Thursday, June 26th post about College Point, there are a couple of very interesting comments there now. Thanks for that, everybody.
4 comments:
Anonymous
said...
Boy, that College Point, I guess living there for only 13 years made me miss some of the excitement but not all! I have good and bad memories from the Point but mostly good. Ann Ceely
In my little town I grew up believing God keeps his eye on us all And he used to lean upon me As I pledged allegiance to the wall
Lord I recall My little town
Coming home after school Flying my bike past the gates Of the factories
My mom doing the laundry Hanging our shirts In the dirty breeze
And after it rains Theres a rainbow And all of the colors are black Its not that the colors arent there Its just imagin-ation they lack Everythings the same Back in my little town
Nothing but the dead and dying Back in my little town Nothing but the dead and dying Back in my little town
In my little town I never meant nothin I was just my fathers son Saving my money Dreaming of glory Twitching like a finger On the trigger of a gun
Leaving nothing but the dead and dying Back in my little town
Nothing but the dead and dying Back in my little town...
I used to live in new york city Every thing there was dark and dirty Outside my window was a steeple With a clock that always said 12:30
Young girls are coming to the canyon And in the morning I can see them walking I can no longer keep my blinds drawn And I can’t keep myself from talking.
At first so strange to feel so friendly To say good morning and really mean it To feel these changes happening in me But not to notice till I feel it.
Young girls are coming to the canyon And in the morning I can see them walking I can no longer keep my blinds drawn And I can’t keep myself from talking.
Cloudy waters cast no reflection Images of beauty lie there stagnant Vibrations bounce in no direction And lie there shattered into fragments.
Young girls are coming to the canyon And in the morning I can see them walking I can no longer keep my blinds drawn And I can’t keep myself from talking.
Paul Simon grew up in Queens, near Queens College, in the "Electchester" (sic) co-op apartments. They'd been built by the electricians union for members. My last apartment in New York was in the next group of buildings over, the Pomonak Housing Projects.
Paul was a good kid to know, an organizer of fun things. Like when his parents weren't home he'd organize a porn party, rent the projecter, get the movies. He was a friend of a friend.
Mr. C is: a reformed lawyer; a religious atheist; a useful "Handy Man;" an amateur social scientist; a beloved teacher; a well liked husband and father; Ambassador Emeritus from, and to, Planet X; a freelance professor; taxi driver to the stars (Joe DiMaggio and Ronald McDonald, both out of uniform); an excellent fire fighter; an enthusiastic but untalented musician; an experienced counselor; a top-notch disk jockey; an all around get-along-guy; a cunning linguist; a would-be lifestyle victim; a Masonic wannabe; a frequent reader; Professor Irwin Corey's Ph.D. adviser; an accomplished driver and motorcyclist; a famous rockologist; a reliable but indifferent bullshit detective; a poor speller; a proud United States Navy veteran (honorably discharged, barely); the Ayatollah of Ass-o-Hola; a drug legend; a Returned Peace Corps volunteer (Thailand); a generally charming man; nationally and internationally known from coast to coast; a legend in his own mind; a cultural-anthropological critic-at-large; an avenging angel who coolly bides his time; Soul Brother number 37; and a friend to the poor.
4 comments:
Boy, that College Point, I guess living there for only 13 years made me miss some of the excitement but not all! I have good and bad memories from the Point but mostly good.
Ann Ceely
In my little town
I grew up believing
God keeps his eye on us all
And he used to lean upon me
As I pledged allegiance to the wall
Lord I recall
My little town
Coming home after school
Flying my bike past the gates
Of the factories
My mom doing the laundry
Hanging our shirts
In the dirty breeze
And after it rains
Theres a rainbow
And all of the colors are black
Its not that the colors arent there
Its just imagin-ation they lack
Everythings the same
Back
in my little town
Nothing but the dead and dying
Back in my little town
Nothing but the dead and dying
Back in my little town
In my little town
I never meant nothin
I was just my fathers son
Saving my money
Dreaming of glory
Twitching like a finger
On the trigger of a gun
Leaving nothing but the dead and dying
Back in my little town
Nothing but the dead and dying
Back in my little town...
--Words & music by paul simon 1975
I used to live in new york city
Every thing there was dark and dirty
Outside my window was a steeple
With a clock that always said 12:30
Young girls are coming to the canyon
And in the morning I can see them walking
I can no longer keep my blinds drawn
And I can’t keep myself from talking.
At first so strange to feel so friendly
To say good morning and really mean it
To feel these changes happening in me
But not to notice till I feel it.
Young girls are coming to the canyon
And in the morning I can see them walking
I can no longer keep my blinds drawn
And I can’t keep myself from talking.
Cloudy waters cast no reflection
Images of beauty lie there stagnant
Vibrations bounce in no direction
And lie there shattered into fragments.
Young girls are coming to the canyon
And in the morning I can see them walking
I can no longer keep my blinds drawn
And I can’t keep myself from talking.
-12:30 by John Sebastian, Mommas and Pappas
Paul Simon grew up in Queens, near Queens College, in the "Electchester" (sic) co-op apartments. They'd been built by the electricians union for members. My last apartment in New York was in the next group of buildings over, the Pomonak Housing Projects.
Paul was a good kid to know, an organizer of fun things. Like when his parents weren't home he'd organize a porn party, rent the projecter, get the movies. He was a friend of a friend.
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