One of my neighbors went driving by today in a nice '66 blue Mustang convertible. First time I had seen the car. She waved.
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One of my neighbors went driving by today in a nice '66 blue Mustang convertible. First time I had seen the car. She waved.
I had a freshman poly sci class in there, too. Marty Nessley was in my class, and he sat up front. A big lecture hall/theatre, with a 6’11” dude in the first row. And he always had his hand up to answer the prof’s questions.
And most importantly . . . He never fouled.
(what was the name of the movie thing there? Sweetwater? I saw a preview of Killing Fields there and remember watching Eraserhead there as well).
Mechanical Engineering. I was a wanna be History major but those paying much of the bills weren’t having it.
I remember seeing Heavy Metal and Fritz the Cat at Freewater. There were a lot more films but...
I'm in a concerted effort to put trees back up.
Ymo Appleseed?
The Johnny Appleseed statue on East was the fifth hole (IIRC) on the frisbee golf course back in the day. I loved to put on a Walkman, grab a Dead bootleg cassette (especially Fox Theatre 5/19/77) and head out to conquest the course. Great way to see the quiet parts of East.
I did not know there was a Johnny Appleseed statue over there.
Just a reaction to them cutting down decades olds trees as they were preparing the sub-division I live in. The first couple sections were completely stripped save for a 150+ year old tree in my neighbors yard. They did a better job later on of retaining more of the trees. But still sad to see so many of them cut down.
I had many classes in Gross. Many barely squeaked by classes in Gross. Many, many. Walked in there to check out the old, groovy step down conversation pit lobby last year and wow, it still smells the same!
PS, gray, rainy-icy morning here in the DCMDVA area and beautiful! holes lost!
Hmm, I’ve been trying to figure out a peak for Springsteen. That to some extent discounts the more recent stuff. Some of which I like a lot. But the early stuff is magical.
For me it is Nebraska. But I am not a huge Bruce fan.
(and somewhat different because I would judge the Dead by live shows but Bruce by albums).
If Wikipedia is to be believed, I would specifically pin his peak on January 3, 1982:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebraska_(album)
Quote:
The demo recording sessions that produced the album "Nebraska" actually covered several days, but Jan. 3, 1982 is credited as the "legendary night when 15 tracks were recorded. They were "Starkweather" ("Nebraska"), "Atlantic City," "Mansion On The Hill," "Johnny 99," "Highway Patrolman," "State Trooper," "Used Cars," "Wanda" ("Open All Night"), "My Father's House," "Reason To Believe," "Born in the U.S.A.", "Downbound Train," "Child Bride," "Losin' Kind" and "Pink Cadillac," a total of 15 songs; 10 ended up on "Nebraska" and the demo for "Born in the U.S.A." would appear later on the Tracks compilation. The remaining four unreleased demos circulate among Springsteen fans. Two of these, "Downbound Train" (BITUSA) and "Pink Cadillac" (Tracks), were officially released in band format, leaving "Child Bride" and "Losin' Kind" as truly unreleased.