It takes a lot of practice
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A friend asked: “If you had the chance to ask three different people
(living or dead, famous or not) ONE question… who and what would you ask?”
The one req...
Teach the Young: A Frank-ly Kind Act
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This story was brought to my attention by our esteemed alumnus, Roger
Green. This is the story of youngsters thwarted in their initial forays
into small bu...
Faded road markings cause concern
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Q: Can someone at New York state tell me why the DOT doesn’t use a better
reflective paint when the lines are painted? It appears the paint used has
no ref...
Double and last
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Hi all members of our ABC-Wednesday-family.
This will be the last birthdaypost on this url... because in 2 days ABC
Wednesday will move to http://abcwed...
Alan Moore's Twilight Proposal
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Introduction by Alan David Doane:
Honestly I didn't intend the irony, but this week's FMF, looking at Alan
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In memoriam: Jan Galligan
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I am posting a link to Jan Galligan's online obituary for any and all who
may have known him or read the items published here that he contributed to.
RIP...
Letter to the Editor
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To the Editor,
Suppose that early in your employment you decided to set up 401(k) or IRA
pension plans, contributing to them with each paycheck in the ...
Eagle Scout Project
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Rutherford neighbor Krish Soni is getting started on his Eagle Scout
project on Saturday, October 26. He will be labeling storm drains in the
neighborhood ...
February Thaw
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My friend Phil and I have a tradition of meeting outside his building and
going for a walk around his block once a month. Last Wednesday was a great
day fo...
We’re Off On An Adventure!
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Just now, Marge and I are doing a bit of adventuring. The next adventure
will include a whole new online reality and presence for me and my work…
See you i...
It Changes
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Living with Lupus and Fibro and Asthma is often not so much 'one day at a
time.' It is much more like one fifteen minute segment of time - at at time.
This...
Goodbye, goodbye, goodbye…
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Well, kids, this is it. I’m leaving first thing tomorrow morning. My visits
home will be few and far between, and when they happen, they’ll be
exclusive...
Spring is here?
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As far as the pro peloton goes, it’s on! I watched the Tour of Flanders
today, and it was one of the best races I’ve ever seen. “Looking back, you
get a b...
Modern Types-Ronald Searle,Geoffrey Gorer
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With the recent attention given to Ronald Searle's 90th birthday and new
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The book is titled Modern Ty...
The annual increasing number: 66
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So! Yet another birthday, huh? For me, 66 is one of the “non-significant”
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five, ...
One Word 2025
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This January will be my eleventh year picking one word to focus on for the
year instead of making New Year Resolutions. One Word for 2015:
Fearless/Fear Le...
AmeriNZ 417 – Happy New Year
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Happy New Year! This is my first podcast of 2025, and I begin by telling
you about my holidays and some of what I got up to. As usual I have a few
side sto...
US-to-UK Word of the Year 2024: landslide
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I've been struck by the lack of election-related 2024 Words of the Year
from the English dictionaries (for a list, see November's newsletter). So
I am h...
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Saturday November 2nd.
The viewings on the Saturday went well. Monday morning the Estate Agents
rang to say there had been 2 offers. We went for the one...
1, 2, 3, 4: You Can Count On It
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Up the stairs, count the steps1, 2, 3, 41, 2, 3, 41, 2, 3…Crap, it didn’t
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middl...
This is The End (a follow-up)
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I wrote yesterday about my possibly retiring this space in favor of
migrating all of my blogging to ForgottenStars.net, because of Reasons. I
am now pul...
Sunday Round-up
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Wash your mouth out
In these ultra-hygienic days, Russian artist Yulia Popova has come into her
own by making models of foodstuffs out of soap. What makes y...
Where We Remain Undeveloped
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One implication of the Son of God being born as one of us is that the
fullness of God was present in the undeveloped state of a baby, which
further means t...
The long, LONG saga of Mia's new chair
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I've been wanting to write about Mia's new chair for a while, because it's
something that we hope will help her out a lot. However, I didn't want to
write ...
Tough Day
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A few weeks ago, I turned 38, and I am still under the scrutiny of
strangers in public. One would think that once you're out of grade school,
middle school...
Change
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Group Reading “The only thing we have in this world that is utterly and
intrinsically ours is our integrity.” ~ Mira Grant One- to find the
universal eleme...
Retro Y'all
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Been doing a lot of jumping lately, but feel I don't have much to show for
it. Oh well. At least I'm still getting my clothes on the right way.
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Spring is in the air.
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After a few wonderful, sunny days we are back to a somewhat grey and rainy
day. Yesterday all doors back and front, were open all day long. The
central he...
U is for UNDER and UP
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I had no idea what to post for this week's celebration of the letter *U*.
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Song of the Week: "Whispering Your Name"
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I just got this into my head a while back. This is Alison Moyet, from her
1994 album *Essex*, one of my favorite albums which I discovered because of
Becca...
No parallel
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Get a good look at these: Whence they came: After seeing that incredible
glow-in-the-dark Zac Posen dress that Claire Danes wore at the 2016 Met
Gala, Lori...
ABC Wednesday: The Importance of Being Bored
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When I was growing up, you being bored was your problem that you were
responsible to rectify. As children we learned never to be bored- or at
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Parenting Tips
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Posting for the first time in a while to share some parenting advice. So
last year, one of my twin daughters mocked a handicapped kid at school,
grabbed a ...
Save Up to Half!
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This has got to be my new favorite classic comic book ad. Accordions? Was
there a really enough demand for accordions to place a half-page ad in, of
all th...
Berowne's 294
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(Also for Three Word Wednesday and ABC Wednesday: "S" is for "shrewish")
No quiz this week. Instead I got to thinking about the enigmatic play we
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After watching part of the clown show the other night it's a safe bet none
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Age is a State of Mind, Somewhere Near Nebraska
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What a year it has been! After surviving the odometer rolling over to 40, I
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The End of a Long Day
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#Freaking Out -AND!
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Calmly completely freaking out about my move. AND! I quit smoking. I feel
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So I am calmly completel...
Gaze Upon My Works and Snicker, Part 53.
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[image: DP700-F365028]
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Year in Review: My favorite music of 2011
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It's that time of year, so here my picks for my favorite music of 2011, in
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Beirut, “The Rip Tide”
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[image: CircuitMess DIY Wearable]
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Ragged Ann
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“All the other kids were terrified of the giant doll, but not our
granddaughter.” (submitted by Peggy)
The post Ragged Ann appeared first on AwkwardFamil...
Episode 326: The WGA Strike
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One by one, Ken goes over the many issues the WGA is fighting for and why
they’re important. He also gives an overview of the situation and how it
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Quackle!
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I was happy to discover that the best scrabble simulation software,
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The phrase was chilling. Omitting the contemporary names, it evoked Cold
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Mom Has Stacked Dinner Party Roster
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Last week’s 10 wins leaves me with 153 wins. Weak season. Sorry. Week 17
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What were the people at NPR thinking? The coverage of President Obama’s
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by Thomas Reifer At the height of global demonstrations against Israel’s
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2PP132 – 16 May 2020
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This episode was delayed, yet again, because Arthur didn’t have enough
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You may have noticed that you haven’t heard much from me lately. That’s
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This is your very first post. Click the Edit link to modify or delete it,
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This article originally appeared in the 10.15.15 issue of Metroland
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Sunday, May 03, 2009
Pete Seeger is 90
I've seen Pete Seeger sing about 32 times. This is no exaggeration; it may be an undercount. He would appear at various antiwar and anti-nuke campaigns in the mid-Hudson Valley of New York State. One of the first times I saw him was at a George McGovern rally in New Paltz, my college town, in 1972. Once, I went on the Clearwater, where he performed.
When a number of people protested the Springboks, the South African rugby team, playing in Albany, Pete was there singing in the rain. The one time I actually saw Pete in concert was April 4, 1982 at Page Hall in the downtown SUNY Albany campus.
But his impact on my life long preceded seeing him perform. My father owned his "We Shall Overcome" album; it was as pivotal in my appreciation of music as any Beatles or other pop album; my review of the expanded CD release is here My father was a singer of folk songs, performing regionally in the Binghamton, NY area, and he often sang songs that Pete, or friends of his such as Woody Guthrie, had popularized. And I saw him perform "Waist Deep in the Big Muddy" on the Smothers Brothers show in 1968, which helped crystallize my opposition to the Vietnam war.
I think Pete's taken some unfair criticism. About Dylan going electric, Pete is quoted as saying, "There are reports of me being anti-him going electric at the '65 Newport Folk festival, but that's wrong. I was the MC that night. He was singing 'Maggie's Farm' and you couldn't understand a word because the mic was distorting his voice. I ran to the mixing desk and said, 'Fix the sound, it's terrible!' The guy said 'No, that's how they want it.' And I did say that if I had an axe I'd cut the cable! But I wanted to hear the words. I didn't mind him going electric."
And the late Phil Ochs castigated him, unfairly, in this couplet from Love Me, I'm a Liberal: "I go to all the Pete Seeger concerts He sure gets me singing those songs."
I'm happy that Bruce Springsteen has spread the gospel of Seeger in a couple of his recent albums. In fact, the first time I heard Springsteen do Seeger was on the http://www.zmag.org/zmag/viewArticle/12743 Where Have All The Flowers Gone compilation which came out in 1998 and I bouught 3 or 4 years later; recommended.
I believe that the first time I "saw" Pete was on your referenced "Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour;" and the first time I saw him live was at the same McGovern rally as you. I've also seen him at numerous anti-war and social-activist rallies - one of the advantages of living in the Hudson Valley - and two years ago he performed at the memorial service for Woodstock Town Historian Alf Evers, who died at age 99. There is now a movement afoot to name the "Walkway Over the Hudson" from Highland to Poughkeepsie ( a converted train trestle) after Pete, and Alan Chartock on WAMC has been actively promoting this. We are fortunate to have such a talented and genuinely humane fellow like Pete among us. Happy Birthday, and many more!
4 comments:
I believe that the first time I "saw" Pete was on your referenced "Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour;" and the first time I saw him live was at the same McGovern rally as you. I've also seen him at numerous anti-war and social-activist rallies - one of the advantages of living in the Hudson Valley - and two years ago he performed at the memorial service for Woodstock Town Historian Alf Evers, who died at age 99. There is now a movement afoot to name the "Walkway Over the Hudson" from Highland to Poughkeepsie ( a converted train trestle) after Pete, and Alan Chartock on WAMC has been actively promoting this.
We are fortunate to have such a talented and genuinely humane fellow like Pete among us. Happy Birthday, and many more!
Pete Seeger: The Power of Song
I love his children's music.
Amy Goodman | Pete Seeger Carries Us On
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