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Community - Western Neighborhoods Project - San Francisco History
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Placer County Offers Wide Array Of Things To See, Do
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America is back, but it s late to the party
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You can never go home again, or so conventional wisdom tells us. The saying â adapted from Thomas Wolfeâs âYou Canât Go Home Againâ â warns us to beware of nostalgia. Doing so can lead to disappointment akin to meeting your heroes or â worse still â sacrificing progress at the altar of a romanticized past.
Nostalgia and even a bit of surrealism has been plentiful as Iâve returned to Tupelo, where I was born, remembering growing up here and in Pontotoc.
Some of my first memories are from living on Shady Lane in Pontotoc, going to the two-screen movie theatre with Matt, who lived across the street. We would eat a dill pickle served on ice in a paper cone. It made an absolute but delicious mess.
Robert Azzi: America: We need all the light we can get
Published: 12/20/2020 6:10:53 AM
As Christian or Muslim I’ve always loved the Christmas tradition – especially strong in New England – of placing a single candle in each window of a house.
Growing up in Manchester, the candles in our windows were made by Daddy, who recycled wooden textile spools that came from the mills along the Merrimack River where many immigrants got their first jobs in America.
Daddy put sockets in them and carefully wired them so they could sit solidly on our window sills. They were turned on at sunset – off at bedtime – except on Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve when Mummy insisted they stay on all night.