I don’t write in a journal everyday, but I have accumulated many entries over the past 50+ years beginning in 1966. Some items evolved into longer works. Among the leftovers little pieces survived. I thought a collection of these with a piece culled from the same date in a past year would make an interesting yearbook. The consistencies and inconsistencies of mind, skipping back and forth across time, provide varied perspectives. It is difficult to remember the context of the past we’ve lived; we also make suppositions about times that predate ourselves.

The few alterations from original drafts were to improve clarity. The worst of my work is not included. There remains enough mediocrity and immaturity to make me feel humble and you feel smart. There are also moments of accidental insight and incidental humor.

Author Stephen Crane referred to his little pieces as pills…apparently they were small and somewhat hard to swallow, but good for you.


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Monday, June 1, 2020

Be True To Your School


from this week in June, 2012  (I was 67)

                           Be True To Your School
         I’ve been re-reading Bob Greene’s Be True To Your School,
a journal of his 1964 senior year in high school and his absorption
with the Beatles and hormones.  (Beatle mania was a much better
term than I thought at the time).  The book is as evocative for its
blind spots as for the nostalgic images. There is a class separation
in these Columbus, Ohio schools more apparent than in the ones I
knew in small towns on Minnesota’s Iron Range.  Greene is
unconscious of it, but he and his friends blithely drive Impala
convertibles and T-Birds, both new ’64 and classic ’56 models. 
They belong to fraternities and sororities. (In high school?) 
         There is no mention of the sense of national loss in direction
or loss of momentum caused by the JFK assassination, nor the turmoil
of the fomenting civil rights movement.  There is no anxiety over the
cold war, atomic weapons or our beginning involvement in Viet Nam. 
Still it is a touching and even historic memoir.  If you have since
followed his columns or books, you know Bob Greene was to learn
much in his next ten years of becoming a newsman.

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