The posts I thought I was going to do did not get done, quite obviously. And it’s not because I brushed 9/11 aside. Quite the contrary, Sunday night turned out to be the most emotional 9/11 I’ve had since the 9/11.
I went to a memorial service held in the Great Auditorium and within minutes I was in tears. Between the solemnity of the occasion, the bagpipers, the flags, the orchestra, the two choirs and the speakers, not to mention the building, I was a wreck.
And why I didn’t think to bring tissues, I don’t know. The speakers were all great but I have to say I was definitely partial to the Baptist Minister, former Secretary of State New Jersey. He was quite the preacher man!
As I promised, I would post any memories sent in to me about 9/11/01, please read Heather’s account of that dreadful day, my generation’s day of infamy.
We had left Maine early on September 10th and were planning to stop in NYC to visit our daughter the next day. We stopped overnight at a hotel in southern Connecticut to allow ourselves a relaxed time the next morning before heading into the city for our lunch date. As we were getting dressed, my cell phone rang and it was our oldest son calling from his then home in Hatboro, PA asking if we were watching TV. We had not been but the moment we turned it on, the only images we saw were the scenes of the first plane and then the second plane smashing into the World Trade Center buildings and the attendant misery as a stunned world watched. Everybody was speechless and most of the hotel guests gathered in the lobby to watch the large TV and perhaps share the comfort of being around others
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I featured the photo of the empty shoes which so poignantly spoke to the loss of so lives and how the left behind living try to cope when there’s no one there to fill those shoes. That memorial display was in New Jersey and in New York City…

A man remembers his father
photo by Murray Head

Memorial bracelet - 10 Years
And Gail sent me this link to one man’s tribute to the wife he lost in The World Trade Center:
Related articles
- Ten years ago in NYC (puyman.wordpress.com)
- “Call to Remember” Project Invites People Everywhere to Share and Hear Memories of 9/11 (prweb.com)
- New Providence unveils 9/11 memorial (nj.com)
- September 11 Memorial Up-Close (huffingtonpost.com)


























Queen Birther, Lady Liberty or bat-**** crazy, Orly Taitz (pictured right) can still draw a crowd.



What Happens When the Star of the Show is Tarnished?
Posted in BY THE WAY, From My Point of View - Personal commentary on Movies and Books, Ha-P 2 B in OG, tagged Arts, Concert, Labor Day, Martha and the Vandellas, Martha Reeves, New York City, Ocean Grove New Jersey, United States on September 4, 2011| 2 Comments »
Welllllllll, I’ll tell ya! People get up and leave! That is exactly what happened last night at the Doo Wop Extravaganza, the annual Labor Day concert at The Great Auditorium.
The first surprise of the evening was Kenny Vance and the Planotones; Kenny with his extraordinary voice and devoted Auditorium fans has for the past several years been the closing act of the concert. He brings the house down as his voice goes up and up and up! Why was he the opening act? Several people around me murmured the same thought; did he have another show to go to? We don’t know the answer to that question. What we do know is that he was NOT the headliner of this particular Doo Wop show. And why not? BECAUSE this year’s star was Martha Reeves, formerly of Martha & The Vandellas.
I’ve never seen Martha perform before so I don’t have a standard by which to measure her performance. What I saw was truly disgraceful. She wasn’t on stage more than 15 minutes when people began to get up and leave. She was erratic, her enunciation and projection left so much to be desired that it was impossible to understand the words to any song she was feebly attempting to sing! I’m not going to speculate on what was wrong with her last night that caused her to forget words to songs, stop in the middle and chastise the band because they weren’t on count or worse yet, to ask the audience to clap on command by the number. I swear there wasn’t one person in the audience who knew when to clap. Add that to the fact that she consistently referred to her venue as being in Ocean View! It was just too much. We left right after the clapping fiasco. I have never left a concert in Ocean Grove before. They haven’t all been great but never so bad that I wanted to just get out of there.
Not going to end this commentary on a sour note, NOT when I can extoll the virtues of Kenny Vance’s performance. He was fabulous as always, we are never disappointed with the Planotones and 3 standing ovations to prove it. How does he hold those falsetto notes so long? He is gifted with a clear and strong voice and over the years has perfected his falsetto voice and incorporated it into many more of their songs.
One of the great treasures of Ocean Grove and the United States is our Great Auditorium and as a venue for great performers, it stands alone. Every singer this year has mentioned the magnificence of the Great Auditorium, its marvelous acoustics enhance every performance; I look forward to next year’s roster of entertainers, knowing of course that Kenny Vance and The Planotones will be back to trill and thrill us.
Kenny Vance
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