BY JANA SAASTAD
When people think of Tony Orlando, images of the 1970s icon belting out his popular songs “Tie a Yellow Ribbon,” “Knock Three Times,” and “Candida” immediately come to mind. After all, these songs topped the charts for weeks and sold millions of copies, with “Yellow Ribbon” named #37 on Billboard’s All-time Hot 100 Songs.
But before the hits, Orlando was a successful music executive for nearly a decade. And before that he was a young kid (16 years old, to be exact) writing and performing songs for Don Kirshner’s record label for $50 a week on the 6th floor of the famed Brill Building in Manhattan along with Carole King, Gerry Goffin, Neil Sedaka and a group called Tom & Jerry who would later become known as Simon and Garfunkel.
“We were all teenagers with a dream,” Orlando told Placer County Online in an exclusive interview to promote his Dec. 21 performance at Thunder Valley Casino in Lincoln.
Read more »
Friday, 17 December 2010
Sunday, 5 December 2010
Repeal Don't Ask, Don't Tell
BY JANA SAASTAD
Here’s our Christmas wish: We’d like Congress and the U.S. Senate to repeal don’t ask, don’t tell.
This gift doesn’t need to be wrapped in pretty paper and tied with a shiny bow; it just needs to happen.
Here are three reasons:
If our federal elected leaders don’t move on this matter, it will be settled by the court – and that's an action frowned upon by Defense Secretary Robert Gates who says a court ruling will make the integration process frenetic and rushed rather than methodical and organized.
Read more »
Here’s our Christmas wish: We’d like Congress and the U.S. Senate to repeal don’t ask, don’t tell.
This gift doesn’t need to be wrapped in pretty paper and tied with a shiny bow; it just needs to happen.
Here are three reasons:
If our federal elected leaders don’t move on this matter, it will be settled by the court – and that's an action frowned upon by Defense Secretary Robert Gates who says a court ruling will make the integration process frenetic and rushed rather than methodical and organized.
Read more »
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)