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The Monday Morning Memo

“Gerard Dulouz was born in 1917
a sickly little kid with a rheumatic heart
and many other complications that made him ill
for the most part of his life which ended in July 1926,
when he was 9, and the nuns of St Louis de France
Parochial School were at his bedside to take down
his dying words because they'd heard his
astonishing revelations of heaven delivered in
catechism class on no more encouragement
than that it was his turn to speak.”
– Jack Kerouac

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Random Quote:

“These new skyscrapers do not aspire to scrape the sky; at the point of exhaustion, where the old skyscrapers used to taper, gather their dwindling energy, and lunge upward with a heart-stopping spire, these glass boxes suffer the intense architectural embarrassment of having to house the air-conditioning apparatus, and the ascent of windows ends in an awkward piece of slatted veiling. A pity, perhaps, but well suited to an age of anti-climax. Glassy-eyed from contemplation of these buildings made entirely of windows, we walked west feeling oddly empty, as if we had dined on a meal of doughnut holes.”

- John Updike, New Yorker magazine, Notes and Comments, Oct. 13, 1962

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