***I got it from NetFlix, very good. At 06:15 PM 5/3/2008, you wrote: >I do recall the marker behind the library now that you bring it up. The >library is a wonderful little hometown library. Very personable. I, >always, took my kids there when they were little. I preferred it more then >my local city library. I took my littlest to story hour every week until >he started school. >Besides the book "City of Light", there is also, a movie "Lackawanna Blues" >about life across the bridge in Lackawanna. A black woman runs a boarding >house for people that she brings up from the south. It's hard to get a >hold of but it's great! Speaking about the Lackawanna Bridge on Ridge >Road. When you visit Lackawanna, the bridge is being replaced. It's not >closed but it's a bit of a mess. Rebuilding of the bridge will take another >year or two. If the same lady in Vital Statistics is still there from the >last several years, she is very nice and friendly. You can spark up a >conversation with her and she'll give you her "eye teeth". When I went for >my grandfather's death certificate, as she was copying it she asked me if I >knew how he died. I told her that I did know he was electrocuted in the >plant. She was concerned that I didn't know and it would be a shock to me. > >Ridge Road still is the home of the elite at Daisies Restaurant. The >politicians from Lackawanna and South Buffalo still meet regularly for >breakfast. I think that's how Daises was able to afford to move from the >corner of Ridge Road and South Park to a few doors down on South Park and >open up a beautiful remodeled restaurant. They made their money from the >politician :) > >Now I'm confused. If Charles E. Long MD died in the SOCONY, Atlas Plant >explosion on March 7, 1927, How did he sign my grandfathers death >certificate on Aug. 15, 1928?? I'm looking at his signature as I'm writing >this. > > > >You wrote: >Charles E. Long was the physician that signed off on my Grandfather's >death certificate. He was one of the two men that were killed in the >SOCONY, Atlas Plant explosion on March 7, 1927. > > > >------------------------------- >To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >[email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes >in the subject and the body of the message