Re: today's column title. As I have recounted here before (what else is new?

), one of my first dialogues with
BK was years ago when I asked if he had written the song "Driftin'" found on an obscure late 60s LP by a Mamas and Papas knock-off group called The Collage. BK's priceless answer to me was, "I would never write a song with a dropped "g" at the end of a word." (The song was actually written by Bobby Kimmel, and it's a very nice one, dropped "g" and all). Well, anyhoo, another great song on that record is "Any Day's a Sunday Afternoon" (by the immortal team of Joelson-Careaga) with this
a propos chorus:
It's a Monday afternoon on Friday
Thursday afternoon on Wednesday
Any day's a Sunday afternoon
(This was 1968--it was hard to keep track of days whilst stoned out of one's mind.

).
I've been trying to track down info on this group for years and years. I even had a nice email exchange with Perry Botkin, who did the rather baroque orchestrations for the album (think Sgt. Pepper, only more-so), and even he couldn't remember anything other than that he had done it). Do any of you Angelinos know about the group?
TOD: what's eBay?

I've found many a treasure at thrift stores and online. Long before the internet took over and the fairly recent spate of CD re-releases, there was a fantastic used record store in downtown Seattle (just a little north of the downtown core, can't remember the name, but it was the owner's last name and I think it was Italian or Greek), and I found so many sealed, rare cast albums there--everything from The Mad Show to The Zulu and the Zayda. I dropped big bucks there through the years.
And through a connection I made on eBay I ended up with Frances Farmer's 1935 passport, which is probably one of the rarest pieces of FF memorabilia I own.