Daily Archives: June 2, 2025

A Gray Dog on University Place?

Marjorie Williams

It’s a beautiful June 2nd…a Monday. It had been a pretty good weekend, Mike hanging out with Bill and me, and things went quite well. A lot of time just sitting around talking, which reminded me of the old days in the ’80s, just hanging out with friends in the apartment, talking, sometimes drinking, sometimes smoking, but always talking

Mike was planning on coming over and leaving today, but it turned out that last night was when he went back to his crib, which was fine. It had been a good Sunday. I had done over 14 miles, close to 15 miles on my bicycle, scored 135 heart points, which turned out to be good.

The ride was uneventful, a little windy but nothing insurmountable. Once again, the main issue I have with bike riding is people not paying attention to their surroundings and perhaps I have been that way in the past, but on the bicycle, you have to pay attention to what’s in front of you.

Today at lunch, I sit in the shadow of the office building I work in, close to the corner of 16th and 5th, smoking a mini cigar and just watching the parade pass by.

Bill has driven some high school students to Tilted Acres from the movie Hairspray in 1988. He should be coming back tonight.

I posted Marjorie Williams’ name at the top. Marjorie Williams was known to my family at least my siblings, as Mrs. Williams, nee Klatt. I grew up at 13 Riverview, and the Williams family lived at 7 Riverview. I spent a lot of time at 7 Riverview, so much so that I can remember a lot of details about their house.

I thought they were a hip, together family, but it turns out they were probably more messed up than we were. But Marjorie Williams was beautiful.

My brother Frank had a crush on her and wrote a fan letter that there was never sent but was discovered by my mother, much to my brother’s embarrassment. A favorite memory of mine was being at 7 Riverview and watching the movie Camelot on television.

Perhaps I am juxtaposing images, but I swear Mrs Williams was as beautiful as Vanessa Redgrave in Camelot, singing along to some of the songs. I saw her as a strong woman, but in reality, she might have been more vulnerable than I realized. Barbara Williams, the youngest daughter, was at Frank’s wake.

She may have been taken aback by my statement that she was the first friend I had ever had. Years later, when high school happened, I didn’t see her that much and hung out with her younger brother Scott, who was 6 years younger than me.

Barbara later married someone who beat me up during summer recreation in Lodi, New Jersey. I took it as a betrayal, but how did she know? Barbara and I did work together in the HBJ book warehouse, and she was driving before I was, so she generally gave me a ride home at the end of our shift. My brother Frank worked with her in the same building in Hackensack New Jersey and that’s how he reconnected with Barbara Williams.