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2007-09-03 00:37:37 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Entertainment & Music Polls & Surveys

10 answers

Those are 2 songs by the Drifters. One of my favorite siging groups. I like both songs equally.

2007-09-03 00:42:16 · answer #1 · answered by barbwire 7 · 1 0

Under the Boardwalk

2007-09-03 00:45:43 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

under the boardwalk ☺

2007-09-03 00:41:36 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I like both of those songs.

Hmm.."Under the Boardwalk".

2007-09-03 00:40:17 · answer #4 · answered by Kaia 7 · 1 0

under the boardwalk, boardwalk

2007-09-03 00:45:56 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

i prefer under the boardwalk..although both are great. "boardwalk" has a great summer feel to it.

2007-09-03 00:44:18 · answer #6 · answered by binreddy 5 · 1 0

this is an old shibboleth of people who prefer to inject faith into public existence that they are honoring the spirit of the country's founders. quite, the founders adversarial the institutionalization of religion. They saved the form freed from references to God. The rfile mentions faith just to assure that godly thought could never be used as a qualification for containing place of work—a departure from many contemporary state constitutions. That the founders made erecting a church-state wall their first precedence whilst they added the bill of Rights to the form shows the importance they located on conserving what Isaac Kramnick and R. Laurence Moore have stated as a "godless shape." whilst Benjamin Franklin proposed in the time of the Constitutional convention that the founders start up each and every day of their labors with a prayer to God for education, his suggestion become defeated. Given this prepare, this is not staggering that the unique Pledge of Allegiance—meant as an expression of patriotism, not non secular faith—additionally made no point out of God. The pledge become written in 1892 via the socialist Francis Bellamy, a cousin of the well known radical author Edward Bellamy. He devised it for the conventional magazine young infants's companion on the party of the country's first party of Columbus Day. Its wording disregarded reference not just to God yet additionally, curiously, to the united states: "I pledge allegiance to my flag and the republic for which it stands, one united states of america indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.

2016-11-14 01:42:57 · answer #7 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Up On The Roof... sing it JT

2007-09-03 00:42:01 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

under the broadwalk

2007-09-03 00:45:26 · answer #9 · answered by peter t 5 · 1 0

Both disgusting and dirty places to do anything...no. j/k

2007-09-03 00:45:56 · answer #10 · answered by ? 6 · 1 0

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