Date: Tue, 24 May 1994 10:34:49 EDT
From: Larry Horn LHORN[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]YALEVM.CIS.YALE.EDU
Subject: King of the Hill
My recollection from New York City in the early and mid fifties jibes with
Wayne's (and with Randy Roberts's); K of the H involved a mound and a
horseless joust/push-off, not a simple pile-on.
--Larry
----------------------------Original message----------------------------
Robert Kelly wrote:
kids pile on top of each other = king of the hill
--In my neighborood in San Antonio in the late fifties and early sixites,
"king of the hill" actually required some sort of mound. The king was able
to push everybody off but himself. As a medieval accounts of Fortune's
wheel demonstrate, no one can be king of the hill for long.
Wayne Glowka
Professor of English
Georgia College
Milledgeville, GA 31061
912-453-4222
wglowka[AT SYMBOL GOES HERE]mail.gac.peachnet.edu