"Don't Stop Believin'" aka "Small Town Girl" by Journey: "Just a small town girl/Livin' in a lonely world/She took the midnight train going anywhere/Just a city boy/Born and raised in South Detroit/He took the midnight train going anywhere..."
I believe the song you're looking for is Journey's 'Don't Stop Believing'
don't stop believing
A bat chain refers to the chain that hangs down from a signal post on a train line. The signal device that was pulled down was called a bat and different bats had different colours to signal the train driver as to the condition of the track ahead, or whether the train could proceed,etc. The bat chain puller was the person who set the signals for the approaching train according to track status reports received by telegraph. The song BCP probably metaphorically refers to the fact that this job is obsolete in the world of train spotters in this automated world.
That is the first line of the song 'Run Around' by Blues Traveler. It is also the first line of the POEM 'The Raven' by Edgar Allan Poe.
I found the answer to my own question. Incredible! I used Google search as a last resort, after searching for the song by probable title California. I entered the lyrics on the Enter line and Google found it right away from a couple of music search websites. Song California, by Wave.
6th Avenue heartache, by the Wallflowers.
The title is "What a Difference a Day Makes".
I haven't seen the movie yet, but the short story takes place on the Far Rockaway-Mott Avenue branch of the A train (of the A-C-E, the blue line, aka the 8th Avenue line). The Butcher favors the Avenue of the Americas (6th Avenue) line, which is the B-D-F-M (the orange line). But for some reason, the bulk of the story takes place on the A train.
Midnight on the Firing Line was created on 1994-01-26.
V-Line information can be found by going to the V-Line depot, or by giving them a phone call at 1800 800 120 from 6am to midnight daily. You can request more specific information from them this way.
If not for standard time zones, the midnight line would be the longitude directly opposite the longitude on which the sun is directly overhead. Therefore, it would be constantly circling the earth. At the moment when the sun is at its highest point in the sky as seen from Greenwich, England (noon GMT), the midnight line would coincide with the international date line. That would be the one moment per day in which local time at every point around the earth would be on the same day. In reality, the midnight line jumps from one time zone boundary to the next through the day. When it is midnight where you are, the midnight line is jumping from the first time zone boundary east of you to the first time zone boundary west of you. Since Sunday becomes Monday when the midnight line "travels" past you to the west, the same is true when you travel past the midnight line to the east. However, when you travel east across the international date line, Monday becomes Sunday. If the international date line were the 12 at the top of a clockface, the midnight line would be the hour hand.
The Finish Line - Train song - was created in 2009.
It's just before midnight.
40 minutes on the RER commuter train from Paris east (line A).
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It depends if the bug is flying high enough to get hit. If the bug is beneath the train then no, probably not. However if the bug is high enough; yes. they will collide If the bug starts out east of the train, they will never collide because the train will sink into the ocean before the bug manages to circle the Earth.
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A train it's a red line
It's on the London Victoria line.