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To: TornadoAlley3
They were told to lie on the floor or hide underneath tables and stay quiet.

Hey...that's what I was told and made to practice during the cold war 40-45 years ago. Of course, even when I was small I had an alternative plan in mind. I was going to fight my way out of the school and head for home and die with my Mom if the air raid siren went off and Commies were going to drop the atomic bombs. Even then I knew the schools would just become mass incinerators. Anyway, never happened, we both survived and I still love my Mom.

Happy Mother's Day, Mom!
11 posted on 05/13/2007 3:15:01 PM PDT by WorkingClassFilth (Current tagline banned under hate speech laws.)
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To: WorkingClassFilth

What a good son you are!

We did the “duck and cover” drills in the early sixties in our grammar school, too.

Then we did one better—we crouched down along the hallway walls so we wouldn’t be cut down by all the glass windows(the real tall ones—remember the big wooden pole we used to open the top sash—you could have jousted with that thing!).

No one bothered to explain that we were only 12 miles from NYC—which means that in a hydrogen bomb blast, our whole town would have been incinerated.


14 posted on 05/13/2007 3:20:02 PM PDT by exit82 (Sheryl Crow is on a roll)
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To: WorkingClassFilth

I missed the fun of the nuclear duck and cover drills, but we got a steady dose of tornado duck and covers growing up in Green Bay, WI.

Still seems odd looking back, but not as odd as worrying about protecting yourself from falling debris from nukes.


21 posted on 05/13/2007 3:25:58 PM PDT by sbMKE
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To: WorkingClassFilth

Lived so close to ground zero in Flint, MI that we never practiced anything. Everybody, even the kids knew we would be instantly dead.


141 posted on 05/13/2007 5:36:51 PM PDT by Ace's Dad ("There are more important things: Friendship, Bravery...")
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To: WorkingClassFilth

But you were told it was a drill—only practice.

This should have been done only as practice for the teachers, with actors as stand-ins for the kids. Performing a “live” test with the seeming intent of instructing elementary kids is asinine.


169 posted on 05/13/2007 6:50:16 PM PDT by ConservativeMind
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To: WorkingClassFilth; exit82; sbMKE; Ace's Dad; ConservativeMind
They were told to lie on the floor or hide underneath tables and stay quiet.
Hey...that's what I was told and made to practice during the cold war 40-45 years ago. Of course, even when I was small I had an alternative plan in mind. I was going to fight my way out of the school and head for home and die with my Mom if the air raid siren went off and Commies were going to drop the atomic bombs. Even then I knew the schools would just become mass incinerators. Anyway, never happened, we both survived and I still love my Mom. Happy Mother's Day, Mom


You're a good son, no question. However there is nothing to suggest that all schools would have been 'incinerators' if nuclear attack had taken place. Schools in downtown areas? Granted, not a lot of chance anywhere near ground zero. But in the suburban areas, the 'duck and cover' routine would have saved lives, and I remember those days well.

Unfortunately for our collective societal memory, we have more than a few revisionists and smart asses who always like to pipe up 'yeah, ducking under a desk is REALLY going to save us from an atomic blast', but that is just stupidity on display - we all KNEW that nothing could prevent a direct atomic hit from wiping us out, BUT: we DID know that if we were under a desk at the time the blast wave blew any windows out that it might keep us from being slashed to ribbons by flying glass shards and other debris. THAT was the idea behind 'duck and cover' in the classroom, and closing our eyes was of course to prevent accidental blindness if we were to be close enough to see the actual atomic 'flash' at the detonation point.

I can remember notices sent home with us during the Cuban Missile Crisis asking parents to donate canned goods, fruit juices, crackers, blankets, etc. in the event that Khrushchev and Castro made good on their threats, and the support was phenomenal, nearly 100 percent.

The Federal Civil Defense Administration was one of those rare examples of a government program that did exactly what it was supposed to do, and did it well.
202 posted on 05/13/2007 9:46:43 PM PDT by mkjessup (Jan 20, 2009 - "We Don't Know. Where Rudy Went. Just Glad He's Not. The President. Burma Shave.")
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To: WorkingClassFilth
I was going to fight my way out of the school and head for home and die with my Mom if the air raid siren went off and Commies were going to drop the atomic bombs.

Well, the cultural Marxists have deployed the 'education bomb' against us, commencing with The Frankfurt School in the late 1930's, and progressing into the NEA. It's a slow process, but it's been working well for them.

VOUCHERS!

286 posted on 05/14/2007 9:33:08 AM PDT by polymuser (There is one war and one enemy.)
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To: WorkingClassFilth
I was told and made to practice during the cold war 40-45 years ago.

In the Detroit area schools they were called "tornado drills."

339 posted on 05/15/2007 3:01:44 PM PDT by j_tull (Massachusetts, the Gay State. Once the leader of the American Revolution, now leading its demise.)
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