Posted on 01/09/2007 9:18:52 AM PST by HungarianGypsy
That whole macrame thing (vests, belts, plant hangers) was so ugly--what were we thinking? I guess it was groovy in a hippy sort of way.
I sewed a fake fur bunny costume for my little sister one Halloween. I was much happier sewing Halloween costumes, because whenever I sewed an ensemble for myself, I was too sick of looking at it to enjoy wearing it!
I still love my Frito casserole recipe...and sweet and sour meatballs.
I guess high school wasn't a complete waste...even if it was in public schools! :-)
I hated the day we had to wear them to school.
I was horrible, just horrible. Still can't sew!
Me looking at a real Apollo 11 Moon Rock in 1970.
What a picture!!!!!! You're so fortunate to have that!!!
BTW: I graduated from high school that year, you puppy!
:-)
Dick Dale and the deltones, the Studebaker Avanti, wake-a- thons, walk-a-thons. AM radio disc jockeys.
OH, that is so cute!
you must be a man.
Graduated from HS 1965, married same year. First child in 1967, 2nd in 1969.
Read about VietNam in Time magazine and wondered what it all meant. Not being in college, I missed the wild child revolution and drugs. Went to church a lot, and had fun.
Hubby was not on top of the draft pick list because he was a student in a Bible college.
Early 60's were wonderful. Great music, good life style. The Beatles came, changed the music and did drugs and ruined it all.
I turned off the radio and enjoyed the church music.
Really, missed the 60's.
to the 1960s veterans (and some spouses and support) on this thread!
Tax-chick's dad
USMCVet
lapdog
brazzaville/Michael Frazier
Al Gator
stumpy
Stashiu
antisocial
ExtremeUnction
Nam Vet
bert
PSYCHO-FREEP
BIGLOOK
alice_in_bubbaland's hubby
Zman516
Don Carlos
Apologies if I overlooked anyone - I just made notes as I was reading the posts!
And you had to get up to change the channels. I know in my house it was that way until 1984.
And Bonanza on Sunday nights was in color.
I was a teen in the sixties and it is my belief that if all of the laws and so-called rights of today were enforced back then, the entire decade would have come to a screeching halt!
If anyone today gets offended, the entire country is forced to change it's horrible offending ways.
There was a famous quote made by the famous philosopher Mr. Spock (and no I am not a trekie) in the movie "The Wrath of Khan" that went something like: "The needs of the many, outweigh the needs of the few," which I have found throughout the years following that this simple statement of logic and wisdom actually holds true in life. However in todays self aggrandizing world it has actually been reversed and has pretty much become the law of the land in as much as it seems that all that matters today is that "The needs of the few, Outweigh the needs of the many."
Oh what a broken world we live in.
USAFSS?
You're right!
Other observation: When I was in High School we kept hearing about former classmates dying or being injured in Viet Nam. I kept thinking "I'm graduating into this crap?"
Here's a site with a transcript and both wma and mp3 versions.
http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/redskeltonpledgeofallegiance.htm
Wow, it was very similar for me. Even when they started allowing girls to wear pants to school, I just almost couldn't.
Re: the sixties, looking back, everyone was so poor compared to today. I've often wondered if it was because of how relatively recently WWII had ended. When I think back on the homes of people who were considered relatively well off, they hardly had anything compared to now.
WWII was still big in the 60s. In the early 60s, they always played war movies on TV and at the movies. We went for a long time without a TV in my house. Well, we had a huge one that didn't work. Those big ones, called "consoles," were made to look like pieces of furniture, about 5-6 feet long, nearly 3 feet high, with ornate woodwork on the front. In the early 60s, before the hippies came into being, beatniks were the people who thought they were cool and that everyone else was "square." I admit I only saw them on TV. They would act very angry and intense, recite bad poetry in coffeehouses, and wear pedal-pushers (the girls) and turtlenecks (the guys). Pipes were in and considered cool. After the poem or other intense performance was finished, the audience members would snap their fingers instead of clap.
Of course, real life was not like that at all. Life was still pretty straight for most people. Toward the later part of the decade, the beatniks were replaced by protesters angry against the Vietnam War. I was a kid during the 60s, and I remember that every day on the radio they would announce how many Viet Cong had been killed versus how many U.S. soldiers had been killed. Somehow, there were always about three times as many of them killed versus us. There were lots of riots, too, by these angry types. Being a kid, I just thought that's the way life was, i.e. wars and riots.
Even though people on TV and in magazines would talk about liberation from old-fashioned values, real life was still straight for most people, as I said earlier. At least most everyone I knew. There was usually one or two "bad" girls and wild boys, but they were considered out of the mainstream and not acceptable.
That's what caused the baby boom.
People had kids so someone could change the channel for them.
The reproduction rate has gone down considerably since the invention of the remote control.
That's my story and I'm sticking to it!
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