Baby Boomers?

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  • mizbabygirl4
    mizbabygirl4 Member Posts: 163
    edited March 2009

    Plus the high point of our week was Gunsmoke on Monday nights. I remember once I got in trouble for something, and my mother let me select my punishment: a spanking or missing Gunsmoke.

    Janet

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2009
  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited November 2009

    Thanks, PatMom, for bumping this.  I'll have to go back an do some reading now.

  • lovemyfamilysomuch
    lovemyfamilysomuch Member Posts: 1,585
    edited November 2009

    Crying over Lassie episodes

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited November 2009

    Remember the Fuzzy Wuzzy soap that grew "hair?"   Still not sure how it worked.  I also liked the Crazy Foam bath soap that came in an aerosol can with different heads on top -- I had the parrot head.

  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited November 2009

    I vaguely rememebr Fuzzy Wuzzy Soap.  We didn't get much stuff like that when I was young.  My grandmother got us bubble bath in the figures of cartoon characters.  They were about 10 inches tall.  When they were empty she glued their heads on them and were used them as toys.  I remember Porky and Petunia Pig, Mickey and Minnie Mouse and Bullwinkle.

  • GramE
    GramE Member Posts: 5,056
    edited November 2009
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2009

       I have been sharing memories from the good old days on another post and just saw this one.  Yes, I remember pogo sticks .  My sister got one for her birthday, but I was actually quite good at it....also was good with the hulahoop. We used to play a lot of jacks.  And I loved Ambush by Dana and Yardley and Mary Quant..  I think I liked Lady Bug better than villager because of the cute little pin you got.  I didn't like Black Jack gum so much, but loved  Teaberry and Juicy Fruit.  Remember how they used to make chains with the gumwrappers? And they came out with those hospital shirts because Ben Casey and Dr.Kildare made them so popular.

  • GramE
    GramE Member Posts: 5,056
    edited November 2009

    Marybe, I recently saw some sort of laminated purses and coin purses of gum wrappers at an exhorbitant price -- $ 45 for a coin purse and $ 85 for a hand bag.   Who knew?   

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2009

    I saw those also in a magazine and saved it to show one of my girlfriends since she and I used to make those chains all the time. On the plane back from TX when I went to MD Anderson I had her show me how to make them again and we did a few on the plane, but they didn't look all that great.  I think the paper they use now for wrappers is not the same...or maybe it is the fact our fingers do not have as much dexterity. Remember Sit upons (sp)?  We made them at girlscout camp out of newpaper and then would have something to sit on other than the hard ground around the campfire? 

  • GramE
    GramE Member Posts: 5,056
    edited November 2009

    I did not do Girl Scouts.   I was one of those kids who did not do sports - left handed and could not run to save my life - nick name was Super Klutz after I broke my ankle stepping off a curb...   So, mom found this craft:  cigar box, hole puncher, bottle of glue and construction paper.   Punch out a bunch of holes, different colors. paste in rows and/or patterns all over the cigar box.   I had one of those boxes for YEARS with my various treasures in it.   

    In Art class, maybe 5th grade, we made place mats by coloring a piece of construction paper with all sorts of different colors -- very hard coloring to make it "thick".  put a piece of waxed paper over top and ironed it to melt the crayon.  Hardly what Martha Stewart would do...!!!

     

  • ICanDoThis
    ICanDoThis Member Posts: 1,473
    edited November 2009

    The late, great Soupy Sales, who was on Channel 5 in NY when we all got home from Middle School.

    With his friends, White Fang and Black Tooth.

  • GramE
    GramE Member Posts: 5,056
    edited November 2009

    We had Kukla, Fran and Ollie on tv after school.   Pre Mr. Rogers.  My younger brother would sit mezmerized in front of the tv - only time he sat still !!!    

    One summer a girl friend and I began a Monopoly game, which lasted most of the summer.  We "borrowed" money from the bank when we ran out. She had the neatest play house that her Dad built in their back yard, with shutters we closed when we left.   The game stayed in there, away from the other kids and protected when it rained.   

    How about catching fire flies or lightning bugs in a jar.  

  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited November 2009

    Marybe, were the sit-upons the squares that also tied aroung your waist so they were always ready for you to sit upon?  I made one that was flourescent green.  Hadn't thought about that for years.

    Barbies whose legs did not bend.  How about Midge, Barbie's red-headed best friend?  I still have her, but when bendable leg Barbie came out, the local toy store had a trade in, so straight legged Barbie is long gone.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2009

    Girl Scouts still make sit-upons.  They have gotten fancier.

    Using the sticky Contact type vinyl makes it much faster and easier these days (no more punching holes in the heavy vinyl).  If you add a cord to tie it around the waist you have to make sure that you catch the cord inside the newspaper padding because the cord will cut the vinyl without that extra padding.

    We've also made them with older girls from the tops of old jeans stitched at the top and legs and stuffed (through the fly) with plastic bags.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2009

       I am glad to know some things have not changed.  I always liked GS....loved it when we cooked meals on the campfire.  We did camper's stew which was hamburger, onions and potatos I think, wrapped in foil.  Oddly enough I did not and still do not like somemores. I ddin't like the marshmallow part. We did camper's sodas where we stuck a peppermint stick in an orange and could suck the juice out of it....did that on hikes. So many of my memories involve food....that should tell you something about me. .  To this day I can remember the words to the camp songs we would sing.  One thing that has changed big time is the price of a box of girl scout cookies.....outrageous!!  And the cookies are smaller!! 

  • Ivylane
    Ivylane Member Posts: 544
    edited November 2009

    Ok, who remembers SPOOLIES????? Come on, you know you do......

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2009

    Did you make them with a spool after you had used the thread up and a rubber band and a toothpic?   I know we did something like that in 7th grade, but don't recall what they were called. 

  • cnemeth
    cnemeth Member Posts: 257
    edited November 2009

    Wow!

    Tommy Roe concert singing Dizzy.

    Bobby Sherman concert singing anything.

    And Romper Room.  Always wanted her to look through her mirror and see me but she never mentioned my name.

    Colleen

  • Ivylane
    Ivylane Member Posts: 544
    edited November 2009

    Marybe...no SPOOLIES were a weird kind of plastic hair roller thing that snapped in on the ends kind of like spaceships.... er...or something like that

  • Jean09
    Jean09 Member Posts: 126
    edited November 2009

    Captain Kangaroo, Uncle Al, Dawn Doll, Little People, The Osmonds, Partridge Family, Gilligans Island.......

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited November 2009

      Hmmm, am trying to remember those...spoolies, huh?  I used the foam ones that had a plactic tube going thru them and snapped on the ends and I used this pink plastic ones that had another piece of plastic that snapped on top of them and then there were the hot rollers.  I was never able to keep curl in my hair for long...Poker straight.  Speaking of curls......where are these curls everyone told me I was going to have once my hair started coming back?.  I have plenty of hair coming in and it is thick, but there is not one bit of curl to it. 

    I liked the Donna Reed Show and Father Knows Best and Leave it to Beaver.   I used to have this huge crush on Clint McCullough on Wagon Train and also Rowdy Yates in Rawhide.  Was that where Clint got his start at being a cowboy?  I also liked The Flying Nun.  Sally Field has held up  very well. 

  • JanetT52
    JanetT52 Member Posts: 7
    edited November 2009

    Boy does this bring back memories.  Had a small grocery store on the way to/from school (which we all walked to in those days) and our parents would give us a dime or a nickel once in awhile so we could get penny candy on our way home.  We were so excited about that.

    Remember getting your first transitor radio?  You were lucky to get any stations on some of them!

    Gunsmoke, Howdy Dowdy, American Bandstand, Paladin, Rawhide, Donna Reed Show, Gale Storm, and Mickey Mouse Club.  Loved them all.

  • Ivylane
    Ivylane Member Posts: 544
    edited November 2011
  • diana50
    diana50 Member Posts: 2,134
    edited November 2011

    25 cents to go to a movie if you were under 12, 50 cents if you were older.

  • Ivylane
    Ivylane Member Posts: 544
    edited November 2011

    How about GLASS bottles of Coke (the soft drink...sad that I even need to clarify) that you could get in the soda machines for 10 cents.  To this day, nothing tastes better to me than that. Unfortunately, to buy a six-pack of Coke in glass bottles you need to take out a mortgage...lol

  • MLP
    MLP Member Posts: 59
    edited May 2012

    What a great topic! It brings back very fond memories. I used to love Mighty Mouse. I was always scared to death when the girl got tied to a log and went down the chute to the sawmill. Mighty Mouse saved her just at the last minute before she was sawed in half. Here I come to save the day! 

    Dodge ball. Do parents allow that anymore? Opening windows in school with those poles that swung them open.

    Candy cigarettes.

    Air raid drills in school.

    The Lone Ranger. My Friend Flicka. Sugarfoot. Art Linkletter. Arthur Godfrey.

  • topless
    topless Member Posts: 74
    edited July 2012

    This morning on my walk my i pod shuffel played "Hey Jude" and I immediately flashed to listening to this song while driving myself to a waitressing job and trying to count all the "Na Na Na NAnana's" there were.  I was about 20 and I was driving a beige 1968 cadilac with huge fins that cost me all of $100.00.  When I started nursing school in 1971 I had to drive to Kalamazoo from Battle Creek for one of my Psych. classes.  About 1/2 way there that car would seize up and I would have to "burp" the gas tank to get it going again.  It always worked! 

    It's funny how a song can send you back in time for a few seconds.  

  • Lezza13
    Lezza13 Member Posts: 957
    edited August 2012

    I like this topic!

    Penny candy at a corner store

    Boittled milk delivered to my apartment

     A bread truck delivery

    Mickey Mouse club, Mister Ed

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