SCOUTER Interactive - Your Guide to Scout Out the Net! SCOUTER Magazine and Network
SCOUTER  |  NetCompass  |  NetRoster  |  Forums  |  ClipArt  |  Headlines  |  Auctions  

You are 1 of 974 Active Users

 Locator >
SCOUTER : archives : scouts-l : August 1999 : Post
Menu > Email this page to a friend Send page to friend
 

Check out the new SCOUTER Discussion Forums and Post Your Questions Now!

Re: Are You Old Enough To Remember?

Ian N Ford (ian@FORD.DIRCON.CO.UK)
Sat, 21 Aug 1999 01:57:27 +0100


----- Original Message -----
From: Charles W. Pourciau <pourciau@EARTHLINK.NET>
To: <SCOUTS-L@LISTSERV.TCU.EDU>
Sent: Friday, August 20, 1999 6:32 PM
Subject: Are You Old Enough To Remember?

> Are You Old Enough To Remember?

> ..all soft drinks came in bottles and you could get a deposit back.

Bob a Job - taking the lemonade bottles back and getting three old pennies
for each one.
Using the buckle on my Scout belt to open Coca Cola bottles ...

> ..cars had no air conditioning.

Here most of 'em still don't ...

> ..there was "free air" at all service stations.

and a guy who pumped the gas ...

> ..there were S&H green stamps.

Green Shield stamps. The Welsh nationalists wrote " Free Wales " on the
motorway
bridges, and somewag added " with every four gallons - or double stamps. "

> ..you could go as a child and buy your dad a pack of cigarettes.

And get change from a ten bob note ( 80 cents)

> ..music was on vinyl records 45 rpm and albums were 78 rpm.

And tapes came on little reels ...

> ..there was one light (red) on top of police cars.

Here they were blue ... and the police cars had bells.

> ..there was only AM radio.

With valves ... and the case was made of Bakelite and had that smell when it
warmed up

> ..everyone took the bus to town.

Most of us still do. Have you ever tried to park in London ? But the buses
had open platforms so the kids
could jump on and off when the conductor was collecting fares ... and the
electric trolley buses with
overhead power cables ...
.
> ..gas was .26 a gal and ethyl was way too high at .30.

My dad complained when petrol went up to three shillings - about 50 cents.
But then
our gallons are 20% bigger than yours ...

> ..Typing Class was noisy.

What typing class ? Do you remember sit up and beg desks with ink wells that
you dipped
a pen into ? We had those in the '60s.

> ..you only had GM, Ford and Chrysler making cars in the US.

Citron 2CV , the Mini and the Volkwagen beetle. And the Reliant three
wheeler ...

> ..most of the change in your pocket was pure silver.

Ours went to cupro-nicket in 1947 to pay y'all for World War 2. But the
pennies were
an inch and a quarter in diameter, three weighed an ounce. And the three
penny bits
had twelve sides. Twelve pennies to a shilling and twenty shillings to a
pound. Sure
made arithmetic lessons fun.

> ..football helmets came without face guards.

football meant Bobby Charlton in baggy shorts and the '66 World Cup ...

> ..the Network News was only 15 minutes long.

And there was only the BBC.
.
> ..every house had a tall outside TV antennae.

Every house ?

> ..you could call a Doctor and he came to your house (the same day).

Now a deputising service sends a deputy in a car with a driver who looks
like
a night club bouncer.

> ..Atomic War was a real everyday thought.

Yes, " Protect and Survive " . Whitewash the windows and get in the cupboard
under the stairs.
Or ... in case of nuclear attack - put your head between your legs and kiss
yourself goodbye.

> ..men carried metal lunch boxes to work.

And schoolboys wore caps and carried their books to school in leather
satchels. And we filled our
fountain pens from bottles of ink.

But what about ...

* Being bitten by the baker's horse ?

* The ice cream man coming round on a pedal tricycle ?

* Half-day closing on Thursdays ?

* Pushing button B on the payphones in the hope a few pennies would fall out
?

* Teacher asking to borrow your penknife to sharpen a pencil ?

* Rose hip syrup ?

* Steam trains ?

Oh boy ... I MUST be getting old ...

Ian


A few Commercial Links from the SCOUTER NetCompass...


Featured Link Wilderness Dining -- Food and CookwareClick here for more information
Free shipping on freeze dried and dehydrated camping food, utensils, pots, pans and ovens for backcountry cooking. Also offers free recipes and ideas for gourmet backpacking meals.

Featured Link Maine Whitewater Rafting-Scout Specials!Click here for more information
Rafting and Kayaking in Maine - Scout Specials, Camping, Cabins, Meals, Hiking, Biking, Climbing Wall, Team Building and More!

Featured Link # 1 Eagle Scout Gift For Past 5 Years Click here for more information
Over the past five years this gorgeous 8x10 framed print, with inset poem - This Uniformed Little Boy - has become the number one gift presented at Eagle Courts of Honor.

Featured Link Whitewater Rafting and Merit BadgeClick here for more information
West Vrginia Whitewater Rafting, Climbing, Horseback Riding, Fishing and Mountain Biking with Appalachian Wildwaters. We offer camping, lodging, food, a pool and a hot tub to relax in after a day of adventure.

Featured Link Corn maze, Pumpkin Patch & Country FunClick here for more information
Get lost...in over 20 acres of cornfield mazes including a Haunted Maze at Dewberry Farm! Shoot the incredible Corn Cannon, take a hayride to the pumpkin patch, or have a campout around a campfire.

Featured Link Moxie Rafting Maine & MassachusettsClick here for more information
Daily whitewater rafting and river trips in New England.

Featured Link Rafting & Camping on the Colorado RiverClick here for more information
Receive a FREE night of camping when you whitewater raft on the Colorado River through Glenwood Canyon.

Add your link to SCOUTER NetCompass





Join SCOUTER.com

Join SCOUTER.com and participate in the Discussion Forums & receive our email newsletters. First, please enter your e-mail address. We'll see if we have you in our records (must be complete and valid e-mail address to complete registration):

E-mail address

Postal/ZipCode


Site Members Login


SCOUTER Forums

Share your questions, answers and ideas in the SCOUTER Forums!


FREE Web Hosting from SCOUTER!
SCOUTER.com provides free web hosting to more than 2,000 Scout units!

What's become of SCOUTER Magazine, the print publication?

Buy the Back Issues

NetCompass
Categories

Advancement
Calendar
Campfires
Discussion Lists
Graphics and Clipart
Leaders Resource
Medical Issues Library
Meeting Activities
Scout Skills
Scouting History
Scouting Organizations
Service To America
Training
Where To Go
Youth Protection

Sponsors

Site Dedication

SCOUTER celebrates the life of William Hillcourt... Scoutmaster to the World and the founding inspiration for the grassoots resources we share.

© 1994-2005 SCOUTER.com. All rights reserved.

SCOUTER is an independent publication and has been the primary Scouting portal on the web since 1994.
It is not officially affiliated with the Boy Scouts of America, the Girl Scouts of the USA or the World Organization of Scout Movements.
Web Developer/SaaS Hosting by FastRoot, Chicago - Terry Howerton

spacer.gif (57 bytes)