The "Good Ol' Days"—Then versus Now

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paul

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Here is a revealing tangential discussion that appeared in this archived thread: https://vacuumland.org/threads/1956-compact-model-c-4-owners-manual.3896/

The tendency to speak of the "good ol' days" as though past times were better in every way is unrealistic as the conversation recounts. While yesteryears had their good points, so do the 2020s if we consider our "haves" instead of our "have nots".

Do you have anything to add about "Then"?

Danemodsandy: We're all rather spoiled today; power nozzles get up everything pretty easily, even pet hair. In the old days, you had to work at it a little harder, and features like the concentrator really did help.
Normvac:
Vacuuming with a suction carpet tool !

You are correct about having to work harder with a stright suction cannister or tank in the "old" days. I can remember
every one had half warn out, short pile wool rugs. It would be so hard to make make the suction nozzles work. I remember
vacuuming a whole rug with the lux nozzle flipped over on the
top. As the poor ole rug was almost threat bear. I also remember housewives using the floor brush. So the cleaner would get the rug cleaner. Now talk about WORK, I have done
that a few times in my life. I have also seen people using
the upholstery tool to cleaner carpet as it would concentrate
more suction to get the job done.

Norm: One thought I forgot about, was my former mother in law had a 1953/4 Revelation. I help clean one time, asked where the carpet tool was for the living room carpeting (501 Nylon, at the time) They had NO idea where to look, as they had not used it since the carpet was a few months old. The brush in the carpet nozzle and the hard floor brushes were almost totally gone!

Danemodsandy: Ah, someone else who remembers the '50s and '60s accurately! People who watch "Mad Men" or old Rat Pack movies have no idea what it was really like to live in that world. People didn't have nearly as much as they have today. Air conditioning was a luxury; many people experienced it only when they went to the movies or a restaurant. Of those who had it at home, many had it only in the bedroom, to promote better sleep.

The lack of A/C meant that most people lived with their windows wide open in summer. That brought in dust and grit galore, which helped to wear out fabrics and rugs with appalling rapidity. Using window fans for cooling only accelerated the rate at which schmutz came into the house. The smoking habits of the era (anytime, anywhere, as much as you pleased) contributed nicotine stains. The paint colours of the time- usually greyed-down blues and tans instead of clear, bright colours- were designed to hide the ravages of smoking. Upholstery fabrics were generally dark, to hide soiling.

In spite of the cheery, "can-do" tone of magazine advertising of the period, some tasks were nearly impossible to accomplish. One of the biggies was upholstery cleaning. Most methods were based on laying down detergent foam, letting it dry, and vacuuming up the residue, which- it was hoped- would contain the dirt. It was only somewhat effective, and detergent left in the fabric attracted more dirt.

Cleaning an oven was a task so dreadful, it really could be used in Hell as an eternal punishment for particularly grievous sins. You had a glass jar of Easy-Off with a little brush clipped to its cap; the brush was maybe three-quarters of an inch wide. Painting the oven cleaner evenly onto the entire inner surface of an oven took forever.

People today don't understand how hard it was to do things like washing dishes in summer heat. You'd have been hot all day, you were tired from it, and here you were, facing an hour over a hot, steamy dishpan.

It really was difficult to keep a house truly clean, if you were in a major city. Not until the later '60s, when central air became a possibility for more people, did you begin to see life take the form we know today. With air, you could have light-coloured paint and carpeting. You could pick white-and-gold damask for the living room sofa, and know that it would survive for a while.

Don't get me started about '50s cars. For all that glamour and all those tailfins, those cars were old at 75,000 miles, all but worn out, because they were so cheaply built, and because oil and gasoline were so poorly refined by today's standards.

A different time.
Camelotshadow:
I remember trying to sleep in the heat of NY in the summer
I remember the old black antique fan I had
blowing in my eyes all restless night
I remember waking up tired & bloodshot
LOL

We had no AC for a long time
Think first one we got was my grandparents old 50's be clunker.
It was in the LR window were we all hovered with sheets on the kitchen & hallway doorways to try to keep one 12 X 18 room cool.

OOOh the kitchen
Yep washing dishes after cooling in 90 plus
My mom bbq' almost every night & we ate out back under the huge pear tree we had.

That was great!
but not everyone in those days lived in a house
there were the apt dwellars

That was worse.

Having AC wasn't the only probelm in our house
Even if we wanted AC's in a few windows
there was the electrical problem as the house was over 100 years old & I think still only 15 Amp
These days thats a hairdryer

LOL

But that was life for us even in the 70's & we had to live with it...
 
Btw, I understand that some individuals, groups, and countries lack some modern conveniences or appliances by situation rather than by choice; so this is not meant to turn a blind eye or otherwise be insensitive to them at all.
 
I'm just old enough to remember cars that had no ac, the "defroster" was an old towel stuffed under the front bench seat, the transmission three on the tree ( a three speed manual with a column shift ), umbrella handle parking brakes, high beam buttons on the floor next to the clutch ( oooh, remember those ? ), windshield washers operated by another button on the floor that you pumped to squirt water on the windshield, wing vent windows, AM only tube radios that took a minute or two to warm up with a single speaker mounted in the center of the steel dash board, no seat belts, drum brakes that were scary in any kind of rain, skinny bias ply tube tires that would get caught in the street car and rail road tracks that ran down the center of many city streets, and dodgy six volt electrics that didn't like wet weather.

I remember having to remove the tubes from the back of the TV periodically ( don't forget to discharge the big capacitor in the back ! ), put the tubes in a shoe box and drive over to the grocery store or drug store to test them and buy replacements for any that were defective. And those TVs ! Only 13 VHF channels that required one to walk over to the TV and turn a knob to change channels. Los Angeles had nine TV stations. That was it and they all went off the air between 11:00pm and midnight typically by playing the national anthem while showing a big American flag blowing in the breeze. After that all you had to look at was a test pattern ( what's that ? ) until 6:00 am. And every time you changed channels you had to get up and mess with the rabbit ear antennas to bring the signal in better ( unless you had a nice roof top antenna connected to the TV by a long pair of wires or coaxial cable ) and you had to adjust vertical hold, horizontal hold, contrast and brightness frequently as they would wander off over time and the picture would start scrolling from top to bottom or from one side to the other. TV was black and white too. Watch an old episode of Bonanza or Addams Family to see what that looked like.

And then there were people smoking in the supermarket, even the butcher and shelf stockers, stomping their butts out on the floor of the store. Gross. Parents would smack their kids in the store, some dads even pulled their belt off the hit their kids. Restaurants were gas chambers from everyone smoking up a storm as they ate. People smoked on airplanes too. You never see this on modern airplanes but older ones all had little ashtrays in the armrest.

No computers, no hand held caculators. If you were into math, science or engineering you became expert using a slide rule and the pros would also use a big Monroe mechanical calculator. But if you needed to do any geometry or trig you needed books of tables to look up sine, cosines, tangents and such as well as tables of logs and exponents. Now a $5 calculator does all this.

Consider when I grew up ( late 1950s ) peanut butter was not homogenized. You had to stir it every time you opened it. Milk came in bottles delivered by a milkman, and you left the empties on the porch so he could take them back to be washed, sterilized and re-used. Milk wasn't homogenized either so the cream floated to the top. You had to shake the bottle up before using it. My mom and I would walk down the street to the Italian market, pick out a live chicken and have the butcher kill it, pluck it and dress it for us. All this stuff that was every day for us but unknown now though you can still buy live chickens that way in parts of LA.

Oh yeah, you had to buy your own steel trash cans back then and I vividly remember how spun up my dad would get with the city trash collectors. They would dent the daylights out of the cans heaving them into the back of the truck ( one or two guys stood on little platforms at the back of the truck holding a hand hold and they would jump off at each house to dump the cans in back ). Soon enough the city would put a sticker on the can telling us the can was too beat up, replace it. As if it was our fault the trash can was beat to heck !
 
Last edited:
Different times. In NZ we still have unhomogenised peanut butter.
You can buy it here too but it is more of a specialty item that cost more. Most peanut butter here is homogenized. Back then no peanut butter was homogenized. A lot of stores had machines that ground up roasted peanuts into peanut butter and filled a jar for you. Not the most sanitary thing O_O
 
I forgot to mention a few more things about old cars from that era. There were no viton oil seals back then. Oil seals were made of leather and leaked copious amounts of oil wherever you parked. You had to top the oil up all the time too as it leaked out pretty fast. Cars also had these springy rods sticking out from behind the wheel arch called a curb feeler. These were for parking the car so you didn't scrap the hub caps and rocker panels on the curb. Oh yeah, hub caps were big stainless steel things that were surprisingly heavy and could pop off a front wheel during brisk cornering. If one hit something like another car they could do some damage ! Don't ask me how I know. I had to fetch one out of a neighbor's front yard. Ooops. And cars leaned a lot when going around even a mild corner. On our old 1954 Plymouth it was not unusual for the curb feelers to drag when making a brisk left turn, say to beat the yellow left turn light.
 
I'm just old enough to remember cars that had no ac, the "defroster" was an old towel stuffed under the front bench seat, the transmission three on the tree ( a three speed manual with a column shift ), umbrella handle parking brakes, high beam buttons on the floor next to the clutch ( oooh, remember those ? ), windshield washers operated by another button on the floor that you pumped to squirt water on the windshield, wing vent windows, AM only tube radios that took a minute or two to warm up with a single speaker mounted in the center of the steel dash board, no seat belts, drum brakes that were scary in any kind of rain, skinny bias ply tube tires that would get caught in the street car and rail road tracks that ran down the center of many city streets, and dodgy six volt electrics that didn't like wet weather.

I remember having to remove the tubes from the back of the TV periodically ( don't forget to discharge the big capacitor in the back ! ), put the tubes in a shoe box and drive over to the grocery store or drug store to test them and buy replacements for any that were defective. And those TVs ! Only 13 VHF channels that required one to walk over to the TV and turn a knob to change channels. Los Angeles had nine TV stations. That was it and they all went off the air between 11:00pm and midnight typically by playing the national anthem while showing a big American flag blowing in the breeze. After that all you had to look at was a test pattern ( what's that ? ) until 6:00 am. And every time you changed channels you had to get up and mess with the rabbit ear antennas to bring the signal in better ( unless you had a nice roof top antenna connected to the TV by a long pair of wires or coaxial cable ) and you had to adjust vertical hold, horizontal hold, contrast and brightness frequently as they would wander off over time and the picture would start scrolling from top to bottom or from one side to the other. TV was black and white too. Watch an old episode of Bonanza or Addams Family to see what that looked like.

And then there were people smoking in the supermarket, even the butcher and shelf stockers, stomping their butts out on the floor of the store. Gross. Parents would smack their kids in the store, some dads even pulled their belt off the hit their kids. Restaurants were gas chambers from everyone smoking up a storm as they ate. People smoked on airplanes too. You never see this on modern airplanes but older ones all had little ashtrays in the armrest.

No computers, no hand held caculators. If you were into math, science or engineering you became expert using a slide rule and the pros would also use a big Monroe mechanical calculator. But if you needed to do any geometry or trig you needed books of tables to look up sine, cosines, tangents and such as well as tables of logs and exponents. Now a $5 calculator does all this.

Consider when I grew up ( late 1950s ) peanut butter was not homogenized. You had to stir it every time you opened it. Milk came in bottles delivered by a milkman, and you left the empties on the porch so he could take them back to be washed, sterilized and re-used. Milk wasn't homogenized either so the cream floated to the top. You had to shake the bottle up before using it. My mom and I would walk down the street to the Italian market, pick out a live chicken and have the butcher kill it, pluck it and dress it for us. All this stuff that was every day for us but unknown now though you can still buy live chickens that way in parts of LA.

Oh yeah, you had to buy your own steel trash cans back then and I vividly remember how spun up my dad would get with the city trash collectors. They would dent the daylights out of the cans heaving them into the back of the truck ( one or two guys stood on little platforms at the back of the truck holding a hand hold and they would jump off at each house to dump the cans in back ). Soon enough the city would put a sticker on the can telling us the can was too beat up, replace it. As if it was our fault the trash can was beat to heck !
I think you may be a little older than me but not by much, as I have many of the same memories. Vent wing windows, 3 on the tree, and the floor mounted dimmer switch are a couple things I actually miss! My first car was a 60 Ford Falcon with 6 cylinder, 3 on the tree, and hand choke. Parking brake was a rod with a T-handle under the left side of the dash. One thing it had that I didn't like was vacuum wipers--the faster you drove, the slower the wipers went.
I remember antenna TV too, but we always had rooftop antennas, never rabbit ears, and we also had a tenna-rotor. I remember the midnight sign-off with the National Anthem and the test pattern, and the broadcast day started at 6:00 AM the same way. We got our first remote controlled TV when I was 4 years old, a Magnavox with a somewhat primitive remote system. The tuner on the TV had a motor on it and there was a cord that ran from the TV to the remote, which was as big as a kid's hand, with a knob on the end of it. You turned the knob to turn the volume up or down, and pushed the knob in to change channels and held it until you reached the channel you wanted. If you went past it, you had to run it all the way around until you got back to it. I was probably about 12 when we first got cable, and a sophomore in high school when we got our first color TV.
I also remember smoking being everywhere, and parents disciplining their kids in public. Fortunately I was never a victim of that--if I got out of line, all it took was for Mom or Dad to ask if I wanted to get spanked "in front of all these people" and I straightened up real quick! As for computers and calculators, we didn't have them, but when we didn't need them when we were kids either! Never learned the slide rule, never had a calculator until I started college, and never had a computer until about 25 years ago!
I don't remember milk that wasn't homogenized, but I do remember it being home delivered, as well as bread. We got our milk from Isaly's and bread from Omar. I also remember fresh vegetables being sold door to door. We had our own garbage cans too, but apparently our hauler was more careful than yours, as I don't remember our cans getting beat up.
And when we were kids, we went out and played all day during the summer with our friends and didn't have our noses in a phone all day!
Jeff
 
If you ever wondered what the CR stands for in the brand name CR Oil Seals it means Chicago Rawhide. Back in the day Chicago was a major meat packing center and thus there was an abundance of leather available for making industrial and automotive oil seals.
 
I think you may be a little older than me but not by much, as I have many of the same memories. Vent wing windows, 3 on the tree, and the floor mounted dimmer switch are a couple things I actually miss! My first car was a 60 Ford Falcon with 6 cylinder, 3 on the tree, and hand choke. Parking brake was a rod with a T-handle under the left side of the dash. One thing it had that I didn't like was vacuum wipers--the faster you drove, the slower the wipers went.
I remember antenna TV too, but we always had rooftop antennas, never rabbit ears, and we also had a tenna-rotor. I remember the midnight sign-off with the National Anthem and the test pattern, and the broadcast day started at 6:00 AM the same way. We got our first remote controlled TV when I was 4 years old, a Magnavox with a somewhat primitive remote system. The tuner on the TV had a motor on it and there was a cord that ran from the TV to the remote, which was as big as a kid's hand, with a knob on the end of it. You turned the knob to turn the volume up or down, and pushed the knob in to change channels and held it until you reached the channel you wanted. If you went past it, you had to run it all the way around until you got back to it. I was probably about 12 when we first got cable, and a sophomore in high school when we got our first color TV.
I also remember smoking being everywhere, and parents disciplining their kids in public. Fortunately I was never a victim of that--if I got out of line, all it took was for Mom or Dad to ask if I wanted to get spanked "in front of all these people" and I straightened up real quick! As for computers and calculators, we didn't have them, but when we didn't need them when we were kids either! Never learned the slide rule, never had a calculator until I started college, and never had a computer until about 25 years ago!
I don't remember milk that wasn't homogenized, but I do remember it being home delivered, as well as bread. We got our milk from Isaly's and bread from Omar. I also remember fresh vegetables being sold door to door. We had our own garbage cans too, but apparently our hauler was more careful than yours, as I don't remember our cans getting beat up.
And when we were kids, we went out and played all day during the summer with our friends and didn't have our noses in a phone all day!
Jeff
Oh man, I had forgotten about the Helms Bakery truck coming down our street every afternoon. It was a big Chevy Suburban cargo wagon thing. The driver would open the doors in back and you were presented with big beautiful polished wooden drawers that slid out almost silently to reveal wonderful smelling baked goods. They were an LA institution well into the 1970s.

My grandparents had a TV remote that used radio. It had a chunky square button to turn the TV on or off and two more square buttons, one for changing the channel up and the other to change the channel down. There was a very noisy motor in the TV that turned the channel dial in response to commands from the remote. That was high tech for the day.

Our letter carriers drove down the sidewalks in these Cushman three wheeler with a cargo box on the back and it had a little drivers compartment with vinyl doors and a windshield. Street licensed too.

We were using slide rules by high school. Required to pass some of our classes in physics, chemistry, trig and calculus, the last of which I flunked miserably ( later on I mastered it and went on to earn an MA in Economics ). My dad had one of the very first electronic calculators for his work as a land surveyor. It was an HP25 that cost $450 back then. Absolute bleeding edge tech for 1974. Let him retire the old Monroe mechanical calculator. Now a $5 calculator from Wally World could do everything that old HP did. But later on as a pilot in the Navy we had master the "Whiz Wheel", basically a circular slide rule for making various wind and course calculations. Now pilots do this with hand held calculators or the flight director in aircraft does it.
 
Oh man, I had forgotten about the Helms Bakery truck coming down our street every afternoon. It was a big Chevy Suburban cargo wagon thing. The driver would open the doors in back and you were presented with big beautiful polished wooden drawers that slid out almost silently to reveal wonderful smelling baked goods. They were an LA institution well into the 1970s.

My grandparents had a TV remote that used radio. It had a chunky square button to turn the TV on or off and two more square buttons, one for changing the channel up and the other to change the channel down. There was a very noisy motor in the TV that turned the channel dial in response to commands from the remote. That was high tech for the day.

Our letter carriers drove down the sidewalks in these Cushman three wheeler with a cargo box on the back and it had a little drivers compartment with vinyl doors and a windshield. Street licensed too.

We were using slide rules by high school. Required to pass some of our classes in physics, chemistry, trig and calculus, the last of which I flunked miserably ( later on I mastered it and went on to earn an MA in Economics ). My dad had one of the very first electronic calculators for his work as a land surveyor. It was an HP25 that cost $450 back then. Absolute bleeding edge tech for 1974. Let him retire the old Monroe mechanical calculator. Now a $5 calculator from Wally World could do everything that old HP did. But later on as a pilot in the Navy we had master the "Whiz Wheel", basically a circular slide rule for making various wind and course calculations. Now pilots do this with hand held calculators or the flight director in aircraft does it.
The truck the Omar breadman drove was similar to the milkman's truck, except without refrigeration. Think the brand of the truck was Todco, or something like that. If I remember right, it was yellow & white with Omar in big red letters. He had a 2-tiered rack that he brought in the house with bread, rolls, and other delicious baked goods on it. I especially loved their iced cinnamon rolls!
The TV & remote your grandparents had sounds like an early version of Zenith's Space Command system. It had buttons for channel up, channel down, volume up, and volume down, and on/off. And yes, the motor on the tuner of my parents' Magnavox was quite noisy too!
I remember our mail carriers driving their OWN cars while delivering the mail well into the 70's. But the police department had a fleet of 3-wheel Harleys for many years, probably also into the early 70's.
I never had physics, chemistry, trig, or calculus in high school, but I did take geometry in my sophomore year and had some algebra in jr. high. When I went to college it was later in life (I was 25) when it looked like it was time for a career change. It was the early 80's, no one was hiring and plants were closing down, victims of corporate takeovers. Ended up double majoring and earned associate degrees in Business and Accounting. Everything was taught the old-fashioned manual way. Computers were somewhat new at the time, and the only class we had related to them was Introduction to Data Processing.
Jeff
 
"-Monroe mechanical calculator-"--The factory building in Bristol VA that Electrolux moved to about 1970 was built for Monroe about 1949.Electrolux added additions and modernized over the following years.
"-cars-"--Who remembers driving your car with clutch,vent windows,AM radio,etc for gas and having someone pump the gas(about 30 to 50 cents a gallon! before mid 70s),clean your windshield and check the oil & tires?
 
I'm just old enough to remember cars that had no ac, the "defroster" was an old towel stuffed under the front bench seat, the transmission three on the tree ( a three speed manual with a column shift ), umbrella handle parking brakes, high beam buttons on the floor next to the clutch ( oooh, remember those ? ), windshield washers operated by another button on the floor that you pumped to squirt water on the windshield, wing vent windows, AM only tube radios that took a minute or two to warm up with a single speaker mounted in the center of the steel dash board, no seat belts, drum brakes that were scary in any kind of rain, skinny bias ply tube tires that would get caught in the street car and rail road tracks that ran down the center of many city streets, and dodgy six volt electrics that didn't like wet weather.

I remember having to remove the tubes from the back of the TV periodically ( don't forget to discharge the big capacitor in the back ! ), put the tubes in a shoe box and drive over to the grocery store or drug store to test them and buy replacements for any that were defective. And those TVs ! Only 13 VHF channels that required one to walk over to the TV and turn a knob to change channels. Los Angeles had nine TV stations. That was it and they all went off the air between 11:00pm and midnight typically by playing the national anthem while showing a big American flag blowing in the breeze. After that all you had to look at was a test pattern ( what's that ? ) until 6:00 am. And every time you changed channels you had to get up and mess with the rabbit ear antennas to bring the signal in better ( unless you had a nice roof top antenna connected to the TV by a long pair of wires or coaxial cable ) and you had to adjust vertical hold, horizontal hold, contrast and brightness frequently as they would wander off over time and the picture would start scrolling from top to bottom or from one side to the other. TV was black and white too. Watch an old episode of Bonanza or Addams Family to see what that looked like.

And then there were people smoking in the supermarket, even the butcher and shelf stockers, stomping their butts out on the floor of the store. Gross. Parents would smack their kids in the store, some dads even pulled their belt off the hit their kids. Restaurants were gas chambers from everyone smoking up a storm as they ate. People smoked on airplanes too. You never see this on modern airplanes but older ones all had little ashtrays in the armrest.

No computers, no hand held caculators. If you were into math, science or engineering you became expert using a slide rule and the pros would also use a big Monroe mechanical calculator. But if you needed to do any geometry or trig you needed books of tables to look up sine, cosines, tangents and such as well as tables of logs and exponents. Now a $5 calculator does all this.

Consider when I grew up ( late 1950s ) peanut butter was not homogenized. You had to stir it every time you opened it. Milk came in bottles delivered by a milkman, and you left the empties on the porch so he could take them back to be washed, sterilized and re-used. Milk wasn't homogenized either so the cream floated to the top. You had to shake the bottle up before using it. My mom and I would walk down the street to the Italian market, pick out a live chicken and have the butcher kill it, pluck it and dress it for us. All this stuff that was every day for us but unknown now though you can still buy live chickens that way in parts of LA.

Oh yeah, you had to buy your own steel trash cans back then and I vividly remember how spun up my dad would get with the city trash collectors. They would dent the daylights out of the cans heaving them into the back of the truck ( one or two guys stood on little platforms at the back of the truck holding a hand hold and they would jump off at each house to dump the cans in back ). Soon enough the city would put a sticker on the can telling us the can was too beat up, replace it. As if it was our fault the trash can was beat to heck !
Very interesting—thanks for opening the window to the past even further. Regarding the trash cans, I am thinking that either the trash was unbagged or in paper bags (no plastic bags then, correct?) that made emptying them more labor-intensive. My family recalled that some had to take their trash to the city dump as curbside pickup was unavailable. As for stirring the peanut butter, the organic type I purchase at ALDI requires that, too. And about the smoking—even though it's now more publicly-restricted than yesteryear the large amount of people doing so is apparent looking at street gutters, parking lots. et cetera littered with butts.
 
"-Monroe mechanical calculator-"--The factory building in Bristol VA that Electrolux moved to about 1970 was built for Monroe about 1949.Electrolux added additions and modernized over the following years.
"-cars-"--Who remembers driving your car with clutch,vent windows,AM radio,etc for gas and having someone pump the gas(about 30 to 50 cents a gallon! before mid 70s),clean your windshield and check the oil & tires?
Yeah, I only discovered that Electrolux Corporation's Bristol factory was purchased rather than built in 1970. I had never heard of Monroe Calculators before.

I recall my parents' '66 Mercury Monterey, my aunt & uncle's '65 Dodge Coronet and my oldest sister's '75 VW Beetle having vent windows. I think our '72 Mercury Montego station wagon had an AM/FM radio, but the others only had AM. And, I do recall full-service stations doing the services you mentioned.
 
The truck the Omar breadman drove was similar to the milkman's truck, except without refrigeration. Think the brand of the truck was Todco, or something like that. If I remember right, it was yellow & white with Omar in big red letters. He had a 2-tiered rack that he brought in the house with bread, rolls, and other delicious baked goods on it. I especially loved their iced cinnamon rolls!
The TV & remote your grandparents had sounds like an early version of Zenith's Space Command system. It had buttons for channel up, channel down, volume up, and volume down, and on/off. And yes, the motor on the tuner of my parents' Magnavox was quite noisy too!
I remember our mail carriers driving their OWN cars while delivering the mail well into the 70's. But the police department had a fleet of 3-wheel Harleys for many years, probably also into the early 70's.
I never had physics, chemistry, trig, or calculus in high school, but I did take geometry in my sophomore year and had some algebra in jr. high. When I went to college it was later in life (I was 25) when it looked like it was time for a career change. It was the early 80's, no one was hiring and plants were closing down, victims of corporate takeovers. Ended up double majoring and earned associate degrees in Business and Accounting. Everything was taught the old-fashioned manual way. Computers were somewhat new at the time, and the only class we had related to them was Introduction to Data Processing.
Jeff
I am impressed by your double major—way to go! That took you a lot of money, time, and work.

A few things came to mind as I read about your memories of times past: my relatives' milkman, who would occasionally be invited to stay for morning coffee; some of the milkman's product containers that could be used for drinking cups when emptied, an old TV we had in our basement family room when I was very young that had tubes which took awhile to warm up before the screen came on, and TV antennas on houses around the neighborhood; although we never had one.
 

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