The "Good Ol' Days"—Then versus Now

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Jeff and Cheesewonton, have you considered being or are you docents?

I'd ask you, too, Jimmy, but I know your hands are full at this time.
Actually, I guess I AM a docent, although I never thought of there being a title for what I do, other than volunteer. I have been volunteering at the Main Street Free Press Museum in Fredericktown, Ohio for 25 years now. This is the building and equipment that used to be the Knox County Citizen. We have an open house during the Fredericktown Tomato Show, which happens the week following Labor Day each year, and I print cards that we hand out to visitors on an old hand fed, foot powered platen letterpress, while explaining the letterpress process to them. Also, during the rest of the year, I go down there from time to time for a workday, either working on equipment or doing general work to make the place more presentable. They say a picture is worth a thousand words, so here's a picture of me running the press.
And by the way Paul, thank you for the compliment about my double major in college. But it wasn't really that hard to do. After I had been at college for about a year, I was looking at the course catalog when it was time to select classes for the next quarter and realized that the classes for the Business Admin. major and Higher Accounting major were mostly the same, except for just a few that each major had that the other one didn't. I figured that with so much overlap, I could have both majors with just a couple more quarters' work than what it would take for either one, so I went for it and got both associate degrees. Unfortunately, I was never able to make a career out of it, but that's OK--about 2 years after I graduated, I got back into the Printing Industry, which WAS my career for most of my working years.
Jeff
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I forgot to mention that old Plymouth had manual steering and manual brakes. No power assisted anything. The steering took around 12 turns lock to lock and required real arm strength to park it.
 
I forgot to mention that old Plymouth had manual steering and manual brakes. No power assisted anything. The steering took around 12 turns lock to lock and required real arm strength to park it.
This is also why having a huge steering wheel mattered a lot and was more than just bling bling for most cars, it was a selling point.

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