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NFT: 8 reasons kids of the '70s should be dead

Greg from LI : 3/27/2015 10:07 am
Come for the laughs about pre-pussification of America childhoods, stay for the smokeshow mommy in item #5!
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RE: There's a simple way to understand this  
pjcas18 : 3/27/2015 10:58 am : link
In comment 12206170 Greg from LI said:
Quote:
Do you ever see children younger than 13 or so playing on the streets of your neighborhood without an adult in sight? Highly unlikely. It was ubiquitous prior to the early '90s. Or as the linked article mentions - how many of us were left alone in a vehicle while mom ran into the store for a few minutes? That will literally get you arrested now.


Quote:
Do you ever see children younger than 13 or so playing on the streets of your neighborhood without an adult in sight?


Every single day in my neighborhood.

My neighbors are always texting my wife to ask if her kids are at my house or if we know where they are. It's a lot like the older days. one of my neighbors whistles for his kids, LOL.

maybe my neighborhood is somewhat of a throwback, because all of us were kids in that era.
RE: Anyone remember the original glas made clackers?  
okiegiant : 3/27/2015 10:59 am : link
In comment 12206153 steve in ky said:
Quote:
I think they outlawed them because some would bust and blinded some kids. Never had one burst but hey certainly busted up your wrists and hands pretty good.



I remember walking across the playground and there were maybe a dozen kids just tearing those things up! It was like trying to get through a gladiator fight.
RE: There's a simple way to understand this  
Britt in VA : 3/27/2015 10:59 am : link
In comment 12206170 Greg from LI said:
Quote:
Do you ever see children younger than 13 or so playing on the streets of your neighborhood without an adult in sight? Highly unlikely. It was ubiquitous prior to the early '90s. Or as the linked article mentions - how many of us were left alone in a vehicle while mom ran into the store for a few minutes? That will literally get you arrested now.


That one about leaving your kids in the car is one that hits home right now.

There are so many times these days when I have my three year old and nine month old in the car, and I just need one simple thing in the gas station that would take thirty seconds, but now I either skip it or go through the whole ordeal of dragging the whole brood in there. I've even seen someone on the news as recently as a month ago getting arrested (!) for doing that same thing.
RE: Love it!! Great post Greg. In the '70s, not only did we not use  
AcidTest : 3/27/2015 11:00 am : link
In comment 12206161 Victor in CT said:
Quote:
helmets on bicycles, we routinely did stunts in the street. ALONE! With no parents! Or parents watching us have fun and enjoying it.

During the Evel Kneival era, we would make a ramp out of cinder blocks and a 2x4 and do jumps in the street. We'd get arrested for allowing our kids to do that today.


We did exactly that as well! And even crazier shit on skateboards.
RE: Not just the 70s  
Britt in VA : 3/27/2015 11:01 am : link
In comment 12206182 RinR said:
Quote:
60s too. To this day I cant believe we all would routinely, without thought pile in my father's car and drive off with no seat belts.

And of course no cell phones. Although my mom did always want me to have a dime on me for the pay phones!


Like I said, pre-interenet/cell phone and post-internet/cell phone all bleed together.

50's, 60's, 70's 80's? All similar.

1995-since? All similar.
RE: RE: There's a simple way to understand this  
jcn56 : 3/27/2015 11:02 am : link
In comment 12206185 pjcas18 said:
Quote:
In comment 12206170 Greg from LI said:


Quote:


Do you ever see children younger than 13 or so playing on the streets of your neighborhood without an adult in sight? Highly unlikely. It was ubiquitous prior to the early '90s. Or as the linked article mentions - how many of us were left alone in a vehicle while mom ran into the store for a few minutes? That will literally get you arrested now.





Quote:


Do you ever see children younger than 13 or so playing on the streets of your neighborhood without an adult in sight?



Every single day in my neighborhood.

My neighbors are always texting my wife to ask if her kids are at my house or if we know where they are. It's a lot like the older days. one of my neighbors whistles for his kids, LOL.

maybe my neighborhood is somewhat of a throwback, because all of us were kids in that era.


It's nice that your neighborhood is like that, I'm glad to hear it. Living here in NYC, you'd think someone came and snatched all the school aged children. Most of their day is structured activities, so you don't see kids playing outside on their own anymore. I'm not sure if it's entirely the safety issue, or just the way things are now with kids going from one activity to another (baseball practice, basketball practice, etc.).
you neighborhood sounds very much like an exception, pj  
Greg from LI : 3/27/2015 11:02 am : link
.
Yep growing up in the 70's and 80's...  
Johnny5 : 3/27/2015 11:03 am : link
...can be pretty much summed up as a million individual neighborhood episodes of Jackass.
born in 74 here, this thread brings back a lot of memories  
mfsd : 3/27/2015 11:03 am : link
me and my neighborhood buddies invented or adopted a millions games to play outside...running bases, suicide, marco polo and sharks and minnows in the pool...hours of whiffle ball, street hockey, touch football that was always much rougher than it sounds.

Usually not an adult anywhere nearby. We rode our bikes all over town. Somehow, we not only survived, but had a blast

And who didn't crack their head or break or bruise themselves up on those metal jungle gyms now and then?
My wife and I make it a point to encourage our children  
steve in ky : 3/27/2015 11:05 am : link
to go outside and play on their own. It is so rare now that we have met people that would say oh you have the children that play outside all the time. Who ever thought that would be something so unique.

RE: Yep growing up in the 70's and 80's...  
AcidTest : 3/27/2015 11:06 am : link
In comment 12206204 Johnny5 said:
Quote:
...can be pretty much summed up as a million individual neighborhood episodes of Jackass.


Yes. We used to traipse all over the place, going into sewers, and to "Booger Island."

Firecrackers were also for the whole summer, not just the fourth of July.
Things I remember and love from that that time....  
Britt in VA : 3/27/2015 11:08 am : link
that don't really exist anymore:

-Drive Ins
-Five and Dimes
-Soda Counters in Drugstores
-Creature Features
-Saturday Morning and Afterschool cartoons (I know cartoons exist today, but Saturday morning and two hours after school were the ONLY time periods then. No 24 hour, round the clock, multiple networks like today).
Aside from the initial ass kickings I recieved  
Sec 103 : 3/27/2015 11:10 am : link
because I couldn't speak english, growing up in Manhattan in the sixties was a blast. Exploring the subway system all over the place, taking the ferry to Stagnant Island and back for free, playing baseball in Sheep's Meadow, or Riverside. Basketball at any playground. Other games such as ringalario, booties up, kick the can, handball, slapball, johnny ride the pony, etc... You were never home, in fact you were never in your own neighbourhood. Stealing apples for the fruit stand and wanting the store owner to chase you... Subway surfing on the 7 line over GCP... So much fun was to be had... Going to Yankee Stadium for doubleheaders for 50 cents and getting a bat, ball or cap... Watching the hippies get stoned and then screw out in the open in Central Park... So many memories...
From 1980-1985  
BIG FRED 1973 : 3/27/2015 11:11 am : link
i flew by myself ever summer to see my grandparents in Florida .Now you never see that
we didn't even play touch football  
Greg from LI : 3/27/2015 11:13 am : link
Well, we did at school during recess, but after school we played tackle. There was a complex of townhouses near my home where a lot of kids from my school lived. On one side of the complex there was a huge grass field, and we'd play these massive games of tackle football, sometimes probably as large as 20 on 20. This was all kids in grades 3-5. Blood was not uncommon by any means. Clothslines were less common but not unheard of.

I can also remember me and my best friend playing one on one football. We'd line up head to head and just ram into each other. And, of course, there was the now-taboo named Smear the Queer, which was just an excuse to pummel each other.
Move out of the suburbs.  
Cam in MO : 3/27/2015 11:13 am : link
Rural areas can still be very much like this.

Honestly all it takes sometime is for one or two parents to let their kids play outside by themselves and others begin to follow suit.

There definitely is a huge difference between then and now, though.

RE: you neighborhood sounds very much like an exception, pj  
pjcas18 : 3/27/2015 11:14 am : link
In comment 12206200 Greg from LI said:
Quote:
.


Sounds like it. We moved two years ago June, and our old neighborhood wasn't like this. There was a house across the street with 4 kids and my kids and their kids (we both had a set of twins in the same grade) would play, but that was it. Kind of like a ghost town.

But it was because the neighborhood turned over, their used to be a lot of kids, but they grew up, got married, moved out and left empty-nesters for the most part.

Now, no exaggeration, there are maybe 30 - 40 houses in this neighborhood, and 90+% have kids all within a few years of each other.

there could be a summer camp out there in the neighborhood.

And the few houses that don't have kids are planning to move within the next couple years (according to the rumor mill).
Britt  
Greg from LI : 3/27/2015 11:14 am : link
Slightly off topic, but when your kids are a little older the Goochland Drive In is a lot of fun.
RE: who got shot in school?  
Diver_Down : 3/27/2015 11:16 am : link
In comment 12206123 Steve in South Jersey said:
Quote:
in the 70s?


Starting off the decade, there was Kent State. Perhpas, you heard of it?
RE: Britt  
Britt in VA : 3/27/2015 11:19 am : link
In comment 12206251 Greg from LI said:
Quote:
Slightly off topic, but when your kids are a little older the Goochland Drive In is a lot of fun.


Already on the list. I'm thinking of trying it out this summer when Alex turns four. That's probably roundabouts my first memories of a drive in, at that age.

That said, I have an adult outdoor Halloween party that I do every year, with a giant screen and surround sound system, that I plan on using for the new "family outdoor movie night" when my kids get a little older, as a family tradition during the summers, like every Friday or Saturday night.

Something about sitting outside at night in the summer air, on a big screen...
RE: RE: who got shot in school?  
Britt in VA : 3/27/2015 11:19 am : link
In comment 12206256 Diver_Down said:
Quote:
In comment 12206123 Steve in South Jersey said:


Quote:


in the 70s?



Starting off the decade, there was Kent State. Perhpas, you heard of it?


C'mon man, Kent State is nothing like Sandy Hook or Columbine.
man I don't know where you all live  
Jon : 3/27/2015 11:20 am : link
but the kids in my neighborhood play outside quite a bit...
Let me put is this way...  
Britt in VA : 3/27/2015 11:22 am : link
My parents probably treated me the same way their parents treated them, and so on and so forth.

Times have changed.

I will never allow, in this day and age, my children to do what I was allowed to do because I legitimately fear for their safety.
Briit, I didn't realize Steve's question came with qualifiers.  
Diver_Down : 3/27/2015 11:24 am : link
It was a simple, "Who got shot in school?". I was pointing out that in the spring of the 1970 that students indeed were killed while attending school. I thought it met the qualification. Apparently, your standard is only young kids getting killed by young kids.
I wouldn't do everything my parents did  
Greg from LI : 3/27/2015 11:25 am : link
I don't have a problem with bike helmets, for example. But I want to give my kids a helluva lot more freedom than is customary today, and, unfortunately, much more than my wife does. She won't even let our son go out to the bus stop by himself in the morning, and it's literally directly across the street from our house. You can see him through the window while sitting on our couch. He's a smart kind - why do we have to treat him like an imbecile?
RE: Briit, I didn't realize Steve's question came with qualifiers.  
Britt in VA : 3/27/2015 11:26 am : link
In comment 12206286 Diver_Down said:
Quote:
It was a simple, "Who got shot in school?". I was pointing out that in the spring of the 1970 that students indeed were killed while attending school. I thought it met the qualification. Apparently, your standard is only young kids getting killed by young kids.


I think it's actually you misinterpreting what Steve meant, since we were referring to our everyday childhood school experiences, not war protests on a college campus with the national guard, but I could be wrong about that.
RE: Let me put is this way...  
pjcas18 : 3/27/2015 11:29 am : link
In comment 12206280 Britt in VA said:
Quote:
My parents probably treated me the same way their parents treated them, and so on and so forth.

Times have changed.

I will never allow, in this day and age, my children to do what I was allowed to do because I legitimately fear for their safety.


Not disagreeing, but I can distinctly remember my grandfather and father waxing nostalgically about how great things were when they were kids and how different they were when I was a kid.

So that was my initial point. Sure things are different now, but I was saying that the older generations said the same about our generation.
I had a cousin who lived next door to my grandparents on Grand St. in  
Victor in CT : 3/27/2015 11:30 am : link
Little Italy. Every summer, from about age 10-14 I would stay there for a week or 2. He and I went everywhere alone. Subway, bus, all parts of town. MSG had a bowling alley back then that we would go to. The Ferry, Museum of Natural History, by ourselves.
RE: Love it!! Great post Greg. In the '70s, not only did we not use  
Reb8thVA : 3/27/2015 11:31 am : link
In comment 12206161 Victor in CT said:
Quote:
helmets on bicycles, we routinely did stunts in the street. ALONE! With no parents! Or parents watching us have fun and enjoying it.

During the Evel Kneival era, we would make a ramp out of cinder blocks and a 2x4 and do jumps in the street. We'd get arrested for allowing our kids to do that today.


Yeah, I remember clearly one summer I was a human scab from wiping out on my bike too many times thinking I was Evil Kenevil
I was born in 1978  
Model4001 : 3/27/2015 11:33 am : link
Playing outside all day in the summer until the streetlights came on and your dad bellowed (seriously you could hear it a mile away) out the back door for you to come home...not only normal, it was EXPECTED of you.

I never would've thought that that world would disappear. I'm just glad I was a part of it while it still existed.
RE: RE: Let me put is this way...  
Britt in VA : 3/27/2015 11:34 am : link
In comment 12206308 pjcas18 said:
Quote:
In comment 12206280 Britt in VA said:


Quote:


My parents probably treated me the same way their parents treated them, and so on and so forth.

Times have changed.

I will never allow, in this day and age, my children to do what I was allowed to do because I legitimately fear for their safety.



Not disagreeing, but I can distinctly remember my grandfather and father waxing nostalgically about how great things were when they were kids and how different they were when I was a kid.

So that was my initial point. Sure things are different now, but I was saying that the older generations said the same about our generation.


Of course... But when you look at the big picture... There weren't as many differences between the 50's and the 80's as there are between the 80's and the 2000's, you know? Yeah, behavior and little things here and there...

But the technology explosion of the 90's I'd compare to the Industrial Revolution. The internet was a major turning point in mankind. It is all encompassing. It changed the way we live completely.
RE: RE: Love it!! Great post Greg. In the '70s, not only did we not use  
Victor in CT : 3/27/2015 11:36 am : link
In comment 12206313 Reb8thVA said:
Quote:
In comment 12206161 Victor in CT said:


Quote:


helmets on bicycles, we routinely did stunts in the street. ALONE! With no parents! Or parents watching us have fun and enjoying it.

During the Evel Kneival era, we would make a ramp out of cinder blocks and a 2x4 and do jumps in the street. We'd get arrested for allowing our kids to do that today.



Yeah, I remember clearly one summer I was a human scab from wiping out on my bike too many times thinking I was Evil Kenevil


I have a slightly chipped front tooth as a souvenir. And my bottom lip healed a little funny on the inside. Ruined my career as a trumpet player before it started. Like Ralph Kramden, I could never hit that high note again.
.  
arcarsenal : 3/27/2015 11:52 am : link
I am 30 and my generation is the last one that is going to remember what life was like before cell phones and the internet. Kind of weird to think about. I grew up calling friends houses if I wanted to get in touch with them, I never had a cell phone in high school and didn't have a computer until like 6th or 7th grade.

I have a younger brother who grew up in a completely different world than I did and we're only 8 years apart.
Don't see that many kids in our neighborhood  
Scyber : 3/27/2015 12:08 pm : link
Our neighborhood still has a number of original owners (from the 80s) so there aren't too many kids. My sons bus stop only has 3 kids (for about 20-25 houses). There are some younger couples that have younger kids so I imagine we will see more soon.

Some of the residents of my town still recall the Megan Kanka murder with tears, so I guess there is some hesitation about free-roaming kids from people that were around during that time.

I'd probably be OK with my oldest son playing outside by himself (he is 7), but not the 5 and 2 year old.
Ahhh....  
Strip-Sack : 3/27/2015 12:11 pm : link
the good old days! I can remember going with my Dad to the bank early on Sat morning so he'd have cash for the weekend and dealing with the long lines. No calculators in School...let alone phones. The old station wagon with the extra pop up seats in the way back. Tang, Space Food Sticks (or whatever they were called, peanut butter rocked). Event TV that you couldn't record...Wizard of Oz every Thanksgiving, various Xmas shows. Early morning TV during the week if you were home "sick" from school...Zoom, New Zoo Review, Rocky & Bullwinkle, Fractured Fairytales....good times!
I remember when I was real little  
steve in ky : 3/27/2015 12:29 pm : link
I used to like to climb up and lie on that small ledge between the back seat and rear window of the car when driving on the highway.
RE: who got shot in school?  
Bill in UT : 3/27/2015 12:31 pm : link
In comment 12206123 Steve in South Jersey said:
Quote:
in the 70s?


1970s[edit]
January 5, 1970: Washington, DC, Tyrone Perry, 15, was shot to death at Hine Junior High School.[178]
May 4, 1970: Kent, Ohio, During protests of the Vietnam War on the college Campus of Kent State University, Armed National Guard Soldiers opened fire on unarmed students killing four people.[179]
May 15, 1970: Jackson, Mississippi, One student was killed and twelve others injured when police open fired on students gathered to protest the military presence in Cambodia
[180]* February 2, 1971: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Teacher Samson L. Freedman, 56, was shot to death as he left Morris E. Leeds School, by Kevin Simmons, 14. Freedman had suspended Simmons earlier in the day for cursing in the hallway.[181]

November 8, 1971: Grove, Oklahoma, School custodian, Jim "James" Underwood brought a .22 caliber revolver to school hidden in a brown paper bag. School principal, T. J. Melton, 49, was shot in the left shoulder, left ear and in the top of his head, according to published reports. He died around 9 a.m. and Underwood was charged the next day with first-degree murder.[182]
November 11, 1971: Spokane, Washington, Former MIT student Larry J. Harmon, 21, entered St. Aloysius Roman Catholic Church on the Gonzaga University campus armed with a .22 caliber rifle. Harmon killed the caretaker, 68-year-old Hilary Kunz, and upon emerging from the church, wounded four more people before police officers shot and killed him. Harmon was described by his father as a religious fanatic who believed that he had seen the devil and that Christ was an imposter.[183]
January 5, 1972: Washington, DC, Fifth-grade teacher Margaret Brooks, 57, was shot to death in front of her students by her estranged husband James A. Brooks.[184]
February 26, 1973: Richmond, Virginia, Wayne Phillips, 17, was shot to death when he was caught between two youths who were fighting in the hallway of Armstrong High School.[185]
October 1, 1973: Elmwood Park, Illinois, Elmwood Park Community High School student Cynthia Schulze was shot and killed in the hallway between classes by student William Rossi, with whom she was probably not acquainted. Rossi then ran out of the school and shot himself to death in an alley nearby.[186]
January 17, 1974: Chicago, Illinois, Elementary school principal Rudolph Jezek, Jr., 52, was shot to death in his office by Steven Guy, 14, a former student said to be angry at being transferred from the school to a social adjustment center.[187]
March 22, 1974: Brownstown, Indiana, Jessie Blevins, 48, athletic director at Brownstown Central High School, was shot to death in the school parking lot by a 17-year-old student.[188]
December 30, 1974: Olean, New York, Regents scholar Anthony Barbaro, 17, armed with a rifle and shotgun, kills three adults and wounds 11 others at his high school, which was closed for the Christmas holiday. Barbaro was reportedly a loner who kept a diary describing several "battle plans" for his attack on the school.[189][190]
February 18, 1975: Marist College, Poughkeepsie, New York, Marist College student Shelley Lynn Sperling was shot and killed by a scorned suitor, Louis o. Acevedo, in the Marist College cafeteria.[191]
March 18, 1975: Sumner High School, St. Louis, Missouri, 16-year-old Stephen Goods, a bystander, is shot and killed during a fight between other teens.[192]
September 11, 1975: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, U.S. Grant High School student Randy Truitt was shot and killed by James Briggs at the school, leaving several others injured.[193]
February 12, 1976: Detroit, Michigan, Intruders shot five Murray-Wright High School students after an apparent dispute over one of the intruders girlfriends.[194]
June 12, 1976: California State University, Custodian Edward Charles Allaway, 37, opened fire with a semi-automatic rifle in the library on the California State University, Fullerton campus killing 7, and wounding 2.[citation needed]
November 10, 1976: Detroit, Michigan, Second grade teacher Bettye McCaster, 45, was shot to death in front of her 29 students at Burt Elementary School, by her estranged husband, Al Lewis.[195]
April 7, 1977: Whitharral, Texas, High School principal M. O. Tripp was shot to death on the front steps of the school by Ricardo Lopez, 17.[196]
February 9, 1978: St. Albans, West Virginia, A 15-year-old student was shot and killed by another student at Hayes Junior High School.[citation needed]
February 22, 1978: Lansing, Michigan, After being taunted for his beliefs, a 15-year-old self-proclaimed Nazi, killed one student and wounded a second with a Luger pistol at Everett High School.[190]
April 26, 1978: Dallas, Texas, Woodrow Porter, 38, who was a janitor at Paul Dunbar Elementary School, was shot to death by the 56-year-old grandmother of an 8-year-old that was allegedly spanked by Porter earlier.[197]
May 18, 1978: Austin, Texas, John Daniel Christian, 13, son of Lyndon B. Johnson's former press secretary George Christian, shot to death his English teacher, Wilbur Grayson, 29, with his father's .22 caliber rifle in front of approximately 30 classmates. John Christian was arrested and charged but was not prosecuted. He spent two years in a mental hospital. He is now a practicing attorney in Austin, Texas.[198]
January 29, 1979: San Diego, California, Brenda Spencer opened fire on Grover Cleveland Elementary School from the window of her home across the street, killing two adults and wounding nine others, eight of whom were children.[199] The shootings inspired the song I Don't Like Mondays.


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Most of the people above...  
Britt in VA : 3/27/2015 12:35 pm : link
that were shot were adults, and there were clear motives behind the shootings.

But whatever, like I said, not a pissing match.
RE: Most of the people above...  
Bill in UT : 3/27/2015 12:49 pm : link
In comment 12206455 Britt in VA said:
Quote:
that were shot were adults, and there were clear motives behind the shootings.

But whatever, like I said, not a pissing match.


I was just answering a question. I don't see why the term "pissing match" would even come up, unless I missed something in another post
What I meant was...  
Britt in VA : 3/27/2015 12:57 pm : link
I didn't want it to turn in to one of those... "Back in my day things were this way" and somebody comes in and argues "nothing's changed, happened the same then as it does now, you're just older"...

Which was kind of starting to happen a little bit here. Pissing match was just a overly strong term I used for it.

My personal opinion is that while there may be a few remaining similarities, the reality of the world we live in now is nothing like the world back then. They are in fact, very, very different. Regardless of one's own nostalgic feelings over their childhood and/or the upcoming generation. And that's okay.

Inevitably, when somebody starts one of these threads, this is the course it tends to head off on, despite not being in the spirit of the op. So anyways, back to the 70's.
Finally got back on my favorite site!  
NYGBlue42 : 3/27/2015 1:30 pm : link
Anyway this 70's topic brings back memories of playing war in the woods ,Being dropped of at Adventure land for the day with out any parent going to Sunrise mall with friends to the movies an game rooms ,White castle ,Playing wiffle ball, Stick ball,Street/RollerHockey I could go on,BUT todays World is a different place,I must admit I don't let my 16 an 9 year olds have the freedom that I had growing up in the 70's to late 80's .Just to many F up people in this world today.One thing i wish we had back then was cell phones ,so at 5' O' clock my parents new where i was.
9th reason  
njm : 3/27/2015 1:32 pm : link
They had to listen to Kiss during their formative years.
RE: who got shot in school?  
SwirlingEddie : 3/27/2015 1:47 pm : link
In comment 12206123 Steve in South Jersey said:
Quote:
in the 70s?


Wikipedia lists 24 school shooting incidents in this country during the 1970s.


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Self-hitting...  
kinard : 3/27/2015 1:50 pm : link
and "half-field" baseball games. You could play for hours with three guys per side.
RE: RE: who got shot in school?  
Victor in CT : 3/27/2015 1:53 pm : link
In comment 12206623 SwirlingEddie said:
Quote:
In comment 12206123 Steve in South Jersey said:


Quote:


in the 70s?



Wikipedia lists 24 school shooting incidents in this country during the 1970s.
Link - ( New Window )


Another great '70s (and '80s)thing was National Lampoon Magazine. Do you remember the "Mass Murderer Trading Cards" that were designed just like TOPPS baseball cards? Probably had most of these shootings
RE: Self-hitting...  
Victor in CT : 3/27/2015 1:54 pm : link
In comment 12206630 kinard said:
Quote:
and "half-field" baseball games. You could play for hours with three guys per side.


Yes. Played all day
.  
Pat from Inside Football : 3/27/2015 2:21 pm : link
When I was growing up I hated sitting in the sun because I'd burn so easily. One of my friends used to bake in the sun and call me Casper because I was so pale.

I bet that friend is wishing they had followed my lead, especially after having several skin cancer scares.

the one thing I do wish I had back as a kid was a safety helmet when I rode my bike. I actually took a nasty spill off my bike once--thankfully I didn't suffer a head injury, but when I think back to how close I came, I was damn lucky to walk away with just some bad scrapes and cuts and nothing more.

Also kids of the 70s actually got outside and played more, getting more exercise. today it's too tempting for kids to sit indoors playing video games all day. So I would think kids of the 70s were in better physical condition back then, but I'm just guessing.
Hell, even in the late 70s and 80s when video games were becoming huge  
Matt M. : 3/27/2015 2:25 pm : link
We still played outside a Hell of a lot more than sitting inside playing video games. That's what you did when it was raining or it was too dark to play outside.
I remember the first day I had my dirt bike  
Matt M. : 3/27/2015 2:27 pm : link
(BMX not a motorized one). My friends and I were racing around the block and really getting physical. I ended up flipping over my bike. When I walked it back with my shoulder and knee bleeding, my father didn't even notice me. He was just pissed the front reflector was broken on my first day out. I still have a scar on my shoulder from that scrape.
RE: RE: Self-hitting...  
Matt M. : 3/27/2015 2:30 pm : link
In comment 12206637 Victor in CT said:
Quote:
In comment 12206630 kinard said:


Quote:


and "half-field" baseball games. You could play for hours with three guys per side.



Yes. Played all day
I hate those as a kid, but loved them when I got older. I was usually the only lefty and either because of the number of kids or the way the schoolyard was configured, the right side was usually foul or an out. So I was forced to hit the other way. It served me well as I got older and played baseball in HS.

That's why I always loved and related to Mattingly's story of learning to go the other way because of his backyard wiffleball games with his brothers. Paul O'Neill had a similar story.

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