Sunday, April 26, 2020

Fountain Pen

We used only a pencil in the first few years of school.  I think it was 3rd grade that we started using a pen. A fountain pen.
 It was a love hate relationship.  I had my fountain pen for a long time till I left  it on a bus on my way home from school. 

My pen looked like this only a maroon color.
Many things could go wrong with your pen. The split could widen and you had a blotch on your paper. A pen could leak from just about anywhere and destroy books and anything else in a book bag.
But what was worse...was when your ink bottle leaked.
I am pretty sure I have used this exact ink. I kept my bottle inside it's box as more protection if any spilled out.  Filling up your pen was a little dangerous. You could splatter and get the ink on the back of the uniform of the person in front of you. Or on yourself and then have to listen to your mother as she tries to scrub it out of whatever you got it on.

It was not unusual to hand in a paper with some blotches of ink on it.  And just about always some ink on your hands.

If you forgot to tell your mother you are low on ink, you had to beg someone in class to let you use theirs. 
In old cartoons and movies you see a boy, sitting behind a girl,  dipping the girls hair braid into an ink bottle. That never happened in my school. A nun would have slapped him silly if he did that.

Eventually, Ball point pens became more common and we were allowed to use them in school. We were so happy, but that did not last long.

Early ballpoint pens were horrible! 
They did not write with a smooth line of ink, sometimes. 
It might skip, it might not write at all. It might only use up half the ink in them and stop. You always had to have a few pens on you.
Here is the pen.
Some times the pen would only write on parts of the paper which made you wonder why the heck it would not write on certain areas.

They look like some of today's pens, but they are NOT.  They improved with time, thankgoodness.











Wednesday, April 8, 2020

TV Part Two

When I was 8,  This is the age of my family and what they liked to watch. Of course they liked a wide variety of shows, this is just movies.  We all seem to agree on what TV shows to watch.



Not my family but you get the idea how we all watched TV together. If we were all home, there was not enough room and some of us had to sit on the floor. 

Watching the Ed Sullivan show was fun and most of us watched it on Sunday Night because he had a wide variety of acts that appealed to all of us. 


MOVIES
Mother- Westerns, War Movies, Drama's

Father- War Movies, Westerns, Drama's

Peggy 17,  Romance, Drama's 

Barbara 15, Romance, musicals

Me 8, Science Fiction, Thriller, Mystery, sometimes Drama

Charlie 7, War movies, westerns

Thomas, to young to count.

Everyone liked a good mystery movie including me, so that was not much of a problem either UNLESS it was opposite  a War or Western Movie. 
I liked all the Science Fiction, Thriller movies besides Mystery movies.  

If I wanted to watch something that was opposite a War movie and my father was home, I was not going to watch my movie. No matter how much I begged.   Now if I wanted to watch something opposite a Western movie, I had a 50-50 chance of my mother letting me watch my movie.

My father worked nights and slept during the day. So it was only a problem with him on his days off. 

We liked comedies, Abbott and Costello, Martin and Lewis, I liked some drama's but I was not a fan till I was much older and watched some of the old movies,  watch any Gregory Peck movie, nothing gets better than him. 

The Best times were movies that only showed once a year. (The VCR ruined this).  When the Wizard of Oz, or The Miracle on 42nd street  or A Christmas Carol or Charlie Browns Christmas was going to be on TV, you prepared for it.  
You were excited for weeks leading up to the movie.
  You made sure you would be home to watch it, popcorn was made (jiffy popcorn made on the stove) and everyone watched it together. 
Those are very warm memories. sigh

We don't have one picture of us all in the livingroom, watching TV. It's a good thing I have it all in my mind...