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Oh nothing really just wanted to share

Discussion in 'Free Fire Zone' started by Biak, Jan 23, 2013.

  1. USMCPrice

    USMCPrice Idiot at Large

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    Ah the 1970's, the best decade of my life. If I had one wish it would be that my children and grandchildren could experience life like we did.

    Best music, coolest cars, people were free'er and you were pretty much left alone to follow your own path.

    For those that didn't get to experience it (the '70's), here's a good video that lets you have a glimpse. Good music, good weed, beer and wine. Lean, tan, naturally beautiful women (most younger women now look like overly made-up Thots). People enjoying the music and experience, the sun and their friends. No selfies to show their friends they're living the life, no livestreaming for views. Living life and enjoying the adventure. Also a glimpse of California when it was a paradise before it became an autocratic, communist state.

     
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  2. OpanaPointer

    OpanaPointer I Point at Opana Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    Arrived in Vietnam on 1/14/1970. Evacuated somewhere around July 1972. After that things got weird.
     
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  3. Half Track

    Half Track Well-Known Member

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    Yes, that is very nice. I got out of the Navy in August of 1969 (should have stayed in the active reserves, but that’s another story) I took a job as a process technician and shift foreman in a cement manufacturing plant. I had a very good boss to train me. The 70’s were everything you said. The sixties were nice to a certain extent, but the Vietnam War caused upheaval and then there was the segregation/integration problem in the south. I suppose it was bad down there in 50’s and earlier but I wasn’t born until 1945. That being said, growing up in the 1950’s was so wonderful. It was a time of change and renewal after the War. Of course then in the early 1950’s you had Korea. But, rock and roll and Elvis was just starting. But gosh, times were good and fun just about anywhere you went, at least in Lancaster County Pennsylvania, where I lived. Before we moved out of the city, when I was in fourth grade, I used to walk three blocks to the George Washington elementary school and buy soft pretzels and penny candy from an old man who sat along the way on the street corner. Then in 1955 we moved out into the countryside and lived in a ranch style home in the Amish country. Life was good and when I was 13 I had Amish friends and I road my bike down the lane about a mile and in August I worked the tobacco fields with them because they needed the help. Horse and mule drawn tobacco wagons. I was paid $1.00 an hour and stayed over some days to have home made ice cream on the farm house front lawn. They were wonderful people to be with. It was a dairy farm with about 100 head of Holstein cows. I helped with the milking. I loved the farm, the life and the people. When I was 15 in 1961, my father was transferred with the Pennsylvania Power and Light Company to their main office in Allentown, PA. He was a vice president with them. My mother was a registered nurse but retired from nursing in 1946 to be a homemaker and raise me. I was their only child. I missed the farm life, but made new friends in Allentown. I had a blue 1960 Chevy convertible by 1963. I behaved because I had been raised right with loving parents. After high school I went to two years of technical school but then my deferment ran out and in August 1965 I joined the Navy, rather than the Army. I had received my draft notice to report to Fort Jackson S.C. but I enlisted in the Navy before my report time with the Army. But I still think growing up in the 50’s, to me anyway, was just such a wonderful time to grow up. I’m glad I still have those memories.
     
    Last edited: Sep 24, 2023
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  4. OpanaPointer

    OpanaPointer I Point at Opana Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    Born 1951. Male parent was a factory worker. I had a '60 Chevy in 1968. Left it at home when I went to boot camp in '69.
     
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  5. Biak

    Biak Boy from Illinois Staff Member

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    Graduated in 73' just missing Vietnam. But I do remember my draft card with a 1A (1f?) but 1972 was the end of the draft so I was never assigned a number that I remember.
    First car was a 1963 Studebaker Lark which I paid fifty bucks for. Recently touched base with the first girl I drove home from school. Cute blond then, who now teaches Yoga. Still cute. The car had a flathead six and a carburetor that refused fixin'. Replaced the fuel bowl -(pinhole)-, needle valves, set the timing, and added about ten pounds of Bondo. Ya youngsters can look that up. Parked the Lark and bought a 1962 Galaxie 500 for $150.00. Police interceptor with three on the tree and 390 hp and it even came with the spotlight by the drivers side mirror. That was a screamer.
    1969 to 1973 was my formulative years but the sixties and seventies is home and I ain't leaving.
    PEACE
     
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  6. OpanaPointer

    OpanaPointer I Point at Opana Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    My first was a '58 Biscayne.

    [​IMG]
     
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  7. Biak

    Biak Boy from Illinois Staff Member

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    My Lark had more rust. A lot more.

    upload_2023-9-24_19-21-18.png
     
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  8. OpanaPointer

    OpanaPointer I Point at Opana Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    The Biscayne was the first car that was MINE! Before that me and my brother shared this:

    [​IMG]

    The front seats laid down against the leading edge of the back seat, making a respectable "bedroom". The local drive-ins wouldn't admit mixed teenage couples to the show, so my girlfriend rode with Bro's GF and when the "last row boogie" started.
     
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  9. USMCPrice

    USMCPrice Idiot at Large

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    My first was a red 1964 Corvair convertible. Bought it with money I'd saved when I was 14, it didn't run, but the body and interior were really nice. You could get a special license in Louisiana when you were 14 but had to have a licensed driver in the car with you. I was always a year younger than everyone in my class due to starting school early because of a late year birthday. My dad and I got an engine from a junkyard and rebuilt it. Great fun little car. When you turned 15 you could get a regular license so that worked out well. Moved back to Tennessee, before I turned 16, so we sold the Corvair and I bought a four year old '69 Camaro with the money when I turned 16. Wish I still had that car.



    This is a Monza-Spyder which was turbo-charged, mine was the regular Monza (non-turbo). Even the same wire wheel covers. My top boot was white and not red as well. Very fun car. Always carried extra fan belts because the one belt on the engine was responsible for cooling the air-cooled engine. Broke one in the middle of the Lake Pontchartrain Bridge (a 24 miles long) once. Me and my dad changed it in about 5 minutes flat.
     
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  10. OpanaPointer

    OpanaPointer I Point at Opana Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    I presume it's unsafe just sitting there?
     
  11. Biak

    Biak Boy from Illinois Staff Member

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    Oh the Memories ! My third car was a 1969 Camero SS /RS ( Spring 1973). GOD I loved that car! Kissed the most beautiful girl in the World in the back seat. Also put many miles on it while the chumps were in school just driving the back county roads until school let out. Set the record for most absences my last semester of senior year. Skipping became sorta my thing.
    Then a few months later I met my to-be wife and within the next year traded it for a new 1975 Chevy Nova.
     
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  12. CAC

    CAC Ace of Spades

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    Australia tuned into the Brownlow Medal count last night to choose the best player of the year. Its the biggest award of the game and is chosen by the umpires, who allot 1,2 and 3 points after every game to the three best players...These numbers are counted on the night and a champion is crowned.
    My man Josh Daicos - Who plays with his brother Nick Daicos (Day-Koss) was favourite to win in only his second season. Chosen by Collingwood under the "Father -Son" rule (A rule in AFL that a son can get priority over the team his father played for).
    The problem was Josh fractured his knee three weeks out from the end of the season so didn't poll any points in the last three games.
    Josh Daicos sitting at the top of the pile with 28 points with one game to count...
    Well the count went down to the wire...Lachie Neal
    And the winner is Lachie Neal playing for the Brisbane Lions wins his SECOND Brownlow...What a champion. As many as 4 players could have won last night.

    Nick - Father and AFL legend Peter Daicos and Josh on the right...
    [​IMG]
    Father and Legend Peter Daicos...
    [​IMG]

    Lachie Neal this years best player and Brownlow medalist...Told he was too small to play AFL
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Sep 25, 2023
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  13. CAC

    CAC Ace of Spades

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    This year's AFL Grand Final (superbowl) is on this Saturday...Whos playing?

    Lachie Neal's Brisbane Lions will play my beloved Collingwood Magpies in the Grand Final this year. The Pies finished at the top of the competition (minor premiers)
    Can they go a step further?

    Lions
    [​IMG]

    Mighty Magpies...
    [​IMG]
     
  14. CAC

    CAC Ace of Spades

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    Last edited: Sep 26, 2023
  15. OpanaPointer

    OpanaPointer I Point at Opana Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    KISS image isn't showing for me. Link?
     
  16. CAC

    CAC Ace of Spades

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    upload_2023-9-26_22-35-39.jpeg
     
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  17. OpanaPointer

    OpanaPointer I Point at Opana Staff Member WW2|ORG Editor

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    I saw them when they were lead-off band for The James Gang while on leave, c. 1975. My next leave, 1976(?) they were the headliners and RUSH was the lead-off band.
     
  18. Biak

    Biak Boy from Illinois Staff Member

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    Might get the chance to visit the 'kids' during their Halloween party. Daughter always goes all out and makes it an event of the year. Wife decided to go as a hippie and I'm desperately looking for my Peace pendant necklace from 1972 to go with my tie-died t-shirt, bell bottom pants. Can't wait until I pull out a joint around the bonfire, open a bottle of Boones Farm Strawberry wine ! Grass is legal in Illinois now which kinda' takes away the charm but the reaction should be Cool. Might import a nickel bag.
     
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  19. CAC

    CAC Ace of Spades

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    The 70s weren’t particularly great for me…But plenty had it worse so in many ways I was lucky. Such an old world back then, echos of the past (including WW2) everywhere. The 80s were pretty cool for me.
    I get my grass sent to me express post from Victoria…I even have a ‘medical cannabis patient’ card that allows me to smoke marijuana anywhere you can smoke a cigarette, even work (not that I ever have).

    About two months ago I pulled the red ball and had to have a drug test at work, and was given an hour before the swab test. I had my card with me when I walked in and explained the deal with the tester…My result didn’t meet the cut off for a positive, so he said that’s it you can go! He said if I had had some that morning I would have gone over but the result is a negative…I felt like arguing with him…’I AM a smoker!’
     
  20. USMCPrice

    USMCPrice Idiot at Large

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    I'd take a bong! Pass that around.
     
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