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Have To do 2 today. Maybe a 3rd later.
1971 The groundbreaking television series All in the Family debuted on CBS; the sitcom became known for its frank and satirical treatment of sensitive or important topics.
HB who you know couldn't wait for Tuesdays as that's when Jeff's would get the new comics issues in.I was 8 and already reading comics - this show hooked me completely. I fell for Batmania.
Marvel was already engaged in the darker side for anyone who wanted it and as I got older I went there more and more.
I have a cousin my same age who lived in New Jersey. Neither one of us were allowed to have comic books, except once a year. Every summer he would come south and spend two weeks at our grandparents home. Not only did this home have a stash of comics that were absolutely off limits the other 50 weeks of the year, but those two weeks during the summer were the only time either of us were allowed to buy comics. So both of us would save money all year anticipation of his summer trip South. And we would gorge on comics the entire two weeks. Re-reading old ones and buying a few new ones to expand the existing cache. As well worn as all those comics were, I bet none of them would be worth even face value today, even if they hadn't been thrown away decades ago.HB who you know couldn't wait for Tuesdays as that's when Jeff's would get the new comics issues in.
In that episode with Sammy Davis Jr., the neighbors, The Jefferson's, had a son named, IIRC, Lionel. And Lionel said in describing Archie Bunker to the Sammy Davis, Jr., "Oh Archie isn't a bad sort. He wouldn't burn a cross in your front yard. But if someone else did, he'd roast marshmallows over it."
ETA: Actual dialog as found on IMDB:
Lionel: He's not a bad guy Mr. Davis. I mean like, he'd never burn a cross on your yard.
Sammy Davis, Jr.: No, but if he saw one burning, he's liable to toast a marshmallow on it.
I have a cousin my same age who lived in New Jersey. Neither one of us were allowed to have comic books, except once a year. Every summer he would come south and spend two weeks at our grandparents home. Not only did this home have a stash of comics that were absolutely off limits the other 50 weeks of the year, but those two weeks during the summer were the only time either of us were allowed to buy comics. So both of us would save money all year anticipation of his summer trip South. And we would gorge on comics the entire two weeks. Re-reading old ones and buying a few new ones to expand the existing cache. As well worn as all those comics were, I bet none of them would be worth even face value today, even if they hadn't been thrown away decades ago.
"One word, . . ., UHMWPE, also know as, ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene.1942 American industrialist Henry Ford patented plastic automobile construction.
Interestingly, Lionel’s love interest and eventual wife on The Jeffersons, Helen, was played by Berlinda Tolbert, who was born and raised in Charlotte and attended the NC School of the Arts. She actually grew up a few blocks from where I grew up, though in a different era. She lives in Charlotte now and is active in the community.Lionel was played by Mike Evans who was born in Salisbury, NC. He got out young though and his family moved to Los Angeles. He died young at 57 in 2006. He did attend Palmer Memorial Institute in Sedalia before moving west. PMI has a very interesting story all of its own as an elite AFAM prep school outside of Greensboro.
Mike Evans (actor) - Wikipedia
Palmer Memorial Institute is now a museum and a state historic site:
Charlotte Hawkins Brown Museum | NC Historic Sites
Founded in 1902 by Dr. Charlotte Hawkins Brown, Palmer Memorial Institute transformed the lives of more than 2,000 African American students.historicsites.nc.gov
Sweet Jesus. The human tragedy was terrible, but can you imagine the ants???Fiery hot molasses floods the streets of Boston on January 15, 1919, killing 21 people and injuring scores of others. The molasses burst from a huge tank at the United States Industrial Alcohol Company building in the heart of the city.
The United States Industrial Alcohol building was located on Commercial Street near North End Park in Boston. It was close to lunch time on January 15 and Boston was experiencing some unseasonably warm weather as workers were loading freight-train cars within the large building. Next to the workers was a 58-foot-high tank filled with 2.5 million gallons of crude molasses.
Suddenly, the bolts holding the bottom of the tank exploded, shooting out like bullets, and the hot molasses rushed out. An eight-foot-high wave of molasses swept away the freight cars and caved in the building’s doors and windows. The few workers in the building’s cellar had no chance as the liquid poured down and overwhelmed them.
Smashed vehicles and debris sitting in a puddle of molasses on Commercial Street on January 16, 1919, the day after a giant tank in Boston's North End collapsed, sending a wave of more than two million gallons of molasses. The tank was 58 feet high and 98 feet in diameter. It was used to store molasses which eventually was shipped to a distillery in Cambridge.
That pamphlet is interesting, with the “leading citizens” promoting the increased prosperity of Charlotte since prohibition took effect. That should be contrasted to the prosperity Charlotte has experienced since “liquor by the drink” became available in 1978.More on Prohibition in NC (which began 12 years "early").
"What a leading farmer says:
"In the Hopewell section we notice a great benefit since Charlotte has been under Prohibition. Parties who usually come home intoxicated now come home sober. We can send our hands to town without the fear of them coming home drunk and running the mules to death."