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16 out of 20
Missed 2, 6, 12, and 15. Born in '58, so some of them are a little early, even for me.
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At night the stars put on a show for free (Carole King) One Earth, One Sky - IYA 2009 All moderation in purple |
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I got 12 correct and since I'm 39 until next Monday I'll claim my handicap now, thankyou.
Most of these questions I don't know from my own life experiences. I only knew the leg painting from hearing my grandmother talking about it. I know polio because my uncle was struck by it. I do remember mimeographed handouts in school but I didn't sniff because I thought I'd get high. I sniffed because I liked the smell. I don't know if I even knew what "getting high" meant at that age. |
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12 (2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 10, 11, 12, 14, 16, 19, 20). I'm below 40, and I'm not American. In many cases, it's not difficult to guess the right answer, given the choices.
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"A witty saying proves nothing" Voltaire. "All your bias are belong to us" Ara Pacis. |
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16/20
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" The universe is running away I heard it on the news just the other day There's this new stuff called dark energy We can't measure and we can't see..." - from Jimmy Buffett's What if the hokey pokey is all it really is about? |
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Remembering I'm 29, everybody?
17. Granted, I guessed at a couple--but most of the ones I guessed, I guessed right. So, there! (I missed 1, 12, and 19.)
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Gillian "Now everyone was giving her that kind of look UFOlogists get when they suddenly say, 'Hey, if you shade your eyes you can see it is just a flock of geese after all.'" "You can't erase icing." "I can't believe it doesn't work! I found it on the internet, man!" |
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Yikes! I got all except #6 and #18. In my defense, I know some of them because my parents told me about them. *Sigh* I'm still old though (54).
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An open mind is like an open window...without a good screen you'll get all sorts of weird bugs! |
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12 I missed because I had no idea what you were talking about. Also, I assumed "taxi" was too obvious. (Give me some credit, though--I knew it wasn't SUV!)
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Gillian "Now everyone was giving her that kind of look UFOlogists get when they suddenly say, 'Hey, if you shade your eyes you can see it is just a flock of geese after all.'" "You can't erase icing." "I can't believe it doesn't work! I found it on the internet, man!" |
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20 out of 20. Being born in the 1940s sometimes has its advantages.
Now where'd I put my glasses? ![]()
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A person's name, or a mark representing it, as signed personally or by deputy, as in subscribing a letter or other document. |
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18, missing 6 and 12.
I remember the Nash Metro with its rear leaning back window as looking backwards, so I picked it. And i don't recall the song, but we used to take the streetcar downtown all the time. AT least in Washington DC, the streetcar was very popular way to get around. I was afraid Gillian would beat me, she seems to recall my childhood better than I do. By the way, it is a common mistake to confuse Mimeograph machines. People routinely misuse the term. Mimeograph stencils were sheets of special paper that you typed on (with the ribbon kept out of the weay) and it actually poked through the surface of the paper making a stencil. Then this was mounted on a drum full of ink, and the ink seeped through the stencil and was printed onto the paper. The purple ink ones were called "Ditto Machines" after a popular brand. Generically they were "spirit duplicators." On these you typed on a special two layer original which had a very rich carbin-paper-like sheet. This left a purple negative in the transferred ink. The machine wiped a solvent solution over the thing and the purple "carbon" was transfered to the paper a page at a time until it ran out of purple image. It was the Ditto copies that had the smell of volatile hydrocarbons. Mimeograph copies were black and smelled like India ink. But everyone called the Ditto copies Mimeographs anyway. Ditto was good for small runs, like something to pass out to one or two classes. Mimeo stencils lasted a lot longer and were better suited to larger runs like newsletters to send home with the whole school full of students or something. A school usually had both. As a big fan of Howdy Doody, I can assure you that the lovely Princess Summerfall Winterspring was not a puppet but a live lovely young woman. ANd everyone wore their skate key around their neck. If you had no style you wore it on a piece of string, but back them evryone was into "gimp." Gimp was this long very narrow strip of vinyl plastic - came in all colors - and you wove or braided it into various things like key fobs, wallet borders, or lanyards for your skate key. I think gimp is still around, but I suspect they call it something else as the word has since acquired a connotation that it didn't then have. |
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Wow, I got 15. Do I lead the non-American league?
I had to quess much, but there were few questions where the answer could be deduced with some level of confidence based on given options (3, 9, 14, 16, 17 and perhaps even 2). I missed questions 4, 6, 8, 12 and 20 Quote:
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"Stupidity gets denser in a crowd" - Old Finnish saying. [My website and My BLOG] [Nimblebrain forums] |
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I also recall the Indian princess being a real person. She might have been a puppet first, but the real thing was a rather sexy-looking gal. Judy Tyler met with a tragic end. BTW, I can remember listening to Buffalo Bob et al on the radio before we had a TV. A neighbor had one of those Studebakers. Even back then it was a very odd looking car. Since I grew up in a town next to Danbury, CT, the "Hat City", skate keys were kept on lanyards made of braided leather. The strips for making them were all over the place, a result of the trimming operation that was part of the hat making process. Of course you first had to have a pair of skates. My sister had skates, and therefore the key on braided leather, but our family was poor so the kid brother didn't have skates. But there were other uses for those leather braids. ![]() Used to use "Butch" wax for the crewcut (just on the front), drank the super-sweet stuff out of those wax bottles, chewed Blackjack, got a polio shot with a needle (not an oral dose), and used to practice "duck and cover" every month as a part of our Civil Defense training.
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11/20, but I'm only 24 years old. Not being American didn't affect me.
I got number 12 right, though, even though that seemed to be very difficult! Ella Fitzgerald sang that song (though I'm sure it predates her). Enzp: I didn't know that gimp was that old! I used to make stuff out of it as a kid, so it was around as recently as 1990, anyway. It was called gimp, it was still flexible vinyl, and it came in nice fluorescent colours, too. I still have some sitting around, because it's occasionally useful.
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"It's turtles all the way down." |
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Oh, BTW skates back then weren't "in line", and they clamped onto your shoes, both of my knees are ruined (covered in scars) as a result of this activity. To this very day people ask me about what happened....I was a "hot dog" skater back in the day!
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An open mind is like an open window...without a good screen you'll get all sorts of weird bugs! |
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. I remember trying "Dots" as an adult and thinking, yuk! , why did I like them. As for Duck and Cover (yep, I did it too, it used to scare me as a kid), you'll have to just hide under your own desk.
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At night the stars put on a show for free (Carole King) One Earth, One Sky - IYA 2009 All moderation in purple |
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Everything I need to know I learned through Googling. |
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I think this is the same movie which had what I thought was some humor. It discussed three aspects of the nuke, the light, heat and blast. The movie suggested not looking at the light or perhaps painting windows to prevent the light from getting in. It also suggests protection from the heat. As for the blast, it showed the continuing wave of destruction radiating outward... |
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Believe it or not, we had an air raid drill when I was in seventh grade. Duck and cover in the hallway. This would have been . . . (pause while Gillian does math) the '89/'90 school year. Which, in practice, meant that all of us knew it was bogus, especially given how close my junior high was to both JPL and downtown LA. The expression "the survivors will envy the dead" popped up in several of the conversations in that hallway.
And I made lanyards at camp one year using those violently-coloured strips of vinyl. Don't remember what they called it, but the word "gimp" does ring a distant bell. Then again, in very bad weather, "gimpy" becomes my nickname around here.
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Gillian "Now everyone was giving her that kind of look UFOlogists get when they suddenly say, 'Hey, if you shade your eyes you can see it is just a flock of geese after all.'" "You can't erase icing." "I can't believe it doesn't work! I found it on the internet, man!" |
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ToSeek: are you thinking of the 1949-51 Nash Airflyte, the famous "Tub Nash"? These cars had curvaceous styling that resembled a large, inverted bathtub.
Also, I'm currently writing my honors thesis about civil defense during the Cold War. I was rather shocked to find out where the idea of "duck and cover" came from. I had grown up thinking it was someone's idea of a sick joke, but I found out that they got the idea from interviews with Hiroshima survivors conducted in the 1940s. I have a book published by RAND in 1951 that explains the rationale for teaching schoolchildren to "Duck and Cover."
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"I like the Walrus best," said Alice......... |
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