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jwphillips2

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Posts posted by jwphillips2

  1. It's not like Rice has huge signing bonuses/scholarships for football!

    Best go-cart driving anywhere, and the close-in parking was FREE (damn you Astros, Oilers, Rockets, Texans!).

    I always went to the games to watch "The Mob" band play. Notice I didn't say "Marching" band. Best battles of the football bands were Rice vs A&M. Quite a few altercations. It was great.

  2. I hung out at The Deputy. Great burgers. Great car hops! It was just down the street from The Jester, Byron's BBQ, Sin Alley. 2Ks was across the street from the Galleria. Heading toward Sage was the Luau with their flaming fountain and pretty good Polynesian food - right across the street from the funeral home.

    Sonny Looks Sir Loin Steakhouse on Westheimer (and downtown) with the knight who used to greet the customers on horseback in full knight's regalia holding a lance. I see that Brenners has taken over the restaurant Rainbow Lodge in Memorial Park. Brenners was a really good place for beef. Ye Olde College Inn on Main, Kellys on South Main. Gaidos on S. Main, Red Lion.

    Clubs having good food - Lakeside Country Club, Glen McCarthy's The Cork Club(and wild game dinners), The Petroleum Club, The Roundtable. The restaurant that was poolside at the Shamrock(Eggs Benedict and Mimosas @ Sunday Brunch) Thanks Glen. So many clubs and restaurants!

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  3. My mother lived on a farm in Ok in the 30's-40's-50's. Back in the 30's and maybe

    early 40's they had a gasoline powered washing machine. I don't think they had electricity

    until the 40's, as they were one of the last in that area to be hooked up.

    I'm not sure what brand it was.

    You can see a few old machines here..

    http://www.oldewash.com/articles/lives.htm

    A few gas powered washing machines in action..

    MK

    Coleman lanterns became famous almost overnight after coming out with an iron that didn't need a fireplace or electricity. It worked just like the lanterns in that you poured in "white gas" from a bottle and then pumped it up for an hour's use. It was cheap and a very small percentage of households had electricity after the turn of the century. BTW we now call this "camping".

  4. We were at the Chik-fil-A in Pearland a couple of weeks ago and it was raining hard... an employee with an umbrella walked us out to our car!! I was totally shocked. That was lovely customer service.

    I remember doing retail and had this couple I had helped, return to the store and ask for my manager. They proceeded to tell him what a great job I had done and they would be coming back based on this experience(!). They said "If you have the right to complain, you have the obligation to commend". That was over 30 years ago and I've never forgotten that experience.

  5. There are a few other considerations than just hiding out. Air filtration, waste water, fresh water, food, those pesky zombies, etc.

    By the way, you can keep up your skills with a little extra practice.

    link to trap

    These are portable and cheap, just don't miss if you set it up in the living room.

    A new feature name may help gain acceptance such as, Zombie Excluder Device or something similar.

  6. Sorry to laugh but I cannot get the song/tune out of my head, "You dropped the bomb on me".

    Yeah, you have to do the descending whistle with that one....

    Mr. Fringe, I think the desks were made of "black box" material after all the testing in the classrooms.

    sevfiv - I think you're right about Jackwood.

  7. If you can remember "Duck and cover" you can probably remember bomb shelters as a selling point for houses. I remember visiting a family friend's house in Bellaire (I think it was on Jack street) and touring their bomb shelter. It was fully stocked with food and medicine (he was a doctor) and thinking how lucky he was to have one. Then I thought about the scenario of being the only family to survive the nuclear holocaust and what kind of life that would be. Later, I started finding more and more shelters. The ones downtown were marked CD for Civil Defense and many buildings converted an unused room or two in the basements. You were supposed to tune your AM radio to either 640 or 1240 Mhz. If you see a 50s or 60s radio you'll see the "CD" marked at those frequencies. I remember the Friday siren tests at noon downtown. Pretty chilling thinking about it now.

  8. That's hilarious! So what the hell was in the egg? Reminds me of when they started putting panty hose in those egg shaped containers.

    I think panty hose would have been a little too progressive for us kids back then. Besides, the patent on panty hose wasn't issued until 1979. That does seem weird now...

  9. As a kid, my first savings account was established at the First State Bank of Bellaire right on Bellaire Blvd. What was confusing was the name. What was the capitol of the State of Bellaire?

    Is Fin & Feather still there? I knew a kid (no, it wasn't me!) who took a warm can of vegetable soup to the balcony of the theater and then when it got dark, made some regurgitation noises, and then dumped the can over the rail. Yes, he got caught.

  10. When one of the new tenants moved into a well established building renovation, they decided to paint over a rather large 6' X 8' original mural on the wall and cover up the only "hippie art" in the area. I'm not sure after all these years that the current owners would want it published or revealed. It's also a shame that the remodeling company didn't know who Peter Max was.

    Would you tell?

    Suggestions? Advice?

  11. Carnation Milk was on Waugh just south of Allen Parkway. I worked there in '65-66 while at Reagan.

    I was dream-splicing Bordens into this because you could tour the Carnation plant (in the 60s) and then buy "hand-packed" ice cream at the end of the tour, which is actually a better deal than a tour of of the Bluebell plant.

    Thanks for the terrific picture. I remember this one pretty vividly after the anhydrous (meaning no water) ammonia truck that super-novaed on 59 in front of the Houston Post building under the 610 overpass. As the cloud of ammonia drifted down the freeway, it sucked all the moisture out of the grass and palm trees instantly killing them and turned everything dark brown. Looked like a wide area death ray. Whew!

  12. Maybe you better ditch the goose eggs, could be radio-active they say! :lol:

    They wouldn't do anything dangerous like that to us kids, would they?

    .....scuse me, it's time to play with my Lawn Darts.

    ps: If you pulled her neck, she would dispense an egg.

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