Yup. The infamous participation award.If I remember correctly there where Gold, Silver and Bronze patches but if you could not earn one you got that lapel pin.
Yup. The infamous participation award.If I remember correctly there where Gold, Silver and Bronze patches but if you could not earn one you got that lapel pin.
You mean romper stomper bomper boo? Tell me tell me tell me true? Children tv gone wild, 40 years+ and syndication isn't too shabby. Mr Rogers and Captain Kangaroo, eat your heart out.nope... not quite
It was Do-Bee from Romper Room
Good call on the id, but not the single word name,Center pieces for 45 RPM vinyl singles. For some reason, I think they're called googles.
I remember it all started in the early to mid 70's, when it was said that the average 60 year old Swede was in the same physical shape as the average 30 year old canadian.I think thats the logo for Participaction or what ever it was called. Late seventies Govt program to boost fitness.
Commodore VIC-20, teh first commercial home computer. No monitor, you were supposed to run the RF output to a television and no OS as we know them. A massive 8K of RAM, and you either played games from a ROM cartridge or learned BASIC.
Commodore PET, the first commercial desktop computer. Jack Tramiel started Commodore Business Machines from his typewriter repair shop in downtown Toronto.
One word;
How about this item, commonly worn on the belt, back when a buck was a buck
Occasionally one still sees them on commuter rail conductors when they are on routes where the ticket office is only open at peak hours.Coin dispenser: quarters, dimes, nickels, pennies.
Push the lever at the front to pop a coin out the bottom. Filling them was trickier.
I have one pretty much like it although mine has an entirely brass lid.
Can you find a pic of the inkwell-filler that looked like a long spouted watering can that the trusted Inkwell Monitor took from desk to desk in the classroom?I have one pretty much like it although mine has an entirely brass lid.
An Inkwell from the mid-nineteenth century.
you could put your eye out"caps"
I liked to get all five rolls from the box and make them blow up together with a big hammer