Can you name things that youngsters of today won't know?

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Dave 123

Legendary Member
This horrified me at the time. A lot of British content appeared on Australian TV and I'd often sit and watch with my parents. I wouldn't stay in the room when this was on.

Was it really acceptable, even in the 70s?

(I'm not saying Australian TV is perfect. :angel:)


Dunno. I found it weird.
I’d have been about 8/9 when they finished, I’m not really sure I knew what race and racism was.
 

petek

Über Member
Location
East Coast UK
Some kids who'd had polio did wear callipers and any kid wearing a caliper could be called a 'spastic'.
Kids can be cruel.
Apropos polio. It was quite prevalent back in the 50s. Very few classes in our primary school without a kid who'd been in an iron lung and come out with a calliper.
 

Andrew_P

In between here and there
Price stickers - I will admit to one of my misdemeanours of switching the sticker from the plastic ball to the Wembley ball from Woolworths. With hindsight apart from it being wrong I have no clue why it felt better switching from one ball to another, and again in hindsight the person at the till must have known!

wembley-trophy.jpg
 

Andrew_P

In between here and there
Rubs chin wonder if I could print out some barcode stickers for my next shopping trip to Sainsbury.
 

petek

Über Member
Location
East Coast UK
IMG_4584.JPG

[QUOTE 5019789, member: 259"]Spot the Ball.[/QUOTE]
Also 'Spot the Ball' rubber stamps to increase your chances of winning.
 
[QUOTE 5019735, member: 259"]You can still get "Spanish Gold" online. A certain (allegedly) tax avoiding megashop named after a big river in South America sells it.:okay:[/QUOTE]

a lot of the old sweets still available on www.aquarterof.co.uk other websites are available
we get a big order from them just before Christmas......
 
Dymo tape labels. Does anyone still use a Dymo embossed printer? It was a cutting edge of 1970s drawer administration.
 

Profpointy

Legendary Member
Some kids who'd had polio did wear callipers and any kid wearing a caliper could be called a 'spastic'.
Kids can be cruel.
Apropos polio. It was quite prevalent back in the 50s. Very few classes in our primary school without a kid who'd been in an iron lung and come out with a calliper.

Wasn't, and isn't spasticity a legitimate label for a class of symptoms. I also understand "spastic" was a more sensitive label than "cripple". It only later became a not-to-be-used label
 
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