Friday, February 28, 2014

Generic Blog Post



Here's a blast from the past.  Remember these packages in the grocery stores?

Starting sometime in the late seventies, these generic products began showing up on grocery shelves.  I did a little research, and found out that Chicago based Jewel Food Stores pioneered the introduction of generic grocery products into the US market, with a range of 44 items in February 1977. The program was so successful that Jewel Food Stores quickly increased its generic line to about 100 items.



About the time we turned 18, the generic rage was in full swing.  I remember thinking the beer was just about the funniest thing I'd ever seen.  It was nasty beer, too.  Especially the light beer.  Bleh!


Remember how all of the generic products were lined up side by side on their own store shelves?  





For a couple of years there, you could buy generic everything!  Then it turned into a joke...


Then suddenly, the novelty faded.  A couple of years later,  the packaging disappeared from the shelves and it was all over.  Amazingly, most of the people I work with today have no idea this ever happened.


Thursday, February 27, 2014

Sunday Get-Together




After our last reunion planning meeting, Leon Byrd took a few minutes to document our crowd, and then put this cool video together.  Nice job, Leon!

It's easy to see which of us was hard at work, and which of us was goofing off.  I have the distinct honor of being the one caught coming out of the bathroom.  I hope that doesn't count as my fifteen minutes of fame!

I think there were fourteen of us at the meeting.   There's a few more of us every time we get together.  Our next planning get-together is March 23rd.  If you are in the area, stop in!

CougarWiki



You've just gotta love the internet.  Thanks to the totally open-sourced nature of Wikipedia, I was able to list the Apex Class of 1979 website in the External Links section of the Wikipedia page about Apex High School.  Check it out!

Now, theoretically, people all over the planet could stumble onto our site.  If we wind up with hundreds of foreign tourists crashing our reunion on September 6th,  well, we know where they came from!




Wednesday, February 19, 2014

More from the Wayback Machine...Music Edition.



This really took me back to 1979.  The Knack, Donna Summer, Chic, Rod Stewart.

I guess my favorites are along the lines of "What a Fool Believes" by the Doobie Brothers and "The Logical Song" by Supertramp.  Really the whole "Breakfast in America" album.

We really did have great music.   Back in our day, musicians didn't "sample" a successful predecessor's work, and most of them actually played a musical instrument, even competently.

The music...even the disco...still sounds great.  Enjoy!

http://www.musicoutfitters.com/topsongs/1979.htm


Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Got photos?


That (above) is a gas line during the energy crisis of 1979. Remember?

Since starting this project of reconnecting with all of you Apex 1979 classmates, I have been searching for pictures that document our days in Apex.  Cameras are prolific today, and everyone has an enormous number of pictures, documenting everything from profound events to everyday moments.  Pictures today don't carry the same value as they did when we were in high school.

Constant picture taking was not the norm back in 1979.  There was no such thing as digital photography.  Pictures took effort and consumed resources.  As a result, much of our daily life was not documented in photographs.

While in school, I worked as the soda jerk at Bennett's Pharmacy in downtown Apex. Anyone who remembers Mr. Bennett's store probably remembers that Mr Bennett ran a classy, friendly, home town place that was fun to visit.

I loved working there.  I got to make lemon-aids and orange-aids the old fashioned way, with real fruits.  I'd slice them and squeeze them in a manual press to extract the juice, then mix that juice with the simple syrup I had made from hot water and lots and lots of sugar.  Nothing is better.

I remember making vanilla Cokes for customers.   I even remember a day that an elderly local came in and asked for an ammonia Coke.  I had no idea what that meant.

Mr Bennett told me to go and get a bottle of ammonia form the shelf, and to put a tablespoon of it in a fountain Coke.

It calmed the nerves, as I remember.  Who knew?

I remember talking with Mr. Bennett about the gas crisis that raged in 1979.  I told him I wanted to store gallons of gasoline under my parents' house, in empty milk jugs.  He quietly advised me that such a plan would possibly end in a big explosion that destroyed the house.  I abandoned the idea.

Remembering all of the wonderful memories I had working at Bennett's Pharmacy led me to search in vain online for pictures of the street (Salem street?), or the pharmacy.  I turned up nothing.

The point of this story is just this: I need your photos to make the blog come alive. We all had our afternoon jobs and our familiar routines.  Memories of those routines most likely feel as precious to you now as my memories of Bennett's Pharmacy do for me.

Please contact me if you have photos.  I'll arrange to scan them and get them back to you, or if you are able to scan, even better.   Send your scanned photos, or messages about photos that need to be scanned, to thomketring@apex1979.com.

Extra credit for you if you have pictures of Bennett's Pharmacy!






Saturday, February 8, 2014

At Tacotacotaco-Bell

Another cheesy (sorry) commercial from 1979.


Important Stuff From 1979

Look at everything that was happening in 1979!



1979 was the year that Skylab re-entered Earth's atmosphere, disintegrated, and burned up over Australia.  BTW, Pluto was still a planet when we graduated.


The first Sudoku was published.  Back then, it was called "Number Place."



About the time we graduated, the Gossamer Albatross, a human powered plane, successfully crossed the English Channel.


1979 was the year that "Alien" hit the movie theaters.  Man, that movie scared me.


"Mad Max," too.

Although Apple didn't release the iPod until October 23, 2001, the technology was invented in 1979. Meanwhile, we were lugging our gigantic boom boxes around everywhere...



...unless we had a Sony Walkman, also invented in 1979.  

The compact disk player, too.  


Rollerblades and snowboards...



An Nacho Cheese Doritos!  Remember these commercials?





35!






Thirty-five years!  It’s hard to fully appreciate what a long time that really is.

Think about it. Thirty-five years is enough time to bring children into the world, raise them to adulthood, and watch them leave home and start their own lives.

How about thirty-five years measured in cars?  For me, that’s fifteen.  Homes and apartments?  Twelve.  Pets?  I can’t even count them all.

It’s long enough that as I sat to write this post, I had to really struggle to remember what life at Apex High School was like back in 1979.  Eventually, the memories have started coming back into focus, but they are way down deep inside, where they have laid quietly for most of my life. 


It feels good to wake them up.