Showing posts with label 1959. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1959. Show all posts

Friday, March 17, 2023

Anniversary of our First date, 1959

St. Pat's Ball at The University of Illinois in 1959 was our first date. So, I made a special dinner --Donato's Pizza. We'd never had this Columbus specialty although we've lived here 56 years. It was very good. We got a large, "serious meat" pizza: according to a nutrition website, sausage, pepperoni, ham, bacon, 720 calories per serving, and enough sodium and fat for a week. However, it was a celebration.

https://www.mashed.com/484751/the-untold-truth-of-donatos-pizza/?

Columbus-Style Pizza - Donatos Pizza (experiencecolumbus.com)

  

Monday, June 15, 2009

Monday Memories of 1959

My brother is working on the 50th reunion of his high school class. Not only is he a "local" but he was also the class president. I think he's having a good time strolling down memory lane with his classmates. In today's WSJ, which I know he reads because he is a stock broker, Edward Kosner reviews Fred Kaplan's "1959: The year everything changed."

You can throw a dart at a timeline and write a book about almost any year (except 1957, imo) opines Kosner, but when examined closely, you can see important events that got us to where we are today. The most important one, from my view--1959 is the year I met my husband at the University of Illinois. We'd both broken up with our high school sweethearts (to whom we'd been engaged) and found each other. He told me on our first date that he planned to marry me--he was a big city (Indianapolis) slicker with a good line, and I laughed at him, much too smart to be taken in by that one. Other important events of 1959 outlined in this book were:
    1. Castro took power in Cuba.
    2. Berry Gordy started Motown.
    3. Allan Ginsberg recited "Howl" at Columbia.
    4. Pioneer space craft.
    5. Lady Chatterley's lover heated up book reading.
    6. Toyota and Datsun (Nissan) made their U.S. debut.
    7. The microchip was introduced--the germ plasm of our digital age.
      "Evolved from the transistor, the silicon integrated circuit was the work of a tinkering engineer named Jack Kilby. He showed off his little gizmo at a radio engineers' trade show in New York in March 1959. The debut of Kilby's microchip -- the germ plasm of our laptop, hand-held, wall-mounted, broadband, blog-sodden digital age -- merited two paragraphs in the next day's New York Times."
    8. The first U.S. soldier was killed in Vietnam.
    9. Frank Lloyd Wright's Guggenheim Museum opened.
    10. Martin Luther King studied nonviolence in India.
    11. The Birth control pill Enovid was approved for sale.
    12. Jack Kerouac's "On the road" was launched.
    13. The rise of Malcolm X.
    14. The U.S. Civil Rights Commission documents racial discrimination in a 668 page report.
Kosner notes, "And, for all the wonders integral to 21st-century life, it's hard to argue that we're happier today than in good old, prehistoric 1959."

Thursday, April 05, 2007

3659

Happy Birthday

Today is my husband's birthday. This is what we looked like when we met in 1959, when I weighed more than he did. I'm wearing a girl friend's formal, which was a bit snug, and he's wearing his grandfather's jacket, which was a bit big.

Armory House Spring Dance, 1959


I see you're still dreaming
there's still so much to do.
Helping and guiding,
painting and traveling.
Isn't it great
to be you.

He's in the process of retiring, but met today with a client who he says is one of the nicest people he's ever worked with, but I think he usually says that. He brings that out in people. Calm, reassuring, and confident. Pretty much the same easy going, quiet, thoughtful guy I met in 1959. He stays busy.

  • Design Review Board at Lakeside
  • member of two Christian men's group that meet weekly for breakfast
  • member of a couple's group at our church, UALC
  • mentors a child at an urban school
  • teaches a drawing class at the senior center and Lakeside in the summer
  • Head of the Visual Arts Ministry at our church
  • handles all the arrangements when we travel
  • communion server at our church
  • usher at our church
  • 15 years teaching VBS children
  • member of a group of watercolorists that meets monthly
  • keeps an active painting schedule--completes about 10 a month
  • member of two community art groups, founder of one, past president of both
  • Condo association president
  • leads a women's aerobics class
  • takes me out to eat every Friday night