
Comics of choice included
Archie,
Family Circle,
Marmaduke,
Beetle Baily,
Superman & Batman respectively. Sophie & Marcie use to read us "the funnies" from the Sunday paper like
Lil Abner,
Blondie of Blondie & Dagwood fame.
Dennis the Menace was annoying, still is, even bugged us but was easy to take and predictable reading. I got into
Snoopy & The Peanuts Gang and discovered satire when I read
Mad
magazine featuring smart-ass, "What, me worry?" Alfred E.
Neuman. Is it just me or when you look real quickly at
GW Bush, he and Alfred E. are dead ringers for each other? The ears look like some one else I know too. Any who, besides your army men, sports was a big deal to you, consequently became a big deal to me. I've often wondered had I been much more interested in
girly-things, toys, clothes, activities and such... would you have been interested in those things too. I don't think so Mark, you were pretty much your own guy, kind of conventional kid, normal... where as Mary, Mary quite the contrary, always seem to look at life and all it's rarities, wonders, weird wild ways as something to explore rather than ignore.
1960's
TV included
Combat featuring Vic Morrow and a platoon of soldiers trying to survive with WWII as it's backdrop. You and Chris felt strongly about wanting to watch that program and Sophie, Marcie and I wanted to watch
The Red Skelton Variety Show starring the kind, dimple-faced, dashing and funny Red
Skelton of course. It was quite the battle of the the TV, I think on Tuesday nights. I'm not crystal clear, but mom probably manadated taking turns every week or maybe if Gary was home on leave, we watched
Combat, no questions asked since he was in the Air Force and soldiery and all. How could we not watch it at that point?
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