The Best Photos, Comics & Puzzles from The Past! TM $4.99 JANUARY 2015 IN THIS ISSUE 5 Toys Attic TERRIBLE TOY FLOPS Do you remember YOUR favorite toys? in the Games and toys from days gone by CABBAGE PATCH Adoption Mania JAN 2015 $4.99 Vol 7.1 Over 85 features and puzzles inside! 1939 Hours Of Puzzles, Vintage Comics & Blasts From The Past TM In This Issue: 4 Who’s That Star? This star arose from the most humble of beginnings to dominate the world of miniature fashion. 7 Toy Parade A look at some great toys from down the years. 24 Simple Toys, Creative Kids The best toys are 10 percent toy and 90 percent kid. 26 Classic Toy Fails Here are some of the worst toys ever conceived. What were they thinking? 28 True Crime: The Clue of the Curious January 2015 • Vol. 7, No. 1 ReMIND™ magazine (PE 7720) is published monthly by NTVB Media, Inc. 213 Park Street, Troy, Michigan 48083 Periodical postage paid at Troy, Michigan and additional mailing office. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to ReMIND magazine c/o NTVB Media, Inc., 213 Park Street, Troy, MI 48083 TO SUBSCRIBE, GO TO: www.remindmagazine.com or call (855) 773-6463 (855.7ReMIND) SUBSCRIBER SERVICES Go to www.remindhelp.com ADVERTISING AND MEDIA INQUIRIES Contact Robert Schollenberger at (248) 245-0915 or email [email protected] ReMIND PUBLISHING PUBLISHER Andrew DeAngelis EDITOR David Cohea Bobby-Soxer SVP/CFO Larry MacKenzie Imagine the teenager’s surprise when she opened her friend’s drawer and found a knife, a blackjack and a book about John Dillinger. VP STRATEGIC PLANNING Rick Gables 37 Cabbage Patch of Gold In the mid-1980s, Cabbage Patch Kids were so popular that parents fought over the last remaining ones in stores. FAVORITES 4 Editor’s Letter 5Retro Criss-Cross Puzzle 6 Hollywood 11TV Trivia Crossword 38 Number Puzzles 40 Super Crosswords SVP/CMO Michael Keever VP NATIONAL AD SALES Robert Schollenberger VP SUBSCRIBER SERVICES Robin Block-Taylor VP PRODUCTION Lonnie Shipley DIRECTOR MARKETING SERVICES Marci Waldrup ART DIRECTOR Karen Ruud © 2015 NTVB Media, Inc. and King Features Syndicate. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or part or storage in any data retrieval system or any transmission by any means therefrom without prior written permission is prohibited ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 3 From the Editor Toys In The Attic Do you ever wonder what happened to all those toys you used to play with? I can’t remember giving or throwing any away, but not a single one survived my childhood. What happened to my Legos and Tinker Toys? Or that toy snub-nosed .38 revolver that I used when play-acting James Bond? What about my Matchbox Carry Case Car City, and all of the Matchbox cars I filled it with? Where did all those science toys go — the chemistry set my mom made me keep in the basement, the microscope and dissecting tools, those specimens in jars of vile-smelling formaldehyde? (Such critters I don’t mind losing.) What happened to the games — my James Bond board game, my brother’s Rock ‘em Sock ‘em Robots, the Monopoly game, or Risk? Whatever happened to Operation? When I think about it (and I don’t very often), it seems my entire childhood was invested in those fleeting after-school amusements, and now they’re gone. Or would be — if it weren’t for the memories we share here. This issue of ReMIND searches out all those toys that surely must be tucked away in attic spaces somewhere. Let’s have some fun digging them back up! David Cohea ReMIND editor ([email protected]) Celebrity Birthdays Jan. 1, 1938 Frank Langella Jan. 2, 1947 Jack Hanna Jan. 5, 1931 Robert Duvall Jan. 6, 1913 Loretta Young Jan. 7, 1957 Katie Couric Jan. 9, 1935 - Bob Denver Jan. 13, 1935 - Rip Taylor Jan. 14, 1919 - Andy Rooney Jan. 17, 1922 - Betty White Jan. 19, 1946 - Dolly Parton Jan. 22, 1959 - Linda Blair Jan. 25, 1938 - Etta James Jan. 28, 1936 - Alan Alda Jan. 29, 1945 Tom Selleck Jan. 30, 1937 Vanessa Redgrave Jan. 31, 1921 Carol Channing Who’s That Star? Can you guess the identity of the star featured in this photograph? Look for the answer on page 23. 4 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 Re tro T oy s At ti c IN T HE C R CROSS I Criss Cross is a themed word search Using the clues, locate the S puzzle. word on the puzzle grid. One has S been placed to get you started. 4 LETTERS Ball Clue Sled Yoyo 5 LETTERS G.I. Joe Jacks Kazoo 6 LETTERS C L U E Barbie Cap gun Go Fish Ray Gun Skates Slinky 7 LETTERS Bicycle Crayons Play-Doh Records 8 LETTERS Baby doll Hula hoop Monopoly Red wagon Toy piano Train set Tricycle 9 LETTERS Comic book Cowboy hat Harmonica Teddy bear Wooden bat 10 LETTERS Boondoggle Erector set Tinkertoys Tonka truck View-Master 11 LETTERS Balsa glider Fingerpaint Lincoln Logs Matchbox car Spinning top Tiddlywinks 12 LETTERS Baseball mitt Jack in the box Jigsaw puzzle Pick-up sticks Record player Rocking horse Wooden blocks © 2015 NTVB Media Puzzle answer on page 43. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 5 Tidbits .Hollywood MGM and Paramount Pictures are remaking the classic 1959 film BenHur, which won Charlton Heston an Oscar. Boardwalk Empire star Jack Huston, grandson of John Huston and nephew of Anjelica Huston, will play Judah, a.k.a. BenHur. The script, by John Ridley (12 Years a Slave) and Keith Clarke, is based on the 1880 novel Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ. You can bet the $359 million grosses of Noah, with Russell Crowe, prompted this reboot. John Wayne was known as “The Duke” for his entire career. Now John Wayne Enterprises is suing Duke University because the school thinks it owns the title to all things named “Duke.” The Wayne family claims that, “Duke does not own the word ‘Duke’ in all contexts and for all purposes.” It contends that the North Carolina university believes products bearing John Wayne’s world-renowned image and signature will somehow be confused as being associated with Duke University. Case in point: “Duke” brand Kentucky bourbon whiskey. The bottle is imprinted with “Monument Valley Distillers,” and John Wayne’s image and signature are prominently featured on the label, along with the image of a shotgun casing. The university doesn’t market or sell alcohol, but it objects to ANYTHING sold with the name “Duke.” We checked with a lawyer, who said, “If they don’t use the name ‘Duke University,’ the By Tony Rizzo Charlton Heston as Ben-Hur Wayne family is not infringing on their name.” Despite his recent marriage, George Clooney is still stirring things up. He’ll take on Rupert Murdock (owner of the Fox Network) when he directs Hack Attack, an adaptation of journalist Nick Davies’ book about “The News of the World.” Murdock’s British newspaper was at the root of the voicemail hacking scandal of politicians, celebrities, even murder victims and terrorist survivors. The paper’s former editor was sent to prison, and Murdock closed down the 168-year-old tabloid. Barbra Streisand said in a recent interview that she would only star in the classic film Gypsy this year. She said, “I began my film career in Funny Girl and it only seems fitting to end it with Gypsy.” Her love interest, Herbie, could be played by her husband, James Brolin. If there has to be nepotism ... keep it in the family! Want to read fun Check out our blog! 6 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 Butter Molds Q: At a farm auction several years ago, I bought three butter molds that were obviously quite old. Each has a pattern, with the most elaborate depicting a cluster of roses. Are these collectible? — Emporia, Va. A: It was during the reign of Charles II in Britain that decorating butter became popular. In America, this practice thrived due in no small part to farm wives who marked the homemade butter they sold so it would be readily identified as their product. No two farms used the same mold in the same county or area. The more detailed the pattern of a mold, the more expensive it can be. For example, a rare Amish hexagon mold with intricate pattern of acorns and oak leaves recently sold for $650 at auction. Most, however, sell in the $50 to $75 range. Q: I have a silk scarf that I acquired when I was in college during the 1970s. It features a Peter Max design and was rarely worn. Is it worth keeping? — Susan, Rio Rancho, N.M. A: Peter Max is the quintessential pop artist who has been creating collectibles since the 1960s. He symbolizes the hippie era and sponsored the first psychedelic show in New York in 1995. Most collectors are especially interested in Max items produced before 1975. Your scarf is probably valued in the $50 to $75 range. I base this on recent Internet sales. Q: I have a pennant with an image of Dwight Eisenhower and the words “We Still Like Ike.” It is obviously from his re-election campaign in 1956. Is it collectible? — Sarah, Homestead, Fla. A: Your pennant would retail in the $25 to $40 range, according to “Warman’s Political Collectibles: Identification and Price Guide,” by Enoch L. Nappen (Krause Books). Collecting political memorabilia remains one of America’s favorite hobbies. Write to Larry Cox in care of King Features Weekly Service, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 328536475, or send e-mail to [email protected]. Due to the large volume of mail he receives, Mr. Cox is unable to personally answer all reader questions. Do not send any materials requiring return mail. ReMIND features between issues? REMINDMAGAZINE.WORDPRESS.COM Or “LIKE US” on ATTIC: A parade of vintage toys If you could retrieve a favorite toy from a box that got lost up in the attic years ago, what would it be? Would it be a toy you played with others, or something you spent hours with alone? Were you fascinated, amused or simply entertained? What memories of childhood come back to you when you think of it? Here are some classic toys from down the decades — some the best things found under a Christmas tree, others quite cheap. But really, price was never important — all a kid needed was a little bit of toy and a lot of imagination. Do you remember these gems? Life Hasbro’s The Game of Life was a 1960 reissue of the 100-year-old The Checkered Game of Life. Art Linkletter was spokesman for the game in 1960 and his image appears on the $100,000 bills. “I can't believe he knocked his block off!” Rock’em Sock’em Robots One of the most popular toys of the 1960s was Rock’em Sock’em Robots. Two players worked the gears of dueling robots, vying for that winning punch that knocks the head off its opponent. Hundreds of thousands of these guys were sold over the years. Toy Kitchen Nothing like practicing for the real deal with your own toy kitchen. This one, featured in a 1976 Sears catalog, offered all the modern faux conveniences for stylish young girls. Quotable “Quotes” You may recall the humorous observation by George Carlin, “Some people see things that are and ask, why? Some people dream of things that never were and ask, why not? Some people have to go to work and don’t have time for all of that.” But do you recall these additional quotes from Mr. Carlin? “ ” TOYS in the “Inside every cynical person, there is a disappointed idealist.” “Have you ever noticed that anyone driving slower than you is an idiot, and everyone going faster than you is a maniac?” “I went to the bookstore and asked the saleswoman, ‘Where’s the self-help section?’ She said if she told me, it would defeat the purpose.” “I was thinking about how people seem to read the Bible a whole lot more as they get older; then it dawned on me – they’re cramming for their final exam.” ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 7 Classic TV & Film Catching Up With: Brooke Shields This Month ’ s Movies Worth Watching Again The Odd Couple (1968) Two friends, both divorced, decide to share an apartment, despite the fact that their personalities are wildly different. Felix (Jack Lemmon) is a neurotic neat freak, and Oscar (Walter Matthau) is a fun-loving slob. Also stars John Fiedler. Based on a play by Neil Simon and later made into a television series in the 1970s. Jan. 2 at 8pm ET on TCM A Raisin in the Sun (1961) Based on a play written by Lorraine Hansberry, this drama follows a black family struggling with poverty, racism and personal challenges as they seek a better way of life. Stars Sidney Poitier, Claudia McNeil and Ruby Dee. Jan. 14 at 9:45pm ET on TCM To Kill a Mockingbird (1962) Harper Lee’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel provided the inspiration for this classic film — widely considered one of the greatest ever made — starring Gregory Peck as a small-town lawyer who defends a black man against an undeserved rape charge. Watch for Robert Duvall as the reclusive Boo Radley. Jan. 18 at 8pm ET on TCM Your mother supported your career from a very young age. Did she always want you to be a star? Brooke Shields: It was this bizarre, gradual process. By chance, I got a job as a baby model. We started to make money, and that was more of an income than my mom was able to make working part time at a bookstore or at Lord & Taylor or wherever she was working, so it became this path that we were both on together, and it was fun and it opened up a whole life for us. All the President’s Men (1976) Reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward uncover the details of the Watergate scandal, which eventually led to the resignation of President Nixon in 1974. Stars Dustin Hoffman, Robert Redford and Jack Warden. Jan. 27 at 10pm ET on TCM Can you name the TV Series? This Dynamic Duo is out to fight crime in Gotham City. Answer: Batman 8 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 By Gerry Strauss She was America’s sweetheart, even while sparking controversy with her films (she played an underage hooker in her first major role), her TV ads (she redefined the concept of snug-fitting jeans in more than one TV commercial), and her uberpublic relationships (her bond with Michael Jackson made headlines all over the world). For Brooke Shields, getting the public’s attention is just another day at work, and for over four decades, she’s done it without a hint of difficulty or regret. Her latest book, There Was a Little Girl, is about the most cherished part of her life: her relationship with her mother Teri. We caught up with Brooke and reflected on her untouchable career. Your mom was such a huge part of your early life and career. What types of sacrifices did she make in order to support you? It was less glamorous for my mother than you’d think, because we were getting up at 5 in the morning on these trips and we were working 16-hour days during the summer. It was just a very different type of life, so I really can’t look at it as a sacrifice. I have no recollection of not liking it. From your role as a child prostitute in 1978’s Pretty Baby to your famous Calvin Klein ads, you’ve been involved in a lot of provocative projects throughout your career. Do you think you were consciously looking for controversy? No. I’ve got to be honest. I wish I had that type of foresight. I’d love to say we had a plan and it was charted out and then we navigated, but if you really look at the whole body of my career, it is not ... there’s nothing charted. There is no rhyme or reason to any of it. TV, films, Broadway: You’ve pretty much done it all, but what is something that you still want to do that you have yet to do? I think I just want more of what I’ve done that I’ve liked. I eventually want to do a one-woman show on Broadway. I absolutely miss being on television, like a television show, in a world that I go to every day and work hard for, and just being comedic. 1977 The doors to New York City’s Studio 54 nightclub opened for the first time, George Lucas’ Star Wars premiered in theaters and the world mourned the passing of “The King,” Elvis Presley. The year was 1977 and the following TV series were the Top 10. 1. Laverne & Shirley 2. Happy Days 3. Three’s Company 4. 60 Minutes 5. Charlie’s Angels 6. All in the Family 7. Little House on the Prairie 8. Alice 9. M*A*S*H 10. One Day at a Time Find More TVth Classics Wi TV WEEKLY Magazine When you subscribe to TV Weekly you’ll get complete TV listings for Turner Classic Movies, AMC and over 70 other networks, including your locals! Call 1-888-639-0001 for details! “ Disney Songs For the past 70-plus years, Disney movies have been contributing catchy tunes to our popular culture. Here are part of the lyrics to several classic Disney songs. Can you name the movie from which each comes? ” 1. “Someday my prince will come ...” 2. “Oh, this is the night, it’s a beautiful night, and we call it Bella Notte ...” 3. “Love is a song that never ends ...” 4. “Everybody wants to be a cat, because a cat’s the only cat who knows where it’s at ...” 5. “Look for the bare necessities, the simple bare necessities, forget about your worries and your strife ...” 6. “Baby mine, don’t you cry. Baby mine, dry your eye ...” 7. “Zip-a-dee-doo-dah, zip-a-dee-ay. My, oh, my what a wonderful day ...” 8. “I know you, I walked with you once upon a dream ...” 9. “When you wish upon a star, makes no difference who you are ...” 10. “Cruella De Vil, Cruella De Vil. If she doesn’t scare you no evil thing will ...” A. The Aristocats (1970) B. Lady and the Tramp F. Song of the South (1955) C. The Jungle Book (1967) D. Dumbo (1941) E. Sleeping Beauty (1959) G. Snow White and the (1946) Seven Dwarfs (1937) H. Pinocchio (1940) I. Bambi (1942) J. 101 Dalmatians (1961) 1.G 2.B 3.I 4.A 5.C 6.D 7.F 8.E 9.H 10.J Rated Retro: And I Quote … ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 9 Trivia T o ys in The Att ic By Sherie Sprague Trivia Quiz Dire Straits 1. Name the group that released “Good Times.” 2. Which band had hits with “19th Nervous Breakdown” and “Mother’s Little Helper”? Name the year. 3. Which group had a U.S. and U.K. hit with “The Boys Are Back in Town” in 1976? 4. Which group released “Sultans of Swing,” and when? 5. Name the one-hit wonder that had a hit with “Gimme Gimme Good Lovin’” 6. Which all-girl Go-Go’s song mentions dances called the Pony and the Watusi? 1. Chic had a No. 1 hit with the song in 1979. The group’s C’est Chic album also included the 1978 hit “Le Freak.” 2. The Rolling Stones, both in 1966. 3. Thin Lizzy, on their Jailbreak album. The song has since been covered by others, including Bon Jovi. 4. Dire Straits, in 1978 in the U.K. The song didn’t chart until it was re-released six months later in the U.S. Then it rose to the Top Ten charts in both countries. 5. Crazy Elephant, in 1969. 6. “We Got the Beat,” released in 1980. The song was used in the movie Fast Times at Ridgemont High. With a length of only 2:32, it was considered short for a dance song. 10 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 1. What was the original name of Chutes and Ladders? 2. Name the first toy to be advertised on television. 3. How many phrases did the original Chatty Cathy speak? 4.What was the only year the rear-loading Beach Bomb was produced? 5. What is toyetic? 6. How many leg parts came in the original Cootie game? 7. What was the first movie based on a toy? 8. Which came first: roller skates with wheels or inline skates? 9.What were “Xray Spex,” the “Remote-Controlled Ghost,” “Sea Monkeys” and the “Ventrilo Voice Thrower”? 10. How many action figures were in the original G.I. Joe lineup? 11. How many answers were inside a Magic 8 ball? 12. Where did LEGO get its name? 13. How did the diving submarine toy work? 14. What goes on at Babyland General Hospital? 15. What does NERF stand for? Puzzle answer on page 33. by Samantha Weaver • You might be surprised to learn that the U.S. state that is closest to Africa is Maine. • During the filming of the classic film The Wizard of Oz, the dog that played Toto was paid $125 per week. In contrast, the actors who played the munchkins were paid $100 per week — and their manager, Leo Singer, kept half of that. • In Western medicine in the 19th century, experts believed in a phenomenon called “maternal impressions,” which posited that what a pregnant woman looked at could influence the appearance of her child. This belief set off a rush of pregnant Parisian women heading to the Louvre to gaze at the lovely artworks, hoping to give birth to attractive babies. • You might think that hot dogs are a relatively recent food offering, but you’d be wrong. The first sausages were created more than 3,500 years ago when ancient Babylonians began stuffing spiced meat into the intestines of animals. • Half of first-time marriages in Kentucky involve teenagers. THOUGHT FOR THE DAY: “The old believe everything; the middle-aged suspect everything; the young know everything.” —Oscar Wilde ACROSS 1 1969 to 1971 toy- based cartoon, __ Wheels 4 Fireplace shelf 7“Phooey!” 11Rock of __ (Samson’s biblical refuge) 13The left one of #41Across was bionic 14Earth goddess of ancient Greece, variantly 15 Mythical Hun king 16 Tenn. neighbor 17Rubik’s Cube inventor Mr. Rubik 18 The Six Million __ Man 20Filled 22 My __ Pony (‘80s cartoon about Hasbro toys) 24 Toys holder 26Highlander 28 Hi-__ graphics 29 Jeff Lynne’s gr. 30 ‘Dino’ suffix 31Island country in the Indian Ocean, to the IOC 32 Angel’s hat 33Ohio __ Company (Etch A Sketch maker) 34 __ _ premium 35 ‘Musket’ suffixes 36Stop-_-__ 37DC Comics based 1960s show 39 Li’l __, Al Capp comical character 41#18-Across BY KELLY ANN BUCHANAN TOYS IN THE ATTIC ©2014 NTVB Media, Inc. All rights reserved. merchandise, Colonel Steve __ action figure 45“Here _ __, there...”: Bit of the famous farm tune 46 Gibraltar, e.g. 48Knight’s heraldic wreath 49 Hobby shop items 50 Garden pond fish 51 At no time, in verse 52 Besides that 53“__-hoo!” 54 Bouncy check acronym DOWN 1 Mr. Potato __ 2Sgt. Snorkel’s comic strip dog 3 Like a ship in a bottle 4 Deck of cards symbol 5 Olive of comics 6Mrs. __ (Buffy’s toy on Family Affair) 7“_ __ to go first this time!” (Board game player’s exclamation) 8One of a plush toy on an ‘80s cartoon series: 2 wds. 9 Mattel males: 2 wds. 10Former NBAer, __ Ming 12Police series that spawned a board game, Barney __ 19 Garlic, in Paris 21 Bronze Roman money 23Sweet __ (Sno-Cone, for one) 25 Tic-Tac-Toe losing line 26Evil wizard on The Smurfs 27Decepticons were their enemies on 1984 to 1987 animated Puzzle answer on page 43. action series Transformers 30 __ Francisco 31Milton Bradley game about the TV crimefighting duo, __ & Hutch 32 Muppets creator Jim 34Mr. Vigoda of #12Down 35 Parisian water 38Super __ Bros. (Nintendo video game) 40 #1-Down accessory 42 Train, in Spain 43 Islands: French 44 Spongy toys brand 45 Peer Gynt’s mother 47Also ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 11 Those Fabulous ’50s Baseball Paraphernalia ✤ WORD SLEUTH 1 1959 Find the listed words in the diagram. They run in all directions – forward, backward, up, down and diagonally. “No, Harry, I don’t know where your other skate is, and furthermore, I couldn't care less...” Ball Cap Jacket Bat Cleats JerseySocks Batting glove Glove Pants Belt Helmet Pine tar Puzzle answer on page 43. • Dirty candles can be cleaned up quickly with a leg of pantyhose. Slip the candle in the hose, rub the outside of the candle and release. • When I need to dust the ceiling, I don’t have a fancy contraption; I just use my broom. If you have popcorn ceilings, you can rubber-band a feather duster to the end of your broom. — JoAnn • “Rub banana on CDs with scratches. Wipe excess off with a soft towel, and make sure all of the banana is gone before you put it in your player. It usually does the trick for me.” — T.E. in Maine • “When heater season is in full effect — like now — I keep a spray bottle of water, to which I add 2 tablespoons of liquid fabric softener. I spritz the house from time to time, and it will add humidity as well as a pleasant scent.” — M.A. in Ohio • “Disposable razors can be used to remove burrs from sweaters or wool slacks.” — O.D. in Tennessee 12 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 Shin guard Spikes TOTYTSIC : A in th e Reeling Years By Lucie M. Winborne ’50s Trivia Go-Hi Toss Glider Testor opened shop for the model-kit industry in 1929, principally selling model cement. During World War II, when chemicals were tightly controlled for the war effort, Testor turned to other products, producing inexpensive flying models produced from balsa. This “Go-Hi” toss glider issued in 1948 is an example of the original design, featuring great graphics, a nicely printed box and a “warm” tone to the balsa-wood construction — all for just 10 cents. What kid wouldn’t love it? 1. What tragic real-life object inspired Elvis Presley’s first No. 1 hit, “Heartbreak Hotel”? 2. What was the original name of presidential retreat Camp David? 3.Time Magazine called these “don’t give a damn pills” when they hit the market in the mid-’50s. 4. Before he was immortalized as Captain Kangaroo, what role was Bob Keeshan known for? 5. Who graced the cover of the first TV Guide? 6.Name the company headed by Joan Crawford’s husband, Alfred Steele. 7. How many years did Ford’s ill-fated Edsel automobile last on the market? 8.In 1959, the Dalai Lama fled Tibet for this country. 9.Which of these teams was not the result of a change of cities in the ’50s? A) Los Angeles Dodgers; B) San Francisco Giants; C) Houston Astros 10.This fitness tool developed by Jack LaLanne was the first elastic band used for resistance training. Puzzle answer on page 15. 1960 Puzzle answer on page 43. “What are you getting for your birthday that your folks promised you wouldn’t get?” ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 13 Those Fabulous ’50s ❉ JOSEPH CROSSWORD 1 Howdy Doody’s T.V. Game Howdy Doody was the king of children’s TV shows in the ’50s. Merchandising opportunities of the show were endless — Howdy appeared on everything from watches to salt-andpepper sets. The Milton Bradley board game first sold in 1951 was straight-ahead fare for fans of the show who wanted most to be there — the game was set in the TV studio. A game in mint condition is worth now around $100. Puzzle answer on page 43. 14 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 ACROSS 1 Gladiator star 6Passion 10Red Square name 11Paper amount 12Lower 13 Goads on 14 Team animal 15Gadget protector 16Wield 17Painter Vermeer 18Devilfish 19 Racing bet 22 Put away 23 Tops tortes 26Tapering cigar 29 Yak it up 32 Put down 7 Swiss peak 8 Game setting 9Irritable 11Count 15Lobbying grp. 17 Ring vendors 20Dandy 21 Tennis feat 24 Solar event 25Represses 27Squealer 28Minks’ cousins DOWN 29 Try to get 1 Stop talking 30 Pedro’s pal 2Picture puzzles 31Sleigh sounders 3Ready for battle 35Dregs 4Sage 36Practice for a bout 5 Compass pt. 387-Down, for 6Damaged one Puzzle answer on page 43. 3Ignited 3 34Breakfast choice 36 Make finer 37Target of an audit 38 Bobbing goal 39Eyeballs 40CD player part 41 Friends character 42Iron ❈ KING from page 13 Reeling Years ’50s Trivia Answers 1.A 1955 suicide note left by a Miami man, containing the line, “I walk a lonely street.” The song’s writers penned the tune in half an hour and incorporated the line into its first verse. 2. Shangri-La. 3. Anti-anxiety tranquilizers. 4.Clarabell on “Howdy Doody.” 5.Lucille Ball and her Ford’s Edsel. new son. 6.Pepsi Cola. 7.Only three. 8. India. 9.C. The Astros were formed in 1962, but both the Dodgers and the Giants moved to California from New York. 10.The Glamour Stretcher. ACROSS 1Duchamp’s art movement 5 Uncooked 8 Remain 12 Tel — 13 Blackbird 14 Vagrant 15 Downhill racer 17Follow the rules 18 Follow 19Food fish also called mahi mahi 21 Coagulate 24 Year-end abbr. 25 Familiar folks 28Actress Campbell 30Letterman’s network 33 Id counterpart 34 Farm statistic 35 Erstwhile acorn 36San Francisco’s — Hill 37 Ms. Moore 38 Wan CROSSWORD 1 9 3 41 43 46 50 51 54 55 56 57 58 59 1 Vacillate 1 16 Solidify 20 Keatsian works 22 Formerly 23Contract details 25 Author Follett 26Billy Joel’s “— to Extremes” 27Vessels that resemble stout men 29 Bridal cover 31 Scrooge’s cry 32 Firmament 34 Hebrew month 38Exploitative one 40 Pack animals 42 lndivisible 43 Throat clearer 44 Pedestal part 45 Engrave 47Toothpaste holder 48 Walked on 49 Longings 52 Discovery call 53 Ginormous Singer Sumac No neatnik Urge earnestly Eccentric Tow Admittedly Advantage Actor McBride Black, in verse Tree hugger? Glutton Ohio nine DOWN 1Cornerstone info 2Shakespeare’s river 3 Firsties 4 Acknowledge 5Scott Joplin’s music 6Ortiz of Ugly Betty 7Kite flyer’s need 8 Coast 9 Shag et al. 10 Sleeping 1951 “Knock some of the paint off. Then your mother will HAVE to buy it.” Puzzle answer on page 43. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 15 Those Fabulous ’50s Unscramble these twelve letter strings to form each into an ordinary word (ex. H A G N E C becomes CHANGE). Prepare to use only ONE word from any marked ( ♥ ) letter string as each unscrambles into more than one word (ex. ♥ R A T H E becomes HATER or EARTH or HEART). Fit each string’s word either across or down to knot all twelve strings together. Puzzle answer on page 43. 1958 16 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 ❉ JOSEPH ACROSS 1Beat at the board 6 Argo skipper 11 Century plant 12 Radiate 13 Small dogs 14Sight from Everest 15 Puts up 17 Blond shade 19Singer Orbison 20 — di dah 23 Oscillate 25 Verdi classic 26Neil Young song 28 Grand Ole — 29Speechwriter Peggy 30 Fast flier 31 Part of HRH CROSSWORD 2 2 Wallop 3 33Miss Congeniality director Donald 35 Spiral shape 38 Pass 41 Stand 42 Concur 43Spanish snacks 44 Admit DOWN 1 Tourist’s aid 2Epoch 3 Cheer up 4 At any time 5Mormon state 6Wharf 7Line of symmetry 8 Long lunch? 9Exalted poem 10 Surfing site 16 Tiara’s kin 17Friend of D’Artagnan 18Oozes 20 Brave person 21Loser to Dwight 22 Went without 24Essay 25 In the past 27Actually 31Spells 33 Tower setting 34Playwright William 35Topper 36Period 37Sassiness 39 Corp. bigwig 40 Decimal base Puzzle answer on page 43. Retro Sleuth Year 1984 One of the hottest toys of Christmas 1984 was actually a galaxy of toys: the next installment of Masters of the Universe, also known as He-Man. Created by Mattel, Masters of the Universe was a media behemoth that included four animated television series, comic books, a movie and gazillions of action figures. The main idea was that He-Man and his forces were engaged in eternal combat against the evil Skeletor and his boys. Starting in 1982, each year a whole line of action figures was released, with 1984 seeing such characters as Thunder Punch and Roboto come to the aid of HeMan, with Skeletor getting help from Dragon Blaster and Stinkor. INSTRUCTIONS: Each “case” has six clues. The challenge is to solve each case with as few clues as possible. Case 1: Between Machines 1. Action toy 2. “More than meets the eye” 3.Two toys for the price of one 4. Shiftable toy parts 5. Is it a car? Animal? Jet? 6. It’s a “robot in disguise” Case 2: It’s For You 1. Love song 2. Stevie Wonder 3.Featured in The Woman In Red 4. Oscar for Best Original Song 5. About a phone call 6.“No chocolate candy hearts to give away” © 2014 NTVB Media, Inc. Case 3: Chickens Were Relieved 1.Punchline 2. TV ad 3. Has become a catchphrase 4. Wendy’s fast food chain 5. Too much bread 6. Not enough meat Case 4: What Is A Host? 1. Quizmaster from Canada 2.Becomes TV game show host 3.Replaces Art Fleming in 1984 4.Asks contestants general knowledge questions 5.Answers must be in the form of a question 6. Takes over as Jeopardy host Case 5: Junkyard Doggies 1.Popular plush stuffed animal 2. Floppy ears, droopy eyes 3.Heart-shaped emblem near tail 4.Dog dolls with adoption papers 5.Comes inside a doghouse box 6.Tagline:“Loveable Huggable” Case 6: Eden In A Box 1. High-tech for sale 2. A “toy” that costs $2,495 3. Fits on a desk 4.Famous commercial for it aired during Super Bowl XVIII 5. Introduced by Steve Jobs 6. Symbolized by an apple Puzzle answers on page 44. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 17 Those Outta Sight ’60s HERE IS A PLEASANT LITTLE GAME that will give you a message every day. It’s a numerical puzzle designed to spell out your fortune. Count the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is 6 or more, subtract 4. If the number is less than 6, add 3. The result is your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner and check one of your key numbers, left to right. Then read the message the letters under the checked figures give you. 1965 ❉ JOSEPH ACROSS 1Strapped 6 Wheel of Fortune host 11Ran 12 Not obtuse 13 Last letter 14 “Beau —” 15 Perfect rating 16Govt. org. that pays seniors 18Badge material 19Wail 20 Diarist Anaïs 21 Bar rocks 22Sounded owlish 24Distantly 25Nickname of Aethelred 27Brusque 29 Shop holders 32Cigar remnant CROSSWORD 3 3Crony 3 34Affirmative vote 35 Grant’s foe 36Live 37 Isr. neighbor 38 Jacob’s father 40Overhead 42Pitching choice 43Dance party attendee 44Chose 45Loses DOWN 1 Irregular spot 2 Dawn of the Dead director 3Madonna song 4Beer bash need 5 Lou Grant star 6 Cosmos author 7 Deck topper 8Madonna song 9New York prison 10 More cutting 17Cocktail made with brandy and lemon 23 Blasting stuff 24Nabokov novel 26Very attentive 27 Cotton cloth 28Depletes 30Irritated 31Cavalry weapons 33Showed nervousness 39 Blvd. kin 41 Scrooge cry Puzzle answer on page 44. 18 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 Reeling Years By Lucie M. Winborne TOTYTSIC : A in th e ’60s Trivia 1.This book by Rachel Carson is considered the “embryo for the Environmental Movement.” 2.This classic sports-car model was introduced by Chevrolet in 1966. 3.What U.S. city was the center of 1967’s “Summer of Love”? 4. These three neighboring states battled Israel during the Six Days War. 5. Street in London that housed independent fashion boutiques and designers. 6.He won the most Oscars for Best Director in the ’60s. 7. The 1963 holiday classic cowritten by Phil Spector has been covered by artists from U2 to the pop trio Hansen. 8.Name the ancient literature that inspired Pete Seeger’s controversial folk song “Turn! Turn! Turn!” 9.Worldwide dance craze that debuted on The Dick Clark Show. 10. The “Tammy” doll, inspired by the movie character made popular by Debbie Reynolds, had a little sister. What was her name? Hungry Hungry Hippos Hippos like marbles! That’s the concept of this 1978 game in which two to four players control the jaws of plastic wallowers and try to gobble as many marbles as possible. TV commercials showed a line of colored cartoon hippos dancing in a conga line and singing, “Hungry Hungry Hip-pos!” Puzzle answer on page 21. 1960 “I know you work hard for your money, but not any harder than I’m working right now.” ACROSS 1 Tampa Bay player, for short 4 Islands near Galway 8 “This — recording” 9 Philippine island 0 Trounced 1 12Remove a stripe 13 Ahab was one 15Full of affection 18Cry from 13 Across 19 Last night 20Small, long- haired dogs, for short 21 Deli bread DOWN 1 Puppeteer Baird 2 Dos Passos trilogy 3 Ginger’s cousin 4 Shrewdness 5 Newspaper staffer 6 Partner of aid 7 Staircase descender? 11Passes the baton 13Outer covering 14“Verrry funny! ” 16Campus creeper 17 $100 bill Puzzle answer on page 44. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 19 Those Outta Sight ’60s ❉ JOSEPH CROSSWORD 4 TOTYTSIC : in th e A Viewmaster 3D Stereo Viewer Viewmaster Stereoscopes had been around since the late ’30s, but in 1966 the maker began releasing viewers with fewer scenic and more child-friendly subjects, including Disney classics like Cinderella and Snow White, and TV series like Batman, The Man From U.N.C.L.E. and even Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In. You could get a self-light viewer for $3.50 or a low-tech hold-it-up-to-alight-source version for $1.53. Childhood Fun ACROSS 1Dozen for Hercules 7 Weevil target 11 Broad street 12 Buffalo’s lake 13 Take in 14Cotton seeders 15Choose 16Arbor makeup 17Basketball’s Archibald 18Subject of recent mapping 19Cordelia’s dad 21 Train unit 22 Ransom star 25John Ritter’s dad 26Sudden breeze 27Poplars 6Collection 7 Kick off 8South American river 9 End, for one 10Inferior 16Words of action 18Ancient Roman jurist 20Spur 22Dark pigment 23Demanded 24 First pope 25 — rasa 28Temperamental 30 “Of Thee —” 31Coloration 32Fury 34Gushing review 36Zodiac animal Puzzle answer on page 44. 29Bread with a pocket 33Burger topper 34Lacquer ingredient 35“Do — others ...” 36 G or R 37 Told tales 38 Get even for 39Dennis’s role on NYPD Blue 40Business news highlight DOWN 1Weighed down 2 Spanish city 3Sire 4Amoeba makeup 5Underbody problem 20 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 ✤ WORD SLEUTH 2 Find the listed words in the diagram. They run in all directions – forward, backward, up, down and diagonally. Balloons CartoonsGames School Blocks Climbing Jump rope Bubble gum Comic books Playgrounds Teddy bears CandyDolls Playing Puzzle answer on page 44. Skate boards 1960 from page 19 Reeling Years ’60s Trivia Answers 1. Silent Spring. 2. The Camaro. 3.San Francisco — more specifically, the neighborhood of Haight-Ashbury. 4.Syria, Jordan and Egypt. 5. Carnaby Street. 6. Robert Wise. 7.“Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” 8.The biblical book of Ecclesiastes. 9. The Twist. 10. Pepper. Dancing “The Twist.” TOTYTSIC : A in th e Mr. Potato Head Hasbro introduced the first Mr. Potato Head in 1952. A plastic model with plastic parts that attached variously to the body — ears, eyes, shoes, a hat, a nose, a mouth — it was the first toy to be advertised on TV. Over the years Mr. Potato Head picked up additional adornments (suit, shirts, tie), was joined by a Mrs. and gained accessories like a boat and trailer. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 21 1947 1955 22 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 Who's That Star? e i b r a B by Lucie M. Winborne Barbie Millicent Roberts was born on March 9, 1959, in Willows, Wis., to George and Margaret Roberts, the oldest of six siblings. Although her childhood was “relatively normal,” from her teen years on she has fit the stereotype of a firstborn child as high achiever, with a staggering list of accomplishments. “I always wanted to demonstrate that women can take on a variety of roles in life,” Barbie is frequently quoted as saying, adding that her parents instilled in their children a strong sense of the value of education. To that end, not only has she completed medical school, serving as both nurse and physician but she has also passed her love of learning on to both children and adults by teaching a number of subjects ranging from Spanish to sign language to art. And when she’s not teaching, she’s doing: putting her boundless energy into public service roles on the police force and at the local fire department, even in the world of politics, which she admits is “probably the biggest challenge I’ve ever taken on.” Praised for her selfless work on behalf of UNICEF and as an ambassador for world peace, she surprised the nation by narrowly beating out Bill Clinton in the 1996 presidential race, then choosing to serve only one term in order to devote more time to her numerous causes. Sadly, Barbie hasn’t found quite as much success on the romantic front. Although she and Ken Carson were a couple for over 40 years, they never married or had a family. Both are tight-lipped about the reason behind their 2004 breakup, though tabloids have speculated that an Australian surfer known only as Blaine played a role. Two years later the couple reunited, but those closest to them say they remain “just friends.” For all her accomplishments, Barbie has weathered her share of criticism. Some have accused her of promoting an “unrealistic body image” that could lead young women to become anorexic in an attempt to emulate her flawless figure, but the former teen model insists that “each woman has her own beauty,” attributing her shape to diet and workouts rather than surgical enhancement. Are there any frontiers left for Barbie to explore? Rumors hint at a possible NASA stint, but Barbie is keeping mum at the moment. What seems certain is that this timeless beauty will continue to surprise and inspire us for years to come. The Mattel toy company released its first Barbie fashion doll in 1959. Since then, more than a billion Barbie dolls have been sold worldwide. In 2009, to celebrate her 50th birthday, a runway show in New York’s Fashion Week was staged in her honor, with fashions created by the leading haute couturiers. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 23 Feeling Nostalgic e l p m i S e v i t a e r C Winborne By Lucie M. Today’s parents are faced with a dizzying myriad of choices when it comes to providing playthings for their offspring. As technology advances, so does the temptation to spring for mini laptops or videos that promise to turn babies into future Einsteins. But experts like Susan Linn, a psychiatry professor at Harvard Medical School, believes the best toys are “10 percent toy and 90 percent child.” Perhaps that’s why some of the low-tech fun that boomers grew up with has never gone out of style, finding a new audience today with a younger generation discovering, as Linn says, that “the toys that really foster creativity just lie there until they’re transformed by children,” like a few favorites pictured here you still may have in your closet. RUBIK’S CUBE When Ernö Rubik introduced his 3-D color-coded puzzle in the mid’70s, it took almost a decade for the deceptively simple invention to become a household name, but kids and adults alike still spend countless addictive hours scrambling the cube’s colored squares in an attempt to restore it to its original color scheme. Never mind that with 43 quintillion combinations, achieving the sole solution often seems maddeningly out of reach: It took Rubik himself at least a month to solve it. Devotees cite such benefits as increased focus, patience, even confidence, as well as improved spatial awareness and sharpened mental reflexes from their hours of practice. And for the competitive, cash prizes are given for categories including fewest moves, one-handed and even blindfolded in national and international championships. 24 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 LEGO The 1949 debut of Danish carpenter Ole Christiansen’s interlocking red and white blocks (the name is derived from the Danish words “leg godt,” or “play well”) gave kids nearly endless opportunities to stretch the bounds of imagination. A mere six bricks can be combined in more than 100 million ways, and as one modern adult fan noted, “Where one day you are making a castle, the next you can make a space station.” Teachers and engineers praise the toy for promoting hand-eye coordination, communication, critical thinking and problem solving, even mathematics, while its ageless versatility makes it a great multigenerational family activity. To date, Lego has produced more than 320 billion single bricks, with no sign of slowing down. ETCH A SKETCH one into an artist with the A device that can turn any ’t do da Vinci probably couldn turn of a knob? Even Leonar of hild basement-built brainc have resisted playing with this : ple sim is le sagnes. The princip French electrician André Cas um min alu a stylus that pulls Twisting two knobs moves . screen, forming a black line the of k powder from the bac and w dra , dle doo ld parents) cou Kids (and just as often their s iast hus ent ary por e contem do over in a shake, while som ng shi oni ast ting fec re per spend up to 80 hours or mo r 100 million units to date, ove of s sale h Wit art. works of s named to the Toy Industry in 2003 the Etch a Sketch wa 100 s List, commemorating the Association’s Century of Toy y. tur cen h e toys of the 20t most memorable and creativ A BALL Sometimes we forget how much enjoyment can be derived from simply bouncing a ball. Playground favorite foursquare, in which players work their way from the lowest numbered square to the highest by eliminating their fellow players in those squares, boosts kids’ hand-eye coordination and manual dexterity, as well as group skills like teamwork and cooperation, with only a bouncy ball, piece of chalk, flat surface and four enthusiastic participants. To make the game more challenging, special-instruction calls like “Bus stop,” “Taxi” and “Titanic” can be inserted at random, and those of a competitive bent can go on in adulthood to an annual world championship tournament in Bridgton, Maine, where some players increase the fun by continuing another favorite childhood tradition: dressing in costume while going for the prize. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 25 Feeling Nostalgic “ARE YOU SURE THERE’S A MARKET FOR THAT?” 5 ROTTEN KIDS’ TOYS THAT POSITIVELY STANK By Lucie M. Winborne Designing the perfect toy is a complex business these days, what with worrying about small parts getting lost or swallowed, packaging, noise factor, movie or TV tie-ins, etc. But what about those “What were you thinking?” creations that are the equivalent of Ford’s Edsel? It’s hard to picture even the most desperate parents flocking to the mall for these gems, which undoubtedly received an engraved invitation to the Toy Hall of Shame shortly after their debut. Like these … Airport Security Play Set Perhaps Time magazine said it best when it asked: “Why let your kids play with toys that encourage their wildest flights of fancy when you can teach them the joys of standing in line and following rules?” Especially for only $58 — far less than the cost of an average plane ticket! Still, while the set is available on Amazon.com, few wanted to relive the joys of post-911 air travel, although for those youngsters pondering a future career in security, there’s the … 26 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 Police Electric Baton Shock Or, not to put too fine a point on it, the toy taser. Sure, kids throughout the ages have clobbered each other in the name of role playing, but even in a game of cops and robbers, it’s hard to picture a scenario in which delivering an electric shock to his friends wouldn’t put a kid on the fast track to the time-out corner. Yet even that’s not quite as drastic as the child-friendly version of … Super Aids Six young White House aides, accidentally exposed to a chemical that gave them super powers, using their new talents in the service of President Ronald Reagan? Sounded like a good idea until the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention labeled a mysterious new illness “acquired immune deficiency syndrome” or AIDS. Perhaps Mattel should have stuck to promoting Reagan values like those espoused a couple of decades later by … Happy Family Midge Russian Roulette? No, it’s just the Kaba Kick! Players point a pink hipposhaped barrel at their own heads, pull the trigger, and earn points if nothing happens (just like in real life). However, if the gun “fires,” they get a kick from plastic feet. Suffice it to say that while the Japanese have given us many wonderful inventions, this was not one of them. But kids in hot water for playing with guns after their folks warned them not to might have earned points of a different sort by helping to fight injustice on the political front, if Mattel hadn’t pulled its … Midge unquestionably made impending motherhood look easy with a magnetically attached belly containing a baby that could be snapped out of its plastic womb for cuddling. Unfortunately, consumers didn’t quite see it that way. Some shoppers believed the doll promoted teen pregnancy, in spite of the fact that Midge’s family included a husband, and after a nationwide series of complaints, it was clear this expectant mom just didn’t deliver. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 27 Feeling Nostalgic Illustration by Vincent Guise FROM THE ARCHIVES OF CRIME Sunday Mirror Magazine, Sept. 12, 1948 The Clue of the Curious Bobby-Soxer by Arthur Mefford The amicable teenager didn’t realize that friendship with a “nice stranger” would involve her in a murder case LIEUTENANT PHIL BREITZKE, head of the Chicago Homicide Squad, took the call. In an excited voice the manager of the famous Stevens Hotel reported that there had been a murder in Room 717. Ten minutes later, Breitzke and a dozen detectives were on the scene. They were followed by Coroner A. L. Brodie. Inside a closet was the victim. He appeared to be about 25. His hair was matted with blood. His face was battered, his lips twisted grotesquely. He was a slight youth, about five feet six and he was attired only in light gray trousers. On a chair was a checked shirt and a plaid coat, such as is usually affected by the 28 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 drugstore cowboy-bobbysox crowd. “This boy,” said Brodie, after a brief examination, “was beaten to death. Probably with the base of this lamp.” He held up a bronze-based lamp he had picked from the floor. “Besides that,” he went on, “he was stabbed three times in the head and five times in the chest. Any one of the wounds could have been fatal.” Inquiry brought out that the victim had occupied the room with another youth of about his own age. That both had been in the room the previous evening — that of May 10, 1945 — was indicated by the fact that both the twin beds had been slept in. The hotel manager revealed that the slain youth and his roommate had been registered as Harold Gordon and Robert Levitus, both of 106 West 47th Street, New York City. The manager didn’t know which was Gordon and which was Levitus, so he couldn’t identify the victim. From a bellhop, however, Chief of Detectives Walter Storms learned that both boys were well supplied with money, had ordered food and drinks in their room, and had been liberal tippers. “What did his roommate look like?” Storms demanded. The bellhop pondered a moment, then — “Well, I don’t think the other guy was as old as this one. He was always prettied up in a fancy riding habit and reminded me of a movie cowboy. He was good-looking, with blond, curly hair.” Detective John McNamara, who had There they had registered as “Smith” and as “Flash Gordon” because of his bravado. been making an inch-by-inch search of the “Levinsky,” giving as their home address, a Breitzke described Gordon’s roommate. suite, interrupted the questioning. “Here’s non-existent street number in Chicago. ‘”Oh, he?” said one youth. “He went to a letter,” he said, handing it to Storms. The “We’ve got to find Shirley,” Storms said. Senn High, too. But he was much younger letter read: “Concentrate on her!” than Stein. He was a freshman. His name is “Dear Son: Don’t just glance at this Breitzke and his aides started checking Donald Jay Cooke. He’s only about 16 now, letter and discard it as so much paper. You on the telephone calls made from Room 717. but looks older. Both of them were finally are starting a new life. Don’t make it just an After three days work they finally located one expelled from Senn and sent to Montifiore.” adventure. Make it something worthwhile. number at which a girl named Shirley lived. Montifiore is a school for incorrigibles. Please do the right thing, dear. You are old She was Shirley Allen, a stunning brunette “When was the last time you saw enough to know right from wrong and to of 18. Cooke?” pressed Breitzke. know the consequences …” After a lot of denials, Shirley finally “Almost a month ago. They got out of “Try to get a room in a Jewish admitted she had visited Gordon in his room Montifiore and came back here. They both neighborhood. The police won’t look for you the day before his body was discovered. had a lot of dough and peppy new clothes. there. Don’t at any time confide in anyone She said that she had met him at a corner They made fun of us guys still going to that your name is other than Harold Gordon. drugstore; that he seemed like a nice boy school and called us a lot of suckers.” Make sure that no one calls you anything but and that she liked him. Beyond the fact that “You know whether he and Cooke were Harold. Please, dear, try to make good. mixed up in any gangs?” Love, Mom.” ‘’Yes, I heard they were,” said the “Hmmm!” grunted Storms. youth. “But I don’t know anything about “Doesn’t make sense. Still doesn’t it beyond that.” identify the victim as one or the other. “Gordon’s” parents, Mr. and Mrs. However, it does look like they were Alfred Stein, lived at 4932 North Kedzie both on the lam. As I size it up, this guy Avenue, it was found. They were taken to is Gordon and the letter proves that his the morgue and identified the body as that mother knows about some misdoings of of their son. his. We’ve got to find out who ‘Don’ is.” The parents reluctantly conceded After Storms had digested the that their son had been a “problem child.” letter, McNamara handed him another He became a truant at an early age slip of paper. It was the unused return and they had a hard time keeping him part of a round-trip bus ticket from out of scrapes. He filched things from Confronted by the police and her mother, Cleveland to Chicago. As evidence it neighborhood stores, fought with children the girl broke down and told all she knew was worthless, except perhaps to show his own age, and at 17 had been accused about her boyfriend. that the victim may have been from by a girl of a morals offense. Cleveland, instead of New York City. In November 1944, he had been Breitzke, meanwhile, had been checking with Gordon had told her he came from New York, caught in a burglary, but the judge had been the hotel’s chief operator on telephone calls she knew nothing about him. She named the lenient and released him on probation. The made from the room. She had recorded the drugstore where she had met him. parents had then sent him to a private school numbers and the lieutenant double-checked Three detectives were assigned to cover in Detroit. A short time later he had been on all the addresses. the place, to question every one of the jive expelled for robbing fellow pupils. Questioning of other hotel employees hepcats with whom the victim had ingratiated “Then he ran away from home,” his revealed that the victim’s roommate had himself because of his free spending. mother said, tearfully. ‘”He wrote me from gone out early the previous morning. He Eventually they talked to a boy named Meyer New York and I wrote back begging him to was dressed for the bridle path and hadn’t Goldberg. be good. He said he was taking a new name returned so far as was known. Then, shortly “Sure, I know ‘Gordon,’” he said. “I and starting all over. ‘You’ll be proud of me, after he went out, the slain youth had a female think he got mixed up in some sort of a mess yet,’ he wrote. visitor — a pretty brunette whom a bellhop in New York and he came back here using “We didn’t know he had returned to had heard him call “Shirley.” that phony name. His real name is Morton Chicago, and we never heard of Donald “She was very young and wore bobby- Stein, and he used to go to Senn High School Cooke.” sox,” the bellhop said. “I served their lunch here with me.” Breitzke and his men now concentrated here in the room.” ON a hot trail now, the detectives hurried on a search for Cooke. His description was New York police, meanwhile, reported to Senn High School. There the records sent out on thousands of police flyers and on that the 47th Street address given by the two revealed that Stein had been an irregular the teletype. Further patient digging brought youths was that of the Rex Hotel, and that two pupil, often in conflict with the truant officer. to light Mrs. Isabelle Edwards, Cooke’s boys answering the description of Gordon He was sophisticated far beyond his years. mother, who worked as a secretary to a and Levitus had lived there for several weeks. Among fellow pupils he had been known Continued on page 34 ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 29 1958 1973 30 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 12 Fun Packed Issues of Magazine ReMIND magazine offers fresh takes on popular TV, movie, music and sports personalities from days gone by. Rounding out each jam-packed issue of ReMIND are dozens of brain-teasing puzzles, trivia quizzes, classic comics and features, providing a fun way to stay sharp while interactively sharing the past with the next generation! FREE PREVIEW online at: www.remindmagazine.com Enjoy monthly THEMES & CONTENT like: ▪ Sudoku ▪ Movie Stars ▪ Word Sleuth ▪ Trivia ▪ Articles ▪ Retro Ads ORDERING IS EASY: online: remindmagazine.com phone: 1-855-773-6463 mail: Complete order form below ❏ YES! Sign me up for 1 year ✓ YOUR SAVINGS YOUR PRICE $41.89 $17.99 (12 issues) of ReMIND magazine for only $17.99. NAME ADDRESS CITYSTATE ZIP Mail this coupon to: ReMIND magazine, 213 Park Drive, Troy MI 48083 Option #1/ Pay by check or money order (Make check or money order out to: ReMIND magazine) Option #2 /Charge my credit card Credit Card # ❏Visa ❏MC ❏ Discover ❏AmEx Signature Required: Exp. Date: BLAST FROM THE PAST PRICING! Allow 4-6 weeks for delivery of your first issue. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 31 Those Funky’70s Reeling TOTYTSIC : A in th e Years By Lucie M. Winborne ’70s Trivia Frosty Snow Cone Maker First released in 1969, the Frosty Snow Cone Maker became an instant hit with the summer set. Add ice cubes and syrup flavoring, and turn the handle for your own frosty treat. Have trouble crushing the ice? You could still tear open the packets and drink the syrup. 1.According to this TV commercial, how does a kid eat an Oreo cookie? 2. Name the hairstyle popularized by Olympic gold medalist Dorothy Hamill in 1976. 3.What radical group kidnapped American heiress Patty Hearst? 4.Construction began on this American oil pipeline in 1973, and it was opened in 1977, during an oil crisis. 5.Which of the following was not invented during the ’70s? Food processor; cellular telephone; Velcro; the CAT scanner 6.What state did Mary Ann of Gilligan’s Island call home? 7.In 1974, the Sears Tower became the world’s tallest building in this city. 8.She was the first “test tube baby,” born from in-vitro fertilization in 1978. 9. What was the purpose of the neutron bomb? 10.In the musical Grease, what was bad-girl Rizzo’s real name? Puzzle answer on page 34. Even Exchange by Donna Pettman Each numbered row contains two clues and two 6-letter answers. The two answers differ from each other by only one letter, which has already been inserted. For example, if you exchange the A from MASTER for an I, you get MISTER. Do not change the order of the letters. 1. Railroad cars —R——— Samuel Clemens —W——— 2. Tasteless B———— African antelope E———— 3. Small horses — — N — — — Flowers — — S — — — 4. Stockpile — — — — ETempest ————M 5. Painting border —R——— Fire from a candle —L——— 6. Breakfast cake W————— Lottery R————— 7. Fruit of the vine ———P— Mealtime prayer ———C— 8. Talking wildly — — — — — GGully —————E 9. Ponder — — — — K Addams Family hand ————G 10. Confess ——P——— Up to date ——C——— 32 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 Puzzle answer on page 44. T o ys in The Att ic Trivia Quiz ANSWERS from page 10 1. Snakes and Ladders, an ancient game from India. 2.Mr. Potato Head, in 1952. Before 1960 the toy didn’t come with a potato. 3.Eleven. Seven more were added in 1963. An evil Cathy imitation made it into an episode of The Twilight Zone, using the same voice as the original doll, but speaking hateful phrases. 4.1969. The rear-loading version was discovered to be too top-heavy. The side-load version that made it to retail stores had two surfboards hanging from the sides. 5.Using media to push toy sales: For example, My Little Pony had two television Cootie series plus a movie. The Transformers had a comic book series and a television series. 6.24, six for each of the Cooties to be built. 7.Raggedy Ann & Andy: A Musical Adventure, 1977. This was followed in the 1980s by Masters of the Universe, The Care Bears, Rainbow Brite and My Little Pony. 8.Inline skates actually came first, as far back as 1760 when wheels were put on a skate in place of an ice-skating blade. Four wheels didn’t come along until 1863. 9.Stuff advertised in the back of comic books, often ripoffs. Read Mail-Order Mysteries by Kirk Demarais for an exposé of what you really got when you ordered those things and more. 10. Four, one for each branch of the military services. 11. Twenty. 12.From Ole Kirk Christiansen, who called his company LEGO, short for the Danish words “Leg Godt,” which means to “play well.” LEGO is still owned by a company in Denmark. 13.Baking powder caused a reaction that made the sub go up and down in the water. 14.Cabbage Patch Kids dolls are born. The site in Cleveland, Ga., includes an “adoption” center. 15.Non-Expanding Recreational Foam, the spongy material Nerf toys are made from. 1975 Mah-Jongg ✤ WORD SLEUTH 3 Find the listed words in the diagram. They run in all directions – forward, backward, up, down and diagonally. Bamboos DragonsJokers Circles East CombinationsFlowers Tiles ScorecardWall Sets Winds Cracks GameSuits Puzzle answer on page 44. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 33 Those Funky’70s ACROSS &byDOWN Donna Pettman from page 32 Reeling Years ’70s Trivia Answers 1.“Oh, a kid will eat the middle of an Oreo first, and save the chocolate cookie outside for last.” 2.The wedge cut. 3. Symbionese Liberation Army, or SLA. 4.The TransAlaskan Oil Pipeline. 5. Velcro. 6. Kansas. 7. Chicago. 8. Louise Brown. Dorothy Hamill sports a 9.It killed people wedge cut yet left buildings and infrastructure intact. 10. Betty. Continued from page 29 business executive. She said that Donald’s father had died when he was about 3, and that she had remarried. Then her second husband, Edwards, died, and Donald got beyond control. “I think Morton Stein was the bad influence in my son’s life,” she said. She said her son, after being freed on probation from Montifiore, had visited her only once. With him at the time were Stein and Shirley Allen. “She seemed like an awfully nice little girl,” Mrs. Edwards went on. “I hoped she would be a good influence on Stein, and in that way on my son as well. But it looks differently now. I have no idea where my son is.” Breitzke now called on Shirley Allen again. “Shirley,” he said, “I hear you’re only 15, instead of the 18 you claim. I also know that you didn’t tell me all you knew about ‘Gordon.’ Now, you’ve got to come clean or else you’ll be in trouble.” Shirley’s mother broke into tears. ‘’She’ll tell everything,” her mother sobbed. “Shirley, tell this gentleman the truth.” “Was Don Cooke in love with you, too?” Breitzke urged. “No,” the girl replied. “There never was any question about that. He didn’t try to horn in on my affair with ‘Gordon’ in any way. He left the Stevens hotel room right after I got there the day before they found the body. He had on a riding habit and said he was going over to the ‘Academy.’ “That’s the last time I ever saw him. And, I had luncheon with 34 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 Rearrange the letters in each group to form a word. Place the words into the diagram so that the same words read both across and down. The first word across is the same as the first word down, the second word across is the same as the second word down and so on. The letter groups are not necessarily placed next to the row of the diagram in which they go. Puzzle answer on page 44. ‘Gordon’ and left the hotel about five o’clock. I called him the next day but nobody answered.” Pressed further, Shirley said Stein, whose real name she knew, had bragged to her about a dozen holdups he and Cooke had staged. “That day I had lunch with him, I opened a dresser drawer while he was in the bathroom. There was a blackjack, a long, sharp knife and a book. The book was The Life of John Dillinger. I asked him about it and he said he studied the book so he would avoid making the same mistakes that Dillinger did.” Shirley denied knowledge of any specific holdups Stein and Cooke had committed. Breitzke and his aides were satisfied she had told all she knew. MEANWHILE, other detectives had discovered that Don Cooke had bought a bus ticket for Houston, Texas. The search for him was concentrated there. But the police didn’t give up surveillance of the bobby-sox crowd at the drugstore. One of the bobby-soxers received a picture postcard from De Ridder, La. “Having a swell time,” Donald Cooke wrote. “You’d like it if you were here with me.’’ Louisiana State Troopers turned De Ridder upside down looking for Cooke. No luck. Then another bobby-soxer got a card from him postmarked “Marshall, Texas.” No luck there, either. Then a third card, this time from Gretna, La. The sheriff caught him there. He admitted killing Stein. Said he slew him in self-defense after Stein had attacked him with a knife. ‘’I pushed his body into a closet, took what dough he had, and beat it,” he said. On December 7, 1945, back in Chicago, Cooke pleaded guilty to manslaughter before Criminal Court Judge Harold G. Ward. Only 16, he was immediately sentenced to 14 year in State’s prison. Awesome’80s Reeling Years By Lucie M. Winborne ’80s Trivia 1. Name the mechanical bear that belonged to Apollo’s son Boxey in the TV series Battlestar Galactica. 2. Who lamented that there were “no candycovered chocolate hearts to give away and no wedding Saturday within the month of June”? 3.This original comic strip featured Bill the Cat. 4.What company created the first color arcade game? 5.Name the war that took place on a Caribbean island during Ronald Reagan’s first presidential term. 6.She made waves as a mermaid in the hit film Splash. 7. What made Michael Milken rich and famous? 8. Clothing designer known for its alligator logo. 9.What former communist European country produced one of the decade’s lamest automobiles? 10.This perky brunette was one of the first MTV veejays. Puzzle answer on page 37. The ’80s was the decade that introduced us to John Hughes and his long resumé of socially relevant films that captured the feel of the generation, from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off to National Lampoon’s Vacation. It was also the decade in film that brought Raiders of the Lost Ark, The Shining, Top Gun and these other films — see if you remember the title. 1 Hint: Lloyd Dobler (John Cusack) showed audiences how to win over a girl using his boombox in this film. 2 Hint: Disney introduced a more lively, spunky heroine named Ariel in this animated classic. 3 Hint: Tatum O’Neal and Kristy McNichol are pitted against each other to see who can lose their virginity first in this drama. Answers: 1. Say Anything (1989) 2. The Little Mermaid (1989) 3. Little Darlings (1980) Puzzle answer on page 45. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 35 Awesome’80s TOTYTSIC : A in th e ✤ WORD SLEUTH 4 Find the listed words in the diagram. They run in all directions – forward, backward, up, down and diagonally. Wooly Willy Brakeman Crossing Wooly Willy was the ultimate car-trip toy back in the ’50s and ’60s. Using a magnetic wand, you pulled metal filings through the plastic cover over Willy’s face, which was printed on the inside card. Other versions included Dapper Dan, Funny Face and Brunette Betty. In 2003, the Toy Industry Association named Wooly Willy to its “Century of Toys List.” 1985 36 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 Trains PassengersTankers CabooseDiesel Porter Track Cars EngineSignalWhistle ConductorFreight Steam Puzzle answer on page 44. TOTYTSIC : from page 35 Reeling A Years in th e ’80s Trivia Answers 1. Muffit. Muffit and Boxey on 2.Stevie Wonder in “Battlestar Galactica” “I Just Called to Say I Love You.” 3. Bloom County. 4.Atari. The game was “Tempest.” 5. Grenada. 6. Daryl Hannah. 7. Junk bonds. 8. Izod. 9.Yugoslavia gave us the “Yugo,” the future of which was a “No go.” 10. Martha Quinn. Simon Says Simon Says was an early electronic game from Milton Bradley that used what was called software back then to devise patterns of tones that players were challenged to repeat by pressing buttons. The longer the game progressed, the more buttons players would have to recall and press. Released in 1978 at Studio 54 in New York City, Simon Says was a hit of the 1970s and ’80s. Cabbage Patch of Gold If you grew up in the ’80s, Cabbage Patch Kids sprouted up just about everywhere you looked. Originally created in the 1970s for sale at local craft shows by Xavier Roberts, they were named Cabbage Patch Kids by Roger Schlaifer when he secured the worldwide licensing rights in 1982. Schlaifer and his wife wrote the story that has been included with every Cabbage Patch Kid product since. In it, Xavier Roberts, a 10-year-old boy, discovers the Cabbage Patch Kids by following a Bunny Bee behind a waterfall into a magical valley, where the Babies are being born. To keep them from becoming enslaved by the evil Lavendar McDade, it is his mission to get each Cabbage Patch Baby adopted into the home of a loving family. The dolls were first manufactured and sold by the toy company Coleco, followed by Hasbro, Mattel, Toys ’R’ Us and (currently) Play Along. Around the mid-’80s, Cabbage Patch Kids became so popular that desperate parents sometimes got into fights over the one remaining doll in stock. The dolls made the cover of Newsweek before Christmas. Roger Schlaifer and his wife issued more than 150 licenses for Cabbage Patch Kids branded products, generating some $2 billion in retail sales. Cabbage Patch Kids were named the official mascot of the 1992 Olympic Team, and in 1999 a popular vote selected the dolls as one of the 15 most representative images of the ’80s to use in commemorative postage stamps. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 37 Puzzles Puzzle answers on page 45. Using the clues, simple arithmetic, and a little logic, place a single digit (0 to 9) in each empty box in the diagram. To help you get started, one digit has been entered in the diagram. by Linda Thistle ACROSS 1 One-fourth of 14-Across 4The first digit is the sum of the other digits 6The last digit is three times the first digit 7 Eight times 12-Across 14Consecutive digits in ascending order 15 Five more than 5-Down 9 Two times 12-Down 10 10-Down times 12-Down 11Consecutive digits in ascending order 12 11-Across plus 3-Down 13 10-Across minus 1-Across Puzzle answer on page 45. 38 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 DOWN 2 Four hundred less than 4-Across 3 One less than 4-Down 4 Five times 10-Down 5 1-Across plus 2-Down 7Three hundred more than 11-Down 8 One more than 6-Across 9The last digit is the sum of the other digits 10 One-fourth of 8-Down 11 15-Across plus 9-Down 12 11-Across minus 8-Down 13 9-Across plus 10-Down Puzzle answer on page 45. Puzzle answers on page 45. Puzzle answer on page 45. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 39 Super Crossword 40 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 1 # Puzzle answer on page 45. Super Crossword 2 # Puzzle answer on page 46. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 41 Super Crossword 42 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 3 # Puzzle answer on page 46. Puzzle Answers o Retr Baseball Paraphernalia ✤ WORD SLEUTH 1 CRISS CROSS T E D D Y B E C O M I C B O A P T O Y P I G U G O F I N B M O A O T R A I N S E C D H WO O D E B G O O G O X L D C E E A N R B A L L L E O R E D C E K C S T K A Z O O R S E T I N O A S T O N K A T R U C K W K M O J R N A R E O C C P K Y O Y O I R L N O D Y T P H L E R A B A B Y D O O C E X K R F I N B A T G H J B O A A R E C O R D S K B E S I T E B P I A G O N D L D S L A Y G W L V I I N D K E R T O Y S R J I G S L I N A W P L A Y U H U Z Z L L E C N G E R P I A J Y O O E N S S K Y D O H C L U E I N C O L N L O O P G S L A H A R M B O A I N T S I E C B A A L L E D M B I C Y C L S T C K U P S T I C K S A P T I E R A Y G U N S N I E WM A S T E R N G C OW B O Y H A T O P T R I C Y C L E This puzzle is on page 11. This puzzle is on page 12. ❉ JOSEPH CROSSWORD 1 This puzzle is on page 5. ANSWER This puzzle is on page 14. This puzzle is on page 13. ❈ KING ❉ JOSEPH CROSSWORD 2 CROSSWORD 1 This puzzle is on page 15. This puzzle is on page 14. This puzzle is on page 16. This puzzle is on page 16. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 43 Puzzle Answers Retro Sleuth ❉ JOSEPH CROSSWORD 3 Childhood Fun ✤ WORD SLEUTH 2 Case answers 1. Transformers 2.“I Just Called To Say I Love You” 3.“Where’s the beef?” 4. Alex Trebek 5. Pound Puppies 6. The first Apple Macintosh computer goes on sale This puzzle is on page 18. This puzzle is on page 17. ❉ JOSEPH CROSSWORD 4 This puzzle is on page 19. This puzzle is on page 20. This puzzle is on page 20. Mah-Jongg ✤ WORD SLEUTH 3 This puzzle is on page 33. Trains ✤ WORD SLEUTH 4 Even Exchange Answers This puzzle is on page 32. 44 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 This puzzle is on page 34. This puzzle is on page 36. 1 2 # # ANSWER This puzzle is on page 35. This puzzle is on page 39. This puzzle is on page 39. This puzzle is on page 38. This puzzle is on page 38. This puzzle is on page 38. This puzzle is on page 39. This puzzle is on page 39. This puzzle is on page 40. ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 • 45 Puzzle Answers This puzzle is on page 41. TOTYTSIC : A G.I. Joe Bucking conventional wisdom that boys don’t play with “dolls,” Hasbro released this line of “action figures” beginning in 1964. The initial product offering represented the four branches of the U.S. armed forces. “America’s movable fighting man” was emblazoned on every boxed figure. As the war in Vietnam became more problematic, G.I. Joe lost his association with Soldier/Sailor/Pilot/ Marine and he was turned into an Adventurer. 46 • ReMIND magazine • Vol 7, Issue 1 in th e This puzzle is on page 42. 1984 1956 1967 1950s
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