The Tunes: Fall of 1964

November 13, 2009

          According to that impeccable source, The Courier-Express, the top ten tunes in September of 1964 were as follows:

 1. Little GTO                           Ronnie and the Daytona’s

2. House of the Rising Sun                            The Animals

3. Remember                                                    Shangrilas

4. Because                                                       Dave Clark 5

5. Where Did Our Love Go                              Supremes

6. Anytime at All                                               Beatles

7. Slow Down                                                     Beatles

8. Baby I Need Your Lovin’                       The Four Tops   

9. It Hurts to be in Love                                    Gene Pitney

10. Dancin’ in the Streets                                  Martha & the Vandellas

I am not clear as to whether this was in DuBois or the entire country.

[It is the beauty of You Tube that you can relive the ‘60s by looking at and hearing most of the tunes of this era.]

           One month later in October, the top three tunes were:

1. I’ll Be Back Again                                        Beatles

2. Pretty Woman                                              Roy Orbison

3. Baby Love                                                   Supremes

          In December the top 3 were:

1. I Feel Fine                                                    Beatles

2. Come See About Me                                   Supremes

3. Love Potion #9                                             The Searchers

Vietnam had not yet boiled over so the protest songs were not yet in vogue. However, little did we know things were soon going to change. When the Beatles were making us feel fine, Diana Ross was asking us to come and see about her and The Searchers were imbibing  love potion #9 until they kissed a cop down on 34th and Vine, there was a news item that caught the attention of those paying attention.

          On December 3, 1964, at Sproul Hall, the administration building of the University of California at Berkeley, over 1500 students staged an all night sit in protesting the censoring of political speech on campus. It was the beginning of the so-called Free Speech Movement that would mushroom into nation wide protests over the next 8 years. During that time period the top tunes would shed their sentimentality. Like the rest of culture, pop music lost its innocence.

School Mergers

November 10, 2009

           I can recall the hubbub over the merger of Sandy schools with the DuBois schools. It made sense supporters hooted. Of course, there were those who wanted to maintain their own schools as civic pride; those who wanted nothing to do with “those lessers”; and those who believed it would dumb down both school systems. I can also remember the argument that your taxes would only increase only by the cost of a pack of cigarettes a month as a result of the merger.

            We should have known better from a cost standpoint. Cigarettes were only 25 cents a pack at Jake Graham’s store in the middle fifties. About the only thing I noticed was the introduction of red with the black and white of DuBois’ colors on athletic uniforms. Of course, I was not paying the taxes at that time. Whatever the cost of the merger, in November of 1964, another merger was announced and approved.

            Reynoldsville-Sykesville would become part of the DuBois Area School District beginning with the school year of 1965-66. No one was talking small tax increase this time. Just getting all those high school age kids to DuBois meant an enormous increase in transportation costs. It was too bad this merger did not take place the year before. The Reyn-Sykes Falcons were undefeated in football in the fall of 1964 with such stalwarts as Frank Adamski, Denny Torretti, Bill Clontz and Sam Early. It would not have hurt to have Harry Clarke as a coach either as he was an offensive wizard with many successful years as coach at Central High School in Martinsburg after the merger.

            Mergers in themselves had merit. But bigness had its drawbacks. It was the end of the neighborhood school. Regional schools had to be built to facilitate bringing young people from all over the district. Economies of scale did not permit schools with 250 kids anymore. And, of course, the transportation costs just kept rising and rising. More students meant more administrators, non instructional types the students never see, unless they are “problem students.” A larger district meant more funds from the state and federal government, so more folks to keep the books and do the paperwork that is required by bureaucrats.

            There is no doubt that the smaller districts would have had difficulty surviving and delivering the instruction needed. But, some survive. Harmony, Glendale, Moshannon Valley and Curwensville in Clearfield County are just a few. When the new high school in Clearfield was built many clamored for it to be built at the Driving Park, the home of the Clearfield County Fair. Instead, it was built on the border with the Curwensville District.  It was inevitable, so it was argued, that Curwensville would merge with Clearfield. Building the high school there requires transportation for all but about 10 of the students. As for the merger, it’s been almost 30 years and we are still waiting.

Fall and High School Football

November 5, 2009

           High School football was the king of the sports in DuBois in the 1960s. Boys wanted to play football for the Beavers. There were back yard sandlot games all over the city. There were no Pee Wee football leagues at that time, so most kids got their first shot in organized football in Junior High. Dozens and dozens of young boys “went out” for football. Besides cross country, there were not other sports to compete with football. It was the “manly” thing to do…try to be a football player. From the heat of August to the chill of November, boys learned hard lessons about themselves and how to work as a team for a cause greater than themselves.

            The heritage of football was rich. Youngsters hoped to be the next QB like Bill Gordon, the next back like Don Gilbert or Gene Mikelonis, the next lineman like Bill Rearick, the next receiver like Sam Miller. But, there was more than an individual component to playing football. Football was a part of the warp and woof of the community. It was an honor to play for the high school team which represented the community. It was a matter of pride to play football for the DuBois Beavers. At this time there were very few college and professional football games on TV. The emphasis for most folks was on the local high school eleven.

            This was also the time before district and state playoffs. The team played 10 games and that was it. Your rivalries were of utmost important. Clearfield, Punxsutawney and DuBois made up the mythical Big Three. It was the goal of the season to defeat the other two. Except for the late thirties and middle fifties, DuBois and Punxsy dominated the rivalry. Clearfield had its triumphs in wrestling having a 64 match win streak in the sixties and still having the most state champion wresters of any school in Pennsylvania.

            So, the season finale between DuBois and Punxsy was always the watershed event of the football season. Like Army/Navy, winning that game could turn a dismal season successful. The game almost always played on Veteran’s Day [Armistice Day for the purists]. Both communities festooned themselves with school color ribbons, balloons and signs like “Trap the Beavers” or “Make Ground Chuck”. Because the day was a holiday, even day games were packed with fans of both teams. The teams were the representatives of their communities fighting for “bragging rights” for the next year.

            Times have changed. There are so many more options for a young boy today. Many play Pee Wee football and find early on it’s not their thing. Soccer has siphoned off many who would otherwise play football. Young folks are not inclined to put in the time, effort and sacrifice to play football. In an age of individuality, prosperity and choices, why choose to play a team game when I can do what I want. With the overwhelming amount of college and pro games now on TV, loyalties are no longer to the Beavers but to college and pro teams. On the streets of DuBois you will see more Steeler and Penn State gear than DAHS. High school football games are now the domain of parents and grandparents of the teams and marching bands. 

            Fall and football are different now. The leaves still color in brilliance, but high school football is no longer an important component of school and community. No one talks of the Big Three anymore. The last couple years, DuBois has played Clearfield and Punxsy the first two games of the season. Reports are that they will no longer be playing each other after this year. Rivalries are passé and all that counts is being district and state champion. High school football programs are having difficulty fielding full squads of 33 players. Youngsters are no longer participants but observers. Boys do not seem to be interested in the lessons of self-sacrifice and teamwork learned on the gridiron. Whether for good or bad, it is a different time.

Three Men in October

November 4, 2009

            During a week in October of 1964, three men became linked forever in time. Martin Luther King won the Nobel Peace Prize on 14 October. Nikita Khrushchev was ousted as Premier of the Soviet Union on 16 October. Herbert Hoover died on 21 October. How about an old high school English  assignment: contrast and compare?

            ML King was the undisputed leader in breaking down segregation in the South. He was tireless in his non-violent protest of the treatment of blacks. In 1964, it had been 10 years since Brown v Board of Education declared separate but equal was no longer good law. But, things were moving very slowly from the equality front.

             I remember vividly an antidote concerning the situation while visiting Charlotte, NC, in 1961. My brother had recently moved there for employment in the aerospace industry after graduation from Penn State. We were shopping at a local department store and I approached a drinking fountain that had a placard over it stating “Colored”. I thought it was colored water! I did not realize different colors of folks drank from different fountains. I had to be taught.

            King ultimately lost his life over his attempts to rid the nation of segregation in all areas of life. His life was not free of controversy, but no one can deny his powerful influence over the changes that have occurred since he began his crusade to overcome racism. Not that it has been overcome, but it certainly is a giant step forward to elect the first Afro-American President last year forty years after ML King was murdered.

            Khrushchev, you will remember, was responsible for the first important shoe incident in history. The second, being the shoe hurled at GW Bush in Iraq at a press conference. At the 902nd Plenary Session of the UN General Assembly on 12 October 1960, Khrushchev removed his shoe and banged it on the table in protest to the Philipino Delegation berating the Soviets for colonialism. With his bald head and gap toothed smile he was the sinister embodiment of the USSR. He was credited with beginning de-Stalinization of the Soviet Union. However, he was the head of an empire that sought to rule the world by force. He was the architect of the missile race and space exploration. Just one day after his tirade, the Soviets returned safely a 3 man space vehicle from a 24 hour space flight. By all accounts, the USA was at least two years behind in the space race in 1964.

              He did not bury the West militarily as he hoped but was deposed 4 years after his shoe pounding, in October of 1964. He was the antithesis of the non-violent King. He was the head of a régime that used intimidation and death itself to remain in power and control its satellite states. His object was not equality but subjugation through might and power. He was quite a contrast to rev. King. They seemed not to inhabit the same universe.

            Herbert Hoover was neither like King or Khrushchev. He was an academic, a mining engineer and author. He held the cabinet position of Secretary of Commerce in the 1920s. His first elected office was the Presidency in 1928. He was not a charismatic leader like King or a political operative like Khrushchev. He is best known for the Depression following the 1929 Stock Market Crash in October. At the beginning of the crisis he kept the government out of the recovery. However, later, he tired to move the government into ambitious programs that lead Roosevelt to claim Hoover’s policies were leading the country into socialism. Of course, when in office Roosevelt redefined the idea of socialism in the US.

            His biggest blunder may have been signing into law the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act in June of 1930. It was designed to make American goods more productive by placing high tariffs on imports. It only exacerbated the problem, helping make the Depression a world wide problem by starting a trade war. When 1932 came around he was turned out of office with less than 40% of the vote. He was the most hated man in America and his inability to correct matters lead to the beginning of “bigger government” that only has become bigger over the years. Unlike King and Khrushchev, the Baby Boomers understanding of Hoover is not experiential but historical, mediated by written accounts and passions, prejudices and experiences of family that lived through the Depression.

            In October 1964, right when fall school activities are in high gear, news broke concerning 3 very different men who affected the Class of ’65 and the world they live in. Nikita Khrushchev forced the US to spend billions on nuclear weapons and the space race, expenditures that could have been used for positive domestic programs or not at all resulting in less revenue required by the government from the governed.  Martin Luther King, through non-violent means, required the US to face the fact that fact of racial discrimination. That, of course, led to the Civil Rights Act of the same year. Herbert Hoover who was an agent, either intentionally, unintentionally or both, of change in way government became involved in the economy of the country that continues to be debated to this very day.

Election Day: 1964

November 2, 2009

             LBJ became President of the United States [POTUS] as a result of one of those events that mark our lives. We all remember where we were when JFK was assassinated. I was in the Plane Geometry class of Jon Yount [he being a story in himself.]. In November of 1964, LBJ was running for POTUS on his own merit. His opponent was Barry Goldwater. Goldwater has the famous campaign phrase “In your heart you know he’s right!” that was countered by the opposition with “In you guts you know he’s nuts!”

            Goldwater was portrayed as a wild eyed right wing extremist of the John Birch type, and he had no chance. LBJ won the popular vote in 44 states, about 61% of the raw voted, giving him a landslide of 486 electoral votes. He campaigned on the implementation of the Great Society and ending the Vietnam “conflict” he inherited. The former proved difficult since government has enough problems delivering the mail let alone ending poverty and injustice. And, the latter, well, it was LBJ’s doom. His mismanagement of the now “war” lead him to not stand for re-election in 1968. So, an ambitious program to try and socially re-engineer America was taken down by foreign policy issues.

            Hauntingly familiar, to use a Halloween pun. Presently we have a POTUS who is trying to overhaul America with ambitious domestic programs that will change the social face of the US. And, he is facing an intractable war he inherited. There truly is “nothing new under the sun”. It is merely old news happening to new people. Elections have consequences and not always the ones for which we think we are voting. LBJ’s election effected a change on society forever, but not in the way he planned. What will be the consequences of the present Presidency 45 years later?

Eyeglasses

September 2, 2009

Ever notice in those old yearbooks the predominance of eyeglasses on students. The styles always look strange to our modern views…just like neck tie and lapel widths. Today, there are few student pictures with eyeglasses in yare books. Why? Contact lenses. Not that they were not available in 1965. It is said that Da Vinci…yes he who painted the Last Supper that is observable in Milan and the focus of the Dan Brown novel…was the first to outline a design for a lens to be placed over the human eye to improve vision. Various inventions were tried over the years: the first glass contact lenses was manufactured by German glassblower F.E. Muller in 1887; Fick & Kalt used them to correct vision in 1888; Hungarian Joseph Dallos perfected making molds of the human eye to perfect fitting in 1929; in 1946 the first combination plastic/glass contact lens was made; and the first contoured plastic lens was produced in Oregon in 1950. So, contacts are not a “modern invention”. Yet, widespread use was not a part of eyewear until Bausch & Lomb introduced the first available soft contact lens in 1971. Since that time, with improved fit, comfort, and both disposability and permanence, contact lenses have become the eyewear of choice for the high school types. So, in reviewing the 1965 Yearbook of DAHS [or any other school for that matter], look at all the eyeglasses on faces. You are “looking” at ancient history.

45 Years Ago

September 1, 2009

Yesterday, 31 August, marked the 45 anniversary of the beginning of the senior year in high school of the Class of 1965 at DuBois Area High School. 45 years ago…it hardly seems possible. A lot has happened in that 45 years. We will look at the events of 1964-65, what has changed, and take a look at all aspects of culture and society then and how it compares to today. This is going to be a fun, nostalgic and bittersweet journey. Enjoy the ride!