Thursday, March 29, 2012

HHS 1960 Senior Class Washington D.C. trip Itinerary March '60





Here are an updated itineray and photos from Eleanor of our Senior Trip to D.C., March 16-18, 1960. It snowed and we have that old 8mm film converted to video of our travels, which we may be able to adapt for viewing on this site. We were taken to so many places. I can name everyone in the pix (except the girl in distress), can you?



Monday, March 19, 2012

Green Pastures (1957) & You Can't Take It With You (1959?)


These were major productions, Green Pastures when we were Sophomores directed by Lee Yopp, and then You Can't Take It With You when we were Seniors, directed by Kathryn Hoyt, once Yopp left for the Lambertville, New Hope theater scene. Diane Brod Hoffman scanned these for the blog.  She also notes that in all our theater productions, which were very big deals, involving many many students from all classes, how many of our teachers gave their time to them. Also, Eleanor sent the Trenton Times Hamilton High Notes (mislabeled Morrisville High) that announced the forthcoming Green Pastures.










Monday, March 12, 2012

Programs Programs Programs

  
1956 Eighth Graduation Commencement at Maple Shade School
This was a very United Nations program.


1956 9th Grade Christmas Play at Steinert High 







1959 November 20 1959 Senior Ball
Here's Eleanor's Senior Ball Program and Dance Card--with nobody listed since she already had Tommy under control. We all went out to an early morning movie, like at 1:00 am.



    
June 10, 1960 Senior Class Night HHS West Auditorium 

                                                      





June 20, 1960 Senior Commencement,  
War Memorial Building, Trenton NJ



1959 HHS-West Class Night June 12, 1959

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Our Fabulous 50's

Here are some lists to jog our memories of our era--the late 50's and the beginning of the 60's. Actually "the 60's" of cultural change fame began in 1967--the Summer of Love. We're creatures of the 1950's--our formative years--so here are some of those 50's shapers of our outlooks. By 1960 the US had 1500 military advisors in Viet Nam--the beginning of a marker for the next generation.
                                     Pop Music in the 1950’s

http://www.popculturemadness.com/Entertainment/Decades/50s-Music.html

1950s Top Twenty Dance Hall Songs:
1. Rock Around The Clock - Bill Haley and His Comets
2. Rock and Roll is Here To Stay - Danny & the Juniors
3. Blueberry Hill - Fats Domino
4. At The Hop - Danny and the Juniors
5. Little Bitty Pretty One - Thurston Harris
6. The ABC's Of Love - Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers
7. All Shook Up - Elvis Presley
8. Little Darlin' - The Diamonds
9. Come Go With Me - Dell-Vikings
10. Kansas City - Wilbert Harrison
11. Love Is Strange - Mickey and Sylvia
12. Be-Bop-A-Lula - Gene Vincent
13. I'm Walkin' - Fats Domino
14. Peggy Sue - Buddy Holly
15. School Day - Chuck Berry
16. What'd I Say - Ray Charles
17. The Stroll - The Diamonds
18. Goody Goody - Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers
19. Stood Up - Ricky Nelson
20. Chantilly Lace - Big Bopper

The Top Ten 50's Songs That Mon and Dad Hated:
1. Wake Up Little Suzie - The Everly Bothers
2. Great Balls of Fire - Jerry Lee Lewis
3. Tutti Fruitti - Little Richard
4. Rumble - Link Wray
5. Yakety Yak - Coasters
6. Love For Sale - Billie Holiday
7. Ragtime Cowboy Joe - The Chipmunks
8. Endless Sleep - Jody Reynolds
9. Standing On The Corner (Watching All The Girls Go By) - Four Lads
10. Tequila! - Champs

The Top Ten Late 50's One Hit Wonders:
1. Donna/ La Bamba - Richie Valens
2. Sea of Love - Phil Phillips
3. Blue Suede Shoes - Carl Perkins
4. Sorry (I Ran All The Way Home) - Impalas
5. Trickle, Trickle - the Videos
6. Silhouettes - The Rays
7. To Know Him, Is To Love Him - The Teddy Bears
8. Mr. Lee - Bobbettes
9. Sea Cruise - Frankie Ford
10. Woo-Hoo - Rock-A-Teens

The Top Ten 50s Party Rock Songs:
1. Don't Be Cruel/Hound Dog - Elvis Presley
2. Whole Lot Of Shakin' Going On - Jerry Lee Lewis
3. Maybellene - Chuck Berry
4. Long Tall Sally - Little Richard
5. Johnny B. Goode - Chuck Berry
6. Rock and Roll Music - Chuck Berry
7. Blue Suede Shoes - Carl Perkins
8. Do You Want To Dance - Bobby Freeman
9. Book Of Love - Monotones
10. Rockin Robin - Bobby Day


The Top Ten Late 50s Love Songs:
1. Sea Of Love - Phil Phillips
2. Earth Angel - The Penguins
3. Chances Are - Johnny Mathis
4. Sleepwalk - Santo and Johnny
5. You Send Me - Sam Cooke
6. In The Still of The Night - Five Satins
7. It's All in The Game - Tommy Edwards
8. Only You (And You Alone) - The Platters
9. Put Your Head On My Shoulder - Paul Anka
10. Come Softly To Me - the Fleetwoods
11. It's Just a Matter of Time - Brook Benton
12. I Only Have Eyes For You - Flamingos
13. All the Way - Frank Sinatra
14. Love Is A Many Splendored Thing - Four Aces
15. April Love - Pat Boone

The Top Ten Naughty Songs of the 50s:
1. Sixty Minute Man - The Dominoes
2. It Ain't The Meat - The Swallows
3. (When We Are Dancing) I Get Ideas - Louis Armstrong
4. Baby Let's Play House - Elvis Presley
5. Big Ten-Inch Record - Moose Jackson
6. Get Hot Or Go Home - John Kerby
7. I Got A Rocket In My Pocket - Jimmy Lloyd
8. (I Love To Play Your Piano) Let Me Bang Your Box - The Toppers With Orchestra
9. Whistle Bait - Lorrie And Larry Collins
10. Whole Lot Of Shakin' Going On - Jerry Lee Lewis




               1959–1960 Emmy Awards (Television)

Outstanding Program Achievement in the Field of Drama
Playhouse 90 (CBS)

Outstanding Performance By an Actor in a Series (Lead or Support)
Robert Stack, The Untouchables

Outstanding Performance By an Actress in a Series (Lead or Support)
Jane Wyatt, Father Knows Best

Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Drama
Robert Mulligan, The Moon and Sixpence

Outstanding Writing Achievement in Drama
Rod Serling, Twilight Zone

Outstanding Single Performance By an Actor (Lead or Support)
Laurence Olivier, The Moon and Sixpence

Outstanding Single Performance By an Actress (Lead or Support)
Ingrid Bergman, Ford Startime: The Turn of the Screw

Outstanding Program Achievement in the Field of Humor
Art Carney Special (NBC)

Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Comedy
Ralph Levy and Bud Yorkin, Jack Benny Hour specials

Outstanding Writing Achievement in Comedy
Sam Perrin, George Balzer, Al Gordon and Hal Goldman, Jack Benny Show

Outstanding Program Achievement in the Field of Variety
Fabulous Fifties (CBS)

Outstanding Performance in a Variety or Musical Program or Series
Harry Belafonte, Revlon Revue: Tonight With Belafonte

Outstanding Achievement in the Field of Music
Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic (CBS)

Outstanding Program Achievement in the Field of Public Affairs and Education
Twentieth Century (CBS)

Outstanding Program Achievement in the Field of News
Huntley-Brinkley Report (NBC)

Outstanding Writing Achievement in the Documentary Field
Howard K. Smith and Av Westin, The Population Explosion

Outstanding Achievement in the Field of Children's Programming
Huckleberry Hound (Syndicated)



                  Important Historic and Cultural Events of the 1950’s

1950 - Pres. Harry Truman  ( 'til 1952) approves production of the hydrogen bomb and sends air force and navy to Korea in June.

1951 - Transcontinental television begins with a speech by Pres. Truman. 

1953 - 1961 Dwight D. Eisenhower  is president. 

1952 - The Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1952 removes racial and ethnic barriers to becoming a U.S. citizen. 

1953 -  Julius and Ethel Rosenberg are electrocuted for their part in W.W.II espionage. 

1953 - Fighting ends in Korea

1954 -  U. S. Senator Joseph McCarthy begins televised hearings into alleged Communists in the army. 

1954 - Racial segregation is ruled unconstitutional in public schools by the U.S. Supreme Court. 

1955 -  Rosa Parks refuses to give up her seat on a public bus in Montgomery, Alabama. 

1955 - The American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations merge making the new AFL-CIO an organization with 15 million members. 

also in 1955  Dr. Jonas Salk  developed a vaccine for  polio

1956 - The Federal Highway Act is signed, marking the beginning of work on the interstate highway system. 

1958 - Explorer I, the first U.S. satellite, successfully orbits the earth. 

1958 - The first domestic jet-airline passenger service is begun by National Airlines between New York City and Miami. 

1959 - Alaska and Hawaii become the forty-ninth and fiftieth states. 




                                                   US History 1959/1960 
                                                                                                    http://americasbesthistory.com/abhtimeline1950.html

1959
January 3, 1959 - Alaska is admitted to the United States as the 49th state to be followed on August 21 by Hawaii.
January 7, 1959 - The United States recognizes the new Cuban government under rebel leader Fidel Castro.  Castro becomes the Premier of Cuba on February 16.
April 9, 1959 - NASA selects the first seven military pilots to become the Mercury Seven, first astronauts of the United States.  The Mercury Seven included John Glenn, Scott Carpenter, Gordon Cooper, Gus Grissom, Wally Schirra, Alan Shepherd, and Deke Slayton.
April 25, 1959 - The St. Lawrence Seaway is opened along the Canada and United States borders, allowing increased ship traffic between the Atlantic Ocean and the Great Lakes.
February 22, 1959 - The Daytona 500 stock car race is run for the first time with Lee Petty taking the first checkered flag.
September 26, 1959 - President Dwight D. Eisenhower hosts Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev at his farm in Gettysburg, Pennsylvaniaduring the first visit of any Soviet Union leader to the United States.  (Picture below) Eisenhower National Historic Site, site of the Kruschchev/Eisenhower meetings in 1959.  Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.


                                          1960
February 1, 1960 - Four black college students from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College in Greensboro, North Carolina stage a sit-in at a segregated Woolworth lunch counter, protesting their denial of service.  This action caused a national campaign, waged by seventy-thousand students, both white and black, over the next eight months, in sit-ins across the nation for Civil Rights.

April 1, 1960 - Tiros I, the first weather satellite, is launched by the United States.  Twelve days later, the navigation satellite, Transat 1-b is launched.

May 1, 1960 - In the Soviet Union, a United States U-2 reconnaissance plane is shot done by Soviet forces, leading to the capture of U.S. pilot Gary Powers and the eventual cancellation of the Paris summit conference.  On August 19, Powers is sentences by the Soviet Union to ten years in prison for espionage.  On February 10, 1962 , he would be exchanged for a captured Soviet spy in Berlin.

July 1, 1960 - The fifty star flag of the United States is debuted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, reflecting the admission of Hawaii into the union in 1959.

November 8, 1960 - The presidential race to succeed two term president Dwight D. Eisenhower is won by Senator John F. Kennedy, the Democratic candidate from Massachusetts, over incumbent Vice President Richard M. Nixon.  Kennedy was a narrow victor in the popular vote, by slightly more than 120,000 votes, but won a more substantial victory in the Electoral College tally, 303 to 219.  62.8% of the voting age population took part in the contest.  The 1960 campaign for president had seen the first televised debate on September 26.

The 1960 census includes a United States population of 179,323,175, an 18.5% increase since 1950.  For the first time, two states, New York and California have over fifteen million people within their borders.  The geographic center of the United States is located six and one half miles northwest of Centralia, Illinois.

                                                          

HHS Drama vs Professional Theater




It seems our stage productions under Lee Yopp (here Oklahoma; for Inherit the Wind and Caruosel, see earlier post)  were so popular with audiences, we took them on the road and offered additional performances. Also, Eleanor Goldy kept the playbills from the two shows Mr. Yopp took us to, all in one day in New York City--The Crucible and West Side Story. We needed to see "Broadway" theater just to get us revved for his Hamilton High productions. She remembers our trip was on May 21, 1958; she has her ticket stub to prove it.  And then earlier, in 1957,  there was Green Pastures. We were "da bomb" in today's parlance, totally awesome!                                                                                     (John Dezseran as a 14 year-old sophomore played God. )


Reunion Skit of High School Heartbreak: "She Got You"

   




Here's a spirited class re-unionist willing to put herself on the line for the sorrows and regrets of high school romance. She's looking good for a 1960's graduate, if that what she is. No information about the school or the year, but her lip sync performance of Patsy Cline's 1962 hit "She's Got You" is worth it.