Newsday TV Book, September 25-October 1, 1977.
I was entering the third grade at St. Pius, and I think it was around this time that I saw an interview with O.J. Simpson in one of those kids' magazines--Dynamite, or Pizzazz, perhaps even Bananas--where he was asked what his motto was. If I recall correctly, it began "If it doesn't fit..." (Sorry, that was pretty hacky.)
I went to one of my brothers and asked what a motto was. He explained, and I immediately resolved: dammit, I need me a motto! I chewed it over for days, trying to determine the saying I had learned in my eight years on the planet that was most meaningful to me, and thus, useful words for all others to conduct their own lives by.
The motto I settled on?
"Don't shit where you eat."
Do not ask me how I arrived at this. My, what an odd boy. Anyway, back to the TV Book...
I must have looked at this cover (with Alan Alda and Talia Shire in the TV movie "Kill Me if You Can") a hundred times over the twenty or so years I've had the issue. It wasn't until I read the article by Bill Kaufman--which mentions that Alan Alda wore nose and dental appliances to play death-penalized Caryl Chessman--that I realized, oh yeah, that almost doesn't look like him! (Note that, in one of the photo captions, they identify Alda as his dad.)
(Click on pics to clarify the text.)
"AT A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD to go out of your way for!"
would, like, fool somebody or something?
Also, I looked up the servings of a half sheet cake, here quantified as 30-35. I found a range of answers (with the most common being around forty), from 18 to... 108?!? I'd say either someone doesn't know what the hell they're talking about, or there are a lot of disgruntled First Communion party attendees milling around with a sliver of raspberry cream vanilla sponge cake that's slightly thicker than the Dixie plate it's smeared on.
The afternoon programs are listed beside an ad that's rare in my collection. The Cleveland Hair Clinic seems at first glance to be offering transplantation that's affordable because it is done one cranial hemisphere at a time. (Nope, a closer look reveals that's "before" and "now" portrayed simultaneously.) The other ads I've seen for the CHC (not to be confused with the world-renowned Cleveland Non-Hair Clinic) have school teacher Ken Kotula's likeness sporting a full head of genuine ersatz follicles.
Btw, Plainview shout-out: Midway Jewish Center, woot-woot! (Although I think that was actually in Syosset, as implied. Whatever.)
The Westrock Beef ad is nearly ubiquitous in the TV Books of the seventies, but I usually skip scanning them. This one, however, has a cool-looking, full-page Black Angus and a large lariat logo, with the featureless WB Cowboy riding a horse that appears to be wearing stylish slacks.Today is the first day of autumn and the weather instantly complied with an even-colder-than-average forecast--so look for appropriately crisp and chilly, pumpkin-spiced October posts, coming soon!
In the meantime, kiddies, remember: Don't Shit Where You Eat!