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On a rainy night, I had flown to Manhattan. Walking to a hotel, I was drenched in seconds. In a recessed doorway, I saw a man huddled on the ground.
I hurried into the hotel, rushed up to the registration desk and in a loud and excited voice announced: “There’s a man lying on the street just around the corner!”
The look in the eyes of the clerks told it all. It was if they were saying: Welcome to Planet Earth, the society with haves and have-nots.
EMMA GOTTLIEB-ELLINOY
Seal Beach
I was about 7 years old in 1955. I was at my grandmother’s house with the rest of our family, watching the Rose Parade on her round screen TV, the only TV in our family. I was glued to the set when all of a sudden there was Monty Montana.
I yelled out with glee: “Is that Monty Montana?” The announcer said: “Yes, it’s Monty Montana!” I was convinced that the announcer had heard me. For several years after, I would scream into the speaker in hopes of repeating the incident.
SERGIO HERNANDEZ
From the Internet
I was watching an afternoon talk show in the early 1950s. They introduced a large, boxy thing they called a “Radar Range.” I watched in disbelief as they demonstrated boiling water in a few seconds, as muffins began to rise in less than a minute.
“In the years to come we will all be cooking with sound waves!” the host said. “Yeah! Right!” I sniffed. “And right after that, we fly to the moon! Hah!”
DOROTHY BELLESILES
Ventura
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