Well, it happened last week.
It is an annual event, and I knew that unless the Lord came back or He
carried me home, that I would become 72.
That’s right. I turned 72 on
December 13. I outlived my mom by 17
years. She died at 55.
Speaking of mom, annually she asked if I wanted a birthday
present or a Christmas present. She
could not afford both. It puzzled me for
a long time how she could afford birthday, and Christmas presents for by sister
and two brothers, but not me.
I made me wonder how she afforded to have me in the first
place. I never thought to ask if she got
a Christmas present twelve days after my birth.
I must have been her Christmas present in December 1952.
You know there have been plenty of changes in the world
since 1952. “In 1952 despite the war in Korea Americans considered themselves to be
prospering with average worker earning $3,400 per year, a college teacher could
expect to earn $5,100 per year. Three out of 5 families owned a car, 2 out of 3
families now had a telephone, and 1 in 3 homes had a television. The average
woman in America
would be married by 20 years of age looking forward to raising a family but few
continued with a career after children were born. Fast Food restaurants were
growing in popularity, but the scourge of Polio hit many thousands of families
(@50,000). Many more cars in America
were now fitted with automatic gearboxes and gas cost 25 cents per gallon. The
world's first passenger jet The Comet is produced in UK signaling the start of faster
and cheaper air travel in later years.”
In
1952, Dwight D. Eisenhower (Republican) defeated Adlai Stevenson (Democratic) for
President of the United
States. The first
roll on deodorant
is introduced under the brand name Ban-Roll-On.
The first Holiday Inn opens in Tennessee. There is the world’s first successful use of
a mechanical heart in the US.
MAD Magazine publishes its first issue. The Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) fried
chicken franchise opened. The "Today" Program debuts on NBC, the
first of its kind hosted by Dave Garroway. The Big Bang Theory
of the creation of the Universe first propounded. Gary Cooper won Best Actor for High Noon. Norman Vincent Peale publishes his most
popular book, The Power of Positive
Thinking, and it sells more than 20 million copies in 41 languages. Mrs. Paul's introduces frozen fish sticks. TV first acknowledges
pregnancy on I Love Lucy. Considering that TV will not portray married people
sleeping it the same bed. Sony, a brand-new Japanese company, introduces the first pocket-sized transistor radio. There were 37,794 motor vehicle related
deaths. While in the air, there were 5 accidents resulting in 140 fatalities. Mr. Potato Head arrives! Boy, I love French fries. Kellogg introduced Sugar Frosted Flakes, 29
percent sugar. Unemployment
was 3.1%.
Favorite songs in 1952 were Tex Ritter’s High Noon (Do Not Forsake Me), Nat King
Cole’s Unforgettable, The Mills
Brother’s Worn Glow, and one of my
favorites, I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa
Claus by Jimmy Boyd.
This hit is most remembered for, a cute novelty given him by
Mitch Miller at Columbia
about a kid who can't understand why Mommy is cheating on Daddy with Santa! It
seems innocuous now, but the Catholic Church actually managed to get this one
banned in several major markets (including that old standby, Boston), claiming that the implication --
however mistaken -- was all wrong for a religious holiday. It took a special
conference between the 13-year-old Boyd and the Council of Churches to clear
the song in those markets, where it finally enjoyed success year after year.
I wonder what mama thought when I was born. When I think about my birthday and all the
change, I am reminded of Mary at Jesus’ birth and the ban execution Herod
placed on baby boys in an effort to kill Jesus.
While they were there,
the time came for the baby to be born, and she gave birth to her firstborn, a
son. She wrapped him in cloths and placed him in a manger, because there was no
room for them in the inn. . . But Mary treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart
(Luke 26-7, 19 NIV).
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