50s & 60s Pages
Awards
Apply
Won
Winners
Diner & Fun
Mel´s Out
Mel´s In
Cartoons
Cruisin´
Drive In
Prom 1967
Games
High School
Links
Maltshop
Hot Links
Menu
Menu
SiteMap
Motorcycles
Harley Pages
Music
MIDI Pages
Poems
My Promise
Fantasy
Unicorn 1
Unicorn 2
Patriotic
9-11 2001
Vietnam Wall
Vietnam Links
Web Rings
Web Guard
Woodstock
Woodstock 69
Yearbook
Sign
View
Thank You For Visiting
Heartbeat´s 1 & 2 50s & 60s Pages
Check Back Often For New Updates
|
Jump Rope
MIDI: Crocodile Rock © By: Original Artist
Slinky´s
|
Slinky´s - They are pretty well self explanatory.
1. You can make them go side to side.
2. You can make them walk down stairs.
3. You can make up all sorts of thinks for a Slinky to do.
|
Hula Hoop
|
1. Find enough space around. Keep your feet one foot wide. Relax your knee, waist and body.
2. Relax your elbow. Lift the hoop and advance the hoop tightly against the back of your waist.
3. Grasp the hoop and keep it in horizontal position before swing out. no slant no tilt or incline.
4. Horizontally swing out the hoop against waist, fast and powerfully. Move on your waist immediately.
5. Move on your waist in circular, both side or backward & forward motion against the hoop.
6. Keep your motion fast enough to match the circulation speed of the hoop for it to stay up.
|
Paper Dolls
Do you remember the fun we had playing with Paper Dolls. Dressing them up in
their new fashions and pretending we could going anywhere that we wanted to go. Boy those were the
good old days! |
Paddle Ball
|
Take the paddle and ball in hand and hit ball with the paddle. Try to keep
an even rhythm to keep the ball bouncing off of the paddle.
Pretty soon you will be doing all kinds of trick with the paddle and ball.
|
Jacks
Take jacks in one hand gently scatter on flat surface.
1. Pitch ball gently up in the air.
2. While ball is in the air, pick up one jack.
3. Catch ball.
4. Repeat until you have all 10 jacks picked up.
5. Once this is completed, you do the same thing again only pick up 2 jacks at a time.
6. Repeat with 3´s, 4´s, 5´s, 6´s, 7´s, 8´s, 9´s, & 10´s, .
7. Repeat with Around the World - Pitch ball up and your hand goes around the
ball as if you were going around the world and then you pick up a jack. Catch ball.
Repeat this same as above with all 10 jacks.
8. Repeat with 3´s, 4´s, 5´s, 6´s, 7´s, 8´s, 9´s, & 10´s, .
9. Now you have Pigs In A Blanket, pitch ball up, cup one hand on floor with thumb open,
slide 1 jack inside hand. Catch ball. Repeat this same as above with all 10 jacks.
10. Repeat with 3´s, 4´s, 5´s, 6´s, 7´s, 8´s, 9´s, & 10´s, .
"There are a lot more jacks games, but I can´t remember the rest of them right now" .
|
Marble´s

The Marble Game - "Ringer"
These diagrams have been drawn to illustrate different points of play in the game of "Ringer" as they might occur during the course of a regular game.
|
Most boys and girls understand Ringer the first time it is explained, but to make it easier these drawings have been made by an artist to show the most common plays, such as frequently occur in championship games.
In studying these diagrams imagine that two boys are going to play a game. To determine who shall play first each boy lags with his shooter.
|
 |
To start a game of Ringer the boys lag from a line, drawn tangent to the ring, to a parallel line across the ring, which would be 10 feet away. The boy whose shooter comes nearest the line has the first shot. Players must lag before each game. Practice lagging, as the first shot may mean the winning of the game before your opponent gets a shot. In lagging, a boy may toss his shooter to the other line, or he may knuckle down and shoot it. |
 |
This shows boy No.1 who won the lag, preparing to knuckle down. His knuckle has not quite reached the ground, which is necessary before shooting. He can take any position about the ring he chooses. Notice how the 13 marbles in the ring are arranged at the start of the game. |
 |
Boy No.1 knocks a marble from the ring on his first shot and his shooter stays in the ring. He picks up the marble. As he has knocked one from the ring, he is entitled to another try. Players are not permitted to walk inside the ring unless their shooter comes to a stop inside the ring. Penalty is a fine of one marble. |
 |
Here we see boy No. 1 continuing play. He "knuckles down" inside the ring where his shooter stopped on the last shot. This gives him the advantage of being nearer to the big group of marbles in the center of the ring for his next shot. Expert marble shots try to hit a marble, knock it out of ring and make their shooter "stick" in the spot. |
 |
On this play, No.1 hit a marble, but did not knock it from the ring. At the same time his shooter, too, stays inside the ring. He can not pick up the marble, neither is he allowed to pick up his shooter. He must leave the shooter there until the other boy has played. |
 |
Boy No. 2 may start by "knuckling down" anywhere at the ring edge. In this case he may shoot at the 11 marbles in the center or if he wishes, he may go to the other side and try for No.1´s shooter or the marble that No.1 almost knocked from the ring. |
 |
Boy No.2 chooses to try for No. 1 boy´s shooter and knocks it out of ring, winning all the marbles No.1 has taken and putting No.1 out of that game. Or he could shoot as shown in Fig. 8. |
 |
Boy No.2 hits a marble but does not knock it out of the ring yet his shooter goes thru the ring and stops outside. The marble remains where it stopped in the ring, and as No.2 did not score, it is now the turn of No.1 to shoot again. |
 |
No. 1 "knuckles down" inside the ring where his shooter stopped (Fig. 5). He is going to shoot at the marble nearest his shooter. By hitting it at the proper angle and knocking it from the ring he can get his shooter near the center of the ring for his next shot. |
|
50s & 60s Years
The Fifties

1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
The Sixties

1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
Holiday Pages
Holiday Menu
4th Of July
Christmas
Easter
Father´s Day
Halloween
Mother´s Day
St. Patrick´s
Thanksgiving
Valentine´s
Information
Contact Us

Thank You For Visiting
Heartbeat´s 1 & 2 50s & 60s Years
Check Back Often For New Updates
|