wrote in message ...
On Thu, 05 Jan 2012 13:06:48 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:
On 1/5/12 12:49 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 05 Jan 2012 08:58:33 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:
I don't know what the average paycheck was back then.
In the 50s my father made about $5,000-6000 a year as a GS11 in the
government
That GS11 is probably about 12x that now and gas is 17x
In 1963, at a summer job through the Teamsters, I was earning about
$7.00 an hour loading skids of razor blades and shaving cream onto
semi-truck trailers. It was a semi-skilled job (I ran a forklift), so
probably paid below the "average" paycheck in those days. It was higher
than many of the workers at the factory, but lower than the guys who set
up and maintained the machinery. Shick used to sell us packages of
blades for a nickel each...that sure deterred theft. I'd load up before
the semester started and then resell the blades on campus for half the
price at the local markets. :) I also sold and delivered doughnuts,
picked up drycleaning and delivered pizzas, though not all at the same
time. College was cheap back then and it was not difficult to pay most
of your own expenses.
I was a Teamster in 1963, making a third of that. You must had a
heluva contract. I was only making $2.50 an hour at IBM in 1966
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Seems like Harry raked in the money. 1964 in school apprentice for NCR was
$95 a week. When I graduated 36 weeks school I made $120 a week. Very good
pay. My girlfriend at the time was an RN and and assistant head nurse for
the orthopedic floor and made $376 a month. Me thinks an apprentice
forklift driver was making a lot less than $210 / week. My stepfather was a
college Prof. and made about $16k a year.