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#41
posted to rec.boats
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Depressing
Poco Deplorevole
- show quoted text - "I must have been thinking of take home pay. When I was drafted, June of '65, the base pay for E-1 was $83.20. I believe my take home was about $72. https://www.navycs.com/charts/1964-m...pay-chart.html (Ain't the internet great?)" ......and probably grossly overpaid at that! |
#42
posted to rec.boats
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Depressing
True North wrote:
Poco Deplorevole - show quoted text - "I must have been thinking of take home pay. When I was drafted, June of '65, the base pay for E-1 was $83.20. I believe my take home was about $72. https://www.navycs.com/charts/1964-m...pay-chart.html (Ain't the internet great?)" .....and probably grossly overpaid at that! If we were, what were you? |
#43
posted to rec.boats
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Depressing
True North wrote:
Poco Deplorevole - show quoted text - "I must have been thinking of take home pay. When I was drafted, June of '65, the base pay for E-1 was $83.20. I believe my take home was about $72. https://www.navycs.com/charts/1964-m...pay-chart.html (Ain't the internet great?)" .....and probably grossly overpaid at that! Maybe I was thinking take home also. As I did not realize we made that much. I know I made more in the three months I worked for NCR in 1965, than I made in the 9 months service. Was not much difference, but was more. |
#44
posted to rec.boats
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Depressing
On Tue, 7 Feb 2017 13:07:28 -0800 (PST), True North wrote:
Poco Deplorevole - show quoted text - "I must have been thinking of take home pay. When I was drafted, June of '65, the base pay for E-1 was $83.20. I believe my take home was about $72. https://www.navycs.com/charts/1964-m...pay-chart.html (Ain't the internet great?)" .....and probably grossly overpaid at that! Absolutely! I didn't know **** about the Army, and here I was dragging in all the big bucks! |
#45
posted to rec.boats
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Depressing
On Tue, 07 Feb 2017 15:25:13 -0500, Poco Deplorevole
wrote: On Tue, 7 Feb 2017 19:50:15 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote: wrote: On Tue, 07 Feb 2017 07:50:59 -0500, Poco Deplorevole wrote: On Mon, 06 Feb 2017 18:56:29 -0500, wrote: On Mon, 06 Feb 2017 13:47:49 -0500, Poco Deplorevole wrote: On Mon, 6 Feb 2017 16:29:40 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote: wrote: On Mon, 6 Feb 2017 06:44:29 -0800 (PST), True North wrote: Poco Deplorevole - show quoted text - "Too late. I called my bro, conceded, and crashed. Should have stayed up. Unreal. At halftime they showed the most points down that had ever been overcome to win. Three times teams had come back after being 10 points down. None had come from more than a 10 point deficit. At the 25 point deficit mark I chalked up the loss. Called the bank, had the checkbook on the desk, ready to write the check in the morning. I got up and my wife had left me a note: "Patriots Won. Jim is sending check." I guess he forgot that I'd conceded. Or maybe he thought I'd demand a recount anyway. Who knows. I should get the money any day now. Can't wait. Don't know what I'll buy with it. All of $2.00." WOW! You're quite the big time operator. It would cost at least $2 to write and mail a cheque up here. Almost that much to send the money by etransfer. I would just send one of these http://gfretwell.com/ftp/2%20dollar%20bills.jpg Just like my buddy who passed away couple years ago. He always used $2 bills. Back in the 60's the air force base at which my dad was stationed would pay the airmen in $2 bills...their whole check. Of course the checks weren't as big back then. The purpose was to show the communities how much money the military was spending on the local economy. The idea was pretty good for a few months after that payday all one would see was $2 bills everywhere. Don't know if other military installations did that or not. Pax River talked about it but the payroll was just too big and I think they do a lot of direct deposit anyway. Whiteman AFB was pretty good sized, but I don't know how big, comparatively speaking. It was a B-47 base back then. Had a great photo shop and hobby shop which is where I spent most of my summer days when not working. I was talking about "big" in the number of two dollar bills it would take. Back in the olden days the average enlisted salary was $100 or so. That is about what I was making as an E-3 in 1965 before my pro pay and sea pay. Maybe a $100 after extras. Seems like I made about $75 as an E-3 in 1965-66 I must have been thinking of take home pay. When I was drafted, June of '65, the base pay for E-1 was $83.20. I believe my take home was about $72. https://www.navycs.com/charts/1964-m...pay-chart.html (Ain't the internet great?) I guess my memory is not as bad as I thought. ;-) I did kind of remember it because when IBM asked me what my salary expectations were, I gave them my monthly pay as what I wanted a week ($100) and that is what I got. ($430/mo) It turned out they got me cheap (other guys started at $475) but that was a good thing for me because I got a lot of early raises. ;-) My boss would call me in every few months and throw another $20 or $30 at me. I felt like a millionaire. |
#47
posted to rec.boats
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Depressing
Bill
- hide quoted text - True North wrote: Poco Deplorevole - show quoted text - "I must have been thinking of take home pay. When I was drafted, June of '65, the base pay for E-1 was $83.20. I believe my take home was about $72. https://www.navycs.com/charts/1964-m...pay-chart.html (Ain't the internet great?)" .....and probably grossly overpaid at that! "If we were, what were you?" Well..in 1965 depending if it was the spring or fall I was in either grade 10 or 11 in high school. I did work Thursday and Friday evenings plus all day Saturday stocking shelves at a local supermarket earning somewhere between $1 and $1.50 per hour. So, at 16 hours a week x 4 weeks x hourly rate, I probably earned as much as y'all and worth every penny. |
#48
posted to rec.boats
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Depressing
On Tue, 7 Feb 2017 17:46:50 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 2/7/17 4:33 PM, wrote: I did kind of remember it because when IBM asked me what my salary expectations were, I gave them my monthly pay as what I wanted a week ($100) and that is what I got. ($430/mo) It turned out they got me cheap (other guys started at $475) but that was a good thing for me because I got a lot of early raises. ;-) My boss would call me in every few months and throw another $20 or $30 at me. I felt like a millionaire. I made about $110 a week when I started as a "cub reporter" summer intern for the KC Star. This was in the mid-1960s. In those days, you could get a decent steak dinner at a "family restaurant" for about $3.00, and a first-class breakfast for 99 cents. Really. Best of all, several nights a week the city editor sent me out on assignment to cover someone making speech at some dinner, and, of course, the reporter from The Star got to eat there, too. Sometimes I worked at the cop shop, police headquarters, and got to joke around with Clarence Kelly, the chief, who later became head of the FBI. Ate a lot of chicken dinners. At the end of that summer, I decided to finish up my senior year of college (I had already completed almost all the courses I need for graduation) and keep the night job at The Star. Got a $25 a week raise. So I'd drive to KC to arrive at the paper at 4 pm and I'd drive back to the campus at 1 am. Did that five days a week. It really was a terrific job. When I finished my writing assignments for the night, I'd volunteer to copy read for a couple of hours on the wire desk or fill in wherever help was needed. The last year I was at the paper, the world news editor decided to take a year of vacation and I was "promoted" on temporary basis to fill in for him. My guilty indulgence was a HoJo short stack with coffee for 99 cents. There was one right near the beltway at 355 and I would stop there first thing in the morning, use their phone to call dispatch and if I didn't have a call I would get cakes and coffee before going somewhere else. I had the habit from High School when I would stop at the coffee shop at 8th and M SE for coffee and 2 doughnuts before I got on the street car to go up town to school. That was 30 cents or something. (1960-4) If I didn't do that I would grab a couple of Little Tavern burgers at 17th and Pa NW on the way to school. There used to be a tunnel through the building right next to Little Tavern that came out on G street. |
#49
posted to rec.boats
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Depressing
On 2/7/17 7:03 PM, wrote:
On Tue, 7 Feb 2017 17:46:50 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 2/7/17 4:33 PM, wrote: I did kind of remember it because when IBM asked me what my salary expectations were, I gave them my monthly pay as what I wanted a week ($100) and that is what I got. ($430/mo) It turned out they got me cheap (other guys started at $475) but that was a good thing for me because I got a lot of early raises. ;-) My boss would call me in every few months and throw another $20 or $30 at me. I felt like a millionaire. I made about $110 a week when I started as a "cub reporter" summer intern for the KC Star. This was in the mid-1960s. In those days, you could get a decent steak dinner at a "family restaurant" for about $3.00, and a first-class breakfast for 99 cents. Really. Best of all, several nights a week the city editor sent me out on assignment to cover someone making speech at some dinner, and, of course, the reporter from The Star got to eat there, too. Sometimes I worked at the cop shop, police headquarters, and got to joke around with Clarence Kelly, the chief, who later became head of the FBI. Ate a lot of chicken dinners. At the end of that summer, I decided to finish up my senior year of college (I had already completed almost all the courses I need for graduation) and keep the night job at The Star. Got a $25 a week raise. So I'd drive to KC to arrive at the paper at 4 pm and I'd drive back to the campus at 1 am. Did that five days a week. It really was a terrific job. When I finished my writing assignments for the night, I'd volunteer to copy read for a couple of hours on the wire desk or fill in wherever help was needed. The last year I was at the paper, the world news editor decided to take a year of vacation and I was "promoted" on temporary basis to fill in for him. My guilty indulgence was a HoJo short stack with coffee for 99 cents. There was one right near the beltway at 355 and I would stop there first thing in the morning, use their phone to call dispatch and if I didn't have a call I would get cakes and coffee before going somewhere else. I had the habit from High School when I would stop at the coffee shop at 8th and M SE for coffee and 2 doughnuts before I got on the street car to go up town to school. That was 30 cents or something. (1960-4) If I didn't do that I would grab a couple of Little Tavern burgers at 17th and Pa NW on the way to school. There used to be a tunnel through the building right next to Little Tavern that came out on G street. The 99 cents place was called Nichols. It closed about 10 years ago. For 99 cents you got steak, eggs, potatoes and toast. Coffee was another buck...that's how they managed to break even. It was open all night. |
#50
posted to rec.boats
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Depressing
True North wrote:
Bill - hide quoted text - True North wrote: Poco Deplorevole - show quoted text - "I must have been thinking of take home pay. When I was drafted, June of '65, the base pay for E-1 was $83.20. I believe my take home was about $72. https://www.navycs.com/charts/1964-m...pay-chart.html (Ain't the internet great?)" .....and probably grossly overpaid at that! "If we were, what were you?" Well..in 1965 depending if it was the spring or fall I was in either grade 10 or 11 in high school. I did work Thursday and Friday evenings plus all day Saturday stocking shelves at a local supermarket earning somewhere between $1 and $1.50 per hour. So, at 16 hours a week x 4 weeks x hourly rate, I probably earned as much as y'all and worth every penny. Good for you. |
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