While working hours at the Ko-Op Cafe, the one almost constant presence was the Jukebox. From opening up at 7 a.m. till closing at 11 p.m. (Or was that 10:30 ?), most of the time - tunes were playing. Samuel Music of Effingham, owned and maintained the Jukebox and the pinball machines. Their two workers came by every few weeks to empty the till, load some new vinyl and clean / maintain the machine.
Once we had worked there long enough, Mize granted a few of us the privilege of sometimes taking a few quarters out of the cash register to play some of our favorites. A good time to exercise that special right was when a crowd of students came in - - what we called a 'rush.' Many of us also kicked in more from our own pocket; we loved pop music and truly kept the jukebox playing.
When I started work in November 1964, the Folk Music Revival was winding down as the British Invasion was firing up. And somewhere around 1966, Soul Music and Motown were having an impact. Put your dancing shoes on; here's one of my favorites from Jackie Wilson.
Jukeboxes are largely a memory today, but what was your favorite tune from the Sixties? I'll see if it can be spotlighted from here. The Beatles in 1965 with "I Feel Fine."
The Animals in 1966-1967 . . . those tunes were our 'anthems' in the hall! The 'Mow' and his roommates in the 'Bahamas' wore out the groove on his album.
I worked at the Ko-Op and the Short Stop in 1972-73 and lived above the Ko-Op my Junior and Senior years at EIU in 1971-73. Larry's favorite song at the time was Signs by the Five Man Electrical Band. He would play it before the lunch rush all the time https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oeT5otk2R1g
In 2009, Annette, and I moved into a home that we had built in rural, south central Utah.
Prior to this for about ten years, we were full-time RVers - - living, working, and traveling in our 38' diesel motorhome (Sold).
By 2004, we were both teaching web-based graduate courses in Library and Information Science at Indiana University at Indianapolis (IUPUI). We were able to work from almost any location in the U.S. (plus parts of Canada) using a 2-way Internet satellite system. After more than forty-five years in education, Larry has retired; Annette continues to teach online, virtual courses for a few more years.
Together we also ran a small publishing firm (Vision to Action) and a consulting business (Lamb Learning Group LLG).
Our home is in Wayne County, UT on the northern slope of Boulder Mountain, the highest mountain plateau in North America (House is at 7,500' elevation), near the small towns of Teasdale and Torrey, and beautiful UT Hwy 12 - - our home is also minutes away from Capitol Reef National Park. We still love to travel and explore with our 2017 CampInn Raindrop trailer, but now we have a home base.
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I worked at the Ko-Op and the Short Stop in 1972-73 and lived above the Ko-Op my Junior and Senior years at EIU in 1971-73. Larry's favorite song at the time was Signs by the Five Man Electrical Band. He would play it before the lunch rush all the time https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oeT5otk2R1g
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