I'm a millennial, but these were my elementary school desks.
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They implied those things would stop a nuclear blast to us. Duck and Cover.
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I lost a lot of cute erasers to the back of these desks
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My kids still have desks like these starting in about 4th grade.
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They implied those things would stop a nuclear blast to us. Duck and Cover.
It wouldn't stop a direct nuclear strike of course, but it would help protect you from falling debris, broken glass, and flash burn/blindness if you were some miles from the impact.
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Hell, those were ancient when I was a teen in the 80s.
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Duck and Cover!
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Thought this was another German post and read that as "Arsch Wizard" (ass wizard)
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I bought a surplus one of those. I use it as a nightstand. I am prepared.
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It wouldn't stop a direct nuclear strike of course, but it would help protect you from falling debris, broken glass, and flash burn/blindness if you were some miles from the impact.
Grew up in tornado alley. We did the same drills for tornadoes. Then the one day we were at school for a tornado watch, they closed early, called our folks to come pick us up and had us wait outside for them.
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They implied those things would stop a nuclear blast to us. Duck and Cover.
It was never meant to save you from the blast. It was meant to save you from the concrete slab of the roof crushing you when the pressure wave rolls over the building and collapses it. That way if you're lucky, someone can dig you out.
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My school's desks were similar, but instead of just having an open cubby under the surface, the surface was hinged and opened up to access the cubby.
Getting a new piece of paper or a pencil was like working on a car under the hood.
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My school's desks were similar, but instead of just having an open cubby under the surface, the surface was hinged and opened up to access the cubby.
Getting a new piece of paper or a pencil was like working on a car under the hood.
Oh those desks were so shit. You forget something and lift it up only for all your books and paper to slide off and people laugh at your misery.
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We are just getting these in gen a classrooms.