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[–] PM_ME_UR_NOODZ 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

They're smiling because they found some weed that got left behind. They found lots of weed, lots and lots of it, also lots of stamps.

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[–] aileron_ron 0 points 6 points (+6|-0) ago 

And I was there, Smoked my first joint, Had my first beer and saw many nude woman. And got laid 3 times that weekend

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[–] someguyfromcanada [S] 0 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago 

What was your favorite part? Besides the women.

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[–] aileron_ron 0 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago 

No parents and rules, Everyone was friendly, Skinny dipping. And the music

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[–] someguyfromcanada [S] 0 points 14 points (+14|-0) ago 

In 1969 the Yasgurs were the largest milk producer in Sullivan County, New York, with 650 cows on 600 acres. Yasgur leased one of his farm's fields for a fee that festival sponsors said was $10,000. Soon afterward he began to receive both threatening and supporting phone calls, which had to be routed to his farm by the local operator.

He said at the time that he never expected the festival to be so large, but that "if the generation gap is to be closed, we older people have to do more than we have done." Yasgur quickly established a rapport with the concert-goers, providing food at cost or for free. When he heard that some local residents were reportedly selling water to people coming to the concert, he put up a big sign at his barn reading "Free Water" and instructed his children to "take every empty milk bottle from the plant, fill them with water and give them to the kids, and give away all the milk and milk products we had at the dairy."

Many of his neighbors turned against him after the festival, and he was no longer welcome at the town general store, but he never regretted his decision to allow the concert on his farm.

Source.

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[–] Bakersmon 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

Wow. So cool. Thanks!