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Old 04-19-2008, 06:54 AM
 
Location: Portland, Maine
4,180 posts, read 14,591,613 times
Reputation: 1673

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I received this email from a friend. Thought it may be of interest to some of you:
Thought you might enjoy................

You could only buy a Volvo from Michaelson Motors on Reisterstown Rd, the best place to become a Chevrolet ownah was at York and Bellona, Johnnys on Harford Rd was the "Walking Mans Friend", Granny Packer was on Blair Road in Oberlee, and "Hey, Hey Fox Chevrolet" was just as annoying then as the car ads these days.

You rode on street cars and busses operated by BTC (Baltimore Transit Company), and remember when their color schemes went from yellow to green to blue, and you could pay with tokens.

You can sing the phone number for Hampden Moving and Storage.

You remember Royal Parker yelling at kids jumping on furniture that was not covered in plastic ..... "what're ya trying to ruin it?"

You think being called "hon" by waitresses, cashiers, bank tellers, and complete strangers is perfectly normal.

You remember the Bay Belle cruise that took you to Betterton and Tolchester beaches before the Bay Bridge was built.

You watched local TV shows: Duckpins for Dollars, The Collegians, Pinbusters, Buddy Deane Show, Romper Room, and Hutzler's Theatre.

You also saw Stu Kerr star as Bozo the Clown and Professor Cool for the kids, then host "Dialing for Dollars" for the stay-at-home moms, and later fill-in as the weather man (complete with cloud and sun magnets) on the 6 o'clock news.

Your mother always knew the daily "count and the amount" on dialing for dollars.

You know how to pronounce Towson and Ellicott City , and always notice ads where the announcers get it wrong.

You had milk home delivered by Green Spring, Sealtest, and Cloverland ...... but somehow Cloverland was the only one who claimed to be "the dairy with cows". Oh yeah, you can probably sing their number too (NOrth 9-2222)

You remember going for a Sunday drive to get ice cream at Murrays, Sanders (The Dam Place ), or at Cloverland Dairy Farm on Dulaney Valley Rd. If you didn't have a car, there was always a walk to Arundel or High's. Or you could just stay home and wait for the bells of the Good Humor Man ….. Wait a minute!

When somebody gave their phone number prefix (such as IDlewood - 5 or DRexel - 7 or HAmilton - 6), you knew right where they were from.

You've been on Sunday drives through "Droodle" park, and watched the submarine races at Loch Raven, Lake Montebello, or Harbor Field.

You still use the old "Poly" on North Ave as a reference for directions.

If you were interested in Motorcycles; You could buy Honda at Pete's in Hamilton, a Triumph at Boutwell's on Broadway, A Harley at Baltimore HD on Loch Raven Rd, a Beemer from Motor Sports Center on Pinckney Rd, or a Yamaha from Frankie & Ronnie's on Route 40.

Speaking of Ronnie, how about Baltimore 's own Ronnie Dove?

You remember when Baltimore had three passenger train stations; Penn Station, Camden Station, and the B&O Station on Mount Royal Avenue It also had a functioning light rail system. The city and adjoining counties were linked by street cars, which plied the tracks for 104 years before the busses ultimately won on November 3, 1963. One of the last survivors was the No. 8 line, which ran betwee n Catonsville and Towson. There are still a bunch of huge old car barns around: York Road in Govans, Harford Rd in Hamilton, Belair Rd in Overlea, Retreat Street, and the monster on Washington Blvd. to name a few.

Car drivers, bicycle riders, and pedestrians had to avoid street car tracks long after the street cars were out of business. It took years to dig up the tracks, and some are still evident on paved-over cobblestone streets. Now we are spending a gazillion dollars trying to re-create the original version of light rail.

You can remember what the harbor looked like before it was THE Inner Harbor , and that Connolly's Restaurant on Pier 5 was the last survivor of the old Pratt St. waterfront.

You know why Pigtown is called Pigtown.

You remember swimming and family picnics at Beaver Dam and Beaver Springs Swim Clubs in Cockeysville .... and no one knew of a place called Hunt Valley.

You remember when there was home delivery of the Morning Sun, The Evening Sun, The Sunday Sun, The News-Post, and The Sunday American. The last two were later the News-American.... and all long before the City Paper made its debut.

You know what/where the 9th Ward is?

You remember when White Marsh was just a marsh, Owings Mills was just a farm, and Columbia was a utopian dream (and a farm)! You still don't get the whole " Town Center " thing, and maybe you shouldn't ..... it's just a mall!

Taking visitors downtown at night to see the Washington Monument ... and point out why (from a certain angle) George Washington is really the father of our country.

You looked forward to Earl Weaver antics over a bad call ..... okay, over any call.

You remember laughing at bawdy jokes and political comments scrawled in white shoe polish on the front window of Turkey Joe's Bar in Fells Point.

Eating at Pollack Johnnie's, Lexington Market, Attman's, Bel-Loc Diner, Ciminos, Little Tavern (buy'em by the bag!), White Castle, AJ's Dog House, Horn & Horn, Oriole Cafeteria, White Coffee Pot, Hot Shoppes, Ameche's, Gino's, Read's, Hooper's, Silber's Bakery . . .

You've seen the governor (and other dignitaries) standing in line, in the rain, outside of Haussners, because they never took reservations.

You remember Friendship Airport (now BWI) and Harbor Field (now Dundalk Marine Terminal).

You remember late night "Mister Ray's Hair Weave" commercials.

You found yourself cheering for the guys who added "hon" to the Welcome to Baltimore sign on the BW Parkway, especially after the Mayor got upset and staked out the sign to catch them.

You remember driving over the old Kent Narrows Draw-Bridge that snarled weekend traffic coming home from the Ocean. You remember 17-mile traffic backups coming back from Ocean City on holiday weekends.

You remember the nitwit who crashed the plane into the upper deck of Memorial Stadium.

You had plenty of friends who worked at Sparrows Point, and each had an ugly old "point car" to drive to work.

Everybody else (it seemed) worked for GM on Broening Hywy, Western Electric, or National Brewery.

You remember going to see the fabulous Fire Department Christmas Train Garden at the home of T-27 & E-45 on Glen Avenue (by the way, it's still open).

Fort Holabird was alive and thriving.

You remember when now trendy Canton was a true blue-collar
neighborhood of small factories, a can company, waterfront oyster and vegetable packing houses, seed companies, tug boat piers, filthy harbor water, and a few greasy-spoon restaurants. In the early 70s the neighborhood had about eight square blocks of its homes demolished to make way for an interstate to connect 95 and 83. The interstate never happened, but there are ramps for it on I-95 to this day.

You love to see the Domino Sugar sign reflecting across the harbor.

You'll always remember a cheer-leading fan, in Section 34, from the 70s.

You remember when Social Security moved out of the Candler Building to their new complex in Woodlawn.

You remember seeing the Four Seasons perform at Painters Mill or at Club Venus. You saw the Beatles, The Beach Boys, Dave Clark Five, The Rolling Stones, The Monkees, and Peter, Paul & Mary at the Civic Center. You saw Emerson, Lake, and Palmer at the Lyric. You saw Otis Reading, the Four Tops, and the Temptations at Calvert Hall. You didn't save a single program!

You remember the Towson State Teachers College in Towson.
.

All the big downtown theaters were as cool as the Senator is now.

You know where High and Low Streets meet.

You liked the Orioles' smiling cartoon bird face better than the ornithologically correct Oriole on today's ball cap.

More Parks sausages Mom, Please!

You remember the rotating restaurant on top of the Holiday Inn on Light Street.


You've had the monster "Powerhouse" burger at one of four Ameche's Drive-ins .... and long before there was a McDonald's in sight. You could "Meetcha at Ameche's!" at Loch Raven & Taylor, 5800 Reisterstown Rd , 7700 Wise Ave , or Ritchie Hywy & 5th in Glen Burnie. All gone!

A few years later you could also have a 15-cent burger at Gino Marchetti's, or drive through the Circle for a Cheesy-Q. They're gone too!

You get a kick out of hearing Johns Hopkins or Pimlico named in movies or TV.

You know B&O is not body odor.

You remember when the Baltimore Civic Center was home to The Baltimore Bullets, The Baltimore Blast, The Baltimore Clippers, rock concerts, car shows, horse shows, civil-service exams, circuses, ice shows, and graduations.

You remember the wonderful spicy cinnamon smell of McCormick's on Light Street , and all the big festivals at Rash Field.

You've marveled as the three-wheeled motor cops shifted both sides of 33rd Street to the "one-way" pattern to get all the traffic in and out of Orioles and Colts games in record time / every time. Try that one on Pratt St !

Every kitchen had a can of Old Bay and every Frigidaire a case of Natty Boh. Ain't the beer cold!

You remember when Baltimore rated a "Playboy Club", and no, it
wasn't on the block.

You understand the difference between Hampden and Remington.

You remember Ross Z Pierpont, candidate for governor - again!

You and your Mom shopped at Braeger-Gutman's, Hutzler's,
Stewart's, Hochschild Kohn, Robert Hall, The May Company, Hecht's, Peck & Peck, Hamburgers, Epstein's, Youngs, Websters, Frank Leonards, Eddie Jacobs, The Sample Store, Woolworth's, SS Kresge, McCrorys, Ben Franklin, Dacks 5 &10, EJ Korvettes, Two Guys, Cooks, Caldor, Hechingers, and of course Shocketts on Broadway.

Shopping on The Avenue meant Eastern Avenue in Highlandtown, unless of course you were from the other side of town, then it was 36th St.

Shopping on The Boulevard meant Washington Boulevard in Pigtown.

You've cruised Ameche's, the Circle, Champs, and Topps Lot on a week-end evening to see the muscle cars.

You know that an Arabber is really a guy who sells fruit and vegetables from a horse drawn cart.

You remember when the city po-leece cars went from black and white, to blue and white, then to all white with red and blue stripes.

You know live crabs are at their very meanest right before steaming, and that if one gets you ..... he WILL NOT let go!

You helped paint a bi-centennial fire hydrant.

You know that the Colts Band does not need a football team to do their thing. They were formed in 1947 and have spent 13 years of their existence without a team (51 to 53 & 84 to 95). Didn't slow 'em down at all!

You always knew where to find Blaze Starr.

You remember the spectacular 13-alarm Schapiro's Rag-Factory fire that lit up the entire city sky. Hint: it's where the Pepsi sign on the JFX is now.

You remember cutting school to go to the Flower Mart and Opening Day.

You remember Greenmount Cemetery as a place you could actually visit, or drive past, without taking your life in your hands.

You know where 'Downey Ocean' is, and remember where the "Irish House" was.

You remember the old rivalries of Poly / City, Loyola / Calvert Hall were played out every Thanksgiving Day at Memorial Stadium. And the Steel Bowl.

You remember when Belvedere Avenue was "Northern Parkway", and the two-lane road up-the-hill from Falls Rd to Roland Ave was a steep, narrow, and treacherous path. They stopped traffic on Falls Road to allow the cars on Belvedere to travel one at a time on icy/snowy days. Cold Spring between Falls and Roland wasn't much better.

You know Frank Zappa was from Dundalk ...... and that somehow helps you to understand his lyrics.

You remember a very green, but not very Irish, Hyman Pressman marching in the St. Patrick's Day parades, and Louis L Goldstien with his immortal "God bless you all real good" blessing.

You've remember special deli shopping trips to Stone's Bakery, Jack's Corned Beef, Weiss Deli, and Attman's Deli on Lombard St, right in the heart of the high rise projects.

In those days Sears was still called Sears, Roebuck, and Company..... and lived at Harford and North. Wards was a little more formal as Montgomery Ward ... and was located at Monroe and Washington Blvd. Both stores carried their own brand of lawn mowers, tools, guns, motorcycles, clothes, shoes, tires, and appliances. A Sears Revolving Credit Card was tough to [SIZE=+0]get![/SIZE]

You remember the Gwynn Oak, Carlin's, and Bay Shore Amusement Parks .

You know where Engine 6 lives.

You remember all the ship repair drydocks that lined Key Highway. Now it costs a million-plus to call it home!

You wait every year to hear true Baltimore Christmas classics; "Oh, I want Crabs for Christmas" and "Walking in an Essex Wonderland".

You first heard of Spiro Agnew when he was the Baltimore
County Executive.

You know where to park for the Preakness. And still remember your parking spot for the Colts games.

The cheapest guy in town had an ideal location to watch fireworks.

Mama Cass

You remember the old North Central Railroad that ran from downtown to Pennsylvania. It ran on the current light rail tracks along the JFX, through Mount Washington, crossed Lake Roland (Robert E Lee Memorial Park), out thru Ruxton and Lutherville, crossed York Rd at the Cockeysville Underpass, an d then headed north to PA on what is now a great bicycle path. The transition from working railway to light rail and bicycle path was courtesy of a very determined Hurricane Agnes in 1972. David and Freddie killed off any chances of NCR recovery in '79.

You love to hear Arty Donovan explain anything.

Eating at The Golden Arm, Brasey's, and The Iron Horse. Or bowling at Colt Lanes.

You got a parking ticket (or towed away) while in court for a parking ticket in the old traffic court at 211 E Madison St.

You don't think that Assawoman Bay is a strange name.

You are an expert crab picker that always volunteers to teach visitors the only (and best) way to pick a steamed crab. Of course everyone else around you will interrupt the lesson to show your new student their best way, and confusion will reign. This will never change!

You had to be ready to yell out your order at Captain Harvey's, or risk hearing jeers from all the longshoremen in line.

You have no idea what an Auchentoroly is, but know where there is a street (a terrace actually) named after one.

You have great memories of Memorial Stadium, and the days when Brooks, Frank, Jim Palmer, Gus Triandos, Mark Belanger, Luis Aparicio, Jim Gentile, Milt Pappas, Dave McNally, Andy
Etchebarren, Eddie Murray, Hoyt Wilhelm, Dave Johnson, Rick Dempsey, Earl Weaver, and the Ripken boys gave Baltimore plenty of seasons and reasons to be proud.

You had to pull out the BS sign when Robert Irsay declared that he had to move (steal) the Colts from Baltimore .... because the city would not support a team. We didn't get to be the world's largest outdoor insane asylum for nothing. The names of Johnny Unitas, Raymond Berry, Bill Pellington, Art Donovan, Tom Matte, Alan Ameche, Gino Marchetti, Jim Mutscheler, Lenny Moore,
John Mackey, Big Daddy, Jimmy Orr, Bert Jones, Lydell Mitchell, John Dutton, Mike Barnes, Joe Ehrman, Fred Cook, and many others are held in reverence to this day! Won't support a team ....... hmmm!!!!

You remember when Baltimore Street was a gaping cavern
covered by wooden planks and steel plates during years of subway construction.

You still cheer for the Orioles even when they aren't doing well, and root for anyone playing the Yankees or Colts. There'll never be even the slightest hint of forgiveness for Bob Irsay, and Mayflower Movers might as well move themselves to Indiana for all the business I'll ever give them.

Everybody knows what a 'zink' and 'payment' are, and just how important it is to "warsh them marble stoops."

You remember urban renewal, the riots of 68, and burn-baby-burn.

And no matter where you are, you can only laugh when you see signs saying ' Maryland Crab Cakes!'

Even during all the years of no pro football team in Baltimore , you couldn't bring yourself to be a Redskins Fan.

You say ' Blare Road ' for Belair Road

You understand the inner and outer loops of the beltway, and don't understand why they need signs up to point out which is
which.

You remember Rolf Hertzgaard, Frank Luber, Royal Parker, Jim Mustard, Mike Hambrick, Ron Smith, Jerry Turner, and Al Sanders on the tube.

There was Kirby Scott, Johnny Dark, Jack Edwards on WCAO, Jay Grason and Galen Fromm on WBAL, Lee Case on WCBM, Mike March, Johnny Walker, and The Flying Dutchman on WFBR, and Joe Buccheri on a variety of Classic Rock stations ....to name but a few.

You remember the strange mixture of Oprah Winfrey and Richard Sher on WJZ's morning show.

You were confused for a few years after they swapped one-way directions on Lombard and Pratt Streets.

You've been to a prom at the "Alcazar", and probably danced to the Admirals.

Vince Bagli was 'the' sports announcer on TV. Charlie Eckman was "the" coach. Chuck Thompson was 'the' voice of the Orioles / after Bailey Goss.

You refer to <st1:PlaceName w
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Old 04-19-2008, 10:46 AM
 
Location: La Crescenta, CA
418 posts, read 1,734,090 times
Reputation: 335
Awesome.

A lot of that stuff is from the 50s or 60s, before my time, but my mom always talked about riding the trolley. Still, I do remember a lot of these things:

Quote:
Originally Posted by jonjj View Post
You think being called "hon" by waitresses, cashiers, bank tellers, and complete strangers is perfectly normal.
Still happened the last time I was home!


Quote:
You watched local TV shows: Duckpins for Dollars, The Collegians, Pinbusters, Buddy Deane Show, Romper Room, and Hutzler's Theatre.
This shows you how clueless I am -- I had no idea Romper Room was local! I definitely remember Duckpins for Dollars.

Quote:
You had milk home delivered by Green Spring, Sealtest, and Cloverland ...... but somehow Cloverland was the only one who claimed to be "the dairy with cows". Oh yeah, you can probably sing their number too (NOrth 9-2222)
Yep -- this continued well into the 70s. The one dairy that delivered our milk was on Wilkens Avenue & Maiden Choice Lane -- it's now a Giant, a housing development, Charlestown Retirement home...Hard to believe that was a farm not too long ago.

Quote:
You can remember what the harbor looked like before it was THE Inner Harbor , and that Connolly's Restaurant on Pier 5 was the last survivor of the old Pratt St. waterfront.
Yep -- I remember it was just kind of a walkway around the water, and there was a wooden playground over by Rash Field. And that was pretty much it. Still, that memory of it is itself a big change from it used to look like. For more old pix of the Inner Harbor, click here.


Quote:
You remember when there was home delivery of the Morning Sun, The Evening Sun, The Sunday Sun, The News-Post, and The Sunday American. The last two were later the News-American.... and all long before the City Paper made its debut.
We used to get the News American. My grandparents got the Evening Sun. The Morning Sun was thought to be a little snooty.

Quote:
You looked forward to Earl Weaver antics over a bad call ..... okay, over any call.
I'd hate to be the guy who had to clean off the umpire's shoes!

Quote:
Eating at Pollack Johnnie's, Lexington Market, Attman's...
Still eat at all of these three places when I'm back home! (And Cross Street Market, too.) But Gino's, alas, was bought out by KFC. And before Old Country Buffet, Horn & Horn was shoveling out the cheap bulk food to grandparents and their kids for a long time. I got sick at Horn & Horn many a time.


Quote:
You remember late night "Mister Ray's Hair Weave" commercials.
"Da best hear weeve for da löwest price in taown!"

Quote:
You found yourself cheering for the guys who added "hon" to the Welcome to Baltimore sign on the BW Parkway, especially after the Mayor got upset and staked out the sign to catch them.
And they tore it down...and he put it back up...and they tore it down...and he put it back up.

They should have left it! I do remember Kurt Schmoke saying he was "offended" by the use of the word "hon." Idiot.

Quote:
You remember driving over the old Kent Narrows Draw-Bridge that snarled weekend traffic coming home from the Ocean. You remember 17-mile traffic backups coming back from Ocean City on holiday weekends.
I remember these back-ups from being a kid -- but I remember them from last year, too!

Quote:
You remember the nitwit who crashed the plane into the upper deck of Memorial Stadium.
And thanks to Bob Irsay, there was no in the seats to get hurt.

Quote:
Everybody else (it seemed) worked for GM on Broening Hywy, Western Electric, or National Brewery.
Wow...half my family worked at GM. The other half at Beth Steel. And the other half in a hair salon.

Quote:
You remember when now trendy Canton was a true blue-collar
neighborhood of small factories, a can company, waterfront oyster and vegetable packing houses, seed companies, tug boat piers, filthy harbor water, and a few greasy-spoon restaurants.
My mother grew up there -- her, her 5 sisters and brothers, her parents, grandparents and uncle all in one little rowhouse, a block from the water. Everyone worked at Beth Steel. Now the house she lived in would sell for $700K.

Quote:
You love to see the Domino Sugar sign reflecting across the harbor.
Still do!

Quote:
You'll always remember a cheer-leading fan, in Section 34, from the 70s.
O!

And one more time for the man.


Quote:
You liked the Orioles' smiling cartoon bird face better than the ornithologically correct Oriole on today's ball cap.
Still the one I wear.

Quote:
You remember the rotating restaurant on top of the Holiday Inn on Light Street.
From the outside it still looks like it's there.

Quote:
You remember when the Baltimore Civic Center was home to The Baltimore Bullets, The Baltimore Blast, The Baltimore Clippers, rock concerts, car shows, horse shows, civil-service exams, circuses, ice shows, and graduations.
And everytime the Blast scored, they'd play "Celebration" by Kool and the Gang.

Quote:
You remember the wonderful spicy cinnamon smell of McCormick's on Light Street , and all the big festivals at Rash Field.
One of the best parts of going to the Harbor. You can actually still smell it...if you drive past their business park in Hunt Valley.

Quote:
You know that an Arabber is really a guy who sells fruit and vegetables from a horse drawn cart.
They used to come all the way out to my grandparent's place on the border between Southwest Baltimore and Arbutus. They still were going through Hampden before I moved in 2005.

Quote:
You know that the Colts Band does not need a football team to do their thing. They were formed in 1947 and have spent 13 years of their existence without a team (51 to 53 & 84 to 95). Didn't slow 'em down at all!
Three of the kids from my high school band were in the Colts Band...three years after the Colts left town.


Quote:
You know where 'Downey Ocean' is
I still hear that phrase used.


Quote:
You remember a very green, but not very Irish, Hyman Pressman marching in the St. Patrick's Day parades, and Louis L Goldstien with his immortal "God bless you all real good" blessing.
First book of poetry I ever read was by Hyman Pressman. Kind of odd for a comptroller.

Quote:
You've remember special deli shopping trips to Stone's Bakery, Jack's Corned Beef, Weiss Deli, and Attman's Deli on Lombard St, right in the heart of the high rise projects.
The whole block was called "Jewtown" -- not derogatory, either. It was simply an ethnic designation, the same way some people still use "Greektown" to refer to areas off Eastern Avenue. But I guess it sounded bad, so now it's "Corned Beef Row."



Quote:
You know where to park for the Preakness.
Yeah -- on the front lawn of Pimlico residents' homes! They'd charge you a pretty penny, too.


Quote:
You don't think that Assawoman Bay is a strange name.
Well...even when I was little I thought that was pretty funny.

Quote:
You are an expert crab picker that always volunteers to teach visitors the only (and best) way to pick a steamed crab. Of course everyone else around you will interrupt the lesson to show your new student their best way, and confusion will reign. This will never change!
My method still works best.

Quote:
You have great memories of Memorial Stadium, and the days when Brooks, Frank, Jim Palmer, Gus Triandos, Mark Belanger, Luis Aparicio, Jim Gentile, Milt Pappas, Dave McNally, Andy
Etchebarren, Eddie Murray, Hoyt Wilhelm, Dave Johnson, Rick Dempsey, Earl Weaver, and the Ripken boys gave Baltimore plenty of seasons and reasons to be proud.
The great thing about watching games in the 70s -- it seemed like they always won.


Quote:
You still cheer for the Orioles even when they aren't doing well, and root for anyone playing the Yankees or Colts. There'll never be even the slightest hint of forgiveness for Bob Irsay, and Mayflower Movers might as well move themselves to Indiana for all the business I'll ever give them.
Saddest pic ever. But a championship came back to Baltimore before it got to the Phony Ponies.

Quote:
And no matter where you are, you can only laugh when you see signs saying ' Maryland Crab Cakes!'
Ugh. They try selling them in Texas -- all claw meat!

Quote:
Even during all the years of no pro football team in Baltimore , you couldn't bring yourself to be a Redskins Fan.
Barf on DC!

Quote:
You say ' Blare Road ' for Belair Road
That's why I thought it was the "Belair Witch Project."

Quote:
You understand the inner and outer loops of the beltway, and don't understand why they need signs up to point out which is
which.
Quote:
You remember Rolf Hertzgaard, Frank Luber, Royal Parker, Jim Mustard, Mike Hambrick, Ron Smith, Jerry Turner, and Al Sanders on the tube.
And Oprah Winfrey on Channel 13!

Quote:
There was Kirby Scott, Johnny Dark, Jack Edwards on WCAO, Jay Grason and Galen Fromm on WBAL, Lee Case on WCBM, Mike March, Johnny Walker, and The Flying Dutchman on WFBR, and Joe Buccheri on a variety of Classic Rock stations ....to name but a few.
I won free tickets to something or other because I called in with the correct answer to one of Johnny Walker's trivia questions on morning before school -- and when I got to school, three of my teachers asked, "Is that you I heard on Johnny Walker this morning?"

Also, for years 1300 AM used to play polka every Sunday morning. My mother always listened to it and tried to get me to dance.

Quote:
Vince Bagli was 'the' sports announcer on TV. Charlie Eckman was "the" coach. Chuck Thompson was 'the' voice of the Orioles / after Bailey Goss.
Ah, Chuck Thompson. Go to war Miss Agnes!
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Old 04-19-2008, 10:21 PM
 
Location: Pigtown!! Washington Village Does NOT Exist.
689 posts, read 3,215,009 times
Reputation: 129
I'm not from here, but jeez...I remember Mr. Ray's Hair Weave. There was always an ad in the TV guide where we lived.

And we still have Arabbers in Pigtown -- I buy my fruit from them in the summer...one went by today, but I didn't get outside in time.
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Old 10-16-2008, 04:29 PM
 
4 posts, read 152,706 times
Reputation: 13
Quote:
Originally Posted by jonjj View Post
I received this email from a friend. Thought it may be of interest to some of you:
[FONT=Arial]Thought you might enjoy................[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You could only buy a Volvo from Michaelson Motors on [/FONT][FONT=Arial]Reisterstown Rd, the best place to become a Chevrolet ownah was at York and Bellona, Johnnys on Harford Rd was the "Walking Mans Friend", Granny Packer was on Blair Road in Oberlee, and "Hey, Hey Fox Chevrolet" was just as annoying then as the car ads these days.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You rode on street cars and busses operated by BTC (Baltimore [/FONT][FONT=Arial]Transit Company), and remember when their color schemes went from yellow to green to blue, and you could pay with tokens.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You can sing the phone number for Hampden Moving and [/FONT][FONT=Arial]Storage.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember Royal Parker yelling at kids jumping on furniture that was not covered in plastic ..... "what're ya trying to ruin it?"[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You think being called "hon" by waitresses, cashiers, bank [/FONT][FONT=Arial]tellers, and complete strangers is perfectly normal.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember the Bay Belle cruise that took you to Betterton and Tolchester beaches before the Bay Bridge was built.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You watched local TV shows: Duckpins for Dollars, The Collegians, Pinbusters, Buddy Deane Show, Romper Room, and Hutzler's Theatre.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You also saw Stu Kerr star as Bozo the Clown and Professor [/FONT][FONT=Arial]Cool for the kids, then host "Dialing for Dollars" for the stay-at-home moms, and later fill-in as the weather man (complete with cloud and sun magnets) on the 6 o'clock news.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Your mother always knew the daily "count and the amount" on dialing for dollars.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You know how to pronounce Towson and Ellicott City , and always notice ads where the announcers get it wrong.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You had milk home delivered by Green Spring, Sealtest, and Cloverland ...... but somehow Cloverland was the only one who claimed to be "the dairy with cows". Oh yeah, you can probably sing their number too (NOrth 9-2222)[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember going for a Sunday drive to get ice cream at Murrays, Sanders [/FONT][FONT=Arial](The Dam Place ), or at Cloverland Dairy Farm on Dulaney Valley Rd. If you didn't have a car, there was always a walk to Arundel or High's. Or you could just stay home and wait for the bells of the Good Humor Man ….. Wait a minute![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]When somebody gave their phone number prefix (such as IDlewood - 5 or DRexel - 7 or HAmilton - 6), you knew right where they were from.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You've been on Sunday drives through "Droodle" park, and [/FONT][FONT=Arial]watched the submarine races at Loch Raven, Lake Montebello, or Harbor Field.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You still use the old "Poly" on North Ave as a reference for directions.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]If you were interested in Motorcycles; You could buy Honda at Pete's in Hamilton, a Triumph at Boutwell's on Broadway, A Harley at Baltimore HD on Loch Raven Rd, a Beemer from Motor Sports Center on Pinckney Rd, or a Yamaha from Frankie & [/FONT][FONT=Arial]Ronnie's on Route 40.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Speaking of Ronnie, how about Baltimore 's own Ronnie Dove?[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember when Baltimore had three passenger train stations; Penn Station, Camden Station, and the B&O Station on Mount Royal Avenue It also had a functioning light rail system. The city and adjoining counties were linked by street cars, which [/FONT][FONT=Arial]plied the tracks for 104 years before the busses ultimately won on November 3, 1963. One of the last survivors was the No. 8 line, which ran betwee n Catonsville and Towson. There are still a bunch of huge old car barns around: York Road in Govans, Harford Rd in Hamilton, Belair Rd in Overlea, Retreat Street, and the monster on Washington Blvd. to name a few.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Car drivers, bicycle riders, and pedestrians had to avoid street car tracks long after the street cars were out of business. It took years to dig up the tracks, and some are still evident on paved-over cobblestone streets. Now we are spending a gazillion dollars trying to re-create the original version of light rail.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You can remember what the harbor looked like before it was THE Inner Harbor , and that Connolly's Restaurant on Pier 5 was the last survivor of the old Pratt St. waterfront.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You know why Pigtown is called Pigtown.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember swimming and family picnics at Beaver Dam and Beaver Springs Swim Clubs in Cockeysville .... and no one knew of a place called Hunt Valley.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember when there was home delivery of the Morning Sun, The Evening Sun, The Sunday Sun, The News-Post, and The Sunday American. The last two were later the News-American.... and all long before the City Paper made its debut.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You know what/where the 9th Ward is?[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember when White Marsh was just a marsh, Owings Mills was just a farm, and Columbia was a utopian dream (and a farm)! You still don't get the whole " Town Center " thing, and maybe you shouldn't ..... it's just a mall![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Taking visitors downtown at night to see the Washington Monument ... and point out why (from a certain angle) George Washington is really the father of our country.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You looked forward to Earl Weaver antics over a bad call ..... okay, over any call.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember laughing at bawdy jokes and political comments scrawled in white shoe polish on the front window of Turkey Joe's Bar in Fells Point.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Eating at Pollack Johnnie's, Lexington Market, Attman's, Bel-Loc Diner, Ciminos, Little Tavern (buy'em by the bag!), White Castle, AJ's Dog House, Horn & Horn, Oriole Cafeteria, White Coffee Pot, Hot Shoppes, Ameche's, Gino's, Read's, Hooper's, Silber's [/FONT][FONT=Arial]Bakery . . .[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You've seen the governor (and other dignitaries) standing in line, in the rain, outside of Haussners, because they never took reservations.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember Friendship Airport (now BWI) and Harbor Field (now Dundalk Marine Terminal).[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember late night "Mister Ray's Hair Weave" [/FONT][FONT=Arial]commercials.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You found yourself cheering for the guys who added "hon" to the Welcome to Baltimore sign on the BW Parkway, especially after the Mayor got upset and staked out the sign to catch them.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember driving over the old Kent Narrows Draw-Bridge [/FONT][FONT=Arial]that snarled weekend traffic coming home from the Ocean. You remember 17-mile traffic backups coming back from Ocean City on holiday weekends.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember the nitwit who crashed the plane into the upper deck of Memorial Stadium.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You had plenty of friends who worked at Sparrows Point, and each had an ugly old "point car" to drive to work.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Everybody else (it seemed) worked for GM on Broening Hywy, Western Electric, or National Brewery.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember going to see the fabulous Fire Department Christmas Train Garden at the home of T-27 & E-45 on Glen [/FONT][FONT=Arial]Avenue (by the way, it's still open).[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Fort Holabird was alive and thriving.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember when now trendy Canton was a true blue-collar[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial]neighborhood of small factories, a can company, waterfront oyster and vegetable packing houses, seed companies, tug boat piers, filthy harbor water, and a few greasy-spoon restaurants. In the early 70s the neighborhood had about eight square blocks of its homes demolished to make way for an interstate to connect 95 and 83. The interstate never happened, but there are ramps [/FONT][FONT=Arial]for it on I-95 to this day.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You love to see the Domino Sugar sign reflecting across the [/FONT][FONT=Arial]harbor.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You'll always remember a cheer-leading fan, in Section 34, from the 70s.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember when Social Security moved out of the Candler Building to their new complex in Woodlawn.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember seeing the Four Seasons perform at Painters Mill or at Club Venus. You saw the Beatles, The Beach Boys, Dave Clark Five, The Rolling Stones, The Monkees, and Peter, Paul & Mary at the Civic Center. You saw Emerson, Lake, and Palmer at the Lyric. You saw Otis Reading, the Four Tops, and the Temptations at Calvert Hall. You didn't save a single program![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember the Towson State Teachers College in Towson.[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial].[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]All the big downtown theaters were as cool as the Senator is now.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You know where High and Low Streets meet.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You liked the Orioles' smiling cartoon bird face better than the ornithologically correct Oriole on today's ball cap.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]More Parks sausages Mom, Please![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember the rotating restaurant on top of the Holiday Inn on Light Street.[/FONT]


[FONT=Arial]You've had the monster "Powerhouse" burger at one of four Ameche's Drive-ins .... and long before there was a McDonald's in sight. You could "Meetcha at Ameche's!" at Loch Raven & Taylor, 5800 Reisterstown Rd , 7700 Wise Ave , or Ritchie Hywy & 5th in Glen Burnie. All gone![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]A few years later you could also have a 15-cent burger at Gino Marchetti's, or drive through the Circle for a Cheesy-Q. They're gone too![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You get a kick out of hearing Johns Hopkins or Pimlico named [/FONT][FONT=Arial]in movies or TV.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You know B&O is not body odor.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember when the Baltimore Civic Center was home to The Baltimore Bullets, The Baltimore Blast, The Baltimore Clippers, rock concerts, car shows, horse shows, civil-service exams, circuses, ice shows, and graduations.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember the wonderful spicy cinnamon smell of McCormick's on Light Street , and all the big festivals at Rash Field.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You've marveled as the three-wheeled motor cops shifted both [/FONT][FONT=Arial]sides of 33rd Street to the "one-way" pattern to get all the traffic in and out of Orioles and Colts games in record time / every time. Try that one on Pratt St ![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Every kitchen had a can of Old Bay and every Frigidaire a case of Natty Boh. Ain't the beer cold![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember when Baltimore rated a "Playboy Club", and no, it[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial]wasn't on the block.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You understand the difference between Hampden and Remington.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember Ross Z Pierpont, candidate for governor - again![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You and your Mom shopped at Braeger-Gutman's, Hutzler's,[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial]Stewart's, Hochschild Kohn, Robert Hall, The May Company, Hecht's, Peck & Peck, Hamburgers, Epstein's, Youngs, Websters, Frank Leonards, Eddie Jacobs, The Sample Store, Woolworth's, SS Kresge, McCrorys, Ben Franklin, Dacks 5 [/FONT][FONT=Arial]&10, EJ Korvettes, Two Guys, Cooks, Caldor, Hechingers, and of course Shocketts on Broadway.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Shopping on The Avenue meant Eastern Avenue in Highlandtown, unless of course you were from the other side of town, then it was 36th St.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Shopping on The Boulevard meant Washington Boulevard in Pigtown.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You've cruised Ameche's, the Circle, Champs, and Topps Lot on a week-end evening to see the muscle cars.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You know that an Arabber is really a guy who sells fruit and vegetables from a horse drawn cart.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember when the city po-leece cars went from black and white, to blue and white, then to all white with red and blue stripes.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You know live crabs are at their very meanest right before steaming, and that if one gets you ..... he WILL NOT let go![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You helped paint a bi-centennial fire hydrant.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You know that the Colts Band does not need a football team to do their thing. They were formed in 1947 and have spent 13 years of their existence without a team (51 to 53 & 84 to 95). Didn't slow 'em down at all![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You always knew where to find Blaze Starr.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember the spectacular 13-alarm Schapiro's Rag-Factory fire that lit up the entire city sky. Hint: it's where the Pepsi sign on the JFX is now.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember cutting school to go to the Flower Mart and Opening Day.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember Greenmount Cemetery as a place you could actually visit, or drive past, without taking your life in your hands.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You know where 'Downey Ocean' is, and remember where the "Irish House" was.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember the old rivalries of Poly / City, Loyola / Calvert Hall were played out every Thanksgiving Day at Memorial Stadium. And the Steel Bowl.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember when Belvedere Avenue was "Northern Parkway", and the two-lane road up-the-hill from Falls Rd to Roland Ave was a steep, narrow, and treacherous path. They stopped traffic on Falls Road to allow the cars on Belvedere to [/FONT][FONT=Arial]travel one at a time on icy/snowy days. Cold Spring between Falls and Roland wasn't much better.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You know Frank Zappa was from Dundalk ...... and that somehow helps you to understand his lyrics.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember a very green, but not very Irish, Hyman Pressman marching in the St. Patrick's Day parades, and Louis L Goldstien with his immortal "God bless you all real good" [/FONT][FONT=Arial]blessing.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You've remember special deli shopping trips to Stone's Bakery, Jack's Corned Beef, Weiss Deli, and Attman's Deli on Lombard St, right in the heart of the high rise projects.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]In those days Sears was still called Sears, Roebuck, and Company..... and lived at Harford and North. Wards was a little more formal as Montgomery Ward ... and was located at Monroe and Washington Blvd. Both stores carried their own brand of lawn mowers, tools, guns, motorcycles, clothes, shoes, tires, [/FONT][FONT=Arial]and appliances. A Sears Revolving Credit Card was tough to [/FONT][SIZE=+0]get![/SIZE]

[FONT=Arial]You remember the Gwynn Oak, Carlin's, and Bay Shore Amusement Parks .[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You know where Engine 6 lives.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember all the ship repair drydocks that lined Key [/FONT][FONT=Arial]Highway. Now it costs a million-plus to call it home![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You wait every year to hear true Baltimore Christmas classics; "Oh, I want Crabs for Christmas" and "Walking in an Essex Wonderland".[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You first heard of Spiro Agnew when he was the Baltimore[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial]County Executive.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You know where to park for the Preakness. And still remember your parking spot for the Colts games.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]The cheapest guy in town had an ideal location to watch [/FONT][FONT=Arial]fireworks.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Mama Cass[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember the old North Central Railroad that ran from downtown to Pennsylvania. It ran on the current light rail tracks along the JFX, through Mount Washington, crossed Lake Roland (Robert E Lee Memorial Park), out thru Ruxton and Lutherville, crossed York Rd at the Cockeysville Underpass, an d then headed north to PA on what is now a great bicycle path. The transition from working railway to light rail and bicycle path was courtesy of a very determined Hurricane Agnes in 1972. David and Freddie killed off any chances of NCR recovery in '79.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You love to hear Arty Donovan explain anything.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Eating at The Golden Arm, Brasey's, and The Iron Horse. Or bowling at Colt Lanes.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You got a parking ticket (or towed away) while in court for a parking ticket in the old traffic court at 211 E Madison St.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You don't think that Assawoman Bay is a strange name.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You are an expert crab picker that always volunteers to teach visitors the only (and best) way to pick a steamed crab. Of course everyone else around you will interrupt the lesson to show your new student their best way, and confusion will reign. This will never change![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You had to be ready to yell out your order at Captain Harvey's, or risk hearing jeers from all the longshoremen in line.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You have no idea what an Auchentoroly is, but know where there is a street (a terrace actually) named after one.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You have great memories of Memorial Stadium, and the days when Brooks, Frank, Jim Palmer, Gus Triandos, Mark Belanger, Luis Aparicio, Jim Gentile, Milt Pappas, Dave McNally, Andy[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial]Etchebarren, Eddie Murray, Hoyt Wilhelm, Dave Johnson, Rick Dempsey, Earl Weaver, and the Ripken boys gave Baltimore plenty of seasons and reasons to be proud.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You had to pull out the BS sign when Robert Irsay declared that he had to move (steal) the Colts from Baltimore .... because the city would not support a team. We didn't get to be the world's largest outdoor insane asylum for nothing. The names of Johnny Unitas, Raymond Berry, Bill Pellington, Art Donovan, Tom Matte, Alan Ameche, Gino Marchetti, Jim Mutscheler, Lenny Moore,[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial]John Mackey, Big Daddy, Jimmy Orr, Bert Jones, Lydell Mitchell, John Dutton, Mike Barnes, Joe Ehrman, Fred Cook, and many others are held in reverence to this day! Won't support a team ....... hmmm!!!![/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember when Baltimore Street was a gaping cavern[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial]covered by wooden planks and steel plates during years of subway construction.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You still cheer for the Orioles even when they aren't doing well, and root for anyone playing the Yankees or Colts. There'll never be even the slightest hint of forgiveness for Bob Irsay, and Mayflower Movers might as well move themselves to Indiana for all the business I'll ever give them.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Everybody knows what a 'zink' and 'payment' are, and just how [/FONT][FONT=Arial]important it is to "warsh them marble stoops."[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember urban renewal, the riots of 68, and burn-baby-burn.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]And no matter where you are, you can only laugh when you see [/FONT][FONT=Arial]signs saying ' Maryland Crab Cakes!'[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Even during all the years of no pro football team in Baltimore , you couldn't bring yourself to be a Redskins Fan.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You say ' Blare Road ' for Belair Road[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You understand the inner and outer loops of the beltway, and [/FONT][FONT=Arial]don't understand why they need signs up to point out which is[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial]which.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember Rolf Hertzgaard, Frank Luber, Royal Parker, Jim Mustard, Mike Hambrick, Ron Smith, Jerry Turner, and Al Sanders on the tube.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]There was Kirby Scott, Johnny Dark, Jack Edwards on WCAO, Jay Grason and Galen Fromm on WBAL, Lee Case on WCBM, Mike March, Johnny Walker, and The Flying Dutchman on WFBR, and Joe Buccheri on a variety of Classic Rock stations ....to name but a few.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You remember the strange mixture of Oprah Winfrey and Richard Sher on WJZ's morning show.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You were confused for a few years after they swapped one-way directions on Lombard and Pratt Streets.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You've been to a prom at the "Alcazar", and probably danced to the Admirals.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]Vince Bagli was 'the' sports announcer on TV. Charlie Eckman was "the" coach. Chuck Thompson was 'the' voice of the Orioles / after Bailey Goss.[/FONT]

[FONT=Arial]You refer to <st1:PlaceName w[/FONT]
Hi, I was born and raised in Mt. Winans and can remember all those things. I was recently talking about the old montgomery wards on monroe st. I hope to talk to more people about the old neighberhood.
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Old 10-16-2008, 04:33 PM
 
4 posts, read 152,706 times
Reputation: 13
Hi, I was born and raised in Mt. Winans, and can remember all those things. I was recently talking about the old Montgomery Wards on Monroe St. It brings back memories. I hope to talk to others from my old stumping ground
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Old 10-16-2008, 04:57 PM
 
4 posts, read 152,706 times
Reputation: 13
[quote=Vera Ruark;5722775]Hi, I was born and raised in Mt. Winans, and can remember all those things. I was recently talking about the old Montgomery Wards on Monroe St. It brings back memories. I hope to talk to others from my old stumping ground. I am putting together a photo book of my old neighberhood and can't seem to find anyone from there. When I mention things like the old light green busses, and the old Ginos, my friends laugh. I can also remember the Sinclair gas stations, I used to get dinosaur banks from there. How about the Reads Drug store... Great Hot dogs and the best fountain sodas around.
or... Wool Worths, Camden Station, and Yes... Memorial Park....Junior
Orioles.
Going grocery shoppng ment going to the market, Hollins, Cross Street,
then they had every thing in little stands out doors.

The inner Harbor was a sight of it,s own back then, wooden piers, ans the smelly Fish Market. These things are missed by many.
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Old 10-16-2008, 05:00 PM
 
4 posts, read 152,706 times
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I some times wish I could go back.
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Old 10-17-2008, 05:55 AM
 
Location: Bodymore
156 posts, read 786,750 times
Reputation: 46
How things have changed.
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Old 10-18-2008, 12:47 PM
 
Location: Triangle, North Carolina
2,819 posts, read 10,399,983 times
Reputation: 1519
Thanks for the memories!!!
I laughed when I saw Duckpins for Dollars!!! God I'm getting old.

Your right best, my how things have changed
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Old 01-09-2009, 07:52 PM
 
1 posts, read 37,402 times
Reputation: 12
Does anyone remember what Cancun Cantina used to be called in the 60's?
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