Robert Hall Clothes Commercial Store Best Video RARE

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Uploaded by on Oct 4, 2009

Robert Hall Clothes Commercial Store Best Video RARE

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  • Listen to all my 50s 60s 70s 80s MP3 Music at dustysmp3com Free

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  • @jekuhn323 Actually, at about eight or nine years of age I was taking the local bus by myself or with a friend, to go to the public library, swimming lessons at the Boys Club, local movie theater, etc. Parents didn't have to watch their kids 24/7 in those days, and no cell phones either.

  • @jekuhn323 I think I was about 14 when I was allowed to travel into Boston and Cambridge, away from my home in suburban Waltham, Massachusetts. I still had a nighttime curfew. But I could go to movies, stores, etc. in the afternoons, early evenings.

  • @jekuhn323 At what age were you permitted to travel to Manhattan, unaccompanied by an adult? Did you go to concerts and/or theaters in Manhattan as a kid and teenager? Did you ever see The Velvet Underground, The New York Dolls, and/or The Ramones, when those bands were starting out?

  • @jekuhn323 I am happy someone else out there shares my fondness of the good suburban life of the 1960s. I imagine Ray Romano and Jerry Seinfeld must have enjoyed similar good times to yourself---didn't they both live on Long Island in their youths?

  • @gymnastix Feel the same way. The 60s in N.Y on Long Island were fantastic

  • Just heard a reference to Robert Hall on the classic TV show, That's My Mama.

  • @hebneh And I'm sick & tired of social critics denegrating the middle class lifestyle of America in the 1950s and '60s. What's so bad about two parents (one at home full-time) sharing a home with their children, a little peace of mind, and modest prosperity? I would wish that life for every person (if he/she would want it). I truly would. If everybody had it, there would be fewer problems today.

  • @hebneh Except for having a personal computer, a DVD recorder, a color TV with a slightly bigger screen, and my own a/c to make the heat of summer less miserable, I would still take life in those times over life today, with no argument.

    On the whole, after all, what was not to like about living in a single-family home, with a yard that had a nice green lawn, a garden and some trees, in an American suburb of the 1950s and '60s? Those were fantastic times!

  • @hebneh I realized there were unhappy times (mostly my mom's illness) even in those best of times , and also not all kids had it as good as I did. But we were raised to help the poor with donations of canned food, and the still-good clothes we'd outgrown. I feel no guilt for having lived a good life for which my dad worked hard and was happy to provide his family. In appreciation, I did my chores, and helped clean the house.

  • @hebneh Elementary school days and those years during that era were some of the happiest of my life. My mom and dad, and most of my relatives were still alive, few responsibilities, great TV shows (including "Batman," "Shindig!," Lucy, "Leave It To Beaver," and more cartoons and TV specials than at which one could shake a stick), the exciting, new rock & roll music and records, great movies at cheap prices, in a local theater with one, huge screen. What was not to like about life then?

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