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Vegas Vampire Strip Logo
The Vegas Vampire was Sin City's horror host from 1963 to 1972. The show aired on Friday and Saturday nights on Channel 5. -
Dream Cup Coffee Shop
Do you remember the Dream Cup Coffee Shop in Springfield? -
Beware of Sharks Ohio
We don't have any oceans in the Buckeye State, but we have plenty of ponds, lakes, and rivers. Stay alert. You never know... -
Houston Astro-Knots
The Houston Astro-Knots played in the second incarnation of World Team Tennis that began in 1981. The original league played from 1974 to 1978. The Astro-Knots joined the re-tooled league in 1982 and folded after the 1983 season. -
Chicago Bruisers Helmet
The Chicago Bruisers were one of four teams established for the inaugural season of the Arena Football League in 1987. Their homefield was the Rosemont Horizon. After three seasons the team folded. -
Indinia University
Hoosiers can take a joke. Laugh it up in this funny design from Old School Shirts. -
Indinia Parent
Hoosiers can take a joke. Laugh it up in this funny design from Old School Shirts. -
New York Express Soccer
The New York Arrows were charter members of the original Major Indoor Soccer League (MISL) in 1978. They played their home games at the Nassau County Coliseum on Long Island. Though successful on the indoor pitch, winning four championships, the Arrows had trouble drawing... -
California Dreamin'
California was admitted to the union on September 9, 1850. Settled over 13,000 by some of the continents first inhabitants, it??one of the most culturally and linguistically diverse areas in pre-Columbian America. Today, it's still rich in culture and natural wonders.?? -
California Livin'
California was admitted to the union on September 9, 1850. Settled over 13,000 by some of the continents first inhabitants, it??one of the most culturally and linguistically diverse areas in pre-Columbian America. Today, it's still rich in culture and natural wonders.?? -
Jolly Joan
Famous for it's giant neon sign, Jolly Joan's opened in the 1930s at 127 SW Broadway in Portland. At one time, it was the busiest restaurant in Oregon. It served over 6,000 diners a day. It closed in the 1970s. OS2044 -
Pittsburgh FOR-EV-ER
As Squints from the movie "The Sandlot" might put it, live and die Pittsburgh FOR-EV-ER! -
Playland Roller Rink
Playland Amusement Park opened in 1930 on Bitter Lake. A popular entratianment spot into the 1950s, it featured a roller coaster, Shute the Shoots, and roller rink among other attractions. It closed in 1961, the land aquired to build a school. -
Seattle's Everett Hawks
The Everett Hawks was first a professional and then a minor-league arena football team based in Everett, just outside Seattle, Washington from 2002 to 2007. -
King's Klubhouse
What's the password to King's Klubhouse? -
Public Market Center
The world famous Pike Place Market overlooks the Elliott Bay waterfront in Seattle. It opened in 1907 and is one of the oldest continuously operated public farmers' markets in the United States. -
Coal Black Stove Polish
Cheiftain Manufacturing Company made Coal Black Stove Polish in Baltimore, Maryland. -
Baltimore Elite Giants
The Baltimore Elite Giants were a professional baseball team that played in the Negro leagues from 1920 to 1950. In their final season, they played in the Negro National League with the crosstown rival Baltimore Black Sox. -
Carlin's Park Roller Rink
Carlin's Park was founded in 1918 by John C. Carling. The park featured a roller coaster, circus acts, and rollerskating. It also had activities during the winter months. After a fire in 1956, it became a drive-in movie theater which lasted until 1977. -
Texas Arrowheads
The Texas Arrowheads were a cricket team that played for the United States Pro Cricket League in 2004, the circuit's lone season. -
Geist's Cocktail Cove
Come summertime in Indiana, Cocktail Cove, located on the Geist Reservoir, is the place to party and get some sun. -
Grover Cleveland Is Not From Cleveland
Grover Cleveland, the 22nd and 24th President of the United States, was NOT from Cleveland, he was from New Jersey. However, he was distantly related to Moses Cleaveland (yes, spelled differently) the man for whom the city is named. -
Web Star License Plate
Webster Slaughter, number 84, was a wide receiver for the Cleveland Browns from 1986 to 1991. A favorite target of quarterback Bernie Kosar, his car had this unique license plate (though it was registered in his native California). -
John Dillinger
Though he famously met his end outside a Chicago movie theater, notorious criminal John Dillinger began his life in Indianapolis. -
Atlas Supermarket
Sid and Eleanor Maurer opened the Atlas Supermarket at the corner of North College Avenue and 54th Street in 1947. It closed in 2002 after 55 years in business. Fun Fact: Atlas Supermarket was where television star David Letterman worked as a stock boy... -
Circle City
Are you a proud native of the Circle City? Show your pride in Indianapolis with this stylish T-shirt. -
Cleveland 216 Area Code
One of the first area codes issued under the North American Numbering Plan in 1947, the 216 area code once covered all of Northeast Ohio. In the mid 1990s, the 330 and 440 area codes were introduced to handle the demand for telephone numbers. -
Cleveland Cobras
Previously the Cleveland Stars, the Cleveland Cobras came about in 1974 and were an American soccer??club based in Cleveland, Ohio??and a member of the American Soccer League. -
Milway Milwaukee
Milway in Milwaukee was a treasured Wisconsin institution.
