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80's-90's MEMORIES


poop stache

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Fordham Rd. @ Grand Concourse

 

 

i remember there was a Woolworth on Jerome ave and Burnside ave.

 

that shit had a diner in it.

 

a-w-counter-i.jpg?w=500

 

the back of the store had all sorts of pets.

 

i purchased my guppies there.

 

this is not it, couldn't find a pic.

 

6a00d8341c18b253ef01310fb7f54b970c-500wi

yeah remember them both. also the DZ on fordham..

210b0776754e11e181bd12313817987b_7.jpg

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Fordham Rd. @ Grand Concourse

 

 

i remember there was a Woolworth on Jerome ave and Burnside ave.

 

that shit had a diner in it.

 

a-w-counter-i.jpg?w=500

 

the back of the store had all sorts of pets.

 

i purchased my guppies there.

 

this is not it, couldn't find a pic.

 

6a00d8341c18b253ef01310fb7f54b970c-500wi

 

I used to steal live fish from the pet section of Woolworths. true story, you could also get Vanilla Coke at the counter of the diner.

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xo2yhf.jpg

 

A playful Ivan the gorilla approached the camera in September of 1973. For 27 years, from 1967-1994, Ivan was the most famous resident of the B & I Circus Store, 8012 South Tacoma Way. Store owner Earl (E.L.) Irwin purchased Ivan and another infant gorilla from an animal trainer in the Congo in 1964. The pair were intended to publicize the B& I. The female Western Lowland gorilla died soon after arrival, but Ivan became a favorite of the Irwin family and took up residence at their house. By 1967, Ivan's strength, natural curiosity and playfulness ruled him out as a house pet and he went to live at the B& I full time. As attitudes toward captive animals changed with the time, Ivan's fans became the core of a "free the gorilla" movement. In 1994, the Irwin family donated Ivan to the Woodland Park Zoo. He is on permanent loan to the Atlanta Zoo.

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xo2yhf.jpg

 

A playful Ivan the gorilla approached the camera in September of 1973. For 27 years, from 1967-1994, Ivan was the most famous resident of the B & I Circus Store, 8012 South Tacoma Way. Store owner Earl (E.L.) Irwin purchased Ivan and another infant gorilla from an animal trainer in the Congo in 1964. The pair were intended to publicize the B& I. The female Western Lowland gorilla died soon after arrival, but Ivan became a favorite of the Irwin family and took up residence at their house. By 1967, Ivan's strength, natural curiosity and playfulness ruled him out as a house pet and he went to live at the B& I full time. As attitudes toward captive animals changed with the time, Ivan's fans became the core of a "free the gorilla" movement. In 1994, the Irwin family donated Ivan to the Woodland Park Zoo. He is on permanent loan to the Atlanta Zoo.

 

 

 

haha.

have you been to the B&I recently?

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