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  <id>tag:www.barbarafeldman.com,2008://1/tag:blog.surfnetkids.com,2003://3.44-</id>
  <updated>2008-04-23T05:28:08Z</updated>
  <title>Comments for She&apos;d Never Seen a Record Player</title>
<subtitle>Welcome to my office.  I am Barbara J. Feldman, syndicated newspaper columnist, online publisher, author, mother, wife and Net surfer supreme (not listed
in order of importance, of course).</subtitle>
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    <id>tag:blog.surfnetkids.com,2003://3.44</id>
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    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.barbarafeldman.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=44" title="She'd Never Seen a Record Player" />
    <published>2003-05-21T01:21:24Z</published>
    <updated>2007-02-27T23:53:12Z</updated>
    <title>She&apos;d Never Seen a Record Player</title>
    <summary>My daughter is studying the American Revolution in her fifth grade class, and learned some colonial-era folk dances from a woman who visited their classroom. To accompany the dancing, the...</summary>
    <author>
      <name></name>
      <uri>http://www.surfnetkids.com</uri>
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      <![CDATA[<p>My daughter is studying the American Revolution in her fifth grade class, and learned some colonial-era folk dances from a woman who visited their classroom.  To accompany the dancing, the visiting instructor brought a record player.   It was the first record player my daughter had ever seen!</p>

<p>Which started me thinking about the fold-up portable RCA stereo record player I had in high-school.  It was very cool, and I took it with me when I left for college.   It did duty long after college too, because I remember it in Zürich, where I worked for a few years in my early twenties. </p>

<p>The RCA stereo was approximately the same size as my first home computer I purchased many years later:  <a href="http://oldcomputers.net/compaqi.html" target=_blank>one of the very first Compaq portable computers</a>.  It had two floppies (no hard drive) and ran the MS-DOS operating system.  It must have weighed about thirty pounds; certainly not very portable by today's standards!  </p>

<p>Okay ... I'm back... I was gone with the memories of my youth, but I'm back now.<br />
</p>]]>
      
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  <entry>
    <id>tag:blog.surfnetkids.com,2003://3.44-comment:72</id>
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    <title>Comment from Barry Galef on 2003-05-29</title>
    <author>
        <name>Barry Galef</name>
        <uri></uri>
    </author>
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        <![CDATA[<p>Hi Barbara,</p>

<p>You have my sympathy on the flood!  <br />
I got a kick out of your record player story -- it was less than a year ago that my 16-year-old asked me what, exactly, a phonograph was.  He had heard of them, but never learned their function.  I stared at him, stupified.  And we actually have a turntable, and I use it rather often!</p>

<p>By the way, that Compaq you had weighed 38 pounds, and probably came close to pulling you arm out of its socket.  They called them portable, we called them luggable.</p>

<p>-- Barry</p>]]>
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    <published>2003-05-29T11:01:27Z</published>
  </entry>

  <entry>
    <id>tag:blog.surfnetkids.com,2003://3.44-comment:71</id>
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    <title>Comment from Heidi on 2003-05-28</title>
    <author>
        <name>Heidi</name>
        <uri></uri>
    </author>
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        <![CDATA[<p>lol, I had to chuckle when you said it was the first time your daughter had seen a record player.  In the New Year, some of my kids (grade 4/5) at school bugged me to bring in the song, "I'm gonna wash that man right out of my hair."  I did and I pulled down the ancient portable record player our school has.  The looks and the questions...."What is that thing?"  Amazing the difference between 1 generation and the next :)</p>]]>
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    <published>2003-05-29T02:21:43Z</published>
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