Front windshield could have a green tint line at upper area as an option
yes yes
A transatlantic cruise in the 1940s and 1950s would have been luxurious. The food and entertainment would have been top of the line and the service would have been tremendous.
Car window tint is a film that is applied to the windows. It is not permanent in the sense that it does not change the class but removing it would be very difficult. If window tint is done by the correct professional then it will last a long time. Many cars come from the factory with windows already tinted. THis is permanent because it is not a film that is applied it is that the glass itself has been altered.
there might of been games like pacman on video game and there also would of been games on the computer
There probably would have been no cold war, but there probably would have been WW3, probably starting in early to mid 1950s.
white is any part on a white surface that has not been tinted
Dude, I've been pulled over for just my tinted windows atleast 4 or 5 times now, and happened to just get a fix it ticket for it this last time. The stops have resulted in one ticket for not having my insurance papers on me, one for the tint, and one huge one for DUI-D that might get my licsense suspended. I recommend not having tinted windows at all, they cause a lot of unwanted attention.
A loaf of bread in the 1950s would have only been about twenty nine cents. Bread was a common grocery purchase in those days as it is today.
It does work with Windows 7 ! I've been using Windows 7 for a while now, and Answers certainly works on my computer (otherwise I would not have been able to read your question - or answer it !)
Classrooms in the 1950s were typically more traditional compared to today, with rows of desks facing the front where the teacher would stand. Chalkboards were commonly used for teaching, and students often had assigned seats. Discipline and rote memorization were emphasized in this era of education.
Windows 3.1 would have been installed on top of a standalone version of MS-DOS. All standalone versions of MS-DOS used FAT12 or FAT16. It is possible to run Windows 3.1 on top of later versions of MS-DOS with a FAT32 file system, but this would have been extremely uncommon.
Probably not, because if it were I don't think boys would have been allowed to say it on TV in the 1950s.