Ricky Nelson is crooning "Fools Rush In" on the vintage stereo. There are ashtrays throughout the house, even though nobody smokes. And the atomic star-burst clock above the fireplace keeps perfect time.
In fact, everything in Dr. Matthew and Pamela Mayo's home in Rochester, Minn., would suggest that Eisenhower was still in the White House.
Virtually every stick of furniture, every piece of art and every knickknack is retro, relics from the "Father Knows Best" era. Matthew, a fan of midcentury modern design, has been collecting for about seven years, long enough to acquire a houseful of artifacts that would have made TV patriarch Jim Anderson feel right at home.
Even the drawers in the living-room stereo cabinet hold nostalgic items such as vintage fondue forks and "Danish Tiny Tapers," the pencil-thin candles that decked many a midcentury candelabra.
Visitors who haven't been forewarned are taken aback when they first enter the Mayos' residential time capsule.
"They say, 'You live in a '50s museum.' Or sometimes just 'What the heck?'" said Matthew, a chiropractor who is not related to Rochester's famed medical family.
The Mayos' faithful yet playful re-creation of a '50s dwelling was recently showcased in Atomic Ranch magazine, the bible for fans of ranch houses and Space Age style.
Matthew is especially fond of unusual novelty pieces, like the row of faux book spines that open to reveal a concealed mini-bar. "That's the kind of stuff I look for: James Bond with secret compartments," he said.