Post by putianliu on Dec 5, 2012 9:00:04 GMT
When you first encounter New York, whether for the first time or after a time away, it can be overwhelming. It can look fierce, inhuman and hard, Nike Lebron 9 Men shoes14intimidating in its enormity and complexity. The sheer magnitude of the built environment gives the impression that the city is a vast machine that has been growing, evolving, adapting over centuries. And it is. But all those buildings and asphalt[2], they're the work of people. It's all made of people -- everyone who lives here, and everyone past who's left a mark, Nike Lebron 9 Men shoes11great or small, right on the city itself. There's Adolph Ochs, who revitalized the New York Times in the early 20th century and situated it in a building on 43rd Street, off of what would soon be called Times Square. There's Fiorello LaGuardia, mayor of New York during the Great Depression and World War II, who read the funny papers over the radio to the people of New York during a newspaper strike in 1945. His name graces a major international airport,Nike Lebron 9 Men shoes10 a public high school for the performing arts, and a street running through Greenwich Village. So many of New York's streets and corners are named for someone who has contributed to the legend of the city. Edgar Allan Poe Way, part of West 84th Street, marks one of the many places the impoverished[3] poet and author lived in New York. Frank Torre Place, on East Second Street in the Kensington section of Brooklyn, was named for the older brother of Yankees manager Joe Torre. Frank's battle for life in the fall of 1996 after a heart transplant provided great inspiration for the pinstriped Bronx Bombers, who would go on to win the World Series for New York that year.
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The buildings, statues, streets and neighborhoods are the people that make New York -- some "ordinary," and some whom history canonizes. But all have, in deed or in spirit, left their mark on the city. And you, in some way, do that too.