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Archive for November, 2009

Nov
30
    
Posted (Admin) in New York Food on November-30-2009

With Christmas and Hanukkah looming, you could probably use a drink.



Nov
30
    
Posted (Admin) in Vanishing New York on November-30-2009

Before Zum Schneider resided on the corner of 7th and C, there was this guy.

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Nov
27
    
Posted (Admin) in 3 on November-27-2009


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Nov
27
    
Posted (Admin) in 3 on November-27-2009



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Nov
25
    
Posted (Admin) in Vanishing New York on November-25-2009

In case you’re left without a place to feast tomorrow, try some of these locales for homemade-like cooking. The Howard Johnson’s menu looks good. Chilled fruit cup with sherbet. Mince pie. Freshly baked rolls and butter. Orange drink! Mints!

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Nov
25
    
Posted (Admin) in 3 on November-25-2009

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Nov
25
    
Posted (Admin) in Vanishing New York on November-25-2009

The Papaya King on 14th and 7th is shuttered. The neon lights are off, the shades are down, and the interior is a wreck of packing boxes. It went on the market last January.:

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Nov
25
    
Posted (Admin) in 3 on November-25-2009

If you look at the census figures for a place like Flushing, Queens, you will find that, like many areas of New York, this is more a small city or town than a neighborhood. Flushing has a population of 173,826 and a demographic makeup that is 43% Asian, 19% Hispanic, 6% black and 39% white. The range of services is broad enough that you could easily never leave the neighborhood and I imagine many who live and work in Flushing do not leave often.
Flushing now rivals Manhattan’s Chinatown as a center for Chinese community, making it the largest (or second largest) in the United States and outside Asia. Flushing, however, unlike a typical Chinatown, has more Asian diversity both in its residents and businesses/services with many Asian groups including Korean, Taiwanese, Malaysian, Thai, Vietnamese and Japanese.
Flushing has become a model for religious pluralism in America, says R. Scott Hanson, a visiting assistant professor of history at the State University of New York at Binghamton and an affiliate of the Pluralism Project at Harvard University. There are over 200 places of worship in a neighborhood of only 2.5 square miles.
On my recent excursion, I explored the area by foot and by car and was amazed by the diversity of people, commerce, architecture and residential enclaves that I found. I was particularly impressed with North Flushing’s absolutely exquisite single family homes, just a short way from the hustle and bustle of Main Street, Roosevelt Avenue and Northern Boulevard. You can see, for example, the Fitzgerald-Ginsberg Mansion in the upper right of the photo collage.
There is a botanical garden, Flushing Meadows-Corona Park (site of the 1964 World’s Fair - see here), the Queens Museum of Art, art galleries, tea shops, herbalists, dumpling stands, Queens College, the Old Quaker Meeting House and the historic Flushing Town Hall (headquarters of the Flushing Council on Culture and the Arts, an affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution). Flushing is home to the Queens Borough Public Library - the Flushing branch is the busiest branch of the highest circulation system in the country.
I would recommend a visit to Flushing (along with Jackson Heights), both for the New Yorker and the out of town visitor. Here you will get a slice of ethnic life in New York City in a real working neighborhood which caters to its residents and not so heavily to tourists like Manhattan’s Chinatown. And there are plenty of restaurants to satisfy and shops to peruse.There’s a vibrant feeling in this place. Flushing is a city on the move …

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Nov
24
    
Posted (Admin) in Vanishing New York on November-24-2009

We asked and we have received. Mike Joyce, creator of the “More Jane, Less Marc” guerrilla postcard campaign, has put his catchy slogan on a t-shirt.

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Nov
23
    
Posted (Admin) in Vanishing New York on November-23-2009

Loving the Garment District: “The area still has pungency. It has not surrendered to the great anaesthetizing march of modernity. It has not chased its working class to faraway suburbs. It has not become a hollow movie-set version of an authentic place…” [NYT]

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