33rd St 09 Mr Brainwash
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Hmmm... This might be a dummy question, but are those individuals anybody important? The image isn't large enough for me to make anyone out, although if I squint my eyes, I think I see Sean Connery and Moe from the 3 stooges
- dwlfennell
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No one I recognize. Looks like Moe's hair (seated next to an aged Aunt Bee) is just a beret.cadeallaw wrote:Hmmm... This might be a dummy question, but are those individuals anybody important? The image isn't large enough for me to make anyone out, although if I squint my eyes, I think I see Sean Connery and Moe from the 3 stooges
Nice... thanks for the blown up pic.dwlfennell wrote:
No one I recognize. Looks like Moe's hair (seated next to an aged Aunt Bee) is just a beret.
- bloodthrust
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I keep seeing Brian Wilson as the far left guy.
Perkins wrote:Hmm. Art with rules. Doesn't sound like all that great of an idea to me.
mistersmith wrote:It's Pearl Jam. You could poop on a piece of French Paper and write "Pearl Jam" in it with your finger and have a decent shot at AoTW.
- dwlfennell
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It's those jowls...and generally sullen look.bloodthrust wrote:I keep seeing Brian Wilson as the far left guy.
And he's talking to Ruth Gordon????dwlfennell wrote:It's those jowls...and generally sullen look.bloodthrust wrote:I keep seeing Brian Wilson as the far left guy.
The Dude abides...
The 33rd Street PATH station, opened on November 10, 1910, is located on Sixth Avenue (Avenue of the Americas), between 32nd and 33rd Streets in Manhattan, under Herald Square.
The present station is not the original. When the Independent Subway's 6th Avenue line was being built in 1936 it was necessary to relocate the H & M 33rd Street station. The original station was closed in December 1937. A new terminal station located at 32nd Street was opened September 1939. Although the station is at 32nd Street the 33rd Street name was retained.
Gimbels New York flagship was located in the cluster of large department stores that surrounded Herald Square. Designed by architect Daniel Burnham, the structure, which once offered 27 acres (110,000 m2) of selling space, has since been modernized and entirely revamped, and now houses the Manhattan Mall. When this building opened in 1910, a major selling point was its many doors leading to the Herald Square subway station; thanks to such easy access, by the time Gimbels closed in 1986 this store had the highest rate of "shrinkage", or shoplifting losses, in the world. Doors also opened upon a pedestrian passage under 33rd Street, connecting Penn Station to those subway stations. This "Gimbels Corridor" was closed in the 1970s for reasons of liability. After conversion to the Manhattan Mall, parts of the former store were occupied by a mid-town branch of Brooklyn's Abraham & Straus and still later by Stern's. The building that housed a Gimbels branch at 86th Street and Lexington Avenue remains, but has been converted to luxury apartments
Taken from Wikipedia. Just something to chew on.
The present station is not the original. When the Independent Subway's 6th Avenue line was being built in 1936 it was necessary to relocate the H & M 33rd Street station. The original station was closed in December 1937. A new terminal station located at 32nd Street was opened September 1939. Although the station is at 32nd Street the 33rd Street name was retained.
Gimbels New York flagship was located in the cluster of large department stores that surrounded Herald Square. Designed by architect Daniel Burnham, the structure, which once offered 27 acres (110,000 m2) of selling space, has since been modernized and entirely revamped, and now houses the Manhattan Mall. When this building opened in 1910, a major selling point was its many doors leading to the Herald Square subway station; thanks to such easy access, by the time Gimbels closed in 1986 this store had the highest rate of "shrinkage", or shoplifting losses, in the world. Doors also opened upon a pedestrian passage under 33rd Street, connecting Penn Station to those subway stations. This "Gimbels Corridor" was closed in the 1970s for reasons of liability. After conversion to the Manhattan Mall, parts of the former store were occupied by a mid-town branch of Brooklyn's Abraham & Straus and still later by Stern's. The building that housed a Gimbels branch at 86th Street and Lexington Avenue remains, but has been converted to luxury apartments
Taken from Wikipedia. Just something to chew on.
dangerboy wrote:i think he thinks we think more about what he thinks than we actually think of what he thinks