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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/</link>
     <title>New York </title>
     <description>The settlement founded in the 1620s by the Dutch West India Company on the southern tip of Manhattan Island developed from a trading post in the wilderness into an important seaport and center of commerce under English rule.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/babels_secret.htm</link>
     <title>New York: Babel's Secret </title>
     <description>The story of America's national unity and the Homogenized Baby is not without interest at this point. If memory serves, it was on a prewar February day that the office boy was told to run down to the big newspaper stand on the corner and bring back the current issue of half a dozen foreign-language dailies.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/city_five_boroughs205.htm</link>
     <title>New York History: Immigration </title>
     <description>It is frequently not realized that despite New York City's more than fortyfold growth during the nineteenth century the net contribution to the city from the American hinterland was, on balance, nil. In 1800 the area within what came to be the five boroughs of New York City contained 79,000 persons, or 1.5 percent of the national population.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/new_york_career_guidance.htm</link>
     <title>New York Career Guidance </title>
     <description>Career guidance can be a critical intervention for residents of large cities like New York where the network of educational, training, and employing institutions is too complex and differentiated to be readily understood.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/new_york_opportunity_income.htm</link>
     <title>New York Opportunity and Income </title>
     <description>Ultimately, a worker's question is: Can a living be made in New York City, and, if so, how? Answers to this question, of course, are relative. Compared with 31 of the world's largest cities, New York salaries are the highest.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/harness_racing.htm</link>
     <title>The First Modern Sport in America: Harness Racing in New York City, 1825-1870  </title>
     <description>New York City between 1820 and 1870 revealed, however, a much more active sporting life than heretofore thought to have existed at that time. Far from mere prefigurings, the framework of modern sport was established during this half century.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/new_york_work_welfare.htm</link>
     <title>New York Work and Welfare </title>
     <description>A review of the development of the welfare dilemma, with particular reference to New York City, and of the experience with alterations in the assistance programs that have been initiated during the past few years should sharpen our understanding of the nexus between work and welfare and our thinking about the relationships between income transfers and general economic planning.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/new_york_minorities.htm</link>
     <title>New York Minorities </title>
     <description>It is becoming increasingly difficult to deal with minority groups in New York City as if they were special groups whose labor market problems can be considered independently of the rest of the population.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/new_york_higher_education.htm</link>
     <title>New York Higher Education </title>
     <description>Whatever the measure, it is clear that the higher educational enterprise is as troubled as the primary and secondary educational systems.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/new_york_capital_1789.htm</link>
     <title>This Was New York: The Nation's Capital in 1789 </title>
     <description>Setting out on a journey to New York City in 1789, you consulted first of all not a timetable but a calendar. You reckoned on two full days to get from Philadelphia to New York by stage wagon, at least three days from Albany, and not less than six days from Boston.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/centers.htm</link>
     <title>New York: Centers </title>
     <description>Strictly speaking, Rockefeller Center is not a center at all. People use the word in two closely related meanings, of which Rockefeller Center meets neither.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/broadway_road.htm</link>
     <title>New York: Broadway and the Road </title>
     <description>Visitors in New York must have often made this particular mistake, and occasionally a native, too. Strolling across town in the middle forties between Sixth Avenue and Eighth Avenue in the daylight hours (visitors), or hasten across town on business (natives).</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/midtown.htm</link>
     <title>New York: Midtown, Times Square </title>
     <description>Much more frequently the encounters on Times Square are by appointment between good housewives from North Bergen, New Jersey and their girlhood friends from Washington Heights. They may be seen any day in the week, especially around the matinee hours, waiting for each other at the corner of Broadway and Forty-third Street in front of the Paramount Theater.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/metropolitian_museum_art.htm</link>
     <title>The Metropolitian Museum of Art </title>
     <description>The decorative arts include woodwork, metalwork, ceramics, enamels, glass and textiles. The Pierpont Morgan collection of European decorative arts occupies a wing by itself; another entire wing, the gift of Robert W. de Forest, is devoted to early American art.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/new_york_botanical_garden.htm</link>
     <title>The New York Botanical Garden </title>
     <description>The decorative arts include woodwork, metalwork, ceramics, enamels, glass and textiles. The Pierpont Morgan collection of European decorative arts occupies a wing by itself; another entire wing, the gift of Robert W. de Forest, is devoted to early American art.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/central_park.htm</link>
     <title>New York: Central Park </title>
     <description>But even more important is the fact that Central Park as late as 1920 did not have the garden wall which today encloses it on three sides to the height, in places, of several hundred feet.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/brooklyn_points_interest.htm</link>
     <title>New York: Brooklyn Points of Interest </title>
     <description>The decorative arts include woodwork, metalwork, ceramics, enamels, glass and textiles. The Pierpont Morgan collection of European decorative arts occupies a wing by itself; another entire wing, the gift of Robert W. de Forest, is devoted to early American art.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/new_york_aquarium.htm</link>
     <title>New York Aquarium </title>
     <description>Next you go by subway to the Battery Park to visit the Aquarium. In what was originally a fort, West Battery, erected in the year 1807, the structure which houses the Aquarium has had a varied career. You are apt to find a crowd there ahead of you standing fascinated in front of the fish tanks.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/new_york_libraries.htm</link>
     <title>New York: The City's Libraries </title>
     <description>The New York Public Library, The Brooklyn Public Library, The Queens Borough Public Library. The more you enjoy a particular kind of cultural or recreational reading, the more you need more books.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/new_york_founding.htm</link>
     <title>New York : The Founding, Colonial City </title>
     <description>After a century and a half of life as the capital of a colonial province, the city of New York contained about 25,000 residents. On the eve of the American Revolution it ranked second (behind Philadelphia) in population size among the colonial municipalities but was first in cosmopolitanism.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/new_york_american_city.htm</link>
     <title>New York : The American City </title>
     <description>In the half century following the American Declaration of Independence New York City grew at a much faster rate (except during the Revolutionary War itself and during the period around the War of 1812) than it had during colonialism.</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/city_five_boroughs.htm</link>
     <title>New York : The City of Five Boroughs </title>
     <description>Following the creation of the greater city of New York in 1898 all of the elements necessary for population expansion came into place. These included a large land area (three hundred square miles).</description>
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     <link>http://numberonestars.com/new_york/index.htm</link>
     <title>New York </title>
     <description>The settlement founded in the 1620s by the Dutch West India Company on the southern tip of Manhattan Island developed from a trading post in the wilderness into an important seaport and center of commerce under English rule.</description>
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