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[64] [65] On June 11, 2012, the MTA duplicated "The Weekender" site as a free mobile app download for iOS. [ 66 ] [ 67 ] On November 29, 2012, an Android version of the app was released. [ 68 ] The Weekender, however, is only available as an online version, because it changes every week. [ 47 ]
The R44 is a New York City Subway car model built by the St. Louis Car Company from 1971 to 1973 for the B Division and the Staten Island Railway (SIR). The cars replaced many R1–9 series cars, and all remaining 1925 Standard Steel built SIRTOA ME-1 trains, providing Staten Island with a new fleet of railcars.
The E Queens Boulevard Express/Eighth Avenue Local [3] is a rapid transit service in the B Division of the New York City Subway.Its route emblem, or "bullet", is blue since it uses the IND Eighth Avenue Line in Manhattan.
Prudential Financial, Inc. is an American Fortune Global 500 and Fortune 500 company whose subsidiaries provide insurance, retirement planning, investment management, and other products and services to both retail and institutional customers throughout the United States and in over 40 other countries.
The R160 is a class of New Technology Train subway cars built for the New York City Subway's B Division.Entering service between 2006 and 2010, they replaced all R38, R40, and NYCT-operated R44 cars, and most R32 and R42 cars.
The current R service is the successor to the original route 2 of the Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation. [5] [6] When 2 service began on January 15, 1916, it ran between Chambers Street on the BMT Nassau Street Line and 86th Street on the BMT Fourth Avenue Line, using the Manhattan Bridge to cross the East River, and running via Fourth Avenue local. [7]
Aerial view Northern entry gate and container cranes Looking northeast from the Chemical Coast across Arthur Kill, with Howland Hook Marine Terminal on far right, and Port Newark in distance Howland Hook from John's Cove
The Library of Babel website attracted the attention of scholars, particularly those working at the juncture of humanities and digital media. [10] [11] [12] Zac Zimmer wrote in Do Borges's librarians have bodies: "Basile's is perhaps the most absolutely dehumanizing of all Library visualizations, in that beyond being driven to suicidal madness or philosophical resignation, his Librarians have ...