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  2. List of bus routes in Manhattan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bus_routes_in...

    New York City Omnibus Corporation buses route (M23 - 5) replaced New York Railways' Sixth Avenue Line streetcar on March 3, 1936. New York City Omnibus Corporation buses route (M22 - 6) replaced New York Railways' Broadway Line streetcar on March 6, 1936. The routes were combined as a one-way pair on November 10, 1963, and kept the number 6.

  3. List of bus routes in Brooklyn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_bus_routes_in_Brooklyn

    A 2018 XN60 (1108) on the B35 local at Flatbush’s Church Avenue/East 18th Street in January 2019, set to short-turn at McDonald Avenue. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) operates a number of bus routes in Brooklyn, New York, United States; one minor route is privately operated under a city franchise.

  4. CBS Building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CBS_Building

    The CBS Building stands directly above a New York City Subway tunnel connecting the Sixth Avenue and 53rd Street subway lines. [5] [b] The building, developed for broadcasting company CBS, was designed to occupy only 60 percent of its site. [7] [8] It is three blocks north of Rockefeller Center, the headquarters of CBS's rival NBC. [9]

  5. Mohamed Al-Fayed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohamed_Al-Fayed

    Mohamed Abdel Moneim Al-Fayed [a] (/ æ l ˈ f aɪ. ɛ d /; 27 January 1929 – 30 August 2023) was an Egyptian billionaire businessman whose residence and primary business interests were in the United Kingdom from the mid-1960s.

  6. Danbury, Connecticut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danbury,_Connecticut

    The city is a commercial hub of Western Connecticut, an outer-ring commuter suburb of New York City, and a historic summer colony within the New York metropolitan area and New England. [4] Danbury is nicknamed the "Hat City", because it was once the center of the American hat industry, during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

  7. Carnegie Mellon University - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnegie_Mellon_University

    On April 23, 2012, New York's Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and New York University's President John Sexton announced an agreement between New York City, New York's MTA, and a consortium of academic institutions, and private technology companies that led to the creation in New York of a Center for Urban Science and Progress (CUSP).

  8. Harry Houdini - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Houdini

    In 1904, Houdini bought a New York City townhouse at 278 West 113th Street in Harlem. He paid US$25,000 (equivalent to $847,778 in 2023) for the five-level, 6,008-square-foot house, which was built in 1895, and lived in it with his wife Bess, and various other relatives until his death in 1926.