This document provides an excerpt from a travelogue about a trip to New York City in October 2004 by the author and their friends. They attended a conference and festival marking the 100th anniversary of the St. Louis World's Fair. The group was met at their hotel near Lincoln Center and taken to brunch. In the afternoon, they visited Ground Zero and went shopping at The Strand bookstore before seeing Broadway shows in the evening. The author reflects on the impact of 9/11 and sights around New York City.
This document provides an excerpt from a travelogue about a trip to New York City in October 2004 by the author and their friends. They attended a conference and festival marking the 100th anniversary of the St. Louis World's Fair. The group was met at their hotel near Lincoln Center and taken to brunch. In the afternoon, they visited Ground Zero and went shopping at The Strand bookstore before seeing Broadway shows in the evening. The author reflects on the impact of 9/11 and sights around New York City.
This document provides an excerpt from a travelogue about a trip to New York City in October 2004 by the author and their friends. They attended a conference and festival marking the 100th anniversary of the St. Louis World's Fair. The group was met at their hotel near Lincoln Center and taken to brunch. In the afternoon, they visited Ground Zero and went shopping at The Strand bookstore before seeing Broadway shows in the evening. The author reflects on the impact of 9/11 and sights around New York City.
This document provides an excerpt from a travelogue about a trip to New York City in October 2004 by the author and their friends. They attended a conference and festival marking the 100th anniversary of the St. Louis World's Fair. The group was met at their hotel near Lincoln Center and taken to brunch. In the afternoon, they visited Ground Zero and went shopping at The Strand bookstore before seeing Broadway shows in the evening. The author reflects on the impact of 9/11 and sights around New York City.
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The passage describes the narrator's trip to New York City with friends to attend a conference. It details their experiences visiting various landmarks and seeing a Broadway show.
The group visited Ground Zero, which had been converted to a subway station. The collapse of the towers there was still vivid in their imaginations from seeing it repeatedly on TV.
Preachy and Bien chose to see Fiddler on the Roof, while Rio, Ani and the narrator saw Bombay Dreams, an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical based on Bollywood.
Excerpt from, “New York City, Post 9/11”
Everything starts on October 2004 and my friends Preachy Legasto
and Fe Mangahas, were travelling together to attend a conference in New York city. The conference and festival were meant to mark the 100th anniversary of St. Louis World’s fair, thousands of ethnic tribes from the “empire” (Igorot and Moros) Has been display for audiences. I barely got any sleep on the long flight to L.A. , and tried to entertain myself by reading fitfully a collection of Latin American stories (edited by Carlos Fuentes and Julio Ortega) and stuffing her face. The immigration officer at L.A. was young, Latino-looking, and very pleasant. When I told him I had lived in the U.S. for a while some years back, he become even friendlier. And when I said that I’d be in D.C. a few days after New York to visit my daughter who was in graduate school, the immigration officer said “Ah, one of the smart ones.” I had a window seat on the American Airlines connecting flight to New York, and was able to catch the dawn breaking layers of color above banned clouds – moure, rose, gold, lemon, powder blue, tarqoise, all shades of blue darkening to almost violet, graying violet. . . A splendid sight!! New York City was wrapped in gray rain but Ma-Yi had sent people to meet our party, which consisted of Bien Lumbera, Rio Almario, Rio’s daughter Ani, Preachy and myself. So we were whisked off to the hotel Belleclaire on West 77th St., an interesting part of the city not far from Lincoln center and Central park. Its brochure described it as “a grand style hotel, offering old world charm at affordable prices”, built in 1903, last renovated in 2012. Before we had time to unpack, Ora Kapunan (Preachy Sister’s Sister in law) arrived, and announced that she was taking us all to brunch at the Manhattan diner next door. This announcement was greeted with enthusiasm by all, since we had been served only crackers and cheese by American Airlines on the L.A., I was lightheaded from both sleep deprivation and hunger. After lunch, Ora asked us where we wanted to go – she was at our disposal, she said “I began to understand why Preachy was carrying so many pasalubong”. “Don’t you want to see Ground Zero?” Ora asked, sounding not disappointed so much surprised. “Oh. . . Yes, of course.” We murmured obediently. We went to Ground Zero, which converted into a subway station, brought images of the incredible collapse of these towers, played so often on international TV that they had become indelibly imprinted on the imagination. BBC anchor woman, saying “And now we return to New York and its Broken heart”. From the suburb where I lived in New Jersey, you can see the skyline of Manhattan when it appears through the trees or beyond the edge of a hill, I find myself checking it and checking it again to see of the world trade towers still aren’t there. One of my favorite books about New York is “Gone to New York”, by Ian Frazier. What happened to them and to the people in them is unacceptable to mind to accommodate ourselves to the facts is to feel a weight that gets no lighter no matter how we adjust it. The weight has a particular heariness in the early morning. I wake up at Five Forty-Five, before the first light. Ora figured we wouldn’t have time to do both the strand and MOMA, so we chose the former. She drove us to the other end of tower, pointing out the usual landmarks-Rocket Feller Center, Lincoln Square, Times Square, Washington Square, NYU, The New School. As usual, I went a little crazy at the strand, spending much more than I mean to, on travel literature mainly, and feeling deprived by having only a couple of hours for browsing. Then we lined up for broad way tickets in a light drizzle. And though the wait was kind of long, entertainment was provided by two black men with dread locks, beating reggae tunes on what looked like tin basins. In the meantime, the afternoon had turned sunny and crisp, Preachy and ani simply put their heads down on the table which had been cleared of dishes and went to sleep. I was feeling pretty woozy myself. But if I couldn’t sleep on a soft seat in a darkened airplane cabin, I certainly couldn’t on a cold plastic chair in a brightly lit dinner. I amused myself by listening to a group of black teenagers singing at a nearby table. One of the girls was so good that I came to the conclusion that Fantasia (latest “American Idol”) was really not all that special out here. Preachy and bien had chosen fiddler on the roof. But Rio, Ani and I had opted for Bombay Dreams, An Andrew Lloyd Webber production based on an idea of Webber’s and Shekkar Khapurs. A long time before Slumg Dog Millionaire was to sweep the Oscars. The music was by A.R. Rahman, and the lyrics by Don Black. Many Marayan played Akaash, the Slum boy who dreams of becoming a Bollywood movie star and actually become one, allows it to go to his head and turn his back on his hometown, but repents and promises to make up and help improve life in his old neighborhood. It remind me of old Filipinos, the Nida Blanca—Nestor de Villa sort. We took the subway back, stopped at westside supermarket for fruits and other stuff we could have for breakfast, and then still high, Preachy and I stayed up to chat with Joi in Preachy’s room. There’s no denying it New York does throb and glow.