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The Big Apple: New York
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By the late 1920s, New York writers other than Fitz Gerald were starting to use "Big Apple" and were using it outside of a horse-racing context.[13] "The Big Apple" was a popular song[14] and dance[15] in the 1930s. Walter Winchell and other writers continued to use the name in the 1940s and 1950s.[16]
The Big Apple BBQ Block Party annually draws more than 120,000 New Yorkers for a taste of America’s favorite barbecue flavors. More than a dozen of the country’s top pit masters will serve up their specialties to the crowd.
If you know where to look, the Big Apple is bursting with juicy bargains. And happily for vacationers at all income levels, New York City has never sparkled more. The past decade has seen dramatic revitalization of long-neglected neighborhoods mad waves of brand new construction. Spirits are high, and crime is way down. Times Square, once seedy but now exploding with family-friendly appeal and mote bright lights than ever, is the most vivid example of the renaissance. A citywide hotel boom has created dozens of spiffy places to rest your head in the "City That Never Sleeps."(Continue Reading)
Whiteys Lindy Hoppers doing the Big Apple in the movie Keep Punching (1939) Despite it's name the Big Apple did not actually originate in New York. It evolved and first became recognized as a dance form in Columbia, South Carolina. Putting an exact date to the creation of a dance is always difficult. It seems most likely to have formed in the early 1930's with the dance slowly gaining popularity and spreading into other areas of South Carolina through to the mid 1930's. At that time of racial segregation the dance evolved soley in the African American community. However, as with many dances of the era it was soon picked up by the whites and quicky gained popularity and became more widespread as a result.
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Big Apple Chorus rehearsals are always open to the public. Friends, family and visitors can often be found in the auditorium while the chorus runs through its paces. You never know what you might see! The chorus might be working on a new arrangment, choreography, vocal exercise or revisiting old repertoire. Whatever it is, it will be Big Apple style and a lot of fun!!!
Millions of vegetarian New Yorkers and non-meat-eating visitors to the Big Apple will love this lively, well-researched guide. It provides detailed reviews of the best restaurants, in all price ranges, that offer vegetarian fare, including those that ... serve meat. Also included is information on lodgings that cater to vegetarians and markets offering organic and vegetarian foods throughout the five boroughs. All this plus helpful ratings and at-a-glance charts make this guide an essential tool for the vegetarian resident or visitor navigating the food and lodging options in New York City.
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