The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00913897_2671
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT22) PITTSBURGH -- Aug. 8, 2002 -- PITTSBURGH-HILL-4 -- Known to locals as simply The Hill, the 1.4 square mile cluster of five neighborhoods perched above downtown Pittsburgh was once one of the most thriving predominantly black areas in the country. But political and social change pitched the neighborhood into a downward spiral in recent decades. Now black professionals are part of a push to recapture -- physically, spiritually and emotionally -- some of The Hill's colorful past. Residents hope The Hill in Pittsburgh returns to glory days. Two residents sit on Wylie Avenue, which was once its busiest street. (Michelle V. Agins/The New York Times) *LITE
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2002-08-08
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
Michelle V. Agins/The New York Times/Redux
17339027
0,53MB
15cm x 10cm by 300dpi
1, 2002, 4, 8, A, ABOVE, AGINS, AND, ARE, AREAS, AS, AUG, AVENUE, BLACK, BUSIEST, BUT, CHANGE, CLUSTER, COLORFUL, COUNTRY, DAYS, DECADES, DOWNTOWN, DOWNWARD, EMOTIONALLY, FIVE, GLORY, HILL, HOPE, IN, INTO, ITS, KNOWN, LITE, LOCALS, MICHELLE, MILE, MOST, NEIGHBORHOOD, NEIGHBORHOODS, NEW, NOW, NYT22, OF, ON, ONCE, ONE, PART, PAST, PERCHED, PHYSICALLY, PITCHED, PITTSBURGH, POLITICAL, PREDOMINANTLY, PROFESSIONALS, PUSH, RECAPTURE, RECENT, REDUX, RESIDENTS, RETURNS, SIMPLY, SIT, SOCIAL, SOME, SPIRAL, SPIRITUALLY, SQUARE, STREET, THE, THRIVING, TIMES, TO, TWO, WAS, WHICH, WYLIE, YORK,