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Fun City: by Sean Deveney
$6.79
Description:
Fun City: John Lindsay, Joe Namath, and How Sports Saved New York in the 1960s
Book Overview
On January 1, 1966, New York came to a standstill as the city’s transit workers went on strike. This was the first day on the job for Mayor John Lindsay–a handsome, young former congressman with presidential aspirations–and he would approach the issue with an unconventional outlook that would be his hallmark. He ignored the cold and walked four miles, famously declaring, “I still think it is a fun city.” As profound social, racial, and cultural change sank the city into repeated crises, critics lampooned Lindsay’s “fun city.” Yet for all the hard times the city endured during and after his tenure as mayor, there was indeed fun to be had. Against this backdrop, too, the sporting scene saw tremendous upheaval. On one hand, the venerable Yankees–who had won 15 pennants in an 18-year span before 1965–and the NFL’s powerhouse Giants suddenly went into a level of decline neither had known for generations, as stars like Mickey Mantle and Whitey Ford on the diamond and Y.A. Tittle on the gridiron aged quickly. But on the other, the fall of the city’s sports behemoths was
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Fun City by Sean Deveney
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John Lindsay, Joe Namath, and How Sports Saved New York in the 1960s
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