People (NYU students?) taking time out to enjoy a few moments of relaxation in Washington Square Park, June 10, 1951.
Photo: Robert Kradin for the AP

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People (NYU students?) taking time out to enjoy a few moments of relaxation in Washington Square Park, June 10, 1951.
Photo: Robert Kradin for the AP
Servicemen and their hostesses gather around a piano at the Harlem branch of the Y.M.C.A. on February 7, 1942, during one of the weekly Saturday night parties given for the men in uniform.
Photo: Robert Kradin for the AP
Shoppers inspect items for sale at the Avenue C Market near Sixth Street, April 10, 1950.
Photo: Robert Kradin for the AP
Three grandmothers and a guest try out the Kiddie Slide at Coney Island on August 8, 1950. In the rear, left, is Josephine Berman, 75, Kay Walker, 68, front, left, Hector DuBois, 65, center and Betty Gordon, 62. They are all members of the "Grandmothers Night-Out Club of Brooklyn."
Photo: Robert Kradin for the AP
Near Broadway in Jackson Heights on July 21, 1949, with the elevated Number 7 train in the background.
Photo: Robert Kradin for the AP
Spotters on the tower of the Empire State Building scan the skies for "enemy" planes, October 9, 1941. (The U.S. wasn't in the war yet.) Maneuvers to perfect the defense of the north and central Atlantic seaboard against air attacks were started by the First Air Force. Some 40,000 civilian volunteer air raid spotters assisted the Army defenders. These two men were part of a group of 36 American Legionnaires taking turns at watch on the tower.
Photo: Robert Kradin for the AP
Without cell phones, people surround the teletype machine at the Associated Press Building on Rockefeller Plaza for the latest news, May 10, 1940.
Photo: Robert Kradin for the AP
Kids group around the striking exhibition of life on earth 120,000,000 years ago, in Tyrannosaurus Hall, opened to the public at the American Museum of Natural History on August 1, 1956. The hall, named for the king of the dinosaurs, is said to have the world's most comprehensive display of cretaceous dinosaurs. This tyrannosauus is 45 feet long and 20 feet high.
Photo: Robert Kradin for the AP via Insider.com