Up late or up early? A female model, in a white dress, embraces a male model, in a suit, under an umbrella on the sidewalk of the Grand Central Terminal ramp,, September 13, 1959.
Photo: Jerry Schatzberg via seeoldnyc.com

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Up late or up early? A female model, in a white dress, embraces a male model, in a suit, under an umbrella on the sidewalk of the Grand Central Terminal ramp,, September 13, 1959.
Photo: Jerry Schatzberg via seeoldnyc.com
Kersh is coming back next week!!!! I missed him
Yessssss!!! Finally, it's been too long🥺
🎉 Milo and Wes' Big Daaaay! 🎂 | Sept. 13
Thousands of spectators cheer as over a quarter of a million marchers show support for the National Recovery Administration (NRA) in a parade on Fifth Avenue on September 13, 1933. The NRA was part of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal to institute industry-wide codes intended to eliminate unfair trade practices, reduce unemployment, establish minimum wages and maximum hours, and guarantee the right of labor to bargain collectively. The NRA ended when it was invalidated by the Supreme Court in 1935, but many of its provisions were included in subsequent legislation. The NRA flag, at the left, is the symbol of a Blue Eagle with the motto "We do our part." This view is looking north at 42nd St.
Photo: Associated Press
In the 1930s, "NRA" stood for the National Recovery Administration, established by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933 as part of his New Deal. Its goal was to allow businesses get together to write "codes of fair competition" that would help workers set minimum wages and maximum weekly hours, as well as minimum prices at which products could be sold.
That the NRA was popular with workers is shown above by the turnout for a parade in its honor on Fifth Avenue on September 13, 1933. But two years later, the Supreme Court ruled it unconstitutional, and it was disbanded. However, many of its provisions resurfaced in the National Labor Relations Act of 1935. The end result was a surge in the growth and power of unions.
Photo: Associated Press
Ben, @ anyone who thinks he can't pamper Wes on his birthday since he pampers Wes everyday: Honey.
Ben, popping his fingers: You got a big storm comin'
Take this dump of me trying to draw Milo n Wes together
Cocoon
Some days I'm happy that I met you
But then I remember
You made me difficult to love
Nothing was ever enough
You always seemed better off
Left me feeling so lost
Crying but at what cost?
Oh, you're hard to please
Can’t force you to see
Oh, you're hard to please
Spinning this wheel
I’m tired of smiles than tears
Stop calling my phone
Just leave me alone
Let this cocoon of broken bones
Cast until it’s grown
Some nights I lay just like this
All I do is reminisce
But then I remember
You were so oblivious
No merit to our promises
That should have been obvious
But it was just the opposite
But I laugh at the years passed
Let me forget when you kissed me last
Oh, you're hard to please
Can’t force you to see
Oh, you're hard to please
Spinning this wheel
Oh, leave me alone
Let this cocoon of broken bones
Cast until it’s grown
You were just unusual
My feelings all misconstrued
But I suppose it was mutual
Soon you’ll be with someone new
To impress, undress you
But I have to confess
That they might still be second best
And I won’t be around
To be possessed or second-guessed
Oh, I’m not hard to please
You’ll move on and you’ll heal
Let someone else cast those broken bones
Just leave me alone
Oh, you're hard to please
When will time heal?
Oh, I'm hard to please
When will time heal?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xiSk3siLf3g