Thursday, 18 April 2013

In NYC, stresses of solidarity with competing Boston

NYC (AP) a' A stadium saturated in Yankees supporters stood arm in arm at the base of the third inning in the Bronx, singing along to "Sweet Caroline," the Boston Red Sox anthem. Sarcasm and irony were missing. Sincerity was the mood of the night time. The rival groups have buried the hatchet a' at the very least for the present time. Yankee supporters anchored the Neil Diamond hit within a game Tuesday against the Arizona Diamondbacks, showing solidarity using their friend to the north a day after explosions at the Boston Marathon killed three people and wounded more than 170. "Everybody in New York knows what they are going through," said Mike Petti, 48, a fan nicknamed Yankee Mike who for 13 seasons has been an addition of the bleacher section where the most hardcore fans a those who dislike Red Sox Nation the most a' stay. "When it happened here, Boston was performing 'New York, New York.'" The teams' competition a' that has reared its ugly head in bench-clearing brawls and lover approaches over the years a' is simply one difference between the cities, both on the list of earliest in the country and each with a rich history. But shop around New York this week, and you'll see nothing but love for Boston. In what city officials said was a first, the bright-blue Boston city flag flew at half-staff at New York City Hall, on the orders of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who grew up in the Boston suburb of Medford. "We stand shoulder to shoulder with our friends in Boston, as all Americans do," mentioned Bloomberg, who in 2006 established the party Mayors Against Illegal Guns with Boston Mayor Thomas Menino. Bloomberg said he called his counterpart Monday to supply any aid to him Ny could offer. In Brooklyn on Monday night, an Wall Street group, the Illuminator, predicted in significant neon lights on the walls of the Brooklyn Academy of Music the 2 groups' logos, a heart inserted in between them, to see "NY( heart )B." The picture moved viral. Ny Roman Catholic Cardinal Timothy Dolan, celebrating Mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral in Nyc on Tuesday, said a particular prayer for Boston. "You have got our love, you have got our desire and you have got our solidarity," he explained. "You are likely to get through it." An email offering comfort was sent out by joe Daniels, president and CEO of the National September 11 Memorial and Museum, to Bostonians. "The 9/11 Memorial is really a constant reminder not merely of what we've endured as a result of terrorism, but also of our power to come together with limitless compassion," he wrote. "In the aftermath of the Boston problems, this spirit of unity is more important than ever." Anxiety has bubbled between Boston and New York since the 17th century, once the Puritans, who founded Boston, and the Dutch, who founded New York, squabbled over Long Island, mentioned Professor Bill Fowler, a University historian and former director of the Massachusetts Historical Society. "We are so small in comparison to Nyc, but we're so powerful," said Fowler, recognizing that Boston, with just over 600,000 people, is smaller than the borough of Brooklyn. "On per capita basis, we have got you beat, it is that you're bigger." For Yankees fan Steve Sanzillo, who is still going back and forth together with his wife, a fan, over which baseball group their 19-month-old child Jackson can root for, Monday's assault did more to unify the cities than any rivalry might separate. "It just brings straight back all of the memories of 2001," he said. "I think I speak for all New Yorkers by expressing our hearts are with Boston." At Yankee Stadium, where police planes buzzed overhead and counterterrorism officers patrolled the exterior, there was a feeling of concern one of the supporters, citizens of a town no stranger to terrorism offering a knowing nod for their usually hated competitors from Boston. "I have already been getting a large amount of looks, type nods," mentioned Boston native Christine Sanzillo, 34, wearing in a Red Sox hat along with her husband, a New York native. Today "it is really a positive energy here. Once my mother had a beer put on her head." During a moment of silence at the start of the game, a big commemorative lace with logos from the two clubs was found on the electronic board atop the ballpark. "But what is going to happen once the Knicks and Celtics block off?" Petti a "Yankee Mike" a' said, discussing the forthcoming playoff game involving the two cities' baseball teams. "They may show some respect," he said, "then they are planning to desire to defeat each other." Com Associated Press writer Jennifer Peltz led to the report.

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