This week was the slowest one in my life, each day felt like
a year. It was a good week though lots of thing happened like Elder Revee got
his visa and is heading for Ecuador tomorrow!!
Transfers are on Thursday, Elder Zarges is staying and is
training while being a district leader or DT for short. I'm being transferred
out to McKeesport. I'm still in the same zone but not the same district. My new
companions name is Elder Griffin and all I've heard about him is that he likes
to eat a lot... (including my food) so I don’t know what to do about that.
It's been in the high 20s but the humidity makes it feel 20
and that’s not too cold for me. I am lasting a good long time without freezing
up so no it's not cold yet.
Norman is a man who is not interested in progressing. He’s
only interested in what our faith is about and why. So I guess he’s going
alright.
My new area has a CAR.
I'm so happy to get rid of those buses.
Love you,
Elder Hunt
Love you,
Elder Hunt
Michelle, our investigator and soon to be member!!
(Interesting read for you history buffs)
Mellon Institute- Now the Carnegie Mellon University
In the 19th and 20th centuries, Pittsburgh was notorious for
its pollution and soot, earning itself monikers like “Smoky City” and “Hell
with the Lid Off.” The flourishing coal and steel industries caused the city’s
buildings to be stained black, and the city to be dark with smoke even before
noon.
Conditions were so bad, white-collar workers often had extra
pairs of shirts to change into during the day. And when Frank Lloyd Wright was
asked how to fix the city, he glibly said, “Raze it and start over.”
In 1946, the newly elected mayor proposed a less extreme
plan to clean up the city and improve the standard of living. Over the next two
decades, the surfaces of buildings were cleaned, new, cleaner industries slowly
came up, and the level of pollution dropped by nearly 90 percent.
But some buildings wanted to keep a reminder of the city’s
smoky past to warn future generations about the consequences of filthy air, and
the Mellon Institute of Industrial Research was one of them.
The headquarters of the institute, built in 1937, takes up
an entire city block. The building is ringed with 62 large columns, each 36
feet high. When the city was cleaning up its act, the institute left one side
of some of these iconic limestone columns untouched and black, as a reminder of
the smoky air of years past.
The Institute merged with the nearby Carnegie Institute of
Technology to become Carnegie Mellon University in 1967. Today the picturesque
columns at the front entrance of the building are a popular spot for wedding
and occasion photography, and even filming scenes for movies—black soot and
all.
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