The new names were terrible and I would never use them..... ever. I've been going to Yosemite for over 60 years and no way those name were in my vocabulary.
Finally! About time!
Nothing beats a great piece of glass!
I leave the digital work for the urologists and proctologists.
How unfortunate that Delaware North received even a penny. It should have been held responsible for the government's legal fees during this mess that it created.
I found it curious how I didn't even remember the substitute names, nor did anyone else I've talked to. In fact, I totally forgot that the ruse had ever happened. We just kept referring to the traditional names as if nothing ever happened. But I did note that the Park was just buying time, and that the older signage was in place all along, and the substitutes signs merely applied like a veneer, designed to be easily removed.
Sears Tower is Sears Tower
and so on
Tin Can
Interesting, the FOX site "news" offers an article published by CNN!
"I have never in my life made music for money or fame. God walks out of the room when you are thinking about money." -- Quincy Jones
Well, what seems traditional now has its roots in something otherwise. When I grew up near there, we contemptuously referred to Yosemite as "Curry National Park" because it was being run like a private concession. To many of us, "Camp Curry" is itself just an older version of the same kind of corporate insult. "The Ahwahnee Hotel" at least gives tribute to the name of the tribe which originally lived there, the Ahwahneechee. So too does the little town of Ahwahnee outside the Park. Of course, all the Indians were all chased out of the Park to make room for the tourist industry, which included several big past hotels well before the Ahwahnee was built, and only a small number of descendants remain.
Good news about the old names returning.
Now if they'd only return Housekeeping to being Camp 16 and get rid of the Yosemite Park & Curry Company DP camp-esque concrete structures, Aramark may be on to something.
"I would feel more optimistic about a bright future for man if he spent less time proving that he can outwit Nature and more time tasting her sweetness and respecting her seniority"---EB White
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