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Hotel Pennsylvania in Manhattan succumbs to COVID-19

Hotel Pennsylvania in Manhattan succumbs to COVID-19
eturbonews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from eturbonews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Nobody Asked Me, But… No 253; Hotel History: Hotel Pennsylvania | By Stanley Turkel – Hospitality Net

Hotel History: Hotel Pennsylvania (1704 rooms) : An iconic hotel in mid-town Manhattan is closing its doors for good. The Hotel Pennsylvania will not reopen, succumbing to this past year’s Covid 19 pandemic and years of narrowly avoiding the chopping block.

The Vice Presidential Pop Star | 1310 WIBA

By Dan O Donnell Jun 3, 2021 Vice Presidents by their nature are rather anonymous and easily forgotten. Richard Mentor Johnson, George Dallas, and Schuyler Colfax aren t exactly household names. But sometimes, extraordinary men are elevated to this rather ordinary office and do extraordinary things. They advise, they craft policy, and sometimes.they make music. This is the forgotten history of the Vice Presidential Pop Star. Charles Dawes was a man of many interests and talents; something of a microcosm of America itself. And in a very real way, Dawes was America itself. A descendant of both Edward Doty, a passenger on the Mayflower, and William Dawes who accompanied Paul Revere on his midnight ride, Dawes from an early age knew that he wanted to live up to his famous family name.

The Vice Presidential Pop Star | News/Talk 1130 WISN

Stories of Standards—Don t Get Around Much Anymore

Linda Hillshafer Share Tune in weekday mornings to hear our favorite versions of “Don’t Get Around Much Anymore.” Rodney Franks presents Stories of Standards Monday through Friday at 7:50 and 8:50 am beginning Monday, April 26! Stories of Standards is sponsored by ListenUp. “Don’t Get Around Much Anymore” was written in 1940 by Duke Ellington. Originally titled “Never No Lament” it became a hit shortly after Bob Russell added lyrics in 1942, at which point the title changed. Two different versions, one by Ellington and another by The Ink Spots, hit number one on the the R&B charts in 1973. Ellington’s recording reached number eight on the pop charts.

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