Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The co-owner of a New York City bar that authorities said has been defying coronavirus restrictions was taken into custody early Sunday after running over a deputy with a car, authorities said.
A sicko raped a 30-year-old woman passed out in his car after the two met at a nearby bar in an early-morning Manhattan attack last month, law enforcement sources said Thursday.
The altercation began when a sport utility vehicle (SUV) driven by motorist Alexian Lien encountered a group of motorcyclists in Lower Manhattan. [8] [9] Lien, a then-33-year-old Chinese American banker, was heading to New Jersey with his wife, Rosalyn Ng [10] and two-year-old daughter, who were also in the vehicle; they were going to celebrate the couple's anniversary.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Ludwika "Lucy" Mickevicius, originally from Poland, became a bartender in the East Village in the early 1980s. She took over the bar, originally named Blanche’s, in December 1987. The establishment was later renamed Lucy's in her honor. [3] [2] Lucy's was known for its unchanging, no-frills atmosphere. The bar featured dim lighting, worn ...
The Ramrod was a gay leather bar at 394–395 West Street in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City, which earned unsought notoriety as the site of an infamous hate crime. The bar was shuttered and never reopened after an act of anti-gay gun violence in 1980.
Pissed-off Big Apple cabbies are demanding that city officials issue them emergency placards to let them double-park for up to 10 minutes so they can use the bathroom without being ticketed.
The Smithsonian Institution now has a copy of Marugg's boot on display in Washington, D.C. [11] [12] By 1970 Marugg had sold 2,000 boots. Although the patent ran out in 1976 and modern car and truck wheels necessitated a redesign, Marugg's daughter kept up the business until 1986. Clancy Systems International later bought the rights to the boot.