Ray Scott – My Kind of Music

Ray Scott – My Kind of Music
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Ray Scott – My Kind of Music
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For more than five decades, F.W.I.L. Lundy’s Restaurant of Sheepshead Bay was an institution of Brooklyn life, as essential to defining the borough as the Bridge and the Dodgers.When the restaurant reopened in late 1995 after a hiatus of 16 years, residents greeted it as if a long-lost family member had come home. For thousands of people, Lundy’s was their own personal restaurant, a place where they knew the waiters — and the waiters knew them — by name and where dining was always an event, an
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Judas Priest – Heavy Metal Parking Lot
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A few nice activities to do in new york city images I found:
Cities: New York

Image by Digital Collections at the University of Maryland
To see more digital images from this collection go to: digital.lib.umd.edu/ntlpostcards.jsp
Postcards featuring urban destinations surged in abundance at the turn of the twentieth century. Travel to and within cities became easier during this period as railroad and trolley services expanded, and as railway cars and hotels offered more refined facilities. Cities appealed to tourists for the same reasons they do today: grand parks, colossal buildings, historic sites, museums, shopping, and theatrical, musical and sports performances. More so than other vacation sites, cities offered a wide variety of attractions all in one place. A postcard describing a city tour reveals a whirlwind of activities. The thousands of surviving cards with urban scenes demonstrate the growing popularity of American cities as vacation destinations.
Cities: New York

Image by Digital Collections at the University of Maryland
To see more digital images from this collection go to: digital.lib.umd.edu/ntlpostcards.jsp
Postcards featuring urban destinations surged in abundance at the turn of the twentieth century. Travel to and within cities became easier during this period as railroad and trolley services expanded, and as railway cars and hotels offered more refined facilities. Cities appealed to tourists for the same reasons they do today: grand parks, colossal buildings, historic sites, museums, shopping, and theatrical, musical and sports performances. More so than other vacation sites, cities offered a wide variety of attractions all in one place. A postcard describing a city tour reveals a whirlwind of activities. The thousands of surviving cards with urban scenes demonstrate the growing popularity of American cities as vacation destinations.
Cities: New York

Image by Digital Collections at the University of Maryland
To see more digital images from this collection go to: digital.lib.umd.edu/ntlpostcards.jsp
Postcards featuring urban destinations surged in abundance at the turn of the twentieth century. Travel to and within cities became easier during this period as railroad and trolley services expanded, and as railway cars and hotels offered more refined facilities. Cities appealed to tourists for the same reasons they do today: grand parks, colossal buildings, historic sites, museums, shopping, and theatrical, musical and sports performances. More so than other vacation sites, cities offered a wide variety of attractions all in one place. A postcard describing a city tour reveals a whirlwind of activities. The thousands of surviving cards with urban scenes demonstrate the growing popularity of American cities as vacation destinations.

Fairfield, Conn. (Vocus) April 30, 2010
Fairfield University alumni led the 23rd annual Awards Dinner, held this week in New York, to a record-breaking $ 1.4 million for its Multicultural Scholarship. Co-chairs Frank Carroll of Stamford, Conn., Class of 1989, and Kevin Shea of Ho-Ho-Kus, N.J., Class of 1987, made the announcement to more than 500 people who came to support the scholarship fund at the Grand Hyatt in New York. A more diverse campus enriches the educational experience of all of Fairfields students, helping them reach their fullest potential, said Carroll. To date, 155 students have received scholarships through the fund.
University President Jeffrey P. von Arx, S.J., thanked Carroll and Shea for their leadership and said, A Fairfield University education is an education for the formation of global citizens individuals who recognize the humanity in all people and cultures, who have the passion to address injustice, and the knowledge and skills to work to transform society for the greater good. He said a hallmark of Jesuit education was ensuring that young men and women of promise regardless of their circumstanceshave access to this education.
Junior Edwin Mu