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Charles Rangel was sometimes known as the Lion of Lenox Avenue. Harlem’s own Charlie Rangel rose from humble beginnings to become one of the most familiar faces and distinct voices in American ...
Former Rep. Charles Rangel, the longtime N.Y. congressman, was laid to rest Friday with a funeral at St. Patrick's Cathedral ...
Searching for the best halal hot dogs around Lenox Avenue and 125th Street in Harlem. Donald Trump's approval rating skyrockets with Hispanics Ranking All-You-Can-Eat Chain Buffets From Worst To ...
Former President Bill Clinton, Gov. Kathy Hochul and House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries remembered former U.S. Rep.
Three colorful figures are now brightening up the intersection of 124th Street and Lenox Avenue in Harlem: Called "Aunties," ...
Rangel, born in Harlem in 1930 and known as the “Lion of Lenox Avenue,” was first elected to Congress in 1971, defeating Rev. Adam Clayton Powell for his seat. He went on to serve 23 terms in ...
"Aunties" presents three large-scale figurative sculptures with intentional space in between each for the public to stand in ...
Rangel was a resilient, unapologetically, but contradictorily Black warrior, and the St. Aloysius tribute was as much an ...
Five shows that made a splash at this year’s or previous Orlando Fringe Festivals are getting encore performances in the ...
He was a son of Harlem, affectionately called "the Lion of Lenox Avenue," and part of the so-called "Harlem Gang of Four" coalition with Basil Paterson, Percy Sutton, Herman "Denny" Farrell and ...
Once known as the "Lion of Lenox Avenue," the outspoken, gravel-voiced Rangel served as a representative for what is now New York's 13th congressional district in Harlem from 1971 until 2017.