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First OMNY Card Machines Roll Out To Replace MetroCards - New York City, NY - Six subway stations now have vending machines for the refillable, tap-to-pay OMNY cards as the MTA preps a system-wide ...
MTA's Contactless MetroCard Replacement At Nearly All Subways - New York City, NY - The OMNY payment system is at 458 of 472 subway stations and will be installed at remaining locations by the ...
MetroCard will continue to be accepted by New York City Transit subways and buses and Bee-Line service until 2024, enabling Bee-Line passengers to have the option of using MetroCard or OMNY during the transition phase. By 2024, MetroCard will be discontinued and all Bee-Line passengers will then use OMNY.
The New York Senior Hurling Championship is an annual competition between hurling clubs affiliated with the New York GAA.Most Gaelic Athletic Association clubs are based on the counties of Ireland, though sometimes players will play with a different team in New York from their own county.
Below is a list of U.S. senators who have represented the State of New York in the United States Senate since 1789. The date of the start of the tenure is either the first day of the legislative term (senators who were elected regularly before the term began), or the day when they took the seat (U.S. senators who were elected in special elections to fill vacancies, or after the term began).
MetroCard (New York City) → MetroCard — There are no other articles with the name MetroCard at this time, and thus there is no need to disambiguate. — AEMoreira042281 ( talk ) 03:18, 27 August 2008 (UTC) [ reply ]
Since 1914, each of New York City's five boroughs has been coextensive with a county of New York State – unlike most U.S. cities, which lie within a single county or extend partially into another county, constitute a county in themselves, or are completely separate and independent of any county. Each borough is represented by a borough ...
A pizza parlor in New York City. The Pizza Principle, or the Pizza-Subway Connection, in New York City, is a humorous but generally historically accurate "economic law" proposed by native New Yorker Eric M. Bram. [1] He noted, as reported by The New York Times in 1980, that from the early 1960s "the price of a slice of pizza has matched, with uncanny precision, the cost of a New York subway ride."