In New York, the coronavirus has sent citywide emergency calls soaring. Some days, there are more than 6,000.
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Before the pandemic, America’s biggest, loudest city often lived up to its own hype. Now the hush, whether at midnight or midday, is broken mostly by the wail of ambulances.
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“I feel like I have an obligation to take those hospital workers from point A to point B,” said taxi driver Nicolae Hent.http://apne.ws/S1wnTsv
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Broadway lights went dark last month as the virus spread, an unprecedented closure for an industry that grossed $1.8 billion last season.
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“Literally to be back on that stage and to do what I do in front of an audience again, I’ll be putting 110 percent of myself there," said Broadway actor E. Clayton Cornelioushttp://apne.ws/Fh4JGVz
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See their stories and more at http://APNews.com/TheFightforNewYork …http://apne.ws/S1HOAPv
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