The home of the late Philadelphia head mobster Angelo Bruno did not prove significant enough for the advisory Committee on Historical Designation to recommend its approval for historical designation.
It was a tough week for longtime city Sanitation worker Angelo Bruno. But it wasn’t the mounds of snow or loads of trash that got to the 59-year-old sanitman, who retired this week after 31 years. It ...
PHILADELPHIA -- He was known as the "Gentle Don" and went out in an arguably ungentle way -- a shotgun blast to the back of the head. Now, the Snyder Avenue home of ex-mob boss Angelo Bruno might ...
PHILADELPHIA (CBS) --- Greed is never good - especially when it infects the mob. Angelo Bruno, the Philadelphia Don with a gentle touch and a reputation for wisdom and restraint among fellow mob Dons, ...
The Irishman has been wowing the Netflix audience this week, bringing another cinematic masterpiece for Martin Scorsese. Not only does it contain a gigantic runtime, but it also has a large number of ...
The longtime home of former Philadelphia Family mob boss Angelo Bruno will not receive historical designation after the city's advisory Historical Committee rejected a February nomination painting ...
Angelo Bruno, known as the "Gentle Don," ran the Philadelphia Mafia in the 1960s and 1970s. He was shot and killed outside of his home in 1980. Angelo Bruno, Philadelphia's mob boss in the 1960s and ...
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The home of a late Philadelphia mob boss has been nominated to become a city historical landmark, 35 years after he was shot to death in a car in front of it. Angelo Bruno, who was ...
Angelo Bruno, 60, spent more than 30 years as a sanitation worker in New York City. He and his partner, Eddie Nieves, cleared more than 14 tons of garbage from the city streets each day. But the two ...
BRUNO, Angelo Angelo Bruno, 83, of Newington, died Tuesday (September 30, 2008). Born in Hartford on September 22, 1925, son of the late Salvatore and Anne Marie Bruno, he lived in Newington for 50 ...
Angelo Bruno always told his players that if they were on the team, they needed to be 100 percent committed. When Bruno realized he could no longer hold up his end of that 100 percent commitment, he ...