With arms linked, the 30 or so people sang songs – including a festive Auld Lang Syne – as they tramped down the soft snow for their rescue helicopter to land. Whenever anyone's feet fell a little too deeply through the uncertain surface, the whole
(RNN) – Auld Lang Syne has been around since at least the 1700s and a New Year's staple since 1929. The lyrics to the Scottish folk song are often attributed to poet Robert Burns, although he claimed he wrote it down after hearing someone else sing it.
This morning I decided that I was going to write a soundtrack post called "Here's the Deal with Auld Lang Syne." And then around 4pm "What's the Deal with Auld Lang Syne?" went up on Huffington Post. So cool. Go there for
This morning I decided that I was going to write a soundtrack post called "Here's the Deal with Auld Lang Syne." And then around 4pm "What's the Deal with Auld Lang Syne?" went up on Huffington Post. So cool. Go there for
Sadlack's set to sing 'Auld Lang Syne'. By David Menconi. dmenconi@newsobserver.comDecember 30, 2013 Updated 18 hours ago. 2013-12-31T02:04:09Z. By David Menconi The_News_and_Observer. Facebook Twitter Google Plus Reddit E-mail Print.