OAKDALE BUNGALOW SITES the Clarendon

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

OAKDALE BUNGALOW SITES the Clarendon 1m NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SFXPAY. AUGUST 23. 1008 i Let. Apartments to Lei. j\ BFOOKLYX SALESROOM CONTROL OF MILK SUPPLY. Westchester Real Estate. Westchester Real Estate. Unfurnished Apartments to Unfurnished _ \u25a0 I _____-^ Nathan Straus Returning J&any Ir.proved Parcels Among After a Year's Crasade Abroad. Offerings This Week. Nathan Straus will sail for this rountry this veek after having improved parcels willbe sold spent a year abroad ;a A lar^e number of conducting of The Astor Estate's crusade Eden pure The Garden The ot- for milk. He this week IB th- Monta»rne st. salesrooms. sent on a review of the as follows: federal report following the typhoid outbreak In trees, Jeriaps wi'.l be ashinirton. On the Hudson contains no apple House-Keeping Apartment- TO-MORROW. which was traced to the milk sup- ' ply, and makes pub- is old forest trees, and Smith: N«w Jersey aye. w ». «i> ft s of this a baels for calling for but covered with magnificent n-r Wti H ra--cal Kaaiuel Blum lic control. The For Rent from Oct. Ist «. £c aye -0xl«»; Jc*»ph L. a«t fact that infected milk will infect c «. UU ft s of Mtklnaye. 20xlO>; human b«-ln the gorgeous scenery is a perpetual source of delight KfiSnwßiw ai; Watkln» St. has been established in typhoid, tr- lctin*Ycn-uc ajrt fbmucl Saperstein et •Oiaiam l't- tv. aSSS; Amlco Realty Co et al tuberculous and diphtheria, and Mr. Straus says: to alllovers of nature. "This I to be aye. «X» ft « of hold a reason of paramount impor- bSfg^jSS! tkVst Marks n tance for Insisting '« aye 3'xMO Jchn E Slmoa- a*t ...Morrts GolJen- on public control of the milk H aye. SSO It •of Howard supply, 7- .t a! 1437 St Marks n«. or st least on precautionary measures for •WT^'V ox R-JDar: securing non-tuborcvlous milk for the Innocent chil- Apthorp ft n of Ay« dren who must The H Kast 34th St. c b. BK.H have milk cannot protect r, Win P^-.l:h: • Wheeler et and who T %.\,;V Cora A Cook airt Howard- E al: themselves." <( c of Ralph aye. 20x107.2; Audley X t *•\u25a0• Mft Seventy-Eighth Seventy-Ninth Street iw»a_. V- *Jr fi^-jnc Kid lie et al. Many physicians are quoted in favor of pasteuri- The Home Place de Luxe to O V ftft « of \l-v>- I»ar: Schonck aye. w «.s. SSSX of zation as the means of assuring purity fi*'w-trV\u2666JxlwO; Northern I?ank of N V a«t. barah of the milk Broadway "^' to West End Avenue supply, and in insecurity public is the best improved residential park in Xew York, «c!t£La;cr et al- vl«»w of the of the ON WEDNESDAY. as regards the supply in large ciUe* Mr. Straus available for all year homes. still available, in pv' V'lljara I*TUe: Has S«th su v « JX' ftr. af Avenue declares that milk can no longer be allowed to take A limited number of apartments C.ermanla and high class, hot not high priced. r.fij1... ft s of aaren.ron Road. -xlOO: Real •are of Itself, that it Exclusire rooms, ?«*jte lmxro\-en:ent ro art Seliß >*UaTnar. et al. "calls aloud for appropriate suites of 8. 9 and 10 exclusive of the large - £ 2T;h it, cf treatment." -^ 1- Ean c I«o ft 8 Clarendon will tell you about it. car- vo s.— same earne; Our booklet Our S*J ft n of Avenue D. xl(»; a«t Mr. Straus feel, pur foyer halls and baths. fmm >'3.t>00 to $6,300. jSaf-isd - « that the federal report will riages meet all trains at Hastings. Bttfli 3 241> S ft n eof be followed ere long ?*Sv ja*^w« I- nnrmley: I iiae) at c s. br federal legislation Eng- ISalOO; Edward Mlethke airt Barbara Steromler land, he aays. nShffS*™ st. ran!.* has also recognized the necessity of . .;.; V ivf, w s. «C 8ft •of Oarden action, \u0084."- :rk \u25a0 »x n \u25a0»»« to l>^tt: Isaac and he believes that In that country the ***J.* H'-man Kali«crs:ein rt a!: action No 1; care of milk will public responsibility. SvWt -: be made a Hastings !„('-. ay* 2i> s ft s of O.ar.ien nw v 34x Homes Co. SBJi •"s Mr. Straus began his crusade « *V," » 43.(1 a ( 35x • 37x n 4^ t-> beu: same a*t for pure milk six- -* . es. ir-> sof bum teen years ' Ko 2 Thatford «-•' ft ago in this city, and his pas- Main Office, 47 "W. 42nd St, New York. Tel. 385 Bryant. Court rt ; extended Graham s**Z X-'-r- .,"y{li' H. I^\u25a0^ atrt Free Ta!n-ui School A»- - JoJm al; 275 ftc teurized milk stations to other cities from year to •*l'",Mn o^ Bri-nnsviUe ft Troutman s>t. ns. year. Harlem Office (Open Evenings), 57 E. I25th St. Tel. 824 Harlem. Aye. aye. •-,-.. Isaac PWiiHlilu ajrt This summer those in charge of his stations Seventh 116th a.nd 117 th Sts. » f Mjrtle \u25a0^Sbm ct aJ: Sanford rt. s. «7.« t nof co-operated with the societies in the united crusade -1»«™ "7* v>x nao 3x c sOx n ir.Ox w KM to PanfonJ St. x a s against SbJnx -'l^x w 7.- to sanf^ra .- x H\u25a0\u25a0 to b'^»c. Fred- infant mortality instituted by the Health 7 and 8 room suites, exclusive of large • v i*W>::« trocter. a^t Minnie Glnsburjr et al. Department before the began. : H ?mith: Lot Hte 175. bir«rk «: lot* warm season $1,050 to $2,490 "v William" ••. foyer and bath. Rents _%. ij,ck 12 l<n t-> S>4. Mock 13: l«t 507 to BJ». • . 1 '»S. M>-«ck 21 : Auction Sales of Real Estate. Auction Sales of Real Estate. 177,. biock <J: lot 3C7 to S7«. block 12: l«»ltn \ — 1 lot 42S to 131 block 13: M 507 to 52«. S3O buildings surround a large court the Apthorp Court •IS.-M«*,_.V1V «SC>. block 21: man Real Estate. Both s^,.,' } k --i«. ;ot 664 to «<* &S3 tn feet, and that of Graham Court 79x103 feet. S S»aff Jacob SneJlker. in 2Sth Ward. Sallle R bein? 95x134 VcoraSl ait Gecrse F Srr.anoy et al. These courts are beautifully treated with flowers, shrubbery s ft c of and fountains. \u25a0rv \niiirn H Smith: Pacific lit. s. 207.3 RULAND&WHITING and floor plans of Hail, treasurer, apt CO- Illustrated booklet c<+i<fne<~Ta<-.y .iv~. <v»x107.2: Wm 1 etc. BUNGALOW SITES OAKDALE request. 1 • both houses willbe mailed on "Bt'j^e^r. Burnley: 57th rt. a. 3.VT4 tt w «f M ESTATE \u25a0 REAL superintendent the office \u0084..\u25a0 \u25a0«V,;(HV Charles 6 m.«tam aut Moses Heismar. et For inspection, apply to the at on -V\Vr^*->h w s. 2.V1 ft s of Pltlclr aye. Bxl«O: Fan- 5 BEEKMAM ST, MEW YORK ON GREAT SOUTH BAY premises. Zt'.r BoxttSa act liia H»rnM»n +t al; Hfjterr.an aye. n w the ?ve, 80x100; Abraham Ad»!berg a t Ea^.Jp- Ee"rman et al. REAL, ESTATE BITER-HAVE YOU NOTICED th*t real ertate values were not lowered by the r»- cent panic?. ARt HIBALJ> C. FOSB. \u25a0 AT AUCTION BIG EOCKAWAY PARK SALE. • Bjyan L, \u25a0;\u25a0.>• will sell at auction on the prenii.^s on next Saturday afternoon, by order of Unfurnished Apartments to Let. George- C. Austin, assignee of the Corbin Banking Thursday, Sept. 3d, t o_.p;u_y. 172 choice lots at Rockaway Park. The in Atlantic Oci—n. opposite this THB-,„ langham -V-j^CAar."rishts the r " '" the property, and i5the 'rr-pern". n l soM with AT 11 O'CLOCK. The the rlpa- only portion of Rockaway Park wherein WEST, FROM 73D TO 74TM STREET. \u25a0 sold. CENTRAL PARK j.:3:l rirr.ts have been Majestic Exchange Sales Room, 14 Vesey Street. Th^re i.<= a boardwalk ir. front of the property " direcUy NOW COMPLETED AND OCCUPIED. i'ti-.e lots are on high, level land, on the St. Nicholas Avenue szi very easy Shore 5 feet above water level. Land ~ Aviv-tic Ocean. They will be sold on 6. E. COR. J4BTH ST. T ***tiitei wUI be guaranteed free of cost THE MOST LUXURIOUS :term's'and ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF in rich lawn to water's edge. Im- HOUSEKEEPING APARTMENT BUILDING to the tui-ers. building. EVER CONSTRUCTED IN AMERICA OR EUROPE. ? and 8 tlnuous haJl and Include* mediately available for CONTAINS EVERY KNOWN IMPROVEMENT Rooms._ elevator «-rrlce: ele«-trlo COMFORT .. Isubway and L . 1hour. Sta- FOR AND COirVEXIENCX. TO BTILD APAETMEST HOUSE. R«\u25a0 \u25a0 tals | gtaUons en 145th I ..Hrhts Xew York to Oakdale to' »t. p;ans have been fUed for a six story apartment 5690 : surface line and rold water 10 aye. and »».Q«°. t—^ tion to minutes. layolt and house ai the southeast comer of New I £*£££„,£" sfYui Realty Com- Superintendent on premises, — Housekeeping Suites !2.n St.. to be built for the Plnehurst or mortgage 3 years at hay- avenue Dl BOIS 4 TAYLOR. 60 per cent on SUPERIOR pary ita cost of 3170,000. It wfll an Broadway (140 et.) FINISH op {| vS[) BKjns^ feet, xrtth 8.055 th LaRQE LfQHTRQOMS 3 frcEtatre of 12U feet and a d-pth of BJ 4 per cent.
Recommended publications
  • 1 Luxury Hotels, Resorts, Yachts, Mansions, Private Clubs, Museums
    Luxury hotels, Resorts, Yachts, Mansions, Private clubs, Museums, Opera houses, restaurants RESORTS Boca Raton Resort & Club, Boca Raton, FL Bocaire Country Club, Boca Raton, FL Equinox Resort, Manchester Village, VT Hyatt Regency Aruba La Quinta Resort, La Quinta, CA Ojai Valley Inn & Spa, Ojai, CA Otesaga Resort Hotel, Cooperstown, NY Phoenician Resort, Phoenix, AZ Rosewood Mayakoba, Riviera Maya, Mexico Stoweflake Resort, Stowe, VT Westin La Paloma Resort, Tucson, AZ YACHTS Eastern Star yacht, Chelsea Piers, NYC Lady Windridge Yacht, Tarrytown, NY Manhattan cruise ship, Chelsea Piers, NYC Marika yacht, Chelsea Piers, NYC Star of America yacht, Chelsea Piers, NYC MANSIONS Barry Diller mansion, Beverly Hills, CA Boldt Castle, Alexandria Bay, NY 1 David Rockefeller mansion, Pocantico Hills, NY Neale Ranch, Saratoga, Wyoming Paul Fireman mansion, Cape Cod, MA Sam & Ronnie Heyman mansion, Westport, CT Somerset House, London The Ansonia, NYC The Mount, Lenox, MA Ventfort Hall, Lenox, MA Walter Scott Mansion, Omaha, NE (party for Warren Buffett) PRIVATE CLUBS American Yacht Club, Rye, NY The Bohemian Club, San Francisco The Metropolitan Club, NYC Millbrook Club, Greenwich, CT New York Stock Exchange floor and private dining room, NYC Birchwood Country Club, Westport, CT Cordillera Motorcycle Club, Cordillera, CO Cultural Services of the French Embassy, NYC Harold Pratt House, Council on Foreign Relations, Park Avenue, NYC Drayton Hall Plantation, Charleston, SC Tuxedo Club Country Club, Tuxedo Park, NY Fenway Golf Club, Scarsdale, NY Fisher Island, Miami Harvard Club, NYC Harvard Faculty Club, Cambridge, MA Bay Club at Mattaspoisett, Mattapoisett, MA Ocean Reef Club, Key Largo, FL Quail Hollow Country Club, Charlotte, NC Racquet and Tennis Club, Park Avenue, NYC Russian Trade Ministry, Washington DC Saugatuck Rowing Club, Westport, CT Shelter Harbor Country Club, Charlestown, RI St.
    [Show full text]
  • Active Corporations: Beginning 1800
    Active Corporations: Beginning 1800 DOS ID Current Entity Name 5306 MAGNOLIA METAL COMPANY 5310 BRISTOL WAGON AND CARRIAGE WORKS 5313 DUNLOP COAL COMPANY LIMITED 5314 THE DE-LON CORP. 5316 THE MILLER COMPANY 5318 KOMPACT PRODUCTS CORPORATION 5339 METROPOLITAN CHAIN STORES, INC. 5341 N. J. HOME BUILDERS CORPORATION 5349 THE CAPITA ENDOWMENT COMPANY 5360 ECLIPSE LEATHER CORP. 6589 SHERWOOD BROS. CO. 6590 BURLINGTON VENETIAN BLIND COMPANY 6593 CAB SALES COMPANY 6600 WALDIA REALTY CORPORATION 6618 GATTI SERVICE INCORPORATED 6628 HANDI APPLIANCE CORPORATION 6642 THE M. B. PARKER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 6646 ALLIED BANKSHARES COMPANY 6651 SYRACUSE PURCHASING COMPANY, INC. Page 1 of 2794 09/28/2021 Active Corporations: Beginning 1800 Initial DOS Filing Date County Jurisdiction 06/08/1893 NEW YORK WEST VIRGINIA 05/16/1893 NEW YORK UNITED KINGDOM 09/17/1924 ERIE ONTARIO 09/18/1924 SARATOGA DELAWARE 09/19/1924 NEW YORK CONNECTICUT 09/12/1924 NEW YORK DELAWARE 10/27/1924 NEW YORK DELAWARE 10/27/1924 NEW YORK NEW JERSEY 10/24/1924 ALBANY OHIO 11/18/1924 NEW YORK NEW JERSEY 02/15/1895 ALBANY PENNSYLVANIA 02/16/1895 NEW YORK VERMONT 11/03/1927 NEW YORK DELAWARE 11/09/1927 NEW YORK DELAWARE 11/23/1927 NEW YORK NEW JERSEY 12/02/1927 NEW YORK DELAWARE 12/12/1927 NEW YORK OHIO 12/16/1927 NEW YORK NEW JERSEY 12/14/1927 NEW YORK GEORGIA Page 2 of 2794 09/28/2021 Active Corporations: Beginning 1800 Entity Type DOS Process Name FOREIGN BUSINESS CORPORATION EDWARD C. MILLER FOREIGN BUSINESS CORPORATION ALFRED HEYN FOREIGN BUSINESS CORPORATION DUNLOP COAL COMPANY LIMITED FOREIGN BUSINESS CORPORATION THE DE-LON CORP.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Meeting & Symposium Association for Preservation Technology
    Disasters and How We Overcome Them 2021 Association for Annual Meeting Preservation & Symposium Technology February 26, 2021 Northeast Chapter Virtual Symposium APTNE 2021 Schedule of Events APTNE WELCOME ADDRESS 9:00AM - 9:10AM ANNUAL APTNE President, Rebecca Buntrock MEETING & Click or Scan for Q&A KEYNOTE PRESENTATION SYMPOSIUM #APTNE21 9:10AM - 10:00AM The Social Construction of Disaster History Don Friedman Addressing Graffiti on Masonry Substrates: 10:00AM - 10:35AM Taking a Sensitive Approach Casey Weisdock APTNE Living with Water: Adaption Processes, www.aptne.org 10:35AM - 11:00AM Heritage Conservation, and Conflicting Values aptne Shivali Gaikwad aptne_ DISASTERS AND HOW linkedin.com/ groups/8351626 11:00AM - 11:15AM Coffee Break (Breakout Rooms) WE OVERCOME THEM Architects of National Identity: an Analysis of Urbanization and 11:15AM - 11:40AM Historic Preservation of Minority Religious Venues in Shaxi, Yunnan Olivia McCarthy-Kelley Disasters come in various forms, whether they be a natural disaster, a man-made disaster, or a disastrous situation. In preservation, we deal Protecting Our Diplomatic Structures: A Seismic Program Review 11:40AM - 12:15PM with each of these disasters, whether it be from planning to prevent them, Shane Maxemow and David Keller investigating the aftermath, or in overcoming them and coming out better than before. Each situation is defined in how we approach the disaster CHAPTER HIGHLIGHTS 12:15PM - 12:25PM and each of us is judge d in how we react. In a time that is currently fraught APTNE Vice President, Helena Currie with various global disasters, each of us is challenged to move above and beyond, bringing our history and our buildings with us.
    [Show full text]
  • Plague Diary by Margaret Porter Troupe
    Plague Diary Margaret Porter Troupe, Graham Court Apartments, Harlem, New York City April 4, 2020 By the time I start this diary, I’ve been sheltering in since March 20th. The last person who’s visited us inside the apartment was Monique Clesca. She came to lunch here. We sat apart and neither of us wore facemasks. We elbow bumped and didn’t shake hands or kiss. I waited 14 days to see if I had symptoms of Covid-19. The police arrived yesterday and made the people who hang out in A. Phillip Randolph Square Park, (formerly Dewey Square), drinking, loitering, littering, and just being an eyesore and nuisance, leave the park. This little triangular park is directly across the street from Graham Court and where Miles Davis and other beboppers playing at Minton’s during the 1940s used to come to shoot up or do whatever they did there in-between sets. Minton’s is around the corner on 118th Street between 7th Avenue and St. Nicholas. The police or parks people removed the benches too and put up a chicken-wire fence at the entrances to keep people out. Now those people come across the street and congregate under the scaffolding in front of Graham Court. There’s a lot of drug dealing going on too. It feels quite a bit more unsafe around here lately. Must keep antenna raised for trouble. Woke up today thinking about my friend Cynthia, who was sounding scary to me yesterday as we discussed how we’re both feeling. I’ve been having congestion the last eight days and she has been having symptoms too but don’t know whether to attribute them to her blood pressure medication, pollen (it’s Spring now and everything’s bursting in bloom) or the novel coronavirus, Covid-19.
    [Show full text]
  • The Skeletal Biology, Archaeology and History of the New York African Burial Ground: a Synthesis of Volumes 1, 2, and 3
    THE NEW YORK AFRICAN BURIAL GROUND U.S. General Services Administration VOL. 4 The Skeletal Biology, Archaeology and History of the New York African Burial Ground: Burial African York New History and of the Archaeology Biology, Skeletal The THE NEW YORK AFRICAN BURIAL GROUND: Unearthing the African Presence in Colonial New York Volume 4 A Synthesis of Volumes 1, 2, and 3 Volumes of A Synthesis Prepared by Statistical Research, Inc Research, Statistical by Prepared . The Skeletal Biology, Archaeology and History of the New York African Burial Ground: A Synthesis of Volumes 1, 2, and 3 Prepared by Statistical Research, Inc. ISBN: 0-88258-258-5 9 780882 582580 HOWARD UNIVERSITY HUABG-V4-Synthesis-0510.indd 1 5/27/10 11:17 AM THE NEW YORK AFRICAN BURIAL GROUND: Unearthing the African Presence in Colonial New York Volume 4 The Skeletal Biology, Archaeology, and History of the New York African Burial Ground: A Synthesis of Volumes 1, 2, and 3 Prepared by Statistical Research, Inc. HOWARD UNIVERSITY PRESS WASHINGTON, D.C. 2009 Published in association with the United States General Services Administration The content of this report is derived primarily from Volumes 1, 2, and 3 of the series, The New York African Burial Ground: Unearthing the African Presence in Colonial New York. Application has been filed for Library of Congress registration. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. General Services Administration or Howard University. Published by Howard University Press 2225 Georgia Avenue NW, Suite 720 Washington, D.C.
    [Show full text]
  • Copyrighted Material
    INDEX ABC Television Studios 152 Chrysler Building 96, 102 Evelyn Apartments 143–4 Abyssinian Baptist Church 164 Chumley’s 66–8 Fabbri mansion 113 The Alamo 51 Church of the Ascension Fifth Avenue 56, 120, 140 B. Altman Building 96 60–1 Five Points 29–31 American Museum of Natural Church of the Incarnation 95 Flagg, Ernest 43, 55, 156 History 142–3 Church of the Most Precious Flatiron Building 93 The Ansonia 153 Blood 37 Foley Square 19 Apollo Theater 165 Church of St Ann and the Holy Forward Building 23 The Apthorp 144 Trinity 167 42nd Street 98–103 Asia Society 121 Church of St Luke in the Fields Fraunces Tavern 12–13 Astor, John Jacob 50, 55, 100 65 ‘Freedom Tower’ 15 Astor Library 55 Church of San Salvatore 39 Frick Collection 120, 121 Church of the Transfiguration Banca Stabile 37 (Mott Street) 33 Gangs of New York 30 Bayard-Condict Building 54 Church of the Transfiguration Gay Street 69 Beecher, Henry Ward 167, 170, (35th Street) 95 General Motors Building 110 171 City Beautiful movement General Slocum 70, 73, 74 Belvedere Castle 135 58–60 General Theological Seminary Bethesda Terrace 135, 138 City College 161 88–9 Boathouse, Central Park 138 City Hall 18 German American Shooting Bohemian National Hall 116 Colonnade Row 55 Society 72 Borough Hall, Brooklyn 167 Columbia University 158–9 Gilbert, Cass 9, 18, 19, 122 Bow Bridge 138–9 Columbus Circle 149 Gotti, John 40 Bowery 50, 52–4, 57 Columbus Park 29 Grace Court Alley 170 Bowling Green Park 9 Conservatory Water 138 Gracie Mansion 112, 117 Broadway 8, 92 Cooper-Hewitt National Gramercy
    [Show full text]
  • THE ANSONIA HOTEL, 2101-2119 Broadway, Borough of Manhattan
    Landmarks Preservation Commission March 14, 1972, Number 1 LP-0285 THE ANSONIA HOTEL, 2101-2119 Broadway, Borough of Manhattan. Begun 1899, completed 1904; architect Paul E. M. DuBoy. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 1165, Lot 20. On April 28, 1970, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the Ansonia Hotel and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 13). The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Two witnesses spoke in favor of designation. The owner opposed .it. Subsequent to the hearing the Commission has received 53 letters from individuals and organizations and petitions signed by approximately 25,770 persons favoring designation. It has also received a petition signed by 11 persons opposing designation. DESCRIPTION ~~D ANALYSIS This apartment-hotel in the grand French Beaux Arts style occupies the entire blockfront on the ,.,est side of Broadway bet•reen 73rd and 74th Streets. It rises on its conspicuous site to a height of seventeen stories. Built at the turn of the century, with over three hundred suites, it was at that time one of the largest apartment-hotels in the world. The Ansonia is a symbol of an era of opulence and elegance, and still stands as one of the truly grand buildings of Manhattan's West Side. The most striking features of this vast structure are the corner towers on Broadway, with their domes and railings, which rise slightly above and reptat the theme of the three story convex mansard roof that cr-owns the building.
    [Show full text]
  • Radio Rocks Ny
    nb10p01.qxp 3/7/2008 7:28 PM Page 1 TOP STORIES SMALL BUSINESS The 5 breeds Israeli firm has of firms most bundle riding on likely to beat old Times building a recession PAGE 2 PAGE 17 Soured holdings, nervous bankers pull hedge funds VOL. XXIV, NO.10 MARCH 10-16, 2008 PRICE: $3.00 back to earth ROLLING STONES: PAGE 3 Devotees know it’s Coalition only rock ’n’ roll, but High Line condo they like it. gets museum draws up exhibition NEW YORK, NEW YORK P. 6 Starrett 2 key projects vital to the city City bid and the Village Will be lower than VIEWPOINT, PAGE 12 1983 1986 1999 2006 WPLJ WAPP WNEW WXRK getty images rejected offer; other flips to flips to drops drops rock Top 40 Hot 97 rock suitors are likely BUSINESS LIVES ROCK’S OFF NY FERRY TALES IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIll BY DANIEL MASSEY Commuters swear by 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 their boat rides, but the a coalition of local labor, reli- 1967 1971 1982 1985 1993 2007 trips cost an arm and a WNEW-FM WPLJ-FM WAPP-FM WXRK-FM WAXQ-FM WXRK 2008 gious and community organiza- leg ... and then some launches rocks out rocks out becomes launches returns WRXP-FM tions is putting together a plan to PAGE 23 K-Rock to rock is newest rocker buy Starrett City,the largest feder- ROCK’S ON ally subsidized housing complex in the nation. The group—which includes the Central Labor Council, the Christian Cultural Center and the RADIO ROCKS NY Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty—says its proposal ensures that Starrett City, a 140-acre, 46- ings system that has shown the for- town” in which hip-hop, dance building complex on Jamaica Bay New station WRXP mat has more listeners than radio and R&B were the dominant in Brooklyn, will remain afford- joins 2 established executives had ever dreamed.
    [Show full text]
  • Membees of the Society
    MEMBEES OF THE SOCIETY. January 1, 1917. [Life members are designated by *] ACKERMANN-TETJBNER, Dr. B. G. A. B. G. Teubner, Poststrasse 3, Leipzig, Germany. ADAMS, Prof. E. P. Princeton University, Princeton, N. J. ADKINS, L. K. Wisconsin State Normal School, La Crosse, Wis. AGARD, Asst. Prof. H. L. Williams College, Williamstown, Mass. AKERS, Prof. O. P. Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa. ALEXANDER, Dr. J. W., II. Instructor, Princeton University, Princeton, N. J. 34 Cleveland Lane. ALLARDICE, Prof. R. E. Stanford University, Cal. ALLEN, Dr. E. S. Instructor, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. 1002 Comwell Place. ALLEN, Dr. FLORENCE E. Instructor, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. 219 Lathrop Street. ALLEN, ASSO. Prof. JOSEPH. College of the City of New York, New York, N. Y. ALLEN, Prof. E. B. Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio. ALTSHILLER, Dr. NATHAN. Instructor, University of Oklahoma, Nor­ man, Okla. 280 West Symmes Street. AMES, ASSO. Prof. L. D. University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. 208 Thilly Avenue. AMMERMAN, CHARLES. McKinley Manual Training High School, St. Louis, Mo. ANDEREGG, Prof. FREDERICK. Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio. 207 East College Street. ANDREWS, Dr. GRACE. 116 Cambridge Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. * ARCHIBALD, Asst. Prof. R. C. Brown University, Providence, R. I. 9 Charles Field Street. ARMSTRONG, Prof. G. N. Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio. ARMSTRONG, L. E. Instructor, Stevens Institute of Technology, Ho- boken, N. J. ASHCRAFT, Prof. T. B. Colby College, Waterville, Me. 34 Pleasant Street. ASHTON, Prof. C. H. University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan. 1200 Ohio Street. 4 License or copyright restrictions may apply to redistribution; see https://www.ams.org/journal-terms-of-use 5 *ATCHISON, Prof.
    [Show full text]
  • NEWS of the FOUR COUNTIES BORDERING SAN FRANCISCO BAY ~ " — I.* LE BEUF INCOURT Jjrev
    8 THE S^lF^^ NEWS OF THE FOUR COUNTIES BORDERING SAN FRANCISCO BAY ~ " — i.* LE BEUF INCOURT jjRev. George H.Wilkins, MEN URGE VOTE ON WILDMANWORRIES RICH STRIKE MADE VANDALSATWORK PRATT&BECKER FOR EMBEZZLING Who Resigns Pastorate EQUAL SUFFRAGE OCEAN VIEWWOMEN ATMOORES CREEK IN JEWISH TEMPLE REFUSED LICENSE Former Cashier of Hale Bros. Is Alameda County League Secures Police Guard Boswell's Ranch to Important Discovery Is Made Sacred Articles Torn From Altar Secretary of Y. M. C. A. an* Having His Preliminary Signatures to Petition to : Track Dweller in Hills Near Milletts^ Station Scattered Over Floor Residents in Neighborhood ' Examination State Legislature North of Berkeley in Nevada of tdince . Protest Against Dive — tand OAKLAND,Dec. ZO. The preliminary OAKLAND. Dec. 30.—The equal suf- VBERKELET,' Dec 30.—A wild A story is printed- by ihe Round "The vandals who in the last few The application of Pratt & Becker reopen notorious the examination of Alfred A. Le Beuf, for- frage league of Aldmeda county will who « frequents the neighborhood of Mountain Nugget concerning ••- the re- weeks have committed depredations in to the dive at churches, of iiason and O'Farrell streets i a petition legislature ,;Vlew - creek, both Protestant and Catholic corner mer casMcr of Halo Bros.' Oakland send to the state Ocean has eluded all efforts of cent discoveries at Moores denied by the police commissioners ?20,- as Ifto complete their demonstration of |was store, who is accused of stealing asking that a constitutional amend- the police to capture him and, the wom- which Is situated; about a -•dbnen , contempt last night, but not without an exchange from; miie3 for all creeds and houses of I "00 from hi? former employers, on the ment to enfranchise women be sub- en" in the vicinity of Boswell's ranch Round Mountain.
    [Show full text]
  • CITIES SERVICE BUILDING, 70 Pine Street (Aka 66-76 Pine Street, 2-18 Cedar Street, 171-185 Pearl Street), Manhattan
    Landmarks Preservation Commission June 21, 2011; Designation List 443 LP-2441 CITIES SERVICE BUILDING, 70 Pine Street (aka 66-76 Pine Street, 2-18 Cedar Street, 171-185 Pearl Street), Manhattan. Built 1930-32; Clinton & Russell, Holton & George, architects. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 41, Lot 1. On May 10, 2011, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the Cities Service Building and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 1). The hearing was duly advertised according to provisions of law. Six people spoke in favor of designation, including representatives of the owners, Manhattan Community Board 1, the Historic Districts Council, and the New York Landmarks Conservancy. Summary The former Cities Service Building at 70 Pine Street is a 66-story skyscraper, rising from a trapezoidal site bounded by Pine Street, Cedar Street, and Pearl Street. An icon of the lower Manhattan skyline, the building’s shaft terminates in a slender pinnacle crowned by an illuminated lantern and stainless steel spire. At the time of completion in 1932, this Art Deco style tower was the tallest structure in lower Manhattan, and at 952 feet, the third tallest structure in the world. Commissioned by a major American corporation, it was an expression of the owner’s success, escalating real estate costs, and the current zoning code that required buildings to diminish in mass as they rise. The Cities Service Company was chartered by Henry L. Doherty in 1910, and quickly grew to become one of the largest corporations in the United States, controlling approximately 150 energy firms in 38 states, including numerous oil and power suppliers.
    [Show full text]
  • Interim Report
    Interim Report Prepared By: DPZ Partners With: Gianni Longo & Associates Robert Orr & Associates CDM Smith The Williams Group Urban3 Good Earth Advisors Prepared For: City of Derby, CT • November 11, 2016 1:45 AM Page Intentionally Blank LISTENING TO THE COMMUNITY ........................... 5 Historic Context.........................................................54 Historic Maps .......................................................54 Stakeholder Interviews ............................................... 7 Historic Images ....................................................55 Overview ................................................................ 7 What We Heard ...................................................... 7 Views of the Site ........................................................58 Preliminary considerations .................................10 Scale Comparisons ...................................................60 Community Voices ....................................................11 Darien, CT .............................................................60 Overview ...............................................................11 Milford, CT ............................................................61 A. Strong & Weak Places: Mapping ...................11 Southport Green, Southport, CT ........................61 Bethesda Row, Bethesda, MD ............................62 Community Voices: Strong Places ..........................12 Rockville Town Center, MD .................................62 Mapping ...............................................................12
    [Show full text]