First National Bank Sohanck —

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

First National Bank Sohanck — Qpiy paper Sn Monmouth A D a ily R e c o r d o f tKe L o ca l ; County receiving regular daily Happenings is the ShoreD ii- Tc)cgmph News Service.' ‘ trictf?om Deal to Belmar. FOURTEENTH YEAR* NO. 293, ASBURY PARK, NEW JERSEY, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, ■I'M PRICE ONE CENT : EL SC WOOD PARK LEASED SULLOCrS GONDITION TO SPECIAL AWARD1 • - 1.' • - . * . ■ ■«*»• Monmouth Brivi.-.i;: id 1'i^ld Cltili IUccir- SAID TO BE CRITICAL Three Flaliiuff ICods to ,bo Sont T , I j R e^..;E ^ate ^B afgain,! . - paruleB nml^\Vlll:flrcatiy-Im prove ~ Wiioox^by.J^edreatliggi Magrazino lor JDespatcli Recplved at':l?ro.sliolil Docs Not For sale and rent-r-our specialty ■ ssssd. Beautify the* (li-tiuiiUf Prize Pliotograiihs SuhmittecK . ■■ Say -SherlJV lir liis M iir - being, property at Asbuiy Paik; . Tho Monmouth County Driving one v Ail oxcolIon t photograph o f Fisheriniin, ■ One'of the best built and mod- .V ' ' ilorfir ?iortll %Vlth Him. FieliicJuljrecentlyfoririad In New York A; W . LtiFufgo of this clty>-'vvith hlB prize *Allenhurst and £)eal. Although his 'cpidltlbri Is jritlcal arid : era improved, qotteges a t; by .prbmjjneafc summer residents o f Lonp oitcJi, a 23-pound'bftsg, upon hisjjack, ,^vas ■ every, day that posses,without a>v operation Branch nnd yJoihity, with : Br. , II. H aubliiittwl In th o lnsfe yearly photograph io being performed leBSonB hls ohnricca of life, Art In^plMhtary Fqtitipn Filed by Kane, prominent is driving clrolea,: as it-i contest.of Recrcatiori by F. L; W ilcox of Alleged Scheme Probably Sounds i¥ s 5 1 a n c e - — D E A L - - William’,Bullock, tho riojgro desperado who prosldoht,.hag' tcon incorporated and"hat Asbufy Park. , . Francis Ai Pawley and Sev^ was shot'down by two Uotectlvcs in.Vir- Well to Promoters But Other with rooms and;,eve?y mod" effeoted a leasb'pf.Ellkwood' Pdrk 'fron A letter of praise from tho editor of tho In tfie> B E S T co m p a n ie s at ciir- 12 Jslnia'i WcdDosday nlghfci Is still ollvo .erah Other-Creditors, Phi.llp Daly.. Many changes wlll bo made jn^gazin’o waa receivetl by Mr.vWiIcoi n,nd --■-•'-..v Teat sites. -Lissfe- e^mtably : eteinapjrovenienl, w iilbe sacrU md conscious?': If rlie ftoavcrs'lib'wlll. be. Powers Are, Watchings at'ElkwQod Park, which promises to be 1 ho photograph was reproduced as a cover brought Back to.E'reehq^d to be again-tried adjusted-and promptly paid. , Seed' to an.iasriediate purchaser. aomct-.tfee * centre of Qutdoqr>i?port and illustratVon recently. .When the list of for the fourth tiine for’ tho mjinlor of Chief SALE 0N JUDGMENTS STAVED pleasure' o f various, kinds.-.-, Tho malii pHfze\winners' w as.announced; • however, THE HAGUE SAYS NO RUPTURE ■. on easy .terms,, \ A n exce of PolicU tiimeh Walsh o f Red Bank. building .of the casino will .lie moved-to Mr: W ilcox’s picture. wrfs n o tin the list ’Bheriff O. ,E.- Dayls arrived at Ports­ LOANS Focation aad splendid plot. (LOO Sales 'on Jadijmsjits Hecnxe'd another; slto and converted, into a .club- and he sent a Iqtter of inquiry, thinking it 0‘mcIal ExplanntIou. pf Ministers’ Absence mouth' yesterday mording to tako- tho es­ . by iitber r(=ditcr« WIesf W sr. UoawBk-o iouso. $hb .’Irin will be enlarged ind hrtd been, misplaced. Xf'rom Post— Incident Showlnc: Cordial .’% by ISO feet. ."•/ caped murderer' in' eustody.' He wns ac- ‘. on first niortgage on impTav.ed. .o f tTlo luauffliration o f IlBB&irnptoy.Pro-: spacfons verandas added.. Between $5,000 Such proved to be thq Case. Editor Itelatlons Between England, and Portu- conyjanled by ConstabteCharlesK.Strong. property, ' , For.particulars see ; . Svii’c by t!:t Service of will be spent for Sjiiprovementt ^hields replied that by some mistake tho .gal— Blue- Jackets; Cheer Pope .Irt St. The two olilcbrs, hav»i rfequlsltldn papers IS'otJ’cpa This Morulrij, - and lh beautifying tlie grounds., • . pictureJmd not been.entered in tiie contest Pete r’s— Czar Nearly ‘ Itecorc re for Bullock-, aiid went to Rlchiiiond. to The ,club w ili' request the orepti.on ol afid pzirfclcularly,requested 'that ft bo sen- D. C. COVERT •A petition .in Involuntary lianUruptcy havo-them lridowad by Slsvernor TylBi*,,al­ Vienna, Saturday.^“ Tho FreiPostpri'nts sfatlons on both the llhqof tije N -Y. & L. tored in . the,; next competition. A» an against' the W . Mv 3awley potnpany /ojf a fresh Balkan.scare assorting that Prince B. and Ne.w Jersey Southern railway; though Bullock has nbt lntlinatod thnt he MILAN ROSS AGENCY ZOSTBond Street, ”, ' - Asbtuy Park. this city, praying that the caid compjiny aihend for tho ov^-sight he sfcated tbat;ho .Nioholas of Montenegro has organized a also' a trolley branch from tho lino' of the would refuse to go without tho papers.. Be deolarod a banbrupt, has boon Hied by liad orderod t^iree fishing-rods—an exper^ league between Roumania/^ervia, Bulga­ • 208 MAIN STREET.' A tiers tiff Highlands; Red Bank luul Xiong Tho wounded' prjlsbnbir.itold ono of tho oortnln o f the orodltors of that corpora­ bait casting rod, a Henshall,bass rod atid ria and Montenegro for the purpose of at­ Branch road, • (Officers after his capture that’ ho was to tion. ; . ’■ . ■: ' a fly rod—to be made arid sent M r/ Wilcox tacking Turkey While tho great powers, The club Is composed of men w ho are have a. now trial and ha did not appear to Tha drsdltors moBihg- the application asaspecifvl prize.' The rods are worth ?10.C0. are occupied with affairs’ in China. .The intorestod in.goosi rap,<ls in Long Branch fear returning to Now jersoy, but whon are FrarssIa A , Pawley o f thls.city, brother paper says thoy intend the partition of- and vicinity and the orgonizatioxi will be hi was first bapturod snd the detectives o f W illiam A . Pawley, presidents of the showed him tho picture whioh established Turkey among them; excepting Constan­ ASBURY PARK and OCEAN .QftOVB tne. moans of bringing gentlemen inter­ SHERMAN’S WIFE FLED -AND- • ■ * *t ' * Pawley cAmpany;. Pntrlok Cavanagh, his identity ho seemed to realize fully the tinople, which they will occupy jointly. ested in driving from all parts of the . i HoteiBrunswIok, ‘Michael Cavanagit and James F. Knapp, fate in storp for him, for ho begged them TO HER PARENTS--HOME Operatldns will begin-, simultaneously ■with ' Offices < Railroad1 Itepot i\d . country to Long Branch. The principal doing business as Oavanagh Bros. & to blow his brains out. ’ rebellions in Macodonia and Albania.. (1314 Bangs. Atenue. features o f thtj olub w ill fie exhibitions o f Fathcr-ln-l.aw. Lane -and Hdsbaod ’■ ISn- Knapp; Edward W. Cook and theColum Thbrc was no question about Bullock’s- Prtaoipal Office,.,,. .723 MATTISON.AVE. trotting horsos dtid .general driving. Be; iguae Sn Lively -Altcrcatlon Which bla Shade Olpth company, Identity after-Sheriff jOtiyts -■ saw. him;.. for AN OFFICIAL DENIAL Goods stored'Bt reasonable stated., sides there will , bo BasobaHand football , CoilslaWo W hite Quells. ’ Monmonth Building:, AsfcuryPark,N.J. The, petitioners are represented by A t­ as tho qlllcor, for whpm he had worked te- j.'l Telephone eoanestloB»;j I B ' V games, fly castlpg tournamonts «in<I vari: Frank Sliorman of South' Miiin street, torney Elraor E. Cooley of-New York city; foro' bis crime, m id fi-qni whose custoily ho Holland and Portngueso Ministers Left P.O.Box667, - - .Abb0 » t P a r k , ouh field spprts,*. drrosled for being sir nr. I: and disorderly, Tlio Pawley company has bc^n in> se- escaped, entered the coll’nnd sai^:’ “ Hello, P o s ts to'Give Governments Personal was given a hearing before" Justlco John c a p it a l , . .... $100,000 ;-ero financial atralta tor a comparatively Bill; are yos badly hurt? « tho negro act­ ■ Inforihatioii, .’Tis^Saiti. f THE LAST NIGHT OF THE . A. Bordon yesterday: Ho wns sentenced long time past.’ The corporation was real­ ually seemed glad to see his probable exe­ The Hague, Saturday.—Am 'official SU R PL U S.. ..... 25,000 to spend 110 dnys.m tho.county jail, but ly built' upon tho ruins or the business cutioner.- ...... statement was Issued this afternoon re­ AUCTION SAI.F. JEPTUNE COMPANY’S FAIR sentence was suspended ponding hls.-gqod conducted by Mr. Pawloy some years agti. Sheriff Osyls immediutoiy did every­ garding tho alleged differences between Executes all trusts known to the law. .?• „ behavior. • .". Loans money on bond and mortflrage. This vonturq was a failure and the som-': Slflo Gallery Xeadliig Attraction—Jolin S. thing possible to Kecure tho comfort and tho governments of. tho Netiierlands *dnd When Sherman reached homo,his wife, Receives deposits subject to check and allows. puny wa3 incorporated about thrqe years AilrainCrnck .Shot '^i.> ^..Berkley recovery, of his prls'orior. Tho very'host Portugal which are said to have arisen in interest on daily balances. whom, it is said, ho threatened to brain Acta as Trustee, Registrar and Transfer Agent. ADJOURNED ago undte the laws of the state of-Tiov,- Clary Fenmle ClaimplbB.-- surgeon obtainable was;summoned, It Is ^he recall: of :the ministerazof „both connr with a lamp, was not thero. Her father, “ Pftys.coupons.—~ ™ —■■■'■•. York. ; The oxpeoted success did not ac­ Tonight is tho last night of the Neptune a question whether -Bullock will, bo trios. Tlio statement denies that there has Makes demand and tinie loans' on approved Mr. Lane of Jorsoyvllje; had arrived whllo collateral.
Recommended publications
  • A Retrospective of Preservation Practice and the New York City Subway System
    Under the Big Apple: a Retrospective of Preservation Practice and the New York City Subway System by Emma Marie Waterloo This thesis/dissertation document has been electronically approved by the following individuals: Tomlan,Michael Andrew (Chairperson) Chusid,Jeffrey M. (Minor Member) UNDER THE BIG APPLE: A RETROSPECTIVE OF PRESERVATION PRACTICE AND THE NEW YORK CITY SUBWAY SYSTEM A Thesis Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Cornell University In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts by Emma Marie Waterloo August 2010 © 2010 Emma Marie Waterloo ABSTRACT The New York City Subway system is one of the most iconic, most extensive, and most influential train networks in America. In operation for over 100 years, this engineering marvel dictated development patterns in upper Manhattan, Brooklyn, and the Bronx. The interior station designs of the different lines chronicle the changing architectural fashion of the aboveground world from the turn of the century through the 1940s. Many prominent architects have designed the stations over the years, including the earliest stations by Heins and LaFarge. However, the conversation about preservation surrounding the historic resource has only begun in earnest in the past twenty years. It is the system’s very heritage that creates its preservation controversies. After World War II, the rapid transit system suffered from several decades of neglect and deferred maintenance as ridership fell and violent crime rose. At the height of the subway’s degradation in 1979, the decision to celebrate the seventy-fifth anniversary of the opening of the subway with a local landmark designation was unusual.
    [Show full text]
  • Design a Subway Station Mosaic That Reflects Their Home Or School Neighborhood and Draw It
    MILES OF TILES MILES OF TILES BACKGROUND INFORMATION FOR TEACHERS “Design and aesthetics have been a part of the subway from the original stations of 1904 to the latest work in 2018. But nothing in New York stands still – certainly not the subway - and the approach to subway style has evolved, reflecting the major stages of the system’s construction during the early 1900s, the teens, and the late 20s and early 30s and the renovations and redesigns of later years. The earliest parts of the system still convey the flowery, genteel flavor of a smaller, older city. Later sections, by contrast, show a conscious turn toward the modern, including open admiration for the system’s raw structural power. The evolution of subway design follows the trajectory of the world of art and architecture as these came to terms with the Industrial revolution, and the tug-of-war between a traditional deference to European models and a modernist ideology demanding an honest expression of contemporary industrial technology.” —Subway style: 100 years of Architecture & Design in the New York City Subway New York City, in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, was an industrial hub attracting many Americans from rural communities looking for work, and immigrants looking for better lives. It was, however, blighted by impoverished neighborhoods of broken down tenements and social injustice. The city lacked a plan for how it should look, where structures should be built, or how services should be distributed. It was described as a ‘ragged pincushion of towers’ with no government regulation over the urban landscape.
    [Show full text]
  • The New York City Subway
    John Stern, a consultant on the faculty of the not-for-profit Aesthetic Realism Foundation in New York City, and a graduate of Columbia University, has had a lifelong interest in architecture, history, geology, cities, and transportation. He was a senior planner for the Tri-State Regional Planning Commission in New York, and is an Honorary Director of the Shore Line Trolley Museum in Connecticut. His extensive photographs of streetcar systems in dozens of American and Canadian cities during the late 1940s, '50s, and '60s comprise a major portion of the Sprague Library's collection. Mr. Stern resides in New York City with his wife, Faith, who is also a consultant of Aesthetic Realism, the education founded by the American poet and critic Eli Siegel (1902-1978). His public talks include seminars on Fiorello LaGuardia and Robert Moses, and "The Brooklyn Bridge: A Study in Greatness," written with consultant and art historian Carrie Wilson, which was presented at the bridge's 120th anniversary celebration in 2003, and the 125th anniversary in 2008. The paper printed here was given at the Aesthetic Realism Foundation, 141 Greene Street in NYC on October 23rd and at the Queens Public Library in Flushing in 2006. The New York Subway: A Century By John Stern THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1904 was a gala day in the City of New York. Six hundred guests assembled inside flag-bedecked City Hall listened to speeches extolling the brand-new subway, New York's first. After the last speech, Mayor George B. McClellan spoke, saying, "Now I, as Mayor, in the name of the people, declare the subway open."1 He and other dignitaries proceeded down into City Hall station for the inau- gural ride up the East Side to Grand Central Terminal, then across 42nd Street to Times Square, and up Broadway to West 145th Street: 9 miles in all (shown by the red lines on the map).
    [Show full text]
  • Oral History Interview with Wendy Olsoff and Penny Pilkington, 2009 January 21 and May 22
    Oral history interview with Wendy Olsoff and Penny Pilkington, 2009 January 21 and May 22 Funding for this interview was provided by the Widgeon Point Charitable Foundation. Funding for the digital preservation of this interview was provided by a grant from the Save America's Treasures Program of the National Park Service. Contact Information Reference Department Archives of American Art Smithsonian Institution Washington. D.C. 20560 www.aaa.si.edu/askus Transcript Preface The following oral history transcript is the result of a tape-recorded interview with Wendy Olsoff and Penny Pilkington on January 21 and May 22, 2009. The interview took place at in New York, New York, and was conducted by James McElhinney for the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. Funding for this interview was provided by a grant from the Widgeon Point Charitable Foundation. Wendy Olsoff, Penny Pilkington, and James McElhinney have reviewed the transcript and have made corrections and emendations. The reader should bear in mind that he or she is reading a transcript of spoken, rather than written, prose. Interview JAMES McELHINNEY: This is James McElhinney speaking with Penny Pilkington and Wendy Olstroff. PENNY PILKINGTON: Olsoff. O-L-S-O-F-F. MR. McELHINNEY: Olsoff? WENDY OLSOFF: Right. MR. McELHINNEY: At 432 Lafayette Street in New York, New York, on January 21, 2009. So for the transcriber, I’m going to ask you to just simply introduce yourselves so that the person who is writing out the interview will be able to identify— [END OF DISC 1, TRACK 1.] MR. McELHINNEY: —who’s who by voice.
    [Show full text]
  • Rent Glossary of Terms
    Rent Glossary of Terms 11th Street and Avenue B CBGB’s – More properly CBGB & OMFUG, a club on Bowery Ave between 1st and 2nd streets. The following is taken from the website http://www.cbgb.com. It is a history written by Hilly Kristal, the founder of CBGB and OMFUG. The question most often asked of me is, "What does CBGB stand for?" I reply, "It stands for the kind of music I intended to have, but not the kind that we became famous for: COUNTRY BLUEGRASS BLUES." The next question is always, "but what does OMFUG stand for?" and I say "That's more of what we do, It means OTHER MUSIC FOR UPLIFTING GORMANDIZERS." And what is a gormandizer? It’s a voracious eater of, in this case, MUSIC. […] The obvious follow up question is often "is this your favorite kind of music?" No!!! I've always liked all kinds but half the radio stations all over the U.S. were playing country music, cool juke boxes were playing blues and bluegrass as well as folk and country. Also, a lot of my artist/writer friends were always going off to some fiddlers convention (bluegrass concert) or blues and folk festivals. So I thought it would be a whole lot of fun to have my own club with all this kind of music playing there. Unfortunately—or perhaps FORTUNATELY—things didn't work out quite the way I 'd expected. That first year was an exercise in persistence and a trial in patience. My determination to book only musicians who played their own music instead of copying others, was indomitable.
    [Show full text]
  • Home News and Comment. 3Jk TRAVELING DANGEROUS
    riphe Newtown Bee VOLUME XXXI. NEWTOWN, CONN.,' FRIDAY FEBRUARY 7 1008. NUMBER 0. Edward Taylor wui 69 yean old, Wednesday, and never folt better In . OUR NEIGHBORS. his life, To-da- y on the fox hunt he can tire out any young man in Sandy , Stevenson. Home News and Comment. 3jK TRAVELING DANGEROUS. The raods here are 10 Icy that in dangerous. I iM- James Wheeler commenced, this I week, to harvest his Ice crop from Bid- - I well's pond. ' ' Miss Louise Bryant of New Haven Is visiting at Monterey Bryant's. Mrs Will Booth and sister, Mrs 3k Hoyt, of Bethel were guests of Mr and Mrs George Smith over Sunday, I 'WW W 1? Prayer meetings, conducted by Rev i Mr Thayer, are held at the church, Thursday evenings. Mr and Mrs George Prindle have moved from Hull's Hill into R. S. Hin- - ' - i "MV. ',t-V- ' C . 7 a- . V man's tenement house. Daniel Knapp has moved his steam saw mill to this place and expects soon to saw timber for J. B. Downs. Edward Taylor, Greenfield Hill. Sixty Nine Years Old, Wednesday, and 4 Still the Champion Fox Hunter ef DEERFIELD ITEMS. - Newtown. Even G. F. and G. T. H. Mrs Sarah Seymour is quite sick. W. get "tuckered" out when tramp ; Harry Nichols of has been off with him. Bridgeport a guest at the home of W. E. Nichols. H. W. Bowen has gone to Washing in Hook, a tramp over the Black North ton to visit his parents. Cuntry, Zoar and Great Quarter.
    [Show full text]
  • IRT Subway System Underground Interior
    Landmarks Preservation Ccmnission October 23, 1979, Designation List 129 LP-1096 IRI' SUBWAY SYSTfl.:l UNDERGROUND INTERIOR, canprising: portions of the Borough Hall Iexi.ngton Avenue line station oonsisting of the walls adjacent to the platfonns, encanpa.ssing the mosaic tile, glazed tile, faience and terra-cotta plaques and rroldings, and marble wainscoting (excluding the walls adjacent to platform ex­ tensions) ; portions of the Wall Street lexington Avenue line station consisting of the \\ralls adjacent to the platfonns and original entrance areas, encanpa.ssing the mosaic tile, glazed tile, faience and terra-cotta plaques and moldings, and marble wainscoting (excluding the walls adjacent to platfonn extensions); portions of the Fulton Street Iexi.ngton Avenue line station oonsisting of the walls adjacent to the platfonns and original entrance areas, encanpa.ssing the mosaic tile, glazed tile, faience and terra-cotta plaques and rroldings, and marble wainscoting (excluding the walls adjacent to platfonn extensions); portions of the City Hall station consisting of the walls, platfonn, ceiling vaults, sky­ lights and staircases; portions of the Bleecker Street station consisting of the walls adjacent to the platfonns and entrance areas, encanpassing the rrosaic tile, glazed tile, faience plaques and moldings, brick wainsooting and marble wainscot cap (excluding the walls adjacent to platfonn extensions and connecting passageways), and the platfonn and entrance area columns surfaced with glazed tile; portions of the Astor Place station
    [Show full text]
  • April 2017 Photo Notes
    Park West PHOTO NOTES Camera Club 2017 April This Issue Volume 80 • Issue 8 Club News…………………………2 - 21 Photography Ne..………………..22 - 27 Exhibits, Workshops, Etc………. 28 - 30 Schedule of Activities……..…… 31 - 39 Complete Index................................... 40 complete listings on last page April 2017 www.ParkWestCameraClub.org !1 Park West Camera Club Committee Chairs The Park West Camera Club is an independent not-for- Archive Myrna Harrison-Changar profit corporation. Guests are always welcome at meet- 212 663 1422 [email protected] ings and activities. Competition John Brengelman The Park West Camera Club newsletter, Photo Notes, is 917-543-7957 [email protected] Hedy Klein published every month by and for the members of the 718 793 0246 [email protected] Park West Camera Club. Subscriptions are included with Club membership. Yearly subscriptions are avail- Field Trip Susan Sigrist able to non-members by e-mail at no charge. Printed 212 758 0036 [email protected] issues are available at PWCC meetings. Paul Grebanier 718 629 7164 [email protected] Submissions of full-length articles or smaller items of photographic or general interest are always accepted. Gallery Karen Corrigan The staff of Photo Notes reserves the right to edit any 212 674 2201 [email protected] submissions which are published. House Marty Smith Deadline for submissions is the first Monday of each 347 703 3905 [email protected] month. Membership Marlene Schonbrun 212 662 3107 [email protected] Photo Notes is optimized for viewing on the internet. Elena
    [Show full text]
  • XFR STN: the New Museum's Stone Tape
    NEWMUSEUM.ORG The New Museum dedicates its Fifth Floor gallery space to “XFR STN” (Transfer Station), an open-door artist-centered media archiving project. 07/17–09/08/2013 Published by DIRECTOR’S FOREWORD FR STN” initially arose from the need to preserve the Monday/Wednesday/Friday Video Club dis- Conservator of “XFR STN,” he ensures the project operates as close to best practice as possible. We Xtribution project. MWF was a co-op “store” of the artists´ group Colab (Collaborative Projects, are thankful to him and his skilled team of technicians, which includes Rebecca Fraimow, Leeroy Kun Inc.), directed by Alan W. Moore and Michael Carter from 1986–2000, which showed and sold artists’ Young Kang, Kristin MacDonough, and Bleakley McDowell. and independent film and video on VHS at consumer prices. As realized at the New Museum, “XFR STN” will also address the wider need for artists’ access to media services that preserve creative works Staff members from throughout the Museum were called upon for both their specialized skills currently stored in aging and obsolete audiovisual and digital formats. and their untiring enthusiasm for the project. Johanna Burton, Keith Haring Director and Curator of Education and Public Engagement, initiated the project and worked closely with Digital Conser- !e exhibition will produce digitized materials from three distinct repositories: MWF Video Club’s vator at Rhizome, Ben Fino-Radin, the New Museum’s Digital Archivist, Tara Hart, and Associ- collection, which comprises some sixty boxes of diverse moving image materials; the New Museum’s ate Director of Education, Jen Song, on all aspects.
    [Show full text]
  • 1986--Dept Guide to NYC Updated.Pdf
    DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY An Incomplete Guide to New York With opportunities for eating, drinking, socializing, intellectualizing and more. I ■ •• ■■ ••• ■■■ •••••••••••••• ■■■■ •••••••••••••···••1■■■■■■ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ BOOKSTORES Barnes & Noble 5th Avenue at 18th Street B Dalton 6th Avenue at &h Street "BOOKS" Mercer opposite Coles East/West Books 5th Avenue at 14th Street New School Bookstore 5th Avenue and 14th Street NYU Bookcenter 18 Washington Place (the East Building) Pageant Books 109 East 9th Street St Mark's Books 13 St Mark's Place Shakespeare & Co Broadway at Washington Place The Strand Broadway at 12th Street (best place to fmd TOB) LIBRARIES Brooklyn Public Grand Army Plaza/780-7810 Cooper Union Library Cooper Square/Astor Place New York Public 5th Ave at 42nd Street M-W: 10-8:45pm Th-Sat: 10-5:45 cl~d Sundays (books cannot be checked out; largest collection in US next to the Liorary of Congress) Mid-Manhattan Library 5th Avenue at 40th Street great selection, usually has the books that Bobst doesn't. Can be checked out. New School Library 5th Avenue at 14th Street Especially good in the Social Sciences. Books can be checked out. MOVIES Bleecker St Cinema Bleecker and LaGuardia/674-2560 Cinema Village 12 Street and 5th Ave/924-3363 Film Forum 57 Watts Street/431-1590 Lincoln Plua Lincoln Center (great for foreign films)/757-2280 Public Theater 425 Lafayette (near Astor)/YJS-7100 Quad Cinema 34 W. 13th Street/255-8800 Thalia Soho 15 Vandam/675-0498 Theatre 80 80 St Marks Place/254-7400 MUSEUMS American Museum or the Moving Image Zukor Theater, 34-31 35th St, Astoria/784-4742 The Asia Society 725 Park Avenue/288-6400 Bronx Council on Arts' Longwood Gallery 965 Longwood Ave, Bronx/842-5659 Bronx _Museum or the Arts 1040 Grand Concourse and 165th/681-6000 The Brooklyn Museum 200 Eastern Pkwy, Bklyn/718-638-S(XX) Center for African Art 52-54 East 68th St/861-1200 The Cloisters Fort Tryon Park/923-3700 Frick Collection 1 East 70th St/288-0700 Solomon R.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 7: Historic Resources
    Chapter 7: Historic Resources A. INTRODUCTION This chapter considers the potential of the proposed actions to affect historic resources, both archaeological and architectural. It has been prepared in accordance with City Environmental Quality Review (CEQR) guidelines, which require that City agencies consider the effects of their actions on historic properties. In accordance with CEQR guidelines, this analysis identifies all historic resources that have been designated or determined to meet the eligibility requirements for local, state, or national designation, and it also identifies properties that may meet such eligibility requirements. In assessing potential project effects on historic resources, this analysis follows the guidance of the CEQR Technical Manual. The CEQR Technical Manual recommends that a historic resources assessment be performed if a proposed action would result in any of the following actions: in-ground disturbance; new construction; physical alteration of any building; the change in scale, visual context, or visual setting of any building, structure, object, or landscape feature; or the screening or elimination of publicly accessible views; even if no known historic resources are located nearby. Since the proposed actions are expected to generate some of these results, a full analysis under CEQR was undertaken. As described more fully below, the proposed actions would result in significant adverse impacts on historic resources. There would be direct impacts on 141 sites. With respect to archaeological resources, there would be impacts on 23 potential development sites. The sites are located at 139 East Houston Street, 32-36 East 3rd Street, 28 East 2nd Street, 239 East 3rd Street, 740 East 6th Street, 258-266 East 7th Street, 271 East 7th Street, 349 East 10th Street, 101 East 7th Street, 64 East 3rd Street, 100 East 4th Street, 68 East 7th Street, 73 St.
    [Show full text]
  • March 15, 2020
    MARCH 15, 2020 HOLY WEEK SCHEDULE JESUS CHRIST: OUR LENTEN SERIES ON Holy Thursday, April 9th THE PERSON OF JESUS CONTINUES Mass of the Lord’s Supper - 7:00 pm Please join us from 6:30 - 7:30 pm on Sun- Good Friday, April 10th days evening (following the 5:30 pm Mass) Stations of the Cross - Noon in the Saint Agnes Parish Center. Good Friday Service - 3:00 pm March 15: No Class (Spring Break) Holy Saturday, April 11th March 22: Eucharist: Why did Jesus give us Easter Vigil - 7:00 pm the Eucharist and why do we call it the "source and summit of Christian life"? Easter Sunday, April 12th March 29: The Passion of Jesus: What did 8:00 am Mass in the Church Jesus suffer in His passion and cross and 8:00 am Mass in the Parish Center what does it mean for us? April 5 (Palm Sunday): The Resurrection: 10:00 am Mass in the Church Why is the resurrection important to us as 10:00 am Mass in the Parish Center Christians? What did Jesus accomplish in rising from the dead? Noon Mass in the Church only Questions? Contact Rachel Noffke at There is no 5:30 pm Mass [email protected]. on Easter Sunday! WEEKEND MASSES WEEKDAY MASSES CONFESSIONS Saturday Vigil Monday - Friday Saturday 4:30 pm 6:45 am 3:00 - 4:00 pm Sunday Wednesday (in Lent) 8:00 & 10:00 am, Noon, 5:30 pm 6:00 - 7:00 pm 5250 MISSION ROAD • ROELAND PARK, KANSAS 66205 P: (913) 262-2400 | F: (913) 262-1050 | WWW.STAGNESKC.ORG WELCOME TO SAINT AGNES! CLERGY LENTEN PENANCE FR.
    [Show full text]