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Murdoch's Global Plan For
CNYB 05-07-07 A 1 5/4/2007 7:00 PM Page 1 TOP STORIES Portrait of NYC’s boom time Wall Street upstart —Greg David cashes in on boom on the red hot economy in options trading Page 13 PAGE 2 ® New Yorkers are stepping to the beat of Dancing With the Stars VOL. XXIII, NO. 19 WWW.NEWYORKBUSINESS.COM MAY 7-13, 2007 PRICE: $3.00 PAGE 3 Times Sq. details its growth, worries Murdoch’s about the future PAGE 3 global plan Under pressure, law firms offer corporate clients for WSJ contingency fees PAGE 9 421-a property tax Times, CNBC and fight heads to others could lose Albany; unpacking out to combined mayor’s 2030 plan Fox, Dow Jones THE INSIDER, PAGE 14 BY MATTHEW FLAMM BUSINESS LIVES last week, Rupert Murdoch, in a ap images familiar role as insurrectionist, up- RUPERT MURDOCH might bring in a JOINING THE PARTY set the already turbulent media compatible editor for The Wall Street Journal. landscape with his $5 billion offer for Dow Jones & Co. But associ- NEIL RUBLER of Vantage Properties ates and observers of the News media platform—including the has acquired several Corp. chairman say that last week planned Fox Business cable chan- thousand affordable was nothing compared with what’s nel—and take market share away housing units in the in store if he acquires the property. from rivals like CNBC, Reuters past 16 months. Campaign staffers They foresee a reinvigorated and the Financial Times. trade normal lives for a Dow Jones brand that will combine Furthermore, The Wall Street with News Corp.’s global assets to Journal would vie with The New chance at the White NEW POWER BROKERS House PAGE 39 create the foremost financial news York Times to shape the national and information provider. -
Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Founded March 21, 1888, by CLINTON W
Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Founded March 21, 1888, by CLINTON W. SWEET. Devoted to Real Estate, Building Construction and Building Management in the Metropolitan District Published Every Saturday by THE RECORD AND GUIDE COMPANY FRANK E. PERLEY, President and Editor; W. D. HAD SELL, Vice-President; J. W. FRANK, Secretary-Treasurer. Bntered as second olasa matt« Norember 8, I8T>, at Uia Po«t Office at New York. N. Y., nnder tlie Act of Uarcb S. I8T8. Copyright, 1919, by The Record and Guide Company. 119 West 40th Street, New York (Telpehone: Bryant «0«). VOLL XLV NEW YORK, JANUARY 10, 1920 «.00 A THAR NO. 2 (2764) 2O0. A COPT AdTertisinp Index AdTertisinr Index Page A B See Electric Elevator Co. TABLE OF CONTENTS Newins, Harvey B SS 4th Cover New York Edison Co."," The!!!" 59 Ackerly, Orville B., & Son..2(1 Cover SECTION I. New York Title Mortgage Co.. Acme Cabinet Co., Inc 62 The no Acme Service Corporation 45 Editorials 37 Adler, Ernest N 2d Cover Niewenhous Bros., Inc 61 A. J. Contracting Co., Inc 62 Readers' Comment on Current Topics 38 Noyes Co., Chas. F... .Front "cover ' Alliance Realty Co 36 Lockwood Committee Offers Bills Affecting Obelisk Waterproofing Co.... 56 Ames & Co 2d Cover Amy & Co., A. V 2a Cover Realty 39 n^p*"!, '^P^l?'"''"™ Corp..2d civer Anderson & Co., James S 36 O Reilly & Dahn 2d Cover Armstrong, John 2d Cover Governor Smith Will Send Message on Housing 39 Orr & Co., John C......... .."Il Aspromonte & Son, L. S 59 Sales and Conveyances in Manhattan and Bronx Payton, Jr., Co., Philip A. -
Report of the Jewish Publication Society of America
REPORT OF THE TWENTY-SIXTH YEAR OF THE JEWISH PUBLICATION SOCIETY OF AMERICA 1913-1914 JEWISH PUBLICATION SOCIETY 421 THE JEWISH PUBLICATION SOCIETY OP AMERICA OFFICERS PRESIDENT SIMON MILLER, Philadelphia FIRST VICE-PRESIDENT DR. HENRY M. LEIPZIGER, New York SECOND VICE-PRESIDENT HORACE STERN, Philadelphia TREASURER HENRY FERNBERGER, Philadelphia SECRETARY BENJAMIN ALEXANDER, Philadelphia ASSISTANT SECRETARY I. GEORGE DOBSEVAGE, Philadelphia SECRETARY TO THE PUBLICATION COMMITTEE HENRIETTA SZOLD, New York TRUSTEES DR. CYRUS ADLER 3 Philadelphia HART BLUMENTHAL 2 Philadelphia CHARLES EISENMAN 2 Cleveland HENRY FERNBERGER * Philadelphia 2 DANIEL GUGGENHEIM New York 1 JOSEPH HAGEDORN Philadelphia 2 EPHRAIM LEDEEER Philadelphia DR. HENRY M. LEIPZIGER S New York SIMON MILLER2 Philadelphia ! MOBRIS NEWBUKGEE New York JULIUS ROSENWALD * Chicago SIGMUND B. SONNEBORN J Baltimore HORACE STERN * Philadelphia a SAMUEL STRAUSS New York 1 HON. SELIGMAN J. STRAUSS Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 1 CYRUS L. SULZBERGER New York 1 Term expires in 1915. 2 Term expires in 1916. 3 Term expires in 1917. 3 422 AMERICAN JEWISH YEAR BOOK HON. MAYEB SULZBERGER 8 Philadelphia A. LEO WEIL3 Pittsburgh 2 HARBIS WEINSTOCK Sacramento EDWIN WOLF' Philadelphia HONORARY VICE-PRESIDENTS 1 ISAAC W. BERNHEIM Louisville REV. DR. HENRY COHEN 3 Galveston 8 Louis K. GTJTMAN Baltimore REV. DR. MAX HELLER * New Orleans 2 Miss ELLA JACOBS Philadelphia S. W. JACOBS • Montreal HON. JULIAN W. MACK * Washington REV. DR. MARTIN A. MEYER 2 San Francisco HON. SIMON W. ROSENDALE = Albany, N. Y. 8 MURRAY SEASONGOOD Cincinnati HON. M. C. SLOSS * San Francisco REV. DR. JOSEPH STOLZ * Chicago HON. SIMON WOLF * Washington, D. C. PUBLICATION COMMITTEE HON. MAYER SULZBERGER, Chairman Philadelphia DB. -
Palmer's Views of New York, Past and Present
COPy RIGHT /909 BY ROH'-HT M. PAl-WER . /A MS TZZjEB— Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library Gift of Seymour B. Durst Old York Library ov<~ £io sr fc\ \ 3 PALMER'S VIEWS- 2—PALMER'S VIEWS VIEW OF FORT AMSTERDAM on the Manhattan. (Original in Holland.) Erected 1623, finished 1635 by Gov- ernor Van Twiller. Peter Minuit bought the Island, about 22,000 acres, for $24, a few baubles, beads and some rum. VIEW OF BATTERY PARK as it appeared in the more recent past, yet a marked contrast with the present-day view as seen on opposite page, showing the Whitehall Building, etc. L PALMKR'S VIEWS— Jersey Shore. Battery Park. Pennsylvania Freight Depots. Battery Place. Washington Street. WHITEHALL BUILDING, Battery Place, West to Washington Street, overlooking Hudson River and Battery Park, twenty stories, 254 feet high; one of the most conspicuous office buildings in the city as seen from the harbor, commanding view of New York Bay, New Jersey and South Brooklyn. General offices of the Otis Elevator Co., incorporated November, 1898, with branch offices in all principal cities. Otis elevators are successfully used in the tallest structures of the largest cities in the world. Eiffel Tower, 1,000 feet high, Metropolitan Life Tower, Singer Building, Hudson Terminal Buildings, etc.. etc. 4—PALMER'S VIEWS THE OLD FORT, built by Peter Minuit, 1626, was on site of present Custom House. (A.) White house built on Strand by Governor Stuyvesant; (B.) House built by Jacob Leisler ; first brick house on Manhattan. (C.) The "Strand." now Whitehall Street; (D.) Pearl Street; (E.) Rampart, now State Street; (G.) Mouth of Broad NEW AMSTERDAM, a small city on Manhattan Island, New Holland, North America, now St. -
Directory of Theamerican Society of Certified Public Accountants, January 1, 1925 American Society of Certified Public Accountants
University of Mississippi eGrove American Institute of Certified Public Accountants AICPA Committees (AICPA) Historical Collection 1-1-1925 Directory of theAmerican Society of Certified Public Accountants, January 1, 1925 American Society of Certified Public Accountants Follow this and additional works at: https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aicpa_comm Part of the Accounting Commons, and the Taxation Commons Recommended Citation American Society of Certified Public Accountants, "Directory of theAmerican Society of Certified Public Accountants, January 1, 1925" (1925). AICPA Committees. 134. https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aicpa_comm/134 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) Historical Collection at eGrove. It has been accepted for inclusion in AICPA Committees by an authorized administrator of eGrove. For more information, please contact [email protected]. DIRECTORY The American Society of Certified Public Accountants Officers .. Directors .. Auditors State Representatives .. Membership Roster Constitution and By-Laws American Society of Certified Public Accountants JANUARY 1, 1925 421 Woodward Building Washington, D. C DIRECTORY sf The American Society of Certified Public Accountants Officers - Directors Auditors State Representatives .. Membership Roster Constitution and By-Laws AmericanThe Society of Certified Public Accountants Woodward Building Washington, D. C. JANUARY 1, 1925 CONTENTS Page Officers............ ................ 1......................... ............................................................. -
STORES OFFICES Office Service
BUSINESS PLACES TO LET. BUSINESS PLACES TO LET. BUSINESS PLACES TO LET. BUSINESS PLACES TO IET^ BUSINESS PLACES TO LET. BUSINESS PLACES TO LET. BUSINESS PLACES TO LET. BUSINESS IfilAClJS TO LET. Above 14fh to 59th St. 14th St. to .IfttVi St. AhvH 14th to 5fttti St. (Iii'Ibmvw. Abotr t4tti to 59th St. Abovx 14th St. (<> 50th -t. <lnrlu»l\e). \bo\c I till St. to 3'Jth St. (InrliMhr). Allot i' lttli St. tc 591 h st. (InWiiklvo). Ab«\« 14th St. to Vlth St. il«clni»lve). (lnt-lti«i\r). Above (Inclti*!?*). (Ini-lukive). Ka^t fttivrr to East River to North Hiver. Cult Itivrr to North Kiier. Ki.vrr iu >urili Bittr. Ka^t Hi\i*r to North Itivcr. I0a>>t Itiver to North Ki\i-r. Ka»t lti*«-r to North IIiiit. Knot River to North River. North ttiver. [PENN STATION 7"* AVE. SUB 'HUDSON TUBES^ 11,0 f NINTH AVE EL |SIXTH AVE EL. IffKLVN SUB Knickerbocker ILEX AVE SUB.' i N V CENTRAL^ BROADWAY I SUBLINES at42^ Street occupancy DO YOU KNOW Til ! j TOE MARBRIDGE BUILDING » the May 1st accessible Office Building ia New York City? Mr. Is THE MARBRIDGE BUILDING faces south on Executive.Time west on Money 34th Street, Herald Square, and north on 35th Street. I hink of the many advantages of having Your business concentrated on one such tloor. THE MARBRIDGE BUILDING has eleven floors Reduction of overhead and salaries, saving with approximately 30,000 square feet on a floor. of time and the expense of inter-floor com¬ munication. -
Hotel Martinique, 1260 Broadway, Aka 1260-1268 Broadway, 49-51 West 32Nd Street, and 54- 58 West 33Rd Street, Manhattan
Landmarks Preservation Commission May 5, 1998, Designation List 292 LP-1983 Hotel Martinique, 1260 Broadway, aka 1260-1268 Broadway, 49-51 West 32nd Street, and 54- 58 West 33rd Street, Manhattan. Built 1897-98, 1901-03, 1909-11; architect, Henry J. Hardenbergh. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 834, Lot 11. On February 10, 1998, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation of the Hotel Martinique (Item No. 2) . The hearing was duly advertised according to the provisions of law. There were two speakers in favor of designation and the representative of the owner stated that they were not opposed to designation. Summary The Hotel Martinique, a major work of the prominent designer Henry J. Hardenbergh, was constructed in three phases, in 1897-98, 1901-03, and 1909- 11. Developer William R. H. Martin, who had invested heavily in real estate in this area of the city, built and expanded the hotel in response to the growth of entertainment, shopping, and transportation activities in this busy midtown section. Martin hired the distinguished architect Henry J. Hardenbergh, who had acquired a reputation for his luxury hotel designs, including the original Waldorf and Astoria Hotels, as well as the Plaza. In his hotel and apartment house designs, Hardenbergh created picturesque compositions based on Beaux-Arts precedents, giving special care to interior planning and appointments. For the sixteen-story, French Renaissance inspired style Hotel Martinique, the architect capitalized on the openness made possible by Greeley Square, to show off the building's boldly-scaled mansard roof, with its towers, and ornate dormers. -
Appendix a Cultural Resources in the Area of Potential Effect
Appendix A Cultural Resources in the Area of Potential Effect Table A-1 Cultural Resources in the Area of Potential Effect Map S/NR- NYCL- Ref. # Name/Type Address S/NR NYCL eligible eligible 1 Hudson River Bulkhead Roughly between the Battery and X West 59th Street along the Hudson River waterfront 2 High Line Along 30th Street between Tenth and X Twelfth Avenues, and Twelfth Avenue between 30th and 34th Streets 3 W&J Sloane Warehouse and 306-310 Eleventh Avenue and 541- X Garage 561 West 29th Street 4 Charles P. Rodgers & Company 517-523 West 29th Street X Building 5 Farley Complex Block bounded by Eighth and Ninth X X Avenues and 31st and 33rd Streets 6 Loft Building 424 West 33rd Street X 7 St. Michael’s RC Church 414-424 West 34th Street and 409- X X Complex 429 West 33rd Street 8 Former Pinehill Crystal Water 500-504 West 36th Street X Company 9 William F. Sloan Memorial YMCA 360 West 34th Street X X 10 Former J.C. Penney Co. 331-343 West 33rd Street; 330 West X 34th Street 11 Loft Building 406-426 West 31st Street X 12 Tenement 463 West 35th Street X 13 Former Gledhill Wall Paper 541-545 West 34th Street; 546-548 X Company West 35th Street 14 West Side Jewish Center 347 West 34th Street X 15 Former Manhattan Opera House 311 West 34th Street X X 16 New Yorker Hotel 481-497 Eighth Avenue X X 17 Morgan General Mail Facility 341 Ninth Avenue X 18 Former French Hospital 326-330 West 30th Street X 19 Pennsylvania Building 225 West 34th Street X X 20 Hoover Building 501-507 Eighth Avenue X 21 Garment Center Historic District Roughly bounded -
PROPERTY Bay Shore, L
. m ies. 111 I Siiburbs for Tribune Readers LONG ISLAND LONG ISLAND ¦J BOROUGII OF BROOKLYN HOROl GII OF BROOKLYN* BOROIGH OF BROOKLYN BOROIOB OF MANHATTAN BOBOUGJ1 OF MANHATTAN BOROCGH OF MANHATTAN" ¦BKiRtsaraHai AT Bridge Street NEAB Penataquit Point, "Bunk" Rent Regulation Laws Custom House PROPERTY Bay Shore, L. I. Will Not Build Homes PossessionMay1st 290 Park Ave. Splendid opportunity for Do not place too much faith in the new rent regulation small concern to acquire a Rent.Increasing Rent laws. Even if found constitutional, will discourage business home at DO YOU WANT A SUMMER they permanent can bc insured against to-day, just as conserva- building. One year from to-day the rent situation will low cost. tive business men insurc against fire, Which'at the same time can be and other accident, be much worse. Full particulars on application emcrgencies. The payment of a sum occupied the entire year? equivalent to approximatcly eight years' renta!, and Demand Is purchasTS an apartment in this ultra-modern, We are building a number of houses as nearly perfect as Supply Lawrence, Blake sixteen-story co-operatively owned and mortgage modern architectural skill can design and careful constructlon pro- free apartment house, It is anticipated that the du.ce; every modern convenience of a city home, ready for early of Rents. income from the summer occupancy. Only Regulator apartments retained for leas- & JeweSl ing will more than pay the Penataquit Point, Bay Shore, with its frontagre on three sides and rents cannot be reduced while building remains 115 Rector 4080 opcrating expenses. -
Appendix E: Historic and Cultural Resources
Appendix E: Historic and Cultural Resources ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW Project number: EMPIRE STATE DEVELOPMENT CORP / SEQRA-M Project: EMPIRE STATION DEVELOPMENT Date Received: 7/7/2020 ARCHAEOLOGY REVIEW ONLY. Properties with Archaeological significance: LPC review of archaeological sensitivity models and historic maps indicates that there is potential for the recovery of remains from 19th Century "Jews Cemetery" on the project site. Accordingly, the Commission recommends that an archaeological documentary study be performed for the bbl 1008087501 to clarify these initial findings and provide the threshold for the next level of review, if such review is necessary (see CEQR Technical Manual 2014). Properties with no Archaeological significance: LPC review of archaeological sensitivity models and historic maps indicates that there is potential for the recovery of remains from 19th Century "Jews Cemetery" on the project site. Accordingly, the Commission recommends that an archaeological documentary study be performed for the bbl 1008087501 to clarify these initial findings and provide the threshold for the next level of review, if such review is necessary (see CEQR Technical Manual 2014). There are no further archeological concerns for the following bbl: 1008080040, 1008090082, 1008090080, 1008090073, 1008090069, 1008090017, 1008090016, 1008090008, 1008090005, 1008090004, 1008090003, 1008090001, 1007830048, 1007830034, 1007830070, 1007830001, 1008060076, 1008060069, 1008060009, 1008060006, 1008060003, 1008060001, 1007800076, 1007800075, 1007800074, 1007800073, 1007800071, 1007800070, 1007800060, 1007800045, Page 1 of 2 1007800036, 1007800026, 1007800019, 1007800017, 1007800015, 1007800013, 1007800010, 1007800009, 1007800007, 1007800006, 1007800005, 1007800002, 1007800001, 1007540063, 1007540051, 1007540044, 1007540041, 1007540040, 1007540039, 1007540038, 1007540037, 1007540036, 1007540035, 1007540034. 7/28/2020 SIGNATURE DATE Gina Santucci, Environmental Review Coordinator File Name: 35043_FSO_DNP_07142020.docx Page 2 of 2 ANDREW M. -
Caribbean Life in New York City: Sociocultural Dimensions
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 294 967 UD 026 195 AUTHOR Sutton, Constance R., Ed.; Chaney,Elsa M., Ed. TITLE Caribbean Life in New York City:Sociocultural Dimensions. INSTITUTION Center for Migration Studies, Inc.,Staten Island, N.Y. REPORT NO ISBN-0-913256-92-7 PUB DATE 87 NOTE 383p.; Photographs will not reproduceclearly. AVAILABLE FROMCenter for Migration Studies, 209 FlaggPlace, Staten Island, New York 10304-1148 ($12.95 paper--ISBN-0-913256-92-7; $17.50 hardcover--ISBN-0-913256-88-9; $3.00 shippingand handling). PUB TYPE Collected Works General (020) -- Reports Research /Technical (143)-- Information Analyses (070) EDRS PRICE MF01 Plus Postage. PC Not Availablefrom EDRS. DESCRIPTORS *Acculturation; Child Rearing; *CrossCultural Studies; 2ultural Background; CulturalDifferences; Cultural Pluralism; *Cultural Traits;Dominicans; Ethnicity; Foreign Nationals; Haitians;Hispanic Americans; *Migrants; Puerto Ricans;Racial Identification; Social ScienceResearch; *Social Support Groups; Urban Demography IDENTIFIERS *Caribbean Americans; *New York (New York);West Indians ABSTRACT This book comprises the followingpapers discussing Caribbean life in New York City: (1) TheContext of Caribbean Migration (rasa M. Chaney); (2) The Caribbeanizationof New York City and the Emergence of a Transnational Socio-CulturalSystem (Constance R. Sutton); (3) New York City and Its People:An Historical Perspective Up to World War II (David M. Reimers);(4) New York City and the New Caribbean Immigration: A ContextualStatement (Roy Simon Bryce-Laporte); (5) Where Caribbean Peoples Livein New York City (Dennis Conway and Ualthan Bigby); (6) Black ImmigrantWomen in "Brown Girl, Brownstones" (Paula Marshall); (7)Migration and West Indian Racial and Ethnic Consciousness (ConstanceR. Sutton and Susan Makiesky-Barrow); (8) West Indians in New York Cityand London: A Comparative Analysis (Nancy Foner); (9) West IndianChild Fostering: Its Role in Migrant Exchanges (Isa Maria Solo); (1n)Garifuna Settlement in New York: A New Frontier (NancieL. -
Rogers, Peet & Company Building
Landmarks Preservation Commission December 14, 2010 Designation List 436 LP-2432 ROGERS, PEET & COMPANY BUILDING, 258 Broadway (aka 258-259 Broadway, 1-11 Warren Street), Manhattan Built 1899-1900, John B. Snook & Sons, architects; 1909 addition, Townsend, Steinle & Haskell, architects. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 134, Lot 25 On June 22, 2010, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the Rogers, Peet & Company Building and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Public Hearing Item No. 11). The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Two people spoke in favor of designation, including a representative of the Historic Districts Council.1 Summary The Rogers, Peet & Company building is an eight-story neo- Renaissance style commercial and office building designed by the firm of John B. Snook & Sons. Constructed in 1899-1900 for clergyman Eugene A. Hoffman, the building was occupied by Rogers, Peet & Co., a well-known retailer of men’s and boys’ clothing, for a period of more than 70 years. The Rogers, Peet & Co. building is an early example of a steel skeleton-framed skyscraper influenced by the Chicago school of architects, and stands out among a group of important early skyscrapers located in the vicinity of City Hall, New York’s original skyscraper district, for its clear articulation of the structural grid and restrained use of stylized classical ornament. Constructed using the latest in fireproofing technologies, the building expresses its structural steel framing in the wide window bays on the east and north facades that are divided by strong vertical brick piers and recessed cast-iron or brick spandrels.