New York Amsterdam News — 1963-04-06
1963
7 pages
✓ Indexed
♦
2 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., April 6, 1963
-Cavanagh -V
£
/rf
(Continued from Page Ona) laulted with or sought the recom-
aixrimt mend*tlon of the toterdeDomtoa-
Chaptatoctos oi racial diacrtom-tion>1 Minl#ters Meeting Dr
nauon and prejudice’ to tta al- Asapansa-Johnson later told
leged failure to appoint Negros*
to chaplaincy position* to the
city’* Institution*.
reporter
Not Consulted
The ministers, led by the Rev.
Dr. C. Asapansa-Johnson, cited
as an example the appointment
in February of the Rev. Vernon
Nlchol*, a white minister of
Queens, to the Protestant chap
laincy vacancy at City Hospital
in East Elmhurst, Queens.
The chaplaincy, they told Dep
uty Mayor Cavanagh, was an ad
ditional Protestant representa
tion at the hospital, created by
the mayor several years ago to
broaden the Protestant racial
base at the hospital whose Negro
patient population Is to exc
of 50 per cent.
The extra Protestant chap
laincy was created. Dr. Asapan
sa-Johnson told Cavanagh. at the
request of the Interdenomina
tional Ministers.
The Rev. Nichols, a young
clergyman and Boston Univer
sity product, was named to the
position by the Queens Federa
tion of Churches, with the approv
al of the Protestant Committee
on City Chaplaincies, to fill the
vacancy created by the death
last Jan. 23 of the Rev.. Joseph
C. Hill, a Negro minister.
The ministers also urged Cav
anagh to create more chaplain
cies for Negroes at Bellevue and;
Sydenham Hospitals and the Wo-i
men’s House of Detention, neith-i
er of which reportedly has a
Negro populations.
States His Position
Cavanagh told The Amsterdam
News that he would submit the
latter to Mayor Wagner for his
consideration and would ask the
Rev. Dr. Dan Potter, executive
director of the Protestant Council
of New York aryl a member of
tbe Protestant Committee on City
Chaplaincies, to meet with him
and the Negro ministers next
week to air the bias charges.
“They were certainly vitally
and strongly interested—hr this
matter (of bias'," said Cavanagh
of the ministers. “1 think any
names submitted for positions in
city chaplaincies should always
include three names, and one of
those three names should be that
of a Negro clergyman "
In denying the bias allegation
once, Dr. Potter told The Amster
dam News that the Rev. Nichols
was “highly qualified” for the]
City Hospital position, and his
appointment was strictly on the,
basis of merit.
Neither organization ever con-
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LITTLE BROTHERS MEET
BIG BROTHER — Senator Ed
ward Kennedy, Democrat-Mas-
sachusetts, brother of the Pres
ident, and a member of the Big
Brothers of America, an organi
zation dedicated to aiding un
derprivileged children, meets
two little brothers, Stephen Ed
gar, 10 (left) and William
Banks, 9, in his office at the
Capitol today. He shows them a
model of Flying Cloud clipper
ship. The Big Brothers are hav
ing their annual banquet in
(UPI Photo)
Washington.
BRIGHTON
LIQUOR & WINE CORP.
136 LENOX AVENUE
At West 116th St. Suhway
EN 9-1444
I SELECTIVE BOARD — Here
I are three members of Mayor
Robert Wagner’s selection
1 board, who are charged with
I, the responsibility of nominating
j two persons to fill vacancies on
the New York City Board of
Education created by the ex
piration of the terms of Dr.
Clarence Senior and Brendan
Byrne. From left, they are, Dr.
Grayson Kirk, president of Co
lumbia University;, Dr. Har
ry D. Gideonse, acting chan
cellor of the City University of
New York, and Mrs, Jerome A.
Schack, president of the League
of Women Voters.
Another First For
Rose Morgan
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10.99
-Ross
TCont nued from Page One)
six months Rosa was granted
a leave of absence pending final
outcome in the case.
Mr Morgenthau said the de
feodants . named in the mdict-
, nient allegedly participated in
one of three schemes to cheat
the government. Some defend
ants filed false returns to show'
they had paid or were due re
funds. when they had actually
not done such, while others were
issued refund checks and dis-
jtributed the proceeds.
Another phase of the scheme,
Morgenthau said, was to de
stroy taxpayers delinquent ac
counts to bar future payments
due the government.
some of the defendants to the
case
Assistant US. Attorney T. F.
Gilroy. Daly, who has handled)
the government prosecution ofj
the case which has been devel
oped by the Internal Revenue’s
internal inspection service, said
possible maximum sentences In
the case if convicted range from
a possible 85 years for Boss to
.five years for McClary.
Among the officials whose tax
papers Ross is accused of fil
ing late to avoid an audit are
! those of Criminal Court Justice
Kenneth N. Phipps. Phipps con
firmed that Ross was his law
yer and added that he had "no
comment on the situation ’.
Morgenthau said the range of
the 55 counts involved in the
federal official!, lmperaonattng
federal officers, filing false doc
uments with the Internal Rev
enue, destruction of federal doc
uments. fraudulent evasion of
taxes, and misconduct on the
part of federal employee*.
Attorneys for most of the per
sons indicted have for several*
weeks charged the government
with conducting a "witchhunt,"
and acting on "hearsay" evid
ence. and it is expected that a
bitter battle will ensue In
the court to the coining weeks.
Ross, in announcing that he
had taken a leave of abeence,
said. “I am innocent of tbe
chargee and I feel certain I
v/ill be vindicated. These charges
have no connection with my du
ties in the Banking Department.’’
The U S. Attorney’s office said
that while the present estim
ates are that the government
was cheated out of $500,000 in]
the fraud scheme, indications
are that it may be “substan
tially higher”. Morgenthau said
the investigation was continuing
and other indictments may be
forthcoming
Among those who have been
previously arrested in the case
and are free on bail a^e John
jL. Lacey, 50, highest-ranking
j Negro in the New York internal
j Revenue office who w as super
visor of the Bronx office; Gro
ver Cooper, 33. former IRS em
ployee, of Englewood, N.J.;!
Ethel Ivy Neeley, 37, also a
former IRS worker, of 2225 Mad
ison Ave. Mrs. Laurel M. Bay ]
lev, 43, of 2200 Madison Ave.; ]
and -Mrs. Katharine Wood, 48,
also of Englewood, N.J.
Among the prominent nightlife
figures who have been indicted
are Percy Branker, 62, owmer
of Branker’s Cocktail Lounge,
92 St. Nicholas Place; David
Lopez, 46, wealthy owner of a
chain of hotels and motels on
Long Island and also a con
struction company owner;
Charles J. Moore, 52, well-know n
owner of Harlem’s Dawn En
terprises; Irving Tendrick, 43,
owner of the Brown Bomber,
710 St. Nicholas Ave., and other
nightspots; and Herman Mc-
jTootle, 61, of Rockville Centre.
L.I., considered a wealthy Long
Island sportsman.
-Allen
(Continued from Page Oi>e)
He will assume full time duties
on September 1.
Under Fire
Samuel Dash, executive director
of the Philadelphia social re
habilitation agency, said Allen's
job will be to stimulate and or
ganize local participation and act
as liaison between the project
planners and directors. The pro
gram has been under fire from
Philadelphia NAACP ’euuers be
cause there was not a Negro in
a top post.
Allen, a graduate of Wilber
force, who also holds degrees from
Yale and Columbia universities,
has organized and served as ex-
cutive director of Urban Leagues
in several cities, and is former
president of the National As
sociation of Intergroup Relations
Officials.
He is married to the former
Elizabeth Banks and the father
of three children, residing with
his family at 205-07 104th Ave.,
Hollis, Queens.
The 12th defendant Indicted,;
Frank McClary, Jr., 33, of 458
W. 151st St., an odd jobs work
er, is accused of assisting Grover!
Cooper in destroying records of I
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A colorful kitchen wall phono
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’ A Mttle Princess Phone helps save
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five delightful colors.
§ A phone In the family room adds
o convenience to family activities.
Put a phone in any room where the fam
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Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com
--- PAGE BREAK ---
Harlem Parents Win Open Enrollment
S • N. ¥. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., April 6, 1963
ON SALE
NOW
Kings
Soeiul
KINGS SOCIAL MAGAZINE
ON ALL NEWSSTANDS
Ballet Set
The City Center of Music &
Drama has accepted an invita
tion from Lincoln Center for the
Performing Arts for the New
Y( rk City Ballet to open The
New York State Theater on April
23, 1964 as part of the Worfd’s
Fair, and to perform there at
popular prices for twenty weeks
each year during 1964 and 1965.
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WHOLESALE and RETAIL
Esther Beauty Aids Co.
SO West 125th St.
New York 27, New York
Brooklyn: 1327 Folton Street
LE 4-0437
Near Nostrnnd Ave.
Dudley
Aided
Parents of students attending
Harlem’s Junior High School 43
woo a signal victory Monday
when they were told that their
children would be permitted to
attend three high schools in the
Bronx.
Headed by Mrs. Janet Karson,
Executive Board member of the
school’s PTA, parents, teachers,
and community leaders appealed
to the Board not to force the
children In schools they feel are
overcrowded.
JHS 43 s graduating class has
been zoned out of George Wash
ington High School. Schools given
as alternatives were rejected by
parents, who said the schools
are overcrowded and have a high
Monday, Mrs. Karson was of
ficially informed by the Board that
the graduating youths may enroll
in three Bronx schools.
Twenty-five will attend De Witt
Clinton High, 44 are going to
Waltoo High and 150 are attend
ing Roosevelt.
Mrs.x Karson labelled the
Bocfrd s move as “excellent. The
Board of Education did the best
for our children.”
In pressing for the children’s
admission to the three Bronx high
schools, Mrs. Karson and dele
gations of parents were aided by
Congressman William F. Ryan
and Borough President Ed Dud
ley.
A FRIEND — Arnold Forster,
General Counsel of the Anti-
Defamation League of B’nai
B’rith, and a “friend of the
court” participant in the vic
torious court battle that ended
the racial bias controversy in
New Rochelle schools, was
sworn in Tuesday as a mem
ber of the New Rochelle Board
of Education by Mayor Stan
ley Church.........
History Quiz
1. What was the name of the
Fort held by Negroes in 1815?
2. Who was the first president
of Liberia?
3. Who was W. J. Purvis?
4.. Thousands of Negro civil
service cluhs were reduced to a
few hundred during what admin
istrations?
Answers
1. Ft. Mins on the Appalachi-
cola River was held by 1000
Negroes from Georgia in 1815
Their forces were strengthened
by contingents of Creek Indians.
2. Joseph Jenkins Roberts serv
ed from 1848 to 1855. He came
from Virginia.
3. W. B. Purvis acquired a
fortune from his inventions of
machinery for making paper
bags. Most of the rights to these
inventions were sold to the
Union Paper Bag Company of
New" York by the Philadelphia
inventor.
4. During the Taft, Harding,
Coolidge and Hoover adminis
trations.
Maple sirup is one of our old
est agricultural commodities, and
is one of the few crops produced
osly In America.
WINNERS — Group worker
Connie Bunn (left) presents tro
phies to winners of a talent
show held at James Weldon
Johnson Community Center,
2205 First Avenue, NYC. Win
ners (left to right) are Rita
Rodman, second place tap dan
cer, Rosalind West, fourth
place dancer, Gwendolyn Ter
ry, first place dancer and the
Hipsters, Mary Hedgeman, Es
ther Brazier and Phyllis Hedge-
man, who took third place for
a comedy routine.
(Photo by McAdams)
><•:?*' s < . • •• > ’•>: - ? - W 4S5SS8S- ■
«
sr-Tc.*.' i
JOHN HAGGENS &
AL GOODMAN
Lemuel Orr 2nd Class Scout of
Troop 160, Abyssinian Baptist
Church appeared before a board
of review to take his 1st class
test. It is certain Orr passed the
test because of his own efforts
and the able guidance of George
Lamar his Scoutmaster.
It is believed by many Scout-
ers that we could have more of
our Scouts advance if the idea of
concentration would be put
across, it takes will power and
self control. Perhaps if the
leaders would suggest to their
Scouts how to map out their
plans to arcompliAh a certain
amount of work on requirements
in a given length of time. Set the
time limit and stick to it.
Let us look at some of the re
quirements for 1st class. Perhaps
they may aid some Scout. To be
come First Class, a Scout must
prove 1. Scout Spirit, 2. vScout
Participation, 3. Scoutcraft.
Scout spirit and 6cout parti
cipation should be so ingrained
in a boy as a Tenderfoot and
should be second nature. Scout
spirit is living the Scout law,
oath, motto and slogan. Scout
participation Is the Troop and
patrol activity, taking care of
self and learning habits of thrift.
Scout craft is the field he
should set in his mind to ac
complish in a definite time. l.|
Prepare for camping by knowing
Health protection and First Aid.
Have the clothing and equipment
for the season and weather. 2.
Learn mapping knowing direc
tions and measuring distances. 3.
Live in camp (The fun of it all)
camp making and woodlore. 4.
Cooking, cookery, and knowing
edible wild plants. 5. Learn to
Swim. 6. Learn Signaling. 7.
Go camping?
As one can see first class is
really becoming an outdoorsman,
and in becoming an outdoorsman
a boy has learned to live with
and become a part of law® that
could sustain him through cut
life.
Special
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Ends June 8
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ENROLL NOW
Business School
139 W. 125th St. UN 4-3170
Send S2.M for Claaa Reaervatlon
ARTHRITIS
RHEUMATISM
PAINS
k,_ ...
UNCONQUERED - Mrs. Jos
ephine Jones, center, fearless
Harlem school teacher who
charged the Board of Examin
ers discriminates against Neg-
roes when greding their exams
clpal Jobs, Is flanked by, lei.1,
Mra. Raphael Hendrix, NAACP
Education Committee chair
man and Mrs. Dorothy Jones,
education consultant for the
Commission on Human Rights
at Manhattan Branch NAACP
headquarters, 239 W. 125th St.
Mrs. Jones is shown expressing
her gratitude for the backing of
the Branch membership.
(Gilbert Photo)
whenever moderate Arthritis, Rheuma
ATLANTA, Ga. — Emory Un
tism or Muscular Pains occur you
should try DOLCIN tablets. Nothing
iversity, an all-white private
else in the world is faster, safer, better
school this week admitted two
for such pains than DOLCIN. Get
Negro women to its School of
DOLCIN* tablets at the drug store to
Nursing. The two women are
day! Give them a fair and square trial!
___ ____ the first full-time Negro students
Take them all! The directions tell you
how. You" must* get fast relief or'setlever admitted to the Methodist
your money back.
gieeo tw-*o«w I Church supported school.
GIRL SCOUT
■TO
MEAD THESE FOUR POINTS, THEN ASK YOURSELPl
DO I NEED
A FAMILY SECURITY
CHECK-UP?
What It is and what it does for you
NOTICE
AMBITIOUS WOMEN
IS RECESSION
With the help of your Metropolitan man—
1. You check the facta: Your Social Security, your
home, your Ufa insurance, your pension plan, your
savings and other assets. You may be surprised to
learn how much you’re worth.
2. You weigh your responsibilities: Mortgage or
rent payments, education, retirement, accident and
sickness emergencies; how much it would cost your
family to live without you.
3. You loam where you stand. You determine your
weak and strong points, whether the provisions you
have made for your family will do what you intend.
4. You plan for tho future. Based on these facts, you
decide what action, if any, may be needed to give you
a family security plan, tailor-made to your own needs
—one which makes good sense for you.
Whatever your income, a regular review of your
financial health is as important as your physical
check-up. Learn how easy and inexpensive it is tof
insure the future. Call or write today. There’s no
obligation—except to those you love.
w,
MARTIN GOLD
Metropolitan Representative
2138 FLATBUSH AVENUE, BKLYN., N. Y.
Office: DE 8-3092 Re>. DE 2-6822
CHp Coupon for farther Information
mm M
«■» w» • w* ■■■ “*
“
RIGHT AROUND THE CORNER?
LET'S FACE FACTS
’ J
• You may have a good job now but what
about later on?
• No matter who you are, you never know
when you may be "let out" of a good
job. Isn't that true?
• Now is the time to arouse your ambition
and prepare for eventualities.
• Why waste your time. While you can af
ford it, why not learn a dignified voca
tion in a depression-proof business. Be
your own boss.
• As long as there are women in the world
there will always be beauticians—and
they make good money, too.
• Surely you can afford to make a small
down payment—then pay as you learn.
Attend day or evening class.
— REGISTER NOW —
APEX
BEAUTY SCHOOL
The School With A High Prestige
135th St. & 7th Ave. AU 3-9702
|
39th SUCCESSFUL YEAR
Send mo FREE catalogue N.Y.A. and Other Information
Noma_____________________________________________ .____
Address __ _______ __________________ ______ ____________
Metropolitan Life Inouronco Company, Now York 107N. VJ
City______________ ____________!----------------- State____
By LILLIAN JAY
Mrs. Marvin B. Eckford, Com
missioner Bethune District, Girl
Scout Council of Greater New
York, at the monthly meeting of
the Girl Scout Leaders Club, stres
sed the need for leaders at the
four age levels. The new pro
gram becomes effective, In Sep
tember. Mary Harwell Is presi
dent of the club.
Miss Harwell made an Impas
sioned plea for more girls and
adults to give time to help train
girls for Scouting. Leadership
training information can be ob
tained by phoning MU 4-0873.
Camping
The president announced that
classes for camp licenses are now
closed. No Brownie Leader may
take camp training sinceBrownies
cannot go camping. All girls who
wish to go camping this year
must attend High Rock. Mrs. Mc
Lane. neighborhood chairman,
will furnish more complete infor
mation.
Maria Cavalcanti of Brazil, was
a special guest of Leaders Club.
During the meeting. Miss Caval
canti described the Girl Scout uni
form of Scoots in her country
and showed pins awa’ded Scouts
and Brownies in Brazil.
itroop committee and how beat
its members can serve the girts
in the troop through working with
the troop leaders. Leaders are
also encouraged to attend the
workshop, which is the first of
ita kind for Hamilton Grange Dis
trict.
Troop Welfare
Troop Committee members
make up the largest proportion
of adults who are registered in
Girl Scouting. Each Girl Scout
troop has from three to five troop
committee members who are in-)
terested in the welfare of the
troop. These committee members
may be parents, neighbors, or
comatiunlty leaders.
j Two workshops will be given
so that troop committee mem
bers and leaders may make a
choice. Either Tuesday, April 16
or 23, from 7:45 p.m. to 10:00*
p.m., at the YWCA on 125th
street.
Senior Girl Scouts were respon
sible for the flage ceremony
which opened the graduate cere
mony for the members of the
Domestic Peace Corps working
in Harlem. The ceremony was
held at PS. 100 on Sunday,
March 30.
New Leaders are. Miss Ichel-j Plan Multiple
berger Reiss, 3-266, Miss Marie)
a a. C_:.
Ellis, PS 139, and Mildred Weber, Pav,l,on Fa,r
Hood Memorial Church, who di
rects girls from seven to ten
yean of age.
Memberd of the troop commit
tee’s of the thirty-eight Girl Scout
troops in Hamilton Grange will
be receiving notice of a ■workshop
to discuss the function of the
Honduras, Guatemala, Nicar
agua, Costa Rica and El Salv-
dor, the Central-american Com
mon Maret Republics, bmke
ground" last Thursday for a mul
tiple pavilion at the New York
1964-65 World's Fair, Flushing
Meadow Park, N. Y.
Woman Tortured
by Agonizing ITCH
•7 wewrty iuMtt death
7'Ayeort.Tbmlfetrada
»n» mender creme. Netr
rmheppy," wrilet Mn.
P.ketnejtfLA. Calif.
Hm'i Mmed i*l4*f two
lorrure* of vaginal itch,
acetal Itch, chafing. raaH
and inn with an amaung era
terawtaraUed LZNACANFThlafawaeting
■at Jic*M if rrentekllta harmful barteria (term*
wh,l« m tooth** raw, irritated and inflamed
“---- n arratrhing—an anerda heating.
rl G«a LANACANE at drug*,at*.
Participating in the “earth-
turning” ceremony were Robert
Moses, Fair president; former
Governor Charles Polettl, Fair
vice president in charge of In-
ternstional Affairs and Exhibits,
and Dr. Pedro Abelardo Delgado.
Secretary General of the Perm-
ament Secretariat of the General
Treaty of Centralameriean Keo-,
nomic Integration.
Form the right habit. Read the
Amsterdam News every week.
Out every Thursday.
Learn to be a Court Reporter, a Dictaphone Typkrt, a
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Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com
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11 • N. V. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., April 6, 1963
NSW YORK
Amsterdam Netos
«•••
C. B. POWELL
President ic Editor
P. M- H. SnvonN, Secy-Treas; - J. L. Hicks, Executive Editor
W. E. Bm(. Comptraltor; E. A. Walt AdvartlMng Director. E U Jarkma,
ClrrulaUoa Oiroctor: J. B. Waiter. CKp Editor, J. W Wada, Claaatflad Advar
D. Sheppard. Brooklyn Manat er.
Published weekly by the Powell-Savory Corporation at 2340
Eighth Ave., N. Y. Telephone ACademy 2-7800. Brooklyn
office, 1251 Bedford Avenue. Telephone ULster 7-2500.
Mall aubarrtpUoa rataa: 1 yaar *7,W — • mot . MM
Destination Moon!
A few months ago when America’s first astro
naut soared into orbit and everyone in the nation was
firmly convinced that he was at last in orbit, the
hard bitten editors of this newspaper did not try to
hide their emotion as they joined with other
Americans in an outburst of patriotic fervor over
the fact that at last “we did it too.”
And that same'Burst of pride was felt in our
editorial offices again this week with the announce
ment that 29 year old Negro Air Force Captain
Edward J. Dwight has been named as one of our
astronauts with the moon as a possible destination.
Its a long way to the moon. And its going to take
the efforts of ALL Americans to get us there. Good
luck Captain Dwight!
Not The Answer
The superintendent of schools for the City of
New York has submitted an annual budget calling
for $647,937,275 for the operation of our schools which
is an increase of more than 83 million dollars over
what the schools cost last year.
But from the look of things at Albany the super
intendent not only is not going to get the increase he
is asking for—he might not get as much money this
year as he did last year.
Under ordinary circumstances this threat of a
cut in funds to our school system would be a signal
to the city’s newspapers, including this one, to rally
around the schools.
But neither this newspaper, nor any other one
we have noted thus far, have been inclined to call
for a rally around our schools. For certainly this
newspaper, and, apparently many others, have
serious doubts as to whether or not the people got
full dollar value for the 647 million dollars spent on
our schools last year and whether or not an increase
of 83 million dollars this year would bring us any
nearer to the type of educational institutions we are
seeking.
Our city schools are in bad shape — and that’s
putting it mildly.
When we look at the millions we have spent on
them and note that they are growing steadily worse
instead of getting better, vfe find’ ourselves asking
ourselves:
Is more money the answer?
Max Rubin, the able head of the City’s Board of
Education, is aggressively pushing for the- extra
83 million dollars. Rubin is a good administrator and
he is doing exactly what we would expect a good
administrator to do.
But in recent weeks, two private, one state and
now a Federal agency have either called for, or
decided to conduct a probe of our schools to deter
mine if persistent charges of racial bias against
Negro teachers are true. -
And, next month, in the Board of Higher Educa
tion, where we spend another 70 million dollars each
year, State Commissioner of Human Rights
chairman, George Fowler, has already scheduled a
hearing on charges of religious bias against
Catholics.
Unfortunately, we consider ourselves sophisti
cated enough in our knowledge of our schools to state
flatly that we believe any fair probe of such charges
will show that they are true.
We know there is bias against Negroes in our
elementary schools and we believe that Catholics
will be able to prove their charges of bias against
members of their faith in institutions of higher
learning.
Perhaps we do need more money to operate our
schools. Increased costs are the order of our day.
*• But we believe that we speak for the oppressed
minorities when we say to Board of Education Direc
tor Max Rubin, Superintendent of Schools Bernard
Donovan, Mayor Wagner, Governor Rockefeller and
the State legislature that we don’t favor spending
one penny of the taxpayers money to subsidize racial
and religious bias in New York state.
We have enough of that in Mississippi.
What New York City needs to do is to knock a
few heads together at 110 Livingston Street and make
some of our highly paid educators there give the city
a fair day’s work for a fair day’s pay.
Dog Days
We didn’t think it was quite possible after the
Emmett Till, Mack Parker and Meredith cases, but
the state of Mississippi is reaching for a new low
in man’s inhumanity to man by turning ferocious
dogs on unarmed Negro citizens whose only offense
is that they are trying to register to vote.
And of course, as might have been expected,
Mississippi’s Governor Ross Barnett is backing the
city of Greenwood to the hilt in its use of dogs to
bar these Americans from exercising one of the
most priceless freedoms of their American heritage
—the right to vote.
It all adds up to the fact that once again we are
forced to call upon the Federal government to im
mediately take the next step beyond persuasion—
to take whatever steps are necessary to qnd this
insult to the law of our land and this degradation of
a segment of its law abiding citizens.
Faster Than The Crow Files!
Taxation
Delinquent Taxes
By R. J. MEADDOUGH
Believe it or not, the government’s expressed
policy is to get only that amount of tax money due
the government; no more, and certainly no less.
To achieve these goals, the Internal Revenue Serv
ice has developed an elaborate administration
which, to the public, is known as “red tape.”
>■ There are a number of reasons for
owing taxes: too little tax withheld;
additional income; disallowed deduc
tions; additional assessments; etc.
Keep in mind that none of these
reasons make you a criminal and you
cannot go to jail for owing taxes.
Regardless of the reason for owing
taxes, this is the way the system
works:
Mraddough 1. The taxpayer receives an IBM
card which shows the amount of tax due the gov
ernment.
2. After a short period of time, another form
is sent—form 17a—which reminds the taxpayer of
taxes due.
3. Approximately one month later, a “white
notice” is sent, again calling attention to taxes due.
This notice is labeled TY-69, part of a packet call
ed a TDA-Tax Delinquent Account — and indicates
that the taxpayer has now slipped into delinquency
statu*. From this moment on the taxpayer is al
ways wrong, and this policy can be used to justify
any abuse done in behalf of tax collection.
4. You may receive a number of letters at this
point, the most common being an L-24 letter ask
ing you please to pay your taxes. These are the
letters of the Office Collection Force (OCF), which
handles the easy cases where the taxpayer is easily
accessible. OCF may send you an L-31 letter—
Final Notice Before Seizure — before taking fairly
routine collection action.
5. If OCF is unable to collect the tax, the case
is sent to a Revenue Officer for final solution.
Technically, a Revenue Officer should visit your
office or home within thirty days from the day he *
receives your case, and his card in your mailbox is
evidence of that visit. If you fail to contact him,
he can take any action he feels necessary to collect
your taxes.
Rich and well-to-do people have legal loopholes
such as expense accounts, capital gains, and split
income to aid them, but poor people must depend
on administration to aid them when they run afoul
of the tax laws. Except in rare instances, social
security, welfare, and railroad retirement payments
will not be taken or accepted. Tax debts may be
written off if the taxpayer is in poor financial con
dition, with the proviso that he will pay the tax
in the event that his situation improves, or he has
a refund in a future year. A part-payment agree
ment, spreading payments over a number of
months, is not a right of the taxpayer, but it is a
service that IRS extends when conditions warrant.
The determining factor is a financial statement,
to analyze your
usually form 433C, which
ability to pay. If you can pay your taxes within
thirty days from the time you are contacted, you
need not fill out the financial statement.
This is the extensive mechanism that the gov
ernment has developed to help people in tax
trouble, but the tax laws are still unequal, unfair
and chaotic. The-only way the public will ever re
ceive relief is to fight for it. Groups that receive
special consideration under the present tax struc
ture are quite willing to lobby for their continu
ance. Your congressman, who enacted these
ridiculous laws, is the only one who can change
them. Your congressman, being human, is most
interested in the groups which threaten his . politi
cal existence. Do so.
Along This Way
Terror In Mississippi
With guns, clubs, police dogs and
arson, Mississippi white people
are forcing their peculiar way of
life upon Negro citizens who are
trying to exercise the rights which
the Constitution, the courts and
the Congress all say
are theirs.
Last week in
Greenwood, Missis
sippi, a Negro home
was blasted with a
shotgun, but no
member of the fami
ly was hurt. Three
weeks ago a Negro
voter registration
worker was shot by white men who
drew alongside his car.
WILKINS
Last week the offices of the voter
registration workers were burned
out. Three weeks ago a building
next door to the registration office
was burned. Somewhere in be
tween, The workers were evicted
by their Negro landlady who trem
bled in fear for her life and her
property after warnings from
Greenwood whites. Now their new
quarters are burned out.
Snarling police dogs, clubs and
guns were used by police upon a
sizable group that sought to reg
ister to vote immediately after the
By ROY WILKINS
shotgun attack on the Dewey
Green home. Eleven persons were
arrested and jailed, including at
least two leaders of the Student
Non-Violent Coordinating Commit
tee. Police threiv a literal armed
blockade around the courthouse to
prevent anyone from registering to
vote.
The Federal government ought
to step into the Greenwood mess
and act under the authority grant
ed to it by the Civil Rights Act of
1957.
Greenwood officials can be en
joined from interfering with per-
, sons who seek to register tc vote.
Those who persist in blocking Ne
gro applicants can be arrested
and tried in Federal courts.
By the time this is in print per
haps some action will have been
taken by the Federal government
to free the jailed registration
workers.
They are refusing to come out
on bail, contending that Green
wood white officials have directly
violated the 1960 law and that the
Federal government thus has the
obligation to free the workers. We
agree.
Headquarters
Greenwood is the headquarters
of the Mississippi White Citizens
Councils. It is, in effect, the capi
tal of what remains of the Con
federacy. There could be no better
place for a showdown on Negro
constitutional rights and upon the
authority of the Federal govern
ment than this Home of the Haters.
There could be no better time than
the centennial year of the Eman
cipation Proclamation. For one
hundred years Mississippi has
been telling the Federal govern
ment and the Negro to go to hell.
It’s about time a stand was taken.
The leading recommendation of
the Mississippi Advisory Commit
tee to the U.S. Civil Rights Com
mission says, . . if these rights
... are denied by the State to a
segment of its citizenry, these
citizens have no choice but to turn
to the Federal government for
protection/’
If the Kennedy administration
cannot hear the clunk of clubs
against heads, the blasts of shot
guns and the growl of police dogs,
can it not hear the earnest words
of white Mississippians them
selves? Elsewhere in their report
they say simply: “We find that
terror hangs over the Negro in
Mississippi. . . and terrorism has
no proper place in the American
form of government.”
Pulse Of New York’s Public
The A mst erdam News welcomes letters on either side of any subject. It Is preferred that letters not exceed 250 words-and
thea assist be signed. Names will be withheld on request. No letters can be returned. AU must tx addressed to the Sditor.
What's The Point?
Sir: I realize that a newspaper
is a business. Nevertheless, there
should be certain ethical and
Journalistic principles that come
before selling newspapers.
I am referring to your head
line of March 9, to the effect
that Jewish people control 53 per
cent of top city jobs Even If this
statistic were accurate, which
your article blatantly failed to
substantiate, what Is your point?
Don’t you know how difficult it
still Is for qualified Jewish per
sonnel to be selected for certain
municipal positions?
Your article was even more
ironically incongruous since it
appeared on the> same page as
an editorial professing brother
hood, and an article about a
Jewish man (here no mention of
his religion) bequeathing a $250,-
000 to his Negro employee.
I thought your newspaper was
above*this kind of yellow Jour
nalism. I hope this isolated ins
tance is not Indicative of the
caliber of the paper.
Disillusioned Reader
Youth Program
Sir: The Board of Directors
of the Northsid* Center for Child
Development wishes to affirm
your very positive position of
support of the ACT and HARYOU
programs of action and planning
for youth in Harlem. Those of
us who are concerned with the
emotionally disturbed children In
thia community are acutely sen
sitive to the need for a massive
attack on the problem of help
ing the youth of our community.
Our experience with disturbed
children ha# helped us to realize
that in spite of many depriva
tions most of these children and
their families possess many
strengths. With help they can
make a contribution to thia com
munity.
We are therefore In full agree
ment with your publisher's state
ment of March 9 and comiRtted
to the ACT and HARYOU efforts.
These efforts must succeed.
Howard Sloan
President
Northside Center
For Child Development
31 West 110th Street
N. Y
Likes & Dislikes
Sir: This is a letter with brick
bats and flowers. The flowers
are for Mr. Hicks, who writes
a vigorous, forthright column.
Sometimes he's a bit spectacular
but always interesting. He's a
man of his times, who knows
what the score is.
You also have a column called
White on White” (whatever that
means) by Miss Gertrude Wil
son I’m an omnivorous reader
and I scan her comer too. I
get the impression that she’s try
ing to be a newspaperwoman, but
I would say that she has a long
way to go.
Her column in last week's edi
tion, •'Guest of the Muslims"
had a strange. Alice in Wonder
land quality about it. The whole
piece had the ring of an eighth
grade school girl’s composition
showing either a terribly naive
disposition, «*r Just plain stupid
ity.
She says "But U 4 wese black
I would want to be a Muslim
because I could not believe in a
white God.” I never knew God
had any color. I was brought
up to look upon God as the Cre
ator of the universe, the Su
preme Being who Is all good,
all knowing, and all merciful. He
is pure spirit, and as such, I
was unaware that he had any
color.
A good writer does a little re
search before he expounds a
topic for the public. I think that
if Mias Wilson had taken the
trouble to read C. Eric Lin
coln’s “The Black Muslims In
America'' she might have writ
ten a more pertinent piece. She
might have discovered that the
Muslims do not believe in after
life.
To quote author Lincoln, ‘'Fi
nally, the Movement la a reli
gion with no distinct God, no
afterlife and no heaven. It Is a
religion of the here and now.
In this, of course, it somewhat
resembles Buddhism, but where
as Buddhism is motivated by
love, the Black Muslim Move
ment is powered and energized
by hate."
Malcolm X is a most facile
speaker, an expert pleader for
his cause, and God knows the
white man has given him plenty
of ammunition, but his platform
is still based on hate, and I feel
certain that any religion or
philosophy that teaches love will
eventually triumph over hatred.
William T. Shields
New York. N. Y.
Appreciation
view, a necessary part of teacher
as will as supervisory examina
tions. and because very few ap
peals are ever granted in respect
to the interview, perhaps the tape
recording, or the recording of
the proceedings by a stenograph*
er would somewhat mitigate this
situation.
Also, it is hoped that you will
be very alert to the placement of
new supervisors who are Negro
in all Negro or Puerto Rican
areas. All children need worthy
teachers. All schools need capa
ble supervisors. Therefore, the
placement of teachers and super
visors according to their ethnic
background is not necessarily
beneficial to the pupils or to the
schools involved.
In addition, in an era when
integration Is in the foreground,
this kind of placement is hardly
in keeping with the progress which
is being sought or made in re
gard to integration.
You are to be highly commend
ed for your interest and support.
Unsigned, but not by choice
Sir: I would like to thank you
on behalf of the patients of the
hospital for the complimentary
copies of the New York Amster
dam News which you have been Bad Effect
sending to our library through
the courtesy of one of our patients.
This interesting weekly news
paper has a special appeal for
many of our readers from the
New York area, particularly dur
ing the current "news black out”.
Please rest assured that your
generous contribution will be
greatly appreciated.
Sir: I cannot believe that the
Amsterdam News, dedicated as
it is to the elmlnation of racial
and religious prejudice, would
willfully publish an article or de
vise a headline calculated to en
gender or arouse such preju
dice. Yet this is clearly the ef
fect of your March 9 front page
story on the religious distribution
of so-called "top Jobs” in the New
York City government.
Alfred M. Stanley, MD.
Rockland State Hospital
Orangeburg, N.Y.
Board Examiners
Sir: Your article In regard to
charges against the Board of
Examiners was read with much
interest and agreement. While
reflecting upon the article, two
other points came to mind.
Because the candidate in any
Board of Education examination
who happens to be a Negro can
become a target of subtle or even
overt prejudice during an Inter
The headline "Secret Study
Says Jews Control City's Top
Jobs” is particularly at fault.
Even If the body of the article
sustained it (which It does not)
the Implications it suggests are
manifestly autl-semitic.
An examination of the cited fig
ures themselves shovis that the
apparent predominance of Jaws
ip these positions results entire
ly from their proportion In the
city’s educational system. The
headline could equally well (and
equally reprehensibly) have
made the same points about Ro
man Catholics, who predominate
in city and borough administra
tive positions and In the Judi
ciary.
The only point to any discus
sion in these terms Is, obvious
ly, as a basis for charges of
religious or ethnic favoritism.
No such charge seems to have
been made, but publishing the
information with no attempt at
explanation cannot help having
the effect of a charge.
In much the same way. we
repeatedly protest the puonca
tion of statistics indicating that
Negroes commit much more than
their proportionate “share” o f
crimes. Unless the statlatics are
interpreted with intelligence and
understanding, they do a disser
vice to the cause of freedom by
Implying some special quality of
criminality in the Negro papula
tion.
It seems to me that a forth
right clarification of the Amster
dam News position in this mat
ter. prominently displayed, is
very much in order. I believe
that you, as a falrminded per
son, would want to be sure that
the misunderstanding is not al
lowed to persist.
Roy Wllkina
Executive Secretary
NAACP
Wonderful
Sir: I am taking the liberty
of writing you, and also to utter
freely accordingly to conscience,
the great happiness I received In
reading your wonderful article,
“A Visit to God," in March 23
issue of the Amsterdam News
Knowing the faith of a nation
has often depended on the good
or bad digestion of its people,
as well as its leaders, also not
being as educated as toell i
I should like to be, or feel it
necessary to be, I am really not
prepared to express how deeply
it touched me
For as you stated "God knows
that these facts are true. So does
the God of the Board of Edu
cation. But the Board of Educa
tion's God doesn’t want you to
know." Oh, you are so very true,
and like you I am sick of it
also.
With you, I too, shall speak
with our God about the matter,
also I too. will go or write to City
Hall, and ask Mayor Wagner to
do something about the Board
of Education’s God. And although
our God’s mill grinds slowly
but surely, there is no virtue so
truly great and Godlike as Jus
tice.
In closing, I wish you all the
luck and Joy.
Doris Robinson.
N. Y. C.
Available
Sir: I have read your article In
the Amsterdam News in refer
ence to the manpower utiliza
tion council of New York seeking
the unemployed and skilled peo
ple in New York and I feel that
this is IrJeed very needful.
I am Interested In finding
something In the field of social
work on a part time basis. I
would also accept work in any
other field of like nature.
I have a background of social
work training and teaching ex
perience.
I am employed and living at
the present time In Long Island,
hut shall be available on the
first of April.
If you feel that you can help
me I shall appreciate hearing
from you.
Oppie L. Emerson
Jamaica, N.Y.
, Additional Letters To
Editor On Pages 24 and 25
Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com
--- PAGE BREAK ---
28 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., April 6, 1963
*
Long Islanders
Receive Awards
The Greater Long Island Cos
metologists held their fourth an
nual dance and atyle show at
the Linden Manor, in St. Albans,
last Saturday night. The spec
tacular affair was highlighted
by the presenting of service
trophic* to deserving members
of the Queens community.
Beautiful Dee Simmons, “Miss
Beaux Arts of 1963,” presented
the trophies, donated by the
Schaefer Brewing Co., to Mrs.
Catherine Basie, wife of the
famous musician, Mr. Paul Gib
son, Past President of the Long
Island Chapter of the NAACP,
and Lou LuTour, educator-dram
atist for their unselfish volunteer
service among youth and organ
izations.
She alt>o crowned Miss Eler-
wenc Rurton of Washington,
D C., as the 1963 Queen of the
(Organization. Mrs. Florence El-
lerbee, President of the Cosmet
ologists, assisted with the pres
entations and made the thanking!
speech. Mr. Joseph W. Christian]
represented the Schaefer Co. |
Relief Gyps
Sentenced
CITED FOR SERVICE — Cap
tain E. G. Campbell, chief of
staff to the commander of the
Atlantic area Military Sea
Transportation Service. Brook
lyn, bestows awards for 30
years of commendable service,
upon Frank Buckley of 115-48
169th St.. Jamaica. Mr. Buck-
ley. now a statistical cargo
auditor with the former New
clerk, had previously been an
York Port of Embarkation. He
was a Master Sergeant in
the U. S. Army from 1941
through 1945 and prior to 1941
served with the 369th Infantry
Regt. before it was federalized.
Girl Dies In Her Arms;
Mother Blames Kings Co.
“Doctor, please, please, I feeliferson High School. Anna’s fun
like I am dying. I can’t catch eral was held Thursday even
ing at Emanuel Soul-Saving Sta
my breath."
tion, 2130 Dean St.
Those, said the mother, were
the . last words of Anna Mae
Washington. 16. Just before she
expired In her arms Sunday,
March 24. at Kings County
She was buried Friday after
noon, March 29, at Evergreen
Cemetery. There mourning her
^Itoto^ W^X^wert
pital.
"It la ironic that she died
many friends and these other
aIKt three brothers:
at Kings County , said Mrs. Ches- Margaret Frances, Cheryl,
Roxanna, Kathleen. An-
•ie Washington. ‘ since she was
born in the same hospital. Her
(MrJ Artis), Davtg> Ro_
grief was more poignant because
she said, they waited fourTiours
at the emergency clinic without
medical care.
bert, Kim. Lucenda and Charlie.
B'klyn College
Suffering with a spell of asth- prn<y-ani
ma, Anna had been rushed by I ru8r
her mother from their 1570 Pros-I Registration for all courses In
pect Place home t»*the hospital; the Brooklyn College Adult Ed-
]ucation Program Is open at the
about 4 o’clock.
'college, Bedford Ave. and Ave.
. Medication
"My daughter did not receive H Room 1405 Boylan Hall,
one bit of medication while in yhe program, which opened
the hospital and the nurses walk- Monday and will last for eight
ed by her," Mrs. Washington W€eks, offers 150 courses In the
complained. When a doctor told
arts, social sciences and busi
a nurse to take Anna to Room
ness. There are special classes
C. the nurse did not. Rather she,
for teenagers and children In
Mrs. Washington, did
art, painting, ballet, reading im-
Whlle they waited in there, provement, English review (for
college entrance) and personal
grooming.
the doctor came in to attend to a
pneumonia patient. Then Anna,
growing worse, cried out for help
The registration times, Mon
The doctor came over, went out
day through Thursday, are 9 a.
and Mrs. Washington held her m. to 9 p.m., and on Friday. 9
;dying daughter in her arms. a m. to 5 p.m. For further in-
When the doctor returned it formation call ULster 9-2400 Ext.
was all over. A student at Jef-j 218.
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Up to 7 Years to Pay
Call: Fl 7-1632 Day or Night
241-1S Braddock Ave.
Belrose, N.Y.
Ask for Mr. Jordan
WARDROBES
Featuring
Our Exclusive lou
vre Bifold Units,
B.fold Deers A
Room Dividers, Sold
& Installed.
s19’5
50 Units on Display ! !
Wall to Wall
Floor to Ceiling
Any Size Any Design
Call ST 3-5917 -5918
248 FLATBUSH AVE.,
BROOKLYN
Open every day 'til 9
WARDROBES USA INC
Marine Recruits
aica, N.Y., and Robert K. Sut-
liff, son of Mr. and Mrs. Her-
,PARRIS ISLAND, S.C. — Mar- bert Sutliff of 3343 Decatur Ave.,
ine privates Michael J. Dewar, Brooklyn, have completed recruit
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert D training at the Marine Corps
Dewar of 118-61 154th St.. Jam- Recruit Depot here.
.
PRISCO TRAVEL BUREAU
— Announces
DOT SHAUGHNESSY
Is Now Associuted With Us
Please Call in at: 1 Dekalb Ave.
(Albee Theatre Bldg.)
WORLD WIDE TRAVEL SERVICE
Immigration and
Naturalization Information
MA 5-1150
MAKE IT A SURE MOVE
T’lScLLt rilAit:
MOVING AND STORAGE, INC.
LOCAL
AND
LONG
DISTANCE
WAREHOUSE FACILITIES - PACKING • CRATING - SHIPPING
SLIDING DOOR WARDROBES
Jamaica - Trinidad - Barbados - Bahamas
GL 5-0670
Warehouse
44 46 Rockaway Ave.
BROOKLYN
Furniture Store
1445 Fulton St.
All Kinds
All Sizes
All Wood 6'x8'x25 $55 Free Del. Cr Inst.
STAR CARPENTRY CO.
n 5 5 j jKrrorrrjTnnnny ytnj 5 otto ptw tmrtnrc.
TONY HOUSE CRAFT CORP.
BUILDERS £ GENERAL CONTRACTORS
VIOLATIONS REMOVED
• KITCHEN CABINETS CUSTOM BUILT
• WARDROBE SLIDING DOOR CLOSETS
MADE TO ORDER
____
• FINISHED BASEMENTS & ATTICS
• NO JOB TOO LARGE OR TOO SMALL
• ALL WORK GUARANTEED
FREE ESTIMATES - NO OBLIGATION
SL 6-2800
I
SHOWROOM: 488 RALPH AVENUE. BROOKLYN
DAILY A SAT 9 A.M.-4 P.M. TUBS. A THURS. TO t PM.
IF BUSY CALL SI 6 2801
HY y-o291
363 7th Ave., Bklyn.
Bet. 10th & 11th St.
GRAND OPENING
PAINT AND FLOOR
SUPPLIFS
2 50 PER GAL
2.75 PER GAL
• CEII.ING PAINT
• (r.K.Yi). f<
• LATEX Fl
• CEILING
WALLS
___ 2 75 PF.R GAL
3 50 PER GAL
• HIGH GLOSg
• PRIMER & SEALER
»
2 .75 PER GAL
IN 9-1571
793 Rodgers Ave , Bklyn.
Bet
Linden Blvd. & Church Av
SPEEPY
CONSTRUCTION CO.
GENHAl contractors
HOME ALTERATIONS
1 airily converted ta 2 Family
Free Delivery \
2
HY 3-6308
Reliable Paint & Supply Ca.
646 Rogers Ave., Bklyn.
GR 9-4070
112-15 Farmers Blvd.
Hollis
bdULfl.
A A fi 0 o 0 0 8 fiJLflJLfiJJJLflJLQ fiJCfi fiJLSJULfiJLfi fi fiJCfi Qj! i 9 9 0 v
BIC hours a day serving you
• • e
i-
FRED A "DOC”
1:30 6 AJM.
DOC" WHEELER
6 9 AJM.
FRED BARR
9 AJM.-NOON
ALMA JOHN
NOON-1 PJM.
MAGNIFICENT
MONTAGUE
13 PJM.
HAL "DR. JIVE"
JACKSON
3 7 P.M.
"JOCKO"
71 PJM.
BIG JOE
1-10:30 PJM.
NAACP SHOW
URBAN LEAGUE PRESENTS
DR. ANNA HEDGEMAN
REV. V. SIMPSON TURNER
DR. MILTON GALAMISON
NEWS
EVERY
Va HOUR
CONTROVERSY (LEON LEWIS)
1G:3G PM—MIDNIGHT
MAGNIFICENT
MONTAGUE
MID.-3 AJM.
BILL McCREARY
3 AJM. 5;30 AJM. .
LEON LEWIS
HERB. NORMAN MANNY BRIDGES
ART RUST
SPORTS
/
YOUR COMMUNITY HALL OF FAME STATIONWWRL 1600 4 IT’S THE END
ON YOUR DIAL
A 6-foot 4-inch minister andi
the pregnant mother of three
children were sentenced in]
Brooklyn Criminal Court Friday i
following their convictions on
welfare fraud charges.
Judges Thomas Rohan.John
Lee and Milton Shalleck sen
tenced the Reverend Ras Evans,'
pastor of the New Friendship
Baptist Church, 1825 Prospect
Place, Bklyn.f to three months
in the workhouse, in addition to
a $500 fine or fifty more days ]
Sentenced
Mrs. Louella Wilbourn Dan
dridge, 24, was sentenced to an
indefinite terrain the City Pen-|
itentiary but execution of the
sentence" was suspended after
she testified against the preach
er. She was placed on indefinite i
,
probation.
Assistant District Attorney
Harold D. Travin had asked that
Evans, who, according to the
A.D.A., has a record of previous
arrests in Arkansas, be given
a year’s term and that Mrs
Dandridge be given three
months.
Wilful
The actions of Evans, accord
ing to Mr- Travin, constituted
“a willful and deliberate sub
stantiation” of “a series of com
plete lies” told to the Welfare
Department's Borough Hall
branch by Mrs. Dandridge which
enabled her to collect $640 90
between Fe. 9 and July 15, I960
Specifically. Mr. Travin had
charged, Evans told welfare in
vestigators that Mrs. Dandridge
lived in variously In two of his
houses at 181 McDonough St
and 823 Putnam Ave., with one
Charles Walker when she was
In fact living In Sardis, Mias .
with her legal husband and
father of two of her children,
another minister, the Rev. Thur
man Dandridge.
He also issued three phony
baptismal certificates to Mrs
Dandridge purporting to show
that her <hr#e legitimate chil
dren by Rev. Dandridge were
the illegitimate issue of Charles
Walker.
Form the right habit. Read the
Amsterdam News every week.
Out every Thursday.
BICYCLES
ALL TYPES—SIZES—COLORS
BUY DIRECT Jr SAVE
NY LARGEST WHOLESALERS
SPECIALIZE IN 10 SPEED RACERS
AT LOW, LOW PRICK
CONTINENTAL DIESEL CORP.
1042 Atlantic Ave., Bklyn.
SALES A SERVICE ___
GOSPEL
AT
DAWN
LO.VG ISLANDERS HONORED
Miss Lou LuTour, educator-
dramatist, Mrs. Catherine Bais-‘
ie, civic-minded woman, and
Mr. Paul Gibson, Past Presi
dent of the Long Island NAACP,
received Schaefer trophies for
their unselfish work for youths.
Second from left, Joseph W.
Christian represents Schaefer.
Rocky's Gift Helps Church Open Faster
Two years ahead of schedule, |acle”. “We had not anticipated
Antioch Baptist Church at 828!the opening of the Church House
Greene Ave , will dedicate Its'and Neighborhood Center for at
The four-story 14-room center
“Antioch Church House and least two years” he said.
will house a Day Care Center, a
Neighborhood Center” at l:30|
Golden Agers Center for senior
Rev. Lawrence paid tribute to
citizens, the Antioch Youth Cen
P.M. Palm Sunday, April 7.
Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller for
ter, church offices. In addition
Speakers at the Bedford-Stuy-
a gift of 100 shares of Standard there will be classrooms for re
vesant church ceremonies will
be the Rev. Dr. Sandy F. Ray,(Oil 01 New Jersey stock towardsjligious education and classes in
President of the Empire States 0084 H reminded Rev. Law-1 Afro-American history, an Afro-
Baptist Convention, and the Rev. rence of the first gift towards; American library, the Antioch-
Dr. Vernon Johns, noted theol- the erection of the church, ini Ebony Book Store,
1880, which came from the Gov
ernor’s grand-father.
Standard Oil Stock
ogian, and educator.
A former pastor of the historic
Dexter Avenue Baptist Church,
Montgomery, Ala., Rev. Johns
will be guest preacher during
the closing week of the Lenten
School of Religion at Antioch.
His sermon topic at the 11
A.M. service on Palm Sunday
will be “Ride On, King Jesus!”
From Monday April 8 through
Good Friday April 12, he will
•peak each evening at 8 P.M.
Dr. Johns preceded the Rev.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., as
pastor of Dexter Avenue Baptist
Church, before the later went
to his present pastorate in At
lanta, Gt. While at Dexter, Rev.
King led the Montgomery Bus
Protest movement that broke
the back of segregation in the
Deep South.
Besides Rev. Johns and Dr.
Ray, other invited speakers at
the dedication include Brooklyn
Borough President Abe Stark;
R. Risky Dent, Jr. Director of
City Rent and Rehabilitation Ad
ministration In Brooklyn.
The Rev. George Lawrence,
pastor of Antioch, called the
early opening a ‘‘modern mir
2 Mothers Honored
Two mothers were honored
Tuesday March 2fi for starting
self-help programs that are help
ing to cut down the delinquency
rate and Improve class perfor
mance among school children of
Albany Houses, Brooklyn.
Mrs. Elsie Richardson, a school
secretary, and Mrs. Consuela
Hall, a nurse, were praised for
Initiating the reading and home
work clinic at a Hotel St. George
dinner given by the Association
of Brooklyn Settlements.
The reading clinic meets three
days a w'eek at the Stuyvesant
Community Center of the Albany
Houses, 184 Troy Ave. The home
work clinic is held twice a week.
Both are conducted by Volunteer
teachers, largely mothers who
have taken special courses for
the purpose.
James. The affair honored other
volunteers in the Neighborhood
House program.
The board of the Stuyvesant
Community Center was repre
sented by Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Norman, George Silcott, Day
Joy and Mrs. Mary Woods, vice
presidents. Also present was
Denis Dryden, executive direc
tor of Stuyvesant Community
Center.
Alert Cops
Sound Fire
Alarm
Some of the volunteers work
Ing with the clinics Include Mrs. jas
Ethel Parsons, project teacher
at P.S. 243; Mrs. Gloria Cour-
t1en; Mlsk' Muriel Hall, Mrs.
Margaret Childs, Mrs.
A pair of radio motor patrol
men, Ronald Duncan and Thom-
*^e Empire Bouje-
vard Station, sounded the
alarm that led to the safety of!
sixteen families in an hour-long
fire in Brooklyn’s Crown Heights
section this week
The cops spotted the blaze in
a 4-story residence at 464 Eas
tern Parkway and helped steer
some of the tenants to the street
Howard Godfrey, 55, and his
wife, N8n May, were slightly in
jured when they escaped the,
blaze by leaping four floors into
firemen’s nets. Henry Edwards,]
49, and a visitor, Frederese Da-
vis, 42, of 780 St. John’s Place,
negotiated their way dov n a
ladder to safety. Several fiiemen
were treated for smoke It hala
tion. An adjoining buildln t at
470 Eastern Parkway sufiered
smoke damage.
A-OK MEATS
Liptman Poultry
Finest Top
Quality Meats
Frozen Foods
Dairy Products
& Groceries
Free Delivery
PR 8-0600
109 Kingston Ave., Bklyn.
Sluggish-
Catching
Cold?
Doctors prescribe the
citrus fruit laxative
CITRATE OF
MAGNESIA
r»4t Rorief of
consneATioa
UPSET STOMACH
even txouLcract
BOOK NOW
to
WEST INDIES
We Specialize in Bringing
Your Relatives Here.
INCOME TAX SERVICE
FARRELL TRAVEL BUREAU «.
ST 3-4380
517 Nostrand Ave.
ST 3-4338
ROOFS
ORIGINAL—UNIQUE—SCIENTIFIC
DaPONT'S HYPALON USED DURABLE A COLORFUL ROOF SURFACE
EXCLUSIVE APPLICATORS; ALCO GENERAL CONTRACTORS
free nr. MA 4-2748
F.H.A. FIN. A APP.
172 BEDFORD AVI., BKLYN.
r ‘OPTICIANS
MAin 3-6545
• Eyes Examined
• Prescription* Filled
• Laboratory On Premises
• Seme Day Service
• Special Children’s
sr
i.
a Established For IB Y<
Owr Spaa
Of Trie* Tt CAaaaa Pram.
GrandV\
St I
1M “
HEARING AID CENTER
JAckson 2-6014
• Special Introductory Prices
• All Standard Brands
• Reductions On Batteries
A Repairs
• Designed To Be Last
nOTiceaDiv
a Experts In Attendance
gfMewt OoeaUvraMan fa
Norm Awitoea
jr»r FurtXar fapaneaMant
__
JU.- Ov tfrtot AU
N«ar t
Sat to S, Zraa-
totPJC.
NAML.
Apt*.
t
Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com
--- PAGE BREAK ---
38 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, S*»t., April 6, 1963
WHO ARE OUR GREAT LEADERS
TODAY?
REV. MARTIN LUTHER KING, IR.
Presiden? of the SOUTHERN CHRISTIAN LEAD-
ERSHIP CONFERENCE, who has been called the great
est non-violent leader since Mohandas K. Gandhi of
India.
r
ROY WILKINS
Executive Secretary of the N.A.A.C.P. Working
for the last 30 years advancing the cause of democracy
in education and Civil Rights.
r
—t i
JACKIE ROBINSON
Recently elected to baseball's Hall of Fame, a great
leader, a fighter with honesty, courage and determina
tion to bring freedom from oppression and exploitation.
Where Can These Leaders' Views
Be Found?
Every Week In
2340 8th Ave., New York 27, N. Y.
NEWS STANDS - New York City 15 cents - Elsewhere 20 cents
1 ’
<- ->-•
w
4
SUBSCRIPTIONS
1 yr. $7.00 Save $3.40
6 mo. $4.00 Save $1.70
Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com
--- PAGE BREAK ---
44 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., April 6, 1963
r
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
HOUSES
HOUSES
HOUSES
HOUSES
HOUSES
HOUSES
HOUSES
BROOKLYN-FOR SALE
BlkdOKLYN-FOR SALE
BROOKLYN-FOR SALE
BROOKLYN-FOR SALE
BROOKLYN-FOR SALE
BROOKLYN-FOR SALE
Brooklyn For Rent
PRESIDENT ST.
C$1 BOO Down)
3 story and basement brownstone
3 family. 10 rms. all vacant, holly-
wood kitchens, and baths, ail. a
real buy
DUMONT
NE 1-3731
Evenings SIS PY 1-3857 or com* *«
1215 Fulton St near Bedford Ave
Open every day Including Sundaya
from 9:30 AM to 1 PM. Free
Parking.
Flo
Flo
itbush
itbush
• 1
/
Coat'd from preceding page
Flatbush
Flatbush
New
Homes
' 1 Fare Zone
< 2 FAM
7—
•
-
•
->
Newest Design
for
Luxurious Living
All
Brick
6 Vi Rms-Duplex Apt
3 Bedrms-P/2 Baths
+
4Vi rm rental opt
You Get
1. Beautiful dual
colored tile
master bathroom,
oversized bath
tub
Year Mortgage. 4 fomily
20
brick, oil heat. Nice condition
Nr. Linden Blyd. 2 opts vacant
Modern kitchen. Large yard.
Completely residential. One of
the best buys in Brooklyn. Low
carrying cost.
Mrs. Branch MA 2-8110
AFTER 8 P.M. NE 8-4469
FREE PICK-UP SERVICE
LLNCOLN PL. 2 story A basement
brick. 2 family. 10 rooms, semi-
detached. completely redecorated,
cash $7500. Easy terms. ALEX-
ST 3-3700; eves. AX 1-3091.
MC DONOUGH ST., near Levis
Ave. 2 family, brownstone. 3 story
and basement, 12 large rms. 3
modern baths, 2 lovely Fanny Far
mer kitchens, close to everything,
completely decorated inside sn<i
out. cash needed only $2500. Call
Mr. Harris PR HWO.
Eastern Pkway, nr Nostrand
2 family and basement, 3 modern
baths, brass plumbing, parquet
floors. 14 rms. price $30,000, 95.000
down. Mr. Salisbury NE 8-5141,
evenings PR 3-0819.
FLATBUSH
(3 Yr. Old Hmm)
3 family, duplex. 8 rm apt. avail
able. brick, oil, modern In every
respect. Extras. Patio, washing
machine, refrigerator, etc. Call Mr.
NE 8-3731
Evenings 316 PY 1-3857
r FHA MTGL
2 FAM
BRICK
2. Finest formica
bathroom vanitor*
ie linen closets
with louver doors,
--1 finest chrome fix
tures, large medi
cine cabinets
3. 9 Spacious closets
4. Oak floors
throughout
5. Wall oven
6. Counter top rang-____________________
« with stainless! Unjon St nr A|b
steel hood
7. Double
GARAGE
Semi-detached. 3 family, 11 rooms,
2 beautiful tiled baths, modern kitch
All parquet floors, clean, oil
heat, small down payment Small
monthly carrying charges. Act fast.
1 -----
(2 Fam, Fia. Basement)
Solid brick, 12 tremendous rms
hung
vacancies, Hollywood kitchens and
fron‘ porch- eMy t*rn“
wood windows,
flush doors, full DUMONT
NE 8-3731
w.ntka, e-Swlmmlne. Evenings 516 PY 1-3857 or come to
weorner Stripping UH FulVm St near Bedford Ave
Open evury day Including Bundays
Built in air condi
from 9: JO AM to 8 PM. Free Park
tioning sleeves in)—
all rooms. Your
choice of decora
tive painting
colors
AJAX
Call MR. STEINBERG
IN 7-7477
8.
9. Concealed tele
phone wires thru
out building
10 Dishwashers
refrioerator
installed
UL 7-3400
and Special
4 FAM
BRIGHTON BEACH — owner must
sell. 2 family, fully detached, re
ment frame. 10 rooms, private
driveway, terms arranged. CALL
MR CHAMBERS ALEX KEALTY
PR 1-7810
ST 3-3700
$530 DOWN
(4 Family A Stars)
Solid brick. 20 tremendoua rm*
Decorated, otl, excellent Investment
for the right person.
DUMONT
NE S-3731
121$ Fulton St. near Bedford Ave.
Open every day Including Sundays,
ircm 9 30 am. to 8 p.m. Free
Parking.____________________________
$890 DOWN, FLATBUSH
17 RMS. 3 family, 2 vacancies, 2
decontrols, oil heal, excellent terms
COPA 455 Flatbush Ave. MA 2-5100
JEFFERSON AVE (Marcy) brown
stone. 11 rms. 918,500. Cash 92.000
Madison St. (Stuyvesant) 2 fam
ily, residential cash 9750. Halsey
St.. 2 family. cash too1' Lafayette
Ave. 2 family, garages. 919.500
cash, 52.500 Cummins
PR 4-6611
2 FAMILY - $1500 DOWN
2 FAMILY Brick, 11 box rms, new
oil steam, parquet, all decorated,
OWNER
near 8th Ave Sub.
OL 2-0137
Bush wick, 1500 Dn
2 Family, semi-detached, automatic
gas heat. Newly decorated. 12
rms, near 8th Ave. sub and schools
AU vacant OWNER CL 3-0137
FLATBUSH - 2 Family, detached
2, modern 4-rms apts. 2 porchea.
Small’ down payment.
918.500
FRANK N. BROWN
UL 7-6017
Sun. PR 8-1218
Flatbush
Flatbush
•
•
Homes
1 Fare Zone
2 FAM
Newest Design
for
Luxurious Living
All
Brick
Homes
1 Fare Zone
2 FAM
Newest Design
for
Luxurious Living
All
Brick
1. Beautiful d u a l]00^ 438 ^maah at* ma «hx>
15Vi Rms-Duplex Apt b
Bedrms-P/2 Baths
+
4 Vi rm rental apt
You Get
colored tile
master bathroom,
oversized bath
tub
2. Finest formica
bathroom vani-
torie linen closets
with louver doors,
finest chrome fix
tures, large medi
cine cabinets
3. 9 spacious closets
4. Oak floors
throughout
5. Wall oven
6. Countertop rang
es with stainless ,
steel hood
Gl NO CASH DOWN
2 Family brick, 11 rms, 2 car garage
Oil. parquet, modern baths. Vacant
COPA 455 Flatbush Ave. MA 2-5100
FAMILY Brick, 14 rms, new
steam heat, beautiful bldg, will
be all vacant. Must see.
LEGAL 3 Family brick. U rms.
excellent condition. 2 vacancies
A boy.
BROKER
IN 7-3418
$490 DOWN 4 FAM
BRICK, Modern baths, oil heat.
All vacant
4 Family Brick
All Vacant
ALL TILE BATHS, modem kitchens,
good neighborhoods. I mortgage.
Call: MR FRIEDMAN
IN 7-9472
YOUNG BACHELOR, school Teacfi-
. desires neatlty furnished 3
room apt. In desirable neigh
borhood. Prefer to pay on a
weekly basis. Call after 5 PM,
MO 2-9700. Extension 607.
$990, LINCOLN PL
2 FAMILY brick. Oil. parquet, 12
rms.
Possession.
COPA 255 Flatbush Ave. MA 2-5W0
$690 DOWN BUSHWICK
2 Family Finished basement, par
Vacant.
quet.
COPA 255 Flatbush Ave. MA 2-5100
Modern.
CROWN HEIGHTS — 4 Family brick
Semi-detached, 2 car garage.
All vacant 3-4 and 1-3 rm apt.
926500
mortgage.
$5,500 Down
Frank N. Brown
UL 7-6017
Sun, PR 8-1213
8.
| $490 Down, Clinton Hill
$1490 DOWN, BUSHWICK
3 FAMILY BRICK. Oil. AU vacant
20 rms.
COPA 255 Flatbush Ave. MA 2-5100
7. Double hung
wood windows,
flush doors, full
weather stripping
.
D ... .
OUllr in Oir Condi- 3 FAMILY, 2 vacancies, 1 decon-
• trolled. Oil beat. Good location,
. •
tioning Sleeves in COPA 255 Flatbush Ave. MA 2-5100
all rooms. Yourl CROWN HEIGHTS, $16,500
choice of decora-2
"eXX be*t
tive oa i ntiwgl00^ n*tbMh A"~ ** r810°
colors
9. Concealed
FLATBUSH $1500 DOWN
FAMILY BRICK. Oil, seml-de-
Oalea. tached. Finished basement
** 'COPA 255 Flatbush Ave. MA 2-5100
•
I
phone wires thru
out building
10 Dishwashers
refrigerator
installed
and
BUSHWICK
2 FAMILY, 12 larre rms. all vacant.
Modern baths, all decorated.
$1,500 Cash Dn
Call MR. FRIEDMAN
6V2 Rms-Duplex Apt
3 Bedrms-1V2 Baths
4V2 rm rental a
You Get
1. Beautiful dual
colored tile
master bathroom,
oversized bath
tub
2. Finest formica
bathroom vani-
torie linen closets
with louver doors,
finest chrome fix
tures, larqe medi
cine cabinets
3. 9 spacious closets
4. Oak floors
throughout
5. Wall oven
6. Counter top rang
es with stainless
steel hood
7. Double hung
wood windows,
flush doors, full
weather stripping
8. Built in air condi
tioning sleeves in
all rooms. Your
choice of decora
tive painting
colors
9. Concealed tele
phone wires thru-
out building
10 Dishwashers and
refrigerator
installed
IN 7-9472
$990 Down Crown Heights
12 FAMILY. Excellent condition, clean
all vacant. New -automatic beat.
COPA 235 Flatbush Ave. MA 2-5100
_
-
11 Cyclone fence.
You Get
Full basement - Ga
rage - Sun deck -
Interior and exter
ior stairway to ga
rage and basement
- Walk to schools,
houses of worship
and shopping cen
ters - Minutes to
beaches and other
SDOrt facilities . ch,rmln« 4 famlly house. bright .Ir^SpOrt facilities
11 Cyclone fence.
You Get
Full basement - Ga
rage - Sun deck
Interior and exter- reasonable offer refused.
ior stairway to ga-
rage and basement s
- Walk to schools,
houses of worship
and shopping cen
ters - Minutes to
beaches and other
CASH
DOWN
tag
,
•
Sacrifice - $395 Dn
(3 Family, All Vacant)
| Owner must sell Immediately, oil,
No
reaaonsble offer refused.
DUMONT
NE 8-3731
Evenings 316 PY 1-3857 or come t».
1215 Fulton St near Bedford Ave
Including Sundays
PM. Free Park
11 Cyclone fence.
You Get
Full basement - Ga-
rage - Sun deck -
Interior and exter
ior stairway to ga
rage and basement
- Walk to schools
houses of worship
and shopping cen
ters - Minutes to
beaches and other
sport facilities -
Close to Belt Park
way connecting
with State Parks,
Golf courses, coun
try clubs, etc.
Minimum
Down Payment
$6,000
Model house open
all
(or inspection
$?»turdaM rrd
900
$
CASH
3 FAM
itory 8 basemant, brownMone
room 8 1/5 room apartment. 2
inrlea, 1 decontrolled Good In
vacancies,
neighborhood
come, residential
Quiet, oil nr sub. 8 school. Terms
arranged.
Cull MR. STEINBERG
IN 7-7477
$275 DOWN
Buakwkk Vicinity
(2 family garage), large rms. all
vacant, oil. right In the heart of
everything
DUMONT
NE 8-3731
Evenings 516 PY 1-3857 or come to
1215 Fulton St near Bedford Ave.
Open every day Including Bunday,
from 8:16 AM to 8 PM. Free Park
--------- -—
tag
LINCOLN PL ,
Coll Naw For Appointment
($650 DOWN)
3 family solid brick. 11 large rms.
aeml detached, newly modernized,
oil. conveniently located
GL 5-6100
DUMONT
NE 13731
Evenings 518 PY 1 3857 or come to
1215 Fulton St. noar Bedford Ave
Open every day Including Sundaya
from 9 30 AM to 8 FM. Free
Parktag.
$490 DOWN
3 Family, brick, 2 apts vacant, oil
$990 DOWN
NEAR LINDEN BLVD
All vacant 2 family, brick and ga
rage oil. 11 rooms. Porch Newly
24 hour service
PRIMA
3|fVI I I UVIII I IU) (room». beautiful baths and kitchens.
oil heat. Thl* property ha. terrific
income potential, located In quiet
rertdentlal neighborhood. Perfect for
children, walk subway, schools,
churcbea, near all conveniences, very
(low monthly carrying charge*. Must
[Sell Immediately. We have many
more, 4, i, I k I family bouses to
Ichooae from, located In Flatbush,
Crown Heights, Park Slope. Bush-
wick. Many with (mail cash down.
{Com. in or call,
Close to Belt Park
way connecting
with State Parks,
Golf courses, coun-t.
try clubs, etc.
Minimum
Down Payment
' $6,000
Model house open
for inspection oil
day Saturday and
Sunday.
Call Naw far Appointment
24 hour ssrvics
GL 5-6100
PRIMA
AJAX REAL ESTATE
1192 Fulton St.
(Near Bedford Ave.)
AJAX
UL 7-3400
OPEN WEEKDAYS
9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Alao Open
Saturdays, Sundaya
and Holldaya
$199 DOWN
(Owmt Nlatt Sell)
2 family garage, all vacant, dec
rated, ail. A real doll house, all
ready for yon to move Into.
DUMONT
NE 8-3731
Eveulngs 518 PY 1-3857 er erne to
1213 Fulton St. near Bedford Ave
Open every day including Sundays
from 9:18 AM to 8 PM. Free
Close to Bolt Park
way connecting
with State Parks,
Golf courses, coun
try clubs, etc.
Minimum
Down Payment
$6,000
Model house open
for inspection all
day Saturday and
Sunday.
24 hour service
GL 5-6100
PRIMA
1146 Buthwick Ave.
Sole Exclusive Ag't
BAINBRIDGE ST. 2 story brick
1 car garage — Quincy St. cor
ner. 18 family modern improve
ments. Good Investment Partir
ulars. Miller Brat. 1131
Roalty
1146 Bushwick Ave.
a /.
run-M Sole Exclusive Ag ^^^^ISole Exclusive Agt
• a g- rM* 0,1 n rno"” F«rah Newiy(r a _ a •
1146 Buthwick Avu.
<. Partte-lj, a -
lea tty
■
ST 3-8395
3 Yr. Old Home
(2 Family Duplax)
Located tn the heart of Flatbush,
brickl )acancics. ultra modern, oil,
an outstanding area. Easy term*
arranged
DUMONT
NE 8-3731
Evenings 518 PY 1 3857 or come to
1218 Fulton fit near Bedford Ave.
open every day Including Sundaya
from 9.30 AM to 8 PM. Free Park
mg
2 family. 2 modern batha. 13 rms
Good for growing family. 918.500.
91500 down. Mr Salisbury NE 8
$141. evenings PR 34*1*.
$499 DOWN
(Crawn Heights Vic.)
2 family 2 story and basement
brownstone. It large rms, all vacant,
oil. completely decorated inside and
out.
DUMONT
NE 8-3731
Evenings 518 PY 1 3857 or come to
1215 Fulton St near Bedford Ave
Open every day Including Sundays
to 8 PM. Fr»-
from 9:30 AM
Parking.
MONTGOMERY ST.
2 family tapestry brick. 2-4st8arage,
semi detached, gVk rm apts, modem
baths with stall shower, parquet
floors, storm windows. Mr Salisbury
NE 8-5141, evenings PR 3-0819.
Eastern Parkway Vicinity
9900. cash. Good block, 10 room
brick. Mrs. Griffiths. IN 2-1135.
Montgomery St. 2 Family
Semi-detached, 2/6 room apts. Fin-
iahew nasement. Garages. Mrs. Mor
gan. BU 7-3588._________ _________
Crown Heights, Flatbush
S900. cash. Modern, detached 2 fami
ly. Many extras. William David.
IN 2-1822.
Brooklyn College Area
Detached 12 rooms. 3*k modern
baths. Wall to wall carpeting. Near
shopping and subways. Only parti
cular buyer need call. Mr. David.
Crown Heights Flatbush
3 family 17 rooms, all vacant 61900
down. Mr. Bowles. BU 2-9654.
FLATBUSH-2 FAMILY
12 rms. completely modern
2 car garage
MISS PAT
PR 5-4633
2 FAMILY tapestry brick, modern
kitchens, tile.bath, parquet, steam
cash. 81,000. Open twenty-four
hrs daily. Broker ST 9-3649.
Brooklyn—For Rent
AJAX
UL 7-3400
HOUSES
FOR
LEASE
AND
APARTMENTS
FOR RENT
AJAX REAL ESTATE
1192 Fulton St.
(Near Bedford Ave.)
AJAX
UL 7-3400
OPEN WEEK DAYS
9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Also Open
Saturdays, Sundays
and Holidays
2 AND 3 FAMILY houses for lease.
9150 mthly and up. Jones. HY 5-
4963. Representing Payne A Payne
DUMONT
NE 8-3731
HOUSES
FOR
LEASE
AND
APARTMENTS
FOR RENT
Alan hundreds of choice houses
for sale with low down payment
DUMONT
1215 Fulton St.
(near Bedford Ave.)
NE 8-3731
va 516 PY 1 3857
Opon 9:30 AM to • RM Doily
Open Sat., San. and Holiday*
HOUSE FOR LEASE.
Clean Rmwnstone, good area. 9555
required,
Call agent
NE 8-5347.
SPECIALS
LEAKE CONTRACT*
1 family. I mu___ _________*135
2 family, garage ___________9190
2
family. Flatbush _____ 9250
Broker Mrs. Coleman
PR 9 3323
HY 5 4310 briSk’ ,
2 FAMILY BRICK 10 ROOMS ™dl.telv before
$190.00. Call Braktr 01 2-1 Ml I ax T-oam
FLATBUSH
2 family brick. 12 rooms all vacant,
oil Newly decorated. 9250 mo. Best
view Realty. 452 Dean St. ST 3 7546
Open Sunday
HOUSES
Qaaant-For Saia
HOUSES
Qaaant —Far Saia
2 FAMILY BRICK
6*2 only $14,500
hr. ALBANS - » large hotel sued
bedrooms, fin. b«*emeut. *p<. O**'
er leaving stale. A terrific desl
to all. Hurry - Exclusive. Goodyear.
1 87-56 lorth St. Jamaica. OL 7-6«'»
This 2 family must be seen.__________________ _____
apartment consists of « rooms, the 1,^ uNLY _ 1 4 2 Family pre-war
homes, vacant. Mote right In. Bal
I other is a
i r. k
oriv«.
snce like rent. No cash down. Buy
and only *150 required, for all Dont n lne
un the GR plan Goodyear - 87-54
Lose out. HVRK\ I CsH Agent 1
- -
JamaJca ol 7-0800.
Kilo apartment. all
bslement. oil best !
1st,
JAMAICA — 2 family. 515300. 9
ALBANS — Solid brt>-k_Capet rooms each^ fl. Waikato subway.
Cod. 4 bedrooms detached. 92OJIOO G.l no cash down Move right in
No broker
92,000 down payment FL 34)891, j OWNER
7-9 p.m. Principals only. Owner
OL 7-8213
HOLLIS —
4 master bedrooms.
! LEGAL 2 FAMILY HOUSE
|
Fully detached. Full basement
rig lit in.
Nr transportation, way. Owner
OL 7-8213.
WEST 25TH ST.3 FAMILY brick.!« x 100 plot.
14 rooms, sun porches overlook- j uL 8-7929
tng ocean. 2 decontrolled apts..
LEASE 9200 00 monthly or OirHollis • Chappelle Gardena-921.000
sale at 923.500 cash and terms This spacious California type home
|mu»l be seen. Boasts a tremendous
arranged.
WILLIAMS AVE., 2 family, paint-living room with woodburning fire-
ed inside and out, 8 nxm a mce placv> banquet size dining room
block. 9150
large eat-in kitchen with breakfast
brick. nook. 5 master bedrooms, color tile
PUTNAM AVE., 2 fs.nily
OWNER
er. ALBANS Proper — Lovely Col
onial detached, beautiful area. 61*
rm*. Oversized garage, atall show
er. extra lavatory, laundry rm,
washing machine, large refriger-
ator, aluminum combustion, oil,
916500. AX 1-6260 eve tinge end
OWNER
ukends JA 6-4918.
12 rooms, newly decorated, gas-
steam, 9175. — Many other*
all sections of Brooklyn.
CROWN ESTATES Hickory 3 5590
1034 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn
“ baths, 2 car garage. Urge garden SPHLNGF1ELO GDNS — P'ok fore-
Financing arranged, closures. Modem 1 fann y -de-'
1° plot
tached. Residential location. Cash
only 9350 No closing fees. Broker
TW 4-9664, eves.
JAXMAN REALTY AX 1-7400
160 12 Hillside Ave, Jamaica
ST. ALBANS
Queens—For Sale
QUEENS VILLAGE. 918,900. 1 fam
ily, 4 bedrooms, eat-in kitchen,
large dining room, living room
with wall to wall carpeting. 2-car
garage, A-l condition. Fine real
dential area. No brokert. HO
4647. Owner.
E ELMHURST — 2 fam brick,
5 & 4 large rooms, corner plot,
garage. Very good location.
923 400
E. ELMHURST — 1 family. 4 bed
rooms. garage, many extras. FHA
mtge. Immediate occupancy.
CORONA — Gl Special. 2 family,
4 A 3 rooms, large plot, walk to
subway. 916.500.
NESBITT
NE 9-3922
2 FAM
4 Finished Basement
Garage
Automatic Heat
Live Rent Free
U-NEED-A
ST. ALBANS — Bungalow, $ large
roomz. new gas beat, detached, cy
clone fence, sacrifice. 913,800. Call
tny agent If you have 9350 cash.
Agate Realty. 188-18 Linden Blvd.
AR 6-3233
St. Albans.
SOUTH OZONE PARK - Mother A
daughter, detached, 4 4 3 rm apts
2 car garage, oil beat, 30 x 100
plot. Vacant. G.l. 9200 cash. No
closing costa. Agate Realty, US-16
Unden Blvd, St Albans. AR 6-3233
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS — I mu* seU
my 1 family brick bouse. 3 bed
rooms. gas beat, finished baaameni,
only 917^90. Moving to coast forces
this sale. Call my agent. AR 6-3233
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS - Ranch
5 rooms, detached, 1 car garage,
enclosed porch, see this beauty now.
Call owner, only $13,500. $500 cash
AR 6-3237
buys this house.
DESPERATE OWNER
I bought another house and 1 must
sell mine at a loss. Beautiful 4 yr
old Colonial, huge rms. 3 master
bedrms. tremendous property. You
can take over my mortgage and
some closing co* or refinancing can
be arranged at low co*. Call my
agent
AX 7-8300
HOLLIS — Detached 1 family, 7
rms, attic, basement, garage, oil 1
heat, modern kitchen, breakfast
nook. Owner. HO 4-2088.
1 FAMILY, 5 bedrms, garage, $21500
Semi-finished basement, near stores
and transp. Call Padilla. HO 8-
9415. Owner. 4-7 p.m. wkdaya all
day Sat.,, Son.
EAST ELMHURST—Terrific BUY!!
I family bnck, 6 nice rooms, finished
basement. 2 car garage.
LOW CASH - 915,490
LEWIS A MURPHY HI 9-0100
95-38 Roosevelt Ave. Jackaon Hts, LI
ROSEDALE. 6 room ranch. Newly
decorated. 3 years old. Finished
basement, bar. 1V» baths. Storms,
screens, patio, cyclone fence. Kit
chen, bath In basement. Extras
OWNER
LA 8-8920
ST. ALBANS, 6ta rm, 3 bedrms,
garage, brand new oil burner,
close to Linden Blvd., excellent
condition, vacant — move right
In. No commissions or fees. Price
only 914,500, down payment re
quired 9500. Call owner direct.
VI 9-2441, Miss Sutton.
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS
7 Room Bungalow. 5 0 4 Rm
2 Family.
Rodgers Realty
JA 31653 0 HO 8-1960
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
8 ROOM HOUSE $2,000 CASH
TAKE OVER .LOW MORTGAGE, NO
CLOSING FEftS OR OTHER COSTS
LEGAL 2 FAMILY 91.500 CASH
DOWN TAKE OVER LOW MORT
GAGE CALL TODAY
135 26 Rockaway Blvd.
OL 9-4545
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS 227th ST.
Brick Cape Cod with finished »ttic
and basement, brick garage, Plate
roof, wall to wall carpeting, a steal
at $19,500
MARTIN L SIMMS
Broker
SP 8-7219
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS f
Legal 2 family. Solid brick. S'* 3;
rooms. Part finished basement, gar
age, 81^00 Cash Down.
Homefinders Ltd.
I MUST SELL THIS MO.
My home mu* be told In April as
I mo* be out by late May. 1 own
a gorgeous fully detached 8 rm
home. Immaculate inside, full base
ment. garage. In a top residential
Fl 1-1950 section - tree lined street. Call my
agent for details
AX 7-8302
EMPTY HOUSE
MUST BE SOLD
1 have a home in Queens village
I which is doing me no good
"Empty". I wilL-sell at a loss for
a quick sale It Is fully detached
and recently decorated, beautiful
street. $300 dow= on contract Is all
you need. Special deals for veterans.
Call my agent NOW
AX 7-8301
WALK TO SUBWAY I
Beautiful 3-bedroom home.
613.500. Located near school,
shopping A transportation.
NO DOWN PAYMENT FOR ALL:
$86. MONTH!
CALL AGENT . . .
J. LAWLOR
0L S-2100
B. D. Harty Jr. Broker
192-05 Linden Blvd.
St. Albans
OZONE PARK
Doll House
Cape Cod
4 Bedrms
Automatic Heat
Full Basement
Newly Decorated
Inside and Out
Only $103
CHOICE OF MANY OTHERS
HILLBURN REALTY RE 9-4640
110-06 Farmers Blvd, . St. Albans.
ST. ALBANS 7 RsT”DET ACHED
Colonial, enclosed porch, garage,
oil. full basement, garden plot,
917.800, Call Owner JfO 44)883.
stTalbans. New i family hou*T. Mthlv Mtq Payment -
nfir. rr<
2 bedrms, select neighborhood,
3
'
'
LAURELTON
SOLID BRICK CAPE COD
4-BEDROOMS'
1-ear garage. 4.#0# sq ft.
Caa be sold FHA ar Gl.
CALL AGENT . . .
fader
rgott 01 8-2101
, near transp.
Call owner
fha-Foreclosure $t3joo i
3 BEDROOMS, OIL. GARAGE WE |
HAVE THE KEY FOR INSPEC-J
TIONS CALL FHA AGENT AX 14)100
SL 641072
TAKE OVER $87 MO. PAY
ABSOLUTELY NO CREDIT CHECK.
MOYE IN 10 DAYS. Take over pay-
ments, pay only small amount ol
cash to owner, and this beautiful
f“,n,
U-NEED-A
135-26 Rockaway Blvd.
0L 9-4545
S. OZONE PARK — 5 RM HOUSE
Oil. fully detached, patio, large
backyard. Low down payment.
ST. ALBANS
BANS
$11,990
2-FAMILYI
Stucco, completely detached. $
rooms A bath with 3 bedrooms.
Wood-burning fireplace, plus 3
room Income apartment Knotty
pine finished basement. Full
down payment 914)00 Gl NO
CASH DOWN! Call Agent ....
MISS MAZELL
OL B-1911
ssursr^srsasv “S I** G’,dens
MONTHS. Call owner * Agent AX 7
0236.
WE ARE NOT FOOLING
RANCH $25 DOWN
Detached Legal 2 Family
4'4 and 3tk room apts., plus a nite
i club finished rentable basement,
I with a complete bath. Many EX-
ITRAS MOVE RIGHT IN
6 room Ranch near Subway, all de-, St. Albans & Vic.
tached, vacant, move In within 10
days, asking $13,500 can he had
for lesx Call A*''"* now' inake! 4 ]arge bedrooms, ultra modern
offer Payments like rent. Onlv kl(chen and bafh ,argf Iandacapwl
$W5 57 r«»r month. A<ent AX 7- pjott g^mi-fininhed basement, many
0072.
Gl SACRIFICE
detached dutch colonial
------------- --------- -------------- —
EXTRAS MOVE RIGHT IN.
$15,990
ALL
$57.66 Mo. Roy
G.l. NO CASH
FHA $690 DOWN
QUEENS HOME SALES
OL 8-7510
170-13 Hillside Avenue
Detached Colonial 8 large rooms,
neat and clean as a pin. Aute-
_ _____
malic Heat NO HANDYMAN’S | LEGAL 2 FAMILY HOIJ.IS BRICK
SPECIAL READY TO MOVE IN J
6 A bath, 3 4 bath, finished
basement, expansion attic, extra
onlv $9,800 Full Price. 9100 Down
large plot, double garage. Owner
must sell.
to all. Call JA-6-7302.
Gl No Cash
Civilians
Low Low Cash
Jamaica
$15,9^0
Legal 2 family
o 2 separate 5 room opts.
• Vacant
o Just painted
• Approved—move right in
• Walk to subway
Homes to rent with option to h"’ .
Buy on the GR plan. Its easy bal
ance like rent
GOODYEAR
OL 7-6800
87-56 168th St., Jamaica
Hollis Francis Lewis Blvd. aec.
Beautiful 7 rm house with modern
kitchen. Finished basement. 2 car.
garage next to cor
Mie keni JA 3 0336, JA 3 0347
JA 3-0098
HAH
NEED A BUYER
WITH $100 CASH
If you work and make over <50 per
week Have $100 Cash 1 can get
for you a beautiful 3 Bedroom Col
onial near Subway for only 810 500
Your payments each month will he
cheaper than rent. Only 979 82 I wi'l
-romlse you and guarantee in writ
ing that you will not need one cent
more than *100. To find out more
about this unusual offer Call A'-nt^COTE REALTY
MR MELODY
JA 8 7302
HAH
HOLLIS - 4 BEDROOM HOME
With modern kitchen A bath, fin
ished basement, double garage,
large landscaped plot $2,000 down
JA 3 0098
"
SPrTnofIELDGARDENS
1 FAMILY DETACHED, Corner plo«,
5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, garage,
newly decorated, oil beat, Price
813.800
Gl or FHA
CAMBRIA HEIGHTS
BRICK TUDOR
Home with Lavender colored tile
j bath, completely modern kitchen,
beautiful finished basement, ,3 lovely
bedrooms, separate living and din
ing rooms. Detached garage. Con
temporary landscaping Situated on
one of the mo* residential streets
in Queens; only $900 cash needed.
JA 9-5003 c»ll Agent for full details JA 8-7301
NOT A FANTASY
‘ THIS IS FOR REAL
2 FAMILY CAPE COD - S. Ozone
Park. 824.990 G.l. 81.000. Civ , |
92.200. Modern 2 family, 50 x 100,!
LemTn,"1*,
m^dnT^ hath. w7nrntM
hl«r t
«h« •««*«• «•
*" home n*ar V,B Wrrl1 C*”’*"’
V^r u-Ifl<hDhor; section of Queen* I can get thl*
'"'I J»’'
THIS WEEK
FANTASTIC DEAL
In not too many words, all I ran
sav la Jhat 1 have a most beautiful
ranch Style home, featuring all large
rooms, in the b*st seebon’ of FT
ALBANS, for only 912.700. Can be
had with onlv 890 Cash Or ANY _
ONE CAN TAKE OVER EXISTING | BEST PEAL
OL 9 -tono
Gl MORTGAGE, with low cash 2 FAMILY. HOLLIS - OVER THE
oil heal, garage. 5.000 So Feel of MORTGAGE 82.90(1 1147 month pays
g apartment^ 7 BV-hens, 2
land House all by Itself^on tree
lined residential street 872 5# Month- baths. 2 aeparate entrances. Live
Iv payment. Call thia
Reni Free’ Low taxes, detached,
for deal of a lifetime JA 6 7371 garage, oil steam, many extras
r .7e emranra. comnuLu
vur Hu™~ HnTvT *
"
,n”1 of »'*’ C“h Gui/antaed
TT .Ho!n*
rooms and a total of eight room*
with garage Monthly payment at
low as 891.12 per month. Call Ex
clusive Agent — AX 74)236.
REDUCED FROM
$16,000 to $12,500
fl/ISTNG FEES’!
REST DEAL
Quiet residential
schools, buses. More*, etc . NO hnn’* W'M|1 finished basement
_______ __ neighborhood, ’,u’* Reduced my 8 room 4 bedroom
tn
812.500 because of Job Transfer to
Ol, 9-4900 New Mexico. Desptrate must sell
i Io next 7 days or I will be forced
to resell to hank I will xive you
thia home with 8150 cash My agert
HOIJ.IS - Top Area — Solid Bricij.
821.990 G l I4IW Down Payment.
t .... 41 576.S3 a month. Call him at:
BRICK RANCH
3 YEARS YOUNG
Modern as they come. Cabinet
Lined Kitchen, built In oven. Tre
mendous Bedrooms, full length base
ment. plenty of yard spare and
"xtraa galore are the features of this
Brick Ranch, only 8100 down Io all
889 88 monthly payment. Agent
AX 74E00
with hi, z, kitehen
u ith bar A kllchen facilities, fatrge
40x100 miner plot Cylnne fence
Professionally landscaped, beau
tiful patio. This la surely a be*
deal buy!! Call Now!!
HANDY MAN SPECIAL
A room Colonial needs paint nnd i BEST DEAL
.™! Pr,<* r,'M° (ENGLISH TUDOR HOI J JR - Be.a-
Cash down 8150 to all
AGENT
JA A 7.100
llful A large rooms, finished base
ment. garage, large plot, load*
of extras Only $23,990. $2,500 donw
H A H_________________ JA 341098
QUEENS VILLAGE. LEGAL 2
FAMILY — 2 completely modern
apts: beautifully finished base
of extra*. Only 823JNM. 82.800 down.
JA 1-0608
DUTCH COLONIAL
MOTHER A DAUGHTER
if you ran lop this don’t call ns
7 Magnificent rooms wtlh bath
room and extra lav. Modern Uu|___
To Dote Kitchen. Wood Burning x r
Fireplace. Finished Basement, lm-i
m»cul*e and snotless throughout > ARE YOU LOOKING for a 2 family
Odon aq feet of land completely room house detached! Owner
with 2 car garage, plus extra 21 n’n** sacrifice, act quickly. Red
uced to 519.990. Owner’s Agent
apartment with aeparate
entrance ♦ kllchen and bath. Afl ________________________
thia for the Meager Sum of ***’ HOLLIS - Detaetisd 2 family
Down. Call our Agert and be, finished basement apartment. 3
AX 7-0072li^m*. j kitchens, garage, oil. fine
satisfied
neighborhood, 827,800. Also brick
LA 0-2180
2 FAMILY 512,500
OL 9-4900 8900 Down
AX 74)309
2 FAM1I.Y nRICK A SlHNGLE-
5 Down. 3 Up. Part tinlahed
Basement
1* OWeek.
Homafinders Ltd. Fi 1-1950
B. D. HARTY JR. Broker
1924)5 IJnden Blvd St. Alban*
HOLLIS
CHAPPELLE GDNS
SOLID BRICK RANCH
MOTHER DAUGHTER
Cathedral celllnga. 2 modern kitchen*
* room*. 2 bath*, garage.
$900 DOWN I
CALL A6ENTI
Ol 8-2101
OZONE BARK
9480 DOWN
Beautiful 8’A rm hnuae. detached
Newly decorated, m hath* Oil
heal All modern. Finished base
ment. garage, extra*. Near aU
conveniences Asking 817JM*
FA 2 8989
Jamaica
ONLY 5100 DOWN
MOVE RIGHT IN
DETACH 8 RM RANCH
Finished basement, 'arge garden pin*
Oarage
OWNER-AGENT
Continued on following paga
FOR RENT with option 2 faml’y 1 "m roaring: Selling Ibis large 2i finished h»*ement, garage. 81A.8AI). 147-08 Rockaway Blvd
| modern I family. 0 large rooms, i WALKERS REALTY
5 and 4 room apartment Decnn i•» •
trolled. Call owner JA 94)583
and yard apace I alao have 3 other ;
2 family hornet. *11 of which must
1 FAMILY $150 mo. Loaot. Llncnln 'be told Immediately ! ’»m movngJJyV.JSil
OL 741200
« <»» ’"rt* room* f Maurer Realty. ISO 18 Hillside Av* -----------
PI bet. 6th ■ 7th Ave. 3 family. > the quiet country ride of Vermont
”
Hull St 9180 mo. 1 family. 9125 11 must nil any one of the home* J™4'4 C44h
w 411 clort"«
Bainbridge SI
JA 2 4661
i with fh* levvxr HexVl'tx navmmot
I with the low down payment of 8300
AGENT 10 4,1 C41’ my pcr»°'”l *gent bow
N WHY I i f
I A * TT^t
! for more information. JA 0-7371.
HOUSES EOR LEASE Option to byy
MR FRIEDMAN
IN 7 9472
E. ELMHURST
(,ne family brick house. ll.nOfl down
AGENT
TW 04)573 Jamaica
BROKER
j\CfERANS — Do you want to JA 3 2605
i move Into a house tn Queens with-
cut a down payment’ Call Good-
Ol, 748)90
! vear OL 7 6880 07-56 ItiAth M
Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com
--- PAGE BREAK ---
BO • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., April 6, 1963
L
FACES DEATH — Sam Block,
a gangling youth of 23, has ar
rived here from Greenwood,
Miss., to make a plea for food,
clothing and money for some
22,500 destitute Negroes in Le
flore County, Miss. Arrested
13 times, Jailed and beaten by
white bigots and ordered out of
his home by his ear-stricken
parents, Block is conducting a
lonely, death-haunted battle in
Mississippi to teach ^Negroes
to read, write, vote and fight
for first-class citizenship. He
is a field secretary for the
Student Non-Violent Coordinat
ing Committee (SNCC).
New Lafayette Players
Presented In 2 Plays
By BERTHA WOMBLE
The New Lafayette Player*,
under the direction of Ken Free
man, had a very successful first
night, dramatically and audi
ence-wise last Friday night at
Judson Hall.
Dave Taylor gave an excel
lent portrayal of the weak heart
ed Young Captain, and Raymond
Tasco, an insolent Page who is
his faithful friend seemed dry
at first, but later proved that it
is this very quality which en
hances his wit and humor.
Bernadette Poole was most
audacious in the title role of
“Imoinda,” an adapation of Osc
ar Wilde's “Salome,” reset in
Africa. She was captivating as
the seductive princess who not
only drives a hard bargain, but
also drives men to suicide’ and
anguish with her symppy voice
and lusty promises.
Rai Tasco was brilliant, as
King Aboam, who lusts after his
wife’s daughter. His many moods
are definitely transferable, and
the constant chidings of serene
Bee Freeman, a most wise queen
and mother, added fuel to hii
already zesty performance.
Very audible both on and off
stage, William Kearn was the
captive, Philosophical, Jamoan
who remains the object of the
sensuous Imoinda’s attentions,
also festered towards him wheth
er on or off stage.
Interesting in contrast were
the guards, Robert Molock, a
quick and vibrant First Soldier,
and Aly Ma, whose calm, sonor
ous voice and mannerisms at
tracted is Olang the Execution
er.
Soprano Heard
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The play opened cheerfully
with the sweet strains of Sadie
Robertson’s beautiful soprano
melody, the only other music
being the adept drumming of
Carlton Connor. James Harris,
Connie Tasco and Tilla Petra
handled their roles well.
Tilla Petra and Pawnee Sills
showed skill in “Blessed Are
the Fruits” in their respective
roles of Marie and Margaret
Robert Molock, William Kern,
Dave Taylor and Aly Ma sup
plied spice to the zany action
The entire cast is very capable
Ken Freeman, who adapted
and directed both plays was
no less than outstanding as Mal-
chus in “Blessed Are the Fruits,
He was quite worthy — a rare
and true artist in all of his
many talents.
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Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com