New York Amsterdam News — 1963-06-29
1963
7 pages
✓ Indexed
* W. T. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., June 29, 1963
- .nbwyor
Amsterdam
Netos
C. B. POWELL
President tc Editor
P. M. H. Savoky, Stcy-Treas. • J. L. Hicks, Executu* Editoi
Oowlroltart K. A. WaM. Atv.rtW« tMrwurt B. M. Jaetaoa.
*• *
W'#eyy by lhe Powell-8»Yory Corporation at 234
ration at 2340
£}fnth Ave., N. T. Telephone Academy 2-7800 Brooklyn
office, 1281 Bedford Avenue. Telephone ULster 7-2500.
The Time Is Now
This newspaper would like to make its position
crystal clear with regards to the demonstrations which
took place last Monday and Tuesday around the site
af the new Harlem Hospital where Negroes picketed
and protested because of the lack of job opportunities
given them in the building trades and unions in this
city.
We would like to make it crystal clear that we
support these demonstrations, that we feel they are
right, that we congratulate the NAACP, the Urban
League and the Committee on Racial Equality for
staging them and that we hope there will be more
of the same. No one worked harder for a new Harlem
Hospital than this newspaper but no one could detest
seeing it built under lim-crow policies more than this
same newspaper.
., ,We think acting Mayor Paul Screvane was right
in halting the work on this project until it becomes
crystal clear that Negroes are not denied the right
tQ work on it.
For too long now, we have been satisfied with
mere statements from City Hall, from union head*
quarters and from individual labor leaders while
we watch the unemployed rolls of Negroes grow and
grow. As Dr. Martin Luther King has said: Negroes
have heard the word “wait” too often from the power
structure which controls this city.
This “wait” Dr. King has said has always meant
“never”. As Dr. King put it: “It has been a tranquiliz-
ing thalidomide, relieving the emotional stress for
a moment only to give birth to an ill-formed infant of
fmtrata”
’And we must'CertaBily agree with
tinguished jurist of yesterday that ‘justicl
nuist someio
City of New York will promp
Harlem Hospital project becomes a model one^rom
the standpoint of fair employment and when that is
done we hope that the same groups which have
demonstrated at the Harlem Hospital project will
immediately turn their attentions to some other city
project and force home the same conditions.
*~ The course is now clear. We have waited too
long and the only thing that will help us is direct
action. This newspaper stands for whatever direct
action as is needed to bring about a change.
..Too Little-As Usual
Last Saturday the Bedford-Stuyvesant Neighbor
hood Council, with an assist from the Bedford-Stuy-
resont Area Services Committee undertook to start
a campaign to clean up some 22 blocks of our worst
slums. That area alone contains some 16,500 people
and with the limited garbage collection system that
has existed there, the piling up of refuse has created
a great sanitation and health hazard.
The area selected is bounded on the north by
Lafayette Avenue, south by Monroe, west by Nost
rand and east by Sumner. Gates Avenue and Sum-
aex, almost all the way, are both dire examples of
what poor sanitation service can create.
•« The Council is, therefore, to be commended for
this move which it has had to make because our
Rrrmngh President has done nothing about a deterior
ating condition. Part of the objective of the Council
In this campaign is to fence empty, garbage-littered
lots, do a bulk-collection job and get a five-day gar
bage removal system going.---------------
The Sanitation Department and the police have
agreed to cooperate as best they can. But it is a
shame that people who pay their taxes should be
driven to having to clean up their area themselves.
To dramatize this sad situation some time ago,
CORE had to dump several tons of garbage on the
borough hall steps. These same people downtown
are the ones who point deriding fingers at Bedford-
Stuvvesant’s filth.
“ While this is exemplary on the part of the Coun
cil, it is not enough because there are several other
blocks that are just as bad "r worse. We need our
political leaders to grab hold of this sparkplug and
demand a clean-up campaign for the entire area, not
just for a month but all the time.
we p“* a,
Look Carefully
It is becoming more and more apparent that
many of the activities being held in our fair city
and advertised as being held to aid the civil rights
straggle in the South are nothing but outright
hustles.
. More and more affairs are being held, osten
sibly “to aid -the struggle of Dr. King” when the
promoters of these affairs are well aware that
neither Dr. King, nor his movement, nor any of the
v>ther legitimate organizations involved in the cur
rent struggle will recognize one red cent.
Because of such outright frauds in our city,
we think that each of us should recognize these
affairs for what they are, and if one is to attend
or support them, <to so with eyes open and not
with the foolish thought that your support is
giving aid and comfort to those struggling in
Alabama and Mississippi.
’■“‘“Of couriw the safest way to lend your financial
fupport to any of the legitimate organizations involved
io the current struggle is to send your money directly
to that organization.
A White Christian ■*
Looks At Muslims *
By FATHER WILLIAM McPEAKE
(Pastor of St Aloysius Catholic Church)
Factually and historically American Negroes
are not descendants of “Black Asiatics” for the
most part they are descendants of the Ne
slaves who came predominantly from the Interior
of Africa, souths of the Sahara.
Ghana, Nigeria and the Congo, the struggling
new democracies are the homelands
of their ancestors, not the Arabic
coastlands of northeastern Africa
and certainly not some mythical
tribe of Shabazz.
There Is a difference, not a
superiority between the Arabic coast
dwellers and the natives of Interior
Africa. American Negroes are mostly
descendants of the latter, And, the
crowning irony is this:
If there is one group more than any other re
sponsible for the horror and degradation of slavery,
that responsible group is the Arab slave trade of
Africa.
Listen to the Supreme Wisdom of the messen
ger of Allah from Chicago, “400 years ago, the
white Christians stole the Black Muslims away
from their homes and brought them to North ;
America where the whites were already in tlje
process of systematic genocide against the Indian”; ’
Thus speaks Elijah Poole of Georgia, Muhammad,
the Prophet, in the “sacred text of the Black
Muslim Movement” (Pg. 180 BMIA by Lincoln.) \
Lets analyze that inspired statement: Four \
hundred years ago in 1561, there were no white
colonies in the territory of the United States.
The Spanish founded the first permanent.’
colony in this country at St. Augustine, Fla. in
1565. In 1619 the first Negro slaves were landed
by the Dutch at Jamestown. The charge that
systematic genocide against the Indians was in.
process in 1516 is a ridiculous impossibility.
“White Christians stole Black Muslims away*
from their homes:”
*' /
Supreme Lie and a Supreme insult to the Intel-T*
\
ligence of the American Negro.
The American Negro rightly resents the
abominable injustice done to his ancestors by «
slavery but without mitigating or condoning the
historical facts. Ancient
evil let us face
civilizations, Roman; Greek and oriental were;
based on slavery. Christianity did not, could not 5
suppress or destroy slavery in the first few cen-'
turies of the Christian era.
Frotn the beginning of Christianity, slaves as
well as free men were welcome in the church and
all slaves and free men were taught to treat one
another with charity.
In the Middle Ages slavery had been wiped
out but serfdom in feudal times replaced it. A
serf was tied to the land he cultivated and did not
have free use of private property.
On the other hand slavery was common and
condoned from the beginning in Mohammedan
countries.
(To be concluded)
1
failed to contain any four letter
words. But. this is unimportant.
The essential issue is the fact
that the Mirror continues its pol
icy of discrimination against the
Negro people with the above
mentioned aspect of crime re
porting.
I have written to your con
stantly Improving publication
with The hope that possibly those
of your readers who also buy the
Mirror will refrain' from doing so
until that newspaper resolves its
apparent need to make the dis
tinction in a' news article that c
particular apprehended criminal
Is also aNegro. Unfortunately, in
our present society, Ihave ’he
need to mention that 1 am Cau
casian.
Donald L. Hockman, NY.
Nome Your Own
Sir: Is It conceivable that in
such a great multitude of Ne-
"and^Vuerto^Rlcand* that
one of them should not be nom
inated for councilman at large?
Now Is the time to face reality
and have your voice heard. Take
action to have placed on the
ballot a qualified candidate from
these two groups of people. Or
‘o surrender and 1ft the pro
fessionals do yonr choosing and
nominating for you. Make your
voice heard, and Insist on proper
representation on the City Coun
cil of New York.
I suggest the name of Ramon
A. Martinez as an Individual
well qualified to hold this public
office.
Anthony F. Gonzalez
New York, N.Y.
Right To Win
Sir: The Negro In Alabama has
ta win because he la right. Right
by the laws of the Tonstltutioi,
right by the principles he Is
attempting to uphold, and right
by preserving human dignity.
Human Dignity ta one of* the
Ideals expressed very often by
President Kennedy as being one
Of the fundamentals of democra
cy. The Negro In Alabama and
throughout the south hat been
robbed of thia dignity time and
again.
Because Rev. King has had the
will, temperament and valar to
uphold these principles, tgnbr-
ance, stubborness and primitive
thinking has tried “to cut him
down. But through trial and er
ror, man has cerquered many^
trying feats, so let us hope this.'
will be another in the chaip. *
Also, let us keep earnestly in
mind, more words expressed by
our President, "Ask not what
your cuntry can do for you, but
what you can do for ynor coun
try."
live In it
One of the first things is to
Lillian Bartow
Bronx, N. Y. .
Muslim Concept
Sir: I read with interest "Fath
er” McPeAe’s article. "A whits
Christian Looks at Muslima.** He'
attempted to discredit the Mus
lims because they are represent-'
ed by an “uneducated convict.'’
It would be well for the "greet
white father" to realize that edu
cation has never given ~nyone e*
,°°
be well for Mm to realize that
Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ
to an uneducated convict too.
If the "good white fathers” do
not convert all of us to the Muo,
11m faith, then it can’t be done.
May I point out to the "good
white father” the trial of Mus
lims in Loa Angeles in which
Muslima known to be unarmed
were deliberately shot down b?‘
. . shall we aay . . . Christiane*
These Muslims are now being
tried by . . shall we say . , .
Christiana? The Mualima have
said of this trial that it la not the.
Muslims that ar* on trial but,*
Christianity. Perhaps the "good
white father” might use his Infiu-
< nee to help Christianity survive
the verdict.
Max L. Hardema
New Y.4k, N.Y ‘
o
oster Hornet
V *•
Sir: I simply want to add nty
thanks to Monsignor Moore’s for,
your kind help In publicizing few.
Cardinal’s Campaign for Foster
Homes.
Right now, the Amsterdgm*
News clipping occupies the top-
spot on Monsignor Moore’s staff
bulletin board to bring it to the'
attention of the office staff, ao»«
dal workers and visiting foster
4
parents.
Arthur E. Cullen
New York :’*J
)
r.
Along This Way
How To Beat A Filibuster
By ROT WILKINS
There could be endless debate
on what additional items should
have been included in the Presi
dent’s civil rights proposals to
Congress, but the most important
smart enough to read the signs)
what kind of ammunition and tac
tics will serve our cause most
effectively:
,
The forthcoming struggle . in
will be for the bill. But Republican
Senate Leader Everett McKinley
Dirksen is opposed to the section
requiring Negroes to be served in
public facilities.
weeks ahead is the
fight. It will be tough and nasty
Representative Charles
be as simple as pitting 2,(
civil rights bill.
The enemies of
civil rights have
recognized this bat
tle necessity and, ___
before the ink was WILKINS
dry on Mr. Kennedy’s suggestions,
they were busy as an army of
ants. Some called on the Constitu
tion. Some descended to person
alities, as in the questions on
whether the children of civil rights
Congressmen attended integrated
schools Manv questioned the
rights of government to enact a
law prohibiting a business from
discriminating. Others played
party politics and others just play
ed the plain old race angle.
The point forJNegro citizens to
note in this preliminary talk is
that it gives a clue as to the
grounds (and the geographical
areas) upon which the battle will
be fought and indicates (if we are
from amodg. the
Congressmen from 3Tor,38 states
and from 76 or 78 Senators. ‘The
task is complicated by the party
divisions and by the splits within
the parties, as well as by Con
gressional procedures.
For example, Senator John
Tower, Republican of Texas, is
almost certain to vote “no” along
with Senator James O. Eastland,
Democrat of Mississippi.
Complex Situation
But these two probablv will be
ned to- *ena‘or Bourke B. Hick
enlooper. Renublican of Iowa, and
by Senator Milton'Young, Republi
can of South Dakota. On the other
hand, Senator Clifford Case, Re
publican of New Jersey, will join
Senator Philip Hart, Democrat of
Michigan in support of the bill.
Needless to say, New York’s
two Republican Senators, Jacob
K. Javits and Kenneth Keating,
This extremely complex situa
tion, in which many factors be
side race play a part, requires
more than one technique by Negro
citizens. Basically it requires
what they, in their enthusiasm for
whoop-de-do, have yet to tackle:
hard, careful, day-in, day-out work
on the precinct, city and state
level.
Congressman William L. Dhw-
'cn told c vil rights leaders years
r- tha, until they made fewer
cches and rang more doorbells
kv would not get results in the
arena of politics
Civil rights strategists must
concentrate in the doubtful Con-
use our heads at least as much as
allies the other groups which have
influence with Congressmen and
Senators. The battle can be won-
even the filibuster beaten—if we
use our heads at leasts as much as
we use our mouths.
Pulse Of New York’s Public
TKt Amtttrdoro Newt welcomet Jettert <m ettJiei
wott h» sfeMtf. Names w(U be wtthhoM on
o/ any rebject. ft to preferred that totters aot
it No totters eon be returned. AB
to the editor.
What Negroes Want
Sir: First, Joseph Albright saya
"I would ten thousand time*
rather walk through the door
of acceptance with voluntary
welcome than have the door
knocked down for me to enter".
Then Mr. Malcolm X says "I
am against Integration, forcing
ourselves on people who doo't
love us".
And now, Mias Eartha Kitt
says "the Negro should know
what he wants. .1 want equality,
that is why I bothered to ed
ucate myself and put myself in
a position where I could be
treated as an equal”.
Can Americans like these, pos
sibly be so misinformed as to
think that Rev. Martin Luther
King and the rest of us in this
fight for first dase citizenship,
are stupid enough to suffer the
leathenly abuse of muddle-mind,
pathetically self-fooled America
betrayers, for the purpose of
crossing some far fetched Im
aginary line and knocking down
some far fetched social door?
Forcing ourselves on them? Or
being treated as equals by some
so-called separate race of an In-
seoarable human race including
them?
If so. let Mr. Albright. Mr.,
Malcolm X, Miss Kitt and others
likewise misinformed, wake up.
see now. Learn what we want
and shall fight for until
to, integration of human
that in spite of those who would
distort the fact. Our aim re
mains unchanged, our objective
clear. Integration of colorless,
inalienable. individually God
given absolutely necessary hu
man rights. Wherein to what
ever level one ascenda, or one
descends, decides his worth and
place; belongs to him; all hereon
are equals; all
f
makers of the light or dark
ness, beauty or ugliness; fra
grance or stink of the existing
climate; the harmony or dis
cord in one, life members*
band; acceptance is mutual, and
none shall say "I think you are
as good as I”.
And anybody's child sits un-
intimidated on the public bench
at the public zoo. And every hu
man being, even the illiterate,
even the poorest is free from
unjust laws.
A. Webster
, Brooklyn, N.Y,
Powell Poll
Sir: Why not take a poll In
yotir paper by the Harlem Com
munity whether Congressman
Powell should go to Jail for six
weeks or pay Mrs. James?
I believe Powell should be in
Congress this time to help fight
for the President civil rights bills
which he is sending to the
branches of Congress. He can
go to Jail Fater if he must.
What has this woman done for
Harlem? Has she worked in any
°l tl» .mnlMtlo..’
Aid Needed
Sir: Rev. James Coleman of
Mount Olive Baptist Church has
in the last six months been giv
ing a limited support to the
boycotting parents of Englewood,
the local chapter NAACP and
the Englewood movesnent.
Rev. Coleman is a young min
ister who has been pastor of his
church a little over a year,
a result of this support and forth
right stance which has pointed
up his leadership capabilities in
the field of civil rights has
caused his fellow ministers to
become extremely critical of
him.
I am urging you to investigate
because we of northern New
Jersey cannot afford to lose a
freedom fighter of Rev. Cole
man's caliber. I am afraid that
if something isn’t done that hie
fellow ministers will be able to
exert so much pressure on this
young minister that he will be
come disgusted and desert our
fight.
Agustna B. Harris, pres.,
I 2^7
Mayor of New York, or so it
teems.
Negroes also should recognize
that Russia is murdering Jews.
Communist Russia is denying
Russian Jews the right to have
Bibles, prayer books, etc. It is
therefore Incumbent upon Ne
groes to come to the aid of
Russian Jews by protesting to
the Russian Government- of its
treatment toward Russian Jews
Why shouldn't Negro groups
picket the Russian Embassy in
Washington in protest of the
Russian murder of Jews? Would
this not show goodwill on the
part of the Negroes towards the
Jews?
Samuel Dyen. sec.
"Brith Hablryonim-Zealots of
Israel
Racial Tog
Sir: Several months ago," I
wrote a letter to the editor of the
New York .Jirror in which I
complained about the newspap
er’s obvious policy of including
racial origin In articles reporting
various crimes which involve Ne
groes; eg., William Jones 21-
_____ : burglary, etc.
Mr. Powell has spent all of 30
years in speaking against lnjus-
tice. I think she Is being used by Ungrateful
another race to destroy one of
ours. She should not be concern
ed whether the gets her money.
I am sure if the appeal court
rules against Mr. Powell, he wfl!
pay her to his ability. To me th>s
Judgment la one of revenge and
In the letter, I basically con-
tended that I felt It la appro-
„ prlate to print racial descriptiona
loufht b le.
who are ungrateful to tha Jew- <al authorttiM ,a orter #n.
Ish people, and this la a terrible
thing. After all, Jews helped
Negroes In their fight to attain
civil equality.
Stt: There are many Negroes of pe^.
not Justice
Maybe Mrs.^James la entitled
to something but not this. Tne
whole thing smells to me. I have
lived in New York for 30 years
and know people who have deal
ings with the police by telling on
their neighbors in regard to gam
bling la getting something lor It
some way or other.
Unsigned.
Negroes should remember that
Jews too, are discriminated
against. In sports. The New York
Yankees never had a Jew on
their Major League Ro«ter. This
could be considered discrimina
tion. couldn’t It?
Jew*, like Negroes, have not
as yet attained the office of tne
Presidency or even of the Vice-
Presidency. A Jew can’t become
hence their being Identified and
captured However, I also stat
ed that I am In complete oppo
sition to the Mirror’s tendency to
Indicate In a new* report that
an already apprehended Individ
ual Involved la a crime happens
to be a Negro.
Furthermore, because of this
policy, 1 seriously suspect the
underlying motives of the pub
lisher and, or editorial staff of
the Mirror. My totter to that
newspaper was never published,
which to understandable since It
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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IB • W. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., June 29, 1963
Wj^t CatUrat^^
THOM ASIN A NO&OM
foe x war or un...
-Habtt fo a cable. We weave a thread of it
kvery day and at last we cannot breakit" . . .
_____ _______ —Anonymous
THE INTERNATIONAL SET . . . Marie McCullough,
who belongs to Atty. Robert came home on Wednesday
after tight wonderful weeks browsing around in Europe
. ». Mollie Lee Moon, all of 16 and daughter of the Henry
Moons, is studying at the Alliance Francaise which is
part of the University of Paris; is staying with the very
wealthy Lomente French family who are seeing that
she sees and does everything. The Moons have a little
problem though; all of her letters are in French and
-Henry isn’t quite sure of the accuracy of his college
French . . .
’Twas such fun joining the 1963 honorees of the
New York Club of the National Association of Negro
Business and Professional Women’s Clubs recently as
they were hosted and toasted high up in Greenwich
Village by Ambassador Omar Hamid Adeel'of the Sudan,
Africa in his Washington Square Village penthouse
apartment The honorees attending were Estelle Noble,
Helen Butler Brown, Julia Jones and Jimmie Williams,
along with Anna C. Perry the whiz-of-a-president . . .
Mrs. Flora Azikiwe. wife of the Governor General
of Nigeria, stopped off in NYC for some 24 hours last
week en route to the graduation of their son, Chuma,
from Harvard University; then took off for Washington
D.C. to speak at the World Food Conference meeting...
Gordon Parks and his devastatingly beautiful Liz
leaving for a trip around the world soon and will return
in time for the publication of his book on which Sidney
Kingsley may do a play, too . . .
Artrelle Wheatley, Ford Foundation staff official
and wife of Henry Wheatley, of the State’s International
Official Visitors Office, left Friday night for a two
month assignment in Kenya, West Africa, where she
will help in opening a Ford Foundation office in Nairobi.
Her mother, Mrs. Henry Miller, came up from Welch,
.West Virginia, to see her daughters off. Her dad was
w former U.S. Atty, in the Virgin Islands under the Eisen
hower administration.
. ."--xJf
College Fund, Inc. and now in Washington D C
changed her name to Mrs. Reginald Hawkins. He’s a
DC pharmacist, says my “trusty spy system” . . .
The next time you see Marie Frazier, widow nf Pi.
Ae. Franklin Frazier, call her Mrs. Fred Thunderhird.
They were school days sweethearts; were wed recently
and are living in Monticello, Ga., near Atlanta. He is a
doctor, too
SCENE AND HEARD . . . Adelphic Union Lodge #14
is proud of oldest-member Past Master Charles H.
Percival who has been a mason since 1921 and with
Adelphic since 1937. He is 77 and going strong .
Miss Marie Louise Scruggs,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ramon
S. Scruggs of Detroit and New
York, was married to Dr. Charles
Norman lnniss in the Cathedral
of St. Paul, in Detroit, Mich,
last Saturday. 'Rev? Rick ford
Meyers performed the double
ring ceremony.
Mr. Scruggs gave his daughter
iu marriage in the candle lit
Cathedral Mrs. Clyde Hall was
matron of honor, and Mist Kay
Burge&s was maid of honor. The
Misses Merle McClendon and
Dorothy Jamerson of Nashville,
Tenn.; Rosalyn lnniss of the
Bronx; Gail Berry of Cincinnati.
0 , Claudia Love. Alice Baker
and Terry Rosenfield of El
lington, Conn.; Nancy Miller of
Jersey City, N. J. and Joanne
Herson of Lakewood, N. J. were
bridesmaids Sandra Stevens and
Pamela Busby were flower girls.
11 Ushers
**
Charles Henry was best man.
The ushers were Dr. Franklin
Seabrooks, Paul Piper, Samuel
Simpson, Ramon Scruggs, Jr.,
Marion lnniss, Robert lnniss, Gil
bert Fisher, Melvin Tinsley, Cur
tis Faire. Marcus Mahone, Jr.
and Dr. Joseph Chisholm.
Miss Claudette Elizabeth Heav
ens, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel White of the Bronx was
married recently to Walter Earl
Thomas at the St Martin’s Epis
copal Church where the Rev.
John H. Johnson and Rev. Wil
liam E. Kidd officiated at the
double ring nuptial mass.
The bride was given in marri
age by her father. Miss Sarah
Nash was maid of honor. The
bridesmaids were Misses Barbara
Anthony, Janet Leader and
Yvonne Thomas. Karen Washing
ton was flower girl.
The bride wore a gown of cam
elia white peau de sole with
appliques of Belgian lace etching
the sculptured bodice and form
ing panels on the controlled dome
skirt. She carried a bouquet of
orchids and trailing slephanotis.
The bride is a June graduate
of Clark University, Worcester,
Telephone Executive
Mr. Scruggs, father of the
bride. Is public Gelations director
of the American Telephone and
Telegraph company in New York
City.
Dr. lnniss, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Norman lnniss of the
Bronx is a resident at Receiving
Hospital in the Bronx. He is a
graduate of Hunter College in
New York City and of Meharry
Medical College in Nashville.
Tenn. He is a member of the
Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.
The couple will live in Detroit.
WEDDING DAY — Miss Marie
Louise Scruggs, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ramon S.
Scruggs, as she was married to
Dr. Charles Norman lnniss last
Saturday at the Cathedral
Church of St. Paul in Detroit.
St. James
r>
Miss Robbie Louise McCray,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elliott
Smith McCray, was married re
cently to Charles Louis Jones
at the St. James Presbyterian
Church where the Rev. Shelby
Rooks officiated at the double
ring ceremony.
Mr. McCrav gave his daughter
in marriage. Mus Yolande Wright
was maid of honor. Bridesmaids
were Misses Arlene Medford,
Estella Taylor and Mrs. Valerie
Wynter. Nadine Ramsey was
flower girl and Roger Bannister
was ring bearer.
Arnold Snyder was best man
Ushers were James Boyd, Morris
Downing and Donald Sterhenson
Mrs. Doe Milligan sang “Ave
Maria** and “Oh, Promise Me.
White Orchids
The bride wore white peau de
soie and lace. Her veil hung
from a rose with seed pearls
and her bouquet was of white
orchids and lily of the valley.
The bride received her mis
ter's degree In psychology from
Long Island University and Is
on the staff as a psychologist
at the Edenwald School in the
Bronx.
Mr. Jones, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Zack Jones of New York
City, is a graduate of the Charles
Evans Hughes High School and
is with the US Air Force.
The Reception was held at the
Audubon Ballroom for some 600
guests. The couple will live In
Suisun, Calif.
Miss Johnson Of
AN Staff Weds
Miss Cecelia Catherine Johnson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam Johnson, the Bronx, was
married recently to Lancelot An
thony Berkeley at the Cauklwell
AME Church, with the Rev. Carn
es McKinney officiating at the
double ring ceremony.
Thq. bride was gtvan. in mar
riage by her father. Misa Joyce
Morris was maid of honor. Miss
Cynthia Bell and Miss Deanna
Boot.
White Silk Shantung
The brides’ gown was of white
silk shantung, embroidered pan
els and an oval neckline. Her
veil hung from a seed pearl
crown.
The bride is a graduate of the
Grace Dodge High School and is
on the staff of the New York
Amsterdam News. The groom is
with Weil and Company.
The reception was held at the
home of the bride’s aunt Mrs. H.
H. Beatenbaugh.
EUROPE BOUND — Mr. and
Mrs. William Sweat plan to
celebrate their 25th anniver-
•ary on a European tour next
month, taking in London, Par
is, Rome, Holland and Switzer
land. She’s a member of Tem
ple Chapter No. 6 OES while
he la Worshipful Master of Is
rael Lodge No. 49. King Solo
mon Grand Lodge. (Gilbert
Photo)
Christian Women's Meet
Held At Holiday Hills f
The Christian Women’s Retreat
was held recently at Holiday
Hills In Pawling, N. Y. Mrs.
Uvee Mdodana-Arbouin is the dir
ector.
The event, being held for the
eighth time, drew many persons
in a varied program designed
to “promote comradeship and
intergroup understanding through
worship, study and religious de
velopment; and to foster efficiency
in Christian service.’’
Mrs. Marie Anderson, Mrs. Gret
chen Thornton and Mrs. Bertha
WilUams.
Citations went to Misses an<J
Mesdames Wilhelmina Cole, Eun
ice deSouza, Bertha Harris, Lit
lian S. Hunter, Mary Knox, C.O?
Mamj, Viola Payne, Sarah Peas,
ant, Ann R. Stanley, Frederick
Rubin, Frances Wilson and Ern
estine Washington.
Two-year
awards
Mrs. Sibley Speaks
Among those participating In
Two-year citations went to Meh-
dames Carolyn Allen, Nevada
i 1»
Claye, Lollie B. Hill, Fannie
the program were Mrs. Georgiana Mann’ Rebecca Moore, SarahMo>-
Sibley, who was keynote speak
er and Mesdames Welthy Hon-
singer Fisher, Eloise Bailey, El
iza Duckworth, Jean Booze,
ley, Mildred ^McIntyre, Mildred
Nixon, Vivian Robinson. Emma
Ryan Mainer Starks, Ruth Wat
ers ami Cora : W‘lliaTns
—
uuugiliuu, XAtviuc ucwcu, xaaaaawi#
and Mrs. Frederick D. Washing-^
ton, Rev. A. C. L. Arbouin, Dr.
E. B. Hicks David M. Thomas,
Miss Hazel Johns of Burma and
Mrs. Ann R. Stanley.
of New York was named corres
ponding secretary 6f the Clark
College National Alumni Associa
tion at the annual meeting held
at the college in Atlanta last
week.
Many awards
Awards were presented which
included the Distinguished Ser
vice Plaque which were won by
Clarence R. J. Weekes is the
new president of the group and
other officers include Henry
Caldwell and Anne H. Wright
That happy crew you saw out in the NYC and LI
waters on a recent Sunday was Master Sergeant Nor
man Simmons and his wife in their brand new 28-foot
cabin cruiser “Lollipop Lady.” The other “sailors”
were the Wiley Simmons’, the Jesse Walkers and the
Sgt John Wynns ..
Somebody said “our” women don’t play golf. That
“ain’t necessarily so” and if you don’t believe it just
go to the Amsterdam News—Ballantine & Sons golf
tournament August 15 and 16 at the Asbury Park Coun
try Club, Asbury Park, N.J. (Come on girls, sign up!
Don’t you dare embarrass me, after that statement!)..
SCHOOL DAZE . . . Dorothy H. Yancey joined class
mates and friends at the 25th reunion of her class at
Virginia Union Univ. during the recent commencement
and was .given a citation “Alumnus of the Year”, for
her outstanding work with the United Negro College
Fund. Other New Yorkers going down were Dr. Aaron
O. Wells, Mrs. Kate J. Hicks, the Elam Bankses of
Jersey City, Chairman of the Trustee Board Dr. John
L. S. Holloman and Eva F. Jordan . . .
X "Twas so charming Henri Mae Young who was
cited last Sunday by the Howard University Alumni
Club of New York at Bowman’s for her contribution
to the group
HERE AND THERE . . . Randy.Abbott “pleased as
punch” over the recent showing of his “Portraits in
Black” in a 125th Street bank window.
Tony Flemming home from a delightful trip to
Fayetteville, N.C.
Charles Thomas Jr. was best
man. Charles Butler Jr. was ring
bearer. The ushers were Enrique
Riggs, Wallis Funderburk and
Sidney McLean.
Lace-organa Gown
The bride wore a gown with a
lace bodice and organza skirt
appliqued with lace and embroid
ered wMfc pearls and sequins
with a chapel train. Her head
piece was of pearls and crystals.
The bride is a graduate of Wal
ton High School. She is on the
staff of the NY Telephone Com
pany.
Mrs. Thomas, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles S. Thomas of S.
Ozone Pork.N. Y., is a graduate
of the William Howard Taft High
School.
The reception was held at the
Savoy Manor for some 200 guests.
The couple honeymooned in the
Bahama ^Islands.
Miss Rawls
Is Wed To
Mr. Branch
Miss Alva C. Rawls, daughter
of Mrs. Jerome Rawls of the
Bronx was married recently to
Lawrence Branch at St. Anthony
of Padua la the Bronx.
Those charming Postal Alliance fellows want every-
body to know tha( some information you may have read
•bout the place of their convention (in another paper!)
was incorrect? The group will meet right here in New
• York City at the Henry Hudson Hotel, August 19-24 and
further its the Golden Anniversary for them
ofth
Mabel Staapers, grand dame of Negro nurses (and
she says there are no such! They are just "nurses”)
was so overwhelmed with the letters, telegrams, flowers
and on and on that she got at her recent testimonial that
aha Will just never get around to saying “thank you”,
but she loves you
Jerome Rawls gave his sister
in marriage. Miss Dorothy Smith
was maid of honor. Stephen
Branch was best man. Brides
maids were Miss Helena Branch
Mrs. Denise Branch, Mrs. Judith
Wilson and Miss Judith Wilson
The ushers were William Rawls
Victor Branch, John Ward and
Vernon Gibson.
Cathedral Train
The bride wore a. gown of em
broidered white silk peau de
soie with n cathedral train. Her
veil hung from si pill box bend
piece.
Lovable Lacy Alberta Dabney just celebrated her
60th year as a staffer at the Harlem Hospital. Dear
r It’a talented Mary Alice Wright, YMCA biggie, who
The bride la a graduate of New
York Community College and
heads the bacteriology depart
ment at St. Frances Hospital. Mr
Branch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hu
bert L. Branch, la n graduate of
Southern Illinois University and
ts on the staff of the Travellers
Insurance Company of New York.
The wadding reception for some
250 guests was held at the Savoy
Manor ballroom. The couple hon
eymooned In Mexico City, Mexi
co and will live in the Bronx.
will maatormind the big Delta confab to be held at
the Americana Hotel, August 11 to 17 •
FASCINATING NEW YORKERS . . . Lovely Ball of
Rosas deb Elizabeth Tarry Patton’s dress was made
by bar grandmother, Mrs. Eala Tarry, who is 61 years
«f nga. The dress of elegant simplicity was a work of
art ia silk taffeta from Switzerland and the lining of
gossamer like silk from Korea, was a gift to her mother
from a World War II soldier and had been kept for
Five teenagers presented their
fttortith’r debut Mri. Tarry was a top designer art^iMt^weA^at^ the uptown
Teenage Artists At Y
Birmingham, Ala., tor more than 50 years
ALL AROUND THE TOWN . . . Composer William
Dawaoa of Tuskegee was in town last week on matters
partaiiiing to the recording of his “Negro Folk Sym-
branch of the YWCA.
The budding artists were Miss
Lorraine Hudson. 8idney Barry,
Sandra Kitt. Miss Sandra
Melendez and Miss Francine.
Their work Included ofls. pastels
and pen and Ink drawings.
>1
Johnson Family
Has Reunion
Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Johnson
were hosts to their family at a
reunion recently at the home of
his sister and her, husband. Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Carbin in
Bridgeton. N. J.
BRIDAL PORTRAIT — Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Earl Thomas
are shown as they were re
cently married at the St
.
, _.
Among members of the family
. attending were Mr. and Mrs.
XL’.M? S’-SLStS’ »*■ «s «?•
the Rev. John H. Johnson of- (
fkiated at the double ring nup
tial mass
Henry Enouch. Miss Juanita
Charles Enouch and Mr. and
Mrs. Nathaniel Benson, all of
New York.
Also Howard Johnson, Mr. and
Mrs. Asbury Holden, Mr. and
Mrs. Schoffer Vaughan, Mrs.
Martha Copes. Thirgert Corbin,
Mrs. Elizabeth Hicks. Elton
Johnson, Mrs. Josie Henson, Har
vey Blount. Mrs. Stella Johnson,
Mrs. Annie Downing and Mrs
Perlene Reynolds from Phttadel
phi a.
Also Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Carbin. Mrs. Bessie Matthews.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Union.
Mr. and Mrs. Page Harmon, Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Bones and Mr.
and Mrs. James Holden of New
Jersey.
PEPSI-COLA PRESENTS
THE WEEK’S
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
Now—June 30—ART EXHIBIT; Van Elliot; 132 W. 97 Street
Now—July 12—ART EXHIBIT; 39 Grove Street; Village Art
Center Gallery
June 28, 29, 30—ART SHOW; Lenox Terrace (470 Lenox Ave-
nue Bldg.); Lenox Terrace Tenants Association,
Inc.
June 28—BOATRIDE; Pier *93; Miss Sepia USA associates.
June 28—AWARD NIOHT; YMCA Little Theatre; Y Drama
Group.
June 29—DANCE; Dawn Casino; Mystic Tie Lodge.
June 29—Audubon; Claflin College Club.
June 29—DANCE; Savoy Manor; Club Craftsmans of Tyre.
June 29—BUS TOUR: Pennsylvania; Tennessee A. and I.
University Club of N.Y.
June 29—DANCE; Renaissance; S.C. State College Club.
June 29—DINNER-DANCE; Hotel Commodore; Mt. Olive
Christian Mission Center.
June 29—ART SHOW; Exhibits Unlimited
(Ardsley, N.Y.); benefit for CORE.
Art Gallery
June 30—COCKTAIL PARTY; Playboy Club; Heritage Group
____
Miss Bell Guest
Model In N.C.
June 30—DINNER; African; Kennedy Memorial Center;
African Continental Art and Cultural Center.
June 30—PARTY; Renaissance; Student Nonviolent Co
Miss Lois BeH and 8-year-dd
Karen Thorman of New York
City were models at the fashion
show sponsored by the Old North
State Pharmaceutical Society Au
xiliary of Winston Salem, N.C.
last week at the Cafeteria of the
A. and T. College in Greens
boro, N.C.
Mrs. Rufus Hairston was com
mentator for the show. Other
models included Misses and Mes
dames Gail Brandon, Renee Har
rison, Edith Wilson. Melinee Al
len. Jenifer Diggs. Dorothy Jones,
Nell Watkins, Louise Watkins. Pa
tricia Wynn and Elsie Shanks.
Officers at the group include
Mesdames Elaine Thompson,
president; and Lessle Devers.
Geneva Douglas. Myrtle Samp
son, Virginia Wakefield and Hat
tie Penn.
_
Art Aidi CORE
Art works are being viewed
and sold for the benefit of CORE
at the Exhibits Unlimited Art
GaHery in Ardsley, N.Y. now
through July 3. Miss Clarie Green
berg and Jean Sez are co-chair
men.
Artists who are participating
include Myril Adler, Rudolf Bar
anlk, Arthur Hercbensohn, Ans
tole Kovorsky, SUvano Lora, Wil
fred Machln, Martin Reis, Fay
Stevens, Nadia Tmerson, Her
mine Twerkov and Zeke Ziner
A Litvak primitive oil and a
Clifford Odets will also be sold
ordinating Committee.
June 30—HAIR STYLE SHOW; Sheraton Atlantic Hotel;
Natalie’s Models.
July 6—DANCE; Savoy Manor;
Benedict College Club of
New York.
July 6—DANCE; Audubon; Los Pinos Nuevoe.
July 12—YACHT CRUISE; Pier 81; Evening of
Vassal Thomas.
Elegance,
_
July 13—DANCE; Celebrity Club; The Sophisticates.
July 13—WEEKEND; Lake Wood, NJ.; The Frat Men. 1
July 13—BU8 OUTING; Bear Mountain; Fellowship Baptist
Church of the Bronx.
July 13—DANCE; Renaissance; Mutual Society of French
Colonials, Inc.
July 26—DANCE; Savoy Manor; Johnson C. Smith Univer
sity Club, Inc.
July 27—DANCE; 8avoy Manor; Englishmen Social Club.
July 27—BUS RIDE; Willow Orove, Pa.; Unity Club of Bethel
AME Church.
And hen’s
another big event:
, the new tall Pepsi
. In the 16 ox. battle
Serve more, save morel
Material for this space is compiled by the N.Y. Amsterdam Newt. Z
The Amsterdam News is responsible for all announcements herein. *
e
Wasted Time
Lost wealth may be restored
by Industry, • the wreck of health
regained by temperance, - for
HAPPY COUPLE — Mr. and
Mrs. William Edward Hunter
are shown on their recent wed
ding day after live ceremony
at the St. David's Episcopal
Church where the Rev. John
gotten knowledge restored by
H. Welle pertormed the rites.
study, * alienated friendship
Mrs. Hunter is the former Miss
smoothed Into forgetfulness, •
Ann Marie Anderson, daughter
even forfeited reputation won by
of Mrs. Dorothy Lynes.
penitence and virtue. But who
ever looked upon his, vanished
hours, - recalled hit slighted
dom, . or effaced from heaven's
record the fearful blot of wasted
. stamped them with wls-
time. — Mrs. Sigourney.
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 ---
Witnesses Comply With South's
Laws, Quiet On Rights Fight (
n e N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., June 29, 1963
To Honor Rev. Dempsey
The lev Oberia D. Dempsey the Anti-Crime and Anti-Narcot-
will be honored Sunday tor lead- ‘cs Committee, pastors Upper
tag a campaign against crime
and narcotic addictioa
.
in Har- Park *** “1 125tk *
committee works out of
church.
Park Avenue Baptist Church,
the
mv
The Citizens Committee o f
___________________
Five Hundred and the Anti- _______
Crime and Anti-Narcotics Com- TVOman
mittee holds a testimonial din- You sometimes have to answer
ner at 8 p.m at the Hotel Com- a woman according to her worn-
modore, 42nti St. and Lexington anishness, just as you have to
answer a fool according to his
Ave. v
—Bernard Shaw
The Rev. Dempsey, leader of folly.
CAROLINA & Southern Movers
*. FlarMa. Vlrgial. MarytaaS. Artsaaa. Tasaa. N.V. u
ASSOCIATED MOVERS 6 STORAGE
MO
THIBD ATX.. BBOHX MT
Jehovah’s Witnesses condone *r
the separation of their Negro and ha
white members in the South, ag
merely out of compliance with vo
Southern segregation law.
"But compliance with that law <
doesn’t mean that we believe
that the races were meant by fjS
God to 'be separated or that we Ar
believe that Negroes are Inferior (s
to whites.” Ulysses Glass, an of- An
flclal of the sect, told The Am- 1
sterdam News this week while
acknowledging the veracity of th<
charges of segregation.
’’The law doesn't interfere with ca
our mission of teaching God’s mi
word. He doesn't require that sla
everybody must be together in lut
order to teach His word,” con- rel
tinned Glass, adding that those ed.
ship positions) and are Integrat- Lay That Pistol
Down, Man
ed here in our staff at head- June is the moath of annual
quarters (77 Sands St., Brook- amnesty granted ty the Police
Department during which own-
lyn>.”
The charges of segregation ecu of illegal weapons and dan-
wera mads by Jackie Williams, gerous war souvenirs may turn
a young woman of 1296 Dean 8t., thorn In without penalty unless
Brooklyn, who said she had asked they have been used In a crime,
clarification in a recent letter to Those wishing to avail them-
the Watchtower Bible and Trace selves of the opportohity to rid
their homes of the ever-danger-
Sciety.
Mlss Williams said she never ——————
received a
ous Implements should notify po
lice headquarters, 240 Centre St.,
the type of weapon and the time
and precinct of the surrender.
Ail types of weapons are in
cluded: Pistole, automatics, rif
les, sawed shotguns, machine
guns, land grenades, gravity
knives. stUetoes and brass knuck
__________
lea, etc.
.
<3
s
c
New Chief For
Cancer Agency
Dr. Henry J. Heimlich, surg
eon-director of the Heimlich Med
ical Group in New Rochelle, has
been elected president of Cancer
Care. Inc. of the National Can
cer Foundation, it was announc
ed this week by Mrs. J. Holl
aday Philbin, chairman of the
agency's executive committee.
Which bridge or tunnel
Is least crowded?
-diat 9991234 for the New York City
Report and find OUt (Outside NYC plaaza dial
NSW York ToImI
Arm Code 212)
•‘We believe la Jesus’ teaching:
‘Give unto Caesar those things
which are Caesars and to God
those things which also are his’,”
said Glass.
“That ia why we comply with
Southern law and will not recog
nise segregation when the law
is changed." he added.
Ne Government
“We don't recognize govern
ment by man, only government
by God.” Glass continued.
That is also a reason why the
Witnesses have hot taken any
position on the civil rights strug
gle. as also charged, said Glass.
"Throughout the remainder of
the country, Witnesses are all
treated alike," Glass stated. “Wit-
nessdfc are also district super-
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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 ---
<z
t»
SO • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., June 29, 1963 Gail RftnwoH'la Brooklyn
Two Ways to Solve Your Hair Problem
Magazine Page theater
amusements,
Is Married
Mrs. Gail Yancey Bennett,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John
T. Yancey was married Saturday
afternoon to Dr. Herschel Coch
ran. son of Mr. and Mrs Cordy
Cochran of Cleveland. Ohio.
Mrs. William C. Handy, widow
of Xh^amous composer, will open
her lovely garden at 19 Chester
Place, Yonkers, on Sunday, June
90, to the FTiends, an auxiliary
group of the Nepperhan Com-
emmity Center, for their Garden
Party and Summer Musicale,
from four to six. Tickets may be
obtained from Mrs. George H.
Blackwell, 63 Cornell Ave . or
Mr*. Theodore Smith, 283 War-
burton Ave.
Attorney Constance Motley to
be the Speaker at the N.A.A.C.P.
Tea Sunday, July 14. at the Jew
ish Community Center on Sound-
view Ave., in White Plains.
Mrs. Mary Surrency, director of
the ML Vernon School of Beauty
Culture, planning graduation ex-
ercisaa for thia year’s class of
fiftrfpwduates. on Sunday, June
30rThe Baccalaureate Service, to
hiZat Grace Baptist Church at
ffariMlowed by a reception at
| £2br Bridge Master, Mary
.AlicdTMrs. Arthur W. Browne!
.ef White Plains, to Norfolk, \a„
to compete In the Bon Ton Tour
nament Mrs. Browne took sec-
I ond place in the American Bridge
‘Association Tournament recently
In Manhattan.
I Those embattled Negro parents
In NewRochelle, finally won their
fight oo all points. Lincoln School
will be closed and the pupils dis
tributed among the other New
RocheAle schools
Muptw* of ML Vernon Gir.
Seoul Troupe No. 26, prepared
the food themselves, when they
feted their mothers at a Mother
and Daughter Dinner at St. Clc-
Dental Assistants, who also at
tended Hunter College, planning
a July 14 wedding to Thomp
son Kumekpor, of Ghana.
Mr. Kumekpor, who is a grad
uate .Undent at Princeton Univer
sity in the Dept. of Sociology, re
ceived his B.A. from the Univer
sity of Ghana, bolds an honor
scholarship from the University,
of London and will receive his
Doctorate from Princeton this
month.
Please continue to send your
news to me at 4 Oliver Ave. or
phone it to W# 8-8627 and thaax.
.MORE THISA AND THATA
The Omegas will live it up at
their Annual Scholarship Fund
Dance June 28, at the Glen Is
land Casino.
When the New Rochelle Busi
ness and Professional women held
their installation at the ML Ver-
non home of new member, Ada ;
Ramsey. National Corresponding
Sec., Marion Hughs, was present
to make the installation. Also ;
present was National Awards;
Chairman. J+mmie Williams. New
officers are. President. Cecelia ;
Cumberbatch, First V.P., Grace
Mackey, Second V.P., Geneva ■
Weeks, Third V.P., Nellie Ruth
Cook, Recording Sec. Kathleen
Jordan, Corresponding Sec., Etbel
La Var. Financial Sec., Juanita
Stubbs and Treasurer Alvin C. I
Kinney.
Necessity
Necessity knows no law except
to conquer. — Syrus.
The Rev. Herman Baroo, Min
ister of Maiarene Congregational
Church, Brooklyn, performed the
double ring ceremony in the Un-
; ioo Street home of the bride's
parents.
Mrs. Alma Brown and 0. f.
Wells attended the couple. Sha-
. ron Bennett, daughter of the
. bride acted as flower girl. Oth
ers of the bridal party’included
usher* Dr. Clarence Beverly and
I Dr. Bernard H. Robinson of New
Jersey. Also Lawrence P. Doss,
Dr. Samuel Q Mitchell, Dr. Lew
is M. Daniels, and Dr. Vertner
White, all of Washington, D.C.
The guests who attended the
quiet reception immediately fol
lowing the wedding were Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Brown, Attorney
and Mrs. 0. T. Wells, Mr. and
Mrs. William Brooks, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Whiting, Mr. and
Mrs. William Shaw, Mr. and Mrs.
Georg© Harris, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Turner, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Hamilton and -Mr. and
Mrs. George McClammy.
Also. Mr. and Mrs. John Wat
kins, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Wilson.
Mr and Mrs. Tyrone Davis. Dr
William West, Dr? Danny Veal,
Dr; Benjirrjr. Watkih*. Dr. and
Mrs. Lionel Wardlaw, Mesdames
Samuel Mitchell, yertner White.
Vivian Reed, Lawrence Doss,
Margaret Graves, Iris Martin,
Ethel Morgan, Malcolm Martin,
Florida Riley, Alieyne Gloster
and Janet Martin Stewart.
Otbeu were Misses Toni Des-
verny, Ardath Hairston, Winifred
Burrell, Edna Anderson, Joyce
Jackson, Benjamin Ashburn,
James Baird, Joseph Mann and
Ernie Hill.
tnees.
ChAtks Sifford, touring pro U
understand from a golfing enthu-
grast that they are the aristocracy ,
of gettdom) from the middle-
tt f-a the only Negro in the Thun-
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three performers are integral
part of lively Lombardo show
on Jones Beach which opened
last Saturday. Left is singer
Irving Barnes of Hollis, N.Y.,
famous Broadway singing star
Robert Clary and at right is
Mrs. Kay Barnes, also a sin
(West Photo).
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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 ---
T. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., June 29, 1963
hJ£
AIMS TO WIN — Former
heavyweight champ Floyd Pat
terson poses with a painting
of his final bout with Ingemar
Johansson following his press
conference Thursday at the
Newspaper Guild. Patterson
flew to Las Vegas Friday to
continue preparation for his
July 22 return with Sonny Lis-
ton. The articulate 28-year-dd
former fistic king, who^ was
kayoed in the first round by
Liston nine months ago, told the
gathering that the next fight
would not end in the first round.
Patterson also said that he
would fight Cassius Clay if he
regains the crown, iLayne
Photo)
Parks Meet
Program Guide
For Teenagers
The Department of Parks will
conduct a track meet Saturday.
June 29 at East River Drive and
Sixth Street There will be 12 ev
ents for beys and girls 17 and un
der. There will be no entry- fee
and competitors who have won
prizes at PSAL, private school or
have competed in AAU events are
ineligible to compete.
The New York Qty Youth
Board has published a 17-page
booklet, “Program Guide to Sum
mer Activities for Teenagers.”
Issued oy the Community Serv
ices Department of the Board,
free copies are avaiable by writ
ing tb the Board at 79 Madison
Avenue, New York 16, New York.
Over 300 golfers are expected
to attend the Fifth Annual Pro-
Am Golf Tournament sponsored
by the Goodson Foundation for
Children and Piel Bros. Inc.,
brewers of Piels Light Beer, to
be held Sunday, July 28, at the
Asbury Park Golf and Country
Club in Neptune, New Jersey.
Highlight of this year’s tourr
ament will be the Pro division
in which $1250 In cash prises
are being offered with $400 going
to the winner of the event. Ten
cash prises are being offered in
the Pro division.
The announcement was made
this week by Abe Saperstein,
founder • owner - coach of the
famed court Jesters, who are cur
rently in the midst of another pre
cedent - setting, record • shatter
ing tour of Europe. Saperstein re
turned to the U.S. for meetings
here related to the outdoor ap
pearances by the ‘Trotters. He
will also go to Chicago and Los
Angeles before rejoining the
troupe overseas about July 1.
BENEFITTED FROM TRO
PHY GAMES — Mayor Wagner
meets two members of one of
The Polo Grounds game is one
the PAL’s 630 baseball teams.
Tournament In August
Players Already Eying Tourney $®f
3-Ring Golf Tourney
Pro-Am
'Trotters
At PG Aid
YM, NAACP
The Harlem Branch of the
YMCA and the NAACP will be
two of the beneficiaries from the
huge Harlem Globetrotters’ pro
gram at the Polo Grounds, Thurs
day, August August 22.
Roland Brown, one of New Jer
sey’s top amateur golfers, reports
that interest Is already running
high in that area for the coming
Fourth Annual 3 - ring Charity
Open Golf Tournament, co - spon
sored by Ballantine Beer and the
Amsterdam News.
The tournament will run Aug
12-16 at the Asbury Park Golf and
Country Club. Neptune, N.J., for
amateur and professional play-
ers.
Brown says he has been receiv
ing many queries regarding the
tournament from Negro and white
golfers.
Only last week. Brown, a New
Jersey electrical engineer - golf
er who shoots in the low 70’s,
stumbled in the match play of the
New Jersey State Amateur Cham
pionships at the Essex Falla Coun
try Club. Last summer, follow
ing the Ballantine - Amsterdam
News 3 - Ring tournament, he
teamed with Teedy Rose, finish
ing second in the Upper Lake N.Y
Amateur Championships.
Field Director
Brown’s work with the tourna
ment committee was so satisfac
tory last summer that he will
again be in charge as field direc
tor this year.
The five - day 3 • ring compe
tition will get under way on Mon
day, August 12 with women and
senior men (over age 58 > leading
off. Amateur and pros start their
opening rounds on August 14, and
go into the finals on August 16.
The sponsors are offering $3,-
000 in cash prizes to the winners
in the professional bracket, with
$1,000 as the top prize. There will
be 18 other cash prizes. Thirty-
one trophies are up for grab
among the amateurs.
Mail entries to the Sports De-
ipartment, N.Y. Amsterdam News,
2340 8th Ave. New York 27, N.Y.
I am robmittinq my entry fee ef □ $12 Women □ $12 Sealer
Men □ $17 Amateur □ $2S Professional far the Throe Ring
Charity Open Golf Toumemont. Foos indues Groee end locker
foes. I understand that my paid entry will be confirmed by mail.
Amateurs entitled to one practice round, pros ootRUd to two
practice rounds. Pro-Amateur field will be cut at end of 2nd round.
40 lew pros end ties, 10 lew amateurs end ties in each Right.
player guilty ef
AAU Games
iCounts Mav
at Downing Stadium. Randalia Ha’haele Jnhiinv Cmin
Island, Saturday, June 29. The
field events will start at 11:30
a ni. Admission Is free.
little guy who made the big
jump from candlot ball to the
National Football League last
thp
Acrobatics Class
The New York City Youth
Board will conduct an Instruction
session in acrobatic* at West Side
PAL Center. 144 W. 90th St., on
June 27, at 7:30 p.m. for youngs
ters of Manhattan.
year, has signed his 1963 contract
with the eastern division cham
pion New York Giants.
Coach A1 Sherman plans to
take a long look at Johnny as
a flanker back when the Giants
open training camp at Fairfield
University next month.
United Golfers’ Association
rules will govern all play.
All proceeds from the tourna
ment are used to purchase
Christmas baskets for needy
families.
Piel Bros. Inc. representatives
Don Hare wood, Chris Gowan,
Tony Citarella and Frank Budd
will be hosts for the benefit
tournament.
Additional information can be
secured by writing to Roosevelt
Goodson, Director, 754 East 169th
Street, Bronx 56, N.Y. or by
calling DA 9-1106.
of four dates in Eastern baseball
parks this summer for the ’Trot
ters. The others are August 20,
Roosevelt Stadium, Jersey City;
August 23, Fenway Park, Boston,
and August 25, Dillon Stadium,
Hartford, Conn. .
Arrangements with the YMCA
and NAACP were completed this
week by Frank Forbes, boxing
judge and well known sports fig
ure, assisting as a coordinator for
the New York and Jersey City
games. Other worthwhile civic
groups will benefit from proceeds
of the games.
More Join To Pay
Homage To Joe Louis
Gov. Richard Hughes of New Schae
Jersey and Gev. John Dempsey
of Connecticut have joined Gov. r^m °
Nelson Rockefeller, Dr. Ralph
Bunche, and John Kluge, presl- as an
dent of Metromedia, Inc., as hon- the Li
orary co -chairmen of the July ship £
la Salute to Joe IxMiis to--.fig
given that boxing great by Metro-
James A. Farley, Boxing Com
missioner Melvin L. Krulewitch,,
Mayor Robert Wagner, and Ben-
net Korn, president of Metropol
itan Broadcasting Television, are
co - chairmen of the event.
Leaders from all fields of
American life are Landing togeth
er to honor Joe Louis one week
beftfre the world premiere of his
autobiographical documentary,
“In This Corner — Joe Louis’’
which will be telecast on "The
All-America
Players In
Buffalo Sat.
RIGHT IN THEBE — Ravens
catcher Georgia Rosario, Col
umbia - Community Baseball
League pre-teen baseball league
All-Star catcher, make a nice
target for his pitcher while
Snookie' Charlie Davis, the
loop’s batting champ, waits
patiently for the delivery. There
are eleven teams in the pre-
teenage baseball loop.
BIC hours a day serving you
"JOCKO"
7-4 PM
tout COMMUNITY HALL'OF FAME STATIONWWRL 1600 4 IT’S THE END
ON YOUR 0IAI
<
i
i
* -■
Don't look now. but football's
In the air.
Willie Richardson, Jackson
State's fleet halfback who was a
hero in last fall’s North - South
game, will be on the East Squad
Saturday night In the American
Football Coaches Association All-
America Game at War Memorial
Stadium in Buffalo.
The game will be nationally
televised over the ABC-TV Net
work at 10 p.m., EDT, in a de
layed telecast since the kickoff
time is at 8:30 p.m. All 60 of the
graduating collegiate players who
are in the game have been signed
or drafted by a pro team.
Other players with the East
Squad, include Penn Sate s pass
catching end. Dave Robinson;
John Mackey of Syracuse and
Dave Francis oihOhio State.
With the West Squad are Lar
ry Ferguson, the halfback - cap
tain of Iowa, Jesse Branch of
Iowa and Bobby Lee Bell. Min-
neiota's rugged tackle from Shel
by. N.C.
ATA Junior
Nationals Set
GREENSBORO, N.C. — The
Boys end Girts 16-18, 14-16, and
Under 14 singles and doubles Na
tional Tennis Championships of
the ATA will be held on the cam
pus of A & T College, Greensboro
N.C., July 30 - August 3, 1983.
Entries dose Julv 25. All en
tries should be forwarded to Dr.
R. Walter Johnson — 1000 Fifth
Street — Lynchburg, Virginia,
before July 25. Write to him tor
entry blanks.
Mm "In The Knew" Are Tilting
MATURES POWERFUL FORMULA
Ofnbre
ablets
$
Teak-Stomachic-Stimulant
744 Beck St., Bronx threw out
the first ball at the Mayor’s
Trophy Game last Thursday
between the Yankees and Met*
— and which the Mets won, 6-2.
before a crowd of 50,742. Pro;
coeds from the game go to
sandlot baseball.
The 15-year-old youngsters,
Jose Caban, left, oi 774 Fox St..
Bronx, and William Smith, of
Sports Whirl
By LES MATTHEWS
• y»“
ites: “Cassius Liston .will draw 15 million. I
hance to de-| would say if I boxed Clay we
for the heavy would draw about half that much,
m by Henry because Liston will answer C*ay
be taken ser- and I won’t.
oxer can get ‘ Some fight* I start slow and
g. especially
£ 8tart fast , .Dan Florio
I . y‘ Man~ and Buster Watson, my trainorv
1 boxers un- j^jp me with my strategy
ind he knows I will make the final
. j m boxing less. BoX0£
s young man
he is going. no^ y,e important thiagr
to brag and Condition is important also^J
mows that it wq£
vegas j>m
ling flying lessons, have 16 hoofa
i lost his first and have soloed. . .1 stopped rijj
lg the softball mg p'.anes in 1955 when the plaae
iors. The col- i was on had a'little accidegC
aid the War- j did not fly again until 198JI
ibout because when I flew to Sweden . . I Wove
>y the Bronx not seen Cus D’Amato since ,*the
by Frank £aSt fight . . we have bo contraet.-
He Aill.get his cut. J d9fli;t seed'
* *
Top pitcher . / 4
5a‘4
into Meneaez, a contract
>m Robinson
ball League is seeking umpires, softball
pitcher
Umpires are paid.
The Mets of the Bedford-Stuy- ball k
vesant baseball league have two ball, 1
sets of brothers on the team, sluggin
Cliff and Willie Davis are infield- day ui
ers while Willie .Little pitches 32nd I
with his brother Marv playing failed
in the infield. . .Willie “Fat Man” PAL c
Brinson, the Brooklyn musician, time s
is the man behind the loop. .. won th
The Metropolitan AAU track and held <w
field championship*; Saturday, nual
July 29, at Randalls Island.
Patterson Talks
and fie
for R
Former heavyweight champion June 2
Floyd Patterson answering re- Johnny
porters at a press interview be- relatioi
fore flying to Las Vegas to con-Center
tinue his preparation for his re- Julie
'about
turn with Sonny Liston;
“I weigh 195 but I expect to Daniel
' weigh 185 for the title fight... The H
’ My opinion about Sonny Liston divided
is not important. . .1 will not be J. Bo<
kayoed in one round. . .The pub- loop at
’lie will see a different fight. . the B
It’s been nine months since toe Bronx,
. last fight. . .1 made several mis- erans
takes. . .1 started too slow and water,
i allowed Liston to set the pace . . B. S.
i Liston made several derogatory and I
i remarks about me I have nothing Morris
against him. .. .Liston and Clay a no-l
will • draw well at the gate.. . at Col.
Well! Clay said his bout with are plj
To people
and to their sons and daughters
Metropolitan has developed a new series of policies covering
expense of hospitalization which will be issued at all ages 65
and over. These policies can mean a great deal to the peace of
mind of senior citizens and their families in time of need
brought about by age or sickness.
| *
The premiums on these policies may be paid by the older
people themslves—or by their children who may have the
ultimate responsibility for hospital bills. And—under present
income tax laws, these premiums are treated as medical ex
penses of the taxpayer or his dependents for purposes of income
tax deductions.
If you would like further information on Metropolitan's
new Senior Citizens Policies, write or phone:
August Brocco
MANAGER
FRANCIS ESPOSITO
IRWIN SABATH
SEYMOUR FIEIGELMAN
SHERMAN WINK
Metropolitan laser once Consultants
Estate Planning A Business Insurance
105 Court Street
(near Atlantic Avenue)
Brooklyn, N. Y. Tel. MA 4
* FiTf Out Coupon For Further Information
NAME
I ADDRESS „
I TELEPHONE
L__________
AGE
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, Naw York 10, NY.
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 ---
Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, June 29, 1963
- "■> :•** *TPW*~Y*v’gr Jp“ ’ .***•-•*-• ww^ «» , w ,/ • t
" ’
' SW’i- ’T
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
?Ti4iMi?tTaJv>i* #«<»»»» r»
CALL Ri 9-5300.. TO PLACE WANT ADS .. IN BROOKLYN CALL UL 7-2500
Mvusm
Hom
Kch s Plaza
ROOMS
TRANSIENTS
AD 4-7300
MO 24160
J
ROSEDALE $15,990
GA $50 CASH |
West End Av. 936 (106 St.)
THE LANCASTER
STURMAN
REAL ESTATE
391 t 149th ST.
LU 54100
Dee Joy Village
Springfield Gd»,
Civ. $950 Cash.
GOODYEAR
01 74800
17»-T Hillside Ave.. Jamaica
Open 7 Days l:3»-R:3O
JA 3*5300
Hollis Estates $15,990
DETACHED DUTCH COL.
7 large rma. garage, full
basement, garden grounds.
ADOISIEIGH DARK
COLONUL 1 family. 44x104!
lot. A bedrma, modern kitch
en with wall oven, wall to
wall carpeting throughout. I
bouse. 26-ft living room,
spacious finished basement
and many other EXTRAS.
Beautifully landscaped.
CAPE COD
4 bedrooms, finished base
mant. lovely patio. Trued
cammia Heights
1 family detached, brick h
shingle. 40 x 100 let. 3 bed-
ACCLAIM REALTY
HO 4-3450
306-01 Hollis Ave., N. Y.
CORONA
Opportunity!
LEWIS A MURPHY Hl 4-0100
«-38 ROOSEVELT AVE.
JACKSON HEIGHTS. LX
2’/a to 4’/i
ROOMS FROM
$108.00
Furnished Model
id shape. 2—3 family
160-34 A MO-34 Liberty
STRIDE HO 4*7630
WEEK...
after WEEK
Special - Low Cash
New York
AMSTERDAM NEWS
has carried MORE
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
....ISSUE
ISSUE....
than ANY other
newspaper
in the U. S. A.
EXCEPTING /
BROOKLYN 1 FARE ZONE
NEW 1 FAMILY
$1,000 Dawn
TO AU
DON'T TAKE OVER SOMEBODY ELSE
ACHES
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FOR LESS MONEY
you can OWN a beautiful and luxurious
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AMES "GUARANTEED'
BRAND NEW HOME
LOCATED IN THE FINEST, MOST DESIRED
RESIDENTIAL AREAS IN QUEENS...NEAR CITY SUBWAY
Beautiful
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Featuring 6 Tremendous
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Baths, Gleaming, Glorious
Kitchen Units including
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SPRINGFIELD
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On Large Beautifully
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6 Rooms (3 Bedrooms)
Exquisite Kitchen Units
with built-in wall Oven
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SEE MODEL
at 206-11
47th AVE.
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EXP'Y
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IDEAL FOR
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X $22,900
with $2400 Or. pay.
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PAYS ALII
14714 HH LSIDE AV . JAMAICA
OL 8-4000
Open Daily. Sat A Sun
FREE PARKING
147-HlllaMe Art.. Jamaica
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Many Extras
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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 ---
42 • N. X. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat , June 29, 1963
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
FURNISHE
Brooklyn—Unfurnished
CTVYVBBANT AVE.,
SO. OZONE PARK — 3 rmi. fas
and electric Included, private en
hance. .Neer everything, BIOS
mouth. Also new 1 and 2 family
BROKER
bomea tar sale
TOBIAS W. WASHINGTON
FA 2-8514
JA 9-1529
AGENT
1 ~.3 rm agt Bl P* wk.
M couple preferred.
EV 5-9424 Owner
Lafayette Aw. 352 (dassaa)
"LAST APT "
m rme. 295.
Newly rebuilt
PR 3-2015
1H RM UNFURNISHED APT. Bean
totally decorated. new stove. r*
frlgurator. tola bath. 71 Stuyves
ant Ave. UL 5-4215. OWNER.
3V» RM UNFURNISHED Garden
Apt at 114 Herel St. Day. WA P-
SIM. Night, HY 2-1114. Owner.
1V4. 2. Jta. 3. 4. S, 6 RM APTS.
CLINTON AVE.. 515 - 2 rm modem
apt. TUe bath, ground door, near
sob. 202 month Stmt. FI 7-6124
bet 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. OWNER
RMS, SOS: with garage. $115-
5 mu, Prospect PI. near New
York Ave.. Apt. bouse. $110; 3
rme, 275. Decatur St. Mrs. So
bers PR 3-9694 S3 Albany Ave.
BRAND NEW 4W RMS. Ultramod
ern apt. Crown Height* Flatbush
UL 7-1387
section. Smalls
Apts. Available
All Over Brooklyn
4's, S's, 4's, 3's, 2's
From $47 and Up
Children Welcome
Welfare Welcome
BUFFALO AVE nr Park Place.
Clean 4 rm 269 per month In
apartment building. Nr transp.
Working ooupie preferred. Agent
HY 2-5573
RiiCKAWAV AVE.. 732. 4 large rms
I mo's rent, 277.36 Phis 1 mo's
of 3 adufcn pi
PR 3-6517 or
Harris.
Apts. Available
All Over Brooklyn
r«, 3%4'i,ri,t'»
From $47 and Up
Children Welcome
Welfare Welcome
UL 7-3400
1192 Fatten St. (nr. Bodford]
AJAX REAL ESTATE
NE 8-3731
CROWN HEIGHTS — parlor floor
and ground floor, yard, children.
Bus A Sub SUB.
CROWN ESTATES Hickory 3-5590
loot Lafayette Ave..
Mdyn.
t BEAUTIFUL’ RMS~FOR_RENT
HANCOCK ST, 4 RMS. M
Business people preferred.
Call Sun and after
« RMS. With kitchen and bath, tile
kitchen and bath, freshly painted
$100 monthly. Owner GL $-2697
5 RM Apt. Newly painted and dec
orated $85 a month. Cal E. Wil
liams Agent GL $-2835
FR 4-0295
BU 4-7770
Unfurtt. opt., 5 rooms. Coll
ST 9-4933, twwtr.
4, 5 and 6 room opts.
Besu'ifid large private mu. Crown
Heighn. and Redford-Stuyvesant
Children. call
MR LYNCH — GL 5-5077
CLINTON HILL Section. 3 rm apt
Newly decorated, parquet floors,
good shopping god trsnm Working
people preferred Owner PR 1-
8213 or NE 8-7461 before 9 p.m
St-rlng PI., »
Llncotn Pl.. 3
St John's PI., 4 rooms------$1«
ALEXANDER ST 3-3700
783 Franklin Ave. (Nr Bt Johns PD
(OPEN WEEKENDS)
Came In now DI 1-1177. IX 41198
i»M Strauss St . Cor. Pitkin Ave
GREEN A W1TE REALTY, lac.
4 rooms, 1120; 4
IX 7-4017
IX 4-7757
ST ALBANS — 3 rm. apts, furn
ished and unfurnished. Also 4 rm.
apts. A houses to lease.
REVANDER REALTY
200-06 Linden Blvd
LA 7-6060
St. Albans
ST ALBANS - HOLLIS - Lovely
3 room apts. furnished A unfura.
Children. Also 4-room apt. A
houses. Agent — HO 5-6020
JAMAICA - 2 business
(erred. Nicely furnished
OL 9-7037
OWNER
4 Nicety furnished rm apt. 1
dleaged working couple pref
Call from IP a.m. — 6 p.m. Ot
OL 1-5323
Queens—Unfurnished
MIC KENS JA 3-0347
ALL SECTIONS of Queens, apart
3. 4. 5. A 6 rms.
Florence Leoawan
LA 54319 AR 6-7559
200-27 Unden Blvd St Albans
3 ROOM APARTMENT Modem P100
s month. Couple preferred.
AGENT
HO S-4W6
New ‘3 bedroom apartment. July:
Occup. A-l Ares
$185 Monthly
Agent 516 FI 7-8739
ludtard'l Fr„ S,nric,
l.ONU 1HI.AND apartments, hit-
chanettes and rooms. Liat yours
with us (or quick notion. No
charge to landlords — Jenhlns
Realty. 22-21 102th Bt.. Corona,
HA 4-8324
NT.
FREE LANDLORD LISTING
BRONX A QUEENS APTS. WANTED
HILBURN REALTY GL 44640
Apartments Wanted!
ANYWHERE IN BROOKLYN
No Charges to Landlords
Responsible Tenants Waiting
Please Call Naw
Mr. Baiman or Mr. Lucks
UL 7-3400
1192 Fulton St. (near Bedford)
Want A Working Tenant?
ACT NOW:
LIST TODAY!
J. BuCanan
311 Kingston Ave.
PR 2 9598
(near Union)
GL 5-5451
2 Family Brick
Playroom Garage
6.1. Approved
Ask About
Our Layaway Plan
ALSO AVAILABUB
1 FAMILY HOMES
2939 Tiemann Ave.
BEAUTIFUL NEW
2 FAMILY BRICK
SOI’NT) VIEW STATION PELHAM
BAY LINE. I Mock from subway
6 A 5 ROOM RANCH
LEVEL APTS.
3 Baths, Fall Basement
$3,500 DOWN
EASY TERMS
Silhouette Realty TU 2-2600
12M t. GunhlU Rd.
Open 7 days
$1,750 DOWN
Buys 3 Bedroom Homs
N. RIKELMAN CY 5-5710
W. BRONX - :
241)00. Sound v
$5,000 WUUan
family brteb.
2. 3, A 4 I
BROKER
HO 5-6020
GL 4-59B7
Studio Apt Reap. work, couple prel
Florence Leoawan
LAS-8319 AR 67559
200-27 Linden Blvd. St. Albans
Kew Garden Hills
Beautiful Garden Apts.
In A Fine Community
Naw Refrigerator acd Range
Landlord's Frao Service
Year Apts . Kitchenettes A Houses
Needed. We have select cttsotele.
AURORA REALTY, HO 5-6020
112-13 Farmers Blvd. St. Albans. NY
SPRINGFIELD GARDENS
3 Roam Apartment
NEWLY DECORATED
AFTS. —RENTAL S&VICE
Crown Heights and Vicinity.
Ns Charge ta Landlords.
roker
NE 3-8363
$100
CALL OWNER:
. . AXJ-1802 ,
Broker R. Jenks, AU 3-6267
WORKIWQ MstAsr, P year std dnn-
CARRIES
10% CASH
2 FAM
FULL A SEMJ-DETAfMED
SETON HOMES
V - /
We oliljr have one 4-room apartment
lor rent. $95 per month But look
What else we have!
5 Room House. 87$ per mo. No Foe.
6 Room House, 960 per mo. No Fee.
7 Room House, 890 per mo. No Fee.
Call ns last and see for yourself.
AGENT
AX 7-0072
Williomsbridge—Beautiful 4 fam
brick det. 4 garages, garden, pol
io Very modem. Many, many
others.
Coll naw—Dorsett, 334 I. 143 3*.
LU 9-5120 WY 1-2587
SUBURBAN UVINO
•uses — 2 family brick. 8 A
ihed basement, tile baths,
garage, wan ovens. Near
Longfellow Ava. Modern 4 family
brick. oU. baaemenl. excellent lo
cation. Must see to appreciate.
EGERTON DENNIS
900 E ltd St
CY 2-3777
YOUNG MAN Wishes to
rm apt with same. I
Pl. PR 3-3425.
$ RM APT In new developmeiM
S. Otona Park, or transp. Separate
heating. $115-120 month. Call
OL 9-5613 or LA 6-5622 Robert
H. Welch. '
Manhattan—For Saia
1. 2. 3. family houses. Aim income
properties. All Boros.
C LESLEY JOHN LE 4-7758
FOR SALE Private house near
125th 9i. 3 legal rooming houses,
alto, 1. 3, 3 family homes In
Bronx. Others MR. MARTIN
127TH ST (Bet 5th A Madison Avee)
Legal ronmlng house Pries S15JOO
LEGAL Rooming house, above 145th
SACRIFICE
W 132 ST-7 AVE
It, 11 rms. brick, new oil
r. 6 kitchenettes, legal room
no violations, registered rent
year. Cash required only 83738
CALL OWNER PL 7-6985
394 W. 114th Ot.. 10 family Vacant
apt. tar buyer S14WIP with 83488
cash. Income $4,900 Georie W.
Cole. 402 W. 148th St., FO 11-5506.
may have
r-UL 7-4174
JAMAICA and all areas, 2. 3. 6.
S, and 6 rme . CaN new for choice
furnished rme. Aim
apts. Many
available Be•her ns P-M48.
'' • **wm»g*wo9vt nf\iii n, wdrAJI
SAMUEL A WAWEVNS. LTD.
IN 7-9485
IN NEW YORK CALL Ri 9-5300 .. TO PLACE WANT ADS.. IN BROOKLYN CALL UL 7-2500
f
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