New York Amsterdam News — 1963-08-31
1963
11 pages
✓ Indexed
NEWi
SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1963
Mood Of Marc
Is Determined
By JAMES BOOKER
WASHINGTON — “Some of us may die, like Wil
liam Moore and Medgar Evers, but our war is for
life, not for death, and we will not stop our demands
for FREEDOM NOW!’’
These were the emotion-packed bellind bars Iuknow yo“ wiU un'
words that echoed and re-echoed d,er*and my absence. (The group
around the historic Lincoln Mon-M 233 Persons are not scheduled
ument Wednesday afternoon, but to * a. rained unttl SepL 9 but
the man who said them was ab- c°u^ ** released on $300 bail.)
sent from the demonstrations. “S° cannot ** you “
They came from James Farm- body; but we are Wlth y™. nL
er, national d.rector of the Con- .spirit By march,n?
gress on Racial Equality, who t0\ yo«J« tramPin«
missed the historic demonstra- sP°ken the me®saf®. .
tions, electing to remain in jail sa«e of "ur T**
in Donaldsville, La., rather than ana ~ Yo“ have f. “
attend the March and meet with the Struggles of*our* people• m
President Kennedy late Wednes- Mississippi and Alabama, too,
dav afternoon
and ,n California and fhicago
"
X. TZ complete text .1 ™J”
his dramatic message:
' from al‘ over nat,°" “
“From a South Louisiana Par- one ml**ty ™ce you have sp°-
ish jail I salute the March on ken t0 the natlon-
Washington for Jobs and Free-
don\,Tw° iUndr,ed,Jh‘TtW°' “You have also spoken to the
Direct Action
Freedom Fighters jailed with me w> You have said t0 the
in Plaquemine, La., also send worW by yQUr presence here, as
greetings to you.
our successfui Direct Action in
In jail
numberless cities has said, that
“I wanted with all my heart in an a«e of, the™^“5le"
to be with you in Washington on bomb; violence is outmoded as
this great day. My imprisoned » 8olul,on to Problems <*
,
brothers and sisters wanted to m“- ,
be there too! I cannot come out -It 13 a truth that needs to
while they are still in, for their «* Seated loud’y, and no one
“Crime was the same as mine else *nr»hwe in the world is
- demanding Freedom Now."
« w*n “ <»r Ameri'
And, most of them will not come can Negroes through their non-
out until the charges are drop- violent direct action demonstra-
ped or their sentences served. l*ons-
“I cannot let the heroic Negro “The tear gas and the electric
citizens of Plaquemine down by!catt*e prods of Plaquemine, La.,
...
,
leaving them now while they are (Continued on Page Two)
Amsterdam Marchers
EARLY BIRDS — Amsterdam
News staffers are shown early
Wednesday boarding their bus
provided by this newspaper's
management to take them to
Join the more than 200,000 who
gave their full backing to the
Civil Rights March On Wash
ington. Staffers in the fore
ground include, Mrs. Nona
Pierce, Executive Secretary;
George Hackett, building ad
ministrator: Anne Woodley, edi
torial: Estelle Jones, adver
tising and Selvin Michael, As
sistant to the publisher.
iDummett Photo)
March Officials
Avert Breakdown
By JAMES BOOKER
WASHINGTON, D.C. — An hour before the his
toric civil rights march was to begin, the nine leaders
of the march held a closed meeting in the Lincoln
Memorial to avert what might have caused a major
breakdown in the demonstrations.
The situation developed over 1 '•
I
the prepared speech ef J o h n major goals of the demonstra-
Lewis, of the Student Non-Vlo- support the Preaideat’s
lent Coordinating Committee. O).L1f nil1
Lewis had prepared to bitterly
™
attack the ^ministration’. Civil As the ™3U“- Ma^h Chairmen,
*
2 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS. S«t, Auf. 11, 1H3
••This Is Oar Prayer!”
HARLEM STREET SCENE —
for the March On Washington.
Typical of pre dawn scenes in
They are members of Local 144,
Harlem Wednesday are these
Hotel and Allied Services Em
demonstrators ready to leave
ployees Union, who made the
1.450 membership representa
tion which marched. The Union
spent $6,000 for transportation,
sent 1,000 sandwiches and 1,500
soft drinks.
DIAMONDS ARE A GIRL S newswoman, looks at diamond
BEST FRIEND — Connie Blan- star medallion awarded Miss
kenbaker ileft> beams happily Blanekenbaker at Studio Girl
as Nancy Gitten, Philadelphia cjntest, held Saturday night at
Hotel Sheraton East. Jack Sig
ler, assistant to vice president
of Studio Girl, looks on. (Gilbert
Photo).
Residents
Join March
By HARCOURT TYNES, Jr,
‘ Staff Editor sf the
Boycott
Never
< Continued from
Lang,, who is in <
Lincoln Memorial,
George Causey, wh
of George Rockwel
Police Ei
Guardians Pres
Allen, and his co-w
Wesley, Kenneth Cu
John Pierce, left
2:30 a.m. heading i
SET FOR DEBUT — Vigor
ously rehearsing for their
forthcoming debut concert on
September 6th at the River
side Plaza Ballroom are mem
bers of the lere Dance Com
pany. The group was commis
sioned by the Trinidad & To
bago Independence Celebra
tions Committee to spark the
First Anniversary Celebration
of the Independence of the
West Indies Islands which will
take the form of a ‘Concert
and Grand Ball’. Representa
tive to the United Nations from
Trinidad & Tobago will be pa
trons. Above left to right are:
Judith Doren, Carol Spinelli,
Florence Bowe. Elsie Steele
and Leroy Fentress.
GEORGIA PEACH—The Geor
gia Club cf Cornerstone Baptist
Cjiurch of Brooklyn, held an
oriental tea and fas'iion show
Saturday Aug. 54. Miss Barbara
Young was crowned “Georgia
Peach of ’63'’ by the Rev. San
dy F. Ray. pastor as club pres
ident Mrs. Esther Freeman
looked on. I Merritt Photo).
BRIGHTON'S
AUGUST SALE
-TOUR CHOlCr
*.29
4/5 Quarts
Lawson
Brands
1. Vedke
HAVtNO r,
A FAITH
See Our
Countar - *
Specials! '* £
BRIGHTON -
U'uQR A WINE COBP.
136 LENOX AVENUE f
At West 116th St. Sobway
E,t V-S4$4
F THE LARGEST AUTOMOBILE
SCHOOL IN THE WOBLD
Licensed by The State of New York
Learn to drive e TKACTOR-
TRAILER, TRUCK OR BUR.
Inatructioe leading to Claea 1-14
chauffeur* license uow aeattabte
Specially equipped can hr the
handicapped and disabled
You gain confidence quickly
under our modern instruction
method
1963 SAFER DUAL CONTROL CARS
AUTOMATIC. STANDARD SHIFT
SPORT CARS AND TRUCKS
SMALL FOREIGN
WE FURNISH'RAH FOR ROAD TEST
A FREE trial lesson in a new
automatic or standard shift
car. All cars equipped with
dual controls.
A FREE 60 page booklet
0 giving complete instruC-
L tions on how to drive.
145 W. 14th St.
(Bet. 6th 6 7th AvesJ
CHelsw 2-7547
Mt. Kisco, N. Y.
hui
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Hun- I
dreds of Upper Westchester reel- coc
dents joined more than 100,000 *
persons from throughout the na- dej
tian Wednesday in the March on tht
Washington for Jobs and freedom. an,
Under warm, sunny skies, exu- r
berant masses of people moved mi
to the Lincoln Memorial in the coi
oui
demonstration.
By noon, at least, there had <
been no violence. And Roy Wil
kins, NAACP leader, predicted dg
the day would pass peacefully. ca
At about 11 a.m. Rev. Rlchanl Nt
Bowman, pastor of St Luke's cu
Church in Katonah, was waiting fj
In the huge throng on the walk
surrounding Washington Monu- an
n»
ment -
I’M HAPPY to see so many da
people here from Westchester,” j
be said. He added that “this has
a deep personal meaning to us. w<
My church believes in this. I’m es
representing the congregation.”
Milton Yale, chairman of the ic,
Goldens Bridge Civil Rights Com
mittee, said he believed the dem-
onstration would “strike a blow sj,
against Jim Crow in the North je
to
as well as the South.”
MR. YALE was the leader of e
_ about 80 persons from Mt. Kisco,
Goldens Bridge and^Ralonah. 4^,
“We’re going back home,” he g,
said “and bend every effort to
get rid of discrimination in hous- j,
ing, employment and education
in Upper Westchester.”
$
we will boycott every se- , Dorothy Jon«- Consultant b
fated school In this city." In, Education for the City Com- a
is remarks were met with mission on Human Rlghts’ *on r'
Hindering burst of roaring ap- aa °Xation
P?renta after a
val from the more than two she discussed the Commissions
0
dred parents present.
obinson said that the boycott,
toward “tegroted y
rdinated on a city-wide basis, In, delirenng a P01 cy Sta^ *
“h “w" ”
<* Education should: t
eflnite and affirmative school **
be continued. "until we get
schools.
1
egregation timetable. Think of 1- Adopt immediately a master v
i boycott as old age insur- plan listing all steps leading to «
e.”
e said. “It is a crime to per- and teachers in the school sys- |
I
tinue to victimize and deny 2. Set a time schedule for the t
children good educations.” implementation of each phase ofj
, complete integration of pupils
the Board of Education to tern.
►n the subject of Freedom the plan.
isses, the parent leaders 3- Assume responsibility for ag
signing children to schools for
reed that:
. Ignore the Board of Edu- integration purposes as it now
;ion’s curriculum and teach assumes responsibility for assign-
gro heritage, Negro history, ment on a neighborhood-school
irent freedom movements and basis.
< Include in a master plan
-ican history.
I. Stress reading, arithmetic specific details on desegregating
j remedial reading and re- all schools in the system, using
•dial arithmetic.
, whatever combination of Integra- i
I. Classes will be held five tion techniques is appropriate;]
ys a week from 9 am. to such as sit£ selection, re-zoning.,
,m
(the pairing of schoqls under
in announcing details on the some version of the Princeton
>rkings of their Freedom Class-1 Plan, the exchange of school pop-j
the Harlem parents said that, ulations, the busing of children,
date they had acquired serv- of any ethnic group, to other
•s of 30 tea'uers.
rhey issued a plea for both 5. Work out with the Commis-
>gro and white retired profes- sion on Human Rights and pub
inals, well versed on the sub- He and private intergroup agen-
rt of Negro and African bis- cies a program of community
ry to address individual class-;education and community in-,
1 volvement for each phase of the
i districts.
Harlem par- j 6. Set up a coordinating so
Inquiries and applications plan.
ay' be made tq
rts Committee. W. 133rd tion committee on school inte-
reet
'gration composed of policy-level
Other Freedom Classes plans representatives of the Board of
elude, asking parents for the Education and those officials City
an of books from their per- agencies such as COHR. The De
nial libraries, on Negro heri- partment of Real Estate, the
ige, history and Africa. Housing Authority, and the Plan-
The parents announced that ning Commission.
-rPUYVWq „• pv{ Rnbert A
Guirbs and Pvt. Ernest Bow
scr. both from the New Ycrk
area, are receiving eight weeks
basic training at the U.S. Ar
my Training Center, Fort Dix,
N.J. Pvt. Gumbs is the son of
Mr and Mrs. Lesmore Gumbs,
354 Lyman Pl. Bronx; and
Pvt. Bower is the son of Al-
reported for duty witli the Sec-
lyn.
AMERICA'S SELLING
SCOTCH WHISKY’.
Blumstein
WEST IlSlh STREET
Buster Brown
goes back
to school
Blouses 1.
Parochial Blous
Gym Suits !
SBps $1
Knit Pantie;
Raincoats i
Jr. Petite Skir
Jr. Petite Blous
HE WALKED WITH GOD —
Rev. Milton Perry was one of
those who highlighted the his
toric 1957 Prayer Pilgrimage to
Washington as he walked 225
miles from New York to the
nation’s capital. Above, a po
liceman holds him as he ad
dressed the 50,000 persons at
the civil rights demonstration
for freedom, which resisted In
passage of the nation'^ first
civil rights bill since Recon
struction.
The
honor,
spoons
louder he talked of his
the faster we counted our
Ralph Waldo Emerson
It is a worthier thing to de
serve honor than to possess it.
—Thomas Fuller
That glory only is imperishable
which is fixed in one's own moral
make-up.
—Mary Baker Eddy
Hard to believe, Isn’t it. For
over 60 years kids have gone
back to school in Buster Browns.
And every fall Buster Brown is
ready with an all-new selection
of back-to-school styles.
KEEP THE MARCH ROLLING!
Bosses - Keep the State Senate in Harlem
’ Rl.E N pro.
Sots whisk1!
W’. w>
w.<
THE
BUCKINGHAM CORPORATION
ROCKEFELLER CENTER • NEW YORK
IMPORTERS • BLENDED H PROOf
g Vote for
K
H
E
B
Dedicated
... Community , .
i
Fighters!
REELECT
■ - LLOYD E. DICKENS
4?
1 M ALICE WATSON
DIST. LEADER
Ab<I
Female Leader 11th Assembly District
(ENDORSED BY REP. ADAM C POWELL)
AND ELECT
ATTORNEY
HENRY R. WILLIAMS
DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE
CITY COUNCIL
21st District
"The Leaders
Harlem can Trutt"
AIK! WATSON
t-
Primary Day, Thursday, Sept. 5, 1963
Poll* open 3 to 10 p.m. t------------
REMEMBER THESE NAMES
Lloyd E. Dickens • Alice We tion • Henry R. Williams
Let Uncle Sam deliver it
Send a check! It’s a very poor
idea to carry much money on your per
son. Manufacturers Hanover hag two
safe and economical ways to pay bills or
send monev.
Register Check ... costa only 20f for
face amounts up to $250. Looks just like
a personal check.
Special Checking Account ... best
way to handle your money. Costs only
10< per check plus 50< a month service
charge. Your name printed free.
& up
according to size
Why not bring yowr child In for
n look nt oar Banter Browns.
Let us check their ehoe size
with Buster Brown’s patented
B-Point Fitting Program. It ,
tnkea the guesswork out of
shoe fitting, and assures your
child of is perfect fit every time.
MANUFACTURERS HANOVER TRUST
Member Federal Deposit Ineuranre Corporation
BLUMSTEIN WEST l?5th STREET
The march, itself, which began
about 11:15 became a huge, slow
ly moving traffic jam. Banners
and buttons were in evidence
d! every where. Overhead helipcoters
droned. Marchers sang freedom
>n songs.
■
;e There was no count available of
» the number here from Upper West-
sr Chester but one group of buses
r- alone brought more than 4,000
rfl persons. Most of the buses had
n- left about midnight or soon after-
»e wards.
rs “We were a sleeping bunch,”
to said one of the passengers.
«. William Moore of Lake Katonah
said he hopes the march will re-:
ty suit in passage of President Ken-j
ty nody s bill and John McMahon, a^
in Latin teacher at Harvey School
le- sakt “this is a very moving dem-.
nd onstration.”
•y - they both said they were sur-(
ey prised at the size of the final
“d turnout of marchers.
Miss Mika Maas, of Katonah,
in- who works for Readers Digest.
said she had never participated
te. in a “movement” before and
>er that she was “incredibly glad”,
she came.
A Message to a Man
about to Buy Scotch
GLEN
ROSSIE
tMPOR
CXINCAN GILMOUft A CO. LTO
THE UNITED STATES AUTOMOBILE CLUB
Cordially Invifts Yoa fo Attend a 2-Heer Movie and Class en
HOTEL GRANADA, Ashland Pt. & Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn N.Yl
GRAND BA It ROOM
. Tuesday, Sept. 10
7 P.M. BmNG^uTFWENDs
WRITE FOR FREE 114 PAGE BOOK ON "LEARN TO DRIVE"
InciuSiay 140 Ovcttisst S Asswart ter writtss test.
Driving Lessons Given in Brooklyn, Monhotton, Bronx & Queens
BROOKLYN
MANHATTAN
BRONX
QUEENS
404 JAV ST. — BORO HALL
Bel. WiH»w«fcfcy * Rrtt** »t«.
MA 4-4695
Queens, Tom Jones’ Unity Demo-'
ertts of Brooklyn, and the Cbol-
sea and Riverside Democrats ml
Mlbhattan.
From Harlem Rep Adam Clay4
toa Powell’s Alfred lashes Clnb
of Democrats had two busloads,
while Assemblyman Mark South-
all led a busload from the Upper
Manhattan Action committee.
Among the many local officials'
seen in the teeming thousands at
the Lincoln Memorial and Wash- j
Ington monument crowds were
John Young and Paul O’Dwyer.
Democratic candidates for Man
hattan Councilman • At - Large:
Queens District Attorney Frank
O'Cdnner; Judge Louis, Kaplan.
State Senator Jamea Watsan.
lty Comptroller Gerald Nor-
L Assembly ate Lloyd ptaA*
Attorney Mhcr .WffliMnse. H
iey Lowell aR<« wWwW®,
Jones, of CCHR. and others.
New York Republicans, noti
wishing to be left out completely,
sent a delegation of 30 Republican
officials, headed by former Post
master Ray Schaeffer and At
torney Robert Rhone.
e
From Queens Mrs. Marie
Brown Brewer and J. Foster
Philips headed a large de
legation from the Queens 11th
A.D., United Democrats, and
scores of other New Yorkers at
tended the mass demonstrations
with the Federation of Civil Ser
vice Organizations, Tnc„ the Vul
can Society, Guardians Society,
and other groups
Rocky On Faiths
Witness Cross
Stand Lines
MEDITATION - Heads bowed
in prayer, part of the more
than 200,000 who participated
in the Civil Rights March on
Washington For Jobs And Free-
dom are shown daring medita
tion momenta Wednesday at
the foot of the Lincoln Memor
ial. The rally protested civil
rights abuses to Ne®-oes.
Washington Scene
DANCE PLANNERS — Mem
bers ot 1110 Epsilon Sigma
Wives of Phi Beta Sigma Fra
ternity have a tete-a-tete on
program arrangements tor
their Crystal Dansant, to be
held, September 15 at the
Sheraton-Tenny Inn at La Guar
dia Airport. Jimmy Jones’ Or
chestra will supply the music.
From, left, dance committee
members are, Mrs. Mamie
Redd, co-chairman; Mrs. Pan
sy Phillips, chairman and Mrs.
Lucille Clark, Epsilon Sigma
Wives president.
Taking the witness stand for the WASHINGTON, D.C. —
first time in his life in a court Catholics, Protestants and,
proceeding. New York’s Gov. Nel- jews crossed the lines Of
son Rockefeller admitted late cree(j an(j race Wednesday
Tuesday that he had given the what Was possibly the
word W hi, cOdnKl. Sol Corbin. es( totertaith support
to have the CORE sit - in dem- 6
onstrators removed from his of- civil rights the nation
fices at 22 w. 56th st., on August has ever seen in its history.
Of the more than 200,000 dem-
L
"I authorized Mr. Corbin to call onstrators. well over 40,000 of
churchmen and worn-
the police to have them removed I
and to take whatever steps were, ,
necessary to their removal,” pn wbo turned the grounds of the
. j ,
.
Rockefeller testified under ques- Lincoln Memorial into a veri-
tioning from Attorneys Percy Sut- table forest of humans and pickets
to underline the call for freedom
ton and Mark Lane.
The Governor, who appeared and Jobs for all Americans,
voluntarily after the court had, »we marqh together for dignity
ruled that a summons by the de- and brotherhood of all men under
fense attorneys was invalid, made'etod,” boldly stood out on many
his 20 - minute appearance on the of the siens carried by Lutherans <
witness stand in Criminal Court as from Massachusetts, Catholics
a private citizen, as the owner of from Texas. Episcopalians from ’
the building which houses the Maryland, Jews from New Jer- ’
Governor’s 55th St., offices.
sey, and othe- denominations
Righti BUI as “worthless.” *• Philip Randolph, Dr. Martin
Luther King, Mr. Lewis, and
Reether Moves
Walter Reuther, hastily sum- James Foreman, also of SNCC.)
monad the sponsors of the March went into a closed door huddle
together and each agreed that the for a half hour and rewrote Lew-
speech was in violation of the is' speech.
Francis Turner Jr.
Dies In Auto Crash
OAK BLUFFS, Mass. Francis A. Turner, Jr., 22,
son of Board of Education Zoning Chairman, Francia
A. Turner, Sr., was killed early Tuesday morning when
his Triumph sports car left a West Tisbury Road op
posite Penny’s Field in Edgartown, Massachusetts,
and hurtled into a pine grove
The youth was a June graduate
of Oberlin and was spending the pre;
^ali
summer in Oak Bluffs.
He was hurtled 63 feet from
the point where his car up-ended own
in the P»®p grove.
Police said the car traveled
390 feet from where It first left
the road. The accident was dis
covered by John hSaderios. a for
mer policeman.
The youth’s body was shipped
ta New York and arrangements
weire being made for burial as
the Amsterdam News went to
Closed
**Pass The Bill!
Now or Never
Ahmann addressed the huge
rally and was one of the found
ers of the rally.
Roy Wilkins, another speaker
said, in explaining the March to
the audience:
“We are here today because
we want the Congress of the U.S.
to hear from us — in person,
what many of us have told >ur
public officials back home: We
want freedom!”
On Trial
Walter Reuther, UAW Presi
dent looked upon the rally as
"American democracy being on
trial in the eyes of the world."
"The century-long patience of
millions ef-Negro Americans who
have been deprived of their con
stitutional rights, of full citizen
ship is at an end." Reuther said.
"There Is,” said Reuther "no*
halfway house to human - free
dom.
“What is needed in the present
crisis is not half way and half
hearted measures, but action,
bold aad adequate to square Am-j
erican democracy's performance
with its promise of full citizen
ship and equal opportunity for
all Americans.”
In a speech, which began "Five
score years ago,” and which
closely paralleled Lincoln's his
toric Gettysburg Address, D r.
Martin Luther King said, that
the demonstrators had come to
Washington "to cash a check,"
and he charged America with,
having, “defaulted on a promis
sory note." in so far as citizens
of color are concerned.
“Instead of honoring this sa
cred obligation," Dr. King said.
■"America has given the Negro
the bad check; a check which
has come back marked insuffi
cient funds."
Declaring that Negroes refuse'
to believe “that the bank of jus
tice Is bankrupt.” King said, “We
have come to cash this check, a
check that would give us. upon
demand the riches of freedom
and the security of Justice."
By 11 .a.m., the police had up
ped this number to 100.000 and
when the marchers finally’reach
ed the Lincoln Memcrial at 2 p.m.
the most conservative estimate
by anyone , in Washington was
that the crowd had already reach
ed the .predicted 200.000 and ,
thousands were still on the way.
Sutton and Lane, who are de from scattered areas of the na- i
fending seven CORE sit-iners ac- tion.
N
cused of intrusion of real estate As if to underscore their stand
property on August 1, had sought other church demonstrators held p
to question Rockefeller on wheth- aloft signs which declared, “Seg
____ I
er he had pesonally given the or- regation is Hell."
Harlem Rocks School Board
Set Up Citywide Boycott Plan
BULLETIN
GreatestDay
In My Life
—Randolph I
The orderly rally got off to
what Washington police called the
“slow start", but at 10 a m.* the
Metropolitan Police Department
admitted that 40,000 marchers
had already converged on the
Washington Monument grounds
WASHINGTON. D C. - The
man most responsible for the
historic March On Washington,
A. Philip Randolph, hailed the
demonstration as “the greatest
day in my life,”
Randolph, in an exclusive
statement to the Amsterdam
News recalling his previous
protests demonstrations over
the past 31 years, said:
Press Praise
"The March has exceeded all
expectations, and achieved one
of our basic objectives, to
awaken and arouse the con
science of our nation aa it has
nevef been done before in his
tory."
Mr. Randolph said that the
presence of an estimated 1.500
communications men. including
press, radio and television, as
sembled for a single event was
the greatest in the nation's
history.”
STATESMAN - A.
landolph, President of
jtherhjod of Steeping
ten arid the man who
i the March on Wash-
s shown addressing the
humanity in Washing-
ton Wednesday. He Is saying,
"We march to redress old
grievances and to help resolve
an American crisis born of the
twin evils of racism and de
privation,"
doorway arm h*u leading to his they have not commited themselves to calling off their school boycott, but t
offloe, making it difficult for vis- considering Dr Gross’s Tuesday agreem ent to draw up a timetable and schi
^-0^ h.d .
_ '.T7^
P'“- -
■ '
;
loss cf memory at one point when Harlem parents rocked the Board of Education Monday night by announci
Lane asked concerning an August . .
2 speech In which he was quoted “*•».
,-------- ---------------------—*
school segregation and refuses meeting, Monday night in
.
as saying he had no objections
sit-in demonstrations
Rockefel-
to
In contract to the way Wash- I
ington ignored the Prayer Pil
grimage In 1967, government of I
ficials reported that over 60 per i
cent of Washington government
employees had turned out for the i
1
march
Don’t Miss This!
Watch for, your next issue of
your Amsterdam News which will
be filled with stories and pictures
of you and you and others who
participated in the greatest civil
for Negro, Puerto Rican
l. Freedom Classes have been it0 eliminate de facto
get up in Hariem churches with Uoq
segrega- Mary’s Church at I2tth St ,
qij Broadway. Isaiah Rotrtni
full cooperation of Hariem minis- 4 gome parent, wU1 algo pic. Harlem Parents Commit
predomlnanUy aH
tors
and white jwp»« wimse parents gchoo|Si gnd
wUi boycott Harlem s 54 public
schools, beginning 8 a.m., Mon- wnd theif ch|Wren
day. September 9, 19M.
. whlte chairman, presided over
,n thoae three-hour meet which saw a i
and whlte Barenla cession of Harlem parent-leaf
schools and white parents who "Since School Superintend
ch,Wrwi to tho>e Calvin Grots won’t give un a
nB|te. step by step timetable
addition to oicketlnfl schoo> integration, there's <
are being set up jointly in com- ,choo)s
munity centers and churches In
the five boroughs os a city-wide, 5. in addition to picxeting,
haste bv civil rights organiza-
hin? U-Lkintr with the Harlem NAACP local branches, have Robinson said, "We must st
□‘ rents
P1*1**, "civU disobedience." be- up like men and women. We
2. Freedom da^aea currently
parents, members of °°e
alternative”
thoge ipeak
3. The Harlem Parents Com- P*«e
mlttee is completing plans to file Ja‘> "
suit against the New York City
Board of Education charging. The announcements were made 411**
“it knowingly perpetuates public at a Boycott Jim Crow School (Continued ou Page Two'
t mind getog to beg no more. Instead, we’re
^IregMe^now F And*lto^
negrefwted "***• And te»ce
Robinson Presides
101(1
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 ---
I T■
N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Aug. 31, 1M»
AME Bishop
From Africa
Visits Here
Andolh, Louise Kendal
Bishop William Coma
and Dr. Charles C. WL
siding elder of the Hi
district of the New Y<
ence.
Bishop S. Dorme Lartey, the
first African to become a bishop
of the African Methodist Episco
pal Zion Church since 1796, visit
ed this city recently after attend
ing the AME’s women's home and
foreign missionary convention in
St. Louis, MP-
During his stay here, he was
entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Ed
win A. Thomas Sr., Mrs. Clara
LOOK MA! NO BUSTERS
Lumbermen in the north drill
a hole in their ax hanflee, fifllt
with oUve oil and plug hola. QU
runs through handle prevents
dry bands, preserves the Woods
and a.*ts as a natural lubricant
helping keep blisters off the
hand.* of city fellers, who might
Want to use their ax.
A
B e N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Aug. SI, 1963
Weekly News
Z tiiti/Tinieral Houk
How The Boys Are
Social Set
< • N.Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Aug. 31, 1963
Tommie
Boyle*
Richardson
Mr. and Mrs Clifford Bayles |S BUNGCl
W.bbs
tfttPM Moines. Iowa, recently Thomas Richardson of 27-47 Gib
tcisiled thia city, staying at the more St., East Elmhurst, died
tome of Mrs. Bayles' brother Tuesday afternoon In East Elm-
hbd his wife, Mr. and Mrs. l.lhur* Gener*’ Hospital following
aB dl»*»s of two ***** Funeral
— u. .» BI
W<bb at 684 Risersiue Drive, j^ry^g werc tentatively set for
c, Mrs. Bayles. a member of the Friday.
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, at Richardson. 50. was born in
tended the convention which was, Washington. D.C. and waa con-
held at the Americana in com-'nected with the Urban League for
melioration of the 50th anniv- many years. During his residence
in d.C. he played an active role
ersary.
------------------------------- iin establishing an apprentiee-
ship Program In the Bureau of En-
gravingaad Printing, In his capa-
Hy as * union leader.
VOOpei
D
He was employed as senior ad-
^nlom
-JUIvlIl
verttslng copy writer by the Ted
Cruzs/uL-uM
JUUUKer _ Bates Co. at 666 Fifth Ave.
_
_ .
since April of this year
_
The Rev. Quincy D. Cooper Surviving him are his wife,
delivered the sermon at the Joint Mrs Clara Richardson: son. Earl,
anniversary services of the New M senior student at Virginia
York State Scotch Rite Masons state University; daughters, Fran-
APd Ladies of the Order of the ces and Judith, and a sister, Ma-
Aastern Star, held recently at rle of Washington, D.C.
St. Louis NAACr
Boycotts Schools
ST. LOUIS - The St. Louis
Chapter of the NAACP announc
ed Monday that it Is spearhead
ing a boycott of this city's pub
lic schools to protest racial dis-
(Timmination In the schools.
Elementary schools will open
September 4. High Schools will
open September 5.
DIRECTOR: Anne C. Ford has
been appointed field service di
rector of Girls Clubs of Ameri
ca, it was announced today by
Mrs. David K. Spofford, GCA
President. In her new post, Mrs.
Ford will serve as liaison be
tween the national youth organ
ization and member Girls Clubs
throughout the United States
and in Canada GCA serves
more than 50.000 girls from six
through high school age.
GILBEYS GIN
the world agrees on’GILBEY’S, please'I
dry,
smooth,
flavorful
RockyMisses March
New * York’s Gov. Nelson by hi
Rockefeller elected to attend the toms.
New York State Fair in Syra- ally ii
cute Wednesday, Instead of fly- sertin
Ing down for the March on Wash- “cons
log ton, but sent a telegram to guara
the March, sent two special rep- peace
resentatlves, and Issued a spec- and i
lal proclamation for the day. fully
A telegram to A. Philip Ran- Gov
dolph, which was read at the H
March, hailed the demonstrations Comn
'as a “truly historic under- his '
taking," which he said he hoped chair,
I "will focus the national con- meat,
science morwtntensively on the c,v11
urgent obligation before us; re- resen
Ispect for the civil rights of all
I men and equality opportunity in £L(
every area of American life for v-u
each of our citizens."
xir
In a special proclamation set- of m
ting the day as "Justice and Unioi
'Equality Day,” Governor Rocke- reass
feller praised the historic March Miss,
as a "redress for the cumulative U.S.
grievances Imposed upon Negroes spec!,
LABOR DAY GREETINGS:
ATTENTION — Members of Local 32-J
Wo ask ell eur members te march with vs, ender the banner ef
LOCAL 32-J, m the GREAT LABOR DAY PARADE
PLEASE ASSEMBLE Monday, September 2,1 M3 at 2:45 PROMPT
ON WEST 28th STREET, the West Side ef 8th Aveeee. far the Line ef
March. We're leekieg forward te swing ell ef you there.
The Officers, Executive Beard Members and Staff ef local 32-J
meanwhile EXTEND GREETINGS te ear Thousands af Members end
Friends in Celebration af LABOR DAY, TM3.
ALBERT I. PERRY
President and Business Manager
DOLORES DRAPALA PITER j. MCMANUS NELLIE MAISKY
Secretary-Troaauror
General Organlner
Vlro-Praatatont
Vice-Preaidant
THOMAS J. PERRY CHESTER W. BROWN ANTON GASPARIK
Recording Secretary
LOCAL 32-J
BaiMtag Sarrica Emoleyeee latenatieeal I'toa All-CIO
!M-N1 Beet Mth sweet. New Yark J. New Tarh
Welfare Department
BACK-TO-SCHOOL SPECIALS
—i
by CLAIM
for ' wigs
Custom made
human
hau
oidc-J
aicepted low
law
Charge It A
Wear It!
No Down
Payment
Necessary
“LET US CLEAN AND
RESTYLE YOUR WIG'
added
beauty
<and
time
SAVERS
for ledger, thicker end leveller heir.
CHARGE IT.
3. CREAM-PERM
Hair stays straight for months. Also
recommended for Children's Hair. Easy for
them to core for without help while on
vacation or in camp.
by Claire
$10”
When in New York, visit Claire
. . . every type of Hair Dressing
is done by Claire's Competent
staff of 15 stylists. For prompt
attention, COME IN WITH OR
WITHOUT APPOINTMENT-
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
Enjoy our Air Conditioned Salon
BEAUTY FAIR
by Claire
398 WEST 145 ST.
Near St. Nicholas Ave.
AD 4-3914
aar*»
Black
Eagle
In Haiti
PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI _
Bgriem's famed Black Eagle.
^Col- Hubert Fauntleroy Julian
arrived here last weekend, but
to typical Julian fashion, he said
■ Is all just a coincidence.
Julian's arrival, however, came
a» reports were sweeping the
city that the shaky government
of-President Duvalier was mak
ing a desperate attempt to buy
arms to help in the war against
the Invading rebel forces seek
ing to overthrow the govern
ment.
Asked whether he had come
to Haiti to sell arms,'Julian ve
hemently denied it asserting that
he had come to the country to
rest because he is sick. "I’m
too old and too rich to start
any foolishness." he said.
The Town of New Castle, orig
inally a part of North Castle, was
set up as a separate township in
1791 by act ol the New York State
Legislature.
Woman Gun
Sitting In
Her Kitchen
Mrs. Kathrine Whitman, 63,
who was shot in the lower back
Saturday night while sitting In
the kitchen of her home at 14
Morningside Ave., is confined to
Metropolitan Hospital in serious
condition.
Police said Mrs. Whitman said
that she had heard what sounded
like a firecracker Saturday night
shortly before she felt the pain
in her back. Police believed
the bullet passed through the
Venetian blinds of the rear front
room, through a sofa and into
the back of Mrs. Whitman.
Det. Carl Lacho of the West
126th St. detectives is assigned
to the case.
SINK, YOU 885%!!&&X
Do you have trouble with your
landing net drying out between
catches so the Gol Dura thing
floats when you try to slip it
under fish. Stop this in a jiffy
by dipping the net in melted
paraffin before you go out. Will
sink lake a rock. ,
I ’ NOTICE OF NAMES OF PERSONS
APPEARING AS OWNERS OF CERTAIN UNCLAIMED
PROPERTY HELD BY
AMERICAN IRVING SAVINGS BANK
NEW FORK, H. Y.
Th« peraoiu whom namea and laat known addraaaea ara art forth below
appear frotn tha recorde af tha above-named baafetns organization to ba
antlUad to unclaimed propertp to amounts of twentyJna-jlullgra or more.
AMOUNTS DUE ON DEPOSITS
JCohaa. Sot S., 313 Waal 107 M.. Naw York dtp
■Coatasa Cousins Circle. U3-S 22S St , Laurelton, N. Y.
Pete a ay. Edmond. USS Madtoon Ave.. N. Y. C.
DaOto. DavUt ZOO Rlvaratde Drive. N. Y. C.
Fitzpatrick, Sarah 1507 Kerrigan Ave., Union Qty. N. J. ’
Fonchea. Da Lars. 510 Furnald Hall, Colombia University, N. Y.
O sari la. Asms. IOS East 52 St. N. Y. C.
Graen. Lsoaasrd=ls Trust For Else Feilchenfeld, 219 West BI Bt . N. Y. C
CusUucct. Joim W . P.O. Box 104. Times Sq. Station, N. Y.
41 origin. Leeila Ana. 1138 Fifth Ave.. N. Y. C.
■Ulawlto. Abraham, 172S Andrews Ava.. Bronx, N. Y.
■on. Winifred. 425 East M3 St.. Bronx, N. Y.
BUShas. Theodora K. T —In Trust For Altos Hughes, 184 Decatur St.. Brook-
N Y
Irwin. Mary.' 102 East 84 M.. N. Y. C.
James. Dorothea. 49 Claremont Ava.. Apt. SB. N. Y. C.
Katz. Mor—In Trust For Leah Kata, 545 West 111 St., N. Y. C. . r-
Kata. Zoitan. 545 West 111 St.. N. Y. C.
Kronecke, Henry A , 554 Hillcrest St., Teaneck. New Jersey
Krnsocks. Hermann, 554 Hillcrest St., Teaneck, N. J.
Laky, Robert. 308 East 71 St.. N. Y. C.
Laurence. Christy R., 25 East 86 St.. N. Y. C.
McGam. Geraldine. 1567 Lexington Ava , N. Y. C.
-McNamara, Anna. 1876 First Ava., N. Y. C.
Michaels. Joseph R-. Merton Ave.. Oyster Bay, L. I., N. Y.
Pederson. Cert E.—In Trust For Alice Krakewsky. 33rd St. A 8th Ave., N.Y.C.
Reynolde. Anna OK Reynolds, James. 2» East 188 N. Y. C.
Riven, Edna L.. 128 Weak 101 St. N. Y. C.
Bote. Leslie O-. 8M Weet U9 ft., N. Y. C.
Rndner, Jaw, 1975 Park Ave., N. Y. C.
Sdnvarta, Benjamin. 108 Weet 58 St.. N. Y. C.
Shaft. It eneon OB Shaft. RoanUnd. TUB West 9 St. Austin. Texas
’ery on Guided Missile School
at Ft, Sill, Oklahoma.
WELCOMED BACK! ALBANY,
N. Y.—August 21, 1963—Joseph
L. Cohen (left,, Is welcomed
back to the Department of Aud
it and Control by State Comp
troller Arthur Levitt. Mr. Geta—
en, of 176-50 131st Avenue,
Springfield Gardens, N.Y., was
appointed Senior Attorney in
Mr. Levitt's Legal Division,
w here he will specialize in real
ty matters, render opinions on
statewide issues involving land
acquisitions, and on realty
phases of local government. In
his new position he will receive
an annual salary of 88,480. A
native of Jamaica, L. I., Mr.
Cohen returns to the Depart- ;
ment of Audit and C ontrol where
he rose from Law Apprentice
to Junior Attorney between 1959 I
and 1961. He most recently was
a legal aid of the New York '
City Commissioner of Investi
gations. “We are delighted to
have Mr. Cohen back on our
staff," Comptroller Levitt said.
“His expertise in law and his
fine record in many legal fields
will serve the people of New !
York State well in his new func
tion.” A graduate of New York !
Universitv and the Brooklyn Law
School, Mr. Cohen was admitted
to the Bar in June. 1953. He is '
a member of the National As
sociation for the Advancement
of Colored People, Brooklyn
Branch; a 32nd degree Mason
in King Solomon Grand Lodge,
NYC; a member of the St. Ald
en’s Chamber of Commerce and.
of the Queens Lawyers' Asso*
ciation. A Korean War veteran,
he underwent one year of USAF
pilot training at Tuskegee. Ala.,
and was graduated from Artil-
hisfor/.„lVoo(worths has^M
H everything for back-to-schoo// W
HOLD EVERYTHING!
IT’S EASY WITH A
• SCHOOLBAG
2-Tm Iff whb Norm Mata
Rugged, vinyl coated bag is made
witn plastic handle ana shoulder
strap. Lunch pocket! Cinger/tan,
red/blade, blue/red.
Reg. 1.98 BeM jB
Sgrgt 9zg Sdwal log
Sturdy vinyl coating, has banidv
lunch pocket, outside pencil pocket,
handle and. leather shoulder strap.
Ginger, blue, red. 12toxl5*.
A 2.14 value t File keeps
homework perfectly' organ
ized, inner-cover clip pre
vents loss of valuable notes,
papers. Filler paper in
cluded. leather-look vinyl
3 ring binder ha$ disap
pearing handles I
WINDSOR
16 -FIECC
SCHOOL PACKS
FILLER PAPER FOR BINDERS
Sere abJfl Hon this
IW'
vahiel Full 500 theeta( 1000 lined, margined pages)
Si» 1014x8'. Choose 5 bole or 3 hole punched.
Terrific, fust about the mnet complete Undent peck! Each
has n>ll-top or zippered pencil bat 3 lead pencils, re*
tractable ball point pen, double pencil sharpener, 8' ruler.
aniH P™cil cra’rr' compass with pencil, 6 colored
the ONE place to
call for
money
the minute you want it I
YES1 Call Beneficial. Get cash fait tor
vacation, for any good reason. Get Interna
tional Credit Card.too.The folks at Beneficial
like to aay"Yoer Just call up end teal
Loans up to 1100—Your loan can be life-insured at lew cost
ENEFICIAL
FINANCE CO. OF NEW YORK, INC.
OVER TOO OFFICES
In Metropolitan Araa of Naw York
BcNanciAL Financb Systkm has over 100 offices throughout
the Metropolitan Araa of New York . . . ia Manhattan,
Brooklyn, Bronx, Queens, Staten Island, Putnam, Rockland,
Westchester, Nassau, Suffolk.. .'and throughout New Jersey
and Connecticut.
WHBRB TO CAUL i Look up BiwinciAL Fimamcc
Co. in the white pages of YOUR telephone directory
for the oflee nearest you. Here are the addresses of
a few of tha more then 100 offices:
W. 4M SL~100 W JJ St.. I I LW 4-8888
WASH. HH-MO V. PlEtSt. WAT-17W
RRoax -M4S.Heuk.Ml mo team
TRCMONT—471 I. Trawwt An,
lur-eioe
N»ar Farmrrt
AIR FORCE OFFICER Eugrn.
O’Neil of New York City, a re
cent graduate of Officer Train
ing School at Lackland AFB,
Texas, has been commissioned
a second lieutenant. Lt. O’Neil,
son of Frank 8. O’Neil of 10
Park Terrace East, is now sta
tioned at Fairchild AFB, Wash.,
where he la receiving training
•a a supply officer.
COMMISSIONED - Emil M.
Squaszo of the Rrnx has been
commissioned a rec-rd lieuten
ant In the U.'. » r ’’ ret fol
lowing his graduation from Of
ficer Training School at Lack
land AFB. Texas. His parents
Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Squaz-
so live at 23 Aster Pl , Bronx.
nwn Mowers wonm none at
125th St. and 7th Ave.
125th St. and Broadway
Lenox Ave. and 140th St
Lenox Art. and 116th St.
Amsterdam Ave. fir 162nd St
3rd Ave. and 121 fit St.
BROOKLYN
Fulton and Nostrand Ave
1
8
A
A
I
1
CITED: Three members of an
Ethiopian Airlines’ flight crew
are shown (front row, right)
following an investiture cere
mony in Addis Ababa in which
they were made members of
the Humane Order of African
Redemption by order of Dr.
William V. S. Tubman, Presi
dent of Liberia. The three are:
Captain G. K. Hills, system di
rector of flight operations
(third from right); Miss Wubet
Tesfamichael, instructor of
Ethiopian Airlines flight host
esses; and Gerard Mis ton,
manager of in-flight service
. . . Captain Hills was made a
Knight Commander of the Or
der and Miss Tesfamichael and
Mr. Miston became Chevaliers
in the Order. At Captain Hills'
right is Getachew Mekasha,
Assistant Minister in charge
of African Affairs with the
Ethiopian Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, who was also made a
Knight Commander of the Or
der.
STAFF MAN - Jerry D. Goss,
Photographer’s Mate Second
Class, USN, staff photographer
on the staff of Commander
Military Sea Transportation Ser
vice, Atlantic Area Headquar
ters, Brooklyn, New York. Goss
is one of two staff photograph
ers serving on the Public Rela
tions Staff of MSTS Headquar
ters, here.
CHIEF JOURNALIST. . .Rich-
ard A. Graddlck, Public Infor
mation Assistant, Staff Com
mander, Military Sea Transpor
tation Service, Atlantic Area
Headquarters, Brooklyn, N.Y.
Chief Graddlck, the Navy’s
first Negro journalist, will be
assigned in late September to
the Public Information Staff of
the USS Independence (CVA-62)
where he will serve until his re
tirement in 1964.
GOT IT BACK! - Rear Admir •
al Frank L. Johnson, Comman
der, Military Sea Transporta
tion Service, Atlantic Area, pre
sents Michael Alexander his
refund check for receiving his
original engineer’s license from
the U.S. Coast Guard. (Official
U.S. Navy Photograph).
By humility I mean not the
abjectness of a base mind, but a
prudent care not to overvalue
ourselves.
—Nathaniel Crew
Humility, like darkness, reveals
the heavenly lights.
No change In quality
No change In price .
—Thoreau
80raM8mnNC0tmiY.UWIPILLLn.minUXM0E0miMLY.8IPM0f.l6XainKBm«BnTI
j
A salute to the grand opening of Clayton Apartments and to the public officials
and workers of the Harlem Comm unity who have made Harlem's first city <* aid
ed Mitchell-Lama Cooperative a reality...
CLAYTON APARTMENTS
Block Front Lenox Avenue West 134th to 135th Streets-
Community Public
Officials
Edward R. Dudley
BORO PRESIDENT
J. Raymond Jones
COUNCILMAN
Adam Clayton Powell
CONGRESSMAN
Herbert B. Evans
VICE CHAIRMAN
HOUSING AND REDEVELOPMENT BOARD
Earl Brown
DEPUTY BORO PRESIDENT
Howard E. Bell
ASSISTANT COUNSEL
HOUSING AND REDEVELOPMENT BOARD
Robert C. Weaver
DIRECTOR MOUSING A HOME
FINANCE AGENCY
Community Professional
Workers
John L Edmonds
. ’ ATTORNEY
Daniel L Burrows
INSURANCE .
C. D. King
INSURANCE
Dyett, Alexander fir Dinkins
Jean dePasse
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
Mabel Tilghman
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
Thelma Griffith Johnson
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
Robert W. Seavey
ATTORNEY
Burrows, King fir Co., Inc.
SALES AGENT
Lucas, Tucker fir Wolcott
ACCOUNTANTS
C. D. King &
Daniel L Burrows Inc.
MANAGING AGENTS
Levie Patrick
CUSTODIAN ENGINEER
» 1 OAK
COMMUNITY CONSTRUCTION WORKERS
More than^5 construction workers from the Harlem com
I .
munity actually worked on the job site os shop stewards,
bricklayers, mesons, plasterers, carpenters, watchmen,
Concrete Laborers, Porters, cMient finishers, painters, metal
workers, excavators and iMWiflnii Men.
We are proud to moke known that during the course of
construction 60% to 80% of the workers on the general
contractor's direct payroll were members of the Harlem
community.
OCCUPANCY COMMENCES SEPTEMBER 16th
A FEW 3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS STILL AVAILABLE
Equity Investment: $3350 - Convenient Financing Arranged
Estimated Monthly Carrying Charges Per Room: $23.45
BURROWS AND KING COMPANY, INC.
757 St. Nicholas Avenue at West 148th Street, New York City (FO 8-6603)
SUPERVISED BY: The Housing end Redevelopment Board of T he City of New York
HON. ROBERT F. WAGNER, MAYOR
Milton Motion,
Herbert B. Evens,
Walter S. Fried,
Vka
Milton H. Frankfurt,
CWuf Bmi-mu of PrafKt Sarricas
P
vi
“Anyone who Is now 62 or older more
aad who has worked in employ- wine
ment covered by Social Security ev*®
tially
at any time may be losing moo-
ey regularly by not finding out .
what his rights are” said Mr.
Stanley J. Fioresi, district man-
ager of the Social Security Ad-
ministration at 230 West 12S St. rnern
“With the Amendments .of 1961.
many people who were previous- 1
ly ineligible, became eligible un- yi
der the reduced work require-
ment" he explains, "and since
benefits can be paid retroactive- 2 •
ly for only twelve months, each yon
month's delay may cost one you
monthly benefit check.” E v e n curit
those who are still earning more >PP11
than 81200 should Inquire prompt- 3
ly at age 62 because under the have
ADVERTISEMENT
BACK
CORREC
HERE’S PROOF
Harold T. Smith, 44. of 75 La- I
Salle St., died recently and was 1
buried in Long Island National 1
Cemetery following funeral ser- »
vices at Unity Funeral Home, s
2352 8th Ave., officiated by Rev. |
Joseph Maxweil.
He is survived by his wife Mrs. ,
Eula Mae Smith; daughter, bro- |
ther and three sisters. Mr- Smith ■'
was bora in .Newark, N.J.
Luvtfan - Wilkins
Lunq, P. Wilkins. 77. of 458
Manhattan Ave., who died re-
centljLin the Bird S. Color Mem
orial Rweital was buried In Mt.
OlivetoCymetery, Maspeth, N.Y.
foUou|qi funeral services nt Un
ity Fatoral Home, 2352 8th Ave.,
officiAea by Rev. Henry Doug-
of Virginia, he is sur-
y two sons, two graud-
and other relatives.
Ever ^Williams
Ever* Williams, 55, of 2410 8th
Ave., Who died recently in Har
lem Hospital waa buried in Sil
ver Meant Cemetery, Staten Is
land, Rfter last rites at Unity
Funerji Chapel, 2352 8th Ave.,
performed by Rev. E. Raymond
Dorothy Julien
Dorothy Julien, of 902 Bryant
Ave., native of St Vincent, B.W.l.
died recently in Mt. Sinai Hos
pital and was buried in Fern-
cliff Cemetery, Hartsdale, N.Y.,
following rosary services at Un
ity Funeral Chapel 2352 6th Ave.
conducted by Rev. Walter Harri
gan.
She is survived by a son, Ham
ilton Thompson of New York.
Robert Silos
AIRCRAFT SPECIALIST Air
man Thomas Y. Carrion, and
Airman Laurence M. Solomon,
both of New York City, have
been reassigned to Chanute
AFR, 111. for technical training
courses following U.S. A1 r
Force basic military training
at Lackland AFB. Texas. Air
man Carrion, son of Antonio
Y. Carrion of 146 Audubon Ave.,
will take a course in aircraft
fuel systems. Airman Solomon,
son of Mrs. Evelyn Mack of
516 W, 148th St., will receive
training in aircraft mainten
ance.
Robert Silas. 31. of 205 W 115th J
St. who died recently in his home, l
was buried in Ferncliff Cemetery, s
following funeral services at Un- ?
ity Funeral Chapel, 2352 8th Ave., j
officiated by Rev. Theodore Ker- |
rison.
He is survived by two sisters; j
aunts, uncle, grandmother and 1
other relatives. He was born in |
New York City.
Alfred Preston
Baby Alfred Preston, age four I
. months, who died recently in the j
■ home of his parents Mr. and |
i Mrs. James Preston of 643 E. ;
, 169th“St., Bronx, was buried in
s Frederick Douglass Cemetery,
! Staten Island. Prayer services
. were held at Unity Funeral Chap- 5
el, 2352 8th Ave. -
> Other surviving relatives in ad- ■
■ dition to his parents are two ?
- brothers, two sisters and a grand
mother.
Mary Atwater
Mary Atwater, 58, of 303 W. -
122nd St., died recently in House .
' of Calvary Hospital and was bur- I
1 led in Ferncliff Cemetery, Harts- .
! dale, N.Y., following rosary in |
Rose Chapel, 2352 8th Ave., and
1 a funeral Mass 1st St. Joseph |
" Catholic Church.
Surviving relatives include two
: sisters, brothers, foster mother ]
, and a nephew.
i
James Jeffers
, James Jeffers. SI, of 761 St.
^iNtetalns
native of North
B’Carotaa? died recently in his
ly home and was buried in Rose-
r- hill Cemetery, Linden, N.J. fol-
s- lowing funeral services at Unity
r- Funeral Chapel, 2352 8th Ave.,
h officiated by Rev. Theodore Ker-
1- rison.
l- Surviving him are his wife,
». Mrs. Bernice Jeffers, threedaugh-
id ters, brother, sister, grandson
a and other relatives.
August 13, 1963
Mr. Joseph E, Hall
Unity Funeral Home, Inc.
2352-54-56 Eighth Avenue
New York 27, N.Y.
My family and I were pleased with the services that
you* conducted for my loved one, Mrs. Bessie Mills. We
have no complaints whatsoever.
We were also pleased with the way you conducted
funeral services for my deceased brother, Mr. Odell Mills,
a year ago. If anything else should happen, we shall call
Upon you for your services.
Also, your chauffeurs gave very excellent sewice.-
-
’
J Vety truly yours;
Eddie Mills
funeral ^rroine, ^snc.
2352-4-6 Eighth Ave.
At 126th St.
Nn York 27, N.Y.
MOnument 6-8300
Your Loved Ones Deserve The Best"
LEATHERNECKS — Pvt. An
gel Morales, left, and Pvt. Or
lando E. Mirabal, right, have
reported for duty with the Sec
ond Marine Division at Camp
Lejeune, N.C., fdlowing infan
try combat training. Private
Morales’ parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Salvador Morales, resde at 124
E. 107th St. Private Mirabal's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jose R-
Mirabal, reside at 999 E. 163rd
St.
Male—age 37 from Brooklyn. p
Occupation: Furniture salesman, m
He had moved several pieces of
furniture and could not straight- s
en up, he was pulled severely to
the right side. His wife brought (
Mm to the doctors of chiropractic
at the Chiropractic Center of
N.Y.C. Ia discussing his condi
tion, it whs learned that thia pain <
was a reeurredDt < * condi-«
tion he had five pean we»- After j
a thorough spinal study, his spine ,
was adjusted and in three days
<e pain left and he was feeling
perfectly normal. His response
was' so good he is now going
through a spinal correction pro
gram which will prevent further
flare-ups.
>
OFFICER’S RANK - Claudio
Rebolto ef 101 E. High St., Ball
ston Spa, N-t, became a sec-
oafkjli^MML recently follow
ing Ms grad: fetion from Officer
Training School at Lackland
AFB. Texas. A teacher a4 Ball
ston Spa Central School before
entering,the Dervlee, Lt Rebdtlo
is |ow DerVing at P ckstowx
Air Force 8tation, S. !)., sis a'
personnel officer
Female—age 21 from Manhattan.
Mother of three, bothered by re
current, severe backaches follow
ing the birth of her first child
at age 17. The backaches became
progressively more frequent and
more severe with the two suc
ceeding children. After several
wsqccessful attempts for relief
at clinics and by specialists, she
Was tskew to the doctors of chiro
practic of the Chiropractic Center
of N.Y.C. with the hope that she
might ba helped here. Spinal
X-rays revealed a marked struct
ural weakness in the low back.
Conservative Chiropractic man-
lagement corrected the structural
problem and the young mother
has been free of pain for over
i six months. She now has her en
tire family under periodic preven
I live adjustments to insure their
I future health.
"MARINE JIECRUfC J>vt. Felix
Rivera Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Felix Rivera of 601 W. 141st
New York, has reported for
duty with the Second Marine
Division at Camp Lejeune, N.
C, He recently completed In
fantry combat training.
JR EXPERIENCE
IS OUR BEST
REFERENCE
A recent survey was made o
100 of our “hopeless" patients
They tried everything and wen
given up by renowned specialist
and Imp It ll I. Our care Mi
therapy restored these unfoi
lunate victims to normal bvtoi
again. You never leave w I
clown,
w
you are still In pete We wf
Yolanda Jouvert.i not send you away wttbset toe
4th grade ing better even if we here 1
(treat you aU day at ae e*U
charge
We are toOratod to hMp ye
at reasonable fee. that ell ca
afford. We atokw spiriO amaa
mrnts for welfare, dtoahtod. m
ra* ,
< jaj security, penstoo —h unde
rn to me.
hat I would like privileged patients We will he!
ANYONE who needs our help.
„ing,
wli
way
.
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 ---
1® • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Aug. 31, 1963
.
.NKWYORK
, Amsterdam Netos
Z/rrv\
C. B. POWELL
President Sc Editor
I .. H. Savory, Secy Treat. ■ J. L. Hicks Executive Editor
« «. BmS. CWMUvUwi K a. Wan. AdvartWM IMractort E. H. Jackaoa.
Ctrcalatta Director; J. B. Walkar. Cltj Editor; J. W. Wade. Claaaifled Adver
tttiiia Maaager; D. tkregard. Braeklya Manager.
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.
ratee; l year I7.M - •
MW
• *
Time To Act
Is is a pleasure and somewhat of a relief to note
that the City Commission On Human Rights has de
cided to attempt to solve the problem of the City’s
racial imbalance in its schools.
It’3 about time.
We say it’s about time because up until COHR
decided to enter this raging controversy this serious
. matter had been treated as more or less a game of
hide and seek between people who had little author
ity to act and who were doing little more, and who
could do little more Than get their names in the
„ papers.
Superintendent of Schools Calvin Gross, despite
his obvious sincerity, has gone after this problem as
if he were dealing with a handful of sophomores in
, one of our high schools.
He has invited just about everyone who has had
a complaint on the schools to his offices for numer-
, ous conferences in what seems to be a belief that If
he lets everyone talk about the problem the problem
will ultimately go away.
There is much to be said for Mr. Gross’ willing
ness to meet with any and all who complain about
the segregated schools, but there comes a time when
the complaints are all in and it is time to do some
thing about those complaints.
We submit that that time has come.
... And it is not for the parents of these Negro chil-
« dren to tell Mr. Gross how the problem is to be solved.
' That is what Mr. Gross is being paid for. And we
. might add, he is being paid well for it.
The facts are plain:
Negro children in New York are bottled up in
segregated Jim Crow schools in open defiance of the
Supreme Court’s decision of 1954.
Dr. James E. Allen, State Education Commis
sioner, has ordered the schools in the state integrated.
That’s all there is to it.
Mr. Allen in his official position did not ASK
the New York school board to do this—he ORDERED
. '
it done!
And when Mr. Gross walks into a meeting with
Negro parents with a half baked scheme which at
best would change nothing, as he did last week, he
not only insulting the Negro people of this city,
ife is also flouting the laws of the state.
We admit that there are problems connected with
the integration of these schools, but we repeat—that’s
why we hire qualified men for such jobs and pay
them well.
If Mr. Gross feels that the problems cannot be
solved then he should say so and we will have to
start looking around for someone who can solve them.
That point should be clear—the problem must be
"solved.
It’s simply unthinkable that hundreds of thous
ands of Negro parents are going to continue to for
ever send their children to inferior schools which the
highest court in this land has said do nothing but
ripple and warp their minds.
We are firm in our conviction that the problems
* must be solved.
We have never believed that the problems can’t
, be solved.
And there is the hope that with COHR entering
(the picture as an official agency of the city, Mr.
.»Gross will finally get the idea that New York is not
playing games any longer and get down to firmly
doing what he has been told to do.
Selling Oat?
-
AM1
1^1
fO*
SAVfc
'MOVING IN
MS
FOR.
SALE
iff*
r-*?r In Action
Looking Ahead
News Of The Week
National
On the eve of the March ofi Washington, midnight
explosions by Southern bigots struck in two Southern
communities. One blast from a dynamite pack blew a
crater in a field about 200' yards from the Columbia,
S.C., home of Henri Monteith, who is scheduled to enter
the all-white University of South Carolina in Septem
ber. The second blast came in a classroom in a Catho
lic school in Buras, La., which whites have boycotted
since it was integrated for a short period a year ago.
There were no injuries.
• • » •
Senators rushed through legislation late Wednes
day in the hopes of averting the nationwide railroad
strike scheduled to begin at 12:01 Thursday. Both labor
and management officials were in a series of meetings
to avert the strike which could almost cripple much of
the nations economy and travel.
» ♦ * •
The race for the GOP nomination for President in
1964 began stepping up this week as a former college
classmate of New York’s Gov. Nelson Rockefeller an
nounced that he is confident Rocky will enter the New
Hampshire primary next March 8. Meanwhile Arizona’s
Sen. Barry Goldwater said he would decide next Janu
ary whether he would enter the race.
* • * *
City and State
A scheduled City Hall demonstration by the Joint
Committee for Equal Employment Opportunity was
called off Tuesday because most of the members were
busy on plans for the March on Washington.
(The following editorial, which
first appeared in the March,
1960 edition of the “Economic
Bulletin,” is reprinted here this
week because it is considered
particularly timely in the light
of a pending Senate filibuster
on President Ke'nnedy‘s civil
rights bill.)
appear that the design of the fram- 1. Require speakers on questions Some 144 speakers took up 19 hours and 11 minutes
ers of the rule was not to permit a under debate to confine their dis- to discuss the pros and cons of the Breezy Point Park
Senator to block legislative action cussions to matters germane to the at the Board of Estimate’s public hearing Monday,
with 103 against it and 40 in favor. Mayor Wagner, who
by reading funny papers, novels, or subject, and
talking about matters which had 2. When it appears that a Senator favors the plan for the $200,000,000 park, set Primary
nothing whatever to do with the or Senators are concerned with Day, Sept. 5, for the Board’s closed hearing on the pro-
subject under discussion, but to blocking legislation rather than ex- posed park site. Among speakers in favor was Roy
have ample time to make out a tending their debate for the honest Wilkins, NAACP executive secretary.
purpose of clarifying their position
case for his side.
«
*
»
*
-------
The framers of the rule, at the and fully discussing issues, keep p,ans fQr a sidewaIk cafe in Centrai Park, at 59th
Every time a rule, no matter how time had had experience with “gag the Senate in contmuous session — gt t the official okay o{ supreme Court Justice
sound in principle, is abused, the rule” in which a presiding officer around the clock - and let the Ja”ob Markowitz this week as he gave the go ahead
cry goes up to eliminate it as un- might summarily shut off debate speakers talk themselves to death. for the cafe which millionaire Huntington Hartford has
workable. On occasion, experience at will any time a measure was be- CITES LaGUARDIA FORMULA offered to give $862,000 to help in building.
______ ’___________________
has shown that what actually has mg discussed which was disagree- The latter procedure was sug-
happened is that those charged able to him or a small interested gested once by the late Mayor Fio-
Where To?
with the responsibility of enforcing clique, but they did not reckon with rello La Guardia of N.Y. He doubt-
the rule and crushing the abuse the South on the Civil Rights issue, less felt that the spectacle of a
Out on Long Island last week in Malverne “For
since there was no such issue at member or members of the United gale„ ^gns went up aU QVer |he niy_white community
have no heart or courage to per-
that time. They could see, however, states Senate holding up the action as white owners announced that they would sell
form their duty. This appears to be
(heir homes jn protest o{ an order by the state Com.
that a member of the Senate could of that important body for days and
the case with the rule governing
easily be denied full opportunity to nights reading funny papers, the missioner of Education calling for racial equality in
debate in the United States Senate,
There are few laws or rules that debate an issue by the abuse of Police Gazette and Sporting News, Malverne schools
case of the filibuster, we have the have such reaction throughout
abuse of the privilege of full debate world that a filibuster could be ef- have yet noted in these days of wild protests,
by an individual Senator or Sena- fectively broken by outraged public
tors.
is about
opinion.
the most
This
could get unanimous approval of power by a presiding officer. In the simply to retain the floor, would
the Congress or the people, but un-
the
der our system of government, the
minority yields to the vote of the
majoritv. This is as it should be,
but with one proviso—that the ma- In establishing rule 22, requiring This is how the matter stands to-
jority does not use its power to in- the vote of 64 Senators to “shut off day in the United States Senate as
flict moral, physical, or economic debate,” it is apparent that an ef- the civil rights filibuster gets under
pressure on the minority. This fort was being made to prevent way. If Majority Leader Lyndon
“gag rule.” Without debating the Johnson sticks to his guns and keeps
would be tyranny.
Obviously, the rule governing de- question here as to whether debate the Senate in continuous sessions as
Where are they going?
We suggest these white residents of Malverne
start learning what many of their cousins in the
South already have learned, and that is that a per
son can run from the laws of this land — but he can’t
hide!
Communism, to the basic rpean- the cause of our suffering, will,
should be limited in the Senate by he promised, we may see the ex-ing of our boasted democracy.'like animals — even after a life-
bate in the Senate was well-inten
tioned. It is erroneously referred to 64 Senators or by a simple majority. Dose of one of the great frauds of rep^cn^^he^p^nJUTora"!^ -"Turn « inX^nd8^ *
ridiculous “protest we
as “unlimited debate.” It would
seem better to call it “full debate,”
for in the initial instance, it would
The column entitled “March On Washington” eously credited to Dr. Martin Luther King. It was
which appeared in this space last week was erron- written by Roy Wilkins.
Pulse Of New York’s Public
The Amsterdam News welcomes letters on either side of any subject. It is preferred that letters not exceed 2SC words and they
must be signed. Names will be withheld o n request. No letters can be returned. AU must be addressed to the Kditor.
rule could “break” a filibuster.
it would seem that there are two nur time—the false impression ere- democracy.
i ask my people to realize th£t
/•ourqps open now to fight the fili- atf'd that onlv a chance in Senate In my belief, Gov. Wallace is this 'New Negro" being spoken
guilty of such crimes. Therefore, about, is not at all the pulse of
b'ister:
the greatest contribution that we the Black Masses in America.*J
as individual American citizensask them to take a look the next
can donate to ourselves and our
time they take a subway or bus.
country, is to be cautious of such
Take note of the number of "New
characters as this. Let us learn
Negroes” wearing processes in
to protect ourselves against the
such fashion it is difficult to tell
influence of selfish and incom
the women from the men. Count
petent propagandists whose main
the number of "wlgged" heads.
purpose is to keep our demo
Look on the cover of any leading
cratic land and the minds of our
Negro publication and number
children in the shadow of dark
the black or brown-skinned
ness. No longer can we risk the
girls. Take a look at your girl
is right. He’s not as white as possibility of a conflict within
friend and try to see what color
clouds or pearls, though powder our borders because of a hand-
she is under the light make-up
here does help the girls.
and light stockings. Talk among
yourselves and pick out those
who are bent upon marry
ing light so that eventually the
"colored race" in America will
be dissolved. Try to realize that
light, like white, is NOT always
right.
Now negro is a word for black. If we fail in our obligations to
but call a Negro black, and back uphold the rights and privileges
will come the answer, with a of every American, regardless of
frown, he's not so black, as he complexion, we shall find our-
Iselves solely divided and out-
is brown.
Bethune Essay
casts of all humanity.
fui 0( extremists.
Birds Of A Feather
Last Saturday ten pickets from something called
the National State Rights Party threw a picket line
" in front of 38 Park Row, the home of the national of-
fice of the Committee On Racial Equility.
They carried signs which among other things
.said: “Black and White Is Red” and “Race Mixing Is
A Communist Conspiracy.” They marched behind a
Confederate flag.
As the pickets paraded they were joined by two
members of the American Nazi party wearing the
.hated Nazi shirts.
When the Nazis moved in the director of the Na
tionalist States Rights Party screamed that his pick
ets were “embarassed” by the Nazi support.
„ , Frankly, we think the Nazis have at last found
.good company!
Make It Legal!
Frankly speaking, when the City of New York
gets around to holding.hearings on off-track betting,
we will be in Washington where, we are happy to
say, Mayor Wagner will also be, to protest racial
imbalance in these United States of ours.
The Mayor will rush back after the March on
Washington and throw his weight behind the move to
legalize such betting. /.
We might not come back with the Mayor for
there still will be some work to be done in Washing-
.ton. ,
But just for the record let it be said that this
newspaper will be with the Mayor all the way on
this one.
The quicker New York legalizes such betting the
better.
We’ve always had it—we will always have it.
.We might as well make it legal!
Take Pride
the sky past lights turned on to
dispell the lonesomeness of the
Sir: This is a response to the few who dared themselves to
Letter of the Week “A Mouth- ceme.
ful" by Calvin Graham.
I wish to express complete ac
cord with your entire letter. I
only wish the printing of it by
the Amsterdam News would help
Negro Americans not Just in Har
lem but in every city in^tlflfc
country to understand why young
Negroes like myself cannot pos
sibly take pride in being a black
American, and why whites are
so reluctant in welcoming us as
neighbors.
Where were those who failed
to fill the desolate shame of all
the empty seats?
Where else could they have
found to go to on that night that
should have been?
Wert they in bars and cars
chasing personal stars, or, clus
tered in groups on grubby com
ers explaining; talk and talk,
songs, sitting down and card
board signs, were a waste of
black time for the benefit of white
for white?
Freedom Centennary
I don’t know.
I asked a few around but they
didn't know either and so I left,
feeling a small part of its dis
grace. Harry Grant, Bx., N.Y
The small minority of us
who make every effort to be de
cent and self respecting are blot
ted out by the vast majority of
American blacks who fit per
fectly the descriptions in your
letter. It has always been a
puzzle to me why blacks from
other areas of the world possess
a higher sense of family re- Sir: Permit me to thank you
sponsibility and self repect than for the cooperation that you
those born in the U.S.A., who have given Rev. J. w Findley.
are so much more blessed mat
director. Public Relations, 1st
erially with an access to free
district, A.M E. Zion Church, her
education regardless of Its form.
alding the “Centenary of Free
I would also like to know what
dom", which will be observed
we can gain by forcing our
by the denomination in New York
selves on and fighting for rights City, Sept. 7-13
of Puerto Ricans. Don't we have This celebration marks 187
enough racial troubles? Their In- y«ars of freedom building by the
different attitude towards us has A.M.E. Zion Church, in its effort
been well expressed in letters to obtain this desired goal thru
to white newspapers and tapes Christian service and living. The
on the radio. If Puerto Ricans
event brings this service into
aren’t Interested in improving
focus in the New York area, with
their decadent lot, why should
the entire denomination cooper
ating.
the Negro be so concerned?
Qloria Bond
N. Y. C.
On Coogan's Bluff
I heard the Negro cry for free
dom last night.
And the Polo Grounds was emp-
1 ty where his cryin' song pierced
This office takes this opportun
Ity to solicit your continued co
operation with Rev. Findley and
it is my hope that we can continue
to count on you and your pub
lication.
Sir: I have entered an essay
contest sponsored by the National
Council of Negro Women. The
theme of the contest Is, "What
The Life and Works of Mary Mc
Leod Bethune Mean to Me." I
would be very grateful for any
information that you can send
me on Miss Bethune either from
your files or past editions of the
paper.
Carol Martindale
584 W. 152nd St. NYC
Editor's Note: Try the Schom-
burg Collection. 103 W. 135th St
Magnificent Latter
Sir: Your "letter of the week
In the Aug. 24th issue by Calvin
E. Graham entitled "A mouth
ful" wan magnificent.
Reprints of this letter should ap
pear in the Amsterdam News
at the beginning of each year
with a w rd of encouragement
to each one of us to resolve to
dedicate ourselves to eradicating
some of these. Our March on
Washington is meaningless unless
each “marcher pledges himself to
this end."
You referred last week to the
inaction of some of our "Big
Guys.” It is worthwhile to re
member that the best of their ef
forts is voided by this element
that sticks out like a sore thumb,
and other groups tend to use it as
a weapon against us although
they are fully aware that this be
havior is not truly representative
of the entire Negro race.
Elsie Richardson
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Color Chart
Alexander Barnes
Public Relations Dr.
AME Zion Church
sir:
The white man isn't really
white, although to call him white
The Chinese and the Japan
ese, it’s yellow when we speak
of these, but take their skins, it
can be seen, they’re no more
yellow than they’re green.
The Indians, we say. are red.
Some claim they’re copper-hued,
instead, but take most white men,
heat with sun; you’ve Indians,
when they’re well done.
So, White Man, Chinese. Ne
gro, Red, -of all of these, it can
be said, that each and every
single clan is but aaother shade
Of taa.UL__
However, I am proud to add
that President Kennedy, during
his plea to this nation, clearly
pointed out that the time is NOW,
in which every American must
put forth all efforts in correct
ing the great injustices which
our nation has been guilty of for
so long. Certainly, any true heart
ed American would agree with
his liberal way of thinking.
JOHN W. HOWELL,
• So. Ozone Park, N. Y.
Frank Greenberg,
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Victims of Deception
Sir:
u ------ '
Bigotist Propaganda
Sir:
I have, for some time admired
your paper and the obligation it
is fulfilling to the American peo
ple. I am particularly interested
I would very much like to ex
In the letters that are published
press by viewpoints concerning
weekly. I hold this Interest be
the accusations plunged at the
cause I wish to know the thoughts
Kennedy administration by Gov
ernors Wallace (Ala.) and Bar- of my people and what each has
nett (Miss.).
to say about life in general.
However, since Gov. Wallace I must confess, that I am some-
appears to be the most confused what dlsppointed in what is being
of the two, I shall direct, my termed as the "New Negro." It
criticism directly at hia method seems to me that we (including
myself) are so completely caught
of propaganda. In my opinion,
up in this struggle for civil rights
his ideas of democracy are more
and integration that it may be.
in line with Hitler’s Nazi Party
we are closing our eyes to the
doctrine (the main principles
were racial superiority and lea
fact that we have been victims
dership) than tHe democratic
of deception many times in the
form which governs our land.
past and are apt to allow His
I believe that when a person
tory to repeat Itself If we are
possesses their Judgment in. a
not careful. It is for this reason
direction contrary td our foun- that I beg my people to take a
datlon and the Constitution which'closer look at the white man's
governs our land, they are def-{ image of the "New Negro" and
Initely a threat, even more than! remember these people, who arc
Ask any refugee from Haiti or
Cuba if this is not so! For those
who are bent upon seeking refuge
in African Brotherhood, I say do
not depend upon it. My position
is such that I am in daily con
tact with Africans, all of whom
have their own problems.
If we realized how completely
alone we are, we would all Join
hands in locked assurance that
only in death must we be separa
ted. I ask you, are those people
mentioned above, the New Ne
gro? Or is he in fact the old, the
white man’s Negro?
In conclusion, I beg my people
to concentrate equally as much
effort upon unity as upon equal
opportunity. Moreover, I urge
that we waste no time at aU with
integration (I am convinced it
is not the solution). My formal
education is limited, only high
school. My age is young, only 11;
but like most young black Ameri
cans, I will go with my kind
down whichever path the leaders
choose. I pray they’ll lead us
safely.
Name withheld by request.
The Insiders
Sir: Keep hammering away at
the "Insiders.’’ Maybe some day
they will remember to "remem
ber the bridge that carried them
safely across."
,
I Mattle Williams
470 Lenox Ave.
New York, New York
Another Angle
*
How The Boys Are Doing
By JAMES L. HICKS
By JAMES L. HICKS
• How do they make out when the bul
lets start flying?
I.mean the boys in the service.
You may recall last year we asked
a few questions about Negro officers
and how they were making out in the
peacetime army.
We are happy to report H
this week that the De
partment of Defense took
note of our query and
has made available to us
the latest information on
the number of Negro
personnel in the armed
forces; the ranks which
they hold; the stations
HICKS
at which they are now serving and the
relationship of their status with the rest
of the personnel in the armed forces.
I am even more happy to report that
the picture is much, much better than
it was when we first made our query.
I don’t hesitate to say that I believe
much of this change is due to the ag
gressiveness of the Kennedy adminis
tration.
Next week, we will start publishing
the names of the guys and gals who
hold the highest ranks and tell you
where they are serving all over the
world.
Meanwhile here is a graphic report
on the boys:
CHAW
NIGRO MRSONMKL AS MRCINT OF ALL MRSONNIL
1949 TO 1962
AIRY
NAVY
AIR FORCE
MARINE CORPS
tNllSTtD
OHICWS
ENIBTED
offians
tNllSTtD
OFFICERS
ENIBTED
OFFICERS
PERCENTAGE OF NEGROES IN NATIONAL POPULATION
11%
1.1
t.l
«.»
i.»i
o o.i «»
11
'49 54 <a
'49 '54 '62
'49 *54 ‘62
•49 '54 '62
49 '54 '62
'49 '54 '62
'49 '54 '62
'49 '54 '62
*TO THE NEAREST ONE TENTH OF ONE PERCENT.
• From June 1963 Report of The President's Committee on
Equal Opportunity in the Armed Forces.
(Continued on Page 46)
Your Child’s Health
Teenagers Teeth
By THOMAS W. PATRICK, JR., M.D.
Teenagers, to keep a bright smile,
there are three important things you
_
must do. Brush your
teeth often. See your
dentist regularly and cat
the right foods. To have
clean and healthy teeth,
brush your teeth imme
diately after eating. At
school or away from
home, rinse your mouth
with water. Good tooth-
brushing habits and good PATRICK
eating habits will reduce dental de
cay and help keep your teeth and
gums healthy. Your dentist is one of
your most important friends because he
teaches you how to care for your teeth,
restores them and tries to prevent any
serious dental problem. Your per
manent teeth must last all of your life,
so make your dentist your life time pal.
Diet and good teeth are closely relat
ed. Be sure to eat daily: a citrus fruit or
juice and one other fruit. Vegetables,
one raw, one green or yellow, four
glasses of milk, and meat, fish, poultry,
cheese or dried beans. Eat one egg a
day and whole grain or enriched bread
or cereal and butter or fortified marga
rine.
Poppy’s Notes
Rocky’s Choice Not Happy
Bv POPPY CANNON WHITE
F * or
POPPY
tantalized with more or less delicate,
but persistent hints that the nominee
would belong to a minority group.
Bessie Buchanan’s name was fre
quently mentioned. For although Mrs.
Buchanan is a Democrat, she threw
all of her influence behind Governor
Rockefeller during his last campaign
for reelection. According to many poli
tical observers, she deserves the lion’s
(or should we say, lady’s) share of the
credit for having corraled the necessary
votes for the Governor in the crucial
Uptown area. There are a great many
who believe that Mrs. Buchanan’s con
tribution was not properly appreciated.
And that she was not adequately re
warded when she was named not too
long ago to the State Commission
against Discrimination.
One of the first official acts of Gover
nor Rockefeller when he took office
rffore than three years ago, was to ap
point Caroline K. Simon as Secretary of
State. It was an imaginative — some
called it a daring — appointment. No
woman had ever held so
high an office in the
state before. Also, as
time showed, it was a jj
wise choice, practical,
and as it turned out,
highly rewarding to the
Governor politically. For
no Secretary of State
had ever focused so
much attention or
brought about such good understanding
or so much approval of the inner work
ings of the state government.
« Probably no other secretary of the
State of New York had ever worked so
bard, travelled so much, made so many
speeches, shaken so many hands or
jttended so many bridges to ease the
Governor’s progress. Certainly no other
NOT ALL WOMEN
Secretary of Stated has ever been so
Not all the candidates discussed in
busy or so gracious; smiled so charm
ingly. Nor has anyone managed to look those long loud whispers were women,
of course. George Fowler, head of
so beautiful. Or wear such pretty hats.
SCAD was discussed. So was the Honor
”” CHANGE NOT UNEXPECTED
able Samuel H. Pierce who is generally
conceded to be amongst the most bril
liant attorneys in this country—white* or
colored.
An eminent educator, Dr. Corinne
Galvin of Cornell University, was
another colored woman whose name
had been suggested to the Governor for
the post.
Now, to the immense relief of her
husband, Irving K. Halpern and the
friends who have worried about her
horrendous schedule, Caroline K. Simon
has been rewarded with the compara
tively tranquil joys of becoming a
judge.
Now the Upstate gentleman who has
been appointed to be the new Secretary
of State, may be a paragon of all vir
tues! I wouldn’t know. Neither have I
The change was not unexpected. For
been able up to now to find anyone
many months there have been rumdrs—
rumors with all the earmarks of having in or around New York City who had
been carefully planted.
ever heard his name before.
Women’s groups were being assured, Speaking only of cabinet appoint-
unofficially of course, that a new Sec- ments ... of course ... in this last
rttary of State would most certainly be instance it would seem that Rocky’s
a woman. Civil rights groups were choice is not happy.
“Next) Door”
By TED SHEARLR
[~rei
PE«0NMEL-
* A.
N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Af. »X, IMS •
Whlte-On-Whlte
Fourth Of July Americans
By GERTRUDE WILSON
There is little comfort in words these
days.
They are used to confuse or con
found the unwary; as passifiers or pal
liatives for the wary; to sell or solicit
the gullible; to rob or to rape the guile
less; to cover the sins of
the multitude.
an elegant -flw of words about tax
reform. Mr. Average Man found out
that he didn’t have to worry about his
take-home pay any more, because he
wouldn’t have any pay to worry about
He wouldn’t have a job.
When the Congress gets finished with
baring our national soul over the partial
test-ban treaty with Russia, however,
Mr. Average Man won’t have any
worries at all. He’ll be radiated out of
existence.;
Words are used by the
radical right, and those
whom they admire, to
becloud the meaning of
the very Constitution of
Feature the words of General Curtis
the nation, in oraer to
protect the rights of the
LeMay before one of the three com
mittees investigating the treaty. He
privileged at the ex
pense of the deprived. WILSON
said if the treaty hadn’t been signed he
Barry Goldwater collects Indian relics, would be against it, but now that it is
and wears an Indian suit at public signed he’s for it.
affairs when he’s at home, while the
Indians themselves languish on the
reservation in poverty and ignorance.
Is he for the signature and against
the treaty? Or, conversely, is he for
the treaty and against the signature?
The Russians
These Fourth of July Americans wal
low around in a deluge of words about
truth, justice, and the American way,
when, in fact, there is rare truth, wry
justice, and no American way for a
sorely taxed and badly frightened
nation, whose leaders are Jockeying
around in committees, getting ready
for an election year.
Like the man said, you can’t fool all
of the people all of the time, even with
dulcet words.
<
Take the tax bill.
The whole idea of a reduction in
taxes was something which Mr. Aver
age Man looked upon like he would a
cool water hole after a 50 mile hike.
It was a mirage, though built of
beautiful word pictures, dissolving in
The man who makes the bombs
wants to make and test more. That
follows. The men who are responsible
for our defense aren’t necessarily
against the treaty, they’re Just afraid
we’ll stop defending ourselves against
the Russians.
The Russians? Do they really believe
that we, the people, take much stodk
in the word of people who have usdd
their word only to break it? Do they
really believe that we are unaware bf
either the promise or the hazards of
such a treaty with such people? Do
they really think we believe in such
nice catch-phrases as “the Monroe
Doctrine” any longer, when it is So
obvious that in Cuba we are staring
(Continued on Page 46)
Pear Sally-
- Engagement Ring
By SALLY
DEAR SALLY: I’m about to become
engaged to a fine girl, and since I don’t
have too much money to spend on the
ring, I’m wondering if I •
should just buy her the
kind of ring I can af
ford and offer it to her,
hoping it will be accept
able to her — or just
what? RUDY.
DEAR RUDY: I think
it would be much better
and more thoughtful to
be governed by your SALLY
girl’s taste and wishes
in this matter, particularly as to style.
One practical way you could handle this
is first to visit your jeweler alone and
hav e him put aside a good selection of
rings within the price range you can
afford -* and then you and your girl
can visit the store together and she can
select the ring she likes best from this
selection.
Sally would be glad to answer almost
any question of the heart bothering
Amsterdam News readers. Send us
yours. Address questions to, Sally,
Amsterdam News, 2340 8th Ave., N.Y.C.
Uptown Lowdown
Political Pot
By JAMES BOOKER
Name Dropping:
mittee on Exploitation. The Mayor’a
office is seeking a Queens Negro to Re
Dr. John A. Davis, CCNY professor
place . . . Gov. Rockefeller is asking
and head of the American Society on
his friends how they would like to see
African Culture has been offered the
Jackie Robinson as a member of the
post of chief assistant to Ambassador
State Athletic Conmftsskm. Uptown
G. Menon Williams, head of the State
nightlifers raised eyebrows over the
Department’s African Affairs section
dropping of Charlie Dixon as manager
. . . Friends say that the
of the Red Rooster and bringing back
Eartha Kitt marriage!
ex-manager Jake Johnson . . . Tom
bust up started over
Sims, the ex-soft drinks official, has
some questions on the
joined the staff of McCann-Erickson in
race issue . . . NAACP
a five-figure salary job, the first of seV-,
executive secretary Roy;
eral joining the midtown agency. SorAe
Wilkins will have a busy
other agencies getting ethe message
go we hear ... Bondsman’Leroy Douna-
time after the March on j
Washington. He’s due to j
vent has engaged 10 buses to take resi
return to Jackson, Miss.,
dents of the 115th St., area on a free
on Sept. 7 to face trial on BOOKER
busride on Sept. 1 to Bear Mountain .'..
his arrest for restraint of trade growing
Queens Assistant D.A. Kenneth Brow’he
out of his demonstrating with the late
to serve as secretary of the borough’s
Medgar Evers in June . . . The Urban
Democratic judicial convention next
League’s Whitney Young looking for a
month ... Ex-New York dlsker Tommy
man to fill the New York League post smalls now operates Smalls Paradise,
soon to be vacated by Dr. Lewis . . .
Isn’t it about time the dailies stopped
using Negroes in their dope stories to
get a politician off the hook. The rumor
that President Kennedy will name a
Negro as Postmaster General has D.C.,
Negroes scurrying, but the truth is that
he has offered the post to a Tennessee
Congressman. The same was true with
Gov. Rockefeller naming a Negro Sec
retary of State. Ex-Judge John Lom-
enzo sworn Into the post Wednesday ...
Look for a major campaign against
certain Wall Street businesses this fall
because New York is the nation’s fi
nancial capital, with little integration. .
‘ The new Manufacturers bank stated
to open Sept. 16 at 125th and 8th . f .
Why hasn’t the city started construction
at the Harlem Hospital site again? It’s
ironic that this is the only construction
site where work was halted and nobody
seems to care whether it resumes^
again? ... Shapely model Elaine Brooks
opening her own modeling school ’in
midtown ... A major registration drive
to be launched in minority communi
ties in New York City right after Labor
Day with full City Hall backing ... all
of which brings us around to saying,
now that the March is over, let’s get
down to Implementing the goals—free
dom and Jobs . .. That’s SO, Princess.
Around Town:
Lance Drummond has been let out as
executive director of the Mayor’s Corn-
» — *—> 9
West, in Loe Angeles.
Loft Ticker
1
‘-J
He SAYS HIS ANCESTORS CAME
OVER ON THE MAYFLOWER.,,IN THE
&ACK OF THE BOAT, OP COURSE,,/ z>
Home Plate
Living To Do
The Right Thing
By JACKIE ROBINSON
Some weeks ago, in NEGRO DIGEST, I read an
article by my friend, Doc Young entitled “The Case
Of The Athletic Patsies.” Doc was taking a scornful
editorial look at some of the race’s well known
athletes who have, at one time or other, involved
themselves in politics.
£
It never became clear to me, even
after finishing Doc’s piece, why he
seemed to feel that athletes have less
right to be involved in politics than—
well, for instance—newspapermen and
magazine writers. The political arena
is just crammed with folk who have
come from behind their typewriters to
help govern cities, states and the
nation. Many people felt that Jim
Haggerty acted out the role of Presi- ROBINSON
dent while Mr. Eisenhower was Chairman of The
Board and a dedicated golf-player.
Mr. Young’s article was critical of the fact that,
in his opinion, I “goofed” twice by supporting Dick
Nixon. What Doc does not seem to take into con
sideration is the fact that, while I may not be a
celebrated writer of magazine articles like he is, I
still have enough common sense to think for myself.
Unlike some other people who get involved in
politics, I also have enough moral stamina to always
speak for myself, regardless of who likes or doesn’t
like what I say.
Is Doc Young of the opinion that a man must be
ignorant to be an athlete? So far as I can see, it
takes no great wisdom to make a judgement as to
which one of two people you would like to see elected
'to the Presidency.
Doc says I “struck out twice” in supporting
Nixon. That is arrogant rot. Doc fails to remember
that 50 million other Americans supported the former
Vice President at the Polls. Frankly, up until a few
weeks ago, when the President began to really get
on the ball on Civil Rights, I wasn’t too sure we 50
million had been wrong.
I don’t know whether I would support Mr. Nixon
today. I do know that I had my reasons for doing
so in the past. For one thing, I have an unforget
table picture of the then Vice President returning to
this country from Africa and Asia and telling the
Press~that every act of discrimination practised in
this country had the effect of handing a gun to the
Communists.
I have an unforgettable picture of Mr. Nixon
answering the threat of Southern bigots to import a
Negro family into the Vice President’s neighborhood
to move next door to him. DICK NIXON retorted:
“Send them — Pat will bake them a cake and I’ll
help them move in.”
I know that, with all the great Civil Rights
speeches our present Vice President has been making
that he failed to support the drive against filibuster.
Doc is a good friend of mine but he is ignorant
of the fact that I pick my Candidates by what I be
lieve and not by what anyone else believes.
I don’t know where Doc gets his information from
when he says that people of the West Coast don’t
care if I never come out there again, simply because
I campaigned out there for Nixon when he ran for
Governor.
I don’t know what people Doc is referring to. But
? one thing is true. I only go places where I am
invited and where I believe I cairdo a decent job
in behalf of Civil Rights. I don’t claim to be a leader
but I have a right, a duty and a responsibility as a
citizen and a Negro and I intend to go right on speak
ing out for what I honestly believe.
If any of the people Doc refers to have with
drawn friendship from me because I supported
Nixon, then it’s obvious they weren’t my friends in
the first place.
While Doc’s attitude disappoints me, I’m very
grateful that, according to the recent Newsweek Poll,
there are some people who believe I am sincere. I
am grateful that people like Roy Wilkins and A.
Philip Randolph and Dr. Martin King think so.
• N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Aug. 31, 1963
THOM AS/HA HOHPQM
, It is not wealth or ancestry, but honorable conduct
and a noble disposition that make men great.
. .
-Wah? • ?
By Rhea Callaway
,
’
{Mrs. Norford Is on vacation. Her column this week
is written by Rhea Callaway.)
Do not be alarmed! Mrs. Norford is well and hearty,
Just on a well earned vacation. She has given us the
unexpected pleasure of “doing” the next column or so
for her while she “does” the elite vacatioff spots. She’ll
be back full of news for you, meanwhile, let's get to
gether to see what’s happenin’ — ought to be kinda
fun I.
It was kinda fun just talking to the energetic Edna
Marcella Kinney who had us literally gasping while
she told of all the activities she crowds into her 25
,hour day. Must be 25 ’cause it couldn’t happen in a
mere 8. For instance, she’s rehearsing Mt. Olive’s
cast of 1,000 for its Emancipation pageant; getting
ready to participate in the Temple Daughter Elks’ Bos
ton meet, then on to Cape Cod!
. Another one of our favorites exhibiting prodigious
enfergy is radio’s Alma John. She, too, will share in the
Temple Daughters’ nationaLmesting.
PLANNING . . . Meeting at
1 to r Mrs. Henry L. Lambert,
L'Aiglon Restaurant to discuss
Mrs. William A. Roberts and
plans for the fashion show and
Mrs. Morris Newburger. The
luncheon on October 23rd are
luncheon will be held at the.
Wliu Piincline^. WecL
Vemett Patrick $r.
How lovely to run into National Urban League
c
Guild’s Helen E. Harden, just back from Europe and
as all travelers, simply bubbling over with nows.
Helen, in company with Dorothy Hibbert of Amity
ville and Lora Wright were entertained at the Ghanian
Embassy in the Eternal City (Rome) by H. E. Mr.
Peter Nuamah and Mrs. Nuamer. Says Langston
Hughes sends love -^Trom Rome — and Jay Clifford
aver the Continele — greeted them with red roses at
Cannes, France
, Oh, do send congratulations to Lambda Kappa Mu’s
Catherine CowelL The Sorors returned her to office for
a second term. She’s Grand Basileus, you know. Other
sor.ority news coming to us says that Cordelle Walcott
Is giving local Iota Phi Lambda sorors the benefit of
her charming personality. Cordelle heads Buffalo’s
—Beta Phi chapter. And do send a card to that sorority’s
Adele Carter, who, unhappily, is too ill in Brooklyn’s
fit. John’s Hospital.
A busy, busy Ollie Chinn Porter is now in Evans
ville, Ind., (home, don’t you know) after Phi Kappa’s
confab in La, a never-to-be forgotten trip to Hawaii
and a side trip to Chicago. Ah, travel, ah, fabulous
friends!
A gown of white illk organza
with fitted bodice, full skirt and
three quarter sleeves was chosen
by the former Miss Deanna Vic
toria Pinckney for her recent
marriage to Mr. Vemell Patrick
Jr. The couple repeated the
nuptial vows before the Rev. Mr.
Ralph E. Darmstadt at the Van
Alst Avenue Methodist Church in
Long Island City.
Miss Lenore Pinckney, a sis
ter of the bride was maid of
honor. Bridesmaids were the
Misses Illooa Pinckney, also a
Sister of the bride; Elease Robin
son, a sister of the groom, Shir
ley Gonzalez and Merle Fender-
son.
Serving as the groom’s best
man was his brother Mr. Isidore
Patrick. Other attendants were
Messrs Reginald Patrick, Clin
ton Jackson, Robert Cook and
James Welcome. Flower girl
was the groom’s niece, Diane
Robinson. The musical portion of
the ceremony was provided by
Bruce Greig, organist and Cyrene
Brown, soloist
Bride a Student
The bride, a daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Pinckney of
Long Island City, -is a student at
the College of the City of New
York. The groom, a son of Mr.
and Mrs. Vemell Patrick Sr. of
Staten Island. N. Y., attended
Howard University in Washing
ton, D. C„ and is a graduate of
The College of the City of New
York. He is a teacher of mathe
matics in the Staten Island school
system.
A reception for nearly 200 guests
was held at the Astoria Manor
following the church ceremony.
The couple is at home on Howard
Avenue on Staten Island.
While we couldn’t make the scene for the gala
birthday dinner tossed for octogenarian Mary Dunaway,
we hear that Hubert, her adoring son really outdid
himself making her 89th natal day one for the books.
Vernon Cradle and his style-wise Wilhelmina, Miriam
Joneg, Lucy Conway, Regetta Wallace were there,
mough, as were the dowager’s daughter Mattie Don
away Dawson and her other son, handsome as all get
out James “Sweet” Dunaway. James is just up from
Miami where he caused quite a stir among the girls.
He’s a t-a-1-1 one!
* Have you had the good fortune to meet Sophie
Divers, yet? You will, and we believe she’s a gal on
the move. An SCHR staffer, she’s really dynamic. May
be it’s a little early, but Dorothy Height’s beaming
’cause she just got Bessie Allison Buchanan’s Vyes’
tp chair this Fall’s debutante ball. Bessie, you know
toils as a commissioner for the State Commission on
Human Rights, the State agency headed by the erudite
George Fowler.
Those of us who were so happy at Idlewild Airport
seeing Ruth Porter Humphrey and son off for New
Orleans, have been saddened by the news that Ruth’s
sister left this vale — Friends standing by to console
the family. A Hotel Americana private luncheon had
Ada Fisher Jones, and Yvonne Hill getting their heads
together re something for their favorite charity. You’ll
be hearing about it, because for once, it’s really some
thing new!
Last Saturday Florence Allen Holmes, national
proxy of the Business and Professional Women, called
her official family together out in Bethpage to hear
some reports. Expecting 50, she was surprised when
110 women came, and not only listened to the report,
but set machinery in motion to implement President
Kennedy’s idea that women ought to participate more
fully in the affairs of the nation.
Seen and heard giving their considered opinions
were Minnie D. Hurley, Helen Craig Goins, Newark’s
Ethel Moore, D.C.’s Alice Carr, Joyce Phillips Austin
and Anna Calloway Perry.
His Excellency, Ambassador and Minister Pleni
potentiary, Mr. Edgerton Richardson (Jamaica’s rep
resentative at the UN) is turning the tables these days.
His E. 80’s apartment was the scene of a most interest
ing Sunday afternoon. There were Lalla Long, Estelle
Noble, together with Elayne Corley, Maude Gadsen and
Jolla Jones. Laita’s a politico; Estelle’s with a banking
Bran, Etayne’s a roentology supervisor, Maude’s one
of our more outstanding clubwomen and Julia’s a well
known business woman. Just the mixture for a mar
velous afternoon!
And as we read our barely legible notes, we come
-across items such as “grey wool topper,” “plaid
“Jumper,” “long sleeved blouses,” and oops! It’s nearly
Je<!hool bell time, and that list means Fall shopping!
MR. AND MRS. VERNELL
PATRICK JR. showing newly
wed happiness as they pause
for the camerman after their
nuptial vows were said at the.
Van Alst Avenue Methodist.
Church, in Long Island City. The
bride, the former Miss Deanna
Victoria Pinckney, is a
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Pinckney of Long Is
land City. Her groom, a teacher
of mathemates, is a son of
.Mr. and Mrs. Vemell Patrick,
Sr., of Staten Island.
R. Johnson, Mmes. Salona Phil
lips, Lulu Watson and Irma
Cockfield.
Also Mmes. Charles Carring
ton, Jennie Anderson, Ruth Beck-
les, Mary Challenar, Leroy Bur
gess, Theo Hall, Hennie Odal,
Misses Edna Jervis, Mildred
Chapman, Marion Dyson, Susan
Tulford, Mayme Chapman and
Mr. Cecil Cde.
Cocktails and dinner were
served on the patio overlooking
the swimming pool by Mr. Robert
Sutton, caterer, assisted by Mr.
McDaniel. Colorful garden
flowers and music added to the
festive atmosphere.
Deltas'
Garden
Party
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority
members, who were attending
Delta's convention at the Hotel
Americana, were entertained
Sunday at a garden party by Mrs.
Alberta P. Ellis at her home,
1014 K. 264th St . Bronx.
The honored guests were Mrs.
Aurelia Noble; Dr. Jeanne
Noble; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Horne, of Atlanta, Ga.; Mrs.
Bessie Osborne, of Santa Monica,
Calif,; and Mr. and Mrs. William
Mullins and daughter, Emma, of
Jackson. Miss.
Other guests included Mr. and
Mrs. George Nanton, Mr. and
Mrs. Ira Head, Capt. and Mrs.
The "Iron Cow” aboard t h e
white hospital ship S.S. HOPE
produces thousands of gallons of
milk each day by combining puri
fied sea water and a special com
pound.
in offer top-quality hand and
tom-made wigs on credit an
discount prices, making
Top of The Fair and, benefits
the Greater NejMfork Coun
cils, Boy §couts of America,
as pajt^jTtheir 1963-64 finance
paign efforts.
Birthday
Barbecue
In Babylon
One of the gayest, most fash
ionable and festive birthday bar
becue parties to be held in Baby
lon was given Sunday in honor
of Mrs. Aleatha Graham, well-
known beautician and hair styl
ist.
Mrs. Graham, resident of the
village of Babylon for the past
seven years is equally as well
known in Brooklyn, where for
many years she was ^ beaujy
shop operator and leading beau
tician and hair stylist. Her resi
dence is 7 Beverly Road.
Among the many guests attend
ing were: The Reverend and
Mrs. Wilbur J. Pittman, newly-
elected pastor, Ebenezer Baptist
Church of Babylon; Atty, and
Mrs. Calvin C. Cobb and chil
dren, of N. Babylon, Independent
Judge candidate for the Suffolk
County District Court in Babylon;
Mrs. Helen Allsberry and chil
dren, of Babylon; Mr. James
Bailey of St. Albans; Mrs. L.
Barger and children of Babylon;
Mr. and Mrs. J. Byers and son
of St. Albans.
Also Miss Joyce Dixon of St.
Albans; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Dunbar of Brooklyn; Miss Char-;
lotte Dunbar of Brooklyn; Mrs.
William Griffith of Bay Shore;
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Guinn aid
children of Dix Hills, S. Hunting-
ton; Mrs. F. Hall and children
of Babylon; Mrs. L. V. Howell
and daughter of Brooklyn; Mr.
and Mrs. William Houston of
Babylon; Mr. and Mrs. Mack Mc-
Farley and children of Brooklyn:
Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Moore
and children, of Brooklyn; Mrs.
Lena Nixon and children o(
Springfield Gardens;
Also Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Redway of St. Albans; Mrs,
Vasbtie Rice of Babylon; Miss
Mae Simmons of St. Albans; Mr
George T. Smith of Westbury
and Mr, and Mrs. Edgar Titui
of Wyandanch.
Shower Selma
Quail With
Shower Gifts
Popular young Harlem ma
ron, Selma Quail, celebrated th
opening of her new home in tli
Lafayette Morrison Terrac
Aoartments, Bronx, Saturda
night by entertaining a sma
group of close friends.
Partygoers
Among guests, who toasted hi
health, christened her home si
showered her with gifts rangii
from huge lounge chairs to co
versation pieces included, Chr
tine Burke, J. B. Davis, Mrs. A
therine Douglas, Mrs. Lelia Sai
son, Robert Manning, Mrs. Mt
red Lewis, Mrs. Barbara Lai
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Slater, h
and Mrs. T. S. Alston, Peggy D
kenon, Catherine Ming. Mrs. i
elyn Hoskins and daughter, M
Nona Maddox, Ting TbomM, 1
setta Thomas, Benjamin Bra<
Marvin Hunt Henry Smith, B
bara Hayne and Marty Shcppa
-------------------$
Now They're
Looking For
"Miss Wig!"
Wig City, New York’s mi
moth new emporium speclalia
in high fashion wigs at pricei
fit every pocketbook, is cond
ing a contest to select the
"Rc4» a Wlgged Women” in
UnitedTftatag, Atnong the m
'’lamorous personalities now
the running are Diahann Can
Abbe Lane, Teri Thornton
Carol Channing. Femmes f
every branch of showbusin
society, the business world or
other phase of public life
eligible. Winners will be ch<
by Wig City’s staff of ex
stylists.
Located at 200 West 34th'SI
I on the corner of 7th Avenue
I City is the only store of its
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 ---
I
a
The works of art will be exhib
ited and sold at the Brooklyn Mu
seum from September 11-22. Mrs.
Ralph Bunche is honorary chair-
man of the Art Festiyal.
“We intend to give 100 per cent
of the monies raised through the
sale of art work and the admis
sion to opening night directly to
the NAACP Legal Defense Fund,’
an Art Festival sopkesman said.
The Art Festival for the
NAACP Legal Defense Fund was
organized last June by three wo
men from Brooklyn who wished
to do something for the civil
rights effort.
. .
The trio — Mrs. Virginia Can-
tarella, Mrs. Cynthia Dantzic
and Mrs. Jan Swan — organized
the exhibit and sale of art works.
The trio decided to donate the
proceeds of the Festival to the
Legal Defense Fund after consid
ering many civil rights group*.
The proceeds are earmarked
for use in training attorneys in
civil rights law and for use. in
civil rights cases.
Sponsors of the festval are
James Baldwin, Leonard Bern
stein, Abraham Beame, Harry D.
Gideonse, Alan Kapelner, Rose
mary Park, and Norman Thomas.
Professional entertainment is
being planned for opening night,
a Festival spokesman said.
The Manor House in North
Salem ceased to serve as an ac
ademy in the early 1800’s when
it was deeded by the State of
New York to the Town of North
Salem as a Town Hall.
JU8TSBINI
The others are
notJ&B
rare scotch
whisky
more in
UnemployedNegroes
On & Off Broadway
'Bye Birdie'
Slated At
Morningside
after the ^9-year old Lumet was N. Y. AMSTERDAMNEWS, Sat., Aug. 31, 1963 •
rushed to a hospital from an over
dose scare.
Sid Lumet Hedges
On Romance With
Lena’s Daughter
Two exciting films, “Warrior
Empress” and "7 Women From
Hell” are the feature presenta
tion Friday, Aug. 30 at the nir-
conditioned Morningside Thea
tre, 116 St. and Eighth Ave. "'
(See Pictures Page 27)
“She’s a nice girl whom I met about six months
ago. I’ve seen her a few times, that’s all,” producer-
Three big features will be director Sidney Lumet told newsmen this week in seek-
presented Saturday. Aug. 3i ing to deny rumors that he and luscious Gail Jones,
They are “Underwater City”,125-year old daughter of Lena Horne were' thinking of
Miss Jones, a life Magazine
staffer who lives at 300 West End
Ave., had called police after hav
ing talked with Lumet on the
phone and he told her he had
taken pills. She allegedly rushed
to his home to try to wak^ him
but was unsuccessful, and'then!
called police.
Lumet, however, denied any
overdose of pills, claiming he
had drunk a half a bottle of
vodka.
*
After Miss Jones was un-
B’klyn Women
In Art Festival
The Art Festival. .for the graph ers and printsnataTR
throughout the country who hava
been asked to submit their works
NAACP Legal Defense Fund to
day received its first contribution
of a painting from Elaine
Kooning.
Debtor the Festival.
“House of Fright” and “Wild future marriage.
Westerners”, a chapter and three
color cartoons.
Sunday and Monday features
are "Bye Bye Birdie", “Valley
of Dragons,” and “Under Fire.
Lumet>s conunentS and
J4jss Jones* refusal to talk
to reporters, rumors persisted
throughout New York nightlife
circles that the two were serious
and a possible future merger
.
called Miss Horne’s manager,
Halph Harris, who also called po-
might develop between heiress i lice and turned in a fire alarm.
Gloria Vanderbilts ex-husband .After a few hours at the hospital,
ai'd M'ss Jones.
j Lumet, who was divorced from
Mrs. De Kooning, one of the na
tion’s leading painters and art
i" TSS L"_™‘.-.Sh.e critic, presenkd one ot four oil
paintings to the chairmen of the
Art Festival in the offices of the
NAACP Legal Defense Fund at
10 Columbus Circle, New York.
The romantic affair between!Miss Vanderbilt last Saturday,
the two came to light this week was released from the hospital.
Mrs. De Kooning is one of the
many painters, sculptors, photo
14 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM
NEWS, Sat.L Aug. 31^1963
Housing Agency
Appoints New
General Counsel
Sol A. Llebman, who was chief
assistant general counsel, lias
been made general counsel of (he
Housing and Redevelopment
Board.
Llebman wflj be responsible for
all legal aspects of the Board ac-.
tivltles. He has previously served
In the Federal Government as
counsel to the Reconstruction Fi
nance Corp, and enforcement di
rector for New York's Office of
Price Stabilization.
The agency is responsible for
the City's programs of urban re-|
newal and middle income housing
which are the largest in the na
tion. It also administers programs!
of rehabilitation aid and other
services.
TV TRAINED NURSES-First
group of nurses aides to com
plete new television training
course conducted through WN-
YC-TV Channel 31 (UHF) by
the Department of Hospitals,
the nursing homes and com
munity agencies, receive certif
icates recently at Peter Cooper
Nursing Home, 43 St. Marks
Pl. Seated in front center, dark
dress, is Ann Palmer, R.N. of
the TV Faculty, Department of
Hospitals, who delivered the
certificates. At her rights is
Gwendolyn Wilform, nurses di
rector, and at left. Gerald Pet-
erseto. assistant director. Oth
ers* shown are Clara Alutiza,
Queen Barrow, Justine Brady,
Donna Bynum, Lillie Camp
bell, Dorothy Corbett, Janie R.
Flowers, Marie Hart, Ada Gob-
ern, Audrey Haynes, Sandra
Matthews, Cleopatra Nixon, Vin
cent Terialles, Beulah Towe,
Hattie Ward, Alphonso Watkins,
Lorella Whitfield and Betty Wir-
bush. -t (Gilbert Photo)
In The Wings
By DAVE HEPBURN
Qyietly, behind the scenes, CORE has been doing
a great deal to bring about the change of image about
which so many organizations talked last year but have
done nothing.
---------
Remember how many people got into the act—the
CENP, and the numerous others — mouthing plati
tudes about what they planned to do?
Remember all the hoopla around the
Powell investigation offices? This is a
lesson in how gains are not made — by
lack of stick-to-itiveness. Only CORE,
aided and abetted by P. Jay Sidney, an
actor, have kept up the pace, with an
assist by the State Commission for
Human Rights’ TV consultant George
Norford.
What CORE has been doing is to take
AT AI*OLLO: Chuck Ja
the big companies one at a time. At first they try to and Mary wells co - star
make them see the light. If thev resist they threaten Apollo Theatres Holiday R
to be "resented for one ’
beginning Friday, d. J.
G is master of ceremonie
... .
them with boycotts.
A Better Break
..
J
The first company they went after was Lever
Brothers, and as we recorded in a previous column, AAeany Name
Lever Bros, have issued instructions to their agencies
to give the Negro a better break in the communications Political
industries—in feature TV and radio as well as in com- njrprfnr
L/livCIUr
mercials.
J *
Now CORE has gone after Colgate-Palmolive Co., afl-cio President G
with some good results and are planning next to at- Meany announced today
tack the biggest of them all Procter & Gamble. As P°intmcnt of J°Wh M
one CORE spokesman told us: “If you prove to be a
af"
Avoid
Labor Day
Fatality
State Conciliates
job Controversy
The State Commission for Human Rights last week , „
giant-killer, you’ll have no trouble from the little guys.” mittee on PoiitiCai
That’s good thinking and we are sure if CORE gets Rourke 58, has been
P&G to go along with their program, the industry will ber of Local 90, int4ationai
conciliated a complaint against an upstate employ- foUow cue Just because the smaller companies will Brotherhood of Ei~irhJ Wort-
The Greater New York Safety
ers, since 1928. and i il two
Council has declined to issue an
estimate or prediction of what
months ago was score y-trea-
the traffic accident toll may be
surer of the Connect! State
over the coming Labor Day week
Labor Council. He is t eluding
end. Instead, it issued a reminder
his third successive t#j . in the
today to New Yorkers that 666
Connecticut House of eprese-
,,____ ... which gives them the knowledge of how much of Lever £,“7™ previously h served
persons were injured and seven
killed in motor vehicle accidents untarily tato such an order, and Among the provisions of the con- Bros or p&Q soap Negroes buy. Armed with this three terms in the sta Senate,
day w^Cndy a yiar°agt6 ° *' break ‘through was regard*d ^“sSS’iTTrnploy^, *to | and following the pattern that Philadelphia ministers ending
3 NeW
ment agency alleging denial of equal opportunity be
cause of color, by a consent order providing for full
compliance with the state laws.
CORE, aided by churches and some civic organiza
tions in the New York and Philadelphia areas has done
a type of marketing survey and brand selection job,
It was the first time an em
ployment agency had entered vol-
challenged, Its enforcceability in
the Supreme Court.
have no other recourse.
.... ... ............
. . ,
sF ’
„
„
.
“Our goal is to reduce this by the Commission as especially(writjng, that all referrals to job have Used to CUt a soft drink Companv and an oil
terms begling in
ligin or age: that the agency re- these companies that a sustained and activated boy-
’aint bv^rs'^’ertoude^orde'of that.it in‘lruct lts
.aim uy vjciuuuc
maiming and slaughter of holiday significant because of the im- openings be made without regard company down to size, thev have been able to show 1933
’
Rn
travelers as much as possible, iDortant position of such agencies to creed, race, color, national or-\
Rourke was business igent of
declared Jerome J. O’Neill, direc-
Local 90 from 1935 to 3, when
tor of the Safety Council’s traffic in2abor recTuiUl^ntJ ,_________ ject discriminatory job orders and Cott, by Negroes, of their products could do consider-;^ for
30 month! service
and transportation division. “If
1 with the Navy Seabee Shortly
every driver made certain his car p
after his return to th< ocal of-
Schenectady,
was in perfect mechanical eondi- 84b Lincoln Ave
i fice he was elected cretary-
tion, and then exercised the neces- that the Moore Employment Ag-
Usually the results have been that the companies “‘Sn.^nd ‘ to thli
sary personal ingredients of ency, Inc., which has offices in
care, caution, alertness, courte- Albany and Schenectady, alleged-
sy and plain common sense there ly i.enied her job referrals be- C,il*ia/ey»e FlFTHi~
could be a tremendous reduction cause she was a Negro.
in accidents this coming week-j A finding of probable cause to
end. Most traffic accidents are credit the allegations of her com-
aw>idable if people will only try plaint had been made by Com-
ana stop playing Russian roulette;mjssoner j. Edward Conway, who
with their lives on the highways.”
agree to make a compromise or, in fact, to open more capacity after the afl io mer-
doors to Negroes in the different communications ser. He resigned July] to join
fields. If they don’t live up to their promise, COREiJj ^ew
can always blow the whistle on them. CORE states ber.
too that a large number of Jewish organizations have
helped in the brand selection job.
cernmg this, and that the agency
make clear “its intention in ob-
con- able harm to their annual profit and loss statement,
to y,e jaw
______ ______
JuUWUjf • Il III
Hirinn
' 1,1 1’’y
Companies Agree
OkfYV
VxfSMjr
placing
. . .
..
,
666 Injuries
attempted without success to con- w Transit Authority signed a
563,820.000 contract Wednesday to
ciliate the case.
,
This is very effective but there is only one problem
Any statistical projection of Agreement on the consent or- purchase 600 new BMT-IND priDp j. nnt farpp pnnuffh to'do an effective Policing
IS n°l iarSe enou8n 10 ao a" enetuve poncing
last year’s local accident figures, w» reached after four hours
der was reached after four hours subway cars from the Budd Com-i^^1'^ 43 44UI' 404 c,iyu8,‘ lu ““
of testimony at a public hearing >any of Philadelphia, the largest'job, after the companies have agreed to toe the line, late James L. McDevitt
whether based on the number of
cars or any other determinable held last Thursday in Albany, single subway car order ever Therefore, we would suggest that CORE require the
to furnish them with a reporton
cars from the
The appointment of 14 u t k e
fills out the COPE fadership
team. Earlier this ninth the
former deputy director Alexan
der E. Barkan, was limed di-
I rector by Meany to Mace the
______ By FREDERICK O’NEAL
The figures on Negro employment for the past
two theatrical seasons on and off-Broadway are as
follows:
SEASON 1961-62 SEASON 1962-63
Total Jobs Available
On Broadway
Off-Broadway
Total Plays Produced
On Broadway
Off-Broadway-
123
50
63
100
Shows Employing Negroes
On Broudway
Off-Broadway
14
20
Integrated Productions
On Broadway
Off-Broadway
The fifty-one jobs available
10
11
__ __ _
51
26
59
68
21
12
mately
of the total
number during the season.
The number of jobs filled
by Negro actors fluctuates
from season to season, ac
cording to the number of
shows done with predomi
nantly or all-Negro casts.
During tlje season -1961-62,
three such shows (Kwam-
ina, Purlie Victorious &
Kicks and Co.) accounted
for ninety of the total of
one hundred twenty three
jobs filled by Negro actors.
The past season had only
one such show (Tiger,
Tiger, Burning Bright) ac
counting for fourteen of a
total of fifty-one.
Fred O’Neal
The Ethnic Minorities Committee of Actors Equity,
while concerned with the total employment picture,
Up To 13
considers the figures on integrated casting as most
important for obvious reasons. In this respect, some
slight progress is shown, as the total number of shows
with integrated casting increased from ten during the
1961-62 season to thirteen for the past season. While
there was a drop in the number of integrated shows
off-Broadwayt there was also a significant drop of ap
proximately 33% in the total number of shows done
under these contracts. Balancing off these figures
would reveal no change.
for the coming season, the Ethnic Minorities Commit
When Marc Bohan of Paris'
famed House cf Dior arrived here
In an effort to increase the use of Negro actors !ast w/f,ken<] tr>. *ive *h,e French
bom fall and winter styles an ex
tra s’les push, an unsung young
Negro designer was holed - up in
his Brooklyn Heights studio
searching for fresh details to'en
hance the value of his second fall
and winter showing.
tee has been meeting with representatives of various
theatrical units whose members are responsible for
casting. So far, the Committee feels that these meet
ings have been helpful. The coming season will reveal
"
SWINGING BLOCK PARTY —
A sizzling heat wave seems to
have hit this wingding at West
128th Street as these teeners
give out with versions of the
“Monkey,” latest dance craze.
Bewitched and slightly bewild
ered is Angela Greene (centerI
age 4. who is trying to di?
what's going on. but at ngnt
the session is swinging to the
current hit tune, "Heat Wave."
Christ Community Church of
Harlem sponsored Back-to-
School party. (Gilbert Photo)..
La Rue Bland
Awaiting
The Big Day
Rue's theories on how the sea
son's high fashions should be
worn.
If there really is a new Negro
and a new day a-coming, LaRue
believes our women must pre
pare for a completely new era in
which Negro fashioc experts will
be glorifying the total woman,in
cluding her personality.
RKO Showing
Mundo Cane,
PT-109 Films
*‘For Love or Money,” a com
edy of husband hungry females'!
starring Kirk Douglas, Mitzi
Gaynor, Julie Newmar and Gig
“Milady of the future, LaRue,young ,s continuing its fourth
■
------ - -
"cannot afford to look like' - -•
week at the RKO Palace
He is LaRue Bland, a graduate
says,
any other woman if she’s inter
ested in a real career and salaries
in the $12,000 to $18,000 range.
She must be ready all the way."
Meanwhile, at the RKO Albee,
“Mondo Cane ', written by Gual-
tiero Jacopetti and considered
quite a controversial film, began
In his guidebook to glamour,
an exclusive run this week in
every woman receives the VIP
New York. Sharing the screen
treatment because he confines his
is “On Any Street,” a drama
of UCLa"*'james Monroe** High Patrons' studio visits to the "By a5out desperate youth starring
and P S. 80 in the Bronx. LaRue. Appointment Only category. Elsa Martineili and Mylene De-
as this unsung artist prefers to!. T\rc sf ^en "
be known, was also a top student ing abou,t tbe Pa”S f«sh,0“’ th’Sj The bizarre, the unusual, the
at the Parsons School of Design season. LaRue observes, but1 wildly unconventional and the
and NYU before going to “The am conBdent that drastic changes downright shocking behaviour of
are in the air and I do not nec-'f,umans around the world are the
essarily believe that the new i ingredients of the feature-length
styles must come from Paris cr technicolor “Mondo Cane.”
Rome. It is time for something
dramatically new to originate in a “pt-109”, a technicolor. Pan
vision drama about combat in
place called Harlem.”
the South Pacific starring Cliff
Not so with Mr. Bland, who is
Robertson as Lt. (jg) John F.
only 26. because his is a world of
Fashion history shows there's
continuing struggle. For exam-been only four major fash on rev- Kennedy opened this week at
pie. LaRue had to spend all his 0iuti0ns ’since the turn of 'he cen- RKO first-run theatres^
savings to spot "The Couture Col- tury, LaRue points out.
The second feature The Brain
lection of LaRue" in the Hotel; “There was the flapper line of Tfiat ^ouldn t Die. is being
Astor’s Versailles Suite Sunday the Poiret era. the long dress by •<^lown at
afternoon. September 8.
The fashion world's welcome
mat for Mr. Bohan was unrolled
for the House of Dior’s idol long
before he stepped aboard an Air
France liner in Paris.
RKO -Hamilton
Something New
c monEect
“PT-109”
Coast
Patou in 1927 and the Dior New
And as it is with all beginners Look ,n 1947," La Rue .said. “So
it’s my guess we’ll have some
thing excitingly new before the
end of the World’i Fair, and it
just might come from a little
studio In Brooklyn Heights.” .
without good "connections,” he is
compelled to produce his fall and
winter showing by requiring the
patrons to pay $10 each as a sub
scription.
Alhambra, Chester,
Franklin. Royal, Tilyou, Bush-
wick, Greenpoint and Alden. At
aU RKO first run-theatres Walt
Disney’s animated song parade,
“A Symposium on Popular
Songs,” is the second feature.
who presided at the hearing in
the state office Building, noting steej and equipped with the lat- what improvements they have made. This would be
that employment agencies are a type Wide picture windows, a sort of self-policing job for the companies and a
main source of labor recruitment will start arriving around late tjmp.<.avpr #or CORF which is not set un to check out
added that “labor hiring patterns summer next year for operation «me-saver I0r I UKb wmcn IS noi sei up IO cneCK OUl
seven channels and umpteen radio stations to keep
are of great concern to us.'
.
on the BMT.
The conciliation was reached in
Joel Squire, manager of adver
a conference of the hearing pan
tising and public relations of Budd
el, which included Commissioners
Company, told The Amsterdam
Ruperto Ruiz and Mrs. Bessie A.
News that the firm employs
Buchanan, with Commission as
“many Negroes" in varying cap-
sociate Attorney Sidney Kant and acities in its railroad plant, as
Elias Moubar. attorney for the well as in other plants in Phila-
employment agency.
delphia and other areas.
tabs on the industry.
Deny Vote Conspiracy
Aacinst Hospital Group
VOCAL COACH & STY1ST
Nite Club Singing Acts tented
Reasonable Rates
Call Far Appamtmatf
Cl 5-9990
if ns dancing
wi TEACH U
Anderson’siludio
2323 7th AvsJ36th St.)
AU 3-0542
the effectiveness of such conferences:
Southern Tours
Because of the agreement reached between Equity
and the League of New York Theatres to bar all
theatres employing a policy of racial discrimination
from their schedules beginning June 1st, 1962, it was
felt that there would be a drop in the number of dates
played. On the contrary, Bus and Truck tours actually
are on the increase throughout the south.
Five states have shown an increase in playing
dates: They are Florida. North Carolina, Oklahoma,
Virginia afnd Tennessee. Alabama bookings fell off. The
past season (1962-63), saw 56 cities receiving 138 en
gagements, an increase of 100% over the previous
season in the number of cities played; during the 1961-
62 season, 63 legitimate performances were seen in 28
Relations and unwarranted.’’ He add
ed that the board cannot be held
responsible for the “continued
sharp disputes between the un
ions and between the unions and
the various employers.”
METROPOLITAN MUSIC SCHOOL
southern cities.
OOOH! — Diana Sands and A1
Freeman Jr., two of the bril
liant performers of the sardon
ically funny “The Living Prem
ise,” playing nightly at the Pre
mise Theater, have just return
ed from an on location shooting
in Acapulco, Mexico of the Jo
shua Logan project of “Ensign
Pulver,” a movie sequel to
“Mister Roberts.” The movie
will be released later this year.
time
to
turn in?
termination and concern to keep
safe and stay alive, which we sin
cerely hope have been strengthen
ed by community safety education
during the last year.”
O’Neill reported 666 injuries
and seven deaths resulted from
411 traffic accidents within New
York City between 6 p.m. Friday
(Aug. 31) and midnight Monday
(Labor Day) in 1963. There were,
in the same 78-hour period. 507
other motor vehicle accidents in
which there was no personal in
jury but which created enough
property damage to cast gloom
upon or to ruin the holiday for
those Involved. None of these fig
ures included accidents in which
New York City residents were
participants outside the city lim
its.
Ironx PAL
To Crown
Miss Queen
Lynch PAL Center. 974 E. 156
St., Bronx, will crown its first
annual Miss Teen Queen Friday
evening of this week in the cen
ter’s spacious auditorium. Four
teen young ladies will be com
peting for the honor.
Judges for the contest are Ophe
lia DeVoe, Bob Logan. Davis
Ross, Reuben Patton, Kitty Kir
by, Dorothy Demby, Ralph De-
Mayo, Kenny Kay, Ronald Bloom
Ruth Miles, Mary Irving nn<l
Bronx Borough President Joseph
Periconi. Contestants will be
judged on their culinary talent,
arts and crafts, sports, music
danee and a 350-word compos:
tion.
...this
calls for
Gloria Mooney heads the Miss
Teen Queen, production team
which includes Pedro Oquendo,
sports supervisor; Laura Wilson,
choreographer and music arrang
er; Naomi Hubbard, arts and
crafts supervisor; Chris Doute,
photography supervisor, and
Fred L. Guirty, who is in
charge of community relations
and will act as master of cere
monies. %
Thomas Garry la the Brunt
manager of the PAL and Ronald
Coleman is the director of Lynch
Center.
✓4
1a
I
I
/
I
•
I
t
I
%
%
V
Enjoy
the King
of Been!
where
there’s life...
tbdre’s Bude
Invitdtiom Then an intemting
toun through all Budminr breweriea.
Come
the 7 Golden Key to <
. ISC.. ST. LOUIS • OfVMK • tos anolk • tamfa
Workshop
Adults
The education committee of the
Jamaica branch NAACP will
sponsor a workshop for parents
at St. Albans Congregational
Church, Linden Blvd. and Marne
PL, Tuesday Sept. 3, from 1:30
to 4 p.m. and Wednesday Sept
4 from 7:30 to 10 p.m.
All parents in the commvn’ty
are requested to attend bringing
any school questions or problems
■Joseph Q. Livingston, is chair
man of the committee.
The conciliation followed testi
mony by James G. Mallia, per
sonnel director of the Golub Corp,
that in the summer of 1958 the
Moore agency had referred “six
or eight” white women to his
company for a secretarial posi
tion. He said that when he asked
the agency if they had anyone
else, the reply was that they did
not, “except for a Negro girl
(Mrs. Forde) whom you wouldn’t
want to speak to.”
Mr.;Mallia continued his testi
mony' by saying that he subse
quently Interviewed and hired
Mrs. Forde.
Mother of Two
Mrs. Forde. the mother of two
children, had testified earlier that
on Nov, 8, 1961. she reactivated
work with the agency but that
her application for secretarial
work with the agency but that
through mid - January she did.
not receive a job referral al
though the agency ran a series of
advertisements in a Schenecta
dy paper for her line of work.
Mrs. Forde, who had ten years
of secretarial ecperience, said
that these alleged refusals to
grant her referrals were based
upon agency statements that its
clients did not wish a woman with
children under teen - age, or that
the emplpyer wanted an unmar
ried woman, or other reasons not
connected with job qualifications.
The consent order is enforce
able though the epurts, and by its
nature obviates any necessity for
the Commission to establish, if
'Miss Pabsco'
Contest Moves
Into Finals
Merle Hinds polled 15,738 votes
to become the front-runner in
the “Miss Pabsco of 1963” pop
ularity contest following the sec
ond count conducted this week
at 1215 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn.
Activity was brisk at the poll
before Miss Hinds gained the
top spot on the third ballot re
placing Sylvia Collins who led
the first count recently b u t
could not maintain her advan
tage in the latest bidding.
Squire declined to state the ex
State Labor
Racing
Harness
,
Kass Pollack, TA press officer,
also told The Amsterdam News
that Budd reported it does hire
Negroes in skilled as well as un
skilled capacities, but said he did
ndt know how many.
act number of Negroes employed, The
explaining that Budd was prohib- Board and Local 144 of the Hotel
ited by the Defense Department, and Allied Service Employees
Union this week denied charges
for which it handles government
of Local 1199 of the Drug and
contracts, from releasing such
Hospital Employees Union that
figures.
they had conspired with each
other “to prevent hospital work
ers from exercising their right
to vote for a union of their own
choosing in secret ballot elec
tions” under the new state law.
Leon J. Davis, president of
Local 1199, made the charges
following a protest demonstra
tion of 75 hospital workers Mon
day at the I^bor Relation*
Board's offices at 270 Broadway
The new state law extending
collectiving bargaining rights to
A minimum of five races will voluntary hospital workers in
be televised when harness racing this city became effective last!
from Yonkers Raceway is pres July 1 On that date, according!
ented on “The Sehaeder Circle of to Davis, Local 1199 petitioned
Sports,” on Saturday, S<?pt 7, for elections at 10 hospitals,
from 10-11 p.m. on Station WPIX “After two months of Inter-i
New York.
minable stalling.’’ he said, "the
Marty Glickmaa and Lou O’-(workers' patience is being ex-
Neill will share the commentary hausted Unless the board re-
for the one - hour telecast, with verses its tactics,and sets dates
Glickman acting as master of cer-: for immediate elections it will
monies and O'Neill handling the be directly responsible for a new
wave of hospital labor strife
actual call of the races.
The races to be televised will which the htw was designed to
On TV
include the daily double (first and(prevent," ,
second races) and the featured Davis charged the board with
fifth race. In addition, the prog- “working hand in glove” with
ram will aiso Include Interviews Local 144 in an attempt to split
with winning drivers and other;up hospital bargaining units into
racing personalities.
a virtual grab bag for raiding
unions.”
Yonkers Raceway harness rac
ing is a feature of "The Schaef
Commenting on the charge, 1
er Circle of Sports," sponsored by 'Loral 144 president Peter Ottleyll
the K. and M. Schaefer Brewing j ca]|cd jt -a cheap publicity gim-
C mpany; and represented hyl^ to get 1199 off the hook
Batten, Barton, Durstine & Os-!for faiiure to organize hospital^
born, Inc.
VeW Law
r 9 Active,
"•nday
The new statewide law barring
discrimination in the tale or ren
tal of all housing except rentals
in an owner - occupied one or
two - family home goes Into Ef
fect on Sunday, Sept. 1, state of
ficials pointed out.
iworkera and to hide the fact
| that it was 1199 ttself that was
guilty of stalling hospital elec-i
tioci. ’
? ‘
"It is more than Ironical,"j
said Ottley, “that Local 1199,
: which was one the unions
| pleading for the state board to
take over and supervise elec
tions in hospitals, is now turning
on the boaru and seeking to b»
smirch it.”
A spokesman for the Labor
Relations Board labeled Davis’
chage as "reckless, groundless
Award
The ’'101 Junior Flash” won
a second place certificate from
the Columbia Scholastic Press
Association, The magazine
scored 805 points out of a pos
sible 1.000 points in the annual
newspaper contest.
1
The new law, which also extends
the discriminatory ban to real es
tate brokers effecting all housing,
Griselda Simmons allied 14,-
will be administered by the State
200 votes remaining in second
Commission for Human Rights.
place. Behind her was Norma
It is expected that the new Met-
Brown with 14.000 which puts
ralf-Baker anti-bias housing law
her in a challenging position for
will affect nearly 95 per cent of
the finals coming up Sept. 14. the private housing In the state
J8 West 74 Street TR 3*2761
Fall term registration through September
Pke-School, children «nd idults • Folk, popular or dwsical
• Instruction in music theory and in the following instruments:
riaagtcal
im
•reewdRett
£OOC*rtift4
O-*M
v^<.
|ee««
4»tar
b..io
fr»*ch bom oboa
fjnpeal
viola
bar.‘ana
clarinet .
d-vese
than dell it
vsoloacaRo
trumpet
9a»<>ehoft4
v^rai
doubia bait ♦rambefta
pb^nel
6wta
me order
baneon
FREE PSACT1CE ItOOM AVAILABLE TO AU STUDENTS
HALLS FOR HIRE
nilUf MR CONOITIOHtt
SAVOY MANOR
* 120 UST 149lh ST. MO H665
raTfRERS FOR WtDOINGS,
BANQUETS A COCKTA
3 Ballroom lor Doom. J
Shows - (♦••W
8 Moating Roams Accommodating 40 to 800 Pooplt
CLUB BARON
South West Canwr 132 St. A Lenox Avenoe
II l« amart aaU rronamlcal to kin thin Club for your Social Panrllono
Make Rrarrratlona Now For Your Daneoa. Corktalla. Wrdrflnfi. Elr.
Matea FrMaya and Sandays »50
fomptately Air CondlUonrd for Yoor Sammrr Date
.
Saturdaya SWt
. fall AV 1-7SM/
Wo Aro Opow for Sprine and Fall Roaorvatlnna
DIFFERENT RENT RATES FOR WEDDINGS
CLUB
SEA BREEZE
The Mast Modern Place
tn Harlem
Lanox Ava. nr. 131 Sf.
Catering to Private Parties,
Weddings, Etc. For reservations
call: AU 6-7759 dr LE 4-3419
APRIL, MAY A JUNE
BOOKINGS AVAILABLE
Club La Chois
HARLEM'S NEWLY
DECORATED SHOWPLACE
AIR CONDITIONED
JOSEPHINE THENSTEAD, MGR.
Available for Dances,
Weddings, Banquets and
Cocktail Parties, Catering.
7th Ave. Bel. 154Hi and
155 Sts., H.Y.C ,
AU 3 8501 - AU 6-7584
And in the 1960-61 season before the decision to
eliminate segregated houses, 24 cities in eleven of the
southern states saw 36 engagements. Several houses
have changed their policy for Equity productions and
go back to a segregated arrangement for motion
pictures. The new season (1963-64) at this point looks
very promising for the Negro actor. In the works are
several plays to be done on and off-Broadway,
Among*these are “Ballad for Bimshire”, with a
predominantly Negro cast, “Tambourines to Glory
the Langston Hughes play and the musical version
of “Golden Boy” starring Sammy Davis, Jr., and now
scheduled to open first in London.
Different
But don’t get alarmed! LaRue,
unlike most fashion show produc
ers here, is offering something
extra with his daringly different
collection. He’s throwing in a
luncheon and a bevy of models
who are well acquainted with La-
BuWdirected by «INE FtANKIL
To-Frt •:»: Sat 7:». 10:M: Sun 1, »:»
Air raadlttoaed. M. Marks naykaasa
ib aaa Art. <M si.)
oa abb
AlB-CONDmONED
UOR\j\CSIDE- NOW /
Ttoatre. US St. a Mh Are. MO S-KB
Fri., Aa<- B. 'WARRIOk EMYRFSS'
•1m 1 WOMEN FROM HELL'
SAT.. ACO. 31 —
3 BIO FEAT.
“UNDERWATER CITY" •l»o
"HOUSE OF FRIGHT" and
"WILD WESTERNERS". • chapter
A 3 COLOR CARTOONS
Su. A Mm., Sent. l-S-3 RIG FEAT.
“RYE BYE BIRDIE" al««
"VALLEY OF DRAGONS"
and "UNDER FIRF."
Several other plays are in preparation for pre
sentation during the'TOming season. If substantial
headway can be made in breaking down time-worn
casting barriers, we can expect to see a season in
which th<s “people of high visibility will be very much
in evidence on the main stem.
Next Week: A column by Lofton Mttchall, play
wright (“Land Beyond The River”) and co-author of
“Ballad For Bimshire”, the new musical play opening
off Brodwav this fall.
• a >n«*t*U« **M
ft id test a nt out vene /
1/ wo raurre atm n wtinwwc:
vjr.f 'llv Air-Conditioned
NOW THRU TUESDAY
4 hk atrl ,
ALHAMBRA . - .>■
-
REGINT
FRANKLIN
Hamilton
bush wick
NOW THRU TUIS.
ST
< H WAV
A WINNER!
'-rw,
LOUIS JOURDAN SYLVIA SYMS
^AMAZONS OF ROME”
«■ BLEECKER ST.
Btoochor ond W B way—ON 4-Mie
Now Ihr. Moaday Odty
BLACK ORPHEUS
and ALEC OUINNEOR la
Lavender Hill Mob
Lata Showa Friday
Cliff ROBER1SON’"SBJSS""
--------- larra I at all TWIAIBU ■■ 1
oStfJt’SONG PARADE
IralN That WawWa t
STARTS WED.. SEPT. MR
Raro
F.xpoood la
"Wall of
RARLGFF
"TMI
Timor’
RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL
Showpiece of the Nation • Rockefeller Center • PL 7-3100
DORIS DAY • JAMES GARNER
“THE THRILL OF IT ALL!”
c rere. ARLENE FRANCIS
’ Mh IMAM) AMWKW3 • EIIIOTT MIO . M6INALD OWf N • MSU DTH
and taaai Mar CAM MIMA - h««nd hr Am War A Hart" ***».
OlracM hr Narma laman. A Ualnnal HMm la tadiaaa COtOA
ON THK GREAT STAGE
“Ear*pa” —International apactacla of colorful pageantry
and oxcitingantertainmant with Baiiat Company, toioiata, famed
Rochattaa in "Changing of tha Guard." apetjtlty acta, Sym
phony Orchoatra.
non. era ret.
(iMMtHOMMl)
OMaiaata
UNooa l .N
12 Nona
RIF.M. »1.»
I P.M.
It ClMini 11.10
tATWOIT
(taattNOMm)
Opaniaa ta
11 AM. I .N
11 KM.
It 12 Naaa $1-35
12 Noon
NIR.M. ll.M
1F.M
It CteMag tl.B
tewoiT
Opening ta
I Ml ft SO
I F.M.
te Closing 11 M
HOLIDITI
M'ZS
i 1 F.M.
tai P.M.|I.M
J P.M.
to Cloiini $t W
[Mit.lUNCUT! POP.PRICES! ’MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY'J
a
w
^IRUIISI
M H.I — II
■Snell
aMtaasarraai
aAwaMa..
>JSTBflT
tmimiT
MMIRt *«t
BdANCEY
OCTROI A
GIT YtRNON
•YWW ROCN
RFN PLMNS
aaimiT
MRBI
tun it
atm
(MHO ’
ORtCRTU
RTKNt
PRERHIR
.
FRANK
SINATRA
COMEBLOWYOURHORN’
Lsa J. COBB Molly PICON color
e «”9i» rtAtwif ©mt at tataimmreatD
1PAR1S PICK-UP' ,
I«wore | . Ul'tKU 1 MTtMU ° ][bom mm pft. ior* -tichnicolo«'
«EWtBRir.ta£=££]Itreoan - |-«o
1 are Siaaiai «« l g TmaotuMs ow popuia» V)Nft«
[seeiM aaawrl
m tm« worn a-'
■HtLtRR its pimp Tightg „
MUM II area mat « wamr tat item tm n
USUI MUST' I PX tun ta t SMMAASN ltd
wticMti tasn (mm ii imr nitw
LITTLE JTIYII WORIER
"FlNGERT IPS"
BIN t. KIRI
"STAND BY Mt • "I" (WHO MAVI NOTHING)
TRI ARGILS
"Til" • ‘ MY BOY I Alt NO J BACK '
GERE MTREY
“TOWS WITHOUT PITY"
"IBUt 10W NIWP BUNS SMOOTH'
JAH ARR REAR
“iinoa" . "sum arr
THE MIRACLES .
Munns MONKFY" 1
••YOUW REMIY GOT A NOlO ON ME"
THE 8MIILUS
"Ml YOtJ 10)4 ME TOMOMfOW"
DON'T SAY G000NIGW ANO MEAN GOOOSYI"
TRI BMPTIRS
"ON BROADWAY” • "UP ON THE ROOT"
THE ROVELLS
"BRISTOl STOMP" . YOU CAN'T SIT DOWN"
THE RONETTES
M MY BABY
JAY ARO THE AMERICAHS
"SHE CRIED" • “ONIY IN AMERICA"
TN TYN8
SO MUCH IN 10W'•'WONOEMIA.. WONDER!Ul
THE 6HIFF0IG
"HE'S SO FINE" • “ONE FINE OAr
RARIY AHI THE RAIRBOWS
"SWB”
AMI RICAN INIfRNttlONAl nmm ,
RIKtme
iONQUEROR;
~COLORSCOPE
Bigz-Winner White Cross Shoe
Drawing. . .The drawing for
the Electric Organ given away
by the White Cross Shoe Clinic
took place on Saturday, August
17th. The luck winner, Miss
JoAnn Lacks, six years old,
residing at 16 E. 132nd St. NYC.
' WOtlD'S
THEATRE
♦W.**4»»*4*»*44*»4*»***»**»*4-****»*4»4»»***»*4*»*****»**************
BEGINNING FRIDAY, AUG. 30 - One Week Only
HE PICKS THE BEST
ROCKY G
PRESENTS A JOYFUL
U; 4
OPT.
HOLIDAY REVUE
CHUCK JACKSON
STAGE SHOWS
APPROXIMATELY
1 P.M. ■ 4 P.M.:
MARY WELLS
The BLUEBELLES
The VIBRATIONS
BARBARA LEWIS
B. B. SOXX .‘u"Dn*ENS
COMEDY By
BABY SEALES
MUSIC By
Reuben Phillips Band
{♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦«************************p*
-■ i
-----
9
Y j
IB • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Aug. 31, 1963
-------- .By ANDY STANFIELD
Co.
(Pinch Hitting for George Palmer)
Former Olympic Sprint Champion and Now Special
Sales Representative of The F. & M. Schaefer Brewing
—t---------
Although I would feel
more at home in a pair of
track shoes, o r selling
Schaefer Beer, than I do
writing a guest column for
my good friend George Pal
mer, I still insist on getting
off to a running start. All
of which brings me to the
Olympic Games of 1952
and 1956.
The above years may not
ring a bell with some of
you. They’re probably just
part of a calendar, long for
gotten, but to me, these
years will always dominate
my life.
— Take the summer of
1952. The dates — July 19
to August 3. This was the
occasion of the Olympic Andy Stanfield
Games, held in Helsinki, Finland, and I’m proud to
say Uncle Sam asked me to go along and keep our*
Olympic team company, as a sprinter in the 200 meters,
and as the anchor man in the 400-meter relay. I’ve
still got a couple of gold medals to go with my mem
ories of Helsinki.
Four years later, during our winter of 1956, it was
summer in Melbourne, Australia. This time, the gold
medals were a lot scarcer, at least as far as I was con
cerned. But I managed a silver medal in the 200 meters
and then called it a career.
At one time, sports writers called me the world’s
fastest human. Well, I guess you could have said the
same thing about Charlie Paddock, back in 1920, Jesse
Owens, in 1936, or Mel Patton, the California Flash, in
1948. And, of course, today’s Bob Hayes, currently the
swiftest of them all.
I think I can understand why runners grow faster
all the time. Perhaps I would have been unable to do
so, if I hadn’t become associated with The Schaefer
Brewing Co. and I’ll explain what I mean.
I’ve always said that you can predicate anything In
athletics to business. The harder we train, be it in a
stadium, or in business, the more records are liable to
fall.
DRUMMER BOY: Musicians
must be born not made. Four-
year-old James Bradley Jr., the
most remarkable young drum
ming talent to hit Hollywood
in the past ten years, makes
his musical debut on Art Link-
letter’s CBS - TV and radio
"House Party” show on Tues
day, Sept. 3. Young Master
Bradley, with his mother and
father, James Bradley Jr., of
Los Angeles, will be interview
ed by Linkletter and hisbelieve-
it-or-not story told to Art’s
many millions of viewers. Young
Bradley had never had a drum
lesson in his life. His remark
able talent for rhythm was dis
covered when he was still a
toddler and he was found keep
ing time by beating on the sides
of his crib. Linkletter agreed
that young Master Bradley has
a great future. When Link ask
ed him what he wanted to be
when he grew up the youngster
replied, “Another Erskine Haw
kins ... or Gene Krupa.”
Postal Service Seen
As ‘Proving Ground’
Describing the Postal Service as a “valuable train
Announced
The closing date for acceptance
of applications for an examina
tion as a nursing assistant at the
Veterns Administration Hospital
in the Bronx is Sept. 9, it was an-
ing ground” for leaders of the national Negro com
munity, Assistant Postmaster General Frederick C.
Belen said last week the Post Office Department is nounced this week
following “with success” a vigorous equal employment Application esc Forms 5000-
program among its 587,000 employes.
mu!t be received by the board
he told a 7 p.m.------------------------------------------------ the U.S. Civil Service Exam-
in NAACP affairs; Judge Theo- iners. Veterans Administration
dore Spalding of the Municipal
Hospital, 130 W. Kingsbridge Rd.,
Court in Philadelphia and Come
Bronx 68. New York, not later
dian Dick Gregory,” Mr. Belen
than that date for the $3,560 a
said.
year. 40-hour a week position.
“This means,’
Promotions Limited
The Assistant Postmaster Gen-
There’s an added Ingredient to my theme. When
the Olympic Games were held back in the era of
Charlie Paddock, neither the training methods nor the
track conditions could equal what our athletes are pro
vided with today. The winning time for the 200 meters
in the Olympic Games of 1920 was twenty-two seconds
flat. My time, in 1952, was twenty and seven-tenths sec
onds. In 1960, the best time for the distance shrunk to
twenty and five-tenths seconds.
Touch Grid
Loops Now
Practicing
banquet session of the convention
of the National Alliance of Pos
tal Employes at the Henry Hud
son Hotel, “that we have not
given, and do not intend to give
anyone any preferential treat
ment simply because of his race,
creed or color, just as we will
not tolerate anyone receiving less
than equal treatment because of
race, creed or color.
The Postal Executive from
Washington, D.C. cited as one of
the leaders is Alliance National
President Ashby Smith —
well-recognized leader in the la
bor movement/’
"Other distinguished Negroes
who at one time were postal
employes include Howard Jen
kins, newly-appointed member of
the National Labor Relations
Board; Earl B. Dickerson, Presi
dent of the Supreme Liberty Life
Insurance Company and a leader
eral said postal promotions are eral,
very limited due to nature of
the work, but the last two years
have been marked by notable
promotions of Negroes promoted
because they were “entitled to”
be elevated. “We are simply
giving qualified men the jobs
’ he said. Belen pointed to
Chris Scott, postal transporta
tion executive in Washington;
Henry McGee, postal regional
executive from Chicago, and Hen
ry Dixon and Sam Simmons, top
level personnel officials from
Washington.
spoke to the group today
also, praising highly the highly
effective role played by Negro
personnel in carrying out major
programs of the last two years
for mail service Improvement.
He cited as an example the
leadership of the Los Angeles
Post Office, headed by a Negro
Postmaster. Leslie Shaw, in
carrying out such programs as
ZIP Code to reduce mail hand
lings and speed service; Acceler
ated Business Collection and De
livery for four-hour downtown
local mail service and other
Mr. James F. Kelleher, Special
Assistant to the Postmaster Gen- service activities.
Columbia-Community touch
football leagues are now prac
ticing on the Athletic Field which
is located at 112th St., and Man
hattan Avenue. Touch football
season will begin September 28.
According to James H. Young
there will be two loops this sea
n; a Junior Division with boys
13 through 15 and a -Senior
Division with boys IS through 17.
Convicts
Woman Of
Abortion
Queen Ester Georage, 50, of 246
Bradhurst Ave-, convicted of
abortion after a week long Jury
trial before Justice Abraham
Bloch In Supreme Court, will be
sentenced Oct. 24. She faces up
to four years in prison.
According to Assistant DA Ed
ward Davidowitz. Mrs. George,
formed an abortion on a Mrs.
Mary Boyd in 470 W. 150th 9t.,
on May 17.
Last Rites For
Mrs. Shockley
Mrs. Rosalie Shockley was
buried last week Friday at Long
Island National Cemetery. Farm
ingdale, L. I., after a low Mass
was said at Our Lady of Grace
R. C. Church, 226th St. and
Bronxwood Ave., the Bronx.
Mrs. Shockley, a native of
Georgia, died last Aug. 19 while
en route to Misericordia Hospital
from her home at 963 E. 220th
St.. Bronx. She ii survived by
her husband, Joseph; a mother
and several other relatives and
friends.
I
More than 300 physicians, den-
its, nurses and paramedical
1 representing 40 state..
__
_ _ aboard the white
I hospital chip S.S. HOPE during
'her first two voyages.
te. ffllMS ffixsi®
PARTY Til
DM It TONY AXAS’/F STEAK
HOUSE
MiRSNDA’S r
(Magloto IwdMaat - Rinor • Ala Csrta
154th ft. A 7th Ate. AD 4-4734
]
M»k.r Saarhaa (■*<••• I Naw »
222 W. 119th StM NX 24 UN 4-9213
ARROZ CON FOLIO 0 FAELLA VALENCIANA
O*«b It Nara ta 1 A.M. — FrUay A Saturday Opm Ualfl J A M.
RESTAURANT A BAR
INSOUCIANTLY YOURS
hn «t 158th St.
WA 3-9749
GOLD BRICK INN
HARLEM’S NEWEST AND MOST DISTINCTIVE RESTAURANT AND BAR
) CHINESE-AMERICAN DINING ROOM
AMSTERDAM AVL «t 1S7th ST.
AU 3-8792
"SAVE WHILE YOU RAVE"
GOLDEN Grill
tou«
*354 W. 145th St.
Car. St. Nidielas Art.
FSTWT,
VISIT OUR SPACh
RESTAURANT Ah
DELICIOUS LUNCHEONS i
FEATURE
FOR YOUR LIS1
CURLIE
AND HIS A
& *
LEN FONG
3S33 BROADWAY
NEW YORK 31,
mitbentic Conforms Cui
SPECIAL FACILITIES
BANQUETS • RE
Cocktoil Lounge
Orders Prep
MADRID I
114th
1902 7th Avanes
NOTED FOR OUR
DELICIOUS
CHICKEN at
SCI
At War — NOKMA XLLISON. I
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 ---
d* •
M • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Aug. 31, 1963
Performer Buried In New Haven
Eddie Greenlee. 69. who
danced and sang with Thaddeus
Drayton all over the world, was
buried Monday in New HaVen,
Conn. He lived with his wife and
three daughters at 267 Dixwell
Ave., New Haven.
Greenlee and Drayton went to
Europe in 1913 with the cake
walking dance team of Charlie
Johnson and ixa« Green. The
Greenlee and Drayton dance
team gSTned fame in Europe
and the two went on their own.
Kid Cole, a singer, and Peggy
Holland, a drummer, were added
to their act. Greenlee and Dray
ton spoke several languages, in
cluding Russian.
At the start of World War One
tlte dance team, which was set
to open in Paris, returned home
and Drayton Joined the Army
while Greenlee teamed up with
Ethel Williams.
At the end of the war they
returned to the stage as a team
and played the Loew's circuit
for anunpreeedented two years.
They returned to Europe in
1925. Accompanying them were
Josephine Baker and Hilda
Rogers. When the dance team
returned to Budapest. Hungary,
in 1925. it was met at the boat
by a big band.
Greenlee, who owned and op
erated a hotel, cafe, and three
houses, was raised in New York
City.. Besides his wife. Dolores,
and three children he is also
survived by three sisters and a
brother.
DOUBLE HANDY!
AND ONLY
BALLANTINE’S GOT
CHOW UNE — Unable to find
her sister a tearful lass who
said her name was Terry holds
her loaded plate and cries dur
ing the annual 115th St. block
party Friday evening. Betty
Givern, center, makes her way
to a seat while Henry Palmer,
right, waits patiently for his
dish. Dishing out refreshments
are. left to right Sharon Lock
hart, Pat Hazel. Josephine Jon
es and Estelle Clark. The party
marks the end of the PAL Play
street which was under the di
rection of Gilbert Dyer and
S & H Quality Stores
Marhe Salmon. The party was el Simmons who maintains an
co-sponsored by insurance brok- office in the block. (Gilbert pho-
ers Leroy Dounavent and Eth- to).—- ,
Labor Day
Parade
Planned
Y" Teaches
Si" or "Oui'
You can, through the Informal
Adult Education program offer
ed at Brooklyn Central YMCA,
starting September 9, learn to
Hawaiian
Punch
College bin
Chicken
Broth
DOLES
Lipton Soup Mix
Chicken Cl-
Noodle
5c •« Stable Pack
Carolina
Rice
, .
, v
_ T u
uajr, -
or shine, on Labor Day. Monday.
« j the language from the very first
_?
, evening Beginners classes for
Sept. 2. The line of march will both Spanish and French are
be up Fifth Avenue from 26th to! available Tuesday evenings, and
63rd streets. It will begin at 10 a variety of brush-up courses are
a.m. and end at about 6 p.m. available for those with some
.
.
BABIES
RMlMISn
RecMstHuted
Lemon Jui<
The parade sponsored by the background.
.
New York City Central Labor! These seven weeks courses are
Council will have as its theme especially developed to be useful
“Full Employment and Equal Op- for business, travel, and pleasure
and are open to both men and
portunity.”
The emphasis in parade prep- women on an informal basis and
arations this year has been put on there are no educatonal require-
getting the message across, rath- ments for registration,
er than getting out, the largest Further Information may be ob
number of marchers, according to tained by contacting the Prog-
Harry Van Arsdale, president of ram Office, Brooklyn Central
the council, and Daniel Gilmar- YMCA. 55 Hanson Place, Brook-
tin. chairman of its parade com- lyn, N.Y. 11217 JAckson 2-6000
Ballantine beers
PLASTIC SIX-PACK
OF SELF-OPEN CANS
(EASY-CARRYING • EASY-COOLING)
(EASY-OPENING)
ternatloaal unions will march
with their delegations and then
return to the reviewing stand.
Theatrical unions will have
their traditional place at the head
of the parade, with casts of sever
al shows in costume. They lead
the parade so that performers
and technicians can get to thea
tres in time for Labor Day ma
tinees.
- - ■ ' - - - 1 • •
, » • A -fi - g <
It’s the happiest, handiest way to drench a summer thirst! Ballantine's plastic
six-pack of Self-Open Cans! Perfect for good times in the great outdoors—
you can put this quick-cooling plastic pack on ice, and snap out the cans
when you want them! What’s more, those Self-Open Cans need no opener!
There’s never been a handier way to buy beer—or a happier beer to buyl
Crutchfi.ld CORN MEAL
SELLO ROJO RICE
5 lb. bag 73c
KOTEX
C] 1
A
***
I
lESTOh
Original
DOG FOOD
Bon Ami Powder
2 for 29c
Jef Soroy 55c
9 LIVES
ALPO
Dog Food
Beef Chenin
MARCAL
Get a headstart on Labor Day driving with jfypyflfriowtf. service!
Newark, New Jeney, Euo dealer • • kelpe plan a trip
See your Esso dealer for an Esso map. America’s favorite maps show the side
roads, the back roads, the uncrowded scenic roods that make driving a real
pleasure. They show nearby recreation areas and spots of interest you may
want to visit
And make sure your car’s in shape to go. Let your Esso dealer check
your tires, your oil, your battery, fan belt and cooling system. Does your car
need a lubrication? Fill up with Esso Extra gasoline. It keeps your engine
cleaner to give you more useable power.
Now you’re ready for a really carefree Labor Day Weekend. It’s service
like this that makes the sign of “Happy Motoring” America’s First Choice.
■ • ’
nUmDLC OIL & REFINING COMPANY
America’s Leading Energy Company
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 ---
M • N. T. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Aug. 31, 1963
»*
IA/go/c I y News
wtf
ua i'f ( hapel
11 Ob PIT his 4V( B'KLVN N V
Barbara Forth
Barbara relic* Forth,
Felice Ford la
39 years ago. died Mon
t Aug IS at Unity Hospital
• TShe was buried Friday Aus.
J 1« to St Charles Cemetery, Far-
• minBdale. L.I. The body had re-
. poeed in Unity Parkway Chapel.
Parkway and Pitkin Ave
iem Matg was
said at Holy Rosary Church, Aug
IS and at St Peter Qaver Ro
man Catholic Church the next
day.
The deceased who Heed with
her husband Ernest nt 177 Wlad-
aee Parkway. Hempstead. L.I..
was a teacher at P.S. 36. Brook-
scse: »
lyn. she attended P.S. S and
Franklin K. Lane High School
before going to Long Island Univ
ersity.
She was an active member of
St Peter Claver Roman Cath
olic Church, the Catholic Teach
ers Association and the United
Federation of Teachers. She
was also a member of Phi Delta
Kappa Sorority and the Brook
lyn Club of the National Associa
tion of Negro Business and Pro
fessional Women’s Club.
She is survived by her husband
whom she married in 1958; by
a son. Michael and her mother
Mrs. Dorothy Ford.
Johnnie Mock
Johnnie Mack of 1798 Fulton
SL. died Aug. 7 at St John's
Hospital. Brooklyn. He was 16
years old.
-Interment took place Monday
13 la Frederick Douglass
Cemetery, Staten Island, follow-
••tag funeral service at Unity Park
way Chapel. Eastern Parkway
and Pitkin Ave.
Surviving him are his parents
Eddie and Lillie Boyd Mack,
four brothers, Eddie. Jr., Ar
thur, Jerome, and Charles; two
slaters, Theresa and Shirley; also
a grandmother, five aunts, three
uncles and a host of other rel
atives and friends.
/
J
In 2 Years Pastor
Doubles Membership
$47,000 Parsonage
For Baptist Pastor
located at 796 Clocks Blvd., five
minutes walk from the church at
3504 Great Neck Road.
The Hollywood Baptist Church
of Amityville. L.I. dedicated Its
new frame brick veneer four-level
parsonage Sunday Aug. 18. at an
afternoon ceremony attended by
town officials, visiting clergy and
members.
This is also a newly built struc
ture, having been dedicated on
Oct. c 1961. It cost 8160.000. Pas
tor of the church is Rev. Andy
C. Lewter who went with the 41-
months ago by the church is un- pashenger church bus to the Aug
officially valued at 847.000. It is 28 March on Washington.
The structure, started four
*
In Brooklyn
News Of Churches
This week the Rev. Wil
liam J. Hall completes two
years as pastor of Bethel
Baptist Church, 263 Bergen
St. Brooklyn and in that
time the membership has
almost doubled.
"V" To Teach
Investing
When he went there In August
1961, there were 3000 members
on roll with only 540 active.
Since then he has added 1437 new
members and many of the old
ones have become active.
Another indicator of the new
times Rev. Hall has brought to
the South Brooklyn church is its
physical transformation. He ha*
renovated the Interior at the coat
of 810.000 and the congregation
has expressed its appreciation
for the changes by buying a new
parsonage for 836,000.
These things have endeared the
congregation to the pastor and
the minister to hia flock. The lat
ter, Kcv. Hall said, have shown
such “faith and love" towards
him and so improved his own
material conditions that he feels
obliged to work to Improve their
own material conditions aa well.
Working aa "a free agent of
the Church,” he la attempting to
get them better Jobs, housing
more decent conditions. ”
During the interview a lady
representing the tenants of War
ren St. between 3rd and 4th Ave*,
entered the office.
ReT; -Hall.has been acting as
coordinator of the tenants group
trying to improve things in the
all Negro block where dirt, dope
and dilapidation ran riot. The
St. Lake’s
BROOKLYN — St. Luke’s Com
munity Church of Brownsville,
Rev. Wilbert Miller, pastor, will
sponsor a reception Sunday eve
ning Sept. IS at 7 30 p.m. in
honor of the recently published
“AU Neighborhood's Change,
Rae Glauber
The book is a survey of Browns
ville, Brooklyn and it comes out
at the time of Brownsville’s 100th
anniversary. Entertainment wlU
be furnished by Estelia McKin
ney. soprano. Eugene Broadnax.
Charles Dyer, Pearl Hill. Sybil
King. Vera Prout and Lloyd Walk
er, at the church at 142 Watkins
St
Xe
Here are some questions asked
by the Newman Memorial Meth
odist Church. Sunday bulletin:
{“Are you carrying your share ot
Mt. Lebanon Baptist Church of Every man at sometime has
Brooklyn, at the current confer- the need to be acquainted with
eoce of Christian educators at some aspect of the Law and the
question of investing the fruits
the American Baptist Assembly,
of his labors. These two sub
Green Lake, Wis. He is one of
ject* are the basis of courses
400 church school administrators,
being offered at Brooklyn Cen
teachers and other interested lay
tral Y.M.C.A. as part of its In
by'men attending the National Christ
formal Adult Education program
which opens September 9th.
ian Education Conference
Because of the need for vital
information these two courses
have been developed. “Practical
Investing” Is an excellent aeries
including: - Mechanics. Types of
Orders, Financial Statements,
Ecpnomic Indicators, Theories,
and other information with which
all Investors in the market should
be acquainted.
SL Stephen's
Four bus-loads went from St.
Stephen’s P.E. Church of Ja
maica, earlier this month for the
7th annual trip of the congrega
tion to Canada. They worshipped
at St. George’s Cathedral, Kings
ton, Ont. where in 1957, they saw
their vacationing pastor Rev.
Leslie C. Forde, participate In
the service.
Vestryman Howard Baker, said
Rev. Forde had never served in
the cathedral in his own diocese.
He added that he likes the Can
adian visit very much because,
although he is a race fighter, he
likes to be well treated and have
the opportunity to relax some
time.
Calvary
The Calvary Baptist Church,
111-10 New York Blvd., Jamaica
will present Marvinell Hanna in
a recital, Oct. 6, at the Town
Hall. Reservations close Sept 15.
Pastor of the church is Rev.
I^aw For You
The companion series.
Rev. Smith will bring with him
. group had sent a petition to the thue ®edf<”2 rL-SnUy^S!"!
church, Cleve McDowell. Negro
Uw -QtK .r-inpt fnr
78th precinct for more police
for the Layman ’, is designed toi222**2.T222^**2'l'J *27 x2*2 2”_5^2*71 student who succeeded James
protection and to the rent and
acquaint us with transactions
rehabilitation office for aid In Meredith on the campus of Ole
that involve the Law as it af
Rpv Smith who has been
improving the conditon of the
fects our every day life. Land
lord, Tenant. Wills,' Social Sec
urity, Contracts, Suits, Etc., Will
be- covered.
houses.
Both courses will be conducted
on Tuesday evenings at 7:30 P.M.
for seven weeks starting Septem
ber 10th. ,
There was his Involvement in
the fight for jobs. Rev. Hall had
been on vacation when it was
felt the Negro ministers should
make a stand in the fight at the
Downstate Medical Center.
He was there on the first day
Men and Women are invited
of the arrest and then had a sec
to Inquire for further informa
ond. Worshippers here look to
tion at the Program Office,
Brooklyn Central Y.M.C.A., 55 the minister for more than Sun-
Hanson Place, Brooklyn, N.Y. day morning preaching, Rev.
11217 - JAckson 2-boOU.
Hall said.
TYPICAL SCENE — This lady
shown was revived after being
overwhelmed by the intense
heat during the March to the
Lincoln Memorial Wednesday.
There were many assigned to
, immediately help her and many
other demonstrators who piss
ed out.
Rev. Smith At St. Phillips
Guest preacher at St. Philip’s
Protestant Episcopal Church at
the 11 A.M. service Sunday, will
be the Rev. Wofford K. Smith,
Episcopal chaplain at the Uni
versity of Mississippi.
very much interested in dlvil
rights, is attending the national
conference of Episcopalian chap
lains at Columbia University.
Host pastor is the Rev. Rich
ard B. Martin.
A democracy can only be strong
if all the citizen* are properly
educated and careers are freely
open to all the talented.
—James B. Caflant
Heroes of Emancipation
years 1770-1831
PHUJJS WHEATLEY
the load for civil rights, integra
tion and brotherhood? Have you
joined the N.AACP this year:
deserving I may be ... I would
written your Congressman and
have published the poem, had
Senator asking to vote for the
of the first Negroes
I not been apprehensive that,
destined to win some sort of
while I only meant to give the passage of the President's Civil
reflown la America. The chief
world this new instance of your
'^erary figures of these years
genius, I might have incurred
rcre JTiillis Wheatley. Jupiter
the imputation of vanity.** She
The Rev. Gerald White, pastor
fiammotM*. and Gustavus Vassa.
subsequently visited General
of White’s Memorial Baptist
Phillip Mheatley, the most gifted
Washington and his staff and said 27 banks turned down his
| application for mortgage on the
yf the three, is by far the mosti was entertained by them.
famous. Every history of Negro The ahtislavery societies pub- new church building he is buying
’•America tells of her talent and
accomplishment.
I‘«ms of Phillis Wheatley whicn Avenue Baptist Church.
Rights Bill . . Have you?
White
gnd soid Memoir and at 65 Weirfield St., bow the Bush- Walter S
Pinn.
At the age of seven, in lTll.jiiicy used to illustrate the intel-
Phillis Wheatley waa kidnapped lectual capacities of the Negro.
and brought in a slave ship to
Boston, where she was lucky
enough to be purchased by John
Wheatley, a prosperous tailor,
who trained her aa a personal
-eervant for hia wife. As a result,
•“Phillig quickly leaned the Eng-
1 Hah language and began acquir-
a Ing the fundamentals of a das-
* *‘«ical education
During her stay in London.
PhiUia was Internationally ac
claimed. but on her reutrn to
Boston, her fortunes began to
decline. Following the death of
her patroness, Susannah Wheat-
ley, she married John Peters,
a handsome colored grocer. The
couple drifted from place to
place carrying their first, then
‘.ieir second child with them.
"TtiT’s was finally reduced to
earning her keep as a drudge in
a cheap boarding house. Her
two children died and she was
estranged from her husband be
fore her third child was born.
Although she was considered a
prodigy in her time, a success
ful and sophisticated imitator,
she died penniless in December,
1784, within a few hours of her
third child.
“ ■ While still a child, she began
w-ttlng remarkable verse. In
‘"’ISe in which few women — or)
men — read books, Phillis
Wheatley wrote her first one
“When she was 36 yean old. It
was published la England
she had been taken by her
tor's son because of bar failing
health. Her hook, Peenaa ea Var
ious Subject*. RegUou* and M
al was the first volume by a
Negro woman and the Second
book by an American woman.
appointed Commander-in-Chief of
the Continental Army, she cele
brated the event in heroic coup-
yiets Upon receipt of the poems
* Washington wrote her a letter,
* February 31, 1771, la which he
Her reputation was kept alive
When George Washington was by antislavery writers and pub-
Heists of succeeding decades,
who well knew the symbolic val
ue of an unmixed Negro slave
girl from Africa who had dis
played such literary talent, and
who had been officially received
by no less a personage than Gen
eral George Washington.
• said:".. Thank you for your po-
» ltte notice of me ...
•
They go to the minister for ad
vice on various aspects of their
personal affairs and confide in
him. The attitude of the parish
ioner toward the pastor differs
from that In the South, he stated.
Born in Oxford, N.C., Aug. 1,
1928, Rev. Hall had done under
graduate studies In Shaw Uni
versity, and graduate work at
North Carolina College.
Names of members who have State Nips License Of Blockbuster
paid for pews at the St. John’s
Baptist Church, 480 Bainbridge
St., are being installed begin
ning this week at the Virginia
factory where the pews are be
ing made.
Secretary of State Caroline K.
Simon has suspended for two
months the license of a Laurel
ton real estate broker for alleged
blockbusting activity.
busting activities and suspended
for two weeks the license of
another broker for aiding and
abetting the other. Earlier this
month, she revoked the license
of a salesman found to have
engaged in blockbusting.
a salesman found to
On Sunday Sept. 8 at 4 p.m.
the Annual Women’s Day Com
mittee will hold a Pew Rally at
the church. Rev. F. Arthur Reed
is pastor.
First
At the First AME Zion Church.
Leon Frazier, who does busi
ness as Cross Island Realty Co.,
233-06 Merrick Road, Laurelton.
He spent three years In the
N.Y., was found to have induced ier’s license until September 14. army and taught school for four
owner in Laurelton to'1963. is based on a finding that years. In April 1955 he was caUed
a home
sell her
house with statements when he took a Negro couple to pastor Olive Grove Baptist
he made relating to an actual;to look at the Laurelton home church three miles from the
First Baptist Church, his home
church where he began his minis
try Nov. 28, 1954.
The suspension of Mr. Frai-___
Tompkins Ave and McDonough an<i prospective ethnic change in listed with him, he told the own-
St., the Praying Band will hold
the neighborhood in which the er that he would be unable to
its anniversary Sunday Sept. 8
(sell her property to white peo-
house was located.
at 3 p.m. while the Stewardess
Board will have theirs Sept 15
at 4 p.m. Guest preacher will be
Rev. R. L. Saunders of Stuyve-
sant Heights Christian Church.
Pastor of Zion is the Rev. W. O.
Carrington.
pie, that she would have to sell
to colored people, and that the
neighborhood was changing by
reason of Negroes haring moved
into the area.
After a hearing and full re
view of the facts, it was de
termined he had demonstrated
untrustworthiness as evidenced
by blockbusting activity.
Glorious
The 40th anniversary of Frank
Blockbusting is a term gen
erally applied to the solicitation
It was charged that Mr. Fra
zier also told the home owner
___ ___ ______ of the sale or lease of property her property would depreciate
Rev. Hall is married to the
Peterson deacon of the Glorious on grounds of a change in the because of the change in the
Church of God in Christ, 878 ethnic structure of a neighbor- neighborhood and that her house former Mabel Sellars, a graduate
of Shaw University. They have
two children, Wanda Yvonne, 8
and Andrea Lynette, 6.
would be “a shanty” within a
In June, 1961. Mrs. Simon pro- year if she did not sell her
He built a new church of Olive
Grove, also pastored Spring St.
Baptist Church in Henderson be
fore coming to Brooklyn. South
ern churches, he said, are placing
more emphasis on education than
on their role as an agency for
spiritual growth.
Gates Ave., is being observed hood
Invitations have gone to city
choirs to render two selections
on the day.
ML Lebanon
John T. Hairston of 315 Livonia
Ave., Brooklyn, is representing
mulgated a rule prohibiting real property,
estate brokers and salesmen,
licensed by the Department of
State, from engaging In the prac
tice. Last October she revoked
the license of a broker for block-
Dignified Service
H.R. HURD, JR. FUNERAL HOME, INC.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Maria Hurd Owens
Paul B. Hemsley
Emilio E. Owens
Slocum 6-5777
10 Tray Avo. nr. Fulton St.
Brooklyn 13, N. Y.
BROOKLYN'S
MOST
figw
MODERN
FUNERAL
HOME
YoungWants
Preferential
Treatment ■
“Negroes should be compen
sated for past injustices just like
the nation has compensated sol
diers and service veteran* after
World War H.”
The apeaker was not Malcolm
X, bat Whitney Young, executive
director of the National Urban
Leagne. In kicking off a new note
of militancy for the Interracial
organization as he opened the
League’s 53rd annual convention
in Los Angeles, Calif., this:
week.
In a strong appeal for prefer
ential treatment of Negroes, Mr.
Young said, “Servicemen were’
compensated for being removed
from the mainstream of Ameri-:
can life for four years, and we
Negroes have been outside for a
hundred years.”
Marshall Plan
“The Negro should have bet
ter schools, better teachers. bet-
ter social workers, better health
facilities,” Young added, appeal
ing for a Marshall Plan for Ne
groes in housing, education, and
employment from the federal,
state, and local governments*
More than 1,006 Urban League
delegates are meeting in the con
vention at Los Angeles* Statlcr-
Hiltoo Hotel and will detail the
proposed plan.
During the week they have
heard highlight speeches from
Massachusetts Attorney General
Edward W. Brooke who caution
ed Negroes against "questioning
the loyalty of proven fighters for
equal rights.” and urged lead
ers and workers in the civil
rights movement to avoid dis
sension and name-calling in their
own ranks.
" >
Henry Steeger. white president
of the League, warned that vio
lence would continue in the Unit
ed States until Negroes achieve
their goals, and called upon busi
ness and labor to put more Ne
groes into managerial positions.
Most fruit* and tomatoes will
continue to ripen at room tem
perature. Direct sunlight is not
beneficial.
Tfcfl Largest Funeral Met ta the City
•
IRfCTlON ROOM ON PRtMISRS
HY 3-6672-HYJ-667J
1*04-06 FULTON ST„ BROOKLYN, N. Y.
YOUR GUIDE TO
I. Church Services
—-
BAPTIST
(ETHEL BAPTIST CHURCH
ggg Bergen Street. Brwklye 17. N. Y.
' Com* in to Worship and go -ot U Serve"
Bey. W. *. HALL. Fa
THIS SUNDAY
BAPTIST
MT. CARMEL BAPTIST CHURCH
711
t,
RF.Y
Breeklya. N. T.
,. K. CABBINGTON. Paster
ORDER OF SERVICE
• « A M -Sunday
11:00 A M.—Morning Service
g 00 P.M.—Evening Service
I 00 AM Morning
111 AM—Churn* RghaoL
I Worahi
U:00 A.M.—Morntng Worship. Bor. J.
Bev P. T.
M Dbuglaa
, of Virginia.
SV P *L—Preeentation of the Debutantes.
7:J0 P.M>~W 1. Hall Eneemhle, Mnetcal Program.
Evart third Sgnday. Holy Cosnr
MAIa SIMM
ULeter MSS1
HOLY TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Ralph Aeo. at Oniney S(. Rhlyn. H. T.
Bay. Thomas S. Marlon. Paetor
Vleo-Pres. of National BaptM
('enveoilaa. C. S. A.
THIS SUNDAY
Boy. T. B.
•:N A M,
M:« A M -Morning Worship
g:M P.M.-B.T.U. Community
U(1 Franklin A«O.
,
St. JOHN'S BAPTIST CHURCH
4SS Bstabrtdge M. (Noar Mratogn Ayo.l
BrooUyn. N. T.
Artkar Mood. Fastor and Pi
THIS SUNDAY
• J0 A M -SUNDAY SCHOOL
II 00 A M - SUNDAY WORSHIP
WEDNESDAY. I JO PJL-______
PRAYER MEETING RIRLE
1 P M - HOLY COMMUNION, 1ST SUNDAY
ST. JOHN'S PENTiCOSTAL
HOLY CHURCH
1177 BEDFORD AVL
TNI* SUNDAY
Ainrfay School S:JO am.
Morning Worship 1100 a m.
Night Sarrica S:SS p.m.
CORNERSTONE BAPTIST CHURCH
Leola Areaae ind Madtsaa Street. Sreeklya
THF REVEREND SANDY P. RAY
THIS SUNDAY
• 00 A M -CHURCH SCHOOL
II :M A M —MORNING WORSHIP
* 00 P M BAPTMT TRAINING UNION
g:00 P.M—EVENING WORSHIP
MT. SINAI BAPTIST CHURCH
Ml GATES AVENUE
BROOKLYN, NEW
PASTOR BEY. DB. W. LTMON LOWE
ORDER OF SERVICE
I SO A M -BAPTISM SERVICE
• JO A M —CHURCH SCHOOL
11:00 A.M.-MORNWO BBEYIOI
7:» P M -EVENING WORSHIP
Holy Communion follnwln, evening atrvtea on every Jrd Sunday.
METHODIST
FIRST A.ME. ZION CHURCH
ad MrDoooogh SL
H. Y.
BEY. W. O. CARRINGTON,
THIS SUNDAY
•:« A M-SUNDAY SCHOOL
10^0 A M - JUNIOR CHURCH
11 00 A M MORNING WORSHIP
I SO P M-EXTENDED SUNDaV SCHOOL
• OOP.M EVENING WOHSHIP
PRESBYTERIAN
SILOAM PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
JeNeraoa A Marry Avaa.
Y.
REY. DR. MILTON A. GALAMBION. Paatar
• 00 A M
U;gl AJS.
MORNING WORSHIT
MORNING WORSHIP
THIS SUNDAY
• < >
In time of need, come
Chapel, - where you can
direction and every modern facility at
budget to suit every purse.
Unity Parkway
to
get expert funeral
• X«r*A ZMI 3'CftOJ- * A to. nt
... „
ft* M
fiOLfl’J
a
Inc.
Unity Parkway Chapel,
HYacinth 3-8200
1406 PITKIN AVENUE
at Eastern. Parkway & Ralph Avenue
BROOKLYN, N.Y.
f
"Your Lovecf Ones Deserve The Best"
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 ---
32 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Aug. 31, 1963
f
Columbia-Community Loop
WON LOST
9
St. Joseph
8
Flames Juniors
7
Rams Juniors
8
Aces
Frederick Douglas Ctr. 5
PRE-TEENAGE SOFTBALL
0
1
3
4
LEAGUE C
Lucas
Junior Knights
All-Stars
550 Jets
Flames
WON LOST
ft
7
7
4
4
1
2
3
4
4
JUNIOR SOFTBALL LEAGUE—
A-2
WON LOST
8
Woolworth
Hudson Guild Griffs 5
8
WWRL
5
Blumstein
2
3
3
3
IC. Twins Juniors
WLIB
A. J. Letter Seniors
Apollos
SENIOR'SOFTBALL LEAGUE B
WON LOST
S
- «
3
8
8
*
8
8
Rams Seniors
Friedland
I.C. Twins Seniors
.J. Lester Seniors
Jokers .
PRE TEENAGE BASEBALL
8
•
6
8
5
0
8
3
LEAGUE D
WON LOST
1®
Icierstate
Giants
®
Harlem Education PJt. 8
Snookies Sugar Bows 6
5
Dodgers
Mets f
5
Grace Methodist Church 8
Ravens
4
5
. 5
8
4 8
’i
■
VA Acts To
Stem Bias
In Housing
The Veterans Administration
this week announced the adoption
of tighter measures to secure
compliance with President Ken
nedy’s order banning race bias
in housing.
John S. Gleason Jr., VA ad
ministrator In Washington, said
that steps to reaffirm and
strengthen the anti-bias policy
include an iron-dad agreement,
or certification, from all approv
ed property management and
sales brokers stating In writing
that they “will not refuse to sell
or rent VA properties to any per
son because of race, creed or na
tional origin.”
“I have ordered this action,"
he said, “on a nationwide basis
in a move I consider appropri
ate to further carry out the in
tent of the President’s Execu
tive Order.”
VA properties are those ac
quired by foreclosures on mort
gage loans that were guaranteed
by the agency. Gleason pointed
out that in selling or renting
these properties his office is guid
ed only by the credit worthiness
of the buyer or tenant, and not
by his ethnic background. “This
has always been our policy," he
declared.
In a recent action, the VA drop
ped a home bullder^who refused
to sell a home in the Bel-Aire
Subdivision of Merritt Island.
Cocoa, Fla., to an eligible Negro
veteran.
After an investigation the VA
discovered that the builder. House
and Home. Ltd. of Orlando. FIs.,
had residential properties for sale
all during the six-month period
their would-be Negro client, Dave
P. Johnson, waited to buy a
home with Gl financing but was
denied the opportunity.
VA notified the firm It “wifi
refuse to appraise any properties
owned, sponsored, or to be con
structed” by them as a result of
their discriminatory practices.
Gleason emphasized that the
VA program will be closed to all
management and sales brokers
who refuse to provide the non
discrimination certificates In writ
ing, or who fail to live up to the
agreement once they have sign-
N.Y. Marines
With 7th Fleet
In Far East
Four marines from New York
City are ae.*ving with the Second
Battalion, Third Regiment, Ma
rine Division currently assigned
aboard Seventh Fleet ships In the
Far East.
They are Pfc. Orlando Cara
ballo of 19 W. 115th St.. Lance
Cpl. Bernard Waters, 310 W. 117th
St.; Pfc. Rudolph Johnson. 135 W.
138th St., and Lance Cpl. Wil
liam J. Weber, 204 Manhattan
Ave.
Since their arrival on Okin
awa last January, the men have
taken part in amphibious exercis
es near Seoul, Korea. In addition
to cold weather and counter •
guerrilla warfare training.
SUMMSftCAGE ACES—Com
munity Center 175 junior bas
ketball team was presented
with trophies after topping the
Gems, 74-56. to-win the George
Washington High School sum
mer basketball tourney. Left to
right, front: Mike Hogan, Ar
thur Nelson, Derek Wade, James
Sneldon. Center: Gary Wilkins,
Kenneth Clark, Edward Hamm
Joe Harris. Rear-?-Harold Tun-
ney, Alonzo Frazier §nd coach
George Wilkerson. (Gilbert pho
to).
Marcyettes
Bow, 20-2,
Monterey Debs chalked up their
14th victory against one defeat
in the womens Slo-Pitch Softball
Association by handing the Marc
ettes a 20-2 defeat on the diamond
at Bedford and Jefferson Ave
nues in Brooklyn Sunday.
Marcyettes’ pitcher Peggy Kell
had difficulty in retiring the side
in the first inning as the Mont
erey's chalked up 10 runs. The
winners scored one in the second,
five in the third, one in the fifth
and three in the sixth. The losers
Team Bows When Mate Deserts
One of the glaring weaknesses
of sandlot baseball reared its
ugly head and struck the Dol
phins of the Community Baseball
scored one run in toe second
and fifth innings.
Monterey’s pitching ace, Helen
White, only gave up four hits
and two runs. The Marcyettes’
Liz Thomas, Marie Turner, Ruby
Phillips, Dolores Newkirk and
Barbara Singleton were unable
to stop the Monterey Debs.
On Sept. 1 Monterey will engage
Rocky on the diamond at Bedford
and Jefferson Avenues.
League. That weakness is the to league, showing no
lack of organization and coopera- respect for the efforts
tion among teams and managers, agers and leagues,
in particular. This lack of mana- The Crowns lost a
gerial unity makes sandlot base- game when they drop
ball a pawn for disloyal ball play- decision to the climl
ers-
York Stars. Leroy Tho
The Dolphins, with a chance for the distance allowing tl
second place in the community only 4 hits. Thomas
loop, had but nine men to show dutch double in the 4-n
up for their game against the inning was the decid
Uncle Walt’s Playmates. In the Ro]and Berry took the
second inning with the Dolphins This practically gives
leading 2-1, Ronald Williams, riors the Community
playing Centerfield for the Dol- championship,
phins, left Central Park to play
a game elsewhere. This left the
Dolphins with but eight men and
so they forfitted the ball game. Warriors
With any kind of organizational Crowns
STANDINGS
W
set-up. a sort of union, ballplay- Stars
ers could not hop around from Dolphins
team to team, and from league!Uncle Walt's
10
6
6
5
3
All-Stars Top
Mets; 49'ers
Edge Braves
The All-Stars and 49’ers chalked
up victories in the Bedford-Stuy-
vesant Baseball League play at
Red Hook Stadium in Brooklyn
Sunday by taking the measure
of the Mets and Braves, respec
tively.
All-Stars pitcher Dave Cleve
land only gave up three hits to
the Mets which combined with
errors accounted for seven runs.
Johnny Dingle was credited with
the defeat.
On Sept. 1. the Braves will
meet the 49’ers in the first
game of a four-team twin bill
at Red Hook Stadium and in
the nightcap the Mets will face
the Cobras. The Braves are lead
ing the loop.
ALL - STARS
METS
Thurston, lb Dixon, if
Calhoun, 2b Hines, 3b
J. Dingle p Lopez, cf
W. Dingle, If Williams, rf
Richardson, c Griffin, 2b
Billups, cf Cleveland, p
Starks, 3b Cogdell, ss
Williams, rf Sober, c
Sorrap, ss Huggins, lb
»
N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Aug. 31, 1963 • 33
Red Cotto spearheaded Com-
munity Center 123 to a 88-87 de
cision over Comniunity Center 175
cagers Thursday to win the first
annual George Washington Com
munity Center summer basket
ball finals. The game was played
in Washington’s gym on Audubon
Ave. at 183rd St.
In the opening contest Com
munity Center 175 Juniors won
a 74-56 decision over the Gems.
The 175 Juniors took the lead
from the opening frame and
never relinquished it. The Gems,
disqualified from the junior
tournament for fielding two senior
players, were unable to overtake
the 175 Juniors.
The hard driving Cotto, looking
forward to a brilliant season
with Commerce High School
varsity basketball team, set the
pace for his teamates by scoring
27 points while teammates Bob
Samuels and Charles Landrum
scored 17 and 14 points respec
tively. Paul Lowndes and Joe
Stewart chalked up 16 and 13
points, respectively, forthelosers.
175 Community Center: Joe
i Stevart, Paul Lowndes, Joe
; Lewis, Tommie Walker, Wil-
liam Green, Jasper Lewis,
Winston Miller. Marvin Poole.
123 Community Center: Red
Cotto, Bob Samnels, Louis
Jenkins. Noel Todman, Charles
Landrum, Billie Megell, James
England, Harry Barner, Sterling
Herring, Richard Thomas, Don
Myers, Harold Cook,
Korean Vets
Begin Last
School Year
The last full year of schooling
for veterans taking education or
training courses under the Ko
rean Gl Bill begins this Septem
ber, the Veterans Administration
announced this week.
When this school year ends,,
only a half year of schooling
will still be obtainable under the
program. Courses starting in
September will end next Janu
ary 31.
Ti e milk : plant equipment
aboard the white hospital ship
S.S. HOPE is equal to a herd of
2500 cows.
TRINITY ALL STARS: Spon
ing of 22 men plays every Sun
sored by Neil Cooper and J.M.
day, usually in a public play
Conner, co-owners of Trinity
ground at East 163rd Street
Liquor Store, 845 Trinity Ave
and Trinity Avenue where there
nue, Bronx. The team CQnsist-
are approximately two to three
hundred persons in attendance.
Managed by patrolman Perry
of the 42nd Precinct, it affords
recreational activity and enter
tainment to quite a large seg
ment of the neighborhood.
ALONE IN A CROWD — Lit
tle Jeanette Wright of. 230 W.
115th St., said she enjoys eating
alone. Jeanetre who said she is
one of the best twisters in the
block took part in the annual
115th St. block party activities
Friday afternoon. More than 300
boys and girls visited the par
ty. —(Gilbert Photo).
—^convenient phone call will clear
everything up. ® New York Telephone
Puerto Rican
Leaders Pledge
Rights Support
Robins Score
Over Bruins
Leaders of the city’s Puerto Rican community
announced their strong support of the March on Wash
ington and of “the struggle of Negro Americans and
of all minorities for total equality in the United States”
at a special press conference last Thursday at the
1
Hotel Manhattan.
The Puerto Rican leaders, who others.” in an obvious reference
saHRher had the support of some to Ne«ro leaders and self-styled
290 clubs representing the influ- whUe libcrals linkin« civU. righb
ential leaders of the city’s esti- for “Negroes and Puerto Ricans,
mated 650,000 Puerto Ricans, said The statement issued by the
there had been much comment leaders also said that the Puertc
on where the Puerto Ricans Rican community would fight t(
stood and they felt “the time end job discrimination, to ex
has come for us to make our- tend educational facilities offered
selves beard on this critical sub- Puerto Rican children, to im
prove the Puerto Rican standan
ject”
of living to encourage fur
Own Demonstrations
”We support this struggle be- ther participation in politics,
cause we suffer from some of “Although only a fraction 0
the same practices of inequality the Puerto Ricaps are Negro, thi
as do Negro Americans and other fact is that we Among ourselve
minorities. We support it because are an integrated so' <ety ant
it is morally right and because have never accepted the tern
no one in our society enjoys full used, values involved or attitude
liberty unless all do,” a state- toward race that exist in man;
ment signed by 24 leaders as- parts of the United States,” to
serted.
statement asserted.
While they did not indicate "sup- Leaders signing the statemen
port for any of the local demon- included Irma Vidal Santaelis
strations, the group at the press chairman of the Board of th
conference gave indications that Puerto Rican Parade; Mari
they would be launching some Abreu, of District 65; Gilber
demonstrations of their own soon. Valentin, of the Congress of Puei
Jose Monserrat and Herman to Rican Hometowns; Ramon A
Badillo, City Relocation Commis- Martinez, of the Council of Puei
sioner. two of the spokesmen, in- to Rican and Spanish America
dicated that the group would Organizations; Mr. Monserrat
press for a Puerto Rican in a Mr. Badillo; Manuel Martine:
policy-making post at the Com- also of the Puerto Rican Parade
mission on Human Rights and at Celia Vice, of the Council <
the Board of Education and the Brooklyn Organizations; Monsei
Board of Higher Education. rate Flores, of the United Bron
For Self
Organizations
Others pointed out that the Puer- Maximino Gonzalez, Council <
to Ricans needed “to be heard Puerto Rican and Spanish Amer
for ourselves and not through can. Organizations; Luis Heruai
dez. Voters Club; Paul Sanchez,
representative of the AFL-CIO;
Assemblymen Frank Torres and
Carlos Rios; Eric Arrdyo, of the
Puerto Rican Youth Association;
Petra Rosa, Puerto Rican Citi
zens Committee on Housing;
Joseph Rodriquez, Hispanic So
ciety of the Fire Department;
Gilberto Prince, Hispanic Society
of the City Housing Authority;
Carmen Maduro, Agrupacion Fe-
menina Hispano Americana; An
tonia Denis, Puerto Rican Pio
neers Association; John Faltj,
(Council of Puerto Rican Lower
East Side Organizations; and
Joseph Morales, Jr., of the Mi
gration Division of the Common
wealth of Puerto Rich
Sports Whirl
By LES MATTHEWS
of the Col. Young taking another whirl in the ring,
ue are seriously con- Patterson, not yet 30, said:
♦organizing or dis- -j am ready to retire. 1
oop. C. Muley Jack- will decide on my future after
wmi trick-shot arch-
iaioner of the loop.
*! ?“?**" wood Park every weekend, will
’
ses to discharge er who entertatM crowds at In-
missing for the next two weeks
BirdJand Suttks WUlis, a marksman with the bow
**
.
i C°^UniL and *rrrow. abo entertains at
Veterans Hospitals . . . Curtis
S bal1 Lea«u* football star, is also
.trhO id Md hurdler- McClinton also
ned at 016 end an excellent basketball player
McClinton, the American Foot-
oec a me of former sings . . . Talking about football
hamp Harold John- the Raiders* demon Daniels. Art
hiUy battler, whose powell. Bo Robertson and Fred
en away io Las Veg- Williams forced the cancellation
•rgotten mao of box- of the Raiders contest with the!
i Thomas cleared 7- New York Jets by refusing to
Jen . . . Ollie Mat- piay before a segregated crowd
as a tornado on the jn Mobile. Ala.
West lndian-Araerican Soc-
1982 as a member
|S.»,aDd
crushed cer has j>een practicing at
Little support, is now Red Hook gtadium in Brooklyn
*
™ W3S for lhe coming season which be-
e Los Angeles ^aims gins Sunday, Sept. 8. The 18-man
ver.glve„uP 1“8' ^am. which finished third in the
son is willing to come 34^^ Eastern District Soccer;
ement and nux with League season, is looking
n for a couple mil- toward an excellent season. Hor
ace Morancie is glowing since
s are still talking the team’s outstanding stars Os-
sy the Columbia Field Wald Richards. Fits Luke. Ar
ne All-Stars, manag- dent DeFour and Elmo Dorset
y Oatis and coached have returned. Allan Taylor was
Miner. Wilson Mon- re-elected president of the soc-
Frank Gueltos forced cerloop.
► Little League All- Howard Jones, Boys High bas-
utt after tying the ketball coach, told me that the
a the recent All-Star school is looking forward to an-
e Columbia-Commun- other championship team a 1-
Hanager Thomas O’- though they lost to DeWitt Clin-
happy that his team, ton last year. Vaughn Harper rill
trailing 6-0 at the enter Syracuse U.. William Taylor
third, fought hack to to Maryland State College and
ire, that he saw dark-Carlton Walter to N.Y. School
fused to let his team institute of Technology. Return-
taches of toe Morning ing> accordirg to Jones, will be
ere Charles Berg and Jackie Wilson. Chico Donovan.
Elridge Webb and Larry Cheat-
barn.
Clinchers,
Kings Win
Bali Tilts
Red Cotto was the star of the
Community Leagues’ basketball
tournament at George Washing
ton High School, which was creat
ed by Richard Sanders and Mar
tin Leichter, director of the
school's summer program. George
Dickerson was the outstanding
coach of the tourney which at
tracted 32 teams. It will be an
annual affair.
Warriors
Scalp
Crystals
Gene’s Warriors turned in one
of their best games of the sea
son by edging Bronx Crystals,
14-3, in a regular Col. Young Soft-
ball League contest Sunday on
[ the softball diamond of toe 145th j
I St. and Lenox Ave., playground. I
Warriors’ moundsman Richie
■ Burrell kept the Crystals off bal-
, lance with assorted pitches and
I speed merchant, Joe “Tippy”
. Evans did not allow a fly ball
to land in the outfield.
’ Crystal’s starting pitcher, Artie
’ Dunn, who was hampered by
. several fielding errors, was re- I
, placed by Frank Paul in the bot-
I tom of the fifth but the Crystals
, were unable to overtake the War-
, riors.
r WARRIORS
, Gihom
, J. Williams
s Stech
CRYSTALS
Menendez
Meade;
King1
a Joe Williams
1 Palmer
1 Evans
I Staton
I Bussy
I Burrell
,
Boyd
Toddj
Green
Kellan
Jarvis
Simpson
Jones
Love
Jordaft
Ford
Spellman
Campbell
Bowman
What's Your Opinion
Dial DE 5-1606 and give Leon
Lewis "Your opinion" on the
Question of the day. Leon
I
puts you right on the air.
You are the star on
Here’s good news for New Yorkers
who know their beer! You can buy
this famous premium beer—Original
Pabst Blue Ribbon—and pay no
more than you’ve been paying for
your good regular beer. Original
Pabst is the beer with the old-time
flavor that likes you best—brewed as
it was when it won the Blue Ribbon
back in 1893. You can buy Pabst in
cans, bottles, quarts and cases, all
at popular prices—everywhere in the
Greater New York area. It’s still the
best beer buy in years!
A CHAMP — J«*n Brica Is
shown with Harry Scott, a pos
tal clerk who won ‘‘Mr. Hast
Coast” title of 1983. over 70
eootestants at Walt Whitman
Auditorium, Brooklyn. The El
dorado Athletic Club of Brook
lyn sponsored the contest. Jean
is an entry in the fourth an
nual Miss Sepia USA contest
fClemmons Photo)
Among fine Scotches, the Martin’s label
alone beus the words, "All Extra Quality.”
PRETTY AND TALENTED —
Twenty - one year old Carol
Price has won the hearts of
many people through the many
benefiti she has participated
in for Charity. She even won
the heart of Mayor Wagner
with a apeech she made at
the Hotel Commodore In June
Carol is a graduate of John
R. Powera School. She la atudy-
ing Court Reporting at Steno-
type Institute. She has studied
Business Law at Interboro In
stitute. She is studying drama
tics at the New York Academy
of Theatrical Arts. She has also
studied music, ballet and
interperetive dancingr Carol
is recording secretary of
a member of the NAACP. City
Mission Society, Christmas
Cheer Club and the Young
Adult Council of Abyssinian Bap
tist Church. Carol is now un-
ganizing a club for young la
dies known as Miss Utopia un
der the supervision of
Mrs. Wilhelmia Adams Carol
has appeared In many
fashion shows including being
guest model for Millicent Tay
lor, who presented Fashions
at the W C. Handy Fashion
Shiw and Lawn Party for the
blind at the Handy estate on
August 11, 1963.
- J*.-.- ■7
X • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Aug. 31, 1963
Honors Pastor’s
Wife For Work
Estelle
Smith
Winner
The Rev. S. R. Johnson. Jr.,
pastor of Bethlehem Baptist
Church, looks on while Mrs. Leon
Scot* pins a flower on his wife.
Mrs. Eva Henry Johnson at the
celebration of their twenty-fifth
JSedding anniversary celebrated
last week at St. Paul Commun
ity Baptist Church. Seated near
..Ihe punch bowl is the wife of the
, Rev. E. L. Sidden. The Rev.1
Adolphus Smith, pastor of St.
Paul, reread the vows for the
Johnsons. The celebration was at
tended by a large number of
j^arishioners.
This week’s recipe was won
by Miss Estelle Smith of 357
W. 116th St., New York.
Barbecued Beef Loaves
m lb. ground beef
h cups dry bread Crumbs
1 tbls. instant minced onion
V« cup shredded raw carrots
2 tsp. salt
tsp. pepper
1 cup evaporated milk
2 small onions
barbecue sauce
Mix meat with bread crumbs,
instant onion, carrots, salt, pep
per and milk, lightly but thor
oughly. Shape into six individual
loaves. Place in baking dish.
Bake in pre-heated oven 350 de
grees for 20 mins.
Meanwhile prepare sauce
After baking 20 min. place
sliced onions on top of each loaf
and spoon sauce over. Bake 30
mins. more.
Barbecue Sauce
Mix in bowl and blend thor
oughly
h cup light brown sugar
1 tsp. dry mustard
tsp, each of cloves and
allspice.
1 tbls flour
cup tomato catsup
1 tbls. lemon juice
It is thought that Hendrik Hud
son was the first white man to
penetrate the area which is now
Buchanan.
COLIN G. WITTER
RECRUITS — Pvt. Mack A.
Smitherman, of 370 Ford St.,
Bronx, and Pvt. Colin G. Wit
ter. of 108 Ave. D. Manhattan,
are ^receiving basic training at
at the U S. Army Training Cen
ter. Fort Dix, N.J. At the end
of eight weeks instruction in
general military subjects.
drills bugs
I foster!
^Melrose Lumber Co
1*641 Saint Anns Ave.
Bronx, New York
UNDERCOATING
THE ORIGINAL 3M RUBBERIZED UNDERSEAL
lifetime guarantee-------
5 GALLONS OF GAS FREE I75
FLYING A SERVICE STATION l/c‘
1380 ATLANTIC AVE. - CORNER NEW YORg AVE.
7 A.M. TO 6 P.M.-ALL DAY SAT. BROOKLYN
4 liFts-1 HOUR SERVICE
PR 4-781
k - . AAA MEMBERS INVITED- . ~
MACK A. SMITHERMAN
EARLY BIRDS
SENSATIONAL
CLEARANCE!
BENNETT ® BUICK
New Yorkers Win
ABA Bridge Titles,
NEW YORKERS WIN: The following is a list of
the winners in the American Bridge Association’s tour
nament held recently at the Sheraton Hotel in Phila
delphia:
Life Masters Individual
1) Dan Arindell, New York, N.Y.
2) Louise Hudson, Philadelphia, Pa.
Life Masters Women’s Pairs
1) Alvena Fritz, Daisy Washington, Los Angeles, Calif.
2) Evelyn Herndon, St. Albans, N.Y., Dooley Curie,
\
N.Y.C.
Life Masters Men’s Pairs
1) Dr. Emmett Smiley, Montgomery, Ala., Bfill Sides,
Chicago, 111.
2) Cecil A. Scott, James H. Smith, Philadelphia, Pa.
Life Masters Open Pairs
1) Luie Petri, Roscoe Rigmaiden, Philadelphia, Pa.
2) Eddie Brown, Dr. Fred Slavgher, Detroit, Mich.
i ' Life Masters Open Team
I
K~"'r
1) Janice Wilkens, Detroit, Mich., Andrew Mills, De
troit, Jeanne Halen, Philadelphia, Charles Byant,
Columbus, Ohio
2) Dan Serivens, Zenia, Ohio, Eddie Brown, Detroit,
Mich., Fred Slaughter, Detroit, Dertram Hudson,
Detroit
Belsaw Cup Life
1) Janice Wilkes, Detroit, Charles Pyant, Columbus,
2) Samuel Lucas, Beverly Lucas, Springfield, Ohio
Life Masters Mixed Pairs
1) Mr. and Mrs. Byron Brooks, Brooklyn, N.Y.
2) Clyde Woolridge, Washington, D.C., James Garcia,
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Life Masters Mixed Teams
1) Mr. and Mrs. Albert “Sonny” Hawkins, Doris
Brooks, Dr. Joseph Henry
2) Mabel Hawkins, Dan Serivens, Janice Wilkins, An
drew Mills
Mrs. Brooks won the “outstanding player of the
year” award. Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Hawkins won
the Life Masters Mixed Team of Four for the fifth time.
MANHATTAN’S CHRYSLER
SALES OPERATIONS
CHRYSLER
MOTORS CORPORATlOH
SUPERMARKET
BROADWAY'S
1 EXPANSION
TODAYS
SPECIAL!
1963
CHRYSLER
GREATEST
NEW CAR
gargains
OF THE YEAR
4 DR. SEDAN F#f
Stock No. 1650) Only AO
ng, Aotomalic TraiiwmtMwn. Rwlifl
p. Variable speed wipgra. Whaat
It Wall T»t»»
We'rD taking in mors
ons-owner, low-mileags
trade-ins than w« cat
handle. We must make
room for more ... so
out they go at eut-to-
the-bone prices I
MANHATTAN CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH SALES gg
MAKE US PROVE IT!
131st Street and B WAY • /
Branch Showroom
165th St & Broadway • Si)
NEW YORK
Offers the widest selection of "Quality Value" lote
model Cadillacs — one owner Cadillacs that give
you the finest in comfort, pride ond performance.
START YOUR CADILLAC OWNERSHIP
WITH ONE OE THESE OUTSTAMDIMD VALUES:
63 CONVERTIBLE
62 COUPE
61 COUPE DEVILLE
'61 SEDAN DEVILLE, AIR-CONO.
'6, CONVERTIBLE
*60 SEDAN DEVILLE
Most df the cors in our inventory ore air{onditiOaed
—all ore equipped with standard Cadillac features.
BROADWAY AT 57th ST.
M. 7-4000
BEST BUYSI -'63
PONTI ACS - TEMPESTS
C1EARANCE SALE
ALL MODELS
NCW t EXEC CARS — ALL MODELS
Seme Air-Conditioned
Pontiac
CADILLACS
1957'* thru 1963'*
Bonk Rates
Servicemen Financed
1,000 Other Makot
to Cheeto From
CREDIT BY PHONE
CY 2-5280
CAR TRADERS
CUARANCK
1963
MODELS
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
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 ---
36 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Aug. 31, 1963
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
IN NEW YORK CALL Ri 9-5300.. TO PLACE WANT ADS.. IN BROOKLYN CALL UL 7-2500
CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE 5 PJA TUESDAY PRECEDING THURSDAY
CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE 5 PJL TUESDAY PRECEDING THURSDAY
ROOMS
ROOMS
APARTMENTS
APARTMENTS
HOUSES
. JRaahattan-Faniishad
Manhattan—Farm (had
Branx-Uafaraisbad
Bronx—UnfvrMsbod
Queans Far Sab
HOUSES
ror
MOUSES
HOUSES
HOUSES
flssas^ssa IZmw- CmIa
aa m a ^Ra w RS B^g
Queans For Sab
Quotas Far Sab
1-2-3 Rooms
1-2-3 Rooms
Brooklyn—Furnished
HOUSES
1, 2 and 3 Roams
Queens Fer Sab
ALVIN HOTEL
(corner Broadway)
1U W. »»«d Btreot
•Jliw TOM CITT. N. I.
Singles (11.
2 rm.. unit*
refrigerator, rooking
ii».
2H (22.
3 rm. unit* welfare (24
hie prices,
(or thaatri-
CiU Owner UN 5-6225
IRVING ARMS HOTEL
222 RIVERSIDE DRIVE
(Corner (4th Street) *
Refrigeration and cooking in
every room.
SINGLES — (IS L'F WEEKLY
DOUBLES—(17.55 If WEEKLY
Daily (3.50 and up.
Maid Service
Irving Arms credit cards
Moored.
For information and reaerva-
tangt
CALL RI 9-6320
General Management. Joe Rubino
APARTMENTS
Monhotton-Furnished
1, 2 and 3 Roams
BARBERA REAL ESTATE
FOR RENT
APTS., ROOMS, CHILDREN
INTEGRATED
Furnished A unfurnished
1656 Amsterdam Avenue
.cor. W. 142nd St.
AU 6-0095
George Roberta. Mgr.
Manhattan—Unfurnished
Manhattan—For Sab
HOUSES
HOUSES FOR SALE
IN ALL BOROS
Small Dews Payments
ALSO
GENERAL INSURANCE
2371 7th Avenae
Between 138th anud 136th Sta.
AU 1-7666 Iren
Bronx For Sole
1-2-3 Reams
West End Av. 936 (106 St.)
Columbia University Arte
LAST FEW APARTMENTS
THE LANCASTER
’ • lVi-room kitchenette apts.
• Newly renovated
. Sunken colored tile bath
. Elevator
• Incinerator -
• Intercom door system
• Agent on Premises
• References
• Also Furnished
|2Vi rms _ 170 E.
’ lti A 3 rms 424 E.
. 2 rms _ 433-35 W.
12 rms ____ 140 W.
' 3 rms_____ 74 W.
,2 h 3 rms 152 W.
|2 rms _______ 4066
’ 2 fc 3 rms - 278 W
. P4 rms ___ 54 E
IVk h 2 rms 229 E
2 A 3 rms 1777 Mad
13 rms ___ 354 E.
12 rms ___ 306 W.
2V4 rms___ 132 W.
107th 8t.
115th St. I
136th St. I
117th st.;
116th St. J
124th St. I
3rd Ave.
118th St. I
122nd St.y
126th St.,
Ison Ave. |
135th St I
114th St.,
136th St. |
Utilities Included
See Supers in Bldgs.1
NO FEE
i Owner
AU 411141
2 family houses In Bronx. New
A aid. Small cash.
Rooming houses In Manh. A
Bronx. Good income.
1 family in New Rochelle.
Moderate cash.
3 fam home in best section
of Mt. Vernon. Good condition.
Priced In high M's.
462 W. 145 St. WA 46100.
FO 45506. Agent.
Brooklyn For Sab
BROKERS NOTICE
PLENTY VACANT HOUSES
BROKERS FULL COMMISSION
1 A 2 families—some newly dec
orated. Lew down payments.
On rang gr Brookhm Send for
new listings. 145-06 Jamaica Av.
Reliabb Corp. JA 6-6660
Brooklyn—Far Rant
115 Street, 104 West
• Newly Renovated
• 2’/i and 3’/i Rooms
• Colored Tile Baths
a Naw Kitchen Equipment
e Large Westingbmse
Refrigerator with Freeier
e Agent en Premises
NEWLY REMODELED
'“colored Hto baths.
3 RM. APT. $95
4 rm. apt.
ceramic kitcheni 6120
I Call Owner UN 5-6203
214-3-4 Rm. Apt.
Newly remodeled. Color tf
bathe. Ceramic kitchens fr
SB te S12I. UN 46225. 206
IB St. Owner.
2 family vacant brick, rent
6166. Option te buy. 6 moms. 3
baths, decorated. 562 Warren
M.. sear 4th Ave. A subway.
JA 6-6660
Do You Need
4 A Room
£*CmI A Comfertoblo
WE HAVE IT
•YOU WILL RENT OUR
ROOMS ON SIGHT
-Mot tor * Safe Living A5
THE MIDWAY
B Fireproof Betiding
Um A Hmm
KITCHENETTES
flBM $20 UR
fa a furnished Room
Z Fell Betel Servtee
Slaea Free-Vtllltiee Free
■levator Operator Oa
Only 24 Hear* Dally
Me Seeerlty—Ne Fea
• Tourists
_____$1X50 wk. fer 1
Frem $1X00 wk. br 2
MO 6-7200
* Ask Foe Boom Clark
Il6 West 100th Strnt
* Bight oa the Corner
bMmm
HOTEL
MARSEILLES
r. 103rd St. A i'way,
at Subway Entrance
Wo LbyHb yonr »((•«•
ti«p te «ar newly re-
moieled reams t opts.
with grhrata kitchre-
ettas and baths.
• 24 hr hotel service^
• Phunts in every rm|
• The Meet reaseeeblej
rates
t • Yea must have
references
140 W 103 ST.I
' CASTLE MOTH
Harlem's newest transient
hotel. Fireproof. Running
water la all rooms. Radios,
television. Free Fan*
Rates from (2 truulent
36 W 106th St.
UN 5-7190
HOTEL OXFORD
545 W. 112th St.
Hew Kitchenettes
Singles - Doubles
$15 Week 4 Up
Hcri EL nmiVTCE
24 HOURS
MO 2-9700
"IB St. ra W. (Car. 5 Ave.)
NOTH RIAL
Harlems Favorite
LDDOCK
Tito Rotel.
ara as low as they
SINGLE ROOMS
(INCLUDING TV)
fram (15.5a week * ep
— ALSO -
1 h 2 ROOM SUITES
WITH PRIVATE BATHS
Si (3.61 DAY UP
iMO S-ITMi
BATES
Rich's Plaza
AIR CONDITIONED
ROOMS
* Smart A Hw
A Heeielike
Jm Mdm. Com
Conveniences
**
• at 144th
St.
TRANSIENTS
* AD 4-7300
Gaarga RUh, Prop.
EAST ELMHURST
BRAND NEW SOLID
FAMILY
HOMES
BRICK
LOW, LOW CASH TO ALL
SEE AAODEL AT
96-08 ASTORIA BLVD.
(Corner of Astoria Blvd. & 97th St.)
MODEL PHONE: HI 6-9416
AMES 167-10 HILLSIDE AVE.
LARGEST BUILDER OF NEW HOMES
OPEN ALL DAY, MONDAY, LABOR DAY
0L 8-4000
Open Daily, Sat. & Sun.
JAMAICA, N.Y.
ACT NOW
These are beautiful new custom homes built in the finest area of Springfield
Gardens. A truly residential tree lined area, close to schools, shopping,
houses of worship, transportation. This offer limited.
'500
Our beautifully decorated model features a 3 Bedrooms a Mosaic tile bath
a Eat-in kitchen a Sliding glass wall to outside dining terrace a Hugo
built-in wall oven and range a Exquisite dining room a Enormous ebset
area a Full 450 square foot basement a Concrete patio.
CASH
FOR G.L’», THIS IS YOUR COMPLETE DOWN PAYMENT.
ALSO AVAILABLE, LOW CASH 30 YEAP. F.H.A. MORTGAGES
Limited Offer — Act Today Preview Price $18,490
Bring this ad with you, for special savings.
AMERICAN HOMES
Decorated Model Home—Springfield Blvd., 118th Ave„ Cambria Hts., Queens.
AR 6-5660
Directions: FROM BKLYN: Atlantic Ave., Unden Bird., or Shore Parkway Southern State Parkway
te Springfield Blvd. Then left te 116th Ave. OK FROM NYC: Long island Expressway te Francis
Lewis Bird. South eu Francis Lewis Blvd. to Springfield Blvd.. left to model. PUBLIC TRANSF.s
6th Ave. Sohway to Jamaica 149 S4. Station. Q4 has to model. Model epen Sat. A Suu.. 12-6 P.M.
and by i
"PRE LABOR DAY SALE"
LEGAL 2 FAMILY
NO CASH DOWN
NO CASH DOWN
SOLID BRICK DETACHED
Spacious 10 Room Home on
Exceptional Plot. Extra
nary Layout. Many Ul
Fine Features, 2 Modern Kit
chens A Baths, Basement, Oil
Heat. Price 915.548. G.I. NO
CASH Civ. 5500 Down
1.1VK RENT FREE
NO CASft DOWN
EXCLUSIVE
DETACHED
512306
Very Clean Home. 5 Huge
Rooms. Bsth. Full Basement.
Oil Heat. Garage. Extras
G.I. APPROVED
SO. OZONE PARK 512A0O
Detached Lovely 5 Rooms A
, Plus second Kitchen A
In Basement, Garage.
46 X 100 Landscaped Plot.
FIRST 510 DEPOSIT TAKES IT
EXCLUSIVE WITH US
rtotaehed 7 Rooms. Modem
Kitchen and Bath. Full Base
ment, 041 Heat. Garage. Price
Reduced for Quick Sale. G.I.
Approved (13.500
599 90 Pays
AR
mb WHY PAY RENT?
DETACHED 2 FAMILY *
2 Tremendous Apts. 6 A Bath
Up 6 A Bath Down. Vacant for
Quick Deal, Sacrifice Price
515,000 G.L No Cash CIV. (450
Down
LIVE RENT FREE
LEGAL 2 FAM. $14,000
11 Rooms. All Oversized. 2
Science Kitchens. 2 Modern
Baths, Fnll Basement, OU Heat,
Extras, Buyer Lives Rent Free
NO CASH DOWN
1AM
135-19 Rockaway Bbd.
JA 3-337?
159 12 HiRsMe Ave.
SO. OZONE PARK
JAMAICA
33
IL 7-3100
103-09 Northern Blvd.
CORONA
BETTER REALTY
ALL 5 OFFICES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
9:30 AM TO 8:30 PM
■ VA & FHA Approved Homes ■
So. Ozone Park Springfld Gdns. ■
1 Family 6
Bssement. Gas
AD Transportation.
’
FULL PRICE
$14,990
I t Cape Cad -■
Large Booms. Full Rase-
ant. M X 106 Plot. Gar-
la. Near Shopping
FULL PRICE
$15,990
Gl NO DOWNPAYMENT
CIV . SMAIJ, CASH NEEDED
NO DOWNPAYMENT G.L
LITTLE CASH NEEDED
FHA
AGATE REALTY
I
159-11 Hillside Ave., Jamaica, N. Y.
Open 7 Days a Week - 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
<
JA 3-4521 ’
TO PLACE
A WANT AD
CALL
Ri 9-5300
G.I.S
NO CASH
HOLLIS . . .
7 ROOM COLONIAL PLUS FINISHED BASEMENT,
SCIENCE KITCHEN, HOLLYWOOD BATH, MANY
EXTRAS - PATIO, ETC.
13,990
FULL PRICE
$390 CASH NON VETS
TRYME
REALTY
168-16 Hillside Ave.
Jamaica
OL8-6100
OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK
ONLY At'ABCO
CAN YOU GET THESE BUYS !
LABOR DAY SPECIAL
MUST USIKNTUl SECTION IN NOUIS
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
NO CASH
G.I. INSPECTED and APPROVED
8 RMS • 4 BDRMS
Playroom Basement a Luxurious Living Roam
a Hollywood Kitchen a Oversized Garage a
Garden Pbt.
ONLY $104.92 MONTHLY
TO BANK
16822 HILLSIDE AVE., JAMAICA
At 169 St. Subway Sta. Open 7 Days a Week
0L - 7 - 7900
ST. ALBANS $15,990
GI SACRIFICE
Detached Colonial, situated on
a tree lined atreet. (tk large
rma. with ultra modem kitch
en A bath, nite clnb finished
basement, garage, landscaped
gardens, all appliances. Im
mediate occupancy.
SPRINGFIELD GDNS.
$15,990
FORECLOSURE SALE
English Colonial, 4 master
bedrooms, modem kitchen A
hath, white walled basement,
ovrsizeed garage. Everything
goes. Must sen. D*nisrtto.
QUEENS VIL $19,990
OWNER LEAVING STATE
Detached English Colonial,
legal 2 family with 5 A 3 rm
apartments, streamlined kitch
ens A baths finished base
ment. beautiful trees A shrubs
Immediate occupancy. LIVE
RENT FREE All appliances
plus.
CAMBRIA HTS. $19,990
WIDOW’S SACRIFICE
ENGLISH TUDOR TYPE
HOME LIVE RENT FREE!
Situated on a tree lined
atreet, 2 4-room apartments. ]
streamlined kitcheni A baths,
+ a rentable basement, gar-
age Both apartment* vacant.
ALL APPLIANCBS. MOVE
RIGHT IN
G.I. NO CASH DOWN
FHA $690 DOWN
QUEENS HOME SALES CO.
oT’8*751o”~k’
OZONE PARK
6 ROOM — 3 BEDROOM .
RANCHES
AND
COLONIALS
6 Rooms — 3 Bedrooms — 2 Baths
fr *19,500
LOW DOWN PAYMENT • EXCELLENT MTGE TERMS
SEE MODEL AT
116-49 VAN WYCK EXPTWY
AMES
Largest Builder Of New Homes
167-1G Hilkitl* Ava., Ja«aica /\g an M4k/kA
O“4 WvU
Ogan Daily, Strt. A San.
Eraa Parking
Opan AH Day, Monday, Labor Day
iG.I.'s NO CASI
FHA
AS LOW AS
$300 DOWN
• • • •
Cambria Hts
10 Roam, 2-Family
30x100
• • a •
St. Albans
9-Room, 2-Family
40x100
• • • •
I South Ozone PI
•
8-Room, 2-Family
40x100
e • •
Cambria Hts
8-Room, 1-Family
50x140
a • • •
ISpringfield Gdn|
7-Room, 1-Family
60x100
a •
•
Hollis
7-Room, 1-Family
25x100
•
Baisley Pk
6-Room NEW Brick
Ranch. Taka aver
present mtge. 40x11
•
• • •
CALL OUt AGENT AND I
INQUIRE ABOUT THESE |
DOWN PAYMENTS
AMD MANY OTHERl
GOOD DEALS HE HAS|
FOR YOU!
• e e e
IAMES LAWLI
REALTY CORF.
19-14 Svtphin Bfvd.
ICE’ Train to Sutpbln Blvd I
1 Walk 1 block north of I
| Jamaica Avenue.)
OL 8-2100
2 FAMILY J
No Cash Gl J
FHA low cash <
HOLLIS (
,
$15,990
•8 rms A bath for owner ,
I
•3 rm apt te rent
,
•Separate entrances
•2 car garage
1
•At shopping and schools. ,
Live Rent Free.
A steal — Hurry with deposit I
GOODYEAR'
0L 7-6800 !
1 17-56 168th St., Jamaica I
> North of ftllbide Ave
. Open Daily, Sat., Sun. 9-9
EXCELLENT
VALUES
RANCH 510,000
On * lovely winding coun
try reed, near all conven
ience*. and in the most heau.
tiful area of Queens. Is locat
ed a 6 room cedar ranch.
Owner selling due to retire-
"$110 DOWN-558 M0.
COLONIAL $11,000
ST ALBANS. Dutch Colonial
with finished basement. 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, huge
yard. 2 garages. worth
much more than 511.non
$175 DOWN-569 M0.
ARCADIA
JA. 67300
(Opea 6 te 6 every day)
Ogan All Day Labor Day
$100 DOWN
$200 On Contract
No Closing Fees
JAMAICA -ewiaB I family, |
emnpleto 1 rm apta. all hast,
anlv (14JM
BO. OZONE PK —4 rm da-
tached. modara aad cats, only
(1#J((.
ao. OZONE PK —I rm de
tached. new ahinglea. aluminum
comblnatton windows and donra.
finished basement. A-L only
earn.
Many more fine homes la *11
areas of Long bland Call or
coma to any of oar offices.
Corwin-Gutbfcer Realtors
(421 Rorkaway Blvd. MI 1-16M
124M Hlllabto Ava. AX 7-222#
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 ---
4r t
•Tf fiii
*• •
a
»
\
• 38 • N. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Aug. 31, 1963
7 r y v-q-v
7
\
r^fr
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS
t
.4
IN NEW YORK CALL Ri 95300.. TO PLACE WANT ADS .. IN BROOKLYN CALL UL 7-2500
CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE 5 FJW. TUESDAY PRECEDING THURSDAY
CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINE 5 PJH. TUESDAY PRECEDING THURSDAY
HOUSES
HOUSES
HOUSES
Haasas Waatad—Ta Bay
ROOMS
ROOMS
ROOMS
ROOMS
ROOMS
Nassau-Suffolk Far Saia
Nassaa-Saffolk Far Saia
Na$5au Suffolk For Saia
Manhattan Furnished
Manhattan—Furnished
Maahattajf—Furnished
Broax—Furnished
Brooklyn—Furnithad
BUY! SAVE $$$! BUY RIGHT! SAVE $$$ BUY — BY
4th Ave. Realty
And Save More $$$$! ■
GIs No Money Needed as a Down Payment
$16,500
$15,490
61 Special! Brkkl If yi
This homo has
aaad—you May have immo
needed for pleasant living. It
iota occupancy. Lovely to
contains a spacious living
room with brick wot
the hoMO oa aa ovoa lovolior
rosMootial street. It coo-
ing fireplace. Separate
GmImC 1
al dining room. Eot-io kit
JOUR*..wGR DaWiwOM
ao aodoarioy living rooi
chen, lovely size
spacious kitchen, color tile
bathroom, full
g o r ■ | o, storms, ocroons, bath, fall basement, many
blinds, professionally land- many extras as a bonus. It
scaped! This one should bo may cost leu than your
a most to see.
You must see this good buyl
Bo first to see this kernel
It contains 8 rooms with
finished basement, beauti
fully decorated in knotty
pine. 4 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, veiy largo delightful
kitcheis spacious living
room, dining room, 2 car ga
rage plus many extras.
RUSH! RUSH! RUSH!
S17J50
kodrttAie
I rent.
$18,990
$19,500
$20,500
This heme is sitnnted in For the buyer who cares!
eea ef meat J-------- ■*—* txctptionol home in the
„
*» Moreau fan-tv.. ht®rt •<
Brm wo hqiwb vwwwiy «n g rgoms
6500 *a. ft» of picturesque axgamivo finished b a i •-
btautifvl
landscaping. It includes 7 meat, 4 large bedrooms, 2
large rnomt with 4 ignsinusj NaNywaad hafhiaami, ex
bedroom, 2 fall gargooos gotoito kitchen. Separate
I—»4--------- ■------ ,
dgin rooms, Miryo •oivgiKTOi mm Mt9 i
spacious liviag
____ _____ BP—1
1-tA.^U^.—
KiTumOf wxpwsjwW II ving
-
-
sivel
extras;
many extras.
Ton can't boat this largo
bom A lovely area!
English Tudar's aren't being
built today! Wa have one!
Solid brick A stucco! Plaster
walls! Spacious bedroom!
Exceptionally largo liviag
roam, grand separate form
al dining room plus TV or
bedroom, beautiful kitchen
with breakfast nook. Exqui
site bathroom, fall base
ment, 2 car garage, English
Tudor in construction sym
bolizes quality.
i from NYC dial 5141
IV 5-2477
5-2477
219 So. Franklin St.
Hempstead
HOUSES
WANTED
ALL AREAS
Bklyn, Manh, Bronx
Wsst, LI, Nassau
ALL CASH
OR CASH
‘Over Mortgages,
Highest Prices
Immediate Decision
48 Hour Closing
No Commission Charge I
'Call PL 7-6985;
ARK YOU ONE (tF THE
LUCKY
Homeowners
In Brooklyn or Queens
Immediate Cash
Available
For Your House
or
Swap Your Home
U you have outgrown tt for
either a smaller, larger, or
call os.
NO MONEY DOWN
on most of these transactions.
AX 1-4020
For free Information
(ask fee Mr. Mania)
I New New New|
RANCHES A HIGH
RANCHES
G.l. NO CASH
CIV —EASY TERMS
I Veterans opportunity to
[that fast expiring GI Bill
a brand new b
__ om built borne.
[choice wooded plots as
e. Terms arranged
ON VETERANS.
25 Minutes to
N.Y. City Line
$17,990
|C1 APPROVED BUILDERS]
Woodcraft
Homes
IV 3-5534
*
*
OUR EXCLUSIVE *
*
Hempstead vie.
<NEWLT DECORATED. 212.92842
W 7 room Colonial. 4 bedrooms. 6
ltt baths, fin basement, det *
#
♦
gar., oversized plot, extras. *
* REDUCED (22J88) NOW 217 JM J
Owner must sell and vacate <
*
by Oct. 1st. Spacious stone +
*
4’ bedrooms, 7 room*
2 car garage, excel-*
lent neighborhood PROFES-*
SIONAL 15x30 SWIMMING 42
42
POOL. Many extras.
218 JM*
3 bedrooms. 2 baths, knotty?
pine kitchen, gar., oversize?
plot, oil beat, extras. JUST?
*
★ COLONIAL
★
★
♦
ij
Il* REDUCED.
I * GI no carl. down. Civ. 2620. *
^uaoncf
914688 ♦
524 rms, det. fin. basement.42
♦
patio, c, clone fence, low tax-*
★
es. convenient to everything *
★
*RENT IMVIKD OCC. 8142 mo.i
5 rms and bath, oil heat.*
*
j
gar , spacious grounds.
516 IV 3-3400
E-M-I-C-Ol
22 Station Plaza. Hempstead *
★
(Bus Terminal)
214.50. 215. 216 and up. AU 3 9496 WY 1-1312.
KITCHENETTES — Singles, 215:
doubles 212 up. Clean bouse, ele
vator, phone and room service—
FABLON HOTEL, 308 W. 99th St.
UN 5-5877
CLAY AVE.. Adjoining rms. Work
ing couple prof. Eves CY 3-7762
CLAy“aVE. Furn “nnavailable,
quiet home LU 8-9157.
KITCHENETTES
HUDSON Realdonce
1849 Amsterdam Ave. leor W 141M)
St ) Housekeeping rms. 21150 wk. I
rm apt* Working couples prelerrad.
218.40 wk. AU 3-5140.
Rooms, kitchenettes & Apts.
A. Prince. Broker. 201 W 135th St.
AU 1-5577
KITCHENETTES. Single. $13.98.
Doubles 217.95. MO 8-2500.
LARGE Beautiful bedroom and kit
chen Quiet middle-aged working
married religious people preferred
MO 25564
KITCHENETTES l'i • 2ti. Some
Private baths. Broker AU 1-0253
SLNGLE And kitchenette rooms. —
AD 46202. between 5:25.7:22 p.m.
BEDROOM. 216 weekly, single wo
man or business couple preferred
Cooking facilities. 1st floor, nice
building. 121st St. near Losing
ton Ave. TA 8-3014.
KITCHENETTE. Business persons
preferred. In clean modern bldg
All transportation. Mrs. Williams
TE 1-4626.
ATTRACTIVE Rm. Cooking Work
ing single person prel. Elevator
Nr. all transp UN 5-6710.
Large kitchenettes A rooms.
CALL M0 2-8600
L.VRGE Bright rm. 2 Windows —
Couple or woman pref. AU 3-3094
CLAY AVE.. Large rm. Working
(leiaoo pref AU privileges —
JE 8-7210
CLAY AVE., 1325, Large
rm, near all transp.
CLINTON AVE., Furn rm.
Call after 6 p.m.
TR 2-0436
Collagq Ave. 1321 (170 51.)
Singles, doubles. quiet bouse
nr
Studio rma. kilchen p-.ivlleges.
subway.
CROTONA PARK E — Large rm.
Business person pref Refa WY 1-3483
DAVIDSON'-AVBINUE. 1919~ Attrac
tive rooms, stove, sink, refriger
ator in room. Single or couple
preferred
TR 25192
EAST 168TH ST.. 2 Room suite.
Working people preferred. Quiet
Atmosphere. Cooking. Refrigera
tor Mr*. M. LU 46003.
MACY PL.. 879. Single rm. Private
bouse. Block sub.
,
FRANKLIN AVE., Large, cooking.
KI 2-0985.
915.50.
MINFORD PLACE. 1543. Nr. 174th
St. Station - 2 large double and
single, linen, telephone, refrigera
tor. Reasonable. CaU Supt. LU 9-
7806 nr BA 5-9011.__________
PARK AVE. Furnished rpis. man
or woman preferred CY 5-1295.
PROSPECT AVE., E. 166th St. Furn
Rm ITivlleges DA 36764.
STEBBINS AVE.. OttTLarge Furn.
RM. in quiet Ministers home —
Rm. Private house KI 2-
rELLER AVE.. 1379. (Bet 169 A
170 Sts.) Beautiful decorated rm.
atngto girl prof CY 3-1118.
AVE., 1398, Large rm. 213
JE 6-7755.
TIEMA.N AVE., 3138. Front rm,
matured or middle-age
pref. TU 1
TIFFANY STRICT
9S1
Near Weatrbaster Av*. Spactoua
clean rooms. Kitchen privileges
Singles and doubles. Refrigerator la
every room. Moderate rentals. Near
convenient tranap. DA 96423.
<929tfi
TIFFANY STREET. 985. Singles
212615. Doublet 218618 Private
cooking faculties. DA 9-2639.
W. BRONX — Master bedrm. neat
ly furnished, private bouse, re
frigerator, woman pref. CaU eves
LU 8-3778
ADELPHI ST . 171. Beautifully dec
orated studio style kitchenette
raage. venetlans-comhlnatlou sink
tub. References. Security. Single
man prof. Wkdays. after • p.m.
AU day wkenda. UL 3-0610 Ground
Floor bell.______________ J________
ADELPiuA ST., 181. 2 rms. beauti
fully furn , near aU tranap. cou
ple preferred with refe
UL
ARLINGTON PL.. 18
nu. Working person prof
BAINBRIDGE ST.. 113. 3tk taro
rms. kitchen and bath. Working
couple pref. (Owner.)____________
BAINBRIDGE ST., Two furn rma.
HY 1-7627
BALNBR1DGE ST.110.
1 kitchenette
BAINBRIDGE StTsOO?-HsU rm.
gentleman preferred.
BEDFORD“ DEANTastefully ‘
ion. rma. 1 large. 1 emaU very/
reasonable. CaU HY 3 3246
12 noon or after U p.m.
Sun — Mon.
BERGEN ST. 1341 — Laroe
nished rm.. bath same floor,
cooking. PR 3-4400.
BERGEN ST. Near Kingston. 3 l
furnished rma. Bedrm-living
kikeban, balk soom Boor. PB
BERGEN ST. nr Kingston,
fully furnished rm. SL
BERGEN ~ST . l l25. Neatly |
rm. Respectable working
pref_________________
BERGEN ST.. 1191. Large if —
Quiet neighborrood. workif 0-
dulta preferred.
BROOKLYN — Dean- St
elaborately funuahed 2
vemenoea. respectable
duke pref GL 2-2197
Eventnga.
BUSHW1CK — 2 RMS
Or SL 6-7384
BUSHW1CK SECTION
furn large rm GL
BUSHWICK AVE.. One
Nr. aU tranap GL
BUSHWKX SECTION — j
untarn
people pref. 29 to
OL 2-0439 after 9 p.m.
Bf.'SHWKK-
Geatlemaa
BUSHWICK‘SBCTIOfT
rm. tingle adult
2794.
BUSHWICK Section,
rms. OaU HY 66678.1
rm.
26571.
Hl 2-
furn
BUSHWICK SECTION f Furn rm.
Also double nn
BUSHWICK — 3 larf tarn rma
11STH ST . SIS W. Apt. 2D. Large
furn rma. Single er double Kil
chen privilege*.
’16TH ST~2B W , UCHTMAN Ren
t*l Service. Single-double rooraa.
Uaa ol kitchen. Newly decorated.
See Hr. Jordea. Manager.
11STH St.. 135. W. Apt 4W. Large
Small, Neat, working peraon pref
llb-rn ST.“249,W. Apt. J. Large
lorn rm. Welfare lady pref. —
UN 4-59M
COR. W. 118 St. (7th Ave.) Neat
ly turn. Quiet home. Rpepecuhle
working peraon pref UN 5-9175.
117TU ST.. I'M, W, Apt. 7B. Large
rm. Couple or single pref.
UN 5-2416
118TH ST., W. Large front Furn
i Rm Call after 6 p m. JE 7-1792.
UKTHS1;.7 W. f single" rm. settled
man or lady pref Elevator. Rea
aanable rent UN 4-8919.
118TH ST . K. Madison Ave . 1 rm.
kitchen 'privileges EN 9-3390.
ii8th st . 352.wTapC nTiur
niahed rooms.
119TH SV.. Oil. W. Apt. 3W. small
Rm. Working Man. Woman o r
Welfare Prof. AU 1-7708.
119TH ST., 102, W, Apt. 2E. Room.
Working people preferred.
120TH ST.T’kB. W. AptT 43. Large
furn. rm. couple or 2 single men
pref., call anytime after 10 a.m.
MO 2-5822.
121ST ST .10, W. Kitchenette. $14.
Mr. Jackson.
121ST ST . 100, “w. Apt. 33, Large,
Quiet Elevator, ladies pref.
122ND ST.. 13, W, single room —
Respectable working man pref.
123RD“ST., 355. W. Single A^double
Rms. Working pref.
123KO ST.. 246. Wr .Neaily fui lushed
rooms, men preferred.
123RD ST., 68. E. Kitchenettes-
1-2 rms. single 213.50-217. Double.
218-220. Adults pref. Mr. Jackson.
Mgr. on premises.
123RD ST.. 156. W. 2 rm. kitchen
ette. furn or unfurnished LU3-2879
I23RJ) ST., 170 W. Apt 2C. Small
room, man preferred. UN 4-0748
123RD ST.. 225. W^ Apt 6, Furn
ished rm. to rent.
X24TtTsT.. 110. W, Apt. 4W, Single,
large, settled working man prof.
Ref
125th St, W. - Kitchenettes. Rms.
No security
No Fee
Coll M0 2-1920
126TH ST , 33. W. Kitchenette rm.
for rent.
126TH ST., W. Large kitchenette.
Private bouse. La Salle Rlty, 218
W ll«h St.
127TH ST.. 127. E. Single robm—
RI 9-4435
to let.
127TH ST.. 146. W. Furnished rm.
_____
127171 ST? 153, E, Sleeping room.
$8.05 per week convenient neigh
borhood. For appointment call
Miss Brooks. AT 9-9519.
128TH ST.. 300, W, Apt. 2. Rma..
Working person pref.
128TH ST , 156. W. Furn. rma. —
Ring basement.
and quiet. AU 3-4915.
152.ND ST.. W. 2 eingte rooma.-caU
week-ends, and after S. AD 4-7490.
154TH ST., 408. W. Large front rm
Single.
157TH ST. W. Near Bway. Nice
rm. available, working people pref
Cooking privileges. Cali after 3
p m. LO 8-5921.
158TH ST.. 636. W.
and ktt-
• p.m.
182ND ST. 588. W. Beautiful double
single rooms. S22. 917613.50. 211 50
per wk. Working people pref. Refs.
Required.
chenetie, references. •
175TH ST., 528. W. 2 adjoining rm*.
CY 9-8072
Richard Hotel
6 Bradhurst Ave.
AU 3-5500
Maid A telephone service
Daily. —gakfr* Tniwtenti
<S22tf>
446 CENTRAL Park West (Nr. 104
St.) Nicely decorated, elev. single
A Double, kitchenette.
UN 4-4171
CENTRAL Park West. Furnished
rm. Elevator building, single or
couple pref. MO 3-6157.
EIXJECOMB AVE.. Block from 145
St. subway, gentleman pref refer
ences. AU 6-6148.
EDGBXXJMBE AVE. — PNirniriwd
room for rent. AD 4-3122.
EDGECOMBE AVE., Single room,
no cooking. Man pref. FO 8-0335
FRANKLIN AVE., Large attractive
comfortable 215.50 K1 2-0885.
HAMILTON PLACETS arge'fur-
nished rooms, overlooking avenue,
with use of kitchen and utensils.
2 Working girls or working cou
ple preferred FO 55814.
LENOX AVE.. 272, Desirable rma.
Urge or small LE 4-4194.
LENOX AVE., Working couple pref
Child. Quiet home, cooking
AU 3-4978. SA 2-3241.
LENOX AVE.. 26 Apt 5. — 2 fur
nished rooms for rent. 29 and 210
AR 6-6871
LE 4-8611
MADISON AVE.. Attractive kitchen
ette. clean quiet building. *•—1----
persona preferred. Supt. LE 4-1818
MANHATTAN AVE.. 617, Apt. 2.
Large front room. Working per
aon or Elderly lady pref. Cal
MO 2-8954 after 7 p m
MANHATTAN AVE.. Large Mtch-
enette. Private house. Nicety furn
La Salle Rlty., 218 W. 116th St.
MONTGOMERY ST.. 15. I A 2 furn.
rms, private cooking, refrigerator
816 to $23 wkly CA 8-4235.
MORNINGSIDE AVE., 20. Apt. 16.
Single rm for rent, woman pref
MQRNLSGSIDE 7aVe7~2O. Apt. 22.
Working people preferred. Cook
ing. elevator.
MORNINGSIDE AVE.. Furnished
rooms. Elevator BiMMing Adults
^referred MO 3-5878
MT MORRIS PARK W . Large, and
small kitchenettes. MO 3-1774
RIVERSIDE DRIVE Mother prefer
red. Child. 2 separate rooms with
private bath Mrs English
FO 8-2342
ST. NICHOLAS AVE., (153rd St.)
Large Furn Room FO 8-0036.
{MTH STTuiTw. Rms. 810, 27.50,
129TH ST., West of 8lh Ave At-
ST.
Furn Rm. Conveniences DA 3-4764
tractive corner
O«ibje sr NICHOLAS \YE.. Quiet home,
room. Cooking Working adult* Working person pref. UN 5-9175
■ —----------------------- 1
pref. 814. wk. AU 66249 after 6 pm ———-—-
ST. NICHOLAS AVE, (150th St.)
Beautifully furnished room, hot.
cold. Rimaing water. Working
man, woman preferred. Refer
ences. AD 4-3566
129TH ST., W. Large furnished rm.
129TH ST., 148, W, Apt. 18, Neat
CaU DI
ly furnished room.
129TH ST. 17, W. Kitchenette, furn
LE 4-0407.
129TH ST , 17, W. Single rm. Man
pref LE 4-MO7.
129 St. W. - Kitchenettes. Rms.
No Security
No Fee
ST. NICHOLAS AVE., 728, Room
and Kitchen. Working coupla pref
AU 6-347U after 6 $22 wk.
ST NICHOLAS PL.. Large room
Home like. Refer. WA 6-7253
Coll UN 5-2461
______ MO 2-1941
AT 9-2785 _________
FURN or unfuro. Freshly painted
large rm. Working people prof.
Refs. MO 3-1739.
LARGE Furn kitchenette rma. -
Working people prof LE
LARGE Furnished room. AU 5-1370
(Near 155th St St Nicholas Ave.
ferred Call MO 3-4964.
Room.
NICELY Furn rm. near subway —
Woman pref TO 26062.
ROOMS Wo-king people, or p
Sion prefv red UN 6-3440
ROOM, Quiet working peraon pre
ferred MO 3-5307
FURNISHED Rooms, large a
small; also kitchenettes. All bor
oughs. References required —
MO 26719
LARGE Attract!-e nn working or
retired men pref. UN 5-0683
SMALL Furn rm. Working single
man pref. Nico quiet home. CaU
After 5 AU 3-7067.
EXQtTSZTEI.Y Furnished large rm
private bath A refrigerator. Cook
ing. Must be clean. Neat house
keeper Lady prof. FO 8-6379 after
6:30 p.m.
LARGE RM. Man pref. No cooking
References AD 4-3944.
FURNISHED RM. SINGLE man prof.
LO 96106
MEDIUM sire rm,
for 2. LO 8-1447.
large enough
2 ROOMS
AD 4-7792
LARGE Rm. couple pref. Refer
ences required MO 2-0882
FTTLNLSHED room, couple or tin
gle working preferred UN 4-1786
NEATLY Furnished rm. Reaped
able working peraon pref WA 8-
0632
LARGE AIRY ROOM
RE 9-1038
MO 2-1500
LARGE Front rm turn. Working
man pref. Home atmosphere. —
NICHOLAS AVE., up town —I WA 63314 nvar Amsterdam Ave
DOMESTIC JOBS
Sleep-In sleep-out
TEK AGENCY
^22 E. 125 SL
EN 9-4050
ROOMS
Manhattan Furnished
12th Street. 136 E.
GR 7-9678
Singles 57 — Doubles $11
47TH ST, 114. W. Hotel Stacey,
PL 7-6800 Singles. Doubles, m.
2M» Rm apts. Available. Also Rms
with cooking, also Children. Low
Rates. Owner.
71ST ,-31 W HOTEL KENT 1 A 2
rms, private bath, kitchenette—
817 to 230 wkly SU 7-2500.
3 bedroom split level, den, fin
ished basement, attached gar
age. plot 60x150. Price $23500
HEMPSTEAD
6 rooms, colonial, full basement,
complete house of furniture. 50
xlOO plot. $15,000. Low down pay
ment FHA. Gia $300 down.
BOOK REALTY
217 S. Franklin Hempstead
IV 1-2919 IV 1-9226
WYANDANCH
Best Buy Hl-Leveled Ranch.
All extras included in tales price
See us before you buy, caU col
lect for easy directions to our
model.
TU 8-5262
Land Specialists Inc.
Distinctive
$17,990 - Ranch
3 Bedims — Fin Bsmt.
PRICE SLASHED! Adorable 3
bedrm modem ranch in distinc
tive tree lined residential area.
Features large guest size living
rm. 1 twin size bedrma. huge
wood paneled finished basement,
carpeting. 4 appliances. GAR
AGE. 8% mortgage—628 monthly
or refinanced $690 down. HUR
RY -WONT LAST!
WORTH REALTY
866 Fulton Ave. Hemp, IV 56040
MORTGAGE MONEY
Mortgoga Money
MORTGAGES
Immediate
Inspection and
Commitment.
FHA A Ola SPECIALTY. LET
U B CONSOLIDATE YOUR
DEBTS TO REDUCE YOUR
PAYMENTS.
Far let, 2nd and 3rd
mortgages, quick action
•a foreclo«ures. We fi
nance repairs, alterations
and building loans.
Well Buy Your
House - All Cash
We offer deads far tale
AND LEASES at lowest
cast, aa residential and
business properties.
FUNDS AVAILABLE FOR
LAND MORTGAGES
Any Type Financ
ing Considered
CONSULT US FOR
CONVENTIONAL O DIFFICULT
FINANCING
(CONFIDENTIAL - PERSONAL -
ANALYSIS AND SERVICE
RENDERED.)
CROWN ESTATES
1824 Lafayette Ave., Broaklya
Hickory 3-5590
HoasMjWaatadk-Te^Baj^
ALL CASH
IN 24 Hoars
Any Haute
Any Condition
Tap Pricat Paid
Call "Tha Crazy Irishman"
Alw
---- -
IvlBa wwTTINiy
01 74222
129TH ST , 161, W, Reasonable Idt-
cbenetie, sober working people
pref.
131ST ST., 143 W.
"THE DUNSTON"
Clean, quiet, 812
See office. AU 3-9940
131ST ST., 22S, W, Rma tf. 810
Cooking privlleges.
Sbtb St- 184 TTeat
NOTICE
- 132ND ST.. 220. W. Large furn
kitchenette 8r„ couple pref.
No Security st • 114« West- Nlcely ,urB"
Na Fee
iMied unite, reasonable weekly
Furnished
rotes. See manager, Mr. Was-
I!.-
oaute. KMksooable rotas.
!
.
UE 8-8910
ton.
91 ST. fc COLliiStTAVE
TR 7-6400 No fee
133rd St. W. Kitchenettes. Rma.
No secority
HOTEL ENDICOTT
Rms. 213 up. with kitchtea 220 up
Coll SW J-B712
HOTEL COLUMBUS
106 W. 83rd ST.
16 2 furnished rooms Quiet at-1 SEVENTH
mospbere. Complete housekeeping
TR 3-0900
1 XiT’ll CT
241, W. (Basement bell)
Kitchenette, neatly furnished. 218.
Weekly.. Working couple preferred
“AVE.,- W. 135th St,
Kitchenette available, working
couple pref. AU 3-7831.
135TH ST., 221, W, Apt. 5. 3 Rma.
Furn. 2 Bedrma. 1 livingnn. Kit
chen for cooktag hot not In the
rma, $g i vt 1 wte in advance.
fjfiTH ST.. W. Private room, man
pref. TO 2-0482.____ _________ ____
138TH ST.. W. Pvt. Room avail
able Working man pref. RA 4-5501
137TH ST , W. Nr. 8th Ave. sub.
Neatly furnished single rm. cook
ing and refrigerator. Working
,dv pref. Refarence*. Owner 914-
YO MT77. , _
._________
1WTH ST . f». W, Apt. 17. Lovely
_ front room. Privileges AU 8-3807
13RTH ST.. 273. W, Apt- 8, Large
furn rm. Working lady pref.
AD t-0885
140TH ST.. 233. W, Apt. IE. Settled
working tody preferred 810 wkly.
ftOTU ST~A 7TH AVI.. Neel
Pref. AD 46081.
MOTH ST., 161 W. Apt 74. Boom 1
rent. Ask tor Kearney.
140TH ST . 140. W. Apt. 88. Large
rm. available. 812 wkly. 6 p.
AD 46922
148TH rr . W. Mm. Working person
prof AU 1-11IB.
14(rtH ST . 151. W, Apt. 21. Furn-
AU •
B4th ST„ 25, W
Off Central Park West
Newly remodeled and
refurnished singles, and doubles
with kitchenettes.
Aiea 3 ream apti.
88TH ST . W. Large rm A large
kllchenette, nice block, quiet bldg
FO 5-2820 after T.M p.m.
Belnord Residence Hefei
207 209 W. 87 St.
(East of Broadway)
Just Completed
TR 3-5222. TR 3-1658
Transients Accommodated
316 WEST 93RD ST Furnished,
double cooking. 215 and up Single,
no cooking, 29 and up. Elevator.
Adults preferred, security
1D4TH ST., 14, W. 1 Rm. kitchen
ettes From 812.50 wk. 2 rm. Ut-
chenettes from 816 50 wk Adults
pref. RI 9-3327
llOTH ST., 207, Watt, Furnished
WITH ST., W, Fabulously furn. adj.
living rm., 2 baths. Gentleman ap-
predating gracious living pref..
Privileges. Phone. TV optional-
EN 9-7825.
llflTH ST.. 186, Hm, large, Irtt-
ehaa privileges. Quiet People pref
Ref Required RI 96330
110TH ST . W. Man. set fled, work
ing preferred Bell. EN 9 2751
llOTH ST., 225. W. Apt .16. Work
tog man pref.
DOTH ST 141 k.
CAMBRIDGE
UN 86118
Newly remodeled A newly furn _______ _________________
Singlet A doublet Latest ttyle l39TH ST . W. Smell Room, Call
kitchenettes A switchboard
AU 1
Private Kitchenettes
Maid. Elevtlor A Switchboard
Dally - Weekly Rates Transients
142ND ST., 131. Apt. 2. Rm. Call
O. Innto after 0 p.m. AU
111TH FT., W, 2 or I rm. Urn ef
kllchan Child RI_9 7087 Baker.
U1TH »T.. 143. W. Apt. 4, Furn
rma. .27, 219. «1.
II2TH ST., 191 W. Single rm. quiet
home, no rooking Working man
UR------
I12TH rr.. 120. W. Apt. 4D. Quiet
home, respectable working pref
Mutt have reference.
115TH ST., W, Very large neatty
furnished double rm. rooking. 81$
TE 16078.
ilFTH STa 15. E. Apt. 2A, LagfU
rm. 213. Small rm. 10. Working
lady pref. AB prvftegea, tetevtttpn
EN 96808
7
144TH ST..
AU
W. Neatly
144TH ST.. 184, W. Apt. >•
M4TH ST., M0. W. Furn. rm. work-
Ing girl pref.. kitchen privileges
FO 2-1077. (_________
145TH ST , 413, W. Kitchenettes, ap
ply Fridays references A security
W. 1I8TH ST . 701 — Apt. II. Nice
ouUlde rm FI) 8 4398
147TH ST. W.
rent, call after 7 AU 2-8240.
147TH KT , 247. W, Apt. D4. Furn
wmea HI M
AU 86234
ST. NICHOLAS AVE., 320 Apt 7 A x
Large room p ’-inr« lady pref LARGE Kitchenette, furnished —
ST. NICHOLAS AVE., dnaa. wortk
ing pref FO 8-5724
WASHINGTON HTS Kitchenette^
Private house, Nice quiet clean
neighborhood. Single or couple
pref. Call FA 26792 or SW 56475
Week's rent A Week's security
ROOM. Welfare, child Elevator-
Call Friday after 4. Thurectoy af
ter 4. Saturday n0 day. SA 2-3312
2 “ADJOINING rooms share kitchen
Welfare
115th St. Eg
Owner
UN 5-2250
7TH AVE., 2400 Apt 35. Room. Work
ing woman preferred. No cooking
7TBTAVE?72M7rApt. 5 — Cheerful
rooms with use of kitchen 98. 99
$12.50 AD 4-2341 — FO 86500
7TH AVE., 2329. Apt. 3N, NaMlF
furn rm. Cooking
7TH AVE., 2363 Apt 4S. Room, eld
erly Indy or lady with child pref.
Welfare Use of kitchen WA 66046
7TH AVE., 1845. Apt. SD?! ^xtre-
large front rms. Nicely furn. Ele
va lor. Telephone, A kitchen priv
ileges. Respectable working couple
or single person pref. DE 5-7498
Before 9 a.m. or after 7 30 p.m.
All day Sat. A Sun.
7TH AVE.. 1879. Apt. 72. Rma. —
Couple, single. UN 4-7085.
7TH "AVE..-(ii4th*S».)“ Large or
small rma. Use of kitchen. Child
RI 9-7067 Baker
7TH AVE.. 2465. Apt. U, Room to
tot, Man pref., AU 1-2892.
7TH AVE.. 2394. Apt. 74, Single rm.
for rent. AU 6-5405 Settled p<
aon pref.
7TH AVE . 1990. Apt. 4, Large rm.
Refs. MO 6-2324.
KITCHENETTES — ltk. 2V$ furn.
unfurnished Some private baths
249 W. 142 St. AD 46948 JONES
LARGE RM. Nt7 Subway. Respect
able pref MO 26502
STUDIO RMS. Running water, new
furn A deeorationa. Linen turn.
Cooking privileges, men pref.r—
of employment AU 16528.
ROOMS FOR RENT
MO 2-4375
2 SINGLE RMS. Working people
AU 1-7498 after 6 p.m.
A 2 RM UNIT Furn . Share kitchen
A bath Single pref. Ref. Ri
able RI 96887 Fri- Sat.
1 LARGE Furn rm with double
bed. group of nnrvea or working
girl pref. AU 1-3844.
ONK Single and one double room
tor rent. Working aduRa prefer
red LE 4-1340 No fee.
K'rtcb. a. Roti. $9, $13, $15, $18
Agent, 236 W. 13fdh St.
AU 6-7170
AU 8-7782
Manhattan—Unfurnished
117TH ST , 128 W. 2 large untaro
7TH AVE., 2441, Rm. working man
Rms. UL 86926
pref.
7TH AVE.. 2480, Apt. 87. Furnished
rooms, large and small, UgM
and sonny, respectable working
people pref. FO 8-4590.
HAMILTON TERRACE 58 Kitchen
Btte Man or couple pref. 815
AU 1-7824.
LARGE Room Cooking privileges.
Nice quiet working woman pref
Before 9 a.m. In mormnga A af
ter 8 p.m. CaU SW 46351.
2 LARGE Front rms together 2
Working girls pref. Uaa of Mt
chen CaU but. 9 a.m. A 10 p.m.
AT-----
WA 66793,
RM. In quiet home. Nice middle-
aged working man pref. SW 4-1222
2 ADJOINING RMS Use of kit
chen. Mother A otald pref. 210
per rm wkly MO >6270.
RINGI.E Working person with ref
erence pref AD 4-7286.
DONDEE Room Servlet. Rooms tor
everyone. Children Welfare. —
UN 46308. Mrs SalHe Williams
<T NICHOLAS PL.. Large
Mbs. Refer WA 8-7252.
RTPOUBNErTF
Large, front, no
MEDIUM
working people prof.
AD 4-7484
IJ4HGE FRONT RM, Next Io hath.
Mb. fcos 8< dear. WA I MM.
K1TC HENCriE. Large, adults pref
Security, 264 Lenox Ave.
Bronx—Furnished
134TH ST., 454, E. (Between Wil
lis and Brook Aves ) Kitchenette,
IVk rooms, both AU private; also
single room. Owner, no fee MO 9*
9675- AD 4-4007
124TH ST. 422 East. 2 furnished
rooms. Working people preferred
221 weekly. A week's security. Ute
ef ktoetien. AU
186TH ST.. 2 Rooms. Furn. Mother
A Children. 225 Wkly TU 7-2927
189TH ST., E. Largs, nicely tarn
lahed. cooking, refrigerator, work
Ing people pref. Quiet atmosphere
Mrs M. I.U
179TH ST., E, Large rm for rent.
TI 2-4071.
lOOTH Or . 150. W. Rx. Rm. Single
Girl pref. UgM rooking, retriger
ator. Nr. NYU CY 46428
181HT ST., 72, W. Vary torse room
private refrigerator and rookiqg
828 16 par week. Reaudful and
neighborhood For
Mil Mrs Lang FO A
9922 after 7 p.m.
217TH ST , 944,
furn rms.
Kitchen privileges OL 26348.
223RD 8T. 920,
E, large rm.
«t. AU
223RD ST , Font Rm. All
Nice Neighborhood OL
Large Fnrn r&. —
E. 230TH ST
Cookk
TU 1
18JRD or
ANDREWS AVE..
A Jerome Ave.
WI FA 7
■OBTON RD. A ISOtk SI. -
I-erge newly furn rm DA 3 4/63
Large
RRUCKNER BLVD . 135. Furnished
douhle-elnfle mome Kitchen fsdl
ItlM. Irlgldalrea PI2 up MO 96934
COMrORTARLX RM. Raepertable
quiet home, elevator, good tranap
ReHftona, choreh connected per
•na prof. Eventnga Saturday aU
day AU 26751.
RRIRTlNIflR BLVD. 903 Apt ID
mm, qidel home. Single
n nr womad preferred. Near
Frivitages. KI
CAUIDWEU. AVE . 875. Private
LARGE roam, twin beds. 1 work
ing girls nr coupla prof. Can week
days after 8 p.m. and all day
' Wednesday and Sunday FI 86482.
houae, large hrigM room
subway. Kilchen, bath asms floor
Jtton Rent
KI 7 NEW
MIST ST.
large rm.
W. Apt. «, Om RM. Man pref
References WA 8-1408.
141ST ST., 172, W. Apt. 1A, Rm
MIST rr.. 125. w. Apt- *.
tor rent, settled man pref.
8 LARGE Rms. Adjoining with prt
vale entrance, cel UN 56874.
___—-------- --------------- —Me
SETTLED Woman nr a worh-f
Pref. UN 46758.
MIST ST . 208, W. Rooms to tot.
FO 32256. Mr
NEATLY Furn rm Working people
prof. Call RI 96040
rr GEMS OFFERED BY "|
I CHESTER I
* Ranch $12,500*
*’ $100 Total Catk 6X
■ Rambling ranch with fin .
I bsnrt, 3-badmi2, only 6 yrt. |
. eM-VACANT. Imroed accag- ,
| Bring dtocharga A dagasit. |
I Marry an this ana. Na dat
ing co$l$.
ALSO
1
| BUILDERS CLOSE OUT I
NEW RANCH
$19,990
| Brick A aluminant tiding |
, with tide hall, 1 car garaga, .
| 3 bedrmt, eat in hitch, din- ,
I ing nn, living rm, fad hate-
Hit lit,
MMH MORTGAGE AVAILABLE
| ONLY $500 CLOSING COST
-4
W. BRONX (Nr. 167th SI.) Work
log couple pref. CaU anytime —
AU 1 7999
Cooking GL 3-9628.
CAMBRIDGE PL.
Working men pref^d.
WHEELER It Wi
2 Rms. TI 26143.
Ave. Bx
WILLIS AVE., Kitchenette 817. Sin
gle 27 50 FA 46580
FURNISHED roam, welfare prefer
red TR 8-1721.
ADJOINING RMS Working people
pref Kitchen privilege*. CaU duly
CAMfiRIlXlE PL.
rma far rent
nights.
2 LARGE
CalMA 2658>e-
CARLTON AVE.. 61 - F
front rm, ST 9612
cari.tonaveT
with cooking
pref. JA 2-2474
Large rm
Mping
TR 8-2546
CLASSON A\. 40Q
2 RMS. 1 Medium 1 large. Rea
sonabla rent. Settled woman, wor
king or welfare pref. LU 5 2842.
CY 2-9282.
SLNGLE RM. Quiet home, man pref
CaU after 5 DA 9-5671.
SLNGLE AND Double rm*. kitchen
privileges, child. CaU KI 26644
2 ADJOINING RMS $15 wkly. single
man pref. LU
DOUBLE Front rm. linen, nr sub.
2 large double kitchenette,
working people pref. CaU
ME 5-7478
Working couple or tingle
pref. CaU after 6 LU
FRONT ROOM.
TU 1-2897
man Pref.
IARGE RM 1 Fit Working Mother
Child pref, WY 1-1939.
ROOM. Working man pref. Quiet-
Home LU 96134.
2 FURNISHED RMS, Share bath
A Kitchen KI 2-2447.
MEDIUM SIZED RM. Retired or
welfare woman pref. DA 9-
9456.
—
CLEAN RM. Private house. 98. up
Conveniences, settled men and
College students pref. Rm. wom
an pref 1AJ 9-1201.
NEATLY Furn Rm. Religious home
Working man pref. 210
DA 3-2504
NICK RM, Cooking privileges. Mon
CLERMONT AVE.
nished rm
able working
CLIFTON PL
ST 9 7990 after 6 ».
Neatly fur
kgu tarn rm
CLLNTON AVE.
With cooking
or single girl
large rm
Bachelor
ST 36508.
rm
Double rm
CROWN HEIGHTS
gle Elderly
813 wkly ato-
Merred Wei-
Cl'MBERLAND ST. 1 8th Ave. sub
Kitchenette, hall in with sink.
JA 2
DEAN ST . 1082.“ Ha* Rm 810 Sei
Mr Connors or HY 36141
DEAN ST. 1158.
refrigerator.
with
prof
DEAN ST. Large rn rm. Kitch
enette. Working gi pref.
PR
DEAN ST., Ill
CaU after 5 p m
dean“ stTISt?
Lovely
DECATUR ST . 8«
pie preferred
D9TATUR ST7
kitchen-bath. 313
preferred
Pref WY 2-1796.
FURNISHED rma. frigldalre. —
Share Utchen, 1 Single hall rm.
KI 2-5726
DECATUR ST.
rm. also ball
DECATUR ST , _
aonable PR 26M
Medium
2 rma. ron-
evening
GL 511
LARGE Furelttted room front, with
refrigerator $16 wkly TU 1-933S
or DA 8-5624.
2 LARGE Adjoining rms. 1 double
rm; 1 single, all (acllitlea LU 8-
COMFORTABLE Rm, convenient
tranap. business peraon or Mu
dent pref WY 2-1874.
DOUBLE and single rooms, quiet
private home JE 7-5882.
LARGE Front room tor rent also
small. Near tranap phone A rook
Ing privileges DA 361M. ♦
NR SUBWAY, Large rm. Private
Kitchen Call CY 4 5226 or eves
TV 35840.
SINGLE RM Nicely furn. Front.
Parquet Floors. Cooking. Radio
8th Ave. subway 2 hlka. Girl pref
CY 4-3260
QUIET, Comfortable home, pleas
ant surroundings. Settled men pre-
Private
DA 86165
R(X)MS. Homelike, cooking, work
ing women preferred DA 8-9186
DECATUR ST , 62
room. bath, man
GL 5-$9
235 DBCA3 R ST
ROOM 13 LET
DBCA-mt ST. I9f B
Working people gef
anUtal rm.
DVFFlHLD ST , it, Large rm —
single person preprred downtown
area Welfare UL 26314.
FOfRTH ST.7“nr?> Methodist Ho^
pital l6rge furn front rm Call
HY 96251) Moraq Noon.
FLATBUSH RMS.'fot rent~Ask
for Mr. Davis PI 3 9659
FRANKLIN AVE,. 843 — Furnlsh-
i(ii, ehare
ST
FRANKLTN- AVE
with bath ST 9602.
FULTON ST , 2 RMS,
Welfare
GATES AVE? lit?
men to share 3 studio
821 M wkly Sea Mr. Coam
call HY 26141.
LARGE rma In private house Nr
Prospect Sta Call LU 56151.
OATES AVE . 97 — Large.
Working people preferred.
NEATLY furn. Business girl pref
Pleasant environment. FO 8 7920
GATES AVE . 240 Kitchenette.
In* couple preferred
NEATLY furn lahed room. Working
couple preferred CY 32843
2 FRONT RMS, Kitchen available
Couple prof TR 86052
FRONT Fnrn. modern rm for rent,
man pref., after 0 p.m. OL A
84001 call all day Sat. A Si
KITCHENCTTE and rooms, newly
decorated. Quiet home and neigh
borhood. Rent reasonable. Reaped
■ me JAorKing peroonw preferred,
'LU 32218
TR 8-2279
8T3DIO Room, quiet neighborhood
Bachelor prof. CeeMng JE 9-8727
E. BRONX — 2 separately tarn rma
for rent Single working girls or
couple prof. Near subways DA A
WEST FARMS Section Kitchenette
811.99
TY 1-2189
1 FURNISHED rme. Butlinen adulK
pref. Cooking prtvltegee. couple
alngle pref DA 8 8008 LU 96890.
ONE LARGE Rm
DA 31003
NICELY FURN,
DA 26910
CHILD
Quiet
rviWI-Y,
ty»w IHJ11 rr* qrtlet nmr-
king people pref LU 9-2297,
FURNISHED RM to
A child. FO 4-7935
rent, mother
GATES AVE.. 432. Bachelor
preferred, kitchenettes. also(
with share cooking, newly
ed. Interviewer an
and Fri , other days by
men! ST 3-1388. NE
GREENE AVE 472. I-arge
etta rm. working adults
red
FENIMORF. ST Private
IN 96871)
FORT GREEN PL . Man
Hall rm 98 wkly PR
Large
GREENE AVE..
Furn 112 Wk
HAUSEY A Evergreen
man prol
NY 164m
HALSEY ST.. — Near
Largs fur
CaQ after 8 p.m.
HAIJiEY ST. 788.-
mam pretarrad.
home. GL 26792.
HALSEY ST.,
HANCOCK ST.
n
___ GL
Hpreftered 8T"
beautifully
Bronx—Uofarnithsd
HANCOCK nr
Large rm
2Vk RMB UWurn, roll
TI 360M
• P-m.
A
4 SMAIL RMR. Whlk-to. ednlla pref
Freedumland Vic.. OL 4-7985.
Couttnirof!
or Flawing
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 ---
IJ^ZJ^STERDAM NEWS, Set, Aug. 31, 1963
Fourth Of July Americans
(Continued From Page 11)
into the maw of a possible missile site?
A treaty to an American these days
is simply the old college try. We have
no other choice. Single-minded scien
tists, or wary generals, or puddin’ faced
boys from the mid-west playing cow
boy and Indian, notwithstanding, we
have no choice but to ratify the treaty,
and to work like Hell on our defenses.
The People
we have the people. The people who
will march on Washington on August
28th, and those who will march there
after. We have the people who will
bring sojne pressure to make meaning
ful tax relief for an overburdenec
populace. We have the people to help
the only leader we have now, John F.
Kennedy, to do something, anything,
to protect this nation and the world
from a nuclear war which would solve
Out of all the words, or despite them,
everything—and nothing.
STATISTICS ON NBORO COMMISSIONID OFFICIRS
Table I
Tabla D
STATISTICS ON NIORO INLISTID MRSONNIL*
-
Army
Numb** end Percent (in Sr,ntUl«i) of Negro Pe'tonne I In tocb Grode
Navy
\ Air Farce
Marine Carp*
76 ( 2.97%)
586 ( 5.72%)
22(1.30%)
•9(1.22%)
32 ( 0 *3%)
5(0.71%)
140 ( 1.67%)
19(0*1%)
3,I43 ( 7.64%)
9*4(2.42%)
614 ( 2 51%)
142 8.12%)
10,496 (12.65%)
2.*43 (4.43%)
2, IIS ( 4.19%)
417 8.93%)
21,992(16.2*%)
5.370(4.23%)
10,2*7 ( 9.33%)
1,490 (» 65%)
.
21,133 (12.20%)
4.771 (4.59%)
14,321 (12.47%)
2,663(9 08%)
26,3*5 (11.90%)
7,502(5.11%)
11,505 ( 9 26%)
3,101 (1.14%)
10, *36 (10 54%)
5,394(5,22%)
6.951 (10.23%)
3,727(8.01%)
•,456 (11.15%)
1,431 (4.77%)
597 (17.17%)
1.787 (7.55%)
103,603(12.20%)
30,40* (5.22%)
46,564 ( 9.1 %)
13,351 (7.59%)
Grade
l-«
(Ngkew)
M
1-7
E*6
E-5
E-4
1-3
1-2
E-l
(lowest)
Total Enlisted Mem
ber* and Ftrcentaget
62 Doto for oil Service*. The Air Force figure* or* Aown from certain (elected command!, and represent
about 76% of oil Air Force enlisted personnel. All other figures ore complete end world-wide in scope.
••From June 196J Report of The President's Committee on
Equal Opportunity in the Armed Forces.
GUEST Nancy Wilson who will
be the guest on the Steve Al
len show during the week of
September 2.
— and where.
A young mother appealed to
the Tracers to help her locate
her husband and child. When
they were found, she grabbed
the child and disappeared. The
husband, after learning that it
was Tracers who found them, of
fered the company a handsome
fee if it would now find his
wife — so he could counter-kid-
nap the child. The offer was
turned down.
A woman who had disappear
ed with her two small children
was infuriated when the Tracers
agents tracked her down. But i Israel
when they told her that the court
would take their children away,
the parents agreed to forgive
each other and forget their
troubles. Both loved the chil
dren. They were reunited.
Hospital Ballot Battle
job rates ranging from $60 to
$120 a week to be increased to
W to $125 weekly in two years.
Previous starting rates ran from
$54 to $113.80 a week.
The 1,750 Mt. Sinai employees
As The Amsterdam News went,Square and E. 17th St. will cast
their ballots, probably in favor
of representation by Local 1199,
headed by Leon Davis, on Fri
day evening of this week.
to press, the more than 150 non
professional Negro and Puerto
Rican workers at Lenox Hill
Hospital in Manhattan prepared
to cast ballots to accept or re
ject re-collective bargaining rec
ognition by Local 1199 of the
Drug and Hospital Employees
Union.
As in Lenox Hill’s election
Local 144 reportedly also will
be absent as a rival of Local
1199
At Knickerbocker
Last week
Nonmedical staffers at Beth at Madison
However, both Local 144,
headed by Peter Ottley, and
Local 1199 will be rivals Thurs
day evening for the loyalties of
the more than 150 nonprofession
al staffers of Knickerbocker
Hospital at Convent Ave. and
It was a fair certainty, how
ever, that the nonmedical staf
fers of the hospital, at Park Ave.
and 77th St., would vote in favor
of representation by Local 1199
in an election in which Local
144 of the Building Service and
Allied Employees Union was not 130th St.
a rival
also get 10 paid holidays with
three to be selected by them
and payment at 24 times the
regular rate when they are re
quired to work on a holiday;
paid vacations up to four weeks;
three weeks sick leave after
five years with sick leave cum
ulative up to 20 days and other
benefits, including $1,000 life in-
surance coverage and 120 days
Mt. Sinai Hospital Blue Cross coverage and free
Ave* and 106th St medical service at the hospital.
Stuyvesant signed a contract with Local Mt. Sinai, Lenox Hill and Beth
_________ 1199. governing wages and em-Israel were among the seven
ployment conditions of its 1.750 nonprofit hospitals struck in the
and oil! Jumpers for neighbor professional technical, clerical major walkout of June 22. 1959
hood merchants. At 18,
capital, he rented desk space and
The hospital was the largest
went into business — calling hira-
in the nation to sign a pact
aelf a "skip tracer." (They skip
and I trace.) He later changed!with Local 1198. The pact called
the name of his firm to The!^
increases ranging from
Tracers Company of America 34 to $8 weekly, two additiona.
and began specializing in tracing ;Pfiy raises of 5 per cent in each
next two years and wage
persons in all categories — and
to arbitration
“
in all ports of the world. To; reopeners subject ‘
his organization has found >n the final two years of the
for collective bargaining rights.
The collective bargaining
measure, signed in early April
by Gov. Rockefeller, becomes
law on July 1, covering all hos
pital and residential care-center
nonprofessional workers in the
city.
and nonprofessional staffers.
Hospital at
the final two
date,
more than 700,000 persons — !$-y«ar agreement,
Bing Sing prison was establish
ed at Ot Rung owing to its ex
baustless bodies of marble for
convicts sentenced to hard labor.
many of them involved in mari-
tai problems.
Job Rates
The contract set minimum
Ro dt
Aiwy, Air Farce,
Morin. Corp.
Gwwwlt
(Alltnm)
N.uy
Admiral.
(All type*)
Co loM.I<
Captain*
*
Number ond Farcmel (in A3r0ntK.ee*) of Nogro P«nonn.l in Eock Ronk
Army
Navy
Air Force
Morine Corp*
0(0%)
4(0.11%)
0(0%)
0(0%)
1 (0.29%)
6(0.14%)
Lt. Colon.1*
Commond.rs
117(0.95%)
3(0.03%)
67(2.54%) z
sa-v---
evtajon
Lt. Commondan
424«.47%)
17(0.14%)
124(0.60%)
Coptoin.
Lidwtont*
1532 (5.21%)
38(0.35%)
615(1.74%)
IS LiautOTant*
LiMtweant* (j.g.)
450(4.33%)
57(0.39%)
317(1.56%)
2d li«utOTonti
Emigre*
421 8-26%)
29(0.22%).
170(1.45%)
Tot.1 Office* A PwcnlogM
3150(3.2%)
174(0.24%)
1300 (1.24%)
0(0%)
0(0%)
0(0%)
0(0%)
7(0.17«M
16 (0.44%)
9(0.2«%)
32(0.21%)
Walla, Wash., disappeared *‘th I I • D
year aearch, his distraught wife UfllOfl KIVU/TV
called in Tracers. Thev cheeked
Tracers. They checked
leads in Wyoming, Montana and
Utah, and finaUy unearthed the
man and his two sons in Idaho.
Another man and his 9 year old
son were located thru one simple
This boy had been an avid
reader of a popular child’s maga
zine. A subscription list reveal-
that he was still reading it
1962 Doto for oil Service*. Use Air Force Figures include only officer* ouigned to duty in the 40 State*
of the continental United State*. All other figure* are complete and world-wide in scope.
-•From June 1963 Report of The President's Committee on
Equal Opportunity in the Armed Forces.
“Technical” Kidnapings
Often Never Make News
hut to use
mother and child from Reno to of mother love
Texas to Vancouver to Florida
and hack to Texas. Every time
its agents caught up with her
she would vanish again,' practi-
caily from under their noses
by norma lee browning
Of all the crimes that the Am
erican public finds revolting, the
kidnaping of a child enrages it
most. Tbe news makes head
lines. AU efforts of law enforce
One time, when they had her
ment agencies, communication
cornered, the husband flew in.
channels. A an alerted citizenry
She honeyed him into a reconcil
are dedicated to the search for
iation. They kissed and made up
tbe kidnaper and the child —
and she agreed to bring the baby
and swift punishment for the
and come back home. As soon
criminal. Yet, there are at least
as he went down to the restaur
a thousand kidnapings any year
ant for a cup of coffee, she was
that never reach the front pages
or even the police records Lit- off again. Roe kept Tracers bep-
ping for five months until they
tle effort is made to solve them.
enught i’p with her again.
The kidnapers rarely are punish
ed i ‘1
a cloak of respectability while
leading a life of dubious moral
ity. Mast technical kidnapings oc
cur during visiting periods, when
the parent who was not granted
custody comes to see his child.
Tbe kidnaping usuaUy foUows a
misunderstanding or quarrel dur
ing these visiting periods. Some
times it also is done deliberate
ly for revenge following a di
vorce suit.
S-Year Search
his two small sons. After a three
wealthy farmer
“But no matter how it turns
out,’’ says Eisenberg, ‘techni
cal kidnaping leaves ugly scars.
It’s the child who gets hurt. He
is torp by divided loyalties and
often is forced to play a double
identity role.”
Eisenberg's investigating car
eer began when he was only 14,
Walla, tracing all sorts of dead beats
Few persons except the prin
cipals. involved even hear about
them. These are not kidnapings
for ransom. They are crimes
spawned by broken homes, by because
divorced or estranged parents— Process
embittered, frustrated mothers
and fathers, who flout court or
ders and take the law into their
own bands by running off with
their own children.
The k draping parent usually
flees to another state to escape
jurisdiction. He believes that his
•pouse won’t start legal action
in a court of new jurisdiction.
it's a long drawn-out
He believes he is safe
m police intervention or legal
especially as long
as be remains in hiding under
an assumed name
Every now and then Eisenberg
turns up a miaJsg mother who
has stolen her child — not out
Convenient push-button
control of flies, mosquitoes
and other flying insects. You
can see them drop when
Gulfspray’s big power gpeato
work. More PyrethYins
makes Gulfspray fast and
effective. No lingering odor,
either. Get Gulfspray ... it
kills bugs fasti
J. Bolts, Inc.
1351 Boston Rood
Bronx 56, New York
INDIVIDUALLY
OWNED
KRASDALE FOOD STORES
INDIVIDUALLY
OPERATED
KRASDALE PRUNE JUKE ...___
_
qt. 29c
KRASDALE GRAPE DRINK................................ 32-oz. can 29c
KRASDALE GRAPE JELLY________ 12-oz.
jar 21c
SEADALE ALASKA PINK SALMON__________ toll can 59c
KRASDALE DISTANT SPRAY STARCH........... 15-oz. can 39c
CARRO GIANDULAS _______________ #303 can 39c
KRASDALE GUAVA JELLY _............ ........ ....
12-oz. jar 29c
KRASDALE HOME STYLE PEACHES ...
16-oz. 2 far <3c
KRASDALE CRUSHED PINEAPPLE .
16-oz. 2 for 53c
FRENCH SALAD MUSTARD
6 oz. jar 13c
GREEN GIANT
DOLE
SWIFTS
Meats far Babies
2 49c
MEXICORN
#303 Can
PINEAPPLE JUICE
■2?
EOT5
#2 CM
for
45c
PALMOLIVE
BATH
SIZE .
for 29c
PALMOLIVE
Ito. SIZE
2 tor 29c
HAWAIIAN
PUNCH
-46-OZ.
* CAN
Regular Size
21c
2
LAUNDRY SOAP
Beechnut Baby Food
STRAINED
2 for 23c
JUNIOR
31c
2
MEATS FOR
BABIES
2
49t
HEINZ BARBECUE RELISH
HEINZ HOT DOG RELISH
HEINZ BAKED BEANS .
HEINZ BAKED BEANS
HEMZ BAKED BEANS .
HEINZ WHITE VINEGAR
HEMZ TOMATO KETCHUP
HEINZ TOMATO KETCHUP
HEMZ SPAGHETTI IN TOMATO SAUCE
CONTAOINA TOMATO PASTE
REALEMON LEMON JUICE
MDIAN HEAD CORN MEAL
SELLO ROJO RICE
. 11-oz. 29c
____ ..... 11-az. 29«
16-oz. con 2 for 29c
7-oz. can 10«
20-oz. can 2 for 39c
16-oz. bottle 19c
14-oz. bottle 25c
— 20-oz. bottle 37c
6’/i-oz. 10c
.. . 2 cans 29c
........ 8-az. 25c
2-lb. package 25c
2-lb. package 31c
COLLEGE
INN
Temato Jake
Cecktoil
27c
GREEN GIANT
SWEET PEAS
#303 Can
2 for 45c
■•ardtUy Cadttah Cakes lO’/i-ez conlR
■oordiky Shredded Codf'nh 4-oz. pkg. lit
18-oz con 55c
Kray Terk Chitterlins*
18-oz. can 55c
Kray Park Stomach* ,
12-oz. jar 39c
Krotchnor Wheat Gena
Breodceit Caraad leaf Hath 16-oz. con 39c
Broadcast Beat Stew
16-ez. con 39c
Broadcast Sliced leaf 2>/t-oz. jar 39c
■raadcast Vienna Saasagt 4-oz. con 25c
U Choy Boon Sgraats
Lo Choy Vegetable*
la Chay Chaw Maia Blnner
Lo Chay Say Saaca 3-oz bottle 12c
t’oxtex Waxed Paper
#2 con 15<
16-oz. con 29c
59c
$$«
AJAX
9
Smoll A for
(2c, off) O
- Gidnt A
SUDS
2
49c
KOTEX
NAPKINS
DYNAMO
Reg. 49C
, ••••
FLORIENT
loi Me «H
10BX MEAT...Radiant Broiled
TON
ALPG PH Food, CWUBKS-nef chepptd
Mi ll LIVES CAT FOOD
45c
31c
1 {We
I vj Z
*1.20
Less 15c off label
N00W.I SOUP K, 29c
LITTON CHKKIN
GREEN GIANT
Quick fboittd!
NIBLHS
#303 Can 19c
AJAX
Liquid Cleaner
15-oz. Bottle 39c
BAGGIES
Sandwich Bags 50
29c
FOOD
WRAP 45c
PINK LIQUID VEL
VEL
4c off 12
37c
YOUR
BEST
BUY^tl
k
A Rolls
FACIAL TISSUE
400's
TracGra tO/flnd them.
Fad month* aunts ran Into
Moe^ walla. -1 Twice, however. I
they came across clews thaf*
seemed 4*«polat to-a. m
ting Mrs. X’e description in every
detail bat one — her name It
was neither her maidaa imr mar
ried name, nor any rtf the fam
Uy names Mr. X had given t<
giont 79c
ACTION BLEACH
mornsenavbfr
9.
■Jit*
Women aa
rule don’t adopt
type of family coimectkm.
on « slim chance, agents
a her trail. They made
study of her bock-
aad came ap with aomo-
her husband didn’t know
bar real maiden name. She
her etep-fathere name when
» was found In
and her ex-huoband even
ropataed legal custody of
Me ehfld.
sa. Tracers
the trail at oae
Convenient push-button
control of flies, mosquitoes
and other flying insects. You
can sea them drop when
Gulfspray’a big power goes to
work. More Pyrethrins
makes Gulfspray fast and
effective. No lingering odor,
either. Get Gulfspray ... it
kills hup fasti
Delco Point fir
Ho rd wo re Co.
2055 7rt» Ave.
New York, N.Y.
Sa< Cadet
DOG FOOD
16-oz.
Cans 35c
The tragedy of the “technical
kidnapings" as they are called,
is the havoc wreaked upon an
Innocent child Who becomes a
pawn in a chess war between
parents. Often perpetrated out of
•beer spite or hatred, it's gener
ally regarded by police as a
family squabble, and no effort is
made to find or punish the kid
naping parent.
Fear Publicity
Distraught parents either un
able to obtain police aid or more
often anxious to avoid it for fear
of unfavorable publicity, frequent
ly appeal to a private agency
to aid them locate the abscond
ing spouse and child.
Leader in the fieW*l9 Baa
Eisenberg, private investigator
and head of Tracers Company
of America, specialists in
missing persona for the past
years. He has handled thou
of "tsskwirsl kidnaping" cases
In 75 percent of the cases his
company has succeeded in locat
ing both patent and child.
Once Tracer* finds them, it*
task is completed. The company
investigates each case thorough
ly before taking aa assignment,
and it refuses to betoate tovolv
ed in <*aotnten--kidnap’’Wattlee or
in mattew Which are properly
the jurisdiction of local, state and
federal authorities. But in many
cases the mere finding of a run
away paratt and child may .help
tbe aggrieved parent to regain
legal custody of * child -A‘
Mr.;,$W* Mr*. John X were
divoraefl. >A court awarded cus
tody of thktr 3 yadr 4)8.daughter
to the father. Mrc X refused
give up the child. She snatched
her and fled to Dellas. Her Dus
band fraught proceedings against
her tMttaSe di-appeared again
with W* child, this time leaving'
4 years of fruit-!
MT. X employed
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 ---
16 • V. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Sept. 28, 1963
4 Harlem
Spots Lose
Licenses
"Gone Are The Days
Is A Howl A Minute
Four Harlem nightspots were
slapped with suspension of their
licenses by the State Liquor Au-j
thority in what appeared to be a
stepped up campaign against vio
lators of the ABC laws.
Heaviest suspension went to the
E.S. Restaurant, Inc . of 380 W
125th St., which had its license
suspended for 20 days, beginning
Sept. 24. for permitting gambling
on the premises.
Other suspensions Included a
15-day closing of the St. Nicholas
Restaurant, Inc. 403 W. 145th St.,
from Sept 16-Oct. 1. for permitt
ing the bar to become disorderly;
and a 10-day suspension of the
grocery license of Evangelos
Pau'.ogianis. 2116 8th Ave., for
selling beer during prohibited
By JESSE H. WALKER
Ossie Dovis’ hit Broadway play,
"Purlie Victorious” is oow a rol
licking film at the Trans-Lux
East Theatre and so much the
better, since more people will
see this wonderfifl spoof on race
relations on the screen.
Now called "Gone Are the
Days'* — a much better title
since the days Davis writes about
are gone (we hope!) —this corny,
hilarious, satirical slap at white
racism should bring even a laugh
from Governor Wallace. It's a
howl a minute
With Davis repeating his role
of Purlie Victorious and his wife,
Ruby Dee again as Lutiebelle
Gussie Mae Jenkins, the same
cast that was seen on Broadway
appears again in the same roles
with the exception of Hilda
Haynes who now appears In the
role of Missy which Helen Martin
was seen on stage.
Serious Lessen
Godfrey Cambridge as the Un
cle Tom Gitlow (“You're the boss,
boss”) and Sorrell Booke as Capt.
Cotchipee. Alan Alda as the 01'
Cap'n’s liberal son, Charlie, Beah
Manequins 500
INTEREST INCOME
TOTAL RECEIPTS
DISBURSEMENTS:
DONATIONS TO ORGANIZATIONS
Morningside Community
Center
Children’s Aid Society
First Junior Guardsmen
NYC (369th)
N.Y. Mission Society —
Camp Minisink
Mt. Morris
Children Center.-
Vocational Guidance
Work Shop Center
InterDepartmental Neigh-
* hood Service Center
Child Care
Committee, Inc. '
$1,6
£
f
£
3
2
3
OTHER EXPENSES:
Audit
Artist
Printing
Prizes and Awards
Secretarial Service
Flowers and Decorations
Tickets
Fares
$4,550.00
NET CASH DECREASE DURING FISCAL
YEAR ENDED AUGUST 31, 1963
ADD — CASH BALANCE
AUGUST 31, 1962
CASH BALANCE — AUGUST 31, 1963
$ (266.78)
$ 761.33
Richards as Idella. Charles Welch
as the Sheriff and Ralph Roberts
as his deputy, all add to the one-
hour and 37 minutes of laughter
which is actually underlined with
a serious lesson.
Although “Gone Are the Days”
has opened at an art theatre,
we're hoping that It gets wide
distribution throughout the coun
try, and especially is it welcome
at this time of the “Negro Revo
lition’* since it lampoons so thor
oughly the die-hard elements In
the Civil rights struggle by laugh
ing at segregation.
That takes A lot of doing. But
Mr. Davis ana his superb cast
do it. And you'll have a wonder
ful time watching them.
It's not “Grand Hotel" at Ra
dio City Music Hall these days
but “V.I.Ps”, a modern-styled
film of Very Important Persons
and chocked full of such top mo
vie names as Elizabeth Taylos,
Richard Burton, Louis Jordon,
Linda Christian, Orson Welles,
Elsa Martinelli, Rod Taylor and
Margaret Rutherford.
This time the setting Is In a
London Airport, where the peo
ple waiting for a scheduled trans
atlantic takeoff are all confronted
with special problems when the
plane is held up because of the!
London fog.
Husband Wife
Miss Taylor and Burton, ap
pearing together for the first
time since “Cleopatra", are hus
band and wife la thia Terence
Rattigan screenplay. But tat this
the beautiful Elizabeth la running
away from her spouse with the
gigolo. Louis Jordan. This is a
triangle to end all triangles as
Burton pleads, broods, threatens
and becomes shattered in his ef
forts to hold on to Miss Taylor.
The fog brings many other won
derful problems to the “V.I.P.t”
— such as movie producer Orsop
Welles trying to leave the country
by midnight to avoid income
taxes, Rod Taylor, an industria
list trying to reach New York to
cover a bouncing check and
Margaret Rutherford as a simple
old dutchess traveling tourist
class.
It’s a super deluxe film, with
super deluxe players, in panavi-
sion and Metrocolor, beginning
its second week Thursday.
On the stage is "Far East. Far
West,” a new spectacle produced
by Russell Markert. Featuring the
Ballet in an exotic oriental set
ting with Harrison and Fisher in
a dance specialty, the show also
presents the Rockettes in a con
trasting western scene dressed
as cowboys. The Music Hall's
traditional seasonal presentation,
“Koi Nldrei,” opens the show .' .
J.H.W.
A TEN YEAR MAN — Pop
ular liquor salesman, Frank
Bizzell receives a B u 1 o v a
Watch from Leo Lehrman,
Eastern Division manager of
Hunter - Four Roses Distilling
Co., in honor of ten years of
service with the company.
Shown at a luncheon celebrat
ing the ocassion are 1 to r:
Mike Hedley, Bill Grace, P. &
S. Liquor Store; Jack Hart,
Eastern Division sales mana-
ger of Hunter's, Frank Blxaell,
Leo Lehrman. Bob Murray.
Eastern Division merchandise
manager; George Palmer,
sales representative for the
Amsterdam News.
(Photo by McAdams)
1
■
■ " 'f j
■ 1 j
WHEN OLD BUDDIES MEET- gether. The N.Y Chapter ser
ifs more than a treat, and ved as host for the affair which
that it was at the reunion was held in the Skyline Room
dance of the ‘Club 249, Inc ,” of the Hotel Theresa. Shown
last week, when this group of from left: Morris Page, presi-
World War II veterans got to- * dent of N. Y. Chapter; Wade
Shaw, president o f Washing
ton, D. C. Chapter; Kermit
White, president of Pittsburgh
Chapter; and John Kirby, Jr.
chairman of Publicity Commit-
(Photo by McAdams)
tee
Second Benefit For Musicians Aid Society
The second benefit concert to Allen, Herman Autrey, Buck Johnson. Drums* Panama Fran-
aid the Musicians Aid Society Clayton. Wild Bill Davison, Lou cis. Jimmie Crawford, Joe Jones,
will be held Saturday at Central Metcalf, Pee Wee Erwin. Clari- Herb Cowens and Hap Gormley.
Plaza, 2nd Avenue near 6th net: Buster Bailey. Tony Parent!,-------------------------------
Street where the Louis Metcalf Garvin Bushell and Eddie Bare- . .
,„d Vic Dickenson bands will
Trombone: Tyre. G1, n n. M » Beilbkfn
.
. t . Jimmy Archey, Herb Fleming,
play. The concerts begin at 9 Conrad Janis, Vic Dickerson. The musical for “Ballad Foi
j Piano: Cliff Jackson. M a r t y Blmshire" is Samuel Benskta am!
p.m.
Guests artists Include the fol- Napoleon. Red Richards, Hank not Samuel Benshin as reportet
lowing: Trumpets - Henry "Red” Duncan. Sammy Price, Clarence in last week's publication.
MONDAY NIGHT CAMP FUND STATEMENT
OF RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS
SEPTEMBER 1, 1962 TO AUGUST 31, 1963
RECEIPTS:
Taverns — Date Amount Total
$ 98.00
136.50
125.50
109.00
106.75 575.75
Palm Cafe
16^29-62
12-10-62
2-18-63
4-29-63
6-24-63
Dawn Cafe
11-5-62
1- 14-63
2- 25-63
5-6-63
Midway Lounge
11-12-62
1-21-63
3-18-63
5-20-63
Franks Restaurant
10- 15-62
11- 26-62
2-4-63
4-1-63
6-3-63
Linnette’s Bar & Grill
10-22-62
12-3-62
2-11-63
4-8-63
6-10-63
La Famine
11-19-62
1-28-63
3-25-63
5-27-63
Wells Music Bar
4-22-63
6-17-63
Le Petite Paris
3-11-63
Baby Grand
1-7-63
£
Goldbrick Inn
5-13-63
100.00
80.00
76.00
73.00
SPECIAL DONATIONS FROM INDUSTRIES
TOTAL
$3,203.25
Ballantine Beer
Schaefer Brewery.
Seagram Distillers
Apollo Theatre
Pabst Beer
Rheingold Beer
Schenley’s
$ 500.00
100.00
100.00
100.00
100.00
100.00
25.00
OTHER SPECIAL DONATIONS
200.00
100.00
100.00
50.00
25.00
The Winsomettes
Bottle & Cork
Sales Club
Sae Mores Club
Progressive Beauty
Shop Owners of
Brooklyn
Annie Owens Boyd
MIBlK*'SielSEU.IHG
SCOTCH WHRW
Mary Lou
Williams
To Wells’
All those with a flair for the
good life who call at Joe Wells’!
Chicken 'n' Waffles 'n' Jazz ren-
devous, 2249 7th Ave. --nt West
132nd St. — can expect a rare
treat beginning the evening of
October 1.
The imaginative artistry of
pianist Mary Lou Williams will
be on display!
For two weeks Mary Lou will (
be presiding — and performing
— at Joe Wells’ upstairs Garden
Supper Club, holding deeply en-
grossing, richly rewarding' con-1
versations in jazz.
Miss Williams has long been
away from the uptown entertain
ment scene. She has not con-'
ducted her keyboard seminars at!
Joe Wells' since last March. ,
"J have many new things to
say," she related the other dayj
at dinner, "and I want to share
them with others — through con-'
versations in jazz.’’
Jackie McLean
At Town Hall
Alto "saxophonist Jackie Mc
Lean, a 1963 Downbeat Poll Win
ner will be heard In concert
with an all-star group at Town
Hall, Saturday. Sept. 28 at 8:30
p.m.
Accompanying him will be
Grachan Moncur on trombone,
Bobby Hutcherson on vibes, Lar
ry Ridley on bass and Clifford
Jarvis on drums.
Summer Showcase
ISPA Presents
The International School of
Performing Arts presents Its
Premier Workshop Showcase for
1963 Sunday and Monday at the
school located at 225 W 28th St
Directed by Richard Ward, It
featured Ruby Pearson and
Frank Archie in "Golden Boy",
Sandy Edelstein and Edmqpd Lu
go in "Return To Kansas City”,
Leslie Rivers and All Colon in
“Hatful <4 Rain".
Also Sandy Edelstein and
Frank Archie in "Born Yester
day”, Ruby Pearson and Ed
mund Lugo In “Winterset", and
Juanita Bethea and Leslie Riv
ers in "Yerma".
The Sensational
Dynamic Yeung Seng Stylist
SONNY LEE
Formerly with Fnrgy 6 Bess, Sen* Dance A Comic M.C.
ruth McFadden
Rythm I Blues Receding Star
VANILLA WAFER, the Exotic 0m
Hoi Singer and His All Stan
Johnny Taylor at the Organ • Chinese Amer. Cuisine
Free Adm. Never a Cover • Cant. Music A Ent.
319 West 125th St.
Res: UN 4-6481-1180
M0 2 4362
VISIT OUR SPACIOUS and LUXURIOUS
RESTAURANT AND COCKTAIL LOUNGE
DELICIOUS LUNCHEONS AND DINNERS SERVED DAILY
FEATURING NIGHTLY
* FOR YOUR LISTENING PLEASURE
CURUE HAMNER
ANO HIS ALL STAR BAND
CHOP HOUSE &
SEA FOOD
313-315 WIST 123th Street
Rl 9 9146 9116
.
CHOICE WINES
3 BROADWAY
NEAR WEST 145 ST.
, NEW YORK 31, N. T. - «U 1-7270
""thentic Cantonese Cuisine and good American Food
SPECIAL FACILITIES FOB SOCIAL OCCASIONS
BANQUETS a RECEPTIONS • DINNERS*
Cocktail Lounge and Air Conditioning
Orders Prepared To Take Out
OT9GW to FS/MGt
MIK at TONY X/AS*// STBAK
IERENDAS /VV HOUM
Ceeolete leedwees • Dlneer - Ale Cwte
134th ft. A 7tfc Avo. AD 4-9739
JOE WELLS presents
The World's Greatest Female Exponent hi Jazz
MARY LOU WILLIAMS
Opening Tuesday, October 1st
with her latest recording
"JAZZ FOR THE SOUL"
2249 7fh Avo., NJ. 21, N.Y.
AU 3-8244-819
TOP CLUB
354 WEST 125 STRUT
Rl
"VISIT OUR COMFORTABLE LOVE SEAT LOUNGE"
Now Available For Recaptions, Cocktail Parties,
Mooting Room, at Attractive Rates
MADRID BAR & GRILL
1902 7th Avenoe near 116th Street
UN 4 734
521 CLUB
Franklin Ave. and Fulton St., B'lyn ST 3-8374
Donee to tho Music of Jimmy Oliver
and tho Seal Twisters
Ladies Nits Every Wed. — Aodiooco Participation Shows
Open 7 p.m. to 3 o.m., Floor Shows Every Night
Friday - Saturday - Sunday
laReckt A Bey - Atre-Cehon Dancers
Indra Exetk Fire Dancers - Sitter Rosetta Smith, Seng Stylist
Sept. 26, Dave "Baby" Cortex
NOTED FOR OUR
DELICIOUS STEAKS, CHOPS
CHICKEN and RICE DINNERS
SfcBVKn DAILY
At S»r - \OHMA CLI.ISON. LUCY FOFtTK AND BUOTHFR BRAXTON
_____
GOLD BRICK INN
HARLEM'S NEWEST AND MOST DISTINCTIVE RESTAURANT AND BAR
CHINESE-AMERICAN DINING ROOM
AMSTERDAM AVt nt l$7lb ST.
AU 3-8792
"SAVE WHILE YOU RAVE"
Amsterdam Avo. at 15flh H.
RESTAURANT K BAR
"INSOUCIANTLY YOURS" WA 3-9749
SPANISH 1
AMERICAN
RESTAURANT
Established 1924
WERE FAMOUS FOR ABSOLUTELY NOTHING I
Bet stilt Being business at the
SELBRA'S MIDWAY LOUNGE
415 W. 125th Street
UN 4-923
Tb Serve Yea, Beatrice, Sonja, Roberta, Loaaio A Leroy
GOLDEN Grill
SA 2 9806
2017 5th Avenoe
Uptown's newest most elegant Supper Club
& Cocktail Lounge — luncheon served daily
SCOTCH
WHISKY
not nucmaoHAM
> tearogAwow i
. «scMvtu.*«
.
" 7 ••
llWSOmf »■ «(»»»»» >,*oa»7
v«™. .
I
J
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