Sign of the Cross: 1943
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New York, May 1943. “A Harlem street scene.” Medium-format nitrate negative by Gordon Parks for the Office of War Information. View full size.
Sign of the Cross: 1943
Dave
Thu, 16 Feb 2012 20:51:41 GMT
Sign of the Cross: 1943
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New York, May 1943. “A Harlem street scene.” Medium-format nitrate negative by Gordon Parks for the Office of War Information. View full size.
Sign of the Cross: 1943
Dave
Thu, 16 Feb 2012 20:51:41 GMT
http://assets.dnainfo.com/generated/video/2011/12/1324578930.mov/image320x240.jpg
Rival beau kills girlfriend’s man at her 17th birthday party: cops
An 18-year-old Manhattan man was shot dead early Friday at a Harlem birthday party, apparently by his girlfriend’s other beau, police sources said. Walter Sumpter was struck once in the chest by a gunman on W. 154th St.
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Rival beau kills girlfriend’s man at her 17th birthday party: cops
CORINNE LESTCH, ROCCO PARASCANDOLA
Sat, 31 Dec 2011 03:27:42 GMT
December 19, 2011 7:20am | By Jeff Mays, DNAinfo Reporter/Producer

HARLEM—The Lenox Lounge and its historic Zebra Room may soon be changing its stripes.
The iconic Harlem landmark, located at 288 Lenox Avenue between 124th and 125th streets since 1939, has hosted jazz greats such as Billie Holiday, Miles Davis and John Coltrane and is up for lease.
The 2,250 square foot Art Deco lounge can be had for a cool $20,500 per month starting in February, according to a listing by Walker Malloy & Company.
Sources close to the deal also say that celebrity chef Marcus Samuelsson, who operates the popular Red Rooster Harlem just a block away, has expressed interest in the space.

The current lease, which the owner is not renewing, is below market value, according to a source close to the transaction who asked not be named because of the sensitive nature of the negotiations.
“It is getting a lot of attention from restaurants that want to expand,” said the source. “It’s an iconic establishment that has been there forever. The Lenox Lounge speaks for itself.”
BY HEIDI EVANS
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Sunday, December 18 2011, 6:00 AM
Mariela Lombard/Mariela Lombard for News
Profile of W. 114th – between Frederick Douglass and Adam Clayton Powell Jr Blvds. has been a haven for drug dealers for decades. Now with new condos being built, young urban professionals are joining forces with long time public housing residents to rid their storied block of crime.
Mariela Lombard/Mariela Lombard for News
Ron Peterson, president of condo association at 2110 Frederick Douglass Blvd. and Roberta Coleman, NYCHA tenant association leader.
Mariela Lombard/Mariela Lombard for News
Profile of W. 114th – between Frederick Douglass and Adam Clayton Powell Jr Blvds. has been a haven for drug dealers for decades. Now with new condos being built, young urban professionals are joining forces with long time public housing residents to rid their storied block of crime.
Mariela Lombard/Mariela Lombard for News
Profile of W. 114th – between Frederick Douglass and Adam Clayton Powell Jr Blvds. has been a haven for drug dealers for decades. Now with new condos being built, young urban professionals are joining forces with long time public housing residents to rid their storied block of crime.
Mariela Lombard/Mariela Lombard for News
Profile of W. 114th – between Frederick Douglass and Adam Clayton Powell Jr Blvds. has been a haven for drug dealers for decades. Now with new condos being built, young urban professionals are joining forces with long time public housing residents to rid their storied block of crime.
Roberta Coleman has seen it all on her beloved Harlem block.
For the nearly 40 years she has lived on W. 114th St. between Frederick Douglass and Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvds., there’s been a turf war between the mothers and grandmothers on the tree-lined street and the never-ending stream of drug dealers.
But now there is hope that power may finally be shifting for good to the long-suffering, law-abiding citizens of the storied block.
With gentrification moving at a blazing pace in Harlem, Coleman, still going strong at 67 as president of the public housing tenant’s association, has a new partner in fighting crime: the young urban professionals who have moved into two luxury condos on the corner.
After two murders on the block this summer – not involving people who lived there – newcomers and oldtimers have joined forces to drive out the dealers.
Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/a-harlem-block-crime-article-1.992813#ixzz1gu5SUVFm
A Walmart opening in Harlem could put many of the smaller stores selling fresh food in the neighborhood out of business, according to a report by Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer.
Walmart in Harlem would put other food stores out of business, report predicts
ERIN DURKIN
Thu, 15 Dec 2011 11:00:46 GMT
Off-Duty Cop Shoots Suspected Groper In Harlem Subway Station
An off-duty cop shot and apprehended a suspected groper in a subway station in Harlem today. The shooting happened on the platform of an A train at the 125th Street station just after 12:30 p.m. According to the News, a mother screamed that her teen daughter had just been groped, and a second woman also came forward that she had been groped. The officer spotted the suspect sitting on a bench in front of the train: “As he approaches [the suspect] the officer identifies himself as a police officer,” said NYPD spokesman Paul Browne. “A struggle ensues and one round is discharged from the officer’s gun, striking the suspect in the [buttocks].“ [ more › ]
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Off-Duty Cop Shoots Suspected Groper In Harlem Subway Station
Ben Yakas
Fri, 09 Dec 2011 21:03:39 GMT
Judge lectures Harlem families to take responsibility as he sentenced Drug Dealers. Did he go to far? Was he right on point?
Was Supreme Court Justice Edward McLaughlin calling a spade a spade, or did he go way too far as he urged parental responsibility at the sentencing of five violent Harlem drug dealers, including Jaquan Layne who is seen below.
This is regarding the so called 137th Street Crew. The gang was charged with drug, gun, and conspiracy crimes in Harlem. The name may sound familiar. It’s the same gang that recruited teens, including one time preppy school student Afrika Owes. She was just 15 years old when she carried guns for her then boyfriend, the leader of the group.
In the judge’s words:
“Gun violence in Harlem is the responsibility of that community.” Judge McLaughlin said as he sent the 21-year-old leader of the W. 137th St. gang, Jaquan “Jay Cash” Layne“ away for 20 years to life.
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I ask you Is it fair to paint the entire community with a broad brush? Or is this the type of tough love that the Harlem’s of America need?
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“If you do nothing, you are complicit.” The Judge said.
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I stop here to ask you to dig deep down in your soul in answering Judge McLaughlin statement. If you do nothing, you are complicit.”
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He urged families to do more to turn their kids from crime.
“If your relative is not doing homework, if you are not going to their school and talking with their teachers, then you contribute to your child’s and your community’s destruction,” the judge said.
“If your relative has money, jewelry and nice clothes but no job, your relative is in the drug business.”
There is “no gun genie” delivering weapons to kids, the judge continued.
Guns “are in your homes, whether you know it or not and whether you are blind to it or not.”
The judge’s words seemed to shock the families of the five gang members as they sat in the courtroom gallery waiting for their sons to be sentenced.
Several family members dismissed the judge’s words as racist.
“I can’t do this,” Layne’s sobbing grandmother said as she left court – mascara streaking her cheeks.
“With all these kids being sentence like this. I think he’s prejudice,” said the woman who would not give her name.
A second of her grandsons, Jahlyl Layne, 18, was sentenced to at least 7 ½ years behind bars and up to 23 ½ years.
Was the judge telling the truth? Or was he looking down at poor African American families? Would he lecture another community like this? But, are other groups killing themselves in the numbers that African Americans are? Was the judge doing the black community a favor? Does his comments perhaps reveal a contempt on his part that has been there for years? Would you want this judge hearing other cases involving African Americans or did he simply do the right thing speaking out this time? These are some serious questions to think about.
Judge lectures Harlem families to take responsibility as he sentenced Drug Dealers. Did he go to far? Was he right on point?
Dominic Carter
Wed, 30 Nov 2011 04:45:42 GMT
Yesterday a little Harlem liquor store was lambasted by members of the Mount Morris Park Historic District, which has been working hard to class up the neighborhood, and then along came this downmarket booze peddler to Lenox Avenue—their “Champs-Élysées”—with a garish neon sign and bulletproof glass. The sophisticated community improvers were hoping for a nice wine shop where they could enjoy nightly tastings, while others, like local handyman Rick Jones, were simply grateful to have a new “place to get drunk.” But now the city is stepping in to restore balance to the Force of Gentrification. [ more › ]

City Goes After “Ghetto” Harlem Liquor Store That Appalls The Neighbors
John Del Signore
Tue, 29 Nov 2011 17:45:59 GMT
Neon Liquor Store Sign Appalls Upscale Harlem Neighborhood
The Mount Morris Park Historic District in East Central Harlem is supposed to be a classy place, where celebrities like Maya Angelou enjoy dainty cucumber sandwiches and intellectual discourse ensconced in their multi-million dollar brownstones. But a new liquor store on Lenox Avenue and 119th Street is threatening to turn the neighborhood into a garish, crime-ridden Pottersville—its flashy neon sign and bulletproof plexiglass has some appalled local residents rushing to condemn the establishment in the “pages” of DNAinfo. [ more › ]
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Neon Liquor Store Sign Appalls Upscale Harlem Neighborhood
John Del Signore
Mon, 28 Nov 2011 18:07:09 GMT