You are on page 1of 145

Box# 31

Folder# 615
Word's Fair:
Newsletters (1)
Jan ,1964
..
January 7, 1964
Your Board of Governors has elected Mr. Joseph A. Martino
as its Chairman, to succeed Mr. William E. Robinson who has resigned.
At the same time, Mr. Stuart A. Constable was elected to
membership on the Board of Governors.
As a result of these changes, the Board of Governors is now
constituted as follows:
Chairman
Vice Chairman
Treasurer
Secretary
Ralph J. Bunche
John J. Clancy
Stuart A. Constable
Thomas J. Deegan, Jr.
Bernard F. Gimbel
Ex-Officio
Joseph A. Martino
Howard S. Cullman
Robert D. L. Gardiner
Richard C. Patterson
James C. Kellogg, III
Mrs. Mary W. Lasker
Matthias E. Lukens
Charles Poletti
Bayard F. Pope
Robert Moses
Austin J. Tobin
Richard C. Patterson
Secretary
'
...
. )c,_ (' ) eLl'. -t. .. ;._;
fiCACI TtlftOUOH
UMDIIIITAMDIHO
NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR 1964-1965 CORPORATION--- . JJ
EXPOSITION AT FLUSHING MEADOW PARK
FLUS/HMO !12 . 'Y.yTILEf'HOHEAREACOOE212WF 41964. CASLEAODAESSMWORLDSF'AIR"
January
2
'
1964
ROBERT MOSES
'ltEIIDENT
//
- ... l
/
-
/11/
//
/ MEMORANDUM TO STUART CONSTABLE
_/
FROM ROBERT MOSES
I want to be absolutely sure that we are keeping in
close touch with the various city departments which have
some jurisdiction or at any rate close official contact with
the Fair, - Borough President of Queens, Police, Fire,
Health, Buildings, D. S. C. , Highways, Traffic. I asswne
these officials know what we are doing and are periodically
briefed and taken on inspections. This should of course be
a continuous current business. Please give me memo.
President
RM:vr
....r._. .. @--.. 111 DAYS TO OPENING DAY
HACIE TMitOUOM
UNOI:IIITAIIOtllct
... ,
NEW YORK WORLD"S F"AIR 1964-1965 CORPORATION
INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION AT FLUSHING MEADOW PARK
F'LUIHINO 1!12. N.Y. TEU:ftHONIE AlitA Coo i!li! WF' H984 AOOIIESs'WORLDSFAIR"
January 2, 1964
ROBERT MOSES
II'IIESIDCIIT
MEMORANDUM TO THOMAS J. DEEGAN, JR.
FROM ROBERT MOSES
Murray Davis who is in immediate charge of the
April 22 Fair Opening arrangements, talked to me about the place of
the ceremony.
He is now discussing the subject with Stuart Constable,
General Potter and the others, beginning with you. My feeling is that
the' enclosed Fair Assembly Area presents the best location. It is easily
controlled by the police (ours and the City), Secret Service, F. B. I., etc.
It will hold about 18,000, all seated, and accommodate a large number
of VIP's on the platform. There wotild be two kinds of tickets- platform
and audience.
I am afraid the original idea of using the Fountain
of Industry area wouldn't work, more people to be sure, but almost
impossible to control and protect, standees instead of a seated audience,
etc., etc.
Will you please give some thought to this and indicate
what Murray can do beyond what he is already doing to meet the
House wishes and our problems.
RM:gls
President
----@--..
111 DAYS TO OPENING DAY
TO:
FROM:
SUBJECT:
Mr. Bill
Bill Donoghue
Magazine Coverage
Within roughly a period of five weeks, articles,
entire issues, or cover stories will appear in eleven
national magazines.
Readers Digest
Architectural Forum
Newsweek
Time
U. S. News & World Report
Life
Look
Seventeen
Vogue
Harper's
Popular Mechanics
Circulation
13,000,000
(21,000,000 Incl. Int.)
63,000
1,500,000
2,700,000
1,250,000
7,250,000
7,500,000
1,100,000
500,000
300,000
1,250,000
The total circulation of the above amounts to
36,413,000. This does not include the international
circulation of Readers Digest which amounts to 8,000,000.
cc: Miss Joyce Martin
Mr. P. J. McDonnell
Worlcl'a Fair OUIOI: Preu CeAa.r
New York World'a Fall 1984-1985 Corporation
f'1uahlng Meadow Park, Flu.lbiJig 52. NnYork
/
NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR&c6RPORATION
To: All Executives, Executive Date:
Committee, Staff, Consultants
and Board of Directors
From: William Berns
The attached kit being distributed world-wide
by First National City Bank is an indication
of the excellent promotion underway for the
Fair.
FIRST NATIONAL CITY BANK
THOMAS R. WILCOX
IXECUTIVE VICE PRESIOENT
Mr, Robert Moses, President
New York World
1
s Fair
1964-1965 Corporation
Flushing 52, New York
Dear Mr, Moses:
3911 PARK AVENUE, NEW YORK 21, N.Y.
December 30, 1963
As April ZZ
1
1964 draws near, we are stepping up our
promotion of the New York World
1
s Fair and of the services
we will be offering there,
l think you will be interested in the enclosed kit of
information about the Fair which we are presently distributing
to some 4,000 correspondent banks throughout the United States
and overseas, It is also being sent to il2,000 First National City
Bank Travelers Checks sale a agencies aad to 3,000 leading
business corporations.
I am writing to inform you of these promotional efforts
and also to let you know that f=he response indicates a great deal
of interest in the Fair !both in this country and abroad,
Sincerely,
;,,,,1 -,,,\ '' l/j r:l fJ I'J(,.J19f-', l"rurJ!tun Un >Pilllt'" pre\tnlrd by@ Unr!ed Steel

YDUR ANK AT THE FAIR
First National Crty it the only bank at the New York World's Fair 1964-1965. We will main-
tain two fully ttaffed banking centers on the fairgrounds. The Service Branch, designed
for the apeclat banking needs of the exhibitors, concessionaires, and working population
of the Fair, hu been open aince September 16th.
Poopte coming to aee the Fair will find our Visitors Branch, at the Ave. of Africa near
the Court of the Five Boroughs, geared to meet their special needs. It will be open
7 days a week from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. and have a multi-lingual staff representing the
worldwlde scope of Firat National City Bank.
TH WGPILC'I'B FAIPI BRANCHES WILL
PATUPI. THE MGST MODERN BANKING
CDNCBPTB AND FACILITIES .
They will be in constant touch with First National City's headquarters in Manhattan and
will be tied Into the communications network between the Bank's own city-wide and
worldwlde branch system and our thousands of correspondents throughout the U.S.A.
and around the world.
CITI8ANK'8 WDRLC'1
1
B FAIR FACILITIES AND
TAIIP ARE AT YOUR SERVICE!
l
l
< '',
'., ,: ..
r:.,..,

wfth, ., .....
.. .-..
.. .

-&eetfu


The:Q\ij;
. . ,;.
brM:ch'e
experlm

FIRST NATIONAL
CITY ..
serves the Greater New York area
with a complete network of full serv-
ice branches, located throughout
the city and suburban Nassau and
Westchester. Each one of them has
been designated an official New
York World's Fair Ticket and Infor-
mation Center.
The men and women who staff these
branches combine knowledge and
experience in every phase of retail
and corporate banking ... serving the
banking requirements of big and
small businesses and individual cus-
tomers. They are the people who will
serve you and your customers at the
World's Fair.
Plr:tT NATICINAL CITY ...
APIOUNCI THB CCJUNTRV .
APIDUND THa WDALCI
The Bank aervoa bualneas In all 60 of tho United Statee. We provide our large network
of correspondent banks with a wido range of services, helping to fulfill their needs and
those of their customers. They, In turn, help uu to &Orvf! our corporate and personal cus-
tomers outside New York.
Cltlbank also operates complete banks on-the-scene in 34 countries on 5 continents.
The people who staff our Overseas Division, in New York and in the branches abroad,
know the financial and economic climate of their respective areas. Most of them are
citizens of the country in which they work. They provide customers with full banking
services wherever their interests are ... in Caracas or Calcutta .. Lebanon or Liberia.
They make First National City ...
THE RIGHT BANK IN THE RIGHT PLACE
TO SERVE VDU!
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
... I
'I
CJ961, 1962, 1963 Nrw Yotl.. World'o; Fatt 1964-1965 Corporatton
' 4
. \ .. ~ ;
,,.
' '
,,
.. ... .., .
.. ""
. ,.
4. ,., '
.
..
' ..
- ~
'
I .
.,. .
, .. - ~ -
' '
j
I

Artist W. D. Shaw's interpretation of tire Fair some of tire pavilions in tire central exhibition area.
fY"' to +l-. i1l Under the symbol of the Unisphere, exhibits from all parts
{_.()me of the will be gathered/or your delight! 0 You'll visit
nd
+he .,d f gleaming pmilions ... wander through exotic temples and
a sre (A WlJrlU serene gardens ... tour towering fantasies of glass and steel.
0 You'll stroll picturesque promenades. . colorful fountains . .. sample foods from every corner of the
globe. D You'll wonder at predictions of zhings to come ... gaze at re-creations of things past. 0 You'll see
water shows ... theater productions ... circuses ... sports events ... fireH:orks ... symphonies and brass
bands. 0 In this Olympics of Progress you will truly see the best from all the world.

-., Unilltl Slota Stool
Cl , .. , - Y- -- ,.._. , .. 3 c..._.,_
fun walkontheland-
scape of the
moon, laugh at circus clowns
... see the Olympic trials ...
watch stage extravaganzas,
movies,showsandexhibitions.
Discover
Explore the new worlds of
science ... the cultures of dis-
tant lands ... man's greatest
accomplishments of today and
dreams of tomorrow.
[,' \r.) () \ l Dine hke an
l ' '
1
Arab1an po-
tentate or Hawaiian native ...
feast on French delicacies or
good American hot dogs ...
fine food for any budget.
R e 1 ax Pause in the_
C sparkle of
spectacular fountains ... visit
restful theatres, lounges. gal-
leries, stadiums, parks, play-
grounds, pools and gardens.
R 1
de Buses ... motor
trams or ch<ur
cars take you around the Fair
. . . view the Fair from a heli-
copter ... circle over a replica
of New York City.
Art Stand before
Michelangelo's
masterpiece, "Pieta" ... view
the great architecture of the
world . . . see marvels of
great sculpture and painting.
Enjoy all this ... and much more ... at the Fair!
Swiss Sky Ride
The Fair is a Family Affair!
No World Exposition ever had so much to offer each mem-
ber of the family ... from children's shows to fashion
shows ... from automobile racing to moonlight dancing!
Your visit will be a vacation, an education, an inspiration!
New York is a World's Fair Festival!
New York City extends a friendly welcome to your whole
family. New hotels are opening, new transportation facili-
ties are ready, everything is being planned for your comfort
and convenience. In 1964 and '65 the New York World's
Fair, together with Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts,
will make New York the most exciting city in the world .
The Fair opens April 22, 1964. Advance tickets are on sale
now. Adult admission-$2.00 ... children-$1.00 (2 to 12
years). Ask your travel agent for additional information.
NFW YORK WORlD's lf<IK 1964-19fJ5-1LllSitiNG 52, NIW YORK
FIRST NATIONAL CITY BANK
THE ONLY BANK AT THE FAIR .....
THE ONLY BANK YOUR FAMILY EVER NEEDS.
Printed in U S. A 102-lOOOM-4 1 63

..
..
l
{
. I
....
.. \ . ; j
. ...
I'
..
-I
.
..
..
l,
\}
..
.,
~
~
..
. ~
- ~
-," ..
;,
""'
--- ..... _ .. - ---. --
Sf ATE OF NEW JERSEY
County: Bergen
Name & Address
xo Tollgate Motel, Hudson Ter., Fort Lee, N.J.
xo Twin Ltk .. Motor Lodge, 256 Rt. 4, Paramus, N.J.
-------- -- -
Area Code:
201
Telephone
Number
WI 7-0707
HU 7-8500
Rooms Without Bath
Single Double
Rooms With Bath
Single
8.00
8.00-12.00
Double
12.00-14.00
10.00-16.00
County: Elltx Area Code: 201
--------------- ---------- - -------------- ----
x Carllon Hotel, 22 E. Park St., Newark, N.J. , ............. , ............... MI 2-7100 ................................... 7.50 ............ 8.50-10.50
x Douglll Hotel, 15 Hill St., Newark, N.J ................... , .............. MI 2-5100 ........................... . .. .. 6.0012.00 ...... 12.0020.00
x Enax Houae, 1050 Broad St., Newark 2, N.J ............................. MI 2-4400 ................................... 8.00- 9.00 ...... 11.50-12.50
xo Green' Hotel, 103 Pleasant Valley Way, West Orange, N.J ................ RE 1-2300 ...... 10.00 ........ 15.00-17.00 .... 15.00 ......... .20.00-22.00
xo Lucerne Motor Hotel, 1156 Broad St., Newark, N.J ........................ BI 3-4590 ....... 4.00-5.00 ...... 5.00 6.00 ..... 6.00- 7.00 ....... 8.00-11.00
Marlborough Hotel, 89 N. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N.J .............. OR 3-2811 ................................... 5.00 ............ 6.5010.00
xo MarrloU Motor Hotel, at Newark Airport, N.J. Tpke. (Ex. 14),. ............. , ..................................................................... .
Newark. N J .......................................................... MA 4-2454 ............ .to op 1964 ........... 9.00-15.00 ...... 14.0025.00
x Military Park Hotel, 16 Park Pl., Newark 1, N.J ........................... MA 34080 .................................... 7.00- 9.00 ...... 10.0013.00
x Robart Treat Hotel, 50 Park Pl., Newark 1, N.J ........................... MA 2-1000 .................................... 8.5015.00 ...... 12.00-20.00
Area Code: 201
County: Hudson
xo Chrla-Ann Motor Court, 1300 Tonnelle Ave., North Bergen. N.J ........... UN 73328 .. ..
.............. .............. .
.12.0014.00 .. .
xo Eael Gale Motor Hotel, 2600 Tonne lie Ave., North Bergen, N. J ............ UN 6-0400 ... .
.............. .............. .
.10.0014 00 .. .
x Holland Hotel, 9 Journal Square, Jersey City 6, N. J ...................... OL 34900 ... .
.. . 3 004.00... . .. 6 00 ........
..5.00 6.00 ...
xo Howard Johnaon'e Motor Lodge, 875 Paterson Plank Rd. ,Secaucus, N.J .. UN 4-1400 ... .
.............. .............. .
. .9.0014.00 .. .
xo Plaza Hotel, 91 Sip Ave., Jersey City, N.J ................................ OL 30100 ... .
.. . 5 25 .. " ...... 7.50 ........
..6.50- 9.00 .. .
Tunnel Rd., r.Jorlh Bergen, N.J ..... _-_:: ............ UN 4-4500 ... .
.............. .............. .
..9.00 ...... ..
County: Mlddleaex Area Code 201
----------
xo Dutch Maid Motale, Rts. 1 & 9, Woodbridge, N.J .......................... ME 41394 .. ..
xo Edlaon Motor Lodge, U.S. At. 1 at Wilson Ave., Edison, N.J .............. CH 70633 .. ..
xo Howard Johnson' a Motor Lodge, Rts. 1 & 18, New Brunswick, N. J ......... CH 9-8000 ... .
xo Roger Smith Motor Hotel, 18 Livingston Ave., New Brunswick, N.J ........ CH 7-6000 ... .
xo Swill Molal, U.S. Rt. 1 at Garden Stale Pkwy., Metuchen. N.J ............ LI 8. 9500 .. ..
---------------- Area Code: 201
.. 366 - 3300.... .. . 5.00 ........
.. CA 81300 .. ..
.. JE 9-0451 .. ..
Area Code 201
County: Morris
- -----------
xo Dutton Hotal a Motor Lodge, 63 N. Sussex St .. Dover, N.J ............. .
xo Pine Brook Motor Lodge, Rt. 46, Pine Brook, N.J ....................
xo Revere Hotel, 20 Community Pl., Morristown, N.J ..................... .
------ ----------
County: Pa11alc
----------- ----------- --
X Alexander Hamlllon Hotel, 55 Church St., Paterson 12, N.J ............... SH 28000 ....... 5.50 ....... .
x Lincoln Hotel, 4 Henry St., Passaic, N.J ................................. PR 7-3300 ....... 3.754.75 ... .
-------------------------- -- ------.
Area Code. 201
County: Som_af!!_l_ ______ .
- ---
xo Arch Motel, U.S. Hwy. 22 (East Bound La.), Somerville, N. J ............... RA 2-3555 ... .
xo Old Mill Inn, Rt. 202, Bernardsville, N. J .................................. JE 8-1413 ... .
County: Union Area Code. 201
-- -------- ----- --
X Elizabeth Carteret Hotel, 1155 E. Jersey St., Elizabeth 4, N. J .............. EL 3 4000 .. ..
xo Park Eaat Hotel, 1065 E. Jersey St .. Elizabeth 4, N.J ....................... EL 53200 ... .
xo Park Hotel, 123 W. 7th St., Plainfield, N.J ................................. PL 63400 ... .
xo Swan Motel, U.S. Rts. 1 & 9, Linden, N. J ................................. WA 5-5300 ... .
xo VIllage Motel 8o Swim Club, Hwys. 1 & 9, Rahway, N. J ..................... 382 - 1500 ... .
xo Winfield ScoU Hotel, 323 N. Broad St., Elizabeth, N.J ..................... EL 21000 ... .
------------------ --------
------------- ----------
STATE OF CONNECTICUT
_ ___ ____ ___ Area Code: 203
.............................
xo Admiral Motel, 3n Main Ave., Norwalk 7, Conn ........................ .
x Arcade Hotel, 1001 Main St., Bndgeport3, Conn ....................... .
xo Bridgeport Motor Inn, Rl. 1A (Ex. 24 Conn. Tpke.), Bridgeport, Conn ... .
xo Courteay Inn, Conn. Thrwy. (Ex. 14-15), Norwalk, Conn ................ .
xo Fairfield Motor Inn, 417 Post Rd., Fairfield. Conn ...................... .
xo Greenwich New Englander Motor Hotel, 1114 Post Rd. (Ex. 5 Conn ..... .
Thrwy.), Greenwich, Conn .......................................... .
xo Homeatead Inn, 420 Field Point Rd., Greenwich, Conn ................ .
xo Howard Johnson' Motor Lodge, Conn. Tpke. (Ex. 11), Darien, Conn ... .
xo Malnstreeler Motor Lodge, Main St. & Chapel St., Bridgeport 3, Conn ..
xo Merritt Parkway Motor Hotel, Merritt Pkwy.-Black Rock Tpke., ........ .
Fairfield, Conn ..................................................... .
xo Norwalk Motor Inn, 99 East Ave. (Conn. Tpke. Ex. 16). Norwalk, Conn .. .
xo Pequot Motor Inn, 3471 Post Rd., Southport, Conn ..................... .
xo Pickwick Arm Hotel, Post Rd. (Rt. 1), Greenwich, Conn ........ .
xo Roger Smith Motor Lodge & Hotel, 55 River St., Stamford, Conn ....... .
*O Sllvermlne Tavern a Gallarleo, Perry Ave .. Norwalk, Conn ............. .
xo Stamford Houaa, 84 W. Park Pl., Stamford, Conn ..................... ..
xoo Stamlord Motor Hotel, 1209 E. Main St., Stamford, Conn .............. ..
xo Stratford Motor Inn, 6905 Main St., Stratford, Conn .................... .
.. VI 7 2416 .. ..
.. ED 40184 .. ..
.. FO 74404 .. ..
.. TE 84371 .. ..
.. CL 6-0491 .. ..
. . 3.003 50 ..... 5.50 6.50 ...
............... ............. .
........ to ope 1963 ........ .
............... ............. .
.............................
.. NE 73691 .. ..
.. TO 97500 .. ..
.. OL 53933 .. ..
.. FO 64321 .. ..
............... ............. .
... 7.007.50. . . . .10 00-10.50 ...
............................
........ to ope 1963 ........ .
.............................
.. CL 95264 .. ..
.. TE 8-5531 .. ..
.. CL 9 7885 .. ..
.. TO 9-2100 .. ..
.. DA 3-2112 .. ..
.. VI 7 4558 ... .
.. DA 43113 ... .
.. DA 52655 .. ..
.. DR 87351 .. ..
.. CL 95236 .. ..
............... ............. .
............... ............. .
............... ............. .
... 5 00-6 00 ...... 9 00 ... " ...
. . . 5.00-5 75 ...... 8.00-8.75 .. '.
. . . 6.00 ......... 10.00 ...... ..
............... ............. .
............... ............. .
............... ............. .
............... ............. .
. .6 50 9.50 .. .
.. 6.00 9.00 .. .
..9.5011 50 .. .
.. 8 00-11.00 .. '
. .6.00-10 00 .. .
. .7 50 8.75 .. .
. .8 0012.00 ...... 10.00-14.00
. .5 00- 6.00 ....... 7 50 9.50
. . 8.50-10.00. . . . . ,12.0015.00
.11.0013 00... .. .12.00-19 00
.10.00-12.00... . .. 12.00-18.00
............ .
.. 9.0020.00. . . . .13 00-20.00
..9.00 9 50 ...... 11.00-16.00
.10.00-14.00. ' .... 14.00-16.00
. .8 00-15 00 ...... 12.0020.00
.............. ............ .
.10 00-14.00 ...... 14 00-18 00
. .9 00-10 00 ...... 12.00-16.00
. .8 0010 00 ...... 12.00-17.00
. .8 0012 00. ' ..... 12 00-16.00
. .6.7520.00 .. ' .... 11 0020 00
. .8.00 ..... ' . . . .. 10.00-16.00
. .8.2511 75 ....... 11.2512.75
. . 9.00-11.00 ...... ,12.00-20.00
.10 00 ............ 16.00. "" .
. .8.50-20.00 ....... 13.50-20.00
xo Weatpor1 New Englander Motor Hotel, 1595 Post Rd., Westport. Conn .. .
xo Waetporter Motel, 295 Westport Ave. (U.S. Rl. 1), Norwalk, Conn ..... ..
..8.28 " .. " ...... 12.42 .. " .
.. VI 7 5827 .. .. ............. .
I
I
\
I
I
\
\
I
i
' I
I
I
I
I
I.
LONG ISLAND SOU NO
Hltllt II.I.CH
ATLANTIC OCEAN
The material contained herein is furnished solely for the Informa-
tion and guidance of persons using this folder. Effort has been
made to compile the information carefully, but neither the New
York World's Fair 1964-1965 Corporation. nor the New York Con-
venton and Visttors Bureau, Inc. nor the New York World's Fair
Housing Bureau guarantees the rates or other information herein
set forth or assumes any responsibility for errors or omissions
or for damages which may result from reliances upon such rates
or upon the information contained.
INTRODUCTION
This folder has been prepared to assist y
your visit to the New York World's Fair 1
published by the New York World's Fair He
the Fair's official housing service, which I
the New York Convention and Visitors E
profit civic organization.
All the establishments listed are partie
World's Fair Housing Bureau program, anc
to maintain the highest standard of fair c
relations with World's Fair visitors.
Tho listings, which include virtually every
and motel in New York City and its en
ranged according to geographical areas
the map at left. Reservations for accomo
of these establishments during the World
(April 22-0ctober 18, 1964 and Apri121-0c
may be made:
1. Through the New York World's Fair He
whose address is 30 Rockefeller Plaza
New York.
2. Directly to the hotel or motel you select, I
shown In this folder.
3. Through your travel agent, who can pi
valion either through the Housing Bureau
the hotel or motel of your choice.
_ rates listed In New York City and 31f.
STATE OF NEW YORK
New York City Borough: ManhaH811
Name & Address
x Abbey Hotel,151 W. 51st St., N.Y. 19, N.Y ..... ..
x Adame Hotel, 2 E. 86th St., N. Y. 28, N. Y ........ .
x Alamac Hotel, 71st St. & Broadway, N.Y. 23, N. Y
x Alden Hotel, 225 Central Park W., N.Y. 24, N. Y .
Algonquin Hotel, 59 W. 44th St., N. Y. 36, N. Y
x Allarton HOUH lor Women, 130 E. 57th St., N. Y. l
x AlrH Hotel, 37 E. 64th St., N. Y. 21, N.Y . ,.
x America Hotel, 145 W. 47th St., N. Y. 36, N. Y .....
Americana ol N- York, 52nd St. & 7th Ave., N. Y
x Arlington Hotel, 18 W. 25th St., N. Y. 10, N.Y .
x Aehley Hotel, 157 W. 47th St .. N. Y. 38, N.Y ......
x Aetor Hotel, 44th St. & Broadway (Times Square)
Barblzon lor Women, 140 E. 83rd St., N.Y. 21, N.
x BarblzonPiua Hotel, 106 Central Park S. (6th Av
x Barclay Hotel, 111 E. 48th St.. N. Y. 17, N.Y .
x Beacon Hotel, 2130 Broadway, N.Y. 23, N.Y .
x Beaux Arll Hotel, 310 E. 44th St., N.Y. 17, N. Y
x Bedford Hotel, 118 E. 40th St.. N.Y. 18, N.Y ......
x Beekmen Hotel, 575 Park Ave. (83rd St.), N.Y. 21,
x Beekman Tower Hotel, 3 Mitchell Pl. (1st Ave.--491
x Belmont Piau Hotel, 49th St. at Lexington Ave.,
herein Ia furnished solely lor the Informs-
persons using this folder. Ellert has been
Information carelully, but neither the New
Corporation, nor the New York Con-
Inc. nor the New York World's Fair
the rates or other Information herein
any responsibility for orrora or omissions
may result from reliances upon such rates
on contained.
INTRODUCTION
This folder has been prepared to assist you in planning
your visit to the New York World's Fair 1964-1965. It is
published by the New York World's Fair Housing Bureau,
the Fair's official housing service, which is a division of
the New York Convention and Visitors Bureau, a non-
profit civic organization.
All the establishments listed are participants In the
World's Fair Housing Bureau program, and have pledged
to maintain the highest standard of fair dealing In their
relations with World's Fair visitors.
The listings, which Include virtually every transient hotel
and motel In New York City and its environs, are ar-
ranged according to geographical areas as shown on
the map at left. Reservations for accomodations at any
of these establishments during the World's Fair periods
(Apri122-0ctober 18, 1964 and Apri121-0ctober 17, 1965)
may be made:
1. Through the New York World's Fair Housing Bureau,
whose address is 30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York 20,
New York.
2. Directly to the hotel or motel you select, at the addresses
shown in this folder.
3. Through your travel agent, who can place your reser-
vation either through the Housing Bureau or directly with
the hotel or motel of your choice.
STATE OF NEW YORK
New York City Borough: Manhattan
Name & Address
The rates listed herein are those reported as current .
when this information was compiled in 1962, and are
subject to change. Early in 1964, the New York World's
Fair Housing Bureau will issue a revised edition of this
folder showing the rates In effect at that time. Another
edition will be published at the beginning of 1965. All
participating hotels and motels have agreed that their
rates during the World's Fair seasons In 1964 and 1965
will not exceed the regular rates in effect at the beginning
of the 1espective calendar years.
The symbol x preceding the name of an establishment
in the listings indicates that air conditioned units are
available. An asterisk (*) indicates that housekeeping
units are availabiQ. A circle (o) indicates that the estab-
lishment is a motel or motor hotel.
Further information about hotel and motel accommoda-
tions for the New York World's Fair 1964-1965 is avail-
able from the Worlci's Fair Housing Bureau, as well as
from travel agents and other travel specialists through-
out the world.
In making reservations through the World's Fair Housing
Bureau, please indicate the establishment of your first
choice and at least three alternatives. The Housing
Bureau is operated as a convenience for visitors to the
World's Fair and does not charge for its services.
-------------------
Area Code:
212
Telephone
Number
Rooms Without Bath
Single Double
Rooms With Bath
Single Double
Abbey Hotel, 151 W. 51st St., N. Y. 19, N. Y ............................... Cl 6 9400 ................................... 8.50-10.50 .... 11.50-16.50
x AdamaHotal, 2 E. 66th St., N.Y. 26, N.Y ................................. RH 4-1600 ................................... 12.00-tG.OO .... 18.00-22.00
x Alamac Hotel, 71st St. & Broadway, N.Y. 23, N.Y ........................ EN 2-5000 .................................... 6.00- 8.50 ..... 9.00-10.00
x Aldan Hotel, 225 Central Park W., N.Y. 24, N.Y .......................... TR 3-7300 ................................... 10.00-13.00 .... 13.00-17.00
Algonquin Hotel, 59 W. 44th St., N.Y. 36, N.Y ............................ MU 7-4400 ................................. , .10.50-16.00 .... 14.50-19.50
Allerton HOUle lor Women, 130 E. 57th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ................. PL 3-8841 .. .. .4.25-5.50 ... , ................ 8.00-10.00 .... 11.0016.00
x Alraa Hotel, 37 E. 64th St., N. Y. 21, N.Y ................................. RH 40200 . .. .. ............................. 16.0020.00 ... .20.00-26.00
x AmariCI Hotel, 145 W. 47th St., N.Y. 36, N.Y ............................. CO 5-6300 .. .. .4.00 ........... 5.00 7.00 .... 5.00- 7.00 .... 7.00-10.00
AmariCinl of N- York, 52nd St. & 7th Ave., N.Y. 19, N. Y ............... LT 1 -1000 .. . . .............................. 12.00-28.00 .... 16.00-32.00
x Arlington Hotel,18 W. 25th St., N. Y.10, N.Y ............................. WA 9-8960 ....... 3.50-5.00 ....... 4.00- 6.00 . 5.00- 6.00 .... 6.00-12.00
x Alhley Hotel, 157 W. 47th St., N. Y. 36, N. Y .............................. Cl 5 6090 ....... 3.50-4.00 ....... 6.00 .. .. .. . .. 5.00- 8.00 .... 8.00-12.00
Allor Hotel, 44th St. & Broadway (Times Square) N.Y. 36, N. Y ........... JU 6-3000 ................................... 9.00-18.00 .... 14.00-24.00
Barblzon lor Women, 140 E. 63rd St., N.Y. 21, N.Y ....................... TE 6-5700 ....... 5.50-7.50 ...... 12.50-15.00 .... 9.50-13.00 .... 17.50-18.50
x Barblzon-Piul Hotel, 108 Central ParkS. (6th Ave.) N.Y. 19, N.Y ........ CI 7-7000 .. .. .. . .. .. . .. . . . .. .. .. 9.50-15.00 .... 15.00-23.00
Barclay Hotel, 111 E. 48th St., N. Y. 17, N.Y .............................. PL 5-5900 .. .. . .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..15.50-21.95 .... 19.50-27.95
x Beacon Hotll, 2130 Broadway, N.Y. 23, N.Y ............................. su 7-1100 .. . ...... .. .. ..... .. .. .. .. .. .... .. 7.00- 9.00 .... 10.75-11.25
x Beaux Arll Hotel, 310 E. 44th St., N.Y. 17, N.Y ........................... MU 9-3600 . .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. . . .. . .. .. .. ..13.00-19.00 .... 16.00-24.00
x Bedford Hotal,118 E. 40th St.. N.Y. 16, N.Y .............................. OX 7-4800 .. ...... .. .. ..... ... .. .. .. ..... ..12.50-14.00 .... 15.5017.00
xt BHkmln Hotll, 575 Park Ave. (63rd St.), N.Y. 21, N.Y ................... TE 6-4900 ................................... 18.00-21.00 ... 21.00-24.00
Beekman Tower Hotel, 3 Mitchell Pl. (1st Ave.-49th St.). N. Y 17, N. Y ..... EL 5-7300 ...... 7.50-9.00... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..12.00-14.00 ... 15.00-20.00
Belmont Plaza Hotel, 49th 51. at Lexington Ave .. N.Y. 22. N.Y ............ PL 5-1200 . .. .. .......... ... .. .... .. .... .. .. 8.50-16.00 ... 14.00-20.00
~ -
1
I'
i
i
r
I
I I
' I
!
\
!
l
I
'
J
!
STATE OF NEW YORK
New York City Borough: Manhattan
Name & Address
Area Code:
212
Telephone
Number
Rooms Without Bath
Single Double
.... / .. ..
Rooms With Bath
Single Double
x 8erkahlre Hotel, 21 E. 52nd St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ............................. PL 35800 ........... ....... ........ 14.0019.00 ...... 19.0025.00
x Beverly Hotel, Lexington Ave. (50th St.), N.Y. 22, N.Y .................... PL 3-2700 ............... ..... .......... 15.0020.00 ...... 18.0025.00
x Biltmore Hotel, 43rd St. at Madison Ave., N.Y. 17, N.Y ................... MU 77000 ............. ........ ......... 14.95-25.00 ...... 18.9530.00
x Blackatone Hotel, 50 E. 58th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ............................ EL 5-4200 ................. .. .. ...... .. 12.0015.00 ...... 17.0019.00
x Bolivar Hotel, 230 Central Park W., N.Y. 24, N.Y ......................... SU 7-6000 ................. ...... ......... 8.00-10.00 ...... 10.0014.00
x Bretlln Hotal, Broadway at 29th St., N. V. 1, N. Y. . . . .. . . . .. . . . . .. .. .. .MU 5-9600 ..... 3.50 .......... 5.006.00 ..... 5.00 6.50 ...... 6.0010.00
xo BreWIIIr Hotel, 21 W. 86th St., N. V. 24, N.Y .............................. SC 4-8500 ....... .. .... " ...... .. .. .. 6.00-10.00 ...... 10.0012.00
x Brlalol Hotel,129 W. 48th St., N.Y. 36, N.Y ............................... CI 7-3800 .................................. 7.00-12.00 ...... 10.0015.00
xo Brllleny Hotel, 55 E. 10th St., N.Y. 3, N.Y ................................ OR 7-5100 ............. ......... ......... 10.00-15.00 ...... 16.0020.00
x Buckingham Hotel,101 W. 57th St., N.Y. 19, N. V ......................... CI 6 1500 ........... .. .. ..... .. ...... 10.50-14.50 ...... 12.50-17.50
x Cameron Hotel, 41 w. 86th St., N.Y. 24, N.Y ............................. SC 4-6900 ................. ................ 6.5010.50 ...... 9.50-16.00
x Cerlrle Hotel, 35 E. 76th St. (Madison Ave.) N. Y. 21, N.Y ................. RH 41600 ................. .......... .. 20.00-25.00 ..... 24.00-30.00
x Century Hotel, 111 W. 46th St., N.Y. 38, N.Y .............................. PL 7 7300 ........................ ...... .. 7.00-10.00 ...... 11.0014.00
x Chatham Hotel, 33 E. 46th St., N.Y. 17, N.Y .............................. EL 55400 ........................ ......... 10.5019.00 ...... 19.0023.00
x Chelttrlltld Hotel, 130 W. 49th St., N.Y. 19, N.Y ......................... CO 5-noo ... 5.00 .......... 6.50-9 50 ..... 7.50-10.50 ...... 8.5015.00
xo City Squire, 51st St. & Broadway, N.Y. 19, N. Y ........................... to open 1963 elephone num er & rates not stabllshed at t me of printing l
x Claridge Hotel, 44th St. & Broadway, N.Y. 36, N.Y ...................... JU 25050 ...... 5.00-7.00 .. ... 7.009 oo ...... 7.00-10.00 ....... 9.0015.00
x Collaeum Houae, 228 W. 71st St., N.Y. 23, N.Y .......................... TA 3-1000 ........ " " ........ ........ 5.00- 6.00 .. .... 8.00-12.00
x Collingwood Hotel, 45W. 35th St., N. Y.1, N.Y .......................... WI 72500 ........... .......... ....... .7.00 9.00 ...... 10.0014.00
x Commodore Hotel, 42nd St. at Park & Lexington Aves., N.Y. 17, N.Y .... MU 66000 ........... .... ..... ...... .11.00-19.00 ...... 16.0Q-24.00
xo Concord Hotel, 130 E. 40th St., N.Y. 18, N.Y ............................. MU 39580 ............ .......... .. .... .10.0015.00 ...... 12.5018.00
x ComlahArmaHotel, 311 W.23rdSt.,N. Y.11, N.Y ...................... CH 37400 .................................... 9.00 ........... 11 0014.00
Crown Hottl,136 W. 44th St., N.Y. 38, N.Y .............................. JU 23516 ........ 4.50-5.50 .. ... 7.00- 8.50 ..... 6.50- 7.50 ....... 9.00-11.00
xo Croydon Holel,12 E. 86th St., N.Y. 28, N.Y .............................. BU 6-4000 .......... .......... ........ 10.0012.00 ...... 14.0016.00
x Delmonico Hotel, 502 Park Ave., N.Y. 22, N.Y ........................... EL 5-2500 ...... .. ...... ..... .17.00-28.00 ...... 22.00-30.00
x Diplomat Hotel, 108 W. 43rd St., N.Y. 36, N. Y ........................... BR 93707 ........ 5.00-7.00 .. ... 7.00-11 00 ..... 7.50 9.00 ....... 9.5012.00
x Dixit Hotel, 250 W. 43rd St., N.Y. 38, N.Y ............................... WI 76000 ...... .. ....................... 8.00-14.00." ... 11.50-19.00
x Doreet Hotel, 30 W. 54th St., N.Y. 19, N.Y .................. _ ............. Cl 7 7300 .......... ...................... 15.00-19.00 ...... 19.0025.00
x Drake Hotel, 440 Park Ave. (58th St.), N.Y. 22, N.Y ...................... PL 50600 .................................. 21 0023.00 ...... 26.0030.00
x Dryden E11l Hotel, 150 E. 39th St., N. Y. 18, N. Y. .. .. . .. . .. . .. .. . .. .. .. .. OR 9-3900 ........... .... .... ........... 15.00-22.00 ...... 22.00-30.00
x Edlton Hotel, 228 W. 47th St., N.Y. 38, N.Y .............................. Cl 85000 ........................ ......... 8.50-12.00 ...... 13.5016.50
xo Elyaee Hotel, 60 E. 54th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ................................ PL 31066 ............ ........ .......... 14.50-25.00 ...... 17.00-28.00
x Empire Hotel, 63rd St. & Broadway, N.Y. 23, N.Y ........................ co s-7400 ....... 5.00-5.50 .................... 7.00-10.00 ...... 10.0016.00
xo Eaplanade Hotel, 305 West End Ave., N. Y. 23, N.Y ...................... TR 45000 ............................... .. 7.00-10.00 ...... 10.0012.00
xo EIIIX HOUII, 160 Central Park S .. N.Y. 19, N. Y. .. .. .. . . .. .. .. . .. .. .. . .. Cl 7-0300 .................. ...... ....... .18.00-26.00 ...... 20.0028.00
x ExcelalorHotel, 45 W. 61sl St .. N.Y. 24, N.Y ............................. EN 29200 .................................. 7.00 9.00 ...... .9.0011.00
x Executive Hotel, 237 Madison Ave., N. Y.16, N.Y ........................ MU 60300 .................................. 12.50-15.50 ...... 15.50-19.50
xo Filth AVInue Hotel, 24 5th Ave., N.Y. 11, N. Y ............................ GR 36400 .............. ................ 10.00-14.00 ..... ,15.0019.00
x ForreatHotal, 224 W. 49th St., N. Y.19, N.Y .............................. Cl 6-5252 ........................ ......... 8.0010.00 ...... 11.0015.00
x George Withington Hotel, 23rd St. & Lexington Ave., N. Y. 10, N. V ...... GR 5-1920 ................................... 7.00-10.00 ...... 11.5016.00
xo Gledatona Hotel, 114 E. 52nd St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ........................... PL 34300.. .. ... ........................ 13.00-17.00 ...... 17.0022.00
x Gorham Hotel, 136 W. 55th St., N.Y. 19, N.Y ............................. Cl 5 -1800 .................................. 12.00 ........... 14.00 .... ..
x Gotham Hotel, 700 5th Ave., N. Y.19, N.Y ............................... Cl 7-2200 ................................ 14.00-20.00 ...... 19.00 ..30.00
x Governor Clinton Hotel, 371 7th Ave .. N.Y. 1, N.Y ....................... PE 63400- .................................. 6.00-14.00 ...... 11.00-21.00
xo Gramercy Park Hotel, Lexington Ave. & 21st St .. N.Y. 10, N.Y ........... GR 5-4320 ................................... 11.00-14.00 ...... 14.0018.00
x Great Norlhem Hotel, 116 W. 57th St., N.Y. 19, N.Y ...................... Cl 7 -1900 ................................... 7.5011.00 ...... 10.5014.00
x Groavanor Hotel, 35 5th Ave., N.Y. 3, N.Y ............................... GR 36000 ................................... 9.50-12.00 ...... 13.00-16.00
x Hadaon Hotel, 1234 Broadway, N.Y. 1, N.Y .............................. LO 5-4100- ....... 3.00-4.00 ...... 5.006.00 ...... 5.00 8.00 ....... 7.0012.00
xo Hamilton Hotel,141 W. 73rd St., N.Y. 23, N.Y ............................ EN 2-7400- ................................... 5.00- 7.00 ....... 7.00 9.00
x Houle, 150 Central Parks . N.Y. 19, N.Y ..................... Cl 6. noo ................... ................ 16.00-26.00 ...... 22.0026.00 I
x HenryHudaonHotti,353W. 57th St., N.Y. 19, N. Y ........................ CO 5-6100 .................................... 7.25-12.00 ...... 11.0018.50
xo Holiday Inn of New York City, 57th St.-9th & 10th Aves., N. Y. 19, N.Y ..... LT 18100 .............. to op n 1963 .......... 13.00-14.00 ...... 17.0016.00 }
x Holland Hotel, 351 W. 42nd St., N.Y. 38, N. Y .............................. Cl 6 0700- ................. ................. 6.00 ............ 8.00 9.00
xo Howard Johnaon'a Motor Lodge, 51st St. & Bth Ave., N. Y. 19, N. V ......... LT 14100- .................................. 12 00-20 oo ...... 14.0022.00
Kenmore Hotel, 145 E. 23rd St., N.Y. 10, N.Y......................... .. GR 5-3840- ....... 4 50-5.50 .................... 6.50 ........... 10.0012.00
x Kimberly Hotel, 203 W. 74th St. (Broadway), N.Y. 23, N.Y ................ EN 23000 ................................... 7.00- 9.00 ...... 10.00-14.00
xo King Edwerd Hotel, 120 W. 44th St .. N.Y. 36, N. Y ........................ JU 23900- ................................... 5.50 8.00 ....... 8.00-12.00
x Knickerbocker Hotel, 120 w. 45th St., N.Y. 36, N Y ....................... JU 2-4200- .................................. 6.00-10.00 ....... 9.00-16.00
x Lencealer Hotel, 22 E. 38th St. (Madison Ave.), N.Y. 16, N. Y .............. MU 53700- ...... 5.00-6.50 .................... 6.50-15.00 ...... 13.00-20.00
x Le Marqula Hotel, 12 E. 31st St., N.Y. 18, N. v ............................. MU 47480 ........ 4.00-6.00 ...... 5.00-7.00 ...... 5.00 7.00 ....... 7.00 9.00
x Lexington Hotel, Lexington Ave. & E. 48th St., N.Y. 17, N. Y ............. PL 54400 .................................. 10.75-15.95- ..... 14.9520.95
xo Lincoln Square Hotel, 186 W. 75th St., N.Y. 23, N.Y ....................... TR 33000 ....... 4.00-6.00 ...... 6.006.00 ...... 5.00 8.00 ....... 7.0012.00
xo. Lincoln Square Motor Inn, 155 W. 86th St .. N.Y. 23, N.Y .................. SU 76800- ............ to op n 1963 .......... 14.00-18.00 ...... 14.00-18.00
xo Loew'l Midtown Motor Inn, 46th St. & 8th Ave., N. Y. 36, N. Y ............. LT 1 7000. .. .. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. .. . . . . .. .. .. . .12.00-20.00 ...... 14.0022.00
x Lombardy Hotel111 E. 58th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ............................ PL 36600 ................................. 19.00-24.00 ...... 22.0029.00
x Lowell Hotel, 28 E. 63rd St., N.Y. 21, N.Y ............................... TE 8-1400- ................................. 11.00-20.00 ...... 20.0023.00
x Luctme Hotel, 201 W. 79th St., N.Y. 24, N.Y .............................. EN 2 7100 ....... 4.50 ........................ 6.00 8.00 ....... 9.0012.00
X Madleon Hotel, 15 E. 58th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y .............................. EL 55000 .................................. 17.00-22.00 ...... 21.0027.00
x Menger Vanderbilt Hotel, Park Ave. at 34th St., N.Y. 16, N. Y ............. MU 3-4000.... .. ........................... 9.0022.00 ...... 14.00-22.00
x MengerWindaor Holtl, 100 W.58th St.(Ave.olthe Amer.),N.Y.19,N.Y ....... CO 52100 ................................. 10.50-14.50 .... 14.0018.00
x Manhattan Hotel, 44th-45th Sts. & 6th Ave., N.Y. 38, N.Y .................. JU 20300 ................................... 8.00-14.25 ...... 12.5020.00
x Manhattan Toware Hotel, Broadway & 76th St., N.Y. 24, N.Y .............. SU 71900 ....... 4.00 ........................ 6.0010.00 ...... 10.00-14.00
x Manelltld Hotel, 12 W. 44th St., N. V. 36, N. Y ............................ MU 25140 ....... 4.005.50 ...... 5.507.50 ...... 6.50 9.00 ....... 8.00-12.00
x Marcy Hotel, 720 West End Ave., N.Y. 25, N. Y ........................... AI 9 3300 ................................... 9.0011.00 ...... 11.0014.00
x Marthe Walhlngton Hotelier Women, 30 E. 30th St., N. Y. 16, N.Y ........ MU 9-1900 ....... 4.00-6.00 ...... 6.00-7.00 ...... 6.00 8.00 ....... 7.00 9.00
x Martinique Hotel, 32nd St. & Broadway, N.Y. 1, N.Y ..................... PE 63800 ....... 4.506.00 ...... 7.008.00 ...... 6.50-10.50 ....... 9.5014.50

STATE OF NEW YORK
New York City Borough: Manhattan
Name & Address
x Mayfair Houae, 610 Park Ave., N.Y. 21, N.Y ....... .
x Meyflowar Hotel, 15 Central Park W., N.Y. 23, N.Y.
x Maurice Hotel, 145 W. 58th St., N. Y .19, N. Y .
xo Motel City, 510 W. 42nd St., N.Y. 36, N.Y ......... ..
x Murrer Hill Hotel, 42 W. 35th St., N.Y. 1, N. Y ..... .
x Naaaau Hotel, 58 E. 59th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ........ ..
xoo National Hotel, 592 7th Ave (42nd St.), N.Y. 36, N.Y.
u Navarro Hotel, 112 Central ParkS., N.Y. 19, N. Y .
x New Wnton Hotel, 50th St. & Madison Ave., N. Y. 2:
x New York Hilton 11 Rockefeller Canter,
Ave. of the Americas 53rd & 54th Sts .. N. Y. 19, N.
x New Yorker Hotel, 34th St. & 8th Ave., N.Y. 1, N.Y.
x One Filth Avenue Hotel, 1 5th Ave., N.Y. 3, N. Y ....
x Paramount Holal, 235 W. 46th St., N.Y. 38, N. Y .
x Parle Hotel, 752 West End Ave., N. Y. 25, N. Y .......
x Park Creacent Hotel, 150 Riverside Dr .. N. Y. 24, N.
x Park Lana Holt I, 299 Park Ave., N. Y. 17, N. Y .... ,
xo Park Plaza Hotel, 50 W. nth St., N. Y. 24, N. Y ..... .
x Park Royal Hotel, 23 W. 73rd St. (Oil Central
x Park Sheraton Hotel, 870 7th Ave., N. Y. 19, N. Y . ,
x Peter Cooper Hotel, 130 E. 39th St., N.Y. 16, N. Y.,,
x Piccadilly Hotel, 227 W. 45th St., N.Y. 38, N. Y .. ,
Pickwick Anna Hotel, 230 E. 51st St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ..
x Pierre Hotel, 2 E. 61st St., N. Y. 21, N. Y ........... ,
x Plaza Hotel, 5th Ave. at 59th St., N. V. 19, N.Y .... ..
x Plymouth Hotel, 143 W. 49th St., N. Y. 19, N. Y. , . , ,
x President Hotel, 234 W. 48th St., N. Y. 36, N. Y ......
x Prince George Hotel, 14 E. 28th St., N.Y. 18, N. Y .
x Regency Hotel, Park Ave. at 61sl St., N. V. 22, N. Y.
x Rex Hotel, 106 W. 47th St., N.Y. 36, N.Y .......... ..
xo Riviera Congreaa Motor Inn, 550 10th Ave., N. Y. 18,
x Roger Smith Hottl, 501 Lexington Ave. (47th St.), N.
x RogerWilllama Hotel, 28 E. 31st St. (Madison Ave.),
x Roosevelt Hotel, 45th St. at Madison Ave., N.Y. 17,
x Roaoll't Hotel, 147 W. 43rd St., N. Y. 38, N. Y . , . , .
x Royalton Hotel, 44 W. 44th St., N. Y. 38, N.Y. , , , ..
x Ruxton Hotel, 50 W. 72nd St., N. Y. 23, N.Y ....... ..
x St. Moritz Hotel, 50 Central Park S., N.Y. 19, N. Y ..
x St. Regia Hotel, 2 E. 55th St., N. Y. 22, N. Y .. , .
x Sallabury Hotel, 123 W. 57th St., N. Y. 19, N.Y ..
x San Cerloa Hotel, 150 E. 50th St., N.Y. 22, N. Y ..
x Savoy Hilton Hotel, 5th Ava. & 58th St., N.Y. 22, N.
x Schuylll Hotel, 57 W. 45th St., N. Y. 38, N.Y ,.
x Seventy Park Hotel, 70 Park Ave., N.Y. 18, N. Y .
x Seville Hotel, 22 E. 29th St., N.Y. 18, N.Y ... ,.
x Seymour Hotel, 50 W. 45th St., N. Y. 38, N. Y .......
xt Shelburne Hotel, 303 Lexington Ave. (37th St.), N. V
x Shelton Towera Hotel, Lexington Ave. 46th-491h Sta
x Sheraton Atlantic Hotel, 34th St. & Broadway, N.Y.
x Sheraton-East Hotel, 341 Park Ave. (5181 St.), N.Y.
xo Sheraton Motor Inn, 12th Ava. at42nd St., N. Y. 36,
x Shoreham llotel, 33 W. 55th St., N.Y. 19, N. Y ...
Simmon HoUII, (Women Only) 350 W. 86th St., N.
xo Skyline Motor Inn, 725 10th Ave. (49th50th Sts.), N.
Somer11t Hotel, 150 W. 47th St., N. Y. 38, N.Y ....
x Spencer Anna Hotel, 140 W. 69th St. (Broadway), N.
x Stanhope Hotel, 995 5th Ave., N. Y. 26, N.Y ...
StatlerHIIton Hotel, 401 7th Ave., N.Y. 1, N. Y .....
x Summit Hotel, E. 51st St. & Lexington Ave., N. Y. 2:
xo Surrey Hotel, 20 E. 76th St., N.Y. 21, N.Y ..........
x SuHonEaet Hotel, 330 E. 58th St., N. Y. 22, N. Y ...
x Tall Hotel, 7th Ave. at 50th St., N. Y. 19, N. Y .... ,.,
x Thareu Hotel, 2090 7th Ave. (125th St.), N.Y. 27, N.
xo Time Square Motor Hotel, 255 W. 43rd St., N. Y. 31
x Town Hou11 Hotel, 108 E. 38th St., N. V. 16, N. Y .
x Tudor Hotel, 304 E. 42nd St., N. Y. 17, N.Y .. , ,
x Tuscany Hotel, 39th St. E. or Park Ave., N. Y. 18, N.
x VIctoria Hotel, 51st St. & 7th Ave., N. V. 19, N. Y.,,
xo Volney Hotel, 23 E. 74th St., N. Y. 21, N.Y .....
x WaldorfAatorle Hotel, 301 Park Ave., N.Y. 22, N.'
x Warwick Hotel, 85 W. 54th St., N. Y. 19, N.Y .......
x Wellington Hotel, 7th Ave. 55th & 58th Sts., N.Y. 11
Wentworth Hotel, 59 W. 46th St., N.Y. 38, N. Y ... ,,
x Wealbury Hotel, Madison Ave. at 89th St., N. Y. 21,
x Weatover Hotel, 253 W. 72nd St., N.Y. 23, N.Y ....
x Windermere Hotel, 666 West End Ave., N. Y. 25, N
. ,
.19.00-25.00
.18.00.25.00
.18.86-30.00
17.00.18.00
10,00.14.00
8.00..10.00
10.00.12.00
10.00.15.00
18.00.20.00
... 12.50-17.50
.. 9.50-18.00
24.1)0.31).00
... 11.00.14.00
18.00.23.00
8.50-15.00
of printing
.. 8.00.15.00
.8.110-12.00
... 10.00.14.00
18.00.24.00
12.50-18.00
... 11.00.14.00
.... 9.01).11.00
.14.00.18.00
.22.1)0.31).00
.8.50-12.00
11.50-19.00
19.00.25.00
oill ,IJUoiiOI,UIIoo ol , .28.00.30.00
.22.1)0.31).00
13.50-18.50
,17.00.28.00
... 10.00..18.00
10.00.12.00
.20.00.28.00
... .11.00.11.00
... 15.50-18.50
... 15.00.18.00
... 11.00.15.00
11.50-18.00
17.00.22.00
... 14.00 .. ""
19.0D-30.00
... 11.00.21.00
... 14.00.18.00
10.50-14.00
13.00.18.00
.... 7.00.12.00
.... 7.00. 9.00
22.00.28.00
... 11.00.18.50
... 17.00.18.00
.... 8.00. 8.00
14.00.22.00
10.00.12.00
... 10.00.14.00
.... 8.00.12.00
.... 8.00.11.00
13.00.20.00
.... 7.00. 9.00
14.8520.85
7.00.12.00
14.00.18.00
14.00.22.00
22.00.28.00
20.D0-23.00
.... 9.00.12.00
... 21.00.27.00
14.00.22.00
... 14.00.18.00
,12.50-20.00
10.00.14.00
.... 8.00.12.00
.. ,11.00.14.00
.... 7.00.. 9.00
8.50-14.50
I
v
)\
IT ATE OF NEW YORK
New York City Borough: ManhalfAin
Name & Addreaa
Area Code:
212
Telephone
Number
Rooms Without Bath
Single Double
Rooms With Bath
Single Double
x MarfllrHouM, 810 Park Ava., N.Y. 21, N.Y .............................. RH 48700 .................................. 18.00.20.00 "' "20.00.24.00
x Marn-t Hotal, 15 Central Park W., N. Y. 23, N.Y ....................... CO 50080 .................................. 14.00.17.00 ..... 18.50-19.00
x Meurlce Hotal, 145 W. 58th St., N. Y .19, N. Y ............................. CI 77440... .. ............................ 10.00.11.00 ..... 15.01).16.00
xo Mottl City, 510 W. 42nd St., N.Y. 31, N.Y ................................. OX 57171... . ............................. 14.01).18.00 ..... 18.01).24.00
K Murflr Hill Hotel, 42 W. 31th St., N.Y. 1, N.Y ............................ WI 70200 .................................. 7.00.10.00 ..... 10.00.13.00
X N-u Hotal, 58 E. 59th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ................................ EL 53250 ...... .2.50-3.50 ..... .3.50-4.50... 3.00. 5.00 ... , .. 4.01). 8,00
x Nati01111Hotal,5927thAve(42ndSt.),N. Y.31, N.Y ...................... WI 73100 ...... A.OD-5.00 ..... .7.01).8.00 .... 8.01). 7.00 ...... 9.00.10.00
x Nawarro Hotel, 112 Central ParkS., N.Y. 19, N.Y ......................... CI 7 7900... .. .... .. .. ..... .............. .16.50-22.00 , .... 111.50-28.00
X N- Wttloft Hotel, 501h St. & Madison Ave., N.Y. 22, N.Y ................ PL 34800... ........ ....... ....... ...... .13.00.18.00 ..... 19.00.25.00
x N-YorkHutonatRocllatallerCI!IIer, ..................................................................................................... ..
Ave. olthe Americas 53rd & 54th Sis., N. Y. 19, N. Y ................... .JU 6 7000 ............ to op 1963 .. .. .. .. .14.Q0.22.00 ..... 18.01).28.00
x N- Yorker Hotel, 34th St. & 8th Ave., N.Y. 1, N.Y ....................... LO 31000... .... .. .. ...... ....... ...... 8.0015.00 ..... 13.01).21.00
x 0na Fifth Avenue Hotel, 15th Ave., N.Y. 3, N.Y .......................... SP 77000... ........ ....... .. ............ .13.01).17.00 ..... 18.00.20.00
x ParamouniHotei,235W.48thSt.,N. Y.38, N.Y ........................... CI 65500 ................................. 7.50-10.50 ..... 10.50-15.00
X Parle Hotel, 752West End Ave., N.Y. 25, N.Y ............................. RI 93500 .................. '""""""' 5.QO. 8.75., ... 7.50-13.50
x Park Craacent Hotel, 150 Riverside Dr., N.Y. 24, N.Y ..................... TR 3-8200... ...... .. ...... .... .. .. ...... 8.01).15.00.. ,.11.01)..18.00
x Park"- Hotel, 299 Park Ave., N. Y.17, N.Y ............................. PL 54100 .................. """"""" .:19.00.22.00 ..... 25.01).28.00
x Park Plua Hotel, 50 W. 77th St., N.Y. 24, N.Y ........................... .SU 7-5900 ...... .3.50-4.00 ..... 5.oo-e.oo... 4.50- 8.00.. ... 7.01).10.00
x Park ROfll Hotel, 23 W. 73rd St. (oil Central Park), N. Y. 23, N. Y .......... su 75500... .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. ...... 8.01).12.00.. .. 10.00.18.00
x Park Sheraton Hotel, 870 7th Ave., N.Y. 19, N. Y .......................... CI 7 8000... .. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. ...... 8.50-15.50.. .. 13.80-19.50
X Paler Cooper Hotel, 130 E. 39th St., N.Y. 18, N.Y ......................... MU 51100... ...... .. ....... .. ............ .14.110-16.00 .. .. 16.50-18.50
x PlccaciiiiJ Hotel, 227 W. 45th St., N.Y. 38, N.Y ............................ CI 65800... ............... .............. 8.01).12.00.. ..11.110-17.00
Plokwlok Arml Holel, 230 E. 51at St .. N.Y. 22, N.Y ........................ EL 50300 ...... A.25-4.50... ...... ........ 5.50- 5.75.. ... 8.QO. 9.00
X Plerr. Hotel, 2 E. 61st St., N.Y. 21, N. Y .................................. TE 88000 ................................. .23.01).27.00.. .. 28.00.33.00
x Pla11 Hotel, 5th Ave. at 59th St., N.Y. 19, N.Y ............................ PL 93000... ........ ....... ...... .. ...... .15.01).28.00.. .. 20.01).34.00
x PIJII!Outll Hotel,143 W. 49th St., N. Y.19, N.Y ............................ CI 78100 .................................. 7.01)..10.00 ..... 10.01)..17.00
X Prnldent Hotel, 234W. 48th St., N.Y. 31, N.Y ............................ CI 88800 .................................. 7.01).10.00 .... 11.01).15.00
X Prince George Hotel, 14 E. 28th St., N.Y. 16, N. Y ........................ LE 27800... ...... .. ...... ....... ....... .11.01).13.00 ..... 12.01).17.00
X Rq111cy Hotel, Park Ave. al61st St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ....................... PL 94100 ............ to op n 1963.. ...... .22.01).30.00., .. 27.01).31.00
x Rex Hotel, 106 W. 47th St., N.Y. 31, N.Y .................................. PL 78380 ...... .3.50-4.00 ..... .5.01).8.00... 4.01).. 5.00.. .. 8.01).. 9.00
xo Riviera Conoraae Motor Inn, 550 10th Ave., N.Y. 18, N.Y ................. ox 53100... .. ..... .. ...... .............. .12.01).16.00 ..... 16.00.20.00
x Roger lmllh Hotal, 501 Lexington Ave. (47th St.), N.Y. 17, N.Y ........... PL 51400... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ...... 9,01).14.50 ..... 13.01).18.50
x RogerWIIIIIInl Hotel, 28 E. 31st St. (Madison Ave.), N.Y. 16, N. Y ........ MU 11-0600... ...... .. ...... .... .. ........ 8.01)..14.00 ..... 10.01).14.00
x Rooasvett Hotel, 45th St. at Madison Ave., N.Y. 17, N. Y .................. MU 8-9200... .... .. .. ....... .............. .13.00-21.00.. .. 19.00.27.00
x R-11'1 Hotel, 147W. 43rd St., N.Y. 31, N.Y ............................ .JU 23200... ............... .............. 4.00. 7.00 ...... 7,01).12.00
K ROJIIton Hotel, 44 W. 44th St., N.Y. 31, N.Y ............................. MU 2-8050 ....... 6.00.7.50 ...... 8.00-10.00.. 9.01).14.50 ..... 12.50-16.50
x Rllldon Hotel, 50 W. 72nd St., N.Y. 23, N.Y ............................... SU 70500... ...... .. ....... .... .. .. ...... 8.01).10.00 ..... 10.01).14.00
x st. Morita Hotel, 50 Central ParkS., N.Y. 19, N.Y ........................ PL 55800... ..... .. .. ...... .............. .11.00.18.00., .. 15.00.21.00
x 8L Ragle Hotel, 2 E. 55th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ............................... PL 34500... ...... ... ...... .............. .18.01).23.00 ..... 27.0D-32.00
x lalllburr Holel,123 W. 57th St., N.Y. 19, N.Y ............................ CI 61300... ............... .............. .12.00.14.00 ..... 14.110-19.00
x San Clrloe Hotal,150 E. 50th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ........................... PL 51800... ............... .............. .13.01).15.00 ..... 18.01).20.00
x Iavoy Hilton Hotel, 5th Ave. & 58th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ..................... EL 52800... .. . .. .. ........ ...... ........ .13.01).35.00.. .. 18.0D-35.00
X* 8clluyler Hotel, 57 W. 45th St., N.Y. 31, N. Y ............................. .JU 20840 ....... 3.50-5.00 ...... 4.50 8.00.. 8.01). 9.00.. .. 8.01).11.00
x lavanlf Park Hotel, 70 Park Ave., N.Y. 18, N.Y .......................... MU 77050... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. .12.50-20.00 ..... 17.00.24.00
X* Iaviiie Hotel, 22 E. 28th St., N.Y. 18, N. Y ................................ LE 22860... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 5.01).. 5.50 ...... B.QO. 9.00
x a.,mourHotel, 50 W. 45th St., N.Y. 31, N.Y .............................. MU 2-5940... .. ... .. .. ...... .. .... .. ...... 9.01)..12.00 ..... 14.01).18.00
x Sbalbuma Hotal, 303 Lexington Ave. (37th St.), N. Y. 18, N. Y .... MU 95200... . . . . .10.85-13.85 , ,13.85-16.85
x Sbalton Towent Hotel, Lexington Ave. 48th-49th SIS., N. Y.17, N.Y ........ PL 54000 ....... 5.oo-&.OO ...... 8.00 .... .. 8.85-12.85 ...... 11.115-17.85
x 8baratonAtlantlc Hotel, 34th St. & Broadway, N. Y.1, N.Y ............... PE 65700 .......................... ; ...... 8.75-14.00 ...... 13.75-18.00
x Sbaraton.Ent Hotel, 341 Park Ave. (51st St.), N.Y. 22, N.Y ............... PL 51000... .... .. .. ....... .. .. .......... .19.01).28.00 ..... 23.00-30.00
xo Sbaraton Motor Inn, 12th Ave. at 42nd St . N. Y. 31, N. Y .................. OX 58500... . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .... ,11.50-17.00 ...... 17.7521.00
x 811ontham Hotal, 33 W. 55th St., N.Y. 19, N.Y ............................ CI 76700 .. , ...... .. ....... .............. .12.01).15.00 ...... 14.01).16.00
Slmmona HOIIR, (Women Only) 350 W. 88th St., N.Y. 24, N.Y ............. SC 4-8tOO ....... 4.00.8.00 ...... 7.00-8.00... .. ....................... ..
xo SIIJIIne Motor lnn,12510th Ave. (49th50th Sis.), N.Y. 19, N.Y ............ JU 63400 ............................... , .14.01).18.00 ...... 14.0020.00
x llomei'HI Hotel, 150 W. 47th St., N.Y. 31, N.Y ............................ PL 72780 ....... 3.50-4.50... ...... .... .... , 4.50- 6.50 ...... 8.01).11.00
x Spencer Arma Hotel, 140 W. 69th St. (Broadway), N.Y. 23, N.Y ............ SU 74700... .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .... .. .. .. .. a.oo- 8.00 ....... 7.01). 9.00
x 8tenllopa Hotel, 985 5th Ave., N.Y. 28, N. Y .............................. BU 85800 ........................... , .. .. .18.01).24.00 ..... .20.110-28.00
x ltatlerHIIlon Hotel, 4017th Ave., N.Y. 1, N.Y ............................ PE 65000... ..... .. ........ .............. . 1 1 . 0 1 ) . t 9 . 0 0 . ~ .... 14.50-25.00
x lummll Hotal, E. 51at St. & Lexington Ave., N.Y. 22, N. Y ................ PL 2 7000 .................................. 14.01).28.00 ...... 18.01)..32.00
x Surray Hotel, 20 E. 78th St., N.Y. 21, N.Y ................................. RH 41890 .................................. 19.00.22.00 ..... .23.0028.00
x lutton-l!alt Hotel, 330 E. 58th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y .......................... PL 11700 ....... 4.75-5.75 ................... 10.00-14.00 ...... 10.00.14.00
x Taft Hotel, 7th Ave. at 501h St., N. Y.19, N.Y .............................. CI 74000,.. ............... .............. 8.00.13.75 ...... 11.50-19.15
x ThernaHotel, 2090 7th Ave. (125th St.), N.Y. 27, N. Y ..................... UN 83300 ....... 6.30-8.48 ...... 8.30-8.48... .10.48-11.48 .... .,10.48-12.48
xo Timet Square Motor Hotel, 255 W. 43rd St., N.Y. 31, N.Y ................. tA 46900... ...5.00 .......... 7.00-8.00 ..... 8.01).. 8.00 ....... 9.00.12.00
x Town H- Holel,106 E. 38th St., N.Y. 16, N.Y ......................... LE 28500 .................................. 16.01).18.00 ...... 19.00.21.00
x Tudor Hotel, 304 E.42nd St., N. Y.17, N.Y ............................... YU 68800 .................................. 8.01)..11.00 ...... 10.00.17.00
x Tu-r Hotel, 39th St. E. ol Park Ave., N. Y. 18, N. Y .................... ,MU 8-1800... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. .18.110-24.80 ..... .24.80-30.80
x Vlotorll Hotel, 51st St. & 7th Ave., N.Y. 19, N.Y .......................... CI 77800 .................................. 8.50-12.00 ...... 12.01).20.00
x YOIIIIJ Hotel, 23 E. 74th St., N.Y. 21, N. Y ................................ BU 87500 .................................. 14.00.17.00 .. , .. .20.110-28.00
x WldoriAalorla Hotel, 301 Park Ave., N. Y. 22, N.Y ....................... EL 53000... .. ............................ 10.01)..22.00 ...... 18.0D-32.00
x Wrwlok Hotel, 85W. 54th St., N.Y. 19, N.Y .............................. CI 72700... .. ............................ 14.01).25.00 ...... 18.00.28.00
x Wellington Hotel, 7th Ave. 55th & 56th Sis .. N. Y.19, N.Y ................. CI 73900... .. ............................. 7.75-14.75 ...... 11.50-19.50
x Wanlwortll Hote1,59W. 48th St., N.Y. 38, N.Y ............................ JU 22200 ....... 5.oo-&.OO ...... 7.00.9.00 ...... 8.01).12.00 ...... 10.00.18.00
x WHiburrHotal, Madison Ave. at 69th St., N.Y. 21, N.Y .................. LE 52000... .. ............................ 14.00.20.00 ...... 18.00..25.00
x WIII011' Hotel, 253 W. 72nd St., N. Y. 23, N.Y ........................... EN 29600,.. .. ............................. 8.01)..10.00 ...... 10.00.12.00
x Wlndtnnara Hotei,888West End Ave., N.Y. 25, N.Y ..................... sc 48200 .................................. 7.01).10.00 ...... 10.01).12.00
8TATI 01' NEW YORK
New York City Borough: Manhattan
Name & Addreaa
Area Code:
212
Telephone
Number
Rooms Without Bath Rooms With Bath
Single Double Single Double
x Wlnalow Hotel, 45 E. 55th St., N.Y. 22. N.Y ......................... PL 36800 ...... 5.006.00... . .......... 8 0011.00 ...... 12.0015.00
x WolcoHHolel, 4 W. 31st St., N. Y.1, N.Y ................................. LA 47800 ....... 4.006.00 ..... 5.007.00 ...... 7.00 9.00 ...... 10.0014.00
x Woodllock Hotel,127 W. 43rd St., N.Y. 36, N.Y .......................... JU 25000 ....... 5.00.... ... . .8.009.00 ...... 6.50 9.00 ...... 10.0014.00
xt Woodward Hotel, 210 W. 55th St. (Broadway), N.Y. 19, N. Y............ . .. CI 7 2000.... .. . .. . . .. . . . ............... 5 00 8.00 ...... 8.00-12.00
x Wrndllem Hotel, 42 W. 58th St., N. Y.19, N.Y ............................. PL 33500 ................................. 11.0013.00 ...... 12.00-14.00
x Y.M.C.A. wm. Sloane Houae, (Men Onl..:.y_l_356 __ w_._34_t_h_s_t._,_N_. Y_._1,:....N_._Y_._.l--o_x_5._5_1_33_._-11-- ._2._70_-_5._50_._.-JI--3_.80_4._.40_ .. _ .. .. _ .. _._ ._ .. _.
__ ___________________________


xo Brona Park Motel, 2500 Crotona Ave., Bronx 58, N.Y ...................... WE 3-2000 .................................. 12.00 ............ 14.00-16.00
x Concourte Plue Hotel, 900 Grand Concourse, Bronx 51, N.Y ............ CY 34000 ................................... 7.5010.00 ...... 13 00-19.00
xo DHOan Molal, 3800 Bailey Ave., Bronx 63, N.Y ........................... KI 6. 6300 .................................. 10.00-12.00 ...... 12.0020.00
xo Riverdale Motor Inn, 6356 Broadway, Bronx 71, N.Y ...................... KI 9 3300 .................................. 12.0014.00 ...... 14.0016.00
xo Bledlum Motor Lodge, W. 187th St.Major Deegan Expwy., ........... .
Bronx 52, N: Y ........................................................... LU 85400 .................................. 10.0012.00 ..... 14.0D-18.00
xo Town CounlfJ Motor Lodge, 2244 Tillotson Ave., Bronx 69. N.Y ....... XX 49000 .................................. 11.00t3.00 ...... 13.00-17.00
xo Van Cortlandt Molal, 6393 Broadway, Bronx 71, N. Y .......... _. _ _ .. -'.1-- _ .. _. _ ._._ .. _._ .. _ . .._._._ .. _. _ .. _._ .. _. _ .. _. -1 c._.a_.oo __ ... 10.001_4.00_
New York City Borough: Brooklyn Area Code 212
Franklin Akma Hotel, 68 Orange St., Brooklyn 1, N.Y ..................... MA 4-7:176. ...... 4.505.50... ..6.50 7.00 .. . .. 6.50 7.00 ... . ... 8.5010.00
xo Golden Gate Motor Inn, Belt Pkwy.-Knapp St., Brooklyn 35. N.Y ......... SH 34000.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............ . . 11.00t3.00 ... . . 15.00-19.00
x Granade Hotel, Lafayette Ave. & Ashland Pl., Brooklyn 17, N. v ........... UL 82000.... . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . ............ . .. 8.5012.00 ... .. .11.0018.00
x Greeorr Hotel, 6315 4th Avo., Brooklyn 9, N.Y ............................ SH 8 7000 ................................. . .. 8.00 ........ . .. 10.0011.00
xoMenhaHan Beach Hotel, 158 West End Ave., Brooklyn 35, N.Y ............ SH 33000 ....... 5.00 .......... 8.00 ....... . .. 7.5016.50 ... . . . 10.0022.00
x II. George Hotal, 51 Clark St., Brooklyn 1, N.Y .......................... MA 4-5000 ....... 4.00-4.50 ................. . . . 6.5014.00 ... . . . 10.00-17.00
xo BealalaMotor Inn, 3900 Shore Pkwy. (Ex. 14 Bell Pkwy.) ........................................................... . .............. .............
Brooklyn 35, N. Y. .. .. .. .. . .. . .. . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. . .. . . . . . .. TW 1-1000... . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . ............ . .12.0018.00 ... . .. 14.0022.00
TOWII'I Hotel, 25 Clark St., Brooklyn 1, N.Y .............................. MA 4-2000 ................................ . .. 7.QO- 8.00 ... . .. 10.0013.00
Naw York City Borough: QuHna Area Code 212
Beach Haven Holaf, 243 Beach 19th St., Far Rockaway 91, N.Y ............ FA 7-2130 ....... 7.50 ......... 10.00-15.00 .. . .10.00 ........ . 15.0018.00
xo CroNWar Airport Inn At La Guardia,... . .. .. . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . .. . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . ............ .. .............. .............
1Q0-30 Ditmars Blvd., Flushing 59, N.Y ................................. HI 6 7900 ............................... .. .14.0018.00 ... . . . 18.D0-24.00
xo CroNWBJ ldl .. lld Inn, 152-25138th Ave., Jamaica 34, N.Y ................ FI 1 3000 ............................... .. .14.0015.00 ... . . .18.D0-19.00
x l'oreal Hilla Inn. 1 Station Square, Forest Hilla 75, N.Y ................... BO 81900 ....... 5.00 ......... 10.00 ...... .. . 8.5014.00 ... . .. 12.0020.00
Franklin Hotel, 163rd St., Jamaica 32, N.Y .......................... JA 66330 ....... 4.006.00 ...... 5.008.00 ... . .. 6.00 8.00 ... . ... 6.00 9.00
xo Gtand Central Motor Inn, 7111 Astoria Blvd., Astoria 2, N.Y .............. AS 4 2800 ................................ . .12.0015.00 ... . . t5.0026.00
xo Homnlead Hotel, 82-45 Grenfell St., Kew Gardens15, N.Y ............... HI 1. 2000 ............................... .. 9.0012.00 ... 12.0015.00
xo International Hotel, N. Y. Int. Airport, Jamaica 30, N. Y ................... 995 9000 ................................ .
xo Kew Motor Inn, 80-05 Grand Central Pkwy., Kew Gardens Hills 35, N. Y .... OL 6 4200 ............................... ..
.12.00-t7.00 ... . . 18.0022.00
.12.00t6.00 ... . . . 16.0030.00
xo LaGuardlaHotel,9911 Ditmars Blvd., E. Elmhurst 59, N.Y ............... DE 54900 ................................ . 13.0017.00 ... . . 17.0D-22.00
xo Pan American Motor Inn, 79-10 Queena Blvd., Elmhurst 73, N.Y ........... HI 67676 ............ to op f11963 ....... ..
xo Rlwlera Idlewild Hotel, N. Y. Int. Airport (Belt Pkwy.) Jamaica 30, N. Y .... AR 6-6666 ............ to opE 1963 ....... ..
xto Banford Hotel, 140-40 Sanford Ave., Flushing 55, N.Y ..................... FL 31400 ............................... ..
.15.0022.00 ... . .. 18.0026.00
.16.0020.00 ... . . .22.0D-32.00
. . 9.()().10.00 ... . . . 13.0014.00
xo Schlna Inn at For111 Hilla, 108-25 Horace Harding Expwy., ......................................................... .. .............. . ............
Flushing 68, N.Y ...................................................... HI 6 1600 ................................ .
xo BeBWIJ Idlewild Hotel, N.Y. Int. Airport (Belt Pkwy.) Jamaica 30, N.Y .... FA 28700 ................................ .
xo Bhel'llon-TeniiiiJ Inn AI La Guardia .. . .. .. .. . .. . .. . . .. .. .. . .. . .. . .. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. . .. .. ........... ..
.12.0016.00 ... . .. 16.00-t8.00
.16.0020.00 ... . . .22.00-32.00
.............. . ............
110-10 Grand Central Pkwy., E. Elmhurst 69, N.Y ........................ HI 6. 4800 ............................... ..
xo Slc}'WIJ Hotel, 13210 S. Conduit Ave., Jamaica 30, N.Y ................... QL 9-6300 ................................ .
.12.5016.50 ... . .. 14.50-20.00
.13.00t5-00 .. . .. 17.0022.00
xo BkpiJ Hotel La Guardla,102-10 Ditmars Blvd., Flushing 69, N.Y ......... TW 96900 ............................... ..
x lunchmar Hotel, 3752 80th St., Jackson Hts. 72, N. Y .................... NE 9-0140 ................................ .
.13.0015-00 ... . .. 17.00-20.00
.12.0014.00 ... . .. 12.0014.00
xo Travalera Hotel-Molal, 9400 Ditmars Blvd. (La Guardia Airport), .................................................... .
E. Elmhurst 59, N.Y .................................................... DE 51200 ................................ .
.............. . ............
.13.00 ........ . . 17.0D-18.00
xo Treadway Inn, 114th Sl. & 37th Ave. (near the Fair) Flushing 52, N. Y ...... TW 81400 ........... to op ;, 1963 ........ .
uo Whitman Hotel, 160-11 89th Ave., Jamaica 2, N.Y ......................... RE 95200 ................................ .
.15.()().17.00 ... . .. 19.0024.00
.. 9.00-12.00 ... . .. 12.0015.00
New York City Borough: Richmond (Staten laland) Area Code 212

xo Richmond Hotel, 71 Central Ave., Staten Island 1, N. Y ................... Gl 7 8445 ....... 5.25 .......... 7.35 .. .. .. .. ..8.40 ........... 10.50 ..... .
---------
STATI! OF NEW YORK
County: Neuau --------- Area C-:.o:..d_ec:..'
---- -----
xo Bar Harbour Molal, 5050 Sunrise Hwy. (AI. 27), Massapequa Park, N. Y .... Ll 1 2000. .. .. ........... . ............... .1000t1.00 ... . . . 12.0015.00
uo BaJIMrrr Great Neck Hotel, 75 N. Station Plaza, Great Neck, N.Y ......... HU 22900 ................. . ............... .13.00 ........ . .. 18.00 ......
xto Bethpage Motel, Hempstead Tpke., Bethpage, N. Y ...................... PE 1-7000 ................ .. ............... .10 0012.00 ... . .. 12.0020.00
xo Colonr Anna Hotel, 190 Glen Cove Ave., Glen Cove, N.Y ................. OR 12945 ....... 6.00 ...... .
uo Cotonr Hotal,10 Bond St., Great Neck, N.Y .............................. HU 7-3400 ................ ..
xo Courtaey Inn a .. Horte Mertna, S. Main St., Freeport, N.Y .............. MA 39t00 ................. .
xo Farmingdale Motor Lodge, At. 110 (Broadhollow Rd.),Farmlngdale, N.Y .. CH 9-2810 ...............
xo Garden City Hotel, 71h St. & Park Ave., Garden City, N.Y ................. PI 6-0700 ................. .
xo GIIBWIJ Motel, Sunrise Hwy., Merrick, N. Y ............................. FR 8. 7100 ................. .
xo Hempetaad Motor Hotel, 130 Hempstead Ave., West Hempstead, N. Y ..... IV 5. 2000 .................
xo Harltega Quality Court Motor Inn, Jericho Tpke. (RI. 25), Syosset, N. Y ... WA 1-6900 .............
xb leland Inn, Old Country Rd., Westbury, N. Y ............................. PI 1-4500 ................ ..
xo leland Lodge Molal, 274 Jericho Tpke . Syosset, N.Y .................... WA 16166. ................ .
Jericho Molal, Jericho Tpke., Jericho, N.Y .............................. ED 36400. ................ .
. . . 8.00 ........ . . 8 00 ........ .. . 11.0013.00
............... .. 9 5012.00 ... . .. 14.Q0-18.00
............... .1t 0013.00 ... . .. 12.0019.00
............... .. 9.00 ........ . . 10.0012.00
............... .12.0016.00 ... . .. 17.()().21.00
............... .12 0016.00 ... . .. 14.Q0-18.00
............... .120014.00 ... . .. 14.0020.00

. t1.00t2 00 ... . .. 15.()().19.00

.12 00-15 00 ... . . ,16.()().22.00
............... .1100 ........ . .. 16.0018.00
............... .. 90011.00 ... . .. 12 0020.00
r
II
STATE OF NEW YORK
County: Na111u
Name & Address
xo Lynbrook Motor Hotel, 5 Frear St., Lynbrook
o Mansion Hotel, 54 Lincoln Ave., Rockville Ct
xo Meadowbrook Motor Lodge, 4400 Jericho Tp
Mineola Hotel, 193 2nd St., Mineola, N.Y ....
Promenade Hotel on the beach, 102 W. Broa
xo Raceway Inn Motel, Old Country Rd. at Poet
xo Roosevelt Inn, 1650 Hempstead Tpke., East I
o Roslyn Harbor Hotel, 22 Bryant Ave., Roslyn
xo Tivoli Motel, 3400 Brush Hollow Rd.,
xo Town & Countrr Molal, 49 Old Country Rd.,
xo Turnpike Motel, 434 Hempstead Tpke., W. H
xo Weetburr Motel, Jericho Tpke., Westbury,
County: Orange
xo Thayer Hotel, Wast Point, N. Y ..... ,
County: Rockland
xo Aahley Motor Court, U. S. At. 59, Nanuet, N
xo Courtaar Inn, N.Y. Thrwy. (Ex. 11), Nyack,
xo Motel on the Mountain, N. Y. Thrwy. (Ex. 1!
xo Paacack Molal, At. 59 (N.Y. Thrwy. Ex. 14),
County: SuHolk
xo Baylhore Inn, 400 Bayshore Rd., Bayahore,
xo Beacon Motel, Smithtown Bypaaa & Jerlch<
xo Chevy Chaae Motel, 438 Sunrise Hwy., Bab
xo Eden Rock Molal, 3055 Veterans Memorial
xo Fonlenac Motor Lodge, Jericho Tpke.Brlcl
Smithtown, N. Y .......... , ........... ..
xo Huntington Molal, 331 W. Jericho Tpke. (RI
xo Jerlmac Motel, 2231 Jericho Tpke., Comm1
xo Llndenhunt Motel, w. Montauk Hwy. &. Ch
xo Tha112 Motel, Rt. 112, Medford, N.Y ......
xo Patchogue Molal &. Countrr Club, Sunrise
xo Plntl Motor Lodge, At. 109 near Straight F
xo St. Moritz Motel, Yacht Club Rd., Babylon,
xo Sky Motel, 7th St. & 3rd Ave. (At. 109), N. L
xo Starllta Molal, 760 Little E. Neck Rd. (Sunt
xo Three VIllage Inn, Dock Rd., Stony Brook,
xo Walt Whitman Motel, 295 E. Jericho Tpke .
County: Waetcheatar
xo Ardaler Acree Hotel Court, 580 Saw Mill A
xo Central Motel Court, 441 Central Ave., Wh
xo Dunwoodle Motor Inn, 300 Yonkers Ave.,
xo Gramatan Hotel, Pondlleld Rd., Bronxvlll'
xo Hawthorne Circle Motor Inn, 20 Saw Mill I
xo Hilton Inn, 455 S. Broadway, Tarrytown, ti
xo Holiday Inn of Yonkera, 125 Tuckahoe Rd.
xo Roger Smith Motor Hotel, 1 Chesler Ave.,
xo Saw Mill River Motel, 25 Valley Rd., Elms
o Scal'ldale Inn, School La. oil Popham Rd
xo Tarrrraat Molal, 542 Tarrytown Rd., While
xo Trade Windt Motor Court, 1141 Yonkers
xo Tuckahoe Motel, 307 Tuckahoe Rd.,
xo Watergate Motor Hotel, Albany Post Rd. 1
xo Weetcheeter Town Houn Motor Inn, 185
Ex. 6), Yonkers, N.Y .................. .
xo Yorktown Motor Lodge, U.S. AI. 202-Tacc
STATE OF NEW JERSEY
__________________ __
Courleay Inn, AI. 4, Fort Lee, N.J .......
xo Hortzon Motel, u. s. At. 46, s. Hackenaat
xo Howard Johneon'e Motor Lodge, AI. 17, I
xo Marriott Motor Hotel at Gao. Waahlngtot
the Bridge Plaza, Fort Lee, N.J ..
xo New Orlean Molal, AI. 4, Fort Lee, N. J .
xo OrltaniMotor Hotel, 414 Hackensack Av1
xo Palleadaa Motor Lodge, At. 46, Fort Lee,
xo Peter Pan Molal, At. 3, E. Rutherford, N
xo SkyYiaw Molal, Ala. 1 & II & 46, Fort Lee
xo Suburban Motor Hotel, AI. 4 & Intersect
xo Swill Court Motel, N.J. Hwy. 17, Upper
8.150-10.00
15.00.19.00
11.00.18.00
.,10.CJ0..11.00
10.00.22.00
10.CJ0..17.00
12.C)().15.00
... 18.00
12.oo-20.00
tt.oo-13.00
14.oo-1a.oo
,12.C)().19.00
1o.oo-12.oo
17.(10.21.00
... 14.C)().18.00
14.C)().20.00
ts.oo-1t.oo
,ta.oo-22.00
1e.oo-1a.oo
,.12.C)().20.00
ITATI 01' NEW YOFiK
county:N-
Name & Acldr"'
Area Code:
516
Telephone
Number
Rooms Without Bath Rooma With Bath
Single Double Single Double
xo LJflbraok Motor Hottl, 5 Freer St., Lynbrook, N. Y............ . L Y 9 8800.... .. 12.Q0..18.00... ..115.0CI-30.00
o Manlllon Hotel, 54 Lincoln Ave., Rockville Cent., N. V ..................... AO 69862.... .. .5.00 .......... 8.00 .. .... .. .. ...................... ..
xo Motor Lodgtt,4100 Jericho Tpke., Jericho, N. Y ............ OV 14200.... .... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 11.00 ......... .,18.CJ0..16.00
Mineola Hotel, 1113 2nd St., Mineola, N.Y ................................. PI 6 9751.... ...4.00-5.00 ...... r.oo- 7.50 ..... 8.150 ........... 8.50-10.150
Pro111811811e Hotel on the beach, 102 W. Broadway, Long Beach, N. Y... ..GE 1-0100.... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 15.Q0..25.00.... 25.00-35.00
xo ,._.,Inn Motel, Old Country Rd. at Poat Ava., Weatbury, N. V ......... ED 3-7330 .................................. 12.Q0..14.00 ...... 14.0018.00
xo Roo-'tlnn, 1IIGO Hampstead Tpke., East Meadow, N. V ................ IV B 2100.... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 11.0()..13.00 ...... 14.oo-20.00
o RoaiJn Hubor Hotel, 22 Bryant Ava., Roalyn, N.Y ..................... , .. MA 19657 ....... 4.oo-8.00 ...... 8.oo-14.00... .8.00 ...........
xo nvoll Motel, 3400 Bruah Hollow Ad., Waatbury, N. V ...................... ED 38800.... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 10.00 ........... t2.oo-18.00
xo Town A Country Motel, 49 Old Country Rd., Westbury, N.Y ............... ED 3-5550.... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 12.00 ........... 15.CJ0..18.00
xo Turnplkellotel,434 Hampatead Tpke., W. Hempstead, N. V ............... IV 5 7300.... ...... .. .. .. .. .... .. ....... 12.Q0..115.00 ...... 15.oo-28.00
xo Weatbury Motel, Jericho Tpke., Westbury, N.Y ........................... ED 46811 .................................. 12.0018.00 ...... 12.00..21.00
COunty: Orengt Area Code: 914

xo fh-rer Hotel, Weat Point, N. v ........................................... WE 84731.... ..5.00-7.00 ...... 7.oo- a.oo... .1.oo- 9.00... ..10.CJ0..12.00
county: Rooklend Area Code: 914
xo Mill., Motor Court, U.S. Rt. sv, Nanuet, N.Y ............................ NA 3-4300-:c:-::-.. --. t-.- .. -.. -.. -.. -.. -.-, .. t- .. -.. -.- .. -.. -.. -.. -l .. t-.- ... -.- .. -.. -.. -.. +.-.t:-:-2.
7
01).:-:1
7
4.00::-
xo Coui'IHJ Inn, N.Y. Thrwy. (Ex. 11), Nyack, N.Y .......................... EL 8-5100... .. ..... to ope 1983......... 11.0()..13.00 ...... 15.(10.,18,00
xo Motel on the Mounteln, N.Y. Thrwy. (Ex. 15), Suffern, N.Y ............... EL 7 2500 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... 12.Q0..14.oo... ..11.oo-22.00
xeo PaiCIICk Motel, At. 50 (N.Y. Thrwy. Ex. 14), Spring Valley, N. v ........... NA 3-3792 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .e.oo-10.00... ..1o.oo-14.00
County: luffolk Area Code: 518
xo lapllore Inn, 400 Bayahore Rd., Bay shore, N. Y ...................... ,
xo Be-Motel, Smithtown Bypan & Jericho Tpke., Nesconset, N.Y
xo CJ1evr CluiHMOitl, 4311 SunriH Hwy., Babylon, N. Y ................. ..
xo ll!dan Rook Motel, 3055 Veterans Memorial Hwy Ronkonkoma, N. V
xo Fontenac Motor Lodge, Jericho Tpke.Brldga Branch Rd.,
Smithtown, N.Y ................................................... ..
xo HunUnglon Motel, 331 W. Jericho Tpke. (At. 25), Huntington, N. Y ...... .
xo .lerlmao Motel, 2231 Jericho Tpka., Commack, N. V .................... .
xo Undanllurat Motel, W. Montauk Hwy. & Chestnut St., Lindenhurst, N.Y
xo Thtt 111 Motel, At. 112, Medford, N.Y ................................. ..
xo Patohelgua Motel& CountJy Club, Sunrise Hwy. (RI. 27),Patchogue, N.Y
xeo Plnu Motor Lodge, At 109 near Straight Path, N. Llndenhurat, N. Y .
xeo 11. Moritz Motel, Yacht Club Rd., Babylon, N. Y ...................... ..
xo 111r Mottl, 7th St. & 3rd Ave. (Rt. 109), N. Lindenhurst, N. V ............ .
xo llarlltaMotel, 780 LIHit E. Neck Ad. (Sunrise Hwy.),Weat Babylon, N.Y
xo Three VIllage Inn, Dock Rd., Stony Brook, N. Y ...................... ..
xo Walt Whlbnen E. Jericho Tpke. (At. 25), Huntington S1a.,N.Y
County: Wellcheller
xo Anlaler Acree Hotel Court, 660 Saw Mill River Ad. (Rt. 9A),Ardsley, N.Y
xo Central Molal Court, 441 central Ave., White Plains, N. Y
xo Dunwoodla Motor Inn, 300 Yonkers Ave., Yonkens, N. Y ................ .
xo Granudan Hotel, Pondlleld Rd., Bronxville 8, N. V ..................... .
xo Hawtllomt Circle Motor Inn, 20 Saw Mill River Road, Hawthorne, N. V
xo Hilton Inn, 455 S. Broadway, Tarrytown, N.Y .......................... .
xo Holiday Inn of Yonken, 125 Tuckahoe Rd., Yonkera, N. V ,.,,.,
xo Roger lmllh Motor Hotel, 1 Cheater Ave., White Plains, N.Y
xeo Saw Mill River Motel, 25 Valley Ad., Elmsford, N.Y ................. ,.,.
o lcaradalt Inn, School La. off Popham Rd., Scansdale, N. Y ,
xo Tarryreal Motel, 542 Tarrytown Ad., White Plains, N.Y ................. .
xo Tnda Windt Motor Court, 1141 Yonkens Ave., Yonkers 2, N. Y ......... .
xo Tuokahoa Motel, 307 Tuckahoe Rd., Yonkers, N. Y .................. ,,,
xo Wetergalallotor Hotel, Albany Poet Rd. (Rt. 9), croton-on-Hudson,N.Y.
xo Wlllcllllter Town HouH Motor Inn, 185 Tuckahoe Rd. (N. V. Thrwy
Ex. 6), Yonkers, N. V ................................................ .
xo Yorktown Motor L.oclga, u.s. Rt. 202-Taconlc Pkwy., Yorktown Hta.,N.V
&TATE OF NEW .IER8EY
county: Bergen
xoa Courllt11nn, Rt. 4, Fort Lee, N. J .................................... ..
xo HoriiiOIIIIotel, U. S. Rt. 48, s. Hackanaack, N. J ....................... .
xo Howard JohniOn'a Motor Lodge, Rt. 17, Ramsay, N.J
xo Marrlolt Motor Hotel 11 Gto. Wallllngton lrtclga, Hudson Ter. &
the Bridge Plaza, Fort Lee, N.J ........... (N.Y. office area code 212)
xo Nn Ortllnt Motel, At. 4, Fort Lea, N. J .............................. .
xto OrttaniMotor HOlt!, 414 Hackenuck Ave. (At. 4), HackenHck, N. J
xo Ptlll8dlt Motor L.oclga, Rt. 48, Fort Lee, N. J ..... , ................... .
xo Peter P1n Motel, Rt. 3, E. Rutherford, N.J ............................. .
xo SlcyvlawMotel, Rta. 1 & 9& 48, Fort Lee, N. ........................ .
xo luburbln Motor Hotel, Rt. 4 & Intersection 208, Folr Lawn, N. J .. ,
xo 8wln Court Motel, N.J. Hwy. 17, Upper Saddle River, N.J ............ .
.. MO 6-7275 .. ..
.. AN 50802 .. ..
.. MO 9-8097 .. ..
.. JU 88800 .. ..
: :A'N'&:40.40:::: ::::::::: oP',; '1983 ::::::::
.. HA 7-4803 ............................... ..
.. FO 81020 ............................... ..
.. TU 8-5850 ............................... ..
.. GR 5-3112 ............................... ..
.. EM 38680 ............................... ..
.. TU 67100 .............................. ..
.. MO 9-3223. .............................. ..
.. TU 8-5500 ............................... ..
.. MO 9-6106. .............................. ..
.. ST 7-0555 ............................... ..
.. HA 702150. .............................. ..
Area Code: 914
11.01)..13.00.. ..13.01)..18.00
.8.01).10.00... ..12.00 .....
.. ........ , .. ..10.CJ0..12.00
.B.OCI-12.00... ..10.01).17.00
11.01).13.00... .,14.C)().18.00
11.D0-13.oo ...... 14.oo-1e.oo
e.oo-1o.oo. .. ..1o.oo-12.00
.8.oo-1o.oo. .1o.oo-12.oo
.8.00........ ..10.C)().12,00
.8.CJG.1o.oo ...... 1o.oo-14.oo
.8.50 ........... 12.C)().13.00
10.CJG.11.00.... ..10.C)().12,00
12.01)..18.00 ...... 12.C)().18.00
.8.CJG. e.oo ...... 1o.oo-13.oo
10.oo-1c.oo.... .1o.oo-1e.oo
.8.00 ........... 12.00 .... .
.8.oo-1o.oo. .. ..1o.oo-1e.oo
.. ow 32700 .................................. .8.00 ........... 12.00.:14.00
.. WH 8-8717 ................................... 9.00 ........... 10.0012.00
..GR 66800.. .. .. ........... , .. .. .. .. .. .. .10.oo-12.00... .. .14.110-17.00
.. DE 75200 ....... 7.00 ........................ 8.0CI-12.00 ...... 14.110-18.00
.. LV 281500 ................................... &.oo-12.00 ...... 11.110-18.00
.. ME 15700 .................................. 12.oo-1!1.150 ...... 18.110-20.00
..GR 83800 .................................. 10.C)().14.00 ...... 12.0018.00
.. WH 9-1000 ....... 8.00 .......... 9.00 .......... 8.oo-13.00 ...... 11.50-17,00
.. LV 27500 .................................. 10.oo-12.00 ...... 13.CI0-17.00
.. sc 35300 ....... 8.00 ......... 10.00 ......... 10.00 ........... 15.00 .... .
.. WH 8-8951 ................................... 9.00 ........... 11.110-15.00
.. BE 7-0400 .................................. 10.50-12.00 ...... 12.110-18.00
.. sw 3-8300 .................................. 11.00 ........... 14.0015.00
.. CR 14322 ................................... 8.00 ........... 12.Q0.14.00
::aRa:6200:::: ::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::: :14.00-1&:oo::: :::1e.oo:24:oo
.. vo 23822 .................................. 12.01).14.00 ...... 14.00.20.00
Area Code: 201
.. WI 72100 .................................. 10.00 ...... ..
.. HU 97500 .................................. 10.00-18.00 ...
.. DA 7-4500 .................................. 10.00-12.00 .. .
::c-15::::: ,-*::::::::: :1o.00-17:oo:::
.. WI 4-4900 ........ ., ....................... .,8.50-11.00, ..
.. HU 88900 ................. ., ............. , .. B.OCI-10.00 .. .
.. WI 40321 ................................... 8.00 ...... ..
.. GE 86898 .................................. .S.G0-12.00 ...
.. WI 41700 ................................. .,11.00-12.00,
.... 7912100 .................................. 10.00-12.00 .. .
..DA 72138 ................................. .,7.00- 8.00.,
STATE OF NEW JERSEY
County. Bergen
Name & Address
Area Code
201
Telephone
Number
\
Rooms W1thout Bath Rooms With Bath
Smgle Double Double
xo Tollgate Motel, Hudson Ter . Fort Lee N.J.
T_!l_n Motor At. 4, N
---r--
--.------
County:E11ex
------- ---------
C.rlton Hotel, 22 E. Park St.. Newark, N J.
x Douglaa Hotel, 15 Hill St., Newark, N.J ........ .
x EIHX Houae, 1050 Broad St., Newark 2. N.J ............ .
WI 7-0707
HU 7-8500
---1-- - .
Area Code 201
----
. .. MI 2-7100 .. ..
...MI 2-5100 .. ..
xo Green'a Hotel, 103 Pleasant Valley Way. West Orange. N.J ....... .
xo Lucerne Motor Hotel, 1156 Broad St . Newark. N J .....
. .. MI 2-4400 .. ..
. .. RE 1-2300 ... .
. .. BI 3-4590 ... .
.......... OR 3-2811 .. ..
--1--- .
.. 10 00 ......... 1500-1700 ...
... 4 00-5.00 ...... 5 00- 6.00 ...
8 00
8.00-12 00
. 7.50 ....... .
. .6.00-12 00 .. .
.. 8 00- 9 00 .. .
00 ....... .
..6 00- 7 00 .. .
. .5 00 ...... ..
12 00-14.00
10 00-16.00
... .a 5010.50
. . . 12.0020.00
.. .11 .5012.50
. . .20 00-22.00
. . . . 8 00-11 00
.. .. 6 5010.00
Marlborough Hotel, 89 N. Arlmgton Ave .. East Orange. N J ..
xo MarrloH Motor Hotel, at Newark Airport, N J Tpke (Ex 14) ....
Newark. N J ......................... .
................. .............................. . ........... ..
x Military Park Hotel,16 Park PI. Newark 1, N.J ... .
. .. MA 4-2454 ............ Jo op r 1964 ........... 9 OD-15 00 ...... 14_00 .. 25 00
x Robert Treat Hotel, 50 Park Pl., Newark 1. N.J ..... .
.. .MA 3-4080.... .. .... 7 00- 9 00 ...... 10 00-13 00
. .. MA 2-1000.... .. .. . . . . . . .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. . ..8 50-15 00 ...... 12 00-20.00
County: Hudaon
Area Code 201
uo ChrlaAnn Motor Court,1300 Tonne lie Ave .. North Bergen N J...... . .. UN 7-3328 ....
xo E .. t Gate Motor Hotel, 2600 Tonnelle Ave .. North Bergen. N J... . .. UN 6-0400 ..
x Holland Hotel, 9 Journal Square. Jersey Cly 6. N.J.. . .. OL 3-4900 ..
xo Howard Johnaon'a Motor Lodge, 675 Paterson Plank Ad .Secaucus. N.J .. UN 4-1400.
xo Plaza Hotel, 91 Sip Ave .. Jersey C1ty. N J .. . .OL 3-0100.
xo Yo!" Tunnel Ad. North Bergen. N J. . ... 4-4500.
County: Mlddleaex Area Code 201
xo Dutch Maid Motela, Rts.1 & 9, Woodbridge, N J.. . ...... ME 4-1394 .. .
xo Ediloon Motor Lodge, U S. At. 1 at Wilson Ave. Edson. N J ....... CH 7-0633 ... .
xo Howard Johnaon'a Motor Lodge, Rts. 1 & 18. New Brunswck. N J ....... CH 9-8000 ... .
.. .3 00-4 00.. .. .6 00
... 525 ......... 750
.12 00-14 00 .. .
.10 00-14 00 .. .
.. 5 00- 6 00 ..
.. 9 00-14 00 ..
. .6 50- 9.00.
. .9 00.
.. 700- 900.
.. 700- 900 .. .
.. 9.00-10 00 .. .
. . . 14 00-18.00
. .. 14 00-18 00
. .. .7 00-10.00
. .. 12 00-18.00
. .. 10.00-13.00
. .. 12 00-14.00
. ... 8 0012.00
xo Roger Smith Motor Hotel, 18 Li"ngston Ave . New Brunswck. N J ........ CH 7-6000 ... .
xo Swill Motel, U.S. At. 1 at Garden State Pkwy . Metuchen. N J . . .. Ll 8- 9500 ... .
. .. 5 00 ...... 8 00 .......... 7 00-10 00 .
. ... 9 00-14 00
. .. 12 00-15 00
. .. 10 00-13 00
. .10.00-13 00 -------- --
.. 8 50 ....
County: Morrla
Aea Coae 201
--!--- -- -
xo DuHon Hotel & Motor Lodge, 63 N Sussex St . Dover. N
xo Pine Brook Motor Lodge, At. 46, Pone Brook. N J .... .
xo Revere Hotel, 20 Commun1ty Pl., Moms town. N.J ... .
. 366 - 3300. .. . . 5 00.... . . 7 50.
.. CA 8-1300.... .. .......... ..
.. JE 9-0451.... .......... . ........... .
--1- - .. - +-------
Area Code 201
1--- ----
.. 7 50-tO 00 ....... 9 00-14.00
..8 00 ............ B 00-15.00
. 5 50- 6.50... .9 0010.00

County: P1118IC
x Alexander Hamilton Hotel, 55 Church St., Paterson 12. N.J .... .
x Uncoln Hotel, 4 Henry St., Passaic. N.J. . ........... .
..SH 2-8000 ....... 5.50.... ..6 50-10 00 ...... 11 50-15.00
. .PR 7-3300 ....... 3 75-4.75 ...... 4 25-6 00 ...... 6 00 7 50 ....... 6.00 7.50
County: Somerset
Area Code 201
--- ----- - -
xo Arch Motel, U. S. Hwy. 22 (East Bound La.), Somerville. N J ............... RA 2-3555 ... .
xo Old Mill Inn, At. 202, Bernardsville, N. J. .. ...... JE 8-1413 .......................... .
------- -- ------- --
_ ____ . ___ f------- _____ _
x Ellzebtlh Carteret Hotel, 1155 E. Jersey St., Elzabeth 4, N. J .............. EL 3-4000 ............................... ..
xo Park Eaat Hotel, 1065 E Jersey St., Elzabeth 4, N. J_. . .EL 5-3200.... . ............ .
xo Park Hotel, 123 W. 7th St., Plainfield, N.J. . . ........... PL 6-3400 ....... 5 00-5 50 ...... 8.00 ...... .
xo Swan Mottl, U.S. Rts.1 & 9, Linden, N.J. . .. WA 5-5300 .................. .
xo Village Motel & Swim Club, Hwys. 1 & 9, Rahway. N.J... .. ......... 382 1500.... . ............... .
xo Wlnlleld Scott Hotel, 323 N. Broad St., EliZabeth, N.J. . .. EL 2-1000 ....... 5 50-5 75 ...... 8 00 ...... .
-------- - ---- -- - -
STATE OF CONNECTICUT

A rea Code 203
1---
xoo Admiral Mottl, 377 Main Ave., Norwalk 7, Conn .......................... VI 7- 2416 ............................... ..
x Arcade Hotel, 1001 Mam St., Bndgeport 3, Conn. . ................ ED 4-0184 ....... 3 003 50 ...... 5 SO 6 50 ..
xo Bridgeport Motor Inn, At. 1A (Ex 24 Conn. Tpke ). Bridgeport. Conn ...... FO 7-4404 .................. .
xo Courteey Inn, Conn. Thrwy. (Ex. 1415). Norwalk. Conn. . . TE 8-4371. ........... to ope 1963 ...... .
-

. .9 00. . .. 12.00-14.00
..8 50- 9 00 ...... 11 50-12.00
. . 6 50- 9 50 ....... 9.50-12.50
. . 6 00 9.00 ....... 9 00-14.00
. .9 50-11 50.. . .. 12 5015.00
. .8 00-tt 00.. . .. 10 00-16.00
. . 6 00-10 00 ...... .7.00-14.00
. . 7 50- B 75 ..... 11.0013.00
.
.. 8 00-12 00 ...
.. 5 00 6 00 ..
.. 8 50-tO 00 ..
xo Fairfield Motor Inn, 417 Post Ad . Conn . . . . . . . . .. .. . . .. . . . . .CL 6-0491 ................ .
- xo Greenwich New Englander Motor Hotel, 1114 Post Rd. (Ex. 5 Conn... . ............................. .
Thrwy.). Greenwich. Conn.. .. . .. .. .. .. ..NE 7-3691 .............. ..
. 11 00-13 00 ...
. 10.00-12 00.
. .. 10 00-14.00
.. .. 7 50- 9.50
. .. 12 00-15.00
.. .12 00-1900
. .. 12.00-18.00
I
I
I
tl

xo Homeatead Inn, 420 Field Point Rd .. Greenwich. Conn. . .TO 9-7500.... .7.00-7 50 ..... 10 00-10 50.
xo Howard Johnaon'a Motor Lodge, Conn. Tpke (Ex 11), Conn... . .OL 5-3933 ..
xo Malnatreeter Motor Lodge, Ma1n St & Chapel St., Bridgeport 3, Conn. . .FO 6-4321 ... .
xo Merritt Parkway Motor Hotel, Pkwy.-Black Rock Tpke.,......... . ........... .
Fairfield, Conn... . . . . . . .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CL 9-5264.
xo Norwtlk Motor Inn, 99 East Ave. (Conn Tpke Ex. 16). Norwalk, Conn.. . . TE 8-5531 ...
xo Pequot Motor Inn, 3471 Post Rd., Southport, Conn . . ............. CL 9-7885.
xo Pickwick Arrna Hotel, Post Rd. (Rt. 1), Greenwich, Conn .. TO 9-2100.
xo Roger Smith Motor Lodge & Hotel, 55 R1ver St., Stamford. Conn.. . . DA 3-2112.
oo Sllvermlne Tevern & Gallerleo, Perry Ave . Norwalk, Conn . VI 7. 4558 ..
xo Stemlord Houae, B4 W. Park PL. Stamford, Conn. .DA 4-3113 .. ..
. . . to ope 1963.
... 5 00-6 00 ..
... 5 00-5 75 ..
. .. 6 DO ..
..9 00.
. .a oo-8.75.
.10 00 ..
xoo Stamford Motor Hotel, 1209 E. Maon St. Stamford, Conn.. .DA 5-2655 ... .
xo Strattord Motor Inn, 6905 Main St., Stratlord, Conn. . .... DR 87351 ....... .
xo Wettport New Englender Motor Hotel, 1595 Post Ad. Westport. Conn ..... CL 9-5236 ................................ .
xo Weetporter Motel, 295 Westport Ave. (U.S. At. 1), Norwalk, Conn ......... VI 7-5827 ............................... ..
.. 9 0020 00 ..
.. 900-950 ..
. tO 00-14 00.
.. a oo-t5 oo .
. .13 00-20.00
. .. 11.00-16.00
. .. 14.00-16.00
. .. 12 00-20.00
10 00-14 00. . .. 14.00-18 00
.9 00-10 00.. .12 00-16.00
. 8 J0-10 00. . .12 0017.00
.. 8 00-12 00.. .12 00-1600
6 75-20 00 .... _It 00-20 00
. .8 00. . .10 00-16.00
. .8 2511 75 .11 25-12.75
. .9 00-11 00.. . .. 12 00-20.00
. 10 00 .. 16.00 ......
. . 8 50-20 00 ....... 13.50-20.00
.. 8 28 ........... 12.42 .... .
......
i
I.
h
t
k
! .
f
''
''I'. "4ooo...,.
\
( , ~ ; ~
, _ ~
. ' .
. .
~ : -
II
. ,
,. .. :I '
. . ...
I I '
I ' ' .,
. ~ ..
.. ... ... , ..
: . ~ .. "'
< '-?1 .
I "t. I
~ I .
. . ,
., . 'i ' I
4. . ....
' . .
' I . ..
' .
-- ...
NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR TICKET PRICE INFORMATION
Individual Tickets
20 Ticket Book
Recognized
Travel and
Transportation Agencies
Certificates
Note
Now to February 29, 19641 March 1 to October 18, 1964
ADULTS $1.80 ADULTS $2.00
CHILDREN 0.90 CHILDREN 1.00
Children: 12 years old or less. Children under 2 years old
admitted free.
ADULTS
CHILDREN
$27.00 I ADULTS
13.50 CHILDREN
$30.00
15.00
Tickets are detachable only by collector when books are
presented at gates.
A.DULT. s ....... .. $1.35 I ADULTS ' ......... $2.00
CHILDREN ....... 0.675 CHILDREN . ...... i.oo.
Price information for Travel and Transportation agencies
only. Request folder 100-TA. Write (on your letterhead) to:
Director of Publications, New York World's Fair Corporation,
Flushing 52, N. Y.
Applications for a certificate designating organizations as
an "Official New York World's Fair Ticket and Information .
Center" may be obtained by writing to Director of Publica'
tions, New York World's Fair, Flushing 52, New York.
Discounts quoted herein apply to 1964 Season only. Gate
Prices: $2.00 adults and $1.00 children. Tickets are valid
for both 1964 and 1965 Seasons.
Automobile parking!
$1.50 per car per day
..
-... -'
.,....._.@ ....... ...
0"''""'"'...,.,.'""' , ..... , ... ~
ORDER
YOUR
TICKETS
NOW
It Is to your advantage to
order your tickets now and
make adequate plans to brlns
the public to the Fair.
When you order 50 or more
tickets, you save 32.5%
over the resutar retail price.
Special discounts on all
tickets expire on February
29, 1964.
lQQ.GR lOOM 9.25 63 < 1963 New York W o r l d ' ~ F;w !9641965 Corpotallon
..

- --- -- .. ---.
,., .. _. ..... - . ~ . -. . .... ~
\
PLEASE PRINT 01\ TYPE ALL INFOI\MAT ION Cosl Per
Name af Purchaser
Regular
Tickel-
Number of
Leu 10%
Price
Advance
Tick ell
INDIVIDUAL TICKETS
Ditcount
ADULTS
$2.00
$1.80
CHILDREN 2-12 YRS.
$1.00
.90
Address
SULK ORDERS -
50 OR MORE TICKETS
City
Zane
Stale
(Prices revert lo $2 I
lor adults, S 1 for ADULTS
$1.50
$1.35
children ofler
Feb. 29, 1964) CHILDREN 2-12 YRS.
.75
.675
TRAVEL OR TRANSPORTATION
Type af lutlneu AGENCIES
Minimum of 20 Tickell
ADULTS
$1.50
$1.35
CHILDREN
2-12 YRS.
.75
.675
Dale of Order
DO NOT USE
20 TICKET BOOK
(Tick ell are de
Cos I
Cos I
Number of
lochoble only by
Per Book
Per Book
Books
collector when books ADULTS
$30.00
$27.00
are presented at
$15.00
$13.50
CHILDREN
2-12 YRS.
THIS FORM AFTER
FEBRUARY 29, 1964
gale)
TOTAL AMOUNT '10% odvance discount eapires February 29, 1964
..
'1
'I
;,,:
AMOUNT
DoNal
Use This
Column
~
.....
.,
.
'
Please mall
Check or
Money Order
with this Form
to:
New York
World's Fair
1964-1965
Corporation
FLUSHING 52,
NEW YORK
ATTENTION:
TICKET
SALES
CASHIER
"-. .. : I
...
' .

''
\

NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR 1964-1965 CORPORATION
c, .. ,...,,_.w ... ... ,,...,, .. ,(.....,__
OFFICIAL ADVANCE ADMISSION TICKET ORDER FORM
.
. ,
,., .
...
I C '
. ''
...... ...
.. , ..
; . .. ""
4' : .
. .., ..
.. 1 .
,,
. '\ f
I
I'.
. '
..
I . f'
....
'll. '
FIRST NATIONAL CITY BANK
GEORGE S. MOORE
PRESIDENT
Dear Friend:
399 PARK AVENUE, NEW YORK 22, N.Y.
As a showcase of what man can achieve in an expanding
world and universe, I believe that the New York World's Fair
will be the most exciting public event on our national calendar
for 1964-65.
First National City Bank is the only bank at the Fair where
we are now operating a Service Branch for the convenience of
Fair employees, exhibitors and concessionaires, We will open
a second office, the Visitors Branch, on April 22, 1964, concurrent
with the opening of the Fair, At this office, we will offer a full
complement of financial services to visitors from the United States
and throughout the world,
Additionally, First National City Travelers Checks have
been designated "Official Travelers Check New York World's Fair
1964-65" and all of our branches in the metropolitan area are
Official World's Fair Ticket and Information Centers.
Our facilities at the Fair and throughout the city stand ready
to help you and your customers.
Yours sincerely,
~ - -
FIRST NATIONAL CITY BANK
GEORGE S. MOORE
PRESIDENT
Dear Friend:
3911 PARK AVENUE, NEW YORK 22, N.Y.
As a showcase of what man can achieve in an expanding
world and universe, I believe that the New York World
1
s Fair
will be the most exciting public event on our national calendar
for 1964-65.
First National City Bank is the only bank at the Fair where
we are now operating a Service Branch for the convenience of
Fair employees, exhibitors and concessionaires. We will open
a second office, the Visitors Branch, on April 22, 1964, concurrent
with the opening of the Fair. At this office , we will offer a full
complement of financial services to visitors from the United States
and throughout the world.
Additionally, First National City Travelers Checks have
been designated "Official Travelers Check New York World's Fair
1964-65" and all of our branches in the metropolitan area are
Official World's Fair Ticket and Information Centers.
Our facilities at the Fair and throughout the city stand ready
to help you and your customers,
Yours sincerely,
FmST NATIONAL CITY BANK
1964-65 WORLD'S F Am
Letters of Introduction and Check Cashing Services
With our two branches at the World's Fair, we want to do
everything we can to assist your clients who may be visiting New York
during 1964 and 1965.
To provide special services and check cashing privileges for
your important customers and employees, we feel a Letter of Introduction
will assure them of our most efficient service.
A suggested Letter of Introduction is attached herewith. This
will enable your important customers to cash checks within certain
limitations at our World's Fair Visitors Branch or at our 399 Park
Avenue office. The original of the Letter should be given to your
customer and two copies sent to our Bank and Corporate Services
Department, 399 Park Avenue, New York. It is important that the Letter
indicate the limit to which we are authorized to cash checks and that all
copies of the Letter bear the customer's signature.
We suggest that your customers carry an ample supply of
First National City Travelers Checks for their trip to New York. A
Letter of Introduction from you, however, may be helpful in the event
that an unforeseen need for assistance develops.
LETTER OF INTRODUCTION EXHIBIT
(YOUR BANK LETTERHEAD)
First National City Bank
399 Park Avenue
New York 22, New York
Gentlemen:
We are pleased to introduce to you Mr.
a valued customer at this Bank. A specimen of his signature appears
below.
He will be visiting New York City on a business trip (or pleasure
or both} during which he expects to visit the World's Fair. In case of
his need, would you be good enough to cash checks for him, drawn on
us, up to $ per day.
Your courtesies to him while in your city will be greatly
appreciated.
Sincerely yours,
Signature of Bank Officer
Specimen Signature of Customer
Instructions: (1) Deliver original to customer.
(2) Send 2 copies to: First National City Bank
Bank & Corporate Services Department
399 Park Avenue
New York 22, New York
FACT SHEET
NEW YORK WORLD'S F AlR 1964-65
Sponsor
New York World's Fair 1964-65 Corporation
Flushing 52# New York
Dates of Fair
Wednesday, April ZZ -- Sunday, October 18, 1964
Wednesday, April21 --Sunday, October 17, 1965
Gates will open every day at 9:30a.m., with all
exhibits open until 10 p.m. and amusements until 2:00 a.m.
Location and Size
Flushing Meadow Park, Queens, New York. The Fair is
located on an area of land of 646 acres which can be conveniently
reached from mid-town New York by subway, railroad, bus, boat#
helicopter and automobile.
Attendance
It is expected that more than Z5, 000,000 people will make a total
of 80, 000,000 visits to the Fair- -45,000, 000 in 1964 and 35,000, 000 in
1965. Over 500,000 visitors are expected from overseas.
Exhibits
There will be 150 major exhibit buildings and amusement attractions,
plus extensive restaurant and service facilities at the Fair. Many of the
buildings will have multiple exhibits. A summary of exhibits by area
follows:
Industrial Exhibits 35
Transportation Exhibits 15
Special Exhibits 16
Federal and States
Area Participants 28
International Exhibitors 42
Major Amusements 14
z
Admission Tickets
During the sessions of the Fair in 1964 and 1965, the regular
charge for admission will be $Z. 00 for adults and $1. 00 for children from
2 to 12 years old. Children under Z will be admitted free. Quantities of
50 tickets or more, purchased prior to March 1, 1964, cost $1.35 per
adult ticket and $. 675 per children's ticket (any combination of adult and
children tickets adding to 50 may be purchased at these discounted prices).
All tickets will be honored for both years of the Fair.
The advance ticket sale has had particular appeal to us, and we are
presently distributing tickets through our Branches in the Metropolitan
Area. It occurs you may be interested in taking advantage of the discount
prices, and we would be pleased to make tickets available to you prior to
March 1, 1964, including quantities of less than 50.
If you prefer to place your order directly with the Fair, we are
enclosing a World's Fair Ticket Order Form, and requests for tickets
should be addressed to:
New York World's Fair 1964-65 Corporation
Flushing 52, New York
Attention: Ticket Sales Center
Additionally, books of ZO tickets are also available at a cost of
$30.00 per book for adults and $15.00 per book for children. Purchases
of these books prior to March 1, 1964 earn a 10% discount, i.e. $2.7. 00
for an adult book and $13. 50 for a children's book, and may be obtained
from the Fair directly at the above address.
"Ticket and Information Center" Certificates
As part of the Fair's publicity program, an 11" x 15" parchment
certificate is available to organizations purchasing 1, 000 or more tickets.
This certificate designates the organization as an Official New York
World's Fair Ticket and Information Center. Such Centers are required
to display at least two World
1
s Fair posters as well as to keep on hand a
reasonable supply of tickets and a minimum of 100 copies of the World's
Fair Consumer Folder. Both the posters and the folders are furnished
free of charge, and a copy of the latter is enclosed.
It occurs to us that your bank may wish to consider this, and if such
is the case, details can be arranged through Mr. J. J. Wuerthner,
World's Fair Ticket Office, Room 4029, Time and Life Building,
Rockefeller Center, New York, New York.
3
Hotel Accommodations
As you can appreciate, hotel accommodations in New York
will be in great demand during the Fair. Visitors to New York are
being urged to secure reservations as much as 6 months in advance,
and the New York World's Fair Housing Bureau has been set up to
assist in this connection. This organization is a division of the
New York Convention and Visitors Bureau, a non-profit organization.
The enclosed Hotel and Motel Guide, published by the
Bureau, lists virtually every transient hotel and motel in New York
City and environs, and the rates reported in 196Z. Early in 1964,
a revised edition will be issued with the rates in effect at that time.
Should your employees or customers wish to make reservations,
they can be handled through one of the following ways:
1. Through the New York World's Fair
Housing Bureau, 30 Rockefeller Plaza,
New York 20, New York
2. Directly to the hotel or motel as listed
in the folder.
3. Through any travel agent who can place
a reservation through the Housing Bureau
or directly with the hotel or motel.
World's Fair Consumer Folder
The enclosed World's Fair Consumer Folder is available
free of charge in packages of 200. In the event you wish to distribute
a quantity of them, they may be obtained by writing
Mr. Ken Fuller
New York World's Fair 1964-65 Corporation
Flushing 52, New York
Division of Operations January 15, 1964
PUBLIC RESTAURANTS
AT THE
NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR
The information contained in this report is subject to change.
TOTALS - RESTAURANT FACILITIES
Exhibitors with Restaurants -
61
Number of Individual Restaurants -
113
Total Restaurant Seats -
30,552
Number of Public Bars or
Cocktail Lounges -
43
Total number of Bar and Cocktail
Lounge Seats -
2, 681
Note: In addition, the Brass Rail will operate
2 5 large refreshment stands throughout
the Fair grounds. Many exhibitors will
have small refreshment stands in their
pavilions.
INDUSTRIAL AREA TOTALS
Exhibitors with Restaurants - 9
Number of Individual Restaurants - 12
Total Restaurant Seats - 3, 593
Number of Public Bars or
Cocktail Lounges - 6
Total number of Bar and Cocktail
Lounge Seats -
195
BETTER LIVING CENTER
RESERVATIONS:
Will not accept group reservations.
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. "Hilton Cafe International" - roof top restaurant.
Seats: About 250
Open: 10 AM to 10 PM (tentative)
Price: A la carte, Lunch -from 50 to $2. 75
11
Dinner - from 5 0 ~ to $2. 75.
Complete Lunch - from $2. 25 to $4. 00
11
Dinner - from $2. 25 to $4. 00
Menu: 5 self-service pick-up kitchens -native chefs from
various countries will supervise preparation of dishes.
Each kitchen will serve selected specialties of the
Mediterranean, Europe, North America, Southand
Central America, and the Orient. Desserts and
beverages will be served by waitresses.
Entertainment: Music
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 55
CREDIT CARDS:
Carte Blanche. Possibly others.
RESTAURANT OPERATOR:
Mr. Paul G. Schreiber
Hilton Hotels International, Inc.
Waldorf Astoria
301 Park Avenue
New York 22, N. Y.
Phone: AR 1-6130 or MU 8-2240
RESERVATIONS:
THE BRASS RAIL
(Block 19)
Brass Rail World's Fair Organization
World's Fair Banquet Sales Office
745 Seventh Avenue
New York 19, N. Y.
Phone: PL 7-9500
Will accept group reservations for all hours of operation.
Largest group - 600
Special group rates will be dependent upon menus for each group.
Price range will be $2. 95 to $12. 00.
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. The Brass Rail Pan American Patio Restaurant
Seats: 600
Open: 11 AM to 10 PM
Price: Dinner and Lunch - $2. 95
Special children's rate - $1. 00 less than menu prices.
Menu: South American foods devised by world famous chef
Hyppolite Holtcoeur.
Entertainment: Fashion Shows will be presented to diners
on a continuous basis at no charge during
meal times.
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 60
CREDIT CARDS:
Diners Club
RESERVATIONS:
FESTIVAL OF GAS
Mr. Sanford Bain
Restaurant Associates
515 West 57th Street
New York, N. Y.
Phone: JU 6-5800
Will accept group reservations 9 AM to 11:15 AM and
5:15PM to 8:30PM
Largest group - 200
Special group rates average 10% off menu prices,
subject to prior arrangements.
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant
Seats: 220
Open: 11 AM to 12 Midnight
Upon application will open earlier for groups
of 75 persons or more.
Price: Lunch -Ala carte, from $2. 85 to $4. 50
Complete dinner, $5. 50
Dinner - A la carte, from $3. 50 to $6. 00
Complete dinner, $8. 50
Varied steaks for lunch and dinner, to $7. 50
Supper -A la carte, from $2. 25
Menu: Regional specialties of America.
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 40
CREDIT CARDS:
American Express and Restaurant Associates
HALL OF EDUCATION
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
Hall of Education
10 Columbus Circle
New York 10, N. Y.
Phone: JU 2-1540
Will accept group reservations from 10 AM to 12 Noon,
3 PM to 5 PM,
8 PM to 10 PM
Largest group - 400
1 Restaurant (cafeteria)
1. Self-service style Restaurant
Seats: 400
Open: 10 AM to 12 Midnight
Price: Ala carte, 309 to $1. 25
Menu: American Food
CREDIT CARDS:
Will not accept credit cards.
RESERVATIONS:
PAVILION OF AMERICAN INTERIORS
Mr. Philip Elton
Pavilion of American Interiors
301 East 47th Street
New York, New York
Phone: PL 2-6190
Will accept group reservations.
Largest group - 350
Will probably have special group rates.
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge (On roof of Pavilion)
1. Restaurant
Seats: 216 outdoor
134 indoor
Open: 10 AM to 10 PM
Price: Buffet Lunch - Under $3. 00
Waiter Service in evening -average meal about $5. 00
Special children's rates not established.
Menu: American food.
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 40
CREDIT CARDS:
Will not accept credit cards.
RESERVATIONS:
RHEINGOLD
"Little Old New York''
Mr. R. M. Webb
Manager - Little Old New York
Greyhound Post Houses, Inc.
7300 West Madison Street
Forest Park, illinois
Phone: 312 366-5700
Will accept group reservations ibr groups of 100 or more at any time
other than peak service periods, as well as to smaller groups of
30 to SO during the rr...cal period in the Observatory (Solarium) of
the Town House.
FACILITIES:
2 Restaurants - 1 Tavern
All facilities will sell draft and bottled beer.
1. "Sidewalk Cafe"
Seats: 150
Open: 9 AM to 2 AM
Price: A la carte and dinner menu will be in the medium
price range.
Special rates for children - not established.
Menu: Tavern type food, including hot corned beef, roaS: beef,
pastrami, cold plates, sandwich plates.
Entertainment: Four-piece band in Park bandstand.
Keystone Kops - a roving barbershop quartet
Miscellaneous variety acts.
2. "The Town House Restaurant"
Seats: 300
Open: 9 AM to 2 AM
Price: A la carte and dinner menu will be in the medium
price range.
Special rates for children - not established.
Menu: Typical American type food - tender juicy steaks, special
breads and desserts.
Entertainment: Four-pi.ece band in Park bandstand.
Keystone Kops - a roving barbershop quartet
Miscellaneous variety acts.
3. "The Rheingold Tavern"
Seats: 150
CREDIT CARDS:
Open: 9 AM to 2 AM
Price. A la carte and dinner will be in medium price range.
Special rates for children - not established.
Menu: Hot meat sandwiches.
Entertainment: Four-piece band in Park bandstand.
Keystone Kops - a roving barbershop quartet
Miscellaneous variety acts.
American Express
THE F. & M. SCHAEFER BREWING CO.
RESERVATIONS:
Mr. James G. Ryan
The F. & M. Schaefer Brewing Co.
430 Kent A venue
Brooklyn 11, N. Y.
Phone: EV 7-7000
Will accept group reservations from 11:30 AM to 10 PM.
largest group - about 500
Special group rates depends upon size of group and type of menu, etc.
Groups will be handled out of doors in the Schaefer Patio area.
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant - 1 Bar
1. Restaurant
Seats: 340
Open: 11: 30 AM to 10 PM
Price: Lunch - $2. 95
Dinner and Supper - $3. 95
Special children's rates:
Lunch - $2. 00
Dinner and Supper - $3. 00
Menu: Buffet style - American food.
Will feature dishes in which beer is used as an ingredient.
2. Bar
CREDIT CARDS:
Probably Diners Club and American Express.
THE SEVEN-UP EXHIBIT
RES:giRVATIONS:
Will not accept group reservations.
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant
1. "7-Up International Sandwich Gardens''
Seats: 408
Open: 10 AM to 10 PM
Price: $1. 50 for 4 sandwiches. No charge for 7-Up.
Menu: Sandwiches from around the world. Four general
areas of the world will be represented. They are:
The Americas
The Mediterranean
Northern Europe
The Pacific
Each of these general areas will be represented by
sandwiches from 4 countries within that area.
Visitor will select 4 sandwiches from one area.
Entertainment: Continuous entertainment will be presented
from four circular stages. Program under
the supervision of John Krimsky.
Entertainment will be international in nature,
featuring music, song and dance specialties
of many lands.
CREDIT CARDS:
Will not accept credit cards.
RESTAURANT OPERATOR:
The Brass Rail
745 Seventh Avenue
New York 19, N. Y.
Phone: PL '7-9500
RESERVATIONS:
WORLD OF FOOD
World of Food
158 East 35th Street
New York 16, N. Y.
Phone: OR 9-0260
Will accept group reservations.
Largest group - 350
FACILITIES:
2 Deluxe Restaurants - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1 restaurant will have 350 seats;
1 restaurant will have 75 seats.
American food will be served.
No other information available.
INTERNATIONAL AREA TOTALS
Exhibitors with Restaurants - 29
Number of Individual Restaurants - 57
Total Restaurant Seats - 10, 804
Number of Public Bars or
Cocktail Lounges - 21
Total number of Bar and Cocktail
Lounge Seats - 819
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS
AFRICAN PAVILION
Mr. Frederick J. Pagnani
Attica Associates Inc.
12 East 41 Street
New York, N. Y.
Phone: MU 6-5835
Will accept group reservations
Largest group - 100
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant
Seats: 250
Open: 10 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Price: Average meal $4. 00 including a drink
Half price for children
Menu: African food
Entertainment: Not determined
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 60
Not determined
ARGENTINA
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS
Dr. Ignacio M. Monaco
Comarg S. R. L.
Lavalle 1125MPiso 11
0. F. 25
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Small private dining-room can be made available
1 Restaurant M 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant
Seats: 350
Open: Not determined
Price: Under $1. QO for Empanados only
$1. 50 to $3. 00 range
Menu: Argentinian food featuring Barbecue Beef
ala Argentina
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: Undetermined
Not decided
BELGIAN VILLAGE
RESERVATIONS:
Mr. Harry Miller.
97-45 Queens Boulevard
Rego Park, New York
Phone: TW 6-7250
Will accept group reservations for Rathskeller.
Largest group - 1, 500.
Special rates for groups open to negotiation.
FACILITIES:
1 large Rathskeller - 19 small Restaurants - 3 Cocktail Lounges
1. Rathskeller
Seats: 1, 500
Open: 10 AM to 4 AM
Price: Not established.
Menu: Belgian and European dishes. Also American food.
Entertainment: Music and Dancing, Brass Band, Folk
Dancing and other professional entertainment.
2. 19 Restaurants - sidewalk cafe and terrace types.
Seats: Will average about 25 seats for each restaurant.
Open: 10 AM to 11 PM
Price: A la carte and complete dinners. Will vary from
deluxe prices for continental food to budget prices.
Menu: Belgian and European dishes. Also American food.
Entertainment: A complete program of entertainment will
take place in the Belgian Village and may be viewed
by diners at the sidewalk cafes.
3. 3 Cocktail Lounges
Seats: Averaging 50 seats each.
CREDIT CARDS:
Will not accept credit cards.
BRASS Ri\IL (Block 1121_)
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS
Brass Rail World's Fair Organization
World's Fair Banquet Sales Office
745 Seventh Avenue
New York, N. Y.
Phone: PL 7-9500
Will accept group reservations for all hours
Largest group - '150
Special rates for groups dependant upon menus
Price Range: From $2. 75 to $12. 00
1 Restaurant - 1 Lounge
1. The Brass Rail Garden Restaurant
Seats: 750
Open: 11 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Price: Complete Dinners $2. 75
$1. 00 less than menu price for children
Menu: Southern style food devised by world-famous chef,
Hyppolite Holtcoeur
Entertainment: Fashion Shows presented at no charge on
a continuous basis during meal times
?.. Cocktail
Seats:
Diners Club
BRASS RAIL (Block #23)
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS
Brass Rail World's Fair Organization
World's Fair Banquet Sales Office
745 Seventh Avenue
New York, N. Y.
Phone: PL 7-9500
Will accept group reservations all hours
Largest group - 566
Special group rates dependent upon the menu selected
Price Range: From $2. 95 to $12. 00
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
l. The Brass Rail Danish Smorgasbord Restaurant
Seats: 566
Open: 11 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Price: Complete Dinner $2. 75
$1. 00 less than menu price for children
Menu: Danish Buffet devised by world-famous chef
Hyppolite Holtcoeur
Entertainment: Fa::hion Shows presented at no charge on
a continuous basis during meal times
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 56
Diners Club
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
CARIDBEAN
Mr. Samuel J. DeSarno
30 East 42nd Street - Suite 2008
New York N. Y.
Phone: TN 7-7373
Will accept group res=rvations (Preferable before 6 P. M. )
Largest group - 500
Special rates for groups open to negotiations
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant
Seats: 425 (including patio)
Open: 11:30 A. M. to 2 A. M.
Price: A la carte and Complete Dinner $2. 25 to $6. 00
After 10 P. M. 2 drink minimum
35% reduction for children's plate
Menu: Caribbean food
Entertainment: Dancing after 10 P. M. Professional
entertainment from 4 P. M. to 2 A. M.
Will include steel bands, limbo and
calypso danCErs, etc.
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 23
Diners Club and American Express
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
DENMARK
Have not decided if they will accept group reservations
as yet.
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. "Restaurant Denmark"
Seats: 150 to 200
Open: 10 AM to midnight
Price: Lunch - Ala carte, from $2. 00 to $5. 00
Complete dinner, from $2. 50 to $3. 50
Dinner - Ala carte, from $3. 00 to $7. 50
Complete dinner, from $5. 50 to $7. 50
Supper - A la carte, from $2. 00 to $5. 00
Menu: Danish food, including seafoods of the North,
Danish cold table and Danish open-face sandwiches.
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 30 to 40
CREDIT CARDS:
Carte Blanche, American Express and Diners Club.
RESTAURANT OPERATOR:
Denmark Pavilion, Inc.
665 Fifth A venue - Room 709
New York 22, N. Y.
Phone: HA 1-4383
FRANCE
RESERVATIONS:
Mr. Jacques M. Fisher
Director General
The Pavilion of Paris and French Industry
598 Madison A venue
New York 22, N. Y.
Phone: PL 8-3003
Will accept group reservations.
Largest group - 300
Special rates for groups open to negotiation.
F AGILITIES:
4 Restaurants
1. Deluxe Restaurant
Seats: 250 to 300
Open: 11 AM to 2 AM
Price: Not established.
Menu: French Cuisine
Entertainment: Music
2. 3 Sidewalk Cafes
Seats: About 250
CREDIT CARDS:
Open: 10 AM to 10 PM
Price: Not established.
Menu: French and American cuisine.
Not determined.
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES
CREDIT CARDS:
GREECE
Mr. John James Carlos ATA, Commissioner General
Greek Pavilion N.Y. W. F. 1964-1965 Ltd.
501 Fifth Avenue
New York 17, N. Y.
Phone: MU 7-5499
Will accept group reservations from noon to 2 A. M.
Largest group - 150
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Greek "Taverna" Restaurant
Seats: 350
Open: Not determined
Price: Moderate prices
Special rates for children not determined
Menu: Greek food
Entertainment: Music, Dancing and Professional entertainment
will transform restaurant into cabaret in the
evening.
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: About 100
Not determined
GUINEA
RESERVATIONS:
Mr. Abel Camara
Commercial Attache
Embassy of the Republic of Guinea
2112 Leroy Place, N. W.
Washington 8, D. C.
Phone: 202 HU 3-9420
Will accept group reservations.
Largest group - 50
Special rates for groups open to negotiation.
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant
Seats: 126
Open: 10 AM to Midnight
Price: Not determined.
Menu: Food of Guinea. Also Continental and American food.
Entertainment: Music and Dancing
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: Not determined.
CREDIT CARDS:
Will honor most credit cards.
HONG KONG
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
Mr. Gilbert T. Hodges
Communications Advisors, Inc.
551 Fifth Avenue
New York 17, New York
Phone YU 6-4235
Will accept group reservations
Largest group - 200
From 12 to 3 P. M. and 7 P. M. to 11 P. M.
Special Group Rate $10. 80 includes admission to
Fair, 1 free cocktail, Hong Kong Banquet, live
Dance Music and Oriental Variety Show
2 Restaurants - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. "Cathay" Restaurant
Seats: 215
Open: Tentatively 10 A. M. to 1 A. M.
Price: Not determined
Special rates for children not determined
Menu: Hong Kong Food featuring Canton, Shanghai and
Peking cooking.
Entertainment: Music, Dancing and other entertainment
from Crown Colony Club for special groups.
2. "The Crown Colony Club"
Seats: Apploximately 500
Open: Not determined
Price: Not determined -possible minimum charge about
$3. 00 per person
Menu: Light snack type Chinese foods (appetizers, soups,
and a la carte entrees).
Entertainment: Club will feature 3 or 4 Shows daily which
will include Dancers, Singers, instrument-
alists, acrobats, opera groups, and other
Variety Acts imported from Hong Kong
CREDIT CARDS:
Page 2
HONG KONG
3. "Bar of the Dragons"
Seats: 30
Entertainment: From the bar area, visitors can view
stage shows and ot..her entertainment
from the floor of the "Cathay" restaurant.
Not determined
INDIA
RESERVATIONS:
No information.
FACILITIES:
Will probably have one 250 seat restaurant serving Indian food.
No other information available.
~ X H I B I T REPRESENTATIVE:
Mr. A. S. Sethi, Consul
Consulate General of India
3 East 64th Street
New York 21, New York
Phone: TR 9-7800
RESERYA TIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
INDONESIA
Restaurant Associates (Att. Mr. Bain)
515 West 57th Street
New York, N. Y.
Phone JU 6-5800
Will accept group reservations
Largest group 500
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant
Seats: 500
Open: 11: 30 A. M. to 2 A. M.
Price: Not determined
Menu: Indonesian food
Entertainment: Professional entertainers
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 50
Restaurant Associates and American Express
INTERNATIONAL PlAZA
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
Will not accept group reservations
1 Restaurant
1. Restaurant - self -service
Seats: 400 Outdoor Umbrella-style
Open: 10 A. M. to 12 Midnight
Price: A la carte from 309 to $1. 25
Menu: International foods, including foods of the United States
Italy, China, etc.
CREDIT CARDS:
Will not accept credit cards
RESTAURANT OPERATOR
Sportservice Corporation
Leo R. Lazarus
14 Park Lane
Rockville Centre, New York
Phone: 516-RO 6-6542
JAPAN
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES :
CREDIT CARDS:
Japanese Exhibitors' Association of New York
11 West 42nd Street
New York 36, New York
Phone: OX 5-0778-9
ox 5-0446-7
Will accept group reservations for lunch between 1: 30 to 4 P. M.
and dinner between 9:30 and 11:30 P. M.
Largest group 400
l Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. "House of Japan" Restaurant
Seats: 500
Open: Lunch 11:30 AM to 5 PM
Dinner 5 P. M. to 9 P. M.
Supper 9 P. M. to 1:30 A. M.
Price: Lunch, Dinner and Supper Ala carte from 2 5 ~ to 9 5 ~
Complete Lunch from $1. 20 to $2. 80
Complete Dinner from $3. 00 to $6. 00
Complete Supper from $6.00 to $7. 50
Menu: Japanese Food. Also, International Lunch featuring
breaded veal cutlet, chicken curry, fried chicken,
fried jumbo shrimp, etc.
Entertainment: Music and Dancing. Typical Japanese Floor
Shows
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: Not Determined
Under Consideration
JORDAN
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
Mr. Sami A wad
First Secretary Press & Tourism
Permanent Commission of the Hashemite Kingdom of J oman
to the United Nations
411 East 53rd Street
New York 22, New York
Phone: PL 5-3431
Will accept group reservations for lunch in
theatre ~ - light food service
Largest group - 200
Special rates for groups open to negotiation
1 Restaurant
1. Restaurant - Counter service
Seats: 22
Open: 9 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Price: 5 0 ~ to $2. 00
Menu: Jordanian food
Will not accept credit cards.
KOREA
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES
CREDIT CARDS:
Korean Trade Promotion Center
10 West 56th Street
New York, N. Y.
Phone: JU 2-6432
Will accept group accommodations
Largest group - 90
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant
Seats: 90
Open: Not determined
Price: Not determined
Menu: Korean food
Entertainment: Music, Dancing and Professional entertainment
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 20
American Express and Diners Club
MALAYSIA
RESERVATIONS:
No information.
F AGILITIES:
1 Restaurant
Seats: About 75
Will serve Malaysian food.
No other information available.
EXIDBIT REPRESENTATIVE:
His Excellency
Dato Ong Yoke Lin
Ambassador of Malaysia
2401 Massachusetts Avenue, N. W.
Washington 8, D. C.
Phone: 202 AD 4-7600
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
MEXICO
Mr. R. Calderon
Balsa Hotels Corporation
2 East 55th Street
New York, New York
Phone: PL 3-4500
Will accept group reservations
Largest group - 75 to 100
Special rates for groups open to negotiation
2 Restaurants - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. "Focolare" - Deluxe Restaurant
Seats: 150
Open: 11 A. M. to 2 A. M.
Price: Ala carte; About $5 to $6 for average meal
Menu: Mexican and Continental food
Entertainment: Mexican Mara chi Band
2. "Cafe Alameda" -Moderately Priced ReS:aurant
Seats: 100
Open: 9:30 A. M. to 2 A. M.
Price: Ala carte; about $3 to $4 for average meal
Menu: Mexican and Continental food.
3. "Jorongo" - Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 70
Entertainment: Trio
Diners Club - Possibly others
MOROCCO
RESERVATIONS:
Mr. Moktar Sbai, President
The Moroccan Pavilion, Inc.
' 1141 Broadway
FACILITIES:
New York, N. Y.
Phone: MU 4-7714
Will accept group reservations.
Largest group - 200 in Night Club
300 in Outdoor Restaurant
Special rates for groups open to negotiation.
2 Restaurants - 1 Night Club
1. Restaurant - Outdoor seating, self service.
Seats: 300
Open: 10 AM to 2 AM
Price: A la carte - and up.
Half price for children.
Menu: Moroccan food such as
11
Cuscus" and
11
Brochettes
11

Also American food including steaks and hambuzgem.
Entertainment: Professional Morrocan entertainment on an
occasional basis.
2. Sidewalk Cafe - Waiter Service
Seats: 100
Open: 10 AM to 2 AM
Price: A la carte - and up, $1. 00 minimum.
Half price for children.
Menu: Moroccan and American food.
Entertainment: Occasional professional Moroccan entertainment.
3.
11
0ne Thousand and One Nights'' - Night Club
Seats: 200
Open: 10 AM to 2 AM (10 AM to 1 H.A special for group
1 PM to 6:30PM - 1 hour show.
6:30PM to 2 AM - elaborate 2 to 3 hour show.
Price: 10 AM to 1 PM -light food menu- special rates for groups.
1 PM to 6: 30 PM - a la carte light food menu - $2 minimum.
6: 30 PM to 2 AM - approximately $5 minimum. A vemge
meal price $5 to $7.
(continued)
Page 2
MOROCCO
3. "One 'Thousand and One Nights" - Night Club (continued)
Menu: Moroccan and American food.
Entertainment: 10 AM to 1 PM - special Moroccan shows for groups.
1 PM to 6: 30 PM - 1 hour Moroccan show.
6: 30 PM to 2 AM - elaborate 2 to 3 hour Moroccan
show complete with native entertainers -
dancers, singers, musicians, etc. -about
20 performers from Morocco.
CREDIT CARDS:
Most credit cards will be honored.
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
PAKISTAN
Mr. Shahid M. Am in
12 East 65th Street
New York 21, New York
Phone TR 9-5800
Will accept group reservations
Largest group - 80
Special group rates not determined
1 Restaurant (In 2 sections Indoor and Outdoor)
1. Restaurant
Seats: 80 to 100
Open: 9: 30 A. M. to 12 Midnight
Price: Not determined
Special children's prices not determined
Menu: Pakistani food featuring Tandoori Chicken, Kebabs
and Bilau. Pakistani pickles and condiments will
be sold to take home.
Entertainment: Occasional Fashion Shows
Will probably accept certain Credit Cards
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
POLYNESIAN VILLAGE
Will not accept group reservations
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant
Seats: 300
Open: 10 A. M. to 2 A. M.
Price: A la carte- Medium to Luxury prices
Special rates for children not determined
Menu: Polynesian food
Entertainment: Professional entertainment
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 90 - Will feature exotic Polynesian drinks
Entertainment: Polynesian
Not determined
RESTAURANT OPERATOR
Mr. William Moultray
900 West Lake North
Seattle, Washington
Phone: MAINE 3-4155
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
SPAIN
Mr. Manuel Ortuno
Executive Director
Pavilion of Spain
850 Third Avenue 12th Floor
New York 22, New York
Phone: PL 3-9630
Will accept group reservations
Largest group 500
3 Restaurants - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. "Toledo" Deluxe Restaurant
Seats: 150
Open: 10 A. M. to 12 midnight
Price: Luxury Prices
Menu: Typical food of Spain and International Food
Cortes - operator of famous Jockey Club and
Club 31 in Madrid is Director General of this
Restaurant
2. "Grenada" Deluxe Restaurant
Seats: 350
Open: 10 A. M. to 12 midnight
Price: Lunch will average $4. 50 -Dinner about $7. 50
Menu: Typical food of Spain - Cortes will also operate
this restaurant
Entertainment: Flamenco Music and Dancing
3. "Madrid" Shell Fish Restaurant
Seats: 50 to lOO
Open: 10 A. M. to midnight
Menu: Sea Food
4. Cocktail Lounge - Large Cocktail Lounge
SUDAN
RESERVATIONS:
No Information
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant
1. Restaurant - Outdoor Style
Seats: Not Determined
Price: Not Determined
Menu: Sudanese and American Food
CREDIT CARDS:
Not Determined
EXHIBITOR'S REPRESENTATIVE:
Mr. Mohamed Zaki Elhag
2ND SECRETARY EMBASSY OF THE REPUBLIC OF SUDAN
3421 MASSACHUSETTS A V. N. W.
WASHINGTON 8, D. C.
Phone 202-FE 8-8565
SWEDEN
RESERVATIONS:
Have not decided if they will accept group reservations.
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant
Seats: 80 Indoors and 40 Outdoors
Open: 10 A. M. to 12 Midnight
Price: $5. 00 or $6. 00 per person - average price.
Special children's rates not determined
Menu: Swedish smorgasbord
CREDIT CARDS
Not Determined
RESTAURANT OPERATOR
Mr. Viggo Hansen
S. A. S. Catering Corporation
c/o Scandanavian Airlines
138-02 Queens Boulevard
Jamaica 35, New York
Phone OL 7-8000
SWITZERLAND
RESERVATIONS:
Mr. Frederick J. Pagnani
Attica Associates Inc.
12 East 41st Street
New York, New York
Phone: MU 6-5835
Will accept group reservations
Largest group - 300
FACILITIES: 1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
CREDIT CARDS:
1. Restaurant
Seats: 3b0
Open: 10 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Price: Average meal about $4. 00 including l drink
Children's rates half price
Menu: Swiss food
Entertainment: Swiss waiters and waitresses will sing and
entertain diners
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 20
Not determined
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
THAILAND
Miss Nid
Nid of Thailand
20 East 60 Street
New York 22, N. Y.
Phone PL 5-2666
Will accept group reservations
Largest group - 200
Special group rates subject to negotiation
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant - mostly outdoor umbrella-style (First Thailand Restau-
rant in the United uLd.Lt::i::ll
Seats: 200 to 250
Open: 11 A. M. to 12 midnight
Prices: Moderate Prices
Special Children's rates not determined
Menu: Thailand food served buffet style with 8 to 12
individual dishes
Entertainment: Fashion Shows
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: Not determined
Not determined
UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC
RESERVATIONS:
No information.
FACILITIES:
Will probably have about a 100 seat restaurant serving food
indigenous to United Arab Republic.
No other information available.
EXHIBIT REPRESENTATIVE:
Mr. Mohammed Aly Nazif
Counsellor, Economic Affairs
Permanent Mission of the United Arab Republic
to the United Nations
900 Park Avenue
New York 21, New York
Phone: TR 9-6300
RESERVATIONS:
WEST BERLIN
Mr. Irving Goldman
West Berlin's Pavilion, Inc.
90 Ninth Avenue
New York, New York
Phone: WA 9-7493
Will accept group reservations.
Largest group - 150
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant (Pub)
Seats: About 80 to 100 indoors
60 outdoors
Open: Not determined.
Price: Medium prices.
Menu: German and English food.
Entertainment: Probably music.
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 40
CREDIT CARDS:
Will probably honor some credit cards; not determined.
FEDERAL AND STATES AREAS TOTALS
Exhibitors with Restaurants -
Number of Individual Restaurants -
Total Restaurant Seats -
Number of Public Bars or
Cocktail Lounges -
Total number of Bar and Cocktail
Lounge Seats -
11
20
8, 245
6
690
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
BRASS RAIL (Block 45)
Brass Rail World's Fair Organization
745 Seventh Avenue
New York, N. Y.
Phone PL 7-9500
Will accept group reservations for all hours
Largest group- 1000
Special rates for groups depend upon menus
Price range will be $2. 95 to $12. 00
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Brass Rail Barbecue Restaurant
Seats: 750
Open: 11 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Price: Complete dinner $2. 95
Special childrens' rate $1. 00 less than menu price
Menu: Midwestern (steak house) devised by world-famous
chef Hyppolite Holtcoeur
Entertainment: Fashion Shows at no charge to diners during
meal times
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 75
CREDIT CARDS:
Diners Club
RESERVATIONS:
CALIFORNIA -HOLLYWOOD U.S. A.
Mrs. Ann Campbell
120 East 36th Street
New York, N. Y.
MU 3-4825
Will accept group reservations between 10 AM and 10 PM.
Smallest group - 20. Largest group - 100.
10% discount for groups of 40 or more.
FACILITIES:
2 Restaurants - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. "A & W Root Beer Garden"
Seats: 400
Open: 10 AM to 10 PM
Price: A la carte Lunch and Supper - 4 0 ~ to $1. 50
Dinner - 409 to $2. 50
Menu: Hamburgers, Hot Dogs, Fried Chicken, and other
snack foods; Soup and Soft Drinks.
Fast service operation.
2. "Neptw1e's Galley" (Section of above restaurant)
Seaiood Bar and Restaurant.
3. Cocktail Lounge
CREDIT CARDS:
Seats: 300
Low priced, quick service food items, will be served at
prices ranging from $1. 00 to $2. 00.
There will be professional entertainment.
Will not be accepted.
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
LOUISIANA
Mr. Samuel J. DeSarno
30 East 42nd Street - &lite 2008
New York, N. Y.
Phone: TN 7-7373
Will accept group reservations for most facilities
Largest Group - 1200
Special Rates for Groups open to negotiation
2 Restaurants - 4 Jazz Clubs - 1 Music Hall
1.
11
Antoines-Brennen"
Seats: 1000 on 2 floors
Open: 11A. M. to2A. M.
Price: Lunch A la carte from $3. 00
Dinner A la carte from $6. 50
Supper A la carte from $3. 7 5
35% Discount for Childrens' Plate
Menu: New Orleans and French type food
Entertainment: 4 piece Combo for Dinner Music
2.
11
Cajun Lounge"
Seats: Total of 500 in 3 rooms - Removable Partitions
Open: 11 A. M. to 2 A. M.
Price & Menu: Hot and Cold hor d 'oevrs and limited A la carte
menu from $1. 50 to $10. 00
Entertainment: At least ~ Entertainment Groups
3.
11
Music Hall Dinner Theatre"
Seats: 850 - Large Revue with cast of 65
4. 4 Jazz Clubs
Seats: 500 eac:h
Diners Club and American Express
MARYLAND
RESERVATIONS:
Will not accept group reservations.
FACILITIES:
2 Restaurants - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant, indoor.
Seats: 175
Open: 10:30 AM to 11 PM
Price: A la carte, Lunch $1. 85 to $3. 75
" Dinner $2. 25 to $7. 00
Complete Dinner $3. 75 to $6. 50
Menu: Maryland food. Full menu including Stevens Racetrack
favorites.
2. "Fisherman's 'Wharf", outdoor (cafeteria style)
Seats: 200
Open: 10:30 AM to 11 PM
Price: 359 to $1. 65
Menu: Seafood and Fried Chicken
3. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: Approximately 75
CREDIT CARDS:
Will not be accepted.
RESTAURANT OPERATOR:
Mr. Raymond Hartzshorn
Harry M. Stevens, Inc.
320 Fifth Avenue
New York 1, N. Y.
Phone: PE 6-0100
MINNESOTA
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
Mr. Morgan Jul
1515 Rhode Island Av. North
Washington D. C. 2005
Phone 202-667-2520
Will Accept group reservations
Largest group 12
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. "North Star Viking"
Seats: 450
Open: 9 A. M. to 2 .A. M.
Price: Continental Dreakfast $1. 00 before 10 .A. M.
Lunch - Complete meal $3. 75
Dinner and Supper - Complete meal $4. 75
Special Childrens' rate $1. 00 less than meal price
(for children under 12)
Menu: Minnesota smorgasbord
Entertainment: From 10 P. M. to 2 A. M. - not finalized
2. Cocktail Lounge
Food Service Available
Seats: 90
American Express
MISSOURI
RESERVATIONS:
Will not accept group reservations.
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant (Self Service Operation)
1. Restaurant
Seats: 100 Outdoors
Open: 11 AM to 2 AM
Price: Inexpensive.
Menu: Snacks, Soft Drinks and Beer - related to Missouri.
CREDIT CARDS:
Will not be accepted.
RESTAURANT OPERATOR:
Restaurant Associates
515 West 57th Street
New York, N. Y.
Phone: JU 6-5800
NEW ENGLAND STATES PAVILION
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
The Millstone Restaurant
Mt. Hope Street
North Attleboro, Mass.
Phone MY 9-2721
Will accept group reservations from 1:30 P.M. to 5 P. M.
Largest group 40
Special group rates $4. 00-$5. 00-$6. 00
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant
Seats: 210
Open: 11 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Price: Lunch A la carte $2. 2 5 to $3. 75
Dinner A la carte $5. 50 to $8. 00
Supper A la carte $4. 00 to $6. 00
Special childrens' rate approximately
half price
Menu: A selection of New England dishes
typical of early Colonial days, such as
New England pot roast, Johnny Cakes,
Country-fried chicken, Boston Chowder, etc.
Entertainment: Music-Duo
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 50
Will accept some credit cards - not determined as yet which ones.
RESERVATIONS:
NEW MEXICO
Mrs. Frona Merrill
580 Cocopan
Altadena, California
Phone: 213 797-1483
Will accept group reservations from 2 PM to 7 PM.
Largest group - 300
Special group rates - $1. 59 $2. 69 $3. 29
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant
Seats: 700
Open: Breakfast - 9 AM to 11 AM
Lunch - 11 AM to 3 PM
Dinner - 3 PM to 7 PM
Supper - 7 PM to Midnight
Price: Lunch and Dinner -Ala carte, $1. 79
Complete dinner, $2. 89
Supper - Complete dinner, $3. 50
Special rates for children: $1. 00, $2. 00, $3. 00
Menu: New Mexican food specialties and barbecued foods.
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 100
CREDIT CARDS:
Will not be accepted.
NEW YORK STATE
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
Mr. Wm. J. Drohan
1270 Sixth Avenue
New York, N. Y.
Phone CI 7-5800
Will accept group reservations
Largest group - 400
1 Restaurant - self-service OJ2eration
Seats: 400
Open: 10 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Price: Moderate prices up to $2. 50
Menu: New York State specialties and other American food.
CREDIT CARDS:
Have not decided if they will accept Credit Cards
WEST VIRGINIA

Will not accept Group Reservations
FACILITIES:
1 Self-service type Restaurant
Seats: 60
Open: 9:30 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Price: 50 to $1. 50
Menu: West Virginia Ham sandwiches, Fried Chicken, etc.
CREDIT CARDS:
Will Not Accept Credit Cards
EXHIBITOR'S REPRESENTATIVE:
Mr. E. L. Montgomery, Director
West Virginia Pavilion
State Capitol
Charleston, West Virginia
Phone: 304 DI 3-4411
WISCONSIN
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
Mr. Dan Townsend
Tad's New York Inc.
18 East 42nd St.
New York, N. Y.
Phone TN 7-7760
Will accept group reservations from 2 to 5 P. M. and 8 to 10 P. M.
Largest group - 150
1 Restaurant - 1 Tavern
1. "Tad's Steak House" -- self-service operation
Seats: 350
Open: 10 A. M. to Midnight
Price: $1. 19
Menu: 12 ounce sirloin strip steak charcoal broiled,
baked potato, garlic bread, tossed green salad.
Beverages and desserts additional charge.
2. Tavern - Food service available
Seats: 100
Entertainment: Possibly - not determined
Will not accept Credit Cards
TRANSPORTATION AREA TOTALS
Exhibitors with Restaurants -
Number of Individual Restaurants -
Total Restaurant Seats -
Number of Public Bars or
Cocktail Lounges -
Total number of Bar and Cocktail
Lounge Seats -
6
20
2,310
6
610
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
BRASS RAIL (Block 49)
Brass Rail World's Fair
World's Fair Banquet Sales Office
745 Seventh Ave.
New York, N. Y.
Phone: PL 7-9500
Will accept group reservations
Largest Group - 300
Special group rate will depend upon the menu
Price Range will be $2. 95 to $12. 00
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
L The Brass Rail Italian Festival Restaurant
Seats: 300
Open: 11 A. M. to 10 P M.
Price: Complete Dinner $2. 7 5
Special childrens
1
rate $1. 00 less than menu price
Menu: Italian Food devised by World Famous Chef Hyppolite
Holt coeur
Entertainment: Fashion Shows available on a continuous basis
during meal times at no charge to the public
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 30
Diners Club
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
BRASS RAIL (BLOCK SOb)
Brass Rail World's Fair
World's Fair Banquet Sales Office
745 Seventh Avenue
New York, N. Y.
Phone: PL 7-9500
Will accept group reservations
Largest Group 300
Special group rates depend upon menu
Price range will be $2.75 to $12. 00
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Brass Rail Country Farm Restaurant
Seats: 300
Open 11 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Price: Complete Dinner $2. 75
Special Childrens' Plate $1. 00 less than menu price
Menu: Southern style devised by world-famous chef
Hyppolite Holtcoeur.
Entertainment: Fashion Shows on a continuous basis during
meal times to public at no charge
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 30
Diners Club
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
CENTURY GRILL
Will not accept Group Reservations
1 Restaurant - 1 Bar
Seats: 560
Open: 10 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Price: Ala carte menu $1. 00 and up
Menu: Hamburger steaks prepared in accordance with
the recipes of the nations of the world that will
have exhibits. Also, foot-long hot dogs.
Entertainment: Music
2. Bar - Stand-up type serving beer only
Will not accept club credit cards.
RESTAURANT OPERATOR:
Mr. Joseph R. Holden
125-10 Queens Blvd.
Kew Gardens 15, New York
Phone: LI 4-5083
RESERVATIONS:
, FACILITIES:
GREYHOUND AT THE WORLD'S FAIR, INC.
Mr. John W. Teets
Manager, Main Street U.S. A.
Greyhound Post Houses, Inc.
7300 West Madison Street
Forest Park, Illinois
Phone 312-366-5700
Will accept group reservatwns - Meal service is offered to
groups of 100 or more at any time other than peak service
periods, as well as to smaller groups during the meal period
in the Western, Nantucket and Federal Rooms.
Special group rates not established
"Main Street U.S. A." - Will include 5 Restaurants,
1 Cocktail Lounge and a Snack Bar
The theme is Greyhound Post Houses Serving America
1. Nantucket Room
Seats: 150
Open: 9 A. M. to 2 A M.
Price: A la carte and complete dinner in medium price range
Menu: Features New England specialties such as New England
Clam Chowder, Maryland Crab, Lobster, Hot Apple Pie
2. Federal Room
Seats: 100
Open: 9 A. M. to 2 A. M.
Price: A la carte and complete dinner in medium price range
Menu: Features specialties of the South, including such
items as Maryland Fried Chicken, Baked Country Ham,
Corn Bread, Plantation Shortcake, Pecan Pie
3. Western Room
Seats: 150
Open: 9 A. M. to 2 A. M.
Price: A la carte and complete dinner in medium price range
Menu: Features Western type cookery, including steaks,
Baron of Beef, Hamburgers and a variety of sandwiches
4. Food Service of Tomorrow - self-service
Seats: 200 including stand-up capacity
Open: 9 A. M. to 2 A. M.
Price: A la carte and complete dinner in the medium price
range
Menu: A variety of meals - hot sweet rolls and desserts
all prepared in secohds with microwave energy.
CREDIT CARDS:
GREYHOUND AT T H ~ WORLD'S FAIR, INC.
5. Cafeteria
Seats: 200
Open: 9 A. M. to 2 A. M.
Price: A la carte and complete dinner will be in
the medium price range
Menu: Complete dinners featuring roast round of beef
and golden fried chicken
6. Cocktail Lounge
Entertainment: Background Music in all Restaurants
Special Childrens' Rates in all facilities not established
American Express
RESERVATIONS:
PORT OF NEW YORK AUTHORITY HELIPORT
Mr. Robert Paynter
Top of the Fair, Inc.
lllth Street - Flushing Meadow Park
Flushing 52, N, Y.
Phone: 888-5500
Will accept group reservations during pre-Fair and inter-Fair
periods.
Largest group - 550. (Larger groups by application. }
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant - 2 Cocktail Lounges
1. Top of the Fair Restaurant - Official World's Fair Restaurant
Seats: 550
Open: 11 AM to 2 AM
Price: Lunch -modified ala carte, $2. 50 to $5. 50
Dinner - modified a la carte, $3. 25 to $7. 25
Supper - ala carte, $2. 25 to $6. 75
Special children's rate - half price.
Menu: International Food. Special dishes in keeping with
different regional days at the Fair.
Entertainment: Music and Dancing on week-ends during
non-Fair periods; not during the Fair.
2. Capsule Lounge in Top of the Fair Restaurant
Seats: 150
3. Drinks Around the World Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 400
CREDIT CARDS:
American Express, Knott Hotels Corporation, and Diners Club.
RESERVATIONS:
TRANSPORTATION AND TRAVEL PAVILION
David Wachsman
507 5th Avenue
New York. N. Y.
Phone: MU 7-1196
Will accept group reservations for their 2 restaurants
No Other information available
LAKE AMUSEMENT AREA TOTALS
Exhibitors with Restaurants - 5
Number of Individual Restaurants - 11
Total Restaurant Seats - 5, 270
Number of Public Bars or
Cocktail Lounges - 3
Total number of Bar and Cocktail
Lounge Seats - 367
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
AERIAL TOWER RIDE AND WAFFLE TERRACE
Mr. Arnold Fisher
156 N. Franklin Street
Hempstead, N. Y.
Phone: 516 IV-9-3010
Will probably accept group reservations
Largest Group - 600
1 Restaurant - Open air Terrace Style
1. Waffle Terrace
Seats: 600
Open: 9: 30 A. M. to 4 A. M.
Price:A la carte from $1. 00 to $3. 00
Menu: Will feature "Bel-Gem Brussels Waffles" and
Hot Plate
Will Not Accept Club Credit Cards
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
CHUN KING CORPORATION
Will Not Accept Group Reservations
1 Restaurant
1. The Chun King Inn - 2 Pagoda style Tea Houses and The Inn
Seats: 600
Open: 10 A. M. to 10 P. M.
Price: 9 9 ~ Dinner
Menu: 7 Variety Dinner will include
Egg Roll, Fried Rice, Chow Mein and
other American Oriental Food
Will Not Accept Credit Cards
RESTAURANT OPERATOR:
Mr. Ray Denslow
Chun King Corporation
5020 Roosevelt Avenue
Duluth, Minn. 55801
Phone: 218-628-1021
RESERVATIONS:
HAWAII
Miss Clara Ahn
770 Lexington Avenue
New York 21, New York
Phone: PL 1-6868 or PL 1-5438
Will accept group reservations.
Largest group - 500 for special 3-hour outdoor Luau
between 6:30 and 9:30PM.
Special group rates - $10. 50 per person
Includes rum punch, complete Luau dinner,
professional pageantry - show, and all
tips and taxes.
Early breakfast groups of up to 300 persons can be accomodated
in restaurant.
FACILITIES:
1 Restaurant - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. "Restaurant of the Five Volcanos''
Seats: 300 indoor
500 outdoor
Open: About 11:30 AM to 2 AM
Earlier for private groups.
Price: A la carte, Lunch - $2. 50 to $4. 00
11
Dinner and Supper - $3. 50 to $7. 50
11
Leilani Picnic Lunch
11
, in outdoor luncheon area -
$1. 55 for children 10 years and under.
Menu: Hawaiin Cuisine.
Entertainment: Elaborate show four times a week -
2 times for private groups,
2 times for the public in connection with
special Luau dinner.
2. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 172
CREDIT CARDS:
Undecided, but most likely wili honor at least two kinds.
RESERVATIONS:
MISSISSIPPI RIVER SHOWBOAT
Mr. Julius A. Lopata
Special Enterprises Showboat, Inc.
666 Fifth A venue
New York 19, New York
Phone: OX 7-6875
Will accept group reservations.
Largest group - 750 on each of 2 decks.
Special group rates have not been established.
FACILITIES:
2 Restaurants - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. 2 Restaurants - 1 on each deck.
Seats: Each restaurant will contain 750 seats.
Open: 12 noon to 2 AM
Price: A la carte, Lunch $1. 89
11
Dinner $1. 89 to $7. 50
11
Supper $1. 89 to $7. 50
Minimum food or beverage: Mon. thru Thurs. $5.00
Fri. , Sat. & Sun. $6. 00
Menu: Southern style food and Sirloin Steaks.
Entertainment: Continuous Riverboat entertainment and
Supper Club extravaganza.
2. Cocktail Lounge
CREDIT CARDS:
American Express and Diners Club
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
THE TEXAS PAVILIONS
and
THE MUSIC HALL
William McCallum
33 E. 48 Street Suite 606
New York, N. Y.
Phone: PL 2-7810
Will accept group reservations in Frontier Palace for groups from
25 to 400 between 12 A. M. and 2 A. M.
Special group rates open to negotiation
1 De Luxe Restaurant
- 5 Cafeteria style self-service operations
1 Cocktail Lounge
l. "Frontier Palace" De Luxe Restaurant
Seats: 420
Open: 12 noon to 2 A. M.
Price: FixeEI pdce $4. 25 for complete dinner
Menu: Texas steak dinner
Entertainment:Western style such as Can Can girls, Player
Piano, Banjos, etc.
Beer Gardens
Seats: 300
Modern Texas
Seats: 525
Gateway to Mexico
Seats: 200
Shrimp House
Seats: 175
Oil Exhibit & Tourism
Seats: 150
Open: 10 A. M. to 2 A. M.
Price: from 1 0 ~ to $1. 25
Menu: Shrimp, Texas beefsteaks, BarbecwBeef, Wieners,
Mexican food and Texas fried chicken
CREDIT CARDS:
THE TEXAS PAVILIONS Page 2.
and
THE MUSIC HALL
The Drawing Room Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 195
Will Not Accept Credit Cards
WORLD'S FAIR MARINA
RESERVATIONS:
FACILITIES:
CREDIT CARDS:
WORLD'S FAIR MARINA-FLUSHING BAY
Mr. Lee L. Starr
World's Fair Marina
Corona 68, New York
Phone: TW 8-1212
Will accept group reservations
2 Restauran1B - 1 Cocktail Lounge
1. Restaurant In Marina
Seats: 300
Open: 9 A. M. to 12 Midnight
Price: Medium price range
Menu: American Food
2. Restaurant in Ship docked at Marina
Seats: Not Known
Open: Hours not determined
Price: Not Determined
Menu: Italian Food
Entertainment: Probably Music and Dancing and Professional
Entertainment in evening
3.. Cocktail Lounge
Seats: 60
Not Determined
....
A ,....;,. .
V' J.V\. 6 . ..,t...:_
EASTMAN DILLON, UNION SECURITIES & C ... .Vt.c"f--
0.


CHICACO
CLI!Ve&.AND

LO$ ANGELI!S

PHIIJIDELPHIA
liiiN DIEGO
IAN FJI.ANCI5CO
ME.MIII!IU NEW YOJI.It STOCK E.XCHANC!
One Chase Manhattan Plaza
New York, N.Y. 10005
tCAIILE ADDII.I!SS
I!AST\IN ION
T!LEPHONI
71011000
January 16, 1964


Mr. Robert Moses, President
New York World's Fair 1964-1965 Corporation
Flushing 52, New York

Dear Mr. writing you with regard to your letter of
"Memorandum to World's Fair Participants and Other Interested Parties" to
register with you my extreme embarrassment because of this memorandum.
I am a General Partner in this investment banking firm; and,
as a result of your memorandum, several of your directors have telephone
calls to me and my senior partnEtr inquiring as to my reasons for supposedly
writing this appeal, which I did not, nor have anything to do with it.
While the spelling of my last name is different, I am known through-
out both my business and personal world as "Larry Bogert".
I would appreciate it very much if you would make an effort to
correct this impression not only with the members of your Board of Directors
but others who have received this memorandum. As you can see, this has been
an embarrassment for me.
I would appreciate hearing from you in due course.
Very truly yours,

H. Lawrence ;/
HLBjr./ls
cc: Mr. Ferdinand Eberstadt
UNISIIHI:"C 010&1
IIIEACC TH"OUOH
UNOIUtaTANOIMO
NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR 1964-1965 CORPORATION.
INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION AT FLUSHING MEADOW PARK
FLUSHING 52. N.Y. TtLEPHONtAREA Coot 212 WF 41964 CAlLE ADDRESS MWORLOSFAIR"
Memorandum to World's Fair Participants
and Other Interested Parties
ROBERT MOSES
IIIIUIOENT
./ .
On y B_2gart)on a letterhead entitled "Friends of the New
York Museum of Science and Technology, Hall of Science at the New York
World's Fair 1964-1965," has sent out an ::>ppeal for subscriptions to a.
periodical, known as "Science Reporter" concerning the Hall of Science
on the site of the 1964-1965 New York World's Fair, and for donations to
assist programs for creating public interest in the Hall of Science.
The New York World's Fair 1964-1965 Corporation wishes to make
clear that Mr. Bogart, the "Science Reporter", and the "Friends of The
New York Museum of Science and Teclmology, Hall of Science at the 1964-
1965 World's Fair" are not sponsored or endorsed, officially or otherwise,
by The City of New York, the Fair Corporation, or The Port of New York
Authority. The use on Mr. Bogart's letterhead of the name "Hall of
Science" and the illustration of the Hall of Science is without authority
from these agencies. The Fair Corporation disavows any conrwction
with him or his program.
The Hall of Science is being built by the City. During the Fair,
the Hall of Science is leased to the Fair Corporation and is administered
by the Port Authority, the agent of the Fair Corporation for the Trans-
portation Section of the Fair.
After the Fair the Hall of Science will be administered by a non-
profit membership corporation pursuant to special legislation and an
agreement with the City. That nonprofit corporation has not yet been
formed. No fund-raising activities are being by it, by the
City, by the Fair Corporation, by the Port Authority, or by any other
organization or group officially connected with the Hall of Science. If
any officially sanctioned fund-raising activities are undertaken at any
future time, the public will be appropriately advised.
December 31, 1963
- ....... @---
DAYS TO OPENING DAY
Mise Ernes-tine Haag
Secretary
World' Fair Corporation
nuahiragMeattowe
Pluehing, New York
Deal" Braeatine:
January 21, 19M
'1'be attached l'equea't ia .. Wou14
,.,. pau it oa to the person in ehar9e o'L to Ilia
COI28idu:ation.
Preeideat Screvane WCNld appnc:f.&te :1. t i.t Miee JCa
l'eoeived a letter trom1he World's ind!catiD that bad
been p&aaed OD.
S:l.acel'ely,
BileeD R. P .. aoai
!Xecuti ve Secl'etary to the PJr .. ida t
ERP:la
REMARKS OF ROBERT MOSES
PRESIDENT OF
THE NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR
1%1-1%5 CORPORATION
AT THE
JOINT ANNUAL MEETING
OF MEMBERS AND DIRECTORS
TOP OF THE FAIR
FLUSHING MEADOW
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1964
AT NOON

'
' .
f '
~ :
.. \ ~ j
...
. . .
...
.. .... .. '. .. ,. ..
... , .
. . ..
4, ' i)
,,
.
' .
.
..
.'. i
' \j '
I '
j .
........ --. - - - ~ - - - - - - -
In this final interim report I am content to
ride along, to add little to what my associates
have said, to thank them again, to bide the result
and trust to hard work, continued vigilance and
good luck to see us through.
The last minute problems, crises and tempests
in teapots in the building of a fair are the su-
preme test of the effectiveness of an organiza-
tion. Our staff is functioning smoothly. It is in
high gear. Those in charge of engineering and
contracts, the building trades and the sponsors
of pavilions, exhibits, concessions and amuse-
ments are working harmoniously with our ell.-
ecutives. W/e shall have a tremendous show.
Unless we meet extraordinary obstacles which
can not be anticipated, we shall open fully
equipped on schedule.
It has been necessary to explain repeatedly
that we have no single centrally controlled physi-
cal concept to implement our theme. We aim at
variety, not uniformity, at freedom of experi-
ment and expression, not at tradition, integra-
tion and the cohesion which draws all elements
together. This principle applies of course most
conspicuously to design.
Years ago there was an old guide at a State
Capitol who used to point dramatically upward
in the rotunda and say, "The ceiling, my friends,
is embololical." Well, our ceiling at the Fair too
is "embololical", and those who hoped we would
have either a classical revival or a revolution
will have to be satisfied with extraordinary
shapes and forms selected independently by our
participants and not by us.
In design liberal mindedness is what we aim
at. Many an architect builds monuments to him-
self, and exhibitors at the Fair naturally go for
easily recognizable symbols of their own prod-
ucts. Maybe Brendan Behan was right when he
said that good architecture is invisible.
0
1963 New York World's Fair 19641965 Corporation
As to operation, we aim at an orderly, safe,
respectable, properly policed and controlled Fair.
Ninety-nine percent of the patrons want it that
way and their expectations will prevail. The
orher one percent will not be allowed to inter-
fere with the comfort of the ninety-nine. A Fair
can ne fun without license, disorder and offense
Considerable forethought and ingenuity have
gone into Flushing Meadow. The ideal Fair is
not planned as \Y/ ren or L'Enfant or Haussmann
would build a city. It is fashioned temporarily
within a permanent framework and pattern
which will accommodate a large urban park
later. Every tree and shrub which fit the ulti-
mate pattern, on public avenues and squares
and on the lots of exhibitors, are salvaged, and
every utility above and below ground is built
to last and serve the park or to be removed or
abandoned when the Fair closes. These things
are not left to chance.
You have received the Post-Fair Preliminary
Park Report and the proposal for a modified
agreement with the City under which the Fair
offers to complete a unique Queens park system,
including Flushing Meadow and the Corridor be-
yond. This proposal is of course contingent upon
a sufficient earned Fair balance to pay the cost.
The financial assumptions back of it are out-
lined. This is a prospectus. No guarantee goes
with it, but it is our honest belief that the actual
results will fully sustain our hopes. We there-
fore ask that our objectives, with such modifi-
cations as may be required, be determined in
advance so that we can proceed in an orderly,
constructive fashion to insure that this Fair
at least will live in usefulness as well as mem-
ory long after 1965.
Thank you for your patience. That's all I have
to say.
....
,..,
.. - ---- --. .. --.
. ..... ~
~ )
NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR
1964-1965
Unlsphell, - @ United Stalls Stlel
(11961 NewYorkWorlri1fO" \90.1911' (oporolron
COME TO THE FAIR!
APRIL 22, 1964
,. \ .. ~ I
...
I <

" ' .
......
-..
\"
.....
' ~ , ..
. . ..
4, :. ?)
,,
.
-
I
..,I
...
I .
~ - - ------ - -- \ ~ _ _ _ , ... -JJ{' ~ - - ... ~ . _ _ . . . . . . ~ ~
MEMORANDUM noM
EILEEN PESSONI
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE COUNCIL
....
I I '
...
.... ,... .. ' . .. ,, .-
. ~ ....
4 ....
1 .
'. i #
' 1 .
. ,
.. , '
I . ,,
.
J t'
..... NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR 1964-1965 CORPORATION
INTER NATIONAL EXPOSITION AT F' LU 5 HI N G M EAOOW PARK
F'LUIHINO 52, N.Y. TtLEI'HONEAREA Coot 212 WF' 4-1964 CABLE ADDRtss"WORLDSF'AIR"
II'CACl THitOUOH
UN01:"8TANDINO
January 27 1964
MEMORANDUM TO THOiv1AS :r. DEEGAN, J'R.
FROM ROBERT MOSES
ROBERT MOSES
Attached is correspondence with Kenny O'Donnell.
You will notice that I replied by telegram to his recent
letter. We simply can't leave 1n abeyance or up 1n the air
the matter of attendance by the President. The entire cere-
mony is being buUt around him. This is my understanding
with you. If he is not qoing to be there, the situation will be
altogether different. We don't know whether or not he is
going to be there. We cannot possibly make any intelligent
plans. LitUe as I would like it, I would much rather have a
"no" answer than to leave the whole thing 1n the present im
possible state. There are altogether too many factors and
personalities involved to leave this matter to chance or a
last-minute decision.
As you know, Mr. Truman and General Eisenhower
have agreed to be present and to speak.
RM:MR:am
Attachments
86
/s/ ROBERT MOSES
President
DAYS TO OPENING DAY
January 27, 1964
TELEGRAM TO:
MR. KENNETH O'DONNELL
SPECIAL ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
I HAVE YOUR LETTER OF JANUARY 23 REGARDING
THE PRESIDENT'S OPENING OF THE WORLD'S FAIR ON
APRIL 22. WE HAVE NO THOUGHT OF FORClliG A
DECISION, BUT THERE IS AN IMMENSE AMOUNT OF
PLANNING AND MACHINERY REQUIRED TO PREDICATE
THIS INIPORTANT OPENING ON THE PRESIDENT'S
A'ITENDANCE, INVOLVING MANY OTHER FACTORS AND
PERSONALITIES WIDCH MUST BE SUBORDINATED. TOM
DEEGAN IS NO DOUBT KEEPING YOU rnFORMED. WE
SHALL APPRECIATE IT ENORMOUSLY IF YOU WILL GIVE
US A FINAL DECISION JUST AB SOON AS POSSIBLE, SO
THAT WE MAY BE GUIDED ACCORDINGLY.
ROBERT MOSES
PRESIDENT
NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR 1964-1965
CORPORATION
C ~ P Y
,.
j
'! ..
..
~
f I
THE WHIT HOUSE
WASHINGTON
January Z3, 1964
/
Dear Mr. Moses:
This is in response to your letter of December 5th to the
President, which was turned over to me because I handle
the President's appointments and schedule.
I am very sorry for the delay in replying and also that
we are still not in position to give you a definite answer
as to whether the President can deliver the principal
dedication address on the opening day of the New York
World's Fair, April ZZnd. He would'like to do so, of
course, but his official schedule for that period is still
uncertain and we cannot make a firm commitment.
Just as soon as a decision can be made in the rna tter,
we will let you know.
With the President's thanks and best wishes,
Sincerely,
Special Assistant to the President
Mr. Robert Moses
President, New York World's
Fair 1964-1965 Corporation
Flushing SZ, New York
F

OFFICIAL BULLETIN OF
THE NEW YORK
WORLD'S FAIR
1964-1965
UNISPHERE
.-n ....Mh @UII!ItdSlllnStttl VOL. 3, NO. 1 JANUARY 22, 1964
ADVANCE TICKET SALE
PASSES GOAL ESTABLISHED
MORE THAN FULL YEAR AGO
Due to rhc trcmcnd"u' rt>pnnsc to d,ltc
ly both cxh1b1tllrs ,1nd IHlll cxh1b1tnrs,
r r.lnsport.l!IO!l gwups ,\lld 1nd1\ 1du.tls. and
\\'lth the b1g month .,f Fclnur1 .1heJJ.
Thom,1, J lkcg.1n. Jr. dwrnun "t the
l:XlllHI\(' U>lllnii([Cl', prcdlt!S thJt the
F.ur, .1ch .1nce t1ckct s,de go.tl t>f I O,lHI0,-
000 lit kcts wd I be met .Hlcl p.1sscJ by
Opening D.ty.
The i.l!c>r rcp"rr on .l<h.lllce ,tdmls"on
t1cktt ;,des plJccd the number .It I, 'ili0,-
000, or .tlmost .1s high .1s the ongin.tl
estim.He of 'i.llllli,OOll for the entl[(: c.un-
p.llgn nude more th.tn .1 yc.1r Jgo when
tickets were tirst put on s.dc.
Mr. Dccg.lll, under whuse d1rCc110n the
11cket c.1111p.ugn 1s I'CIIlg conducted ;.ud:
"\X'c lure exceeded our grt.llt>t cxpcc
t.H1on. \X'e now icd conhdem we wdl sdl
more dun I li.Ollli.OOO tickets bdon: we
open, n1.1k1ng th11 the l.1rgest .ld\ .llltt:
tlcktt s.de 111 lmtnry.
:\lr DtT,t:.lll s.tll!'he '' .1s h.l'lll,t: lm pre
cllctlllll till the l.1rgc number Ill lllil,llllll-
unlt l.1rgcr tlcl-,tt orders expected fr"lll
.l!lcl b.llll-,s durmg the next
h1c \leek>
( tilllJ'IIlllS ,lrt: hu) lll,t: the ticket> 111
hdk l<>ts fnr ll'l.dc 111 thur UllJ'Ic'I'-L'S .1111
clJ)(lllllLrs ,It subsl.lllt!.Ii s.lllll,J.:S :\t the
'>21
2
j'l'f cellt dJ'Lilllll(, .1 purcil.l\e <II
lllll,liOll t1c kcrs. fllr cx.unplc. s.1 1 cs S<>\
(1()(1 ( Jrdns fllr fifty c>r more uckcts, the
llllnlllllllll number rc:<JIIIre,J (() <JU.dily ft1r
the tull \c1
2
', ,J""'unr. He he1n,t: re
celll'd Ill r.lj'lcJJ) lllL rc.l\III,J.: <Jll.llllll ll'S
CONSTRUCTION PROGRESS EARNS
HIGH GRADES AS OPENING NEARS
The '>tory ui the prrsent stJtt of con-
strllllltJII ,It the F.ur IS one uf excellent
j"'rt>,"rt" If the contr.lttor> were to be
,L:Llclc,J .Is .1 ,L:r<ll)' ,l( thiS llllll: .IS thl' Lur
5\\III,J.:S llll<<lls (IIJ.d >CIIll'>ll'f i'cltlfe llj'L'Il
.111 1hc1 1\<>td,JIc flll.lr,Jt,J lll(h .1
fLJ'"ft c.1rd shL>IIIIl,L: .1111.1rk "f 1\," pn>ol
rlur rile l.11r, I '>liJ'ill> ludcllll,"' '' dl bt
L<>lllj'ilfcd <>11 "f ltfllrl llli<J.r\j'flj
1<111 "' rill' lud,lill,l:' He Ll'lllj'lcrth
tlli 111 ,\..., thL Jlllll 111 thr_ f1LI1! tnr,L'hf
,,1\ II '"Ill<.\\ hI( lll<ll ,t.:f.<j'IJH.Iill. lhl
-..kIll'> .t r L 111 ' 1//. .'!1( .1 'i /1,,. : _
1
, , / __, 1
A check for S 135,000 representing the larg-
est single re-order of advance sole tickets
to the New York World's Fair is presented by
First National City Bank officials John E
Thilly, sen<or vice president, right, and Robert
F. Burns, manager of the bank's World's Fair
branches lo Erwin Witt, left, comptroller of
the New York World 1 Fair Corporation. Mr.
W<tt prepares Ia deposit the check in o TV
honk, a dosed circuit televis10n banking sy1
tem which wdl be a feature of Fir1t Nalionol
City 1 Visilors Branch at the Fair.
Riding on lest cor weighted to simulate fully
loaded 40 pmsenger car of AMF's World's
Fair Monorad are (left to right) Robert Moses.
Fai< p<esident, The Hon. Samuel!. Rosenman.
mPmber of the Fair'\ executive committee and
lakP Amusement Area consullont, ond Carter
l BJrgess. AMF cha"mon Behind Mr. Bur-
qess is Rodney C Gall. AMF president.
QUOTE OF THE MONTH
"World's Fair Forecast Is Rosy,
Jf"ith Profits For All - - -
Eve,1 Neu York City."
(Eight-column streamer in the New York
Times year-end revue)
POSTAGE STAMP DESIGN
Final design of commemorative stamp to be
issued by the Post Office on Opening Day,
when Postmaster General John A. Gronouski
will present one of the first stamps to Mr.
Moses. The Post Office is also embossing
the new stamp on an envelope.
SINGER SPONSORS STADIUM
The 17,000 seat Singer Bowl, formerly the
Arena, will be sponsored by the Singer Com-
pany, as announced by Donald P. Kircher,
Singer president and Robert Moses. The
Singer Bowl will host numerous Fair events,
including some of the Opening Day cere-
monies, U. S. Olympic Trials, concerts and
folk dancing. The 270-ft. long Bowl will also
house ingenious displays of Singer's tradi-
tional products and services.
Stuart Constable (center), Fair vice presi-
dent in charge of Operations, with Dr. Ira
L. Eshelman, president of Bibletown Produc-
tions-U.S.A., and Walter Giebelhaus, pro-
gram director for the Operations Department.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS MEETS
TODAY AT TOP OF THE FAIR
Thomas J. Deegan, Jr., chairman of the
Fair's executive committee, will preside
at today's meeting of the Board of Direc-
tors. The meeting will be held far the
first time at the Top of the Fair. Repre
sentatives of various news media have
been invited to hear reports by the Fair's
departmental heads and Mr. Moses.
Conrtruction Progress Earns High Grades As Opening Nears
(continued from page I, col. 2) These 50
include some of the exposition's so-called
"big boys," such as Bell System, duPont,
Eastman Kodak, Electric Power & Light,
Ford, Gas, Inc., General Electric, General
Motors, Greyhound, I. B. M., Johnson's
Wax, Pepsi-Cola, Schaefer Beer and Trav-
elers Insurance Companies.
Twelve of these structures go to the
head of the class. They are completed both
externally and internally and, if the Fair
were co open tomorrow, they would be
about ready to receive the first of the ex
peered 70,000,000 visitors. This list in-
cludes Century Grill, Dynamic Maturity,
Eastman Kodak, First National City Bank,
Formica, the Heliport, Hall of Free Enter-
prise, International Plaza, the Post Office,
Simmons, Sinclair and Socony Mobil. The
Hc.:liport and First National have been
operational for a number of months.
Further evidence that all will be in
readiness by Opening Day is the fact none
of the contractors has felt the urgency to
__________ _
Fair Protocol Office Prepares for Visiting State Dignitaries
One of the most important functions of
the Fair's operating seasons will be the
supervision of official Fair ceremonies and
the handling of visits by chiefs of state
and ocher prominent governmental, busi-
ness and community leaders from the
United States and abroad. This responsi-
bility rests with the Office of the Chief of
Protocol, located in the Fair's Administra
tion Building.
All official Fair invitations will be 1ssued
by Protocol, wh1ch will keep a master guest
ltsr, available to all exhibitors. Liaison will
be maintained with the U.S. World's Fa1r
Commissioner, the Commissioners General
of international pavilions, the managers of
state, industrial and transportation exhibits,
and officials of the New York Cit}', New
York State and Federal governments. Visits
by dignitaries will be handled in conjunc-
tion with the Fair host division and respec-
tive exhibitor representatives.
Ambassador Richard C. P;uterson, Jr.
is Chief of Protocol. Serving as Deputy
Chief of Protocol is Gates Davison, for-
merly of the Fair's International Division.
Ocher officers include Roberto deMendoza,
Assistant Chief of Protocol and Saeed
Kahn, assistant to the Chief of Protocol.
Communications and Public Relations
will servile news media with all informa
tion received from Protocol regarding de-
tails of special visits, arrival and departure
time, press conferences, speeches, public
appearances, official receptions, dinners,
banquets and other highlights.
City's Cultural Institutions Presenting Special Exhibits
Special exhibits and programs presented
by the City's major cultural organizations
will complement the attractions at the
Fairgrounds during the exposition years
of 1964 and 1965.
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arcs
and the Metropolitan Opera Company,
museums, libraries and botanical gardens
will, in effect, become part of the Fair as
they extend enthusiastic hospitality to the
Fair's 70 million visitors.
The American Museum of Natural His-
tory will open its new Hall of North
American Birds. In the Hayden Planeta-
rium, the Museum plans a major exhibition
on the history of astronomy.
"The Art of Nepal" will be presented
by the Asia Society. In the Brooklyn Mu-
seum there will be a reconstruction of the
17th centuty Schenk House as well as a
display of European and American 19th
century paintings.
The Huntington Hartford Museum will
salute the Fair with an exhibition of post-
ers illustrating earlier World's Fairs. A
two-part exhibition of Vincent Van Gogh
will be presented in the Guggenheim Mu-
seum.
Exhibits illustrating the culture of Spain
and Portugal will be offered by the
Hispanic Society of America and at the
Jewish Museum, an archaeological exhibi
tion will focus on biblical times.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, now
being renovated, will present a comprehen-
sive survey of American art from Colonial
times to the present.
A large exhibition of modern painting
and sculpture, international in character,
will open the two new wings of the Mu-
seum of Modern Art.
An Indian ''Hall of Fame," pre-Colum-
bian metal art and a tribute to Alaska are
among the scheduled exhibits in the Mu
seum of the American Indian. Period
prints, paintings and furnishings will be
assembled at the Museum of the City of
New York in a special exhibition entitled
''New York in 1664."
The Museum of Contemporary Crafts
will feature the works of outstanding con
temporary craftsmen while the Museum
of Primitive Art will display masterpieces
of pre-Columbian sculpture from its col
lections.
"The Industry and Arts of All Nations"
will be the main exhibit scheduled to co
incide with the Fair's opening by the New
York Hiscorical Society.
The New York Public Library's "64
Treasures for the '64 Fair" will include
an illuminated 14th century psalter, rare
early issue books and priceless historical
documents such as Washington's Farewell
Address, a draft of the Declaration of In-
dependence and a Columbus letter. In
commemoration of the 400th anniversary
of Shakespeare's birth, the Library will
also offer a "Shakespearean Treasures" ex
hibit. Notable acquisitions since the 1939-
1940 World's Fair will be featured in The
Pierpont Morgan Library.
Several exhibits of contemporary Ameri
can painting and sculpture will be ex-
hibited at the Riverside Museum, and
dioramas and exhibits on archaeology and
history will be featured in the Staten Island
Institute of Arts and Sciences.
The Whitney Museum will present a
loan exhibition of paintings, sculpture and
drawings entitled "Between the Fairs-
Landmarks of American Art, 19391964,
and for the second summer, "Young Amer-
ica 1965" will be an exhibition of young
American painters and sculptors.
At the Bronx Zoo, the New York Zoo
logical Society wifl salute the Fair and
open a new Aquatic Bird House. The
Brooklyn Botanical Garden will have un-
usual displays of Japanese horticulture
while the New York Botanical Garden
will feature a World's Fair Plant and
Garden Information Center.
Originally part of the 1939-1940 New
York World's Fair, the Queens Botanical
Gardens have been moved to a more ad-
vantageous site in Kissena Corridor Park,
just outside the exposition grounds.
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
which will function as the performing arts
wing of the World's Fair, will be Amer-
ica's greatest cultural complex at its com-
pletion.
The already completed Philharmonic
Hall and the New York State Theater,
scheduled to open the day after the Fair's
official opening, will be the scene of the
Lincoln Center-World's Fair Performing
Arcs Festival.
Included as part of the Festival program
are performances by the New York City
Ballet, Bayan1han Philippines Ballet, Chil-
ean National Ballet, a wellknown Euro-
pe.!n theater group and productions of The
Kmg .wd I and Merry Widow. The Royal
Sh.1kespeare Company will stage several
productions in commemoration of Shake-
speare's -100th anniversary.
The Merropolit.m Opera Company will
interrupt 1ts Spnng Tour to present sixteen
special post-season performances planned
primarily for out-of-town VISitors to the
Fair. Featured works 10 the World's Fair
repertoire will he three Verdi operas based
on Shakespe.1rc's plays. part of the world-
wide .ton 1\'t:rsary celebration.
FlffiNINE LICENSEES
GRANTED FAIR RIGHTS
A total of fifty-nine licensees have been
signed to date, according to the latest an-
nouncement from Media Enterprises, Inc.,
the Fair's licensing agent.
The two newest companies are: A. H.
Schreiber Co. Inc. for children's play
clothes, and S. M. Frank and Co. Inc., for
pipes and pipe smoking accessories.
Orher licensees announced previously by
Milton Kayle, executive vice-president of
Media Enterprises Inc., are:
Medallic Art Company - Time, Inc. -
Arlington Hat Co. Inc - Dexter Press, Inc.
- Bearse Manufacturing Co. -United World
Films, Inc. - Interstate Bag Co. Inc. -
Marchal, Inc. - Allison Mfg. Co. Inc. -
Photo lab, Inc. - lowell Toy Manufacturing
Corp. -Mallory Battery Company- Spertus
Publishers, Inc. - Topping, Inc. - Good
Housekeeping Magazine - S t a n c ~ a f t -
Macksan Imports, Inc. - Scarves by Vera,
Inc. - The Tie King, Inc. - Ed-U-Cards
Manufacturing Corp. - Annin & Company -
Hortie-Van Mfg. Co. - Goldfarb Exposition
Souvenir Corp. - Pe.erless Plastics, Inc. -
RMS Sales Corporation - Parker Pen Com
pany -World Wide Paper Products Corp. -
Frederick A. Krause Associates, Inc. -
Imperial Knife Assoc. Companies, Inc. -
Alvimar Manufacturing Co. Inc. - Ebsco
Industries, Inc. - Indian Head Mills, Inc. -
Allen Hollander Co. Inc. - Thomson-Leeds
Company, Inc. - Park Electrochemical Corp.
-Linn Myers, Inc. - Houze Glass Corpora
tion - The Harlee Company - Foster Grant
Co. Inc.- Match Corporation of America-
Diamond Match Corporation - Universal
Match Corporation - Banner Printing Prod
ucts Corp. - Loft Candy Corporation -
Milton Bradley Company - Hassenfeld Bros.
Inc. - lion Match Company, Inc. - Ameri
can Match Company - Simmons Company
- Sylvania Electric Products, Inc. - Leader
Sales Corp. - Fleetwood Cover Service -
Suburban Toy & Mfg. Co. - Cosby Brush
& Import Co. Inc. - M. Z. Berger & Com
pany, Inc. - Gordon Peters Co. Inc. -
Haffkine Mfg. Co. Inc.
Pori Authority Heliport
uith S-6/ S Helicopter
Futizul of Gas
TRANSPORTATION TALE
OF THE PAST, PRESENT
AND FUTURE FEATURED
The opportunity to span millions of
years from the dawn of history to the
world of tomorrow awaits visitors to the
Fair's 69-acre Transportation Area. Here,
auto and related industries will present the
story of people and products- on the move,
from the beginning of time through the
present and finally, into the not-too-distant
future with its dramatic probabilities.
Fronting on the westerly side of Grand
Central Parkway, the area will be one of
the Fair's focal points. Encompassing the
exposition's largest exhibits- the pavil-
ions of the three United States automotive
giants - the area is headquarters for all
internal transportation and guided tours,
terminal for bus shuttles to the airport, and
site of "the air gateway to the Fair," the
Heliport.
The drama of motion is everywhere in
the exhibits of the area, as is the spanning
of time. A "Magic Skyway" automobile
trip, created by Walt Disney, will take
passengers through time tunnels that cover
millions of years in exactly twelve minutes.
New ways of underwater exploring and
living, new ways to cope with the remote
control, push-button future, new applica-
tions of communications, and totally new
products of scientific research are among
the exciting concepts of a fifteen minute
trip through the world of tomorrow.
As they take a trip to the moon, in the
area's only multiple exhibit building, visi-
tors will see a lunar exploration team mov-
ing under reduced gravity, riding strange
vehicles and manning orbiting space sta-
tions. Another exhibit will take them five
feet underground to a luxury home and
garden designed to show the advantages
of living below the earth's surface.
Mechanized, life-like dinosaurs in na-
tural habitat, science exhibits that young-
sters can work, and a simulated rendezvous
of rwo-manned orbital vehicles, are among
the other prominent transportation area at-
tractions.
Here also vis:tors will be able to test
their driving skills on electronically-con-
trolled simulated highways, ride an 80-foot
high giant-rirc ferris wheel, thrill to dare-
devil and precision automobile driving, or
take a leisurely ride in a gasoline powered
"antique" car.
Theater presentations will include the
history of motion engineering, a simulated
coast-to-coast bus ride, and a "wrap-
around" 360-degree motion picture of the
world's greatest port.
Attention has also been given to the
traveling gourmet who may selecr from a
wide variety of menus at the Top of The
Fair Restaurant, located beneath the Heli-
port and offering a dramatic view of the
Fairgrounds, several Brass Rail dining
areas, the Post House Restaurant, and Cen-
tury Grill, which will feature international
hamburgers and foot-long hot dogs.
After all has been absorbed in the excit-
ing world of transportation at the Fair, the
visitor can board a rwin turbine Sikorsky
S-61 N helicopter from atop the Port Au-
thority Building for a breathtaking view
of the entire grounds.
. '\,,..
Guy F. Tozzoli, director of the Transportation
Section, addresses the Board of Directors
at its last meeting held in Shea Stadium.
'SEE AMERICA' TOURS
STIMULATED BY FEDERAL
AND STATES EXHIBITS
Visitors who normally would take their
full vacation time to see only one or rwo
points of interest in the country, can make
a "Tour of America" by visiting the Fed-
eral and States exhibits. Twenty-four states
are building individual or joint pavilions
and a number of others expect to rent
space in the multiple-exhibit Travel and
Transportation Pavilion.
The U.S. Government pavilion, dedi-
cated by the late President Kennedy to the
theme, "Challenge to Greatness," stands
eight stories high and covers more than a
city block. Its exhibits, including a Cine-
rama film on the history of the United
States, will emphasize the pioneering spirit
of Americans, past, present and future.
The New York State exhibit features
three rowers, with the tallest, the highest
point on the Fairgrounds, capped by an
observation platform; a circular cheater
and a huge elliptical "Tent of Tomorrow."
In the last two, films, shows and displays
will emphasize the state's industry and
culture.
The New York C ~ t y building is likely
to provt one of the Fair "sleepers" as an
attraction. One half of it will be devoted to
a s1mulated helicopter ride over a scale
model of Greater New York on which are
reproduced every one of the my's more
than HOO,OOO buildings. The other half of
the building will be the home of D1ck
Burton's "Ice-Travaganza." The Mary-
land Pavilion will house a 130-seat theater
for an historical presentation of the com-
poslllg of the: "Star Spangled Banner," va-
cationland displays and a model of Balti-
more harbor.
In the Hollywood-California building,
visitors will be able to watch all steps taken
in making a movie and see sets used in
some famous films of the past. Florida will
emphasize its tourist and industrial attrac-
tions with a "Cape Coral" model home
and a porpoise show. Hawaii will also em-
phasize its tourist attractions in spectacular
ways. New Jersey adds to its tercentenary
celebration with an exhibit joining 21 sep-
arate buildings, each representing one of
the state's counties. Missouri will display
a replica of Lindbergh's famous "Spirit of
St. Louis" and full-sized space capsules.
In the Oregon exhibit, a "Timber
Carnival," consisting of log rolling, ax
throwing, and other contests in the skills
connected with the northwest's timber in-
dustry, will be performed daily. In the
Oklahoma pavilion, a huge topographical
map, emphasizing the state's water devel-
opments, will be on display. West Virginia
will show models of a community of the
future and a coal mine, as well as exhibits
of glass-blowing, radio astronomy and the
state's vacation attractions. Wisconsin, in
addition to displaying the state's industrial
accomplishments, also will emphasize va-
cation attractions and show the largest
piece of cheese ever produced.
The New England pavilion, with all six
states in the area represented, will empha-
size the region's contriburions to the coun-
try s past and present. The Illinois exhibit
will include a "living," moving and talk-
ing figure of President Abraham Lincoln,
created by Walt Disney.
Louisiana's building will be fashioned
after the New Orleans "Vieux Carre." The
Texas pavilions include a spectacular stage
show. Other exceptional attractions will be
on display in the exhibits of Alaska, Min-
nesota, Montana and New Mexico. In all
state pavilions visitors, in addition to
watching the exhibits, will be able to savor
the best of each section's cooking. Every
state of the Union, whether or not repre-
sented in an exhibit, will have its own
particular day at the Fair through the ap-
pearance of state organizations.
Gen. William E. PoHer (right), executive vice
president and director of the Federal and
States Section, and Governor J. Millard
Tawes of Maryland with construction work-
ers in front of the Pavilion of Maryland.
INTERNATIONAL AREA TO
OFFER AN INEXPENSIVE,
INSTANT WORLD TOUR
Without crossing an ocean, some 70 to
80 million visitors will be able to see the
world in Flushing Meadow Park, for at
the Fair more than 50 foreign nations will
display their attractions in 39 pavilions, at
tractively spaced across the exposition's
lnternauonal Area.
Visitors to the area w1ll take advantage
of an "Around-the-World" bargain, as
they delight in the exhibits of world cui
tures, handicrafts and arts, learn of the na
tions agricultural resources and en JO)'
being transported, figuratively, w faraway
places, in an atmosphere characteriStiC of
other lands. Food indigenous to the na
tions and the performances of name dane
ers, singers and musicians will heighten
the illusion.
The "instant" trip around the world
will be provided m a journey of but five
minutes and at a cost of only 50 cents on
the Swiss Sky Ride, a 112-foot high trip
of 2,000 feet, straight across the heart of
the International Area, with a fine overall
view of the Fair. After entering the Fair's
main gate, a visitor will walk along New
York Avenue, past the Pavilion of West
Berlin, and amve in about three minutes
at one of the two terminals of the Sky Ride.
The visitor then will walk up steps to a
platform, enter a four-passenger cable car,
be carried to the height of the ride and
thus become one of the 4,800 travelers
per hour who will so begin the journey.
The visitor will first view the two-story
Pavilion of Korea, in an architectural style
never before seen here, India's Pavilion
with its theme of "Progress in Democracy,"
and the Pavilion of Ireland faced with
slabs of native Irish stone and depicting
the life and customs of the Emerald Isle.
Further along the way is Argentina's build-
mg constructed in concrete and glass,
where visitors can see whole steers roasted
on a large wheel rotisserie, Mex1co's with
its concave walls, the Republic of China's
pagoda-style pavilion, and the Caribbean
complex, where the islands are exhibiting
jointly. After a glimpse of Denmark's Pa
vilion one will be attracted by the Pavilion
of Venezutla, and then view Hong Kong,
where many oriental souvenirs await closer
mspection.
Continuing his JOurney, the "instant
world traveler" will view the Pavilion of
Centralamerica-Panama, where the corn
mon market countries of Costa Rica, El
Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nic-
aragua join Panama in displaying exhibits
symbolic of their vigorous march toward
a brighter future of economic develop
ment. Next to be: seen art the Pavd1on of
Indonesia, w1th exhibits of < ulwre, trade
and rounsm, then Polynes1a with "long
house," containing a small bar and restau
rant, and Spam, with Hs three buddmgs
offenng a theater, two gallem:s, threc res
raurants and a "wine cave."
Halfway through the ride, the Pavilions
of the Philippines, Greece, and Morocto
can be seen along w1th those of Paktstan.
Malays1a, S1erra Leone and Africa, where
several nations wdl cxh1b1t. The
wdl also have a colorful teleswpK v1ew of
costumed mhabJtants en{(:rmg the pavil-
IOns of Japan, Austna, the Umtcd Arab
Lebanon, Jordan, Sudan and
Gumea.
With but one breathtakmg mmutc re
man11ng, the several pavi11ons exhJbJtmg
m the International Plaza will appear.
Here, mdusmes representing the countncs
of West Germany, Ecuador, Monaco, Italy
and the Government of Nepal wdl have
displays along w1th an International Res
taurant, where worldwJde epicurean de
l!ghts wdl be served.
Nearby, "Creative Sweden" will pre
sent her advanced mdustry and research,
Switzerland will delight the tourist with
her many noted products such as watches
and chocolates, and France will highlight
her mynad attractions.
As the car descends to the platform of
the destination terminal, the dJsembark
mg "world traveler" wdl see a typical turn
of-thecentury Belg1an Village. A!Jghtmg,
and walking but a few paces, the visitor
will end his global tour on an mspirational
note at the Vatican Pavilion, where
Michelangelo's P1eta will be shown for the
first t1me outs1de of Sc. Peter's Bastlica in
Rome.
Before leavmg the International Area,
the VISitor wdl encounter such speCial ex
h1bJtS as tht Hall of Free Enterpme. Here,
wdl be housed the Tree of Economic Life,
tracmg the economic progress of man
through the constant 1mprovement of tools.
Of internatiOnal interest 1s the: fact that the
Hall will bring added fomgn represent.!
cion to the International Area, as 1t h.1s .J
natiOns on its Advisory Council.
Another special exh1b1t is the Pan bon tlf
2,000 Tnbes, sponsored hy Wyc!Jffe B1ble
Translators, who wdl demonstrate tht
process of creat1ng an alphabet and the
written word from the spoken l.mguJgt:s
of pnm1me peoples. In the Masonic Cen-
ter PavdJon, Masonry's connection \nth
the h1srory of New York State and the
country wdl be highlighted.
Other buiidmgs m the Area mcludt the
Chmt1an Suenre P,l\'dJon, fc.uunng .1
thrtc-dimtnsinn.d cxh1hlt, the Bdly Gr.l-
hJm P.tvdJon With a 100-sc.lt tiH:.H.er .uhl
1 he 'it rrn()m from Science Pavilion, spon
'><Htd by the Chmt1an Life Convention.
The area wdl attract visitors from
rhrough(Jut the world as they do their part
111 athle\'lng the Fa1r's goal of Peace
Through Understanding.
One of the most notable events of the Fair's
pre-season activity occurred when President
Diasdo Macapogal visited the Philippine Pa-
vilion site and later was tendered a luncheon
in the Administration Building. He was accom-
panied by Mrs. Macapagol ond a delegation
of his country's officials. He is shown above
at the luncheon with Fair President Robert
Moses and Governor Charles Poletti, vice
president of lnternotional Af!oirs and Exhibits
for the exposition.
LAKE AMUSEMENT AREA
REPLETE WITH MUSIC,
FOOD, RIDES AND
SPECTACLE
Typifymg the slogan of one of its main
attractions, John Ringling North's Conti-
nental CJrcus, the Fau's Lake Amusement
Area wdl truly be a lure to "children of all
ages.
Here at two of the main entrances to
the the magnet of fun will
be k1ng. Surrounding this area of enter
tamment magic will be the AMF Mono
r.1il. on which SIX trams will whisk pas-
sengers on a fumnstic ride as they enjoy
a panor.1mic \'iew of the Fair.
The Amphitheatre will be the home of
Leon Leon1doff and Meyer Davis' "Won
derl.tnd." Mr. Leon1doff, famed director
of the R.Jd1o Ctty MusiC Hall stage shows,
wdl pwducc a spectacular stage and water
shPw replete w1th music, d.tncing, swim
mng. pKturesgue w.uerfalls and .1 glimpse
tnto w.tyourcr space.
The Amcnc.tn lndi.tn Vdl.1ge will offer
Ji.,e ttl,ll .1nd d.tnnng .md present
the story of true Indan life, past and
present
BFF, lnr wdl present a waffle restau
r.tnt .md .u::n.tl ndc. The ride. str.1ight up,
wtll me slowly rn .1 het,i,!ht of 120 feet.
Chun King Inn, set in a Chinese garden
adjoining several small lakes, will serve
a 7-course dinner for 99.
The Continental Circus will present a
typical international onering circus. A
museum tracing the history of this enter
tainment medium will be adjacent to the
5,000seat circus arena.
A display of unusual water formations
in colorful designs, controlled by the play
ing of an organ, will be the offering of
Dancing Waters. This show has been pop
ular throughout the world.
The Flume Ride, "shooting the shoots"
in a floating hollow log, will be a lure for
visitors ro Kiddyland and the Jaycopter
offers a simulated helicopter trip 100 feet
above the crowd.
Maroda Enterprises Mississippi River
Showboat and the exhibit of the Santa
Maria will take the Fair visitors onto the
cool waters of Meadow Lake.
Maroda will offer a 20-minute boar
cruise of the lake. The Showboat, a double
decked side-wheeler anchored 250 feet
from shore, will have musical entertain-
ment and dining. It will also have a supper
club revue. The Santa Maria will be an
authentic replica of Christopher Colum-
bus' flagship. A 200-foot enclosed pier will
lead to the ship, where the life of Colum-
bus will be depicted in three-dimensional
diorama.
The famous one-hour puppet show, a
revised version of Les Poupees de Paris,
will feature song and dance in miniature
with actual voices of theatrical stars.
Walters International Wax Museum
will contain more than 30 life-size tab-
leaux based on famous paintings, histori-
cal and contemporary figures, mythology,
religious events and motion picture and
television personalities.
The three states of Florida, Hawaii and
Texas will have major exhibits in the Lake
Amusement Area. Florida will have a live
porpoise show and a 100-foot Citrus
Tower. Hawaii will have an exhibit tell-
ing the story of the islands, a 40-foot
waterfall, artificial lagoons and a 600-seat
amphitheatre.
A series of pavilions will make up the
Texas exhibit, each presenting a differ-
ent phase of Texas life. A 2,500-seat Music
Hall will present "To Broadway With
Love," a spectacular based upon 100 years
of American musical comedy.
All in all, the Lake Amusement Area
will be a tasteful, entertaining complex.
dedicated to wholesome fun for all.
FAIR EXHIBITS SHOW
CURRENT AND FUTURE
PROGRESS OF INDUSTRY
The largest section of the Fair- the
3Y
4
million square foot Industrial Area
-will be a gigantic showcase fully stocked
with the fantastic accomplishments and
progress industry has made in our era and
will serve as its prospectus for tomorrow.
Just as the 39 Fair launched the con-
sumer acceptance of television, nylon,
clover-leaf traffic patterns and air condi
tioning, so products and services which
will be displayed here in 1964 and 1965
are expected to have far-reaching effects
on the taste, buying trends and concepts
of living of the millions who will attend
the Fair, and the many more who will have
been exposed to its glamour and excite-
ment via all forms of mass media.
That Business has recognized the in
valuable opportunity to expose the larg-
est single aggregate of people ever gath
ered in such a limited area to its products
and message is evident in the impressive
roster of Fair exhibitors. Among the
more than 300 companies and trade asso
ciations represented either in their own
pavilions or in one of the multiple exhib-
itor buildings, are not only blue ribbon
titans of manufacture and commerce but
also smaller businesses eager to project a
picture of leadership in their respective
fields.
The audience of more than 70 million
visitors will be a receptive one, willing to
be mformed and ready to be entertained.
In the competition to lure their share of
the anticipated influx, the business con-
cerns of the Fair's Industrial Area have
produced an exming, extravagant variety
of exhibit concepts. A combination of ad
vanced technological knowledge and the
atrical flair has given expression to the
visions of the best creative talent in the
country in dramatic, tasteful promotions
directed primarily toward an impact on
public good will. The result has been a
gilded, deliberately soft sell with themes-
sage delivered via rides, revues and revels,
and informal, often ingenious teaching
techniques.
Within the 40 pavilions of the Indus-
trial Area, visitors will see examples of
Walt Disney's startling audio-animatronK
figures, either along the banks during a
boar ride or performing on a series of
stages.
There will be magic shows and puppet
shows and a fantasy world of mechanized
dolls.
A global tour will stop at exmic pons
of call, another will break through time
barriers as it spans man's history.
Broadway and Hollywood will be well
represented with Morton Gould, Carol
Haney, Joe Mielziner, Michael Brown,
Tom Tichener, Elmer Bernstein, Robert
Davis and the Eckards, among many
others, contributing their special talents to
live theatrical productions, motion pic-
tures, slide shows - and revolutionary
combinations of all three.
For women, the pavilions in the Area
will offer cooking demonstrations, fash-
ion shows, beauty consultations, sewing
tips, a forecast of home-related products
and striking, original room settings and
model homes created by the country's
foremost architects and interior designers.
The very young will enjoy the latest in
playground equipment while older chil-
dren can absorb the principles of computer
arithmetic and nuclear physics, learn how
a television facility operates and how a
demograph works and gain further en-
joyable insight into American history-
or select a pen pal. Older persons can
point with pride to their own accomplish-
ments and their active future.
A variety of foods and beverages served
in attractive settings and private room-
ettes with beds which can be rented for a
quick nap, will add much to create com-
fort.
Unifying all of the exhibits and under-
lining the global significance of the Fair
is its symbol- the massive Unisphere
- donated by the United States Steel
Corporation, which will also sponsor the
special Opening Day NBC telecast ex-
pected to reach 40,000,000 persons across
the nation.
Martin Stone, director of the Industrial Sec-
tion, with the model of the Eastman-Kodak
pavilion at the Time-Life preview exhibition.
ALL-OUT PROMOTIONAL EFFORTS ACHIEVING SPECTACULAR RESULTS
What the trade magazines and news-
letters have referred to as "the greatest
single promotional effort in history," is
moving into the homestretch under the
direction of William Berns, vice president
in charge of Communications and Public
Relations for the Fair. Assisting Mr. Berns
on the Fair staff is Gregory Dawson, di-
rector of public relations activities.
Consulting with Mr. Berns and activat-
ing the various programs are the Thomas J.
Deegan Company for promotion, William
J. Donoghue Corporation for publicity and
press relations and J. Walter Thompson
Company for advertising.
PROMOTION
The Thomas J. Deegan Company enters
the final pre-Fair phase under the direc-
tion of its president, L. Richard Guylay,
and its senior vice president, Howard S.
Johnson. With accent on advance ticket
sales, every promotional scheme known to
the trade is being employed to assure the
sale of ten million pre-opening tickets.
Among programs scheduled, the Today
Show (NBC-TV) will originate from the
Fair at least half-an-hour a week. Other
programs already making specific plans for
Fair origination include "Tonight," "Steve
Allen," "Candid Camera," "Ed Sullivan,"
"Perry Como," "Danny Kaye," "Queen
For A Day," "Captain Kangaroo," and
"To Tell The Truth."
A complete promotion kit is being pre-
pared to service over 6,000 radio and tele-
vision stations in the United States and
abroad.
In Philadelphia, the five Gimbel stores
will devote all windows to the World's
Fair during the month of February. In
New York, Gimbels has erected a five-story
Unisphere on the Sixth Avenue side of
their building, to remain throughout the
Fair.
LIFE is producing World's Fair dis-
plays which will be featured simultane-
ously in 200 department stores across the
country during the winter and spring
months of 1964.
The Deegan Company has distributed
over 8,000,000 pieces of literature, pro-
vided a variety of speakers kits, and has
organized a speakers' bureau responsible
for making more than 2,500 speeches a
week throughout the United States and
in some parts of Europe. Cooperation has
been provided by such exhibitors as Trav-
elers, General Electric and the Bell System.
The Paris office of the company, headed
by Bill Humphreys, has had the close co-
operation of the United States Travel Ser-
vice and the United States Information Ser-
vice in European promotion. De Grassi &
Associates, Tokyo, handle the Fair's pro-
motional activity in the Far East.
In addition, model and poster exhibits
are displayed in such traffic centers as the
offices of TWA, El AI, Pan American and
various department stores.
On the West Coast, AI Rackin and Ken
Manson have placed visual materials on 74
radio and television shows and are develop-
ing Fair story lines with the producers of
a number of major motion ptctures.
PUBLICITY AND PRESS
RELATIONS
Although day-to-day press activity is the
primary responsibility of the William J.
Donoghue Corporation, the staff, headed
by Peter J. McDonnell, director of public-
ity, and Jerome Edelberg, assistant pub-
liciry director has taken on broader duties,
including magazines, radio and television
news, the weekly press, trade books and
company publications.
In the magazine field, the two-year con-
centrated effort of Joyce 1\lartin, magazine
coordinator, is bearing rich fruit. What
seemed to be early apathy due to the re-
moteness of April, 1964, changed to deep
interest and in the most recent five weeks
alone, a circulation of 51,146,000 has been
attained in the fourteen magazines listed
below. It is well to keep in mind that these
are ABC circulation figures, not to be con-
fused with what Madison Avenue and the
publishers rightly term, "readership."
MAGAZINE
Reader's Di&est:
CIRCULATION
15,250,000
Major article by Ira Wolfert
(U.S. and canada)
Newsweek:
cover, major and photos
Architectural Forum:
Cover, story and photos
Time:
Story and full color photos
U.S. News and World Report:
life:
Look:
Major Story with photos
Major spread with lull color art
Full Issue, lncludlnl cover, plus
Insert
Seventeen:
full Issue, lncludlnl cover
Vogue:
Spread
Harper's Bazaar:
Spread
Popular Mechanics:
Spread
Changint Times
Artlcle
New Yorker
Article
Parade
Article
1,500,000
63,000
2,700,000
1,250,000
7,250,000
7,500,000
1,100,000
500,000
300,000
1,250,000
1,000,000
483,000
11,000,000
In the titld of daily newspapers .md
the wtre senices, releases .He sent out at
least on a daily basis, inquiries are han-
dled constantly by telephone, letter and
personal call and special features are pre-
pared as the occasion demands.
A special newsletter is issued every
Monda)' to the weekly newspapers within
a 1 00-mtle radius of Flushing Meadow
Park and the pick-up has well exceeded all
expectations. As Opening Day approaches,
circulation of the weekly letter will be ex-
panded to include papers in key communi-
ties throughout the nation.
Radio and television outlets in nearby
communities of New York, New Jersey,
Connecticut and Pennsylvania are serviced
with weekly material especially slanted for
verbal and pictorial transmission.
Trade books and company magazines
.ue provided photographs and copy, while
their editors are given tours of the grounds
and the tdentical personal artention given
major consumer magazines. Assistance is
given on ,,ll tours by press aides, for the
most part young collegians, under the di
rection of Joseph Boyle.
ADVERTISING
The Fair recently has used extensive
New York market area advertising in sup
port of the advance ticket sales program.
New posters have been created and will
soon join the now famous Bob Peak post
ers which have been distributed all over
the world.
All advertising is planned and created
for the Commumcations and Public Rela-
tions Divtsion by the J. Walter Thompson
Comp.my, consultants to the Fair. The ac-
count team at Thompson is headed by
Rheinstrom, management super-
'isor, Ted Ropl, account supervisor, Bill
B.tylor. rl'presentative .1nd Bill Banks, in-
ternational representative.
William Berns, vice president, Communica-
tions and Public Relations, makes first call on
o bank of touch-tone telephones just installed
in the Fair's ultra-modern Press Building.
..... 1
.,
---.--- ~ --' ___..,_
.A Readers Digest
THE READER'S DIGEST PLEASANTVILLE. NEW YORK
/-
' -... ..
I'
.\
~ -
"
'
4,
..
I .
'" .,. .
,
I"'
- ~
'
.-\ ,.: I
....
..
..
e
I'
..
...
....
()
.
I
..
.,
t
1
'
A preview of the New York
lVorld's Fair, an i,;pressive
display of man's achieve-
ments and a dazzling vision
of his prospects
Condenud from THE DIPLOMAT
HY IRA \VoLFERT
Coming:
The Most
Marvelous
Fair Ever!
., ,. * a r r rwxrnttiti "h.
3 THE READER'S DIGEST
COMING: THE MOST MARVELOUS FAIR EVER! 4
T
HE MOST brilliant electric
lights of all time are now
being installed between the
bases of three 12o-foot-high pylons
in New York. Developed to simu-
late the sun in space research, each
lamp is less than three inches in
diameter and 19Yz inches long, yet
produces a light as bright as 8,775,-
ooo hundred-watt bulbs. Combined,
the 1 2 searchlights will add up to
12 billion candlepower. Reflectors
around them will concentrate this
light into a single beam and direct
it upward.
As night falls on April 22, jets of
air will start streaming on the lamps
to blow away their heat, and the
lights will be turned on for the first
evening of the New York World's
Fair.
The fair will run until October
18, 1(/64, then be opened again in
15 from April 21 to October 17.
And every night of this run the
beam of light will shine heaven-
ward from the "tower of light" pa-
vilion of the U.S. Electric Power
and Light Companies.
"This fair can't get away with be-
ing merely marvelous," says Robert
Moses, president of the Fair Corpo-
ration. "So much talent and eco-
nomic power are being poured into
this square mile of ground that if it
... o .. -.al 0
O"'Ll"'Af P"u CO oNC 9.2 .. anOIOAL
... ! .. INQTO .. <1, 0 C
.. .,. b._,
\.-.:..:
doesn't produce the most marvelous
fair ever, it YCill be a disappointment
-like holding an Olympics without
breaking any records."
Forty-eight nations (plus West
Berlin and the crown colony of
Hong Kong) will be represented.
For reasons they have not made en-
tirely clear, Russia, Britain and the
Commonwealth nations (except In-
dia) are not showing at the fair.
Russia had reserved for itself the
largest space in the International
Exhibition. When it backed out, the
ground was taken over by one of the
poorest nations in Europe-Spain.
Japan has contracted for two pavil-
ions. There will be exhibits by the
U.S. government, 26 states and
more than Ho industries represent-
ing more than 300 companies. The
exhibitors and concessionaires are
erecting 150 different pavilions and
spending about 550 million dollars
to put on shows in them.
Man in his be\vildering variety-
that's what the shows will present.
For example: From General Elec-
tric is coming a demonstration of
controlled nuclear fusion. In this
first public unveiling of what scien-
tists predict to be the most promis-
ing power source, fair visitors will
watch fusion liberate pure energy
from deuterium gas at a tempera-
ture of over 20 million degrees F.
From St. Peter's Basilica in Rome
is coming quite another kind of
transcendent human achievement:
the Pieta by Michelangelo, finished
seven years after Columbus' discov-
ery of America, depicting in white
----- .... --- ---
marble, slightly larger than life-size,
a crucified-Christ figure lying in the
arms of His mourning mother. The
Pieta will be viewed from four lev-
els. The three lower levels are mov-
ing platforms that take those who
want merely to look at the statue
past it slowly and silently. The top
level is motionless, for those who
want to linger in contemplation of
this profound study.
The space manufacturers are send-
ing a full-sized space station and
two orbital vehicles to simulate the
rendezvous in space that will have
to be accomplished for the journey
to the moon. The Parker Pen Co.,
in conjunction with the People-to-
People program, is sending a com-
puter stocked with personal data on
one million friendly souls. Tell the
computer your interests and it will
leaf through its innards for a con-
genial international pen pal and
hand you the name and address
printed on a special overseas post-
card. Wisconsin is sending the big-
gest cheese ever made, a $1oo,ooo
cheddar seven feet high, 9Yz feet in
diameter. Montana-$1,ooo,ooo in
gold nuggets.
One unusual feature of this fair is
the number of exhibits being staged
by professional showmen. To see
what a showman can do, I went to
Thornwood, N.Y., to watch Ray-
mond Lester complete an enormous
scale model of the city of New York.
It has taken two years, cost $6oo,ooo
and was painstakingly worked up
from more than so,ooo aerial photo-
graphs. On a floor 180 feet long, 100
feet wide, it shows every street in
the five boroughs, every river and
bridge, every window in every one
of the city's 835,000 buildings. It
even shows the 1000 vessels that can
be found plying the harbor or tied
up at piers on an average day,
all on a scale of one inch to 100 feet.
Usually such displays, however
grand and lavishly detailed, are still
just toys you're not allowed to play
with. But Lester is letting the audi-
ence play with his toy. It works
this way: You sit in a four-passenger
car suspended on overhead rails.
There is no sensation of movement
until suddenly clouds start scudding
past the windows. The clouds break
and you are as in a helicopter flying
at 2000 feet over lower New York
bay. Actually, you are only 2Yz feet
up, but because the Statue of Liberty
below you is little more than three
inches high, the Empire State Build-
ing only 14 inches high and every-
thing else in exact proportion, the
illusion is perfect.
A tape recording explains the
points of interest as you take a lei-
surely eight-minute "flying" tour
around the city. As you approach
La Guardia and Idlewild airports,
beacon lights flash and planes take
off and climb by you in the dis-
tance. Your own "helicopter" climbs,
and the city falls away beneath you
steadily until at last you can see it
all from one end to the other. Then
your copter lands you on a bal-
cony and as a 15-minute recording
tells the city's life story you watch
one of the greatest spectacles on
-.. .........---- -- -
---- .. -
earth-New York going from dawn
to dusk, then to night dawn <tnd
day again.
Another unusual feature of the
fair is the amount of space devoted
to religion-a total of seven acres
and eight pavilions. Here will be
found the Mormons' great Taber-
nacle Choir from Salt Lake City,
a fourth-century carving that is one
of the earliest known studies of
Jesus, a Gutenberg Bible, the cross
charred in the bombing of Coventry
Cathedral, a computer used in trans-
lating the Bible into unwritten lan-
guages.
No pavilion is allowed to occupy
more than 6o percent of its site; the
remaining 40 percent must be land-
scaped. Since all the giants are going
all out in this one, the competition
to impress visitors is fierce. "As one
of the smaller exhibitors we were as-
signed a limited amount of space," I
was told by Walter Dorwin Teague,
Jr., designer of the Gas Companies'
exhibit. "We achieved the effect of
spaciousness by running our 40 per-
cent of landscaping right through
the building as well as around it."
This "little" exhibitor is spending
$s,soo,ooo for his show!
The fair will be easy on your feet.
You will ride past, over or under
practically everything. Outdoors,
you ride from exhibit to exhibit in
glass-topped sight-seeing buses, in
open-sided trailer trains, or in a tiny
four-passenger "taxi." You can even
travel high above all the exhibits for
a panoramic view from a Swiss sky
ride or around the perimeter of the
f"
= ... - :
s THE READER'S DIGEST
Lake Amusement Area aboard one
of the six air -conditioned two-car
trains by AMF Monorail.
Indoors, you ride standing on
moving walks and stairways, or sit-
ting in cars, floating armchairs and
space ships. At General Electric, the
stage rides around you, while at
IHM you ride in the theater itself,
which is on rails.
At the 1939 New York World's
Fair. General Motors' Futurama-a
ride over the highways of the future
-was the smash hit, playing lO an
average of 2X,ooo people a day. In
the new GM Fu-
turama, the audience (up to 70,000
a day this time) will ride around the
world as it could be if the fair's
theme of "Peace Through Under-
standing" is achieved and scientists
and technologists can devote their
energies exclusively to peaceful de-
velopments. "No fantasies, nothing
that can't be backed up with hard
facts as a definite, practical possibil-
ity," came the order to the designers
from General Motors Chairman
Frederic G. Donner.
What a world you'll see in GM's
crystal ball! With underwater drill-
ing already accounting for a sub-
stantial part of the world's oil supply
and diamond miners taking an
average of 100 carats a day from thf'
floor of the ocean off South Africa,
the underwater world, more cer-
tainly than space, is man's newest
frontier. So the F:.nurama audience
rides under the sea. New ways of un-
derwater exploring, mining, farm-
ing and living are shown. Trains of
:
nuclear-powered submarine tankers
fill up at wells on the ocean floor,
speed to a seashore refinery, unload
and return without surfacing.
Then the audience comes up to
see what the luture is doing to cope
with its enormously increased popu-
lation. They see a jungle cleared by
a tree cutter that uses a laser beam
as a saw. Behind it is a five-story-
high road-building vehicle as long
as three football fields. It makes a
multi-laned concrete highway while
you wait. The front end levels the
cleared ground, the middle grades
and installs a steel foundation, the
hind end covers it with slabs of ce-
ment, plastic and other materials
that the monster itself forms while
the trucks that feed it raw materials
drive up on the highway it is laying.
From this strange scene the au-
dience rides on to a desert farmed
by remote control: the mineral-
rich desert soil is irrigated with de-
salted sea water, its flow regulated
by moisture-sensing devices planted
amid the crops. With push-buttons
in his home at the edge of the fields,
the farmer mixes fertilizers into the
water and directs the vehicles that
plow, seed, cultivate and harvest the
land.
The U.S. government is bidding
for the title of "Champ Crowd
Pleaser" with a 7-million-dollar pa-
vilion where a Cinerama movie tells
the story of the development of the
United States, using 30 projectors
and 132 screens in what might be
called a drive-along theater. The
audience, seated in open-topped
-=
.....
COMING: THE MOST MARVELOUS FAIR EVER! 6
buses, rides right along with Co-
lumbus, with the settlers, with the
westering pioneers and the immi-
grants, while all around movie
screens move aside, go up and
down, even form a tunnel for the
buses to drive through.
Four other challengers for the
title have turned to one of Holly-
wood's most valuable natural re-
sources, Walt Disney. Visitors to the
Pepsi-Cola pavilion will be taken on
a Disneyland-type tour of the world,
and visitors to the Ford pavilion on
a Disneyland ride through history.
And both General Electric and
the State of Illinois will use lifelike
figures animated by Disney. At the
Illinois pavilion, a figure six-feet-
four-inches tall, with a face so home-
ly it is beautiful, constructed with
the help of a life mask of Abraham
Lincoln, will rise, step forward and
make one of the poet-President's
immortal addresses. Disney says,
"I'm doing everything I know how
to give the audience the sensation of
being in the crowd the day Lincoln
himself made the
Fair authorities estimate that it
would take 12 early-morning-to-
late-night days and the constitution
of a bulldozer to see everything that
will be offered. That does not in-
clude what New York itself is plan-
ning for the visitor. Broadway,
naturally, is going all out, and there
will be special shows and concerts
at Lincoln Center, special exhibits
at the museums and libraries and
trials for the American Olympic
team.
But the fair's the main show, of
course. And what you'll see there is
man at his proudest. One day re-
cently, carried away by the sight
growing before his eyes, Robert
Moses lifted up his gravelly voice
and caroled, "Come in your helicop-
ter. Land on our Helicopter Tower.
You will be more filled with wild
surmise than stout Cortez and his
men gazing at the Pacific, silent
upon a peak in Darien."
REPRINTED FROM THE JANUARY 196. ISSUE OF THE READER'S DIGEST
COPYRIGHT 1964 BY THE READER'S DIGEST ASSOCIATION, INC., PLEASANTVILLE, N.Y. PRINTED IN U S.A.
. ..,....".,...._,______

.... .. . ._.....
)
t;,-
Y/{ /h , fitn,_utal
L {t_,4,.'Y/ . . %.,:" 1,96'/1-1/)6'.5'
2.:?, ;y.oa. me'N' .-:k.('M
a !iJu.ed'.rJ< 4- /;,.,.. ./;(,
, :Jl-./.n-1 . /luJ
.-:IJ..,.Ju/, nl


,.\ I
...
I C

..
.. ... .. , .
... -.
i\ .
I
'
" ..
'
I .
I )
J
CONFIDENTIAL
o'ac.t

''_,1
' .
,' .
NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR 1964-1965 CORPORATION
INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION AT FLUSHING MEADOW PARK
FLUSHING 52. N_ y_ TtLtPHONtAAEA Coot 212 WF 41964 CABLE ADORtSS .. WORLOSFAIR"
CHARLES POLETTI
YICI Plllt:StD,NT
INTI:RNATIONAL AFflr.IRI I UMtatT_!'
PEACE THROUGH
UHD!.RSTANOINO
To:
From:
ROBERT MOSES
PRESIDENT
January 24, 1964
MOSES
JOHN YOUNG \-;/ . ("
,,
\
Subject: THE PATRIARCH A
!. I firmly believe His Holi.ness the Patriarch Athenagoras
will visit the New York World's Fair during our closing week
in October 1964.
2. A national committee will be organized to issue this
invitation. Among others, this committee will consist of:
President Lyndon B. Johnson
His Eminence Archbishop Iakovos, Greek Archbishop of
North and South America.
His Eminence Cardinal Spellman, of New York.
His Eminence Cardinal Cushing, of Boston.
His Eminence Cardinal Mac Intyre, of Los Angeles.
Mayor Robert Wagner.
Commissioner Robert Moses.
Dr. Roswell Barnes, Director of the World Council of Churdms.-
Dr. R. H. Edwin Espy, Director of the National Council of tlifJ
Churches of Christ in the United States of America.
3. Three weeks from now, Mr. Spiros Skouras will leave for
Istanbul to finalize the arrangements with His Holiness the Patriarch.
4, Next week, if convenient for you, I shall arrange a private
highly confidential luncheon to be given by you for Mr. Spires Skouras
Judge Samuel Rosenman, Tom Deegan and myself.
.. @--....
DAYS TO OPENING DAY
-,,,
-
..
..
.,. .
~ -
... \ r ~ ;
,
.
..
,,
....
'
, ..
- ~
_-t' .,
~ - . '
.OIWIQE
.....
................... , .....
.........
............
'
I
I
I
BERGEN I
I
I
LOWER BAY
I
I
'
I
' I
-f
I
I
I
'
'
. '
WESTCHE81ER ' . >
-tx"
,.,.

,"cP'
.,-" .
( FAIRFIELD


TAI't'iUI:rn. '
'
I
LONG ISLAND SOUND
NASSAU
ATLANTIC OCEAN
SUFFOLK
\
(:)1'>"1 l'if..' !96J .. fW W0"'-C'"S OO.OA \96" COAPO .. ATIO ..
.....
HllOaOII.I
The material contained herein is furnished solely lor the inlorma
lion and guidance of persons using this folder. Effort has been
made to compile the information carefully, but neither the New
York World's Fair 1964-1965 Corporation, nor the New York Con-
vention and Visitors Bureau. Inc. nor the New York World's Fair
Housing Bureau guarantees the rates or other information herein
set forth or assumes any responsibility for errors or omissions
or tor damages which may result from reliances upon such rates
or upon the information contained.

1
INTRODUCTION
This folder has been prepared to assist you in planning
your visit to the New York World's Fair 1964-1965. It is
published by the New York World's Fair Housing Bureau,
the Fair's official housing service. which is a division of
the New York Convention and Visitors Bureau, a non-
profit civic organization.
All the establishments listed are participants in the
World's Fair Housing Bureau program, and have pledged
to maintain the highest standard of fair dealing in their
relations with World's Fair visitors.
The listings, which include virtually every transient hotel
and motel in New York City and its environs, are ar-
ranged according to geographical areas as shown on
the map at left. Reservations for accomodations at any
of these establishments during the World's Fair periods
(April 22-0ctober 18. 1964 and April 21-0ctober 17, 1965)
may be made:
1. Through the New York World's Fair Housing Bureau.
whose address is 30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York 20.
New York .
2. Directly to the hotel or motel you select. at the addresses
shown in this folder.
3. Through your travel ageni. who can place your reser-
vation either through the Housing Bureau or directly with
the hotel or motel of your choice.
Add 5k tax to rates listed 1n New York City and 31!2/o ir_:J
STATE OF NEW YORK
New York Coty Borough. Manhattan
Name & Address
Abbey Hotel, 151 W. 51st St .. N.Y. 19, N.Y ............................ .
X* Adams Hotel, 2 E. 86th St .. N. Y 28, N. Y ............................. ..
x* Alamac Hotel, 71st St. & Broadway, N. Y. 23, N. Y ..................... .
x* Alden Hotel, 225 Central Park W., N.Y. 24, N.Y ....................... .
x Algonquin Hotel, 59 W. 44th St., N.Y. 36, N.Y ......................... .
x Allerton House for Women, 130 E. 57th S!., N.Y. 22, N.Y .............. .
X* Alrae Hotel, 37 E. 64th St., N. Y. 21, N.Y ............................. ..
x* America Hotel, 145 W. 47th St., N.Y. 36, N.Y .......................... .
x Americana of New York, 52nd St. & 7th Ave., N.Y. 19. N.Y ............ .
X* Arlington Hotel, 18 W. 25th St., N.Y. 10, N.Y .......................... .
Ashley Hotel, 157 W. 47th St., N. Y. 36, N.Y .......................... ..
Astor Hotel, 44th St. & Broadway (Times Square) N.Y. 36, N.Y ........ .
Barblzon for Women, 140 E. 63rd St., N. Y. 21, N. Y ................... ..
X* Barblzon-Piaza Hotel, 106 Central ParkS. (6th Ave.) N.Y. 19, N.Y ..... .
x Barclay Hotel, 111 E. 48th St., N. Y. 17, N.Y ........................... .
x* Beacon Hotel, 2130 Broadway, N.Y. 23, N.Y .......................... .
x Beaux Am Hotel, 310 E. 44th St., N.Y. 17, N.Y ....................... ..
x Bedford Hotel, 118 E. 40th St.. N.Y. 16, N.Y ........................... .
Beekman Hotel, 575 Park Ave. (63rd St.}, N.Y. 21. N. Y ................ .
Beekman Tower Hotel, 3 Mitchell Pl. (1st Ave.-49th St.), N.Y. 17. N.Y .. .
Belmont Piau Hole!, 49th St. at Lexington Ave., N. Y. 22, N. Y ........ ..
r
it
INTRODUCTION
This folder has been prepared to assist you in planning
your visit to the New York World's Fair 1964-1965. It is
published by the New York World's Fair Housing Bureau,
the Fair's official housing service, which is a division of
the New York Convention and Visitors Bureau. a non-
profit civic organization.
All the establishments listed are participants in the
World's Fair Housing Bureau program, and have pledged
to maintain the highest standard of fair dealing in their
relations with World's Fair visitors.
The listings, which include virtually every transient hotel
and motel in New York City and its environs, are ar-
ranged according to geographical areas as shown on
the map at left. Reservations for accomodations at any
of these establishments during the World's Fair periods
(April 22-0ctober 18, 1964 and Aprii21-0ctober 17, 1965)
may be made:
1. Through the New York World's Fair Housing Bureau.
whose address is 30 Rockefeller Plaza. New York 20.
New York.
2. Directly to the hotel or motel you setect.at the addresses
shown in this folder.
3. Through your travel agent. who can plac6 your reser-
vation either through the Housing Bureau or directly with
the hotel or motel of your choice.
Add 5% tax to rates listed in New York City and 3'12% in Connect1cut
. '
-- - ~ - . ' ._. __ ... _ ~ - ---- J- ~
/ ___ ,., ..
\
The rates listed herein are those reported as current
when this information was compiled in 1962. and are
subject to change. Early in 1964, the New York World's
Fair Housing Bureau will issue a revised edition of this
folder showing the rates in effect at that time. Another
edition will be published at the beginning of 1965. All
participating hotels and motels have agreed that their
rates during the World's Fair seasons 1n 1964 and 1965
will not exceed the regular rates in effect at the beginning
of the respective calendar years.
The symbol x preceding the name of an establishment
in the listings indicates that air conditioned units are
available. An asterisk (*) indicates that housekeeping
units are availabl!l. A circle (o) indicates that the estab-
lishment is a motel or motor hotel.
Further information about hotel and motel accommoda-
tions for the New York World's Fair 1964-1965 is avail-
able from the World's Fair Housing Bureau, as well as
from travel agents and other travel specialists through-
out the world.
In making reservations through the World's Fair Housing
Bureau. please indicate the establishment of your first
choice and at least three alternatives. The Housing
Bureau is operated as a convenience for visitors to the
World's Fair and does not charge for its services.
-------- ------------------------
STATE OF NEW YORK
New York City Borough. Manhattan
Name & Address
x Abbelf Hotel, 151 W. 51st St., N.Y. 19, N.Y ......................... , ...
xo Adama Hotel, 2 E. 86th St., N. Y 28, N. Y ..................... , ........ .
x Alamac Hotel, 71st St. & Broadway, N.Y. 23, N.Y ........ , ............ .
x Alden Hotel, 225 Central Park W., N.Y. 24, N.Y ....................... .
Algonquin Hotel, 59 W. 44th St., N.Y. 36, N.Y ......................... .
x Allerton Hause for Women, 130 E. 57th St., N. Y. 22. N. Y ............. ..
xo Alrae Hotel, 37 E. 64th St., N. Y. 21, N.Y ........... , .................. .
x America Hotel, 145 W. 47th St .. N. Y. 36, N. Y .......................... .
x Americana of New York, 52nd St. & 7th Ave .. N.Y. 19, N.Y ............ .
x Arlington Hotel, 16 W. 25th St., N. Y. 10, N.Y .......................... .
Ashier Hotel, 157 W. 47th St., N. Y. 36, N.Y ........................... .
x Allor Hotel, 44th St. & Broadway (Times Square) N.Y. 36. N Y ........
x Barblzon lor Women, 140 E. 63rd St., N. Y. 21, N. Y ....... , ............ .
x BarblzonPiaza Hotel, 106 Central ParkS. (6th Ave.) N.Y. 19, N.Y ..... .
x Barcllif Hotel, 111 E. 48th St., N. Y. 17, N.Y ........... , ............... .
x Beacon Hotel, 2130 Broadway, N. Y. 23, N.Y ............ , ............. .
x BeauxArlsHalei,310E.44th5t.,N. Y.17,N. Y ........................ .
xo Bedford Hotel, 118 E. 40th St., N. Y. 16, N.Y ............... , ........... .
x Beekman Hotel, 575 Park Ave. (63rd St.), N. Y 21, N Y ............... .
x Beekman Tower Hotel, 3 Mitchell Pl. (1st Ave -49th 51), N Y 17, N.Y .. .
, j x Belmont Plaza Hotel, 49th St. at Lexington Ave. N.Y. 22, N. Y., .......
I - - - - - - - - - ~ ~ - - - - - - - - ~ --
Area Code:
212
Telephone
Number
Rooms Without Bath
Single Double
Rooms With Bath
Single Double
r-------r-------r-------r------
.. Cl 6 9400 , ............... .. ............... .. 8.50-10.50 . .11.50-16.50
.. RH 41800 ................. . ............... '.12.0016.00 .. .18.0022.00
.. EN 2-5000 ................ .. ............... ... 6.00- o.so .. . .. 9.00-10.00
.. TR 3-7300 ................ .. ............... .. 10.00-13.00 .. .13.0017.00
.. MU 7-4400 ................. . ............... .. 10 50-16.00 .. . .14.50-19.50
.. PL 3-8841 ....... 4.25-5.50 .. . ............... .. 6.0010.00- . ..11.0016.00
.. RH 4-0200 ..... , .. , ........ . ............... .. 16.00-20.00 .. .20.0026.00
.. co 5-6300 "" ... 4.00 ...... . '' . 5.00 7.00 .. .. 5.00- 7.00 .. 7.00-10.00
.. L T 1 - 1000 ................ .. ............... '-12.00-28.00' .16.0032.00
.. WA 98960 ....... 3.505 00 .. . .... 4.00 8.00 .. .. 5.00- 8.00 .. 8.00-12.00
.. Ct 5-6090 ....... 3 50-4.00 ... .... 6.00 ....... .. 5.00 8.00 .. . 8.0012.00
.. JU 6-3000 ................. . ............... .. 9.0018.00 .. . .14.00-24.00
.. TE 8-5700 ....... 5 507.50 ... ... 12.5015.00 .. . '9.50-13.00 . . .17.5018.50
.. CI 7-7000 ................ .. ............... . '9.5015.00 .. . .15.00-23.00
.. PL 5- 5900 .. .. .. ........... . ............... . .15.50-21.95 ' . .19.5027.95
.. su 7-1100 .................. . ............... .. 7.00- 9.00' ..10.75-11.25
.. MU 9-3800 ................. . ............... '.13.0019.00' . . .18.00-24.00
.. ox 7-4800 .................. . ............... '.12.5014.00 ' . . 15.50-17.00
.. TE 8-4900 ................. . ............... '.18.00-21.00 .. 21.0024.00
.. EL 5-7300 ....... 7.50-9.00 .. . ............... .. 12 00-14.00 .. 15.0020.00
.. PL 5-1200 .................. .

.. 8.50-16.00 .. 14.0020.00
i
I
I
l
I
'l
j
'
STATE OF NEW YORK
Area Code:
212
Telephone
Number
Rooms Without Bath
Rooms With Bath
Double
New York City Borough: Manhattan
Name & Address
Single Double
Single
Barkahlra Hotel, 21 E. 52nd St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ............................. PL 35800 .................................. 14.0019.00.. ...19.0025.00
Beverly Hotel, Lexington Ave. (50th St.), N. y. 22. N. y .................... PL 3. 2700... .. . . .. .. .. .. . . . . ........ .. .. 15.0020 00 .. 18.0025.00
Biltmore Hotel, 43rd St. at Madison Ave., N. v. 17, N. v ................... MU 7-7000 ........................... . .... 14.95-25.00 ...... 18.9530.00
Blackatone Hotel, 50 E. 58th St., N.Y. 22, N. Y ............................ EL 5-4200 .................................. 12.00-15.00 ...... 17.0019.00
Bolivar Hotel, 230 Central Park W., N.Y. 24, N.Y ......................... su 7-6000 ........................... .. .. B 00-10.00. .10.00-14.00
Brealln Hotel, Broadway at 29th St., N. v. 1, N. v ......................... MU 5-9600 ....... 3 50 .......... 5 006.00. ... 5.00 6.50 .. .. 8.00-10.00
Brewater Hotel, 21 W 86th St., N. v. 24, N.Y .............................. SC 4-8500 .................................. 8.0010 00 ...... 10.00-12.00
Brlatol Hotel, 129 W. 48th St., N.Y. 36, N.Y ............................... CI 7. 3600 ............................... .. 7.0012 00 .... 10.0015.00
Brittany Hotel, 55 E. 10th St., N.Y. 3, N.Y ................................ OR 75100 .................................. 10.00-15.00 ...... 16.0020.00
Buckingham Hotel, 101 W. 57th St., N. Y. 19, N.Y ......................... CI 6-1500 ............................... .. 10 50-14 50 ...... 12.5017.50
Cameron Hotel, 41 W. 86th St., N. v. 24, N. v ............................ sc 4-6900 .................................. 6 50-10 50 ...... 9.50-16.00
Carlyle Hotel, 35 E. 76th Sl (Madison Ave.) N.Y. 21, N. Y ................. RH 4-1600 ................................. 20 00-25 00 ..... 24.0030.00
Century Hotel, 111 W. 46th St., N.Y. 36, N. Y .............................. PL 7. 7300 .................................. 7.00-10 00 ...... 11.0014.00
Chatham Hotel, 33 E. 48th St., N.Y. 17, N.Y .............................. EL 5 5400 .................................. 10 50-19 00 ...... 19.0023.00
Cheatarlleld Hotel, 130 W. 491h St. N.Y. 19, N.Y ......................... CO 5-7700 ...... 5.00 .......... 6 509 50 ..... 7.5010 50 ...... 8 5015.00
City Squire, 51st St. & Broadway, N.Y. 19. N. v ........................... to open 1963 telephone num er & rates not stablished at I e of printing
Claridge Hole I, 44th St. & Broadway. N. Y. 36, N. y ..................... JU 2. 5050 ....... 5 007.00... . .. 7 009 oo .. .. 7.0010 00... ... 9.0015.00
Coliseum House, 228 W. 71sl St, N.Y. 23, N.Y .......................... TR 31000 ....................... ...... .. .. 5 00 8 00 .. .... 8.0012.00
Collingwood Hotel, 45 W. 35th St. N. Y.1, N.Y .......................... WI 7-2500 ................................. .. 7 00 9 00 ...... 10.00-14.00
Commodore Hotel, 42nd St. at Park & Lexington Aves, N.Y. 17, N.Y .... MU 66000 ............................ .. .. 11 00-19.00 ...... 16.00-24.00
Concord Hotel, 130 E. 40th St., N.Y. 16, N.Y ............................ MU 39580- .................................. 10.00-15 00 ...... 12.50-18.00
Cornlah Arms Hotel, 311 W. 23rd St., N. Y.11, N. Y ...................... CH 3-7400 ............................... ... 9 00 ........... 11.0014 00
Crown Hotel, 136 W. 44th St., N.Y. 36, N.Y .............................. JU 2-3516 ........ 4.505 50 ...... 7 00 8 50 ..... 6 50 7 50 ....... 9 001100
Croydon Hotel, 12 E. 86th St, N.Y. 28, N.Y .............................. BU B-4000 .................................. 10 00-12 00 ...... 14.0016.00
Delmonico Hotel, 502 Park Ave., N.Y. 22, N.Y... . . . .. ................ EL 5-2500 .................................. 17 00-2a 00 ...... 22.0030.00
Diplomat Hotel, 108 W 43rd St, N.Y. 36, N.Y ........................... BR 93707 ....... 5 007 00.. . .. 7 00-11 00 ..... 7 50 9.00 ....... 9.5012.00
Dixie Hotel, 250 W. 43rd St. N.Y. 36, N.Y ............................... WI 76000 ................................... 8 00-14 00 ...... 11.5019 00
Dorset Hotel, 30 W. 54th St., N.Y. 19, N.Y ............................... Cl 7. 7300 ................................ .15.0019 00 ...... 19 0025.00
Drake Hotel, 440 Park Ave. (56th St), N.Y. 22, N.Y. .. PL 50600- ................................. 21 00-23 00 ...... 26 0030.00
Dryden Eaat Hotel, 150 E. 39th St, N.Y. 16, N.Y ........................ OR 93900................ . ............... 15 00-22.00 ...... 22.0030.00
Edlaon Hotel, 228 W. 47th St, N.Y. 36, N. Y........ .. ............ Cl 6 5000 ................................... a 5012.00 ...... 13.50-18.50
Elyaee Hotel, 60 E. 54th Sl., N.Y. 22, N.Y... . .. . . . . .. .. . . .... PL 31066... .. .............. 14 50-25.00 ...... 17.0028.00
Empire Hotel, 63rd St. & Broadway, N.Y. 23, N Y... . . CO 5-7400- ....... 5 00-5 50 .................... 7.00-10 00 ...... 10.00-16.00
Esplanade Hotel, 305 West End Ave, N. Y. 23. N.Y. .. TR 45000.. . . . . . . .. ............... 7.00-10 00 ...... 10 0012.00
Eaaex House, 160 Central ParkS, N.Y. 19. N.Y... . ..... Cl 7-0300-. .. .............. 16 00-28.00 ...... 20.00-28.00
Excelsior Hotel, 45 W. B1st St., N.Y. 24. N. Y.. . . . . . ......... EN 2-9200-.. .. ............... 7 00 9 oo ....... 9.0011.00
Executive Hotel, 237 Madison Ave., N.Y. 16, N.Y..... . MU 6-0300-.............. . ............... 12 50-15.50 ...... 15.5019.50
Fifth Avenue Hotel, 24 5th Ave., N.Y. 11, N.Y........ . ..... GR 3-6400-. . ............... 10 00-14 00 ...... 15.00-19.00
Forrest Holel, 224 W. 49th St .. N Y. 19, N.Y............ . .... Cl 6 5252........ ..8 0010 00 ...... 11 0015.00
George Waahlngton Hotel, 23rd St & Lexington Ave., N Y 10, N Y. .. GR 5-1920... .. . .. . .. .. ............... 7 0010 oo ...... 11.50-16.00
Gladatone Hotel, 114 E. 52nd Sl., N.Y. 22, N.Y............ .. .... PL 34300-.. . . . . 13 0017 00 ...... 17.0022.00
Gorham Hotel, 136 W. 55th St., N.Y. 19, N.Y...... . . . .. . . ..... Cl 5-1600-.. .. .............. 12 00 ........... 14.00 .... ..
Golham Hotel, 700 5th Ave., N.Y. 19. N. Y. . . .. . .. . . . . . ....... Cl 7 2200-...... .. ................ 14.00-20.00 ...... 19 0030.00
Governor Clinton Hotel, 371 7th Ave .. N.Y. 1, N.Y. . . . .... PE 6-3400-...... . . . .. . . . . . .. . . .a 00-14.00 ...... 11.00-2t.OO
Gramercy Park Hotel, Lexington Ave. & 21st St., N Y. 10, N Y. . . . ...... GR 5-4320-.... . ............... 11 00-14.00 ...... 14.00-18.00
GreatNorthernHotei,116W. 57th St., N. Y.19, N.Y. . ................. Cl 719QQ......... .. ............... 7.5011 00 ...... 10.50-14.00
Groavenor Hotel, 35 5th Ave., N.Y. 3, N.Y.. . . . . . ................. GR 3-6000- ................. 9.5012.00 ...... 13.00-16.00
Hadton Hotel, 1234 Broadway, N.Y. 1, N.Y....... . ......... LO 5-4100- ....... 3.00-4 oo ...... 5.008 oo ...... 5 OO a oo ....... 7.00-12.00
Hamilton Hotel, 141 W. 73rd St., N. Y 23, N.Y... . ................. EN 2-74QQ ................................. 500 7.00 ....... 7.00 9.00
Hampshire House, 150 Central ParkS., N.Y. 19, N.Y ...................... Cl 6 noo...... .. .............. 1a oo-2a.oo ...... 22.00-26.00
Henry Hudaon Hotel, 353 W. 57th St .. N.Y. 19, N Y.... . ................ CO 5-6100- ................ 7.25-12.00 ...... 11.0018.50
Holiday Inn of New York City, 57th St.-9th & 10th Aves., N.Y. 19, N.Y ...... LT 18100- ... to op n 1963 .......... 13.0014 oo ...... 17.00-18.00
Holland Holel, 351 W. 42nd St, N.Y. 36. N. Y ............................. Cl 6 0700... .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. 6 00 8 00 9 00
Howard Johnson's Motor Lodge, 51st St. & ath Ave . N.Y. 19, N. Y ......... L T 1 4100- .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
Kenmore Hotel, 145 E. 23rd St., N.Y. 10, N.Y............. . ...... GR 5-3a40-. . .. 4.50 5_50 .......... '.' ..... '
12 00
'
20
QQ.'' ''
14

00

22

00
Kimberly Hotel, 203W. 74th St. (Broadway), N.Y. 23, N. Y ........ EN 2-3000. .. ............. "
6 50
........... \0.00
12

00
KlngEdwardHotai,120W. 441hSI., N.Y. 36. N.Y.. ...JU
2
.
3900
.. .. ...............
7
.00 9QQ ...... 10.00-14.00
Knickerbocker Hotel, 120W.45thSI., N.Y. 36, N.Y... .. .... JU 2. 4200.. ::::::::::::::: "
5

50
a.OQ ....... 6.00
1
2.00
Lancaster Hotel, 22 E. 38th St. (Madison Ave.), N.Y. 16. N v. .. . MU 5. 3700.. ..s
00

1
0.00 .......
9
.00
1
6.00
Le Marqula Hotel, 12 E. 31st St., N. Y. 16, N. y .. .. . . . . . . .. . .. .. . MU
4
.
74
ao.. ... "" ........ "' .. a 50-15 QQ .. ... 13.00-20.00
Lexington Hotel, Lexington Ave. & E.4att' St, N. Y 17, N. v ............. PL
5
.
4400
.
500
'
700

5
0 7.0Q ....... 7.00 9.00
LlncolnSquareHotei,166W.75thSt.N Y 23,N v . ...TR 3-3ooo. .400-6oo ... :::6'00.8' 00::::

...


Lincoln Square Motor Inn, 155 W. 66th St .. N.Y. 23. N. Y ....... SU 7-6600- . to op n 1963 ......... "
4
.. .. "
Loew'a Midtown Motor Inn, 48th St. & ath Ave., N. v. 36, N v. .. .. L T
1
.
7000
. .. .............. 1 .oo-1a oo. ... 14.0018.00
LombardyHotel111 E. 56th St., N. Y.22, N.Y. . .. PL
3
.a
6
oo. .1200-20.00 ...... 14002200
Lowell Hotel, 28 E. 63rd St., N.Y. 21, N. Y. .. .. .. . TE
6
_
1400
.. .. .. .... .. .. -19.0024.00 .. ... 22.0029.00
Lucerne Hotel, 201 W. 79th St., N.Y. 24, N. Y... . ... EN
2
.
7100
.. .. 4 50 :::::::::::::::
1
7.0020.00 .. ... 20.0023 00
Madlaon Hotel, 15 E. 58th St., N.Y. 22, N. Y... .. EL
5
.
5000
.. 6 00 8.00 .. .... 9.0012.00
Manger Vanderbilt Hotel, Park Ave. at 34th St., N.Y. 16, N. y . . . . . . . .. MU 3-4000.. .. .. -17 00-22.00 ...... 21.00-27.00
Manger Wlndtor Hotel, 100 W.58th SI.(Ave.of the Amer.).N.Y 19,N.Y. . . co
5
.
2100
. .. .9 00-22 00 .. ... 14.0022.00
Manhattan Hotel, 44th-45th Sis. & Bth Ave., N.Y. 36. N. v............ .. JU
2
.
0300
_. " ... .... 10.5014.50 ...... 14.0018.00
Manhattan Towera Hotel, Broadway & 76th St., N.Y. 24. N.Y........ .. su 7-l900. _4_
00
.. .. ... .. .a 00-14.25. ... 12.5020.00
Mantlleld Hotel, 12 W. 44th St., N. Y.
3
6, N. Y......................... .. MU
2
. 5140_.. _4 00_5 50 _ .. :: :s 'so-7' so:::: .6.00-10.00 ...... 10.0014.00
Marcy Holel, 720 West End Ave., N.Y. 25. N. v .......................... AI 9. 3300_. .6 50 9 00 ....... 8.0012.00
Martha Wethington Hotel lor Women, 30 E 30th St. N.Y. 16, N.Y ........ MU 9-t900.. . . _4 00.6 oo ..... _6 00_7 oo ....
9
OO-tt 00. ... 11.00-14.00
-
__ M_a_rt_ln_lq_u_e_Hotel, 32nd St & Broadway, N. Y. 1, N. Y ...................... PE 6 3800.. .. 4 50_6_00_ .... _7_00_8 OO...... 6.00 B 00 ...... 7.00 9.00
------- .. 6.50-10.50 ....... 9.5014.50
X
X
x
x
x
X
x
X
x
xo
X
x
x
x
x
X
X
X
x
x
x
x
x
x
X
x
x
X
x
x
x
X
xo
X
xo
xo
x
X
..
x
xo
xo
x
x
..
X
x
X
X
. .
........
t
ts
.
I

,.

; .
..
' ; ~
...
'I
i
~ ~
. -,
.,
;.
-,
STATE OF NEW YORK
Area Code
212
Telephone
Number
New York City Borough: Manhattan
Nama & Address
-------------------- -------------
X Mayfair House, 610 Park Ave .. N.Y. 21. N.Y .............................. RH 4-6700 .. .
x Mayflower Hotel, 15 Central Park W., N.Y. 23. N.Y ....................... co 5-0060 .. .
x Maurice Hotel, 145 W. 58th St., N. Y .19, N. Y ............................. CI 7-7440 ..
xo Motel City, 510 W. 42nd St.. N.Y. 36, N.Y ................................. OX 5-7171 .. .
Murray Hill Hotel, 42 W. 35th St., N.Y. 1, N. Y ............................ WI 7-0200 ...
NIIHU Hotel, 56 E. 59th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ................................ EL 5-3250 ...
xo National Hotel, 592 7th Ave (42nd St.). N. Y. 36, N. Y ...................... WI 7-3800 .. .
x Navarro Hotel, 112 Central ParkS., N.Y. 19, N.Y ....... , .... , .... , .. , .... CI 7-7900 ..
x New Weaton Hotel, 50th St. & Madison Ave., N. v. 22. N.Y ... , ............ PL 3-4600 .. ,
x Now York Hilton at Rockefeller Center, . , . . . .. . .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .. ............. .
Ave. of the Americas 53rd & 54th Sts .. N.Y. 19, N.Y ................... .JU 6-7000 .
New Yorker Hotel, 34th St. & 8th Ave .. N. Y. 1, N. Y ....................... LO 3-1000 .. .
One Filth Avenue Hotel, 1 5th Ave , N.Y. 3. N.Y .......................... SP 7-7000 .. .
x Paramount Hotel, 235 W. 46th St N. Y 36. N. Y ..................... _ ..... CI 6-5500 ..
x Perla Hotel, 752 West End Ave., N.Y. 25, N. Y ............................. AI 9-3500 .
xo Park Crescent Hotel, 150 Riverside Dr .. N.Y. 24, N.Y ..................... TR 3-6200 ..
x Park Lena Hotel, 299 Park Ave., N.Y. 17, N.Y ............................. PL 5-4100 .. .
x Park Plaza Hotel, 50 W. nth St.. N.Y. 24, N.Y ............................ SU 7-5900 .. .
x Park Royal Hotel, 23 W. 73rd St. (off Central Park), N.Y. 23, N.Y .......... SU 7-5500 ..
Park Sheraton Hotel, 870 7th Ave., N.Y. 19. N. Y .......................... CI 7-6000 ...
Peter Cooper Hotel, 130 E. 39th St .. N.Y. 16, N.Y ......................... MU 5-1100 ...
Piccadilly Hotel, 227 W. 45th St., N.Y. 36, N.Y ............................ Ct 6-6600 .. .
Pickwick Anna Hotel, 230 E. 51st St.. N.Y. 22, N.Y ...................... EL 5-0300 ..
Pierre Hotel, 2 E 61st St., N.Y. 21, N.Y .................................. TE 6-6000 .. .
Plaza Hotel, 5th Ave. at 59th St., N. Y.19, N.Y ............................ PL 9-3000 ...
Plymouth Hotel, 143 W. 49th St., N. Y.19, N.Y ............................ CI 7-6100 ...
Prealdent Hotel, 234 W. 48th St., N.Y. 36, N.Y ............................ Ct 6-6600 .. .
Prince George Hotel, 14 E. 28th St .. N.Y. 16. N. Y ....................... LE 2-7600 .. .
Regency Hotel, Park Ave. at 61st St., N.Y. 22. N Y ....................... PL 9-4100 .. .
Rex Hotel, 106 W. 47th St., N.Y. 36. N.Y...... .. ....................... PL 7-6360 .. .
xo Riviera Congreu Motor Inn, 550 10th Ave . N. Y 16. N.Y ................. OX 5-3100 .. .
Roger Smith Hotel, 501 Lexington Ave. (47th St.). N. Y. t7. N Y .......... PL 5-1400 .. .
Roger Wllllama Hotel, 28 E. 31st St (Madison Ave.). N.Y. 16, N. Y ........ MU 9-0600 ..
Roosevelt Hotel, 45th St. at Mad1son Ave , N.Y. 17, N Y ... MU 6-9200 ...
Roaolf'l Hotel, 147 W. 43rd St. N. Y 36, N.Y. ...JU 2-3200 ..
Royalton Hotel, 44 W. 44th St.. N Y 36, N. Y. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. MU 2-6060 ..
x Ruxton Hotel, 50 W. 72nd St. N. Y 23. N. Y ... SU 7-0500 .. .
St. Moritz Hotel, 50 Central ParkS .. N.Y. 19, N.Y.... ...PL 5-5600 .. .
St. Regia Hotel, 2 E. 55th St, N.Y. 22. N.Y................ ...PL 3-4500 ...

Salisbury Hotel, 123 W. 57th St. N.Y. 19. N.Y... .. ............... CI 6-1300 ...

San Carlos Hotel, 150 E. 50th St.. N.Y. 22. N.Y ........................... PL 5-1600 .. .
X Savoy Hilton Hotel, 5th Ave. & 58th St. N. Y 22. N.Y ..................... EL 5-2600 .. .
x Schuyler Hotel, 57 W. 45th St.. N. Y 36, N.Y .............................. JU 2-0640 .. .
x Seventy Park Hotel, 70 Park Ave .. N.Y. 16, N.Y .......................... MU 7-7050 .. .
x Seville Hotel, 22 E. 29th St.. N. Y 16, N.Y ................................ LE 2-2960 ..
x Seymour Hotel, 50 W. 45th St, N.Y. 36, N.Y .............................. MU 2-5940 ...

Shelburne Hotel, 303 Lexington Ave. (37th St.). N. Y 16, N. Y ............ MU 9-5200 ...
Shelton Towers Hotel, Lexington Ave. 48th-49th Sts .. N Y. 17, N.Y ........ PL 5-4000 ..
Sheraton Atlantic Hotel, 34th St. & Broadway, N. Y 1, N.Y ............... PE 6-5700 .. .
Sheraton-East Hotel, 341 Park Ave. (51st St.), N.Y. 22. N.Y ............... PL 5-1000 ..
XO Sheraton Motor Inn, 12th Ave. at 42nd St.. N.Y. 36, N.Y ................. OX 5-6500 ..
x Shoreham Hotel, 33 W. 55th St , N.Y. 19, N. Y. . ....................... Ct 7-6700 .. .
Slmmon1 House, (Women Only) 350 W. 88th St., N.Y. 24. N.Y ............. SC 4-6100 .. .
XO Skyline Motor Inn, 725 10th Ave. (49th-50th Sts.), N. Y 19, N.Y ............ JU 6-3400 .. .
Somerset Hotel, 150 W. 47th St .. N.Y. 36, N.Y............ . .. PL 7-2760 .. .
x Spencer Arma Hotel, 140 W. 69th St. (Broadway), N.Y. 23, N.Y ............ SU 7-4700 ..
X Stanhope Hotel, 995 5th Ave .. N.Y. 26, N.Y. . .................... BU 8-5600 .. .
Statler-Hilton Hotel, 401 7th Ave., N.Y. 1, N.Y ........................... PE 6-5000 ..
X Summit Hotel, E. 51st St. & Lexington Ave., N.Y. 22, N.Y. .. .. ... ...PL 2-7000 ...
x Surrey Hotel, 20 E. 76th St., N.Y. 21, N.Y... . .................... RH 4-1690 ...
Sutton-East Hotel, 330 E 56th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y .......................... PL 1-1700 .. .
Tall Hotel, 7th Ave. at 50th St.. N. Y. 19, N. Y................ .. .Ct 7-4000 .. .
x Theresa Hotel, 2090 7th Ave. (I 25th St.), N. Y. 27. N. Y.... . ..... UN 6-3300 .. .
xo Times Square Motor Hotel, 255 W. 43rd St., N.Y. 36, N.Y ................ LA 4-6900 ..
x Town House Hotel, 108 E. 36th St, N.Y. 16, N. Y ................. LE 2-6500 .. .
Tudor Hotel, 304 E. 42nd St.. N. Y. 17. N. Y. . .................... YU 6-6600 .. .
Tuacany Hotel, 39th St. E. of Park Ave, N.Y. 16, N.Y ..................... MU 6-1600 ...
VIctoria Hotel, 51st St. & 7th Ave., N.Y. 19, N.Y. . .............. CI 7-7600 .. .
X* Volney Hotel, 23 E. 74th St.. N Y. 21, N.Y ............................... BU 8-7500 .. .
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, 301 Park Ave., N.Y. 22. N.Y ...................... EL 5-3000 .. .
x Warwick Hotel, 65 W. 54th St. N. Y. 19, N. Y....... . .............. Cl 7-2700 ...
Wellington Hotel, 7th Ave. 55th & 56th Sts., N.Y. 19, N. Y ............. , . Cl 7-3900, ..
Wentworth Hotel, 59 W. 46th St., N.Y. 36, N. Y.. . . . . .. .JU 2-2200 .
xo Westbury Hotel, Madison Ave. at 69th St., N. Y 21, N.Y. . .............. LE 5-2000 .. .
XO Weatover Hotel, 253 W. 72nd St., N.Y. 23, N.Y ........................... EN 2-9600 .. .
f .
-------... ~ - - ~
./-'
Rooms Without Bath Rooms With Bath
Slngla Double Single
. '' 2 50-3.50 ...
. . . . 4.00-5 00 .. '
' ............... 16 00-20 00 .. .
.. ............... 14 00-17.00 ...
. ............... 10.00-11.00 .. -
.'' ............. 14.00-18.00 ...
.. .............. 7.00-10.00 .. .
. . .3.50-4.50 .. 3.00- 5.00' ..
'.7.006.00 .. 6.00- 7.00. ' .
- .. ' .... '' .. .16 50-22.00 . '
.. ' ....... ' ...... 13 00-19.00 ...
Double
- 20.00-24.00
. 16.50-19.00
15.00-16.00
16.00-24.00
. '10.00-13.00
4.00- 6.00
. '. 9.00-10.00
-. 19.50-26.00
19.00-25.00
.. .. .. .. . to op n 1963 .......... 14.00-22.00 ..... 18.00-29.00
.. " .......... ' ........... ' ..... 9.00-15.00 ..... 13.00-2100
.. . .. .. .. .. .. .. . . .. " ... ' ...... 13.00-17.00 .. - .. 16.00-20.00
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. ' .... ' ............ 7.50-10.50 ..... 10.50-15.00
............... ................ 5.00- 8.75 ...... 7.50-13.50
... " .......................... 8.00-15.00 ..... 11 00-18.00
.. .. . .. .. .. .. ' ............... 19.00-22.00... . ' 25 00-28.00
.. .. 3 50-4 00 ..... 5.00-6 00 ..... 4.50- 6.00 .. - ... 7.00-10.00
............... ................ 8.00-12.00 ..... 10.00-1800
.. .. .. . .. .. - .............. ' .... 8.50-15.50 ..... 13 90-19.50
............... .............. .. 1400-16.00 ..... 1650-1850
............... ........... ... .. 8.00-12.00 ..... 11.00-17.00
.. .425-4.50 ................ ' .. 5.50- 5. 75 .. - ... 8.00- 9 00
.. . .. ' ...... " ...... '" ....... 23.00-27.00 ..... 26.00-33.00
.. .. .. "" ........ "' " ... ' .... 15 00-29.00 ..... 20.00-34 00
.. .. " .. "- ....... ""' ........ 7.00-10 00 .. - .. 10.00-17.00
............... .............. .. 7.00-10.00 ..... 11.00-15.00
............... .............. .. 1100-13 00 ..... 12.00-17.00
.. .. .. . .. to op n 1963 ....... , 22 00-30.00 _ .... 27 00-36.00
" .. 3 50-4 00 ...... 5 00-6.00 ..... 4.00- 5.00 ....... 6.00- 9 00
. .. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. . .. . .. .. . .. 12.00-16 00 ..... - 16 00-20.00
............... .............. .. 9.00-14.50 ..... 13 00-18.50
.. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 6.00-14.00- .... 10 00-14.00
.. .... -" ... " .............. ' .. 13 00-21.00... . ' 19.00-27.00
............... .............. .. 4.00- 700 ....... 700-12.00
.... 6 00-7 50 ...... 8 00-10.00 .... 9.00-14 50 ..... 12.50-16 50
............... .............. .. 8 00-10.00 ..... 10.00-14 00
............... .............. .. 11.00-1800 ..... 15.00-21 00
.. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. . .. 16 00-23.00 ..... 27.00-32 00
.... .. .. .. .. .. ' ................ 12.00-14.00 ..... 14 00-19.00
....... ..... ... .. . ........... .. 13.00-15 00 ..... 16.00-20.00
.. ............................. 13.00-35 00... .. 18.00-35.00
.... 3.50-5 00 ...... 4.50- 6 00 .... 6 00- 9 00 ...... 6.00-11.00
. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . ' .............. 12 50-20 00 ... '' 17 00-24 00
.. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . " ......... 5.00- 5 50... . .. 6.00- 9.00
............... .. .. ............. 9.00-12.00 ..... 14 00-16.00
.. ................... " ........ 10 85-13.85... .. .13.85-16.85
... . 5 00-6 00 ...... 8.00 ......... 8.85-12.85 ..... ,11.85-17.85
.. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. . .. '" ......... 6.75-14 00 ...... 13.75-18.00
. . .. . . ' ............ ' ... ' ....... 19.00-26.00... 23 00-30.00
.. " ............................ 11 50-17.00 ...... 17.75-21 00
. . . ' ... ' .... ' .......... ' ...... ,12.00-15 00 ...... 14.00-16 00
. .. .4 00-6 00." .. ,7 00-6.00 .............................. ..
" ............................. 14 00-18 00 ...... 14 00-20.00
.... 3 50-4 50 .. , ................. 4 50- 6.50... .. . 8 00-11.00
...... .. .. . .. .. .. .... .. . .. .. .. .. 6 00- 8.00 ...... .7.00- 9.00
...... ' ................... '' .... 16.00-24 00 .. ' ... 20 00-28.00
................................ 11 00-19.00 ...... 14.50-25.00
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '.' ' ... 14 00-28 00. '' ... 16 00-32.00
................................ 19 00-22.00 ...... 23.00-26.00
.... 4 75-5 75 .................... 10 00-14 00 ... ' .. 10 00-14.00
, .............. , , ............. , . 8 00-13 75 ...... 11.50-19.75
. ... 6 30-6 48,.' ... 6 30-8.43 .. '. '10.48-11.48... - 10.48-12.48
.... 5 00 .......... 7.00-6.00 ...... 6 00- 8 00 ....... 9.00-12.00
................................ 16.00-18.00 ...... 19.00-21.00
................................ 6.00-11 00 ...... 10.00-17.00
. ' ... ' ........ ' .... '' ..... ' . '. '16 80-24.80 .... '.24.80-30 80
.. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . .. . .. . .. . . 6.50-12 00 ... - .. 12.00-20.00
... " .......................... 14.00-17 00 ...... 20 00-26.00
"" ........................... 10.00-22 00... .. 16.00-32.00
.. ... " ...... " " ........... ' . 14 00-25 00... .. '16.00-29.00
.............................. 7 75-14 75 ...... 1150-19.50
. . . . 5 00-6 00 ... '. '7.00-9.00.' . '.8.00-12.00 ..... 10.00-16.00
............................... 14.0020 00.'. . .. 16.00-25.00
.. " ........................ " .. 8 00-10.00 ...... 10.00-12.00
... .. . . .. . .. .. ' ' ........... 7.00-10 00 - --,10.00-12.00 x Windermere Hotel, 666 West End Ave, N.Y. 25, N.Y ..................... SC 4-6200 .. .
-------- - - - - - - - - ~ - - - ______ ___JL..___ __ ___L. __ ___L ____ L.,.__ ____ J ___ _


- ... ..,.__.... _____ _
STATE OF NEW YORK
New York City Borough: Manhattan
Name & Address
Area Code:
212
Telephone
Number
Rooms Without Bath Rooms With Bath
Single Double Single
x WlniiOW Hotel, 45 E. 55th St., N.Y. 22, N.Y ............................... PL 3-6800 ....... 5.006.00 .................... 8 0011 00 ...
xo Wolcott Hotel, 4 W. 31st St., N.Y. 1, N.Y ................................. LA 4-7800 ...... .4.008.00 ...... 5.00-7.00 ...... 7.00 9.00 .. .
x Woodltock Hotel, 1'11 W. 43rd St., N.Y. 36, N.Y....................... ..JU 2-5000 ....... 5.00 .......... 8.009 00 ...... 8.50 9.00 .. .
x Woodward Hotel, 210 W. 55th St. (Broadway), N.Y. 19, N.Y ............... CI 7-2000 ...................... , ............ 5.00 8 00 ..
xo Wrndhlrll Hotel, 42 W. 58th St., N.Y. 19, N.Y ............................. PL 3-3500 .................................. 11 00-13.00 .. .
x Y.M.C.A. Wm. Sloane Hou11, (Men Only) 356 W. 34th St., N.Y. 1, N_::...:.y.::".:j'r.,'_:_'.:._O.::X..:5:_.::_51..:.33.::..:...:.".J-'..:..::2:_.7..:.0_-s_.s_o.. __ .+- .. _3_.8_0-_4_.4_0._._ .. -1 .. 7.50 ....... .
-------1-----+-
Double
... 12.00-15.00
.. . 10.00-14.00
. . . 10.D0-14.00
.. . 8.0012.00
. . . 12.D0-14.00
.............
New York City Borough: Thl Bronx ------f-A_r_ea Code 212
xoo Bronx Park Motel, 2500 Crotona Ave., Bronx 58, N. Y .................. . ... WE 32000 ... .
.12.00 ............ 14 00-16.00
xo Concoul"'l Plua Hotel, 900 Grand Concourse, Bronx 51, N.Y ........ . ... CY 3-4000 .. ..
..7.5010 00 ....... 13 0019.00
xo Dllllln Molal, 3600 Bailey Ave., Bronx 63, N. Y ....................... . ... KI 6-6300 .. ..
.1o.oo-12 oo ...... 12.00-ro.oo
xoo Rlnrdale Motor Inn, 6355 Broadway, Bronx 71, N.Y .................. . ... KI 9-3300 .. ..
.12.00-14.00 ...... 14.0016.00
xo Stadium Motor Lodge, W. 167th St.-Major Deegan Expwy., ........ , ..
Bronx 52, N. Y ....................................................... .
.10.00-12.00 ...... 14.0016.00
... LU 85400 .. ..
xo Town I Country Motor Lodge, 2244 Tillotson Ave., Bronx 69, N. Y ..... . ... XX 4-9000 .. ..
. 11.00-13.00... . .. 13.0017.00
xo Yen Cortlandt Motel, 6393 Brasdway, Bronx 71, N.Y .................. . ... KI 9-7272 ................................ . . .8.00-10 00 ...... 10.00-14.00
- -------- ---+-----t-
New York City Borough: Brooklyn
-- _ --------+-A---'re:.::.a Code_,2_12---f-------f------r
Franklin Arm Hotel, 66 Orange St., Brooklyn 1, N.Y. . . .. .. .. . .. .... .. ..MA 47378 ....... 4.505.50 ...... 6.50- 7.00 ..... 6 50- 7.00 ....... 8.5010.00
xo GoldtnOaleMotorlnn, Belt Pkwy.-Knapp St., Brooklyn35, N.Y ......... SH 34000 .................................. 11.0013.00 ...... 15.0019.00
x Granada Hotel, lafayette Ave. & Ashland Pl., Brooklyn 17, N.Y ........... UL 82000 ................................... 8.5012.00 ...... 11.0016.00
x Gragory Hotel, 8315 4th Ave . Brooklyn 9, N. Y ............................ SH 8-7000 ................................... 8.00 ........... 10.0011.00
xo Manhattan Beach Hotel, 158 West End Ave., Brooklyn 35, N.Y......... ..SH 3-3000 ....... 5.00 .......... 8.00 .......... 7.5016.50 ...... 10.00-22.00
x St. George Hotel, 51 Clark St., Brooklyn 1, N.Y .......................... MA 4-5000 ....... 4.004.50 .................... 6.50-14.00 ...... 10.0017.00
xo Seallll Motor Inn, 3900 Shore Pkwy. (Ex. 14 Belt Pkwy.) ............. .
Brooklyn 35, N.Y ..................................................... .
. . TW 11000. ................................. 12.0018.00 ...... 14.0022.00
x Towtfl Holtl, 25 Clark St., Brooklyn 1, N.Y ........................... .
.. MA 42000.... .. .. . .. .. . .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 7.00- 8.00 ...... 10.0013.00
New York City Borough: Ou11n1 Area Code 21-2
-------------------------------------
Buch Haven Hotel, 243 Beach 19th St., Far Rockaway 91, N. Y......... ..FA 7 2130 ....... 7.50 ......... 10.00-15.00 .... 10.00 ........... 15.0016.00
xo CrouwaJ Airport Inn AI La Guardia,...... . . . .. .. . . . . . .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. . . .. .. .. . .. .. . .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. . . . . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. . .. ......... ..
1D0-30 Ditmars Blvd., Flushing 69, N. Y.............................. . .. HI 6 -7900.... . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . .14.00-18 00 ...... 18.00-24.00
xo Crauwarldlewlld Inn, 152-25138th Ave., Jamaica 34, N.Y ................ FI 1-3000 .................................. 14.00-15.00 ...... 18.0019.00
u FoniiHIIIalnn. 1 Station Square, Forest Hills 75, N.Y ................... BO 8-1900 ....... 5.00 ......... 10.00 .......... 8 50-14.00 ...... 12.0020.00
F111nklln HOIII, 8!1-05 163rd St., Jamaica 32, N. Y .......................... JA 6-8330 ....... 4.006.00... ..5.008 00 ...... 6.00 8.00 ....... 6.00 9.00
xo Grand Central Motor IM, 71-11 Astoria Blvd., Astoria 2. N.Y .............. AS 42800.... .. .... .. .... . .. ............. 12.00-15.00 ...... 15.00-26.00
xo Homellead Hotel, 82-45 Grenfell St., Kew Gardens 15, N.Y .............. HI 1. 2000 .................... 9.0012.00 .... 12.00-15.00
xo lnllmlllonal Hotel, N.Y. Int. Airport, Jamaica 30, N.Y ................... 995 9000 .................................. 12.00-17.00 ...... 18.0022.00
xo Kew Motor Inn, 80-05 Grand Central Pkwy., Kew Gardens Hills 35, N.Y .... OL 8-4200 .................................. 12 00-16.00 ...... 16.00-30.00
La Guardia Hotel, 99-11 Ditmars Blvd., E. Elmhurst 69, N.Y ............... DE 54900 .................................. 13 0017.00 ...... 17.00-22.00
xo Pen Amlrlc.n Motor Inn, 79-10 Queens Blvd., Elmhurst73, N.Y ........... HI 6. 7676 ............ to op 1963 .......... 15.0022.00 ...... 18.0026.00
xo Riviera Idlewild Hotel, N.Y. Int. Airport (Belt Pkwy.) Jamaica 30, N.Y. . .. AR 66666 ............ to op 1963 .......... 16.00-20.00 ..... 22.00-32.00
Sanford Holtl, 140-40 Sanford Ave., Flushing 55, N.Y ..................... FL 3-1400 ................................... 9.0010.00 ...... 13.0014.00
xo Schlnalnn 11 Fo,.at Hilla, 108-25 Horace Harding Expwy., .................................................................................... ..
Flushing 68, N.Y ...................................................... HI 6 1600 .................................. 12.0016.00 ...... 16.0016.00
xo SllwiJ Idlewild Hotel, N.Y. Int. Airport (Bell Pkwy.) Jamaica 30, N.Y .... FA 28700 .................................. 16.0020.00 ..... 22.0032.00
xo Shlnilon-TeMIJ IM AI La Guardia ......................................................................................................... .
9010 Grand Central Pkwy., E. Elmhurst69, N.Y ........................ HI 6 4800 .................................. 12.50-16.50 ...... 14.5020.00
xo SkJwiJ Hotel, 132-10 S. Conduit Ave., Jamaica 30, N.Y ................... OL 96300 .................................. 13.0015-00 ...... 17.0022.00
xo SkJWIJ Hotel La Guardia, 10210 Ditmars Blvd., Flushing 69, N.Y ......... TW 9-6900 .................................. 13.0015-00 ...... 17.0020.00
x SunchllltrHOIII, 37-52 80th St., Jackson Hts. 72, N.Y .................... NE 90140 .................................. 12.00-14.00 ...... 12.0014.00
xo Travtlera Hotel-Moll!, 9400 Ditmars Blvd. (La Guardia Airport), .. .. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. . . ........................ ..
E. Elmhurst 59. N.Y .................................................... DE 51200 .................................. 13.00 ........... H.D0-18.00
xo T,.ldw., IM, 114th St. & 37th Ave. (near the Fair) Flushing 52, N.Y.... ..TW 81400.... .15 00-17.00 ...... 19.00-24.00
xo Whitman Holll, 1110-11 89th Ave., Jamaica 2, N. V...................... ...RE 95200.... ..9.00-12.00 ...... 12.0015.00
Area Code 212
-------11--------
New York City Borough: Richmond (Staten 111end)
Island 1, N.Y .............
STATE OF NEW YORK
_co_un_ty_._N_IIIIU________ _ ________________ _
xo Bar Harbour Motel, 5050 Sunrise Hwy. (Rt. 27), MassapeQua Park, N.Y. ..LI 1 2000.... . .. .. .. .. .. . .. . .............. 10 oo-11.00 ...
uo BIJblrry Graet NICk Hotel, 75 N. Station Plaza, Great Neck, N.Y...... ..HU 22900 .................................. 13.00 ...... ..
xoo Bethpage Motel, Hempstead Tpke .. Bethpage, N. Y. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. . ..PE 1 7000 .................................. 10 00-12.00 ...
ColonJ Arml Hotel, 190 Glen Cove Ave., Glen Cove, N.Y.............. ..OR 1 2945 ....... 6.00 .......... 8.00 .......... 8.00 ....... .
xo Colonr Holll, 10 Bond St., Great Neck, N. Y................... ........ ..HU 7-3400.... .. .. .. ... .. .. . . ............... 9 50-12 oo ...
xo CouriiiJ Inn Su-Hor11 Marina, S. Main St., Freeport. N.Y........... ..MA 3-9100.... .. .. .. .. .. . . .. . .............. 11 00-13.00 ...
xo Farmingdale Motor Lodge, Rt. 110 (Broadhollow Rd.).Farmingdale,N.Y ... CH 92810 ................ , ................ 9.00 ....... .
xo Gardin City Hotel, 7th St. & Park Ave., Garden City, N.Y.............. ..PI 6 0700.... .. .. .. .. . .. .. . .. ............. 12.0016.00 .. .
xo GaiiWIJ Moll!, Sunrise Hwy., Merrick, N.Y.......................... ..FR 8 7100 .................................. 12.0016.00 .. .
xo Hemplllld Motor Hotel, 130 Hempstead Ave . West Hempstead, N. Y- .. IV 5 2000.... .. .. . .. . .. . . .. .. ............. 12.00-14.00 .. .
xo Herlllgl Quality Court Motor Inn, Jericho Tpke. (Rt. 25), Syosset, N.Y. .. WA 1-6900.... . .. . .. .. .. . .. .. ............. 1100-12.00 .. .
xo Island IM, Old Country Rd., Westbury. N. Y. .. . .. . . . . . .. . . .. .. .. .. .. . .. PI 1 4500.... .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. ............ ,12 0015.00 ...
Island Lodge Motel, 274 Jericho Tpke .. Syosset. N. Y. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. . .. WA 16166.... . .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. ............. 11 oo ...... ..
.. .. !.r .. ;;;f .. .. _:-- .. _-:-::- .. -:-"-_..!..._E_o_a_-_6400. __ ._ .. .L .. _._ .. .. .. L.":.:.:.. .. .:..:..--:.::... .. :.:.:..L.:.
9
:.=
00
_
11
oo ...
... 12.0015.00
... 18.00 ......
. . . 12.0020.00
.. .11.0013.00
. . 14.0016.00
. . . 12.0019.00
.. 10.0012.00
. . . 17.0021.00
. . . 14.0018.00
. . . 14.00-20.00
.. . 15.D0-19.00
. . 16.0022.00
. . . 16.0016.00
. . 12 0020.00
J
STATE OF NEW YORK
County: Na11au
Name & Address
xo Lynbrook Motor Hotel, 5 Freer St., Lynbrook, N.
o Manalon Hotel, 54 lincoln Ave., Rockville Cent.,
xo Meadowbrook Motor Lodge, 4400 Jericho Tpke.,
Mlneole Hotel, 193 2nd St., Mineola, N. Y .
Promenade Hotel on the beach, 102 W.
Racewey Inn Motel, Old Country Rd. at Poal Ave
xo Rooaevelllnn, 1850 Hampstead Tpke., East Meac
o Roalyn Harbor Hotel, 22 Bryant Ava., Roslyn, N. '
Tivoli Mottl, 3400 Brush Hollow Rd., Wealbury, N
xo Town 6 Country Motel, 49 Old Country Rd., Weal
xo Tumplkt Motel, 434 Hempatead Tpke., W. Hemp1
xo Weetbury Motel, Jericho Tpke., Westbury, N.Y ..
County: Orange
xo Thayer Holel, West Point, N.Y ................. .
County: Rocklan __ d ___________ _
xo A1hley Motor Court, U. s. Rl. 59, Nanuet, N.Y ...
xo Courteay Inn, N.Y. Thrwy. (Ex. 11), Nyack, N.Y.
xo Motel on tho Mountain, N. Y. Thrwy. (Ex. 15), su
xo Paacack Mottl, Rl. 59 (N.Y. Thrwy. Ex. 14), Sprlr
County: Suffolk
xo Baylhora Inn, 400 Bayahore Rd., Bayahore, N. Y
xo Beacon Molal, Smlthlown Bypass & Jericho Tpk
xo Chevy Chan Motel, 436 Sunrise Hwy., Babylon,
xo Eden Rock Motel, 3055 Veterans Memorial Hwy.,
xo Fontonac Motor Lodge, Jericho Tpke.-Brldge Br
Smithtown, N.Y ............................ ..
xo Huntington Molal, 331 W. Jericho Tpke. (RI. 25),
xo Jertmac Motel, 2231 Jericho Tpke., Commack, N
xo Llndenhunt Molal, W. Montauk Hwy. & Chestnui
xo The112 Molal, Rt. 112, Medford, N.Y ,
xo Patchogue Motel a Country Club, Sunrlae Hwy.
xoo Plnea Motor Lodge, Rt. 109 near Straight Path,
xo St. Moritz Motel, Yacht Club Rd., Babylon, N. Y.
xo SkJ Mottl, 71h St. & 3rd Ave. (RI. 109), N. linden
xo Slarllle Molal, 780 Little E. Neck Rd. (Sunrise H1
xo Three VIllage Inn, Dock Rd., Stony Brook, N. Y.
xo Walt Whitman Motel, 295 E. Jericho Tpke. (AI. 21
County: Wellchtltar
xo Ardaley Acral Hotel Court, 580 Saw Mill River R
xo Central Motel Court, 441 Central Ave., While Pia
xo Dunwoodle Motor Inn, 300 Yonkers Ave., Yonke
xo Gramatan Hotel, Pondlleld Rd., Bronxville 8, N.
xo Hawthomt Circle Motor Inn, 20 Saw Mill River F
xo Hilton Inn, 455 S. Broadway, Tarrytown, N.Y ....
xo Holiday Inn of Yonkere, 125 Tuckahoe Rd., Yank
xo Roger Smllh Motor Hotel, 1 Chesler Ave., While
xo Saw Mill River Motel, 25 Valley Rd., Elmsford, N
o Scar.dala Inn, School La. off Popham Rd., Scar'
xo Tarry,.at Motel, 542 Tarrytown Rd., White Plaint
xo Trade Wlndl Motor Court, 1141 Yonkera Ave., Y
xo Tuckahoa Motel, 307 Tuckahoe Rd., Yonkera, N,
xo Watergate Motor Hotel, Albany Post Rd. (RI. 9),
xo Weatchelltr Town Houn Motor Inn, 185 Tuckat
Ex. 6), Yonkers, N. Y ....................... ..
xo Yorktown Motor Lodge, U.S. Rl. 202-Taconlc Pk
STATE OF NEW JERSEY
County: Bergen
xo Courta1y Inn, Rt. 4, Fort lee, N. J ............ ..
xoo Horizon Motel, u. s. Rt. 48, s. Hackensack, N. J
xo Howard Johnaon'l Motor Lodge, Rt. 17, Ramae)
xo Marriott Motor Hotel et Geo. Waahlngton Brtdg
the Bridge Plaza, Fort Lee, N. J (N.'
xo Naw Orl11n1 Motel, Rt. 4, Fort Lee, N. J ,
xo Ortlanl Motor Hotel, 414 Hackensack Ave. (RI. 4
xo Pallaadal Motor Lodge, Rt. 48, Fort lee, N.J ...
xo Peter Pan Molal, Rl. 3, E. Rutherford, N. J
xo Skyvlew Molal, Ria. 1 & 9 & 48, Fort Lee, N. J
xo Suburban Motor Hotel, Rt. 4 & 208,
xo Swlaa Court Motel, N.J. Hwy. 17, Uppar Saddle
8.50-10.00
15.0CI-19.00
.. 11.00-18.00
.. 10.0CI-11.00
10.oo-22.00
10.0CI-17.00
.. 15.D0-18.00
............
18.0CI-24.00
, .18.0CI-111.00
12.0CI-20.00
.. .e.oo- 9.00
.. 15.0CI-28.00
.. 12.0CI-15.00
,.18.0CI-22.00
,18.0CI-30.00
17.0CI-22.00
16.0CI-28.00
.22.0CI-32.00
13.0CI-14.00
. - .. . . -
':; .. : ; ', : 'I,.: ,' " '.. ' . . ( j" .. : . .. . . . . ".
.. .... J ....
STATE OF NEW YORK
County: NUIIU
Name&Addreae
Area Code:
518
Telephone
Nu .. 1bar
Rooms Without Bath
Single Double
Roome With Bath
Single Double
KO LJHbrook Motor Hottl, 5 Frnr St., Lynbrook, N.Y..................... ..LY 98800 .................................. 12.00.18.00 ..... ,15,0CI-30.00
o Manalon Hotel, 54 Lincoln Ave., Rockville Cent., N. Y........... .. .. .. ..RO 89662.... .. .5.00........ ..8.00 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .... , ....
xo Mlldowbrook Motor Lodge, 4400 Jericho Tpka., Jericho, N.Y ............ ov t-4200 .................................. 11.00 ........... 18.00.18.il0
Mineo .. Hotel, 183 2nd St., Mineola, N.Y ..... ., .......................... PI 6 975t ....... 4.CJ0.5.00 ...... 7.00. 7.50 ..... 8.50 ........... 8.5010.50
Promenade Hotel on 1111 b .. oh, 102 w. Broadway, Long Beach, N. V ...... GE 10100 .................................. 15.00.28.00 ..... 28.00.35.00
xo R-.ylnn Motel, Old Country Rd. at Post Ava., Westbury, N.Y ...... , .ED 3-7330 .................................. 12.00.14.00... ..14.00.18.00
xo R-'tlnn, 1850 Hampttead Tpka., E .. t Meadow, N. V ................ IV 9 2100 .................................. 1t.OG-13.00... ..14.00-20.00
o Roalrn Hlrbor Hotel, 22 Bryant Ava., Roslyn, N. Y ........................ MA 19857 ....... 4.00-8.00 ...... 8.0D-14.00 ..... 8.00 ........... 12.00.18.00
xo Tlwoll Motel, 3400 Bruah Hollow Rd., Weetbury, N.Y ...................... ED 38800 .................................. 10.00 ., ........ 12.00.18.00
xo Town a Countrr Motel, 49 Old Country Rd .. Woetbury, N.Y ............... ED 35550 .................................. 12.00 ........ ,
xo Tumplka Motel, 434 Hempatead Tpka., W. Hempstead, N. Y............. ..IV 5 7300.... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .12.00.15.00... .. .15.00.211.00
xo Wettburv Mottl, Jericho Tpke., Westbury, N.Y ........................... ED 48811 .................................. 12.00.18.00 ...... 12.00.21.00
County: 0,.11111 Area Code: 914

XO TIIIJif Hottl, West Point, N.Y .... .,, .. ., ..... .,,.,.,.,.,. ............... WE 9-4731., ..... S.OD-7.00., ... 7.00 9.00 .. , ,.7.00. 11.00,., ... 10.0CI-12.00
County: Roclclend Area Code: 914
xo Alhler Motor Coun, u.s. Rt. 59, Nanuet, N. Y ............................ NA 3-4300 ................................................. 12.00.14.00
xo Courtier Inn. N.Y. Thrwy. (Ex. 11), Nyack, N. Y .......................... EL 85100 ........... to op .......... 11.00.13.00 ...... 15.0CI-te.OO
xo Mottl on tho Mounteln, N.Y. Thrwy. (Ex. 15), Suffern, N.Y ............... EL 72500 ................................. 12.00.14.00 ......
xto PaaoeOk Motel, Rt. 119 (N.Y. Thrwy. Ex. 14), Spring Valley, N.Y ........... NA 33792 .................................. 8.00.10.00 ...... 10.00.14.00
County: 8uffolk Area Code: 518
xo lllpllorllnn, 400 Bayahore Rd., Bayehora, N. Y...................... .. MO 6-7275.... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .11.00.13.00 .. , ... 13.0CI-18.00
xo a.-Motel, Smithtown Bypeae a. Jericho Tpke., Nesconset, N. Y... ..AN 50802 ................................... 8.00.10.00 ... < .. 12.00 ... ..
xo Cilltr CllaM Motel, 438 Sunrise Hwy., Babylon, N.Y.................. ..MO 9-11097 .................................................. tO.OCI-12.00
xo ldln Rook Mottl, 3055 Vatarana Memorial Hwy., Ronkonkoma, N.Y... ..JU 88800.... .. .. .. .. .. .. , ............... 6.00.12.00 ...... 10.0CI-17.00
xo Fontenac Motor Lodge, Jericho Tpke.Brldga Branch Rd.. . .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .11.00.13.00... .. .14.00,.18.00
Smithtown, N. v............................ ........................ ..AN 64040 ............. to op n 1963 ......... 11.00.13.00 ...... 14.00.11.00
xo HunUngton Motel, 331 w. Jericho Tpke. (Rt. 25), Huntington, N.Y ......... HA 7-4803. .................................. 8.00.10.00 ...... 10.0CI-12.00
xo Jartmeo Motel, 2231 Jorloho Tpka., Commack, N.Y ....................... FO 81020 ................................... 8.00.10.00 ..... ,10.00.12.00
xo Undtnllurat Motel, W. Montauk Hwy. & Cheatnut St., Lindenhurst, N.Y. .. TU 8-5850 ................................... 8.00 ........... 10.00.12.00
xo Thi111Motel, Rl.112, Medford, N. V ..................................... GR 53112 ................................... 8.00.10.00 ...... 10.0CI-14.00
xo PalohOIUI Motel a Count" Club, Sunrise Hwy. (Rt. 27),Patchogua, N.V .. EM 38880 ................................... 8.50 ........... 12.0CI-13.00
xo Pin .. Motor Lodge, Rt. 109 near Straight Path, N. Lindenhurst, N. V ...... TU 8 7100 .................................. 10.00.11.00 ..... ,10.00.12.00
xo 8t. Moritz Mottl, Yacht Club Rd., Babylon, N. Y .......................... MO 9-3223 .............. , .................. 12.00.18.00 ...... 12.00.11.00
xo Sky 7th St. & 3rd Ava. (Rt. 109), N. Lindenhurst, N.Y ............... TU 85500 ................................... e.oo- 9.00, ..... 10.0CI-1S.OO
xo 81erllte Motel, 750 Little E. Neck Rd. (Sunrise Hwy.),Weet Babylon, N.Y ... MO 9-GtOB. ................................. 10.00.14.00. ..... 10.0CI-18.00
xo Three VIllage Inn, Dock Rd., Stony Brook, N.Y .......................... ST 7-0555 ................................... 8.00 ........... 12.00 ... ..
xo Walt Wllltmen Motel, 295 E. Jericho Tpka. (Rt. 25), Huntington Sta.,N.Y ... HA 7-Cl280. .................................. 8.00.10.00 ...... 10.00.18.00
County: Wlllohelltr Area Code: 914
xo ArdtlerAcrn Hotel Court, 580 Saw Mill River Rd. (Rt. 9A),Ardaley,N.Y ... OW 32700 ................................... 8.00 ........... 12.01)..14.00
xo Central Motel Court, 441 Central Ave., White Plains, N.Y ............... , WH 8-8717 ................................... 9.00 ........... 10.01)..12.00
xo Dunwoocllt Motor Inn, 300 Yonkert Ave., Yonkers, N. Y................ .. .GR 8-8800.... .. .. .. .. .. .. ............... 10.00.12.00... .. 14.01)..17.00
xo Qnmatan Hotel, Pondfleld Rd., Bronxville 8, N.Y ....................... ,DE 75200 ....... 7.00 ........................ 8.00.12.00 ... ; .. 14.0CI-18.00
xo HJwlhome Clrole Motor Inn, 20 Saw Mill River Road, Hawthorne, N.Y. , .. LY 211600 ................................... 9.00.12.00 ...... 11.0CI-1!1.00
xo Hilton Inn, 455 S. Broadway, Tarrytown, N. Y ........................... ,.ME 15700 ................................. ,12.00.15.50,. .... 18.0CI-20.00
xo Hollcler Inn of Yonkera, 125 Tuckahoe Rd., Yonkers, N.Y ................. GR 63800 .................................. 10.0014.00 .. , ... 12.00.18.00
xo Roger lmllh Motor Hotel, 1 Chaster Ave., White Plains, N.Y ............. WH 9-1000 ....... 6.00, ... , ... 9.00, ........ 8.00.13.00 ...... 11.50-17.00
xo81WMIII RlverMotei,25ValleyRd., Elmtford, N.Y .................... ,,LY 27500 .... ,.,,,,,,,. ................ 10.00.12.00 ...... 13.0CI-17.00
o 8Cit'ldalelnn, School La. off Popham Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y ............... sc 3-5300, ..... 6.00 ......... 10.00 ......... 10.00 ........... 111.00 .. ,,
xo Tanyt'IIIMotei,542Tarrytown Rd., White Plalna, N.Y .................... WH 9-6951 ................................... 9.00 ...... , ... 11.0CI-15.00
xo Trade Wlncla Motor Court, 1141 Yonkers Ave., Yonkers 2, N.Y ..... ,, ... BE 7-0400 ....... , ......................... 10.50-12.00 ...... 12.0CI-1B.OO
xo Tuakahoe Motel, 307 Tuckahoe Rd., Yonkera, N.Y ........................ sw 3-8300 .................................. 11.00 ..... ,, ... 14.00.15.00
xo Wetergate Motor Hotel, Albany Post Rd. (Rt. 9), CrotononHudson,N.Y ... CR 14322 ................................... 8.00 ........... 12.00.14.00
xo WtllellnterTown Houee Motor lnn,185 Tuckahoe Rd. (N.Y. Thrwy., .............................. , .......................... ,, ........... ..
Ex. 8), Yonkers, N.Y ................................................ ,,GR 66200.... .............. .. ............. 14.0018 00 ...... 18.00.24.00.
xo Yortctown Motor Lodge, U.S. Rt. 202Taconlc Pkwy., Yorktown Hta.,N.Y ... YO 23822 ............. , ................... 12.00.14.00 ...... 14.0CI-20.00
STATE OF NBW JERSEY
,12.0CI-15.00 County: Bergen Area Code: 201

1
B,OO... ,. xo Courlftr Inn, Rt. 4, Fort Lee, N.J..................................... ..WI 72100 .................................. 10.00 ......... ,.12.0CI-20.00
"
12
oo-20.00 uo Horizon Motel, u.s. Rt. 46, S. Hackensack, N. J .. ,., ................... HU 97500, ................................ 10.00.16.00 ...... 10.oo-22.00
"
11
oo-
13

00
xo Howard Johnaon'a Motor Lodge, Rt. 17, Ramaey, N.J. .. .. ... .. ... .. ..OA 74500 .................................. 10.00.12.00 .... ,14.0CI-111.00
xo Merriott Motor Hotel at Gao. Welhlngton Bridge, Hudson Tar. &. , , ,
.. the Bridge Plaza, Fort L&e, N.J ........... (N. v. ofllcaarea code 2121 ::ct'5':8868:::: :::::: "1s64::::::::: :1o.'00..17:cici::: :;:14.00:zs:oo
"
10
oo-
12

00
xo NIW Orleana Motel, Rt. 4, Fort Lee, N.J. .. .... ........ ............ ... ..WI 44900.... .............. ............. ,8.50-11.00 ...... ,B.OCI-18.00
.. H.oo-
21

00
xo Orttenl Motor Hotel, 414 Hackensack Ave. (Rt. 4), Hackensack, N. J.... ..HU 68900,.. .. .. .. .. .... .... , ....... ,8.00.10.00., ... 10.0CI-111.00
"
14
1X1-
18

00
xo PaiiHdnMotorL.odga, At. 46, Fort Lee, N.J .......................... ,.WI 40321 ................................ ,.8.00 ........... 12.0CI-14.00
"
14
CJ0-20.00 xo Paler Pan Motel, Rt. 3, E. Rutherford, N.J ......... ,.................. ..GE 86699,.. .. .. .. .. .. .. , ............ , .8.00.12.00 ...... 10.0CI-18.00
"
15
IXI-
19
: xo 8kyylew Motel, Rte. 1 &. 8 & 46, Fort Lee, N.J ....................... , .. WI 41700.... ........ ...... ............. ,8.00.12.00,,. .,,11.0CI-13.00.
"
18
oo-
22
xo Suburban Motor Hottl, Rt. 4 & Intersection 208, Fair Lawn, N.J........ .. .. 7812100.... .. .. .. .. .. .. .............. 10.00.12.00 ...... 14.0CI-18.00
..
1
S.IXI-
18

00
xo 8wl .. Coun Motel, N.J. Hwy. 17, Upper Saddle River, N.J ........ ,.. ..DA 72138.... .. .. .. .... .. .. .... ., ........ 7.00. 8.00 ...... JI.OCI-12.00
.II.UU.l'I.W. , , , , ,12.CJ0-20.00 ;,;;;;;;;;;; ....... ;,::._;,,:: ... :::._::::'::.-::;: . ": .. :;.,-:: .. .. :::-:!=:::;;;;;;iii
. J
... -;:
. .,

l
'1\o'
\
STATE OF NEW JERSEY
County: Bergen
Area Code
2()1
Telephone
Number
Rooms Wrlhout Bath Rooms W1th Bath
Name & Address
xo Tollgate Motel, Hudson Ter . Fort Lee. N J.
xo Twin Lakea Motor Lodge, 256 At 4. Paramus. N J
-------------- ---
County. EaMI
x Carlton Hotel, 22 E Park St. Newark, N J.
x Douglaa Hotel, 15 Hill St . Newark. N. J ....
x EIMI HouM, 1050 Broad St . Newark 2. N J
xo Green'a Hotal,103 Pleasant Valley Way, West Orange. N.J .. .
xo Lucerne Motor Hotel, 1156 Broad St. Newark. N. J ............. .
Marlborough Hotel, 89 N Arl1ngton Ave . Eat Orange. N J ..
xo MarrtoH Motor Hotel, at Newark Airport, N J Tpke (Ex 14r ......
Smgle Double
-- ---,------ -
WI 7-0707
HU 7-8500
Area Code 201
..MI 2-7100 ... .
..MI 2-5100 .. .
.. MI 2-4400 .. ..
..RE 1-2300 .. .
..BI 3-4590 ..
..OR 3-2811 ...
1000.. .1500-1700.
.. 4 005 00 .. " .. 5 00- 6 00 ...
Smgle
BOO
8 00-12 00
.. 7 50""""
. .6 0012 00.
. .e oo- 9 oo ...
.15 00 "".
..6 00- 7 00 ..
.. 5 00 ' .... ' ..
Double
t2 00-14.00
10 00-16.00
... .a 50-to.so
. .. 12 00-20.00
. . . 11.5012.50
. . 20 00-22.00
. .. .8 00-11.00
. ... 6 50-10.00
Newark. N J ......... , ......... , ... .
Millie I')' Park Hotel, 16 Park PI . Newark 1, N. J ..
Robert Treat Hotel, 50 Park PI . Newark 1. N J
. .MA 4-2454 .. . . . Jo OPE 1964. . .9 00-15 00... . .. 14 00-25.00
. .MA 3-4080 ... . . .7 00 9 00 ...... 1000-13.00
.. MA 2-1000 .. .. ..8 50-15 00. ".12 00-20.00
County. Hudaon Area Code 201
xo ChrtaAnn Motor Court, 1300 Tonne lie Ave . North Bergen N J.. . ..... UN 7-3328 ... .
xo East Gate Motor Hotel, 2600 Tonnelle Ave .. North Bergen N J.. . .UN 6-0400 ... .
.12 00-14 00 ...... 14 00-18.00
x Holland Hotel, 9 Journal Square. Jersey C1ty 6. N.J.. . .... OL 3-4900 ..
.10 00-14 Oil . 14.00-18.00
xo Howard Johnaon'a Motor Lodge, 875 Paterson Plank Ad .Secaucus,N J ... UN 4-t400 ... .
. '.3 00-4 Oil' ".6 00 '. ..5 00- 6 00 ....... 700-10.00
xo Plaza Hotel, 91 S1p A;e .. Jersey C1ty, N.J... . .OL 3-0100 ... .
xo York Motel, Lincoln Tunnel Ad. North Bergen. N J.............. . . . . . .UN 4-4500 ... .
------------------- --------- ---- r---.
" .5 25 " " " " "7 50 .
. .9 00-14 Oil .. ' .. 12.0018.00
'.6 50- 9 00... . .. 10 0013.00
..9 Oil """" ' .. 12 00-14.00
County: Mlddl- Area Code 201

xo DutchMaldMotela,Rts 1&9.Woodbridge,N J .. ME4-1394.... .. ............. 700-900 .. .
xo EdlsonMotorLodge,U S Rt.1atWilsonAve.Edlson.N J .. CH7-0633 ................................. 700900 ...
xo Howard Johnaon'a Motor Lodge, Rts 1 & 18. New Brunswrck. N J.. . .CH 9-8000.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 00-10 00 ...
xo Roger Smith Motor Hotel, 18 L1vmgston Ave., New Brunswrck. N J.. . .CH 7-6000 ....... 5 00 .......... a 00 .......... 7 0010.00 ...
xo Swlaa Motel, U.S At. 1 at Garden State Pkwy., Metuchen. N J .. Ll 8- 9500 ................................... 8 50.
--- . -- ----- ----- . --------- ------ ---- ------- ---- ------4----
County: Morrla Area Code 201
. . . . 8 0012.00
. . . . 9 00-14.00
. . . 12 0015.00
. .. 10 0013.00
- .. 10.0013.00
-- .. 366 3300 .. : .... 5()() .. .. ... 750-1000 .. .
xo Pine Brook Motor lodge, At. 46. PmeBrook, N J.... ..CA B-1300 ................................... 800 ....... .
xo RnereHotei,20Commun1tyPI .. Momstown. N.J.. ..JE 9-0451 ................................... 550 6.50 .. .
. ... 9 00-14.00
. .. 8 0015.00
. ' .. 9 00-10.00
County Panalc ---.. -- -------------- 201 ---- t------- ------+----
x- St, Paterson 12, N. J... . . SH 2-8000 ...... -:-5-so--:-:-.= . =:: .. 6 50-10 00... . . 11.50-t5.00
x Uncoln Hotel, 4 Henry St., Passa1c, N. J. . . . . .. . . . .. .. . .. . . PR 7 3300 ....... 3.75-4.75 ...... 4 25-6 00.... ..6.00 7 so ....... 6.00 7.50
----------------. -- -- ---- 1-:---- .. ---- .. ------t--- ---
County: SomerMI Area Code 201
xo Arch Motel, u s. Hwy -.. -. -. - ::RA-2-:i5ss.--:-.-:- .................... :.--:.-.--:-:-: .. 9 oo ........... 12.0014.00
xo Old Mill Inn, At 202, Bernardsville, N. J. . ..................... JE 81413 ................................... 8 50- 9 00 ... _ .. 11.50-t2.00
r-Aea Code. 201 ------- ----------t------f-----
x 4, N.J. . . . . . .EL 3-4000. r:-:-: ............................ 6 50 9 50 ....... 9.5012.50
.. o Park Em Hotel, 1065 E Jersey St .. Elizabeth 4, N. J . . . . . . . . . . .. . .EL 5-3200 ................................... 6.00 9.00 ....... 9.00-14.00
xo Park Hotel,123 W. 7th St, Plainfield, N.J.... . .PL 6-3400 ....... 5 00-5.50 ...... 8.00...... ..9.50-11 50 ...... 12.50-15.00
xo Swan Motel, U.S. Rts. 1 & 9, Linden, N. J. ..WA 5-5300 ................................... 8 00-11.00 ...... 10.0018.00
xo VIllage Motel & Swim Club, Hwys. 1 & 9, Rahway, N.J.. . .382 1500 ................................... 6 00-10.00 ....... 7.00t4.00
xo Winfield ScoH Hotel, 323 N. Broad St., Elizabeth, N. J ................. EL 2-1000 ....... 5.50-5 75 ...... 8 oo .......... 7 50- 8 75. . .. 1t.0013.00
STATE OF CONNECTICUT____ ----- -- .. ---- 1-------t---- ---- --
County:_Falrllel_d ------- . ______ 1----------r--- __ _
xto Admiral Motel, m Main Ave., Norwalk 7, Conn.. . ...... VI 7 2416 ................................... 8 00-12 00 ...... 10.00-14.00
x Arcade Hotel,1001 Main St. Bndgeport 3, Conn ................... ED 4-0184 ....... 3 00-3.50 ...... 5.50- 6 50 ..... 5.00- 6 00 ....... 7 50 9.50
xo. Bridgeport Motor Inn, At. 1A (Ex. 24 Conn. Tpke.), Bridgeport. Conn ...... FO 74404 ................................... 8 50-10 00 ...... 12.0015.00
xo Courtaty Inn, Conn. Thrwy. (Ex. 1415), Norwalk, Conn. . .TE 8-4371. ........... to ope 1963 .......... 11 00-13 00 ...... 12.0019.00
xo Fairfield Motor Inn, 417 Post Ad , Conn.. . . . . .. . . . . . .. . .CL 6-0491 .................................. 10 00-12.00 ....... 12.00-t8.00
xo GrNnwlch New Englander Motor Hotel, 1114 Post Rd. (Ex. 5 Conn... . . . .. .. .. . . .. . .. . .. . .. .. . .. . . .. . .. .. .. . .. .. . ............. .
Thrwy.), Greenw1ch, Conn......... ..NE 7-3691. ..... , ...... , ... , ..... , ........ .
xo Homeatead Inn, 420 F1eld Point Rd., Greenwich, Conn. . . . . . . TO 9-7500 ....... 7.00-7.50 ..... 10 00-10.50 .. .
.. 9 00-20 00 ... .
xo Howard Johnaon'aMolor Lodge, Conn Tpke. (Ex. 11), Darien, Conn.. . .OL 5-3933 ...................... .
xo Malnatreeter Motor Lodge, Main St. & Chapel St. Bndgeport 3. Conn. . . . FO 6-4321 ............ lo ope 1963 ..
,.900- 950 ... .
.1000-1400. "
.. 8 00-15 Oil.
xo MerriH Parkway Motor Hotel, Memtt Pkwy.-Black Rock Tpke., . . . . . .. .. . .. . .. . . . .. ............ .
Fairfield, Conn.................... . . . . .. .. . . .. . . .. . .. . ..CL 9-5284 ... .
xo Norwalk Motor Inn, 99 East Ave. (Conn. Tpke Ex. 16). Norwalk, Conn ..... TE 85531 .................. .
xo Pequot Motor Inn, 3471 Post Ad., Southport, Conn.. . .CL 9-7885 ... .
.10 00-14 00 ..
.. 9 00-10 00 .. -
xo Pickwick Anna Hotel, Post Ad. (At. 1 ). Greenwich, Conn . . . . . . . . . TO 92100 ... .
xo Roger Smith Motor Lodge & Hotel, 55 River St.. Stamlord, Conn..... . .DA 3-2112 ... .
o Sllwermlne Tavern I Gallerln, Perry Ave , Norwalk, Conn.. . . VI 7 45S8 ... .
xo Stamford Houu, 84 W. Park Pl., Stamlord, Conn.............. .DA 43113 ... .
.. o Stamford Motor Hotel, 1209 E. Main St.. Stamford, Conn. . .DA 5-2655 ... .
xo StreHord Motor Inn, 6905 Main St., Stratlord, Conn. . . .............. DR 87351 .. ..
xo Weatport New Englander Motor Hotel, 1595 Post Ad, Westport. Conn ..... CL 9-5236 ... .
xo Wntporter Motel, <95 Westport Ave. (U.S. At. 1), Norwalk, Conn ......... VI 7. 5827 ...
.. 8 00-10 00
".5.00-6 00. " ... 9 00 .. "... .8 00-12 Oil ..
... 5.00-5 75.. . .8 00-8.75.. . .6 75-20.00 ..
' .. 6 00"". "' .10 00 .. "" . ..8 Oil .
................................ 825-1175 ..
................................ 900-11.00 ....
"" '" ... ' .... "".'' '"" .... 10 00.
............................... 850-2000 ... .
. """ ..... ' ..... ".'. " .. '." .8.28." ... ''.
............
. .13.00-20.00
. .11.00-t6.00
. .14.0018.00
. .12.0020.00
. .......... .
. .14.0018.00
. .12.00-1600
. .12.0017.00
. .12.0016.00
'.11 0020.00
. .10 0016.00
. .tt 25t2.75
. .12.0020.00
.. 16.00. .....
. .13 50-20.00
..12.42 .....
_. .
.....
I
t
I
; .
1 .
. I
t .. :r. l!. I..awrence Bt:Jgert, Jr.
Eutman, DUlon, Unlon Recur1ths & Co.
ate Chaae Manhattan .Plaza
N$w York, N.Y. 10006
:\':r. Bogert:
I &!n sorry to learn from your lette1 of lanuary 16,
that some persons apparently auuxned that you were the l,arry Bogart
referred to In my memorandum c1 December 31, U;63 concerning the
Hall of &:tence.
I1 you delire, we shall be qlad to send out a supplemental
memorandum as follows to those who reeetved the December Shit
memorandum:
You recenUy received a memorandum slQned by me, under
date of December 31, lt,68, wheretn the New 'York v:orld'a Fair 1964-
1965 Corporation disavowed aey connection wtth a 'Larry Bogart' who
had aent out an appeal for subscripUons to a penodlcal conc&"nlnq the
Hall of Science at the
1
,\ orld's Ir"atr and for donaUona to uslat proqrame
for creatlnq publlc interest In the Hall of Science.
e have been requested by H. Laurence lr. , who
1a a partner in the i.nvestment banldntJ ftrm of Eastman Dll1on, Union
Securltlea & Co. of Cne Cbaae Manhattan Plaza, New York, New York,
to make clear that he ls not the 'larry Bo)Jart' referred to in my memo-
ranc:lulL and that he had nothlng to do wtth the appeal
.. e are happy to make tbis clear. e ::.;u.ld point out ln
thte eoonecUon that the 'Larry Bogart' referred to ln the DecernbcJr Slat
utemorandum had bls bueineas of1ice at 11 Vest -tar1d fitreet, rioom 1000,
New York, N.Y.
M:y own feellng 1a that 1t might be better not to send auch
a supplemental memorandum since 1t ma:y atlmulate further lnqulrla.
However, we lha11 be guided by your. wishes bt the matter.
cc : F. Et>erstadt
Tozzoli
Miller /
Screvane
1. V. Thornton
Tappan
Gen. Flle
Ubrary
Cordially,
President
AiiBl:l 1:1'TlCStW !1. Ha4; , I'!": tar.)'
Nt;lf York World' a F11ir
Fl:lobinc; Nuy
Dl. Oo.brie 1 K.ira. hc:nba . .IJll .(:a:! :1 r :.latcd a :.:f
Record,' in lhi h he states t.bat, 1.1. to hia re _:.)1-
tion, I was oru' of t'i!J'(-f: \,bo a 1m ll t&.ru:!o,;c;lJ
t!1e rtrJtion '<hidl he >.:cd at tLr of
Dir< tvra, h._ld on Jau;.;ary 1 6i,.
Sine& 1 took nv part in cit .. har t..hf ditk .nakoJl or tJ.1(?
I ttlepb:mHl Dr. Kirs.!'JmballJD wt lrd&J Ql"ld in.ful'ml."d
b3 him that bo bucci lu.s nt )!l "of'-' .r re .\l"Je.
ii.h8t cv happetl(.'<i ia orlfllCVllC J..'"li'."oeu mt vtl t/1 a
t.nman 11hJ, li!, 1l!J-s J\;l hnir snd 'fib.") lti'QS ai.tt:i.ng
cnu:. or tw ro'Ws in t'rclDt ;.f me.
I tlxre:tore a:pprt-;c itlt(' J:J.,r \)rl'f.: t:L'"'-t the rc-vrd
the rJf rJ;J :lea; na a :Jc. :Alder .Ji' tl'4t mtb!l,
Grlawl()lci
P .bliahcr and Lt:it. ..:.n
P bl i:: it:: Lit
C 0 I Y
York \Iorld'a Fair 1961-19'5 Corporation
flushing 52, New York
Mrs, Denny :.rt swold
Publt sher & tor
Publla !{elations Nct.'B
127 f!aat 'iOth <:treet
New \'ork 21, New York
Dear Mrs.
January 28
1
1964
t:rneattne 1:, Hatg
Sec'y of Corporation
Aae't to the Frealdeat
Thank you for your letter of January 27th relating to the
motion that was made by Gabriel Kirschenbaum at the Annual
Meeting of the New York World's Fair on January 22nd.
I do not know what "record" t)r. 1a rschcnbaum referred t.o
for the reaao.; that !!!:!. Ncord as of the meeting ahowa
Mrs. f'auln landry an' Col, U oyd U, Stearns (hath members of
tho corporation) as the t'\ro persons supporting flr. Kirschenbaum's
motion, therefore you can r.u assured thnt :- ,ur ntJm will not
appear on the record as a seconrler ,.,f thl s
111 th all \-lishes,
Slnccrdy,
t.:rnfis t 1 nc list g
ccro;tary

You might also like