Word: 65th
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...took them by surprise. Night before Mrs. Roosevelt had stood beside the President at the official, reception for the Supreme Court. Then she slipped away, caught a midnight train for Manhattan and at 9 o'clock in the morning, in the library of the Roosevelt house on East 65th Street gave her daughter in marriage to John Boettiger. A clerk from the Marriage License Bureau had brought a license to the house shortly after 8 a. m. There it was filled out by John Boettiger, 34, and Anna Roosevelt Dall, 28. Justice Frederic Kernochan, friend and fishing companion...
...East 65th St., Manhattan, where painters were freshening the iron fence and balconies of Franklin Roosevelt's town house,* a sign was last week hung out reading "For Rent, Alfred E. Schermerhorn, Inc." An enterprising reporter, posing as a possible tenant, had the real estate agent take him through the building's 14 rooms and five baths, was told that the rental asked was $6,000 a year, that the oil burning furnace in the basement would not cost more than $800 a year to operate, that the electricity bill would not run over $25 a month, that...
...property is owned by his mother whose own town house, No. 47 East 65th St., adjoins. A sliding mirror in the President's upstairs living room connects the two houses...
...Lucienne Boyer went straight on to another opening, even more elegant and gala, The Rainbow Room, on the 65th floor of Rockefeller Center's RCA Building. First client to arrive was John D. Rockefeller Jr. who supplied some of the cash for The Rainbow Room's glass walls, color organ and two-speed reversible, revolving dance floor. At a table in an alcove farthest from the dance floor, Mr. & Mrs. Rockefeller and their guests ? Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Rockefeller, Mr. & Mrs. John D. Rockefeller III?were half way through the club's $15 dinner before the other frolickers started...
...France with a manager, a pianist, a violinist, three maids, 23 trunks, 50 pieces of hand luggage, a 12th Century Buddha and a $6,000-per-week contract. Awaiting her were a Sherry-Netherland penthouse, a show called Continental Varieties, a brand new night club on the 65th floor of the R. C. A. building, Rockefeller Center. Producers Arch Selwyn and Harold B. Franklin congratulated themselves when, a week before the Varieties opened, every $8.80 seat in the house had been sold. Rockefeller Center was proud of its Rainbow Room, with its high glass walls overlooking the city, its mirrored...