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PM Daily, Vol. 3, January 27, 1941, No. 194, p. 8
Blaze Makes 200 Homeless, Kills One and Injures Seven
A four-alarm fire swept the upper floors of the six-story apartment house at 552 Riverside Dr., near Claremont Inn, during snow storm early yesterday morning. By the time the fierce blaze was brought under control, 200 people were homeless, one tenant had been suffocated, another was cut by glass, and six firemen were hurt.
Many of those forced to the street in scanty attire were students at the nearby Juilliard School of Music. Tenants in nearby buildings sheltered many of the homeless. A tailor around the corner on Tiemann Pl. converted his shop into a refuge, and 60 of the younger tenants were taken to Knickerbocker Hospital [Founded in 1862; 70 Convent Av., Manhattan, now apartments – according to wikipedia] for the night. The Red Cross precinct disaster service swung into action, supplying clothes and funds for those who needed them.

When the flames got to work on the metal cornice it burned with this blowtorch effect, the glow being visible across the Hudson.

Tenants got off the upper fire escapes just before they were enveloped by flames. Cause of he fire was not determined.

This girl musician is laughing hysterically. She saved her precious violin, but dashed to the street in nightgown and without shoes.

PM Photos by Weegee

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Weegee Daily, January 27, 2013
No Fire Yesterday or Today… The building is pet friendly…

(Noir-ish lighting ;-)
Perhaps coincidentally, currently there is a sixth floor apartment available, for sale, for $369,000. From a real estate website: the building was built in 1910; the building has 68 units, 6 floors, a live-in super, common court yard, bike storage, storage, fitness center and central laundry room. The building is pet friendly. 60 years ago today, it’s very likely that this apartment was damaged in the above fire…
Weegee Daily Photos by Ceegee

Weegee Daily Map!

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(To be continued…)

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PM Daily, January 27, 1941, Vol. 1, No. 159, p. 32
New York Chinese Welcome New Year to Pell Street in a Snowstorm
In the Chinese calendar, today is New Year’s… Chinatown welcomed it at midnight with the traditional lion dance to drive away evil spirits. Weegee made this picture of the ceremony from a fire escape above headquarters of the Hip Sing Chinese Association, 15 Pell St…

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Weegee Daily, January 27, 2013
New York Chinese Do Not Welcome New Year on Pell Street after a Small Snowstorm
In the Chinese calendar, today is not New Year’s… Ceegee made these pictures from Pell St., in front of the Hip Sing Chinese Association, 15 Pell St. (That building probably has not changed much in 62 years.)

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PM Daily, January 26, 1941, Vol. 1, No. 32, p. 32
Winter From Empire State Building
Snow was almost gone from pavements yesterday, but it lay thick on skyscraper roofs. No traffic there, 5 to 10 degrees colder.
PM Photo by Weegee

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Weegee Daily, January 26, 2013
Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall from Google Maps… Or, Winter from above the Empire State Building
Snow was lingers on pavements and curbs yesterday, but it lay on skyscraper roofs. No traffic there… (Too lazy and cheap to go to the top of the Empire State Building… With the magic of Google maps and Photoshop…)

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PM Daily, January 26, 1941, Vol. 1, No. 32, p. 13
The Storm Wasn’t Really This Bad
Weegee was after snow pictures Saturday morning and he found this one on Columbus Circle. The snow didn’t really fall this heavily. This is just the way the snowplow piled it up. To make it look worse Weegee put his camera on the street and shot upward.
Photo by Weegee

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Weegee Daily, January 26, 2013
The Storm Wasn’t Really That Bad
Ceegee was after snow pictures Saturday morning and he found this one on Columbus Circle. The snow didn’t really fall heavily… To make it look worse Ceegee put his camera almost on the street and shot upward… (Funny coincidence, it did snow a little last (Friday) night…)
Photo by Ceegee

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“to a quarter of their plans, that’s my paper.” We are anxious for you to see it — no need to tell you — and that’s one reason we’re writing in advance, and disclosing the full story to you.

Our press capacity at the beginning may not exceed 200,000. That’s cautious, and we have to be cautious. In the beginning, sure as shooting, it won’t be easy to get PM. Curiosity alone can readily sweep every edition off the stands, minutes after delivery.

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WE ARE ARRANGING FOR A FAST PLANE AND TRAIN DISTRIBUTION system that will get PM to you first thing in the morning. Thus it will bring you the latest national and international news ON THE SAME DAY, or even before, your own morning newspaper — and always AT LEAST SIX DAYS FRESHER than a weekly could possibly get it to you.

The enclosed airmail Charter Subscription card will ensure you getting Vol. I, No. I if we receive it in time. In addition, we are arranging to print a limited number of copies of a special PREVIEW EDITION OF PM — to be called Vol. I, No. O — and these will be sent ONLY to Charter Subscribers — those who send in the enclosed reservation cards. THESE PREVIEW PM’S WILL NOT BE SOLD TO THE PUBLIC. They are certain to be very valuable “firsts” — even more so than Vol. I, No. I.

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PM Daily, January 25, 1942, Vol. 2, No. 32, p. 11
Two Passengers Are Killed As Auto Dives Into Hudson
Police Raise Connecticut Auto that plunged into the Hudson at 29th St. Saturday. Two people (one in car window) were killed…
A Street Cleaner, Charles Sharkey, heard screams, helped rescue driver (third person in car) who had managed to get out…
The Driver, Burton Chapin, was taken to a waterfront shack to get over the shock. He still grasps driver’s license.
PM Photos by Weegee

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Weegee Daily, January 25, 2013
No Pedestrians Are Killed…
Looking into the Hudson at 29th St. Thursday. No people were killed…
It was too cold for this, 17 degrees and very, very windy…
The piers are no longer present… below a small heliport; across the street from something like a sanitation parking/working area… My right hand is frozen… He still grasps a camera…
Weegee Daily Photos by Ceegee

Weegee Daily Map!

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The new PICTURE MAGAZINE Daily

A NEW KIND OF NEWSPAPER – THE EASIEST NEWSPAPER T0 READ

June 8, 1940

“HERE IS THE WHOLE EXCITING INSIDE STORY OF PM – THE NEW PICTURE-MAGAZINE-NEWSPAPER!

An historic event is about to occur. A new kind of newspaper will soon be published in New York. It will give you DAILY (five days a week) all the important news your morning newspaper now does. Then, in addition – in a 64-page Sunday edition called PM’s WEEKLY — it will give you everything and more than any weekly now gives you, and because it will roll off the presses Saturday, it will be AT LEAST FIVE DAYS FRESHER — in its news and pictures — than any other weekly picture or news magazine.

The men who will run this paper have already been called by those in the know, “the most brilliant editorial staff ever gathered together by one newspaper.”

Over 5,000 applications — almost all from highly experienced news- paper men — flooded in upon PM from every corner of the land. Why?

PM will accept no advertising. Why? How can it possibly exist if it doesn’t?

What other astonishing features will it have, UTTERLY DIFFERENT FROM ANY NEWSPAPER OR MAGAZINE EVER PUBLISHED?

Why can it be stated, with such complete confidence, that IT WILL BE THE EASIEST NEWSPAPER T0 READ EVER PUBLISHED — in this or any land?

What line will it hold editorially, and fight for day in and day out?

The enclosed memorandum will answer these and other questions for you. A number of the smartest people in New York were privately shown this inter-office memo – written by the publisher, Ralph Ingersoll, for the staff which has now been brought together. The reaction was so excited that immediately it struck us that our friends among the public, within overnight delivery of New York, should also be given it to read. (Pardon its shirt-sleeve appearance… we are working at high speed, and there is no time for white ties and tails.)

You should read it, of course, knowing something about the originator and editor of PM — Ralph Ingersoll. A young man still, he has been in succession, since 1925: Managing Editor of the NEW YORKER in its early days; then of FORTUNE; next, General Manager of TIME, Inc. In the latter position he took an active part in the phenomenal launching of LIFE.

When you have read Mr. Ingersoll’s memorandum, we miss our guess if you don’t say: “I surely want to see that paper. If the editors live up…”

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