Fifteen years of unpublicized work by a committee of 100 New Yorkers was culminated yesterday in the cornerstone laying for a six-story Brotherhood House which will provide free facilities for 100 voluntary interfaith and social agencies in New York City.
Most of the $3,000,000 to build the new structure was contributed by members of the committee, who intend to also cover the annual operating budget of Brotherhood House. Stated for completion in 1963, it will have a library, meditation and music rooms, a 400-seat auditorium, seminar and conference rooms, and offices.
Governor Rockefeller and Mayer Wagner took part in the ceremony, and hailed the purposes of the building and its sponsors. The committee, named Brotherhood-In-Action, is composed of prominent New Yorkers with Charles H. Tuttle as president. The officers include James A. Farley, John MacCrate, Theodore Newhouse, Lawrence A. Wien, Albert A. List and Samuel Hausman.
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The Archive of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency includes articles published from 1923 to 2008. Archive stories reflect the journalistic standards and practices of the time they were published.