European Stars and Stripes (Newspaper) - June 01, 1977, Darmstadt, Hesse Neighbourhoods Lead to neglect. But Sherbum. A one of the main authors of the by argues we should preserve the charac Quality of single family neighbourhood by to on their condition not their wife Harriet head of the Market pro the Type of couple the report focuses restored an old victorian plan to have no children. People could be accommodated the maybe shifting Money from children facilities playgrounds for example rehabilitation. Uses Seattle to stabilize its population at 500,-f 6f keeping the current mixture of families ifs residents but to build new apartments for eople couples thus relieving pres using urges the City to flow with the economic Seattle is becoming less a manufacturing id More a business service Economy so be it j report build More office towers report s theories have not been fully a i Many people fear that such policies will Day made up Only of a Young economic poor the Black True these Young people have lots of spend Boney says Peter Staten who Heads Seattle s Wai preservation efforts. But you change if the City than you can afford to. It leads to a Nemous locked door Type of Hung childless couples have less permanence Ita Brily less commitment argues Paul . 0, win recently resigned As head of the depart lot Community development to run for mayor. I Community loses something when children that is something to be concerned about eng the City a place for people to More towers he maintains will not much to the me base because most of the people employed Ina live in the suburbs. Not everyone agrees that Seattle has Irreg re Ihor lost its families. James r. Ellis a lawyer to u a leading civic Force believes the rising to of Energy suburban housing will Force my people to come Back although he Wal Uei the new Young professionals. U the Fate of the Public schools that is the deep of lure of worry. Every year enrolment slips by her 3,000 or 4.000 the proportion of minority grows. Schools have customarily been the that holds neighbourhoods together the fear it if they close Down or deteriorate neighbor is will decay. The threat of an integration suits Batch the fears. M very fearful about the schools mayor Weso said. We always had Strong schools. When be buy Homes they do so because of the schools will undermine that introduce Uncertain ill the tide of newcomers does not dismay theor who is ending his term soon. I am not ing my hands. It Seattle is More desirable Tolet older people or smaller households or 1, that s not necessarily mayors wring their hands about the loss of shite Middle class but a City is like a living or to that changes Ever 20 or 30 sep the cake the ice Cream too keep the land allow the Energy Bremer kind Rock Douglas d. Scott a Tau Arthe Logist were scrambling through taper Trees atop Sand Canyon for glimpses of one 40 ruins in this tiny stretch of land alone. Found 1200 a.d., some 50,000 anasazi. Or an i Pueblo indians lived traded in the Vicini their Best preserved gifts to future generations \ the haunting Stone tenements tucked in the i of Mesa verde National Park about 30 Miles cording to Scott the Region contains thousands edition Al Sites littered with shards of precious try the Walls of anasazi houses trading i towers Fri we ritual pits we re As interested As anybody in the Arch eolo said Bremer As he peeked into the window of i was once an anasazi House. Before an explore Well is begun he said the Oil company has an geologist inspect the site prepare a report Lell Hopes to limit its exploration to spots along ung roads. Nevertheless. Scott stared worriedly a red tip of a 143-foot exploratory drilling Rig lie Over the Canyon Walls about a mile away me biggest single detriment u archaeological is people visiting them he said. Drilling is the problem. But when you have a producing you have a Road. Then you get the pot Hunt professional Amateur diggers alike have dered Many Sites he added. June 1, 1977 r by David n. Rosenthal associated press Osalie Wilson is one of the Rich people Fitzgerald said Are different from you me. When this 22-year-old could t find the kind of music she liked for her lonely late night forays she gave up looking built her own place in new Orleans. It s an $800,000, two Story converted warehouse wit Hart decor hanging plants the Best jazz Talent Avail Able at any Bobby Short to Gato Barbieri musicians have come to Rosy a in an Uptown warehouse District by the Mississippi River to perform in a town where imported jazz is a to a player they agree that Rosy a with Plush surroundings near perfect sound is unique. So Isi the woman who fantasized the whole thing on a summer night in 1975."Rosalie believes that the people who play her club Are artists should be treated like artists says Michael Davenport of los Angeles who does the booking for Rosy s manages jazz violinist Jean Luc Many club owners treat the musicians like serv ants. Rosy in t like that she had a desire to build the club for music rather than a desire to make making a lot of Money probably was t necessary even if that had been Rosalie Wilson s intent. She was already Rich an heir to a Fortune valued at$23.3 million when her father Mother died within 10 months of each other in 1972. The Money came from j. Ray Mcdermott co., a hug Oil construction engineering firm recently tied to suspected bribery abroad illegal Campaign contributions at Home. A court ordered report said that Rosy s father Proba Bly spent $300,000 in company funds on political contributions when he was Mcdermott s of her wealth Rosy never worked before she opened her club. She is reluctant to discuss either he Money or her personal life. Overweight she refuses to have her picture a teenager Rosy went to several colleges but never graduated because she says she got Little out of 20-year-old brother says neither of us was Ever the most socially abiding it s something reclaims that continued As they became adults in the Bas Tion of closed social circles that is new Orleans. Rosy s club like Many other things in her life resulted from an impulsive decision at a time when she was t sure what she wanted. I was driving around town very late at night alone. When a very Strong desire came Over me. I had this fantasy. I wanted to build a facility totally dedicated the first step was a building. After almost buying on Structure she purchased a dilapidated warehouse that had just been sold for $25,000 for use As an Art place was a catastrophe Rosy says. I offered the new buyer almost twice the Price he had paid Igot the building. But it was almost on the condemned list what we bought was a Rosy s in new Orleans former warehouse. She kept the Brick facade gutted the inside Addinga Glass atrium where there had been a 30-foot-High open ing. The area below the atrium became a restaurant with its Kitchen adjacent to one Side the music room adjacent to another. The building still looks like a warehouse Only identification is a Small Blue Neon sign in the window that says Rosy a in swirling script to match the club s advertising logo designed by Milton Glaser the Well known artist who did graphics forthe Broadway show the wit inside is a pastiche of tasteful Art Deco that took Rostand los Angeles Interior designer Donna Vaccarino More than a Quarter of a million dollars a year of search ing to find like Warhol silk screens a pair of three foot High Blue urns from the front of the Pasadena civic Center intricate multilevel brass Light fixtures including a pair salvaged from a Walts music room brings images of Humphrey Bogart Dooley Wilson of late nights velvet tog. Dim lights bask the audience of 250 the waitresses Glide among the circular tables almost unnoticed during performances. The sound system beginning with Large Cost $50,000 is worthy of a recording studio. Upstairs where the crowds Don t go. The musicians can relax in a soft comfortable dressing room with a catered Buffet a bartender on duty. It All up to a place in which saxophonist Gat Barbieri says he would rather play than any other in North America which Jerry Wexler of Atlantic re cords Calls one of the hottest in the country. And which Drew Cole Porter interpreter Bobby Short from new York to perform in new Orleans for the first time. So Long new Orleans has been involved with its own music this is an attempt to involve it with everyone else a Short said. It seems to be working. I was treated Well the audience was More attentive less impressed with itself than Price for bringing in performers like Short Rah Saan Roland Kirk Earl mines has t been agent Davenport says artists fees have ranged from $2,500 a week to $1.500 for one a usual cover charge of $5 a head. Rosy says she try to break even on the music make a profit on the restaurant two bars. Although she quotes no figures she says it is doing incredibly Well for a business Ope Only since last october. And her brother Roger says it has Given Rosalie Wilson Rich girl turned businesswoman a direction she did t have change has been like night Day before there was a person confused now there is one with goal building creating something be says. She was always fascinated with music listening to John Coltrane when the rest of us were into Black Sab Bath grand Funk. But now she is making use of i guess Rosy says people took dead aim on the fact that i was wealthy Young female open ing a jazz club All of which seemed like real failure potential i la admit. But i think i was destined to do this i Don t think i was destined to the stars stripes Page is
