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1937 (Q20 Flushing-College Point service) 1938 (Q44 Flushing-Jamaica service) 1940 (Q44 Bronx-Jamaica service) 1999 (Q44 limited-stop service; Q20A/B College Point-Jamaica service) 2015 (Q44 SBS) Route; Locale: Queens and The Bronx, New York, U.S. Communities served: Queens: Jamaica, Briarwood, Kew Gardens Hills, Queensboro Hill, Flushing ...
[6] [11] The Q50, meanwhile, runs primarily between Flushing and Pelham Bay Park; there is no direct Co-op City-to-Queens service except during rush hours, [12] when Q50 buses are extended north to Erskine Place and Earhart Lane in Section 5, traveling clockwise in Co-op City northbound and counterclockwise southbound.
One of the planned changes was the elimination of Q17-20 service between Flushing and College Point due to competition from routes of the Queens-Nassau Transit lines. Service was replaced by three routes: the new Q44FS between Flushing and College Point, the new Q17 Flushing-188th Street line, and the existing Q17A Little Neck-169th Street line.
Q25 service began in 1928, under the operation of the Flushing Heights Bus Company. [11] This route was formally known as Route Q-25, Flushing-Jamaica via Parsons Boulevard Line. [12] On May 25, 1933, Queens–Nassau Transit received a one-year franchise for route "Q-34" from Flushing to College Point. [13] The route began service in April 1933 ...
Due to slow trips and high passenger load, limited-stop service was added to the route on September 12, 2010. [4] [24] Community Boards 5 and 8 had been asking for the introduction of limited-stop service for the Q58 for years, but limited service was only added at this time because the Q58 had reached the headway required for limited-stop service.
Beginning on June 8, 1942, due to restrictions on gasoline and tire usage during World War II, the service was truncated to 14th Avenue and 122nd Street in College Point. [6] [21] Service north of 14th Avenue was restored on February 4, 1946. [18] The Q20 was separated from the Q17 during off-peak "base period" hours on January 27, 1947. [22]
The TimesLedger Newspapers is a chain of paid circulation weekly newspapers covering news, sports and events of concern to residents of the borough of Queens, New York. [1] The company's flagship paper is the Bayside Times , which was founded in 1935 as the paper of record for Bayside, New York , where its offices are presently based.
The Bronx Chronicle, a century-old newspaper; Bronx News; Bronx Press-Review; Bronx Times-Reporter; Brooklyn Eagle (daily) Catholic Worker (monthly) The Chief (public service weekly) City & State (public service bi-weekly) Columbia Daily Spectator (weekly) Crain's New York Business (weekly) Der Blatt (Yiddish-language weekly) Der Yid (Yiddish ...