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Bethp«f?
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BETHPiGE t I %
4 7 PGWE.ll. *V
Vol. 3 No. 24
Serving Betfipage - Plainview - Island Trees — Plainedge — Seaford
^ ^ P « P W W W
From
(The Publishers Desk
An estimated 12,000 work-bound
June graduates from more
than 100 Nassau-Suffolk public
and parochial high schools have
Grumman Aircraft Engineering
Corp. ' *•
Suffolk County Executive H.
Lee Dennison, Thomas E. Dight,
been invited to participate in president Suffolk chapter, New
"Long Island Employment Day - York State Association of
1969" May 26-27 at Nassau - - -
Community College in Garden
City. A similar event will be
conducted at Hauppauge High
School in Suffolk on May 28.
Employment Day is a community
project jointly sponsored
by government, business and
industry and education.
The prime objective of E-Day
is to enable the often-forgotten
non-college bound youth (male
and female) to meet and talk
about jobs, training and career
possibilities, or establish future
contacts, with representatives of
the participating -Long- Island
business and industrial firms.
More than 2,000 Long Island
firms have been invUed to participate.
Honorary chairmen lor. tne
Nassau event are Nassau County
Executive Eugene H. Nickerson,
Dr Howard E. Imhof, president,
Nassau Association of Chief
School Administrators and John
B Rettaliata, vice president.
Secondary School Administrators
and Lou V. Tempera, Suffolk
Labor Commissioner, are the
honorary Suffolk chairman.
This year, for the first time,
and in all future years, _ Day
will be Island-wide and an annual
Long Island community event.
Nassau's E-Day will take place in
the field house of Nassau Community
College at Mitchel Field.
The Suffolk counterpart will take
place at the new Hauppauge High
School in Hauppauge. There will
be morning (9-11:30 a.m.) and
afternoon (1-3:30 p.m.) sessions
at both locations.
B-Day gives many high school
graduates their first opportunity
to meet prospective employers
and discuss permanent employment.
The event is also
designed to help Long Island
employers meet their continuing
needs for entrance-level employes.
'
Major sponsors include the
{Continued on Page 8)
Thursday, April 10, 1969
Long Island National
Bank To Install IBM
HICKSVILLE, N.Yj - Long
Island National Bank' plans to
install, in the near future, IBM's
new 360-25 computer system.
This is the most advanced data
processing system yet on the
market.
Long Island National will be
the first commercial bank on
Long Island to offer its depositors
the benefits of this new equipment.
The IBM 360-25 system,
equipped to handle all banking
functions will be installed in a
specially prepared room in our
new corporate headquarters at
11 Broadway in Hicksville. This
new system will process all the
Bank's checking accounts,
mortgages, personal and student
loans and proof and transit
procedures. It is also planned
that savings accounts will be
processed on the new Model 25 in
the near future.
Some of the new design improvements
incorporated in Long
Island National's nevr jtrmiei sw
are: a main memory that
operates in less than a miOtontb
of a second; a small "scratch
pad" memory that is made up of
tiny monolithic circuits and is
five times faster than the main
memory, a new compact design
to save valuable floor space; and
{Continued on Page 2)
10« per copy
iTIOSE* JONES BOYS: Because he is the father of
popular young singer Jack Jones, people tend to forget
I h a t ^ a n Jones, right, was once famous in his own
Paint Your Wagon at the Wedgewood Theatre, Glen
Cove. Oyster Bay Councilman M. Hallsted Christ looks
on: Christ played host to 500 senior citizens at the
performance which was arranged by the town's
Department of Recreation and Community Activities.
Looking Back... Recognize Anyone?
«, ««i TMQT AT I ATION AND DANCE of the Bethpage Fire
JANUARY 1951 N f ^ ^ ^ t h o s e who will remember her is the
Dept Auxiliary. In the center IOT u president. She was
P^ident Mrs Rut h W ™ « g ™ ^ member. other of-the
third president of the t ^ - p^d^t, Mrs. Jeannette
f i c e r s stalled ^armgh^were V^ce ^ ^ Mrs EUen
Curcio. Secretary. Mrs K a > » ^ ^ Greco CM, jeannette
Simone. Bottom ro* -Stella ™*d
D m Ruth L u t tge, Caroline
CEullrmciog.e rB.EesUsieen bWim o^KCaM^ M^a zzie ^ ^g > P^e g QAMl bertson^, 2nd^
Uccellini, Ernestine Defanis, Dolores Defanis, Janet Greco, Evelyn
Kranz, Winnie Bellini, Mary Campagne, Evelyn Auer, Back Row -
Edna Looney, Alice Auer, Louise DeWitt, Catherine Seitz, Mollie
Scherer, Mary Ratto, Estelle Romscho, Louise Bedell, Muriel Cava,
Dot Rabas, Emma Osworth, Marie Ludwig, Elsie Ludwig and Emma
DeubeLThe following are deceased: Ruth Luttge, Catherine Seitz,
Emma Deubel, Stella Miranda, Caroline Ellinger and Evelyn Kranz.
CM - Charter Member. „ • » .
Photo by Frank D. Mallet
^
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Bethpage-Tribune_1969-04-10 |
| Subject | Newspaper |
| Description | This is a Newspaper distributed locally within Bethpage, Old Bethpage, Island Trees, Plainedge and Seaford. |
| Creator | Florence Cullem |
| Publisher | Florence Cullem |
| Contributors | Scanned and Prepared by Hudson Microimaging, Port Ewen, New York 12466. |
| Date | 2009 |
| Type | Periodical |
| Format | PDF; TIFF |
| Source | Bethpage Public Library |
| Language | English |
| Coverage | United States |
| Rights | The Newspaper is in the public Domain and Digital Rights Held by Bethpage Public Library. |
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