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^ p O P E f l , J, ^
HEMPSTEAD (twhi EAST ROCKAWAY LYNBROOK MALVERNE
Vol.14 No. 13 E n t e r e d a s Second—Class Matter
P o s t Office, Lynbrook, N.Y. LY 3-1300 THE FAMILY NEWSPAPER Wednesday, August 28,1974 lOc
One World Grusade
On The Move
I must write this article
because for the past two weeks,
as a reporter with some
knowledge of the Far East, what
was happening not only in Long
island but all over America
deserves to be told. I have seen
Young America on the march
inspired by 'the example of their
brothers and sisters from 29
countries. They have been
vilified, persecuted, completely
and brilliantly misunderstood by
surface and not in depth analysis.
What would make a Japanese
leave his homeland and come
humbly to America, stand on
street corners, go hungry and
ignored yet keep going under
incredible odds? What could
make a wealthy young Chinese
from the Philippines le^ve his
comfortable home, drive 200
miles in one night on a special
mission and get by on two hours
sleep? Why would young people
from Ireland, from Holland, from
Germany, Austria, Italy and
other countries around the world
leave home and families to join
their American brothers and
sisters in a mass religious
movement? Why would young
Americans with amazingly
different backgrounds stand in
the hot sun of Texas and sing 10
hours in the 110 degrees heat, and
Celebrating 25 years
Guisto Caceippo and Mayor Becker in front of the
''House of Salter" Celebrating his 25th year in business
at 212 Hempstead Avenue, Lynbrook.
Senior Citizens Booth
By Annette Ling
work just as hard to try to
emulate their counterparts from
the East in self sacrifice, com-plete
dedication and sureness of
purpose that is truly awesome?
From every state of the United
States, they came to Berrytown,
New York with their sleeping
bags, tireless energy and won-derful
enthusiasm to plan for
Rev. Sung Myung Moon's rally at
Madison Square Garden on Sept.
18, 1974 when their goal must be
met of not only filling up the
Garden but also exciting
Americans to live up to their
calling as a God centered Nation.
They met in a lovingly restored
Catholic monastery where teams
worked at cooking, restoring
crumbling Catholic statues,
broken windows, studying the
Bible, praying together and
aiming towards one goal always.
Their mission is to re-vitalize
faith, active faith, in America.
They are young, and have hope
for America whether be of
Catholic, Protestant, Atheist or
Bhuddists of the past. Some have
gone the whole scene, tried
drugs, gone hippie, become
Communists and yet have turned
their paths right around to try to
be an inspiration to the rest of us
right here on Long Island, in New
[Continued on page 8J
DEPARTMENT
Of SENIOR CITIZEN AFFAIRS
, /.Acn AOtlAIDE ATTARD RAIWG CASO COMMISSIONW CDUHIY IXKUIIVt
Above Suburbia Federal Savings and Loan Association's Marketing Vice President Donald J. Kelly,
Lynbrook Branch Manager Mrs. Alice Mockler and Customer Service Officer Alvin A. Kessler review
The Nassau County Prime Times published by the Department of Senior Citizens Affairs.
This month Suburl^ia Federal Savings and Loan Association displays "Here's Nassau World for Senior
Citizen's". This" is a 3' by 8' booth displaying, Pre-Retirement Counseling Workshops, Retired Senior
Volunteer Program, Speedy Telephone Guide to Services for Senior Citizens, Senior Citizens Help Line,
Nassau County Prime Times, Ring-a-Day Telephone Reassurance Service and Property Tax Reduc-tions
for Senior Citizen Homeowners. These folders are now available at our Lynbrook office.
Welcomes New Rabbi
Rabbi Louis D. Diament, of
Ramsey, New Jersey, has been
appointed as the new Spiritual
Leader of Congregation Beth
David, in Lynbrook, Long Island.
Fiabbi Diament was born in
East Chicago, Indiana where he
received his religious training, in
a small synagogue. He went on to
Roosevelt College in Chicago,
and Northwestern University in
Evanston, receiving his bac-calaureate
and Masters degree.
He has held pulpits in
Cheyenne, Wyoming, Inwood,
Long Island and Ramsey, New
Jersy. Rabbi Diament also acted
a Principal of the Religious
Schools of all these
congregations, as well as at the
Atlantic Beach Jewish Center,
Beth Sholom of Lawrence, Long
Island, and was the founder of the
[Continued on page 8]
Due to Labor Day
Monday Sept. 2nd. The
Helm will go to press
Friday Aug. 30th. All
copy must be in no
later then Thursday
August 29 by 12 noon.
Governor Malcolm Wilson launches New York State's Adoption In-formation
Program '•'>r c^^'Mren wUK special needs who are older or
black or handicap^ .. T. :a> > special medical and income
subsidies and other special . vii a help families who adopt these
children.
T;.e Governor, shown with children at the New York F'oundling
Hospital, says the thing most necessary is love.
The New York State Board of Social Welfare, which is sponsoring
the campaign with the cooperation of the State Department of Social
Services, has set up an information center in Albany. For more in-formation
write: Adoption, Box 7290, Albany, Ne\Y York 12223.
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | The-Helm_1974-08-28; Lynbrook Helm Independent Review |
| Subject | Newspaper |
| Description | This is a newspaper distributed locally within Lynbrook, Malverne, & Nassau County |
| Creator | Islander Publishing Co. |
| Publisher | Islander Publishing Co. |
| Contributors | Scanned and Prepared by Hudson Microimaging, Port Ewen, NY 12466 |
| Date | 1974 |
| Type | Weekly Periodical |
| Format | PDF; TIFF |
| Source | Lynbrook Public Library; Arthur Mattson; HSERL |
| Language | English |
| Coverage | United States |
| Rights | The Newspaper is in the public domain and Digital Rights held by Lynbrook Public Library and the Historical Society of East Rockaway & Lynbrook |
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