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A L V E R N C PUBLIC
., J T T H C" M A 3 P-^
M A L V £ ft N E. NY i i S
Vol.14 No. 26 Entered a s Second—Class Mattej
P o s t Office, t y n b r o o k , N.Y. LY 3-1300 THE FAMILY NEWSPAPER Wednesday, November 21,1974
(;raND OPENING: On hand for the ribbon cutting honors at the
grand opening of Suburbia Federal Savings' new East Rockaway
office was Arnold White, mayor of East Rockaway, shown handling
the giant golden scissors. Assisting Mayor White are (left to right)
Philip J. Weiler, Jr., vice president of the Federal Home Loan Bank of
New York, Gloria Jaccarino, manager of the new office and J. Arthur
Stein, vice chairman of the Board of Suburbia Federal.
Mediation Sought
Landlords, Tenants Discuss
Rent StabOization Problems
The regular meeting of the
Board of Trustees of the Inc.
Village of Lynbrook was held
Monday evening at 8 P.M. on
Nov. 18, at the Village Hall, 1
Columbus Drive in Lynbrook
where the board room was well-filled
because there had been an
earlier evening meeting on the
problems of rent stabilization in
Lynbrook and representatives of
landlords of the Village and two
main spokesmen for the tenants
and others of their Tenants'
Committee tried to find some sort
of common ground or possible
mediation point. Chairman Louis
Tessler and Richard Levey
reported on their progress at a
later period during the board
meetit^.
Deputy Mayor and Trustee
Kurt Arndt chaired the meeting
until Mayor Francis X. Becker
was free to officiate. (He had to
preside at another special
meeting).
Variety Covered
National Bible Week was of-ficially
passed by the Board and
Mayor Becker's proclamation
read.
Next on the agenda were two
bid openings. One was for a
D.P.W. front-end loader and the
other, for a new police patrol
vehicle. Bids were opened, read,
studied and turned over to both
the supt. of D.P.W., Reginald
Pilling and Police Chief Frank
Kehr for further evaluation.
READS F.D. REPORT
Fire Chief Ralph Bien read the
Lynbrook Fire Dept. report for
October. The number of am-bulance
and rescue calls was
reported as 57 with the fire
department also mourning the
death of two former members of
the Hook and Ladder Co. and
taking part in complete drills and
training.
Maurice DeLucca, director of
the Lynbrook Recreation Center,
gave the October report for the
Lynbrook Recreation Com-mission.
One hundred-seventy-five
children took part in the
Halloween costume parade with
Our Lady of Peace Band, the
mayor and trustees leading the
way from Earle Ave. through the
business section to the Lynbrook
Elk's Club No. 1515 where the
costumes were judged according
to age groups and prizes awar-ded.
Five-hundred and sixty-six
senior citizens attended senior
citizens' meetings at the
recreation center. They hold
painting and ceramics classes.
Supt. of the Building Dept.
Jerry Sanetti gave the depart-mental
report for Oct. It showed
that there were eight business
registrations and sidewalk repair
notices sent out and itemized the
permits, for different areas
which are required by village
law.
Frank Hillgardner, assistant
I Continued on page 8]
Lynbrook Public Schools
Plan December Concerts
CELEBRATES ANNIVERSARY: Hempstead Town Presiding
Supervisor Francis T. Purcell (left) joins with members of the Hugo
Muensterberg Unit 903 of Lynbrook, Steuben Society of America at
their 49th Anniversary Dinner and Dance held recently. Seen with
Purcell are (left to right) Robert Wilderman, of the National Council
of Steul)en Society, Ute Lally, first vice-chairlady of Lynbrook Unit
Steuben Society and Fritz Warmhold, chairman of the Lynbrook Unit
Steuben Society and first vice-chairman New York State Council.
The Music Department of the
Lynbrook Public Schools has
announced their schedule of
musical events to take place
during the month of December.
The programs at various district
schools will cover a variety of
musical expression from band to
opera.
Opening the month of concerts
on Monday, December 2, the
High School String Orchestra,
under the direction of Roberta
Kaufman, and the Madrigal
Singers, under the direction of
Douglas March, will be heard in a
program of Chamber music. It
will take place at the High School
Cafeteria and the time is 8:00
P.M. A reception will follow.
On Wednesday, December 4, at
8 P.M., South Middle School will
present their Annual Winter
Concert in the South Gymnasium
and feature the band, Joseph
Impastato, conductor, the
chorus, Marie Doman, director,
and the String Orchestra, under
the baton of Miss Kaufman.
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
PROGRAM
For a Sunday afternoon
program of music, Frank Dan,
Charles DeAngelis and Miss
Kaufman have programmed a
variety of musical selections at
the North Middle School. The
program, featuring two bands,
three choruses and strings, will
be held on December 8, at 2 P.M.
in the North Gymnasium.
December 10, is the date for the
Atlantic Avenue School Winter
Concert featuring the band,
orchestra and chorus, under the
direction of Dr. Edward Heth,
Gail Meister and Eugene Harris.
The time is 8 P.M. and the place
is the Atlantic Avenue Gym-nasium.
West End School will present
their Annual Winter Concert in
the Gymnasium on December 16,
at 8 P.M. The two school bands,
the strings and the chorus will be
heard in music of many styles
and moods. The concert will be
under the direction of Richard
Gilley, Mrs. Rose Soyka and Miss
Meister.
CHANGE OF PACE
On Wednesday, December 18,
at 8 P.M., as a change of pace and
to add to the 'holiday spirit,' the
High School Vocal Department,
under the direction of Douglas
March, will present the opera,
"Amahl and the Night Visitors"
by Gian-Carlo Menotti. The
production, which will be held in
the High School Auditorium, will
also feature the Varsity Singers
and Concert Choir in a short
program of selected musical
works.
On December 19, to end the
series of programs, Marion
Street School will present their
traditional Winter Musical in the
Gymnasium at 8 P.M. The
production, "Willy Wonka and
the Toy Factory," under the
direction of Barbara Modlin, will
be a 'treat for all ages.'
Over 1500 students will par-ticipate
in the programs and the
public is invited to attend.
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | The-Helm_1974-11-27; 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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