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MISS EMA HUITIHOTOS f*
THE L. T. HISTORICAL SfCIETt
PIERRPONT A CLINTON ST3. U- 49
BROOBLYN 2, N. Y. COM*
/ i Pra^ Winning Weekly Serving The Greater Farmingdale Area Since 1920 15C
An Official Newspaper for the Village of Farmingdale
JLL
VOL. 57 NO. 3 Second Class Postage Paid
in Farmingdale, N. Y. 11735 THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1975 CopyriKht 1975 by
Island- WLle Publication, Inc.
price 1 hi - $ 5 per year
Farmingdale County Champs
Hopes High For Rutgers Cup
THE CHAMPIONSHIP TROPHY It presented to Farmingdale Conch Don Snyder [ right] following the
Daler's defeat of Massapequa Friday afternoon. Looking on are Co- Captains Mike Ancelitz and Mike
Scibelli and Asst. Coach Irv Apgar.
[ Photo by AlKeim]
Weber, Bell Seek Reelection
In S. F'dale Water District
George M. Weber and Roger C.
Bell, have announced they will be
candidates to succeed themselves
as Water Commissioners
of the South Farmingdale Water
District - Weber for a full three
year term, and Bell for two
years, balance of term for which
he was appointed. The election is
to be held on December 9th, from
4: 00 P. M. - 10: 00 P. M., in the
Farmingdale Fire District
Firehouse, South Main Street and
Linden Avenue, South Farmingdale,
and in the North
Massapequa Firehouse,
Broadway and Albany Avenue,
North Massapequa.
Weber has been Water Commissioner
since 1080 and at
present is Chairman of the
Board. He is a former Fire
Commissioner and still an active
member of the Massapequa Fire
District, as well as an Engineer
of the New York Telephone
Company.
payer of South Farmingdale for
over 37 years. He is an active
member of the Farmingdale Fire
Department; Supervisor of the
Estimating Department at
Fairchild Republic Company for
24 years; and an active member
of the Republic Society of
Engineers and Scientists.
Twenty- three years ago, this
community of approximately
[ Continued on page 16]
RadiganNew Leader
C. Raymond Radigan of 6
Tenth Avenue, Farmingdale, was
elected to . succeed Frank J.
Hynes as Executive Leader of
Farmingdale Republican
Committee for the balance of
Hynes' term of office. Hynes
resigned the position for the
» purpose of devoting more of his
time to his business and family
interests, effective December }.
Radigan waa a committeeman
since 1961 and was President of
the Farmingdale Republican
Club during the term 1964- 1965.
He was President of the
President's Council of the Oyster
Bay Republican Clubs and served
on many committees of the
Republican Party and was active
in many charity fund raising
drives.
Upon being elected, Radigan
set down the following statement
position of Republican Executive
Leader of Farmingdale:
" As a result, of Watergate and
other problems in the political
arena the electorate has become
cynical to the point that they have
[ Continued on page 16]
by Mark Faber
' The championship game is
always going to be a tough
game," said Daler assistant
coach Irv Apgar after the Dalers
edged Massapequa 9- 7 to win the
4A championship. ' The teams'
records don't matter, both teams
have to be good to play in the
game. It's always going to be a
good game," he added.
The victory enabled Farmingdale,
the second ranked
team in the state, to finish with a
perfect 9- 0 record. The Dalers are
the prime contenders for the
Rutgers Cup, symbolic of the best
high school football team in
Tick Fever
Fatal For
Former Daler
A former Farmingdale
resident, who was bitten by a tick
while making fuel oil deliveries in'
eastern Suffolk, died Sunday
night in a Port Jefferson Hospital
of Rocky Mountain Spotted
Fever.
Karl Eyester, 33, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Luther Eyester, who have
been Farmingdale residents for
the past 42 years/ died in the
intensive care unit of the St.
Charles Hospital at 8 p. m. Sunday.
He resided with his family in
Ronkonkoma. Funeral services
will be held Friday at 10 a. m. at
the Arthur F. White Funeral
Home, Farmingdale, with Pastor
James Corgee of St. Luke's
Lutheran Church officiating.
Interment will be at Long Island
National Cemetery.
Eyester began running a fever
slightly over two weeks ago,
accompanied by a red rash. He
was treated for flu. He was admitted
to the hospital approximately
four days before his
death, according to his brother
Rick ( Richard), who operates the
Shell Station at the corner of
Main and Fulton Streets.
Eyster is survived by bis wife,
Marylou, and three children,
Karl, Jr., Marylou and Dawn.
In addition to bis parents,
Eyester is also survived by five
brothers, Frederick, Richard,
four sisters Helen Kalb, Patricia
Strauch, Nancy Rada and Louise
Weydener.
Nassau County. " We'll know if
we won the cup within a week,"
said Apgar.
After stopping Farmingdale,
Massapequa took possession for
the first time on the Daler 43. The
Chiefs tore through the Dalers'
county leading defense and drove
43 yards in three plays,
culminating with Bill Bodkin's 20
yard touchdown run. The kick for
the extra point was added and the
chiefs grabbed an early 7- 0 lead.
" They executed well and
picked up on our defensive
mistakes," said Daler quarterback
Rich Naslonski.
" I guess it was kind- of a
defensive letdown,... or a breakdown,"
said coach Don Snyder.
Farmingdale got back on the
first play of the second quarter.
Brian Violetta fielded a Chief
punt on the Massapequa 40 yard-line,
broke two tackles and
dashed down the sidelines to
paydirt. " Violetta's runback was
the key to the game," said
Farmingdale's fullback Steve
Insalaco. " He really came
through for us." The two- point
conversion failed and the Dalers
trailed 7- 6.
The score remained the same
until early in the fourth quarter.
Bob Fmochio recovered a Chief
fumble on the Massapequa 30
yard- line. The Dalers drove to the
17 where they were faced with a
Fourth- and- eight situation. " We
knew Bob can kick field goals and
even though he wasn't kicking
well in practice we decided to let
him try it," said Apgar.
Fmochio came on and booted a
line drive 34 yard field goal that
cleared the cross bar by inches to
put Farmingdale up 9- 7.
Massapequa had one last opportunity
late in the game when
they had a first down on the
Dalers' 35. The Chiefs have an
excellent kicker and were only
yards from field goal range.
However the Daler defense rose
to the occasion and dropped the
Chiefs back eight yards on the
next three plays including a four
yard loss on fourth down to insure
the victory.
" They were the best team
we've played all year," said
Naslonski. " They held us down,"
said Daler co- captain Mike
Ancelitz. " They were one of the
toughest teams I've faced. We got
to them at the end though," he
added with a smile.
A tough Massapequa defense
[ Continued en page 16]
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | 1975-12-04 |
| Subject |
Newspaper |
| Description |
This is a newspaper distributed locally within Massapequa, Massapequa_Park and Plainedge. |
| Creator |
Caroline_Bunting_Klesh Edith_Seaman |
| Publisher |
Frank J. Klesh |
| Contributors |
Scanned and prepared by Hudson_Microimaging, Port_Ewen, NY 12466. |
| Date |
1975 |
| Digital Date |
2008 |
| Type |
Periodical |
| Format |
PDF TIFF |
| Source |
Farmingdale_Public_Library |
| Language |
English |
| Coverage |
United_States |
| Rights |
Digital_Rights Farmingdale_Public_Library. |
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