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Hewlett East Rockaway Lynbrook Malverne Valley Stream Lakeview
Vol. 3, No. 39 Kiuered HS Soronii-Class Matter,
Post Office. Lynbrook, N. Y. LYNBROOK, N. Y., THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1964 LY 3-1300 lO^zf Per Copy
I L
. - (State Photo)
FRANCIS T. PURCELL, Republican Candidate for Assemblyman in
the 1st Assembly District, receives congratulations from State Senator Nor-man
F. Lent, Jr. Both Mr. Purcell and Senator Lent are life-long Repub-licans
and high school chums, both having graduated from Malverne High
School.
Diner in E.R. Draws Complaints
At the East Rockaway Village Board Meeting last Monday
night there was a heated discussion regarding the diner which
is to be erected on the corner of Baisley Ave. and Main St. Many
persons residing in the area voiced their displeasure at the
thought of this type of business in their back yard.
The biggest grievances were di~ •
rected at the parking situation and
the fact that it was to be a 24 hour
operation. Also under discussion
was the proposed means of ingress
and egress from the diner.
All of the above complaints
seem to stem from the fact that the
^ars would be using Baisley A\'e.
mure than Main St. The oNerfiow
of cars, if any, from the diner park-ing
lot would use the Municipal
lot on Baisley and entrances and
exits to the diner lot would be on
Baisley Ave. During tiie sununer
months espcciLdly, Baisley Ave. is
very congested due to people com-ing
and going to licwlctt Point
Beach.
Mayor Krull pointed out that the
Municipal lot was there for the use
o f ' t h e business district, of \Nliich
the diner would be a part, but he
stated tliat the Board would take
under advisement the matter of en-trance
to the diner parking lot with
a view toward changing it to Main
f St.
Previously the Mayor had point-ed
out the need for new businesses
in East Rockaway to alleviate the
tax burden of the residents — not
only Village taxes but school taxes
as weD.
Eost Rockaway
Fire Chief On
N.C. Commission
East Rockaway Fire Chief Edwin
C. Graebe has been appointed Chair-man
of the Fourth Battalion which
comprises the Fire Departments of
Lynbrook, Malverne, Lakeview,
Rockville Centre, and East Rocka-way.
This is one of nine battalions
in Nassau County which contain
the 71 Fire Districts.
Craebe now automatically is on
the Fire Commission of the County
of Nassau,
No Fireworks
Nassau County Commissioner of
Police James J. Kelly today remind-ed
residents of the county that only
licensed pyrotechnists are permitted
to «et off fireworks.
"Fireworks are dangerous," he
said, "especially to ehildren. I
ask all parents to help us keep
fireworks out of the hands of chil-dren."
Kelly pointed out that the sale,
distribution, possession or use of
fireworks in any area of the county
is a voilati(m of the state penal law.
Conviction on the misdemeanor
charge can bring punishment of a
fine un to $100 or 90 days in jail,
or both.
Comity police have circulated
warnings to shopkeepers, citing the
law and the penalty for violators.
Kelly reported that 11 arrests were
made during the month of May for
]H)ssession or sale of fireworks.
Eight were for possession, one for
Ijossession with intent to sell, and
two were for the sale of fireworks.
Members of the county force have
been alerted to be especially vigi-lant
for violations of the fireworks
law as the Forth of July approaches.
The reguarly scheduled Board
Meeting of the Bor'd of Trustees
of the Inc. Village ol Malverne
to be held on June 17th, 1964
will be dispensed with.
The next meeting of the Board
of Tnistees will be held on July
1st, at 8:30 P.M.
Carlino — In or
Rumors and counter-rumors o\'er the ouster of Joseph Car-lino
as Nassau County Republican Leader are flying thick and
fast. On Tuesday, the report was that Carhno was out and would
be replaced by'State Senator Edward Speno, along with other
changes in the, Nassau County Republican Organization.
This was quickly denied by all ,
M.H.S. Teen Masicale
The" Scholarship Fund of Mal-verne
Senior High School was dou-bly
enhanced Sunday (June?), by
superb performances of outstanding-musically
talented Malverne youths
and by the swelling of the higher
education fund through donations
contributed by an appreciative aud-ience.
The Sunday afternoon occas-ion
was the Second Annual Musicale,
sponsored by the Senior High School
Teen Age Council and given at the
High School Auditorium.
The program afforded the com-munity
a rare opportimity to see
and hear over 50 young Malverne
people demonstrate their fine musi-cal
abilities in a tasteful and varied
recital; the audience reaction dur-ing
the event and the favorable
comments after the Musicale in-dicated
a high degree of satisfac-tion
with the artistic and cultural
accomplishment and development of
the half-hundred young performers.
Soloiss included: Steven Margos-hes,
pianist, who offered a brilliant
perormance of Kabalevsky's "Finale
of the Third Piano Sonata"; Steph-anie
Macklin, an accomplished lyric
soprano who sang "Solveg Song
from Peer Gvnt" by Grieg; Jonathan
Jeter, popular wrestler-pianist, who
played a bright medley of his own
arrangements of favorite standard
songs; Harlan Wechsler, Malverne
High Ahimnus, who otfercv! an ar-tistic
Bach recital on the' Memorial
Organ; and Marc Saperstein, also a
Malverne alumnus, who presented
Chopin's "Scherzo in B-flat Minor"
with concert proficiency. Bodi Sap-erstein
and Wechsler are, presently,
Harvaril stutlents.
Mendelssohn's "1'rio in D-Minor-
Allegro Appasiouata' was offered by:
Steven Margoshes, piano; Douglas
^Continued on page 7)
concerned and in a display of unity,
all leaders met Carlino at the airport
yesterday as he returned from a
speaking engagement in Buffalo.
Carlino has been blamed in many
quarters for the poor showing of
Regular Republican Candidates in
the recent Primary Election. Francis
T. Purcell defeated the Party
choice in the First Assembly Dis-trict
and Ralph Edsell barely
squeezed past Eugene Clavin in the
race for the seat being vacated by
Frank J. Becker. In addition, a
Goldwater candidate won one con-test,
and there is still the possibility
of another victory.
Mr. Carlino cannot be kicked out,
but a vote of no-confidence by the
executive committee might force
him to step down. It is evident that
the committee feels that Mr. Car-lino
might be an anchor in the com-ing
November elections.
In many districts, drives will be
started at the proper time to oust
committeemen aligned with Car-
(Continued on page 11)
The second meeting in June
of the Board of Trustees of the
incorporated Village of Lynbrook
has been postponed from June
15th to June 22nd, to the Con-
15th to June 22nd, due to the
Conference of Mayors annual
meeting being held on June 15th.
Lyn. Boy Accepted
At Annapolis
Congressman Frank J. Becker ha^
annoimced that not only has his
principal appointee been accepted
to enter Annapolis on June 30, but
also one of his qualified alternates,
J E F F R E Y A. FAGAN, 76 Waverly
Ave., Lynbrook, has also been noti-fied
that he has been selected for
entry at the same time.
Congressman Becker stated: Be-cause
of the high standards of selec-tion
for my appomtees, great mon-sideration
is given by the Academy
officials, every year, to my alternate's
list. Jeftrey Fagan is the second
boy chosen from my alternates list
this year. Of the two Midshipmen I
have graduating from the Academy
this year, one was a qualified alter-nate,
chosen by the Selection Board.
The other. Midshipman Michael C.
Berkowitz of Woodmere, is receiving
high honors from the Academy and
has been awarded a graduate study
grant as a Fulbriglit Scholar.
"My graduate from the Air Force
Academy in Colorado, Cadet Robert
Lodge of Lynbrook, has received
some of the highest honors given
tliis year. I am indeed proud of the
e x c e l l e n t achievements of these
young men, who are to be the fut-ure
military leaders of our country."
COUNTY EXECUTIVE EUGENE H. NICKERSON AND MAYOR
CHARLES M. KRULL OF EAST ROCKAWAY snip a ribbon opeixing a
free boat launching ramp at Bay Park. Accommodating boats up to 26 feet
in length, the Bay Park ramp is the second ia the County's system. The
other is at Milburn Creek inthe Baldwin-Freeport area
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | The-Helm_1964-06-11; 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 | 1964 |
| 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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