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LYNBROOK IVIALVERNE EAST ROCKAWAY
V O L R M n A Entered a s Second-Class Matter
yUL. 8 NO. 4 Post Office, Lynbrook, N.?^ LY 3-1300 THE FAMILY NEWSPAPER THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1968 100 I
Lucky Helm-Review Subscriber
Anoffiier/ Lucky Subscrtber of the Helm Independent Review, Mrs. J. Thlemer of 31 Blake Avenue,
Lynbrook. The prize was a gift certificate from Viking Manor Restaurant, 875 Sunrise Highway,
Lynbrook, one of our advertisers. Mr, John Thorp officiated at the selection of the winner. Looking
on is Mr. Marc Lasson, owner of the Viking Manor.
SPECIAL LYNBROOK
VILLAGE ATTORNEY Nixon in Nassau
I
r .
Michael J. Wallace, Esq., 35
Marshall Ave., Lynbrook has
been a^jpointed Special Village
Attorney & Prosecutor for the
Police Court of Lynbrook by the
Mayor and Board of Trustees.
He is a practicing attorney and a
former New York City Corpora-tion
Counsel.
He was born in the Bronx in
the Throgs Neck section and
attended schools there and is a
graduate of Face College and St.
John's University Law School.
He and his wife, the former
Mary Monahan have three chil-dren,
Michael, age 7, Joseph,
age 6, and Douglas, age 2. The
two older children attend West
End School. Mrs. W^lace is a
Class Mother of the P.T.A. there.
Mr. Wallace was the 1968
Chairman of the Cerebral Palsy
Drive in Lynbrook, a member of
the West Lyn Civic Assoc., and a
very active person in community
affairs in Lynbrook. He ran as
the Democratic Candidate for the
old 19th New York Assembly
District. Mike is an able attorney
and an asset to the official Village
of Lynbrook family.
Lynbrook
S a t u r d a y , October
5th, marks the first visit
to Nassau of RichardM.
Nixon, R e p u b l i c an
Presidential can(^date.
Nixon is scheduled to
speak at a rally at Roose-velt
Field at 11 A.M.
All Lynbrook residents
are invited to join a
motorcade leaving from
the Earle Ave. parking
field, (adjacent to the
railroad trestle) Satur-day
morning at 9:45
A.M. For those who do
not have a car or do
not wish to drive, a
special bus will be a-vailable.
For further in-f
o r m a t i o n , residents
may call Lynbrook Re-publican
Headquarters
at 12 Atlantic Ave.. Lvn-brook
and the number
is LY 3-2702.
East Rockaway
East Rockaway res-idents
will be provided
with free bus and auto
transportation to the
Nixon Rally at Roose-velt
Field Shopping Cen-ter
scheduled for Satur-day,
October 5th.
MEET YOUR CANDIDATES By Annette Ling
16th A.D.
Accordii^ to plans
announced by Senator
Norman F. Lent, Repub-lican
Leader of East
Rockaway, a bus and
motorcade will form up
in front of the East
R o c k a w a y American
Legion Hall, Main Street,
East Rockaway, at 9:30
a.m. The motorcade will
depart for Roosevelt
Field Shopping Center
promptly at 10:00 a.m.
All residents are en-couraged
to '*Bring the
Family" and join ap-proximately
200 local
residents for the fun-filled
trip to see the
next President of the
United States and his
wife and family.
James Drohan of 18
Baisley v Avenue, East
Rockaway, New York
(LY 3-4940) is in charge
of the motorcade.
Ted Reinhard, 735
Scranton Avenue (LY 3-
2105) Chairman of U-nited
Citizens for Nix-on-
Agnew, will also
participate, along with
a delegation of in-dependent
Nixon-Agnew
supporters.
GEORGE FARRELL, JR. Ri-
PUBLICAN PARTY CANDIDATE
George Farrell, Jr. born in
1930 in Floral Park, attended
Our Lady of Victory School there,
Xavier High School, and Ford-ham
College'where he received
his A,B.' Degree and then, grad-uated
from Brooklyn Law School
in 1957. He served in the 25th
Infantry Division in the Korean
War from 1952 to 1954. He has
an active law practice in Mineola,
where he it- -^nember of the law
firm of Fritz, Christ, O'Brien,
Allsopp & Farrell. He is a
former officer of the West End
Civic Assoc. of Floral Park, a
former Chairman of the Citizens'
Party there, a Committeeman of
the 104th AJ3. since 1959, a
member of the Zoning Board of
Appeals of Floral Park, from
1964 to the present time he has
served as an Executive Commit-teeman,
Floral Park, in 1963,
he was appointed a Trustee of
Floral Park, in 1963 to 1965
he served as elected Mayor of
Floral Park, he was re-elected
Mayor of the Village of Floral
Park in 1965 and won unopposed
and in 1966 to 1968 he has
Served as a New York State
Assemblyman in Albany.
He and his wife, Patricia have
4 children, Kathleen, age 10,
Kevin, age 5, Joseph, age 8,
and Elizabeth, age 2. He was
born in and raised in Floral
Park and has taken an active
part in a great many charitable
fund raising drives there. He is
a member of the Lions Club
of Floral Park, a member of
American Legion Post #334, a
member of the Bar Assoc. of both
Nassau County and the American
Bar Assoc., a member of the
Republican Club of Floral Park,
the Chairman of Eagle Scout
Board of Review, Matincock
Dist., Honorary Chairman of the
Boy Scout Fund Drive, 1964-65,
Honorary Chairman of Salvation
Army Fund Campaign in 1963,
1964, and 1965, 1962 Chairman
of Cancer Fund Drive, Chair-man
of the Campaign for Elimi-nation
of Aircraft Noise for
Village of Floral Park, Mem-ber
of Nassau County Village
Officials Assoc., Chairman of
the Municipal Affairs Committee,
and finally. Chairman of the
Auditing Committee. He is an
active member of Our Lady of
Victory Catholic Church and is
a member of the Holy Name
Society of that church. He is a
member of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars of Floral Park.
Below are his answers to spe-cific
q^estions asked of each
candidate:
WHAT IS YOUR POSITION ON
THE PROPOSED 20% INCREASE
IN THE NEW YORK STATE IN-COME
TAX?
"It is impossible to effectively
discuss the fiscal requirements
of your state until budget re-quirements
are submitted by all
state departments. My efforts
this year will be to continue
toward reducing state expendi-tures
wherever possible. Last
year, I co-sponsored a bill which
reduced medicaid eiipenses ex-
-a"^n^d^'y i^it airUes br&v u3u0K0 umlilUuiioiink diQytiJr»w«<ea ««an-govehior's
proposed sur-tax. I
shall strive to eliminate the mosr
recent proposal to increase the
income tax and the sales tax.
WHAT ARE YOUR PROPOSALS
ABOUT THE RISING CRIME
RATE IN NEW YORK STATE?
"The rising crime rate is the
result of many factors including
a general l a ^ of respect for
lawful authority, and burdensome
procedures upon law enforcement
outlined by recent Supreme Court
decisions. Our policeman have
been shackled with laws, regu-lations
and court decisions which
make the prosecution of crimi-nals
more difficult today than
ever before. This factor with
the alarming rise in narcotic .
use would jeopardize the safety
of our country.
The sale of narcotics must
be penalized by a mandatory
just sentence.
Treasury Dept. staffs must
be increased to attack the prob-lem
of foreign traffic in nar-cotics,
and to protect the exist-ing
law-abiding citizens.
I support the proposal to study
the resolution to further study
the death penalty and would sup-port
such a proposal of leading
law-abiding law enforcement of-ficials,
both state and federal
that this would act as a deter-rent
to criminal activity.
nil John A. Milano
JOHN A. MILANO, ESQ. DEM-OCRATIC
CANDIDATE
Mr, John A, Milano, practicing
(Continued on page 8)
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | The-Helm_1968-10-03; 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 Ewan, NY 12466 |
| Date | 1968 |
| 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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