December 5, 1968 FARMINGDALE OBSERVER PAGE 7
Highlighting
Local
Events
PLAINEDGE PL
FILM SHOWING
The films to be presented
Saturday, December 7 at the
Plainedge Public Library are
" Paddle to the Sea," " Roy,
Sheep Dog of the Scottish
Highlands," and " Sorcerer's
Apprentice." The film series
for elementary school children
is held every other Saturday
at 10: 30 a. m. in the library.
On Thursday, December 12,
at 8: 00 p. m. the film, " Nothing
But a Man" will be presented
at the Plainedge Public
Library. Admission is free.
MASS. PLAY
SHOWS PHOTOGRAPHY
A special exhibition, contemporary
Photography
Since 1950 may be seen at
the Bar Harbour Building of
the Massapequa Public Library,
40 Harbor Lane,
across from the Bar Harbor
Shopping Center, through to
January 4. This is an outstanding
exhibit of great
picutres from Eastman
House, Rochester, New
York. It comes to Massapequa
after having been shown
in many other communities
and many colleges and universities
in the East. It is being
subsidized by the New
York State Council on the
Arts.
HOLIDAYS BRIGHTENED
WITH POETRY READINGS
Dramatic readings of poetry
will brighten the holiday
season for the American Association
of University
Women in Manhasset and
the Sisterhood of the Farm-ingdale
Jewish Center.
" Poetry Highlights", a specially
designed program developed
by Ann White and Laurie
James, will be presented at
the Christmas meeting of the
AAUW at the Congregational
Church in Manhasset on
December 9 at 8 p. m.
For Chanukah the Farming-dale
Jewish Center will feature
the program, " Again, Again
A New Beginning," also originated
and performed by the
two Long Island actresses.
In January programs designed
for elementary
school children will be initiated
in Commack.
The actresses very success-fulprogram,
" Famous American
Women Poets", will be repeated
on Valentine's Day,
February 14,1969, at the Farm-ingdale
Library.
LEAGUE OF WOMEN
VOTERS HOLD MEETING
The League of Women Voters
of the Town of Oyster Bay
is holding a meeting on December
11, 1968 at 8: 30 P. M. at
the home of Mrs. Myron Hud
erman, 7 Quail Court, Plain-view
to discuss and devise
methods for constitutional
change. All interested women
are welcome to attend. Refreshments
will be served.
BETHPAGE PL
HIGHLIGHTS SOCIOLOGIST
What is Nigeria really like
today? How does the Peace
Corps function in Turkey?
What happens to abandoned
children in Turkey, many of
them the illegitimate offspring
of American servicemen?
Hear Laura B. Brown, sociologist,
answer these questions
and many others at the
next meeting of the Friends of
the Bethpage Public Library,
at the library on Powell Avenue,
Friday, December 13th,
8: 30 P. M. Miss Brown, born in
Birmingham, Alabama, graduated
from Dillard University,
New Orleans, in 1963. She
spent the next six months as a
teacher in Nigeria with Crossroads
Africa, and the follow
ing two years as a Peace
Corps worker in the orphanages
of Turkey. Following her
years in Asia Minor and Africa,
she worked under the Haryou
Act in Harlem and then with
the Urban Opportunities
Program. She is presently
studying for a master's degree
in Social Work at New York
University under a federal
grant...
Her exciting and timely
program, which includes color
slides, is free and open to the
public. Everyone is urged to
attend.
PLAINEDGE LIBRARY
FILM SERIES CONTINUES
The next presentation in the
Plainedge Public Library's
film series for adults will be
on December 12 at 8: 00 pm.
It is NOTHING BUT A
MAN starring Ivan Dixon
and Abbey Lincoln and is the
story of the struggle of a
young Negro couple in Alabama
trying to achieve a
reasonably secure and dignified
life for themselves. The
story transcends the race
issue and deals with the
universally significant question
of personal integrity.
EAST NASSAU ADL TO
HONOR FIVE B'NAI
BR1TII LEADERS
The East Nassau Division
of the Anti- Defamation League
Appeal will honor five local
B'nai B'rith leaders a a testimonial
breakfast on Sunday,
December 8, at the Temple
Beth El of Bellmore.
The award recipients and
their B'nai B'rith lodges are:
Dr. Eugene Arden of Central
Nassau Lodge; Milton Jonas,
Fidelty Lodge; Lloyd Jor-risch,
Colossus Lodge; Joseph
M. Seltzer, Meadow-brook
Lodge; and Walter
Weltman, Pioneer Lodge.
Citations to the five will
be " for advancing the cause
of human rights."
The announcement was made
by division chairman Adrian
Friedman. Sidney Schlosser
is the breakfast chairman.
The ADL Appeal is campaigning
across the country
for $ 6,193,000 to support a
program of intergroup research
and education, community
relations and civil
rights conducted by the
Anti - Defamation League
of B'nai B'rith. Founded in
1913, ADL is a leadership
group of American Jews and
one of the oldest and largest
human relations agencies in
the country.
SISTERHOOD TO MEET
The next regular meeting
the Sisterhood of the Farming-dale
Jewish Center will be held,
at 425 Fulton Street, Farming-dale
at 8: 30 P. M. on Tuesday,
December 10.
MORE INFORMATIVE
LOCAL READING
. . IN THE OBSERVER
LIBI Wants
" Charges"
Backed Up
Opponents of apartment
houses who appear before
Nassau and Suffolk Planning
and Zoning Boards and
other agencies should be required
to substantiate their
" charges," it was asserted
by Timothy J. Mclnerney,
Executive Vice President
of the Long Island Builders
Institute, in a talk before
the members of the Long
Island Chapter of the consulting
Engineers Council of
New ork State Inc.
The talk was given at the
regular monthly meeting of
the Chapter, Wednesday
evening, December 4, at the
Milleridge Inn, Jericho. Mclnerney
was introduced by
Warren A. Sambach, President
of the Chapter.
According to Mclnerney,
the " charges" indiscriminately
leveled at new apartment
houses by representatives
of civic groups, school
boards, and others claim
" they increase the student
bodies in schools, add to the
cost of municipal services,
and bring in undesirables."
" Actually, apartment
houses do none of these
things," Mclnerney declared.
" Survey after survey shows
that apartment houses cause
less of a burden on schools
than do single family homes;
their tax contributions more
than compensate for the
municipal services they
require; and they provide
housing for young newly-weds
and older people— all
residents of Long Island."
The LIBI official asserted
that those who make the unfounded
charges are never
asked to back up their allegations.
Multifamily housing,
according to Mclnerney, is
a necessary adjunct of
suburban housing. The proper
controls can be exercised
to prevent apartment
houses from becoming
replicas of certain housing
prevalent in Brooklyn,
Queens, Manhattan and
Bronx, and which many
people picture as being
that planned for Nassau
and Suffolk.
" Throughout Long Island,"
he said, " there is
ample evidence that the
building industry on Long Island
has demonstrated that
it has the talent and the
know- how to produce apartment
houses that conform to
suburban architecture. Planning
Boards, zoning officials
and others have the necessary
power to make certain
that this housing conforms to
the requirements."
put on a pretty face
BY
Aubrey McDonald
Does YOUR mirror reflect the radiant look of good health? If
so, your complexion has a miost, fine- textured look.
Obeying Mother Nature's rules of drinking plenty of water, get-ing
adequate rest and breatning good fresh air is important.
However, if you are adhering to these good health factors and
are still disappointed in your complexion, perhaps the fault lies
in improper cleansing of your
face.
Proper cleansing is of the
utmost importance, it prepares
the skin for the moisturizer
and make- up or night
cream. If the c o m p l e x i on
is not thoroughly clean, your
night cream will not be effective
because it will be applied
to clogged pores. When makeup
is applied to a face which
is not scrupulously clean, it
lacks the morning- fresh look
and distorts make- up tones.
Today's fashions are geared
to the " girl- on- the- go." Let me
help you achieve a " girl- on- the-glow"
complexion. It's as easy
as counting to five!
1. Apply Fashion Two Twenty
Cleansing Cream to your forehead,
chin, nose and cheeks.
Massage this creamy liquid
into your skin with gentle upward
and outward movements.
2. Moisten fingertips and continue
to massage cream into
the skin. Be sure to raise elbows
to shoulder height. This
will give you greater leverage
and will make your massage
more effective.
3. Massage your throat with
your entire hand, cupping it to
fit around throat and chin.
4. Begin at the center of the
forehead and massage, drawing
your fingers toward the
temple.
5. Apply a moist face cloth to
the complexion and g e n t ly
wipe off cleansing cream, using
upward and outward massage
stroke. Repeat until cloth is
free of makeup and complexion
is sparkly clean.
Yes, it's really that simple!
Let me remind you to always
use upward and outward massage
strokes. Circular or downward
strokes stretch the skin.
However, avoid massaging the
under- eye area. This is extremely
delicate tissue and must be
pampered by gently patting.
You'll be pleased with your
vital, new look. Think pleasant
thoughts and your " inner glow"
will be as luminous as your
radiantly clean complexion!
m
Happiness
is being up to your neck in hot water
. . . from a new Gulf Econojet Water
Heater. Everyone in the family can take
a bath and you'll still have all the hot
water needed for the kitchen and laundry.
The Gulf Econojet Water Heater
produces hot water faster than your
entire family can use it.
Size for size, the oil- powered Gulf
Econojet produces hot water faster
and cheaper than gas or electric water
heaters. If you need more hot water, or
if your water heater needs replacing
. . . call us today. §
SOUR HEAT
Econojrr
ROMANELLI & SON
374 FULTON STREET, FARMINGDALE
CH 9- 0813
Gulf Solar Heat makes tfce wannest of Iriendi