{ title: 'The Long Island advance. (Patchogue, N.Y.) 1961-current, July 27, 1961, Page 5, Image 5', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-07-27/ed-1/seq-5/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-07-27/ed-1/seq-5.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-07-27/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-07-27/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Suffolk Cooperative Library System
Supervisors Over Ride Exec ' s Airport Bill Veto Victory for Cromarty: RIVERHEAD — Tht Suffolk Board of Supervisors , b y a 7-to-3 vote has o\ erridden Count y Executive H. Lee Dennison ' s veto of an (arlier i csolulion which withdrew two airports in Babylon Townshi p j ' -om the county-wide multi-million dollar airport program. The action to override Mr. Dennison ' s veto, taken at Monday ' s board meeting, was a victoiy ior |;ab\ .on Supervisor Arthur Cro- maiij. Th. \ airport program was titst adopted by the board April 10 , aft\r p lans for county air- port ^ in Huntington , lsli p and East Hampton were withdrawn by home-rule roso ' utions of the su- pei vigors from those towns. Tlu ee week* ago. Mr. Cromarty, b y another home-rule reso ut ' on. which was adopted unanimousl y by the 10-niember board , wi thdrew Deer Park and Zahn ' s Airports 11 (.in the program. Mr. Dennison la-t week vetoed the resolution , and the stage was set for the show down Monday. Mr. Cromarty introduced the resolution to override the veto and it was quickl y seconded by Shelter Island Supervisor Evans Grilling. Three Democratic super- visors , William Bain of East Hampton; August Stout of Brook- haven and Robert Brady of Smith- t o w n . changed their original \home-ruV' vote , and vo ted anain st the overridin g resolution. Huntin gton ' s Democratic Super- visor Robert J. Fl ynn and Super- visor William J. Leonard joined in with the five Republicans to carry the resolution b y the neces- sary seven affirmative, votes. Mr. Fl ynn called Mr. Cromar- ty ' s action \ politicall y motivated , but agreed with Mr. Cromart y that the crowded western end of Suffolk should not be developed airportwise. Both Mr. Flynn and Mr. Leonard said they recognized the riiiht of anv supervisor to withdraw fiom any over-all pro- gram he felt was not in the best inteiesfs of his respective town- ship. 'l he onl y east-end supervisor to st.ck with Mr. Dennison in his \eto of Mr. Cromarty s home-rule resolution was Mr. Bain , who vot- \( i wJihuut comment. Mr. Cromarty hailed the over- riding resolution of the boai J. as a victory for the \home-rule of the townships . \ \This proves that the right oi self determination is sti'I a 'ivc and that the county executive ' s p lan to centralize the entire coun- ty into one huge bureaucracy is being opposed , \ he stated. \This overriding of the county execu- tive ' s attempt at a take-over is good news not onl y for residents of my town , but is an important victory for every town. \ Mr. Dennison later admitted he was not surprised at Mr. Leon- ard' s vote , but was \ somewha surprised at the vote of Fl ynn. \ He said the program was damag- ed \temporarily \ but tb<> i there were alternate sites in mind. The count y executive said that the two Babylon airports may sti'I end up in the count y system. \The owners would like to sell them to us , \ he continued. \However , there are no negotiations at this point , \ Mr. Dennison stated. Mr. Dennison said Mr. Cromar- ty ' s action \is politicall y motivat- ed to bolster himself for the com- ing election. \ ,^fes^ WE'VE £ 5Wf DONE IT! BBS fi \ J CREAM PUFF CORNER YES , WE'VE MOVED CREAM-PUFF A \ -m CORNER' I* MSJ OUR NEW LOCAT | ° N 4 ^ j k MEDFORD AVE. % /. \jlt i f [Rt 112] OPPOSITE '^WP ROE BOULEVARD PATCHOGUE , N. Y. LAT E MODEL USED CARS Bm^ that are exceptionall y clean - F^^K ' Iff^ % Always a nice p lace to do ^ ^lB jp ($R , jfe*\ ' You 'll be glad you did. So ^^^^T take a look at the . . . i ^rCT P ^i ^- J ^- FINEST CARS AROUND! ,^^— HK _^ Known As CREAM PUFFS . And Here ll^kiififi §M Are Just A Few Of Them... SEE TH EM ^ ^Gg^^, • '60 CHEVROLET • '57 CHEVROLET ^SSSiSmm VW 2-Door Bel Air V-8. A/T , 4-Door , Hardtop ^^l|il§ Pv»?P^ ^^ • '59 CHEVROLET • '57 DODGE ^mJ^T V-8 . A/T S-»ort Coupe 2-Door Hardtop • '59 IMPERIAL • '57 FORD \^^^^^ kmm \\ Fnil po« fr 2-T)oor. H/T Station Wasron. V-8 , A/T Jk*—^B Mtwn ^ ^flWg'^gS* • • '59 MERCURY • '57 MERCURY «)|@HMH@^Li *\ ? «> . ^ r •>«« .. 2-Door ^-8 , A / T - Power • '59 BUICK • '56 CHEVROLET __^^ B ^< • '59 OLDSMOBILE • ^56 FORD T ^j8S W^^ ^^ • '59 LARK 00 \ H0L • '56 BUICK V\8 wmmyfr ^ «3w; on w„~„n Pull Power. Convertible { / ' 'j>^- I^H^B^^M • '58 CADILLAC • '56 FORD ; ; r ^- ' f '^ T ~^l c<vn^p r «;M,. C „ M Power 4-Door Fair. V-8 '?' '<& L _ = »iflESlS ^ • '58 MERCURY ° '56 OLDSMOBILE ' !sa ©^ s V ftl 4-Hr.or Wor^«oy> 4-Door Hardtop • '58 FORD • '56 FORD L JSS I ^^— : H \ / T A / T ' Fa ,r ' 500 , 2 ' Door • »« ° r CADIT I AC ^^^^fHBfafBMMp ^ W D/ \JLUbMOtSlL E Full Power and Air Con- ^*F ' ^b/ 2-Door , H/T . V-8 , A/T , Power ditioninjr ^ ^ m ~ y , PHONE GRover 5-4477 — ASK FOR fiBS^^^^^ |l4 FRANK HOLZ or FRANK SIMSON i^gPBi«Mg)8 * OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. —SATURDAYS , 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. HOLZ MOTORS , 225 MEDFORD AVE . , PATCHOGUE , N. Y. \WHER E GOOD CARS GET TOGETHER \ GRATEFUL MOTHER , Mrs. Cathenne Andrews , Bernstein Road , Center Moriches , thanks life- guards Paul Schloug h , left , of 18 Amity Street , Patchogue , and Raymond Mann . 40 Grenville Avenue , Patchogue. for saving lives of daugh- ter Charlette , '0, and 11-year-old playmate , Bar- bara Mallard >f Brooklyn , Saturday at Kaler Pond , East Moriches. Charlette and Barbara , both non-swimmers , apparently wandered into water over their heads. Schlough revived Char- lette with rescue breathin<> and Mann pulled Barbara to shore and revived her with artificial resp iration . —Advance Photo Lifeguards Continued from page 1 , this section that it could have been worse. I' m thankful that she is all ri ght. \ Saturday ' s brush with death dramatically illustrated the need for a telep hone at Kaler Pond. At the time of the accident , Jim Shane of Union Avenue , Center Moriches, raced GOO yards to the home of Emil Voll where he placed • the emergency call. He made the trip in minutes , but members of the emergency crew stressed the importance of seconds in a submersion case. Brookhaven Town Supervisor August Stout' s office told The Advance Monday that a p hone had been ordered in- stalled at the pond before Satur- day ' s accident and that is should be installed any day now. The American Newspaper Pub- lishers Association was founded in 1887. District 12 Limits School Bus Use; Enrollment Rises The Board of Education of Mid- dle Island Central School District 12 adopted a policy July ID to limit the use of district buses to \ school-sponsored activities of an educational or recreational na- ture. \ Dr. Louis V. Nannini, district principal , said the action was ta- ken at a regular board meeting in comp liance with state regula- tions. The board said it planned to move into its new district head- quarters in the former East Mid- dle Island School on the Rocky- Point-Yaphank Road in early Au- gust. Headquarters are at present located on Route 25 , Middle Island. The East Middle Island School which was built in 1927 , will not be used for the next school year. Twenty-five new classrooms are expected to be completed by Sep- tember 1 , Dr. Nannini said. Bus Contracts Bus contracts totalling $75, 200 were awarded by the board. John Anastasi , administrative assistant for business affairs , who is in charge of the district' s bus trans- portation , said reci pients of the bus contracts , the number of buses in each contract , ar.d the bid sub- mitted , were as follows : Adel- werth' s Bus Service of Eastport seven buses , $40 , 410 ; Coram Bus Service , Inc., of Coram , three , $16- 800; Victor Polonski of Southern Boulevard , East Patchogue , two , $11,550 , and Frank Boeni g of Wa- ding River, one , $6 , 500. Mr. Boenig will transport students to paro- chial schools in the east end of the district , Ml* . Anastasi said , and station wagons or buses will bring students to parochial schools in the west end depending upon the num- ber of pup ils involved. The board set the probationary period for civil service employees at 26 weeks. Dr. Nannini said the board has an option to set the period from eight to 26 weeks. Hired as custodians were John Rindos of Wellington Road , P .id- die Island , and August Macedi of Upton Road , the Ridge. Enrollment Increase Student enrollment in the dis- trict is expected to increase 514 pupils in the Fall from 1 , 126 on June 30 to an anticipated 1 , 640 on September 1 , Dr. Nannini said. Tenth , eleventh and twelfth grade students will continue to at- tend Port Jefferson Hi gh School at tuition of $400 per pupil , an increase of $25 over last year , he said. Students from kindergarten through the ninth grade will go to district schools. Last year , he said , the district had pupils from kindergarten through the eighth grade. Some junior high school students — seventh , eig hth and ninth graders — will be in Coram School , which will be temporarily designated Longwood High School , Dr. Nannini said. Enrollment in the dfstrict s schools as of June 30 and the an- ticipated enrollment September 1 for the schools which will be open- ed , is as follows , according to figures presented by Dr. Nannini ; The Ridge School , 188 and 400 ; Main Street School , 100 , to be closed; Charles E. Walters Schooy 240 , and 420; West Middle Island School , 260 and 420 ; Estonian Hall 80 , not to be used ; Coram School 109 , and 400 , since 11 classi'ooms will have been added; East Middle Island School , 55 , to be closed , and The Annex , 94 , to be rented by the district. f «\w S M Head f or the breeziest spot you can f ind 'J- ss^ this weekend . . . but don ' t budge ^^fe \fe ! A* on inch ' til you shop N*« gP ^ ^4- • JF ^^ ^ ots on Sale 9:30 a.m. Friday, i«p^ anc j a jj j ^ Saturday and Monday ! Ifc ODD LOT DAYS! -^— ^~- Limited Quantities ! Broken sizes and sty les ! All Sales Final ! ACCESSORIES ! j 1 PRE-TEENS ! Reg. 10.98 imp ort bags , leather j R Daytime Cottons ! Reg. 24.98 suits , pre-teen trimmed Italian straws , 6.97 T , NEW 5.98 styles ! dress-up styles 14.98 Reg. 2.98 jewel boxes , **, ** velvet lined \leather look\ ....1.87 3.9® Reg . 19.98 suits 10.98 LINGERIE ' 0ur loveliest s u nback s , in a shim- Reg. 24.98 coats 14.98 mering rainbow of pastels , plus D _ _ . . Reg. 3.95 half sli p, famous- White. Sizes 5-15 , but not every Re^' 12-98 3 ackets 7.98 maker ny lon , White only 1 .98 color in every size . Reg# 4>9g nandbags > 249 p lus tax Reg. 5.95 sli p, famed maker Fashion Shop, First Floor „ « rt0 . „ „ Aex t White onl y, lace trimmed 2.98 Reg. 2.98 handbags .. .. 1 .49 plus tax Reg. 5.99 dusters , cotton 3.99 R eg# 4>98 Jam^ sets , Reg. 8.98 bouffant petties , INFANT S TOHni FR<; f 2 \P c -> assorted prints 2.49 lavish lace trim , tiered 5.99 IN^ANl^- l UDDLERb ! ^' Reg. 5.95-13.95 nig hties , Reg. 16.98 coat ' n cap set , Reg- 7 - 98 swim sults > 3 P C lovely colors and details..3.99-8.99 toddler boys 8.58 \ modified Bikini\ styles 4.99 o a r^un norM i Re S - ^- 98 coat ' n ca P *** > 3-6x CHILDREN ! toddIer boys 7 98 LINENS ! Reg. to 2.98 shirts , boys ' Reg u 9g coat (]) b 6 gg Reg 59S S p re ads , cotton polos and print flannels $1 a , T . v ,, . P 1QQ o lif Reg. 5.98 suit (1) g irls 4.78 florals ' Twm or Ful1 size ' Reg. 19.98 suits , s * some Provincial prints 4.77 boys ' dress 10.98 Reg. 10.98 suit (1) boys 7.18 Reg 15.98 coat ' n cap Reg ?>98 ^ boys 6#88 Reg. $1 scarf- oval \ eyelet set , boys '.'o lace plastic 36 x 22 47c Reg. 16.98 coat ' n cap Re 2. 2 - 98 dia P er set s » set boys 8.58 infants ' print styles 1 .69 Reg . 1.98 \kiddie \ towel set , Reg. 14.98 suits , boys 6.98 Reg. 5.98 blankets , 36x50....3.98 includes bath and face cloth....97c _______—— l Reg. 5.98 quilt set , nylon 3.98 ^ Boys ' 'Fortified' Slacks ! 7-14 GIRLS ! Misses ' Blouses , Shirts ! Reg. 3.98-4.98 drip-dry Reg# 3#98 J ama ica sets 1 .99 ' Re^ 2-98 to 7'9S st > les 2.99 Reg. 2.98 deck pants 1 .49 1.59 to 4.99 Not just ordinary cotton slacks , Reg. 19.98 Suits , g irls ' ' Our gayest blouse and shirt col- but deluxe 9 oz. sateen , \forti- dress-up sty les 10.98 lection at a clear-away reduction. fied\ for extra mileage with Du- P 1 fi QQ * * A RQ Famous makers , finest fabrics , Pont \420\ Nylon! Sizes 6-12. KCg* ^'^ SUUS ° breath-taking detailing! Boys ' Shop, First Floor Reg. 24.98 COatS 14.98 Blouses , First Floor L I Reg . 19.98 coats 10.98 !_ The Bee Hive . . . Suffolk County ' s \Department Store of Famous Brands \ . . . East Main Street , Patchogue. Sorry, no mail or p hone orders on Clearance items. Plenty of parking, always . . . three (3) free lots within a block! NPYAC Team Continued from page 1 , this section games from Hornell , involving the NPYAC team. The team will be housed in an armory in Hornell. Its members include Richard Grande , Dick Die- terle , Steve Jones , Eugene Naiar- di , Joe Hauser , Ray Fell , Bill Toth , Charles Mischo , Jr., batboy; Dick Powell , Chuck Duval . Earl Stuart, Terry Rowse , Rust y Okies , Paul M'-Rae , Phil Liguori and Bobby M ischo. College Administration Moves to Campus Mon. School Begins Sept. 25: Officials of Suffolk Count y Communit y College will move into the renovated administration building Monday on the new college campus which was the former site of the Suffolk Count y Sunatoriirn. Reg istration for the new school yta 1 ' will bo held September 18, 19 and 20 at the campus. Classes will beg ; n September 2f> for the school' s second academic year. Last year classes were held at Sachem Se nior High School of School District 5 , with an enroll- ment of l '/2 full-time students , and 300 part-time students . LeRoy VanNostrand , Jr. , chair- man of the board of trustees , said that 502 freshman have been ac- cepted for full-time study. Ht- said he expected close to (ioO full-time students by September and a total part-time enrollment of about 1 , 000 students. ''We have a real college here , \ said Mr. VanNostrand. \This is a larger enrollment than we antici- pated and it will be hard to ac- commodate all of the students , but it will be done. \ The board chairman said the cement drivers ' strike will not de- lay the Fall opening of the col- lege , but it has slowed renovation of former sanatorium buildings. Two frame buildings , former nurses ' quarters , have been reno 1 vated to , provide two classrooms on the first floor and two on the second floor of each structure. Woi'k is progressing at the old infirmary, which will be converted into a student union and cafeteria on the first floor and a depart- ment for the teaching of busi- ness on the second floor . Reno- vation is also continuing in the Marshall Building, which will be made into the college ' s science building with six classrooms on taci. floor of the two-stoi'i struc- ture. The basement of the Ross build- ing which housed the County Mental Health Department , will be converted to a library. The Advance is on sale at Otto ' s Stationery, G & G Luncheonette , Mc Carthy ' s Luncheonette , Krause Delicatessen , Joh n ' s Grocery Store , TO BE SUCCESSFUL — ADVERTISE New Dredg ing Continued from page 1 , this section the restoration of the dunes could be made permanent. He recently voted against a similar resolution concerning Great South Beach in Southampton Township. The board requested the State Department of Public Works to conduct the survey to restore the dune areas between Smiths Point County Park and Mloriches Inlet, a distance of six miles. Count y Executive H. Lee Den- nison said that the Board of Su- pervisors will then study the sur- vey to determine whether or not Suffolk will enter into a joint program with the state. Suffolk is to pay half of the cost of the survey estimated at $5 , 000. Mr. Dennison said he had no idea of the cost of replenishing the dunes , but noted thai a sur- vey undertaken by the federal government for erosion protection along the entire south shore of Suffolk estimated the cost for that entire project at $35 , 00u , 000. Easiest way to crush your sales laurels is to lean on them hard. Austerity Budget Continued from page 1 , this section fleeting a $28, 000 decrease from the $2 , 358 (510 budget defeated May 2. The revised basic budget would have called for an estimated tax rate of $10.28 , which wo.ild have included the eo^t of present educational st rvices ami present transportation services. It was de- feated by a vote of 1 , 017 to 71)7. The district, which includes Bellport , Brookhaven and Ea. - .t Patchogue , has been on a tem- porary austerity program since July 1. There have been no recre- ation program , no Summer music programs , concerts or lessons , no upkeep of grounds and no Sum- mer use of buildings b y B o y Scouts , Girl Scouts or other groups. i TRY OUR CLASSIFIED COLUMNS