{ title: 'The Long Island advance. (Patchogue, N.Y.) 1961-current, November 02, 1961, Page 2, Image 2', 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/sn95071025/1961-11-02/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-11-02/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-11-02/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-11-02/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Suffolk Cooperative Library System
Community Service Award Is Received B y Swezey & Newins Swezey & Newins is one oi 38 stores throughout the country that has been awarded a certifi- c ate of commendation in the \Re- tailing Serves America \ competi- tion. These awards were made by the National Retail Merchants As- soc iation in conjunction with the Reader ' s Digest. Outstanding acts of community seivice piacticod by retail stores weie singled out for the national recognition. The Patchogue de- partment store progiam was its \Salute to Service \ presentation in which the store ' s entire window space was devoted to telling the story of 32 local service organi- zations to the community. The program was designed to provide more information about the ser- vices and the organizations to new residents of fast-growing Suffolk County. All 38 recipients are semi-final- ists in - the \Retailing Serves America \ Commendation awards competition w hich will take place tomorrow at the Reader ' s Digest in its Pleasantville headquarters. W^^mS ^m^^ m. V ^ mU. ^ m. 9 ^ ^^^ [ MEDFORD HOTEL I dag 90 ' s Atmofipljere | DELICIOUS STEAK or CHICKEN DINNER $1 .00 (Ser\ ed from 10 a.m . to closing) OLD T IMER'S NIGHT Every Friday and Saturday sing and Dance :: Impromptu Entertainment -:o:- M VKE \OYll RESERY VTIONS NOW FOR \OUR CHRISTMAS PARTY -:o:- RTE. 112 MUSICIANS AND GRover MEDFORD ENTERTAINERS INVITED 5-9783 I ^-^P-M i uiu im urn m i ULL I ii um » j ll ' ¦^r^»r»>T gr»^lg<rcr<r ^!^g«^Br^r»r» /aa -**,. ^ € lt/^^ ^ ^ I l^K * <* - 2^5? ^M CfehT^ \ I \ ^^^^^^^ ^Z^ ^^^- ^ H ^ / I ^_^^g^M ! M\| f g £&J YOU GET ! Join Our Christinas Club Now ! I 1 962' s CLUB WILL STA RT IN A FEW DAYS. j Drop in and Get All the Information Now ! I THE PATCHOGUE BANK \Service Is Our Business \ . I © 47 West Main Street , Patchogue GRover 5-3020 e Branch Office—468 East Main Street , Patchogue GRover 5-3035 i i , | Friday Evenings — 6:30 P. M. to 8 P. M. I MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE COEP. i i -—**^— — — .~—— — __ — ~mm- - ——— — —», , m mmm—mm — .__. „ . ,__ NSA' S Queen Anne Group in Workshop The Queen Anne chapter of the National Secretaries Association will hold a workshop for secre- taries this Saturday in the audi- torium of St. Peter ' s Church , 500 South Country Road , Bay Shore. Scheduled to start at 9:30 a. m., the workshop will feature the theme , \Charm-It Opens Doors \ , Mrs. Frederick J. Luder , presi- dent of the chapter said. Speakers for the workshop will be Kenneth E. Van Sise , director of evening programs , Suffolk Count y Community College , Sel- den , whose top ic is \Human Re- lations in Business \ ; Mass Elea- nore Phillips of Abraham & Straus , Bab y lon , whose topic is \The Stage is Set for Beauty \ ; and a representative of Gouband De Paris , Hicksville whose top ic is \You Can Look Like a Good Secretary \ . The invocation will be given by the Rev. Canon Sydney R. Peters of St. Peter ' s Church . Canon Peters is an honorary member of the Queen Anne Chapter. Mrs. Robert L. Mullen of North- port is chairma n of the workshop. She is being assisted by Mrs. Frank Liebhaber of Ronkonkoma , Mrs. Rodney Van Housen of Bay Shore and Miss Rosemary Ashura of Amityville. The workshop is open to all interested in attending. For further information call Mrs. Mullen at ANdrew 1-7435. Sorqptimist Int 'l Club Slates Monthly Meeting The Suffolk Soroptimist Inter- national Club will hold its month- ly dinner and meeting Monday at the Suffolk County Republican Clubhouse , Atlantic Avenue , Blue Point , according to President Mrs. Kenneth B. Clayton of Bayport. Dinner will commence at 6:30 p. m. w ith the meeting following. The executive business women ' s service club , a branch of the in- ternational organization , will fi- nalize plans for its annual fund- raising Christmas bazaar and home baked food sale , which will be held November 17 and all day November 18, on East Main Street , Patchogue. |^nmnnnimnnmmumnmm»imiiu»imnnnnmmmmmnmmiinninnuuMimiinninimnnirauiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiinniiiiniiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiuinuii!i | TOAD\ CONKLIN'S GIGANTIC WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE SALE j SA VE • SA VE ® SAVE \ BRAND NE W EVINRUDE OUTBOARD MOTORS I List SALE ! 4 FISHERMAN— 5 1/2 h.p $239.00 $175 I 2 SPORTWIN—lOh.p 335.00 240 I 4 FASTWIN—18 h.p 400.50 299 1 4 BIG TWIN—40 h.p 548.50 399 ! 6 LARK—3 5 h.p 633.50 475 I 1 LARK—40 h.p 649.50 475 LIMITED QUANTITIES :: FACTORY GUARANTEED I © UP TO 24 MONTHS TO PAY • j SORRY , NO TRADES ON THESE SALE MOTORS § I I Ij^lHlijIQ ctf &kiiren Af lr. 4^J0 pf iT Ctf O G U£'U- FOLLOW THE YELLOW ARROW BOAT YARD , Inc. Serving Boat Owners Since 1 920 DISC l SS1NG ISSUES with Assembly man Perry li. ])ur\v\ i . Jr.. ol First AssembU District , sec- ond from left , w ere , left to right : incumbent Jus- ti c e (.» the Peace Erling \. Larsen , tow n super- \IMH \ cv ndid.iu' Charles R. Doiuinj, and Edwin Arnzen. candidate for town clerk. The occasion was a meeting of Sunrise Republican Club at East Moriches Fire House Monday night. —Maple Leaf Photo Service Dr. Ammerman Inaugurated: By John McLain \One of the forces affecting the growth and development of the community college is the growing belief that hig her educational op- portunities must be equalized and that certain barriers to higher education must be eliminated. \ The statement was made by Dr. Albert Merlin Ammerman Sun- day at his inauguration as presi- dent of Sutfolk County Commun- ity College. More than 300 persons attended the ceremony over which Earl L. Vandermeulen , vice-chair- man of the board of trustees , pre- sided in front of the Marshall building on the former grounds of the Suffolk County Sanatorium. Di. Ammerman , who comes to the count y from a position as dean of instruction at Henry Ford Community Co llege , Dearborn , Mich. , was invested by LeRoy Van Nostrand , Jr., chairman of the board of trustees , as the college ' s first president. Last year the col- lege held classes in Sachem Sen- ior High School and Riverhead. This Fall the college has 615 full- time students and 833 part-time evening students for a total of 1 , 448. \The community college philo- soph y, \ continued Dr. Ammerman in his inaugura l address , \ sees the college as a creation and servant of mankind , responsible to the will of its creator , ready to adapt to changing educational needs with appropriate education- al opportunities. It recognizes and emphasizes the fact that there are varieties of valuable abilities that need development , and thus pro- vides for a diversified instruc- tional program . The community college has moved to create op- portunities for citizens of all va- rieties of high ability and of all social and economic classes to de- velop ' their talents for the serv- ice of society and for their own self-interest. \ Dr. Ammerman was welcomed bv county and state leaders. Suf- folk Count y Executive H. Lee Dennison said , Education must be tho source , the well-spring of our freedom . . . and must be the greatest project undertaken by the American peop le. I bring the support , faith and trust of the count y government. \ The Suffolk Count y Board of Supervisors is the local sponsor of the college. Operational costs are financed one-third by the state , one-third by the county and one-third by tuition and fees. The college is under the general supervision of the State University of New York and under the immediate su- pervision of the nine-member board of trustees—all residents of the county. Also welcoming Dr. Ammerman to his position were Boyd E. Col- der , trustee of the State Univer- sity of New York; Walter M. Ormsby, district superintendent of the second supervisory district of Suffolk Count y; Paul B. Orvis , executive dean for institutes and community colleges of the State University, and Dale B. Lake , dean of the college , repiesenting the faculty. The college has 27 full-time faculty members. The historic ceremony was held beneath a green-striped tent on an autumnal day of brilliant sun- shine. The invocation was given b y the Rev. John G. Carew , pas- tor of St. Joseph' s R. C. Church of Lake Ronkonkoma. The Rev. John T. Callander , Jr., pastor of the First Presby terian Church of Port Jefferson , gave the benedic- tion. Music was provided by the 45-member Sachem Hi g h School Band , directed by Thomas L. Ram- sey. Enrollment Growth In his address , which was de- livered in a clear , forthright man - ner , Dr. Ammerman said the community college has shown \the highest rate of expansion of all other units of hi gher educa- tion sei'vice. \ He said enrollments in community colleges , also known as junior colleges , has grown from 75 , 000 in 1930 to 750 , 000 in 1955, to about 1 , 000 , 000 students at present. Indicating the need for such a college in the count y, he said , the State Education Depart- ment reported that in 1959 the county graduated 4 , 700 hig h school students , and the number will reach 10 , 800 in 1965 and 16 , - 000 b y 1970. Dr. Ammerman said one barrier to hi g her education is lack of finances. \When young people can live at home and pay onl y modest tuition fees , the economic barrier is lowered. \ Another barrier is geography, he said. \The com- munity college is lowerin g the sreogranhic barrier by bringing the college to the peop le. \ Noting + he si gnificance of the commuting 1 foPege student. Dr. Ammerman ^bserv^d with humor that Suffolk Count y Community College al- ready faces a parking problem. College Program In his speech Dr. Ammerman , who took an Ed.D. at Wayne State University and his B.A. and M.A. from the Universit y of Michigan , gav e four purposes of the compre- hensive community college ' s pro - gram. These were: 1) the first two years of a liberal arts and science program ; 2) occupational-voca- tional programs of a technical or semi-professional nature ; 3) gen- eral education for all students , and 4) community service pro- grams. He stressed the import- ance of libera l arts and science courses \ paralleling \ the fresh- man-sophomore courses of four- year colleges and universities . Under the second function , he said , \technician \ characterizes a divers e group of occupations \in- termediate between the skilled craftsman and the engineer or scientist. \ Dr. Ammerman stated that the \ gap \ has widened be- tween skilled craftsman and en- gineer and contended the com- munity college \is ideall y situat- ed and organized to fill this im- por t ant gap and to hel p meet our national manpower needs at this semi-prof essioal or technic a l level. \ Under the third function , Dr. Ammerman said , \The basic pur- pose of general education is to provide some communit y of values , ideas , and attitudes essen-J tial as a cohesive force in this age. \ Community colleges in the state may grant either the asso- ciate in arts or tbe associate in app lied science degree. The de- grees require a minimum number of semester hours irr the liberal arts and sciences in the areas of the humanities , social science , na- tura l science and mathematics. One of the most important func- tions of community service is th? adult education program , Dr Ammerman said. He pointed out hat the program permits the out- of-school youth and adult the op- portunity to pursue part-time study toward completing two years of college work during eve- ning hours. Community service also includes forums , institute s and cultural activities for the area , he said. Approximately 70 per cent of the present student body are en- rolled in the liberal arts and sciences , Dr. Ammerman said , and long-range plans are being made to accommodate 4 , 000 full-time students by 1970. \At Suffolk County Community College , \ Dr. Ammerman con- cluded , \ not only must we handle a huge increase in number of stu- dents in the years ahead , but we must offer a high quality of edu- cation. Our society demands the maximum development of individ- ual abilities and potentialities. The motto inscribed on the great seal of the State Universit y of New York says , 'Let each become all he is capable of being. ' As president of Suffolk Count y Com- munity College , I dedicate my energ ies to this proposition. \ Comm. Col lege a Fotxe To Equalize Educatio n Some 125 persons attended the ^emi-annual eel chowder dinner of the Hunters Garden Associa- tion October 19 at Brewster ' s Wood.s between East Moiiches and Riveihead. Paul Bailey of Amityville gave a taj k on Long Island' s partici- pation in the Civil War. Robert Jett of Patchogue exhibited a key front Libby Puson of the Civil War. Robert D. (Captain Bob) New- ins of Patchogue was reelected president and Benjamin Fanning of Riverhead , vice president , of the association. A new secretary- tieasurer , Charles L. Lyon of Coram , was elected. Eel Chowder Dinner Is Attended by 125 TV Ninth Patiho gue Youth Athletu < lul> will gi\e a hunteis Mldj i onise at 7:30 p. m. tomor- row at the James. ' Restaurant on Medtoul Asenue m Patchogue. Th- - > fir-t lte c ream cone was (lig .na' ecl ,r the St. Louis Expo- sition in lS'0-4 . HUNTER s vri:r\ COI KSE I j «wi -mmh *k\mm>i -mm-i •*¦»¦< «*n«*»« ^« .«»w ^^i'«^tp^^ RENT FR EE In exchange for care of 3 children. Mastic area. Immediate Occupancy. 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C^i&^BBBaYimM , , llliilli ll^BB|HI|WBBBMIHHWM Ik \ ' JaBBBBBBBBrnmLm ¦ - - ^ ^->h- t ' wkk ^Wml ;. Jafca \BBBBBBBBBm\\\ ^BBBBBBBBBBBBB ' -^ABWA —BCTEW ^ili ^ j BBWit zi^m . n^^lKlSHft^^^^ltt> M1>^^H^^^M^<ll^flH BBBmW^mmmmmm ^BBm^Bm\\mWmBBBjSBBBB^^BBmm%mmmmmV W, . .mBBBBB wBBBBB «1^f \SHP^Pi^^^^K^^^^B^H^^P^^^Wf^^^^^^l^L^ll^^l^uUfl^^^^H BBB^^BBBBBBmWS^^E ^BBBt^SBBBt^MBBBBBmBt ¦<¦ <-BBBBBm *BBB¥* *$ f-wM^^^B^M?I^^^HIi^^^^H^^^^BMrillliMlli ^^^^^HHlHHniB ^^^^^^^^H ' [KiflBB^^ffiM^CT^Si^\' k^^H - ^TiB I mf i [ \^^ ^^^^^M^^^^^^HHBKI^B^^B^B We wish to thank our many friends and l datives for their many acts of sympathy during our bereavement , in the loss of our dear mother. We aie especially grateful to the Bell port Ambu- lance , Dr. Harder , and Dr. Stah- man. The famil y of the late Mrs. Nellie Eleazev . —Adv. CARD OF THANKS ) The printed word carries the dignity and solemnity of the wed- ding ceremony when you select the expert craftsmanship of The Advance for your wedding invita- tions and announcement s—always at budget prices. —Adv. SWEE T SIXTEEN PA RTY was held at Bette r 'Ole Restaurant in Brookhaven Saturday and 20 guests were present. Pictured from left to right in birthday cake-cutting ceremony are Robert Smith , Harry Weiss , Diane Zeidler , Sandra Row- land , guest of honor , and Clifford Still. —Maple Leaf Photo Service Miss Angela Joan Piccininni , 21 , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Piccininni of 504 Medford Avenue , Patchogue , will be queen of the Military Ball at Noti e Dame Uni- Angela Joan Piccininni vez*sity, South Bend , Ind., Novem- ber 17. Her official title is \Queen of the Sea. \ Miss Piccininni' s fiance , James O. O'Hanlon , 21 , son of Mr. and Mrs. James O'Hanlon of Seaford , cadet lieutenant in the Navy Re- serve Officers Training Corps at Notre Dame , is chairman of the ball. He is also head of the Navy ROTC at the university. Both are graduates of Seton Hall High School , Patchogue. Miss Piccininni is presently employed in the accounting department of the New York Telephone Company ' s Patchogue office. Nanie Patchogue Girl Queen of N avy ROTC Ball at Notre Dame The Kiwanis Club of Patchogue will meet at the Route 112 Lounge at 6:30 p. m. Tuesday. I Charles Mizzi , representing the Suffolk Center for the Emotion- ally Disturbed , will speak on \The Needs of Emotionally Dis- turbed 'Children. \ . Mr. Mizzi is at present teach- ing a post graduate course at Adelphi College on the subject of the mentally retarded. He also teaches special classes at Hemp- stead for emotionally retarded , children , as well as courses in (Nassau County High School. He has a masters degree in child edu- cation and is working on his doc- Kiwanis to Hear Talk On Mentally Retarded I CARD OF THANKS I \The Sprigs , \ Brookhaven Me- morial Hospital Thrift Shop wish to express their appreciation to the many individuals and organ- izations who have so genei'ously contributed clothing and other usable articles. Sincere thanks to those who participated in the recent decora- tion and rearrangement of the shop by supp l y ing equipment , paint and labor.