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Tile Spotll,IIt VOL. X, NO. ,18 MA Y 6, 1965 $1.00 PER YEAR 1O¢ A COPY THREE GIRLS FROM TRI·VILLAGE AREA ARE FINALISTS IN TULIP QUEEN CONTEST Eleven Finalists in the 1965 Delmar. She was nominated Tulip Queen contest have been by George M. George, pro­ named. The Town of Bethle­ prietor of the stCbre.' Miss hem is well represented by Wheeler, a blond, is twenty three fair ladies. BONNIE.MA­ and lives at 158 Kenwood Av­ SON, a graduate of Bethlehem enue, Elsmere. Her hobbies Central High School, now at­ include horseback riding, ski­ tending State University of New ing and swimming. York resides in Delmar. Miss SUSAN DOWNEY, a nineteen Mason, a blond, nineteen years year old brunette, is a student of age, was nominated by at the Junior College of Al­ Denny Williams, President of bany. She is a graduate of the sophomore class. She lives Bethlehem Central High School, on campus at Brubacker Hall, Delmar, where she was a mem­ and enjoys knitting, skiing and ber of the school orchestra, as swimming. a violinist. Miss Downey is working her way through col­ GRACE WHEElER, also a lege by working as a waitress graduate of Bethlehem Central, at Schrafft1s, Glenmont. She is a secretary for the Albany lives in Retreat Howe, Glen­ law firm of Maynard, O'Connor mont, and spends her spare and Smith, and works part­ time sewing, COOYing and horse­ time in the Plaza Pharmacy, back riding. BCHS MUSIC DEPARTMENT CONCERT TOMORROW NIGHT On May 7, the Bethlehem will conclude the first part of Central Mwic Department will the program -conducted by Mr. present its 30th Spring Concert. James Rhodes. The program will include the The Sen i 0 r High Concert Senior Hi g h Concert Choir, Band, Wlder the direction of Choraliers, Orchestra, Concert Mr. Samuel BozzeUa, has pre­ Band, and Dance Band. The pared a variety type program concert will be held at the to include folk music, marches, Senior High auditorium at 8:00 light jazz, and traditional com­ P.M. positions for band. Band se­ Highlights 0 f the program lections include Mozart's "Im­ include orchestral arrangements presario, II Haydn's "Orlando of both light und Geriou::; com PalandnllO j " O[;tcrlingl::; ''Eall­ positinn,o:;. A mnne t.hp..'\p, ::t.rA dology," and ''Bolero F.c:pannl" Durand's i'lviademc)lseUe de Ly Lecuuua. Featured nuin­ Paris, II Corelli's "Adagio and bers will include a flute en­ Allegro, I' and l'I'heFinale from semble performance of Oster­ Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. " ling's "Beguine for Flutes II and l'Three Cardinals" a trumpet The Bethlehem Concert trio by Davis. Portions of the Choir will sing selections from band concert will be presented fa Each His Own isn't the case here as Col. Keith T. O'Keefe, lIThe Sound of Music II by Rod­ on May 21 when the Band-.per­ ~atervliet Arsenal commanding officer, whose forte is modern weap­ gers and Hammerstein. The fonns as guest of the New York mry, and Joe Higgins, archery expert, examine respectively an ebon­ Choraliers have chosen a var­ State Pavilion at the New York te bow, and the Army's M-14. Both bow and arrow and the M-14 will ied program including "Hello World's Fair. )e demonstrated at the arsenal on May 15 when Springfield Armory Dolly" by Herman, "Father ;mall arms experts fire the M-14 and r...1-60 machine gun, while Joe The evening IS perlormance lnd his colleagues of the Bear Archery Co. Team display amazing William" from Alice in Won­ will also include a short inter­ l1arksmanship magic with their updated versioj;ls of Robin Hood's derland by Fine, and Maragrls lude of light jazz played by avarite weapon. "Anthem for Spring." This the Dance Band. PAGE 2 ~ May 6, 1965 THE 5POTLIGf • Two LITTLE GIRLS aged four while you were away!" and six were left ,in charge of In some alarm, mama grandma while mother did some who died. errands. When mother returned "One of the goldfish," one re­ the girls rushed to her with the plied. "We put it on a piece of statement: "We had a funeral bread and fed it to the cat." When you're HOME-MINDED Enthusiasm and ideas are bountiful these days among the of St. Thomas Parish as plans are fannulated for the Ninth nual Card Party and Fashion Show to be held May 21st at p.m. in the school auditorium. Looking at one of the posters created by Mrs. James W. Clyne for the "Bouquet Fashion II theme are left to right: Mrs. Charles W. Reeves, ident of the Altar-Rosary Society, Rt. Rev. Raymond F. Rooneyi P.A., Pastor, and Mrs. Francis 1. Barclay, General Ce,-C:h'Lil"lnai with Mrs. John W. Mantica who was unable to be present time this picture was taken. Tulip Contest Postponed color. A 11 entries, will be judged by fully Because of the late bloom­ ited out-of-town judges, ing of tulips in the area, the ,list of winners published judges of the Front Yard Plant­ the prize bulbs awarded. ing are unable to make a cor­ deadline for entries will come to the rect decision due to the lack of be May 10, MORTGAGE-MINDED BANK for ECONOMY - MINDED PEOPLE That's us ... City & County Savings Bank, Over $100 Million in sound mortgages in force. Can we add yours? Open 10 AM, to 4 P.M. Fridays until 8 P.M_ 163 Delaware Avenue, Elsmere Opposite Delaware Plaza " DO I SMELL GASOLINE ON YOUR BREATH? " -==::-:-=-::::c:-:-::-:c-=-_.....,--,M-=,-=m",b'-='-='..:',-,der,al Deposit Insurance Corpo~~n_ ~ __ '" _ THE SPOTLIGHT is published every Thursday by Spotlight, I~c., 154 Delaware Avenue, Delmar, N.Y., ROBERT G. KING, PUBLISHER. Dec L line for ne_..... s is Thursday afternc_~n, one week ~rE'cedin9 publication; deadline for dis ploy advertisements is Fr_;d_a-'y'---a_ft_e_m-=o-=a-="-=. ______ HE SPOTLIGHT May 6, 1965 - PAGE 3 lIrnmer Course Registration are 16 years of age on or be­ fore July 10, 1965 and have Registration for the summer not earned a New York State. lourses in Personal Typing and drivers license. One major ~river Education in the Beth­ change from the previous years ehern Central School District to with love .... is that the course will be ex­ MOTHER begin May 17. A pplica­ tended from six weeks to nine vvill be accepted until weeks, beginning July 6 and May 21, in the senior ending September 3. Two' guidance office. sections will be open to stu­ Stuldents who will be in grades dents, one beginning at 8 a, m. as of September 1965 have the opportunity to and the other at noon. Students Driver Education if they (Continued on Page 6) DON'T FORGET Chocolates lIb. $1.60 2Ibs.3,15 Mother's J?ay tS May Little Ambassadors 9th lIb, $2,15 21bs.4.25 Mother's Day MAY 9th L.J. MULLEN PHARMACY HOURS· M. C. Mullen, Prop. 256 Delaware Ave" Elsmere DAllY AT 10 A.M. HE 9-2413 - PHONES - HE 9-5411 EVENINGS - WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY & FRIDAY PAGE 4 - May 6, 1965 THE SPOTLlG~ 222 . DELAWARE ART CARNEY CO·STARS IN BROADWAY HIT, AYE. \\A Long Way From The Sewe~/' He Says FRI. AND SAT. SPECIALS Delmar Appliance and Catalog Store REG. 139.95 AIR CONDITIONERS 5,000 BTU air conditioner with kit. Delivered. Dehumidifies as it cools. 5124 NO MONEY DOWN 6.50 a month REG. 259.95 CONSOLE STEREO 6-speaker. AM-FM radio. Ou, Art Carney is a study in housewifely zeal as he vacuums the best selling set. Delivered. 5199 rug in a hilarious scene' from the new Broadway Smash, "The NO MONEY DOWN Odd Couple." The play. which receiyed raye notices, eoncerns two $9 a month men, one divoreed and the other separated, who share an apart­ ment and ultimately have the same arguments they had with their respective spouses. CALL ••• Art Carney has risen from eluded "Charley's Aunt," "Pa­ the sewers to a starring berth nama Hattie" and the leading in Broadway's biggest hit, role in the TV version of the 439-9363 "The Odd Couple." "And it was Broadway comedy hit, "Har­ Jackie Gleason who put me in vey." FOR OYER 130,000 ITEMS the sewers," he recalls. "It was a wonderful oppor­ "About twelve years ago I tunity to prove that I could,be was an out-of-work radio a-ctor more than a comic," he says. *FREE CATALOGS looking for a job. Then The He began his professional ca­ Great One auditioned me. The reer in 1938 doing comedy bits, CATALOG ORDERS PLACED (Mon.-Fri.) before 12 noon can be next thing I knew I was earning novelty songs and impersona­ picked up same day after 6 P.M. Orders placed ofter 12 noon on a thousand a week playing Ed tions, and made his first Broad­ Friday, will be ready after 6 P.M. on Mondoy. N orton, the fl'iendly sewer way appearance in 1957 in the Merchandise listed above on sale ot Delmar store. worker on a network television "Rope Dancers." show." Carney's film career will be DELMAR CATALOG AND Carney was a regular on launched in the soon-to-be­ Gleason's show for six years. released MGM motion picture, APPLIANCE STORE As his popularity with TV au­ "The Yellow Rolls Royce." diences became established, he "But nothing can replace the OPEN MON. THRU FRI. took on other acting chores thrill of starring in a Broadway 'which demonstrated his enor­ hit like "The Odd Couple," he mous versatility.
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