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Poughkeepsie Journal from Poughkeepsie, New York • Page 12
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Poughkeepsie Journal from Poughkeepsie, New York • Page 12

Location:
Poughkeepsie, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Jv IF TWELVE A 7, Moehrke After Jo 'V IPOUHkEEPlgrjoWNAb: 7 THURSDAY. MARCH ,301961. William F. Moehrke, executive secretary ot.the'Dutchess eoun ty Civil Service commission, said today that aH municipal de partments. should let thev commission know what (hey are go-Ing lo do in, regard to upcoming "apjwrrilmenTsaj4as mailer of courtesy they ought to interview all applicant for a.

Job," Mr. made, the statement when asked to comment pn a letter to the Poughkeepsle Journal jrom. a. county woman s. jAQ.complaineilnaLaitfLpafc ing a civil service examination for appointment as a laboratory technician" apprentice 1ir the County Health department, the lob was given to another who had 'not taken the examination and the "letter writer did not a Teeiiwrthewui'te5yof iitIif terview.

"I AM AT A loss to under aland this action, said the aggrieved candidate who asked that her name not be used. "It makes one question the neces sity or tiling a. uvu service examination." vDr. Norman Fabian, deputy 1 county medical examiner, said "no comment" "today when asked if he wanted to explaln.the action. Mr.

Moehrke said, "Because Cites Agency Rolicy Candidate Complains Discover the magic in a i of praise! How often do you neglect to pass alorig some pleasant truth that would make another person happy? Do you know tha right way to pay a compli ment? bow to avoid having your remarks mistaken for flattery? how touse praise to give your youngsters self confidence? Discover the secrets of an art which can win new friends, heal old woUnds and bring you as much pleasure as those you praise. Read "There is MagicinaWord of Praise" April Reader's Digest. Get your copy today! these Health department lobs are reimbursable by the state, we as tne atate to' pass upon the qualifications of all candidates', for the jobs'. However, in making any appointments, It ought tdTbe the policy of all departments to letClvil Service miow wnat Uiey are gome to do. and as a matter of courtesy they ought to interview all candidates jor FROM WHAT the PouehkeejT sle Journal, could learn, the aggrieved candidate went to the Civil Serviee commission and Inquired about a job, learned that the laboratory lob was expected to be created, and her qualifications were' sent to Albany, The state said the woman did not qualify for the typeset ttork, hcrCj butarrangement were made for her to take an examination to see it she could meet the qualifications.

She did meet them and once this was determined, the County Health department was Informed. How ever, by this time a commitment had been made by the Health commissioner: TtfttirtinraisBrovt? the ancient Israelitcr froTfi uul ai or the Board or lieaitn, to another (candidate who had given her employer notice she was leaving. Mr. Moehrke said that fat some future date" there will be an open competitive examination for the lob of laboratory technl elan apprentlce ln the County Health department and at that time, the aggrieved candidate, the one now holding the ap pointment temporarily, and any others may take it. The provisional appointment then must bemadeJrom lhetop three who pass the examination.

Fort Lauderdale Free Dance Calms Students, Police End Hustling Tactics FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA. (AP) Clt officials syphoa ed off the restless tension of vacationing college students with another free dance onia cordoned stretch of ocean high way In this resort town.v There were no traffic, block ades last night other than for the dance area, and police vigilance i was almost back to normal, in contrast to the hustling police tactics of the night before. ONLY FIVE students were arrested, police said, compared with tome 150 In the previous 24 hours. Two of the Ave were taken to Jail on Intoxication charges: another for a traffic violation and two were held for investigation. The street dance was plan ned by city officials to divert students from the rioting which occurred earlier this week after police Imposed a nlght tlmel Dan on Deer ana ocean iront ro mancing, Since there Were about 10 boys to every girl, many nien students stood in little groups watching those who had dates aance.

TENTATIVE PLANS to set up a date bureau were made by tne city's newly formed Student Recreation committee. It hopes to attract young women complete with parents' consent The committee called a Good Friday student service for noon i TOPS Dairy Bar oShTiow5 Soft lee Cream Shakes Sundaes Sandwiches Hot Dogs Burgers Pixsa Pies Soft Drinks Candy Cigarettes SPRING HOURS: 11 a.m. b.m. EVERY Day. ROUtB 55 (Mandie.ter Rd.) uiuei oi.imisvuie no.

JOHN and VI ANGIE. yonr hosts! at the First Presbyterian church and 'Considered a park track meet for Saturday. Most of the students who ap peared in court yesterday were given a choice of $39 fines or three days In Jail, In contrast to a mandatory jail sentence In the previous two days' "rioting. Parents and relatives flocked to the police station to make bonds for the studentZ Obed Lodge To Attend Conyention nhed Indcre. Tree and Ac cepted Masons, will condJct a brief business session at Ma' sonic temple at 7 o'clock, Mon day night, after which mem bers will participate in a con ventlon of the Dutchess Masonic district at Masonic temple at 8 A.

The convention sessions are to be conducted by Howard W. Potts, grand lecturer of the Grand Lodge 'of Maosns of the state. Members of other lodges in the district will also par Jj tlcipate. 2 Area Teachers. Receive Fellowships William E.

Cady. music teach er, Franklin u. Roosevelt mgn school, Hyde park, and miss Ethel C. Torgesen, English teacher, Poughkeepsle High School, have been selected to work at the Summer Institute in the Humanities sponsored by the John Hay Fellows program A total of 118 secondary school teachers and 60 school adminis trators have been awarded fel lowships. Each participant will receive $75 a week, plus $15 a week for each dependent up to four, travel expenses and tuition.

Netherwood Church Plans Communion There will be a Good Friday Communion service conducted In the Netherwood Baptist church, at 7:30 clock, tomorrow night. The Rev. Bruce 'Aus tin, pastor, will deliver the ser mon on the theme "Signs of the Cross," the 13th sermon In the series on the general theme, The choir will present the selection, "Into the Woods My Master Went." A delightful Occasion Vr at a fJM "us 'i rr rf i i hum i ft evet OXIM4 Nick T. Kazounls, Matheos and Anthony hosts at Wendover Farms, have gone to great extremes to serve you, a most skillfully dnner this Easter, f. Reservations' AX 7J842 Routa'fl V.1..., n.J A 4, LL Beth El lb Mark 4 Festival of Pessach Temple Beth El has sched uled services for.

tomorrow and Saturday nights at 8 o'clock' and Saturday and Sunday1 rhornlngs 4tHi to mark "the Festival of Pessach or Passover, commemorating the 'liberation Egyptian bondage. which, will be observed by Jews tnrough out the world for a period of eight days beginning Saturday. Members of the temples youth group will Introduce the scriptural readings and Rabbi Edwin Zimet will deliver the lermoiu PrenU.wUl attend wlth their children. Due to tne Holiday there" will be no school ses slorTSunday morning. Dr.

Sanford Heads Babe Ruth League Officers have been elected to head the Southern Dutchess Babe Ruth league. These in clude Dr Thomas Sanford. president; Donald Weher, Vice president; George 'Wade III, secretary, and Wesley Vincent, treasurer, The league includes teams from LaGrange. Southwest LaGrange, East FlshkiU, Hyde Park, Pleasant Valley and Bcek man.) This year the league will become affiliated with, the Na tional Babe Ruth League. lna, and teams will be eligible to participate' In playoff games on a district, regional and national level, Managers Include: LaGrange Wesley Vincent: Southwest LaGrange, George Wade 111! Hyde Park, Donald Weber; Pleasant Valley, Jack Gilbert; Beekman, William Kennedy.

The league's schedule begins May 19. Trade Winds. Cautious Market lady known as spring ar rived in Wall Street last week and the stock market stopped, is looking and listening. Since last October the stock market has been proclaiming loudly that the 1960 61 reces sion would be short and Tollowd4 see, by a recovery boom. And it was proclaimed the New Frontier Administration would go on a spending spree.

But now the boys in Wall Street are looking and listen ing. There Is doubt about the expected business boom. As voiced by J. E. Granville of E.

F. Hutton and Company: "Too many are accepting the normal seasonal business upturn as the signal of a boom. It Is strongly suspected the boiling stock mar ket could suddenly find itretf sitting on a pilot light instead of a set of brightly burning gas Jets." More disturbing that Con gress isn't going arcing with President Kennedy's antirecession spending program. And his top notch economist, Dr. Walter Heller, admits there is a slow ness in home building, and that the expected big spending of state and local governments may not materialize but be at a slow pace on account of financing difficulties.

of continued bright premises by the stock market letter services, not from smart money circles, THIS WILL NOT BE denied: Federal Reserve officials are studying day by day reports of the climb in stock market credit. The threat Is an increase In margin requirements now at 7C percent, reduced from 00 percent last July. This time, perhaps mid April, the higher rate will be on all transactions and not only new accounts. NO ONE IN WALL STREET was disturbed by the Depart' ment of Justice threat to Invest! eate nrlce fixing in the food in dustnr. Factually, market prices of those snares moved up aiier the announcement, bald a securities analyst It Isn't likely that big brother President will permit his l)ttle brother Attorney uenerai bod.io no anything to upset the bull mar ket applecart.

MORE THAN 200 LEADING department and specialty stores across the nation are receiving questionnaires from the Federal Trade Commission. So are some 20 resident buying organizations representing department stores. Major question: Are the re' tallers accepting advertising and promotions) allowances not made 'available to an retailers 7 That's illeaal prohibited by the Robinson Patman Act. This ln tent Is to aid small retailers. Answers are mandatory under Section 6.

of the Federal Trade Commission Acm AN ALL NEW NONRESIN ixtne wash and wear white broadcloth will he a It.m In thi PhllHivuVan Heusen Fall llnef The finish, developed; bv the comDanv witn tne unem leal Division of General Aniline Fllm is guaranteed for the life of the century shirt. It is of soft quality, witn sUeds ttuaibl pin rdr34ng, stays white, withstands any bleach and will not develop any odor, J.l 1 THERE WILL BE DIP In number of American. tour ists to Eurote this yean Hea ions: Vacationists now know hat every dollar spent abroad e7dralnonthe7natlon'sgold reserve; (2) revaluation of the Ind DUlcn currencies means the dollar now buys 5 percent less over there; and 13) Americans know' that travel at home win helpxhe nationpull out olHhefrecession: (Release) by. Consolidated, news Features, Inc.) Rdger Babson ColdLWarNorLlkecl i A ssaa It Keeps Wheels Turning BABSON PARK. MASS.Un fortunately, the "cold war" Is developing Into a dangerous In dustry.

Too many voters are directly or Indirectly making money on4L 1 am ashamed to say that many: people are learning to like this "cold war." Even labor depends upon It for employ ment and employers feel it necessary for profits. They dreaded the "cold war" at first but now are getting used to it 'and even, depending on it. Surely lf the coldfwar ahould suddenly stop, there would be a great Increase JnAjncnmlofcJ enedand lookJor.a hole on the wall to get out tnrougnri agree we are entering the "Roaring as to the reason for the "roaring" perhaps many are now being fooled. tf This is feared not only by those how out of work, but also by employers who" are benefit Ing from subcontracts and forc ed Bradstreet if you think I am overly fearful. Most of the active stocks list ed on the New York Stock Exchange art counting upon the "cold war" to continue.

This is a dangerous limb upon which to depend. Investment counselors warn that temporary market declines "are to be expected as a "necessary correction or readjustment," but they continue to be fundamentally bullish and look for even higherprices after the "corrections" are completed. They may be risht for a while; but the Law. of Action' and which Sir Isaac Newton enunciated back In the I7tn century still holds good. Even President Kennedy and his White House advisers see the dangerous paradox In the present situation of "getting used to the 'cold war "Surelv.

full employment depends now on continuation nf tha rnlit wr. (TmVls resulting in' a new 'atti tude on the part of both con servatives, and liberals. Repub licans and Democrats. It has be come as popular as cocktail par tics. No one yet has had the cqurage to check it.

IT NOW LOOKS as thoueh the 'only 'Way to combat the present contentment with the 'cold, jvar" with its splrallnrl wage and upward price move ments will be through the arbitrary "freezing" of both wages and prices: ThisJs the first step toward making President Kennedy an economic dictator which I expect to He Is now preparing the ground for such a move by appointing so' many of his family and intimate friends to Important posts. Watch' his future moves. Another movement to watch Is the John Birch society, which has "Americanism" of the DAR type as Us watchword although It favors a semi dictatorship for the nation. It Is named after John Birch, who was a Christian missionary in China and later fought with the Nationalist Chinese In their war against the Japanese. Birch was promoted to a captain ami worked In the Intelligence division un der General Cheifnault.

On Aug. Z3, JH45, uircn was killed by the Chinese Communists. The present national leader of the society is a neighbor Mnlne. Robert Welch, of Belmont, Mass. Frankly, he Is fighting for our return to a republic and away from democracy, which Mr.

Kennedy probably also thinks Is the only way to win the "cold war Bullishness still prevails In Wall Street, But only became SCRELISTfiE8SED proir erty is coming on the market someday, regardless of the fore casts being made by optimistic investment advisers. The safest way to make profits is to service. No investor can render service now by climbing to buyt stocks, bonds, reaf estate, or commodities. The way to render service Is to store upl casn now ana De prepared to use it when it again Is in great demand. The first group to the pinch are the country banks.

When borrowers fall to pay their notes, then we know the turn downward is coming. The "Roaring Sixties" can roar from two causes, from enthusiasm, or from panic. "Anyone who has lived on a ranch with cattle, hogsrand other Hvestockrhas seen his stock roar when fright James to Participate In College Opera Rufus B. James, city, has a role in an opera which will be presented on April 16 and 18 for the benefit the HUlman Memorial association. Mr.

James will portray "Dr. Falke" in the opera "Die Fle dermaus" (The Bat). He Is. the son of Mr. and Mrs.

John C. James of 176 Smith street. and a "senior In the musle education curriculum at the College of Edu.catlon.at Fredonla Falls Airman Completes Course Joseph F. Brouthers, aviation electronics technician airman. USN, son of Mr.

and Mrs. George Brouthers, Myers Corners road, Wapplngers Falls, has been graduated from the Aviation Electronics Technician school, radar course, at the Na val Air Technical Training Center, Memphis, Tenn. 4 1 step Bilinear at Howard Jofansotis COMPLETE For Children $2.25 MENU Celery Ripe and Stuffed Olives Radishes Choice of 1 Chilled JrultirPwitlrSherbet Chllleil TomatinJtiIca Cherrystone Clams Fresh Shrimp Cocktail Choice of Consomme Cream of Mushroom Soup choice of entr'ee Baked Sauca Roast, Prime RIBs of Beef au Jus Roast Stuffed Young'Tom Turkey, Cranberry Sauce Broiled Swordfish Roast Leg of Lamb, Mint Jelly Roast Long Island Duckling. Wild Rice and, Orange Sauce Tossed Green.Salaa' Roquefort Dressing Cole Slaw Choice of Two Creamed New Potatoes W.hlpped Potatoes Fresh Garden Peas Buttered Asparagus Creamed Silver Onions Choice of Rhubarb Pie Blueberry Pie Hot Apple Pie with Cheddar Cheese Hot Fudge or Hot Butterscotch Short Cake Howard Johnson's Delicious Ice. Cream or Sherbet Fruit Jello, Whipped Cream Chocolate Pecan Pudding, Whipped Cream Coffee Tea Milk Fresh Roasted Nuts After Dinner Mints HowardJ OWARD JOHNSON'S MAIN at MANCHESTER ROAD Open 11 a.m.

to 12 p. fRf ot NICK BENI'Sr ITALIAN 2i RESTAURANT Serving your favorite Italian American Specialties VEAL SCALLOPINI Piccante BONELESS CHICKEN Ala Parmagiani fEEEZgSClLLOPINI Pi'zxaiold 41 rn 1 JUMBO SCAMPI Saute Garlic Sauct jS Reservations Dial.GL 2 5620 H0 vmvt'cJKmJv (fro HTClHrwHiP iiiV? bssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssbw i VS NICK BENI invites and vour to family ffK, EASTER mt tou'soal trimininflS .3 Costing traditianaj at SSSSiMp ANCHOR INN LZ IT III MHiLh IH HIHIl 1 II I XREERVATIONS 4 88M HV li 1 j. A i ,1 r. A yv fd 17 Vv7.

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Pages Available:
1,239,129
Years Available:
1785-2024