those agonizing minutes only a little girl, and she was...

1
Onl y a Little Girl , and She Was Burning... Those Agonizing Minutes "Help mc . . . please help mc ... I am only a little girl and I am burning!" Shortly after this dramatic call for assistance vvas received by telephone , West Sayvillc-Oakdale firemen and police sped a critically burned West Sayville child to Southside Hospital Sunday morning. Her condition remained critical yesterday. Burns cover about 40 percent of her body and arms. She sustained them when her pajamas caught fire while she was attempting to warm milk on the kitchen stove for her four-year-old half-brother. The victim of the accident is eight-year-old Lor- raine Rogers of 28 Andrea Lane in West Sayville. At the time of the near-tragedy she was alono in the hr.usc with her half-brother , Guy Worzel. Her step- father and mother , Mr. and Mrs. Robert Worzel , were at Davis Field in Bayport where Mr . Worzel is a flight instructor. A sister, 17-year-old Diane Rogers , was at church. This is the way police and firemen reconstruct the events: Shortly before 10 a. m. the girl ' s pajamas burst into fiames at the stove. She ran screaming into the bathroom , turned on the water and jumped into the tub. Meanwhile , four-year-old Guy managed to dial Die telephone operator. Mrs. Florence Santanicllo , the operator , plugged into the line and heard a childish voice shouting "fire!" She attempted to learn the address but the youngster was shouting and crying and then she telephoned the West Sayville Fire Department. According to a tape recording of the messages received at the fire house, Mrs. Santaniello said she had a small child on the line. He was reporting a fire. Darrell Leigh Manuell , the houseman , broke in at that point while sounding a general alarm. The child' s response was garbled. Then the burned girl came to the phone. "Help me ," she sobbed , "help me, I' m burning ... oh , help me." Leigh-Manuel repeatedly asked for the ad- dress. She said she lived on Andrea Lane. "When he asked again for the house number , she cried: "Help me . . . please help me ... I am only a little girl and I am burning!" Then , and only then , the terrified youngster gave the address ... 28 Andrea Lane. Leigh-Manuell dis- patched men and apparatus to the scene and told the child. "Okay, wc are coming right down , honey. Now you get out of the house. Get the children out of the house." The girl sobbed . . . "no ... not the house ... I' m on fire, " and then the message ceased. The ' firemen arrived promptl y and entered the house to find the girl badly burned and in a state of shock. First Assistant Chief Nicholas Paglia and Ptl. J. F. Blake of the Suffolk County Police Depart- ment , assisted by Second Assistant Chief Herbert Bower , carried her to a police patrol car which sped the injured girl to the hospital. The tape recording of messages received at fire headquarters shows that Mr. Leigh-Manuell and Assistant Chief Paglia , as well as Mrs. Santaniello, spent several agonizing, minutes attempting to learn the address from the seriously burned girl. Several times she apparently gave the number but the mes- sage was garbled by her sobs. When the house num- ber was finally received it took the firemen but a few minutes to reach the scene. Yesterday it was reported at the hospital that Lorraine' s condition was still critical; indeed that she was entering the most serious phase of her fight for life, a time when the danger of infection is acute. Ex-Diamond Ace in New Setting ? Winter ' s deep freeze disappeared , at least temporarily, Sunday afternoon as bri ght skies and 60-degree temperatures h ^raided a change of seasons. Joseph Sudato and Pat Reilly, both of Bohemia , were in .lined to rush matters while strolling along Sayville 's Main Street. They stoked up on ice cream. (Photo by Rozycki). Probe Cosa Nostra Lin k Riverhead Caesar Seotto, who once played a smart game of baseball for the old Sayville Field Club , is currently being investigated by the Suffolk County Grand Jury . . . but not because of his past prowess on the diamond. The 54-year-old Islip man is charged by police with being cne of . Suffolk' s leading book- makers and an associate of John (Sonny) Franzcsc , a Cosa Nostra figure . Seotto has been convict- ed four times on bookmaking charges since 1947 and has been described by police as a major figure in a bookmaking ring which operates from Babylon to Patchogue and nets more than ?10 , 0Q0 a week. Senile ' s role in the current investigation of Cosa Nostra activities was disclosed Monday wh in 52-year-old Alexander C. Bcig, a textile mill operator of Grundy Avenue , Hoibrook , was reported to have refused to talk to the \ grand jury about his alleged associations With Seotto despite the fact he had been granted immunity. Berg vvas taken before County Judge George F. X. Mclnerney who ordered him to tell what he knows to the grand jury or face contempt charges. The Hoi- brook manufacturer then re- turned to the grand jury room. A grand jury stenographer testified in open court before Judge Mclnerney that Berg had refused to name a man he was placing bets with when arrested by police on December 30th. Seized with him in a police raid on that date w ere Seotto and two others. The charges against Mr. Berg were dismissed in First District Court in Commack Tuesday by Judge Floyd Sarisohn after As- sistant District Attorney Patrick J. Canning said he had cooper- ated with the district attorney ' s office. Although Seotto never lived in Sayville , he was well known in the community in the 1930s as a baseball player on one of Long Island' s outstanding semi- professional clubs. He was a crack infieldcr and a good hit- ter. Ten Teens Held for Wrecking Girl's Car Ten youths vvere seized hy police last Thursday night on charges of threatening a 19- year-old girl , assaulting her male companion and damaging her car , after the vehicle and one in which some of the ac- cused teen agcrs were riding collided. Police reported that the hoys forced her ear off Uie road and then proceeded lo wreck it. They were arraigned in First District Court Friday before Jud ge Morton Wcissman According to police , lite acci- dent occurred at 9:20 p. m. at the intersection of Middle Coun- try Road and Hawkins Avenue in Lake Grove. The girl , Miss Em- ma Jean Sanford , 19, of East Northport , became frightened and drove away. The teen agcrs chased her car for two miles , forcing her car off the road , she complained. One teenager struck Miss Sanford' s compan- ion , Oscar Bradwcll , 21, of Cen- tereach with a bottle , police said, and another smashed the car windows. Four were placed under arrest by police at the scene. The remainder were taken in- to custody at the Sixth Pre- cinct after demanding release of their friends and allegedly slumping in the roof of the girl s car and pouring sand in the gas tank. Ail were charged with malicious mischief except Edward J. Sullivan. 16, of 19 Dorchester Street , Lake Ronkon- koma , who vvas charged with as- sault for allegedly throwing the bottle which struck Mr. Brad- well. Frank Colaizzo , 18, of 18 Wal- ters Road , Lake Konkonkoma vvas identified as the driver cf the car containing the accuseu youths. Arraigned with him were Edward J. Kahnis , 17, of 31 First Court , Lake Ronkon- koma: Thomas Gugligmclli , 18, of Wl Konkonkoma Avenue and Peter Quinn , 16, of 18 Ninth Street , both of Ronkonkoma, and Lounic A. Mason , 19 , of Farmingville . All were held in $500 bail. Sullivan and Frank Salmon Jr. ot 56 Samuel Street anel Caesar LaFala , 18, of Lake Shore Drive , all of Lake Ron- konkoma , were held in $1, 000 bail. Michael W. Adamko , 19, of 88 Kirk Avenue and Robeit Greene , 16, of 11 Gail Drive , both of Lake Ronkonkoma , were released in $200 bail. Judge Wci ssman said the eight who were held in custody because they were unable to post the required higher bonds were placed in higher bond be- cause they have prior police re cords. If convicted , each of the accused teenagers could be .sentenced to a year in jail ami a S50O line. This is Isli p Town: All 230 , 880 of Us ' Islip Town remains in the ; lead in the population race in Suffolk County with 230,880 inhabitants listed on January first , acp^rding to the annual estimate announced yesterday by tffe Long Is- land Lighting Company. Islip ' s population has Increas- ed by 57, 92^, since the ^ federal census In /JOGO, whcii; : 172,959 residents vierC ; Ust^tLJiy t\_ e government .IJLCd niscarch shows that the towiu ' s citizens,, - increased in numbers by- 10? '- ' 170 In 1964 but this increase played second fiddle to that ex- perienced in neighboring Brook- haven .where 11 ,800 new resi- dents-Were listed. Brookhavcn ' s percentage growth, over 1963 was put at 8.09, the highest in Nassau-Suffolk. The current figures for the county' s 10 towns arc listed as follows: Islip. 230, 880; Babylon 181 , 950 , Huntington 162, 520, Brookhaven 157, 730, Smithtown 83.910. Southampton 32. 820, Riverhead 16,940, Southold 14, - 780, East Hampton 10,480 and Shelter Island 1 , 460. Broohkavcn led the county in growth last year with 11 , 800 nevv residents , followed by Islip with 10,170, Huntington 6,300, Smithtovvn 5, 850, Babylon 5, 240, Southampton 1 ,200, Riverhead 740, ' East Hampton 240. 'tSc-uth- olcf 190 and Shelter Island- _30. The Nasau-Suffolk population was put by LILCO at a whop- ping 2, 308, 530, a 17.37 percent increase , since 1960. Suffolk' s total of 893.470 represents a gain of 226,686 in four years , an increase of 34 percent , and outstripped Nassau ' s 8.84 per- cent -boost of 114, 889 to a total of 1 , 415 , 060. In -964 Suffolk had both the largest numerical and percent- age increase . . . 41, 760 people compared lo Nassau ' s 23,520. Both counties, however , are now growing at a decreasing rate of increase. Nassau , with an aver- age growth rate of 1.86 percent since 1960, dropped to 1 .69 per- cent for 1964. Suffolk' s average rate of 7.16 percent fell to 4.90 percent . Seek V* - Mile School Busing Haza rds Are Cited A proposal: that the one-mile limit for - busing elcrficntiiry school . .children , be reduced to threebquarce^fof a mile may be submitted ttib taxpayers : of the Sayville ' SSChocrt District at --th j. district' s annual meeting in May, itf developed this week. ?;• .Impetus for the idea is . com- ing chiefly from residents of the Indian Head development in! the northeast section of the com- munity whose children are-vvalk- jng to the Sunrise Drive School. Representatives of the Mon- tauk-Broadway Civic Association vvere to discuss the matter with school authorities this week anel are expected to bring it to the attention of the Board of Edu- cation at its monthly meeting next Thursday ni ght. In the past , similar proposals have not been acted upon by the board but proponents have been advised to submit petitions i calling foi'- fifv^oteba t the! ahpualb meeting. The- present district polity—eqai ' valent' -to-' miniraums required by the State Education- . Department—calls Sor transpor-'b tac.bn fd^kindcrga^n-tiirougli v . sixth gr9de pupils vvBp live more than one? mile from tthc school to which they are assigned ,.a two-mile ; standard for seventh and eighth graders , and three miles JJor high school students. Residents of the Indian Head scctie.1 east of Broadway Ave- nue ente traffic hazards brought aboiil by increased use of that s.n_ ct since the opening of the Billy Blake discount house on Sunrise Highway and because some of the residential streets west of Broadway, leading to ¦ the school property, arc not yet equipped with sidewalks. If a vote on this issue Is im- meidiatcly forthcoming, it will <* <ve the. .spdUsb^t , the, -au, iiual meeting " with tjie election of three tneroborfcoj.lfie . ictoard of jfducation- 1 Vacancies; \vill oc- cur in 'QjC positions held by Percy Hoek ^and Arthur 3upHer , both, of whom are concluding thrcc-^car terms, and for* the unexpired term of John Bein- tema , who resigned recently. The board is eicpected to ap- point John Reinsrria of 135 Roll- stone Avenue , West- . Sayville , to fill the Beintema vacancy at next week' s meeting. Mr . Kcinsma is expected to run in May ' foT (he balance of the term. Li quor Drawing Not Illega l , Court Declares Riverhead A legal fight by a Sayville liquor dealer to up- set the State Liquor Authority ' s system of processing new pack- age store applications came a cropper in Supreme Court here Monday. Justice John P. Cohalan Jr. ruled that SLA drawings to de- termine the order in which 1 , 177 nevv applications would bo considered were not illega l lot- teries as claimed by Lawrence A. Daub , who operates a pack- age store on Railroad Avenue in SayviUe. Mr. Daub , who maintains that lotteries arc forbidden by state law, is expected to bring an appeal to the Appellate Divis- ion. The Liquor Authority con- ducted two drawings in January to set up a priority system for applications implemented by Gov. Rockefeller ' s liquor reform measure which vvas adopted last August. It. in effect , ended the SI.A's long moratorium on new package stores. It provides for 1.177 new ones in the state , 177 of which arc scheduled for Suf- folk Countv. Justice Cchalan ruled , "There is no case authority that sup- ports the claim that the clement of chance as to the numerical order in which the applicat.jns are to be processed constitutes a lottery . '' The drawing, he com- mented , i.s " a mere processing incident. " Islip—Legislation has been in- troduced in Albany to turn over town-owned ' Byron Lake Park in Oakdale to the newly created park district which encompass- es the eastern end of Islip Town , it was announced Tuesday at a meeting of the Town Board. If the enabling legislation is passed and signed by Gov. Rockefeller it will open the way for (he district to operate and improve Byron Lake Park through a Special district tax and limit its use to residents of the district. Among the im- provements being planned is a . swimming pool , one of a scries scheduled for construction in various parts of the town. The town board reviewed five applications for gasoline service stations sought on Veterans Me- morial Highway. Three were ap- Continued on pace 8 Park District May Take Over Oakdale Area Sayville firemen were called to the foot of Candec Avenue on Sunday evening to extinguish a minor blaze in the wooden en- closure near the waterfront in the lslip Town park. They re- ported to police that the fire appeared to be the work of young arsonists. FIRE SUNDAY EVENING The main attraction at a spaghetti supper sponsored by the Oakdale auxiliary of Southside Hospital goes down the dra n as 10-ycai-old John Bralich of Chateau Drive tackles the subject. Observers are Mrs. Arthur Faria and Mrs. Harold Lanchan- tin. (Photo by Rozycki). John DiMartino , newly elected presid ent of the Montauk-Broadway Civic Asso- ciation , catches up on paper work with tie assistance of MrS . Louis E. Bare , left , recording secretary, and Mrs. Judith Wool .y, corresponding secretary. Standing are Sal Mancuso , vice-president , and Lawrence Collins , treasurer. (Photo by Rozycki) .

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Page 1: Those Agonizing Minutes Only a Little Girl, and She Was ...nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84031477/1965-03... · Only a Little Girl, and She Was Burning... Those Agonizing Minutes

Only a Little Girl, and She Was Burning...Those Agonizing Minutes

"Help mc . . . please help mc . . . I am only alittle girl and I am burning!"

Shortly after this dramatic call for assistancevvas received by telephone, West Sayvillc-Oakdalefiremen and police sped a critically burned WestSayville child to Southside Hospital Sunday morning.

Her condition remained critical yesterday. Burnscover about 40 percent of her body and arms. Shesustained them when her pajamas caught fire whileshe was attempting to warm milk on the kitchenstove for her four-year-old half-brother.

The victim of the accident is eight-year-old Lor-raine Rogers of 28 Andrea Lane in West Sayville. Atthe time of the near-tragedy she was alono in thehr.usc with her half-brother , Guy Worzel. Her step-father and mother , Mr. and Mrs. Robert Worzel ,were at Davis Field in Bayport where Mr. Worzelis a flight instructor. A sister, 17-year-old DianeRogers, was at church.

This is the way police and firemen reconstructthe events:

Shortly before 10 a. m. the girl 's pajamas burstinto fiames at the stove. She ran screaming into thebathroom , turned on the water and jumped into the

tub. Meanwhile, four-year-old Guy managed to dialDie telephone operator.

Mrs. Florence Santanicllo, the operator , pluggedinto the line and heard a childish voice shouting"fire!" She attempted to learn the address but theyoungster was shouting and crying and then shetelephoned the West Sayville Fire Department.

According to a tape recording of the messagesreceived at the fire house, Mrs. Santaniello saidshe had a small child on the line. He was reportinga fire. Darrell Leigh Manuell , the houseman , brokein at that point while sounding a general alarm. Thechild's response was garbled.

Then the burned girl came to the phone. "Helpme," she sobbed, "help me, I'm burning . . . oh, helpme." Leigh-Manuel repeatedly asked for the ad-dress. She said she lived on Andrea Lane. "When heasked again for the house number, she cried:

"Help me . . . please help me . . . I am only alittle girl and I am burning!"

Then , and only then, the terrified youngster gavethe address . . . 28 Andrea Lane. Leigh-Manuell dis-patched men and apparatus to the scene and told thechild. "Okay, wc are coming right down, honey. Now

you get out of the house. Get the children out of thehouse." The girl sobbed . . . "no . . . not the house. . . I'm on fire," and then the message ceased.

The' firemen arrived promptl y and entered thehouse to find the girl badly burned and in a stateof shock. First Assistant Chief Nicholas Paglia andPtl. J. F. Blake of the Suffolk County Police Depart-ment, assisted by Second Assistant Chief HerbertBower, carried her to a police patrol car whichsped the injured girl to the hospital.

The tape recording of messages received at fireheadquarters shows that Mr. Leigh-Manuell andAssistant Chief Paglia , as well as Mrs. Santaniello,spent several agonizing, minutes attempting to learnthe address from the seriously burned girl. Severaltimes she apparently gave the number but the mes-sage was garbled by her sobs. When the house num-ber was finally received it took the firemen buta few minutes to reach the scene.

Yesterday it was reported at the hospital thatLorraine's condition was still critical; indeed thatshe was entering the most serious phase of herfight for life, a time when the danger of infectionis acute.

Ex-Diamond Ace in New Setting?

Winter 's deep freeze disappeared , at least temporarily, Sunday afternoon asbright skies and 60-degree temperatures h ̂ raided a change of seasons. Joseph Sudatoand Pat Reilly, both of Bohemia , were in .lined to rush matters while strolling alongSayville's Main Street. They stoked up on ice cream. (Photo by Rozycki).

Probe Cosa Nostra Lin k

Riverhead — Caesar Seotto,who once played a smart gameof baseball for the old SayvilleField Club, is currently beinginvestigated by the SuffolkCounty Grand Jury . . . but notbecause of his past prowess onthe diamond.

The 54-year-old Islip man ischarged by police with beingcne of . Suffolk's leading book-makers and an associate of John(Sonny) Franzcsc, a Cosa Nostrafigure . Seotto has been convict-ed four times on bookmakingcharges since 1947 and has beendescribed by police as a majorfigure in a bookmaking ringwhich operates from Babylon toPatchogue and nets more than?10,0Q0 a week.

Senile's role in the currentinvestigation of Cosa Nostraactivities was disclosed Mondaywh in 52-year-old Alexander C.Bcig, a textile mill operator ofGrundy Avenue, Hoibrook, wasreported to have refused to talkto the \ grand jury about hisalleged associations With Seottodespite the fact he had beengranted immunity.

Berg vvas taken before CountyJudge George F. X. Mclnerneywho ordered him to tell whathe knows to the grand jury orface contempt charges. The Hoi-brook manufacturer then re-turned to the grand jury room.

A grand jury stenographertestified in open court beforeJudge Mclnerney that Berg had

refused to name a man he wasplacing bets with when arrestedby police on December 30th.Seized with him in a police raidon that date w ere Seotto andtwo others.

The charges against Mr. Bergwere dismissed in First DistrictCourt in Commack Tuesday byJudge Floyd Sarisohn after As-sistant District Attorney PatrickJ. Canning said he had cooper-ated with the district attorney 'soffice.

Although Seotto never livedin Sayville , he was well knownin the community in the 1930sas a baseball player on one ofLong Island's outstanding semi-professional clubs. He was acrack infieldcr and a good hit-ter.

Ten Teens Held for Wrecking Girl's CarTen youths vvere seized hy

police last Thursday night oncharges of threatening a 19-year-old girl , assaulting hermale companion and damagingher car , after the vehicle andone in which some of the ac-cused teen agcrs were ridingcollided.

Police reported that the hoysforced her ear off Uie road andthen proceeded lo wreck it.They were arraigned in FirstDistr ict Court Friday beforeJud ge Morton Wcissman

According to police , lite acci-dent occurred at 9:20 p. m. atthe intersection of Middle Coun-try Road and Hawkins Avenue in

Lake Grove. The girl , Miss Em-ma Jean Sanford , 19, of EastNorthport , became frightenedand drove away. The teen agcrschased her car for two miles ,forcing her car off the road ,she complained. One teenagerstruck Miss Sanford's compan-ion , Oscar Bradwcll , 21, of Cen-tereach with a bottle, policesaid, and another smashed thecar windows. Four were placedunder arrest by police at thescene.

The remainder were taken in-to custody at the Sixth Pre-cinct after demanding releaseof their friends and allegedlyslumping in the roof of the

girl s car and pouring sand inthe gas tank. Ail were charged

with malicious mischief exceptEdward J. Sullivan. 16, of 19Dorchester Street , Lake Ronkon-koma , who vvas charged with as-sault for allegedly throwing thebottle which struck Mr. Brad-well.

Frank Colaizzo , 18, of 18 Wal-ters Road , Lake Konkonkomavvas identified as the driver cfthe car containing the accuseuyouths. Arraigned with himwere Edward J. Kahnis , 17, of31 First Court , Lake Ronkon-koma: Thomas Gugligmclli , 18,of Wl Konkonkoma Avenue andPeter Quinn , 16, of 18 NinthStreet , both of Ronkonkoma,and Lounic A. Mason , 19, of

Farmingville . All were held in$500 bail.

Sullivan and Frank SalmonJr. ot 56 Samuel Street anelCaesar LaFala , 18, of LakeShore Drive , all of Lake Ron-konkoma , were held in $1,000bail.

Michael W. Adamko , 19, of88 Kirk Avenue and RobeitGreene , 16, of 11 Gail Drive ,both of Lake Ronkonkoma , werereleased in $200 bail.

Judge Wcissman said theeight who were held in custodybecause they were unable topost the required higher bondswere placed in higher bond be-cause they have prior police records. If convicted , each of theaccused teenagers could be.sentenced to a year in jail amia S50O line.

This is Islip Town:All 230,880 of Us

' Islip Town remains in the ; lead in the populationrace in Suffolk County with 230,880 inhabitants listed onJanuary first , acp^rding to the annual estimate announcedyesterday by tffe Long Is-land Lighting Company.

Islip's population has Increas-ed by 57,92^, since the

^ federalcensus In /JOGO, whcii;: 172,959residents vierC ; Ust^tLJiy t\_egovernment .IJLCd niscarchshows that the towiu's citizens,, -increased in numbers by- 10? '-'170 In 1964 but this increaseplayed second fiddle to that ex-perienced in neighboring Brook-haven .where 11,800 new resi-dents-Were listed. Brookhavcn 'spercentage growth, over 1963was put at 8.09, the highest inNassau-Suffolk.

The current figures for thecounty's 10 towns arc listed asfollows: Islip. 230,880; Babylon181,950, Huntington 162,520,Brookhaven 157,730, Smithtown83.910. Southampton 32.820,Riverhead 16,940, Southold 14,-780, East Hampton 10,480 andShelter Island 1,460.

Broohkavcn led the county in

growth last year with 11,800nevv residents, followed by Islipwith 10,170, Huntington 6,300,Smithtovvn 5,850, Babylon 5,240,Southampton 1,200, Riverhead740,' East Hampton 240.'tSc-uth-olcf 190 and Shelter Island-_30.

The Nasau-Suffolk populationwas put by LILCO at a whop-ping 2,308,530, a 17.37 percentincrease , since 1960. Suffolk'stotal of 893.470 represents again of 226,686 in four years,an increase of 34 percent , andoutstripped Nassau 's 8.84 per-cent -boost of 114,889 to a totalof 1,415,060.

In -964 Suffolk had both thelargest numerical and percent-age increase . . . 41,760 peoplecompared lo Nassau 's 23,520.Both counties, however, are nowgrowing at a decreasing rate ofincrease. Nassau , with an aver-age growth rate of 1.86 percentsince 1960, dropped to 1.69 per-cent for 1964. Suffolk's averagerate of 7.16 percent fell to 4.90percent.

Seek V*-Mile School BusingHazards Are Cited

A proposal: that the one-milelimit for - busing elcrficntiiryschool ..children , be reduced tothreebquarce^fof a mile may besubmitted ttib taxpayers : of theSayville'SSChocrt District at --th j .district's annual meeting in May,itf developed this week.?;•.Impetus for the idea is .com-ing chiefly from residents of theIndian Head development in! thenortheast section of the com-munity whose children are-vvalk-j ng to the Sunrise Drive School.

Representatives of the Mon-tauk-Broadway Civic Associationvvere to discuss the matter withschool authorities this week anelare expected to bring it to theattention of the Board of Edu-cation at its monthly meetingnext Thursday ni ght.

In the past , similar proposalshave not been acted upon bythe board but proponents have

been advised to submit petitionsi calling foi'- fifv^otebat the! ahpualbmeeting. The- present districtpolity—eqai'valent'-to-'miniraumsrequired by the State Education- .Department—calls Sor transpor-'btac.bn fd^kindcrga^n-tiirougliv.sixth gr9de pupils vvBp live morethan one? mile from tthc schoolto which they are assigned,.atwo-mile ; standard for seventhand eighth graders , and threemiles JJor high school students.

Residents of the Indian Headscctie.1 east of Broadway Ave-nue ente traffic hazards broughtaboiil by increased use of thats.n_ ct since the opening of theBilly Blake discount house onSunrise Highway and becausesome of the residential streetswest of Broadway, leading to¦ the school property, arc not yetequipped with sidewalks.

If a vote on this issue Is im-

meidiatcly forthcoming, it will<*<ve the..spdUsb t̂ , the,-au,iiual meeting "with tjie electionof three tneroborfcoj.lfie .ictoardof j fducation-1 Vacancies; \vill oc-cur in 'QjC positions held byPercy Hoek ^and Arthur 3upHer,both, of whom are concludingthrcc-^car terms, and for* theunexpired term of John Bein-tema , who resigned recently.

The board is eicpected to ap-point John Reinsrria of 135 Roll-stone Avenue, West-.Sayville, tofill the Beintema vacancy at nextweek's meeting. Mr . Kcinsma isexpected to run in May 'foT (hebalance of the term.

Liquor DrawingNot Illegal,Court Declares

Riverhead — A legal fight bya Sayville liquor dealer to up-set the State Liquor Authority 'ssystem of processing new pack-age store applications came acropper in Supreme Court hereMonday.

Justice John P. Cohalan Jr.ruled that SLA drawings to de-termine the order in which1,177 nevv applications would boconsidered were not illega l lot-teries as claimed by LawrenceA. Daub , who operates a pack-age store on Railroad Avenuein SayviUe.

Mr. Daub , who maintains thatlotteries arc forbidden by statelaw, is expected to bring anappeal to the Appellate Divis-ion.

The Liquor Authority con-ducted two drawings in Januaryto set up a priority system forapplications implemented byGov. Rockefeller 's liquor reformmeasure which vvas adopted lastAugust. It. in effect , ended theSI.A's long moratorium on newpackage stores. It provides for1.177 new ones in the state , 177of which arc scheduled for Suf-folk Countv.

Justice Cchalan ruled , "Thereis no case authority that sup-ports the claim that the clementof chance as to the numericalorder in which the applicat.j nsare to be processed constitutesa lottery .'' The drawing, he com-mented , i.s "a mere processingincident. "

Islip—Legislation has been in-troduced in Albany to turn overtown-owned ' Byron Lake Parkin Oakdale to the newly createdpark district which encompass-es the eastern end of Islip Town,it was announced Tuesday at ameeting of the Town Board.

If the enabling legislation ispassed and signed by Gov.Rockefeller it will open the wayfor (he district to operate andimprove Byron Lake Parkthrough a Special district taxand limit its use to residents ofthe district. Among the im-provements being planned is a.swimming pool, one of a scriesscheduled for construction invarious parts of the town.

The town board reviewed fiveapplications for gasoline servicestations sought on Veterans Me-morial Highway. Three were ap-

Continued on pace 8

Park DistrictMay Take OverOakdale Area

Sayville firemen were calledto the foot of Candec Avenue onSunday evening to extinguish aminor blaze in the wooden en-closure near the waterfront inthe lslip Town park. They re-ported to police that the fireappeared to be the work ofyoung arsonists.

FIRE SUNDAY EVENING

The main attraction at a spaghetti supper sponsored by the Oakdale auxiliaryof Southside Hospital goes down the dra n as 10-ycai-old John Bralich of ChateauDrive tackles the subject. Observers are Mrs. Arthur Faria and Mrs. Harold Lanchan-tin. (Photo by Rozycki).

John DiMartino , newly elected presid ent of the Montauk-Broadway Civic Asso-ciation , catches up on paper work with tie assistance of MrS. Louis E. Bare, left ,recording secretary, and Mrs. Judith Wool .y, corresponding secretary. Standing areSal Mancuso, vice-president , and Lawrence Collins, treasurer. (Photo by Rozycki).