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Image provided by: Freeport Memorial Library
• I ^ K . V- • I U) £ Soviet Orchestra to . o 0\ 0\ perform at FHS CC lU ' Q LU Vi O X Ui Q < m , in its debut U.S. lour, ihc 15*mcmbcr Leningrad Conservatory Chamber Orchestra will perform at Freeport High School Thursday. October 18, hosted by the Freeport Community Concert Association in cooperation with the Friendship Ambassadors Foundation. . . The performance, one of only two scheduled in the New York MctiopoliDh area, is limed to coincide with the 150th anniversary of the birth of Tchaikovsky. The orchestra is made up of the 128- ycar>old Leningrad C6nscrvatory*s most gifted graduates, and has performed cxlci:sivcty both in the U.S.S.R. and abroad to critical acclaim. The Conservatory is the oldest musical institution of higher learning in the Soviet Union, Tickets for the 8 p.m. performance, which will be drawn from the works of Vivaldi, Bach, Mozart, Mendelssohn, Rachmaninov, Shosiakovitch and others, arc available at the subsidized price of S5. For information, call 623* 0076 or 379-1716. The Freeport Community Concert Association’s history of bringing outstanding dance and musical groups to Freeport audiences at subsidized prices is largely the work of 20-year Association President Harry Harrison, who is. a member of several organizations closely connected with embassies al the United Nations. Cited by the village in 1989 for his outstanding role as cultural ambassador to its citizens, Mr. Harrison has been with the Association since 1950.. Party for Freeport author ■ A “Book.Party” sponsored by the NAACP in honor of Freeport author Denton Watson and his recently published biography of Clarence Miicbeil, Jr., who was director of the NAACP Washington Bureau, will be held Sunday, September 30. . The event will begin at 12 noon a t Frcciwri’s United Methodist Church, 46 Pine Street, where Mr. Watson chairs the Adm inistrative Council.’ Copies of the book, ”Lion in the Lobby,” will be available for purchase and Mrs. Watson will be on hand to autograph copies. The wx)rk, which took Watson 10 years to write,' draws a sharp contrast between the strategies of the NAACP, which saw civil rig h ts, as* a constitutional issue, and the Reverend Martin Luther King, who saw it as a moral issue. I f chronicles Mr. MitchcH’s association with, eight ’ presidents and a host of powerful bwmakers. The author and his wife Rose joined Freeport’s United Methodist Church just after moving to Long Island in 1980. They have two children, Victor and Dawn. McCluskey’s Steak House A Long Island landmark. . . . \Famous For Steaks’ STILL . . THE BEST VALUE ON LONG ISLAND!! Where Can You Eat Steak and Drink Vodka For Under $20.00??? at McCluskey’s You Can McCIuskey’s Famous Steak Sandwich (16 oz. Sirloin Steak) with French Fried Potatoes .■ ;V::$15.50 Vodka & Tonic $2.75 Total $18^5 f Tax Serving Long Islanders and iheir fjuhilies for o v » 5S 516-785-9711 157 West Sunrise Highway • Bellmbre LENINGRAD CONSERVATORY CHAMBER ORCHESTRA will app e a r a t Freeport High School O ctober 1 8 , p r e s e n te d by th e F r e e p o r t Com m u n ity Concert A ssociation. Czech choir at FHS Jitrd, a children’s choir from Czechoslovakia, will be at Freeport High School on O ctober 12 to p^^dpate in a clinic and performance with ih6High School’s choral students. The 40 gills, aged 12 to 17 from Hiradec IM o v e , a city about 60 miles northeast of Prague,- are touring the United States for the First time for a series of performances, following o\'cr 20 concert lours in Europe during the past 17 years performing primarily contemporary Czechoslovkian mode. FHS Choral Music teacher Stephen Pagano noted: “We arc pleased to h o a ' these very talented vocalists and to have them share both music and experiences with our 200 choral music rtudents.” Adult classes still open Freeport’s ‘ Adult Continuing Education Fall 1990 sem ester is underway, with classes Having begun on Monday, September 24. However, there arc sUll some openings in classes in such areas a s the Arts,: B usiness Skills, Computers, Driving. Home Crafts, and Languages. Special seminars on selected topics will .also be offered during the semester. Adult Literacy classes In English as a Second LanguagC'and G eneral Education Diplom a (GED) classes are also underway. Further information on the current schedule of classes can be obtained by. calling the Adult Education Office at 867-5314. Freeport residency is not required. 320 MonUuk Hwy. WattUIfp . 587-7400 K ^ tAuranis All Size Lobsters Braitod or Steamed 275 S.MainSL Freeport 370-7052 Sunday Brunch 11:30AU-3PU 9.S\ Come By Boat or Car Brunch • Lunch • Dinner Parties Arranged IHE CAM P THAT CARES” EARLY CAMP ENROLLMENT DEADUNE 0CT.2 DAY CAMP ^ .Ages 3-11 TRAVEL PROGRAM Grades 5-10 iSSSfS? Soum Shore itciiim i • cur w . . . i ^ . Country Day School & Camp Mature Adult Staff Lunch ^ Transportation 1149 Newbridge Rd. N. Bellmore - 7 8 5 ^ 1 1 . _ __________ - - — y a — The Freepe present a pro, music sung accompanied piano on Suni The progr from French songs, and ai by Debussy. Yvonne Printi . Ms. Zand i soprano. ha\ Alts Muscun the .sponso Development will porfon Library is s County ( Dcvciopmcni .Car The Job i C e n ter of Library.has schedule ol Lillie Selv counselor,, with clients Tuesdays fn Those loo to change c and writing invited to n Ms. Sclw)!! The care offered a ai^intm en residents IS BAl t : RAI ' 7 ; ' :