12 The Dallas Post Dallas, PA Wednesday, March 29 , 1989 SCHOOL Mixed media at Misericordia It's not a specific time period, and it's not representative of a particular artistic movement, it's the annual mixed media art ex- hibit, at College Misericordia, running now until April 17. True to its name, the mixed media show contains varied selec- tions of art. One piece on display is Marshall Rumbaugh’s lime-wood carving of the famous monk phi- losopher Thomas Merton. Dallas artist Sue Hand is showing a four by six foot realistic painting of a stairway. Misericordia Art Direc- tor Marilyn Webster commented, “You feel as if you can walk into the stairway and step up the stairs.” Among the other paintings, photography and needlecraft works by Art Gallery members is an ab- stract necklace and earring set by a Misericordia alumna. The showing is open Sunday - Friday, 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the Art Gallery at Misericordia. Call 675- 2181, ext. 247 for more informa- tion. E. DUI POSTER CONTEST - Above from left on the DUI TASK Force SHOWING MIXED MEDIA - From left, Sr. Mary Kittell, art gallery assistant and Marilyn Webster, director of the art gallery. The paintings are examples of works by gallery members in the mixed media exhibit at College Misericordia. is Carol Nicholas, DUI Project Coordinator and Dolores Shiskowski, Public Awareness Committee Chairperson. DUI group sponsors poster contest The Luzerne County Driving Under the Influence TASK Force is sponsoring a DUI Logo Contest. This contest is open to all area senior high school students. The topic for the logo is: “Don’t Drink and Drive”. The logo can be made up of words, symbols and/or shapes. All entries should be on 8 1/2 x 11 white paper (limit of three colors), with name, address, phone and school on back of each entry. The deadline is April 27 and the winner will receive $100. Two sec- ond place winners will receive $50 each. All entries must be submit- ted to the office of Catholic Social Services, 33 East Northampton Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18701 by April 27. For more information contactyour high school art teacher, Misericordia courses can help women cope College Misericordia is offering a series of non-credit courses to address the interests and concerns of women. Men and women are invited to register by calling Col- lege Misericordia’'s Continuing Education Department at 675- 2181. Director of the Ethics Institute of Northeast Pennsylvania, Siena Finley, RSM, will discuss “Ethical Questions for Families of the Ag- ing” on Wednesday, April 12, from 7 to 9 p.m. The course is meant to help care-givers find peace of mind while dealing with the demanding needs of aging parents, grandpar- ents and other relatives. Men and women who must meet the needs of others while trying not to neglect themselves or their families are invited to attend. Cost is $10 per person, or $15 for two in the same family. Another course, “S.0.S. - Help for Single or Separated Women” - will be offered on Saturday, April 29, from 9 a.m. to noon. Attorney Mary Louise Faber and Karen Hazelton, CPA, will discuss legal and financial pitfalls to anticipate and avoid when experiencing di- vorce. Through this class women can become aware of their rights and can prevent mistakes with life-long implications. The cost is $10. Scholarships are available for those who cannot pay. LCCC offers free vision screenings. The Luzerne County Community College Alumni Office recently sponsored free vision screenings for LCCC students and staff at the main campus in Nanticoke. The free screenings were conducted by Dr. Jay B. Tanner, a '78 graduate of the LCCC Pre-Optometry program who is employed by the Pugliese Eye Clinic; and included testing for glaucoma. Shown participating in the screenings are, from left, first row, Dr. Jay B. Tanner, Dallas; and Suzanne Dorosky, Dallas, LCCC student. Second row, Sandy Long, Wilkes-Barre, LCCC alumni coordinator; Dr. Joseph Serniak, Pugliese Eye Clinic intern; and Esther Liuzzi, Plains, LCCC director of college health services. School Menus DALLAS SCHOOLS Mar. 30 - Apr. 5 THURSDAY - Hot turkey sand- wich w/gravy, buttery rice, chilled pears, choice of milk. FRIDAY - Crispy pepperoni pizza, mixed vegetables, cinnamon applesauce, chocolate cake w/ peanut butter icing, choice of milk. MONDAY - Chili dog, crips po- tato puffs, golden apple juice, choice of milk. Extra chili dog w/ lunch 25c. TUESDAY - Crispy breaded chicken, glazed sweet potatoes, buttered twisty pasta, chilled pine- apple, choice of milk. WEDNESDAY - Tasty chicken soup, Italian hoagie w/lettuce- tomato, macaroni salad, cinnamon applesauce, choice of milk. LAKE-LEHMAN SCHOOLS Mar. 30 - Apr. 5 THURSDAY - Hamburg gravy, mashed potatoes, honey glazed carrot coins, roll-butter, ice cream, milk. FRIDAY - Apple juice, tuna or peanut butter-jelly hoagie, French fries, pineapple tidbits, milk. MONDAY - Minced bologna- sliced cheese sandwich, vegetable soup-crackers, peaches, milk. TUESDAY - Hamburg on bun, potato puffs, buttered corn, purple plums, milk. WEDNESDAY - Sloppy Joe on bun, parsleyed potatoes, green beans, cherry delight, milk. WEST SIDE TECH Mar. 30 - 31 Breakfast THURSDAY - Ham, pancakes w/syrup-butter, juice, milk or cereal, juice, pastry, milk. FRIDAY - Muffin-butter, choice of cereal, chilled orange juice, milk. Lunch THURSDAY - Italian meatballs w/tomato sauce on hard roll, sea- soned green beans, cherry short cake. milk. FRIDAY - French bread pizza, fresh relish cup, celery-broccoli- carrots, vegetable dip, fresh fruit bowl, pumpkin spice bars, milk. INSURANCE ESTIMATES FOREIGN & DOMESTIC FRAME & UNIBODY STRAIGHTENING BEFORE See The Complete Line Of Feugo Fireplaces At... Fender Benders’ Rick's Body Skop Rr. 105 W. Saylor Ave., Plains - 823-2211 FUEGO IV ® A WEEKEND PROJECT. Eleanor Miller announces for school board Eleanor Miller of Millington Road, Bulford Farms in Shaver- town has announced her candi- dacy for election to the Lake- Lehman School District Board of Directors. She is a resident of the Region III voting district in Jackson Township. She will be a candidate on both Democratic and Republi- can ballots in the Primary Elec- tion to be held on May 16. Married to Murray J. Miller, Architect, Mrs. Miller is the mother of two sons. Jason is a freshman at Clarion University and a mem- ber of the college swim team. Justin is an eighth grade student at Lake-Lehman Junior High School and a junior ski instructor at Big Boulder Ski area. . According to a prepared state- ment, her credentials include a B.S. in Business Education at Montclair State College, and doc- toral studies in Adult and Con- tinuing Education at Temple University. Mrs. Miller states that her par- ticipation on the Lake:Lehman School Board will be directed toward influencing the children of the school district to become all that they are capable of being. She expresses a special concern for students with special needs, in- cluding learning disabilities, cit- _. ing the need for teachers and all staff members in the academic environment to be in-serviced on the topic of learning differences which she believes will be viewed by historians in centuries to come asthe greatest educational break- through of the 20th century. “I'm concerned, literally, about saving children’s lives,” she notes. Miller stated, “The practices of nepo- tism, cronyism, and favoritism should have no place in public Eleanor Miller education and must be eradicated if our region is to progress and prosper. Nepotism destroys the spirit and the morale of our chil- dren's finest role models, those who have achieved on their own merits. We are growing to the level of sophistication where this is an idea whose time has arrived. Our children observe and emulate the example we set for them. If we expect them to reflect values of ethics, fairness, and equal oppor- tunity, that is the example we must set at the highest levels of our public institutions.” She states, “In this election, voters will have an opportunity to send a message to a new generation that our chil- dren, not politics, are the number one priority in the Lake-Lehman School District. This is a commit- ment it will take in order for the school district to fulfill its maxi- mum potential. This is the legacy our children deserve.” Mrs. Miller's 25-year career in education includes teaching of business education at Westury High School (Long Island, New York), Horace Greeley High School Tony award winner will speak at Wilkes Tony award winning actress Phyllis Frelich is slated to be this year's speaker at the Cooperative Lecture on Tuesday, April 4 at 7:30 p.m. at Wilkes Colle Barre. Ms. Frelich’s topic is “Hear the Silence”. The Cooperative Lecture is sponsored each cordia, Penn State Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne Count the Jewish Community Center of Wyoming Valley. Ms. Frelich is best known for her Broadway performance “Children of a Lesser God”. Television audi- ences saw her in the NBC Hallmark Hall of Fame feature, “Love is Never Silent”. Accompanied by her translator, she leads the audience into the wonderous yet often isolated world of the deaf. The Cooperative Lecture is free and open to the public. Special seating arrangements have been made to accommodate the deaf community. Shown planning the publicity for the Cooperative Lecture from left, are Ken Swisher, Wilkes College; Carol Wall, College Misericordia; Sandy Rifkin, Cooperative Lecture Chairperson; Pauline Carmody, Luzerne County Community College; Judy Geller, Jewish Community Center. Absent were Marianne Puhalla, Penn State WB and James Bebla, King’s College. FIBERGLASS REPAIRS SPOT & COMPLETE PAINTING TOWING AVAILABLE ~ 631 Memorial Hwy., Dallas, Pa “YOUR ONE STOP SHOP” 45> FREPLACE AND ® CHIMNEY EXPERTS = Financing And Free ° Layaway/Available a and the Robert E. Bell Middle School (Chappaqua, New York) and Summit High School (Summit, New Jersey). She has been em- ployed for 11 years at the Commu- nity College of Luzerne County as an administrator of non-traditional . programs for adult learners and Assistant to the Academic Dean. In addition, she is a part-time instructor of marketing and man- agement telecourses at LCCC. Mrs. Miller's community service includes participation in Leader- . ship Wilkes-Barre as a graduate and mentor. She was secretary®: and newsletter editor of the Lead- ership Wilkes-Barre Alumni Asso- ciation, a member of the Awards Committee and the Executive Women's Council of Greater Wilkes-Barre Chamber of Com- merce, and a Board Member and former President of Domestic Vio- lence Service Center of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Committee, a member of the Northeastern PA unit of the American Trauma Soci- ety, and First Vice-President of Emergency Medical Services of Northeastern Pa. A founding member of the Wyoming Valley Women’s Network, Miller served on the Planning Committee of the Wyoming Valley Women's Confer- ence and as a presenter two con- secutive years. She is an Advisory Board member of the Single Par- ents and Homemakers program at LCCC and a former member of the Public Advisory Committee of Penn- N ? sylvania Power and Light Co. She was a member of the Back Moun- tain Barnraising Committee, and she is a member ol the Kiwanis Club of Wilkes-Barre and the Luzerne County Association of Children and Adults with Learning Disabilities. ge Marts Center, So. Franklin Street, Wilkes- year by five local colleges, Wilkes College, College Miseri- y Community College, and King’s College along with Forms Flyers a o Typesetting * Fast, Accurate, Attractive and Reasonably Priced * Produced on State-of-the-Art Laser Typesetting Systems * Resumes Posters Bill Stuffers Invitations Envelopes and Letterheads lways See A Proof easonable Rates Te SDALLASCPosT 309-415 Plaza Dallas, PA 675-5211 Hi
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