heran meet- onday ed to ppett, James oulder r plus ridge, or and o also | Bear strum; Wolfe Book, onald k, Jo- allace; Lion had- ley. David 1 Dy- HN, strum, evine, 5 pre- ] and Game eo rep- s far cAvoy 1, 3% ster. n De- Acne 1aver- wat om is 8B” | Sut- and We pig a , and he) | FN EE i § i PSAs DALLAS, P ENNSYLVANIA TT TE Valley Jaycees To Play “Santa” The Jaycees of Greater Wilkes-|all who participate.” Barre will play “Santa’” again to | children of St. Stanislaus Institute the~“Orphans’ Shopping Tour,” the St. Michael's Industrial School through their Annual Shopping Tour.’ is set for December 13 . two collection days will be held ed capital, according to president Edward Urbanski, ton. Aim of the Project is to provide | "a one-day, shopping spree for the children of these two institutions... | © providing each child with five dol- lars to shop with as he so pleases. The Jaycee president stated that, | “over these many years this project! has proven to be a highlight of our ch@gypter’s holiday activities . . . and eal year our newer members quickly understand why. The work involved toward its culmination | brings. many imtangible rewards to 14K GOLD A RING with the enlarged 16 show detail Aruly a “bihstone gf hidren oe husband and wife family! . or grandchildren VA yA on « & Aa. 7 7” * Fry Sewele” HENRY'S Memorial Highway “Christmas | tend forth buckets for public con- Date of the Tour tributions on December 3 and 10. . although | Main points" of concentration will be near before hand to raise the much-need- | chapter | Kings- | , Prutzman and family in Danville. Shavertown SUSAN BEAUTY SHOP 95. MIDLAND DRIVE DALLAS | OPEN MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT In an effort to raise money for | Jaycees will don placards and ex- much- traveled traffic ar- teries in the area and at the various Shopping Centers locally. Support of the public is earnestly requested. Project planning is being directed by several past presidents of the | Greater Wilkes-Barre Jaycees. ldetown Mr. and Mrs. Z. E. Garinger, Dal- las, Lina Garinger, Alderson, Mr. and Mrs. Loren Keller spent Thanks- giving Day with Mr. ‘and Mrs. Frank Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Fritz, spent Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kanou and family in Nanticoke, | Mr. and Mrs. Myron Hess of Blooms- burg recently visited Mr. and Mrs. Fitz. Carol Toluba who is teaching in Philadelphia, and Philip Toluba, stu- dent at Penn State spent the holi- day weekend ‘with their parents, | Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Toluba. | Joanne McKenna Malaid of Ide- town, was married to William A.‘ Harrington of Benton, on Saturday, Dec. 3, at the Chapel of Foundry , Methodist Church D.C. Mrs. Pearl Connor returned to her home after spending the last week with Mr. and Mrs. John Connor in Delaware. | Miss Betty Sutton, Jchnson City, ! N.Y., spent the weekend with her! Parents; Mr. and Mrs. John Sutton. | Callers at the Sutton home on in Washington, | Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Corey Evans and daughter, Elsie, Louie Ridge and Mr. and Mrs. James Evans, Robert and Carol of Berwick. Serving and Waiting Class met in the church house on Thursday |. night. Mrs. Jesse Boice led the de- votions while Mrs. Corey Meade | presided. Next meeting will be in. form of a Christmas party. All of- ficers were retained for the year. Present were Mrs. Emory Hadsel, | Mrs. Corey Meade, Mrs. John Race, Mary Baker, Marie Spencer, Mrs. Ethel Shaver, Mrs. Pearl Connor, Mrs. Jesse Boice. Mus. Elmer Harris returned if | FRITZINGER'S 674-7053 | : You, the Merchant. . Why? To talk with people about your merchandise? To keep your store name before people as a reminder of your services? To create store traffic? You advertise. Whatever your objective, your advertising message must be exposed to a responsive audience to be productive. Our circulation audience? Well, people in our audience pay to get a copy of the paper— that’s an indication of voluntary response. Just how responsive are the readers of our paper? Our A.B.C.-audited circulation figures will tell you how many copies are sold, where they are sold, how much readers pay, and a host of other information. Ask to see a copy of our latest A.B.C. report. This symbol represents our membership in the Audit Bureau of Circula- tions, your assurance that our circulation facts are verified by independent audit, measured by recognized standards, and reported in standardized reports. These audited facts, available without obligation to interested persons, provide a factual basis for advertising rates, evidence of subscriber interest, facts on market coverage, and facts for appraising our circulation: quality and editorial vitality. ‘of the map DALLAS POST, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1966 —— Promoted 1 JOHN L. KROGULSKI John L. Krogulski, N. Lehi gh | - Street, Shavertown, has been pro- moted to Division Plant Manager- North of Commonwealth Telephone | Company as announced by Granville Miller, General Plant Manager of the Company. Krogulski started his telephone career as a cable splicer’s helper back in 1948. Prior to this he had several years’ experience with the Sordoni Construction Company and hitch in the U. S. Marine Corps where he attained the rank of serg- ' eant. In his new assignment, Kro-' gulski will be responsible for plant operations in the Wellsboro, To- wanda, Clarks Summit, Montrose and Tunkhannock districts, Mr. Miller stated: ‘“‘Jack’s experi- ence has been broad in the tele- | phone field, having served as cable- | man, installer-repairman and cen- tral office switchman. After a high- ly trained specialists course, he be- | came Communications Consultant in | 1962 an expert on advising commercial and industrial customers as to their communication needs. In 1963 he became Sales Manager Company. Jack has the technical and commercial back- ground to see that the quality of | service of the Company is top- |! notch to every subscriber in his | division.” The Krogulskis—Jack, his wife, | Jennie, and the children, Judy Ann, 14, and Kenneth, 9—will continue ! to make their home in Shavertown. her home from the Nesbitt Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Boice had as guests last week, Mr. and Mrs. Don- ald Boice from Rochester, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Galen Walker, Kevin | and Michele from Rockville, Mary- | land; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bois | from Harrisburg; Patsy Hoover, Emerson, N. J.; Dean Long, hil; | ! adelphia; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Hoo- ver, Idetown; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert . Moyer, Herbie and Connie, Outlet; Mrs. Ralph Moyer, Idetown. The Walkers and the | stayed for deer hunting. Boices of French Carols”, , English Christmas”. i Claudia Zaboski, | ton, N.Y., | you in high school. | York. All applicants to the College | zines and newspapers they read Dallas High Chorus And Band To Present Christmas Concert The Dallas Senior High School Band under the direction of Lester R. Lewis, and Chorus, directed by Mrs. Robert F. Sherwood will pre- sent a Christmas program, Sunday, December 11 at 3 p. m. in the Senior High School Auditorium. The band will present the first part of the program playing “Jingle Bells Rhapsody”, “Noel Suite’, “A Group and “An Old Organists will be Ruth Higgins, Thomas Myers and Diane Davies. Accompanists for the chorus will be Frank Juarbe, Jcan Nelson, Beth Sheehan, Michael Evans, Thomas Earl, Janet Balshaw, Patti Larson, Ruth Higgins and Dorothy Philo. The Mixed Chorus will sing a varied program starting with a can- on, “Glory, Laud and Honor”. “Jubi- | late Deo” follows with a sextet, | groups san Weiner, Paul Turner, Thomas Viernon and William Rowett. James Taylor is soloist for “The First Snowfall ”. “March of The Kings”, “White Christmas’, Do You Hear What I Hear ?” and Happy Holiday” are other Mixed Chorus numbers. “O Listen to the Angels Sing” will feature instrumental accompani- ment: Janet Balshaw and Judy Dana, flutes; Chris Demmy, orches- tra bells; Diane Davies, percussion; Greg Hicks and Stephen Townsend, guitars, Special groups appearing in the concert will be the Chanters singing “The Sleigh”; the Choraliers, “Ha- nukkah Holiday” and the combined singing “Christmas Morn”. The Greenbriars, Roy. Supulski, Greg Hicks, Steve Townsend will do “What Child Is This?” A Barber- shop Quartet -Howard Wiggin, Paul Changes In Student Reading There may have been a dramatic i shift in the reading habits of col- lege-bound youth during the past several years, according to the re- sults of a study at Columbia College issued today. The report reveals a trend from the classics, British writers, and those magazines with light content, to existentialists like Camus and Dostoevsky, American writers like Steinbeck, Hemingway, Faulk- ner, and Ayn Rand, and more seri= ous magazines like The New Repub- | lic, Newsweek, Saturday Review, | and The New Yorker. According to Vere Gaynor, a Col- umbia freshman from Southhamp- | “The reason for the chift, I guess, is the greater pressures on The Viet Nam war is a big factor. It seems im-! portant to search for something of value, something: meaningful to you.” The findings come from a com- parison of books, magazines, and newspapers read by entering fresh- men in the Class of 1962 and the! Class of 1970 at Columbia College, away | the 2,700-man liberal arts school at Columbia University in New are requested to list the books they have most enjoyed and the maga- regularly. Shakespeare is the author who has declined in popularity most con- | spicuouslyy. While 25 per cent of | the Class of 1962 listed at least! one of his plays as a favorite, only nine per cent of the 700-man Class | of 1970 did so. Homer, Dickens, G. | | B. Shaw, and E. M. Forster were other important writerss who have suffered a loss of interest. On the other hand several authors | have risen sharply in popularity. | Camus listed as a favorite by only | two per cent of the Class of 1962, | was enjoyed by 18 per cent of the Class of 1970. James Joyce wag read by five times as many mem- bers of the Class of 1970 as in the earlier group. Kafka, Steinbeck, Ayn | Rand, Fitzgerald, and Faulkner were others whose stock has risen. Some authors who were strongly liked eight years ag, continued to | be fairly. popular: Joseph Conrad, Thomas Hardy, Jean-Paul Sartre, Sinclair Lewis, Mark Twain, Thomas ! Wolfe, and Hemingway. Certain single books also continue | to enjoy the students’ favor: Hux- | ley’s Brave New World, Joyce's | Portrait of the Artist as a Young' | cent. | adds, Man, Salinger’'s Catcher in the Rye, Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm, Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. Conspicuously abs Sent from the Class of 1970’= list of formerly well-liked authors : Machiavelli, Jane Austen, “Plato, D. HH; Larne and Eugene O'Neill. Also missing were such well-pub- licized moderns as James Baldwin, Henry Miller, Jack Kerouac, Saul Bellow, Gunter Grass, and the befter known poets. In magazines, the Columbia Col- lege study has revealed a move- ment away from lighter reading | toward - periodicals more concerned with weightier matters. Reader's Digest was read by 29 per cent of the Class of 1962, but by only six per cent of the Class of 1970. Life decreased from 55 per cent to 35 per cent and Look, Sat-: urday Evening Post, and Sports Iilu- strated showed similar losses among students. Over the eight-year span The New Republic had the greatest jump in |‘ student subscriptions, from two per cent to 15 per cent. Saturday Re- view was next with a rise in steady readers from four per cent to 14 per Newsweek was read by 24 per cent of the Class of 1962, but 36 per cent of the Class of 1970 en- | joyed it; The New Yorker increased | in readers from 10 per cent to 21 | ‘per cent. | Other magazines per’'s, National Reviaw, | American and Esquire. Time is the most widely read mag- azine among the Class of 1970, with 1'49 per cent, up three per cent from . eight years ago. Playboy was in-| in the regularly-read cat- cluded egory by only a tiny handful. “I think there’s a definite move- ment away from the mass mag-! azines toward the more specialized, meaty ones,” baum, a Columbia freshman from Evanston, Illinois. freshman from Cincinnati, Ohio, “Many students today would rather than his pastimes.” Only one newspaper Was widely | I'read by this ye s entering class, 40 per cent of whom come from the | 45 states outside the Middle Atlantic! The | | New York Times, which had about | area and 16 foreign countries: two-thirds of the Class of 1970 as regular Yeaders. * CHANEL * MY SIN + '* ARPEGE * REVLON MAX FACTOR SHULTON * JEAN NATE * IMPREVU etc. J. J. FEDOCK, R.P. 675-1191 HALL'S PHARMACY YOUR BAGCX MOUNTAIN HEADQUARTERS For : COSMETICS and TOILETRIES HALL'S PHARMACY SHAVERTOWN, PA. (OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY 8 AM. TO 10:00 P.M.—98 HOURS) Registered Pharmacists at your service E. W. HALL, R.P. s JADE EAST * YORK TOWN s-OlLD SPICE * YARDLEY ENGLISH LEATHER TOP BRASS etc. L. J. ELLIOTT, R.P. 675-1192 that ‘showed a rise in student readers were Har- Scientific | says Michael Rosen- Mark Morris. a | read about man’s dilemma | | Turner, Wiilliam Rowett and Thom- | as Vernon will sing “Jolly Old St. | { Nicholas”. Sally Myers, Sharon Yal- | | ick, Linda Croom and Sarah Peters | will present a novelty, “Frosty, the | | Snowman”. Chris Demmy, Beverly Whiting, Su-| “Jingle Bells” will be | sung in Japanese by Diane Davies. | The song was translated by ex-| change student Yoicchi Wakabay- | ashi. Anna Fahlen, exchange student | from Sweden, will sing two of her | native Christmas Carols. The public is invited. There will be no charge for admission. The Choraliers and Chanters will be presenting a short Christmas program at the Miners National Bank in Dallas on Friday, December 16 at 6 p. m. and at the Shaver- | | town Shopping Center at 6:30 p. m. CLASSIFIED ADS COST LITTLE. "GET RESULTS! SECTION A — PAGE 7 7 FOR YOUR NEXT PRINTING JOB, CALL THE POST Dr. Aaron S. Lisses ! Optometrist 88 Main Street, Dallas Professional Suite 674-4506 Gateway Center DALLAS HOURS: Edwardsville Tuesday - - 2 to 8 pm. 287-9735 Wednesday - 2 to & p.m. Friday - - 2 to 5pm. GATEWAY CENTER HOURS: Daily 98830 to 5:30 p.m. Evenings Thurs. & Fri. to 8 p.m. CNTACT LENSES ry Loans Over $600 Made by OPEN DAILY — 9 AM. TO 5 P.M. { i LET ~ 26 LAKE STREET DALLAS, PA. HELP YOU WITH LOANS of $20.00 to $3500 Call: 674-1781 DALLAS FINANCE COMPANY DALLAS CONSUMER DISCOUNT CC Dallas Consumer Discount Company For Friendly, Convenient And Confidential Service FRIDAY — 9 AM. TO 8 P.M. OPEN SATURDAYS TILL XMAS — 9 AM. TO 12 P.M. “EN eee EERE eR * . / AAR a ; Sache So Bt 50, Ml ah RD RRS RE BEAN REAL RAR Rh WB BRASS CHOIR The Wyoming National Bank Of Wilkes Barre Cordially Invites You To Enjoy A Program . Of Christmas Music Presented By The Fo Lake-Lehman High School _ under direction of John Miliauskas Wednesday, December 14 at 12:30 p.m. In The Bank Lobby 29 West Market Street Wilkes Barre, Pa. SEAM EES RRR ARR RA ERR EERE ES ARES REESE RE A o ks & tas ewrsn y