PAGE ELEVEN: Dallas School Board continued from PAGE 1 machines, music equipment and band uniforms for the junior high and for majorette uniforms for the senior high. The bids were referred to appropriate committees for tabulation and evaluation. A letter was received from Dallas Letterman’s Booster Club officially presenting the sign erected on Route 309 and Center Hill Road to the school. It was noted that the sign had been placed there with the permission of Hume Daron, ‘owner of the property. Letters of thanks will be sent to the club and to Mr. Daron. Earl Fritzges, chairman of the finance and insurance committee, announced there will be a W@pecial meeting held March’ 17 at 7 p.m. to prepare the budget for the next school year. Milton Evans, chairman of the teachers’ committee an- nounced they will meet with . the board March 31 at 7:30 p.m. The treasurer's statement showed a cash balance on hand of $58,622.22 as of Feb. 27. A resolution was adopted to bor- row from the United Penn Bank a sum not to exceed $125,000 for payroll and current bills. The cafeteria reported for the month of February showed an averate of 2197 students were served daily. Income for the month was $18,147.68 with a def- icit aftghr expenses of $1786.84. Annduncement was made that the tennis courts will be ready for use; this spring. The ques- . tion to whether they will - be open to the general public is to be decided by the school athletic council. Dr. Mellman stated that more definite in- formation will be available at the next board meeting. A resolution was adoped to permit Thomas F. Carr, gui- dance counselor, to attend the Pennsylvania School Counselor Association Conference in Her- shey March 12, 13 and 14. area colleges attend Approval was given for Sophia Morris, Dallas Senior High School librarian, to attend the school library con- ference at Millersville State College April 17 and 18. Permission was given for the followingprincipalsandteachers to attend the Luzerne County Social Studies Council Work- shop: Edgar W. Hughes Jr. assistant principal, Dallas Se- nior High School ; Donald Evans, RichardDisqueandJohnTurner, high school teachers; Ferne Whitby and William Roberts, junior high school teachers; Walter Prokopchak, elementary teaching principal; Phillip Zachary, head teacher, and John Mulhern, elementary teaching principal. A resolution was adopted to | allow Edward J. Potera, Span- ish teacher in the senior high school, to serve as a member of a Commission on Secondary Schools of the Middle States Associationscheduledtovisitthe Jim Thorpe Area Junior-Senior High School in April. Permission was granted to football coach, Jack Jones, to | attend the National Football Clinic in Atlantic City, N.J. March 23 through 26. Interim action of the super- intendent to permit Ruth Lewis, | James Pichert and Clifton Dun- gey, students, to attend the Region II State Chorus at the Line Mountain Senior High School, Herndon, was approved. Permission was given Back Mountain Baseball for Boys, Westmoreland teeners’ team, to use the baseball field at the Dallas Senior High School for practice Tuesday and Thurs- day evenings and Saturdays. A resolution was adopted to permit the following Key Club members to attend the State Key Club Convention in Pitts- burgh; Harry Goeringer, dele- gate; Grant Davis, delegate; William Bradbury, alternate regional conference Representatives of College Misericordia, Wilkes College and King’s College were among those @ittending the regional meetiv'g of the Intercollegiate Conference on Government for the Eastern Pennsylvania Dis- ‘Hans Henninger at @hanute AFB Airman Hans J. Henninger, son of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Henninger, RD 3, Dallas, has completed basic training at Lackland AFB, Texas. He has been assigned to Chanute AFB, Ill, for training in air- craft maintenance. Airman Henninger is a 1969 graduate of Bellevue High School, Bellevue, Neb. - ® Special Care To Antiques Over 50 Years Dependable Service M. B. BEDDING co. | 326 So. Main. St.,. Wilkes-Barre won - §22-2491 trict at East Stroudsburg State College March 1. Anthony G. Gaglione, sassis- tant professor of social studies at Stroudsburg, serves as ad- visor to the organization. The general meeting and orient- ation session was conducted in Stroud Hall followed by individ- ual committee meetings and the executive meeting. Among the committee dis- cussions held included those of health, education, welfare; for- eign affairs; civil. rights and judiciary, natural resources and agriculture; business, in- dustry and labor; military af- fairs, civil defense; space and ocean affairs; urban affairs; government organization and tax and finance. M. B. Bedding completely rebuilds. your furniture then recover it: in your choice of lovely fabrics illness and bereavement. SRR OF TANG The family of Mrs. wishes to express their sincere appreciation for the acts of kindness extended to them through cards, gifts and flowers during their Mother's long M. Lillian Hildebrant IF YOU PLAN to purchase a MEMORIAL, allow us to prepare it NOW! We guarantee to have it installed before Evora DAY. NOW IS THE TIME — : to take care of your CEMETERY NEEDS! ORDERS PLACED NOW WILL RECEIVE A SPECIAL 30% WINTER DISCOUNT! Beauty, Quality, Craftsmanship in MEMORIALS ENDURING We are specialists in fully guaranteed monuments sculptured from Select Barre Granite. Monuments William R. Petro, Manager MARBLE & GRANIT CO. INC. DISPLAY: LUZERNE—DALLAS HIGHWAY (BETWEEN O'MALIA LAUNDRY AND CONTINENTAL INN) LUZERNE, PA. SUMMIT HILL Phone: 287-7140 delegate; Steven Goode, alter- : nate Delegate; man, secretary. Permission was given for William Baran, Key Club advisor, to accompany the students. Eight sections of tenth grade students received permission to attend the King’s College pres- entation of ‘“The Tragedy of Troilus and Cressida” March 18. Interim action of the super- intendent to permit senior high - Terry Hart- school students to participate in the radio program ‘‘Scholastic’’ conducted by Station WAZL, Hazleton, was approved. Dallas students won the first round of the competition. Their op- ponents were from West Hazle- ton High School and Leighton High School. The semi-finals will | be held in May. Judy Ann Paltrineri, 460 Main St., Luzerne, and Viola M. Visneski, Box 27, Noxen, were appointed as housekeepers - inthe Dallas Junior High School. Helen A. Frantz, RD 1, Dallas, i was approved as an available substitute custodian. Milton Evans, vice president of the Dallas board of directors, presided at the meeting in the absence of the president, John LaBerge. Also absent were i directors Garvin Smith and | Bernard Novicki. Billie Jo Brice receives wings Billie Jo Brice, a daughter of Maj. and Mrs. Regis W. Brice, Pole 49, Harveys Lake, was presented with her stew- ardess wings by Northwest Orient Airlines after complet- ing five weeks of specialized training at the Minneapolis- St. Paul International Air- port. Miss Brice, a graduate of Dallas Senior High School, attended Quincy Junior College and Wilkes College. She will be assigned to the airline’s home base in Minneapolis-St. Paul. Howard Wiener on dean’s list Ohio Wesleyan : University; Delaware, Ohio, has announced that Howard Wiener III has been named to the dean’s list for the first term, 1969-70. Howard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wiener Jr., 161 High- land Ave., Trucksville, is a senior at.the university. The term dean’s list is based upon grades for the fall term, 1969-70, and includes freshmen and sophomores who had a term average of 3.50 or better; juniors with a term average of 3.55 or better; seniors with a term average of 3.60 or bet- ter. Xi oy DRS..| - Hours. candidate for division & P. BERGER Optometrists 27 Machell Ave., Dallas 675-5067 “Wednesday Morning THE DALLAS POST, MARCH 19, 1970 Brian W. Beard “wins scholarship Brian W. Beard, a freshman at The Pennsylvania State Un- iversity majoring in earth and mineral sciences, received a $600 scholarship from the Sears, Roebuck Foundation. Brian became eligible for the scholarship after successfully completing one term of college course work. Brian, the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Ralph Beard, 117 Church St., Dallas, is a grad- uate of Dallas Senior High School. He is also a 1968 Nat- ional 4-H Award winner in leadership. Edward Crinnion graduates from Belknap College Edward Crinnion Jr., son of. Mr. and Mrs. Edward V. Crin- nion, Sr.,»Valley View Drive, Dallas, graduated from Belk- nap College, Center Harbor, N.H., recently with a BS de- gree in mathematics. While attending Belknap, Edward was active in the photography club; astronomy and physics club and on dorm council; he was on the staff of the yearbook, ‘Northwind’ and the newspaper, ‘“Belk- napian.”’ He was named to the dean’s list in his sophomore, junior and senior years and to “Who’s Who Among Stud- ents in American Colleges and Universities. . momen Hl 4 Call A —— Monday & Thursday Evenings For Aopointmenty RE — aE Give Whitman : American FINO’S Phamacy At The Light In Dallas Phone 675-1141 Greeting COSMETIC Brian W. Beard, Dallas, Roebuck and Co. store in Sears, Roebuck Foundation. Penn State 4-H Club leader. shown at scholarship from Joshua A. left, receives a $600 Tobey, manager of the Sears, State College, on behalf of the At right is Leland G. Jinks, 25 teacher-aides in Dallas schools Dallas School approved the appointment of 25 College Misericordia stu- dents as teacher-aides in Dal- las elementary schools for a period extending from Feb.24 to May 12. A letter .was received by the board from Michael H. Yozviak, coordinator of the teacher-aide program, College Misericordia, commenting on the success of similar pro- grams in the past. The letter read in part, ‘Reports from our students who participated in the teacher-aide program in your secondary schools during the past semester indicate that it was a great success. “May we at College Miseri- Lake man with Marines Marine Cpl. Ronald S. Bainbridge, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Bainbridge, Harveys Lake, is now serving at the Marine Corps Air Sta- tion in Yuma, Ariz. District has’ cordia extend sincere thanks to you, your Board of Educa- tion, and your most cooper- ative staff for giving our pro- spective teachers the oppor- tunity to gain an invaluable experience.” The students and the schools 'to which they are assigned are as follows: Dallas Elementary School: Sr. Patricia Clark, Virginia Fitch, Michele M. Malinoski, Catherine Mc- Namara and Linda Zettle- moyer. Dallas Intermediate School: Patricia Klug, Colleen B. Mar- tin, Deborah A. Pembleton and Judith Weidman; Shavertown Elementary School: Jane M. Bramwell, Sally - Loftus, She- lia Ann Tuthill and Katherine Whitehead. Trucksville Elementary. Sc- hool: Deborah Berrettini, Karen Ann Kurczek and Kathy Staub ; Westmoreland Element- ary School: Mary Lou Barder, Rita M. Gocek, Mary Gubitosa, Regina Husovski, Carolyn Kuchemba, Phyllis Ockenkow- ski, Regina Umlah, Ann Marie Urbanski and Constance Williams. 72905 NORNKNMAIL EN X RESERVE aE THE UNIQUE STAKES of AMIERKGA Y82Z23P63X arg tnt bP INCOOTI= AND THIS DOLLAR THINKS IT EARNED MAXIMUM INTEREST we hate to break the bad news but a dollar just isn’t earning all it could even at maximum legal rates, unless the interest is compounded continuously. UNITED PENN BANK COMPOUNDS CONTINUOUSLY from DAY OF DEPOSIT at the HIGHEST RATE ?. or mr ENDING of INTEREST allowed by law. SAVINGS PLANS FROM Joi io 2 Next quarter starts April 1st To 2 Why fool around? It's your money make the most of it nited Penn Bank The bank you can grow with Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation