PAGE SEVEN meet the team Dallas Senior High School football stadium will will be the scene of the annual ‘Mcet the Team Night’ tonight at 6:30. Coach Jack Jones has arranged for an intra-squad game to be played, followed by the intro- duction of players. Sponsored by the Dallas Area Lettermen- Booster Club, the program has become an annual event and provides an excellent op- portunity for parents and fans to become better acquainted with team personnel. The Booster Club will present the first in a series of game films Sept. 8. They will be * at Dallas tonight shown every Tuesday night - during football season. This program, initiated last season, is made possible through the cooperation of Coach Jones and his- staff, along with camera- men Tudor Ellis and Joe Katy]. It resulted in football interest reaching an all-time high. Films will be shown at the Brothers Four Restaurant, Main Street, Dallas, starting at 8 p.m. President Bob Hislop has an- nounced that new membership cards will be available at the meeting. He requests all members to attend. / sports talk by George Eget Baseball’s National League East is having quite a race this year. Even though the race has five teams involved, two of those teams have losing records. Pennsylvania has two teams in the race. It has the current top team, the Pittsburg Pirates, and the Philadelphia Phillies, a team with a below 500 record. However, the Pirates are losing lately and the Phillies are winning At press time, the Pirates were 70-63 for a .526 percentage. The ago Cubs were in second piace, only one game be- -—- hind. The New York Mets were one and a half games back. The ‘St. Louis Cardinals were six ~ games back. But the “Fighting “ Phillies” with a 62-70 record, . were only seven and a half games behind. The team that had the lowest winning percentage, but still won a pennant was the 1959 L.A. Dodgers with an 88-68 record for a .564 winning percentage. ~~ Coach Roland Schmidt of the Wilkes College Colonels had 99 players show up Aug. 31 for the first practice of Wilkes’ 25th season. The Colonels open Sept. 26 with Lycoming College—and they need a new quarterback to replaced June graduate Joe Zakowskr. The candidates for the position are Dennis Brew, 5- 10, 175-pound senior; John Payer, 6-2, 195-pound junior; and Mike Barski, 6-1, a 175- pound sophomore. Brew is the only with varsity ex- perience’ Wilkes has won 37 out of their last 40 games and has 31 letter- men returning. : Penn State has released its 1970 football preview. Joe Paterno’s Lions have many records to uphold this fall. State ‘has a 22-game winning streak, a 30-game non-losing record and 31 consecutive non-losing seasons dating back to 1939. The Lions have had two 11-0 seasons in a row and two Orange Bowl . victories. Concerning the winning streak, Coach Paterno said, “We have enough problems with things we can do some- thing abgut. If you get worked up E streak, all of a sudden you don’t have one. We don’t want to manufacture pro- blems. I expect the 1970 team to have the same major quality others lve had in the past- pride ifSthemselves, pride in winning. Other things generally fall into place. You have to develop poise—that comes with experience.” Among the problems facing State this year, is finding a quarterback to replace Chuck Burkhart, an average passer, ‘but a good field general with an all-winning record in college starts. The Lions have senior Mike Cooper and junior Bob Parsons. In last spring’s Blue- White game, a scrimmage con- cluding spring practice, Cooper completed 11 of 22 passes for 191 yards and four touchdowns and . Parsons was 15 of 20 for 267 yards and three touchdowns. Another questionmark for State will be the defense. The 1969 defense not only stopped opponents, but could also score on them. The unit had three All- Americans)Mike Reid, Dennis Onkotz and Neal Smith) and played together for three years. They also stayed healthy. What about this year? Paterno has made some switches to strengthen the defense. Senior ‘Charlie Zapiec has been moved from offensive guard to inside linebacker and Gary Hull from defensive end to outside linebacker. Mike Smith will return to the secondary after being a linebacker for a while. The offense appears to be much stronger this year. The team will pass more this year and Cooper, Parsons and sopho- more John Hufnagle are good runners. Franco Harris and Lydell Mitchell should have fine years running for yardage and catching passes on plays during which they flood zones after coming out of the backfield. The schedule is going to be tough this year because all op- ponents will have two common objectives—to beat the three time Eastern champions and to end the nation’s longest winning streak. Navy is the Lion’s opening game opponent at Beaver Stadium on Sept. 19. Navy should be an improved team be- cause it had an undefeated Plebe team last fall. The Mid- shipmen have also scheduled Colgate on Sept. 12 to free them of opening game jitters. Colorado will try to get revenge for the Big Eight at Colorado on Sept. 26. The Lions travel to Wisconsin on Oct. 3 and to Boston College on Oct. 10. Top rival Syracuse will invade Beaver Stadium for Home coming on Oct. 17. Syracuse will try to avenge last year’s 15-14 defeat. State travels to Army on Oct. 24th and returns home to play West Virginia on Oct. 31. The Lions play Maryland away on Nov. 7 and entertain Ohio University on Nov. 14. This is Band Day, on which high school bands from throughout the state assemble and put on a com- bined half-time show. The re- gular season ends on Nov. 21 when Pittsburgh plays at State in the traditional game. Notes—tennis A way to improve your game—watch ‘Love Tennis’’ on Channel 44 Saturdays at 6 p.m. The Dallas Dodgers captured the 1970 Minor League champion- ship by defeating the Westmoreland Braves, 11-10. The game climaxed a five year period of 14 wins and two losses. In the photograph are Walter Hennebaul, manager; Earl Lozier, coach; Walter Hennebaul Jr., John Prater, Eric Tappa, Randy Jacobs, Scott Carter, Bill Wentz, Greg Gentille, Bob Whalen, . John Davis, Ray Kern, Jim Rosser, Jay Troup and Sean Muldoon. Knights list football games Lake-Lehman High School football team will host Wyalus- ing in the opening contest of the 1970 season Sept. 12. Hanover will visit the Knights Sept. 19. The rest of the schedule in- cludes three home games and five away. Lake-Lehman goes to Meyers Sept. 26; Central Catholic Oct. 2; Plains Oct.9; Wyoming Oct. 23, and to Dallas for the final game, Nov. 26. Home games include West Side Tech Oct. 17, G.A.R. Nov. 7 and Nanticoke Nov. 14. George Curry is head coach of the Knights, assisted by John Oliver, John Jenkins, Ed Nar- kiewicz and David Harris. Jane Morris will coach girl’s hockey and Wilma Schierer, girl’s cheerleading. Edward Edwards has been appointed to the position of game manager for all sports at Lake-Lehman High School for the 1970-71 school year. Mr. Edwards’ chief responsi- bility will be to oversee inter- scholastic contests in all sports in which the students at Lake- Lehman High School partic- ipate. A teacher of mathematics and former head football coach, 1955-67, he is deeply interested in athletics and in youth. football tickets available now Gerald Stinson, athletic di- rector at Dallas Senior High School, announces that season tickets for adults and students for the 1970 football season will be available starting Wednes- day at the senior high office. The tickets are good for all home games including Pittston Area, Sept. 12 at 2 p.m. at the Dallas Senior High School. Because they are non-porous and easy to clean, nickel stain- less steel platters and prepara- tion equipment in the meat de- partments of supermarkets help reduce bacteria that cause meat discoloration. Andrew Gallagher top dairy winner Andrew F. Gallagher, RD 1, Dallas, with a Brown Swiss Junior Yearling, was the top winner from Luzerne County at the 24th Northeastern Pennsyl- vania District Dairy Show at NEBA grounds in Tunkhannock ‘Aug. 25. A total of 150 head of 4-H animals were shown before Judge Obie Snyder, Impler. Twelve Northeast counties were represented by 4-H members with the five major breeds. Wayne County showed the most blue ribbons. The entire show consisted of 77 Holsteins, 28 Guernseys, 25 Jerseys, 11 Ayrshires, and seven Brown Swiss. _ The Agricultural Extension Service conducted the show as part of its 4-H dairy program. Other ribbon winners from Luzerne County were Holstein: intermediate calf—Joseph P. Fuller, RD 3, Dallas, white Blue Knights open season Marv Antinnes, Wyoming Seminary’s director of ath- letics, has been running a foot- ball camp for the Blue Knights prior to their 1970 season. The Seminary Knights enter the 1970 pigskin campaign with an im- pressive 7-0 record from last year. Marv says it won’t be so much a question of how to im- prove on that record as how to maintain it. Coach Antinnes’ camp started Aug. 31, and will end Sept. 5 with a pre-season varsity scrimmage on the fifth. Seminary’s pre-season opener will be the Perkiomen School Sept. 19 in Pennsburg. The football schedule at Semin- ary will continue through Sep- tember and October, and will wind up with the homecoming game against Blair Academy of Blairstown, N.J., Nov. 7. The new Wilkes courts are coming along fine. The courts are painted green with red trim. * What an improvement over the washboards that were there! Serving Northeastern Pennsylvania On A Clear Channel - Now we aren’t about to say that WNAK plays some of: P.O. Box 859 Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18701 . 730 ON YOUR DIAL 822-6108 - the nicest music around, but a lot of folks | Phones: (AC 717) $199 ribbon; senior calf—Kathleen Goeringer, RD 3, Dallas, red ribbon, (also owner breeder); senior yearling—Leslie Ann Goeringer, RD 3, Dallas, blue ribbon (2); Guernsey: inter- mediate calf—Leslie Ann Goeringer, RD 3, Dallas, blue ribbon (1); senior calf—Betsy Stefanowicz, Harveys Lake, blue ribbon; two year old— Marianne Stefanowicz, Harveys Lake, 'red ribbon; Brown Swiss—junior yearling— Andrew Gallagher, RD 1, Dallas, blue ribbon (1). One of the true tests of the individual 4-H dairy club member's effort is the winning of the Master Fitting or; Master Showmanship award. Winners selected from Luzerne County included Leslie Ann Goeringer, RD 3, Dallas, Marianne Stefan- owicz, Harveys Lake, and An- drew Gallagher, RD1, Dallas, Master Showmanship; Leslie Ann Goeringer, Harveys Lake, Master Fitting. Luzerne County was declared the winner of the Good Housekeeping award in which all. counties participated. Judgement was made on the basis of the manner in which the counties kept their area in a neat and orderly manner. FRIGIDAIRE lets you UIT] [JBN GOOFS! Just pick the fabric on the 6-Position Selector! = Makes washday goof-proof! An easy-to-set dial programs proper agitation, spin speeds and water temperatures. ® Cold Water Con- trol! Cold wash and rinse option for any fabric setting. m Thorough, gentle Jet Action agita- tion! m= Dependable! No belts, gears, pulleys. = Jet-Away lint removal. No lint trap needed! Fabric Softener Dispenser with this Washer! Automatically adds conditioner to the final rinse for softer clothes, easier ironing. WHITE APPLIANCE & FURNITURE Dallas, Pa. Bowling News The bowling season is on! Crown Imperial Bowling Lanes, Memorial Highway, Dallas, is a beehive of activity as most leagues begin to roll off, for averages as they officially open the season. The Ladies Country League was the first to haul out their gear, dust it off, and line up. There are six teams back in action with familiar names such as Joe’s Pizza, Fashion Ven- ding, Daring’s Market, Nelson Manufacturing, Brothers 4 and Pargas, reappearing on the girls’ shirts. : The first night saw Daring’s take all 4 points from Nelson; , Brothers 4.cop 4 from Pargas, and Joe’s lose 3 to Fashion. Bernie Pape was top scorer with 180-181-172 (533) for Pargas. Evelyn Roberts posted 201 (512) and Joan Bolinski rolled 222 (511) for Daring’s. Anita Matte had 183 (476); Libby Cyphers, (492); Helen Bonomo (463); and Ruth Bennett, 172 (461). The Industrial League is also back on the line with eight teams Wednesday nights. Team names are Rebels, Parker Fuel, McCreary Tires, Larksville 66, Hoppy'’s, Boston, Panthers, and Yamys. “provides a ‘solid estimate of fuel We'll find out if your oil burner is robbing you of heating efficiency. 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