The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, February 04, 1971, Image 14

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    PAGE FOURTEEN
camper oO
A 13-year-old Dallas boy
received the Camper of the
Year trophy at a Camp Kresge
reunion dinner recently.
Albert Stredny, son of Mrs.
Edna Stredny, Demunds Road,
Dallas, received the trophy, the
highest honor awarded to any
camper, from Donald I. Bell,
youth and camping director of
Wilkes-Barre YMCA.
Young Stredny was one of
four campers who had been
named previously as honor
campers during a 7-week camp-
ing season. Albert attended
Camp Kresge during the last
two weeks in July.
The 18th annual Camp
Reunion was held in YM-YWCA
building, Wilkes-Barre. The
highlight of the session was the
awarding of trophies for the
1970 season honor campers
from which the Camper of the
LIBRARY
Dallas youth
f year
Year was picked. Other cam-
pers were Eric Garner, Dallas;
Alan Williams, Shavertown;
and Nino Sartini, Wilkes-Barre.
Also attending the reunion
was William Bispels, Shaver-
town, an honor camper from the
1969 season.
Grant Davis, Dallas, camp
song leader for the 1970 camp
season, led the singing of songs
at the reunion.
Albert is a student at Girard
School and College, Philadel-
phia, where he is in the seventh
grade. His younger brother
Thomas also attends the same
school.
Mrs. Stredny reported that
her son is typical of the average
American boy, and is very
sports-minded.
Camp Kresge is on Beaver
Lake and is a resident camp of
the Wilkes-Barre YMCA.
(continued from PAGE ONE)
appreciation to all 1970
especially to the late Bill M
auction workers and
0ss, an enthusiastic auc-
tion worker who died in November.
“No one will really know the involvement of
Bill and his wife Gertrude until auction time rolls
around and there are many jobs to be done that
took so many volunteer hours by the Mosses,” Mr.
Anthony concluded.
Board members nominated for re-election to
three year terms of office were Dr. Craig Aicher,
Peter Arnaud, and Alice Howell. Also nominated
for three year terms were R. Spencer Martin,
Granville F. Miller, and Robert D. Richardson. The
nomination of Margaret Wood to fill the unexpired
term of Mrs. Edward Boltz was confirmed by the
oak a a yl
directors.
Librarian Sue Davern reported 930 new
borrowers during the past year and an overall
increase in circulation of nearly 5,000. She termed
these figures ‘‘very gratifying’’ and suggested that
the year had been “a good one in many respects.”
Mrs. James Alexander,
chairman of Friends of
the Library, reported that 338 Friends had con-
tributed a total of $1253.50.
Mr. Eck announced that
the library had received bequests from the estates
of Mae Townend and Emma Reed and a $1,000
grant from the Morris Foundation,
THE DALLAS POST, FEB. 4, 1971
FIRE
(continued jrom PAGE ONE)"
stairs bedroom, where double windows were blown
out by the heat of the flames.
Damage was estimated at $2,500.
Assistant fire chiefs Robert Richardson and
James Davies directed the operation,
Dallas American Legion Post 672 has started
an emergency fund for the Paul Fiske family.
Donations of money may be mailed to Post
Office Box No. 1, Dallas. Those with clothing or
household goods to donate may call the Dallas
Legion at 675-9607.
A Legion spokesman said on Monday that a
“fair’’ number of calls has been received concern-
ing donations of clothing and other items.
The family includes Mr. and Mrs. Fiske and
their two children, a son, 18, and a daughter, 13. ;
FIRE TRUCK
(continued from PAGE ONE)
fully equipped with hoses to fight fires when no
other apparatus is available. However, it was
bought primarily as a tanker to transport water
from streams and lakes to fires in rural areas.
Also in use is a 1947 John Bean fire engine, with
a 450 gallon capacity, and a pumper, purchased in
1968 for $18,000.
Recently, Mr. and Mrs.Alfred Bronson of
Sweet Valley donated an ambulance to the fire
company. Mr. Bronson, director of Bronson’s
Funeral Home, operated an ambulance service in
the area for 25 years.
Officers of the fire unit stated all equipment is
completely paid for through funds raised by Decor-
ation Day parades, coin card drives, and donations.
They expressed their gratification and thanks to
the people of the community for their support and
cooperation.
Serving as officers are: John Scott, president;
Jack Minsavage, vice president; Carl Hoyt, secre-
tary; Carl D. Rood, treasurer; Albert Wallace,
foreman; Loren Cragle Jr., chief; and Russ Major,
Carl D. Rood and Robert Walsh, assistant chiefs.
Trustees are Daniel Hudzik, Ord Trumbower and
Kenneth Williams.
The company has approximately 100 members.
Serving as newly-elected president of the
Ladies Auxiliary is Alice Walsh. Other officers
elected in December are Phyllis Wolfe, vice presi-
dent; Marie Roginski, secretary; Elinor Cragle,
treasurer; and Aletha Cragle, Frank Yahara and
Janet Neher, trustees.
lobbies in Washington
by Shawn Murphy
Tall, slender, and poised, Barbara Reid could
be a Grand Cotillion Debutante. When one learns
that she is in fact an environmental activist deter-
mined to turn Washington's priorities upside down,
WEIS MARKET
(continued from PAGE ONE)
and pastries is not a figment of the shopper’s
imagination: one corner of the supermarket is
taken up by a small bakery complete with ovens
and attractive display cases. The baked goods taste
as delicious as they smell.
According to Robert Weis, vice president and
treasurer of Weis markets, the series of wood-
stained wall panels which comprise the store’s
interior represent a unique approach to market
decor. The Dallas market is the first new store to
utilize this dramatic concept, Mr. Weis stated.
The market’s exterior, too, is attractive and
different. A mansard roof made of a new type of
aluminum facing displays, on close scrutiny, a
dark color variation which is quite handsome.
The new Weis market is the first business to
open in the Dallas Village Shopping Center. A drug
store operated by the Stapinski chain is expected to
open April or shortly thereafter, and space for a
number of smaller stores exists beneath the
shopping center’s single roof.
Store manager is Thomas Mertz, former
manager of the Weis store in Dundee; he will soon
reside ‘at Harveys Lake.
manager is Harry Romig, a Dallas resident.
Meat department
{
DALLAS SCHOOL MENU
MONDAY—Cheeseburg at Jr. and Sr. high; hamburg in elemen-
tary ; potato chips, tossed salad, pear or peach half, milk.
TUESDAY—Veal parmesan, mashed potatoes or buttered rice,
assorted vegetables, Parker House rolls, jello with topping, milk.
WEDNESDAY—Tomato rice soup with saltines, ham and cheese
sandwich on rye bread, tossed garden salad with dressing, ap-
plesauce, and milk.
THURSDAY—Ham barbecue with tangy sauce, potato cheese
puffs, buttered carrots, cake squares and milk.
FRIDAY—Fish i in the round or peanut butter and jelly sandwich,
stewed tomatoes, homemade rolls and butter, assorted fruit and
milk.
young conservationist
the casual observer might well ask, “What’s a nice
girl like you doing in a job like that?”’
Barbara is typical of a new breed of activists
bent on correcting existing societal ills by working
within the system rather than by tearing it apart at
the seams. If the Establishment poses no threat to
her, it’s probably because she understands so com-
pletely the intricate workings that make it tick.
A panelist at the recent Clean Air Workshop
for residents in the Luzerne-Lackawanna area,
Barbara had listeners sitting on the edges of their
chairs as she rattled off tales of behind-the-scenes
wheeling and dealing that went into getting the
Clean Air Act of 1970 through Congress.
Like a chapter straight out of The Perils of
Pauline, the bill (which calls for drastic changes in
the design of air polluting automobile engines by
1976) was very nearly killed when Detroit’s big
guns appeared en masse to lobby for amendments
which would have gutted the tough legislation.
Veteran observers of the Washington scene had
predicted an early death for the bill when conser-
vationists, including Barbara and her fellow
workers at Environmental Action, Inc., blew the
whistle on the automobile manufacturers’ gctivi-
ties by turning the spotlight of public opinion on
them.
Even the Administration, which had refused to
comment publicly on the bill during the battle, tried
to squash it at the last minute by sending out a
“secret letter” listing several reasons why it
should be defeated. The activists obtained a copy of
the letter, mimeographed it and sent copies to
persons in positions to help their cause.
When the bill finally passed and President
Nixon signed the legislation— without inviting the
bill’s sponsor Edmund Muskie to the signing cere-
mony—he characterized the Clean Air Act as#igni-
ficant accomplishment of his administration.
A 1967 graduate of the University of yo
Barbara tested her political wings as a mer®er of
Robert Kennedy’s team in 1968. She got ‘‘turned on
to conservation’’ after spending a year at the Con-
servation Foundation in Washington and was the
Mic-West’s Earth Day co-ordinator last year.
Barbara joined Environmental Action Inc.,
last year and is currently writing a book with
several fellow conservationists titled Earth Tool
Kit, to be published this spring by Simon and
Shuster. She is a staff member of Environmental
Action, a bi-weekly publication which attempts to
“focus concern on the environmental crisis.”
What is a nice girl like Barbara doing in a job
like that? Her work, she says with a gleam in her
eye, is more than a job—it’s a life style. %
CO EA IE Org FIERA IE rg ITEM SA NE By YOR
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QO oO9 (> OO Coa ed
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Phone 675-5121
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EVANS DRUG STORE
Prescription Pharmacy
Shavertown
EASY PARKING Phone 675-3366
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