The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, October 28, 1971, Image 11

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A Greenstreet News Co. Publication
Lake-Lehman Band
Proud of ‘New Look’
The high stepping members
of the Lake-Lehman High
School Band are proud of their
new look, a look accentuated by
uniforms
presented to the band at a
special ceremony last Thursday
attractive new
night.
The uniforms,
band,
winter twirler uniforms, and the
drum major’s uniform.
The parade uniform—the
costume with which most
~
purchased
jointly by the Band Sponsors
Association "and the Lake-
Lehman School Board, were
accepted by School Board
President Edgar Lashford and
Anthony Marchakitus, assistant
superintendent of schools, and
were in turn presented to John.
Miliauskas, director of the
Knights’ award-winning band.
Five uniforms were modeled
by various members of the
including parade and
concert uniforms, summer and
persons identify the Lake-
Lehman band— is fashioned of
light weight wool and boasts a
gold parade shield on which is
emblazaoned a black ‘“L”. The
uniform is accentuated by
epaulets, complete with un-
derarm gold braids. A gold-
trimmed visor type hat
decorated with a sun-burst gold
medallion completed the
parade dress.
For concerts, band members
will wear tuxedo style jackets
with rolled satin lapels and gold
tone buttons. The summer
twirling uniform is a gold
sleeveless jumper trimmed in
front with black frogs and
conservative gold tone buttons.
The uniform, which has a
slightly flared skirt, is com-
plimented in the winter with a
high waist-fitted back closing
jacket accented with a black
cumberbund. A beret is worn in
both seasons.
Dallas Senior
~ High School
Intramurals
Intramurals started last week
for 11th and 12th grades. Volley-
ball and basketball will be of-
‘ered at this time, with baseball
. the spring. Mr. Brobst and
r. Hoover will be in charge of
boys, while Miss Jenkins and
Mrs. Faerber will be in charge
the girls. A great turnout is
surely making this program a
success. Come on out and keep
physically fit.
Homecoming
Homecoming is just around
the corner, believe it or not. The
chairmen and their committees
are doing a fine job in planning
a great day. The day starts with
Dallas and Central Catholic
playing at Dallas. The highlight
is ‘the crowning of the home-
coming queen at halftime. The
day is ended with a semi-formal
dance at the school gym. We
hope all of you can make it Nov.
24-30
Te;
¥ISIT YOUR
SCHOOLS
AMERICAN
EDUCATION
WEEK
OCTOBER
24-30, 1971
by Nancy Popielarz
and Patti Van Etten
District Band Try-outs
District Band try-outs were
held at Abington Heights High
School Oct. 17. Approximately
400 students from Northeastern
Pennsylvania had taken part in
the program. Dallas was
represented by Judy MacAvoy,
Patti Lewis, Jeanette
Goeringer, Brad Hochhalter,
Scott Bayer, Carol Sipple,
Thomas Krivak, Sharon
Carkhuff, Marilyn Miller,
Michael Davis, Richard Monte,
Eric Martin, Jay Miller, Alan
Zabaski, and Richard Steckiel.
Good Laick!!!!
Veteran’e” Day parade
Qu Oct. 24, the band, color-
guard, majorettes, strutters,
and cheerleaders from the
Dallas Senior High School
marched in the annual
Veteran’s Day parade and
competition. The procession
started down Wyoming Avenue
in Kingston at 2 p.m., then
proceeded into Wilkes-Barre,
around the square, and down
River Street past the reviewing
stand. The band, one of 14 in the
competition, has practiced
marching and playing for the
past several weeks in an-
ticipation of the parade. The
trophies for the competition
were presented by the Boston
Store.
Chorus trip
Oct. 19 was a big day for
Dallas High's music depart-
ment. Its members went to
the Irem Temple in Wilkes-
Barre to see a youth concert
given by the Northeastern
Pennsylvania Philharmonic
Orchestra, conducted by
Ferdinand Liva. The orchestra
performed Tchaikowsky and
Bach, members of the Wilkes-
Barre Ballet Theater presented
three selections with orchestral
backgrounds from the Nut-
cracker Suite, and the winner of
the Young Artists Concert held
last spring, gave a piano solo of
George Gershwin’s ‘Rhapsody
In Blue’ for the finale.
Class dues
Payment of class dues has
started for the 1971-72 school
year. Both the juniors and
sophomores are expected to pay
a total of $8.00 by the end of the
year. Dues are collected by a
homeroom representative each
Tuesday. The money collected
is used by the students in their
senior year for the class trip
and other such activities.
SERVING SUNDAY
- DINNERS
NOON ‘TIL 8 P.M.
ad
Cocktails Served
1 P.M. to 10 P.M.
% ROAST TURKEY
* ROAST BEEF
* CLAMS
% LOBSTER TAIL
* SHRIMP
% BROASTED PORK CHOPS
Plus... many other selections from our
SPECIAL SUNDAY MENU
458 Main St., Edwardsville 288-5601
CUISINE
SEAFO000
Photo by J. Kozemchak Sr.
THE DALLAS POST, OCT. 28, 1971
g
With their hands held high and their shoulders thrust smartly
back, members of the Lake-Lehman High School Band proudly
model their new band uniforms. From left to right are Kathy
Salansky and Frances Yankowski, wearing the summer and
winter twirling uniforms; Ted Scouten in concert dress, Steve
DeBarry in parade uniform, and Marc Elgaway, drum major.
| Contractor Proposes New
Pinecrest Ave. Apartments
Pinecrest Avenue in Dallas
will soon be graced with three
apartment units containing four
apartments each if plans pro-
posed by Leo Rutkowski, a
Chase builder, are approved by
the Dallas Borough Council.
The plans were presented at the
Oct. 19 meeting of the council
and will be considered in more
detail by the borough’s planning
commission before a decision to
approve or disapprove is made.
Mr. Rutkowski told members
of the press that the proposed
units would feature town house
apartments, half of which would
be two-bedroom dwellings and
half of which would be three-
bedroom units. Brick and
® aluminum siding would high-
light the buildings’ exteriors,
and off-street parking would be
provided for tenants.
In other business, the council
accepted the bid of L.L.
Richardson, Dallas Chrysler
and Dodge dealer, for a 1972
Polara four-door sedan police
cruiser. The total cost was
given as $3,636.95 and the bid
was, according to Police Com-
mittee Chairman William Berti,
the only bid which met all of the
council’s specifications.
Howard ‘‘Duke’’Isaacs was the
only other bidder.
Well, I never expected to be
honored in my lifetime by
having something of my
published writings included in
the file for future reference in
the family archives of history!
But that is the case. A couple
of weeks ago my column was
boiling with enthusiasm of my
becoming a highly-honored
great-grand uncle. I waxed en-
joyment-conscious as I told the
story of my trip to Binghamton
to baptize my great grand
nephew, David Michael Hutch-
ings. In fact this little David
himself who is five months old
_the 29th of this month is expect-
ing to write me someday after
he gets enough schooling to be
able to read history, and tell me
how much he enjoys thinking
back to the occasion when, as
his mother writes, ‘he knows
that he brought a lot of happi-
ness to some very dear people
when he was small.”
His mother, after receiving a
clipping of my column from the
Dallas Post, wrote: “Dave and I
were very happy to receive your
note and clipping. I'm going to
put it in his baby book so that
some time in the future, Dave
and I can look back and re-
member what a beautiful oc-
casion it was.”
Then after she signed off and
went to prepare breakfast for
“my little one,” she took the
trouble to show her five months
old precocious son how to sign
his name at the bottom of the
Corn, which provides more food
for men and beasts than any
other food, has a mysterious
heritage. While it was under
cultivation when the first ex-
plorers reached the New World,
corn was unknown in ancient
times and cannot be traced to a
wild plant!
CHECKERBOARD
INN
FEATURING
Seafood
Steaks
Homemade Italian
Food
Dinners Served
Tues-Sat 5 til 12
diningroom closed monday
Petr & Janice Matt uli
Carverton Rd.
Trucksville
My Typewriter Talks
page! That will be when he is
about 20 and when he realizes
that he signed a letter of thanks
to his greatgranduncle Charlie,
he will say to his mother:
“Mom, I can write my name a
lot better now. But shall I get
the computer to write to him for
me?”
There is nothing more
sacredly kept and cherished
(unless it is the family Bible!)
like the baby book belonging to
an individual or a family. And
so I go my way with the
cherished knowledge that some
of my writings are being kept
carefully ‘clear past my 100th
birthday and available for
young adult readers!
No wonder I'm looking so
smug and happy!
Well, there is something else
to get me excited. A man way
out in the plains country who
does some work of New Testa-
ment Greek translating got to
talking with one of my mailing
list people who gets my Jots
from Dot, and got the idea I was
“a New Testament scholar.”
Now I'll admit to being a
“scholar” with a very limited
definition of just being one who
is a pupil either in or out of
school. But “scholar” used the
way this man uses it scares the
daylights out of me. He is trying
to do some New Testament
translating printed into book
form and finds the publisher too
slow in getting the page-proof
done, and suggests maybe I'd
like to read proof or look over
“the galleys of John!”
That is an interesting
byproduct of my mailing list
and the fact that I have some
private fun of my own as a
hobby working out a few verses
of the Greek into English as I
understand it! It is one thing to
scan the Greek lexicon to find
the meaning of words in some
favorite scripture, and it is
quite another to try to associate
with a real toiler in this field for
publication! I haven’t caught
my breath enough to answer the
letter yet. I discover as a retired
man sometimes my mail stacks
up! Still, it keeps me from bore-
dom.
And along comes another
letter from a former Boy Scout
friend of mine, now turned
minister, storywriter, and in-
teresting letterwriter. He in-
cluded one funny little stunt of
mine that I pulled off for my
Boy Scouts back in the country
in a storybook he got published.
My name wasn’t mentioned but
I was sufficiently identified to
feel quite flattered!
Now he writes that he has me
by name in a devotional book
which is already in the press of
our church publishing house,
and as he says it’s “too late for
you to do anything about it.”
Well, I'll just have to be
delighted again! That boy did
grow up, and he must be in his
60’s by now even if his mind is
still as jumping lively as a teen-
ager! He doesn’t live around
here anymore. He has gone
places!
I still get a thrill when
someone says, as they often do,
“I always read your column,”
and even more so when some-
Tonight Thru Sat. Nite
The FREDDIE COLE Show
2 Las Vegas Shows Nitely
Beginning Mon. Nov. 1st.
‘To Sat. Nov. 6
- DAVE OSBORNE Show
Direct from Las Vegas
Hi-Lite
2 Shows Nitely-Action
Starts at 9:30
403 MARKET ST. KINGSTON
Lounge And
Restaurant
by Rev. Charles H. Gilbert
one says, ‘‘I always miss your
column when it isn’t in!”
But all the time I sit here
listening to this typewriter talk
such vanities to my too willing
ears I have staring me in the
face scraps and starters and
jumbles of a sermon I am trying
to get into condition to deliver in
public.
And 1 dreamt about it the
other night, that I was already
in the pulpit, a lot of people
milling around expressing all
the confusion that was in my
mind, and I was Searching
through a Bible (too late to be
doing ‘that!) for my text, any
text would do, but had no ser-
mon and it was almost time to
preach it!
I used fo have times like that
when I was trying to get out a
new sermon every week. And
sometime I was there in
perhaps some large church
pulpit and me in my pajamas,
and couldn’t find the psalter or
the scripture
anything! This was the first I,
have been in such a dream state
in a long time. So I better make |
this talking typewriter change
its tune and get to unravelling
some scripture I can use. I
might even put it in my pajama
pocket just in case!
wh c———
a —
Dallas Borough Council went
on record as opposing the pro-
posed 20 percent rate hike indi-
cated by UGI. Atty. Charles D.
Lemmond Jr. was authorized
by the council to direct a letter
of protest to the Public Utility
Commission informing that
organization of the council’s
opposition to the increase.
Recreation Committee
Chairman George Thomas
announced that there will be no
winter recreation program this
year at the Dallas United
Methodist Church. Mr. Thomas
explained that it was the feeling
of his committee that the pro-
gram had not attained substan-
tial support from the commun-
ity’s youngsters to warrant con-
tinuing it for a second year.
Berti announced that appli-
cants for a third full-time police
officer are being reviewed by
the police committee, and that a
recommendation will be made
for that position soon.
Morning Worship
Morning worship will be held
at the Trucksville United
Methodist Church at 9:30 a.m.
Oct. 31. The pastor, the Rev. Dr.
Laurence T. Beers, will speak
on the subject: “How to In-
crease Your Faith”. Church
school and the pastor’s Con-
firmation Class, will meet at
10:45 a.m. Members of the
Methodist Youth Fellowship
will participate in the Back
Mountain Festival in the
evening.
4-MADAME FORTUNE
Page Eleven
Soil surveys, prepared by the
Soil Sonservation Service, are
important tools for community
planning boards, engineers,
lawyers and builders. Soil
surveys interpret basic soil,
water and geologic features and
can detect areas unsuitable for
home building.
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81 Public Sq. WB
Sees all—Knows All
Tells All
SHE WILL READ YOUR PALM AND
CARDS. ANSWERS ALL QUESTIONS
ON LOVE, MARRIAGE & BUSINESS.
She has heiped many & will help you;
if you are worried, sick or troubled
don’t fail fo see her.
Sister Sloan is known thru-out the 4
corners of the world. Phone
824-9077
83 N. MAIN ST., ASHLEY
Open 9 to 9, 7 days a wk.
Shadow Brook
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$1.75
Res taurant
~ Sunday Dinner |
11:00 ’til 3:00 p.m.
Complete Dinner
$2.50
Char-broiled
T-Bone STEAK
$2 95
French Fries,
Coleslaw & Rolls
Delicious
Homemade Pies
PIZZA
675-9611
Memorial Hwy., Dallas
“Gift Shop
BERNIE’S
TAKE OUTS INVITED
PHONE
288-6606
288-6607
822-1513
Choice:
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Liquor
and
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“AN ATMOSPHERE YOU'LL LIKE”
Complete Menu—11 A.M. til 2 A.M.
THE COMPLETE MENU RESTAURANT
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a SEA FOOD
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612-614 MAIN ST., EDWARDSVILLE, PA.
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