ad. cre 16 i Students and families who have suffered losses from the recent flood have been notified by the Wilkes College Financial Aid Office that both state and federal attention is being given to new avenues of greater as- sistance. This was announced in a letter sent during the week by Richard Raspen and Harry Keller, college admin- istrators who are handling special financial assistance for Wilkes students. The announcement, which was sent to all current and pro- spective Wilkes College students, described a meeting held recently between Dr. Stanley Holden, college liasion director for federal, state and private aid, and government officials. Raspen said, ‘Both state and federal sources of student aid Manstield Grad On Dean's List Marilyn A. Soldo, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph M. Soldo, 116 White Birch Lane, Dallas, has been named to the dean’s list at Mansfield State College following the close of the spring semester. Miss Soldo, a recent graduate of the college, received a bachelor of science degree in May. Her major subject area was elementary education, with a minor area in art education. Miss Soldo completed her student teaching in the Tunk- hannock School District. funds were approached. We received their assurances that they would do everything in their power to assist students and families who suffered flood losses.” It was pointed out that at the state level, the Pennsylvania Higher Education Asistance Agency was given legislative authority about a week ago to make awards. At the present time, they indicate that they will be using pre-flood data for their need analysis, but avenues are being explored to take into consideration individual changing financial conditions due to recent losses. The students were told that the college must receive from them an accurate estimate of the extent of loss to the student body. Those affected directly or indirectly have been asked to by Nelson Woolbert 696-1689 Trucksville Fire Company will hold their regular monthly meeting in the fire hall tomor- row night at 8. Paul Sabol will preside. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Harrison, Carverton Road, and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Harrison, Fern- brook, have returned from a fishing trip to Canada. Enroute they visited Toronto, Niagara Falls, and Buffalo. Mr. and Mrs. John Dunn and family, Pittsburgh, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Duffy and family, Oak Street. Donald Johnson, Carverton Road, has returned from Wal- dorf, Md., where he spent several days. His brother, Rus- sell, attended a wrestling camp in Virginia Beach, Va., the past two weeks. Beth Ann Bullock, Brenda Sue Johnson, Cheryl L. Cohen, and Jean Marie Petro returned Sunday from Girl Scout Camp Louise, near Berwick, where they attended the third session. Robert Richards, Annadale, Va., spent several days with his mother, Mr. J. D. Richards, Midway Manor. Kevin Colovos, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gus Colovos, South Lehigh Street, enlisted in the Marine Corps through the recruiting station in the Veterans Building in Wilkes-Barre. Kevin is pre- sently undergoing nine weeks training at Parris Island, S.C., and on completion of this and threee weeks advance training, he will receive a 15-day leave Mr. and Mrs. Richard De- bosky, Virginia Beach, Va. visited Mrs. Wallace Perrin Sr., Holly Street, several days re- cently. . Dr. Puma, Kingston, has pur- chased and moved to a home at Midway Manor. Registrations are now being taken for the fall session of Trucksville Nursery School for children in the three and four year age range. Interested persons contact Mrs. Alan Nichols, Carverton Road. Rachel Dymond, Philadel- phia, spent the weekend with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Crane and family, Crane Road. Liza Hornack, Staub Road, will leave tomorrow to vacation in the Thousand Islands. She The Early Bird Gets the Space! If you are planning a social event and wish to submit copy ‘and-or a picture to the news- paper, please call us and let us know in advance. We'll save a space for your news, thereby assuring you of a slot on our women’s page. will be accompanied by her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. James Singer, Chenango, N.Y. Sgt. and Mrs. James Walters, Plattsburg, N.Y., announce the birth of a daughter, Christine, born July 3 in Plattsburgh General Hospital. Mrs. Walters is the former Sharon Musto of Carverton Heights. Sgt. Walters is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Walters, 201 Terrace Ave., Trucksville Gardens. Vacation Church School of the Trucksville United Methodist Church originally scheduled for the week of Aug. 7 through Aug. 11 has been cancelled by the committee in charge. The fifth annual outing of the Slovak League of America, Branch 487, Wyoming Valley, will be held Aug. 13 at the Sacred Heart Park in Dallas. Michael Kester, Harris Hill Road, is a member of the enter- tainment committee. Trucksville Fire Company will hold its annual clambake Saturday at Mathers Grove. Reservation deadline is today. Richard Montgomery will take your reservation. Thomas Sch- midle is chairman of the event. accompanied the letter, so that requests for increases in student aid funds may be sub- stantiated. Raspen stated that through the efforts of volunteers who came to the financial aid office during the early morning warning on June 23, all the files containing pertinent records financial aid office is operating out of the second floor of Weckesser Hall, 170 Sout» Franklin Street, until re- novations can be made to the first floor of Chase Hall on South River Street. Students having questions concerning financial aid avail- urged to contact either Raspen or Keller at the Wilkes admin- istration building. Dallas Students On Dean's List Priscilla Evelyn Reese, 126% Franklin St., Dallas, and Kevin Joseph McGuire of 140 Sterling Ave., Dallas, have been named to the dean’s list for the second semester of the 1971- 72 college year at Bloomsburg State College, according to Dr. Hobart Heller, acting vice president and dean of the faculties. Five hundred fifteen students of a total full-time undergradu- ate enrollment of 4,252 qualified for the academic honor by earn- ing a quality point average of 3.5 or higher during the past semester. One hundred forty- one students achieved a perfect average of 4.0 for the semester. The dean’s list students must carry a minimum of 12 credit hours for the semester. Miss Reese and Mr. McGuire are graduates of Dallas Senior High School. R. N.Shoemaker Citadel Junior Cadet Richard N. Shoemaker, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. N. Shoe- maker, 117 White Birch Lane, Dallas, is among the carefully-- selected cadets who will com- prise this year’s training cadre at The Citadel. The cadre will report to the military college on Aug. 16 for a week’s intensive training before freshmen cadets arrive. Mem- bers of the cadre make up for receiving, processing, and training the plebes who will arrive Aug. 23. The cadre will then conduct specialized training for, the new cadets of the freshman class. Shoemaker, a rising junior, will hold the rank of sergeant within the Corps. He is majoring in business adminis- tration and is enrolled in the Air Force ROTC program. PHONE 388-6719 FALLS, PENNA. * Hardware *Plumbing Supplies DEHUMIDIFIERS TOASTERS FANS ETC. The flood disaster mobile home program added a new touch to the Wilkes College campus during the week when one was backed into a spot near Bedford Hall at South River and South Streets. Recipient of the trailer-type home is Nelson E. Carle, super- intendent of buildings and grounds at Wilkes College, who is shown unlocking the door to his new “home” so that College Business Manager Charles Abate can get a first-hand view. Mr. Carle, whose home on Carey Avenue suffered heavy damage from the flood waters, has practically lived on the campus since the waters receded June 25 because of his job responsibilities. Mr. Abate, whose family and home were also affected by the flood, has worked virtually around the clock at the college in directing the massive clean- up program ‘‘Operation Snap- back” —the volunteer effort on the part of many to repair some of the $10-million damage to the institution. A record number of students-- 1,097--were named to the dean’s list at Bucknell University for the spring semester of the 1971- 72 academic year. The total is 173 more than the previous record set during the second semester last year and represents ‘41 percent of the undergraduate student body. Area students who were named to the dean’s list include Mary E. Cully, 3 S. Pioneer Avenue, Trucksville; James W. Pichert, 53 Carverton Road, Trucksville; Swoyersville residents Susan H. Caprari, 22 Laverick Ave.; Joseph M.: Laskowski of 48 Bohac St. and William W. Salis, 319 Dana St. In Kingston, John H. Shafer of 219 N. Sprague Ave. and Marilyn C. Shup of 249 Reynolds St. were named to the list. Jane C. Keller, 4 Sunset Court, Forty Fort, concludes the list of local students so honored. Students who are named to the dean’s list must achieve a grade-point average of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 system. FITSRITE Improved Adjustable NOSE CLIP An aid in preventing nose and ear infections Non-Slip Comfortable Helps Correct breathing Invisible out of ears Shut out noise Sleep Soundly Box of 6 Pr. $1.” Quick Service 675-5121 DRUG STORE Easy Parking 675-3368 _n A pioneering effort by the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) to convert a disjointed medical system into a manageable cor- poration, where old programs can be scrapped and new methods with anticipated lower costs to hospitals and con- sumers can be tested, will be attempted in a regional 8- county area. The formation of the new cor- poration, to be known as the Health Care Management Corp. of N.E. Pa., has been an- nounced by the Health and Hos- pital Planning Council of N. E. Pa. (HHPC), the region’s com- prehensive health planning agency. Serving Lackawanna, erne, Carbon, Monroe, Pike, Sullivan, Wayne and Wyoming Counties, the organization will be responsible for the develop- ment of an accessible, effective and quality oriented personal health delivery system. Lower medical costs are expected to be realized from the activities of the corporation. HHPC has been the sponsor- ing agency for a separate federally funded project called the Experimental Health -Ser- vices Delivery System which over the last year has developed and advanced the corporate approach as the answer to ini- tiating, delivering and manag- ing regional health care ser- vices. With the creation of the cor- poration, the HEW experimen- tal contract is expected to be re- linquished by HHPC and turned over to the new organization. The new corporation is com- prised of 19 directors and 96 members. At a recent meeting, officers were elected and the organization’s by-laws were ratified. Dr. Leonard Wolf, nominee of the independent colleges of the region, has been elected chair- man of the Health Care Management Corp. Other officers are Gerald F. Malloy, vice-chairman, nomi- nee of the Luzerne County Home Health Services, and Sister William Joseph Lydon, RSM, secretary-treasurer nominee of Mercy Hospital. The concept of a regional cor- porate structure has received the endorsement of, officials of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, offi- cials of the Regional Medical Program and Congressman Daniel J. Flood. Basically, the new organiza- tion will seek to establish rela- tionships with health care pro- fessionals, consumers, public officials, third party payors, such as Blue Cross, and with voluntary charitable funds to combine efforts. In addition, the new group will conduct studies and evalua- tions which will provide a health profile of the region’s popula- tion and coordinate efforts for a better delivery system. The corporation’s by-laws call for the ‘‘development of in- novative programs to receive and allocate funds in such a manner as to insure the purpose of the corporation and to evalu- ate the effectiveness of both the programs and allocations.” Close cooperation will be sought with the research, 7 demonstration and educational programs of the Regional Medi- cal Program. The new unit also will be responsive to plans and priorities set by HHPC. Other directors elected to the corporation’s five-category board are: provider eos, David L, Gamble; Sister Mary Sara McNelis, RSM; Harry D. Propst, M.D.; Arthur W. Sher- wood, M.D.; public category, John Davidson; Edgar J. Lash- ford; Harry F. Lee; Robert A. Robbins; Margaret T. Rosen- berry; political category: Judge Roy A. Gardner; payor category, F. William Reming- ton; Dr. Wallace F. Stettler; direct representation category, Michael J. Aronica, M.D.; George T. Bell; Elliot R. Knauer. ‘ “The Dallas Post Has A Variety Of Wedding Stationery 675-5211 available THE NEW SPIN/DRY AGITATOR WASHER The Spiral Ramp Agitator provides a thoroughly clean, tangle-free wash. Each piece in the wash load is continually turned over and over for maximum washing action. Agitator is removable for easy cleaning. The accessory wood grain Decorator Top (CPT200) not only adds to the appearance of Mini-Mate, but also provides convenient countertop work space, and a hot water supply. damp-dry, * 3 Wash selections » Suds Saver feature » Safety Switch and Brake covers The Mini-Mate Washer is the only compact with a lint filter mounted on top of the agitator. As clothes are being washed, the wash water continuously flows through the lint filter, where all lint is trapped. time. Lint filter is also designed as a detergent ra only $199. } | rR = Es SRE an RENE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers