CREST = School buses will roll again when school opens in the Dallas District Sept. 19. Published here-with is a list of the scheduled bus routes which will be in effet opening day. ROUTE 1: Secondary-Orange to Lake Louise to Orange to Dymond Hollow to Orange to Demunds to Applewood Manor to junior and senior high school; Elementary-Orange to Lake Louise to Orange to Dymond Hollow to Orange to Demunds to Applewood Manor to Inter- mediate School and to West- moreland Elementary. ROUTE 2: Secondary-Orange to Culver Hill to Eaton’s Corners to Moore’s Store to Fernbrook to the juniorgand senior high; Yiomoiiry-Orange to Culver Hill. to Eaton’s Corners to Moore’s Store to Fernbrook to Westmoreland Elementary to Dallas Intermediate. ROUTE 3: Secondary-Carverton to Lewis Corners via Memorial Shrine to Carverton to Carver- ton Heights to Moore's Store to Hildebrandt Road to junior and senior high; Elementary-Carverton to Lewis Caorpers via Memorial Shrine Bore to Carver- ton Heights to Harris Hill Road to Westmoreland, picking up kindergarten at Westmoreland and on to intermediate and kindergarten. ROUTE 4: Secondary-Carverton to Lewis Corners via Bodle Road to Carverton to Saxe’s Corners via Carverton Road to Trucks- ville via Rt. 309 to junior and senior high; Elementary-Carverton to Lewis Corners via Bodle Road to Carverton to Saxe’s Corners via Carverton Road to Trucks- ville Elementary to Westmore- land. ROUTE 5: Secondary-Bunker Hill to Meadowcrest thru Meadow- crest to Carverton Road to Trucksville » Rt. 309 to junior and senior high; Elementary-Bunker Hill to Meadowcrest thru Meadow- crest thru to Carverton Road to Trucksville Elementary to Westmoraggihd. ROUTE ~ Secondary-Beaumont to Kunkle to Alderson to Ells- worth’s Hill to Kunkle to the Wyoming County Line via Route 92 to Kunkle via 309 to the junior and senior high; Elementary-Beaumont to Kunkle to Alderson to Kunkle to Ellsworth’s Hill to Kunkle via 309 to Dallas Intermediate and Westmoreland. ROUTE 7: Secondary-Kunkle to Lake Catalpa to Demunds to Fern- brook to junior and senior high; Elementary-Kunkle to the Wyoming County line via old Route 92 to Kunkle via 309 to Lake Catalpa to Demunds to Fernbrook to Westmoreland to Dallas Intermediate. NOON: Kinder % rten-Home via Trucksville'to Kunkle. ROUTE 8: Secondary-Luzerne via 309 to Shavertown to Center St. over Wood, Franklin and Beech to Fernbrook to the junior and senior highs : Elementd#zy-West Dallas to Hayes Corners, old Lake Road, Whitesell Bros., Castle Inn, Dallas Elementary to Dallas Intermediate. Starting at Pioneer and West Overbrook ina Ave. intersection to Huntsville Dam area to Westmoreland via Pioneer Ave.; Elementary P.M.-Shuttle from Trucksville to Westmore- land to Shavertown via Center St. over Wood, Franklin, Beech to Fernbrook to Roushey Plot to Orchard Farm entrance on Route 309. ROUTE 9: Secondary-Upper Demunds to Applewood Manor to Demunds Road to Moore's Store via Hildebrandt Road to junior and senior high; Elementary P.M.-Dallas Intermediate to Westmoreland Elementary to New Goss Manor via Lehigh St. and Route 309. ROUTE 10: Secondary-Newberry Estate via Pioneer Ave. to Trucksville via 309 to Dallas Junior High to Dallas with Gate of Heaven stu- dents; Elementary A.M.-Dallas light to Claude St. to Center Hill Road, east to Goss Manor and New Goss Manor, via Hilde- brandt Road to Midway Manor to Harris Hill Road to West- moreland Elementary and a shuttle run to Dallas In- termediate; Elementary P.M-Westmore- land Elementary via Pioneer to Fernbrook to Roushey Plot to Hildebrandt Read. ROUTE 11: Secondary-Fernbrook via Overbrook and Huntsville Road to Gate of Heaven to junior and senior high; Elementary-Huntsville Dam down Huntsville Road to Dallas Elementary to Dallas Inter- mediate, starting again at Orchard Farm entrance to Fernbrook Corners to Beech, Franklin, Wood and Center St. to the Westmoreland Elementary back to Dallas Intermediate as a shuttle run- AM. only; NOON Kindergarten-Kindergarten to Carverton; y Elementary P.M.-Dallas Elementary to West Dallas and vicinity. ROUTE 12: Secondary-Trucksville via Pioneer to the Senior High to Dallas to Shavertown to Trucksville to the Vocation Education School. Elementary-Shavertown up Center St.; over Wood, Franklin, Beech to Fernbrook to Westmoreland with a shuttle to Dallas Intermediate. ROUTE 13: Secondary-Starting at Goeringer’s to Midway Manor to Meadowcrest to Trucksville to junior and senior high; Elementary-Meadowcrest to Trucksville Gardens to Trucks- ville to Shavertown Elementary via Pioneer Ave. to Dallas Intermediate. ROUTE 14: Secondary-Trucksville via Lehigh St. to the Dallas Junior High School. ROUTE 15: Secondary-Trucksville Gar- dens to Trucksville to Dallas Senior High. Elementary-Cairn’s Store to Westmoreland to Shavertown to Roushey Plot, Lower Demunds R. to Hildebrandt R. to inter- mediate and kindergarten. ROUTE 16: Secondary-West Dallas to junior and senior high; Elementary A.M.-West Dallas to Haddonfield Hills through Elmecrest to Dallas Intermediate; Kindergarten P.M.session- Starting at West Dallas to Huntsville to Trucksville to kindergarten; AFTS m. Elementary P.M.-Dallas Intermediate to Dallas Elementary to Huntsville to Trucksville to West Dallas. ROUTE 17: Secondary-Trucksville via Pioneer Ave. to Gate of Heaven School to senior high. ROUTE 18: Secondary-Demunds to Fern- to senior high. ROUTE 19: Secondary-Cairn’s Store to Trucksville via 309 to Lutheran Church to Dallas Junior High; Elementary-Midway Manor to Westmoreland Elementary to Shavertown Elementary to Dallas Intermediate. ROUTE 20: Secondary-Trucksville Gar- dens to Trucksville via 309 to Fernbrook to Dallas Elementary to Gate of Heaven School to Dallas Junior and Senior High. ROUTE 21: Secondary-West Dallas to Machell to Sterling Ave. to junior and senior high. ROUTE 22: Secondary-Shavertown via Lehigh St. to Harris Hill Rd. to Midway Manor to Checker- board to Meadowcrest to Gate of Heaven to senior high; Elementary P.M.-Westmore- land Elementary to Demunds via Dallas. ROUTE 23: Secondary-Harris Hill Rd. to Center St., cross 309 to Pioneer Ave. to Dallas .to junior and senior high; Elementary-Trucksville Gar- dens to Trucksville via 309 to Dallas Intermediate. Flower Arranging Taught in Course Summer and fall are ideal times to learn to arrange flowers. They are available from gardens or can be bought at reasonable prices. You’ll need a few tools, a few basic containers, and a little know-how. If you’ll provide the tools and bases, The Pennsyl- vania State University will pro- vide the know-how in a corres- pondence course. To arrive at a pleasing ar- rangement decide first where it is to be used. Then choose the container and shape the ar- rangement, to fit the spot where you plan to use it. If you need help with con- tainer selection, principles of design, correct placement of flowers, preserving flowers, or corsage making, you’ll want to send for Penn State’s flower ar- ranging course. It’s excellent for individual or group study. To get the course, send $3 to Flower Arrangement, Box 5000, University Park, Pa. 16802. Make checks or money orders payable to Penn State. Prof. G. G. Gregory has a busy schedule these days as he meets daily with first and second year baccalaureate students discussing assignment choices and the academic cur- riculum they plan to pursue, whether it be at the local campus or during their first and second terms on changing from Park. He also sets up appoint- ments for those students with special problems with Robert L. Sabatino, campus counselor. This is an exceptionally busy time as students prepare for orientation week and the opening of classes in Sept- ember. Twenty surveying students are presently doing their summer camp practicum under the direction of Prof. John Kolesar and Prof. John Hychko. The students are fulfilling the necessary curriculum require- ment prior to their registration as second year students the week of Sept. 18. The recent plea from the local campus asking local residents with facilities to take some of the students entering school this year brought some response for ‘which administrators are most appreciative. However, there is still need for additional housing for students and John R. Murphy, dean of students, once again asks area residents who have rooms to seriously con- sider submitting applications to house one or more students. American Cancer Society The Are Here! ON OUR WE ARE OUNCING ETTER Residents need only contact the local campus at Lehman and in- dicate their willingness to con- sider applicants for rooms. Students in the electrical engineering technology cur- riculum started their lab prac- ticum last Friday. The three- credit course which continues for three weeks must be com- pleted by the first year students before they begin their second year classes at the local campus. A familiar face will be missing from the business office and the campus after today. Attractive Joy Kozemchak, who has been employed at the Wilkes-Barre Campus for the past two and one half years, is leaving her position as clerk typist to stay at home and assume the role of homemaker and mother. Joy and her husband, David reside on Jackson Street, Dallas. She will be missed by faculty and staff as well as students, both for her conscientious performance of duties as well as her pleasant smile and congenial person- ality. There is no doubt the tempo has increased on campus as ad- and staff report back from va- cations and begin preparing for the fall term of classes. The decision to accept late re- gistrations has also played an important role in the busy work this fall. rps asm m——r————r SS ——— We're the by Millie Hogoboom 696-2603 Two young friends on Sutton Road certainly had very dif- ferent vacations this summer. Alda Maturi, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Maturi, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mathers III in Mayen, Ger- many, for six weeks. One of the sights she will probably never forget was the view from the top of Tyrol Mountain in the Austrian Alps after she and her hosts had climbed 15 miles up its sheer side on foot. She also visited Cologne, the medieval town of Rothenburg, Koblentz, Bonn and the Neuschwanstein Palace, from which the Castle at Disneyland was copied. In Munich she saw the Olympic Stadium and even had a hamburger at an American “McDonald’s.” Across another ocean, Alda’s of Mr. and Mrs. Ned Reese of Sutton Road, spent three weeks sun bathing and star gazing on the beach at Waikiki. David Cassidy wiped his face on her towel and she saw John Lennon, Jack Lloyd and was invited to a dinner for B. J. Thomas. She also toured a naval cruiser in the harbor. Sharon will enter her junior year at St. Cyril Academy in Danville this fall. Bob and Barbara Casper have a new grandson, Robert Casper Bohorad, who arrived Aug. 20 at the Nesbitt Hospital. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bohorad of Pottsville. Mrs. Bohorad is the former Judy Casper. His brother, Jimmy, has been staying with the Caspers recently. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Laskowski of Chase Road visited their daughter, Mary Ann Parsons in Arlington, Va., last weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bertram of Huntsville Road had as their guests recently, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hadsall of New Jersey. Jack and Lou Conyngham of Sutton Road were glad to have all three of their daughters return home for the first time in about six weeks. Ann was on a tour of England and Scotland while Alison was attending Camp Oneka and Sarah was enjoying the activities of Camp Rock Runn in Pottstown. In their absence their brother, Jack, spent his summer developing a strong set of muscles working at Hillside Farm and enjoying being the “ruler of the roost” at home. We are happy to welcome two new families to Sutton Road. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Williams, formerly of South Welles Street, Kingston, now have their HUD trailer parked in the yard of their son-in-law and daughter, Sherman and Arline Sutton. Mr. Williams works for the Dodge Company, of Kingston. Tom and Mary Nice and their children, Christin, Tom, John, Jeffrey, and Kelly, were former residents of Elm Street in Kingston before the flood. Now they are occupying their new HUD trailer in the yard of Mary’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Cummings Sr. Mr. Nice is a driver for the Martz Bus Company. : THE WILKES-BARRE CAMPUS PENNSYLVANIA STATE Greenstreet News 675-5211 for Wedding Stationery Ready | UNIVERSITY Continuing Education Division announces REGISTRATION FOR FALL 1972 WILKES BARRE CAMPUS Registration: Tuesday, September 5, 7:00 p.m., Hayfield House. z Advanced Credit Courses for Teachers and Others C.F. Ed. 417 Philosophic Basis of Education Cn. Ed. 404 Group Procedure in Guidance & Counseling Ed. Adm. 460 Introduction to Adult Education - Ed. Psych. 451 Appraisal and Interpretation of Standardized Group Tests C. & S. 470A Workshop in Selected Studies: Reading Problems in Secondary Schools, Saf. Ed. 452 Organization & Supervision in Safety Education Spch. 496 Speech for Teachers Undergraduate Credit Courses Engl. 1 Composition & Rhetoric Fr. 1 Elementary French Spch. 200 Effective Speech Associate Credit E.G." Engineering Drawing Math 801 Technical Mathematics Math 802 Technical Mathematics Math 803 Technical Calculus Physics 151 Technical Physics Special Interest Courses Basic Oil Painting General Landscaping for the Home Owner Building Construction Supervisory Development Program Professional Engineering Review—Surveying Real Estate Educational Program Real Estate Sales Real Estate Appraisal Right-of-Way Seminar KINGSTON Registration: Wednesday, September 6, 7:00 p.m. Wyoming Valley West High School, Chester Street Advanced Credit Courses for Teachers and Others A. Ed. 414 Advanced Crafts for Teachers Cn, Ed. 403 Foundations of Guidance & Counseling Process Math 413 Mathematics of Science for Teachers Ph. Ed. 400 Adaptive Physical Education Psychology of Adjustment Psych. 437 Undergraduate Credit Ed. Psych. 14 Learning and Instruction Hist. 21 History of the U.S. Since 1865 TUNKHANNOCK T Registration: Thursday, September 7, 7:00 p.m. Tunkhan- nock Middle School, Philadelphia Street Advanced Credit Courses for Teachers and Others E.E.C. 400 Introduction to Exceptional Children L. Ed. 441 Teaching Childrens Literature Math Ed. 422 Individualized Instruction in School Mathematics C. & S. 470B Workshop in Selected Studies: Reading Problems in Elementary School HI. Ed. 496 Special Project: Drug Education Phy. Ed. 489 Intramural Athletics Undergraduate Credit Soc. 5 Social Problems Special Interest Courses Intermediate Oil Painting Two Year Management Development School Term I—Communications & Organization Term |V—Industrial Relations Real Estate Educational Program Real Estate Financing Real Estate Sales MOUNTAINTOP Crestwood High School, Crestwood Boulevard. Registration for these courses may be completed at any registration location on the designated night. Advanced Credit Courses for Teachers and Others L. Ed. 440 The Elementary School Reading Program Special Interest Courses Real Estate Education Program Real Estate Appraising Classes begin the week of September 25, 1972 For additional information or brochure, please call or write: The Wilkes-Barre Campus—Continuing Education The Pennsylvania State University P.O. Box 1830 Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania 18708 ; Phone: 675-2171
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