ETERS | 3 Page 10 Installation of new officers for the Dallas Key Club was held [recently at an interclub dinner meeting of the Key Club and its pent organization, the Dallas ~ Kiwanis Club. Officers of the Kiwanis Club officers and the co-chairman, . Peter Winebrake, initiated new ‘members. New officers are pre- sident, Jack Coon; vice pre- sident, Kevin Chadwick; secre- tary, Harold Rose; and trea- . Ernest Pliscott. New "members initiated were Robert With the addition of a new 31 undergraduate evening and program for the spring semester. From figure drawing to money & banking to acting, munity. Some courses meet late afternoons, others in the mornings, but all are designed Christmas comes but once a a-year chores come with it. specialists at The Pennsylvania you prepare your home and leisurely pace. Don’t be caught program that will leave you limp and unable to enjoy the festivities. Start your early organization with a list. It needn’t be too detailed. Put down everything you'll need to do, along with the date it should be completed. Be though, and allow Do any special cleaning jobs silverware and getting out your households, they've probably SEE year’s festivities. Meade Kemrer, members of the Wilkes College Sociology Department, will present a lecture Dec. 18 at 8 p.m. in Starr Hall, room 109. His topic will be ‘‘Changing Political Relations in the American Southwest and Their Impact Upon Navajo Indian Communities.” Archaeological evidence will demonstrate the coincidence of changing environmental strategies, site locational strategies, and westward migration rates that correspond from 1750 to 1900. ‘Mr. Kemrer joined the Wilkes College faculty this year and is an assistant professor of sociology. He received a B.A. Degree from Lycoming College and his M.A. from Temple University. The lecture is open to the INSURANCE 2 FOR $271 That's right, $25;000 bodily injury and property damage liability. Six months coverage for 2 machines: $27 ' Underwritten by Foremost Insurance Company. insurance programs inc. P. O. BOX 783 SCRANTON, PA. 18501 PHONE 346-8483 THE DALLAS POST, DEC. 14, 1972 Casselberry, Blake Saba, Richard Crompton, Doug Larson, George Parrs, and Dan Slagle. : Edgar Hughes, assistant i principal of Dallas Senior High School gave the welcoming ad- dress. William Baran, club ad- visor, reviewed the services rendered by the Key Club and presented the program projects Final ar onganiants have been worked out for the Cooperative Adult Education Program being sponsored by Luzerne County Community College and the Dallas Area School District. Registration for the courses and seminars to be offered by the Community College at the for this year. Dallas, was the speaker. to make college courses avail- able to area residents who hold fulltime positions during the day, according to Sister M. Eloise McGinty, RSM, registrar at Misericordia. Registration for spring semester continuing education courses will be held at the college during the week of Jan. 8 with the registrar’s office open daily from 8:40 a.m. to 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. A complete list of courses being offered under the program is available by con- tacting the registrar’s office at the college. Check your holiday towel and linen supply. Your holiday decorated guest towels and dish towels may need to be washed to freshen them up. And if you are having overnight guests, make sure your sheet and pillowcase supply is in good condition. Look over your tablecloths and napkins If you haven’t used them since last year, another quick sudsing will bring out their beauty. 3 Remember, too, home itself will be the background for all the holiday sparkle. If it isn’t immaculate the tinselly glitter is dulled. Look your house over with a critical eye. Check those little things you've been neglecting. The key word to a successful season is ‘‘early,” say the Extension specialists. Cook early, clean early, decorate early, and by all means, shop early. A special benefit presentation of ‘Hello Dolly by the Chanosonnette Theater of Easton will be given at the Wilkes College Center for the Performing Arts, Dec. 16, at 8 p.m. A member of the Wilkes College Theater, Joel Fischman of Wilkes-Barre, was present at a recent performance of Hello Dolly in Easton and mentioned that the people of Wilkes-Barre might enjoy seeing the show, that it would serve as a real “morale booster’’ for flood stricken residents. Two members of the production, Jean MecClay, director, and Richard J. Fox, set and lights designer im- mediately picked up the idea’ about it. The Wilkes Community Effort (WCE), under the direction of Rebecca Jost, assumed the sponsorship on the Wyoming Valley end. Members of the cast became excited about the special project and decided to raise money to cover the production’s expenses themselves. Cast members began contributing money and time-out from the regular routine of the Christ- mas season, to make the season a little more enjoyable for victims of the June 23 disaster. Helping with expenses, which include royalties, costumes, music and travel, are businessmen from the Easton area and the Easton Inter-Faith Flood Recovery Inc. Wilkes College personnel volunteered to send trucks to First Presbyterian Church, Wilkes-Barre; Jewish Com- munity Center; Leisure Lounge of the Jewish Community Center; staff of the District Attorney’s Office; Catholic Youth Center, Wilkes-Barre; YWCA staff, Wilkes-Barre; Red Cross ; and Baptist Tabernacle. props to Wilkes-Barre and to help set up the stage. They also offered to provide supper for the “Dolly’’ company the night of the show. The cast and stage crew took down the sets with painstaking care so that they could be reassembled at Wilkes. Choreographer Jan Pietrowski agreed to step in and fill the role of one performer who is unable to make the trip. The following organizations will have people who were af- fected by the flood in atten- dance at the performance: Church of Christ Uniting, Kingston; St. John’s Lutheran Church, Wilkes-Barre; Swoyersville Volunteer Hose Company, No. 1; Welsh Baptist Church, Edwardsville; First Barre; Wilkes-Barre General Hospital employees; Wilkes College faculty and staff; Hanover Junior Women’s Club; Res. 287-8482 2 P.O. Box 849 Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18701 730 ON YOUR DIAL BROUGHT TO YOU BY FRANK ORLOSKI SERVICE STATIONS Phones: (ACT17) 822-6108 735-0730 Pennsylvania Leads in Mushroom Production—The Keystone State now produces 61 percent of all U.S.-grown mushrooms, according to the Pennsylvania Crop Reporting Service at Harrisburg. Production during the year that ended June 30, 1972, “totaled 140:5 million pounds, which was 9 percent above last year’s Crop. Dallas Senior High School will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Dec. 13 and Dec. 18. Classes are scheduled to begin the week of Jan. 8, 1973, at Dallas Senior High School. Details of the cooperative program have been worked out by Dr. Jack Jones, director of continuing education and evening session at the Com- munity College, in cooperation with Dr. Linford Werkheiser, Dallas superintendent of schools, and Robert Dolbear, principal of Dallas High School. The program was developed especially for the convenience there are no residence requirements for enrollment. Y-Teen Club Will Assess Mrs. H. Merritt Hughes Sr., chairman of the girls program committee of the Wilkes-Barre YWCA, a United Fund Agency, announces that this committee has called a general Y-Teen Club meeting for Dec. 11 at 4 p.m. All Inter-Club. Council members, active club mem- bers, prospective members and all interested Y-Teens are urged to attend this special meeting at the YWCA. Mrs. E. B. Macpherson, greet the girls and explain. the limitations under which we must work this year. All members of the committee will be on hand to help clubs plan future program. Marsha Hrichison, a member of the Hanover club and a mem- ber of the planning committee for mid-winter conference, will talk to the group about this con- ference and relate her exper- iences at summer conference. Dr. Jones states that on the basis of specific interests displayed by Back Mountain residents through a question- naire survey, five college credit courses and 14 non-credit seminars are included in the initial program offereings. College credit courses being offered are English Com- position I, Principles of Ac- counting I, Typing I, General Psychology and Principles of Sociology. Courses are one semester in length at a tuition of $15 per semester hour. Seminar offerings are beginning photography, cake decorating, fundamentals of bridge, painting and sketching, “minor home repairs, Knitting, sewing, egg decorating, powder-puff mechanics, beginning golf, reading for speed and comprehension, wines of the world, modern math for parents, and small appliance repair. Cost of the seminars varies according to duration and cost of materials. Further details are included in Meeting Program Members of the girls program committee inciude Hughes, Mrs. John Angley, Mrs. Hassan Ahmad, Mrs. David Baum, Mrs. Edward Kentusky, Mrs. Edward John- son, Mrs. Anthony Okran, Dolores Grabko, Mrs. Evans. ° 1 UNTIL ? each night at 9 p.m. an advertisement carried in today’s issue. _ According to Dr. Jones, the Community College is willing to offer credit courses and other type programs (short cogsses, seminars, workshops az. the interest. is displayed. A minimum enrollment of 12 persons is necessary. He added that in the case of non-credit programs, if any individual is interested in an unusual subject and can locate 11 others who share the interest, the College will be happy to arrange for the course offering. Anyone desiring additional information about the Sooperalive program is invited to call Dr. Jones at 825-7594. a There is a backlog. of mail in some of the local post offices. Don’t take a chance on your news being left out of the paper. Send it in early or drop it off at the office. TCAMPFACTORY Te LAMPS POLE, SWAG and TBLE SHADES FITT {| AT FACTORY PRICES Allegheny Lamp MANUFACTURING Wilkes-Barre Tel 825-6135 sl | 302 WYO MING AVE SPEAKERS 4
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers