I en, Rr FO aT I ~ LT _ Alfred (Al) H. Ackerson, immediate past president of the Dallas Kiwanis Club, has been commended by the Penn- sylvania Department of Commerce for his ‘important. role in the recovery effort from Hurricane Agnes. As part time executive = director of the Luzerne County Industrial Development Authority, he has been expediting Pennsylvania’s short term disaster recovery loans for the Wilkes-Barre area businesses. As a commercial credit ex- by Rev. Charles H. Gilbert My first impulse when at- tending «the Sinfonia .Da Camera, Feb. 7, at College Misericordia was to thank God in all devout sincerity “for my good ears,” with which I en- Joyed unusual delight in hearing that evening of music. God knew and accepted my thanks with no special demonstration to make him aware. Fur- thermore 1 knew that College Misericordia was His agent for arranging these and other special concert treats. I said to myself, “I will use. My Typewriter Talks column in The Dallas Post to say ‘Thank You’ to College Misericordia for providing concerts in such good taste.” 1 know that it takes more than one person to arrange such events and I am thinking of College Misericordia as representing - a wide coverage of responsible people. And thank you, all of you. There are dates in my life which I call special ‘‘ex- periences,’’ to be noted as such in my diaries. It is more than just a record for a day, but rather covers happenings which I call ‘experiences’ in my soul's journey. The record of that night was more than ordinary because I became conscious that sound waves with all their’ mystery and lovliness were coming through all possible in- terventions right to me. They would be coming from sound boxes of a score or more stringed instruments representing harmonies and pitches, and I seemed able to hear them not only as separate waves of sound but as a planned blending into a total gift from God. The strings of the deep bass seemed to speak to my emotions -as if purposely sounded. I got the impression at first that there were some wind instruments hidden back there, but soon realized the strings were doing it all. These vibrations were coming as so many creators of the tones ,and air waves, coming with "unusual clarity and pleasure. Not being a skilled listener, I could not say in what way this particular concert was doing this to me more than ever before. But suddenly I felt this high gratitude which by inner words I kept saying, “Thank God for my good ears!” Never before have I ever said such a particularized prayer of thanksgiving. I have done much complaining about my im- pairment of hearing, for in- stance the melody of the song sparrow, the too soft speech of readers! On this night I was majoring in my feeling of “Thank You, God, for my good ears!” What marvelously complex is the mechanism of hearing! I read in a book the other day about how sound waves strike a membrane down a channel of the inner ear and set a-tremble a chain of tiny bone shapes until the auditory is reached, and then it becomes sort out and interpret to the conscious mind what is going on outside the hard skull. The world of vibrations becomes a concert, and this inner self of conscious mind has, perhaps, an ‘‘experience’’ about it! An experience for me! Becoming a part of me! Coming from up there on that platform down to me as an individual! And I was ~ There was something else different. The names of the composers of the music of the concert were not totally un- familiar to me, but so far as I am aware of it, I did not know any of the numbers they were playing. I know how people are’ about hymn tunes. They want only the familiar ones, or as best!”” They don’t really mean old, just familiar, and usually referring back into their childhood. How often audiences “The Old Rugged init!) I never heard that song in my boyhood, for the song goes no further back than 1913! I have observed that during the concerts I have attended, I found myself watching for some familiar phrases of the music that I had heard before. A habit was formed of setting special store of value on that part of the concert which was familiar to me. We all know how true that is with the music of Handel's Messiah. If the only concert we ever attend is the Messiah or other familiar favorites, how can any other of the great works of the musicians have a chance at our inner lives? We become poorer just through favoring only the familiar. Here was a concert finding its way into my deeper self and giving me an unusual sense of privilege to be able to hear vibrations for the sheer delight of the music’ as such. And the effect of spending a whole rich evening in the atmosphere of whole regiments of notes and harmonies and rhythms, clearly and easily hearing it with my God-given ears! This has become for me a date of ecstasy for my diary, as though I had achieved a new skill, or at least a new level of listening pleasure. 1 do not want to omit special mention of the gifted artist at the keyboard . of the. .piano, Thomas Hrynkiv. I first saw and heard him as a very young man with oodles of future promise ‘ahead of him in a concert in Wilkes College gymnasium, must be 18 or 20 years ago. How he makes the keys on a piano sing! Alsol:l always think about such a piano, how much skilled work- manship goes into its manufacture! And time for the seasoning of the wood! Again, it was a combination of different wave-lengths of music borne to us from that piano. Again—I want to pass along to Misericordia and associates my thanks and ap- preciation. And, please, God hear again, which I am coaxing from my typewriter to tap out a “Thank You, God, for my good ears!’ Woman departs For Bangladesh A former Dallas girl who is now a medical missionary under the Association of Bap- tists for World Evangelism left for Bangladesh Wednesday to undergo language study and work at a missionary hospital for four years. Janice Wolfe, a member of the Bible Baptist Church, Shickshinny, departed from Kennedy Airport with her first destination being Chittagong, Banladesh. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Wolfe, RD 2 Dallas, and is a graduate of Lake-Lehman High School and the Wilkes-Barre General Hospital for Nurses. She also attended Baptist Bible College in Clarks Summit. New Number For Police Telephone numbers for the Kingston Township Police and Municipal Building will change, effective Feb: 20. New numbers will be 696-1174 and 696-1175. [970 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-Door Hardtop. Air Conditioning $2295 MIDWAY = J SALES | 2010 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming 287-3114 pert with more than 40 years experience in business, the 71- year old retired banker’s job has been to get the paperwork Wilkes-Barre industrial base jobs can be restored as quickly as possible. In the three month period ending Jan. 1, Al handled the paper-work at the local level connected with making over 30 loans totaling about $8-million. He will complete his temporary assignment by June 30 by concentrating now on the details involved with the repayment of loans. “Al has been great to work with in this program,’ reports Charles J. Blankenship, state commerce disaster recovery coordinator. State Commerce Secretary Walter Arader selected Mr. Ackerson for the position with the concurrence of the authority. According to Sec. Arader, Mr. Ackerson’s age was not of importance, only his business experience and his credit. His years in business in the community were a real plus for the emergency position. ‘“‘Al’s work has proven to be an example of the talent that can be found among our senior citizens if our society fakes the trouble to seek it out,” Mr. Blankenship emphasized. Living in an apartment in Kingston, Al and his wife Louise lost all their possessions when the June flood swept through that area. The couple’s losses went beyond ordinary household items because Al has been an antique and book collector for years. They lost many antiques and other items that they placed in storage when they earlier moved from a 17-room house in the Dallas area. Al plans to return to an apartment in the Dallas area. The Ackersons are presently in a mobile home which was visited by President Nixon on his tour in September. The New Army Is Going to Pot! The Army is going to POT and they don’t care who knows it. POT is Performance Orientated Training, considerably differ- ent from Army training of another era. Soldiers at Fort Ord, Calif. are exposed to a totally dif- ferent instructional technique. Privates are hardly ever seen listening to a lecture. The men are trained with their ‘Hands On’’ the equipment. Basic trainees have radios in their hands after only 30 minutes of basic instruction. Soldiers now teach each other. When a ser- geant instructor teaches a man how to climb a pole, the recruit must climb the pole himself, then turn right around and show another recruit how it’s done. The soldiers really go for it. As one put it recently, “I learn- ed more’ as an instructor than I did as an instructee,”” he quipped. ‘Some of the guys ask some pretty tough questions and the more answers you have to dig up—the more you're going to know yourself.” The more its men know, the more the Army knows. From the looks of it, the new Army, the Modern Volunteer Army, is a pretty knowledgeable Army. William Conyngham Elected President Planned Parenthood William L. Conyngham, a Back Mountain resident, was elected to serve as president of the Planned Parenthood Association of. Luzerne County at the organization’s recent meeting at the Hotel Sterling. His family has long been a staunch supporter of Planned Parenthood, several members having served on the affiliate board. At one time Mr. and Mrs. Conyngham served on the board simultaneously. A 1942 graduate of Yale University, Mr. Conyngham is presently secretary-treasurer of Eastern Pennsylvania Supply Company of Wilkes-Barre. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the First National Bank of Eastern Pennsylvania, as well as the Wilkes-Barre General Hospital and Wyoming Valley Historical Society. Sundays will find him and his family at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, where he serves as senior warden. He lives at Chase with his wife, the former Cornelia Parkhurst, and their children. Other officers elected include Mrs. John G. Ruggles Jr. first vice-president; Mrs. Stanford L. Weiss, second vice- president; Mrs. William C. M. Butler Jr., recording secretary; Mrs. William Robbins, corresponding secretary; Clifford K. Melberger, treasurer; and Harold C. Snowdon Jr, assistant treasurer. Newly named to Planned Parenthood’s Board of Directors were: Edmund M. Poggi Jr.; Louis W. Jones Jr.; Mrs. Stewart Pierson, John Charest, Mrs. Peter Foldes and Mrs. Sydney Friedman. Dallas Boy Accepted By Widener College Peter Calkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Calkins of Dallas, mission at Widener College in Chester, it was announced by Vincent F. Lindsley, director of Peter is currently a senior at Dallas Senior High School and will graduate in June. Located on an 87-acre campus in Chester, Widener College, whose name honors . the nationally prominent Philadel- phia family, offers baccalaur- eate degrees to men and women in liberal arts, science, en- gineering, economics and management. and nursing, as well as the new unstructured major for those who prefer a more flexible approach to high- er education. ; Reg. $4.50 Reg. $4.50 17 Oz. Bottle Now $2.50 Now $2.50 $2.50 The 21st annual Parade of Quartets Concert sponsored by the Wilkes-Barre Chapter, Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing in. America (SPEBSQSA), is scheduled for March 3 in the Coughlin High School Auditorium, = Wilkes-Barre. Curtain time is 8 p.m. The Cirele W Four from Pittsburgh, formerly known as The Westinghouse Quartet will headline the concert, according to General Chairman Raymond Patsko, Wilkes-Barre. He added that comedy segments will be provided by The Free Lancers from Dundalk, Md. Special guests on the program will be The Chorus of the Lehigh from Allentown-Bethlehem Chapter of SPEBSQSA. Ap- pearance by the 60-member chorus is a goodwill gesture by fellow barbershoppers ex- tending a helping hand to members of the singing society - affected by the hurricane disaster of last June. The local chorus, under the direction of James McClelland, Wilkes- Barre, will be featured in a separate segment of the show. The Tag Masters, registered quartet of the Wilkes-Barre Chapter, also will appear. Tickets for the upcoming concert, one performance. this year, are available from members of the Wilkes-Barre SPEBSQSA Chapter and by writing to the organization’s meeting and rehearsal site, Scott Street Hose Company in Swoyersville. Chairmen assisting with the concert plans are: tickets— John J. McCloskey, Moun- taintop; program—Thomas Reilly, West Pittston; patrons— Phillip L. Brown, Shavertown; promotion and staging— William A. Zdancewicz, Ed- wardsville. Chapter president is John Durkin, Pittston. The public is invited to attend this harmony concert. The Jazz Ensemble of Ver- nona High School, Vernona, N.J., has been named as one of the competitors in the for- thcoming Festival of Stage Bands being sponsored by the Kiwanis Club of Dallas. One of the best known jazz ensembles in the U.S., the Vernona group was chosen to participate in the U.S. High School division of the Mon- treaux International Jazz Festival held in Montreaux, Switzerland. The group received the honor, according to director Harry Owens, as a result of past festival awards. The Vernona group captured first place in the Ramapo High School Stage Band Festival, New Jersey's largest festival, and placed second among fifty bands in the New England Band Festival, the first time it competed, and first the next year. The Vernona Jazz Ensemble will compete with at least three other high school stage bands in the Kiwanis Club Festival Feb. 24 in the Irem Temple Auditorium in Wilkes-Barre. Judging from applications received, the other high school competitors will be from the local area, according to Festival Committee co- chairman Tom O’Malia. The festival will begin at 8 p.m. with tickets available at the door. Tickets may be ob- tained in advance by contacting the Do Re Music Center in Dallas. Subscribe to The Dallas Post TRY THE: FAMOUS Accessory SAL 16 Ends Mar. 3 PS SY pF TR / Aro find i 302 « iw prlloniey COOK & DUNN One Coat, No-Drip Latex Flat One coat covers most surfaces and colors. 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