(continued from PAGE ONE) Adults can participate in various sports activities which include basketball, tennis, volleyball, badminton, quoits, elc., and are available from 9 am. lo ¢ p.m. daily, Monday through Saturday. Several projects have already been completed by children of the playground. Orders were taken for a hoagie sale and approximately 530 hoagies were made and distributed June 30 area. Top salesmen among the children were Rena Tomchak for various improvements at the playground. Some will be used for a swim party to be held for playground children, July 11. The party will be highlighted Al a special meeting, June 29, Lake-Lehman’s school direc- tors opted to extend Blue Cross- Blue Shield and major medical teachers for one month beyond Ally. Charles D. Lemmond Jr.. the board’s solicitor and Dallas Lions Flect Officers Dallas Lions Club held election of officers recently with the following results: President. Clem Kuras; first vice president, Ben Pieczynski; second vice president, Jack Penman; third vice president, Secretary, John George; (reasurer, Bob Fino; tailtwister, Sargo Toni; and Lion Tamer, Tom Kane. Board of directors members elected were John Mulhern, and Anthony DeStefano. Wives of the members were guests at the meeting. According {o the young adults in charge, the turnout has been fair. Tennis has been a very popular activity and the courts are usually in constant use. Applications are currently being accepted for the men’s and women’s singles tennis tournament which will begin July 16. Applications will be accepted until July 14, and are available at the center. A doubles tournament for men and women is planned for early August and a mixed doubles tournament is in the planning stages. A junior tournament will also be conduc- ted in late August. Applications for these contests are also available at the center. More information can be obtained by calling 675-1681. Instructors report that the first session of tennis lessons for children and for women are progressing very well. The second session will begin in early August with registration sel for Aug. 1 at 10 a.m. The Dallas Center has en- tered a basketball team in the Luzerne County Playground Basketball League. The league, sanctioned by the P.ILAA. is comprised of 12 teams, each playing a 16-game schedule. The teams are made up of players who are expected to compete on the varsity, and for their respective high schools during the 1973-74 season. Players on the Dallas team, which defeated Coughlin Friday night, are Chuck Wilson, Mike Caffrey, Tom Considine, Steve Meskers, Dave Fritzges, Frank Wallace, Brad Arnaud, Rob Blase, and Gary Zumchak. All Dallas home games are chief negotiator, explained that the present one-year contract held by professional employes of the district was to expire at midnight Saturday and that, un- less the board were to take ac- tion. certain of the employe benefits which accrue to the teachers would also be inter- rupted. Atty. Lemmond stated that these benefits include Blue Cross-Blue Shield and major medical insurance coverage for the teacher and his dependents Robert Onufer On Deployment Navy gunner’s mate second class Robert J. Onufer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Onufer, of Noxen Road, Harveys Lake, is on deployment with the U.S. 7th Fleet in the Western Pacific, aboard the USS Edson. A former student of Lake- Lehman High School, he joined the Navy in June of 1969. Subscribe To The Post as well as a $5,000 life insurance policy for each professional staff member. On a motion by School Direc- tor Ellis Hoover, the board voted unanimously to provide one month’s additional cover- age for all personnel covered under the 1972-73 contract. If no contract has been signed by the end of that period, Mr. Hoover said, ‘we will see to it that arrangements can be made by the teachers to continue their own coverage.” The school directors also approved a budget for the 1973- 74 year totalling expenditures of $2.147.311 and encompassing a tax millage rate of 42. Enabling taxes approved by the board in- clude a per capita tax, 10 per- cent amusement tax, mechani- cal devices tax, one percent transfer tax and one percent earned income tax. The latter may be shared equally with municipalities in the Lake- Lehman district. played at the Dallas Recreation Center at 6:30 p.m. Spectators are welcome. No admission is charged. Upcoming games on the Dallas court are against Wyoming Area, July 9; Central Catholic, July 13; Wyoming Seminary, July 16; St. John’s, July 20; Crestwood, July 23; Coughlin, July 25; Northwest, Aug. 3; Central Catholic, Aug. 6; Wyoming Seminary, Aug. 10; Meyers, Aug. 13. The playground at Dallas also sponsors a junior varsity team. Currently 2-0 in their league, members of the team are Brian Sickler, Jeff Supulski, Bruce Riefenstahl, Greg Steele, Mike Carly, John Reese, Bill Kleiner, Jim Walsh, Jim Parker, Mike McGourty. | Also scheduled on the basket- ball program at the playground be run ‘in early August. The clinic will be conducted by local high school coaches and college players. Boys from fourth through 12th grade are weleome held July 25 at the Dallas Recreation Center at 1 p.m. The basketball program is being conducted by Tim Bauman, with the assistance of Tony Fannick and Tom Pieczynski. Plans at the Dallas play- ground also include clinics for wrestling, cheerleading and twirling. The wrestling clinic, jointly sponsored by the Back Mountain Wrestling Club and the Dallas Recreation Center, is scheduled to begin Aug. 13 and will run for one week. A tourna- ment will conclude the program, which is still in the planning stages. Arrangements are being made for mats and insurance. Many qualified instructors and college wrest- lers will be on hand and all children and other interested participants are welcome. The Dallas Post (Doris Mallin) The Lehman Township Super- visors voted to authorize Roy F. Weston Company of Philadel phia to update the 1968 sewerage feasibility study for Alan Majors, William Samuels and Joseph Park, and secretary Lewis Ide, who presided over this monthly meeting, announ- ced that the study is not a commitment to install sewers, but an attempt to determine the various aspects of a treatment system; what funds, federal and state, are available to sub- sidize sewers, and what would the ultimate cost be to township residents if sewers were in- stalled. The cost of updating the 1968 study is $2,100; a $1,000 refund from the state is anticipated to offset the cost of the original study. Tom Hartz, Cease Terrace Road, Lake Silkworth, was spokesman for a group of residents from that street, who complained about its ‘‘deplor- able condition.” Roadmaster Alan Majors promised that A really great man is known by three signs—generosity in the design, humanity in the execution, moderation in success. repairs will be made to Cease Terrace Road within the next two weeks. Residents from various parts of the township complained about acts of vandalism, and about motorcycles and auto- mobiles speeding and driving in an unsafe manner. Chief of Police Lionel Bulford noted that several offenders have been warned and that anyone caught violating speed and safety laws will be arrested and prosecuted. A letter was read by Lewis Ide announcing that Governor Milton Shapp, under Section 7 of the State Council of Civil Defense Act, has appointed Ignatius Hozempa as Civil Defense Director for Lehman Township. Bids for road paving material were opened and read: Evans Asphalt. Company, total bid $15,326; American Asphalt Company, total bid $15,291. Action on these bids was tabled until a later date. This project will be financed with federal revenue sharing funds. A motion was passed authorizing township solicitor William Valentine to proceed with legalities involved in the township’s assuming respon- sibility for Lake Avenue, Conover Drive and Goodwin Avenue, Lake Silkworth. The cheerleading and twirling clinics. will be conducted by Diane Masoner and various members of the Dallas squads. Registration is set for July 26 at 11 a.m. Instruction will be of- fei. Re More information concerning these clinics will be available as plans become more definite. According to Dianne, Debbie, and Tim, the Dallas Recreation ‘is most successful when used to its fullest. The I TT (continued from PAGE ONE) facilities are here and we urge all area residents to take an interest and make the play- ground program a complete success.” For further information on the playground, call 675-1681. * a Alinikoff, Mrs. S. M. and Mrs. Thomas G.¥ham Jr. constant use. e 630 Ib. capacity — 18.0 cu. ft. (AHAM) e Slim-Wall insu- lation — store 1/3 more food without increasing floor space e Fast freeze shelves — let you freeze food quickly on Please be advised that after July 16, 1973, Getting Serious Fino's Rexall Pharmacy, Dallas, will take over Rs Ry a Ry RR Ne a un a mr + FREE PARTS AND LABOR FOR ONE YEAR EDWAL MX FR X H&W 4 KODAK loys! patronage in the past years. We will BOYD'S ONE AND ONLY LOCATION BOYD R. 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We want to DE Movie - Slide - Camera Equipment \ : : { and easy to keep clean © Plus magnetic door gasket, Pre- SIMMON OMEGA 3 GRA—LAB express our deepest thanks fo the many cision temperature control, : Westinghouse built-in quality. : BOGEN XK GOSSEN ) hundreds of customers who gave us their Syne an Oo i Darkroom equipment { NAT but without prescriptions. a a Low processing prices AZT EC PHOTOGR&PHY and SUPPLIES 86 South Main Street Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Sincerely, | EVANS REXALL DRUG STORE ) Low Prices x Used Equipment Specials | y Shavertown, Pa. Phone 825-7835 a a a a a
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