“Continuing Education's brochure for the fall term of courses including description. date. time and place is present- ly in the process of being printed and will be ready for mailing in early August. As in the posfiiradunte. undergrad- uate credit courses and special interest classes will be offered to persons in the Wilkes-Barre Campus area. The two-day credit workshop in veneral disease will be of- fered this weekend, July 27 and 28. Also coming up is the workshop on outdoor education. scheduled for July 30 and 31. and the two-day workshop on drugs. The latter workshop will be offered in two different sections due to the interest on the part of local registrants. The first two-day session will run Aug. 7 and 8, the second. Aug. 9 and 10. All the workshops are one credit courses. The Environmental con- servation workshop will close August 8. Teachers taking this course will be able to take much of the information into the classroom during the coming year. Joe Kolesar. a member of the campus maintenance staff, after years with the Wilkes- Barre Campus is leaving to accept a position with the Veterans Administration Hospital. Joe has made many friends among the faculty. staff and students at the local campus and he will be missed by one and all. Everyone, however. wishes him success tion. Three new faces are seen on campus this summer. They are the new members of the main- tenance staff. Increase in maintenance employees has been made necessary due to the newly-constructed facilities on campus. The new employees are John L.H. Shelley, Forty Fort: George Krupsha, Leh- man; and Guy Camp, Berwick. Catharine Orf. bookkeeper at Wilkes-Barre Campus, is off campus this week enjoying a well-earned vacation. With the coming of the 1973-74 academic year. her accounting responsi- bilities will* triple. with the handling of registration and student accounts. While on vacation. Joy Kozemchak. a former member of the staff will fill in for Catharine. Recent tests of water quality at Harvé@® Lake show that the lake’s water meets state standards. The tests were made approximately two weeks ago by the Water Quality branch of the Department of Environ- mental Rescources. Twenty-five bacteriological samples were taken. When the The human race is in the best condition when it has the greatest degree of liberty. results came back they showed that Harveys Lake water is “well within state standards’ for unpolluted waters, ac- cording to department field supervisor, Stanley Lehman. All samples were taken from the shore. Favorable results from that type of sample points to even cleaner overall water than the tests reported. As Mr. Lehman explained it, ‘‘shore samples are almost always the most indicative of polluting dis- charge.” growth not just for our Bank, but . for the entire Pocono- Northeast . which we serve. 8 WILKES-BARRE OFFICE WILLIAM W. SCRANTON Chairman of the Board CARL A. PROPES President and Chief Executive Officer WALTER R. FOX Vice President and Office Manager JOSEPH A. GDOVIN Assistant Vice President GLENN M. HOWELL Assistant Cashier HARRY L. SMITH Assistant Cashier MYRON W. YENCHA Vice President and Assistant Secretary ASSOCIATE BOARD WILKES-BARRE DONALD D. TRETHEWAY Chairman JUSTIN BERGMAN, JR. KENNETH A. BURDON ROBERT C. RINEHIMER A. DeWITT SMITH JOHN R. VIVIAN FREDERICK J. ECK THOMAS J. MACK, JR. JOSEPH M. NELSON EDWARD J. SCHELLENBERG, JR. ARTHUR SILVERBLATT GEORGE B. SORDONI are shown as they prepared to “Rent-A-Kid” ‘Rent-A-Kid". an odd job opportunity for teenagers in the Wyoming Valley. is now in full operation. The program is spon- sored by the Youth Action Coun- cil. a recently formed group of vouth who volunteered to re- spond to the needs and concerns of youth in Luzerne and Wyoming Counties. Molly Casey answers the phone and matches requests for odd jobs with nearly 80 teen- agers currently on file. Thanks to Robert Miscavage. Miss Casey is on loan from the Model Cities program. Youth Action Council mem- bers work in recruiting teen- agers. publicly and fund raising ASSETS Program in for the *Rent-A-Kid"’ program. Miss Casey has on file teen- agers. who are specialists in cleaning attics. babysitting. mowing lawns. pulling weeds. washing windows. painting and “animal sitting’. When an individual calls for a specific chore, an hourly wage is agreed upon by the central office according to a standard hourly wage. The teenagers are assigned jobs according to ex- perience. equipment and loca- tion. Since many teenagers do not have cars or drivers licenses. the employer is requested to provide {ransportation or bus flare to and from the job. S. Government Subdivisions Other Securities Other Assets ABLLITIEES : Deposits Unearned Discount Capital Accounts: ~ Equity Capital: Capital Stock Surplus TRUST ASSETS ¥ Scranton Carbondale Pocono Pines Operation A special babysitting course and house-cleaning classes have been scheduled by Miss Joey Merisko of the Lehman Campus of Pennsylvania State University. Persons who would like to “Rent-A-Kid" are asked to call Miss Casey at 829-1341. Teenagers who desire to join the program should visit the Youth Action Council headquar- ters. 2nd floor. 73 West Union Street. The “‘Rent-A-Kid” program and Youth Action Council are assisted by staff people from Catholic Social Services. Penn- sylvania's United Services Agency. United Way and VISTA. Dallas High School Girl Miss Unico Runner-Up Pamela Taddei, of Carverton Heights, was selected first runner-up in the Miss Unico judging. A fashion show was held at the Boston Store to select the high school girl to serve as Miss Unico for the annual East-West Unico foot- ball game. Miss Taddei represented Dallas Senior High School in the competition. She was selected based on her runner-up finish in the selection of this year’s Dallas High School Home- coming Queen. Page 13 A series of ‘‘Selected Topic” courses, better known to students as ‘‘mini-courses’’, will be offered at College Misericordia this fall for students and for the general public. Designed to meet one day a week for five consecutive weeks, the ‘Selected Topic” courses will be taught by Misericordia faculty and will be valued at one credit each. The purpose of the courses, accord- ing to a spokesman, is to provide enrichment and addi- tional knowledge to the com- munity on various intellectual, artistic, and cultural levels. The courses may be taken for personal satisfaction and may also be used to satisfy general elective requirements toward graduation. The credits may not Construction Starts Shavertown Bank Franklin Federal Savings and Loan Association will begin construction on their new building in the Shavertown Shopping Center, Aug. 1. Completion date is set for the end of October. Marlin Johnson, project supervisor for Bank Builders Corporation, St. Louis, Mo. stated that the $130,000 struc- ture will be 34 feet by 50 feet and will include a drive-in window. The building was designed by the St. Louis firm, but will be built by the Sordoni Construc- tion Company, Forty Fort. An adjacent building oc- cupied by Henry’s Jewelry and Robert Hair Fashion is also be applied, however, in fulfill- ment of departmental core requirements. Scheduled for the fall are “French for Travellers’’; “How to Survive Student Teaching’; ‘“‘American Folk Music’, “Identifying Living Things’; and ‘‘Introduction to Astrono- my’. One feature of the ‘‘Selected Topic” courses that appears to be attractive to students is the Pass-Fail grading system used, rather than giving letter grades. Information regarding regis- tration for the courses may be obtained by contacting the Registrar's Office at Miseri- cordia. Dallas Fall Fair Dates Announced At last week’s Dallas Rotary club meeting, Francis Red” Ambrose announced that the 10th annual Dallas Fall Fair would be held Sept. 7, 8 and 9 this year. As usual this affair will be held on the Lehman Horse Show grounds. He pointed out that although this started out as solely a Rotary event, it is now run by the three service clubs of the area, Rotary, Kiwanis and Lions. A Dallas Fall Fair As- sociation now runs the event, with representatives of the three service clubs making up the association. How empty learning, how vain is art, but as it mends the life and ‘guides the heart. Learning makes a man fit company for himself. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers