Legion Plans Italian Night The Home Association of the Dallas American Legion Post 672. will hold another ‘first,’ Oct. 20. at the Post home, Memorial Jighway, Dallas, Italian a a begin at 5:30 p.m. with dancing from 9 p.m. until closing. A buffet will be served at 11:30 p.m. Al Ciccarelli, president of the board and chairman of the affair, promises a big evening for everyone. He has already contacted Italy for cooks. and has obtained a band from “Little Italy’’, New York City. He says that the menu will not include any Polish food—just spaghetti with meatballs, lasagna, eggplant parmigiano, hot sausage, meatballs, .as- sorted = cheeses, capicola, salami, tossed salad, : bread, Italian doughnuts and coffee. Tickets can be purchased from any Liegion member or at the Legion Home. Dallas Man Member 0f Marywood Faculty Marywood College, Scranton; recently announced that Dr. Joseph Barrett, Overbrook Avenue, Dallas; has been named an associate professor there. Sister M. Coleman Nee, IHM, president of Marywood, made the agmnouncement. Dr. Bart had served as a psychologist with the Veterans Administration Hospital. From 1965 to 1970 he served as assistant and associate profes- sor of counselor education at the University of Scranton. He also functioned as the director of the guidance center. Dr. Barrett received his bachelor of arts and master of arts degrees from the Univer- sity of Scranton. His doctorate was earned at St. John’s Uni- versity, N.J. His new teaching position will not mark his first instruction chores at Marywood. He had formerly served the college as a visiting professor. Boosta Club Board Will Meet Sept. 27 The bodX of directors of the Dallas Booster Club will meet at 8 p.m., Sept. 27, at the Dallas American Legion. Members of the Booster Club program committee are asked to be present for this meeting. Plans for the Booster Club program will be completed. Members of the Booster Club who have ‘ads’ to be included inthe 1973 program are asked to turn them in. Plans for the annual Fall Frolic Dinner-Dance scheduled for Oct. 5 at the Continental Inn, will be discussed. Members are remindedgnat all reservations for the i 8 must be turned in’ at the Sept. 27 board meeting. George A. McCutcheon, an educator and director of counseling at the Luzerne County Community College has been honored by being asked by the governor of the Pennsyl- vania district of Kiwanis Inter- national, John W. Laughlin of McKeesport to serve for the second straight year as district chairman of Circle K clubs in Pennsylvania during the up- coming Kiwanis year of 1973-74. _ Mr. McCutcheon, who resides at 90 Sterling Ave., Dallas, is a member of the Kiwanis Club of Dallas and has been an active Kiwanian for 14 years, compil- ing an outstanding perfect attendance record of the same length of time. He has served his local Kiwanis club in many capacities such as Key Club committee advisor for eight years, Circle K Club committee advisor for seven years at the Luzerne County ‘Community College, achairman of the Quality of Our Environment Committee, first vice president and president. Serving on the Kiwanis Pennsylvania District level is not new to Mr. McCutcheon in that he had been asked in the past by district governors to serve, last year as district district chairman of the Quality of Our Environment committee during the years of 1971 and 1972. ; Mr. McCutcheon has also been ' honored by other organizations, having been the recipient of Freedom's Founda- tion award for work with youth of the community. In addition to this he was selected as the “Man of Year’ for work done in IF IT’S Kingston. YOU WANT x % i" g aia HEF. # HOURS: gy . 8 Sov 10:00 - 8:45 p.m. & EN ON HO ION his local community. This award is presented each year py the- Lions, Rotary, and Kiwanis Clubs of Dallas as a joint venture. Mr. McCutcheon will journey to Monroeville, Oct. 20, to at- tend a meeting to be held at the new Howard Johnsons Motor Lodge, where the district of- ficers of the Pennsylvania district of Kiwanis Inter- national will officially be- in- stalled. Since this is an import- ant Pennsylvania district func- tion, it is expected that several hundred Kiwanians and their wives will be in attendance. Trucksville Woman Earns B.A. Degree The Solo Club of Luzerne County will meet to dine at Piledggi’ s Restaurant, Bhisan St., Kingston, Sept: 28 at 7 p.m. There will be bowling wy 30 at 7:30 p.m. at the Crown Im- perial Lanes, Dallas Highway. Any. person, single, divorced, widowed or legally separated, who is between the ages of 30 and 55 is welcome to join the group. For information about joining or. reservations call Maude Cloak, 675-2356, or Jerry Brislin, 823-4283 after 5:30 p.m. TE % were, from manager; Maj. Will; Cragle. right, Michael Dolan, Keirstead, zone regional The Dallas Senior High School Key Club will be conducting a newspaper drive, Sept. 29. The service club’s first project of the school year is a double- pronged ecology effort. The col- lected newspapers will be sold for recycling, and the proceeds will be used for community beautification projects. The Key Club boys have dis- tributed a notice explaining their project and asking for sup- port. With the note they en- closed a piece of twine. The recipient of the twine is asked to use it to bundle newspapers as the boys will be unable to collect papers which have not been bundled. The note also asks that the papers be put on the curb by 8:30 a.m., Sept. 29; if the donor Solo Club Plans Upcoming Events Marcia M. Wazeter, 74 High- land Ave., Trucksville, was one of 156 undergraduates at Bloomsburg State College to complete requirements for an academic degree, Aug. 24. She has received her B.A. degree in sociology. She will be officially recogniz- ed in commencement excer- eo 0 by’ EOD NR XX RS NO TET gS SO OS RE RE %; i 4 $ te NO PLUMBING NEEDED ; 4 To serve fresh gravity drip % 2 coffee in offices, schools, 5 % reception areas, pleasure 3 8 boats, etc. * i Wherever coffee lovers 9 8 gather. 8 DROS “chocolate So Doi S035 WRITE TO: ore aN ZS OS EO oo oo we lives in New Goss Manor, Or- chard View Terrace, Old Goss Manor, College Manor, Elm- crest, Haddonfield Hills, Parish Heights, High Point Acres, Westmoreland Hills, Midway Manor, Trucksville Gardens, Meadowcrest and spplewond Manor. Other contributors are asked to take their papers to the senior high school parking lot between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. on that date. In the case of a heavy rain Sept. 29, papers will be picked g Page 3 Pete Lange, Dallas Township police chief and president of the Luzerne County Police Chiefs’ Association, attended the press conference Sept. 19 at the Luzerne-Wyoming County Men- tal Health Center No. 1, 103 S. Main St., Wilkes-Barre. The conference was called to an- nounce a $26,136 federal grant for a police training program in mental health and family crisis intervention. This will be the first program of its type in Pennsylvania, and will serve as a model for future state training programs in this field. The grant will be used to pro- vide all fulltime municipal police officers in Luzerne persons who are mentally dis- turbed, and in intervening in family disputes. Also attending the press con- ference were the Luzerne County commissioners, the board of directors of the Lu- zerne-Wyoming County Mental Health Center No. 1, Wilkes dean Geroge F. Ralson, presi- dent of the center’s board; cen- ter director John J. Viola; Harry Russ, regional director of the Governor’s Justice Com- mission; and John Radko, Hanover Township police chief and past president of the Penn- sylvania Police Chiefs’ Associa- tion. The Governor’s Justice Com- mission, of which Atty. Gen. Construction of the one-half million dollar Encon Plant in Fernbrook is well underway, with all steelwork erected to date. Hanford Eckman, owner of the fabricated electrical heating sources firm, announc- ed that work on concrete floors and roofing will begin this week, weather permitting. The build- ing itself will be of pre-en- gineered fabricated steel. Mr. Eckman predicted mid-Novem- ber as the logical date of com- pletion. Limited production should be- gin in December, he said, and will increase as American made machinery is installed and or- ders increase. The basic Reg. $1.59 vd. o McCall's 3441 53 607 wide Values S399 0d 18 2 2 Israel Packel is chairman, ap- proved the grant proposal and the channeling of the funds from the Law Enforcement Assis- tance Administration. The training proposal was sponsor- missioners and was endorsed by the Luzerne County Police Chiefs’ Association, and the Hazleton-Nanticoke Mental Health-Mental Retardation Center. The training sessions will be conducted from Noyem- ber to May of 1974. The 381 policemen who will take the 30- hour course will be trained dur- ing their regular duty hours over the course of one week. The policemen will be divided into 26 groups of 15 officers each. Fifteen groups will be trained in Wilkes-Barre, five, in Hazleton, and six in Dallas. Ro- bert Santos, director of the ed, and applications for the ini- tial work force have been re- ceived. Fifty men and 50 women will be employed at this local plant when full capacity is reached, Mr. Eckman esti- mated. - The financial support for this comes from the Luzerne County Municipal Authority Industrial Fund and the Wilkes-Barre Chamber of Commerce. Allen, Rodda and Associates, archi- tects. designed the 100 by 200 foot structure. It is being built by Banks Construction Com- pany. Subscribe To The Post JIN FABRIC S AND CRAFTS 60" WIDE FIRST QUALITY MA- CHINE WASH- ABLE. 1-5 YD. LENGTHS. COLORS. ALL tation, Education and Training Unit, is the project director. Based on reports for the nine months prior to June, the police were involved with 120, or 25 percent, of the 500 crisis inci- dents served by the Mental Health Center’s emergency psychiatric service, at night and on weekends, according to quired by law to assist in other psychiatric emergency situa- tions that may occur during the day when the outpatient unit is in operation. “The training of the police disturbed persons and families who are experiencing a crisis will be instrumental in alleviat- ing much of the danger sur- rounding these crisis situa- tions,” said Mr. Santos. 1% 255 FIRST AND DRYABLE. Reg. $3.99 yd. AND MORE. 60" AND DRYABLE. AND DRYABLE. WIDE Dis Reg. $3.99 & 4.99 yd. FULL 3% . Reg. $4.99 & $5.99 yd. PER- 48 v TINY PRINTS ON D ARK AND LIGHT WASHABLE. Values $1.79 to $1.99 yd. 1* Br or ot rn 2 5 oe of oo Mark Plaza Mon. thru Sa 1..10:00-9:00