Glenn M. Panzer, M.D., will announce the opening of his practice at the Back Mountain Medical Center effective July. Dr. Panzer will be located at the Medical Center on a full time basis announced Robert Cartier, Medical Center Board president. Dr. Panzer will be avail- able for patients on an appointment basis beginning in July. Subsequent to his un- dergraduate education at Albright College where he received his Bachelor of Science degree in 1972, Dr. Panzer attended Temple University. In 1977, Dr. Panzer com- pleted his training at Temple University and undertook a three-year Family Practice Residency program. The residency was conducted in Wyoming Valley under a program sponsored by the United Health and Hospital Services, Inc. In his activities as a Family Practice resident, Dr. Panzer attended patients at the residency office at the Nesbitt Memorial Hospital Medical Arts Building and also at- tended patients at Nesbitt Memorial Hospital and Wilkes-Barre General Hospital. DeBarry earns PS degree Paul A. DeBarry, son of Mrs. Betty Reese DeBarry of Oak Hill, Dallas, and the late Stephen L. DeBarry, Sr., received a Bachelor of Science degree in en- vironmental resource management, division of the School of Agriculture, University at graduation ceremonies held on Saturday, May 31. Gov. Richard Thornburgh was the speaker at the com- mencement exercises. While matriculating at Penn State, DeBarry was a member of the ERM Club, student council, cross country and Delta Chi marathen. He was named to the dean’s list for three terms. “ DeBarry is also a graduate of Lake-Lehman High School where he was a member of the Honor Society, of the award- winning band for seven years and the track team for six years. Attending the graduation ceremonies at University Park were his mother, his sister, Robin, his brother and sister-in- law, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen L. DeBarry, Jr. and Miss Diane Pall. DeBarry is currently employed in the Civil Engineering Department at Penn State as a technical assistant for hydrology studies. to your car. & FILTER Regularly $11.95 Professional Wheel Alignment camber and toe-in. Regularly $13.95 Tune-u Specia 24° COMPLETE — USE YOUR VISA, MASTERCHARGE, OR JACK WILLIAMS CHARGE ACCOUNT CAR CARE KINGSTON Phone: 283-0551 WILKES-BARRE Route 315, Wilkes-Barre/ Scranton Highway Phone: 829-1991 BERWICK Front Street, Route 11 Phone: 759-0376 CENTERS featured role Theatre Group’s Ed Van Horn, head custodian at the Dallas Township Elementary School, and Bill Thomas, mail courier for the Dallas School District, were honored. at a retirement party at the Hoagie Bar recently. Those in attendance were Gerald Wycallis, Jim Inman, Dr. Richard Shipe, Mrs. Mary Shaver, Mrs. Ruth Novy, Bob Tripp, Mrs. Loretta Thomas, Mrs. Doris McCain, Mrs. Joanne Drayer, Mrs. Frances Husted, Mrs. Barbara Reilly, Mrs. Jean Utter, Mrs. Marsha Spear, Mrs. Marilyn ' Klick, Mrs. Frances Klaboe, Mrs. Evelyn Farrell, Fred Wesley, Mrs. Lillian Harrison, Mrs. Doris Wolfe, Mrs. Priscilla Liput, Mrs. Betty Shoemaker, Mrs. Pearl Walton, Mrs. Ann Updyke, Mrs. Marion Van Horn, Mrs. Ollie Over- man, Mrs. Ginny Gurry, Mrs. Jane Cornell, Mrs. Jane Thomas, Mrs. Kay Scott, Mrs. Rita Mundy, Mrs. Mary Alice Blazes, Miss Ellen Morrissey, Mrs. Cheryl Miskiel, Mrs. Mary . Ann Dembowski, Mrs. Betsy Cannon, Jim Rogowski, Mrs. Alice Krispin and John Mulhern. Mrs. Jean Utter welcomed the guests and introduced Dr. Richard Shipe and Gerald Wyecallis who made a few brief remarks. Mrs. Loretta Thomas presented Van Horn and Thomas with gifts from the group. Brown University, the nation’s seventh * oldest college, awarded Bac- calaureate degrees to nearly 1,200 graduating seniors at its 212th Commencement on June - : Degree recipients in- cluded: Rebecca Loveland, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Loveland of = Shavertown, who received. an A.B. in Anthropology. While at Brown, Rebecca was a member of the ballroom and social dance club and a lab technician for the geology department. She was also elected to membership in Phi Beta Kappa. She was graduated magna cum laude. | Mon.-Fri. 1-7 Saturday 10-1 675-2163 { completes army course Maj. Robert L. Brehm, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. Lee Brehm, Main Street, Trucksville, recently completed the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College Regular Course at Fort Leaven- worth, Kan. The 10-month regular course at the Army’s senior tactical school is designed to . produce graduates who are competent military problem solvers. Emphasis is on career development for the of- ficer’s future as a senior commander or staff of- ficer. This year’s graduating class included 714 U.S. and 95 allied officers. The allied graduates represented 45 countries. Brehm, who entered the Army in February, 1966, received his commission through an officer can- didate school. He received a bachelor’s degree in 1965 from Pennsylvania State University, State College. His wife, Joyce, was with him at the fort during the course. Bush assists rescue Navy Operations Specialist Seaman James M. Bush, son of Robert J. and Francis Bush of Rt. 2, Box 446, Harveys Lake, recently participated in the rescue of 44 Viet- namese refugees at sea. He is a crewmember aboard the guided missile cruiser USS Worden operating from Yokosuka, ‘Japan as a unit of the U.S. 7th ‘Fleet. His ship was dispatched to investigate a boat sighted by a Navy air- craft. Upon arriving at the scene, the Worden’s .commanding’ officer the condition of their boat and the lack of food and water. The 28 men, four women and 12 children brought the total number of refugees rescued by the Worden to 121 in the past 10 months. The Worden, is 533 feet long and carries a crew of 396. It is outfitted with guns, missiles, torpedoes and anti-submarine rockets. A 1976 graduate of Tunhannock Area High School, Tunkhannock, October, 1976. e SALADS NEW ITEM: *3.50 287-2111 Mrs. Modesta Albertson Gregory, who has taught mathematics at Penn State-Wilkes-Barre for 26 years, has announced her retirement. Mrs. Gregory joined the Penn State faculty in 1954, teaching part-time at both the Wilkes-Barre and Scranton campuses. In 1957 she was appointed full-time instructor, and in 1964 she was promoted to assistant professor of mathematics. Prior to joining the taught in the Hanover She'is a graduate of both the Hanover Township High School and the Pennsylvania State University. Mrs. Gregory is ac: member of the National - Council of Teachers of Mathematics, and their Pennsylvania and Luzerne County Chapters. She is active in the Luzerne County Penn State Alumni Club, and served that organization - as treasurer for 15 years. The faculty and staff of Penn State-Wilkes-Barre held a surprise retirement party for Mrs. Gregory in the Hayfield House on the campus in Lehman. At the party she was presented with a Nittany Lion statuette and other ; gifts. G.G. Gregory, assistant professor: of ‘English ' at Penn State-Wilkes:Barre, reside in Hunlock Creek. Colleen M. Bergevin of Dallas, a student at Kutztown State College, has been selected for an exchange program bet- ween the college and Crewe-Alsager College in England. A senior com- munication design major at KSC, Colleen is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Bergevin, 29 Joseph St., Dallas, and a 1977 graduate of Bishop O’Reilly High School. semester studying at the English institution. Colleen is captain of the women’s track and cross country teams and is a member of the Varsity K Club and Art Students Assn. During the past year, she was a residence hall staff member and assistant. William K. Lavelle, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. William K. Lavelle, Sr. of Dallas, recently departed for Marine Corps Officer Candidates School at Quantico. While at Quantico he will undergo ten: weeks of rigorous training in order to prepare himself for the responsibilities which he will later assume as a Marine Officer. He will receive in- struction in a variety of subjects including map and compass reading, leadership and resource management. After graduation from college he will be commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in the United States Marine Corps. The final lecture of the spring lecture series sponsored by the Wyoming Historical and Geological Society will be held Thursday, June 19 at 8 p.m. in the Societey Museum. Miss Connie Havir will speak on ‘‘The Wyoming Valley Silk Industry.” Her lecture will trace the rise and subsequent decline of the silk industry in the valley, with special emphasis on the mills which employed a large amount of women in the early 20th century. Miss Havir, a recent graduate of College Misericordia, served her senior internship at the Historical Society. At that time, she researched her topic and compiled a bibliography of sources which has been presented to the Society. She is a resident of Trucksville and has been sity of Arizona where she - will pursue her Master’s Degree in history. The lecture is free and the public is invited. Diane Godleski, Oak Hill, was among more than 1,700 graduates honored during Villanova University’s 1980 com- mencement exercises. on ‘May 18. '