The Best! Wednesday, Denis John Abromavage, of 84 Columbus Ave. Pittston, will stand trial in connection with a boating Lake. The decision was made after a day-long preliminary hearing held July 22 at which District Justice Leonard D. Harvey presided. It was decided then that there is enough evidence against Abromavage to demand a trial. The boating accident occured when a 350-horsepower Mastercraft speedboat, driven by 24-year-old Abroma- vage, slammed into a Baja outboard motorboat driven by Leonard Pallis of 39 Valley’ View Dr., RD 3, Wyoming. The Mastercraft boat is owned by Mark D. Turner, of Shavertown, and his father, Ralph, of Harding. ; Killed in the accident were Pallis’ wife, Sharon, 39; Crown Hill Village, Box 146, RD 3, Wyoming; and her another passenger in the Pallis’ boat, was critically Barre General Hospital while Pallis, 39; Thomas Children’s Picnic Pitcavage, and his daughter, Melissa, 11, also passen- gers in the Pallis’ boat, escaped injury. Passengers in the Mastercraft boat, Abromavage, Turner and 22-year- old Carol Hite, of 50 Vine St., Pittston, were also uninjured. Abromavage is charged with eight counts of inveolun- tary manslaughter, one count of aggrevated assault, four counts of recklessly endangering another person, two counts of reckless and negligent operation of a watercraft and one count of operating a watercraft under the influence of alcohol. Testifying. at “the June 22nd hearing were Hite, Turner, Pallis; Pitcavage, Dr. Ok Hee Won, a patholo- gist at Wilkes-Barre General Hospital; Chief Deputy Coroner Joseph M. Shaver, Thomas Czerniakowski, a worked on the Pallis’ boat; Claude Neifert, waterways several law enforcement officials. 5 + wu ; Although no’'date has been set for the trial, if #must take place 180 days after the original complaint was tiled, which was July 1. : Richardson. The clowns are from lrem Temple. Townhouse Project By SHEILA HODGES Post Correspondent The Dallas Township Municipal Building was full to overflowing for the Zoning Planning Committee Meet- ing held July 19. Dallas Township Residents were there in force to hear developers’ proposals for the erection of Townhouses on Carden Avenue and Country Club Road, adjacent to the golf course. : Shortly before the meeting began, Atty. Frank Townend announced that Dale and Dale, the developers who had proposed for Country Club Road, had with- drawn their application at 3 p.m. that afternoon. However, the residents were welcome to come inside and register their objections which they elected to do. This first group was represented by Atty. Alan Kluger who stated that approximately 190 people had signed a petition objecting to the building of 60 townhouses on approximately six acres of land adja cent to the Country Club. Their reasons were mainly concerned with density of population, danger on an already dangerous road, extra strain on municipal services and the adverse affect on property values. The Country Club was represented by Atty. Steve Pellion who added that it was felt to be at variance with the zoning. The residents of this group were £5 relieved that the application had been withdrawn, but were concerned that the matter could come up again in the future. The group of residents who had attended last months’ meeting .on the matter of the Church Street, Claude Street and Center Hill Road area which is known as the “fictitious Carden Road” had, as its ‘spokesman, Tom Debbie, had been instrumental in organizing the petition which was presented at the June meeting. Atty. McHugh, representing the developers, Sobeck and Lindquist, put the application before the board and was questioned concerning such matters as car parking and whether the property would be community or individual. It transpired that it would be communal peoperty but the feeling was that the car parking space for owners would be limited. Atty. McHugh stated that the proposed dwellings would fall within the zoning code for the area. When asked whether the developers owned the property, he stated that they had not yet purchased it. Atty. Townend then opened the floor to the residents’ group and stated that all those wishing to object should be sworn for the record. Tom Hadzor commenced by putting the majority of the group’s concerns before the (See TOWN, Page 14) July 27, 1983 Dallas, Harveys Lake By JANE C. BOLGER Post Correspondent Good news for taxpayers in Harveys Lake and Dallas Boroughs - ‘State Auditor General Al Benedict has praised your local governments for earning money. The two Back Mountain municipalities were among five Luzerne County municipalities officially recognized for having invested temporarily idle liquid fuel tax “earned $312. Harveys Lake Borough Secretary-Treasurer Marion Mitchell explained that liquid fuel taxes are state monies. awarded fo municipalities for roads. Exact amounts are computed by a specialized formula which multiplies the number of roads and streets in the area by the official number of residents according to the federal census. The funds which are awarded yearly to Harveys Lake for roadwork are placed in the Pennsylvania Local Government Investment Trust Fund which is a high interest account open to all municipalities, school districts and sewer authorities. The fund which allows same day access to borough monies with no penalty ‘‘has no drawbacks,’’ according to Ms. Mitchell. Bar-B-Que Planned Dallas Borough Secretary Ralph Garris, who also system to earn interest through a N.O.W. account. All equipment, paving, grading, fixing pot holes and road salaries and are withdrawn from the interest earning account only as needed. Both municipalities are turning the newly earned monies right back into road repairs and maintenance. Dallas Borough will be blacktopping Columbia Avenue from Sterling Avenue up to the Laux properties. tions to adopt three new roads - ‘Annabell, Roosevelt miles of roads each year. ’ Recognition of these two municipalities came as a 1980 to Dec. 31, 1981. incorporated ‘as townships and have similiar interest earning accounts, will probably be commended in the future when their audits are taken, according to Annette Reiff, Press Secretary to the State Auditor Construction of a separate exit from the Dallas: Post Office onto Foster-Street began last Tuesday. When the work is completed, in approximately one week, the entire post office parking lot will be one way with entrance only from Church Street and only the new exit available for egress. Foster Street, where the exit is located, has long been an official Dallas Borough thoroughfare but appears to most motorists to be just a part of the area of the Acme parking lot. It connects with Woodlawn Avenue and thus to Route 309 which is seen as a definite advantage to postal customers traveling to the New Goss Manor- Orchard View Terrace area. This change, which has been in thé working for several years, ‘is being made primarily to relieve traffic congestion on Church Street and in downtown Dallas. The preliminary design was done at the request No Fault Insurance By JANE C. BOLGER of Dallas Borough Council by their engineer Lee Corbett and is being financed by the U.S. Government which awarded the contract on bid to Addy Asphalt Company.’ : 5 The entire post office parking lot will also be repaved this week according to Dallas Postmaster Tom Bly. The parking lines will be repainted to designate diagonal parking rather than the former straight parking thus making all traffic flow toward the new exit, : separating the post office and the Acme lot which is commonly used by pedestrians as a shortcut. Bly stated this is “a safety measure to prevent possible accidents’ should someone fall in the culvert.” Instead, people Post Correspondent Reports that No Fault Insurance may be on its way out are being greeted locally by cheers and jeers. One motorists’ statement ‘It never worked right anyway, what good was it?”’ seemed to be a typical comment. wanted to place the blame for the failure of No-Fault on attorneys, insurance companies, legislators, police, doctors or hospitals. An apt quote contibuted by one local politi- cion was “If you want to discover your faults, borrow your neighbor’s spectacles.” Whatever the reason, No-Fault apparently did not accomplish what it was supposed to which may be what State Senator Edwin G. Holl, 24th District, Lansdale had in mind this week when he sponsored a bill to abolish No Fault Insurance state- wide. Whether by design or not, Holl’s Senate Bill 942 surfaced on July 19 which was exactly eight years to the day from the date in 1975 when No-Fauit went into effect. Originally, most motorists thought No Fault covered everything. One Shavertown woman related the tale while parked in a supermarket lot and how she shook when she found out her No Fault insurance covered nothing. The fact that No Fault did not cover property damage but ecov- ered only medical expenses was a lesson too many motorists learned the hard way. So was the fact that very often the other driver did not even have the supposedly manda- tory No Fault Insurance. District Magistrat Earl Gregory stated that in the past eight years he can recall only three arrests in his district under Section 104A which made it a heavily fined mis- —— I ID TS | enmms 8 insurance. Instead, countless motor- Code for not having any insurance cards in their possession. Dallas insurance agent Bruce Slocum found the new legislation ‘very, very intersting” and stated “I really think No Fault could have behind it and supported changes as they were necessary.”” He was not alone in his opinion that right from the beginning reforms were needed