The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, February 15, 1984, Image 3

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    The Back Mt. Police and Dallas
Kiwanis will co-sponsor a ham and
egg breakfast on Sunday, March
18, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Dallas
Senior High School cafeteria for
the benefit of the Association for
the Retarded Citizens of Luzerne
County.
This event is one of the many
being planned during the month of
March which is ‘National Mental
Retardation Month” being ob-
served here and throughout the
nation. The proceeds of the break-
fast will be presented to the
Association to support their work
and help achieve its many ob-
jectives in advocating for retarded
family to help defray medical and
transportation expenses for John
‘‘Jack” Charney, who was. injured
recently in Egypt. Charney’s
brother, Kevin, is a student at the
Dallas Inter mediate School.
Quick to.attend ‘seminar -
. Shown here are students of Team
C ‘of the Dallas Intermediate
School who baked and contributed
to a bake sale held recently at the
school. Proceeds of the sale were
donated to the John Charney
from Wyoming Seminary College
Preparatory School in Kingston,
has been selected to attend the
Hugh O’Brian Youth Foundation
Leadership Seminar set for March
29 to April 1, in Lancaster.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Quick, Harveys Lake,
Miss Quick was chosen to attend
the Jprogram based on her ac-
tivities at the prep school and a
recommendation from a Faculty-
Student Selection Committee. The
purpose of the seminar is to
provide high school sophomores
ATTENTION:
HOMEOWNERS IN THE BACK MT. AREA
AND OTHER SUBURBAN AREAS
We can now offer you homeowners insurance at a
substantial savings if you meet all of the following
criteria: :
Your home must be —
1. Located within 5 miles of a responding fire depart-
ment. ;
2. Accessible year round to fire fighting equipment by
an all weather road.
3. Within 1000 feet of a year round water source.
There must be a minimum 1500 gallon water
supply which can take the form of:
A. Fire department with "tanker or "pumper’
trucks or
B. Lakes, ponds, swimming pools or private water
reservoirs, accessible to fire fighting
equipment.
This applies to any suburban area where there are no
public fire hydrants. If your home meets all of the
above requirements, your homeowners premium will
be priced the same as a home that is located within
1000 feet of a public hydrant.
Call 1. J. Hosey Sons Insurance Agency, Inc. for all the
detail and rates. 855-4611 779-1228.
leadership -
to lose those extra pounds,
explore the reasons behind the
failure of most diets., YOU CAN
BECOME SLIM and stay that way.
Proven method. Send for free
information. No obligation.
J. P. ENTERPRISES
BOX 71, MARKET ST.
LEHMAN, PA. 18627
MEYERS AND DESFOR
announce the opening of an office
for the practice of Law
United Penn Bank Building
Suite 1258
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania 18701
(717) 825-5992
Practice Limited to Family Law, Divorce,
Equitable Distribution, Support, Alimony, Custody
BRUCE D. DESFOR
*Past President of the Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association
Fellow in the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers
Ly
citizens and the rights they have to
education, treatment and training.
The public is invited to attend
and tickets may be purchased
from any member of the Back Mt.
Police, Dallas Kiwanis or at the
ARC office, 71 N. Franklin St., W-
B. Adult tickets are $4.00 and
children under 12 are $2.00.
and Bill Dallas
Kiwamis.
Kalinowski,
Jack Charney is not just a young
man whowas anaccidentvictim in
Egypt. He is an ex-teacher, a poet,
a vegetarian, a world traveler, a
potter, a playwright and aspires to
be many more things. Twenty-
eight year old Charney, whose
major love is ‘‘the Arts”, did not
object when the term
“Renaissance Man’’ was used to
describe him.
Charney, who was in Egypt on
the last leg of a two-year trip
studying native crafts worldwide,
comes by his love of travel
honestly. During the 22 years his
father John Charney served in the
Air Force, the family moved 18
times and lived in numerous
foreign countries.
Jack himself stayed in Florida to
graduate from South Dade County
High School after his dad retired
and returned to the area. He then
wenton to Atnioch College in Ohio
where he majored in Art and
Education.
“I designed. my own college
program which included spending
two years in South America,” he
explained. ‘‘I studied native
craftsmen-in Guatemala, Mexico,
El Salvador and Peru.” His in-
terest in traditional art continues
to this day. “I want to be in-
fluenced by the people... the
craftsmen, the original artists who
are still producing in this cen-
tury,” he stated.
Jack’s ‘interest in pottery also
has its practical side with his mug
and a clay bowl fashioned by him
using an ancient Mexican process
displayed prominently on his
hospital tray. The bowl was filled
with chopped beets which his
girlfriend, Lynda Feman ‘of
brought him along with a bouquet
of bright, green parsley.
Lynda, who had left Egypt only
weeks before Jack’s accident had
been a college classmate as well as
a fellow teacher at The Stowe
School in Vermont. While at Stowe,
Jack taught art, theater, literature
and philosophy:
He is presently writing a play
about ‘whole people-ar t types that
society produced in the past’ who
have been “displaced, forgotten in
modern: industrial society.” He
hopes we ‘‘are entering a post-
industrial union of art types.”
A native craft particular to this
area is also prominently displayed
in his hospital room. It is a cross
fashioned of wooden match sticks
which Jack says is “unique - I've
never seen them anyplace else in
the world.”
After his recuperation, at the
family, home in Dallas; Jack who
definitely has more than a ‘glint of
wanderlust in his eye, will be of f to
see the world again. This time he
and Lynda plan to go to Santa Fe,
New Mexico and ‘‘make Art” as it
is represented in teh Southwes tern
United States.
Despite his experience, Jack
does not rule out the possibility
that some day he might return to
Egypt, expressing understanding
that ‘‘things are different in a
Third World country.” In his owns
words, traveling and seeing what’s
out there are Jack Charney’s thing
- “It sets my imagination on fire.”
-JANE C. BOLGER
Little William Alan Lewis Jr. is
being as cooperative as he possibly
can while being fingerprinted by
Stewart Oakley and Dick Alters of
the Back Mountain Kiwanis Club.
#
a
Seven-year-old Charlie Malpass
gets some help from his mother
Molly as he signs up to play
baseball with Back Mountain
Baseball, Ine. this is the first year
seven-year-olds are allowed to
register. A second registration will
be held Saturday, Feb. 25. (Photo
by George Poynton)
Back Mountain Baseball, Inc.,
will hold its final registration for
the 1984 season on Saturday, Feb.
25, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
Shavertown United Methodist
Church, 163 N. Pioneer. Ave.,
Shavertown.
Registration will be conducted
for the following groups: Boys
Teeners, ages 13-15; Boys 13-year
old league, ages 13; Boys and Girls
Little League Hardball, ages 7-12;
and Girls Little League Softball,
ages 9-15. Parents are asked to
note the sign-up age for Boys and
Girls Little League Hardb all has
been lowered from eight to seven
years old.
First-year players must bring
their birth certificates and must be
accompanied by an adult. A
registration fee is required.
350.4 4
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