’ Not so funny 50 YEARS AGO - MARCH 2, 1934 Riding on the white winds of the winter’s deepest snowfall, sub-zero weather swooped suddenly down on the area, bringing temperatures which sent the. mercury far below the low marks already recorded that winter. The body of Mrs. Elizabeth Mets- Harveys Lake. Her husband, Daniel Metscavage, 60, was arrested by State Police and detained in Wyo- of her deaths. Thwarted in his attempt to locate permanently in Caldwell, N.J. Swag ing station with a check issued on First National Bank of Dallas, Wilson Thompson, former resident of Noxen, was arrested by New Jersey state police bringing to cul- mination a long series of escapades involving the issuance of fraudalent You could get - Peaches, 2 cans, 29¢; bartlett pears, can, 15c; salmon, 2 cans, 23c; pickles, 2 qt. jars, 29c; vinegar, 2 24-0z. bottles, 15¢; Chase and Sanborn coffee, 28c 1b. can. 40 YEARS AGO - MARCH 3, 1944 Women of Dallas and surrounding communities had the opportunity to learn more of the functions and work of the Women’s Army Corps when Lieutenant Phyllis Whit- tingham of the Wilkes-Barre recruiting office opened a part-time information and recruitng booth in Dallas. The Annual Red Cross Drive was launched in the Back Mountain region under the direction of Mrs. Charles Wheaton Lee of Dallas. John Place, 23, of Mehoopany, was fatally injured when he fell from a barn on the Renard farm in Ruggles Hollow. Deaths - Arden Husted, Idetown. You could get - Bread, 2 1vs., 17c; marmalade, 2 1b. jar, 25c; hams, 37c 1b.; spaghettie, 3 lbs. 20c; pan- cake flour, 30 oz. pkg., 7c; margar- ine, 1b. pkg. 24c. 30 YEARS AGO - MARCH 5, 1954 With the appointment of Mrs. Charles Eberle to Kingston Town- ship School Board, an unwritten law was set aside. Mrs. Mary Lou Eberle was the first woman to serve as school director in Kingston Town- ship. “What is a Lutheran?’ was the question answered in a five-page illuminating article in an issue of Look Magazine by Rev. Dr. G. Elson Ruff, former pastor of St. Paul’s Church, Shavertown. One of the largest beavers ever taken in this area was trapped at Lake Catalpa by Ferris Roberts, Red Rock, deputy game warden who had caught his limit every season since beaver trapping became legal in Pennsylvania. Deaths - Mrs. Goldie Gregory, Trucksville; Mrs. Anna M. Lewin, Dallas; Mrs. Elizabeth Culp, Hun- Charles Lech, Roushey Plot.’ v You'could get = Smoked hams; 59c Ib.;o fryers, 43¢ 1b.; Beltsville ‘tur- keys, 59c 1b.; tuna, 3 7-0z. cans, $1; oleo, 2 lbs., 39¢; salmon, 1 lb. can, 37c. 20 YEARS AGO - MARCH 5, 1964 Dale Oney, of Laketon, Harveys Lake, gave in to court ruling of his guilt on four counts of game law violation, resulting in $600 fines and costs. But Richard Mark Burnat, announced he might appeal his con- viction on six counts of deer offen- ses to the Superior Court. Back Mountain Protective Asso- ciation went on record as opposed to unsightly billboards and signs along the new highway. Married - Grace E. Belles, Beau- mont, to Irvin C. Barber, Fairfax, Va. You could get - Boneless chuck, 57c¢ 1b.; rib roast, 59c¢ lb.; black peepper, 4 oz. can, 39¢; hair spray, 89c; grape jelly, 12-oz. jar, 23c; Bufferin, bottle of 36, 45c¢. 10 YEARS AGO - FEBRUARY 28, 1974 Luzerne County Planning Com- mission approved a resolution to alter its master sewage plan to conform with the Dallas Area Municipal Authority Plan. Long lines of motorists at the few gasoline stations remaining open for any length of time had been ordi- nary in Northeastern Pennsylvania and particularly so for a month or more in Lackawanna, Luzerne and Wyoming Counties. Deaths - Wilma Romanowski, Shavertown; Wilda Luft, Sweet Valley; Aloysius Zakjawski, Shaver- town; Charles Fehlinger, Dallas. Married - Patricia D. Rood, Dallas, to Erich Heusing, West Ger- many. You could get - Eggs, 66c doz.; ice cream, '» gal. 58¢; tuna, 6% oz. can, 28c; Kraft dinner, 3 7% oz. pkgs., 68c; oranges, 10 for 89c. Library grant PottyMartin........7....... $12. per year in Pa. te Ed, Publisher - Associate Publisher & Editor Managing Editor Associate Editor Advertising Representative Circulation Manager “ee v is By NANCY KOZEMCHAK Library Correspondent ’ The Back Mountain Memorial Library has been informed that the application for a Library Services and Construction Act (LSCA) Title I grant for Collection Management has been approved for $5,000.00. The grant will be used to initiate a specialized weekly story time for two year olds and their parents and select and acquire materials and equipment to expand the current story hour for three to five year olds. The contracts from the state will be written in late winter of 1984 and projects should be able to start by July. Local funds equal to 10 percent of the total grant must be used for the project in addition to the $5,000. These monies are kept in a separate account which require an audit at the end of the project. Elliot Shelkrot of the State Library in Harrisburg informed the library of the grant approval. The application for the grant and the paper work involved was initiated by Marilyn Rudolph, ‘children’s librarian. A very good friend of the library, Attorney Merton E. Jones, has passed away and the library will miss his valuable services and those of us who were fortunate to know him as a personal friend will miss him also. Mert served on the library Board of Directors since January 28, 1971 and had been a continuing source of help to the library on legal matters. We have received a considerable amount of memorial donations on his behalf and have purchased a series of handsome and durable volumes on the writings of notable American novelists, historians, poets, philosophers and essayists. The library of America is publish- ing these books which is supported by grants from the Ford Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Each compact, elegant book includes several unabridged works, and some volumes run to as many as 1500 pages. America, like other nations, can now offer every reader the collected works of its major authors in authorative editions. An authorative version assures the reader that only after thorough research and study is a text selected for this series. The series include the works of; Harriet Beecher Stowe, Herman Melville, Henry James, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Walt Whitman, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Jack London, Mark Twain, William Dean Howells, Washington Irving and Henry Adams. For each volume, a distin- guished scholar has prepared a succinct chronology of the author's life and career and an essay on the choice of texts. Guest editorial ‘By EDWIN FEULNER hough unusually bitter weather has had much of America in a deep freeze since Thanksgiving, heating fuel continues to be plentiful. It’s not as inexpen- sive as we would like; but it never will be again. That’s wishful thinking. The best we can hope for is price stability and plenty, both of which seem assured for the immediate future. That doesn’t mean the U.S. should become complacent. At their most recent meet- ing, the OPEC oil ministers elected again not to raise prices. But that’s not because they’re less greedy than a few years ago; it’s because there’s a lot of excess oil in the world mar- ketplace. And if the U.S. is smart, it will add to OPEC’s problems by putting Alaskan crude oil back on the energy market, lessening the world’s dependence on Persian Gulf oil even further. But this is not so easily done. Federal legislation has been blocking the free com- mercial export of Alaskan oil and natural gas for the past decade. Blocking the overseas sale of Alaskan crude oil has resulted in an oil glut in that state. Because of that, half of Alaska’s oil is being coasts at considerble cost (ultimately paid by us, the consumers). The East and Gulf coasts can purchase oil more economically, how- ever, from other sources. Moreover, the glut has dis- couraged additional domes- tic oil exploration. A recent study by energy experts Milton Copulos and S. Fred Singer shows that by lifting the restrictions on the export of Alaskan oil and gas, Congress could slice $1.5 billion from the budget deficit, improve America’s balance of trade with Japan - which would be a prime market - and make it unnec- essary to build the proposed $2 billion pipeline from Alas- By putting more oil and gas on the world market, the analysts say, Alaskan exports ‘‘would reduce the need for OPEC oil, and apply downward pressure on the world oil price - to the benefit of the industrialized countries and oil-importing developing nations alike.” Noting that Alaskan oil and gas reserve estimates have grown over the past several years, Singer and Copulos say those who oppose the export of Alaskan gas and oil are at worst bull- headed and at best inconsist- export of refined oil prod- ucts, such as gasoline and fuel oil. “It seems strange, there- fore ,that there should be a prohibition against exporting crude oil.” In the event of an oil coupled with productions cutbacks, ‘‘the market could take over and adjust the available supply...to the demand,” they say. A pro- duction cutback would result “This redistribution of oil would be entirely automatic, acting in response to the normal market forces, not government policies,” Singer and Copulos say. ; Let’s hope Congress learned something when President Reagan lifted oil price controls: that without energy market works more efficiently and benefits American consumers more than when government bureaucrats try to manage the world’s energy supplies from their grey-hole offices in Washington. If they did, they will give OPEC another well-deserved nudge by lift- ing the lid on Alaskan oil. (Edwin Feulner is presi- dent of The Heritage Foun- dation, a Washington-based public policy research insti- ute.) Here is a summary of important events that occurred on Capitol Hill last week from Rep. Frank Coslett, 120th Legislative District: PENNSYLVANIA VOTERS © will be asked in the April primary elec- tion to approve or reject a proposed $190 million economic development bond issue. The House and Senate approved the referendum proposal after Gov. Dick Thornburgh announced the plan with the support of a bipartisan coalition of legisla- tive leaders. If the issue wins voter approal, the funds will be allocated to nine separate programs. The largest single item would be $50 million for loans and grants to local economic developmentnagencies. equipment at vo-tech schools and businesses, youth conservation corps programs and minority ‘eco- nomic development. dards in Pennsylvania’s public schoolls, including competency test- ing, would be mandated under a bill passed by the House and sent to the Senate this week. The legislation specifies basic courses students must take. It also establishes com- petency tests for second, fifth, eighth and eleventh graders. A com- petency test must be passed in the 11th grade in order to graduate, the measure stipulates. LEGISLATION REVISING the procedure for selecting Public Util- ity «Commission members, as well. as ‘shortening the length of thej terms, passed the House by a 134-647 margin. Before its passage, howyg ever, the bill was stripped of ar amendment to place commissioner up for retention elecion at the end of their term. The bill mandates that PUC terms be shortened from 10 to five years and that a PUC nominat-, ing council recommend nominees to the governor for appointment. Rep. Jeffrey Piccola (R-Dauphin) opposed retention elections, saying the commissioners would employ ‘people who can...get them re- elected, not people who know any- thing about utility rates.” DEAR EDITOR: Your acceptance of advertising for “Pregnancy Termination” up to 3% months for a fee (of course) is reprehensible. Surely, it has no place in a family newspaper. In my opinion this is nothing more than soliciting to kill by cruel means a tiny, helpless human being. ‘‘Electrical brain waves (elec- troencephalograph) have been recorded as early as forty days.” H. Hamlin, Life or Death by E.E.G. J.AM.A., Oct. 12, 1964. Dr. Liley, the ‘Father of Fetol- ogy” who developed fetal blood transfusion has said that seven days after fertilization ‘‘the young indi- vidual, in command of his environ- ment and destiny with a tenacious purpose, implants in the spongy lining and with a display of physiol- ogical power suppresses his mother’s menstrual period. This is his home for the next 270 days and to make it habitable the embryo develops a placenta and a protec- tive capsule of fluid for himself. He also solves, single-handed, the hom- egraft problem, that dazzling feat by which foetus and mother, although immunological foreigners who could not exchange skin grafts nor safely receive blood from each nevertheless tolerate each other in parabiosis for nine months. “We know that he moves with a delightful easy grace in his buoyant world, that foetal comfort deter- mines foetal position. He is respon- sive to pain and touch and cold and sound and light. He drinks his amniotic fluid, more if it is artifi- cially sweetened, less if it is given an unpleasant taste. He gets hiccups sleeps. He gets bored with repetitive signals but can be taught to be alerted by a first signal for a second different one. And finally he deter- mines his birthday, for unquestiona- bly the onset of labour ia a uni- lateral decision of the foetus.” “This then is the foetus we know and indeed we each once were. This is the foetus we look after in modern obstetrics, the same baby we are caring for before and after birth, who before birth can be ill and need diagnosis and treatment just like any other patient.”” Liberal Studies, “A Case Against Abortion,” Whitcombe and Tombs, Ltd. 1971. F. PATRICIA BALOGA SHAVERTOWN DEAR EDITOR: During the past three months, the Chemical People Project in concert with both the national and local media have done a marvelous job of heightening community awareness of the insidious effects of alcohol and other drug abuse. Task forces have sprung up. across our own Luzerne-Wyoming Counties community, and interested and concerned citizens are ‘‘putting their heads together’ in the earnest hopes of doing something about the drug and alcohol abuse problem in our locale. I know that many parents, law enforcement officials, and educa- tors, along with other individuals from all walks of life are searching for ways in which they might be part of a community solution. I would like to take this opportunity to offer one specific suggestion - consider lobbying for increased financial support to sustain publicly funded substance abuse treatment programs. ¥/ MS On December 1, 1983, Representa- tive Peter Wambach (Dauphin County) introduced H.B. 1740, which raised the Pennsylvania tax on alco- hol from 18 percent to 20 percent. nearly 12 million dollars to fund treatment and rehabilitation, pre- vention, education, and early inter- vention, as well as research on addiction. Does such a proposed increase seem ‘‘hefty?’’ In actual- ity, funding for drug and alcohol programming has been consistently reduced as a result of both inflation and Federal Block Grant cuts. Therefore, 12 million dollars will simply restore the level of funding for drug and alcohol to where it was in 1977! As an individual professionally trained in human services, I. cer- tainly support increased funding to assorted health and human serv- ices. However, not all health and human service programs have been plagued with budgetary crises to the ; fh oy hol Sector. By way of illustrations, I have enclosed a graph depicting program funding during the period 1977-1984. You will note that commu- nity mental health services were funded at a 112 percent increa child welfare at 106 percent, corr tions at 86 percent and D&A at only 25 percent. During 1977-1983, the Consumer Price Index rose 64 per- cent! 7 House Bill 1740 is an important piece of legislation which will assure the viability of the publicly funded Drug and Alcohol Treatment Service network. I urge members of our community to mobilize around this issue by contacting local State legislators in order to solicit their support. Alcohol and other chemi- cals are Killing people. Those of us who provide services need your THOMAS E. DI MATTEO, ED.D. CRC EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR LUZERNE-WYOMING COUNTY A uae