WORKSHOPS A workshop designed to teach young people, ages-10 to 16, the ART OF QUILTING will be held at Col- lege Misericordia, here. The four part workshop, ‘Quilting for Young People” is scheduled for Saturdays beginning Feb. 16 to March 9, from 10 a.m. to noon at the Dallas campus. “Each youngster will design and make a patchwork pillow,” said Joanne Ennis, instructor of the workshop. The basic techniques of quilting are simple and it’s a craft to be enjoyed. According to Thomas O’Neill, director of special programs at Mis- ericodia, the workshop is educa- tional as well as recreational. The college’s programs for children offer a worthwhile solution to week- end cabin fever, he pointed out. For further information and regis- tration, contact the college’s Office of Special Programs at 675-2181, ext. 331. The fee for the four part workshop is $20, and $5 for materi- als. Enrollment is limited. The Wilkes-Barre Educational Opportunity Center will sponsor a free WORKSHOP ON CAREERS requiring short-term training on Tuesday, Feb. 12, 6:30 to 8 p.m. in the King’s College Library Audito- rium, Jackson Street, Wilkes-Barre. The EOC workshop will focus on expanding local career opportuni- ties in the fields of business, health services, and the hotel-restaurant industry. Speakers will include rep- resentatives from local colleges and businesses who will provide career information, job outlook, and train- ing preparation requirements for work in the field that they will discuss. Featured speakers for the careers workshop will include: Barbara Read, Assistant Professor, Lacka- wanna Junior College, who will review business careers; Helen Kopec, Associate Director of Admis- sions, Luzerne County Community College, who will discuss a variety of health service careers; and George Worthington, Director of Dietary Services, Custom Manage- ment Corporation, Moses Taylor Hospital, who will discuss careers requiring short-term training in the food service industry. The Career Opportunities with Short-Term Training workshop is free and open to the public. To register call EOC at 825-8435. Unity of Wyoming Valley will present two workshops this month on “PSYCHO-CYBERNETICS,” a New Way to Get More Out of Life. The workshops will be conducted at Unity Church of Wyoming Valley, 168 N. Washington St., Wilkes- Barre, on Saturday, February 9 from 1 to 4 p.m. and Sunday, February 10 from 2 to 5 p.m. The classes will be taught by Russell Douglas Addison, a licensed Unity teacher. A love offering will be taken. SALES The Lake-Lehman Band’s Febru- ary Hoagie Sale has been changed STACK'S * BAR AND- wr COCKTAIL LOUNGE Dave: | haven't spent one day not loving you only! I'myours forever! Love, Amie from the third Tuesday (February 19) to the fourth Tuesday (February 26.) Orders should be turned in by Thursday, February 22. This change is for February only. For further information or to place orders, call 696-2951. CHURCH The Rev. Jean Grace Addison will deliver the message entitled “Fully Alive in ’85” at 11 a.m. Sunday, February 3, in Unity Church of Wyoming Valley, 168 N. Washington St., Wilkes-Barre. Sunday School is held at 11 a.m. and Unity is non-denominational, welcoming everyone. A prayer service is held at noon on Tuesdays. The Master Mind prayer group meets at 6:45 p.m. on Tuesdays. A class on ‘Keep a True Lent” is given at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesdays. A love-offering will be taken. PROGRAMS Families today face constant change. More women are employed outside the home. Grandparents and other relatives are unlikely to live nearby. An aging parent may need to move in. A self-supporting son or daughter may return home. Through all this families may need support that is often costly or hard to find. LUZERNE COUNTY COOP- ERATIVE EXTENSION SERVICE has been helping people help hem- selves for 70 years. The County Extension home econ- omist, Josephine Kotch, may be able to help you get the support you need. She offers workshops on man- aging mney for those with litle experience in budgeting. She serves as the advisor for two chapters of 25 Games Party Series * REFRESHMENTS * * Specials * Sundays 2 PM Early Birds, See you at 1 PM Line 1 675-5211 675-5212 the Creative Craftsmen in Luzerne County. Members turn leisure time activities to supplementary income for the home. The extension home economist has learn-at-home packets for those whose schedules don’t allow them to attend workshops. For parents of inants or toddlers, she has support groups and learn-at-home services. A program called “Your New Life Alone” can help the newly divorced or widowed to adjust to his or her new lifestyle. How can one person offer such variety? The secret is access to a network of Penn State faculty who serve as specialists to the county extension home economists. These specialists develop programs based on identified county needs and Mrs. Kotch localizes these for Luzerne County. This also means that Mrs. Kotch’s programs are based on sound research and up-to-date infor- mation. All Extension educational pro- grams are available to residents in the County and everyone is invited to participate. For more information on Exten- sions programs, contact The Penn- sylvania State University Coopera- tive Extension Service of Luzerne County at 5 Water Street, Court- house Annex, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18711 or call: 825-1801 or 459-0736, ext. 701. A program will be presented to the residents of the Meadows Apart- ments, Dallas, by the Dallas Ele- mentary School entitled, ‘THE RUNAWAY SNOWMAN’’, on Wednesday, February 13 at 11 a.m. On Thursday, February 14 at 7 ows Apartments will hold a Valen- tine Party for all the residents. Included in the program will be a talent show. Apple Pie, Ice Cream, and punch will be served. On March 6, the residents of the Meadows Apartments will sponsor a bus trip to the Arena Restaurant for a buffet dinner followed by a shop- ping trip to the Wyoming Valley Mall. Harveys Lake Boy Scout Troop 331 will sponsor a drug and alcohol presentation on Wednesday Febru- ary 27, 1985 at 7:30 p.m. at the Lake-Noxen Elementary School. This porogram titled “Sons and DAughters” - “Drugs and Boze” will host guest speaker Lenore Rosencrans. All scouts and their familys and friends are invited. Regreshments will be served. MEETINGS A special workshop designed to prepare high school students for the SCHOLASTIC APTITUDE TEST (SAT) is being offered at College Misericordia. Love, Steven The five part course is scheduled for Saturdays beginning Feb. 16 through March 16, from 9 a.m. to 12 noon, at the Dallas campus. Initiated several years ago, the workshop has been extended from three to five sessions. The first session introduces the testing expe- rience, followed by three sessions on actual math and English content and a concluding session on anxiety and behavior. According to Dr. Joseph Rogan, head of the college’s educational testing programs, the workshop will teach effective test-taking skill and help build necessary self confi- dence. For more information and regis- tration, contact Misericordia’s Office of Special Protrams at 675- 2181, ext. 331. The fee for the five part workshop is $50.00. The Northeastern Pa. VOLUN- TEER FIREMEN’S FEDERATION will meet on Thursday, Feb. 14, at 8 p.m. in the Taylor Hose Co. No. 1. All delegates are asked to attend this meeting. VETERANS OF THE VIETNAM WAR, Post 2, will meet Thursday, Feb. 7, at 8 p.m., at the Coral Lounge, 245 Owen St., Swoyersville. A film will be shown, and refresh- ments will be served. Dues for 1985 are now due please make prompt payments. Veterans of the Vietnam War, Inc. is a full service organiza- tion open to all veterans. The regular monthly meeting of the LAKE-LEHMAN BOARD of School Directors will be held on tuesday, February 12, 1985, at 8 p.m. in the library of the Lehman- Jackson Elementary School. Joseph “Red” Jones, president, will pre- side. The Wilkes-Barre CHRISTIAN WOMEN’S CLUB is conducting a breakfast buffet on Wednesday, Feb. 20, from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. at Gus Genetti’s Restaurant, Market St., Wilkes-Barre. Dr. Evan Thomas of Shavertown will be the special speaker while Jean Williams, a soloist from Har- ding, will; offer special music. Franklin Giberson, head chef at NPW, will discuss cooking with herbs and spices. A free nursery will be provided for pre-school children. For buffet and nursery reservations, call Frank Gilbert at 696-3756 or Vera Kresge at 824-5937. Reservations close Monday, Feb. 18. Cost is $4.75 per person. The Northeastern Pennsylvania League of LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES will conduct a monthly meeting on Tuesday, Feb. 12, at 7:45 p.m. at the Treadway Inn, Scranton-Carbondale Highway. Mary Curran, M.S.W., ACSW, Supervisor of Child Abuse Unit at Lackawanna County Children and Youth Services, will be the guest speaker. The topic to be presented is Child Abuse. Ms. Curran holds a Masters Degree in Social Work from Marywood College and is a member of Academy of Certified Social Workers. Anyone interested in becoming a member or an affiliate of NPLLPN is asked to write to P.O. Box 307, Scranton, Pa. 18501. COURSES The Wyoming Valley Chapter of the American Red Cross will con- duct a CPR MODULE INSTRUC- TOR course on Tuesdays, Feb. 5, 12 and 19 from 7-10 p.m. The class will meet at the Chapter House on South Franklin Street and a $10.00 fee is charged. The prerequisite for this course is a current certificate in MALTBY DRUG STORE 326 HUGHES ST. SWOVYERSVILLE, PA. : ——_287-7724 BUY ONE GET ONE FREE ® FREE PICK UP AND DELIVERY LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED JOE RANIELI, R. PH. 287-7724 CPR: Basic Life Support. To register, send a check payable to American Red Cross, Safety Seryices at 156 S. Franklin Street, Wilkes-Barre. Due to current Chapter policy you will not be authorized to teach in this Chapter until you teach oneg course with a recognized instructo within 6 months. The Wyoming Valley Chapter AMERICAN RED CROSS will con- duct a CPR Basic Life Support course on Wednesdays, February 6 and 13, from 6 to 9 p.m. To register, call Safety Services at 823-7161. LECTURES DR. ELLIS W. ROBERTS will deliver remarks on his recent book, The Breaker Whistle Blows, Sunday, February 10, 1985, begin- ning at 3 p.m. at Temple B’nai B’rith, 408 Wyoming Avenue, Kings- ton. This presentation is being spon- sored by the Wyoming Historical and Geological Society. The Breaker Whistle Blows recounts selected highlights of the anthracite coal period between the Avondale Fire in 1869 and the Knox Disaster of 1959. Dr. Roberts’s research of these and intervening disasters has revealed that a power- ful labor champion emerged follow- ing each major disaster. The Avondale Disaster in 1869 claimed the lives of 110 predoni- nantly Welsh men and boys. Ter- ence V. Powderly, a president of the Knights of labor, rose to power after the disaster. Twenty-seven years later the Pittston Twin Shaft cave-in suffocated fifty-eight men and led, in part, to John L. Mitchell’s ascendancy. His successor, John L. Lewis, emerged on the labor scene after the 1919 Baltimore Tunnel Dr. Roberts, the son of an immi- grant miner, is an educator with degrees from the University of Ala- bama and New York University. His research for this book led him to numerous sources throughout Northeastern Pennsylvania. It is this trail of research, along with insights gained from writing the. book, about which Dr. roberts will speak. ® For reservations and additional information, please phone the Wyo- _. ming Historical and Geological Society in Wilkes Barre at 823-6244. Pack 281 holds Pinewood Derby Pack 281 Dallas, recently held its Pinewood Derby at the Dallas United Methodist Church. Race winners were: 1st, Christ Brown; 2nd, David Holdredge; 3rd, Michael Goldsmith. Best of show winners were: 1st, Brad Bryant; 2nd, David Podehl; 3rd, Ronnie Moses. Trophies and medals were presented to the winners. The race winners will represent the pack at the District Race to be held at a later date. - The entire pack participated in the opening and closing ceremonies led by Cubmaster George Brutko. é Nancy McDonald thanked all those who helped get the track ready and also noted the race track was yoseuily refurbished, it is 16 years old. Commonwealth names Blazes to personnel post P. Jay Blazes has been promoted to senior manager, employment and development for Commonwealth Telephone Enterprises, Inc. He is responsible for the overall recruiting, employment and train- ing of personnel for the telecom- munications and cable TV corpora- tion. Blazes joined Commonwealth in 1983 as employment manager from the position of Department Chair- man and Professor of Military Edu- cation, University of Soni ‘LARGE COOKED SHRIMP $6.99