The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, February 20, 1985, Image 8

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    "y
Classes
tain Kiwanis Club’s Saturday
Breakfast meeting at Franklin's in
BARBARA DAVIS, Penn State
Extension specialist in adult devel-
opment and aging, has prepared a
new, six-part learn-at-home series
called ‘“Celebrate Your Family
Across Generations’ now available
at the Luzerne County Cooperative
Extension Service Office.
The series is designed to help
adults find ways to build a better
understanding and appreciation for
extended families.
* Differing political views, differing
lifestyles, and individual ways of
‘coping with life and death situations
are often difficult for one generation
to understand about another. Yet
the rewards of keeping family ties
open and strong are well worth the
effort.
.* Your family is a group you belong
to for your entire life. As years
pass, parents and adult children
play important and sometimes
unexpected parts in each other’s
lives. The better you understand
each other, the better your support
will be in times of crisis and the
more you will have to share in
times of celebration. y 7
Keeping in touch and shari lg
information are the keys to success-
ful intergenerational relations. The
‘‘Celebrate Your Family Across
Generations’ learn-at-home series
offers advice and‘ suggestions on
facing hard times, what to do when
you disagree on important matters,
how to celebrate special times,
coping with birth and death, ideas
for keeping in touch, and on men in
the family.
* Discussing these with your family
will help you build your family ties.
Call Luzerne County Cooperative
Extension Service for the series at
825-1701 or 459-0736, ext. 701, or
write, Courthouse Annex, 5 Water
St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711.
Exhibits
THE WYOMING VALLEY
CAMERA CLUB is currently spon-
soring an exhibit of members works
on the campus of Wyoming Semi-
nary in the Gallery of the Stettler
Learning Resources Center,
Sprague Avenue in Kingston.
The showing will be open to the
public on weekdays between 8:30
a.m. and 4:30 p.m. from now until
April 3. Persons who are interested
in becoming members of the Wyo-
ming Valley Camera Club can pick
up information at the exhibit.
A TRAINING SESSION for volun-
teers to teach ‘‘Fresh Start”, a stop-
smoking clinic sponsored by the
American Cancer Society, will be
held at the Kirby Health Center on
February 21 at 7 p.m.
According to the American
Cancer Society, the best teachers
are former smokers. Essential
information and strategies needed
to help people quit smoking will be
taught at the one-hour session.
Contact the American Cancer
Society at 825-7763 to register for
this program.
Meetings
Dallas was the Rev. William Ken-
nard, Pastor of Alderson United
Methodist Church and Chaplain of
Hospice St. John.
With the aid of a slide presenta-
tion Rev. Kennard described the
purpose and functions of Hospice St.
John. It co-ordinates medical, spiri-
tual, and social support to the ter-
minally ill and their families.
Also in attendance as an Inter-
Club visit were members of the
Wilkes-Barre Kiwanis Club.
THE 1960 CLASS of Lake-Noxen
High School, Lake-Lehman School
‘District is planning to reunite after
25 years.
All class members are invited to
participate in making arrangements
for the occasion.
The first reunion meeting will be
held at Harveys Lake Pub on Satur-
day, Feb. 23 at 7 p.m.
BACK MOUNTAIN PAK is con-
cerned about the drug and alcohol
situation - among teenagers in our
community. If you are also con-
cerned, please attend their next
meeting which will be held on Tues-
day, Feb. 26 at 8 p.m. at Trinity
United Presbyterian Church (across
from the Dallas Drive-In).
PAK is in the process of reorgan-
izing, establishing new goals and
trying to obtain more community
involvement. If you feel you may
have something to offer this organi-
zation or would like to become
involved in their efforts, bring a
friend and come to the February 26
meeting.
MEETING OF ALL REPUBLI-
CAN VOTERS of Harveys Lake will
be held at Jonathan R. Davis Fire
Hall on Thursday, Feb. 21, at 8 p.m.
Petitions will be available to any
Republican seeking office for the
primary election.
Margaret Purcell and Ann Colton
will conduct the meeting.
DISABLED AMERICAN VETER-
ANS, Chapter 9, will meet Monday,
March 4, at 7:30 p.m. at the Parsons
VEW, Scott Street, Wilkes-Barre.
Commander Murray Brown will
preside. Alfred Fabie is in charge of
the membership drive and may be
contacted at 824-9346.
COLWELL CLASS of Dallas
United Methodist Church will meet
Tuesday, Feb. 26 at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Emma Jean Pittman,
24 Windsor Drive, Orchard View
Terrace, Dallas.
THE DADDOW-ISAACS AMERI-
CAN LEGION Auxiliary Unit 672
Dallas, will meet at the Post Home,
Thursday, Feb. 21 at 8 p.m. with
Marion Harvey, president, presid-
ing.
Theater
THE NATIONAL PLAYERS of
Washington, D.C. will present the
Tony Award-winning play, ‘“‘Rosen-
crantz and Guildenstern Are Dead,”
at College Misericordia at 8 p.m. on
Feb. 28, in Walsh Auditorium. There
is no charge for this evening of
delightful entertainment. Plan to
see this widely acclaimed comedy
BARON'S
300 Avenue A, Swoyersville
of ideas.
SEAFOOD
287-2111 (Wholesale & Retail)
LARGE COOKED
SHRIMP
Ib. 6.99
LOBSTER TAIL
- *9.99
NEW ENGLAND COOKED
«6.99
* eo
Seminars
A SEMINAR ENTITLED (‘The
Many Faces of Violence” is sched-
uled for Thursday and Friday,
March 21-22 at St. Stephen’s Church,
35 South Franklin Street. Dr. Coles,
nationally known consultant on chil-
dren and the impact of the environ-
ment on their growth and develop-
ment, will open the seminar on
Thursday evening, March 21, with a.
presentation on ‘‘The Roots of Vio-
lence in Childhood.”
This project, funded in part by the
Pennsylvania Humanities Council,
is under the sponsorship of St.
Stephen’s Church and Wilkes and
King’s Colleges. It has drawn
together individuals and agencies in
the community who are called upon
to assist victims of violence.
Panels will be led by representa-
tives of the Domestic Violence
Center, Victim’s Resource Center,
the District Attorney’s Office, the
Guidance Counselors Offices of two
School Districts and the County
Coroner.
- The seminar will conclude on
Friday afternoon with a presenta-
tion by Dr. Gene Sharp, of Harvard
University’s program on Non-vio-
lent Sanctions in Conflict and
Defense, who will comment on the
program to that point and lead a
discussion on possible alternatives
to violence.
This program will be free and
open to the public. However, reser-
vations are recommended by calling
825-6653.
Conferences
FOURTEEN AREA COLLEGES
AND UNIVERSITIES and the Eco-
nomic development Council of
Northeastern Pennsylvania
(EDCNP) will co-sponsor a day-long
conference for business owners,
entrepreneurs, and interested public
who would like to learn about and or
participate in the Ben Franklin
Partnership Program. The confer-
ence will be held on Thursday,
March 7, 8:30 a.m. - 4 p.m., Luzerne
County Community College Confer-
ence Center, Prospect and Middle
Roads, Nanticoke.
In addition to the EDCNP, the
conference is sponsored by: College
Misericordia; East Stroudsburg
University; Johnson School of Tech-
nology; Keystone Junior College;
King’s College; Lackawanna Junior
College; Luzerne County Commu-
nity College; Marywood College;
Pennsylvania State University Com-
monwealth Campuses at Hazleton,
Schuylkill, Scranton and Wilkes-
Barre; University of Scranton and
Wilkes College.
Business owners, entrepreneurs,
and others may register for this
productive and timely conference
by sending $10.00 per person to the
Economic Development Council,
1151 Oak Street, Pittston, Pa. 18640.
Reservation checks should be made
payable to the EDCNP and received
by March 1. For additional informa-
tion, contact Paul Tweedy at the
EDCNP or telephone (717) 655-5581.
shoeing workshop on Sunday, Feb.
24, at 2 p.m. at Borrowdale Acres,
Inc. , on Ryman Road, Dallas.
Ray Anderson, farrier, will
present the program. Harold Grey
of the Riding-Ho Club in Dallas is in
charge of the program.
The public is invited to attend.
Refreshments will be served by Don
Moss, Blazing Saddles; and Carol
Malig, Showin Blue Club, Dallas.
Concerts
THOMAS P. SHELBURNE, presi-
dent of the Philharmonic Society
announces that Franklin’s Family
Restaurants and Offset Paperback
Mfrs., Inc. will co-sponsor the
Wilkes-Barre performance of the
Philharmonic Pops with Guest Con-
ductor Nelson Riddle.
Concerts have been scheduled for
Friday, Feb. 22 at 8:30 p.m. at
Scranton’s Masonic Temple and Sat-
urday, Feb. 23 at 8:30 p.m. at
Wilkes-Barre’s Irem Temple. Tick-
ets may be reserved through the
Philharmonic Hotline 342-0920, 287-
1916, or 654-4788 or purchased from
Philharmonic Ticket Outlets: Gian-
neta Music and Paperback Books-
mith in Scranton and Book and
Record Mart and Gallery of Sound
in Wilkes-Barre. According to Phil-
harmonic Executive Director Sally
Preate, ‘Tickets for Nelson Riddle
and the Pops are selling quickly and
we expect a capacity audience.”
Nelson Riddle, conductor, arran-
ger, composer for Ella Fitzgerald,
Frank Sinatra and Linda Ronstadt,
will perform for the first time in
Northeastern Pennsylvania. He will
conduct a pops program that will
include music of the movies, televi-
sion and Broadway. The program
will range from the Gershwin Piano
Preludes to the themes from James
Bond films. The Program and Artist
Commimttee of the Philharmonic is
especially pleased to have Nelson
Riddle whose busy schedule
includes everything from Presiden-
tial inaugurations to arranging and
conducting Grammy Awrd winning
albums with Linda Ronstadt, one of
the top recording stars of the 80’s.
Mr. Riddle, is probably the most
popular arranger in the pops music
field today.
Sales
MAPLE GROVE U.M.W. will be
taking orders for pies.
Orders can be taken from Betty
Sorber 477-5255, Sharon Pudimott
477-2428 or Fran Yahara 477-5436.
Fruit or pumpkin pie $3.50.
Pick up between 3-5 p.m. at
Church Hall in Hunlock Creek.
Rt. 118 to Sheldon’s Lunch, bear
left, church on top of hill on right.
RUMMAGE SALE will be held at
Maple Grove Church Hall, March 6,
9-3:30 and March 7, 9-2:30. (Bag
Day, March 7 - $1.00 a bag)
Events
Workshops
THE 4-H LIGHT HORSE AND
PONY CLUBS are holding a horse-
6 Pack
5 1 69
FREE PICK UP AND DELIVERY
LOWEST PRICES GUARANTEED
JOE RANIELL, R. PH.
287-7724
indicated below.
THE TAMBURITZENS of
Duquesne University under the
artistic direction of Nicholas Jor-
danoff will present their current
concert production at the Irem
Temple in Wilkes-Barre on Satur-
day, March 2 at 8 p.m. The Tambur-
itzans will appear here under the
sponsorship of friends of Camp
Kresge, the YMCA summer camp.
Tickets for the concert which is
open to the public, are available at
the Wilkes-Barre YMCA, 40 W. Nor-
thampton Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
18701, and at the Box-Office, the
night of the perfromance. For fur-
ther information call 823-2191.
DALLAS TWP. CLASS OF 1955 is
planning their class reunion for
July, 1985 at the Castle Inn.
If anyone knows where the follow-
ing people can be located, please
call Tom at 696-2326: Harry Schultz,
Carol Fitzgerald Burczyk, Nelson
Conden, John Feher, Joan Swales
Brittain.
PEDIATRICS
PEDIATRIC NEUROLOGY ..
PEDIATRIC CARDIOLOGY .
Patrick Burke, M.D.
Q. Thomas Novinger, M.D.
Paul Long, M.D.
Diane Schuller, M.D.
Paul Sutton, M.D.
Stephen Wolf, M.D.
Thomas Cadman, M.D.
John Spangler. M.D.
OTOLARYNGOLOGY
RHEUMATOLOGY
William Herrmann, M.D.
Braxton Hillerman, M.D.
Albert Janerich, M.D.
Louis Spagnoletti, M.D.
Martin Blidner, M.D.
ORTHOPEDICS
NEUROLOGY
William Krywicki, M.D.
Richard Somma, M.D.
John Feerick, M.D.
John Della Rosa, M.D.
John Presper, M.D.
Ronald Harris, M.D.
Ronald Block, M.D.
James Yarnal, D.O.
William Weiss, M.D.
E. Joseph Schwiter, M.D.
Joseph Abate, M.D.’
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Lectures
SEVERAL EXPERTS will visit
the area in the coming months to
speak on a variety of topics related
to ‘‘Science, Technology and
Society,” the theme of Penn State
Wilkes-Barre’s spring Hayfield Lec-
ture Series.
The series will open when Dr.
George K. Shortess, professor of
psychology at Lehigh University
and artist, presents “Art Works
Based on Concepts from the Ner-
vous System’ at 4 p.m. on Thurs-
day, Feb. 21. An exhibit of his work,
which he has named ‘neutral art,”
will also open on that day at the
campus.
On Wednesday, March 13, at 4
p.m., Dr. Daniel Walden, professor
of American Studies at the Pennsyl-
vania State University, University
Park, will explore ‘Urbanism and
the Artist: Saul Bellow and the Age
of Technology.”
Dr. John Caputo, professor of
philosophy at Villanova University,
will present “A Philosopher Looks
at Technological Culture’ on
Monday, March 18 at 3 p.m.
The series will close Thursday,
April 4, when Dr. Judy McIntyre,
associate professor of biology at
Utica College, presents ‘‘Wilderness
Bird of the North: The Common
Loon’ at 4 p.m.
Refreshments will be served after
all presentations, which are free to
the public and scheduled in the
Lehman campus’s Hayfield House..
DR. ALEXANDER MULLIGAN,
president, Institute for Better
Living, will speak on Saturday,
March 2, from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m,
at the Unity Church of Wyoming
Valley, 168 N. Washington St.,
Wilkes-Barre.
Dr. Mulligan’s topic will be “How
to get along with your friends and
relatives, how to stop worrying,
learning how to relax and how to
control your anger.”
nr more information, call 822-
30.
Clinics
A UNIQUE CONFERENCE on
nuclear arms control will be spon-
sored by Luzerne County Commu-
nity College and held at the col-
lege’s Educational Conference
Center on Wednesday, March 6,
almost a week before the actual
negotiations between the United
States and the Soviet Union begin in
Geneva.
The Eastern Pennsylvania Confer-
ence on Nuclear Arms Control,
which is slated to begin at 7 p.m.
will serve as a preview of those
talks, for the major goal of the
conference is the objective presen-
tation of the American and Soviet
negotiating positions on nuclear and
space weapons.
Reservations for the Eastern
Pennsylvania Conference on
Nuclear Arms Control may be made
by contacting Fred Walters at Luz-
erne County Community College,
829-7415.
Church
THE REV. JEAN GRACE ADDI-
SON will deliver the message enti-
tled ‘“The Magic of Loving and
Being Loved”, at 11 a.m. Sunday in
Unity Church of Wyoming Valley,
168 N. Washington St., Wilkes-
Barre.
Sunday school is held at 11 a.m.
Unity is non-denominational and all
are welcome.
A prayer service is held at noon
. Tuesdays. The Master Mind Prayer
Group meets at 6:45 p.m. Tuesdays.
A class on “Keeping a True Lent” is
under way at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays. A
love-offering will be taken.
Dr. Alexander Mulligan will con-
duct a workshop on ‘Ten Basic
Rules for Better Living’ March 2.
he is president for the Institute for
Better Living in Farmingdale, N.Y.
For information call 822-2230.
The church is open from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m. daily. A Course in Mira-
cles class will begin at 11 a.m. and
7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 27. Call
the church at 822-2230 if you are
interested.
THE NPW MEDICAL CENTER
All students interested in taking
Applications must be returned to
lists events
The executive board of the pend-
ing Luzerne County Chapter, Ameri-
can Association of Retired Persons
(AaRP) met recently at the Silver
Queen Restaurant, with Gerard
Fritzen, president, presiding.
‘All members of the board were in
attendance as follows: Caroline
Altavilla, Anne Klein, Kaye Ray,
Marion Pascoe, Mary Conyngham,
Helen Gasowski, Eleanor Sobol,
Vicki Lesser, Walter George, Fred
Krackenfels, Joseph. Greco, John
Rolands, William Weihbrecht,
James Clark and Helen Black.
Eleanor Sobol, program chairper-
son, announced a six month listing
of informative speakers geared to
the aid of senior citizens. These
programs include Attorney John
0’Connor, who will speak on wills
and their probate; a specialist on
Income tax exemption for the
elderly; a representative from the
John Heinz Rehabilitation Institute;
a Pennsylvania State Trooper,
whose topics will be on car and
home security; and a representative
from Riverview Day Care Center,
who will speak on ‘‘Alzheimer’s
Disease”.
James Clark, community services
chairman, will be in charge of
arrangements of the organization’s
summer picnic. Fred Krackenfels is
refreshment committee chairman.
William C. Weihbrecht, and
Gerard Fritzen will co-chair the
tours for the group.
Rent and fuel rebate forms will be
available at the next regular meet-
ing.
Comparison shopping lists of food
and drugs are being prepared along
with an updated discount list.
Volunteers willing to serve on the
nominating committee are Emmett
Thomas, Mary Conyngham, Marion
Pascoe, Anna Erceg, Joseph Greco
and John Gibbon.
Women—
(Continued from page 1)
who served following the retirement
of Thomas Jenkins.
Sandy enjoys what she is doing
because she is involved in a wider
range of business than in private
industry.
“Each day is a challenge, that’s
what makes this position so interest-
ing,” she said. “My background in
school and private industry and my
staff, especially my staff, are fac-
tors in my success.”
Among the various phases of her
work are payroll, accounting, insur-
ance, bid specifications, negotia-
tions, purchasing and, sometimes,
involvement in the educational
process.
Sandy is at her desk at 8:30 a.m.
every weekday and works 45 to 50
hours per week, sometimes more
during budget time. She prepares
necessary information for the direc-
tors. She lets the directors make the
when they ask her.
When not busy with her work or
school, Sandy takes flying lessons.
She has soloed and is getting ready
to take the test for her pilot’s
license. She also is vice president of
Northeastern School Business Offi-
cials Organization which includes
IU 18 and 19.
After. nearly four years, Sandy
Rohrbach Vidlicka looks forward to
each workday with enthusiasm won-
dering what challenge she will face.
That is her secret of success in her
career.
LIFETIME GUARANTEE ON
OUR REMOTE (WIRELESS)
BUSINESS
287-9900