2 The Dallas Post Dallas, PA Wednesday, October 9, 1996 Road (continued from page 1) a plus for everyone, a win-win situation.” - The $166,680 will pay for re- pair or replacement of the road's drainage system, paving and line painting, according to township manager Jeff Box. He expects the engineering work to begin soon, bids to be let this winter and construction is planned to start in the spring. ‘Now that it is responsible for 1.5 miles of North Pioneer Ave., the township will also receive $2,500 per mile, or about $3,750 yearly in state Liquid Fuels tax funds. During the two years it did winter maintenance it received $2,500 per year from PennDOT, Box said. POST PHOTO/GRACE R. DOVE Dignitaries attending Thursday’s check presentation for Pioneer Ave: were: township manager Annual Haunted Barn at [.ehman benefits sick kids In 1985 the Lehman United Methodist Youth Fellowship group established the Wyoming Valley Children’s Aid Fund to help criti- cally or terminally ill students. ‘Since 1985, the youth group has donated more than $6,500 to needy children and children's or- ganizations in our area. Grants are given to families based on their needs. This worthwhile endeavor is solely funded through the efforts of the Lehman U.M.Y.F. They continue to pledge 30 percent of their profits from the annual Haunted Barn to the fund and ask that the people of the area continue to support the efforts to continue the Children's Aid Fund. The Haunted Barn is open on October 11-13, 17-20, 24-27, 29- 30 from 7:00 - 11:00 on Fridays and Saturdays and from 7:00 - 10:00 p.m. all other nights. Your $4 admission benefits the Lehman U.M.Y.F., Lehman Volunteer Fire Co., Lake-Lehman Chorus and the Wyoming Valley Children's Aid ~ Fund. Ifyou know of a needy family in the area or have further ques- tions, contact the Wyoming Val- ley Childrens Aid Fund at P.O. Box 71, Lehman, PA 18627. - The state has turned back more than 4,000 miles of roadways to municipalities statewide since 1981, although few municipali- ties in the Dunmore district have taken advantage of the program, he added. Jeff Box, PennDOT deputy secretary for local transportation Richard Peltz, PennDOT Bureau of Municipal Services director Gerry Kerprich, road foreman Robert Chamberlain, senator Charles Lemmond, supervisor William Tippett, supervisors’ chairman Paul Sabol, supervisors’ vice-chairman ‘Shirley Moyer, police chief James Balavage, engineer Christopher Borton, Brian Grove from Governor Ridge’s northeast regional office, supervisor Herbert Hill, PennDOT district engineer Charles Mattei, assistant district engineer David Skrocki, representative Phyllis Mundy and Lemmond'’s aide Thomas Reese. Student teacher (continued from page 1) locals and teachers. - Alter the Sept. 9 Dallas school board meeting, Wagner said that no King's student teachers had been assigned to the district. “All the middle school science teachers were asked to accept a King's student teacher,” Wagner said later. “They all refused. Our teachers are backing us 100 per- cent.” ~ King's College assigns student teachers to the Back Mountain - Dallas and Lake-Lehman - only if the student teacher requests it, according to director of student teaching Dr. Nick Holodick. “We don't send many student teach- ers out there because Misericordia ~ sends them so many. We haven't had any problems.” Dallas wasn't asked to take stu- dent teachers this semester, he added. “I can’t believe they would turn tail and say they never asked us,” . Wagner said. “I even have the hame of the student teacher: Mr. Butcofski. I looked for him in the school board's minutes.” . King's placed 10secondary and 11. elementary school student teachers this semester in Wilkes- Barre area, Wyoming Area and Wyoming Valley West, Holodick said. +! According lo a fax from King's director of public relations Karen Rogowicz, “The college is trying to work out details with each school district on an individual basis where the refusal of student teach- ers occurs.” : » Wagner, an alumnus of Bishop O'Reilly High School and King's College, said he thinks the tuition refund plan breeds discrimina- tion because he feels King's would have to accept parochial school graduates whether or not they qualify academically. Their par- ents paid for a parochial school education and would expect to get a return on their investments, he surmised. Eventually the college could run out of space for public school graduates if they let all the parochial students in who apply, he added. = “We don’t believe the charge of discrimination is a valid one, as the tuition plan is a reimburse- ment for tuition paid,” Rogowicz answered in her fax. Wagner said he has questions on how the college selects stu- dents for the reimbursement plan, if parochial school graduates might receive special consider- ation in admissions and if King’s might eventually raise its tuition to cover the program at the ex- pense of other students. Wagner claims the tuition re- imbursement plan is decreasing alumni financial support for the college. “People are either refus- ing to donate or are specifying that their donations must go to help public school graduates at King's,” he said. Arecord number ofalumni who never contributed to the college's Alumni Phonathon have changed their minds, Rogowicz wrote. “Because solicitation at this point is incomplete, we reserve any comment on amounts col- lected thus far, aside to say that we anticipate reaching, if not ex- ceeding, our goal. The amount collected varies from night to night depending on the number of vol- unteers and the number of calls made nightly,” she added. “We have not received any more refus- als than in the past.” y s "You'll Have a ' : a N.E. PENNA'S NO. 1 SPOT J 'm Dendy Time" | FOOD, FUN & ENTERTAINMENT STEAKS * CHOPS * SEAFOOD PRICED 95 ‘DANDYS | gs EnTrEES PRICED %0 Soa? 0 Children’s Menu Available ¥ Salt. 125 Deliciously Different & Dandy Late Nite Snacks and i Very Special Cream Drinks OPEN 7 DAYS 11:30 AM TO 2 AM 586-6000 288-3500 RTS. 6 & 11, CLARKS SUMMIT MARK PLAZA, EDWARDSVILLE, RT. 11 ENTERTAINMENT Friday, Oct. 11 TBA Saturday, Oct. 12 TBA Kingston Twp. issues zoning permits Kingston Township zoning of- ficer Ben Gorey issued 37 permits during September and collected $3,056 in fees. The largest projects were two new homes for D. Matty at 459 Mt. Olivet Road, valued at $97,240, and for J. Sincavage at 15 Ivy Drive, valued at $123,420. Other large projects included a garage addition at the R. George residence at 123 Dug Road, val- ued at $57,600; an addition at the J. Turner residence at 84 Mary Street, valued at $17,400; a ga- rage at the R. Nicely residence at 171 N. Main Stret, valued at $8,500 and demolition of a resi- dence, estimated to cost $5,300; and new roofs at the X. Kafcas home at 133 Warden, valued at $6,000; at the M. Bucan home at 8 W. Center St., valued at $6,000; at the P. Connolly residence at 127 Woodtip Dr., valued at $11,400; and at the Zrowski/ Sanfilippo residence at 34 Highwoods, valued at $6,000. CC) PIZZERIA 1 fil 16 Carverton Road, Trucksville call Ahead BEY ToR S010) Eat in or Take Out Try Our Wings! Mon.: 4:00 pm - 10:00 pm Tues., Wed., Thurs.: 4.00 pm - 11:00 pm Fri.: 11:00 am - 12:00 Midnight Sat.: 12:30 pm - 12:00 Midnight * Sun.: 2:00 pm - 11:00 pm Clarification The names of Danielle Terascavage and Carrie Race were left out of the list of members of the Lake-Lehman field hockey team that appeared in last week's issue. They were absent when the photo was taken. v v Ginny Bishop EXPERT ALTERATIONS for Holiday Season * Dressmaking * Tailoring ¢ Patternmaking Il 675-3065 ai Dallas, PA v appointment vy Wedding gowns, Homecoming Dresses, Suits 1 Pr Scranton Prep More than just an image! OPEN HOUSE MEET THE FACES BEHIND THE IMAGE Our students stretch themselves academically, challenge themselves spiritually & express themselves creatively. Sunday 1-4 PM 1000 Wyoming Ave. Scranton, Pa. This ad was developed with the assistance of the Scranton Prep Mass Media class. an Oct. 20 Early Is Your Best MoONROE-NOXEN HEALTH CENTER Route 29, Noxen, PA 18636 298-2121 or 836-5533 EXETER TownsHIP HEALTH CENTER Route 92, Falls, PA 18615 388-6151 RURAL HEALTH CORPORATION An affiliate of WYOMING VALLEY HEALTH CARE SYSTEM Inoculation | Window Shopping... Tor your Home! Mesko Glass features a full line of . Custom Guard vinyl replacement windows! ¢ Shop at home service ® Professional installation * Free estimates ¢ Financing available * Over 66 years of experience GARD WN A Stop by or call Mesko Glass today! We Do It All! 596 Carey Avenue 822-8133 HOME e AUTO ¢ COMMERCIAL MESKO GLASS WILKES-BARRE The Dallas Post 675-5211 FAX: 675-3650 Mailing Address: P.O. Box 366, Dallas PA 18612 Shipping Address: 607 Main Road, Dallas PA 18612 Office hours: Monday - Friday: 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. County, including Dallas, Kingston, Lehman and Jackson townships, Dallas Borough, Harveys Lake and the Dallas and Lake-Lehman school districts. We try to get to as many events as possible, but staff and space limitations make it : Classified Advertising Deadline: Mondays at 4 p.m. Display Advertising Deadline: Mondays at 4 p.m. (Friday at 4 p.m. if proof required) We have a variety of rates and programs to suit your advertising needs. The Dallas Post satisfies most co-op ad programs. Creative services at no charge. Combination rates with The Abington Journal, Clarks Summit, available. We can produce your newsletter, flyer or newspaper. Call for quotes on typesetting, production and printing. Orders for subscriptions received by Friday will begin the following week. See box at right for subscription prices. Local subsciptions should arrive / Fe ete se et ee wo impossible to cover everything. lf you have news about your family, town or organization, please send it to us and we'll try to get it in. Photographs are welcome; we prefer black and white, but color will usually work. any misunderstanding created by a story. Call 675-5211. Have a story idea? Please call, we'd like to hear about it. Corrections, clarifications: The Dallas Post will ccrrect errors of fact or clarify Letters: The Dallas Post prints all letters which have local interest. Send letters to: Editor, The Dallas Post, P.O. Box 366, Dallas PA 18612. All letters must be signed and include a phone number at which we can reach the author. Deadline is Noon, Monday prior to publication. Want a photo that has appeared? We can provide prints of photos taken by our staff. Prices: 5x7 - $5; 8x10 - $10. Call or stop by to order. Wednesdays. Please inform us of damage or delay. The Dallas Post usps 147-720) Published weekly by Bartsen Media, Inc. $18 per year in Luzerne and Wyoming counties (PA); $20 elsewhere in PA, NY or NJ; $22 all other states. Second-class postage paid at Dallas PA. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Dallas Post, P.O. Box 366, Dallas PA 18612. © COPYRIGHT 1996: Entire contents copyrighted. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced by any means without the express written consent of the publisher. I Complete and mail in this form, or call 675-5211 I 0 Please enter a subscription to The Dallas Post Name : H Mail Address | i | City State___ Zip I i Phone i | RATES: 1Year 2Years | | Luzerne & Wyoming counties $18 $32 i | Other PA, NY or NJ 20 36 | I All Other States 22 40 | g | J Return completed form with payment to: N | j The Dallas Post : P.O. Box 366 = an ! Dallas, PA 18612 : Re ee ie Ss ¢ @ oD @ | ® Defense! Call To Schedule Your Flu Vaccination. ol ; A pe > EB '®
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers