SESE PAGE 10 THE DALLAS POST Sunday, August 15, 2010 Joan Harris Dancers will perform at Knoebel's Park The Joan Harris Dancers will appear in two productions at Knoebel’s Amusement Park this week. Nearly 100 dancers from the Back Mountain communities will pool their talents with 200 other dancers from across the region to produce a fun-filled, fast-paced dance review. The dancers are scheduled to take the main stage at the park at 4 and 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug.17. Titled “Sunshine Days!” the show will feature a wide variety of song and dance routines de- signed as one final salute to the summertime. Joan Harris first staged a summer picnic and showcase at an amusement park in 1961 and it has been a favorite tradition for her students ever since. This is the 22nd consec- utive year the studio will per- form at the park in Elysburg. This week’s shows include of a wide variety of ballet, tap, jazz, lyrical and modern dance arranged to music with a sum- mertime theme. The produc- tions mark the end of the cen- tre’s eight-week summer pro- gram. 287-7977. Aubrielle Smith, left, and Kristen Justice, both of Dallas, will For more information, call perform at Knoebel's Amusement Park on Aug. 17 with the Joan Harris Dancers. PEOPLE BRIEFS Mariner graduates from DePaul Allison Mariner, of Shaver- town, graduated from DePaul University in Chicago in June with a Bachelor of Science com- merce degree from The College of Commerce Reiser attends art program Ashlyn Reiser, of Shavertown, attended the Art + Media pro- gram of the Pre-College Sum- mer Institute at the University of the Arts: The Art + Media program helps students explore their individual talents and interests, learn new skills and develop a more comprehensive portfolio. Reiser will be a junior at Wyoming Seminary. Two named to dean's list at Ursinus Katherine L. Banas, of Dallas, and Neil E. Dierolf, of Harveys Lake, have been named to the dean’s list at Ursinus for the spring 2010 semester. Students must achieve an average of 3.50 out of a possible 4.0 grade point average to re- ceive this honor. Banas is majoring in media and communication studies and art and Dierolf is majoring in business and economics politics. Both are members of the Ursi- nus Class of 2010. Dr. Glendon Cook joins Geisinger Glendon Cook, M.D., has joined Geisinger Medical Group - Dallas as a family medicine doctor. Dr. Cook was previously asso- ciated with Dallas Family Prac- tice for the past four years. Board certified in family med- icine, Dr. Cook earned his medical degree from Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia. He completed a family med- icine intern- ship and residency at Wyoming Valley Family Practice. Dr. Cook is a diplomat of the American Board of Family Medicine. He is also a clinical faculty member of The Community Medical College in Scranton. Mike assists biology professors Thomas Mike, of Shavertown, is assisting biology professors William Terzaghi and Kenneth Cook Klemow with their summer research at Wilkes University. Mike, a sophomore in the biology program at Wilkes, is studying the growth, photosyn- thesis and yields of various plants to determine their feasi- bility as a source of biofuels. He is working under a grant from EthosGen, a company dedicated to the production and proc- essing of biomass, the raw bi- ological material required to produce alternative fuels. Mike is the son of Ted and Anna Mike. Rittenberg commended at Mitchell College Sarah Rittenberg, of Shaver- town, has been named to the Commendable Scholar List for the spring 2010 semester at Mitchell College. Commendable Scholars are awarded to students with grade point averages between 3.0 and 3.49. Thomas Parrish named to dean's list Thomas W. Parrish has been named to the dean’s list at Clemson University in Clemson, South Carolina. A 2006 graduate of Dallas Senior High School, Parrish is in the pre-med program at Clemson majoring in Microbiol- ogy. He is the son of David and Kathleen Parrish, of Dallas. Robert Kelley asks Nurse Technician Kim Jones if his Red Cross card issued in Northwest Ten- nessee is valid in Pennsylvania. Drilling workers donate The Old Beaumont School located off Route 309 in Beau- mont was host to a blood drive sponsored by the American Red Cross of Wyoming County. A steady stream of blood do- nors from throughout the com- munity visited agency workers from the American Red Cross during the five-hour drive. About three hours into the drive, a caller from Susquehan- na County phoned the office of American Red Cross Wyoming County, asking for directions to the school from a gas drilling site in Susquehanna County. Nancy Kulow, of Mehoopany, a volunteer for American Can- cer Society Wyoming County helping out at the drive, took the call intended to alert staff members to expect quite a few workers from one of the drill- ing sites in Susquehanna Coun- ty. Soon after, several cars and trucks bearing license plates from Texas and Tennessee pulled into the parking area at Bob Horlacher Memorial Little League Ballpark adjacent to the school Jay Jones, a supervisor with Selman and Associates, of Mid- land, Texas, assigned as Super- intendent of Geology for Cabot Oil & Gas drilling sites in the area, said all of the workers, including his wife, are geolo- gists working under contract with Cabot Oil & Gas to do geological studies at Dimock, Springville, Elk Lake, Mon- trose and South Montrose.” TABLE Continued from Page 1 expanding job market. “It allows you to embrace your traditions and your uniqueness as a community, but still have the understand- ing that there is a bigger world out there,” he said. “Just because you come from a small town doesn’t mean you have to lose your identity when you compete in a global market.” McGovern also wanted to find a way to honor the school’s academic program - not just sports teams and oth- er extracurricular activities. “Most of our people go on to do something (in their) professional lives that has nothing to do with sports,” said McGovern. “What we want to do is show (students) how they can contribute to society and how they can be successful.” The program will run through homecoming week at the high school. Speakers will present to classes during the day and at the football game, a ceremony will be held to honor the guests. Biograph- ical information will be pre- sented to the crowd and each speaker will receive a plaque, commemorating his or her participation as a Knight of the Round Table. A plaque with a group photo of the HOW TO VOTE Nomination forms for Knights of the Round Table can be found on the school’s website, www.lake- lehman.ki2.pa.us, or by logging on to the district's Facebook page. speakers will also be featured in the high school’s front lob- by. As former assistant princi- pal of East Stroudsburg High School, McGovern enjoyed the results of a similar pro- gram. “People looked forward to it,” he said. After five years as superin- tendent, McGovern is finally getting the project off the ground. “(It took) a lot of free time,” he said. district. CHARLOTTE BARTIZEK/ FOR THE DALLAS POST Jim McGovern, superintendent of the Lake-Lehman School Dis- trict, is proposing a new program to honor alumni of the school © PULILE ANSWERS — King Crossword — Answers Solution time: 25 mins. 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Now, we're here to give blood. “It’s important for the group to give blood today because a co-worker at one of the drilling sites was notified a few days ago that his fiancee was seri- ously injured in an auto acci- dent back home in Houston,” Jones added. “We wanted to do this in her name.” Blood donor Robert Kelley talked about recent flooding in his home state of Tennessee. “Not too long ago in Nash- ville, Tennessee, we had a hor- rible flood that was worse than Katrina,” he said. “It left the area totally devastated. My mom’s a captain in the Tennes- see National Guard. She was talking to me about how the Red Cross was helping the peo- ple.” The American Red Cross of Wyoming County sent workers to Tennessee to assist with aid relief efforts back in May. Local residents Marita Zim, Client Caseworker, Health Care Service Supervisor, and Mary Bishop, Client Caseworker, As- sistant Supervisor, were de- ployed to Tennessee in May to assist in aid relief efforts for those who suffered damage brought on by severe storms, tornadoes and flooding. Wyoming Seminary Upper School in Kingston will register boarding and day students on Sunday and Monday, Aug. 29 and 30 for grades nine through 12 and postgraduate. A special opening-of-school convocation service will be held at the Upper School on Tues- day, Aug. 31. The Lower School in Forty Fort will open for its first day of classes on Wednesday, Sept. 1 with a convocation for students in fifth through eighth grades. Orientation for new Lower School students in grades 1-8 will be held from 10 to 11 a.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 31 and an Open House for new and returning Inspection ! NOW $9.98 i Reg. $19.95 [4 t $19.95 . Fill all fluids under hood | 2. Lube chassis | With Coupon - Expires 8/21/10 nsylvania State 50% Off Regular Price LSS Sle ve | with Coupon - Expires 8/21/10 ti: & hannon ! ibe, Oil & Filter id Service: Basic 10W30 3. Check air pressure Ss teve Ps FB HINIEY TIRE & AUTO CENTERS Seminary schedule announced preschool, pre-kindergarten and kindergarten students and their parents will be held at the TN TTY a. EE EE TTS OSS Sil BSS SER Ses A i eo RR a Se Ga 2 % ( ) URE” rm Se same time. {) § The opening convocation for primary grades will be held on Thursday, Sept. 2. A Parents’ Back to School Night will be held at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 2 with a similar Back to School Night for parents of chil- dren in first and second grades set for 7 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 2 and for third and fourth grades at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 7. Parents of middle school stu- dents are invited to an orienta- tion session at 7 p.m. on Tues- day, Sept. 7. OFFER GOOD IN DALLAS LOCATION ONLY! . 570-675-8473 - | ! I i | 1 I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers