L Vol. 122 No. 4 THE BACK MOUNTAIN'S NEWSPAPER SINCE 1889 MARCH 31-APRIL 6, 2013 ALLA 50¢ WILKES-BARRE, PA. www.mydallaspost.com AN EDITION OF THE TIMES LEADER & By DOTTY MARTIN dmartin@mydallaspost.com When Pastor Dan Miller arrived in the Back Mountain in 1993 to resurrect the then-fledgling Back Mountain Harvest Assem- bly Church, he predicted the area behind the church building would become known as a “city on a hill.” What Miller didn’t know at the time was what kind of “city” that would be. Today, the area known as the Rock Recreation Center, or Rock Rec, brings people of all ages to- gether through sports. The build- ing behind the church on Carver- ton Road in Trucksville offers a full-size gymnasium, a stage area, a cardio room, a multi-purpose room, a lounge with a pool table, an air hockey table, a TV and a kitchen area. Rock Rec also includes the Val- ley Tennis and Swim Club, a 15- acre property behind the recreation center that was built in 1960 and purchased by the recreation orga- nization in February 2010. That purchase added to the rec center’s repertoire eight clay tennis courts, an Olympic-size inground pool, an outdoor pavilion and a clubhouse that accommodates 140 people for graduation parties, weddings and family reunions. Now, the faces behind Rock Rec’s success are looking ahead. Elijah Miller, development direc- tor and Pastor Dan’s son, and Doug Miller, center director and no rela- tion to Elijah and Pastor Dan, are spearheading a $4 million capital campaign to transform the recre- ation center into a sports complex. Included in the plan are a mutli- purpose field, major renovations to the swimming pool to add mush- room sprinklers and collapsible rock climbing walls, as well as an addition to the current recreation ock Recreation Center tackles expansion building, adding a second full-size basketball court with drop-down nets. Trees have already begun to be cleared for the field which will be the size of a regulation football field with artificial turf and mark- ings for soccer, field hockey and lacrosse. “The 10-year mark means a lot,” Elijah, 26, said of the Rock Rec Center which started in 2003 with a simple vision. “We had no idea of the impact on the community this place would have. But in the See ROCK, Page 7 FINDING A GOLDEN EGG & FOR THE DALLAS POST/CHARLOTTE BARTIZEK River Morgan found a golden egg at the Dallas Borough Annual Easter Egg Hunt. For more photos of the egg hunt, please turn to page 3. ®yill Dallas High School senior play finally play? By CHARLOTTE BARTIZEK Dallas Post Correspondent Amanda Foote, a backstage hand/actress in the upcoming Dallas Senior High School pro- duction of Rick Abbot’s play “Play On!” wonders, on stage and off, if the high school group “will ever get it right” or if the play will finally be presented next week. “Really, for the first two scenes everybody is freaking out,” Foote said. “There are huge technical problems and we go home every night and re-do everything.” But that’s the idea of this pro- duction and the veteran senior, o will major in musical the- Je at Muhlenburg University ext year, is up to the challenge. The murder mystery - a play within a play - tackles the com- plications, problems and perils of producing a play. In her role as a protagonist stage hand, Foote is up against the strong- willed writer of the play, played by Catherine Blankensop, who changes sets, cues, lighting and script randomly, angering and upsetting the rest of the cast. Blankensop, a shy freshman before auditioning for this play, took on the challenge as the 2 The murder mystery - a play within a play - tackles the com- plications, problems and perils of producing a play. antagonist playwright, and is enjoying the role. “I just love it and guess I just took to it and it had really transformed me,” she says of herself. “Everything in the play goes wrong because of me and I love to go all the way with it.” Could there be a theatre ca- reer in her future? “It’s too early for me to say, right now. I'm tak- ing it all in, let’s say.” Play advisor Harry McKeown wants Blankensop to explode, be bubbly and almost obnox- ious. He says the students have worked exceptionally hard on this complicated story within a story. On the other hand, there is a stark reality to the drama. This is the first time Nate Kalo has been on stage as an actor. “It is very stressful,” he said. “I'm whipped, but it’s very reward- ing and I am sure stretching my abilities pretending to be other people.” See PLAY, Page 7 CHARLOTTE BARTIZEK/ FOR THE DALLAS POST Alssa Horvath, left, and Steven Nave rehearse their roles in Dallas High School's rendition of Rick Abbot's comedy ‘Play On!’ To see if the Dallas High School theater students get their acts/ play together, the public is invited to the Dallas Senior High School at 8 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, April 5 and 6. There is a $5 admission. Nate Kalo, left, and Anastasia Beney are characters in Rick Abbot's comedy ‘Play On!’ at Dallas High School. CHARLOTTE BARTIZEK/ FOR THE DALLAS POST The Rock Recreation Center on Carverton Road inTrucksville plans to almost double the existing facility plus add an artificail turf field for football and soccer, say directors Elijah Miller, left, and Doug Miller. Dallas Post photographer wins Keystone Press Award By SHEENA DELAZIO sdelazio@timesleader.com Dallas Post photographer Charlotte Bar- tizek has won a first-place Keytone Press Award for a feature photo of a kids’ annual fishing day in the Back Mountain. In addition to Bartizek’s award, The Times Leader and associated community publications won 27 Keystone Press Awards this year in a number of categories, includ- ing investigative reporting, page design and sports event coverage. Bartizek has won three awards from PA Keystone competitions over the years for photos but is most proud of a first-place award she re- ceived in 1995 for a sports photo from the National Newspaper Association. The Times Leader gar- nered 11 awards, The Sunday Dispatch received three awards and The Abington Journal won 12 awards. The Abington Journal also was named the “sweepstakes winner” for its division. “Once again the staff at all of our publica- tions showed why they are considered the best in Northeastern Pennsylvania,” said Joe Butkiewicz, vice president and execu- tive editor. “The Times Leader won first- place awards for investigative and ‘spot news,” areas of news gathering crucial to our readers but not a high priority for other papers. The sportswriters and news and feature page designers at The Times Leader do terrific work every day, and it’s great that has been recognized. “The Abington Journal continues to prove that our attention to community news is worth the effort,” Butkiewicz said. “For the fourth consecutive year the staff at the Journal won the sweepstakes award for the best paper of its circulation size in all of Pennsylvania. I'm proud to work with such talented and hardworking journalists.” Winners of the contest will be honored at the Pennsylvania Press Conference May 18 in Harrisburg. Times Leader reporter Terrie Morgan- Besecker won first place in investigative reporting for a series of articles revealing attorney Angela Stevens had double-billed the county for delivering fee petitions relat- ed to her representation of parents whose children are in the custody of Children and Youth Services. Morgan-Besecker and staff writer Ed Lewis also won a first place “spot news” award for their coverage of an October 2012 shootout involving a Wilkes-Barre city po- lice officer who was shot and injured and an attempted-homicide fugitive who was shot and killed during a gunfight in the city. Staff writer Bill O’'Boyle won a second- place award for a personality profile of a woman and her battle with cancer. Sports writer Paul Sokoloski won a sec- ond-place award for a column regarding the late Penn State coach Joe Paterno and the 9 Bartizek See KEYSTONE, Page 4 6 | 2007 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers