L Vol. 122 No. 5 THE BACK MOUNTAIN’S NEWSPAPER SINCE 1889 APRIL 7-13, 2013 The PDAILTI.AS POST @" EE BARRE, PA. www.mydallaspost.com AN EDITION OF THE TIMES LEADER Charles Lemmond Community Spirit Award established The Dallas Post will recognize a member of the Back Mountain community in memory of the late senator. The Dallas Post announces the estab- lishment of the Charles D. Lemmond Jr. Community Spirit Award. The award, named after the former senator who passed away in 2012, will recognize a resident of the Back Mourn- tain for his or her leadership and ad- vancement of community spirit. Readers of The Dallas Post will vote for the person they believe would be A ballot appears on page 16 of today’s pa- per. Entries must be returned to The Dal- las Post by 5 p.m. on Friday, May 3. The Charles D. Lemmond Jr. Com- munity Spirit Award honors those who endeavor to improve the lives of Back Mountain residents through outstand- ing community service, public service or philanthropy and embody Senator Lemmond’s commitment to doing the right thing, in the right way, for the Lemmond an appropriate recipient of this award. right reason. Charles D. Lemmond Jr. (1929- 2012) called the Back Mountain home for more than 50 years. Through his constant and active involvement in a wide range of community groups, he touched many lives, gave a sense of di- rection and responsibility to numerous improvement projects and served as an inspiration to countless individuals. As a soldier, solicitor, prosecutor, judge and legislator, Lemmond demon- strated a strong devotion to civic duty. His 21 years as a well-respected state Senator were marked by his standard of integrity, his pursuit of justice and his desire to do what was right for the people and the community he served. Numerous Back Mountain organiza- tions benefitted by Lemmond’s leader- ship. He was an enthusiast of the Back Mountain Memorial Library Auction and helped secure funding for the ex- pansion of the children’s wing. As a 33rd Degree Mason, member of the Caldwell Consistory and George M. Dallas Lodge 531 and as potentate of the Nobility of Irem Shriners, he was dedicated to caring for children in need. One of his proudest legislative accomplishments was a law he au- thored requiring hearing screenings for newborns. A friend of education, Lemmond supported scholarships for Dallas and Lake-Lehman High School students through his involvement with the Dal- las American Legion Post 672. He was a lifetime trustee at Wyoming Semi- nary College Preparatory School and long-time alumni interviewer for his alma mater, Harvard University. As a member of the Penn State Wilkes-Barre Advisory Board, he worked on numer- ous campus improvements, including the state-of-the-art Nesbitt Library. Fur- ther acknowledgement of his commit- See AWARD, Page 5 Ross students win state awards for handwriting worth $250. at are the odds that three stu- dents from Ross Elementary School in Sweet Valley would come up with three state awards in hand- writing? | There were about 285,000 contest entries this year, according to school principal Don- ald James and a representative from Zaner —Bloser, the educational materials company that has coordinated the contest for the last 22 years. The odds are 3 out of 285,000. See WRITE, Page 5 THE WRITE STUFF By CHARLOTTE BARTIZEK | Dallas Post Correspondent | CT ARLOTTE BARTIZEK tor THE DALLAS POST Sarah Bednarek, a first-grade student at Ross Elementary School, Sweet Valley, has fun writing and being as perfect as she can. Her writing style has won the school a state prize in the Zaner-Bloser National Handwriting Contest and a prize package Three Ross Elementary School students won state prizes in a hand- writing contest. From left, are Donald James, principal; Sarah Bed- narek, first-grade student winner; Corin Frey, first-grade teacher; An- drew Jubis, sixth-grade student winner; Melissa Smigielski, sixth-grade teacher; Karlee Kreller, third-grade student; and Jeremy Williams, third-grade teacher. @ Vlunteer job not physical but very important If youre looking to do some volunteer work but can’t handle anything strenuous, Janet Bau- man has just the job for you. Bauman, the children’s librar- ian at the Back Mountain Memo- rial Library, will set you up with a dishpan full of soapy water and a pair of rubber gloves and you can provide the library with a much-needed service - washing the covers of children’s books. June Jones and Rita Rusnak were long-time volunteers at the library who not only washed book covers but also sanitized 25 TE : . x 1 toys used in the Parent/Child “For anyone looking to be a volunteer, this is a great job because there's no physical aspect to it.” Janet Bauman Children’s librarian at Back Mountain Memorial Library Workshops. Both women are in their late 80s, however, and have stepped down from their volun- teer positions. “These women would sit and wipe down the children’s books,” Bauman said. “We would then air out the books and put them back on the shelves.” Volunteers are needed once a week for this job and, although they can pretty much choose the times they'd like to work, morn- ings in the children’s section at the library can be quite hectic. “For anyone looking to be a volunteer, this is a great job be- cause there’s no physical aspect to it,” Bauman said. “It gives the volunteers someplace to go and somebody to talk to. It’s a social thing.” Anyone interested in volun- teering for this job is asked to call Bauman at 675-1182. June Jones, left, and Rita Rusnak used to volunteer their time washing book covers and sanitizing toys for the parent/child workshop at the Back Mountain Memorial Library. The women have ‘retired’ from their positions, forcing the library to seek new vol- unteers for the task. History Day Is big at Lake-Lehman School's History Day coordinator is national winner himself. By DOTTY MARTIN dmartin@muydallaspost.com Michael Novrocki knows the exhila- ration of winning a History Day compe- tition. He’s done it a few times. Now, the Lake-Lehman history teacher is guiding his students so that they, too, might experience the same feeling. For the 14th consecutive year, Lake- Lehman High School has won the Outstanding School Award, Senior Division, at the Regional History Day Contest. Ten of those wins have come with Novrocki at the helm. The award is presented to the high school in the region that achieves the most winning entries. Lake-Lehman High School won a total of 11 awards this year - four first-place awards, four second-place awards and three third- place awards, as well as the Outstand- ing Entry in Local History Award - at the March 23 competition held at Penn State Wilkes-Barre. Students researched topics related to the annual theme, “Turning Points in History: People, Places and Ideas,” and produced either media documenta- ries, tabletop exhibits or drama perfor- mances. Twenty-three students from Lake- Lehman High School qualified to com- pete in the state competition, which will be held from May 34 at Cumber- land Valley High School in Mechanic- sburg. Novrocki, who has been History Day coordinator at Lake-Lehman since be- ing hired as a history teacher in 2003, first won a regional History Day com- petition as a sophomore at Wyoming Valley West High School in 1987. He teamed up with fellow classmate Scott Stefanides that year to win a first-place award in the group documentary cate- gory for a presentation on coal mining. The next year, Novrocki and Ste- fanides took a project about Father Joseph Murgas all the way to a first- place national History Day award in the group documentary category. Their presentation argued how Father Mur- gas invented the first workable system of overland wireless telegraphy. Their classmate Shaun McAndrew also won a first-place national History Day award in the individual documen- tary category that same year, mark- ing what Novrocki believes is the first and only time students from the same high school won national History Day awards in the same year. Their History Day mentor at the time was Mary Jean Tarantini, now re- tired and residing in Harveys Lake Bor- ough with her husband, David. “She is the reason I am doing what 9 See HISTORY Page 5 6 Il 200 7 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers