Page 16 - SUSQUEHANNA TIMES Re-Usit Shop opens in Mount J oy Mrs. Mildred Steffy is shown unpacking gift items (from the Phillipines and Taiwan) in the newly-opened ‘‘Re-Usit Shop’’ at SO E. Main Street, Mount Joy. The shop, run by volunteer women for the Mennonite Central Committee, sells hand-made gift items from all over the world, and also thrift items such as clothing, which are obtained by donation. Proceeds go to the M.C.C. If you have any used clothing or household utensils you don’t want, bring them to the Re-Usit Shop. The store was ‘‘a real mess,’’ according to Mrs. Steffy, when the volunteers began fixing it up for business. They contracted with a retired carpenter who worked for low wages and charged cost for materials. Work included repairing plaster, painting, and putting in shelves, counters, and panelling. It looks quite nice now, and you might find a pair of good shorts for S0 cents, as the Times reporter did (incidentally, we were the first customer). Hours are from 9 to S Monday thru Saturday, except Friday, when the Re-Usit Shop stays open till 9 at night. Rheems water shortage ends —D.E.R. steps in, wants better service Rheems has had water rroblems five times in the ast seven years. Some residents are, no doubt, giving up hope that a Last week, from noon Monday till Friday evening, Rheems was short of water. Civil Defense workers put in many hours bringing in be depended on). Mr. Kondras told the Times that ‘‘the DER is tied in with the Public Utlilities Commission and the Envi- 80 truck tank loads of dependable supply wili ronmental Protection potable water. ever be theirs. However, a Agency, and they have new factor has entered the some power.” What happened? The picture this time around: The water company has only well supplying the the Department of Envi- assured the DER that new ronmental Resources. area went dry. Why it did, no one knows yet. A new well was tapped on Friday, and is working just fine, but, according to Civil Defense directdr James Kondras, ‘‘We're right back in the same situation. If anything hap- pens to the new well, we’ll have another emergency. There's still no backup.’ The DER has ordered the Rheems Water Company to do the following: within 30 days, analyse the cause of the well failure, and submit a report; within 90 days, develop an adequate supply (i.e., a supply which is greater than the demand, and thus one which can Oldies but Goodies sources are being investi- gated. The continual shortages are not only inconvenient, but can be dangerous. Mr. Kondras noted that a barn fire occured in Maytown on Thursday night. ‘If the fire had been in Rheems, it could have been bad with- out water for the trucks,”’ he said. Photo shows the Girls’ Basketball team of Marietta High School for the 1939-40 season. In the front row, left to right are: Ethel Dettinger Wiker, Nancy Spangler Kepler, Ann Eurich Fletcher, Margaret Baker Bleacher, Dorothy Williams Stoudt, Edith Shuman Sload and Jean Brenner Lowe. In the second row, 1. to r. are: Sarah Jane Krebs, Betty Penwell Radle, Helen Gohn Hart, Jane Zink Swingler, Mary Martin Buch, Leona Carver Lenard and Gladys Simmons White. July 6, 1977 Photo shows, left to right: Edgar Appley, Stan Curry, and Mimi Ginder. Edgar is handing Mimi a check for the $44.02 which he collected in a jar in his store in Marietta. The money will go to help pay the expenses of Stan’s trips around the country to the various track meets he attended, which were financed in part by the DHS Booster Club. Mimi is the president of the Booster Club. Stan Curry is retired for summer Stan Curry, the Donegal Runner who made head- lines for five weeks straight, is done running for the summer. His coach at DHS, Rudy Milovanovic, advised him to ‘take it easy’ for the rest of the summer, according to Stan. Stan was scheduled to go to Gettysburg for a meet this last weekend, but canceled it. He will begin running again next year when he goes to Hagerstown Col- lege. . Stan has been the country in the last month, has been in the news, and has had the rapt attention of the community —he received an ovation at his graduation, and the DHS bulletin board - along Rt. 141 wishes him good all over luck. Have success and fame influenced him? Apparently not. When the Times asked him ‘‘how it feels to be a big star,” Stan quickly replied, “I'm not a big star, I'm just an ordinary guy.”’ “When I started out this year, | wanted to be State champ,’”’ Stan said. ‘‘I’ didn’t really expect to go as far as I did.” Stan attributes much of his running prowess to two men: coach Milovanovic, and his father. ‘‘Rudy Milovanovic was the big- gest physical influence on my running,”’ says Stan, Kermit Curry Ted Hershey —Is accepted at prestigious schoo Ted Hershey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Amos D. Her- shey, 43 Springville Road, Mount Joy, has been ac- cepted for a Summer Pro- gram at the School of Pennsylvania Ballet in Philadelphia, starting Jul H, : Hershey also has been accepted to study with the Toronto Summer School in Dance, Toronto, Canada, under the direction of Diana Jablokova-Vorps, from July 4-8. A 1976 graduate of Donegal High School, Her- shey is currently a student of the Eleanor Hildebrandt Dance Studio, Mount Joy. ‘and my father was the greatest mental influence.” Stan says of coach Mil- ovanovic, ‘‘Rudy has the ability to teach top runners —he knows alot—but I guess he’s happy teaching high school.” Of the many places he travelled to, Stan liked California the best. “‘It’s nice and sunny and hot out there,” he told us. The Sacramento meet was very well organized, and the runners there got free transportation and enter- tainment; in particular, a visit to San Francisco. They also were given free travel bags and t-shirts to com- memorate their stay. Atlan- ta was ‘‘O.K.”” and Knox- ville was not so O.K. with Stan. He found the Tenne- see meet disorganized, and had trouble finding his way around the city. Stan is continuing to work out over the summer, under Rudy’s direction, and has a summer job at New Standard in Mount Joy. Ted Hershey