Page 12—SUSQUEHANNA TIMES Injured Donegal maids finally go down fighting Last week the remarkable achievments of the girls basketball team of Donegal High School finally came to an end for this season. Lacking the able services of Tanya Merchant, on the sidelines with an injured knee, the Donegal girls were finally stopped in the playoffs for the state championship by undefeat- ed Marion Catholic, 51-46. With only 1:40 remaining in the game, however, the score was 46-46, after a spirited comeback by Done- gal. But the Shimkus girls of Marian added a few more in less than two minutes to take the game. The season’s total for Donegal was 27-4, including the overall championship of the Lancaster - Lebanon League. Beth Keffer was high scorer for Donegal with 17 points. Not only did Donegal have to play without able Merch- ant, but ace Sherri Kinsey played gamely with an injured ankle. This was a team that showed lots of courage and spirit, according to expert observers. Earlier in the week the Indian maids had breezed by Lourdes in the playoffs, 73-39. Mike Greiner makes it to state semi-finals Mike Greiner, Donegal’s 119-pound district wrestling champion, went to the semi-finals last week in the tournament for the state championships. Bo 33 APF TH 3 Pa ON Bix Dee 3 og si) PP 2 Greiner lost a decision, 3-5, to Jack Martin of Danville. Martin went on to lose in the finals to Throckmorton of Waynesburg. NB 2 WN . IE 3 \ D4 RD SR Pg In the above photo Katheryn Garrity models one of the outfits she will be wearing in the Welcome Wagon Fashion Show/Card Party to be held March 27 at 8:00 pm in the American Legion Hall. Clothes for the Fashion Show are provided by the Orange Owl, Mount Joy. In this photo Kathy is wearing an awning stripe two-piece with a deep slit. The outfit is 100% cotton. Tickets for the Fashion Show/Card Party are $2.50 and may be purchased by calling Rita Boger at 653-4929 or Sherry Lantz at 684-5705. You won't want to miss the show, complete with beautiful door prizes! | 3 technician-engineer Erik Anderson. Joel Sater, David Kalmbach to star in movie “The American Trail,’ an Agway production The American Trail, a daily syndicated television series sponsored by Agway Inc. of Syracuse, N.Y., will have a crew in Marietta Friday, March 21, to produce features on David Kalmbach and the old movie theatre and Joel Sater and his Antiques. They will be shooting at the movie theatre at 9:00 am and they will move on to Sater’s at 1:30 pm. The American Trail deals with people, places and times in an 11-state area. The series focuses on people Marietta Little League registration Mar. 22, 29 Registration for summer Little League Baseball, sponsored by the Marietta Youth Athletic Association, will be held Saturday, March 22 and 29, from 10 to 12 and 1 to 4 PM, in the Marietta Community House. The MYAA recently re- organized naming these officers: ‘‘Bumper’’ Yohe, president; Ronald Gauss, vice-president; John Spickler, secretary; and Emma Pennwell, treasurer. A work detail for Satur- day, March 22, at 10 AM at Marietta Memorial Park. Volunteers are needed to condition the fields for the summer games. The regular meeting will be held on Sunday, March 30, at 7 PM, in the Marietta Community House. BPW sponsors trip to Washington, May 10 The World Affairs com- mitte of the Mount Joy BPW is sponsoring a bus trip to the Goodwill Embassy Tour in Washinton D.C. The trip will take place May 10. Embassies which are presently open for the tour are: Egypt, Republic of China, New Zealand, Tur- key and Cypress. Other embassies will be an- nounced later. Free shuttle buses will run between embassies where the dis- tance is too far for walking. A reception will be held at one of the embassies. The bus for the tour will leave the Union National Mount Joy Bank parking lot at the motor bank branch (enter at the lower entrance on North Barbara Street) at 7:30 am. A stop will be made on the way down for a quick lunch or snack, and on the return trip for dinner. The bus is expected to arrive back in Mount Joy between 8:30 and 9 pm. Cost for the bus and tour ticket is $18 per person. Reservations must be ac- companied by a check and will be honored on a first come—first served bases. No reservations will be received after April 4, 1980. [continued on Page 6) of the northeast—their her- itage, what they do, where they live, how they work and how they play. Of special historical im- portance is the presentation, by Agway Inc., of a copy of The American Trail features shot in each state. The color March 19, 1980 "The American Trail’ crew [from left] cinematographer-director Jace Anderson, host Don Jacks and videotape will be preserved in each ‘state’s major historical archive for future generations to view and enjoy. The series can be seen daily each Monday through Friday on WGAL-TV, Lan- caster at 6:25 am. Mount Joy native Clarence C. Newcomer, now a U.S. District Justice in Philadelphia, addressed the Mount Joy Chamber of Commerce last week. Having tried the food at Hostetters’, where the meeting was held, he delivered an overwhelmingly favorable verdict on the cuisine, the service, and the management. He also described some of the courtroom cases he has tried, ranging from suits charging discrimination against the disabled, to a case in which the government was convicted of negligence in the allowing a young woman to contract polio.