Page 10 — SUSQUEHANNA BULLETIN Adam Greer home from Russia BPW meets Mrs. John Fry, Marietta, was elected president of the Mount Joy Business and Professional Women’s Club at the regular March session. Additional officers who will be installed in June are: Mrs. Earl Koser, 1st vice- president; Mrs. Albert Wha- len, 2nd vice-president; Mrs. Ronald Hart, corresponding secretary; Sandra Heisey, recording secretary ;and Mrs. Barry Etsell, treasurer. Mrs. Ben Horst was chairperson of the nominating commit- tee. Honored guests for the meeting were Miss Jane Youtz, a recent Freedoms Foundation award winner of Marietta, and her mother Mrs. Ralph Youtz. Miss Sheri Zerphey, girl of the month, was introduced by Mrs. Barry Etsell, of the personal development com- mittee, as was her mother, Mrs. Donald Zerphey. Fif- teen members of the Eliza- bethtown BPW Club were also present to celebrate with the local chapter their 20th birthday anniversary. The neighboring club is the “Mother” of the Mount Joy Club. The hospitality commit- tee with Mrs. Robert Brown and Mrs. Warren Heisey as co-chairpersons,arranged the birthday party. A preview of Donegal High School music department’s produc- tion, ‘““‘Camelot” was pre- sented by the cast. Miss Sandra Heisey presented sev- eral vocal selections accom- panied by Mrs. George Bros- ke. The Reverend Elwood Mehle, chalk artist, sketch- ed scenes with special light- ing. Members of the hospi- tality committee are: Mrs. Jay Barnhart, Mrs. Eugene Eicherly, Mrs. Adam Greer, Mrs. Beryl Hahn, Mrs. Vera Newcomer, Mrs. Paul Stauf- fer. Mrs. Gerald Sheetz, presi- dent, conducted the busi- ness meeting and election. Contributions of $75 will be forwarded to the Commun- ity Council toward Mem- orial Day activities; $50 to the Dental Clinic; $75 to the Mount Joy Library; $10 to the BPW Foundation. Fall District meeting will be held in September, Spring District Meeting with the Elizabethtown Club as hos- tess on April 19th at Quality Inn, Centerville Road, Lan- caster. The local club will sponsor at Donegal High School, a Hobby Show, on May 24th with Mrs. Donald Drenner and Miss Anna Mae Eby as co-chairpersons. More information can be obtained from either Mrs. Drenner or Miss Eby. “I want to go back again”, was the phrase Adam Greer, Maytown, usgd when asked about his recent trip to Russia. Seven days behind the Iron Curtain just wasn’t enough time to see all the. sights in a country as huge as the Soviet. Greer, in the company of 190 tourists, spent three days in Lenin- grad at the same hotel where Liz Taylor was regis- tered. He saw her a few times. Lester and Thelma Eshleman, former residents of the Mount Joy area, were staying on the same floor as the famous actress. Leningrad is the home of] the famous winter palace which the group toured. During World War-II one and one-half million citizens star- ved and four hundred thou- sand were salughtered during Hitler’s invasion. Leningrad contains the second largest collection of art in the world in a museum known as St. Isaac’s Cathedral. The Moscow Circus was also among the tourist at- tractions in this famous city. Kalinin, the city which was completely destroyed by the hitler armies, lies on the Volga river and has been totally rebuilt. Modern con- dominmums house workers who commute to the collec- tive farms to work during the day. Here the residents were celebrating the equivi- lant of World’s Mother’s Day with musical concerts. Russian music, according to Greer, is inspiring. John Brubaker of Lancaster and Adam Greer of Maytown, on the shore of the Volga The largest hotel in the world with 6,000 rooms, was the stopping-off place in Moscow, for the Ameri- cans. The Kremlin, Cathe- drals, museums and the Uni- versity of Moscow attended by 55,000 students, were among sites visited. The Russian Ballet was also one of the more interesting high- lights of the trip. The Russians still wel- come the American dollar. Girl guides and sales-clerks compute total expenditures with the aid of calculators. April 2,1975 Girl Scout news Acting for the Board of Directors at their last meet- ing, Mrs. Warren H. Foley, Mount Joy, Vice President of the Penn Laurel Girl : Scout Council, presented a pewter plate and silver harm to Mrs. Dorcas Broth- ers of Mount Wolf, who will retire on March 31. For 20 L years, Mrs. Brothers has been a member of the Coun- M cil’s staff as Office Manager. Mrs. Walter T. Bulson of Lancaster, Vice President of the Penn Laurel Girl Scout Council, presided at the March meeting of the Coun- cil’s Board of Directors. William A. Teator, Asso- ciate Director of the Lancas- ter United Way Campaign and Ernest R. Tobin, Exe- cutive Director of the Uni- ted Way of Lancaster Coun- ty, talked to the group about Lancaster County’s upcoming United Way cam- paign, and the needed in- volvement of agency board members and staff. James C. Bowman of Lancaster, chairman of the Council’s Educational Ser- vices Task Force, reported on plans for a council-wide conference scheduled for April 21 from 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at Council Headquarters, 1600 Mt. Zion Road, York. Entitled “Can We Learn To Grow?” and chaired by Miss Berenice Hess of Fairfield, the con- ference is for volunteer ad- ministrative personnel and troop leaders from all areas of the six-county Girl Scout Council to come together to discuss innovative pro- gram for girls and recruit- ment and training of troop leaders. SPRING CONCERT AT ELIZABETHTOWN COLLEGE Elizabethtown - College’s Choral Union and Concert Choir will present a Spring Concert on Friday, April 4. The program, which will be held in the Elizabeth- town Area High School Auditorium at 8 p.m. is open to the public without charge. The Choral Union, con- ducted by Marianne Thomas, an instructor in music, will perform four works. They are traditional Eng- lish “My Dancing Day” ar- ranged by Shaw, “Robin Loves Me,” a 13th Century piece by dela Halle, the 16th Century “My Bonnie Lass, She Smileth” by Mor- ley, and the moderm “Geo- graphical Fugue” by Toch. The composer describes the latter, written in 1930, as the last movement of a suite ‘“‘Gesprochene Musik (Spoken Music),” which tries from different angles to produce music effects through speech. Miss Kathy King is ac- companist for the group. The Concert Choir, which performs frequently through the year, is conducted by Harry L. Simmers, associate professor of music. Accom- panist for the 49-voice en- semble is Glen Bowman. For this concert, the choir has chosen 12 pieces, including “Sing, O My Ton- gue” by Bruckner, ‘“Thanks- giving Anthem” by Read, “Psalm of Brotherhood (The 133rd Psalm)” by Schalit, “Killing Me Softly With His Song” by Fox, and “Lord, Thou Has Been Our Refuge” by Williams. Jennifer Burger and Hohn Harp are soloists and Kath- leen Malenke and Robert Basom instrumentalists for the Choral Union. Kristin Smith and Sharon Zimmer- man are soprano and oboe soloists, respectively, for the Choir. That's right! Bank! loans, and late model used cars. there has never been a better time. . . Check and Compare -----Rates on 1975 Models Lower Auto Loan Rates? Union National Mount Joy Bank has lowered the rates on new car "EE Have you been thinking of a new car? Maybe i a } .new models offer less maintenance and better gas mileage. Check and compare, but first see the folks at Union National Annual Amount 36 Monthly Total Total of Percentage Financed Payments * Interest Loan Rate $2,000.00 $63.88 $299.68 $2,299.69 9.31% 2,500.00 79.86 374.96 2,874.96 9.31% 3,000.00 95.83 449.88 3,449.88 9.31% (The above schedules are for 36 month contracts, with approved down payment. Credit life and accident & health insurance available at additional cost.) UNION NATIONAL MOUNT JOY BANK MAYTOWN, PA. MOUNT JOY, PA. THE aol Ime) A RCT a SEN £3, 8 Her
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