Pr Page 2—SUSQUEHANNA BULLETIN Agenda for September Mount The following is the proposed agenda for the Mount Joy Borough Council meeting to be held on Monday, September 8, 1975, at 7:30 P.M.: 1. Receive and open bids Project S00, Borough tennis courts and parking lot. 2. Accept bids for the supplying of fuel oil and heating plant maintenance. 3. Consider permitting the Athletic Association to enlarge the existing storage capacity at Kunkle Field. 4. Consider authorizing the Borough Manager to pursue alternate ways of financing the improvements to the Little Chickies bridge. S. Consider appointing a Joy Council Councilman to a special ad-hoc storm sewer committee. 6. Report the status of the PUC’s investigation into the railroad bridges. 7. Report on the status of the investigation into upgrading Borough signs. 8. Discuss the draft ordinance requiring land- lords to register tenants Per Capita taxes. 10. Consider adopting a motion to change require- ments necessary to receive exoneration from Per Capita taxes. 11. Consider the release of Albert Whalen’s escrow account for improvements to West Main Street. Bateman summarizes current boro projects Joseph Bateman, Borough Manager of Mount Joy, has announced that a request has been made to have the Westview develop- ment inspected by the borough manager and by the borough engineer, in order to accept the streets and park formally into the borough. The borough will issue its second newsletter to resi- dents in October. To expediate per capita tax collections, the Admin- istrative and Finance Com- mitte of the Borough Coun- cil is proposing that all landlords with three or more dwelling units register their tenants with the borough tax collector. Music lessons available Elizabethtown College's Department of Music is making available private lessons in piano, voice, woodwinds, brass and strings through its Prepara- tory Division this year, beginning Sept. 4. The lessons, which last 15 wecks, are available to both children and adults, accord- ing to Mrs. Erica Ellenber- ger, recently appointed di- rector of the Prep Division } The instruction will be given by members of the faculty in the music depart- ment and by student teachers under supervision of a member of the faculty. There is a lower fee for student-taught lessons. A new offering this year will be a weekly piano class for beginners using the College's electronic piano laboratory. According to Mrs. Ellen- berger, such piano classes have proven to be a good way to begin piano study because the students are 7 S Construction will start in early September on re-sur- facing the tennis courts and building a new parking lot in the borough park. if weather is good the projects should be completed by mid-Octo- ber. Planning for the 1976 budget has already begun. Borough Council will dis- cuss the budget at their October meeting. A draft of the proposed budget should be on display by early November. A proposal to establish a shade tree commission for Mount Joy Borough has gone back to the Public Works Committee of the Council for revisions. stimulated by each other as well as by the teacher. Enrollment in each class will be limited to six students grouped according to age. Mrs. Ellenberger, who will teach the piano class as well as administer the program, is a graduate of the University of Rochester and Indiana University. A piano teacher for 10 new energy sources A Mount Joy student 1s currently gaining first-hand experience at Juniata Col- lege in energy research, a field beginning to play a major role in determining how the world will live during coming years. Sharon Steckbeck, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Steckbeck of 204 N. Barbara St., Mount Joy, is one of five Juniata students to engage in energy exploration pro- jects for 10 weeks this summer on the college campus. Miss Steckbeck and her co- workers are involved in a research project dealing with the conversion of coal to liquid fuels. The students are investigating the proper- ties of ‘‘synthoil”” an un-’ usual oil-like product which’ is being produced on “an experimental basis at a U. S. at E-town years, she has been chair- man of the piano depart- ment at the Community Music School in St. Louis and a member of the music faculty at Lebanon Valley College. More information about the Preparatory Division is available from Mrs. Ellen- berger at the College, the telephone number is 367-1151, Ext. 207. School Bus Safety Week, September 2-8 To alert motorists that children soon will be going back to school, State Secre- tary of Transportation Jacob Kassab today announced that Pennsylvania will join the rest of the nation in observing National School Bus Safety Week, Sept. 2 to 8. “Each year too many children are injured because of motorists who either fail to obey or are unfamiliar with traffic laws regarding when and when not to pass a school bus,’’ Kassab said. The only circumstances in which a driver may pass a stopped school bus is when the bus is loading or unloading children directly in front of a school, or when a bus is stopped on the opposite side of a highway when a physical medial .rrier exists, Bureau of Mines coal research station near Pitts- burgh. In addition to analyzing the make-up of the synthoil in regards to overall safety and precautions for use, the researchers are also examin- ing the mechanism by which synthoil is made. According to Dr. William E. Russey, professor of chemistry and co- director of the project, if the workers can pinpoint exactly how the catalyst works in the synthoil process, they should then be able to make a better and more efficient catalyst. Guiding Miss Steckbeck in her research endeavors are two members of the college’s chemistry faculty, Dr. Russey and Dr. Judith W. Lerman. A junior chemistry major, Miss Steckbeck is active in Deputation Club, the Chem Club and intramural volley- ball. She was graduated from Donegal High School in 1973. Cub directors hold meeting by Robert W. Mark The Committee of Cub Pack 136 was held at the home of Cubmaster Robert W. Mark. Attending were: Myron Weber, Ann Mark, John Auker, John Shireman Jay Heller, Evelyn Duke, Sara Demmy, Shirley Good, Edna Wolf, Carolyn Waltz, Dana Mark, Billie Ann Oxford. Den Meetings will start the second week of Septem- ber. Den 1, Wed. 7:30 to 8:30; Den 2, Wed. 3:75 to 4:30 p.m.; Den 3, Mon. 7:30 to 8:30 p.m.; Den 4, Wed. 7:00 to 7:30 p.m.; Den S, Wed. 6:30 to 7:30 p-m.; Den 6, Thur. 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Webelos should contact Webelos Leader, Dana Mark - 653-5983. Dues will be twenty cents per week. There will be a committee meeting Sept. 15, at 7.00 p-m., at the home of Jay Heller, R. D. #1, Mount Joy, PA. ATT September 3. 1975 WhiininIIIIN MILLER’S Mobil’ SERVICE 271 WEST MARKET STREET, MARIETTA eg 42 E. FRONT ST, rar DRINKS SANDWICHES TR) oY pS! Ep YOUNDT’S MEAT MARKET 119 E. Market St., Marietta — 426-1245 Open Daily 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. | Starting Sept. 6— we’ll be open til 8 on aturdays & Sundays [ Children 8 Ag ie nstryiticn Classes Start Sept. 13 Bo SHARP'S DISTRIBUTORS Beer & Ale SLT BYE Drinks 10 Decatur St., Marietta — 426-3918 LANCASTER COUNTY FARM DINER SMORGASBORD a.m. to 8 p.m. BANQUET FACILITIES Phone 717-367-6956 R* 3 ' Mile Fast of Flizabethtown Pa. Dr. David E. Schlosser (Mount Joy Area Only) Susquehanna Times & Advertising Mgr. News Editor Circulation Mgr. Entered at EMERGENCY MEDICAL CALLS Saturday Afternoon and Sunday SUSQUEHANNA BULLETIN The Mount Joy Bulletin Box 75A, R. D. 1, Marietta, Pa. 17547 Published weekly on Wednesday except 4th of July and Christmas week (50 issues per year) Publisher - Nancy H. Bromer, 426-2212 or 426-1707 Nancy Bromer, 426-2212 Hazel Baker, Judy Swab, 426-3159 Advertising Rates Upon Request the post office in Marietta, Pa., as second class mail under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscrintion Rate: $4 per year Vol. 75 No. 34 September 3, 1975 EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES Available Day & Night COLUMBIA HOSPITAL 7th & Poplar (Emergency Entrance) 426-3643 EW baal ea bem AN aaa NN NN pee oO 60
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers