4 THE DALLAS POST/Wednesday, May 7, 1986 ae 4 govicn G8 F000 ak Spawn! Opening set A scene of the dining area of the Crab Claw Seafood House scheduled to open to the public for lunch and dinner, May 16. The ‘Crab Claw’ IS ready to open By CHARLOT M. DENMON Staff Correspondent Back Mountain residents who enjoy the seafood houses of Maryland in less than two weeks. Paul Bankovich will open the Crab Claw, modeled after the seafood houses of Maryland and the New England coasts, May 16, serving fresh seafood for lunch and dinner daily. Formerly from Swoyersville, Bankovich and his wife, Arlene, with their two sons, Paul and Jeff, now live in Dallas. They opened their retail seafood store about three years ago on Memorial Highway, Dallas. Now, Bankovich, math instructor at Luzerne County Commu- nity College for the past 19 years, will fulfill a lifelong ambition when he opens his seafood restaurant. His will be the only restaurant in the area having live lobsters available from which customers may select those of their choice from the large holding tanks. The lobsters as well as other seafood will be trucked in daily by Bankovich’s own trucks, from the Chesapeake Bay or from the shores of New England. The Crab Claw, name of the new restaurant, will be open every day but Monday from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m., with both lunch and dinner served at prices affordable to all. Lunch will be served beginning at 11 a.m. and dinner will be served beginning at 3 p.m. The diningroom and grill room, which accommodates approxi- mately 100 persons is furnished in solid light oak and is highlighted by earth tones of brown and beige. Paintings and prints featuring scenes from the Chesapeake or the New England Shore add to the seafood house atmosphere. A huge satellite mounted on the roof provides programs from all parts of the world and raw clam and oyster bars afford customers to order then sit and watch the clams or oysters shucked and prepared for serving. All food served at the Crab Claw is prepared on the premises and is fresh daily. Nothing is frozen and the large, all-stainless steel kitchen has a 20-foot stainless steel sink at one end where all live crabs are placed then washed and iced down. The ice makes them numb before they are steamed for serving to customers. Huge broilers accommo- date preparation of the food and two huge walk in freezers hold the live seafood when it is brought in by truck. The Crab Claw will feature as its specialty - ‘crabs’ - but the menu also includes items for everyone. But all diners are advised “B.Y.0.B.” - that’s right - “Bring Your Own Bottle.”” The Crab Claw does not have a liquor license, but will provide diners with set-ups if desired. Their menu is best described as ‘Menuficent” at prices for the entire family. Specialties include steamed crabs, steamed shrimp, steamed stone crab claws, lobster-crabs, steamed Maine jumbo crabs or blue crab claws, all seasoned with Bankovich’s own Chesapeake spice. The luncheon menu includes sandwiches of crabcake, softshell crab, fish fillet, snow crab salad, pile high ham or salami or sirloin burger. all served on a hard roll with potato chips and cole slaw; stews, chowders or soups; steamed clams, steamed mussels or steamed oysters. raw clam or oyster bar; variety of seafood appetizers, side dishes and delicious salads which for the light appetite are meals alone. Dinner entrees, served from 3 to 10 p.m., include stuffed flounder, fresh fish catch of the day, combination platter, Maryland crab bake, fried oysters, lobster tail, scallops, surf and turf, New York strip steak, Maine lobster and a New England bake of lobster, clams, hardshell crab, potato and corn on the cob (in season, of course). Soda, coffee, ice tea are the beverages unless one brings in their own alcoholic beverage. Desserts are prepared on the premises as is everything else and they are equally delicious. If you have been to a Maryland or New England Seafood House, _ come to the Crab Claw and compare. “Perfection is the Bankovich motto.” If you have never been to a Shore seafood house, now is the ‘ime to try dining at one in your own community. Many area residents enjoy visiting New York City periodically to see a Broadway show or to shop at such stores as Macy’s or Gimbel’s. Some travel to New York simply to see the ‘“‘sights.” Whatever the reason for the trip, visitors can find an entertaining, educational and inexpensive tour available to them. This tour is the NBC Studio Tour (New York). The tour affords people the. opportunity to find out what goes on behind the scenes of a radio and television studio, the latest in video effects and technology, and the early history of the NBC broadcasting network. Visitors are escorted throughout the facility by a knowledgeable NBC guide who is willing to answer any questions posed. The tour is the chance to find out about NBC from its origins to the season’s hit shows. There is even a special photo gallery in the studio that reflects the network of yesterday and today. People on tour visit such famous sets as “The Today Show,” “NBC Nightly News,’’ the control room of WNBC-AM Radio, videotape room, makeup room, and the famous Studio 8H-currently the home of ‘Saturday Night Live,” and ‘‘The David Letterman Show.” The Mini-Studio is set up to show those interested how one looks on camera, how ‘“The Tonight Show’’ is produced, how sound effects operate, and how graphics are used on the TV monitor. Visitors also discover how a major network covers a main sports event using the new ‘Van Go” mobile unit. The NBC Radio and Television Studio Tour is located in the RCA Building, Rockefeller Center, in the heart of New York City. The tour is one of a working facility so often the bn throughout the course of the our. Tickets are sold on a first-come- first-served basis so it is advised to get to Rockefeller Plaza early to be assured of a reservation. The tour lasts approximately an hour and departs at regular intervals from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The NBC Tour in New York is not as eleaborate as the one in California, but it is well worth the time and effort. Another point of interest, not far from the NBC Studio Tour, is the Museum of Broadcasting. It houses a radio collection beginning with a 1920 broadcast by Franklin d. Roosevelt, an eye witness account of the Hindenburg disaster, reports of the dropping of the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, and many other events in news, sports, public affairs, and entertainment. The Museum’s television collections include such Golden Age TV dramas as “Marty,” ‘Requiem of a Heavyweight,” “the Shakespeare Plays,” “Civilization” and “The Ascent of Man.” Ed Sullivan, the Beatles, Lucille Ball and the like live again at the Museum. A computer-generated card catalog lists 10,000 radio and 8000 television programs available to the public. Twenty-three custom-built consoles, each equipped with a for viewing or listening, to individually-selected programs. (Debbey Wysocki is the entertainment writer for The Dallas Post. Her column appears weekly.) (The following Back Mountain couples have applied for marriage licenses at the Luzerne County Courthouse during the past week: ) HAROLD S. STOUT, 49 Staub Rd., Trucksville, and HEIKE BERN- HARDT, 1313 Murray St., Forty Fort. CHRISTOPHER TROY GORDON, RD 2, Box 87, Harvey’s Lake, to DENISE K. MAHONEY, RD 1, Box 276K, Sweet Valley. DOUGLAS GALLUP, 179 Main St., Dallas, to, BRENDA KORMIS, RD 5, Shavertown. WILLIAM C. REINERT, 35 N. Pioneer Ave., Shavertown, to CAROLE A. PALEY, 9 Woodcrest Dr., Wilkes-Barre. ROBERT S. WINEMAN, 201 Val- lley View Park, Dallas, to LINDA COOLBAUGH, 201 Valley View Park, Dallas. DAVID A. BUTLER, RD 1, Box 25, Noxen, to POLLY ANNE SWEP- STON, RD 1, Box 447, Dallas. GERARD DEAN CHOPKA, RD 1, Box 22C, Sweet Valley, to LORI ANN DOMINICK, 73 LaGrange St., Pittston. ROBERT L. SCRANAGE, RD 1, Box 28B, Harvey's Lake, to JOANNE ELICK, 327 No. Main St., Plains. EDWARD J. HANN, 148 Parrish St., Dallas, to NANCY E. SHEL- DON, Pellam Terrace, RD 1, Dallas. ARTHUR PIMM, Box 58, RD 2, Harvey’s Lake, to REGINA PIMM, Rr. 88 Dana St., Forty Fort. CLARENCE R. RESEIGH, P.O. Box 43, Dallas, to DENISE J. CAVE, RD 1, Box 33, Dallas. Births (The following Back Mountain couple announced a birth this past week: ) and DEBORAH, 11 Westminster Drive, Dallas, a son, Friday, April 25. Visgilio named to committee Thomas Visgilio, associate profes- sor of philosophy and director of the gerontology program at King’s Col- lege, has been appointed to the Standards Committee of the Asso- ciation for Gerontology in Higher Education. The 12-member national commit- tee was established to formulate and implement a set of standards which will be used to assess all The set of standards adopted by the Committee will eventually be used programs will be accredited by the The Committee is expected to nn .E annual meeting of the natinal asso- ciation to be held next March in Boston. : Visgilio, a resident of Shavertown, was appointed to the national com- mittee by William Hayes, president- elect of the Association for Geron- tology in Higher Education and director of the gerontology center at Wichita State University. Visgilio is King’s representative for the national organization, which includes representatives from 270 colleges and universities in the country. Visgilio earned his Bachelor’s degree from Georgetown University and his Master’s degree from For- dham University. STERLING SILVER JEWELRY (NECKLACE CHAIN OR BRACELET) OFFER EXPIRES 5/31/86 Vote vy 20th se of othod to disPO sible met sses, o3pOn ntials oT by 1 lic in ta Oo ® @ be