12 The Dallas Post Dallas, PA Wednesday, January 3, 1990 alendar Exhibits “The Lost Murals and Early Works of Franz Kline”, MacDonald Art Gal- lery, College Misericordia, Dallas, opening January 9. Kline was born in Wilkes-Barre and later moved to Greenwich Village, where he became a major artist of the New York School. Featured in the show will be murals recovered from the paneling of aroller- skatingrink in Lehighton. The show will continue through January 30. Open to the public, free of charge. Gallery hours are Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, 12-5 p.m. and 6-8 p.m.; Friday, 12-5 p.m.; Saturday and Sun- day, 1-5 p.m. Closed Monday. “Anthracite Years.” Permanent exhibit, from the formation of coal to the finished product. Wyoming Histori- cal and Geological Museum, rear of the Osterhout Free Library, 71 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre. Tuesday through Friday, noon to 4 p.m.; Satur- day, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. At the Kirby “Mammoth Follies”, part of the Children’s Theatre Series. Thursday, Jan. 11 at 6 p.m. $6.50 and $5.50. Show at 10 a.m. available for groups of 20 or more, with tickets at $3.50 each. Available on a first-come, first- served basis. For info, call 823-4599. Presented by the Kirby Center. “Music in Motion,” continuing concertseries. Featured performances include: “Hornsignal,” orchestra sol- lists present Hayden, Friday, Jan. 19 at 8 p.m.; “A Night of Naples,” featur- ing chorus and orchestra, Saturday, Feb. 24 at 8 p.m.; Shura Cherkassky, guest pianist, Saturday, March 31, at 8 p.m. Stephen Burns, trumpeter fea- tured in season finale, Friday, April 27. KidStuff “The Wizard of Oz”, Music Box Dinner Theatre, Hughes St., Swoy- ersville, Jan. 12-14 and Jan. 19-21. School day performances, Jan. 19. Fridays, 6 p.m.; Sundays, 1 and5 p.m. School day performances 10 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. McDonald's meals are served at all performances. For more info and to make reservations or pur- chase “Little People’s Passes”, call - the box office at 283-2195, Tuesdays through Saturdays, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Complete season brochures are also available. The Music Box Dinner Play- house, 196 Hughes St., Swoyersville. Community The Fellowship Evangelical Free Church, Hildebrandt Rd., Dallas, announces an additional worship serv- ice. Beginning Sunday, Jan. 7, the Sunday morning schedule will be as follows: 8:30 a.m. worship; 9:45 a.m. Sunday School; 11 a.m. Worship. Special Events “The Footsteps of Vincent Van Gogh,” Sordoni Art Gallery, Wilkes College sponsors 10-day tour of Hol- land, including The Holland Van Gogh exhibition and specially arranged meetings. Escort is Jeanne Slavin, a Holland native, living in the Wyoming Valley. Tour leaves April 29 and re- turns May 9, 1990. For more info, call Sordoni Art Gallery at Wilkes College, 824-4652, ext. 4325. Students in Grades 9-12 will ex- perience the basics of careers in art education, fine art and commercial art fields. Visiting artists tell about their day-to-day schedules and their edu- cation, a college student panel; and a practical “hands-on” experience includ- ing an actual teaching experienceon a 1-1 basis. It will be an intense 11 hours! This workshop is sponsored by Sue Hand's Imagery, Dallas and the Wyoming Valley Art League. Cost $15.00. Forfurtherinfo, call Sue Hand, 675-5094 or Dorothy Ann Searfoss, 333-4837. Stage “Mass Appeal” Jan. 26,27,28, Feb. 2,3,4. Friday and Saturday perform- ances 8 p.m.; Sunday performances 7 p.m. Showcase Theatre, 54 Tunkhan- nock Ave., Exeter. Tickets are $2.50. For info, call 654-2555. Health The Wilkes-Barre Family YMCA is now offering an exercise class for pre-natal and post-natal women. The class will include both water and land exercise, also included in the post- natal will be land exercise for mother and baby. The class is directed by a certified “YMCA You & Me Baby” in- structor. The class will begin on Janu- ary 11. For more information call the Wilkes-Barre YMCA at 823-2191. Music The Community Concert Asso- ciation of Scranton 1989/90 season will include Los Romeros, a classical guitar quartet on Feb. 18, 1990; and the Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre on April 7, 1990. Subscriptions for the season and tickets for individual concerts are available through the Community Concerts office and may be obtained by writing or calling 404 N. Washing- ton Ave., Scranton, 18503, 342-4137. Byard Lancaster and the Jazz- Versity Dance Band, Tuesday, Jan. 9, 8 p.m. in the Buckingham Perform- ing Arts Center at Wyoming Seminary, Sprague Avenue, Kingston. The Music ("The Hoyt Family had importance in U.S. History. Find out how the ) Martins, Elstons, Ides, and Labars and others are related to the Hoyts. Two Sons of Mary Hoyt were nominated for the U.S. Presidency. Three Hoyts were Governor's in different states at one time. Learn of this history, subscribe to: The Hoyt Quarterly Newsletter $15.00 per year Arthur Hoyt Prutzman 1W. Hoyt Street Kingston, PA 18704 287-1014 - Hand Knit Sweaters - Yarns - Gifts - Knitting Lessons Taking Special Sweater Orders Order Now For Valentine's Day! Bh sherds Prid 842 Wyoming Ave., Forty Fort 288-5020 | January Special Colorful Arrangements $25.00 Value For $18.95 822-1128 1280 Wyoming Ave., Forty-Fort, PA « 288-3671 The Cultural Society of Northeastern Pennsylvania will present a Winter Film Festival at the Dorothy Dickson Darte Centeron the campus of Wilkes College. Special projection equipment will be installed for the event which will offer screen- ings of the following films: Wednesday, Jan. 17, 8 p.m., Michel Deville’s celebrated sex comedy “LA Lectrice” (France, 1989) with Miou-Miou, Chris- tian Ruche, and Sylvie Laport. La Lectrice or “The Reader” is the multilayered tale of ayoung woman who offers her services as a professional reader. Her clientele includes a paraplegic youth raging with adolescent desires, a lively young girl ne- glected by her mother, a jittery businessman whose passion- ate outbursts are all-too-hast- ily relieved, and a retired judge teric. The heroine's unpredi- catable house calls becomes an adventure in self discovery as she is willing to confront just about any experience either on or off the page. The literary menu is a tasty assortment ranging from Lewis Carroll to Karl Marx to the Marquis de Sade. Thursday, Jan. 18, 8 p.m. Euzhan Palcy’s “A Dry White Season” (USA/South Africa, 1989) with Marlon Brando, Donald Sutherland, Susan Sarandon, and Janet Suzman. Winner of the special Jury Award at Cannes, “A Dry White [ Season”isa harrowing account of the violent suppression of blacks in South Africa. The story concerns how one white South African (Donald Sutherland) loses his naivete after his gard- son are tortured and murdered by government security forces for no apparent reason. Susan Sarandon plays a cynical jour- with a fondness for the eso- ner and his gardner’s wife and Ny A SCENE FROM LA LECTRICE (THE READER) - Marie (Miou-Miou, left) and the general's widow (Maria Casares, right) in La Lectrice, Michel Deville's playfully sophisticated comedy about the liberating pleasures of literature, which will be shown during the Winter Film Festival at the Dorothy Dickson Darte Center at Wilkes College. Cultural Society schedules Winter Film Festival nalist who helps investigate the « murders. And the film marks the return of the inimitable Marlon Brando who, as a lib- eral lawyer, injects gallows humor into the proceedings. “In most places, justice and the law are distant cousins,” he drawls. “Here in South Africa, they're not on speaking terms.” Saturday, Jan. 20, Claude Chabrol's “Story of Women” (France, 1989) with Isabelle Hup- pert and Francois Cluzet. Win- ner of the New York and Los Angeles Film Critics’ Award as Best Picture of the Year, “Story of Women” is the true story of Marie Latour, who in 1945 be- came the last woman to be guil- lotined in France. Much more than a true crime and punish- ment story, “Story of Women" is a vision of war as’ bourgeois hypocrisy write large. Marie's personal misdeeds take on a troubling ambivalence in the light of far vaster crimes per- petuated in the name of the na- tion. Tickets are now on sale at the Jewish Community Center in Wilkes-Barre and the Dorothy Dickson Darte box-office. Music Department-sponsored event, which is free to the public, features jazz virtu- oso Byard Lancaster who is known for his prowess on the sax, clarinet and flute. Endless Mountains Barbershop- pers Concert, Saturday, Jan. 20, 7:30 p.m. at St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Rte. 6, by Shadowbrook in Tunkhan-- nock. Tickets $4.00 adults; $2.00 for students. Available from church members and barbershoppers, as well as at the door. Refreshments will be served. Proceeds go towards the cost of rebuilding the dike that protects the church from the Tunkhannock Creek. The “Poets” rock and roll band, featuring Frankie and the Corvettes. Saturday, Jan. 20, 9 p.m.-1 a.m. at Bishop O'Reilly Athletic Center, King- ston. Dance sponsored by the Blue and Gold Club. Public is invited. For info call 779-4795, 675-0807; 283- . 0937 or 287-5358. Wilkes-Barre Ballet classes to begin locally Linda Dougher Classes in ballet, pointe, jazz and tap resume Tuesday, Jan. 2 at the Wilkes-Barre and Back Moun- tain schools of the Wilkes-Barre Ballet Theatre. Ms. Linda Dougher senior fac- . ulty member of the Wilkes-Barre Ballet Theatre School instructs intermediate and advanced classes in ballet and pointe. She also teaches classes in jazz and tap. A graduate and former member of Dance Educators of America, Ms. Dougher made her professional debut with the Wilkes-Barre Ballet Theatre Company in 1986 and is a native of Scranton, Pa. Prior to joining the company and school she studied ballet, jazz and tap under the director of Helen Gaus, She has also studied ballet with David Howard, Joseph Lev- inoff, David Keener and Keith Martin; jazz with Gus Giordano; and tap with Charles Kelly. Classes are offered in creative movement, pre-ballet, ballet, pointe, jazz and tap; and are available to three year old to adult. To enroll or for more information please call 824-8602. . Meetings The Tough Love Parent Support Group meets each Tuesday, from 7 p.m.to 9p.m. atthe Shavertown United Methodist Church, 163 N. Pioneer Ave., Shavertown. For more informa- tion call 675-0372. 0% oft Everything In Store Except Valentine's Day, St. Patrick's Day, Easter and Lights 697 Market St., Kingston 288-0873 Mon. - Wed. - Thurs. 9:30 - 8:30 Tues. - Fri. 9:30 - 6:00 * Sat. 9:30 - 5:30 "WE'RE HERE" @ ad Expecting a baby? You're going to need help! We cook dinner, fold laundry, run errands and help with the baby —whatever you need! Call for more information and a free brochure. Gift certificates available. M@ETHERTIME POSTPARTUM HOME CARE Sandra J. Porasky, 2 Carol A. Hynoski, R.N. 717735-8831 24 FLOOR CRAFTERS HAS RELOCATED TO 2-4 SOUTH MAIN STREET, SHAVERTOWN (BELOW RAVES), AS OF JANUARY 1, 1990 "WATCH FOR OUR GRAND OPENING" FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PHONE 693-3048 ¢ Cc. BUTLER EDWARDS, PROP. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers