16 Dallas Post Dallas, PA Wednesday, February 14, 2001 CALENDAR CLuBs/GRouPsS COMMUNITY ACOA (Adult Children of Ad- dictions) and other dysfunction- al families Support Group meet- ings are held for one hour every Tues. at 8 p.m. and every Sat. at 6:30 p.m. at Clearbrook Bldg. Wyoming Ave., Forty Fort. Atten- dees should park and enter from rear of building. SUPPORT GROUP MEET- INGS, for ACOA (Adult Children of Alcoholics) and other dysfunc- tional families are held every Sun., 8 p.m. Blue doors of Mercy Center at College Misericordia, Dallas. For more information, call the Help Line at 829-1341. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS meetings in the Back Mountain [OD-open discussion; OS-open speakers]: Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. (OD) at the Lehman Fire Hall, Lehman Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. (OD) at Loyalville Methodist Church. Friday, 8 p.m. (OD) at St. Therese’s Church Rectory, Pioneer and Davis St., Shaver- town. EATING DISORDERS: Per- sons interested in forming an eating disorder support group in the Back Mountain, please call 696-3688 and ask for Barbara. IDETOWN UM CHURCH COU- PLES CLUB meets every third SOUP SALE, Sat., Feb. 17, sponsored by Noxen-Monroe Sportsmen’s Ass'n. Ham & bean or vegetable beef soup for $3 per quart. Pick up between 4 and 6 p.m. Soup will also be available by the bowl. PANCAKE SUPPER, Sat., Feb. 24, 4-7 p.m., East Dallas United Methodist Church. Pancakes, sausage, eggs, pie and bever- ages. All you can eat. Tickets sold at the door. SD GIHEIRE KILBURN GALLERY, Sheehy Student Center, King's College, Wilkes-Barre. Through Feb. 23: “Susquehanna River Series: A Journey Through the Valley,” featuring works by the En Plein Air Society. For more informa- tion or gallery hours, call 208- 5966. STUDIO III CULTURAL CEN- TER, 175 Main St., Luzerne. Gallery hours are Tues. - Fri. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. or by appoint- ment. Through Feb. 28: Works including water colors, mixed media and oils by Studio III teachers, Marie Perks, Susan Teal and Daya. Back Mountain students in Oklahoma! at the Music Box Four students from the Back Mountain Area are playing a variety of roles in the Music Box Players production of Oklahoma. Donna Kaminski, 15, of Harvey's Lake is a sophomore at Lake-Lehman High School. There she par- ticipates in the school chorus and the debate team. At school and in community theatres, she has appeared in productions of Bye Bye Birdie, a Christmas Carol, The Wishing Tree and Alien Voices. Chelsea MacDougall, 13, is an 8th grade student at Lake-Lehman M.L.E.B. At school she partici- Music THE FOUR NATIONS EN- SEMBLE will present the music of 15th and 17th century Paris in “Love and Remembrance,” Thurs., Feb. 15 at 8 p.m., in the J. Carroll McCormick Campus Ministry Center at King's Col- lege. The performances will in- clude music from J. Ockeghem, F. Couperin, Marais and Ste. Colombe, and Claudin de Semi- sy. Free and open to the public. For further information, call the King's Student Activities Office at 208-5966 or visit the four Na- tions Ensemble’'s website at www.fournations.org. BLoobp DRIVE RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE needs volunteers, both profes- sional and non-professional; call 823-7161. Back Mountain blood collection dates/locations are: Feb. 21: Dallas UMC, Par- sonage St., Dallas, from 12:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Mar. 14: Col- lege Misericordia, 301 Lake St., Dallas, from 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. for toe kms] Kirby Center 71 Public Square, Wilkes-Barre, 826-1100, or Ticketmaster, 693-4100 or www.kirbycenter.org. SESAME STREET LIVE Feb. 27- Mar. 4. Tickets on sale now. > pates in field hockey, track and chorus. She has appeared in several plays at school and for the N.E. Junior Players including Cinderella, Winnie The Pooh, The Jungle Book, Aladdin and Beauty and The Beast. Chelsea studies dance and attended the School of Performing Arts in Philadelphia during the summer of 2000. Nicole Sutton of Dallas, 17, is a senior at Dallas Area High School. There she is a member of the Saturday of each month Jan. through June and Sept. through ~ Dec. New members are always welcome. OUTDOORS GREAT BACKYARD BIRD COUNT will be conducted Feb. HEALTH BACK MOUNTAIN FREE MED- ICAL CLINIC, Fridays at St. S.P.AW.N. (Society of Poets and Writers of the Northeast) meeting. Third Sat. of each month. Call Steve at 639-2320 for more information. Therese’s Church, lower level, cor- ner of Pioneer and Davis St., Shavertown, welcomes all who are in need of medical care by compe- tent doctors, nurses and staff. If chorus, the select chorus, the yearbook staff, the Student Council, and the National Honor Society. She has played numerous roles with the N.E. Junior Players in their productions of The Wizard of Oz and Toy Camp. At the Music Box, she has appeared in Cinderella. She hopes to major in Business and Theatre in college next year. 16-19. Anyone interested is in- vited to count and report birds as part of a national effort to track species distribution. For information, go to www.bird- uninsured or underinsured, we care to help. 6:30 p.m. Confiden- tiality assured. Craig Lee thomas, 14, is a 9th grade student at Lake-Lehman High School. He has appeared in nu- merous shows at the Music Box and the Little Theatre and is a member of the Northeast Choral Soci- ety. Craig has also acted professionally in numerous National Television commercials, appeared in the musical Jubilee at Carnegie Hall, and has hosted on Saturday mornings for the Discovery Chan- source.org. FISHERMAN'S FLEA MAR- KET, Feb. 18, Wilkes-Barre Twp. Firehouse off East SPECIAL EVENTS. SWETLAND HOMESTEAD, the recently renovated historic home re-opens for tours. 885 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming. Thurs. and Fri, 1-4 p.m.; Sat. and Sun.,11 a.m.-4 p.m. $3; children 12 and under, $1. 823-9011. STAR-GAZING, Friedman Ob- servatory at Penn. State Wilkes- Barre, begins 8 p.m. on clear Wed. and Fri. nights. Sessions are free and open to the public. Groups of 10 or more are asked to call for reservations. For more infermation, call 675-9278; or leave a message at the Obser- vatory at 675-9149. Rp Nels ‘OKLAHOMA!", MUSIC BOX DINNER PLAYHOUSE, Swoy- ersville. Opens Feb. 8. Thurs., Fri.,, and Sat., dinner at 6:30 p.m., curtain at 8 p.m.; Sunday, buffet at 1:45 p.m.. curtain at 3:15 p.m. Tickets are $30 for adults, $22 for children. Show only: $17 adults, $15 students, $13 children. For more informa- tion call 283-2195 or 1-800-698- 7529 or www.musicbox.org. Feb. 8-11, 15-18, and 22-25. nel. See calendar listing for show times. Picture above from left: Chelsea MacDougall, Craig Lee Thomas, Donna Kaminski and Nicole Sutton appear in Oklahoma! at The Music Box. STAGE ‘THEY'RE PLAYING OUR SONG,’ Wed., Feb. 21 and Sat., Feb. 24 at 8 p.m. in the King's College Theatre, located in the Administration Building Audito- rium. General admission $5, students and senior citizens $3, King’s College students free. Call 208-5825 for reservations. Northampton St. New and used boats will be on display along with 25 fishing tackle vendors, with new, used and antuque- STAGE ‘THE SOUND OF MUSIC’ at the Scranton Cultural Center, Fri., Feb. 23 at 8 p.m.; Sat., Feb. 24 at 2 & 8 p.m.; Sun., Feb. 25 at 2 & 7:30 p.m. Tickets on sale at the box office and Ticketmas- ter locations; to charge by phone, call 693-4100 or order online at ticketmaster.com CROSSWORD CORNER 101 Wax device 103 Praise 105 Summon mommy 106 Enthusiastic 53 32 Across’ co-star ACROSS 1 Type of file 5 Broadway 56 Moun- org. taineers’ 10 Bog gear 15 — Cass 59 “Darn!” review 19 Game 61 Envelope 108 Hamlet's ending? abbr. line 20 Prentiss or 63 Indeed 113 “Islands in Poundstone 65 Egyptian the —" 21 Kind of Nobelist "83 hit) quartz 66 “Battle Cry” rame of 22 Vizquel of author mind baseball 67 Alibi 116 “Nonsense!” 23 Approxi- 68 Coaching 117 Terrible mately legend 118 Boar's 25 Puzzling 72 Came by beloved problem 73 Exclude 120 Rigatoni 26 “Peter Pan" 74 Actress relative 123 Bridal path? 127 Brainchild 128 Hebrew text 115 Hagen 75 Misjudge 76 “Make a pooch 27 Hester Prynne’s kid 4 Give it 96 Sgt. or cpl. one's awl? § Cal. page 6 Guitarist Sussman 7 Acted promptly? 8 Besides 9 Ecclesiastic 10 Cartog- rapher’s 43 Bulldogs 44 A shape 97 Solid that stops circle traffic 98 New York 49 Tiny Tom city 50 Soap opera, 100 Polo's place 102 Bk. conven- ience 104 — -wop 107 Singer Sheena 109 Literary pseudonym 110 Bright inventor? 111 Dictator 112 Pyramus’ Elizabeth paramour 62 Kickoff 113 Move 64 Muppet like drummer 51 Across 68 Quiet 114 “Archie” e.g. 52 Cassius’ cohort 54 Pupil's place 55 Medieval menial 57 Bouquet 58 Mississippi port 60 Gary and creation 11 Give it — (try) 12 Hasty 13 That's no _ built 14 Grammy winner Woody 15 Dragon or Dracula 28 Kids connect them 32 James of “Misery” 35 Clods 38 Owl or eagle 40 New Hamp- shire's motto 45 — -do-well 46 Shelley showcase 47 Lauder powder 48 Squealers 51 Zodiac crustacean decision!” 80 Big —, CA 81 “What —, a mind reader?” 82 Appearance 83 Royal abbr. 84 Most meager 86 Pres., e.g. 87 Delhi dress 88 Assail 90 Author Grafton 91 Cry over a mouse? 92 Lena of “Havana” 93 Showy shrub 95 High-toned 99 Couch 131 Survival option 134 “Oh, woe!” 135 Honshu metropolis 136 Furry fisherman 137 Tourist isle 138 Riga resident 139 Katmandu's country 140 Peter of Herman's Hermits 141 List ender DOWN 1 Interstate exit 2 — vera 3 Writer Paretsky 16 Words for a wim 17 Lord's lair 18 Spirited steed 24 Norwegian name 29 Disconso- late 33 Humorist Buchwald 34 Tide type 36 Earliest 37 Word with cow or horse 39 Acts like a chicken 40 Tennis Wells 42 Donkey doc partner? 69 Hosts 70 Halloween reeting 71 Ancient deity 73 Shake- spearean poi 78 Air bear? 79 Flexed, as muscles 85 Born 87 Italian wine 88 “The Jungle Book” bear 89 Glum drop? 94 Parental sibling character 117 Push-button predeces- sor 119 Envelop 121 Schipa or Jackson 122 Up on 124 Flatten a fly 125 Kedrova of “Zorba the Greek” 126 Runner Zatopek 129 Record abbr. 130 Smith or Foster 132 Novelist Kesey 133 Vein contents 1. 32 937.14 uy? 5 8 |9 10 {11 [12 13 {14 15 [16 [17 [18 19 20 21 22 23 27 25 26 31 ACROSS 1 Curry or 6 § 19 {10.11 Rice 4 Don't just sit there 7 Tutor 12 “Exodus” name 13 Holler 14 Mortal 15 Card-table call 16 Ace 18 Work with 19 Basins’ acces- sories 20 Presen- tation 22 Work unit 23 Waikiki is there 27 Conclusion 29 Pearl's home 31 Dickens title start 34 Biting 35 Utter confusion 37 Resort 38 Scoundrels 39 Make a 2 decision 41 Colonial nee- dle-wielder 45 Knapsack part target 47 WWF Boasted surface 6 Tippecanoe's 48 Limbo, to mate astronomers? 7 Anything but 52 Pub order that 53 More than one 8 Scamper spoke 9 To love (Lat) 54 Dog's doc 10 Golfer 55 Weeding tool Woosnam 56 Winning 57 Raw rock 58 Moreover DOWN 1 Iberian river March 17 celebrants 3 4 Liniment’s 5 “Rebel Without a Cause” actor 24 Put away - 26 City area, joc- talking 36 Gypsy - 37 Less fresh 40 Utah city 42 Normandy beachhead 43 Beauty parlor 44 Trusty mount 45 Late-braking development 46 Tennis star Sampras 48 Car-front protector 49 - -di-dah 50 Citric quaff 51 Spy novel org. 11 Away from SSW 17 Thus 21 “The Time Machine” author 23 “Sesame Street” cur- mudgeon 25 Opposite of him ularly 28 Teachers’ org. 30 Shrill bark 31 Rudimen-tary lessons 32 “- With Mussolini” 33 Keep THE INTERNATIONAL challenger CROSSNUMBER GAME word on page 2 Time Answers to cross- DIRECTIONS: I Li Fill each square with a number, one through nine. J) Aoae- » Horizontal squares should add to totals on right. Vertical squares should add to totals on bottom. « Diagonal squares through center should add to total in upper and lower right. 11 3 14 Today's Challenge 22 Time 10 Minutes 2 8 seconds 29 Your Working : 10 Minutes Seconds R13 J20 1126518 ©2001 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved. Call to Advertise » 675-5211 a Ee Ec OEE Lt i ge TT Any photo taken by a Post photographer is available in color. Stop by, call or mail in the form ' Date photo appeared.............c.cussussssssnnssnssanssasssnsnas Pagef:.....c.ceesr esse. eesexeinavien assessssssssssvamssssessssssenssmamsssas Brief description............c.ccc...... esssstsanmssasersuasseseneununs tackle to buy, trade or sell. Ad- mission cost is $1. Hours are 10 am till 4 pm. Want A Picture in Color?. "SIZES AND PRICES: 5X7” - $124 TAX » 8”X10” - $15+TAX below. Please make——(qty.) copies in this size: 5x7 8x10 IN BITIC.aesuensncassnencsansnsnsesssnsssssnnsnasssssssasssssusssunanannnananans CitY..ceeeernnssees...a. State PIO IO. .ceerrnrannneerannsessssusssssnssnssenusnsnasssnanasssunanssasnnnns Please enclose payment with order. Send to: The Dallas Post, P.O. Box 366, Dallas, PA 18612 Call 675-5211 if you have questions.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers