The Dallas Post Dallas, PA Thursday, July 25, 2002 CALENDAR Calendar items are published free of charge. Generally, items will ap- pear the two weeks prior to an event. To submit material, send it to the Dallas Post P.O. Box 366, Dallas PA 18162, or bring it to our office at 45 Main Road, Dallas. Deadline is Friday at 3 p.m. ETI Sat. July 27 - FAMILY STYLE HAM SUPPER,4:30-6:30 p.m. at the Sweet Valley Fire Hall, Main Road, Sweet Valley. Takeouts at 4 p.m. $7 for adults, $3.50 for children six thru 12 yrs of age. Free children under 5 yrs. All takeouts $7. July 28-August 4 - VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL, Crusin the Amazon, “A Jungle Journey to Discover Jesus” begins each night at 6:30 p.m. with a FunFair Friday night. Sweet Valley Church of Christ 5439 Main Rd., Sweet Valley. Call 477-2320 for info. July 31 - THE BACK MOUNTAIN SUMMER BIBLE STUDY SE- RIES examining the Gospel of Mark will continue with Monsign- or Peter Crynes, St. Therese’s Church, Shavertown as presen- ter. The Bible study series is pre- sented each Wednesday at noon and again at 7 p.m. at the new St. paul’s Lutheran Church, on Route #118, Dallas. Everyone is invited. ' Sat. August 3 - HOME MADE ICE CREAM SOCIAL 4:30-6:30 p.m. hosted by the ladies of the Sweet Valley Fire Co. Ladies Auxiliary. Held at at the Sweet Valley Fire Hall, Main Rd., Sweet Valley. In- cluded in the menu will be sand- wiches, cake and beverages. 7 1 OUTDOORS JULY ACTIVITIES AT FRANCES SLOCUM , 7 p.m. Friday, July 26; Damsel and Dragons, (ages 7-11), 2 p.m. Saturday, July 27 and North Country Stories and Songs, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, July 27. Activities take place at the Campground Amphitheater. In case of rain, programs are can- celled. July 25 - UCA COMMUTER CAMP sponsored by the All Star Cheer- leaders from the Lake-Lehman High School. Camp will be from 9 ~~ a.m.-3 p.m at the Lake-Noxen El- © ementary School at Harvey's Lake. To register call 1-888- CHEERUCA. For further info call Sandy at 477-3979 or 256-7639. Sat. July 27 - NORTH BRANCH LAND TRUST CANOE TRIP, on the Susquehanna River. Trip will be led by David Buck of Endless Mountain Outfitters. Paddle be- gins at 10 a.m. at Sugar Run in Bradford County and end at Laceyville in Wyoming County. Bring your own lunch. For more info call NLBT 696-5545 or e- mail info @nblt.org. Space is lim- ited. KIDSTUFF STORY TIME 10-11 a.m. For ages three to five. Hoyt Library, 284 Wyoming Ave., Kingston. Tues- days through July 30. Through July - “HOLA AMI- GOS,” 9 a.m. Basic Spanish classes for ages 7 to 11 using poems, songs, hands-on activi- ties. Tudor Cafe, 651 Wyoming ave, Kingston. $64. 288-9697. Send The Dallas Post to a friend. It makes a great gift. Call 675-5211 for information. Jie A Community | August 3 - CAR SHOW, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at the Luzerne County Fair- grounds on Rt. 118 in Lehman. All proceeds will go to the SPCA. Prizes will be awarded. For more info, contact Bob at 477-3218 or Mike at 477-3453. August 4-9 - NEIGHBORHOOD BIBLE TIME YOUTH CRUSADE Cross Creek Community church, 370 Carverton Road, Trucksville. Crusade. The daily time period of Neighborhood Bible Time is from 6:30-9 p.m. each evening, Sunday through Friday.Trans- portation will be provided to and from the Crusade. For more info call 696-0399. Wed. August 7 - ICE CREAM SO- CIAL 4-7 p.m. at East Dallas U.M. Church, located on Lower DeMunds Road. Menu consists hotdogs, wimpie, potato salad, macaroni salad, beans, cake, ice cream and beverage. Sat., August 10 - NITE AT THE RACES presented by Kunkle Fire Company. Doors open 6:30 p.m. Races begin at 7 p.m. Kun- kle Social Hall, Kunkle-Alderson Road. $5 per person. $10 in- cludes horse and admission. Ad- mission includes hot dogs, wimp- ies, chips, pretzels and bever- ages. Call 675-3334 for more info. SllEXHIBITS L MACDONALD ART GALLERY. On the campus of-College Mis- ericordia. Gallery Hours are Tues.-Fri: Noon-5 pm; Tues., Wed. and Thurs.: 6 - 8 pm; Sat. and Sun.: 1- 5 pm. Free. EVERHART MUSEUM, Nay Aug Park, Scranton. Wed.-Sun. noon to 5 p.m.; Thursdays until 8 p.m. 346-7186. SORDONI ART GALLERY, 150 S. River St., Wilkes University, W- B. Open daily noon to 4:30 p.m. For info. call 408-4325. WYOMING HISTORICAL & GEO- LOGICAL SOCIETY, 49 S. Franklin St., W-B. Research li- brary. Museum with permanent exhibit on the anthracite era and local American Indians. Con- tact: 822-1727 or ww.whgs,org 2nd Annual Huntsville Days August 9, 10, T The Huntsville Christian Church will celebrate Huntsville Days Friday through Sunday, August 9- 11. The event will commemorate the history of the community of Huntsville. Activities will begin Friday, with a Silent Auction featuring donated baskets of goodies from area businesses. There will be a Fellowship Dinner to be shared by the churches of Huntsville. Following the dinner, the praise band from the Huntsville Christian Church, Twice Blessed, will perform from 7:30-8:30 p.m. On Saturday, the activities will begin at noon with historical wagon rides around the Huntsville area. Other activities will include a Children’s Auction, old-fashioned games, an Apple Pie Baking Contest, Homemade Craft Auction and a Chicken Barbeque from 4-6 p.m. There also will be two praise bands playing during the afternoon festivities, as well as a Barbershop Quartet from the area. The weekend will be rounded out on Sunday morning with a joint worship service at the Huntsville Methodist Church at 10 a.m. followed by a Fellowship Hour. The public is invited to attend the activities. The Huntsville Christian Church is located one block west of the Huntsville Dam off Huntsville Road in Dallas. For more informa- tion, call the church office at 675-0611. Above, Rick Yanalunas uses his expertise to auc- tion craft items during the event. At right, Jack Kaleta (on left) and Gary Miller (on right) prepare chickens for last year’s Huntsville Days Celebration. Through August 16 - SUMMER THEATRE WORKSHOP for chil- dren ages 8-13 will be conduct- ed by The Music Box Players 9 a.m.-12 noon, Mondays, - Wednesdays, and Fridays, at the Music Box Dinner Play- house, 196 Hughes St., Swoy- ersville. Kevin Costley will head a staff of Music Box profession- als who will teach children basic techniques of acting, mime, and improvisation. Fee per child is $150, and family rates are avail- able. For info and enrollment, call 283-2195 or 800-698-PLAY. Thurs. August 8 & 9 - “LES MIS- ERABLES”, 8 p.m. at the Buck- ingham Performing Arts Center, Sprague Ave. Kingston. For more info call The Performing Arts Institute at 270-2186. Victor Liva will be Guest Conductor at July 27 PAI performances Victor Liva, whose family name is synonymous with music in the Wyoming Valley, will conduct PAI's chamber and symphony or- chestras this Saturday, July 27, at 8 p.m. in the Great Hall, 228 Wyoming Avenue, Kingston. For home # or toll free 1-800 ¥& The Performing Arts Institute (PAI) of Wyoming Seminary will feature music by Brahams and Mozart under the baton of Victor Liva Saturday, July 27, at 8 p.m. at the Great Hall, 228 Wyoming Ave., Kingston. A native of the area whose fam- ily name has long been associat- ed with music in the Wyoming Valley, Victor Liva often returns to PAI to conduct its symphony and chamber orchestras. His late father, Ferdinand Liva, trained many musicians in the area, in- cluding his own children, and founded what later became the Northeastern Pennsylvania Phil- harmonic. The family’s five chil- dren, including Victor, became musicians in their own right and later moved on to great careers. Currently the Director of Or- chestral Studies at Northern Ari- zona University, Liva also directs the orchestra and will soon com- plete his doctorate in orchestral conducting at the University of South Carolina, Columbia. Beginning at 8 p.m. on Satur- day, Liva will lead the Chamber Orchestra in works by Mozart (Divertimento K138) and Arensky (Variations on a Theme by Tchaikovsky). He will also con- duct the Symphony Orchestra, featuring Symphony No. 1 by Brahams and Suite by Arthur Foote. Rounding out Saturday evening's concerts will be perfor- mances by the Masterworks Chorale and the Institute Cho- rus, both under the baton of Alan Baker, director of the Young Artists program at PAI. Currently on the faculty of Bloomsburg University, Dr. Baker also con- ducts the Choral Society of Northeastern Pennsylvania and the Wyoming Valley Children’s Chorus. He is the music director of the Lyric Consort, a profes- sional vocal ensemble that per- forms regionally, and has record- ed for CDs as well as for radio and television. Saturday evening's concerts will be preceded on Friday, July 26, by performances of the Wind Ensemble, Jazz Ensemble, and Young Artists at 8 p.m. at the Buckingham Performing Arts Center, North Sprague Ave. in Kingston. James Wortley, con- ductor of the Wind Ensemble, is the Head of Brass, Percussion and Music Technology at Eton College (England), where he founded ‘the jazz and technology programs. In demand as an adju- dicator, he coaches the brass section of the National Schools’ Symphony Orchestra of Great Britain and is a trombone player with the BBC Orchestra in Scot- land. Perry Orfanella, who will con- duct the Jazz Ensemble, is a freelance bass player and studio musician in Florida. A graduate of the Hartt School of Music, he brings with him 14 years of expe- rience - from the Encore Music Camp of Pennsylvania. The weekend will culminate in a full-scale Dance Company pro- duction on Sunday, July 28, at 3 p.m. in the Buckingham Per- forming Arts Center.The program features all students, faculty, and guest artists as well as live accompaniment by PAI musi- cians. All performances are open to the pubic and free of charge. Ample parking for all concerts is available adjacent to the Buck- ingham Performing Arts Center. For further information, call Nancy Sanderson at 270-2186 or visit the PAI website at www. wyomingseminary.org/pai Aug. 4 - THE JAMES AND OLIV- ER EVANS family reunion will . be held at the Orange Fire Hall 12:30 p.m.. Bring a dish. There will be a business meeting after lunch followed by games and a social hour. DALLAS CLASS OF 1982 will hold its 20-year reunion November 30 at The Appletree Terrace (Newberry Estates) in Dallas. Call Holly Hinkle Daubert at 675- 1714 or Peebug1988@aol.com. LAKE-LEHMAN CLASS OF 1982 is planning a 20 year reunion November 2 at Apple Tree ter- race, Newberry Estates, Dallas. All classmates are encouraged to register at CLASSMATES.COM. For more info contact Sharon at 477-5393. SPECIAL EVENTS Aug. 9-11 - 2nd ANNUAL HUNTSVILLE DAYS. Friday: Silent auction, Fellowship Din- ner, praise band. Saturday his- torical wagon rides begin at noon, Children’s Auction, old- fashioned games, an Apple Pie Baking Contest, Homemade Craft Auction and a Chicken Bar- beque from 4-6 p.m. Sunday: 10 a.m., joint worship service at Huntsville Methodist Church fol- lowed by a Fellowship Hour. Public invited to all activities. For more information, call 675-0611. THE PENNSYLVANIA AN- THRACITE HERITAGE MUSE- UM, McDade park, off Keyser Ave., in Scranton. Open Mon.- Sat. from 9 a.m.-5 p.m., and Sun., noon-5 p.m. Admission is charged. For more info. call 963-4804. SWETLAND HOMESTEAD, at 885 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming. Open Thurs.-Fri., 1-4 p.m.; Sat.-Sun., 11 a.m.- 4 p.m. Admission $3; children 12 and under, $1. For more info. call 823-9011. EE Sun. July 28 - EKUMEN CHORALE MUSIC CONCERT 4 p.m. at St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Dallas. The premier Eastern European Choral En- semble of Northeastern Penn- sylvania performs sacred choral works composed by composers of Russia, Ukraine, Bulgaria and Belarus. ACOA (Adult Children of Addictions) and other dysfunctional families support group meetings 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. Name: Susan Occupation: Preschool teacher Hobbies: Cooking, mountain biking Savings Plan: Coupon clipper The Sunday TIMES@LEADER costs just $1.50 and contains an average of $234 in coupon value, making it a hard investment to pass up. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers