16 The Dallas Post Dallas, PA Thursday, January 16, 2003 CALENDAR Dallas. Deadline is Friday at 3 p.m. ° | Calendar items are published free of charge. Generally, items will appear 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 607 Main Road, Hh EXHIBITS Yo. ry Jan. 17 - LES SAMPOU, acoustic blues, 8 p.m. $12 supporting members. Chicory House, Com- munity Room, St. Stephen’s Pro-Cathedral, 35 S. Franklin St., W-B. 825-8722 or chicory- house.org Jan. 17 - DOO WOP STARS, with Emil Stucchio & the Classics, the Toys and Charlie Thomas’ Drifters. 8 p.m.F.M. Kirby Center, Public Square $42.50, $27.50. Jan. 18 - WILKES UNIVERSITY CHAMBER SINGERS, 18-mem- ber group performing sacred music, madrigals, chansons and contemporary works. 7:30 p.m. at St. Peter's Cathedral, 315 Wyoming Ave., Scranton. Info, 408-4434. Jan. 19 - WINTER INSTRUMEN- TAL CONCERT, a performance of classical and contemporary works by the Wyoming Semi- nary Orchestra, the Jazz Band and other chamber ensembles. 3 p.m. with the Orchestral Con- cert at Great Hall, 228 Wyoming Ave., Kingston, followed by the Jazz concert at the Buckingham Performing Arts Center, N. Sprague Ave., Kingston. Info, 270-2190. Jan. 23 - “BLACK, WHITE AND BLUES,” gospel, poetry and blues by poet Glenis Redmon and singer/guitarits Scott Ainslie. 7 p.m. King’s College, W-B., Info, 208-5900. | UNE ISPECIAL | BM EVENTS | Through Mar 2 - VISUAL ART, this exhibit of the work of region- al artists will be on view and for sale. The Endless Mtns. Council of the Arts Center, 302 W. Tioga St. and the Wyoming County | Courthouse Gallery, Tunkhan- nock. Thu. Jan. 16 - THE PHILLIES WIN- TER TOUR. Signing free auto- graphs will be Phillies Manager Larry Bowa, Jimmy Rollins and Brett Myers. 6-7:30 p.m. at the Stadium Club Restaurant, Lack- Through Feb. 21- “FROM WITHIN Il,” artwork created by College Misericordia faculty and staff. Opens Jan. 19 with a reception 2-5 p.m. Through 2003 - REGIONAL ART EXHIBIT, archival photographs and artifacts. Monday through Saturday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun- day, noon to 5 p.m. Pennsylva- nia Anthracite Heritage Muse- um, McDade Park, off Keyser Ave., Scranton. Info, 963-4804 Through Feb. 7 - NATURE NAR- RATES “IN THE BEGINNING,” religious landscapes by Betty- Ann Hogan originally scheduled January 14 - February 7 will not be shown. Additional details to be announced. Info, Sandra Faux, Public Relations and Mar- keting Office at (570) 208-5885. Jan. 16 - Feb. 16 - AWAKENING, works of Gothic surrealism by Curtis Salonick will be on exhibit with a “Meet the Artist” reception January 23 at 7 p.m. and a gallery talk at 8 p.m. at King’s College Widmann Gallery STAGE Lew Jan. 17-18 - “SHIRLEY VALEN- TINE” ,comedy by Willy Russell, starring Agnes Cummings. 8 p.m.; Jan. 19 3:15 p.m. Dinner served 90 minutes before show- time. Music Box Dinner Play- house 196 Hughes St., Swoy- ersville. $14, $25 with dinner. Info, 283-2195 or musicbox.org Jan 17-18 - “THE ROCKY HOR- ROR SHOW,” the bizarre cult classic. Jan. 10-11, 17-18 at 8 p.m.; Jan. 19, 2 p.m..Showcase Theatre 54 Tunkhannock Ave., Exeter. Info, 654-2555. Jan. 20 - “THE MEETING”, a play written by Jeff Stetson, portrays the fictional meeting of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X at noon in the Hayfield House Community Room. Free. and will be performed by Pin Points The- atre at Penn State W-B. Info, ; 875-0284 + SEL RA RE ME awanna County Stadium in Moosic. Jan.19 - “ROCK ON ICE”, 1- 3:30 pm. Endless Mtns. Council of he Arts 4th annual winter festival. Riverside Park Ice Rink, Rt 29, Tunkhannock. Skate to DJ en- tertainment, compete in games and races! Skate rentals avail- able. Hot and cold drinks served. Sat. Feb. 1 - CASINO NIGHT, the semi-formal evening begins at 6 p.m. with Hors Dioevres and a silent auction, followed by cock- tails, a dinner buffet, dancing and casino gambling from 7 p.m.-midnight. Sponsored by the | Wilkes-Barre General Hospital Auxiliary at the Woodlands Inn and Resort, Plains. Tickets will be sold. call the Wilkes-Barre General Hospital Gift Shoppe at 552-1241 or from any Starlight Casino committee member. Info, contact Barbara Giordano at 288-2324. Jan. 22 - “UNSINKABLE WOMEN,” new, one-woman play about the women who sur- vived the sinking of the Titanic, 8 p.m. in Wyoming Seminary’s Buckingham Performing Arts Center, North Sprague Ave.. Presented in conjunction with Wilkes University. Free and NMMCOMMUNITY open to the public. For info, 270- 2190. Deborah Jean Templin, above, created and performs the Jan. 17 - SPAGHETTI DINNER, 4:30-6:30 p.m. at the Noxen U.M. stories. Send The Dallas Post to a friend. Church on Rt. 29. $5 for adults, $2.50 for children under 12. It makes a great gift. Call 675-5211 for information. SUNDAY, JANUARY 19th AT 1:00 P.M ra EX 3ETT Auction Held On Site Inspection One Hour Before Auction lela sglelag-Nlilgliielgasr=-18(=laKer=-11H 800-262-3050 Auction World USA, Inc. Mark S. Henderson AY-59-L | IRR of Red 72 ge an 3 7 gil Agnes Cummings, one of the region’s most popular and accomplished actresses, plays the title role in this one-woman tour-de-force. Music Box Players to present ‘Shirley Valentine’ The Music Box Players will present Shirley Valentine, a comedy by Willy Russell, which opens the Music Box 2003 Sea- son, on January 17, 18, and 19. Shirley Valentine - a smash hit in London and New York - and later a popular motion pic- ture - is the comic and often poignant journey of bored and unfulfilled middle-class house- wife, Shirley. She dreams of a new life of love and adventure, and, in a moment of supreme bravery, escapes to Greece where her fairy-tale becomes reality and she finds a second life of exotic happiness. Shirley Valentine is directed by Morgan Christopher, who supervised a production of Valentine at the Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia. sets bd OUTDOORS Jan. 18 - FIELD TRIP to the upper Delaware River and vicinity in search of wintering bald eagles. Meet 7 P.M. at the Park & Ride across from the K-Mart by Blackman St. Info, contact Bob Wasilewski at 542-5948. Tue. Jan. 21 - PUBLIC MEETING to discuss and approve design of Luzerne Creek walk along Toby’s Creek and Trucksville Trail access at Carverton 7 p.m. at the Kingston Twp. Building, Thu. Jan. 16 - MONTHLY MEET- ING of the Civil War Round Table. Speaker will be Dr. Shel- don Spears presenting his pro- gram on “Local Civil war History”. 7 p.m. at the Dallas American Le- gion, Rt. 415. BLOOD DRIVES Fri. Jan. 24 - ST. PAUL’S LUTHERAN CHURCH, Route 118, Dallas. and lighting are by Michael Gal- lagher and costumes are by K.D. Love. Performance times on Friday and Saturday, Jan. 17 and 18 are: bar. opens at 6 p.m., a served dinner of chicken and pasta is served at 6:30 p.m., and curtain is at 8 p.m. At the Sunday, Jan. 19 matinee, the bar opens at 1:15 p.m., dinner is served at 1:45 p.m., and cur- Jerry Haines to perform at tain is at 3:15 p.m. Dinner and show is $25, and show-only is $14. Discounted prices are available for senior citizens, children and students. For further information, and to make reservations, call 283- 2195 or 800-698-PLAY. All per- formances are at the Music Box Dinner Playhouse, 196 Hughes Street, Swoyersville, 18704. Penn State Wilkes-Barre Jerry Haines, singer/songwriter, will perform at Penn State Wilkes-Barre on Friday, January 24 at noon, in the campus Cafe’ Commons. Haines has performed throughout the Mid-Atlantic states at fairs, colleges, coffee houses, and concert series for the past 24 years. In addition to guitar, he also plays the autoharp and often accompanies himself on the harmonica. Influenced by Bob Dy- lan, Joni Mitchell, and Leon Redbone, Haines lyrics draw on day to day life. Free and open to the public. For more information , 675-9284. call Tell our advertisers you saw them in The Dallas Post. east Center St., Shavertown. Your Carpets Will Dry In 1-2 HOURS Instead of 1-2 Days New Breakthrough Carpet Cleaning Technology Gets Carpets Cleaner and Lets Them Dry In Hours Not Days... : ; ou can walk on your carpets in just 1-2 hours with Chem- Dry®’s new Carbonating cleaning process. It's called “The Natural® II” because it is non-toxic and dries with no dirt attracting residues. 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