16 The Dallas Post Dallas, PA Thursday, February 6, 2003 CALENDAR 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, Dallas. Deadline is Friday at 3 p.m. MCOMMUNITY Sat. Feb. 8 - PORK & SAUER- KRAUT DINNER/BAKE SALE - 4:30-6:30 p.m. Loyalville U.M.. Church. Takeouts available. Pleast call ahead for takeouts 477-3521. \ "Feb. 11 - DALLAS U.M. WOM- EN’S MEETING, noon at the Meadows Manor, Dallas. Lunch will be ordered form the menu and a Pledge Service will follow entitled “God’s mission in the his- tory of “Korean women’. gieb. 22 - PANCAKE & SAUSAGE SUPPER, all you can eat pan- cakes, sausage, eggs, pie & bev- erage. 4-7 p.m. at Dallas U.M. Church. Lower DeMunds Rd.Tickets at the door. O: Feb. 8 - CONTRA DANCE, Music by Inishowen, St. Therese’s Catholic Church, 17 Pioneer Ave. & Davis St., Shavertown. Info, 333-4007. Feb. 11 - SINGING VALENTINE’S PROJECT, W-B Chapter, Soci- ety for the Preservation and en- couragement of Barber Shop Quartet Singing will “deliver” surprise singing Valentines with rose and card from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. $50 per presentation. Info, 655-2180 or 287-2476. Fri. Feb. 28 - MUSICAL REVIEW, solos, small groups, full 15 voice chorus, audience participation. 7:30 p.m. Lake-Lehman High School auditorium. $4 for adults. $2 for students. KIDSTUFF “BARNEY’S COLORFUL WORLD,’ a musical stage show with the purple dino-star and his friends Baby Bop and B.J. Feb. 14,7 p.m.; Feb. 15 11 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.; Feb. 16, 1:30 and 5 p.m. First Union arena, Highland . park Boulevard, W-B. $31.50, $25, $18, $11.50; $16.50 for- :Sunday’s 5 p.m. show. Info, 693-4100. Feb. 23 - PATCHWORKS: Life and Legends of the Coal Towns. 2 p.m. at The Wyoming Valley Montessori School, 851 W. Mar- ket St., Kingston. Info, 288- 3708. MEXHIBITS © Ig OUTDOORS 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 Feb. 28 - PASTELS by Theresa Ward Thomas and photography by Michael Thomas. Reception Feb. 9, 1-3 p.m. Tudor Bookshop, 651 Wyoming Ave., Kingston.Info, 288-9697. 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. 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. 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 SPECIAL EVENTS Feb. 19 to 23 - “LETS BE FRIENDS” is the latest toe-tap- ping, finger-snapping production of Sesame Street Live. F.M. Kir- by Center, 71 Public Square, Wilkes-Barre. Tickets, $18, $15, $12.50 on sale at the Kirby Cen- ter Box Office and Ticketmaster. Info, 826-1100. Sat. Feb. 22 - KAREN JAMES, will speak about the Underground Railroad. 2 p.m. at the Pennsyl- vania Anthracite Heritage Muse- um, McDade Park, off Keyser Ave., Scranton. Free. Info, 963- 4804. Mar. 9 - “CHARTER DAY” noon to 5 p.m To help celebrate the day, Dr. Kenneth Wolensky will speak on Women Garment Workers and thelLGWU in the 20th Century Pennsylvania at the Pennsylvania Anthracite Heritage Museum at McDade Park, off Keyser Ave. Scranton. Free. Info, 963-4804. Tue. Feb. 18 - BMT TRAIL COUN- CIL MEETING, Discussing strategies for the Back Mountain Trail. 6:45 p.m. at the Back Mountain Memorial Library Feb. 16 - BK MT. YOUTH WRESTLING CLUB/BOARD MEETING, 6 p.m. at Dallas Community Room. Tell our advertisers you saw them in The Dallas Post. They'll appreciate it, and so will we. Visitation Day Presidents’ Day, February 17 Students in pre-kindergarten through grade eight are invited to visit our Lower School for a day. Attend classes and get to know us! Call 718-6610 to arrange for a visit, H a tour or an admission screening! \N WYOMING SEMINARY founded 1844 LOWER SCHOOL < 1560 WYOMING AVE. '® | WWW. Wwyomingseminary.org FORTY FORT Sem Players will stage ‘Baker’s Wife’ A new revival of the delightful romantic musical “The Baker's Wife” will take the stage at Wyoming Seminary’s Bucking- ham Performing Arts Center, North Sprague Avenue, on Feb. 14-16. Performances will begin at 8 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, and at 2 p.m. on Sunday. Tick- ets are $4 for adults and $3 for students and will be sold at the door. With music and lyrics by Stephen Schwartz (“Pippin,” “Godspell,” “Pocahontas,” “Prince of Egypt”) and book by Joseph Stein (“Fiddler on the Roof”), the show has been de- scribed as “a lilting parable about the dangers of hasty love.” Based on the 1938 French film “La Femme de Boulanger” by Marcel Pagnol and Jean Giono, the story is set in the little French town of Concorde in Provence. A middle-aged baker and his young wife move to Con- corde, which has been without a baker and bread for seven weeks. The baker's wife runs off with the mayor's handsome young handyman and the baker, in his grief, stops baking bread. The townsfolk begin quarreling among themselves until they de- cide to join together and encour- “GOD AND THE GHOST OF WOODY GUTHRIE,” an original play by Tom Flannery. 7:30 p.m. Dietrich Theater, 60 E. Tioga St., Tunkhannock$10 in advance,. $12 at the door. Info, 996-1500. Feb. 6 - Feb. 8-9 - “THOSE CRAZY LADIES IN THE HOUSE ON THE CORNER” comedy dinner theatre Sat. at 6 p.m. Sun at 1p.m. at the Carriage Inn, Rte 92 S, Tunkhannock. Info 836- 3622 or emca @mail.emcs.net 7 The Woming Seminary Players will present the romantic musical “The Baker’ s Wife,” Feb. 14-16 at Wyoming Seminary Upper School’s Buckingham Performing Arts Center, North Sprague Avenue, Kingston. Seen in rehearsal for the musical are, from left: sophomore Amber Skye Noyes, Warren, NJ; junior Meghan Davis, Dallas; sophomore David Glauber, Shavertown; sophomore Christa Wroblewski, Dallas; junior Jennifer Slock, Mountain Top; and junior Michael Saba, Kingston. age the young wife to come back, enabling her husband to begin baking again. The Wyoming Seminary Play- ers will present a new revised version of the show, which has been produced only once before, at the Goodspeed Opera House in Connecticut, said Jason Sher- ry, the show's director. This is the first time this revised version has been produced by a high school cast and the performance will include the most recent up- dates and changes, Sherry said. This production of “The Bak- er's Wife” is part of Wyoming Seminary’s 2002-2003 cultural events program The Arts. For more information call 270-2190. Feb. 15-Mar. 9 - “THE KING AND I”, Rodgers and Hammerstein muscial. Performances Thurs- days through Saturdays, 8 p.m.; Sundays, 3:15 p.m. Music Box Dinner Playhouse, 196 Hughes St., Swoyersville. Dinner served 90 minutes before showtime. Invo, 283-2195 or musicbox.org Feb. 19 - “THE TELEPHONE”, Gian Carlo Menotti’s humorous, one-act opera, performed by Tri- Cities Opera, 7 p.m. Kings Col- lege, Third Floor, Sheehy- Farmer Campus Center, W-B. Info, 208-5900. Local students cast in ‘Rough Crossing’ he ‘The King's College Players promise audiences smooth sailing on Feb. 12-15, when the cast performs playwright Tom Stoppard’s “Rough Crossing,” a comedy set aboard a luxury liner in the 1930s. King’s students take on the roles of a group of theater people — hg a star, a composer, and a pair of writers — who are at- tempting to finish an upcoming Broadway show while sailing aboard an ocean liner. Their high profiles attract attention and create shipboard complications, and a very funny play ensues. The cast includes: Rob Klubek, a junior from Wilkes-Barre playing Turai; Michael Miller, a freshman from Dallas, as Gal; se- ~ nior Alex Haynes of Foster, R.I1., cast as Adam; Regina Rockensies of Dallas, who is returning to the King's stage after completing : graduate school, as Natasha; Al Vota, a junior from Floral Park, N.J., is Ivor; and Matt Hinton, a Harveys Lake sophomore, por- traying Dvornichek. “Rough Crossing” will be presented in the Administration Build- ing Auditorium, North River Street. The performances on all four nights begin at 7:30 p.m. Admission: general public, $6; senior _ citizens, $3. For reservations, call the box office at 208-5825. PRE-SCHOOL 3,4,5 Year Olds Maureen Devine, Director Now Accepting Reservations For The 2003-2004 School Year! 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