PAGE 10 THE DALLAS POST Sunday, October 7, 2012 CIVIC BRIEFS Music Box plans “Trailer Park Musical “The Great American Trail er Park Musical” will be held today, Oct. 7 at the Music Box Dinner Playhouse, 196 Hughes St., Swoyersville. ‘Bar opens at 6 p.m. with buffet dinner at 6:30 p.m. and curtain at 8 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. On Sundays, bar opens at 1 p.m., dinner is served at 1:30 p.m. and curtain is at 3 p.m. For more information, call 283-2195. Music Box Players will hold auditions The Music Box Players will hold auditions for “It’s A Won- derful Life the Musical” at 7 p.m. today, Oct. 7 at the Music Box Dinner Playhouse, 196 Hughes St., Swoyersville, Audition slots for boys and girls ages 6 to 12 will be from 2 to 3 p.m. and auditions for adults age 15 and over will be at 7 p.m. All who wish to audition are asked to bring sheet music of a song of their choice and those interested in a speaking role will be asked to read from the script. An accompanist will be provided. Performance dates are Nov. 24 to Dec.16. Ad execs to address Chamber members Philip P. Condron, president and John Cosgrove, vice presi- dent of Condron and Compa- ny, will present the “Best Holi- day Marketing Practices” to increase sales for the holiday season during the Wyoming County Chamber Luncheon set for 11:45 to 1 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 10 at Stone Hedge Golf Course. To reserve seats, contact Deborah at 875-8325 or by e-mail (Debo- rah@wyccc.com). Learn how to prepare your garden For those who would like to learn more about how to pre- pare your garden for the win- ter months and ready it for the spring, join Master Gardener Jean Kolojejchick at 1 p.m. on Oct. 10 at the Luzerne County West Side Annex, 2009 Wyom- ing Ave., Forty Fort. Kolojejchick will share tips and tricks that many of her fellow Master Gardeners use in their own gardens through- out the fall months. Registration is requested prior to attending. To register, contact Penn State Extension Luzerne County at 825-1701 or 602-0600, or email Luzer- neExt@psu.edu. Roundtable meets The Wyoming Valley Civil War Roundtable will meet at 7 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 11 in the lower level of the Daddow- Isaacs American Legion, 730 Memorial Hwy., Dallas. “Susquehanna County in the Civil War” will be presented by Betty Chapple Smith, of Montrose. Chappel has been the curator of the Susquehan- na County Historical Society for 32 years. She was born and raised in Shavertown before moving to the Montrose area. Fee is $3 for non-members. For more information, call John at 675-8936. LOO.E Lodge sponsors breakfast An all-you-can-eat breakfast sponsored by 1.O.O.F. Dallas Lodge will be held from 7:30 to 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, Oct 13 at St Paul’s Lutheran Church, Route 118, Dallas. Donation is $6 and tickets will be available at the door. The building is handicapped accessible. Fahmy will speak to Irregulars The Irregulars of the Back Mountain will hold its month- ly breakfast at 9 a.m. on Sat- urday, Oct. 13 at Leggio’s Res- taurant, Dallas. The Irregulars is a collection of independent entrepreneurs coming together to collaborate and share their life’s experi- ence with the intent of contin- ued personal growth. Dr. Mahmoud H. Fahmy, Professor of Education, Dean of Graduate School and Assist- ant to the President, Retired, Wilkes University will be Pre- senter. Fahmy, of Dallas, was born in Egypt and came to the United States in his 20s. He will help the group understand the population of the Mid- dleEast in light of recent tragic events. To reserve a seat, contact Cholly Hayes, facilitator, at 760-1213, or Bobby Zampetti, secretary, at 690-2323. All-day Bingo planned All day Bingo will be held at on Oct. 14 at Northmoreland Township Fire Hall. Doors open at 12:01 p.m. and early birds start at 1:30 p.m. Dinner will be served at approximately 4:30 p.m. Snacks and drinks are avail- able. For reservations, contact Jim or Carol at 333-4906. Irem Auxiliary hosts card party Irem Women’s Auxiliary will host a card party from noon to 4 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 18 at the Irem Country Club. Tickets are $12 and can be bought from Hope Beisel (675- 1652), Marie Miskel (288- 6341), Lorraine Hastie (654- 3755) or at the door. There will be lunch, prizes and a fun afternoon. Handicapped park- ing is available. President is Janet Stritz- inger; general chairperson is Edna Morgan. For those who don’t play cards, there is Pokeno (played like Bingo) or you can bring a game of your choice. Masonic Village plans Octoberfest Masonic Village Octoberfest will be held from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 19 at Irem Clubhouse, 64 Ridgway Drive, Dallas. Seniors may invite their family to explore this community together. There will be live music, an array of vendors offering fresh produce, pumpkins, baked goods and more. For details and to make reservation, call 866-851-4243. TV Guide Musical comes to Music Box “The TV Guide Musical,” a new musical comedy revue featuring favorite theme songs’ from the beginning of TV to the present, will be held Oct. 19-21 and 26-28 at the Music Box Dinner Playhouse, 196 Hughes St., Swoyersville. Bar opens at 6 p.m., dinner is served at 6:30 p.m. and curtain is at 8 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. On Sundays, bar opens at 1 p.m., dinner is served at 1:30 p.m. and curtain is at 3 p.m. For more information, call 283-2195. Dance will benefit Blue Chip Farm The Fourth Annual Blue Chip Farm Animal Refuge Benefit Dance will be held from 6 to 11 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 20 at the Wilkes-Barre Township Fire Hall. Ticket price is $ 25. Tickets can be ordered by calling 333- 5265, at the farm or at the door. There will be food, snacks, refreshments and music by The Sperazza Band. This is a BYOB event. There will also be a Chinese Auction, a 50/50 drawing, door prizes and basket raffles. Breakfast buffet set The Noxen Fire Co. will hold a breakfast buffet from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 21 at the fire hall, Stull Road, Noxen. Price is $8 for adults and $4 for children under 12 years of age. DHS BOYS SOCCER BOOSTER CLUB PLANS ANNUAL CRAFT SHOW The Dallas High School Boys Soccer Booster Club will hold its 30th annual fall craft show from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Oct. 14 at the | Dallas Middle School. There will be over 75 vendors with something for everyone. There will be homemade food and baked goods BALA as well. Admission is free and there is plenty of parking. MOUNTS Continued from Page 9 seed in the playoffs with a victo- ry. C TEAM Kingston Twp. 20 Ed-Lark 12 The Kingston Township Raid- ers C team upended the Ed-Lark Hurricanes in a decisive 20-12 victory on Sept. 30. Ethan Capitano scored on both a 52-yard and a 43-yard touch- down run and led the team with 157 total yards. R.J Wren con- nected with Jacob Koretz for a 12-yard touchdown pass after Nick Nocito set up the play with an impressive 30-yard run. The Raiders defense held the Hurricanes to only two touch- downs. Cole Vonderheid, Jack DelGaudio and Jack Luke con- tributed to the team’s victory. The C Team improved its re- cord to 5-2 on the season. Dallas 16 Swoyersville 6 The Dallas Jr. Mounts C team picked up a pair of wins the past two weeks, beating Swoyersville, 16-6, and West Pittston, 14-6. In the Swoyersville game, the Jr. Mounts held an 8-6 lead going into the fourth quarter. The Swoyersville offense took the ball inside the red zone where the Dallas defense stiffened, keeping the Sailors’ offense out of the endzone with a goal line stand, throwing Swoyersville back four consecutive times. The Dallas offense took over and execufed a 99-yard drive, capped off by a Brennan Eggles- ton touchdown. The drive took most of the time off the clock and put the game out of reach for a Swoyersville comeback. Against West Pittston, the stout Jr. Mounts defense once again played exceptionally, giv- ing up an early TD but nothing afterward. In the fourth quarter with the clock running and the score tied at 6-6, the Dallas offense went to work, driving the ball into the red zone. The Jr. Mounts came through again with Jared Adam- ski connecting with wideout De- vin Richards for a touchdown pass, putting the Dallas boys up, 12-6. Adamski called his own num- ber on the try for 2 and bulled his way into the end zone for a 14-6 lead. With time running out, the Rams switched quarterbacks but the Dallas defense responded by thwarting four sweeps. Dallas took over on downs and ran out the clock. D TEAM Dallas 24 West Pittston 6 The Dallas Jr.nior Mounts D team added another win to the 2012 season by defeating the West Pittston Rams, 24-6. From the first possession of the game, the offensive running attack was solid with running backs Gavin Adamski, Ryan Cu- ba, Jace Chopyak and Mark Kar- cutskie sharing ball carrying du- ties. The offensive line, consisting of Nate Malarkey, Brady Rosen- crans, Andrew Bednar, Nick Far- rell, Dylan Geskey, Cody Kon- nick and Lucas Tirpak opened holes and blocked hard for the running backs. The defensive line, led by Joey Peters, Colby Klinetob, Keith Hughes, Luke Hajkowski and Noah Moran was repeatedly in the West Pittston backfield, forc- ing two turnovers and holding the Rams to just six points. Defensive backs and lineback- ers Mason Calvey, Myles Tirpak, Gavin Adamski, Mark Karcut- skie and Ryan Cuba kept the rest of the Rams’ offense contained, helping the Jr. Mounts improve to a 5-2 record. The Jr. Mounts will be at home today against Duryea. The final regular season game for the D team is a bye agains(f » the Kingston Township Raiders¥.~ on Oct. 14. The first round of playoffs will begin on Oct. 21 at a field to be determined. | SPORTS BRIEFS Sullivan named to All-Tournament Team Lake-Lehman graduate Cat Sullivan was a vital reason the RIT Tigers went 4-0 at the SU- NY IT Invitational Volleyball Tournament. RIT defeated Cazenovia in four sets and Sage College in three on Friday. The following afternoon, the Tigers beat the - host Wildcats, 3-1, and had little trouble with Old Westbury, sweeping the Panthers. Sullivan was consistent for the Tigers. The senior had eight kills in each of the first three matches and then slammed six against Old Westbury in the finale. Sullivan added 11 blocks and earned All-Tournament honors. Basketball clinic planned at Rock Rec The Rock Rec Center, 340 Carverton Road, Trucksville will hold a Fall Basketball Clinic for Boys and Girls K through sixth grade on Monday and Wednes- day evenings from Oct. 15-24. Boys and girls in K through second grade will meet from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. while boys and girls in third through sixth grades will meet from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. - Early registration cost is $40 per child prior to Oct. 8. For more information, contact ‘the Rock Rec Center at 696- 2769. Gymnastics program begins registration Shooting Starz Gymnastics, 250 Johnston St., Wilkes-Barre, will accept enrollment for 2012 on Oct. 15 and 29 and Dec. 22. For more information, contact Joelle Rose at 822-1212. 1 SUMC Golf Tournament is Oct. 20 The golf committee of the Shavertown United Methodist Church will hold its sixth an- nual golf tournament on Sat- urday, Oct. 20 at the Mill Race Golf Club, Benton. Registration gv, for the captain and crew event ') begins at 9 a.m. with a shotgun start at 10 a.m, | Cost is $80 per person which includes 18 holes of golf, cart, lunch, dinner and prizes. To register to play, to sponsor a hole or to donate prizes, contact Bev Atherholt at 675-7295 or Bill Runner at 675-5055 orthe church office 675-3616. SCHOOL BRIEFS King’s College plans Open House today King’s College will host an Open House for high school students and their families from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. today, Oct. 7. Participants will have an opportunity to attend sessions on the various academic majors at King’s College. Sessions on financial aid, career planning and placement, as well as the honors, study abroad and internship programs will be available. A panel dis- cussion of student life at King’s College also will be featured. The Open House is free and advance registration is required. For more information and to register, contact the Admission Office at 208-5858. Lecture about politics set at Sem The Louis Maslow STEM School at Wyoming Seminary will present a lecture titled “The Politics of Numbers” at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 9 in the Buck- ingham Performing Arts Center, North Sprague Avenue, King- ston. A panel of Sem faculty will explore presidential elections from a variety of disciplines from the audience at the conclu- sion of its presentations. The lecture is free and open to the public. All-class reunion set An all-class reunion for the Shickshinny/Garrison Memo- rial High School will be held at noon on Saturday, Oct. 13 at the Sweet Valley Fire Hall. Anyone interested in attend- ing is asked to call 542-4788, 477-5239 or 477-3131. Friedman exhibit opens Oct. 13 The Pauly Friedman Art Gal- lery at Misericordia University will open with an exhibit entit- led “George Mummert and Michael Tymon — Form and Process: Sculpture in Stone, Bronze and Steel” and “Eliza- beth Fulton: Giclee Landscape Prints,” on Oct. 13. A free opening reception will be held from 5 to 8 p.m. in the art gallery. The exhibits run through Dec. 9. Zumbathon benefits Ross Elementary PT0 A Zumbathon will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. on Oct. 19 at Ross Elementary School, 5148 Main Road, Sweet Valley. All proceeds will benefit the Ross Elementary PTO. ‘Boom’ event at MU set for Oct. 24 The Misericordia University Dead Alchemist Society will present an expanded spectacle for the student organization’s 21st annual “Things That Go Boom in the Night!” at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 24 in the Wells Fargo Amphitheater on campus. The event is open free to the public. This event features new ex- periments, including glowing pumpkins, spooky bubbles and dry-ice potions, as well as sea- sonal favorites like the explod- ing and puking pumpkins and the demise of the gummy bear experiment. Students in the Dead Alche- mist Society will also offer new and expanded activities for children, including hands-on experiments with children mak- ing slime and super bouncy balls. For more information, call T* Anna Fedor, Ph.D., assistant professor of chemistry and bio- chemistry, at 674-6769 or email her at afedor@misericordiz.edu. Friedman Gallery plans bus trip The Pauly Friedman Art Gal- lery at Misericordia University will host a daylong bus trip to tour the Barnes Foundation Museum on Philadelphia’s Mu- seum Mile with lunch at the famed French restaurant, Le Bec Fin, on Saturday, Nov. 17. The bus will leave at 8 a.m. from the Viewmont Mall in | Scranton with a second pick-tp at 8:30 a.m. at Wegmans super- market in Wilkes-Barre. The | return trip will leave Philadel: phia at 5:30 p.m. Tickets are $150 per person, and include a four-course lun- cheon at Le Bec Fin. For reservations, call Anne Postupack, Cameo House Touts, at 655-3420. Wilkes students serving internships Two Back Mountain resi- dents who are students at semester. Laura Easton, of Dallas, is PEOPLE BRIEF Wilkes University are complet- ing internships for the fall 2012 studying mechanical engineer- ing at Wilkes and is complet- ing an internship with Wymaa Gordon. She is the daughter « Diana and Ralph Easton. Emily Travers, of Dallas, is studying psychology at Wi and is completing an intern-N ship with Domestic Violence |. Service Center. She is the daughter of Lisa Morgan.
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