The Guide 04-19-2013

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April 12 to 14 and April 19 to 21 Dinner and Show-Only Tickets NOW ON SALE 283-2195 or 800-698-PLAY

BEL L ES

C O N S TRU C TIO N C O . IN C .

THE BES T RO O FING , S IDING ,W INDO W S & C ARPENTRY

Five Folks

With Monday being Earth Day, we asked:

“WHAT IS THE ONE BIG THING YOU DO FOR THE EARTH?”

N ATIO N AL AW ARD W IN N IN G C O M PAN Y

“I recycle everything I can.” Sarah Cease, 19, Muhlenberg

824-7220 FREE ES TIM ATES PA012959

“I recycle, all of our water bottles and other things.”

Rebecca Brown, 19, Dorrance Township

“I recycle cans and bottles.” Alyson Evans, 20, Scranton

“I try to grow my things, like beans, and my dad planted a lot of trees.”

Brittany Spak, 20, Wyoming

“I recycle all the time — cardboard, glass, and paper.” Alyssa Dolman, 20, Trucksville

GETTING INTO THE GUIDE All submissions must be received two weeks in advance of the pertinent event. E-mailed announcements via guide@timesleader.com are preferred, but announcements also can be faxed to 570-829-5537 or mailed to 15 North Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711. The Guide provides advance coverage and/or notice for events open to the public. Events open only to a specific group of people or after-the-fact announcements and photos are published in community news.

All announcements must include a contact phone number and make note of any admission or ticket prices or note that an event is free. We cannot guarantee publication otherwise. We welcome listings photographs. First preference is given to e-mailed high-res JPGs (300 dpi or above) submitted in compressed format to guide@timesleader.com. Color prints also can be submitted by U.S. mail, but we are unable to return them. Please identify all subjects in photographs.

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FEATURES STAFF 810540

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LISITINGS Marian Melnyk guide@timesleader.com Fax: Attention: The Guide 829-5537 Advertise: To place a display ad - 829-7101


AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER

Lorraine George of Wilkes-Barre holds her clock, which fell from the wall and broke during a severe lightning storm last week. Scientists predict more severe storms, floods and droughts because of increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

AIMEE DILGER FILE PHOTO/THE TIMES LEADER

Among the many Earth Day activities planned for Jim Thorpe’s celebration on Saturday is the chance to do some rock climbing.

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BILL TARUTIS FILE PHOTO/FOR THE TIMES LEADER

Many Earth Day activities are designed to involve and educate children, some of whom here weed a flower bed for a previous Earth Day.

Clean up your act this Earth Day By MARY THERESE BIEBEL mbiebel@timesleader.com

T

he sky grew dark, and thunder was rumbling, so Lorraine George turned off her television. The next thing she knew … “Oh my God, it was a big bang. I tell you, the sound was terrible,” said George, of Wilkes-Barre, who felt her house shake and saw a light outside that was so bright, she thought her front porch had caught fire.

man, we find everything.” Past Lehigh River cleanups have yielded Styrofoam bait containers, car batteries, bicycle parts, buckets lost by rafters, cans, bottles and other items that have washed down toward the river during storms. “We take out bags and bags of trash,” Holland said. That part of the festival sounds like work. Other parts sound like fun, with music, crafts, tai chi, rock climbing and a butterfly program. Youngsters are invited throughout the day to make parasols, wings and masks and to model them in a “Planet Earth Children’s Costume Parade” at 4:30 p.m. in downtown Jim Thorpe. Throughout much of the day in Jim Thorpe, the Recycled Rhythm Drum Circle will welcome people to play their own instruments, or to help make “a thunderously joyful noise” with borrowed items. The drum circle’s own instruments, which Holland described as “buckets and pots and pans and tambourines made from recycled bottle caps” are evidence that “you don’t have to throw everything away. You can make something beautiful out of what you might have thought was trash.” Meanwhile, other Saturday cleanups are scheduled for The Lands at Hillside Farms in Shavertown, Snake Road near McDade Park in Scranton and at the Forty Fort Cemetery in Forty Fort. And, at the Osterhout Free Library in Wilkes-Barre, children can work on an Earth Day Project on Saturday afternoon. “We’ll take a recycled container, like a margarine tub, and decorate it, sort of like decoupage, with newspaper comic pages,” children’s librarian Elaine Rash said. “Then we’ll plant some seeds, something that germinates fast so they can see results.”

IF YOU GO

What: Earth Day Cleanup Where: Around the greenouses and barns at The Lands at Hillside, 65 Hillside Road, Shavertown When: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday What to bring: Gloves, rakes and shovels More info: 888-887-7811 ••• What: Snake Road Cleanup Organizer: Lackawanna Audubon Society Where: Meet in the first parking lot of McDade Park, off Keyser Avenue, Scranton. When: 9 a.m. Saturday. More info: 570-563-1565. ••• What: Forty Fort Cemetery Cleanup Where: 20 River St., Forty Fort When: 9:30 a.m. Saturday What to bring: gloves and rakes More info: 570-760-1255 ••• What: Earth Day Celebration, with animals, crafts, food and music Where: Pocono Environmental Education Center, 538 Emery Road, Dingmans Ferry When: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday Admission: $5 per carload More info: 828-2319 ••• What: Jim Thorpe Earth Day Celebration When: Lehigh River Cleanup from 9 a.m. to noon; crafts, games and music between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Saturday Where: downtown Jim Thorpe More info: jimthorpeearthday.com ••• What: ‘Chasing Ice’ documentary When: 7 p.m. Monday Where: Wyoming Seminary Lower School, 1560 Wyoming Ave., Forty Fort More info: 570-270-2192 ••• What: Earth Day Project for children When: 2 p.m. Saturday Where: Osterhout Free Library, 71 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre Registration: 823-0146, ext. 217

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Actually, it didn’t catch fire. Both George, a retired “floor lady from a silk mill” who is in her 90s, and her homestead made it through the storm that swept through Northeastern Pennsylvania on April 10. There was one casualty, however. The vibration of the shaking house knocked her wall clock to the floor, breaking part of its frame. George called the newspaper to report her experience, which she found very frightening. “Oh, I was petrified,” she said. She’s OK now, back volunteering at her church’s weekly spaghetti dinner and singing in the choir. Even the clock, despite its broken frame, is once more keeping time, thanks to a new battery. Now, we have to admit, George herself doesn’t see what happened as any kind of warning from Mother Nature. Still, Earth Day will be observed on Monday, and some environmentalists might consider a bolt of lightning and a

falling clock a message. Is time running out? You’re likely to suspect the answer is yes if you watch “Chasing Ice,” a documentary to be screened at 7 p.m. Monday at Wyoming Seminary Lower School in Forty Fort. Promotional photos for the movie show immense glaciers, but watch the film and you’ll see the evidence photographer James Balog and his team have gathered that Arctic ice is retreating at an alarming rate. The documentary also includes dramatic footage of storms and flooding, which scientists believe will become more severe in the future, along with droughts, heat waves, hurricanes and loss of habitat. So what can you do to slow the process? Turn off lights when you leave the room, turn off appliances you’re not using and consolidate errands so you’ll drive less, said Jill Carrick, science chair at the Lower School and adviser to the environmental club. “Put it into the habit part of your brain. It should feel weird not to turn off a light.” Planting a tree will have positive effects not only for the planet as a whole but for individual health, she said. “Trees are one of the best filters of particles in the air.” They also can reduce your utility bills. “What a lot of people don’t realize is strategic planting can help reduce energy use in the home.” As for recycling, Carrick offered this example: The energy it takes to produce one plastic bottle is equivalent to a 60watt lightbulb burning for six hours. So the fewer plastic bottles that are manufactured, the better. “We recycle everything we can,” said Shelli Holland, organizer of a Saturdaymorning cleanup on the banks of the Lehigh River. Calling the cleanup “the most important part” of the Jim Thorpe Earth Day Celebration, she said, “Oh,


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THE GUIDE

Events THIS WEEK: APRIL 19 to 25, 2013 Financial Wellness Fair. Check your credit IQ and financial health profile at the Wyoming Valley Mall, Wilkes-Barre Township. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. today. 602-2227. Happy Hour Fundraiser, to benefit the Junior League of Wilkes-Barre. With beer samplings and tours of the brewery, wine, appetizers and desserts. Susquehanna Brewing Company, 635 S. Main St., Pittston. 6 to 8 tonight. $30. 288-4818. Spring Blogfest, an informal gathering of bloggers, candidates for office, elected officials and anyone interested in politics or blogging. Rooney’s Irish Pub, 67 S. Main St., Pittston. 6 tonight. Free. Info at nepablogs.org. Documenting Anthracite on the Silver Screen, screenings and discussions of three historic films about the coal industry: “The Price of Carelessness” (1915; silent) filmed at Truesdale Colliery in Nanticoke; “The Mining and Preparation of Blue Coal” (1938) filmed at the Huber Colliery, Ashley; and “The Miners’ Story (1965) filmed by WCAU-TV in Philadelphia and narrated by Jack Palance. Burke Auditorium, McGowan School of Business, West Union and North River streets, King’s College, WilkesBarre. Tonight with refreshments at 6:30 and event at 7. Free. 715252-6742. Stars of Spring, a sky show on springtime sights in the heavens followed by “Passport to the Universe,” an up-close view of star fields and planets. McMunn Planetarium, Hoeffner Science and Technology Center, East Stroudsburg University. 7 and 8 tonight. Free but reservations required online at esu.edu/planetarium. Calligraphers Guild Presentation, on adding fun flourishes to calligraphy. Room 225, Shields Center for Visual Arts, Marywood University, 2300 Adams Ave., Scranton. 7:30 tonight. Free. 2966507. A Night of Fun, Music and Food to benefit the Pittston Ambulance Association. With a cash bar and music by the Phyllis Hopkins Trio. Knights of Columbus, 55 S. Main St., Pittston. 9 to midnight tonight. $5. 655-8311. Finding Our Ancestors at Home and Abroad, a conference with speakers, representatives from national and state archives, traditional and online immigration resources, with small groupings more specific to country of origin. Luzerne County Community College, 1333 S. Prospect St., Nanticoke. 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Saturday. Registration at genpa. org or visit nepgs.com for complete details. Jay McCarroll, a trunk show by the local fashion designer and winner of Project Runway (season one) and Celebrity Fit Club (sea-

son seven). Outrageous, Midtown Village in downtown Wilkes-Barre. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. 866398-9050. Happy Birthday Classic Corner. Celebrate the third birthday of the senior space with cake and prizes. Osterhout Free Library, 71 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre. 11 a.m. Saturday. Free. 821-1959. History, Food and Fun, learn to bake bread, prepare a meal using whole foods, plan a garden and plant seeds along with games for the whole family. Quiet Valley Living Historical Farm, 347 Quiet Valley Road, Stroudsburg. 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Saturday. $25 per family includes a meal, recipes, a loaf of bread and planted seeds. Reservations: 992-6161. Calligraphy Workshop, creating Zentangles (elaborate doodles) with award-winning artist Virginia Pinto Sosik. Room 225, Shields Center for Visual Arts, Marywood University, 2300 Adams Ave., Scranton. 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday. $25. Reservations: 296-6507. Zentangle Workshop, a class in creating images from repetitive patterns. Candy’s Place: The Center for Cancer Wellness, 190 Welles St., Forty Fort. 10 a.m. to noon Saturday. Registration: 714-8800. Spring Fling, food, drinks, entertainment and basket raffles. Sponsored by the Friends of the Pittston Memorial Library. Susquehanna Brewing Company, 635 S. Main St., Pittston. 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday. $15. 654-9565. Wilkes ASME Car Show, with customs, classics and cruisers. Sponsored by the Wilkes American Society of Mechanical Engineers Club near the Henry Student Center, 84 W. South St., Wilkes University, Wilkes-Barre. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday. $10 per entry. Proceeds benefit the Wounded Warrior Project. 2675734. Fundraiser for lymphoma survivor Brent Evans, who is a candidate for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society’s Man of the Year of Eastern Pennsylvania. Each dollar raised counts as one vote for his candidacy. Rodano’s, Public Square, Wilkes-Barre. 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday. $30 includes food and refreshments. 829-6587. World Affairs Luncheon Seminar, with Laszlo Gyulai of the University of Pennsylvania Medical Center speaking on “Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: The Emotional Toll of Violence in Military and Civilian Populations.” Sponsored by the Schemel Forum in the Rose Room, Brennan Hall, University of Scranton. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Monday. $20. Registration: 941-7816. Entrepreneurs R Us Series, a lunchtime session on the “ins and outs” every entrepreneur should know about accounting. Osterhout Free Library, 71 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre. 12:15 to 12:45 p.m. Monday. Bring a lunch; See EVENTS, Page 5

Ringling Bros. performers are a fearless crew

Audiences will marvel at the balance and precision of the Lopez family when the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus comes to the Mohegan Sun Arena.

Fortitude, ‘fully charged’

By MARY THERESE BIEBEL mbiebel@timesleader.com

T

welve inches, 12 feet and no safety net. It all adds up to one dangerous job. But Maria Lopez isn’t scared. “I like to do the crazy stuff,” she said of her work with the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. “I like the high adrenaline.” If you attend the circus Thursday through April 28 at the Mohegan Sun Arena in WilkesBarre Township, perhaps you’ll see Lopez standing very still as her father-in-law, Alfonso, throws knives at her. Those gleaming blades are at least 12 inches long, which makes them look especially threatening. When she heads into the Globe of Steel on a motorcycle, the diameter of the ball is 12 feet. That’s actually on the small side for one of these contraptions, she said, which increases the danger and the need for precision. “We put three motorcycles in one small cage,” she said. “You have to ride more than 60 miles

IF YOU GO

What: ‘Fully Charged,’ Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus When: 7 p.m. Thursday, 7 p.m. April 26, 1 p.m. April 27, 5 p.m. April 27 and 1 p.m. April 28 Where: Mohegan Sun Arena, 225 Highland Park Blvd., Wilkes-Barre Township More info: 570-970-7600

per hour, and you pass each other by just a couple inches. You can’t make any mistake. Of course you have to be focused all the time.” At one point in the show, she said, the whole arena will go dark except for the LED lights inside the globe. “It’s a very special effect,” she explained, and one that adds to the “Fully Charged” theme of this circus tour. “I’m in love with the circus life,” said Lopez, 34, who grew up in Chile. “The circus still has this magic. They have this magic that all the family can go and be entertained. You see like a dream. You see people fly in the air and people do with their bodies stuff regular people can’t. “It combines so many disci-

plines, like gymnastics, balance, coordination and focus,” she continued. “You can see the power of the body, the elasticity of the human body. You see people work in harmony with the animals. You see the strong man; he can carry telephone poles like it was play, like nothing.” The circus includes feats of strength, acrobatics and a high wire — look for members of the Lopez family to be 22 feet in the air, doing handstands, jumping rope and riding unicycles, all without a net You’ll also see “Kossacks from Russia who do double somersaults in the air and jugglers with super, super high energy” as well as elephants, tigers, dogs, camels, horses and even llamas. If you arrive early, Lopez said, you can meet the cast during a preshow, which is free with every ticket. An hour before show time, visitors can talk to the cast and have photos taken with performers. You might even learn to balance on a low wire, about a foot from the ground.


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The Phyllis Hopkins Trio will entertain tonight at a ‘Night of Fun, Music and Food’ at the Pittston Knights of Columbus to benefit the Pittston Ambulance Association.

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Frances Townsend, former Homeland Security advisor for President George W. Bush, will speak on ‘Government, Law and National Security’ on Tuesday evening at Misericordia University in Dallas. Frances Townsend, former Homeland Security Advisor for President George W. Bush. Walsh Hall, Misericordia University, 301 Lake St., Dallas. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Free but tickets required. 674-6719. The Green Hour: Absinthe at the Everhart. From a taste of its colorful history to a taste of the green drink itself, experience the allure of this once-forbidden beverage. Age 21 and older. Everhart Museum, 1901 Mulberry St., Scranton. 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday. 346-7186. Taste of the Valley, the 9th annual event with live and silent auctions, basket raffle and food by more than 20 area restaurants. Fiorelli’s, 1501 Main St., Peckville. 5:30 to 8 p.m. Thursday. $20, $5 children. Proceeds benefit the Geneva School. Reservations: 489-7620. Spanish Film Club Series, a screening of “I Travel Because I Have To” (2009), a first-person travelogue by a geologist in an isolated region of Brazil. With English subtitles. Pearn Auditorium, Brennan Hall, 320 Madison Ave., See EVENTS, Page 8

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coffee and tea provided. Free. Registration: 821-1959. Diversity Week, four days of events held at the Corporate Learning Center, Luzerne County Community College, 1333 S. Prospect St., Nanticoke. Monday: information on mental disabilities and blogging from 4 to 6 p.m. and readings by the Wyoming Valley Poetry Society at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday: a Latino culture celebration with the Velez Latin Jazz Trio at 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday: Latino culture presentation at 6:30 p.m.; Thursday: a celebration of AfricanAmerican culture at 6:30 p.m. All events are free. 740-0732. Community Conversation, discussions on “What Do You Want Your Community to Look Like?” along with ways to produce real change on the issues. Osterhout Free Library, 71 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre. 9 to 11 a.m. Tuesday. Light refreshments. Reservations: 829-6711, ext. 222. Surviving a Layoff, a financial talk including 401K tips, avoiding foreclosure and credit reports. WilkesBarre Career Link, 32 E. Union St. 1 to 2 p.m. Tuesday. Free. Register at pacareerlink.state.pa.us. 822-1101. Open House at the Family History Research Center Library where the staff will explain the available records to aid in genealogical research. 689 Main Road, Hanover Township. 4 to 8 p.m. Tuesday. 829-1765. Fashion Show, sponsored by the Wyoming Valley Chapter of the International Association of Administrative Professionals. With refreshments, shopping, networking and discount coupons. Clarion Hotel, 300 Meadow Ave., Scranton. 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. 951-9608. Government, Law and National Security, the second annual Dr. Midori Yamanouchi Lecture by


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AGE 6

THE GUIDE

Just for the

RECORD Enjoy live music, freebies on day set aside to honor ‘music the way it was meant to be’

By JOE SYLVESTER jsylvester@timesleader.com

S

CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER

Joe Nardone Jr. shows off some of the merchandise Gallery of Sound stores will have for Saturday’s Record Store Day.

WHET YOUR APPETITE A sampling of new recordings due for release for Record Store Day: Chet Atkins BLACK JACK EP Format: 7-inch vinyl Avenged Sevenfold LIVE IN THE LBC & DIAMONDS IN THE ROUGH Format: 12-inch vinyl The Avett Brothers and Randy Travis MUSIC FROM CMT CROSSROADS Format: 7-inch vinyl The Band THE LAST WALTZ Format: 12-inch vinyl Bayside LIVE AT THE BAYSIDE SOCIAL CLUB

Format: 12-inch vinyl Captain Beefheart FRANK FREEMANS DANCE CLUB Format: 12-inch vinyl Kasey Chambers and Shane Nicholson RATTLIN BONES Format: 12-inch vinyl Charlie Poole With The Highlanders COMPLETE PARAMOUNT AND BRUNSWICK RECORDINGS Format: 12-inch vinyl Cheech & Chong featuring Alice Bowie EARACHE MY EYE & TURN THAT THING DOWN (GREEN 45 RPM VINYL/PICTURE SLEEVE) Bob Dylan WIGWAM Format: 7-inch vinyl

Grateful Dead RARE CUTS & ODDITIES 1966 Format: 12-inch vinyl Milo Greene WHAT’S THE MATTER/STAGING POINT Format: 7-inch vinyl Phish LAWN BOY DELUXE Format: 12-inch vinyl Sonny & The Sunsets TOMORROW IS ALRIGHT Format: 12-inch vinyl Soundgarden KING ANIMAL DEMOS Format: 10-inch LP South Park SAN DIEGO/GAY FISH Format: 7-inch vinyl Ringo Starr RINGO Format: 7-inch vinyl box set

aturday is a day for the records. The vinyl kind. And for CDs and DVDs and all things you can find in your local record store. The day, Record Store Day, is a time for many recording artists to issue new releases and for live music and merchandise giveaways, too. Local music stores are taking part in the international event to promote the businesses and the culture of the record store. “The retail group I was part of was part of the group that founded (Record Store Day),” Joe Nardone Jr. said. Now in its sixth year, Record Store Day has grown, with mostly vinyl records but also CDs, DVDs and Tshirts given away. “The whole first year we had less than 20 items to give away,” Nardone recalled. Nardone’s Gallery of Sound music stores are part of the Music Monitor Network, which manages the event on the third Saturday in April in each year that was organized with the help of the Alliance of Independent Media Stores, otherwise known as AIMS, and the Coalition of Independent Music Stores, or CIMS. The idea is to promote the independent record stores that face competition from corporate chains. “We have about 90 stores in the group,” Nardone said. “The orginal thought was, it is sort of modeled after like a giveway day, like a comic-book day,” Nardone said. “That was sort of the driver. Now it’s a day with the most releases and most items for sale in one given day. Some are limited in number. The two Gallery of Sound stores in Wilkes-Barre and others in Hazleton and Dickson City not only will have new and used records, but seven bands will play throughout the day at the Mundy Street store, Nardone said. One of them, Leroy Justice, which has local ties, is now signed to a national label. The event runs from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

IF YOU GO

Schedule for Gallery of Sound stage, 186 Mundy St. 9 a.m. : Various Vinyl DJs (employees/ customers) Noon: Joe Nardone Jr. (DJ set) History of RSD vinyl rarities 2 p.m.: George Wesley 3 p.m.: Leroy Justice 4 p.m.: Farley 5 p.m.: Cherokee Red 6 p.m.: Grey Zine 7 p.m.: These Elk Forever 7:30 p.m.: Petal Live music at Musical Energi, 59 N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre 3 p.m.: Astorian Stigmata acoustic set 7 p.m.: Mock Sun

There usually are some exciting new releases, too. The Rolling Stones have been part of it every year, and Bob Dylan has been just about every year, Nardone said. But the releases, of which there are many, include numerous rock genres. Musical Energi, on North Main Street in Wilkes-Barre, will host two live groups for Record Store Day, owner Jay Notartomaso said. The event there will take place from 9 a.m. until about 7 p.m. “This our biggest year,” the owner said. “We’ve been participating since the beginning.” Notartomaso said Astorian Stigmata will play an acoustic set in the afternoon, and Mock Sun will play in the evening. “They’re local bands,” Notartomaso said. “They don’t do covers; they’ll be doing their own stuff.” He said the store ordered a lot of the exclusive releases, though it’s not certain which ones it will receive. “Everybody orders, and nobody gets everything they want,” Notartomaso said. “We ordered a lot. We’re still waiting on stuff.” But Notartomaso promised there would be plenty of free stuff, including CDs and T-shirts, as well as a raffle. Notartomaso recommended customers check the store’s Facebook page for more information. He said Record Store Day was started to support record stores, “to get back to music the way it was meant to be.”


Outdoors

Eye on Attraction is one of the bands participating in a concert at New Visions Studio & Gallery in Scranton tonight.

Improv group Here We Are in Spain will guest at the Open Mic tonight at the Dietrich Theater in Tunkhannock. sylvania Northeast Chapter of the American Guild of Organists. With pizza, music and a talk on the historic Austin pipe organ at St. Matthew’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, Jefferson Avenue and Vine Street, Scranton. 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday. Free. 881-2301. Lamentations and Exultations, a concert by the Marywood Chamber Singers. First Presbyterian Church, 97 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre. 2 p.m. Sunday. Free. 824-2478. FUTURE CONCERTS Smith Family Revival, Christian music at Ekklesia Christian Coffee House, River of Life Fellowship Church, 22 Outlet Road, Lehman Township. April 26 with dinner menu at 6 p.m., concert at 7 and open mic at 9. Free. 717-503-7363. Youth Night, with entertainment by young Christian singers and musicians including 14-year-old Kendall Mosley. Voice of Hope Christian Coffee House, St. John’s Lutheran Church, 231 State St., Nanticoke. 7 to 9 p.m. April 26. Free. Broadcast live on WVHO (94.5 FM). 735-1760. Hate-This-Show, a rock concert

Return to the ’70s on Saturday night when the eight-member band ’70s Flashback performs a concert at The Factory in Nuremberg. with Shayfer James, Wicca Phase Springs Eternal, Astorian Stigmata and the Stereo Clique. New Visions Studio & Gallery, 201 Vine St., Scranton. April 26 with doors at 7:30 p.m. and show at 8 p.m. $7. 878-3970. The University of Scranton String Orchestra. Houlihan McLean Center, Mulberry Street at Jefferson Avenue, University of Scranton. 7:30 p.m. April 26. 941-7400.

Acclaimed saxophonist and flutist Erica von Kleist will perform with the University of Scranton Jazz Band on Saturday in the Houlihan McLean Center. Northeastern Pennsylvania Philharmonic, in an all-French concert including Berlioz’ “Symphonie Fantastique,” Ravel’s “La Valse” and Saint Saens’ first cello concerto with soloist Alberto Parrini. F.M. Kirby Center, Public Square, WilkesBarre. 8 p.m. April 26. 341-1568.

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THIS WEEK: APRIL 19 to 25, 2013 Soul Searching, Christian music at Ekklesia Christian Coffee House, River of Life Fellowship Church, 22 Outlet Road, Lehman Township. Tonight with dinner menu at 6, concert at 7 and open mic at 9. Free. 717-503-7363. Open Mic Night, with musicians, poets, storytellers, comedians and others. Followed by the improv comedy troupe Here We Are in Spain. Dietrich Theater, 60 E. Tioga St., Tunkhannock. Tonight with open mic at 7 and improv troupe at 8:15. Free. 996-1500. Cantores Christi Regis Spring Concert, classical, contemporary, sacred and secular choral music by the King’s College choir. J. Carroll McCormick Campus Ministry Center, North Franklin and West Jackson streets, Wilkes-Barre. 7:30 tonight and Saturday. Free. 208-6044. New Visions Concert, with regional bands Eye on Attraction, Atlas Arrows, Static in the Attic and In Writing. New Visions Studio & Gallery, 201 Vine St., Scranton. Tonight with doors at 7:30 and show at 8. $7. 878-3970. Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes, the rock band that sprung from the Jersey Shore music scene of the mid-1970s. Penn’s Peak, 325 Maury Road, Jim Thorpe. 8 tonight.$27. 866-6057325. Three Days Grace, the Canadian rockers with openers Pop Evil. Sherman Theater, 524 Main St., Stroudsburg. 8 tonight. $25. 4202808. Willy Porter, the guitarist and singer-songwriter. Mauch Chunk Opera House, 14 W. Broadway, Jim Thorpe. 8:30 tonight. $23. 3250249. Cross I Bear, a local Christian band. Amazing Taste, How Sweet the Grounds Christian Coffee House, First United Methodist Church, Route 11 and East Butler Street, Shickshinny. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Saturday. 256-3759. 70s Flashback, a concert by the eight-piece band that pays tribute to songs of the ’70s. The Factory Theater, School and Apple streets, Nuremberg. Saturday with doors at 6:30 p.m. and show at 7:30 p.m. Food and refreshments available. $15 benefits the Factory Theater Players. Reservations: 384-3648. Celebrate Harmony: 75 Years, with the Wyoming Valley Barbershop Harmony Chorus and guest quartets Da Copo, Sounds Abound and Young Men in Harmony. Wyoming Area High School, 20 Memorial St., Exeter. 7:30 p.m. Saturday. $20, $15. 287-2476. The University of Scranton Jazz Band, with guest soloist Erica von Kleist on saxophone and flute. Houlihan McLean Center, Mulberry Street at Jefferson Avenue, University of Scranton. 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Free. 941-7624. Scotty McCreery, the fast-rising country star and former “American

Idol” winner. F.M. Kirby Center, Public Square, Wilkes-Barre. 8 p.m. Saturday. $99 (VIP with meet and greet), $75, $49. 826-1100. Paula Cole Band, the Grammywinning singer-songwriter. Mauch Chunk Opera House, 14 W. Broadway, Jim Thorpe. 8 p.m. Saturday. $32. 325-0249. American Voices: Today, works by some of the greatest living American choral composers by the Choral Artists Ensemble of the Choral Society of Northeastern Pennsylvania. St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 232 Wyoming Ave., Scranton. 8 p.m. Saturday. $15, $12 seniors and students. 343-6707. Jay Mankita, the singer-songwriter performing quirky acoustic folk and Americana music at The Cooperage, 1030 Main St., Honesdale. 8 p.m. Saturday. $15 advance; $18 at the door. BYOB. 845-252-6783. The Four Freshmen, the second incarnation of the veteran vocal harmony group begun in 1948. Sponsored by Community Concerts at Lackawanna College. Mellow Theater, 501 Vine St., Scranton. 8 p.m. Saturday. $30, $25. 955-1455. Chris Young, the winner of “Nashville Star” performing selections from his latest release “Neon.” Sherman Theater, 524 Main St., Stroudsburg. 8 p.m. Saturday. $35, $25. 420-2808. Bernie Worrell Orchestra, the pioneer of psychedelic funk and his group. River Street Jazz Cafe, 667 N. River St., Plains Township. Saturday with doors at 8 p.m. and show at 10 p.m. $8. 822-2992. So What, the jazz trio performing free jazz, standards, blues, fusion and funk on bass guitar, drums and alto sax. Hazleton Art League, 225 E. Broad St. 1 p.m. Sunday. $10. 454-0092. Pedals, Pipes and Pizza, the second annual presentation for children and adults by the Penn-

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Stage THIS WEEK: APRIL 19 to 25, 2013 Annie, the Broadway musical about the little orphan escaping the evil Miss Hannigan and being adopted by billionaire Mr. Warbucks. Performed by the Phoenix Kids at the Phoenix Performing Arts Center, 409 Main St., Duryea. Through April 28: 7 p.m. Fridays; 2 and 7 p.m. Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sundays. $12, $10. 457-3589. Loving You Has Made Me Bananas: The 50 Shades of Love Musical. Music Box Dinner Playhouse, 196 Hughes St., Swoyersville. 8 tonight and Saturday; 3 p.m. Sunday. Dinner served 90 minutes before curtain. $34; $16 show only. Reservations: 283-2195. Ring of Fire: The Johnny Cash Musical Show, a tribute to the legendary Man in Black. Theatre at the Grove, 5177 Nuangola Road, Nuangola. Through April 28: 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays; 3 p.m. Sundays. 868-8212. Les Miserables, the Broadway

EVENTS Continued from Page 4

University of Scranton. 7 p.m. Thursday. Free. Registration: 941-6160. Nanticoke Historical Program, recently acquired old ďŹ lms from the 1930s and ’40s including a six-county ďŹ remen’s parade and local men leaving for active duty in World War II. Prese nted by the Nanticoke Historical Society at the St. Faustina Cultural Center, 38 W. Church St., Nanticoke. 7 p.m. Thursday. Free. 735-3659. FUTURE The History of the Poconos, a conference on local history topics including place names, the early European settlers of Monroe County, Sullivan’s Expedition in Tobyhanna Township, the Newfoundland Settlement, the Wilkes-Barre and Eastern Railroad and more. Hoeffner Science and Techology Center, East Stroudsburg University. 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. April 26. Free. 422-3532. Luzerne County Historical Society Dinner, the 155th annual event commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg with guest speaker Greg Goodell of Gettysburg National Military Park. Westmoreland Club, 59 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre. April 26 with reception at 6 p.m. and dinner at 7 p.m. $75. Reservations: 823-6244. The View with a Scranton Attitude: Let’s Hear It from the Boys! A local version of the syndicated talk show with area personalities discussing current topics. Scranton Cultural Center, 420 N. Washington Ave. 7 to 9 p.m. April 26. $6. 344-1111. Renaissance Jamboree, the annual street fair with arts and

sentations of two plays: Jason Miller’s “Lou Gehrig Did Not Die of Cancer� and K.K. Gordon’s “Taking Liberties with Peter Rosig.� Olde Brick Theatre, Rear 128 W. Market St., North Scranton. Through April 27: 8:15 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays. $12.50. Reservations: 344-3656.

musical performed with an all-adult cast by Kiss Theatre Company, 58 Wyoming Valley Mall, Wilkes-Barre Township. Through April 28: 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sundays. $22. 829-1901. A Spotlight on the Jason Miller Playwrights Project, with pre-

ANNOUNCEMENTS Auditions for the Music Box Dinner Playhouse’s June production of “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee.� 196 Hughes St., Swoyersville. 7 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. Needed: men and women age 16 and older. Bring sheet music for a song of your choice. 283-2195. Theater Bus Trip to New York City for Rodgers & Hammerstein’s “Cinderella� and a family-style dinner at Carmine’s on Broadway. Leaves from the Dietrich Theater, 60 E. Tioga St., Tunkhannock 8 a.m. on June 5 and returns at 11 p.m. $235 includes show, bus and dinner along with a contribution to the Dietrich Theater. Reservations: 996-1500.

crafts, food, games and entertainment. Main Street, Bloomsburg. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 27. 784-2522. Cherry Blossom Festival, the annual family-friendly event with music, dance, food booths, amusement rides and arts and crafts. Kirby Park, Wilkes-Barre. 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. April 27-28. 208-4149. Caring F.O.R. Cops, a beneďŹ t for Fallen OfďŹ cers Remembered, an organization that buys bulletproof vests for police ofďŹ cers. Organized by

eighth-grade student Jordan Joseph with food, rafe baskets, children’s activities, silent auction and music. Checkerboard Inn, 385 Carverton Road, Trucksville. 1 to 5 p.m. April 27. $15; $12 children. 406-6123. Fundraising Dance, with food, refreshments and music by the Cool Ride Band. Andrew Lawrence American Legion Post 644, 259-Shoemaker St., Swoyersville. April 27 with doors at 7 p.m. and music at 8 p.m. $15. 706-5963.

Mike Marone, Jesse McNatt, Dave Baker, Bill Lipski and Dawn Winarski will pay tribute to the Man in Black in ‘Ring of Fire: The Johnny Cash Musical Show,’ playing through April 28 at Nuangola’s Theatre at the Grove.

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MAX ROSENN LECTURE IN L AW A N D H U M A N I T I E S

“THE SUPREME COURT: WHAT’S HAPPENING NOW AND WHAT THE FUTURE HOLDS� Noah Feldman Bemis Professor of International Law at Harvard University

DARTE CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS Free and open to the public. Call (570) 408-4306 for information.

Patrons requesting accommodations or services at Wilkes University or Wilkes University-sponsored events in accordance with The American with Disabilities Act (ADA) Title III: Public Accommodations are asked to contact the University at 1-800-Wilkes-U to request such services/accommodations. It is recommended that requests be made at least 48 hours prior to any event.


‘Mame’ is a most eccentric auntie When young Patrick’s father dies, he goes to live with a most flamboyant relative, someone who believes in embracing life with both hands. “Life is a banquet,” she’ll say, “and most poor suckers are starving to death.” Come to the stage play “Auntie Mame” at the Dietrich Theater in Tunkhannock, director Jennifer Jenkins said, and you’ll meet “all the wonderfully eccentric and colorful characters” who are Mame’s friends, people like Vera Charles, “the English actress from Pittsburgh,” who is passed out at a party when Patrick first meets her. Generous Mame does love to throw parties, and most of her guests are grown-ups who might use some unusual words and phrases. “She gives Patrick a little notebook and says ‘I’m going to take

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you around and introduce you to people, and if you hear any words you don’t understand, you can write them down and we’ll talk about them later.’ It’s a brilliant thing to do for a 10-year-old,” Jenkins said. Later, he’ll reveal he’s written “Lysistrata,” “bathtub gin” and “free love.” You can understand why some people might think Auntie Mame is not a good influence on Patrick — even though he adores her. “Unfortunately, there is a bank trustee who sends him off to a

boarding school when Mame is traveling the world with her new husband,” Jenkins said. This will put Patrick in danger of becoming “a stuffy-banker, Connecticut type.” It will be up to Mame to help Patrick return to “the kind of wonderful person who would write a book about his aunt.” The story is based on a true one, Jenkins said, and it follows Mame and Patrick Dennis from 1929 through the Depression to 1946. “One of my favorite moments is Christmas 1929, right after the market crashes. It’s really sweet to see how Mame, even though she’s lost everything, shows her love for her family, which consists of Patrick, her housekeeper and her butler.”

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OBLIVION (XD) (PG-13) 1:30PM 4:30PM 7:30PM 10:30PM NEW MOVIE 42 (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 10:50AM 1:45PM 4:40PM 7:35PM 10:30PM NEW MOVIE CALL, THE (DIGITAL) (R) (11:50AM 2:20PM 4:40PM 7:05PM 9:25PM NOT ON WED. 4/24/13) CROODS, THE (3D) (PG) 2:15PM 7:15PM CROODS, THE (DIGITAL) (PG) 11:35AM 4:50PM 9:45PM EVIL DEAD (DIGITAL) (R) 11:15AM 12:40PM 1:50PM 3:00PM 4:05PM 5:15PM 6:35PM 7:55PM 8:50PM 10:15PM GI JOE: RETALIATION (3D) (PG-13) 11:25AM 4:45PM 10:05PM GI JOE: RETALIATION (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 2:00PM 7:20PM HOST, THE (2013) (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 11:40AM 3:45PM IDENTITY THIEF (DIGITAL) (R) 11:05AM 1:55PM 4:30PM 7:50PM 10:40PM JURASSIC PARK (2013) (3D) (PG-13) 1:25PM 4:25PM 7:25PM 10:25PM LORDS OF SALEM, THE (DIGITAL) (R) 11:10AM 1:40PM 4:10PM 7:10PM 9:40PM NEW MOVIE OBILIVION (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 11:30AM 12:30PM 2:30PM 3:30PM 5:30PM 6:30PM 8:30PM 9:30PM NEW MOVIE OLYMPUS HAS FALLEN (DIGITAL) (R) 12:25PM 3:15PM 6:40PM 10:00PM OZ: THE GREAT AND POWERFUL (3D) (PG) 12:55PM 6:55PM OZ: THE GREAT AND POWERFUL (DIGITAL) (PG) 3:55PM 10:10PM PLACE BEYOND THE PINES, THE (DIGITAL) (R) 12:50PM 4:00PM 7:10PM 10:20PM SCARY MOVIE 5 (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 11:55AM 2:05PM 2:50PM 4:15PM 6:25PM 7:40PM 8:35PM 10:45PM SIDE EFFECTS (DIGITAL) (R) 11:00AM 1:35PM 4:10PM 7:20PM 9:55PM NEW MOVIE SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK (DIGITAL) (R) 11:45AM 5:00PM 9:50PM NEW MOVIE TRANCE (DIGITAL) (R) 7:00PM 9:30PM TYLER PERRY’S TEMPTATION (DIGITAL) (PG-13) 11:20AM 2:25PM (5:05PM 7:45PM NOT ON THURS. 4/25/13) 10:35PM **Note**: Showtimes marked with a \”®”\ indicate reserved seating. You must be 17 with ID or accompanied by a parent to attend R rated features. Children under 6 may not attend R rated features after 6pm

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THE GUIDE

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**Oblivion – PG13 – 130 min – (1:30), (2:00), (4:15), (4:50), 7:05, 7:30, 9:40, 10:15 Oblivion -DBox Motion Seating - PG-13 130 min. (1:30), (4:15), 7:05, 9:40 **The Place Beyond The Pines – R – 150 min – (1:00), (4:00), 7:00, 10:00 Silver Linings Playbook - R - 130 min. (2:00), (4:40), 7:20, 10:00 Scary Movie 5 – PG13 – 95 min – (2:00), (2:35), (4:05), (5:00), 7:05, 7:40, 9:10, 9:50. 42 – PG13 – 135 min – (1:05), (1:40), (3:55), (4:25), 7:15, 7:35, 9:45, 10:15. Evil Dead – R – 100 min – (1:50), (4:10), 7:20, 9:40. ***Jurassic Park in RealD 3D – PG13 – 135 min – (1:20), (4:15), 7:15, 10:00 GI Joe: Retaliation – PG13 – 105 min – (1:10), (3:30), 7:00, 9:15. Olympus Has Fallen – R – 130 min – (1:45), (4:40), 7:30, 10:10. The Croods – PG – 110 min – (1:10), (3:40), 7:00, 9:30. Oz: The Great and Powerful 2D – PG – 140 min – (1:00), (4:00), 7:00, 9:50 THE MET OPERA 04/27/2013 - Giulio Cesare - 12:00PM - 275 min

SPECIAL EVENTS Advance Tickets Available Now For Iron Man 3 OPENING 5/2/13 **Iron Man 3 -PG-13 - 140 min. 9 PM ***Iron Man 3 RealD 3D PG-13 - 140 min. 9 PM Iron Man 3 DBox Motion Seating PG-13 140 min. 9 P.M. All Showtimes Include Pre-Feature Content (Parenthesis Denotes Bargain Matinees)

Avoid the lines: Advance tickets available from Fandango.com Rating Policy Parents and/or Guardians (Age 21 and older) must accompany all children under 17 to an R Rated feature *No passes accepted to these features. **No restricted discount tickets or passes accepted to these features. ***3D features are the regular admission price plus a surcharge of $2.50 D-Box Motion Seats are the admission price plus an $8.00 surcharge First Matinee $5.50 for all features (plus surcharge for 3D features).

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By ROGER MOORE McClatchy-Tribune News Service

S

cience fiction is one film genre that seems to wear its ancestors, the films that inspired it or, less charitably, that it “borrowed” from, with pride. Thus, “Oblivion” has “Scavengers” who dress like Sand People from “Star Wars,” round, red-eyed killer drones from “2001” and “Robocop,” a finale from “Independence Day” and a director from “TRON Legacy.” And Joseph Kosinski brought his blatting synthetic tubas score, used in the original “TRON” and in “Inception,” with him. That doesn’t make “Oblivion” a bad movie, just a familiar one — generic. Decades from now, we see a depopulated post-apocalyptic Earth, where the moon is but a debris field in the night sky. The humans have

IF YOU GO What: “Oblivion” •• 1/2 Starring: Tom Cruise, Morgan Freeman, Olga Kurylenko, Andrea Riseborough, Melissa Leo Directed by: Joseph Kosinski Running time: 126 minutes Rated: PG-13 for sci-fi action violence, brief strong language and some sensuality/nudity

fought and won a war against the invading Scavengers but lost the planet in the process. The A-bombs, earthquakes and tsunamis rendered it almost unlivable. And surviving Scavengers fight on, interfering with the efforts of those on the gigantic space station, Tet, to drain the seas for fusion energy for the human colony on Jupiter’s moon, Titan. Jack Harper (Tom Cruise) is one of “the mop-up crew” who keeps the drones that protect the ocean reactors running on this drying planet, drones the Scavengers keep shoot-

ing down. He has a partner, Victoria (Andrea Riseborough), who monitors his work from the control tower they live in, and a smiling, drawling no-nonsense “Mission Control” boss (a disembodied Melissa Leo) up on Tet. But Jack has little memory of what Earth used to be like. He has dreams of a woman he can’t quite place, is prone to insubordination and reveries when he stumbles across the ruins of the stadium where the last Super Bowl was played. Tumbling into the buried remains of a great library, he picks up a book, Lord Macaulay’s heroic poems about Rome — “How can man die better than facing fearful odds?” Perhaps Jack is remembering his “Top Gun” past. He sneaks off to his cabin in a forested corner of the planet, listening to Led Zeppelin records and fantasizing a life there. If only Victoria would go rogue and visit the surface with him. And that’s when a space ship

crashes and the woman he rescues (Olga Kurylenko) turns out to be the woman from his dreams. Whatever made sense about his world, his past and his mission goes right out the window. The action beats involve shootouts with Scavengers and epic chases involving drones, which are depicted as heartless killing machines that take humanity out of the equation of war. It’s not giving too much away to say that Morgan Freeman pops up and presents further moral quandaries. Cruise is more effective than empathetic in the lead role, Kurylenko is still a pretty (and pretty bland) screen presence, and the humorless Kosinski is still a filmmaker who could use a vigorous edit in the script stage. That makes “Oblivion” exactly the sort of sci-fi film one would expect in April — epic and often exciting, but too familiar and too bland to cut it as a summer release.


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42 — Earnest, righteous, historically accurate and often entertaining, Brian Helgeland’s film is pretty much all you could hope for in a Jackie Robinson film biography. Minus the excitement, which given how well-known Robinson’s story is to baseball fans, is no cardinal sin. And the cast is more adequate than thrilling. It’s the sort of story you find yourself hoping they don’t screw up — that the baseball will be convincing, the racism isn’t watered down and the actor playing Jackie (Chadwick Boseman) comes off as a human being, not an icon. In those regards, “42” scores. PG-13 for thematic elements including language. 128 mins. ••• THE CALL — The 911 dispatcher finally gets a starring role. Halle Berry takes her second kidnapping call when a rookie dispatcher can’t handle the frightening pleas from a taken teenager (Abigail Breslin) trapped in a car’s trunk. R for violence, content and language. 95 mins. •• THE CROODS — In this animated film, a prehistoric family embarks on a journey to find a new home after their cave is destroyed. In 3-D. PG. 92 mins. ••• EVIL DEAD — This remake of Sam Raimi’s “The Evil Dead” — they dropped the “The” in the title — presents, for your edification and enjoyment, some of the most graphic horror violence ever seen on screen. But Fede Alvarez’s homage to the original “Cabin in the Woods” tale lacks the offhanded goofiness and brittle jokes of young people facing death at the hands of something supernatural. R for strong bloody violence and gore, some sexual content and language. 92 mins. •• 1/2 G.I. JOE: RETALIATION — A better-than-average, gravitydefying ninja duel leads to an epic chase through the Himalayas in this big set-piece sequence. PG-13 for intense combat violence and martial-arts action, brief sensuality and language. 110 mins. •• THE HOST — The film adaptation of Stephenie Meyer’s book comes with a workable script about an alien invasion. The bodies of

AP PHOTO

Rooney Mara stars in ‘Side Effects,’ a captivating new-drug film that’s back in theaters. It’s playing locally at Cinemark in Moosic.

humans have been taken over by space travelers who look like neon caterpillars. When an alien known as The Wanderer ends up in the body of the spunky Melanie Stryder (Saoirse Ronan), another problem arises. PG for violence, sensuality. 125 mins. ••• IDENTITY THIEF — Melissa McCarthy and Jason Bateman are opposites stuck on a cross-country road trip together. R for sexuality and language. 107 mins. • 1/2 JURASSIC PARK 3D — Forget blowing the images up to IMAX size and converting the lunging velociraptors and T. Rexes into 3-D. The best reason to revive “Jurassic Park” for its 20th anniversary is Jeff Goldblum. As “chaos theory” expert Dr. Ian Malcolm, he is the skeptic in a cluster of greedy entrepreneurs and spellbound paleontologists. PG-13 for intense sciencefiction terror. 127 mins. ••• OLYMPUS HAS FALLEN — A disgraced Secret Service agent is called back to duty when the White House is taken over by terrorists. R for strong violence and language throughout. 119 mins. ••• 1/2 OZ, THE GREAT AND POWERFUL — Director Sam Raimi was the right guy to make this emerald-tinted world pop off the 3-D screen, but the cast, plainly packed with second or third choices, lets it down. PG for action, scary images and brief mild language. 130 mins. ••• THE PLACE BEYOND THE PINES — This tells three overlapping stories that center on the legacies — voluntary or not — fathers leave their sons and the split-second

ALSO OPENING

from the Lords.” Heidi listens, and the bizarre sounds within the grooves immediately trigger flashbacks of the town’s violent past. Is Heidi going mad, or are the “Lords of Salem” returning for revenge on modern-day Salem? Running time: 101 minutes Rated: R for disturbing violent and sexual content, graphic nudity, language and some drug use. Sources: robzombie.com, movieinsider.com

Movie Amy By AMY LONGSDORF For The Times Leader

Even though the indie drama “The Kitchen” (2012, Monterey, unrated, $27) is set entirely within the walls of the titular room, it never feels claustrophobic or stagy. That’s a tribute to Orefield, Pa.-reared director Ishai Setton and to the actors (Matt Bush, Tate Ellington, Catherine Reitman) who season the material with authenticity and soul. The action unfolds during a birthday party in honor or Jennifer (“That 70s Show” star Laura Prepon), an art-gallery worker who’s having a really rotten 30th birthday. She’s just lost her job, and her boyfriend (Bryan Greenberg) has revealed he’s been cheating on her with one of her friends. While all of the actors are likable, it is Dreama Walker (as Jennifer’s sister Penny) who comes close to stealing the show. The actress is perhaps best known for her turn opposite Shickshinny’s Krysten Ritter in the recently cancelled ABC sitcom “Don’t Trust the B—- In Apartment 23.” “The Kitchen” marks the third feature film Setton has sold to a major distributor. His first — and best — film, “The Big Bad Swim” with Paget Brewster, landed at

Echo Bridge back in 2006, and “3 Days of Normal” starring “Episodes” regular Mircea Monroe found a home at FilmBuff and is scheduled to be available via VOD this summer. More than 20 characters come and go over the course of the 80-minute movie, which is jampacked with betrayals, hook-ups and a naked photographer or two. “ The Kitchen” loses a bit of momentum as it goes along but, in the end, it’s a funny, touching little film that springs plenty of surprises before the end credits roll. Amy Longsdorf writes about DVD and Blu-Ray releases with local connections.

his advances. Hedren was New on DVD rebuff under a studio contract at the By RICK BENTLEY McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Very different kinds of monsters star in this week’s new DVD releases: “A MONSTER IN PARIS,” GRADE B: Paris is terrorized by a very different kind of monster — a giant flea. He’s really not as much a monster as a dapper dresser and beautiful crooner who gets to show his talent when he joins songstress Lucille (Vanessa Paradis) on stage. He’s able to pull off the ruse for a short time because of a “Phantom of the Opera” style disguise. Director and writer Bibo Bergeron (“Shark Tale”) has created a story about the power of love and how it’s wrong to judge people — or giant fleas — at first glance. “THE GIRL,” GRADE B: The made-for-cable movie shows how Tippi Hedren had two minor professional acting credits before getting selected to star in the 1963 Alfred Hitchcock thriller “The Birds.” A year later she headlined Hitchcock’s “Marnie.” What should have been a remarkable launch to her career turned into relentless sexual harassment by the iconic director, which often resulted in on-set abuse when she would

time, and that meant she had no recourse but to try to survive the ordeal. Her story’s told in the film starring Sienna Miller and Toby Jones. “THE HAUNTING IN CONNECTICUT 2: GHOSTS OF GEORGIA,” GRADE B-: This latest tale of terror based on a true story offers a few good scares and a consistently creepy tone. It does fall into the horrorfilm trap of gleaning a lot of its scares from terrorizing a child — in this case a young girl played by Emily Alyn Lind, who looks like a very young Drew Barrymore. Hiding behind the fact the story’s based on real events doesn’t excuse taking such an easy scare tactic. ALSO NEW ON DVD: “IRON MAN: RISE OF THE TECHNOVORE”: Iron Man must stop bio-enhanced monsters. “NOT SUITABLE FOR CHILDREN”: A young man races to become a father. “DJANGO UNCHAINED”: A freed slave ends up in a battle with a German bounty hunter. Jamie Foxx stars. “PARADE’S END”: A young Judi Dench stars in this 1964 film adaptation of the Ford Madox Ford novel. “SAVE THE DATE”: Two sisters battle through the dating world. Alison Brie stars.

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What: “Lords of Salem” Starring: Sheri Moon Zombie, Patricia Quinn, Maria Conchita Alonza, Clint Howard, Dee Wallace, Bruce Davison, Jeff Daniel Phillips Directed by: Rob Zombie Genre: Horror Plot summary: Heidi (Sheri Moon Zombie), a radio station DJ living in Salem, Mass., receives a strange wooden box containing a record, a “gift

decisions that can shape them. The title is the English translation of the Mohawk word for the film’s setting, Schenectady. It’s a fitting romanticizing of reality for the film’s characters, who all hope for something better than what they have. R for language, violence, teen drug/alcohol use. 140 mins. ••• 1/2 SCARY MOVIE V — A couple begin to experience some unusual activity after bringing their newborn son home from the hospital. With the help of home-surveillance cameras and a team of experts, they learn they’re being stalked by a nefarious demon. PG-13 for crude and sexual content throughout, language, some drug material, partial nudity. 85 mins. •• SIDE EFFECTS — A young woman’s world unravels when a drug prescribed by her psychiatrist has unexpected side effects. R for sexuality, nudity, violence and language. 106 mins. ••• SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK —A head-spinner of a movie about love, pain, reinvention and rehabilitation. R for profanity, sex, drugs, violence, adult themes. 120 minutes. •••• TRANCE — Plot-twisting puzzlers are a bubble market in the movies these days, with an arms race of “Inception”-like reality reversals that flip like a coin until dizzy audiences lose all interest in how it lands. That’s certainly the case with Danny Boyle’s mind-bending neonoir with continually shifting layers but little beyond its flashy plot machinations. James McAvoy is Simon, a London auctioneer who describes the emergency protocol of the high-end auction house “in the event of an event.” As he does so, such an event is under way: A wellplanned gang brazenly attempts to steal Francisco Goya’s “Witches in the Air.” Confusion of the grandest sort ensues. R for sexual content, graphic nudity, violence, some grisly images and language. 101 mins. •• TYLER PERRY’S TEMPTATION: CONFESSIONS OF A MARRIAGE COUNSELOR —An ambitious married woman’s temptation by a handsome billionaire leads to betrayal and recklessness and forever alters the course of her life. PG-13 for some violence, sexuality and drug content. 111 mins. • 1/2

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THE GUIDE

CELEBRITY Q&A BY R.D. HELDENFELS

JUMBLE

UNIVERSAL SUDOKU

BY MICHAEL ARGIRION & JEFF KNUREK

‘Longmire’ will be returning to A&E Q. My wife and I loved “Longmire” last year. I believe it was on the A&E network. Will it be back this year? A. Yes. The mystery-drama inspired by a series of novels is set to return to A&E in 2013. At this writing I have not seen a specific air date. Q. On “The Mentalist” there has been a lovely redhead female detective who was a regular but then disappeared for about a month. What happened? A. I believe you are referring to Amanda Righetti, who plays Grace Van Pelt on the series. In January she and husband Jordan Alan welcomed a son, Knox Addison Alan. Righetti took a break from the CBS series around that time, but has returned to work and on the air.

PREVIOUS DAY’S SOLUTION

CRYPTOQUOTE

Q. I saw a preview of a movie about a guy that just got out of prison played by De Niro. Now I cannot find it. Do you know about this film? P.S. I think the title had the word “guy” in it. A. I suspect you saw the trailer for “Stand Up Guys,” a movie starring Al Pacino as a criminal recently released from prison. It also featured Christopher Walken and Alan Arkin. While I liked parts of the movie, reviews were generally not good, and its box-office stay was brief. The movie will be on DVD and Blu-ray on May 21. Do you have a question or comment for the mailbag? Write to me at rheldenfels@thebeaconjournal.com or by regular mail to the Akron Beacon Journal, 44 E. Exchange St., Akron, OH 44309.

HOROSCOPE BY HOLIDAY MATHIS ARIES (March 21-April 19). Potentially

irritating circumstances abound. On a good day, you are not annoyed and opt to transcend the circumstances with a higher thought. On a better day, you don’t even notice. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Instead of staring into an ethereal mist to determine your future, you do what must be done in the moment, creating a destiny worthy of you. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). For the sake of keeping your energy strong and your

ON THE WEB For more Sudoku go to www.timesleader.com attitude buoyant, there will be quite a lot you just have to let go. Hypervigilance is draining. Don’t react to everything. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Marketers say perception is reality, and scientists refute that perception is the least reliable indicator of reality that we have. You’ll find examples to prove both schools of thought today. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You’re wise to shield your energy with an imaginary protective coating before you come into contact with that chronically grumpy someone. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You like the people around you, but you still need a friend whose idea of fun matches more closely your own idea of fun.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). What’s the point

of being beautiful if you don’t feel beautiful? You may as well do the things that are likely to lighten your spirit. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You are keenly aware of your own emotional state, and you have a good sense of how others around you are feeling, too. Keep track. This data will be interesting to you when you look back on it later. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Something you do seemingly without a purpose is not a waste of time. Just because you don’t know the purpose now doesn’t mean there isn’t one. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Something as simple as being prepared for the current temperature as well as for a change

in the weather will contribute to your comfort, confidence and mood. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). A big project seems to be taking forever. And yet, bit by bit, you are getting it done. So don’t lose heart. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You need to partner with someone who will question your ideas, thereby challenging them and making them stronger. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (April 19). You’ll conquer the thing you’ve struggled with for years or change something you’ve disliked. Social luck is strong, and you will meet and mingle with helpful and powerful people over the next three months. July brings a windfall. Your lucky numbers are: 41, 2, 22, 49 and 32.


The harder husband works, the more his wife cheats on him Dear Abby: I am a 47-year-old male, married for 26 years. I am hopelessly in love with my wife and still see her as the most beautiful woman in the world. I have always been selfemployed and have sometimes been at the extremes of feast or famine. During the bad times, I often worked 110-plus-hour weeks to save the ship. Each time things have gotten really bad, my wife has had an

DEAR ABBY ADVICE affair to make up for the time, money and attention I can’t provide her. I found out about her latest affair (her third) when I found a secret cellphone in her purse. For the last eight months, when she visited our daughter at college, she would check into a hotel with her lover. I feel responsible for failing to meet her needs. She doesn’t

want a divorce, but admits she doubts she will ever fully stop dating, and says the effort she puts into deceiving me is proof she loves me and doesn’t want to hurt my feelings. I am amazed at the number of men willing to have sex with a married woman. My heart is broken, and I feel like a failure. Am I a fool to keep fighting for her? — Hopelessly in Love Dear Hopelessly In Love: I hope you realize that as

GOREN BRIDGE

“beautiful” as your wife may be, your relationship with her isn’t a healthy one. Please go look up the definition of the word “codependency.” If your wife loved you, she would prove it by doing everything in her power to HELP you through the rough periods, including finding a job to help with the bills, not sneaking around with other men. That she would claim her deceit is “proof of her love,” and that you would believe her, is amazing. This woman has shown no

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remorse; she has told you she doesn’t plan to be faithful in the future. Do not let her hoodwink you into believing her infidelity is your fault because you worked yourself nearly into a physical collapse trying to save your business and provide for her. If you accept that, it WOULD be foolish. To receive a collection of Abby’s most memorable — and most frequently requested — poems and essays, send a business-sized, self-addressed envelope, plus check or money order for $3.95 ($4.50 in Canada) to: Dear Abby’s “Keepers,” P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Postage is included.)

CROSSWORD

WITH OMAR SHARIF & TANNAH HIRSCH

HOW TO CONTACT:

PAGE 13

Dear Abby: PO Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 Celebrity Questions: TV Week, The Dallas Morning News, Communications Center, PO Box 655237, Dallas, TX 75265


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PIX News at Ten (N) Seinfeld Seinfeld + (N) (TV14) (CC) (TVPG) (CC) (TVG) (TVPG) Monk (CC) (TVPG) Monk (CC) (TVPG) Action Friends 30 Rock 30 Rock 1 News (TVPG) (TV14) (TV14) The Marine (PG-13, ‘06) › John Cena. Thugs The Marine (PG-13, ‘06) › John Cena. Thugs AMC kidnap the wife of a soldier. (CC) kidnap the wife of a soldier. (CC) Swamp’d! Swamp’d! Tanked “Spin the Tanked (CC) (TVPG) Tanked “Spin the AP (N) (CC) Bottlesâ€? (N) (TVPG) Bottlesâ€? (TVPG) Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage ARTS Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars All-Star Celebrity Apprentice Creating a silent American Greed Mad Money CNBC promotional film. (CC) (TVPG) (5:00) The Situation Erin Burnett OutFront Anderson Cooper 360 Piers Morgan Live (N) Anderson Cooper Spe- Anthony Bourdain CNN Room (N) (N) (N) (CC) (Live) cial Report (N) Parts Unknown South Park (:26) Colbert Daily Show (7:57) (:28) (8:58) Chris Rock: Big- South Park Tosh.0 The Dukes of HazCOM Tosh.0 Report Tosh.0 Tosh.0 ger & Blacker (TV14) zard ›› (CC) SportsNite Phillies MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at Philadelphia Phillies. From Citizens SportsNite (N) (Live) PST StateCS (N) Pregame Bank Park in Philadelphia. (Live) (CC) Rewind Union Catholic Catholic Daily Mass The Holy Life on the Rock Catholic WE Crossing Evangeliza- Our Her- Women of CTV Classics: Classics Rosary (TVPG) Classics: BELIEVE the Goal tion mitage Grace Sons of Guns (CC) Sons of Guns (CC) Sons of Guns “Loaded Sons of Guns “Under Blade Blade Sons of Guns “Under DSC (TVMA) (TV14) Upâ€? (N) Siegeâ€? (TV14) Brothers Brothers Siegeâ€? 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(TVG) Diners, Diners, Restaurant: Impossible Diners, Diners, Diners, Diners, Mystery Mystery Diners, Diners, FOOD Drive Drive (TVG) Drive Drive Drive Drive Diners Diners Drive Drive Special Report With FOX Report With The O’Reilly Factor Hannity (N) On Record, Greta Van The O’Reilly Factor FNC Bret Baier (N) Shepard Smith (N) (CC) Susteren (CC) The Nanny Express (‘09) ›› Vanessa Mar- Return to Nim’s Island (PG, ‘13) Bindi Irwin, Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier HALL cil, Brennan Elliot. (CC) Toby Wallace, Matthew Lillard. (CC) (TVG) (TVPG) (TVPG) (TVPG) Modern Marvels (CC) American Pickers (CC) American Pickers (CC) American Pickers (CC) American Pickers (CC) (:02) American Pickers HIST (TVPG) (TVPG) (TVPG) (TVPG) (TVPG) (TVPG) Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Who’s Lived in My Flea Mar- Flea Mar- House Hunters Flea Mar- Flea MarH&G Int’l Int’l Int’l Int’l House? (CC) (TVG) ket ket Hunters Int’l ket ket Hoarders “Bob and Hoarders “Lisa; Berthaâ€? Hoarders “Gail and Hoarders (CC) (TVPG) Hoarders “Merlene; (:01) Hoarders “Vula; LIF Richardâ€? (TVPG) (TVPG) Warrenâ€? (TVPG) Jeffâ€? (CC) (TVPG) Lisaâ€? (TVPG) Jersey Shore (CC) 2013 MTV Movie Awards Macklemore and Awkward. (TV14) The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants MTV (TV14) Ryan Lewis. (TV14) (PG, ‘05) ››› Amber Tamblyn. Sponge- Sponge- Teenage Teenage Teenage Teenage Full House Full House The Nanny The Nanny Friends (:33) NICK Bob Bob Mut. Mut. Mut. Mut. (TVPG) Friends Willie Nelson and Wyn- Elton John: Someone Alice in Wonderland (‘99) ›› Voices of Tina Majorino, Whoopi Valmont (R, ‘89) ››› OVAT ton Marsalis Like Me (CC) Goldberg, Martin Short. (CC) Colin Firth. SPEED NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup: STP NASCAR NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup: STP Faster Faster Faster Faster SPD Center 400, Practice. Live 400, Qualifying. Than Than Than Than Robin Hood (4:30) (PG-13, ‘10) ›› Russell The Mummy (PG-13, ‘99) ››› Brendan Fraser. Premiere. A mummy Bar Rescue “Meat SPIKE Crowe, Cate Blanchett, William Hurt. seeks revenge for a 3,000-year-old curse. Saunaâ€? (TVPG) Defiance “Pilotâ€? Alien races live on Earth in WWE Friday Night SmackDown! The UnderDefiance “Pilotâ€? Alien races live on Earth in SYFY 2046. taker returns to SmackDown. (N) 2046. King of Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Family Guy Family Guy Life as We Know It (PG-13, ‘10) ›› Katherine Heigl, There Yet? TBS Queens (TVPG) (TVPG) (TVPG) (CC) (CC) Josh Duhamel. Premiere. (CC) West Side Story (5:15) (‘61) ›››› Natalie His Girl Friday (‘40) ›››› Cary Grant, Woman of the Year (‘42) ››› Katharine TCM Wood. (CC) Rosalind Russell. (CC) Hepburn, Fay Bainter. (CC) I Found- I Found- Say Yes: Say Yes: Four Weddings: Say Yes: Say Yes: I Found- I Found- Say Yes: Say Yes: TLC Gown Gown ATL ATL Unveiled (TVPG) ATL ATL Gown Gown ATL ATL The Mentalist “Red The Mentalist “Ladies The Dark Knight (PG-13, ‘08) ›››› Christian Bale. Batman battles (:15) Dallas (Part 1 of 2) TNT Tideâ€? (CC) (TV14) in Redâ€? (TV14) a vicious criminal known as the Joker. (CC) (CC) (TV14) Advent. Regular Regular Regular Cartoon Planet (TVG) King of the King of the American American Family Guy Family Guy TOON Time Show Show Show Hill Hill Dad Dad (CC) (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC) Ghost Adventures (N) The Dead Files (CC) The Dead Files (CC) TRAV (TV14) (TVPG) (TVPG) (CC) (TVPG) (TVPG) (TVPG) Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Golden Love-Ray- Love-Ray- Love-Ray- Love-Ray- King of King of TVLD Girls Girls Girls Girls Girls Girls mond mond mond mond Queens Queens Law & Order: Special Law & Order: Special Law & Order: Special Law & Order: Special Law & Order: Special The Moment (CC) USA Victims Unit Victims Unit Victims Unit Victims Unit Victims Unit (TVPG)

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Reads THIS WEEK: APRIL 19 to 25, 2013 Local Buzz. Join local poets for a reading and discussion of their works and the genre of poetry. Osterhout Free Library, 71 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre. 2 p.m. Saturday. Free. Registration: 821-1959. Great Books at Hayfield, a discussion of “On the Road” by Jack Kerouac. Hayfield House Community Room, Penn State Wilkes-Barre, University Drive, off Old Route 115, Lehman Township. Monday with buffet supper at 6 p.m. and discussion at 7 p.m. 675-9269.

sans Chapter of the Pennsylvania Guild of Craftsmen’s dinner. Radisson Lackawanna Station Hotel, 700 Lackawanna Ave., Scranton. April 26 with cocktails at 5:30 p.m. and dinner at 6:30 p.m. $60. 982-6272. Book Signing with local authors Jade Heasley, Bill Ciccotti, Bill Albert and Alison Treat. Barnes & Noble Booksellers, Arena Hub Plaza, Wilkes-Barre Township. 7 p.m. April 26. 829-4210. Writing Workshop, an informal themed writing class with the Campion Literary Society covering poetry, fiction and non-fiction. Room 117, Sheehy-Farmer Campus Center, King’s College, Wilkes-Barre. 3:30 p.m. April 28. Free. 208-5900, ext. 5487.

FUTURE Susan Vreeland, author of “Clara & Mr. Tiffany,” the story of Louis Comfort Tiffany’s chief glass designer, will be the keynote speaker at the Glass Arti-

ANNOUNCEMENTS Just Out the Door, a book of photographs by Lawrence Lang, was recently published and is available at xlibris.com for $15.99.

Buys

Technology Center, 75 Evans St., Kingston. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 27. Vendors welcome. 881-1882. Craft Fair, with vendors, bake sale, live music, homemade food and a silent auction. Joe Terry Civic Center, 1038 Montdale Road, Scott Township. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 27. Sponsored by the Montdale United Methodist Church. 254-6319. Spring Book Sale. Heritage Room, Weinberg Memorial Library, University of Scranton. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 27; noon to 4 p.m. April 28. 941-4078. House and Garden Show, the 21st annual event with home interior and landscape professionals, hundreds of gift ideas, workshops and a cafe-style luncheon. Waverly Community House, 1115 N. Abington Road. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 27; 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 28. $6. 586-8191. Flea Market and Collectibles Show, the 15th annual event with craft and food vendors, raffles and auction. Educational Conference Center parking lot, Luzerne County Community College, 1333 S. Prospect St., Nanticoke. 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. May 4 with auction at noon. Vendors welcome. 7400734.

THIS WEEK: APRIL 19 to 25, 2013 Spring Rummage Sale. Dallas United Methodist Church, 4 Parsonage St. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today; 9 a.m. to noon Saturday. 675-0122. Flea Market, with food available. Bloomingdale Grange, Grange Hall Road. 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. $5 per table. 256-7610. Spring Rummage Sale, with breakfast, lunch and a bake sale. Shavertown United Methodist Church, 163 N. Pioneer Ave. 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. 6965465. Book Sale, sponsored by the Wyoming Free Library. United Methodist Church, 358 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. 693-1364. Spring Pottery and Art Sale. St. Paul Episcopal Church, 276 Church St., Montrose. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. 278-1881. Spring Craft Fair, with indoor and outdoor vendors offering original artwork, vintage and handmade jewelry, candles, oils, vintage accessories and more. New Visions Studio & Gallery, 201 Vine St., Scranton. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. 878-3970. FUTURE Spring Rummage Sale and bake sale, sponsored by the Dorcas Society. St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, 474 Yalick Road, Dallas. 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. April 26; 8 a.m. to noon April 27 (Bag Day). 675-3859. Community Yard Sale. Vendors welcome at $10 per space. Huntsville United Methodist Church, 2355 Huntsville Road, Shavertown. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 27. 477-3748. Spring Craft Fair, with vendors, food, face painting and a Chinese auction. West Side Career and

ANNOUNCEMENTS Vendors Wanted, for a craft show at St. Michael’s Byzantine Catholic Church, 205 N. Main St., Pittston. May 4 and 5. 704-6520 or 654-4568. Vendors Wanted for a Family Fun Day sponsored by Al Noor Academy, 991 Scott St., Wilkes-Barre. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. May 4. $30 inside; $25 outside. 991-6107. Vendors Wanted for the Sons of the American Legion 5th annual Flea Market at Mountain Post 781, Mountain Top. 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. May 5. $10 under cover with table or $5 in the yard with your own table. Reservations: 474-2161.

Outdoors THIS WEEK: APRIL 19 to 25, 2013 MetroCast Giving Back 5K Run and Walk, to benefit local organizations involved in the prevention of teenage suicide, bullying and child abuse. Summerhill Volunteer Fire Company, 422 Summerhill Road, Berwick. Saturday with registration 7:30 to 8:45 a.m. and event at 9 a.m. Followed by a complimentary breakfast for all participants. $25. 802-5660 or neparunner.com. Run for a Rescue, a 5K run and walk to benefit Blues Chip Farms Animal Rescue. McDade Park, off Keyser Avenue, Scranton. Saturday with run at 8 a.m. and walk at 8:30 a.m. $25. 657-0248. Birding at Frances Slocum State Park, a leisurely walk to seek out songbirds. Meet at the Environmental Education Center and Boat Rental, 565 Mount Olivet Road, Kingston Township. 8:30 a.m. Saturday. Free. 675-9900. Fishing Tackle Loaner Day, first come first served basis. Bring your own bait. Driver’s license required to sign out equipment. Nescopeck State Park, 1137 Honey Hole Road, Drums. 9 a.m. to noon Saturday. Free. 403-2006. Art in Nature, a workshop on using clay pots and moss to create living wreaths. Lackawanna Environmental Institute, 10 Moffat Drive, Moscow. 9 a.m. to noon Saturday. $25. Registration: 842-1506. Snake Road Cleanup, with the Lackawanna Audubon Society. Meet in the first parking lot of McDade Park, off Keyser Avenue, Scranton. 9 a.m. Saturday. 563-1565. Creating Bird-Friendly Habitats in Your Yard, using native plants to support local birds and wildlife. Kettle Creek Wildlife Sanctuary, Bartonsville. 10 to 11:30 a.m. Satur-

Why not take a leisurely stroll to seek out songbirds on Saturday? Meet at the Environmental Education Center and Boat Rental of Frances Slocum State Park at 8:30 a.m. day. $5. Registration: 629-3061. Earth Day Cleanup, including litter pickup, raking mulch and planting shrubs and trees. Meet at the park office, Frances Slocum State Park, 565 Mount Olivet Road, Kingston Township. 10 a.m. to noon Saturday. 696-9105. Trail Cleanup Day. Clear park trails of branches, trash and debris. Salt Springs State Park, 2305 Salt Springs Road, Franklin Forks. 11 a.m. Saturday. Free food and T-shirts. Registration: 967-7275. Guided Bird Walk. Nescopeck State Park, 1137 Honey Hole Road, Drums. 8 to 10 a.m. Sunday. Free. Registration: 403-2006. A Celebration of Our Beautiful Local Environment, a 5K walk and run on the Lackawanna River Heritage Trail beginning at the Olive Street entrance in Scranton. 8 a.m. Sunday. Sponsored by the University of Scranton. 941-7520. Egypt Lake Area Hike, 8.5 moderate miles. Meet at the Park and Ride, Route 315, Dupont. Bring lunch and water. 9:45 a.m. Sunday.

Kids THIS WEEK: APRIL 19 to 25, 2013 Beauty and the Beast, the Disney musical performed by the Scranton Prep Players. St. Robert Bellarmine Theater, Scranton Preparatory School, 1000 Wyoming Ave., Scranton. 7:30 tonight and Saturday; 2 p.m. Sunday. $10, $8 students. 941-7737. Toddler Storytime, for ages 2 to 3.5. Osterhout Free Library, 71 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre. Saturdays through April 27 at 10 a.m.; Wednesday at 10 and 11 a.m. Registration: 823-0156. Furry Tales Reading Program. Practice your reading skills with a trained therapy dog and receive a treat for paw-ticipating. Wyoming Free Library, 358 Wyoming Ave. 10 a.m. Saturday. 693-1364. Junior Friends of the Library, a book club for children in grades three to six. Wyoming Free Library, 358 Wyoming Ave. Saturday with book discussion at 11 a.m., followed by lunch and meeting at noon. Signup: 693-1364.

Enjoy a spot of tea and a special menu ‘created by the Mad Hatter’ at the United Methodist Church, 376 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming, on Saturday during an event sponsored by the Friends of the Wyoming Free Library. Mad Hatter’s Tea Party, with a special menu “created by the Mad Hatter” along with photo ops with Alice and her friends. Optional “Alice in Wonderland” dress. Sponsored by the Friends of the Wyoming Free Library at the United Methodist Church, 376 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming. 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. Reservations: 693-1364.

Sponsored by the Susquehanna Trailers Hiking Club. 655-4979. Harveys Lake Earth Day Cleanup. Help pick up litter around the lake. Meet at the Lake-Noxen Elementary School, 135 Westpoint Ave., Harveys Lake. Noon to 4 p.m. Sunday. Registration: 814-9230. Cycle and Recycle, an afternoon of activities focused on recycling, composting and bike riding for all ages. Salt Springs State Park, 2305 Salt Springs Road, Franklin Forks. 12:30 to 5 p.m. Sunday. 967-7275. Sunday for Singles, meet new people and explore nature together. Pocono Environmental Education Center, 538 Emery Road, Dingmans Ferry. 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday. $5. 828-2319. Sustainability Series, a session on “Preserving Green Space Through Land Trusts” with representatives from Countryside Conservancy, the North Branch Land Trust and the Edward L. Rose Conservancy of Susquehanna County. Environmental Education Institute, Keystone College, La Plume. 6 p.m. Tuesday. Free. 945-8555. Move It Outside Day, a guided, two-mile hike to look for signs of spring. Nescopeck State Park, 1137 Honey Hole Road, Drums. 6 to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Free. Registration: 403-2006. FUTURE Spring into Gardening Workshop, an all-day session on turf management, trees, flowers, soil, water features, shade gardens and vegetables with keynote speaker Vincent Cotrone on “Trees and Shrubs in a Changing Landscape.” Also: a plant sale and flea market. Sponsored by the Penn State Master Gardeners at the Technology Center, Penn State Wilkes-Barre, off Old Route 118, Lehman Township. 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 27. $30. Registration: 825-1701. American Girl Party, with excerpts from the latest American Girl books, crafts, activities and snacks. Age 8 and older. West Pittston Library, 200 Exeter Ave. 1 p.m. Saturday. Registration: 654-9847. Bag-a-Badge for Scouts, the Girl Scout Brownie Hiker Badge. Everhart Museum, 1901 Mulberry St., Scranton. 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday. $12 includes a snack. Registration: 346-7186. Young People’s Introduction to Zen, the basics of zazen meditation for ages 10 to 13. Endless Mountain Zendo, 104 Hollow Road, Stillwater. 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Sunday. Registration: 925-5077. Natural Wonders: Nature’s Sensations, a “sensory” walk around the estate for ages 3 to 5. Lackawanna Environmental Institute, 10 Moffat Drive, Moscow. 1 to 2:30 p.m. Thursday. Registration: 842-1506. For Me, for You, for Later, learning to save, share and spend money in a fun workshop designed for children and their parents. Osterhout Free Library, 71 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre. 6 to 7 p.m. Thursday. Free. Registration: 821-1959.


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Do you or a loved one have memory problems? Are these problems normal for your age? Artist Pat Knecht’s ‘Italian Shore’ is among a group exhibit at the B & B Art Gallery in South Abington Township through May 10.

Exhibits

Three Artists: Three Years Later, a group show by artist Ryan Hnat, ceramic potter Skip Sensbach and photographer Marguerite Fuller. Marquis Art & Frame, 122 S. Main St., Wilkes-Barre. Through April 27: 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondays through Fridays; 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays. 823-0518. Time and Landscape, art works by Kathe Frantz. Artists for Art Gallery, 514 Lackawanna Ave., Scranton. Through April 27: noon to 5 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays. 9691040. Senior Art Exhibition, by students majoring in sculpture, painting, illustration, art therapy, photography, graphic design and art education. Mahady Gallery, Marywood University, 2300 Adams Ave., Scranton. Through April 28: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays; 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesdays and Wednesdays; 1 to 4 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. 348-6278. Moving Forward, works by graduating seniors at Keystone College. At both Artists for Art, 514 Lackawanna Ave., Scranton, and ArtWorks Gallery, 503 Lackawanna Ave., Scranton. Through April 27: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays. 2071815 or 969-1040. ANNOUNCEMENTS Call for Entries, for the 7th annual Northeastern Biennial Twenty Thirteen Exhibition with $3,000 in cash awards and solo exhibition opportunities to take place Oct. 19 to Nov. 13 in four Lackawanna County venues. Deadline: June 15. Information at 348-6211 or marywood.edu/galleries.

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PAGE 17

CLOSING SOON Within, art work by Lisa Wray. Through Thursday at the Wyoming County Courthouse Gallery, 1 Courthouse Square, Tunkhannock. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. 836-3200. Under the Sea, a group exhibit with underwater photographs of tropical fish by Morrell Devlin, fiber “sea creature” sculptures and nautical mixed media by Megen Fuller, and glass sea shells and funtional wear by Kyle Lavery. New Visions Studio & Gallery, 201 Vine St., Scranton. Through April 26: noon to 6 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays. 878-3970.

A series of photos taken on the Italian Riviera by Mark Cohen is on exhibit at Marywood University in Scranton through June 14.

812447

THIS WEEK: APRIL 19 to 25, 2013 Spring Juried Exhibition, with painting, photography and 3-D works by members of the Wyoming Valley Art League, Rear 130 S. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre. Opens tonight with a reception from 5 to 8 and an awards presentation at 7. Art of Anna Ostapiw, along with pieces by Karen Mahalik, Pat Knecht, Lou Pontone, Rob Kobrzynski and Kyle Lavery including paintings, photography and blown glass. Opens tonight with a reception 5 to 8. Also: a Gallery Talk by Ostapiw 2 p.m. April 28. B & B Art Gallery, 222 Northern Blvd., South Abington Township. Through May 10: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays. 5852525. Out There, a mix of nature, landscapes and urban cityscapes on metallic paper by Brooklyn photographer Jim Sewastynowicz. Opens Saturday with a reception 6 to 8 p.m. at The Fly on the Wall Gallery, Dragonfly Cafe, 9 E. Broad St., Hazleton. Through May 23: 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Mondays and Tuesdays; 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesdays through Fridays; 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays. 454-1214. Children’s Art Exhibition, with juried works by local students from kindergarten through twelfth grade. T.W. Shoemaker Art Gallery, 312 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday with an Awards Reception 2 to 4 p.m. 392-3103.


PAGE 18

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