He Imes Eader: Coroner: Clot Killed Man Cops Shot
He Imes Eader: Coroner: Clot Killed Man Cops Shot
He Imes Eader: Coroner: Clot Killed Man Cops Shot
38
C M Y K
LIFE S E C T I O N C
THE TIMES LEADER THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2011
timesleader.com
A little something on top is still stylish
By SARA POKORNY
spokorny@timesleader.com
Style: Cloche
Made by: Collection Eighteen
Sold at: Macys, $48
This womans hat, popular in the
20s and making a comeback,
can be found in nearly every hat
department. The cloche (the
French word for bell notice the
bell shape) is tight and worn low.
Many are embellished with flow-
ers or ribbons.
SARA POKORNY PHOTOS/THE TIMES LEADER
Style: Wide brim
Made by: Mossimo
Sold at: Target, $16.99
This falls between a wide-
brimmed floppy and a cloche. Its
more toned down than a floppy
hat and has the simple shape of
a cloche with extra brim. Flowers
or bows embellish many.
Style: Military
Made by: Puma
Sold at: Lids, $21.99
Military hats are casual and often
adjustable with a boxy shape.
The bill is much shorter than that
of a baseball cap.
Style: Wide-brimmed floppy
Made by: Collection Eighteen
Sold at: Macys, $42
This style of hat is often seen in
early May, around Kentucky
Derby time, when bigger is bet-
ter. Its ideal when the risk of
sunburn is high. The extra wide
brim protects the face from
harmful rays.
Style: Fedora
Made by: American Rag
Sold at: Macys, $19.50
The fedora may be the most
common mens hat next to a ball
cap. Not to be confused with a
wider Panama hat, these are
narrowly creased lengthwise and
pinched in front on the sides. The
crease can be diamond- or tear-
drop-shaped. Though often a
solid color, plaids are popular.
Ciaran Burke loves 1930s and 40s
styles, an aspect of his personality
evident in the slate-gray fedora that
sits atop his head daily. Burke, of
Wilkes-Barre, is no man of a certain
age whos been wearing hats all his
life. Hes just a 14-year-old who sim-
ply cant get enough of fashionable
headwear.
And he isnt alone.
Various hat styles from through-
out history topmany a modernhead,
from wide-brimmed to drivers caps.
We canthankthe Royal Weddingand
the likes of Lady Gaga and Katy Per-
ry for putting the accessory at the
forefront of style once more.
Burke sticks strictly to fedoras.
The cap he now wears belonged to
his grandfather, James Kelly, but he
started donning headwear in fourth
grade, when he sported a piece that
belonged to his great-grandfather.
He even has an alternate hat for
warm months, when hot felt just
wont do. He switches off with a
straw fedora and puts the feathers
that stick out of the brim of the felt
hat into the band of the straw ver-
sion.
Its not just about the style for
Burke; etiquettealsocomes intoplay.
I try not to wear it indoors, he
said. Yourealsonot supposedtoput
it down on tables.
Area women also are sporting hats
everywhere you look.
Monica Leon, 48, of Wilkes-Barre
began her love affair with hats when
she was younger and required to
wear one to church. From there she
T
he top hat was made froma beaver pelt. The green-and-white beanie was part of a
1912 girls basketball uniform. As for the bathing cap, that would have been a
smashing accessory to the skirt-and-stockings bathing costume women wore to
protect their modesty at the beach in the olden days.
That was what you wore with
one of those costumes you cant
even imagine wearing, said Lu-
zerne County Historical Society
volunteer Sandra Skies-Ludwig,
who arranged dozens of samples of
vintage headgear into a Mad
About Hats exhibit at the societys
museum in downtown Wilkes-
Barre.
Covering the head was consid-
ered important decades ago, Skies-
Ludwig said, especially for the up-
per-class women who wanted to
preserve their fair complexions to
showtheydidnt havetoworkinthe
sun.
You didnt leave the house with-
out a hat and gloves if you were a
lady, she said.
Doesnt that looklikesomething
a Jane Austen character would
wear? museumcurator Mary Ruth
Burke asked, pointing out a poke
bonnet witha projectingfront brim.
Another groupof hats, consisting
of pieces of decoratedfabric andrib-
bons meant to tie under the chin,
spoke to another period novel.
They remind me of the scene in
Gone With the Wind where Rhett
gives Scarlett a hat and she puts it
on backward, Skies-Ludwig said.
The exhibit contains cloche hats
from the 1920s, mourning hats
trimmed with black ostrich feath-
ers anda festive pinkhat, circa1911,
crafted from silk flowers as well as
mens styles the Homburg, the
Stetson, the Panama and even the
West Point parade hat.
Colonel Robert Bruce Ricketts
Civil War hat is on display, as is a
brides wreath of wax blossoms,
BoyScout andGirl Scout hats of the
past and some old-time hat pins,
each several inches long, that look
as if they could do some damage.
Dont mess with a Victorian
woman, Burke saidwitha chuckle.
She was armed and dangerous.
CLARK VAN ORDEN PHOTOS/THE TIMES LEADER
You didnt leave the house without a HAT and GLOVES if you were a LADY.
Sandra Skies-Ludwig, Luzerne County Historical Society volunteer
Colonel Ricketts wore this hat
during the Civil War.
This vintage 1930s cap from
the Shickshinny Volunteer
Fire Co. sports a tiny fire-
truck medallion on the brim.
This West Point parade hat
would have been worn on
dress occasions.
Peruse some vintage headwear in W-B
By MARY THERESE BIEBEL mbiebel@timesleader.com
Hat couture
THEN AND NOW
Historical Society curator Mary Ruth Burke holds a Panama hat, while volunteer Sandra Skies-Ludwig, in front, shows a beaver-pelt top hat.
What: Mad About Hats, a collection
of vintage headwear
Where: Luzerne County Historical
Society Museum, 69 S. Franklin St.,
Wilkes-Barre
When: Noon to 4 p.m. Tuesdays
through Saturdays
Admission: $4
More info: 822-1727
IF YOU GO
See FOREFRONT, Page 2C
AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER
Ciaran Burke, 14, has been
wearing fedoras like this since
fourth grade. This particular
cap belonged to his grandfa-
ther, James Kelly.
Style: Flat, or drivers
Made by: American Rag
Sold at: Macys, $19.50
These flat caps, often wool or
tweed, are rounded with a small,
stiff-front brim. The style is asso-
ciated with newsboys of old who
sold papers at a corner stand but
is now popular in punk and hip-
hop subcultures.
C M Y K
PAGE 2C THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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STORY SO FAR: Abby and Becky have gone
to the woods with a fe and a cooking pot, to
make the British think they are an army!
CHAPTER SIX
The Army in the Woods
T
he rst sounds were a surprise. The
woods had been so still before! Now the
sounds banged and tooted around the
trees and out over the water.
The girls looked at each other. They were
playing!
Becky hit the pot again.
Abby blew the fe. Yankee Doodle went to
TOWWWN!
They looked out through the leaves.
They hear us! Abby said.
The sailors in the boats had put up their
oars and stopped rowing. They were looking at
the woods. On the ship, sailors called to each
other and pointed to shore. A few of them were
pushing something to the front of the deck.
They are bringing out a cannon! Becky
cried.
A cannon! Abby stepped back quickly. Did
the sailors really think they were an army?
Keep playing! Becky said. She banged on
the pot with her wooden spoons. Bang, BANG!
Bang, BANG! Bang, bang, BANG!
Abby took a breath and blew as hard as she
could. Yankee Doodle went to town, Yankee
Doodle went to townShe stopped suddenly.
The sailors in the boats had picked up their
guns! Abby wanted to run away.
But Becky said, We must go closer, so they
think we are marching to meet them.
Abby wanted to cry out No! But she
stumbled on after Becky. It was hard to
keep going, with so many branches in the
way. It was hard to nd the breath to play the
fe. And it was very hard to walk closer to the
edge of the woods, and to the water, and the
British sailors with their guns.
Suddenly, Becky began banging on the trees!
She hit a tree and then the pot and then an-
other tree. Each tree sounded different. She was
making the sound of many drums!
Becky was so brave! Abby tried to blow
harder on her fe, but only a sharp squeak
came out. She could not even play right! She
almost cried.
But she took a breath and blew again. This
time, she played clear and strong. YANKEE
DOODLE WENT TO TOWN!
The notes lled the air. Abby could almost
believe that she and Becky were an army! If
only the British sailors would think so!
They had come to the edge of the woods.
Bright water came shining through the leaves.
The rst small boat was so close that Abby
could see the face of the sailor at the front. He
had a brown beard like Fathers. It was strange
to think that these British sailors might be
fathers, too, with girls of their own at home
There was a tremendous BOOM and a great
splash.
The cannon! Becky cried.
Abby looked at the ship. The cannon was
pointing at the shore. Sailors were running
across the deck, climbing the masts, pulling
the ropes that held the sails. At the front of the
deck, a sailor waved his arms at the boats in
the water.
In the boats, the sailors threw down their
guns and picked up their oars.
They are calling the boats back to the ship!
Becky said. Play!
YANKEE DOODLE! they played.
The boats were turning. The sailors bent over
their oars. The boats jumped through the water,
heading toward the ship.
They are rowing away! said Abby.
YANKEE DOODLE! they played again.
The boats reached the ship. One after the
other, the sailors stood up, took hold of ropes
and pulled themselves up the side of the ship
to the deck. Then they pulled the boats up after
them.
YANKEE DOODLE! they played together.
Look! Abby pointed. Now a sailor with a
knife was cutting the rope that held the anchor.
They are cutting off the anchor without
waiting to pull it up! Becky said. They want to
get away fast!
The sailor jumped back as the rope ew up
out of his hands.
The ship is turning! Abby said.
BOOOOM!
Oh! she cried.
Becky pulled her to the ground.
There was another rush of air and then a
splash as the second cannonball hit the water.
Abby started to get up, but Becky pulled her
down. Lie still! she said.
They lay on the ground for a long time, but
there were no more shots.
Becky stood up slowly and pushed a branch
away. Abby, it is all right, she said, looking
out. They will not re again.
Abby looked, too. The ship was sailing away.
The British have turned back, Abby said.
Oh, Becky, we made them go!
They were safe!
Now Abby could not keep from crying Play!
And the girls played Yankee Doodle one
more time as the British ship sailed out to sea.
(To be continued Tuesday, Nov. 8)
Text copyright 1999 Betty Miles
Illustrations copyright 1999 Joan Sandin
Reprinted by permission of Breakfast Serials,
Inc. www.breakfastserials.com
For more information about becoming a NIE sponsor contact
Alan Stout at 829-7131 or email astout@timesleader.com
The Army of Two
Written by Betty Miles Illustrated by Joan Sandin
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found it didnt have to be a once-
in-a-while style.
By the time I was in my 20s I
realized how much a hat could
bring to an outfit, she said.
Leonmost oftenwears a black
womens newsboy-style cap
when the weather turns cold
andcanbe foundinfloppy wide-
brimmed hats and Panama caps
in summer. These are her favor-
ite because she finds themmost
versatile.
Youcanthrowa pinor a scarf
on themand completely change
the look.
Thats exactly why Tori Kop-
icki, 35, of Dallas sticks to solid-
colored cloche and wide-
brimmed hats in winter.
When youre walking around
outside all you see is what
youve got onas far as outerwear
goes, she said. You dont see
jewelry or the clothes under-
neath the coat. And to look at
winter coat after winter coat can
be boring, so why not make it
one big outfit? Its an always-
changing thing, too, because
you can add so many different
accessories to a hat.
FOREFRONT
Continued from Page 1C
By the time I was in
my 20s I realized how
much a hat could bring
to an outfit.
Monica Leon, 48
Wilkes-Barre
Second- and third-grade students of St. Nicholas-St. Mary School,
Wilkes-Barre, recently participated in fire emergency training provid-
ed by the Wilkes-Barre Fire Departments Fire Safety House. Some
of the participants, from left, first row, are Justin Tran, Lacey Rinker,
Kennedy Tavaris, Erek Rokosz and Gabriella Randazzo. Second row:
Tom Cross, Wilkes-Barre Fire Department; Kay Corbett, second-grade
teacher; Rosalyn Partington; Nicholas Reilly; Jack Trybulski; Kathryn
Vargo; and Don Hall, Wilkes-Barre Fire Department.
St. Nicholas-St. Mary students learn about fire safety
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THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2011 PAGE 3C
Photographs and information must
be received two full weeks before your
childs birthday.
To ensure accurate publication, your
information must be typed or comput-
er-generated. Include your childs
name, age and birthday, parents,
grandparents and great-grandparents
names and their towns of residence,
any siblings and their ages.
Dont forget to include a daytime
contact phone number.
We cannot return photos submitted
for publication in community news,
including birthday photos, occasions
photos and all publicity photos.
Please do not submit precious or
original professional photographs that
require return because such photos can
become damaged, or occasionally lost,
in the production process.
Send to: Times Leader Birthdays, 15
North Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18711-
0250.
GUIDELINES
Childrens birthdays (ages 1-16) will be published free of charge
C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
If your childs photo and birthday
announcement is on this page, it will
automatically be entered into the
Happy Birthday Shopping Spree
drawing for a $50 certificate. One
winner will be announced on the first
of the month on this page.
WIN A $50 GIFT
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
Nicholas John Vincelli, son of
Christine and Gary Vincelli Jr.,
Shavertown, is celebrating his
seventh birthday today, Nov. 3.
Nicholas is a grandson of Cecelia
Vincelli, Dallas; the late Gary
Vincelli; and Frank and Charlene
Panuccio, Shavertown. He is a
great-grandson of Beatrice
Romanowski, Fairview, N.C.
Nicholas has a sister, Natalie, 5.
Nicholas J. Vincelli
Holly M. Thomas, daughter of
Lori and Joshua Thomas, is
celebrating her first birthday
today, Nov. 3. Holly is a grand-
daughter of Sue and Jimmy
Caley, Glen Lyon; Carole Thomas,
West Wyoming; and the late
Eugene Thomas Jr. She has a
sister, Jenna, 5.
Holly M. Thomas
Gabrielle Lee Oatridge, daughter
of Tara Elizabeth Oatridge and
Jared Butcher, Plymouth, is
celebrating her seventh birthday
today, Nov. 3. Gabrielle is a
granddaughter of Frank Oatridge
Jr., Shavertown; the late Donna
Lee Oatridge; and Wayne and
Carol Glycenfer, Carlisle. She is a
great-granddaughter of Helen
Ziomek, Plymouth; the late
Charlotte Oatridge; and the late
Irving and Dorothy V. Brown.
Gabrielle L. Oatridge
Benjamin Thomas Gruden, son
of Tracey and Frank Gruden,
Wilkes-Barre, is celebrating his
third birthday today, Nov. 3.
Benjamin is a grandson of the
late Joseph Ziegler Sr. and
Teresa and Joe Kyle, all of
Wilkes-Barre, and Frank Gruden
and the late Catherine Gruden,
Scranton. He has two brothers,
Cameron, 5, and Gavin, 7, and a
step-brother, Andrew.
Benjamin T. Gruden
Ava Teresa Grossman, daughter
of Lloyd and Dr. Joan Grossman,
Swoyersville, is celebrating her
fifth birthday today, Nov. 3. Ava
is a granddaughter of A. Henry
and Dolores Cebrick, Swoyers-
ville; Suzanne Melsh, Denver,
Colo.; and Lloyd and Denise
Grossman, Red Bluff, Calif. She
has two brothers, Caleb Andrew,
7, and Jared Nicholas, 10.
Ava T. Grossman
Brayden Makowski, son of Katie
and Mark Makowski, Dallas, is
celebrating his second birthday
today, Nov. 3. Brayden is a grand-
son of Cheryl Albanese, Tunk-
hannock, and Angela and Mark
Makowski, Hanover Township. He
is a great-grandson of Rose
Ziminsky, Kingston, and Sandra
and George Holterhoff, New
Jersey. Brayden is a great-great-
grandson of Rose Meade, Moun-
tain Top.
Brayden Makowski
FORTY FORT: Wyoming
Seminary Lower School,
1560 Wyoming Ave., will hold
an Early Childhood Overview
9-11 a.m. Nov. 10.
Families may tour pre-
school, pre-kindergarten and
kindergarten classrooms and
speak with the dean of the
Primary Division, teachers
and admission staff about the
early childhood program.
Applications are accepted up
to one year in advance of
entry. The school will main-
tain waiting pools when
necessary for all programs.
Call Heidi Sims, associate
director of Lower School
Admission, at 718-6610 for
more information, or email
lsadmission@wyomingsemi-
nary.org. Advance regis-
tration is recommended.
NANTICOKE: Luzerne
County Community College
will hold an information
night for engineering, trades
and technology programs
5:30-7:30 p.m. Nov. 17 at the
colleges Advanced Tech-
nology Center and Building
2.
Participants will have the
opportunity to meet with
faculty and employers and
tour the colleges technology
facilities. Information on
enrollment procedures, ca-
reer opportunities, tuition
and financial aid will also be
available.
The event is free and open
to the public. For more in-
formation, call 740-0399 or
800-377-LCCC, ext. 7399.
WILKES-BARRE: The
Ladies Ancient Order of
Hibernians (LAOH), Division
1 St. John Neumann, invites
all Luzerne County students
to submit essays to the
LAOH 2011-2012 Irish Histo-
ry Writing Contest.
The contest is open to any
students (public, private,
parochial or home-schooled)
in grades 6-12. This years
topics are Level 1(grades
6-8): The Story of Annie
Moore--Irish Immigration to
America and Level 2 (grades
9-12): The Irish and the
Building of the American
Infrastructure.
Cash prizes will be award-
ed to winners at both the
state and national levels. For
complete contest rules and
list of prizes, contact Divi-
sion Historian Mary Ellen
Dooley at 570-735-1711, or
visit the National website at
www.ladiesaoh.com. Dead-
line for division entries is
Jan. 20, 2012.
IN BRIEF
Dallas High School
Class of 1972 is holding an orga-
nizational meeting to plan a 40th
anniversary reunion 7 p.m.
Wednesday at Grotto Pizza, Har-
veys Lake. All classmates interest-
ed in helping to plan the reunion
are invited.
Marymount High School
Class of 1960 will meet 6 p.m. Nov.
15 at Norms Pizza and Eatery,
North Sherman Street, Wilkes-
Barre. Plans for a Christmas dinner
will be completed. All classmates
are invited. For more information
call Ray at 639-1390, Chris at 823-
4341 or Ann at 825-5711.
Class of 1962 will meet 7 p.m.
Wednesday at Norms Pizza and
Eatery, North Sherman Street,
Wilkes-Barre. All local graduates
are invited.
Meyers High School
Class of 1961 is holding a get-
together 1 p.m. Nov. 15 at Logans
Restaurant, Market Place Plaza,
Wilkes-Barre Township. All class
members, spouses and friends are
invited.
Plymouth High School
Class of 1950 is having a Dutch-
treat dinner 4 p.m. today at Perugi-
nos Restaurant, Luzerne. All class-
mates and guests are welcome.
Class of 1956 reunion planning
committee will meet 6 p.m. Nov. 15
at Grotto Pizza, Edwardsville. Plans
for the 2012 reunion will be dis-
cussed. All classmates are invited.
St. Marys High School
Class of 1961 will meet 6 p.m.
Wednesday at Pattes Sports Bar,
64 W. Hollenback Ave., Wilkes-
Barre. Anyone with information on
the following class members con-
tact Ellen Kenney Wallace at 570-
823-2295, or email Kathy Klein
Bennett at kathybg3@prodigy.net:
Albert Gerstle, Barbara Laffey and
Diane Lynch.
West Side Central Catholic High
School
Class of 1960 will hold a Dutch-
treat meeting 5:30 p.m. Wednes-
day at the Beer Deli, Forty Fort, to
discuss upcoming events. All class-
mates are welcome. For more
information, contact Julie at rayju-
liwa@gmail.com or 639-1390, or
Jane at jshultz1942@comcast.net.
Wyoming Area High School
Class of 1986 is celebrating its
25th anniversary reunion 6 p.m.
Nov. 26 at Bar Louie, Mohegan Sun
Casino. Reservations are required.
Contact any of the following class-
mates for ticket information: Leslie
Olerta Leibman at lolerta@com-
cast.net; Trisha Kamor Seidel at
570-885-4121 or trisha.sei-
del@sbcglobal.net; and Lee Stela-
cone Seaman at
las0311@gmail.com.
REUNIONS
Edwardsville High School Class of 1951 recently celebrated its 60th anniversary reunion at Konefals
Restaurant, Edwardsville. Classmates in attendance, from left, first row, are Joan Robbins Slivinski,
Sandra Sakolick Chakon, Kathleen Adams Miller and Tony Washesky. Second row: Michael Remas, Al
Yushinskas, Robert Verosky, Harry Berdy, Joe Koval, Bill Barney, Don Kulick and Joe Salatino.
Edwardsville High School Class of 51 reunites for 60th anniversary
The Department of Mathematics
at Misericordia University recently
hosted the Second Annual Luzerne
and Lackawanna Counties Mathe-
matics Symposium. Regional pro-
fessors participating in the confer-
ence included, fromleft, Dr. Chris-
tian Laing, assistant professor,
Wilkes University; Dr. Steven Ted-
ford, associate professor of mathe-
matics, Misericordia University; Dr.
David Perkins, LCCC; Dr. Timothy
Kearney, assistant professor of
business, Misericordia University;
Dr. Jay Stine, associate professor of
mathematics, Misericordia Uni-
versity; and Dr. Jennifer Franko
Vasquez, University of Scranton.
Misericordia hosts
Mathematics Symposium
C M Y K
PAGE 4C THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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