Five things to do with your family this weekend: Jan. 5-7

Jan. 4—Looking for something to do with your family this weekend? Check out these activities around the Valley:

1. STEAM Innovations Labs is celebrating its first birthday on Friday. The Sunbury makerspace, 363 Market St., will have live music by Keith Bossert and Bruce Bostian during its monthly First Friday celebration from 5 to 8 p.m. Local art will be on display and visitors can check out what kind of programs the lab is offering. More details are available at Steam Innovation Labs' Facebook page.

2. The Community Theatre League, 100 W. 3rd St., Williamsport, is producing a contemporary spin of Lewis Carroll's classic tale. "Alice @ Wonderland" features all the familiar characters but includes modern references. It's a fun way to support student actors while introducing children to theatre. Shows are at 7:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday with a Sunday matinee at 2 p.m. Tickets are $27 for adults, $25 for seniors and $20 for students. Learn more at ctlshows.com/season47.

3. Have a card collector on your hands? Head to the Shikellamy High School, 600 Walnut St., Sunbury, on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. to check out more than 40 tables of cards and collectibles or get an autograph from Mount Carmel graduate and Oakland Athletics draft pick Tom Reisinger. Admission is $1, which will benefit the Shikellamy High School Marching Band, and refreshments will be available.

4. The Lewisburg Children's Museum, 815 Market St., is introducing a brand new STEM program at noon on Sunday. Every week, guests can explore scientific principles with everyday materials through NISE Network kits. The program cost is included in museum admission, which is $9 per ticket for ages 2 and older and free for children under 2. More details are available at lewisburgchildrensmuseum.org.

5. The Friends of the Joseph Priestley House is holding its annual Twelfth Night celebration on Sunday from 4 to 7 p.m. at the museum, 472 Priestley Ave., Northumberland. The celebration will include the traditional Twelfth-Night Cake — where a bean and a clove are baked into the dessert and the people served those slices receive a crown and a jester hat respectively — and other light refreshments. Christmas carols and traditional colonial music will be played, accompanied by fiddler Beverley Conrad and a choral group from the Unitarian Church. Ron Blatchley will reprise his role as scientist Joseph Priestley to lead chemistry demonstrations at 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. All children attending will get a free book. Learn more at Joseph-priestley-house.org.

Have a family-friendly event to suggest? Send details to ksmithcullen@dailyitem.com