Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / March 22, 1980, edition 1 / Page 18
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2 THE CAROLINA TtSES SAT., MARCH. . 18S8 Calendar and Announcements DANCE LESSQNS-March 21 marks the official beginning of spring. You can begin by feeling good with six weeks of swing and ballroom dance lessons with Carolyn Max. Come to New Performing Dance Company School and spring in to Level I or Level II classes at 7 or 8 p.m., respectively. Call for registration at 688-1138. RECITAL CANCELLED The Saturday, March 22, recital which was to be given by Boaz Sharon of the Duke University Department of Music has been cancell ed. This recital will be rescheduled for the academic year 1980-81. SIR SLOB AND THE PRINCESS-Theatre In The Park announces a children's show, "Sir Slob And The Princess," each Saturday and Sunday at 3 p.m., March 22 through April 13. Admission is $1.50. Reservations are not needed. AUDITIONS Theatre In The Park will hold auditions for "Jesus Christ Superstar," March 24 at 1 p.m., at the theatre. Singers, dancers, and actors are needed. For infor mation, call 755-6058 or 755-6936. COLLEGE MUSIC SOCIETY Regional Meeting will be held Saturday March 22, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., in the M.D. Biddle Music Building, Duke University. THE HILLSIDE HIGH SCHOOL Class of 1960 is holding a reunion planning meeting on Saturday, March 22 at 8 p.m., at the home of William Hopson, 2901 Kanewood Drive. Fore further information, call 489-4735. ORGAN RECITAL David McConkey, associate Chapel organist, will present a faculty recital in Duke Chapel Sunday, March 23 at 8:15 p.m. The concert is free and open to the public. GORDAN BALL, who teaches film in the English Department at UNC-Chapel Hill, will screen and discuss five short films "Canadian Pacific" by David Rimmer, "Schwechater" and "Unsere Afrikareise" by Peter Kubelka, "Window Water Baby Moving" by Stan Brakhage, and his own "Sitting" at the N.C. Museum of Art, Raleigh, Sunday March 23 at 3 p.m. Admission is free. "JACK WHITE: PAINTINGS," will go on exhibit at the N.C. Museum of Art, Raleigh, Collectors Gallery, third floor, March 23 (through April 20). Opening reception will be held Sunday, March 23, 4-6 p.m. DUKE UNIVERSITY WIND SYMPHONY - Paul Bryan, conductor, Edgar Williams, guest conductor will present a concert in Page Auditorium, Tues day March 25, 8:15 p.m. Free ancTopen to the public. CHUCK MANGI0NE and the Chuck Mangiont.Quartet, whose newest album, "Fun and Games," features music commissioned for the ABC Sports coverage of the 1980 Winter Olympics at Lake Placid, will perform in concert Monday, March 24 at 8 p.m., in UNC's Memorial Hall. Tickets for the concert are $8 and are available at the Carolina Union Box Of fice. For more information, call 966-1446, Mon-Fri, 12-6 p.m. . A RAINBOW BOX is overflowing at the Edison Johnson Center on Murray Avenue. Classes being offered include clogging, athletics, puppetry, gyn mastics, dance, arts and crafts. Call the Johnson Center at 683-4270 for more information. GREAT DECISIONS '80 The second lecture in a series sponsored by the Duke Institute for Learning in Retirement, will be "The Mideast and The Gulf: U.S. Policy in Ferment," Tuesday March 25, 4:30-6 p.m., in the auditorium of the Gross Chemistry Building at Duke. The speaker will be Ralph Braibanti, James B. Duke Professor of Political Science. For registration or further information, call Ms. Sallie Simons, 684-6259. SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB MEETINGS Edgemont SC Club, March 24 and 31, 1:30 p.m., Memorial Center, Oldham Towers; Incomparable SC Club, J.J. Hender son Center, March 25, 2 p.m. OBT MEETINGS Albright Council, Greater St. Paul Church, March 26, 6 p.m.; Saint Theresa Council, House to House, March 25, 7:30 p.m.; Fayet teville Street Council Management Office, March 25, 7:30 p.m. BEGINNERS MACRAME The Durham Parks and Recreation Department and the City of Durham Schools Community Education Program will offer a begin ners macrame class at Y.E. Smith Elementary School starting March 25 at 7 p.m. The class will be held on each Tuesday for four weeks. The cost is $20 per person which will cover all supplies and instructions. For more information, call Gaston Patterson at 683-4355. IF YOU'RE CONVINCED THAT NUCLEAR POWER has got to go and if you've always dreamed of making it big in Hollywood, the Triangle Area Anti-Nuclear Street Theater Company is the place for you to act out your anti-nuclear sen timents. An organizational meeting of the Company will be held Wednesday, March 26 at 7:30 at the Durham Friends Meeting House, 404 Alexander Avenue. Amateur and experienced actors, writers, costume designers and other talented individuals needed. For more information, call 286-4120. PAULINE KONER DANCE CONSORT will be presented in Page Auditorium, Fri day, March 28 at 8 p.m., sponsored by the Triangle Dance Guild at Duke University. Free master classes will be held in the Ark on Saturday, March 29 at imm' For furtner information, call 684-4059 between 9 a.m. and 4 p,m. CI0MPI QUARTET will perform in the East Duke Music Room, Saturday March 29, 8:15 p.m. Free and open to the public. DUKE ALL-CAMPUS CARNIVAL-Old fashioned fun for children of all ages will abount when Duke University presents the second annual All Campus Carnival, Saturday, March 29, Duke's West Campus quad, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. The carnival is a joint effort among forty student organizations at Duke to raise money for Camp Kaleidoscope Duke Medical Center's new summer camp for chronically ill children. Admission is free and there is plenty of park ing. ROSE SOCIETY PLANS MAY EXHIBITION - Plans for the eleventh Annual Rose Show, sponsored bytthe Chapel Hill Rose Society, were initiated at an all committee meeting with Society chairman, Robert L. Hardison, on Jan. 11. the show will be open to the public Friday and Saturday, May 23 and 24 in the west court of Chapel Hill's University Mall. All show exhibits and competition will be open to home rose growers and ar rangers who desire to participate in categories including sixteen divisions of hor ticultural, plus divisions of miniature, old fashioned roses, and artistic (floral arrangements). Awards in all categories will be at the discretion of accredited ludges from outside the Chapel Hill area. . "Black Music America" Radio Entertainer Lou Rawls and television personality Don Cornelius recently spent a day in a Hollywood studio taping a radio special they hope will change the lives of young black students across the na tion. The duo co-hosted what will become "Black Music America," a six-hour show produced by a grant from Anheuser-Busch Companies, Inc., and designed to raise money for the United Negro College Fund. The show traces the history of black music and artists from turn-of-the-century ragtime to modern disco and will be aired on about 100 black-oriented radio stations around the country. Based on the UNCF theme, "A mind is a terrible thing to waste," the radio special features the works of top black music artists blended with background on the per formers and occasional station breaks for local phone pledge fund-raising activities. The radio special is the se cond part of a Rawls Budweiser program to raise money for the 41 colleges and 50,000 students in the UNCF network. Last October, Rawls taped a three-hour "Lou Rawls Parade of Stars" television special featuring such enter tainers as Bill Cosby, Lola ' Falana, Glen Campbell, Charlev Pride and Muham mad Ali. As part of the fund-raising program, Rawls also toured UNCF campuses in the South last fall interviewing students and taping portions of the television special. "These students come, in many cases, from deprived backgrounds and wouldn't be in college if not for UNCF," said Rawls. "These colleges not only teach the basics of education, but also teach black heritage and culture. They instill a sense of pride in their students." All aspects of black music are featured in the radio special, including blues, jazz, rock & roll, ragtime, folk, gospel and disco. Artists highlighted range from Gertrude "Ma" Rainey, a minstrel singer in the I900's now known as "The Mother of the Blues" to current popular vocalist Cheryl Lynn, a young star who was discovered on television's wacky "Gong Show." In between are such American music traditions as Louis Armstrong, Duke Ell ington, Count Basie, Scott Joplin, Bessie Smith, Nat King Cole, Mahalia Jackson, Ray Charles and Stevie Wonder. Both the radio and televi sion specials will be backed up by marketing support, displays and special advertis ing assistance provided by Anheuser-Busch, brewer of Budweiser. w : rW1! H V ft . O -I Alfred Nobel, the Swedish inventor of dynamite, left hit vast fortune to promote world peace and advance knowledge through the Nobel prizes. " MENTAL HEALTH TOURNAMENT RENAMED TO HONOR FOUNDERS-The Mental Health Tournament which was conceived by Jake Elliott and put into effect by Jake and R.L. Rigsbee has been renamed to honor them. This will be the fifth year for the golf tournament which is now called the EIliottRigsbee Mental Health Classic. Almost by themselves, these two men have raised over eight thousand dollars for the Mental Health Association. This year's tournament will be held at the Duke Golf Course on April 19 and 20. For further details, call the Mental Health Office at 683-2052 or R.L. Rigsbee at 489-7970. The entry fee is $30. DURHAM CITY. SCHOOLS BREAKFAST MENUS-Mon. March 24 Sausage link roll or cereal, juice, milk; Tues. March 25 Pig in Blanket or cereal, juice, milk; Wed. March 26 Turkey sandwich or cereal, fresh fruit, milk; Thurs. March 27 Wafflesmaple syrup or cereal, fruit, milk; Fri. March 28 Banana Bread or cereal, juice, milk. DURHAM CITY SCHOOLS LUNCH MENUS-Mon. March 24 Surf-burger on bun, buttered corn, congealed salad, vegetable choice, peanut butter, milk; Tues. March 25 Cheeseburger on bun, sliced tomato on lettuce, potato rounds, fruit choice, milk; Wed. March 26 Manager's choice; Thurs. March 27 Ham in yeast roll, macaroni and cheese, steamed cabbage wedges, orange quarters, -fruit choice, milk; Fri. March 28 Turkey a la king, rice, toss salad, i raisins, vegetable choice, roll, milk. DURHAM COUNTY SCHOOLS BREAKFAST MENUS: Mon. March 24-Cheese toast, applesauce, milk; Tues. March 25 Oatmeal, juice, milk; Wed. March 26 Cinnamon toast, orange sections, milk; Thurs. March 27 Toast and jelly, applesauce, milk; Fri. March 28 Cereal, banana, milk. DURHAM COUNTY SCHOOLS LUNCHEON MENUS: Mon. March 24-Hot dog, French fries, coleslaw, cookie, milk; Tues. March 25 Pizza, three-bean salad, applesauce, cookie, milk; Wed. March 26 Soup and sandwich, apple, lettuce wedge, milk; Thurs. March 27 Fish wcornbread, coleslaw, applesauce, milk Fri. March 28 Turkey supreme, corn on cob, green beans; sweet potato puff, milk.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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March 22, 1980, edition 1
18
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