Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / June 28, 1980, edition 1 / Page 18
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2 the Carolina times SAT.. JUNE 28, 1980 Calendar and Announcements RECYCLING PICKS UP WITH WARM WEATHER With summer gracing the Carolina and the kids out of school, recyclers should be able to find abundant supplies 'of aluminum available to "trade in" for cash. "Lots of rkople are outside more these days, and that means more aluminum in the form of cans that go with them," observed Pat Foster, Reynolds Plant Manager in Charlotte. Locally, Renolds recycles at Northgate Shopping Center, every Tuesday through Saturday, 9-11:30 a.m. Reynolds pays 23 cents a pound for all clean, recyclable aluminum; and in certain markets pays a bonus price, depending on local market conditions. For more information, call toll free 1-800-228-2525. CONCERT IN THE PARK WDUR's Rhythm Music Festival, Saturday June 28, 1 p.m., Campus Hill Park. SECOND CLASS SESSION BEGINS Jury 7 at the North Carolina Museum of Life and Science, 433 Murray Avenue, Qurham. Insects, Art, Science Ex periments You Can Eat, Junior Curator, Out9oor Lore, Archaeology, and Puppetry. For further infor mation, call 477-0431. DURHAM COUNTY 4-H PROGRAM is offering a wide variety of skills, projects andor activities for ages 9-19 this summer. Call 688-2900 to get more in formation. ARE YOU INTERESTED IN HELPING BAT TERED WOMEN? The YWCA Coalition for Bat tered Women is offering a 25-hour training program for men and women interested in becoming volunteer Advocates. The course begins Saturday, July 12, in Chapel Hill. Call the Orange County Women's Center at 968-4646, or the Durham YWCA at 688-4396 for further information. PUPIL ASSIGNMENT Parents of elementary age children in the Durham City Schools may phone the nearest elementary school to determine their child's assignment this fall. All schools will have a map that will assist them in student assignments. BAKE SALE The Durham County Chapter of the North Central Clients Council is having a Bake Sale, Saturday, June 28, at Roses in Northgate Shop ping Center, Durham. Time 9:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. Homemade cakes, pies and other delicious items. ADOPTIVE HOMES NEEDED FOR BLACK BOYS The Durham County Department of Social Services is seeking adoptive homes for six black boys, ranging in age from eight to sixteen years, who want to belong" to a family. There are two sets of brothers and it is hoped they can be placed together. One set, ages 10 and 13, has been free for adoption for almost a year. The other set, ages 13 and 14, is in a group home. The eight-year-old desperately wants a family of his own, as does the 13-year-old, now residing in a group home, who has no family. It is thegency's belief that there are black families in Durham who can and will provide a home for these children. If you are interested, please call Ms. Esther High or Ms. Ardetha Smith at 683-1341, bet ween 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. ART CLASSES FOR CHILDREN The N.C. Museum of Art still has places available in two sum mer art classes for children. The two-week sessions begin July 7 and July 21. They are open to children presently in grades two through six, or for approximate ages seven through twelve. Teachers will be from the staff of the museum and from the Wake County public school system. Classes will meet from 9:30 a.m., until 12:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. Tuition is $30, although scholarships are available for children who would not be able to attend without financial assistance. ' Anyone interested in the art classes should contact the museum's programs department at (919) 733-7568. THE DEVELOPMENT CENTER FOR DISPLACE HOMEMAKERS plans to hold four more job readiness classes this summer. The two week classes offer career guidance, information on local educational and vocation training opportunities and job search skills. Affected by separation, divorce, death or disability of spouse, or AFDC reci pient? Call 682-9671 for information. 1980 FOURTH OF JULY FAMILY DAY CELEBRATION will be sponsored by the Carrboro Recreation and Parks Commission from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., on the Carrboro Town Hall Grounds. A memorabilia display and an essay contest for youth are planned. Citizens are invited to participate in locating items for the community scavenger hunt. Items are to be turned in to the Carrboro Recreation Department by 5 p.m., Monday, June 30. In the event several items in one category are found, the oldest will be declared the winner. Some of the memorabilia the Commission would like to locate are: letter bearing earliest Carrboro postmark; oldest report from Carrboro and Nor thside schools; oldest photograph of senior class at Northside and eighth grade class at Carrboro School; any item from the Hollywood Movie Theater; train ticket stub issued from Carrboro Station; oldest grade school book, oldest N.C. license plate; oldest Carrboro City license tag; gas rationing stamp, old water bill stub from Lloyd Street office and many others. Winners will be announced during the July 4 festivities. For further information, call 942-8541, extension 203. PARKWOOD FARMERS MARKET invites you to buy or sell vegetables, plants, baked and home canned goods. No fee charged for selling. Saturday, 8 a.m.-12 noon, Parkwood Elementary School park ing lot on Clermont Road, Durham. For information, call John Blake, 544-2171, Parkwood Branch Library. YOUTH VOLUNTEERS NEEDED The American Red Cross needs the volunteer help of youths, age 14 and over by July 1, to serve at the Veterans Administration Hospital in labs, pharmacy, escort and on wards. If working during lunch, a free meal is provided. Training necessary. Call the Red Cross Center, 489-6541, for details. BUS TRIP TO FLORIDA sponsored by Mount Calvary United Church of Christ will leave Durham July 3, 11 p.m., and return Monday, July 7, mid night. Itinerary includes Disney World, Cyprus Garden, Circus World and Sea World. $120 per child under eleven; $145 per adult includes tickets to places of interest but no food. For further informa tion or registration, call Mrs. Shirley Lennon, 688-7092 or 682-3968 or Mrs. Dora Roberson, 544-3117 NATIONAL ART EXHIBITION- COMPETITION Atlanta Life Insurance Com pany is still accepting entries for the national exhibi tion of 100 of the finest newly created works of art by black American artists which will be unveiled this fall in Atlanta, Ga. All art selected for the exhibition will be chosen from 35mm slide entries in order to give as many ar tists as possible a chance to enter. The deadline for receipt of slide entries is July 1. The exhibition is competitive. There is no limit to the subject of the work. Categories include painting, textiles, mixed-media, drawing, photography, print making and indoor and outdoor sculpture. The exhibit of paintings and prints from the islands of the Caribbean is sponsored by the Duke University Union in cooperation with Cayo Hueso Graphics, a gallery in Key West, Florida. The works were compiled for Cayo Hueso by Ms. Judith Brad ford, a former Durham resident, now working as a professional artist in Key West. Ms. Bradford will be present at the opening to answer questions about the works FARMERS GROWING LARGE AMOUNTS OF PRODUCE, or who have surplus produce during the growing season, are invited to join with other farmers in. marketing locally grown produce to schools, nursing homes, restaurants, and day care centers in the Chapel HillDurham area. This project is being organized by the North Carolina Agricultural Marketing Project, which has been working with farmers throughout the state to develop retail and wholesale markets for their produce. For more information, call Ms. Nancy Epstein at 929-8541 or Dale Evarts at 828-1 107. ARE YOU A DISPLACED HOMEMAKER? A person who has suffered the trauma of divorce, separation, or abandonment? A person who is now without any major means of financial support for yourself and your family? Do you need help with fin ding a job, mustering up the courage to meet the challenge of the world of work, or even going back to I school? Are you looking for a new beginning? Come by to see us at the Career Development 1 Center, 139 College Street, Oxford, NC, or call us at 693-1342 or 693-6027. Let us see what we can do to help make your re entry into society a. smooth and successful one! NORTH CAROLINA LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES will have their annual covered dish picnic Tuesday, July 15, 6:30-9 p.m., at Forest Hills Park. All members and their families and friends are in vited tHE" NORTH CAROLINA CHAMBER PLAYERS, under the direction of Donald Martin, presents "Finale: An All-Brahms Concert," the fourth and final concert of The 1980 Summer .Festival Durham Series on Monday, June 30. The concert will begin at 8:15 p.m., in the Gross Chemistry Auditorium on Duke's West Campus. In dividual tickets are $5 for the general public,, and $4 for students with ID and persons 65 years or older. Call Page Box Office 684-4059, Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. KARATE CLASS OFFERED Carrboro Recreation and Parks Department will offer a ten week class, July 1-September 4, Tuesday and Thurs day nights from 7-9 p.m. and will include basic karate instruction and techniques for beginning and advanced students. Cost $20. Pregistration required. Call 942-8541, Extention 203 for further informa tion. DURHAM ARTS COUNCIL TO SPONSOR SUM MER JAZZ VOCAL WORKSHOP The Durham Arts Council's Community Services Program will of fer a nine week series of jazz vocal workshops this summer for all ages in three areas of Durham. The workshops will be taught by Eve Cornelious, featured vocal singer with the popular jazz group Yusuf and Friends. Each workshop will run three weeks each for three days a week from 6-7 p.m. Participants in the workshop will learn to vocalize, harmonize and sing melody during the sessions. In addition, the' paticipants will learn about great singers of jazz such as Bessie Smith and Sarah Vaughn. Eve Cornelious, in thinking about the workshop says: "Merely a way of living is the way some people view their careers. But my career is an art form that can enhance the community and be shared with the young, the old, the new and by far the blue." Workshop locations: June 16-July 3, W.D. Hill; Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday-6:00-7:00 p.m. July 7-July 25, R. Wood Recreation Center; Mon day, Tuesday, Wednesday-6:00-7:00 p.m. July 28-August 13, D. Mickle Center; Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday-6:00-7:00 p.m. The workshops are free. For more information call the Durham Arts Council 682-5519. SUMMER PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN The Durham Day Care Council has compiled a list of summer programs for children. The brochure in cludes summer pre-school programs, day care center programs for 5-12 year olds, day camps including sports camps and clinics, summer classes for enrich ment or remediation. The brochure lists ages, dates, fees, phone numbers. Call the Durham Day Care Council, 688-8661, to get a copy of "Summer Programs 1980." BLOODMOBILE The Durham Chapter of the American Red Cross will sponsor a bloodmobile in the parking lot behind Television Station WTVD, 411 Liberty St., June 30 from 8:30 a.m. until 8 p.m. Blood donors will really be needed because of the Fourth of July holiday. Free entertainment will be rendered until 7 p.m. THE N.C. SERVICE STATION ASSOCIA TION'S 1980 Annual Convention and Trade Show, St. John's Inn, Myrtle Beach, S.C., June 26-29. Reps from Exxon, Phillips, Shell and Gulf will be available , for conversations. DAISY AUTOMATIC SCHEDULE Daisy is a 24 hour telephone-tape service provided by Durham Technical Institute. During the hours 1-9 p.m. Monday-Thursday and 1-5 p.m. on Friday, any tape in the Daisy program is available by calling the Daisy Operator at 596-0611. When the Daisy Operator is not on duty, ten tapes are available. Dial the phone number listed and the tape will play automatically. June 30 to July 6 596-0610 Top Ten Records 596-061 1 Daisy: Weekly Automatic Schedule 596-0612 Job Service: Openings Available Thru Employment Security Commission 596-0613 Spelling Tips: ie or ei 596-0614 The Pill: Questions Answers 596-0615 Math: Measuring Length in Metrics 596-0616 - Toy Safety ; 596-0617 Depressant Drugs 596-0618 Power From Wind 596-0619 Superman: A Gangster For a brochure that lists approximately 500 tapes, ; send a self-addressed, stamped, regular business I envelope to Daisy, Durham Technical Institute, P.O. Box 11307, Durham, North Carolina 27703.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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June 28, 1980, edition 1
18
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