Newspapers / The Carolina times. / Nov. 22, 1980, edition 1 / Page 19
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
I SAT.. NOVEMBER 22,1980 THE CAROLINA TIMES -3 Calendar and Announcements W.D. HILL RECREATION CENTER, 1308 Fayetteville Street, is offering adult classes in ceramics, aerobic slimnastics, martial arts, photography, macrame and sewing. Children's classes include gymnastics, modern dance, and an after school Fun Fest. For more information about these and other classes and programs, call 683-4292. BOOKMOBILE WEEKLY STOPS Every Monday 1:45-2:45, Wellon's Village (near Big Star); Every Tuesday 2:00-3:00, Lakewood Shop ping Center; Every Wednesday 1:30-2:45, Nor thgate Mall (near Big Star); Every Friday 2:00-3:45, King's Plaza (Hillsborough Rd.); Every Saturday 9:30-12:30, Croasdaile Shopping Center; 2:30-3:30 Shannon's Plaza; 3:45-4:30 South Square Mall (near Big Star). FUN FESTIVAL DAYS for children 5-12 years old, November 28. Fun Festival and Day Camp Reunion theme will be "Holiday Creations". FARM CITY WEEK BUS TOUR PLANNED -The Durham County Agricultural Extension Ser vice will sponsor a "Farm City Week" bus tour oi Tuesday, November 25, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The toyr will include an educational visit to Patterson's Mill Country Store on the historic Leigh Farm, a visit to the Environmental Protection Agency in Research Triangle Park, and a visit to a local resjdence utiliz ing passive solar heating. The tour is an activity in celebration of Natioual and North Carolina Farm-City Week, November 20-27. Tour groups will meet at 9 a.m. at the Durham Agricultural Building, 721 Foster Street. Call 688-2240 for further information. A small registration fee will be charged to cover transporta tion and hospitality. SIXTY OR OVER? BORED AND RESTLESS? VOLUNTEERlThe Retired Senior Volunteer Pro gram needs you to: teach children crafts, use your teaching skills to assist in a classroom situation or answer phones for a crisis hot-line. RSVP provides travel reimbursement and free in surance. For more information, call Ms. Helen Pressley or Ms. Kathy Walters, 596-9311, ext. 321, Durham Technical Institute. PRE-SCHOOL DAY CARE CENTER now of fering a safe and nurturing environment for infants, toddlers, and pre-schooler ages 0-5 years. Trained early childhood caretakers want to help your child feel comfortable away from home, gain in dependence, learn new self-help skills and enjoy a variety of activities including creative arts, music, story telling, dramatic play, field trips, and gross motor activities. Call 688-4396 to register or for more information. Durham YWCA, 809 -Proctor St., Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. NCCU ARTS December 12, University Per formance, NCCU Dance Group, 8:15 p.m., B.N. Duke Auditorium, North Carolina Central Univer sity. No admission charge. Sunday, December 14, University Performance, NCCU Choirs, 4 p.m., B.N. Duke Auditorium, North Carolina Central University, No Admission charge. AHOY - ADD HEALTH TO OUR YEARS, a program to maintain and improve the physical health of North Carolina's older population has been developed by the North Carolina Division of Aging. The exercise program is designed specifically for older persons aiidas developed in conjunction with the President's Council on Physical Fitness. Workshops to implement the program on a statewide basis began in early October and will con tinue throughout the year. On Friday, December 5, the Carrboro Recreation and Parks Department and the Division of Aging will sponsor an AHOY training workshop for citizens in the Chapel Hill Carrboro area. The workshop will be held from 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. at the Carrboro Town Hall. Preregistration is required and (here is a $2 registra tion fee for a workshop manual. The workshop will be limited to twenty participants. Representatives from Senior Citizen Clubs or agencies that work with Senior Citizens, as well as interested citizens, are invited to register. For more information, call 942-8541, extension 203. AUDUBON WILDLIFE FILM SERIES in Chapel Hill at Guy B. Phillips Junior High School auditorium on Estes Drive. Tickets will be sold for any unoccupied seats ten minutes before each 8 p.m. performance. For information in Chapel Hill, contact Mrs. Robert Broughton, 942-3836 or Mrs. Robert Utiger, 942-7437; in Durham, Mrs. Charles Stuart, 286-2760. Remaining films in the series are: Tom Sterling's "The Marsh A Quiet Mystery on Dec. 1 1; Walter Berlet's "American Heartland: The Great River Story" on Wednesday, January 28; and Norm Wakeman's "Inside Passage to Alaska" on Tues day, April 7. GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS IN ENGINEER ING AVAILABLE Ninety GEM Fellowships will be awarded to minority students for 1981 by the National Consortium for Graduate Degrees for Minorities in Engineering, Inc. The Consortium is a joint venture of 25 engineering schools and 30 in dustrialgovernmental laboratories to provide op portunities for minority students to pursue master's degrees in engineering. Candidates for participation in this program will be selected from the following American citizens: American Indian, Black American, Mexican American, and Puerto Rican. At the time of ap plication, the minimum academic requirement for the student is enrollment in the junior or senior year of undergraduate study in one of the tngineering disciplines. Recent graduates are also encouraged to apply. All applicants must be admissible to one of the Consortium engineering schools. Applicants chosen will receive a GEM Fellowship which covers tuition and fees at a member school and pays a stipend of $4,000 per academic year. Recipients are also assigned to a technical intern ship each summer at one of the participating employer engineering laboratories. The rate of pay for the summer assignment is comparable to other like employees at the site. The deadline for applica tion material for consideration for 1981 is December 1, 1980. For further information, con tact: Dr. Howard G. Adams, Executive Director, GEM Program, P.O. Box 537, Notre Dame, IN. 46556, telephone 219283-1304. "THE MYTH OF PSALMODY IN EARLY SYNAGOGUE AND CHURCH" is the title of a lecture to be presented on Friday, December 5, 5 p.m., by Prof. James McKinnon of the State University of New York at Buffalo. Room 104 of the Mary Duke Biddle Music Building on East Campus. Free. Public is invited. For more informa tion, call 684-2534. DURHAM CITY SCHOOLS MENUS: Breakfast: Mon. Nov. 24 Cereal or waffles, juice or Vi c. fresh fruit, milk; Tues. Nov. 25 Sausage biscuit or cereal, juice or Vi cup fresh fruit, milk; Wed. Nov. 26 Muffins, peanut butter cup, apple wedge, orange juice, milk; Thurs. Nov. 27 Waf fles, maple syrup or cereal, juice or fresh fruit, milk; Fri. Nov. 28 Ham biscuit or cereal, juice or applesauce w blueberries, milk. Lunch: Mon. Nov. 24 Spaghetti wmeat sauce, toss salad, choice of fresh fruit, French bread, milk choice; Tues. Nov. 25 Thanksgiving dinner: Roast turkey, dressing wgravy, cranberry sauce, green beans, sweet potato pie, roll, milk choice; Wed. Nov. 19 Manager's choice. Thurs., Fri. Nov. 27-28 School closed for Thanksgiving holiday. $1,000 PRIZE OFFERED FOR BEST POEM will be awarded in the poetry competition spon sored by the World of Poetry, a quarterly newslet ter for poets. Poems of all styles and on any subject are eligible to compete for the grand prize or for 49 other cash or merchandise awards. Rules and official entry forms are available from: World of Poetry, 2431 Stockton Blvd., Dept. N, Sacramento, California 95817. VISITOR DESIRED A 72-year-old black man living in a high rise apartment complex for the elderly would appreciate a visitor to come once a week. He is a religious person who enjoys talking. Contact Volunteer Services Bureau, 809 W. Chapel Hill Street, Durham. TALF MEETING The Triangle Area Lesbian Feminists (TALF) will hold their monthly meeting on Saturday, December 6, 7 p.m., at the YWCA, corner of Vickers and Proctor Sts., Durham. There will be a business meeting followed by a program "Feminist Strategies Against the Klan." Child care will be provided. Bring snacks. "TOY TRAINS" EXHIBIT opens Tuesday, Nov. 25, Museum of Life and Science, 433 Murray Ave., Durham. Hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday to Saturday; 2-5 p.m., Sunday. Call 477-0431. The Museum features educational and recreational ex hibits, both indoors and outdoors, ranging from prehistory to aerospace. Walk along the Prehistory Trail, visit the Barnyard; and ride the Ellerbee Creek train. Picnic areas are available. CLASSES AT W.D. HILL The W.D. Hill Recreatiun Center, 1308 Fayetteville Street, will be offering adult classes in aerobic slimnastics, macrame, photography, and holiday crafts. Youth classes will also be offered in modern dance and gymnastics. Roller skating and martial arts classes will be offered for all age groups. For more infor mation, call 683-4292. BOXING MATCH - The Durham Elks Lodge No. 568 and the Durham Parks and Recreation Department are sponsoring an Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) sanctioned boxing match on Satur day, November 22 at 7:30 p.m., in the Durham Civic Center. The Durham Bulls Boxing Club will be the host team. Boxers from Lynchburg, Va., Richlands, Va., Winston-Salem, Goldsboro and other North Carolina cities have been invited to participate. The Boxing Card will have approximately Fifteen mat ches. General admission is $3; children ten years and under $1.50. Proceeds will benefit the Durham Boxing Team and other youth athletic programs. For more infor mation, contact Gene Tomlinson at 683-4355. "AMERICA HURRAH" will be presented nightly through November 23 by the North Carolina Central University Department of Dramatic Art in the University Theatre, Farrison Newton Communications Building, corner of Fayetteville and Lawson Streets. Showtime is 8:15 Nov. 19-22, with an aften oon matinee on Sunday, November 23 at 3:15. Tickets are on sale at McLaughlin Medical Arts Pharmacy, 2520 Fayetteville Street, and the University Drama Department. For more information, call 683-6242. CHAMBER MUSIC CONCERT The Durham County Library invites you to an evening gf chamber music, Friday, November 21 at 7:30 p.m., performed by a woodwind quintet: Ms. Anna Wilson, flute; Ms. Alice Smith, oboe; Les Hickens, clarinet; Chris Myers, bassoon; and Sandy Svoboda, French horn. Program includes works by Barthe, Reicha, Bach, and Ibert as well as a selection by a North Carolinian, L. Stringfield, in honor of North Carolina Culture Week, November 17-21: Admission is free. For more information, call 683-2626. "Nothing can be done except little by little." Charles Baudelaire ASTRO-DESTINY ARIES Quarrels this week, bur happy reconcilioKoni. Proc- Mr. 21 Apr. 19 ticolify and sound judgement needed. TAURUS Extravagent urges need to be restrained for your own Apr. 20 - May 10 good. You'll have strong competition this week. GEMINI A pleasant surprise awaits you. A friend you have May 21 - June 20 not seen for a long time reappears. CANCER A hermit you're not this week. You mingle freely Jane 21 - July 22 and meet on interesting personality. Leo There could be a legacy from a near forgotten rel- July 22 - Aug. 22 ative. There are more surprises in store. VIRGO You have a good head on your shoulders and decide Ant". 21 - Sept. 22 on the right choice when it's necessary . LIBRA Your prospects in career si tuations are great. Good Sept. 22 Oct. 22 vibes create understanding and in turn, deeds. SCORPIO Oct. 2S Nov. 21 SAGITTARIUS Not. 22 -Dec. 21 CAPRICORN Dec 22 Jan. 19 AQUARIUS Jan. 20 - Feb. 18 Don't look back. The future is more important. You can accomplish great things if you have faith. Your loved ones appreciate you more this veek and you appreciate them too. It's a happy week. While old friends, like wine, can mellow withoge, they have been known to sour alio. Enlarge your so cial life. You've been encumbered with ties for a long time & now you begin to lighten the load. PISCES Day dreaming takes too much of your Km. WNIeil Feb. 19 Mar. 20 m be pleasant, not too much can be occoistplished, tml.74
Nov. 22, 1980, edition 1
19
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75