2-THE CAROLINA TIMES SAT., DECEMBER 20, 1980 Calendar and Announcements E-Z RIDER PROVIDES TRANSPORTATION SERVICE for the elderly and handicapped in Chapel Hill-Carrboro. Monday through Friday, 8 a.m.-6 p.m., for 20t. For additional information, call 967-8444. Shared ride taxi provides service for CHT pass holders anywhere in Chapel Hill and Carrboro and within V mile of a bus route. Hours 6:30 p.m. -midnight, Monday through Friday and 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sunday (Chapel Hill only). -Fares 35 adults, 20C all other, bus stop to bus stop; $1.05 adult, 60 all other, door to door. There is no Saturday shared ride service. For additional infor mation, call 967-8247. DISPLACED HOMEMAKERS A new pro gram format at the Career Development Center for Displaced Homemakers, who are out on their own and must find paid employment, even better. In ad dition to personal counseling and career-guidance, services include job readiness instruction, job search assistance, support group meetings, and referrals to other agencies arid training programs. If you are or know a displaced homemaker, call 682-9671 for more information; or contact Durham CETA or YWCA offices. HOLIDAY TALES Storytelling. Kay Taylor, from the Durham County Library, will present a storytelling program of holiday tales for all ages at the Museum of Life & Science on Friday, December 19 at 3:30 p.m. 433 Murray Avenue, Durham. No additional charge. Call 477-0431 for information. SANTA'S TRAIN RIDE - Take a nighttime ride on the Ellerbee Creek Railroad at the Museum of Life and Science, and visit with Santa and Mrs. Claus along the way. Hours: Dec. 17-23, 6-8:30 p.m. Admission S09. Refreshments will be available. 433 Murray Avenue, Durham. DON'T FORGET THE BEST GIFT is the title of a Christmas play sponsored by the Union Chapel Baptist Church Youth Department at 4 p.m., on December 21, at the church, Corner of East F and 25th St., Butner. Don't miss this great original event if you really want to laugh and get in the Christmas spirit. SIXTY OR OVER? The Retired Senior Volunteer Program needs: a retired teacher to help coordinate a machine shop class, a clerical assistant for purchasing office and volunteers to prepare and serve refreshments at a children's hospital. 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.' BUS SERVICE REINSTITUTED - Chapel Hill Transit has reinstituted service in the Pine Knolls area on a limited basis. Provisions have been made for some morning and afternoon service. Addi tional information may be obtained through bus in formation at 942-5174. HANDEL'S MESSIAH The Durham Symphony and Yates Baptist Church Sanctuary Choir will per form highlights from Handel's Messiah at 8 p.m. on Friday, December 19. The performance will be held at Yates Baptist .Church, 2819 Chapel Hill Road, Durham. Admis sion is free, but a free-will offering will be received. The public is cordially invited to attend.. LEARN TO DANCE FOR THE HOLIDAYS -Three-lesson workshop for beginners. Become a pro at the cha cha, swing, rumba, waltz, leading and following techniques and variation steps, all to music from the Big Band era, the 70's and the 80'$. 1 Partners are encouraged but hot necessary. Third workshop date: Sunday, December 21, from 6-7:15 p.m., at the NewPerforming Dance Co., 105 Vt W. j Chapel Hill St., Durham. For information, call Ms. 1 Carolyn Max, instructor at 489-3887 evenings or i NPDC at 688-1138 mornings and evenings. CLOTHES FOR THE NEEDY The Social Service office of OBT is open to serve people within the .community and Head Start families who may have a clothing problem: RECYCLING Need extra cash? There's.money in the trash aluminum, that is. Reynolds recycles at Northgate Shopping Center, every Tuesday through Saturday, 9-11 :30 a.m. 1 Bring cans in a clear plastic bag, and other pieces cut to lengths not exceeding three feet and tightly bound. You will be paid cash on the spot J52 Wormationr call toll free 1-800-228.255. HOLIDAY GIFTMAKING WORKSHOP Create a gift!. Kids from ages 5-12 will make some creative gifts while Mom and Dad have some free time for their holiday planning. Lunch is included. Join us on December 22 from 10-3. Call the Museum of Life and Science af 477-0431 for class registration. Fee: $7 members, $8 non-members. ADULT BOOK DISCUSSION The North Durham Branch Library (Riverview Shopping Center) of the Durham County Library is sponsor ing an Adult Book Discussion group on the second and fourth Tuesday of each month, from 10-11:30 a.m. to .discuss popular fiction and non-fiction titles. Regular attendance is not required and new faces are always welcome. Persons interested in joiningthe" discussion group can call branch librarian Barbara Shumer at 471-2129 for more information. AFTERSCHOOL RECREATION PROGRAMS The Durham City Community Education pro gram and the , Durham ' Parks . and Recreation Department are conducting Afterschool Recreation Programs at Y.E. Smith, East End and George Watts Elementary schools. Thlse programs operate each day school is open through June 5, 1981. The hours are Monday through Friday 2:30-5:30 p.m. The program offers a wide range of activities in cluding sports and athletics, music and drama, arts , and crafts, study hours, tutorial sessions, and other1 seasonal special events. There is a small weekly fee. For more information, call Gaston Patterson at 683-4355 or Albert Huey at 688-2361, extension 245. SOUTHERN CONFERENCE ON AFRO AMERICAN STUDIES will hold its Second An nual meeting February 26-28, 1981 in Houston, Texas. The theme is "Laborers, Shouters, Good Timers, Voters: Participants in the Afro-American Experience." Further details can be had by contac ting Dr. Howard Jones, Box 104. TSU, 3201 Wheeler Avenue, Houston, Texas' 77004. DURHAM SYMPHONY YOUNG ARTISTS COMPETITION for pianists and orchestral in strumentalists, grades 10-12 in Durham, Wake, Orange, Granville and Person counties. Winners will play a movement of a standard concerto with the Durham Symphony. Audition date: February 7, 1981. Call Hjordis Tourian, 682-2910 or Ginny Zehr, 782-4840, for further information. W.D. HILL RECREATION CENTER, 1308 Fayctteville 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. MODEL TRAIN EXHIBIT Museum of Life and Science, 433 Murray Ave., Durham. Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, 2-5 p.m. Sunday. Call 4770431. A special exhibit of model trains, complete with a working layout, will be on display through December 27. FREE PUBLICATIONS FROM IRS may be ordered by calling the IRS toll free telephone number listed in the directory. Among the subjects covered are: child care credit, energy credit, moving expenses and other tax breaks. DAISY AUTOMATIC SCHEDULE DAISY is a 24 hour telephonetape 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 call ing 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. December 22 -28 596-0610 Top Ten Records 596-0611 DAISY: Weekly Automatic Schedule 596-0612 Job Service: Openings Available Thru Employment Security Commission 596-0613 RSVP-Retired Senior Volunteer Program 596-0614 - The Flu 596-0615 - Toy Safety 596-0616 Spelling Test: Homonyms I 596-0617 A Christmas Story for Kids: Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer 596-0618 Gunsmoke: The Last Show on Radio 596-0619 Geen Hornet: Escape for Revenge For a brochure ftat lists approximately 500 tapes, send a self-addressed, stamped, regular business envelope to DAISY, Durham Technical Institute, P O. Box 11307,.Durham, NC 27703. CONTRASTS AND COMPLEMENTS is the name of the art exhibition at CenterGallery featur ing works by Rita May, Cheri Westmoreland, Lise Temple-Greenberg and Stephanie Carleton; Main St., Carrboro (above Tumbleweed Cyclery). The show will run until January 4, 1981. For more in formation, call 967-1316. Gallery hours: 1 1-5 Satur day and Friday; 2-5 Sunday, 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 iRd.); 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). LEARNING AND CAREER INFORMATION FREE FROM PROJECT LIFT in the new Durham County Library. Offering financial aid assistance for college, national college catalogs, trade and technical vocation information, job listings from the Employment Security Commis sion, lists of classes in this area for adults, and a wide variety of reference material on career development and adult education. Whether you want to improve your reading, to learn macrame or to go back to school, we are your advocates and will explore for you courses, classes or other paths of lifelong learning. Call 683-2626 or visit Project LIFT, 300 N, Roxboro St., 9-9 Monday and Tues day, 9-5:30 Wednesday through Saturday. IRS PROBLEM RESOLUTION OFFICE has a toll-free number, 1-800-832-8800 in Greensboro. If you have problems you have not been able to resolve through normal channels, call the Greensboro number. They promise to cut through ' red tape and get to the solution faster than routine channels you have tried. You may also write: Pro blem Resolution Office, 320 Federal Place, Greensboro, NC 27401. : The IRS Office at 400 W. Main St., Durham, of fers free assistance to taxpayers the year round. Anyone needing personal assistance with tax pro blems may visit any weekday from 10 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. No appointment necessary. A VOLUNTEER IS NEEDED at a health care facility to escort patients to designated places and back to their rooms. Also, a 12-year-old black youth would love to have a big brother to do things with. His mother is a single parent who works full time. His younger sister has a big sister and he feels left out. To volunteer or learn of other needs, call the Volunteer Services Bureau, 688-8977 or 688-9049, weekdays, 9 a.m. -4 p.m. CALENDAR ITEMS should reach us no later than Friday before the desired publication date. Two to three weeks prior Is even better! Mail to: Calendar, The Carolina Times, P.O. Box 3825, Durham, NC 27702. No charge. PAGEANT SCHEDULED The Durham Business and Professional Chain has announced February 1, 1981 as the date for its annual "Ms. Durham Business and Professional Chain" Pageant. Those ladies interested in competing for the title of "Ms. Durham Business and Professional Chain" and those businesses interested in sponsor ing a young lady, should contact Ms. Taylor at the Chain office, 688-7356, for further details. JOIN GIRL SCOUTS - If you are a girl bet ween the ages of 6-17 or an adult of any age, male or female, Girl Scouts want YOU! Have fun, make new friends, be a part of something great! In Durham, call 493-3234 or 489-2886. ' CHILDREN'S FILM FESTIVAL - The Carr boro Recreation and Parks Department, concludes its 1980 Children's Film Festival cm Friday, December 19, 7 p.m.; with "The Prince, and The Pauper". Parents are invited to enjoy the film with their children in the Carrboro Elementary School Auditorium. There is a 75 per person admission fee. For more information, call Carrboro Recreation .and Parks Department at 942-8541, extension 203.