2 THE CAROLINA TIMES
SAT..MAY9.1S81
Calendar And Announcements
NCCU ALUMNI ASSOCIATION-DURHAM
CHAPTER will meet Wednesday, May 20, 7:30
p.m., at the home of Mr. and Mrs, fed McNeill,
jr., iiuu vana aircei, uurnam. -
DURHAM ART GUILD There will be an
opening reception, for the Durham Art Guild 1981
Members' Show, Sunday, May 10, at .8 p.m., in the
Durham Arts Council building. On display are a
variety of works by members of the Durham Art
Guild. The show is scheduled to hang 'May 10-June
3. The public is invited. .. "!
HAVING GARDENING, PROBLEMS
Maybe the Agricultural Extension Master
Gardeners of Durham can help. Local volunteer
gardeners are available to assist you with any
gardening questions you may have. - v
The 'hotline' nummber if 682-5000, operating
daily from 9 a.m. til 1 p.m. through May.
DAY CAMP REGISTRATION The Blood
worth Street YMCA, Raleigh, is now accepting ap
plications for its Ten-Week Day Camp Program.
For further information and registration, contact
Gaddis Faulcon, Physical Director, at 834-2448 or
833-1256, Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m.-5
p.m.
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).
KENNEDY'S CHILDREN . .Theatre- In The
Park presents Robert Patrick's; "Kennedy's
Children," Saturday, May 9, at 8:15 p.m. May is
drug awareness month and this performance is a
benefit for Drug Action of Wake County, Inc. Ad
mission is $5. For reservations, call 755-6058 or
755-6936. : ''':,:.-':--
LEARN THE RUDIMENTS of being a top
notch babysitter at the YWCA, May 16-June 6,
Saturdays from 10 a.m.-12 noon, plus two hours of
supervising children scheduled at your convenience.
Call 688-4396 to register. The YWCA will help you
with referrals and references.
DURHAM COUNTY SCHOOLS Due to the
large inventory of USDA donated foods in the
schools, each Cafeteria Manager will select the
menus for the months of May and June. .
SOFTBALL TOURNAMENT The Durham
Athletic Officials Association and; the Durham
Parks and . Recreation Department are co
sponsoring a modified pitch Softball tournament.
The name of the tournament is "The Durham In
vitational Modified Pitch. Tournament". Among
the teams invited are the National Champion
' waamacs irom Aiiania, ueorgia, ana lucai
? team; such as BAG Grill (State runners-up last year)
and Swain's Electric (last year's State Champion)..
The tournament will be double elimination and will
be played at Southern Boundaries Park on May 8,
9, and 10. For information concerning the tourna
ment, please feel free to call George Leach, the
tournament director, at 493-1777 or 968-4556.
BULL CITY CARPOOLING PROGRAM Save
the gas. Call the one regionally coordinated pro
gram, TRI-A-RIDE, (Triangle Area Ridesharing
Program), 549-9999, for names of others traveling
your route.
CALENDAR ITEMS should reach us no later.,
than Friday before the .desired publication week.
Two to three weeks prior Is even be'tter! Mail to:
. Calendar, The Carolina Times, P.O. Box 3825,
Darham, N 27702. No charge.
A MULTI MEDIA ART EXHIBIT by
members of Center Gallery will be on dispjay
'through June 26 at the N.C. Council on the Status
of Women Gallei, 526 N. Wilmington St.,
Raleigh. Hours are 9-5, Mon.-Fri. For more infor
mation, call 733-2455 or 682-6234.
SUMMER CLASSES Registration is open for
six weeks of summer classes at The Studio JJance
School, 1311 S, Roxboro St in ballet, tap, ethnic,
f JM Will glUIICUllV9 VVgllllllllg till. nK VI JUIIV
15. Weekday evenings or Saturdays. For more in
formation, call 688-6961 or 682-6382.
REGISTER NOW - FOR CLASSES AT THE
New Performing Dance Co. & School, an affiliate
member of the Durham Arts Council. A communi
ty outreach program offers free dance classes in
Afro-American technique, with Chuck Davis
through the American Dance Festival. Children's
i and adult classes in modern, jazz styles, ballet,
! modern jazz, and dance exercise are available; Sum
mer sessions start May II and June 15. 'Call
688-1138 for more information.
" CHARTERED TRIP TO DURHAMITES AF
FAIR Interested in a gartered bus trip to D.C
Memorial Day weekend? The Hillside "47 Club"
will be making its annual trip je-JaTtend ' the
"Durhamites Affair" that weekend in Washington.
If you would like ot join us, please call Roosevelt
Lipscomb at 682-4040 or Ms. Louise Prince at
.682-7455 anytime after 6 p.m. for further informa
tion. FUNDS FOR INDIGENT Patients at John
Umstead Hospital who have no social security or
families are in need of spending money for cokes,
candy, etc. The patients are allowed $1 .50 per week.
If you would like to supply a year's spending money
for a patient or make a donation to the Indigent Pa
tient Fund, send your check to the Mental Health
Association, 212 Albemarle St., Butner marked for
the Indigent Patient Fund.
HASSLE HOUSE CRISIS COUNSELOR
TRAINING Hassle House, Durham's Crisis
Center, will hold its spring training for counselors
beginning May 9. The training will center on rela
tionship counseling, suicide prevention, mental
health counseling, and other areas. No prior ex
perience is needed to volunteer. Especially needed
are older or retired counselors who have time dur
ing the day. To talk about taking this training, call
Peter Kramer or Dusty Staub at 688-4353.
OFFICE WORKER'S SUPPORT GROUP - ,
Offered by the YWCA, 809 Proctor St., May 7-28
on Thursdays, 7-9 p.m . Come to any or all sessions.
Fifty cents donation is asked per session. Facilitator
is Ms. Mclanie Scheller. Call 688-4396 or 286-4120
for more information.
CARPOOL The YWCA will carpool to the
"March For ERA" on Saturday, May 2, in
Raleigh. Call the Durham YWCA, 688-4396 to sign
up. Everyone will meet at 11:15 a.m. at the YWCA,
809 Proctor St.
' TENNIS COURTS AVAILABLE The
Durham Parks and Recreation Department has ten
nis courts available for rental. Groups may rent
available courts at the rate of SI per hour per court :
day use or $1.25 per hour per court night use. Make
tennis a part of your next family or business social.
Call Ms. Eileen Witt at 683-4355 to. reserve your
,. courts now! .
NCCU ARTISTS: NEW HORIZONS Art ex
hibit through May 16 (and through Summer
School), . North . Carolina - Central -University
Museum of Art. No admission charge. Hours 9
a.m. -5 p.m., Tuesday-Friday; 2-5 p.m., Sunday.
LUNCH BREAK MOVIE Free. Thursday,
May 14, YWCA, 809 Proctor St. Bring your lunch.
"The Sky Is Grey": In this Ernest Gaines story, a
young black farm boy's visit to the dentist in a small
Louisiana town marks the dawning of his social and
self awareness. With Olivia Cole, Cleavon Little,
annd James Bond III.
FREE, FEATURE MOVIES are shown each
Saturday at 3 p.m., inxthe auditorium of the
Durham County Public Library. Plan to sec "High
Society" May 9 and "Man InThe White Suit" May
.. 16. -: : r
FREE FILMS On Tuesday and Wednesday
evening at 7, May 12-13, the Chapel Hill Public .
Library, corner Franklin and Boundary Streets, will
show "Wuthering Heights".
, A wonderful and sad love story set in early 19th ,
Century England. Sir Laurence Olivier, David
Niven, Donald Crisp and Flora Robson were
directed by William Wyler,
SUMMER NURSERY-KINDERGARTEN -Applications
are being accepted for a seven-week
session of the North Carolina Central University
' Nursery-Kindergarten beginning May 18 and en
ding July 3. Theschdol day will begin at 7:45 a.m
and end at 4 p.m. -,'
Applications for the fall session, beginning in
September, are also being accepted: For further in-
formation, call. 683-6447 or visit the. NCCU
Nursery-Kindergarten at the Diana S. Dent Home
, Economics Building at North Carolina Central
University. -.::-:: -r.-;-; 'k
GIRL SCOUT CAMPS Pines of Carolina Girl
Scout camps are welcoming all Girl Scouts and non
Scouts. Resident Camp Mary Atkinson in Johnston
County will begin its sessions June 21 . Programs in
,' , dude archery, pottery, canoeing, tennis, basketball,,
outdoor cooking, swimming, softball, creative arts
and nature hikes. There is a special session for
younger girls (rising 2nd, 3rd or 4th graders who
have never been to camp).
Camp Graham on Kerr Lake will have Group
Camping Sessions in July and August and an
aquatic session June 21-July 3. Red Cross instruc
tion in all levels of swimming, canoeing and sailing
is offered. There is a counselor-in-training unit for
high school girls. i -,, .
For complete information, contact Gay Byers,
Pines of Carolina Girl Scout Council,, Rt. 8, Box
59, Raleigh, NC 27612; or call 782-3021.
MUSEUM OF LIFE AND SCIENCE 433
Murray Avenue, Durham, is open 10 a.m. toT.
p.m., Tuesday through Saturday; 2-5 p.m., Sun
day. Call 477-0431 for information.'
"SWEDEN SAVES ENERGY!", an international
exhibof photographs and models describing im
aginative solar, wind, and hydroelectric energy pro
jects, through June 7.
Petting Zoo is open at 10:30 a.m. each Saturday.
Come join iH the Scavenger Hunt and help feed the
animals. There is a new lamb!
1981 MARINE ENVIRONMENT WORKSHOP
The N.C. 4rH Program, the N.C. Marine
Resources, and tm N.C. Sea Grant are sponsoring a
summer workshop on the Marine Environment July
19-24. The workshop is open to rising high school
juniors, seniors and seniors who have graduated but
not entered college.
Many facets of coastal life will be examined with
special emphasis placed on the following three ob
jectives: Create an awareness of marine resources and
their potential value to man.
Develop an awareness of ecological problems af
fecting marine life and the complexity of their solu
tions. jr
Explore opportunities in marine related careers.
Outstanding educational research facilities and
an excellent staff furnish an atmosphere of learn
ing, fun and fellowship.
The workshop will be held at the Bogue Banks
Marine Resources Center with lodging and other ac
tivities at Mitchell 4-H Camp, Swahsboro, N.C.
For more information or applications, contact
the 4-H office, 721 Foster St or call 688-2900. Ap
plication deadline June 1, 1981.
TENNIS LESSONS are offered at Edison
Johnson Recreation Center on an on-going basis
Monday and Wednesday mornings at 9 a.m. and
, 10:30. Cost for 12 hours of instruction is $22 for Ci
ty residents and $24 for non-residents. Register at
Edison Johnson Recreation Center or call 683-4355 '.
for more information. Resource person: Ms. Eileen
Witt, :-sv.- i.,'v..::v "
"FETISH ART INVITATIONAL'V a show
featuring artists Steve Clapp, Rich Craven, Barbara
Harmeyer, Mark Keppler, Bill McAllister,
Lawrence Merenstein, Johnnie Mizell, Jerry Noe,
Ann Rowles and Ann Shearer will run May 8-31 at
CenterGallery, 1 18 E. Main St., Carrboro. Gallery
hours: 11-5 Friday-Saturday; 2-5 Sunday. Recep
tion will be Friday, May 8, 8-10 p.m. For informa-
tton, call 967-1316. . - ;
ROSE SHOW The Twelfth Annual Rose
Show, sponsored by the Chapel Hill Rose Society,
will open to the public Friday and Saturday, May
22-23, in. the west court of Chapel Hill's University
Mall.
All show exhibits and competition will be open to
home rose growers and arrangers who desire to par
ticipate in categories including sixteen divisions of
horticulture, '. plus divisions of miniature, old
fashioned roses, and artistic (floral arrangements).
'Awards in all categories will be at the discretion of
accredited judges from outside of the Chapel Hill
area.
CPR CAN SAVE A LIFE CPR is short for
cardiopulmonary resuscitation. It's a way to help
keep heart attack victims alive. And it works.
CPR classes cai usually be completed in 8-12
hours of instruction given over 2 to 3 days. You'll
learn; how to give basic life support to adults,
children and infants. t. ;
Look for the CPR posters in your area for class
information or call the Triangle J Council of .
Governments af 549-055 L
CPR one day it may save the life of someone j
you love. -
. -i : '
WHEELBARROW NEEDED for children's play
therapy at John Umstead Hospital. Medium size,
with two inch wide front wheel. If you can supply a
wheelbarrow, call Volunteer Services at John
, Umstead Hospital, 575-7217 or the Mental Health i
Association at 683-2052.