Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / May 16, 1981, edition 1 / Page 23
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-vf'4S,..')f',V SAT., MAY15, 1881 - - THE CAROLINA TtSSES 7 Calendar 5 and ; Parks;; Department ; Is; currently accepting r registration for leisure classes iri f cloggmgi-tennis,: information, call 942-8541, extension 203. b : JOB CORPS INFORMATION -u Young women 7 . wishing - information about; the "opportunities : available through; Job Corps may call the WICS of- live voo-j7Wi vi mic piujcvi.uirecior ai toy-3yj. x HHS HONORS AND AWARDS PROGRAM - . Tti Hnnrr unit Auarrl rhmmitfM nf u;it;lo High School will present its 32nd Annual Honors and Awards Program on Thursday, May 21 , at 7:30 ' p.m., jn the school auditorium. ?. - Guest speaker for the occasion will be a Hillside -graduate and; former administrator, F. Howard Alston. Alston has been recognized for his outstan ding achievements in education; church, civic and community affairs. Students will be honored for their meritorious ac complishments in both academic and extracur ricular areas of the school's program. The public is , cordially invited to attend. StAHDUKUUUn DUAKU IV1IV&1 IIU MS. Betty e Faucette will be guest speaker at the annual meeting of the Scarborough Nursery School Board : of Directors The meeting is scheduled for Wednes day, May 20, at the School, 309 Queen Street. Ms. Faucette is Day Care Coordinator for Preventive Services Division, the Family & Chldren's Services, DurhanrCounty Department of Social Services. Scarborough Foundation Board members are in vited to attend. 4-H DOG CLUB Youth in Durham County who are interested in learning more about the care and trainingof their dogs can obtain information by participatingin a county wide 4-H Dog Club. The club will be open to all youth 9-19 years of age, regardless of where they live. Find out more about this club at an informational meeting on Tuesday, . May 26, at 7:30 p.m., in the Agricultural Building, 721 Foster St.; or call Ms. Linda Washburn, Exten sion Agent, 4-H at 688-2900. Y?voitn tttinrto om nlannor cr Arr t mice niii f ESSAY CONTEST In preparation for the Town of Carrboro's Annual July 4th festivities,' $50 savings bond in Carrboro's July 4th Essay Con test. The contest is part of the Carrboro July 4th Old Fashioned Family Day Celebration sponsored by the Recreation and Parks Commission. In an effort to encourage youth in the community to think about the true meaning of Independence Day, the theme "What July 4th Means To My Family? was selected. Age divisions and world limitations are as follows: ages 6-8 will be limited to 150 words or less; ages 9-12 will be limited to 250 words or less; entries must be neatly written on lined notepaper on one side only with an allowance for adequate margins. Ink is preferred but not required. Jame, address, telephone number and age should be written on a separate but attached sheet of paper. Entries should be turned in by 5 p.m. on Friday, June 12, at the Carrboro Recreation and Parks s Department located in the Carrboro Town Hall. First and. second place winners will be chosen from each age division. First prize will be a $50 ' bond and a plaque. Second prize winners will receive a plaque and certificate. Winners will be notified and prizes presented during the July 4th Celebration. For more information, call 942-8541, ext. 203. PHYSICAL EXERCISE CLASSES for Senior Citizens are being sponsored each Tuesday and Thursday morning, 9:30-10:30, at the W.D. Hill Recreation Center. For more information, call Ms. Renita Ritchie at 683-4355. GIVTV no nVPO? Th Rrtirrri Senior Volunteer Program needs a tutor for an elementary school child. You may be able to brighten this boy's future by spending just a few hours a week helping him with school work and being a friend, thhis is an ' immediate urgent need.. The RSVP will reimburse you for travel and in surance is provided free Of charge. For more infor mation, call Ms. Helen- Pressley or Ms. Kathy Uo1trc Q.Q11I. vtncirtn 171 Durham f HllVid, y-iJV llf , " - - Technical Institute. RECYCLING Reynolds recycles at Northgate Shopping Center, every Tuesday through Saturday, 9-11 a.m. . viiiiu uncemenis hi Bring cans in a clear plastic bag, and other pieces cut tor lengths not exceeding three feet and tightly. - bound. Other recyclable aluminum includes tubing,. ' siding; pots; pans and cast parts. You will be paid cash on the spot. : ....:; For v more information, -f a call toll '-V- free 1 800-228-2525.- r . A.&f..- SEVENTH ANNUAL POETRY CONTEST A $1000 grand prize will be awarded in the Seventh Annual Poetry Competition sponsored by World of Pdetryi a quarterly newsletter for poets. ' Poems of all styles and on any subject are eligible to compete for the grand prize or for 99 other cash or merchandise awards, totaling over $10,000. ' Rules and official entry forms are available from the World of Poetry, 2431 Stockton, Dent. B, Sacramento, California 95817. v NATIONAL SAFETY INSTRUCTOR SCHOOL The American Red Cross will conduct a National Safety Instructor School, June 6-14, on the campus of Francis Marion: College, near Florence, S.C. Basic and Instructor courses will be offered in: Basic First Aid, Multimedia First Aid, Standard First Aid and Personal Safety, Advanced First Aid and Emergency Care, CPR Modular and Lecture, Advanced Life Saving, Water Safety In structor, Adapted Aquatics, Basic Canoeing and Canoeing Instructor. According to Mrs. Cynthia Reardon, executive director of the Durham County Red Cross Chapter, the facilities at Francis Marion, including the pool, are in well-controlled environments which permits classes to continue even during inclement weather. Living facilities are apartment style, with four students per apartment.. The cost of attending the school will be $120.00. Fee covers the ccfst of room and board. Transforation to and from the school and text materials are additional. Instruction will be provided by a staff of volunteers with long and valid teaching experience. For additional information, contact Mrs. Rear don at the Durham County Chapter, 489-654 1 . COLONIAL CRAFTSMEN TELL "HOW TO" Next events in the series on authentic early . American crafts as practiced in ' Colonial Williamsburg will be: Saturday, May 16, 1 p.m., Stagville Preservation Center and Sunday, May 17, 3 p.m., auditorium, ArchivesLibrary Building, Raleigh Roy Underhill, Master Carpenter (craft demonstration and lecture). On Monday, June 8, 7:30 p.m., auditorium, ArchivesLibrary Building, Raleigh "The Colonial Printer (film). , . NEW TELEVISION SETS NEEDED The Volunteer Services at John Umstead Hospital could, use some new television sets for the patients;. If any company or individual would like to donate one, it will be tax deductible. Call Mental Health Associa tion at 683-2052. 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. May 18-24 . 596-0610 Top Ten Records 596-0611 DAISY: Weekly Automatic Schedule 596-0612 Job Service: Openings. Available; Thru Employment Security Commission 596-0613 General Education -596-0614 What Is A Drug? . : " 596-0615 Unemployment Insurance 596-0616 Economics Mini Course III 596-061 7 Facts About Prostate Cancer 596-0618 -r How Life Insurance Operates 596-0619- Superman: Yellow Mask For a brochure that lists approximately 500 tapes, send a self-addressed, stamped, regular business envelope to DAISY, Durham Technical Institute, P.O. Box 1 1 307, Durham, NC 27703. . FREEDOM TOUR The Martin Luther King Center for Nonviolent Social Change and The Lindenwood Colleges, Lindenwood College 4, located in St. Charles,. Missouri' and St. Louis, Missouri, are offering a unique educational Freedom Tour. Portions of the route of the famed Freedom Ride will be traced inreverse. The tour will originate from New Orleans on July 19 at 7 a.m., and will culminate in Atlanta on July 25 at 6:30 p.m. For an additional cost, members of the tour have the option of attending the four-day Mar tin Luther King, Jr., Summer Institute on Non violence in Atlanta . ye . . - The . Honorable Andrew Young, former am- bassador to the United Nations, Mrs. Coretta Scott ii. . k4.: t ...t... t: tit , rw B.Mni . IXIIIg, IViaillll lUlllCI IVIIIg, U, BIIU llr'-DUIKUU ' . LaFayette, Jr., director of Lindenwood College 4 and chairman of this project, are among a number of civil rights activists who will lecture during the tour on this vital era in American History. , Thetour itself will be offered for college credit f under the heading: "The Struggle for Human Rights in America: Perspective on the 1960's ; Freedom Movement." Other ; courses in the Humanities, Communications, .Writing and Photography, will also be offered. ; Participation in the tour and these events is not limited to those seeking college credit. Teachers, photographers, writers, researchers, anti communi ty leaders are offered a rare opportunity to celebrate the twentieth anniversary of the 1961 Freedom Ride and, the historical events which oc curred along the way. Cost of the tour is $450 which covers all travel J between New Orleans and Atlanta, including hotel : accomodations and meals. To guarantee a space, a $200 deposit is required before May 30. The balance must be paid by June 20. For more information,, contact Ms. Lyda Marasigna or Ms. Pauline Hammen, Lindenwood " College 4, St. Charles Missouri' 63301, 800-325-8429, 314946-6912 or 723-7152. PARTNERS AUCTION The third annual Partners Auction to raise funds to support and ex pand the Partners program will be held on Satur day, June 6.. The day-long auction will be telecast live on WRAL-TV, Channel 5, Viewers will be abie to call in bids on new retail merchandise and ser vices donated by area merchants. Last year's auction produced $45,000 for Part ners. Partners works with youths 10-18 years old who are in trouble or need special help. By matching them up with a caring adult, these youngsters are' helped with the many problems of growing up. AUCTION AND YARD SALE The Orange County Women's Center is planning its first major fundraising event for 1981. The Center's Tundrais-' ing Committee will hold an auction Saturday, June 6, 10 a.m.; at the Carr Mill Mall in Carrboro; Along with the auction there will be. i yard sale, refreshments, and information and literature about ; iiic YYuiuca s venter aiiu as prugrams. Kaiir uaie: : June 13. ';:'' Donations are needed for the auction and the yard sale as well as volunteers to heir with plann- ing, puoiicuy anu woricing me aay oi me auction; Anyone interested ih making a donation (a special talent or service or a long lost treasure from the at tic) or working On the. auction should call Sue NJrden at" the Women's Center, 8-646. Auction donations must be delivered or called in by May 25. . . WHEELBARROW. NEEDED for children's Dlav therapy at John Umstead Hospital. Medium size, wun iwo men wiae irom- wneei. you can supply a Umstead Hospital 5757217 or the Mental Health Association at 683-2052. V . WINE it CHEESE PARTY The South Orange Black Caucus will sponsor a Wine and Cheese Party on Sunday, May 17$; 5r7 p.m., at the Holiday Inn across from Eastgate Shopping Center, 15-501 By-n Pass in Chanel Hill. in the black community for a broad-based com munity organization in which minorities could unite .and address those social, economic and political matters affecting the community. Major objectives of the Caucus. are to; - stimulate voter education and registration; assist with the campaigns of candidates seeking public office who represent the interests of the minority community; actively work on issues such as housing and employment. The Caucus holds voter registration drives, issue and candidate forums and endorsements as means C I 1 . t . oi accompiisning n s opjeciives. The Wine and Cheese Party is open to SOBC member, potential members and persons interested in learning about the Caucus. A $5 donation is rcr quested to defer expense of the event. Tickets are available from members and will be on sale at the door, For more information, contact Weblon DeLon at 929-4817, Ms. Mae McLendon at 942-6571 or Jerry Caldwell.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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May 16, 1981, edition 1
23
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