Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Sept. 5, 1981, edition 1 / Page 18
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2-THE CAROLINA TIKES SAT.. SEPTEMBER 5, 1981 Calendar and Announcements ITEMS for this column should reach us no later than Friday before the desired publication week. Two to three weeks prior is even better! Mail to: Calendar, The Carolina Times, P.O. Box 3825, Durham, NC 27702. No charge. DURHAM CITY SCHOOLS MENUS September 7-1) Breakfast • Monday — Holiday - No School • Tuesday — Chilled orange juice or cereal, milk. • Wednesday — Chilled assorted juices, raisin muf fin, milk. • Thursday — Chilled juice or fresh fruit cup, peanut butter bun or cereal, milk. • Friday — Banana, sausage biscuit or cereal, milk. Lunch • Monday — Holiday - No school. • Tuesday — Slivered ham hoagie or roast beef hoagie w/lettuce & tomato, french fried potatoes, chilled cinnamon apple saiice, choice of milk. • Wednesday — Baked chicken w/herb bread dress ing, cranberry sauce, choice of glazed parsleyed car rots, fresh broccoli spears or green beans, pineapple slice or tidbits, hot biscuits, choice of milk. • Thursday — Salisbury steal4*.steamed fluffy white rice, mixed vegetable greens, apple-raisin salad, hot buttered roll, choice of milk. • Friday — Salmon croquettes or breaded fish por tion w/lemon, choice of creamy coleslaw, buttered yellow corn, chilled mixed fruit cup, choice of milk. DURHAM COUNTY SCHOOLS MENUS September 7 -11 Breakfast ‘Monday — Holiday. ' Tuesday — Cefeal, juice, milk. • Wednesday — Sausage biscuit, applesauce, milk. • Thursday — Orange sections, toast, milk, • Friday — Cereal, juice, milk. Lunch • Monday — Holiday. • Tuesday — Hamburger, lettuce & tomato, onion rings, cake w/frosting, milk. • Wednesday — Barbecue on bun, cole slaw, baked beans, fruit cup, milk. • Thursday — Fried chicken, creamed corn, green beans hot roll, gelatin w/topping, milk. • Friday — Cold plate, milk. DANCE CLASSES — PHe, arabesque, attitude, piroette. These may seem to be words in French, but they represent more — the international language of dance. Men, women, boys and girls can learn that language by enrolling for classes at the New Performing Dance Company School. Classes in modern, ballet, modern jazz, dance exercise, creative dance and tap are available for all ages. Call 688-1138 for information on classes that start Sept. 8. CHAPEL HILL TRANSIT will not operate any service on Monday, September 7, Labor Day. Full services will resume on Tuesday, September 8. Ad ditional information can be obtained by calling 942-5174. NEW CLUB FORMING — A club is being organized in Durham for physically handicapped persons between the ages of 20 and 40. All in terested persons are asked to write Ms. L. Edwards, P.O. Box 1599, Durham, N.C. 27702, giving your name and address. Information will be sent to you regarding the time and place of the first meeting. KERR DAM ARTS AND CRAFTS JAM BOREE — The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will sponsor the third annual John H. Kerr Dam and Reservoir Arts and Crafts Jamboree on Sunday, September 6, from 12 noon until 6 p.m., in the Old Picnic Area across from the Resource Manager’s Office at Kerr Dam on Virginia Highway No, 4. All amateur and professional artists and craftsmen are invited to participate in the display and sale of items. There will be no entry fee, and prize ribbons will be awarded. Craftsmen from several states are expected to enter their work in pottery, leather- work, crochet, stained glass, painting, and wood crafts. The “Porch Swing Band” from Raleigh will kick off the festivities with a Bluegrass concert Saturday night at 8 p.m., in the North Bend Park Am phitheater at Kerr Dam. The concert is free and open to the public. Camping facilities are available at nearby North Bend Campground. Craftsmen interested in participating in this event may write to: Sherrill Storm, Park Interpreter, Resource Manager’s Office, Rt, I, Box 76, Boyd- ton, Va. 23917. Or, call 804-738-6662 for more in formation. DURHAM COMMUNITY RESOURCES — In formation gathering for Durham County Library’s 1981 Directory of Durham Community Resources is nearing completion. Any local organizations or agencies which have not been contacted for inclu sion in this updated edition should call the library at 683-2626 and talk with either Nancy Blood or Linda Payne. The deadline for receiving information is Friday, September 11. Scheduled for publication this fall, the directory lists and describes agencies anjl organizations offer ing services and information to the people of Durham. BLACK CHILD CONFERENCE — The Eleventh Annual Conference of the National Black Child Development Institute will be held October 8-10, at the Capitol Hilton Hotel, Washington, DC. A special block of rooms at the Hilton has been reserved at greatly reduced rates for conference par ticipants. This block will be released for general reservations after September 16. Deadline for pre registration for the conference is September 18. For registration forms and/or further informa tion, contact NBCDI, 1463 Rhode Island Ave., NW, Washington, D.C. 20005. HAVE A SPARE PIANO? The Mental Health Association in Durham County is looking for a good used piano for the use of the patients at John Umstead Hospital. If you have such a piano, call the Mental Health Association,at 683-2052. Dona tions for this piano should be sent to the office at 212 Albemarle Street and marked for the piano fund. They also need a good used sewing machine which sews just simple stitches. No extras to be used by the patients. You can also donate to this project at the address above. “IMAGES IN WATERCOLOR,” an exhibition of four watercolor artists from the Chapel Hill area will open September 13 at the Durham Art Guild Galleries, 120 Morris St. The featured artists are Missie Dickens, JoAnne Rose, Frances Calhoon, and Stephanie B. Carleton. All represent familiar subject matter but each provides her own unique in terpretations. A reception will be held Sunday, September 13, 3-5 p.m. Admission is free. The show will run through October 6. The public is welcome. AUDITIONS — The Department of Dramatic Art at North Carolina Central University will hold auditions for “Deadwood Dick, The Legend of the West”, a musical comedy about the black cowboy, September 2, and 3 at 4 and 7 p.m. (on each day) in the University Theatre at the corner of Fayetteville and Lawson Streets. Actors, singers, and dancers are needed. 683-6144 or 683-6242. HASSLE HOUSE 'CRISIS COUNSELOR TRAINING — Hassle House, Durham’s Crisis Center, will hold its fall training for counselors beginning September 19. No prior experience is needed to volunteer for this training, which centers on mental health counseling, suicide prevention, and relationship counseling. The experience is fun and challenging, with the opportunity to meet in teresting and lively people. Older and retired per sons with time during the day are especially in de mand. To talk about taking this training, call Peter Kramer or Dusty Staub at 688-0417. WOMEN OF ALL AGES: You have a line into the world of communication with the Triangle Cities Toastmistress Club. While making new friends, the Toastmistress Club teaches you the art of public speaking and speechmaking. Dismiss your fears and visit their meetings at the Sears’ Con ference Room at Northgate Shopping Center every second and fourth Thursday at 6:30 p.m. For more information, call Durham 596-6629. HEARING AIDS NEEDED — The Durham County Mental Health Association has a drive on to collect hearing aids for the patients at Umstead Hospital. If you have a good used ha aid you would like to donate, call 683-2052 pickup, or drop them by the office at 212 Albtn St. If you don’t have a hearing aid, but would to make a donation to this project, make check payable to the Mental Association and i for the Hearing Aid fund. A FREE ART WORKSHOP — will be hel September 12 at the Triangle Art Gallery, Durham-Chapel Hill Blvd., in Coggin Plazi, public is invited to come and watch, paint and with the artists, Teresa Spinner and Tom Wald Ms. Spinner will hold a portrait workshop 9:30-noon and a life drawing workshop 12:30-3 p.m. Waldrop will hold a waten workshop from 2:30-5 p.m. Both artists «il demonstrating during the workshops. Everyone who is interested in oil painting, traiture, watercolor and life drawing is welt: Art materials will be available for purchase, further information, call 493-7467. FALL LEISURE CLASSES sponsored by Carrboro Recreation and Parks Department, now open for registration. They are: Adult Youth Piano, Baton, Karate, Women’s Fiti Chair Caning, Aerobic Dance, Adult It (Beginning and Advanced Beginner and termediate). Dance for Fun (ages 3-14), Cot Dance, Yoga. For more information, call 942-8541. FALL CLASS REGISTRATION is now opt the Durham YWCA, 809 Proctor St. Qasset fered in the categories of “Women On The Mo “Parenting”, and “Learn Something New41 Some Fun”. Call 688-4396 for detailed inloi tion, or pick up your copy of the fall class sche at the YWCA, Vickers & Proctor. HEY KIDS — Does your dog have a longtii he small? Or big? Can he do a trick or look plain funny? If the answer is yes, then enter dog in Carrboro Recreation Department’s Free Show, The show will be held on Saw September I_9 from 10 a.m. until noon at thei boro Town Hall Field. Register at the Cam Recreation and Parks Department by Septei 17. If you have questions, call 942-8541, Inotd participate, your dog must be on a leash! NCCU MUSEUM OF ART — RECENT A QUISITIONS, September 13 - October 2. hours: Tuesday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Sunday p.m. Admission Free. MUSEUM OF LIFE AND SCIENCE - Murray Avenue, Durham, is open 10 a.m. p.m., Tuesday through Saturday; 1-6 p.nii day. Call 477-0431 for information. OUTDOOR POPS CONCERT — The Dai Symphony will present an outdoor pops contti Sunday, Sept. 6, 3 p.m., in the Forest Theati Chapel Hill. The program will include work Scott Joplin, Jerome Kern, Leroy Anderson, J.P. Sousa and others. Admission is free place: Hill Hall, UNC. DUKE UNIVERSITY ARTIST SERIES pre its exciting 52nd Season beginning with the i dian Brass ensemble on Monday, October I", the Feld Ballet on Thursday and Friday, No*® 12-13. 1982 begins with Michael Bef Metropolitan Opera tenor, on Thursday, Jan 21. Two events follow in February: Virtn* Roma, Italy’s most celebrated *m| instrumentalists playing glorious Baroque mn® Wednesday, the 17th, and the world premier' duction of Abelard & Heloise, Pulitzer Prize ® Robert Ward’s opera on Tuesday, the Jli®' fabled French flutist Jean-Plerrc RamP* Wednesday, March 24, is followed by the op* Die Fiedermaus on Tuesday, April 6. Call Pa8 Office, 684-4059, for season ticket informal ask about the discount on the Triangle Dau*' Mini-Series featuring the Mimi Garrartf Theatre on Sunday, September 27, and theO* Ballet on Friday, February 12.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Sept. 5, 1981, edition 1
18
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