Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Oct. 10, 1981, edition 1 / Page 18
Part of The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
2 THE CAROLINA TIMES SAT.. OCTOBER 10. 1981 ' - ' .., .. t Calendar and Announcements ITEMS for this column should reach us ho 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 October 12 -15 Breakfast Monday Raisin applesauce, cheese biscuits, milk. Tuesday Assorted juice, cereal, milk. Wednesday Sliced peaches, ham biscuits or cereal, milk. Thursday Fresh Fruit, assocrted ureal, milk. Lunch National School Lunch Week "Nourish Your Neurons'" Monday Hamburger on school baked bun, let tuce leaf wtomatoe slice, savory baked beans, pineapple tidbits, choice of milk. Tuesday Chicken-vegetable supreme wrice, tossed salad, chilled applesauce, hot roll, cookie, choice of milk. Wednesday Deli turkey on sesame bun, vegetable dippers, crispy potatoes, chilled mixed fruit, million -dollar cookie, choice of milk. Tharsday . Pizza slice, Mexican corn, mixed begetable greens, fresh delicious apple, choice of milk. ' .. -, .. . . Friday No School. DURHAM COUNTY SCHOOLS MENUS October 12 -16 Breakfast. Monday Cereal, juice, milk; Tuesday Homemade cinnamon bun, apple wedges, milk. Wednesday Cheese toast, juice, milk. Thursday Scrambled eggs, orange juice, toast, ,v milk. Friday Cereal, peaches, milk. Lunch Monday Hamburger, lettuce & . tomato, onion rings, cake wfrosting, milk. Tuesday Country style steak, mashed potatoes, wgravy, mixed vegetables, hot roll, peach half, milk. Wednesday Deli turkey on Sesame bun, chilled mixed fruit, vegetable dippers, crispy potatoes, million dollar cookie, milk. Thursday Barbecued chicken, buttered carrots, lettuce wedge, cookie, milk.- Friday Fish & cheese, French fries, carrot & celery sticks, cornbread, gelatin wtopping, milk. CHILD AND PARENT SUPPORT SERVICES (CAPSS) will sponsor its fall Parent Aide Training Class beginning on Saturday, October 17, 9 a.m.- p.m. and continuing "every Monday evening thereafter through December ,7. The Parent Aide program is a community based approach in which volunteers work on a one-to-one basis with parents in stress. Training includes comprehensive informa tion about child abuse and neglect including family dynamics, legal aspects, and identification criteria as well as listening and counseling skills, and knowledge of community resources. Continuing Education Units will be offered upon completion of the -training. For more information, call CAPSS weekdays at 286-7112 or CONTACT at 683-1595, anytime. NCCU MUSEUM OF ART - Jim Moon Exhibi- tion, through November 13. Museum hours Tues day through Friday are 9 a.m.-5 p.m.,1 Sunday 2-5. Admission is free. ORGAN RECITAL Arts in Duke Chapel wiiJ preset " an organ recital by Fenner Douglass, University Organist and chairman, of the Depart ment of Music, on Sunday, October II. The pro gram which will begin at 5 p.m., in Duke Chapel will include works by Bach, Buxtehude, Mendelssohn, Saint-Saens, and Scheidt. The public " is invited and admission is free. EVENING : LAW SCHOOL Persons in-, , terested in attending the North Carolina Central University School of Law's Evening Program should contact: Assistant Dean Acie L. Ward, livening Program, School of Law North Carolina ' Central University, Durham, NC 27707. or call: . 919683-6333 for an application packet. Applica tions are now welcomed for January 1982 admis sion. '.', r THE DURHAM THEATRE GUILD will open its 1981-82 season Friday October 9 with The Kurt WeilBertold Brecht classic "Three Penny Opera". The production is directed by Sonny Snead and John Younger, Featured area performers are Jeanne Trahen, Bud. DeWinter, Betty Setzer, and Greg Jones. Performance dates are October 9, 10, 11,. 16, 17, 18, and 23, 24, 25. Tickets for opening night arejS4. All other performances are S3. Curtain times are 8:15 for the Friday and Saturday perfor mances and 2:30 for the Sunday matinees. For in dividual or group reservations, call 682-4259. CHILD CARE FOOD PROGRAM - The Operation Breakthrough, Inc.Head Start Program announces the sponsorship of the Child Care Food Program. . , Free and reduced price meals will be available to enrolled children meeting the approved eligibility criteria at the Head Start Center and will be provid ed without regard to race, color or national origin. KIDS 5 to 10: Make a clay Jack O'Lantern at the Durham Arts Council at a workshop with Beth Whiteside, October 15 or 16 from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. To register, call 682-5519 or come by the Durham Arts Council, J20 Morris Street in . downtown Durham. The number is 682-5519. WATERCOLOR The Durham Arts Council invites you to attend a workshop by noted area watercolorist Nancy Tuttle May, October 14, 10 a.m.-l p.m. To registerr call or come by the DAC, 120 Morris St. The number is 682-5519. VISITING MIME ARTIST, "Gracella" peforms at 1R.N. Harris School on Thursday, October 1 5. A ' workshop is scheduled the same day for Hillside dramadance students and teachers. HALF-TIME PERFORMANCES - HILLSIDE HIGH SCHOOL MARCHING HORNETS Oct. 9, HHS vs. Northern, County Stadium, 8 p.m.; Oct. 16, HHS vs. Person," Roxboro, 8 p.m.; Oct. 22, HHS vs. Chapel Hill, Durham, 7:30 p.m.; Oct. 4 30, HHS vs. Vance, Henderson, 8 p.m. Also DHS Marching Bulldogs-Homecoming, County 4 Stadium, Oct. 23, 8 p.m. ; STUDENT ART EXHIBITS: Fuller Administra tion Building Durham High, first floor; Hillside, second floor, Holton, ground floor; Rogers-Herr, first floor, Elementary, ground and first floor, System-wide, selected work, boardroom. At the North Durham Adm. Bldg. Brogden, first floor, Shepard, first floor, Elementary, first floor. CLAIRE COOPERSTEIN "New Dimen sions". Solo exhibition of plastic sculpture. The Gallery in Coggin Plaza, 441 1 Durham-Chapel Hill Blvd., Durham. Continues through October 12. Gallery hours Monday to Saturday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. : Phone 493-7467. SHARED-RIDE TAXI SERVICE is now in operation. Participating taxicabs are identified by a red and white "SHARED-RIDE" sign. . Fare charge for shared-ride taxi service is based on zones instead of a taximeter. The fare zones are established by dividing the city into eight sections. The charge to the patron for traveling in these zones is: $2.50 for the first zone in which one travels, 50t for the second zone traveled in, and $1 for each ad ditional zone in which one travels to reach hisher destination. r Here is an example of how much a shared-ride taxi trip would cost: If a person rode a shared-ride taxi from Wellons Village to South Square, heshe would travel in three zones. Therefore, the cost would be $4. The same trip in a regular taxi would cost approximately $7.45. To use shared-ride taxi, potential riders should call a taxicab company providing shared-ride taxi service and tell the dispatcher where they would like ' to be picked up, where they would like to go, and when they would like to arrive. The dispatcher will be able to tell them the cost of the trip at that time. VOLUNTEERS ARE NEEDED to help transport cancer patients to and from hospitals for treatment. If you have the time or if your church or Sunday School would like to assist in this project, please call the American 'Cancer Society, Durham County Unit, P.GA Box 2893, Durham, NC 27705. Phone: 286-7943. 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. THREE SOLO ARTISTS an exhibition spon sored by the Durham Art Guild will open October 1 1 at the Guild galleries at 120 Morris St. The show . will feature the works of three North Carolina ar tists: Tony Lunde, Jeannette Oliver, and CheTie Westmoreland. Lunde, whose show "Visiting Hours" features paintings and drawings, was the winner of the Guild's 26th Annual Juried Art Show; Ms. Oliver, a resident of Burlington, works in steel sculpture. Ms. Westmoreland is showing a collection of black and white drawings and et chings. The show wilt open Sunday, October 11, with a reception from 3-5 p.m. and will run through November 3. Admission is free, the public is welcome. ' . : FOR SENIOR CITIZENS The Edison Johnson Center will offer Leisure Activities for Senior Citizens through December 18. Hours will be 1-3 p.m. Activities will consist of card playing, chess, shuffleboard, checkers, etc. If you are in ; terested, call 683-2470 by Wednesday of each week so. the staff can set-up for Fridays. . TERESA SPINNER ART EXHIBIT An ex hibit of paintings and drawings by Durham artist, Teresa Spinner, will open auhe Durham' County Library on October 14 and continue through November 14. A reception for the artist will be held on October 14, 7-9 p.m., and will be open to the public. Exhibit and reception will be on the third floor of the Main Library at 300 N: Roxboro St. Among the more than 25 works on exhibit will be a selection of realistic landscapes of North Carolina scenes done in watercolor and oil. Ms. Spinner is known primarily for her graphite portraits which will also be on view. - . Teresa Spinner is a graduate of Bennington Col lege and Washington University. She attended the Yale School of Art & Architecture and the Paier School of Art. She has studied with international known artists. Her work has been collected here and abroad and she is a regular guest teacher at The Galleria San Juan in Puerto Rico. She also teaches portraiture at the Triangle Gallery here in Durham. EDISON JOHNSON ACTIVITIES: A class in Chess, October 5-December 7. Meets Mondays 7-9 p.m.s ": Tai Chi through November 4. Meets on Wednes day 7-8 p.m. t For other activities and further information, call 683-4270. N.C. MUSEUM OF LIFE AND SCIENCE -433 Murray Avenue, Durham, is open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday; 1-6 p.m., Sun day. Call 477-0431 for information. CLASSES There are still spots for preschoolers through adults in classes sponsored by the N.C. Museum of Life and ScienceOfferings include photography, natural dyeing, explore the Asheboro TkJ811 discveries, and many more. Call 477-0431 to learn abour these opportunities for all ages. ' - ' MUSEUM MATINEE - On Friday-Sunday. Oc. tober 9-11, 3:30 p.m., the NCMLS will show films, "The Leaf" and "The Lakota." (No additional charge for Museum Matinee programs). ' EXHIBIT Part of "The Great Plains Ex penence," "Work and Technology on the Plains", highlights woodworking, blacksmith and agricultural implements that would have been used by pioneers on the Plains. Includes photographic displays of buffalo and Plains Indians.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 10, 1981, edition 1
18
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75