Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / March 13, 1982, edition 1 / Page 23
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SAT., MARCH 13, 1982 THE CAROLINA TIMES 7 Calendar and Announcements THEATRE IN THE PARK'S third annual Mini Season::' . .'; March 12-14 - A Night of One-Acts: a variety of . three lesser-known but innovative jewels for the theatre buff. March 19-21 - Two Original Plays: two North ; Carolina playwrights debut their original works March 26-28 - "Uncommon Women?: this critically acclaimed production returns with the original cast. Individual and season tickets are now on sale: $4 adults; S3 students and seniors. Season, tickets; $10 and $8. All shows begin at 8:15 p.m. at TIP. For more information, call .755-6058 (Raleigh). FINANCIAL AID FOR SCHOOL Let EOC (Educational Opportunity Center) show you the way. ; The latest information on federal campus-based and t independent aid funds and a counselor are available to assist you. Financial Aid Forms (FAF), Family Financial Statements (FFS) and Basic Grant (BEOG) applica tions are available at the EOC satellite office, 208 S. Main St., Roxboro. Call your nearest EOC satellite office today: Bragtown Library, 1-5 p.m., Friday, Ms. Dorothy Yarborough; Durham.County Library, 1-5 p.m., Tuesday and Thursday, Ms. Elizabeth Davi$. FREE MOVIES The Durham County Public Library presents a feature movie each Saturday at 3 p.m., in the auditorium. No admission is charged. The next scheduled movie, "Murder, My Sweet" based on a novel by Ramond Chandler, with Dick! Powell and Clair Trevor, will be presented March 13. Classic "film noir'1 adaptation of Raymond Chandler's hovel about private investigator Philip Marlowe. (1944, 95 min., b&w) GO EXPLORING with the N.C. Museum of Life and Science. On March 27, the museum is sponsoring a field trip to the exciting new Discovery Place in Charlotte. Ride in the comfort of a chartered bus and see this $10 million new museum, the largest science museum in the south. Young and old alike will enjoy the trip. Tour costs $ 15 and does not include lunch. Bus will leave from the museum parking lot at 8 a.m. Satur day, March 27, and will return at 5 p.m. Space is still, available. For further information, call Geofgie Searles at 477-0431. WHIPPOORWILL ASSOCIATION of the Bull Durham Athletic Program is taking registration for Youth Baseball now through March 31. Ages 5-12, boys and girls. Play location: Whippoorwill Park. Registration forms are available at Durham Parks : and Recreation Department, 101 City Hall Plaza or Edison Johnson Recreation Center. Adults are encouraged to participate. For more in- , formation, call the Durham Parks and Recreation Department at 683-4355. ... GOSPEL OF JOHN The Carolina Study Center if offering courses this spring on the Gospel of John (Tuesday evenings in Durham) and on a Christian ap proach to reading and writing poetry (Thursday evenings in Chapel Hill). Classes begin March 16 and 18. For more information, call 942-3573 (Chapel, Hill). THE N.C. MUSEUM OF ART, 107 E. Morgan St., Raleigh, is open Tues.-Sat., 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun., 2-6 p.m. (Closed Mondays and state holidays.) Admission is free. For information, phone 733-7568 or weekends, 733-3248. FREE TAX HELP - Tax assisters trained by IRS will prepare (long or short federal and state) tax returns free of charge for taxpayers who cannot af ford professional help. Bring your W-2 forms, receipts and any forms received from the govern ment. For locations, dates and times, call Ms. Helen Pressley or Ms. Kathy Walters, 596-9311, ext. 321, Durham Technical Institute. PROJECT LIFT If you are an adult new reader, come by Project LIFT and check out the new paper- oacks mysteries, love stones; ana dooks.io neip- . . - . . . r - 2-.U you stuay tor a culver s license, interview iur a juu, and manage your finances. If you are an adult who would like to help other adults learn to read and to improve their basic skills. Project LIFT has informa tion on workshops and volunteer opportunities. Phone Project LIFT, 683-2626, ext. 31, or come to the LIFT office, 2nd floor, Durham County Library, 300 N. Roxboro St. for information. HEALTH NIGHT OUT "Vitamins Myths and Realities" is the topic of the April 6 program. Dr Henry Kamin, professor of biochemistry, will be the resource person. All "Health Night Out" pro grams take place at 7:30 p.m., in the second floor amphitheater of the hospital's North Division on Er win Road. Free to the public. POETRY CONTEST A $1 ,000 grand prize will be awarded in the coming poetry competition spon sored by World of Poetry, 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. Says Contest Chairman Joseph Mellon, "We are encouraging poetic talent of every kind, and expect our contest to produce exciting discoveries." Rules and official entry forms are available from the World of Poetry, 2431 Stockton Blvd., Dept. E, Sacramento, California 95817. HEADSTART REGISTRATION - Operation Breakthrough's Head Start Program will hold its an nual "Open Registration" for the new school year which begins In September, 1982 starting March 15 from 8:30 a.m. -4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. Registration will be held in the Library Resource Area in the Whitted School Building located at 118 E. Umstead St. Register your child for coming school year now! Call 688-5542 for additional information. CITY SCHOOL CULTURAL ARTS AC TIVITIES: Hillside High School Symphonic Band, Duke Medical Center, March 16, 7:30 p.m., Duke North Cafeteria. Durham High School Band and Wind Ensemble, open rehearsalconcert, March 23, 7:30 p.m., auditorium. Youth Art Month Exhibit, South Square Mall: all elementary schools through March 13; March 15-26, all junior and senior high schools. Art Exhibit of Selected Elementary Work, Museum of Life and Science, through March 30. Other student art exhibits: Fuller Adm. Bldg., Rogers-Herr-lst floor, Holton-2nd floor, Brogden- ground floor, Durham High-lst floor, Elementary-, ground & 1st floor; North Durham Adm. Bldg.: ' Hillside-lst floor, Shepard-lst floor, Elementary-lst floor. . SEARCHING FOR FINANCIAL AID Start; with EOC (Educational Opportunity Center), 208 S. ; Main St., Roxboro. They have the latest information on federal, campus-based and independent aid; funds. Financial Aid Forms (FAF), Family Financial Statements (FFS) and Basic Educational Opportunity! Grant (BEOG) applications are available at EOC. They can help complete the forms quickly and ac curately. Call EOC today X599-0257), 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., Sunday. Call 477-0431 for information. BOOK FAIR EXHIBIT: The Children's Science Book Fair continues this week's theme of "Creative Computing". On Friday, March 12, there will be a demonstration of the Museum's computers at 3:30 p.m. On Saturday, March 13, 11-4, several computer ' companies will demonstrate personal computers and let you test your skills. On Sunday, March 14, 2-4:30, p.m., Fred D'Ignazio and the Cory family will lead computer activities. All of these events are suitable for all ages and. free of charge. In addition, books will be available for purchase from 1-4 p.m., March 12 14. . . , . K CLASSES, ETC.: Ride in comfort on a chartered bus to Discovery Place museum in Charlotte with the NCML&S. The bus will leave at 8 a.m. on Saturday, March 27 and return at 5 p.m. Cost of $15 includes museum admission and the bus.. Call 477-0431 for. .further information. . ! FREE TAX HELP Operation Breakthrough in cooperation with Duke Law School offers free tax return preparation from IRS trained volunteers. Assistance is available from 11:30 a.m. until 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, until April 15, in Room 309 at Operation Breakthrough, old J .A. Whitted School Building, located at 118 E. Umstead St. For more in formation, contact Joseph Tezza at 682-571 1. RESOURCES DIRECTORY AVAILABLE The 1982 Directory of Durham Community Resources is now available at the Durham County Library. The guide lists and describes approximately 400 local agencies and organizations offering services and information to the people of Durham. Free copies of the book one per person are available at the Main Library, all the branch libraries, and the bookmobile. People needing multi ple copies for use in agencies must -make their re quests at the Main Library. DOCUMENTARY PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBIT For twenty years, Paul Kwilecki has worked with a quiet passion to photograph his home county in Georgia. His remarkable work portrays life in a small community as he sees it sometimes intimately, sometimes satirically, but always with deep understanding. Brown Gallery, Bryan Center, through March 23. KITE WORKSHOP will be conducted Satur day, March 6, at 2 p.m., in the Early Childhood Center of Shepard Memorial Library on the campus of North Carolina Central University. This is the third consecutive year of the workshop. ; Adults and children will enjoy the kite workshop conducted by Larry Russell. Several types of kites will be demonstrated as the newspaper kite, the kraft paper kite, and the cloth kite. Each participant should bring: newspaper, brown grocery bag, art kraft paper, cloth or burlap scissors, small tree bran ches, dowel sticks or toothpicks, string or nylon hose, stapler, staples, rubber cement, liquid adhesive, glue or paste. The program will be devoted to the history of the kite, kitemaking, kite safety, and flying the kite. Reserve your space in the workshop today. Call 683-6440 or 683-6485. GENEALOGY FOR BEGINNERS WORKSHOP Durham County Library will offer a free Genealogy for Beginners Workshop, consisting of two class sessions at the library and a trip to the North Carolina State Archives in Raleigh. The class sessions will be held .in the third floor Conference Room at the library on March '18 and March 25 (Thursdays) from 7:30 to 9 p.m. The trip to the Ar chives will be Saturday, April 3. The workshop will be repeated May 6, 13 and 22. As class size is limited to 20 for each session, pre-registration is recommend- red. To register, phone Ms. Anne Berkley, 683-2626. NURSES ASSOCIATION SECTION CON FERENCE The 1982 North Carolina Nurses Assoication of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Section Conference will be held at the Sheraton Crabtree in Raleigh March 18-21. Some 150 nurses -who are employed in the delivery of Maternal-Child Health and Gynecologic Nursing ser vices in N.C, Virginia and South Carolina are ex- , pected to participate. Ms. Lillian Woo will deliver the keynote address on "Women in the Ws" to follow the theme of the. conference, "Health Care for Women and Babies The 80's". Other sessions include discussions on the following topics: The Nurse and Sexuality, CON Nursing Care in the '80's Breast Reconstruction and Sexually Transmitted Diseases. Concurrent specialty sessions will be held on Obstetric, Gynecologic and : Neonatal Nursing. The final day will be devoted to a workshop on "Women's Health Care" with Ms.! Cathy Fogel and Ms. Dee Lowdermilk of the UNC C!H School of Nursing as instructors. DURHAM COMMITTEE ON THE AFFAIRS OF BLACK PEOPLE MEETINGS: . , Health Committee, First Tuesdays, 7:30 pjn., St. j Joseph's AME Church. V Political Committee, First Thursdays at 7 p.m., the Library. .
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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March 13, 1982, edition 1
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