2-THE CAROLINA TIKES SATURDAY, JUNE 26, 1982 - Calendar & Announcements ITEMS for this column , should reach us NO LATER TH AN'FRIDAY before the desired publica tion weeki Two to three weeks prior is even better J No charge. Mail to: - :;': -a : Calendar . -aV-: .. The Carolina Times P.O. Box 3825 ; Durham; NC 27702. . NAACP MEETING The monthly meeting of the Durham Branch, NAACP will be held on Sun-. ; day, June 27, 4 p.m., at First Calvary Baptist Church on Morehead 'Avenue in Durham. The public is in vited to attend. SUMMER PROGRAMS '.The W.D. Hill Recrea tion Center is offering summer programs and classes for all age groups. . Adult classes include ceramics, aerobic slimnastics, photography, beginning sewing modern and African dance, crafts (crocheting or macrame), lamp shade designing, and Kung-Fu Pre-teens, may take modern and African dance, gymnastics, and baton twirling. Senior citizens classes include physical exercise, ad vanced macrame, ceramics, crocheting, and flower arranging. ; , -;vv; Teens may register for the Summer Teen Camp which will include swimming, physical exercise, ten nis, crafts, arid photography classes, trips 4o the Asheboro Zoo, Busch Gardens and others. ; For more information, call 683-4292 MIXED DOUBLES TENNIS TOURNAMENT The Durham Parks and Recreation Department is ; sponsoring the Lipton Tea Mixed Doubles Tourna-c ment during National Tennis Week, June 26-27 Local winners advance to sectional tournaments. For applications or more information, contact: Tennis Director, Durham Park and Recreation Depart ment, 101 City Hall Plaza, Durham 27701 (919) 683-4355. Deadline for entries is June 21. DELTA SIGMA THETA REUNION The names and addresses of all Deltas made in Alpha Lambda Chapter, North Carolina College (now NCCU), during the 1940's are being sought by Miss Margie C. Morris, 2520 Tanglewood Land, Charlotte, NC 282I6V for a reunion being planned , for August, of this yean If you have not been con tacted, please contact Miss Morris and provide her with your name, address (include Zip Code), and telephone number. REGISTRATION FOR KINDERGARTEN AND FIRST GRADE in the Durham County Schools will continue through ; the summer. Parents should register children Monday through Friday, between 8:30 and 3:30, at the school their child will be atten-; ding. Kindergarteners must be Ave years old and first graders six years bid by October 16. Bring birth cer- , tificate copy. ' RAPE VICTIMS Volunteers are available 24-hours a day by calling the crisis line at 967-7273 (967-RAPE), Chapel Hill. A report can be made without the victim identifying himself or herself. OPERATION BREAKTHROUGH . offers low-income residents programs and assistance in Employment Skills, Consumer Educa tion, Crisis Intervention and Youth Education. Ap plications for these programs are taken between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday-Friday. For more information, call 683-8731, 682-3209, or 682-4883. is offering home weatherization free of charge to' qualified v residents. These services include -weatherstripping, replacing broken windows, attic insulation, and storm windows. For more informa-. tion, call the Weatherization Coordinator at 682-0421. Operation Breakthrough is located at 200 East Umstead Street in Durham. ESSAY CONTEST Youth ages 6-12 will have an opportunity to win a $50 savings bond in Carrboro's July 4 Essay Contest. The contest is a pre-event ac dependence Day, the Commission selected "What July Fourth Means To My Family and Me" as the theme of the contest. DURHAM COMMITTEE ON THE AFFAIRS OF BLACK PEOPLE: . Health Committee meets on the first Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., St. Joseph's. . . Civic Committee meets on the first Tuesday, Union Baptist Church.;, Political Committee meets on the first Thursday, 7 p.m., at the Library. - , W.D. HILL RECREATION . CENTER, . 1308 Fayetteville St., will be offering a summer program for pre-teens Monday-Friday, 10 a.m. until 1 p.m. ' - Activities will include swimming,, basketball, arts and,; crafts, games, Softball and field trips. For more in- . formation, call 683-4292. , , GOSPEL CONCERT The W.D. Hill Recrea tion Center, 1308 Fayetteville Street will sponsor a free gospel oncert on Sunday, June 27, at 3 p.m., at ' the center. Featured groups will include the New Generation Gospel Singers and choirs from local churches. The public is cordially invited to attend. SUMMER YOUTH VOLUNTEER PROGRAM Students, ages 12-18, who wish to volunteer this sum mer at the Veteran's Administration Medical Center, . the Methodist Retirement Home or with the Blood mobile Service, may call the American Red Cross at 489-6541 for information and applications. VOLUNTEERS NEEDED The Edison Johnson Center is recruiting volunteers in the following areas: classes, office, summer day ; camp, landscaping, maintenance, art work, child care and others, If you are interested in volunteering your time and talents, please call 683-4270 for further information. -. Summer Classes at Edison Johnson " Center in clude: ballet, African dance, aerobics, jazz and tap, Karate, , Tae Chi, modeling, bridge; ceramics. Chinese cooking, macrame, lamp making, flower arV -ranging, pottery;'fcphysical exercise, art "workshops ! and others. Call 683-4270 for further information. , . VOLLEYBALL SUMMER LEAGUE 1 All girls or girl volleyball teams between the ages of 13-18 in - terested in a summer league should contagt Freddrick Sidberry at the Weaver Street Center at 683-4294. PARADE INVITATION Would you or your organization like to participate in the Johnson C. Smith University Homecoming parade to be held on October 30 in Charlotte? Applications for participa tion will be accepted now through mid-September. But get your application in early applications . must be approved in adHnce. '..,. For more information and applications, call Cleveland James between 10 a.m. and 12 noon or between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m., weekdays at 704378-1078. DUST, FUMES, HEAT, NOISE, STRESS. IS YOUR JOB MAKING YOU SICK N.C.? Occupa tional Safety and Health Project (NCOSH), a non profit group of labor and health worker volunteers, ' has technical skills and informational resources to help you free of charge. If you or your group are in terested, call 286-9249. ' , SUMMER FILM SERIES ' at the Chapel Hill Public Library, 523 East Franklin Street. Admission is free. All films are' shown on Tuesday and Wednes day, beginning at 7 p.m. Please use Boundary Street entrance for parking; -" June 29-30: "From Here To Eternity", (1953, 120 min:, BW). James Jones' novel set to the screen with Burt Lancaster, Montgomery Clift, Deborah Kerr, Frank Sinatra, and Donna Reed acting. This picture, about American soldiers based in Hawaii just prior to the bombing of Pearl Harbor, won eight Academy Awards. TAKE A VACATION AT THE LIBRARY A travel film series at Durham County Library on will continue through the end of July; Films will be shown at 7 p.m., on Wednesday. and at 10:30 a.m.., on Thursday mornings in the Main Librarv Auditorium. The series is free and the public is in-; tivity m Carrboro's 198Z r-amiiy Day Celebration . vited. Films for. June 30-JuIy 1 are ,VSidney" and srxnS6tt by'th Carrbdrd 'RecreatidA' arid Parks1 "'Edinburgh ' m-mv ,f ..;.. u-. . commission fA'!'' '';'! V''! ' 'M .M,r 00 you vsevvi6lence-to SftE PRO- ' in an enon io encourage me youxn en inecom- hlems you and munity to think about the true meaning of In your wife" Your girlfriend" You don't have to. There are alternatives to mate abuse and there are people interested in helping you learn. CHANGE: a men's counseling program on domestic violence offers counseling to men who are violent against their mates; Call Hassle House in Durham at 688-4353 and ask for a CHANGE counselor. YOUTH SOCCER The Durham Parks and Recreation Department is organizing Youth Soccer to begin in September for children 5-12 years of age. League playing sites will be Whippoorwill Park and Hillside Park. Interested youth and adults who want to participate or coach may contact their local,recrea tion center of call the Durham Parks and Recreation Department at 683-4355 from 8-4:30, Monday through Friday. Registration deadline is July 31. FINANCIAL AID FOR SCHOOL ? EOC (Educa tional Opportunity Center) has the latest information on federal campus-based and independent aid funds and a counselor 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 Davis; .Ms. Sheila Smith, W.D. Hill Recreation Center, Thursdays, 2-6 p.m. 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, June 26, is "All The King's Men", directed by Robert Rossen with Broderick Crawford and Mercedes McCambridge. This Academy Award winning film was adapted from Robert Penn Warren's novel, and modeled on the career of Hughey Long, An honest man. from a small town is elected mayor and then governor, but power corrupts him absolutely and he ruins his own life and those of his friends, 1949, 109 rftirf., b&w. MARINE WORKSHOP The N.C. 4-H Pro gram, the N.C. Marine Resources Centers, and UNC Sea Grant are sponsoring a workshop August 8-13 at Mitchell 4-H Camp, Swansboro, NC. Rising, high school juniors, rising seniors, and seniors who have graduated but not entered college may apply. Total cost for the workshop is $125. During the week; many facets of coastal life will be examined with emphasis placed on marine resources and their potential value to man; development of awareness of ecological problems affecting marine life; and r. exploring opportunities in marine related careers. Applications may be obtained from the 4-H office in Durham and are due in Raleigh by July 1. CELEBRATE JULY 4TH in Carrboro at the an nual Old Fashioned Family Day Fourth of July Celebration on Sunday, July 4, 1-10 p.m., on the Carrboro Town Hall Grounds. Arts and crafts; firetruck rides, horseshoe tourna ment, games, softball challenge, stage entertainment, fireworks and more. For more information, call 942-8541, extension 203. 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 833-1935 or weekends, 733-3248 i V ' ' JOB HUNTING TIPS FOR TEENS Teens looking for jobs this summer should stop first at the Durham County Library to pick up a free brochure, Job Hun ting Tips For teens. Designed as a cooperative effort by Project LIFT and the Young Adult Section, "Tips" gives helpful advice on where to go to look for jobs, how to get a work permit and how to make a good impression at an interview. A list of addi tional readings is also included. ' - Copies are available at all branches of, Durham County Library, and at Project LIFT (683-2626, ext. 31, or come to the LIFT office, 2nd floor, Durham County Library,; 300, N. Roxboro : St.) and the Reference Department at the main library.;Vx-V' NCCU ARTISTS: NEW HORIZONS The North Carolina Central University Museum of Art exhibit, during summer school. tyuseum hours: Tuesday Friday, 9 a.m.:5 p.m., Sunday, 2-5 p.m. Admission free. .

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