Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Oct. 2, 1982, edition 1 / Page 18
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2 THE CARDURA TIKES SATURDAY, CCTOSER 2, 1S82 Calendar and Announcements ' : PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENTS should reach u NO LATER THAN FRIDAY before the desired publication week. Two lo three weeks prior is even better! No charge. Mail to: Calendar The Carolina Times P.O. Box 3825 Durham, NC 27702. Coming Events THE DURHAM WOMEN'S CENTER will reopen on Saturday October 2, with an Open House Women's Fair at the YWCA, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. There will be 25 one-hour workshops, films, food, , musical entertainment, and free child care. Represen .tatives from a wide ranee of Durham orcanizations will be present to display their literature and to discuss their programs. Some of the workshops to be offered are: 'Your Legal Job Rights, Carpentry Skills for Women, Fighting Sexual Harassment, Resume Writing, Aerobic Dancinn. Women's Labor Historv. Com munication Skills, Astrology. A SI fee will be charg- vw ivi vuvii nui luuvp auuvii in uv ctvciiiciiav i vi $2.50. . . For registration information, call the Women's Center at the YWCA, 688-4396. THE BLOODMOBILE : will be at Carrington Junior High from 3 to 8 p.m., on Thursday, October 7. Call 477-8292 to reserve a time or iust come bv. This life-saving event is co-sponsored by the Red Cross, N. Durham Rotary Club and the Carrington Community Education Center. LOU DONALDSON QUARTET The Sallam Cultural Center, in association with, the Black Stu dent Alliance of Duke University, presents the Lou Donaldson Quartet in concert on Friday; October I, at 8 p.m., in Baldwin Auditorium on Duke's East Campus. tusfl Mre uitk nn a1miccin thorn nf : v w nmi viiv BUIUINIVU VCUV VI ; $5. Advance tickets are available at Page Auditorium Box Office. Regulator Bookshop and NCCU Student : Union; Ruthless Records and Oxbow Music in ' Chapel Hill, the WQDR Store in Raleigh and at the . J . l t . o . " ... . ... j, uuur un uic nigni ui nc snow. A native of North Carolina and honorary degree holder from A&T State University, Donaldson is one of the foremost proponents of the alto saxophone style of the late Charlie Parker. He has performed and recorded with such luminaries as Art Blakey, Jimmy Smith,' Milt Jackson and Thdonioua Monk and has led his own band for some 30 yetrt, The pre sent quartet features Herman Foster on piano. : Proceeds from the show will benefit the Sallam Cultural Center, a non-profit corporation promoting Student Alliance of Duke University. For more infor mation, call 684-4154. THE NEW NEGRO RENAISSANCE - A series oflectures, films and seminars entitled "The 'New Negro Renaissance: Harlem in the 'Twenties'" is be ing offered at the Durham County Library through November. This series is co-sponsored by the Duke University Office of Continuing Education and the Durham County Library and is assisted by the North Carolina Humanities Committee. The lectures and films are open free of charge to the public; the seminars are offered for a nominal fee. Remaining guest speakers in the series Will lecture V on Jazz musicians (October 6), author Jean Toomer" (October 20), and the Harlem Church (November 3). -Noted writer and actress Maya Angetou wHltwrt in a special appearance at N.C. Central University on November 11, speaking on female writers of the Harlem Renaissance. Remaining films include an award-winnins ar chival documentary entitled "I Remember Harlem" (November 21), musical short features starring Duke Ellington and Bessie Smith (October 10), "The Emperor Jones," with Paul Robeson (October 10),. and the silent melodrama "Scar of Shame" (October v'r Five-week seminars on various aspects of Harlem Renaissance literature are offered in the daytime and evening and require advance registration. Details of the entire series are available from the Office of Continuing Education, 107 Bivins, on Duke's East Campus, and main and branch Durham County libraries. ' For more information call 684-6259. DUKE FOLK FESTIVAL Oktoberfest '82 a new face , for an old tradition. A day of festivity, crafts, food, bluegrass music and beer. The outdoor festival is happening on Friday October 1 on the Duke University West Campus between the Bryan Center and the Duke Chapel. Craftspeople welcome to apply. Festival continues in the evening with an ex hilarating performance by the Quiet Riot, a comedy , mime team. The show begins at 9 p.m. in Reynolds Theater. Tickets are on sale at Page Box Office. For more information call 684-2911. PARENTS INTERESTED IN ACTIVE IN VOLVEMENT in children's education are invited to. attend a meeting on October; 12, 7-8:30 p.m., at . Lakeview Community Education Center, 3507 Dear born Drive.-,- Representatives of the Parent; Action Committee for Drugfree Youth will describe their involvement in Durham County Schools. For informatioju-calMsr ' Shary Maskel at 477-2197. """ ' ; TINTYPES, the opening musical for the 1982-83 Broadway On Tour series will be playing on Sunday and Monday, October 3-4, in Memorial Hall on the UNC-Chapel Hill campus. - For ticket information, call the Union Box Office 962-1157, 1-6 p.m. daily. NEW COURSE FOR SENIORS "The Teller Of Tales": From Homer's Ithaca to Durham County's Rougemont" is the title of a course beginning at noon on October 6 at the Methodist Church, Red Mountain Road and Highway 501 in Rougemont, 15 miles north of Durham. , Editor-writer Judy Hogan of Chapel Hill will teach : the course, which aims to bring alive some of the great stories of the past, beginning' with Homer, in the hope of stirring the tale-telling impulse in Durham County seniors . Ms. Hogan will be available before and after the talks to write down stories told to her. Authors, covered also include Flaubert, Chaucer, Jane Austen, Zora Neale Hurston, and James Agee. The course is free and anyone may come to any of the talks. Next week's lecture by Ms. Hogan will be: "Why did Odysseus comet home and why was Penelope still there?". The course is funded by the N.C. Humanities Committee, the Durham County Public Library, and the Carolina Wren Press of Chapel Hill. For more information call the Library 683-2626, ext. 31. DECISIONS: HAVING CHILDREN AFTER 30 is the title, of a workshop which will be sponsored by the Counseling Service of Duke's Office of Continu ing Education, beginning October 7 at 8 p.m. This four-week workshbp is designed for men and women wanting to clarify Concerns and examine priorities ' surrounding decisions about having children after thirty. Ms. Sibyl Wagner, workshop leader, is experienced in counseling couples in major " life change areas. vV . For further information on fees and registration, call Ms. Darlene Wells, 684-6259, at the Office of Continuing Education. FALL FILM SERIES Chapel Hill Public Library. Wednesday evening only at 7 p.m. October 6: Gertrude Stein and Ansel Adams, Ansel Adams might have shown you a photograph of a rose and ..said jt was,, worth jl .thousand, words, but -Gertrude Stein just commented, "A rose is a rose is a rose..." i 109 min. ; v . ... . :, , , ' . FALL CLASSES The W.D. Hill Recreation Center, 1308 Fayetteville St., is conducting registra tion for fall classes and programs. Adult classes will be offered in ceramics, aerobic slimnastics, cake decorating, modern dance, intermediate sewing, cross stitch, African dance, macrame, Kung-Fu; Senior Citizens classes, free to persons 65 and over: ceramics, physical exercise, advanced macrame, sew ing and holiday crafts. THE CITY OF DURHAM is seeking interested citizens to serve on the Human Relations Commis sion and the Recreation i Advisory Committee. Vacancies were created by resignations. The terms will be unexpired terms as follows: Human Relations Commission (term to expired June 30, 1984) and Recreation Advisory Committee (term to expire Sent 16, 1983). v' Applications may be obtained from the City Clerk's Office, 101 City Hall Plaza, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. The application is us ed by the Community Services Committee to deter mine who to recommend to the City Council for appointment.-Deadline for receiving applications will be 4:30 p.m. October 22, 1982. A CULT FILM FESTIVAL, a three-part series, will begin during the weekend of October 1-2 with "Eraserhead," directed by David Lynch, in the Draft House Cinemabow times are 8 and 10 p.m. Tickets are $2.50toTArt School members and $3 for non members; For more information, call the Art School, Carr Millr-Carrboro at 929-2896. --. The Arts EXHIBIT The public is invited to the exhibit J'Work Patterns" featuring the oils on paper, unsTretclitdmuslin and other media by Mary Van Vliet anaMkhele Richards. The "show will run through October Muhe Art School Gallery, Carr , Mill, Carrboro. Gallery hours: 10-5 weekdays, Sun days by appointment. For more information call 942-2041, - .v: ' CAB CALLOWAY Stewart Theatre Signature Series. Stewart Theater, NCSU, Raleigh, October 2, 3 and 8 p.m. Admission. 737-3105. r NIGERIAN NIGHT - Student Center Ballroom and Stewart Theatre,, October 9, 6:30 p.m. Admis sion for Ballroom dinner; program in Stewart Theatre free. 737-2453. LEARN ACTING The wonderful, imaginative craft of acting will be taught this fall at Theatre in the Park. Jo Brown will instruct students 15 years and older from Oct. 4 through Nov. 18. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays: -7:30-10. Students will learn the fundamentals of acting while working on a final production. Call 755-6058 for further informa tion. Fee: $40. ARTIST'S RECEPTION - The public is invited to the opening reception on October 3 5-7 p.m., of the exhibit of watercolors by Tom Waldrop at the Art School Gallery, Carr Mill, Carrboro. Show will run until Nov. 5. Gallery hours: 10-5 weekdays, Sun days by appointment. For more information, call 942-2041. TWO SOLO EXHIBITIONS will be on display Oct. 3-26 at the Durham Art Guild galleries, 120 Morris St. Multi-media work of Chad Hughes and paintings by Michael Tice. Opening reception Sun day, Oct. 3, 6-8 p.m. Admission free and open to public. Gallery hours 9-5 Mon.-Fri., 1-5 Sunday. PHOTO EXPO '82 a two-day celebration and ex ploration of "Photography as Art," McKimmon Center, NCSU, Oct. 23-24. Program includes workshops and seminars in photography, plus a judged photography competition. Registered par ticipants may submit a maximum of three entries in each of three categories: color prints, black and white prints and slides. Sponsored by NCSU Division of Continuing Education and City of Raleigh Arts Commission. Registration deadline: Oct. 8. Contest deadline: Oct. 15. Registration fee: $75 per person. For further information, contact Ms. Alice Strickland,. NCSU Division of, Continuing Educa tion, (919) 737-2261. - "COAO)CWCE"-"a tfay ofswVcTs" col or Xeroxes, black and white Xeroxes, and multi mixtures. Ninth Street Bakery, 754 Ninth St., through Oct. 25. . , ATH?ATRE IN THE PARK'S holiday hit musical, A.Christmas Carol" starring Ira David Wood as Scrooge will be back again ihjs year. Tickets are now tH- si?,e ,n Itserved seats in Memorial Auditorium L?r u JH2 Perfomiannces.. These can ONLY be Wr5E?l throu8h Theatre in the Park. Call ,735-6058 for more information.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Oct. 2, 1982, edition 1
18
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