Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Oct. 9, 1982, edition 1 / Page 22
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2 THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1982 Calendar and Announcements PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENTS should resell as NO LATER THAN FRIDAY before the desired publication week. Two to three weeks prior is evea better! No charge. Mail to: Calendar The Carolina Times P.O.Box3S25 Durham, NC 27702. Coming Events VISIT NCCU High school, junior college, com munity college students and parents of prospective srudents are invited to visit North Carolina Central University Saturday! October 23. Program will in clude lunch and the NCCU-Elizabeth City State foot ball game, at the university's expense. Registration will be at 9:30 a.m., at B.N. puke Auditorium. Call 683-6298 or 683-6326 by October 14 to reserve space for lunch and the game. THE EDISON JOHNSON CENTER will offer a Senior Citizens speaker and luncheon event October 13, 1-3 p.m. Call 683-4270 for further information. AEROBIC DANCE Carrboro Recreation and Parks Department is currently accepting registration for fall aerobic dance classes. Classes will begin Oc tober 12 and run for 8 weeks; meet Tuesday and' Thursday, 7-8 p.m and 8-V p.m. Fee $14.50. Pre registration required: For more information, call 942-8541, ext 20J. ENRICHING YOUR MFE IN THE 80'S is the theme of a group of short programs offered by the Duke U. Office of Continuing Education. "How to Create and Achieve Your Financial Plan" with Douglas Day, Certified Financial Plan ner, CLU, of Charlotte. Workshop will be held Fri-, day, Oct. 8, 9 a.m. -5 p.m., plus a private consulta tion with Day after the workshop. Fee: $60 per per son, $80 per couple. Session will meet in Trustees' Board Room at Duke. ''Cheap Chic: A Consumer's Guide to Quality l-iv--ing on a Shoestring" will present 15 speakers plus the Cheap Chic Fair on Saturday, October 23, 9 a.m. -4 p.m., Gross Chemistry Auditorium. Special fee $19.95, two for $35, covers all activities in this study of "generic elegance" in the '80s. JIMMY BUFFETT AND THE CORAL REEFERS will be performing Sunday, Oct. 17, at Carmichael Auditorium on the UNC-Chapel Hill Campus. Call Debra Karp at 962-1157 for further in formation. WOMEN IN SCIENCE CAREERS workshop will be held Saturday, Oct. 9, 9 a.m.-l p.m., Bivins Bldg., East Duke Campus. Open to any women wishing to enter or advance their careers in the sciences. For registration and more information, call Darlene Wells, 684-6259. HEALTH AWARENESS SEMINARS St. Joseph's AME Church of Durham will sponsor the first in a series of Health Awareness Seminars on Sunday, Oct. 10, 5 p.m. jn the W.G. Pearson Con ference Room. Seminar will focus on arthritis, diabetes, and hypertension and will be conducted by Drs. Arnett Coleman, George Brothers, Jr., and Elaine Hart-Brothers of the Metropolitan Durham Medical Associates. The public is invited to attend. . Rev. W.W. Easley, Jr. is the minister. THE NEW NEGRO RENAISSANCE A scries of lectures,fjlms 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 scries will lecture on author Jean Toomer. (October 20), and the Harlem Church (November 3). Noted writer and ac tress Maya Angelou will put in a special appearance at N.C. Central University on November 1 1; speak ing on female writers of the Harlem Renaissance. Remaining films include an award-winning ar chival documentary entitled "I Remember Harlem" (November 21), musical short features starrinc Duke . Ellington and Bcssitf Smith (October 10) "The Emperor Jones," with Paul Robeson (October 10), and (he silent melodrama "Scar of Shame" (October 3D. Five-week seminars on various aspects of Harlem Renaissance literature arc offered in the daytime and evening and require advance registration. Details of the entire scries arc 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. PANCAKE SALE The 21st Annual Kiwanis Club of Tobaccoland Pancake Sale is scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 2, 4:30-8 p.m., and Wednesday, Nov. 3, 6:30 a.m.-8 p.m., at the Civic Center, Downtown Durham. Tickets are $2.50 per person, children under 6 with adult, free. All you can eat of pancakes and sausage, butter and syrup, beverage! : Tickets, are available from club members or at the door on sale days. All proceeds go to community projects. EARN YOUR HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA at night in Durham County Schools. Prepare to take the GED test or complete Adult High School Diploma classes. Call Eddie Tice or Elizabeth Jones, 683-2591, ext. 280 to enroll in these FREE classes. : PARENTS INTERESTED IN ACTIVE IN VOLVEMENT in their children's education are in vited to attend a meeting on October 12, 7-8:30 p.m., at Lakeview Community Education Center, 3507 Dearborn Drive. Representatives of the Parent Action Committee , for Drugfree Youth will describe their involvement in Durham County Schools. For information, call Ms." Shary Maskel at 477-2197. NEW COURSE FOR SENIORS "The Teller Of Tales"; From Homer's Ithaca to Durham County's Rougemont" is the title of a course now in progress at the Methodist Church, Red Mountain Road and Highway 501 in Rougemont, 15 miles north of Durham. - " Editor-writer Judy Hogan of Chapel Hill is teaching the course, which aims to bring alive some of the great stories of the past in he 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 Ncale Hurston, and James Agee. The course is free and anyone may come to any of the talks. Next week's (Oct. 13 at noon) lecture by Ms. Hogan will be: "Why do old men need their sons, and grown men need their fathers?" 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. INTERIOR DECORATING Marjorie Edwards will teach this Community Education class at Carr ington, Tuesdays, October I2-December 14,'7-9p.m. For fee and registration information call Cerise Wynne-Colljns at 477-8292, weekdays from 4 o 1 ' p.m: . HILLSIDE HIGH SCHOOL'S FAMOUS MAR CHING BAND, under the direction of Clarke A. Egcrton, Jr., will perform at: A&T State University Band Day, Greensboro, Oct. 9; - : v Eastern N.C. Band Festival, Roanoke Rapids, Oct. 30; : ' Half time shows: Hillside v. Roxboro, Durham County Stadium, Oct, 15, 8 p.m.; Hillside v. Chapel Hill. Chapel Hill Senior High School. Oct. 22. 8 p.m.; Hillside v. Henderson Vance, Durham County Stadium, Oct. 28,r'7:30 p.m. SAT PREPARATION WORKSHOP v The Educational Opportunity Center and Project LIFT are offering a SAT workshop for adults planning to lake the Scholastic Aptitude Test (his year. The ses sion includes a film, sample tests and tips on scoring high. The workshop will be held Tuesday, Oct. 12, 7-9 p.m., in the Durham County Library auditorium. Call 683-2626, ext. 31, to register. FALL FILM SERIES Chapel Hill Public r Library. Wednesday evening only at 7 p.m.. October 13: Jacques Louis David, Henri Rousseau, Marc Chagall. Known to the world of painting as a "Primitive", an unbalanced and unsophisticated painter. Henri Rousseau provides a rich contrast to the neo-classical style of Jacque Louis David while Marc Chagall could be seen as the benefactor of both. 90 rnin. V FALL CLASSES The W.D. Hill Recreation Center. 1308 Fayetteville St., is accepting registra tions for youth between the ages of 5 and 18 who are interested in organizing a Community Theatre . Troupe. Rehearsals will be held every Saturday bet- ween 1 1 and 3 p.m., beginning October 9, at the"" center., Parents who have children interested in ac ting, singing, or dancing may call 683-4292 for more information. A beginners sewing class will be offered at the center, beginning Thursday, Oct. 14, 7-9 p.m. For more information, call 683-4292. THE CITY OF DURHAM is seeking interested citizens to serve on the Human Relations Commis sion land, 'the Recreation 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 Sept. 16. 1983). Applications may be obtained from the Citv 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 ap pointment. Deadline for receiving applications will be 4:30 p.m. Ociober 22, 1982. Meetings DURHAM COMMITTEE ON THE AFFAIRS OF BLACK PEOPLE: Health Committee meets on first Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m., St. Joseph's AME Church. Civic Committee meets on first Tuesdays, 5 p.m., Union Baptist Church.' Political Committee meets on the first Thursdays, 7 p.m., at the Library. TQASTMISTRESS CLUB Realize your full potential and open up new vistas through self improvement. Increase and improve your com munications and leadership. Join Toastmistress Club. Triangle Cities Toastmistress Club meetings are scheduled for the 1st and 3rd Thursdays each month at 6:30 p.m., in the Sears Training Room. 2nd floor. For further information, call 596-6629, after 9 p.m. " . ' - . THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS meeting of Scar borough Nursery will be held on Tuesday, October 14, at noon in the school on Queen Street. Volunteers SIXTY OR OVER , The Retired Senior Volunteer Program needs retired men to assist with simple carpentry projects (tools provided). Also an educational institution needs someone with technical skills to assist with drawing maps. RSVP provides travel reimbursement' and free in surance. For more information;' call Ms. Helen Pressley or Ms. Kathy Walters at 596-931 1, ext; 321. Durham Technical Institute. LITERACY WORKSHOP - Help promote adult literacy in North ; Carolina. Participate in the "Literacy Workshop; . How to - Teach Adults to, Read" on Thursday nights from 7 to 9 p.m., through Nov. 4. The Laubach method will be used and will certify volunteers to tutor adults on a onc-on-onc basis. Act now and call Project LIFT at the Durham Couniy l.ibrarv. 683-2626 tor more information.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
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Oct. 9, 1982, edition 1
22
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