4-THE CAROLINA TIMES—SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1998 ecilencIcircciiencIcircQlenclorccilenclQr Arts NCCU MUSEUM OF ART Museum hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.. Tuesday throusrh Friday, and 2 to 5 p.m. Sun day, The mu,seum will observe the university schedule. ,‘160-621 I. DURHAM ARTS COUNCIL • "Underwater" by Hollis Chatclain will be on exhibit through June 4 in the Al- lenton Gallery. 120 Morris Street. 560-2787. DURHA.M ART GUILD • Works by Ellen Burgin. Richard Goldberg and Toni Handy arc (tn display in the CCB Gallery of the Durham Arts Council through May 27. 120 Mttrris St. "THE NEUGENTS, CLOSE TO HO.ME," an exhibition of photographs by David Spear will open in the Gallery of Art & Design at NCSU's student center. Through June 19, Free. 515-3503. N.C. MUSEUM OF ART • "Fifty Years in the Making: N.C. State School of Design" through May 17. • Sacred and Fatal : The Art of Lttuise Btturgeois" through May 3 1. • "Georg Ba.selitz: Portraits of Elke" through May 17. • "Chair Sculptures" through May 22. • "Inventing the American Land.scape: A Dialogue with the Visual World" throuoh April 30. 1999. • "Beyond Likeness: Contemporary Considerations of the Portrait" through Feb. 28. 2110 Blue Ridge Road, Raleigh. 839-6262. ACKLAND ART MUSEUM • "New Currents in Contemporary Art: The 1998 Master of Fine Arts Exhibition" through May 24. South Columbia Street near Franklin Street, Chapel Hill. 966-5736 or 962-0837 TDD. "MENTOR — STUDENT: An African and African-American Faculty Invita tional Visual Arts Exhbition" through July 24 at the African American Cultural Center Gallery. Witherspoon Student Center, NCSU. Free. 515-5210. Classes/Workshops "MASTERING YOUR MONEY" a weekly radio talk show led by Edward D. Fulbright. CPA, president of Fulbright & Fulbright. CPA. PA and Fulbright Financial Consulting. PA. The show airs each Thursday at 7. p.m. on WNCU 90.7 FM. 544- 0398. DATED "Canoeing Basics" is the topic of a class hosted by REI Outdoor May 20, 7 p.m. 255 Crossroads Blvd. in Crossroads Plaza. Cary. Free and open to the public. 233- 8444, SCORE WORKSHOP — The Raleigh Chapter of Service Corps of Retired Execu tives As.sociation. SCORE, is hosting an all-say seminar entitled "How to Start and stay in a Small Business." Wake Technical Community College in Raleigh, May 16, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. The workshops will feature speakers on the subjects of accounting, legal, banking, borrowing, business plans. $35. 856-4739. SUMMER PUBLIC HEALTH RESEARCH INSTITUTE and Videoconference on Minority Health will be held July 12-17 at the UNC-ChapcI Hill School of Public Health, Courses will emphasize issues and solutions related to: collecting, analyzing and interpreting data for racial and ethnic populations. Contact Ms. Veronica S. Lawrence, Minority Health Project, Dept of Biostatistics, School of Public health, 3104 Megavan-Greenberg Hall, CB#7400, Chapel Hill, 27599. Fax 966-0119 or e- mail to minority_health@unc.edu. Website ww'w.tninority.unc.edu SUMMER KIDSTUFF DRAMA CLASSE.S at 3'emple Theatre is now holding registration. For students 8-18. June 8-12, June 15-19, June 22-26. 120 Carthage St., Sanford. 919-774-4512. Events GROUPS HAYTl HERITAGE CENTER * Become a Friend with a $100 donation. Help support the large variety of pro grams at the center. • Hayti Heritage Center needs volunteers for those interested in the arts and cultural events. Call Ms. Artninta Foushee. 804 Old Fayetteville St. 683-1709. Hours M-F 10 a.m.-8 p.m.. weekends 12-5 p.m. PEOPLE'S ALLIANCE • May 25. 7 p.m,. Labor/Econmic Action Group, 2724 Old Sugar Rd.. 493-4928. P.O. Box 3053. 27715. 682-7777. DURHAM BUSINESS AND PROEEJSSIONAL CHAIN Join ihc Chain and "Link" with other black businesses! .804 Olil Fayetteville St. 68,3-1047. NCED CO.MMUNITY SERVICE CENTER • Durham County Health Department representatives are available every second and loiirth Wednesday, 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. for information, referrals and consultation.^ • Consumer Credit Counseling representatives arc available.on the second and loLirth Wednesday. 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. lor services on consumer education, budget and credit counseling, home owmership and debt management plan. I 107 Holloway Street, 560-4369. ARTSCENTER • May 15.8 p.m.. concert with Patty Larkin. $ 14, $ 12. • May 15. 8 p.m., Improv theater. Transactors Improv Company. $3 300-G East Main Street. Carrboro. 929-ARTS. CAROLINA THEATRE • May 15 at 8 p.m. Triangle Opera Theater pre.sents "Rigoletto." $35, $25, $15. .309 W. Morgan St., 560-3040. N.C. MUSEUM OF LIFE AND SCIENCE • "Hunters of the Sky: An Exhibit About Birds of Prey." May 21-September 13. • May 27. 4-6 p.m.. Annual Meinbcrs Meeting. 43.3 W. Murray Ave., 220-5429. INDIVIDUAL EVENTS I ROPAGATION AND DESIGN With Herbaceous Perennials" led by desie- ners Edith Eddleman and Doug Ruhren. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 14 at the Raulston At- boreleum at NCSU, 4301 Beryl Road. $60. 515-3132. CAROLINA LITE BLUES FESTIV'AL is set for Greensboro May 16, 3-11 p.m, at Emerald Pointe Water Park, 3910 South Holden Road. $20, $15.50. Children under three admitted free. Various artists. 336-275-4944. NATIVE AMERICAN POW WOW is set for May 16 & 17 on the Richmond Community College Campus in hamlet. 9 a.m. to 5 p m. Various activities. 910-582- 7184 or 910-582-7010. Free and open to the public. DUKE CHILDREN'S CLASSIC — Golf and tennis tournament May 30 and 31,9 a.m. to 3 p.m.. 419-5400. Celebrity Show, May 30, 7:30 p.m. at the Durham Civic Center Plaza. Free. Exhibition golf, June I, noon, at Duke University Golf Club $10. 681-BLUE. TRAV EL TO EUROPE WITH A&T — The N.C. A&T Department of Architec tural Engineering will visit hi.storic structures while studying in Oxford and Paris, The four-week program runs July 3-31. the program is open to A&T and non-A&T stu dents. Contact Ronnie Bailey at 336-334-7575, ext. 22 or e-mail at phase@ncat.edu Meetings DATED UNITY BOOK OF THE MONTH CLUB will meet the second and last Tuesday of each month at 7:30 p.m. at the Hayti Heritage Center, 804 Old Fayetteville St. Discussions by Rev. Steve Colladay. 990-2531 or 968-1854. ONGOING A. PHILIP RANDOLPH INSTITUTE, DURHAM CHAPTER, meets every third Sunday at 5 p.m. at 202 Greg.son St. For more information call 688-2431 or 688- 8794. All interested persons are invited to attend. AARP OF DURHAM/ORANGE chapter # 189 meets each third Wednesday of the month at 2 p.m. at J.J. Henderson Towers, 807 S. Duke St. The public is invited. BOYD & HODGE COURT NO. 7, Heroines of Jericho PHA, 1st Wednesday d each month, 7:30 p.m. at the Masonic Lodge Hall, 301 Cook Road. BULL CITY ELKS LODGE #317. Brothers of Elks, meets every 1st and 3ril Thursdays, 7:30 p.m. at 2311 South Alston Ave. CHI F2TA PHI SORORITY, INC., a nursing sorority of professional nurses nteels T^hursday of each month at 7 p.m. in the Miller-Morgan Building, NCCU. 596- CLARENCE HUDSON CHAPTER #63, Holy Royal Arch Masons P.H.A. tiieds the second Sunday, 3 p.m. at the Masonic Hall on Cook Road. DAV (Disabled American Veterans) meets every first Thursday at Mount BetW Presbyterian Church, 3541 Rose of Sharon Road, at 7 p.m. Shancker Whitley Chapter no. 21. For more information call Paul Messick, Adjutant or Walter Fox Chaplain al 220-4227. ' cQlencIcirccilefiilQrcQlefidQrccileii^csi’

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