Thursday. March 4. 1982 Special Events Set For March March will be a busy month in North Carolina as. far as festivals, concerts and other special events are concerned. College basketball tournaments, golf and auto racing will be among the major events of the month. The Atlantic Coast Con ference Basketball Tour namnet taps off in Green sboro’s Coliseum March 5 with the finals scheduled for March 7. The Mid Eastern Athletic Conference Tournament takes place March 4-8 down the road in the Winston- Salem Coliseum. As for other major sports events, the Tournament Players Association makes its annual stop at the Greater Greensboro Open on the Forest Oaks Country Club March 30-April 4 with some of the world’s leading golfers competing in the event. This year’s event will feature two celebrity pro am tournaments instead of the usual one. The fifth annual Spring Sprints, a series of short auto races for both amateur and professional drivers, 1 will be run over the Charlotte Motor Speedway’s 2.25 mile asphalt road course corpora ting the 1.5 mile high banked oval track along with a serpentine course on the track infield. Civil War history comes to life in March at Bentonville Battleground, scene of a tactical demonstration of Civil War warfare. More than 300 Union and Con federate soldiers will par ticipate in the event on the battlefield in Johnston County. March too will see Caro winds near Charlotte begin a new season March 20. This year the park will feature a new ride - the Rip 1 Roarin’ Rapids. The park will be open on weekends only until June 5 when fulltime operations begin. Festivals will span the state in March too. On March 13 the 300-year-old legend of “Old Quawk’’ will be celebrated in Carteret County. The observance celebrates the legend of a grumpy and stubborn shipwrecked mariner to shake off the gloom of winter and to welcome spring and the opening of the fishing season. Charlotte celebrates St. Patrick’s Day March 7 with its traditional parade down Tryon Street. Also in Charlotte on March 19-21 ham radio enthusiasts will gather at the Civic Center for the Charlotte Hamfest. The Raleigh Civic Center will be the scene of the N. C. Sports Exposition March 25- 28 featuring sports clinics, guns, fishing, outdoor recreation, boats and other activities. Louisburg College’s 12th annual Folk Festival is set for March 26-27 on the college campus. Coupled with that event will be the 18th annual Franklin County and Louisburg College Art Show which will run March 26-April 8. The Capitol Area Gem and Mineral Show March 26-28 at the State Fairgrounds in Raleigh will being together rockhounds from several states. The 42nd annual Old Time Fiddlers and Bluegrass Convention will be staged March 27 by the Mooresville Lions Club at the Roland R. Morgan Auditorium in Mooresville. About 50 young women from all over North Carolina will compete in ths Miss North Carolina • U.S.A. Pageant in Winston-Salem March 5-6 in Reynolds Auditorium. The beauty and adventure of the underwater world comes to life March 12-14 in Raleigh in the second an nual Southeastern Atlantic States Underwater Con ference and Film Festival. Noted scuba diver Stan Waterman will highlight the event which is scheduled for Holiday Inn North, Sheraton Higbwoods and Enloe High School Auditorium. Plenty of music, art and dance will be evident across the state in March. The Ciompi String Quartet performs at Duke University March 1. Hie : ' v.' h. | Canadian Brass will present a concert March 10 in the High Point Theater and Exhibition Center. Duke University’s Chorale offers its spring concert March 16 while the Duke Symphony Orchestra performs March 23 on the Durham Campus. Duke’s Music Department presents “St. John Passion” March 28 in Duke Chapel and the Duke Wind En semble’s Spring Concert is set for March 30. The North Carolina Dance Theater performs across the state during the month. March 1-2 the dancers will perform in Wilmington at UNC-W, March 6 in Charlotte’s Ovens Auditorium, March 9 at South Stokes High School in Walnut Cove, March 11 at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem and March 25 at the Caswell County Civic Center in Yanceyville. The American Camellia Society and the Men’s Camellia Club of Charlotte will sponsor a flower show March 4-6 at Charlotte’s Eastland Mall. The Moore County Hunter Trials are set for March 6 in Southern Pines. March too will be for cats. They will come from all over the United States for the annual Triad Tar Paws Cat Show in Jamestown’s City Lake Gym March 13-14. The Men’s Piedmont Camellia Club presents its 24th annual show March 13- 14 at Greensboro’s Four Season’s Mall. In Cary on March 7 the annual Cary Road Race will feature a 10,000 meter event and a one-mile fun run. The 25th annual Antiques Fair is set for March 19-20 in Southern Pines at the National Guard Armory. Chapman’s Antique Show is scheduled March 19-21 in the Benton Convention Center in Winston-Salem. The Kinston-Lenoir County Creative Arts and Crafts Show will be March 20 in Fairfield Community Center. A custom car show will be staged at Raleigh’s Civic Center March 20-21 and a Spring Craft Show is set for March 27-28 at the Cleveland County Fairgrounds in Shelby. Stage productions will include “Finian’s Rainbow” March 4-13 in the College Community Center in Salisbury sponsored by the United Arts Council; “Evening of One-Acts” by the Montford Park Players in Asheville March 12-14, “Frankenstein” by the North Carolina Playmakers in Chapel Hill March 13- April 1; “Whose Life Is It Anyway” by the Winston- Salem Little Theater March 19-21; and “Mad Woman of Chaillot” at the College- Community Center in Salisbury March 30-April 3. There will be other music too. Michael Ponti performs in Salisbury March 14; the Greensboro Symphony Orchestra plays March 23 in Greensboro; Jack Daniels Silver Cornet Band appears at High Point Theater and Convention Center March 25; the Ciompi Quarter plays at Duke University March 27; the Salisbury- Rowan Symphony Or chestral Choral Concert is scheduled March 28 in Salisbury; the Winston- Salem Symphony presents its opos concert March 28 in Reynolds Auditorium in Winston-Salem; Bill Gaither Trio Gospel Concert is set for March 30 in Winston- Salem; 1000 Years of Jazz will be performed March 31 in the High Point Theater and Exhibition Center. A children’s theater festival will feature musicians, mime, puppets and a host of other activities for youngsters in Tryon March 20. The Southern Living Show continues through March 7 at the Charlotte Merchandise Mart. Blandwood, the restored 19th century home of N. C. Governor John Motley Morehead, will observe its spring open house March 31- April 3 in Greensboro. 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