Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Aug. 23, 1982, edition 1 / Page 45
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Monday. August 23. 1982The Daily Tar Heel7D lit ' Dy LEAH TALLEY ''" Arte Friitnr You don't have to travel halfway around the world to see 30 Taiwanese children wrestle, dance and skip rope. They are bringing their craft to UNC this fall compliments Of the Carolina Union. Chinese recreational activities will be performed by these children at 8 p.m., Sept. 10' in Carmichael Auditorium. Dragon dancing, Chinese wrestling, Kung Fu and rope skipping become art forms when the children perform. The perfor mance is sponsored by the International Association. The North Carolina Symphony returns to UNC for several performances this fall.. In addition to a free outdoor pops concert, three concerts will be held in Memorial Hall. An all-Beethoven concert will be performed at 8 p.m. Oct, 20. Music in the Present Tense is the title of . the Jan. 14 performance. An all-Tchaikovsky performance will be held April 14. The outdoor pops concert will be at 4 p.m. Sept. 26 in the Forest Theater. . Registration for soecial interest classes i -n i i i j o i in l. t t: i 't will uc iiciu ocpi. Xf-JJ 111 IUC U1UUI1 1UU" by. These are non-credit courses operated by student volunteers, ranging in interest from aerobic dancing and clogging to self-hypnosis and massage. The Union Gallery will feature the Contemporary Calligraphy and Painting From the Republic of China exhibit Aug. 15 through Sept. 20. Current trends in traditional Chinese painting and calli graphy are represented on 64 scrolls in this traveling exhibit. Broadway on Tour begins its annual season with Tintypes, a cabaret-style revue of the Raetime era. Nominated for the Tony award for best musical, Tin types plays in Chapel Hill Oct. 3 and 4. Barnum and 'Master Harold'. . . and the boys from the Broadway tour. The Jazz Ambassadors, the official touring jazz ensemble of the United States Army, will exhibit their talents at 8 p.m. Oct. 14 in Memorial Hall. A range of music from big-band era to more con- ; temporary jazz, rock, pop and patriotic sounds will be performed by these 20 select musicians from the U.S. Army Field Band in Washington, D.C. Video Lunch Breaks may not do any- uung 10 aid uie aigesuon, dui uiey oner the next best thing to live entertainment. Held in the upstairs lobby of the Union, different videotape shows can be seen weekly at lunchtime. The Rolling Stones on Tour can be seen the week of Aug. 23-27. For more physical entertainment, the NFL Follies satirize pro football with a vaudevillian touch, shown Aug. 30 to : Sept. 3. Lithographs, cartoons and can- catures of Toulouse-Lautrec can be seen Sept. 7-10. A 40-minute film of the band Spyrogyra will be shown Sept. 13-17, fol lowed by The Making of Star Wars. Jimi Hendrix Rainbow Bridge closes the fall videotapes the week of Sept. 27-30. Carolina Concerts, the name for the combined efforts of the Carolina Union , and the Chapel Hill Concert Series, will present five acclaimed concert evenings this coming season. Charles Treger and Andre Watts ex plore violin and piano collaboration in their duo performance Oct. 22, Musi cians from the Marlboro Music Festival in Vermont will perform seldom-heard works by Mozart, Beethoven and Dvorak Nov. 1. The Prague Symphony Orches tra, a UO-piece ensemble, will perform Nov. 14. Their performance will be high lighted by Bohemian masterpieces. The spring semester will "feature the Eastern Brass Quintet (Jan. 20) and the Chief tains (March 2), who excell in traditional Irish music. All performances in the con cert series are at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. The spring semester will also feature ' four performances by various dance com panies. These events are sponsored by the Carolina Union Performing Arts Com mittee and the Triangle Dance Guild. The North Carolina Dance Theater will perform Jan. 21, followed by the Alvin Ailey Repertory Ensemble on Feb. 23. The Frank Holder Dance Company, North Carolina's only fully professional modern dance company, will perform on Mar. 19. The Ohio Ballet closes the dance season with a performance of 25 works on April 8. f? 0 V-v ? I f l i I - ,i Si- I "Ct f --IS: m o A. n r f ; I) J. A" 5 AS 0 f Ma f r. i." T t4 if 15 J I I -4 V ft w The Prague Symphony Orchestra (left), whose repertoire includes Bo hemian masterpieces, will perform Nov. 14 at Memorial Hall. The North Carolina Symphony (above) will per form at UNC four times this year, in cluding a free outdoor pops concert Sept. 26 at the Forest Theatre. Up To 20 Off On All S -Y I ' ' ' -' i I , ' '' jf; . : -C s: ' j - n -i here's:!? eres more o fall for at th Sweats the all day. all night, anytime , anywhere wear. . The Gap's got sweats in colors and combinations that nobody else has. Go sweats! Great style, great value. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Aug. 23, 1982, edition 1
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