Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 8, 1983, edition 1 / Page 7
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Thursday, December 8, 1983The Daily Tar Heel7 . . , 1 I I first Today From page 1 . 1 797, making it the second oldest state university building. "The idea behind the University was to create public servants for North Carolina, not to educate young gentlemen," Powell said. "Because of this policy of providing public servants, it was UNC alums who became governors and judges. Some of the early governors of other states were even UNC alumni." The main proponent of establishing UNC was William R. Davie, who pushed the charter through the state assembly. An at femrto na the r Bunn countries in six days, and the governor gave 26 speeches. "Around one table were just company presidents representing almost $50 billion in turnover," Bunn said. "The only way I could have got them there was the governor." Hunt's visit also helped him set up a meeting with the president of General Motor's European division. "It's usually easier for me to see the president of Hanes than GM," Bunn said. Recruiting international clients is easier in Europe industries even making its way into traditional industries such as textiles, with sophisticated computerized weaving equip ment." He said North Carolina's move toward high-tech in dustry would spiral outward from the Research Triangle and help the department create even more jobs than the 6,557 it announced in 1982. "Industries that make high tech products like ITT and IBM employ a substantial number of people in all skill levels," he said, adding that such firms create spinoff industries. "A pharmaceutical firm might require a packaging company or chemicals," he said. The Burroughs Wellcome Co.'s decision to set up a manufacturing plant in Greenville is an example of the spinoff concept. TODAY Pickwick!: A Dickens Celebration of Christmas, James Forsyth's adaptation of Dickens' tale of Samuel Pickwick and his misadventures in the world of 19th-century London, will be performed by the UNC depart ment of dramatic art in Paul Green Theatre through Satur day at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. Call 962-1 121 for more information. Exposures, the Duke Players' experimental theater piece written and designed from scratch through the collaborative efforts of 18 people, will be performed at 8:15 p.m. through Saturday in Shaefer Theatre on the Duke campus. Call 684-3181 for more information. The UNC Chamber Singers will give a concert at 8 p.m. in Person Hall. Call 962-1039 for more information. The North Carolina Symphony will feature mezzo soprano Donna Banks Dease performing Mahler's Kinder lotenlieder at 8 p.m. in Memorial Auditorium in Raleigh. Call 733-9536 for more information. The N.C. State department of musk will give its annual Christmas concert at 8 p.m. in Reynolds Coliseum on the N.C. Stale campus. Call 737-2981 for more information. Works in fabric by Susan Wik-hins will be exhibited through Dec. 18 in the downstairs Union gallery. Watercolors by Nadine Vartanian will be displayed in the Morehead Building through Dec. 31. Sculpture by Xavier Toubes and Caspar Henselmann will be exhibited in the Studio Art Classroom Building through Jan. 7. CenterGallery's December Show will feature paintings, sculpture, pottery and prints through Jan. 1. Color photography by Rick Dobte is on display in the lob by of the Carolina Theatre in Durham. The Sixth Annual Christmas for Collectors Exhibition will be displayed through Jan. 10 in the SomerhiB Gallery at Studio Frames in Durham. Tapestries by Sylvia Heyden will be exhibited in the East Campus Gallery of the East Campus Library on the Duke campus through Dec. 19. The 29th Annual Juried Art Show sponsored by the Durham Art Guild will be exhibited through Dec. 23 in the galleries of the Durham Art Council. Nicholas Afrkano: Paintings 1976-1983 will be on display through Jan. 29 at the North Carolina Museum of Art. Paintings and drawings by Jim Starrett, a faculty member of the N.C. State University School of Design, will be ex hibited at the North Carolina Museum Art through Dec. 31. Ruckus Rodeo, a walk-through sculpture exhibition by Red Grooms, will be displayed through Dec. 31 at the North Carolina Museum of Art. Red Grooms; Prints of the '70s, a selection of 38 works by the New York artist, will be exhibited at the North Carolina Museum of Art through Dec. 31. Star of Bethlehem, an astronomical search for the Star of the Magi through science, scriptural passages and historical speculation, will be shown through Jan. 9 at the Morehead Planetarium. Call 962-1248 for more information. Transactors, a new entertainment troupe which specializes in improvisations, will perform at 8 p.m. at the Art School. Call 942-2041 for more information. Let's Active will perform at 1 1 p.m. at the Culture Club in Raleigh. Call 833-5536 for more information. FRIDAY 9 Harold and Maude, about a maudlin, rich young man who learns to live when he meets a vivacious, liberal octogenarian, will be shown at 7, 9:30 and midnight in the Union Auditorium. Admission $1. Story Theatre, an adaptation by Paul Sills of the Grimm brothers' fairy tales and Aesop's fables, will be performed by the Durham Theatre Guild at 8:15 p.m. through Saturday and Dec. 16-17 at the Durham Arts Council building. Call 688-4259 for more information. A Christmas Carol, starring Ira David Wood as Dickens humbugging Scrooge, will be presented by Theatre in the Park at 7:30 p.m. through Sunday, with weekend matinees at 2:30 p.m., in Memorial Auditorium in Raleigh. Call 755-6058 for more information. CHINESE AND SEAFOOD RESTAURANT We now deliver Chinese and Seafood to your door. Our specialities are the spicy Sino Calabash styled seafood and stir fried seafood. They are genuinely delicious. Our great selection of cuisines from Hunam and Szechan are delectable. Lunch and dinner catering service is available for any size special gathering. 103 E. Main St. Carrboro, N.C. 27510 across from Daily Luncheon is $2.90 Call us for our dinner menu All ABC Permits NCNB 942-0006 Major Credit Cards 5" 3btb? r Norfolk Island Pines n prices begin at $1.50 Mistletoe available after December 1st Gm HMfl 11 5 30 Sunday 4S9-9MS Al LocMont OpOT tmry SufxUy Umvmtty KUn 97-tSM N0rth9.it ill made in 1784, but it was defeated in the assembly. 'As UGA began service in 1801, UNC was already sliding into the position of an established university. Old East, Person Hall, Stuart Hall (a dining hall) and the president's house were already constructed on the UNC campus when UGA began its first session of classes. Also, since Hinton James's arrival as the University's first student in 1795, enrollment had in creased to more than 100 students. The faculty was led by UNC President Joseph Caldwell and, in 1801, when UGA held its first i-nm- JL than in North Carolina, he said. "My counterpart in North Carolina is helicoptering back and forth for four or five days between companies. I meet with the president, the finance director, the technical director and the marketing director for four hours. Their time costs about SI, 000 an houi so you get your business done and get out." Bunn said a good interstate highway system is the best drawing card a state can have for recruiting an in ternational firm. "International clients are looking to set up four- or five-state operations," he said. "The "Thev wanted a nearby manufacturing plant to coor dinate with their headquarters in the Research Triangle," he said. "Greenville was accessible as distance goes." But do firms think as highly of the rest of the state as they do the Triangle and the rest of the Piedmont? The department's 1982 Economic Development Report showed that 53 percent of the new business projects were located in the Piedmont, compared to 24 percent for the mountain region and 23 percent for the coastal areas. In terms of employment, more than half the new jobs created by these projects were in the Piedmont. Lynne Garrison, assistant press secretary to Gov. Jim Hunt, said new industries had been discouraged from concentrating in the Piedmont. "The governor has tried Exam Fa Sky Rambles, a narrated tour of the current night sky, is offered at 7 p.m. before the regular program at the More head Planetarium. Separate admission charge for each show. Lisa Lyanik and the Mobile City Band will play rock dance music through Saturday at 9 p.m. at the Art School. Call 929-28 for more information. The Clef Hangers will give a fall concert at 7:59 p.m. in Gerrard Hall. Admission SI at the door. SATURDAY 't f Take the Money and Run is what Woody Allen JLVf never can do quite right in his "documentary" of a compulsive thief, to be shown at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in the Union Auditorium. The Chapel Hill-Carrboro Community Church will pre sent its annual Christmas concert at 8 p.m. in the Chapel Hill Bible Church on Mason Farm Road. Call 942-5075 for more informatin. The Duke Collegium Musicum will give its fall concert at 8:15 p.m. in Duke Chapel. Call 684-5450 for more informa tion. Winter Scenes and Illustrations of the Christmas Story, a selection of prints, drawings, manuscripts and photographs of subjects appropriate to the holiday season, will be ex hibited through Jan. 8 at the Ackland Art Museum. SUNDAY nMeet John Doe, a holiday film starring Barbara Stanwyck as a newspaper columnist who invents a letter from a John Doe (Gary Cooper), saying he will com mit suicide on Christmas Eve, concludes the Frank Capra Film Festival at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in the Union Auditorium. The Durham Civic Choral Society will present its Christmas concert at 4 p.m. in Baldwin Auditorium on the Duke campus. Cal 682-5519 for more information. The Durham Symphony will give its Christmas concert at 8 p.m. in the Durham High School Auditorium. Call 682-3836 for more information. Glenn Fox will present a program of holiday music com bining piano, guitar and vocal music drawn from mountain, European, rock and gospel sources at 3 p.m. at the North Carolina Museum of Art. Call 833-1935 for more informa tion. Genesis will perform for the first time in North Carolina, featuring Phil Collins and an extravagant light show, at 8 p.m. in the Greensboro Coliseum. Call 294-2870 for more information. The Jim Ketch Quintet will perform at. 7 p.m. as part of the Art School's Sunday Jazz Series. Call 929-28 for more information. Video Exam Breaks will featured Underdog, Bugs Bunny and Bullwinkle cartoons at 8 p.m. through Dec. 12 in the Union upstairs lounge. Earl Wynn will give a dramatic reading of Dickens' A Christmas Carol at 3 p.m. in the Union Auditorium. Admis sion is free. THURSDAY 1 7 Babes on Broadway, a film musical starring JLJ Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland, will be shown at 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. as part of the Hollywood's Best film series at the Art School. Call 929-28 for more informa tion. Pinocchio, the Emmy Award-winning musical based on the childhood classic by Carlo Collodi, will be performed at the Raleigh Little Theatre through Dec. 16 at 8 p.m. and Dec. 17-18 at 3 p.m. Call 821-3111 for more information. The North Carolina Boys Choir will present its annual Christmas concert at 7:30 p.m. in Baldwin Auditorium on the Duke campus. Call 383-2761 for more information. Cafeteria Luncheons Mon.-Fri. 11:30-2:15 Sun. 12:00-2:30 Regular Dinners Sun.-Thurs. 5:00-9:30. Fri.-Sat. 5:00-10:30i Accepted Poinsettias Choose from sizes: 4", 4V4, 6 8", 10" AVAILABLE IN WHITE, RED, PINK OR MARBLE 6" pot $4.50 or 3 for $12.50 Garden Center Grner World Hor 10-6 Daily Sun Closed N. M.St 477-7090 c 7 Of mencement, UNC graduated its seventh class. Early UNC graduates included Archibald Debow Murphy (Class of 1799), who later laid the plans for public education in North Carolina, Powell said. Although a rivalry exists between the two univer sities, officials from both schools insist it is a very friendly and healthy one. "This is one of those friendly academic discussions," Wood said. "Argument is too harsh a word. In both cases it reflects well on the two schools and on the South itself." From page 1 farther you are from an interstate, the better chances are that they're going to look elsewhere." Other prime considerations are availability of sub contractors, the site's proximity to markets and other international companies, good schools and proximity to people with an international mentality. What next for the man with a doctorate in finance, six months' experience in the Middle East as a marketing consultant to the Saudis, and a five-year stint as North Carolina's salesman in Wait Germany? IU star where 1 am," he said. "It gives me a chance to keep in touch with North Carolina." From page 1 to encourage industries to locate all across the state," she said. But Taylor said the reputation of North Carolina as a good location for industry has helped the state in every county. "Companies are impressed that they can do it in Asheville or Randolph County." The Commerce Department's contribution to the state's economic growth has been assailed recently by state Labor Commissioner John Brooks, who has charged that the state has a history of "over-devotion to industrial recruitment as the sole state program for economic growth." Tomorrow: Women and minorities in business in North Carolina. FRIDAY i 1 Awareness Art Ensemble will play reggae music at Wj 9 p.m. through Dec. 17 at the Art School. Call 929-28 for more information. SATURDAY nThe Duke String School Youth Ensembles will perform at 10:30 a.m., and the Duke String School Youth Symphony Strings will perform at 7:30 p.m. in Baldwin Auditorium on the Duke campus. Call 684-5450 for more information. SUNDAY 1 fi A dramatic reading of The Far Journey and Final lO End of Dr. Faustwilz, Spaceman, Part I, the first half of Amon Liner's epic poem set in the Nazi concentra tion camp at Auschwitz, will be given at 7:30 p.m. at the Community Church in Chapel Hill. Pratie Heads will give a Christmas concert of traditional music from Britain at 8 p.m. at the Durham Arts Council. Call 682-5519 for more information. The Judaka Gallery, a permanent collection of Jewish ceremonial objects, will open at the North Carolina Museum of Art. " Heart and Soul music by, for or about bassists and drummers will be presented by the Art School at 7 p.m. as part of its Sunday Jazz Series. Call 929-28 for more infor mation. MOVIES Plaza 1 Rumble Fish at 3:15, 5:15, 7:15 and 9:20 ends today. Scarface starts Friday at 3:30 and 7:30. Plaza II The Big Chill at 3, 5:05, 7: 10 and 9: 15; times change Friday to 3:05, 5:10, 7:15 and 9:20. Plaza III Educating Rita at 3, 5: 10, 7:20 and 9:30 ends today. Sudden Impact starts Friday at 2:20, 4:45, 7:10 and 9:35. Varsity I Tango and Zelig at 3:15, 5:15, 7:15 and 9:15. Varsity II Rear Window at 3, 5, 7 and 9:05. Varsity Lateshows Desperate Living and The Stunt Man at 1 1:30 Friday and Saturday. Carolina Blue An Officer and a Gentleman at 7 and 9:15 ends today. Terms of Endearment starts Friday at 2, 4:30, 7 and 9:30. Carolina White Fame at 2:30, 4:45, 7:05 and 9:15 ends today. Christine, starts Friday at 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30 and 9:40. Carolina lateshows MASH at 11:45 and Life of Brian at midnight Friday and Saturday. Ram I Never say Never Again at 7 and 9:20; weekend matinees at 2 and 4:30. Ram II Here and Now at 7:15 and 9:15 ends today. Educating Rita starts Friday at 7:05 and 9:15; weekend matinees at 2:30 and 4:35. Ram III The Evil Dead at 7:05 and 9:05 ends today. Yentl starts Friday at 7 and 9:30; weekend matinees at 2 and 4:30. Ram Lateshows The Road Warrior and The Shining at midnight Friday and Saturday. Carolina (Durham) A Star Is Born at 7:30, with Satur day shows at 4:30 and 8, and Sunday shows at 1, 4:15 and 7:30. Compiled by David Schmidt, assistant arts editor. re Your Holiday Travels Can Start Right At Your Door. 0. I iu HI I i I ill MM m : ...Tc9?xS ..jjnv .fcJW I J""""1 .i1i;J31mmiiiWiii VIKING TRAVEL Sandwiches . . . Salads WE'RE OPEN WHEN YOU'RE HUNGRY! maintaining our usual ridiculous hours during exams! Hours: 10:30-2 a.m. Sun.-Thur. 10:30-3 a.m. Fri. & Sat. Campus Calendar The Carolina . Student FundDTH Campus Calendar ;: will appear every Monday - and Thursday. An nouncements to be run on Monday must be placed in the box outside the Carolina Student Fund office on the third: floor of South Building by 5 pjm the Friday before they are to run. An nouncements to be run on Thursday must be placed in the box by 5 p.m. of the preceding 'Tuesday; Only announcements from University recognized and campus organizations will be printed. . ' Friday 3:30 p.m. Experienced oarsmen Fresh men and sophomore men in terested in rowing meet at the track. Call 942-6588 or 933-8812. 6 p.m. IVCF Off-Campus Chapter pot luck dinner and the Christmas worship in the Bible Church basement. 7 p.m. Baptist Student Union Annual . Christmas Party. Meet at the Battle House for drive to Hills borough. For Total Travel Air Train Cruise , Hotel Tours including: Van Service to RDU Group-Rates on Request '. Call: 968-4586 Ill" " IS S ' 1 fgfafe ?' v 1 - f??t4 1 ft , . V- sp IS i I mi fr mm A j I mm. hi 7 wmt fl whs t4t t,4,m' 1 Pfc If (I .. wHHR m4, xu U. m I ym - mkh Wr - few 4mf - r m 4 , V lift hfmismM4 Kroger Plaza 103 So. Elliott Rd. Chapel Hill 27514 . . Noon . 'ASCAP March to protest U.S. involvement in Central America and the Middle East. Meet in The Pit. 1:30 p.m. ASCAP Teach-in on Central ' America and Lebanon -in Room 224 of the Union. 3 p.m. Campus Y Big BuddyLittle Buddy Christmas Party. Meet at Campus Y. Saturday 9 a.m. Anglican Student Fellowship End-of-Semester Breakfast Ex travaganza at the Chapel of the Cross. 10 a.m. Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools Art Guild Crafts Fair till 5:30 p.m. at Carr Mill Mall in Carrboro. 8 p.m. Chapel Hill Ballet Company will present "Babes In Toyland" in the Cultural Arts Building at Chapel Hill High School. Call 942-1088. 7 p.m. Maranafha Worship Service in Room 224 of the Union. 8 p.m. Square Dance with the Generic String Band at the Pittsboro Community Building. C 1983 Addph Cocxs BUFFET fo n 2 ft Mon.-Fri. ' 11-2 2 All ABC Permits Cottacts ChJmas Soft Contact Lenses7 Above fee for spherical lenses only Must present this ad pri Offer Expires Dec. 23, 1983 vmbAV Ve would be more than happy to CiTmI Vv arrange an eye examination for you PTICIANS Michael Costabile, licensed optician 235-A Elliott 5:45 p.m. Baptist Student Union's Second Christmas Worship Service at Battle House. 7 p.m. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship South Chapter Christmas Fel lowship Meeting in the James Rec. Room. 7:30 p.m. The University Women's Club program in the Banquet Hall of the Morehead Building. 8:30 p.m. Fellowship of Christian Athletes Special Christmas Meeting in the Union. Sunday 2 p.m. The RHA FacultyStudent Reception in Kenan Parlor. ' 7 JO p.m. A Lovefeast in the Moravian Tradition at the Wesley Founda tion. Call 933-4159. ITEMS OF INTEREST Make 1984 a Happy New Year for others. Volunteer your time to the local community. Stop by the Volunteer Action Center to find out about the opportunities to get involved. We're open Monday-Thursday 2 p.m. - 4 p.m. in Room 203 of the Campus Y. For Health and Wellness Information, call 942-WELL or come by the Health Education Suite, 2nd floor, Student Health Service. CHEC (Contraceptive Health Education CBnic) offers group sessions every Monday at 4 p.m. in the Health Edu cation Suite, second floor of the Student Health Service. In dividual sessions available by appointment. . TOEFL exam is Jan. 14. Applications must be RE CEIVED by Monday, Dec. 12. Applications available in Nash Hall. Test given at Duke. Compony Golden Cototodo 80401 Bwwet of fine Quality Been Since 1873 Mon, night 5-7 Special 22 on. draft : WOUT Road 9-6, M-F 968-4776 i i
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 8, 1983, edition 1
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