2The Daily Tar HeelWednesday, September 4, 1985 i r A eirotage Weeks hhio n n n o oryP ami Gwoeo mm, one By LORETTA GRANTHAM Assistant City Editor I Take an antiques show. Add a Country fair, a Victorian garden party and a fashion show. Throw in a couple of art and fabric conservation programs. I YouVe created Heritage Week. I "Preserving the Best of Our Past" is the theme of Heritage Week, an event Coordinated by The Chapel Hill Pres ervation Society, The Chapel Hill Historical Society and The N.C. Art Society to raise funds for both historical preservation and art activities. ' "The Chapel Hill Preservation Society antiques show has been held each year for 11 or 12 years," said Val Lauder, a society member. "Heritage Week is a way to expand the show and really show the different aspects of our past ... it's an informal approach on looking back at things and enjoying them," she said. Dr. William Chiego, chief curator at the N.C. Museum of Art, will open the five-day event at 4 p.m. Wednesday with a discussion titled "From Private Pleasure to Public Treasure" in the Morehead Building faculty lounge. A country fair at Fearrington, eight miles south of Chapel Hill on N.C. Highway 15-501, will be held from 5:30 8 p.m. Wednesday. Music, baked goods and a farmers market will be part of the fair, an event to show how most OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDY ABROAD ORIENTATION MEETING Thursday, Septembers, 4:00 Student Union Check Student Union desk for room number FULBRIGHTS and UNC EXCHANGES Office of International Programs people used to live in the country and take part in homemade entertainment, Lauder said. A Victorian garden party featuring an "old fashions show" will begin at 4:30 p.m. Thursday at the Horace Williams House. Frances Frank Stone, show chairman, said about 30 different outfits, ranging from the Moravian dresses of the early 1800s to the embroidered garments of the 1930s, will be modeled. "One of the nicest things (about the show) is that we have a. number of Carolina students involved," Stone said, adding that WDMC radio station will provide historical music for the show. . Vintage clothes were donated by Playmakers Repertory Company, stores and people who heard about the show, she said. Patrons, those who make a single donation of $25 for the week, will preview the antiques show Friday at 7 p.m. at the Carolina Inn. The public will be admitted from 8 to 10 p.m. Admission is $3 and must be paid only once throughout the three-day antiques Ln rfn J. L Li ''Wmmmmi mmmmm i t ihp-m it i a IflTl HEWLETT fc, . tLj PACKARD o Get HP's new $49 software module when you buy an HP-41. A deal that has no equal, for a calculator that has no equal. The HP-41 Advantage holds the most popular engineering, math and financial programs ever written for the HP-41. Plus: 12K bytes of ROM user-accessible sub-routines it's user-driven Get the calculator 'engineers nrcfer, for less, during Computer South and Surveyors Supply s HP Sale Days. And get the HP-41 Advantage at the price you prefer. Free! HP-41CV HP-41CX $182.95 $259.95 Offer ends 11-15-85. Suggested US List Price Computer Son tit" Surveyors Stmplv Co. Highway 64 at Old US 1 Apex, Phone: 362-7000 Comnuter South. 47 1 1 Hope Valley Road, Woodcraft Shopping Center (Near NC 54751 Intersection) Durham: 489-9000, Chapel Hill: 929-9111 CREATIVE SANDWICHES SOUPS SALADS C show, said Helen Allen, event chairman. "We planned Heritage Week in order to put more focus on the antiques show," she said, adding that the show is a major fund-raiser for the preser vation society. A' fabric conservation program by Anne Tyrrell, formerly with the N.C. Museum of History, will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Horace Williams House. The antiques show at the Carolina Inn will be held from 1 1 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Dealers representing eight states will show wares ranging from small collec tables to higher-priced items. "We try to upgrade the quality and variety of the show every year," Allen said. Lauder also mentioned the show's variety. "There'll be a varying degree of value from buttons to butter churns,'" she said. The antiques show will be open from 1 to 6 p.m. Sunday. An auction of donated treasures will be held at 5 p.m. with Andy Park, WTVD-TV weather man, as auctioneer. For more information on Heritage Week, call 942-4288. in SrnoiSG-filled i March of Dimes 9 BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION B3 Elena blasts Gulf Coast areas From wire reports BILOXI, Miss. Hurricane Elena howled along the Mississippi coast Tuesday with 122-mph winds, flooding roads, slinging telephone poles and leaving 300,000 customers without power. No injuries were reported as the season's fourth hurricane hit land after stalling in the Gulf of Mexico for four days. The storm earlier was blamed for three deaths in Florida. Hal Gerrish, a forecaster at the National Hurricane Center in Flor ida, said Dauphin Island, Ala., and Pascagoula, Miss., were the hardest hit areas. Reagan renews tax overhaul plan INDEPENDENCE, Mo. Pres ident Reagan said he was "rarin to go" Monday as he renewed a cam paign to overhaul the federal tax system by comparing himself to Harry S Truman and quoting from a Democratic report favoring his tax reform plan. Reagan, speaking in the square of the city where Truman began his political career, launched what aides called a month-long campaign with bipartisan appeal. Reagan, looking fit after vacation ing in California for 23 days, was greeted by an enthusiastic crowd gathered in sweltering heat. Titanic wreckage found PARIS A U.S.-French expe dition has found the wreckage of the Titanic, 560 miles off the coast of news in brief Newfoundland, a French govern ment institute confirmed Monday. The British luxury liner sunk after hitting an iceberg in 1912, killing 1,513 people. The Institute for Research and Exploitation of the Sea said the wreckage was found in water 13,120 feet deep and was identified by the French-made S AR sonar submarine system and the American-made ARGO underwater camera system. Miners' strike wavers in S. Africa JOHANNESBURG, South Africa A strike by black miners faltered Monday as union leaders blamed intimidation by employers as the chief cause. Four people elsewhere were reported slain in continuing violence in black townships, including a boy who was shot by a policeman near Cape Town. The violence has taken more than 600 lives since it began in the township of Sharpeville a year ago. Thatcher realigns cabinet LONDON Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher announced a sweeping realignment of her Cabinet on Monday in what appeared to be a bold attempt to reverse a recent decline in her political fortunes. YOU GAVE IT YOUR BEST SHOT WHEN YOU TOOK IT. NOW GIVE IT THE BEST PROCESSING! Save tip to Oil: land by m w r A Ask for .Wi-.'L' I raltlllg Order developing and printing by ' Kodak of your KODACOLOR VR Film. See us for details Hurry! Offer runs 81985 through 9785 133 E. Franklin St. 942-3026 See how good your prints can really be. ..Ask for quality processing by Kodak. 0 k WWk PWWPWM j Im 1 Then come to the CAMPUS Y and join the many students who annually get involved in the local community and learn more about themselves, other people and the world around them. If you have two hours a week and are interested in learning more about the "real" world and your roles in it come join us at any of the informational meetings listed below. MEETING TIMES COMMITTEE DATE TIME PLACE BIG BUDDY Mon. Sept. 9 7:00-8:00 S. Campus Union Upendo Lounge Tues, Sept. 10 4:00-5:00 Union Auditorium CAMPUS COMMUNITY LINK Mon. Sept. 9 4:00-5:00 Y Lounge Tues. Sept 10 7:00-8:00 Y Lounge DILLON SCHOOL Tues. Sept. 10 6:00-7:00 Y Lounge Wed. Sept. 11 7:00-8:00 Rm. 209 Union MURDOCH Mon. Sept. 9 6:30-8:00 Y Lounge NURSING HOME Thurs.Sept. 5 6:30-7:00 Rm. 211 Union Tues. Sept. 10 7:00-8:00 Y Lounge TUTORING Tues. Sept. 10 4:30-5:30 Rm. 212 Union Wed. Sept. 11 7:00-8:00 Y Lounge UMSTEAD Wed. Sept. 4 7:30-9:00 Rm. 210 Union Thurs.Sept. 5 7:30-9:00 Rm. 208 Union VOLUNTEER ACTION CENTER Wed. Sept. 4 7:30-9:00 Rm. 204 Union Y-OUTREACH Mon. Sept. 9 5:00-6:15 Y Lounge Tues. Sept. 10 4:30-6:00 Rm. 220 Union AMERICA'S TOP HIT RECORDS AND CASSETTES Yours For Only $1.00 Each Now you can own every TOP HIT record or cassette you ever wanted - for only $1.00 each - plus postage and handling. Choose from all artists. . . on every label. 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Every Top Hit record and cassette can be yours for only $1.00 (plus postage and handling) every time you purchase another at regular price (usually $8.98). Sounds incredible - but true! You could save up to $200 or more. Discount book lets make excellent gifts. Satisfaction or your money refunded. ORDER NOW-SEND ONLY $30 (Check or Money Order) For Each Super Discount 30 Coupons Booklet To: (Worth Up To $200 Or More In Savings) Allied Sales And Service Dept 2934 Skycrest Drive Fayettevllle, K.C. 28304 ATTENTION STUDENTS AND FACULTY Receive USA TODAY delivered on or off campus by mail, for only $15.00 for 10 weeks. That's 40 off the newsstand rate, With your paid order you will receive a free USA TODAY beer mug. 1 mmm mm tmm mtam mtm matm w mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm Send Check or Money Order To: USA TODAY 8702 Red Oak Blvd. Charlotte, N.C. 28210 Attn: Michael Rosenthal Campus Y Name Address Phone !

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