The Daily Tar HeelFriday, March 29, 19853
AmtScIhool mm vims to mew locattfiomi
j o 17 j 77 77
nn 77
concerning international business
By ROBERT KEEFE
Staff Writer
"They're probahly one of the best sources we have for
both finances and references," said Meredith Hutchinson,
president of the International Association of Students in
Business and Management, about the North Carolina
World Trade Association.
"They are very supportive of our organization,"
Hutchinson said. "They give us good advice, and we have
very close relations with their president and other officers."
The NCWTA began in 1963 with 20 members. Current
membership is about 800 people and is still growing.
"Our main goal is to educate people of the intricacies
of international commerce," said L.C. Bruce, spokesman
for the association, "and we try to encourage students
to learn about international commerce.
AIESEC members attend the association's monthly
meeting at the Raleigh Women's Club and recieve $500
a year from them to help in expenses and promote world
trade.
"We eventually hope to sponsor a professorship at
UNC" said Bruce, who was one of the founding fathers
of the organization 22 years ago. "Our organization is
a unique thing. When we started out, we tried to encourage
manufacturers to support international commerce and
trade with other nations. Since then, we have tried to
educate the public to international trade.
Bruce said because the dollar had been very strong
on the world market and because of high interest rates,
total U.S. exports had been on the decline. But N.C.
exports are still on the rise, he said.
"Presently, we (North Carolina) rank 1 1th in the nation
in exports to other countries and we are growing steadily,
Bruce said. "When our group began. North Carolina was
1 5th, and I think in the next decade or so we will be
1 0th or higher.
North Carolina is still a leader in tobacco exports, Bruce
said.
"People think that cigarette smoking is on the decline,
but actually there's about a 2 percent annual increase
in cigarette smokers around the world."
Government quotas and subsidies are the real problems
of today's tobacco industry, said R.Ci. Baily, hirst Vice
President of the NCWTA, in a recent newsletter.
"What we are trying to do to stop this is to educate
Congress and individuals as to the need for export of
tobacco products," Bruce said. "It's really just an
emotional issue right now with all the anti-smoking
campaigns going on today."
Bruce said if the tobacco needs of the world could not
be satisfied by the United States, then countries such as
Brazil, Zimbabwe, South Africa and China would take
over some of the U.S.'s tobacco exports.
In addition to tobacco. North Carolina is also a leading
exporter of textiles, plastics and furniture, Bruce said.
High technology equipment exports are also on the rise,
especially in the Triangle area, he said.
"Although many people don't know it, we also export
a great amount in an imbalance of payments," Bruce said.
"These big multinational companies export capital, and
with this capital other countries manufacture goods and
ship them back to the U.S. This creates a false balance
of imports and exports."
Bruce said R.J. Reynolds was. presently involved in
exporting capital to China for the construction of a
tobacco processing plant. The corporation plans to ship
whole tobacco leaves to the plant, where they will be
processed into cigarettes and shipped back to the United
States for sale.
Hutchinson said the NCWTA was very helpful in
finding job openings in multinational companies, and has
helped secure positions for AIESEC members in such
companies as The Cooper Group.
"They also help us in various training programs, and
in financing the upcoming Japan Week," she said.
The NCWTA has also worked closely in the past with
the School of Business Administration.
"We worked with them in the field," said Jack Behrman,
UNC business professor, "giving various lectures and
seminars around the state."
By MIKE GUNZENHAUSER
Staff Writer
After a two-year search for a new
facility, the ArtSchool will begin leasing
new headquarters April 6 in the former
Piggly Wiggly supermarket on East
Main Street in Carrboro.
The ArtSchool's current lease at Carr
Mill Mall expires in December 19X6,
and the organization has outgrown its
7,000-square-foot space in the mall,
Jacques Menache, director of the
school, said in a press conference
Thursday.
The limited space in Carr Mill has
made scheduling events at the Art
School difficult, Menache said. The
school needed a larger space to expand
its programs, he added.
The new facility will include a theater,
classrooms and office space. A later
project will convert the 3,000-square-
foot warehouse behind the supermarket
into a 500-seat auditorium, he said.
Menache would also like to see an
independently-run restaurant in the
building, he said.
Menache estimated initial renova
tions at $250,000. "The key is to do it
fast," he said.
A capital fund drive will be incor
porated into the organization's regular
fund-raising efforts to cover the initial
costs of renovating the building, Men
ache said.
While renovations are being done, the
ArtSchool will use the building for
rehearsals for its three resident touring
companies, the Touch Mime Trio, the
Transactors and Puppet Theater.
Menache said coordinating activities
between the new facility and Carr Mill
would be "the challenge for the next
few months."
The supermarket was in a shopping
center with a Family Dollar Store and
Datech, Inc. The ArtSchool has an
option to buy the 33,000-square-foot
former shopping center for $600,000,
Menache said, but does not plan to buy
it.
The ArtSchool would like a group
of investors to purchase the building
and join the school as managing
partners, Menache said. "We want to
make sure the ArtSchool has a perman
ent home there."
Chinaberry Crafts Gallery, Alert
Cable, Lloyd Street Studios and the
Orange County Council on Aging have
expressed interest in leasing space in the
building, Menache said.
Menache began the ArtSchool in a
Carrboro loft in 1974. He moved it to
Carr Mill in 1979.
Morrison residents sign up for alcohol tes
By WAYNE GRIMSLEY
Staff Writer
A Morrison resident assistant has set up a program with
the Chapel Hill police to test Morrison dormitory students
for alcohol consumption.
Elmarie Parker, a junior from Burlington, said she
requested this test because she thought more students needed
to be educated about alcohol.
"I see a lot of people drinking," she said. "They could
be more aware of the problems."
Lieutenant Gregg Jarvies of Chapel Hill Police said the
test was necessary because students had misconceptions about
alcohol. "They can still be steady on their feet ... and legally
intoxicated," he said. "One doesn't need to be drunk to be
arrested."
Jarvies said an officer would bring a breathalyzer to
measure the blood contents of persons with different weights
and would administer roadside dexterity tests such as
touching one's nose, walking heel-to-toe and reciting the
alphabet.
Parker said students in a North Campus dormitory were
educated by a similar program administered last spring.
Phillip Redmond, a Morrison resident assistant from
Union Grove, said they originally planned to have the
program only for 1 0th floor residents, but expanded it to
the entire dormitory.
"There's never a problem getting participants," Jarvies said.
The assistants signed up 19 volunteers, Redmond said.
"I wanted to see how alcohol affects people with different
weights and sizes," said David Jackson, a sophomore from
Fayetteville, who signed up to participate.
"I signed for free beer," said Steve Hall, a sophomore
from Roanoke Rapids. But Jarvies said the police would
not supply the beer. Parker said students might have to bring
their own alcoholic beverages.
CaciaYeF emtoezzlikig csis delayed by judge
By DORA McALPIN
Staff Writer
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Wiley F. Bowen delayed action
Monday in the case of former UNC
mortician Lester Sandlin who is accused
of embezzling cadavers from the med
ical school.
Bowen delayed action on motions
filed last month by Sandlin's attorney,
Thomas L. Loflin III, after District
Attorney Carl Fox said his staff needed
more time to review them.
Farming
Loflin has filed for dismissal of all
61 felony charges and 195 of 272
misdemeanor charges against Sandlin,
former curator of anatomical materials
at the UNC School of Medicine.
Sandlin, 42, is charged with embez
zling 36 cadavers from the medical
school and obtaining property by false
pretenses. Sandlin also faces charges of
illegally filing for Veterans Administra
tion benefits for the funerals of 18
veterans and of using his state job to
contract for his own benefit.
from page 1
"It works the other way too," he said.
"Unlike bread or meat, they can stop
buying fruit."
Rhodes said consumers may be
buying more fruit, but the apple
business was still depressed' with prices
remaining about the same as 15 years
ago. Like other - areas ' of farming;
production costs for the apple business
have continued to rise, he said.
Growers spend $12,000 to $15,000 to
spray a 40-acre orchard for six months,
and a large piece of farming equipment
can cost as much as $30,000, he said.
While the supply of farms for sale
is increasing, few people want to go into
farming. --- '--..,
"I know a lot of young people in this
area who wanted to be farmers, but it
didn't take them long to get discour
aged," Clapp said. "The money just isn't
there.
Loflin filed motions last month to
dismiss most of the charges, saying the
two-year statute of limitations has
expired on most of the misdemeanors.
When he filed the motions, Loflin
also requested that the district attorney's
office release the names of the cadavers
that were allegedly taken. The indict
ments against Sandlin identified the
cadavers by UNC catalog numbers, and
Loflin said he needed the names in order
to properly defend Sandlin.
In addition, Loflin charged in the
motions that some of the felony charges
against Sandlin are really
misdemeanors.
Fox said Bowen would probably
reach a decision on the motions on April
22, when Sandlin's arraignment is
scheduled.
Campus Calendar
The Carolina Student FundDTH
Campus Calendar will appear daily.
Announcements to be run in the
expanded version on Mondays and
Thursdays must be placed in the box
outside the Carolina Student Fund
office on the third floor of South
Building by 3 p.m. Friday and 3 p.m.
Wednesday, respectively. The dead
lines for the limited editions will be
noon one day before the announce
ment is to run. Only announcements
from University recognized and cam
pus organizations will be printed.
Friday
Noon Campus Y blackbean soup
meal in the Pit.
1:30 p.m. "Participation and Social
Change: How Can One Per
son Make a Difference?," first
lecture in the Allerd K. Lowen
stein Symposium being held
through Saturday.
Students for America rally,
Mike Waller speaking on
support for the Contras, 205
Union.
Senior Class Marshal applica
tions are due at Union Desk.
Film, Sophie's Choice, Union
Auditorium. Also shown at 10
p.m.
4 p.m.
5 p.m.
7 p.m.
Saturday
9:30 a.m. Anglican Student Fellowship
breakfast, Chapel of the
Cross.
7 p.m. Sci-Fi Night, Destination
Moon. Union Auditorium.
8:30 p.m. Sci-Fi Night, Plane t of the
Apes. Union Auditorium.
10 JO p.m.Sci-Fi Night, Deathrace Zoo.
Union Auditorium.
Sunday
7 p.m. Film, Erendira. Union Aud
itorium. Also shown at 9:30
p.m.
Items of Interest
Applications for Student Government
Chancellor's Committees are due April
12. All interested, even former commit
tee members, must pick up a revised
application and set up an interview.
J
The lavish pageantry
of Mexico's
BALLET FOLCLOEICO
comes to
Memorial Hall
Saturday, March 30
8:00 pm
Tickets 69.50 at the
Union Box Office
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Avoid the lottery blues Apply now'
All apartments on the bus line to
UNC. Fantastic Social Program Call
today for full information 967-223 1
or 967-2234 In North Carolina call
toll-free 1-800-672-1678
Nationwide, call toll-free
1-800-334-1656
The Aprirtmput People
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And they re both repre
sented by the insignia you wear
as a member of the Army Nurse
Corps. The caduceus on the left
means you're part of a health care
system in which educational and
career advancement are the rule,
j not the exceotion. The gold bar
on the right means you command respect as an Army officer. If you re
earning a DbN, write: Army Nurse upporturunes, r.. dox i uj,
Clifton, NJ 07015.
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Hie News and Observer
And
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present.
An Evening with Richard Adier
featuring the North Carolina Symphony
Wednesday, April 3, 1985 8:00 p.m.
Memorial Hall, UNC campus, Chapel Hill
Program
Mr. Richard Adler, a two-time Tony Award winner, will be making a
special appearance at the UNC Fine Arts Festival '85: ART NOW. As
a student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the
1940's, Mr. Adler originated the First Fine Arts Festival. He has long
enjoyed a reputation as one of America's top composers of
instrumental works. Wilderness Suite is his symphonic composition
inspired by the U.S National Park Service Parklands and premiered by
the Utah Symphony in 1983. On April 3, 1985 at 8:00 p.m. in Memorial
Hall, the Festival will culminate its fortnight of events with the North
Carolina premiere of Wilderness Suite and selections from the
Adler-Ross Broadway hits Damn Yankees and Pajama Game and
Adler's own Kwamina. Songs from Jean Seberq and Herman Van
Veen, whose lyrics were composed by Mr. Adler's late son, Chris, will
also be featured in this exciting musical celebration.
No Admission Charge
Limit 4 tickets per request.
To Obtain Tickets: Send in the coupon (Please enclose
stamped, self-addressed envelope for return of tickets) or pick
up tickets in person after March 22 at:
The News and Observer
Chapel Hill Office
1829 E. Franklin St.
Chapel Hill, N.C 2751 4
(919) 942-1806
Please send
tickets to:
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