2The Daily Tar Heel Wednesday, November 19, 1986 eadlFs From staff and wir reports The Commission on the Future of the South met in Little Rock, Ark., for two days to address the problem of the "two Souths. Some areas, such as the cities, prosper while the more rural areas remain underdevel oped, said the commission's chair man, former Mississippi Gov. Wil liam Winter. "Just as the nation couldn't survive half slave and half free (before the Civil War), the South cant prosper if you have two groups of people, one doing well and another not," Winter said. The 23-page report from the commission titled "Halfway Home, a Long Way to Go," deals with various concerns such as education, adult illiteracy and technological development. NoCo State halts sprang admissions By PAUL CORY Staff Writer Enrollment limits set by the the UNC Board of Governors have forced North Carolina State Univer sity to freeze undergraduate admis sions for the spring semester of 1987. N.C. State usually admits between 400 to 500 undergraduates for the spring semester, said Anna Keller, dean of admissions. But it will admit only 20 students previously guaran teed admission for this spring. "These are the most stringent Protest used his establishment to call for racial equality. There was also "High Noon" in Aid Ackers, task force member. ". . . But everybody gets upset if we start asking for it too early." (3D Peep's Power Ktprcvcnt Dtrtn defects :.Xf When UCCCA cs EER COT J ,Fihr .. -i vJ Mr 6i aw ' - . .. if ,' m mm ... w x m m. x am m .. t Your College Week in Bermuda is more than just sun, sand and surf. Right from the first outrageous "College Bash" at Klbow Beach, its an unrelenting test of your endurance. Spectacular seaside buffet luncheons. A calypso and limbo festival like none other. Smashing dance-til-you-drop beach parties, featuring Bermuda's top rock, steel and calypso bands, liven a "Party Cruise and Private Island Kxtravaganza:' AH compliments of the Bermuda Department of Tourism. Bermuda is all of this and much, much more. STATESVILLE TRAVEL SERVICE, INC. P.O. Box 232 232 North Center St. Statesville, N.C. 28677 . (70-0K72-3686or: (X(K)) 3H2-6SIS dlflOT sroras mra "The report's basic premise is that as far as we have come in the South, we still have a long way to go," Winter said. He called the report "one of the most comprehensible, readable and, therefore, implemen table documents" he had ever seen. The commission is established every six years to deal with the South's long-term problems and opportunities. This was the 1 4th annual meeting of the commission. Representatives from Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Ken tucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carol ina, Tennessee, Virginia and Puerto Rico make up the commission. Robert Albright of Charlotte, pres ident of Johnson C. Smith Univer sity, is a member of the commission. Gov. Jim Martin has six restrictions we have ever had to put in place," said Nash Winstead, provost and vice chancellor. The BOG implemented the freeze when approximately 400 more stu dents than expected decided to return to the university in the fall. Since yearly enrollment is calculated as an average for the fall and spring semesters, the number of students to be admitted in the spring had to be reduced, Winstead said. The university decided to cut down on the number of transfer the early 1970s, when students gathered and smoked marijuana at the Bell Tower to convince legisla- from page 1 In developing plans for the fund drive, the committee recommended requesting an endowment of $30,000,000 for undergraduate scho larships. That would be divided between need-based scholarships, receiving $1,225,000, and $575,000 for the merit scholarships. The total result would be addi tional scholarship funds totaling $2,500,000. Other sources would also be investigated, Reice said. "Athletics bring a lot of money into the University," he said. "It's not an unreasonable resource to tap into." March 1 to April 4, 1987 MUDA E WEEKS I Ti you breakaway this do it with style. It's touring the island on our breezy mopeds. . (Do remember to keep left!) It's jogging on quiet country roads including an early morning 2-k "Fun Run" from Horseshoe Bay. It's exploring the treasures in our international shops, playing golf on eight great courses, and tennis on over 100 island-wide courts. . But most of all, it's the feeling you get on a tiny, flower-bedecked island, separated from everywhere and everything by 600 miles of sea. This year, go wild . . . in style. See your Campus Travel Representative or Travel Agent for details. TRIANGLE TRAVEL AGENCY 10 IS West Main St. Durham, N.C. 27701 (919) 682-552 1 or: (919) 683-1922 (Broad St. Office) (919) 834-6671 (Raleigh Office) (919) 929-099(in Chapel Hill) appointed members on the commis sion. "He has been represented," said Tim Pittman, press secretary for Martin. "His appointments have an active role in it (the commission)." He said that Lt. Gov. Bob Jordan also had some representatives as the meeting. "It's a multi-level, multi effort task," Pittman said. In North Carolina there is an apparent scattering of growth reflected by the distribution of employment. The lowest rate of unemployment in the state is in the Triangle, said Yvonne Ennis, research analyst for the N.C. Employment Security Commission. "The mountain and coastal counties' (unemployment) tends to be higher," she said. To correct such sporadic develop ment, the commission's report, admissions rather than cut the number of adult students. "There is a huge cry from the adult population, the 30-, 40- and 50-year-olds who need additional education to retool for the job market," he said. "We did not want to cut them out." He added that the university currently offers 330 night courses for them. Nash also said that N.C. State would limit freshman admissions for the fall semester of 1987 to 3,300 students. The university admitted 3,400 students for the fall semester tors to decriminalize the drug. And in 1983, when David Garrow, an associate professor of political science, was denied tenure at UNC, students protested for more than 10 months lobbying for his tenure. Their efforts were in vain. In November 1980, about 800 students gathered for "The Rally for Justice" in front of South Building to hear the student body president and others call for an end to racism from the steps of the building. That tradition of protest con tinued last year, when students protested a decision by UNC admin istrators that upheld the unexplained firing of George Gamble, associate director of the Campus Y. A series of vigils outside Steele Building were held in November 1985, urging administrators to reinstate Gamble. When students in 1985 organized 1 jT w " year, I I CJ JJr 1 4 . JU... .1 . .11 I MERIDIAN TRAVEL SERVICE 20 14 Cameron St. Raleigh, N.C. 27605 (919)828-7431 or: Research Triangle Park Office (919) 549-S921 Somoii issued Monday, emphasized the importance of education. The report said that Southern states should try to provide their students with com petitive educati6n by 1992. It also said that states should mobilize resources to eliminate adult illiteracy. The report also advised that the role of higher education be further developed. The tasks of higher education range from remedial education to generating internation ally competitive research, Winter said. "Strengthen society as a whole by strengthening at-risk families," Win ter said, adding that this referred to ways of breaking the cycle of poverty in high-risk families before the family actually enters poverty. of 1986. He said this limit, plus the extra 200 students granted to the school by the BOG, would help alleviate this year's problems. "We hope to have the situation in hand so we do not have to take stringent actions next spring," Win stead said. Keller added that decreasing the number of freshman admissions for the fall semester of 1987 would also enable the university to keep "transfers at the firm figure we want." from page 1 to protest against ARA, the on campus food service before Marri ott, they were following the college tradition of complaining about cafeteria fare. Such concern had been voiced at UNC before, with more dramatic results. In 1969, state troopers in riot gear closed Lenoir Hall cafeteria during a month-long strike by cafeteria employees. Students overturned chairs in the cafeteria to protest poor treatment of workers. The expression of opinion is what UNC is all about, Dean of Students Frederic Schroeder said Tuesday. "It's about people thinking and coming to conclusions and taking stands," he said. Protests like the shanty built by the anti-apartheid group show that students are concerned about issues that go beyond their immediate lives, Schroeder said. "It's a clear expres sion of very strong interest in others." into Introducing th Leading Edge Model "L" Series 1200B Modem. Other options available. Call dpss at 1-800-558-8946. DP Systems P.O. Box 7287 2120 Pinecroft Road Greensboro. NC 27417-7287 (outside Tax law aims to simplify, but makes form complex From Associated Press reports WASHINGTON The Inter nal Revenue Service unveiled a new tax-withholding form on Tuesday that every worker will have to file and apologized for the form's complexity. This year's overhaul of tax law, initially billed as simplification, turned a two-page W-4 withhold ing form and worksheet into four pages that include a 22-column, 29-line table of figures. TV shows living Korean leader SEOUL, South Korea North Korea showed its "great leader," President Kim II Sung, on television Tuesday while ignoring reports in rival South Korea that Kim died or was embroiled in a serious power struggle. A Defense Ministry spokesman in Seoul acknowledged North Korean news media reports that High Point's on a roll with new movie studio By MATT BIVENS Staff Writer High Point so6n will be ushered into the film-making industry with the construction of a new movie studio near the city, Gov. Jim Martin announced this week. The new studio, to be called the Carolina Atlantic Production Com pany, will be the third motion picture studio in North Carolina. The others are Earl Owensby's complex in Shelby and Dino De Laurentiis' DEG studios in Wilmington. The studio to be launched with a groundbreaking ceremony on Nov. 21 will include a state of the art soundstage, which is crucial to the production of many films, said Tim Pittman, Martin's press secretary. Technical features of the sound stage will include 36-foot high ceilings, a lighting grid with nine interconnecting catwalks, 6,000 amps of power and a 500-ton air conditioner. Pittman said the studio will benefit North Carolinians by providing employment. The motion picture industry is healthy for the state because it is a clean industry that enhances the image of the state and brings in revenue because people associated with the industry migrate to North Carolina, he said. "North Carolina has an extensive W 11 yd! (S(f(l , in- r - ' LEADING EDGE MODEL "D" COMPLETE SYSTEMS STARTING & Services .Inc. 919852-0455 (NC) 1-800-558-8946 NC) 1.-800-334-4830 Leading Fdgc 'Model News in Brief Kim was alive and added, "We are closely watching whether these developments in the North have resulted from a serious internal powft- struggle or (the North's) high-level psychological warfare hiding a sinister plot for military provocation." Shooting blamed on terrorists PARIS Police said Tuesday they believe two women from the terrorist group Direct Action killed industrialist Georges Besse, who was gunned down on the street outside his home. The president of the state owned Renault automobile com pany was shot about 8 p.m. Monday a few steps -from his house in the city's I4th district near "the Monteparnase railway station. relationship with the motion picture industry," Pittman said. The principal owners and inves tors in the new studio are Market Square Partners of High Point and the Carolina Atlantic Production Co., he said. Martin left Sunday for Los Angeles, Ca., in a trip designed to thank the motion picture industry for its support and to try to attract interest and films to the new facility. He will return Friday. North Carolina is the third busiest center of production in the motion picture industry, ranking only behind New York and California. The project, which will cost about $750,000, has been under consider ation by Market Square Partners for more than a year. For fho Kcccrd In Friday's article, "Organization petitions for Rev. Moon," The Daily Tar Heel incorrectly reported that petition-signers would be sent infor mation from the Unification Church. Actually, they would receive the information from CAUSA, an organization with ties to the Unifi cation church. The Daily Tar Heel regrets this copyediting error. TM AT. LEADING EDGE A AUTHORIZED VALUE-ADDED DEALER, is a Registered Trademark of l eading Kdge Products. Ira'. "D" is a trademark of Leading t'dge Products. Inc. 1