^HJNCW toda Vol. IX, No. 4 news from UNC by the sea MARCH, 1985 Smallpox fighter receives Schweitzer Prize for l\/ledicine Dr. Donald A. Henderson Dr. Donald Ainslie Henderson, the man who led the global campaign that successful ly eradicated smallpox, will receive the 1985 Albert Schweitzer International Prize for Medicine. Henderson is dean of The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health and former director of the World Health Organization’s smallpox eradication program. This prize and those awarded in music and humanities will be presented in ceremonies on March 21 at UNCW. The Schweitzer Prize for Medicine is fund ed by the Burroughs Wellcome Fund, a pri vate non-profit foundation supported by the Schweitzer Prizes Weel recognizes excellence, offers musical entertainment UNCW will be celebrating the presentation of the third round of Albert Schweitzer Inter national Prizes with a week highlighted by musical events performed in honor of Bach’s 300 birthday. Bach was Schweitzer’s favorite composer. The Schweitzer Prizes recognize achieve ment in medicine, music and the humanities, the three areas in which Schweitzer excell ed. The prizes will be presented in a ceremony on Thursday, March 21, at 8 p.m. in UNCW’s Kenan Auditorium. Admission is free and the public is invited to attend. The Wilmington Symphony and Wilming ton Choral Society, joined by the UNCW Con cert Choir, will present Bach’s St. Matthew Passion on Sunday, March 17, at 3 p.m. in Kenan Auditorium. General admission tick ets are $5 for adults, $3 for students and senior citizens, and free for UNCW students with a valid I.D. A free Bach memorial concert will be held at St. James Episcopal Church on Tuesday, March 19, at 7 p.m. The North Carolina Symphony will perform Bach Concerto in E major and Beethoven Symphony No. 5 in C minor on Friday, March 22, at 8 p.m. in Kenan Auditorium. General admission tickets are $8 for adults, $6 for students and senior citizens, and free for UNCW students with a valid I.D. Tickets to performances at Kenan Auditor ium will be available at the door. Prize recipients are invited to attend all of these events. They will also meet informal ly with students and the general public on March 20 and 21. One of the major reasons for having the prizes at UNCW is to offer students the opportunity for one-on-one con tact with such distinguished individuals. The Schweitzer Prizes are presented every four years by the North Carolina Educa tional, Historical and Scientific Foundation, Inc., a non-profit foundation in Wilmington, N.C. Previous recipients include well known individuals such as Mother Teresa, one of the worlds most admired humanitarians, and music giants Andres Segovia and Gian Carlo Menotti. Equally impressive but less recog nized recipients are distinguished physicians Larimer Mellon of Haiti, Theodor Binder of Peru, and humanitarian Sadhu Ittyavira of India. Prize winners receive a medal, design ed this year by a UNCW student, and a $5,000 cash award. The Schweitzer International Prizes have been associated with UNCW since the pro gram’s inception in 1975 and are the only in ternational prizes of their kind in the world, and the first and only international prizes given in North Carolina. Burroughs Wellcome Company. Burroughs Wellcome discovers, researches, and manu factures pharmaceuticals for humans and animals. Henderson joined Johns Hopkins in 1977 following 10 years as chief of the global small pox eradication campaign. During Hender son’s first year as director of the WHO pro gram, an estimated 10 to 15 million smallpox cases occurred, causing two million deaths in 43 countries in Latin America, Africa and Asia. Under Henderson’s leadership, more than 700 advisors from 69 countries and 200,000 national health staff and volunteers worked to wipe out the disease. In 1975 a Bangladesh girl experienced the last case of the most severe form of smallpox and in 1977 an African man’s illness proved to be the last natural occurrence of the dis ease. In 1980 the World Health Assembly of ficially declared that smallpox had been eradicated. Henderson received his A.B. degree from Oberlin College in 1950 and his M.D. from the University of Rochester School of Medicine in 1954. In 1960 he earned his Master of Public Health ^degree from The Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health, which he now directs. Henderson lives in Baltimore, Maryland. Ambassadors serve as campus diplomats The United Nations, foreign countries and UNCW all have something in common. All have ambassadors as special envoys to the public. The UNCW Ambassadors serve as campus diplomats, acting as hosts and hostesses at various campus events, conducting tours of the UNCW campus, and participating in re cruitment programs for the university’s ad missions and minority affairs office. Clad in I T green blazers, the Ambassadors are easily identifiable at a formal university function. Established in 1982 by the alumni associa tion, the UNCW Ambassadors have 15 stu dent volunteers. All are undergraduates and are selected on leadership capabilities, knowl edge of the campus, and school spirit. The Ambassadors program provides on-the- job training in public relations skills, and in things learned in the classroom. "They get to polish their skills in dealing with a variety of people, while learning a lit tle bit about business, communications, mar keting, and so forth,” said Frank Bowen, alumni affairs officer and advisor to the group. The Ambassadors attend workshops at the beginning of each school year and hold meet ings throughout the year. The program offers See Ambassadors, pg. 2 (Top to bottom) UNCW Ambassadors Ann Kindt, Laura Allen and Meg Robison. ALUMNI CALENDAR March 17-23: Albert Schweitzer Prizes Week at UNCW March 26-28: Alumni Phonathon Apr. 2-4: Alumni Phonathon Apr. 11-14: North Carolina Azalea Festival, Wil mington, N.C. May 17: Alumni association’s welcome recep tion for new graduates following com mencement practice May 18: Commencement Presentation of Alumni Achievement Award(s) For more information, contact Frank Bowen, UNCW Alumni Affairs Office, 601 S. College Rd., Wilming ton, N.C. 28403. Phone (919) 395-3616.