Faculty members promoted
to professor status at UNC
From staff reports
Three faculty members in
UNC's College of Arts and Scien
ces have been promoted to
professors.
Richard Linton, Department of
f Chemistry; Michela Gallagher,
Department of Psychology; and
Robert Peet, Department of Biol
1 ogy, will become professors in
I their departments on Jan. 1.
Linton, who is also assistant
c vice Dresident of research for UNC
ni-V1 i a j :: -: : 1
ucnerai Muniuiiiiiauuii, bpcuiai
' izes in analytical chemistry. He
1 held a National Science Founda
" tion fellowship at the University
' of Illinois before joining the UNC
faculty in 1977.
Gallagher, a member of the
v'r UNC faculty since 1980, special
4 izes in physiological psychology,
learning and memory, and neuro
science. She was the first scientist
" to discover that naloxone, a drug
' used to counter the effects of
i narcotics, improves memory in
laboratory animals.
Peet, who joined the UNC
faculty in 1975, is an authority on
the dynamics, diversity and distri
bution of vegetation. His recent
research focuses on forest succes
sion, or how forests change and
" develop after disturbances.
Gift to benefit medical group
" The estate of Dr. Corbett How
' ard, a Goldsboro radiologist and
' dermatologist, has given $225,000
jChapel Hill-Canrboro officials
:to develop town visitors ceoteir
.;dy THOM SOLOMON
Staff Writer
Over the past year, interest has
been growing on the part of the
; Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chamber of
Commerce to do a better job of
-providing visitor services, and one
way of doing this is the development
'of a visitors center, Chamber Pres
ident Roger Jennings said.
Representatives from Champaign--Urbana,
111., have visited Chapel Hill
to consult the chamber of commerce
oh the development of a visitors
icenter, Jennings said.
!- The chamber has taken three trips
.'.over. the. past five years to examine
visitors centers in various commun
ities. These communities- included
.Lexington, Ky., Princeton, N.J., and
the most recent trip to Champaign
Urbana, he said.
Champaign is of special interest to
- the chamber because it is a twin city
with a major university, Jennings
,said. Leaders from every segment of
tfre community were encouraged to
go to Champaign, he said.
X Those who went on the trip to
.Champaign-Urbana included Chan
cellor Paul Hardin, UNC Director of
Public Information Ted Bonus,
vChapel Hill Mayor Jonathon Howes
.and Carrboro Mayor Eleanor Kin
:raird, Jennings said.
During their visit, the representa
tives from Champagne-Urbana
talked with chamber members about
determining what services the visitors
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University Briefs
to the Medical Foundation of
North Carolina Inc.
The gift will be used to support
programs at the UNC School of
Medicine.
Howard graduated from UNC
in 1923 and attended UNC's
medical school for two years. A
member of the N.C. Medical
Society and the American Medical
Association, he retired in 1985 and
died the following year.
The Medical Foundation of
North Carolina Inc. was founded
in 1949 and provides funds to
support education, service and
research in medical and health
fields.
Dental seminar to be held
The dental care needs of the
elderly will be the focus of the 34th
annual Dental Seminar Day at the
UNC School of Dentistry Dec. 2.
The seminar, which is open to
dentists and dental professionals
across the state, will be held from
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the UNC
campus.
Fee for the seminar day is $40
for dentists and $20 for dental
auxiliaries and laboratory techni
cians. The luncheon is $15 per
person. For more information,
contact the Office of Continuing
Dental Education.
center will offer, Jennings said.
At many visitors centers, 24-hour
phone lines are set up that provide
information about where to eat, shop
and spend the night, he said.
There are several reasons the town
needs a visitors center, Jennings said.
"For one, we get a number of
visitors in Chapel Hill, but we do little
to make them stay longer," he said.
"We do not have industry, so financ
ing from this community is from
residential property owners."
Chapel Hill does not have the space
for industry and there would be no
interest from industry even if space
was available, Jennings said. But a
visitors center adds to the area's
economic base while it encourages
preservation of the community, he
said.
"The visitors center does not
pollute and uses little of our natural
resources," Jennings said.
The University is also planning a
visitors center, Jennings said. Tenta
tive plans include locating both
visitors centers in a shared space in
the Morehead Planetarium, Jennings
said. The two vistors centers will have
separate functions, though.
"On paper it is a nice marriage,"
Jennings said. "Everyone comes to
the table with some service they
would provide."
Bonus was not available to com
ment on the center, but Jennings said
the University's visitors center would
POL
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By MARY PARSONS
Staff Writer
In an effort to bring more world
class athletic competition to the
Triangle, N.C. Amateur Sports
(NCAS) has submitted a bid for the
1993 World University Games.
The games are an amateur sports
competition geared to college and
university students around the world.
Hill Carrow, president of NCAS,
said the World University Games are
considered the second highest ama
teur athletic competition behind the
Olympics, since it is a worldwide
competition. He said 130 countries
and 7,000 participants would be
involved in the games.
UNC, Duke University, N.C. State
University and N.C. Central Univer
sity would be considered co-hosts of
the event. The schools would play a
tremendous role in making the games
a success, Carrow said.
The games include 1 1 events: track
and field, baseball, basketball, diving,
fencing, gymnastics, swimming,
soccer, tennis, volleyball and water
polo.
Anyone associated with a college
or university can participate in the
games, ranging from those just
accepted at an institution to those
within a year of finishing undergrad
uate or graduate school.
The games have not received a lot
of attention in the United States
because they have never been held
here, Carrow said.
Restrictions by the games interna
tional committee stipulate that 50
cents of every $1 of revenue raised
be specifically geared to the needs of
those doing business with the Uni
versity, while the town's visitors
center would be for more general
visitors.
serve separate functions, but I think
it is hard to divorce the two com
pletely," Jennings said. "You say
Chapel Hill and the University of
North Carolina and they sort of go
together."
The town's visitors center will pick
up where the University leaves off,
Jennings said.
The chamber will begin specific
planning for the visitors center soon,
Jennings said. This planning, which
will include the budget, will be
presented to the visitors center task
force within 30 to 40 days.
The town will use money from the
hotel-motel tax to fund the project,
and the chamber will design and staff
the project.
Jennings also said he hopes to work
with Hillsborough, which is also
developing a visitors center.
"We hope to coordinate with them
and encourage those visiting Chapel
Hill to visit Hillsborough and vice
versa," he said.
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for the games must go to them. This
has made it difficult to sponsor the
games because the United States
would need to raise twice the neces
sary budget, and corporate sponsors
are not encouraged by this idea either.
Changes are supposed to be made
in this policy to help make the World
University Games more visible to the
public, sponsors and television so the
games can become established in the
United States, Carrow said.
Chapel Hill Mayor Jonathan
Howes said the Triangle would be an
excellent site for the games since it
is known for its fine universities and
its excellence in sports.
Carrow said the area also boasts
champion sports leaders such as
Sylvia Hatchell, Kay Yow, Sue
Walsh, Mike Krzyzewski, Al Buehler,
Lee McNeill, Harvey McSwain,
Johnny Dawkins, Leroy Walker and
Nora Lynn Finch.
The Triangle would be a prime site
because there are not many areas that
have the caliber and number of
colleges that are in this region,
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Boycott
"Everybody can participate that
is very positive," Shy said.
IN FACT ran a successful seven
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company's marketing practices for
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u oiversitty Games
Carrow said. The area's ' history is
world-renowned, and in 1993 UNC
will celebrate its anniversary as the
first state-supported university in the
country.
The facilities in this area are
superb, and major construction
would not be necessary, Carrow said.
Koka Booth, mayor of Cary, said,
"I am excited because I thought the
Olympic Festival did more for region
alism and cooperation for this area
than anything else in a long time, and
I expect that the same will occur with
the World University Games.
"It is a unique way of working
together for a common goal, and we
want to be an active part and pledge
our full support and cooperation in
the success of the event."
Carrow said the area as a whole
is greater than the sum of its parts,
and the communities of the Triangle
would give this event a full class
effort. The games would give the area
the chance to show off all of its
facilities.
Representatives of the selection
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committee have been to the Triangle
and have reviewed the facilities and
their capabilities, talked to leaders on
the various campuses, met with Gov.
Jim Martin and toured the surround
ing sites.
The Triangle must first be selected
over other U.S. cities that submit
bids, and the committee will give an
oral presentation on Dec. 2 in
Colorado Springs, Colo., as part of
this selection process.
If the Triangle is selected, its bid
will go to the international committee
to compete with the remaining
candidates.
With the growth anticipated in the
area by 1993, the Triangle should be
more than capable to handle the
event, Carrow said. The economic
impact in North Carolina from the
Olympic Festival was $125 million.
Carrow said he expects 75 percent
more participants in the World
University Games and twice as many
spectators, resulting in a predicted
$200-million economic impact.
from page 1
company's employment recruiting
efforts, Martin said.
Jamison said he would not spec
ulate on how the boycott might saf feet
the company. "There ' has' t6en no
perceivable effect at allaaf," he
said. """"
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