77 777) tD i o 7? 'Bt s" ft i fizz O STY! TfT) i t I i li S i (' I f 0 fx t f t ST ! 1 SF Vi L li t i U kJ I) ULAJ, s 2 . i II. u u U -. '770 7 fTI JUL U By KATIIKIUNK LONG and KHDIK MCKENS Staff Writers Editor's note: Tin's is the first installment of a five part series about the Triangle area in general and the Research Triangle Park in particular. Today 's story is a retrospective on the Research Triangle Park. Stories on successive days will outline the Triangle 's future, and the potential problems it faces as one of the fastest-growing areas in the country. The cities of Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill grew up under differing circumstances. They housed competing universities. Yet, somewhere among those differences the seeds for a cooperative com munity of research industries were planted. Now that seed has grown into an area that covers 5,500 acres of rolling hills and boasts 41 research facilities, 44 commercial firms and an annual pay roll exceeding $170 million. Its' name is Research Triangle Park. The three cities which form the Triangle rank 76th in population nationally but first in Ph.D.'s per capita. The reality of Research Triangle Park today began as a dream in the mid-1960s. The late Luther Hodges, governor of North Carolina when the park first began, called the complex "the marriage of North Carolina's ideals for higher education and its hopes for material progress." The success of that marriage is due in large part to the three cities which form the Triangle. Raleigh was laid out by William Christmas in April 1792 and became the state's center of gov ernment. North Carolina State University was opened in 18S9 as the North Carolina College of Balm reading Look for a high near 80 today, with the low in the mid-50s. It will be breezy, with only a slight chance of showers. ; S Volume 39, Issue 3f 1J Columbia bmsts ofj moothl The Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Space shuttle Columbia roared into space Sunday and sailed a perfect course around Earth, beginning an era of making space a work place for mankind. And everything worked. Flight One of the winged space freighter, piloted by John Young and Robert Crip pen, got off on time, soared into orbit and exercised its cargo bay doors during a criti cal early-flight test Some of Columbia's troublesome tiles shook off, but officials weren't alarmed. At the start of their third orbit, Shuttle Control told the astronauts, "You guys did so good, we're going to let you stay up there for a couple days." That meant a wheels-down landing Tuesday at Ed wards Air Force Base in California. Target time for the first runway landing of the space age is 1:30 p.m. Meanwhile, Columbia was circling 172 miles above Earth. It was the first time . since 1975 that Americans were in space. The flight began precisely at 7:00:03 a.m. "That was one faptastic ride; I highly recommend it," said Crippen, a 15-year astronaut on his first trip in space. "Oh, man, that is so pretty," he said seeing Earth from space for the first time. John Young, setting a record with his fifth trip into space, said, "It sure hasn't changed any. It's something else out there." President Ronald Reagan watched on television from the White House after his first night's sleep at home since he was shot. Shortly before launch his mes sage was read to the astronauts: "You take the hope and prayers of all Americans with you." Roads around Kennedy Space Center were jammed Sunday just before lift-off, just as they had been for hst Friday's scheduled hunch, when a computer pro blem stopped the countdown and launch 16 minutes before ignition. For two miles, Columbia rose nearly straight from its hunch pad into a morning sky. Two minutes into the flight spent rocket boosters were cast loose, falling 16 to 18 miles into the ocean, where two ships waited to recover them for re-use. And the external tank, having expended its half-million gallons of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen bring the shuttle al most to orbit, tumbled away and broke into small pieces as it fell into the Indian Ocean. The first and most important test of Columbia's mechanical systems was ac complished 105 minutes into the Plight, at the beginning of the second of a plan ned 36 orbits, when Young and Crippen opened two hrc doors on the space ship's (Moot-long car.o bay. 'I hat worked fine, but television cam eras, peering through the door showed that a few of the ship's 30,922 heat resis tant tilcv had torn away from the upper rear surface of the ship, OffiuaH&aid the missing tiles crc not in a critical area and represented m hazard to the vehkle and the crew, t With re-entry and lundm. Space 'Inuspitiuiioji Svstcm One will become the tii -t :.h.: iu j ii.il sp.ue, return and he ttvi-Jy to fly arum. Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. The name was changed to North Carolina State College of Agri culture and Engineering in 1917. Durham, which houses Duke University, began as a county crossroads and grew rich from the tobbacco industry. The town of Durham was in corporated in 1867 and the Union Institute, from which Duke University came, was founded in 1838. Chapel Hill takes its name from the New Hope Chapel that stood at the crossroads on the route from Petersburg, Va., to New Bern, N.C., in the 1 8th century. When The University of North Car olina at Chapel Hill opened its doors in 1795, Chapel Hill began to grow and is now home to one of the largest universities in the South. The three universities have helped to make Re search Triangle Park what it is today. Each of the three universities donated a building worth $2.5 million dollars, plus $75,000 a year. In addition, many researchers from the park teach at the three schools. Research Triangle Park has indus tries as large as IBM Corporation with 5,000 employees and Burroughs Well come, a large pharmaceutical research laboratory with a payroll of 1 ,035 em ployees. The North Carolina Educa tional Information Center Program has only two employees, but all indus tries in the park must obey a set of strict but well-regulated rules. Six acres is the minimum for build Tha ing sites, but only 15 percent of the land in each lot may be built on. Noise, smoke and vibration must be held to a minimum, and manu facturing industries must be directly related to re search processes. . . Serving the Sit"- 'J k n2? o Tt ' , . DIM Mrfti Cmi(hh Two residents of Craige are still asleep Sunday morning after spending Saturday night on the dorm's volleyball court. Their flat is furnished , strongly reminiscent of modern American dorm room, but it seems comfortable enough for them. The poster, framed by trees in the background, adds an artistic touch to the setting. Warm weather in recent days has allowed more students to enjoy the great outdoors. (Dard off By LYNN PEITIIMAN Starr Writer The UNC Board of Trustees approved a proposal Friday to build a $7 million, 500-bcd dormitory to meet growing student requests for on-campus housing. The proposal now goes to the N.C. General Assembly base budget comrr. Itee. If the assembly approves the plan, which it is expected to do, the plan will go back to the board in June to be reconsidered. In other business, the board approved employment policies for EPA non-faculty employees. Employment policies concerning annual leave according to how long a non-faculty employee has been employed by the UNC system are now uniform. The board also voted to take control of all campus parking lots on football Saturdays. The .vote gives the board the authority to clear lots needed for Rams Club members. os ohot at ACC regular-Geaoon title By Gr.OFt'llEY MOCK DURHAM It was sign-up day for the Duke tacros.se Clinic, but after watching North Carolina demolish the Blue Devils 22-5 Sunday st Duke, the youn esters in line could not help but wonder what the clniw couU teach them that they would not learn by simply watching the Tar Heels rhy. The decision was never in doubt as the second ranked Tar Heck won their !( th victory over the Blue Devil in 17 contests and clinched at les'.t a tie for their firii-evvf AtUmic Co.i4 Conference title, Virginia defeated Maryland Saturday to finish the conference play with a 3-1 record, Carolina is now 34) in the ACC, 5 1) oa.M. an J !... enly N.C. State Uil on i conference vehedu'e. 'I lie Blue Devth appeared to have the early mo- The Research Triangle Foundation and the Re search Triangle Institute are the governing bodies of the park. Representatives from the three uni versities are board members of these factions and ensure that the .entire Triangle'area benefits from the park. , Research Triangle Park is now seen as one of the foremost centers for research and technology of the dozens of other research parks located in the United States and around the world. However, experts agree that Research Triangle Park is unique. "There's nothing like it at all," said C.X. Lar rabee, director of. Information Services for the Research Triangle Institute. "There are always dozens of them all over the world," he said, but there is no research park with three universities working together. Mark Money, who wrote a doctoral thesis on research parks and helped start a park at the Uni- Research Triangle into tha future versity of Utah, said Research Triangle Park was unique because it had the most land and there fore, was more flexible than any other research park. "It's a rare situation," he said. "They (the students and the University community Monday, April 13, 1981 Chape! Hill, North Carolina ' '' y s- . :'.v - " s f i if k : s X Traii;ee' airoircDves li 11 The board also decided to reduce fines for cars park ed on campus without stickers. The fine had been in creased from $10 to $20 in an effort to cut the number of violations. The board decided to reverse the policy after it was determined that the only effect of the $20 fine was the collection of more money. If approved by the General Assembly and the board, the new dormitory would be completed in 1984. Several sites are being considered. Two of the more preferable ones. Student Body President Scott Norberg said, were behind Kcssing Pool and behind Parker dormitory. All sites must be researched by the Chancellor's Building and Grounds Committee. "I'm strongly in favor of the on-campus housing proposal," Norberg said. "I Chink it is very important that low cost housing be available." He said that 142 people were on the waiting list for on campus housing in March 1976. In March of 19S0, 1,236 people were on the waiting list. These figures fP 'TTt f J Tf ft V ft. mentum, slowing down the tempo and drawing first blood on a score by Hunt Brawley after 1:52 of the game, but Carolina responded with five goals in two-and-a-half minutes and took Duke out of its offensive strategy. "Our style is a faster tempo," UNC coach Willie Scrc-ssaid. "Wchketorun. Duke Lie to play a mere ha!f-field f:r--." The I leels ran cut to a 7-2 lead sHcr the f4 period snJ extended it to 14-3 at halftone. Sztezz cleared the bench in the second half, but the reserves kept the pressure up by scoring e:;ht unanswered second taifeccJs before the Mat Dev us completed the vorirs with two tast-rrume goals. Carolina placed 12 pljyers in the $ecri2 column with Mcr.ty 1 1.11 Iraiir- the way w ith fuur rr.li sr. J an&i-A-A. KevinCrhwctJ. IVe VocIUl, John Cavil. ArJy hr:ih, l;b W.lzi and Pan Abum eh scored original planners) showed a lot of foresight, set ting apart the amount of land they did." Officials at National Humanities Center looked at 26 sites all over the country before deciding to locate at Research Triangle Park, said the center's director, William Bennett. Bennett said the proximity of several universi ties, the park site and the enthusiasm of the peo ple combined to make Research Triangle the cen ter's choice. "It was so many things coming to gether," he said. "There was a very positive air." Money said the first research park, and the one which Research Triangle Park was somewhat modeled after, was Stanford Industrial Park near Stanford University in Palo Alto, Ca. That park began in 1951. Stanford, which is only 700 acres, leases its land because acreage is so limited. Research Triangle has enough land to sell to interested companies. To be successful, Money said, a research park needed organizers who could get along with both a university and a business, a clearly defined policy of what the park is and "somebody in charge, not an anonymous committee." Money's research park at the Uni versity of Utah is patterned after Stan ford Industrial Park, as are most other parks, because of land limitations. But a park now in the planning stages in central Florida is similar to Research Triangle, its planners say. Dr. Ralph Gunter, executive director of the Central Florida Research Park, said the park could one day be the size of Research Triangle Park be cause of the amount of available land in Florida. since 1893 -A emU Icdv c n ! 1 i IS By JONATHAN SMYLIE Starf Writer At the end of the first week of hearings the Finance Committee of the Campus Governing Council has recommended cutting the budgets of 18 of the 34 organ-. izations requesting funding. After another week and a half of hear ings, the Finance Committee will present a tentative breakdown of the $207,390 budget to the entire CGC for approval. The committee has recommended allo cations of approximately 75 percent of what each organization had requested this week. To balance the budget, the com mittee must grant an average of 67 per cent, Finance Committee Chairperson Mike Vandenbergh said Sunday. The request that drew the most dis cussion was that of the new weekly news paper, The Phoenix. The publication's request of $20,334.50 was cut by the Fi nance Committee to a recommended $13,474. The original request was more than 9 percent of the total amount avail able for allocation. For the first time in the history of the budgeting process, this request was con- - s J V ; i ; building dorm show a "strong trend towards students wanting to live on campus," he said. A survey conducted by the Office of Student Affairs showed that students wanted housing that was conveni ent to campus, well-managed and was low-cost, he said. There is not much difference between the costs of the off-campus apartments and the on-campus dorm, but the dorm is more desirable because 4t meets the neces sary criteria. The approximate costs for dormitories in 1934 would be $828 per year, compared to the present rate of $662 per year. The new dormitory rate would be from $2,203 to $2,279. The price of the new dorm, if costs are spread over the other dorms by $100, would be $883 to 1959. Norberg said he did not object to the cost of the new dormitory being distributed over current housing rents, because it would be cheaper than apartments. "It is the only way housing will be affordable." V ' Of 3 If (l v Li (If. J QS e r h V twice and Michael Burnett, Jeff Homire, Dave Wingate, Terry MartmeMo and Chris Mueller each scored once. Burnett, the team's leader In au.hu, had four assists; Tim Voc'kcl had three. The only statistic the Tar Heeh didn't dorrinae was in face-offs, where Blae Devil Chm Sur.t;haen gave Duke a 23-12 advance In that categoty. How ever, poor Clue Devil execution and a hawking Carolina defense stopped Duke from laUr? advan- of this and cutunt into Carc.na' lead. ft... Tar Heel toalie Car Wafers itorreJ II koti in his $eccnd start ilr.ee Tom Sean luffereJ an ar.iJe injury. Scree iJ thai despite having DruteJ ex perience at the pcniiion, Wjfcn had proven himself worthy. "Gary ii a fine your- roali rcrct." "crc? oU, "Sar could have pUyvd if we rwd.-d U'n. lut h'n ankle h vt.ll wre a rut iiutv ? rvvJ Ms- strt.. "1 don't know how big this park will get, but it has a lot of potential," Gunter said. The park is being developed near the University of Central Florida in Orlando. Gunter is very optimistic about the success of his park and other research parks. "I really believe the future for research and development companies will be to locate near a university," he said. Gunter said companies which located near uni versities attracted researchers, who want to keep one foot in the university door. Research compa nies in turn find it easier to recruit the quality of. people they're looking for near a university, he said. Bob Anderson, managing partner of Chapel Hill City Planning and Architectural Associates, is helping to plan the new Florida park. More than 20 years ago he helped plan Research Triangle. "It's a good concept," Anderson said. "You take advantage of available brains at universities," and universities take advantage of research facil ities. "It's a complimentary thing," he said. Officials at Stanford University and Research Triangle Park both said that many people toured the parks every week, thinking about starting sim ilar projects. In the Research Triangle area, the park has made the surrounding communities grow tremendously, and with that growth has come related growing pains for the area. The park has put pressure on municipal facili ties to expand rapidly, Raleigh Public Planner Butch Breazeala said. In the future, Breazeala said, there is a potential problem in sudden demand on facilities. See TRIANGLE on page 4 Bus Survey Student Government repre sentatives are scheduled to conduct a survey on Chapel Hill and Carrboro buses today and Tuesday. See page 3 for story. NwSportArt 933-0245 ButnsiAdvrtiirK 833-11 63 sits ii ' 11 Fin tested publicly. A 12-page report ques tioning the Finance Committee's assess ment of The Phoenix as a "very high cal iber publication dedicated to in-depth investigative reporting on issues not cov ered in existing campus publications (in particular, the pn)," was submitted to the committee by senior Frasier Ives. Ives is the former campaign manager of The Daily Tar Heel editor Jim Hummel. "Committee members are lobbied everyday," Vandenbergh said. "The re port seemed to fall under this category. 1 think the report was important only in stating in written form many of the ques tions that 'needed to be asked. "I am disappointed The Phoenix staff was not given a report the same time the committee was," he said. Ives said he wrote the report because he thought the campus did not need another publication and that a new addition would hurt the already existing publications. "In my opinion The Pliocnix duplicates many of the functions already funded by the CGC," he said. "Because of their (The Phoenix's) large request all other organizations would get even less than they did last year." One of Tfie Phoenix's editors, Thomas Jessiman, called the report a vicious attack on their publication. "The whole tone of the thing was aimed at discrediting our paper in the hope of defeating our budget request," he said. "The damage is irrevocable because the CGC and the money decides the future of our paper. It is still unbelievable to me that we were never shown a copy until the meeting itself." Jim Hummel, Daily Tar Heel editor, approved having the report presented to the committee after conferring with other DTH editors. "We have never questioned The Phoe nix's right to exist as some people sec thii action as being," he said. "We simply wanted to give the CGC an alternate point of view, which we feci they had not got, and express our belief that The Phoenix funding request was excessive." Vandenbergh summed up the commit tee's view of the new newspaper: "The Phoenix was funded because the corn mi: tee took an overall view of the campus See CGC on page 2 Waferv played midfkld for Carolina Iat year, but he aid two victories in the goal had given him con fidence in hh new penhion. "It's the flaying Inns that doc it," Wjter aU. "Practice if altcethef different from garnet. I'm tul learning at a goalie, Yau never ttcp tearrsir. Dc-pae Carolina's iiominanve in the series wiih Duke, the Clue l:nU have fl.j;J the Tar HeeU itn-'vh in retxr.l yean and after U-4 week's einotiofial win over MryU-nd, ccic sali was wtwricd about a letdown. CaM.!.n4 fuv two r-on-ctmfcrence opponents cn itfulrdule before the howda-nvUh State, but the ACC title w'S then tx forenio4 in the team nurJ. "We're p,tis ruHeJ." H'im plain Jmn I rdciL'iMaiJ. MWe'il bep,a.cJ yp. date's Uakn u in ua ycjrj jtnvt wil be cch for the ganie." 99 K