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Serving the students and the University community since 1893
Volume 96, Issue 101
Thursday, January 19, 1989
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
News Sports Arts 962-0245
Business Advertising 962-1163
' y irek' along with the
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HOol Duke,
By DAVE GLENN
Shorts Edtor
Finally, it was time for a return
to some good, old-fashioned Tar Heel
basketball.
And it couldn't have come at a
worse time for the No. 1 Duke Blue
Devils.
";No more running and gunning.
Two three-point attempts instead of
twenty. Tough team defense, against
tire supposed masters of the art,
instead of individual foulathons.
Smart shots in the paint instead of
aselfish display of individual moves
OTLthe outside.
CKHow about the four corners display
Br;none other than much-maligned
sbphomore guard King Rice? Sure,
yfpu remember the four corners. The
Tar Heels used it to destroy oppo
nents with regularity way back when
wewere all in the ninth grade. Or
Cm)ttDtu(c4Din) flated
for Rosemary Square
By DANIEL CONOVER
Staff Writer
After four years of false starts,
shares of the Chapel Hill Inn at
Rosemary Square are for sale, and
developers say construction of the
Rosemary Square development may
begin by early summer.
Tom Harvey of Hotel Securities
said the 188 investment shares were
made available during the first week
of January at prices ranging from
$144,000 to $259,000. Hotel Secur
ities is handling the sale of the units.
OT approves
By AMY WAJDA
Staff Writer
. The UNC Board of Trustees (BOT)
passed a resolution Dec. 9 directing
the office of business and finance to
annually distribute the income from
the UNC trademark licensing pro
gram to the Student Aid Office and
the athletic department for student
scholarships, six years after the
money was accidentally diverted to
an endowment fund.
iodeimte
By JAMES BURROUGHS
Staff Writer
Despite the Carolina Athletic
Association's concern that students
are not receiving enough lower-level
seats for Smith Center basketball
games, UNC athletic department
officials said Wednesday that stu
dents are getting the number of seats
they were originally promised.
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was it last year?
UNC coach Dean Smith com
mented on the suprise UNC tactic,
which they employed late in the first
half and throughout the second
stanza. "We hadn't even worked on
our four corners for five minutes in
the past month," Smith said. "But it
worked pretty well for us today."
The newest version of this schi
zophrenic Tar Heel teamv now 15-3
on the season and 2-1 in conference
play, went into Duke's Cameron
Indoor Stadium and stomped the
previously undefeated Blue Devils 91
71, who fell to 13-1 and 3-1 in ACC
competition.
UNC forward Scott Williams,
hobbled by injuries for much of the
year, tallied team-highs of 22 points
and 11 rebounds in what he called
the highlight of his three years of
UNC basketball. "This is definitely
"We are very pleased with the
initial response to it," Harvey said.
"We have a number of people in the
pipeline, in the neighborhood of 100."
Developer Whit Morrow of the
Rosemary Group said if sales are as
brisk as expected, the $30 million
complex at the corner of Rosemary
and Henderson streets could be under
construction by early summer. The
construction is expected to take about
18 months.
"By the time students come back
in the fall we should be well under
The trademark licensing program,
created by the BOT in 1982, was
designed to allocate half the revenues
from products that use the UNC logo
for the athletic department and the
other half for the Student Aid Office.
But a bureaucratic oversight sent the
Student Aid Office's half to an
unrestricted endowment fund.
An investigation by the student
government committee Students for
Educational Access (SEA) brought
aire getting promised tickets, officials say
The athletic department confirmed
Wednesday that students are allo
cated about 1,600 lower-level seats.
CAA President Carol Geer said the
number is not enough, and she is
waiting to see if students are inter
ested in getting better seats.
The CAA was able to determine
the actual number of lower-level
student seats for the first time on
n.
91
the biggest win of my career,"
Williams said. "This ranks right up
there with our win at Syracuse last
year."
The 6-foot-10 junior added that the
Tar Heels were on a special mission
after their recent slump. "Teams had
been outrebounding us for the past
couple of games," Williams said. "We
just wanted to keep them off the
boards and hit the glass hard
ourselves."
Indeed, the Tar Heels controlled
the boards at both ends of the floor,
finishing the game with an astounding
43-27 rebounding advantage. Junior
forward J.R. Reid contributed to the
cause with 10 rebounds in only 18
minutes of play. Consequently, the
Blue Devils were limited to only one
shot on almost every offensive
See DUKE page 2
way," Morrow said.
The Chapel Hill Inn will be a
condominium hotel offering buyers
both an investment opportunity and
14 days of free occupancy, Morrow
said.
Condominium hotels, which ori
ginated in resort areas like Hilton
Head, S.C., are a relatively new
financing package for developers and
are especially attractive to investors
who visit an area on a regular basis,
See ROSEMARY page 2
ttraiiD1fer of cfolairhip fmimcfls
the oversight to light. In October the
board called for the funds, estimated
by student government at $321,000,
to be put in an institutional trust fund
for the Student Aid Office.
The money was transferred in
November and December in two
separate transfers, said Carolyn
Sturgess, a trust funds acountant with
the UNC business and finance office.
The money is on deposit with the state
treasurer, she said.
Saturday after ticket distribution for
the N.C. State game. Students were
given a number for their place in line,
and when lower-level seats were gone
after student number 555 picked up
tickets, CAA officials decided to look
into the situation.
The CAA has documents showing
that students were originally prom
ised about 2,000 seats during the
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King Rice drives over Duke's
Stuart Hathaway, executive assist
ant for SEA, said the proposal was
written by the business and finance
office. While the proposal allotted
half the money to the Student Aid
Office and half to the athletic depart
ment, it did not restrict the athletic
department's share to use for student
scholarships, he said.
. Athletic director John Swofford
agreed to a student government
proposal to restrict the athletic money
planning stages of the Smith Center.
Athletic department officials say the
discrepancy was caused by a
misunderstanding.
Another discrepancy in student
seating occurred in 1986, when the
athletic department moved part of the
upper-level student seats so that
students were allocated all the seats
in the three highest rows. No students
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DTH Brian Foley
Quin Snyder for two of his 14 points in Wednesday's 91-71 win
to scholarship use, Hathaway said.
Wayne Jones, vice chancellor for
business and finance, included the
proposal in the resolution.
At the Dec. 9 meeting, the BOT
approved an amendment from Stu
dent Body President Kevin Martin
that gives the athletic council, a
committee of students, faculty and
administrators that approves the
athletic department budget and
scholarship proposals, a role similar
were consulted when the switch was
made. .
When CAA officers noticed that
students were sitting in seats they
weren't supposed to have, they went
to the athletic department and com
plained. Some of the seats were
changed as a result, but the original
seating plan was never restored.
About 1,100 lower-level student
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to that of the committee on scholar
ships, awards and student aid in
reviewing the expenditure of
scholarships.
The licensing program brought in
about $300,000 from August through
November 1988, Hathaway said.
Using this figure, student government
predicts the licensing program could
brine in as much as $550,000 bv the
GJ - - - - - j
See ENDOWMENT page 4
seats were distributed on Sunday for
the State game; the remaining 500
went to student spirit groups, includ
ing the pep band and the Carolina
Fever Committee.
Paul Hoolahan, associate athletic
director, said Wednesday that the
discrepancy is a result of a misun-
See TICKETS page 5
level: May 1987
Student seats shaded. Upper level: Original, 1985-86 Upper level: 1986-87
When you win, nothing hurts.
Joe Namath