P se 3 ri: daily tar heel 9 Z ! Morrison Is Key, To Fall Housing By JOHN JENNRICH , DTH Feature Writer Some 1,024 students have been assigned to Morrison Residence Ha!! next fall. But, the 10 - story building may not be ready on time. This is only one of many prob lems facing James Wads worth, director of the UNC Housing Of fice. Assuming that Morrison opens on time, UNC will have 2,431 rooms , for men and 750 for women, a total of 3,181. The normal capacity of these would be 4,853 men and 1,488 women, a total of 6,341. However, Wads worth smiled, we will still have "a few" three - man rooms. In addition to Morrison, all residence halls except Craige, Ehringhaus and those in the Lower Quad are filled for next fall. In order to cope with the in creasing number of coeds, Win ston will be converted into a women's dormitory. There is also a privately - owned dor mitory for women that is being built behind' Chapel Hill Elementary-School. It is not de signed solely for students but graduate women will be able to live there. The privately - owned dormi- tory will somewhat alleviate one of the big headaches at the Housing Office: the problem finding space for the single men and women who want off-cam pus housing. uniy undergraduate women . and freshman men are required to live in University residence halls. The Housing Office main tains lists of available rooms and apartments, but Wadsworth said, "Rooms within walking distance are becoming more and more rare." Because undergraduate wom en must live in dormitories their housing problems direct ly affect the Admissions Office. Admissions director ' Charles Bernard said the number of women admitted is based on the number of dormitory spaces available. There are enough qualified women knocking on the UNC door to fill many times the space available. Bernard said, "We could fill 60 rooms or 600. All we need to know is how many there are." Wadsworth said the married student housing situation is rel atively uncomplicated and most of those students will be taken care of next fall in Odum and Victory Villages. ' From canes To Book (aoety Fo ; GMdlFo .-Fields Story and Picture By JOCK LAUTERER From riding hurricanes ' to cataloging books. Retired Cmdr. A. R. Fields made this switch when he gave up a career fly ing and scouting hurricanes for a job in the UNC Library. "I always liked books; I thought of teaching but that was Ltoo much like a hurricane and I've had enough harrassing ex periences ".Fields said with a chuckle. Fields stared wistfully across the room as he talked of the harrowing times when, he and other early hurricane meteorol ogistjr Jlew headlong 'mtc fn "swirling mass of cloud? VI joined the weather recon naissance squadron in "t Miami to scout hurn used stripped down B-24s railed i ' Privateers." Fields "" K was a iiuranao tttan aa adven- Mf d,iP aceumulat ed "Naw - fan" i. . Feature Writers Conference Adds 2 More Speakers Hey, Look IVIe Over! MUNMC i V M- TS rniuMTP i '7n n"ir r3 ? Get acquainted with the "Route of the Pace makers" the area served by Piedmont Air lines. Then, next time you're traveling along this route a trip home, to a friend's for a holiday or to an athletic event, call Piedmont Airlines or your travel agent. Discover how ' easy and economical it is to fly.. You'll find Piedmont F-27 prop-jets or 404 Pacemakers, mighty comfortable, and Piedmont's friendly hospitality mighty enjoyable. ... HffeniHi li Dion enpiuiteir tailing pregrara Who: graduating engineers and scientists in all disciplines. . VVhyi become a problem-solver and advisor to users of IBM computer systems in areas such as: real-tim& control of industrial processes communications-based informatfon systems time-shared computer systems graphic data processing computer-controlled manufacturing systems . management operating systems engineering desii automation! When: as soon as you graduate, IBM will give yoxr comprehensive training, both1 In the classroom and on the job. Wherer In ail principal cities of the U.S. Hew: see your placement director, visit the nearest IBM branch office or write to E. P. Andrews, Jr., IBM Corporation, Room- 312, II Connecticut Avenue N.W., Washington, P. C. 20036, r j r s u v ia DATA PROCESSING DIVISION Interviews on Campus April 23 IBM is an equal opportunity Employer Seth Payne, Washington cor respondent for Business Week magazine and Al Cromley, White House reporter for the Daily Oklahoman, ' are two additional speakers for the N. C. News and Feature Writers Conference to be held from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday. Julian Scheer, director of pub lic affairs for the NASA in Washington, is program chair man, and is bringing nationally- prominent press talent for the news men's meeting at the Car olina Inn and Peabody Hall. Jack Wilson of Look Magazine and other Cowles publications is a third speaker, at the dinner, at 6i20 p.m. Saturday. Bill Woestendiek, assistant ex ecutive editor of the Houston Post, is a fourth speaker. Professor Walter Spearman of the. UNC Journalism School will discuss "Modern Trends in Fea ture Writing." A panel of Raleigh corres pondents covering the 1965 Gen eral Assembly will discuss the Legislators, and legislation fac ing them, as associated with tasks of news coverage at the opening session at 10 a.m. Sat- . urday in 08 Peabody. Included on the panel are Ambrose Dud ley of the Associated Press; Jay Jenkins of the Charlotte Observ er; Arthur Johnsey, Greensboro Daily News; Dick Hatch, United Press International; Bill Shires, Association of Afternoon Dailies-; Douglas Reed, Asheville Citizen: and David Cooper, Winston-Sa lem Journal and Sentinel. Pete Ivey and Bob Quincey are in charge of arrangements. ' Q Cfjfjt O Ay) Wednesday, April 21 Memorial Hall 8:00 P.M. Tickets now on sale at GM In formation Desk UNC 50c, Date or spouse $1.00. A Graham Memorial Program and hie far away eyes give him away "Back then the only wav to tell wind speed was to look at the waves . and judge from there' . Fly Into Eye , Fields talked as if he enjoyed recalling the old rough and tumble days when' you had to fly right into the eye, seldom done now. "The eye of the hur ricane looks like the hole in the bathtub," he saicL ; "In September of 47 we ran into a unique hurricane one with two eyes. The only one ever recorded. "When you fly into a hurri cane the winds are the highest near the eye about 100 knots, about 115 m.p.h. in layman's language. Then you break into the eye, calm and clear. It's like going through a cobble stone tunnel and then breaking out on to a super highway," he recalled. Kicked Around "We really got kicked around in that two - eyed hurricane, in fact, I thought we'd gone under. When we broke through the clouds into the eye there rose another bank of ragged, grey clouds in a column which formed the second eye . . . looked just like a cyclone. We flew right into this thing and got kicked around some more . . . it was all grey outside, couldn't see a thing. I could hear the captain yelling 'Help me hold it down!' to the co pilot. That was a hairy experi ence. "That funnel shot us up 2,000 feet in less than a minute. I thought we were going to stall, but we got out of it." Was he scared the first time he flew into a hurricane? Too Worried "I was too worried about let ting the rest of the crew down to be scared. I was responsible for making sure we entered the hurricane from the soft quadrant, the southwest corner, where the winds are lowest.We might have missed the eye, I "didn't want to let the team down," Fied recalled. i , Vy - v - . 1 , , . 1 s ' x i if ; - - . ! u J 'J. ts' Space-Age Astronomer To Give McNair Lecture A young astronomer who has made significant contributions to space exploration will deliver a McNair Lecture on Science and Religion here. He is Dr. Frank D. Drake, former chlsf of the Lunar and Planetary Sciences Section of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of the California Institute of Tech nology and now a member of Cornell University's Department of Astronomy faculty. Drake will speak at 8 p.m. May 4 in Hill Hall. The McNair Lectures, open to the public, were established by - the Rev. John Calvin McNair of the UNC class of l&S . The purpose o the lecture se ries is "ta show the mutual bear ing of science and theology upon e"aCh other 2nd to prove the ex istence and attributes, as far as may be, of God from nature." The series has brought a long roll call of distinguished speak ers to the campus. Dreke, who was born in Chi cago in 1930, received the bache lor of engineering physics de gree from Cornell in 1952. His graduate work was done in as tronomy at Harvard University which a warded him a master's degree in 1956 and a doctorate in 195a - Drake originated Project Oz "ma; which was the first attemDt " to communicate with life on oth er planets. In the project, sig nals were transmitted into space on radar frequencies in the hope they would reach intelligent be ings who would reply. From 1938 to 1963, Drake was head of tho divisions of Tele scope Operations and Scientific Services at the National Iladin Astronomy Observatory ie Green Bank, W. Va.. where Oz ma was launched. He was with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at California Institute of Tech nology in 1963 and joined the Cornell faculty in 1964. 1 DR. FRANK D. DRAKE CMDR. A. R. FIELDS looks over some momentos from his f flying days. Fields, once a hurricane hunter, now works for the Wilson Library. The retired commander is the father of Miss Orange County Patti Fields. Science Fain 1 Starts Friday The 11th. annual State Science Fair will be held here Friday and Saturday Biological science exhibits will be in the Naval Armory and physical science exhibits will be on the first floor of Ven ableHall. Thirty - five high school stu dents will present exhibits- in the physical science division and 35 in the' biological science di vision. The state is divided up into seven districts, with 10 students representing each. Each district has held a fair within the past few weeks. An awards luncheon will be held at noon Saturday in South Dining Room of Lenoir Hall. UNC Chancellor Paul F. Sharp will speak and winners will be announced- - : Doctor Gets Large Grant A 34 - year - old assistant professor of medicine here has been selected to share in a $250,000 grant by Lederle Lab oratories, a division of Ameri can Cyanamid Co. Dr. Ellis L. Rolett will receive a Lederle Medical Faculty Award valued at $19,859 to pro mote his abilities as a medical investigator, teacher and schol ar. ; He is one of 11 medical school faculty members in the" U. S". and Canada to share in the 12th , annual awards. Since 1954, Lederle - has - given, more, vthan $7Tnillion -to support medical education. Rolett is a native of New York City and an honor grad uate of the Harvard University Medical School (1955). 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