New dormitory unlikely
despite room shortage
Thursday August 25, 1977 The Daily Tar Heel A7
By AMY McRARY
Stiff Writer
With students crowding residence hall
rooms and apartment waiting lists,
alternatives are left for those seeking a place
to live in Chapel Hill.
Building a new dormitory is not the
answer to the crowding problem on campus,
according to Director of Housing James D.
Condie and Peggy Gibbs, his assistant.
"Building a new dormitory would be hard
to justify as long as we have spaces available
in the spring," Gibbs said. And to Condie,
building a dorm that would take four to five
years to complete is no answer to today's
problem.
Condie said the cost of a new dorm is one
factor, to consider. According to a state
regulation, the University would have to
build the dorm without state funds, he said.
"And if we built a dorm housing 1000
students, which is the capacity of Morrison
and H inton James, it would cost $6 million.
The only way we could pay for this would be
to raise the rent on the student's dormitory
rooms.
"If the University should build any other
housing, I personally believe that it should
be apartments. But building apartments
would cost more than building conventional
housing."
Condie said he believes off-campus
housing is a quicker way to solve the need for
a place to live in Chapel Hill.
But Sandi Sellers, off-campus housing
coordinator for the housing department,
said that for the 25 people a day who come to
her seeking a place to live off-campus.
"Housing is really tight right now and very
frustrating.
"If a person keeps looking and keeps
looking, he might find a place to live, but it
will take a while." she said.
Managers of several apartment complexes
in Chapel Hill and Carrboro also offer
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For Sale
TRIUMPH SPITFIRE "74 1500cc 39,000 miles,
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FRESH SEAFOOD: Shrimp, scallops, and fish
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Instruction
THE YOGA PLACE. New classes, led by Hannah
Baggins, begin Sept. 5. Beginning, continuing, and
advanced. Call 967-9686 for more information and
registration.
WOMANCRAFT CLASSES to begin soon. Sign
up now for knitting, spinning, weaving,
needlepoint, quilting, or crocheting. Call 929-8362
for details or go by 412 W. Franklin Street.
WELCOME YOUR FRENDS BACK TO
CAROLINA IN THE DTH CLASSIFIED ADS!
STUDENT ADS ONLY $1.00 ALL NEXT
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DAILY TAR HEEL this fall.
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Wet heads say swim test is easy
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WATERBED Consumers Guide: History,
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$2.50 FOR PARTICIPATING in an interesting40
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James Condie
students little hope ol finding an alternative
to crowded residence hall rooms. The
waiting list at King's Arms Apartments is
short at the moment. Manager Pat Patterson
said, but he added it will be October or
November before those on the list get an
apartment. Some people leased an
apartment at the beginning ol the summer so
they would have a place to live in the tall, he
said.
Although practically everyone on the
waiting list this spring at Kingswood
Apartments was offered a place to live, those
who are now applying for a place might have
to wait until December, manager J. Brent
Bobbit said.
B) STKVE HI ETTKI.
Muff W riter
"One guy looked up at me and said 1 was
trying to drown him," said
faculty lifeguard Paula Dobbins, "but
only five of the 257 so far today haven't
made it."
Dobbins was referring to the
swimming test required of all UNC
students for graduation. The test has
been an annual chore lor freshmen for
nearly lour decades,
Monday was the first day ol testing at
Bowman Gray Indoor Pool, but
Marybell Avery, director of aquatics,
said it was an uneventful one.
"In the first four hours, we've only
had to pull five out." Avery said. "As
usual, the hardest part is the floating
around lor five minutes."
Several students who passed the test
Monday found it an easy task. "It's
extremely simple." said Mike Drafton. a
freshman from Durham, "but kind of
hard to stay afloat that long."
"This is so stupid." another freshman
said. "You go around looking like a wet
dog all day."
But the experience was not so simple
for all. One coed treaded water
frantically near the pool's edge and
jumped out immediately once the time
expired. "Whooo." she gasped, "that
was a long five minutes."
Students who try to graduate without
taking the swimming test this year will
find it a little more difficult than before
because the physical education
department now files three copies of a
student's test results instead ol one as
before.
Beginning this fall each freshman's
swim test results will be recorded in his
physical education instructor's grade
book, on a master list in the
department's office and in the student's
file held by his adviser.
Previously, the result was kept only
by the student's physical education
instructor.
"Some students got through without
passing the test." said Angela Lumpkin,
director of the Physical Education
Activities Program. "It's not
earthshuking. but some of the ones who
avoided it may have been non
swimmers." Lumpkin said physical education
instructors would often forget to record
the test results and some students who
had not passed would forget about the
requirement. "I had a dozen graduating
seniors the week before exams last
spring come into my office and ask if
they had to take the test." she said.
She defended the swimming
requirement as "a survival skill that
everyone should know. With the beach
only three hours away, you're an
oddball if you can't swim."
The five-minute test requires that
each student jump or dive into the
water, swim two lengths of the pool,
using any stroke and stay in the pool for
the remaining time.
Exemptions are granted if the student
holds a senior lifesaving card or obtains
a medical exemption from the Student
Health Service. Also, transfer students
who have met their physical education
requirements may be exempted.
f-reshmen who cannot pass the test
must register for a swimming course and
take the test afterwards. "I can only
remember one student who really had
trouble after two semesters of the
course," Lumpkin said. "He had an
incredible fear of the water, so we
exempted him."
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