u.n.c. library trials- Sept. 3 ox 870 ahapel Ellhl9siutbVt9t Gct Caught- Weather Mostly sunny, not as cold. High in mid-50s. See Edits, Page Two Offices in Graham Memorial THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1961 Complete UP1 Wire ServK "1 .New Dorms Won't Campus Briefs J "A If s;- H misiie i. 'i i l? .... r- 1 r E . Be F Soon Coeds interested in filling the two vacant positions on the women's honor council should call student government office fcr an appoint ment today. Interviews will be held in the president's office this after noon. Campus Affairs committee will meet this afternoon 4:15-5:30 in the Wcodhouse room GM. The 65 club will meet tonight at 5:30 in Lenoir Hall. Mrs. Herbert McKay will speak on the role of the woman in the 20th century. All freshman girls are urged to attend. "Circulo Hispanico" will meet Friday night at 6:30 in Roland Par kr GM. The joint Christmas meet ing with the Women's College club in Greensboro will be discussed. The program will be "Cancionis de Nanidad." A pep rally will be held Friday night at 6:15 at Emerson Field. The rally will be over in time for par ticipants to attend the Josh White cencert in Memorial Hall, accord ing to Head Cheerleader Al Roper. Applicants for Woodrow Wilson National Foundation Fellowships, who are required to take the Miller Analogies Test, may do so at the University Testing Service on any weekday between the hours of 8:30 and 4:30. The test requires a bout an hour for completion. The fee for testing is $3.00. Applicants should report to Room 022 Peabody Hall. All freshmen who are interested in enrolling in the Air Force ROTC for the second semester should con tact the AFROTC Detachment at Caldwell Annex prior to preregis tration beginning on Thursday, No vember 30th. This announcement applies to those freshmen who did not enroll at the beginning of the fall semester and transfer students who have a desire to earn a com mission in the Air Force. All students who have not picked up their Yack prools' should do "so immediately. In yesterday's Campus Briefs column, "Peoples of the Far East", an anthropology course to be offer, ed next semester, was described. The number for that course is An thropology 138. Picketing Cancelled Temporarily Theater picketing has been called eff temporarily, according to the executive committee of the Citizens Committee for "Open" Movies. The Varsity was not picketed Tuesday or Wednesday night, nor will it be picketed tonight, said committee spokesmen. .Tonight's mass meeting of the organization at 8 at the St. Jo seph's AME Church on W. Rose mary St., will decide whether picketing should resume. Last week directors of the Var sity decided to admit UNC Negrc students beginning Monday. Other Negroes are not admitted. Professor 01 Spanish Will Give Lecture Nicholson B. Adams, professor of Spanish will deliver the annual Fall Humanities lecture on December 7, at 8 p.m. in Carroll Hall. Dr. Ada ms address is entitled "Iberica," and will be a comment cn Hispanic contributions to gen eral civilization. The lecture will be an attempt to interpret the Spanish spirit to historic cultural achieve ments, according to Dr. Adams. The lecture is open to the pub lic. Kenan Professor of English C. Hugh Holman is chaiman of the Di vision of Humanities. Libary Editor Dr. Adams was recently appoint ed general editor of the Laurel Spanish Library of Dell Publishing Co. The library is a series of pa perback Spanish texts and will be accompanied by introductions and notes in English. PT 4 i 5 J 1 I Us ? Craipre Dormitory P re-Registration w ell Underway Dean Carlyle Sitterson of the College of Arts and Sciences yes terday reminded sophomores that they should sign up for adviser ap pointments beginning today, through Dec. 11. Students should bring lists of the courses they wish to take spring semester to their appointments. Registration forms will be ob tained from advisers and students should-turn these in to the regis tration office in Hanes Hall im mediately afterward. Pre-registration will take place as follows, by classes: graduating seniors, last day today; other sen iors, Dec. 1 and 2; graduate stu dents, today through Saturday; l'uniors, Dec. 4-8; sophomores, Dec. 11-15; freshmen, today through Saturday; and anyone else, Dec. 16. Hanes Hall Green forms will be accepted at the registration office, 01 Hanes Hall only on the above indicated days. The College of Arts and Sciences will preregister by class. Students who have a Major will see their Departmental Adviser, secure a Green Form, and take it to Hanes Hall for processing. Pre-Law, Pre Med, Pre-Dental, International Studies and Industrial Relations majors and Special Students see their Adviser in the Dean's office. The School of Education will preregister by class as given above. Obtain Green Form in du plicate from adviser and take it Salesmen Win 2 Scholarships Two UNC students who work Dart-time selling wares that go ;nto a girl's hope chest have been awarded Vita - Craft Company scholarships of $200 and $100. Chancellor William B. Aycock vtresented a $200 award to Bill Bates of Charlotte and a $100 award to Gene Lanier of Chapel Will. The scholarships, awarded an nually by the Vita-Craft Company, makers of cock-ware and other items designed for a young wom an's hope chest, cited Bates and Lanier as the top salesmen of the summer. UNC leads the na tion in the number of students who have wen the Vita-Craft scholarships: fifty-six students won cash prizes in the past years. Infirmary Students in the Infirmary yes terday were Rosa Booth, John Fisher, Paris Fisher, Fredrick Symmes, John Jennings, Thomas Kelly, Catherine Johnson, Samuel Barfield, Dewey Sanders, Robert McConnell. it its &-.--A n r rjhfl3 itiw: lu,:. K 4 1 fit ? ! 1 to 101 Peabody for approval Leave one copy there and take original to 01 Hanes Hall for fur ther processing. Grad School The Graduate School will pre register on days as given above. Regular students now enrolled in the Grad School should see De partmental Adviser, secure Green Form, take it to the Graduate School for approyal and then to Hanes Hall for further processing. Undergraduate students who will graduate in January and plan to enroll in the Graduate School in the Spring Semester are not eli gible to preregister and must register on February 2 or 3. The Registration Office in 01 Hanes Hall is open from 8:30 to 4:30 p.m. Students will not be considered preregistered until they have delivered their green forms to Hanes Hall. 6 ace 1 f 1 Dinsmore To Give Lecture Certainly no area of the world is more r pertinent to this campus, or any other, than ? the Soviet Union. Ray Dinsmore, foremost ? authority on Russia, bringn to life this area of the world at UNC next Tuesday night. Mr. Dinsmore will present "FACE of the " SOVIET," a new film-lecture in color, is 1 Memorial Hall on Dec. 5 at 8 p.m. X Ray Dinsmore is part of Graham Mem- ; crial's Travel Adventure Series, and the season ticket admission is $2.00 for the three lectures still remaining. Season tickets may be purchased at the information desk of GM and tickets will be on sale at the door for $1.00 for each : lecture. In 1060 Ray Dinsmore completed an am bitious plan to re-visit Russia and make a 5,000 mile sweep behind the iron curtain through the sprawling Soviet. He also included two of the world's ten sion ridden spots. He toured both Berlins and the tinder-box of the Middle East. He iot only made color movies of the things ind people he saw, but with his eyes and 3ars he captured the important details the :amera could not get. These experiences he shares with his audience through the clear cut commentary which accompanies the film. Craige and Ehringhous, the two new men's dormitories being constructed, will not be completed in time for spring occupancy, said James Wadsworth, head of the UNC Hous ing department yesterday. The construction of Craige dorm is progressing satis factorily and Wadsworth hopes that the derm will be ready in time for occupancy by students next summer. The other dorm, Ehringhous, will definitely not be completed or ready for students until next fall. Wadsworth added that even if they had been finished by this spring, it would have been impractical to occupy them at that time. There are now three people in almost all of the men's and women's dormitories and four in Battle-Vance-Petti-grew. Men May Not Serve 12 WASHINGTON (UPD President Kennedy said today that military reservists called to active duty in the Berlin crisis may not have to serve a full 12 months. The President emphasized at a news conference that such citizen soldiers were called up to prevent, not fight, a war. At his first meeting with report ers in three weeks, Kennedy strong ly defended the callup of reservists and National Guardsmen although he conceded that some of them are living under unsatisfactory condi tions and not training with the best possible equipment. - TO EXCHANGE VIEWS WASHINGTON (UPD Six Rus sian medical experts have arrived here to exchange views with U.S. scientists on polio, the Public Health Service said Wednesday. Among other things, the Ameri can and Soviet virologist will dis cuss the relative merits of the Salk vaccine and the oral vaccine developed by Dr. Albert Sabin. Of Soviet9 Tuesday y v : ( Orlbi led. He said, however, that they were serving the cause of peace just as effectively as any Strategic Air Command bomber on a 15-minute alert. The chief executive told news men that despite any published re ports to the contrary, none of the reservists would serve more than 12 months. He then went on to say that every effort was being made SP Vacancies Will Be Filled The Student Party will meet next Tuesday night at 7 in GM to elect party officers and to fill two legis lative vacancies in Town Men's III. Town Men's III includes the area north of Franklin St. to the city limits. Jimmy Weeks is party chairman and Dave Williams is vice-chair man. if X Ray Dinsmore -:iViyiiyi:iriiwfftfifr'fi Months to return them to civilian life in less time if possible. Kennedy also: Said he is considering a trip out of the country before the end of the year. He would not disclose his possible destination, saying the plans still were tentative. A quick trip to South America was the prime possibility. Said he saw no prospect of great er harmony between the North Atlantic Treaty and Warsaw Pact blocs until there have been mean ingful, fruitful negotiations with Russia over Berlin and West Ger many. " ' " PREDICTS MOON FLIGHT NEW DELHI (UPD Soviet spaceman Yuri Gagarin predicted Wednesday the first manned flight to the moon will take place soon. Russia's first astronaut ar rived here to begin a nine-day visit in India and said he would like to "fly to Venus and see what's hidden behind its cloudy atmos phere." 4- - V. Ape In WarmUp .r light In Lbayg M ijT- rsrW . V. T - . - ?-t 1 Eliringhaus Dormitory CAPE CANAVERAL (UIT) A Mercury space cap sule manned by an ape and riding atop a powerful 93-foot Atlas rocket blasted off from this test center today on a three-times-around-the-earth orbital flight. It was the final key test in a United States crash pro gram to put a man into orbit by the end of this year. The huge space machine rose I from its launching pad at 10:03 a.m in a burst of smoke and orange flame and climbed smoothly into blue skies, flecked with a few scat tered clouds. It was visible for about four minutes before it dis appeared cut over the Atlantic. The "pilot" on today's flight was a 37V2 -pound chimpanzee named Enos. If all went well his space capsule was to be returned to earth 1,000 miles southwest of the cape at about 2:40 p.m. His job while whirling around the globe was to bang on a series of levers. This was designed to test how effectively he could function during a prolonged period of weightlessness. The 93-foot rocket, after weath ering a series of delays throughout the morning, blasted smoothly from its launching pad and climbed steeply toward the east. Less than two minutes after lift- Aaron Wagman Pleads Guilty NEW YORK (UPD Aaron Wag man, the gambler whose arrest .ouched off the college basketball scandals last spring, pleaded guil y to 37 counts of bribery and one f conspiracy Wednesday in Gen :ral Sessions Court. Judge Joseph A. Sarafite, who m Monday delayed sentencing of Joseph Green, accused fixer of games who also pleaded guilty, fixed Jan. 6 as the day of sentence "or Wagman. Wagman, convicted a year ago for trying, to fix a college football game in Florida and fined $10,000 faces long imprisonment plus heavy fines. He has been in jail, where he was returned Wednesday, since last March in lieu of $65,000 bail. Wagman was accused by prose cutors in his trial Wednesday of be ing the payoff man and fixer for gambling interest in -college basket ball games. IDC Dance Set Friday At Legion Hut An Intcrdormitory Council-sponsored dance will be held Friday night 8-12 at the American Le gion Hut. Joe Hatchet and The Big Axe Combo from Danville, Va., will provide music, "with twist ing guaranteed." An IDC spokesman said that the Council has sponsored a dance be fore each home football game and that only one was a "real suc cess." He said this may have been due to the quality of the music, but that a "really rocking show" is guaranteed Friday night. A bus will leave from Y-Court at 8 p.m. Friday to take students to the dance. i off Mercury scientists said "all sys. terns were go" aboard the space machine. The rocket left a brilliant white contrail in the sky and disappear- BULLETIN CAPE CANAVERAL (UPD The National Space and Aeronautics Administra tion Wednesday named Ma rine Lt. Col. John II. Glenn Jr. as the prijne astronaut lor. the first U. S. orbital flight. Navy Cmdr. M. Scott Carpen ter was designated as backup man. ed from view after lifting, into the blue sky. A split second later, an escape tower riding atop the capsule was jettisoned. Mercury officials said the rocket was moving smoothly a long its course. Aycock Hears S. Education Report Today Chancellor William B. Aycock is meeting, today in Louisville, Ky. with representatives of 16 Southern states to hear the report of the Commission on G o a 1 s for Higher Education in the South. The meeting has been called to release the commission report by Gov. Terry Sanford, chairman of t h e Southern Regional Education Board, and Governor Buford Elling ton of Tennessee, chairman of the Southern Governors' Conference. The Goals Commission report is a comprehensive study for action to guide the South in developing a system of higher education "second to none in the nation." Seven members of the Commis sion prepared the report following nearly a year's study. Appointed by t h e Southern Regional Education Board in 1960, the commission members are: Commission Chair man Colgate W. Dardcn Jr., form er governor of Virginia; A Boyd Campbell, former president of the United Stales Chamber of Com merce; Leoy Collins, former gov ernor of Florida and president of the National Association of Broad casters; H. II. Dewar, Texas in e.stnent banker; Dr. O. C. Carmichael. former president of the University of the University of Alabama and form er chancellor of Vanderbilt Univer sity; Marion B. Folsom, former Secretary of Health, Education and WcVarc and director of the East man Kodak Company; and Ralph McGill, Pulitzer prize-winning pub lisher of The Atlanta Constitution, a n d 11M32 UNC Commencement speaker. Delegates to the meeting were named by the governors of their respective states. The meeting is attracting governors, legislators, and educators from the South. r