TJ.!.C. Library Serials Dept. . . Box 870 TT - . w. , Chaps L HUl,fer Rule See Edits, Page Two Weather Continued Blizzards Offices in Graham Memorial TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1962 Complete UPI Wire Servica Ed McCormack Enters Senate Race In Mass. Nephew Of Speaker Opposes Ted Kennedy Outdistances f n t rill; 9 W tie-legs 'V 1 The famous herald trumpet section of the Navy Band Twice Here Today The U. S. Navy Band hailed as the "World's Finest Band," ar rives here today to give two con certs in Memorial Hall at 2:30 and 8:30 p.m. The Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia music fraternity is spon soring the concerts for the benefit of a music scholarship. Governor Terry Sanford has de clared today VNavy Band Day" in North Carolina and the concerts have also won endorsement from President Kennedy and television and screen star Andy Griffith. This will be the Band's only North Carolina stop on their current tour. The Navy Band contains within itself a complete symphony which presents the works of the masters while it retains its versatility by performing modern numbers. The soloists. within . the . band have .also gained outstanding reputations in their own-right. For these reasons, the Band has come to be called the "World's Finest." Lieut. Anthony A. Mitchell con ducts the organization. A 17 year Navy veteran, he has degrees from the U. S. Naval School of Music and the Catholic University of Ameri AfflMl.WW.,JftVIWJWwAM.V Campus Briefs Legislative Candidates At the beginning of the ' Fall Semester, each men's dormitory district will lose one legislative seat with the exception of Men's Dorm I and VI. These seats will be reapportioned to Men's Dorm I. Indication will be made on the ballot of the spring election of the seat which will revert to Dorm Men's I. A student shall be eligible for election to that seat only by such indication on his petition of nomination. If there are no candi dates for those seats within 20 days of the election, the eats will automatically revert to Dorm Men's I for the spring election. A petition signed by 25 students and the candidate or party endow ment must be received by Dave Buxton, chairman of the Elections Board by Wed. in the Student Gov. Offcest JFreshman Social Committee - There will be a compulsory meet ing of the Freshman Class Social Committee tonight in Graham Me morial at 8. ewe The Carolina Women's Council will meet tonight at 6:30 in the Grail Room at Graham Memorial. CWC Presidency Junior and senior independent women may arrange interviews for the presidency of the Carolina Wo men's Council by contacting the social chairman of their dorms be fore Mar. 9. - NAACP There will be a meeting of the Students in the Infirmary yester day included Jane Taylor, Clyda Boyette, Mary Willwerth, . Martha Wolfe, Uene Gunther, Anna Swann, Dorothy Fayed, ' Martha Acton, Stephen Mack, Scott Ward, Char les Bntt, Marshall Turner, Thorn as Francis, Michael Dore, Claude Reams, Jerome Stokes, William Stratton, Gladys Carr, and Frank Weaver. Infirmary i-I Band Plays ca. Following World War II, he was one of the original pioneers in the television broadcasting industry. Today's 2:30 matinee will be de signed more for grade and high school students, who will also be able to see special showings of the Morehead Planetarium pro duction, "Red Giants to White Dwarfs." Similar Concerts Both concert performances will still be much alike however. In eluded will be the works of such modern composers as Richard Rodgers, Leonard Bernstein, Fred erick Leowe, and Jule Styne. Al so featured will be such composers as Tschaikovsky, Meyerbeer and Strauss. Both concerts will be varied, in cluding , the music of Broadway hits like "Camelot" and "West Side Story," as well as marches. some solos, and a number of classi cal pieces. A featured part o both concerts will be the music of the "Victory at Sea Suite." Concert times are 2:30 and 8:30 p.m. Student tickets are $1.00 and general admission is $1.50. NAACP tonight at 8:30 in 203 Alumni. Elections will be held and there will be discussion of plans for a program dealing with voter registration. Alpha Epsilon Delta Alpha Epsilon Delta will hold its second rush meeting at 8:00 D.m. on Thursday. March 8. in Room 226 of the med school. Al premedical and predental students are invited to attend. Caving-Climbing The Caving-Climbing will meet Wed. at 6:30 p.m. in the front room upstairs in Lenoir Hall. Slides a new cave in Georgia will be shown. Residence Council The Women's Residence Counci will interview candidates for Chair man on March 13-15. Senior girls can obtain application forms from the Dean of Women's Office this week. After the forms have been returned to the Dean's . office, ap plicants may sign up for inter views at the Information Desk in Graham Memorial. Interviews wi be held in Roland Parker from 4- p.m. each afternoon. DTH Editor There will be a meeting of the Selections Board of the Publica tions Board Wed. at 5 p.m. in the Woodhouse Conference Room. In terviews will be held for candidates for the editorship of the Daily Tar Heel. ' BA Dean's List The School of Business Admin istration has announced , the addi tion of four students to its Dean' List for the fall semester. These are Nancy Carol Earle, Stacy Arnold Nunnery, James Barry Pit tleman, and. Kenneth Ervin Tut terow. Women's Council Candidates Interviews will be held this wee for Women's Council candidates by the Bi-partisan Selections Board in the Woodhouse Room in Graham Memorial. There will be a signup sheet on the door of Woodhouse. 'BOSTON (UPD Atty. Gen. Ed ward J. McCormack Jr. Monday announced his candidacy for the U. S. Senate, declaring he would campaign "all the way" against his opponent expected t o b e resident K e n n e d y's youngest brother, Edward M. (Ted) Ken nedy. The attorney general, 38-year-old nephew of House Speaker John W. McCormack, D-Mass., said he hop ed his campaign for the Democra- ic nomination would not tend to divide the party either locally or nationally. Kennedy, 39, was expected to make his formal announcement ater this month and enter this irst campaign for elective office. The seat at stake is the one va cated in late 1960 by then President-elect John F. Kennedy. It has been filled on an interim basis by Sen. Benjamin A. Smith, D Mass., a friend of the President, who was appointed by former De mocratic Gov. Foster Furcolo at Kennedy's behest. Smith is not a candidate in the primary. Yale Singing Group Appears Here Friday Graham Memorial will present the Yale Glee Club Friday at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. The group has been in existence for over 100 years and has appeared throughout the U. S. and Europe, and exten sively behind the Iron Curtain A special admission policy has been announced for this GM func tion. Students and faculty will be admitted free with ID cards and student wives and dates "in tow" will also be admitted free. Dr. George Blanksten To Talk On Latin America "Revolutionary Changes in La tin America" will be the topic of Dr. George I. Blanksten, professor of political science at Northwest ern University, when he addresses the Carolina Symposium on April 4. Dr. Blanksten has traveled ex- GM Schedules New European Flight Graham Memorial has announced that although an insufficient num ber of students turned out to ar range a jet charter flight to Europe this next summer, a new opportunity is now available. Ararangements Wave been made for students currently enrolled this term (and last as well) to fly by jet from New York to London and return for only $300.00. Departure will be June 11 at 9:15 p.m. ar riving London at 8:35 the next morning. The return flight will de part from London at 1:40 p.m on August 22 and arrive New York at 4:20 the same day. No variation in flight can be made one must go and return at these times. The flight will be via DC-3 jet, tourist class on- Alitalia Air Lines. The deadline for signing up for this flight is March 31. A deposit of $150.00 is required at that time and payment in full must be made by April 30. awier . jf o TO BREAK ARMS Soviets App ummit In March WASHINGTON (UPI) Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev has accepted an Anglo-American pro posal to hold a foreign ministers meeting in Geneva this month in an attempt to break the deadlock over disarmament and nuclear testing. The White House said Monday that President Kennedy has re ceived a message "on the sub ject of the disarmament confer ence." Although the White House de clined to comment, other sources said that in the message which arrived Sunday Khrushchev - reluc tantly agreed to send Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko to Ge neva for the disarmament sessions starting March 14: Although Khrushchev had wanted a summit meeting to open the Ge neva conference, he was faced with opposition from Kennedy and British-' Prime Minister. Harold Macmillan. Reports from Moscow said that the premier apparently now has discarded any plan to per sonally attend the start of the meeting. .9 I. Blanksten tensively in Latin America and taught at the University of Mexico in 1959. He acted as Coordinator of In ter-American Affairs for the U.S. Government during World War II and joined the staff of the State Department in late 1945. After receiving; his doctorate from U.C.L.A. in 1949, he publish ed books on the political situations in Ecuador and Argentina. His most recent book, concerning the role of the U.S. in' Latin America, is now in press. Manning Appointed WASHINGTON UPI) Prcsi dent Kennedy Monday named Rob ert J. Manning, a former news paper man, as assistant secretary of state for public- affairs, - Manning, 42, succeeds Roger W Tubby in the $20,000-a-year- post. Tubby recently was named. U. S representative to the United Na tions and other international or ganizations at Geneva. Manning" has 26 years news ex perience. He was born in 'Uing- hamton, N.. Y., and -has "worked for Associated Press, United Press International and as an editor for Time, Life and Fortune and Sports Illustrated. Manning formerly was Sunday editor of the New York Herald Tribune. He is: married and has three sons, Richard, Brian, and Robert. , : , --, . - i " f y - h 7 0 DEADLOCK rove Instead, he agreed to Kennedy's proposal of Feb. 24 urging that the U. S., British and Soviet foreign ministers meet in advance of the Geneva conference to help pave the way for the success of disarm ament negotiations. This, in turn, could conceivably lead to a sum mit conference before June 1. The new Soviet message said Gromyko is willing to meet be forehand with Secretary of State Dean Rusk and British Foreign Secretary Lord Home. French government sources said a short time later that France will boycott the whole 18-nation dis armament conference, and will not even send an observer. Kennedy's hope is that sufficient progress can be made on a "fool proof" nuclear test ban treaty at lower diplomatic levels so that a summit conference could be held in Geneva and the agreement rati fied. 1 If . this happened, the president has said he would agree to call off the resumption of U. S. atmos pheric nuclear tests, now set for late in April. Macmillan echoed this policy- in a statement to the house of com mons Monday. Announcing that Khrushchev had "broadly agreed" tb , the foreign minisfers meeting, he said: .... ,-- "I hope that the progress made in this aspect of disarmament will be such as to make it possible for President Kennedy and myself to meet Mr. Khrushchev in Geneva, to conclude the final stages of a treaty to ban tests." Rusk tentatively plans to leave here for Geneva on March 10. Dip lomats said he hoped to meet with Lord Home the next day. A meet ing with Gromyko could take place on March 12. Campus Seminars In Foreign Study Begin March 12 "What you take with you to Europe in a large part, determines what you will bring back." savs C C. Shotts general coordinator of the Y -sponsored Spmi nars Abroad program for Carolina stu dents. A series of on-campus seminars. planned to prepare students for what they will find in Europe, is being offered beginning March 12, and culminating in a three day seminar in Washington. There stu dents will visit and talk with mem bers of the various embassies of' the countries . to be visited, plus tne ttussian embassy. "We will go where the issues are hottest," says Shotts. The schedule for the on-campus seminars, to be held every Monday at 9 p.m. is as follows: . March 1Z England, Scotland, Ireland and France. March 19 Switzerland, Italy and Germany. March 26 Austria, Denmark and the Netherlands. April 2 Art and Architecture in Europe. April 9 EastWest Conflicts in Europe. April 16 European Interests and Attitudes. The East-West Conflict seminar, on April 9, will be centered on Berlin, emphasizing Russian and American influences and showing the opinions of individual European countries on this . conflict.,. Other seminars are designed to acquaint the students with different ideo logies, local customs and attitudes, and places of particular interest in each oi the .countries to be visited. Although . this program was de signed originally for the students participating in the Seminars Abroad trip, anyone is welcome to attend any and all of the semi nars. Those interested are asked to contact C. C . Shotts in the Y office.- . - 1 N JJP Finishes , ' - Spring ; Slate The University Party convention last night postponed - most of its important business to an open par ty meeting Thursday night. Phil Smith defeated Whitney Durand for the party chairmanship in the only close election of the meeting. The nomination of presidents of the CAA and the CWA, the endorse ment of legislative candidates, and the presentation of the party plat form for the spring election.3 were air postponed by the convention of about 150 members. The party decided not to en dorse a candidate for the editor ship pf the Daily Tar Heel as form er chairman Bill Criswel told the group that the executive commit tee felt "it would not be opportune to endorse an editor at this time. "The UP may support one per son in this campaign," Criswell said, "but the person will, not have the official backing of the party." The endorsement of legislative candidates was postponed as Cris well told the body there had been "poor response to date in that only 26 candidates had applied for par ty endorsement." There are 50 leg islative seats to be filled. The presentation of the party platform was also postponed due to several sections being incomplete. Criswell said that presidential nom inee Inman Allen ; had urged that the platform be presented in detail Thursday ! for the approval of the party. i The party completed its slate of senior clas officers by nominating Richard Staplcton for vice-presn dent. Stapleton defeated Bob Rich ardson by a wide margin. Katheririe Parrish was nominat ed for president of Women's Ath letic Association by acclamation. Bill Imes was selected as a NSA representative, also by acclama tion. Whitney Durand was selected as vice-chairman of the party as he defeated Roy Kirk. - Committee Not Appointed Yet The" five-member " committee ordered by the board of trustees of the Consolidated University to investigate ' the appeal of the sus pension of Ann Carter has not. been appointed yet to the knowledge of the Office; of Student Affairs. This committee, to be appointed soon by Governor Sanford, is to include at least, three lawyers and will be directed tb "act with dis patch" . and submit- recommenda tions at the. board's next meeting. Miss Carter was, convicted by the Woman's Honor Council of an swering questions contained in an original examination, instead of a make-up examination which the professor said he had given her. I I NEW IIOUSE Workmen ing down the old Sigma Phi 207 W. Cameron Ave. The new omiiiatioim "i Susan Crow Is Named Women's Co-ordinator Susan Crow, a Junior from Wil son, has been selected as Women's Coordinator of the 1962 Orientation Committee, Chairman Bob Madry announced yesterday. "I am very pleased and honor ed," stated the appointee, "and will do my best to see that the Women's program . is - meaningful and well-organized next fall." Miss Crow was President of the Student Body at both her high school and at Peace College, where she directed the orientation pro gram. She is a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority. Her first tack will be to help select the rest of the Orientation Committee. Interviews for positions on tCare being held "Tuesday through Thursday of this week in the second floor of Graham Me morial. In announcing Miss Crov's ap pointment, Chairman Madry said, "Those of us that . selected the Co ordinator are confident that Su san will do an excellent job and that the women's part of orienta tion next fall will be a success." Madry thanked all applicants for the position and said that "it was not an easy job, since many capable girls applied." "I hope that these people, will apply for other positions in the Orientation program; we can use them all." Interviews To Open For Orientation Interviews for positions on the Campus Orientation Committee will be held Tuesday-Thursday, March 6-8. Orientation Chairman ' Bob Madry announced Monday. Tues days' interviews will be held in Roland Parker I, Thursday and Friday's in Roland Parker II. Applications are now available at the information desk in Graham Memorial and at the desk of the Reserve Reading Room in the library. These should be turned in at the information desk in Graham Me morial. ! i' have started tear- pie ted by mid Epsilon house at Contractor - for house, to be com- Durham. Raiford And Summers Are Nominated By HARRY W. LLOYD . In a lengthly and fiercely, con tested debate for' the Student Par ty nomination for- president last night, Dwight Wheless. captured a landslide victory over two other candidates. . . ' - fWheless, a junior who has. served as presidential "assistant this year, outdistanced both Robin Britt and Mike Lawler for the SP nomina tion. Another possible candidate, Bud Broome, withdrew before the nominations. The Student Party, which - took more , time in choosing its candi dates for president than' the Uni versity Party- took last week in se lecting its entire slate,- will be at tempting to keep its hold on the top two student government seats which it captured last spring. Whe less, in winning the SP nomination, will face UP candidate Inrrian Al len in the March 27 elections. Wheless, a junior, was the third candidate to . be. voted on. Lawler had received 24 standing votes, and Britt had received 24! When Whe less appeared to have outnumber ed both of them, he was accepted by acclamation.. . The Party voted to postpone ac tion on the choice of a candidate for vice president, in order to give Britt and Lawler time , to decide whether they wanted to run. Lindsay Raiford was .a. Unani mous : choice for- secretary . w hen there were no other -nominations. She will, oppose. Judy Clark in ...the election. Scott Summers, a sophomore, was elected by acclamation to run for treasurer. He will oppose Bill Criswell. 'Wheless, who was supported by Rufiis Edminston, .who had" also been nominated but refused to run because he will.be in law school next year, promised "to fulfill the needs of the students and to! rep resent them." He proposed a num ber, of changes, notably in dormi tory and campus areas. He, as well as his ' two opponents, asked . that the ' present administrations poli cies on improvement of academic and social life of the dorm resi dent be continued. . ...... Britt,. the current chairman of the communications committee, stressed a' number of goals, in cluding one to invite all N. C. merit scholarship finalists to the campus. Britt claimed support of dorm presidents, and "guaranteed"- that he would deliver victory. r . Lawler, w h o was. supported by DTH editor Wayne King, said he wanted to make a "return to poli tics" after a year's stay on the honor council. Platform chairman Richard Akers told the convention that the final party platform would be pres ente dat tonight's meeting, which will also be held in Howell Hall. J summer, will house thirty men. the project is L. S. Hensley of Photo by Jim -Wallace

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