U.TT.C . Library
Serials Dept.
Box 870
Cha21 WkeVoCrps
. See Edits, Page Two
mmK
Weather
Fair and cool
jl SUNDAY, MARCH 18, 1962 -
Offices in Graham Memorial
Complete UPI Wire Service
-A- .
Elections Board Announces
Official List Of Candidates
The following is the official list
of candidates for office in spring
elections as announced by Dave
Buxton, Chairman of the Elections
Board.
Any persons running for office
whose names are not on the list
should contact Dave Buxton at
the Elections Board Office in
Graham Memorial.
President of the Student Body:
Inman Allen (UP); Larry Phelps
(IND); Dwignt Wheless (SP).
Vice-President of Student Body:
Mike Lawler (SP); Larry McDe
vitt (UP); John F. Salter (IND).
Secretary of Student Body:
Judy Clark (UP); Lindsay Rai
ford (SP). Treasurer of Student
Body: Bill Criswell (UP); Jimmy
Weeks (SP).
National Student Association
Congress (Vote for four): Dick
Akers (SP); Mac Armstrong
(UP); Bill Harriss (SP); Charles
Campus
Newman Club
The Newman club will meet for
supper Sunday in the basement of
St. Thomas More Church at 5:30
p.m. Father J. Paul Byron of
Charlotte will speak on Pre-Marital
Chastity.
Cosmopolitan Club
The Cosmopolitan Club will hold
a contest entitled T'he Cosmo
Club clashes with The Grad Club"
at 4 p.m. Sunday in Roland Park
er Lounge in GM. Refreshments
will be served and everyone is
invited.
Tickets are now on sale to the
club's March International Dinner
at Danziger's, Y Court, the In
timate and from members of the
Cosmo Cabinet. The $1.25 price
includes food from all over the
world and entertainment.
New Left
There will be a meeting of the
New Left Club in the Roland
Parker Lounge of Graham Mem
orial at 8:30 tonight. James
McBride Dabbs will lead a dis
cussion on the Southern Character.
AU liberals, socialists, "pinkoes"
and "comsymps" are invited.
Presbyterian Fellowship
Presbvterian Westminster Fel
lowship will meet today at 5 p.m.
for the showing of a movie on the
Far East. A worship program
will begin at 5:30. Supper will
be served at 6, followed by a talk
on Taejon College by Chei Seun
gku. Absentee and In firmary Ballots
A written request for an absen
tee ballot must be made to the
Chairman of the Elections Board
prior to 5 p.m.- Wed. Each re
quest shall be made , individually
and shall include the reason for
absence, the mailing address of
the student during - his absence,
his campus address, and his class.
Absentee ballots must be return
ed in a sighed, sealed envelop to
the Elections , Board .by .5 p.m.
Tuesday, Mar. 27.
; -
r ;" 1
Heatherly (UP); Bill Imes (UP);
Joe Masi (UP); Hank Patterson
(SP); Bill Straughn (SP).
Editor of Daily Tar Heel: Jim
Clotfelter and Chuck Wrye (co
editors) (SP); Ernie Steppe.
President of Carolina Athletic
Association: Charlie Shaffer (SP
UP). Senior Class President: Roger
Smith (UP); Richard Vinroot
SP)(
Senior Class t Vice-President:
Larry Brown (SP); Bruce B.
Greene (IND); Richard Stapleton
(UP).
Senior Class Secretary: Anne
Lobdell (UP); Beth Walker (SP).
Senior Class Treasurer: Jeff
GuUer (SP); Jimmy Miller (UP).
Senior Class Social Chairman:
Cecil Collins (UP); Gail Wood
ward (SP).
Women's Honor Council: Judi
cial District I. (Vote for two) Di
ana Dial; Helen Holmes (BI-
Briefs
Address letters to Allen Simp
son, Elections Board, Graham
Memorial.
Phi Eta Sigma
Any freshmen or sophomores
who think they are eligible for
Phi Eta Sigma honorary frater
nity have been asked to contact
Dr. Ernest Mackie at 376 Phillips
as soon as possible.
Elections Board
There will be an elections Board
meeting Tuesday at 2 p.m. in
Woodhouse Room. If you are un
able to come on time, please
come as soon as possible.
Play Tryouts
Tryouts for The Carolina Play
makers next bill of original one
act plays will be held this after
noon at 4:00 p.m. in the Playmak
ers Theatre. There, are roles for
eight men and four women in the
three plays, to be presented
March 30 and 31. All interested
students are encouraged . to try
out.
Campus Chest
All Campus Chest solicitors
have been asked to bring their
collections to the second floor of
the YMCA.
Junior Class
There will be a Junior Class
Cabinet meeting Sunday at 3 p.m.
in the Grail Room of Graham Me
morial. Strayed Shades
LOST A pair of gray sun
glasses, frames and lens. Contact
Sue Williams at 108 Spencer, 969
9087. . SP
. The Student Party will meet
Monday night in Gerrard Hall at
7:30. A new party chairman will
be elected. Presidential candidate
Dwight Wheless will address the
party and a program will be pres
ented by the IDC.
000 Make
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Part).
II. (Vote for two: Beverly
Griffin (Bi-Part); Emily Squires
(Bi-Part).
III. (Vote for one): Judy Deal
(Bi-Part); Carol Martin (Bi-Part).
IV. (Vote for three): Carol
Clayton (Bi-Part); Darst Murphy
(Bi-Part); Carolyn Pinion (Bi
Part); Kay Taylor (Bi:Part).
Men's Council District I (Vote
for one): Perry McCarty (Bi
Part); Fletcher Somers (Bi-Part);
Bill Whisnant (Bi-Part).
District II. (Vote for one): Wal
ter Dellinger (Bi-Part); John
Mitchener (Bi-Part); Rex Savery
(Bi-Part).
III. (Vote for one): Steve Read
(Ind.)
IV. (Vote for one): John Cur
rie (Bi-Part); Whitney Durand
(Bi-Part); Peter Jason (Bi-Part);
Grant Wheeler (Bi-Part); Kent
Peterson (Bi-Part).
V. John Commander (Bi-Part).
Student Legislature Dorm Men
I (Vote for three); James Riley
(UP); George Rosental (SP);
Ford Rowan (SP); Bob Smith
(SP).
DM II (Vote for three): Phil
Baddour (SP): Kip Carter (SP);
Jimmy Harris (SP); "Pud" Has-
sell (UP); Park McGinty (UP);
Warner Wells (UP).
Special Seat (Vote for one):
Franklin Adkinson (SP); David
Sentelle (IND).
DM III (Vote for four): Gordon
Appell (SP); Clint Eudy (UP);
John Garriss (SP); Richard Jo
nas (UP); Jim Larrick (UP);
Dan Moore (UP); Scott Summers
(SP): Bruce Welch (SP).
Special Seat (Vote for one):
Dick Ellis (SP); Spencer Barnes
(UP).
DM IV (Vote for two): Arthur
Hays (SP); Gary Stuart (SP).
Special Seat (Vote for one):
Preston Aldridge (UP); Lin Dear
ing (SP).
DM V. (Vote for two): Mike Cha
nin (UP); Daily Durr (SP); Ben
Potter (IND); Bill Phillips (SP);
Gerald Thornton (UP).
DM VI. (Vote for three): Mac
Armstrong (UP); Byron Bowman
(UP); Rufus " Edminster (SP);
Norman Graham (SP); Eddie I
card (SP); Larry McDevitt (UP).
Special Seat (Vote for one):
ick Powell (UP); Bill Straughn
(SP); Ralph Whisnant (IND).
Town Men I (Vote for two):
John Angell (UP); Robin Britt
(SP); Bob Spearman (UP-SP).
TM II (Vote for four): Roy
Kirk (UP); Chuck Oberdorfer
(SP); Hank Patterson (SP); John
Ulfelder (UP): Pat Wilson (UP).
TM III (Vote for four): Lanny
Bridgers (UP); Sam Jones (SP);
John McMillan (UP); Bill Mitten
dorf (SP); Steve Nauheim (UP);
Bert Tulluch (SP); Dave Williams
(SP).
TM IV (Vote for six): Bill Bau
erman (SP); Ronnie Clark (SP);
James Coker (UP); Charlie Coop
er (SP); Bob Dean (SP); "Bo"
Edwards '(UP): Sutton Farnhem
(SP); Jack Hill (UP); Bill Imes
(UP); Lowell Pearlman (UP); R
(Continued on Page Three)
-a
Merry
OF
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VI it Lf II II II II II
By WAYNE KING
Using a delivery more remin
iscent of a night-club than a par
ishhouse, Freedom-rider, parapate
tic . Peace-Corps super-salesman
and Yale Chaplain William, Sloan
Coffin told a crowd of Peace Corps
enthusiasts yesterday that the
Corps will help give direction to
the U. S., both internally and in
foreign relations. - . . "
. Coffin spoke to about 140 per
sons at a luncheon held at the Car
olina Inn as part of the two-day
Peace Corps conference held here
Friday and Yesterday. About 60
of the persons attending were del
gates from a score of N. C. col
leges. The dramatic young chaplain,
whose religious zeal is translated
more often into action than plati
tude, punctuated his talk with
quips, quotations and a repetoire
of experiences drawn trom per
sonal experiences at home on the
civil rights scene, and abroad with
the Peace Corps and Crossroads
Africa.
Coffin told his audience that
while depressed countries parti
cipating in the Peace Corps pro
game need the U. S. economically,
the U. S. needs them spiritually.
American Concern
Citing American concern with
materialism, lack of acceptance
of the Negro, and . a decline of
morality in the face of a numerical
religious boom, . the tall, husky
Chaplain voiced . his feeling that
the Peace Corps will provide "the
experience that Americans lack
an experience that will be heart
warming, soul-shaking and revita
lizing." "Returning Peace Corps parti
cipants,". he; said,' ."wilLgive con
viction to the American temper.
Living, working, moving in coun
tries which are striving not for
luxuries, but for necessities, will
provide a new attitude which this
country badly needs:"
He indicated that American "sa
maritanism and . idealism," needs
more expansive goals. "Opinion,"
R
ide Attractions
By WAYNE KING
And JOE MASI
Campus Chest Carnival patrons
and sponsors got taken for a ride
Friday but not exactly in the
way they planned.
Ross Manning Shows, with
whom Chest Carnival officials
had contracted to supply rides,
canceled at the last minute, leav
ing' Chest Co-Chairmen Charlie
Shelton and Jeannie MacDoug
all high and dry with too little
time left to contact other agents,
according to Shelton.
Trucks Said Loaded
Shelton said he contacted Ross
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Pi o
WILLIAM COFFIN
he said, "is no substitute for con
viction." Around the World
Coffin's own conviction has led
him around the world, into de
pressed countries, through the
heartland of segregation and into
almost every area where he feels
Christian conscience can be blended
with action to produce results.
He has served as director of
Operation Crossroads Africa, an
organization which has been send
ing American students into Africa
for several years. He is currently
a member of the National Paece
Corps Advisory Board, and led
a Corps training program in Puer
to Rico.
He helped in organizing and
leading Freedom Rides through the
Southern segregation belt a pro
ject which netted him nation-wide
attention and some time residing
in .Southern jails.
Roads Making People
He characterized the Peace Corps
program not as "people making
a road, but roads making people."
"Returning Peace Corpsmen",
he said, "will have a redemptive
force. They wilL have been given
Manning officials Thursday night
in Loris, and again Friday morn
ing. The trucks were loaded and
ready to roll at 7 a.m. Friday,
he said, but apparently were un
able to travel because the trucks
still bore 1961 license plates.
Shelton said he was told the new
1962 plates were in the posses
sion of owner Ross Manning, who
could not be reached.. .
Shelton said he was not aware
of the cancellation until Friday
morning, and estimated that it
would cost the Chest about $200
in Carnival profit.
Administration
The administration was notified
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PAUL GEREN
humanity which, in turn, they
will give to the rest of the coun
try." He said he felt that American
emphasis on materialism for its
own sake had deprived this coun
try of part of its essential spirit.
"There was a time," he said
"when an auto mechanic crawled
under an automobile with the
same feeling that Michelangelo
had when he lay flat on his back
under the dome of the Sistine
Chapel." Today's mechanic, how
ever, crawls under a car with a
feeling of immorality. Planned
obsolescencee has . made his job
a degrading one."
Feeling
This feeling of immorality,
Coffin said was indicative of a
broader general feeling which he
said hfelfc -was beginning to per
meate the American temper. The
Peace Corps, he said, would help
to offset that feeling by returning
spirit.
Chaplain Coffin was introduced
by Asst. Professor Herbert L.
Bodman, of the History Depart
( Continued on Page 3)
Fail To Show For Carniva
of the cancellation when Shelton
arrived back here Friday. No
legal action has been taken as
yet, according t0 Shelton.
It was estimated that even
without the rides, the Carnival
attracted over 5,000 people, who
milled about among some 50
booths featuring varied fare rang
ing from co-ed dunking to pie
throwing and stilt-walking.
Although the absence of a large
portion of its planned entertain
ment dampened some of the at
mosphere at the annual Campus
Chest Carnival, the 5,000 or so
people who attended the one-day
s Carnival Festivities
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Geren Outlines
Corpsman's Work
By GARRY BLANCHARD
In his address officially opening
a two-day Peace Corps conference
here Friday, Deputy Peace Corps
Director Dr. Paul Geren said the
work Peace Corpsmen are doing
represents a marriage of pragma
tism and idealism.
He likened Peace Corps volun
teers to builders .who don't try to
span great canyons at their widest
points but work where the gaps
are narrower and more readily
bridged.
' Middle Areas
He told his audience of delegates
from twenty colleges in and around
North Carolina that this work of
practical idealism is being done
"in the 'middle' area of the scale
not simply at the ditch-digging
level nor at the expert level, but
in the 'middle' area."' '.
And in all this middle ranee of
scales, he said, "assistance is giv-
Cooperation Is
Asked in Space
WASHINGTON (UPI) Presi
dent Kennedy, has invited Soviet
Premier Nikita Khrushchev to co
operate in five immediate space
projects and eventual joint explor
ation of the moon and the planets
The offer was made in a March
7 letter to Khrushchev made pub
lie today by the White House.
"The tasks are so challenging,
the costs so great, and the risks
to the brave. men who engage in
space exploration so grave, that
we must in all good conscience
try ; every possibility of sharing
these tasks and costs and of min
imizing these risks," the Presi
dent wrote.
The Whjte House said Khrush
chev had not yet replied.
affair did not seem to lack the
enthusiasm that Carnival day
usually creates.
With more than fifty booths op
erating continuously throughout
the long, warm afternoon, the
attending crowd was given a wide
variety of entertainment to choose
from. The athletes in the crowd
could challenge the basketball
team to foul shooting, play minia
ture golf at the SAE booth, or
climb the greased pole at the
DU stand.
The less hardy, but no less
zealous spent the afternoon toss
ing rings at the legs of ADPi's,
J
Photos by
tic
en not in counseling but in doing."
The work of the individual Peace
Corpsman "has as its focus the
hinterland, the out - of - the -way
place," he said. "He's speaking
the language of the people with
whom he works. He lives like his
co-worker. He shares the life of
the people."
Vigorous
In a vigorous, gesturing manner,
Dr. Geren declared the Peace
Corps has resolved not to become
simply another agency, although
it must be an agency because it
has to deal with governments.
He noted that these governments,
or host countries, are the "prime
movers" of the Peace Corps. In
requesting that volunteers be sent
to their country, he said, they give
the corps an opportunity to serve.
Introduction
Dr. Geren was . introduced by
Chancellor William B. Ay cock,
who expressed the University's
pleasure at hosting the conference
and said he hopes UNC will play
an important part in the future de
velopment of the organization.
Jim Wagner, chairman of the
UNC Peace Corps Committee wel
comed the delegates and Peace
Corps officials.
Dr. Geren's address was follow
ed by a film on the Peace Corps
in Tanganyika, and refreshments
and entertainment at Graham
Memorial.
Handbook Editor
Interviews will be held Thursday
for editor of the Carolina Handbook
by the Publications Selections
Board at 4 on the second floor of
Graham Memorial.
Applicants must be prepared to
start work immediately and should
have previous experience in editing
material for either high school or
college publication.
dunking Chi Omega's, or walk
ing on a pair of KD stilts.
The less hard and less zealous
were clustered about money
games presented by Cobb and
Lewis dormitories.
Jail
The Kappa Kappa Gamma jail
was the only display in which
participation was required. For
a dime someone could swear out
a warrant of arrest for anyone
on the grounds, and a Deputy
(most likely Connie Burroughs
who probably set an arrest rec
ord!) was dispatched to haul in
the "offender."
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Jim Wallace and Ilichard Zalk
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