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UMC Library ; Ssriais Pgpt. Box 87D Chapel HIHt N. C. Survey Results Results of a survey on student opinion on the 1964 Presidential race will appear in the first of a fhree-part series tomorrow in the Daily Tar Heel. Moore And Scott ' The Daily Tar IIel endorse Democratic candidates Dan K. Moore and Robert Scott in the North Carolina general election. See edits page two. IlHIdFeb. 23, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1964' Associated Press Wire Service 1 s lift ii ii ii SUm AY NIGHT UP - Selects Slate Of Class Officers Bill Purdy, Teddy O'Toole and John Lovell were tapped by the University Party Sunday night to head their list of candidates for class offices. The election will be held Nov. 10. Purdy, a Morehead scholar from Burlington, gained the nomination for freshman presi dent by defeating John Cibils of Kinston by a wide margin. The nomination for sophomore president went to O'Toole, a na tive of South Hill, Va., by ac clamation. Lovell, from Jacksonville, N.C., was also nominated by ac clamation for the Junior Class presidency by the 300 delegates present in Gerrard Hall. . - Student Party nominations were not complete by deadline last night. Full coverage will be in tomorrow's Daily Tar Heel. Also on the frosh slate are Buddy Wester from Rockingham who defeated Dick Young, Ral eigh, for vice president; Alice Graham of Raleigh, who edged Patty Fields of Chapel Hill for secretary; Allan Klienmaier, Kin ston, who - won nomination for treasurer over Richard Kero and John Knowland; and Amanda Davie, nominated by acclama tion for social chairman. Also nominated by acclama tion for the soph ticket are Tommy White of Durham, vice president; Winbourne Shaffer, Chapel Hill, secretary; and Mary Cherry, Newland, social chair man. . ... The only contested election came when Bill Bowman de feated George Hook and Rich Doner for. treasurer. Bowman is from" Newport News, Va. George. Wainwright of. Wilson defeated V Julian Busby for '.; the nomination ,for junior vice ' presi dent. In other junior elections, Camilla Walters from Greens boro gained the nomination for secretary, Loraine Hatcher of Morehead City was tapped for treasurer and Judy Haley, Chat tanooga, Tenn., was nominated as social chairman. Before balloting began, the Homecoming Four judges for the annual Homecoming Queen Contest, scheduled for Wednesday after noon, were announced yesterday by the Carolina Athletic Council. Judges" are Mrs. Charles P. Erickson, Mrs. Paul Sharp, Jour nalism Professor Walter Spear man and" Campus Police Chief Arthur J. Beaumont. The contest will begin Wednes day at 2 p.m. at a tea in the Carolina Inn ballroom. The 100 contestants will be judged on beauty, poise and personality. Wearing cocktail dresses to the tea, the girls will be divided into three groups, one group to come at 2, one group at 2:45 and the last group at 3:30. The girls should attend at. the tiie listed below for their spon sors : At 2 girls sponsored by: Alex ander,' Battle - Vance - Pettigrew, 40(0 Greet JayMe And Puipg f 0 J f ' t "J I. Jayne And Maverick Marshall convention heard Sam '. Himes give the keynote address. Himes, now a graduate student at Ohio State University, was a former UP legislator and served as campaign manager .-, for Jim Light, Student Body Treasurer, during spring elections last year. A battle broke out over pro- cedure when a motion was made to nominate junior officers be fore freshmen. After a short debate a vote was taken, ending in a tie at 119-119. UP chairman Jeff Adams broke the deadlock by voting, to hold Freshman elections first. Meet in g Maps Plans For Volunteers i Twenty student and civic lead ers heard plans for a community i improvement project in Orange County yesterday at a special i meeting called by Student Body President Bob Spearman. . Bill Harriss, former student body president now working for the North Carolina Fund, outlin ed broad areas of concern in ' Chapel Hill. The program calls for the use of student volunteers who j would work during the winter months for a tutoring service, a day care center, a clean-up i committee, or a special organ ization which earmarks com- ', munities for federal aid. Spearman concluded by ap pointing a seven-man steering committee which will. : call a meeting of civic leaders during National Issue Week (Oct. 26, through 29) to coordinate the program and organize a cam paign to attract student partici pation. ' Members of the committee are iSuzy Sterling, acting chairman, Neal Jackson, Ann Queen, Mike Chanin, Chris Randolph, Chotsey Egenes, and Bill Harriss. Judges Named Craige, Graham, Lewis, Old East, Teague, Alderman, Kenan, Smith, Alpha Kappa Psi, Phi Del ta Chi, Beta Theta Pi, Delta Kap pa Epsilon, Kappa Sigma, Phi Kappa Sigma, Sigma Alpha Ep silon, Tau Epsilon Phi, Zeta Psi, Alpha Gamma Delta, Kappa Kap pa Gamma and Delta Delta Del ta. At 2:45, girls sponsored by: Avery, Carr, Ehringhaus, Man gum, Grimes, Old West, Ruffin, East Cobb, Mclver, Spencer, Del ta Sigma Pi, Sigma Delta Chi, Chi Phi, Delta Upsilon, Lambda Chi Alpha, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sig ma Chi, St. Anthony Hall, Theta Chi, Chi Omega, Phi Mu, Phi Mu Alpha. . At 3:30, girls sponsored by Ay cock, Connor, Everett, , Joyner, Manly, Parker, Stacy, Winston, - West Cobb, Nurses', Whitehead, Continued on Page 3) -C -. ' s - X v r V V ir r c 1 si t i ir Khrushchev Supporter Dies In Crash BELGRADE, Yugoslav The flaming crash of a Russian air liner Monday killed Marshal Ser gei S. Biryuzov, chief of staff of the Soviet armed forces, and all the 17 or more other persons aboard. Biryuzov, 60, was known as a Khrushchev man. Groping for a landing in the rain and fcg after a 1,100-mile flight from Moscow, the four-en Red China9 s Blast WASHINGTON W) Radioactive material from Red China's atom ic test blast may have already begun to pass over the United States but lack of rain over much of the country could mean that very little of the radioactive product would fall to earth the weather bureau said Monday. And even if this happy break in weather conditions did not pre vail, fallout from the "low-yield" nuclear test would not be expect ed to be high enough "to cause any undue health hazard," in this country scientists of the atomic energy commission reported. Fallout specialists of the weath er bureau, .stressing that they Bipartisan Policy WASHINGTON Ut) President Johnson said Monday that devel opments in the Communist world require a "careful watch and on ly reinforce the need to continue basic, bipartisan foreign policy." are not in the fallout detection Kaplan Is Weinstein Lecturer The second annual Rosa B. Weinstein Memorial Lecture on Religion will feature philosopher Dr. Mordecai M. Kaplan tonight at 8 in Howell Hall auditorium. Sponsored by the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, Dr. Kaplan .will discuss "The Meaning, of God for the Modern Jew." The founder of the Society for the Advancement of Judaism and :of the Jewish Reconstructionist movement, he has served on : the faculty of the Jewish Theo logical Seminary of America for over 50 years. i Some of his books are "Juda ism as a Civilization," "The i Future of the American Jew" 'and "The Purpose and Meaning of Jewish Existence." He has written numerous pamphlets, articles and tracts about Juda ism. Faculty and students of all faiths are welcome. An informal question and answer session will follow the lecture. The Rosa B. Weinstein Me morial Lectures were established iby Maurice A. Weinstein of Charlotte to bring noted scholars of religion to UNC, UNC-G and 1 Duke. By CHARLES THOMPSON Jayne Mansfield brought two puppies and her husband to Craige Sunday afternoon to open the Mavericks' social room. "Is The Body really coming?" someone shouted. About 400 students, professors, townspeople, children and babies waited restlessly. Students lean ed out of windows, off balconies and the porch roof. Horns blew and males stam peded at 4 p.m., 45 minutes late. The gray . Bentley pulled a U Haul trailer whose contents re main a mystery. A throng crush ed around. A Maverick, in the dorm's of ficial light blue .cowboy hat, emerged holding a furry pup. After a suspenseful wait the convertible top drew back slowly to reveal a high pile of bleached blonde hair, a white bow. The crowd surged and grabbed . . . for autographed pictures. "She actually touched my hand!" a student whooped, wav ing a picture. Her signature covered the picture. Her costume did not. Police and her stocky body guard in dark glasses shoved through. The crowd jostled Jayne about, yanking pictures from her World NEWS BRIEFS" gine IL13 smashed into a moun tain 10 miles south of Belgrade and disintegrated in a fiery ex plosion. Biryuzov, who was also first Soviet deputy minister of de fense, was the chief of a Russian delegation assigned to the cele bration today of the 20th anniver sary of Belgrade's liberation from Nazi occupation in World War II. Contaminates V. S. business, said that meteorologic al conditions between " Western China and the United States since last Friday's test were and are such as to add up to this picture. 1 . Labor Cabinet LONDON W) Prime Minister Harold Wilson called his first cabinet together yesterday under the threat cf a dock strike and falling prices on the stock mar ket. ' At the same time, Wilson mov ed to cement ties with the United States by agreeing to dispatch his Foreign Secretary, Patrick Gordon Walker, to Washington for talks with Secretary of State Dean Rusk Oct. 26 and 27. With fears growing among busi-. nessmen that Wilson intended to renationalize the steel industry, steel stocks led a downward slide on the London Stock Exchange. On the Labor side, the dock workers voted to tie . up the Lon don port with a one-day wildcat strike Thursday. There was a possibility of the stoppage spreading throughout the nation. The dockers demand another 25 shillings ($3.50) a week twice what employers are ready to pay. Mitchell Dies NEW YORK WV-James P. Mit chell, 63, who served almost eight years as Secretary of Labor in the Eisenhower administration, died Monday of a heart attack in his hotel suite here. He was visiting New York on a business trip. From his own experience, Mit chell knew first-hand the prob lems of labor unions. "I know what it is to be jobless and broke," the big, bluff New Jersey Irishman once said. He rose to the heights of cab-, inet membership in a career which was recognized and hon ored by a Horatio Alger Award in 1959. Mitchell had a broad back ground of labor relations and personnel management when President Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed him Secretary of Labor in October, 1953. GOP Group Charges WASHINGTON UP) A Republic an study group charged yester day that the Kennedy - Johnson Administration has dragged its feet in the research and develop ment of new military weapons systems. hand. Once inside the dorm she wait ed while flashbulbs popped and reporters scrambled. Outside they chanted, "We want Jayne!" On the front porch she looked around and said, "I love your house." She introduced her basset pup py and clutched him close . . envious shouts. Then her new husband, Matt Cimber . . . boos and hisses. "His I.Q. is 165. Mine is only 164, but I think a husband ought to be more intelligent. "Next week I'm going to Mil waukee to be in a play about a girl who takes her clothes off everytime she drinks champ3gn. "My fiancee in the play sends me to a psychiatrist. My hus band plays the psychiatrist, and I fall in love with him. So he ends up with me" Craige's president made her honorary housemother. "I can cook, too," she said. Another stampede, another crush. Her husband tried sk times to back the trailer out. then bumped over a curb and drove across the lawn. At 4:30 she was off on a motorcade through campus and back to Greensboro. . . - ace MORRISON RESIDENCE HALL is beginning floor. Students to become a reality as workers from the REA looking forward Construction Company begin work on the fourth ' . Just to the east FCC Squelches For Free Television WASHINGTON LW The govern ment yesterday squelched a Re publican bid for free-television time to" match' President John son's Sunday night .broadcast and the GOP announced it will sue to reverse the decision. Meanwhile, GOP National Chairman Dean Burch accepted an offer by the National Broad casting Co. for 15-minutes of free-time last night. He said it would consist of substantially what he said at a news confer ence, protesting the government ruling and saying Johnson's ad dress was "patently political." Burch appealed to voters across the nation "who believe in fair play and who resent the White House tactics" to. contribute I funds to finance a half-hour broadcast Wednesday night by Republican nominee Barry Gold water. .Earlier in the day, the Fed eral Communications Commission backed up the refusal of three networks to grant Goldwater equal time to present his views in reply to Johnson. The Presi dent spoke on . the Soviet govern ment upheaval, the first Red Chinese nuclear, explosion and the British Labor Party victory. Both the networks and the FCC said the President's report last night did not fall under the law requiring equal time for political candidates. Without announcing the exact vote, the FCC said in a brief an nouncement: "The commission today determ ined that the President's broad cast on Oct. 18 is not a use within Section 315 of the Com munications Act and does not entitle other legally qualified candidates to the presidency to equal time." The ruling followed rejection by the National Broadcasting Co., the American Broadcasting Co. and the Columbia Broadcast ing System of Burch's request for equal time for Goldwater. Mutual Broadcasting System said it also carried Johnson's talk but was not asked for equal time. . The FCC said the votes of its seven members on the matter would be disclosed when a formal opinion is handed down, probably later in the week. Burch contended that Johnson "simply demanded free time" af ter the Democratic National Com mittee first tried to buy the time, but found it impractical." Lloyd Wright, . a Democratic National Committee official co ordinating the party's purchase of TV time, denied this, saying: "This is false. We did not try to buy time for that broadcast" "It is apparent that the Nation El Security Council's endorse eler And. r I! nJMM inwr-JJih nfrit tnM ment of the speech in advance was simply a device to justify asking for free time," Burch said. "This we submit is a rather cavalier treatment of national se curity," he added. In announcing the Republicans' plan to sue for the time, Burch H ii Sr. i I f I If .. I f i f if I f i if GOP Around The Campus i Tickets Sold Out Tickets for the Saturday night Fair Lady" are sold out, accord- ) ing to Playmakers' Business Manager John W. Parker. Tickets remain for Friday , and Sunday night and are avail- !able at Y-court and 214 Aber , nethy Hall. Cost is $1 for stu dents and $2 for the general public. Parker said that the produc- tion will be held over for an ad t ditional performance on Mon day. The cast includes Peggy Jones as Eliza Doolittle, John Whitty as Henry Higgins, Graham Pollock as Colonel Pickering and Fred Cook as Alfred P. Doolittle. Wirtz To Speak '.' The director of the division of handicapped children and youth, U. S. Office of Education, will visit tie School of Education to morrow. Dr. Morvin A. Wirtz will speak at 10 a.m. in 08 Peabody on the federal program for teaching professionals in educating handi capped children. Dr. Wirtz will discuss current research projects sponsored by the U. S. Education Office at a Carolina Inn luncheon for special graduate students. YRC Meeting Young Republicans Club -will meet tonight at 7:30 in 205 Alum ni to discuss campaign methods in precincts,, residence halls, fra ternities and sororities. Membership has increased by 50 per cent over last year, said YRC President Charles Hooks. The Carolina chapter is the larg est in the state with 280 mem bers. Duke Speech Professor Henry C. Lauerman of Wake Forest Law School wiil discuss. "The Law of Treaties' Pledge Pfg It S - wit" "i " r from Ehringhaus and Craige are to the new , cafeteria being built of Morrison. Photo by Lautercr. told a news conference Johnson's speech was purely political. He said the President produced no information that was not already in the newspapers, proclaimed no new policies, and did not even name the new rulers of the Soviet Union." at the Duke International Law So ciety's Short Course in Interna tional Law at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Duke Law School. The lecture, open to the public, te the second in a series present ing basic principles in public in ternational law. Debate Tonight "Has the Judaeo - Christian Morality Proven Detrimental to Mankind" will be the topic for debate by Di-Phi Senate at 7:30 tonight on third floor of New West. Refreshments will be served. The public is invited. UN Interviews Interviews will be held this week for students interested in representing UNC at the model United Nations convention here Feb. 10-13. The convention will bring to gether 350 students from 60 uni versities and colleges as dele gates representing 75 U-N. coun tries. It is sponsored by Colle giate Council for the U. N. Interviews will be held Wednes day and Thursday from 3 to 6 p.m. in the CCUN office, second floor of Y-Building. Tours Scheduled 1 Tours of John Umstead Hospi tal for the Mentally Disturbed will be held Thursday at 2:30 p.m. and Sunday at 1:30 p.m. for those interested in volunteer service. Volunteers may work with the psychiatrist, sociologist and his patients, "or teach classes in rec reation or 'sports. Lab assistants are also needed. Group and'oc- casiqnal volunteers may sponsor : parties or other entertainments. The hours are tax deductible and gas for transportation will . be paid. Interested students may con--tact. Anne Meissner at Y-Court. (Continued on Page 3) Bid Time Derit c Reds Claim Lead In Space Race MOSCOW LV The Kremlin's leaders pledged Monday to push on to Nikita Khrushchev's twin goals of peace and prosperity but suggested the old Premier was "boldly cast aside" because he hampered progress. In his first public speech since he. took povver. Communist Party Secretary Leonid Brezhnev prom ised to follow policies of peaceful coexistence abroad and more consumer goods at home. This was Khrushchev's blueprint be fore his downfall last week. Premier Alexei Kosygin called the Communist Party "a great creative titanic force" and as serted "it has always inspired everything new and progressive and boldly cast aside whatever hampers our progress." This was taken as a ' veiled reference to Khrushchev's fate. Brezhnev occupied the center of the stage at gala homecoming celebrations for the three newest Soviet cosmonauts, first to orbit in a multiseat space ship. Kosygin spoke later at a Krem lin, reception subdued by news of the death of Marshal Sergei S. Biryuzov, chief of staff of the Soviet Armed Forces, in a plane crash in Yugoslavia. . The. new Soviet rulers claimed Russia is ahead in the space race but wants cooperation-. Brezhnev promised that the party's new leadership would de velop the economy, raise living standards and ensure "social de mocracy." In foreign affairs, he said, ef forts toward peaceful coexistence with the West would be continued and adopted a strikingly milder tone than his predecessor in in direct remarks about the Soviet Chinese dispute. . Much of the bounce and light hearted good humor seemed to be missing along with the absent Khrushchev. His whereabouts are unknown. He is believed to be in Moscow. The contrast in the atmosphere cf previous celebrations and thi3 sometimes strained and awkward performance was marked by Western observers, who witness ed past cosmonaut holidays be ginning with Yuri Gagarin's homecoming in 1961 as the world's first space man. The production, however, fol lowed the same stage directions s all cosmonaut homecomings since Khrushchev welcomed Ga garin home Brezhnev hailed the returned cosmonauts, saying their flight had caused anxiety in the West over the Soviet Union's lead in the space race. Students To Rate Profs Turn about is fair play this week, when approximately 1,000 UNC students get a chance to evaluate their professors. Sherry Stanley, chairman of ;the Academic A fairs Commit tee, said yesterdav distrihi it inn would be completed this week on a questionnaire to be used as a basis for a Course Evalua tion Booklet. Questionnaires will be sent through the campus mail to a selected number of students who took certain courses last semes ter. Miss Stanley said this pro cedure was being used in order to get a full evaluation of the course. The questionnaire asks stu dents to evaluate the professor as well as the course, giving the difficulty of examinations as well. , Miss Stanley said that ques tionnaires should be filled out by next Tuesday and returned to the Information Desk of Graham Memorial or placed in boxes in Y-Court or Lenior Hall.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 20, 1964, edition 1
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