UNC students on front lines at Democratic convention . . . _ Tor Heel political science 'interns' impressed by Kennedy manpower, Dale Carnegie t echniques By Pete Ivey Kennedy campaign techni ques mHH-Hf ymmg political >, science “interns” of frater nity rnsh week* at the Uni versity. To the five students doing their ,political laboratory w«rk at the Democratic National Convention at Los Angeles, the Jack Kennedy machine wa# an awesome corn'd, nation of Band wagon. ataamraHwy Uwiwc, - and lintary liner where money is no object and covics of DM Carne gies wait cn delegates haftd and loot, besieginig them for votes. Kennedy -mLi-ns included polls ter, writers, persnasive salesmen and assorted contact men and messengers. The Kennedy organization field ed the manpower to cater to" needs and wtdms of delegates from every state. The Kennedy j workers divided- fata at least 50 squadrons to-woo-end Win dele gates How they did it is the mar vel reported by the young Caro . |ina political scientists attached to the headquarters staffs of can didates Kennedy. Lyndon Johnson and Adlai Stevenson. Political Courtship No wish was too trivial no re quest too unimportant for the eager and accotamodcklftg Ken nedy workers. If a delegate want ed transportation, a u-drive-it was dispatched from the Kennedy mo tor pool; and if the delegate didn’t want to drive htmtseff. a chaffeur was provided If adetogtte -M a dingy rotai in a ffea-bittoo hotel far trim the cmivenflofl fkWr and if ^ ^ VVCnMBvvyHPlRHiRJiVI^V hovering around each deiega ' ■ hen, he was invited- to trans served by Kennedy in the Bilt ntore Hotel. Delegates were wined and dined. They were but tonholed and kept in constant conversation by Keto nddy staffmen. The Carolina students .who are themselves aceus-omed to the dis play of southern hospitality de clare they never saw such graci ku* living as that the Kennedy representatives bestowed on witl ing delegates. Where only cue or two half votes were gathered to gefier. there the Kennedy men would be. At least the GOP can't get his vote ridw! A postscript JO their Los Angeles safari 'was spoken by Bob Silliman, a Massachusetts Republican, who didn’t have time to go to his home in the Bay State and register on the GOP polling books for the No vember elections, because he waA going to attend the Demo cratic Convention in Califor nia. “Now when -people ask me how I’m going to vote, I say Fm not going to vote at all,” said Silliman. “Fm not regis tered.” Tod Efird of Gastonia, working out of Kennedy headquarters, de scribed a scene one night in the Bihmore. He had spent all after neon bawling delegates in Kennedy Harrill named new narrator at Planetarium The appointment of J. Ed Har riet of Shelly to the narrating staff of the Morehead Planetar ium here was announced today by director Anthony F. Jenzano Harrill is a graduate of Berea College, Kentucky, and is no* working toward a doctor of phil osophy degree ift counselling and guidance in the University School of Education. "Hie native North Carolinian taught for two years at Berea Foundation College be fore coming here in 1959. He is married to the fanner Miss Lois . Evans of Sarah, Ky. Harrill’s appointment gives the Morehead Planetarium five full time staff narrators. The others are Prof. Norman Mattis, Har vey W, Daniel,- Richard S. -Dod son Jr., and James E. Wads worth. They may be heard in “Life on Other Worlds,” the Planetarium’s summer space trip show, daily at 3 and 8:30 o’clock and at additional matinees Sat urdays and Sundays. Harrill will also team with Wadsworth in presenting the Summer Science Course for adults and teen agWs e*ery Monday and Wedhesday evening during ' August. Registrations for it arc ’now being taken. In Chapel MM— The Place for . . . ) lOFflCE SUPPLIES * * Art**** Needs * V* -<+ r,ril, ., I r^1t <