mm. STATE LIBRARY Q C t ° QCT 10 S2 -:• a c-; *! t»J OO p- •-: Q o cr ""Connecticut Daily Campus t-i Sewing Storrs Since 1896 ***«, Cfl u-g w Oi. h5 3 Hi VOL. CXVII, No. 7 STORRS. CONNECTICUT MONDAY, SEPT. 24, 1962 PJ tr* Winter Weekend aH £ Interviews To Select Daily Campus Elects Chairman Of Affair New Board Members Last Thursday night at its first meeting- of the year the Daily Campus Board of Interviews for the chairman of informal dance in the Student Directors elected two members of the Board to fill the vacancies left by the Business Winter Weekend are being held Union Ballrom comprise the act- today, tomorrow, and Wednesday ivities Saturday night. Sunday Manager and the Feature Editor. accoitling to Dag Holtgreen, pro- there is a Jazz Concert and Dol- Elected to the past of Feature Editor was Madge English, Spencer B, a seventh gramming vice-president of the phinelte Show. Snow displays semester English major in Arts and Sciences. Miss English was the Feature Editor of Student Union Board of Gov- built 'by each living unit decor- the Hartford EVafcfcfn pirjTtrvftrf-one year and was a member of the Daily Campus feature ernors. Today and Wednesday ate the Campus during the entire staff last year. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John English-of Johnson Street Interviews will be from 6:30 p.m. weekend and prizes are awarded to 8 p.m. in room 312 Commons. for Uie best ones in Middletown. She replaces John Atticks who resigned the position when he left Tomorrow the interview schedule school. is from 2:00 p.m. to 4 p.m. in maturity Needed Filling the vacancy left by the same room. Approximately $5,000-$6,000 is James Bannon when he re- All interested students are spent for Winter Weekend," signed last spring is John urged to sign up for an interview stated Mr. Holtgreen. "That Is Purtill of Sigma Alpha Ep- at the Control Desk in the Stu- why we need a mature and re- dent Union. sponsible person to fill the pos- silon. Purtill is a seventh ition of chairman." semester Accounting Major. qualifications He is the son of Mr. and The Winter Weekend chairman Interviewers Named Mrs. John S. Purtill, Si\. of must be at least a third semester In addition to Mr. Holtgreen, Glastonbury. Previously he student with a q.pr. Tile editor there will be three other inter- of the Daily Campus, the editor was on the sports staff and of the Nutmeg, station managsr viewers. Miss Gretchen Myers, rei>orted tennis and swim- of WHUS, or members of the program consultant of the Stu- ming news for two years. Stuoent Senate are not eligible. dent Union, Sandra Matava, Linda Devonshire and Pete president of the Board of Gover- Date Set nors, and a member of the Board. Kierys, both of the news February 22, 23, and 24 1963, The recommendations of the in- staff, were appointed Staff- •re the dates set for Wintei terviewing committee will be dis- members-at-large until after Weekend. The chairman must cussed by the Board of Gov- the heeling sessions, at which ernors, who will make the final oversee .the events scheduled for JOHN PURTILL time the News Staff will hold the three day period. selection. MADGE ENGLISH Business Manager elections. Feature Editor Specific Duties Unregistered Campus Photo—1 lowland Miss Devonshire has been Campus Photo—Howland Te specific duties of the chair- a reporter for one year. Ki- man include choosing chairmen Beginning Uxlaj September 24. erys is both a reporter and continue for six weeks.. All students interested in writing of these sub-committees royalty, the Security Department will Assistant News Editor. for the paper will be expect- Olympics, displays. Sunday after- Shock all ears on ranipus. Cars Dr. Max Putzel of the De- noon concert, Friday night semi- ed to attend the heeling meet- found in Student Parking lot partment of English will forir.al, and Saturday night dance. serve in an advisory capacity ings and to take an exam. The general chairman must work which are not properly registered for the CDC. He has been Present members of the with these people and their in- or on which a decal is not dis- the advisor to the Hartford.BOD are Joseph Marfuggi, dividual committees to insure a pl.i.wd will be tagged. The tine Smooth-flowing program. Branch paper for over four Editor-in-Chief; Roseanne for unregistered ears is $10. Stu- j years and was a profession- Cocchiola. Managing Editor; Weekend Events dents are reminded that driving 1 a.1 journalist for nine years. JNed Parker. City Editor: Di- Tlio semi-formal dance Friday on campus between the hours of ! Also decided at this meet- anne Rader, News Editor; evening in the Auditorium is the 7:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. is not per- , ing was the date for the be-j Wayne Mortberg. Sports Edi- opening event of Winter Week- mit teed tars must be parked in end. Saturday morning there is a I ginning of the heeling train- tor; Evelyn Marshak. Senior brunch in the HUB followed by | the students lots to which they in sessions for the fall se-1 Associate; John Howland, Olympic games in the Field i have been aligned during these mester. Heeling will begin ' Photography Editor: and Jer- House. A basketball game and an ' hours. Monday, October 8, and will re Krupnikoff, Adv. Manager. "Do not ask, what I'conn can Ho for you . ." The Pied Piper leads them by the hand a( the Annual Pied KEN GOLDBERG , , , AH Wet Piper Parade Friday. Campus Photo—Howland Campus Photo—Howland Campus Thoto—Laughrej PAGF TWO CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS MONDAY, SEPT. 24, 1962 Washington Merry - Go - Round Connecticut By Drew Pearson Teddy Kennedy, the president's younger the Boston Herald-Traveler—where It wag brother, has won the Massachusetts Dem- before the big payola probe. ocratic primary lor the senate, bu; it will All this is going to leave scars and will be the costliest political battle of the Ken- hurt the fine leadership President Ken- Daily Campus nedy family's costly career. nedy has shown on other fronts. The cost will not be merely in money, One member of the Kennedy family who which will be considerable, but in scars. isn't leaving scars is Mrs. Rose Kennedy, The cash outlay, if ever investigated in now 72 and the mother of nine, who is the way the old-time senate dug into the sweetly, effectively campaigning for her MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1962 relatively modest primary expenditures of youngest son. They have written a great William A. Vare, Republican boss of Penn- speech for Rttse, and she knows how to sylvania, or Frank Smith, the Sam Insull deliver it. candidate in Illnois, would unseat Teddy. "They said Jack was too young. But I Vare and Smith, both Republicans, spent think he's doing a good job—don't you?" a reported $200,000 and $100,000 respective- There is a careful pause during which ly in their primaries and were refused the crowd reacts in the afirmative to the senate seats in the 1920's. mother of the president. Both Democrats and Republicans joined "And they said Bobby was too young in rebuffing them. Today the Democrats to be attorney general. But I think he's do- control the Senate so there isn't much ing a good job, too—don't you?" Deadly Yun' chance of a Senate probe of Kennedy Another pause, and more approval family expenditures in Massachusetts. from the crowd. But ihe political scars will be more Rose Kennedy has another effective line With a screeching of rubber tires and the roar of pow- expensive, not only in Massachusetts, but in the Irish Catholic. Italian Catholic. Po- erful motors, Uconn male students "peal out" of South outside. People don't like the idea of a lish Catholic State of Massachusetts. Campus nightly. It appears that these collegians all have dynasty which, many believe, will see one "Teddy thought of joining the church^- racing blood in their veins and should be on a track instead brother after the other climb to power. as a bishoo." says his mother. "And then of a street. They don't like a royal family pitching in this beautiful creature came along." she all its resources, political and otherwise, to points to young Mrs. Kennedy. "Can you Every night at 10:30 (or 1:30 on weekends) the boys, put across its crown prince, esnecially in blame him for changing his mind?" attempt to turn the short stretch fromSouth to North Cam- a state which once started the revolt So it goes with the new royal family pus into a Connecticut version of the Indianapolis Speed- against a British royal family at Concord In Massachusetts. way. As soon as the date for the night is dropped off, the and at Lexington. Another Scion heroes race for their cars. Then the "fun" begins. Hie Family la Hisrh Gear Another Scion of another onetime royal They don't like the general picture of family. Prof. H. Stuart Hughes of Har- Cars roar forward, as the drivers jockey for position. brother-in-law Steve Smith serving as cam- vard, has rolled up remarkable support Straightaways become dueling grounds, with the drivers paign manager for Teddy, or brother Bobby even though running as an independent. To passing each other on the right, on the left, or whichever in the Justice Department appointing get on Ihe ticket as an independent, Pro- way the opportunity presents itself.
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