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U!?C Library. ; Box 870 jose Chaps! Hill. IT. C.f tiff your tic&et today for to morrow night's Memorial Hall performance of the Jose Bailes Espanoles. The GM program costs 50 cents for students, $1- for dates or spouses. Curtains for the Spanish dance company rise at 8 p.m. t - . Winter Keep the lonejohns fellows, the DTII weatherman predicts warm weather will end Thurs day and it'll be cold walking on those weekend dates. CHAPEOmXrNmTOALINA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1965 Founded Feb. 23. 1893 Associated Press Wire Servicn wm Larson Cancels Speech By ALAN BANOV DTII Staff Writer Arthur Larson wired here yesterday morning to cancel his keynote speech ' tomorrow night for the Model United Nations. The director of the World Rule of 'Law Center at Duke told Secretary General Jim Medford he couldn't come be cause of "emergency due to ill ness in the family." Larson, .who was Undersecre tary cf Labor, director of the United States Information Agency and. Special Consultant to former President Dwight Eisenhower, was scheduled to tspeak at 7 p.m. in Hill Hall. He suggested in the telegram other speakers to replace him Medford and other Collegiate Council for the United Nations officials were, trying yesterday afternoon to find one. Among those contacted were Richard Gardner, Undersecre tary of State, and officials of National CCUN. Larson recently resigned as chairman of the National Coun cil for Civic Responsibilities which was formed to combat extremist groups. One of the chief founders of the group, Larson quit to complete a revi sion of his "Law of Workmen's Compensation." He said Thursday that he must make an April 26 deadline for the revision and that . it would take nearly all his time Some 500 students from over 70 colleges will represent dele gations from about 100 nations The mock U.N. is modeled after the actual world body and will function with a General As sembly, Security Council and various committees. Larson's speech, "A Future for the U.N.," was scheduled to be taped by WUNC-TV for broadcasting . Friday night. The Voice of America is interested in taping the speeches and pro ceedings of the Model N.N. for a possible overseas program. A general debate was planned after Larson's speech, where each delegation would declare " its country's policies. The four main committees will meet from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m Thursday and will reconvene at 2:)0, after lunch, until 6:30 They will meet again from 8 to 11 p.m. Thursday's highlight will be a speech at 7:30 p.m. by Steve Robbins, chairman of the Na tional Student Association 'Ad visory Board. The UCLA gradu ate was the California-Nevada-Hawaii Region Chairman for NSA in 1963. Committees will reconvene from 9 to 11:30 Friday morning. The plenary session of the Gen eral Assembly will meet at 2 p.m., recessing at 6 for a din ner in Lenoir. Dr. Arthur Waskow, of the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, will address the Model U.N. at 8 p.m. Thursday He is the author of "The Limits of Defense," "The Wor ried Man's Guide to World Peace," and "From Race Riot to Sit-in." -r . i N 4 i t Red Bases Bombed Sea T TO viett Nairn 1 K 'X. s 0 econd Strike -DA NANG, Viet Nam UPi sion and that one was crippled have counted as brought down. More than a score of South by communist flak and crashed Radio Hanoi claimed four Vietnamese Skyraiders, with in South Viet Nam. The pilot American jets were shot down His HANDSHAKES, HANDSHAKES That pretty well sums up a big portion of Rush Week. Robert Al exander (left) receives the friendly hand of welcome from members of St. Anthony Hall last night as he passes through the welcome line. This week hundreds of freshmen will swap ' books for smiles and handshakes as they visit fraternity houses which they may someday make their homes. Aside from the smiles, prospective fra ternity members are in store for punch, lots of it. U. S. Air Force jets flying along - pounded targets in Com munist North Viet Nam Mori day in the second strike in re taliation for Red blows against U. S. army installations Sun day. The Vietnamese air com mander reported heavy damage and many casualties at the tar gets, described as three mili tary camps. ; The South Vietnamese en countered heavy enemy ground fire near the border and sev eral planes were hit. All got back but one crashed at landing. U. S. and Vietnamese forces watched the skies for possible Communist air raiders. The Viet Cong promised to step up their guerrilla war "on all battle fronts" and said the ground at tacks on the U. S. Army at Pkeiku Sunday were only a be ginning. More than 1,800 wives and children of U. S. government personnel prepared to leave parachuted safely. - Skyraiders are single engine Sunday. In Washington the Defense in the arm by shrapnel. wound was not serious. He listed the target areas as the villages of Liem Cong Tay. That Le and Song Song, all were missing after the Monday route leading toward the bor- mission. One U. S. Navy jet der. planes developed in World War" Department said no U. S. planes near the frontier and along a II for the U. S. Navy as dive bombers. They -since have been modernized to carry heavy bomb loads. . A Communist Chinese radio broadcast claimed three U. S. planes were shot down in the attack and three others were downed later in the afternoon, was shot down Sunday and the pilot, Lt. Edward A. Dickson of Wyoming, Pa., ejected and para chuted into the sea. He has not been found. Brig. Gen. Nguyen Cao Ky, commander of the Vietnamese bringing, to 10 the number of Air Force, flew the lead plane American jets the Communists in Monday's raid and was hit WORLD REACTION Reds Warn Against Extention Of War Campus Young Republicans Opposed Gag Endorsement By MIKE YOPP DTII Managing: Editor - passed without debate. Mitchell said the speaker ban nlank ws "harilv writ.fpn" anr! The UNC delegation to ' the might not have beeir passed ' North Carolina Federation of Young Republicans conference Saturday voted against the YR platform which included as a plank an endorsement of the Speaker Ban Law. UNC voted 5-2 against the platform, according to Dave Mitchell, campus Young Re publican official. Mitchell said UNC had 11 more time had been allowed be fore the vote. The vote was "hurried," he said. Wanted Amendments Mitchell said he could not comment on how the platform might have been amended if more time has been available.' However, he said, some dele gates wanted amendments to al- Opposed by Gavin The law was opposed by un successful - GOP:' -gubernatorial candidate Robert Gavin' during his campaign last year. It has also met opposition from the YR College Council. Delegations from UNC-G and N.C. State voted against the platform. Mitchell said the platform faced most of its op position from delegations from the Consolidated University. Charles Hooks, chairman -of TOKYO (AP) Red China coupled a pledge of sup nort for Communist North Vipt Nam with n throat vps-- Thf U. S imperialists must understand . . the son ordered their withdrawal as 2ay yu. extend the aggressive war will be the day you a safety measure.; The Ameri- hasten into the grave." can school in Saigon closed. The The Soviet government, competing with Peking for first group of dependents leaves friends and influence in Southeast Asia, also condemned TlLtdGen N u en Khanh com G strUeS afcamst Dong Hoi. manderenof VietnamesT armd Premier Alexei N. Kosygin declared at a Soviet Embassy forces, was jubilant about the reception m Hanoi the situation is "fraught with serious compli- raid by Vietnamese planes and cations, for which the United States of America will bear full the Sunday attacks by 49 car- responsibility." The Soviet leader, who pledged Russian aid to North Viet Nam in a speech a few hours before Sunday's air strike, said the Soviet Union, Red China and North Viet Nam do not want low "communist scientists and the campus YR, could not be votes, but four members were artists and that sort of thing" absent taken. when the vote was MURDOCH COMMITTEE The Murdock Committee which provides recreation fo mentally retarded children, will leave Y-Court at 2 p.m. Thurs day for its ' weekly trip to But ner. The committee, which started last year on a regular basis, plays and works with children, who range in age from 6 to 13. "Irreparable Harm" The conference endorsed the Gag law, saying that any at tempt to repeal it would do "ir reparable harm to the cause of freedom in our state." The platform was passed by a 104-28 vote in the closing min utes of the conference in Char lotte. The general business ses sion ran about 90 minutes late and all platform proposals were on campuses of state-supported colleges. . The Speaker Ban Law was passed by the General Assembly reached for comment. - Censures Committee The conference also censured the Committee for Civic Re- in 1963 with a time element sponsinimy iwmeu u similar to that the conference faced Saturday. The law, which forbids Com munist and Fifth Amendment pleaders from speaking on state supported campuses, was passed in the closing minutes of the last day of the 1963 assembly session. Ay cock's Condition 'Good' After Undergoing Surgery Former Chancellor. William B. Aycock was in "good!' condition yesterday in Memorial hospital after undergoing . surgery for in ternal bleeding. Hospital spokesmen said late yesterday afternoon that Aycock underwent a vagotomy and par tial gastrectomy. This means the vagus nerve was cut to decrease lacid production in the stomach and part of the stomach itself was removed. His general condition was called "good" and the outlook and prognosis were "good." Aycock, who retired from the chancellorship last year to teach law, was stricken in the Law Building about 9 a.m. Saturday. He was taken to Memorial Hos pital by ambulance and given sev eral transfusions for gastro-intes-that the bleeding was caused by final bleeding. X-rays confirmed an ulcer. A1E Skyraiders flew into mis- Terry Backs UHF Station For Raleigh RALEIGH UO Former Gov. Terry Sanford said today he will be a principal in the appli cation for an Ultra High Fre quency television channel in Raleigh. Sanford said he and Har grove Bowles Jr. of Greensboro, . chairman of the State Board of fVnef7af irsn anrl rtaimlnnmant organizations. r"T " T"" The original resolution called """"TI - j .. x "ivc,y auu ULliCl U11 Ldliia WHICH for condemnation of Larson by ... A1 " , inuitaicu mcit me rtaieign Durham market was an excel lent location for an additional television outlet." The former governor said other residents of the Raleigh Durham area will be investors in the proposed station but their names will not be an- lican Arthur Larson of Durham shortly before the 1964 presi dential campaign. Larson formed the committee to combat what he considered irresponsible Republicanism. The group opposes extremist name. After a heated debate an amended resolution- was adopt ed that omitted reference by name to Larson. . Larson announced this week end that he will no longer lead the committee, but urged that it's work be carried on. He is director of Duke's World Rule nounced until a formal applica tion is made to the Federal Communications Commission. rier-based U. S. Navy planes on the Gulf of Tonkin coast. "Personally, Sunday was the tant day of my life," he told war' but il their duty to "strengthen the might and defensive newsmen -in.J5aigoni' ;.,-.-r-Jcapacity, of Communist; nations. V 4.. - Khanh said the Vietnamese 1 Moscow, the government newspaper Izvestia and Radio raids on three villages across Moscow told the Russian people belatedly of Kosygin's promise the border knocked out 70 per of help for the North Vietnamese. . .. cent of the targets hit. "The aggressive actions of the United States against the He said 24 propeller-driven fratprnal npnnlp nf thf TiPmnoratin RpniihhV nf TMnrfM Vnt Nam provoke the decisive protest of all Soviet people," Izvestia said. "It is necessary to put an end to the dangerous provocations." OTHER REACTIONS Reaction elsewhere to the American-South Vietnamese raids ranged from approval, through neutralist caution to notes cf outrage, ordinarily following Cold War channels. Britain, Australia, Thailand and Nationalist China were among the first to line up with the Johnson Administration's opinion that the air strikes were an essential retaliation for aggression from the north. Predictably, the most denunciations were voiced in Hanoi and Peking. The outcry was similar to that in the Gulf of Tonkin crisis last August, when U. S. naval planes raided North Viet namese PT boat bases in retaliation for attacks on American destroyers. North Viet Nam called the latest raids a serious act of war intended to sabotage the 1954 Geneva agreements on Indochina. It called on nations that took part in the Geneva Conference and all other peace-living countries to take "timely and effective acions aimed a staying the hands of the U. S. imperialist aggres sors and warmongers." Radio Peking said thousands upon thousands of people dem onstrated in the Chinese capital against the U. S.-South Vietnam ese air strikes, shouting "down with the U.' S. robbers." "U. S. imperialism get out of Asia,' they called. of Law Center. Teer Chairman The group elected Hubert Teer Jr. of DuTham as chair man. He ran without opposi tion. Mrs. Alfred W. Shriver Jr. of Charlotte was elected vice chairman without opposition. No member of the UNC delega tion was elected to office. "We came in very low just off the tree tops." Ky said on his return to Da Nang. "Just before we reached the target we pulled up to release our bombs. That's when the flak hit us. "Almost all of our planes were hit as they dropped their high explosive and fragmenta tion bombs and turned home." Although Khanh said 24 Vietnamese planes participated, Ky mentioned 30 as the num ber. The Vietnamese air chief s-aid he saw the four U. S. F100 jets along drop bombs to the north of his target areas. The pilot of one of the U. S. planes de clined to talk to newsmen about the raid, saying that officially he was not involved. A U. S. Embassy . announce ment in Saigon said both U. S. and Vietnamese planes took part in "military action" in the Communist north. Ky reported one U. S. jet hit by flak but said there were no U. S. casualties. As his group turned for home, Ky said, he spotted many casualties on the ground and saw military camps ablaze. The planes took off from Da Nang Air Base, 100 miles south of the border, with heavy loads of bombs. The Vietnamese had been scheduled to participate in Sun day raids! coordinated with the U. S. naval jet attacks but low clouds kept them grounded. Thus a second attack on the north had been expected. Reporters in Saigon asked Khanh whether the new attack , might not bring air raids by the Communists. "In war there's always a risk," Khanh said, but added that he knew "for sure" that the North Vietnamese could not get through southern air de fenses. If the Chinese Commun ists Air Force tried, he said, the Americans could not knock out most of their planes. "At the most, 3 to 5 per cent of their planes would get through. Our air defense has been prepared," Khanh said. Modern Civ. Books The Undergraduate Library has announced the loan period for modern civilization reserve books has been extended from one day to three days. The ex tension was made to relieve pressure on students to return books immediately. . Spring Makes Early Visit Deacons Took First Gaine But: "Heels Tl eeil Jiteveii ge o oni ght By LARRY TARLETON DTII Sports Editor An old nemesis comes to -Woollen Gym tonight to meet the Tar Heels. Bones McKinney, a former UNC player himself, brings his Wake Forest Demon Deacons to Chapel Hill in a battle for fourth place in the Atlantic Coast Conference. McKinney's teams have beaten the Tar Heels in seven of their last eight meetings, the only loss coming at Woollen Gym last year by a score of 81-73. Back on Jan. 6, the Tar stretched - the streak to four, amends for our showing in that Wake Forest jumped into an game. The boys have a lot of early 20-point lead and were pride, and they will be ready never headed as they smashed for this one." the Tar Heels, 107-85. But now the situation is re versed. The Demon Deacons have lost two straight, includ ing an embarrassing 77-70 loss to South Carolina. Meanwhile the Tar Heels are fresh from one of their finest performances of the season, a 100-78 win over New York University Saturday night at Greensboro. "We were humiliated by Heels went to Winston-Salem Wake Forest earlier in the sea nursing a three game losing son," said Tar Heel Coach Dean streak, and the Deacons soon Smith, "And we want to make Smith will probably start with All-American center Billy Cun ningham, forwards Ray Respess and Bob Lewis, and guards Tom Gauntlett and Johnny Yokley. "Yokley did a great job for Starting for the Deacons will be Ronny Watts at center, Jim Boshart and Dick Herring at forwards, and Bob Leonard and John Anderson at guards. Leon ard is threatening Cunningham for the ACC scoring lead with a 23.6 average. Watts is the second leading scorer for the Deacs with a 17 ppg average. However it was Herring wno us Saturday night," praised the ruined the Tar Heels in the Tar Heel coach. "Our game plan earlier meeting. The Winston- was to start witn a zone defense Salem blond hit his season nign with Ray Hassell and then send Qf 20 in that game. The Tarj in Yokley and switch to a man- Heels enter the game with a -8 tq-man. Johnny went m and did overall mark and a 4-4 confer- a terrific job on Graham (Mai), ence slate while the Deacons He (Graham) only hit on two of are 9-10 in all games and 5-4 14 shots from the floor. jn the conference. c Angel Flight i Starts Drive For Members The Air Force ROTC Angel Flight has begun a spring "build up" campaign, designed to at tract new members, according, to Flight president. Connie Rob erts. The , female auxiliary of the UNC Air Force ROTC cadet pro gram will sponsor a tea for interested coeds in t he cadet lounge from 2 to 4 pan. Sunday. The flight, a non-military or ganization is primarily to give support to the Air Force ROTC members. Activities include a ca det Christmas party for orphan children, planning for the mili tary ball and air force ball, visits to Air Force bases in the area and serving at refreshment breaks at weekly cadet drill practices. Initiation and annual dues are $7.50. Uniforms in Air Force blue are rented for a refundable $5. The flight meets Monday night and holds teas from 2 to 2:30 p.m. Thursday. - ft. '' V -vs.-: ' V - 4 ' 7 ( 'A The icicles - melted and ran down the gutters in Chapel Hill yesterday as high 60-degree wea ther, brought promises of a mild and eary spring. The change in climate was her alded by a hard, warm Sunday rain, and indications are it will be followed by a siege of fog and clouds. The forecast for today is for variable cloudiness and mild temperature with foggy skies dur ing the night. For North Caro lina 'the lows will hit from 44 to 25 degrees in the mountains and as high is 60 along the coast. UNC fraternities are claiming that the changing conditions are a product of an Interfraternity Council move to throw sunlight on spring rush activities now in progress. In the past three days students have been obliged to trade their winter longjohns for rain boots and finally for short-sleeved shirts. It isn't official spring doesn't begin until March 21 but it is rumored that a robin was heard singing yesterday in Chapel Hill. The rest of the country doesn't have it quite as good. Snow and freezing rain was reported yes terday to t he north and west and even south of us. It looks as if Jack Frost has turned his back oil i uapei mil ior hort sleeve shirts coupled with those "Wow. spring's here! M-Viiio hp mixes the rest oi me . . ... i country on the rocks. - is IT'S SPRING in Chapel Hill (a least for a few days), and a couple takes advantage of warm February weather to loaf on the grass. High temperatures here Monday produced numerous . smiles. (Photo by Jock Laatcrer)
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 9, 1965, edition 1
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