Tickets Ticket Sales for La Centre s',. ?"d the Gorman Lu boff Chou- will begin on Tues day. Printing difficulties have delayed the sales, which were to begin tomorrow. Concert The Netherlands Chamber Orchestra, internationally famed string ensemble, will present a concert tonight at 8 in Memorial Hall. The South's Largest College Newspaper Vol. 74, No. 47 CHAPEL HILL NORTH CAROLINA SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7. 1965 Founded February 23, 1893. .Final Gun Stoes Clemson NC o ins 9 mm mm W .L7-13 Tigers Growling As Contest Ends ED FREAKLEY Tn o . By ED FREAKLEY DTI I Staff Writer Whew! The Tar Heels grab bed the Tiger by the tail in ol' Kenan yesterday and man aged to hang on for a 17-13 squeaker. Most fans hate to see ball games end, but if that nerve racking exhibition had lasted a second longer it would have been sad, sad city all over again. It was Leo Durocher who said ball games are games of inches. It might be well to add that they are not only inches but also fractions of seconds. It looked like the Georgia game all over again there for awhile in the fourth quarter. With 4:55 left in the game Carolina punted and Clemson took the ball on their own 39. From their they took the ball 61 yards in four plays with quarterback Tom Ray taking it over to make the score 17-13. Frank Howard, Tiger coach, had hk troops go for two in hopes that they could come back and get a field goal, if not a touchdown, and win the contest. The attempt failed when Ray's pass was caught out of bounds by flanker Phil Rogers. Clemson lined up for the kickoff, and like Georgia did last week, they tried the on sides boot. Mad Scramble There was a made scramble for the ball and a huge pileup at the 50. The official signaled Carolina had the ball, but then a huge groan went up from the crowd as he reversed himself and said it belonged to the Tigers. But two plays later Bill Ed wards intercepted a pass, and it looked like the threat was over. But the Tar Heels couldn't move the ball and Edwards punted. With 1:40 left the Clemson team began a seem ingly unstoppable drive for the Carolina goal line. Di-Phi Will Armistead Maupin and Eric Van Loon will be the principal speakers at a Di-Phi senate debate on Student Govern ment's affiliation with the Na tional Student Association, Tuesday night at 7:30 on the third floor of New West. Maupin, Vice President of the Senior Class and former student legislator, is an out spoken foe of NSA affiliation and has frequently criticized that organization for its liberal stands. Van Loon is the Student Government's Coordinator for NSA and was a delegate to the 1965 NSA national congress History Of Gag Law Has Editor's Note From its passage in the closing min utes of the 1983 General As sembly, House Bill 1395, now better known as the speaker ban law, has been a searing issue whose controversy has spread beyond the limits of North Carolina. Last summer a special leg islative commission examined the implications of the law; Friday the panel made its re port to the governor, calling for amendment of the law. DTH Staff Writer Ernest Robl covered the speaker ban hearings for both the summer Tar Heel and The Daily Tar Heel. In the series beginning today, he looks back on the brief but turbulent history of H.B. 1395, and presents an analysis of some of its many aspects. First In A Series By ERNEST ROBL DTH Staff Writer "If I could do it all over again it would have been done differently . . . when the bill was presented, I honestly with tl" anything wronS These were the words of Rep. Phil Godwin used this summer in looking back on In 2 Dlavs thev mnvpH tn UNC's 10. With six century -long seconds left the Tiger quarterback faded back and fired to end Wayne Bell on the one foot line. Three Carolina men hit him at the instant he caught the ball and dropped him there. The Tiger tail had almost slipped away, but as Clemson lined up for the final try that beautiful horn sounded Taps. Frank Howard, who shook both of Jim Hickey's hands and patted him on the back after the game, summed it up the best. Pay Again "I tell you, when you see one like that, they ought to line the fans up again at the gate and make 'em pay again," he said. About half way through the first half the Tar Heels rigged up their first score. Clemson booted to the Carolina 33. Standing there was 175-pound little David Riggs. He watch ed the ball roll toward him and the thundering herd of Tiger linemen pouring in. Well, little David decided he wasn't getting anything done standing there so he scooped up the pigskin and waltzed 67 yards through 11 Tigers to score. The foot of Danny Talbott added the extra points and then earlyjn the second quart- Continued on Page 5) Sherry O'Donnell Attacks Appointment Of Secretary Student Body Secretary Sherry O'Donnell attacked last Tuesday's special session Student Legislature as a "dis gusting example of legistive irresponsibility" in a recent statement to the Daily Tar Heel. Miss O'Donnell attacked the Debate NSA this summer. Di-Phi President John Har rison said yesterday the Sen ate has sent out 1,800 cards advertising the event, and he expects a capacity crowd of partisans in the chambers Tuesday. NSA has been severely crit icized by national conservative organizations in recent years for its "ultra - liberalism" in national and international af fairs. Students narrowly defeated in a campus-wide referendum last fall a move to disaffiliate the University from NSA. House Bill 1395, which he co authored and introduced in the closing minutes of the 1963 General Assembly. Entitled "An Act To Regu late Visiting Speakers At State Supported Colleges And Uni versities," H.B. 1395, passed June 26, 1963, is now far bet ter known as the communist speaker ban or simply the gag law. And while Rep. Godwin -stated that he "couldn't see any thing wrong," there have been many individuals and organi zations which have found much wrong with the law. The law states in part that "No college or university which receives any state funds in support thereof, shall per mit any person to use the fa cilities of such college or uni versity for speaking purposes, who: "(A; Is a known member of the Communist Party; "(B) Is known to advocate the overthrow of the Consti tution of the United States or the state of North Carolina; "(C) Has pleaded the Fifth Amendment of the Constitu tion of the United States in refusing to answer any ques - tions with respect to commu h" tXW'ii'4 Iff':, r - f. . . . .... - V.-...,, - . Wji A3'"' CAROLINA FULLBACK yards around Clemson's passage without debate of a constitutional referendum bill which will alios students to de cide whether or not the office of student body secretary will be made an appointive posi tion. If students approve the amendment during the fall elections next Tuesday, the president of the student body will appoint all future secre taries. "The student body secretary literally has the only campus wide elected position that a coed can presently hold on this campus," she said. "She represents the only official voice of the coed to be heard in the Student Government ex ecutive offices. "By this one act, the legis lature has jeopardized the voice of one fourth of the stu dent body," Miss O'Donnell said. "This move will not affect me personally, but it will rele gate the coed to a position of holding a valueless title m btu- nist or subversive connec- committee, any judicial tribu tions, or activities, before any nal, or any executive or ad duly constituted legislative ministrative board of the Unit- v V J ' " SPEAKER BAN Study Commission Chairman David Britt shows some of the strain of the long hearing on North Carolina's controversial law. DTH Photo By Ernest Robl f " , t -- iH m ' 2 Tom Lampman picks up 12 right end early in the third dent Government." Miss O'Donnell criticized the legislature for not allowing her the opportunity to speak be fore the body Tuesday night. "I can only assume that this refusal was due to their gen eral closed - mindedness and willful disregard for their leg islative responsibility," she said. Miss O'Donnell rejected the argument for the amendment that the student body cannot be depended upon to select qualified coeds for the job. "After reviewing the officers of the past two years," she said, "I cannot accept this point of view." Miss O'Donnell predicted the student body will "rubber stamp" its approval of the amendment. She said it was inconsistant for legislature to recommend the appointment of a non-policy making officer such as the secretary and yet refuse to recommend the appointment of the student body treasurer, too. The Speaker Ban Controversy: Part One quarter. Tacklers are Arthur Craig, 42, and Wayne Page, 45. UNC won 17-13. DTH Photo By Ernest Robl. No One Has Blueprint For Viet Future Carv By TREVA MITCHELL Special To The DTH Stephen G. Cary told an au dience in Gerrard Hall Friday that in his three-month mission to Viet Nam he found no one who had a blueprint for the future. "Those with the blueprints are the farthest away," he said. Mr. Cary is the associate ex ecutive secretary of the Amer ican Friends Service Commit tee. He was in Viet Nam from mid - May until mid-August, during the period of intensifi cation of the war. He spoke at the invitation of the International Relations Committee of the YMCA. "Never in my life have I seen anything to compare with what is happening to the peo ple of Viet Nam," said Cary. He added that "One does not get the impression of a nation laid waste. This is a war against people." Been Brief 9 But Turbulent ed States or any state." Critics Of Law Foremost among the critics of the law have been the Con solidated University and the Southern Association of Col leges and Schools. This criti cism has been based on two major contentions: first, that the law usurps the adminis trative powers of the boards of trustees; and second that the law, as it stands, is ex tremely vague, and therefore almost impossible to apply. But the controversy center ing on the legislation has by no means been one-sided. Out spoken defenders of the law have appeared, headed by spokesmen for the Norfh Car olina Department of the Amer ican Legion and State Senator Tcm White, who termed the law "wholesome." However, had it not been for a telegram which arrived in Raleigh late last spring, the "Act To Regulate Visiting Speakers," might have re mained merely an issue to be debated pro and con but to be ignored when the time for action arrived. This telegram from the "There is tremendous pres sure trom abroad to have us believe that the war is gen erated from North Viet Nam," stated Cary. "The historic fact is that the resentment and bit ter disillusionment of the South Vietnamese eventually reach ed the point where rice paddy farmers took to the swamps with their weapons. The roots of the violence are in the south." In Cary's words, the U. S. went into Viet Nam "to forge another link in the defense chain we're building around the perimeter of China." He thinks that those who ob ject to the U. S. policy in Viet Nam should fully understand the situation, suggest an alter native, and "speak with all the vigor we can muster to try to change what is wrong." In closing his speech, he stated that there are positive forces at work, but "the odds against their success are less with every day that the war goes on." Commission on Colleges and Universities of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, signed by Dr. Emmet B. Fields, informed Governor Dan K. Moore that the speak er ban constituted a threat to the accreditation of affected institutions. This telegram having been duly considered by state officials, including the gover nor finally crystallized the entire nebulous issue, focusing on a single concrete and very imminent danger. Unable to put the issue off indefinitely, Governor Moore announced a short time later that he would ask the General Assembly, then in session, to create a special study com mission to come up with a recommendation on the future fate of H.B. 1395. Nine Members The act creating the com mission passed both houses and provided for a nine-member panel: Five members to be selected by the governor, two members by the lieuten ant governor and two mem bers by the speaker of the House of Representatives. Tom Ray Breaks Passing Records By PAT STITII DTH Sports Editor Clemson, a Warn that has built a legend around its run ning attack, passed North Car olina silly here in Kenan Stad um yesterday afternoon All for nothing. The Tiger's do-or-die last minute drive died on the North Carolina one yard line giving the Tar Heels a 17 13 victory. "We took on the ACC lead er and beat them and that's a pretty good day's work any where," Carolina Coach J i m Hickey said after the game. "It was a big one for us." And so it was. There were big moments for individuals on both sides. Dave Riggs' punt return, Jack Dav enport's pass interception, and Danny Talbott's broken field running all resulted in scores for North Carolina. But it was Tiger quarterback Tom Ray, a nobody in the art of throwing the football until yesterday, who stole the show and almost stole the game. It was Ray who broke four team and three ACC individu al records and it was Ray who had the 38,500 who came to witness Clemson's bid for an ACC championship and a bowl game standing on their heads as the Tiger's mounted a des peration drive in the closing seconds of the game. Clemson took over on the Carolina 31 with just 1:40 to go and on three occasions he came up with crucial fourth down calls two of them passes that kept the drive alive. At the UNC 19 he threw down the middle to left end Wayne Bell at the UNC one but Bell was met by three Car olina secondary men there and couldn't take the final step to victory. With the lock running and only four seconds to go, Clem son never had another real chance. Ray threw a despera-. tion standup pass to end Ed gar McGee on the right side in an effort to sop the clock but time ran out. All in all, Ray was involved in eight Clemson records and six ACC all-time marks. . He had 335 total yards gained (ACC record) which surpasses even Talbott's record perform ance against Georgia here last week. Danny had his worst day ever passing (seven for 21 with two interceptions), but he moved the North Carolina at tack and drew the praise of both Clemson Coach Frank Howard and Hickey after the game. He got off two fine runs, one midway in the second quarter in which he weaved through the Clemson secondary for 41 The commission, consisting of eight men and one woman, met for the first time July 14, and conducted two two-day sessions of hearings on the ban law Aug. 11-12 and Sept. 8-9. In opening the first day of hearings, Commission Chair man David Britt of Fairmont told the audience, "I doubt that this is going to be an entertainment program. It is goiiig to be a little bit tedious at times as we try to go into documents, as we try to ask people questions." And at times the hearings did become extremely tedious. In the end, the printed tran scripts of testimony and doc uments submitted for the rec ord amounted to well over a thousand pages And it was on the basis of this volume of testimony that the commission finally came to a decision, providing the basis for Fri day's recommendation. The group to which the fate of House Bill 1395 was entrust ed came from a varied back ground; it was composed of five lawy ers, one newswoman, one minister and two indus trialists. Five of the members served in the immediately STATISTICS First Downs 13 26 Yards Rushing 203 123 Passes 7-21 23-48 Passing Yardage 68 342 Total Yardage 271 463 Passes Inter. By 4 2 Punts . ... 8-40.9 7-37.1 Score bv quarters: UNC 7 3 0 717 Clemson 0 7 0 613 yards io the Clemson 12 and the otFTer a 35 yard dash for the winning score in the third period. UNC moved the ball to the three yard line after his first run, where Clemson threw Tal bott for a six yard loss as he tried to sweep his left end. Talbott kicked a 26 yard field goal to put his team out front 10-7 at that point and Clemson, which had tied the score at 7-7 just three minutes earlier, could never catch up. Talbott scored 11 points (a touchdown, a FG, and two PATs) yesterday to bring his season's total to 63, just nine short of the UNC season rec ord held jointly by Charlie Justice and Jimmy Ward. Carolina took the lead in the first period on a play by Riggs that can best be described in twin terms daring and smart. He took a punt from Don Barfield on the second dribble, sprinted by surprised Tigers on both sides of him, cut to his right into a pack of blue jersies and ran 67 yards for a touchdown. UNC's secondary was leaky, as it has been all season, but it came up with four pass in terceptions that changed the completion of the game. Gene Link picked off one on the UNC 20 and returned it 10 yards to stop a Tiger drive in the first quarter; Joe Fratan gelo got one on the Carolina 15 midway in the third quart er; Jack Davenport intercept ed on UNC 29 and returned it 51 yards to set up the winning touchdown and Bill Edwards grabbed one on the UNC 32 in the dyiflg minutes of the game. Clemson moved the ball well all afternoon but there w ere defensive standouts for North Carolina. End Jim Ma sino and linebacker Jay Malo bicky both were credited with seven individual tackles. Frank Howard could have had a tie. He elected to go for two after Clemson scored in the fourth quarter to close the gap to 17-13 and failed. Maybe it was because the Baron is just too romantic for his own good. It is Hoawrd who is credited with the quip that a tie ball game is like kissing your sister. concluded session of the Gen eral Assembly. Representative David Britt, who skillfully chaired the ses sions and kept the seemingly endless parade of witnesses flowing along smoothly, is considered the most likely prospect to fill the position of speaker of the house during the next General Assembly. He was appointed to the commission by Governor Moore, of whom he was a ma jor supporter in the 1964 gu bernatorial race. The Robeson County lawyer is considered a potential candidate for gov ernor in 1963. Britt was instrumental in helping the Moore administra tion push its court reform pro gram through the General As sembly last spring. During the proceedings of the study panel, Britt attempt ed to keep above what often amounted to bickering over fine points between a commis sion member and a witness; usually Britt supplied the rou tine questions asked of every witness, occasionally demand ing further clarification of an (Continued on Page 3)

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