Sunday. November 10. 1963 Page 6 Subject: Peace Talks JLo Meet With THE DAILY TAR HEEL 5 lift J' ft ...... f ''ill ' '- ' ... ".,,.' -. ; , . . . - , ' J, 00mf ' nr. , ' ' PZS& 1 . rW; , . - j . , . . ' . : I -'f',- ;- . . - ; , ' , . i . . . -I if.y; '7- 4V ? I ; .. - i J - . i . ' . " .t":r , - -- - - - - 1 ,ri"" """" '''- a-tt iwniimii ! m m T"r w i n m - Wherein RAMSES Sought Flower Power . As Precipitation Escape DTH Staff P:oto By Tom Schnabel Mechanism Nixon KEY BISCAYNE. Fla. (UP I) - President-elect Richard M. Nixon said Saturday he would discuss with President Johnson and Secretary of State Dean Rusk Monday the role he might play in Vietnam peace negotiations between now and his inauguration. Nixon told newsmen that it was "possible" that an observer representing him would attend the peace talks now underway in Paris. But he said any decisions or announcemnt would have to wait until he conferred with Johnson and Rusk. The President-elect chatted briefly with reporters on the back lawn of the home owned by his longtime friend C.G. Bebe Reboze following a meeting with Henry Cabot Lodge, Nixon's vice presidential running mate in 1960 and now U.S. CHICAGO (UPI)-An Ambassador to West Germany, earthquake rocked the nation's President Johnson and Rusk was announced about an hour after Nixon had disclosed that he and his wife, Pat, had been invited by the Johnsons to have lunch at the White House at 1:30 p.m. EST Monday. Still earlier Nixon had disclosed that he would give his vice president, Spiro T. Agnew, an expanded role in the administration so thoroughly integrating the two top offices that they will share a common staff. Agnew will have an office in the White House, work through the While House staff and speak through the same White House spokesman. Nixon said. While leaving up in the air the question of whether he would fly to Paris or Saigon as he has offered to do Nixon categorically ruled out the possibility that he might travel to Europe on any trip not related to Vietnam. "1 would definitely not make any European trip between now and the Jan. 20th inauguration." he said. In answer to a question Nixon also said he had "responded by diplomatic communication" to President Thieu's invitation to visit South Vietnam. Nbcon said the substance of the reply was the same as the public statement he made after the invitation was extended-that he would not undertake such a mission unless President Johnson thought it would be m the interest of the negotiations. "111 have no further announcements until I have had a discussion with President Johnson on Monday and also the secretary of state," he said. Quake Rocks Chicago; amage Reporte No D d The Monday meeting with a in Emmker9 Thieu MM South's Proposal Of Two-Sided Peace Talks Considered SAIGON (UPI)-U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker conferred with President Nguyen Van Thieu Saturday on the South Vietnamese chief's proposal for peace talks with the Communitst. There was speculation abroad that Thieu was softening his position. The Bunker-Thieu meeting at the presidential palace, which lasted an hour, was the first announced conference between the two men since the bombing halt over North Vietnam began Nov. 1. "Of course, they discussed President Thieu's proposal," a Saigon government source said Saturday in referring to the plan put forth Friday for a two-sided conference at Paris involving South Vietnam on one side and North Vietnam on the other. Thieu's proposal said the United States would be subordinate to the South Vietnamese delegation on one side of the conference table and the Viet Cong's National Liberation Front secondary to the North Vietnamese on the other side. In announcing the bombing halt, President Johnson said a four-way conference was envisaged involving the South Vietnamese, the Americans, the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong. This led Thieu to the belief that the Viet Cong would h ave equal representation and prompted his refusal to send a team to Paris for the expanded talks which were to have started last Wednesday. Paris dispatches said South Vietnamese Ambassador Pham Dan Lam was returning to the French capital Sunday from urgent Saigon consultations, and diplomats speculated he might be carrying word of some siftening of Thieu's hard-line stance. Lam is Saigon's chief observer at the Paris talks and potential delegation leader should South Vietnam decide to participate in the expanded conference. A U'S. spokesman announced the Thieu-Bunker meeting in Saigon Saturday, but declined to give details. He said Bunker went to the meeting alone. On previous occasions, he has been accompanied by Deputy Ambassador Samuel Berger. The last previous announced meeting between Thieu and Bunker occurred Oct. 31 and lasted into the early morning hours of Nov. 1. That session, described by a Vietnamese source as "stormy," ended a few hours before Johnson announced the bombing halt. Thieu said at one point the bombing halt was a "unilateral" decision by the United States Johson's decision to call the bombing halt and enter full-seale peace talks with the Communists was seen by the Saigon government as motivated at least partially by domestic U.S. political considerations, and created a deepened sense of mistrust of the United States in the Thieu regime. midsection today, shaking metropolitan skyscrapers in Chicago as well as thousands of smaller buildings throughout a 14 state area. Reports of the quake, a natural rarity in the Midwest, came from Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Iowa, Tennessee, Kansas, Kentucky, Ohio, Wisconsin, West Virgini and Nebraska. Early reports indicated no major property damage or injuries, although the U.S. Weather Bureau in southern tudents Render Diverse Opinions On CU Series the seismographic recorder at St. Louis University. It was the strongest quake recorded at St. Louis since 1963 and the strongest in Chicago since 1948. At Charleston, 111., the tremor snapped a 12-inch water main. Police advised the city's 14,000 residents and 87,000 Eastern Illinois University students to boil the post office building their drinking water. Glassware was buancit-u m a Jefferson City, Mo., gift shop. Chimneys toppled at St. Louis, Mo., and New Harmony, Ind. Part of the roof of a day room caved in at the Anna, 111., State HospitaL Bricks were loosened in buildings on Courthouse Square at Marion, 111. The quake triggered a fire alarm system in a Southern Illinois University dormitory at Carbondale, 111. Illinois said there "was possibility of some injuries' that region. The Rev. Donald Roll, head of the seismograph department at Loyola University in Chicago, said a "rather large earthquake" was reported on his machine at 11:05 a.m. CST. He said the quake's origin was not known. The Cairo Weather Bureau said "U 1. l : l. i f The tremor stopped a Western Union clock at radio station WGAR in Cleaveland, Ohio, at 12:05 a.m. EST. It was so strong that it jammed 'ay Appoints Cunningham For Orientation Chairman fJ0W DELIVERlNGtvy (T ' iChicken, Barbeque.jJFj. ! i Seafood, -rISC- 1 , Hamburger SteakrVsSW Student Body President Ken Day announced Friday the appointment of Bruce Cunningham as Chairman of Orientation. Cunningham, a junior from Charlotte is a Dean's List student and has formerly served on the Student Government Communications Committee, the Orientation Reform Committee and was Assistant to the Chairman of the Orientation Commission. In his role as Chairman of Orientation, Cunningham will be responsible for all orientation activities for incoming students at the University. He will also work with Jay Schwartz, past chairman of the Orientation Commission in evaluating all aspect of the current program including the James " Residential College experiment last year. Day said of the Imported Pipes and Tobaccos appointment, "Bruce has expressed a great willingness to consider modifications and improvements of our orientation program as well as to conduct experimental programs as appear advisable in trying out new ideas." "His past experience gives him a firm grasp of what needs to be done and his willingness to change holds great promise for the increasing refinement of our orientation program." Cavs Stomp Heels- Charter flight to New York. Depart RDU Tues. Nov. 26 5 p.m. Depart NYC Sun. Dec. 1, 1:30 p.m. For reservations call ftr 6 p.m. Dan Daniel, 968-9053 or 968-9301. 67 OLDS 442. Vinyl top, all tstrt. 942-4121 or 942-6206. Handsome walking horse, suitable for show purposes. This gelding is wett-mannered, properly trained and schooled, spirited, and reasonably priced. Call 929-2737. M. SCHMIDT HEALTH FOODS. Hoffman's Hi-Protein, Vitamins, Minerals. Specialty Foods and Heealth Equipment. Isometric Kits, Barbells, etc. Write for further information or order from: M. SCHMIDT HEALTH FOODS, 5303 Raeford Rd., Fayetteville, N.C., 28304. Ph. 425-6130. For Sale: Honda Super Hawk 3Q0. Excellent condition, all accessories. Two Bell helmets included. $250 or best offer Call Watson at 968-9071. Pouches Humidors Accessories VARLEY'S 144 East Franklin St (Continued from page 1) Ciemson yesterday beat Maryland 16-0. UVa. UNC First downs 18 15 Yards rushing ..386 149 Passing 8-14-2 10-23-4 Yards passing 73 168 Punts 9-28.8 9-37.4 Yards Penalized . .51 30 Fumbles lost 0 2 UVa 14 7 14 6-41 UNC 0 0 0 6-6 Scoring: UVa. Anderson 15 yd. run (13:47 left 1st period); Carrington kick PAT. UVa. Quayle 10 yd run (1:42 left 1st qtr); Carrington TICKETS go on sale Tuesday for the Honor Students Association dinner to be held Saturday, Nov. 16 at 6 p.m. in the Carolina Inn ballroom. All honors students freshman, sophomore, and departmental are urged to attend. Tickets may be purchased for $3 in Dr. Patterson's office. For further information contact Sharon Hagie, 933-5132, or Linda Stuntz, 933-2754. kick PAT. UVa. Quayle 5 yd run (3:55 left 2nd qtr); Carrington kick PAT. UVa. Arnette 10 yd run (12:45 left 3rd qtr); Carrington kick PAT. UVa. Arnette pass to Anderson 5 yes (7:30 left 3rd qtr); Carrington kick PAT. UNC Lanier 15 yd run (13:15 left 4th qtr); PAT attempt (Lanier run) no good. UVa. Hey ward 1 yd run (2:30 left 4th qtr); Carrington miss PAT. Students at UNC will be voting Tuesday on representatives to the Honor Council as well as a referendum on Resident Hall Courts for the MRC and an opinion poll on academic calendar reform. The Voting for the Honor council seats is the only election being held as Class officers are not being offered this year by either party. ' The referendum seeks to establish MRC courts in the individual dorms on an experimental basis. Since the By-Laws of the Student Government Constitution have to be changed a vote is required. The experimental courts idea was proposed in legislature two weeks ago. The opposition to the bill centered mainly around the idea that justice in the courts would not be uniform if individual courts. Countering this argument were statements that offenses were not as major in some dorms as they would be in others. For example, one legislator pointed out that a shaving cream fight in James where the floors are concrete wouldn't be the same as one in Alexander where the floors are wooden. One other proposal which allowed the bill to pass was the suggestion that an Appeals Court for the individual courts could be set up. By precedent it could overturn decisions of the lower court and thus insure that no major breeches of the MRC Code will occur. The opinion poll concerning academic reform will also be conducting during the balloting on Tuesday. The poll seeks to find if students at UNC would rather have final exams for the fall semester before the Christmas Holidays and thus free students from worry over their upcoming exams. This poll is in no way binding upon those deciding upon reform but merely would express support or rejection of the idea. The balloting for each of these issues will be conducted Tuesday at the regular polling places throughout the campus. College Relations Director co Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008 O O o SOMETHING MEW! Hickory Smoked BEEF BARBEQUE SANDWICH SANDWICH PLATE Hot Seeded Bun Pickle & Chips With Glass of Draft Beer Au Gratin Potatoes Green Salad 95c $1.15 $1.50 Cosmopolitan Hood Lunch 11:30 'tH J-OO P.m. Supper 5 p.m. 'til 11:30 p.m. of the Ivy Room Restaurant 1004 W. Main a.-rParkina in Rear Tel. 682-9M3 Durham. N. C 1 Address I Reservations with the special low rate are confirmed in advance (based on availability) for Fri., Sat., Sun. nights, plus Thanks-. giving (Nov. 27-Dec. 1), Christmas (Dec. 15-Jan. 1) and July through Labor Day! Many Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns offer student rates during other periods subject to availability at time of check-in and may be requested. Please send me ! a Sheraton Student ! LD.soIcansaveup 'to 20 on Mieraton rooms. Name. i SheratonHotelsifcMotormnstsM I Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns. A Worldwide Service of m J Female photographic model wanted for portrait work. Part time. Experience helpful, but not necessary. Please call 968-8263 (4-9 p.m. preferred). GOO LUCI D SOCCER TEAM STUDIO CARD Hear Ye! SEND A STUDIO CARD Froi I ; You'll have to 1 1 Check your I? Y ' Feet . . . I r y - I I To Be Sure I V. You're I wearing II them l v - Y; Bates ) j I Floaters J I YHE HUB of Chapel Hill I jYOUR MENU : WEEK OF I NOV. 11 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK : Luncheon Specials $1.19 ; MONDAY Yankee Pot Roast : 2 Veg. Soup Salad Rolls I TUESDAY : 14 OBQ Chicken : 2 Veg. Soup Salad Rolls j WEDNESDAY : Hot Corn Beef on Pumpernickel Soup Salad THURSDAY : Beef Parmagiana w SPAGHETTI I Soup Salad S FRIDAY Italian Beef l On Bun Soup Salad : or : Fillet of Flounder l 2 Vegetables ; Soup Salad Bread NIGHT SPECIAL 7:30-9:00 Monday : Eye Round Steak : 2 Vegetables ; Salad Bread $1-29 ; or : Chopped Sirloin I wMushroom Sauce 2 Veg. Salad Bread Tuesday : Spaghetti : Salad Bread : ALL YOU CAN EAT j $1.29 Wednesday V2 Bar-B-Q Chicken : 2 Vegetables Salad Bread : $1.29 Thursday : Pizza Special : Plain or Pepperoni : Vi Price : 104 W. Franklin St CLIP ME OUT