tEfje tCotuer of Campus •Iljougfjt ant) Action Clje Bufe^CJjronttle Volume 61, Number 22 Duke University, Durham, N. C. Friday, December 3, 1965 MSGA, WSGA Unanimously IGC Passes Again By STEVE JOHNSON student governments and the vance of circulation of the post­ deans of Arts and Sciences. ers. Violating organizations will At Thursday night's meet­ be subject to a ten dollar fine. ing the Men's Student Govern­ WSGA Another regulation imposes a ment Association Senate gave The WSGA unanimously pass­ ten dollar fine on persons taking final approval to the charter for ed the Intergrovernmental Coun­ down posters before the con­ the Inter-Government Council cil charter Wednesday night at clusion of the event publicized. by a unanimous vote after little an open legislature meeting. These regulations will become discussion. Following a discussion initiated effective on January 1. The Council will have specific by Mary Earle '67 on the repre­ jurisdiction over academic sentational section of the Study Halls evaluation, inter-university stu­ charter, the legislature decided dent exchanges, the initiation of against attempting any change Rooms 225 and 227 in the an academic honor system, at this time in selecting the IGC Social Sciences Building will be The Duke Chronicle: King Self sponsorship of a major speaker members. open from now through exams 6 p.m. -7 a.m., according to VISTA RECRUITER Rex Ageton explained the purpose and program and "projects of con­ Further discussion centered MSGA Secretary Kent Zaiser opportunities for service in the program at the Forum yester­ cern to a majority of Duke un­ around the possibility of grad­ '67. day and answered questions concerning: the national and local dergraduates." Jurisdiction in uate students acting ex offiico aspects of Vista's work. He has been on campus this week talk­ other areas must be granted con­ members of IGC committees in In other business President ing to interested students. currently by the participating the event that they wished to Hight appointed Don Bellman have a voice in campus affairs. '66, Larry Norwood '67 and Bob The concensus was that the Sweeney '67 to the Publications Monday For Students graduate students, often from Board. other colleges, have no concep­ Newly elected Freshman tion of the University under­ Senator Charlie Smith attended graduate life as well as have his first meeting. He defeated Choir To Perform Messiah' Twice little time to be concerned with Steve Garavelli in a special run­ it. off election before Thanksgiving By JAMS JOHNSON at 8 p.m., the standing-room only ment of the "Hallelujah Chorus." 160-109. With an array of 150 voices performances directed by Prof. This acknowledgement comes Publicity Regulations and an accompanying twenty- Paul Young will be the 33rd from 1742 in Ireland, when King five piece symphonic orchestra, renewal of the local Christmas George II and the audience Culminating several weeks' Symposium Interviews the Chapel Choir and four guest program. rose spontaneously and stood discussion, the Senate passed a soloists will present Handel's Featured in Handel's great throughout the aria. Handel set of West Campus publicity Interviews for the 1966 Sym­ famed masterpiece, the ' 'Mes­ masterpiece are four renowned commented on completing his regulations. Under the first posium Committee will be held siah." Presented in the Chapel soloists: Mildred Allen (sopr­ great oratorio, "1 think I did see regulation no agency will be al­ Monday - Thursday from 7-10 Sunday at 4 p.m. and Monday ano), Inci Basarir (Contralto), Heaven before me — and the lowed to post publicity materials p.m. in 207A Flowers. All ris­ John Hanks (tenor), and Ter- great God himself!" "upon the grounds or outside the ing sophomores, juniors, or rence Hawkins (bass). With The "Messiah" is expected to buildings" at any time without seniors interested in a position credits for singing with the receive standing-room crowds specific permission granted by on the committee should sign Student Speeches Santa Fe, Washington, and New only. For this reason the Sunday the President of the MSGA on up for an interview on the bul­ York Metropolitan Operas, Miss afternoon program is chiefly for behalf of the Senate. Appeals letin Board in front of 202A Allen has also, appeared with out-of-town guests, while on must be made two weeks in ad­ Flowers. To Commemorate the New York Philharmonic Monday evening the University Orchestra and on numerous community is encouraged to at­ television programs and record tend. Founder's Day albums. Miss Basarir, perform- Professor Young explained the for the first time in the United great thrill of the singers in IFC Convicts ATO By JIM MCCULLOUGH States, is actually a lawyer from singing the "Messiah." "A sing­ Something new is planned for Turkey and considers her sing­ er, to perform honestly and un­ In its first major action of the Board decided that the frater­ this year's Founder's Day ing a "second profession." falteringly in this work must year the Interfraternity Council nity will be subject to a period observance December 11. Prin­ Mr. Hanks, a well-known absorb the spirit of the spiritual Judicial Board handed down two of closed relations December cipal addresses for the program recitalist in this area, has fre­ text to such an extent that his vedicts against Alpha Tau Omega 13-17. will be given by the presidents quently performed tenor arias own spirit blends into the music fraternity for violation of rush During this period, the frater­ of the MSGA and WSGA in from the "Messiah." Hawkins, as he sings. In this way, self is rules. nity members may have no con­ Page Auditorium at 11:45 a.m. with numerous radio and telev­ lost in something beyond one's The first case involved a fra­ tacts with freshmen other than Founder's Day commemorates ision credits, has appeared of­ own ego, and lets the true per­ ternity brother who pleaded casual greetings. the signing of the Duke Inden­ ten in oratorio and opera across sonality of the music come guilty to giving rides to three ATO is appealing the decisions ture by James B. Duke on the country. through in all its glorious emo­ freshman football players from to the IFC Council of Presidents. December 11, 1924. It was that Traditionally, the audience tion." UNC to the University on the document which provided the rises following the announce­ night of October 23. The frater­ funds necessary for the transition nity was fined $100 and given of Trinity College into Duke a letter of reprimaned. University. The second case involved two Nurses Dance The program will be preceded General Collins To Discuss violations of open relations on by a brief memorial service in campus. Steve Corey '67 was the Chapel. Dr. James T. Cle­ found guilty of talking to a land, Dean of the Chapel, will Military Affairs In Vietnam freshman inside a freshman dorm Marks Holiday conduct the service and will be and of talking to a freshman assisted by Dr. Howard C. Wilk­ By DAVE HARTGROVE fairs Committee, Jim Frenzel through a window of a freshman "Mistletoe and Holly" will inson, Chaplain to the Univer­ '67 said of General Collins, "We dorm. He turned himself in for decorate the ballroom at the sity. President Douglas M. The Academic Affairs Com­ are honored to have a man of the first offense. annual Hanes House Christmas Knight will serve as lector. mittee of the Men's Student his rank and standing come down In light of the attitude and dance to be held tonight at the Speaking of the plans for Government Association has an­ here to discuss Viet Nam." intent of these violations, the Blair House in Durham. Founder's Day activities, Dr. nounced that Major General The decorations for the dance Knight said: "Our students have William R. Collins of the United will reflect the colonial motif a significant voice in the affairs States Marine Corps will speak used throughout the building. of the University and it follows Monday night at 8 p.m. in Page Music will be by Billy and the from this that they be given op­ Auditorium on "Marine Corps || King Bees, a dance band from portunities to participate in Operations in the Republic of King, North Carolina. The dance events of major importance to Viet Nam." will last from 9-1 p.m. with the institution." General Collins will speak student nurses allowed special "It is important, too, that they only on military affairs in Viet 2 o'clock permissions. As this is have an appreciation for the Uni­ Nam, not on United States a University sponsored affair, versity's history. It is most ap­ diplomatic policy toward that freshmen will be allowed to propriate that we take an oc­ country. The program itself will double date with upperclassmen casional look in retrospect, to include films and slides of com­ in fraternities. see from whence we came, and bat in Viet Nam never before The traditional dance is spon­ to acknowledge the gifts made released for public consumption. sored by the Social-Public Rela­ possible by the University's There will be a question and tions Committee headed by founder." answer period following General Deane Kenworthy '67 of the "In so doing, we may renew Collins' speech, after which a Nursing Student Government the pledge made by those who reception Will be held in Flowers Association. Also a Hanes tradi­ accepted these gifts, to use them Lounge. tion is the midnight decorating as the donor intended— to up­ General Collins is currently the of the lobby by the senior class, lift mankind, to roll back the Assistant Chief of Staff at Marine who this year will return from frontiers of knowledge, to share Corps Headquarters in Washing­ their new home in the Annex man's experiences of the past ton, which makes him intimately to prepare the dorm. The Class with the generations of the fu­ familiar with Marine operations of 1967 is heading the Decora­ ture, and to exert a civilizing in­ Viet Nam. Until last summer, tions Committee, a tradition fluence on the world around us." Collins commanded the Third started their freshman year. Concluding the activities will Marine Division, which is now Cheryl Kingsley '64 now be the anual luncheon and busi­ deployed in Viet Nam as part of THE COURT from which the Hanes House Christmas Queen will working at Massachusetts Gen­ ness meeting of the Duke Uni­ the Third Marine Amphibious be chosen includes (from 1. to r. row 1) Marti Vose '66, Carol eral Hospital and last year's versity National Council sched­ Force. Heape '69,» Helen Wilson "67, (row 2) Pam McQueary '69, Linda Christmas Queen will crown her uled for 1 p.m. in the Union Speaking in his capacity as Murphy '68, Susie Suerkin '67, (row 3) Sandy Schinnerer '68 sucessor, elected by the student Ballroom. Chairman of the Academic Af­ and Anne Seahelm '66. body. Page Two THE DUKE CHRONICLE Friday, December 3, 1965 Harmon Joins Fashion Panel Opens Next Week For Being 'Best-Dressed' Grant Harmon '66 is officially the Players To Stage Tinian's Rainbow' best-dressed man on campus, accord­ By KATHY GOSNELL Branson stage. love with a labor union or­ ing to Esquire magazine. News Editor Cast ganizer. A Southern senator Fashion editor Chip Tolbert The cast includes Jack Park- tries to take land away from Finian's Rainbow comes to the hurst '66 as Finian, Karen Lun- a group of sharecroppers grow­ named Harmon after conferences campus next week through the dry '66 as Sharon, Jerry Jerni- ing tobacco and is turned into with six nominees. His decision was magic of the Du'ke Players. gan '68 as Woody, Frank Glass a Negro through a wish on the based on the candidates' articulate- Wednesday through Sunday, it '67 as Og the leprechaun, Ned pot of gold. Og the leprechaun ness as well as on general appearance will be presented in Branson Putzell '67 as Senator Rawkins is slowly turning mortal because and interest in fashions. After the Building at 8:15 p.m. with a and Mary Pickering '66 as he has lost his pot of gold and interviews, Tolbert declared that 2 p.m. matinee Saturday. Susan. finds that he is falling in love "the choice was much more difficult The play opens with Finian's with Finian's mute daughter here than at other universities." Classical Great arrival in America with a pot Susan. Sharon is tried for of gold stolen from a lepre­ witchcraft because her wish Harmon represents the University "A smash hit in 1947, it is now termed a 'classical great'," chaun, with the leprechaun in turned the senator black. How on a panel of ten undergraduate men according to Ned Putzell '67, hot pursuit. Finian attempts to does Og resolve all these diffi­ from throughout the country. The president of the Players. The promote a big business deal with culties? Well. . . College Advisory Board will meet musical comedy, written by the gold to make himself rich. Tickets are on sale in the in March in New York City to advise Burton Lane and E. Y. Harburg, His daughter Sharon falls in Branson box office for $1.50. the men's fashion industries. is directed by Dr. Michelak of The committee will hold press con­ the English department. Such ferences with a thousand fashion old favorites as "Old Devil Moon" and "How Are Things in manufacturers and complete ques­ Glocca Morra?" come to life un­ THE LOVERS, tionnaires. der the musical direction of John Sharon, played The August and September issues Hanks of the music department by Karen Lun- of Esquire are part of the Board's and the choreography of Eric dry '66, and schedule during their stay. The pro­ Baylin. Working with student Woody, play­ gram is the first of an annual series musicians and a chorus of sing­ ed by Jerry ers and dancers, Baylin and J e r n ig a n '68, for best-dressed undergraduates. Hanks have re-created Broad­ meet and break As one of the first winners, Har­ way musical numbers on the into song during mon will also receive a wardrobe. a scene from the Duke Players produ c 11 o n of 'Finian's Rain­ Frat Blood Drive Set bow.' By MARGARET DOUGLAS titude towards the drive he con­ Tuesday from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Dr. Feature Editor siders to be most prevelant. "Our Frank Bassett, an Orthopedic The Duke Chronicle: Jeff Goldfarb boys are all ready, willing, and Surgeon, has enlisted ten doctors To provide blood and blood able. We know we will have from Duke Hospital to aid in the derivatives to the servicemen in good records." actual withdrawal of blood. Viet Nam and to demonstrate Student nurses, will help the concern for those Americans Humanitarian Gesture drive, as will members of the BUSINESS SCHOOL APPLICANTS stationed abroad an all-frater­ Durham Red Cross. nity blood drive will be held The drive is a united effort on Any student interesaed in graduate education in busi­ the part of the fraternity system Korean Precedent Monday and Tuesday in the In­ not a competitive attempt, a ness, for either an M.B.A. or Ph.D. degree, is invited to door Stadium. "strictly nonpolitical, humani­ This is the first time that there meet with Dr. N. C. Allyn of the Stanford Graduate has been a Red Cross Blood- Goal Of 400 Pints tarian gesture." "We do not seek School of Business on December 8, 1965. Appointments either to applaud or decry Ad­ mobile visit to Durham since In an attempt to reach the 1954 during the Korean Con­ should be made through Miss Fannie Y. Mitchell. The ministration policy, but rather, flict and will hopefully be fol­ goal of 400 pints of blood, the to recognize the needs of the M.B.A. Program, in particular, is designed for majors sponsoring fraternities, Kappa men involved in the conflict," lowed by a future all-Campus Alpha and Sigma Alpha Epsilon, read a statement circulated on drive in the spring. in liberal arts and humanities, science, and engineering. have set a goal of 600 pledges. campus. And certainly those Men donating blood will spend A certain percentage of those needs are pressing as evidenced at most a half hour, only about pledged will be unable to do­by the rising casualty counts in 5 minutes of this being taken nate due to infection, mon­ the Vietnamese war. up for the actual donation. The onucleosis, hypertension and loss of one pint of blood will in hepatitis. At present 540 pledges A bloodmobile from Charlotte no Way adversely affect the have been received, with some will be at the Indoor Stadium donor, the precedure itself being fraternities having 100% sub­ Monday from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. and virtually painless. scription. Rate of pledging how­ ever is widely varied. Bob Fay GET THE '67, one of the co-chairmen of UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY West Coast Corporation recently reorganized that can with­ the drive, exemplified the at- stand rigid financial examation is offering on a no-franchise fee basis exclusive distributorships. This is a product in demand by every home owner and every business and is RABBIT currently being used by such national organizations as Sears Roebuck and Co., Holiday Inn Motels and various Drama By Anouilh branches of the armed forces. Product 100% guaranteed investment from $600 to $14,000. Investment guaranteed with 100% markup. Manufacturer has proven method of distribution advertising and merchandising. A factory rep­ HABIT Sees Joan Of Arc resentative will you in setting up your business. For complete details and descriptive literature write National Chem-Plastics Corp. 1550 Page Industrial Blvd., St. Louis, As Teen-Age Girl Missouri 63132 or call collect Robert T. Adams at Ha-6-7242. •fr it it Area Code 314. The Department of Romance Languages will present L'Alouette, a French play by Jean Anouilh, tonight at 8:15 WASH - DRY in Page Auditorium. A second performance will be given to­ morrow afternoon at 2:30 p.m. Mrs. Neal Dow of the Ro­ mance Languages Department, AND FOLD director of the production, says of the play, "This is a modern interpretation of the life of Joan of Arc, presented in flashback sequences. There is nothing different about Anouilh's inter­ Sheets Ironed FREE pretation, except for his making Joan a modern teen-age girl. In this way she is like any other In any language, the w / young girl working for a cause; •fr -& •& like a teenager risking her neck going's better when you fly. to walk in Selma." For one thing, flights operate on schedules to meet your The title role of Joan of Arc travel needa (which eliminates finding a ride, enduring long is played by Janet Gurkin '67. trips). For another, you enjoy complete Dry Cleaning She is supported by Charles comfort—modern F-27 Altmann '66, Mark Root '68, and prop-jets and 404 and Rick Pasotta '67, who play other Pacemakers fire radar- •—'% leading characters in the drama. equipped, air-conditioned - Pressing Other members of the cast in­ and pressurized. clude Bill Buck '67, Rodney So get going. Call Pitts '68, Andrea Starrett '67, Piedmont or your travel Dennis Bryan, James Mullen, Yvonne Bryan '69, Leslie Hard- agent for service that's man, Connie Jackson '68, John fast, convenient and Kopchick '68, John Adler '69, economical. JACK RABBIT LAUNDRY Hank Nauta '68, and Richard Hellmann '68. Both performances will be AND DRY CLEANERS presented free of charge to \ PIEDMONT members of the University com­ 1103 West Chapel Hill Street munity. AIRLINES Friday, December 3, 1965 THE DUKE CHRONICLE Page University To Conduct SAVE Traffic, Parking Survey 3c Per Gal On Gas Questionnaire week got route leaving the campus. Hi-Test 100 Plus "Oct." started today with the distribu­ Goals We Appreciate Your tion of the first of two survey The survey has both long forms that may have a signifi­ term and short term goals, ac­ Business cant effect on life in the Uni­ cording to Holland. The infor­ versity community. mation will first tell the Traffic Grading System Commission whether or not the Publix Oil Co. Yesterday and today the Aca­ parking spaces now available Morgan & Jones Sts. demic Affairs Committee passed are allocated most effectively. It out their questionnaire on the may provide the basis of a new sticker system where parking grading system. Revision of the WELCOME From grading system is one idea the privileges are determined by faculty is considering in order where one works, lives, or ANNAMARIA'S to improve the academic en­ studies, rather than solely by vironment here. Possibilities status in the University. PIZZA HOUSE students are being asked to con­ The Commission hopes the featuring pizzas, spaghetti sider over the weekend include survey will provide the basis for making accurate long term and meatballs, submarine 7-, 12-point and pass-fail sandwiches systems. projections of future parking and traffic needs and eliminate Open 11:00 a.m. to Traffic Survey the present guess method. Hol­ midnight. Monday through Next Wednesday undergradu­ land thinks the necessary solu­ Saturday. ates who have third period tion for handling future parking classes, along with graduate stu­ problems will be strategically FREE DELIVERY ON 3 dents and the entire faculty and located parking garages paid OR MORE PIZZAS staff will take part in a com­ for by user fees. prehensive traffic and parking survey for West Campus. Evidently as part of a new University policy of looking into problems before they become Personals acute crises Prof. Clyde Holland INSTANT is supervising the survey for the Traffic Commission. Fast sports cars and pretty Participants in the survey will girls (or vice-versa). MGC park­ be asked where they live, where ing lot. 1 p.m. Sunday. they work or study on campus, MILDNESS how they got here, where they had to park, where they would What good is being sorry? It's like to have parked, the type of too late for that now. yours with sticker on the car, and their Irma YELLO- We set out to ruin some ball bearings and BOLE, failed successfully

•• us

The Bell System has many small, automatic out to ruin some ball bearings telephone offices around the by smearing them with an country.The equipment in them icky guck called molybdenum

could operate unattended for disulfide (MoS2). ten years or so, but for a problem. Swock! This solid lubricant, used a certain No matter what you smoke you'll The many electric motors in those offices way, actually increased the life expectancy like Yello-Bole. The new formula, needed lubrication at least once a year. Heat of the ball bearings by a factor honey lining insures Instant Mild­ ness; protects the imported briar from the motors dried up the bearing oils, of ten! Now the motors can run bowl—so completely, it's guaran­ thus entailing costly annual maintenance. teed against burn out for life. Why for at least a decade without not change your smoking habits To stamp out this problem, many tests lubrication. the easy way — the Yello-Bole way. $2.50 to $6.95. were conducted at Bell Telephone We've learned from our Laboratories. Lubricant engi­ "failures." Our aim: investigate neer George H. Kitchen decided everything. to do a basic experiment that The only experiment that can would provide a motor with the really be said to "fail" is the worst possible conditions. He deliberately set one that is never tried.

Bell System (g\ Official pipes New York World's Fair Free Booklet tells how to smoke a pipe; American Telephone & Telegraph and Associated Companies shows shapes, write: YELLO-BOLE PIPES, INC., N.Y. 22, N.Y., Dept. 100. By the makers of KAYWOODtE Page Four THE DUKE CHRONICLE Friday, December 3, 1965

Slot Car Racing Letters To The Editor Skateboards—Frishbees (Continued from page 4) various student governments re­ ment within the rather unique ried Europe nearly to destruc­ Carolina Hobby Shop communications between the quire a co-ordinating body framework of this University. tion. It might be well to start Post Office Corner, Durham three student governments. The within the co-ordinate college Joe Schwab '67 with Europe as a going concern Constitution calls for regular system to aid in co-operation Guy Solie '67 in 1900, with an indication of meetings and for the election of and communication between the Kathy Murray '67 its major strengths and weak- an executive from within the colleges in considering prob­ Betsy Strawn '67 AUTHENTIC membership of the I.G.C. Each lems which concern the students Kent Zaiser '67 It might be well to note that UNIVERSITY campus will be represented on of the entire University. Under Kathy Irwin '67 every one of Dr. Parker's ex­ the I.G.C. by its President, Vice- the I.G.C. the issues of specific ams contains at least one ques­ STYLES president and Treasurer. Each interest to a given campus would tion which takes the form, "Re­ campus will be allowed to ap­ be handled within the appro­ A Question To Top peat the lecture on "In point or elect additional repre­ priate structure of the student Editor, the Chronicle: spite of the comprehensiveness sentatives to the I.G.C. on the government existing on that one From the final examination of of such questions, Dr. Parker's BILLS basis of enrollment of the three campus. This would leave the Dr. Parker's history 52 course course is eminently worthwhile, colleges (West will have three I.G.C. free to consider and act last year: since he is perhaps one of the MAILED additional representatives, East upon those major issues con­ 4. 90 minutes. Write the his­ best lecturers on campus. two, and Hanes one). And the fronting the entire University tory of Europe and the United A Defender of Duke Profs Constitution of the I.G.C. gives community. States from 1900 to 1945, bring­ P. S. It is possible to pass the this body powers to legislate ing in Asia where needed, in course. within prescribed areas of Uni­ We do not feel that removing rather strict chronological or­ OR versity concerns. the student government further der, driving all the countries STUDENT CHARGE from those it is designed to abreast at the same time, indi­ ACCOUNTS INVITED But meanwhile, back at the serve will provide a more ef­ cating general tendencies, and administration, the University fective, glorious or spiritual or­ illustrating the general theme Ropp To Speak Two Fine Stores was consolidating its position ganization. Such a plan would that in 1900 Europe was a go­ Downtown & Northgate behind the co-ordinate college only lead to the misrepresenta­ ing concern whose strengths Theodore Ropp will speak Shopping Center philosophy. This philosophy has tion of the students at a higher were dominant and whose on "Technology and History" yet to be denned and was, we level. We feel that I.G.C. em­ weaknesses were recessive, but in the final lecture of the feel, poorly handled as regards bodies all the benefits of uni­ with World War I the weak­ Modern History special series THE the consultation of student opin­ fication, while avoiding the com­ nesses became dominant, inter­ Tuesday at 4 p.m. in 111 ion. But the fact remains that acted with each other, and car­ Biological Sciences building. YOUNG MEN'S SHOP it is the University's preroga­ plexities of one student govern­ tive in this harsh world to de­ termine the direction it wishes to take for the future. But this does not mean that students, through the I.G.C, cannot take an active part in molding this general philosophy into a satis­ factory reality. And while the I.G.C was not originally planned to fit neatly into the ad­ ministrative system of the co­ ordinate college philosophy, we feel that it can work effectively within the rationale for the sys­ tem. Just as the deans, in their omniscient wisdom, require University staff under the Dean of Arts and Sciences, Dr. Lewis, to resolve problems which effect the entire University; so the

Give exciting gifts in the Red Gift Box

Smartest jacket Want to be a big hero! on campus— by London Fog Then look for big challenges!

Dashing look on campus or golf course. This smart jacket is com­ pletely wash & wear, Come to General Electric,where the young men are important men in exclusive Cali- bre Cloth that shrugs off rain and wind. Navy, Important responsibilities come to new "artificial gill" that lets mam­ H you are good, you'll be rewarded ivory, tan, olive, natural, you early at G.E. mals breathe under water. With money, of coarse. But with You could find yourself on the This is a worldwide company that responsibility, too. pewter or maize . . . team responsible for marketing a makes over 200,000 different prod­ The most important job you'll 17.95. new appliance. Or you could be in ucts, from jet engines and weather ever have is your first job. India, installing a nuclear power satellites to computers and color And the most important job plant Or in a laboratory, looking TV. In this kind of company, you interview you may ever have is with for applications for a remarkable have to be very good to get very far. the man from G.E.

vamSkaa^ni^ 7fogre$s Is OvrMost /mporfynf 7totver'

Northgate • Downtown GENERAL® ELECTRIC Page Six THE DUKE CHRONICLE Friday, December 3, 1965 By MARCUS Tis The Season If you happen to stumble in­ satire on the story of Christmas. for tewlve days, conducted a to the Chronicle office sometime As if things were not sufficiently purge of the Chronicle staff and and begin to read the curious muddled after its publication, the forbade the author of the story &^aa&cf'^^Sddom^ pieces of memorabilia on the editor was out of town from the to be published in any campus various bulletin boards, you will previous Sunday until the fol­ publication. It would be unfair DIAMOND RINGS sooner or later come upon an lowing Friday. not to point out that these ac­ item of interest headed "Free­ tions were effected with the fait dom of the Press: Part One." A slow rumbling, rapidly accompli of the Publications The heading is particularly ap­ gaining in intensity, was heard Board. However, it would be propriate in that "Part Two" has from the direction of Allen even more unfair not to point never followed. Not in the con­ Building. The slumbering mon­ out that the Pub Board acted ventional sense, at any rate. olith, in the persons of Dean with the gentle prodding of Al­ But as any story-teller worth Herring and President Edens, len Building. his Cliche First Class merit was galvanized into action, badge will advise you, "it is best meeting the threat of a free Sinclair Lewis once wrote a to begin at the beginning." On (if perhaps tasteless) press with novel "It Can't Happen Here" Wednesday, December 2, 1959, a characteristic incisiveness. Dean just to prove that it could. With curious article was published in Herring quickly analyzed the every tremor emanating from the Chronicle. It was headed situation and took the logical Allen Building one cannot help simply, "A Christmas Story" and and most reasonable course of but wonder whether a sequel en­ was an anti-Polish, generally action—he fired the editor, had titled "It Can't Happen Again" sacreligious and rather vulgar Chronicle publication suspended is due for a similar purpose. Model UN Schedules Cuban Expatriate To Speak Monday X SYMMETRY Major Pedro Diaz Lanz, for­ Delegation Interviews mer Commander-in-Chief of the Cuban Air Force under Fidel Interviews for the University universities of the South are Castro, will speak Monday at delegations to the Middle South expected to attend. They will 3:30 p.m. in 130 Psychology- Student Accounts Model United Nations to be represent nearly 100 countries. Sociology Building. Presented hosted by the University Febru­ Interviews will also be held by the University's Young ary 9-12 will be held next week. at the same time for the Uni­ Americans for Freedom, Major Welcomed. Women should sign up for versity's six delegates and pos­ Lanz will speak on "The Dream interviews on the door of the sibly six alternates to the Na­ and Tragedy of Cuba." Town Girls Room in Brown tional Model UN in New York Commander of the Cuban Air House and will be interviewed City in March. There may also Force before and shortly after WEAVER'S Jewelers 1 there Wednesday from 2 to 5 be possibilities for local student Castro came to power, Major p.m. and 7 to 10 pjn. and Thurs­ involvement in such positions Lanz and his family left Cuba 333 W. Main day from 2 to 5 p.m. Interested as parliamentarians, reporters, to arrive in Miami July 4, 1965. men will be interviewed during pages, hosts, etc. All positions He subsequently testified be­ the same times in 302 Flowers are open to graduate and under­ fore a Senate subcommittee con­ Building. They should sign up graduate men and women. cerning his experiences in Cuba. for interviews on the MSGA Bulletin Board. University students will make up the delegations of the USSR, Sweden, Jordan, Laos, Kenya, Chile and the Ivory Coast. This year approximately 400 dele­ gates from about 75 colleges and WDBS Receives $7000 Grant For AM Renovations For those inhabitants of West Campus who are wondering why men have been running wires through the dormitory ceilings, the reason is simple. WDBS, the campus radio station, is renovat­ ing its transmission system in order to give the University the best radio set-up of any college in the country. According to Jim Broughton '66, station manager, the Radio Council has appropriated money for renovations from a trust fund which has accumulated surpluses from station opera­ tions over the past 10 years. Ap­ propriations for the renovation of the AM transmission system total $7000, which will cover the cost of two new 50-watt transmitters on East and West Campuses, a 25-watt transmitter at Hanes House, and the in­ stallation of dormitory trans­ mission cable. The transmitters, which were built by Selectrocom, the build­ ers of the University's language labs, are expected to be in op­ eration by the start of next semester, with transmission be­ ginning on some parts of the campus next week. In addition to this work, the Radio Council has asked Presi­ dent Knight to appoint a com­ mittee to investigate the possi­ bilities for establishing a cam­ pus FM station, to be opera­ tional at the beginning of the fall semester. Dr. Blackburn of the Economies Department has been chosen to chair the com­ mittee. In other business, the Radio Council elected John Wicker­ sham '68 its sales manager for this year. Friday, December 3, 1965 THE DUKE CHRONICLE Page Seven Campus Announcements .ML The DUKE SPORTS CAR CANDLELIGHT CABARET to­ AMERICAN FIELD SERVICE CLUB will hold a gymkhana this morrow night after the Clemson are cordially invited to a din­ Sunday afternoon in the Men's game in the Union Ballroom. ner meeting at 5:30 p.m. Monday Graduate Center parking lot. * * * upstairs in the East Campus Registration opens at 10:30 a.m., Professor Russell Hope Rob­ Union. with timed runs beginning at 1 bins will speak to the ERASMUS * * * p.m. Trophies will be given. CLUB at 8 p.m. Monday in the The third ALL-CAMPUS * * * Green Room of the East Duke BRIDGE TOURNAMENT will Any town student who has Building on "The Early English be held tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. not received a STUDENT DI­ Christmas Carols." in The Ark. Sponsored by the HOPSACKING RECTORY may pick one up at * * * Student Union Duplicate Bridge the Information Desk in Flowers There will be a panel discus­ Club, the tournament offers Lounge. sion of COMMUNICATION IN master point awards and full- * * * THE UNIVERSITY tonight at 8 sized trophies for the winning PREFERRED The Student Union Special p.m. at 121 Andrews Drive. The fraternity and sorority pairs and Activities Committee will pre­ panel members are Bob Berson, independent men and women sent the film "THE SKIERS" at editor of the "Real World,". John pairs. The Law School Bridge IILIIIIIIIIIIILJII 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Page Audi­ Kernodle, chairman of the Duke Tournament will be held as a Forum, Professor Thomas Cord­ part of the All--Campus Tourna­ torium. The 90-minute winter le, and Karl Garrison. Trans­ For holiday festivities starting now and well nigh into sports film includes skiing tips ment. Spring, a suit of hopsacking Is highly favored fay those from the nation's top skiers. portation will be provided from * * * * * * the Chapel Steps at 7:45 p.m. The DUKE FORUM HOUSE of traditional persuasion. Such a suit is here depicted. The International House will * * * DEBATE scheduled for Tuesday May we invite you to inspect our entire selection? hold a JAPANESE AFTER­ There will be an Open House has been postponed until Decem­ NOON tomorrow at 3 p.m. The next Wednesday at 2 p.m. in the ber 14 at 8:15 p.m. in 208 Hopsacking Suits by Cricketeer program will include Japanese PHYSICAL THERAPY DE­ Flowers. music, dancing, and movies. PARTMENT of the Hospital. The From 59.50 * * * Open House will include a tour The Student Union will hold a and demonstrations* * *. The HENRY SCHUMAN THE YOUNG MEN'S SHOP Examination MUSIC PRIZE of $100 will be Downtown and Northgate Shopping Center awarded for the first time in May, 1966, to an undergraduate Schedule of the University for an original composition of chamber music or The official examination a distinguished paper in music schedule has been announced history or analysis. Details are for the fall semester 1965. Any available in Room 110A Asbury student wishing to petition for or Room 110 East Duke. relief from three examinations * * * within 24 hours or two exami­ Alpha Phi Omega, campus nations at the same time must service fraternity, will hold its report to his dean's office not annual LOST AND FOUND THE REVEREND DR. SAMUEL later than December 15, 1965, AUCTION Monday at 6 p.m. in L. GANDY, Dean of the School to request a change in schedule. 208 Flowers Building. Proceeds of Religion, Howard University, Wednesday, January 1&. 9-12, will go toward a special scholar­ will deliver the sermon at the TTS 3; 2-5, Chemistry 1; 7-10, ship. University Service of Worship, MWF 4. * * * Sunday at 11 a.m. His topic will Thursday, January 20: 9-12 All those interested in the be "Achieving a Living Faith." MWF 7; 2-5, English 1; 7-10 MWF 1. Friday, January 21: 9-12. MWF 6; 2-5, History 1, IX; 7-10, TT 7. EVERY Saturday, January 22: 9-12, All Language 1, Engr. 1.1-1.4; Sunday • Tuesday L What's the picture? 2. What do you see as far as 2-5, TT 6. girls are concerned? Monday, January 24: 9-12. I see before yon MWF 2; 2-5, Math 21, 41; 7-10 Wednesday • Thursday a career in "Operations I see you using the Math 11, 17, 22, 63. Research. techniques of simulation Tuesday, January 25: 9-12, EXCLUSIVE FOR and systems analysis TTS 1; 2-5, MWF 5; 7-10, Reli­ to solve on-going gion 1, IX. problems. Wednesday, January 26: 9-12, MWF 3; 2-5, Air Science and STUDENTS Naval Science; 7-10, Political Science 11, 11X, 61. 5:00 P.M.-TO-7.00 P.M. SPECIAL Thursday, January 27: 9-12, Zoology 1; 2-5, TTS 4; 7-10, Physics 1, 41. Friday, January 28: 9-12, 1. Whole Pizza Pie-12 inch French and Spanish 63, Engr. 1.5-1.7; 2-5, TTS 2. Plate Of Spaghetti Tossed Salad With Dressing Tea Or Coffee 3. See anything about 4. Nothing about stocks and $1.25 complete analysis? That's the field I bonds or high finance? planned on going into. I see a great future CAROLINA: I see you pioneering for you in Operations 2. Spaghetti With Meat Sauce in real time management Research at Equitable. Winter A Go-Go information configuration. Tossed Salad—Bread And Butter James Stacey Tea Or Coffee—$1.25 complete color

CENTER: 3. Baked Lasagna Tossed Salad With Dressing The Grand Tour Italian Bread & Butter Europe in Your Own Car Tea Or Coffee—$1.25 complete Feature Length color 4. Charocal Broiled Chopped 5. How about that! At Equitable 6. What does it reveal about money? NORTHGATE: Sirloin Steak they said they saw a great With Mushroom Sauce future for me with them in You crossing my palm Horum Scarum with silver. Side Dish Of Spaghetti Elvis Pressley The crystal ball Tossed Salad With Dressing reveals a great future color Italian Bread & Butter either way. RIALTO: Tea Or Coffee—$1.35 complete For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, or Festa Room & Charcoal Hearth write to Patrick Scollard, Manpower Development Division. Repulsion RESTAURANT The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States 605 WEST CBAFEL HILL ST., DOWNTOWN-DURHAM Home Office: 1285 Ave. of the America!. New Tbrfc, N. T. 10019 O Equitable 1965 A Gothic Horror Story AT HOLIDAT INN An Equal Opportunity Employer EXCELLENT BANQUET FACILITIES 1S-TO-250 Page Eight THE DUKE CHRONICLE Friday, December 3, 1965 Frosh Lose In Opener New Frosh Cage Coach Blue Devils Whip VPI,To m Carmody: Another Face Clemson Saturday By DICK MILLER varsity game was, obviously, re­ Blue Devil Coaching Gem At the Greensboro Coliseum markable team balance. Up for By JACK FLEET sity and head frosh coach at was a player coach for the Nor­ Wednesday night hot dog ven­ special commendations as dis­ Penn State under John Eli. At folk Naval Air Station basketball dors in the concourse on one playing better-than-counted-on With the selection las spring the same time, he acquired his team, in addition to acting as side of the arena exhausted their performances, however, must be of Bucky Waters as head basket­ master's degree in education. football line coach and assistant supply of rolls well before tip- Liccardo, Chapman, and Riedy. ball coach of West Virginia, During the summers of 1957 and Athletic Director. In 1959 Tom off time for the Duke-V.P.I. en­ Chapman's capable subbing for Chuck Daly moved up to assis­ 1958, Carmody took additional Carmody married Mary "Murph" counter and so closed up shop. Lewis will continue to be of tant varsity coach of the Blue courses at Penn State and play- Frances Ollis of Pittisburgh. On the other side of the court singular value, at least until the Devils. For three months head Uses Pressure Defense vendors were also not selling, big boy solves his foul prob­ coach Vic Bubas scouted the While at Bethel Park Carmody but because of a shortage of lems. Mike collected four per­ country's top high school bas­ used the same exciting, crowd wieners. Program hawkers sonals Wednesday. ketball mentors to fill the pleasing type of basketball that were sold-out twenty minutes Frosh Fight Back vacancy left by Daly's promo­ Duke now employs. His teams before the varsity game, despite The Blue Duke frosh, starting tion. In June, Bubas announced were noted for their fast breaks only a seventy per cent of ca­ Larry Dempsey (6-5) and the appointment of Thomas and their continuous pressure pacity crowd. On the court a Claudius Claiborne (6-2) in the Carmody as Duke's fourth fresh­ defensive tactics. Thus his stye Duke frosh squad better than front court, Steve Vandenberg man head coach in as many of coaching made him a natural the Virginia Tech aggregation (6-7) at center, and David years. for Duke. played sloppy first half ball and Golden (6-0) and Gene Brom- Top High School Mentor Before Coach Carmody ever never quite caught the junior stead (6-0) at the guard posts, The thirty-six year old Car­ came to Duke he had made an Gobblers, losing eighty-four to fell behind early on cold shoot­ mody hails from Western Penn­ important contribution to Blue eighty. In the main event the ing and rather anemic ­ sylvania, one of the nation's hot­ Devil basketball. He scouted Blue Devil varsity used the first ing. Tech, surprisingly big and beds of high school basketball Deny Ferguson, last year's cap­ eight minutes of their game to strong, led forty to twenty-seven activity. The affable graduate of tain, for Vic Bubas. In addition play out early-season jitters, at the half. The Blue Imps suc­ Slippery Rock State College to Ferguson and Marin, other and then rolled over supposedly cessfully adapted their 2-1-2 coached Bethel Park H. S. (a players from Carmody's district well-regarded V.P.I, with a zone defense to a full court press suburb nine miles south of Pitts­ Western Pennsylvania Inter- margin that was at times fully at the beginning of the second burgh) from 1956 to 1965, where scholastic Athletic League) are forty-five points. In the course stanza. With Vandenberg hit­ in his last five seasons he at­ ex-All-American and pro for­ of this shelling the opposing ting twenty points in that pe­ tained a record of 83 wins and ward Lee Sheffer (N. Carolina), teams were called an incredible riod, the Blues closed the gap 32 losses, winning his sectional Bobbie Bennett (N. Carolina), six times for goal tending. It but were left four points down title in 1960 and 1963 while and Bob Watson, captain of was that kind of night. at the end. coming in second in 1962, 1964, V.M.I. Early Substitution The next game for the Blue and 1965. atll In an interview with the Moving from a twent-seven to Devils will be tomorrow night Tom Carmody's first indirect Coach Tom Carmody Chronicle, Coach Carmody re­ twenty lead with ten minutes to against a tough Clemson squad contact with Duke was in the ed in the same basketball league lated his new challenge as the go in the first half, the Blue which features rugged Randy 1960 playoff where Farrell High against Chuck Daly who was also "dream of every high school Devils gunned for a sixty-one to Mahaffy. The game will be defeated his Bethel Park quintet studying at State. coach." With this year's fine crop thirty lead at intermission. First played in Duke Indoor Stadium One of the stalwarts of Farrell Coach Carmody has always of hardwood talent, Carmody's period statistics showed Duke and will begin at 8:00 p.m. A High was the promising soph­ been active in sports both as a first year at Duke should be an with twenty-six of thirty-six freshman preliminary starts at omore, . In 1965 player and a coach. At Slippery exciting one for all Blue Devil rebounds, twenty-two of forty 6:15. Carmody was the assistant var­ Rock, he played basketball and fans. good from the floor, and sev­ football. From 1951 to 1955 he enteen of nineteen from the charity stripe. These impressive Final intramural Grid Standings results were produced despite early and merciful substitutions W L T Pts | Freshman League by coach Vic Bubas. As ex­ F Pts pected, Jack Marin, Bob Riedy, Fraternity League B House I 7 Mike Lewis, Bob Verga, and 1. Law B 7 1 0 14 House O 6 Steve Vacendak opened for the 2. Lambda Chi Alpha 6 2 0 12 House N 4 2 10 Blues. At eleven minutes into 3. Sigma Nu 5 3 0 10 the first period Jim Liccardo House P 4 1 9 4. Pi Kappa Alpha ....5 3 0 10 House K 4 took Marin's place, to begin the 5. Beta Theta Pi 4 3 1 9 parade of fresh troops. Ron 0 8 Wendelin, Warren Chapman, 6. SAE 4 4 Independent League and Phil Allen also saw first- half action, and eventually the Fraternity League A 1. Bio-Chem 9 entire traveling squad got its 1. Phi Delta Theta ....5 0 4 14 2. Froestry 8 licks at Tech. The final buzzer 2. Phi Kappa Sigma 6 1 2 14 3. Lancaster 7 3. Sigma Chi 6 3 0 14 saw Dick Warren, Stu McKaig, 0 12 4. Mirecourt 6 0 12 Wendelin, Allen, and Bill Zim­ The victorious Phi Kappa Sigma football team poses after their 4. Pi Kappa Phi 5 3 1 11 mer on the floor for Duke. 25-0 victory over Bio-Chem in the championship final, (photo hy 5. ATO 4 3 2 10 5. Divinity 4 0 8 Of great prominence in . the Clifford Rose) 6. Law A 2 3 4 8 Buchanan 3 0 6 Beat Bio-Chem In Finals "ISN'T THERE ANYONE WHO KNOWS Phi Kaps Roll 25-0, [ WHAT CHRISTMAS IS ALL ABOUT?" HARLES M. SCHULZ'S Cnewest cartoon book, Win Grid Championship "A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS/'isihetrt- watming, truly delightful By JON WALLAS Chemistry department to win made even more effective by Christmas story, a perfect Led by the passing of sling­ the 1965 intramural football the excellent pass protection af­ gift for both youngsters shot-armed quarterback Eddie championship by a 25-0 margin forded by blocking back Trip and oldsters. 48 pages, Wyatt and clutch receiving by Friday, November 19. The Phi Sizemore and interior linemen fuli-color throughout. ends Stan "Stosh" Coble and Kaps scored the first time that Gordon Herbert, Tom Sherard, $2.50 at your b Kenny "Soybean" Miller, Phi they had the ball, and, after that, and Steve Hodges. Kappa Sigma defeated the grad­ there was no catching them. The Phi Kaps' fine defense was led by deep back Ray Klaus uate students from the Bio- Offensive Battle THE WORLD PUBLISHING COMPANY and lineman Jim Porto. A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IIMIS MlftftOH COMPANY Throughout the game John Cleveland, OHio 44102 The game v/as, despite the •1365 by tinned Feature Syndeaa, In:, AJI rightlmtivad . score, an offensive battle by both Teipel, Alan Cato, and Joe Cos­ teams. Bio-Chem drove well with tello stood out for the Bio- the ball but was repulsed by Chemistry men as did their fine the fine Phi Kap defense led by signal-caller Tom Parsons. * Beefeaters'Haven * Ray Klaus who had two inter­ Grads Were Undefeated ceptions for the winners. The grad students who were ham­ The Phi Kaps qualified for pered by the fact, as one of their the final game by defeating the Raleigh-Durham own members put it, that "fifty Phi Delts 6-0 in the playoff game Highway per cent of them were old and for their league title and by Ph. 787-3505 married," were led by quarter­ whipping Law B 12-0 in the back Tom Parsons whose passing semi-final playoff game. Bio- mBsmi was quite good in a losing Chem was undefeated until cause. the championship game, having However, it was the Phi Kap garnered ten straight victories offense that led the show. Miller including a 13-0 win over House and especially Coble were I in the semi-final playoff round. tremendous, grabbing every­ The championship game was a thing that quarterback Wyatt hard fought one, but good could put close to them. Both sportsmanship was displayed by these fine ends scored two touch­ both teams. Friday's action downs while Coble added an marks the end of the football extra point. Wyatt threw touch­ season, and the next intramural sport will be basketball. Below DEEDING TIMES: MONDAY Thru FRIDAY 5:30 P.M. - 11:30 P.AA. A Phi Kap receiver grabs one down passes of 30, 10, 2 and 12 SATURDAYS (During Football Season) 4:30 P.M. - llrM P.M. of quarterback Eddie Wyatt's yards plus the successful extra are the final standings by league SUNDAYS 5:30 P.M. - 10:00 P.M. tosses, (photo by Clifford Rose) point. The Phi Kap offense was for the season: