Tom Wolfe!!! "New journalist" Tom Wolfe, author of "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test" and "The the Pump House Gang", will speak tonight in Volume 69, Number 53 Page Auditorium at 8 p.m. in an address sp onsored by the Duke Major Speakers Durham, North Carolina Committee. Tuesday, November 13, 1973 Wolfe, a native of Richmond, Va., earned chronicle a doctorate in American Studies from Yale before joining the staff of the New York Herald Tribune 11 years ago. While with the Tribune he wrote features for the paper's Beatty inquiry dropped, Sunday supplement, New York.

When New York became an independent weekly magazine, Wolfe left the Tribune and became a contributing editor of the magazine. aid probe to continue He has also published in Esquire and, more recently, Rolling Stone. By Dan Neuharth pursue an investigation of Beatty's undergraduate financial aid," it said. The first collection of his works, "The The three students who were attitudes, and are in disagreement Kevin Moore, one of the Kandy-Kolored Tangerine Flake Streamline directed by ASDU almost two whether to examine his competence students, and a sponsor of the Baby", was published in 1965, followed by months ago to investigate the policies as administrator. resolution, said yesterday it would be another collection, "The Pump House Gang", of the financial aid office and its Allegations fruitless to examine Beatty's attitudes and his first "nonfiction novel," "The Electric director, I. Croom Beatty IV, hare The resolution grew out of and past statements. Kool-Aid Acid Test", both published in 1968. moved in past weeks to partially allegations that Beatty said black "Because they are all over and abandon their directive. students would not be eligible to "Radical Chic and Mau-Mauing the Flak done with, I feel like it would be The resolution passed by ASDU work as teacher's aides at Rogers-Herr Catchers", Wolfe's contribution to the "race" chasing a rainbow," he said. Sept. 18 called for a probe of Beatty's Junior High school. genre (it dealt with conductor Leonard Moore said the students were racial attitudes and competence as "This incident displays only one unable to find confirmation of Bernstein's party for the Black Panthers and director of aid. The resolution of many such incidents for which Mr. Beatty's alleged statements about with social workers in San Francisco) was mentioned the possibility of an Beatty is known in regard to his teachers' aides. published in 1971. ASDU demand for resignation if dealing with minority groups," the The UFC committee is holding "The New'Journalism", an anthology of allegations against Beatty were resolution said. meetings to examine the new works by various "new Journalists," Norman confirmed. "We are obliged to pursue the financial aid policy document Mailer, Gay Talese, Joe McGinniss, and The students, who are members facts concerning Mr. Beatty's presented by the administration Hunter Thompson, came out this year. of the UFC committee on admissions financial aid policies and his which would, for the first time, and financial aid, hate decided not to competence as director of outline the specifics of the office's policies and operation. Attention Buildings to close at night Moore said he had shifted attention from the Beatty investigation to this document. "I've devoted more of my time Campus to conserve energy to working on the financial aid document itself," he said. "It's the By Fred Zipp University, pending a thorough to close some buildings" at night the administration and voice best way to prepare for the future." John Blackburn, chancellor review of thyreport and the to save electricity, to lower student concern about wasteful Steven Shore, another student of the University, said yesterday needs of the University by lighting levels in all buildings, and use of energy on campus." committee member, agreed there has that some buildings on campus Adams, Blackburn and Ebert. to turn off air-conditioning at Blackburn was able to offer been a shift of focus of attention to will eventually be closed at Alternatives night in those places where it is only one specific step that the the document, but saidd questions specific times each night in an Blackburn and Adams both not necessary. University would take to concerning Beatty's competence effort to conserve energy. emphasized the need to consider Commenting on t hese decrease its use of electricity. could still be brought up. Blackburn's statement came carefully all alternatives before possibilities, Blackburn said that "We will consider taking "We decided to forego a personal in connection with a report on reaching any final decision. "there are some specific actions action later in the week on investigation of Mr. Beatty," he said, "These things have a lot of we can take to conserve electrical cutting back on purely decorative "but looking at the policy necessarily See related stories on page 5 ramifications, and we want to energy." He emphasized, outside lighting, not having to do involves both the present approach the situation in a well however, that no action will be with safety considerations, administrator and the future of the measures Duke can take to limit thought-out way," Adams noted. taken without first consulting all possibly including the lights on its consumption of energy, Ebert declined to discuss the people who could possibly be the chapel," he said, prepared by Jim Adams, report at all, feeling that "as a affected by the decisions. University business, manager, and matter of protocol, I'm not at John Snider, speaker of the Harry Ebert, director of the liberty to release the chancellor's ASDU legislature, affirmed physical administration. information. Blackburn's statement, saying According to Adams, the The report was begun in that ASDU will "try to put report is an analysis of ways to mid-September and was together some sort of reduce energy consumption in presented to Charles Huestis, questionnaire to determine what each building the University runs. vice-president in charge of facilities can be closed without He described it as "a very business and finance, and inconveniencing students." comprehensive re port—a Blackburn last Wednesday, ASDU shopping list of what can be Adams said. Snider went on to say that done." Electricity he is considering "introducing No specific plan of action The major proposals in the legislation to give the ASDU has been proposed by the report, as Adams described it, are executive clearance to work with

While the University power plant expends excess energy to produce heat, the lights of Gross Chem continue to shine twenty-four hours a day. (Photos by Gary Reimer) Page Two The Chronicle Tuesday, November 1'3, 1973 SPECTRTJMt

The COLLEGE All students interested in All udents, REPUBLICAN CLUB will meet learning about and participating ed i suri: demonstrate their FOREIGN GRAPHIC ARTS Wednesday, Nov. 14 at 7 p.m. in in The POLITICAL SCIENCE internship with the NORTH University Professors will take LANGUAGE PROFICIENCY COMMITTEE will meet 124 Soc. Sci. State Senator Bob DEPARTMENT'S SUMMER CAROLINA GENERAL place at 8 p.m. on Nov. 15 in BY EXAMINATION in French, Tuesday, Nov. 13 at 7 p.m. in Somers, who ran against Sam I NT E RNSH1P PROGRAM in ASSEMBLY should contact the 103 Gross Chemistry. It will German, Latin, Italian, or 207 Flowers. All members Ervin for the U.S. Senate, in Washington, D.C. should attend Political Science Department or feature Barbara B. Spa please attend; new members 1968, will speak on "1974: The a meeting in 212 Perkins (old Walker Reagan at 688-1270. Schnorrenberg, a member of the cdrie: Raci All part of library, near Political History Department of the Dece ibe- 12. crested persons invited. Science Department Office) on University of North Carolina at examination must be complete..' DLS Films presents "I Love Wednesday, Nov. 14, at 5 p.m. Chapel Hill, who will speak on in the University Counselin, You, Alice B. Toklaa," with The Steering Committee of "Women in Higher Education". Center, 309 Flowers by Friday Peter Sellers. S p.m. Moot Court the Psychology Majors Union December graduation should November 16. A ticket oi Room. Admission charged. will have a meeting Wed., Nov. Volunteers needed for the come to 104 Allen Building and Anyone wanting to teach a 14 at 9 p.m. in the Purple Parlor HOLIDAY TREE LIGHTING admission indicating the timi CEREMONY to be held Nov. sign a diploma form if they have class, share a skill, start a co-op, and location of the examinatioi Table V< mcaise De la of Wilson House. Questions—call not already done so. film series, workshop, and share Jim Dietch, 4165. 28. Need people to serve hot will be sent to each registrant b: toujour,. chocolate and cookies, decorate learning-teaching please join us mail and MUST BI the tree and hand out programs. KOINONIA PARTNERS, a in the Durham Community PRESENTED for admission ti musicale. Mi 30 East PHOTO GRAPHERS-A Brief meeting at 7:15, Wed.. Learning Exchange, starting the examination. Campus Un South Balcony. most important meeting Wed., Nov. 14 in 210 Flowers or leave Georgia, will host one student spring 1974. Please call: Pat Nov. 14 at 7:30 p.m. 136 Soc. your name with one of the from January 6-9. If interested McNellis 688-5728. Jane Collins Any graduating student, Sci. will determine the fate of the Union Office. please leave your name in 102 6 8 2-497 7, or Bev Bickel graduate or undergraduate, who Organization" wiU be the topic next semester's Photo Group. Flowers. 684-4296. wishes to nominate someone to discussed at tonight's meeting of Everyone interested is welcome. be Baccalaureate preacher for the RACISM COMMITTEE, Dr. MIRIAM SALPETER, the University Commencement 7:30 in the Y office. A guest TRANSFER STUDENTS! Cornell University, will speak Service, to be held on May, speaker will be present, and aU DUKE PLAYERS: The There will be an important on: Studies on Acetylcholin- 197 interested aie welcome. Executive Council of D.P. meeting Thursday, Nov. 15, at 4 estrerase at Motor Endplates by that 7:30 p.m.. Wed., Nov. 14, Old cordially invites all members to P.m. in room 101 Union to EM Autoradiography on nomination to Box 2831, Dulu a party Sat., Nov. 17 at 8 p.m. discuss transfer student policy. Monday, Nov. 19, in room 147 Hospital, by Friday, Nov 16 There is a HOOF 'N' HORN Chem Building. Proceeds go to 1973. tech crew call this Tuesday and Hospital Ship Hope. in Branson Theatre. Wine, Please Attend. Medical Sciences I. Coffee and Wednesday night from women (and men) and sundry cookies 3:30 p.m. (Continued on page 9) 7:30-10:30 in the Chapel BEAUFORT SEMESTER work projects will be there for PHOTOGRAPHERS: Th, Basement. All interested please PEOPLE: There will be a party all who come, so dress Archive, Duke's literar, for all people going to Beaufort magazine, Is printing ar Published every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday for the SPRING SEMESTER on excellent high quality phuLc. and Friday of the University /ear except during iter est ed in helping Wednesday night at 9 p.m. in Attention Jewish Students: issue this winter. Put a portfolio University holidays and exam periods by the students of organize the Durham 114 Bio-Sci. Take a study break There will be a joint service with together , and submit it Duke University, Durham, N.C. Second class postage paid Community Learning Exchange, to meet the othter campus UNC at DUKE this Friday nite between Nov. 26 and 28. If you at Durham, N.C. Delivered by mail at $16.00 per year. to begin spring 1974, please escapees and much cider and at the Hillel room in Campus have any questions, call the Subscriptions, letters and other inquiries should be mailed come to 212 Flowers on goodies. Center. We want lots of people Archive office, or Thorn Price (x to Box 4696, Duke Station, Durham, N.C. 27706. Tuesday Nov. 13 at 4 p.m. so everyone [lease sign up by 6979) Mon., Wed., or Thurs. The INTERNATIONAL calling x2505 by Thursday from 7-9 pjn. LEAGUE FOR ANIMAL afternoon. Dinner is at 6:00 and A public lecture by Dr. PROTECTION (ILAP) will be services are at 7:15. Hafeei Malik, one of the holding its most important founders and first executive meeting to date at 7:30 p.m. LIMULUS meeting (scuba director of the American this Wednesday, Nov. 14,in 210 club) on Thursday, at 6:15 in Institute of Pakistan Studies, Flowers. Many exciting projects Zener for all members. Your will be sponsored by the will be discussed, and the attendance is expected. Program in Comparative Studies attendance of all members is Critically important. on Southern Asia on Tuesday, requested! Anyone interested in Poets who contributed to the Nov. 13, at 8 p.m. in Zener doing something about wildlife fall issue of the ARCHIVE!!! Auditorium. He will lecture on conservation is welcome, Your poems are in the Poetry "Islamic India before the by Martha J. DeWitt Mughal*," Ble in room 307 B Union Tower THE Daily Crossword THE U.S. CIVIL SERVICE if you would like to have them COMMISSION has announced back. Some are being retained ACROSS 26 Top 49 Dry 13 Eternally All seniors interested in the filing deadline for 1974 for spring issue consideration 1 Arrange sys­ 27 Seamen's 50 Smart 14 Pay one's - permanent employment with summer jobs with Federal and may not be there for your tematically nightmares 52 Hoar 21 Coolers the Federal Government: The agencies. Those who file by finding. Many thanks for qualifying exam will be given on November 23 will be tested contributing, do so again In the 9 Drugstore 29 West of Ida. 53 Island in 24 Bid campus on Nov. 13. Sign up between January 5 and 26; by spring, please. cowboy, for 30 Kind of the Seine 26 Lawyer, e.g. now in the Placement Office. December 28, between 54 — and be 28 Indian February 2 and 16; and by 15 Copies 31 Deer progeny counted attire: pi. January 25, between February M A JOR ATTRACTIONS: 2 3 and March 9, at locations IMPORTED 16 Come 33 Undermine 56 Order's 30 Bad-mouth There will be a meeting, Tuesday convenient to them. 17 Ghetto 35 Earth, e.g. partner 32 Sebaceous at 6:30 p.m. in room 139 Soc. AUTO feature 38 Hi-falutin' 57 Pep 18 Relatives flats 59 Shay, for 34 Its cap. is CROSBY/NASH. Please a nd. There will be a meeting ot PARTS INC. 19 Musical 39 Onion effect Wash. all those interested in bringing syllable 41 Sunday 61 English ivy 35 Erect There will be a scintillating DUPLICATE BRIDGE to Duke meeting of the NC PIRG University on Wednesday, Nov. A Major 20 Japanese service 62 Gluts 36 Whiter, as LOCAL BOARD on Tuesday, 14 at 7:30 p.m. in 201 Flowers. code 42 Camptown 63 Swapped teeth Nov. 13 at 4:30 p.m. in 212 All are welcome. 22 Fret: Scot. events 64 Most down- 37 Peruvian Flowers. All who dare are Distributor of 23 Outside: 43 Australian at-the-heel plantation invited to attend. DOWN JERRY F. HOUGH, pref. bird 40 "-horse!" Interviews for ASDU Professor of Political Science Foreign Car Parts 25 Docks 45 Red dye 1 Teehee 41 Down to 2 Fine earth BUSINESS MANAGER will be and author of "The Soviet Solution to Yesterday's Puzzle: held on Tuesday, Nov. 13, and Prefects," will lecture on "The Hillsborough Rd. 3 Growing in 44 Walks Wednesday, Nov. 14. All Middle East Crisis and East-West ABE QMS H A HMB A T E 5 affectedly Interested students are invited Detente," Wednesday, Nov. 14, 383-1519 4 Shoshonean to si*n up at the ASDU office 3:30 p.m., 226 Perkins Library. T 2.1 ,mF £ i ABA ~~ 1 *_ 46 Fermented for this paid position. Indian fodcer OAT Sin A ) HMi E 0 R A 5 Elia 47 Effiyes PROTPTRE CM N G E L iHllZH5!^!!^0^"1 E 6 Gobbled 48 Last TOMORROW !!Aliiill>llAi.£llll acquire I 7 Tautness OUTING CLUB: General TLOT?|DKTV E FI s E o 50 Concert SLOE|OTT_I_£A|OAKY 8 Williams the meeting Wednesday, Nov. 14, In s 5 s Gross Chem Auditorium at 8 11IIdif. I A * «. E mermaid 51 Swirl MONEY ASIOLAT|AKID|| pjn. Vice President Huestis will 9 — of time 54 Withered deliver a talk and slide show on REAH i|: EM5HI IIG 10 Single and the 1963 American Everest A R R ? TM V A LMT H 0 L 55 Spur Expedition. All are welcome. :: E a pair 58 Pike: Scot. I I E I °B' 1 A • ' 1 ? - 60 Son of OUTING CLUB: There will MONEY be I general meeting Wednesday, Nov. 14, in Gross Chem Auditorium at 8 p.m. Vie* President Huestace will 1 2 i 1 5 7 il B 10 11 12 13 14 deliver a talk and slide show on MONEY - the 1963 American Everest 15 Expedition. - Chronicle needs 17 a. If you're pregnant 19 l21 ^H :-- 23 H24 •• and scared, salespeople, ^•.:: 27 2a ^m ' .UH30 we can help. must have car. ••il 32 .H ' J4 35 36 37 JU There is an alternative to abortion. BIRTHCHOICE. 39 40 H 41 1 BIRTHCHOICE can help 42 4b yoi/ from the moment you Please Contact .mH''' think you're pregnant until 49 b\ •• - well after the birth of your Terry Rocap, b3 -.':• ^H child. We're here to give you n_, confidential help. Call us ad department. 57 today. SI u bj a, BIRTHCHOICE 684-6588 1 £42-3030 or

(Durham WX-3030 toll free) 286-7625 7-IOp.m.M-F Tuesday, November 13, 1973 The Chronicle Page Three U.S. considers treaty to guard Israeli lines

By Bernard Gwertzman not provoke the United carrying wide bipartisan (C) 1973 N. Y.T.News Service States into dropping its support that the existence PEKING—Secretary of support for Israel. of Israel will be supported State Henry A. Kissinger In an interview for by the United States. This said yesterday that the American television has been our policy in the United States was networks filmed re absence of any formal considering a mutual yesterday morning, arrangement and it has security treaty with Israel as Kissinger said that in any never been challenged no one possible way of peace agreement, Israel matter which administration guaran teeing Israel's would have to give up was in office." boundaries once a formal occupied territory and this He added that peace agreement was would pose "a very serious "whether this security achieved in the Middle East. problem" for Israel's guarantee should be At the same time, security. A security treaty expressed in some formal Kissinger said the Arab oil with th> United States document or in some other would serve as an incentive way I think we should wait S An Israeli Army tank repair unit makes themselves at home in the desert as the United State" will to Israel to conclude peace until the negotiations are Israel and Egypt prepare themselves for a possible prolonged cease-fire. (UPI probably continue for the agree men ts, Kissin completed, but it is one of photo) indefinite future but would indicated. the i de as that is under After a peace consideration." agreement is reached, "the The interview, Fistfiahts reported at Israeli border question of guarantees will conducted at the Chinese arise and we will have to government guest house then ask the question—what where he is staying during sort of guaran tees : his three-day visit which U.N. establishes checkpoints unilateral, several countries, ends Wednesday morning, and so forth Kissinger was devoted almost entirely said. to the Middle East. By Henry Tanner The informant said that Egypt had advised Fulbright suggestion Kissinger traveled in the (C) 1973 N. Y. T. News Service the Red Cross here late Sunday that she was Later, he was asked Middle East most of last CAIRO—Finnish troops of the United ready to start sending wounded prisoners of war about the suggestion made week and succeeded in Nations emergency force yesterday established by plane from Cairo to Tel Aviv this morning at by Sen. J. W. Fulbright, getting Israel and Egypt to two checkpoints on the Cairo-Suez road and held 10 ajn. Chairman of the Foreign agree on a formula for them in spite of a threat of attack by Israeli Gamasy was said to have been ready to make Relations Committee that resolving disputes which forces, highly placed sources reported. They said this offer to Yariv contingent on a similar the United States pressure arose over Oct. 22's I srael i n to a pe ace cease-fire. fistfights broke out between Finns and Israelis in movement of wounded Egyptian prisoners from agreement, by offering her the process. Tel Aviv to Cairo. Peace conference in return a mutual security There have been reports The Finnish soldiers, with fixed bayonets, But when the subject of convoys to Suez pact in which the United from Cairo that the formal reportedly acted suddenly at the two locations City was discussed, Yariv declared that food, States would be obliged to peace conference would after a meeting between Egyptian and Israeli water and medical supplies could not be brought come to Israel's support in begin in Geneva on Dec. 10, generals, in the presence of the U.N. truce-force into the city but had to be unloaded on the case of war. Kissinger said but American officials said leader Gen. Ensio Siilasvuo, broke up in outskirts where they would be checked by Israeli about this suggestion: yesterday that while the disagreement. troops. Yariv also wanted to limit the number of "It has been a constant Swiss city might turn out to The informants said shortly before midnight convoys, according to the source. American policy supported be the place for the talks, that the Finnish troops were continuing to hold (Continued on page 4) in every administration and (Continued on page 8) both checkpoints, contrary to an Israeli military communique from Tel Aviv that one of them had been dismantled. One checkpoint was surrounded by a large force of Israeli armored vehicles, the Nixon to provide own notes sources said. The sources added that Gen. Homammed Abdel Chany El-Gamasy, who signed the cease-fire agreement for Egypt, came to in lieu of nonexistent tapes yesterday's meeting with a second list of about 300 Israeli prisoners of war. He reportedly By Warren Weaver, Jr. campaign manager, on June 20, 1972, and stored in the White House vault showed the list to Siilasvuo and was ready to (C> 1973 N. Y. T. News Service three days after the burglary of until they are deli vered to Judge Democratic National Headquarters in hand it over to Gen. Aharon Yariv, the Israeli WASHINGTON-President Nixon Sirica for his screening. the Watergate complex here. representative, but decided against doing so when offered yesterday to furnish federal —The White House will submit to district judge John J. Sirica with Nixon also volunteered to Yariv raised conditions concerning nonmilitary he court by Nov. 20 an analysis and background information on two provide a second dictation belt index of all the subpoenaed material, supplies to the city of Suez that were conversations sought by Watergate dealing with two conversations with together with the actual tapes. On unacceptable to Egypt. investigators that the secret White Dean on March 21, along with, the Nov. 30, the prosecutors and White House recording system had failed to House lawyers will hold a closed record. conference with the judge to discuss The President's action came as claims of privilege by the President. Judge Sirica brought to a close, National defense Real World except for- the testimony of one Under the decision of the United (C) 1973 NYT News Service witness, his fact-finding hearings on States Court of Appeals for the JERUSALEM—Israeli sources said that unless the the missing conversations. The judge District of Columbia, the President question of control of the strategic Cairo-Suez road announced an agreement between the may decline to submit any material was resolved and war prisoners promptly returned White House and the special on the tapes that relates to "national Israel would have to reconsider the entire cease-fire Watergate prosecutors to speed defense or foreign relations" and the agreement with Egypt, including her pledge to permit evidence from the tapes to the grand Watergate prosecutors can "inspect the continuing resupply of the Egyptian HI Corps. jury. the claim and showing" and challenge Nixon reported in a statement it in a closed proceeding before the WASHINGTON-The Republican Party that he would provide the judge with judge. established what it hoped would be a policy voice his own handwritten notes taken Thereafter, Sirica will decide independent of President Nixon just as the White during an April 15 meeting with John whether any of the material is House said it was beginning to win the W. Dean, III, then his counsel. The privileged and should be withheld Richard Nixon (UPI photo) counter-offensive against its Watergate critics. In its conference went unrecorded, from the grand jury. He will transmit first resolution, the committee "welcomed" Nixon's according to the White House, when actual tape recordings of those to the jurors, after consulting the pledges of full disclosure about Watergate, but tape on the recorder ran out. meetings. The President said he was prosecution force if he wishes, all committee members said that the President remains As recently as a week ago, the taking these steps to dispel any public portions that appear to provide in grave political trouble, that pledges alone are not White House had promised to provide doubt about White House relevant evidence for their sufficient for his recovery, and that the party must a dictation belt recording of the cooperation with the investigation. investigation. reassert its separate identity before the 1974 President's summary of the April 15 The agreement announced by congressional elections. Because the hearings were not meeting, in lieu of the gap in the tape, Sirica will involve these steps: technically concluded—Alexander but officials admitted yesterday that -A joint panel of technical Butterfield," a former White House WASHINGTON-New York's death penalty the dictation belt was also missing. experts will examine the subpoenaed aide, is abroad and will not testify Dictation belt statute was permanently voided when the United tapes and all other material submitted untn late this week-Sirica did not States Supreme Court refused to set aside last June's The President said he would by the White House in search of "any announce any rulings based on the ruling by the New York Court of Appeals that the make available a dictation belt evidence of tampering or alterations fact-finding session or any personal state law was unconstitutional. containing his recollection of the of the tape recordings." conclusions. second missing conversation, a -All the tapes and other material u seemed clear from his telephone call to John N. Mitchell, his will be copied, and the original sealed (Continued on page 9) Page Four The Chronicle Tuesday, November 13, 1973 -Financial aid probe- (Continued from page 1) Curt Martin, ASDU Martin also said a probe said yesterday they saw no "At this point I have no president, disagreed with of Beatty's attitudes should conflict between the real questions about Mr. the committee members, not be abandoned. resolution directing the Beatty's competence," he and said he did not think Beatty investigation and their said, but added: "I haven't the questions raised in the "It has been alleged subsequent decision to look really looked into it." resolution have been that, among other things, primarily at policies rather Shore said a section of abandoned. Mr. Beatty's a racist. If than Beatty as director. the document that has not "It becomes very clear there's evidence pointing "Right now Beatty is yet been examined by the that we were not going to towards this, and that it being molded into a person committee deals with the be able to get anywhere on might be affecting jis job, that will someday make a qualifications and ability of Beatty's alleged statement," then I think a serious look de cent fin an ci al aid a financial aid director. he said. at the situation is director," said Moore. When this section is But Martin said that an warren ted." Moore said Duke examined, questions of examination of Beatty's But Martin warned: "I President Terry Sanford Beatty's competence would competence would be think we should be very "put him in that job and probably come up, he said. "appropriate" for the careful about an attitudinal he's going to stay in there The third student committee to consider. investigation; it might be until Sanford gets him out." member of the committee, He added that looked on as a witch "Beatty may be bad, Nancy F e rree , was competence is a difficult hunting." but we could end up with unavailable for comment quality to measure in any Martin, who said he has somebody worse," he said. yesterday. administrator. been meeting often with the Shore students, said the Shore, however, did not resolution's directives rule out the possibility that Secretary of State Henry Kissinger suggested "haven't been abandoned, the studen ts or full yesterday in Peking that a mutual security treaty •Fistfights- but the way in which they committee might consider with Israel may be concluded if necessary to are going to be done has not the possiblity of asking safeguard the Mideast peace settlement. (UPI been finalized." Beatty's resignation as (Continued from page 3) At the Sept. 18 ASDU director if any grounds for. photo) The Egyptian negotiator then was said to meeting in which the such a c tion were found have declared that the Israeli conditions regarding resolution was passed, during the consideration of Moore said the most the financial aid document. convoys were unacceptable and had to be important issue was not Shore said he felt changed if Egypt was to agree to an immediate Beatty's alleged statement questions about Beatty's exchange of prisoners. but his " record" of competence "will come Yariv consulted with Moshe Dayan, the " in se nsitivi ties" to black out" during the normal I sraeli Defense Minister, during the meeting student needs. business of the committee. according to the sources, but did not change the 'Iced over' Israeli negotiating stance as a result. Two weeks later Moore tty is a voting Yesterday's meeting, like Sunday's signing of and Shore reported to the member of the committee. the American sponsored six-point cease-fire islature that a probe of An additional reason the agreement, took place at kilometer 101 on the Beatty's statement and students dropped an attitudes was "iced over," Cairo-Suez road. This point, 60 miles from Cairo, investigation of Beatty's and said they were going to statements and attitudes, is the site of the first Israeli roadblock cutting off shift the emphasis of the said Moore, is that it would Suez City. investigation to financial aid be a conflict of interest for Immediately after the meeting, two platoons policies. the committee to investigate of Finnish soldiers set up a UJST. checkpoint. Both Moore and Shore one of its members. A similar operation was carried on the highway five miles further east, at kilometer 109, the Israeli roadblock outside Suez. According to informed sources, the Finnish Communications officer commanding the operation at kilometer 109 reported that at 5 p.m. an Israeli force How well can you COMMUNICATE? invaded the U.N. checkpoint there and threatened Have you ever considered a career in to open fire in the Finnish soldiers were not journalism, library services, advertising, or withdrawn. broadcasting?Come to the panel discussion on CAREERS IN COMMUNICATIONS and It was then that fistfights and heavy scuffling talk to the experts. Wednesday, Nov. 14, 3:30 occurred between the Finns and the Israeli p.m., East Duke parlor. Cokes and cookies, soldiers. too. Sponsored by Office of Career The Finnish commander called in some 50 or Development. 60 Finnish soldiers as reinforcement from a U.N. encampment a short distance away and made it clear that they would defend the checkpoint against any attack. Ecological Econ

Dr. Herman Koenig, chairman, department of electrical engineering, Michigan State University, will speak on "Toward an Economics of Ecologial Compatability" in Gross Chem Auditorium at 1:45 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 13.

Looking for a Place fo Shop lafe at Night? Well . . . We Stay Open 'til 12:00 Midnight We have groceries, very extensive wine selection, beer, weekly beer specials, almost everything. SAM'S QUIK SHOP Erwin Rd., next to Gyro Car Wash & the Bluelight Restaurant Tuesday, November 13, 1973 The Chronicle Page Five Energy crisis necessitates change Gas rationing possible

By Robert A. Wright not sure we can get pointed up yesterday in : (C) 1973 N. V.T.News Service back to doubling our an A.P.I, report showing HOUSTON- use of energy each 10 to that imports of crude Gasoline rationing may 12 years as we have oil and petroleum begin as early as the done." products climbed 31.4 first of the year, the Regarding the per cent from the 1972 President's adviser on possible impact of the level in the first 10 energy policy said here energy shortage on the months of this year. At yesterday. economy, Love said that rate, imports John A. Love, that the administration accounted for 35.5 per director of the White was concentrating first cent of the nation's House energy policy on conservation daily consumption of o f f ice , said that measures, both 17.1 million barrels. rationing probably voluntary and Frank N. Ikard, would be instituted mandatory, to curtail or p r esident of the j before any increase in eliminate some uses of institute, told the j gasoline tax designed to energy such as excess meeting that the current j dampen demand. driving, ornamental fuel supply problem | At a news lighting and the hours stemmed from the conference prior to of businesses. failure of the nation to speaking to the annual "But," he added, heed the warnings of meeting of the "you have to recognize the petroleum industry American Petroleum the potential impact on dating back to 1954 Institute, Love said that industry. If the short when the government the immediate need in fall should be upwards imposed price „ , .... the energy crisis was to from 15 per cent (of Such increase supplies of regulations on natural driving pleasures may be curtailed upon the institution of gas rationing, estimated demand) gas. (photo by Steve Huffman) heating oil for then, obviously, it is residential use, but that going to have an impact the first of the year on the economy." seemed "a pretty good time" to start gasoline In answer to a House okays Alaska pipeline, rationing. L ove question, Love said that mentioned the based on current reports possibility of gasoline of foreign crude oil reaching $1.20 a gallon reaching as hight as $12 considers proposed energy bill at the retail pump. a barrel—triple the domestic price—and By Edward CowaCowan The Senate is scheduled to take up the Discussing the price pass-thro ugh (C(0197) 1973 NYT News Servicseirieec pipelinpipelinee bilbilll todaytoday,, anandd iiss fullfullyy expecteexpectedd ttoo sensendd longer term outlook, provisions for WASHINGTON-TwWASHINGTON—Two maiomajorr bills to deadeall it on to President Nixon, with the nonenergy Love indicated that it is import eres—gasoline with the energy shortage cleared important provisions. unlikely over the next could rise in price to hurdles in Congress yesterday. In addition to the widening authority tor the two decades that $1.20 a gallon. The House approved and sent to the Senate trade commission to go to court, the bill would Americans can resume the Alaska pipeline bill. And the House left intact let the commission and other regulatory agencies A.P.I. report to require corporations to file economic reports their traditional The energy crisis controversial nonenergy provisions opposed by consumption of power. business that would strengthen the powers of the without the prior approval of the Office of was the primary topic Management and Budget. The immediate effect Oil alternatives of discussion of the Federal Trade Commission to combat misleading advertising and anti-competitive practices. would be to enable the trade commission to go Love said that even American Petroleum forward with its plan to elicit from big, with gasoline rationing, Institute meeting, where The Senate Interior Committed, working for multi-industry corporations—such as Gulf & other conservation and some 2,00 0 oil six hours in an overheated hearing room, Western, Textron, General Electric and efforts to increase executives are gathered. approved, with administration support, a one-year others—sales and profits figures for individual production of The dependency of the emergency energy bill. It would give the President lines of business. alternatives to oil, "in United States on foreign a variety of powers to curb energy consumption, the middle term I am sources of oil was The nonenergy provisions have been opposed including_consumer rationing. by Roy L. Ash, director of the Office of Management and Budget, but the pipeline bill as reported by a House-Senate conference has been supported by the interior, state and treasury departments. Nixon repeatedly urged Congress to promptly authorize the construction of a Trans-Alaska pipeline from the North Slope to the warm-water port of Valdez. From there crude oil would be moved by tankers to Puget Sound and California refineries. Rep. John Melcher, D-Mont., who mans the pipeline bill on the floor, expressed confidence that despite the nonenergy provisions Nixon would approve the bill. A veto that was not overriden, Melcher said, would cause the months-long legislative process to start all over again. Opposition Some of the representatives who had opposed the Alaska pipeline route when the House first approved it in August voted yesterday against the motion of Rep. Sam Steiger, R-Ariz., to send the bill back to conference with instructions to delete the nonenergy provisions. The motion was defeated, 213 to 162. The House then approved the bill, 361 to 14. On the first vote, 42 Democrats and 120 Republicans Source: U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, Sept. 30. 1973favore d recommital and 158 Democrats and 55 Republicans opposed it. A large-scale use of nuclear power couid ease the shortage of energy. This nuclear power system is Because construction of the Alaska pipeline expected to deliver 20 percent of the country's electrical power in the early 1980's. Although it takes would take at least three years, the legislation about nine years to build a nuclear plant now, the Atomic Energy Commission is studying how to cut cannot help the country in the present energy four years off the time required. (NYT photo) shortage. the chronicle Power to.,. thi e c hronicie staff Celia Berdes Managing Editor Bill Serletis Now that the conservation of extend such exploration and revert Steve Dryden, aits editor John Craiiford Beat Reporters energy has joined the ever-expanding to coal, where, they say. there is Eloise Smith Steve Fletcher list of patriotic acts, Duke students enough fuel for the next 2500 years Associate Managing Fred Klein are going to be barraged with a at current rates of consumption. Dan Neuharth David Arneke multitude of austerity measures of But then a whole new series of Lucy Heffner John Quinn local, state, and national origin. problems arise in environmental Brett Steenbarger Since the substantial reduction of oil quality, with air pollution and Ricky Vinegar flow to the U.S. from Arab states, strip-mining heading the list. Union Terry Rocap, ad manager Daily Assignment administration officials have been leaders and mine owners agree, Reporters Night Editors Composition Staff John Boddie suggesting an array of such measures, furthermore, that such a drastic Delia Adkins Steve Dryden ranging from 50 m.p.h. maximum switch would lead to coal demands Peggy Berol Debbie Eichner Randy Bow en Jeanie Faulkner speed limits to 68 degree home and that could not be met under present Dan Caldwell Tom Keyserling office temperatures to the dimming conditions. Chris Colford Larry Toppman Adele Payne David Deckelbaum of Christmas trees. And with Nor do any of the exploration Bub Dozler Photography Staff campus-wide changes in the offing, it and austerity programs solve the Andy Feeney Bill Baxter John Feinstein Steve Huffman, photo editor looks like students must brace energy crisis—they merely postpone Joe Frankel themselves for the inevitable. it. Given a limited quantity of Janet Guy on Paul Hon ie berg Jim Wilson According to Administration resources, fuel is bound to deplete Contributing Editors reports, the Arab action will cut U.S. itself eventually, making the search Bruce Siceloff Sean McManus Sports Staff oil supplies by nearly 15 percent, or for alternative fuel sources most Andy Burness, Editor contributing editor two million barrels out of a 17 imperative. Yet congressional leaders Jane Vessels Jim Caudill, assistant editor million barrel per day consumption as well as Administration officials Editorial Staff Fred Zipp (42 gallons to the barrel). In his continue to harp on the issue of light Umberto Sartori Kim Gagne televised speech, President Nixon switches. Martha Elson, editorial Bernadette McGovern Steve Garland, sports editor chairwoman David Trevaskis Doug Henacd estimated that his proposed energy Conservation of energy is a Doug Starr Linda Walters cutbacks would save 200,000 barrels worthwhile goal, particularly for a Jerry Smith Betsy Deets Paul Honigberg per day, making it perfectly clear nation whose population constitutes that, well intentioned as only 6 percent of the world total, administration programs may be, but whose energy consumption there are other steps which must be reaches 33 percent of the total. A taken. conservation program should be In that speech, Nixon proposed undertaken, crisis or not. some alternatives, centering on the This, of course, means avoiding exploration and development of new unnecessary trips using fuel, whether oil sources, particularly in the region they be to East Campus or San of the Naval reserve at Elk Hills, Clemente. This means cutting California. According to Nixon, this unnecessary power uses, on the Duke would spearhead "Operation Chapel and in "big business." The Independence"—a plan to make the wastes that can be avoided are U.S. independent of all foreign fuel prodigious. But to rely on a paranoid supplies. public as a cure-all for the energy Secretary of Interior Rogers crisis is a delusion, not to mention a C.B. Morton, as well as other, convienient diversion from another, cabinet sources suggest that we presidential crisis. Night editor for today's issue Tom Keyserling Assistant night editors: Bill D avies and Norman W. Hoffman Washington" Who needs more gas' James Reston (C) 1973 NYT News Service Wouldn't you rather have a Buick? his car, brother, you're in trouble. Would this really destroy the WASHINGTON-The craziest And if you can't believe in the latest Accordingly, the recent talk of Republic? notion that has hit this country in a salesman on TV, who can you shortages of gas has brought a lot of long while—and we've had quite a believe in? people down to reality. President The chances are that everybody would be safer and healthier, that few nutty notions lately—is that Nobody suggested that the Nixon has asked us all to conserve shortages of gas, beef and a lot of energy by keeping our cars to fifty the old man would know more about nation's resources were finite or that other people's problems by riding other things are bad for the our power was limited. We thought miles an hour and keeping the American people. thermostats down at home to 68 the bus, that junior's options would money tells and the big guns win. be limited and that, without a car, What America really needs is The biggest is the best. We are No. 1. degrees, and he has offered to set an example. He is cutting off the lights, his contribution to the population more shortages. It is not our But lately, it appears that No. 1 is problem would probably diminish. shortages but our surpluses that are running out of gas, that the big and presumably the tape-recorders, hurting us. Too much gas, too much money and the big guns didn't win in in the White House at 10 o'clock every night. No doubt he will None of these potential bounties booze, too much money, talk, noise, Vietnam or in the Middle East, and to American life would have been and—fire me tomorrow!—too much that we might be a little cold here conserve fuel by staying home more or will travel to Camp David, Key possible if it had not been for the newsprint are our problem. and there in America this winter. blackmail threats of the Arab oil We need to cut down, slow up, The Almighty Dollar has been Biscayne and San Clemente from now on by train. states in the Middle East. By stay home, run around the block, eat devalued twice in he last eighteen ourselves, we would probably never vegetable soup, call up old friends months. The Japanese and the This is all to the good. The Arab have had the common sense of and read a book once in a while. Western Europeans have mastered nations have done us a favor by discipline to cut the speed limit to Americans have always been able to the arts of the computer and the cutting of their oil an;forcing us to fifty miles an hour or stop steaming handle austerity and even adversity. scientific revolution and seem to be self-sufficient at home. Suppose ourselves in our houses, or blinding Prosperity's what's been doing us in. know more about labor-management everybody in American suddenly ourselves with optic noise from For most of this century, we relations than we do. And last year, became sensible—which is quite an electric signs for pills and have been told by our leaders that it competing with the Japanese and assumption—and kept their cars to triple-edged shavers and sexy movies was our right and destiny to have European industries that America fifty miles an hour and their houses in Times Square. two cars and a boat for Sundays. The restored after the last World War, the at 68 degrees to save energy. more we consumed, the more the United States had a spectacular trade But now the threatened shortage nation would prosper. The Voice of deficit of $6.4 billion. Also suppose that all those of gas, oil and heat has finally America was the voice of the Nevertheless, it wasn't until advertising signs were shut off, and brought people to their senses, and hawker, the prevalent melody of President Nixon began talking about junior's car was sold or junked and the only trouble with Henry America was the singing commercial. rationing gasoline and jacking up he had to walk to the corner Kissinger's successful compromise Buy more, consume more, get more thyprices of furnace oil that the drugstore to loaf and watch the girls diplomacy in the Middle East is that things, even if you can't afford them. people began to wake up. You can in the evening, or even that the old the Arabs may agree to sell us their They sky's the limit, and happiness is fiddle with an American's freedom at man had to get to work in the oil at higher prices and encourage us acquisitiveness, getting more things. Watergate, but if you monkey with morning on the bus or in a car pool. to go on with our foolishness. The yellow-brick road- Action! Color! Speed! Violence! Bruce Siceloff So much has happened in a political way lately that a book about the last Presidential campaign is already very old news. You have to scratch your head a minute to part the sea of recent D.C. firsts (felony conviction of a vituperative Veep; indictments of ex-Cabineteers and other Milhousketeers; the scary, secret U.F.O. crisis, in which the President narrowly averted War of the Worlds II), so you can see back. . .back. . .set the WayBack, Sherman, for. . .1972! The year of Bremer, Eagleton, Liddy, and other would-be assassins, of the Clear Choice, and of the Re-Election of the President. Remember? Now I usually despise retreats into the past, nostalgia being a pathetic neurosis and the falsest sort of revisionist history. But impeachment is at hand, which occasion will render the great Mandate inoperative, throwing the '72 campaign into the even stranger perspective of complete irrelevance to present political reality. This, then, may be the last chance for a meaningful discussion of the campaign and, while we're at it, Hunter S. Thompson, who did the best job covering it. remember saying something like 'I feel a bit $1000-per-head plan, the devalued 1000-percent Thompson used to be a sportswriter and pro lightheaded; maybe you should drive. ..' And Eagleton endorsement). It was largely for these wrestling "press release" liar: suddenly there was a terrible roar all around us and reasons that the Clear Choice criteria swung from There was a time, about ten years ago, when I could the sky was full of what looked like huge bats, all compassion and morality (nobody, certainly not write like Grantland Rice. No necessarily because I swooping and screeching and diving around the car, Nixon, could beat McGovern there) to just believed all that sporty bullshit, but because which was going about a hundred miles an hour competence (Nixon, with his Omerta code and St. sportswriting was the only thing I could do that with the top down to Las Vegas, And a roice was Henry's magic touch, won there; McGovem's anybody was willing to pay for. And one of the screaming: 'Holy Jesus! What are those goddamn public staff squabbles hurt his image further). ani mals? people I wrote about seemed to gire a hoot in hell In a summer of torpid campaign reporting, what kind of lunatic gibberish I wrote about them, In this book the author teams up with illustrator Ralph Steadman who, as Kurt Thompson's articles were refreshing adrenalin just as long as it moved. They wanted Action, Color, juleps. Though he could get carried away at times Speed, Violence. Vonnegut has said, "has become as magically integral to Thompson's work as Sir John Tenniel with his enthusiasm (at least until July) for Since then , Thompson has found more McGovern, he wasn't like Teddy White begging lucrative markets and more stimulating subjects was to Through the Looking Glass and Alice in for his psychotic typewriter. In each case he and Wonderland." Indeed, Steadman recently for Nixon interview tidbits and nervously his fetishes—for .44 Magnums, Bowie knives, illustrated an edition of the Lewis Carroll works, protecting his Preferred Journalist status. Doberman Pinschers, and dangerous drugs—have and his loathsome caricatures crawl regularly Thompson's judgment was rarely impaired by his stayed close to (and have thrived on) various across the pages of Rolling Stone. But to realize McGovem ties; fortunately, it was possible to ephemeral phenomena marked by ugly, brutish, their potential forces, Thompson and Steadman print criticism of the Senator's campaign without strangely terrifying and peculiarly American need each other's complementary skills. fear of intimidation and excommunication. Thompson brought these experiences as a Power. While covering the Florida primary in March, In 1967 Thompson wrote Hell's Angels: A journalist, combined with his brief rib, he "tried to compose a fitting epitaph. I wanted something Thompson wrote almost presciently that Strange and Terrible Saga, The Angels (and by McGovern was hampered by the Democratic association, all motorcyclists) had been original, but there in Aspen, Colo.),*to the 1972 Presidential campaign, which he covered for Party ("an atavistic endavor—more an Obstacle catapulted by the press and, later, by Hollywood, than a Vehicle") and by his "painfully earnest into legendary infamy. They were just Rolling Stone. His book Fear and Loathing: on the Campaign Trail '72 consists mostly of articles style," more appreciated and more effective in weird-and-nasty enough to draw scores of the Senate than on the stump. He compared him sex-and-violence charges, and to make great copy published—when he was able to meet his deadlines—in that bi-weekly magazine. with Muskie: "Up close, (McGovern) is a very for print and film. Thompson lived close to them likeable and convincing person—in total contrast for a year and a half and decided they were The articles, also illustrated by Steadman, to Big Ed, who seems okay on TV or at the other mainly just losers, fuck-ups, and 20th-century provided more than a visceral portrait of a end of a crowded auditorium, but who turns off "mutants.,.,.urban outlaws with a rural ethic and frenzied, frustrating campaign in motion. almost everybody who has the misfortune of a new, improvised style of self-preservation." Thompson, virtually alone among thyhuge having to deal with him personally." That new style manifested itself in the end campaign press corps, rooted out facts and when a few of the boys decided to stomp reported what he found; he made judgments and For his candidacy to succeed, Thompson Thompson. Later, swollen and bleeding and kept reported what he thought. That is not so amazing; continued, "McGovern would need at least one awake only by the pain of a broken rib, he "tried what is amazing is the fact that none of the other dark kinky streak of Mick Jagger in his to compose a fitting epitaph. I wanted something "press wizards" reported half of what they knew soul. . .just enough to drift out on the stage in original, but there was no escaping thyecho of or bothered to investigate half of what they front of a big crowd & let the spectacle turn him Mistah Kurtz' final words from the heart of didn't know. on. . .today who seems to understand this is George Wallace." darkness: 'The horror! The Because the CREEPers were expert press horror!. . .Exterminate all the brutes!' " manipulators, alternating intimidation, silence, Wallace, he said, had himself photographed In 1971 Thompson published his best book, and leaks, the headlines and polls went their way. with Southern hero Richard Petty at the Daytona Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage We got glazed panoramic views of Nixon's global 500. The result was invaluable (and absolutely Journey to the Heart of the American Dream. sweeps and peace promises, and nagging alarms free) exposure before 98,000 racing fans, "who The opening, as Gordon Goodman points out in during McGovem's shaky moments (the devalued figure that any friend of Richard Petty's must sit 34th Street magazine, perverts the American on both shoulders of God in his spare time." And literary device (Moby Dick, Huck Finn) which " the photo ran in all the Sunday papers, next to the hero traveling across a stretch of land or accounts of Muskie's dismal (and expensive) water, with a strong savage or dark companion. "Sunshine Special" whistlestop trip. The trip is usually associated with regeneration; Hunter Thompson has since done some good the companion keeps the vulnerable hero alive on writing about the post-Watergate Washington the perilous journey. scene; but now the D.C. press corps is working a But in this case the hero is Thompson little harder, limiting Thompson's role. He still himself; he is accompanied by his huge Samoan gives me a charge, though, and some of the "attorney;" the two are stuffing themselves with dangerous highs of the "politics junkie." dangerous combinations of drugs as they head to Why not? Anything that gets the adrenalin moving Las Vegas, eventually to infiltrate a narcotics like a 440 Tolt blast in a copper bathtub is good for agents convention; rather than regeneration, their the reflexes and keeps the veins free of goal is self-destruction followed by apocalyptic cholsterol. . .but too many adrenalin rushes in any vision: given time-span has the same bad effect on the nerTOus system as too many electro-shock We were somewhere around Barstow on the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold. I Working press on the trail. {Annie Leibovitz) treatments are said to hare on the brain: after a while you start burning out the circuits. Page Eight The Chronicle Tuesday, November 13, 1973

you. "It feels fantastic in your crotch," she said. "What?" I said, doubting my senses. Peppermint! "It tickles your crotch." "Where can I get some?" Editor's note: James Simon Kunen is, as some of you may well remember, the author of "The Strawberry Statement," an affectionate account of his adventures in Hamilton Halt, Columbia University, in April of 1968. Moving right along from strawberries to peppermint, the following piece is excerpted from an article he has written for the current issue of Es****e magazine. It's quite long, and cannot be reprinted here. Suffice it to say, though, that Dr. Bronner is alive and well and living in Escondido, California. By James Simon Kunen There was a time when a girl I knew and I were tripping around in the woods. The sun was going down. We came upon an enormous boulder, and found oursevles climbing atop it, as though instinctively seeking a high, safe place to spend the night. We huddled together on that point of rock, and laughed at how, as we perceived it, our realm had been reduced to a rock point. We saw the world inundated by a rising tide of pernicious plasticity, and us clinging to high ground. And what we spoke of was what symbolized for us the rising tide. We spoke of having seen that day Dr. Bronner's Peppermint Oil Pure-Castile-Soap in a supermarket. Not in a back-alley health grotto such as where I'd bought it, and where it belonged. In a supermarket. Naked to the neon and Muzak. Unit priced. I don't really know how most people are introduced to Dr. Bronner's Supermild Pure Peppermint-Oil—Soap. They see it in the bathroom of some radical who empathizes with the voice unheard. Someone quotes the label. Myself, I was in New York seeing a lawyer, as so many people do, about a divorce. I must have looked unhappy, because the client ahead of me came over and said, "You look down. You ought to try Dr. Bronner's Peppermint Oil Soap." I hadn't asked her, but I was glad she was talking to me. She was a middle-income hippie, an urban organic type, just radiant in her denim overalls, about as healthy as you can be in Manhattan, very attractive—if a little too conscious of it for my taste. She was getting a divorce, too. "You can use it for everything," she said. "I shampoo with it, brush my teeth with it, wash myself all over with it." She did have unimpeachable skin, hair, and teeth. Really nice, just the kind you want to have, if not in yourself, then at least in someone who's with

p>%%%%X%Tk***W%%%*\%*%&%*%%%%%^% •Security treaty- DUU Ma/or Speakers Committee Presents

(Continued from page 3) have stressed that in any details on the exact date Middle East settlement and how they should be which would be regarded by conducted ha?e not been this country as fair, Israel Tom Wolfe completed. would ha»e to return most Kissinger said that once of the land it occupied after the Israelis and Egyptians the June 1967 war, with the author of ironed out the issues exact boundaries to be left remaining in putting into to direct negotiations effect the cease-fire accord, between the warring parties. Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, "we will mote into etting American officials hare said up the peace conference." that Israel has become too "Our expectation is accustomed to the current that this should not be more boundaries and would have \. The Radical Chic than a matter of weeks," he to leam to trade territory said. for a long-term security Tuesday Nov. 13th ^v On the question of the arrangement for the future oil embargo, Kissinger said in which the United States \^ and that while "we are highly would play a role. respectful of the views of Page Auditorium \^ the Arab world, it is not Wolfe reception possible for us to be swayed „, _ \ New Journalism in the major orientation of our policy by the monopoly There will be a 8:15 p.m. position or the temporary reception for Tom monopoly position enjoyed Wolfe on Tuesday, Nov. by a few nations." 13 at 4 p.m. in Broughton Parlor. All Future settlement in terested i n an UNIVERSITY PIZZA TAVERN Throughout the informal discussion are round-the-world trip, welcome. (Formerly University Grill) Kissinger and his top aides NOW OPEN Party *Fresh Dough *Variety of Meals 20% off *Handmade Pizza (American, Italian, Indian) Beverages *Cosy Atmosphere Delicious Food •Delicious Food Courteous Service all Italian Food at Low •Courteous Service *VERY REASONABLE PRICES Prices party supplies Ajanta Enterprises, Inc. wine at discount Kegs delivered Mon-Thurs 11 AM- 11 PM Fri-Sun BUY-QUICK 11 AM- 1 AM PARTY STORE 910 West Main St.—close to Downtown Durham and Bast Campus Located—corner of Erwin Rd. and La Salle St. phone 682-5196 or 688-9857 Open 7 a.m.^til midnite Tuesday, November 13, 1973 The Chronicle Page Nine Paletz regards internships as rewarding experience

By Umberto Sartori more sensitive to the well prepared" students are paid ones being in the Next summer will mark demands political work sponsored. bureaucratic sector, where a the fourth year of the imposes on him." He said the internship student can earn up $132 a political science The summer experience opportunity is generally week. department's summer be comes advantageous to actualized in three ways: "We encourage long internship program. the students as they seek Paletz and Patricia term rewards," said Paletz, David Paletz, professor full time employment in the O'Connor, director of though an intern may of political science and field of politics, or when placement services, will find momentarily suffer from •director of the program, they apply to graduate a position for the student; low pay, or in some cases no explained in an interview school, Paletz said. the student can find a pay at all, the experience yesterday "the scope of the He emphasized that "it position on his own; or itself is very valuable on the internship is to provide the is not a matter of simply Paletz, O'Connor, and the long run, as the student student with useful a p p lyin g and being student will coordinate seeks admittance into fi rs t -hand political accepted," in terms of efforts to seek out such a graduate school, or full time experience, and render him ability and limitation in the position. employment, according to number of interns admitted Most students, Paletz. In the Feature Case This to the summer position. according to Paletz, realize Funding Weeb Competition their interest the third way, Even so, he said that Life Paletz conceded that, often relying on the help of "normally 75% of the due to severe competition Paletz's or O'Connor's interns receive funding from in Old Asia on a national level, "only personal acquaintances. the persons or groups they As an example of this are working for," generally A smallish, but good strategy, Paletz mentioned where living expenses are David Paletz (Photo by Gary Reimer) collection of books on that during the 1972 concerned. China and her neighbors. Cyclists Presidential election Also, the University Plus The Duke Cycling campaign several students found employment in North subsidizes weekly seminars SPECTRUMi League is having an A small collection on Carolina groups supporting at which the interns have open meeting at 7 p.m. the opportunity to meet in 139 Soc. Sci. this Terry Sanford's campaign. The following companies will Napoleon Credit political personalities and have representatives here during evening to determine discuss special topics. of Law Yale the Period of Wednesday, Nov. and his wars. cyclists' problems and The University does not ill speak Thursdayursday,, 14 t^ouS" Tuesday, Nov. 27, subsidize the program, but In 1967 Paletz and one Nov. 15, 3 p.r School to interview seniors and their solutions. of his students, Ron Moot Courtroom, oi graduate students interested in THE OLD BOOK CORNER credit is given to the student nt Everyone is invited. Winkler, pushed an intensive "Catastrophic Diseases and thi 137 A East Rosemary Street Sponsored by the "who presents an analytical Theory of Tragic Choices." Register with the Placement Opposite NCNB Building paper" in which "he draws effort toward the creation Office, 214 Flowers Bttg.. if campus bike path of the program, Paletz interested. Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514 survey committee. from his summer experience" to discuss the explained. Any freshman or "We decided it was sophomore woman interested in political subject matter of becoming affiliated with TAU terrible that Duke hadn't a l-'nthifj 41 in ltnentt'1 II« re To .(*«*>. .vjjfiisir. his interest, Paletz said. EPSILON PHI FRATERNITY Education (COGME) program," he said. —Please contact Randii (x4096) University of California, Los or t anvu — t'njou Oelieious f'oorf In A It-tuxvtt The internship, which is for f urther information (re: Angeles Am ospherrat thv Ivy Roon offered in Washington only, Money benefits, rights, etc.)—If I'm not Their effort failed, in, pleas* leave your name and TUESDAY,NOVEMBER 13 and places the intern with number and I'll return your call. Arthur Andersen & Co. interest groups, federal Paletz continued, because Pratt & Whitney Aircraft bureaucracy, or with a many commitments were Columbia University Graduate TUESDAY CHICKEN'N' •}% School of Business $159 member of Congress. made but little if any Administration SPECIAL DUMPLINGS "It does not, generally money was available at the The COMMUNITY FOR Montgomery Ward time. C R E A TIVE NON-VIOLENCE U. S. Internal Revenue Service speaking, give the student a in Washington, D.C. will host Vale-New Haven Hospital chance to make much several people for a few days THURSDAY. NOV. 15 IVY ROOM &$$&?•* money," said Paletz. The idea took roots over the semester break. If Coopers & Lybrand when A. Kenneth Pye i n t e r e sted please ieave you - E.l. duPont de Nemours & Co. Cosmopolitan Roo Gourmet Shoppe "In fact," he added. name in 102 Flowers. became chancellor. Addressograph-Multigraph • .1004 W-.Maip.St. mu "very often the best jobs are Research & Development Center Believing that "the 688-6041 FMlMWINOMiT If. the least paid," the better University of Georgia Law University needs it," Paletz FRESHMEN ENGINEERS: School Anyone interested in running said, Pye 'granted the for the office of President of the FRIDAY, NOV. 16 department funds to start Freshman Class should sign up Addressograph-Multigraph the program. now in the lobby of the Research & Development Center CLASSIFIEDS Engineering Building. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. I am looking for a If you have found a "On the whole," WEDNESDAY, NOV. 14 ANNOUNCEMENTS girl to date who is pocket camera, please reiterated Paletz, "we are Call AID, the Advising Information Directory, to find We sting house intelligent, u rider- bring it or at least the trying to place only as many out where to get the answers to Price Waterhouse 4 Co. standing, and easy to talk film to the information students as we find are your questions. Ext. 3195, East duPont Walston Inc. to , If you are a desk, Union (Important). Campus Center, Monday-Friday Emory University Graduate qualified for the appropriate 1-5, 7-9. School of Business ABORTION, BIRTH good-looking, intelligent job," Ad min ist ration CONTROL INFO. & g irl who wants a Vanderbilt University School of REFERRAL—NO FEE. boyfriend but somehow Success J. E. Sirrine Co. Up to 24 weeks. General can't get on with guys FOR SALE Paletz said that though MESSIAH TICKETS are anesthesia. Vasectomy, easily, you're the sort of success of the actual now on sale. Tickets may be MONDAY, NOV. 26 tubal ligation also internship experience and of purchased at Page Box Office or Amos Tuck School of Business girl I want. I would like by sending a stamped, available. Free pregnancy to meet and get to know further developments for an Administration test. Call PCS, RECORD COLLEC­ self-addressed envelope to you. Please send your TION: 54 -albums, about eventual career in politics "Messiah", P.O. Box 4822 DS. TUESDAY,NOV. 27 non-profit, name and address to 525 Durham, N.C. A donation of Peat, Marwick, MitcheU & Co. 202-298-7995. half rock (Cream, are "really up to the $1.00 per ticket is requested, Procter & Gamble Holloway St., Durham, Traffic, Creedence students," the opportunity performance dates are Friday, N.C. 27701. Nov. 30 at S pjn.; Saturday, Clearwater, etc.), half is unique and worthwhile. Dec. 1 at 2 p.m.; Sunday, Dec. 2 other (classical, pop-jazz, at 4 p.m. All performances take I am looking for a boy to "In the least," said Administration SEND A FRIEND A etc.)—$20 the lot. 50 old place in the Duke Chapel. When date who is stupid, 45*s—Elvis, Everly Bros., Paletz smiling, "it should be writing for your tickets please MERRIE AULD one hell of a summer for specify the date of performance CHRISTMAS CARDE stubborn, and silent. If etc. —$10 the lot. and number of tickets desired. AVAILABLE NOW AT you are an ugly, stupid 489-1024. them." •Tapes- THE RARE BOOK boy who wants a ROOMS, PERKINS girlfriend but can't get it (Continued from page 3) LIBRARY on with girls easily, proposed schedule, you're the sort of boy I WANTED want! Write to Box WDBS - 107.1 FMhowever , that he was not 5140, Duke Station. disposed to argue with the White House contention Typing: Fast service, TUESDAY, November 13 that two of the tapes under quality work. Call Pat BRIDGE PLAYERS: We Strand 2244 or are looking for two Clerk in Pharmacy, 10-4, 10 a.m.—1 p.m. DAILY CONCERT (See his jurisdiction were simply 688-2963. average bridge players for 5 days/wk. No not in existence, at least a friendly game, once a experience necessary. program guide for listings) pending some contrary week. Call Gene, Apply in person. Revco 6 p.m. CROSSWORDS evidence of tampering from 489-4002, after 7:00 D.S. Inc. 213 W. Main St. "Old Friends"—Music and the technical experts. p.m. talk about the situation of Legal medical abortions The news that there older people. was n o presi den tial from one day to 24 LOST AND FOUND weeks, as low as $125. 6:30 p.m. SPOTLIGHT dictation belt covering the Free pregnancy tests & Found; a black, female Living in the Material April 15 meeting with Dean info. Ms. Rogers, PuPPy with brown Female Roommate to World, by George Harrison came as another in a series Washington, D.C, markings—Mon. night on share 2-Bedroom Apt. $100.00 plus utilities. Midnight THE BOB D YLAN of abrupt White House 2 0 2-628- 7656 or West Campus. Call reversals with respect to 301-484-7424 anytime. 682- 2439 for more Phone LEE 47 7-7351 or SERIES, Part 10 383-5490. potential Watergate information. Nashville Skyline evidence. Page Ten The Chronicle Tuesday, November 13, 1973 V'ball team second in state

By Linda Walters Duke bowed to Western trouble defeating their team at its very best this The Duke women's Carolina in the other two, oppositibn 15-6, 15-7. The year." Senior player and volleyball team placed 12-14, and 5-15. second -match against team captain Sue Hall was second in the North Friday's two wins UNC-G, however, was the the strongest member of the Carolina State Torunament placed Duke in the singles "highlight of the team during the match, and last Saturday, by beating elimination matches on tournament," according to Jan Disque also contributed pre-tourney favorite Saturday, where the Spangler. support. The match went UNC -Greensboro. A remaining six teams "The whole team for only two games, and the de lighted Duke coach contested the title. played extremely well scores were 15-11, 15-11. Dorothy Spangler described Duke's first match on during te entire In the finals, Duke lost « the tournament as an Saturday was with tournament,'' she for the second time to experience where Appalachian State, and the commented, "but the match Western Carolina by "everything just went our Duke women had little with UNC-G showed our (Continued on page 11) way," and expressed respect for the winning team. Western Carolina, which also took the title last year. Playing at Pembroke The Outperformer State College, Duke's team lost only twice, both times to the women of Western .•mm . Carolina. On Friday, three that Rivals the matches decided Saturday's elimination games. Duke met Catawba first in a The women's swim team has a home meet today two-game battle which at 7 p.m. in the Aquatic Center. (Photo by Carl ended with Duke winning Original Ballard) by margins of 18-16, and 15-9. The first game began with a 12-0 lead for Duke, but turned into a close Performance! Super Jock contest and was decided by time rather than score. The second round of "Super Jock" competition will be held today. The events will be the shuttle run, Friday's second match pull-ups, sit-ups and the standing long jump. was less exciting—Duke Competition starts at 4 p.m. in Card Gym and awards defeated St. Andrews 15-5 will be given to the "Top 10" following the and 15-3, but the third conclusion of these events. contest against Western The leader thus far for the individual title is Jeff Carolina demanded more of Anderson who garnered three second place finishes in an effort by the Duke team. yesterday's competition. Winning only the second game of the match, 15-12,

In U.S. Senate Sports9 bill considered the,threatening one because the 66-year-old president of By William N. Wallace existing sports organizations the U.S.Q-C, is against the (C) 1973 N.Y.T. News Service do not want an overseer bill which he has When Marlow Cook, such as a Federal Sports characte ri zed as "a the Repub 1 i can Senator Board. dictatorial assault on the from Kentucky, called Last Monday, Sen. freedom and civil rights Walter Byers, the executive John V. Tunney, D-Calif., of the American people," director of the National who has led the fight for the and "the most dangerous Collegiate Athletic bill, tried again. He legislation ever put forward Association, "an absolute conducted further hearings for passage in the history of idiot" on the floor of the in Washington to appease our countrv." Senate last Oct. 3 it was in a those in opposition which The U.S.O.C. and the way a compliment. include Byers and the N ,C.A .A. have proposed • Special Features; Cook, one of half a N.C.A.A. leadership; the alternatives. Rep. Bob • 120 Watts dozen senators trying to get A.A.U., which supposes Mathias , R-Cali f., • THD & IM Distortion 0.2% the Omnibus Sports Bill, the correctly the bill would • 2 Year Warranty Ports & Labor introduced a bill 10 days Amateur Athletic Act of diminish the power of this • 5 Yr. Warrenty On All Transistors ago which would require 1973, through the Congress, creaky organization, and the binding arbitration of all • Compare These Feature* With ANY later ap. logized. U.S. Olympic Committee. disputes between athletes Competitive Priced Brand He was angry because The latter's position is and amateur sports the N.C.A.A., run like a scattered. Later in the week organizations. seigniory by Byers, had the Athletes Advisory Experience the World of Sony Sound ... a wealth of scared the Senate half to Committee to the U.S.O.C. Cited by Tunney as one sound, perfectly conveyed.The rhythm of jazz improvias- death through its lobbying came out in favor of the of the most effective tions, born in the United States ... tho melodies of efforts against the bill. What bill. lobbying organizations he Italian opera ... or the lighthearted tempos of a Byers doesn't want, he has known, the N.C.A.A. Mexican mariachi band. Each sound has a unique This committee is head flavor, style, and ofigin, but each is universal in its doesn't eet. persuaded Sen. Bob Dole, The bill would do three by Captain Micki King of richness of musical expression. Sony hi-fi components R-Kans., to do its bidding. can transmit this richness — purely, powerfully, realist­ things. It would create a the U.S. Air Force, the Olympic gold medal diver So Dole introduced an ically. With 5ony, you can experience the sound — the commission to review the ful! ambience — as if ycu were there ... at a jam United States Olympic who testified eloquently in amendment which has come Washington that the athletes to be known as the Byers session, a rock concert, the opera, or an outdoor festival. programs. It would set up a Because every Sony hi-fi component is designed with National Sports Foundation were weary of unrealized bill. It would take most of promises and waiting for the teeth out of the quality standards and professional expertise. Enter the to help finance amateur World of Sony Sound.... sports programs by means change in the archaic sports Amateur Athletic Act and of matching private and structures. eliminate a sports federal funds, up to $100 Yet Philip 0. Krumm, foundation. million. It would establish a U.S. Sports Board, Student date and guest tickets appointed by the President, empowered to sanction the SEE&HEA. organizations like the for the State and Carolina games Amateur Athletic Union TODAY Al which send out the U.S. teams for international competitions in Olympic go on sale today. events only. The latter function is Tuesday, November 13/1973 The Chronicle Page Eleven Perspectives" On the right track Andy Burness For those of us who have grown to know and highly prestigious affair was earned principally B love Durham as a haven for heroin addiction, through the efforts of Leroy Walker and Al •m crime, and syphillis, there's an added feature in Buehler, track coaches at North Carolina Central '.-.' lis thriving metropolis which is sure to attract and Duke respectively. •gar,-,', tv ^eople from the world over. It's no coincidence that Durham and Wallace Indeed, Durham has turned over a new leaf, Wade Stadium were able to land this meet, nd the great town of ill repute will give way to a because Walker and Buehler have been actively ew town, one which abounds with political working towards attracting the very best in track ontroversy, detente, oil disputes, for the last three years. ublicity,.. .and track. Two years ago, Durham was forunate enough Yes, track. to land the Pan African Games, and the Because July 5 and 6, Durham will host the organization from top to bottom for that event iggest international sports event ever in North was impressive enough to warrant the Martin Sometimes you get what you ask for. .(Photo by Carolina, the gala track and field meet between Luther King Games, which were held last May. Bruce Siceloff) the United States and the Soviet Union. This Each time, Walker, Buehler and Company were blessed with perfect weather and good crowd response, and they made the most of the situation by attracting many of the more celebrated track and field participants from After the game around the globe. Durham was considered a good choice for these two meets, because, among other reasons, this weekend, it's a Southern city that is receptive to blacks. Walker's work at North Carolina Central has proven to the appropriate authorities that the stop by the black population of Durham would support a significant track meet, and that the fans could expect high-quality performance in return. The additional facts that Durham athletes such as Bob Wheeler of Duke and the NCCU mile CAR SHOP relay team have achieved national prominence certainly has not hurt attendance. And lastly, progress in the track realm was deemed significant enough by Duke athletic officials that a new and pick up your all-weather track was installed just previous to the King Games, and the surface has met with resounding approval from those who have used it. party refreshments The U.S.-Soviet meet this July promises to be equally successful. The same highly competent duo will mastermind the occasion, and barring to celebrate unforseen problems with the weather, attendance should soar. Assuming that the meet is promoted efficiently, Durham, NCCU, and Duke should be Duke's victory the beneficiaries of favorable publicity, not only in the United States, but in the Soviet Union as well. Duke's potential access to Soviet If you want a keg academicians would appear to be enhanced by this track meet, a sporting event which, curiously order 2 days ahead enough, has nothing to do with intellectual ==i*e3i3S5S^S2a

$ a challenging meet. Page Twelve The Chronicle Tuesday, November 13, 1973

Picture postcard memory?

The energy crisis hasn't dimmed New York's nighttime skyline, but the threat of power reductions and sharp rises in the cost of electricity may yet make the city's evening glow just a memory on a picture postcard. Meanwhile, on the West Coast, the states of Oregon and Washington have initiated programs to conserve power. 3oth commercial and residential users of electricity have been encouraged to lower thermostats, turn off neon signs and use lower-wattage light bulbs. (New York Times news photo)

'The fuel crisis need not mean genuine suffering for any American, but it will require some sacrifice by all Americans.' Nixon

White House responds to crisis

In accordance with the Administration policy, President Nixon has ordered the heat turned down and some of the lights in the White House turned off during the energy crisis. (UPI photo)