Volume 70 Number 139 WE A JHER Partly cloudy chance of Thursday, showers this morning afre r- April 24,1975 noon and evening. Duke University The Chronicle Durham, Dormitory telephone service cut back by administration

By Mitchell Wiener cutbacks for next year. There will be large cutbacks in the number of all The new policy which has been established, phones in University housing facilities next year, Smith explained, is that one hall phone will be pro­ Larry Smith, director of housing management, an- vided for every 75 persons or less in each living nunced yesterday. group. This will result in a reduction in the number The cutbacks will take effect on May 15 in all of West campus hall phones from 138 to 48 and in dorms which already have individual room phones, the number of East campus phones from 147 to 21. and upon completion of phone installation in other In a initial meeting two weeks ago, Griffith said, he dorms. had first been informed of the decision. Richard William Griffith, dean of student affairs, ex­ Cox, associate dean of student affairs, Ella Shore, plained that the decision had been made by Charles dean of the nursing school, Dean Wilson, a Huestis. vice-president of business and finance in representative of the Duke telephone system and Dean of Student Affairs William Griffith (Photo by consultation with Provost Fred Cleaveland and Smith were also present at the meeting. Barbara Blount) Chancellor John Blackburn, as part of the budget ASDU invited At the initial meeting, Griffith explained, the Financial hardships general circumstances were explained. One week later, he said, another meeting was held to discuss the specifics of the proposal. Linda Bolle, a member Phone cuts hassle students of the ASDU executive council was also invited to this meeting. By Mitchell Wiener and ASDU would be unable to have input in any subse­ She brought the statistics back to the council for The recent University decision to cut back on the quent University decisions on this matter. discussion. ASDU President Rick Glaser said yester­ number of hall phones in the dorms may increase the Certainly the late date at which the ASDU executive day that the executive was unhappy with the de­ financial hardships which many students are now facing due to the large tuition and housing increases already ap­ council and the student body were informed of this de­ cision because he felt the cutbacks in the number of proved for next year. cision will make if difficult for them to properly express phones was excessive, especially in East Campus their views. Dean William Griffith admitted that his main concern dormitories. Another meeting has been set up for It would also seem that the late announcement of the with this proposal is assuring that students with financial tomorrow between two members of the ASDU ex­ hardship not be forced into getting private phones against decision might have been intentional. The decision was ecutive council, Cox and Griffith. made last March at the time that next year's budget was their will. .. (Continued on page 5) being finalized. Surely the Troika could have informed Griffith and ASDU at an earlier date. A news analysis Glaser has also indicated that the ASDU executive is displeased with the cutbacks. He said he felt that far too Black Studies A student would have to incur a minimum expense of many phones had been eliminated, especially on East $70.00 for the academic year just to be provided with Campus where reductions of 15 phones were made in director resigns private local service at the present phone rates. some dorms. According to Griffith, an attempt to leave a few extra This decision was also made without consulting those By Sean J.C. McManus sire for a more substantia! phones hooked up in some dorms could be a nightmare of whom it wouid affect most, the students. ASDU President In a privately released contribution on my part, as administrative rigamaroie. This could have been avoided Rick Glaser pointed out that last Tuesday was the last statement yesterday, Walter well as my own recognition with proper student input into the original decision. meeting of the ASDU legislature for the academic year. W. Burford announced his that my personal concerns resignation as the director are in greater accord wi - of the Black Studies Pro­ teaching as opposed to ad­ gram at Duke. ministration," Burfords resignation wil "Naturally in leaving tl e become effective Aug. 31. directorship and the a • Grads applaud bus driver 1975. but he will continue ministration I intend no i - his role as an assistant pro- duction in my efforts at a fessorof religion. illumination of the t By Christopher Colford Burford said in his state­ perience of black Americ. "He's the most beloved person on campus," one ment. "The primary reason Burford has been t •• student remarked. for my resignation is the director of Black Stud ; "R.C. is a great friend to us all—after we graduate, Religion Department's de­ since its inception in 196 we're going to miss him." added another. To hundreds of his friends he is simply "R.C". the cheerful man with the deep Southern drawl and the ever-prsent grin, who has been driving the Duke Manor and Central Campus bus routes for three years. During that time. R.C. Freeman has made numerous close companions of students who ride his bus. "adding a little touch of warmth to this cold University." in one undergraduate's words. And yesterday, in a brief ceremony on the West Campus quad, forty graduating seniors expressed their appreciation for Freeman's close friendshi p and R.C. Freeman, the beloved bus driver personal concern. He was presented with a new fis­ the 12-year veteran of Duke Power Company request­ hing rod and rell, a gift of more than a hundred Duke ed the Central Campus circuit last fall so he could students who knew the weekend angler's enthusiasm stay with the large group of students who had moved for the sport. there. Students cited Freeman's early-morn ing "R.C. we decided that you were a greal guy. and cheerfulness, his compassion in hearing students' we thought we'd give vou a token of our friendship." problems, and his genial personality as factors which said Trinitv College senior Rob Fields in presenting make Freeman "not just your average bus driver." the gift. "Wi; graduating seniors will miss you next The presentation was arranged by Field, senior El­ year." len Bromley and junior Mark Sindelar. and was kept The surprised Freeman, smiling broadly, told the secret from Freeman until the last minute. When the crowd. "Y'all are th'- sweetest—the best I've ever ceremony was over. Freeman boarded his bus with a seen...! love every ore ofyotj." last wave of thanks to the applause of the crowd, and The schedule for the operating hours of 'he After two years of driving the Duke Manor route. drove off on the route he has come to know so well. libraries during exam period is on page 9 (Photo by Gary Reimer) Page Two The Chronicle Thursday. April 24.1975 SPECTRUM TODAY KNOWLEDGE of S K Thurs.. April 24. 8

The ABSOLUTE DEADLINE for |oel Kramer, au nominations (or Ihe OUTSTANDING PASSIONATK MIND a i yoga postures in TEACHER AWARD is Thursday, the yoga adept, talks on "Yo All Ccnnmonweallh Cili* n. Audit! mat 7:30 tonight. lUTlCAi. SCIENCE MAIORS: Plea :y-(our md den Duke community are inviled Newman Community Th LH the ASDU office. Absolutely, i Gtoss Chen he last get-together of the toriumat7:30pm. Thurs. April 2*. meeting this week is tonight al 7-30 p.m. NEWMAN COMMUNITY: The Liturgy jimmnnweallh House 211 Irive 4 p.m. Friday 25 April. (Thursday) at 7:30 p.m. in the Newman TOMORROW ICHTHUS—(Inter-Varsity LIMULUS: Last meeting of this year. Center GENERAL FINANCIAL AID: Federally Insured Button All Greeks'! The last Happy Thursday, at 6:45 at Ihe Clubhouse. All Studenl Loans- The Deadline for applica­ d on East members come, discussion ol party and DUKE CHESS CLUB- Last meeting of tion for FISl.s for fall 1975 is June 30. Campus of H 1 HOL n*«t year's schedule. If canl come, call this semester. All officeis musl attend . Tha 197S. Chapel. Kristin (x6836) and leave summer ad- Discussion about next year. Thurs.. Social Summer Work-Sludy-An under­ Epsilon. Omifrtin dress. Sciences Buld Room 3t!. 7 p.m. graduate student planning to work under COMMUNITY 11 will round out our the Summer College Work-Study program year together this Friday at Asbury MOUNTAIN 1 FOLKS t Di: MEDITATION i musl sign up in the Undergraduate Finan­ Methodist. 6 p.m. A good chanc.n forfood. cial Aid Office. The program will start fu- festive foibles, and time lo worship together once more are here for all who 1.1975. come. Enough of the spite of life to curry Prcpare yourselves for that long await- you through finals See you there. OK? nd last day of classes. The Ouke Union is ATTENTION WALKERS-Anybody who sponsoring a CELEBRATION OF SPRING CLASSIFIEDS has money from lasl Sunday's CROP with over 100 craftspeople on the quad SHALOM I Hunger Walk may turn il in at the Fast Ta­ ble on the (|uad loday Today is the lasl ANNOUNCEMENTS House for summer sublet: Sat. night [April 12) please the year will be held this Friday might. For three of four people; April 25. at 7:00. Sorry, no dinner this return it to me. Diana helped fight world hunger Europe-Israel-Africa-Asia. large den and living room, Harmer in 102 Aycock or this Travel discount year round. dining room, kitchen, air mail it to Box 6542 CS. The Student Air Travel Agency. conditioned, completely ring is of sentimental value Inc.; 4228 First Avenue, and nicely furnished. Ask­ and cannot be replaced; A I MU KPSILON HONORARY FRAT: Tucker. Ga. 30084. Phone ing $170/month but negotia­ sizeable reward is offered 404-934-6662 ble. Call Don. Doug or Mark for its return. at 684-3499. ABORTION. BIRTH CON­ TROL INFO & REFERRAL. Sublet- Morreene Manor- NO FEE: Up to 24 weeks. two bedrooms, two baths, General anesthesia. Vasec­ air conditioned, furnished. tomy, tuba! ligation also. June 7-mid August. 1971 Toyota Corona Mk. II 202-298-7995. 383-4679 evenings. 38.000 miles. A/C. A/T. Mint condition $1475. Call Princess Ida is coming. War Summer Sublet: Duke Larry 489-6207 or |im between the sexes? Gilbert 544-1272. THE Daily Crosswordb v Frank R.Jackson and Sullivan's only liberat­ Manor, one bedroom, furnished, pool. $145 ed heroine makes ap­ FOR SALE: The week at tbe ACROSS 29 Knightly 47 Column base 18 Expression pearance in Page (negotiable): Call Cathy. 286-0502 evenings; beach with the one you 1 Kind of character 50 Wretched 23 Thoughtful- Auditorium April 25 aud ness 684-2985 office. love. Large, luxurious two monster 33 Vapor 51 Extinct 26. Cast of dozens. Joyous bedroom apartment. ON 5 The - to 34 Palestrina bird 24 Small nail song and merry dance. piece 54 Camera's 25 Destinies Three and one-half rooms: THE OCEAN. Tennis, pool, pay Ticketsat Page box office. private balcony, water or 10 Churchill 35 Be indebted eye Song of furnished; pool; air condi­ 36 Sahara 55 The works David tioned, one mile from cam­ spring beds. Share it with a Downs spot Future CPAs Learn how to 14 Hero or description 58 Escutcheon 27 Roman rooms prepare for the CPA exam. pus, dishwasher, terrace friend or family. Call )im. Chapel Hill 933-3463 or god 37 Made dove­ area 28 Controls BECKER CPA REVIEW barbecue; 6/6-8/1 8; like sounds 59 Bind up 29 Lax Wrightsville. Beach 15 Emigre COURSE. .Call collect $95'month. 383-5008. 38 Moon again 30 Skunk, of 256-2148. 16 Foolish Charlotte 704-375-3051. 17 Freckles 39 Linden tree 60 Toward sorts Sumer Sublet: mid May 19 Rake 40 Peevish shelter 31 Possessor HI. I'm Zion. I'm sure you've thru mid August. Four 170 m. p.g. French 20 Fall back 41 Powerful 61 Goings-on 32 Rents seen me on campus. (You bedrooms, two bathrooms, motorbike, almost new- 21 Erase beam 62 Porterhouse 34 Northern know, the big black lovable must sell. No documenta­ 22 Gapes 42 Lady muscle big game dog. My owner is graduat­ washer/dryer. $240/month tion necessary. Perfect 24 Australian thumper 63 'The thun­ M anglers ing and tells me that I'm go­ or $60/month per person. transportation. 489-9728. woman 44 Cuts dering — " Bathe ing to need a new home. (I'd Ten minutes from campus. 25 Accomplish­ 45 Besides DOWN Western prefer living where I have Call 477-4940 after 6:00 FOR SALE: Double bet ment 46 Winged 1 Liquid European lots of running room). I( p.m. mattress and springs 26 Repeat parts measure Propped Conscious­ you'd like to adopt me. $15.00. Not great but bette Solution to Yesterday's Puzzle: 2 What's the please call 684-5358 and WANTED than the floor. Cal big-? ness ask for David Spiegel. 489-7295 after 5:00 p.m. 3 Yearn raisers Killer Full and part time jobs this 4 High SUMMER SUBLET 5 Decorous High nest summer. Need advertising 6 Rejoice Request reps for Duke Phone Book. FOR SALE: 1968 Chevrolet SUMMER SUBLET: Two Impala convertible. 7 Base Give bedroom hose, 2.5 miles Call Bruce Gill 286-4583 temporarily after6:00p.m. 682-7213 or 684-3777. Ask from West Campus, May for Jim Lewis. France 49 Involved in thru August rental, aaaa 9 Reduced SO Measure out Earn money: Male and ••••aaa naoanH backyard available for aaaa aaaa 10 Teach or 51 "Walk a gardening, semi-493-2202. female participants needed Irish Sutter Puppies for sale. NQDDB arana nnn Kidd crooked —" comes with plants. for legal research study. Ten w«oks old. AKC- 11 Smell 52 Heavy blow $3.00 for maximum of one registered. Shots and * 51 ate" ° IIHIWM 12 Swing around 53 Ripened hour. Call Ms. Hardymon Two bedroom apartment in wormed. Great with CIOIAITIOIEIFIPISBEIZIRIAI 13 Pegs for 56 Dogs' doc 684-5012 mornings. lovely old house complete­ children. Spend your tax re­ driver 57 So there! ly furnished for 4. $55 a fund on a loveable pot. Gill I b 7 S 10 TT' 12 13 month per person or WANTED: Refrigerator, any 489-1315. 2 1 1 9 negotiable. Price includes students wishing to sell IH ib all utilities. Call 684-1806 their refrigerator, please call FORMAL WEAR SHOP. or 684-7563. Doug 684-0018. Durham's oldest. AH suits 17 May thru August. Two in stock. Most experienced r in fitting bedroom apartment partial­ Ride needed to Miami leav­ ly furnished $140/month. ing anytime after Sat. May ^H'"' ^"••?5 One block from West Cam­ 3. Call Karen in Jarvis 312. ih 77 2B wm^'i pus 286-4991 after 7 p.m. ex. 4155 or 3989. Gibson [-50 six-string ac- P° coustic guitar and hard Vi 1 3 Apartment to sublet (May or shell, plush case, serious H'' H ~' June thru August): Two MCAT REVIEW COURSE inquiries onlv. call Bob. K bedrooms, one and one-half OF DURHAM. A fall course 489-4063 after 5:00. Leave baths, central air condition­ of seven 4-hour sessions M ^H ing, fully furnished. H will be offered in Sept. just U7 1 383-3303 or 489-3127. prior to the MCAT. Pre- l *' enrollment forms and in­ FOR SALE: Furniture: Desk, chairs, tables, lamps, wr SUMMER SUBLET: At Four formation may be obtained ^•r>0 • • Seasons Apartments, next by calling 477-6253 or beds, bookcase, also tires 1-7 *9 " to Lake wood, three 682-2725 after 5:00 p.m. (radials 175-14). turntable J* ii bb I bedroom fully furnished, (Garrard 40B with Empire - air conditioned, swimming 888-E), and 20-inch porta­ 5* w I pool, two double water LOST & FOUND ble fan. 383-2074. ,, beds. SlfiO/month plus 6i b? " utilities or $60/person and LOST & FOUND: Blue (Continued on P4) 1 utilities-call loe at windbreaker with name 493-1355. ) 1975 by Chicago Tribune-N.Y. News Synd. Inc. "Eddie Pooh" on inside. summer AH Rights Reserved Call Nibs al 684-4703. neurope Furnished Profs home for rent, May-August. Three bedrooms, two baths, a/c. HELP. Will whoever picked Wooded area. $210/month Up the pearl ring that I left phis utilities. 489-1447. in the kitchen in Aycock Thursday. April 24.1975 The Chronicle Page Three Pressure rises in Saigon Troop use OK 'd Panic in Saigon By Martha Angle any military operation to By Fox Butterfield and Walter Taylor remove the remaining 1Q1973 NYT NtwiSeniw [Q1B75 Washington Star-News Americans and some South SAIGON — Panic surfaced here Wednesday as WASHINGTON — Vietnamese, urging Ford to thousands of Vietnamese tried desperately to find ways to Congress Wednesday get as many people out as flee their country before the expected Communist take­ moved toward approval of possible before a troop over. legislation authorizing commitment is required. But there are few means of escape left, and most of them President Ford to use U.S. "If the U.S. intends to involve knowing or working for the Americans. U.S. Air troops if necessary for the take out large numbers of Force C-141 jet transports took off all day and night Wed­ transfer of the dwindling Vietnamese who fear for nesday from Tan Son Nhut Air Base with the lucky U.S. colony in Vietnam as their lives, let us get them passengers headed for Clark Air Base in the Philippines or the White House all but out by air and sea this Anderson Air Base on Guam. abandoned efforts to gain week." said Sen. Charles H. To get a seat aboard one of the C-141's, people offered more military aid for the Percy. R-Ill. "It would be everything of value they had. Saigon Government. the height of folly to wait Marriage an advantage Members of both the until the battle reaches Under South Vietnam's stringent emigration law, the House and Senate con­ Saigon when we can take only legal way for a Vietnamese to go abroad since the Refugees hang on for life while attempting to tinued to worry about the them out now." he said. Communists offensive began last month is to be married flee Saigon (UPI) potential risks involved in Senate considers package to a foreigner. The Senate is weighing a A south Vietnamese Army captain succeeded in getting Clash with Congress likely $200 million package com­ his young son aboard a C-141 Wednesday by forging a bining humanitarian aid to birth certificate for him and persuading a neighbor who South Vietnam and Cam­ was a secretary in the American defense attache office to Ford considers oil hike bodia with contingency take him with her as her son. The attache's office has been funds to support evacua­ evacuating its Vietnamese employes for the past week, and the embassy is expected to start doing the same By Roberta Hornig a $1 tariff already put in place Feb. 1. tion efforts. The House is (C) 1975 Washington Star-New. debating a similar $237 Thursday. "The first dollar prodded them WASHINGTON — President Ford million measure. The captain later asked an American acquaintance to reportedly is leaning toward increas­ (members of congress). The second mail a letter to h's sister, who is married to a former Cl­ might spur them to even greater The legislation now ing oil prices next week as a means of seems virtually certain to in Lodi.N.J. prodding Congress to come up with a heights," the aide said. become the sole con­ "Please take care of my son," he wrote, "Quan (the son's national energy program. He added: "It might help them get to gressional response to name) is the last drop of blood in our family. If you have Chief economic and energy ad­ an energy program before the third Ford's plea of April 10 for time, pray for us." visers, a White House aide said Wed­ dollar goes on," referring to the final $722 million in military aid Panic after resignation Although anxiety over the fate of Saigon bad been nesday, currently favor adding an ad­ step needed to reach the total $3 tariff to Saigon and $250 million in humanitarian assistance. building over the past month with the Communists ad­ ditional $1 to the tariff on imported Ford announced in his energy message to congress. Prospects for House ap­ vance down the length of the country, the panic began on­ oil and starting a gradual de­ ly after President Nguyen Van Thieu's resignation on Policy opinions proval of more military aid controlling of domestic oil prices on were at least as bleak. Monday. May 11 - the deadline Ford has set for After a meeting Tuesday between congressional action on his or any Ford and his energy and economic ad­ other program he considers accepta­ visers, Federal Energy Administrator ble for curbing energy consumption Frank G. Zarb reported he would pre­ Thailand rejects U.S. and imports of foreign oil. sent a list of policy options to the President on how to proceed if The new $1 levy would be on top of closing the bases, but the problem is Congress fails to meet its deadline for By Henry S. Bradsher (C) 1975 Washington Stai-News when it is to be done, one spokesman drafting an energy package. WASHINGTON — The U.S. failure here said. The White House aide said that list to protect South Vietnam has The "When" seems to depend upon of options would go to Ford Monday. strengthened the desire in Thailand to how soon Saigon falls - a development Zarb refused to predict what Ford be rid of a U.S. military presence, that is expected to come soon by would decide, saying he believes which is now seen as more of a danger military conquest or a politically ar­ there is a "50-50 chance" that he will than a protection. ranged surrender - and the whole approve the moves to raise prices. Distracted by emergencies in Cam­ American involvement in South Viet­ Zarb said he has been meeting with bodia and in Vietnam, the Ford Ad­ nam ends. Democratic congressional leaders on ministration has been unable to see far Other sources describe the U.S. re­ how Congress will proceed. He said enough ahead to make decisions on luctance to be pinned down for dis­ he plans to continue those sessions, the U.S. military bases in Thailand. cussions on a withdrawal timetable as adding that congress is working hard This has caused mounting dis­ primarily a bureaucratic problem. The on a program. But he acknowledged pleasure in Bangkok over the U.S. Defense and State departments, plus that major gaps remain between what failure to sit down and work out a other agencies, are involved. The Na­ A contemplative President Ford on the President wants and what timetable with Thailand on closing tional Security Council must make the his way to Tulane University (UPI) Congress is willing to do at this point. the bases. final decision on negotiating a timeta­ The Thai government has said it ble. wants U.S. troops withdrawn within a Under a military government, Real world year. The official figure on U.S. troop Thailand abandoned it traditional strength there is now 27.500; the ac­ neutralism in the mid-1960*s to SAIGON — South Vietnam's leaders were apparently attempting to form a tual total is a bit lower. permit the construction of a network new government acceptable as negotiating agent to the Vietcong. Conversations The Thai foreign ministry of American military installations. were said to center on Lt. Gen. Duong Van Minh. who led the coup that overthrew spokesman. Phirat Hsarasena, was Eight air bases and a deep-water port President Ngo Dinh Diem in 1963. But neither the Vietcong nor the North Viet­ quoted by a Bangkok newspaper Tues­ namese has been willing to offer a list of appropriate names. Fighting around the were opened. day as saying that the U.S. embassy capital was minimal. Bombing bases there has ignored a three-week-old re­ The bases were used to support the WASHINGTON — The North Vietnamese and vietcong have told Washington quest to talk about closing the bases U.S. effort in Vietnam. Most of the through intermediaries that they do not wish to humiliate the United States in the within a year. bombing of North Vietnam was from coming days, but beyond that they do not say whether they are prepared to The acting head of the embassy, Thai bases. They were also used for negotiate. Authoritative Administration officials say it is asking two things of Edward E. Masters, was invited to a the U.S. "secret war" in Laos. Hanoi and the Provisional Revolutionary Government - a safe evacuation for meeting of the joint U.S.-Thai com­ The number of Americans stationed American citizens and dependents and for an unspecified number of South Viet­ mittee on troop withdrawals but did in Thailand reached 48,000 in 1972. namese. not reply. Phirat said. "It is believed The internal danger in Thailand he might be hesitating in hopes the from Communist guerrillas, support­ NEW ORLEANS — President Ford said in a speech to students at Tulane withdrawal will not have to take ed mainly by North Vietnam but also University that the war in Indochina was "finished - as far as America is con­ pla^e."' the spokesman said. cerned" and that the nation should develop an agenda for the future. He asked by China, has grown in recent years as his audience to join in this process, moving beyond the discord of the last decade. State Deparmtne officials deny this. a once-large U.S. role in suppressing There is no problem over nVentuallv the guerrillas has declined. Page Four The Chronic! Thursday, April 24,1975 Laser increases nuclear potential, problems plicate efforts to limit the T h i! n e w process The isotope i ill 235. cent success with isotopes chem ical means. Instead. By Walter Sullivan proliferation of nuclear separates the varying forms, of boron, chlorine, anil sub their very slight differences (C) 1975 NYT News Smice w ith 235 pi s and weapons because it would or isotopes, of an element neutrons in ils nucleus, can pliur. in weighl or magnetic pro­ NEW YORK—The Los make possible the produc­ by means of a lasor beam IK; used to generate nuclear However, the leader of perties have been ex­ Alamos, N. M.. Scientific tion of uranium 235 used in tunes precisely to the vibra­ power or a nuclear ox- tht; group then;. Dr. C. Paul ploited. Laboratory has developed a such weapons with a tional frequency charac­ plosion. Robinson, believes that This led. for example, lo technique that scientists minimum of technical teristic of one such isotope. Uranium 238. containing uranium 235 can he extract­ Ihe huge gaseous diffusion believe will makt; it much sophistication. In this way. it is possible to three additional neutrons, ed with one one-hundredth plant at Oak Ridge. Term.. simpler and cheaper to pro­ It also casts in a new light break that isotope loose cannot be employed. to one one-thousandth tht; where tht; compound from the chemical com­ duce nuclear weapons and fears about the theft of More than 99 per emit of energy required under pre­ uranium hexafluoride was pound of which it is ;i part commercial nuclear power. potential bomb fuel, such raw uranium is of tht; latter sent methods. run through some 3,000 without affecting its almost The hitherto secret pro­ as plutoniom. by terrorists. type, and therefore a niiijor This, he told a meeting successive stages to pro­ identical sister isotopes. cess involves extracting since it suggests that bornh challenge in the original here on laser technology, duce enough uranium 235 uranium 235 — a key fuel could more easily be Each of the elements, atomic bomb project was could worsen tht; problem for the first atomic bomb. isotope used to produce extracted from raw from tht; lightest (hydrogen) the extraction of the of checking nuclear pro­ Each stage enriched the nuclear energy — horn the uranium without recourse to tbe heaviest (such as uranium 235. liferation. He presented a product by a factor of only 1.004. raw uranium metal. to elaborate thievery. uranium) occur as isotopes Uranium separation paper on Ihe subject Tues­ Cheaper power The process was made that, for each element are The account of the new day and elaborated on it in In the work reported this public this week following identical chemically but development at Los Almos an interview Wednesday. week, isotopes of boron, The new process may disclosure that the new vary slightly in weight makes no mention of at­ Since all the isotopes of chlorine and sulphur were hasten the development of technique had also been because of differences in tempts not use the new one element react in the enriched — in a single the number of neutrons in cheaper nuclear power, but achieved by scientists in method for uranium separa­ same manner chemically. stage—by factors of from 5 their nucleus. it also is expected to com­ the Soviet Union. tion. Rather, it tells nf re­ thev cannot be separated bv

CLASSIFIED 1 ANNOUNCEMENTS

Send your horse to the country. Pasture board S25. I stable board $75. Ring, jumps, trails along the Flat River and into the Butner SUMMER GARMENT STORAGE Reservation. Pond for swimming. 20 minutes from Duke. Antler's Hill Farm. 477-2044. Duke Student Laundry Sun Sublet: i from cam- The following program pus. SI 00/1 onth. call 383-4075. has been arranged for cleaning and storage of student garments WANTED and room furnishings: Ride needed to Cleveland or vicinity. Monday. Mav 5 or after. Will sharedrivingand 1. The rate for this service is as follows: each item @ $1.75 (i.e., 1 skirt, expenses. Call Will Harder. 684-5893. and leave message. 1 blanket, 1 coat, 1 sweater. This charge covers cleaning, pressing, mothproofing, storage handling and insurance.

Summr Work-study (Minimum order — 6 pieces) Tours for Admissior fice. Mon-Fri. 1:00 p.n Patsv Huff 684-3214. 2. Bring your order to Duke Student Laundry during hours — 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. — Monday through Friday. NEEDED: Teachers for Beth El Synagogue Sunday school. 1975-76. Sunday mornings. 10-12. Hebrew 3. Be prepared to pay charges in advance when you bring your order. not required. Call 477-7593. 4. Articles of high value or leather, fur or suede must be submitted to clerk for special attention, pricing and separate storage. Used refrigerator in delecta­ ble condition for sale. Call N. Ferree at 684-2872. Price very reasonable. 5. All orders must be picked up in entirety at Duke Student Laundry prior to Oct. 1,1975.

Calculator lost in engineer­ ing Buiding April 23. Whoever found it please RUGS call 286-7993. Reward of-

CLEANED * STORED * INSURED

LOST: Bulova Small size (up to & inc. 5x7) $8.00 watch. Silver, 6x9 $14.00 Duke Student Laundry works, in garden: 8x10 and 9x1 2 $21.00 afternoon. Sen 12x12 and 12x15 $24.00 value. 286-9161. Quotation on other sizes PAD—same price as rug. Satisfaction on cleaning Basement — Union Building not guaranteed. (Foam and rubber pad not ac­ West Campus LOST: Personality. cepted.) J. Haywood Evans, Manager Development, and Psy chopa t hoi ogy-Ca meron, I ~ Call 286-7649. Reward $20.00. j^^^jjj^j^^^-X-*^^^^ Thursday. April 24.1975 The Chronicle Page Five

Present No. Phones to be Re­ No. Phones of Hall Phones moved Summer *75 Remaining A Fubar -Phone cutbacks- B Phi Delta Theta C Alpha Tau Omega (Continued from page 1) D Phi Gamma Tau phone. At this rate the phone cutback E Phi Kappa Yesterday. Smith said, the EThetaChi memoranda informing the various liv­ would save the department about FPhi Kappa ' ing groups of the decision were sent to $6700 per month. G House G the dorms asking them to list the Donald Vandayburg. manager of H phones which they wished to keep in communications systems, said that he I House I operation. had been consulted about the decision J Phi Kappa Epsilon Redutions great but he was not aware that any final de­ K The effect of the cutbacks will be cision had been made. He emphasized L much greater on East campus than on that the decision to remove the hall M Stonehenge West with some dorms on East being phones was not his. He said his de­ N Stonehenge cut from 17 phones to 2. See accom­ partment just follows orders and if O Phi Kappa Psi panying chart for details of cutback they're told to move a phone or dis­ P House P by dorm connect a phone, it gets done, R-S Delta Sigma Phi TUV Maxwell Smith explained that the cost for He pointed out that this semester Y Tau Epsilon Phi approximately 60 per cent of the stu­ maintaining the hall phones is born ZHouseZ by the housing department at a cost of dents who could have had room W House W approximately $31.00 per month per phones elected to take them. YO Delta Sigma Phi YOO Present No. Phones to be Re- No. Phones AAPsi Epsilon East Campus of Hall Phones moved Summer'75 Remaining BB Kappa Sigma CC 2 3 Hanes House 5 DD Beta Theta Pi 11 EE Sigma Chi Giles 15 FF Bassett 15 13 GG Buchanan. Sig Alspaugh 17 Alpha Epsilon 15 2 Pegram 17 HH Warwick. BO Avcock 15 2 Windsor Brown 17 2 WAI Wannamaker I Southgate 14 4 WAII Pi Kappa Alpha Gilbert-Addoms 18 WAIII Delta Tau Delta Epworth 5 WAIV Wannamaker IV 12 2 larvis 14 IA Mirecourt 163 138 25 IB Tabard 1C Taylor Correction Seniors 2CYork In an article Tuesday. a statement was Seniors must return their personal in­ 2C Lancaster made regarding the possibility of the formation fo rms to the Duke News P.E. program com ng under the Service office by April 30 if they, want jurisdiction of DUAA. This statement the information to be sent to home town should have referred to DUAA's possi­ nwspapers. The forms can be sent ble administration of women's and non- through cam pus mail or brought by in revenue sports. The Chronicle regrets person to the news service office at 615 this error Chapel Drive •V Raise hell ARE YOU STILL

PLUS ALL THE SALAD YOU CAN MAKE PLUS A PITCHER OF BEER Smith WITH YOUR MEAL Olympic champions and world record holders—the ITA star-studded track and field cast includes Jim Ryun, Ben Jipcho. Bob Seagren. Rod Milburn. Brian Oldfield. Wyomia Tyus. Dave Wottle. Lee Evans. STEAKPllB Steve Smith and dozens more See 55 of the world's best ever track & Wottle field competitors in this one time action packed spectacular. LIMITED Open far diimer4:Mp.M. W«W. thru Sia.: Sun from 4;*M)p.m. IOI0 Hamilton R.wrt. Oia(H I Mill \i \\x iiikTM.-i-litiiiirf 15-501 mid 54 Wade Stadium—Sat, May 3,2:00 p.m. Tickets Now On Sale $6.00, $4.00, $3.00, $2.00, and $1.00 Children under 16, V2price 'V' Available at the Cameron Stadium Box Office, and all Record Bar Stores The (still) 51 % minority Last week's defeat ot the Equal Rights the same cells in jails and prisons with men Amendment in the North Carolina state and black bucks." legislature was. if nothing else consistent. Despite the fact that only five more states Other spokesmen for the state, both here at are needed to ratify the amendment by the home and in Washington, have previously March 22. 1979. deadline, defeats such as displayed their intent to deprive women of North Carolina's of which there have been equality under the law. and of their right to seven, add to the growing feeling that its control their own lives. chances are looking bad. The state senate defeated the amend­ Majority Report, a New York-based ment in 1973. Sen. Sam Ervin was its most feminist newspaper, reports that no federal outspoken opponent in the Senate amendment has survived a ratification bat­ Judiciary Committee hearings, and Sen. tle as long as the one for the ERA. The 14th Jesse Helms has introduced Senate Joint and 15th Amendments, guaranteeing equal Resolution 6, "guaranteeing the right of life protection of law and voting rights for black to the unborn." It seems if North Carolina men, required less than half the time for has its way. the 51 per cent minority will not ratification that the ERA struggle has con­ only remain unequal in the eyes of the law, sumed to date. but be told what to do about their unborn Ever since 50.000 women marched for children by their male representatives. equality in New York City in 1970—a march The sad thing is that the ERA has been that the media predicted would be a called, and indeed has become, a "highly "flop"—anti-ERA and anti-abortion groups, emotional" amendment. There doesn't as well as large corporations, have been or­ seem to be anything very emotional or de­ ganizing against ratification. Through court batable about it as it is written: actions against physicians performing legal Section 1. Equality of rights under the law abortions, massive letter writing cam­ shall not be denied or abridged by the United paigns, dramatic media messages showing States or any state on account of sex. garbage pails of fetuses, and, in the case of Section 2. The congress shall have the Ohio's Birthright, inc.. the use of $100,000 WOT mr I'M COMFAR/N' MWELF TO R00SEVEL power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, of taxpayer's money. anti-ERA forces have the provisions of this article. been exhausting the efforts of the amend­ Section 3. This amendment shall take effect ment's proponents. two years after the date of ratification. It would seem that 49 years after the ERA The purpose of the last section is to give was first introduced in Congress, the Unit­ state and federal governments time to bring ed States, and North Carolina, would begin Last gasp of letters conflicting laws into compliance with the to understand the barbarism of its lack of ERA. and to protect the rights of both men action. As with the suffrage movement, trum, the Arts page, and the Sports page into and women. perhaps the only way to convince our politi­ a conglomeration which would be a big suc­ No where does the amendment say that cians of the seriousness of our intent ts to 'Critical' cess. To theedit council: men and women will have to share hit them where it hurts—at the polls. Next I am really disappointed that Duke could It is almost with a feeling of regret that I bathrooms, or that ministers will be forced year wilt perhaps be our last chance to in­ do no better than the sorry Chronicle in my write this. After suffering in silence for near­ to marry people of the same sex, as was sure that the majority of our country will four years. Richard Nixon once said "four ly four years. I fee! that 1 simply must ex­ argued on the floor of the legislature, or. as finally have become as equal as the other more years." ! hope that The Chronicle will press my feelings concerning Duke's Daily Georgia's National States Rights Party 49 per cent. fare better than Nixon did. warned. "ERA would force women to share "Newspaper." The Chronicle. I really feet like a hypocrite, complaining about I would like to apologize to the persons something which is a representation of an who were associated with The Chronicle in a editorial staff which does nothing but com­ technical sense—it was not your fault. One more time Tony Dover 75 plain. This formal has not changed in four The closing of the law library to under­ a library. years: the superficiality still exists, and Ihe graduates comes as an unpleasant surprise The University claims that it can not find totally slanted and biased—excuse me— Inpolite to the student body. The law library is the enough staff to keep Perkins library open "liberal" editorials still remain. To the edit council: last bastion of all-night studying remaining all night. The real question is. it that they One still finds the important news stories Mitchell Wiener's article about Ihe North on the campus. cannot find enough staff, of that they do on pages three and four, with those articles Carolina Folklife Festival was discourteous not want to incur the expenditures nec- Dean Pye says that the library must be which the whimsical editorial staff believes as well as incorrect. First there was no need cessary to keep the library open all night? closed to undergraduates because they are are pertinent on the front page. Without the to refer to North Carolinians as "grits.1* Such simply taking up too much room in the Under the current schedule the library news stories from the major wire services, slang and derogatory terms should not be library and are forcing the law students to will be closing as early as 10:30 some which are selected to seemingly fit the used in a front-page news article. Secondly, find other places to study. nights and 11:00 p.m. on others. It is an in­ purposes of our wonderful daily paper, The Ihe festival had representatives from all He also cites recent friction between un­ sult to the undergraduate student body to Chronicle would die. smothered in its own across the state, not just the mountains. For dergraduates and law students as a pro­ suggest that the library should close that garbage. From Vietnam to Joanne Little to example the crab cage builders and the Pied­ blem which has caused him much concern. early. the Forestry School debate, the policy of "we mont gospel groups can not be found-in the He is certainly correct in saying that taw The law school has also found it must complain about something." "politi­ western part of the state. Thirdly. Durham is students should have first priority to the necessary to employ a security guard at the cians are all liars." "people on trial are inno­ not culturally deprived. The Southern library. It is unfortunate that no other entrance to the law school library to check cent, especially in controversial cases." etc.. culture is unique, not easily labeled or dis­ means of handling this problem could be for law school identification cards, is this still exists. I ask you—is the nation really played. The demonstrations on the quad this devised besides the barring of the library to really neccessary? Aren't librarians capable better off without Nixon? Has the removal of weekend were for the further education of undergrads. of checking ID's? Aren't there more the U.S. presence in Vietnam made the suf­ those Duke students too lazy or unwilling to However, during this hectic time of year worthwhile projects for security to engage fering cease? Is Ms. Little really not guilty, or leave the campus and experience the when students are finishing East minute in? If not. perhaps security can staff Perkins does her race and sex have anything to do Southern ways. I suggest it is Mitchell papers and preparing for final exams, the library in order to keep it open too. with it? Do you think the Duke Administra­ Wiener and others like him who are repell­ University has the responsibility to provide Surely a school which boasts of the quali­ tion would want In get rid of the Forestry ing culture and not the festival participants all-night library service to the student body. ty of its library can keep that facility open so School if they thought it would hurt Ihe or North Carolina citizens who are wil ling fo Certainly the undergraduate students that its student body can benefit from its University? The answers to Ihese. and many share their culture wilh their visitors. more questions have never been found in the have the need to use research facilities just excellence rather than do without its Elisabeth Fellows 77 as the law students do. and an empty scholarly resources. joke called The Chronicle. classroom cannot always take the place of I have thought on a few occasions what Policy might happen if the editors of The Chronicle Totheeditcouncil: found that the world was indeed a Utopia. The editorial policy of The Chronicle as Cherished letter Would they go crazy for lack of something to slated on April 21.1975 is: criticize, or would they become To tbe edit council: ministrator, a serious scholar, a good ". . . capital punishment is wrong. Those sportswriters? At least the sports staff of The Since Clark Cahow and I are two of only teacher, and a skilled organizer. During my who clamor for it do no! properly appreciate Chronicle has done an admirable job. in light three persons in Duke's history to receive the Duke career. I encountered only one top ad­ Ihe value of human life—killing is wrong no of Ihe poor performance of the majority of Chronicle's "Finger In Every Pie" Award, ministrator more receptive to student needs. mailer whal the circumstances." the athletic teams at Duke in the lasl four perhaps a comment on his appointment as desires, and problems. He is imaginative. In light of this statement. I would sincere­ years. Add to that the pseudo-intellectual Director of Admissions is in order. sets tremendously high goals, and is utterly ly like to see a statement of Ihe editorial and Utopian mire in which the editorial staff I share your disappointment over the devoted to the welfare of the Duke com­ policy of The Chronicle on the question of munity—all parts of il. has wallowed, and one ian easily see the dif­ abortion. behind-the-scenes decision-making process. ficulties which the sports staff has over­ Stephen Koscittsza 76 As a student, I worked very hard in ASDU I've been on search committees, and un­ come. and other groups toward an open University. derstand the members' disappointment. We I feel, however, that you are accentuating the all crave more openness in University de­ The Chronicle editorials really do not represent the majority of opinion al Duke, Schizoid negative and ignoring the good features of cision-making. Bul lei's not blind ourselves Totheeditcouncil: and I wonder how many p<;ople would buy his appointment. to Ihe fact that Cahow will be a fabulous Ad­ There is no longer any doubt in my mind the thing if it were necessary for financial re­ It's an excellent choice. I fail lo see how missions Director who will. I predict, bring that John Feinstein is a total schizophrenic asons. Maybe someone could combine the anyone can be a better Director of Ad­ several generations of studenis who will In half of his articles, he attacks, usually crossword puzzle; (which is the sole intellec­ missions than Cahow. He is a top-notch ad­ contribute might ly to Duke's progress. ferociously, the DUAA deficit and the pro­ tual challenge in The Chronicle), the Spec­ Harry Harkins '73 fessional ization of sports at the college level The new Hospital - Baird Straughan Editor's note: Baird Straughan is a efficiencies (such as heat reclaim units) Opponents charge that the planners un­ sophomore in Trinity College. This is (he which may lower their estimates. On the derestimate the inflationary increases in second of two columns aboul the proposed other hand, hospitals,with single-bed rooms construction costs and bond interest rates, new Hospital. sometimes require more staff than hospitals ignore forthcoming private suits, and over­ Apart from questions of need, most like the present one. (To do them justice, it look large sums of uncollectable bills. To a criticisms of the proposed hospital concern should be mentioned that at least one third certain extent, the dispute is one of misin­ its finances. Opponents charge that the pro­ of the increase in charges is not inflation, but formation, since the last widely publicized ject will increase the price charged patients, rather due to the cost of improving health figures date from January. 1974, when all in­ that it will adversely effect the rest of the care.) flation estimates were dictated by the cost of University, and that the hospital planners Administrators insist that, unless an Living Council. Some administrators still re­ have hidden the project's basic financial in- economic disaster hits, the project will have fuse to release their estimates, but other are feasibility. no effect on the rest of the University. Ac­ more helpful. The first criticism is entirely correct. cording to Charles Huestis only $1.6 million One misconception is that, while the Hospital planners have projected 1980 daily of the University's funds (16 per cent of un­ financial feasability of the project is based inpatient per diem costs at a 92.7 per cent in­ allocated income) goes to the Medical on an 8.5 per cent inflationary increase in crease over 1975 rates if the hospital is bui It. Center. I. Peyton Fuller. University Con- construction costs, actual inflation is much compared to 67.7 per cent without it. The trollor currently working with the hospital. higher. At present, the Turner Construction •ggr^ projected differencecomes out to $51 per was more emphatic about the independence Index quotes an 8 per cent inflation rate, and of the University and the Medical Center: day in a total average cost of $394. (The $20 administrators are planning with that figure. "the Hospital has been mandated by the figure quoted yesterday was incorrect in that Worker pay increases are now projected to Board of Trustees to be self-sustaining. As a 2 it assumed the new hospital's cost was car­ average from 9 to 9'/ per cent, rather than 6 result, favorable operations in the Hospital ried only in room-and-board increases.) The per cent, as released in the 1974 report. The do not hurt the rest of the University, nor do planners are now studying the savings due to interest rate for the proposed bonds, yELiBur...' unfavorable operations hurt the rest of the originally projected at 8.5 per cent, is fluc­ University." Approximately $61 million in tuating around 9.5 percent. A basic assump­ unsecured bonds will be floated to finance tion has been that double-digit inflation will the project. The bonds are to be backed by no soon end. either naturally or through govern­ collateral beside the "good faith and credit of ment action, and that inflation rates will Duke University" meaning that in the event drop from an average of 12 per cent next year s to the edit council of the Hospital's bankruptcy, the University to 6 per cent in 1980. would be expected to pay the debt. through the use of grants-in-aid. In the other admissions officer who is highly respected In the April 12th issue of the "Chronicle" half, he propounds the view that winning is. for his professional integrity. Does the Short of an economic collapse, the plan­ Pau.1 Bermanzohn, a medical student at and should be. the only goal in sports com­ Provost want us to believe that a man of this ners foresee no problems in meeting the UNC. asserted that further suits against the petition. Clearly, these two views are incom­ caliber was not fit to be elevated to the posi­ bond payments: they forecast "debt service" Hospital under the Fair Labor Standards Act would be forthcoming. In 1969. the Hospital patible: nowadays, it takes money to build tion of permanent director? funds sufficient to cover the payments one petro-actively paid some workers (mostly winning teams. If Mr. Feinstein wants win­ Again on April 10 you editorialized that and one-half to two times will be available. women) for admitted non-compliance with ning teams, then he should quit bitching the appointment was made "in direct con­ Beyond hospital revenue, the quasi - endowment (to be raised with te $35 million equal pay standards. Since then, ad­ about the DUAA deficit. If. on the other tradiction to the decision of a duly appoint­ equity) and money pledged by the Hospital's ministrators insist, there has been no further hand, he really does not want to spend a lot ed search committee." You seem to be in­ private clinics would be available to meet complaint: but Bermanzohn claims that all of money on athletic scholarships, then he dicating that the search committee did. in the payments if revenues fell short of an' :has not yet been paid. In lhe same article, re­ should stop judging all of the teams solely fact, have a preference among Ihe five tici pat ions. However, without near-proof ference is made to $27 million in uncollect­ on their win-loss records and conference finalists. With the information lhat has been re­ that all will run smoothly, the Board of ed patient bills, far out of agreement with standings. projections for thai year and allegedly vealed in the Chronicle, il now becomes es­ Trustees is unlikely to approve the bond is­ Look, for example, al Mr. Feinstein's re­ threatening the financial stability of the sential that the Provost come forward with a sue. marks about the swimming team—a team Hospital. Mr. Fuller, acting head of the definitive statement regarding the appoint­ with which he should certainly be familiar The Board is expected to limit borrowing Hospital Accounting Department, denies ment, if this is not immediately forthcoming, since he entered Duke with the intention to approximately $61 million, and the rest of this and cites $14.5 in uncollected patient [not carried out) of going out for swimming. the Board of Trustees should direct that an the money will be raised from other sources. bills as of March. Of total patient billing, an Unlike most of the other swimming teams in investigation be made independent of the To cover inflation, the target for such funds average of 8 per cent is "bad", he said, and the ACC. Duke does not recruit national adminstration and that such an investigation is now around $35 million, and if possible stated that this is one of the lowest tales for caliber swimmers wilh scholarships, a be made with full access to the search com­ more will be raised to establish an endow­ comparable Hospitals. policy which Mr. Feinstein must surely sup­ mittee files to determine if the Provost's ac­ ment. According to Dr. Ellchlepp. $17 to $18 of the $35 is in hand or committed. Plans to port, given his opposition to athletic grants- tions were justified. The investigating body The planner's projections aren't fixed, to go to the Hospital Section of the Duke En­ in-aids. Yet. in yesterday's article on the should be empowered Io take testimony the extent that costs to the Hospital vary, the dowment for substantial funding. According future of sports at Duke (4/22). Mr. Feinstein from anyone connected with the search, costs charged patients will change. As of this to Mr. Huestis. Ihe Board of Trustees is un­ lamented the low standing of the swimming without fear of reprisal, including those who time, however, these are their best guesses, likely to okay the project without having all and probably will be the ones presented to team in the ACC and cast uncalled-for interviewed (he five finalists. Finally, their the money, and "up to another month" the Board of Trustees on May 9th and 10th. aspersions on the coach (based only on his findings should be made a matter of public would be needed to raise it. when the Board makes its final decision. agej. The Duke swimmers do not expect to record. Nothing less would begin to answer heat State or UNC. and they are not disap­ the many questions raised by the Provost's pointed by those losses. Apparently. Mr. rejection of the search committee's work. Feinstein does and is. Nothing less may satisfy those alumni who In short. I am tired of Mr. Feinstein's two- will now question whether their own work on behalf of the university is worth the ef­ East Campus Feds faced approach to sports—especially his "winning is everything" philosophy—and fort. hope that next year he will be able to make lordanS. Levitin.'5B up his mind. Chairman. Norfolk Area Alumni currently on the waiting list—I am not Alice Baxter Admissions Advisory Committee Housing guaranteed housing in my present dorm, nor Residential Staff the federation, nor even East. I am guaran­ To the edit council: teed a room, somewhere. TotheeditcouncilKudos: Mote bullshit around us: The irony is thai I specifically asked that I I would like to take this opportunity to Priorities again. This time it's housing. not he placed on a frat dorm this year. I was. I Disregard personalty congratulate all the Duke stu­ I am currently a member of an East Cam­ will be assigned a room as those which are Totheeditcouncil: denis who participated in Ihe Big Four pus federation. Next year there is a good presently assigned open up. The manner in which a permanent Direc- Sports Day lasl Monday. chance I will not be. This is not my choice: it Fate? Perhaps. But the housing cards are lor of Admissions at Duke University has Then: wen; over 350 men and women on was decided for me by Ihe policies which heavily stacked against independents in frat been named has to be a low point in un­ the Duke campus participating in 14 dif­ determine Duke's housing assignments. sections. I can understand the fraternity iversity administration. To have an impartial ferent activities. It was a great opportunity In short. I don't have a room because I did situation and the desire of brothers to live search committee work for fourteen months for the students of Ihe Big Four schools lo get not join a fraternity. I was placed in a together. But I do resent being penalized for only to have their recommendations Healed together for friendly yet keen competition. fraternity dorm in the federation this year, not participating in that. If there are really wilh such apparent disregard is an insult lo This was the 29th vear of Ihis unique sports and assumed lhat 1 would be able lo remain going to be "viable living alternatives" to ni the intelligent' that commiltee. day. and it marked the advent of women's there if I so chose. Or al least in the federa­ fraternity living at Duke, then organizations You have reported that all of Ihe five com poli tion. tion. Bul the fraternity's pledge class was so such as federations must be given equal foot­ finalists wen; rejected by the Provost. Dr. My thanks goes to those people who con­ large that then; will l>e little or no room for ing in housing allotments. Preference must Fred Cleaveland. because none of Ihem me. tributed to Ihe success of Big Four Day; independents next year. In effect. I have he given to federation members in the same his standards- whatever they worn. The iden­ Kathy Simpson, women's IM Director: the been politely kicked out: 1 was not guaran­ way il is to fraternities. There is no tities of the five were no secret. Four of them women athletes and'supervisors: and the teed a room. My situation is not unique: pre­ mechanism which now exists (and this has openly visited the campus when: vou have male athletes and supervisors. It was a job sumably many independents in fraternity been confirmed) which gives federations the reported they were interviewed by a number well done. sections are faced with Ihe same situation in same priorities which fraternities have: nor of people. The fifth was the senior member Bru«:e Corrie the Fall Housing Crunch. Them was one re­ which allows them the same continuity. of Ihe admissions staffs) Duke, a dedicated IM Din*:tor— Men course: the lottery. I played it and lost. I am Nelson Hyde 78 ; Eight The Chronicle Thursday, April 24,1975 U.S. affirms support for Israel By Bernard Gwertzman Israeli request would have to be cut policy reassessment as a pressure tac­ the shipment of previously contrac- (Cl IMS W«ihin*lonSt«r-Newi before being submitted to Congress. tic to get them to make new con­ ted-for equipment. WASHINGTON — Secretary of The Israelis have been concerned cessions to the Egyptians. Schlesinger, in a television in­ Degense James R. Schlesinger has as­ that the reassessment might cause In particular, they have regarded terview earlier this month, said the sured Israel that the Ford Administra­ them difficulty in securing some new the freeze on new arms commitments equipment - such as additional F-4 tion's current reassessment of its Mid­ weapons systems. as a form of arm-twisting. jets, M-60 tanks, other sophisticated dle East policies wil not diminish Priority has been given to purchas­ weapons and tons of ammunition - continued American support for ing the F-15, the Air Force's new The Ford Administration, however, puts the Israelis "in a better position" Israel's security. figher; laser-directed bombs, and com­ has stressed that despite the reassess­ than they were at the outbreak of the In a two-hour session early Tuesday pleting the sale of about 200 Lance ment, there has been no slowdown in October. 197 3 war. evening with Israeli Ambassador missiles, short-range ground-to- Simcha Dinitz. Schlesinger reportedly ground mobile missiles, capable of reaffirmed what he had already said carrying nuclear warheads. publicly - that "the United States con­ At present, the Israelis expect to be tinues to have as an objective the able to conclude the Lance deal. A security of Israel." team of Israeli military men has been Reports of the meeting circulated in this country for some time learning among Israeli supporter Wednesday to operate the missile and the Israelis and served to ease their concern about expect the final paperwork to be the Administration's freeze on new finished after the reassessment is military aid commitments to Israel over. pending the conclusion of the policy The Israelis also anticipate that the reassessment. Administration will reinvite a team of & The review, in the form of a national Israeli air force specialists to evaluate O*\A» .* &° „* &* ^ * v«" .

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SERVICE FACILITIES in tr 6 LOWEST PRICES (We (except cheese) GUARANTEE it!) Phone no._ (Not valid with any other alter) ANN SHACHTMAN, MGR. 942-8544 • •COUPONkM-"m""COUPON« HOURS: Mon., Thurs., Fri. 10—9; J Tues., Wed., Sat. 10—6 &C^ &Sou n Above PJ'B-17S E. Franklin TJion'^Fhurs. open 'til 1 • Fri.-Sat. open 'til 2 X *m**mmmrTrm Thursday, April 24,1975 The Chronicle Page Nine Library 'Butler's black comedy— (Continued from page 12) md Hermione Gingold — I believe hers was the finest Schedules or he spoke while the audience's laughter still reverberat­ performance in that production. And again, although the ed throughout Branson Theatre. But he moves well (in role of Mrs. Prentice hardly stretches her talents all that Examination Period high heels, no less!), holds stage with the most ex­ much, she dominates the production. Beautiful — yes. April 26 through May 5.1975 perienced of actors, and it was a distinct pleasure to see beautiful, and don't you laugh as you remember her as new talent for a change. Lady Bracknell — in a dark brown wig and a sultry black Perkins Library Carole Bowers is an intense, intelligent actress who has slip (the people in this show rarely wear clothes), and 9:00a.m. -6:00p.m. Saturday. April 26 shone in all her performances this year. As Holga in After with magnificent comic timing, Hedrick was always the 2:00 p.m. -1:00a.m. Sunday. April 27 the Fall, she was excellent, yet wasted in the banality of object of my attention, whether or not her character was 8:00 a.m.-1:00a.m. Monday, April 28-Friday. May2 Arthur Miller's pseudo-intellectual hash. Later in The Im­ supposed to be. A fascinating performance ("My trouble Saturday. May 3 9:00a.m.-6:00 p.m. portance of Being Earnest, she proved herself to be an stems from your inadequacy as a lover! It's embarrassing. Sunday, May 4 2:00 p.m. - midnight adept comedienne. Here the role of Geraldine amounts to You've must've learned your technique from a Christmas Monday. May 5 8:00 a.m. -11:00 p.m. little more than constant confusion, yet Bowers invests it cracker") — bravo! No Desk Service after 11:00 p.m. with a sense of deeply felt desperation and neurosis is in­ What (he Butler Saw was a pleasant evening — the herent in Orion's characters. laughs came fast and furious, the pacing and direction Undergraduate Library By far the two most consistent characterizations were was generally adept and sure, and most of the actors Saturday. April 26 9:00a.m.-10:30 p.m. those of Ralph Thornburg and Beth Hedrick. In a re­ turned in steller performances. All that was missing was Sunday. April 27 12:30 p.m.-1:00a.m. markably sustained comic performance as Sergeant the laicious, malevolent sense of evil I found in reading Monday. April 28-Friday. May 2 8:00a.m. -1:00a.m. Ranee. Thornburg never substituted vaudeville buf­ Orton's play. With a deadened script, Duke Players pre­ Saturday. May 3 9:00 a.m.-10:30p.m. foonery for genuine confusion. He always managed to be sented a capable, but shallow production of a surfacely Sunday. May 4 12:30-midnight comical, yet thoroughly convicing within the free reigns amusing, but deadly serious black comedy of errors. Monday. Mav 5 8:00a.m.-11:00 p.m. of Orion's zany farce in which over-acting and sheer mug­ ging could be an easy temptation. Again, it was a pleasure East Campus Library to see fresh faces on Branson's stage — Thornburg's ex­ -Latent Image 2- cellent performance (along with that of Garth Weldon's) stands, the collection of Saturday. April 26 9:00a.m.-10:30 p.m. proves that there is much talent among Duke under­ (Continued from page 12) photos and essays is sparse, Sunday. April 27 12:30 p.m.-midnight graduates which should be used to better advantage. foolish as to deny either is but diverse. Latent Image 2, 8:00 a.m. - midnight Monday. April 28-Friday, May 2 As far as Beth Hedrick is concerned, well.... at the risk proceeding with only a the sequel to the highly ac­ 9:00 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Saturday, May 3 of sounding idolatrous. I believe she is the finest young partial sensitivity to his claimed first volume 12:30 p.m.- midnight Sunday, May 4 dramatic talent Duke Players offers^She has performed in metier. Latent Image 2 en­ published two years ago, is 8:00a.m.-10:30 p.m. Monday. May 5 nearly every type of role (would you believe her as Big dorses both. ample evidence of what No Reference service after 10:00 p.m. Mama in Cal on a Hot Tin Roof and Patsy in Little Perhaps the only lamen­ Duke's photo publication Murders — both in one season?) and has effectively con­ table characteristic of the can be. With more support, In general, other campus libraries will follow their regular tributed to shows with her versatility and remarkable ex­ book is its brevity, undoub­ next year's editors may add schedules. pertise. Her performance as Lady Bracknell in The Im- tedly necessitated by finan- depth to an already broad porta nee of Being Earnest conjured visions of Edith Evans scope.

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5) 7'/2 Foot Color T.V. in the bar! (Largest screen in North or South Carolina) The Durham Savoyards 6) presents One of the finest clubs on the entire East Coast This Weekend Friday and Saturday: Princess Ida Bob Tappe and the Fabulous Jammers Featu ri ng Bobby Wayne, formerly with Doug Clark and the Hot Nuts Sunday: Rock Concert 2-6 April 25 & 26 8:15 PM Featuring Weeds Matinee April 26 2:00 PM See You TONIGHT at Page Auditorium Adults: $3.50 Studenis: $2.50 BLUEBERRY HILL Tickets available ul Pus:,' Box Offive 15-501 By Pass Telephone Chapel Hill Boulevard 489-3984 Across from the NEW South Square Mall Thursday, April 24,1975 The Chronicle Page Eleven Consider the source Gone with the Wind? John Feinstein Duke sports fans, especially if they happen to be stu­ the Blue Devils aren't as good as everyone thought they Throughout the contest, which was close all the way, dents, are a unique breed. They manage to combine all the were. they continued believing Duke would win but some could characteristics of a cynic, with all those associated with Well they're not. Last year the football team wasn't bad, be heard saying things like, "If we can't beat these guys, an idealist. but it wasn't good either—6-5 is nothing to write home we can't beat anybody." They look to the "glorious past" of Duke sports, talk about. Neither is 13-13, which is what the basketball Well Duke didn't beat Virginia, to everybody's dis­ about it, and desperately wish for its return. Yet when team's record was this past season. may—and for that afternoon everybody became a cynic: they are faced with the bare facts of what the teams have Will the future bring more joy—who knows? But in the "We really are rotten," was the prevailing mood. produced during their years on the campus, it is difficult minds of many Duke students there is no question about Yet a week later they were all back, admitting there was for them to smile too much—grin and bear it would be "no way" Duke could beat Maryland but not wanting to be more tike it. absent in case a miracle occurred, which it didn't prompt­ The Duke students who attend athletic events now, ing; "I knew there was no way we could beat them," and save for a few graduate students, were not here when the "Why do I even waste my time." basketball team was a national powerhouse, nor were They waste their time because of those rare occasions they here, much less alive, when Duke was attending the when coming to the game is not a "waste of time." Rose Bowl. In addition, the successes of the minor sports And they keep coming because they have a great cop- teams in recent years have been few and far between. out ready in case of defeat. "None of them can read or But the Duke student is constantly being reminded of write anyway," is a remark often heard at Duke athletic the greatness of the "Duke tradition" in sports. The pro­ contests. (If you can't go to college go to State?) So, "if we pagandists even go so far as to refer to it as "our rich lose we're still smarter than they are"—right? athletic heritage." Except that losing still hurts and with each passing year The occasional moments of glory, which during this the students become a bit more cynical about the whole school year could be counted on one of their hands, com­ thing. But just when they are totally fed up, they graduate, bined with the propaganda they are constantly exposed and a new crop of bright-eyed freshman, many of whom to, brings out the idealist inherent in everyone. Duke fans came to Duke because of its athletic program, takes their take a great win as a sign of more to come—rarely is there places. more. Thus, neither or the Indoor But these occasional flights into the heights turn the Stadium will ever be empty—although local interest has students into their own propagandists. They sit around declined noticeably in direct proportion to the schools telling each other why "next year" is going to be better, number of wins. But the students will still come out to and by the time next year rolls around they are ready for watch, blame the referees, blame the other team for its great things. it—Duke will rise again. recruiting tactics, blame the coach (how often have you But the season itself usually finds them leaving many Already walking around campus you can hear students heard "we've GOT the talent") and if necessary, blame the games muttering "I knew they would blow it." Losses in saying that 1975 is the year that the football team is going cheerleaders. football to Clemson and Carolina—when they all KNEW to put it all together and win the conference title. As for But then they will sit down and think about the game we had the better team, and basketball losses to Virginia basketball, how can Duke fail with a man like Bill Foster logically and realize that the other team was better and and Wake Forest teams who could NEVER beat Duke on leading the way? that's the crux of the matter. But nine times out of ten its home court—leave the Duke fans wondering if maybe The main reason for this eternal optimism is the ex­ they'll decide that next time will be different and make istence of four letters. D-U-K-E. It's the name of the the trek back to give the whole thing another whirl. Coming up to third school. Duke represents big-time sports. Our graduates, or So if you wander around here, it is not unlikely to hear at least former players, keep turning up in the pro ranks, floor Flowers ain't that the same person predict that next year's football team will our basketball program is still nationally famous, and be 3-8 in one sentence, and 8-3 in the next. hard! Join the hordes of what othef school hosted the Rose Bowi in its own Optimism and youth are almost synonyms for one new Chronicle writers stadium? another—but losing constantly can turn one into a hard­ and photographers The talk about the "madhouse that is Cameron Indoor core cynic very quickly. But Duke teams don't lose con­ rushing up here for the Stadium" and knowing that their school is talked about stantly—they lose—but not constantly. So the students, orientation meeting this nationally, swells Duke students with pride. They boast while finding their idealism taxed, can often put down Friday at 4 p.m. Ask the about their schools megger accomplishments in their the feelings of cynicism welling within them—though not famous—egs., Cran­ home towns, and somehow manage to forget that during completely. ford, Pelham, Pinsky, the 1970's Duke has perenially finished in the second If the "glorious past" continues to be just that—past— Wesson, Melcher, division of the ACC in both basketball and football. then athetically-minded students will stop coming here Armeke and Clay Perhaps this year's basketball game in the indoor and the crowds and the enthusiasm will dwindle. You Felker, editor of New Stadium with Virginia provides a perfect example of the can't rest on your laurels forever. York magazine—H's prevailing attitude on campus. But who knows? Maybe Mike McGee and company will your ticket to a career Many students stayed away, since the game was on win the ACC title. Maybe Bill Foster will put Duke back television. Those that did come.'were there expecting a into the national rankings and everyone will forget the in journalism! win and some had to be nudged and awakened when the cynicism of the early 70's. game began. After all. tomorrow is another day. ; s>Jsf##»*»******^***»*******»**»***#^»*<»******»**»^*»***»»**^»***^******< Freewater Thursday Series N| Presents 9 j Contempt 9 JUNIORS By Jean-Luc Godard (France/Italy, 1963) With Brigitte Bardot, Michael Piccoli, and Jack Palance and Fritz Lang I Piccoli, who is trapped in a crumbling marriage with Bardot, represents SENIORS the modern intellectual, torn between the lost beauty of classicism and a sense of incipient revolution. "One of Godard's finest films; taught, vibrant, and sensitive, whose tragedy unfolds relenllessly." Peter Order Your Class Ring Morris. Graduating seniors must secure an eligibility card from Central Records. Tonight: 8:00 & 10:00 p.m. No eligibility card is needed for juniors. Bio Sci Auditorium Tuesday, April 22 thru Admission $1.00 Thursday, April 24 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM

Tomorrow Night: Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe University Store West Campus I And "Smoke and Ashe" (Freewater) I. i 90£NSS*9att«S0*»«99*fiiN eO» l,NWWWWWMIIWIWI*WWWIWW(IWIIHI)IIWIIWWW«IWMW«WHWIW Page Twelve The Chronicle Thursday. April 24,1975 Duke Players' 'Butler' capable, but shallow

By Kevin Patterson ness. Author |oe Orion's vision of a nightmare society in adaptation. There is method in Orton's zany madness. "With modness. as with vomit, it's the passer-by who re­ which people desperately seek justification of their ex­ and one laughs, certainly, but after a time the laughs ceives the inconvenience. .." istence and whose uncertain sexual identities are taken at should turn sour and stick in your throat. Under Richard —)oe Orion face value. Altman's expert direction. What the Butler Saw managed author of What the Butler Saw While a successful production on its own terms, the to divert us and make us laugh, but the almost terrifying As What the Butler Saw begins, a psychoanalyst Duke Players presentation of What the Butler Saw fails to aspects of Orton's scathing humor were not present. (Norman Ussery played Dr. Prentice) attempting to realize Orton's black comic vision of an irrational world When Norman Ussery enters instructing a prospective seduce a prospective secretary (Carole Bowers played in which rational men can't exist—"It isn't rational." in­ secretary as to her duties, he might as well he Algernon Geraldine Barclay) is interrupted by his alcoholic nym­ sists one character. A major flaw (and here Duke Players is (of The Importance of Being Earnest) offering a tray of phomaniac wife (Beth Hedrick played Mrs. Prentice) who. not at fault) is Ihe working script for the American stage cucumber sandwiches. Like Algernon. Dr. Prentice is after attending a coven of lesbians, spent the evening at production which alternately coarsens and deadens the about lo be embroiled in a humorous game of mistaken the Station Hotel, where she was sexually assaulted in a full impact of Orton's savage language and situations. For (physical, quasi-sexual) identities; unlike his effete, self- linen closet by bellhop {Garth Weldon plays Nick) who example, near the end of the play the crazed participants assured counterpart, however, Prentice is a man hot in turns out to be h. but lhal would be telling! In the carry guns in order to hunt down others whom they pursuit of sexual conquest. Unfortunately, Ussery is not meantime, a psychiatrist from the state (Bud de Winter believe to be insane. In the American version, the shoot- convincing in this aspect of his role, and the beginning of plays Dr. Ranee) arrives and concludes that Dr. Prentice is ing is still in good fun; no one is hurt by the make believe the play suffers from a lack of focus. (How does one sicker than any of his patients. bullets. In Orton's original version, however, the weapons portray sexual desire? Not with wild eyes, certainly, not Add one bumbling police sergeant (Ralph Thornburg are very real indeed, and the comedy takes on darker im- with panting tongue, but this element is missing in Us- played Match), and the chase is on in this fast-paced com­ plications. sery's aloof, controlled performance, and it's essential for edy of errors, mistaken identities, and near-nude people Mrs. Prentice (desperate, showing her hands). Is Ihis us to understand the motivation which sets the zany plot colliding in frantic chases, during which their sense of re­ blood real? into orbit.) LJssery. who is, nevertheless, a actor of fine presence and control, manages to show his remarkable ality vs. illusion is shattered. Confusion is rampant, and Ranee. No. comic timing to great advantage as the frenetic pace in­ the effect is of individuals furious in their denial of mad- Mrs. Prentice. Can you see it? creases. He is most convicing (and need I say?) amusing as Ranee. Yes. a confused Dr. Prentice vainly trying to set matters Mrs. Prentice. Then what explanation is there? straight again. Ranee. I'm a scientist. I stale facts, I cannot be expected to provide explanations. Reject any para-normal As for Bud De Winter as Dr. Ranee. I'm confused and phenomena. It's the only way to remain sane. don't know exactly what I sensed wrong in his Mrs. Prentice. It seems real. performance. De Winter has played the role before and Ranee. Who are you to decide what reality is? here acts with the cool comptency of someone phoning in iHO All of this, and more, is lost in the shoddy American his performance. Maybe that's it. De Winter simply gave up — the effort was too much. Dr. Ranee is at first conven­ tionally sane, but by the play's end, he is discovered to be Latent Image 2: the maddest of all. He is the insane voice of the power of the state, but I got little of this from watching De Winter's performance. Ranee is probably the most difficult in the play (Sir Ralph Richardson originated the role in Lon­ The photo document,the image as art don); certainly, it is the most satisfying as an acting vehi- By Holly Brubach Common and Kwilecki's of intensity, and little else, popular as the springboard c|e His psychotic transformation is alternately hilarious A photograph must be com- for a critical approach to j frightening. As Ranee, De Winter is neurotic in a No longer just a hope in testimony to Eugene Atget an( pelling to the viewer in the Shakespeare among ll, non-deadly way. but he is never a man possessed, the minds of a committed and Decatur County add a sma purely visual sense of its freshmen English students. technical level. De Winter insisted on talking few. Latent Image 2 has focus and a background to 0n a form, as well as in the con- for new aesthetic throughout the audience's laughter, making it difficult to finally materialized in the images they present, notative sense of its subject manifestoes among artists, understand much of the fleeting wit of the script, tangible black-and-white. Sydney Nathans raises matter. In this sense. Latent and for speculation among Although De Winter, too. garnered his share of laughs. I After what seemed an in- an important question in Image 2 seems a bit ran- photographers. But among foundhis to be a weak, poorly motivated performance. terminable struggle to the application of solicit support and funding, documentary photography dom. some of the work the latter, the argument is ^ Nick ^ overeexed bellhop. Garth Weldon relies editor Bill Baxter and his to historical research. Vis- lacking in the force that un­ little more than a dead end more perhaps on the sightgag of dressing as a woman for staff of two. John Menapace ual records to date have leashes all that is latent in with side streets: photo- |aughter than an innate comic ability, but he is an earnest, and Ana Diaz, have put largely been the historians' the image. graphy is art and life at on- terrib|y appealing young actor nevertheless. Occasionally together a commendable tools to "peddle the past." The duality of art and ce. Any photographer so his voice fell to a whisper and was difficult to understand, monument to photography rarely used for understand- life is a universal argument. (Continued on page 8) (Continued on page 8) in and beyond the Duke ing it as well. Nathans- community, argues impressively for the Latent Image's format is scrutiny of photography as especially impressive, as an aid to the study of his- NCCU Student Art Show should be true of any book tory. Bottom center: Birth Counterclockwise: From specializing in a graphic I suppose if the essays Africa Mother, Ralph medium. The photographs have a focus, it is the lack of Barnette; Let there be light, are well-reproduced. Ihe defensiveness among the Cortey Dempsey and Black layout is unassuming. authors about producing Man. Fuzzy Lovette; Major Baxter's introduction of- "art." Nathans makes no McNair (untitled); Sculpture fers inroads for interpreta- such distinctions, but con- (untitled); The Neglected, tion. not only of Latent centrates on the documen- Major McNair; The Orgy, Saundra Riggs. Image, but of all photo- tary aspect inherent in graphy. by obliterating the every photograph; Lukas line between document and has set both artistic and art and sanctioning a documentary goals for stylistic range so broad as to himself in the creative pro- include "the very personal cess; and Kwilecki seems work of Diane Arbus and indifferent to the public's Robert Frank Frank to the skeptical toward his subjective, transparent medium as art: "I simply work of Walker Evans." wanted a medium that had Such is Latent Image's re- the technical capacity to aim, from the more delineate with a minimum personal statements of Vic loss of verisimilitude any Lukas and Paul Kwilecki to piece of reality I chose." the more detached objec- The photography chosen tivity of Becky Yeomans for Latent Image 2 ranges and George Church. from fascinating to facile. I Lukas and Kwilecki have wonder if perhaps the each included literal selection tries to cover too forewards to their work broad a spectrum of styles which also conveniently and perspectives in too serve as introductions to limited a space (albeit, too their aesthetic or intent and small a budget). There are their means of pursuing it. photographs thai endure Certainly, the photographs and those that fade; those of both can stand apart from that best stand in the verbal explanations, but passage of time have in Lukas' delienation of Mona common a peculiar degree