Sfe abflta m fed Wednesday, January 13. 1971 The Daily Tar Heel Wm 1 bjriuighif to' .971 1 Police raid Paiuttliieirs after meat robbery WINSTON-SALEM-Police fired hundreds of shots and lobbed tear gas into a Black Panther headquarters Tuesday, charging that they were fired upon from inside the house while investigating theft of a truckload of meat. No one was hurt despite a barrage that riddled the walls with bullet holes and smashed out windows in the two-story frame house. Police took two blacks into custody and recovered 20 boxes of frozen meat identified as having been taken from the truck. They also confiscated a shotgun, two military-type weapons, and ammunition. Police Chief Justus Tucker told newsmen several of his officers said they were j? fired upon as they surrounded the house. Police and sheriff's deputies, about 75-100 men strong, opened up with rifles and shotguns in a barrage that lasted I between 30 seconds and a minute. x ? Tucker said a truck driver, Ralph Lindley, was delivering meat when his truck I was stolen. After reporting' the theft, Lindley found the truck parked in front of the Panther headquarters. Lindley said he was driven away by an armed black. Teacher strike closes schools CHICAGO-Teachers went on strike Tuesday in the Chicago school system, the nation's second largest, closing the city's 533 public schools and giving 577,000 pupils an unscheduled holiday. Mayor Richard Daley, moving quickly to end the deadlock between the 20,000-member Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) and the board of education, invited negotiators to bargain in his office. The two sides were millions of dollars apart as they recessed talks in the early hours Tuesday. The board had offered a $38.56 million package, including a 4 per cent salary increase. CTU demands totalled $42 million, and called for a 12 per cent increase in teacher's salaries. Steel prices concern Nixon j? ML SA N CLEMENTE, Calif .-President Nixon was "deeply concerned" Tuesday over the "enormous" 12.5 per cent price increase announced by Bethlehem Steel Corp. and threatened to open U.S. doors wider for foreign steel imports if other companies follow suit. In a unprecedented tough response to the announcement of the Bethlehem hikes on steel products, effective March 1, Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said that Nixon asked his Cabinet Committee on Economic Policy to review all aspects of the effects of the increase on the economy and to report promptly on action the ' government can take. SKIERS Join Durham-Chapel Hill Ski Trip to Kitzbuhel & St. Anton, Austria . .... March 6 thru 20th For information call Patty Albright at Circle Tours 942-4196 C r-.'!v. Crossword Puzzle Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle ACROSS- 1 Entreaty 5 Pronoyn 8 Containers 12 Ventilates 13 Diss 14 River in Siberia 15 Keepin a sound state 17 Portico 18 Scoff 19 Wiping out 21 Common contraction 23 New Deal agency (in'rt.) 24 French plural article 27 Scraped with the nails 32 Great bustard 34 Be ill 35 Elanet 36 Gondolier's melody 39 Number 40 Exist 41 Bark 43 Meeting of bodies 47 Man's name 51 Mine entrance 52 Valuable cabinet wood 54 Not one 55 Tierradel Fuegan Indian 56 Mild expletive 57 Sandarac tree 58 Damp 59 Communists DOWN 1 Moccasins 2 King of beasts 3Seaeagie 4 Hem of poperty , 5 Weight of India 6 Possess 7 Without end 8 Russian horseman 9 One opposed 10 Midday 11 Projecting tooth 16 Goddess of ...trti&tdrd 20 Skill 22 Person clad in rags 24 Tennis stroke 25 Greek letter 26 Title of respect 28 Spanish for "river" .29 Strike 30 French for "summer" aTp AlRj IS T O pj sec P 2. E 2. ILi X A TTe AVE "Til AjP E R S 'TJ4 E P au S IE A SjjF jE ALBEU M: A wSr" C E R E A L j S E G E Tj A L JM Of" ST erIavert sL, car itIwii t q rtal Wek at e sJn d fjsl E R E IE T T Ap T E RlHl ItieipI iAlslslel epnai 13 31 Lair 33 Strew 37 Macaw 38 Ireland 42 Force 43 Scene of first' miracle 44 Aroma 45 One of Columbus's ships 46 Pitch 48 Theater box 49 Burden 50 Advantage 53 Posed for portrait 18 ! 20 JJ 233? 32 ' 33 34 35" 36 " "37 38 43 " 51 SS 32 53 1 54 53 ""3S " 57 S! by Frank Parrish Feature Editor As 1970 recedes slowly into memory I'm sure I would be amiss if I didn't recall some of the singular triumphs that made it another banner year for the arts. I don't guarantee infallibility. Nothing is certain in these parlous times. Sophia Loren, for example, made both a "worst-dressed" and "best-dressed" list. Now, for a look at the outrageous misfortunes suffered by art. Worst book-Erich Segal's "Love Story" towers above the rest. Its one virtue is that it is mercifully thin-131 pages in hard cover. Professor Doctor Segal apparently tried to revive the genteel school of literature. William Dean Howells, luckier than most sentimentalists, is dead. Were he alive, he would have seen the reviews. The critics, in an inexcusable lapse of taste, were nearly unanimous in their praise. I do not hold against the book that it was written as a spinoff from the movie's screenplay or that parts of it first saw print in "The Ladies' Home Journal." It's quite atrocious in its own right. . The story traces a love affair between Jennifer Cavilleri, an Italian baker's daughter and Oliver Barrett IV, a New England patrician's son. When Oliver announces his plans to marry Jenny, he completely breaks with his father. Their relations, alas, were never amiable anyway. There you have it, folks, all in one package. Not just a tale of "star-crossed lovers" but a generation gap as well. If only Barrett the Elder had broken up the affair, you wouldn't be treated to stock characters going through a dumb show of emotion. After Ollie and Jenny have been married for a precious few years, the reader learns Jenny doesn't have much time left. Alas, cruel fate. She has leukemia. Just think, it could have been another "Forsyte Saga." As you read the deathbed scene, you must have a heart of stone if you don't laugh uncontrollably. Then you can enjoy a good cry. Erich Segal's overdose of sacharine headed the best seller list in fiction for most of 1970. It warmed the cockles of American Have any special skills, hobbies, or fetishes? IUNC can use you for our Feb-Max Bi-Lune Contact: King Nyle I P.O. Box 630 (Frank. St) Chattel Hill. N.C. 1 CHESS, the classic game of strategy, now comes packaged in a deluxe 3M Bookshelf edition. Chess players of all ages will treasure this fine set. Bookshelf case contains imported, hand-detailed Staunton design French wood chessmen, varnished, weighted and felted, 2" King, and a handsome wood-grained foldaway chess board. A 3M Bookshelf Classic. $19.95 Plus 31 Other Exciting Games Of Skill And Strategy from $4.50 to $8.95 DIILV 1D7H00 rfeaj f:3 Maa.-Frf, t P.f. r imiMwmiiP HATE 1 I ( I'D REAILV LIKE TO Kj I WHAT IT WOULD f TAKE IT FROM. ME, IT'S J U UU (HAVINS 60 MANj I A BETTER PERSON M UKEIO OgTHAT 1 A GREAT FEELING 1 J ?s-- x - Y T UD0IN r KNOW, A BIT 1 DIDN'T ROUGH. SLEEP A TOED EVSRVTMl'EAVSN KNOWS ALL THE CUUES UNOWN T A'DbSSN MAN. 'ELFFUL ADVICE, - -HI - - - i -r "- f- r" B IboESN I NrffN f FLOSRIE J whATY teuQttp D'VER ) K J r YUP ) TfiYV fen 3 X lN Ef2 zz&frt . tMgJS hearts. Segal, in my judgment, owes the American public an apology. Yet, to take a line from Mr. Segal's epic: "Love means not ever having to say you're sorry." Worst movie "Airport" is grounded but miraculously soars to unimaginable heights of mediocrity. As with the Supreme Court, perhaps we need a little mediocrity in the movies. "Airport," far and away, led at the box office in 1970. Its cast included practically every product of the star system except John Barrymore. "Airport" was based on Arthur Hailey's melodramatic book of the same name. It was far more traumatic on celluloid than in print. The movie was soapier than the 10,00th segment of "Love of Life." Airport's score had the organ stops pulled out but it was bland enough to match the dovetailing dramatics. Worst television program There were many contenders for this honor. That hardiest of perennials, "The Ed Sullivan Show" was only dismissed reluctantly. But let's face it. The showman who brought us "the little Italian mouse" and the immortal Raphael-that would have been quite a coup but he was a singer, not a Renaissance painter deserves better treatment. Shrewdly calculating what most closely approximates primitivism, IH have to go with "Let's Make A Deal." Genial Monte Hall proves repeatedly that greed can reduce adults to inarticulate asses. Next season, he may distribute some beads and conceal Manhattan behind one of the curtains. Monte's audience members dress like extras for Andy Warhol's next film and are reduced to drools, laughter and convulsions when Monte picks them to make deals. The best is yet to come though. God help the viewer when someone wins. Worst records (single and albums worst single-Bobby Sherman gets the nod for his opus, "Easy Come, Easy Go." In the bubble genre, Bobby is without equal. The music on this one sounds as though it is played by cast of fs from the Ohio Express and 1910 Fruitgum Company. And the lyrics offer a sad comment on the mental state of subteens. But Bobby has indisputably found his "metier." Watch him in action. He launches into a series of pelvic gyrations, flashes a toothy grin or two and K'lts out the pungent lyrics. Worst album -The Partridge Family album is the work of a collection of terrible enfants. I can only wonder it the Partridges play their own music. It they don't, the studio musjcuns must have been snt over from a nearby unemployment office. The PjrtriJ.ce Family is evolution's answer to the Monkees who also started making joyless noises on the tube. My list of 1970s artistic marvels concluded, I can only add that 1970 was a true "annus mirabilious." Camptis calendar All aliens must file their current addresses with the Immigration authorities before January 31. Cards should be obtained at either Post Office, filled in and returned to the Post Office. The Cinematheque. Tonight Busby Berkely's "42nd Street" starring Ruby Keeler and Dick Powell. Shows at seven and nine. Admission $1. The UNC Reader's Theatre will present "The Little Prince" in the Carolina Union Coffee House tonight at nine. Students who took an Incomplete in Benavie's Econ. 31 in the spring semester of 1970 may take the final exam on January 27 at 2 p.m. in Greenlaw 101. For further information, see Robert Mackay in Hanes 400G. Attention: Small men. The UNC Boat Club needs small men 5'4" or under to train as light-weight coxswains. For more information, call Jack Carpenter. 942-2881. Students participating in the YM-YWCA United Nations Seminar in New York will meet briefly tomorrow, upstairs in the Y at 8 p.m. Hamagshimim meets tomorrow night in the student union at 8. All Jewish students are invited to sample this new campus group. Found: A wedding ring on the intramural field during soccer club game. Loser may claim by calling 966-2375 and describing the ring. Lost: 1971 Class Ring, Kappa Sigma insignia. Reward. Wm. A. Peters, LLL. 4216 Garret Rd., Apt. C-I3, Durham, 489-8748. FOR SALE 9 (For More Information, Read Classifieds) V C i c IRS A NVEN TORY SALE I X PIONEER DEMONSTRATORS fl Reg. NOW 1 SX-440 Receiver $199.95 $17935 1 SX-770 Receiver 249.95 224.95 1 SX-990 Receiver 299.95 269.95 1 SX-1500TD Receiver 399.95 359.95 1 SA-500 Amplifier 109.95 97.95 1 SA-700 Amplifier 199.95 179.95 1 SA-900 Amplifier 259.95 234.95 1TX-900 Tuner 259.95 234.95 1 TX-700 Tuner 199.95 179.95 2 TX-600 Tape Deck 299.95 259.95 Auto-Reverse 1 pr. CS 700 Speakers 179.95 1 54.95 1 pr.vCS-630X Speakers 279.95 235.95 1 pr. CS-05 Speakers 1 19.95 99.95 1 PL-25 Auto Turntable 129.95 115.95 HARMON KARDON Reg. 1 . SC-7 Compact $475.00 3. SC-1 8 FM-Stereo Compac t 309.95 1. SC-23 AM-FM Stereo 319.95 1 . PR HK-50 Speakers 85.00 1 .CAO-4 Cassette Deck 1 59.95 1 M ' '. NOW $314.95 217.00 229.00 65.00 125.00 MODEL 11 & 12 AMPLIFIER & PRE-AMPLIFIER REDUCED AZTEC SPEAKERS Reg. NOW 2 PR. GAUGIN FLOOR SPEAKER $219.95 $145.00 1 PR. REMBRANDT BOOKSHELF 135.00 85.00 VIVITAR RADIOS & RECORDERS Reg. NOW 2 720 Cassette $179.95 $135.00 1 730 AM-FM Cassette 249.95 179.00 C-2 Portable Cassette 79.95 58.50 IC7-007 AM-FM Radio 39.95 28.00 PRC-770 AM-FM, Portable Cassette 99.95 69.00 BELLWOOD TAPE PLAYERS Reg. NOW 9500-AM-FM STEREO 8-TRACK WITH WALNUT SPEAKERS $179.95 $139.95 8500 SAME AS ABOVE WITHOUT RADIO ONLY 99.95 DUAL RECORD CHANGERS DEMO-UNITS REDUCED GERRARD RECORD CHANGERS DEMO-UNITS REDUCED ALL CAR UNITS REDUCED Res NOW BOMAN COLOR ORGAN 6' 3 CHANNEL- RED, GREEN, BLUE, SEPARATE CONTROLS FOR EACH COLOR $59.95 pr. $47.00 pr. or 24.95 ea. ALL SOUND LIGHT EQUIPMENT REDUCED 1 TC 222A 1 TC 800 1 TC 860 2 TC-8 1 TC-230 SONY RECORDERS Reg. NOW $99.95 $89.95 179.95 149.95 129.95 yy.95 135.00 115.00 199.95 179.95 KENWOOD DEMO-COMPACTS Reg. NOW KS-707 379.95 340.00 KS-505 269.95 241.00 RECORDING TAPE 10 OFF