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from the wires of United Press I ntsrnational
Compiled by Tom Sawyer
Wire Editor
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R 0 , '2 A prosssutor he 3 issued srrest warrants gs!nsi st Issst lour suspects
ths fc;-.rp:r.3 of J. Paul Getty III, grandson of the oil fcHHonsIre, ps'Ice source ss
Thsy c-ld tha wsrrsni3 were issued in Lsgonegro, the tmcli southern town near
ths sp whzrB Getty v3 released Dec. 15 for a $2-9 minion ransom.
Kzll Young to seek Ervin's seat
JERUSALEM Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger and Israeli officials set
up a special working group Tuesday to draft
a new proposal on separation of Egyptian
and Israeli troops on the Suez front to be
presented to Egypt.
Kissinger said the major difference
between Cairo and Jerusalem now was on
the size and strength of the military force
each side wanted to leave on its territory - He
will take the new plan back to Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat on Wednesday,
government officials said.
American and Israeli officials convened
the group, comprised of four Americans and
three Israelis, after what they described as an
"intense" round of meetings over Egyptian
counterproposals on troop disengagement.
Senior U.S. officials had said Egypt's
proposals were close enough to Israel's to
make compromise possible.
"The differences which exist are
manageable, once source said. He
(Kissinger) does not consider the problem so
large as he did 48 hours ago.
Kissinger has been shuttling between
Egypt and Israel since last Friday in his
efforts to break the deadlock on troop
disengagement which has been the major
CHARLOTTE Ball Youna, a twice-deflated ReaubSican candidate for the LLC
Hsuss of Representatives, has announced as a GOP candidate for the seat held by 7-, , J-
Can. Ccm ErYia, D-f I.C. . KO OICV CllCS
Ervin, cheirrtian of the Senate Watergate Committee, said earlier that he would not
be a czr.ZlZzl's for reelection when his present term expires at the end of this year.
:L cats preliminary okay on plant
RALEIGH The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) gave Carolina Power & Light
Co. permission Tussdey to construct temporary buildings at the site of its planned
nueSeer p'.ent in Vske County.
The AEC ssid CP&L couid also prepare the site for construction of permanent
c u!'din3. The buildings w"I be used during construction of the plant, 20 miies south
cf nelcih.
Vcrk on the plant itself awaits a permit from the AEC. The permit cannot be
r rc-ied until .a pufcSic heating is he!d, end no date for a hearing has been set'
WILSON. N.C. Former Rep. Harold D.
Cooley, D-N.C, who served for 17 years as
chairman of the House Agriculture
Committee, died in his sleep Tuesday. He
was 76.
Cooley, whose 32-year Congressional
career ended with his defeat for relection in
1966, had been hospitalized with
emphysema at Wilson Memorial Hospital.
Cooley was first elected to Congress in
1934 as the representative of North
Carolina's tobacco-rich 4th District. He was
appointed as a freshman to the Agriculture
Committee and became its chairman in 1 949.
The Drama Committee of the Duke University Union Presents..
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Thursday, January 17 at 4:00 and 8:30 p.m
Page Auditorium, Duke University
I Evening: $5.50, $4.50. $3.50 O Matinee: $3.00
j plenty of good seats available O On sale now at Page Box Office, Duke O 684-4509
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All featured this week on Carolina's own radio station-55 -on your AM dial
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obstacle to resumption of the Middlr East
peace conference in Geneva. Kissinger his
met twice with Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat at the Nile city of Aswan and twice
with Israeli officials in Jerusalem.
A source in the U.S. delegation said
Kissinger felt just one more round trip would
be necessary to reach a "workable
agreement."
Kissinger told newsmen accompanying
him on the plane from Egypt Monday nignt
the differences between the two
disengagement plans centered mainly on
Israel's proposal for the thinning out of
forces near the Suez Canal.
The argument now is on withdrawal of
kilometers here and there and the number of
missiles, tanks and soldiers that each side
lemmBerauores
wants to leave in its territory." Kissinger
said. "But above all. there is a willingness in
principle by Israel and Egypt to work for an
execution of the separation of forces
agreement.
Foreicn
Minister Abba Eban told
newsmen alter a two-and-one-nan nour
meeting with Kissinger:
Ve have appointed a working group to
formulate the Israeli ideas on the Egyptian
proposals so that wtien the secretary goes
back to Egypt he'll have a very clearh
formulated conception of what our views
are."
Sitting in on the Kissinger-Eban meeting
were Defense Minister Moshe Dayan.
Deputy Prime Minister Yigal Allon and
other Israeli and American officials.
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WASHINGTON Americans began
turning down thermostats Tuesday in the
face of a new, 15 per cent cutback in heating
oil allocations, but the government promised
that no one would freeze this winter.
John C. Sawhill, deputy director of the
Federal Energy Office, also told reporters
that details of the government's standby
gasoline rationing program would be made
public on Wednesday to give the public time
to comment.
Sawhill gave no hint when a decision on
rationing might be made. Energy chief
William E. Simon has said it would not be
imposed before March 1 at the earliest, that
chances were better than even it would not be
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necessary.
At a news conference, Sawhill predicted
the public would comply with the
government's appeal to turn down
thermostats by six degrees in homes and
schools and by 10 degrees everywhere else,
even though there is no provision for federal
enforcement.
The goal is to achieve an average setting of
68 degrees, which energy officials estimate
will be enough to get through the winter with
heating oil allocations reduced 15 per cent
below the expected demand for the current
cold season.
Still, Sawhill said, "a home-owner who
runs out is not going to be allowed to freee."
ZTZ - :!" "I
Fine Old Sets
at silly Little
Prices in Our
Front Window
THE OLD BOOK CORNER
137A East Rosemary Street
Opposite Town Parking Lots
Chapel Hill. N.C. 27514
Following the meeting. Kissinger bneted
Prime Minister Golda Mcir at her home on
the talks. U.S. officials said. Mrs. Mcir has
been ill and has not taken pan in all o! the
disenpigement talks.
Later, the cabinet convened for a special
session at Mrs. Meir's home. A government
spokesman said Mrs. Meir.despite her
illness, chaired the session.
The Egyptian disengagement counter
proposals were drawn up in Aswan Monday
after officials there said the Israeli proposal
Kissinger presented was "unsatisfactory"
Crisis grows
LONDON Prime Minister Edward
Heath said Tuesday he will hold one more
meeting with leaders of the 10 million
member Trades Union Congress ( I'UC) in
still another bid to find a way out of Britain's
grave industrial crisis.
He made the announcement to Parliament
in reply to a question from Labor opposition
leader Harold Wilson.
Britain's 29,000 railroad engineers went
on a 24-hour strike Tuesday hours alter
Heath and union leaders broke off abortive
talks aimed at ending a crippling slowdown
by the nation's 260.000 coal miners.
The British capital's 10.000 subwax
workers threatened a walkout in February
also to back a pay claim. They demanded
more than the SI 5. 12 million deal offered by
the London Transpon Board.
Reflecting the deepening crisis, the British
pound plunged to its lowest level in history
on the foreign exchange market.
with
coupon
pizza special
$1.00 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA
$.50 OFF ANY MEDIUM PIZZA
GOOD 114 to 124
Kresw Mm, Krt to Fiza I & II ThMtra
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1 w wi w www Fri. & Set. 11 mun. - 10 pn.
PIZZA TAVERTil sxiy 12 pan. & pan.
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UXTZZPeiCOP STUFF
4SS 6. frailiia St.
Phone: 929-7626
"Hi, I'm Bonnie Raitt. I've never played
the South before but I've heard how
nice this area is. See ya'll Friday
Night January 1 8th at Duke's Page
Auditorium."
Tickets-$3.50 at all the usual places.
Presentation of Duke University
Union.
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