The Dally Tar Hssl I t V v calen Wednesday. March 17, 1371 f fTV-? f 1 , - oar ST; i i f M Ills M . s ! i .! I The Wesley Foundation, 214 Pittsboro St., presents an evening of chamber music tonight at 8. Stephanie Melvin, Mezzo-Soprano; Susan Oehler and Nancy Jayne, Flute; Donald Oehler, Clarinet; Sarah Womack and Margaret Proctor, Violin; Linda Bass, Viola; Julie Griffin, Cello; and Gretchen Atkinson, Harpsichord. Works by: Giordani, Weber, Monteverdi, Telemann and Vilia-Lobos. No admission charged. Interviews for Chairman of the Carolina Symposium will be held Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, March 22, 23, and 24 in the Carolina Union. The symposium topic for the spring of 1972 is "The Southern Renaissance. Form available at the Union information desk. UNC students are invited to become members of the Young Democrats Club. Members will be available in the Student Union this week for registration. The UNC club takes part in the College Federation of the state YDC, sponsors symposiums and conferences, conducts legislative lobbying campaigns and invites speakers on contemporary issues. Donations are requested for the Campus Chest auction to be held April 8. Students, residence colleges, fraternities, sororities and any organizations, groups or individuals are asked to bring their items to the APO office, Smith Building, before spring break, or call 933-1044 or 933-3996. The UNC Young Democrats Club is sponsoring a symposium on political parties and voting behavior on Saturday, March 20. The symposium begins at 11 a.m. in the Great Hall of the Student Union. Continuing seminars run throughout the afternoon. All UNC students and faculty are invited. Choosing your major? Want information about special credit, independent study, graduate studies, special courses in any academic department? Professors are meeting with students Tues., Wed. and Thurs. and next Monday, 7:30-9:30 p.m. in Granville cafeteria, main social lounges of West Cobb, Morrison, James and in the Teague social lounge of Scott College. Refreshments will be served. All students are urged to attend. Found i- a reddish-brown male cat with .flea, collar. Can be claimed from the men ron r the third floor of Lewis. For information call 933-1556. Found: Man's ring in South Building. Found about two weeks ago. Call Mrs. Wagoner at 933-1367 to identify the ring. Avoid The Rush Get Your Haircut For The Spring Vacation NOW. CAROLINA UNION BARBERSHOP ?: The Dally Tar Heel Is published by the :. University of North Carolina Student :: Publications Board, daily except Sunday, examination periods, vacations and summer periods. Offices are at the Student Union : building, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. 27514. Telephone : numbers: News, Sports-933-101 1 ; 9 3 3J10 12: Business, Circulation, Advertising 933-1163. Subscription rates: $5.00 per semester. $10.00 per year; X Second class postage paid at U. S. Post :::: Office in Chapel Hill, N.C. :::: The Student Legislature shall have-:: powers to determine the Student Activities fee and to appropriate all revenue derived from the Student X; Activities fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student X Constitution). The budgetary: appropriation for the 1970-71 academic :X year is $2 ft, 2 9 2. 50 for undergraduates X and $4,647.50 for graduates as the:': subscription rate for the student body ($ 1 .84 per student based on fall semester enrollment figures). X The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to ;X regulate the typographical tone of all: advertisements and to revise or turn X; away copy it consider objectionable. X; ' :: The Daily Tar Heel will not consider X adjustments or payments for any -X advertisement involving major typographical errors or erroneous':': insertion unless notice Is given to the X; Business Manager within (1) one day X after the advertisement appears, or ;X within one day of the receiving of tear '. sheets, of subscription of the paper. The : Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible & for more than one incorrect insertion of X an advertisement scheduled to run & several times. Notices for such correction ; must be given before th next insertion. : ......... ....?AV.SV.SV.V.V.V.VAV.V..-.V..X'I mum I VoIZ70r I 7T 7 1 m if ito? anvJ i it's cf anvinteSt.M -px r;rru !NTEST V ' I W3 PLAV1N1 fCZ A CUIb L J DINNER 'AS B52h4 ) VAN I WAS TWO FRMS UPJJ ! 'j FOP jJvT 1 "A I rmw I 1 1 --fir" - btJg Players rehearse a scene from "Los Mariones," one of the plays the Romance Languages Department will present in the Great Hall on Thursday and Friday. In this scene, Mama is protecting her boys on the Spanish version of Calderon Great Hall An allegory by Calderon and two short comic plays will be presented Thursday and Friday in the Great Hall of the Union by the Romance Languages Department of the University of North Carolina. The plays, part of an annual program of drama and related lectures, are scheduled at 8 p.m. Thursday and 4 p.m. Friday. All events are free. Sturgiss Leavitt, emeritus professor of Spanish at UNC, will speak on "Calderon" at 3 p.m. Thursday, A program of early Spanish polyphonic music will follow. Prof. Everett Hesse of the University of Maryland will lecture in English on "The Spanish 'Comedia' in the Golden Century" at 11 a.m. Friday. Both talks will be in the Dey Hall faculty lounge. "Andromeda and Perseo" was written by Calderon to celebrate the sacrament of Crossvord Puzzle ACROSS 1 Unit of Siamese currency 4 Hebrew month 6 Express gratification 11 Color 13 Sword 15 Teutonic deity 16 Egg dishes 18 College degree (abbr.) 19 Preposition 21 Short jacket 22 Sicilian volcano 24 Partner 26 Poses for portrait 28 Above (poet) 29 Girl's name 31 Part of speech 33 Rupees (abbr.) 34 Word of sorrow 36 Want 38 Parent (colloq.) 40 Fruit seeds 42 Fix indelibly 45 Exist 47 Pertaining to the laity 49 Calumniate 50 Wedges in 52 Female horse 54 Prefix: not 55 Conjunction 56 Archbishop 59 Title of respect (abbr.) 61 Fixed amount 63 Language 65 Mr. Claus 66 Printer's measure 67 Worthless leaving 3 Initials of 26th President A Egyptian singing girl 5 Vegetable (pi) 6 Capital of N.J. 7 Chapeau 8 Part of church 9 Symbol-for nickel 10 Sharper 12 River In Italy 14 Raises 17 Cut of meat 20 Spanish pot 23 Preposition 24 Exclamation 25 Bark 27 Petitions 30 Metal fastener 32 Seines 35 Endurance DOWN Simian Bony-shelled reptile 1 2 Distr- by V v. Sadie Hawkins Day (Noche de San Juan). The players are (l.-r.): Barbara Catching, Roy Pattishall, Carmen Ebervole, Luis Pereira and Janet Icenhour. plays slated for Thursday, Holy Communion. The Greek myth was used allegoricaUy to show the rescue of human nature (Andromeda) by Christ (Perseus) from the devil and snake-headed Medusa. The comic pieces, "Turrada" and "Los Mariones" by Luis Quinones de Benavente, will precede "Andromeda and Perseo," following the tradition of Calderon's own time. "Turrada" is the story of lovers' jealousy that almost lands the hero and heroine in jail. The classic ploy of a man masquerading as a woman completes the intrigue. "Los Mariones" is built around the Spanish concept of honor, but in this case the man's honor requires salvation. During the celebration of a sort of Spanish Sadie Hawkins Day, two girls invade the bedroom of a pair of sissified Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle 5AGf lSCRU8jr P A M g R EL'P A u SEt jR I O cte ns 1u" ft g-rjc H!ALR'T E Alp, L "to L af ca r ilIas SIO R t eTp a l Amen m a uIpl l t i UTT l a i rTpTj sun REMEMBER JA LEE 1 1 firs m i iii sTa t a TPs cal I ng A L JTTf R j 5TjI R A PlASI jSIANiPlsf 1Sat 17 37 Spanish artist S8 Army officer 39 Macaws 41 Country of Asia 43 Grumbling 44 Pair (abbr.) 46 Printer's measure 48 Carton 51 Twirl 53 Short jacket 57 Decay 58 Printer's measure 60 Soak 62 Symbol for tantalum 64 Proceed r"2 3 5 6 7 8 9 10 71 " 12 fc 14 glv20 g 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29" "3Q jjglT " 32 j33 " 34 "35 j"r"' 37 38 39 m 40 41 SI 42 43 44 45" 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 "53 55 5657 ' 58 5960 61 62 3g 63 ' 64 w5 I 1 rW wtf United Feature Syndicate, Inc. 17 a t '.i Friday brothers. The boys' mother, of course, discovers the situation and forces the marriage of the two couples as the only way to save the family's honor. ' Some 20 students have roles in the plays. They are Barbara Catching, Francisco Javier Sanchez, Douglass Dewey, Luis Pereira, Eric Diehl, Roy Pattishall, Richard Bierck, Adrienne Wood, Pat Wood, Vicky Owen and Marilyn Sutton. Also Janet Icenhour, Susan Waters, Ann , Rothe, , ,Brabro PiehL Xynn Eisenberg, Judith Oslack, Nancy Beachley, Melvin Palmer and Kent Lioret. Prof, and Mrs. A.V. Ebersole also have roles. - Fest continues The Newman-Woodward Movie Festival continues tonight with "The Long Hot Summer." In this film, the passions seem to rise with the heat in a small Southern town. Violence and ill temper seem to belong to the atmosphere. Based on the play by Tennessee Williams, the movie will be shown at 7 and 9:30 tonight in Carroll Hall. Admission is 25 cents. cfaure looking at an insurance man you can say no to. Jerry Lawson Chapel Hill Blvd. 489-6502 Because he's a member of our "Top 50 Club." This means he belongs to an exclusive group that annually sells more life insurance than nine-tenths of the companies licensed in this country. In other words, he's doing just fine. In addition, he's got your interests at heart. Does that sound like just another adver tising phrase? Well, look at it this way. Ask any top professional if there's a healthier way to build a business. So call him. You'll be impressed by the great number of things he knows about insurance that you may not. Things that can be vitally important to you. And remember you can always say no to him. PROVIDENT MUTUAL 2 LIFE Leaders in insurance sines 1855 . . . when we quit getting better, we stop being good. by Marcia Abrarnson Special to the DTll Robin Morgan, Editor, "Sisterhood ts Powerful," Vintage Paperback, $2.45 Mary Lou Thompson, Editor, "Yokes Of The New Feminism," Besccn Press, 55.95 In the last few years, book publishers have capitalized on radical politics, splitting profits with the Abbie H off mans and James Kunens; some of the resulting books were good, most were terrible. Naturally, publishers eventually "discovered" the growing feminist cause but it has taken some time for them to come up finally with a comprehensive anthology of writings from the women's liberation movement. Anyone who has been saving yellowed clippings of "Notes of a Radical Lesbian" and 'The Politics of Housework" from underground newspapers can safely invest $2.45 in "Sisterhood is Powerful." Not only is the anthology excellent -most of the classic radical essays on the women's movement are included-but all profits from the sale of the book will go to women's organizations. According to former editor Laura Fur man, publishinghouses are bastions of male chauvinism; it is remarkable that the Vintage anthology is so good. Editor Robin Morgan writes, "I had insisted on working with women at Random House, and it was agreed that my two editors (women) and myself would have no interference from men. Of course, what none of us foresaw was that neither of my editors had any real power in the male dominated hierarchy of the house and so were forced into a position of 'interceding' with those who could enforce the decisions 'men.' " No doubt fewer problems plagued the moderate "Voices of the New Feminism," a respectable hardback put out by the Unitarian Universalist Women's Association. This latter anthology leans heavily on the respectability of a Martha Griffiths or Shirley Chisholm; it is aimed specifically at more moderate members of the women's movement and contains a short piece by Betty Friedan, organizer of NOW. These two collections represent the two divisions of the women's movement: moderate and radical. Moderates speak of reforming the present system; never would they suggest abandoning the nuclear t family or heterosexual norms. Radicals will not stop at equality on the capitalist totem pole; they see the falseness of male-female roles and demand a new kind of person. It is not definitions of male as dominant-aggressive and female as passive-sensitive must be ended because they are based not in nature but in economic and psychological needs to oppress. While the Thompson anthology contains an exhortation from Congresswoman Chisholm for women to bring a spirit of moral purpose to politics, it does not investigate the alternative of lesbianism as does "Sisterhood is Powerful." The Morgan anthology is much more far reaching in its consideration of the problems and possible solutions of sexism. Both books stress the statistical evidence of women's oppression. Both begin with excellent historical essays which correct long-standing misconceptions about women. Connie Brown and Jane Seitz in "Sisterhood is Powerful" detail the militancy of the suffragist movement and explain why it failed. I, for one, did not know that the BTH Classifieds '65 Red Volks bug. Rebuilt engine, fine condition. Call Clint 942-3050. "MALE CONTRACEPTIVES." Pre-spring special package. 24 items, $4.50. Nation's best. Contraceptive kit has 27 items plus a special package for $6.50. Limited supply. Lowest prices $.06 up. Call 966-2574 MTWThF 7-9 p.m. We undersell. Good buy for mechanically-minded person. 1965 HONDA CB-160, needs minor repairs. $145. Call Steve, 967-4936. SUMMER FLIGHTS TO EUROPE June8-Aug.26:$170 June 20-Aug. 1: $170 NY-LON DON-NY Call 929-3655 6 p.m.-midnite Yamaha 250cc DT1-B. 2000 miles. Good condition. Excellent streettrail bike. Call 929-2474. SUMMER IN EUROPE! StudentFaculty Flights: May 29-July 23:$199 June 11 -Aug. 23: S205 June 29-Aug. 18: $230 942-7239 evenings. FOR SALE: Fender Super-Reverb Amplifier. Excellent condition. S300 or best offer. Call Roger at 968-921 5 between 5 and 7. RIDE NEEDED to Bridgewater. Staunton, or Harrisonburg, Va. Friday March 19. Will share gas expense. Call Sarah at 929-5233. NEED RIDE to Norfolk or Newport News, Va. for Friday. March 19. Call Andrea at 966-5323. Will share expenses. 8-TRACK TAPES S1.00-S3.00. Huge selection of all types of taoes. BUY, SELL. TRADE. Records, Clogs & things. 405 W. Franklin St. Summer in North Africa with UNEFEX. Travel from London down through France, Spain, and into continent with Landrover. 7 guys 7 girls. Call 933-3312. TAX RETURN PREPARATION: MBA student with undergraduate major in accounting and Senior accounting major will prepare tax returns for students and others. GUARANTEED. $4.00 and up. Call S23-2S33. 1969 TRIUMPH GT-6, yellow with black interior, 14,000 miles, AM-FM radio, 30 or more M.P.G. 933-4533. National Guard had to be called up in Washington uproar created by the women's movement. Several other essays in the Morgan anthology are mandatory reading for anyone who wants to begin to understand the women's movement. "Kinde, Kuche, Kirche as Scientific Law: Psychology Constructs the Female," by Dr. Naomi Weisstein, has been of tremendous importance in its rejection of standard psychological arguments for female inferiority. Dr.Weisstein exposes falhciss of modern psychology and reminds us that one set of experiments has shown that experimenters (generally men) tend to find what they expect to find. She shows how many scientists," using only studies of children who have been socialized for years into traditional sexual role-playing, come to the conclusion that women are naturally childlike and submissive. Kate Millet's much heralded "Sexual Politics," a treatment of literature from a feminist perspective, is excerpted in the Morgan anthology; her treatments of Mailer and Genet are included. Capitalism and sexism are linked in Karen Sacks' essay which examines the need of private enterprise to exploit the cheap labor of working women and the absolutely free labor of the indispensable wife and mother who frees her' husband to put in full time. Marge Piercy's 'The Grand Coolie Dam" tears apart the male chauvinism of the male-dominated new left, and shows much much the sexism of these "revolutionaries" has produced the impetus for the radical women's movement. In "Double Jeopardy: To Be Black and Female," another important essay, Frances Beal refutes the arguments that the black woman must build up her man's shattered spirit. This is counter-revolutionary, she says; "we must begin talking about the elimination of all kinds of oppression . . . We need our whole army out there dealing with the enemy, not half an army." The Morgan anthology also includes poems, some by Sylvia Plath, drawings and personal anecdotes. The Thompson anthology offers fewer essays, and several are duplicated in the less expensive Morgan book. Perhaps the most interesting place is a report to the United Nations on the status of women in Sweden, the country where the most progress has been made but which still has much to accomplish. Some day-care centers exist, for example, but not enough and the sharing of housework and outside-the-home work between husband and wife is only beginning. "Sisterhood is Powerful" is, of course, the best buy and the kind of book anyone who aspires to be a human being should read to understand why women are beginning to believe that "this time we women must seize control over our own lives and try, in the process, to salvage the planet from the ecological disaster and nuclear threat created by male-oriented power nations." Cinematheque Tonight the Cinematheque will present "My Apprenticeship," directed by Mark Donskoi. This is the story of the early life of Maxim Gorki, Russian novelist, short-story writer and playwright. Shows are at seven and nine in Murphey 111. Admission is $1. The film depicts Gorki's struggles as he works to find himself and a literary style. DRIVERS WANTED immediately for one-way delivery of personal cars to San Diego. Cleveland and St. Louis. $50 deposit, refunded at destination. Drivers pays only gas and oil after first tank. Phone 275-9705 (Greensboro) TV'S FOR RENT: Black and white or color. Rent by the week or month. No deposit. Eastgate TV and Appliance, 942-5125. JET TO EUROPE $189.00 NY-LONDON-NY June 9-Aug. 25 UNC Flights, 201 Carolina Union LEARN TO FLY in the Tarheel Flying Club. Individual instruction with Seth Gooden. For information and appointment call 929-4458; evenings, 929-5753. 1964 CORVETTE CONVERT. B.'kwhite top, 327-350 HP engine. Hurst 4-speed. 2 new tires. Asking $1750 or best offer. Call 967-2194. '63 Mercury CycJone-4 spd., 4 bbl, 330 G.T., R & H, power steering, power brakes, m-w tires, good condition. Best offer. Call 933-4752. '65 VW Camper with tent, paneled new tires, recent tune-up, all accessories. $1050 or best offer. 929-5141 5-6 p.m. CADILLAC, 73,000 original miles, new tires, factory-rebuilt transmission at 76.000. 1956 model, best offer over $290 takes it. Durham 429-2522. NEED RIDE to D.C. area (Fairfax, Va.) over spring vacation. Will share expenses. Can leave Thurs. or F ri. Call 933-8 113. COME TO THE CAROLINA FRIENDS SCHOOL CRAFTS FAIR. Sat, Mar. 20, 12-10 p.m.; Sun., Mar. 21, 2-6 p.m. at Wesley Foundation on Pittsboro St. Crafts, food, music, international bazaar and more. ATTENTION: found, please 966-5031. Lost Classics 75 notebook. If return to 109 Spencer or call FOR SALE: Harfey-Davidson Sprint. Excellent condition. Engine just been overhauled. Good bike for summer. 933-9377. TOP OF THE LINE: Conn 60-B trumpet. Silver finish. $500 new. Constellation trombone. Nickel finish. S370 now. Both in excellent condition. Call SS5-5437 after 4. GUITAR FOR SALE: ARCH-TOP non-electric. Excellent cond. 3 months old. New $225; will sell for $150,933-2553.

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