Llsfitfsr. Fcirtssr? 11. ir?4 O o sen no in hi 'Hill ;y Ceil Crcnsa audience, stuffed ir.to Graham Messrul Thursday night, waited for the emzsrulator, liberator, bra-burner and pre- hct. Surprisingly, almost half the crowd Co-founder of the . N2li.0a.al Women's rc . si Caucus and cf li- tcaeazine. Gloria Steiaera spoke during the Women's Festival. sponsored by the Association of Vomrn Students and the Carolina Forum. SptaJdr ilculy and softly, she sprinkled her talk mith laughter. :.: J? fry CIH V.'z'.zh tizvez ZClzr The feminist rr.cvcent ia this country must work in solidarity with the v- ce" cf South Vietnam, or see its own demise, Jane Fonda said Friday t Urging v, omen to "use the new power we have." the artress and outspoken antiwar activist called for national pressure to end what she termed "the nrv war in Indochina.'" "A let cf people ask why we are still involved with antiwar organizations," she said, "but in the last few months it has teen pretty well acknowledged that the war is continuing; there is no peace. "But what has not been documented is the American responsibility for the continuation cf the Vietnam war," she said. The new war. Fonda said, is being if-. mi Guys & G2';s needad for summer err: ploy ment at National Parks. Private Caps, Dl3s Ranches and Psscrts throughout the ration. Over S3, CCD staeents a'2ed each year. For FREE information on $tiel assistance program send se'f-ai pressed -STAMPED er?v icpe to Opportunity Research. Dept. SJO, 5 Flathead Drive, YOU MUST APPLY EARLY ,C7 PLAYING ENDS I TUES SHOWS 3:00-5:00 7:00-9:00' 3 X i m 'w MkmM aU JLt tmmi X "m diaxd. dlbk y - i J "i i 7 ' J i!"e -mfym HELD OVER T SHOWS 2:45-4:55 7:05-9:15 "--j Ed igoa Vsm unit !ry jlELD OVEO WEE1C SHOWS 3:00-0:30 7:30-:30 i K . b W -te T Z't Tw HmI is pw'2.4 fry Cm UH.Wy l ' c54 Sander, tlM veaE&an. li-j-t r to t w&y &cmr$vf ti r ii' T tf 4a' ' 5. PI. fc JJ. C.l:M 17. l.aww.&w 13 A IT. 't .i". j j.ort ttrti. t:s-ir.i 'A si U-S. Pffis C":-3 is tij C Mt ! S Att"SC2 f Mtf to ;';-- j t ftl tfrti IrcM Cat tadnl Tl 0'" r Tr HmI mmw tarn rifftl Is wrfuSiftf Bm t. ", ta ti (4wtMMMi to rM r fejm eopy B cmikSw fe-K!9Matiite. TitC. f Tinr l"wi 3 n60ilJtf;k',,,,er ft, kr -7 1 3 pfrjrpp'jess imn r n Srt W ! Cl6 it to C I 1 1 ) ana Arj K'nm Bt asfwBfEwWHWt r . t , r . . 1 cm ery ef fca rec!wJ t t-t . u stc';. a of t srTac Tim toSj Tar hmt '-is rt fe rapoi.sa tar waw isaa) i L-t jn ti i?ir;jaw n&t to t? ti ti IF i .. H -a i- - She emphasired thai she was on campus to stir cp enthusiasm for local women's movement organizations. If we come today, and there's no trouble tomorrow, we haven't done our job. she said. SteLacm called for an anthropological revolution to end the caste system based on visible differences in people. She said sex and race discriminatioa go hand la hand. " "Yes. class is important too. but one can conceivably get out of a class, but one cannot change his physical traits that force him to the bottom of the system," she said. "Generalized differences of the sexes are urges end to new war waged by a South Vietnamese police state supplied and funded by the United States. She said South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu is holding 200,000 political prisoners, and said more than half of them w omen. Fonda spoke to a near capacity audience at Memorial Hall as part cf the Women's Fes thai sponsored by the Association of Women Students. She described accounts of systematic torture and rape of women by South Vietnamese government forces, and said the war had created a situation where 403,003 women have been forced into prostitution to live. The Thieu government in South Vietnam, Fond a, said, has less popular support than any other dictatorhsip in the world, and would not exist without United States tax dollars. Fonda urged students to write their congressman to lobby for passage of the lol loq ol J' ' Fantasy whosa 1:24 2:55 4:26 5:53 7:23 9:C0 f techmqua is as yx V- fascinating as W f its plat -Judith Crist ! It Li.to Ci open 24 HOURS W V I I I ! ' 1 1 J - C,"T if ' 07 W. Frankkm St. Chp1 Hill. N.C O 2m vflr f-? rf fm r r; tt r r n BA fi r BOAST EEEF PLATTER 1 vcg., salsd, end Gcrlic brcsd 1-49. BEEF PARMESAN; end Gcdlc brczd. 1.09. V 0 - o 1affalf,a i luiir" ggji? rg& aj ii B only functional at relatively few times, such as during childbirth. Individual differences are far greater." she said. She listed myths that affect sex and race groups. "We hear that women and blacks are child-like, irresponsible, have small brains and are always late. Oh yes. and rhythm. For women, it's the kind of lunar rhythm that affects their cycles, and for blacks, it's musical rhythm." Steinem said. She said politics should be redefined as "any power relationship in our lives." If one kind of person owra the fields, and Indochina Peace Package, legislation now pending that would stop U.S, aid for the maintenance of South Vietnamese police and prisons. She said the letters can change the opinions of legislators. "If I can change from Barbarella. if Daniel Ells berg can change, anybody can change," she said. Fonda admitted she never visited South Vietnam, but said she gained her insights into Vietnamese life when she visited Hanoi in 1972. Reacting to the widespread criticism of her plea to American pilots over Hanoi radio to stop "the bombing, she said, "1 do the only responsible thing in my life, and I come back and am called a traitor. I didn't break any laws." Drawing a thunderous ovation, Fonda told what students should do, besides writing their Congressmen. "Carry a spray paint can around, and when you see a nice big, empty wall, write Stop the New War." FRIDAY THRU I TUESDAY TUESDAY SHOWS: 1:00-2:05 4:50-6:45 8:40 1SSLTS HIT Feature-Length Cartoon - AScience F iction Adventure" ' its in Class of its Own, Easily the Most Enjoyable Newi Animated Movie of music is superb. You can see several possible allegories in 'Fantastic Planst'." Joseph Gelmis. Newsday wiicnv. n2 j V wstt. ALMI NOV SHOW 1:00-2:30-4:05- NORTH GATE SHOPPING CENTER DURHAM f i I V i Mi IM j i j I n Appfy new to exs-ar fenos ens cf ths mcst exciting "ysr e.!xcd prey cms vslhl. centrally located Lt Dre;s.tz. Austria. r.esr Evropm'm firvsst wlfitar sports ertas. . Uva en Austrian farr3y N3 Ijjsjs requlremtrt for admisston Lesrn German by using it Independent trawl tSii orsanliid excurslens Vmv&oul Europe SkLnj -kJ tXI iistrucUon Fulfy tscrod'.tsd TransfmiJbii cred:ts. Curriculum incbdes Humenlflet, Soc'J Sciences end PfyaJ- C;sn ta cphomo'ct. Juniors frcn 3 accredit;! ccogss. jrn. i e WmtAMiii n ax other kind cf person Is working then, then that is politics, she said. She listed the disproportionate number of males oa the UNC faculty and the Morehead Scholarship's discrimination against femaies as politics. She biasted forced sterilization, legal ia 22 states, saying it affects black women more than anyone else. She said the women's movement is rot against love. "There cannot be love where there is no 'equality and mutual respect. People say the women's movement is against love. It seems to me it will make it possible for the first time.'" she said. If a woman doesn't have a ring on her finger or a date on Saturday night, she is said to be incomplete, Steinem said. "We've been men junkies too long. It's time we become self-identified." she said. She said the women's movement is view ed as anti-male because of fear "Men are asking themselves, Suppose they do to us what we've been doing to them all these years? But we don't want to imitate the male pattern."" The caste svstem has forced men into a role, too, she said. Steinem announced the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) had just passed in Ohio, leaving only five more states to ratify it before enactment. So much of the argument against the ERA rests on bathrooms." "Everybody thinks they will have to go to the bathroom together." "It's a small and visible part of the humiliating caste system.' She said the bread and buuer issues are the most important issues for women. "We're obligated to put . on such unbearable pressure that the economy can't afford to discriminate," she said. Revolutionary feminism is the only path to humanism, she said. . mow A finishing school for IVsyivErd girls v 71 is 4yr Crf i yy ' if ,'rj i f) t f- . . -f'v7 ' aj i f t i if f J , f " CSSiO - ICTRXaSt US FUSS 5:45-7:20-9.00 Inn :U o 1 n n m and seniors For sisZi wrZs: ! tw i 4J I V.lict Ycr ! f ' ft t Gloria Stolnem during Ihs speech Thursday rJght Gteria Stsirwm tpoSce ct LlmorizJ KaU Tbursisy R'-h!, ts part cf ths Vcmen's Festi veI, which ccr.iinu through T fitly. he czZsl i or mere ective psrticipdon in local ferrinlxt groups. (2l!f phcto try Gary Lctrsfeo) Police seize heroin; i arrest 6 in local raid More than $50,000 in heroin -as seized by members of the Chaps i HiU and Durham police vice squads late Thursday rijt in what has been called the largest drug raid in the history of Chapel Hill. The raid resulted in the arrest of six persons on charges of possession of heroin, manufacture of heroin and conspiracy to manufacture and seD heroin. Police seized one pound and 1 1 ounces of heroin at 613 Northampton Plaza apartments. Lt. Arnold Gold of the Chapri Hill Poncr; Department announced the ; foUwir: Compromise found for Cralge Undergraduate and graduate residents of Craige dormitory have reached a compromise on the issue of equal representation on the Craige executive council, Lloyd Scher, Council representative. said New elections for the positions of dormitory president and vice president will be held Thursday from 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. Persons desiring to run for either office should contact Lynn Pollock, resident advisor at Craige, or. Bill S nod grass. 2T""'T,f,s- ii'i Li I nj : i I 1 uM ? THIS IS IT . . . fce FINAL WEEK cf ocr .Winr Cnaranc Sala the time is nrrwe rtrst sacriilje ccr csnp!te vinisr ifiygJnry cf fee finest, fashioci3.il? men's wear. NO SPBCLL GROUPS, this is our ENTIRE WvTER INVENTCRV! G m m m m r f r S I r bwiJi (wi ,fTv "t (jnir Crab tree Volley JTcI! D ij D persons had been arrested by the narcotics scuad: Norman James Harris, 22. 1512 'Aahash Ave.. Durhi ia: Bra Richardson. 30. 1316 Wabash Ave. Durham: Eugene Young. 34. 1015 Fayettevilie St Durham; Carl Harris, 22. 613 Northampton Plaza; Carolyn Wade. 25. 613 Northampton Plaza and Beatrice Harris, 24. I CO? Juniper Ave.. Durham. Also arrested were dearth ur Harris on a charge of conspiracy to manufacture and sell heroin and Rose Ra gland on a charge of limple possession of marijuana. Both were arrested at Ragiands Epanmert off N.C. 54 in, Chanel HilL . . president of the Graduate and Professional Student Federation (GPSF by 12 noon Tuesday. "The UrJerrs;:y caused the confrontation by putting the undergraduates in Craige." Sober said. A directive -iH be given to the housing department thai an entirely graduate student dorm is needed at UNC." Scher win also request that the housing department extend the deadline allowed graduate students for application for residence in Craiee to Ai:sl 15 of each vear. .' : .. I . it l f ti W Zjr hi ins ? kw v i S.Ari! ff "T r fro. r r - M V ICJ Et French i - f V 5 4T I 7AGr:z:cciiiE 4 W 1' -J. ..gaa t. :a Silsrs, lit w Tcrx ,4