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Pierre Hassner Junior Show: on the OP-ED page an affair Wellesley News to remember

VOLUME LXXI, NUMBER 4 WELLESLEY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1974 American Studies department Seeks separate major status By Margaret Draper '77 Mr. Vanderpool sees this un- lives of famous politicians and ification of the courses as an im- Students across the country national leaders, but also of their are porlanl goal for all the majors. He lesser-known contemporaries. discovering American culture as a is als.) interested in students gain- Mr. Vanderpool admits that the new area of study. This interest, ing ,i grasp of the diversity of the scarcity of course offerings has led some students feel has escaped American experience. With this in many students Wellesley; American Studies to spend their is an mind, he hopes to bring Charles junior year at such colleges as intcr-dcpartmenlal major, but Kuralt. creator of the "On the Amherst only one course. Extra- and Williams, where Road" series for to CBS News, American Studies is a vital, pop- dcparlmentttl 335. is offered campus; this series attempts to ular part of the curriculum. specifically for American Studies show this diversity by bringing Michele Thorcn. who took majors. Under the direction of Stories local of customs and habits American Studies at Amherst, Mr. Harold Vanderpool, Assis- from around the country. Mr. described her professor as "The tant Professor of Religion And Vanderpool also referred to a best lecturer I've ever heard." Biblical Studies, there finally -ourse at Amherst entitled Only a few instructors on campus, seems to be a definite movement American Lives which could serve such as Mr. Vanderpool and Ms. on campus to make American is the basis for an addition to Phyllis Cole, Assistant Professor Studies .i siandard department,' Wcllesley's curriculum; this of English, gear their courses with a Staff and course offerings course not only investigates the Continued on pg. 4 of its own. The main problem facing American Studies majors is the January plans begin lack of unity and coherence in the courses available to them. Hav- The lime for Winter Study was Educational Research and There's something very strange about the girls next door, according to Wellesley's "Junior Show" sctn last ing taken courses in various voted into the school calendar last Development Committee, and Friday and Saturday at Alumnae Hall. More inside. Photo bv Sasha Norkin '75 departments on campus, they feel spring, but the planning for this Mr. Steve Nelson, Director of i he need to unify their studies into program has just begun. At a Student Activities, have some idea of America's culture meeting held September 17, fif- volunteered their lime to help the and heritage. L; Iradcparlmental teen of the approximately forty Core Committee. supporters want action l students attending U.F.W. 335 is the only assistance (hat he> volunteered to Mr. Nelson sees Winter Study receive with this process; the ma- serve on the Core Committee, as a "fun, creative time". "The jors are grateful for this course, which will be responsible for co- main value of Winter Study will By Rcnee Edel '78 concerned groups, the stated Michael Sullivan. but feci the need for more similar ordinating Winter Study 1975. be to provide a period of time for division of the A&P Companv h is The group will also be holding "It's more than a labor dis- representatives to it. Mr. Arthur Gold. Chairman of Wellesley students to do what agreed to stop purchasing non-U. meetings with of pute." stated Michael Sullivan, they want to to boycott the United Farm Workers Union do." According I \\ . lettuce. The was coordinator of the Chaplaincy Mr. Nelson, the curriculum will costing the company $100,000 per and the Wellesley Alliance, a United Farm Workers Project. Resident Program be very flexible allowing for either week coalition of townspeople, clergy "Its a basic religious and moral concentrated study in one Other aims of the Project in- and college community members issue." he commented on the farm specialized course or experimen- clude educating the college com- In this way. the group will be able workers' cause. discussed tation in two or three subjects. munity as to the various problems lo branch out and support the proposal The Workers Project i- Farm a There is also the possibility that encountered by the farm workers. cause outside the campus. group composed of students first '77 seniors will be able to do concen- "There are possibilities of a film The organizational By Andrea Rohin feminism to naturalize social working to support the cause of trated 350 and 370 work. program and there will he publici- meeting lor the Farm Workers relationships, the definition the United Farm Workers. "This Plans to establish a Residence of Howe\er. the committee has l\ on the eroup's activities," Project was held October I. year, the will he primarily Hall were feminism. A feminist critique of group Program Series discuss- ycl to decide how to organize the Wellesley courses, and feminism focused on supporting the boycott ed at an organizational meeting curriculum. Possibilities include a as a value system. against Gullo Wines." stated held recently with Wilma Scott letter to the entire college com- Michael Sullivan. "We also hope Heide Wcllesley's Guest-in- A title for the first program was munity encouraging anyone in- to make the boycott of non-U F. past president of Residence. and suggested by Kathy Humphrey terested in leaching or par- W. lettuce a NOW. '75: "You don't have to be a man ticipating in a course to contact policy." he added. This series would be based on to be sexist."' the committee. Another possibili- The Farm Workers Project got aspects of feminism, and how it Ms. Heide kept reminding the t\ is the active solicitation of underway last year when an es- affects the Wellesley student. group that in order to plan the possible "resource people" from timate of the amount of U. F. W. 1 he series is tentatively set up for program effectively, they must the faculty, student body, and. the lettuce used in the dining hit lis was four separate week night meetings keep in mind their original objec- staff. The committee will then dis- proven inaccurate. Nearly 800 in various residence halls. ine: to promote a sense of defini- tribute a catalog containing (he students signed ' a petition rc- The meeting centered around tion to feminism, and it's im- tentative course offerings. questing the Food Service Ad- the locus of the series, and possi- plications to us individually and as A few basic facts about Winter minislrulion to purchase only U. ble ideas for the program. Many a college. The group intends to Term have been established: the F. W lei luce, and if not available, ideas were proposed, one of which gear its program to attract and program will be voluntary, it will to substitute other greens for the was asking Ivy Battini. a feminist nol offend the college community, be non-credit, and it must be self- lettuce. folk singer to perform. and to urge Wellesley students to sustaining, entailing a maximum This policy was endorsed by the The topics discussed included: start thinking about and reacting Continued on pg. 4 Wellesley Senate, but lapses when human sexuality on campus. to feminism. college is nol in session, "By mak- ing the boycott a Wellesley College policy, lettuce bought any time during the year would have to be United Farm Workers Union lettuce." said Sullivan. Schneider Food Service has also cooperated with (he lettuce boycott. Carolyn Shaw Bell, Professor of Economics at Wellesley College is Due to the support of the farm scheduled to be the guest on "The Da»id Susskind Show" along with workers' cause by the Farm other leading economists. The show will be seen tomorrow at 10 p.m., on Workers Project and many other channel 2.

many roods Ford Forum The poster design lor this M.ir'N publicity for "Many lectures start Roads. A Wellesley College Careers Conference'' has been The Ford Hall Forum will be- designed l>\ Peyton Morris '77, its 67th season of lectures at its gin in a contest held In the Office new at Alumni Hall at location oi c ;ireer Serviced. Northeastern University on Sun- I lie coulerence is scheduled open- day October 6. The season to be held November 10 ing lecture will be "Kissinger in through the 12 Alumnae Iroui by Kalb. Perspective' Marvin many different fields are ex- Other lecturers scheduled for pected lo attend. tins sc ison are. Dan Rather, Ayn Rand. Ralph Nader. Germaine Greer, Justice William O. Douglas. William Locb, Dr. Harvey G. Cos, Dr. Rollo May, Joseph Guillroy trial continued and Florynce Kennedy. lectures begin at 8:00 p.m., Joseph Guillroy charged with the Metropolitan District Com- with doors open to members at the alleged kidnupping of MIT mission Police, the c.isc has been 7:00 p.m.. and to the public at since coed Margaret I laiiisworlh. has suspended indefinitely Mr individual 7 45 p m. An student yet to come lo trial. Guillroy has admitted himself to membership can be obtained for Bridge-water Slate Hospital Mr. Guillroy, 28. of Boston, S5.00 from the Forum at its office pic (ded not guilty to charges of Ms Hainsworth. a former at Alumni Hull. Northeastern kidnapping and to several motor Wellesley student and business 369 Huntington Ave, University, was schedul- , vehicle Offenses and manager' of (he NEWS. Huston Wellesley ed lor trial September 27 in Quin- was found gagged and un- Ford Hall Forum is (he oldest cj District < ourl. consciencc in the back seal of a Continuously operated public lec- basement of Founders Hall, has opened for snack bur locuted in the Howevci sources ul the wrecked ear August 21. She was , , . ii.j.v s student-run ture series in the United States. 9:30 «• 4=00. Tuesday through Thursday. ,. 4.-00. and Friday. JO to information recently released from Carney bu'ne^ IhVturs Ire he Monday M The season will run lor ten weeks, courthouse had no case Vccording Hospital in Dorchester. 2:50. Photo by Sasha Norkin *75 ending on May 4. concerning the to ;

WELLESLEY NEWS 1 Letters to the Editor Wellesley News Honor code examined Schneider's additions By Meg Sencinditer '75 dent arc prompted by personal ethics, and are found to be am- whom?), to Befuddle consumers To I he Editor: biguous (by whom The NEWS recently carried the does she appeal for justice? Mr. Turgeon, Schneider Food Services: An Open Letter to editorial "Reexamination of Middle-range procedures imply a Dear Mr. Turgeon: honor system exposes priorities of spectrum of rather ludicrous, but We thought we would put together some of the questions students" (Sept. 20, 1974). It necessary questions and, we may described our honor system as suppose, of answers of the same which students and faculty members have been asking late- "ailing", yet asserted that "the sort. They open a Pandora's Box Food Services. Some of us are confused ly about Schneider honor code should not, in princi- of moral and practical dilemmas. about innovations at Schneider ... and prices. We're sure ple, have lo be debated in a public 5.) The ethical compromise, of forum." It asked, College which symptomatic, that you have all of the appropriate facts and figures to "Can dilemmas are Government force students to sign is this: middle-range procedures answer our questions. an honor pledge?", yet maintained impose restrictions on those who it for Schneider to allocate what — Why is necessary that "an honor system, one which arc honorable in an effort to ac- must have been considerable funds to purchase a new cash works, is an essential component commodate those who are not. of our community." It mentioned register? Couldn't that money have been used to defray the They grant everyone the limited the proposed alternative of degree of responsibility and cost of food at Schneider for the students and faculty "middlc-rungc procedures" to privilege, and they deprive members? effect "a middle-range honesty". everyone of the same degree of — The new deli-bar is fantastic ... for the faculty. How In short, the editorial provacativc- responsibility and privilege. In so ly outlined the status of a concept come the deli-bar disappears at 5 p.m.?? To tell you the doing, they neither effectively pre- fundamental to our modus vent dishonorable actions nor the integrity of our academic refusal to sign. One may refuse to truth, those hand-made sandwiches are better than the operandi at Wellesley. In theory, effectively promote honorable community by preserving her per- sign our personal preference, but all others that sit in the refrigerator unit day. it should have drawn a large, im- ones. Middle-range measures sonal integrity. Universal pledge- this is quite another matter. — If the new cash register is supposed to speed things up mediate response from members constitute, in effect, a morally signing would insure a common Perhaps it is time for some of us of our community. It did not. non-committal solution for a understanding — of what our per- to put aside personal preference at Schneider (we're guessing that that is part of your (See Wellesley NEWS: Sept. 27, moral problem. Resorting to such sonal and institutional integrity for the sake of the well-being of rationale for its purchase), why are the lines in the evenings 1974). The appearance of the measures is like refusing to cast a entails. It would emphasize the community. Perhaps it is time still incredibly long and slow??? editorial and our lack of response ballot in an effort to decide a tied equally the code's efficacy as a for some of us to subdue feelings

to it suggest that honor at vote. It work in standard by which to determine of self-righteous indignation when — Where is the old cash register??? Couldn't we have two does not theory; Wellesley, as well as the "issue" it cannot work in practice. individual culpability, and as a our integrity is, as some think, lines?? of honor, arc not merely ailing, Further, such measures put preserver of the individual rights challenged by a pledge-signing — certain food items at Schneider are reasonably While but are rapidly approaching an honor and integrity on the defen- and privileges of its adherents. policy. Perhaps it is time for priced, others seem exorbitantly over-priced. The bagels, undignified death. sive. Installation of a turnstile in Under this system, the dis- some of us to slop viewing the This apparent state of would ever pledge as an affront to our for example. 40 cents???? affairs the library, for instance, reflects honorable be as free as digni- prompts the following opinions the assumption (hat everyone to violate the code. However, the ty, and to begin to see it as an un- — Could we have some fresh vegetables once in a while, about it. They admit a strong passing through it may be guilty majority of us would be as free as equivocal reaffirmation of our the salad bar? For those of us who eat regularly at besides bias. Perhaps, to some readers, ol thievery. In other words, it im- ever lo maintain it. If there is any failh in Wellesley's integrity and Schneider, malnutrition threatens. several of them will seem out- plies that we believe everyone psychological advantage to be our participation in that integrity. rageous or insulting. — The hot cider and hot chocolate are welcome They guilty until proven innocent. We gained, it is to be gained here. For And perhaps it is lime for some of should. That is, they should hit penalize the honorable without a student found cheating or steal- us to admit that we cannot beverages during the winter. Could we have some soup, too? cause. In this instance, they' must ing would have to face not only simultaneously claim that a viable ... honor at Wellesley ... rapidly — We realize you're operating at a loss — maybe the; that charge, but approaching an undignified death. submit to yet another also the charge of honor system is essential to our will college could subsidize even larger losses? \ bureaucratic measure which perjuring herself. community, and ask whether we their readers at some level and inconvenience and harrass them 9.) Mandatory pledge-signing can legislate mandatory pledge- It's not that we aren't pleased with "some of the new- elicit from them some definitive more efficiently than it will catch should present no problem as signing. Either an honor system is Schneider services, its just that its the only place on campus; reaction. It is to be hoped that, in book thieves. there is no ethical basis for a Letter continued on p. 8 that we have as an alternative to dorm dining. And we feel; this way, they will serve to keep 6.) The maintenance of our that "monopolies" like yours have to be a little more! alive the honor code "issue" until honor system without the written New law seems to open files, our decisive action on it insures committment of the entire student responsive than usual to community demands and- the longevity of "a system of total body has proved unsuccessful. questions. access to records ; trust and limitless discretion" at The introduction of optional Yet limited Could you write to us soon, and send along a few charts! Wellesley. pledge-signing — a middle-range and figures? We're starving for information. I.) We must deal with the procedure — may be just as un- By Bettina Blake clarified. nature of honesty, which is successful, The NEWS Staff ab- if not more so. One Dean of Academic Programs solute. To be honest means to be possible consequence of the policy There is more time for clarifica- and other eaters thoroughly honest. No departure might be the absurd division of the tion, it now appears, than either To the Editor: from thorough honesty qualifies campus into the signers' group the alert News reporter who first While your coverage of the honesty. It simply establishes and and the non-signers' group. Of tried lo see her record or I realized Family Educational Rights and qualifies dishonesty. If, for exam- course, (he division would be earlier. We are informed that Ihe Library to Privacy Act carries out that part fails solicit ple, a student steals one book meaningless. Inevitably we would Act becomes effective on of the law which requires that from the library, and a second stu- have some dishonorable signers November 19, 1974, but that its students be informed of the new Student views about hours dent steals ten books, we cannot and some honorable non-signers. implementation may be post- rights accorded them, it overstates say the first student is more Nevettheless. we might have to poned beyond that date. The Act, the case. The Wellesley College Library does not seem to be in- honest than the second, or say the deal with ihe distinction as though or the "Buckley Amendment," It is not true that "Wellesley second is less honest than the it were was added to the 1974 education terested in getting student first. real. For example, we feedback concerning library College students now have access We must say both are dishonest, might have to answer the ques- bill on the floor of the Senate hours. The staff can point with pride to the fact that, when to all official College records in and then let the number of books tion, Ms a girl who signed the without any hearings or con- compared to their name," as your lead sentence 57 other small, private schools, Wellesley's stolen in each case qualify the ex- pledge and who is caught cheating sideration in committee, and its states. Although the Act appears library is among the top in number of hours open — 104% tent of their respective dishonesty. on an exam subject to the same numerous ambiguities and over- to grant blanket The point access to the in- hours a week. is, there is no middle penalty as one who has not signed sights are now being challenged by dividual concerned, some records ground between honesty and dis- Ihe pledge, but who is also caught various groups. Perhaps such a favorable may be protected by other position when compared to honesty. cheating?' existing If so, what good is the other schools legislation (e.g. psychiatric makes the College feel that students are 2.) If our honor code is to have pledge? If not, can we still con- The positive intent of "right lo records), others by prior com- satisfied. They are not. any value, it must emulate the know" legislation, which is ... our profession of the merits of a mitments to maintain confiden- nature of the principle it claims to generally be Last year a questionnaire acknowledged, must concerning the library was cir- Wellesley education ... tragically tiality (e.g. letters of recommen- uphold. Like honesty, it too must weighed against its effects on the misleading vanity. culated before Christmas vacation. This was not an under- dation). We do not know yet establish "an all-or-nothing reliability of written records and taking of which confidential records will be the College Library; a member of the class of '74 proposition". Otherwise, it con- sider our laws impartial? evaluations. Conflicting concerns open to individual tradicts its founding principle These questions presuppose inspection, nor initiated the effort and partially tabulated the results; and for openness and privacy musl be do we know how will is worthless. several others: would we have to Eight How the fairly reconciled. hundred completed questionnaires — a sizeable modify our present ways of 3.) If our honor system is to be pledges be filed? Who would have assur- response on this campus — were collected. Four ing the privacy of each record. hundred effective, we must subscribe to it access to them? Under what con- Wellesley needs lo find its own Even the definition of an "official of those were tabulated, and the results were presented to in its entirety. That is, we must ditions? Within what limits? consensus and may also wish lo record" allow is by no means as clear as the library staff. for everyone to share fully What decisions, if any, would be speak out on some issues publicly. your article implies. It l is impor- he responsibility and privilege of made on the basis of a student's Next Monday I plan to to the those go Among results was the indication that a substantial tant that all of us — faculty, participating in "a system of total pledge-card status? If the cards ad- President's Advisory Council. number of students wanted the library to trust were ministrative officers, and students remain open until and limitless discretion". If computer filed, and no one which is made up of faculty, ad- alike we cannot had access to — refrain from making midnight on Saturdays during reading periods and exam accept it completely them under any con- ministralivc, and student premature changes in our weeks. and universally, then, as the ditions, what would be their pur- policies representatives, for advice on ;md procedures cdilorial suggested, we pose? Can we assume that the until the how, move The library must as a community, to staff obviously was willing to comply with de- provisions of the Privacy "return to a more rigid system of signing of the pledge would func- Act arc ahead in Ihe coming weeks. mand when it was shoved at them. No other expansion of; controls". That is, we must give tion as a psychological deterrent hours up the was implemented because, Ms. Brown, head: whole privilege of in- lo stealing and cheating when we dividual control because we can- must already allow for the librarian, asserted, there was not any marked consensus on not sustain our individual respon- possibility that there will be dis- other suggested changes. A glance at the Wellesley tabulation of sibility to be honest. honorable signers? News And. above results reveals otherwise: a significant number of people — 4.) "Middle-range procedures" all. how are these matters to be introduce needless adjudicated, 70% — said they would use the library confusion. In and by whom? Edi.or-,n-Ch.cf , if it were open after 9 „„„,„ A Dvjs ?6 contrast with an unqualified 7.) Middle-range procedures " p.m. on Saturdays. M 0r Debbie Ziwot 76 honor system, they call for 'con- seem to point out many ways "™nJL S FH?. r lo go Nancy '77 For financial reasons, says Ff° , MeTigue Ms. Brown, there is no ditional trust' and 'limited dis- wrong and few ways lo go right. Editorial Editor c„«j.„ dJju >7A possibility of hiring cretion'. By complicating the additional employees that would be The confusion ensues our ethical and Op-ed Editor ... k" " n\ ' Debra Knopman 75 when we try to methodological r „ „ . needed if hours answer such guidelines, they Oovernment Editor • were extended. Also, dormitory study . i r , -7<76 questions c..t. r,,. Lin trackman as: Under what con- create a multitude of moral Features .. rooms should and Editor . .« be sufficient she felt, for those wishing to Pit M ditions are we to be trusted? procedural loopholes. By side- Arts Editor '* work at ? v£ 4l "odd hours". What are stepping the y the criteria for deciding absolute nature of Sports Editor... S"'' v^' il True, the these conditions? honesty, they tend Wellesley College Library is open over Who decides to undermine an im- :: " : """"""":::K2?S pressive number these conditions and criteria? We our honor system more than they of hours, and the staff responds to some KTff must answer a tend to reinforce it. student demands. similar list of In light of B But why has the library questions Susan Pignoiti 75 expended so about 'limits'. And these conclusions and the dis-

much effort in ascertaining since '. W personal preferences regarding cases of trust and discretion satisfaction with both the Circulation" Manager" ^l" i/£' P°" Z\ library for which no conditions anonymous „ W'lie Et furniture and practically no effort on the important or limits honor code and Cartoonist \ •'fMary Van Amburg^ %T •have been prescribed arc bound to proposed rigid controls, we should issue of library hours? Why was the only recent campus- arise, a B °S '° we must answer even review the merits ' n M " M of an honor ' 0wned op-nted. I, J? - and published week wide canvas on that subject initiated a ZSfiS"SEC 8h by student, and not stickier questions: system whose MUy ' nC,U, ' Ve What only 'control' is the " "«"' du ""« ChrilimM andnd Spring even fully tabulated? procedure S^'iSt Must the Wellesley should we follow? mandatory signing of '" "' " innings Hall. NEWS a pledge. i conduct a ,ii """ °2 ' 8 Te,c Does a reversion ' ,hone C.r- survey of its own? to a personal 8.) In broad terms, a signed culallon 4000 * ' "«»M. extension 270 Ml rule of thumb fall inside or outside pledge simply means that a stu- tt> the fwNli»/«j f' 1 " system? If the actions of a stu- dent commits herself to upholding Af" Z WELLESLEY NEWS Page 3 On Honor, From Cold War to Hot Peace Wisdom, • • • OP-ED • •• By Pierre And Trust Hassner tion, which had been covered up triumph of the defensive, hidden by its initial and important end protected by verbal offensive. Editors Note: vent stabilization through freez- irrt McMtboa "75 By Ruth Anna Putnam Pierre Hassner is successes: on the one hand all this The detente does not necessarily By Mirf the second ing, enough rigidity lo prevent Professor guest scholar to par- spectacular activity basically disturb the balance between Associate of Philosophy Something dying ticipate in Wellesley's stabilization through adaptation, Barnette amounts lo "recognizing alliances or regimes, but it docs enough communication under ihe window Miller lecture series. realities'", and con- Recently the honors code He kindly i.e. to accepting the lend to make them much more toys down a pallern has submitted vergence to prevent stabilization to NEWS the following status quo; but on the other hand, ihln brealh. been a subject of discussion. The vulnerable to each other. From of article through isolation, enough separa- that originally appeared in Ihis recognition of the status quo the two super- Something laboring question has been: docs it work moment the the tion and divergence lo prevent wilh dry gasps, shaken, New York Times last year in could activate psychological and does it work well powers, the two alliances, the two (or enough), or stabilization through integration. like pulling a irain inlo lungs. an aborted farm. Excerpts from a social forces which might under- wc need proctors and Europes, the Two Gcrmanys, the release. do other Perhaps, then, a stale of agitated Exhaustion, personal interview with mine it Dehra far more powerfully, two types of society recognize Persistent rhythm lugs the cur- kinds of watchdogs? But in earlier immobility rather lhan either Knopman and Florence because more lain, years discussion centered Davis unpredictably than each others' real game, whether has also revolution or integration is conducted pushing It outwards and sucking It September 30, 1974 any diplomatic or military undcr- intentional or not, begins, It has on the necessity for or ap- post-cold war have been included. laking. characteristic of the in little lo with conquest or even propriateness of, "It is the respon- do Professor system as it stems to be ol ttlC to the screen; the scratching Hassner is currently Rarely have force and wilh active subversion. Rather it sibility of every member of the of fabric alerts lo the motion. Professor diplomacy post-industrial society, with of Politics at the rested upon such im- has been rightly called Something fading college community to report to diplomatic activism being the University plicit of Bologna. He has gambles about their effects "competitive decadence"; it con- withers away on the sill. the class dean any apparent viola- equivalent social unrest authored of and leaves many articles on on long-range historical, political cerns the comparative ability of The flap up tion of this principle." (Articles of political hoth being the expression of ihe and ihey crackle. philosophy and inter- and economic, but above all, societies to resist the forces of dis- Government Book If. Article, between a declining The brealh scrapes by national politics. gap social and psychological integration which cat away at all XV, section 2) legitimacy and a persisting struc- with a rasp and a rattle. Docs the era processes, of negotiation Yet nobody knows to of them and which tend to be en- Hands fold in ihe lap. Ideally we conceive of_ ture. The essential characteristic - spell the end of the era of confron- what extent they can be couraged by their interpcnelra- They wrinkle like claws. Wellcsley as a society of scholars, of this stale is neither force nor tation or its beginning? The manipulated, reserved, influenced, tion. The dryness settles devoted to of persons the pursuit cooperation but the constant in- in flakes of dust. troubles of Mr. Brezhnev with dis- controlled or limited by treaties or A new stage of "hot peace" has of wisdom. In reality Wclleslcy fluence of societies on one another Margaret McMahon '75 is sidents those troops, and of Mr. Nixon by replaced the cold war. In a way, it an institution which within ihe framework a com- also prepares with of Congress, widely different as In the long run, who can stands in the same relationship to (Editor's note: Margaret students to pass petition whose goals are less and examinations the they are, suggest a common possibly pretend lo know whether its predecessor as the cold war did McMahon won the Wing Prize passing of which is required less tangible, whose means are less if one answer: the for poetry last year.) detente may bring the invasion of Czechoslovakia to hot or violent war; it is still a wishes to have certain types of and less direct, whose conse- beginning of the real has retarded or accelerated (he confronta- relationship of conflict, but is their importance, but within this careers. These two goals come in quences are less and less tion, that of each society with waning of Soviet influence on removed one stage further from a precisely complex process where the Soviet conflict. For example, if I pursue calculable, because they itself, upon which its Eastern , whether confronta- the direct challenge to the other side's Union lends lo acquire a partial wisdom I am interested in finding involve activities rather lhan tion with other meaning of Brandt's Oslpolitik ultimately possessions, institutions, regimes, military superiority and the out what I don't know cheating strategies and because these ac- — depends. lies m the acceptance of Ger- and also from the use of physical wcsicm countries tend lo increase would prevent me from finding tivities are important as much Increased many's division or the economic contacts in adoption force. The challenge and ihe their economic and technological I don't I because of [heir effects on whal out, so cheat. If need with of the only possible way to sur- the Wesl lead the Soviet threat remain at least in part, but one. But ihe most decisive element high grades to get into law school societies are as on what they do. leaders mount it, whether East-West in- to increased repression they come as much from within as in (he both and The real race may be less lo in- crisis, social I am interested in showing not favors within their own society in order dustrial cooperation the from without; their character is one's comparative power spiritual of modern society. This merely how much I know but that crease to avoid the ideological con- liberalization of the Soviet regime even more indirect and less ex- than to decrease one's com- crisis is more visible and diffuse in I know more than you — hence tamination; but, in an era or enables the Soviet leaders to or com- plicit. the West, it is more controlled but the to parative vulnerability. I o temptation cheat, or dispense with it, whether military munication, this repression, in But it may be wrong lo assume more explosive in the Easl. The plagiarize, manipulate nol only an op- to make myself look superiority still leads to an in- turn, cannot be hidden from the that the farther one gets from war brutality of communist regimes ponent's weaknesses but one - belter than I am. crease political influence. West and cannot but harm the in and propaganda the closer one is makes better at repressing <>«n l>> encourage exported ero- (hem very economic cooperation which In olher ages, force and to peace and reconciliation. In Wcllcsley's rules concerning sion or lo control contagious ex- dissidents while ihe elasticity of is being sought. In the West, diplomacy led to conquests or to this new stale of ambiguity, academic honesty are an attempt plosions lo modify or maintain Western societies makes them alliances. During the delenle challenges the necessity of reversals of situations may thaw without being belter at co-opting to make the judging of achieve- nol so much territorial borders or them. modifications of defense and the authority of Cold War, such solved, isolation may be broken in is ment and comparative achieve- even diplomatic alignments as If this so. Ihe same process of siaius were impossible, governments, to the point where ii the quo favour of asymmetrical penctra- delenle can encourage the exter- ment as fair as possible. They are whal might be called the balance becomes hard to maintain the the situation was frozen by the lion or imbalance ralher than of nal of the Soviet Union also an attempt to accomplish this of will and the balance of expec- successes confrontation, the two blocs weld- military strength and the reconciliation. There may always aggravate its internal dif- in a way which minimizes in- tations. and diplomatic flexibility which ed by the threat, real or supposed, be social ferment lo pre- terference with the pursuit of made enough Power considerations retain Continucd on p. 7 of the enemy, the status quo was wisdom. Thus, while we may have it possible in the first place. now really see the upheld by the very fact of not be- disagreements on points of detail, Only do we ambiguous and paradoxical ing recognized. The Cold War, we may be said to have consented Establishes the Therapy was in fact characterized by Music character the era of negotia- to the rules. of

Inter alia Welleslcy is a society composed of young adults. We How lo Slnw Down Line of Communication are, more or less, ready for the is last wnh responsibilities of citizenship. We By Maureen Smith '75 a phenomenon o( the lovelj lone ihe weakest of ready only is twenty-five years, although laps, bowed psalleries produce a shall become more Find a lillle hit of land knowledge of the therapeutic violin like sound with I/I00th of wc practice these responsibilities Editor's Note: Maureen Smith / qualities music has existed the effort: and olher instruments Somewhere W of not through external compulsion has combined an interest in psy- since the beginning of history. such as the reed horns and pen- ("Big Sister is watching you") but \i chology and music to form an in- .uiii carrot seed. plant a Still unknown to many people, latome zithers allow any person, through an inner commitment. dependent major in music music Ihcrapy is becoming in- no mailer how handicapped, lo This goal is furthered by Now sit down and walch il grow. therapy. NEWS offers this article JT . \$tr creasingly respected and its use produce music successfully. Songs operating under an honors code as an introduction to a relatively il is fully yrown widespread. In the ma- by Paul Nordoff and Clive Rob- and would be frustrated by a When unknown field and as an inspira- more fact, ol stale schools as well as bins, lor example, are phrased as system of "watchdogs." tion for those who have yet devis- jority Pull il up und f v private schools for exceptional closely to speech as possible. So far I^have argued for the ed a scheme for adding oranges have Ilicse songs use Ihe "opening" in- compliance apples, or art history and children in Massachusetts honors code. And in Fat il. and /CV^ one or more registered music lervals of the fourth and fifth and with that code let me acknowledge physics, or for that matter music therapists on their staff. incorporate such devices as un- that the source of my reasons may and psychology. In short, music therapy is the usual dissonant harmonics and be found in the writings of Aristo- The establishment of music — Stephen (Jaskin. "Litinn on Ihe Farth" use ol music-related activities lo hanging dominant sevenths which tle. therapy as a formal field of study make ihe behavior of an in- very lew people can resist resolv- particularly But if we have no external dividual more adaptive As in any ing. Such devices are watchdogs, what should happen if Cicada and Related Arthropod therapy, the goals and techniques effective in initiating speech in someone's internal watchdog (her are highly individualized for each non-verbal children. case, but there arc some Effectiveness is music therapy's sense of honor, or fair play, or Societies Rally at Woods Hole shining quality 350 justice) fails. Aristotle doesn't generalities. With retarded During my

wilh least 6 lo field work. I saw blind, retarded help me here. By Jan Shorey '75 investigate topics of their own in- involved playing at children, for example, shorl, each songs erib cases smile in delight, doubl- Experience of living in a police terest This privilege coupled with 8 living reprcsenlatives of brightly harmonized can phylum in order lo learn their help leach rudimentary reading ing ihe amount of their ver- slate has given me a strong aver- (Editor's note: Jan Shorey is a excellent laboratory facilities and iraks. Lectures during the lasl 4 skills such as prepositional con- bal)/, il ions after hearing a sion against "citizen-informers." senior biology major.) location plus a superb library has weeks course covered areas cepts as well as numbers, colors, therapist mirror back, in a Don't say, "but that police state What could be more delicate made MBL a Mecca for both of Ihe research of invertebrate physiology that and so on. Emotionally disturbed rhythmic and melodic way. the perpetuated a bad system, we wish than a Manet, more meticulous U.S. and foreign I saw biologists and biochemists. That were of special interest to (he children can benefit from im- sounds thai they had made. to perpetuate a good system." The than a watchmaker, more in- turn (and closer lo home) stall: lor example, osmoregula- provising in the penlalonic scale, disturbed, hyperactive children "citizen-informers" often thought tricate lhan an IBM-360. and lad, in bioluminescence, behavior of whole lone scale, or wilh Indian soothed and absorbed in im- they were perpetuating a good more addictive lhan a good means ihut MBL is a fine place tion, boring gastropods (hole-making!), ragas which all provide audio provising on a penlalonic scale of system. "Asimov?" Cast aside your mam- for fledgling biologists to "meet and the innervation of insect mus- "successes" and can be either resonator bells. The only other We argued against "Big Sister malian prejudice and you will be ihe right people al ihe right lime." concern of the Cor- cle. Throughout Ihe summer, the relaxing or releasing experiences, time (hey were that restful, I was is watching you" on the grounds compelled lo answer, truthfully, The major class look field trips to nearby salt Mosi disturbed or retarded peo- told, wis liter a large dosage of that as long as Big Sister watches INVERTEBRATES! poration is to maintain an ex- marshes and intertidul /ones. ple suffer from a "failure orien- niahn or some other depressant. I do we al the cellenl research facility for highly we don't build character, I spent this past summer period opportunity investigators. However, I spent a two-week lalion" 1 herefore. the general also had the rare of build character if little sisters are Marine Biological Laboratory qualified working with Dr. Robert give a sense self- autistic child actual- in the interest of training future goal is in them of witnessing an watching? (MBL) in Woods Hole. Mass., Irvine) on the 17- is ly respond to another human be- investigators the lab admits aboul Jo.iephson (UC, worth and self-confidence. This being introduced to the world of Dissecting one of Ihe allow this case, a music therapist, 150 students lo ils summer yr Cicada. accomplished bj me such ing, in But then, on the other hand, if the research scienlisl and the fan- critiers is like culling open a lo repeated success llicsc siicec-s situations arc not in- programs in Embryology, Ex- persons huve no one watches, will it become tastic realm of marine guitar! All the heller lo sing wilh, help lo the rare exceptions. six citable Membrane Biophysics and experiences which open true that "nice girls finish last"? Is vertebrate zoology. The first win. wants lo eat when you're were Physiology, Invertebrate and lines ..I communication in in- that the kind of society in which weeks of ihe summer only above ground for 2 days once iliuting or developing speech, es- entitled I X- Zoology, Marine Botany. Marine we want to live? devoted lo a course 17 years'' Specifically, I behaviors, in- Ii is not the therapist or Ihe .i ii every tablish acceptable propose the ideal pcrimental Invertebrate Zoology l v. l g y . Neurobiology, It's easy to Coball Chloride staining music alone that makes music Physiology, and Reproductive used crease memory and attention solution: exams on which you and (he lasl six weeks, to a techniques in an effort lo locale span, and help improve motor Ihcrapy work. Rather, il is the not project involving ihe Biology. Each course is described can't cheat, papers which do research sensitive, skill- the cell bodies ol those nerves skills combination ol a But of a colonial as "intensive." Lei me tell you benefit from plagiarism, etc. bioluminescense dorsal therapist-musician, using a service Ihe use as i therapeutic ed, what thai means, in terms ol which W In musk thai ideal is nol realizable in all bvdroid. longitudinal flight muscle. Olher tool? Music lias innate order in ils wonderful, therapeutic tool. was incorporated in 1888 "Invert." Lectures (excellent!) courses in all fields. MBL in music therapy is slow members O.I ihe 17-yr. Cicada and rhythm. Through ihe tempo. Progress (his country's were delivered Mon. - Sal. from personal view, considering .mil is now one of My Related Arthropod Society (to melody, and harmony, music can Usually hcing measured in years regarded marine 8:15 until 9:30, and were followed all our aims: wisdom, jobs, honor, m. ist highl) weeks meet again in 1991!) did in- i c a induce rather than or months, laboratory work until one v. r c a mood, anything It is privately owned and by trust (I have nol said stations. what measured is recording from the act i- . however, is oneself unable lo focus tercellular ISSOCiationS. and conies in is by the corporation ol found about trust; how thai managed muscles and the tympanic to positive There are very few peo- one's microscope Both the lab Lymbal breakdown communications reader) is: ami scholars who form left as an exercise lo the scientists ple with any type of handicap that library were open 24 hrs per nerves, burners since it is much less other then working community. Il is in and if we trust each ils I d> can't During the next Iwo-wcck threatening than speech do not respond to music. This code. If operation during the day. lei's not have an honors peuk under Dr. response is period. I worked James Special instruments huve been practically universal researchers are free The first 2 weeks of the course wc can. then lei's nol lake awaj summer when power, o r i n ( Li C L A ) on the -pccial songs com- music therapy's unique for dealt with a phyletic survey of M developed and what we have just leave their home institutions, with one hand lo bioluminescence of several lo allow music to be most n cun be used in establishing a line marine invertebrate fauna ... at posed 1 year-round. other. The present although il is "P -'" given with I lie bydroids and a charming lillle alls el Ice in c ol communication with a person rate a ... therapeutic working in the corporately ihe of phylum per day is a dishonorable While initial failed. honors code scale worm. Much of my Resonator bells produce a e k ir. when all else has I ah work Ihis lime labs, scientists are free to woosh! during compromise. owned Conlinued on p. 7

23 Central St. Great Haircuts 237-5878 23 WEST Gives (Over Olken's) !

WtLLESLEY NEWS Page 4 CG looks at residence contract Assigns examination to Res Pol

the special ad-hoc protects these records By Lin Frackman 76 reconstitute from third I honor code committee of last year party access. Senate unanimously passed a to evaluate and make recommen- Mrs. Mclvin. Dean of the Cla« I motion Monday night to assign to dations concerning the future of 75, stated that it is still no , the Residence Policy Committee status of the honor code. This clear what records are referred to the task of re-evaluating the committee will include students, as "records" in the new law, but I residence contract. CG also pass- faculty members and ad- that psychiatric records will prob- ed a recommendation to ministrators, and will not have the ably not be included. However College go»ernmenl officers listen attentively at Senate's meeting Monday night. From left they are: Bar- Academic Council that students power to change legislation. It will recommendations from professors! Vil Juniors, Stephanie Smith 75, Chairman of House Presidents, Ann Conolly be entitled to petition professors examine the questions of whether will be under the law. Mrs. bara Vondy 76, Chairman of Mclvin I '76, Student Bursar. Angela Freyre 76, Jr. Vice-President for On Campus Affairs, Linny Little 75, CG Presi- in December to receive academic the code functions now, how to emphasized that graduate schools for Off-Campus Affairs. credit for independent dent, Liane Callahan 76, Jr. Vice-President, work done make it function better should to seem to think that it's better if the

Photo by Sasha Norkin during Winter Study (Jan. 1 1-31). 76 have self-scheduled exams, and students does not get to see her Cin'dy Israel, 76, Senate rep whether the code should be more recommendations. Dean Mclvin from Cazcnovc, if asked students explicit as opposed to implicit. added that any student is welcome can occupy their rooms now if CG passed the motion. to see any recommendation that Program studies surrealism they have not signed the residence she writes. ~ contract, and whether the contract Mrs. Fedo emphasized that Angela Freyre, 76, Vice- permits the College to put other contrary to common belief on President for On-Campus Affairs, Since 1974 is the fiftieth tists touched with Aragon, Eluard, Char, an- madness, Julicn students in the rooms during campus, the federal law allowing clarified the difference between a niversary of the founding of (Bosch, Fussli, Grandville, Sadc, Gracq, Pieyre de Mandiargues, Winter Study period. Susan Fedo, students to see all records does not recognition form for on-campus Poe. Oclavio ... Surrealism, a program com- Lautreamont, Rimbaud ... ). Pa/ ; in art. Max Director of Student Services, have effect until November 19. clubs and a constitution. The in the of memorating this event appears es- art patients in mental in- Ernst, Chirico, Dali. Man Ray, answered both in the affirmative. She added that the law has two recognition form is for one year pecially appropriate within the slilulions. They also anticipated Picasso, Miro, Magritte, Brauner, '75, Abby Franklin, Chief purls. The first opens all in- only and u club cannot request context of the College Centennial the current interest in the occult Tanguy, Arp, Toyen, Hantai, Justice, moved that Senate dividual records, but the second SOFC funds under it. A constitu- celebration. The committee in (astrology, alchemy, fortune tell- Giacometti, Wilfredo Lam. In the tion must be renewed every three churge of this program has ing ... ). theater. Vitrac, Artaud. whose in- How To Count Preferential Ballots years and under it a club can attempted to plan a number of The so-called counterculture is fluence on Grolowsky and the liv- schedule elections, request SOFC events which will illustrate the im- little more than a return to the ing theatre is so marked, the early 1. Count the total number of ballots. funds, etc. portance of Surrealism, the extent dominant concerns of Surrealism: Adamov, Arrabal ... ; in the 2. Arrange all ballots in 5 (or 6 elc.) piles according to names mark- Susan Challenger, 76, Senate and depth of its influence. in the twenties, the Surrealists cinema, Bunuel. Man Ray, Ado ed with "I". rep from Tower Court, added thai The true significance and were already advocating the ex- Kyrou ... can recognize an organization lasting CG influence of Surrealism arc panding of consciousness, freeing The following reading list may 3. Record results, i.e. number of "I" votes for each individual and but is not (hereby bound to grant commonly ignored, although far the mind from cultural, rational, serve as a starting point: total take to check (in case one ballot eventually does not count, in it SOFC funds. A club can be per- more than any other movement of and institutional constraints. J.H. They Matthews, An Introduction write: "total" "120 plus I invalid ballot, if, for example, the total mitted to meet on campus, this nature, it revolutionized called for the sexual revolution to Surrealism; Surrealism and the was 121.) without meeting the requirements Western culture. Its founder, An- (they wrote the pamphlet Hands Novel; Surrealism and Film; to receive a grant from SOFC. dre Breton, was a medical student off love! as a protest against Theatre in Dada and Surrealism. 4. Take smallest pile and redistribute this pile among the remaining specializing in psychiatry. During puritanical American laws). They H.S. Gcrshman. The Surrealist 4 piles, according to highest vote (i.e. according to lowest number, in World War I, he treated shell- extolled Oriental wisdom. Revolution in France; H. Nadcau, this case according to "2"s.) Mark each of the distributed ballots shocked soldiers and he was one Buddhism and the cult of the 77te History Surrealism; W. of with a 2 (in order to be able to count additions to first vote.) of the first in France to show an Dalai Lama. They valued spon- Fowlic, Age Of Surrealism; Anna interest in Freud's theories, taneous action (the happening was Bulakian. Surrealism; The Road 5. Record count in 4 piles. although he had strong reser- one of their inventions). to the Absolute; Breton. Magus of vations about Freud's attitude They also initialed many of the Surrealism; Andre Breton, 6. Take smallest pile from these 4 piles and redistribute remaining 3 toward conventional morality, techniques which were used some Manifestoes of Surrealism; Yale piles according to highest vote (i.e. lowest number); mark each of Breton defined Surrealism as a fifty years later French by students in Studies. Special issue on these ballots with a "3". Check to see if the second place vote of "pure psychical automatic activi- revolt: the parody of Establish- Surrealism (1964). those ballots can still be valid (i.e. if a number is written down). Go ty which expresses, verbally or ment institutional form (mock to no. 3 only if second candidate choice has been eliminated through any other means, the ac- trials of important figures for previously. tual January term working of the mental their "crimes" against the people, process." He believed in the insulting letters addressed to the 7. Continue in this manner until one person has more than half the power of the human mind which Pope, subversive Continued from pg. I stickers ("Open total number of ballots originally marked and counted. would be liberated by freeing it the Prisons! Disband the army!"), from fee of SI25. With only three all constraints, those of political agitation against colonial In case of a tie at the end between two people, back up to rationality as well months remaining, the Winter as those of con- wars, and against compulsory preceding ballot and take highest betwecrl the two who lied i.e., if ventional Study Committee, has quite a job morality. military service, etc. there is a tie in last column back up to second to last column. In case He sought ahead of it if Winter Study is to be to discover these As a movement. Surrealism at- of a tie on all ballots, i.e., in all columns, the two tellers "draw lots". a reality powers in in January of 1975. dreams, hypnotic tracted so many talents that a trances, and artificially induced listing of those who, at one time or states of madness. Surrealists another, were associated with it demonstrated considerable in- reads like a Who's Who of the terest in the process which led to 20lh century world of arts and the creation of primitive art, in ar- letters: in literature, Slater Breton. defines its role

By Babette Pettersen 78 and cultural exchanges There are occasionally dinners, throughout the. semester in the each ope featuring a different in- I Slater can be considered hope that Mr. Slater's motto, ternational cuisine. In early Susan Fedo, Coordinator of Wcllesley's center for foreign af- "Great International Understan- Student Services, the November, there will be a panel watches fairs. This year the committee is ding" can become integrated in discussion, led by Mr. Max-neef. proceedings of the CG meeting. anxious to define Slater and the society. 76 v«s Visiting Professor of Political Photo by Sasha Norkin promote participation within the The house itself is beautifully Science probably following campus community. the furnished, with a comfortable liv- film, ME.SW— I HAVE OMW "A Stage of Siege," if it is Although Slater has been a part ing FECUSEOWE CjCKKiCCRiWS room, where members and available. QUESTION). of the college for THE HCT THAT itO, AS A Schedule three years, a their friends can listen to inter- of Surrealism Events The foreign students, or the BOTSECP.Af* RAUJTB BE HEW major effort is being made this national music, current A»JD X A U.S. Americans having lived , AS snjC&ST, /SM THE Sept. 30-Nov. 3 - Exhibit of works abroad by Man Ray (Jewett) year to outline all its work, its ac- records, CRt* PtJBOM CM CAMCVS r»>1fJ6 or merely enjoy meeting will be giving Monday. Oct. 7 - Presentation slide shows from T6 Be W££E or Bunuel's films by Elena Gascon- tivities, and its importance , JT SEEKS TO within other students who have ex- «CS6e5T Vcra of the Spanish Department. different countries, to help further THAT XH T*ViNG tf>U Film: Le Chien Andalou (Jewett 8 Wcllesley. The committee is eager T6TOCM ME! TVEI£r*?e perienced a diversity of foreign understanding , SXU-D pm) about the people I NOT HAVE SOME SAV to encourage a greater participa- cultures, visited foretgn countries, and the way iMHWrfco-TEACMME Tuesday. Oct. 8 - Film by in which they live R Bunuel: The Exterminating Angel (Jewett. tion so that everyone can benefit or those who hvelive outside America i ; rScuy< 8 pm) America — from the diversity of cultures and themselves. OuesnoW— .. Wednesday. Oct. 9 - Film by Bunuel: Le Charme experiences Discret de la of the foreign American Studies bourgeoisie students Continued fr. pg. I ^Wslp Friday. Oct. 1 and 1 Sat.. Oct. 12: The Art Eric of Satie. a musical Slater is. however, not merely a towards a study of American «*«? and dramatic presentation under the direction of Mr. Linfield of the select club Tor Wellesley's culture in general rather than a tnghsh Department, 8 pm. Jewett Friday Oct. 1 1 - and Sat. Oct. 12 foreigners, but an international specific discipline. Humulus the Mute by Jean Anouilh, and See Other Side by Robert organization open to Americans The reason for the lack Patrick. 2 plays 9:30, Schneider of Center Coffee House who have lived abroad, those American who Studies offerings is, ac- Saturday. Oct, 12: Symposium on Surrealism have participated in the A.F.S cording to 10-12 a.m. Mr. Vanderpool, |. Opening speech by Andre Pieyre de Mandiargucs program, and anyone who might Wcllesley's strict departmental 2. The Surrealist Existence (Prof. A. Haitort Hoog of Princeton be genuinely interested in learning structure which University) makes any inter- and hearing more about non- disciplinary activity difficult. :TTj 3. Inside Out: Surrealist poetics as reversal of Valcry's American cultures. With twenty junior and senior (Professor M. Beaujour of New York University Each week, the college bulletin 2-4 majors and the enthusiasm of Mr. p.m. I. Andre Breton, poet (Prof. A. Balakian, Ike of New York contains another interesting ac- Vanderpool, Woke* University some definite action tivity at Slater There for GALS will be is expected soon in the area 2. Artaud (Prof. G. Stambolian of of Wcllesley slide-shows, panel discussions. American Surrealism Studies. DcMttocce 3 Now (Prof. J.H. Matthews of Syracuse University THE OPTICAL ILLUSION Each Hair Styling INC. given In our Salon Student tickets to Harvard football games may be purchased from Is an the Harvard Ticket Office Tor one dollar, with college identification. Individualized Regularly five dollars, this special price is in effect for Saturday's Service game, Harvard vs. Rutgers. Tickets will be on sale at the box office OPTICIANS UviyfofTlk designed for just before the game, which begins at 1:30 p.m. your features.

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WELLESLEY NEWS Page 5 New Heads of House broaden position with varied backgrounds By Mary Jo Ruben "77 she has been here. Nora has has been appointed the new same kinds of found pressure, she can her new job very in- Head or House at McAfee. put things in perspective teresting. for "Head of House" is a The position posi- or Head Tina has a B.A. Howard students. or from lion (hat is subject to individual House at Wcllcsley appealed University and has her The new to pursued Head or House at interpretation and definition. her because of the oppor- doctoral studies there. She has Claflin is Janice McQuaid. Some have questioned the tunity io work with college served as an admissions officer Janice has a B.S. from the necessity for such a level students. The beauty position. or at University or the Pembroke College, the Pennsylvania and This year, Stone-Davis is the campus and the location Director studied at the were of a Boston Model San Francisco first dorm to eliminate the other positive ractors. She Cities project, and a teacher at Academy or Art. She has serv- Head of House position is anxious to become an active and to Newton South ed as an Editor/Designer with part High School. In run the dorm solely on student or community life on cam- coming to Wcllesley, Random House, Inc. the pus. Mrs. and effort. All other dorms on cam- Nora docs not sec the role Mosby was looking for a job Children's Television pus have "Heads of House." or Head of House as an ab- that would enable her to spend Workshop (Sesame Street). Shafcr, Tower Court, solute role. In it arc Mungcr, a maximum She coauthored the book amount or time Celeste Finison, Munger Head Lear- McAfee. Claflin and possibilities for offering a Severance with her two year old daughter ning Through Play. The new variety or of House. all have new Heads, of House things. Having a position and still be in the educational Head of House at Munger. She at Claflin has worked Cookyc Williams, Toner Head or Court this year. House gives students out well field, so as "not to get has a B.S. from Lesley College, for her and her family; Head of House. an opportunity to come into cobwebs." While the baby especially loves it. approving or and an M.A. in Educational Scvercnce. has a B.A. contact with people at different from the experiment Janice views her role mainly as at Stone-Davis Psychology from Columbia Cedar Crest College. Later, she levels and styles or living. Nora that is a resource person who is allowing students the University. She. has taught at received a M.L.S. from approves or the experiment at opportunity for experimenta- Kirkland College, and most available to people on the halls Stone-Davis but Syracuse University. At reels that both in whatever tion, Tina feels there is recently served as learning way needed. One options or a Syracuse Ms. Kachra was a an independent function or the Head something missing when disabilities tutor at the Am- or House Resident Advisor for un- student-run dorm and a Head students run a dorm. The back- brose School. As Head or is to establish continuity from derclassmen. She was most year to year; not ground or a Head or House House, Celeste sees herself as just the recently employed as Assistant mechanics or running often enables her to handle- fulfilling any necessary capaci- a dorm. Librarian at the Corning She finds it difficult personal problems that stu- ty. Since she is not under the to define Museum or Gluss Library. the dents might not want to con- role or Head or House, see- fide to another student. There ing il as being in a state or flux Welleslcy. is an element or confidentiality at

that is reassuring. Tina is J e w e I e n e C . William Eleanora Wells, Shafer Head of enthusiastic about the oppor- (Cookyc) has been appointed House. tunities such as cultural the new Head or House at programs, movies, speakers, Tower Court. Cookyc received new Head Shafcr's or House and the nearby town that her B.A. from Pepperdine Wells. is Eleanora (Nora) Wcllcsley offers, but cautions College, an Ed.M. from Har- received Nora her B.A. from against the dangers of isola- vard University, and expects to Mount Holyokc College and tion. She says, "You can forget complete a Master of Com- Tina Mosky. McAfee Head of M.S. from Simmons College. what the real world munications Degree in House. is like. She has been a staff officer in Young adults should get out — December from Pepperdine or House system should the Peace Corps and an Educa- not just the MIT bus into Cam- University. operate. tion Counselor at an army base bridge or to a Harvard mixer." Janice McQuaid, Claflin Head Fatma Kassamali Kachra, Fatma Kachra, Se»crance Head in In the Mrs. Tiajuana (Tina) Germany. month that Mosby Celeste Finison is the new of House. the new Head or House at or House. Alum print reflections in "After Images"

By Flo Davis '76 despite the College warning. even back in 1909, the class year Richards Hope '61 (one or the es- "Bui I'd say", beamed Sue, or the first essayist, Lucy Wilson. sayists and Bob Hope's daughter-

What exactly is it that keeps a "(hat we've muddled through in From 1909, a veritable parade in-law) were instrumental in group or Welleslcy alumnae, 3,- fine shape." or profession. ils begins. motivating the small, but very ac- WLrJM 000 miles away, active in alumnae Arduous Process Harriet Stratmeyer Adams '14 tive alumnae clubs around the affairs??? The first step in (he arduous authored, under various idea or a collection or essays pseudonyms, How can a Los Angeles alumna process or completing the collec- the Nancy Drew and Sue Hinerfeld '57, editor or the retain her "sense" or Wellesley, tion or essays was to solicit names Dana Girl series. . book, worked with Marjorie '17, with its lake, green hills, and brick or alumnae to be placed into Mayling Soong Chiang Miller '50, in spite orsome not-so- belter buildings when Los Angeles has nomination for a place in (he known as Madame Chiang well-hiddcn pessimism about (he Kai-shek, has published desert, stucco, and cacti??? book. more project. But, as one alumna said, Wcllcsley the (han one dozen books, and Il sounds easy: have a meeting, clubs from across "The book is good because or decide to put together a book country submitted nearly 200 remains active in social and Sue." Ik about Wcllesley for the Centen- nimes. The College provided political affairs on Taiwan. Many others, loo numerous (o '25, nial Celebration, sell it. biographical information on each Marion Klein Sanders and mention helped with the drudge But at least ten alumnae dis- of the nominees. winner or (he Wellesley Alumnae work or proofreading, typing, and 1 ffi 1 Award in 1973, is the author 1 covered that organizing and Then, the d cu 1 and or MM m <-K0OM W\ correcting. COFFEE FESTIVAL publishing a collection of essays sometimes painful process of several books and an editor of two The final result is a book with by. "distinguished alumnae" is narrowing the field of con- publications. 45 parts, and a few important anything but easy. tributors began. Barbara Loomis Jackson '50, themes. Il is a time line through After Images Neophyte editors, the alumnae active professionally in urban af- ^ajclodes all. S

INGE'S FRAMING CUSTOM 84 Central St., Wellesley - 237-1210 83 STREET CENTRAL The Mall at Chestnut Hill - 527-2340 WELLESLEV, MASS. 02181 "passport photos taken here'' 235-0620 WELLESLEY NEWS

Janis Ian: Society's child

emotion of "I grew up By Sharon Collins '77 guitar and drums, the in a time when it her lyrics and delivers was over- was hip to he lough," she explain- On Sunday. September 29 at S powered. ed, "I knew thai I wasn't really lough, but when I acted tough, p.m.. members of the Symphony She mentioned how nervous she people Hull audience were scattered in thought that I was lough, w.is "This pluce is so big; we .ire- and small groups and surrounded by some of them were careless used to playing small clubs. I with my guts. rows upon rows of empty seals mean, we might not have much Ai 8:15 ihc lights dimmed and class, hut we sure don't have any "Thai's why I quit. I got really Janis out on the stage, lun walked pretension Crazy, things got ridiculously looking about the same size as her heavy. I mean, when you're fif- folk guitar. Alter her performance (she was teen, it's hard even lo get up in Ihc She tried lo laugh off the sparse loll,, wed by Tom Puxton), I spoke morning, let alone lo gel up. then saying, "Well. I'm not with her backstage in her dressing turnout, go lo school, then go to work. cmbrassed ... we never do too well room. She immediately informed And besides. I didn't know myseir me she is 4 ft. If/in. (all, 96 in Boston . I figured ihere'd only that thul well then. I didn't know what be 2'l people here and they .ill pounds. 23 years old. unmarried, I wanted would luive been pulled off the and Jewish. She was born in New street Jersey and her father was a music She was bored silling in her She suggested tli.it everyone instructor who began teaching her apartment in L.A., writing musk move forward and, while she sang lo play the piano when she was reading, and being alone, and and played her first number, there three. decided il was time for a come- back. was ,i lor^.ird migration, en Jams' family moved to m.isse. when she was four- "But if il doesn'l happen this Ms. Ian has a small hut loyal teen, and she dropped out of lime." she said. "I'll just walk following Everyone laughed a lot school after the tenth grade away again. No one can maintain and enjoyed her belwecn-songs because she hated il so much. this speed for more than three or rambling ehil-eh.it, almost us well lour years, so eventually you have ;is her low-key lolksy mUSK Her driving motivation was lo lo just walk away or you 'fuck Fllcn Ready, Vil Junior, reacts strongly to fellow students' disbelief. She's sure Ihe guy next door is preg. Her must moving numbers were lie fumous, Towards that end, she yourself up." nanl. the simple songs which -he sang wrote and recorded the hit single by herself to her own pi.ino or "Society's Child" in the 60's. She looked pensive, "You

guitar accompaniment. When she Suddenh she was known as a know, this is a weird business lor a was joined by the buck-up electric child prodigy. woman, I mean a woman artist as Gillian jostles creative careen opposed lo a singer who sings her lover's songs

"Mule musicians aren't that in- By Emily Yoffe '77 nings. Ms. Gilliall went on lo She finds no dichotomy in boll terested in female musicians — write for a somewhat larger working in film, and criticizing if except for going lo bed." Penelope Gillian, a woman of audience. By the time she was IS "Criticism seems a natural prolific talent insight, read short story thing lo love Her major creative influences and she had won enough do, if you film ai

one of her short stories: at much as I are Baez, Dylan, and the Beatles; "As We prizes lo garner a scholarship do. I'm fortunate that Have Learnt Prom Freud. There Bennington. al the "New able "At one lime. I wanted to be Yorker" I'm to Are No about retur- write Joan Baez more than anything in Jokes." and spoke She entered Oxford on only about films I like." writing in Jewell. Ihc world." September 24 ning lo her native England While Ms. Gillial does her writing it

Ms. Gilliall authored the i here several of her plays were long hand in bound black She considers herself a song screenplay of "Sunday Bloody produced by ihe BBC. notebooks, which now nuinbci writer, not a poel: "Poets are peo- Sunday." She is currently direc- She became a journalist at the forty: ple like T.S. Eliot and Wallace ting and producing a film, and age of twenty, writing for ihc "The writing's then transcribed Stevens. You can't cover both working on two film scripts. Six "New Statesman." by a very patient secretary. things at the same lime — most months of ihc year she is film It's only now. as a film director "I had written to Woody Allen hues iiisi don't hold without up critic lor the "New Yorker." that she has encountered her first once, and his reply was, "It was so music. Poetry and songwriting are Her career commenced al the "difficulty in being a girl. Though nice lo gel a letter from you Iwo different crafts." age of five when she began her I don't yet have to wave a please do write again, and thu own magazine, for a devoted hy stereciomy certificate. She was then interrupted by lime you might even make it Iwo leens knocking on the door. readership of one. her sister. "Producers really think women legible.'' They seemed rather wide-eyed "My sister, who is now a con- are good al details, bul bad "Besides having unreadable siderable sculptor, and has red overall. about the backstage atmosphere handwriting. I also am organized hair that look brown. "Janis? We just wanted lo say hi makes mine "They're afraid the crew won't so thai page 346 of one notebook meticulously copied oul the and tell you how much wc enjoyed obey a woman's voice, and there'll might go with 342 in another." magazine for this was the show." me, and he mayhem on the floor. They In creating a vast and diver before she could read." don't trust a woman with millions sificd body of characters, she hai "Thanks a lot " Janis grinned from those auspicious begin- of dollars." found, "one gets a bit aii ul them. "Anyone who wants to drogenous when a writer. say hi should be able lo gel back "I've written here." probably more stories about males and the verj After the visitors left, Ms. Ian Dreyfus, Rehearse! old than anything else. mused, "You know, people "All of us contain ever) Rosic shouldn't be astonished by folk Checks hells il out, "You don'l have possibility all the time. We are all lo be a man lo "Eet By Emily Yoffe '77 irrelevant scene with a visiting lou^h! singers ... it's jusl anolher job." age I and 95, male Zionist destroys any remaining and female.' Translating "Dreyfus in Rehearsal" at Ihc continuity. her characters from paper to flesh was Shuberl Theatre now through Oc- Finally, some Polish Anti- easy, she found tober when" working with people like Man Ray: Life with Dada 14. not only needs more Semites come in and beat up the Glenda Jackson, Blood) rehearsal, bul extensive editing and director, and Ihe theatre's elderly "Sunday By S herry Kramer '75 gone new second third act. Sunday's" heroine. lo pholograph and interview The exhibit is all contained in and caretaker This Man Ray as pari of a series he the main gallery, with the Crane play-wiihin-a-play is set in The Poles are played "Glenda is an extraordinary ac- "Collecting is a Poland disease, il is be- was 1 in 1931. tress. a 1 e m p t i n g about photographs of artisls and friends An amateur melodrama iica II j and Wc did a lot of rehearsal ing possessed bv a demon. I- Jewish don't" photographers, but Crane has in Ihc front hall. Ann Gabhart, theatre troupe is pulling on amateurishly by Mich'alc Pendry and improvisation before ihe film own the collection — Ihe collec- since a production Iheir made up for any lost time. Il Jewell Curator, and her staff have director has and Rex Williams. The whole started. By the time we began tion owns me" Arnold Crane said has taken him only six written about Ihe Dreyfus affair scene is so shooting, years lo arranged Ihc an in somewhat of unconvincing thai it wc both knew exactly Monday over apple pic and ice put together 35 years ago. in w his assormcnl of Ihc •chronological order, bul have France. dissipates what should be ihe hat Alex would have done in an) cream ai the College Club. They engage art of Man Ray. resisted ihc urge to line each of in amusing bicker- height of our concern and lension. situation al age 17 or 42." In possession of one of the Crane ing about everything, spent Iwo days at Man Rays works parallel to each hut especial- Act Three finds the iroupc "My Father" finest private collections of Wellesley, where he spoke lo Ihc oihcr and evenly ly of ihc relevance of a play about scattered throughout spaced Instead Europe, with Though producer of two artists, photography in this country. Ar- Docenis. the Wellesley anti-Semitism. They don'l the Friends of there exist groupings, scries, little hear newlyweds Michael and Ms. Gillian's father himself nold is not Crane is a man passionately. Art. and Monday the rumblings Ihc nighi to the clumps of images that share the of cataclysm in Myriam (who played Dreyfus and in the arls. devoted lo ihe an college Ihcii at large as pari or ihe eye-space of Ihe viewer. "civilized" world. his wife) escaping lo Berlin. "My father is a recently retired \ photographer himself as well Surrealism Celebration. "Dreyfus In Rehearsal" In the- hall are several portraits stars By (he lime wc get this piece of as a lawyer, he has judge, and a classicist at Oxford managed to ^The show is ihe Ruth Gordon and cream of of Man Ray by Arnold Crane. Sam Levene, news, the whole enterprise has assemble He worries dreadfully about hit one of ihe two most Crane's collection, iwo forty year theatre which Crane C rane considers these his favorites veterans, gone so flat, it seems a gratuitous comprehensive two dissident lead collections of Man feels has al leasl and consummate aclors. redheads who one example of among his own work. They are The) ire pull al our bored-stiff heart Ray in Ihe such strange world, which is now on all the "crucial' such careers. pieces "by Man only one part of Crane's efforts to commanding presences lhat strings. display in Jewell through. Ray lor them one is willing bring Man Ray and "the lo ignore Besides Ms. Gordon and Mr. "He's also convinced that I November 3 exhibit Ihe less The primarily consists mysterious filmings of than fresh jokes and over- Levene, the cast can I be making any He's Arnold Man's has several other money. C rane is 42 years old. "I ihc 1962 ihealricalily of ihe Bibliothequc National mind" lo places like Wellesley. first act. actors of note, always telling me he's reading ni) He shaves particularly Peter his head twice a day. show which Vet Crane purchased One does hold some- Kastner as Michael/Dreyfus, books carefully at the Athcncum He has been shot al while and covering from Mun Kay some>\hal promise li establishes This recent- the loving Tovah Feldshuh as Myriam. is so I won't send them, and a police shool-oul in his press ly, supplemented antagonism I'll with picces« of ihe troupe. It also Perhaps ihe most save (he postage. photographing days, and eogenl com- suffered boughl Separately met Ihe years sets a lone of foreboding; menl on a one "Dreyfus in Rehearsal" broken foot while shooting "He's a smashing I think D fire- Included are many knows the hitler anli-semiiism man. early ol comes Iron, ., in Chicago. member ol the cast he partly believes I sprang from rayographs, which are the Dreyfus ease is im- soon lo itself: "Oy. oy oy, oy." " A practicing lawyer in Chicago, his lefl thigh pressions left upon reemerge and destroy the lives of he worked his way through bolh photographically sensitive paper these Jewish aclors. college and law school hy selling by objects placed on ihe papei Bui ihc production simply falls photographs to newspapers ai 20- when il is ai exposed lo light; print, apart <\a Two, which is a series 25 dollars a shot Even now he made bj the solarizalion process, ol meaningless and redundant divides his life between his pra- where the negative when partiallj vignettes, nce and his passion for developed is Hashed with light; The relationships have already photographs portraits often composed of been established, wc don't need His allachmenl lo Man Ray several negatives of the same sub- anymore explanation. Worse, an preceded their SPRING first meeting in ject; one - college; and several ex- SEMESTER ISRAEL I96X in Paris where Crane hud periments in color /The Jacob Hiatt Institute COMMUMTr — — V car I Program. Fall Term only, or Spring Term only)

PL4YF^l)SE Applications now being accepted for Wolltfiluy Hills. . Spring THE I! Term 1975 BOOK Juniors and Seniors NOW THRU TUBS., OCT. 8 eligible Beginning knowledge of Hebrew required fcarn COLLECTOR 1 WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS! 16 credits for the semester USED BOOKS Hardcover Paperback Financial Aid history-science mailable Application tnghsh-fiction-Uirtbooks DOCTOR ZHil Deadline: Nmemher 15 COME UP AND BROWSE \<,<) For Information write: NEXT! "CHINATOWN" (R) 545 Washington St. Wellesley Sgua Mon. Tues. - 2nd door & SI All Scats The Jacob Hiatt Institute Mpn-Sat 9-30-5 3" Telephone 237-2519 Brandeis University Wallham, Massachusetts 02154. " 1

NEWS L WELLESLEY Page 7 What's Happening REMINDER: Washington Internship Applications Due: October II -~ Collins B7~Sharon 77 Grace Slick. Paul Kantncr, Jeffer- pieces of the artist's mature work Room 234 Green. Sec Mr. The Exterminating Angel — Tues son Starship — Oct 13 and 14, from the mid-60's onward, against Stcltncr for details. FILMS Oct 8, 8 p.m., Jewett 8 p.m., Boston Music Hall. a backdrop of his experiments of Auditorium, a 90 minute film — Oct 6 al 8 p.m., 112 the early Isieulh by Bunuel, Spanish |930's at the Dessau Washington Internship Joseph Mankeiwicz dialogue Pendleton. with Bauhaus. English subtitles, a black Applications Due: October 1 this story of two men directs comedy of Room 234 Green affluent societly " playing a Russian roulette of See Mr. Stcttner for details. games within games, becoming MUSIC progressively more deadly as

each tries through deceit to Lou Reed — Oct 4, Orpheum the other. Starring Theatre, humiliate with special guest star ART INDEXED is a list of events Michael Cainc and Sir Triumvirat. and announcements published Man Ray Exhibition — Jewell THEATRE Olivier. Leo Kotke Ljiircncc and Janis Ian — Fri Main daily to let you know what's Gallery through Nov 3, Journey to the Center of the Earth Pay of the Jackal — Fri Oct 4, 7 Oct 4 at Cohen Auditorium, happening on campus. photographic works by Man Oct Kresge at Tufts — 5, 7 and 10 p.m., Rick and 10 p.m., MIT. U. Ray INDEXED is posted Monday from the collection of Ar- Wakcman and the National — Sat Oct 5, 7 and 9:30 Herbie Hancock with through Friday Sleeper — Minnie nold Crane. in all residence MIT. Riperton, Philharmonic Orchestra and p.m. Kresge at Fri Oct 4, 8 p.m. The The halls, al (he College Post Of- Glory of Nature's Form — Choir. Music Hall. Committee on Faculty Treasure of Sierra Madre — Symphony Hall. fice, in academic and ad- Washburn Gallery, Museum of Appointments invites all in- Ifhc Moonchildren — final two weeks, Sun Oct 6, 3 and 7 p.m., 10-250 Gordon Lightfoot — Sun Oct 6. ministrative departments, at Science, Science Park, Boston, Charles Playhouse, 76 Warren terested members of the faculty 6:30 and 9:30 the Info al MIT. p.m., Symphony color to an informal Box in Schneider, the photography by Arizo- ton Street, Boston (423-2255) discussion of the Thcni — Fri Oct 4, 6 and 8:15 Hall. Information Bureau in Green nian Willis Peterson spans the Guidelines for Reappointments m. at the Museum of Souther, Hillman, and Furay — and on the Index Board next to p world of wildlife and en- and Promotions Committee 1 Science, Science Park, Boston Oct II, 7 p.m., d^29 124 Founders. Orpheum vironments. and appointment policies al creepy scifi film about Theatre,' with INDEXED announcements — a special guest Kurt Kranz: Bauhaus and Today La Scmana Hispano-Americano Wellcslcy College. the invasion of mutant ants. Danny Fogelburg. are accepted by Information — Hayden Gallery at MIT, — Museum of Science, Science This meeting will be held on Andalou — Oct 7, New York Chamber Bureau, 235 Green with a f,c Chien Mon soloist per- 2 through Oct 12 — an exhibi- Park. Boston, Mon Oct 7 Thursday, Oct. 10, at 4:15 p.m. 8 p.m. Jcwctl Auditorium, a 20 forming music of Monteverdi p.m. deadline the day tion of works in a variety of through Mon Oct 14. a full in the Council Dining Room of minute film in black and white, and Vivaldi, Fri preceding publication. Oct II, 8:30 media, including painting, week of activities during the the College Club. Tea will be '' directed by Luis Bunuel and p.m., Sanders Theatre, INDEXED is what's happen- Har- drawing, photomontage, yearly observation of Latin- served. Salvador Dali, the film follows vard. ing al Wellcslcy. walercolor, silkscrcen, mixed American Week. The Committee on Faculty j presentation of Bunuel given Arkadii Scvidov — Fri Oct II, media, and film — the essence Appointments is al > arranging Professor Elena Gascon- 8:30 p.m., young by Russian of Kranz' art is his concern The Boston Flea Market — through Senate a similar of the Spanish Depart- pianist in recital, \era Jordan Hall, with kinesthetics and form se- Faneuil Hall Market, every meeting with interested Information ment. Boston U. Sunday, - on the Danforth quence, or seriality — over 80 I 6 members of the student body. Fellowships is now available from Dean Joan B. Melvin. The Reverend Susan Andrews will speak on the nation wide obser- The fellowships arc open to all vance a qualified persons of race, Hassner of Week of Concern al the 1 1 a.m. service, Sunday, Oct. 6 in any Houghton Memorial Chapel on the Wellesley College campus. In creed, or citizenship, single or married, who have serious in- cullies. In the West, detente can celebration of World Communion Sunday, it will be a communion terests dp economies by reducing service. Ms. Andrews is Acting Chaplain at the College this year. in careers of teaching [Hilary expenditures, but also Music for the service will be provided by the Chapel Choir under and/or administration in colleges and universities, and ontribute to idcalogical

"The Re).. (Ri . 9) Framingham Art r Erik Satie'. begun to tell you of the delights of 280 Worcester Musical and dramatic pieces Friday night lectures, the frequent by Satie Open 10-9 Daily, Sat. 10-6 237-3020 (1866-1925). including sailboats, ... and the CHEESE the SHOP seminars, Lt Piege de Meduse (Baron 61 CENTRAL STREET Medusa's Trap), a lyrical corn- ed* in one act with incidental A LEARNING EXPERIENCE & ddnccs for mechanical monkey At Steak & Brew Treatlll — the play will be performed in a Taste P French and in an English ver- We don t blow our own horn Come watch our special u on 2j » both evenings. about our specials gourmet from our patrons do that for us. show you the mastery of there is si Swiss Fondue. We will "Steak for $3.95... unbelievable. be demonstrating Swiss difference! And delicious'' — Phil Gibson Fondue making right in Thick juicy Roast Prime Ribs PREPARE our own shop on October FOR: for $4.25—-I'm going to be a 10, 11, 12. Please MCA! Tuesday regular. "—Nancy Sullivan & come nd CPH DAI learn this great culinary trial dtsus

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WELLESLEY NEWS

Title IX and Team Tennis Sports perspective: Women anchor new World Mary Young 76 Wellesley lo make an I Flamingoes, the enough old |, By Pum Chin 75 needed to win a match. When the Triangles and ihe mouth alum envious score is 6-6, a single-game tie- Pittsburgh the bright Minnesota Buckins, as well as the Under lights read, "Tennis anyone?" breaker is played lo determine the Cleveland Nets for television coverage. ' henl, bul issued strict rules against . S | r Anti-discriminatory Title IX Once an exclusive activity of winner of ihe set. The team totals of sporls recruiters being paid and and champion Denver Racquets. from a stationary eight-pa and the emergence the country club set, lennis has for games won decides the victor arc marching band mingled for in 1972 -soliciting from high schools, for The local representatives with scholarships women now left the private courts of Ihe of ihe mutch. by the Ion;! in soiling up a example. , headed screams of crowd. Trwl wcnl :i way Wealthy and entered the urban Thus, the sets played by the i he structure for schools offering these "locals" as Australia's Kerry right vociferous audicJ collegiate sporls The sports stadiums of the nation. women arc just as important as such is awards are all coed except for tiny and England's Roger response condoned » women. Summer. I974, saw the somewhat those played Ivy the men. This fact Melville a Immaculala College in Penn- player-coach is sometimes encouraged Bui the value of Title IX 10 inconspicuous debut of has served to increase Ihe respect Taylor. The team's Hnw^J sylvania, a national women's the prize goes to the those suffering from discrimina- professional World Team Tennis. Bostj universities power. The rationale mascot, a 6-fool tall red lob* tion III large coed (WTT). to an already sports- from (he benefits behind the scholarships musl ob- cavorting around in lull differs greatly saluratcd audience.