OuNTAINNHEAO and the truth shall make you free’ v4, 1969 7 East Carolina University, P.O. Box 2516, Greenville, N.C. Nov. 4, 196 ) isney's happiness inspires homecoming A 3 ‘ i m i ‘s Homecoming: LD— the places— will be the theme for this year’s WALT DISNEY’S MAKE-BELIEVE WOR - p " world of Donand Duck, Mickey Mouse and far away A Tribute to Walt Disney. British representative talks Mallory denies plans about study anreee 6 ald for visitation periods ses , International Studies —— : Abroad sponsors flights Spirit Committee to sell bells | | in (‘Union lobby Wednesday Io on f- Folk Music Club discusses folk entertainment - North Carolina Library Assn. _ Names JoAnn Bell a director er 2 é Menahenn ar swan ce Phi Kappa Tau sponsors ‘Woman Haters Week’ Neo a DY eluaqe to Homecoming, the Phi Kappa Fa fraternity is sponsoring man Hater’s Week event started Sunday Friday The aq wil climax ernoon During — this week, the thers and pledges will not talk to women. They be known by — their or Blood drive collects 309 pints CU Ait Force Officer ted 309 pints of donation to Red hapters in the North Virginia during wMoWNG Training alread oO jual blood drive Wednesday and t yuota of 330 been set for the the cadet in e said that, juota was e was “quite day 154 pints yilected. On 55 pints of blood 57. person blood but le to donate for at ECU were not fonors. One student ell University ood He had down to East a friend and ting a pint OF Griffin to speak here y KEITH PARRISH Howard Griffin, Black Like Me,’ sday, Nov.13 at Viight Auditorium internationally ‘porter, humanitarian, lent of primitive ill speak of his hile posing as a He had a physician skin pigment and mnths in 1959 he igh five Southern t yIlege the | ive years merica, he held the nd Ceremonies f ¥ Was quoted badges and unshaven faces During the week, the fraternity expects raids on the house by sororities and dorm women. Girls raiding the house will do so at their own risk. All brothers and pledges violating the purpose of the week will be caged on the mall Friday afternoon. They will serve as targets for everybody interested. The fraternity asks that no eggs or paint be used in the house raids. They just completed painting the house. The sorority showing the most spirit during the week will win the Phi Tau pledge class for Saturday. slaves for cone A Sy ot, A ht 3p it ithe EACH ENTRY in the Mini-Art show seemed to reflect the world in miniature JOHN HOWARD GRIFFIN lived a black man’s life once for two months and lived to tell about it. His lecture will be at 8 p.m. Thursday in Wright Auditorium. THE MOST IN One Hour ARTINIZING CRRTIFIES DRY CLEANING Ne) Tuesday, November 4, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 3 MIKE WINSLOW’S winning lithograph caught the eyes of many students at the first annual Mini-Art show last week. Winslow wins grand prize in mini-art show The idea was unique and the result was enchanting. That was the way It was at the first annual Mini-Art Show. There were 75 entries, each reflecting the world in miniature. The winners in each category were: Annette Williams painting; Sissy Price, drawing; Mike Winslow, printmaking; Roy Brophy, photography; Belinda Godwin, sculpture; D.D. Stark, jewlery; and Anna Murdock, crafts. The grand prize winner was Winslow. His winning entry was a lithograph with the inscription, ‘‘and some men die knowing jess than when they were born.” Homecoming Parade will be largest ever The Homecoming Parade will begin at 10 a.m Saturday morning. The theme of this years parade is ‘Disneyland: A Tribue to Walt Disney.’ “This is expected to be the best parade of any we have ever had,’ according to Dan Summers, SGA Press Secretary. Summers said that this will be the largest Homecoming Parade ever held here. He said more floats than ever before will help comprise the 105 units of the parade The parade will follow a two and a half mile route. Summers said that invitations have been extended to everyone in the surrounding area to attend Exclusive Apparel for Women Hollywood Vassarette Vanity Fair Lingerie phone Pi-23468 Buy Your HOMECOMING Fashions From Hour Glass Cleaners — Se 2s geese ae ee ee on eee Tuesday, November 4, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 5 Bennet Cerf lauds students, calls censorship un-American blind and run right out to read it, For the remainder of the see it, hear it Bennett Cerf. Be honest evening he had the students think about it By TAYLOR GREEN and _ naturally for years to oe with yourself; what do you in the palm of his hand. It come. i think when you hear that was also interesting to note : } 5 name if you're like most the change of attitude most Sick puns | Boole you inn about of the adults took after that Bennett Cerf wouldn't be ‘ e : we super-square guy that low blow. Sitting up in the Bennett Cerf if he didn’t 7 i wa “What's My Line” for balcony | could see many a include a pun or two during fifteen years while telling nasty frown from many an the course of his talk, which some of the corniest jokes appalled adult. he did at the conclusion of : nd puns you've ever believed Come to think of it, | his lecture. Great as he is on oe possible to be created in the really don’t think Mr. Cerf everything else, Bennett Cerf MRS. RUTH PAULK, acting President, e human mind had one thing to say in favor still tells the corniest puns prepares material for the League of Women : All in ali, Bennett Cerf is of our elders. He also ever conceived by the human . fet mot ome Of Cmose indicated strong approval of mind. One of the sickest individuals you'd like to put the Youths’ work with the ones had to do with Arthur W V t meet yy your “People I’d Like to Moratorium and said he Rubenstein. It seems Mr. oman 0 ers Meet” list. This writer was would like to see a quick Rubenstein was rehearsing on a ich of the same opinion end to the war a plano that needed tuning next ues ay nigat | last night. But let the Genscrchin antl 4 Very Badly. A Mr Ee Goode out Pp Cue Opornokity was called in to A pre-organizational joins the League in her own | had guessed, Mr. Cerf Mr. Cerf turned to that fix the piano which he meeting for a Greenville-Pitt community, she also ather well-educated old bugaboo in the publishing proceeded to do for the next County League of Women becomes a member of her ing graduated from world known as three hours. Upon completion Voters will be held at 8 p.m state League and of the ia University, and is CENSORSHIP- he’s against it. Of his task he left, whereby on Nov. 11 at St. Paul’s League of Women Voters of lifetime Phi Beta He called it ‘un-American’ Mr Rubenstein started Episcopal Church. the United States. | member. As super and self defeating. practicing once more. Still The League of Women Wherever she lives, she int as the guy appears to He is very much disturbed not satisfied with what he Voters is a nonpartisan works with other members TV, you would with those ‘‘well intentioned’ heard, he instructed that Mr. Organization Open to of her local League on issues think that he would ladies and citizens who try to Opornokity be summoned women citizens of voting important to her own equally staunch say what others shall and once again for further age to encourage the community, to her state, Of thre shall not read, see, hear, and retuning. informed and active and to her country. shment eventually think ee participation of aii citizens The League of Women . Change of opinions : a : ¢ ISE!!! To quote By pointing out that a in governmeni and politics. Voters of the United States yossibie, ‘You (the particular work is “dirty,” Upon hearing that his Mrs. Betty Casey, acting has 150,000 members in ve right and they many people who might services were required a publicity director for the more than 1,250 local 1..and if they don’t never otherwise have heard of second time, he replied, ‘I’m League, invited anyone Leagues in all 50 states, the t( you, they are it are suddenly aware of it sorry but Opornokity only interested in responsible District of Columbia and tunes once.’’ That's action on community affairs the Commonwealth of something only Bennett Cerf and those who would like to Puerto Rico. e e ‘ at Amateur film directors could get away with and live be better informed from a Representatives from the he to re-tell it. nonpartisan standpoint on State League will be present ihose “of Us. who political issues to attend the at the local meeting to 3 discuss spring film fest previously thought cryptic meeting next Tuesday. answer questions and to and cynical thoughts of he League of Women guide the group in setiing e Wednesday night a University will be on its way to Bennett Cerf have now Voters functions on three up necessary procedures f 20 film lovers met for — cultivating the art of cinema. altered their opinions by at levels: local, state, and required for becoming ening with Dulberg,”’ to The film festival committee least 160 degrees. If he national. When a women organized the first campus film has put out some basic didn’t tell those God awful ind their chances of explanations of filmmaking and puns, he might well have a possible $150,$100, some restrictions on the type of captured the other 20 ize in the spring films to be entered. degrees. j a two year-old The rules are as follows Hats off to Bennett Cerf ition of fiveorsix actors length is to be anywhere from he certainly is one for the raman. They make One minute to30 minutes; there books. Upun my word! ney but believe in is no limit on subject matter; ilms and — there will be one dollar entry fee thers to the world Using films for each fitm-{8-mm-or-16-mm)__ ting of special effects and there is no limit to the 1 xposures, animation, number of entries; finally, the Dulberg Productions sound for 8 mm films is to be «plained some basic mechanics — recorded on tapes or record disc ic nematography. unless one has a_ personal : lf the SGA gives the Fine orchestra, 8 mm _ sound rts Committee its projector, or nosound at all. fed money next East Carolina FOR SALE ~——F- QE} Yellow Corvair Monza sport, low mileage, $950, call 752-7246 ting. their COL. SANDFRS RECIPE Kentucky Fried Chicken =a, é fihy nger le lickin good It's the year of the brogue the time to be bold in styling. Collegians have the look FREE DELIVERY on orders of $10 Or more that’s “IN this season. Kast Fift) Street Ext. GREENVILLE, N.C Phone 752-5184 LJ wp ri a OCOD EVEL LTT TINT I SETI LE Marcuse retires to background fact completely different ‘ | re ide! By JIMHECK t 5 : nost lenght than \ y position leaders who neal he co 1k ; 2 m what he vaingloriously of the merit i n com f g he 1S pe Ma se is se as \ yreat defeatism of spontaneous disruption . : lay ‘For revolution,” Ma es : : ane { ; to engage Says, “There is ¢ h 968, Sort é S f t , ich : ae : : ‘ , VS ‘ : thing as spontaneit the He has never Bs s precisely,but this see t a | aay { t f y Davis, be the center of his think : ae t re t 1a yf about Lenin's den tie Honot ee : : ars ee ahi al T y t Say f they are centralism, of the need for a Ise Se, Se oe ae a a t s, | t kno revolution to be quided by a yasicle s 2 \ y ng, if ther close-knit critical thinking tion No more book projects forms t S if nd th trategy revolutionary elit This ttribu Tter ~ realist naturally, alienates the that ee ee DOOKS ana esand nis T { u totally ysis, then they can play youthful espouser yf Univer: ; oy . recent and perhaps too Nasti'y tdat tions ee y tant parts in spontaneous and extensive break é ; ; 7) : Essay i M C. democracy. This is ly publics nsi s Marx ee : 2 mae V t TORGs : t I t ided organized spontaneit and The a : | i. ’ : - : el t States f ted nost only threroudt I Hono! ; ivanced talis tuat t st (sit ; analytically organized OS VI Me e only one left M7 ty tk S \ arcuse the only one lett < tem, Ma . S spontaneity can revolutior a have B Be i thes and his vague, utopian Ne : de ¢ N F ie fe ege tellect t 5 On G Form come about The S ter his iS . ; thout whom tt ten Sorbonne-wor ts a nnot possibly : honot \ s yn arbert Marcuse T Te s 2 ia x : : : A ee INET Lac Looks for revolution ' ae epee tao arine's body exhumed — " ae f a national ather the reverse, that seems Tut T € t : age ; true. Few radi } ON Che tbas mines So oo on after investigation f POSsIDIe es ist X IGE 1 NEW YORK_~— (AP)--The investigation into jress ess ee elie 19-year-old Marine yf Pvt. Jose T. Concept i ( | ‘ee i jied at the Parris Island the Bronx att UF tu { vement . | aiNiNng base f July serviceman’s ido t ssib p . evolutionary force. | have vill be exhumed in Br lyn husband had « wha \ Wi Numed i 5 KIYN ISOal d H. 1. HODGES & CO., Ine. oe rules ) y today, Rep Vario = Biagg! Dern Gg mistrea y } Students Sports Headquarters noe ; oe itive the Bronx Instructors at the base any | Conception Inds Evergreen Ge io ae Brooklyn Or WON'T YOU COME a ail Bs. TO OUR SIK-ISH i el fn Styled especially for Homecoming Weekend by Coliege Hall Fashions to the order of 9 ests JEWELERS 402 Evans St b (oo &eeeeee FSSHSSOSSCSCOCSOCPSOCIOSOOCOSOOe ¢ A derstanding | (dive of student erie Black teachers officials lose | The student satd he sold the ide ee ey ee book because he needed the jo S ecause 0 in egra ion its seemingly have of money and was unaware ider S consequences involved that the students could get WASHINGTON (CPS) schools are reassigned as integration and increased the ommitteing an illegal act temporary loans through The black principal and the assistants to white supervisors number of children attending here (6 One of the factors the SGA. black school teacher may be in central offices integrated classrooms In tributing to student In other cases, Trail said a vanishing breed in the “Then.’’ as an NEA | generai, the more extensive conduct, according to that the student did not Soutii—and the cause is the spokesman put ie, they a the desegregation of students seeele Trail, neconcing follow a rule because he felt Civil Rights Act of 1964 better not let their - rs break the greater the chance that hairman of the Men’s it was insignificant and he The ei requires Southern Anan Ce a , a Negro teachers wil be Honor Council WDE OE Oe aie eet ey school districts to desegregate miss "their most econ adversely affected by Frail said that several ignoring If. timelh Classi O10 ims: assig and nt—drivine ne demotion, displacement, or ses came before the This was a case when a Desegregation frequently a neabe? “ lunch.” : dismissal.” onor Council in which the sophomore man failed to means closing down formerly 3 a ae RE oo a atl The techniques employed ecused student did not pick up his activity card and black schools. And school imigarenan. Sia eck noe by school districts in the snsider the penalty of the sles a an Pe had closings are just the excuse iia plevenient_viee ant as South to displace their tion before he did it. He picked one up ana it nad that many districts need to early ce 1954 after the border teachers and principals are been stolen. ibuted this to the fact fire their. Negia states began compliance with M@Nny- They inelude Phat the aoulom une He said he had lied sersonnel—rather than the Supreme Court decision Wholesale dismissal, failure to niversity takes against law because it seemed practical. transfer them to “white” or cairo — ye ae renew contracts, using other eakers is not highly He thought it would cut integrated schools. Edication| whichientiled’ that ecsoms.: to) Justify tiring On) iplicized some of the red tape Thousands have lost their racial segregation could no 4" individual basis, and The Men's and Women’s involved in geiting his card, obs through this longer be tolerated in the ‘requiring certain scores on Honor Councils hear the Trail said “displacement,’’ according to mengols (or thee nation le Une Nacional Teachers 5 for those students who He was placed on the National Education — picked up sven end moved! Exaiminouione (Un) DY. tne committed an Honor conduct probation through Association (NEA) he south after [965 when the [dUcational Testing Service) de offense winter quarter. practice doesn’t always end jmplimentation of the civil before certification is granted. The code is stated in the Trail said that this ts an in firing, NEA says; rights act penetrated into the An additional device ey as “you are on your instance where the student sometimes school staffs are southern states. recently uncovered is honor not to cheat, steal or abandoned a standard set-up simply demoted—given lower According to an NEA task reclassifying general teaching for the group because he pay, less satisfactory force on Ane subject, “In positions under such special In one case this quarter, felt it did not serve the assignments. Sometimes, for 1965, implementation of that federally aided categories as o freshmen men were individual example, principals of black act accelerated the pace of (Continued on page 9) The honor councils are composed of nine members each. All members are harged with illegal entry of iniversity building and TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO. ealing During their hearing the students They are STUDENT DESK LAMPS — GREETING CARDS sald they Knee: they appointed by the SGA Student Stationery ee Professional Filing Supplies breaking the law but president and approved by Drafting and Art Supplies —— School Supplies not think about the the legislature 214 Rast Sth Street 752-2175 bility of being caught hat would follow raul said that this ts a non response He said FLASH!! SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT BRONSON MATNEY JR. y students here attempt things that are very difficult to aet away with” because y believe the forcement of campus Ss iS lax The two men were Cod On coOmauct robation. for fall quarter d given suspended SoemMsiom tor Une remaining academic year. Trail said in a book theft ise this quarter the student lid not know that the book could be traced so easily a 4 “+ Diamonds 3 ee A-ha iste Sra a dee eee = = eon eeenene ee ae = Registered $6.98 8-Track : Tapes $4.99 Tape Town & Harmony House South IN. APPRECIATION TO STUDENTS Jewelers LARGE SELECTION THIS IS NOT A SALE !! THESE ARE NEW Cape Coun & Harmony ee rner ol K ourth and [vans orne! EADQUARTERS for HI-FI STEREO COMPONENTS and TAPE _ EQ Lautares Jewelers 4A Evans Streets ¢ oo eeeeee SFSFHSSSOOSESCCSOOCCOCISOCOOSOCOeS Pte set se OOeeos om ‘November 4, 1969 5 OF 1 1 : Pages, Fountainhead, | uesday Lower voting age 3y BILL SIEVERT {ILI (AF) North t trustees ASH ON ~) policy Pee wering the vot \ aad f nonths ago nat 3 t ymittee c the ou ' pus he conteste Nov. 4 O ction rse minute i) : SSiSSIOF ¢ the policy Statewide referendum es ed Dis i ) 2S } 4 ta Ity Xf f t ss ae { ymmended 2 2NCOUF AGE line !068 1 the entire Six ; ne n the policy The > S< 5S ) : soard A aa C j it a Pp lay by : t Gastonla qT \ Te 2 I t the New Jersey ahead T ate fal ty e f Approved referendums H R iI hy f | : i hict n S wWRmOo biad & the. anual Groma of Leather prew- ; \w's uo tre bene we ths a : | Mosh room - = Kandcrapted. J Mossachusen ), Minnesota sa PW volch muds aud Wii. ta ny Neprael More. Good (hings for Hi2- Qadle People. [ke MUSHROOM - Georgelsun Shoppes: AW. TPM, PITT PLAZA DAIRY BAR | 25 Delicious Flavors | of Ice Crear Tn cious Banan Split or Sundae th ap | } 264 By Pass. Greenville | i. j ee Buccaneer Courts — Newly Decorated Approved ECU Housing for Women Students Attention: Refrigerator and Light Cooking Board of Trustees endorses policy The policy — provides the suspension, discharge for &xpulsion, OF dismiss staff or faculty member who wilfully disrupts al of any student, normal campus Operations The policy sets UP @ board of inquiry and a hearing committee to handle the disrupters appoints the members of the two boards may or may not convene them to hear cases of alleged The chancellor and he d Case and pass judgment Albright’s group proposed that not only the chancellor but also the chairman of the faculty and the studs t body president have author ity to convene the committees Rep lke Andrews D-Chatham, and former stat. Rowe of B Sen Roy WW vere elected to the board’ |o- me mp et eX tive committee Former Sen. Tom White Kinston, @ member of the xecutive committee, asked the trustees to determine if There i ny | \ lie (Eta (6| St t ns tO yscene Iqat language, ind (2) ersity car pa fee the SUDDOTt f these publications | is a a Moscow says that US free _, must get out of Vietnam the Paris The serious | the failure yf the peace talks venture igainst Vietnam convincinaly that sooner or later United States ill hav cognize the impossibilit yf solving the Vietr yuestion by military tO agree to 4 polit settlement and get out Vitnam,’’ the paper addea One. 87e iP @} 6778 tudents and Faculty CITY LAUNDERETTE In each Suite Leave your laundry, we do it for you. l Hr. Fluff Dried Laundry Service Includes soap and bleach Laundry 91% Ibs, 83¢, Folded 93c TDA Ly CLEANING and SHIRTS “Lpe Ullimate tn off Campus Lining ig tenth and heath street 813 Evans Street i Dow resident manager 753 — 2867 SORRY "PEG, 2 PRR HES citing ee rom Burger Chef ed Cross urges public to write North Vietnam WASHINGTON, D.C. The American Red Cross has urged a massive expression of indignation over the treatment of U.S. prisoners held by the North Vietnamese. It called on the American people to write direct to the president of the Democratic Republic of North Vietnam to express concern about Hanoi's failure to give captured U.S. military yenefits of the Conventions. personnel the Geneva Write the president latest tment of Defense sures, 413 Americans are According to nown to be ind 918 sing and prisoners oT others are believed ayptured Pointing out that the srth Vietnamese are qnatory to the Geneva sonventions, Red Cross vational headquarters here said such a public outcry night do much to ensure that American prisoners will the humane in the It urged that eceive reatment called for Jonventions. appeals be addressed to: Office of the President Democratic Republic of North Vietnam Hanoi, North Vietnam An airmail tetter weighing less than one-half ounce takes 25 postage, the Red Cross said. Meanwhile, the American Red Cross is continuing to urge Red Cross societies in all parts of the world to intercede in behalf of the U.S. prisoners with the Red Cross Society of North Vietnam and to ask that their respective governments take stmilar action with the North Vietnamese government. cents in Geneva benefits American Red Cross-sponsored resolution passed without a dissenting vote by 77 governments and In oan 91 national Red Crosss societies, the International Conference of the Red Cross in istanbul last month Urore cd that aid prisoners-of-war be given the benefits and protection of the Geneva Conventions. The Geneva Conventions Biology students visit Marine Studies Station Fleccet) Diology and students will visit the ist Carolina University Station at 1 and 2. which includes h undergraduate and ology rine €tudies ntco on Nov he group, students will tour facilities and hear the Ity nd itioned at students = now Manteo qive yts on the current status ' their research projects Arranges trip and salt water on_ the Alligator River, the Sound, and the coast. : No course work will be offered at the Manteo Laboratory duringQuarter. The Station will reopen for the Spring Quarter with course and research offerings at thie graduate levels. Offerings will depend, in part, on demand, students junior-seniot and and any interestca should make their preferences known at the Geology and Vicent J. Bellis, of the Department of Biology, is ranging the trip Dr hael O'Connor and ODr Me ve RNGGs, Ot the partment of Geology, and rianGls selec, On we epartment of Biology, are Juarter staff members at otation ne students enrolled at Laborator y during the Ouarter are monitoring a physical and factons at 12 have been. set Pp in the area. The stations ire located in fresh, brackish, EUW fo) i) ological tations that Biology departmentat—offrees~ before Spring Quarter offerings are scheduled. couse 421 Greenville Blvd. (264 By-Pass) DINE INN or TAKE OUT Call Ahead For Faster Service Telephone 756-9991 Join The inn Crowd Pizza ton call for all prisoners to be pr2omptly identified; afforded an adequate diet and medical care; permitted to communicate with other prisoners and the ‘‘exterior;’’ promptly repatriated if seriously sick or wounded; and at all times be protected from abuse or The Conventions also state that a neutral intermediary, such as the all-Swiss International Committee of the Red Cross, be given free access to prisoners and their places of detention. Job losses attributed to intergration (Continued from page 7) Title | (poverty aid under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act), then failing to comply with federal civil rights requirements. When federal funds are cut off (as a result of noncempliance), the teachers are told simply that their jobs have been abolished. A precedent-setting ruling dae by a federal judge in July {in a Mississippi case) held that the wholesale dismissal of 71 black teachers and teacher aids was illegal discrimination on the grounds of race. In this instance, the largest mass firing to date, the board of followed the technique education reclassification mentioned earlier. In a second case, which went to the Supreme Court, the court ruled in favor of an ‘‘above-average” teacher dismissed because of her voting-registration and other political activities. The decision established the right ofall. teachers-—no matter what their race—to exercise their political rights without reprisals. tance waan® Tuesday, November 4, 1969, Fountainhead, Page 9 Peace Corps Director notes department is lily-white ‘'The Peace Corps is lily-white and we've got to change that,’ Peace Corps Director Joe Blatchford said this week in an interview on Boston's ‘‘soul station,’’ WILD. Blatchford said that upon being appointed Director of the Peace Corps he discovered that the Peace Corps selection process has been unintentionally discouraging applications from members of minority aroups. Frightening application “To begin with, a 16-page application would frighten anyone, but particuiarly those who haven’t made a career of filling out forms as have most middle-class Americans,’ he pointed out “Then there is the reference system. The Peace Corps requires a large number of written references and members of minority groups are often from backgrounds in which their friends and associates are unfamiliar with or reticent about filling out government forms. Conseguentiy, many applications from members of minority groups never get processed. They lack the proper number of references,” he said. Simplify Applications Blatchford noted that the result of this system has been that black Americans who applied for the Peace Corps were three times !ess likely to be selected. He also said that in the past training has not been geared to the needs of minority group members. He stated that the application form will be NSA endorses simplified and reduced in size, and references obtained either in person or by phone where necessary. “We are not looking toward a quota system of anykind. We don't even keep records according to racial background, although everyone who has iraveled overseas knows that the face of a black, Mexican-American or Puerto Rican is very rare in the Peace Corps. We are_ seeking minorities because we want the Peace Corps overseas to be truly representative of this country, and because these people have a special contribution to make. | suggest the Peace Corps has an obligation to remove barriers which presently prevent all but a small and largery homogeneous group of Americans from serving overseas,’’ Blatchford said. Moratorium WASHINGTON — (CPS) — National Student Association President Charles Palmer has endorsed the Nov. 14 and 15 anti-war demonstrations in Washington, D.C. and San Francisco. Palmer, in a press conference, called for a “united front’’ against the war and reminded students of their ‘‘right’’ to demonstrate freely and peacefully. The mid-November protests are sponsored by the new Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. 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TGS ; | 4 1969 @ € Pirates win over Paladins | # : arly East year, connected with Dwight i. pad After Billy Flanagan on a 39 yard Dass for (cat corked his a score and the Pirates ies ttle less tl £9 P ith yne second trailed. . t : ° : s hree minutes gone in The first two quarters had gira, caries DY aw : | ter, Dick Immell produced enough excitement Ve 5 : 5 i t ing back on an and nail chewing for one night | \ - ey cee koff return that just but the pulse rates — rain cold id right out of the wind and other weather atherly misery not withstanding } { got ther through the jacked up again. ear} in the \ Y In the } iG tesy of fumble, the third quarter when Wightmar 7 ossibDi ( ! nan : ; r} 7 p ed themselves went bouncing, skinning ana actuality } PPING and Pirates. bolte ' jowr the EAst Carolina dancing through the puddles i The \ : ‘ th } e Cleve Hightower ona/7 yard run a three-yard pass to 3efore the Pirate follo ing T € he lock As TiCla ! ) In : ve ie it 1 Furma could sigh with relief. f ne : A | Martin came | ith 94 yard that looked like he | iS taking part in a tal kick urn workout on f q afternoon 41d After that, thir he settled down t ete nobody doina hard inybody, that ressi ) lvant I n the Paladins came up nh fumble with less tl Pr thetic ie The Ait ars | any a) ! : When you know tellect f - io al \€ it's for keeps : the PERFECTO i | | h ne a n ———— € = ie —— err as e eS { y est ent: — Ate Wwillitng tk = ed r \ = k fs hman Coach B @air , ioe a was pulled f 2] home for the first time Fri pt f -Ch ir afternoon when. the the Richmond fresh r if as l tt he th ( t ni I ) t ed 300 y to : a CONT I teadily for oanno Captain 10 ’ }., Cain Whe 1 U lead 1g HOTTIES ) shows capitule é | He is ar RON KONRADY Prey {1 \didate for the ..outstanding defense f four ity next year ..player by the f ay b4 ommi eres canoe Union ) tuct the anchor man in Soe ens promotes He . ‘ ™ P 3 Ct He has the size and seat on ea | perform “~~ Ehess cae “ ; RICK PAGE I na ; dere : * pacer Ttreshmar fT commi wa persons intere ‘ Yy i restrair playing Chess are | | | | | | | A Cin Te Re oa a ‘ : + on > iM