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The girls in Cobb Dorm looked out of their windows late Sunday night to face
the fall's second pantie raid in three days. The group at left responded in unison to
the annearance of DTH ohotoeraDher John Gellman at a second floor window in
r w
Cobb. The girls in Spencer (center) met the roving band at about midnight with a
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brief shower of nylon from the sky, and Jim Minnotte (right) proudly displayed his
prizes at the end of the night's work.
Kissinger To Speak Moc UeiversMv Formed
At Conference Here
by Mike Parnell
News Editor
Presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger
and former Supreme Allied Commander
of Europe Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer are
feature speakers at this' week's
"Conference on the Relations Among
North Atlantic Nations" to be held at the
University. - - - - . .
The conference befihs today for more
than , 500 leaders in business,
education, finance and government
through out the Southeast.
UNC is hosting the conference, one of
two to be held on the campus and one of
five to be held throughout the state
during the observance of October as
International Month.
The conference is being held in the
Carolina Inn and is restricted to those
holding passes for the three-day event.
Lemnitzer is the conference's first
speaker. He will discuss "Cooperation
Among the North Atlantic Nations for
Mutual Security"at 12:30 p.m. today.
Also appearing on the program are
Consolidated University President William
C. Friday, chairman of the conference;
Gov. Robert Scott and Chancellor J.
Carlyle Sitterson.
This afternoon an address on the
"Allied Defense Posture and the United
States" will be delivered by John H.
Morse, deputy assistant secretary of
defense for NATO affairs.
UNC professor James L. Godfrey,
chairman of the Department of History,
will preside.
Francois Duchene, director of the
Institute for Strategic Studies in London,
will address the dinner session tonight. He
will discuss "The Atlantic Allies and the
Warsaw Pact Nations: Problems and
Prespects of a Meaningful Detente."
Presiding at this session will be Joseph
E. Johnson, president of the Carnegie
EndQWmentrfofTiittetnational Peace aKd
vice president of the Institute fpr
Strategic Studies. t "
Featuringr Wednesday's session of the
conference will be Ralf Dahrendorf,
member of the Commission of the
European Committee; Phillip Mosely,
director of the European Institute,
Columbia University and John H. Tuthill,
director of the Atlantic Institute, Paris,
and former U.S. ambassador to the
European Economic Community.
Kissinger will address the concluding
session of the conference on
Thursday.His topic is the "American Role
of Promoting Mutual Political Interest
Among the North Atlantic
Nations." The conference is being
sponsored by UNC, N.C. State, Duke
University and the Research Triangle
Foundation. ' . :
The focus of the conference will be
the problems of military and political
collaboration of the North Atlantic
nations, the economic cooperation of the
U.S. with these nations and the ways the
U.S. can promote better understanding
among the people of the North Atlantic
Nations.
The next conference at the University
concerns population and will be held Oct.
21-23. Three other conferences, to be
held in Raleigh, will concern international
finance, trade and exchange of
technology.
by Doug Hall
Staff Writer ;
The Invisible University of North
Carolina (IUNC), offering courses ranging
from graffitti analysis to pumpkin
carving, will hold open house at noon
Wednesday on the steps of South
Building.
"We just want to get people together
at the open house," said organizer and
"dictator" Nyle . Frank,. . a , University
graduate' student in political science.
"Everybody should bring something
to drink, something to eat, something to
read, something to fly, something to
make love to and somebody to say hello
to," Frank said.
Frank said he hopes everybody in
Chapel Hill comes to the open house,
and, by the end of the semester, I hope I
can get everybody in North Carolina
together at one time.
"But if only one other person shows
up that's okay as long as she's nice," he
said.
Faculty members of IUNC will be
wearing robes during the open house and
will try to meet interested students,
Frank said.
Frank organized the "invisible" school
about three weeks ago, saying, "if you
really want to be free, you have to
finance yourself and be dictator of your
own school."
"The idea of the school is to get
everybody together," he said. "People
have been apart too long, making excuses
for being hostile and suspicious of other
people.
"If we all get together, we can do just
about anything we want. I want North
Carolina to be the first united state."
Among the 37 courses offered by
IUNC are those in anti-crime, communal
living, football analysis and history of
rock music.
The anti-crime course, taught
by-Chapel Hill Police Chief Arthur
Beaumont, is titled "Cooperation
Between the Fuzz and the Fuzzies." The
class will meet at 3 p.m. Wednesday in
the Y-Court
Boh
22 on
Communal living, taught hy
Joestine, will meet at 8 p.m. Oct.
the back steps of South Building and
football analysis,, taught by Larry Pulley,
will meet at 8 p.m. Oct. 21 in the second
floor lounge of Morrison dorm.
The history of rock music, taught by
Scott Taylor and Charles Neal, will meet
at 1 1 :30 p.m. Nov. 13 at 331 Avery.
IUNC will also conduct a tour of small
towns in North Carolina Oct. 24-25. This
activity, conducted in cooperation with
the UNC Liberation Service, will include
parades and conversations with people.
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CHAPEL HILL
Carolina Inn o
... op.m. 8 p.m.
W.Cameron K
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Hilton Motor Inn p
2424 Erwin Road 0p m'
RALEIGH 5?0ro
Oct. 12
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