ff Smoke Signals, Wednesday, October 28, 1970—Page 5 Chowan Braves Swamp Harford, 49-0 Short Items In the News ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) —New Mexico nudists will cele brate Halloween Saturday with a costume party, now that the weather has become cooler. Those who do not wish to ( ear costumes are urged to at least wear a mask. PORTOLA VALLEY, Calif. (AP) — Burglars got $9,000 worth of clothing and a $135 typewriter at the Country Vogue Antique because the burglar alarm didn’t work, reported the San Mateo County sheriff’s of fice. They also took the $300 bur glar alarm. WASHINGTON (AP) - The commissioner of patents says the international peace symbol may not be registered as a com mercial trademark. Commissioner William E. Schuyler Jr.’s decision Wednes day grew out of a request from the Intercontinent Shoe Co. of New York to patent the symbol a circle with an inverted ‘Y’ in the center, as its trade mark. Schuyler rejected the applica tion. DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — A group of graduate students and faculty members has asked Duke University to isolate mili tary training classes so that any potential “act of violence against the ROTC headquar ters” would not endanger non- ROTC members. The petition was presented Wednesday to Chancellor Ken neth Pye by Jay Salkin, an as sistant professor of economics. It was signed by 20 others—stu dents and faculty members. Most of the faculty signers have offices in the social sci ences building where military training classes are held. DOVER, Del. (AP) — Gov. Russell W. Peterson, his staff, his 10 Cabinet secretaries and two top education officials are going to pick up trash for eight hoifftflatui-daly. sninis' i>9-jnRv They will lead 13 teams of vol unteers along various highways to help clean up litter, attract public interest to the drive to keep the state clean and give state officials a first-hand look at the trash problem. A similar clean-up day was held last spring. BOSTON (AP) — Twenty-six policemen have been killed in the line of bchfnn b) ’he past three months and 650 injured, an offi cial of the International Asso ciation of Chiefs of Police says. Quinn Tamm, the organiza- tion’sexecutive director,report ed the figures to an internation al conference of the Public Per sonnel Association Wednesday. “Police are killed not because they are individuals, but be cause they are policemen and represent law enforcement in this country,” Tamm said. '1% V * n Scenes from Harford Slaughter Kickoff Return for Score Begins Field Day t-M ♦ 1 y • i MURFREESBORO—It was an afternoon full of pretty girls and scoring drives as Chowan College rolled over Harford Junior College 49-0 in its homecoming game Saturday. The fired-up Chowan Braves started the game off right by taking the opening kickoff 88 yards for a six-point lead, with the game only six seconds old. The “rough house” defensive outfit for the Braves did its share, setting up a couple of scores with fumbles and interceptions. The Chowan offense scored three out of the first four times they had the ball, proving that ttiey deserve being the seventh- ranked team in the nation. The opening kickoff went to Bob Comerford who gave the ball to Earl Gibson on a reverse and Gibson found nothing but grass between himself and the goal line. The extra point was good and Chowan was leading 7-0. Harford got off only three plays before Chowan linebacker Norman Cage jumped on a fumble at the Harford 15-yard line. Nine plays later Jim Thomas, Chowan kicker, missed a 27-yard field goal. Mike Bracker, Harford defensive back, picked up the ball at his own eight-yard line and returned to his 36. Seven plays later Jerry Borum, Chowan linebacker, picked off a Pete McCarthy pass and carried to the Harford 22-yard line. Six plays after that Nat Wright carried over from the six-yard line. The conversion was good, making the score 14-0, Chowan. Harford received the kick and was forced to punt. Chowan took over at its own 28 and marched to the Harford five- yard line on passes from quar terback Dale McCafferty to split end “Wild Bill” Harris and fullback Ronnie Jarmon. Bob Kilboiu'ne, Chowan kicker, entered the contest and booted a '•‘’is-yard fleld“goal, leaving the score 17-0. Harford could not move the ball and Chowan took over at its own 35. After driving to the Harford 24-yard line, A1 Caloagne, Har ford defensive back, intercepted a McCafferty pass and halted the drive. Gibson, Braves’ defensive back, returned the favor for Chowan two plays later carrying the ball to the Harford 48-yard line. Eight tried later Wright picked up is second score of the day from five yards out. The first half ended with Chowan in the lead 23-0. Neither team could move the ball the first time they had it in the second half. But the next chance the Braves got they drove 31 yards for a touchdown, with Ronnie Mack getting the honors this time from the sue. The conversion was good and Do It This Way! Coach Jerry Lee Hawkins gives valuable instruction to his linemen during Harford-Chowan game. score moved to 30-0. Harford went zero for four in the next series and Chowan got the ball again. This time the Braves missed a field goal from 22 yards out. Two plays later Chowan had the ball again after a fumble recovery and Kilbourne made good a 27-yard field goal. The extra point failed. Harford fumbled its next play and Chowan’s Donald Gleason recovered at the Harford 26-yard line. Seven plays later Thomas kicked a 17-yard field goal. Once again Harford fumbled its first play and Milton Outten recovered at the one-yard line. ^ It wasn’t until the end -of thef^^*®Thif'next'- play ‘John; l(Stump.)in- third quarter that the Braves King knifed in from the one, scored again, with Wright going making the final score 49-0, over from the 14. Chowan. "Three By Chekhov" Thursday Night The South Carolina Theatre Company will present “Three By Chekhov” in McDowell Columns Oct. 29. Curtain time is 8 p.m. and the Student Government Association is the sponsor. The cast of professionals will present “On the Harmfulness of Tobacco,” “Swan Song,” and “A Tragedian in Spite of Himself.” Admission to Chowan students and faculty and staff is free. For others there is a $1 admission fee. In “On the Harmfulness of Tobacco, ” Ivan Nyuchin, a hen pecked husband, is invited to give I 9 i 'I New Young Lawyers Have Different Outlool 1970 Chowan Brave Basketball Squad Members of the 1970 Chowan College basketball team took time out from practice recently to pose for a group picture. Left to right, front row are Mike Thompson, Dan Shreckhise. Ronald Carter, C. Jackie Ross, Harry Jackson and Randy Michie. Second row. Jack Bostain, Ray Brigman, Harry F'lipping, Wayne Davis, Earl Arrington, Norman Roles, Clifton Faison, A1 Crenshaw, and Jerry Ballard. Coach William McCraw predicts a winning season with the addition of several players who stand close to the seven loot mark. CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - Jack Weiss is 23, a 1968 Yale graduate, and an editor of the 1970 Harvard Law Review. Like many of his colleagues, he finds no appeal in a traditional law practice—trusts, and wills and the like. And he doesn’t see “many viable alternatives” throughout the country. “It’s undeniable that many young lawyers like myself are chafing at the bit. The two main alternatives to private practice —public interest law firms and legal services for the poor— raise problems for the new law yer,” he said in an interview. Public interest law involves litigation on major public is sues, often in the form of test cases on such areas as indivi dual rights, pollution and y 2pu8ngo concerns. Weiss said there aren’t enough such public interest slots available to the people across the country who want to fill them and he feels legal service work doesn’t present enough of an analytical challenge. As a result, he said, many stu dents are entering traditional firms with the idea of changing them. “The real question we young lawyers face is how to find the most effective way to do good. There is a romanticism to the notion of fleeing private prac tice to do legal work among the poor but there is much doubt that this is the most effective way to use our skills to promote social change. This is why there is no mass flight of young law yers into storefront law,” he said. Only five of the 381 members of the Harvard Law School class of 1970 entered the legal serv ices practice. Fifty-seven per cent of the same class joined private law firms, the highest percentage since at least 1962. Weiss, who got a taste of tra ditional practice in a Washing ton, D.C. law firm last summer, said he hopes to go into public interest law in New Orleans where he grew up and where his family lives. “I think people who live in an area should be the ones who work to improve conditions there,” he said. “There are a lot of young law yers floating around who are ionized. One day we’ll get to gether and we’ll have something new on our hands. No one knows what it will be but I, for one, am looking forward to it,” he said. Nation’s Top Ten Junior College Football Teams First Place Record Total Points Points 1, Mesa, Arlz. Port Scott, Kan. 5-0 177 10 2. 6-0 149 2 3. Northeastern, Okla. 5-1 138 3 4. Grand Rapids, Mich. 4-1 113 1 5. Wesley, Dover, Del. 5-0 105 1 6. Arizona Western, Yuma, Arlz. 3-1 81 0 7. Chowan 5-0 78 0 8. Tyler, Tex. 5-1 67 1 9. Nassau, Garden City, N. y. 3-0-1 36 1 10. North Dakota of Wahpeton 5-1 25 0 a speech on the subject of the title to his wife’s club. During the course of the speech, his thoughts wander about on every subject imaginable-from his wife to the twitching of his right eye. This is considered one of the funniest and cleverest of Chekhov’s works. Playing the role of Nyuchin is Milton Dickson, founder and director of the South Carolina Theatre Company, now in its sixth year of touring colleges, universities, community theatres, and high schools throughout the Southeast. A well known Shakespearean actor Dickson has played the roles of Macbeth, King Richard III, King Henry V, and Romeo, as well as numerous other roles in plays ranging from “Barefoot In The Park” to “Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?” “Swan Song” is described by the publicist as a beautiful theatre piececoncerning an old actor who relives his past triumphs and failures for the old prompter of the theatre in which he has just appeared in a play. Dickson will play the part of the old actor while Walker Hicklin has the role of the prompter. Hicklin has worked with such stars as Shelley Winters in “Luv” and Bert Parks in “The Music Man” and this past summer was house manager for the off- Broadway production in New York of “The Fantasticks.” Another hen-pecked husband, Tolkachov, is spotlighted in “A Tragedian in Spite of Himself.” He is seen describing a long list ot woes to the wife of a friend of his which includes the complaint he is constantly running errands for his wife and their neighbors. She hears him out and then asks the put-upon husband to run a few errands for her on his way home. His response is to lose all control and go beserk. “This is one of the most popular of the Chekhovian plays and one of the funniest,” the publicist writes. Dickson takes the role of the husband and Sherry Bruck is his friend’s wife.