Friday, October 3, 1969 THE CAMPUS ECHO Page Seven LAW SCHOOL TO DEFEND CROWN INTRAMURAL TENTATIVE CALENDAR OF ACTIVITIES 1969-70 Fall Sports Deadline Entry Starting Date Flag Football .. .. .-.Sept. 29 Sept. 29 Speedball (Women) ... Oct. 1 Oct. 6 Archery Ort. 1 Oct. 7 Pass-Purit-Kick .. Oct. 25 Oct. 10 Cross-Country Oct. 3 Nov. 3 Foul Throw Nov. 5 Nov. 7 Winter Sports Bowling _ • Nov. 4 Nov. 11 Wall Balll ..Nov. 5 Nov. 11 Basketball Nov. 14 Nov. 18 Badminton ... -.Dec. 5 Dec. 9 Volleyball ... Feb. 5 Dec. 10 Physical Fitness Feb. 5 Dec. 10 A1 Greek Basketball Tournament Dec. 10 Table Tennis March 3 Jan. 7 Extramural Basketball Tournament March 6 Swimming ..March 3 March 6 Track March 21 March 26 Softball April 1 April 14 Pocket Billiards ^..April 11 April 14 Horseshoes April 15 April 20 All-Sports Day » . May 3 Intramural Dinner May 15 NCC Graduate Stars In Movie The N. C. Central Legal Eagles are expected to defend their 1968-69 CIAA football crown with little or no opposi tion this season. Coming off a perfect 8-0 record last year, the Eagles will be led by All-Con- ference Kenneth Cooksey. The strong Ohio star led the league in rushing with 278 yards last season. The Eagles return with 16 of their 19-member cham pionship squad, but the three missing players are names of magic. Gone are all-league guard Pete '‘The Greek” Peterson, Cornerback Fred Polhill, and tight end Ronald Pitts. Pitts was second in pass receiving and in scoring last season and was the team’s most valuable player. There are many defensive units with names of fear, but the Legal Eagle Unit can be called just “gruesome.” This mighty unit has been the best defensive group in the league for two consecutive seasons. During their 1968 championship campaign, their opponents could net only 14 yards in rushing and 75 yards per game. This punishing defense is led by all league candidate Ralph “Tiger” Williams (6’4,” 275 lbs..); along with Williams are two of the best defensive tackles in the conference, Don Pitts, (6’2,” 295 lbs.) and Lewis Jordan, (6’3” 220 lbs.). Player-Coach itobbins Washington (6’1,” 195 lbs.) shares the other guard position with Williams. The de fensive comers are manned by two quick towering giants, Bill Proctor (6’2,” 185 lbs.) and Woodrow Brown, (6’3,” 215 lbs.) The Eagles will get their first test when they meet the Mus tangs in the season opener. The Mustangs wil again be explosive with the league’s leading passer, Doug Johnson, and the league’s leading receiver, Nat Scales. The Mustangs are anchored up front by All-Star Harry Respass. The 1968-69 CIAA All-Star Flag Football Team is as fol lows: Ricardo Samuda, Cow boys; Johnny Manning, Mus tangs; Ralph Williams, Law School; Robbin Washington, Law School; Ron Pitts, Law School; Harry Respass, Mus tangs; Kenneth Kooksie, Law School; Paul Taylor, Choir; Jerome Cheek, Choir; Robert Durant, Cowboys; William Cheek, Graduate School; and Davis, Graduate School; and Tim Crawford, Law School. -White Rage- (Continued from Page 6) that integration is philosophi cally so much more acceptable to America, but rather that it is a more familiar concept re quiring less change than black activism, and by now has be come familiar, right and proper. In their rage at the in justice of a world that would shore them hurdling forward, rootless and removed from all the old familiar ways, the two policemen drove up to the Black Panther headquarters at “Art Students- (Continued from Page 5) we badly needed and waited so long for, but we are insulted when you later gave a section of this same building to the Tutorial Center, painted all their walls, pnit in new floors, and built new offices with tele phones when our chairman: doesn’t have one. Then delivery men walked through our de partment for one solid week delivering new furniture for the Center. We pay our tuition like every other student on this campus, yet we are not getting anything for it except continuous insults. We are not asking for a luxuri ous department, but we demand a clean place in which to work and the necessary tools with which to work. On the positive side, the Art Department has not only served this University well, but the entire Durham community un der adverse conditions. Hoi>e- fully, we will continue to do so. Although Dr. Whiting hasi proved to be a good friend to art students, Someone over there is full of “'bull.” There fore, we demand some answers to these injustices and an open apology from someone over there in the administration. 1:30 in the morning and Miot a hole in a picture of Huey Newton. The Alfonso Elder Student Union Cultural Activities Com- Sellborn Speaks To Pre-Law Body NCCU’s Pre-Law Society be gan its second year with the annual membership meeting,; held this year at 7:30 p.m., Octo ber 2, in Room 304 of the Com merce Building. The featured speaker was Professor Ernest Sellborn of the Duke Law School. Professor Sellborn was a co-director of the NCC-Duke CLEO program for entering law students last summer. The aims of the club, discussion of activities for the coming year, and information about the November 8 Law School Admission Test (LSAT) were features of this meeting. For further information con tact Mr. Lieberman, Pre-Law Advisor, Room 308, Commerce Building. -Fire Causes- (Continued from Page 1) Parade. Both matters were con cerned with lack of funds. Thus, they were linked together in a melting pot of Student Govern ment officers and students. After the meeting. Dean Blue and Student Government offi cials agreed that the Homecom ing Committee was duly au thorized, and its decision would have best not have been de bated further. Nevertheless, many expressed pride in the simple fact that students were actually concerned about their Law School and their Home coming Parade. mittee will present a film. Nothing But A Man, on October 8. The film stars Ivan Dixon, a graduate of North Carolina College, Abbey Lincoln, and Gloria Foster. The movie is a dream of the personal struggle of a Southern Negro and his wife in a society hostile to them. A young rail way worker gives up a good job to settle down and marry the preacher’s daughter, a school teacher. His emotional adjust ment to the universal age-old problems of earning a liveli hood and supporting a family, of living in peace and dignity, becomes poignantly difficult because the place is Alabama today and the man will not play the expected Negro role. The polemics is convincing in its presentation of Negroes whe are human beings, in reco gnizable settings. The movie is free of charge. Bulletins will be posted for place of showing. SAM’S PAWN SHOP, INC. SAM MARGOLIS, Manager SHORTY ALLEN, Assistant Manager INSTANT LOANS ON ANYTHING OF VALUE We Loan The Most • TYPEWRITERS • GUITARS • CLOTHING 122 EAST MAIN STREET PHONE 682-2573 DURHAM, N. C. WILLIAM H. GRIER, M.D. Space age wrench/ Suppose you’re up in space and you need to tighten a nut ©n the outside of your space veliicle. Well... if you use an ordinary power wrench, you know what happens! /-ou spin around. Not the nut. But with this new space wrench, the nut turns—not you! Neat? You bet. And we’ve got all kinds of fasdnating equip ment designed specially for way out there. And lots for way down here, too. If you’re a science or engineering grada^e'and you're looking for a good place for your talents, be an officer, a leader, on the Aer.ospace Team. The U.S. Air Force is the largest scientific and research organiza tion of the space age. You’ll be right where the breakthroughs are...braak!r; throughs such as better ways to tighten a nut. Pretty exciting if you’re looking for a new twist., UNITED STATES AIR FORCE, Box A, Dept.SGP 99l^ Randolph Air Force Base, Texas78145 NAM€ AGE ’ CnilFRE PLEASE PRINT MAJOR SUBJECT GRADUATE DATE CAREER INTERESTS HOMF ADDRESS . CITY STATE ZIP ' 1 UNDERSTAND THERE IS NO OBLIGATION. ,