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Male students painting a planter on high street.
'Boreman Hall on right, Campus Lunch, Delta Tau Delta, Kappa Alpha, etc'.
Competitors run up the North High Street next to Boreman Hall.
A scene from Greek Week events 'Hill Climb' showing members of Fraternity running up the North High Street.  In the background Administration Building, Old Buildings and Grounds and Security headquarters, Chemistry Building and Armory are also shown.
Delta Delta Delta member. Going down High Street during Homecoming parade.
Female students of the Women's Hall march in parade on High Street holding banner announcing 'The Marriage W.& J. to WVU'.
A thanksgiving day parade: students are holding a sign of 'W&J' while they march the street.
Sign reads, '[unreadable] Spears, Principal. Make the Red & Black, Black & Blue, Get 'em team, we're for U.  AB School House. Dr. A. J. Hare, Teacher.  Are we slackers" No. You're Wrong.  ABs are backers, 100% strong.'
WVU Students march up High Street from the Post Office to Mountainlair. Front left, with the sign 'Stop The Draft' is Jack Calhoun, Vietnam Veteran, Resister, National Speaker, and Writer.
Students march from Mountainlair to Courthouse Square to protest against the military draft system.  Male student holds sign that reads, 'Defeat Militarism. S.P.U.S.A.'
The march was from the Morgantown Post Office to the Mountainlair. On the far right is Stewart Fisk.
Female with 'Stop the Draft' sign is Alice Bell.
Students marched from the Mountainlair to the U.S. Post Office
Winter 1969-1970.
On right, leaning on rail is Stuart Fisk.
This photo of the Chi Phi fraternity was done for the 1970 WVU Monticola.  In an effort to get interesting group hosts for the Greek Section, we held a contest for the best idea for their group photo.  We didn't ask permission.  We picked a Saturday afternoon.  I got the 4 x 5 camera ready with tripod while we watied for the traffic light to turn red.  Everyone took their chairs into the street.  The first thing that I see upside on the ground glass is the police car that had just come up Pleasant Street.  Imagine what they thought seeing the guys sitting in the street.  A friend of mine, another photographer, yelled "take the picture."  I got four shots as the police started moving people off the street.  The guy in the white jacket didn't even know the police were there.  When they tried to lift him up he slipped on the wet pavement and said something like, "leave me alone, let's finish this picture."  They got him for resisting arrest.  We had a write up in the paper about a sit in staged on High Street for the benefit of a photographer source unknown. - Dave Smith
Unidentified young man stands on a brick paved road.