Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / July 3, 1942, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR The Tar Heel FRIDAY JULY 3, 1942 Variety Entertainment Slated On Naval-UNC Gala Program Head Coach Crowley to Address Assembly; Navy Officers Staff Here to Be Introduced A wide variety of entertainment is tentatively being arranged for the gala Naval and University get-together program scheduled for Monday night, July 13, it was learned yesterday. Efforts are being made to secure Lt. R. F. Logan, head trainer for the Naval Pre-Flight unit and a well known singer and comedian, to appear on the program, it was an- nounced. In addition, there will be an open forum during which any of the audience may present questions to any of the Naval heads on the platform. Questions will be answered as fully and completely as possible without giving s- teQOfflQDi Now. Playing JOHNNY WEISSMULLER MAUREE O'SULLIVAN in "Tarzaris New York Adventure" PREVIEW SHOWING TONIGHT 11:15 P.M. 9 to u AS r I W. T i :::::. l ' - &t IT 1 MITCHELL 4 1 Jk A tHSEri SATURDAY away any vital military secrets, an of ficial Naval source indicated yester day. ' Crowley To Speak Highlight of the Memorial hall pro gram will be the impromptu address of Lieutenant Commander "Sleepy" Jim Crowley, former Fordham coach, and head football coach of the Pre-Flight unit, to whom the floor will be given over for the last part of the program. Commander Crowley, who is famous for his jokes and wide variety of anec dotes, will be making his first appear ance before the Carolina student body since his last trip to Kenan stadium as Fordham coach. The purpose behind the program is to acquaint the student body, faculty, and townspeople with the Naval officers and to bind the friendly relations be tween the two groups. Everybody is invited to the program including stu dents, faculty, and townspeople, the Naval officers and their wives and friends. SCHOLARSHIP (Continued from first page) received will be used for scholarships during the fiscal year in which the funds are received; (2) one-fourth will be used for scholarships for the suc ceeding year; (3) one-fourth will be set up in an emergency loan fund, the interest to be used for scholarships; and (4) one-fourth will be segregated to a general trust fund unless a re quest is made to the contrary. Inter est on the latter fund will be used for scholarships. The committee also outlined a meth od of allocating the scholarships which the administration accepted. The pro visions are that any recipient receiv ing a government loan subsequent to receiving a scnoiarsnip irom tne loan fund will repay the fund out of the government grant. CAFETERIA (Continued from first page) basement enlargement could be ob tained, but it was stated the full de tails would be available shortly, should the plan be executed. In addition, it was learned that E. F. Cooley, Dining hall manager, would go to Annapolis shortly and examine the Navy's "Dining hall methods" with a view towards speeding up Lenoir Dining hall's plant, and pos sibly coordinating the present plant with the new proposed kitchen and basement hall. ARMY PLAN (Continued from first page) subsequent to August 1, graduated 1942. b Students enlisted under, the Army Air Corps program will be included in the above quotas. In addition to the qualifications as to age, citizenship, (see below), who will be chosen from those volunteer ing their services, will be selected on the basis of their academic records, personality, bearing, and other indices of inherent leadership ability. a Students who have not reached their twenty-first birthday must have the written permission of their par ents to be eligible. Students under the age of eighteen years may be charged against quotas provided they agree in writing to enlist in the Enlisted Re serve Corps. upon reaching the age of eighteen. b In those institutions maintaining Naval ROTC Units enlistment in the Army Enlisted Reserve Corps will be held in abeyance until such time as students have been selected for enlist ment in the Naval Reserve. The enlistment procedure will be as follows : a Students will be enlisted through the Recruiting Office of the nearest Army Post or Station. The necessary physical examinations will be accom plished through institutional facilities where practicable. b Upon the selection of a student for enlistment by the institutional au thorities, he will be furnished with a letter of authorization from the insti tution concerned to the PMS&T or the nearest Recruiting Officer requesting enlistment. Such letter will be pre pared in triplicate and disposed of as follows: (1) The student will present the original to the Recruiting Officer as authority for enlistment; (2) Duplicate will be forwarded to Head quarters marked for the attention of the Enlisted Reserve Section; (3) Triplicate retained for file purposes. Qualifying examinations will not be given for the calendar year, 1942. Fur ther information concerning qualifica tion examinations will be furnished at a later date. It was emphasized that the entire program is iounded upon the volun tary enlistment of selected students ! into the Enlisted Reserve Corps and that should the exigencies of the ser vice demand, students so enlisted may be called to duty by the War Depart ment at any time. In case the necessity of war demands the Secretary of War may call to ac tive duty member of the Enlisted Re serve Corps at any time; but it is con templated that enlisted students wi not be called to active service prior to graduation, except those who are separated from the institution for any reason other than transfer to another participating institution and those who fail in the examination. All Enlisted Students in the Army Enlisted Reserve Corps will be required to take a qualifying examination (edu cational) not later than two calendar years' after the beginning of their firs college year. Those who pass the ex amination above a certain level wi! be permitted to continue their college course in an inactive Reserve status Those who fail to reach the prescribed level will be ordered to active duty in an enlisted status at tne eni oi tne second calendar year provided they have no valid reason for deferment. Upon graduation, those who are members of the ROTC advanced course will be commissioned according to ex isting regulations. Others will be or dered to active duty with the branch of the Army for which they are besl qualified. They will take the norma course of basic training, and there after, if qualified, be ordered to the proper Officer Candidate Schools from which, if qualified, they will be com missioned second lieutenants. Students especially qualified for necessary advanced study, research work, or as faculty replacements may be recommended by the institutiona authorities to continue their studies beyond graduation; and upon approval such students will be continued in the Enlisted Reserve Corps in an inactive status. Don't let your battery run down: A well-charged battery means easier starting and less choking. Don't put up with a slipping clutch: Have it repaired quickly and conserve engine power. Twenty-four autos contain enough steel and rubber for one 27-ton U. S. Army tank. Arnold's Leg Cream (Cosmetic Hose) 50c Sutton's Drug Store BEAT THE HEAT! with a GENERAL ELECTRIC Cooling Unit Tor Home or Store" Sizes 36", 42 48" CALL FOR DEMONSTRATION Carolina Sport Shop PHONE 7851 JULY 4TH SPECIAL! Brunswick Stew and Barbecue Supper All You Can Eat for $1.00 6:00 P.M", 9:00 P.M. Saturday, July 4th F -J. ' : o : THE PINES Two Miles Out on the Raleigh Road Jack Sparrow, Prop. A GOOD SUMMER COMBINATION At GRAHAM MEMORIAL GRILL Well Prepared Summer Food Good Service Air Conditioning by Nature Located in the Basement of Graham Memorial Meal Hours: 7:00-9:30 11:45-2:45 5:45-7:45 DOWNTHE ALLEY (Continued from page three) Freshman tennis tournament this week. ... Ensign Jim Lalanne, a familiar figure" to Tar Heel football fans and now stationed at the Pre Flight school here will be married on Saturday, July 11. to Miss Virginia Boren in Greensboro. . . . Ensign Art Jones, former University of Richmond gridiron star and also stationed here, was married last week in colorful cere monies at the Chapel of the Cross. The sinking Yankees come to a cross road beginning today when they en gage the second-place Boston Red Sox in a three games series in Boston. A clean sweep of the series by Yawkey's once gold-plated Sox would send the Yanks staggering back to Gotham with a bare two game lead, and leave the American League pennant chase in a scramble for the first time in years. The strangest thing about the whole Yankee slump is that they have man aged to stay in the running this long with the kind of hitting they have been getting. When your three leading sluggers are averaging approximately .250, as Dimaggio, Keller, and Henrich are doing at present, the pitching staff cannot be expected to carry all of the extra burden as well as they have. We wouldn't be surprised to see the mighty McCarthymen slip to the bottom of the first division before long. O Furman's head football coach, Dizzy McLeod has been in Chapel Hill the past few days inspecting the Naval Pre-Flight physical education plant getting ideas for a plan that North Carolina and other states would do well to copy. McLeod, as head of a commission appointed by the governor of South Carolina, has it in mind to provide compulsory physical education in the state's high schools and colleges which will be of direct use in any branch of the armed services so that students may enter the services with some idea of physical training instead of just start ing from scratch. In addition, it is McLeod's plan to make physics, chemis try, and math prerequisites for di plomas. Governors, take note. Have Your Watch Repaired in Chapel Hill E. IL RICE Watchmaker REPAIRING A SPECIALTY CHAPEL HILL, N. C. Room Number 4 J Over the Carolina Theatre mri fell KEEP COOL ON THE 4TH See us for a complete selection of Sport and Beach Apparel I O Slacks O Sport Shirts O Sandals O Swim Suits O Beach Robes ANDREWS -HENNINGER CO. 133 East Franklin Street War Makes It Difficult To Replace Milk Bottles You Can Help By Returning Empty Bottles Every Day Although there is no shortage of those materials from which glass is made, the war effort has created two conditions which make it dif l j ficult to replace our present milk bottle supply. These conditions are : 1. A considerable portion of milk bottle making machinery is now making other types of glass containers for uses formerly handled by tin containers. 2. Transportation facilities are heavily burdened. The Office of Defense Transportation has requested us to reduce shipping orders, including orders for bottles, to a minimum. You can help by returning your empty milk bottles every single day. Today and every day, place your empties at a convenient place where your Durham Dairy salesman can collect them on his next visit. Don't permit empties to accumulate. The more empty bottles you hold, the greater number of total bottles must be stocked by the dairy. The longer a bottle stays in your home, the greater is its danger of being broken or lost. Start today placing your empty milk bottles in a convenient place so our salesman can collect them regularly. df wmm JLmmitrwgm "Chapel Hill's Complete Dairy Service" as-
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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July 3, 1942, edition 1
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