fjjf -W
Editorials
The Need and the Doing
News
War Chest Drive
Reserve Status Cleared
IRC Speech Postponed
VOLUME LI
Editorial: F-SHl. New.: F-S146. F-8147 CHAPEL HILL, N. C, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1942
Bosinesa and Circulation: 8841
NUMBER 48
Army Officials
Enlisted Reserve
To Remain at
Confirmation was received yesterday that students enrolled in the Army
Enlisted reserve Corps will definitely be allowed to finish the quarter in which
they are called and more than likely finish the school year. ,
This statement; was given to Dean F. F. Bradshaw, head of the College
for War Training, by reliable Army officials in Washington in a telephone
conversation made to clear up recent conflicting reports.
The unnamed officials further told Dean Bradshaw that advancement in
the services will "definitely depend" on the amount of education prior to
induction and that it was imperitive that college students remain in school
until induction orders are received.
As there has never been a definite
serve group, both Dean Bradshaw and
information bureau, urged students to "seriously consider all angles" before
enlisting for immediate action.
It was pointed out that the University does not wish to restrain any stud
ents from enlisting but that the purpose
to give those students who are undecided
can base any future action.
Passing of the teen-age draft bill
their selective service questionnaire
being taken from school before the year
enlist in any of the reserve units until
and may even enlist after that date with, the permission of their local draft
board.
Speaking directly to the 400 students
but who are physically fit, Dean Bradshaw urged them to join a reserve be
fore the Christmas holidays so they
finishing the year.
College Who's Who'
- r ' I ' 1 "i -..5 5 -.-,
To Include 23
Twenty-three University students 5
committee for inclusion in the 1943 edition of "Who's Who Among Students
in American Universities and Colleges,"
announced yesterday from his headquarters at the University of Alabama.
Students nominated for the honorary
chosen on a basis of scholastic record, character, leadership in extra-curricular
activities.
Campus selections for the publication include Ditzie Buice, former presi
dent of the Town Girls association and
Marsha Hood, head of Women's Government association; Martha Guy, presi
dent of the Women's Independent association; W. J. Smith, speaker of the
Legislature; Hunt Hobbs, Yackety-Yack
CWC Plans
Contest
Workshop to Pick
Prize Photographs
The Carolina Workshop will spon
sor a student Snap Shot contest to
begin tomorrow and end on December
1.
A first prize of $5.00 will be award
ed to the person entering the best
print in the contest. The picture will
be featured in campus publications
and in several state papers, and dis
played at Foister's.
A second prize of $3.00 and two
third prizes of $2.00 each will be
awarded to the runner-up pictures.
Judges will be Dr. Paul E. Shearin,
photography instructor of the Physics
department, Bob Weiss of Wooten
Moolton, Ted Croner, free-lance art
photographer, Karl Bishopric, picture
editor of the Yackety-Yack, and Sam
Wallace, campus publications photo
grapher. The contest is designed to encourage
amateur participation in representa
tion of campus activities through
photography. Purpose of the contest
is in line with the policy of the Work
shop Council to stimulate student in
terest in the various fields of creative
art.
Contest plans were drawn up by
Wallace and Karl Bishopric, campus
nhrvtrvpTaTrtiv rtvnresentatives on the
X CD X ml X
Workshop council. Rules state that all
students are eligible to enter the con
test, except student judges Sam Wal
lace, Karl Bishopric, and Ted Croner.
Pictures must be either five by seven
or eight by ten sizes. No limitations
as to subjects are imposed. Pictures
must be turned in to Foister's Photo
Shop by noon December 1, with the
address, and
the type of camera used written on
the reverse side of the print. No en
trance fee is required and students
may submit as many prints as they
wish. All pictures submitted become
the property of the Carolina Work
shop Council.
ftnrps kii hmitted will be
the basis of photographic
quality and general "interest," said
Wallace. "The type of camera used in
taking the pictures will not be taken
into consideration m judging tne pic
tures as some of the inexpensive box
cameras have turned out prize-win
ning shots,"" he said.
Confirm
Corp
s
date set for induction of the Army re
W. D. Perry, director of the war
of the telephone conversation was
a definite statement on which they
will result in some students receiving
within a short time. To offset their
is over, Perry said that they may
actual induction orders are received
k
who are not in any reserve branch,
can have a reasonable opportunity of
UNO
have been nominated by an impartial
H. Pettus Randall, publication editor
listing in the annual publication were
present speaker of the coed senate;
editor; Robert Hoke,-managing edi
tor of the Daily Tar Heel-
Denny Hammond, president of the
University club; Moyer Hendrix, head
of the Interdormitory council; Bucky
Osborne, head of the Intrafraternity
council: Curry Jones, assistant to L,
B. Rogerson in charge of dormitories
Barry Colby, head of the Intertown
council; Michael Carr, president of
the junior class; Dotson Palmer, stud
ent council representative; Ben Mc
Kinnon, humor editor of the Carolina
Mag.
Joe Austin, co-captain of the foot
ball team; Sylvan Meyer, editor of the
Carolina Mag; Sam Gambill, secre
tary-treasurer of the student body;
Richard Railey, head of Carolina Po
litical Union; Bert Bennett, student
body president, Bucky Harward, editor
Daily Tar Heel, Hobert McKeever,
head of the social committee; Steve
Peck, vice-president of the student
body; Tom Badin, president of the
University band.
Phi to Debate
Three New Bills
The Philanthropic assembly will
meet tonight in the Phi hall on the
fourth floor of New East at 7:30 to
discuss three bills, it was reported yes
terday by Elton Edwards, speaker.
By not announcing the bills before
hand, Edwards hopes to bring about
a revival in discussion that has not
been planned. This is a radical de
parture from the regular procedure
in which the bill is announced and
members of the Phi have time to think
about the, discussion before the meet
ing. '
University
Men
Program Tomorrow to Mark
International Student Day
Six campus organizations, the IRC,
CPU, YMCA, YWCA, Di and Phi, will
cooperate tomorrow night to present
Carolina's observance of International
Student Day. .
The program has been put off until
tomorrow to cooperate with the IRC's
presentation.
President Roosevelt's letter, indicat
ing his complete approval of the day,
underlines the thought behind it.
"The International Student Assem
bly has chosen this day to honor the
students and professors tortured and
killed in Czechoslovakia three years
ago. On that day, November 17, 1939,
there was committed the first of a
series of organized massacres design
ed with calculated savagery to stamp
. - x - . . a
JAN CIECHANOWSKI, Polish
Ambassador to the United States,
scheduled to make an IRC address
tomorrow night in Memorial hall
at 8:15.
Ciechanowski
Talk Put Off
To Tomorrow
Schedule Mixup
Causes Date Shift
-
International Relation club's address j
by Polish Ambassador Jan Ciechanow
ski has been shifted from tonight to
tomorrow night because of a schedule
mixup, it was reported last night.
Last minute changes by the YMCA
and International Student Day spon
sors arranged for the simultaneous
shift of Student Day programs to to
morrow instead of today.
The change was caused by a mixup
scheduling the ambassador's speech.
IRC members will sponsor the honor
ary banquet and reception for Ciech
anowski tomorrow night. ?
The emissary will arrive in Chapel
Hill tomorrow afternoon by car and
will survey the Carolina campus until
shortly before the banquet. An open
forum with the Memorial hall audience
has been slated to follow the speech.
Address time is 8:15.
Grady Morgan, IRC president, last
night expressed his deep appreciation
to the students and faculty members,
especially YMCA's Harry Comer, who
"so speedily and smoothly shifted In
ternational Student Day festivities for
alignment with the ambassador's ad
dress." (The report published below about
tomorrow night's speaker was writ
See CIECHANOWSKI, page U
Students Offered
Federal Training
In Drafting Free
Student registration for the gov
ernment's free course in engineering
drawing will continue until Thursday,
it was announced yesterday by Russell
M. Grumman, head of the University
extension division. .
Both men and women, provided they
are high school graduates, will be ac
cepted for enrollment. The class is
tuition free, and the only charge will
be for instruments and textbooks.
Professor H. B. Briggs of State col
lege will be the general supervisor,
and teacher for the class will be Ralph
M. Trimble, associate professor of
applied mathematics at the Uuiversity.
In cooperation with the govern
ment's engineering, science and war
management program, the course will
include various phases of engineering
drawing, including descriptive geom
etry, freehand drawing, and shop
See TRAINING, page U
out all present or future leaders of a
great and democratic republic.
To commemorate the student-teacher
spirit of defiance in the occupied coun
tries, to spotlight the list of German
brutalities, to unite all students in
their opposition to Nazism, the Inter
national Student Service set aside No
vember 17 as International Student
day.
Carolina's program will start with
the supper attended by all foreign stu
dents on the campus. ' .
After a brief address by Professor
E. W. Hexner on International Stu
dent day, the Ambassador, from the
country whose students have suffered
most at the hands of the Nazis; will
speak, c . .-- -
G
arolina War Chest
Opening Money Contrilbiitiong
Mb
D
inve
New War Training College
Brings Back SATC Memories
By Bob Levin and Madison Wright
Announcement of the establishment
of the College for War Trairiing
brought back memories of marching
feet on the campus during the last war
when over 800 students enlisted in the
Student Army Training Corps as a
means of receiving an education before
induction. Daily Tar Heels from
October 2 to November 28 in 1918 out
lined the steps taken by Army officers
arid University officials in changing
the campus from peace to war over
night so that college students could be
better fitted for war service.
As in 1918, Carolina has taken the
lead in war education with the estab
lishment of the College for War Train
ing, but the two programs are entire
ly reversed in makeup and organiza
tion.
In 1918, the campus was alive with
boys in khaki, reveille at 6 o'clock, guns,
Frosh Vote
On Pictures
Class to Decide
On Group Photos
Carolina's first wartime freshman
class since 1917 will vote today on the
question " of group pictures for the
Yackety-Yack at 10 a. m. in Hill hall.
Made necessary due to current
shortages "in essential .metals used in
the printing industry, the f reshman
vote if group pictures are decided up
on, will mark the first in a coming se
ries of publications cutrailments.
Ballots will be distributed as the
first year men enter the auditorium
and after a short talk by Hunter
Hobbs, editor of the Y-Y, the fresh
man will mark their decision. They
have a choice of no pictures at all in
the annual, individual pictures, or
group . pictures.
Hobbs states that "although the in
clusion of individual pictures means a
lot of extra work to the staff, we
hope that this will be their decision,
because not only does it make a better
annual, but this may be the only year
that some of the freshman will be in
school and an individual picture will
something to them."
Individual pictures will cost the
freshman $1.65 while a group picture
will be about a dollar cheaper. The
greatest problem confronting the first
yearers is that of getting the indi
vidual cuts made. The materials used
in making them are placed on the fro
zen list by the government.
Last' year the freshman broke the
tradition of group pictures by voting
for the single ones.
Di to Consider
Liquor Control
Prohibition of the sale of alcoholic
beverages around Army camps, an is
sue recently brought up in Congress,
will be the subject of discussion in the
Dialectic senate tonight at 7:30 in Di
Hall, third floor New West.
Emphasis will be on student dis
cussion, it was announced yesterday.
No guest speakers have been invited.
The Dialectic senate is cooperating
with the IRC, Phi, and the YMCA in
the presentation of a program in ob
servance of International Student day.
Former UNC Student
Receives Commission
Second Lieutenant Roderick E. Mc
Caskill, a former student of Oak Ridge
military academy and the University is
now attached to Robbins Field Army
air deport in Georgia.
McCaskill was commissioned No
vember 10.
Mrs. Beard Leaves
' Mrs. J. G. Beard, director of wom
an's physical education, has left Chap
el Hill to attend the funeral of her
mother in Liberty, New York, and will
not return until Friday.
Swings Into Action
drilling, and buck private pay until
the students marched away for real
Army life. Dormitories were termed
barracks, Swain hall was the mess hall,
trenches were dug in Battle park and
Army officers yelled at a raw bunch of
student soldiers.
Under the proposed setup of the
1942 War College, there will be no pay,
no uniforms, no crack-of-dawn rising,
some drilling, students will pay the
University, and above all, a four year
education plan compacted into two if
the high school student enrolls at 16.
The last war's SATC was made up
of lots of color and shouting in one
place while, officials sat up at night
and planned the next day's program.
It was a government-owned Univer
sity.
University officials don't want to
tread deep water during this war. They
See SATC, page U
Rosen Heads
PU Board Selects
Zaytoun Successor
Marvin Rosen, junior from New
York, was appointed yesterday by the
Publications Union Board to succeed
Henry Zaytoun as circulation manager
of the Daily Tar Heel and the Caro
lina Magazine for the rest of the year.
: Zaytoun's resignation will become
effective Monday, at which time Rosen
will step into the office. The present
manager resigned because he "had a
lot of work to do in his pre-dental
course," besides working as circula
tion manager.
A pre-medical student, Rosen has
worked on the paper since he entered
school in the fall of 1940. He started
out as a freshman on the business staff
as local assistant business manager.
The following year he became one of
the two Durham advertising repre
sentatives, soliciting ads from various
stores in Durham. At the beginning of
this year, he was appointed local busi
ness manager with Bob Bettman, in
which position Rosen will serve until
becoming circulation manager.
Besides his journalistic work, Rosen,
a member and secretary of Pi Lambda
Phi fraternity, has served on the class
executive committee in his freshman
and sophomore years. During his
sophomore year he was a member of
the boxing squad. As an accordion
player he has appeared several times
See ROSEN, page U
Circulation
Grid Contest Winners
Announced by Merchants
Out of ten predictions called for in
the contest sponsored by Chapel Hill
merchants in Thursday's Daily Tab
Heel, seven were answered correctly,
and the other three were very close.
The males showed their talent for
football prognostication to be superior
to that of the females as all ten win
ners were men students. Bill Robin
son, Whitehead, by picking the number
of Carolina passes completed as five,
won two Oxford shirts from the Caro
lina Men's Shop. All winning coupons
were turned in on Thursday, Robin
son's at 9:50 a. m. Giving the num
ber of Duke first downs as 13, Howard
Dale, Steele Basement, won the pipe
offered by the Carolina Pharmacy.
Dale turned his prediction in at 9 a.
m. These were the only purely mas
culine awards.
In another one of the correct predic
tions, Dewey Bowman, Steele, picked
the score at the half to be seven-seven
and won the flowers offered by the
Chapel Hill flower shop. His coupon
was handed in at 10 a. m. Leon Mit
chell just missed the score of the game
he picked it to be 13-12 in Carolina's
favor but won the $2 article offered
by Varsity. He also turned in his se
lection at 10 a. m.
. The Foister Photo company's prize
of $1.25 picture album was won by
Billy Bason, Steele, who correctly
Receiye
Woman's Senate
Gives $50 Check
To Begin Fund
First contribution to the $10,000
Carolina War Chest was received yes
terday 24 hours before the official open
ing of the drive, when Ditzi Buice turn
ed over the $50 check of the Woman's
senate to Berny Moser, chest co-chairman.
Designed to replace the numerous
small relief funds that annually col
lect money on the campus, the War
Chest is receiving its first test at Caro
lina in this two-day drive. In view of
its success in both communities and
colleges, chest heads feel that the re
sults will be highly successful.
Under the present allotment plan,
the World Student Service fund will
receive 60 per cent of the $10,000, and
the U. S. O. and Red Cross will re
ceive 10 per cent each. In addition, to
make certain that students will not be
asked for donations again this year,
the remaining 20 per cent has been set
aside to be used for contributions to
any other relief agency which may
call for aid during the year.
The $10,000, highest figure in Caro
lina history for relief agencies, means
that the average donation from each
student must be $3. "Or," said Moser,
"it will mean that a daily collection of
$1000 a day will put us over our goal.
Figures like that may seem big, but
the job the various relief agencies
must do is gigantic. Other schools
have pledged amounts as large or
larger than ours."
v Through the cooperation of all cam
pus organizations, chest representa
tives will contact every Carolina stu
dent. In addition, a benefit Sound and
Fury show and a dance are scheduled
for the afternoon and evening of
Thanksgiving day.
Sunday Session
Singing Contest
Applications Due
Applications for the singing contests
sponsored by the Valkyries on the Sun
day Night Sessions of November 22 and
29 must be in today. Silver cups will
be awarded the winners of the contests
between sororities and fraternities and
between woman's dormitories and
men's dormitories.
This singing contest is to be an an
nual affair and winner of the cupthree
consecutive times will possess it per
manently. Groups that wish to compete should
register with one of the following to
See CONTEST, page U .
picked the number of attempted Caro
lina passes as 15. His guess was also
in by 10 a. m. Missing by only one
yard with a prediction of 112 yards
that Carolina would gain by passing,
Wyatt Jones, 214 Rosemary St., won
the $2 worth of free cleaning offered
by the Community Cleaners. Jones
turned his coupon in at 10:43 a. m.
Predicting exactly the number of
Carolina punts as nine, James Poole
won the box of stationery given by
Ledbetter-Pickard, turning in his
choice at 10 a. m. John von Canon,
Steele Basement, correctly picked the
number of conversions missed as two
and won the tennis balls given by the
Carolina Sport Shop. The winning
prediction was turned in at 10 :10 a. m.
The Pines' free T-bone steak din
ner was won by Sidney Alverson, 226
yards Carolina gained by rushing to
be 96 93 was the correct amount. He
turned his selection in at 3 p. m. Rus
sell Batchelor, Pettigrew, won the desk
lamp offered by Bruce's by correctly
predicting the number of total first
downs to be 20. His coupon was hand
ed in at 11:21 a. m.
The winners were picked on the
basi3 of the time the coupons were
turned in, as there were many others
that gave the correct answers. The
winners may get their prizes today or
tomorrow at the store which offered
the awards.
i