JT 1 Pre-Flight School Stubbs Quits Student Plays Victory Jtpaa Cogs of the Wheel Catholicism Outline Serving Civilian and Hflitary Students at UKC VOLUME LIII SW CHAPEL HILL, N. O, TUESDAY, AUGUST 211945 NUMBER SW 79 Stubbs Quits As Head Cheer Leader; Flagler May Leave Walt Brinkley, chairman of the beard of elections announced Sunday night that Bill Stubbs, - head cheerleader, has submitted his resignation to take effect im mediately.' The announcement came on the heels of an unof ficial report that" Fred Flagler, who left school recently, had re signed as editor of the Yackety Yack and President of the Pub lications Union Board. Brinkley stressed the fact that he had re ceived no official word from Flagler and that until he does, his board will not take any ac tion on the case. As the Tar Heel went to press Sunday night Flagler could not be reached in time to verify the rumor. In a letter to Brinkley, Stubbs said that he would be unable to return to school this fall and that he was leaving to join the merchant marine. Stubbs was an active member of the cheer leaders during the past two years and in April of this year he was elected head cheer leader. 'The office or offices, if Flag ler does resign, are such that they demand immediate action Brinkley said. "We want to fill them as soon as possible. There will also probably be a seat va cant on the Debate Council and one or two in the legislature, al though nothing is definite as yet. Panel On Jobs For Women Held Sunday STUBBS I . 1 ' & v S ''.. 1'" i z . : ? , I - fmc ' J i -w r? 2 - i ?' ' f i ' - f - i ' ' , s I Student Will Be Given On Thursda The qnestion of jobs for women, es pecially now that the war i3 over, was discussed in a panel at the closing ses sion of the Institute of Business and Professional Women's Clubs here Sun day night. Approximately 50 presidents and other officers of clubs throughout the State participated in the Institute which got under way Friday and which served as a substitute for the annual convention of the State Federation in accordance with ODT regulations. Leaders in the discussion at the final session were Felix Grisette, Executive Secretary of the State Planning Board; Dean D. D. Carroll of the "Uni versity School of Commerce, and Miss Kathryn Cook, vocational adviser to women in the University. Miss Mabel L. Bacon, of Charlotte, Secretary of the State Federation, presided. What jobs may be in store for wo men in the postwar era, how to se cure them, and the place the ex-Wac, Wave or Marine may find, after she is released from service were discussed from both the employer's and em ployee's viewpoint. Mr. Grisette referred to the coopera tion between colleges and the Stale See JOBS, page 4. FLAGLER Campus Cafe To Pay $200 Fine To OP A Following a meeting of the Chapel Hill Price Panel Monday, Clarence Heer, chairman of the Panel, an nounced that the Campus Cafe had been fined $200.00 following charges brought by members of the Tar Heel staff headed by Jack Lackey and Rob ert Morrison. At first it was proposed to fine the cafe only $50.00, but following a meet ing with a representative of the North Carolina Office of Price Administra tion, it was decided to raise the fine to be more proportionate with the vio lations committed. The maximum fine which a local board can levy for a single violation is ?50.00, but the rep resentative from the state OPA point ed out that each violation could be con sidered as a separate offense. The Campu3 Cafe was found guilty of the most severe offense which can be dealt with by the local board. The violations committed were tnird in four, degrees of severity. The Tar Heel was solely responsible See CAMPUS, page Z. Three one-act plays, student writ ten, acted, and produced will be per formed is the Playmakers Theatre, 7:30 Thursday evening. To Count Thirteen," directed by Rosalia Coving ton, is a colorful romance of the Amer ican Revolution. It is based on an imagined episode in the life of Major John Andre, played by Jimmy Riley. Also in the cast are Anne Osterhout and Sherman Lazarus. "To -Count Thirteen" will be the. first play to be presented. It was written by Marion Miller. - ' -J Next on the bill will be "By Any Name written and directed by Anne Osterhout who also has a leading role in one of the other plays. The second play concerns drama in a restaurant. In the cast of "By Any Name" are Marion Miller, Lynn Bailey, Jimmy Riley, Jim Crutchfield, Boy Alexan der, Sherman Lazarus, and Bill Rogers. The last play, "Cake Crumbs" deals with the attempt of catty women to blast the reputation of a newcomer to a small town. The play is written and directed by Barbara Rich. The cast includes Margie Patton, Isabelle Nob litt, Phylli3 Hagenmiller, Thehna Co hen, Christine Taylor, Bill Kornegay, Dick Fishel, Roy Alexander, Jan Grif f en, Norma Green, and Amelia Rives. Alderman And Richer Coeds Sponsor First Formal Since 1941 y Coeds in Alderman and M elver halls entertained at the first formal dance since 1941 Saturday night at 8:30 in the Woman's Gym. Scott Gardiner and his orchestra furnished music for the occasion. Coeds in pastel evening dresses, Ma rines, cadets, ROTCs and civilians made the hall a scene of color and gaiety." Red and7wlut streamers-'deco-rated the gym which had huge card board anchors placed at each entrance. Each coed was allowed to send bids to a date and one stag. Several hun dred attended the dance which high lighted a week of victory festivities. Navy Heads May Reduce Carolina Pre-Flight By Half In Near Future Tar Heel MaylJtt Go Daily In Near Future Plans for the Tar Heel to resume publication as a dally paper were given great stimulus by word re ceived from the United Pres3 that their radio wire service on state, na tional, and international news could be made available on the Tar Heel's request. The only major obstacle now in the way of the resumption of "The Daily Tar Heel" is the lack of print ing facilities. William Push, owner of the Orange Printshop, who prints the paper, has expressed his desire to co-operate in the publication of "The Daily Tar Heel" on a six-days- a-week basis. There is at the present time a shortage of make-up men, linotype operators, and pressmen which makes necessary delaying of the publication of a daily. Mr. Pugh expressed hopes that the publication could start within two months. The Tar Heel is going ahead with plans to increase its staff to sufficient size to handle the publication of a daily paper. The Tar Heel first became a daily in the fall of 1929. It served the stu dents from that time until 1943 when war conditions forced it to become a weekly. It since has been published first on a weekly and later on a semi- weekly basis. The "Daily Tar Heel" was the only student daily published in the Southeast. It held a first class honor rating given by the Associated Collegiate Press of the National Scholastic Press Association. Re sumption of this publication i3 the hnmediate sum of the Tar Heel staff. By special request of South Building the Tar Heel will reprint the exam schedule for this term in the next issue. University Press Was Work And Play For W. T. Couch Government Institute Issues Summary Of New State Laws A 60,000-word summary of the new laws passed by the 1945 General As sembly, just prepared by the Univer sity's Institute of Government staff, was sent out to municipal and county officials throughout the State this weekend. The publication, which was issued from the Institute'3 main office here, was compiled by the same staff which conducted its daily and weekly legis lative information service for city and county officials from Raleigh during the 1945 session. Albert Coates, Director of the In stitute, gave high praise to Peyton Abbott, Clifford Pace, John Fries Blair, Miss Nancy Fewell, and Miss Edna Clark for the daily and weekly legislative bulletins and the final sum mary just printad. The purpose of the summary, it was explained, is to supply officials a con cise, handy summary of the new acts affecting their governmental units prior to the publication of the session laws, and also to provide local offi cials a guide in their use of the session laws for the next two years. The 1945 Legislature passed 1,450 new bills and resolutions, which are organized and analyzed in the Insti tute's summary under 17 main sub jects, as follows: The 1945 Legislature Background, Problems and Achievements, Changes at the City Hall and County Court house, Alcoholic Beverages, Educa tion and the Public School System, Health, Welfare and Hospitals, Wom en, Domestic Relations and Related Matters, Practice and Procedure, Vet erans and Servicemen, Regulation of Businesses and Professions, Legisla tion Affecting Agriculture, Codifica tion and Distribution cf the Laws, State Departments, Institutions, Agencies, Officials and Employees, Aviation and Airports, Motor Ve hicles and Highways, Insurance "Reg ulations, Election Law Amendments, and Comparative Table of Appropria tions and Expenditures Chart. By Marjorie Bond William T. Couch, soon to leave Chapel Hill to become Director of the University of Chicago Press, is known generally in the book world as the man who is The University of North Carolina Press. For 20 years the Ptc been his work and his play. In the early days of the organiza tion he did a little of everything typing his own letters, editing manu scripts, reading proof, persuading local printers to get good type faces and then to learn how to use them well, designing books and going out on the road to sell them even wrap ping and mailing a book now and then if a customer telegraphed a rush order and the stock room was already closed. The Press has grown during these 20 years. Today, with a list of some 450 titles ranging from fiction to nHlnsonhv and from "The Wasted Land" to "The Floor of the Ocean," it is considered "the most dynamic cultural force of the South." Countryman at Heart But you wouldn't learn about this from Mr. Couch. The only things a friend of his might hear him boast about are the tenderness and superior Savor of some, sweet corn he planted or the number of trees he cut down one week-end when he was thinning out the weeds around his home- He is a handy man with an axe, and he prides himself on it. He says he is a countryman at heart, and perhaps he is. Though the village of Chapel Hill seems quite rural enough to many people, when the Couches bought land on which to build their home they went two miles out of town to a hillside covered with oak and hickory, dogwood and virgin i pine. He talks about "my corn" and "my garden," but most of the gar dening around the place is done by Mrs. Couch. And he admit3 frankly that hell be glad when he won't have a lawn that always needs cutting. The reason for this isn't hard to find. Whenever he digs in the garden or mows grass he does it furiously, the way he does everything, with out stopping until he's finished. Any one who works like that in Carolina's summer weather may well look for ward to the time when he doesn't have any more grass to mow. He used to nlay tennis the same way, and then he switched to ping pong not for a rest but because he had a couple of daughters at home who wanted to learn the game. He played with them until they were both able to beat him. Then he quit. Fond of Music Probably the only restful thing he does is listen to music. He has a fine collection of records; and if there is a record player on that mythical desert island on which so many men are washed ashore, hell be perfectly happy especially; if he has Bach's Brandenburg Concertos. Contrary to current fashion, W. T. Couch's avocation is closely akin to hi3 daily work. He reads for fun. He may spend all day reading a manu script, and if he doesn't carry it home to finish during the evening which he frequently does he reads something else. He's always reading. In an academic world where men con centrate more and more on their spe cial interests, he stands out as widely and well read. His personal library is large, be- cause ne uses to own tne Doois ne reads. Searching for good inexpen sive editions of standard works, he has found very few, and this realiza tion led to one of his favorite pub- shing projects: some day he hopes to bring out such book well edit ed, well designed, well printed, and inexpensive and then to find a way to get them into the homes of the people. If there is something of the ex- horter about William Terry Couch he comes by it naturally. He is the son of a minister. He was born on De cember 4, 1901, in Pamplin, a little village in Prince Edward County, Vir ginia, where his father was the min S PRESS, page J. Cut Will Be Fifty Per Cent By Bnddy Glenn , From authoritative sources the Tar Heel learned Sunday that the Navy Department plans to reduce the Pre-Flight School as much as 50 per cent in the near future. the Navy Department on the Pre-Flight School is undeter mined but the Cadets were asked in a questionnaire whether they would like to return to civilian life, return to the navy with their previous rating, or remain in the system as cadets. Noth ing has been decided about the status of the local unit, but something: in that regard is ex pected within a week. Came In 1942 The local Pre-Flight School came to Chapel Hill in June 1942 under contract with the Univer sity to use its facilities during the war as part of Naval Avia tion Expansion Program. One of the prominent Captains of . the local unit are Commander "Scrappy" O'Kessing, later of Guadalcanal fame, and the pres ent Commander James P. Raugh. Expanded Facilities Since their arrival the school has expanded the facilities that it used considerably. Improve ments have been made on sev eral dormitories and Alexander Hall had to be renovated to be of use as an office building. They have constructed several new buildings such as the "Navy Hall," a social gathering place for Cadets and their families, the outdoor pool behind the gymnasium, and some improve ments of Fetzer field housing, and other minor improvements. Under the terms of the two con tracts made in June 1942, the University agreed to use of its facilities in the first. In the second the University agreed to buy any improvements made on the portion of the plant used by the Navy on an improvements depreciation basis. Some of the houses were found to be under Naval standards for housing and office work. The University Dining Hall served the naval personnel with meals at cost. It was a non-profit venture for the University with her, being able to maintain her plant even with over two thousand students leaving for the armed services. The Navy reserved the right to cancel the contract within a no tice of 90 days. President Of Seniors Not To Appoint Class Committee This Term The appointment of the senior class committee will t postponed until after the start of the September term, Pete Pully, president of the senior class, announced Sunday night. "It would be unfair to leave these people out of the committees since there are so many of them who will be graduating in November who are not here this summer," Pully stated. The majority of the work done in connection with the graduation is done by special committees appointed by the senior president. Plans for a senior banquet and a senior picnic as well as the choice of a commencement speaker are to be made by these committees. The pres ent senior class will graduate in No vember. CPU Leader Searches For Lecturers BillCrispy chairman of- the- Caro lina Political Union, is new in New York, conferring with prominent in dividuals whom he hopes to be able to present to Chapel Hill audiences as part of the CPU's speaker pre sentation series for the coming aca demic year. Mayor F. H. LaGuardia, New York's dynamic "Little Flower," is among those whom Crisp has con tacted, he will also see Henry Luce, publisher of Time, Life, and Fortune magazines, and Sidney Hillman, chair man of the CIO-PAC. Crisp will also see George V. Denny, Jr. moderator of "America's Town Meeting of the Air." It i3 hoped that the Union will be able to induce Mr. Denny, a Caro lina alumnus, to schedule one of his nation-wide broadcasts from Chapel Hill. The Town Meeting has been pre sented from the Carolina campus pre viously at the invitation of the Union. Crisp will arrive in Washington next week where he will see Harold Ickes, Phillip Murray, William Green and Henry Wallace, among others. After that, he will visit Atlanta to confer with Governor Ellis Arnall of Georgia. While in New York, Crisp has CPU member Dick Stern, and the Union's secretary, Jerry Davidoff, with whom he discussed plans for the groups ac tivities during the coming season. He See CPU, page i. UNC In Good Position For Reconversion Says Durham By Sam Snmmerlin "Reconversion from war to peace is going to be a long and di5cult task, but the University of North Carolina is in a good position to make swift re adjustments, and a prospective enroll ment, larger than any in ita history, points to a bright future for Caro- m t i i. r rr una, saia .Representative ari j. . Durham, graduate of the University and former Chapel Hill pharmacist who found himself in Congress in January, 1&39, when he was named to succeed Judge Lewi3 Teague of High Point, who had died during the campaign. "The University ha3 been able to re tain many of its professors, and it has made numerous provisions for aiding returning G.I.'s," Eep. Durham con tinued, "and I believe tnat primarily because of these two reasons the Uni versity will soon be converted to a peacetime set-up." Congressman Durham, a resident of Chapel Hill, has been here cn vacation for a short while, but he returned to Washington the 27th of thi3 month, a week before Congress reconvenes, to begin work with the House subcom mittee Number Two, of which he is chairman. This committee has the re sponsibility of war surplus property and personnel of the Army, and also it is in charge cf legislation for the War Department. Mr. Durham's most immediate problem i3 the draft, which, in his opinion, should now be stopped. However, the most difficult task ahead, Mr. Durham stated, is the repid discharge of soldiers, almost all of whom now wish to return to civilian life. The bottleneck, Durham said, lies in the fact that every soldier has to be processed out by a doctor, and, as it now stands, there just are not enough doctors to do the job in a short time. Nevertheless, much has been ac complished, for all of the American soldiers who were prisoners of war in See UXC IX GOOD, page 4-