i . 4 . i Ft fx Mil Brief, Nazis : Retreat h As HiericaBs . Come to Life Solon Asks Probe Of Draft Dodgers ALLIED HDQ., N. A., Feb. 24 (UP) Allied tanks turning from the defensive to a powerful countercharge supported by eve ry type plane in the US African arsenal have forced an -18-mile German retreat to within three miles of the enemy's starting point in Kasserine Gap in west ern Tunisia, front dispatches said tonight. WASHINGTON, Feb. 24 (UP) The House Military Af fairs sub-committee today dis closed plans for a complete in vestigation of selective service operation after Rep. Forest A. Harness (R. Ind.) demaded that "desk heroes" and "draft dodgers" deferred for govern ment and war industry jobs be turned out to fight. RAF Takes Off with Fogs To Resume European Blows LONDON, Feb. 24 (UP ) RAF planes taking advantage of lifting Channel fogs today re sumed their continental offensive in which more than 100,000 tons of bombs have been dropped on Germany, Italy and the Axis-occupied countries. - British Bulletin Reveals Churchill Has Pneumonia LONDON, Feb. 24 (UP) A government bulletin disclosed ' tonight that Prime Minister Win ston Churchill, ill for a week, is suffering from pneumonia. Americans and Japs Trade Aerial Blows in Wide Area WASHINGTON, Feb, 24 IUSIDE Chance for coeds . . .Balloting, over No Second Cup . . . CPU Boundtable ... On The Hour On Page Two VOLUME LI B.in d circulation M4i CHAPEL HILL, N. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUAItY 25, 1943 Editorial: T-iUU Nws F-8148, F-3147 NUMBER 110 Legisla "fare A XL i-L XL for the Carolina (UP) American and J apanese witf be used Griffin Sets egistration Spring Dates Some Students Sign March 3-8 Registration dates Spring quarter of all students excepting those enrolled in the General college have been set as March 3-8, it was stated yesterday by I. C. Griffin, assis tant registrar. Regular procedure, as employ ed in the Winter quarter enroll ment, will be followed with the one exception that scheduling of conferences with advisors and deans has been dropped since it is not deemed necessary this spring. Advisor's Conference Plans for registration of stu-l dents in the General college will probably be worked out in a con ference between Dean Johnson and the advisors at the beginn ing of next week. The dean ad vised all affected to watch the Daily Tar Heel for an an nouncement of the regulations his school will follow. For the students in the Col lege of Arts and Science and the Graduate school, the customary setup of preliminary conferen ces with their advisors and then the meeting with Dean A. W. Hobbs or Dean W. W. Pierson Ashbaugh Grilled in Row Over Milk Classification An open meeting of the Chapel ilill Board of Alderman yester day resolved into a closed gatti ering after heated discussion be tween Mr. Ashbaugh, represent tative of the Durham Dairy Products company, and - towns people on the subject of a sub standard grade of milk being sold in Chapel Hill as "A." Meeting to take action on the finding of Dr. William Richard son, state Board of Health offi cer for this district, the Board of Aldermen questioned Ash baugh as to the policy of the dairy, which is now selling a milk classified by the United States "C," the lowest rating under health statues. Richardson opened the meet- flyers have, traded blows against each other's bases from the Solo mons to the New Hebrides in a furious new burst of aerial activ ity, the Navy reported today. Reds Try To Cut Nazi Line By Driving West of Kharkov LONDON, Feb. 25 (Thursday) ( UP ) Russion troops are driving directly westward on the Kharkov front in an attempt to cut the entire German north south defense line in two, dis patches indicated today. Madame Chiang Pleads For More Aid to China WASTTTNGTON. Feb. 24 (UP) Madame Chiang Kai See NEWS BRIEFS, page U ing by presenting the report of the USPHS on the milk, and by reviewing past action taken on the situation by the state board. He said that at a meeting Mon day the state group decided to keep constant vigilance over the milk being sold in the state, and public Health Service as grade to recominend to consumers a re stricted use of "A" grade m view of the demands being made by the Army. Mr. Ashbaugh then took the floor in defense of the dairy and from that time rose repeatedly to answer the questions of the assembly and the Board members. He stated that the dairy is not See MILK, page U Y-Y Is Weeks Behind Plans Labor Lack Causes Delay in Schedules Due to a delay caused by Woot-ten-Moulton's lack of experienced help, the 1943 Yackety-Yack is now approximately six weeks be hind schedule, Ben Snyder, editor of the annual, said yesterday. This lack of workers, caused by the war, cut down on the amount of pictures that could be taken fand-develdpewithma short Commerce majors need mere ly see Dean Carroll. Tally Line The tally line system has been preserved for formal registra tion and will be situated in the second floor lobby of Memorial hall. Griffin is working out other details of the spring quarter and all information and procedure will be published as soon as pos sible. Once again he called on all students who have any. pros pects of returning to school to register at the appropriate time. "Registration entails no obliga tions and will save the student a great deal of trouble if he does return." Rent Control Still Doubtful OPA Says Head Has Not Decided In a special dispatch from the Office of War Information in Raleigh, state OPA off icials cla rified the rent control discus sions concerning Chapel Hill by sJtying that as yet the adminis trator has not issued a regula tion for this area to bring it un der, federal rent control. The OPA summary of the rent time. On account of this bottle-j control regulations as aplies to Educator Predicts Colleges To Admit Younger Students WASHINGTON, (OWI Spec ial) r. Francis J. Brown, con sultant to the American Council on Education reported last week that next year's freshman clas ses in some colleges would proba bly include a larger number of 17-yearold boys and girls who have not finished high school. A few colleges have accepted high school juniors for some time, Dr. Brown said, giving Universi ty of North Carolina as an exam ple. Last year over 300 high school juniors were tested at North Carolina, and 140 of them were admitted to the freshman class. The increased number of non graduate high school students in freshman classes will reflect a "liberalization and expansion" of this policy in colleges which al ready practice it, Dr. Brown pointed out, rather than accept ance of the policy -by colleges which have resisted it to date. The Navy's refusal to accept men in its V-l program unless they have a fcicrh school certificate is a set back to larger college enrollment of 17-year-olds. Dr. Brown predicted that stu dents who will make up the rest of next year's college group will fall into the following categories : 1; Women -particul a r 1 y freshmen and sophomores. Among juniors and seniors there will be a sharp enrollment drop except among those women stu dying nursing, engineering, phy sics arid other subjects necessary to the war effort. 2. Men not physically fit for the armed services. In proport ion to the country as a whole, however, college men have a good physical record, Dr. Brown point ed out. Selective Service figures show that only 15 of college men were physically unfit in the first draft, due nostly to bad eyes. This figure compares favorably with the 40 of 18 and 19-year-olds throughout the country that Manpower Director McNutt re ports will probably be found un fit for military service. 3. Pre-professiorial and pro fessional groups given occupa See EDUCATOR, page 4 neck, in no way the fault of Wootten-lVEoulton, work on the yearbook was stopped and held up. However, as soon as all class pictures were taken and devel oped, work began again. Snyder stated "The Yackety-1 Yack is coming along as well as could be expected under the cir cumstances, but' the approach ing exams have reduced the staff. Already the bulk of the copy is in or is coming in soon. The four class sections are virtually com pleted and are now in the engra vers' hands. The introductory section of the annual is also fin ished and is now at the printers. The athletic and extra-curricular activities sections are progress ing fairly well and are now half completed. Work on the fraterni ty section is practically over and it should be in the engravers' of fice within two weeks. The Yackety-Yack will have 100 less pages this than in last year s annual. The pages tnat have been cut out are superfluous ones, such as kodachromes, double spreads, and divider pages, sepa rating the sections of the year book that have been eliminated. This decrease in pages is due to two causes : the engravers do not have enough copper, zinc and oth er engraving metals, and the an nual does not.have enough money to finance a bigger Y-Y. Both the decrease in the num ber of students and a not very large amount of advertising, though equal to last year's, have cut down on the amount of money givn by the Publications Union Board to the annual. The engra vers this year were forced by war priorities to cut the amount of engraving metals by 50 of what was used in the corresponding period of the preceding year. In addition, a further cut of 30 was put into effect. In spite of these difficulties, Snyder said that the Y-Y is getting complete, co operation from the printer and the engraver. Chapel Hill is as follows: "On October 5, 1942, the administra tor of the OPA designated all of the US not previously so desig nated as a defense-rental area. At that time he made recommen dations that rents for housing accommodations be reduced or stabilized to the rents for such housing accommodations on March 1, 1942. Two Months Notice The principle involved in this action is that, according to the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, the administrator is re quired to give a defense-rental aerea 60 days notice before de claring that the federal rent con trol is effective in that area. During this 60 day period the community itself is given the op portunity to stabilize and reduce rents to the March 1 level. "The failure of the commu nity to so stabilize or reduce rents does not automatically es tablish rent control. It is heces- See RENT, page 4 Army ERC To Meet With Perry Tonight The Army Enlisted Reserves will assemble tonight at 7 :30 in Memorial hall for what Dr. W. D. Perry, military informa tion director termed, "The most important meeting yet called for those in the Army unit." Perry, after telephoning At lanta, decided that the entire body ot ERC students at Caro lina must meet tonight in order to fill out information blanks that will affect the date and place of their call to active du ty. Time Changed For Graham's Saturday Talk President Joined WL Board in 1941 The time for President Frank P. Graham's Saturday speech in Gerrard hall was shifted yester day from 4 :30 to 5 p. m. ! In the address, his first sche duled talk on campus since the opening convocation last tail. Dr. Graham will analyze the many problems the War Labor Board has faced and solved in the years of labor and world strife. Carolina's president has been a . member . of .the .War. Labor board since 1941 and in past months his many duties in it it have kept him in Washington almost constantly. He has, how ever, managed to return each week to Chapel Hill, although he has been unable to address any large gatherings in the 1942-43 season until now. His "off-the-record" discus sion of labor problems is expec ted to include the vital ques tion of strikes in defense indus tries and the Board's policy to wards them. Another prime point in the speech is the "Little Steel For mula" and its effect upon the so-called Little Steel companies both in the present war and in the future peace. Dr. Graham's labor back ground is long and varied, hav ing served on both state and federal committees. All interested students, towns people and Navy Pre-Flight ca dets have been invited by the University to hear Dr. Graham in one of his now-infrequent ad dresses at Carolina. easure Provides Succession Installation Date Moved to March 30 Replacement of ; student of ficers who may be forced to re sign their positions because of war calls was provided for last night when the legislature unan imously passed a bill which pro vided a systematic means of succession. Under the new program, the order of succession will be : president, vice-president, secretary-treasurer, senior represen tative to the student council, speaker of the legislature, and oldest hold-over member of the student council. No appointment made under the rulings of this bill shall be al lowed to continue for longer than one scholastic quarter. New elec tions shall be called for in the legislature's discretion. Formal installation of newly elected officers also was advan ced to March 30 instead of the present April 24 date, during the meeting. The replacement bill passed with little discussion, a small flurry over whether the speaker or the senior representative should have prior standing for the presidency being the only notable point of dissension. The bill further provided that if a class president is forced to resign, the respective class vice president shall ascend to the presidency. Other class vacan- cies, however, will oe iiiiea in general class elections. Replacement of officers in various other campus organiza tions was as follows: On the Publications Union board, a vacancy shall be filled by the remaining members se lecting someone from the cam pus with experience in publica tions work. Among the editors of publi cations, vacancies shall be filled by appointment of the P. U. board from the campus of per sons experienced in publication work. On the honor councils, or in the student council, vacancies shall be filled by appointment by the student council. The Monogram club shall elect from the campus persons to fill vacancies in the offices of pres ident arid vice president of the 1- See LEGISLATURE, page 4 Winslow To Discuss New Ration Plan UNC Economist To Analyze Week Dr. R. S. Winslow, head of the economics denartment. will delve into a week of lengthened ration lists and rumored Wash ington shakeups at 7 p. im in the Horace Williams lounge of Graham Memorial when he views the week's developments as analysist for the weekly news period Often a guest speaker on the campus, Winslow has acquired a reputation as one who exer cises the far-seeing viewpoint typical of the economist. Dab- unity bling in a bit of prophesying, he thinks the "dollar will fol low the flag" after the war, em phasizing that each nation's trade will follow the diplomatic line rather than the "laissez- faire" policy he says has led to nothing but squabbles in the past. Privational Unity Winslow believes the biggest national question is that of the result of privations on Amer ican unity. Unity, he says, will increase as rationing grows tighter, for "the individual is essentially patriotic, but no man will standi his neighbor's get ting a greater slice than him self. Proper distribution is bound to result in unity .". Priorities haven't increased in . government circles, however, which the scheduled speaker attributes to the inabil ity of the army and navy heads to accept the over-all view of production, which attitude pro- jduction kings must resist. "The Analysis Period To Start at 7 onslaught against Nelson is not a personal matter. Trouble would have occurred between the mil itary leaders and any head of the WPB who refused to be har nessed," he commented. Dr Winslow received his A.B. degree at Iowa, his M.A. at Ill inois, and his Ph.D. at Chapel Hill in '36. Two years ago he served as associate economist in the office of secretary of the U. S. Department of Agricul ture, and at present is field rep resentative for the Engineering, Science Management W ar Training courses sponsored by the government through the ex tension division, aside from his duties as head of the economics department.