U.:i.C. Library v Serial's Dept. Clwpe 1 . Hi I i i y , I " i r-; r f fANl'MtT 2-31 VOLUME LX CHAPEL HILL, N. C. TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1952 NUMBER -33 C- n SOD t X f1 7( A. - ''if Ml Carnage Fallow Is m M rairT L.aws University ;this year will no longer automatically : receive ; SOrdays after the end of their academic year to enlist in the service of their choice before being drafted, but they still will have ample time to escape the army by en listing , else where. . - - The ;30rday arrangements, are not necessary this year, Selective Service Director Major General jewis B. Hershey, said yesterday from Washington. This, he ex- plained, is due to the 1951 amend , ments to the Selective Service law which provide that students are henceforth to be deferred in stead of having their induction postponed. ' The Selective Service act of 1948 provided that any student' X 'Whiskey Bill . When members and guests of the Dialectic Senate chew at the carcass of the oft-macerated liquor referendum problem to night at 8' o'clock, the floors of Di hall on third floor New West should ooze with oratical gore. : Persons "cited as political ex perts have maintained that the initiation of such a referendum would result inevitably in ajiry North Carolina, and for this rea son, say ' Senators, discussion should wax rather warm. s Opposed to the practice of al lowing local option regarding liquor sales, a referendum calling for statewide participation is re garded by wets as a device which would rally - the dry forces into real voting power and oust liquor from the state. v - :tk0 Sonata's 'bill' was inspired by a similar bill introduced at the State Student Legislature i .ntt rrV, loot vpar bv Wake Forest. At that time the bill received ma w nnnosition, particularly from the Carolina delegation. At that time, the bill was aeiea vv a close vote. t 'The Senate renewed its plea for assured that such guests are welcome to participate in discussion. DTH Circulation : . students . living off campus and not receiving The Daily Tar Heel are now requested to see Ileal Cadieu, circulation man ager. - . . : - He will be in the circulation office, second floor Graham Me morial during the afternoons. If he is not in, leave name and ad dress under the door of the of r fice. ' - , ' . t ; -: '-- If aiudent receiving his pa pr pr mail,, has, chang his address he should ' inform vthe cubscripiion department of the changs also.' i Di-K0vi3tc(&''BifG Explained who, while satisfactorily pursuing a. . full-time course, was ordered for induction would Upon pre senting the. facts to hist local board have his induction post poned until the end of his aca demic year. At the end of the year, , the student became . liable for immediate induction. The 1951 amendments to the Act changed this, General Hershey pointed out, by providing that any student pursuing a full-time course who was , ordered . for in duction would, if he had never before been deferred as a student, be deferred in Class I-S until the end of his academic year, but he could, receive only one such de ferment. - A student who is entitled to a statutory I-S deferment must be ordered for induction, General Hershey pointed out, before he can be deferred by his local board. The law says that he shall be deferred 'upon presenting the facts" that he is satisfactorily pursuing a full-time course at the time the order for induction is issued. A student who is ordered for induction should not be thrown into a panic,' ...General Hershey- explained, all that is necessary is for him to request the Dean or Registrar to im mediately give his local board official notice that he is a full time , student doing satisfactory work and that such work actually commenced, prior to the date the order for induction was mailed. Enrollment, acceptance" and re gistration do not count, actual attendance at classes is the pre requisite. . ' The, Selective Service law places upon each registrant the obligation of keeping the local board advised of his current status. It would therefore be a wise move, General Hershey suggested, for each student "to have his school send official notice to the local board as soon as the student has been notified that he has passed his preiriducr tion physical examination. If. the local board has been put on notice that the student is pursuing a full-time course, General Hershey advised, there will be little danger of a last minute mix-up which might result in the induction of a student legally entitled "to a statutory I-S 'deferment. ' ; The new Selective Service law provided for the Class -I-S statu tory deferment and .gave; . the President? authority to r prescribe regulations" governing the - defer ment df students in such numbers sl3 he deemed necessary to the maintenance of the national health, safety or: ; interest, xne President1 1- H subsequently" pre scribed a Class II-S "student de ferment ; program. Students may be - placed in this classification,- General Hersney expiamea, ai wie- discretion of their local boards.; To assist the. boards, in; determin- i iWtf" whih? J students should V be! given'II-S deferments,; a. method - (See Draft, Page 6) n ; ' ' jySsfi IVIilio loimeci 10 .'OliSIC . rAllan Milledge, former "chair man of .the Men's Council, has j been appointed to a seat on the Student Council: by President Henry Bowers.. . . Final approval of the appoint ment rests with the Student Leg islature Thursday night. . ' Milledge. 'will fill the seat va cated by Chapel Hill native Bill Wolf, who has assumed the chair manship of ' the Student Party. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, the. Golden Fleece and Order of the Old Well, Milledge received his A.B. in political science last December and is now working for his masters degree. . " , Frssh Coffee Firsa Ely Prof -Student il Seat Will Soon Open At Lenoir by Grady Elmore A faculty-student dining room in Lenoir hall is scheduled to open its doors in about two weeks, manager George Prillman. stated yesterday. . ; ' . In response to expressed wishes by certain faculty members for a quiter place to eat, the second floor, front corner banquet room is undergoing preparations to ac commodate 100 persons. - . .A - " ' "The new- dining room will by no means be exclusive to the f acr ulty," - Mr. Prillman emphasizes. Students desiring a more private, Playmakers Tro tits Set For Today :Director John W. ' Parker and staff wiUcast 22 'parts today at 4 p.m. and -7: 30 p.m. in Memorial H.all for - the Playmakers gala musical, production ' of -the year "Spring For Sure." Everyone in the school, is- eligible - to audition, and -all are assured a careful hearing., - . - v ' 'Sprirlg'ior Sure' is a musical Icomedy- -written - by " Catherine McDonald- ' and' Wilton z Mason both associated with 'the Univer sity, and tried put here -in 1950. The present showing is scheduled; for Februray . 1-3 . in Memorial Hall, and will' take two hours on February i -4-16 and: 1 March 24 April 5. Members of the cast will need to sing 'and dance', but the corps of directors can offer instruc- tion: 'in; these 1 arts. Everyone is requested to 5 jbrmg "some j song with them. A pianist is also ineed- -led to work with Bill 'V'an Coilins iana mist jiaiimiuiiu orgaiu 1 1 j V 1 . ) TTj T5 ; I . 1 ( To Observe US Student Life In ShortOheMonthVisHs ''Sji&i I 9- : ! FRED H. WEAVER less nbisey atmosphere are most welcome to take advantage of the upstairs room," he said. Members of the faculty and stu dents who so desire will follow the regular procedure through the cafeteria line, then carry their provisioned trays up -the ' steps located in the main lobby." ' '' ':' . ; ' ' '. Prillman, a former self-help stu dent here who graduated in 1947, stated that this step is only orie of many he intends taking in an en deavor to completely satisfy Lie noir hall patrons. The. replacement of ground cof fee for last quarter's frozen 'type was accomplished just last week, as .a first step of improvement in response ; to complaints by . stu dents.. Since assuming .the manager ship of Lenoir in October, George Prillman has outlined a policy to conform with his theory that "Le noir . is . the students' - dining -hall and should be operated as such." In addition to changing from frozen to "fresh coffee the" new manager has opened for students" usuage three, .banquet rooms on the second i loor. "These are avail able for private banquets club din ners, or fraternity get-to-gether meals at ho extra cost," he says. Simply notify him and obtain your food in the cafeteria and transport it upstairs, with-no fee for use of the room and no tip ping. For a" banquet serving a sep arate, menu of prices is on hand, ranging from $1.25 upi. Pots of cof fee and pitchers of ice water are ;pravideditHMnmuH ; ; " r Dean of Students Fred H. Weav er has been awarded a Carnegie ffi4Corporation traveling fellowship to visit universities and rnTIpfrpi and study undergraduate life. Chancellor Robert B. House an nounced yesterday. Weaver will visit on one month temporary leaves of absence. r "This fellowship provides Dean Weaver with an excellent oppor tunity to observe the undergrad uate phases of student life in ma jor institutions of the country," the chancellor commented. "The trip' he added, "will enable him to gather information which should prove invaluable to the stu dent life program here. The fellowship, a part of the Carnegie administrative personnel program, is awarded tp young ad ministrators to give them oppor tunity for travel which have gen erally been available only to teaching staffs of universities. In the last 10 years only 25 such fellowships have been awarded. Weaver will leave in early Feb ruary bn one month tours. The fellowship provides traveling ex penses for visits from two to four months. He will visit one group of institutions, then return to the , University for a month and fin ally conclude his travels with an other visit. Although. Weaver ha 3 not announced his itinerary, he indicated he would visit schools throughout the country. A graduate of .the class of 1937, Weaver became assistant dean cf "men in 1933' and served in that capacity until 1941. He then serv ed as American vice-consul in Rio di Janeiro but came back to the University and volunteered for Naval flight training. Later he re ceived his commission in 1943 and spent one year with the- Naval Ferry Command. While waiting for 'assignment to a carrier in 1945 as a fighter-bomber pilot, V-J Day came. Weaver came back to Chapel Hill and to the dean's office and in September, 1948, became Dsan of Students. In 1949 he was grant ed a leave of absence to -study for a masters degree at Harvard. He returned the next year. Weaver is married to the former . Frances Angas. Mrs. Weaver is a 1949 UNC graduate. Ring Sale Juniors are now eligible lav order iheir class rings and may do so beginning Thursday, Al House, Ring Chairman of the Grail announced today. Orders for rings for the class of 1953 as well as 1952 will be taken Thursday in the Y lobby from 9:30 to 4:30. A deposit of five . dollars is required when the order is placed and delivery of the rings is made in 8 ia 10 weeks. The Grail is the only agency through which the official Uni versity class ring may be ob tained Ring orders will be t-.--en every other Thursday cr r TPmai ifJM of Ha