Selective Service Predicts
Limited Student Deferments
FT. STEWART. Ga (AP) —
Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, direc
tor of the Selective Service, said
Saturday that draft deferments
for college students will become
more difficult to obtain because
of increasing manpower needs
in Viet Nam.
•We have been very lenient
and. therefore, it can stand some
tightening," Hershey said in an
interview at this Army base where
draft directors from 10 states
meet Sunday to discuss ways of
filling quotas.
Hershey said prospective draft
ees must not only have reasons
for deferment—"but better rea
sons.” He said he wanted to get
Job Opportunities
Students may contact the
Placement Office in Susan Camp
bell Hall for further information
about the following job opport
unities.
Jan. 10 — Alexander Grant &
Co. Accountants for employment
in Honolulu.
Jan. 11 — Liberty Mutual In
surance Co. BA in Liberal Arts
(History, Pol. Science. Econ.) BS
in Bus. Ad. (Marketing) for
Claims & Sales.
Jan. 11 —Arthur Andersen &
Co. Acctg. majors for Accounting,
Auditing and Taxes. Gen. Bus.,
Acctg., Ind. Mgt.. Math program
ming for Counseling in Admin.
Services.
Jan. IT—F. W. Woolworth. Bus.
Ad., Lib. Arts for Mgt. Trainees.
Jan. 17 — Weyerhaeuser Co.
Bach/Bus. Ad. or Lib. Arts for
Production and Sales Trainees in
Wood Products Div.
Jan. 18 — Dow Chemical Co.
BS/MS any discipline. Scientific
background preferred but not re
quired for various careers in
Marketing.
Jan. 18 — Omark Industries.
BA/Accounting — Domestic Ac
counting. MA/Finance — Inter
national Finance.
Jan. 19—Public Health Service,
Environmental Health. MS/Ph.D.
Biologists (Aquatic) Chemists,
Math., Physics, Statisticians for
A i r Pollution, Environmental
Engr. & Food Protection, Radio
logical Health, Pesticides.
Portland public schools will in
terview students interested in a
secondary or elementary school
teaching position January 25 and
26.
the views of state director on re- j
storing Korean war standards j
that made it tough to get defer
ments and keep them.
The draft chief said it was his
guess that the needs would be;
similar to those of the Korean
war when the draft ran about 80,
000 a month. That is more than
double the current draft.
The conference will be the first
of three regional meetings called
by Hershey. Directors from Ala
bama, Georgia. Florida, Arkansas, i
Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma,
Tennessee, North Carolina, and
South Carolina will attend the
meeting. The Puerto Rico direc-,
tor also will be here.
“It will be more difficult to get
a deferment hereafter,” Hershey
said. But the exact procedures
will depend upon what results
from U. S. peace moves in Viet
Nam and the national budget.
“Unsolved" Problems
“We are in a situation where
there are several unsolved prob
lems.” he said. "Therefore, there
is a certain amount of waiting.”
Hershey said he wanted to get
the directors in a frame of mind
for quick action in the tightening
of draft loopholes.
“I have always got to prepare
for the worst,” the 72-year-old
Hershey said. “I said two months
ago 1 had a tendency to believe
that we are going to stabilize at
about 30,000 a month.
“Now I don't know what to
think.
“I guess we’re trying to get
XT
Anti-war Protester
Receives Sentence
PITTSBURGH (AP) — A 19
year-old Pittsburgh pacifist who
participated in an anti war dem
onstration in violation of a pro
bation order was sent to prison
Friday for four years.
Judge Louis Rosenberg of U.S.!
District Court revoked the pro
bation of Thomas W. Rodd who
was arrested last week after dem
onstrating at the Boeing Vertol
Helicopter plant near Philadel
phia.
It was Judge Rosenberg who
sentenced Rodd to five years in
prison in 1964 for refusing to reg
ister for the draft.
Sentence was suspended and'
Rodd was placed on probation
and ordered not to participate in
any demonstrations.
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ready for a Korean war anau
where it will he about 80,000 a
month.”
Next Oraftees
He said the steps of an increas
ed draft, after available 19-year
olds have been taken, would he:
1. College students. 2 The IV
category — those who failed
their draft exams, and 3. Child
less marriages.
Of the 1Y group, Hershey said
he got a concession from the mil
itary to take young men scoring
as low as 15 on the mental test
as opposed to the 31 points now
required.
Hershey said a means of uni
form selection in college defer
ments has to be worked out and
probably would be based on a
combination of class standing and
Selective Service tests—the two
criteria of the Korean War draft.
Hershey said he would review
for the state directors the pol
icy on Selective Service law viola
tions such as draft card burning,
or interfering with local boards
He said he felt that the law
was satisfied if a man who avoid
ed the draft later agreed to serve.
Campus Briefs
Announcement* for Campus Briefs must
be turned in by 3:30 p.m. the day before
publication. Because of space limitations,
no announcements will be run more than
twice. %
The ASI.*0 Campus Planning Commit
ter nill met at 1 p ro. Tuesday in room
309 SU.
Students interested in applying t * the
University School of NtiixinK should at
tend a inerting at 3 or 4 pm, I ursday in
1.14 ("omniums calth, or 4 or 5pm 1hur*»
day in lOl Common wealth, or contact Mt«
Olson, ext. 1391.
Students who are interested in teaching
handicapped children to swim, i»r who
taught them last term, will meet at 7:30
p.m. today in the SI*. Anyone not aide to
attend ma> leave his name at the YWCA,
ext 1K58.
The Panhellenic Executive t ounril will
mete at 6:4S p.m. Tuesday in the SC.
•I* Faith Hclevant ?“ will l*e the topic
at the Oregon Christian Fellowship .it 9
p.m. Tuesday in the SC.
Chi Delta Phi, women's creative writing
and literary honorary, will meet at 7 p.m.
Tuesday in the SU. All interested persons
are invited to attend. The meeting will
provide further information for all niter
ested women student* who may apply until
the first week of February. They need not
1m* majoring in an F.ngli»h or writing field
Questions are encouraged and will l*e
answered by Miss Rise in the Browsing
K<iom or Roberta Nudo at Laurel House.
Drakes and Decoy* will hold a joint
mandatory meeting at 6:45 p.m. Tuesday
hi the SC. All those who have not paid
their dues must do so or l#e disqualified.
Plan* for winter term activities will 1*
presented.
Rally Board will hold an important
meeting at 4 p.m. Tuesday »u die SL\ All
member* must attend.
Theta Sigma Phi will meet at 6:1> p.m.
Tuesday in the Erie Allen Seminar Room.
Sign-ups will lie taken for the college
weekend in Portland. All member* are
urged to attend.
STUDY IN
SOUTHERN
FRANCE
An undergraduate liberal arts
year in Aix-en-Provence
FRENCH LANGUAGE
& LITERATURE
EUROPEAN STUDIES
ART & ART HISTORY
MEDITERRANEAN STUDIES
Classes in English and French
satisfying American curriculum
requirements
Institute students enrolled at
the University of Aix-Marseille
founded in 1409
Students live in French homes
Tuition, trans-Atlantic fares,
room and board, about $1,950.
INSTITUTE FOR
AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES
2 bis, rue du Bon-Pasteur
Aix-en-Provence, France
Sex Seminars Meet Regularly
Regular meetings of the \ M
YWCA Sex Seminar will 1>* r.m
at 4 pm. Wednesday m the St
This informal discussion Kioup
provides an opportunity for men
and women students to talk ran
(|idly almut sex and other mat
Schedule Corrected
For Faculty Recital
The School of Music faculty re
cital featuring .lames Miller, ten
or. and Helen S Miller, accomp
anist, will he January 20, not
January 11. as was erroneously
reported in last Thursday’s Emer
ald.
tern of on interpersonal nature
Students who are interested
should plan •<> attend the Wnl
nesday afternoon discussions on a
rcRulnr basin. 81 tin ups for the
program arc helm.; taken at n
thcr the VMCA or YWt'A oflire
(YWCA (ifilinpci Hall; Y.\K \
.Mil SI'.) fall extensions iH.’it)
or ~2tHl for further Information.
Oregon Dally Emerald
The ()trgi'h llmlr Kramtd ia p«hll*hf<t
five limrn In Sefrtnuher ami five <Uya « r«-It
turuiK lit* Mleimc year, cjuryl dun Mg
fttminaiNii ptfutl*, he il»r Student Fuhli*
«ll<>iia lluaiil <>l lit* University ul ()r*g< n.
S«cK>ml clll* |*»ai *|{e y«nl al Kiturn*, Ore.
mn *740 J St«b*cri|rtt«»n iale* $$ prr >e«r|
12 prt unit
' On Campus
with
Max Qhulman
ROMAN IN THE GLOAMIN*
Now as the end of the first semester draws near, one fac t
emerges dearly: you an* all going tc> flunk out of school.
There are two things you can do about it. First, you ran
marry money. (I don’t mean >ou marry the- money t/sc//; I
mean you marry a person who has money. Weddings Ice
tween people and currency have not been legal anywhere in
the United States sinc e the Smoot-Hawlev Act. Persor.na'
Stainless Steel Blades, on the other liand. are legal every
where and are, indeed, used with great pleasure and satis
faction in all fifty states of the Union and I>uluth. 1 bring
up Personna Stainless Steel Blades because this column is
sponsored by the makers of Personna Stainless Steel Blades,
and they are inclines! to get edgy if I omit to mention their
product. Some of them get edgy and some get double-edgy
because Personna Blades come both in Injector style and
Double Kdge style.)
But I digress. I was saying you can marry money but, of
course, you will not because you are a high minded, clean
living, pure-hearted, freckle-faced American kid. Therefore-,
to keep from flunking, you must try the second method:
you must learn how to take lecture notes.
According to a recent survey, eleven out erf ten American
undergraduates do not know the proper way to take lecture
notes. To illustrate this spiralling statistic, let us suppose
you are taking a course* in history'. IM ijs further supposc
the lecturer is lecturing on the ruling house* of England.
You listen intently. You write diligently in your notebook,
making a topic outline as you have been taught, f.ike this:
I. House of Plantmgenet.
II. House of Lancaster. jar
III. House of York.
Then you stop. You put aside your pen. You blink back
a tear, for you cannot go on. Oh, yea, you know very well
that the next ruling house is the House of Tudor. The trou
ble is you don’t know the Roman numeral that come* after
III.
It may, incidentally, be of some comfort to learn that
you are not the only people who don't know Roman numer
als. The fact is, the Romans never knew them either. Oh, I
suppose they could tell you how much V or X were or like
that, but when it came to real Zingers like I.X I or MMC,
they just Hang away their styluses and went downtown to
have a bath or take in a circus or maybe stab Ca«nar a few
times.
You may wonder why Rome stuck with these ridiculous
numerals when the Arabs had such a nice, simple system.
Well, sir, the fact is that Emperor Vespasian tried like crazy
to buy the Arabic numerals from Suleiman The Magnificent,
but Suleiman wouldn't do business—not even when Vespa
sian raised his bid to 100,000 gold piastres, plus he offered
to throw in the Colosseum, the Appian Way, and Techni
color.
So Rome stuck with Roman numerals—to its sorrow, as
it turned out. One day in the Forum, Cicero and Pliny got
to arguing about how much is CDL times MVIX. Well.si'-,
pretty soon everyone in town came around to join the has
sle. In all the excitement, nobody remembered to lock the
north gate and — wham! before you could say urn tonga—in
rushed the Goths, the Visigoths, and the Green Bay Packers!
Well, sir, that’s the way the empire crumbles, and I di
gress. Let s got back to lecture notes, let’s also say a word
about Burma Shave *. Why? Because Burma Shave is made
by the makers of Personna Blades who, it will be recalled,
are the sponsors of this column. They are also the sponsors
of the ultimate in shaving luxury. First coat yottr kisser
with Burma Shave, regular or menthol—or, if you are the
devil-may-care sort, some of each. Then whisk off your st ub
ble with an incredibly sharp, unbelievably durable Personna
Blade, Injector or Double Edge—remembering first to put
the blade in a razor. The result: facial felicity, cutaneous
cheer, epidermal elysium. Whether you shave every day,
every III days, or every VII, you’ll always find Personna
and Burma Shave a winning combination.
ft ft ft © I’.Mill, Mux Hhulimiii
Fcrtutniwm amo, Tom Pemonnam arnat, hick Pemonnam
arnal, llarru Fernonnam a trial, quique Pemonnam arnanl —
cl tjaotjue amubitin.