PAGE TV70 THE DAILY TAR HEEL APRIL 27, l Clje iBEtli) T6e official newspaper cf the Publications Union Board si the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Spring Holidays. Entered as second class matter at the post oSce of Chapel HilL N. C, under act of March 3, 1879. . Subscription price, ?3.00 for the college year. - - A. T. DilL...-....:. Robert C. Page, Jr..... Joe Wefeb.: Editor .-Managing Editor Business Manager Editorial Staff EDITORIAL BOARD Philip Hammer, chairman, Don Becker, Nelson Lansdale, E. R. Oettinger, Jeanne Holt, W. C. Durfee, B. C. Proctor. FEATURE BOARD Vermont Royster, chairman, Wal ter Terry, Ed Goldenthal, John Wiggins, Ralph Bur gin, Jean Smith Cantrell.. CITY EDITORS Irving Suss, Jack Lowe, Walter Har- gett. ' DESK MEN Nick Powell, Don McKee, Jim Daniels, Eleanor BizzelL Reed Sarratt. SPORTS DEPARTMENT Jimmy Morris and Bill Anderson,' co-editors, C. P. Nicholson, Milton Scherer, Ralph Gialanella, Smith Barrier, Tom Bost, Lester Ostrow. EXCHANGES Jimmy Craighill, Margaret Gaines. REPORTERS E. L. Kahn, Emery Raper, Sam Willard, John Eddleman, Francis Chngman, Don Wetherbee, Margaret McCauley. . Business Staff ASST. BUSINESS MGR. (Sales) Agnew Bahnson, Jr. COLLECTION MANAGER James Barnard. OFFICE MANAGER L. E. Brooks. DURHAM REPRESENTATIVE Henry B. Darling. LOCAL ADVERTISING STAFF Butler French (man ager), Hugh Primrose, Phil Singer, Robert Sosnick, Herbert Osterheld, Niles Bond, Eli Joyner, Oscar Tyree, Boylan Garr. CIRCULATION MAN AGER Ralto Farlow. CITY EDITOR FOR THIS ISSUE: JACK LOWE Friday, April 27, 1934 Unifying " ' The Playmakers The Carolina Playmakers is primarily student in personnel, purpose, and activities. Yet it re mains an organization the greater part of which is wholly unorganized. The student members have ho choice but to listen, no alternative but to obey. Although some sort of hierarchy is indubitably necessary in an organization which purports to train, there exists nevertheless a very real place and need for an organized stu dent' Playmaker unit. Among the main benefits to be reaped from such a body are providing a solid place in the Playmaker scheme for the individual student and making possible greater cooperation between the student members and the heads. At present any student expression of opinion must come from individuals and as such because of the very struc ture of the organization, seems' insignificant. Hence, the ideal of student freedom of expres sion is definitely hindered rather than furthered by this lack of organization. Conversely, the Playmaker heads, having recourse to only iso lated opinions in play writing and acting classes, are subject to making decisions decidedly un popular to the student Playmaker producing unit which is required to carry them out. An organized student group would thus provide a definite meeting ground for student and faculty opinion and through this contact would allow each a check on the other. In this way the chances for dissatisfaction would be greatly les sened and an incentive to pull together as a fully represented organization would be created. The student organization headed by officers and, possibly, a steering committee could in addition take over still more concrete tasks by way of eliminating problems which recur yearly in the Playmaker routine. Instead of the pres ent haphazard method of conducting the annual Playmaker "Revels" and "Capers" by casting all responsibility upon the head of some poor over worked student, the organized body of student members would logically assume responsibility for the events. Persistent tartars such as the question of Yackety Yack representation would be easily and practically handled. Much needed rules on the usage of Playmaker sets and prop erties could be fairly proposed and enforced. Finally, on such vital points of Playmaker policy as tours, experimental and public productions, and the annual state dramatic tournament, the cooperation and recommendations of an organ ized, self -controlled student Playmakers would be invaluable. Surely the more than half hundred student Playmakers now on the campus are entitled to group representation in the planning which di rectly requires their participation.' Surely a stu dent group which the heads proudly' declare has an all-time scholastic average of near Phi Beta Kappa is capable of forming and conducting a constructive organization. With the acquisition of a will to organize and a promise of coopera tion from Playmaker heads, the student person nel may well operate to the profit of all con cerned. E.R.O. - Lawyers And the Co-op Here and there one hears mutterings about the law school directorate of the Cooperative Dry Cleaners. From the accusations that we have chanced to hear it appears that those complain ing have not had the facts at hand. The idea of a cooperative dry cleaning plant had been occupying the minds of several stu dents for. about.two years before the plant ma terialized. These students, by. the time the idea matured, were in the law school. The opening of the co-op presented a legal problem first of all that would have beaten down any group that was not acquainted with the law, so from that angle it was wise to have law students heading the plant. When the directors were chosen these things were not exactly paramount in selecting the group. It was figured that members were needed from the dormitory council, the service rooms, the fraternity group, the interfraternity managers, and the student body at large. In this manner the first directors were named, and it merely happened that they were all in the law school. The . muttering has been about the present method of choosing the directors. First of all Li T . A V . M -V - - -' -m - . m me present directors nave done Detter tnan a good job with the experiment, and there is no reason for wanting a change at the present. The remaining debt on the plant will fee dissolved by the end of the month, which is no smal achievement for a plant that has given the good service and reasonable costs that the co-op has. In further defense of the benevolent fathers' of the enterprise, it should be stated that they have been working on a plan of electing directors. The directors realize that it is out of the ques tion to allow the 'posts to be elected by the stu dent body, for the student body has been con sistent in picking popular rather than able lead ers. On the other hand the student members would not stand for an autocratic selection of directors (which is not without reason either). It appears that the present directors are likely to work out a plan of selection which allows the directors to name their successors subject to the approval of the members. Any plan that can satisfactorily solve the problem is welcome, but we do not believe that criticism is justified un less there is something better offered. B.C.P. Out of Nothing . Voting for the proposal that the Student coun cil be given power to decide on all matters of dispute between student officials, subject to a referendum of the student body, the latter group Wednesday turned out 200 strong to pass the proposition by, an overwhelming count. The advantages of the proposal as a definite student policy are obvious enough. It will place power where power is heeded and advantageously administered ; it will put an end to the petty controversies and the larger disagreements aris ing between student organizations ; it will clearjy distinguish a single group as the judicial and legislative body to which all questions of this nature will be referred. And it will also give the student body the power and duty to express its opinions in interpreting the decisions. But, we ask, what good is the referendum to a student body which turns but but one-tenth of its number to ratify its use as a democratic weapon ? Are not the results of Wednesday's voting spree ludicrous when we realize that the students were voting to give themselves the power of the referendum in order to represent their opinions and only 200 appeared at the polls? It diverts from ridiculousness, however, when we consider the extreme importance of the first part of the clause purported to establish a much-needed central power for campus organ izations. Wex cannot help remarking, nevertheless, on the hopelessness of the whole situation. Surely if a student body has no more interest in dedi eating to itself the powers of democratic refer endum, it will hardly rise from its lounging posi tion to lumber through the polls in order to ex press itself on an activity question similar to, say, the recent Publications Union board's rotat ing membership mix-up. Out of their casual interest has come the power of referendum with no power of duty. P.G.H. Looters Locked Out Some time ago an editorial appeared in the Daily Tar Heel, advocating new locks for the doors of the dormitories on the campus. To date nothing has been done, but it is hoped that the buildings department will take advantage of the summer vacation to put on new locks or fix the old ones so that the rooms cannot be easily entered by thieves. The locks now on the doors are equipped with oblique latches which can be easily pushed back by inserting a quizbook in the door and applying a little pressure on the latch. Due to this simple method of breaking into a dormitory room, thieves have stolen money, books, and clothing at frequent times during the past school year. The very ease with which one can enter a dormitory room almost at will is itself an in vitation for a robbery. If, however, the locks on the doors were equipped with square latches, the only means of entrance to the rooms would1 be by means of a key. While robberies have been reported from al most every dormitory on the campus, Carr dormitory has been immune to the crime wave that has blown over the campus this year. The fact is easily explained by an examination of the locks in" that dormitory, which would show them to be equipped with square latches. " No doubt the University would have to go to some expense to equip the locks with square latches, but it is doubtful that the cost of doing this would ex ceed the total amount of cash, books, and clothing stolen from dormitory rooms during the past year. J.L. TEA DANCE OPENS MAY FROLICS SET (Continued from page one) ami Beach Fla. ; Jane Hess Wea ver, High Point: Mary Alice Nash, Columbus, Ohio; Wilfred Schlosser, Greensboro; Mar tha Thomas, Richmond ; Lucy Dortch, Raleigh; Emily Ray, New Haven, Conn. ; and Clotilda Jones, Salisbury. D. K. E. Dates Delta Kappa Epsilon: Jane Craige, Winston Salem; Vir- ginia Johnston, Norfolk, Va.; Mary Davis Harrison, Peters burg; Virginia Moore, Bennetts- ville, S. C. ; Charlotte Winborne, Marion ; Katherine Jamiespn, Oxford ; Chloe Frierson, Colum bia, Tenn. ; Rebecca Jordan, Chapel Hill ; Jane Carlton, Greensboro ; Etta Burt Warren, Trenton; Margaret Lewis, Dur ham ; Margaret Willliams, Win ston Salem ; Katherine Arns, Wheeling, W. Va. ; Liza Lewis, Oxford ; Rose Rogers, Greens boro; Matilda Ehringhaus, Ral eigh ; Laura Lyon, Durham ; and Esther .Mebane, Chapel Hill. With Zeta Psis Zeta Psi : Patte Evans, Mem phis, Tenn.; .Mary Banks Mc- Pherson, Durham; Emily Wes- cott, ' Long Island, N. Y. ; Jane Morrison, Charlotte; Florrie Ad- kins, Atlanta; Carolyn Kramer, Elizabeth City; Mary Wisdom Lambeth, Charlotte ; Estelle FoL lin, Winston - Salem ; Nancy Nalle, Charlotte ; Martha Cheat ham, Wilson ; Ida Smith, Dunn ; Jane Raoul, Asheville ; Mary Harris, Wilmington ; Grace Bowes, Rockingham ; Mary Neal Moody, Charlotte; Betty Fowles, Nashville ; Marion Gwaltriey, Macon, Ga. ; Helen Broadhurst, Goldsboro ; and Ann Howman, Miami Beach, Fla. S. A. E. Guests Sigma Alpha Epsilon : Victo ria Jenkins, Savannah, Ga.; Ma rion Taylor, Asheville ; Mary Mc Kay, Concord ; Dolly Bell, Savan nah; Josephine Meador, Atlanta; Frances Jones, Greensboro; Alice CoWles Barringer, Char lotte; Maria Parham, Hender son; Clara M. Grantham; Julia Shirley, Richmond; Ann Moore, Florence, S. C. ; Barbara Fulton, Knoxviller Tenn.; Harriet Du- bose, Columbia, S. C. ; Frances Darden, Suffolk, Va. ; Alice Boat wright, Wilmington; Sarah Snipes, Raleigh; Morgan Hazen, Knoxville, Tenn. ; and Louise Tompkins, Columbia, S. C. Sigma Chi Visitors Sigma Chi: Ellen Adams, Ma- con, Ga.; Susan Kennedy, Cam den, S. C; Ruth Whitton, Char- lotte ; Ruth Lang, Carthage ; Sally Jordan, Jackson, Miss. Nell Joslin, Raleigh; Jean Twit- ;y, . Rock Hill, S. C. ; Louise Brown Michaels, Greensboro ; Mary Ellen Watts, Charlotte; Margaret Mallory, Cheraw, S. C. ; Betsy Wright, Asheville ; Marion Traynham, Burlington ; Elizabeth Armfield, Greensbor6 ; ... Mary Coppedge, Rockingham; Frances Askew, Windsor; Eliza beth Turnbull, Boydton, Va. ; Alice DePass, Camden, S. C. Jean Harris, Camden, S. C.-r Pat sy McMulIan, Chapel Hill ; Vir ginia Ezzard, Atlanta ; and Mar- jorie Mills, Evanston, HI. Beta Theta Pi Beta Theta Pi : Jane Crabtree, Greensboro; Ellen 'Praftj Bir mingham, Ala.; Agnes Williams, Jacksonville, . Fla. ; . Hortense Jones, Greensboro; Sarah Bad- ham, Edenton ; Frances Piatt, Durham; Martha Fry, Greens boro; Mary Starr Martin, Win ston-Salem ; Eva Stevenson, Charlotte ; Eleanor Hayes, Char lotte; Sarah Denny, High Point ; Elizabeth Neal, Marion; Cleo Brown, Fayetteville ; Gertrude Hass, Charleston. S. C. : Ella Garrett, Greenville ; Dorothy Clark, Fayetteville r Claire Hanes, Winston-Salem; , Ellen Kelly, Greensboro ; Roberta Mc- Graw, Asheville; Hilton Roller, Fort Defiance, Va;; Elizabeth Shands, Gainesville, Fla Kitty Kiker, Reidsville; Caroline Dal- ton, High Point ; Cleve Wharton, Winston-Salem ; Margaret Hay den, High Point ; Ruth-'Garrett, Danville, Va.; Betty Voegtlen, Summit, N. J. ; ; Agnes Leak, Greensboro ; Bruce Cro well, Dan ville, Va. ; Sally Couch, Charlotte. PRACTICAL VALUE OF OCCUPATIONAL GUIDANCE SHOWN (Continued from page one) He'said vocational subjects were taught in agriculture, home eco nomics, and business - training. L. M. Miller, guidance direc tor in Rockland County, N. Y., showed how he learned about occupations of parents through a survey made by school chil dren m 47 districts. , Dean W. C. Jackson of the University school of public ad ministration presided . over a session on Negro guidance : at which Dr. S. L. Smith, director of the southern office of the Rosenwald fund, Nashville, dis cussed the "essential needs of the Negro" and Dr. N. C. New- bold, state director of '. Negro education m North . Carolina, suggested a state program of I guidance for Negroes. , , Yesterday afternoon the dele gates visited the CCC camp near Durham and were taken on a tour of the Duke University campus alter which, they were guests of Duke at a dinner meeting. ' V i Speakers at last night's ses sion over which Frank Cush- nian, chief of the Industrial ucation Service, United Stat Office of Education, preside were: William H. Stead, associl ate director, United States Eail ployment Service, Department of Labor; Miss Mary Stewart, assistant director, Bureau 0f Indian Affairs, Department of Interior; and L. J. 0'Rourker director of Personnel Research' United States Civil Service Commission. FINCHLEY HERE TODAY Students' Co-op Cleaners' Go your own (Way on your own ships TO EUROPE COLLEGE men and women are dis covering that there is something new in Tourist Class on America's new liners, the Manhattan and Washington. You'll find broad, sunny decks high up in the ship;,large and beautiful public rooms; modern, well ventilated cabins; tiled swimming pool; air-conditioned dining salon. The Manhattan n&Wasbington,xhz world's fastest cabin liners. With their running mates, the President Hardin n A President Roosevelt, they offer weekly service to oDfc, Plymouth, Havre and Hamburg. TOURIST CLASS (up) One "Way S204 (up) Round Trip , Sailings between June 11 to July 9 rates slightly higher. Stt your local agent. His strvicts an iW - UIIITED STATES LL'ES Xooscrelt Steamship Company. Inc. Gen. Arts. '' - mPanys Office: 111 E. Plume St, Norfolk, Va. MED STUDENTS OBSERVE INMATES OF DIX HILL Members of. Dr. R. B. Law. son's class in physical diagnosis visited the state hospital fer the insane at Dix Hill in Raleigh yes- . . octunu group from Lawson's class to visit the .iwumiiuu mis weeK, another having gone Tuesday. The purpose of the medical students in making the trip is uuivc vwG3 ui patnoiogical " paneii Ls ana to conduct examinations pertaining Just Received New Shipment SU3IMER SLACKS 1.95 thru 2.85 SPORT SHIRTS Terry Cloth or Mesh 95c SLEEVELESS SWEATERS by McGregor 1.45 thru 2.45 THE YOUNG HEN'S SHOP 126-128 E. Main St. Durham, N. C. I LlGIIT food is the kind that will keep the brain in action. So start the day with Kellogg's Rice Krispies. Thoe crisp, crunchy rice bubbles with milk or cream appeal to the taste and fur nish energy you need. Rice Krispies at lunch are also ideaL "Won't bog you down. And at the end of the day when hungry and tired Rice Krispies satisfy the appetite and promote sound sleep. Ask for Kellogg's Rice Krispies at your campus restaurant, fraternity house or eating club. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. Listenl