12 Pages, Today o Second Section volums. XXXIV CHAPEL HILL, SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1926 NUMBER 64 THE INDIVIDUAL AT CAROLINA IS GIVEN EVERY ATTENTION JSIEV MEN AKE NOW INTRODUCED TO UNIVERSITY THROUGH ' SYSTEMATIC ATTENTION STUDENTS EARLY ORIENTED " . ' , , JO CAMPUS-FACULTY AND UPPERCLASSMEN ASSIST - NEW. MEN IN GETTING ACQUAINTED ; , By H. W. Chase . , .'. President of The University of North Carolina In a recent publication by the Univer sity of 'Minnesota there occurs this state mftiti "An outstanding accomplishment of the past 20 years has been the redis covery of the Indlyklual In the mass, lne was when nearly any group was relatively small jahcl, tach person, how ever slender his' accomplishments, stood nut s something, of, an entity.. He drew Department of Psychology Then there is the work of the De partment of Psychology, which conducts tests of mental alertness for all enter ing students, and maintains, an examina tion service for all who desire a more thorough form of mental examination. There Is the Y. M. C. A., in charge of Mention by the ' mew fact of his being ' individual opportunities for self-help and - . " 1 ' wuusc vuuinuuuuu iu me ueveiopmeiu "As men massed in greater and greater masses to accomplish the things which the world..-, required,? the individual be came less and less conspicuous. And as so often happens, this situation brought it own cure, for society dcided that it must pay purposeful and intentional hd to sits indlyldualifi it was to fit him into the niche that would best serve public ends, At 'result .of this awak ening the individual, in the mass seems destined soon 16 1 better off than the individual "in'ilier'isinaUM '.'group, for in the larger group 4iis case will be taken up and given individual attention, where as in, the smaller, group he may be as sumed to N jk-ell enough off by virture of his position and may receive little per sonal consideration or none." ',. Develops the Individual The University of North Carolina- is committed to- a program of seeking to develop and assist the individual ; stu dent An "institution of the size of the University naturally offers many stimu lating contacts. . Men of many types of mind and interest gather on its campus from this and Other states. There is a variety and broadening influence about its life , that, arises naturally out of the many things ,that go son, tbt many lines of activity on the part of its faculty ' and student jbody" -..i'.-y.-'. 'r -. . It lsLtbei.Xatth. ,.of the- University that to. such advantage there can be added, through proper organiiation and fore thought provision, for tlie . individual which is of distinctive Quality;-that far from being tost in the mass, the indi vidual student can. secure attention which is systematic and intelligent pre cisely because it does bring to bear the resources of a large, and complex insti tution on the task. Of the "form which that work is assuming it is my purpose to say something here. Each College Has Dean In the first place, the student who registers In the .University enrolls in a particular college or schooU It may. be the College of XiberafArts, the School of Commerce, or Engineering, or Applied Science, or Education, or -Pharmacy, or, later in his course, Law or Medicine or the School of Public Welfare or the Graduate School. Now he will find that ia whatever school he registers, he comes a once under the supervision of its dean, those business a Is to keep in contact with him and hias vork. Thus at once his immediate group - is reduced from twenty-five hundred to one of a few hun dred students with which a responsible University official is constantly in touch. - Dean of Students Again, the University maintains an of fice, headed by a full-time Dean of Stu dents,, whose concern it is to deal with the Individual and "his problems, and the student life on the campus. The Dean of Students is, not an official concerned with discipline. lie i Is rather a counsel lor with vhom individuals can, and do, Niter into tits, frankest and most confi dential relationships. Just because this office does such a great variety f things for individuals," It is difficult' to describe its works jn a" systematic 'way. Here nters the administration of, student loan funds, and So discussion of individ ual financial problems. ' Under this of fice, for example, have been organised this Spring Quarter groups totalling hout 800 Freshmen,'' for discussion of opportunities and the training re Wired for different professions and oc cupations. From this' office is a(?mlnls frred the work In intramural athjetlcs "t centers about thfci purpose of giv. ing every ; individual who is interested opportunityto compete in healthful ath letic sports, with regular schedules of games between the 'dormitory and fra ternity house: units. -Tne basketball sea Son, for example, ; has seen forty-two teams taking regular part In this' year's Program.--These are simple illustrations. Very much of the work cannot be dassi M here, it will suffice to say that any "tudent can find In this office at any time sympathetic counsel n any problem, no ftatter bow personal, that may be In his mind. - --,'-v-f.. : of student leadership hi the moral and religious life of the University is very great. There is the deep personal in terest in students, their life and problems, manifest in the pastors of the various churches, some of which have added stu dent pastors especially for personal work with students. Reception of New Students The attitude of the University is well Illustrated by its procedure in the re ception of new students.' These men are now asked to come to the Univer sity two days before the other students. They meet together for a general intro ductory talk or two, and then they are divided into sections of some thirty men, each with its faculty; advisor and some upper classman who has volunteered for the purpose. This makes it possible for every man to get individual attention from the start; the advisors are numer ous enough to look after individual dif ficulties. : Then these same small . sec tions are taken by the student officials bpens here in less than three weeks from for talks about self-government, the men are given individual physical examina tions, mental tests, shown how to use the library, and in general introduced to the University. Teaches Self-Reliance , In justhe same way, the University's theory of discipline is personal. "It is that, instead of attempting to hedge stu dents around with voluminous rules and regulations as to their conduct, every in dividual is expected to feel a sense of responsibility for his own conduct, and his share of the responsibility for what goes on in the campus community. Very different is all this from the idea that some men may have, that the in dividual student at Carolina is simply a cog in a machine. Just how much room for the individual there is here no one can appreciate until he becomes a part of the University life. To develop and strengthen this fine tradition of Caro lina Is one of the purposes that the University tries to keep constantly in view. ' ' Forever something between us and what we deem our happiness. - Byron. LARGE INCREASE IN COUNTY CLUBS First Groups Were Organized v in 1901. HQLD REGULAR MEETINGS Purpose Is to Promote Spirit of Friendship and Cooperation. : By 3. N. Robbins It has now been nearly a quarter of a century since the "great era of county clubs," as some one has aptly called it, began at Carolina. In 1904, groups of students from Buncombe, Wake, Meck lenburg, and Forsyth . organized them selves into compact groups with more or less regular meeting dates' rules and by laws and recognizing the county as the unit of membership. There was some at tempt made to prepare regular programs for the meetings and the county club idea received instant favor from the stu dents. The fad swept over the campus like a whirlwind. The clubs that had already been installed met with gratifying suc cess, and many others were formed. Soon the students from larger towns and from other states began forming town and state clubs outside the county club, and the report stated that they "were still corning." . , When the Raleigh Club made its ap pearance on the campus known by the flaring streamers worn by its members, the Tar Heel seemed to think that the limit had about been reached and was led to deliver itself of the following sar castic remark: "The formation of this society has suggested other similar or ganizations, and it is 'said that ribbons will soon appear for clubs representing University, Station and other large cor porations." The clubs have continued to increase in numbers and in membership. Prac tically every county in the state is now represented by a club at the University. Many of the larger towns are still rep resented and most of the other states that send students here. It has been es timated that there are now at least 150 organizations of the county club type on the campus" and that nearly every stu dent is a member of one of these clubs. The early clubs were very different from those of today. In spite of the best efforts of the officers, the organization was loose and the meetings sporadic, to say the least. No regular program was carried out after the first few meetings, and these gatherings which were usual ly held in some dormitory room often turned into regular matador sessions. These clubs today are run on a busi ness like basis. Regular weekly, bi-weekly or monthly meetings are held. Their purpose is to promote a better, spirit of friendship and cooperation among stu dents from the same counties. Graduate students and, prominent men from out. in the state and often from other states are invited to lecture at the meetings. When there is no regular speaker for the meeting, many of the clubs require the members to prepare speeches tiiem ( Continued on page four) , : UNIVERSITY BUILT IN A WILDERNESS Uuilt Here Because GMtizens ! Willingly Donated Land. NORTH STATE WAS POOR Chapel Hill Was At Juncture of Two I ' Heavily Travelled Highways. The Carolina Playmakers Of University Of North Carolina i Until the establishment of the oldest state university, the University of North Carolina, in 1798, Chapel Hill, situated at the junction of the heavily travelled north and south and east and west pike roads, could boast of only a tavern and a small church of England, from which the town derives its name. The latest census figures place the pop ulation of the town at 2,146,' exclusive of the student body. The two pike roads ran from Pittsboro to Petersburg, and from Newburn to Hillsboro. The most important one was that from plttsboro. From this town the highway extended to Fsyetteville, the social center of the state and the market town of the commonwealth. The crops and slaves were bartered to buyers in the Cumberland capital and the town of Fsyetteville ranked with Philadelphia and Charleston as the most important centers of trade and Industry In the nation. Many reasons have been assigned for selecting such a wilderness as Chapel Ilill- then was, for the site of the State's University. The most popular assump tion has been that its location woulld be very conducive to scholarly study. Like most popular ideas, the isolation theory is fallacious. The State of North Caro lina was very poor and the landowners of this section, possessing great tracts of virgin forests, willingly donated the -land upon which this institution is built. Mrs. Cornelia P. Spenser says, "Chapel Hill was chosen for the site of the University because the farmers who owned the land all round gave more liberally of their lands to endow the institution than the men in other sections. They had nothing but land to give and they gave that free ly." The surrounding land is made up of hundreds of low hills and mandocks most of which are glacial, submarine, or volcanic in origin. Much of the terri tory was once covered by the Triassic Sea. With an. average annual tempera ture of SflVi degrees, the climate is a bracing one. Chapel Hill has the cli matic features of Florence, Italy, ac cording to Collier Cobb. There has for a long time been a per sistent impression afloat that when the University was established, there was a clause included in the charter prohibit ing railways from running their lines to Chapel Hill. Stevenson did not invent his locomotive until twenty-seven years after the University arose in the prime val forest. After much agitation and litigation, the work was begun on the University railway in 1881. It was fin ished in the following year. Due to its limited schedule, students have .now en ( Continued on page four) The University of North Carolina, at Chapel Hill, the home of the Carolina Playmakers, is the oldest of all the stute universities. It was founded in 1789 and has well been called "The Mother of State Universities." Ths Carolina Playmakers were organ ized in 1918 by Frederick H. Koch, who had come to the University as professor of dramatic literature. Before this, Pro fessor Koch had been doing pioneer work in North Dakota since 1905, long be fore the beginnings of the Little The' atre movement. There he founded the Dakota Playmakers at the University of North Dakota. Believmg that "the lo cality if it be truly interpreted, is the only universal," Professor Koch has de veloped the writing of native plays in America as the Abbey Theatre group has done in Ireland. Of the two vol umes of Carolina Folk-Plays published by Henry Holt and Company, Augustus Thomas writes: "I have read them and I consider them fully equal to any of the Irish folk-lore plays produced by the Abbey Company under Lady Gregory's direction." And the folk-dramas of Da- kota and of Carolina have made a defi nite impress on the professional theatre. "No one can doubt," writes Arthur Hob son Quinn, "that the success of the Caro lina Playmakers has turned the atten tion of the playwrights (of Broadway) to this field." Anyone who is interested in writing, producing or acting in plays may be come a Ploymaker. The group Includes students and members of the faculty from all departments of the University, Professor Koch is interested not only in the creation of a North Carolina drama but welcomes students from other sec tions of the country to write plays of their own locality, based upon their own observation and experience. (Last sum mer, at Columbia University, he gave a course in play-writing for a group rep resenting widely different localities, ranging from Minesota to Louisiana.) One of the most remarkable plays writ ten and produced by the Playmakers at Chapel Hill was a Chinese folk-play, The Thrice-Promised Bride , written by Mr. fcheng-Chin Hsiung, of Nan Chang, China, who came to North Carolina for graduate work in the drama. The play has a naivete of humor and imagination. Its literary quality is evidenced by is publication in the Theatre Arts Monthly and The Golden Book and its inclusion in Frank Shay's volume of International Plays. - So the Carolina Playmakers in vite to their fellowship of playwrights and craftsmen, students from beyond the borders of their own state who are seri ously interested in the making of an American folk-theatre.' The stated aims of the I'luymukcrs are: (1) To promote and encourage dra matic art, especially by the publication and production of j)lays; (2) to serve as an experimental theatre for the develop ment of plays representing the tradi- UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA GLEE CLUB V"j nAiSr s A rj u V! If &v Pi Qy'7 3 U'-v itf nr. si .-II U k'0c, - l Members of the Club, reading "from left to right: Seated Ludwig Lauerlmuss, president; Paul John Weaver, uirectorj truest V. Young, business manager. First row-J. L. Cantwell, R. W. Wilkins, G. Y. Harris, R. Foltz, S. P. Vance, C. Cone, E. M. Hedgepeth, A. Laney, W. M. K. Bender, M C Berry, K. R. Jones, J. D. Mc-Connell. Second row P. N. Olive, C. C. Branch, D. M. Holshouser, C. T. Hawkins, E. II. Erwin, C. L. Breard, C a! Lee, R. B, Gladstone, 3. N. Neal, O. M. Smathers, C. U. Lawrence, P. S. Foster, R. II. Harris. Third rowU. E. Woodall, J. W. McClum rock T M Whitener, C. Nance, W. J. Cocke, Jr., R. M. Haidec, J. C Adams, R. M. Cain, F. X. Myers, K. F. Seldon, C. F. McRae. Fourth row J R, DeJouroatte, C W. Robinson, D. I). Carroll, T. B. Smith, O. Toms, G. M. Stephens, M. S. Pond, J. S. Trotter, E. L. Curlee, J. Crowson, X W Lttt Fifth row-T. H. Mackie, L. Watson, H. W. White, C H. Elmore, T. B, Ogburn, II. Kemp, L. Moore, J R. Baker, J. F. Cleminger. Sixth r(Wj, r. Dobbitt, H. S. Hall, W. F. Shaffncr, H. Weil, II. II. Briggs, J Starr, J. M. Parsley, II. K. McDowell, B W.'Williams. tions and various phases of present-day life of the people; (3) to extend its In fluences in the establishment of a native theatre in other communities. Their chief activities fulfilling these aims are threefold: (1) the production of original plays in the Playmakers The atre at Chapel Hill; (2) the state tours which carry the plays back to the people they interpret; (3) the Bureau of Com munity Drama throughout the state. ! Although formally listed in the Uni versity catalog as English 31, Dramatic Composition, there is a delightful infor mality about the play-writing group in which the Carolina folk-plays originate. Under Professor Koch's sympathetic guidance the rough Ideas of the student playwright gradually create their own forms. For this reason the plays and productions of the Carolina Playmakers have a fresjiness and vigor not often found in the non-professional theatre. The best plays written In the course are read each quarter at an author's reading. From these the play commit tee makes the selection for the new pro duction in the Playmakers Theatre. The Playmakers Theatre building on the campus is the first state theatre dedi cated to native drama. ' It Is a building of classic dignity and beauty. Going back to the days before the Civil .War, this vine-clad home of the Playmakers is a place of historic memories. ; The inside of the building has been entirely remodeled. The auditorium contains 345 seats on a single Inclined floor. Each seat affords a perfect view of the stage. The stage equipment and the, lighting system designed and in stalled by Mr. Monroe Pevear, of Bos tonare flexible und well-adapted for experimental purposes. Here directors of outside groups may come for aid In working , out their problems of stage craft. In this way, the Playmakers The atre is the radial center for dramatic art in North Carolina and beyond. . Since their initiul bill of original folk plays on March 14, 1919, on a makeshift jtoge they built themselves In the Chapel Hill high school there being no audi torium available on the campus the Carolina Pluymakers have produced 42 o ftheir own native plays, in addition to a series of studio productions of stand ard and clussic pluys and a number of Shakespearean productions on the lovely out-of-door stage of their Forest The atre. In these various productions over 475 players have participated and 91 North Carolina towns have been visited. Many of these had had no real dramatic production In years. Altogether, the Playmakers have played before more than 100,000 people. Besides their hume performances in Chapel Hill, they have taken their plays out over the state from coastal towns to mountain villages, for their stage equipment Is portable and may easily be adapted to any pvn hall or school audi torium. They travel In a big white auto mobile bus, the "Playmakers Special," with their scenery and lighting equip ment in a Ford truck behind. Professor Koch believes that the touring of the players Is an essential part of their training In bringing them into closer contact with the folk-life of their peo ple. They have made ten tours of North Carolina and last season a most success ful tour farther south. In such cities as Charleston, Atlanta, and Savannah, they were received with vast enthusiasm and the invitation to come back. The touring of the Playmakers hat aroused a new interest In the drama throughout the state. To meet this need the Bureau of Community Drama was organized in 1918 by Professor Koch. The work is efficiently carried out by Miss Ethel Rockwell, who serves as state representative of the Bureau. Miss Rock well has hud wide experience In page antry and community drama and has done a remarkable work in organizing and directing dramatic groups all over North Carolina. The Bureau has over 1,000 volumes of plays and books about the theatre, which are sent without charge beyond the post age to any person In the state. Besides this, pamphlets on play-production and suggested programs are published for distribution. Any one may write for suggestions and receive personal atten tion. Miss Rockwell and her assistants go to any community in the state to as sist In organizing dramatic groups, to conduct rehearsals, and to give instruc tion in make-up, and in the designing and making of scenery and costumes. An Important outgrowth of this de partment is the Carolina Dramatic Asso ciation, organized to cultivate dramatic art in the schools and communities. The Association arranges a series of state wide contests of one-act plays. The win (CoMcmutf on page four) '