Page Two THE TARHEEL Tuesday, March 12, 192? Wfy Car Sleel Leading Southern College Tbi Weekly Newspaper The Theatre "Mum's the Word" Published three times weekly during the college -year, and is the official newspaper of the Publications Union of the University of North v Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Sub scription price, $2.00 local and $3.00 out of towni for the college year. Offices in the basement of Alumni Building. Walter Spearman ..... Editor George Ehrhart Mgr. Ed Marion Alexander ... Bus. Mgr. editorial department Harry Galland : Assistant Editor Glenn Holder John Mebane .......... Will Yarborough Assistant Editor Assistant Editor Sports Editor Tuesday, March 12, 1929 PARAGRAPHICS "Mum's the Word" is still rocifer ous and seems to be going strong the campus insists upon talking about it despite the command to silence in the .title. Beginning next term, State College will levy a fifty cent fine on students for each class cut. Hard on the stu dents but at least a fine way to make money. .. ' If such a system were in vogue here pretty soon we'd have- enough cash to complete Graham Memorial. - Bill Perry and Loretto Carroll Bailey read papers last night at the N. C. Club on "Rural N. C. at Play." No doubt they were entirely familiar with the subject Bill edits the Buc- career and Loretto writes prize plays. Emory University is to choose its niotpouiar and representative nian and bestow upon him the title of "Doctor of Stupidity." Wecan't help wondering how , anyone outside the J student body will know that such a title carries with it a high honor. He and She" On Paying Double At State College The very latest collegiate style in securing money has been announced by State College authorities every student is to be fined fifty cents for each class cut without a satisfactory excuse. All accumulated fines will then be turned over to the various departments of the college for the purchase of new equipment. "Splendid idea!" declaim the fac ulty members, "now students cannot afford to cut class." "Rotten!" de clare the students, "it's our educa tion, so why not let us take it as we see fit. And certainly there's no jus tice in making us pay for what We don't get." The whole idea of fines for miss ing classwork is a giant's .step away from the ideal of real education: that is, the development and self-realization of the individual student. When a man comes to college, it is fqr the purpose of learning things of inter est to himself, of entering new vistas of knowledge, of fitting himself for the business of living, of trying to discover just what it's all about. If the ends sought are best obtained by faithful attendance at classes, well and good. But, if, one -day, more is to be learned from personal work in the library or in a private confer ence with another person, certainly that is to be preferred to class and certainly no fine should be forthcom ing. Furthermore, if the professor is unable to make the class work inter esting enough to draw the student and hold his attention, then some thing is wrong either with the pro fessor or with the course. And why, pray, should the student be fined be cause the professor happens to be so incompetent that he cannot secure attendance? This is indeed a strange proceeding at State and the students lose either way. They come to college and pay for their education. Then if they do not take it just exactly as the administration advises, they must pay again because they are not . ... By H. J. GALLAND A good, fast, tuneful college musical comedy was shown last night at Me morial hall before an unusually en thusiastic audience. The production was "Mum's the Word," presented by the Wigue and Masque club of the University. Contrary to the usual procedure, the show has a recognizable plot. It is cleverly written, and presents ex cellent opportunities for - dancing and singing, all of which are eagerly seiz ed by a cast which made up in enthu siasm what it lacked in training. First-night flaws are generally smoothed under an avalanche of ap plause from admiring relatives, of the performers, benevolent professors and their wives, and proud swains. So it was with the first performance of this amateur production. The cast was none too sure of itself, and gave evidence of much last minute work on the part of the director. Missed cues, poor handling jof scenery, and such amateur faults were present, but not so noticeable as to interfere appreci ably with the show. Throughout the piece, the dancing and singing was way above the average. Wex Malone did a good job with the music, including several catchy tunes to the words of Al Kahn. "Sitting in the Moonlight," one of the featured songs, is worthy of whistling for at least a week after the last per formance, and probably will be heard on the campus long after the show has packed up its scenery and props and departed. "Co-ed," sung first as a duet by Ann Lawrence and Frank Jacocks and then by a trio consisting of the Misses Lawrence, Moore, and McKinnie is in teresting but not very successful. Marilee Shaw and Bobby Hedgecock put over their-song with extra polish. Their dancing and acting is excellent, and they turned in two of the best per formances of the show. Andy Macintosh and Elizabeth Barber danced with ease and sang wen. .Howard .Bailey's acting was good, as usual, making his love scenes with Phoebe Harding effective and interesting. The chorus work was also unusually excellent, giving evi dence that emphasis was put on the singing and dancing during the re hearsals. They are the real features of the performance, as they should be in a musical comedy. Sidney Glickman's harmonica play ing at the beginning of the second act was a welcome and professionally good interlude. His rendering of "The Song of India" and "The Rhapsody in ,Blue" cannot be beat. He was not given enough latitude to put his stuff over. The other feature of the perfor mance also not only was equal to the publicity blurbs assigned it but sur passed the enthusiastic descriptions given. Miss Peggy Burgaw's solo dance was the type of thing that is generally described with such terms as "zephyr," "swansdown," "grace ful," and just plain ordinary "swell," She is pretty, lithe, and her abbreviat ed costume showed off her well turned figure to perfection. The audience could not seem to get enough of her. She is worth the price of admission and her part was much too limited. Moore Bryson as the Dean, Mary Dirnberger as Mrs. Willoughby, and Art Sickles as Mr. Willoughby, the ever-present rich alumnus, do well with their parts. Bobby Hedgecock and Marilee Shaw seem to enjoy their parts, and as a result the au dience enjoys watching them. Mari lee Shaw's "Flo-Flo Farraday" is one of the best things in the show. Miss Shaw plays the part of the' tough actress with intelligence. Her hips are among the most eloquent proper ties in the show. ' J Wardlaw's Orchestra was ade quate. They played somewhat too fast, making it difficult for the sing ers and dancers to catch up with them. Malone's music was well or chestrated and sounded good. The costumes are the most original and beautiful to be seen here in a long while. The designers did a par ticularly effective job with Miss Shaw's dress and the costumes for the chorus number wherein the girls do a Tiller imitation on their knees. The scenery, all of it designed and constructed by studentsis useful but not particularly pretty or artisic. One or two of the modernistic effects, de signed by Miss Mary Dirnberger, are worthy of notice. - On the whole "Mum's the Word" is well-staged, tuneful, with a good-looking chorus, excellent- dancing, and good singing. There is nothing necessarily lame about a lame duck unless he tries to taking what they have already paidjcrowd in at the public feedtrough for! Springfield Republican. By J. E. DUNGAN He and She by Rachel Crothers. Presented by The. .Town Stage Soci ety of Columbia, "S. C, at the Play makers Theatre, March 8th and 9th. Directed by William Dean. Settings by William Dean assisted by Uni versity of South Carolina English 33 and 34 classes. v The Cast Tom Herf ord......Mr. G. E. Whitehead Ann Herford .Mrs. Julius Taylor Daisy Herford.: Miss Epps Jones Millicent...... Miss Sarah Quattlebaum Dr. Remington... Mr. Alex Martin Keith McKenzie...Mr. Eward PritchaTd Ruth Creel Miss Luite Robertson Ellen . ........... Miss Daisy Powell Rachel Crothers is a writer of the Woman's Home Companion stamp, nothing more. This play of hers crudely named He and She, is an un natural handling of what is proving to be a dead issue; i.e., man's desire to be his mate's complete overlord. Three dreary acts filled with com monplace dialogue set forth, with no genuinely convincing situations the age-old battle- between the sexes. The expressed object of Little Theatre is to regenerate appreciation of the finer things in drama, and to present to those persons who still have hope for the future of the spoken stage true examples of dra matic literature. If, however, I have misconceived the object of the Little Theatre, and that it vis to provide only another means of amusing per sons, then He and She fills the' bill. Miss Crothers most assuredly pointed her piece toward the box office, seek ing to capitalize on the ideal of the regime through which we have al ready passed, in addition to giving her play a tawdry title which no doubt garnered not a few dollars for its author. There is nothing ingeni ous about its plot or sprightly about its dialogue; its entire life depends upon the uttering of countless shib boleths . and trite phrases which strangely enough strike home with a great many audiences. With the handicap of producing a poor play, coupled with the fact that the cast was typically amateurish, William Dean, the University of South Carolina professor in play writing and producing, was able to make a fair production of the play after all.' In this connection, it ought to be said of the directing, however, that whenever Ann came down front, the loss of balance among the actors was very noticeable. Dean must have had considerable effort keeping his actors in character judging by the number of times they slipped during the course of the play. The timing was irritatingly slow. None of the actors stressed cues. I don't know whether it was Dean's fault or not, out none of the cast with the single exception of Miss Jones displayed any subtlety or much variety in their acting. In fact the majority of them seized one tone and held tenaciously to it, fearing to show any variety. Directly in back of us were two of the faculty accompanied by their wives. We felt warmly attached to them during the entire progress of the play because of their critical evaluation of the music furnished by the Playmakers preceding and dur ing the acts by means of a phono graph played in the orchestra pit. They both agreed that it sounded very much akin to "a freight truck in a warehouse." We might add that it was worse than the local moving picture palace orchestra, which it is agreed is a considerable concession. The play was written for Ann Her ford, the sculptor's wife, who is her self a sculptor, and Mrs. Julius Tay lor looked the part when she made her entrance. She lost her oppor tunity to , star, though, by her monotonous interpretation. But Miss Epps Jones portraying the role of Daisy Herford, the sister-in-law who longs for marriage, but whom cir cumstance has kept single, stole the play from right under Mrs. Taylor's nose. Miss Jones was miles ahead .of the rest of the cast. Her intonations, her facial expressions, her poise, car riage and enunciation were all re markably good. She only .slipped from quality acting once when she let fall one of those altogether' f or eign "d-a-m-m-m's. She didn't just read her lines like most amateurs, she lived them. Her .very pointed re mark about "marriageable women lying around thick" was so realisti cally done that it made you want to meet her back stage and propose.. That's real acting. On the - whole the feminine roles were better filled than the masculine. Miss Saiah Quattlebaum cast in the role of MilLcent, the sixteen year oui daughter of the family, was capi tal, although her acting was . a bit forced at times. Miss Lutie Robert son in the part of Ruth Creel with fewer lines than most of the players exhibited the fact that she had studied her role, and was attempting to get the most out of a difficult paxt. In her unimpassioned love scenes with Keith, Miss Robertson was a little too . inhuman, as we in terpret the part of the woman torn ietween position and a home. Then there was Ellen, the inevitable Irish maid (all maids are either Irish or French in this kind of play), inter preted by Miss Daisy Lee Powell, who is as pretty and comely a maid as any family would desire, but not an altogether finished actress. Dr. Remington, - father of Mrs. Herford, whose sudden and mys terious departures were interestingly reminiscent of the melodramatic de tectives of the thrillers of the past century, was played by Mr. Alex Martin who was comparatively speak ing, excellent. He took a grotesque part and softened it into some, sem blance of reality by means of his own personality. Mr. G. E. Whitehead, playing op posite Mrs. Taylor in the part of Tom Herford never got into character ex cept on rare occasions. He 'fumbled his lines badly. His statue scene in the third act when . he goes into a trance for a period of several mo ments was unintentionally humorous. Mr. Edwin Pritchard the other ac tor in He and She, we, have been told, is a person of great versatility. We have it on the best information that he is, among other things, a senior in the law school at the University of South Carolina, an athletic coach, and a member of the state legislature. We are certain of this much, he ' is no actor He burlesqued his part by overacting. When he said that he was "down and out" in the second act we hoped he wouldn't get up again. His. prize line was this: "As Daisy said, he's sore, naturally enough spoken in the most unnatural tone that he could have commanded. He and She, and its actors evident ly pleased the majority of the audi ence. Notwithstanding, critically judged, it is a poor play, this pro duction of it was fair, and the; acting was typically amateurish. "' ' The Kansas State Teachers' College at Emporia has secured a loan of $15,000 with which to complete the student union building. , Dialectic Senate Will Elect Officers The meeting of the Dialectic Senate tonight will be given over largely to the election of Spring quarter offi cers. An entire set of off icials will be chosen, with the exception of John Norwood who was chosen Spring quarter president at an earlier date. The - retiring off icers are : - H. N. Brown, president; J. C. Williams, president-pro-tem; T. R. Karriker, clerk; R. A. Parsley, assistant- treasurer; and J. E. Hunter, critic. After the election the senate will discuss the proposition of birth con trol in the United States! The resolu tion is: "Resolved, That the Di Senate go on record as favoring the adoption of a system of birth control in the United States." Discussions tonight are expected" to disclose the advanta ges and the disadvantages of such a plan in striking contrast. Along life's highway are many pil grims, but some of them are not mak ing any progress. WHAT IS THE MARKET PRICE FOR LOVE? -" g. & tr pigO. TITAN ASlPft TICKER i iigif J aiiBii 'ifllil bids a iliJ Tni George Bancroft A j i ll f v forJ" lata: i r flfei "Wolf of Wall Street" with-- BACLANOVA NANCY CARROL BEHIND the frenzy of Wall Street looms 'The Wolf"! The Stock Market Giant! The ruth less fighter!" Roaring into battle and loving it! While, at home, waits the enticing beauty on whom he lavishes . his wealth. "The Wolf's" wife. Is she alone? Added COMEDY I ; NOVELTY TODAY LINA BASQUETTE -in "Younger Generation" - - o THIS IS THE WHY AND HOW OF IT There's a part of you somewhere between your Adam's apple and your ankles concerned with smoke-judgment. . And you can't fox that smoke-sense if it really knows its cigarettes! Here's the test: Light a Camel and pulLin a cloud of cool fragrance. The deep approval inside is witnessed by "that certain feeling." Try and match it! We'll bet a hand-painted lemonade shaker you can't do it. ' - ; ;.-.!;.: ' 1928 R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, VINSTON-SALEM, N. C.