Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 25, 1937, edition 1 / Page 1
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X 8m f I 1 II Wit Mr S 'iiws -J 1 i f I VOLUME .XLV EDITORIAL PKONE 43 fl CHAPEL HILL, N. C SUNDAY, APRIL 25, 1937. NUMBER 152 Parker Plans Murmck Appeals TiW Tvainincr For Stage Aides mining To Assist SHow Ui INew Men Council Will Set Date For Opening Of School Campus politicians who sur vived the recent election may see a more realistic side of their vic tory when they begin work to ward obtaining a degree in an officers-elect training school be fore the end of the year. The need for developing their general executive .ability was of ficially recognized yesterday Wigue when Incumbent Council Presi dent Parker announced that -plans were underway for a series tof lectures by faculty members on procedure, and the practical methods for conducting meet ings; ; .' Details The Student council in a ses- And Masque Business Manager Requests Help For Playbill, Props, Costumes joe murmck. ousmess man- QcroT vf Vi a Wimio on rl Moomio aorfAvehin . norliOTViOTlTaw T Ti Productions company, yesterday issued a call for assistants. He explained that before the first production, May 11, his staff must prepare a playbill, ar range costummsr. ana prepare aion Tuesday nignt wm set tne stage equipment. opening aate ana worK out ue- Dick 0lson and Jack Scatter tails. along lines similar to last g00d are Murnick's assistants, .year's school. ", Others wishing such a job may Parker enthusiastically en- communicate with Murnick at dorsed the move "to encourage telephone 4011. 4he academic education" of next gear's campus leaders, and an- TtfKlA Will Rpflri ticipated that Dr. Olsen of the iUCnje TT 111 lifSdll English and public speaking de partments would resume his po sition of last year as the school's headmaster. Discussion classes and lectures will probably be held during chapel period for approximately aweek and a half. - ' ' Anderson Drama "High Tor" To Be Given In Playmaker Theatre Held "High Tor." the hew - Ameri can comedy in verse by Max well Anderson,' will be read this evening at'8:30 in the Playmak ers theatre by Professor George McKie. Professor McKie's reading will Kutz Offers Students Ice Crejt'Y' Store Director Indicates Future Possibility Of Soda Fountain -": Ice cream goes on sale in the Book Exchange tomorrow- morn ing. ... . ' ' - : " ; W. S. . Kutz, director of . the X" building store, announced yesterday that over the week-end a six hole container is being in stalled. ? Products to be sold are pop- sicles, ice cream cups, sand wiches, and "push-outs." No bulk cream for cones will be handled. Long Campaign The addition of ice cream to the Exchange's stock climaxes a long student campaign. . Kutz stressed yesterday that "this is the students' center, They will get what they want.'1 He pointed out that with, the past two years students have se cured plain and chocolate milk, text book rebates, and the larg est assortment of merchandise in the store's history. He stated that pending the popularity of the ice cream coun ter,- other frozen milk products might be added. "And," he saidi "there may some day be -a soda fountain." Hudson Requests Magazine Staff To Attend Meet Editor Announces Staff Posi tions And Plans For Next ' Year's Publication Payton Will Stair mg Fiesta Community Sing Headliner - r - ur: A -r - ' . ; hi jack Payton, former national . champion xylophonist, who will be a guest performer tonight at 7:30 on the Graham Memorial Community Sing program directed by Leonard Levitch, to be held in the Main Lounge of the Student Union. Payton is a student of Duke university. New Dramas Issue To Have To Be Given Vote Tuesday Plays By Green, Bland Legislature Question McMullan, Spearman Comes To Head . Four plays never before given The question of instituting a production will be presented to- student legislature into campus morrow night at 8:30 in the government will be brought to ti i 4.1. x. nn. immediate consideration Tues P nrmnwro tnpnTro TnPdP urn. . .... . .. . day. night when the Student auctions will De open to tne pud- council meet either m lie ana: no aamission will De the issue or stamp it with their charged. approval. i The plays are "Cockle. Doody If the proposal survives coun- Doo," by Patsy, McMullan, "The n judgment, it will be submitted Goodbye;- b pS "Green, purfor;discussi6n in Plans arid contributions for Play Tryouts Will R A P one oi xne regular unaay thg Mav issue the Carolina nAv '-AWc evening play-readings sponsored Matrazine will be discussed at a Tn ,V . m A by the Carolina Haymakers. The meeting in the Grail room of TO Meet lUeSday nnhlic is invited to hear the new m.... --. - - . vjrraxiam lviemuxiai iuesiuty ax- The first reading rehearsal PIay which if. at Present one of ternoon at 2 o'clock. Everyone and try-out of the tentative cast tne outstanamg successes oi tne interested in working for the for "Androcles and the Lion" IorK season. Magazine in any capacity is in- will he held Tuesdav night at 7 In the play the story of a mo- yited to attend. The following " o'clock in the Playmakers thea- dern young man is blended with are especially requested to come: iter. a taie oi tne pnantom crew oi an Barksdale Bartlett, Beaty, Professotr Koch is directing old Dutch ship who wait for the Booker, Calhoun, Cone, Creedy! the production which will be return of their vessel. As play- Newby Crowell, Ruth Crowell, staged in the Forest theater 7 rgess mereaitn ana Daniel, Deppe, Fauce, Feldman, next month as the final play of esh?ro.ft,l?ni!r Foote, Gardner, Gordon, Hinkle, wnovw M9en, tion of uutnrie Mciintic, mgn Hochmann. Lee, Meder, Met- . ' , , Tor ' stands out as the most im- Lnifo Miller Munch Nieffli. TVn -rnTTi'nfr Tiqw hPPTi re- . - cane, miner, jxluuui, niz&u, riX.; : " Portant- oomeay w tne season, Pee Rabb, Reece, Smith, 1;hey are asked to be present Tuesday evening: Dr. Urban T. Holmes. Lubin Lecrerette. How ard Richardson, Mrs. Russell Smith, Jean Ashe, Charles Pen nington, Robert Finch, Mary Haynsworth, Ellen Deppe, Rob ert Nachtmann, Harold Augen blick. '; ' Others , Eugene Langston, Jack Lee, Paul Nickell, Sanford Stein, Manuel Korn.' Harold Liskiri, Samuel Hirsch, John Graff, Ger ald Hochman, Sanford Reece, Lammy Alderman, Elias Fried lander, William Hoyle, Robert Steward, and Berf ord Thurman. From these the production will he cast, and in addition there will be many others used in the group scenes. ' v - -"Androcles and the Lion" promises to be one of the most colorful and entertaining pro ductions staged by The Carolina Playmakers, according to "Koch. Laid in Rome during-the perse cution of the Christians, the comedy by George Bernard Shaw is filled with brilliant satire, and the scenery and costumes offer many opportunities for. a pic turesque and elaborate production. according to critics. Stoney, Teijeiro, Wheat, Wooten. ings preceding a campus-wide vote to ultimately determine the issue's life or death. Approvals The Interfraternity and In- terdormitory councils, the - Di Ring In The New With this issue an old ad ministration yields the man agement of the Daily Tar Heel to a new one. The outgoing editor and, managing editor wish to take this opportunity to publicly express their ap preciation for the fine co operation which they have received throughout the past year from their staff and from members of the faculty, administration and student-body-at-Iarge. Mistakes during the year have been many, but they have been unintentional. The new administration will be able to avoid many , of the old's errors. We wish our successors, - Mac Smith and Charles Gilmore, the very best year J possible. May they bring the Daily Tar Heel to new jheights in college journalism ! J Don JMcKee PeedSarratt Bland, and "Abide With Me," by Walter Spearman. All four plays have been di rected in Professor Samuel Sel den's course in directing. The student directors are Marguerite Lnd phi and the Grail in re. i.ipscomD,Josepn i?eiaman,i!,ve- centiy-called sessions unani- lyn bmaer, ana; Charlotte m0uslv acclaimed the need for Wricrhf. "1 i . . . --o - isiipn a nnnv hut avtcrtraatorl a host of changes in the structure- Jean Walker, Christine Mayn- powers draft formulated by the ard, Ellen Deppe, Edgar Hinton, original committee. Nancy Schaliert, Bedford Thur- The plan has been sponsored man, uan Hamilton, ttamuel by incumbent President John Hirsch, Dixie Reed, Bynum Parker and is endorsed by Dark, Eleanor Patrick, Howard President-elect Bob Magill. Kicharason, ' Robert Stewara, Marguerite Lipscomb, Wayne Richards To Speak T..i.l-i-J J Ti T v" VUA VyllU.HU 111 li cfrtr, I iiliuiiuv KJXLXJX. CllllC Goverment Geologic History Au- thority Will Give Address Tomorrow Night Levitch Finds Picked Talent For Program Herr Elmendorf To Lead Song: At Tonight's Get-Together Xylophonist Jack Payton, of Duke university, will be on hand tonight as one of the several guest performers on the Com munity Sing program in the Graham Memorial lounge at 7:30. Payton, who played on a Sun day afternoon concert in the fall quarter, was popular with Caro lina students. He was national champion xylophonist a few years ago. Schnitzelbank One of the most famous get together songs of them all, "Schnitzelbank," will be led by Herr John Elmendorf von Con necticut assisted by Tim Elr liot, Geddie Monroe, Bob Polisar, and Albert Ellis.- Appropriate pictures for the song will be pointed out by Herr Professor Elmendorf and the audience will answer his questions en masse. Nell Booker and Bob Polisar helped plan the pictures for the song, and the arrangement is reminiscent of singing in an old fashioned German beer garden. . . "No, No" Larry Wagger, of High Point and a former, Carolina,3tudent, will sing "No, No, A Thousand. Times No," with .aDDnmriate (Continued on page .three) Sophomore Compiles Index Qf Daily Tar Heel Since 1927 Wilkins Preparing Extensive Catalogue Of All Stories In Campus Daily Begun in the fall quarter of 1935-36 and still in the process of preparation, an extensive in dex of every Daily Tar Heel story since 1927 is being com piled by University Sophomore L. G. Wilkins assisted by four other N. Y. A. students. When the index has been com pleted, copies will be placed in both the Daily Tar'Heel office and in the library. All stories which have appeared in the daily have been listed alphabetically and indexed to provide easy finding. Weary Job "It has been a long and weari some job," said Wilkins yester day standing before three long tables of copy paper in Graham Memorial, "but I believe it has been worth all our time and pa tience." Pharmacists Will Hold Set This Weekend Johnson's Band Tb Play For Spring Dances In Bynum : Next Friday and Saturday the University pharmacy school will dance to the rhythm of Phar macy Student Freddy Johnson's orchestra when they again hold their annual spring dance set in Bynum gym. The figure to be made with the officers and their sponsors will be on Friday night. The rest of the set will be on Saturday with a tea dance in the after noon and the closing dance that night. Figure Participants in the figure will Visiting Professor Horace. G. T)'.VinJn A. 11 1 , 1 Avu-uttx ua, uv eminent autnoniy students helping him with" the on geologic history, will speak in tasK. irom lime to time, ouiue . i-.t..,. A tt0i rrn : have CTaduated and some have tomorrow night on "Our Chang- Ku A. Hal CornweU. pres:- given up altogether. At present, lnS Atlantic ShoreUne. j at. i- j. l j recent eeoiocnc nistorv win ui tne live who starteu tne jvu, .. - ' nr-ooW.r' f r-n also De exniamea to the prnim. I " v,v,v, v. . wiuncu, see lti - Lantern slides will accompany Dr. Richards' talk. Local Geol ogy Professor J. W. Huddle urg- only Wilkins is left to through to completion. Student Helpers TVinsA st".11l1PTia TtrVio Viqito vn tributed their time to the work eseryone;on the campus inter- and are still in school include A. J. Ellington, Richard Chiles, Ev erett Knight and Thomas Noe. If a layman in the library ested in this work to attend. Invitations student council representative. with Miss June Bush, Chapel Hill; Joseph W. Watson, presi dent of Rho Chi fraternity, with Mrs. J. W. Watson. Chapel Hill: Howard Fox, president of fourth year class, with Miss Martha Croom, Winston-Salem; C. C. Orders for Commencement in- Oates, president of third year wishes to put his hand on a earn- vitations will be taken by the class, with Miss Earnestine Bar- pus story of recent origin for committee through this coming ber. Chapel Hill. various reasons, he will find it week in the Y. M. C. A. lobby Jimmy Fox, secretary of the an easy matter. to look the story from 10:30. until 11 o'clock each pharmacy school, with Miss Ju- up in the new index which will day, from 2 to 5 o'clock Mon- lia Stewart, Clinton; Freddy in turn refer him to the Daily day, Wednesday and Friday, and Johnson, chairman of the dance Tar Heel- files in the stacks. from 2 to 3 o'clock on Tuesday committee, with Miss Mildred This information will, of and Thursday.- The committee Whitaker, Durham; Phil Link, course, 'be oi prime importance wisnes to announce that May l dance committee,' with Miss Bee as a time saver to tne daily is tne aDsoiute aeaoime for or- Dalton, Reidsville; J. A. Way, Tar Heel staff members wishing ders so that, delivery will be jr., dance committee, with Lin- information on a previous story made in adequate time. There da King, Asheboro; and Jess Ir- n a I ill i : ;xj; . .... in connection witn a contempor- wm ue no invitations avauaDie vin, president of second year i . 1 1 1 if i t s 5 :s i i i i j i t i ; i V- i in t I j 4"! ary one. rat any later aate. (Continued on page three) . t M 1 1 ft Wilkins has had a number of
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 25, 1937, edition 1
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