PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 19; The oSkial newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University of North Carolina, at Chapel HOI, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. En tered as second class matter at the post bfSce at Chapel Hill, N. C, under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, $3.00 for the college year. J. Mac Smith. .Editor Charles W. Gilmorc William McLean Jesse Lewis -Managing1 Editor .Business Manager .Circulation Manager Editorial Staff Editorial Writers: Stuart Bafcb, Lytt Gardner, Alien Merrill, Voit Gilmore, Bob duFour, Ramsay Potts, R. Herbert Rof fer, David J. Jacobson. Nxws Editors: Will G. Arey, Jr., Gordon Burns, Mor ris Rosenberg. Deskmen: Tom Stanback, Ray Lowery, Jesse Reese. Rfwior Reporter: Bob Perkins. Freshman Reporters: Charles Barrett, Adrian' Spies,. David Stick, Donald Bishop, Miss L.ucy Jane Hunter, Carroll McGaughey (Radio), Miss Gladys Best Tripp, BUI Snyder, Iawrence m. jj erung. Rewrite: Jim M$Aden. Exchange Editor: Ben Dixon. Sports Rnrroa: R. R. Howe. Jr. Sports Night Editors: Shelley Rolfe, Frank Holeman, Laffitte Howard. Sports Reporters: Jerry Stoff, William L. Beerman, Richard Morris, Martin Kalkstein, Leonard Lobred. Business Staff Advertising Managers: Bobby Davis, Clen Humphrey. Durham Representative: Dick Eastman. juocax. Advertising Assistants Stuart Ficklin, Bert Halperin, Bm Ogburn, Andrew Gennett, Ned Ham- fttm. BilW Gillian. Office: Gilly Nicholson, Aubrey McPhail, Louis Barba, J50D Lerner, ai buck, dim ocnieuer. For This Issue News: Will G. Arey, Jr. Sports: Laffitte Howard PLAYB1AKERST0 PBJSENTFffTH PRODUCTION Eight New Plays WOl Be Given April 20-23 The Carolina Playmakers will pre sent their fifth public production of the season in the form of eight new American plays written , by students of Dr. Frederick H. Koch's Playwrit- ing courses and directed by graduate students of Professor Samuel Selden's course in Direction on April 20, 21, 22, 23. The plays include: "While Report ers Watched," a Christmas eve mys tery by Rose Peagler, Homerville, Georgia. It is directed by Clemon White of Luflin, Texas. Youth's Vicissitudes "The Worm Turns," by Jean Brab ham of Batesburg, South Carolina, tells a story of youth's vicissitudes in the throes of romantic love in a small South Carolina town. The author di rects the play. "One Man's House" by Gwenn Pharis of Magrath, Alberta, Canada, is the story of Jan Lodeska, a Polish- Canadian radical, who is involved in labor agitation and who believes he can make a new world. It is directed by Vivian Veach of Rockf ord, Illinois Folk Comedy "Pair of Quilts," a folk comedy of an itinerant country peddler in East ern North Carolina by Bernice Kelly Scottish Emblem HORIZONTAL. 1 Prickly plant pictured here, i 7 It belongs to the genus 33 Relaxation. 14 To ornament. 16 Gaelic. 17 Male fish. 18 Enticing : woman. - 19 Dyeing apparatus. 20 Prayer. 21 Feather shaft. 22 Sweet secre tion. 42 Finale. 23 Nevertheless. 43 Compass 24 Child's marble, point. 26 Raised strips. 45 Eye tumor. 31 Made of lead! 46 Feminine ,35 Surface pronoun. measurement?. 47 And. ,36 Chestnut 49 Spotted cat. Answer to Previous Puzzle JlOjSiEl TJ1T)U;R&I APjETS If) ST SgONjEW 11 6 i rt xiixb. priM aid aImi OLlSIMiEjAjRi JT El AIR STTT LEMSMRfcRlE RTTg Pt C lNi c 0 fefc SL AIN T TTsob olwc vtjp'opa 3jp sqRtuj&ns EpnLUfprJR TtRl I US IP A R RIEID CL i ZTATm ALTgfr S ENn&jO!6C; isipIah iNncloiNiDlulcmoiRl 10 To insist upon. 11 Consumer. . 12 Serpents collectively. 15 Coin. covering. '38DulL ; 39 Digits of the foot. 40 Irascible.' ,41 Fruit. 51 Upright 54 Blood. 55 Mongrel. 56 It is the na tional of Scotland. 57 It is a prickly ipl.). VERTICAL. 1 It grows in regions. 2 To salute. 3 Island. 4 Bristle. 5 Maidens. 6 Proclamation. 7 Crawled. 8 To temper. 9 A share. .25 Spider's home 27 Satiric 28 Achievement. 29 FueL 30 Public auto.' 32 High mountain.' 33 Club fees.' 2 Descended from the same mother. 36 Common verb. ' 37 Right 40 To seesaw.1. 43 Coast 44 Well-known 46 Not "swift 48 Genuine. 49 Away. 50 Self. 1 52 To make a mistake. 53IUs. HIS MAJESTY'S PRIME MINISTER: JOHN M. BOOKER Address to the Throne Coronation Ceremony, Harris of Seaboard, North Carolina, QlinW -FaiMiltv Hav. Anril 5. 1938 hs directed by Fred Koch, Jr. I These four plays will be presented Shining from the countenances of Your devoted on two evenings. subjects is the joy that the voice of the people has The opening production on the . j T-Ai? i -rr- 4. Uia t,wv Tti other two nights will be "Three Fool returned their rightful King to his throne. In ish y. Harrig The . a m mm - 1 i 1 T 1 . . I J - v times liKe tnese, wnen tne wnoie worm seems gu- play is a Carolina folk comedy. Noei ing Facist, we may hope that next year His Houston of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Majesty's royal office will be converted into one directs it, of life tenure with a Kenan supplement to the , aroliIsIds , "Mary Marge," by Ellen Deppe of Royal Eschequer. Biltmore, North Carolina, is a comedy For Your Majesty's Prime Minister, I ask but of the islands off the North Carolina an earlv retirement on a Carnesrie nension. coast- K is directed by Lois Latham , . , . i . tT i i I f Rainbow Springs, North Carolina. Win, auK-iAM-a' molftnia TA Ymif lrtVO V OTTO-I AVUi "J wx V xt - "Murder in the Snow" by Robert cious, and truly regal consort echoes from their Finch of DiUoll) Montana, and Betty heartbeats. Smith of Chapel Hill is one of Hitherto forbidden to hope for a dynasty, Your llilop one-act plays -written of . . , ..... , . . the time of the gold strike m Montana vv ""' . ""iV-"" Territory in 1870. Lynette Heldman Under our paternalistic unicameral system oi gov- js Erecting. -w- i t i'i n i I ernment, a irmce couia oe seiectea even tnougn Tnis is villa," a melodrama by he cannot be born to the Royal Rulers. So with Josephina Niggii of Monterrey, Mex- fnll lioorfs fT-nny nonnlo noil fVo Hvn wn PrinfP I ico. was written especially for Elect Robert Magill the First, Last, and Only, ftudent-actor Robert Nachtmann, and . ,.. , . , .. , is expected to be directed by Joe rung Dy tne arace oi uou can sun ue jusmieu. Brown Vox populi is it not Vox Dei ? 5 fc T"5 9 10 II 12 J5 14 : 15 jib " 17 ; ia 19 20 2l 22 ' Z7 p 12? 33 5l 32 133 134 " 55" 36 5? 56 39 " ' 4l 42 43 44 3 r5? c" p" $ m MT. si 52 !T POINT OF VIEW By Ramsay Potts Letters from business men and landowners dicate an open and determined opposition to ti (J current attempts to organize the southern far! 1 ers. B. L. Moss has written. an article in tl American Mercury which purports to give a til picture of how the tenants and sharecropp fare. But opposed to Mr. Moss view, that th is no problem, is the testimony of scores of inve; . i x rrxx ?x gators ana writers. ney insist on calling- u Q tention to low standards of livmg and locales c. disgraceful exploration." i; Here is the opinion of a prominent plantat owner near Hughes, Ark. "A tenant union r"1 i i ..n r 3 1 - f At l. not De success! uiiy luruieu uecause oi ine 0.111 ent types of farms all over the Southland" i because "farms are not licensed as are mercha k and other businesses." That opinion expres,ve? the contention of numerous economists. Org ization of any kind is more assured of success industry than in agriculture. Nevertheless the Southern Tenant Farm Union has carried its campaign into the hearSf" tenant-farmed land. And it has the backing the CIO, with which it is affiliated. f an That affiliation with the Lewis group indici 1 an important trend. The farm and labor gro spr have drawn closer together during the last years. It seems not improbable that a Farnvo: Labor party in 1940 will be formed. The elemt for the movement are becoming more cognb of the possibilities of such an. organization. 1 sted Sis Brown Attends Arizona Inaugural Dr. Earl H. Brown, formerly of Concord, represented the University at the inauguration of President Al fred Atkinson at the -University of Arizona Tuesday, Dr. Brown, who is associated with the Thomas-Davis Clinic in Tucson, Arizona, received the degree of B.S. in Medicine at Chapel Hill in 1925. UP Sweeps 19 Into Office Your subjects' desire for a dynasty is quickened the memory, as it were what would hv the introduction of radical elements into our happen to them? They would be not ;Qf,r 1,, n Por.li.n Pnlifiol TT-ninn w only dead languages; they would be . . f . , . ,. buried languages. an increasingly irxespuiisiuie anu even mceiiuiai Tfae modern foreign language would press, tne reporters ol which have all blossomed fare no better, in order to subsist, into columnists, thereby depriving your people of their teachers would all be conducting a news organ; by the annually recurring propos- tours through Europe with field work al rvF a aqti cfurlf crTrrmryinnf V,of ttqo I on e jioo, seminars in Monte ano, , , i ji and laboratory courses m Paris. w uc wuc came uiu wuii xii new Diiccp & uuumifi, And ag for my priceless flowers of and by the multiplication of organizations many English poesy what would become of of them secret. I Chaucer, Spencer, Shakespeare, Mil Delusive is the plea that most of these organiza- ton' who swd-the bed that we lie tioris are really quite harmless, consuming their a.x xxvuxo i vuiimv ic oumcoo j.uxxii,jf . 1S not prophetic. rJut I fear that once granted that most Oi these student movements the protective "Requirements" were start from nothing and lead nowhere ; they might swept away, those sturdy old plants lead somewhere would be gone with the wind. English Such dangers were adumbrated in my address ture would survive s only in Oral j. , . -. , -, , j I English, Creative Writing, Journal- nuw uecumea my uuiy vu wain ism and Playmaking if the regis- iqur Majesty that one ot them has developed into trants were not killed in the crush. an unquestionable menace. I refer to the student Alas for -History this generation movement to secure control of the Royal Univer- wuld be too busy making it to study sitv's curriculum. Should this rpvnlntmn sue, Economics courses in money and . -i. i j banking might have an appeal if con , w & M4 uotuo xuxuo dense(j jnto CQUrse jn Banking as i am aoouz xo mention. with and on Father. A course in Ac Stern old disciplinary courses would be driven counting for Bad Checks might be out of the curriculum by unworthy substitutes, useful. But Political Science would be Think of such classical couurses as the four en- resarded as amply covered by campus 1aH "A Sfnr ho TVi7vll, ,vP T?,,nm' . politics, and Philosophy, by the daily w ;4- uc a 4J1 ' bull-sessions-every hour on the hour. tjr mx6u, wc tcicupcu intu ime cuui&e &tuuing Psychology's course in "Child Devel- the morphology of the professors. Or "The Mor- opment" might still draw Freshmen; might easily be diverted by backward-looking con servatives into a study of the Administrative con trol of the student body. And might not the field "Animal Behavior" and "The Psy chology of Personality" should at tract all classes. But I fear that our present encouraging course in Mar- riaee. following the trp-nd nf tlm timAS. - 1- - r j 1 i t i I ' o - ' worK oi xne Dioiogicai sciences oecome demor- would be supplemented if not sup anzieu uiiiciai instruction OI tnese excursions planted by a course in Divorce. might be done away with : then our vouner men 0nly the Department of Education, and co-eds would go untutored, strolling hand-in- !dge(1 m lts Palat1 ew home' com hru thrAiicrh ho nAc A ;Aa ue absurea a iiounsnmg iuture. its H 4-11 J JJ il. . -M " , xv.., wiu uuw w ten uie uirus irom me iiowers and Basketball now called laboratory; that is, if they kept on strolling. I courses would doubtless be sustained The efforts of the Geology Department might by a transfer of the scholarships, f el be fnmised nnon t.hp o-onlntrv nf hp rnmVnlnm Mowships, and loan funds that other X - 0""0. vv.. investigating the mineral and fossil elements in subjects would no longer need. The General Catalogue. It would not surprise me tween it and Your Royal Persons -Trill to see the title Of the course "Oil Geology" stand this loyal brain-trust so dis-; changed to "Platform Smoothies." cerningly selected. vzxrw xi wxxxwi CxCxxxotxuixxCxi ixx Elis, G 0 . -.,..0, -.f.A ... Q. tougnemng nead and nide m tne good old oays elevator at the New York iVorld's when knowledge was implanted upon the seat of pair :in 1853. (Continued from first page) Graham polled 239 votes to 199 for Pete Williams. Chuck Kline marked up 276 votes to be secretary over Tom Fry, who received 163 ballots. Frank Wakely, 232, met stiffest opposition among the UP senior candidates from Jane Hunter, coed who received 207 votes for treasurer. Billy Campbell, 263, will represent the senior class on the student council after he defeated George Nethercutt, 180. SP Strength The Student party showed greatest strength in the election of junior class offices, putting its candidates in for student council representative, secretary, and treasurer. Charlie Wood (UP) captured the junior presi dency with 255 votes to 211 for Cy Jones (SP). The vice-presidency went to Jim Davis (UP) with 305 ballots to 154 for Charlie Rider. Mac Nesbit gained the secretary's post for the Student party when he defeated Harry Driver (UP) by a vote of 261 to 187. Benny Hunter (SP) will be next year's junior class treasurer as a result of his 256 to 203 victory over Foy Roberson (UP). Junior repre sentative to the student council will be Jack Fairley (SP), who received 224 votes to 159 for Bob Doty (UP) and 67 for Phil Walker, independent. Freshmen elections were another clean sweep for the University party. Skipper Bowles rode to the presidency of next year's sophomores by 325 to 169 triumph over Don Baker. Frank Doty, 309, gained the vice-presidency over Sid Sadoff, 182. Syd Alexander defeated David Sessoms for secretary by a 277 to 200 count. Closest fight among the first-year men was for treasurer, -with Charlie Idol winning over Paul Severin, 240 to 234v Bill Dees coasted to a student council post with 324 votes to 146 for Walter Har grove. Mrs. Groves Will Address Delegates (Continued from first page) 7:30, Miss Elizabeth Wang, Univer sity Chinese student, will speak to the conference on "Chinese Family Lif e," and concluding Wednesday's ac tivities the Rev. Edgar S. Schmiede ler of the National Catholic Welfare conference will present to the dele gates "The Catholic Program for the Conservation of Marriage and the Family;" PHI FAVORS CROP CONTROL LEGISLATION Bill On Staff Elections Is Defeated The Phi assembly, in a meeting curtailed by the absence of many members due to election confusion, jvoted upon two bills last night in a regular meeting. A carry-over bill from last week, resolved that the Phi assembly ap prove of the present legislation upon crop control, was voted upon without any further discussion. In as much as the minutes of the previous debate was unavailable Speaker Dudley sug gested that the assembly vote upon the current crop control measure. The vote was 10 to 5 in favor of the bill The second discussion was con cerned with the pertinent problem of staff and campus elections. The bill read: resolved that the staffs of the various publications be empowered to elect their own officers. Representative Henry Roth, speak ing against the proposal, declared that this method of selection is unfair to the campus at large and that it would be undemocratic in nature. Representative Ben Dixon, a publi cations man, defended the proposal. He stated that the men who worked with the various candidates were the most qualified to judge them. Dixon added that staff members were more likely to vote carefully, and more likely to be concerned with the stand ard of the publication. Former Speaker Drew Martin spoke of the dangers of a limited vote, and of the possibilities of the staff being influenced by politics. The bill was defeated by a 12-6 vote. In the absence of the regular of ficers Representative Wallach acted as Sergeant-at-Arms and Representa tive Peterson as Reading Clerk. Be cause of the small attendance Speaker Dudley postponed his . inaugural ad dress until next week. ETCETERA" FROM THE EXCHANGE DESK By Ben Dixon On The Air 8:00 "Cavalcade of America" dra matizes the life of Thomas Jefferson (WHAS). 8:30 Ben Bernie and all the lads (WBT) ; Tommy Dorsey's orchestra WEAF). 9:00 Chesterfield Presents Grace Moore (WHAS); Fred Allen with Portland Hoffa (WSB). 10:00 "Gang Busters" (WHAS); Kay Xyser. (WSB). 12:30 "Three Matches" is the title of the "lights Out" mystery play fea turing Boris KaTloff tonight WSB). When Harvard university music school spon sored a piano concert by Jesus Maria Sanroma several weeks ago, it failed to inquire as to wheth er or not the Sanders theater on the campus had a piano. Not until concert-time was about to be called was it discovered there was no piano. Scouts were sent abroad to find one, and after an hour returned with the news that the only one available was in a building on the far side of the campus. So 1,000 chagrined music lovers trudged across Harvard's "yard" in a blizzard to hear the con cert. The welfare of Oklahoma students certainly is well looked after. In an attempt to reduce the number of "Fs," a "flunk" fee was introduced. Next there was an attempt to put through a "no-week-night-date" rule. Now it's a tutorial sys tem. That smacks of Oxford. Perhaps the authori ties have been to the movies recently. Anyway, the idea is that personal attention of the faculty will be given students in elementary courses there. The professors will list the students who need tutoring oh cards, and the tutors will then phone them to see if they want help no expense in curred, so it would seem. We could well' afford to have the university employ such a system here using good but needy students as tutors. . Committee A group of men who keep minutes and waste hours. Cooing and Billing Cooing stops with the. honeymoon, while billing goes on forever. Detour The roughest distance between two points. v Gold Digger One who uses the males to de fraud. Horse Sense Just stable thinking. Parasite One who goes through a revolving door on your push. Repartee Any reply that is so clever it makes the listener wish he had said it himself. Fire engines went clamoring down South Lime in the dark hours of Saturday morning with much screaming of sirens and roaring of motors. They stopped outside a boarding house. Later in the morning a badly charred mattress thrown from a second story window and resting in the middle of the front yard told the whole story. Moral: Don't smoke in bed. It wakes up people. The Santa Rosa Junior colWp. believes it is the only college in the world that owns a gold mine. It was bought for the college recently at a tax sale for $2.85 by the institutions geological cura tor, and will be worked by students studying mining. There's no gold in the mine, so students will have no get-rich-quick incentive to study. Which makes the gold mine not really a gold mine after all, except perhaps in principle. U a'