JU PAGE TWO THE DAILY TAR HEEL SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 1935 The official newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. En tered as second class matter at the post office at Chapel Hill, N. C nnder act of March 3, 1179. Subscription price, $3.00 for the college year. J. Mac Smith Charles W. Gilmore.. William McLean. Jesse Lewis - .Editor Managing Editor .Business Manager .Circulation Manager Editorial Staff Editorial Writers: Stuart Babb, Lytt Gardner, Allen Merrill, Voit Gilmore, Bob duFour, Bamsay Potts, R. Herbert Eoffer, David J. Jacobson. News Editors: Will G. Arey, Jr., Gordon Burns, Mor ris Rosenberg. Deskmbn: Tom Stanback, Ray Lowery, Jesse Reese. Senior Reporter: Bob Perkins. Freshman Reporters: Charles Barrett, Adrian Spies, David Stick, Donald Bishop, Miss Lucy Jane Hunter, Carroll McGaughey (Radio), Miss Gladys Best Tripp, Bill Snyder, Lawrence M. Ferling. Rewrite: Jim McAden. Exchange Editor: Ben Dixon. Sports Editor: R. R. Howe, Jr. Sports Night Editors: Shelley Rolfe, Frank Holeman, Laffitte Howard. T 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. jocal Advertising Assistants Stuart Ficklin, Bert Halperin, Bill Ogburn, Andrew Gennett, Ned Ham ilton, Billy Gillian. . ., T t v Office: Gilly Nicholson, Aubrey McPhail, Louis Barba, Bob Lerner, Al Buck, Jim Schleifer, James Gra land, Archie Lindsay. For This Issue News: Stuart Rabb Sports: Wm. L. Beerman THE THEATER Melodrama There may be a place in the thea ter for melodrama, and if there is "Murder in the Snow" by Betty Smith and Robert Finch had a legitimate place on the Playmaker bill Friday evening. To put it tritely but succinct ly, as melodrama it filled the bilL It possessed all the requisites and pre requisites. But beyond that there's a question. Bill Hudson says hell agree there's a place for social drama if IH agree there's a place for anything else. I, or anyone else, would find it hard to disagree. This will come as a surprose to many people, but never theless it stands. To say we should have only social drama is to take the surest road back to Puritanism. And you'll remember that it was the Puri tans who tried to do away with the theater entirely in England in the seventeenth century. In short, entertainment, though it has been greatly over-stressed, de serves some consideration. And I will leave it with the audiences to decide whether they are entertained by melo drama. Which leaves only the neces sity for mentioning the fine acting of Bill Morgan and Dan Nachtmann, a good stage set, and the evidences of capable direction by Lynette Heldman. Comedy? It is not as hard to decide on the validity of "Three Foolish Virgins" as theater. Good comedy has always had its place and, I hope, always will. This one, by Bernice Kelly Harris, handles the theme of the old maid with much humor and more human sympa thy. A few lines trickled out that came close to being poetry. I do not know what it is about frustrated old age that draws so much on our sym pathy. However if age is inevitable, frus tration and loneliness are not. Beyond that the comic aspects of the situa tion saved the play from too much sentiment. Frequent allusions to our biological natures apparently never fail to get a laugh. It's here to stay, PEACE, POTTS, AND POPE ' Dead babies rotting at the belly not a pleasant sight. For three days next week the campus will vote, via CPU ballots, on seven particular questions on American foreign policy. On Wednesday night Senator Pope will lecture in Memorial hall, and Ramsay Potts and the Edi tor of the Duke Chronicle will swap their student views on what sort of foreign policy America should pursue. This is the Carolina version of the national col legiate peace program annually effected in April. and obviousiy the subject just can't ,, .,"', . , m be over-worked. This last, with special Many such collegiate demonstrations, both here regard to the title As you can gee and elsewhere in the past, have depended almost we have here all the ingredients for altogether on the emotional approach to the prob- an entertaining production. The en lem of war in the world. With signs and bands tire cast showed themselves to be com and an occasional riot they have voiced youthful protest against the horrors of warfare. War the direction was up t0 standard, and is Hell, to Hell With War. the first remark heard as the curtain . , went up was on the excellence of the mt I S1 - " I ..l r- m- ine current uaronna program as aireauy an- set nounced differs extremely from the purely emo- tional approach to the problem. With the three Strike One days Of balloting on particular issues, the CPU Fortunately Author Jean Brabham ought to be able to sound a fairly accurate picture calls the first play on the bill, "The nf th r.rnr.ns -mir.fi Tht WinrA nrncrrnm should Worm Turns," a comedy: tHus the un- ., ,,, ... 4. n . I conscious humor, which. rivals the con- cuucem itseii witu ail iii-emiii, eAamnmu.i sciouBf is unconsciously taken care of tne neutrality law, tne part 01 munitions, eiiect Probabiy the most important conciu of national economic policies on our relations with sion to be drawn from this story of Europe and Asia, the long-run implications of a college freshman who lost her first isolation, independent "neutrality," or outspoken man shed a few delicious tears, and 1.Y.. , then caught the next street car, is . that college playwrights haven't Next week the Campus will juggle actual policy long enough perspective on adoles Woilc. tW ;n;a-nna ir. !. orno, n cence to write aoout it enecnveiy, the problem of "What Is America Going To Do?" -SAM GREEN. The primary production error was the choice of the cast. Molly Holmes and Dell Bush, who play the parts of the adolescent girls, are still in their middle teens; and although they After graduation many of us will have occasion to vote on or to help formulate, American policy. Only, through the collective intelligence of the look the part and perform creditably people can a democracy play its cards correctly, for their experience, they miss im So it really does matter that, in our peace demon- portant nusances which more expe strations. we derjend on our intelligence, not our fenced and mature actresses, pos emotions. Visceral disorders at the Name of War ses!fd.of,the pf,spective they neces' j i -W ,,- .... ..i. sarny iacK, wouia convey. uia xiavei maue me proDiem.acuie lur us; u viceal disorders don't solve problems, won't gi us peace. . ,,; v Feminine Air Pilot HORIZONTAL .1, 5 Famous flyer pictured here. 10 Hodgepodge. 11 Pronoun. 12 To sharpen a razor. 13 Sour. 14 Secondary law 15 Postscript. - 16 Sheltered place. 18 Form of "be." 19 Electrical unit. 21 Collection of facts. 40 Grave. 23 Type standard 43 Monster. 25 Fiber knots. 45 Musical note. Answer to Previous Puzzle JIViAIRII MO POQIOmAlT EiD "TR TjS RjUiR NpLARCg IjN HF PAB I QRCltRiTAlt: IclRlAlrfTtsiMrAlNnTmAlnv 19 She fiewr from Australia to 27 Rabbits. 29 She recently set a new record for flying. 31 Compound ' ether. 33 To relax. 35 Opposite of higher. 37 To espouse. 39 Morindin dye. 46 The tip. - 48 Beverage. 49 Kettle. 50 Biscuit. 51 Javelins. 53 Golf device. 55 Duration. 57 Also. 58 Cubic meter. 60 Writing fluid. 61, 62 Her native 14 Wager, land. 17 Comfort.' 20 Valuable - property. 22 Apart. 24 Mountainous. " 26 Church bench. 27 Masculine pronoun. 28 Measure of area. 30 Indian. 32 Jogs. 34 Markets. 36 Salt of oleic acid. 38 She is a girl. 41 Myself. 2 To. pass away. 42 Soldier's extra 3 Melodies. pay. j 4 Negative word 43 Music drama. 5 Per. 44 To depart. 6 Your. 47 Eyebrow. , 7 Hindu weight. 50 Orchestra. 8 Glossy paint. 52 Toward. 9 Recent. 54 Snaky fish. 11 To crumble. 56 3.1416. 58 Southeast. , 59 Half an em. 63Dyestuff VERTICAL . 1 An iota. 1 I2 P ft I: jf-"ml 15 i . 17 JG 19 IJ i ft i 1 13 &j """"" i5 -?v 'jigg 27 (26 I """"" W 5o Ji ST" 53" " 55 mmT " -fH 5j5 : "F" pi I H 1 1 1 1 1 hH h ; CAMPUS NOMAD By Voit Gilmore HIGH TRAVEL PRESSURE Many a nomadic person who hasn't wound u on one of French Professor Lyons' delightful Eu ropean vacation tours has turned up in July and August on the famous Georgia Caravan. At a somewhat lower cost than a tour of Eu rope, Georgia Caravan each summer hauls scores of high school and college students through the .West, sometimes Mexico and Canada. Among its pay passengers every year are numerous Carolina undergraduates. The increasing competitiveness of travel tour agencies has found C. Y. Rose, Caravan operator, not wanting. For showmanship and sensational salesmanship he almost rivals the immortal Billv Rose, famed for his Casa Manana. C. Y. Rose's latest stroke to cinch patrons for next summre's jaunt through the West on jiggly busses appeared under the free advertising sec tion of society pages last Sunday. The account was of an urgent midnight phone call from Pro ducer David Selznick in Hollywood to Rose, in Atlanta, pleading that the Caravan be brought by the Mova lot next summer. Maybe one ofrhe Caravan girls will pass for Scarlett, thinks Selz nick, hopes Rose. At any rate, to pacify the entire Caravan horde, they'll alT be lined up, made to look as Southern like as possible, and then shot for a half-minute mob scene in "Gone With The Wind." . Publications Union Board By Adrian Charles Spies Next week's approach is the one with the hope in it; ' FOOTPRINTS ON THE SANDS but; give Niggli Experiment Josephina Niggli's play about Villa is an interesting and perhaps signifi cant experiment in a rather rare dra ma form. She calls "This Is Villa a "portrait of a Mexican general." Under the capable hands of Robert Nachtmann, the portrait emerges, in swift, nervous strokes, as a most col orful, exciting and complete charac terization. The portrait is finished; it has the vital spark and the death less permanence; and there is no at- Of all the organization existent on this campus, the Publications Union board is one of the most powerful. For the PU board, as it is commonly called, has almost supreme supervision over all publications activities. The original purpose of the board was a general supervision of the finances of school publications, and a control over the expenditures of these groups. The business managers of The Daily Tar Heel, the Carolina Magazine, the Yackety-Yack, and the Buccaneer must submit budgets to the board for its approval. In addition the board makes all printing con tracts and arranges for the salaries of all publications men. Although ostensibly a financial check, the PU board possesses a certain amount of authoratative power among the various editorial stalls. A re cent example is the unusual situation which existed last yea. during the Carolina Magazine's staff nominations. Bill Hudson and Nick Read were nominated as co-editors. However the board, fearing that such a combi nation might set a dangerous precedent for future political set-ups, out lawed the ticket. This, however, is an isolated case, and the board usually confines its executive activities to purely financial matters. Five members, three students and two members of the faculty, make up the Publications Union board. Every two years the board itself nomi nates certain faculty members whom it considers worthy of serving with the student members. The president of the University makes the final selection. The three students are elected annually from the campus at large. At present they are, Tom Stanback, Tim Elliot, and Morris Rosen berg. Faculty associates are J. O. Bailey of the English department and Walter Spearman of the Journalism department. J. M. Lear is the salaried faculty advisor, serving in a general advisory capacity and handling much of the routine work. The board usually conducts weekly meetings. An interesting side-light upon the work of this group may be gleaned from the current student radio studio agitation. It was agreed to incor porate this project 'should it be approved under the jurisdiction of the PU board. Initial costs for the setting un of a studio were to be borrowed from a surplus of approximately $14,000 which the board possesses. Again, he board would become the financial councilor of the newly incorporated publication. Most of the Publication Union's surplus is invested in New York stocks and securities; which makes, indirectly, every fee paying student a speculator on the famed New York Stock Jxchange. Rain and Spring Frolics have come to the cam pus this week-end, and in the midst of the storm the old campus regime wilLbe swept away. On Tuesday morning these columns will have a new tempt t anvthinff f urther. A11 the editor; 'luesday night present campus Ollicersl0ther characters serve merely as back- will pass their responsibilities on to next year's ground, as straw men for Villa to li i. j 1. .. . . : TvjpTi 1 hhuck. uuwii, or as uguis tu smut: ujjuii dark spots of the portrait. After four years of charging through curn- But, as a portrait, the play is static CUlum and eXtra-CUrriculum senior campusijites What movement and character devel- nrill finrl fhPTnselvAs at. Inns ends. TIipv will f in A opment there are are circular, return. . , . , ,-. . M. - . ., I ing after the full circle to their origin Vi orv-i ol7o 1111. qt intr tho Tiwiliornt rvr thon rr lacra I w- - and leaving Villa to a great extent years almost oeiore iney nave reanzea it. iney what he was at the beginning. The will pause now and then to peer in at the activities purpose of portrayal is fulfilled; but of enterprising juniors, but somehow there won't pne asks, is the purpose dramatic h anv TiPPrl -fnr thpm anv more. t In the non-comic drama one expects " I 4- 4.1 4. J. 1 4.1 On a campus surcharged With organizations turn off on some ultimate tangent, or there are plenty of "leaders" who as members of turn back t0. some the old order will pretty soon get a ultimate true chance tor". . ..s r cn . . acter signmcance nappens to tne pro rest. That rest will come next week and, faith, tagonist in This Is villa." But they shall need it. whether it is good drama or not. it 1 Rising Juniors All rising juniors are asked to visit Dean A. N. Hobbs during the next few weeks to discuss their next year's schedule. Press Institute (Continued from first page) the individual papers. Members of the University journalism department have been asked to criticize the papers. At 6:30 Saturday night the entire group will attend a banquet on the second floor of Graham Memorial. At the banquet, which will be sponsored bv Graham Memorial, the feature speaker of the Institute will be presented. As a conclusion the group will meet at 8:30 that night to form a perman ent ore-anizatioii. pleet officers." and make plans for next year's meeting. Stick said yesterday that the speak ers for the Institute will be promin ent newspapermen with the News and Observer, the Raleigh Times, and probably the Charlotte Observer, the Greensboro Daily News, and the Dur ham Sun. '.;.;' BIRTHDAYS TODAY (Please call by Ohe ticket office of the Carolina theater for a com plimentary pass,) William Miller Jones Elizabeth Ann Spencer William Luther Hord Samuel Earle Hobbs Herbert H. Alexander Charles Jordan Barlow Leonard B. Baron Tempe Yarborough Barbara Griffin. Letters To The Editor Over 250 Words Subject to Cutting To The Editor, Dear Sir: The attempts of one of your columnists to give facetious information about the library (Febru ary 12) induces me to make a few statements about the acutal condition of affairs in the "Heart of the University." Last year the total circulation was almost 450,- 000 volumes. That is an average of about 175 books for each student. Ten years ago this av erage was less than 60 books per year. The total figure may be interpreted another way. Assum ing that only one book was borrowed for each trip to the library, it indicates that every student visited the library five times a week during the three regular quarters. The amount of work involved in making the resources of the library available to students be gins to assume tremendous proportions. The ideal method of obtaining a book would be to press a button and have the desired volume appear in a cup like a stick of chewing gum or a package of cigarettes. Unfortunately the six tiers of book stacks, packed and jammed to the point of over flowing, are not readily adapted to the use of such mechanical contrivances. The nearest ap proach to instantaneous service is found in send ing a messenger for each book wanted. The time required in delivering the book or giving a report on its location varies from about ten seconds in the reserve rooms to less than three minutes at the main circulation desk. One hundred forty-five carrels located on five floors of the library are occupied by two hundred twenty-five members of the faculty and graduate students actively engaged in producing theses and dissertations. These studies are invaluable to scholarship and research and the demand for them increased yearly. At mid-afternoon or early evening it is not un usual to find almost one-third of the student body in the library. If the writer of "My Day" should by any chance wander in it is doubtful that he would be able to locate a place to anchor his raft Sincerely yours, OLAN V. COOK, Chief, Circulation Department. Rained Out The freshman baseball game scheduled for yesterday with Oak Ridge Military institute was rained out. Bo Shepard, assistant ath letic director, announced that a suitable date for the game will be chosen in the near future. The next freshman game will be played with Burlington high school here Monday. ABU AND HIS PEARLS Many years ago on the Nefud desert in upper Arabia, an old Arab, Abu Bada, was lost. His camel had wandered away in the night. His food and water were gone. For two days he walked, and Abu resigned him self to translation. Toward sunset, he came upon a leather pouch lying on the hot sand. In it Abu saw white grains of parched wheat. : Hungrily he seized them. They were pearls. He threw them to the winds. "Oh mighty Allah," he cried, "when I am fam ished, why dost thou taunt me thus with precious stones?" Did anybody ever eat a pearl? L. I. G. is good theater. BILL HUDSON