y lil.nl EDITORIALS: EATHER: 0 U This From Missouri? n.try blasts vrill ehase icy rams cicsy. THE ONLY COLLEGE DA ILY IN THE SOUTHEAST- l 525 VOLUME XLVH EDITORIAL PHOKE 43 J 1 CHAPEL HILL, N. C SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1939 SC3IXK3 PHONE 4!S& NUMBER 82 Win r i if 1 f v w i V Campus Swing Servers i - . i - .- " t " ' . r I' . 1 1 . ".I t - V?- Freddie Johnson, left, and Jere King, the University and Chapel Hill winter term social seasons. Johnson, plays for the first annual Neophyte ball . - f 4h Dioniil TTiTI 21I1U iving t5 C3 UUl LUl U1V VlMpVI Hill First Annual Neophyte Ball To Initiate Winter Dancing Affair Takes Place In Durham; Leaders Expect Large Crowd Four University social fraternities, Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Delta Kappa Epsilon and Zeta Psi, will entertain at supper parties at their lodges on the Hill this evening and at the first annual Neophyte ball at the Washington-Duke hotel in Dur ham tonight. About 350 members, fa culty members and their,, wives and invited guests will attend. Before the dance, at which Freddie Johnson and his . University orches tra will furnish the music, - supper parties will be held at the following fraternities, with soWal committees receiving: SAE, Miss Nancy Means with Robert Cox; Beta Theta Pi, Miss Merramon LeGrande with Jick Gar land ; Zeta . Psi, Miss Mary - Richard son with Louis Sutton; and DKE, Miss Annalee Fitts witb Wescott Woollen. - ARRANGEMENTS . ' Fred Rippy, Jr., president of SAE, is chairman of arrangements. Serv ing with him are Watt Miles, Beta Theta Pi; Kenneth Royal, DKH; ana Gus Forges, Zeta Psi. The neophytes, with their dates", will be(transported from Durham by five chartered buses. The dance at the Washington-Duke hotel will last from 9 to 12 o'clock. - Pledges and their guests will be: SAE, Miss Martha Ann Morris with Huntley Gover, Miss Betsy Bryant with Judge Carr, Miss Barbara Bur roughs with Tommy Heard, Miss Los sie Taylor with Muck' Dunn, Miss Freddie Gardner with Buck Brown, Miss Peggy Beattie with Sam Means, Miss Rita Clary with Bill Croom, Miss Sue Joyner with Brodie Winborne, Miss Jimmie Southgate with Austin Carr, Miss Fannie Cooper with Frank Havnpc Miss Pfrrv Wallace with Charles Tillett, Miss Martha Worth with Mac MeLendon, Miss Honey Peck with Bobby Strange, and Clay ton Moore, Emmett Barnes, Truman Holland, Jim Hackler, Charles" Nice and Corbett Stovall, stags. OTHERS Zeta Psi, Miss Sarah Sutton with Paul Clodfelter, Miss Sarah Frances Ferrell with Marion Fuller, Miss Booty Hutchinson with Alfred Hob good, Jr., Miss Frances Roebuck with Billy Howard, Miss Jackie Gravely with Eruce Lea, Miss Dorothy Bunn with Sam Mordecai, Miss Delia Cope knd with Asa Parham, Miss Julia Hedrick with Trent Ragland, Miss Sancy Goodwin with John Sasser, Miss Mary Ann Paschall with James Thorpe, Miss Martha Kelly with John Thorpe, Miss Jacqueline Ray with Ferrebee Taylor, Miss Lois- Ruth Johnson with Billy Upton, Miss Doro thy Evans with Harry Weyher, Miss Charlotte Miller with Ike Wright, and Aubrey Haines and Hubert Walston, stags. DKE, Miss Minnie Lou Parker with c- B. Morrisett. Miss" Marie Watters Jrta Gene Devant, Miss Mary Gra- ham rth Truman Hobbs, Miss Mary yd with William Peete, Miss Caro ma Greenleaf with Frank Williams, nd Cy Hogue, Blackwell Brodgen and ames Saunders, stags. eta The-ta Pi, Miss Lulu Gravely h Don Wilson, Miss Carol Good Tn lth Walt Cole, Miss Nancy Tay with Grady Stevens. Miss Jo lly th Nick Foran, Miss Randy continued on page two) 5 t I- - - a F i Li .'.A lead their orchestras tonight in open- at Durham's Washington-Duke hotel, rAnntnr MnK'a T?,nKoi- 17 T m Kali WMAV 0 VW1 A UUlia Hill Counter Club To Entertain Guests At Lee Ball Tonight The village Country club will en tertain about 120 guests at a Robert E. Lee dance at the club house to night, with Jere King and his orches tra furnishing the music. The affair, to be one of the most colorful of the season, will feature the "Old South" idea. Confederate flags will be used in decorating the ballroom. Over the mantle a large por trait of General Lee will be hung. Tables will be lighted with red, white and blue candles. After a buf fet supper is served, guests will dance to the rhythms of King's orchestra. Mrs. W. S. Spearman, wife of Wal ter S. Spearman of the University Journalism department, is chairman of the arrangements committee." Serv ing with Mrs. Spearman are Mrs. F. E. Coenen, Mrs. E. M. Hedgepeth, Mrs. E. L. Mackie and Mrs. W. G. Morgan. LIQUOR OFFICERS ATTEND INSTITUTE Koontz, Gardner Speak To Group North Carolina's enforcement offi cers can stamp out completely what remains of the illicit liquor traffic in their counties if they apply properly the legal weapons available and get the proper cooperation, v ABC officers representing 22 of the counties with liquor control laws were told on the campus Thursday in addresses by State Solicitor H. L. Koontz of the 12th Judicial district, and Wade Gard ner, Solicitor of the Wilson County Recorder's court. Concluding a two day course of in struction, the two prosecutors dis cussed courtroom angles of the offi cers' work with emphasis on the pro- (Continued on ,last page) First Begging Attendance Play makers ' Experimentals Now Draw Overflow Crowds Nowhere Else In Nation Does Audience Participate In Criticizing Presentations By SANFORD STEIN Frpm practically begging a handful of people to attend a performance to turning away over two hundred people at the doors of the newly reno vated theatre last Wednesday night is, in brief, the history of the Playmaker experimental productions. Finished productions of one-act plays written by students in the Uni versity, productions for which special sets are built and admission is char ged, have been a vital part of the Playmaker set-up since 1918, when Professor Frederick H. Koch started the organization at Carolina. But un til 1930 no provision had been made for authors who simply wished to see what their plays would look like when enacted on the stage and who wanted to have their dramatic technique and (Continued on last page) MRS. HUNTINGTON DONATES STATUE TO PERSON HALL Bronze Masterpiece Is Now Circulating In Southern States " "Youth," one of the larger bronzes of the Anna Hyatt Huntington col lection shown at Person hall art gal lery during November, has been pre sented to the University as a gift of the artist, it was learned yesterday from Russell T. Smith, head of, the art department. The statue will be removed from the circulating exhibit and returned to Chapel Hill the first week in February from the Gibbes Memorial art gallery in Charleston, S. C, where it is now being shown, Plans have been made to place it on a pedestal on the terrace of Person hall art gallery in the position it held during the exhibition here. FINE WORK "I consider 'Youth' one of Anna Hyatt Huntington's finest works," said Mr. Smith of the statue. "I feel that it is a particularly appropriate decoration for the campus, because it expresses the spirit of fearless youth." Although the statue was not for sale, it has been given an evaluation of $3,000, based on similar statues by Mrs. Huntington. NOTED SCULPTOR Anna Hyatt Huntington is one of the foremost American sculptors. Ex amples of her work are in such im portant collections as those of the Metropolitan Museum of New York, the Carnegie Institute of Pittsburgh, (Continued on page two) BOGGS SPEARS TO INSTITUTE Many Tar Heels Participating ..... Dr. Ralph S. Boggs, professor of Spanish at the University and an au thority on Spanish, Southern Ameri can and Mexican folklore, is a par ticipant in the winter Institute of Hispanic-American students which opened at the University of Miami in Florida this week. The institute, which will continue through January 27, is open to all scholars interested in Latin America Sponsored by the University of Mi ami, the forum's purpose is to inter pret historical evolution and contem porary life and problems of Hispanic America. OTHER SPEAKERS Dr. Boggs addressed Wednesday's session on "Folklore in Pan Ameri canism." He spoke at last night's ses sion on "Spanish Folklore in America' and discussed "Latin-American Folk lore Awaits the Conquistadors" 'last night. Among other speakers on the pro gram are Dr. J. Fred Rippy, formerly of Duke university and now of the University of Chicago; Dr. Homero Seris, well known Spanish critic who has taught at the University of IUi nois and the University of North (Continued on page two) - Med School Sponsors Post-Graduate Course A post-graduate course in medicine for North Carolina doctors, sponsored by the University Medical school and Extension division, will open in Char lotte Monday, it was announced yes terday. . Dr. Paul D. White of the Massa chusetts General hospital in Boston will speak at the opening session on "Important Clinical Aspects in the Diagnosis and . Treatment of Heart Disease with Particular Reference to Heart Attack." Outstanding physicians and special ists in various fields of medicine are scheduled to address doctors from 15 counties throughout the southwestern part of the state. Lectures will be held each Monday night through March 7 at the Hotel Charlotte, each address to follow a dinner session. Clinics to be held by the visiting speakers will be conducted in the First Methodist church. ' Little Corporal V - ----- ' ' Pete Ivey, formerly the Napoleon of Graham memorial, returns to the campus Sunday night, January 22, to officiate at the Student union's inau gural amateur night. The program begins a bi-weekly campus feature. IVEY TO RETURN TO INAUGURATE AMATEUR SER Magill Invites All To Participate In Bi-weekly Program With Pete Ivey returning to the campus to act as master of cere monies, the Graham Memorial Stu dent union will inaugurate a series of amateur night programs on Sun day, January 22, in the main lounge. Every other Sunday evening after ward, the talented, unmercenary en tertainers among the undergraduates and faculty will perform. As Bob Magill, director of the Student union, said, "Anyone who can sing, dance, cut a shine, play a saxophone, or do anything should take part in the program." To back up this encouragement, he has of-( fared a first prize of three dollars and a second award of two dollars. TO COMPETE Anyone wishing to compete in the amateur contest must fill out the ap plication blank published in the Daily Tar Heel today. Upon drop ping the filled-in form in the ama teur box at the YMCA or Graham memorial, the potential Astaire or Crosby" is officially entered in the show, and eligible to become prize winner. Community singing, slides, and bouncing ball movie shorts will add (Continued on last page) Symphony To Play At Peace Tonight The University Symphony orches tra makes its first appearance of the season when it appears in concert to night at 8:30 at Peace college in Ra leigh. A special feature of the program will be the performance with Mrs. Ca milla Schinhan, a diseuse of consider able experience, of Schillings' "The Witch Song," a work which had had but few performances in America. Other selections included on the pro gram will be the "Unfinished Sym phony" by Schubert, "L'Arlesienne Suite" by Bizet, "Trumpet Voluntary" for brass instruments, percussion, and organ by Purcell-Wood, and a mod ern arrangement of a Bach chorale, "Sleepers Awake." REPRESENTATIVE . The orchestra, which has received considerable attention because of its novel and interesting programs, com prises a large number of students, townspeople, and faculty members, the departments of bio-chemistry, Eng lish, romance languages, medicine, philosophy, and economics being rep resented. - Liee Wiggins is president of the or chestra committee, and Alexander Mitchell is secretary. Dr. Benjamin Swalin is the orchestra conductor. Any people who play orchestral instru ments and who are interested are in vited to join the group. f The next concert in Chapel Hill will be given on February 16. Catalogues, Please s The supply of catalogues of the Graduate school for th year 1938- 1939 has been exhausted. Faculty members and graduate stu dents who have copies of this edition are requested to turn the catalogues in to the Graduate office, 202 South, if these copies can be spared. Criticism Of Tuition Increase Mounts Rapidly; Council Urges Citizens To Write Committee President Graham Advises Against Demonstrations By CARROLL BIcGAUGHEY The Student council, by means of letters sent to influential citizens of the state, and President Frank Gra ham in an interview with John Ran kin, chairman of the student lobby, yesterday "added the weight of their influence to the urgings of the lobby for citizens to write letters to their representatives in the legislature protesting the proposed $50 increase in tuition at the University. , Dr. Graham, in an interview with Lobby Chairman Rankin, strongly advised against any form of student demonstration in Raleigh. He sug gested that the lobby ask students to request their parents to write let ters to the committee in Raleigh. TACT All letters should be reasonable and tactful, Dr. Graham told the lobby chairman, as the flow of opin ion is now toward the University and any undiplomatic or rash demonstra tions or statements would greatly de crease the possibilities of ,the defeat of the measure. The council letter, sent to 150 peo ple throughout the state, reads: Dear Friend of the University: We are calling on you in an hour of need as one of the very important citizenry who determine our legisla tors and hence our state legislation. You no doubt know of the proposal to raise tuition at the University by $50. We are at a loss to know how the proposed cut in appropriations which would result in the raise in our tuition was arrived at but it is a matter of dire consequence to we students. . There , is here, as well as at all the state institutions to which the tui tion raise would apply, a very high percentage of poor students who work either a part or all of their way through school. This proposed raise would cut many of them out of an education, others who would have to redouble their efforts would injure their health as many of them do even under the present circumstances, and of course cut down their studies. This burden on our many students on the border line as to whether they will be able to make the jflnancial grade and get a college education or not, is a matter of more serious con sequence than our legislators seem to think. Please write to them letting them know the feeling of their constitu ency . . . (there follows a list of the members of the House and Senate Appropriations committees, printed ( Continued on page two) All Jitterbugs Know Glenn Miller Has Ascended To Top-Ranking Position Alumni Association Arrange Banquets Alumni banquets in several places have been scheduled during January and February, it was announced yes terday by J. Maryon Saunders, sec retary of the University Alumni as sociation. Coach Raymond Wolf and Saunders will attend banquets tonight and to morrow night in Lenoir and Mt." Airy, respectively. Next week they will be guests at a meeting of Moore County alumni in Southern Pines, January 18, and of High Point alumni, Janu ary 19. SAUNDERS TO ATLANTA Saunders is scheduled to attend meetings of alumni in Atlanta and Birmingham, January 26 and 27, re spectively. In Birmingham he will at tend a conference of alumni secre taries of Southeastern states, Janu ary 27-28. He is to appear on the program of this gathering. Gaston County alumni will have Dean of Administration R. B. House and Secretary Saunders as their guests and speakers at a meeting in Gastonia, February 16. Other meetings now being planned, but dates for which have not been finally determined, include Washing ton, D. C, and Watauga county. Legislators Make Varying Statements Regarding Issue By CHARLES BARRETT Rapidly mounting criticism through out the state against an increase in University tuition fees, as evidenced by statements from legislators and newspaper comment, and a report that Governor Clyde Hoey will not use his influence with the legislature to have the recommendations adopted, led informed observers to feel yester day that resident North Carolinians will be able to attend the University next year at no increase, or at least a relatively small increase, in tuition. The trend among newspapermen and legislators indicated a possibility.that the proposed $227,000 increase in stu dent fees may be divided largely am ong out-of-state students. HOEY VIEW Governor Hoey was reported as be ing inclined to favor a greater boost in tuition charges for non-resident students than recommended by the Advisory Budget commission. If that is done, the possibility arises of leav ing fees for state residents at the present level by increasing the recom mended appropriations for the University. Comments were numerous during and after a day's session of the joint Appropriations committees which was devoted almost entirely to tuition. DEYTON' SAYS R. G. Deyton, assistant budget di rector, told the committee that the proposed increase in tuition rates "might reduce enrollment and might injure" the state's educational insti tutions. "The legislature will never consent to the increases in tuition for in-the-state students," Senator Frink of, Brunswick said after the session. "I talked to 21 or 22 members of the legislature some in the senate and some in the house and the general sentiment is opposed to it," Deyton continued. GREAT DECREASE Representative Wilson of Forsyth predicted that the proposed increase would "cut one out of five" students off the present enrollment figures. Senator Frink suggested that the matter of the tuition raises as a pol icy be thrashed out on the floor of the house and senate before the appro priations committee attempts to make a decision. Senator Austin of Jefferson in quired as to whether or not it would be feasible for a non-resident student to pay "the full costs" of his educa tion. It was revealed before the commit tee that, at the present enrollment, (Continued on page two) - Slide Valve Artist Shares Honors With Blonde Torch Singer, Male Vocalist By BILL RHODES WEAVER Glenn Miller and his orchestra, ap pearing here for the Mid-Winter Ger man club dances, have risen to a top notch position in dance band circles within the past 18 months. Prior to organizing the band, Miller was arranger for such orches tras as -Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey, Ray Noble, Glen Gray and Benny Goodman. The young musician is now heard regularly on the Mutual network from his night club and hotel engagements. Miller and his Paradise restaurant musicians have made several record ings for Brunswick, most popular among which are "Doin' the Jive" and "Sold American," the travesty on the chant of the tobacco auc tioneer. UNUSUAL ARRANGEMENTS With a following largely consist ing of collegiate dancers and younger network dialers, Glenn Miller has at tracted attention by his unusual ar rangements. Novel affects are ac complished by his brass choir, con sisting of three trumpets and three (Continued on page two)