WEDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1939 PAGE TWO CABINET OFFICIAL V- THE DAILY TAR HEEL ' - - - - : ; TiT . I ... . - - - " - -- ' " ; - - ' ! I a 1. 1 -- " if i n (i The : ontl 1 acn ) att j tltie j arol j I ! rime" I jthe ; bad j 1 -it, -t: 1011 lora i - xi f srun-! hat I thva lere , initri ?W. brtij owe Vnd . een V; ring ;erel:' ' "reed )f il. itille;. :duC; -, 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. Entered as second class matter at the post office at Chapel Hill, N. C, under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, $3.00 for the college year. Business and editorial offices : 204-207 Graham Memorial Telephones: news, 4351; editorial, 8641; business, 4356; night 6906; circulation, 6476. Martin Harmon Morris W. Rosenberg Clen S. Humphrey Jesse Lewis Editorial Dewitt Barnett, Frank Holeman, Jim Megsoiu V - -. Reporters . Miss Louise Jordan, Bill Rhodes Weaver, Hamriek, Bill Snider. y Technical Staff News Editors: Ed Rankin, Charles Barrett, Carroll McGaughey. Night Sports Editors: Fred Cazel, Gene Williams, Phil Ellis. Deskmen: Edward Prizer, Ben Roebuck, Bob Barber. :' Cub Reporters Miss Doris Goerch, Miss Dorothy Coble, Miss. Jo Jones, Earl Alexander, Hugh Ballard, Kern Holoman. . Columnists v.- Laffitte Howard, Ray Lowery, Elbert Hutton, Sam Green, Sanford Stein. Feature Board Miss Gladys Best Tripp, Bob deGuzman, Irving H. Nemtzow, Lee Manning Wiggins, Simons Lucas Roof, Arthur S. Irwin Katz, David A. Howard, Kalman Dixon, Larry Lerner, St. Clair Pugh. - Sports Editor: SheHey Rolf e. Reporters: William L.Beerman, Leonard Lobred, Richard Morris, Billy Weil, Frank Goldsmith, Jim Vawter, Marty Kalkstein, Harry Hollingsworth, Roy Popkin. ' Assistant Circulation Manager: Larry Ferling. ' Business Staff Assistant Business Manager: William Ogburn. . Durham Advertising: Alvin Patterson, Bill Schwartz. Local Advertising Manager: Unit 1: Bill Bruner. Assistants: Tom Nash, Ruf us Shelkoff, Irving Fleishman, Warren Bernstein. Local Advertising Manager: Unit 2: Andrew Gennett. Assistants: Bob Sears, Jimmy Schliefer, Morty Ulman. Collections Manager: Bob Lerner. - Collections Staff: James Garland, Hal Warshaw, Grady Stevens. "Office Manager: Phil Haigh. Office Staff: Mary Peyton Hover, L. Lan Donnell, Dave Pearlman, Mary Ann For This NEWS: BILL SNIDER. rejuvenate For over a year the student legislature has existed. It was organized to offer a solution to many problems constantly aris ing in University life. To date the student legislature has convened twice. The first meeting was the get-acquainted type, with nothing being done. The second meeting resulted in the appointing of committees to Jiandle various phases of the legislature's work. Perhaps the legislature can be compared to wood which is still green it's alive but isn't good for anything except looks. Perhaps there has been no work for the legislature this year. But it is to be expected that the fault lies in lack of in terest not lack of work. Cer tainly such problems as class fees, dance corsages, and Uni versity appropriations by the state could have been discussed, and solutions could have been suggested. The student council, inter dormitory, interfraternity, and woman's councils serve only as quasi-legislative bodies, their main function being judicial. In the student legislature we have a body, duly created by a large majority of the student body vote. It is supposed to correlate the work of the various coun- j cils. It is the only body of pure ly legislative calibre which exists for student control. In a school where student opinion and rule are major fac-i tors, it seems stupid to pass up the chance to make the legisla ture a vital part of the system. Next year, if there is to be a student legislature, we suggest ' and strongly urge that the new student body officers formulate a legislature which at least will try to accomplish something. Or abolish it as dead wood! honor for service Annual awards night a glori fied copy of the old high school prize night is scheduled again tonight. .Editor Managing Editor ..Business Manager .Circulation Manager Board ' McAden, Don, Bishop, Adrian Spies, Ed Jimmy Dumbell, Louis Harris, Rush Link, Howard M. Bossa, Morton Yogel, Sherman, J. Everette Bryan, Arthur V Staff , v J. Seheinman, Bill Stern, Jack Holland, Koonce. Issue: SPORTS: FRED CAZEL ried assortment of keys will be distributed to campus extra-cur ricular leaders. Those sharing will include athletes, students, and in particular, combinations of the two. For groups, the Order of the Grail gives a plaque to the year's outstanding dormitory. The Delta Kappa Epsilon trophy, given for much the same, rea sons as the dormitory plaque, will go to the fraternity showing best scholarship - athletic at tainments. ' The highest individual award, last year won by Andy Bershaw, all-American end, is the Patter son memorial trophy. It is given to the athlete most outstanding in scholarship, leadership, and extra-curricular activities. This year's ceremony will be little changed from past. Awards nights. But the big interest value, the principals, are differ ent. New leaders will be recog nized and awarded the "crbix de guerre": the campus has been the battlefield. The program deserves your attention and attendance, though you have probably been before. It'll be interesting like the old- fashioned spelling bee. vagabonding Before the year wheezes out and all things academic are dropped into mothballs, we want to call attention to a new prac tice: something which might be retained and used wheri the new school year begins. Dr. L. O. Katsoff, who has managed to treat his students as intelligent adults and make them like it, is finishing his course in sophomore ethics. Throughout the quarter he has presented the various moral theories nec essary to an understanding of the subject. Now he is bringing the theory to life by obtaining outstanding faculty members to address his class on ethical con tent. The class has heard, for example, politics and labor ap proached as matters of ethical consideration. One of the major faults with our selective type of college . From the Fourth Estate By LAFFITTE HOWARD , Herewith commendation for the baseball team as a whole and for Frank Cox in particular. The short haired lad from Marigum played his last college game and slapped a ball over the fence Saturday night all while he had a sprained ankle. Smoke But No Fire Sympathy to the eager young gentlemen who flocked into Lewis the other night. That red lantern on the door had no significance, it had been left to guard the nearby ditch. Whimsey alone placed it over the portal. 1 Nasty Griped E. E. Peacock of the Com merce school who is said to consider his low rating in the prof poll noth ing but personal dislikes, "All right, you seniors. You had your fun last week, next week I have mine!" Utter Damnation Local recorder's court had disposed of its traffic violations yesterday morning when Judge Andrew C. Mc intosh called all Skipper Coffin's court-reporting journalism majors to the front. Sentenced the judge "You are to be confined to the journalistic field for life, sentence suspended after 50 years hard work on condition that your stories have been written with fairness and accuracy, AND MAY GOD HAVE MERCY ON YOUR SOULS!" . Hot Stuff Final plug of the year for Rural Hall's Buc editing Willie "Lightnin"' Stauber. Congratulations for return ing humor to quadrangle level and in parting may you have ho more trouble being funny than being a Cassanova. Bottoms up! 10:30 All rising juniors entering the College of Arts and Sciences meet in Venable 206; those entering School of Commerce in Bingham 103. 2:30 Mural officials meet on Fetzer field. 3:00 Mathematics seminar in 302 Phillips hall. Yackety Yacks to be distributed for last time. 4:30 Spencer hall tea. 5:00 Graham Memorial concert of re corded classics. 5:15 Student Christian council meets in YMCA to elect new officers. 7:00 Band practice in Hill hall. 8:00 Stamp auction in Graham Me morial. ' 8:30 M. H. Waynick presented in gra duation recital. , In Hock Those in hock at the infirmary yes terday were: Claude Sapp, James Holland, Robert Raymer, L. James Schleifer, Robert Goodwin, Mary Mc Kee, William Neely, William Hoyle, J. Cay Hardin, W. L. Wall, Stuart Fick len, Lloyd Allen, John Latham, John Graham, Jerry Allen, JAMES DUM BELL, and James William Stewart. Any Old Rejections? Allen Green, editor of the Mag, has issued the following ultimatum : "Stu dents having rejected material in the Carolina Magazine office must call for it today or it will be thrown in the waste basket." "The Star Spangled Banner" was written by Francis Scott Key in 1814 and authorized as official national an them by Congress in 1931. training is that students must too often be deprived of academic contact with professors in other "schools." In such a class as KatsofTs, men not only present their specialties on a neutral ground, but come into the class room as invited . guests to be treated with interest and re spect. Students are able to blend the viewpoints of a number of lecturers into their own. If there was les pigeon- l holed sacredness about academic fields and more "vagabonding" throuerh reciprocal visits, col- A. ' lege would become more and more an intelligent adult expe rience. today 1,7 U.S. A. cabinet ofciaL 10 Conceited. 11 Period of time 12 Lady. 13 Bushel. 14 Driveway in a building. 16 Exaltation. 18 Medley. Vr 19 Behold.' 20 Crucifix. ( 21 Dye. . 40 Weight 22 Noise. -. ' " allowance. 23 Mooley apple.'48 Since. 26 Brother. - ' 49 Footless 28 To seize. animal. 29 Green quartz., 51 Punitive. - 31 Lizard. 52 Viscous fluid. 32 Boundary. 53 Concerns. 34 Region. ; 55 He is 38 Toward. secretary of. , 38 Astonishes. . 41 Before Christ. 56 Crafty. 42 Small shield 57 He promotes 44 Revived. good will 45 Cry for help through at sea. agreements. v 1 3p jf"" p I"1" T 1 1 "'7'"""r yi"1 igr - t"" " - " 3T" " 3 24 " 26 2f 36"37"" !5 "T 59 "7 W IT W W so" mmJ B' " 55"" 1- 55 " ST""" - To Tell The Truth By Adrian Spies This is the story of a hoy I know. If you can't place him don't worry; he's the accumulation of a lot of youth and part of many people you know. Maybe he is you. I don't know whether this column is a biography or a eulogoy or a prophecy. ' And I don't know because this boy has just begun to live as a man. He is still flexing his muscles and training his wind. The boy him self may know if this is a record of defeat or a whisper of hope. If you are the boy maybe you know. The boy was born that is, began to breath and eat and make those little imitating motions of man in about 1918. If you're the boy and my date isn't correct please don't com plainmy story still might be true. Anyway, there was a child born and there was much pain and much laughter and much hope in 'some home. While the boy slept someone said a prayer and someone made plans. It was all a long time ago when America , was still gasping from the stench of the last World War. And you see, a child born was a sign of peaceful newness. The boy was old enough to go to school. He learned about George Washington and two and two. After school the boy had wonderful after noons and delicious Saturdays shoot ing Germans with wooden guns. There was usually sunlight then, and the amazing bigness of the possession of a nickel,, and the exuberance of a na tion rising away from war. Then one day his friends made the boy play the German. And when a wooden pistol was pointed at him, he had to! be dead. The boy never liked playing soldier as much after that. But still there was the sun and in creasing age and approach to people. And about this time. they taught the boy to revel in our American Dream. Don't ask me what it is,-you learned it too. You know, that warm hope of growing up and making money and being respected and getting your pompous picture in the Sunday roto gravure. The boy was quite a little man and living for the fulfillment of his dream. Then the boy read a newspaper streamer abot the stock market's crash. He heard about this monster "Depression." But his father and the men-folks who knew everything pre dicted that things would be better by summer. So the boy forgot to worry and waited with the child's quiet patience for summer. And summer never came. Summer never came even as the boy passed through the mock-adulthood of high school and came to c 1 lege. Now the boy was old enough to see that haunting shrivels of his com 1212s was a - to the' ;., Pan-American Conference. 13 To low S a cow. 15 He has been in many - years, e 17 Electrified particle. 22 Water barrier. 24 Any glee song 25 Plural pronoun. 27 Striped cloth. 29 To peel 30 Repose. 33 Tortoise. -S5 To edit. 37 Group, of eight 39 Charts. 40 Elephant tusk. 41 Augured. 43 Liquid measure. 45 Bird. 47 To sup. 50 Estimated . golf score. 51 Postscript 54 Compass point VERTICAL 2 Rounded -molding. 3 Genus of frogs. 4 Abusive harangues. 5 Half an em. 6 To wash clothes. 7 Places where herons breed. 8 Russian mountains.. Switch. fortable American dream. There was the sun sometimes and hope some times. But always the boy heard the brooding dissonance of a nation, fight ing with itself for a panacea. And always the boy smelled the unmistak able prophecy of drawn-out decay. Sometimes the boy "listened and smelled and was worried and fright ened. Sometimes he smelled the spring-bloom , instead, and only listened to the unmistakable victory of lunging swing. If you're the boy perhaps you can tell me what hap pened to your private little Ameri can dream. The boy I know lost his and found a fear to falsely take its place. Now in the hot hints of summer the boy is getting ready to let them graduate him. ' Long ago his ideala of the grandeur of learning were dispelled by the curt officialness of blue quiz books and didactic outlines. They are going to give the boy the dignity of cap and gown and the de mocracy of a hand-shake. And after that the boy is all by himself and maybe at last a man. The boy I know is spending quiet hours thinking about his American Dream. The old promise of security and the first grade's lessons of honest fairness that come i doses of George Washington. The dignity of his ex pensive white collar wilts with the heat of hungry competition. The in different tolerance of timeliness col lege towns is a laugh in the "outside world" of already fighting camps. For the summer still has not come. V Out there in the anticipation of summer sweetness some men and they have read books too are fight ing to cure the sickness of a people. They are trying to spread a new American Dream one of cooperation instead of competition, one of plan ning instead of individualist "freedom to buy chains." They are the men like our president. They are the pro- ick Theatre TITO GUIZAR Famous Radio Star in the Prize Winning "RANCH0 GRAND E" In Spanish with English Titles With the Authentic Songs, Dances and Customs of Romantic Old Mexico Squawks By You All letters must be typewritten anA are subject to cutting. Dear Sir, When I started to read the interest, ing article on the Forest Theatre ia today's (Wednesday, May 17) Tak Heel, I thought that, as often happens the headrlines had distorted the facts' but I found that the error was repeat ed more than once in the article iteelf. Some memoirs of mine, written about a year ago, give the story of the origin of the outdoor theatre, afterward named the Forest Theatre. To correct the record, please let me quote: "In the spring of 1916, the tercen tenary of "the death of Shakespeare was celebrated by the community with a pageant, which was presented a little east of the Alumni -Building with, the Arboretum as the "back drop." .A com mittee of which Holly Hanford, if not the chairman, was a prominent iem ber prepared the program. Scenes from several of the plays with casts of students and members of the faculty together with folk-dances "on the green" by students of the Chapel Hill school were given. I remember espec ially Miss Nell Battle, later Mrs. John Booker, as Audrey with Professor Ed ward Jones of Erskine College as Touchstone, John Booker in shining ar mor as Henry V, Bob House as Bot tom, Curtis Henderson as Ariel, and Jake Smith as Puck. this pageant made us reahza the need f br an out-door theatre. So Green Jaw, Hanford, Coker, Booker, and per haps others took long walks oyer the possible territory, looking for a na tural auditorium. They considered among attractive sites the dale in which is now the Kenan Stadium; but final ly decided on the present site. A low platform was built, and movable frames in which shrubbery could be fixed to serve as wings and screens were con structed. On that platform as a fea ture of the opening of the theatre in the spring of 1917 was produced Paul Green's first play." Another feature of the opening was to have been a production of Twelfth Night, but that was rained out and had to be given in Gerrard Hall. The name "Forest Theatre," given by Professor Koch with his fine taste in words, is twenty years old; but the theatre itself is twenty-two years qld. The Tanning of the Shrew in 1919 did not, therefore, open the theatre; but Paul Green's first play in 1917 did. George McKie. Dear Sh : Wednesday afternoon we lost a base ball game to Duke University by the score of 6 to 5 ; however we lost some thing far more important than a ball game, our honor. ' For years I've heard about the poor sportsmanship of Carolina, but I be lieve what happened Wednesday is the worst that I have ever seen on this campus. At the close of Wednesday's game it was almost impossible for sportswriter Woody Woodhouse to give his summary of the game because of the booing of the Carolina students. They crowded around him and made such terrible noises that you would wonder if the students had ever seen a college. It's too late now to do anything about yesterday, but we can certainly, penuig again. Let's just remember that we are Carolina gentlemen and as students, keep anything from hap that we can be just as good a sport when we lose as when we win. Come on Carolina students, let's be have! v ' " M. A. Stroup, JR- gressive Americans fighting winter's decay with a summer that will stay. The boy I know has a dilapidated dream and a growing fear. His dream lies out among the plans of people who plea for tolerance and unity and planned progress. Maybe you are the boy. If so, then you can decide if this is' a biography or a eulogy or a I prophecy. TODAY Nine cups, plaques, and a va-j