1 WEATHER Cloudy and slighlly colder EDITOR! a Fit To Print Stumbling Block This Frugal Life United Press CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1948 Phone F-3371 F-3351 ; ' v - . . . ' ""IigSSil . S QLUME LVI f ?Wfv wiH'Afm Xlf;Tw1 t" w' If! I I 1'JLi "l W ' - ' ' " , . y """ ' - - ' .... - ,, V . I. 1 'II -'fjrP J if l - ;faM- J Doffing his hai to the crowds , Senor Romulo Gallegos enters his car in Caracas as an honor guard of soldiers present arms. Delegates from thirty nations witnessed the inaugaration of the new Chief of State. (International Soundphoto) Rolnik Handles 60 Speaking Roles In Unusual Radio Show Production By Raney Stanford Radio students working in the Communication Center in Swain hall last Wednesday evening un veiled the University's successor to the old "one-man-band", in the person of Robert Rolnik, ra dio student hailing from New York City. For Rolnik, since Wednesday's University radio drama, number 19 in a series of "33 By Air", finds that he is a one man radio show. In a half hour dramatiza tion going out, over five North Carolina radio stations, of James Thurber's sardonic short .story; "The Greatest Man in the World", the remarkable Robert acted and dramatized the parts of J0 different characters. The program, student directed arid "produced, was expanded for radio by Rolnik from Thurber's tale of a tough little punk who, Music, Motorcycle, Flying. N&tfman By -Z. ryan" Haislip Riding a niotyiicyile .to .Wash- ington, D. C, and back over a i i 1 1.. .. . . . , i . wecK-cnci, or uneui uuiiy a imc i sonata to add to his collection Dr. William S. Newman, member nf the university's music faculty, easily lakes cither in .stride. Catching him at an idle-mo-, ment is next to impossible. A man of unlimited energy and in terests, he is at once an accom plished musician, a writer, a stu-" dent of music history, a collector of rare musical works, and a pop- t ular and witty teacher. At the present time, whenev- tr he can snatch a half-hour be- J twecn classes in music apprccia- i tion, lessons with advanced pi ano students, and majors in graa uatc music history and theory, Dr. Newman can be found in his Hill hall studio, practicing for his recital here on March 4. New Music "It tal s from six to ten weeks t work up a recital," he ex plained, interrupting his practice for a short talk. "The amount of time depends on how much" of the music is new." New music, by the way, is one of his chief interests. He has given the first performances in many cities of piano sonatas by Hindesmith, iiTs. His coming recital will fea- ure a sonata by Ernest Bloch: gave the first American per ormance of this sonata in New l'ork in 1940. A rapid, efficient worker, Dr. the new President of Venezuela. by flying solo around the world, finds himself on as shiny a pedes tal as Lindbergh in the eyes of the people, even though in re ality he is the kind of person who would j ust as soon kick his mother's teeth in as look at her. The show was originally sched uled to include a cast of 20 ra- ! u'u . "l : -.Vv oi duu nun. uia ufjyiuMiuansiy an hour before air time, the stu dent producers realized the show lacked that unidentifiable some thing that show people speak of when they say a performance "clicked". - " v." . ' " : : So the spur of the moment de cision was made to revert , the tale back to one viewpoint and let the author take all the speak ing parts., At .3 o'clock then, 20 people moved back from the mU crophonc and Rolnik, .with .only (See ROLNIK) page 4) . In A Hurry , Newman has "a reputation for be-. in- lable.. to get- - enormouaihis-playing-comes out in gestures amount of -.vork done in a short time At the end of the fall Dr. Newman quarter, he gave an examination to 125 music appreciation stu dents. After marking their papers and preparing the grades, j he climbed into his new Plymouth and drove to Boston, making the trip in a' little more than four teen hours. Last fall, ! he ; spent many weekends doing, research in Washington. While the weather was still! good, he otten; maoe tho trio, there and - back, -by motorcycle. When he is not seated at . the I ' 'if Wallace Club Hears Conference Report The Wallace for President club heard reports Friday night from three delegates attending the an-ti-UMT conference held in Wash ington last week by the National Youth Assembly. Reporting on the . conference, which was attended by more than 2,000 delegates from universities and labor and political organiza- tions, members Jerry Hodgson, - Vera Scales, and John Myers told the local Progressive party that General ' Herbert ' Holdridge and Paul ' Robeson spoke against pro- J'Uat.-U Ulixvt'iscil lumiaiji ,tion 'at.-Hhe'- Wys'hington meeting. Jerry- Hodgson reported that a Tiiass iiK'eting was . held on the j: Piinitat : 'sfns in ( Wnshintrton and that Conressmcn questioned by delegates reacted "favorably to , me -principles or me .. aim-urn Joe Martin stated that the bill would probably be defeated and V,.,t Drncilniii Tfumrin rnicrM drop the issue. i speak here tonight at 8 o'clock Local Wallacites 'also reported in the Roland Parker lounge on that the Washington conference the Palestine question. Political Parties Begin Campaign Plans As Candidates Start Soliciting Votes It's impossible to get across, the Y court these days with out seeing little groups of people in a huddle planning po litical strategy. With the three party tickets beginning to fill out, the can didates taking their stand on friends beginning to "solicit approaches a spring election. Heading, the. tickets of J.he Uni- versity and Campus parties will be Jess Dedmond, chairman of the legislature elections commit tee, president of Phi Eta Sigma, freshman scholastic honorary fraternity, and the chairman of the University Orientation com mittee. Mike Ittibish, a member of the legislature and the Monogram club, who has played varsity football for three years,, will op pose Dedmond as the SP nomi nee. His running mate will be the former regional chairman and executive committeeman of the National Student association Herman Baker, who the Stud ent party has nominated for the student body vice-presidency. The University party has nom- Are Among His Numerous Hobbies piano, the energy that goes into and conversation. Pacing about the studio, he talks of his work jn music historyrout of which his collection of about 3,000 key board sonatas the most com prehensive private collection in the .world has "grown.- "When the miscellany collected in the process of applied musical study gets so out of hand that I the owner purchases the same j item more than twice, there us- ually comes a decision to or Iganize the material. Then, if the i owner is not on his guard, he is i bitten by the collectors bug. He dignifies his status by calling himself a 'collector" and his new ly shelved music a 'library'." That is no disparagement of his library, of which he is justly ' proud. His collection of key ! board sonatas is outranked only by the Library of Congress col lection, which holds a slight edge in number, though none in comprehensiveness. He also has a supporting library of important landmarks in ; music history. These include both music and books. ' "I picked up a good many of the sonatas while 1 was -studying in London, Paris, and Flor ence. My first aim has been to get at least one representative work by as many different com posers as possible rather than to exhaust each minor composer as I come to him," Dr. Newman ex plains. Highlights of the collec- FBI agents and Capital police. Recordings of film actress Katherine Hepburn's speech, condemning practices . of the House un-American Activities committee, that was delivered at a Wallace meeting in Los Ange les last May was also featured at the meeting Friday night. Members of the "New" party will canvass North Carolina col leges this week-end to contact students interested in attending the Tarheel Students for Wallace assembly scheduled for Febru ary 2Cth and 20th in Chapel Hill. A meeting of college representa tives of the Wallace movement will be held at North Carolina vinf.k.tn draw un ten- . . ronveri. tion. It was announced that Rabbi 1 Jamos W'ise of NeW York will the issues, and the candidate's your vote", the campus again jnated UVA prexy John , Clam- pitt, an ex-chairman of the Ori entation committee and Univer sity dance committee to oppose Baker. For the secretary-treasurer's post, the hats of Bob Kirby of Charlotte and Gran Childress of Chapel Hill have been tossed in the ring by the University and Student party respectively. As yet, the Campus party has not announced any nominations for the positions of vice-president and secretary-treasurer. Next year's editor of the Daily Tar Heel will be chosen from Ed Joyner, the triply endorsed man aging editor of the DTH, inder pendent Art Melton, or a pos sible additional candidate. Oth (See POLITICS, page 4) tion are rarities such as the set of six two-movement sonatas by the Spaniard Blasco dc Nebra: Czerny, Wagnor, Burney, and Padcrewski composers not us ually associated with sonata writ ing are also represented. Book Published Also in conjunction with his work on the "History of the Sonata Idea," which he has been shaping into book form for the past twelve years, Dr. Newman has had numerous articles pub lished and has given many lecture-recitals. His latest book, a critical edition of "Thirteen Keyboard Sonatas of the Eigh teenth and Nineteenth Centur ies," has just been published by the University Press. "For the lecture recitals, I talk about one-third of the time and then illustrate the lecture by playing appropriate music," he says. "They are usually on some aspect of the sonata form either history or theory." Julliard School of Music, one of the top music schools in the country, has in vited him to give a series . of six lecture-recitals this summer. These will touch on highlights in the history of the keyboard sonata. i was cerefully watched by On May 2nd, he returns to his ;Wise is also the co-author of the hometown. Cleveland, to play ! famous Springfield Plan for with the Cleveland philharmonic, working unity among various re conducted by Karl Grossman. "It i ligions. He is the director of the will be a sort of homecoming," j Stuyvesant House in New York he says, "I haven't played there 'and has written several books in almost two years." dealing with Jewish world af- (See NEWMAN, page 4) fairs. ri,ji"'" ' i I ' K . t 4 C , 4 " , " ' I r - ' 1 anvii-.rtr iViiiiilliiiillMllli1llTTTlttiiili1irnii Margarel Kolb Music Recital Features Pianist In Hill Tonight Mrs. Margaret Kolb, piano so loist, will be featured with the University Symphony orchestra under the direction of Earl Slo cum in a concert in Hill hall at 8:30 tonight. - Mrs. Kolb, instructor in the music department, will do solo work in Variations on a Nursery Rhyme, by Donnanyi, highlight of the concert. A Viennese Waltz, a March, and a Fugue are used :n a series of variations on the well known "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star." A graduate of Salem College, Mrs. Kolb received her M.A. from Columbia university and studied with. Olga -Damaross Stokowski in Philadelphia. She gave a re cital last spring which students and townspeople will remember was well received. Mrs. Kolb is accompanist to the Music Theater Repertory group which gives chamber operas throughout the state. In the past she has been associated with the Berkshire Music Center, Colum bia Opera Workshop, Piedmont Musical Festival, and the Ashe vilie Mozart Festival. ; The program will include the Brassy Prelude by Ganz, Bee thoven's Leonore Overture No. 3, Schubert's Symphony No. 5, Borodin's Provetsian Dances from "Prince Igor". China Cooperaror To Speak Monday The coperative movement in community, state, and world is the theme of a meeting this Mon day night for all Chapel Hill co operators. Speaking on the worldwide aspect is Dr. Fuliang Chang, Executive Secretary of the Industrial Cooperative Leag ue of China. His visit to Chapel Hill and the state this week is part of Dr. Chang's current nine-month tour for observation of U. S, cooperatives. Other visitors are Mr D. R. Graham of the Credit. Union di vision of the State Department of Agriculture and Mr. Samuel Ro senberg of the University Eco nomics Department. Sponsored by the Methodist and Presbyterian Supper Cooperatives, the meeting is at 7:30 in the Presbyterian Church. All members of the Vic tory Village Cooperative Store, the Orange County Credit Union, and the Farmers Dairy Co-op are especially invited, and the ses sion is open to the public. Rabbi To Discuss Palestine Issue Rabbi James Waterman Wise, noted Jewish leader, will speak on the Palestine situation at a public meeting in Roland Parker lounges 2 and 3 this evening at 8 o'clock. Director of the Council Against Intolerance in America, Rabbi Week-End Retreat To Be Discussed By Y Delegates By Betly i'eirson Reports on the Y Retreat be ing held at ' Natural Bridge this weekend will be presented at the Coed Get-Together tomorrow af ternoon at five . o'clock in the main lounge of Graham Memori al. Representatives from the commission groups will give the reports at the meeting which this time is open to everyone on campus. . The commissions are meeting several times during the week end to discuss the various prob lems of the world today and what the students at Carolina : can do to help solve these problems. The five commissions which include student leaders and faculty ad visors were set up in advance as a general framework, "but con- tributions from the floor will be the most important factor in dis cussions at the Retreat. Group Discussions - The group discussing the Pan orama of Campus Social Life will concentrate on the facilities for recreation at the University and ways to improve them. The lack of social rooms in the dorms, the athletic program, dances, and the facilities at Graham Memorial will be points mentioned. Emily Ogburn will lead in the discus sions which also include such problems as where to go and what to do on dates, the ratio of boys to girls, and drinking.. Bill Shuford, director of Graham Me morial, is the advisor for the group. The commission on the Pano rama of Campus Life, led by Barbara Cashion, Bill Millers, and Jess Dedmond, will discuss the purposes of organization and po litical offices. The program of the ?r?ip includes ' discussions on now organizational set-up helps students to prepare for citizen ship and how to arouse interest in campus, national, and world wide political issues. The rseults of lack of interest in leadership as the problem applies to the campus will also be a point of interest for the group. Dr. Frank W. Hanft, of the University law faculty, will act as advisor. Racial Tensions in World Racial Tentions in Our World is the topic for discussion by the group led by Ethel Perry and George Worth. Particular em phasis will be laid on the ques tion of what can be done to improve the existing situation and ease the tension throughout the world today. Warren Ashby, of the University philosophy de partment, is group advisor. Representatives from these groups will be at the meeting to morrow afternoon' to report, to the students on the findings of the commissions. - -:.-....- - Playmakers Present Original Drama Soon As Major Feature By Mark Sumner "People laughed, that's the main reason I became interested in playwriting," says 27-year-old Gene McLain, whose full length play "Call Back Yesterday," will be staged by the Carolina Play makers as their fourth major pro duction in March. He was speak ing of the way his school mates laughed at a comedy skit he wrote as a class assignment in gram mar school. "It was a simple skit with only five characters," he went on, "but when it was put on as part of our Saint Patrick's day show, I the audience enjoyed it, and watching it made me feel good. Nothing went wrong, but it real ly wouldn't have made any dif ference to the skit." McLain's original play has just oeen selected for the production as the annual student written full-length experimental of the Playmakers, and the announce ment was made by Samuel Sel dom head of the University Drama Department. Sandy-haired McLain is a grad uate student in the Department and his home is Mamaroneck, Local Debafors Ciiosen For Tulane ToiirsicimeEit LSU Bans Mag For Sex Issue BATON ROUGE. La. There's no "Pell Mell" for students at Louisiana State University to look forward lo. or "he and she" jokes and cartoons show ing lots of pretty girls. But many a student is treasuring a copy autographed by its chief subject. The subject of the last issue was the subject of a lot of talk that ended with Ihe ban ning of "Pell Mell" by campus authorities. The students in charge de voted the cover, and almost the entire contents, to a New Orleans striptease Artist named 'Stormy' otherwise Stacie Ran dolph. Laurence. The pictures and interview on the personal and professional life of a strip per raised a lot of eyebrows. Then the student editors im ported "Stormy" herself, to au tograph copies of "Pell Mell" 5.000 of them that sold faster than "Stormy" ever disrobed. That was just too much for LSU officials. They banned sale of the humor magazine, rebuk ed the staff, and hinted at ex pulsion of Editor Pat Mclntyre, Publisher Ray Brannon, and Publicity Manager Robert Carter. - The good name of the uni versity, said student life di rector J. Perry Cole, was at stake. Wine, Women, and . . . San Jose,- California-(UP) A San Jose, California, man's habit of trading bits of his house for wine has cost him his wife and what's left of the house. Mrs. Carlos Bernal told a Su perior Cour judge that it all started last November when she came home from the hospital. The doorbell was gone. Her husband explained that he had sold it to buy wine. Then a win dow vanished. Same story. Five more windows went. Next to disappear was the kitchen stove, followed by the lighting; fixtures. Finally, four strips of plaster board vanished, one by one, leaving huge holes in the wall. Yesterday, Judge Leonard Av illa granted her an interlocutory decree - of ' divorce, $75 a month support, and what remains of the. house. N. Y. He served in the Army for three years, entered the Univer sity here in January 1946, and has concentrated on playwrit- Gene McLain. graduate stu dent in the University of North Carolina Department of Dra matic Art, whose new original full-length play, "Call Back Yesterday," will be produced by the Carolina Playmakers March 10. 11, 12. 13. ,J - V'-: ;ft f- By John Slump Four students have been se .cctcd to represent the Un.vers.ty .n-the competition for the Na tional centennial forensic champ ionships to be held at Tulane university in Ntw Oilcans, La. on Thursday, Fridr.y, and Satur day of this week. Carolina's representatives in the debate classification will be Charlie Long, Merl Stevens. Dick Mottsman, and Herbert Mitchell. Topic for the competition, to which .ill universities in North and South America have been invited to send speakers', is "Re solved: That a world federal gov ernment should be established." Long and Miss Stevens will support the affirmative side of the question while the negative is being argued by Mottsman and Mitchell. These four people were chosen after making what De bate Council President Earl Fitz gerald colled "an excellent show ing against topflight competition" in a series of preliminary try outs. Tryout Called To select representatives for the university in the oratorical and extemporaneous divisions of the contest, the Debate council has called a tryout session ot be' held at 7 o'clock Monday evening in the Di hall. At that time two orators and two extemporaneous speakers will be chosen to accompany the debaters to New Orleans. Those trying out for the orator's po sition will give prepared mem orized, 1200 word-speeches on any subject they desire. t Persons trying out for the ex temporaneous speaking aisign- ments will be given a subject 30 seconds before they are to speak and will be asked to give a five minute talk on it. New Orleans Requirements The requirements in New Or leans for the orators will be iden tical with those here, but the extemporaneous speakers will be asked to speak for eight minutes on a topic of national or domestic interest which will be presented to them 30 seconds before they ascend the rostrum. Contestants selected to make the trip will be given plane tick lets to and from New Orleans by the Debate council. They are expected to leave Raleigh-Durham airport at 1 o'clock Wed nesday afternoon and will arrive in the Delta city that evening. International Entries At last reports, teams from 14 (.Vec DEBATORS, page 4) mg. "Call Bark Yesterday" is his third full-length play, and he has authored 10 one-act shows. Hia original radio drama, "The World Is My Domain," was aired over several North Carolina radio sta tions by the University Commun ication Center. A second radio drama, "A Penny For My Baby," will be produced on the air next month. He has acted in several of the experimental productions of the Playmakers, and has been act ive in backstage work. He was a member of the 'cast of Paul Green's symphonic drama, "The Lost Colony," during 1946. "I have tried, since I started working with the Playmakers, to learn as much as I could be fore worrying about productions of my plays. ' 'Call Back Yester day' is the first play I will have had produced, and its the first one I've tried to push," he said. "Call Back Yesterday" will be presented on March 10, 11, 12 and 13. Harry E. Davis, associate di rector of the Playmakers, 'is di recting the production, and James Riley, West Palm Beach, Fla., is designing the settings.