Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 12, 1946, edition 1 / Page 4
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Page Four ANNOUNCEMENT JIMMY MARSHALL & CAROLIN ians are available for Christmas season dance engagements in your home town. Contact Dane Lineber ger, No. 2 Cobb Terrace, Phone 7711, Chapel Hill, N. C. (1-7449) FOR SALE HAND EMBROIDERED PORTO Rican lingerie, pure silk, ideal for trousseau or holiday gifts. For de tails call F-2477 morning3 or be tween 6 and 8 p,m. (1-7448) THE DAILY TAR HEEL THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1945 STANDARD UNDERWOOD TYPE writer. Excellent condition. Rea sonably priced. Call F-2311 (day) or 7441 (night). Ask for Jimmy Sims. (1-7441) CHRISTMAS TREES (CEDAR), freshly cut. Any size $1.00 and up. Write R. Sykes, Box 522. Orders delivered on Thursday & Saturday each week. (1-7443) HOUSE TRAILER NO. 6, UNIVER sity Trailer Court. Good condition, furnished. Available immediately or Jan. 1. See G. H. Parks. (1-7450) ZEISS IKON SUPER IKONTO B camera. Zeiss-Tessar f. 3.5 lens, Compur rapid. Bargain at $160. John Kerr, KA House. (1-7459) RADIO-PHONE, $20, CALL G. DE znas, 5886, after 6 p.m. or see it at 503 W. Cameron. . (1-7453) BLUE LEATHER PORTABLE PHO nograph in fine condition. Cost $90, will sell for $50. Only few months old. See or write Sam Whitehall. Room 409 Grimes between 7:30 8:00 p. m. (2-0000) " LOST WOULD THE PARTY WHO TOOK by mistake from the make-up room in Memorial Hall the evening of the Glee Club Concert, please re-j i I turn the snow-wnite, Dunny-iur eve ' ning jacket and a small silver mesh evening bag containing a car key, post office key, evening comb and case, and mirror. Reward. Phone F-2481 or return to Info desk at Y. (1-7444) Campus Calendar Short Notices for Busy Readers Veterans Must Report Changes of Addresses Veterans going to school taking on-the-job training must report any change of address promptly to the Veterans Administration if they wish to receive their subsistence checks without delay, according to Elliot G. Bourne, local VA training officer. This is necessary as many checks are now being returned to the reg ional VA office due to incorrect ad dresses. Those not getting their sub sistence checks regularly should com ply with the following rules for ad dress changes: Send in VA claim number; former and present address; type of benefit being received, such as pensions, compensation, or subsis tence allowances. Send this in to Regional-Office, Veterans Administra tion, Nissen Building, Winston-Salem, N. C. HILLEL SERVICES "TOMORROW Hillel services commemorating the Festival of Chanukah will be held at 7:30 tomorrow evening in Roland Parker lounge, Graham Memorial. Rabbi Fred I. Rypins of Temple Em anuel in Greensboro will be guest speaker. IIFIDEIIC FOUNTAIN PEN ON CAMPUS Mon. Green with gold band. Re ward. W. A. Fairey, II, 208 Grimes. (1-7455) ., BLACK VELVET COAT, LENG th, white fur collar, white lining. Taken by mistake from coat room at Sat. night dance in gym. Please return to Florence Medd, 104 Mc Iver. (1-7454) LADIES YELLOW GOLD WRIST watch. Bulova with gold band. Lost Tues. in business section. Contact Eleanor Singletary, 202 Alderman. Reward. (1-7457) When you've done your work faith fully each day, you can zip through final exams like a breeze. And when you complete your secretarial train ing at Katharine Gibbs, you can enter any business office with confi dence. Personal placement service in four cities. College Course Dean. KATHARINE GIBBS Barter Theatre Group To Appear in January The widely acclaimed Barter Thea tre of Virginia, under the direction of Robert Porterfield, will give a one night performance of Shakespeare's comedy, "Much Ado About Nothing," in Memorial hall January 8 under the sponsorship of the Carolina Play makers. . Tickets, priced at $1.23, are now on sale at Ledbetter-Pickard's and the Playmakers business office in Swain hall. These will be obtainable until the Christmas holidays, and sales will resume January. 4. MEADOWBROOK RESERVATIONS Reservations for the Dec. 29 Caro lina night at the Meadowbrook in Cedar Grove, N. J., may be made with Harrison Tenney, telephone 8641. Aft er the holidays, direct reservations may be made by calling the Meadow brook, Little Falls 40110, New Jersey. FINAL NEW YORK 17.... BOSTON I6. CHICAGO II PROVIDENCE 6 .. 230 Park Ave. 90 Marlborough St. .......51 East Superior St. 155 Angell St. (Continued from page 1) January. Student Council Runoff The three-cornered race for Stu dent Council at-large seat proved closest, with candidates seesawing in and out of the lead with every new tabulation , Tuesday evening. Bob Broughton, UP, topped the field with 577 votes, compared to 465 for Ed York, Student. Party candidate, but a runoff election will be necessary early next quarter. Independent Al Lowenstein, who ran third with 411 votes, was able to take enough votes from both regular party nominees to make the second poll necessary. Nearly as close was the contest for Men's Council, which ended in a victory for UP nominee "Swifty" Buel. He led Bill Starnes 563 to 544 in the final tabulation. Victor for the men's representative on the Student Council was Laurie Hooper, who tal lied 635 votes to SP candidate Jack Booraem's 481. Town District Vote For town seats in the Student Legis lature, University party ' candidates took seven of eight vacancies, leav ing SP nominee Bill Mackie in eight place. Winners are Tag Montague (endorsed by both parties) with 388 votes, Jack Folger (333), Charlie Norton (332), Bill Raker (276), Earl Woodard, (273), Bill Moffitt (272), Walt Talley (264), and Mackie (247). Six-month town legislators are Ernest House (329), Elton Forehand (309) and Benson McCutcheon (295). Dormitory Winners Dormitory voters turned the tables on the University Party by electing ten SP legislators for one-year terms to one UP nominee. Victors for the Student Party are Charlie Long (362), Kenneth Black (317), Dick Walker (305), Jim Castleberry (282), John Giles (278), Kenneth Limeback (274), Basil Sherrill (258), Cecil Prince (254), and Joe Byrd (261). UP candidate Bob Stockton tied Prince at 254. For the six-month dormitory term two SP candidates, Johnny Clampitt (266) and Herman Baker (251), were winners. December Mag Due Saturday December's Carolina Magazine, third of the year for editor Fred Ja cobson, will be distributed to the stu dent body by Saturday. Fiction by authors John Sink, Stu Harris, Jerry Hurwitz, and Dick Stern, and Martha Linney will be featured. Special .articles on the re cent World Peace contest, and the Vet Village, the latter a word-picture combination by Bill Woestendiek and photographer Bob Reams, will also be included. The cover is by John Sink and the center spread is the work of John Davis. The usual distribution system wiX be used to get the December Maga zine to the student body. Those -who do not regularly receive the Dailjr Tar Heel delivery are asked to pici up copies of the Magazine ia tie YMCA or Graham Memorial on Mon day. Any student having copies of tke DTH to be bound must bring than, by the Daily Tar Heel business office by 4 o'clock this afternoon. Every North Carolina Student order your key by mail. Special values gold plated North Carolina keys including: tax and in surance, postage 70c,' Sterling: silver $1.00, 10k gold $5.00. Worth dmble. Agents want ed. Your initials & year engraved on back, 3 c per letter. We make pins, rings, dance favors, smoker, prom & fraternity pins & keys, seal mounted gifts, novelties, com pacts. U. S. Medal & Emblem Company, Inc. Mfg. Jewelers 35 Maiden Lane, N. Y. 7, N. Y. NC We Wish to All Our Patrons I A MERRY CHRISTMAS and A HAPPY NEW YEAR serving- you on your return to t the Hill. rMlEWYEAn D. R. BROOKS CAFETERIA V WANTED DELIVERY MAN FOR MORNING or afternoon daily newspaper. Con tact W. J. Barnes, 132 Mason Rd., Victory Village. (1-7451) RIDES AVAILABLE TO HICKORY VIA GREENSBORO. Leave Carolina Dec. 13 at 3:30. See Bob Morrison, 4 Vance. (2-0000) RIDES WANTED A RIDE FOR TWO PEOPLE TO Gastonia or Lowell in the evening of Dec. 19 or 20. Will share ex penses. Call C. E. Padgett, Lot 58, University Trailer Camp. (1-7447) TWO PASSENGERS TO NEW York, 18 or 19 Dec. after 5:30 P. M. Ed Hecht, 204 Whitehead, phone 8056. (1-7445) RIDE TO KNOXVILLE ON DEC. 15th or 19th. Call or write John E. Hamby, 411 Ruffin, phone 3001. (1-7431) TO AUSTIN, TEXAS OR VICINITY leaving Mon. afternoon or Tues. morn. Will help share driving and expenses. Call John A. Norris, dial 7821. (1-7458) RIDE TO WASHINGTON, D. C. leaving Mon. afternoon or Tues. Call 8561. (1-745Z) FLY TO SUGAR BOWL GAME in a 79.00 XSS Call Hubert Aenchbacher 6686 between 2-5 P.M. Thurs., Fri., Sat, or write: P. O. Box 734, Chapel Hill Schedules can be arranged to suit majority of passengers. RESORT AIR LINES LUXURY 21-PASSENGER DC-3 4.-5lK.v ( ' S 4 V, V ' f FAIttEWffl in his only screen appearance A Delightful Romance , Beautifully TolcLj in SS::8:H: "j Oroem Minds -for- open Comntoy with CHARLES FARRELLMARI TEMPEST TODAY ONLY 3 o QOCOOOa TELEPHONE men are hard at work extending and improving telephone service in rural areas served by the Bell Companies. They're pushing a 100,000,000 three, to five year program to give telephone service to all who want it just as fast as possible. To do this they had to look beyond conventional telephone practices. New techniques and new and improved equip ment had to be planned, developed and proved. Now they arc furnishing tele? phone service over rural power lines, over new steel wire that requires fewer poles per mile, over insulated wire that can be buried directly in the ground and by means of rural radio. Men who approach every problem with open minds . . . who are guided by inge nuity and resourcefulness rather than by established method . . ; find telephony an ever stimulating and interesting career; nBEILIL There's Opportunity and Adventure in Telephony T IE IL E IP HII N IE YTTIEM A iiom 1 WHETHER IT'S GIFTS OR PERSONAL HEEDS vV Limited Quantity of Leather Luggage PRITCHARB-BMGHT COMPANY WEARING APPAREL FOR MEN WHO CARE "TOMORROW'S STYLES TODAY" WASHINGTON-DUKE HOTEL BLDG. DURHAM Y r-X -i 4U -.,.. . " - - , : , . ; - ; , J . J
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 12, 1946, edition 1
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