FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1947 Page Four THE DAILY TAR HEEL . Di Debaters Vote Down Bill Urging Compulsory Balloting Meeting for its first discussion session this term, the Dialectic senate Wednesday evening in the midst of heated debate turned down a bill recommending "compulsory student balloting in all campus elections," and with an over-whelming majority adopted alA - -- a suDstitute resolution as presenter. 7 by president Don Shropshire contain ing 10 points to be recommended to the president of the student body with the hope that "they will do much to UNIVERSITY FLORIST "For the Best in Flowers" PICK THEATRE BLDG. Chapel Hill, N. C. Telephone 6816 CLASSIFIED Classified (Want Ad) advertisements are payable in advance at the Daily Tar Heel Business Office, Graham Memorial, by 2 o'clock the day preceding publication. Kates : fifty cents per inch (count 25 words to the inch). The Daily Tar Heel assumes responsibility only for the first incorrect insertion, and then only to the extent of a make-good insertion to be run only in case of an error which materially lessens the value of the advertisement. Dial S641 for further information. create more interest among students in student government and in other extra-curricular activities." The aims which made up the reso lution are as follows: (1) Handbook each year for all stu dents with great emphasis on cam pus activities. (2) More emphasis on same by Fresh man Orientation committee. (3) More funds for Daily Tar Heel newly created- space to be used for more fully covering campus organizations. (4) Better publicity for Student Leg islator!. (5) More frequent reports by student body president via the Student Legis lature on conditions of campus. (6). More of those organizations which have access to student funds to cease to meet behind "closed" doors. (7) Introduction to campus of all candidates for major offices by Board of Elections before every election. (8) Establishment of more polling places for scattered areas. (9) 'House counselors to impress upon LFL ABNER It's a Small World By Al Capp LgADlE HAWKINS DAHCE-rew!ij YOU fW ENTER MADAME BUT THE GENTLEMAN NO.V HIS COSTUME! JUST ISN'T AUTHENTIC .I' rA m - 1 1 i i i hi DON'T LET STANLEY STEAMER GIT AWAY DAISY." E.F YO SEES HIM-SE1ZE. HIM AH LL BE BACK.' r i ,...,..r r rue nnurnNOR- AH"M: wuw. WKSED LIKE A nom AU 'Vl2SK LIKE. SiU ' ONE. M THE ORIGINAL MAti c ir-urr rr cu ri i'r GLADLY GIVE MY SPECTACLES r- -M it rC TUIQ . I tTtat T o - HIMSELF rirATSA I We service all makes of radios and players at AB's BOOKSHOP ANNOUNCEMENT CAROLINA CYCLE CO., 120 W. Rosemary St. New and used bicy cles for sale; rentals and repairs. 9-10:30 a. m. 3:15-5:45 p. m. All day Sat. Sundays by appointments. l-9944) THERE WILL BE A MARINE Corps League beer party, Fri., Jan. 31 at Shorty's cabin. All former Ma rines invited. Bus leaves Old Well at 7:30. Stag or drag, $2.50. (1-9943-1) FOR SALE: AUTOMOTIVE 6BB 1939 CHEVROLET MASTER BUSI ness Coupe. Excellent mechanical condition. Radio and heater. Call F 2161. (1-9929) 1942 BUICK SUPER SEDAN, SER ies 50, radio, heater, spotlight, ex cellent condition. Call Lew Breun inger, 9761 after 2:30 p. m. (1-9946) HUDSON, 1942, BLACK CLUB COU pe in good condition. Very reason able price. Bob Lewis, Room 3, Sut ton Bldg. (over Ledbetter-Pick-ard's). (1-9947) FOR SALE 6B WOMAN'S BICYCLE IN GOOD CON dition, very reasonable price. Call DTH office between 2 and 6 p. m. l-2000-l) HOUSE TRAILER WITH BUILT-IN cabinets, icebox and beds. 143 E. Hosemary Street. (1-9942) 1946 HOUSE TRAILER. LOTS OF room. Ideal for several fellows or couple (with children). Stationary bed. Venetian blinds, studio couch. Lot 35, Trailer Ct. (1-9945) ELECTRIC STOVE, REFRIGERA tor, 120 bass note accordion, double bed, bookcase, chests of drawers, wicker chairs, tables, garden tools. Can be seen at Ericson's place, Uni ver. Lake Rd. (1-9933) UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER, good condition, $40.00; Remington 12-gauge repeating shotgun, $20.00; Kerosene cook stove, two-burner with oven, $5.00. 137 Mason Farm Road. (1-9938) 23 FOOT ALL-METAL HOUSE trailer. Completely furnished, in cludes shower and hot water heat er. Immediate occupancy. William Smoak, 97 University Trailer Ct. (1-9924) LOST 12 HONSON LIGHTER AT BASKET ball game Tues. night. "C.L.W." en graved on side. Finder please con tact Charlie Wilson, Phi Delta The ta House. (1-9939) LOST THE DARK GREEN BOTTOM ' part of a Parker "51." Bill Shrago, 5241. (1-9928) ONE BLACK LEATHER JACKET . with snap buttons and green rubber composition rain coat, on campus. Finder please contact Burt Myers, Phi Gam House. (1-2000-1) . TAKEN BY MISTAKE 20 WILL THE PERSON TO WHOM I loaned my pen in the check line on Monday, please turn it in at the Y information desk. (1-9941) students within their iurisdiction the 'importance of their interest in all elections. (10) Student Legislature to use con stitutional power to establish class organizations and aid them in keeping alive. Prior to the main discussion the Sen ate accepted the membership applica tion of Lincoln Kan after Member ship. Chairman Charles O. Long pre sented it to. the Senate with the unani mous approval of the committee. In accordance with its policy of reinstat ing those veterans who were mem bers in good standing before leav ing the University the body also re admitted Robert Berer. The president J announced that Kan would be formally initated at next week's session. Baptist Supper Forum To Hear James Street James Street, noted novelist and author of "The Gauntlet," will be the guest speaker at the regular supper forum which will be held this even ing in the Baptist church. Street's subject will be, "Facts and Fiction." Bill Gulley, chairman of the sup per forum will preside at the meeting. University Service Station Odis Pendergraft Prop. He's a Back-Alley LEO SWAPS HEXES WITH A WHACKY HYPNOTIST! f - It ! Officers Are Searching For Armed Robbers Of Bank of Netvland , Newland, Jan. 30 (UP) Officei are searching the mountains along the Tennessee border for four armed men. who held up the Avery County bank in Newland, North Carolina to day and fled with $25,000. Before they left, the bandits locked five customers and the bank president's daughter ;n the vault. One of the bandits covered the cus tomers with two pistols. Another guarded the door, and a third cram med the money in a bag. Then they herded pretty 24-year-old Martha Guy daughter of the bank president and the customers into the vault. Outside, they left bookkeeper Georgia Stout tied loosely so she could wiggle free and open the vault after the ban dits left. The fourth robber was waiting out side in a grey 1946 Ford sedan. He drove all the holdup men away to ward Tennessee. Today Is Last Chance To Renew Insurance Today is the last day veterans can renew their National Service Life Insurance without a physical exami nation. Men may receive applications from the veterans office, 119 Peabody. HILLEL SERVICES In the absence of Rabbi Strumpf, Joseph , Mottsman will conduct the services and professor L. O. KatsofF will speak at Hillel sabbath services to be held this evening at 7:30 in the Roland Parker lounge of Graham Me morial. STUDENTS I Today is the last time that funds will be collected for the 1947 In fantile Paralysis campaign. Do your part and give generously. Just Ask Your Roommate. . . Bold Theft of T ypewriter Surprises UNC Secretary By Sam Whitehall Of all types of thieves, the bold, brazenly audacious type is the thief most feared, least encountered and most disconcerting-. He may snatch up your false teeth when you least suspect him or he may remove a typewriter when your back is turned. The typewriter epi sode is not fiction, it is unadulterated fact. Monday at one o'clock Mrs. Delanie Webb, secretary at the University Testing service in Peabody hall, re- J turned to .her office from lunch, step ped around the corner to ask her boss a question, and puff !, she had no type writer at her desk. In fact the daring one had been so quick he had neglect ed to remove the office form which Mrs. Webb had been typing out. Wouldn't Think of It! Immediately a score or more of people were asked the question, "If you saw a person walking across the campus carrying a typewriter, would your first thought be 'Catch that man, he has stolen a typewriter?' " Each one said, "No, I would not even think of someone stealing the typewriter." Yet the fact remains that Royal typewriter No.' KMM 12-3189647, which was little over a month old, and which had just been broken in by the typist, is no longer at the desk where it belongs. i Uncle Sam Says Now the question asked is, "Did your roommate happen to carry in a brand new Royal upright with Pica type?" If the answer is "Yes," let Mrs. Webb in 105 Peabody know. It Happens Here . . . 4:00 UNC Symphony Orchestra rehearsal. 7:30 Jewish Sabbath Services, Ro land Parker lounge, Graham Me morial. 8:00 Marine Corps League party, Shorty's cabin. 8:00 Swimming meet, UNC vs. VPI, Woollen gymnasium. 8 : 30 Student Entertainment series presentation of "The Bartered Bride," Memorial hall. Well Known Detective To TalkHere Tomorrow The two-week School in Investiga tion Technique, being conducted here by the Institute of Government with the cooperation of the FBI, for mem bers of the State Bureau of Investi gation, police, arid city and county sheriffs, will come to a close with "graduation" exercises here Satur day morning, . February 1, at 11 o'clock. Principal speakers will be Chief of Police Frank N. Littlejohn of Char lotte, who is often called "the best known detective in North Carolina." Instructors at the School, which opened January 19, are Special Agent Fred MacEntyre of the FBI and Ter ry Sanford, assistant director of the Institute of Government. Attending are 35 officers from towns and cities in many sections of the State, including Raleigh, Durham, Charlotte, Fayetteville, Winston-Sa lem, High Point Rocky Mount, Wil mington, Elizabeth City, Wilson, Greenville, Burlington, . Reidsville, Kinston, and others. Dial 8641 for newspaper service. IRC FORUM (Continued from page two) even exist and don't amount to a hill of beans when they do exist.) Russia and the U. S. and Britain should keep right on battling behind the scene3 to see who will control Spain five years from now. 3. All countries should stop trading: with Franco, starving Spain economi cally. We should bolster the existing Spanish Republican government-in-exile. Meanwhile, the UN should ap peal by radio, by leaflets, by carrier pigeon appeal to the Spanish people to oust Franco's government. This last solution, although the most forceful, is rather unrealistic. If Russia and the western powers cannot agree now on many of the simplest problems, how can we expect to de cide the future government of Spain? Another bloody revolution in Spain could precede and precipitate a third world war. Understanding and trust is the an swer. The two leading world forces, communist Russia and our own nation must find the magic formula to dis agree without being disagreeable. With the threat of war eliminated, we can solve our differences easily. This may seem to leave the Spanish situ ation hanging in mid-air, but it is the most practical solution to the Franco question and to most of the world's present political problems. FRESHMEN (Continued from first page) mediately, followed by several more from the rear of the auditorium. Chairman Montague informed the assembled group that the election could be contested only by appealing to either student body president Dewey Dorsett or to the student legislature. TODAY BE COMFORTABLE RIDE I N A CAROLINA CAB DIAL 4811 DIAL UUI1ULITHE Jlf BOWERY i BOYS N .1" i One of my nephews, Assistant Sec retary of the United States Treasury Edward H. Foley," made a few re marks the other day which are worth the attention and action of all my other nieces and nephews. In talk ing about buying Savings Bonds through the payroll sayings plan, he said: "Workers are doing them selves a favor when they increase their take-home savings. The man who has saved up a reserve has a sense of security which the man who lives from hand to mouth can never know. He gets more out of life. He can take today as it comes, rather than spend it worrying about to morrow." The same reasoning ap plies not only to Americans on some body's payroll but to the millions ol men and women who earn their liv ing as doctors, lawyers and inde pendent business men who can ar range for regular purchases of Sav ings Bonds at their banks. U.S. Treasury Department P, OF THE HOTTEST " SINGER THE W vyf J,CHT ctUBS klFlDAUIPIHO W ROBERT AIDA if if ANDREA KING rain i " Also COLOR CARTOON IIUI1TZ HALL BOBBY JORDAN i Also LATEST NEWS TODAY PICK THEATRE FOLLOW THE r- Jill i) k&mmmm. 'ask ,r,m" r""'r,,"i" mmmmm 31 r. f. msi b i vflf is or at . 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