to watch will be ipt ich tion against State. in another close one, Beta Sunday, October 4, 1964 "Page B THE DAILY TAR HEEL Scholarship Applications Due Nov. 2 The deadline for 1964 Rhodes Scholarship applications is near ing, potential candidates were re minded today. All applications should be in by November 2. Inquiries' and completed appli cation forms for the 62-year-old scholarships, which provide for two or three years study at Ox ford University, England, should be sent to the state secretary, Edwin M. Yoder Jr., at the UNC-G History Department or to Mrs. D. D. Smith, editorial sec retary, Greensboro Daily News. Conditions of eligibility, accord ing to Yoder, ar simple: candi dates should be unmarried male citizens of the U. 45. between 18 and 24 at file time of applica tion, with at least junior stand ing in some recognized tiegree granting college or university. A candidate may apply either through his borne state or through the state in which he has attend ed at least two years of college. Regulations for selection, laid down in the will of the late Cecil J. Rhodes, include: 'literary and scholastic attainments exhibi tion of moral force of character (and physical vigor, as shown by fondness for and success in sports." Career Program Planned Thursday The University Placement Serv ice will conduct a Career Pro gram for all seniors and gradu ate students Thursctey evening at 7:30 in Hill Hall. The meeting is jointly sponsored by Alpha Kap pa Psi and Delta Sigma Pi busi ness fraternities. All men and women students who will be looking fcr jobs fol lowing graduation or after com pletion of military service are urged to attend this career meet ing. J. M. Galloway, director of the Placement Service, will, explain how his office assists students in beginning their careers in business, industry, government and college teaching. The guest speaker for the pro gram will be Mr. Andy Robert son, pesident of Crawford and Company of Atlanta, Ga. His many years of experience in the field of college recruiting make him well qualified to discuss problems facing job seekers. Any student who has satis factorily completed two semes ters of work at UNC is eligible to register with the Placement Serv ice. Students are urged to regis ter early in order to participate in the employment interviews conducted through the Service from mid-October to April. Job counseling and career informa tion are also available to stu dents, and permanent personnel files are maintained for every in dividual registered with the office. ONLY DAYS TO EBIUF CLOSE TO THE BRINK OF ETERNITY mm Campus Briefs :::::x::;X;X;:::ww Book On Sale Copies of thee book "North Carolina and the Negro" will be sold at the Information Desk of Graham Memorial beginning to day. The sale is being sponsored by the National Student Association Campus Committee for the benefit of a fund to send one UNC stu dent to the Crossroads Africa project. The book, published by the North Carolina's Mayors' Coop erating Committee, is an attempt to provide an objective view of the events which occurred prior to the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. A study of each North Carolina community and the special fac ters surrounding its racial situa tion is presented. Honor Commission Appointments to the Honor .System Commission have been 'announced by Student Body Pres ident Bob Spearman. Appointees are: V. King, M. Colison, L. Merrow, E. Rollins, E. Millington, M. Kirk, C. Wright, C. Miller, D. Leslie, E. Baur, P. Clay, B. Roberts, G. Teague, P. Tavlor, C. Angel, B. Harris, J. Co'ield, G. Fiek, B. Gordon. Commission chairman Paul Dickson has asked all new ap pointees, to meet with him in the Grail Room of Graham Memori al tomorrow from 3-4 p.m. Plans for the coming year and arrangements for an orientation rrogram instructing fall candid ates for the Honor Council will be discussed. Quizzes will also be composed for the Honor Council, IFC Court members, and the Attorney Gen eral's staff. Reserve Meeting Naval Reserve Research Com pany 6-6 of Chapel Hill will have its first meeting of the school year tomorrow at 6 p.m. in the NROTC Armory. The program will feature a lecture on training duty reports and administrative matters. Speakers at other meetings during the quarter will lecture on geological studies for a sec ond canal in Panama, cosmic ray research, archaeological excava tions in Winchester, England, dy namics of leadership, the Ranger 7 moon shot, applying statistical theory to personnel problems, and NASA's technical transfer program. Meetings are conducted on three Monday nights each month, and participation in the unit pro vides retirement and promotion credit for Naval Reserve officers. New members are welcome. Recruiters Here A special USAF officer selec tion team will visit UNC this week to counsel and interview students interested in the USAF Officer Training School program for college graduates. The team, under Maj. John C. Elkins, will be in Y-Court from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. tomorrow Wednesday. Persons unable to meet with the team should write USAF Recruiting Detachment 307, 201 W. . Cabarrus St., Raleigh, for further information. Yack Photos Yack pictures for freshmein and nursing students will be taken tomorrow-Friday in the basement of Graham Memorial. A late fee of one dollar will be charged for all juniors and medical students who haven't had theirs taken yet. There will be no exceptions. Amateur Radio Club UNC Amateur Radio Club will hold an organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Cald well annex. Students interested in joining the club may apply for member ship at the meeting Club officers said that both hams and novices . are invited to join. In the past years over 100 hams have belonged to the club in a single year. u imi j -n Vii u ij i S 1STATE FAIRGROUNDS RALEIGH OPENING NIGHT OF N. C. STATE FAIR St m 8:33 Pja. All Seats Reserved!! $2.50 and $3.00. In Chapel Hill The Record Bar and Kemp's of Chapel Hill. ooili Congress Adjourns WASHINGTON AP) A polit ically impatient Congress dispos ed of some odds and ends Satur day, then shut up shop and hustl ed off to the hustings where its lengthy legislative record will loom large in campaign oratory. Both Houses adjourned until Jan. 4 which means the 88th Con gress has completed its record' repads ut paneoaj si ji ssaun session by President Johnson. Regardless of issues, the ad journment only a montli from ballot day means that members of the 88th who want to come back with the 89ui as nearly all cf them do must do a fast job cf pointing with pride and view ing with alarm. All House scats and a third of those in the Sen ate are to be filled. DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Mists 5 Unable to find the way 9. Polish city 10. Operatic melody 11. Mediter ranean island 12. de MUo 14. Signs as correct: abbr. 15. Lixivium 17. Anglo Saxon letter 18. Personal - pronoun 19. "The Way of All " 21. Hawaiian, bird 22. Below: naut. 23. Border 25. Permit 27. A salad green 28. Glen 29. Presently 30. Account: abbr. 31. Noise 33. Early Chinese coin 35. Crowd 37. Piece of furniture 38. Droop 39. Reptile 41. Sex appeal: si. 43. Wading' bird 44. Mother of Zeus 45. Surrender 46. Scatters, as seed DOWN l.Chip 2. Nocturnal birds 3. Obtained 4. Kind of bird 5. Washes 6. Metallic rock 7. Mathemat ical term 8. Food fishes 11. Mother: affect. 15. Coverings for the feet 16. Kind of shrub II 14- 18 2 30 39 Y77771I ZS 2.fc 43 4S 19. Large masses of drift ing ice 20. A king of, Judea 25. Entire amount 24. Lair 25. U.S. president 26. Concise 27. Birds of prey: So. Am. 29. Girl's nickname 32. Excessively overweight aTiEisiTnciejMc S A L I T I Y jO.BlOlE S H U jo5 1J jjEl 1 H TIHD I EjOp I ID IS. k a renToi-T1V S cToTWeI jsjC6Q 3an1e wtjEIWIEjRI . 19 4o 771 i IS 1Z 37 lb 1 i 10 12. 27 41 44 Saturday's Aniwet- 33. Fathers: colloq. 34. Exclama tion. 36. Infant 38. Mergansc? 40. Young" . goat 42. Exclama tion 2.1, 42. 17 24 71 1 7A 4 3a 53 34 DAILY CBYPTOQUOTE o-& Here's how to work it: D on me H eader ? German Science Books From a great University Library we bring you a large selection of duplicates and discards of books on the sciences, written in German. Here are important books in mathema tics, chemistry and physics with a smattering of other sciences. Prices are low, and there'll be no more wrhen these are gone. Goodies from Harpers Warehouse When the great publishing firm of Harpers cleared out their warehouse, we Tvere offered a share of the loot. These books are not dropped titles they are copies of live sellers that were slightly damaged in the handling. While they last, they're all yours for half price or less. Have Fun all ihis Vesk al The Intimate 119 East Franklin Street ool-.shop Open Till 10 P.M. .: ; s

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