feature pMr Babism 2. Maid of SOHE Of 2. Picture of a fiartw broken bone1 med , 4. Comfort 26. Drink- 5. "Coming through the 6. Priests in France 7. Foot race of 26 miles 8. In bed 9. Number 10. Sleighs 16. Owns med DAILY CROSSWORD , ACROSS 44. Bring- upon 18. Shade J. Prize oneself tree fighter 45. Savory ' 21. Breaclf . Accumuiaie 46. Plague 22. Circus 11. An im- - DOWN" t pressive display 12. City in Shinar: Bib. 13. Satiated and bored 14. In law, . a writ or brief 15. Organ of sight 16. Turned in a specified direction 17. Yes: dial. 18. The Orient 19. Nova Scotia: 17. Prate abbr. 20. Celestial being3 2Z. Excla mation 25. Sacred song 26. Baby's disorder 29. Hebrew letter SO. Chastise 31. Frequency modulation: abbr. 33. Fall 35. Palm Ely 20. Embark . again 2S. Exclama tion of ' disgust 40. Atlantic for one 41. Italian city. 43. Meager l.. &). joMJv )q Tjsr ! ITfjTjRTE fv I PJEjLlT Si mfK D!S?I Yesterday" Aaawetf i . ing- . v-o verea vessel with fluff : 27. Narrow- 37. The Sevea. strip of land 28. Greek letter 38. Ruin 30. Father: 39. Alma affectionate box 31. Inauerurai 1. " tionpoet the- 1 32. Birthplace . Peodulraa of Moham- 42. Part of -to ber 1 2 3 s- 'AS, fa r 3 la k l 1-1 1 eM I I I 10-17 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Here's how to work it? l AXYDLBAAXK teL.ONGFKL.LOW One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A fa used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos trophies, the length and formation of the words afe all hints. Each day the code letters are different. A Cryptogram Quotation I T Z R Z X X S J Z Y D X LrS "qV," L.YZ RZXX L.MFZ SJZ WMJQX i. S Q S ML. M J . T Y Z X I Z E W M Z R Q Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE UNIVERSITY BRINGS OUT ALL. ABILITIES INCLUDING INCAPABILITY. CHEKHOV DAILY CROSSWORD Br ACROSS 1. Great quantities 6. Ablaze 11. Gateway to temple: Jap, 12. Girl's name 13. Leek, for one 14. Sound, as - ty-i aum e.- 15. At a $ distance 36. Mountain pass 17. Toward 08. Water god? BabyL 19. Dirty loclc 23. Overturn 26. Bowling alley 27. Whatnot ornaments 23. Author . Ferber 30. Jots 31. Ancient gold alloy 32. Compass point: abbr. 33. Brazil palm 35. Dance step 37. Man's nickname 39. Chum: Brit, colloq. 42. To endure 43. Scarlett's surname 44. Out of sight 45. Bog 46. Accumulate DOWN 1. Ermine in summer coat 2. Confuses 3. Operatic melody 4. Paris personality 5. Transgress 6. Early pulpit 7. Be com pletely unsuccessful (2 wds.) t 8. Anger S. Narrow inlet 10. Wear away 16. Aments 18. In comic , strips a 1 $ cry 01 fright 20. Old term of re proach 21. Part of desk set: pL 22. God of pleas-ure: . Egypt 24. Languish 25. Runs, as a. child 27. N2. . parrot 28. Immediately 34. River NW India 36. Oriental f nurse BjaXERfTlAjMAsjs' airr ar 13 abe l bTase LJbr eve y'eE he aped ylAkrrr 3 a ffaw s p!s!a iTac oil t c eHp u nTT s h RE SHi PPB A MQ. OtEANTPARMAi 5jC AjN T fTNCUR TlAfsiTvLiTeAt5E Yesterday' Answer 37. Prow 38. Scarlett O'Hara's home 39. Mother? . affectionate 40. Excla mation. 41. Sailor 42. Resort 13 15 Z7 :Z9 31 39 4 H5 "717771 S S A 25 I40 ?4 41 SSA "A Z5 55 18 5 4 If 28 10 4 i- 1: 57 136 M2 55 DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Here's how to fWttk its AXYDI.BAAXR hl.ON'OFEI.I.OW One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A fa used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters apos trophies, the length and formation of the wwJ3 are all hiats. Each day the code letters are different A Cryptogram Quotation RCP'XT XREZBPNFXPM XU OR- CF'U ZEEZBPNPXPM.-OmU Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE LESS ONE HAS TO DO. THE LESS TIME ONE FINDS TO DO IT IN. CHESTER FIELD. ( 1962. Kins Features Syndicate, Inc Haivh Is Chosen Mascot Of AF Cadets Here Taking the lead from the Air Force Academy, which" has a fal con, a sparrow-hawk has been adop ted as a mascot by UNC's cadets, and will be on the drill field each Thursday with them. Cadef Lt. Col. William H. Hold erness, Cadet Group Commander, who is keeping the bird explained, "a" boy in a dorm owns it, and can't keep it there." For the rest of this-school year the hawk will stav Hhlrlprnpcj' hnmi nn M ? Columbia St. The hawk, a . female, originally carne from New Mexico. It has not yet been named. . i & - I I " z $ J f 1 h t - ' - . - - -1 II" 4f-i" i- 1 5 - - I v II4- - J Pm-' j I If I I r if f v j ij if J ' 1 t r ft! J i LL.- - L ST . 4mJL&n.m I J Selections Bd. Sets Interviews The Bi-partisan Selection Board will hold interviews for all women interested in seeking endorsement for their Candidacy for positions on the Women's Council. The interviews will be from 3:30- MASCOT Cadet Lt. CoL William H. Holderness, Air Force ROTC 5:00, Monday; 7:00-900, Tuesday; Group Commander, holds a female sparrow-hawk recently adopted and 3:30-5:30, Wednesday. The in- by the cadets here. teVviews Will be held in the Coun- cil Room on the second floor of Graham Memorial. There are vacancies on the coun cil in all Judicial Districts. Sign up for interviews at the main desk in Graham Memorial. HARPSICHORD KIT A Superb, Authentic, Full Toned Workshop Assembly, S150. Free Brochure. Write Zucker mann Harpsichords, Dept. Q, 115 Christopher St., N. Y. C. 14. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS Faculty News Briefs Dr. Robert R. Cadmus, profes-j for research on cultural values in sor and chairman of the newly ; worker and management behavior established Department of Hospital in the United States and Japan. Administration in the School of Prof. Whitehill conducted a study Medicine, has been named to the identifying and evaluating the im Committee on Nursing Education ' pact of cultural values upon work- Facilities recently formed under the joint sponsorship of the Nation al League for Nursing and the U. S. Public Health Service. Arthur M. Whitehill Jr., R. J. Reynolds Professor of Human Re lations in Industry in the School of Business Administration, is the recipient of a $4,025 one-year grant from the U. S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare eOPYOlOMT IS 1961, THt COCA-COLA COMPANY. COCA-COLA AND COKE ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS ' - M as M2f 'J '?- y.-:-: : JT- jtx ri. : 1 In over 100 countries j j people, get that refreshing ; : neti? "feeling with Coke! 1 l - X' ' ill (ivMM, s 5 v - - - y3 er behavior and attitudes in these two countries. His new program will include investigation of the possibilities for extending his pre vious studies to management. Prof. Whitehill predicts that his study will be beneficial for man agement development programs. The knowledge of cultural forces which he is seeking should give some information on the many un answered "whys" of human be havior which deter understanding and effective action in industrial societies in this country and throughout the world, according to Prof. Whitehill. Professor P. P. Naor, head of the Department of Industrial Engin eering in the Haifa Institute of Techniology, Haifa, Israel, will ad dress the UNC Statistics Collo quium on Monday, October 22, at 4 p.m. in room 265 Phillips Hall. Dr. Naor will speak on a prob lem of preventive maintenance. The meeting is open to all interest ed in maintenance problems or in the application of statistical meth ods. Prof. Naor is spending the pres ent academic year in research in the University Department of Sta tistics. He studied in England and received the degrees of bache lor of science in chemical engin-. eering and doctor of philosophy in theoretical metallurgy from the University of Birmingham. Dr. E. N. Mitchell, visiting as sociate professor of physics at the University, will address the UNC Physics Colloquium on Wednes day, Oct. 24, at 4:30 p.m. in room 265 Phillips Hall. Dr. Mitchell will speak on "Mag netostriction in thin Ferromagnetic Films." A tea will procede the address at 4 p.m. in room 277. Dr. Richard T. Smith, professor and chairman of the department of pediatrics in the University of Florida School of Medicine will speak here Saturday, Oct. 20, at 11:00 a.m. in room 226 of the Medical School Building. His top ic, "Development Aspects of Im munity and Immunological Toler ance," is one in a series of the 1962 Medical Sciences Lectures be ing held at the University of North Carolina. Bottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company by Durham Coca-Cola Bottling: Co. P0G0 1Q - TQ ull gyMQonra.mr mm immmmmmmwmmmmtimmmittMmtmA mmtmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtmwmmmmtmmmmmmwmmmtmmmmmmmmmmmwA PEANUTS fu f tit mEtl, W&H it ( TAKE MDRTEcCCS" I 3 I Of ORAL 1 m.THEy PITT THE DROPS 0M ANDI CREW IT RI6HT L?P-OF COU&5, ARGUMENT U1THTKE KV&S rr ?&tr exactu AN ARaBiTITOJAS 4 . v: DSMT15T 15 A6AiMr fcAilN& CU3E5 1 I Good Reading for the Whole Family News Facts . Family Features Th Christian Science Monitor Onm Norway St., Boston 1 5, Most. Send your newspaper for the time checked. Enclosed find my check or money order. 1 year 520 O 6 montha $10 3 month $5 Name 14 Do-Notliings Are Tapped Into Order Of Lampshades Late last Wednesday night in a subterranean section of the Nurses Dorm, the Order of the Old Lamp shades tapped 17 new members 14 undergraduates and 3 honorary members. The Lampshades, active in their third year on the UNC campus, recognize students outstanding for their quality of "nothinness." Those "nothing" tapped in the singularly unimpressive ceremony Wednesday include honorary mem bers Miss Nancy Adams, assistant to the Dean of Women, and Sue Ross and Freida Smithwick. grad uate counselors in the Nurses Dorm. New actives initiated were Mary Shaw, Anna Strater, and Sara Bur ns, seniors Patty Hildebrand, Bet sy Eurnette, Mary Roberts, Missy Westmoreland, Sandy Saine, Julia Davis and Dianne Rollick. Juniors: and Susan Mott, Judy Tyson, Sally Canby, and Ellen Solomon, sopho mores. There are sixteen old members of the organization and two other - CLASSIFIED ADS - PER INSERTION 90c MINI mum, up to 25 words. Ads must be in the Tar Heel office by 3 p.m. 'he day before publication, ex cept for Sunday ads. Sunday ads must be in by 3 p.m. on Friday. The Tar Heel will not be respon sible for more than one incorrect nsertion. Daily Tar Heel, Second floor, Graham Memorial. honorary members on campus. The Lampshades admit that a few of those tapped Wednesday have "broken down and achieved things during their college careers." However, these persons were select ed because of the "nothing" spirit in which they go about their du ties. The next goal of the Lampshades, according to Jean Yoder, "Head Bulb" of the order, is to have a campus-wide tapping. MODELS NEEDED Ackland Art Center needs male and female models for life drawing classes on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 8-10 a.m. The salary is one dollar an hour. Either call 9637-084 or report to room 106 Ack land. Inf! Students To Have Picnic International students .ire invited to a picnic this Sunday. Ofinbr 21. at 4 o'clock nn the Cummunhy Church grounds just off Mason Farm Road on Purefory R; There will be no speeohe-'. and m program. The town-folk and their children want an onnorlunttv tn cvr : acquainted with international stu- dents. ! It is difficult to obtain correct : lists of our international students : and many might not have received j a personal invitation. Everyone i- cordially invited. Transportation will be furnished for those who come to the front of I the Y.M.C.A. Building between ?:?,) and 3:4. next Sunday. FLU SHOTS Flu shots are being given in the Infirmary from 9-11:30 a.m. and I from 2-5 p.m. Monday through Friday. RESPONSIBLE MARRIED STU dent to deliver a established morn ing paper route. Automobile neces sary. Time required about 2 hrs. per week. Phone 942-5653. ALFA ROMEO SYPDER ROAD- j ster 1962, radio, heater, seat belts, j toneau cover, excellent condition 12,000 miles. Must sell. 2500 $ or best offer. Phone North 5-2492 Lib- I erty, N. C. I I Jl WJIJ U L I I I J It says : I ' I I quit! yyy I Try the ( Help l th 9 Columns jjlj of the u!osV o t ; H li' : 6 daily Tar Heel It Cost Only 90c Per Day j&ovv&g ff-xfj s-xxyt vr -rtn' 'cue ?m x. ,w ,v.- x a i. a a iat.-cx. . t- ; - V.-" J ivi " 1 c I 1 , v M ,7 4 et Lots More from EM more body in the blend more flavor in the smoke more taste through the filter r 1 lt e r s USOETT 1 MTEM TOBACCO CO. "SO JTERS I :fytm toacco CO. And LM's filter is the modern filter all white, inside and outside so only pure white touches your lips. Address "City Zone State

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