Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 20, 1964, edition 1 / Page 2
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Sunday, September 20, 1964 THE SUNDAY TAR HEEL Page 3, o League Urges Voti In an effort to remind local citizens of their civic respon sibility to vote, the Chapel Hill chapter of the League of Women Voters is currently engaged in a voter-registration campaign en titled, "Your Vote Makes a Dif ference." The League notes that if just one more eligible voter in each a precinct in the country had vot ed in the i960 election, the out come of the entire election would '- have been changed. ' ' The campaign centers around, three Saturdays, Oct. 10, 17, and 24 which have i been named as registration days in Qrahge coun ty .. ' '..;..' The League estimates that an estimated 40 million eligible, vot ers will' not use their right, to -vote in November. , "The country's poor voting rec ord can be attributed to the num ber of non-voters who are eli gible, but do not make the ef fort to register and vote,", said Mrs. H.j Stuart Willis, president of the organization. "Of this num ber, the great majority . are women," she said. The central theme of the reg istration drive, the importance of the single vote, was selected in conjunction with the Library USA exhibit at the New York World's Fair. Other women's organizations are cooperating with the league in the local campaign. Welcome Vanderers! While you chaps were out carry ing culture to the boondocks, the -crew at the Intimate has not been idle. Here os a report: IN THE NEW BOOK WORLD Perhaps the most exciting of the new books was published while you were having final exams last June. In the event c that you missed it then, we can tell you that THE LIGHT THAT SHINES, by U. N. C.'s own Chancellor Emeritus Robert B. House has been selling and selling and selling all summer long. It's a wonderful picture of the University back in the days of Horace Williams, Kemp c Plummer Battle and a dozen other's whom you probably think of as Dormitories. Five bucks will get you an autographed copy. Charles Schulz has had a sort of one-man opulation explosion, and now has half a dozen new books on the shelf, including a a new PEANUTS number. IN THE OLD BOOK CORNER The old book stock has had its prices trimmed twice since you left, so that the old familiar faces ought to be sold, or at least cheaper, by now. Come in and check up. On the other hand, there has s never been a summer when we had so many libraries of old books come in. It. will take time to get them all processed, but it should be a lively Fall for scholars! Ask us to boast about it. The Intimate Bookshop ; 119 E. Franklin St. Open Till 10 PJU. Around The Campus SG INTERVIEWS Interviews for appointment to Student Government committees will be held from 2-5 p.rn. Monday-Friday in the Student Gov ernment offices in Graham Me morial. Interested students should call 933-1257 for infor mation and appointments. COUNSELORS ""' Orientation Counselors who have not already turned in their orientation manuals at the GM Information Desk should do so today. Counselors are reminded to include a slip of paper with their name inside the manual. K GRANT RECEIVED UNO's Memorial - Hospital will receive $987,375 in additional federal funds, : according to an announcement by , t h e State Medical Care Commission Fri day in Raleigh. ' f AUTO CHECKS 'Campus Police will setup sev eral checkpoints on Chapel Hill streets and the University cam pus tomorrow to check student auto registration. Student regis trations will be cancelled if the required stickers do not appear on the windshield. RECEPTION TODAY .The Cosmopolitan Club will hold a reception for foreign stu dents, their host families in Chapel Hill and prospective club members this afternoon in the lobby of GM. The reception, scheduled for 4 o'clock, is open to all club members.-John Cli nard is Cosmopolitan Club presi dent. ; ' GMAB INTERVIEWS Interviews for positions on six Graham Memorial Activities Board committees will be held should sign up for interviews at this week. Interested - students the GM Information Desk. Posi- tions are open on the. Drama, Current Affairs! Publicity, Petite Musicale, and .Free Flicks Committees. Gregory, Chandler Appear In Durham Benefit Monday Comedian Dick Gregory will bring his biting satire to Durham Civic Center Monday as a part of a program sponsored by Durham-Chapel Hill CORE. Gregory will share billing with well-known folksinger Lee Chand ler in the perxoivnanee slated for 8 p.m. Gregory, known as an ardent civil rights worker as well as a satirist, shot to national feme several years ago after he . be came an overnight success in a Chicago night club. His dry humor can be heard in picket lines in Greenwood, Miss., as well as supper clubs in New York City. Chandler, just back from a summer of civil rights work in Mississippi, holds a master's degree in music from Columbia University. He is perhaps best known for his recording of Stag ger Lee. Tickets are on sale here at Kemp's and the Record Bar. Cost is $1.25. Durham Civic Center is at the corner of Foster and Mor gan Streets, one block north of the Jack Tar Hotel. SECRETARIAL COURSE y y Begins September 17, 1964 AFTERNOON and EVENING CLASSES Inquire Today! - Begin October 1, 1964 TOWn GLASSES SECRETARIAL COLLEGE P. O. Box 615 Chapel Hill Telephone 942-4797 jAr v .n . . . .." olv'-'T'-vvs't, . ................ . :.-.vi v V.V.-.. vioiov.v.- ?r wwwwwptw svSv -rfw i ' It 1 lit ' ' - ' C-tv,. i THE NationalSecurityAgency is a totaily unique organization . and offers creative research opportunities in the art and science of sophisticated communications There is absolutely no other organiza tion like it . . . no other organization doing the same important work, or offering the same wealth of opportunity for imaginative thinkers in the Liberal Arts, as well as the Physical and Engineering Sciences. The National Security Agency is a major research arm of the Department of Defense, but its influence and responsibilities are far broader. It works closely with many indus trial and research institutions; it has special access to scientific information at universi ties and other Government laboratories; and it enjoys close consulting arrangements with scientists of commanding stature. NSA staff members enjoy all the benefits of Fed eral employment without the requirements imposed by the Civil Service system. What does NSA do that warrants this unique stature?. NSA approaches the subject of sophisti cated communications from these original standpoints: , Creating secure communications sys tems and equipments. Unknown anywhere else, and devising special refinements for computers & edp systems that will increase our handling, capabilities. This means that Communications Engineers, Computer De sign Specialists, Mathematicians, Program mers, and Systems Analysts, all contribute to the design of antennas, transmitters, re ceivers, and terminal equipment ... to ex periments using new semiconductors, mag netic film, superconductive devices, etc., resulting in new logic circuits and memory units, better high-gain arrays for UHF radio systems, higher-capacity data han dling terminal equipment, more effective speech band-width compression . . . and scores of similar advances. 2. By the very nature of "secure" com munications, assuring the continuing in vulnerability of U.S. communications through cryptologic procedures and tech niques. Because cryptology and its crypto graphic counterpart are not taught else where, mathematicians, scientists and all others with appropriate intellectual curios itywill be taught this challenging new discipline right at NSA. Work in this field may involve specially-designed computers, television, computer-to-computer data links, and edp programming. (Even music, philosophy, or the classics may be useful prerequisites for cryptologyl) . 3. Translating written data, and presenting the crux of the material in meaningful form. This is the home of the linguistics expert and the languages graduate enab ling the talented graduate to make the most of his or her particular gift, and quickly expand familiarity with other tongues. In all that NSA does, there is seldom any existing precedent. Only NSA pioneers in secure communications on this broad a scale, so only NSA offers the college gradu ate the best chance to make immediate use of bis disciplined thinking ... without years of post-graduate experience. All these features together with its well-instrumented laboratories, libraries, and profes sional staff of specialists in amazingly varied fields provide a stimulating aca demic atmosphere for individual accomplishment. On-Campus Interviews for Mathematicians and En gineers will be held later. Consult your Placement Of fice for dates. t ttdTTU AT A RTQ Q Your PQT Application must HtiiLt ili I O OnLlJllD. be mailed before October 14th This -is most important: To apply for an NSA position, all students EXCEPT Mathe maticians, Engineers, and Physicists must take the PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATION TEST scheduled for Saturday, October 24th. Stop In at your Placement Office and ask for the NSA Professional Qualification Test brochure ... fill out and mail in the application card enclosed inside . . . and bring to the test the ticket you wilf receive by mail. Even if you are not sure of your career Interests yet, get the facts on NSA opportu nities now. , 5to "-. ' - tilth. NSA is located In expanding facilities at Fort George G. Meade, Maryland halfway between Washington and Baltimore. It Is handy to trans portation facilities, the University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins, suburban or rural living (in town living, too, now that the new circumferen tial highways are completed) . . . and the Chesa peake Bay resort region.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 20, 1964, edition 1
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