CAROLINA Sat, Oct 27, 1973 POTATOES GETTING SVELTE NEW IAAAGE J. i . ' I r!':-w: " V...... . . - ... - . . ; . BACK J 4 OHLV WAVE V Will ..SSSSSSSf iil . ...aiu n v rtg) No more half-baked ideas about potatoes. The overstuffed image of your average potato is being replaced today by one of more moderate proportions. Nutritionists are doing this rebuilding job by comparing the spud's supposedly high cal orie count with that of a steak. The comparison is this: A pound of steak contains from 1,400 to 1,600 calories. The average quarter of a pound of meat serving contains about 400 calories. On the other hand, an aver age serving of baked potatoes contains only 150 calories. But go light on the butter and sour cream. Health Insurance Institute IT'S A LAUGH! "ISN'T IT WONDERFUL TO HAVE A DAY OFF AND RELAX WITH THE CHILDREN!" Crossword Puzzle ACROSS l.Dolt 4. Coin 8. Color 12. Wing 13. Forms of transport 15. Young cat 17. Incentive 18. Pull 19. Stitch 20. German article 21. Seaport 23. Pronoun 24. Through 25. Humans 26. Bag 27. Artery 29. Bone 30. Withdraw 32. That one 33. Iberia 35. Compass point 36. Suffix: enzyme 37. Terminate 38. Pen 39. Stove 40. Silkworm 41. Consumed XI 21 ft 19 33 HO 37 3 1 13 30 52. ss 9 II 31 If 17 39 S to Si IS 42. Scandina vian money 43. Specimen 45. Petty! official 48. Celestial glow 50. la la Aatwar to Punl I t I I BOJ II i It I i I l T 1" 001 CI A I 51. Slimy 52. Negatives 53. Place DOWN 1. Tree 2. Moham medan title 3. Make big 4. Pulled 5. Boy's name 6. Musical syllable 7. Gantry 8. Obtained 9. Attacker 10. Publicize 23. Pass the - 24. Cooking 'vessel 26. Japanese coin 27. Card 28. Sun's disk Egypt. 30. Disen cumber 31. At all 34. Beast 36. Wards off 38. Beer mug 39. Scrap 40. Existence 1 1. French river Whole 14. File 16. Weight 19. Conceal 21. Biblical name 22. Without 42. Grains 44. Scruti nize 45. Pronoun 46. Measure 47. Stroke 40 Ptw! ACROSS 1. Passive 6. Nut 11. Vegetable 13. Excite 14. Degenerate 16. Permit 17. Water drops! 18. Goddess of dawn 20. Trigono metric function 21. Bitter vetch 22. Contests 24. By 25. Wheeled vehicles 27. Jar 28. Deceiver 29. Excellently 31. Palm fiber 32. Indications 33. Ocean 36. Great Lake 38. Hint 39. Sleeping places 40. Persian coins 37 10 Y7 2o lb 99 3-1 42. Slips away 46. Chemical 44. Perceive compound 45. Salty 47. Fewest Aunt to Puada Ll 5 vphB a3l-J-lgl3 laHuuinu'-ir-ilwli.l t uwh ppldllTI-t. n o Y9M 5 tt 131 DOWN 1. Frighten 2. Siberian tribesman 3. Iris root 4. Press 5. Capture 6. Vegetable 7. Building wings 8. Measuring instrument 9. Amends 10. Fresher 12. Speculative 15. Belonging to you 19. Quiet 22. Foundation 23. Ship wind catcher 25. Hat 26. Merry 27. Brave 29. Tooth decay 30. Malarial fever 31. Concise , , 33. Reddish brown 34. Paradises 35. Property 37. Other 39. Cotton bundle 41. Indian weight 43. Wolframite MEN on Wheels HELPFUL SAFETY TIPS fry Elizabeth Stimley Plymouth Safety Writer EMERGENCY STOPS If you put your foot on the brake pedal and nothing hap pens, don't panic, use the park ing brake. Modern cars have three brak ing systems one for the front, one for the rear - and the park ing brake. The possibility oi an systems iaii ing at the same time is small. You can also slow down by mov ing the gear shift lever into a lower gear. One day, go to a deserted parking lot and practice using the parking brake to stop the car. First, put the car in drive and start the car rolling slowly. Pull out on the hand lever, and press down on the parking brake. You'll find that you have to jam down on the parking brake quite hard, but it will stop the car. Do this several times until you get the feel of it. MOUNTAIN IN THE WORtf ? mm IMTSHMr,LPNnS...Ca9.l5 FT.HIGH)? IT REQUIRED RLL Or 36 MONTHS TO COMPUTE nS RECORD ELEVATION f iE . . . . - ,y; ' I Mwr is the oKiN of THE BR1DQL JEIL? rPMTUWeS POO... AS PROTECTION AGAINST "THE EVIL EVE. SINCE ENEMIES PrSvjEUBS FflEHDS CRME TO THE CHURCH f n xlxkn I irxtf DDI ICUCC MWE FROM THE HftlR OF CftMELS r not HT ftLL f THEV ORE MRDE FROM I "IRE TAILS OF SIBERIAN SOUjRRELSf CM BIG 00 SOME BEETLES GROW? WIRE GlAMT BEETLES OF BRAZIL. OfTEVl PTTTAIN A LENGTH OF 8 IrKHES MONKEYS... ftNO ARE Bl6 ENOUGrC t Pfrrocx RNpEy lrrse fish f Forecasts show that THE worute NRGyie&S " mi POU8LE BY THE MIP-980S. TH SUCCESS OF THE APPROPRIATELY NAME P HORTH SEA VIKN6 PELP OP NATURAL GAS PISCOVEREP BY CONTINENTAL Oft- HOLPS NTER NATIONAL mPUCATIOHS: ZONES SQTOOO MILES OPFSHORE COASTLINES APPEAR TO EE THE aa,t MUnMISlNG AOmAS FOR NEW . SOURCES OF OIL ANP NATURAL GAS. Practice may save your life. Should you lose braking power while in traffic, move over to the slow driving lane, testing the brake pedal as you do so. Then shift into a lower gear to slow down. If you feel that you can't drive the car further, move onto the shoulder of the road with care. Don't slam on the brakes, pump them. Watch out for soft shoulder sur face roads. Slow down as much as possible before you leave the pavement, keeping the wheel straight. Turn on the four-way flashers to indicate that you are having trouble. Be ready for an emergency braking problem, test the brakes before you leave home and learn to use the parking brake. It's as simple as running a sewing machine. A jet fighter has a re frigerating system with a freezing capacity equal to 176,000 ice cubes a day. VhKH IS THE CM LARGE CITY IN THE WORLD SITUATED ON TWO CONTlNgNTSf f vi up! V M ttcYLRlu TflBKEY f ONE HALF .v.eiitSSP -TUP rffuce HRLFI-. acrotbephrdanelles, m ASiaf HDW DID VJE GET THE WORD TIP ? 'WPS tor?- I 0fVMu -run BDCY I VTfBOC, OF THE WORDS "TO INSURE PROMPTNESS. ROSOED WAITERS1 8XES TTH THAT FASTER SERVICE PEPOSffH) GHTUlTlES'. w 'HV DOESN'T IT HURT VHEN HAIR IS CUT f ,i ntices hWf F 1 mir JM vl ' ' trVjCRUSe HAIR Hfi$ NO N.r g)OESTHE FUR KNOWN AS HUDSON SErL....COME rKWl lHt cu 4 1 T A TIME WHEN EVEN THE uATCi ne tup AORTH SEA abc aartiiAls nW ftf&TArLP TO SArC. cnYIKWWEtvi'"-' SOUNP PETROLEUM OPERATIONS, GAS IS NOW MOVEP FROM THE VKNG COMPLEX VIA AN 86 -MILE UHPERSEA PIPELINE IS USEP FOR HOME AND INDUSTRIAL USE, fHIS&AHT SBLF-PROPEUeP mo PRIUINO FOR COCONO CMM7HSTANP ioo-FT. waves. rymWB 1 1 t?.f t'.it.U:' 07nOrttM(FMMM as many as 100 "wives.,, ' 5 I , - ySc " m " ' 1 Ml I T3 If HE LUDINGJON PUMPED STORAGE PROJECT, ON THE EASTERN SHORE OF LANE MICHIGAN, IS I973'S OUTSTANDING CIVIL ENGINEERING ACHIEVEMENT OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS.., THE LARGEST PUMPED STORAGE PROJECT M THE WORLD (A GIANT STORAGE BATTERY), THE FACILITY PROVIDES READILY AVAILABLE POWER THAT IS CRITICALLY NEEDED DURING OUR PRESENT ENERGY CRISIS... POWER PRODUCED BY A PLANT THAT IS AS POLLUTION FREE AS OUR PRESENT TECHNOLOGY PERMITS. THE FIZZLE FAMILY - - x ntittT. By H. T. ELMO I'M ONCr 0SHRR6 AROUND ) HERE SINCE MY . WIFE VJENT INTO BB POLITICS J-r7 jgill TO SWEEP .THE COUNTRY! r vii9niwiiiwi win THE LIVING ROOM 1 " z"" " PPn-iaPAlEax IZwrLvriiyv inc. WlakeWM WCMGAN, 13MPLOYIN6 THE LAMEST PUMP-TURBINE AND GENERATOR-MOTORS ci co -- Aic to, i- rcn rue PROJECT TAKES WATER FROM LAKE MICHIGAN DURING OFF-PEAK HOURS AND PUMPS IT UP TO A HUGE MAN-MADE RESERVOIR, I MILE WIDE AND 2 MILES LONG. ytMNG times when Mosr PXMEX IS NEEpEP) ' ' o At nj sznwArr; EFrmr ENERGY flT'S OUTRfi6tX)US i I THE PRICES THEVRE' J CHAR6IN6 FOR 7 L MEATT THESE rEA usia, GETTING HIGHER EeBVDte NONE FORI A WEEK 60 DOW AND BUY SOME 1 l WANT A DOLLAR I WORTH OF MEAT, J STEV BACK HERE ANDA I 111, LET Vt3U SMELL y PUGGY SHOP VJISELV ALWAYS GET YOUpJ MOMEVS WORTH'. ll9L IT ' SI I7! HUPPW' HUBBY' "THE e)kffcKTE!T DUr IMC CENTURY p EVERY WORD OF THE OECLRRWION OF IVJOtrtrNUBNCt ON IHC HEAO OF A PIN J AMERICA'S MOST LOVEABLE IADDIE ff by Horace Elmo THIS IS DAN0EI39US.VfeY OUT IN THE OCEAN! I HOPE WE SEE I EVERY AWEMTUE HAS ITS UPf AND DOWNS, KpPUSGV 71 ' I OOH LOOK! LR.NDAHOYJ IT S ft TINY ISLRND...BUT AT LfflST ITS LAND ! I Jr yVA Mmw TOWllOTP Ir ' - bVFST VPGMA UNtVEPSfTY'S MORGANTOWH SITE IS AN IDEAL PROVING GROUND FOR NEW CFRTj MASS TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM. rtiMB t-jahcc si nnV MANY OF TS 23 OOO STUDENTS AND STAFF MEMBERS MUST TRAVEL BETWEEN THE SCHOOL'S WIDELY SEPARATED CAMPUSES. FIFfST OF TS KIND IN THE U.S.. THE W COMPUTER-OPERATED PERSONAL RAPID TRANSIT (PRTJ 5T5TCM, &UII. inc OF LEARNING BY BOEING AEROSPACE CO. AS PART OF THE US. DEPT. OF TRANSPORTA TION PROGRAM IS SEEN AS A PACE SETTER FOR OTHER COMMUNITIES WHERE MASS I SURFACE TRANSPORTATION AND AR-POLLUTION CONTROL DEMAND URGENT ATTENTION. POWER FOR TWE CAR'S PRESENT m MILE GUIDE WA Y RUN IS TRANSMITTED V7A 174 OOO POUNDS OF COPPER BUS BAR FURNISHED BY REVERE COPPER AND BRASS INCORPORATED. KVtfUkvsu mm i . ' umihv mm 1 1 in EACH RUBBER TIREP CAROM CARRY 21 PASSENGERS. UP AND DOWN ! Circus pesktrmcr. clarence 6. willarp, was able to increase his height from 5 feet io inches to feet 4 inches at wiil bv constant practice in muscular manipulation1. OMAMPOWM! SAF BURS WAY TO MAKE YOUR BREAMS COME TRUE! AMP THEY'RE SOEA6Y TO BUY.' GET THEM AT VOIM BANK-OR THROUGH your BOND POWER. THAT'S REAL' PREAM POWER. I V FAST GERMS! A COUSH TRAVELS AT A VELOCITV OF 245 MILES PER HOUR! I GOOD SHAPE (Continued from Pige 5B) vardsof rushins and mad onto m$K downs. Roger Jackson Mi the running attack with 29 yards on his only carry of the game. The Livingstone defence, however, continued to perform very well. It limited the Broncos to 102 yards rushing in 38 running attempts. The visitors gained 130 yards passing, but they threw the ball 32 times. Craig Sills, one of three FayettevUle quarterbacks that saw action, led his team's aerial attack by completing nine out of 25 passes for 95 yards. . Both teams were Dlaeued bv fumbles. Mike Wright. John Young and Wayne Bvthwood each recovered a fumble for the winners, while Walt Dillard. Oarryl Jones, Robert Thomas and un unidentified teammate each made a recovery for the losers. Livingstone bolted to a 7-0 lead in the first Quarter when it received the opening kickoff and took over on its own 35-yard line. Three plays later, Nichols bit end Mike Williams with 64-vard scorinff nam. Cooney made the extra point with 13:27 showing on the dock. . The Broncos struck just as quickly in the second Quarter. With first down on the Livingstone 85, FayettevUle moved the ball down to the 16 in four plays. With 11:43 to 00. Quarterback Marion Wit-fall rifled a pass to end William Smith, who raced into the end zone. Jerome McDowell's converision run failed, making the score 7-6. Later in the second period the Bears took over in good field position on the Bronco 27 -yard line... An 18-yard pass by Nichols to Calvin Eley highlighted a drive that moved the ball to the two in four plays. With 6:04 remaining in the half, James Lewis charged Into the end zone. Cooney's kick save the hosts a 14-6 advantage. FayettevUle took over and lost the ball three plays later. Walt Dillard feU on a fumble by the Bronco's Clenn McCoy, giving the Bears the pigskin on the FayettevUle 45v , Aided by a 13-yard pass from Nichols to WUliams, the hosts reaches the one-yard line in thre plays. Nichols crashed in for a touchdown with 2:42 left in the half and Cooney booted the extra point, increasing Livingstone's cushion to 21-6. A fumble by the Broncos on the opening kick off of the third period set up another Bear score. Livingstone player fell on a fumble by FayetteviUe's John Mitchell, enabUng the hosts to take over inches away from the visitors' eoal line. The hosts were pushed back to the four, but on third down and goal to go, Nichols found received Reginald Childers in the corner of the end zone. Cooney made the extra point following the scoring pass and the score was 28-6. In the fourth quarter, FayettevUle completed a drive from its own 18 when Sills unloaded a touchdown pass to James Glasson. The conversion run was halted and with 14 minutes left in the game, the score was 22-12. The Bears then drove 45 yards down to the Broncos one in eiuht plays They notched their glnal touchdown of the contest when Eley drove in tor the score with 6:06 on the clock. Cooney's kick was wide and Livingstone had a 34-12 advantage. The visitors rounded out the scoring when they put together a 90-yard scoring drive. With 1:31 left in the game, Sills passed 24 yards to Charles Perry for paydirt. StUs ran for two points and the game ended, 34-20. The scoring summary: Score by quarters: FayettevUle ...0 6 0 14-20 Livingstone . . . 7 14 7 ft-84 brainy AM) BEAUTIFUL h lovely sophomore FayettevUle State University coed Clararene Jacobs. A native oi saiemDurg, Clararene made all A's during her first year at FSU. A mathematics and an honor student, she would Uke to teach at the high school level upon completing FSU. "Ntfwweekw Reviews Books By Two Authors With UNC-Chapel Hill Roots CHAPEL-HILL - Books by two authors with University of HONOR ROLL ' (Continued from Page 3B) Joshua Lassiter, Myron R. Lawrence, Rosalyn Lawrence, Angela Lloyd. Geneva L. Mangum, Breqda A. McAUister, Robert MltcheU, Lisa Mull, Cathy NoelL Douglas Osborn, Catherine Page, Thomas Paschall, Stephanie Pettiford, Martha Platts, Lettie Randall, Deborah Stephenson, Nikola Tlcic, Darlene Tilley, Deborah Wood, Lemuel Umstead, Sharry Whitted, Shirley Wiggins, Ralph Wilbur, Edward Williams, Jacquelyn D. WiUiams, Blake C. Woodlief. ov.HoBon Honored By ANC Society RICHMOND - Governor Linwood Hoiton was honored recently for "his exemplary contribution to the field of race relations" by the American Negro Commemorative Society (ANCS). . In a brief ceremony held at the State Capitol, the governor was given the James A. Bland Commemorative Medal, a limited edition medal honoring the author of Virginia's official song, "Carry Me Back to Old Virginia." A member of the board of advisors of ANCS, Lawrence K. Chavis of Ettrick, was in charge of the presentation. Chavis, a faculty member at Virginia State College in Petersburg, was accompanied by Dr. Wendell P. Russell, VSC President. Chavis said Hoiton "exemplifies statesmanship of noble caUber and furnishes leadership necessary for making Virginia a show place of the nation in race relations..." Snt, Oct. 27, 1973 The Veterans Administration reminds veterans discharged between January 31, 19, and June 1, 1966, that they haw only until May 31, 1974, to cosMH training under the Of Hll-except for flight, farm, or .fi t r )' AdsjiiniatratioB cnwtfsMs WjB to ehoek -mm traveling or establishing BLISSFUL BRONCOS - Dr. Charles "A" Lyons, Jr., ChanceUor of FayettevUle State University, happily kisses Homecoming Queen Lettie Williams during halftime ceremonies. The Broncos fans had a right to be happy after defeating arch-foe Winston Salem State University, 14-12 and moving into third place in the tough CLAA football race. ENDORSES (Continued from Front Page) intersection; (2) Look in all directions before crossing the street; (3) Watch for and obey all traffic Ughts; (4) Walk, never run across the street; (5) Walk on the sidewalk, not on the street; (6) Wait on the curb, not in the street, until the street is clear to cross. The Mayor had words of advice for motorists, too. He cautioned drivers to be on the alert for excited youngsters on the afternoon and early evening of October 31. If we all do our part and follow common-sense rules for safety, this Halloween will be an enjoyable and safe holiday for the children of Durham," he said. PEARSON (Continued from Front Page) are many, but for the well-being of the country as a whole. "As bankers, we know that good savings habits can ensure personal financial security-- preparing a family for an emergency, or for the future costs of an education, a new home, a vacation, or retirement. We strongly endorse the Payroll Savings and Bond A Month Plans, which can be tools in beginning good savings habits, as well as suppliers of non-inflationary funds for the government." North Carolina connections are featured in the current issure of "Newsweek" magazine. "The Fourteenth Chronicle Letters and Diaries of John Dos Passos" edited by UNO English Professor Townsend Ludington and "The Very Nearest Room" by Jane Logan who received her masters degreeat Chapel Hill in 1970 are reviewed in the book section of the national news magazine. John Dos Passos, author of the three-part chronicle "U.S.A." and the novels "Manhattan Transfer" and "Three Soldiers," was a member of the prominent group of literary figures of the 1920'sandl930's. ''The Fourteenth Chronicle" contains more than 425 letters written by Dos Passos to these friends-writers Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald E.E. Cummings, Sherwood Anderson, Upton Sinclair and Edmund Wilson. Ludington selected these letters from more than 2,000 and wrote the notes providing biographical settings. Dos Passos' letters have been called "a chronicle of our century continuing over several generations through war, depression, war again, social revolution.... Throughout his long Ufe there were few important political or social controversies in which Dos Passos was no concerned." Dos Passos died in 1970 at the age of 74. Most critics agree that "The Fourteenth Chronicle, " published by Gambit, is an important work. Favorable reviews have appeared in "The New Republic," "Saturday Review World" and "Atlantic." "The Very Nearest Room" te Ms. Logan's first novel. Partly autobiographical, it is the story of 15-year old Lee Kramer who is nurse to her dying mother and mother substitute to her pretty teenage sister and sickly 8-year-old brother. Although constantly coping with her family, Lee still has time to comment on life in her hometown, Chandler, N.C. mm mm, mm n IUE "PEOPLE HELPING PEOPLE" theme of the Kodak Community Service Photography Awards is Ulustrated by this picture taken by Gilbert James, Massive Economic Neighborhood Development, Inc., New York City. TROJANS (Continued from Page 5B) against Elizabeth City CoUege, victors over the Trojans this vear. Hampton has the victim of terrible defeats at the hands of the Trojans in the last four vnars and will be seeking revenge against the Men of Troy; rr Coach William Bennett will be sending his nigged defense and a rejuvenated offense against the Pirates on Saturday. The defensive unit which held nationally ranked Tennessee State to just 3 points for 55 minutes before letting the bottom fall out is expected to be fired up against the pirates. Sr. Safetyman Chris Arnold remarked after last weeks loss to TSU, "Hampton and the remainder of our schedule had better be ready because we should have beaten Tennessee.. ..We let that game sUp away from us after holding them for 55 minutes." One Trojan that will have special interest In this game wiU be Charles Taliaferro the middle man of the tough Trojan defense. Taliaferro is a native of the Tidewater, having resided in Newport News, Virginia. Also returning are Vernon Cross of Suffolk, and Maurice Smith of Chesapeake It should prove to be an exciting contest for both the Trojans and the Pirates this coming Saturday. Sincerity is a great virtue, rarely exhibited and seldom appreciated. SEWING MACHINE SICK? m wen fry Our 7 Point CMtk.Vst 1 tWiiomi 2 0iln4cban nlir mathiiM! LufcftCOttf l(IMtCf (bctrk MOTOR! A TMHTIMel trades IKTROI if .. Jia.., . ' 7. wKftestaytffhbArf AUXAn?ii?StWIMfi by Joe Black I've had a few comments to make about this sub ject before. But it seems to me it's time to discuss it again. Because, as always, it's time to do some thing about it. I'm talking about the Haves and the Have-nots. The Blacks who have it made. And the Blacks who haven't. Yet. And that's an important word. Yet. Simply because, someday, we'll see more of us who have, than have-not. We've all been patient for a long time, waiting for that better day. But let's all stop for a moment and think. For many of us, that better day has dawned. It's here. Now. And I'm not just talking about all of our Superstars. I'm talking, this time, about Mr. and Mrs. Aver age Black Citizen. But I wonder, just how many of us are really handling the added responsibilities of being there? Not the least of which, of course, is holding out our hands to help our less fortunate brothers and sisters. For many Blacks today, it's time to put some money where our mouths are. After all, to have gotten to where we are, today's Haves haven't had a lot of. time to waste. Now that we're there, there's no time to waste on indifference to the rest of our brothers and sisters. Jee'Bhck Vice President The Greyhound Corporation e Pi iryo YEARS I m lWi2Gai. 86 PROOF i I iilsi i 3B 'TimJmmw' Hj w ' JBj TTren LV4. L M I ML! 2623 Chapel Hill Blvd. RIVERVIEW SHOPPING CENTER 975 12 Gal. 90 PROOF i i m g B I WLwmmmBmmmmmmB H 8Tbbon lis oj33-s' Mobil Radicals with the 50,000, miie guarantee tf re T ' - TnrWA Vi j pi--- : i Cod running 70 series Multi-ply Butyl Liner Wide flat tread Excellent traction & stability Smooth comfortable ride at high speeds Tough traction and surer stopping even on wet pavement Ainr SB33 $5433 Al "IF f.aVT. Wi Radial Tire Guarantee rtSffBfSSSai .u.w ..!, mrnurn, m iuth MM mtmmmmmmm -i-iifte'mind tiev (o AaUimm eufivnr at the te al adwawent. wich nee u nut ot MiustweM laily i.wiied te faolactei o " Mobil THERE'S A MOBIL DEALER RIGHT UNDER YOUR NOSE Kesenrcn inangie moon Bout 54 b. k mmtmm Mooo Voooy iNoosf

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