Friday, October 14, 1966 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Page 4 Motorists: GefctSet Distinctive Rings Pearls -Cameo -Jade rr- For Winter Brim Jig 1 Rir QUIZ COMING UP-The logical thing to do when you've BIG QUIZ COMING ine logi s J:L w?ly snthel was the last governor of iiaitrtp uic UlgUIr - Vf .r.x.v.:.w.v.v.v. ............... I Harry Is Not Dead file's Hiding Out In; X; .V $ Miami Beach. g Xt ThT riflLMS 6 PAPAS Are Coming: Sat. Oct. 22 8:00 P.M. Carmichael Tickets at G.M. Info Desk NOW PLAYING STARRING Stuart Whitman & Janet Leigh 12 STRING GUITAR must isell this week! Harmony con cert sells for $140. Guitar only 4 months old. First reasonable offer. Steve Lyons at G.M. 933-2285. FOR RENT; 2 air-conditioned mobile homes. One new, available now ?90 per month. Second available Nov. 1 $75 per month. Call 942 3268 or 942-1749. CLASSIC JAGUAR 1960 MARK IX Amazingly low price Grey with red leather interior walnut tables and bar Call Ronn Michalove, 942-2781 mealtime at 968-9136 FOR SALE: 1957 MGA ROAD STER. Metallic blue, wire wheels, ect. A-l condition throughout. Phone 968-5821. HOCKEY COACH WANTED! Faculty member interested in coaching a Carolina Ice-hockey Club please call 942-5819. Twenty - five experienced un dergraduates already express ed strong enthusiasm in club. B.S.A. MOTORCYCLE, 350 cc. single, 32 h.p., alloy fenders, feridax seat, candy apple red finish, made for scrambling or touring. Perfect condition. Jim Newton, 968-9035, 968-9062. 305 HONDA SCRABMLER. Purchased in May. 1966. 1300 carefully driven miles. Mint Condition. Very fine price. 968-9007. Ask for Bob Ochs man. JAGUAR '66 XKE COUPE'. Red with crome wire wheels. 5300 mile. $4800. Call 873 3001. Asheboro. N. C. V.? CORVATR Convertible' for ' sale. Delux model. White, red interior. Clen. Priced to sell. Norris MacKinnon, 3 Amity Ct., 968-5776. Ml Leisure Society Of Future W ill Cause Many NEW YORK (AP) If you plan to stick around until the 1980's this may be your life: Three - day weekends, three or four month vacations, Sou thern California - type living with emphasis on family and home, high income, abun dance of material things. . . Sound good to you? It will to many people, but some won't like it, says Her man Kahn, physicist and Dir ' J is . The great MARTHA GRAHAM is coming to Duke Friday night for one perform ance only. Call Durham 684-4059 for tickets. DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS l.Part of a flower 6.Lift 11. Island off Venezuela 12. Mistake 13. Girl's name 14. Common wealth country 15. Beast of burden 16. Music note 17. Excess of chances 18. Greek letter 19. To take dinner 21. Ogrle 22. Melody 24. Large bird 26. Dispatches 28. Extra 32. To steep in liquid 34. Dry 35. Behave 38. Weeps 40. Language of the abbr. 41. Landing place in India 43. Behold 44. American Indian 45. Do a tailoring' job 47. Biblical name 48. Avoid 49. Appor tioned, as cards 50. Relieved 51. A frolic DOWN 1. Sleeping garments 2. Secre tary's miscue in typing 3. Brewers' vats 4. Lincoln 5. Music note 6. The turmeric 7. Italian river 8. Sultan's decree 9. Turfy 10. Rub out the Albemarle Colony, huh? Better write that down. It may There s man nameg to memorize! You feel well, another hour and it'll all be over-Photo by Jock Lauterer. sociologist Predicts ector of the Hudson Institute. So along with our barbecue society we're in for a lot of beatniks, revolutionary - type movements and withdrawals from society." Kahn discussed the future recently in an interview be fore a spaech to 300 women attending a "Quo Vadis, To day's Woman?" seminar. His views mostly were based on a current Hudson Institute study 14. Walk ing stick 16. Music note 19. Bread winners 20. Printers' 23. At home 25. Java DpIl oTpTTsTt a r 3 m a i nF JEaneIj e R.N Hi Jou m c E ERGS OS O Tp A El T O EL A Rk DO L PI s tIpTa T AtaulGjLM :T::iip e n d srzzzl c jD e JreT H PLlP lEbi HA v M A LOP O 5 K E 6) lBUE. TaL-INE REALM lEySllj Yesterday's Answer 37. Ankle 39. Hindu sacred tree tree , 27. Distress signal 29. Land measure 30. Describing a tamed mustang 31. Instruct 33. Fisher man's rod 35. Harmonize 36. Pincer like claw 42. Surge of the sea 44. Scorch 46. Man's 47. Ribbed fabric ' 49. Failing marks I 12 13 H 15 tZ4fc ' 7 la h ho m WL 4z 22 23 2H 25 26 27 28- 2T 30 3T "32 33 3M- 35 36 37 33 7" Ti i rrr - ne 777, .x . "1 111 '111 1 Neuroses speculating about the quality of life in the United States from 1976 to the year 2000. Before he helped found the Hudson Institute at Harmon -on - Hudson, N.Y., in 1961 Kahn was associated for 12 years with the Rand Corporation. EUROPEAN TACK "The Europeans may return to the tradition of the gentle man the man with many skills, none of which are very useful," said Kahn. 'They may take extra productivity out in greater leisure or in avoca tions." The Americans, on the other hand, are more likely to take it out in work and in increased material goods. "Poftnlo will live in 10 - room houses with threecars in the garage and a' neucop ter on the lawn, but they won't have a maid, unless they im port one from the underdevel oped world. The personal ser vices will be imported." As for income, something between 5 and 10 per cent of U. S. households may have a disposable income (after taxes) of between $40,000 and $50,000 a year. Kahn said the hours of work are likely to decrease from the current 2,000 a year to something between 1600 and 1700, and it's not improbable they might drop as low as 1,- 000. This sharp change in work patterns could be traumatic, he said. For the average man em phasis would be shifted from our current "work - oriented, advance - oriented, achieve ment - oriented value sys tems" to family values. NQ MEANING "Many Americans will be satisfied, but others will find such a life meaningless and purposeless, and they will look for something to fulfill them," said Kahn. "They may found a new religion. There will be mass move ments both rational and irrational cults, a kind of privatism, LSD without ques tion." A 12 1 ALL $4.00 LP.'s ONLY $2.25 ALL $5.00 LP.'s ONLY $2.75 ALL $6.00 L.P.'s OflLY $3.25 ALL CLASSICAL LP.'s $2.75 MONO-TAX INCLUDED STEKEO NEW LATE RELEASES JUST ARRIVED TOP JOO RELEASES-CASH BOX MAMAS HUNDREDS TO SELECT FROM PAPAS Extra Special: Kenip's Famous Automatic Black Umbrellas ONLY S3.39-STAY DRY CAT! - t.iauu iLfi) it's that time ot year again for car owners to start thinking about the problems of winter driv ing. There are many things the 't smart motorist can do to min imize those problems, for him self and his car. Now's the time, for exam- pie, to have the old bus tak en in for a checkup. Have a mechanic sound out the en gine, check the plugs and points. Change the oil, have a new oil filter put in, and a : grease job on the chassis if it needs it. Also and this is important check the condition of the battery. Cold weather places a se vere strain on a battery, be cause it must provide the pow er for starting a cold engine with thickened oil. The bat tery drain is much more se vere than in the summer. If your battery is more than two years old, it may still have the power to turn your engine over in warm weather but perhaps not enough to get it started in severe cold. Have it checked thoroughly, and if it doesn't test up to snuff, re place it. It may save you the trouble and cost of service calls this winter to get start ed. Now, the radiator. Perman ent type anti-freeze solutions are good for a long time. But they contain rust inhibitors that weaken with time. They're ma & E1ELB OVERT (to U tic q ' 2:15, 4 RECORD SAL n KEGHP'S GREEH-TEHT m n itsv i ,.aiJ-.r i M IT .'NEXT TO DAlaV J fine for af least two years. But if they're older than that the inhibitors may not be able to prevent buildup of rust and scale in the water channels inside the engine block and the head, and in the cores of the radiator. If your anti-freeze is too old, have your cooling system thoroughly flushed oui and replace the anti-freeze with a fresh supply. And perhaps most important from the standpoint of your own safety, check very care fully the entire exhaust sys tem. Leaky connections, or a muffler or exhaust pipe with holes, can turn a car into a death trap. Remember that in the sum mer time you drive with win dows open much of the time, and fumes escaping into the car from the exhaust system blow out the window. But win ter driving is done with win dows closed, and if fumes are escapmg from the exhaust system they will accumulate inside the car. Carbon monoxide is odor less, and in even minute con centrations can cause drowsi ness to a driver and passen gers. This is a safety hazard in itself. In concentration, it can result in unconsciousness and death before anyone in the car realizes anything is hap pening. So, have that exhaust sys tem checked along with every thing else. "Such an overwhelmingly flawless work of tragic beau ty that the viewer is stripped of objectivity and can only marvel at the emotions he is experiencing1! A visual mas terpiece of cinematography with such inescapable pres ence that one becomes de fensively involved; acting that transcends its very defi nition! Marked with direc torial genius, it is a tightly controlled, subtly consum mate work of art that defies verbal interpretation. The emotional impact will leave you stunned in your seat, and you will probably weep, but you will leave the theatre acutely aware that something inside you has changed. To miss it, when it is there, would be an even greater tragedy!" Ty Stephens Triangle Repertory Theatre 30, 6:45 and 9:00 THE RIALT0, DURHAM VACANT LUi - ' ifc.r ': fit J T.L KEMP 135 EAST FRANKLIN The Home of The Old Well Charm SEE CAROLINA vs. NOTRE DAME ON CLOSED CIRCUIT TV, OR HEAR IT ON THE RADIO, WHILE WE DO YOUR LAUNDRY .V 3 HOUR SHIRT SERVICE OiIE HOUR GLEAHUIG OR BRING YOUR TRANSISTOR AND DO-IT-YOUR 3ELF AT OUR COIN-OP. LAUNDROMAT OUE-HOUR GlflM-O-Mlfl Opposite Brady's Restuarant HALF PRICE (In Groups of 10 or if attending "A National Theatre-U. S. stylet'- -Oakland Tribune ANTA presents the National Repertory Theatre PLAYING SCHEDULE: EVENINGS AT 8:30 Mon..Oct. 17 Tues., Oct. 18 Wed., Oct. 19 Thurs.. Oct. 20 Fri.. Oct. 21 Sat., Oct. 22 TONIGHT POET TONIGHT POET TONIGHT POET Student Prices (all perfs.) Orch. $2.50, Please enclose a stamped, seif-addressed envelope, make checks payable to "Theatre of UNC-G" and mail order to Aycock Auditorium, University of North Carolina, Greerboro, N.C. 27412. For information phone: 6 performances Aycock Auditorium, HONDA SPECTACULA BIG SAVINGS any NEW OPED 616 W. Chapel Hill St DURHAM n "1 o Jewelry TO STUDENTS more. Faculty included with students.) NOEL COWARD'S 'f ' TONIGHT AT 8:30 Three plays of love and laughter directed for NRT by Jack Sydow, G. Wood and Nina Foch. "Ways and Means" is a sparkling tale of ' professional house guests on the Riviera. "Still Life" is the fragile love story filmed as "Brief Encounter." "Fumed Oak" tells a hilarious tale of a henpecked husband who flies the coop. EUGENE O'NEILL'S A TOUCH OF THE POET The first national tour of a great American play. In New York, the critics wrote: "Once more, O'Neill gives stature to the theatre" Daily News. "Drama on a big scale" Times. t "Here is a play to cherish, to see again and again" Daily Mirror. "Drama of enormous power, insight, and sheer emotional impact" Post. 2.00; Men. $2.50; Bale. $2.00, 1.50, 1.00 272 -DbiD in lareensDoro. only. Evenings at 8:30 Greensboro, Oct. 17-22 FALL SALES on Many, Many, and USED BIKES QOAB ID8. in