... . Iw I . , 4 4 ---- . Page 6 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Wednesday, October 12, 1966 - vvv.v.v.v.w.w.ot iMaruy Is Gone But : Harry's gone. ; But Harry's is still here. J Ralph is running it now, though. Harry Maklin, the moon - faced proprietor of the delicatessen next door to the Post Office, and his wife, Sybil, retired this week, leaving for Miami Beach . : But Harry's which will always be Harry's even if Harry is in Miami Beach is staying in the fa mily. Ralph Maklin, who is Harry's Number One son, and his wife, Sandy, have taken command and say the'yll keep things the way they are : "We'll still kick out bare - feeters," Ralph said. j'And we'll keep the name Harry's.' And of course, the waiters will stay just like they've always been the most individualistic ones in lown. Harry's first came to Chapel Hill in 1926 when Harry Stern, who is Harry Maklin's borther - in law, opened it next door to the present Robbin's Store. A year or two later, Harry's moved to where the Youth Center is now next to the Carolina Thea ter. Harry Maklin bought the restaurant in 1939 and managed it for five years, selling out in 1944 and mov ing to New York and then Baltimore. A decade later, he returned, bought back Harry's and moved it to where The Fireside is now. In Janu ary of 1960, he moved it to where it is now. And even though he's retired now, Harry will re turn again. He and Sybil are coming back this summer to manage Harry's while Ralph and Sandy take a vaca tion. Congress Votes To Give LB J Guard Call-up Power WASHINGTON (AP) Con- gress voted today to give Pre- sident Johnson the authority to call to active: duty without J 1 . M aeciarmg a national emergen- cy the country's nearly two million reservists and national guardsmen. The President did not ask for the authority contained in a compromise $58,067,472,000 TODAY First meeting; of YM-YWCA Foreign Students Commit tee 5:00 p.m. upstairs YMCA Building. s '' Men's Residence Council will meet at 7 p.m. on the 4th floor of New East. GMAB Drama Committee in i terviews will be today and tomorrow from 4:30 to 6:30 at GM. Sign up for inter views at the GM Informa tion Desk. Orientation for the Chapel Hill Experimental Tutorial will be held at 7:30 p.m. in 105 ! Gardner. New applicants are welcome. The maximum commitment will be 2 hours. Campus Affairs Committee will meet at 4 p.m. in Roland Parker Til. All who have been notified of their accep tance on the committee are reminded to attend. Student Committee on Mental Health will meet from 5:30 7 p.m. in Roland Parker II. If you are unable to attend i please contact Doug Mc Keown, 967-3385. Interviews for a vacant seat v M. w HVIUiV in the Student Legislature for 117i 4. it .1 . v. uiaiun nesiaence nail, WD vi, wui De neia at 4 p.m. in Roland Parker I. All members of the UP Execu tive Committee are expect ed to attend. NSA Resource Department meeting at 5 p.m. in Roland Parker III. The UNC Amateur Radio Club will meet at 7:30 in the Caldwell - Y building. All interested persons are invit ed to attend. jThe Murdoch Committee in t vites all students interested in working with mentally re traded chidren at Murdoch PEWTER Campus l 1 ; T. L. KEMP Jewelry 135 Franklin St. "Home of the Old Well Charm" J. . ' appropriations bill which will finance most defense outlays, including the Viet Nam war costs, for the 12 months which 1 . Degan juiy i. The Senate aDDroved the measure on voice vote after the House passed it 305 to 42. The bill now goes to the White House for the President's sig nature. Calendar Center to meet with them at 2 p.m. in 'front of the Y. All students who could please bring cars will be very liber ally reimbursed for gas mon ey. u?c Physlcs Colloquium will the Naval Research Labora- tory to speak on "Radiative Recombination and the Self Trapped Hole , in Alkali Ha lide Crystals.' The meeting is at 4 p.m. in room 215, Phillips Hall. Tea and cof fee will be served one half hour before the talk in the Lounge room 277, Phillips Hall. ; The film "The Parable" will be shown at the Gallery Cof fee Shop, 214 Pittsboro St., at 9 p.m. and 11 p.m. No admission charge. Alpha Phi Omega will hold fall rush at the Morehead Planetarium Faculty Lounge at 7:45 p.m; All Carolina men are welcome. GM Music Committee inter views will be held from 4-5:30 p.m. Sign up at GM Infor mation Desfc 1 The UNC Chess Club will meet tmrs T 11 . . 44 um '"xA P-m. m itoiand Parker III. All persons in- terested in playing chess are invited. The Chapel Hill Tutorial Pro ject will have its orientation meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 08 Peabody Hall. All volunteers must attend. All other per sons interested in tutoring high school and elementary students are invited. The Communications Commit tee will meet at 3 p.m. in Roland Parker II. Those un able to attend please meet at the same time and same place on Thursday. MUGS Reproductions v. Harry's SUM Tkere 1 "A " . - ) i a '-mi r ... I I G- ft - ' -''-'-'"I L THAT MAN HARRY, here cash register, is now gone ment. But courage! Harry-lovers, Ralph is there. ?nd Har ry's' will never be 'Ralph's And you've still gotta wear shoes to get in. The Chief Executive lacks the power to activate reser vists now unless he declares a state of national emergency. The new authority will extend to June 30 but Johnson is not expected to use it under pres ent conditions. The compromise empowers the President to call up entire units of the Ready Reserve or National Guard, as well as in dividuals not assigned to units who have not served at least 24 months on active duty and have not fulfilled reserve mili tary requirements. Unassigned reservists could be required to serve a total of 24 months, less any time ser ved on active duty or in active duty training. Entire units also could be required to serve on active duty for 24 months. Chairman George H. Mahon, D Tex., of the House Appro priations Committee said the language in the measure does not suggest that the President can take any action with re gard to using reserves to beef up forces in Viet Nam. It sim ply gives! him authority, he said. Rep. Robert L. F. Sikes, D ,Fla., told the House the call up authority would not be ab used but should be available if needed while Congress is in : adjournment. J "We have to trust some body," Sikes said. Sen. Richard Russell, D. Ga., told the Senate, however, "I hope the President will see fit to make use of this autho rity." Mahon also said Senate lead ers had given "solem assur ance" that they would seek agreement early next year on separate legislation defining the status and strength of re serve components. The House recently passed such legislation but the Senate did not consider it. Instead, the Senate put the reserve pro vision in the appropriations bill. THE El FOB V KIDDED, T But not because we're "second best", because we aren t. In fact, THE HUB has long enjoyed a re utation as a fashion leader in Chapel Hill and the bte' V? h,f der use we realie that our tChe-n S lUtT?- Take u out on wrtfSd l . " you outnt yourseIf for the "Where Quality Is A Tradition, Not A Price' found musing by his cherished titiMirm i ini ,i iii.in iii.miiii. . nl into tne nappy stale of retire- (DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer) Prisdm, System Bad D irector'Savs CHARLOTTE (AP) North Carolina Prisons Director Lee Bounds asserted Tuesday night North Carolina has a "very bad prison system." Bounds made the statement in a filmed television program which was prepared and shown Tuesday night by Char lotte Station WBTV. He stressed the need for community responsibility in the matter of rehabilitation. Bounds said that one answer to the problem of how to im prove conditions is the single cell system. He said he would ask the North Carolina Gen eral Assembly for more than $12 million with w h i c h to build three 500 - man facili ties equipped with individual cells. Bounds declared, "There is no useful purpose in d2nying that within these 50 - man dormitories in the field unit system at night the in mates have control not us. "There are attacks, sexual attacks and other attacks, strong-arm methods for exact ing from a weaker inmate payments of various kinds to the predatory inmates and we can't do anything about it at present. "There is a climate of fearj frankly, that makes it at the moment impractical for us to order custodial officers onto the 50-man dormitories where medium custody or close custody inmates are confined. "Custody only was to be provided. To acquire person-) nel for rehabilitation, to de velop and operate correction al programs in our system would take more money than we're likely to get from the General Assmbly if we take that route of providing our own personnel for this pur pose. "I think it would be a futile? effort to seek that amount of money and I don't intend to try. "My efforts, instead, are going to be directed at the HUB A ii Aims Godwin Wants Broader Auto Inspection Law PINE HURST (AP)-a pflg. ton Godwin commissioner of North Carolina's Motor Vehi cle Department, Tuesday called for a broader, auto in spection law and a more ef ficient liability insurance stat ute. Godwin spoke first Tuesday at a civic club meeting in Hamlet, then at an insurance agents meeting in Pinehurst He told the Pinehurst ses sion that "strengthening of the state's financial responsi bility act is an important part of the traffic safety legisla tion enacted by the 1965 Gen eral Assembly." Godwin said that drivers licenses are being suspended at a rate of 400 to 1,000 a day for failure to comply with the law. In North Carolina, all mot orists must have liability in surance. If they fail to do so, their driver's licenses are automatically suspended. The biggest problem, God win said, "is thp nnh1i. lllnfnnlA y n t il .. Pmpuy." ou- e nocea, "mere are too many incidents involving insurance agents who were careless or dishonest in the handling of important auto matters. free community, at persuad ing responsible people that convicted offenders are just not the responsibility of the correctional agencies of the State. That when they leave your county, your sheriff's custody, to go to the prison system, they are still the re from which they come ; "And that effective correc tion can only be achieved by the community assuming its own corrective sarvices nec essary and the understanding of the problem including the understanding of the respon sibility regarding the pro b lem. "We are trying to gear up in such a way as to do for ourselves only what we can't persuade the free community to do for us." Beat Notre Dame Pep Rally Thursday Night ROUND TWO of The Intimate's Giant Bargain Book Sale Continues Still stocks of beautiful books at handsome savings! Join in the fun and excitement this week at The Intimate Bookshop 119 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Open Till 10 P.M. open evenings (Continued from Page 1) dated and where a single minded continuity is neces sary." The college trained woman dedicates a large part of her mature years to family life and child bearing and rear ing, but on the average the college trained woman ex pects to work for pay for 25 years during her life time. "The vocational aspect of planning for some years of participation in the active lab or market should be realisti cally thought out by most w o m e n," Dean Carmichacl said. Club To Buy Plane The Chapel Hill Flying club will purcahse a new $6,000 Rector, Profs Demoted; Are Now Janitors TOKYO (AP) The rec tor and eight teachers at Hsinhua University in Peking were denounced by the Red Guards as reactionary and now are janitors at the school, members of the militant youth group told Japenese corres pondents today. ' "They are sweeping the floors and growing vegetables and other labor reform jobs," Sung Pai-Lin, 18, a Red Guard, told the Japenese in the Red Chinese capital. ' 4 Thirty of the Red Gurads, in a meeting with the correspon dents, also confirmed what has long been ' evident in the west: That Defense Minister Lin Piao, described as party chair man Mao Tse-Tung's "close comrade in arms," is heir apparent to Mao. They said Liu Shao-Chi, na, is unsuitable for leading the cultural revolution or purge against those opposing Mao's thought. Sung said the Red Guards did not want war with the United States but if America invades China "We will fight to the very end." "The Red Guards are the reserve force of the liberation army," Sung said, "We will fight a people's war and are not afraid of nuclear arms. Armed with Mao Tse - Tung's thought one Red Guard will kill 10 Americans," The Red Guards are teen age students of high school age. Japanese newsmen describ ed the group, including some girl students, as the "angry young men and women" of Communist China. Sung said there were only 40 members in the Red Guards when it was voluntarily launch ed at Hsinhua University May 29. The Red Guards now list 265 students out of an enroll ment of 1,300, Sung said, and 16 teachers out of a faculty of 150, he added. He told Japanese newsmen: "Our anger exploded when the rector and other reaction ary teachers interfered with our attempts to study the thought of Mao Tse - Tung and to carry out a proletar ian cultural revolution in co operation with laborers, far mers and soldiers. until 10:00 p.m. Cavmpus Briefs twin-seater plane in the near future. At its last meeting the club voted to purchase a Chapion Citabria, equipped for acro batic and instrument flying. The 105 horsepower plane will feature stick controls rather than the conventional control wheel found on most smaller aircraft. The Flying Club is a non profit University organization which offers complete flight training to interested s t u dents. Dr. Don Johnson of the School of Public Health serves as advisor and flight instruc tor for the organization. The club currently uses an Aeronca Chief which will be used as a trade in on the new aircraft. The club offers free demonstration flights to prospective members. Arrangements for demon stration flights can be made by calling Johnson at 966-1171. Fellowship Deadline October 31 is the deadline for faculty members to nomi nate candidates for Woodrow Wilson Fellowships for 1967 1968. The faculty member should send the student's name, cur rent mailing address, college and proposed field of gradu ate study to the regional chairman. Beanbirds Tap 14 The Beanbirds tapped 14 new members in pre - dawn ceremonies this morning. Those tapped include Mary Jo "Whooping Cat B i r d" Campen, Hannah "Pigmy Titmouse" Vaughan, Barbara "Butcher Keel - Tailed Knight, Joan "Bobby barelegged" Mc Claine, Ann "Vinous Brested Buzzard" Adair, Liz "Sap- YQUHG LIEU! Got ALL the facts FREE! For a CAREER as an AIRLINE PILOT attend the special meeting Sun. Oct. 16th, 2 to 4 P.M. at the University Motel, Raleigh Rd., Chapel Hill. Free refreshments served. Qualified personnel to answer your questions. Avaition Academy of North Carolina Raleigh-Durham Airport MONOGRAM DINING Luncheon Special For Wednesday Shieken Stew UJOoodles Choice Of Two Vegetables Salad WDressing Beverage Homemade Layer Cake 97 Mellow moods of love Los Indios Tabajaras In this new album, Los Indios Tabajaras once again display their remarkable talents as they set a mellow mood for romance with their tender renditions of "As Time Goes By," "La Mer," "Who Can I Turn To," "Make Believe," "The Song Is Ended," "Time Was" and 6 more favorites. The mood is mellow, the setting is romantic, the listening is great. m f "ft & A. t I V RCAflCWIl) (A The most trusted name in sound liV sucker Snowbird" Scott, Kar en "Dung Shoveller Duck" Vi all. Also, Diane "Ruby Crowned Nuthatch" Ricks, Johnny "Carbonated Dock Creeper" Rivers, Bruce "Tyrant Fly cathcer" Logue, Bill "Jingle Foul Longspur" Leech, Jay "Horney - Hangnest" Hannon, Bob "Broad-rumped Passion Pigeoned" Poitras and Andy "Goat-sucker Grosbeak" Gay Ion. WALKING WILLIAMS BOSTON (UPI) Baseball Hall of Famer Ted Williams set the Boston Red Sox record for most walks received in an entire season 162 in two different years, 1947 and 1949. Part - time student help wanted by the Dairy Bar. Phone 942-5356 for ap pointment. THE NEW YORK LIFE agent on your campus is a good man to know. Write . . . Phone . . . Visit GEORGE L. COXHEAD, CJLU. 203 East Franklin (Over Dairy Bar) Pn. 942-4358 NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY ROOM 'r 1 1 Si iimuu cm -- if X u it W W fa SH mm ' V 1 III 1 1 j ' il- li I Mi ii , !