4 -Wolfe- (Contl.iued from Pare 1) going to reach some terrible age like 25," Wolfe said. Then what do they do? Stagnate, he said. Another form of dropping out, Wolfe said, is men's at traction to machines. He told about a motorcycle shop operator who had a Har ley - Davidson cycle with a Chevrolet V-8 engine that he rides bent over and wrapped around it so as to cut down wind resistance. "With a 300-pound Chevy engine bolted into his thorax, he had reached a pure state," Wolfe said. "Dropping out," however, has reached its "purest form in Hugh Hefner," Wolfe said. Hefner symbolizes what eve rybody all over is trying to do turn their homes into "pleas ure palaces." "People are going off on their own, having their own kind of Happiness Explosion" Wolfe said, "whether the pol iticians and intellectuals real ize it or not." Politicians and intellectuals, Wolfe said, are all basically alike, be they right wing or left wing, in that they see eve rything through "an apocalyp tical world view." This outlook means that the government and those who run it feel like it's their job to protect the prople from various apocalypses war, famine and so on and they want everybody else to feel that way too. During a question and an swer period, Wolfe defended Pop Art by saying it is "a reaction against something art ists cannot conceive space technology They're making art out of Everyday, mass produced items. FOR SALE: 650 cc. Tri umph Motorcycle. Saddlebags and windshield available. Not 8 .Q00 miles.: - 1S59 ' T-110 ast to& Must sell. $550' (rhtiybe less) Call 968-9032. HONDA S-90. 1965, 2500 miles. Mechanically perfect (62 mp-h.), excellent black and sil ver - ,'iey finish. Call Wyatt McCallie, 968-9062, 968-9305; message if not in. FOR SALE 1964 VW, EXCEL lent condition, new tires, must be seen to be appreciated. 929 6216. FOR SALE 16 SUZUKI Trail 80. New condition, only 350 miles, 4 month warranty, asking $325 or best offer, must sell, call 966-5205 after 5 p.m. FOR SALE 1956 CHEVRO let. Good condition. Call Wm. Clark, 942-5937 after 2 p.m., 306 C. Mason Farm Road. COLLEGE STUDENTS OPENINGS FOR 5 COLLEGE students to work part - time while in school to train for summer work. Write P .0. Box 17245, Raleigh, N. C. 1965 PLYMOUTH BARRA cuda. Excellent condition, automatic transmission, radio and heater. $1895, call 942-1541 after 5 p.m. TRIUMPH TIGER CUB, 200 cc. plenty of go-many extras. Must sell immediately. Very reasonably priced, call 942-2202. DTH F it's Not The Price You Pay, It's The Value Received! Ch oose Your Jeweler Carefully timff rmUufi In Jtlmilt. We offer more value to the Student . . . Ask us what we mean! You'll buy from us. I'JELMtrS JEWELERS The StudtnVs Quality Jeweler 17 Years 327 W. Main1 Durham Heart Transplant O.K. HOUSTON, Texas Doctors planted an artificial heart m a man yesterday to take over the work of a damaged chamber, then struggled with every known medical skill to keep him alive when a crisis erupted. But less than two hours after the device was implanted a doctor announced, "the electrocardiogram looks great' and doctors began sewing up the incision. The patient was Marcel L. DeRudder of Westville, III., 6o and unemployed because of his ailment. He entered the hospital a week ago. At noon, yesterday Central Standard Time, the hospital announced that the blood flow was improving and the natural heart's beat had improved. Shortly after the implant, Dr. Lancaster, acting as liaison man with newsmen, indicated blood pressure was very satis factory. Ford Yells Mismanagement WASHINGTON House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford pressed his Viet Nam mismanagement charge against Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara today but said the Pentagon should not change bosses in the middle of a war. "I think it would be unfortunate at this time . . to make a shift and bring in a new man," said the Michigan congress man. In the Senate, a Democratic member of the foreign rela tions committee urged that the United States seek a two week, election-cease-fire in South Viet Nam. Sen. Albert Gore of Tennessee told the Senate a cease-fire would remove a hindrance to broad participation and result in a more meaningful election next August. Dirksen stopped short of the mismanagement accusation Ford has made repeatedly and both men rejected any idea that McNamara resign. Robbery Suspect Caught LONDON Scotland Yard detectives today swooped on a remote little seaside resort 70 miles from London and seized James Edward White, suspected mastermind of the great train robbery. He had led them a merry chase since the robbery in 1963. Following a tip, plain clothesmen of the Yard's flying squad dashed by car to an apartment house overlooking a beach at Littlestone-On-Sea. Yesterday he was questioned at Scotland Yard headquar ters in connection with the $7.2 million train robbery Aug. 8, 1963. Only $758,000 of the loot has been found. Police are still seeking two other men for questioning. They are Bruce Reynolds, 33, and Ronald Edwards, 34. In addition police are hunting for Charles Wilson and Ron ald Biggs, who escaped from prison in daring, well-organized breaks while serving 30-year sentences for their part in the robbery. Wilson escaped from a prison near Birmingham in August, 1964. Biggs was sprung from London's ' Wandsworth Prison last JUl.I: . s Capp Blasts - (Continued from Page 1) It started to fill, she said, like it hadn't for anybody else during the whole symposium. AL CAPP sat in the middle chair on stage and fidgeted around until he found the poc ket with the Benson & Hedges cigarettes in them and lit one up. He looked a little like a cross between a southern politi cian and a northern ganster in his dark pinstripe suit with the red pocket handerker chief and with his black hair pulled straight back. Then, after Capp had been introduced and all those peo ple who were sitting and stan ding and perching in window sills and looking in from out side clapped for 22 seconds, Capp started talking. And for one hour and 25 min utes, Memorial Hall belonged to Al Capp. ALMOST, ANYWAY. Some people didn't like Capp's badmouthing student protestors. These were, for the most part, student protes tor - types. Like this one guy in a green-and-white polka dotted shirt and long hair 'and a red beard. He just kinda sat there and looked pained and kept twisting ah? Daily ear iirrl World News BRIEFS By The Associated Press the little tuft of whiskers right ; under his lower lip. CVi Then there was this 26-year-; old little blonde from Durham who wouldn't say who she was, but would say she didn't like Capp too much either. "I couldn't tell you exactly why," she said. "It's just that he knows how to be funny, but he doesn't bother to find out enough about things to really get inside them." ''-, ... - 4 CHASE HALL HAS SOMETHING SEW!! SUNDAY BUFFET RARE ROAST BEEF PLUS A VARIETY OF OTHER ENTREES 12 to 2 and 5 to 7 ALL YOU CAN EAT - $li60 complete CHILDREN UNDER lo HALF PRICE Loads of Parkin at Ramshead Lot Behind Chase The Buffet is In Addition to our Regular Cafeteria Service THE DAILY Marines SAIGON (AP) - Battalions of U. S. Marines and Vietna mese troops pounced from hel icopters today on a Commun ist base in the Quang v?l; sector, pinpointed by a Viet Cong defector and battered tbp tied regulars iney surnrkeH there in a day - long battle The Allied Task Force had counted 173 enemy dead bv nightfaU. Maj. Gen. Lewis W. Fields', Commander of the 1st Mar ine Division, said the toll may exceed 300. Losses among both the Americans and the Viet namese were reported light. Vietnamese troops appeared to be resuming their wheel horse role in the field after the political diversions that limit ed their campaigning early in April. Vietnamese marines and paratroopers involved with the American Marines in the Quang Ngai sector battle were credited with 111 of the count ed dead. Attending the revived activi ty in the ground war was a dis closure that North Vietnamese labor battalions have reopen ed the Mu Gia pass, tunneling through or boring over the landslides with which B52 jet bombers closed that supply gateway April 12. The pass is an outlet to the Ho Chi Minn trail that the B 52s blocked in their first raid on North Viet Nam, a raid that dumped nearly 700 tons of ex plosives and is estimated to American (Continued from Page 1) of job systems and into their self-designated roles. Like the guy on the motor cycle with the alligator suit, or Hugh Hefner. Both have reached the "pure state." Intellectuals and politicos are promoting the "apocalyp tic view of life" in this coun try. 'They have an inability to look at anything that hap pens in this country except as it relates to 1930 politics," he says. Role - playing has its falla cies, too. The "kids" in Cali fornia are shot as soon as they, reach the age of 25. The state is becoming segregated by age; old folks, towns are crop- ping up,- -the Hollywood strip . t won't permit .girls ;in the bars over 25 years old. -- . . 1 "Pretty soon these surfers. will have to start stagnating on the beach." But some have found it possible to remain un der 25 through ingenious ways. Married couples have taken to motorcycles, and a select few reach their dream in a psych ological way. In a sort of conversion re action, a person will build a three -foot wide moat around his house, which is actually pretty useless as far as keep ing out people who would in vade his life. "If they have a psychological fear, why not build a psychological moat." TAR HEEL Bar Long Battle have cost more than $1 mil lion. Smaller planes of the U. S. Air Force F105 Thunder chiefs and F4C Phantoms sought Wednesday to curb re- vived traffic through the pass -ine spokesman 5am mey era tered highway 15, an approach route, at three points. Saigon authorities said com bat deaths among South Viet Nam's armed forces, which fell below those of the Ameri cans for the first time in the week of April 3-9, totaled 141 last week. A spokesman said there was "a very large num ber of small, scattered ac tions." Fifty - two Vietnamese were listed as missing. The U. S. Military Command announced 89 Americans were killed, 635 wounded and five missing in action. American combat dead in the war now total 2,594 and the wounded 15,863. Allied spokesman said 531 Communists were killed and 135 captured, compared with 785 killed and 140 captured in the previous week. The most spectacular air strike against North Viet Nam Wednesday seemed to center on a military complex in the jungles 48 miles southeast of Dien Bien Phu and about 150 due west of Hanoi. U.S. Thunderchief pilots said they quickly silenced ground guns, destroyed about 100 buil dings, including a radio trans mitter, and left the wreckage Dream- Wolfe's answer to the mass withdrawal? Government-subsidized dem onstrations. In this way, by "acting out" even a token par ticipation, our leaders will be comforted to know that some one cares aboue something. If nothing is done people are going to get completely out of touch, enraptured in their myths. This might be symbolized by Hugh Hefner slipping, like an otter in a bin full of ene into his swimming pool, wear into his wimming pool, wear ing an aqua lung, approach ing that weightless state, un til "your status system be comes a world of one and your supply of oxygen can be touched .'by .no, other person.", " Such Is' the pure state of the American dream. Duke Gridder Theft Suspect DURHAM (AP) Kenneth Dale Chatham, 20 - year - old Duke University football play er, and two Furman Universi ty student will be tried next Thursday on charges of steal ing a television set and other items from the Holiday Inn Motel in Durham last Friday. Hit VC burning. "It looked like the whole area was on fire," said Capt. George W- Acree, 33, of Westminster, Md., one of the pilots. A Navy A4 Skyhawk from the carrier Kitty Hawk was shot down by ground fire 12 miles north of Vinh. The pi lot parachuted and other fliers saw him land safely. Peking's New China News Agency broadcast a Hanoi de claration that three American planes were shot down. Chief Justice Earl Warren Questions Power Of HUAC WASHINGTON (AP) Chief Justice Earl Warren question ed today whether members of the House Committee on Un American Activities can pro perly "roam the country and pick out what they want to in vestigate." "If subcommittees of that group can do it, other congres sional subcommittees can," the Chief Justice said as the Supreme Court took a new look at Congress' power to investi gate subversion. J. Walter Yeagley, an assis tant Attorney General to whom Warren, directed the question, replied that "I don't think it would be proper." "And this was not done," he added when the subcommittee questioned John T. Gojack, a former Vice President of the united Electrical, Radio, and Machine workers of America. Gojack declined to answrer questions at a 1935 hearing and is appealing a contempt of con gress conviction which follow ed. The Justice Department law yer said the purpose of the investigation was an inquiry into alleged communist party infiltration of the labor move ment. He said this was clear ly explained by the subcom mittee chairman, then-Rep. Morgan M. Moulder, D-Mo., when Gojack was summoned to Washington in February 1955. But Frank J. Donner of New York, an attorney for Gojack contended that the committee broke its own rules by not stat ing the subject under inves tigation in a resolution autho rizing the subcommittee's hear ings. Under questioning by Just FARC! FRESH DAIRY STORE Como As You Are Shop From Your Car Or Park on Our Next Door Lot and Walk In! Open 7 Days a Week - 8 a.m. to 1 1 p.m. Pine State Milk and Dairy Products Cold Cuts and Luncheon Meats Cheeses Party Items and Chips CALL 942-2626 and Check Our Low For FRATERNITY or DORM PARTIES ON STOCK AT ALL TIMES COLD WINE or CHAMPAGNE BYTHE BOTTLE OR THE CASE SIX PAKS All Brands FRANKLIN STREET AT BOLIN CREEK BRIDGE (Next to Professional Building) CHAPEL HILL, N. C. Moore Revives NC - SC Dispute MONROE (AP) Gov. Dan Moore revived a longtime dis pute between North Carolina and South Carolina Thursday night when he said Andrew Johnson was one of three pre sidents North Carolina "gave to our nation." "In the unlikely event that someone might question that Jackson was a Union county N. C. man," Moore said, "there is a marker in this county which shows the place of his birth. And there is a statute in Raleigh which bears further ice Abe Fortas, Yeagley agreed the resolution was not Speci fic on this point, but he said the hearings were considered "hangovers" from earlier com mittee investigations into al leged communist party activi ties within the Labor Move ment. During these investigations," he said, other members 6f Go jack's union were called be fore the committee. Testimony (Continued from Pa ire 1) which took three stitches. Reynolds testified he meant to wake up some Marines who were dozing during a class. He said he threw from a sit ting position and was off bal ance. Presenting another charge, the prosecution said the ser geant over - exercised a re cruit. Reynolds replied that as soon as he saw the man growing pale he ordered him off the field into his barracks to rest. The prosecution also alleg ed that Reynolds threw a re cruit's spectacles to the floor and broke them. The drill instruator testi fied he was inspecting the glasses, started to place them back on the recruit and they fell to the floor. Seven officers, ranging from a second lieutenant to a ; col onel, head the second day of testimony. i. .:."'; Last November,, four other drill instructors were tried for mistreating recruits. They were all acquitted. FRESH OUT 0 BEER? Soft Drinks and Party Mix Ice Cream Bread & Donuts Groceries WINES & CHAMPAGNE Dec O lL E Friday, April 22, 1966 witness to the fact.' South Carolina claims John son as a native son, since he was born about two miles in side the South Carolina line. Gov. Moore made his re marks in a speech prepared for delivery at the annual din ner meeting of the Union coun ty Merchants Association. He told the audience the name of Jackson was once considered for the area now called Union County. l must auiiui uin 1 " glad thai Jackson's name was .ved for another county in . North Carolina," Moore stated. . The county that proudly bears the name of Jackson is the one where I lived the great er part of my lise.' The governor cited accom plishments of Union county in the program for total develop ment of North Carolina. He said these achievements "offer a good example to oth er communities of our state that want to make progress. . . Your leadership has fully lived up to its reponsibility." Moore said the challenge fa cing him as governor "is to' see to it that the best possible tools of progress schools, roads, and other essential state programs are made avail able to our people. The chal lenge to you, and to all the oth er communities and counties of our state, is to put these tools to effective use." The governor added, "I see a bright future for this area, and all of North Carolina, so 1 . 1 . i lung as we nave active, inter ested leadership like yours." L 1 Personalizing In 23-Karat Gold $1.00 on any book purchased at The Intimate. Full Name or Initials The Intimate Bookshop 119 East Franklin Street Chapef Hill " ' " upen tvenints . Meats Ice Cold Six-Pak Beer Pizzas Ice Cubes Fresh Country Eggs Cigarettes Prices on R