U:IC Library Serials p,pt. ning frr? held this mo- oriai forma itt .Graham Me eds any detested co- . n 1 T ' 1 1 1 fjf Lfs YcA- Chance Today is the last day that Yac late pictures will be tak en; anyone except seniors may have their pictures taken for a three dollar late fee. le 74, Number 37 CHAPEL HILL, N. C WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1966 Founded February 23, 1893 If Paull Not Reinstated 1,500 Capacity mm Imh Instractor: et For By STEVE BENNETT DTH Staff Writer Dean of Men William G. I5npaid yesterday that a dS erso" caPacity has been Placed on Chase Cafeteria and the South Campus Residence S.have decided Pay for all damage done to the building Saturday night. The decisions were the re sults of a meeting held by Long yesterday with the gov ernors and social lieutenant governors of the residence col leges that sponsored the South Campus Weekend dance. "I feel certain that any damage done to Chase Cafe teria Saturday night was a result of extensive overcrowd ing rather than deliberate de struction," Long said. Money receipts from the dance showed an attendance of more than 2,600 persons a thousand more than is con sidered to be the capacity. John Ellis, governor of Mor rison, said, "The governors of the south campus residence colleges have met to discuss the incidents in connection with the dance Saturday night. "We have drawn up a list of procedural recommenda tions for parties to be held in Chase and we are sending them to the office of the Dean of Men, the University Food Service and the governors of all residence colleges." Ticket sales for the dance rangedfrom $2 to $5.50 at the door. Long explained the in crease in the price of the tickets had been started by some of the door keepers to discourage additional persons from seeking admittance to the dance. They explained that they felt that they could not refuse to sell the tickets after Rep. Powell Gets 30 Days Plus Fine NEW YOR K(AP) The State Appellate Division found Ren. Adam Clayton roweu, D N.Y.. guilty today of wilful failure to comply with a lower court order in a long stand ing libel judgment and sen tenced him to 30 days in jail and $250 fine. The court overruled 41 a Sept. 9 decision by State Su preme Court Justice Sidney Fine. He had found the Har lem Democratic leader inno cent of wilful failure to appear before the court to give an ac counting of his finances. The majority decision of the court, the state's second high est, spoke of the "long and ugly record in this matter" and added: "This failure to obey (a sub poena) is consistent with the debtor's cynical refusal to honor his own promises to gether with a total disregard of any and all process that has been served against him. The court gave Powell until Nov 3 to appear before it and submit to a financial examina tion to purge himself of the rontempt conviction. Today's was the third civil contempt finding against Po-wc-11 in connection with a $164,000 libel judgement won by Mrs. Esther James a Har lem widow who Powell three years ago described on a Re vision program as a bag woman' or police graft col- IeTwo earlier arrest orders are out against Powell for civi contempt, but they do not ;necifv a sentence. PstOct. 10, a state su preme court jury convicted Powell of criminal contempt. No sentence has been handed down on that conviction. Today's ruling upheld an ap Thv Mrs. James against ' ' w ... .. tjo.,dii hnri not will ing tnai ruw- - - u!y failed to appear for the financial ewimu"'" The original judgement a eainst Powell stemmed from f ury finding in 1963 that he had defamed the 6year- lThtda7pellate ruling said a congressman "must respond to civil process and is i taagte for all consequences of dis regarding the same except . that he cannot be subjected to arrest during a session of Congress." Chase advertising had stated that tickets would be sold at the door. Damage to Chase included a damaged punch machine, liquor-stanined draperies, a discolored ceiling tile, a towel dispenser pulled from the rest room wall and a badly scuffed floor.. Long also pointed out that the reason Chase was unable to open Sunday morning for breakfast was not the fault of the residence colleges. Time Set By Meet Coaches By LYTT STAMPS DTH Staff Writer An informal "meet the coa ches" reception has been plan ned by the freshman Student Party candidates in the Nov ember 8 election. Bland Simpson, SP nominee for president of the Class of 70, announced yesterday that the reception which will be held the third week of Novem ber will give freshmen an op portunity to meet leaders of the athletic program. Simpson said the reception would give students informa tion on all areas of the sports program, with concentration placed on swimming, wrestl ing, track and cross country, soccer, lacrosse, tennis and golf. "One plank of the SP fresh man platform is full support of the freshman athletic pro gram," Simpson said. "We feel this is one of the many ways of doing this." Simpson is working with freshman athletic director Joe Hilton in making the arrang ments. Hilton said, 'We are inters ested in all youngsters who come to UNC who have athle tic ability and are interested in trying out for one of the freshman teams. "We are missing a lot of good athletes simply because they don't try new areas," he said. "We appreciate the SP ef forts in this field and we hope this kind of meeting will be i a. r iL. enlightening to some of the youngsters who don't com pletly understand the athletic program," Hilton said. , Simpson said 'the reception will be open to anyone with freshmen especially being urged to attend. He said the date and location of the reception will be an nounced later. Indonesian Strongman ToGetAx JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) Once the second most power ful man in Indonesia, Dr. Su bandrio was sentenced to death today on a charge of helping the Communist Party coup that failed last year. The man who for nine years was Indonesia's foreign minis ter and the right hand man of President Sukarno listened impassively as the special military tribunal read the verdict. The sentence brought to an end the meteoric career of the slender, bespectacle former medical doctor. Last March the army arrested him on sus picion of helping in the abor tive coup. While the court tried him al so on charges of corruption, it concentrated in its verdict" on the charges of treason and subversion. The court held that Suban drio knew the coup was brew ing, and that Communist divi sions were training in central Java, but did , not report to Sukarno, who since March has been shorn by the army of most of his powers. The court said Subandrio helped the coup attempt by making inflamatory speeches urging the people "to crush capitalist bureaucrats." After reading the decision to a hushed crowd, Lt. Col. AH, the chief judge, asked Suban drio if he wanted to appeal the sentence. Subandrio stood in the bleak, See INDONESIA On Page 6 :Sj . : ' N V. M 7 ' -"; A T v.. t. . .mini- I I I I fl'li linmm 1VII1III if Hi mn """ ' "" " - ' Iii'm in limn iii.li num.. i r DEATH SCENE Campos Policeman Her bert Ellis was found burned to death in the charred cab of his Ford pickup Monday night by his son. Investigation placed the time of Am thorities Pro be Fire Death Of UNC Policeman By ERNEST H. ROBL DTH Asst. News Editor Chapel Hill authorities were investigating Tuesday the pos sible self immolation of well known campus policeman Her bert Ellis. Charred skeletal remains of the 47 year old Ellis were found in his pickup truck on Nunns' Chapel Road in Orange County late Monday. Ellis, who worked the even ing shift on the center of campus, is believed to have died about noon. Ellis' 18 year old son John found his father's remains and reported the death to the Orange Co. Sheriff's Dept. According to Campus Securi- Campus Briefs California Flight Anyone interested in taking a chartered flight to Los Ange les, Calif., for the Christmas holidays should contact Gary Byrner or John Wheeler at 929-2622. If 100 people are interested, a plane can be chartered at a maximum cost of $140 round trip. Other places to sign up in clude GM, Y-Court or Lenoir. If interested, sign up imme diately so that the group will be able to get a plane. Teaching Jobs Representatives from the Fulton County School System of Atlanta, Ga., will be inter viewing prospective teachers today. Prospective teachers who will be available for employment- in January are invited to sign up for an interview at the Teacher Placement Bu reau at 103 Peabody Hall. Other systems who will be interviewing soon include Chapel Hill City (Oct. 27 and 28); Goldsboro City (Nov. 1); Chatham County (Nov. 3); Ft. Bragg (Nov. 8); Haywood County (Nov. 9); and Sanford City (Nov. 9). New York Bus An undergraduate student has chartered a bus to New York for the Thanksgiving holidays to provide an eco nomical and convenient means of transportation for students. The non-stop bus trip will begin Wednesday, Nov. 23, at 11 a.m. and will arrive at the Port Authority Terminal in New York about 8:30 p.m. It death to be looking into the possibility of suicide as the cause of the policeman's death. DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer Herbert Ellis will leave New York Sunday at 12 noon from Grand Cen tral Station arriving back in Chapel Hill about 9 p.m. The cost of the entire trip is $22. Any interested students contact Doug Barba at 968 9305 or 968-9062 as soon as pos sible. The bus is now half full for the trip. Job Interviews The Celanese Corp., the Ra dio Corp. of America, Inter national Business Machines and College Life Insurance will be recruiting on campus to day. Students wishing to inter view company representatives should make an appointment at the Placement Service, 211 Gardner Hall. Tomorrow, representatives from Johns - Manville Corp. (summer work also), Monsan to Co. (summer work also), IBM and Warner Brothers Co. will be here. Friday, companies repre sented will include American Cyanamid Co. (summer work also), Bureau of Census, Mon santo Co., IBM, Center for Naval Analyses (summer work also) and Prentice-Hall, Inc. Candidates Meeting There will be a mandatory meeting of all candidates in the fall campaign Thursday from 4:30 to 5:30 in Roland Parker II and III. Candidates for class officers and honor council, party chairman and the chief cam paign co-ordinator for each party should attend. Candidates who can not at tend must contact Doug Mc Keown at 967-3385 or the chair man of the Elections Commission. about 11:47 a.m. Officials are ty Chief Arthur Beaumont Ellis had been ill and de pressed lately. v The cab of Ellis' truck was competely burned out and only a "small pile of bones" re mained. The intense heat of the fire melted the glass win dows of the truck. Orange Co. Medical Examin er Hubert Patterson and Co roner Allen Walker have been called into the case. The area in which the burn ed truck was found is located between NC86 and Old NC86. Ellis was reportedly seen in the area shortly before noon. John Ellis walked through the area at approximately this time and later remembered having seen smoke. When his father failed to come home for dinner, a search was begun, during which the young er Ellis discovered the truck. Ellis, who had been a cam pus policeman for 21 years, is survived by his widow Lenoir Lee Ellis and four sons. Funeral plans were incom plete Tuesday afternoon. Flamenco Guitarist Manitas Be Plata To Appear In Memorial Hall Monday The famous flamenco gui tarist Manitas De Plata will appear in Memorial Hall Mon day at 8 p.m. free to students with I. D. cards. For his first American tour late in 1965, his visit includ ed three Carnegie Hall con certs. Two were sold out in advance, and the third, too, immediately following a New York Times review. The stam pede for tickets predicated a fourth concert. Though Manitas de Plata was born in France and is a French citizen, he is indeed a Spanish gypsy whose family migrated to a gypsy encamp ment in the south of France many years ago. His father interested him in music at the age of nine, and before that he had always been exposed to the guitar strummings of his family and neighbors at gypsy encamp ments. Perhaps the most amazing aspect of Manitas de Plata's musicianship is that he is self taught. By observing his el ders' guitar playing, by lis tening to the radio and record ings, the innately gifted young ster was soon finding his way to more and more intricate teheniques. For twenty years he roamed southern France in the caravan constantly spend ing his time practing and lis TTD an Part - time English instructors voted here Monday night to stop teaching clas ses Saturday if Michael Paull is not returned to teaching his English class by Thursday. A group of about 25 instructors passed resolutions going to Chancellor Sitterson and the acting chairman of the English Department, demanding that Paull be reinstated immediately. The meeting held in a Bingham Hall classroom - auditorium, was attended Objectionable Theme : orse tesks' By KAREN FREEMAN DTH Saff Writer "You can go into any class room and find things written on desks that are more ob jectionable than what was in the themes. "I had . had a date the night before and had come back and written my theme at 4:30 in the morning. . .1 hadn't writ ten it to embarrass anyone." So said one of the authors of the "objectionable" themes read in Michael Paull's Eng lish class. She described the Saturday, October 15, class as ui ur seri- nary. . .it wasn't real ous." She herself had written a W Grocers Getting Caught In Price-Pressure Squeezes MIAMI BEACH, FLA (AP) The nation's supermarket operators were told today they were midlemen caught in the middle in a wave of boy cotts by housewives protest ing the cost of food. While the 1,000 food chain executives met inside a plush, airconditioned hotel, two wo men picketed on a sidewalk. They left after two hours, com plaining the Florida sun was too hot. But across the country thou sands of housewives banded together in picket - and - pro test clubs with names like the "Tally Rally," the "We've Had It" club, and the "Halloween Rebellion." tening to other gypsy play ers. Asked what is his most priz ed possession, Manitas de Plata replies without hesita tion and with justifiable pride, "My guitar!" aside from its value as a superb musical in strument (made in Madrid in 1962 by Ramirez), it is pos sibly the most valuable guitar in existence. It is decorated by original works by two of the greatest living artists. Pablo Picasso drew a magnificent sketch of a Picador and bull on Mani tas' guitar along with his personal tribute and signa ture. Salvador Dali did an oil painting of Don Quixote along with his inscription saluting his friend and admired artist Man itas de Plata. The guitar is al so inscribed by the actor - pro ducer Jean Louis Barrault, Francois Perier and French painters Maurice Sarthou and Mario Prassinos. From whatever the locale, in whatever style in which he plays, Manitas de Plata is the master as he soars in flights of fancy and as a soloist he can make the in strument sound like an or chestra of guitars, so fleet are his fingers, so exacting his interpretations. Cla J by about 15 instructors from other de partments. After the resolutions were passed, the group then debated the possibility of boycotting classes on Saturday if their demand was not met. Reporters were asked to leave the meeting before the boycott proposal was voted on, but one of the instructors told the DTH yesterday that the proposal was passed. On mgs Student theme in dialogue form, tak ing a boy's point - of - view. She thinks that Paull had the papers read just to give him an idea of the quality of work that was done, and had the class rewrite the papers be cause they had not included the elements Paull was look ing for effectively enough. The original assignment, was for Paull's students to use six forms of imagery in a theme entitled, "To My Coy Mis tress." At the conclusion of Satur day's class, prior to Paull's removal, "Nobody had any idea that bang! We expected to come back (Tuesday) and find him as usual, and then See THEMES on Page 6 Angered by the rising cost of groceries and emboldened by the success of the massive boycott in Denver, they aimed to force chains to cut prices by trading with small inde pendents. Many also called for the im mediate removal of the grow ing number of games and trading stamps, which they call a nuisance that adds too much to the cost of bread. In Miami Mrs. Charles T. Lundstrom, president of the Greater Miami Consumers League, sent a telegram to the National Association of Food Chains meeting across the bay on Miami Beach. "We demand removal of MANITAS DE PLATA holds his famous guitar. Original art bv Picasso can be seen on the guitar at the bottom of the picture. The flamenco guitarist will perform in Memorial Hall on Monday free to UNC students. .Boycotl Under the terms of the pro posed boycott, the instructors would meet their classes at the schedule time, but would not teach. Several of the instructors from the other departments walked out when the reporters were asked to leave. The meeting began with a reading of Chancellor Sitter son's statements concerning the Paull case. Parts of the statements were met with hisses. Several instructors told the group they had already given their classes the same assign ment as the one which caused Paull to lose his teaching po sition. Regarding the meeting of full time English professors set for Wednesday to discuss the case, the general feeling at the meeting was that the English department would be under pressure from Sitterson. Dr. Forrest Read, associate professor of English told the American Association of Uni versity Professors would inves tigate the fairness with which the Paull case has been han dled. gambling and trickery from supermarkets," she said. The grocers said they were not at fault. George W. Kock of Washington, D. C, president of the Grocery Man ufacturers Association of America, told the convention: "The so - called middleman is just that, a man in the mid dle caught up in an economic squeeze not of his own mak ing. "We middlemen are the tar gets of attack whenever cir cumstances beyond our con trol force price levels up. The public has come to consider the term middleman in an un favorable light." n If 1