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Volume LXIX, No. 140
Complete (UPI) Wire Service
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY. APRIL 16, 1961
Offices in Graham Memorial
Friday's Bomb Scare
See Editorials. Pegs Two.
Four Pages This Ilzu2
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Fleece Tap Tomorrow Eve
Two hooded giants will stalk the aisles of Memorial Hall tomorrow night in
search of new Argonauts for the Order of the Golden Fleece, the University's high
est honorary order for men. The fifty-eighth annual tapping will begin promptly at 7.
Following the Golden Fleece tapping will be the annual Valkyrie Sing, spon
sored by the Order of the Valkyries, the highest honorary order for women on cam
pus. Various campus organizations, including dormitories and fraternities, will com
pete in sing and skit categories.
Tomorrow night s ceremony
wlil include the readings of the
legends of both of the honorary
societies. ;
Included with the reading of
the Golden Fleece legend will
be the annual oration of Jason,
hero of the legend. The iden
tity of Jason and other officers
of the Order will also be re
vealed. -
The Valkyrie legend will also
be presented. In addition, the
Irene Lee award will be pre
sented to the outstanding sen
ior woman of the year.
The tapping ceremony is ex
pected to last approximately
one hour. Immediately follow
ing it, the Golden Fleece will
hold a closed banquet at the
Deutsch Charged
In Star 9s Death
UNC Senior Mike Deutsch has been charged with the
first degree murder of Lennie Rosenbluth, former bas
ketball star for the Tar Heels.
Rosenbluth was shot and killed during an argument
at the Major League Bowling Lanes Thursday afternoon.
Trial for the mock murder will be on April 41 at :u
p.m. in the Law School courtroom, 210 Manning Hall.
Investigation by Chapel Hill police revealed that
there was evidence of "hard feelings" between the two
Chief prosecutor," Barry Win
ston, indicated after talking with
Senior Jayne Brown that sev
eral days prior to the murder,
Deutsch and Rosenbluth had
had an argument while the ac
cused and Miss Brown were at
the alley bowling.
The couple had been dating
for several months and it was
reported that Deutsch had pro
posed to her but had been re
fused although Miss Brown ad-
much." One reason for refus
ing, she said, was .his bad
temper and intense jealousy.
She is reported to have. writ
ten a letter to Deutsch in which
she told him it would be better
if she did not see him again.
The accused was' carrying an
opened letter when he entered
the lanes Thursday. .
Frank Brown, third year law
student, will be the chief de-
Carolina Inn in honor of the
new -initiates. Governor Terry
Sanf ord, who was tapped into
the Order as a student in 1941,
will speak at the event.
The Order of the Golden
Fleece is composed of outstand
ing junior, senior, and faculty
men. currently tnere are
student Argonauts and over
fifty on the faculty or in other
University positions.
Doors Locked
All students participating in
the Valkyrie Sing must be at
Memorial Hall by 6:30 to be
seated in special sections. The
remainder of the audience must
be seated by 7. Doors will be
locked at this time, and late
comers will not be admitted
until the tapping has been com
pleted. There will be seven judges
for the Sing. Included will be
Lillian Pruett of the music de
partment, Romulus Linney of
dramatic arts, Dr. O. B. Harbi
son of the English department,
Glen Vernon of dramatic arts,
Betty Smith, author of the play
"A Tree Grows in Brooklyn,"
and two students who have not
yet. been selected.
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"A bomb will explode in the library in one hour." : " "' ; 1
These words sent scores of Carolina students scurrying from the library : Friday
night and brought four campus policemen" and an FBI agent into the huge booketo'rium.
There was no bomb found and the anonymous. caller has hot been located".- :,: ; :
The call was received at 8:15 p.m. by'Juriior Joe Green; working at the circulation
desk on the second floor. Green stated that the voice was male and did not say where
the bomb was located, only that
on the foreign languages build- Dr. Jerold Orne, head li
ing accidentally ripped out an brarian, happened to be in. the
electric cable feeding to the li- stacks, along with several other
brary. students at the time. "Yep, it
1 , Lights Off was pretty dark in there," he
Lights were off throughout said. " :
the building for approximately Electricity was also ' off. in
an hour. Candles were dug out, Bingham Hall, the English
dusted off and lit in most of building, until the cable was
the upstairs and inner rooms, repaired at 10:25 a.m.
it would go off.
The junior called another stu
dent who then notified the po
lice. Chief Arthur Beaumont
telephoned the FBI agent, in
Durham. Bombing a building
and a bomb scare are federal
offenses.. . .
The building was evacuated in
about 15 minutes and' a search
by police officers and library
staff members turned up noth
ing. There are 42 miles of book
shelves in the stacks and the
search was primarily centered
in the offices and other rooms.
Serious Prank I
Chief . Beaumont said, "This
is a very serious thing for a
prankster to play on the stu
dents who are trying to study
in the library. There were a
number of people who had gone
o the free flick and were un
able to : get their books from
the library later.
There was a rash of bomb
scares lfest year during the sev
eral weeks of "heavy snow. Most
of them were on days when a
test . had been scheduled in the
building.
Friday was a rough day all
around for the library. At about
9:30 a.m. a bulldozer working
Castro Mobilizes
300, 000-Mari Army
HAVANA (UPI) At least six warplanes bombed and
strafed military targets in Havana and two other Cubarr
cities Saturday and Fidel Castro, blaming the United
States, mobilized his 300,000-man militia to defend Cuba;
against invasion.
Two of the attacking planes, both old B26 bombers,
landed in Florida where their pilots identified them
selves as defecting air force officers. One plane was. badly
shot up. A third plane, also i
mitted she liked him "veryifense counsel
Infirmary
Students in the " Infirmary
yesterday included Jennifer
Jamewol,, Gloria Hemby, Cor
nelia Snyder, Edna Cloy es, John
Boling, Charles Browne, Wil
liam Brunson, : and John Ros
cow. ' '
Campus Briefs
And Reminders
A program of old Charlie
Chaplin films will be shown at
a meeting of the UNC-Chapel
Hill Film Society in Carroll Hall
Monday at 8 p.m. The public
has been invited.
Head Cheerleader Al Roper
has announced that-tryouts for
cheerleaders next year will be
held in Kenan Stadium begin
ning Tuesday at 5 p.m. Roper
requested that all interested
people be present. Tryouts will
be in the Tin Can in case of
rain. No experience is necessary
for the tryouts.
'Stolen Cups' Recovered
The trophies reported stolen
from the Delta " Upsilon social
fraternity earlier this week are
back on the. display, shelves. The
"theft" was perpetrated by the
DU pledges.. ..."
Film Patrons Want
To See The Finish
'Friday night, at approximately 11:30, there was what
some people termed, a "mild riot" at the Varsity theatre.
The. riot, however, was nothing more than the follow
ing:'' "The Sins of Rachel Cade," had the audience spell
bound, when the projector stopped grinding for no ap
parent reason. This . was at ,11:30, and there were about
40 people in the audience.' Some
of the crowd left, others de
manded to see the remaining 42
minutes of the film.
The 25 people that remained
succeeded in getting the pro-
Bi-Phi
Debates
1j
That the John Birch Society
be recognized as a serious threat
to our security and way of life
and as internal will be argued
by the Di-Phi debating society
Tuesday night at 8 p.m. on the
third floor of New West.
The -bill, as- submitted - by
Carroll Raver of the society's
Ways and Means Committee,
asks that the John Birch So
ciety be recognized as a dan
gerous trend toward pacifism
aimed at weakening the United
States in the cold war, and that
it be subjected to a Congres
sional investigation if it con
tinues in its "brash and un
democratic methods."
"The society shows a marked
trend toward 'McCarthyism
with . the same destructive
evils," the bill states.
jectionist to start ' the film
again, and resumed their seats
to see as the advertisements
put it "How it could happen
to Rachel."
Film Stops Again
At 12:00 the projectionist
again stopped the film and re
fused to show the remaining
twelve minutes. He felt that it
was the theatre's policy not to
show films after 11:30. The
manager of the theatre was not
around to make the decision, i
Some patrons would "not!
leave, and a few began to get
mildly angry. The projectionist,
a part-time employee, ana a
student at the University, went
to the police station. ,
The police dispatched a car
to the theatre to "straighten
things out." While the police
were trying to ascertain who
was in the right, Andy Gutier
rez, the theatre manager, "hap
pened to be driving by," and
came in. He made the projec
tionist . return to his post.
The blame switched hands
three times: it went from the
manager to the projectionist on
duty to the regular projection
ists, "who should have ex
plained everything to the part-
time operator," according to
Gutierrez.
Finally the film started roll
ing, the police left, and the 25
staunch patrons saw twelve
more minutes of: "The Sins of
Rachel Cade."
damaged, landed in another
"foreign country," exile sources
in Miami said.
The Castro government
charged the attacks were an
American-inspired "prelude to
large-scale military aggression."
Cuba and Russia took the
bombings immediately before
the United Nations in New
York.
A 20-minute three-plane raid
on Havana shortly after dawn
touched off thunderous explo
sions at Camp Liberty, the
army headquarters. The explo
sions rocketed the city for 40
minutes afterwards.
The government reported
seven, dead and 39 wounded in
Havana, mostly soldiers and
militiamen. Fifteen civilians
were reported among the
wounded.
Two planes struck at the air
field in Santiago on the east
ern tip of Cuba. The govern
ment reported five wounded and
charged the planes "flew to the
Yankee base of Guantanamo."
At least one plane attacked
the air base at San Antonio de
Ios Banos, 20 miles west of
Havana.
There were no immediate re
ports of casualties at San An
tonio. Base Shattered
The Camp Liberty base on
the edge of Havana was shat
tered. "They were real clever,"
a militiaman said. "First they
got us with bombs and then
hey strafed us with machine
guns.
The U.N. 98-nation Main Po
itical Committee in New York
began an emergency session to
hear Cuba's charge that . "ag
gression" had been committed
by "North American aircraft."
Russia forced the meeting
after the U.N. General As
sembly president refused a
Cuban plea for an emergency
full assembly meeting.
Drops Bombs
One dropped a stick of bombs
and zoomed upward through a
hail of tracer bullets. The sec
ond dove to the attack and
then roared away, damaged by
bullets.
A third criss-crossed the area
to try to wreck parked planes.
Several planes at Camp Co
lumbia took off in pursuit. Am
munition dump explosions
rocked the camp streets. The
cream - colored headquarters
building was pocked with bul
lets. ' ----- - - -
One of the three attacking
B26 bombers over Havana was
first reported to have been shot
down. Other reports said it
limped to safety outside Cuba.
In New York, a spokesman
for the anti-Castro Cuban revo
lutionary council, headed by
Dr. Jose Miro Cardona, con
firmed the attack was made by
defecting Cuban air force pilots
and the planes "bore Cuban
markings."
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WORLD
NEWS
BRIEFS
By United Press International
r
Nikita Khrushchev
Defecting Planes Land In Miami
MIAMI Defecting pilots fleeing Fidel Castro's air force
flew to Florida in World War II bombers Saturday after
blasting Cuban military installations to avenge betrayal by
a "coward" among them.
One of the Cuban air force B26 bombers landed at
Miami International Airport, riddled from anti-aircraft and
small arms fire and with only one of its two engines work
ing. Another landed at the Boca Chica U.S. Naval Air Sta
tion at Key West.
Carolina's laundromat Ritual
And In Five Easy Steps . v
: .. (Photos fay Ira Blaustein)
You Have 23 Dust Rags
Russia May Answer Laos Soon
WASHINGTON Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A.
Gromyko has indicated Russia will reply in a few days to a
call for a cease fire in Laos, it was learned Saturday.
Reliable sources said Gromyko informed U.S. Ambas
sador Llewellyn E. Thompson Jr., of this in a talk in Moscow
Thursday.
Khrushchev Using Space Feat
LONDON Diplomatic sources said here Saturday that
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev is exploiting the man-in-space
feat for its internal as well as international propaganda
effect.
Khrushchev, they said, recently has focused his atten
tion primarily on the home front where a boost of popular
morale such as that from the manned space flight could
hardly have been better timed.
Yuri Wants To Do 'Real Flying
Spaseman Yuri Gagarin said Saturday his pioneer flight
in orbit was such a breeze he now wants "to do some real
flying" to the moon, Venus or Mars. He disclosed the Rus
sians are building special space ships presumably for a
manned moon flight.
Gagarin told the largest news conference ever held in
Moscow that his own spaceship "Vostok" (East) returned to
earth intact, its instruments in tip-top order, and it cculi
be used again for space flight