Wht I mm Dorm Feud Which is better Morrison or Craie? There's a lot of discussion going on about the subject in South campus. See page 5 of today's DTli. Red Hot Ball State was winning over Wake Forest last night hen flags oTerhanging the court caught fire and the auditorium had to be emptied, making a rematch necessary. The South's Largest College Newspaper CHAPEL HILL NORTH CAROLINA SUNDAY, DECEMBER 12. 1965 Founded February 23, 1S93. 'Scoping' Provides Sexy Benefits f Fourth Ranked Vaildy Beats Tar Heels, $17 By JOHN GREENBACKER DTH Staff Writer S$ It was all timed very nice- ft;:: The crowd of slightly drunken Alexander Resi gn dence Hall men left their beer blast last Friday night and congregated on the Kg steps facing Winston, the girls' residence hall. '$& "A simulated panty raid," Kg they called it, and after :$ raising a little hell they ex $S pertly performed mock x-x charges on Winston's doors. The true intent was more Sv" sinister than the girls might gj: have imaged. Sij: "It's time for some 'scop jgi; ing,' " the cry went out, and :-:x; as the unknowing Winston girls dropped their occupa jgj tions and went to their win- dows to investigate the xjx racket, at least thirty eyes SSI adjusted to lenses on Alex :: ander's second and third xjx floors. The "show" began. : Scoping is a favorite past- time on campus, and the :'x only tools of a scoper's trade :x are a watchful eye, a good S vantage point, and an old pair of binoculars, a tele- scope or some field glasses. : From Alexander to Joy 2 nor, Conner to Columbia xx. Street, Carolina gentlemen x doff their inhibitions and be- come part - time peeping : toms. Kx: "Early in the evening the iv'-v girls sometimes forget to xx pull down their shades," one rowdy fellow explained. "Sometimes we get some real good silhouettes." "At the beginning of the year when it was hot we used to see a lot of good stuff," a student said. "One girl spent five minutes in front of the window drying herself off. "Usually it happens so quickly that only one guy "scoping in" on a bathroom, it was best to get the girl when she took off her robe before stepping into the shower. One connoiseur in Joynor praised the virtues of the "old dependables" in Cobb who never pull their shades down. "You just wait until you see someone moving in a --. ..mntuj.. Wyyxsaxs& J '. v.; I " III! I """ -! Ill I If TT'aT gets to see it," he said, "but this time we switched back and forth and even had a chance to talk about it." Some male students claim the "novelty" has worn off, and the girls have gotten more careful since the be ginning of school. 'The bathrooms are the only interesting things these days," a boy said. "The glass is frosted, but occa sionally we see something." Another said that when room and then you get your binoculars," he said. One fraternity man took the trouble set up a massive telescope on a tripod in his room and trained it on Granville Hall, the new women graduate student's residence. "The damned arthitect frosted the windows and made them too small," he lamented. The boys claim they aren't the only guilty ones. One girl in Whitehead quietly joked about peeking : at the Chi Phi house across xSj the street. Despite the WTinston housemother's claims to the $: contrary, Alexander and x$: Conner men say the girls xxi have been scoping in on $?: them, too. ijij:-: "The guy across the hall :Xx" said he saw a girl on the x:x first floor of Winston with a Sx pair of binoculars looking at x:::: him," a graduate student x:x said. "If they want to look, M its all right with me." One Alexander resident vx said that during the early::;':;-: all football games between SS Winston girls and local male $? residents, some of the girls W admitted they had peeped in x::x a few times. "We feel we have to put on a hooch show for them Sc once and a while," an Al-jx-S exander boy said. "I hope& they appreciate it." ivS The coeds of Winston have ::x hotly denied the charges against them, and one com-Kg: plained that Conner menSS should shade their windows. xx.x "Its embarrassing to park ft:?. your car, get out and see Six a beautiful bod in the win dow," a Winston girl said.;:;:-::: In spite of objections by :$:: some of the girls, everyone::$ is waiting for the return of jivS hot weather. "It'll get too hot for themS to keep their windows and':? shades closed," an Alexan- xS der resident said with ax'S trace of lecherous glee. xwvs WORLD HiHH BRIEFS Fireball Mystifies UNC's, Jenzano EDITOR'S NOTE: Carolina Style, which usually runs in this column, will return Tuesday. It will be a five day a week feature in the DTH Tuesday through Saturday. Space Chase Begins Today SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON, Tex., Gemini 7 pilot James Lovell sent a light signal to Earth yesterday as the bearded astronauts headed for a world endurance mark, a church service and rendezvous with a sistership all on a busy Sunday in space. "I got her," shouted Air Force Lt. Col. Frank Borman, the command pilot as he jockeyed the Gemini 7 so Lovell could track the Earth light with his own light beam. Both pilots' voices burst with excitement. Reds Encourage War Effort In Laos TOKYO The Communist Pathet Lao have been directed to launch a Viet Cong-style guerrilla war in Laos against what the Red leaders call "a dry season" offensive by forces of the Royal Laotian Army. The directive from the Pathet Lao supreme command was carried in a broadcast dispatch of Peking's New China News Agency. Laos' neutralist premier, Prince Souvanna Phouma, has accused North Viet Nam of sending regular army troops to Laos to fight with the Pathet Lao, led by his half-brother, Prince Souphanouvong. Laos is next door to Viet Nam. The Communist directive claimed the Laotian Government was building up its forces for a drive against the Pathet Lao and all Red troops were ordered "to firmly smash the military attack and political sabotage launched by U. S. imperalism and its lackeys during the dry season." Claiming the Pathet Lao has guerrillas through the coun try, the directive called on Coimunist forces to "raise vigilance, build hatred toward the enemy, foster a militant revolutionary spirit, master the combat strategy with the main stress on guerrilla warfare and the tactic of annihilating operations, and fight firmly." Harsh Weather Racks Europe By WAYNE MURDER DTII Staff Writer "Very Unusual." That's how Anthony Jenzano, director of the Morehead Plan etarium, describes the myster ious fireball that was seen from Pennsylvania to Califor nia. It rained meteorites all over the Midwest and started several small fires. "When I first heard the re port it sounded like it must have been a man-made object, like the nose cone of a rocket," he commented. Usually meteors stop burn ing about 30 to 70 miles up and are cold when they reach the ground he said. "It is very unusual for one to land and start fire." According to Jenzano one piece was found about the size of a baseball and had a gray ish metallic color. "And," he said, "I have nev er seen a meteorite like that." Two reputable scientists de scribed the object as a fire ball after hearing descriptions from people who had seen it. But he doubted their guess be cause "those things can play tricks on people's eyes." He said the eye can retain the im age of the shooting star for a short time after it has gone out and make it seem like it is burning when it isn't. He broke meteors down into three classes; the conventional meteor that cause shooting stars, the fireball, and the bo lide, which explodes in the atmosphere. The last two disintegrate and form meteors. The meteors start glowing about 30 to 40 miles up in the atmosphere. the things the United States and Russians are putting into space, it shouldn't be unusual for something to come down in an uncalculated way. He said the metal of rockets can retain heat better than a meteor and might explain the fires, if they were actually caused by the object. But for the time being he felt the question of what it is up for grabs until a lot of in vestigation had been done. ill I . Jl - ' .. ) UNC Battles Down To Final Minutes By SANDY TREAD WELL made a mistake the ball was DTH Sports Writer given up and victory inched The Tar Heels displayed an its way out of reach, overdose of courage and de- All the Tar Heels struggled termination, but fell to the fense by a final score of 81 72, last night in Nashville. The first half of last night's battle is easily described by cliches a cliff hanger . . . beautiful ... a see-saw battle ... a real treat. The Tar Heels proved a lot of things during their first 20 minutes of basketball a gainst Vanderbilt. First, they refused to choke. Carolina ran onto the court wth the opposing cheers of 5,000 screaming fans ringing in their ears. They started off cold and the Commodores burned red hot. Vandy's Keith Thomas, who is the proud owner of one of the finest outside shots in the country, hit from the middle. The Tar Heels met a really tough de fense and tried endlessly for a shot that never came. Then Vandy hit four quick baskets and it looked like the trip to Nashville was one bet ter forgotten. Finally Bob Lewis hit a pair and the Tar Heels began to relax. Vanderbilt, however, against the strength of Van dy's defense. All of the five blue uniformed players on the floor hit for baskets and they bounced from six to four and back to six points behind. But Vanderbilt found their open ings faster and hit with more consistency. Then mid way through the second half, Carolina had one final smell of victory. Yokley hit a jump shot from the out side. Lewis shot from the lane for his twenty-fifth point to make the score 62-58. Lee pushed a lay up through the strings and Lewis gave Caro lina 3 quick points with 5:58 left in the game. With three minutes remain ing Lee grabbed a rebound and passed downcourt to Bo Wyenandt and his basket broke the back of the Carolina fighting effort. Time became the Tar Heels' biggest opponent. Vanderbilt relaxed and Lee hit on a foll with two field goals. Vander with two field goals, ander bilt pulled away in the closing minutes and the crowds De- refused to cool off. Thomas gan chanting. "We're number hit two baskets and with 12:44 one." left in the half and the clock ticking, Vanderbilt lead by 1014-4. LARRY MILLER, Carolina's soph forward, does Us stuff. Carolina then began a long and determined comeback. It's culmination was reached after the Commodores lost the ball four straight times. The fourth was a steal by Larry Miller and after two free throws the score was locked up at 24 points each with 7:06 remain ing. The Tar Heels took the lead two times in the next four minutes. In the second half the Van derbilt squad didn't let up the pressure. Whenever Carolina Clyde Lee made the most of his 6-9 frame and scored the final points of the game. Bobby Lewis was the game's high scorer, with 30 points. Lee had 2i and" Wyenandt con nected for 20. Keith Thomas' outside shot proved near per fect and earned him 14 points. Larry Miller was Carolina's second man with 14 to his credit. When it was all over two things had been proved last night in Nashville. Vanderbilt is more than deserving of their number four ranking and Chapel Hill has a team to be proud of. K Leader's Wife: 'We Won't Come9 Student Cuts Recording LONDON Gales, blizzards and floods hit widespread areas of Europe for the third straight day yesterday, causing death and damage in half a dozen countries. Heavy snow blanketed Northern Italy and three fishermen were feared drowned as storms lashed the Italian coast. In Britain, the rain-swollen river Thames subsided and Londoners relaxed a flood vigil. The river flooded homes and factories Friday and at one time threatened to flood the House of Commons while legislators were debating. In other parts of Britain the situation was worse. The river Severn was running 17 feet above normal at Shrewsbury in the English midlands and flooded parts of the town. Troops helped ferry stranded office workers as the town suffered its second pre-Christmas flood in succession. Fierce gales that have been battering the Dutch west coast moderated yesterday, but large areas of the country were left under flood water. At Stravoren, in Friesland Province, the body of an unidentified woman was washed ashore on Ijsel Lake. Three deaths in England have been blamed on the wild weather. The Rhine River was running 16 feet higher than normal near the German border. Floods were also reported in Belgium and throughout most of the low countries. In Denmark, several jutland towns were flooded and row boats were the only means of transport along flooded streets. According to Jenzano only the skin of the meteor burns; the inside never gets hot. When it hits the earth it it cold, which is why he can't under stand how it could start fires. He conjectured that with all Sophomores Seek Assistance Anyone interested in apply ing for a sophomore class committee position and who was not able to come by Graham Memorial for inter views, is asked to call the president Bill Long, at 418 Ehringhaus, 929-6030, or to contact any of the officers be fore next Thursday. Positions are open on the social, finance, publicity, plan ning, communications and sec retariat committees. By DAVID ROTHMAN DTH Staff Writer Mrs. J. Robert Jones, wife of the North Carolina Grand Dragon, said no Klansmen will appear at the Weltner Carolina Forum speech Mon day "to my knowledge." "As far as I know, there have been no preparations for the speech by any member of the Klan," she said. "In fact, my husband thought Weltner bad already been to Chapel Hill." Federal officials had said they heard of threats from Jones to embarrass and heckel the congressmen from Georgia who voted for the 1964 Civil Rights bill. Weltner will speak at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Memorial Hall on the Klan's "invisible empire." Chapel Hill Police Chief William Blake said he had been "contacted by officials about a month or so ago," but he would not identify them. Campus Security head Ar thur Beaumont said: "Much of what I've heard is from George Nicholson (for um chairman). I haven't offi cially heard from federal of ficials. "We are taking just normal precautions," he continued. "There will be policemen there to direct traffic, but I don't expect any trouble. "People made the same fuss when people like Martin Luth er King and Governor Bar nett (the Mississippi segrega tionist) appeared." He said he has "so much confidence in our students I expect no trouble from them whatsoever." Pete Young, the WRAL-TV newsman who has called the Klansmen "our brothers," said earlier this month: "I hope that the Klan will not heckel and embarrass Congressman Weltner. I for one, want to hear what WTelt ner has to say." Nicholson told The Daily Tar Heel Friday that a Klan intermediary has asked him to reserve "50 to 60" seats for Klan members at W'eltner's speech. The Klansmen reportedly were to form their own "hoot ing section" during the forum. CHARLES L. WELTNER Scheduled to appear along side Weltner were Congress of Racial Equality Board Chair man Floyd McKissick, Young and Greensboro attorney L.P. McClendon. McClendon was the chief counselor for the Bobby Bak er hearings. Cameras from nine North Carolina television stations and two Atlanta stations will broadcast the congressman's speech, which will be preced ed by the controversial CBS documentary on the Klan. The panel discussion is be ing sponsored by the YMCA Human Relations Committee as well as by the Forum. Weltner is a member of a distinguished Georgia family whose members include the first chief justice of the State Supreme Court and a Confed erate general. A folks inging UNC student has turned producer and cut a 12 - inch LP album titled "Devil's Child," recorded on the Inner Records label. Dave Jones, who spent last summer touring the United States and Canada singing and lecturing at many mid-western universities and night clubs, wrote all 16 songs on the album. Accompanying himself on the 12 - string, Jones displays a great variety of styles from stomping, driving bottle neck blues to intricate finger picking instrumentals and deep moving ballads. During his summer tour he played to, among others, Lyn da Baines Johnson, as well as numerous college audiences. Producer of the record, Chris Munger, a uiu stu dent from Lexington, Va., said the record will be on sale at Kemps and the Record Bar later this week. Cost is $3.95. Phi Delta Kappa Patrick W. Carlton, vice president of the Beta Theta chapter of Phi Delta Kappa graduate men's educational fraternity will represent NC at the 30th biennial council cf PDK to be held from Decem ber 28-30 at the University of OKlahoma. Carlton graduated from North Carolina in 1954. He is attending UNC on a Southern Education Foundation Fellow ship. Carlton held a Fulbright Teaching Fellowship to Tur key in 1963. Right To Bear Arms "Should the right of the people to keep and bear arms as guaranteed by he Consti tution be repealed" will be the topic of a public debate 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Di Phi Senate chambers on the third floor of New West. All interested students are invited to speak, and refresh ments will be served at the close of the meeting. The lead speakers for the negative and affirmative sides of the topic have not been an nounced. Hormel To Interview Dean James C. Hormel of the University of Chicago Law School will be at UNC tomor row to interview students in terested in attending law school. Students who desire an ap pointment with Dean Hormel should sign up for an appoint ment at the Placement Serv ice, 211 Gardner Hall. Planning Department Student Government has added a Department of Long Range Planning to its other five departments. Committees in the depart ment will be for Curriculum, Student Mental Health, Cul tural Programs, Opportunities for Outstanding Students, and the Problem of the Expand ing University. President Paul Dickson will hold interviews for depart ment head and chairmen of these committees tomorrow through Wednesday from 2-5 p.m. Anyone wishing an inter view should phone student government for an appointment. To Sing Messiah The Raleigh Oratorio Socie ty will sing George Friederich Handel's "Messiah" Saturday at 3 p.m. in the Raleigh Me morial Auditorium. James M. Lhamblee of Chapel Hill will direct the per formance. In addition to the often performed Christmas section (Part I), the choral group will also sing Parts II and III, telling the complete story of the birth and death of the Messiah. The Society's 55-voice chor us will be augmented by a chamber orchestra and harp sichord, giving an authentic Baroque rendition of the ora torio. Circulo Hispanico Bill McFadden was elected president of the Circulo His panico at a meeting last Wed nesday. Ronald Miller was picked to be vice president, Stewart Rosen to be treasurer and Lucy Reed to be secretary. Teh club was organized to offer students an opportunity to hear and speak Spanish and to learn about the cul tures of Spanish speaking countries. The club presents a lecture and discussion monthly. Intramurals Old East and the Mangum Mugs set up a showdown for the residence hall tag football title with convincing wins over their opponents Friday. Old East waltzed by the Al exander Poobahs, 21-0. Dave McFadden's touchdown gave Old East a 6-0 halftime lead. Jim Poore and Ron Lowe add ed TD's in the second half. John Closer chipped in with a safety. Mangum jumped off to a 19 0 halftime lead and coasted to a 32-6 victory over Avery No. 1. Joe Dunn and Bob Car ter were the stars for Man gum with two touchdowns each. Reg Simpson helped out with another one. Tony Nichol son salvaged something for Avery with his score. The teams will meet next Wednes day to decide the championship.