Page 6
euiic?uti
Simllinser Survey
iow Gain Ib
Time-Out Day Hosts
Poll
PHILADELPHIA
(UPI)-The Sindlinger survey
Tuesday reported an
apparently sharp drop in
support for George C. Wallace
during the past two weeks and
continuing gains by Hubert H.
Humphrey against
front-running Richard M.
Nixon.
The survey, conducted by
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RUSSIA:
12:30-4:50-9:10
THUNDERBALL
2:40-7:00
THE NEW YORK LIFE agents on your campus
are good , men to know.
Write Phone Visit
George Coxhead
942-4358
20312 E. Franklin St.
XEROX COPIES
Fast and Cheap
Cost per Original:
1st copy 10c per copy
2nd-4th Copy 8c per copy
5th-10th Copy 6c per copy
11th-100th Copy 5c per copy
Each Copy over 100 3c
SPECIAL ON NOTEBOOKS 8c per copy
RAPID REPRODUCTIONS
of Chapel Hill
105 N. Columbia St. 9-5 Mon.-Fri.
Phone: 929-4028
THE HUB SUGGESTS . .
raperefi
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at
THE HUB
OF
CHAPEL HILL
Sindlinger & Co., a market
research firm based in
suburban Norwood, involved
telephone interviews with 2,414
persons in the four days ending
at midnight Monday.
It showed Nixon still
leading in the presidential race
by any of several
measurements by the
Sindlinger firm.
But Albert E. Sindlinger,
president of the organization,
said the sharp decline in
expressed support for Wallace
and an increase in "no
opinions" continued to make it
Area Receives
New WRBU-TV
Chapel Hill is finally getting
a 3rd television station.
WRDU T.V. will begin
broadcasting sometime within
the next two weeks. Its new
studio on Highway 54 will be
the control center for the UHF
Channel 28.
The Orange County tower
has an antenna 830 feet above
the ground and 1,004 feet
higher than the average ground
level in the station's
broadcasting range. . The
installation contractor was the
D.W. Sargeant Company.
The full color capacity
station will combine local
Dwight H. McAlister
942-1558
(Over Dairy Bar)
3O Advertised in Playboy pi
and Esquire -
(3 Permanently
y Pressed
lacks
permanently pressed, they mean
hazardous
outcome of
to
the
election.
Sindlinger said the latest
survey indicated that about
68 861,000 Americans plan to
vote on Nov. 5, a drop from an
indicated voting figure of
75,733,000 registered during
the first week in October.
When adults who were
registered and planned to vote
were asked for whom they
would vote their answers in
Sindlinger's most recent poll
and polls published this month
were:
programs with chosen network
shows.
Station personnel include
manager Glenn C. Jackson,
traffic manager Barabar
Entrekin, sales manager, Paul
Kelly and sales representative
Harman Watkins.
Jackson was formerly
station manager for New York
City's Mutual Broadcasting
System. He spent 18 years in
Atlanta, Toledo and Fairmont
for the Storer Broadcasting
Company and has directed
Trenton, N.J. and Springfield
Mass. station.
He is the past president of
the broadcasters' associations
in Georgia and New Jersey.
Jackson matriculated at
Marietta College.
Chief officers of the
corporation are President
Robinson Everett and Vice
President John B. Wilson.
Other stockholders are:
Sandy McClamroch, mayor of
Chapel Hill; E. J. Evans, former
mayor of Durham and former
president of UNC's alumni
association; Jim Reid, former
Raleigh mayor; Mrs. R. O.
Everett; John Wheeler, Durham
banker; Dr. Wirt Smith, Duke
University Medical Center; and
Jack Johnson, assistant dean of
the Duke law school.
extremely
forecast the
Curriculum Pltiittung
To Be Discussed
By TOM SNOOK
DTH Staff Writer
Student involvement in
departmental curriculum
planning will be the subject of
the meeting tonight of Action
Government Group number 12.
The meeting, to be held in
Gerrard Hall at 7 p.m. is calling
for all interested students and
faculty members to meet and
discuss the ways for students
to become meaningfully
involved in course planning on
the departmental level.
Several departments in the
University have already
instituted programs of varying
degrees and have taken steps to
induce such involvement.
However, it is hoped that the
meeting will spur the existing
efforts of those departments
and initiate programs of active
student involvement in the
others.
Interest in student
involvement has received
increasea attention lately from faculty members who have
the faculty and students. ideas on this subject and wish
It is hoped that the meeting to help organize for student
will serve as a brainstorming involvement are urged to
session to develop future steps attend the meeting tonight.
if if if if ijL if if if Jrf Jrf Jrf if if if
T
AUAN
THURSDAY EVENING
5:30-7:00
AII the Spaghetti You Can EatJ
and A Glass of Grape
l RED CARPET i
-fc 1404 E- Frank,in 929-3768
ififififififlfifify.
Today Oct. 17 Oct 8
Wallace 10.4 11.2 16.8
Nixon 38.1 40.1 3&1
Humphrey 31.0 29.6 27.7
Others 0.9 0.9 0.8
Undecided 19.6 ia2 16.6
When all adults, regardless
of registration status, were
asked whom they wanted to
see elected, the replies were as
follows:
Record
ABOARD USS ESSEX
(UPI) Apollo 7's astronauts
splashed upside-down into the
Atlantic Tuesday, winding up
the nation s most successful
spaceflight and clearing the
way for the United States and
Russia to stage one of the
monumental contests of
history a dash to the moon.
Slicking back into the dense
atmosphere without the
intense ear and sinus pain they
had anticipated, Walter Schirra,
Donn Eisele and Walt
Cunningham dropped
nose-down, but softly, into the
ocean 1,100 miles east of Cape
Kennedy at 7: 12 a.m. EDT.
Their historic voyage, the
first manned test of the craft
built to carry Americans to the
moon, lasted 11 days and
covered 4.5 million miles.
During most of the mission
all three men suffered head
colds, which raised the
possibility of pain and burst
eardrums on reentry.
"They were able to clear
their ears and they said it was a
soft landing, much softer than
they thought it would be,"
Astronaut physician Dr.
Charles Berry reported hours
later. He said their only injury
was skinned wrists caused by
their watchbands.
The astronauts were to fly
from the Essex to Cape
Kennedy Wednesday, arriving
there at 8 a.m. EDT. Apollo 7
was to remain on the Essex
until the carrier reached
for full student involvement in
all departments.
The greatest problem to
student involvement lies in the
tremendous diversity and
variance that exist among the
departments. Such diversity
makes a standardized approach
to the problem unpractical.
Imagination is needed to
develop mechanics which will
be suitable to the various
departments and yet flexible
enough to account for any and
all variations. It is hoped that
mis meeting win provide an
abundance of ideas from which
to institute a foundation for
student involvement.
Student Body President Ken
Day expressed "great hope that
out of this meeting a great
impetus will be generated for
full student involvement in all
A1 Ml
phases of departmental
curriculum planning which so
vitally affects us all.'
All interested students and
Ends For Apollo
Today Oct.l
Wallace 15.6 16.7
Oct 8
17.2
34.3
30.4
7.9
10.2
whole
Nixon 36.3
Humphrey 33.6
None 3.5
Non opinion 11.0
Among audits
and adults who
vote, Sindlinger
distance between
33.8
31.4
3.1
15.0
as a
planned to
found less
rsixon and
Humphrey than the Gallup poll
reported.
Space Voyage
Norfolk Va. naval base.
For 15 tense minutes after
splashdown, while the crew
righted their craft by inflating
three brown-and-yellow
eniors
e-Con'
"Re-con," a nation-wide
NSA job placement service,
will be jointly sponsored on
campus by NSA and the senior
class.
"Re-con," in its first year of
operation, will match senior
applicants with job
opportunities through a
computer.
"The senior class," said class
president Charlie Ferris, "in
taking this service as a class
project, would like to
emphasize that "Re-con" is not
a substitute for the University's
Job Placement Service."
Ferris said seniors and
graduate students should not
use "Re-con" without using
the Job Placement Service.
The Job Placement Service
is a well-established service
which has been tried
successfully. Ferris said that
while "Re-con" offers a wider
range of job openings than the
Murdoch Committee
Sets Y Barrel Sale
The YM-YWCA Murdoch
Committee will sell barrels
made by mentally retarded
students in' Y court on
Thursday, according to Jeannie
Mundhenke, co-chairman of
the committee.
She described the size of the
barrels as l-2V2 feet high with a
diamter of about 18 inches and
costing $1.27-$1.75. They can
be used as foot stools, bar
stools, bedside tables,
telephone tables and more, she
added.
The money earned from the
sale will help support the
workshop expenses at the
Murdoch Center, an institution
for the mentally retarded in
Butner, N.C. It will also help
pay the expenses of the
Murdock Committee.
The barrels were made by
Murdoch students with
relatively high IQ's who have a
problem adjusting to the
institution. As an incentive, the
boys are paid for each barrel
they build, explained raui
Ogburn, boys' co-chairman of
the committee.
He said: "We hope everyone
NEW PRICES!
On Your Favorite Beverage:
PITCHER $1.00
MUG
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Sand
wic
By EVIE STEVENSON
DTH Staff Writer
A decision was made
Monday to establish a
sandwich "taste test" booth at
next Tuesday's Time-On t Day
Thomas Shetley, head of
the Lmversity Student Stores,
George Prillaman, head of the
University Food Services. .Tim
rew
balloons on its submerged
nose, Apollo 7's fate in the
ocean remained unknown
because its "homing" beacon
was under water.
Sponsor
Service
Placement Service, "Re-con" is
in its first year and has not
been tested before.
"'Re-con' is for serniors
and graduate students who are
using the Placement Service to
get a second chance," added
Ferris.
Virginia Carson, UNC
National Student Association
Coordinator, said, "NSA feels
"Re-con" is an excellent
opportunity to explore a
broader job scope."
Miss Carson said companies
across the country notify
"Re-con" of job openings
while applicants fill in
questionnaires. She said that
once an application is matched
with a job, the company
concerned will contact the
applicant.
Ferris said "Re-con" is a
free service. Applications are
available at the GM
information desk.
stops by the barrel saleI'm
sure there are many uses for
the barrels which we haven't
thought of."
XL
J
DflflGMJ
COIJTIUU
AT THE
INTIMATE
BOOKSHOP
.30
JOIN THE
CROWD
Call in for Faster Service
942-5149
DINE IN or TAKE OUT
Across From
University Square
2C3 W Ffanklin
FALL
BOO
SEE
r 1
Taste
Glass, chairman of the Student
Consumer Services and eight
members of the Residence
College Board of Governors
agreed to let students compare
the taste of UNC sandwiches
with those by Made-Rite .
The two brands of
sandwiches, probided by
Shetley, will be marked "X"
and "Y" for students to five
their preferences of the
samples.
Shetley promised at the
meeting to provide Avery
Dorm with an infrared oven for
heating sandwiches and
hamburgers.
Library
(Continued from page 1)
moved from Wilson Library,
the building's side doors will be
locked and entrance and exit
will be restricted to the front
doors.
He added that a new
addition to Wilson Library7 is
being planned for sometime in
the future.
It will house, among other
things, a large, modem,
graduate student's lounge.
Thompson said that the new
Robert B. House
Undergraduate Library
contains "the best study
facilities on campus."
) R
, v i ' f'
Tn -4 "T-. i, X"
lSSt,, 'J
h fa
; f ' ''''' '
in exclusive British iacketings
Folkweave sport jacketicgs are excellent examples
of the sterling quality that British mills weave into
their woollens. They are designed exclusively for
H. Freeman & Son of Philadelphia, who tailor tfcca
into supremely individual sport coats.
This bresentation is in con junction
ih the Britifb Woollens Export
Clothing that combmei
ideas and :dealt Since IssS.
ijh freeman &Tso?A! yr
Test
Glass said a questionnaire
concerning preferences of
sandwich varieties will be given;
to the Board of Governors
Thursday. :'-
The Board will give the
questionnaires to the individual
residence college senates for
distribution.
Students will receive the
sheets in their rooms.
Collection boxes will be put in
the dorm lobbies.
Glass said the questionnaire
was prompted by two
proposals under consideration
by the University: 1) a
reduction in the number of
varieties of sandwiches and 2) a
cut in price and weight that
will equal Made-Rite
sandwiches.
The Board of Governors
appointed one person in each
dorm to handle vending
machine complaints. The
Board is scheduled to meet
today with the Triangle
Vending Machine Company to
discuss policy on distribution
of machines on campus. ;
IA PIZZA
HOW DELIVERING
Chicken, Barbeque,
Seafood,
Hamburger Steak-
CALL 37-1451
LYNN
Pant Dress
by
College Town
19.98
Sizes 5-15
Other Styles
in Long Sleeve
and Sleeveless
from 13.98
solids & tweeds
orlons & wool
blends
Association
HARYW
i