Page 2 Rezoning On Board’s Agenda Re-Zoning controversies loom once more for the Planning Board when it meets Tuesday at 7:30 in the Town Hall. Heading the list will be a re quest from C. A. Ellinger, who -. ■ ggPEfc.... ■ V- Mflßfc^gaa —----- A T Msfe - jp ? g TT*i j i«)[i A QUALITY fl PERFORMANCE U FEATURES • Peak Picture Control • Exclusive Automatic “Fringe-Lock" Circuit • High Gain 3-Stage IF Amplifier • “Gated Beam" Sound System • Zenith Quality Sound-Out-Front Speaker • Exclusive “Blanking Circuit” helps protect picture tube • “Capacity plus" quality components 0 CINELENS* darkened picture glass intensifies picture contrast ' sl, ? Built ALSO CHOOSE ZENITH Record Players, Hi-Fi’s, Stereos, Radios 462 W. Franklin St. Chapel Hill, N. C. Phone 968-4451 PLENTY FREE PARKING Store Hours—B a.m.-6 p.m. Friday Night 9 p.m. BE SURE TO VISIT CHAPEL HILL’S NEWEST BUILDING SUPPLY FOR: Lumber Westinghouse Appliances Building Materials ./ • > ?\V f/j&r GLIDDEN If PAINT I m\ on,y *2.97 Gal / Trim Brush FREE Jf With every 4 Gpls • Free Delivery and Prompt Service • Easy Credit Terms HOIE BIILDIKG SIPPLY eO. 103 S. Graham St. 712 WHkenson Ave. Chapel Hill Durham Phone 929-1556 Phone 684-0565 n ■ . ——i— •■■■■■—■ ■ I ■ has requested that 9.68 acres he owns on the Old Oxford Road be tween Lake Forest, Coker Hills end Durham Road be re-zoned from Agricultural to RA-10. His request was heard last Monday night before the regular quarter ly hearing of the Planners and the Board of Aldermen. Residents of both Lake Forest and Coker Hills, which are zon ed RA-20, objected to the propos ed zoning of Mr. Ellinger’s land. The Aldermen referred the Is sue to the Planners; further ob jections are expected at the Planners’ consideration. - Also to be considered is a com plicated mathematical formula for determining the size and set back required for signs in subur ban and regional commercial zones. The proposed formula drew opposition from,restaurateur Ted Danziger during its hearing. Also to be considered: —Amendment of the zoning or dinance to eliminate parking in required front yards in regional and commercial zones. . —Correction of a discrepancy in the Table of District Regula tions which permits construction of buildings up to property lines but stipulates that the height of the building be no more than the setback of the building of the property line. As the regulation presently reads, a building would have to be contructed underground to conform in all respects. , —Amendment of the zoning or dinance to bring the definition of "land fill” in the ordinance into agreement with the definition in the Table of District Regulations. 'Baptist Student’ Publishes Cansler UNC’s director of Baptist stu dent work, James 0. Cansler, has written three articles to ap pear in the December “Baptist Student,” Southern Baptists’ col legiate magazine. “The Man of Faith on the Cam pus” is the third in a new series of study articles appearing monthly in the ’ Student” and recommended for campus Baptist Student Union study groups. It is a part of the overall study “What It Means to Be a Man of Faith in the Twentieth Century.” The three articles treat the cam pus man of faith’s “Environ ment,” “Studies,” and “Ethics and Morals.” “Baptist Student” is published monthly during the nine months of the schoofl year by the Bap tist Sunday School Board. Nash ville, Tenn. Fellowship Will Meet On Thursday The Chapel Hill Interracial Fellowship will meet Thursday, December 5, at 8 p.m. at St, Joseph CME Church. Chapel Hill School Superintend ent Howard Thompson and Chap el Hill Housing Authority mem ber Mrs. Robert Mace, with other members of the Housing Auth ority, will be the principal speak ers. In addition, a program of dis cussion of housing, schools, and employment win be offered. Each of the three areas of the program will be presided over by a sep arate chairman. Officers for the coming year will be elected. The public is invited to attend. The Chapel Hill Weekly, issued every Sunday and Wed nesday, and is entered as sec ond-class matter February 28, 1923, at the post office at Chap el Hill, North Carolina, publish ed by the Chapel Hill Publish ing Company, Inc., is under the act of March 3,1878. THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY Pete Ivey’s Town & Gown— (Continued from Page 1) ates of suburban incubators. They were transported, separ ately in groups, to rural dirt roads, secondary roads, paved highways, 4-lane super highways, city streets, intersections, boule vards, driveways, c lover leaK pathways, and turnpikes. • * • To avoid fragmentation and bias, different breeds of poultry were tested and interviews were •conducted with 374 dealers in chickens and an additional 142 observers and by-standers, includ ing motorists and pedestrians, and cock fight habitues. In the pilot study, to gain pre liminary findings, four dozen chickens of different breeds and egalitarian status were placed one at a time on one side of a road. These chickens were then observed over a period of time to determine: (1) Whether or not they crossed the road, <2) How long they delayed before cross ing the road, (3) What actions they performed prior to crossing the road, (4) What attractions, or lack of attractions, on the other side of the road seemed to exert any motivating force on the chickens, (5) What real or imag ined advantages seemed tp exist on the other side of the road as compared to the side they were originally stationed, (6) What was the average period of time a hen remained on me side of the rpad before attempting a crossing, <7) How long it took the average chicken to go across a highway, a street, (8) What effects did •traffic on the road have as a de terrent, or as a hypnotic attrac tion, in propelling chickens from one side of the road to the other, (9) What did the chicken do after reaching the other side. (10) Was there any observable display of attainment or triumph indicated by the chicken after getting across, (D) To what extent did a chicken tend to re-cross the road, to get back on the original side. • * * To obviate error and to make the data comprehensive and un assailable, all subject chickens had numbered tags placed around one leg. Only one chicken out of the entire 3,567 failed to cross a road. This posed a dilemma for the chairman of the project, which was finally settled by wringing the chicken's neck, and eating her for dinner. This was justified on grounds that uncoop erative chickens ought not be counted because they foul up sta tistical results. * * * Findings of the project suggest strongly that it is not improbable that the sequential relationships of the structured tests, as they relate to all of the chickens with out exception, indicate that in the milieu in which poultry trav el, there are certain definite,and identifiable attitudinal and con ceptual frames of reference or schema which can be adapted for any given foci of fowl behavior. The enculturation of barnyard society seemingly has no concom itant effects on mobility of one chicken over another, or of one group as compared with another. The multiples of inter-actions are as variable es the casual internal and external relationships among the respondent chickens. Yet the roles manifested by segmented teams of chickens in the predic tive models would provide data which show stereotypes of indi vidual behavior, as contrasted to striking examples of adjusted, mal-adjusted, adaptive, and de prived hens and roosters alike. Moreover, there is noted a cer tain aimlessness in poultry ra tionale that impels the research ers to assume that diverse com plexities are not ruled out of consideration. These are not clearly defined but certainly lead Thrifty FRIGIDAIRE Washer with Automatic Soak Cycle! I giant rstr" ■ 12 LB. Mmm 71,81 • Seeks tJetbss better by tar than ovemltf* eoek. • New! Frigidaire underwater Actioa Zone helps get mi your wash fabulously clesnl • Fresh running weter •Sor- *2O9 95 • Automatic lint dhposal •w M • Dependable! It's the Sturdy FrigkJsife washsfc BENNETT & BLOCKSIDGE, lie. FRIGIDAIBE SALES ft SERVICE I 105 East Franklin Phone 942-5141 towards a norm of tendencies peculiar to hen house mores. This anomalous corollary pro duces an aggregate impact quite apart from any obvious history of the chickens to peck, to scratch, to chick, to crow, to look about them at random, to squawk, to cackle, and to per form other actions indicating vi able, and sometimes mysterious and unpredictable forms of con duct. There appears to be a high cor relation of magnetism on the other side of the road, to draw chickens from one side; but the difficulty is in proving whether a changed set of circumstances or conditions animate and inani mate on that other side of the road has any bearing on the transmigratory tendencies when chickens are next to a traffic artery, or whether the need to go over the other side is some thing that is inherent in the chicken because he or she is a chicken, and that what happens is only a reflection of what oc curs in the chicken’s mind. This poses the quandary of ano mie and/or co-efficients of ob servable roles. This varies from chicken to ehicken, and from road to road, street to highway, and so cm. * * • The many - faceted indicated drives which may be only a manifestation actually of a pro bability that a chicken really has no place to go are not readily demonstrated to be poly-nucleat ed pheiwpena of micro-dynamics. Much larger samples will have to be tested before evaluation can ascertain precisely what hap pens. This will involve more chickens, more researchers, more time, more money. By this, we do not assert that we have reaebed a non-decisional impasse. Individual chickens, as well as chickens in dyads, in threesomes, foursomes and larg er groups do provide evidence that leads us to assume from the data that more definitive re sults can be obtained in (he fu ture. No value judgments can be firmly projected, and integra tive assumptions are supportive of neither minimal nor maximal significances. Until that time, all the facts as to motivating forces and hid den compulsions on the part of the chicken, as associated with the objects on each side of the road, lead us to state, with modi fications, that a chicken does, in theory and in practice, cross the road in order to get to the other side. —Parade— (Continued from Page 1) Clowns from Dunn, a Brownie unit from the First Baptist Church, a horse and buggy by Chapel Hill dressmaker Nancy Riley, Elves entered by the Junior Service League, the Chapel Hill Reereation Department Baton Corps, two Chapel Hill Fire De partment engines (one very old, one very new), two Civil Air Pa trol vehicles, and - floats spon sored by Beta Sigma Phi Sorori ty, Long Meadow Dairy, and Croft Business College of Dur ham. The Merchants Association will sponsor the Santa Claus float, and Miss Orange County, Ann Clayton of Hillsboro, will ride in a convertible. The 5:30 time of the parade has been set to save parents the in convenience of taking their chil dren home from school, rushing through supper, going out again, and returning home relatively late in the evening. ning out. With 33 seconds re maining, Chapman came in with his tape and toe and, as they say at the pool hall, split the uprights. • • • The first and only stop was Kenan FieldHflDse. The players piled out and marched in and began ripping off tape and re moving shoulder pads and ac cepting congratulations from teammates who bad arrived on a second bus. Coach Jim Hickey, a late ar rival, walked to the center of the dressing room and the play ers cheered. “You know how I feel about the game and about you,” said Hickey, underplaying the mom ent. “It was great. Naw we’ve got a Bowl bid. Next week, there will be no practice and . . He stopped his speech to allow his workmen to applaud the “no practice” remark. Then he con tinued. “You have the week off. Now have a good time. But stay in shape. We want to be ready to play a good game when the time comes.” Edge presented the game ball to his coach. “This is yours,” said Junior. Hickey took it, looked at it pride fully like an ostrich might look at the first egg she laid, ft added his own thoughts. “You all know,” said the coach, “that this is the one we wanted for (he Chancellor (Aycock). You put names on M. and I’ll take it over.” (Advertisement) BY ALICE STONE i Adroit enlarging of eyes isn’t quite as difficult a feat as you might imagine. To begin, use Mack eyeliner and extend your Mack eyeline a bare fraction of an inch—in a straight line—be yond the natural edge of your top eyelid. Switching now to charcoal gray eyeliner, start barely inside the outer corner of the lower lid and form a line outward until it meets the black line to form a triangle. The advantage of using char coal gray for the lower line lies in the softening effect it gener ally provides. i There are advantages of an other nature in trusting hair care Ho Aesthetic Hair Styling Salon. Our operators and styl ists have both the training and experience to turn out consis tently fine work. Be it a perma nent or high-fashion styling, you are assured of satisfaction at Aesthetic Hair Styling Salon, 133% East Franklin Street. Phone 942-4335. Open Friday evenings, too. Call for appoint ment. f THIS WEEK’S HELPFUL HINT: Willing to experiment with a new and inviting salad? Try pouring hot spaghetti sauce over cottage cheese. m ii ■ i ii —— « I Make correspondence and study I I EASY with a HOME DESK OUTFIT! I Does your home need a center for letter-writing, budget balancing, student’s work? Here are 3 handsome ways to make these chores a pleasurel . 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On the training room wall is a yellowing copy of the student paper following the 50-0 victory over Duke in 1959. Hickey point ed to it and remarked, “This one today was more pleasing than that one. this one had every thing.” Somewhere outside the clang ing of a bell could be heard. “It’s the Victory Bell,” a play er noted. The bell is an exchange of good will between the student bodies of Duke and Carolina. “Back home where it belongs,” added another. Hickey called Sigmon aside and the two agreed they would drive QI4 Maryland fngravatf Kepoussa Kirk King Window rimrov# WISH® i e Selected IfUdec 6eaut