Page 12-Friday, August 11, 1978-The Michigan Daily 50% OPPOSE CARTER RE-ELECTION BID President's popularity slips below Nixon's (Continued from Page 1) cent were undecided, AMONG REPUBLICANS, 26 per cent would like Carter to run, with 66 per cent saying they don't want him to run. The rest were undecided. The crucial and large group of in- dependent voters split 53-33 against a Carter re-election bid. Looking at those who said they voted for Carter in 1976, half of those said they want to see Carter run for re-election in 1980. But 37 per cent of his 1976 suppor- ters don't want to see Carter try again. IN RECENT months, AP-NBC News polls and others have shown Carter facing trouble when matched against potential 1980 primary or general elec- tion opponents. The finding of this poll is significant because it shows substantial opposition to a Carter re-election bid, regardless of who the opponent is. Carter's job rating was down slightly this month, but not significantly. TWENTY-SIX per cent of the public gave Carter a "good" or "excellent" job rating. But 73 per cent labeled his performance "only fair" or "poor." One per cent were undecided. In the June AP-NBC News poll, 27 per cent gave Carter good or excellent marks while 70 per cent rated his work only fair or poor. Since the error margin for a poll of 1,600 people is three per cent, one cannot say the change from June to August is a significant one. Four years after Nixon resigned as President in disgrace, 36 per cent of those questioned rated his performance good or excellent, 10 points above Car- ter's rating. Sixty-two per cent rated his work only fair or poor. Two per cent were undecided. WHILE NIXON'S rating is overall higher than Carter's, 34 per cent rated Nixon as poor, versus 20 per cent who gave Carter that rating. Seventy-two per cent of those questioned said Nixon was guilty of an impeachable offense, about the same level as found in a January AP-NBC News poll. Twenty per cent said he was not guilty. Among those who said Nixon was guilty of an impeachable offense, he and Carter got identical job ratings. THE BRIGHT SPOT for Carter is the public's trust rating. Forty-seven per cent said you can trust Carter to do what's right at least most of the time. Half said you can trust him only sometimes or almost never. That 47-50 split compares to the 45-53 trust rating in the June survey. Prior to June, the rating of the President who had made trust a major campaign pledge had fallen steadily since he took office. As with any sample survey, the results of the AP-NBC News polls could differ from the results of interviews with all Americans with telephones because of chance variations in the sample. For polls with 1,600 .interviews, the results should vary no more than three percentage points either way simply because of sample errors. That is, there is only once chance out of 20 that the results of interviews with all American adults would vary from these results by more than three percentage points. Of course, the results could vary from other polls because of differences in the wording of questions, timing of inter- views or the method of interviewing. Twenty-nine of the 38 mountain peaks over 13,000 feet in Switzerland are in the Zermatt area, including the Mat- terhorn. Garden toads can eat up to 10,000 in- sects in one season. Although an Arabian camel has an average lifespan of 12 years, it has been known to live as long as 28 years. T The last day of publication , .,--. +"..i i summer 1:fiicbigan 1U 3ait Saturday, August 12 Have a great break- We will! (sigh!) for the is heweli Arizona NEW YORK Philadelphia CHICAGO Look for us on September 7-our incoming student supplement will be distributed free on campus. And.. .to get you back in the swing of things... the MICHIGAN DAILY will be distributed free on September 8, 9, & 10. The MICHIGAN DAILY Staff