xt76125qc75n https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt76125qc75n/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1967-09-07 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers English Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September 07, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 07, 1967 1967 1967-09-07 2024 true xt76125qc75n section xt76125qc75n THE KENTUCKY Thursday Afternoon, Sept. 7, 1967 The South’s Outstanding College Daily _ UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON ERN EL Vol. LIX, No. 8 SG Begins European Travel Aid Student Government, feeling that UK hasbeenlaxintlrearea d international studies, has ar- ranged for student and faculty transportation to Europe this summer at a low cost. The Travel Service is a “first step in a new concept of stu- dent services at UK," said Brint Milward, SC director of student services. The rates for round trip air fare are $265 and 8331 for two separate trips. Both flights leave from New York and arrive in Amsterdam. Students are free to do as they please once in Europe, Mil- ward said. SC will have a local travel agent on campus, according to demand, to help plan part or all of a student's trip. Milward added, however, that students are not obligated to consult the travel agent. They may plan their own tours with or without his aid, or simply “bum around" as they like. For students interested in studying in Europe, one of the trips will correspond to most European summer schools, said Milward, a senior history major. The travel service is open to all UK students, faculty, admin- istrative personnel, and their im- mediate families. The air rates are low—lower even than air charter-because the University is a non-profit agency and only its members will be allowed to participate. Milward noted that student government, toward the close of last year and during the summer, moved away from functions in which it ”had no business,"such as programming, and is limiting itself to governing and providing student services. “In the past, UK's services for students have not had the re- levance of those at other major universities," Milward said. “Other ideas in addition to the travel service will be brought forth in the coming semester." Further information on the trips can be obtained in the SC office in the Student Center. Congratulation .' This scene was repeated again and again as fall sorority rush came to an end Wednesday night. Here a Tri-Delt congratulates an overjoyed (and most likely tired) rushee on her acceptance into the sorority. A list of new pledges will be published later. New Era At Lincoln, Dr. Oswald Premises "The Lincoln School enters into a new era of responsibility, and it is hoped that the new school will measure up to its re- sponsibility as did Lincoln Institute throughout its history." So said President John W. Oswald, as he welcomed stu- dents Wednesday to the first classes in the “new" Lincoln School at Simpsonville. Dr. Oswald told the 62 high school students representing 15 Kentucky counties, that the school presents a unique oppor- tunity for the individual student, and from the individual “things can be learned that will be bene- ficial to education in this state and even the nation." The school, operated by UK, is new in that it will now serve chosen bright youngsters who may have been economically and culturally disadvantaged. It was formerly the Lincoln Institute, a Negro boarding school. UK ‘At Your Disposal' Dr. Oswald explained to the students and some 25 guests that the academic and research facili- ties of UK are at the disposal of the students, and that each student should avail himself of the facilities ”We are interested in you," Dr. Oswald said. ”We are as concerned about you as we are the students at the University. The faculty at this school is deeply motivated and interested in this school. So I hope you will take advantage of the op- portunity afforded you. " Eventually the sclibol is ex- pected to have about 250 young- sters in the first four high school grades. About 30 percent of the present group is Negro. Dr. William J. Tisdall, direc- tor of the school, welcomed the guests and introduced the facul- ty at a noon luncheon. Matthews Seeks Delay In Closing Horse Farm Deal Attorney General Robert Matthews said Wednesday he has “asked ‘the University's Research Foundation not to finalize its purchase of Maine Chance Farm until his office completes its investigation. Mr. Matthews said he has asked the University to furnish his office with information on the Research F oundation's assets and its plans to finance the purchase of the 720-acre horse farm. The Bank of New York, exec- utor. of the estate of the late Elizabeth Arden Graham, an- nounced in July that it was ac- cepting the $2 million bid of the University to purchase the farm. The University's interest in the farm precipitated what has become a statewide controversy. California horseman Rex C. Ells- worth, whose bid the New York bank said was second, has charged that the University and the Keeneland Association con- spired to keep him from settling in Lexington. Mr. Ellsworth has said his plans for the farm would include, among other things, 'a breeder's sales operation. Keeneland oper- , ates the only breeder’s sales in the area now. The University has said it is interested in Maine Chance in order to protect its existing prop- erty in the area. UK already owns Spindletop and Coldstream Farm whose 1,200-acres bound Maine Chance on three sides. UK spokesmen have said the combined acreage on the three farms would be used for agricul- tural research and the possible establishment of an Equine Re- search Institute. Research In Mind The University, it is known, is also interested in seeing that the Maine Chance property is not used for commercial develop- ment which could jeopardize the research on Coldstream and Spin- dlet0p. According to UK spokesmen, the $2 million for the farm would be financed from a mortgage on the property. One-fourth of the purchase price would be paid F ‘Too Few Negroes At UK’ Group Says By ROBERT F. BRANDT [II ”There are simply not enough Negroes on campus and we are trying to find out why," says Ellis Bullock, president of ”Or- gena." Orgena, whose name is de— rived from the inversion of the phrase, "A Negro," was begun last spring. Its purpose, as stated, are to promote the image of the Negro student at UK, to provide for a better relationship among these students, to promote inter- action with other students on campus and to. create a forum for the expression of student opin- ion. Orgena is not a civil rights organization, Bullock says. It is not affiliated with the Campus Committee on Human Rights (C- CHR), although rmny of the members are the same. In fact, he said Orgena was formed "be cause we felt the CCHR was not able to cope with the Negro's social problems at UK." ”We have tried to make the Negro become involved in carn- pus activities, " he said. ”We have tried to gain social acceptance for the Negro at UK. We have found that after joining Orgena, a Negro finds it easier to join other organizations on campus." Held Bull Sessions Orgena had 45 members at the end of last semester. These members took part in Sunday afternoon “dialogues" which Bullock described as ”educated bull-sessions." ”These dialogues, Open! to all, gave the Negro a chance to hear other Negroes' problems," he said. “We plan to have these ses- sions this year but on an ac— celerated basis. We have speakers and an open forum where any- one can be heard," he added. Bullock hopes Orgena will ex- pand to other colleges and uni- versities. Bullock says the group i» is studying the Black Legion or- ganization which has become in— fluential in northeastern schools. Last year was a formation period for Orgena. This year it is working on a program withthe YMCA to recruit Negroes to UK, and to help find scholarships available to Negroes. Another program Orgena is working on is finding out why so few Negroes have graduated from UK. Questionnaires are be ing sent to Negroes who have left UK, Bullock said. Why Negroes Left ”We want to know if Ne~ groes in the past left because they felt alienated here, or if they left because of financial or other reasons. " / Bullock said Orgena is not affiliated with Alpha Phi Alpha, UK's Negro colony. (A colony is recognized by its national fra- ternity, but not by the Interfra- ternity Council. Alpha Phi Al- pha has not yet been recognized because of its small size.) Bullock said Orgena received help from the colony, hOWever, while it was organizing. ”We are separated from the colony as we are separated from the CCHR," Bullock said. “We work closely with them, and many members belong to twoor all of the groups, but we are separated and serving different purposes. immediately from the assets of the research foundation. Mr. Matthews questioned this method of financing Wednesday. He said he understood that the Research Foundation's assets were funds that had been given the University for research. So-called overrides from re- search grants, the attomey gen- eral said, would be used by the foundation to make the initial one—fourth payment. However, Mr. Matthews said it was his opinion that these overrides could be used only fOr administrative expenses. ”So I cannot give my opinion on the legality of this proposal now," he said. Mr. Matthews said if the Uni- versity is paying the administra- tive cost of the foundation “it would seem reasonable that these overrides be used for that purpose instead of forming the down pay— ment on a horse far ‘About- ace’ Meanwhile, Dr. Arnold G. Pessin, one of the men involved with Ellsworth in attempting to purchase the farm, testified Wednesday that the Bank of New York made a complete about- face in three days in deciding how to handle the sale of the farm. Dr. Pessin's statements were made in a deposition filed in US. District Court here as part of the record of a suit Ellsworth is bringing against the Univer- sity and the Research Founda- tion. Dr. Pessin said an officer of the Bank of New York told him July 28 that it had received the Ellsworth bid to buy the farm but that it would be ”at least ten days before a decision was made." ‘ However, Dr. Pessin testified, three days later the bank told him a higher bid had been re— ceived and the farm had been sold. Dr. Pessin said he had un- derstood that he would be noti- fied if a bid higher than Ells- worth's was received. Dr. Pessin confirmed that the Ellsworth bid was submitted by the Central Bank and Trust Co. whose board chairman, financier Garvice D. Kincaid, has been identified as an Ellsworth backer. Dr. Pessin said the bank's only interest in the sale was to povide a loan for which Ells- " worth would provide collateral other than a mortgage on the farm. Tried To Buy Earlier He said they had tried to buy the farm as early as 18 months ago, before its owner, Elizabeth Arden Graham, died. After Mrs. Graham's death, Dr. Pessin said, he and Ells— worth prepared to bid on the uoperty, arranging with the bank here for a loan of up to $3 mil- lion. He said he made two bids to the New York Bank by tele- phone, first of $1.85 million on July % and a second of $1.94 million the following day. 2 - THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, 'Sept. 7,19'6'7 Dimensions In Philosophy Relativity And Faith: Secular Mystery? (Editor‘s Note: Dr. Wilburn is Desn end Proiessor of Theology st the Lexington Theological Seminary. He hss held professorship st George Pepperdine College, Los Angeles. Cnliiornin. Phillips University, Enid, Ohio-horns, end has been serving in his copeeity “sheen oi the Seminary ior six years. Dr. Wilhern has held honorary positions snd delivered guest leetures too numerous to mention. He is the nether of ten hoohs in theology. and 85 srtieles. the latest being in the January, 1007 issue oi the “Lexington Theological Quarterly.” Dr. Wilhnrn received his BA. in Gernssn end Philosophy et the University of Cell- ionin. Berkeley, his I.A. st the Divinity School. of the University of Chieege, end his Ph.D. else st Chio esgo. lie has done post-doetorel re- seereh both st the University of Heidelberg. lieidelherg. Germany, end st Yale University. New Keven. Con- neetlelt. This is the first of two parts ei on srtlel'e written by him espeeislly (or the “Kernel” during the Sun- Iner, not.) By RALPH G. WILBURN One of modern man’s knotty problems is indicated by the “new” morality of which there is considerable talk these days. Human values have been up- rooted from their grounding in reality and now hang in thin air, likeghosts from a bygone age. The secularizing process has resulted in the radical rel- ativization of values, reducing them, it appears, to mere sub- jective preferences. But since man cannot live without some trans-subjective grounding of values, he has become an easy prey fOr irrational value systems. He bows to Chauvinism, is swayed by the magical qualities of powerful leaders, or warships the deceptive goddess of ma- terial success. Demonic systems have be- come the source for man’s norms and values. Must we now leave it at that? Does the relativiza- tion of values pull us irretriev- ably into the quagmire of rela- tivism? Or is relativity com- patible with the depth dimen- sion of religious faith? Historical Relativity Before facing the question, we might ask: why has this knotty problem arisen? It has arisen, it seems to me, due to 1 JAMES FOX soldering Jam GAVIN lathe-lull”!!! “manhunt-cum “mnnunm museums-Amm- TONIGHT ut 8:00; NOW PLAYING! "Museum or mum!" — Chicago Tribune Weiss-n. JULIE ANDREWS As Mil-ll! . MARY TYLER MOORE CAROL OHANNING hlIJSSHUtnER'S producionol TW' "dunno: LILLIE as “when m mumm-mwuoeulorm SEATS NOW AVAILABLE! All Seats Reserved! TOMORROW at 8 :30; wane/am; Air Conditioned O "6 Euclid O 266-1174 O Formerly Mlllend . For group soles coll Mrs. Stanley Drew, Dir. of Spec. Sorv. 266-2174 @ MMINEES 2 p.m. growth in modern man's aware- ness of the historically condi- tioned character of all human thinking. We modems have be- come profoundly aware of the fact that all human thinking is enmeshed in, and determined by, the relative forces of his— tory. As the saying goes, all think- ing is determined by one’s “point of view,” the posture of which is shaped. by the time, place, and situation in which the individual realizes his be- ing and does his thinking. This historical relativity characterizes religious and ethical thinking, as all other thinking. To put the matter bluntly: the methods by which our fore- fathers determined standards of truth and value have, in our day, come into sharp conflict with the tendency to relativity produced by historical reflec- tion on human existence. Defense Against Nihilism Now a person cannot main- tain intellectual integrity if, like the proverbial ostrich with head in sand, he attempts to escape this relativity by ignoring it, by going on clinging to simple standards of value, be they of rational or traditional origin. The only proper question for us is, whether we are doomed to join the melancholy chorus of the sophists of a n c i e n t Greece; or is there a way through and beyond this skep- ticism which gnaws like a rat at the guts of religious and ethical faith? Does faith possess a reliable defense against de- spair and nihilism? ’ While the histon'city of all thinking means that there is no escape from historical relativity, it seems to me that there is nevertheless power in faith to overcome relativism, in four ways. First, those who learn how to exist responsibly escape the tragedy of being mere victims of the forces of history. To capitulate to these forces means to move along through life in an irresponsible way, permitting oneself to be determined wholly from without, by the historical forces that beat upon him. 1.‘ FREE! The first 100 people in the store Saturday, Sept. 16‘ get to kiss our beautiful *secretary! ‘ Incidentally his name is Gus! —-—— I’ laundry .8: Dry Cleaning l (NEXT) TO THE COLISEUM) an; Such an individual fails to become anything but a victim of history, just part of the debris washed up on the shores of time. He‘ is an unreflective conformist. ' To Escape Conformism Faith liberates one from this fraudulent mode of being. For part of the freedom of faith lies in its capacity to respond re- sponsibly to the situation in which one finds himself, and to the moral and spiritual heritage out of which the present situa— tion has arisen. Through such responsible response, one is en- abled to lay claim to his spiritual destiny, rise above the destruc- tive forces which are also in- herent human possibilities, and realize (though of course not without ambiguity) the possi- bilities of existence for the life * of creative community. Second, from the fact that there is no escape from rela- tivity in human thinking, it is by no means evident that there is no tmth at all in our intellec~ tual quest, or that we are hope- lessly lost in an ocean of an- archistic relativism. Nor is it at all evident that since man's ap- prehension of a reality is finite. the reality apprehended must also be finite. To draw the lat- ter conclusion from the former premise is to commit the logical fallacy of a non-sequiter. It would be like saying that since man knows the Universe only in part, there is no such thing as the Universe; or since no argument conclusively proves the existence of God, God does not exist. One can only regard it as a confused kind of think- ing which is unable to distin- guish between the fictitious idea of a universal concept the legit- imate idea of a concept of the Universal. Absolute Obligation To say, then, that religious and ethical understanding must be formulated in language char- acterized by relativity and ex- pressed in terminology dictated by perennially changing condi- tions does not mean that we are obliged to abandon the pos- ture of absolute loyalty to the claims which man’s humanity or the higher life of love lays upon us. On the contrary, to be human means to stand under absolute obligation: to follow the light of truth, as it is given us to see this light. Granted, due NA(kUlA‘-v FHA!) TONIGHT Adm. $1.25 use YOUR FREE coupons: Cartoon at 7:30 77/510110! I: (1'0... -—‘—- ALSO [ages [.7]! (7/? - ”c.“ to our finitude and estrange- ment, no one of us may do this faithfully. But to be willing to do anything less, it seems to me, is to be morally culpable at the deepest level of being. The logic of this interrelation- ship of absolute and relative elements appears in practically all of man's knowledge. That the physicist of our day dis- claims any absolute validity for the fmitful models he uses does not totally obliterate the objeci' ' tive validity of the corpus of knowledge in the science of physics. Most physicists would can- tend that this growing body of knowledge is not made up out of whole cloth, despite some Conventionalists who reject Bac~ onian Inductivism, together with the claim that scientific theories are empirical, and argue that scientific models are mere pig- eon-holes, fabricated by the fer- tile imagination of the scientist. To be sure, it would be dif- ficult to find a Simon-pure Bac- onian Inductivist any longer. Yet the dominant philosophy of science holds that a scientific model has truth in it, is on the way to truth, even though it is accompanied by the awareness that the reality cognitively ap- prehended transcends the unite grasp of it,» and that scientific knowledge is surrounded by the penumbra of tantalizing mys- tery. Absolute Vs. The Relative The epistemology of ethics is comparable to the situation in physics. One sees a similar in- terrelationship of absolute and relative elements, for example, in Socrates’ decision to drink the hemlock. It is legitimate to question his defense of the par- ticular ruling of his political order. Yet at the deeper level of his conscience stood a cate- gorical imperative, expressed in his convictions (1) that delib- erately doing what one believes to be wrong is always evil and dishonorable, (2) that when in- jured one must not do injury in return, and (3) that we ought not retaliate or render evil for evil to anyone, whatever evil we may have suffered from him. The second port of Dr. Wilhlrn's article will sppeer in Friday's Kernel. Burton’s O. K. GRILL 108 Euclid ’Home Cooked Meals’ 3‘ —Carry Out— Open 24 hours, daily Tar: KENTUCKY KERNEL The Kentucky Kernel, University Station. University of Kentucky. Lex- ington, Kentucky 40506. Second class Postage paid at Lexin n. Kentucky. Mailed live times w d the school year except holidays and exam periods, and once during the summer session. Published by the Board of Student Publications, UK Post Office Box 4”. Bezun as the Cadet in 1894 and published continuously as the Kernel since 1913: Advertising published herein is in- tended to help the render buy. Any (also or misleading advertising should he reported to The Editors. SUBSCRIPTION ‘ Yearly, by mail —— .00 Per copy. from files — $.10 KERNEL TELEPHON ES Editor. Managing Editor ......... 2331 Editorial Page Editor, Associate Editors. Sports ...... 2320 News Desk ...................... 2M7 - The Nitty Gritty Dirt' road Band is a hunorously haphaz- ard combination of then and now. Dress is '205 and songs are mostly vintage good-time music. If in- stead of the current slang name, the title reflected that era, it would be the Brass Tacks Jug Band. There aren't many jug bands at the moment. Jim Kweskin and his Jug Band work mostly in Cambridge, Mass. Dave Van Rank went to the Blues Project. Dr. West’s Medicine Show and Junk Barid keeps breaking up. Jeff Hanna, oftenest spokes- man for the still~new Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, says, “He's a very good writer but he doesn't have the band he should have. He wrote ‘Don’t Wear Metal Pants out in an Electrical Storm Baby.’ He has a junk drummer who uses his own baby teeth. Funky Jug Band "Kweskin and us both started as funky jug bands. They're el- ectrical and they've moved into swing. We now do some folk. We're not electrical and some of the kids think it's a freak sound, the newest ‘in' thing." In person, the six young men, oldest 21, who are the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band appear like an undisciplined Hoosier Hot Shots. ' Their oftenest requested number is a goofy ”Teddy Bears' 'Pic- nic." On record, Liberty LPs ”The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band" and ”Ricochet" and single, “Buy, for Me the Rain," they sound more cohesive. ”I Wish I Could Shimmy Like my Sister Kate" is on the first LP. Hanna says, “We liked it for jug, and it's very contempor- ary sounding. It was copyrighted by Armand Piron in 1922. We tried to find more songs by him and couldn't. Somebody told us Louie Armstrong wrote that one and sold'it to him." The Bee Gees? In conversation, unlike many groups, the Nitty Gritty mem— bers like to talk about other groups. They admire the Bea- tles and say, “If anybody does anything close to the Beatles in the next few years we think it’ll be the Bee Gees or the Hollies or the Cream. ”The New Vaudeville Band is great for what its doing, but they're entertainers' entertainers. They're so much into camp, like it's done 'on old r ords. The kids mostly get bar The Stone Poneys, they say, has broken up; the Buffalo Spring- field has split and repatched. Why is there so much breaking apart and personnel changing among pop groups just now? “There are too many groups flooding the market. There’s an abundance of musicians trying to start superior groups to get to the top." The six Nitty Gritty members hope to stay together. “We’ve known each other beforethe band started for one thing (at high school in Long Beach, Calif.) We got into it for fun and .still usually have fun. ”The worst time we ever had was when we were staying in one hotel room in Sausalito with $2 to last till Sunday, hitchhiking across the bridge to San Fran- cisco to play Basin Street West. We couldn't get an advance. Our single had come out but our album hadn't. Our road manager bought us food." Got a Jug They originally called them- selves the Illegitimate Jug Band because they dont use a jug. When they got one ,they renamed. They also play guitar mandolin, banjo, harmonica, kazoo, wash- IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THE KERNEL‘. . «52$”¢9"“’¢§‘°wm> -_ “:3 ROGER. DI SILVESTRO of casual Kentucky. Mr. $20. brown. DOWNTO‘X Etienne Aigner is featured in our new Contemporary Shop. . . . This is the shop especially created for the College Coed. . . . Etienne Aigner ever popular loafer is just one of the many young styles to be found at EMBRY’S. Your UK representative at Embry's Contemporary Shop Mr. DiSiIvestro, will be happy to assist and ad- ‘ vise you in your selection ’ ‘ or dress shoes. 2;, Roger is presently a stu- dent at the University of Hi Silvestro (‘hrmses : for the '('oed a loafer by I Etienne Aigner. This hand- ' some shoe (011168 in antique ON-THE-CAMPUS. 38I S. LIME - ‘ . .. «a 535 it . ~ EAST MAIN «cross from Holmes Hall V -. 6"}: ' Down To The Nitty Gritty board, sandblocks, comb and washtub bass which Jimmy Fad- den made with an old metal tub, an oak broomstick and a D bass string. ”We can leave our stuff onstage and it isn't stolen. Other- groups think it’s junk." . Why are so many of the new groups coming out of California? “On the back of the first Beach Boys' album you could see five barefoot surfer kids and every— body thought, ‘If they can do it . . . And what about the Flower Movement, also cominggfrom Cale ifomia? Hanna says, “It's a fad right now. It’s like surfing. It's good to a point. I figure if they put it on long enough, they’ll eventually believe it. But you'd rather have them be friendly all the time than suddenly going out dtheir way.” THE KENTUCKY KERNEL Thursday, Sept. 7, 1967- 3 LAST . DAYS OF SUMMER With cool weather heralding the last days of Botanical Garden- type relaxing, at student utilizes the natural assets of the Univer- sity to catch up on some last minute reading. SUB Slates Movie Schedule A series of recent movies has been planned for showing by the Student Center Program Direc- tor's office for the semester. The movies will be shown in the Student Center Theatre, as was the case last year, and the price remains at 50 cents. Among the films scheduled for showing are ”The Carpet- baggers," ”Strange Bedfellows," ”Guns of Navarone," and ”Flow- er Drum Song." These movies will be shown during September, with such clas- sics as "Judgment at Nurem- will change too. Student Center. scholarship. berg.” "The Longest Day,” “Tom Jones," "For Whom the Bell Tolls," and “Lord Jim" pegged for showing later in the year. 3 p.m. Sunday Matinee _ The theater will operate on a Friday, Saturday, Sunday schedule, with two showings on Friday and Saturday and a Sun- day matinee. Weekend movies will be pre- sented at 6:30 p.m. and again at 9:15 p.m. The Sunday matinee will be at 3 p. m. When a double feature is - ‘ : KENTUCKY'S SCHOLARSHIP WEEKEND W Student Center, University of Kentucky Lexington Lav 1968 will be a year of change for the University of Kentucky. Dynamic physical change will be even more evident as the year progresses. .The students will change. Their modes of dress, speech, and behavior will change. Ways to have fun And so we ask, will ”Kentucky’s Outstanding College Spring Weekend” of ten years ago provide today’s student the same numerous times of fun? Or, is I968 the year for LITTLE KENTUCKY DERBY to change? To modernize? This is the question we want you to answer. LITTLE KENTUCKY DERBY is looking for interested people with creative ideas to direct the course of events which make up an ”Outstanding College Weekend.” Your application for the Little Kentucky Derby Board of Student Directors is now available. This week only, applications are being accepted in ~ the Student Center Program Director' 5 Office, Room 203, This is your invitation to challenge. The challenge is to create a spring weekend full of interesting fun, things to do, which in turn will allow your fellow student to continue his education through Little Kentucky Derby’s contribution to Sincerely, LITTLE KENTUCKY DERBY Thomas Derr, Chairman 4 Board of Student Directors September 5, i967 ' scheduled ft! the SUB, each show will be aired once each day, in— cluding Sunday. Starring in the “The Carpet- baggers” are Carroll Baker, Alan Ladd‘and George Peppard. Rock Hudson and Gina Lollobrigida are featured in "Strange Bedfel- lows," and Gregory Peck, David Niven and Anthony Quinn are the leads in ”The Guns of Nav- arone. The movies are sponsored by the Student Center Direct or's Of- fice and are open to all students and faculty. Ii 4—THE KENTUCKYK ENR EL, Th huarsd a,y Sept. 7, I967 “1' ' NOW TWO STORES {_ TO BETTER 3W ‘ SERVE YOU BOTH STORES OPEN I7 HRS. DAILY — 8 A.M. TO I A.M. >\\\//f<"fi\/ ’T'lffi/ [14/ CENTER Park v“ load / R“ ‘. "J ‘3" r k G and W / E D < RIB cur very ay Granulated "320‘ o o ’s' \ ,4; . ‘ , ‘, ”1.33:0 . . ,d A 0 \FE Han Id ~ _ i i . .", 0 OPEN ALInAv eve-RY mm I7 HOURS DAILY 8 A.M. TO I A.M. \ / EVERY DAY .. '1 . ‘ M LOW PRICES / Miracle Wllipuo “49 es i ‘ Hourly 3( FRESH DAILY COUNTY FA'R < oooooooooooooooooooooooo _\\Q ‘1 BR: no sugar ----------------- l""16" ( GRO D \ «m \ ¢ I 6 OZ )Mocorom I8 BEE lo”15c eonu uI er """ ¢ fig lb 7L\v \g/AJJ'Y: P Ian 39 6/4 49) \ BIIIIys Food (In qu GoId Mod. Io / Flour ————————— W325 55¢ ' ' \ \ I/IF'VQ/ B I’ ”AM/ ’ 1 V/ Toilet Tissue 4:121'34¢ ' ' L /2 gal. 23C y \ MISS GEORGIA ~ Tong ————————————————— 79¢\ I-IALVEs BLEACH )émis'i'éuch/ze “A ‘( PEACHE lllllll 39¢ ) Corn Flakes my 4:, °°"" ’i Crisco ———————— 3:3; 83‘ A MU’I\ Tomato Souoeo" 20¢ :14 b ‘45 4 I In..-‘ \IAWAV/ 5 \I - ‘I 'wvwoab 4‘69“.» ‘ by JACKIE ROSS A ringing telephone in a women’s dormitory no longer brings someone dashing out of a room and down the hall. The new University system of having phones in each room has eliminated that problem, but has created new ones. The most frequent complaint is the lack of privacy. The old telephones were in booths in the middle of the hall. There the user could turn her face to the wall or sit behind the peti- tion in the booth assured that no one but the person on the other end could hear her. The present system has 15 to 20 coeds on the same partyline. “Now you don't know who's listening on the line, or if anybody is," says Mary Beth Laurel], junior from Elwood City, Penn. ,“It's hard to know if someone else is on the phone when you want to use it without accidently interrupting their conversation." A Cermantown, Ohio senior, jan Blankenship, commented that she liked having the phone in Room Phonesf’oseNetoSet 0f Problems ‘ the room at times, “like when the janitors are on the floor," but she doesn't like having to talk while her roommate is trying to study or sleep. Another gripe stems from the inability to tell in which room the phone is ringing if the occu- pants are out. However, most people concede it is just a matter of tuning the ear to a differ- ent ring. Long-winded coeds provide another problem for the new system. Formerly, ifa coed used the phone more than the allotted time, usually 15 minutes, it was easy to find out who it was and remove her from the line. Under the new system, someone can get on the phone and tie it up indefinitely without fear ofdetection—unless some- one is listening in or conducting a room—to—room search. Like every other new thing, the telephone system will take getting used to. However much students complain, the general feeling is that the long-awaited ”private" phones system is an improvement over the old one. Parents Paying Less As Costs Rise The Auorlated Pren NEW YORK~The cost of a college education continues to rise but, paradoxically, some stu- dents this fall will pay out less of their parents‘ money than stu- dents of a few years ago. New methods of financing, more scholar