xt71ns0kwb0r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt71ns0kwb0r/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-09-06 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 06, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 06, 1973 1973 1973-09-06 2020 true xt71ns0kwb0r section xt71ns0kwb0r The Kentucky Kernel

September 6, 1973
Vol. LXV No. 21

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

When Daniel Ellsberg
and Anthony Russo
came to trial earlier
this year, the issue in
question was the
Pentagon Papers.
The case became
entwined in the
Watergate scandal.
dismissed, and now
high White House
operatives are to
answer for “dirty
tricks”.

Nixon aide

is indicted

By LINDA DEUTSCH
Associated Press Writer

Business brisk

Burger Chef

has little effect

By RON MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer

LOS ANGELES — Former presidential
adviser John D. Ehrlichman has been
indicted on charges of perjury, burglary
and conspiracy to commit a burglary,
sources close to a county grand jury said
today.

The sources also said three former
White House aides — Egil Krogh Jr.,
David Young and G. Gordon Liddy -— also
were indicted on various counts of
burglary, conspiracy and solicitation of a
burglary in connection with the break-in at
the office of Daniel Ellsberg‘s
psychiatrist.

Ehrlichman sent word through his at-
torney that he will surrender here
Tuesday. A district attorney’s spokesman
said Ehrlichman would be arraigned the
same day after being booked, finger-
printed and photographed. Tuesday is the
deadline set for voluntary surrender of
those indicted before arrest warrants
would be issued.

SEALED INDICTMENTS were
returned Tuesday in the 1971 break-in at
the Beverly Hills office of Ellsberg‘s
psychiatrist. Dist. Atty. Joseph Busch said
the indictments would be released publicly
only after any one of those named
surrenders to authorities

THE OPENING of the new Burger Chef
restaurant on Euclid Ave. has had little
effect upon the other two quick-service
restaurants in the campus area.

Although the new facility has a large
volume of business, with customers
standing lines outside during unusually
busy periods, managers of Tolly-Ho and
Kampus Korner say their businesses have
not declined.

“Anytime an eatery opens. naturally it
is going to hurt your business, but my
business has been hurt only slightly by the
opening of Burger Chef," Tom Simpson.
Kampus Korner manager said.

SIMPSON. who has operated eating
establishments in the University area for
24 years, said he is serving all the
customers he can handle.

He added that his restaurant is now
closing at 10 p.m.. but this is due to labor

Liddy. a convicted Watergate con-
spirator, is already in prison. The sources
who confirmed the indictments said Liddy
would be considered to have surrendered
only after federal authorities agree to
transport him to Los Angeles for
arraignment.

Busch said his office had notified at-
torneys for all of those indicted Tuesday
night. He indicated that all were willing to
surrender voluntarily, but said the at-
torneys have not yet fixed the times of
surrender.

SOURCES CLOSE TO the county grand
jury, which issued the indictment secretly
Tuesday. indicated that the perjury
charge resulted from contradictions
between Ehrlichman's testimony here last
June 8 in a secret grand jury session and
his later public testimony before the
Senate Watergate committee in
Washington.

Other contradictions were believed to
exist in three memorandums presented to
the grand jury during its probe.

The White House interoffice memos
reportedly involved Ehrlichman, Krogh
and Young in plans for the breakoin. Krogh
and Young headed the under-cover White

problems rather than a lack of all night
business.

“Our business is off about 40-50 per-
sons," Simpson said. but attributed the
decrease to the decline of all night service.
not Burger Chef competition.

THERE HAS been no decline in
customers at Tolly-Ho since the opening of
Burger Chef . said Helen Hollopeter. who.
along with her husband. owns the
restaurant.

Tolly-Ho is now the only campus eating
place offering all night service.

A Burger Chef spokesman said business
has been good since opening in mid-
summer. but would not estimate the
volume turned over since school began last
week. He added that the restaurant is also
having problems hiring employees.
especially for the late shift.

House “plumbers squad” charged with
plugging leaks of secret information.

THE INDICTMENT was ordered sealed
until at least one of those indicted had
surrendered. and Dist. Atty. Joseph Busch
declined comment on the identities of
those named.

The maximum sentence upon conviction
for burglary, conspiracy to commit a
burglary and perjury is 1 to 14 years in
prison on each count. The maximum
sentence for solicitation is 1 to 5 years.

The probe here was an offshoot of the
Pentagon papers trial.

The trial judge revealed last April that
he had been told of a break-in at the
Beverly Hills office of Dr. Lewis Fielding,
who had once treated Ellsberg.

LATER IT WAS disclosed that Liddy
and another Watergate conspirator, E.
Howard Hunt, had engineered the 1971
break-in at the request of “the plumbers
squad."

US. District Court Judge Matt Byrne
dismissed charges against Ellsberg and
Anthony Russo because of what he
declared was government misconduct.

Ehrlichman has maintained he did not
know of the break-in until after it oc-
curred. although he authorized “covert
activities" by the plumbers squad.

2 . . "l

The new Burger ('hei. next to
Memorial Coliseum on Euclid. has
had no apparent economic effect on
other campus eating places. (Kernel
photo by Brian Ilarrigan)

 

News In Brlef

from The Associated Press

0 Union ups demands?
0 inmates back in [oil

' Sirica stops lectures

0 News leaks found

0 Oh, those prices!
0 John Stennis returns
oUnion message due
- Terrorists hold it

0 Today's weather...

0 LEXINGTON. Ky. -— General
Telephone Co. of Kentucky accused a
striking union Wednesday of increasing its
demands by 67 per cent since the walkout
began July 23.

e MICHIGAN CITY. Ind. —- Inmates
were back behind bars at the Indiana State
Prison here Wednesday.

A final headcount to be conducted later
in the day ended a two—day operation to
secure the prison. which was rocked by a
35-hour Labor Day weekend disturbance.

0 WASHINGTON — Federal Judge John
J. Sirica silenced two major figures in the
Watergate scandal Wednesday, calling it a
disgrace that criminals could "profit by
their wrongdoing" by traveling the lecture
circuit.

The chief U.S. district judge ordered
convicted burglar James W. McCord Jr.
and confessed conspirator Jeb Stuart
Magruder to refrain from making public
addresses or granting interviews if they
want to remain free pending sentencing.

Magruder, a former White House
aide and deputy director of the Committee
for the lie-election of the President. told
Sirica in a letter the-only reason he con-
sidered a speaking tour was because “I
now find myself in financial difficulty.”

OWASHINGTON — Atty. Gen. Elliot L.
Richardson has received information that
some of the news leaks about a federal
investigation of Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew have come from within the Justice
Department. spokesman John W. Hushen
said. He said Richardson obtained the
information from news media sources.

0 WASHINGTON — The government
will hit consumers Friday with some of
the worst price news of the post-World War
II era when it releases its wholesale price
index for August.

Sources at the Treasury department
said Wednesday the index may show that
farm prices increased more than 20 per
cent during the month. and that the cover-
all wholesale price index increased by
more than a staggering 5 per cent.

0 WASHINGTON — Sen. John C.
Stennis. D—Miss.. who was shot twice
during a holdup Jan. 30. returned to the
Senate today to a standing ovation from
his colleagues.

Walking without assistance. Stennis
quietly shook hands with senators from
both parties as he took his seat on the
center aisle to listen to speeches of
greeting.

0 WASHINGTON — President Nixon
said Wednesday he will send Congress a
new State of the L'nion message calling for
action to stem inflation and to preserve the
nation's energy resources.

In his second news conference in two

weeks. Nixon also exhorted Congress not
to cut his defense budget. He cautioned
that reductions could send the United
States into critical negotiations with the
Soviet [him later this year in “a second-
class position."
0 PARIS — Three Palestinian terrorists
holding 11 persons in the Saudi Arabian
Embassy threw one of the hostages out a
window Wednesday night and threatened
to execute the others “right away“ unless
their demands for passage to an Arab
country were met.

...more cooling showers

Those long-awaited thundershowers
will continue. hopefully cooling things off
until Friday. Our local weatherperson
promises temperatures will go no higher
than the mid 80‘s. and will drop to the mid
60‘s this evening. The chance of rain
stands at 30 per cent. Friday will be warm
and partly cloudy.

 

  

 

 

  

 

 

The Kentucky Kernel ‘ .\\}_Ty§t¢g;u:§:7-

Established l894

Steve Swift, Editor in (mm

Mike Clark. Managing Editor

Jenny Swartz, News Editor

Kay? Coyte. Nancy Daly and Bruce winqes. Copy Editors

Charles Wolfe. Practicum Manaoer

Carol Cropper. Arts Editor

8 It Straub Sports Editor

Bruce Singleton. Photographic Manager

Editorials represent the opinions of the editors and not the Universi'

Editorials

Student store
provides a lesson

The closing of Student Services Inc. last week marks
a sad note for student participation in a worthwhile
activity.

The operation. which suffered internally from
personal rivalries had little chance of survival from
the beginning.

e'l‘he three commercial bookstores on campus.
«881 was a non-profit corporation intent on lowering
student expense accounts) had. and will continue to
have. a firm grip on student business because of the
quantity of materials offered.

~—'l‘he financial base used to begin the store was
little more than a 10 cent weekly allowance from
Student Government. This obviously was one reason
for the limited services provided by the store.

~-—rl“ailure to obtain a permanent manager for the
store contributed to chaotic conditions. Since its
conception last September. the store was handled by
three managments.

—However. the foremost reason for the failure of
the store was the shoddy planning of services to be

offered.
Last year's SG president. Scott Wendelsdorf, helped

create 881 through successful examples he picked up
from the Universities of Michigan and Wisconsin.

.-\t Michigan. a student services store began with a
cigarette stand in the student center. The odds of
thishappening often are slim. even selling the
cheapest alblums in town didn‘t help 881.

Wendelsdorf's intentions were good but better
planning would have meant a better store.

Hindsight improves one‘s vision to 20-20; we‘d like to
make a few suggestions for other attempts at a
student-run store.

—.-\ny group which draws up plans for such an ac-
tivity should spend considerable time analyzing
similar stores across the country:

—Several thousand dollars capital should be ac-
cumulated. It may take years to accomplish this but.
in the long run. the stOre would be well worth such an
investment.

Above all. hire a professional manager. Few
businesses can succeed with amateurs running the
organization.

We are sorry to see the store close. but from the
beginning the Kernel had predicted a quick death. The
students who devoted many hours to the store should
be commended and hopefully all connected with the
operation have learned some valuable lessons.

Rapist rumor false

Recent tumors of a rapist on campus have been
lalse. according to Joe Burch. director of public
safety. However. he said. two cases of detaining
females against their will did occur during the sum-
mer.

ln yesterday's Kernel (“Burch denies rapist
rumors.“ page 4) Burch noted that during the past
three years seven rapes and 22 detainments have
taken place on campus...a not too surprising. but
wholely unnecessary. figure.

Sexual attacks on campus can easily be reduced if
students would follow a few guidelines:

When walking at night. use the buddy system and
travel in pairs; numbers seemingly thwart would be
attackers. Report suspicious persons to the public
safety office immediately. it a sexual assualt takes
place. immediately report it to the public safety office.

 

 

 

 

 

 

W

Nlcholas Von Hoffman

King Features Syndicate

Labor Day: fun, sun and divorce

WASHINGTON — For people with
enough money to have slow vacations in
the lazy summer. Labor Day is as much
the beginning of a New Year as January
First. They come back to town ready with
new projects. ready to start over. That
early week of September is also when a lot
of them announce their divorces.

So many millions of us have been
divorced you think the word would have
gotten around that separation isn’t
necessarily the solution to marriage.
Perhaps we continue to put too much hope
in splitting up because our literature has
tended to concentrate on unhappy
marriages rather than unhappy divorces.

Phil Potter. the central figure in Dan
Wakefield's morosely excellent new novel.
”Starting Over“ rDelacorte Press. $7.95).
is just such a one who broke up a bad
marriage for a worse divorce. As the
embodiment of the ascendant assumption
that the childless. alimonyless American
male with a fresh bill of divorcement in his
hands has been liberated to carouse in the
hog heaven of the libido. Potter‘s men
friends wink feliciations at him.

Actually. men frequently take divorce
harder than their w.ves. Brought up. as so
many are. to deny their dependency on
anyone. they suffer an unhappy astonish-
ment at finding out that the jail they came
home to every night was also a home. and
that the second bachelordom they thought
they wanted so much is a pitiable drag.

WOMEN OFTEN permit themselves a
more realistic assessment of the pros and
cons of their marriages. and if their
divorces are no happier they are less
surprised at their pain. Trained to cook.
sew. and keep house. they can at least look
after themselves. which retread bachelors
like Potter. who live off TV dinners and
invites out. can’t do.

One of the reasons people get divorced is
that they forget why they got married.
Many men. for instance. can‘t fight off the
infection of Playboyism. until they go and
do it for a while. and then. like Potter in the
book. they may begin to look forward to
meeting a woman. taking her out and not
sleeping with her: “He would do it slow. he
would get to know her. He didn‘t just want
to get laid and go on to something else. in
the dulling old routine."

The first time around. when you‘re

young. it‘s easier to find a mate. You live
among singles and you‘re relaxed in the
knowledge that you will just naturally pair
off in monogamous happiness. The next
time. by the nearly universal testimony of
divorcees of both sexes. it‘s not so easy.
The available all seem like life's culls. and
the nights of searching and party going to
meet new people more often than not end
in sad little grotesqueries as when Potter
and a divorcee are interrupted. panicked
and humiliated in their passion by her
small son.

FAR FROM giving relief and providing
liberation. divorce opens up a new life of
lonely tedium culminating once a year in
“the trinity of public trials called
Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year‘s.
that annual punishing gauntlet know gaily
as - The Holidays." Hence. the desire to
find someone to share monogamy with can
approach the dimensions of a frightened
rage.

In Wakefield‘s book. Potter thinks he has
found someone to monogue with. but then
he runs into another phenomenon. He loses
sexual interest in her. To keep it going they
try to have sex in every imaginable
position and circumstance. That doesn‘t
work for long. and when his girlfriend
demands to know why. as so many hurt
and confused ex-partners do. the guilty,
defeated Potter can only say. “After doing
it a couple of weeks. it‘s as if the desire
drains out. And yet you‘re the same per-

son."
POTTER .-\NI) IIIS ex-girlfriend stop

sleeping with each other. but they don't
exactly break up. They become “allies,"
allies in the search for mates. going to
parties together. tippingr each other off as
to possibles. plotting and gossiping
together. Once this kind of relationship
existed only between members of the same
sex. but now in a time of many divorces
and later marriages. you see more and
more couples who are really allies.

In life and in Wakefield’s novel, allies
haven‘t found a way to beat the game, only
make it a little easier to play. The
girlfriend is defeated in her attempts at
matrimony and must settle for Christmas
by herself as the mistress of a shrink. And
Potter. unhappy in marriage and unhappy
out of it. weds a perfectly horrible young
woman he‘s barely slept with. He will lose
interest in her later.

J

 

 

 

  

Nixon's news conference
touches Agnew, tapes

WASHINGTON (AP) — Here,
at a glance, are items discussed
by President Nixon at his news
conference Wednesday:

CONGRESS: Nixon will send
to Congress Monday what
amounts to a new State of the
Union message urging action on
administration measures in-
volving inflation, defense and

energy.
011.: He said that if oil—
producing Arab states ex-

propriate U.S.-owned property
without fair compensation and
continue to increase oil prices,
they will lose their markets as
Western nations look to other
supply sources.

AGNEW: He recalled that he
already has expressed con—
fidence in Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew, under investigation in
connection with alleged political
kickbacks in Maryland and would
have no comment on the in-
vestigation.

WATERGATE TAPES: It
would not be appropriate, Nixon
said, to specify what kind of
Supreme Court decision it would
take before he would agree to
give up tapes of presidential
conversations sought by
Watergate probers.

PROPERTY: The ~Internal
Revenue Service audited his tax
returns for 1971 and 1972, he said,
and did not order him to pay any
more money. There has been
speculation about whether he was
subject to capital gains taxes on

his personal property tran-
sactions.
INFLATION: The ad

ministration is doing everything
that should be done to stop in-

flation without bringing a
recession, he said, and his
economic advisers believe some
of the benefits from various steps
should be evident over the next
few months.

MINIML'M WAGE: Nixon
said he will veto a bill to raise the
minimum wage from $1.60 and
hour to $2.20 in 1973 in hopes that
Congress will pass a new bill that
would not be inflationary.

Transylvania abolishes
standard grade system

By MIKE (‘L'NNINGiIIAM
Kernel Staff Writer
Transylvania University has
become one of the first to abolish
the grade point average (GPA),
that age—old determinant of who

passes and who fails.

Replacing it this fall is a
system whereby the student
receives a letter grade of A, B. C,
or CR (for Pass-Fail), for work of
a satisfactory or better than
satisfactory nature, and a grade
of NC (No Credit) for all other
completed work, according to
John F. Harrison, Dean of In-
struction at Transylvania
University.

“We’ve eliminated D entirely,"
Harrison said, “but the F has
been eliminated in name only.”

“The NC grade goes on the
record," he added, “and
represents failure.“

Under the new system, a
student will be considered
making satisfactory progress if
he has received credit for 75 per
cent of the hours attempted to
that date.

During the second year, those
with less than 75 per cent are
placed on probation, subject to
suspension if they fail to receive
grades of C-CR or better in 50 per
cent of their hours attempted.

()n conclusion of the second
year, a student may be dropped.
if after two consecutive quarters
of probation, he has less than the
75 per cent figure specified.

Harrison cited two motives for
changing the grading system.

“I think the grade point
average has a spurious accuracy.
...the input figures (4pts for an A,
etc.) are of a gross nature, and

the probational figure is
specific," he stated. ,
“Secondly and more im-

portantly, if a student now (under
the GPA system) is in danger of
suspension, he has no choice but
to go hunting for courses where
he can make an A or B, whether
he likes the course or not.”

Persons with D's presently on
their records will receive credit
for them, Harrison added. “When
you make a change like this you
have to make sure that no one is
caught in the middle."

He himself was the stimulator
of the change, Harrison
professed. Several years before,
as a professor. he fought for the
change and lost. He never
deserted the project. however.
and since his promotion to dean
in spring of 1971, has seen the
plans materialize.

 

(

Memos

 

. THERE WILL BE a K-Club Meeting at
7 .30p,m,on Thursday, September 6th in the
complex commons. To obtain football
tickets and get membership cards, at
tendance is necessary!!!

AUDITIONS for The Death and Lite of
Sneaky Fitch, Fine Arts Building, Guignol
Theatre, 710 p.m., September ion, I973.

AUDITIONS for Story Theatre, Fine Arts
Building, Guignol Theatre, 35 8. 7-9 pm,
September 5, and 3-5 pm. September 6.

FREE HELP SESSIONS: for all students
in Allied Health Professions. pre Pharmacy,
Pharmacy, pre Nursmg and Nursing. If you
need tutoring in any subject, call the Otfice
of Learning Serwces 258 4840 or Mr, Dana
Klmck (after 5 pm ) 266 8780.

 

BOOTS

for

GALS

Hiking
Work
Western
Downtown
Casual Jean 8. Denim
Shop

347 W. Main
255-8214

 

 

 

..FREE U information and organizational
meeting~Persons interested in teaching
Free U courses leave course description,
title, your name, address, and phone number
in the Free U box in the Student Government
office before Sept. I0. Anyone wanting to
help can come to the coordinators‘ meeting,
Tuesday, 7:30 pm in Room IIS, Student
Center.

STUDENT HEALTH ADVISORY COM-
MITTEE will hold its quarterly meeting
Thursday, September 6, at 6:30 pm. in the
Health Service Lobby. Any interested
student is welcome.

FREE COFFEE HOUSE -- Sunday, Sept.
9, 7 :30pm. Open to everyone. If you’d like to
be a performer call 255-0467 before Sept. 7.
Newman Center, 320 Rose Lane.

..STUDENT GOVERNMENT SENATE
meeting-Thursday, Sept. 6, 7:30 Room 24:
Student Center.

..VOTER REGISTRATION forms are
available in the Student Government office
for anyone who has not yet re-reglstered.

THE COUNSELING Center will otter two
free, non credit Developmental Reading
Study Skills classes during the tall semester
Register at 301 Old Agriculture Building
(next to Commerce Building) Classes begin
Monday, Sept. 10. Monday and Wednesday at
2 p m or 3 p. m. 2957

UK EQUINE CLUB welcomes any UK
student or faculty member interested in
horses to come to a meeting on Monday
Sept lOat 7p m in A 6, Agricultural Srience
BUlldInQ OSIO

2O % Off

On All
Grumbacher Art Supplies

With This Ad 8. U.I(.

ID. Card

10% OFF

The Year Round With U.K. ID. Card

720m
WWg

Offer Good Only at Fayette Mall

 

 

'I‘III‘

KI'IN'I‘I '(‘KY KENNEL. 'I'

hurts-day. September 6 1973—3

 

 

150 East High Street
(Corner High 8. Harrison)

     

“ I

Sundays, 11:00 8. /:30

Wednesdays, 6: 30

Calvary
Baptist
Church

L. Reed Polk, Jr.
Pastor

 

 

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ITALIAN
RESTAURANT

 

Serving the finest

Cold Beer, W'

PIZZA

Dine-in Or Carry-out

Open Til

Sundays 12 Noon To 9 PM

Big Bruckner Trio

1425 Alexandria Dr. 9 pm l0

3”. 'o' o o to We '0 to —_______r__‘r.vr at r. ./.i‘.:,?.

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Italian Foods

me, Cocktails

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33.01))...“

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1AM

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1 am
252-7597

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—The
Friendly

Ride The Bus

Blanding Cafeteria

To

Serve
ROSS L. RANGE

Pastor

Reaching

1/ Youth Retreats

1/ Opportunities For

 

Board the Church Bus 8: 45- 9: 00 a. m. at Kirwan-

Welcome 'D'
To I
Lexington ' I
0.. M

We're Here

Campus For Christ

Bible Studies on a College Level

/ Dynamic College Activities

Sundays Services

___-.5__.‘

ChurChfl

This Sunday

5'.

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I:

 

 

 

 

 

 l——'I‘lll‘1 KI‘IN'I'LI‘KY KENNEL. Thursday. September ti. iEITIl

Home Ec dean still

 

 

 

 

Downtown and Turf/and

 

You‘ll find all the sharp looks

JACQUELINE

    
     
  

 

at Hymson‘s

from $15 to $20

 

2012 Regency Road
Lexington, Kentucky

Play America's favorite game of catch
after enjoying LUMS Super Deluxe Cheeseburger
served With lettuce, tomato, onion slice, pickle

spear, cole slaw and french fries. . . .it’s a complete
11' cal.

and 60 fly the
Saucer!

(lt's yours to keep)

A * l a teacher at heart

By BILL I’INKS'I‘UN
Kernel Staff Writer

Marjorie S Stewart has been
Dean of the (‘ollege of Home
Economics since January, but in
spite of her position. it‘s apparent
that the dean is still a teacher at
heart

So she teaches a freshman
orientation course in home ec.
explaining that ”the Dean is
someone a freshman usually
doesn‘t meet."

STILL. there's more to it than
that. and. she continues with a
smile. "I like the teaching; I like
the interaction with young
people."

Stewart has been acting dean
since July. 1972 until her ap-
pointment was made permanent
in January. Before that. she
headed the Home Economics
Education Division of the College
of Education and had been
teaching at UK since 1969.

A main concern right now in
the College of Home Economics.
according to Stewart. is the need
to make the facilities more at-
tractive for students and
teachers,

PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS
are turned off. Stewart said. by
buildings and furnishings that
have little aesthetic appeal,

“We‘re in competition with the
other universities in and out of
the state." Stewart said. and
stressed that often it‘s the first
impression a student gets of a
school that influences his choice
of colleges.

Also of concern is the establish-
ment of a doctoral degree
program in the field of home
economics at L'K, According to
Stewart. there IS a great demand
for home economists with PhD‘s.

t‘l'RRI-ZN'I‘LY. no college or
university in Kentucky offers a
PhD in home economics. Stewart
said that such a program is in the
planning stage at UK and that
"perhaps" a PhD in nutrition and
food science would be available
in the fall of 1974. although she
cautioned that nothing is definite
so far.

Stewart graduated from the
L'niversity of California. did her
master's work at UK in home
eoconomics. and received her
PhD in home economics
education from Ohio State in 1968.

HILLEL OPEN HOUSE

7:30 p.m. . September 9
Student Center Room 206

A good place to meet fellow

Jewish students

. . . with free refreshments.

Do you:

Love Football

Have School Pride
Enjoy People (all ages)
Like to have fun

A KENTUCKY KITTEN

Official L. K Football Hostess Does!

Come learn more!

Interviews September 10th and 11th

7:00 PM Memorial Coliseum

Use lower left side entrance

 

 SCB features trio
of Bergman films

Till-I IIAL'NTING genius Of
Ingmar Bergman has earned for
him the throne of god in the

minds of contemporary film-
enthusiasts.
Next week Student Center

cinema will honor him with the
numberone spot in its series of
fall film festivals.

.'.‘:.l.*.

   
   

Scene From 4‘ “a
Through A Glass Darkly
The Touch will come forward
Monday evening as the first step
on a journey into the mind of
Bergman. Its story of a woman.
Bibi Anderson, who reaches out—
first to her husband (Max von
Sydow) and then to her lover
(Elliot Gould)—only to find
herself alone reveals a theme of
alienation which runs through
many of Bergman's films.
With Tuesday arrives The
Passion of Anna. Here again. the
idea that man loves alone

presents itself. Actors Sven Nyk-
vist. Bibi Anderson. Max Von
Sydow and Erland Josephson
create a world in which every
man is doomed to live on an
island.

Through a Glass Darkly ex-
tracts for examination one day of
a young woman's slow descent
into insanity. Her father, played
by Gunnar Bjornstrand. can only
look on with the coldness of a
scientific observer as his
daughter loses her mind while
her brother. Lars Passgard, uses
the opportunity to set up an in-
cestuous relationship with her.

Bergman's talent as a director
needs no testimony. If. as Cinema
Chairman Mark Lusk said. the
purpose of this trilogy is to
“provide a showcase for the

[ The Arts

director”, no further incentive
should be needed for the at-
tendance of any serious movie-
goer.

Showings will be at 6:30 p.m.
and 8:30 p.m. in the Student
Center Theatre.

 

 

At Canterbury House

Play season begins

By JOSEPH STONE
Kernel Staff Writer

AFTER A HOT summer break
the Canterbury House is ex-
pecting a season full of buf-
foonery and a dash of catharsis
starting with Edward Albee's Zoo
Story.

No stranger to Canterbury
House is Zoo Story‘s director,
Elizabeth Clark. who has ap-
peared in many of the theatre's
productions in the past. The same
goes for Ron Aulgur, who will
protray Jerry. and Dan Chap-

man, playing the role of Peter.

The play’s opening night is
Friday, Sept. 7 at 8:30. It will run
Friday through Sunday—both
this weekend and the next— with
curtain time being the same for
each night’s performance.

TICKET PRICES are $1 for
students and $2 for non-students.

The theatre is located in the
basement of the Canterbury
House. across from the UK Fine
Arts Building on Rose Street.
Reservations may be secured by
phoning 269—2626.

 

 

347 South Lime

"For The Best
in

Fine Italian

 

 

Maria's
Italian Restaurant

Phone 252-8313

Don't Miss Our

Buffet Lunch

Served each weekday
from It p.m.to t p.m.

 

 

0

use

 

r. i
'_-‘W “was-

In ' 9.

Food"
7 .. WWW—M—"mm-«W m- «~--~~~~«-»-«;
a” cup THIS coupou“! a"'a'a‘-/ =
Er This Coupon Good For
50‘ Off A Pitcher Of Beer

.

50‘ Off Any Medium Pizza
3 This coupon good only at Maria‘s, Thursday,
Sept. 6, from 5 p.m. to It p.m.

'0"- -Q-’..'.'...‘

I I'a'e'e'a‘e’e'e’eta'e'e'

a

\

 

d-Qonfibfifidu- ------------

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Student Center

Board Welcomes YOU

The SCB is now making plans
for fall and spring campus-wide
programs. The following com-
mittees. responsible for varied
student events and activities. are

open for membership:

—Cinema

—Coffee House
—Concerts
—Contemporary Affairs
—Dramatic Arts
—Homecoming-LKD
——Hospitality
—Leadership Conference
——Mini Concerts

—Quiz Bowl
—Recreation

——Special Events
—Visual Arts

Tlll‘l KI‘INTL'CKY IQSRNEL. Thursday. September 6- ”73—5

Applications are available in
room 203. Student Center.

'

  
  

For more information. call 258-
8867.

 

° LANE ALLEN PLAZA
' NICHOLASVILLE, KY.
' OPEN SOON

  
    
   
   
 

WI EDEMANN

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12 OZ. CANS

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Paul Masson Crackting Rose

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ii—Tlll-I KENTL'CKY KERNEL. Thursday. September 6. I973

 

 

CLOSE OUT

6.88
KENTS

South Upper only

 

All Mens

Blue Fancy

White JEANS Corduroy

Bells Regular
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Flares Legs
Brands

Reg. to 10.95 LEVIS Reg. to 10.00
FARAH

Close Out Close Out

Price CAMPUS Price

5.88

Downtown

 

 

 

 

 

lowéjn l-ial’s

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Fashions
in

Jr. Sizes

Tops
Breeches

Trouser-S