xt72ng4gqh0w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt72ng4gqh0w/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-06-21 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, June 21, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 21, 1973 1973 1973-06-21 2020 true xt72ng4gqh0w section xt72ng4gqh0w Kentucky

Kernel

Traffic trends surprising

UK engin

Vol. LXV No. 3
Thursday, June 2l,
Eight pages

1973

completes study

By CHARLES WOLFE
Kernel Staff Writer

A recently completed year—long study of
traffic problems and accidents by the UK
Engineering Department has disclosed
some surprising facts concerning the
causes of many mishaps.

If you feel slightly claustrophobic in an
enclosed automobile, or can’t afford air
conditioning, you probably do most of your
driving with the window down. You also
run a greater risk of having an accident,
accor ding to Dr. John W. Hutchinson,
professor of civil engineering.

THE REASON FOR the increased
danger lies in the higher level ofoutside
noise. Tests have shown noise in general
can have adverse effects on people. In this
case, however, the trouble stems not from
the sounds we hear, but from infrasounds,
which have a very low frequency and

cannot be discerned by the human ear.

According to Hutchinson, infrasound can
cause itching, headaches, irritability, and
motion sickness. They can also slow
reflexes and extend reaction time by as
much as 30 percent.

The 16 member survey team, comprised
of students and faculty, also discovered
that an accident rate is inversely
proportional to the barometric pressure.
The rate invariably increased with the
approach of a storm front, but declined
whenever the barometric pressure rose,
and fair weather resulted.

IN CONDUCTING THE survey, the
team worked in co-operation with the city
and county police departments. They were
informed of accidents as they occurred,
and team members, usually two at a time,
were dispatched to the scene by radio.

The collected data was equally divided

between accidents involving property
damage and those resulting in personal
injury. Those involving property damage
were so numerous that they did not have to
rely on the police for notification. while
those with personal injuries were finally
restricted to fatalities.

Most of the accidents investigated oc-
curred in Fayette County, but team
members also went as far as Louisville
and North Carolina.

DRIVER ERROR was a causal factor in
90 percent of the cases, and was the
primaty factorin 30 to 50 percent.

Hutchinson cited three shorcomings in
the quality and safety of automobileslle
called the elimination of the side wing vent
on many cars “a critical error,“ beause it
necessitated opening the whole window to
get ventilation and created undesirable air
currents within the car. Better quality

Conferences, special events on
tap throughout summer

Conferences and other special events
will bring 21,900 persons to the UK campus
this summer.

Junehosted 16 events, July will host 14
events, and two are scheduled for August.
The mainstay of the activities are for the
summer Advising Conferences of some
10,000 new students and their parents
during 19 days in July. In addition, three
cheerleading camps are booked at UK’s

Seaton Center, with some 2,232 high school
cheerleaders expected to attend.

The Kentucky 4-H program will hold six
different workshops including the 4-H
Congress, foods demonstrations, talk
meet, dairy and livestock judging, electric
workshop, and fashion revue.

Other conferences planned for the
summer include the 16th annual Executive
Housekeepers Institute (June 25-28), the

Flegle rejects University suggestion

Student Government will remain in Student Center

By CHARLES WOLFE

Kernel Staff Writer
After more than a year of

planning and postponements, the
proposed move of the Student
Government offices from the
Student Center to Alumni Gym
has been cancelled.

The proposed move had been
supported by former SG
president Scott Wendelsdorf and
was originally planned to take
place at the beginning of the 1972
fall semester. The move was then
postponed until the end of the
semester when problems arose
concerning the renovation of
Alumni Gym. A second post-
ponement moved the target date
to the end of the 1973 semester.

DURING THE 86 presidential
campaign, however, Jim Flegle
came out strongly against the
move, contending it would
remove the offices from the heart
of student activities and the
student traffic-flow.

Meanwhile, other student
organizations moved their offices
into the Alumni Gym. These
include the Human Relations
Center, Graduate Professional
Students Association, and all

student organization offices
formerly located in Frazee Hall.
In a June 5 letter, Vice-
President of Student Affairs
Robert Zumwinkle urged Flegle
to reconsider his stand against
the move and cited several
reasons in support of it.
ZUMWINKLE NOTED THAT
the square footage in Alumni
Gym is more than double that
allotted to SC in the Student

Student Government will continue to be located
Gym. (Kernel photos by LG. Yopp.)

organizations in Alumni

Kentucky High School Speech Institute
(June 29-July 28), Kentucky Summer Wind
Ensemble (June 17-29), Kentucky Youth
Seminar (June 25-27), Kentucky Board of
Veterinary Examiners (July 10), Ken-
tucky Farm Machinery Dealer Clinic
(July 17), Kentucky Labor School (July 15-
20), Bluegrass National 1973 (Aug. 2-5),
and the Writing Workshop for People over
57 (Aug. 5-11).

Center, and that a space shortage
problem had already been ex-
perienced.

He further stated that the
Student Center needs space for
meeting rooms and program-
ming requirements, that SG
would have greater interaction
with other organizations in
Alumni Gym, and that the hours
of access to 80 offices would not

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky 40506

eering department

control is needed on the assemblyline, he
added, as evidenced by the frequent,
large‘scale recalls by the big car
manufacturs.

Finally, recent safety innovations, such
as energy-absorbing bumpers and door—
mounted steel guard beams, cal also be
dangersous.

THE NEW BL‘MPERS. available on all
full-size General Motors and American
Motors cars, absorb impact with two
compression cylinders, operating like
shock absorbers. Instead of air, the
cylinders contain nitrogen under pressure,
with inherent danger of explosion when a
puncture occurs, or when exposed to flame
or extreme heat. The Los Angeles Police
Department has instructed its policemen
and firemen when investigating an ac-
cident to be cautious around new bumpers,

Hutchinson added.
Continued on Page 8, Col. ‘2

 

 

{Stud-:nt health fee

deadline extended

The Student Health Service fee
payment for the eight-week
summer session has been ex-
tended until 4 p.m., Monday,
June 25. Student Health Service
administrator, Jean Cox, did not
give any reason for the extension.
Payments can be made at the
Health Service in the UK Medical

l Center.

 

 

1,

be restricted as they are in the
Student Center.

Zumwinkle noted that the
student traffic flow to Alumni
Gym will increase with the
presence of the organizations
now there. He also said that SG‘s
continuation in the Student
Center would not be subject to
review and reversal at a later
date, nor would office space be
increased.

in the Student (‘enter (left) rather than joining other student

 

 k
n uc
Kgrnel y

Established 1894

Steve Swift. Editor in Chief
Ron Mitchell. Managing Editor
Kaye (‘oyte. (‘opy Editor

'I‘om Moore. (‘opy Editor

“the Clark. Sports Editor

Jn, Rhodemyre, Arts Editor

Immortals represent the opinion of the Editors. not the University

r

Editorials

Student Government should
move offices

After almost six months 01 arguing
with the Administration, the Student
Government has refused to move the
organization‘s offices from the
Student Center to Alumni Gym.

Last December. George Ruschell,
assistant vice president for business
affairs, announced that student
organizations located in the Student
Center and Frazee Hall would be
given new office space in the recently
renovated gym. SG’s first two m0ving
dates, scheduled for mid-January and
early spring, were postponed because
the remodeling wasn‘t completed.

When other organizations began
moving in near the end of last
semester, Jim Flegle, newly elected
Sg president, came out against the

move in his campaign and as a
member of the Student Senate,
submitted a resolution objecting to
the move which the senate passed.

About the only reasons Flegle gives
for staying in the Student Center are
that the present offices are near other
student activities and heavy student
traffic. He says the move next door to
the gym will keep students away from
SC.

Dr. Robert Zumwinkle, vice
president for student affairs, pointed
out in a June 5 letter to Flegle that
twice as much office space for SG is
available in the gym and it would only
be a matter of time before students
began frequenting the new location.

 

Jim Flegle

With the opportunity to gain twice
as much space and extra room later
when Student Government’s services
expand we can’t understand why
Flegle doesn’t want to give up his
cramped quarters and sacrifice his

 

r

elitist Student Center address by
moving in with other student
organizations.

His adamant refusal to Zumwinkle
forced the latter to announce that UK
has no intention to review the
situation again and SG will have to
stay with its present headquarters
even after Flegle ends his term of
office.

Before it’s too late, Flegle should
reconsider his choice and accept the
new office space in a written apology
to the administration so his suc-
cessors and SG services to students
will benefit in the long run.

Or is he afraid there won't be a
showcase nearby in which to display
his debate trophies?

Letters policy

 

 

By ANDREI VOZNESENSKY

Boredom is a fast of the spirit,
When the living juices

Are dreaming about lofty things.
Let‘s not sin by temptation.

Boredom is a fast of the spirit,

It is a solitary supper,

The carousing of enemies is boring,
And your comrade is doubly boring.

Art lies, thought is scant.
lmpudent rhymes are boring.
And your darling is as boring
As a whore who plays the nun.

Boredom is the cemetery of the soul,
Neither sadness nor delight,

All your aces

Dissolve into sixes.

What a bore, what a great bore...
It is boredom which made Thomas
Cook

Feel that his most cherished land

Had become as disgusting as a bitch.

%‘3§WW

‘mgpawaefosr—

'Tell me more Q/flfl

about this energy crisis

of which you speak. . .’

 

A great fast of the spirit:

The applauding audience is boring.
Your spirit takes a rest,

Like your gut.

Ah, what a gourmand you used to be.
You added pain like sauce

To an enchanted romance,

It gave the conscience a pang...

Transform melancholy into a joke?
Perhaps someone will bite off an ear.
Ho—hum. Boredom and then it will.

The hybrid of boredom round the
world
With our own nagging boredom.
You spit on the mirror
And the spit does not hit its target.

It is boring to reach the ceiling
With half a jump.

It is boring not to touch the floor
With your foot, hanging from the
ceiling.

 

Editors reserve the right to edit, for
space purposes, any letter over 250
words. Send viewpoints to“Letters”,
The Kentucky Kernel, 114, Journalism
Buildiig, CAMPUS. Letters not?
accompanied by name. campus

address, telephone number,
classification. and major will not be

printed.

 

Editor’s note: The “Comment” page is a
forum for student and faculty opinion. In-
order to preserve equal access to this opinion
page, Comments from any one person or
organization will be limited to one per week.
Comments soliciting funds or attendance at
meetings will be referred to The Kernel’s
“Memos” column.

Editors reserve the right to edit, for space
purposes, any'comment over 750 words.
Comments must be accompanied by the
writer's name, campus address, telephone
number, classification and must be typed
double-spaced. Send viewpoints to“Com-
ment”, The Kentucky Kernel, 114 Journalism
Building, CAMPUS.

   
 
  
 
 

 

 

\WEgAIIDCANTKUN
BO , ILLAG,
THAT LL BEA
CKISlS/

$3?

 

  

a page for opinion from inside and outside the university community

 

30969 III

 

Chinese kick the opium habit

By PAUL LOWINGER

DETROIT —— Another country that
once had an addiction problem—one
that lasted for almost 200 years and
involved an incredible 25 per cent of
its population—is China.

Today China is virtually drug-free—
and the methods the Chinese used to
eradicate their addiction problem
might well offer methods we could
use to achieve the same results.

China was forced into addiction by
the Opium Wars. Contrary to popular
belief, these wars—from 1839 to 1842
—did not originate because China
wanted to export opium. They began
when China resisted England's demand
to import opium in exchange for Chi-
nese products—mostly tea, silk, and
porcelain. China lost these wars, and
among other indignities was forced to
exchange its goods for opium. As a
result it became a highly narcoticized
country, a victim of ruthless Western
economic and political policy. By 1850
an entire fifth of the revenue of the
British Government of India — the
source of opium — came from Chinese
consumption of this drug.

Obviously to enlarge the market for
opium, China was forced to create

a huge number of addicts. And it did.
In October of 1949 the People’s Re-
public of China was proclaimed. With-
in a year the Communist Government
instituted a comprehensive program
designed to eliminate this threat to the
nation. All evidence indicates that by
1953 the problem of narcotic drug
abuse was practically eliminated.

One important factor was the
changed ideology of the young people
—-no new supply of addicts was forth-
coming. The changes in outlook in-
cluded a redefinition of the nation and
its youth, of their worth and role. In
rural areas this new definition was
based on land distribution; collective
farming; new educational, social, and
vocational opportunities; and the elec-

 

 

tion of local councils. In the cities it
took the form of nationalization of
commerce and industry, full employ-
ment, worker control, and the end of
foreign domination.

This total ideological transformation
of the younger generation was accom-
panied by the reintegration of Chinese
society through small street commit-
tees that offered cultural leadership.

Equally significant in the Chinese
drive to eliminate narcotic addiction
were its methods of plugging the
source. China is 80 per cent rural, and
an unknown but significant part of the
land had been turned into poppy cul-
tivation. The first major economic and
political mass campaign of the Gov-

ernment was land reform, and this aim '

was coordinated with elimination of
poppy growth. Distribution of land
from large landholders to landless
peasants was accompanied by the need
to convert the opium cash crops to
badly needed food crops. Today China
produces enough opium to meet its
medical needs, but no more.

Smuggled opium was still a source
of the drug, and China acted to stop
this supply with a policy of “carrot
and . stick.” Leniency was recom-
mended for employes and workers of

S
o°
a” a"
O a”

Q

AduItx
(‘hildreniiilfil -\I 73

WAKY AND BOB BAGERIS
PRESENT IN LOUISVILLE

opium traffickers; but heavy penalties
existed for those controlling the traf-
fic, manufacture, or growth of opium.

China's attitude toward the individ-
ual reformed addict was one of good-
willed congratulations, and represents
another important reason why the nar-
cotic problem was overcome. The re-
habilitation of opium addicts began
with their registration. Arrangements
by city-wide antiopium committees for
addict rehabilitation included treat-
ment to break the habit at home, in
clinics and in hospitals.

At every stage of personal rehabili-
tation the ideological motivation was
stressed. Given China’s attitudes, this
ideology was strong on political, so-
cial, and economic information. But
the important thing is that the anti-
drug campaign recognized that the de-
sire and will of the addict is ultimately
the controlling factor of addiction.
China’s policy was not simply to de-
prive a person of drugs, but to replace
the need for narcotics with a forceful,
national commitment. Equally signifi-
cant, the former addict was fully ac-
cepted back into Chinese life without
official stigma or prejudice.

Naturally, many questions have to
be answered about the total success
of the Chinese experience. Is there an
addict population living in labor camps
or prisons because of failure to re-
habilitate? Do the rehabilitated addicts
all function as useful members of Chi-
nese society? To what extent would
addiction be a problem in China if its
internal and border controls were less
stringent? Does traditional Chinese
medicine offer useful ideas about ad-
diction treatment?

Paul Lowinger, M.D.. is ad-
junct professor of psychiatry at
Wayne State University in
Detroit. This article is excerpted
from the Monthly, Medical
Opinion.

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4-THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. June 21. 1978

 

 

The Kentucky Kernel
. o . Priscilla Lane, Lexington. Kentucky ‘

We'll be the first to admit Its not for Begum "1° CW m Wand Dob'tsm

. e rn r . n . n I971.

GVOI‘YOHO. BUI WOUIdn'l’ ll be 0 SZLsontTIZtagse £>f>lst‘.:g‘e.sspa'idc attouLgsijngton,

The Kentucky Kernel, llJ Journalism
BUlldlng, University of Kentucky.
Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Mailed live
times weekly during the school year except
during holidays and exam periods, and twice
weekly during the summer session
Published by The Kernel Press, Inc. 1272
contin00usly as The Kentucky Kernel since
Kentucky.

Advertising published herein is intended to

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KERNEL TELEPHONES

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Managing Editor, News Desk 2574740

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Photography 258-56!”

 

 

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tit—m get—eel

 

Sports
Go-Round

by Mike Clark

The 3 10,000 urinalysis

Walter Byers, head of the National Collegiate Athletic Association,
announced Tuesday that college athletes may have to undergo
mandatory urinalysis tests, perhaps beginning as early as September.

The tests will be performed to insure players aren't using illegal
drugs to kill pain or possibly improve performance.

In spirit, this announcement is consistent with the NCAA‘s policy
that drugs and athletics don’t mix. In practice, however, this latest
suggestion, if accepted, could bode ill for college sports.

Such control measures are unprecedented in NCAA history and
would lower athletes to the level of race horses.

The first three finishers in every horse race in Kentucky must un-
dergo urinalysis to guard against artificially-induced improvement in
an animal. Such would be the case for the athlete if this latest idea
materializes.

Aside from the moral question of control, consider the additional
cost to the individual athletic department.

Outpatient urinalysis at the UK Medical Center costs :4. Multiply
this figure by the number of athletes and the number of games played
by each team, and the cost approaches $10,000 yearly. As we all know,
the ticket buyer will have to pick up the tab.

In light of this, it seems appropriate that each school should police
the trainers who doctor the athletes daily. Such is in keeping with
normal Athletic Department policy and wouldn’t increase the cost to
the individual fan.

 

 

In this day of instantaneous worldwnde communications, it is dif-
ficult for a newspaper to operate without a wire service ticker tape.

The news of the world flows over these machines, informing
readers, listeners, and viewers of events as they happen.

Apparently, these machines receive precious little information from
China these days, regardless of the official friendships established in
the past year.

A case in point is news concerning a State Department All-Star
basketball team’s tour of China. In a word, there is no news.

The first game of this eight-game stint was played Tuesday, with the
Americans winning 88~59 before 18,000 fans in Peking North
Carolina’s George Karl was the leading scorer.

UK’s Kevin Grevey and Jim Andrews are members of the team and
their performance is of interest. to Kernel readers. With this in mind, a
request was made of the Associated Press for additional information
on their respective performances.

The AP said it was difficult to collect what information it had
already delivered. No AP writer was allowed to accompany the team;

As the AP source said, “If you want information about Grevey and
Andrews, they’re going to have to do something pretty spectacular.”

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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. June 21. 1973-5

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SERVING DAILY FROM 11:00 A.M.

 

Look for the Italian Flag
across from Lexington Dodge

 

Heavy spring rains have postponed the completion date of

Booked the library addition until sometime in December.

Originally scheduled to be completed in August, the 83.7
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F. Spragens, assistant director of the design and construction A PA RTM E N T H U N TIN G 1’
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Kentucky \‘

 

 

    
   

 

 

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6-THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday, June 21. 1973

he

Student Yearbook

NEEDS EXPERIENCED
STUDENTS Ti):
9 Prepare Layouts

' Write Copy
' Handle Business

' Photograph Events

Pick Up An Application

Room H3 Journalism Building
Application Deadline is June, 22, I973

How good a

salesman are you?

Interviews are now being conducted for
summer Advertising Salesman openings with
The Kentucky Kernel.

An automobile and approximately 15 to 20
hours time are required per week. Working
time is flexible and can be adapted to an in-
dividual’s class schedule. Ad sales experience
is helpful, but not required.

Pay is seven percent commission (some of our
sales staff earn an average of $250 monthly)

For an interview or for more details call Ken
Stuart at 258-4646 or come by The Kernel
advertising office in Room 113, Journalism
Building.

The
Kentucky

Kernel

in

 

 

 

The Arts]

 

Sequel outclasses '42'

By PETER JONES
Kernel Staff Writer

Sequels are supposed to be
worse than the films they are
based on. However, in the case of
the “Class of ’44" that rule does
not hold.

Neither it nor the “Summer of
‘42,“ on which it is based, is filled
with meaning; but “’44” is a
definitely better film than
“Summer.”

“Summer" was a tear jerker
based for the most part on a
young boy’s love for an older
woman. It was mired in mucky
unrealistic nostalgia from
beginning to end.

“’44” has a melodramatic love
theme, too‘ but it is given much
less importance. It also happens
to have some entire sequences
which are good.

The opening graduation
sequence, complete with a rah-
rah speaker, a valedictorian
reading a rancid poem and the

senior class singing en masse,
may have been an attempt at
nostalgia; but it ended up looking
fairly realistic.

The rest of the film, basically
about the war’s splitting up three
boyhood friends is nostalgic; but
because of a better script and
better acting than was present in
“Summer”, it avoids going
overboard into the bottomless
mire, which uncontrolled
nostalgia can become.

“The Class of ’44” now playing
at the Chevy Chase Cinema is not
by any means a particularly good
film; but it is a pleasant and
somewhat humorous diversion.

Film series continues

For the third summer in a row,
the Council on Women‘s Concerns
is sponsoring “The Amazing
Summer Film Series."

Coming up this Wednesday will
be “Rachel, Rachel.“ It stars
Joanne Woodward and is directed
by her husband, Paul Newman.
The following Thursday, July 5,
the series will present an an-
thology of silent comedy films by
Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton
and Laurel and Hardy. ”House of
Wax,” starring Vincent Price,
will be shown on July 11.

An evening of short films
follows on July 18 including a

variety of features. Among the
notables here are WC Fields’
classic “The Fatal Glass of
Beer” and “Betty Boop for
President." “The Lady
Vanishes,“directed by Alfred
Hitchcock, will be presented on
July 25. The final series offering
is ”Millhouse.” This political
satire is made up of actual
footage of Richard Nixon’s
political speeches.

Admission for each show is 75
cents and shows will be held in
the Classroom Building, room
118.

3,5 and 10 Speed Or
Coaster Models Available To
Rent by Semester ()r Year

New and used bike sales
and accessories. We
service all makes.

Do away with parking
worries; ride right to your

Dmlrls

Ph. 277-6013

1985 llarrodsburg Road

Open 10 to 8 pm Daily
Sat. It) to 6 pm

 

 

  

 

Blue Notes

by Jay Rhodemyre

Records have been a number
one interest of mine for the last
six years. It‘s only natural
because I buy a lot of them. I like
to keep a lot of different kinds of
music around so I won’t get
bored. It‘s not an unnatural wish
so I try to fulfill it. For this
reason, record prices are also of
great interest to me. If you like to
buy a lot of albums, I am sure
that you are aware of the high
price of records. To eliminate a
lot of running around for you, the
following survey may help you
save some money and get what
you want.

Ten stores were priced for
records with a list price of $5.98.
This is the price of most albums
sold today. The survey runs from
the highest retail price to the
lowest. Comments on service
may or may not accompany the
listings.

The most expensive place to
purchase an album in Lexington
is Variety Records in Turfland
Mall. They charge $5.98 for a
$5.98 album and you would be
surprised how many people pay
the price. Somebody must, they
are still in business. Camelot
records in the Fayette Mall is
second highest at $5.22. A good
sale is pretty rare at these two
establishments. I consider a good
sale to be prices set $2.99 to $3.33
on all stock in the store with a
$5.98 list price on the record.

Next comes the UK bookstore
at $4.59. They are not really into
records that much. They
naturally concentrate on school
supplies. The same goes for
Kennedy Bookstore which
charges $4.55. Two other stores
that charge $4 and up are Sound
2000 and Mr. Wiggs at $4.19 and
$4.09 respectively.

Now we get to the places that
sell records at less than $4 and
quite actually have more
responsive service. Wallace’s
Bookstore charges $3.99 for
albums. That is more or less
reasonable. However, a big plus

in their favor is their one-man
service department by the name
of Jim Bob McKee. He knows
what he is talking about and if he
doesn’t, he finds out. This kind of
service is unusual of all the
bookstores including Wallace's,
excluding Jim Bob. Barney
Miller’s charges $3.95, and their
service is very friendly.

Student Services takes the
award for lowest prices in town at
$3.89. They have an inventory
rivaling anybody’s, and they are
very friendly people who want to
help. If you have had trouble
finding them, they have moved.
Thier new location is between the
Baptist Student Union and
Pa