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THE CARDINAL VOL. XXXVII, NO. 2'7 UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVO..LE, LOmSVO..LE, KENTUCKY 40208 GDI scores landslide victory • Student Senate elections ill MAY 13, 1966 A. pplications for ex-officio offices now being accepted Indoor Fryberger Sing won by Threlkeld Hall and Phi Kappa Tau GDI swept the University Student Senate elections held on campus this week, claiming seven at-large and three Arts and Sciences voting positions. Winning from the GreeksDorms- Independents combine were at-large - Clay Copeland, Karen Garvey, Judy Gay, Donna Lang, Margaret Lewis, Jessica Loving, and Jackye Shoptaw; Arts and Sciences-Ben Taylor, Tom Thomas, and Martin Yenawine. APT took four seats The All People's Ticket (APT), the opposing combine, took four seats: at-large-Rose Mary Fleck and Diane Giannini; Arts and Sciences- Bruce Ashley and Al Rittle. The two combines ran tickets only for the Arts and Sciences and at-large elections. Candidates running at large are voted upon by students in all UL schools. Senators elected from other University of Louisville schools were Music School - Connie Karem (unopposed); Medic a 1 School - William Cheatham and Charles Eldridge (both unopposed); Dental School-Brenda Free Ian d (unopposed); Law School-Alan Farber and Kenneth Hirsch; Speed School-Alan Mateja, Scott Dam, and Gerald Purdom. Ken Matheis and Richard Monroe tied in the Business School election. The tie was broken at a Senate meeting last night, but the results could not be obtained before The Cardinal went to press. The University Student Senate VISTA. to seek UL volunteers this Wednesday University of Louisville students will ha an opportunity on Wednesr May 18, to volunteer for servi · •n Indian reservations, among rru6.·ant farm workers, in urban slums, and in rural pockets of pover \~ ranging from Appalachia' ·llows to Alaskan villages .. Repn. - · 3.tives from Volunteers In Service To America (VISTA) will be on campus to outline the program and its role in the war on poverty. A table will be located in the UC Building between the hours of 9 and 3. In add1tion, a 15 minute film "Small Miracles," which shows VISTA Volunteers at work, will be shown at 2:30p.m. in Room 33. VISTA Volunteers serve for one year, lrece~ving living expenses a'ld medical care. In addition t~ : n allowance for food, housinr ·avel and clothing, they receiv( ~ · •O at the end of their service. No er. •. nee examinations or interview - .t.re necessary to join VISTA. Persons over 18 are eligible; there are no education or experier: c--t... requ.ireinents. Those who wish to join must submit two applications which may be obtained from the VISTA information center on campus. Further information is available there and in the insert between pages 4 and 5. is now accepting applications for ex-officio offices. Application forms may be picked up iri the Dean of Students' Office and must be returned by Thursday, May 19. Candidates must be full-time UL students and have a 1.0 cumulative point standing. The ex-officio officers will be elected at the Senate meeting May 19. St4ff Photo Elections here always produce a large crowd of vote soliciters, who accost anyone entering the UC Building. Last Tuesday's senate elections (above) were no exception. For the second consecutive year Threlkeld Hall Dormitory and Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity were judged best in the annual Fryberger Sing competition held Wednesday evening in the Manual High School auditorium. Placing second to Threlkeld Hall in the women's division was Kappa Delta Sorority. Nu Sigma Chi Fraternity was runner-up in the men's division. The Outstanding Fraternity Trophy, annually presented by Kappa Delta, went to Phi Kappa Tau. Chi Omega, for the third year, won the Outstanding Sorority Trophy awarded by Phi Kappa Tau. Stanley Grubbs given award Voted Outstanding Senior Man by the Arts and Sciences Student Council was the late Stanley Grubbs, who died in an automobile accident April 1. Grubbs had received the Outstanding Man award in his freshman, sophomore, and junior years. A & S men and women also receiving Council awards were Senior Class-Ellen Sue Porter, Junior Class-David Banks and Patty J ohmann, and Sophomore Class-Ernie Allen and Cathy Cayce. The Mortar Board award for the Outstanding Freshman Woman went to Kathy Witherington. Larry Weisenthal was selected Outstanding Freshman Man by Phi Eta Sigma honorary. Clad in tartans, the Threlkeld Hall group sang a medley of selections from the musical "Brigadoon." Choral selections from the play "Oliver" were presented by Kappa Delta. Phi Kappa Tau won with the song "Malaguena." Nu Sigma Chi presented the "Navy Hymn," dedicating their selection to the American soldiers fighting in VietNam. Thirteen groups participated in the twenty-ninth annual Fryberger Sing. At the end of the program they were led in singing the University of Louisville alma mater by Dr. Walter Dahlin. The Sing, usually held in the UL Quadrangle, was moved to the Manual Auditorium due to weather conditions. Serving as Master and Mistress of Ceremonies were students Don Waddell and Linda Sorenson. ODK taps 11 Fall semester registration next week as A&S College tries new procedure Tapped at Fryberger for Omicron Delta Kappa men's leadership honorary were A & S-John Anuszewski, Clay Copeland, Kendall Hockenbury, and Robert Oakley; Speed-Arch Davis, Charles Gnerlich, James Prentice, Norman Toombs, and Dan Verser; LawRobert Baughman; and Music - James Walker. Mortar Board senior worhen's honorary and Cwens sophomore women's honorary also tapped new m e m b e r s that evening. Chosen for Mortar Board were Amy Arnold, Carolyn Bishop, Martha Chute, Sylvelin Felde, Karen Garvey, Carolyn Gettler, Donna Gianinni, Kathy Gibson, Phyllis Goff, Sherry Greenlee, Pamela Hascal, Gene Haynes, Donna Hoog, Patty J ohrnann, Connie Karern, Janelle Kirkland, Teresa Leonhardt, Ruth Marcum, Judi McMahon, Carol Taylor, Laura Von Roenn, and Marti Wilde. Advance registration for students of the College of Arts and Sciences who plan to return in the fall is next week. The registration procedure will be enacted in the Multi-Purpose Room from 9-12 and 1-3. The registration schedule is as follows: May 16-Students with 75 or more hours completed (as of February), who have taken the Sophomore Comprehensive Examinations May 17~8 t u d e n t s w i t h 45 through 74 hours completed (as of February), who have taken the Sophomore Comprehensive Examinations May 18-S t u de n t s w i t h 15 through 44 hours completed (as of February) May 19-S t u de n t s with fewer than 15 hours completed (as of February), and all others eligible to enroll who did not enroll on the scheduled day On the scheduled day each student should bring with him a ball point pen, a completed adviser's slip, and his schedule of courses. Procedure outlined As each student enters he will be given La pink and white IBM card which he will keep, but otherwise ignore; 2. seven yellow mM cards with his name on them; 3. a registration form, which does not require carbon paper (will show marks if pressure is applied); and 4. an envelope for his cards. The student will then go to the appropriate tables, exchanging one of his yellow name cards for a green class card for each class in which he wishes to enroll. The registration form should now be filled in completely by printing firmly. The student will be required to fill out the form again if it is not possible to read all copies clearly. Then each student will go to the student and faculty checkers as usual, where he will be given one copy of the registration form. All other materials will be kept in the Registrar's Office until falL Fall schedule In the fall the student should return to Bigelow Hall at the time shown on pages 2 and 3 of the Fall Semester Schedule. At that time any necessary corrections may be made. The student then may arrange to pay his fees. Registration in the fall will follow the following schedule: Friday, September 16, 1966 Returning pre-registered Seniors, Juniors, and Sophomores; all post-baccalaureate students C-E & S-U 9:00 F-G & N-R 10:30 H-M 1:00 A-B & V -Z 2:30 Pre-registered students who do not need to make schedule changes will report at the scheduled hour to Bigelow Hall, to pick up their files. They will then go directly to the Administration Building to arrange for paying fees. Pre-registered students who must make schedule changes will report to Bigelow Hall at the scheduled hour, move to the Multi-Purpose Room for corrective registration, and then go to the Administration Building to pay fees. Corrective registration will be permitted for these reasons: 1. The College changed its offerings. 2. The student failed a course that he must repeat. 3. Going on or off probation necessitates change. 4. Student has clearly demonstriable (to faculty adviser, faculty checker, or Dean's Office representative) reason for change. Monday, September 19, 1966 Returning pre-registered Freshmen ......... ... ............ ..... 9:00 (Continued col. 1, page 8) New Cwens selected were Mary Ann Curran, Georgia Georacopoulos, Mary Janis Gough, Galye Harden, Nancy Jacobs, Wendy Jandt, Judith Kass, Patricia Liles, Mary (Continued col. 4, page 5) ftJ1I PJ&cm Want to cet a tan! You eaD OD the patio outsllle Crawfenl Gym pooL ID last week's warm weather, atadeats aDd otlaen (fOfti'I'OIIIId above) sat OD tbe JoaDces ua4 chain profttled to "eatela a few ray&•
Object Description
Title | The Cardinal, May 13, 1966. |
Volume | XXXVII |
Issue | 27 |
Description | The University of Louisville’s undergraduate newspaper. The title of this publication has varied over the years, but with the exception of the period 1928-1930, when it was known as the U. of L. News, the title has always been a variation of The Cardinal. |
Subject |
Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals University of Louisville--Students--Periodicals |
Date Original | 1966-05-13 |
Object Type | Newspapers |
Source | Scanned from microfilm in the Louisville Cardinal newspapers collection. Item Number ULUA Cardinal 19660513 |
Citation Information | See https://digital.library.louisville.edu/cdm/description/collection/cardinal#conditions for guidance on citing this item. To cite the digital version, add its Reference URL (found by following the link in the header above the digital file) |
Collection | Louisville Cardinal Newspapers Collection |
Collection Website | https://digital.library.louisville.edu/cdm/landingpage/collection/cardinal |
Digital Publisher | University of Louisville Archives and Special Collections |
Date Digital | 2019-01-29 |
Format | application/pdf |
Ordering Information | To inquire about reproductions, permissions, or for information about prices see: http://library.louisville.edu/archives/order. Please cite the Image Number when ordering. |
Image Number | ULUA Cardinal 19660513 |
Rating |
Description
Title | 19660513 1 |
Full Text | THE CARDINAL VOL. XXXVII, NO. 2'7 UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVO..LE, LOmSVO..LE, KENTUCKY 40208 GDI scores landslide victory • Student Senate elections ill MAY 13, 1966 A. pplications for ex-officio offices now being accepted Indoor Fryberger Sing won by Threlkeld Hall and Phi Kappa Tau GDI swept the University Student Senate elections held on campus this week, claiming seven at-large and three Arts and Sciences voting positions. Winning from the GreeksDorms- Independents combine were at-large - Clay Copeland, Karen Garvey, Judy Gay, Donna Lang, Margaret Lewis, Jessica Loving, and Jackye Shoptaw; Arts and Sciences-Ben Taylor, Tom Thomas, and Martin Yenawine. APT took four seats The All People's Ticket (APT), the opposing combine, took four seats: at-large-Rose Mary Fleck and Diane Giannini; Arts and Sciences- Bruce Ashley and Al Rittle. The two combines ran tickets only for the Arts and Sciences and at-large elections. Candidates running at large are voted upon by students in all UL schools. Senators elected from other University of Louisville schools were Music School - Connie Karem (unopposed); Medic a 1 School - William Cheatham and Charles Eldridge (both unopposed); Dental School-Brenda Free Ian d (unopposed); Law School-Alan Farber and Kenneth Hirsch; Speed School-Alan Mateja, Scott Dam, and Gerald Purdom. Ken Matheis and Richard Monroe tied in the Business School election. The tie was broken at a Senate meeting last night, but the results could not be obtained before The Cardinal went to press. The University Student Senate VISTA. to seek UL volunteers this Wednesday University of Louisville students will ha an opportunity on Wednesr May 18, to volunteer for servi · •n Indian reservations, among rru6.·ant farm workers, in urban slums, and in rural pockets of pover \~ ranging from Appalachia' ·llows to Alaskan villages .. Repn. - · 3.tives from Volunteers In Service To America (VISTA) will be on campus to outline the program and its role in the war on poverty. A table will be located in the UC Building between the hours of 9 and 3. In add1tion, a 15 minute film "Small Miracles," which shows VISTA Volunteers at work, will be shown at 2:30p.m. in Room 33. VISTA Volunteers serve for one year, lrece~ving living expenses a'ld medical care. In addition t~ : n allowance for food, housinr ·avel and clothing, they receiv( ~ · •O at the end of their service. No er. •. nee examinations or interview - .t.re necessary to join VISTA. Persons over 18 are eligible; there are no education or experier: c--t... requ.ireinents. Those who wish to join must submit two applications which may be obtained from the VISTA information center on campus. Further information is available there and in the insert between pages 4 and 5. is now accepting applications for ex-officio offices. Application forms may be picked up iri the Dean of Students' Office and must be returned by Thursday, May 19. Candidates must be full-time UL students and have a 1.0 cumulative point standing. The ex-officio officers will be elected at the Senate meeting May 19. St4ff Photo Elections here always produce a large crowd of vote soliciters, who accost anyone entering the UC Building. Last Tuesday's senate elections (above) were no exception. For the second consecutive year Threlkeld Hall Dormitory and Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity were judged best in the annual Fryberger Sing competition held Wednesday evening in the Manual High School auditorium. Placing second to Threlkeld Hall in the women's division was Kappa Delta Sorority. Nu Sigma Chi Fraternity was runner-up in the men's division. The Outstanding Fraternity Trophy, annually presented by Kappa Delta, went to Phi Kappa Tau. Chi Omega, for the third year, won the Outstanding Sorority Trophy awarded by Phi Kappa Tau. Stanley Grubbs given award Voted Outstanding Senior Man by the Arts and Sciences Student Council was the late Stanley Grubbs, who died in an automobile accident April 1. Grubbs had received the Outstanding Man award in his freshman, sophomore, and junior years. A & S men and women also receiving Council awards were Senior Class-Ellen Sue Porter, Junior Class-David Banks and Patty J ohmann, and Sophomore Class-Ernie Allen and Cathy Cayce. The Mortar Board award for the Outstanding Freshman Woman went to Kathy Witherington. Larry Weisenthal was selected Outstanding Freshman Man by Phi Eta Sigma honorary. Clad in tartans, the Threlkeld Hall group sang a medley of selections from the musical "Brigadoon." Choral selections from the play "Oliver" were presented by Kappa Delta. Phi Kappa Tau won with the song "Malaguena." Nu Sigma Chi presented the "Navy Hymn," dedicating their selection to the American soldiers fighting in VietNam. Thirteen groups participated in the twenty-ninth annual Fryberger Sing. At the end of the program they were led in singing the University of Louisville alma mater by Dr. Walter Dahlin. The Sing, usually held in the UL Quadrangle, was moved to the Manual Auditorium due to weather conditions. Serving as Master and Mistress of Ceremonies were students Don Waddell and Linda Sorenson. ODK taps 11 Fall semester registration next week as A&S College tries new procedure Tapped at Fryberger for Omicron Delta Kappa men's leadership honorary were A & S-John Anuszewski, Clay Copeland, Kendall Hockenbury, and Robert Oakley; Speed-Arch Davis, Charles Gnerlich, James Prentice, Norman Toombs, and Dan Verser; LawRobert Baughman; and Music - James Walker. Mortar Board senior worhen's honorary and Cwens sophomore women's honorary also tapped new m e m b e r s that evening. Chosen for Mortar Board were Amy Arnold, Carolyn Bishop, Martha Chute, Sylvelin Felde, Karen Garvey, Carolyn Gettler, Donna Gianinni, Kathy Gibson, Phyllis Goff, Sherry Greenlee, Pamela Hascal, Gene Haynes, Donna Hoog, Patty J ohrnann, Connie Karern, Janelle Kirkland, Teresa Leonhardt, Ruth Marcum, Judi McMahon, Carol Taylor, Laura Von Roenn, and Marti Wilde. Advance registration for students of the College of Arts and Sciences who plan to return in the fall is next week. The registration procedure will be enacted in the Multi-Purpose Room from 9-12 and 1-3. The registration schedule is as follows: May 16-Students with 75 or more hours completed (as of February), who have taken the Sophomore Comprehensive Examinations May 17~8 t u d e n t s w i t h 45 through 74 hours completed (as of February), who have taken the Sophomore Comprehensive Examinations May 18-S t u de n t s w i t h 15 through 44 hours completed (as of February) May 19-S t u de n t s with fewer than 15 hours completed (as of February), and all others eligible to enroll who did not enroll on the scheduled day On the scheduled day each student should bring with him a ball point pen, a completed adviser's slip, and his schedule of courses. Procedure outlined As each student enters he will be given La pink and white IBM card which he will keep, but otherwise ignore; 2. seven yellow mM cards with his name on them; 3. a registration form, which does not require carbon paper (will show marks if pressure is applied); and 4. an envelope for his cards. The student will then go to the appropriate tables, exchanging one of his yellow name cards for a green class card for each class in which he wishes to enroll. The registration form should now be filled in completely by printing firmly. The student will be required to fill out the form again if it is not possible to read all copies clearly. Then each student will go to the student and faculty checkers as usual, where he will be given one copy of the registration form. All other materials will be kept in the Registrar's Office until falL Fall schedule In the fall the student should return to Bigelow Hall at the time shown on pages 2 and 3 of the Fall Semester Schedule. At that time any necessary corrections may be made. The student then may arrange to pay his fees. Registration in the fall will follow the following schedule: Friday, September 16, 1966 Returning pre-registered Seniors, Juniors, and Sophomores; all post-baccalaureate students C-E & S-U 9:00 F-G & N-R 10:30 H-M 1:00 A-B & V -Z 2:30 Pre-registered students who do not need to make schedule changes will report at the scheduled hour to Bigelow Hall, to pick up their files. They will then go directly to the Administration Building to arrange for paying fees. Pre-registered students who must make schedule changes will report to Bigelow Hall at the scheduled hour, move to the Multi-Purpose Room for corrective registration, and then go to the Administration Building to pay fees. Corrective registration will be permitted for these reasons: 1. The College changed its offerings. 2. The student failed a course that he must repeat. 3. Going on or off probation necessitates change. 4. Student has clearly demonstriable (to faculty adviser, faculty checker, or Dean's Office representative) reason for change. Monday, September 19, 1966 Returning pre-registered Freshmen ......... ... ............ ..... 9:00 (Continued col. 1, page 8) New Cwens selected were Mary Ann Curran, Georgia Georacopoulos, Mary Janis Gough, Galye Harden, Nancy Jacobs, Wendy Jandt, Judith Kass, Patricia Liles, Mary (Continued col. 4, page 5) ftJ1I PJ&cm Want to cet a tan! You eaD OD the patio outsllle Crawfenl Gym pooL ID last week's warm weather, atadeats aDd otlaen (fOfti'I'OIIIId above) sat OD tbe JoaDces ua4 chain profttled to "eatela a few ray&• |
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