3.  ELEVEN STATES REPRESENTED AT SYMPOSIUM

     One of the last major events on the Centennial calendar, a Health
Sciences Communication Symposium, ended yesterday at the Medical Center.
The two-day program, which explored possibilities for improved communications
in the health sciences, attracted over 100 registrants from 11 states in
the South, East and Midwest.

    The symposium, arranged by a committee headed by Dr. Michael T.
Romano, coordinator of Medical Center television, featured an interchange
of ideas presented by noted representatives of both the health sciences
and the communications professions. Participants included Alton L.
Blakeslee, science writer for the Associated Press; Ralph P. Creer,
director of medical motion pictures and television for the American
Medical Association; Paul Haney of the NASA Manned Space Craft Center, Houston;
Norman E. Isaacs, executive editor and vice president of The Courier-Journal
and Louisville Times; Dr. Richard Orr, director of the Institute for Advance-
ment of Medical Communications, University of Pennsylvania; Dr. Floyd S.
Cornelison, head of psychiatry at Jefferson Medical College; Joseph Roizen,
international video consultant for the Ampex Corporation; Dr. Ellis A. Johnson,
coordinator of scientific communication activities for the U.S. Department of
Health, Education and Welfare; Dr. James Lieberman, director of the U.S. Public
Health Audiovisual Facility, and Dr. Howard S. Maclay, director of the Institute
of Communications Research at the University of Illinois.


4.  LAW FRATERNITY OPENS UK CHAPTER

     A University chapter of the national law fraternity, Delta Theta Phi,
received its charter at a February 12 ceremony in the College of Law.
Designated as the Alben W. Barkley Senate of Delta Theta Phi, the chapter
initiated 29 students as charter members. The chapter adviser, Prof. W.
Garrett Flickinger, said the fraternity will stimulate learning and academic
excellence, promote high professional standards, and serve as a link between
law students and practicing attorneys.

     Charter members of the Barkley Senate are Ronald Wheat, James L. Pate,
Robert Patton, Winn Turney and Norrie Wake, all of Lexington; Gordon Finley,
Melvyn Price and John H. Thompson, Louisville; Charles Bedell, Oberlin, Ohio;
Dennis Bricking, Southgate; Stephen Cawood, Pineville; Fred Cohen, Pittsburgh;
James A. Crary, Fort Thomas; Sid Douglas, Harlan; Robert Gallenstein, Maysville;
Keen W. Johnson, Paintsville; William F. Knapp, Dry Ridge; Orson Oliver,
Franklin, Ohio; Clyde Richardson, Frankfort; John W. Richardson, Berea;
William G. Rivers, Rochester, N.Y.; Kendall Robinson, Booneville; John Seelie,
Fort Mitchell; Charles Shackelford, Richmond; Richard Stevenson, Covington;
Carl Swanger, Neon; Robert Vance, Williamstown; John Vigor, Ashland, and
James G. Welch, Erlanger.