Bosomworth loves
outdoor sports
The man who loved Lexington so much he returned became Vice-president of the Medical Center in 1962.
Dr. Peter Bosomworth earned his MD at the University of Cincinnati, his BS at Kent State, and his Masters of Medicine at Ohio University.
He completed his residency in 1956-58 at Ohio State before serving in the Navy at Great Lakes, Illinois as Chief of Anesthesiology.
Afterwards he became Director of Anesthesiology at Ohio State, until he returned to Lexington to become the Acting Chairman of Anesthesiology and Vice-president.
In his leisure time he was an outdoor man who loved sailing, gardening and fishing.
A special hobby, which his wife terms a "basketcase", was putting together a Model-T ford. It seemed he just didn't have the time, ff*
443
Spare time goes to his gardening
The Vice-president for Academic Affairs, Dr. Lewis Cochran, had been with UK for 28 years.
Besides having taught math and physics at Morehead University, he also taught at Cumberland University in Tennessee. He later became Assistant Dean of Men and the athletic director at Cumberland.
Reflecting on UK students, he felt that although some people thought students were apathetic, he felt they were just quiet. His attitude varied with the times. The 50's students, he noted, were the most thoughtful.
He saw a change in students today from the past. Today they were better qualified. "Students," he commented, "are smarter every year." He felt test scores proved it.
Dr. Cochran earned his masters at Morehead and his Doctorate at UK. He received them between 1936-39 "in between the war."
In his spare time, Dr. Cochran loved to garden,
Wall's first love
guiding the young
by DON LAMAR
Dr. Stanley Wall, Vice-president of UK's Community College System, assisted by his staff of eight, has administrative responsibility for Kentucky's 12 community colleges throughout the state and the Lexington Technological Institute, located on the Lexington campus. The system included some 13,000 students, over 400 faculty members, and more than 300 part-time employees.
Dr. Wall believe the community college system could serve the people of Kentucky in some important ways which the state's universities cannot. The community colleges were set up to serve communities.
They offered post-secondary education to people who ordinarily could not get to a university or could not afford the expense. They also provide a more technically oriented education that to the state universities.
Dr. Wall and his staff worked to adapt the classes offered in the schools to the specific areas of the state they are to serve. Since 1970, the enrollment of community college students pursuing technical studies, the community colleges followed up where vocational schools left off. However, a student had to follow a comprehensive program of study, enabling him or her to trans-