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Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 47, No. 15, Wku Student Affairs Dec 1967

Ua12/2/1 College Heights Herald, Vol. 47, No. 15, Wku Student Affairs

WKU Archives Records

WKU campus newspaper reporting campus, athletic and Bowling Green, Kentucky news. This issue contains articles:

  • Miss Carmen Willoughby Named Top Scholar
  • Soul Concert Tonight Stars Wilson Pickett
  • Korb, Carolyn. Alumni Group to Present Cash Stipend to Scholar
  • WKU Receives Grants for Summer Institutes
  • Protest Fails as Students Chant Carols
  • Zeh, John. Future for Education Unclear
  • Outstanding Cadet Named for ROTC – Edwin Phelps
  • Chaney, Joanne & Ron Neafus. Journalist of Varied Talents, Jerry Drury Directs Circulation
  • Turner, Charlene. Vietnam Discussion Set for International Club
  • Club News – Geography & Geology, Alpha Kappa Psi, Baptist Student Union, Alpha Kappa Omega, Alpha …


Ua1b3/3 Meeting Minutes, Wku Athletic Committee Dec 1967

Ua1b3/3 Meeting Minutes, Wku Athletic Committee

WKU Archives Records

Meeting to discuss golf facilities, Bowling Green Country Club, Indian Hills Country Club, Nick Denes retirement, William Elrod's retirement and Gene Rhodes resignation.


Ua1b3/3 Meeting Minutes, Wku Athletic Committee Nov 1967

Ua1b3/3 Meeting Minutes, Wku Athletic Committee

WKU Archives Records

Meeting regarding Sullivan Business College basketball game, Bowling Green Country Club, Indian Hills Country Club, purchase of golf course and 1970 invitational basketball tournament.


A Time To Listen... A Time To Act, Us Commission On Civil Rights Nov 1967

A Time To Listen... A Time To Act, Us Commission On Civil Rights

Federal Documents

The Commission on Civil Rights presents this report pursuant to Public Law 85-315, as amended. The report summarizes the testimony given at Commission hearings and at open meetings of the Commission's State Advisory Committees concerning urban racial problems. The testimony-generally given by persons who live in slum ghettos or who deal with ghetto problems daily-provides insights into what slum residents think and feel about the conditions in which they live. Although the Commission has issued and will continue to issue in-depth reports on urban civil rights problems, we believe it is important to share with you as soon as possible …


The Relationship Of Educational, Economic & Social Characteristics Of The Degree Of Desegregation In The Public Schools Of Kentucky, J. Frank Yeager Jul 1967

The Relationship Of Educational, Economic & Social Characteristics Of The Degree Of Desegregation In The Public Schools Of Kentucky, J. Frank Yeager

Masters Theses & Specialist Projects

The problem in this study was to examine the relationship of social-climate to the degree of desegregation in the public schools of Kentucky. This study attempted to determine the relationship of educational, economic and social characteristics of those school districts with bi-racial student bodies operating in Kentucky and the degree of desegregation experienced voluntarily by those districts during the period from 1955-56 school year through the 1963-64 school year.


The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 4), June 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America Jan 1967

The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 4), June 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America

The Vanguard

Valparaiso University's 1967 Workshop in Human Relations for Professional Church Workers will feature Dr. Will Campbell. Dr. Campbell, who will speak to the Human Relations Institute on the Valparaiso campus three days earlier, will lecture to Workshop participants twice.

The theme of this year's Workshop is THE COMMUNICATING MINISTRY. Dr. Campbell's first presentation will be "Listening to Those to Whom We Intend to Communicate"; his second: "Balance of Words and Acts in Ministry. "

The program will also include theological and sociological studies; a field trip to Chicago with interviews with people in ministry there; and acquainting with resources, techniques, …


The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 6), Sep-Oct 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America Jan 1967

The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 6), Sep-Oct 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America

The Vanguard

An LHRAA statement on racial tension was distributed to worshippers attending a Mission Fair at Proviso East High School in Maywood, Illinois, Sunday, October 1.

Held only a few days after riots raged in the streets of the west Chicago suburb, the Fair provided an opportunity for LHRAA's West Suburban Chapter to interpret the meaning of Christ's mission to Christians in the riot-torn area.


The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 8), Dec 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America Jan 1967

The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 8), Dec 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America

The Vanguard

From its earliest days LHRAA has wanted to "help the church fill the role of leadership in the field of human relations assigned to her by her Lord." Specific care was taken not to isolate that ministry to problems in Negro-white relations. Accordingly we have, through the years, addressed ourselves to areas involving the Indian American, Appalachian whites, Puerto Ricans, migrant workers, victims of poverty, and others.


The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 5), Jul-Aug 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America Jan 1967

The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 5), Jul-Aug 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America

The Vanguard

Some forty-five professional church workers visited Holy Family Lutheran Church (ALC) last summer to hear Pastor Fred Downing speak of his ministry there. Describing his heavily populated north side Chicago neighborhood, he told of the tensions that might rupture into riot at any moment. He alluded to manifest resentment and hostility by black towards white. He spoke of increased evidence of "soul brother" signs in the windows of small Negro-owned businesses.


The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 7), Nov 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America Jan 1967

The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 7), Nov 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America

The Vanguard

The Lutheran Human Relations Association of Chicago has prepared a set of fifteen theses urging human relations reforms within the Church in celebration of the 450th anniversary of the Reformation Nov. 5.

The theses address themselves largely to the problems the church of 1967 faces in ministering faithfully for its Lord. Their concern is subsumed under the theses' title, "Reform is the Proper Celebration of Reformation."


The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 1), Jan-Feb 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America Jan 1967

The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 1), Jan-Feb 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America

The Vanguard

Theology professors may be working side by side with inner city pastors this summer, according to a Wheat Ridge Foundation announcement.

The inner city program, proposed by LHRAA and financed by the Wheat Ridge organization, is scheduled to begin this summer and to be in full operation by the summer of 1968.


The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 3), Apr-May 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America Jan 1967

The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 3), Apr-May 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America

The Vanguard

Cleveland's Lutheran Pastors have set in motion a project aimed at finding a more effective way of ministering to that city's intense human relations problems. The scene of one of last year's worst riots, Cleveland has relatively little to show for changing the conditions that provided the setting for last summer's outbursts.


The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 2), Mar 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America Jan 1967

The Vanguard (Vol. 14, No. 2), Mar 1967, Lutheran Human Relations Association Of America

The Vanguard

After Pastor Joseph Lavelais of Philadelphia had conducted opening devotions at the Conference on Church and Social Change at Chicago's Concord-O'Hare Inn, Chairman Wiederaenders presented for adoption an agenda which had been mailed to participants prior to the meeting.

A motion from the floor was adopted by a large majority that the printed agenda be set aside. Voices from the floor indicated an eagerness to discuss the church's commitment and participation in filling a meaningful role in the social problems of the day as they impinge upon the church and the communities it serves.