xt7bk35m9h7m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7bk35m9h7m/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky. Libraries Lexington, Kentucky University of Kentucky Alumni Association 1985 journals  English University of Kentucky Alumni Association Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. Kentucky alumnus Kentucky Alumnus, 1985, No. 2 text images Kentucky Alumnus, 1985, No. 2 1985 2012 true xt7bk35m9h7m section xt7bk35m9h7m JSTRIOUS PROGRESSIVE TRUTHFUL ACHIE\/ING INTELLECTUAL I I I I I I
INFLUENTIAL VALUABLE PRODUCTIVE EXCITING IDEALISTIC ;I I
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DEALIS   al IN  U  US' • '  SIVE ·   I I II I
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I NATE COMPETITIVE V NT SUCCESSFUL I I
NIDUSTRIOUS PROGRE   INTELLECTUAL I I II I
INFLUENTIAL VALUABLE PRODUCTIVE EXCITING IDEALISTIC I I I
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IDEALISTIC DETERMINED INDUSTRIOUS PROG   S I
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SSIVE     TUNATE COMPETITIVE I
PRODUCTIVE EXCITING IDEALISTIC DETERMINED INDUSTRIOUS I
SENT GOAL-ORIENTED HARD-WORKING EFFECTIVE INFLUENTIAL I
INATE COMPETITIVE VIRTUOUS FAMOUS PERSISTENT SUCCESSFUL
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We salute the I3 I
honorees inducted into I
i the Hall of  
` I Distinguished Alumni. Z
` Designed by Lita Cox. l R t `
n 1985 OFFICERS _ _   _
 ; A solid profile of the UK National Alumni
_ PRESIDENT I Association emerges from a recounting of its I 5 ,
""'G KIM? lcckell 68 activities in 1984 and an accounting of its funds. I
- exington I
PRESIDENT-ELECT    
David G. Ravencratt ’58  
'iszisritst Salute to Success I
Mrs. Joe F. Morris '38  
Lexington Every five years a select number of alumni are  
- SECRETARY inducted into the Hall of Distinguished Alumni. Y
.lay Brumfield 48 _ .
G Q O The 13 honorees of 1985 talk about their pers nal
L xin t n O
ASSOCIATION STAFF: motivation and principles for success. »
DIRECTOR I
.lay Brumfield ’48 I
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR ~
B°*° C W'“"°"€' '58 E 3,I`tl'1ql12lk€ I
_ EDITOR
. Liz Howard Demoran _ _ _ _ _
/63 Scientists predict a serious earthquake will occur
MEMBERSHIP in Kentucky within the next 15 years. They're \
. A§(?§Ré);%l)€I(?F39 concerned about the "ostrich" posture ot the I ,
I STAFF; public to this potentially devastating event. .
Brenda Bain  
Julia Brothers I
Linda Brumtield Q
Margie Carby ,
Ruth Elliott l
Amelia Gano I
Carolyn Griffin  
° Ruby Hardin I
Ennis Johnson J
Betty White Nelson
.  ART DIRECTION
Elaine Weber I
, Designs K B  
.  ism 0732-6297 U cat I {2 I
I   I
I The Kentucky Alumnus is A CO[T]p€ndIUI'YI of CGITTPUS f1€WS. I
published quarterly by the I
University of Kentucky Alumni    
Association, 400 Rose Street, I
3 Legngton, KY 40506éI I T9, for C1 N t Q
j it ue » in m m r.
I .;.....15;:..2..;.   RSS O €S I  ,
I Kentucky Alumnus are not I
n ril h eol h ·
U‘;ff;f;,y’OI,Q’;,_,UCQyZ,O,,,,E A class by class update about alumni. I
UK Alumni Association.   I
Postmaster; Forwarding and
address correction requested. I
Send to The Kentucky Alumnus, I
UK Alumni Association, I
Lexington, KY 40506.  

 The Sounds of Summer i _ Vietnom Experience i
  Summer Sounds 85 will feature sev-   —
en free concerts and recitals as well:
Classical music will be in the spotlight June 8LMiCha€l Fogler and facuityI The eacperiences of Kentucky soldiers in · C4
in june when the University of Ken- Cbanibcr Music with guitar, at 8 b_rri_ the Vietnam War will be recounted in a te
iucky presents Summer Sounds 785, a in the Recital Han; June 9_SChuYi€r television oral history program being i FY
series of ten concerts and recitals in the Robinson, Organ, at 3 n_na_ in thc Con- p1'0Cll1C€Cl at the University of Ken- lol
i. UK Cerller fer the Arts- Speueered by cert Hall and Guitar Workshop Stu- toekY· _ all
the UK Cellege nf Flrle Arts, School nf dents Recital at 8 p.m. in the Recital A $1946 gram awarded by the Kell`
Music, and University Extension, Sum- Ha11;Junc 117Thc Concord Trio at 8 tueky Oral History Commission will Q in
mer Sounds ’85 will feature perform- n_in_ in thc Recital Hai]; fund the project in part—a joint effort 5 in
i ances by guest artists and School of Junc 16_.patricia MontgomcryI pia- of UK’s Office Ole lnSt1”uCti0n&l Re-  ` lrr
Music faculty members. The following noI at 3 n_rn_ in thc Rccitai Ha1l;Junc $o¤r`€€$ and the UK Library Oral His- R‘
sueat artists will appear in Summer 21—juh1or String Orchestra Concert, {OW Pmgram- _ e‘
` Sounds *35; Judy Vascki Conductor, at 7 pImI in I About 15 Kentucky veterans will be M
, Juno 6—Rebert Guthrie, Classical the Recital Hall; and june 23—Lucien lotervlewed e¤·eamera» represerlrlrlg a m°
i guitarist, at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall. Star-kI nianoI at 3 n_ni_ in thc Rccitaj dlYol”$€ F&¤§€ ef S0€1&l backgrounds and h
I-le was recently named one of today’s Hair mllllorY experieneee, Sold preieet €llr€€· t '
g leading gUl[3.I`lSIS   the Gllildf P[l1_}l€?' Summer Sounds ,85 is   in Con- tor Pool Leveque of   Excerpts Of br"
i Magazling readera’ pell· The New l/Wk junction with a series of workshops pre- those interviews will be used in a one' pe
Times called him "a guitarist of intelli- sented by thc UK School of MuSic_ hou? Program to be aired on cable and he
` Soooo and $oo$lllVltY·ii Music students from 'unior h` h h ol eoueeoooel televlslorr
June 13-the Fine Ans Quarter, nne through cout-ge will eeceive iiitriiitiim Terry Birrlwhiarelli eeerdiaarer ef the %*
of worldls great chamber €1'1S€Il'1bl€S, HI on guitar, chamber music, strings, key- oral History Program? will eorlduet the UO
3 n_rn_ in inc Rccira] Hair This is thc board, and band interviews and determine the themes to mi
quartct’s second appearance at the UK be eevered.
Center for the Arts; their first was dur- iiwo would like to give Vietnam vet- Cal
ing [hc 1933-34 University Artist Sc-   erans the chance to present their own be
ries. According to the New York Times, .   i   nag, €P1S€," Birdwhistell said. "Whi1t=; there we
"the players still live up to their t \ ` i t   has been a lot written about the veter- » `
U narnc_·iincr bcing tbc bcrfcct atiicc- —.` _   _ . .i;g _     ans, certain viewpoints have been given I mt
_ tivcjr ,V     »  it     , i   more exposure than others." {01
Juno 20_Armc_Maric McDcrmottI {      _ ¤     t\‘  Birdwhistell pointed out that the pro- Ol
pianist, at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall. ¥         _`  gram Will Hot bf? 21 l11Sf0FY ofthe Con- err
i The winner ofthe 1983 Young Concert [re nr   ,—.» ·   it   fliet, but Y&tii€1` will examine how it lat
i Artists International Auditions, she was    Q   ifi   affected the lives of thgsg who partici- tre
deemed "a keyboard virtuoso" by the C   .. i t   fi pated.
War/zingtmz Post. 1 i er A i" · The program, being produced by :··»
Tickets lor guest artist performances Britt Déwls ef OIR, Should be F€3dY for Q
are $5 regular, 153 for students and sen- Round the Clock broadcast by November 1985. l E
ior citizens; series tickets for all three   UK history Professor George C, Het-- » §
pcrlormanccs are $10. Tickets may be _ _ _ _ _ ring, author of two books on the Viet- é
purchased at the UK Center for the Umllgersliy gid:) Steumgi WBfKYl;S {gow nam war, is serving as historical , E
Arts ticket ofhce, at the Rose Street en- on { ,€ ele Ours, e ey’ Or t c rst Consultant. i E
trance, l`rom noon to 4 p.m., Monday time m re 44-year hlsiorlo i 2
I ·_ I I i _ Don Wheeler, station manager, said =
through Saturday. Tickets may be re- 1984 { 1 f h UK E
served by calling the ticket office at was a Success U Veer Or t c _ E
(606) 257_Iio2o V owned and operated station. One pro- E
` ` i gram, he said, One Nzght Stand, featured E
on Saturday night, is now syndicated to
24 other public radio stations nation-
wide. For WBKY, he added, “the pro-
gram is a source of prestige in the pub-
lic radio business, not to mention an ex-
tra source of income."
2

 Think Heolthy Thoughts Plgggvlonlmllljy $iX Fulbi-lg}-irs
i Can a person be mentally conditioned   Five University faculty members have
to be more resistant to illness? Universi-   ,V i `  F j e received Fulbright Awards and are
l ty of Kentucky I`€S€3.I`Cl'l€I`S 3I`€ €XplOI`·  ,.:,   V     V Il 5[udying and lecturing QV€]`s€aS_
l ing mental processes which may eventu-  Q `   _ Kenneth Coleman, Political Science,
g ally lead t0 just such a development. are \ l s  V is teaching and doing research in Vene— ~
t A $ll3»0oO grant from rho National ·’  i ·y    VZ , zuela. David A. Kravitz, Psychology,
  Institute of Health will fund research °  V; /  "rv  is studying in West Germany and con-
 ‘ into behavioral conditioning of f   J2   y guctmg Seminars Oh email greup behaV_
lrnmnnornoolnlallon bY Dr- Thomas  si., `  1or and group decision-making at the
Roszman, microbiologist in the UK       University ofFreiburg_
College of Medicine, and D1`- Donald JOHNECROSBV Education Professor Pentti
M of h UK s chol d - ' ‘ '
mf? t ° P Y Ow gpm Felse Bellels ¤b¤9* l¤ve· Sex iili‘§Zil1i"LT.§°Z2‘§f§ZYE“£El$EZdiZiZLS‘IitiZ i
Roszman says evidence snggosls end Murrluge year to follow up on his research. Gary
there is communication between the   Shannon, Geo ra h , is stud in ri-
brain ?Hd thc immune SyStcm’ arld 8 In a new book, a University of Ken- mary Pl'lYslola§ slllise rolooaglong gan
person s_nl€nlal state can asset nls of tucky professor Of family Studies at- terns from 1950 to 1o8O in England and
her PllYsloalWoll'bolng· · _ tempts, in his Wards, Mm set down West Germany. Michael Webb, Eco-
Fer example someone €’FP€“€*l°*“€ sorrie fallacious beliefs about love, sex nornicsi is cenclncrins research cn cern-
isrrong Eloprogslrig orb orrlorlonallslrl-la' a_nd1*I1aI·[·ia_g€_’7 megcial policieg in regard to imports
101'1, SLIC 3S C3. O 3. COSC I`€ 211VC, . ‘ an cx gyts In gsta ](;a_
may be rnoro susooprlolo te illness- ],i;?;;yliO?;(’ti·i2;p?,}yf);]A;l4}(f;2ilgniixlgigllizfs   Also}? graduate student Gail Gonzalez
Roszman belreves if cmotmlml stare Crosby, as writer and editor, and con- went te Argentina in April rc conduct
can lswsr 1mmun€_r€SpOnScs’ rr Should tains essays by others, selected by Cros- advanced doctoral rosoaroll {nrc lno
be Posslblo re aohlovo the oPPoslro as by_ The publisher is John Wiley gr works of 20th century Argentinian writ-
well. SOnS’ New YOrk_ erjulio Cortazar.
The rreiect *$llbs¤?mP;1_laH§}n_,;-·K ke if I »_ V L   Work],  
have b"°“ d°“a“’d “’ the U“i""Si[Y af ~  *>»     . r  i   The harvesting aid drew eh ehrhusi- a  Itl ` ri 
Kentucky Margaret I' Kmg Llb_mry‘_   ··/~ - 2.;,. ,  Ya   ‘·- ,, - 4   astic response when it was demonstrat- '  i l 
Paul Wll1lS· dlrccmr af Uk hbmn€s*  ` i va i e . { .  - .    F   ed to tobacco farmers around the state,  
· =~  [  wax?  ¤¤".r°*¤¤ii .·=e— .   ra- . .   A  
ekplarhed that mast Or tha dbehrhehrs   Swetnam sa1d. It was later demonstrat-    
relate to thc day-to-day Opcrimonaof Ji"? i `"C aa  —°·· ‘*° $°’*    ed successfullY in harvesting strawber-    
the cemetery but also list who 1S buried I · ries, ben peppers, cucumbers and other .    
there] _ Tobacco TF¤¤$P Ont Del/Ice vegetables that ordinarily require te- ·  
Minutes of the board of directors, fi- patented dious hand labor to harvest-    
habclal lcigara lima carllxhdofglggcms   Worker productivity was increased   ``-·  fa;
‘ eomprlse [ e CO e°U°n· C re` · · by 30 to 40 percent for most crops.    
cord lists about a dozen Lexington men Three UK agriculture engineers have Swemam Said thc multi-cmp Vcrsatil- nr ,  
who contributed $500 each to establish developed a Way aa use 3 aaaaaa hm" ity Of the harvester Sets it apart from   W  
tha aamatarr vcstmg m°h.‘“€ to transplant  Obacco other units on the market and is the  
Bob WachS’ the ccmctcryis general ill? have assigned the patent rights to key to making it ajustifiable investment    
manager, explained that this spring his · for Small farm O eratiene V ‘
office will eempurerize. ··Aher transfer- Larry Swataaaa J amas Caaada aad I dd· - P h · f · r
rang all eur lists onto rhe eempurer we Laws Walwa Say thaia baalav tabaaaa “ ”- “‘°“ YO ervcstlng “““‘°“S’ 1     it
will permit the UK library to transfer harvesting aid, developed in 1979, elim- the baslc mailimcds car?LY aidaprerl ta Z;  "  _=_    
this same information to microhlm for ihares rhueh Or the baek breakrhg labaa mw cmpt C1ElV?t§n` t C aicstt lm-   "   
_ _ - - provemen — e o acco rans an er-     rr,   
gcncalogists and other scholars interest- faam harVeS¤hg_W9rk· Tha rrraehrhe has enables the senin Of one Or tw}; rows at  
· · · M since been modified for use in harvest- S  
ed in such information. _ a time  
ing vegetable crops. ‘   ‘~,—`,`.
~ V Tha he"Y rebaeeo rrahSPlahrariOh ah For more information, contact Larry   ,ti’ Z
  tachment is intended to broaden the Swcmam at 25y_y383_   r,·,r at ,V_.r';  
` `i _ uses of the harvester and make it more  
,!··: practical for small farms with limited  
  equipment budgets.  
.t The basic machine is a gasoline pow-  
   A a ered, three-wheel platform designed for   ‘1`  a  yr
  __ re fx . versatility, ease of operation and low  
  __.`·~   cost. In its tobacco harvesting mode,  
  the machine cuts each plant as it guides   `,._ r j .V,i  
· .` itself automaticall down each row. The   _ ~.»·` ii`  
eq`}, _·    j  { operator, seated comfortably, spears the     »;‘`
  fi  Q ga. _ cut plants on sticks in the traditional  
`L ` war  
Willis said, "The complete list of Although the semi-mechanized tobac-  
people buried in the Lexington Ceme- co harvesting system is not significantly ,  ij
tery is a who’s who in the history of faster than hand methods, operator  
Lexington and K5n[uCky_" Kentucky comfort is improved substantially.  
statesman Henry Clay and other fa-  
mous Kentucky families such as the   _
Morgans and the Breckinridges are  
buried there. V  

 1  .;    E   1   I 1
.   ’r'_ ~ ,.         V I E
· Y .; _ . ,1 ‘ 1 ]
  RE 0RT  
I 1 1
      _ 1
  THIS 1984 ANNUAL REPORT .  
» PRESENTS AN ACCOUNTING 1
OF THE SERVICES AND 1
I I PROGRAMS YOUR UK E
1 NATIONAL ALUMNI  
‘ A A ASSOCIATION PROVIDED IN I 1  
.   A I l Y THE PAST YEAR. IT HAS  
 I 1 I BEEN A PLEASURE TO I  
P I Q   I P WORK WITH THE _  
A   * A A A I  _ 1 VOLUNTEER LEADERSHIP » S
C ‘ _ gj  _  I A YOU HELPED ELECT I 1
A I ~ PLEASE KNOW THAT THE  
F I ; ’ ~ RENEWAL OF YOUR * ·  
I -   _ MEMBERSHIP AND THE  
I A `I I A CONTINUED GROWTH OF  
  A j C , A   VO.` THIS ASSOCIATION ARE A ‘ 1
  _     {   T O 1 VITAL TO THE SUCCESS OF T
C I A I A A 1 OUR MISSION IN RAISING .  
A ·   __-L ° - F   FRIENDS FOR THE I
‘ IY,_ f U , »     I S UNIVERSITY AND T  
    ’ I » > 1 A A ENHANCING OUR SERVICES   · " 
Y > ` A 1 L A TO HIGHER EDUCATION. I ’_`» 1
I L_ I 1 THANK YOU! _ <  
I   Y1   _ A 1 V ‘ _]AY BRUMFIELD   I I
. I 1 1 1 DIRECTOR, ALUMNI AFFAIRS ~ 1
P A A ‘ 1
1
I
1
I

 ` KZ  `.   `y""”. ‘,`     
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A              i      
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i Membershi in the UK National Alum-  i     _   i             The National Association offers 14 ben-
i ni Associatiien reached an all-time high               in        ii  efits of membership from a car decal to Af
5 in 1984 with 24,465 members, an in-  'inie ·`§ *     automatic membership in one of 68 tai
  crease of five percent over the previous   gg;         _,,         alumni clubs and/or aiililiated college ‘  
Q year. Life members represent 30.3 per-    gi              organizations. Approximately 200 club i
  cent of the total membership. The   __,, *,/   Vg,[A>_ _     w ig v>_,  x    functions were held in 1984. { SOI
i iin'ee`Yeni mempeisnip Opiipn gained   Mare than 115 members participated nw
é substantially in popularity with 22 per-   in the alumni travel program, Tours mi
l cent of the members preferring this and the number of participants in each ‘ ,
method of payment. Last year more than 83,000 data chang- during 1984 were: Mexico City/Puerto Jui
Distribution of membership among es were processed in order to maintain Vallarta, 15; Australia/New Zealand, las
f the class years based on a random sam- the accuracy of information such as ad- 11: Passage of the Czars, 12: Germany, aw
  plc shows 13.5 percent having gradua- dresses, degrees, marital status, occupa- 25; University Abroad in Great Britain, ac;
  ted or attended prior to 1944; 12.2 per- tion, etc. 8, and Scandinavia, 47. thi
  cent between 1944 and 1954; 14.6 per- About 70 percent of the members Spindletop Hall, the alumni-faculty .
i cent between 1955 and 1964; 23.5 per- continue to reside in Kentucky with club on Iron Works Pike, now has its;
1 cent between 1965 and 1974 and 36.3 nearly 28 percent out-of-state and 2 per- about 1,700 alumni memberships. mc
i percent between 1975 and 1983. The cent in foreign countries. Membership is open to alumni with 12 COI
  most recent graduating class receives an The largest constituent organization or m01“€ credit h0L1rS Wh0 hold member- WC.
i ollcr tojoin the National Association for continues to be the College of Business ship in the UK National Alumni Asso- Of:
t_ one year at half price. About 400 new and Economies followed by Arts & Sci- Ciation.
, graduates from the class of 1983 took ences, Engineering and Dentistry. Jef- Wildcat merchandise was offered to %
  advantage o1` this oller in 1984. ferson Community College has the alumni in cooperation with the Univer-
i Alumni clubs began a concerted ef- greatest number of graduates on the sity Bookstore. The bookstore is now $6(
’ fort in late 1984 to contact alumni who alumni membership roster for the sec- under the management of Follet Stores —
, did not renew their membership. Mem- ond year in a row. Inc. who prepared a four-color bro-
  bership committee chairman Laura ehure for alumni. $51
’ Glenn White said the etl`ort was paying Hundreds of members enjoyed _
E oll` and itis hoped 1985 renewal statistics Post presidents ofthe Notionol Alumni Associo- check-out privileges at all University
E will improve accordingly. ln 1984, the iiOn lUd9€Cl the elnb Gweiids PiO9"9m enilies Oi and community college libraries. Many E
i l`(TIl(‘\V2ll FZIIC WVZIS 2lppI`()X1fl'l211Cly   PCI`- ihe   Summer Vi/Orlishqpi From Iefii   U1€I'Hb€I`S CO1'ltlI'1Ll€Cl to {3kC advantage
1.   §;*rg,?2· Dr M Fmt md Joh me of discounts from the U.,.V...i., P .... $3,
  Altogether, the records sta1l` main- of Kentucky. One of the most popular _
  tains more than 119,000 individual re- books this year was professor Bert
  cords of alumni and associates. The UK Nelliis book about UK basketball. $2(
i_ National Alumni Association is the otli- Family life insurance and use of the *
cial recordskeeper for the University as UK Career Planning and Placement
niantlatcd by the UK board of trustees.   Center were other benelits utilized by Sli]
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(_     V   . A _’V-‘1=Qfj,-iv Highlighting 1984 activities by alumni     jr, \ if  i` 
      .'       .   clubs were derby parties held in 21 cities e   1   ‘ i ‘ / I} .
‘     _ ._ .._»   '°"“"’{  ii throughout the United States, Northern i   *‘ —l>_ .'   ` .
``ZV i` i. `i:`     ’‘-—` _   Kentucky and Jefferson County club _·,. _   '   i`?·¢_/.’. ll
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