xt7dfn10pn3g https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7dfn10pn3g/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. 3 text images Kentucky Alumnus, 1985, No. 3 1985 2012 true xt7dfn10pn3g section xt7dfn10pn3g · * =-¤-¢-- >~¤   ·*··     ;.···».a·~· V- »·   ,~¤,q .· - ,._·   ». ,
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¤ `s; Sfgff UK campus first as student and then as teacher. ·
Lexington, KY 40506-0119, for
its dues-paying members.
Opiniogs expressed in The
Kentuc y Aumnus are not
I22$;:;:JY.2I:;:,s;:‘r.,.t  Class Notes  
UK Alumni Association. · ‘
S23[Qjj'§;‘,,;‘;f§;j'§*;.fjjsQfd_ A class by class update about alumni.
Send Io The Kentucky Alumnus,
UK Alumni Association,
lexington, KY 40506. I
?<`·"'i" r'»·· rr ·t.—. I  ,·.·   7- li*’?`jj

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l
Old Blue Rolls Agoin Support for Business Reporting S
After several years of carrying students ` ‘ The Knight Foundation has awarded
and visitors around the UK campus,   i   $50,000 to the UK School of journal-
"Old Blue," UK’s double-decker Eng- "'”-W ism to support instruction in business
lish bus, was beginning to show its age. journalism. l
But ajust-completed restoration has re- Creed Black, chairman and publish- |
turned the 30-year-old coach to its for- er of Knight-Ridder Co.’s Lexington
mer glory. i Hemld—Leader, presented a check to the
It was the first major renovation since , Q i M  , school to endow the course in business
the bus was bought, refurbished and     , ·_ reporting and writing.
donated to UK by the UK National   @®Um\li;;i§n·ydKENiL(ir·rEQiyig, i` Edmund Lambeth, director of the
Alumni Association in 1974. =   " journalism school, said the foundation
The project started in late 1984- when   · · grant would have "a major impact on
workers in UK’s physical plant division gt?  i rl g  the enrichment of the school’s curricu-
removed the massive British Leyland i i __  ____ _   lum."
engine. By january, Old Blue had been i rq., `Q_ 1;;  _  ,      V    » — Interest on the investment, Lambeth
moved to the PPD body shop where the _______-1; said, will be used to hire from the re-
task of removing some seven coats of gion a "Knight visiting professional in
Old Paint was Und€ttak€n· Old Blue, looking better than ever, is business lnntnalismi i tn teach tn€
February saw the renovation effort now back at its Old job Of providing COUYSC.
intensify. While workers were busy guided {Oui-S gf the UK campus _ _ _ Tl1€ funds also will bring distin-
$tYiPPi¤g ih€ im€¤”i0F, €Xt€1”i0Y b0dY· that is, after one final detail was taken guished spcciansts tv Lexington tO 3~P`
work was completed and a fresh coat of Care Of_..th€ trimming Of iOw-hanging pear in the Class and at the University.
UK blue paint was applied Bragg fl;- tree branches SO rhny WOnidn¤r hit Oid Books and instructional materials will
tings and trim, which previously had Blur;-’S frcshiymaimcd {Op d€Ck_ be purchased with funds from the grant.
been painted over, were stripped and Lambeth added, "American journal- —·
polished. Much of the electrical wiring ism in recent years has recognized the
was replaced. An all-new interior in increasing importance of giving the
white and contrasting shades of blue public not only timely and reliable busi-
was installed, and by the end of the Collqloo Poetry Series Goes to ¤¢SS ¤ewS, but in-depth reports on an
month a newly-rebuilt engine (bought Europe increasingly complex economy."
in Virginia) was lowered into place.   Lambeth said he and the faculty also
By the end of March, with new pad- _ hope to enlist similar support for the
ded velour seats and wall-to-wall carpet- The Canalon POCUY Series, 3 PnbnCn` establishment of specialized courses
ing insrriiirriy Oid Blue was ready in tion designed and printed entirely at in Science and arts reporting ¢¤ was made by me Naricml En- am be Osama inthefal1of1986. ti
dowment for the Arts book in their dis-
Pl“Y· _ IIIIIIIIIIIIIIEIIII l
Also, the Callaloo Poetry Series,     ,
which has published four chapbooks of   .
poetry, has received a $2,250 grant II "   if  i
from the Kentucky Arts Council. .---”w"’*"""*=**=~··r-...erV 1@:,—,§*"!'€l_'°i 
Charles H. Rowell, English, is editor of       I-
the Series, as well as editor of Callaloo    
magazine. !_’;.;_i·_··_:_~s.._i_t:•_'_.·§___  rn ;} 
  E
I.ln-- i f`? .-  1 lI `‘‘‘ S nlll
IIIIIIIlllIilIIIIIII
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
2 UK

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i Second Endowed Choir For B 8. E Poin Relief
Another endowed chair in the College Pain is therapeutic. It tells us to stay off rally its own defenses to fight the pain.
of Business and Economics is a reality. a sprained ankle while it heals, or tells The human body contains naturally-
UK President Otis Singletary an- us to rub a freshly-bruised shin. These occurring chemicals which are eH"ective
~' nounced the successful completion of a minor aches and pains are part of life, in fighting pain. If, however, the body
i campaign to raise 15750,000 for a chair but when pain persists for an inordi- is constantly challenged with pain, the
in Management Informations Systems. nately long time, or at excruciating lev- reserves are depleted and the natural
A challenge gift of 15250,000 by War- els, help is needed. . pain reliefis greatly diminished.
ren Rosenthal, chairman of the board of But, when it comes to chronic pain- It may be that a block will alleviate
Jerrico, lnc. in Lexington, which re- pain that lasts six months or longer- the problem and allow people a return
i quired that a two-for-one match be the University of Kentucky Medical to work quicker, or it may free them
raised, spurred the fund-raising cam- Center is often the "court of last re- from pain so they can tolerate treat-
paign for the chair, Singletary said. sort" for relief. To meet this ever-pres- ment, such as physical therapy. A
An endowed chair is a faculty posi- ent and growing need for relief, UK has movement as common as lifting a heavy
p tion that is funded by an endowment. established a Pain Management Pro- Object, gr twisting the wrong way can
S Such a position is used to recruit an gram in University Hospital. result in pain, and sometimes that will
outstanding faculty member in a disci- Dr. William Ackerman, assistant become chronic_ That’s when Acker-
pline in which a critical need exists. professor of anesthesiology, is the clini- man and his people come into focus.
, _ According to Richard Furst, dean of cal director for diagnosis and therapeu- Some of the more serious pain proh-
the college, the chairholder will have tic pain management. lems are associated with cancer pa-
three major responsibilities: developing Working on a physician-referral basis tients_ Ackerman also has had success in
. research programs to address problems only, Ackerman’s group expects to see treating people suiirering from shingles
_ faced in the management information 300-400 patients for a year. "Back pain (hgrpeg Zoster), a relatively common vi-
, » area by business and government; de- accounts for about 66-75 percent of all ral complaint in which patients develop
veloping ll'1Stl`U€tl0¤¤l PF0§r3mS at Chrohlc Palhdi Aoltormah Sald» but he blisters near nerve endings. Shingles is
. both the undergraduate and graduate also treats patients for mal"lY tYP€$ of extremely uncomfortable and conven-
t levels within the college; end developing pain which persist ot e level ei Wliieli o tional treatment is nat all that eriective.
i seminars for the business community. person cannot function. More and rnpre physicians will re-
. A nationwide Search for the B€€¤uS€ Path mahagcmtmt is 3 rele- ceive training in pain management in
i chairholder is under way and n person tively MW dlS€lPll¤€» thcrc arerrt m¤¤Y the future, Ackerman said. All residents
will be named to fill the position soon, reputable, qualified olinies at Patlcrltls at UK are required to do a rotation in
, Furst said. disposal. Ackerman said he sees pa- his area before passing their hpards
i The first chair, established a year tl€¤t$ at UK from throughout Kentucky Additional pain management specialists
5 agp, is for banking and financial serv- and from neighboring states as well. will be added ro the UK stair, Acker-
, ices. That chair is held by Dr. Donald Thi? Pain Mohagomoht Program is man said, which will help UK handle
. Mullineaux. Called tho last resort because bY the time even more cases which are referred here
I Ackerman sees patients, they have been {rpm Outlying areas. p
, through extensive medical and P$Ycl'lo` The youthful specialist said, "We re- g
l   losieol oxamlhotlohs arld tcstlrlgi to ho ally get into pain around here . . . so l
i avail. you can get out of it."  
The treatment Ackerman offers
i amounts to breaking the pain cycle. He
, uses injected anesthetics to block the
li pain pathway. This method, which may
. take only five minutes, works for both __ 5:-1.  
short- and long-term pain. Overall, the   ,, i,`  `
blocks yield about a 60-65 percent suc-   " i .»_  »·   
cess rate of either eliminating the pain   .. Y'.; if /,’i~i_Z
or reducing it to a manageable level.    
The block is similar to the injection a _.   _   E`;
dentist gives a patient for dental work. ln *   
Ackerman said it allows the patient’s ‘ .    
body a respite from the pain so it can  A  _ A   l
  ....‘ ~
W  UK 3 i

 i t
Room, Boord Rotes Up ,
is . I   ` ·‘‘ Z     ·
Room and board rates will increase L    .1;.     `’`.¥ » o`°A`     *’,·   `:·,   ’°’.i  *   _[ ’   E
¤b0u* 2 Pcmim {OY the 198**86 aca`     . 1 . .   »l.€ ;   =l,     *
demic year to maintain the self-support-     l,,‘     ````"`ii°: I `“"i i   `i`>i     '‘``'` " ii 1   _     t `
ms status Ofthc Service J =   `vi.  T         ' ii          * · 
The r·r<>i>¤S¤<* ¤¤tS result prt T   ‘¥i»»   »:;~; ;       ``ii   a.*—    i g *
" marily from increased labor, food, and           »·`—    gg __ ,
utility costs," said Dr. jack Blanton, }‘\“Y’       ‘`:`    ··   i ;
UK vice chancellor for administration. .         —»·»--e ’   _ 3
"Thesc rates cover debt service, all op-     `   _»_»    Lati            
erating costs and funds for replacement .  ,   _ '_ 4 ~       ·   ,
of furniture and equipment," Blanton .     `   ,§,._., · _ '    t`-i °
Room and board rates vary accord-   ·-r i   ·   ~..—,   O _‘``     
ing to the number of meals for which   A. 1 `            " i  2     ` ··   
Students Sign up- \   M   {sg   ll ig;   p    g , _ ,  
The most popular plan is two meals a      i`   {   <°’ ':`i‘’   ` ' V .   ```i,
(lay, five days a week. The new rates for   ` i " “"` ,
this plan will increase by $51 a year, to t 
$2,148 in the fall of 1985, a 2.43 per- Q
(wt inemiss Broin-Immune Response  
Other meal plans and the new rates     ‘
mic: mrc? mulls A d_ay’ Seven days a Looking in a crystal ball . . . iflabora- periments to determine if the immune  
wt-ek,`a $62 per year ¤¤  
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s the final seconds ticked _  _     _     {
away, joe B. Hall main- t»: ..   * ·A _ ...,  ., s     `‘l‘ Li     l
tained a stoic, nearly relaxed { jg   · . ,.5  _   ».   ¤  
expression on the sidelines,  .»   T .   . ` tl `‘~:_  g     __       {   , ij    3
Mime latch M0 players hoisted the ‘ .   `  Z'-,        ‘i liiv   . ~   l
(jt)a(;l'i upOr1 Illfilr SllOUlClCI`S l`OI" the llI'l?1l   ,  (S:   ,_  »     si         T I ii
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The scene was not from the Universi-   ·   ‘     `
ty of Kentucky’s 1985 regional loss to Z     ___.   Q. K
St. _lohn’s in Denver, but a college all-   K I   ·`»»   S
star game nine days later_ The players  ;,\» _ g      »-p     ,
were not Bret Bcarup and Kenny V\/ally     ( X",  ,r  ~ A
_ er, but Bobby lice Hurt of Alabama .-  \_    i 
and Iiugene McDowell of Florida. Still,       __A_A   ,_, » `
ll WMS the final gamcjoe Beasmim Hal]   _ t-   .  
coached.  
After 29 years, the last 13 directing   \§
UK, Hall decided to remain loyal to a * `:`’l Q  
promise made to his wife, Katherine,   I   I
long ago. Shortly after accepting his `
first basketball job, Hall promised that  
he would not coach beyond age 55. He i
exceeded that promise by only one year.   _
Rated as perhaps the toughest _job in   ,. `S 3
college athletics, the UK head basket- 2 i  
ball coach is subject to thc scrutiny of — i¤— ·
media, fans and sometimes the players ll I , i
themselves. The pressure may have _i ,, _
broken many men, but Hall survived ` S
and with rcniarkal>le success. He could Kqthqrine und Joe,H¤Ilwit|·»tfieir f¤milY4d¤¤9h*é¤  
*·¤·~’<* sm <>·· amd <‘<~·<*l¤¢<* ¤¤<>th¤t I3 $’°V°·°°¤*°*·¤¤·* ·’¤··.¤***°?K¤***YW‘*“**¤***°°“*’ Mlfe  ttss i if `rsi?  
seasons, but long ago the 56-year old
Hall decided that he was not going to be comfortably into private life, away from and individual accomplishments take a
an "old coach." the questioning and probing of UK back seat to Hall’s top priority.
The memories of keeping the tradi— fans, Hall will consider some ofthe nu- "Your greatest success is your play-
tion at UK intact were appreciated by merous offers he has received since ers and what they amount tO,” Hall
tlie ll,0(l(l—plus fans who attended the March. says. "Their growth and development
National Association of Basketball ()I`I—IaIl’g future, one thing ig certain, as people and their progress toward a
(loaclies all—star game at Memorial Col- He will continue to frequent the streams degree and becoming alumni is most
iseuni. lt was only fitting that when and ponds of not only Kentucky, but lmP0Tf3¤l- Your blgg€$l laallufi? is lh0$€
llall walked down the corridor for thc the nation as w€ll_ Reeently_ he partici- kids you failed to reach, who somehow
final time. the place where he started at pated in a television fishing special, or another did not fit into the program l
UK 20 years ago, the Coliseum, with its The success of a coach is often mea- when they came here.” j
storied history and mystique, would be sured in wins, losses and champion- Of 33 players that completed their el- i
the final chapter in his basketball ca- ships. With that in mind,Joe Hall must igibility under Hall, all but five earned l
l`l`<`l`. be judged as a good coach, In 13 sea- their undergraduate d€gI`€€S.  
()ver a nionth following his retire- sons at Kentucky, his teams won or During his tenure at UK, Hall pro-
ntcnt, _]oe llall finds civilian life relax- shared eight Southeastern Conference duced three academic all-Americans
ing. No longer does he concern himself championships, one national title, 11 and six academic all-SEC players, cho-
Wllli l>l¢i$'<`¤` l><`.-:2   ..o.9
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"Most of us develop our theories of choice to attend UK. speech by his players. "If they make a .
discipline and responsibility from our "l\/Iy feeling in that situation was to good impression when interviewed and I
parents," Hall says. "I look at athlet- say, ‘lo0k, this is the program here at in personal appearances throughout the
ics, and my responsibility to those play- Kentucky; we’d very much like to have state and country, that only enhances
ers, as essentially, a parent away from you and this is what’s expected of you.’ them," he says. "If they foul up and do
home. In the recruitment of them, I be- He may not be a good citizen when he not project a good image and do not ex-
came very close to their parents and comes to Kentucky, but he will be when ercise discipline, that messes them up
they transferred, in some sense, that re- he leaves." and hurts them in their future."
sponsibility to me." Hall credits his success as a recruiter Hall acknowledges the existence of
One of the major soiling points in to two factors—a good product and a sports as big business on campuses
Hauis Career was the [rust he earned I"1I`l'l'1   in   "If YOU believe in YOUY HCYOSS the YIHIIOH, IDUI OPPOSCS any  
f`rOrr1[heparentSOfp1g_yerS_ Hedidlgok product with enthusiasm and display rection deviant from the educational
1 at himself as the ~papa bear), and has that to your customer, that it is the best, goals of the universities. With the in- i
ll been known to Wai; for players until tho he will then buy it. Then all the sales creased financial gains being realized by  
' Woo hours of rho morning things involved in consumating a deal athletic programs, an alarming number  
"You gain a reputation so that par- are much the same as getting a large of schools have been penalized for
ents believe in you and in your pro- contract for a coal company. cheating and illegal activities. Hall says ,
· gram," Hall says. "You attract the Hall refers to UK basketball as a there is no place in college sports for  
{ type of men that put a premium on