xt7zkh0dw116 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7zkh0dw116/data/mets.xml Lexington, Kentucky (Fayette County) University of Kentucky Alumni Association 1981 v. : ill. ; 28 cm. Quarterly, Publication suspended 1922 and resumed with v. 1, no. 1 (May 1929); v. 5, no. 9 (May 1933) not published; issues for v. 37, no. 2-v. 40, no. 1 (spring 1966-spring 1969) incorrectly numbered as v. 38, no. 2-v. 43, no. 1; v. 40 (1969) complete in 3 no. journals  English [Lexington, Ky. : University of Kentucky Alumni Association, Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. Kentucky alumnus University of Kentucky. Kentucky alumni 2002- Kentucky alumnus monthly Kentucky alumnus, vol. 01, no. 51, 1981 text Kentucky alumnus, vol. 01, no. 51, 1981 1981 2012 true xt7zkh0dw116 section xt7zkh0dw116   V 4 V   _-r·   -»     ··.»~  -~- A - V    V ’  V ' ·   V Vr,4 *·< ·=V·,. V r ` gw;  .4 _   
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 Alumni Travel • 1981 I
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Always reammg wzth a hungry cart.
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1 NEW ZEALAND/MILFORD TRACl<—l5 nights in de- 5 YELLOWSTONE PARK-SUN VALLEY—Charter flights
luxe and first class hotels in major cities+"Experience to Yellowstone National Park fer four nights; bus trans- I
the most beautiful vvalk in the vverld+THE MILFORD fer via Craters of the Moen to Sun Valley for three full I
TRACl<." days ofactivity. Tvve dinnersincluded. g
February 19-March 8 > $2,765 from Les Angeles July 15-22 $575 from Cincinnati  
ICONLIN-DODDS_AG.ENCY)__ IARTHURS TRAVEL)  
.. '_ , l IY  
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2 THE GREAT HAWAIIAN CRUISE—Fly from the main- 6 ITALIAN ADVENTURE—An11-day visit te the "Best of  
land of United States to Honolulu and beard the S.S. ltaly"+3 nights at the Bauer Grunvvald Hotel in Venice;  
OCEANIC INDEPENDENCE for a seven-day cruise of 3 nights at the Baglioni Hotel in Florence; and 3 nights  
Oahu, Molokai, Lanai, Hilo, Kona, Mau and l., I
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Robert Burns Wilson d
Portrait of Mary Hendricks Swigert Moore I
(Little Bo Peep), c. 1883-1890
Collection of the Kentuck Historical Societ  
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2 adapte

 I
O
From the Frontier Era to the Great War/ by Arthur jones and Bruce Weber
rom january 25th through March 15th, "'i"'“"“__
1981, the University of Kentucky Art There 67/Olved
Museum will hold the first comprehen- in Kentucky G
sive exhibition of 19th and early 20th   new by-ged of
century Kentucky painting. The Kentacky i art enthusiasts .
Paznter will reveal the Commonwealth s role in   I _ d ll t
the development of early American art, and   an C0 ec Om"
demonstrate the diversity and aesthetic i .  i
excellence of Kentucky's artistic heritage.  ·. V ,.
Portrait painting was the dominant field of i ' ..
artistic endeavor in the Commonwealth in the   'I i
early and mid-19th century. Landscape, genre,   i i  
still-life, historical and religious subjects   A _ T
seldomly were painted during this period, as  
there was little patronage for such works. This ‘“ { . »   , , ~ I , _ \
situation changed only after the Civil War. [   xl ,
During the late 19th century, major ¤‘    `I \
exhibitions of American and European art   I
were held in Louisville as well as in nearby , ···._ ,
Cincinnati. There evolved in Kentucky a new
breed of art enthusiasts and collectors. In .
greater numbers, native—born artists began to M `
study painting in Cincinnati, New York and
abroad. Forced to paint portraits to earn their Wi||i¤m Ed-¤rd West
iiViiig» iii iiiy ii iiiiiiy iiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiy   £2ii;i’.2§£’;’$§ZiAii,‘;'?ij;?€§i.., M....... OM Oi.,
to Kentucky was brief. Now, artists from other ’ ’
regions of the country began to settle in prominent visitors. Artists of the northern
Louisville, Frankfort and other cities of the Kentucky cities of Covington, Newport,
state. Aware of contemporary trends, the works Augusta and Maysville maintained a
of natives and residents reflected the influence particularly close association with Cincinnati.
of the Dusseldorf, Barbizon, and Munich Little has been discovered about the activities
schools of painting, as well as French academic of painters in eastern and southeastern
art. In the early 20th century Impressionism Kentucky, the coal mining and mountainous
and Post—Impressionism influenced a growing regions of the state.
number of artists of Kentucky. The Kentucky Paznter will include paintings
Throughout the 19th and early 20th century by such nationally recognized Kentucky artists
Lexington and Louisville maintained their as Matthew Harris jouett, Edward Troye and
positions as Kentucky’s leading art centers. In Frank Duveneck. A major highlight of the
addition, Bowling Green, Frankfort, Paris and
Danville supported local painters and attracted
Portrazt pamtmg was the
domzmmt fzeld of arttstzc
endeavor through the
Cwzl War perzod.
adapted from Beuux An; 3

 Th h,bi , exhibition is the inclusion of paintings by such Bluegrass state’s important contribution to   Q»·
e ex z HP"' prominent visitors as Chester Harding, George American culture in the field of visual art. lj
A catalog Provides Healy, john Neagle, john james Audubon, The majority of works in the exhibition have   J
G significant Thomas Waterman Wood, j. Rusling Meeker, been lent by institutional and private  
and Substantial Worthington, Wittredge and Alexander collections in Kentucky and Ohio, while a  
introduction Wyant. Additionally, the work of such beloved selection of important paintings arrive from  
to the hikto artists of the Commonwealth as William the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the National ~
_ _   Edward West, joseph Bush, Oliver Frazer, Carl Portrait Gallery, the Corcoran Gallery of Art,
of pazntzng in Brenner, Harvey joiner, Paul Sawyier, and and other leading art institutions.  
Kentucky. Robert Burns Wilson, will be featured. The exhibition catalog serves as a significant `
Among the less well remembered, though and substantial introduction to the history of
V outstanding, artists of the Commonwealth, painting in the Commonwealth through the
whose paintings illuminate an understanding of World War I era. It consists of two essays, as l
the richness of Kentucky’s past, are Louisville’s well as brief biographical sketches of the more
Paul Plaschke, j. B. Alberts, Patty Thum, than 70 artists featured in the exhibit, and
jonn Botto, Clarence Boyd, and Hewitt Green, individual analysis of the more than 100 works. i
Paris’s Hattie Hutchcraft Hill, Bowling Green’s The University of Kentucky Art Museum is
Clement Edwards, Augusta’s Stephen Alke, located in the University Center for the Arts, _
Georgetown’s Will T. Hunleigh, Frankfort’s at the corner of Rose Street and Euclid Avenue
Natalie Sawyier, and Lexington’s Samuel Price. in Lexington. The Museum is open Tuesday
Supported by grants from the National through Sunday, from noon to 5 p.m. An
Endowment for the Arts and the Kentucky exhibit catalog can be ordered by mail ($7.50 e
Arts Commission, the exhibition and catalog each plus $1 shipping) from the UK Art Q,
will prove to be an enlightening survey of the Museum, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. V
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  , ‘ · ‘ if-»»»¤h¤l.>.· ?       . . if ` i
Henry Stull
Honover, l897-1898
Privote Collection
4 S

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Q niversity School was a grand
I- é experiment in education.
E § Teachers were collected
" purposely from a number of
colleges to represent diverse
philosophies of education espoused in
the 1920s. Those divergent views were
J melded eventually into a program that
` continued for 44 years and yielded a
significant number of high achievers.
The training school, as it was
called, was housed in the current
- Taylor Education Building across
Limestone Road from the UK
Administration Building. What a
building it was in l920l It was
constructed with a $150,000 gift from
the general education board of New
York City and a $150,000
appropriation from the Kentucky
Legislature. It was located on a 14
acre site that was donated by the city
of Lexington. The city school board
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assisted in the operation of the school building, an earnest effort has been organization of the training school was
by paying the salaries of the kinder- made to utilize all the space available different from the organization of any    
garten teacher, six elementary school for some useful educational purpose" training school in the United States.   ¢j=
teachers and two junior high school Even the gymnasium was scheduled for Work started with children in the pre-    
teachers. In return, the training school use practically every period in the day. school group, ages Sl/2 to six. The two   Q
accepted 25 students in each grade The building was the epitome of classrooms for these youngsters had i the
from the overcrowded city school design. Throughout the building, the doorways opening into an enclosed mokl
districts-- Maxwell and Ashland Park. most modern type of heating and courtyard with playground equipment. the
The building housed classes from ventilating were installed. Every room The elementary division consisted of Cl
pre-school through college level. The is abundantly supplied with light and the first six grades. Each grade had a Yka?
stage of the auditorium "was made ample provision has been made for large classroom and a smaller group $1;;
sufficiently large to use it for artificial lighting in case of cloudy room where more individualized d
. . ,, , . . . . . an
demonstration teaching. The stage weather, declared the Lexmgiwz instruction than ordinarily possible .
0. . . . .
may be easily converted into a L ader in its press report It was also occured pam
. . . ,, . . chan
classroom which will accommodate as noted in the newspaper that No child Most of the high school grades also dd
. . . . . . . . . a I
many as 50 children. More than 400 in any room in the entire training had a larger classroom and adjoining med
persons may sit in the auditorium and school will ever be called upon to smaller group rooms. The chemistry, lac
. · . . . . . . I
witness a demonstration of good climb more than one flight of stairs. physics and biology laboratories were P E1
teaching." There is no basement and there is no well equipped and were "nearly ideal the 1
There was also a library, cafeteria, attic. There are just two floors in the in the way of utilization of space and ath
gymnasium, doctors office. nurse`s building and all the work will be done equipment as they can be made.`A iexi
office and a large hall to display the on these two floors," There were also home economic wasr
work of the students. "ln planning the In 1920 it was believed that the laboratories for foods and clothing. prog
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lg   more than 1,000 alumni
  ' returned to Lexington to talk
  about at a reunion October 24. It was
` the people. The idea for the reunion ( _ __
Z took root when Mrs. Courtney Ellis, in   LQ;
the company of Morris Beebe and Dr. 2 ’ ' _ <&;~e& V
Claude Trapp, remarked about the '   és
likelihood of a reunion. In the   _ ,‘·._
intervening year between the remark `2 , _ &,·. — h°¤»,1;;.__
and the reality, the circle of interested V 9* 00*,. `  
participants widened to include a _ ,     ` , 4    
chairman for each class; the search for I,.Z·2’,,g °·’4-,}& 'lrgix  
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addresses 1ntens1f1ed and the S, " .1651;.}, _ 00;,, Q I  
_ mechanics of the reunion—date, time, ‘· _ °*·Q_,;;i‘;.,! *¤_é‘_;·_  
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place—were sol1d1f1ed. 5 I [°'   b°'  
Elbow-to-elbow camaraderie filled ' Oo ._ °l§,;._  
. the Lexington Center as alumni were ya)   ` `°’c,;~._ "
· gathered in from far and near. Q ·· °·s»c, ., ,,*6.,,.* &*’  
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I exington s biggest convention hall ,.4 ,e»°’:._` ·.
` wasn`t big enough as the dance _ °’ 6»eq·._ '°¤  
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Nelson Woolcovt, Mary Mylar Brumfield, Marvin Meyers, Johnny Hardwick, Dr. Roy Murphy, Ann Wickliffe Hardwick, John and Marie Leathers Nichols, Ralph McCracken V I
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on the table. When tl1e Tommy wouldn`t have recognized anyone" and  `<· ¥ ‘`’   _
P()f$(‘y l)lll](l l)(‘g2lIl [ll`? ('V(`l1II1g Wltll   [h€]'1 qLIICkly addfjd, WS ve all · 1 W ( V  
Moonlight Serenade, there was a changed for thc better. Dr. David _  s    
collective sigl1 of reverie as couples Cd7’)'l(l7`(ld€7"L€ fzlled the Trapp of Lexington agreed. Even i A A ·
drifted toward the dance floor _ though l1e`s remained in Lexington, ig y
enveloped in a cocoon of memory. Lexington Center "I`m seeing people from right here in  
l.est there were any memories there   town that I l1aven`t seen since school," yl; _r
tl1at neede