Honors College
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1974-751975-761976-771977-78 1978-79 1979-80 The 80s
1974–75 |
FALL 1974 (MAN, SCIENCE, AND SOCIETY)
Old Populism: Panel of USM History & Political Science Professors
September 12, 1974
Ray Skates was a professor history at USM and served as the chairman of the history department at the time of his talk. His special interest was in Mississippi history and 20th century US history.
New Populism
September 19, 1979Fred Harris, a retired senator and former Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, was a candidate for the democratic nomination for President in 1972.
Panel Discussion – Industrialization in Mississippi: How Much is Enough?
September 26, 1974Student Printz, Vol. 58, issue 5. Expressed the position of business, labor, and environmentalists on the problem of balancing the economic needs of Mississippi’s relatively unspoiled climate.
Are We Running Out of Time?
October 3, 1974Melvin Kranzberg was an American historian best known for his laws of technology.
The Mineral Search
October 10, 1974R.W. Bromery was the Chancellor and a professor of Geophysics at the University of Massachusetts.
Puritanism to Existentialism
October 17, 1974Spoke about changing definition of the deity from puritanism to existentialism.
Science and Human Values
October 24, 1974Editha Neumann was a USM professor who discussed the problematic relationship between man’s will to know what is and man’s moral sense of what out to be as it presents itself from ancient times to the atomic age.
October 31, 1974
George Pessoney was a USM professor who served as the Research Coordinator of the College of Science and Technology. His special interests included algae, cryptogamic botany, and ecology.
November 7, 1974
Ruth Moorman was a USM professor of foreign language whose special interests included Latin and Greek and Old French literature.
Wallace Kay was the Curriculum Director of the Honors Program whose special interest was comparative literature.
Evolution
November 14, 1974Loren Eisley was an anthropologist and historian of science.
WINTER 1974-75
No information available.
SPRING 1975
The Responsibility of the Press
March 13, 1975Turner Catledge was the former editor of the New York Times.
The Energy Crisis: Some Solutions
March 20, 1975John Sawhill was the former director of the Federal Energy Administration under President Nixon.
April 3, 1975
Where Are the Political Reformers When We Need them?
April 10, 1975Nicholas von Hoffman was a journalist and author who was a columnist for the Washington Post and served as a CBS Commentator.
Sexual Suicide
April 17, 1975George Gilder is an author who wrote the novel “Sexual Suicide and the Plight of the Unmarrieds.”
The Rights of Women
April 24, 1975Martha Griffiths was a Congresswoman from Michigan and sponsor of the ERA.
The Middle East and the Politics of Oil
May 1, 1975Bob Evans served as a Middle Eastern correspondent and Moscow bureau chief for CBS.
May 8, 1975
The US and the People’s Republic of China
May 15, 1975
1975–1976 |
FALL 1975 (MAN, SCIENCE, SOCIETY): BICENTENNIAL THEME
America
September 18, 1975Russell Kirk was a conservative author who wrote and spoke about political thought, educational theory, literary criticism, foreign affairs, moral questions, and other themes. He had a syndicated column, To the Point, as well as a book titled The Conservative Mind.
General Douglas McArthur
October 2, 1975Clayton James was, at the time of his lecture, a professor of history at Mississippi State University and served as a consultant to the BBC.
The History of the American Indian Movement
October 9, 1975LaDonna Harris is a member of the Comanche tribe and a social activist. She served as the President of the Americans for Indian Opportunity and was appointed by President Johnson to the National Council on Indian Opportunity. She served as a Chairwoman of the Women’s National Advisory Council on Poverty and has long been an advocate for minority rights.
The Common Soldier in the Civil War
October 16, 1975Bell Wiley, a former USM professor, was a historian, educator, and an author. Wiley wrote about the Civil War and was Chairman of the advisory board of the National Historical Society. Wiley also served as a member of the editorial board for the Jefferson Davis Association for publishing Davis’ papers.
Slave Experience in America
October 23, 1975Eugene Genovese was a historian who wrote about the American South and slavery. Genovese served as the chairman of the history department at Rochester University and wrote The Political Economy of Slavery.
Huey Long
October 30, 1975T. Harry Williams was a historian who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1969 for his biography of Huey Long. He was an authority on the Civil War and served as president of the 51¶şÄĚ Historical Association.
Harry Truman: The Man and the President
November 6, 1975Merle Miller was an author who is best remembered for his biography of Harry S. Truman.
American Perspectives
November 13, 1975William Manchester was an author, historian, and biographer who came to speak about his novel, The Arms of Krupp.
WINTER 1975-76
The Energy Crisis, Real or Imagined
December 11, 1975Stewart Udall was a politician who served as the Secretary of the Interior under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson.
The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence
December 18, 1975Victor Marchetti was a special assistant to the Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency. He resigned in 1969 and wrote a book, The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence, about his experience. The book underwent court-approved censorship was later re-published with empty space marking the CIA ordered deletions.
Wall Street Week
January 8, 1976Louis Rukeyser was a financial journalist and economic commentator who hosted Wall Street Week and spoke on economic conditions with emphasis on recovery. Rukeyser was network TV’s first economic editor in the early 1970s.
New Journalist
January 15, 1976Tom Wolfe was an author and journalist best known for his association with New Journalism, a style that emerged in the 60s and 70s and featured literary techniques.
Nuclear Power
January 22, 1976Ralph Nader is a political activist and author, best known at the time of this appearance for his position as a leader in the antinuclear movement.
Riddles of Education
January 29, 1976Max Rafferty was a writer and educator who served as the California State Superintendent for two terms from 1963-1971.
Unions
February 5, 1976John Anderson was a Republican congressman from Illinois who spoke about unions and labor legislation. At the time of his lecture, he was Chairman of the House Republican Conference.
Debate About Race*
February 12, 1976William Shockley was the winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1956 but spoke about “blacks and statistical measurements”. He was, essentially, a physicist turned eugenicist. It was stated that Shockley “will argue that statistics indicate blacks have inferior intelligence as a consequence of their genetic inheritance.”
Richard Goldsby was a professor at the University of Maryland at the time of his lecture. He was a proponent of the view that race is biological as opposed to a social construct.
*There was significant backlash from students and faculty over Shockley. Richard Goldsby was rescheduled from Spring Quarter to debate Shockley.
February 19, 1976
Les Whitten was an investigative journalist who worked with noted columnist Jack Anderson. He wrote about financial corruption on the part of senators and congressmen as well as giant corporations and political committees. He was arrested by the FBI for allegedly possessing secret government documents related to the Bureau of Indian Affairs that started a debate about the United States government’s suppression of news.
SPRING 1976
Ragtime
March 18, 1976E.L. Doctorow was a writer was best known for his works of historic fiction. His lecture was about his novel, Ragtime, which was later adapted into a film. He taught at Sarah Lawrence.
How Congress Really Works
March 25, 1976Martha Griffiths was a former congresswoman and a sponsor of the Equal Rights Amendment. This was her second visit to USM.
The Piano in America: A Love Affair
April 1, 1976At the time of this lecture, David Duvall was the music director of WNCN as well as a writer., and Stanley Waldoff was a professor of music at USM. This Forum was the first musical performance featured in the Forum series.
The Future of Blacks in Mississippi Politics
April 22, 1976At the time of his lecture, Charles Evers was the mayor of Fayette as well as a leader of the NAACP. He was known for leading boycotts against white merchants in 1965 in Natchez and Fayette.
Poetry
April 29, 1976W.D. Snodgrass was a poet who won the 1960 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.
The New Majority
May 6, 1976Pat Buchanan is a conservative political commentator who served as a speechwriter and political assistant for President Nixon. Buchanan also worked for Presidents Ford and Reagan.
The Next 200 Years
May 13, 1976Kenneth Boulding, at the time of his lecture, was an economist on the staff of the League of Nations and served as the Director of the Center for Research in Conflict Resolution.
1976-1977 |
FALL 1976
A Democrat Views the 76 Elections
September 16, 1976Frank Church unsuccessfully campaigned for the democratic nomination for President in 1976. He was a former Idaho senator as well as the chairman of the Senate investigation of the CIA and other intelligence agencies.
An Independent Candidate for President Speaks on the Issues
September 23, 1976At the time of his lecture, Eugene McCarthy was an independent presidential candidate and former senator of Minnesota. He was a member of the Agriculture Committee as well as the Ways and Means Committee and the founder of the Democratic Study Group.
A Republican Views the 76 Election
September 30, 1976Strom Thurmond ran as the National States’ Rights Party’s candidate for president in 1948, served as a senator and was the first person ever elected to a major office in a write-in campaign.
Black Politics
October 7, 1976At the time of his lecture, John Conyers was a member of the House Judiciary Committee and was a liberal voice in Congress on civil rights who openly opposed Vietnam. He introduced an article of impeachment in 1974 for the secret war in Cambodia.
A Political Forum
October 14, 1976This Forum featured a debate between republican incumbent Trent Lott and Gerald Blessey, his democratic opponent who served in the Mississippi Legislature and was president of the Biloxi Bar Association.
The Presidency and the Threshold of the Last Quarter of the Century
October 21, 1976Henry J. Abraham was, at the time of his lecture, a professor at the University of Virginia who wrote about the government and the judicial system. He served as a member of the Advisory Board of the Center for Advanced Studies at UV and was a consultant to the US Senate Subcommittee on Separation of Powers.
Are We A Second-Rate Power?
October 28, 1976William Westmoreland was a United States Army general, former Army Chief of Staff and Commander of the US Military Forces in Vietnam. He was highly decorated and retired after 36 years in the military as Chief of Staff, the highest position in the Army. Following his time in the Army, he became chairman of South Carolina’s Governor’s Task Force for Economic Growth.
Better Ways to Spend Tax Dollars
November 3, 1976William Proxmire was elected to the Senate to fill the slot opened by the death of Joseph McCarthy and became the first person in US Senate history to cast 3,000 straight roll call votes without missing one. He was a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee and chairman of its subcommittee on housing and urban development-space-science as well as a member of the subcommittee on labor-health, education and welfare, and related agencies.
The Presidency: The Next Four Years
November 11, 1976Hugh Sidey was a journalist who wrote about important national and international events such as President Nixon’s trip to China in 1972 and the Kennedy Assassination.
WINTER 1976-77
A 51¶şÄĚ Senator in the New South
December 9, 1976At the time of his lecture, Dale Bumpers was a senator from Arkansas who was elected in 1974 after unseating William Fulbright. He served a term as governor of Arkansas prior to that.
The New South
December 16, 1976At the time of his lecture, Maynard Jackson was the mayor of Atlanta. He was the first black mayor of Atlanta and the youngest person ever (at the time) to hold Atlanta’s highest executive office.
The Role of the South in the Presidential Election
January 6, 1977Gil Carmichael was a Mississippi businessman who was the Mississippi Republican Party’s nominee for the US Senate in 1972 and nominee for governor in 1975.
The Journalist and the New South
January 13, 1977Hodding Carter is a journalist who was the Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs under President Jimmy Carter.
Teamsters
January 20, 1977At the time of his lecture, Normal Goldstein was a nationally known member of the Teamsters Union and was the assistant director of organizing for the International Brotherhood of Teamsters.
The South and Transition
January 27, 1977Douglas Kiker was a Washington Correspondent for NBC and a Washington editor for the Today Show.
The South as a Counter-Culture
January 27, 1977At the time of his lecture, Dr. Sheldon Hackney was the president of Tulane as well as the president of the Council of 51¶şÄĚ Universities.
The Direction of the New South
February 10, 1977At the time of his lecture, Michael Cody was an attorney and former Memphis city council member.
Design and Popular Values: Will the New South Be 51¶şÄĚ
February 17, 1977At the time of his lecture, Jay Rodney Little was a historian from Florida State University who worked as a historic preservationist for the Florida Department of State.
SPRING 1977
Future Man
March 17, 1977At the time of his lecture, George Leonard was the senior editor of Look Magazine and wrote about education, race relations, science, politics, and art. He was a social commentator who wrote The Decline of the American Male.
The Future of Planet Earth
March 24, 1977Buckminster Fuller visited USM twice as a guest of Forum. He was an architect and designer.
The Future Isn't What It Used to Be
March 31, 1977David Gerrold is a science fiction screenwriter who is famous for writing The Trouble with Tribbles, a Star Trek episode. In addition to Star Trek, Gerrold wrote for various other science fiction television shows and served as the story editor for Land of the Lost.
Future Church
April 14, 1977Reverend Carter Heyward is a priest in the Episcopal Church and was part of the Philadelphia Eleven, 11 women ordained in 1974 who paved the way for recognition of women as priests in 1976.
The Poetry of Richard Wilbur
April 21, 1977Richard Wilbur was a poet and literary translator who won a Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in both 1957 and 1989.
Future Defense
May 5, 1977At the time of his lecture, David C. Jones was the Chief of Staff of the US Air Force and a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
The American Woman: Where is She Now and Where is She Going?
May 12, 1977At the time of her lecture, Elizabeth Carpenter was a journalist and the past president of the Women’s National Press Club.
1977-78 |
FALL 1977
Life After Life: Near Death Experiences
September 13, 1977During his lecture, Raymond Moody spoke about his experiences interviewing hundreds of people who had near death experiences.
Comic Books and the World Around Us
September 20, 1977Stan Lee was a comic book writer who co-created Spider-Man, the X-Men, Iron Man, Ant-Man, the Hulk, the Fantastic Four, and Black Panther, among others. He served as a public face of Marvel for many years and spoke about his belief in more realistic, engaging comics.
Carter’s First 300 Days in Office
September 27, 1977This was Les Whitten’s second visit to USM as a Forum Guest. He spoke about President Jimmy Carter’s first 300 days in office and Mississippi issues.
Love â€77
October 4, 1977At the time of this lecture, Dr. Joyce Brothers was a newspaper columnist and a psychologist.
The Piano and American Popular Music
October 11, 1977At the time of this lecture, Luigi Zaninelli was a professor of music at USM as well as a composer.
An Evening with Harlan Ellison
October 18, 1977Harlan Ellison was a writer best known for his work on Star Trek, Outer Limits, and The Alfred Hitchcock Show.
The Role of Polling in American Democracy
November 1, 1977At the time of his lecture, Tom Reinken was the editor of the Gallup poll.
WINTER 1977/78: The University Program Series: Man, Science, and Society
Broun at Large
December 6, 1977At the time of his lecture, Heywood Hale Broun was a sports essayist who delivered weekly sports reports for CBS weekend news programs and occasional reports for the Walter Cronkite news program. He was also a character actor on and off Broadway and wrote a book about theatre and sports called A Studied Madness.
The America I’ve Seen
December 13, 1977At the time of his lecture, Charles Kuralt was a CBS News correspondent, best known for On the Road.
Women: The Questioning Caste
January 3, 1978Frances Farenthold became the first female president of Wells College and served two consecutive terms in the Texas House of Representatives. She finished second in the race for Governor of Texas in 1972 and became the first woman to have her name placed in nomination for vice president of the United States the same year. She also served as chairperson of the National Women’s Political Caucus.
Socio-biology and Its Implications
January 10, 1978Robert Trivers presented a gene-based view of social behavior and applied it to humans.
A Collection of Dada Films
January 17, 1978This Forum was part of the USM German Culture Series sponsored by the USM Department of Foreign Languages and the Goethe Institute in Atlanta.
Dadaism was a nihilistic movement that started following WWI and continued into the 1920s. Hans Richter was an important figure and excerpts from his films Ghosts Before Breakfast, Rhythm 21, Symphonie Diagonale, Inflation, Everything Turns, Race Symphony, and Two-Penny Magic were shown.
The Lure of the Outdoors
January 24, 1978At the time of his lecture, Jack Ford was the assistant publisher of Rolling Stone and on the staff of their spin-off publication, Outside. He was a Park Ranger at Yellowstone and then a member of the US Forest Service Fire fighting crew. He later joined Jacques Cousteau’s crew for joint NASA-Cousteau research project and was a member of the Advisory Committee to the EPA. He also happened to be the son of President Ford.
What’s Wrong with the ERA Amendment
January 31, 1978Phyllis Schlafly was a conservative columnist and commentator who wrote a nationally syndicated column, the Schlafly Report, and appeared regularly on CBS’ Spectrum. She was the unofficial leader of the anti-ERA forces and an opponent of militant feminists. She appeared in numerous debates with leading feminists and proponents of the ERA and called the ERA, “a fraud, a foolish search for impossible equality.”
SPRING 1978
All My Children: An Actress in the World of Daylight Drama
March 14, 1978Ruth Warrick played Phoebe Tyler on All My Children and Orson Wells’ wife in Citizen Kane. She received an Emmy nomination for her role as Hannah Cord in Peyton Place and performed on Broadway.
Geomythology
March 21, 1978At the time of her lecture, Dorothy Vitaliano was a geologist who worked for the Translation Center of the US Geological Survey. Her lecture featured myths and folklore that have been intertwined with geological events such as Lost Atlantis and Noah’s Great Flood.
In Search of Arthur’s Britain
March 28, 1978Geoffrey Ashe is a cultural historian who spoke about the Arthurian legends and historical truth in them.
The Creative Act
April 4, 1978John Ciardi was an author and poet who spoke about the essentials of poetry.
In and Out of the Cults
April 11, 1978Margaret Singer was a philosophy/psychology expert who was a key witness at the Patty Hearst trial. Her lecture featured a discussion about cults and how they integrate people. She also spoke about the effect of a cult on people and how long it takes them to get back to normal.
Bull Fighting and the Brush
April 18, 1978Elaine de Kooning was an artist who was best known for her portraits of public figures. In her lecture, she spoke about her work and how badly the Kennedy assassination affected her (she had followed him for a year and painted him. She stopped painting for a year after his death).
The Colonization of Space
April 25, 1978Gerard O’Neill was a physicist and space activist who described what a space colony would look like and how it would be built.
Development of American Music
May 2, 1978Vincent Persichetti was a contemporary American composer and pianist who traced the development of American music as opposed to European traditional music through both words and notes by speaking and performing.
FALL 1978
European Communism
September 19, 1978Sir Harold Wilson was a British politician who served two terms as the Prime Minister of Great Britain
Why a Physician Turns to Writing
September 26, 1978Dr. Robin Cook is a physician and author who writes about medicine and public health.
A Mississippi Writer Views the South
October 3, 1978Willie Morris was a Mississippi native, author, editor in chief of Harper’s Magazine the youngest in the magazine’s history at the time.
The Rise and Fall of Professional Sports
October 10, 1978Tom Heinsohn was a former head Coach of the Boston Celtics who wrote about money in sports at the time of his lecture.
Proposition 13: An Overview
October 17, 1978Paul Gann was the co-sponsor of Jarvis-Gann Amendment to the California State Constitution.
COCHRAN |
DANTIN |
EVERS |
KIRKSEY |
Mississippi Senatorial Race
October 24, 1978This event was a discussion between Thad Cochran, Maurice Dantin, and Charles Evers, and Henry Kirksey.
The Mississippi Penal System
November 7, 1978Panel: Ron Welch defense attorney, Jon Weathers Forrest County DA, Robert Huggins Chairman of the Corrections Appropriations Committee in the MS House of Rep, Morris Thigpen Deputy Commissioner of the Department of Corrections in Mississippi
Clarence Clyde Ferguson November 14, 1978 International Protection of Human Rights
At the time of this lecture, Clarence Clyde Ferguson was a Harvard Law professor and former US Representative on the Economic and Social Council of the United Nation. Ferguson was also the deputy Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs and United States Ambassador to Uganda.
International Protection of Human Rights
November 14, 1978At the time of this lecture, Clarence Clyde Ferguson was a Harvard Law professor and former US Representative on the Economic and Social Council of the United Nation. Ferguson was also the deputy Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs and United States Ambassador to Uganda.
SPRING 1979
Selections from the Poetry of Howard Nemerov with Commentary
January 16, 1979At the time of this lecture, Howard Nemerov was the poet in Residence at Hollins College and an English professor as well as a celebrated contemporary poet. He also served as Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress and was a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He was also a chancellor of the Academy of American Poets and won a Pulitzer Prize.
The Way I Feel
January 30, 1979Nikki Giovanni is a poet, author, and activist who was a foremost author of the 1960s Black Arts Movement.
Contemporary Art in America
February 6, 1979Ed McGowin is a Hattiesburg native and an artist.
Tales of Early American Folklore
February 20, 1979John Henry Faulk was a writer and the featured story-teller on the TV show Hee Haw. He was also a radio host on CBS until he was labeled a Communist Sympathizer and was blacklisted from employment in the media. However, Faulk fought back through legal action and successfully ended the blacklist. He wrote a book called Fear on Trial about his experience which was adapted for a TV drama on, ironically, CBS.
Creativity and the Bicameral Mind
March 13, 1979Julian Jaynes spoke about his interest in the origins and nature of consciousness or awareness and his book, The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind.
Music as Manifest for Freedom and for Preservation of Man
March 20, 1979Karel Husa was a conductor, compose who won a Pulitzer Prize for Composition in 1969.
The Roots of Jazz
March 27, 1979This Forum was a performance of jazz music with narration focusing on the origins and development of Dixieland Jazz.
Featuring: Charles Wicker, Howard Jones, Bob Smith, Dan Wright, Jamie Foshee, David Nicholson, and Linda Foshee.
Selected Readings with Commentary
April 3, 1979At the time of this lecture, John Barth was an English professor and an author whose book, Chimera, won the National Book Award for fiction.
1979-80 |
FALL 1979
A Physician Looks at National Health
September 25, 1979“Hospital is a contradiction of terms there is nothing hospitable about them.”
At the time of this lecture, Dr. Edgar Berman was a surgeon who wrote “The Solid Gold Stethoscope” He was a past president of Medic and regularly appeared on late night TV. During his lecture, he spoke about health care inflation and how most doctors were in the profession for money and prestige.
What Bakke and Weber Decisions Mean
October 2, 1979At the time of his lecture, Benjamin Hooks was the executive director of the NAACP and the first and only black member of the FCC at the time. He spoke about the Bakke case and stated that the popular interpretation of it was that affirmative action was leading to reverse discrimination against white men.
Twenty Year Change: 60s Activism, 70s Awareness
October 16, 1979Jerry Rubin was a social activist and counterculture icon who was an early organizer of anti-Vietnam efforts. He co-founded the Youth International Party and was a member of the Chicago Seven.
Political Forum
October 23, 1979
Nuclear Power? No!
October 30, 197At the time of his lecture, Barry Commoner was an advocate of environmental safeguards and a critic of nuclear power. He pushed for the implementation of solar power and argued that oil was too expensive, nuclear was too dangerous; solar was the only way to go. He also argued that it had to be done so that not only the rich benefitted from solar power and the poor took the brunt of the rise in costs for other power. He argued that plants must be suited to the needs of the community they were set in.
Nuclear Power? Yes!
November 6, 1979At the time of his lecture, Norman Rasmussen was the head of the Department of Nuclear Engineering at MIT and the former Director of the Nuclear Regulatory Agency’s 1972-75 study to evaluate the risks from nuclear reactor incidents. He argued that nuclear power was the only way to go as geothermal and solar energy were still in their infancy. Further, he argued that solar cost more than nuclear and that nuclear wasn’t perfectly safe but reasonably safe.
Running, the Total Experience
November 13, 1979At the time of his lecture, George Sheehan was a physician and member of the Department of Electrocardiology and Stress Testing at Riverview Hospital in New Jersey. He was also the medical editor of Runner’s World.
Is the Draft Inevitable?
November 27, 1979At the time of his lecture, G.V. Sonny Montgomery was a congressman from Meridian, Mississippi and served on the US House of Representatives Armed Services and Veterans Affairs Committees. He was the chairman of the House Select Committee on Missing Persons in Southeast Asia and wanted to reinstate the draft.
SPRING 1980
The Crisis in Iran
January 29, 1980Ramsey Clark was the Attorney General of the United States during the Johnson administration and was a leading human rights advocate as well as a critic of the government of the Shah of Iran. He met with Ayatollah Khomeini in France before his return to Iran and President Carter sent him to Iran as a special envoy in the early stages of the Iranian Crisis but the mission was abandoned when the Ayatollah refused to receive him.
The Black Experience in American Athletics
February 12, 1980Wilma Rudolph was the first and only American woman to win three Olympic gold medals in one Olympiad at the time of her lecture. She was a childhood victim of Polio who overcame its effects and went on to become one of the greatest woman runners in the world. She was chosen twice as the US Woman Athlete of the Year and was a James E. Sullivan award winner who served on the US Olympic Committee for the 1976 games and was active in the Special Olympic program.
America
February 19, 1980Peter Jenkins is best known for his five-year walk across America. During his journey, he wrote for National Geographic and wrote a book called Walking Across America.
Confessions of a Conservative
February 26, 1980At the time, Garry Wills was a nationally syndicated conservative columnist who wrote “Outrider.”
Awareness, Anxiety, Assurance: Crisis Communication and the Consequences
March 4, 1980At the time, Harold Mendelsohn was a social psychologist and the Director of the University of Denver’s Center for Mass Communications. He received two Emmys for his efforts to use television to educate disadvantaged sub-populations.
The Brethren: A Look Inside the Supreme Court
March 25, 1980At the time of his lecture, Scott Armstrong had served as a consultant on prison reform for several state governments and worked with the Washington Post. He also served as an investigator for the Senate Watergate Committee.
The Presidential Scramble
April 8, 1980Nationally syndicated columnist, author, and radio and television personality. Was a speech writer, political strategist, and special assistant to President Nixon and served briefly as special consultant to President Ford.
Energy: Are We Running out of Time?
April 22, 1980History of technology, helped establish and develop the field. Founder of the Society for the History of Technology and was the editor of the journal Technology and Culture.