| March 10, 2003 --Today,
the University of Utah Board of Trustees approved honorary degrees
for five outstanding individuals, including an honorary degree of
Doctor of Humanities for Terry Tempest Williams, who is also this
year's commencement speaker. The other four honorary degree recipients
include: Afton B. Bradshaw for Doctor of Humane Letters; William
H. "Bill" Child for Doctor of Business; Tom C. Korologos
for Doctor of Humane Letters; and, E. W. "Al" Thrasher
for Doctor of Public Health.
Afton Bradshaw has both a bachelor's degree in Commercial Education
and a master's degree in American History from the University
of Utah. She served eighteen years in the Utah House of Representatives,
earning the trust and respect of her peers on both sides of the
aisle and bringing knowledge and wisdom to her position. She has
received numerous awards during the past twenty-five years, including
recognition as Legislator of the Year by the YWCA in 1999 and
Salt Lake City Republican Woman of the Year in 1998. Bradshaw
has served as a community volunteer on state and national boards,
including more than a decade of service on the Commission on Criminal
and Juvenile Justice.
Bill Child graduated with a B.S. in Elementary Education from
the University of Utah in 1954. While attending the U, Child began
working for his father-in-law, R.C. Willey. Following Willey's
death, Child took over the family business, RC Willey Home Furnishings,
and grew the business into one of the largest furniture retail
outlets in the nation. Child has served on the boards of Commercial
Security Bank, Salt Lake Area Chamber of Commerce, Utah Retail
Merchants Association, Key Bank, the Utah Economic Development
Corporation, as well as numerous University advisory boards. Willey
and his wife, Patricia, have been generous U of U donors since
1968, most notably in their support of Pioneer Theatre Company,
the David Eccles School of Business, the University Hospital,
and the Athletics Department. Recently, Child established the
R.C. Willey Executive Leadership Center with a $1 million contribution
to the C. Roland Christensen Center at the business school.
Tom Korologos earned his B.A. at the U in 1955 and his M.S. at
Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, where he received
the Grantland Rice Fellowship and a Pulitzer Fellowship. He was
also named a Distinguished Alumnus of the U in 1988. Korologos
is highly regarded for his work in public affairs, having served
in the Nixon and Ford administrations as Deputy Assistant to the
President for Legislative Affairs and for nine years under Senator
Wallace F. Bennett. In 1980-81, Korologos served as Director of
Congressional Relations for President Reagan's transition staff
and assisted both the Reagan and Bush administrations in the Senate
confirmation process. He served as Director of Congressional Relations
for the National Bipartisan Commission on Central America, and
as a senior advisor to Senator Dole during his 1996 presidential
bid. In 2001, Korologos volunteered for the Bush-Cheney transition
and managed the confirmation of Donald Rumsfeld as Secretary of
Defense. He has traveled extensively overseas as a member and
chairman of the Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy and as
a member of the Broadcasting Board of Governors. Earlier in his
career, Korologos was a journalist with the New York Herald Tribune,
the Salt Lake Tribune and Associated Press.
Al Thrasher was born in 1920 in Chelan, Washington and started
working at age ten in the sawmill industry to help his family.
From this early age he combined hard work with inventive improvements,
which, over the years, have vitalized the entire lumber industry.
One such invention was a revolutionary breakthrough in timber
saw blades. In addition to achieving a highly successful business
career, Thrasher has devoted his life to improving health care
for children. Twenty-five years ago he established the Thrasher
Research Fund to provide financial support to world-class researchers
- many of them located at the University of Utah - who are seeking
solutions world health problems of children. The discoveries funded
by the Thrasher Research Fund have significantly improved the
health of children through a better understanding of the treatment
and prevention of childhood diseases. Mr. Thrasher and the U's
Public Health Program in the Department of Family and Preventive
Medicine are dedicated to continuing the pursuit of medical advancements
on behalf of children.
Terry Tempest Williams received a B.S. in English and a M.S.
in Educational Studies from the University of Utah and formerly
served as naturalist-in-residence at the Utah Museum of Natural
History. She is one of Utah's most passionate and eloquent nature
and political writers. In addition to her critically important
contribution to the literature of the West, including her best-known
book, Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place, she has
been recognized by Utne Reader and Newsweek as a "visionary"
likely to make "a considerable impact on the political, economic,
and environmental issues facing the western states." She
has also served on the Governing Council of the Wilderness Society
and other national environmental advocacy groups and has testified
before the U.S. Congress on behalf of women's health. In addition
to receiving an honorary degree, Tempest Williams will give this
year's commencement address.
Citations will be presented to the five honorary degree recipients
during commencement on Friday, May 2 at the Jon M. Huntsman Center.
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