Archives for January 21, 2021

A Family Tradition

By Robyn Murray

A lot has changed at the University of Nebraska at Kearney in the last 60 years.

For one, the name. Kearney State College was a small school of about 2,000 students in the 1960s where teaching was the focus and the cost to attend was typically less than $100 a semester.

Today, UNK is a sprawling campus of three colleges and nearly 7,000 students, 120 undergraduate majors and 27 graduate programs. It’s also an economic engine in Kearney and the surrounding communities. Tuition has gone up a bit, too.

For Burnett Society members Jack and Judy Crowley, who graduated from Kearney State in 1960 and now reside in Hastings, watching the campus grow and change has been inspiring.

“Compared to when we were there to today, there’s no comparison,” said Jack. “It’s beautiful. They’ve done a great job. There’s been a lot of new buildings. It’s a wonderful university. I’m glad we’ve got it so close.”

For the Crowleys, UNK is more than a university. It’s a family tradition.

They both studied education at Kearney State. Jack’s sisters, Pat and Peggy, and his brothers, Jim and Ed, all attended the university.

All told, nine Crowley siblings and spouses attended Kearney State.

“We feel we have our own alumni association,” Jack said.

The Crowleys are longtime supporters of UNK. In 2011, they gave a $100,000 gift to establish the Crowley Family Endowed Scholarship, which aims to support Central Community College students who want to earn a four-year degree. They have also set up a planned gift, through a charitable gift annuity, to provide scholarship support for UNK students.

It’s a fitting tribute to the many family members, now deceased, who loved and benefited from the university.

“It’s been in our family,” said Judy. “That’s why it was important to us.”

While they didn’t receive scholarships as students, Jack says they know how important financial support is for students today.

“Scholarships weren’t a big deal back then, but they didn’t need to be,” he said. “It’s different today.”

The Crowleys, who recently celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary, regularly receive letters from their scholarship recipients expressing their gratitude and letting them know the impact of their support. But the influence of Jack and Judy’s lives in Kearney and Hastings, where they have resided since 1966, goes far beyond UNK.

After retiring from a career at Sears and owning several clothing stores locally, Jack started the Central Community College Foundation, which provides scholarship support to numerous students and grew to a $7 million foundation under his leadership. He has served on the boards of several banks and economic development corporations, the Kearney State and Kearney Public Schools foundations, the YMCA and Hastings Area foundations as well as the Madonna Foundation and Catholic Social Services. He has been recognized with several service awards and was named to the Central Community College Hall of Fame.

“He’s given all his life, one way or another,” Judy said.

Not that he would enjoy listing his accomplishments. In fact, the Crowleys would rather not talk about their generosity.

“This is our own little thing,” Judy said. “Just a quiet thing we do on the side.”

But if hearing their story motivates others to give, it’s worth the discomfort of being in the spotlight, Jack said, adding that people often don’t realize the impact they can have or their true capacity to give.

“I think you gain so much by what you give,” he said. “I think it really helps your life.”

“You get it back, no matter what you give,” Judy said. “Your reward comes back to you some way or other.”

Even if the reward is simply getting to be with other people who give.

“People that give are happy people,” Jack said, “and they’re fun to visit with.”

"I think you gain so much by what you give."

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A Conversation with Burnett Society Dr. Dwayne Zobell

Burnett Society member Dwayne Zobell, D.D.S., was born in Montana and graduated from the University of Nebraska Medical Center after attending predental school at Brigham Young University and spending time as a missionary in Argentina.

As a student at UNMC, Dwayne cared for Cuban refugees brought to Lincoln. His experience sparked a lifelong passion for providing free dental care to impoverished communities around the world, which resulted in 28 trips to countries including Mexico, Guatemala, Peru, Bolivia, Paraguay, Argentina, China and the Philippines.

After graduating from UNMC with his doctoral degree, Dwayne practiced dentistry in Cheyenne, Wyoming, and married classmate Donna Taute-Zobell, D.D.S., in 2003. Together, accompanied by their combined family of five children, Dwayne and Donna have continued to travel the world on medical missions.

The Zobells are supporting the UNMC College of Dentistry and Lied Transplant Center through their estate plans.

The following Q&A was conducted with Dwayne.

What was the first job you ever had?

The first one I can remember is picking green beans in our family garden in Lewistown, Montana. My mother gave me a brown paper grocery bag and paid me a nickel.

What is the best advice anyone ever gave you?

Life is like a workshop of hard knocks; you mold according to what you are made of. Keep lots of grit, and you will mold true to form.

Who is someone from history you would want to invite to a dinner party if you could, and why?
Johann Sebastian Bach, perhaps the greatest of all composers.

What is the first question you would ask that guest from history?

How difficult was it to be creative and still fulfill your weekly assignment to compose something new and innovative, especially when you lost your eyesight?

What is the one song you would be sure to play to set the mood at the dinner party?
I think he would enjoy “Fanfare for the Common Man” by Aaron Copland.

What is the question that you like to be asked the most?

Who has influenced your life for the good, and what have you done to help others lately?

Why do you plan to leave a gift to the University of Nebraska in your estate?

I owe so much to the University of Nebraska, not only for my professional education that has given me and my family the means to volunteer and bless countless lives in many countries, but also for literally saving my life when I was a patient at UNMC for coronary bypass surgery after an unexpected stroke, for referring me to a heart transplant center when I had a most difficult diagnosis, and now for providing the post-transplant care to allow for continued life.

"I owe so much to the University of Nebraska, not only for my professional education that has given me and my family the means to volunteer and bless countless lives in many countries, but also for literally saving my life."

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