Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY)

 - Class of 1977

Page 1 of 464

 

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1977 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 464 of the 1977 volume:

Flashback and Update ... The year was a fascinating and challenging one for the Talisman staff, for the 1977 edition was able to cover more of the school year than before with a fall delivery book scheduled. For several sports and special events there were two stories to tell, the 1976 version and the 1977 one-a flashback and an update. As we looked back to spring, 1976, we decided to look farther into Western’s past. There we found stories that had never been told or had been told once but forgotten. We did a story about the athletic records and the old gym where the late coach Ed Diddle made basketball a red towel tradition. We updated old stories by giving them new twists. These included a freshman’s first weekend home, a story about finals week and an essay about why students chose Western. Then we told stories that may never happen again at Western, such as a bicentennial summer; an exchange student in Montpel- lier, France; a student-husband-parent-miner; six new coaches and a student’s research with baby pigs. We took a different angle on community involvement as we covered the Bluegrass and its travel possibilities, food and speech dialects. Many Greek civic activities reflected community in- volvement as well. We covered perhaps the biggest news story, the severe winter on the Hill with much snow, ice and slush. To correct the sometimes criticized copy-heavy pages, we left more space at the top, bottom and in the margins to utilize white space as a design element. Turn the page and begin the flashback and update story about a fascinating year ... (continued on back endsheet) aot fr ‘ “4 yi 7 ¥ t- Another day begins as thesun peeks over the top of the” Hilf} silhowetting Cherry and Van Meter Halls. The view is from the top of E.T. Smith Stadium... Be OS oe ae Rigen Bowling Green, Kentuck 42101 ER EE Bee Celie SP Pe MERE LASS. Cte ee ee ee ISIS ERT eres ary Se a wo Retna eit a So {isd Sih PaRRIORONAN —— RUNES EAT mse 4 SII ST ES SE a a i ll A RT TE OT te RRR eye ma eee awe ann ener A Sai a a a A nh LR RP SO SS SPP SO a eS oa ee ee aaa wie Titicaca Late. “ : : EVOL TELS Ee Eee Pern mee peer eman oe erent . 2 sag ee Re wteen ig we eats tL atts tie no “ a Pe eee em prnat PI of alameda BS seiaaeliaeaas oy amen ir Bw ELS eRe oe Oa late ged 3) HOCUS sare erteaT ere ot TEE DRI I ONE mo “ :. ; fe “ { Ars GGG ee eeanahiedied STEER HRALND 7 pe NE PT rm TA — re a . es EN 2 ba ¢. Loh cas =| CRC, EN, a th ae Sree ees be ae itt etieheenee nemeeeeteennerte Nien Ie int nie on aecips Akin SNR aE ee bine ee RB gs HTS, . ! , ow Rie COM NE ti SE The last concert of the year featured Jimmy Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band. Although the concert | lost money, the small Buffett cult on campus brought the singer back for three encores after his 90 minute set. (See story on page 72-79.) Startled sophomore Sandy Helsley gets her swine flu inoculation from Ova Pittman of the state Bu- reau of Health Services. More than 7,500 persons received shots at the two November vaccination clinics in Diddle Arena. EO Gardner A banner boasting ADPi's 10-year wining streak inthe Sigma Chi Derby helped the cerertty: win again, this time with a catch. The AOPis tied with the ADPis and the sororities now share the compe- tition: title. (See story on page 256.) oe ME SEVGIE rat ay Ul lp ‘ eae OBE S - - xX “ae “ Dd What lured you here, student? Was it some mysterious magnetic pull which beckoned to you from the statue of Henry Hardin Cherry? Or have you known since you were just a kid that W.K.U. with its neatly mowed lawns and red-towel spirit would be the only place you would eonside) going to school? “Why did you come to W.K.U.?” “It’s a common question asked among friends just meeting in the dormitories, and new acquaintances at club meetings and parties. Of approximately 500 surveys sent to women residents, 74 were returned. Two came from Rodes Harlin, two from Central, 13 from North, 13 from McLean, four from Bates Runner, eight from West, seven from Potter, nine from Bemis Lawrence, five from McCormack and 11 from Gilbert. — Lorie Kohl, a sophomore art major, chose Western over University of Kentucky and Eastern alihouen the schools were only 20 minutes away from her Winchester home. The Rodes Harlin resident said the schools ‘were too close and not personal enough.” — Linda Fay Carter, a Central resident from Tompkinsville, said she enrolled because “W.K.U., so I’ve heard, has the best dental hygiene program in the state.” The freshman also said family members: attended W.K.U. — Valerie King, a North Hall resident from Louisville, said, “I knew that I could grow up in my relationship with God through involvement in Campus Crusade for Christ — an organization at W.K.U. which I knew a little about.” Miss King added, “I wanted to go away to school and I could not be involved in Campus Crusade in Louisville.” — Deborah Betz, a senior elementary education major from Cincinnati, Ohio, said she could have attended University of Cincinnati but “It was too expensive and W.K.U. has a better education program.” The McLean Hall resident said low cost was also a factor. — Pam Morgan, a Bates- Runner resident from Niles, Mich., said she came to W.K.U. instead of Western Michigan University because “In-state tuition was more than out-of-state (tuition) at W.K.U.” The sopho- more added, “W.K.U. is much prettier.” — Betty Joyce Brannon from Dothan, Ala., said she wanted to see how other states and state schools operate besides the ones she was familiar with — University of Alabama, Auburn University and Troy State University. The West Hall resident said, “I thought Western would be a broader, more open school. I really like Western but this school could stand some improvement.” — Susan Darlene Allgood, a Potter Hall resident from Custer, said she likes the size of the school. “U.K. is too large; you cannot really get to know students or faculty,” the freshman said. ‘The facilities here are really great. You have access to anything you need.” — Donna Sue Dodson, a nursing student from Brandenburg, said she liked the size and cost of the school. The Bemis Lawrence resident said she didn’t attend a community college so she could live away from home. — Rebecca Lynn Bruce, a senior public relations major from Versailles, said she came SAASAAAASAAAAA SSAA sss, ¢ | to Western because of the availability of a public relations program. The McCormack Hall resident said contact with the University- School Relations office was also a factor. — Holly Topole, a Gilbert Hall resident een Rocky River, Ohio, came to school here because “It’s the only school in the U.S. with my major.” The freshman meteorological technology major also said she didn’t go to universities closer to her home “because too many of my friends went to those schools and I wanted to meet new people and live in a different part of the country.” The surveys revealed that a visit to the campus prior to enrolling was a factor for 48 women. Forty-one said low cost or a scholarship offer was important, and 36 said contact with friends was a factor in their decision to enroll. The men’s residence halls surveyed were less responsive than the women. One survey was returned from Barnes- Campbell, five from Pearce Ford, four from Hugh Poland and 14 from Douglas Keen. — Ted Burke, a Barnes- Campbell resident from Lexington, listed contact with University-School Relations and contact with friends as the reasons he came. He add- ed that he didn’t go to Uni- versity of Kentucky because it is “too big.” — Tom Battle said he came because “others from my hometown were here, and (campus) has a friendly atmosphere.” The Pearce Ford resident from Benton, IIl., said there were two colleges near his home that he could have attended — Southern Illinois University and Rend Lake Junior College. — Daniel S. Pelino, a sophomore from Fairport, N.Y., said although “there are a number of good schools in New ede wanted to go South and see if I could make it on my own.” The Hugh Poland resident listed the low cost, availability of a degree program, site of school and good sports programs as additional reasons. — David Kenner, a resident of Keen Hall from Sharon Grove, said contact with friends, low cost and the size of the school were reasons he came to school here. The sophomore said, “I did not choose U.K. because I did not want to go to a school that large. I did not choose Murray simply because I did not like the school or campus.” Of the 24 surveys returned out of 200 sent to men’s 4 = C7 Por ao —— A Ag SL NUT Th pt pe wi a i residence halls, seven said their parents or family members had attended W.K.U. Fourteen said visiting the campus had an influence on them, 13 said the size of the school as a factor and 12 said the low cost or a scholarship offer appealed to them. Asked to specify any other reasons, the men listed parties, availability of sports programs, friendliness of the people, and the pretty campus as factors in their decision. Only four surveys were returned out of the 121 mailed to off-campus residents. ‘ Contact with friends was an answer given by all four students about why they picked W.K.U. Even if the response was sparse, it is obvious that many factors have influenced the student in choosing W.K.U., and the seemingly simple matter may have been complex. Who knows? Maybe a mysterious magnetic pull from Henry Hardin Cherry’s statue is to be blamed. — DONNA BUCKLES | pert ES eee 16 First Week Of School meee a pe sae i ae pS os Say SNR te Meme A - arta eens First Week Of School 18 First Week Of School Back to the grind .n. ¢ Moving In — Mandatory housing brought a shortage of rooms. ° Registration — Tempers flared as classes were systematically closed, but for others the process was smooth. ° Parking situation — The squeeze was on. 5,901 plus parking stickers were issued for 4,157 spaces. were all the dormitories filled, but the university had to put 106 students on a waiting list before room could be made available. Private rooms were not permitted, and even resident assistants were forced to share their quarters in order to house the extra students. Study rooms, storage rooms and even offices were converted a living space as the shortage contin- ued. Several female students were housed in Western Hills Motel at university ex- pense, and 12 male students were housed in Curry House across from Cherry Hall, where the International Students Office had been. Fourteen rooms on the ground floor of Potter Hall, which had previous- ly been used for storage space were also converted into living quarters. At first, the Curry House lacked facili- ties. The heating system in the house had been shut down and keys were not available to the individual rooms. Even- tually these shortages were corrected, and the 12 students did not want to leave when space was found for them in the dorms. Dormitory capacity at Western is 4,950 — 2,068 for men and 2,882 for women — and the university housing office reported that applications for dor- mitory rooms were running 300-400 above normal throughout the summer. Officials at the housing office said a good percentage of the students stuck without rooms had waited until they ar- rived on campus to place an application for on-campus housing. Among other things, the shortage was blamed on the mandatory housing poli- cy which required most freshmen and sophomores to live on campus, and the closing of the College Inn which housed 330 students. Even though rooms for all students were eventually found, there were no at- tempts to put three students to a room as has happened at other state schools or waive the mandatory housing require- ment. Housing for married students was also in demand since six units had been re- Central Hall is a long way from Asheville, N.C., Kimmie Adams’ home. The freshman already knew President Dero Downing and his family, however, and shares a second floor room with Eli- zabeth Downing, also a freshman. Sports 4 KU | @ — J. Burton — M. Lyons Barefooted as he gets comfortable, Paul Simon said he wasn’t coming down to the instructors’ level. “I think they're coming down to mine,” said Simon who registered at 10 a.m. the last day. He is a sophomore with an undecided major. — J. Burton: Minutes after arriving in Bowling Green, Joan San- topinto and her eiothee unwrap the graduate stu- dent’s stereo. There was not enough room in their car, so one speaker had to be sent later by train from their Alberta, Canada home. | | | moved from Regents Avenue on campus last summer with no plans to replace them. The university said it was no longer financially feasible to maintain fhe structures which rented for $50-$150 per month, and that fewer applications have been on file lately for married student housing. Officials said rent for other married housing may be increased since | apartments of equal size for 20 to 25 per | cent more off campus. Once the problem of where to park the suitcases was taken care of, the next ob- | jective was to settle down to a nice hot | meal — and another shortage. Meal tickets for the Garrett Cafeteria | _were sold out for the first time since the | program began four years ago. During | the first few weeks of the fall semester 594 tickets were sold, and this was 54 more than last year at that time. The tickets, which cost $250, provide two meals per day for the duration of the semester. Sales were also up for food coupon books sold by University Food Services. At the beginning of the semester, 416 coupon books were sold, 95 more than the previous spring semester. Even if the student wasn’t the type who liked to eat out, he still had one obstacle standing between him and a full | stomach as the supply of university com- pact refrigerators was exhausted during | the first week of school. ) The refrigerators, which rent for $20 per semester, are available to dormitory residents. Applicants who did not re- ceive a refrigerator at the beginning of the semester were put on a waiting fist, and many students obtained one later. For those students lucky enough to own an automobile came the invitation to play that ever-popular Western game, “find that space.” ] The rules were very simple; first, the ‘| student went to the Office of Safety and | Security and paid $5 for one of 5,901 plus “hunting licenses” issued for the 4,157 ens spaces on campus — and then e tried to find somewhere to use it. It was a very challenging and time- consuming sport which involved cir- cling and circling Western’s scenic lots in search of an empty slot. If he found a space within a mile of his class, he was a winner; but if he chose to break the tules, the flashing yellow light on top of the tow truck meant “you hee The office also initiated mandatory bi- registration in order to continue the decline of bicycle thefts on campus. “The student patrol and crime preven- tion by identification were responsible for this reduction,” said Marcus Wallace, director of public safety. Just as the new Westerner became set- tled into that new home he had to fight for, a whole new set of challenges ap- peared with registration. Registration occurred when the hud- dled masses gathered in Diddle Arena to fight it out for a schedule that vaguely (continued on page 20) The basketball gym floor became a makeshift desk for Jerry Simpson who couldn’t find another place to do his paperwork with the 24-page fall semester schedule bulletin. The Marion sophomore is an environmental sciences major. — M. Lyons A visit by some new friends gave Allison Alamao a break as she unpacks boxes and stocks her shelves. Erin Brady and Margaret Hemmers, both from Louisville, greet the Elance: freshman in her first floor McCormack Hall room. — J. Burton Back to the grind wm resembled what they wanted to take for the fall semester. After standing in line for over an hour waiting to pay fees, the student found out he came to the wrong window when he finally reached the front. Things were made easier, however, for many freshmen who took advantage of the summer Orientation, and Advise- ment and Registration (OAR) progam. Newcomers numbering 1,532, 600 more than last year, took part in the OAR pro- gram that made the transition process quicker and rather hassle-free. The sessions, which were conducted on June 16, June 23 and August 23, made it possible for 20-25 freshmen to register at once in the Garrett Conference Center | Ballroom in a sane and orderly fashion. Students attended meetings, met with 1 advisers, and attended other special ac- tivities. There was also special activities ) for the parents so that they might be- come more familiar with the campus. Some of the dorms and the libraries were | open, and representatives of the colleges and administrative offices were available A house at the top of the Hill instead of a dorm room at the bottom of the Hill was home for Larry Buford when school started. Twelve males lived in the Curry House and shared two bathrooms until they moved into dorms. Females without rooms were housed at a nearby motel. Bluegrass and rock music by Tennessee Pulley Bone entertained an average size crowd at Van Me- ter Auditorium. The band plays quite often in the Bowling Green area and members said they were pleased with audience reaction. A street dance earli- er in the week attracted mostly new students. | —J Burton — J. Burton 20 First Week Of School for questions. One of the few breaks that students did get appeared when classes started on August 26. An extra five minutes was added to the breaks following 9:10 a.m. and 10:25 a.m. classes. University officials said the breaks were extended during the “times of greatest traffic on campus” to reduce the number of students late to class. That first week of confusion was al- most enough to make anyone wish they had never graduated from high school, but if the student managed to survive all the shortages, he probably fared quite well. As the semester dragged on, howev- er, student activity got ae to normal; with plenty of the one thing there is nev- er a shortage of — work. —TOM EBLEN L] — J. Burton Seal Each of the 16 dorms sponsored an open lobby with skits, food or entertainment. Resident assistants Greg Howard and Bruce Wiley work a turntable for a disco on the 27th floor of Pearce Ford Tower. Howard and Wiley are juniors. — M. Lyons The first move to campus, the first mass registration and the first two days of classes were over for 4,838 freshmen. Tammy Sanders waits for another first, a ride home for the weekend. The nursing major is from Nashville, Tenn. Long lines at registration in Diddle Arena soon give way to lines at the registrar's office on the second floor of the administration building. Sheila Harlow, a student worker in the office, helps senior Charles Alexander. — J. Burton 21 First Week Of School ,— D. Gibson’ Photographs in scrapbook form can describe a sorority and its activities in ways conversations can’t. Anne Jackel, Jane Manar, Cathy Garvin and Anita Pryor take a peek at the ADPi scrap- book from the 1975-76 year. The “rush” is over when anxious rushees re- ceive their white envelopes with a formal invita- tion to pledge one sorority. New Chi Omega pledges Ann Policastri and Susan Poehlein re- joice as the six-day whirlwind itinerary of par- ties and meetings comes to a close. — T. Dekle The screams of joy and relief could be heard to the outermost perimeters of Ivan Wilson Center for Fine Arts as the white cards were distributed. It was the middle of August and the classrooms of Ivan Wilson were filled with excitement as the formal rush end- ed with the awarding of bids. Owe. — T. Dekle with The four-day series of parties and rush activities was serious business for most of the girls involved as the rushees got to know the sororities, and the sororities chose their new sisters. But the weeks before were also filled with “rush” as sorority members _pre- pared costumes, skits and readied them- oe — D. Gibson With kangaroo badges pinned to their outfits, AOPi sisters entertain rushees their version of Hawn, Rita Young and Charlotte Gilliam use gestures to explain that “rush gave them blues until they saw AOPi.” “Mame.” Pam Escorted by active Kathy Maddox, Debra Grimwoo ADPis’ pathway of costumed sisters. Re- cords such as “The Last Kiss” and “Teen Angel” hung from the ceiling and each sorority member pulled her white bobby socks and saddle oxfords out of the closet for the party. The ticket office stood out- side and railroad tracks made from masking tape led into the Phi Mu room, a train station with waiting passengers. Nancy Quarcelino is the engineer in a song, “Just Called to Tell You,” Phi Mu and the 17 fraternities. At the end of the song, Karen York, disguised as a lion reading a newspaper, called Phi Mus to get abroad. makes her way through the about — D. Gibson selves for the rushees. Most of the sorority members moved into the dorm, Central this yeah between one and two weeks early to ee and decorating. ith a predetermined schedule, Gwynne Runner, an AOPi, said they practiced about eight hours a day, or un- til every detail was perfect.” Each sorority presented a different skit each as the girls and the sororities nar- rowed their choices down. The rushees were ushered into each room to the tune of hand clapping, cheers and songs depicting each sorority. The first day each girl visited each of the five sororities for a 10 or 15-minute party. During this time sorority mem- bers put on a skit and showed the rushees scrapbooks of the past year’s activities. The rooms were filled with owls, kan- garoos or whatever happened to be the sorority’s mascot and Leer differ- ently each day. Skits got more elaborate as the days progressed. Some of the sororities had flashing lights, top hats and formal costumes during 'the preference parties, the final parties before the selection was made. “The typical AOPi, (according to the AOPis) has — the skin of a Johnson’s baby, the smile from Dentyne gum, the pep from a box of Wheaties and a sunny disposition from a Tum.” Then there were the KDs who told the girls about sororities and how their so- rority didn’t fit the stereotype. It began with Raggedy Ann and Andy sitting down talking about sororities. “When I was little my mother told me sororities were bad, but now that I’m all grown up I know she wasn’t right ...” Around 150 signed up for the formal rush, 123 participated in the events and UP. B(eieale sorority, according to Lynn Morgan, administrative advisor for the rush activities. Besides an air of excitement and ap- prehension there is also some confusion to the exact procedures and the prop- er rules, according to Kathy Lewis, a rush counselor. “Most of them didn’t know what to expect at first,” she said. “They would want to know what to say and how to act. My advice was always be yourself,” she said. “It was always hard when a girl didn’t get a card back from a sorority she toe wanted in,’ Miss Lewis said. “I wis it could be arranged differently, where no one would be hurt, but that just isn’t possible.” After all the screaming and shoutin were over, pledges and members move into their dorms and joined the new rush about to begin — class registration. — DEBBIE GIBSON egin practic- : | 23 | Rush EE sh Dormitory parking lots are congested on Friday afternoons when students wait for rides home. Most Owensboro fresh- men had already been home several times when Sherry Musgrave made her first 62-mile trip home Sept. 17. When Sherry moved to McCormack Hall she brought most of her clothes, her bicycle and several sacks of groceries, but not her poodle. Corky was the first Musgrave to greet Sherry Friday after- noon at he r home. First Weekend Home Back home again Sherry Musgrave hadn’t seen her family since moving to Western to begin her freshman year. Four weeks from that last goodbye and hug it was time to say hello again to Mom, Dad and Corky. Photos By Debbie Gibson Oherry Musgrave locked the door to room 500 in McCormack Hall, and car- ried her suitcase, calculus book and laun- dry bag to the elevator. Outside, she joined dozens of suitcasers loading car trunks and backseats as they scurried to clear the driveway and hit the Interstate. For some it was the third weekend home since school had started. For the Owensboro freshman, Sept. 17 was the first trek home since the move to West- ern and the goodbyes to her parents. At 1:23 p.m., Sherry, her brother Mar- cus and two hometown buddies left cam- us, and 81 minutes later the brunette ugged her poodle, Corky, and began a non-stop conversation with her mother about the 18th birthday and Labor Day weekends she spent away from home. “I was supposed to come home Labor Day but Marcus had to work,” Sherry explained. Her brother, a junior comput- er science major, is a resident assistant at Hugh Poland Hall. “I couldn't sleep Thursday night. I re- alized I was going home and I couldn't wait to get there.” First of all, Sherry toured her home again. “The house didn’t look the same at all. It‘’d been so long since I'd seen it,” Sherry said. “My clothes weren’t in the closet and it was neat.” The fresh- man said she has become accustomed to her dorm room where things sometimes get messy. Sherry’s father is an electrician who works in Petersburg, Ind., so the family ate a late dinner together. Meanwhile, Sherry described her first weeks at col- lege to her mother. “You can’t always write what you want to say,” the fresh- man said. She told her attentive mother about classes and dorm life. “I have to spend at least two hours on calculus each day, and I got a 45 out of 50 on an English test,” she chattered. As for campus life, Sherry said she and’ her friends ate most of their meals in the dormitory. “But one night we went to Ireland’s. You bought one meal and got one free. Boy, they gave us a lot of cou- pons that first week,” she explained. According to Sherry, her mother paid special attention to her and her brother since they had not been home in a lon time. “She cooked my favorite eae roast beef, mashed potatoes and gravy. “My dad was glad to see us and he asked me about my classes, but he doesn’t talk a lot,” she explained. Friday night, Sherry and Marcus met some friends from Daviess County High School at a home football game against Butler Co. “I got so excited seeing them all at once. Some of my friends who are at UK were home and we began com- paring schools. They said a lot of people there aren’t friendly and some were having trouble meeting people and making friends.” Sherry also talked to her preacher and his wife and her high school teachers, including a government instructor who calls her ‘Muskrat.’ “I saw him coming. He’s a big tease and asked me if I was making all A’s.” Saturday, Sherry visited her dentist, bought some groceries and washed and ironed her clothes. Before long it was 4 p.m. and the Mus- graves had to return to Western so Mar- cus could work during open house. “It went by so fast. I wanted to stay until Sunday,” she said. “Our parents asked when we were coming back. They told us not to study too hard and to be sure and write. They said they’d be com- ing down in a couple of weeks.” Two hours later, Sherry was in room 500 again, but her roommate was not back yet. “Here I had all this stuff to bring up and she wasn’t back yet. At first it was kinda lonely, but after I’d been here awhile it was just like it was before.” Sherry said she likes college but en- joyed that first weekend home. “You re- alize how much you miss something when you don’t have it. You appreciate something like your Mom cooking the meals when it hasn’t been there.” As for Mr. and Mrs. Musgrave’s reac- tion to their children’s homecoming, Mrs. Musgrave said she prepared very little. “I had gone to Illinois for five days to take care of my mother who had gotten home from the hospital after hav- ing surgery.” Mrs. Musgrave said Sherry had changed some since starting college. “We believe she realizes more what we are trying to do for her by being able to let her go to college. We believe being around students and the many different ways each one has, has a lot to do with the change. I was glad to hear she was attending Bible study in the dorm as she went to Wednesday night prayer meet- ing when home. She said it was ‘a good group to be with.’ ” Sherry’s mother said the parent-child relationship changes when the child goes away to mal “You don’t realize ho much they do and really appreciate it, like you should, until they leave,” she explained. Mrs. Musgrave said she has no special plans for fine weekends with her daughter at home. “We just want to make it an enjoyable one for her and just be ourselves as we tried to do over the past weekend.” — CONNIE HOLMAN (1) Textbook prices and textbook content were some of the first subjects Sherry and her dad Ansel dis- cussed Friday night. Sherry told her dad about the expensive textbooks and her calculus homework which takes about two hours each day. An hour after retouring her home in Daviess County home, Sherry, her mother and Corky moved outdoors to inspect the mums Mrs. Mus- grave had grown for the first time while her daugh- ter was away at school in Bowling Green. First Weekend Home 26 Consu One family’s experience with The rising cost of college A series of six 16 X 20 portraits hang in the hallway of the Wendell Beeler farm- house in Grayson County and the sizes of the people in the photographs, the family’s children, resemble stairsteps. Now, just as those portraits appeared on the wall one-by-one, the three oldest Beelers have come to college, and the family is in a perfect position to examine how college costs have increased over a three-year period. Warren, 21, who has earned a bachelor of science degree i in animal science and is now working on a teaching certificate, entered Western in the summer of 1973 after graduating from Caneyville High School. Cindy, 20, an elementary education major with a minor in special education, enrolled in the fall of 1974. She, too, graduated from Caneyville High. By AVERAGE YEARLY INCOME FROM OTHER SOURCES [| AVERAGE YEARLY INCOME PER KENTUCKY FARM 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 YEAR AVERAGE YEARLY INCOME IN DOLLARS mer Report Ginger, 19, a physical education major, started college the next fall after graduat ing from Grayson County High. (Caney ville High consolidated with Leitchfield and Clarkson Highs in 1974.) The family lives on a 620-acre dairy farm in a community named Spring Lick, and Mr. Beeler milks 60 cows twice a day. The success of that enterprise has made a lot of the difference in the oppor tunity for the Beelers to attend college. The family has also witnessed some dif ferences in the costs each of the children has faced. The family has been helped by the fact that the children chose Western for col- lege. A glossary of colleges and universi- ties cited Western as having the lowest tuition fee in the state except Murray in 1974-75. In that year an average year of school COST IN DOLLARS ag DZ ZC 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 ie 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 THE RISING COST OF COLLEGE PER STUDENT cost $1450 at Western compared to $2236 at University of Kentucky. “The fall 1976 semester took more than any of the four that they've all been in,” said Mrs. Beeler. “We haven't ap- plied for any aid other than scholarships because Wendell (Mr. Beeler) says it’s hard to get when you own land.” Warren earned a scholarship in 1973 for tuition and books which carried over through his second semester. Mrs. Beeler said they put $435 in his bank account that fall to cover his other expenses. His expenses increased steadily the next semester partially because he began pledging Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity. By fall 1974 the agriculture major needed $700 to cover expenses. In the same fall when Cindy came to college her parents put $564 in her ex- pense account. Cindy also won a scholar- oa cecemcaslit ship which paid $150 on tuition in both the fall and spring. After that first year, however, she had no scholarship. By the next fall the Beelers had to de- posit $650 for Ginger’s fall semester which was an increase of $86 from Cindy’s first semester. Ginger’s following semester cost ap- proximately $725 and the fall, 1976 se- mester cost the sophomore $800, an in- crease of $150 from her first semester. It was helpful for the family that fall when Warren became employed at Pioneer Hybrid International Incorpo- rated at Smiths Grove and became more self-reliant. Changes in textbook costs were also very noticeable for the girls in particular. “T paid $54.12 for books in my first se- mester,” Cindy said. “This last semester I spent $113.18. “Ginger’s increase from last year isn’t that much but she'll probably really no- tice it by next spring,” she continued. -“In her first semester she paid $69.14 and this fall it was only $73.08.” Mrs. Beeler chuckled when she heard the discussion about her daughters’ books. “I can tell you about one thin that has made a difference,” she ml “Ginger won’t stand in the bookstore lines after registration so when she goes to get books she has to buy new ones.” But talk about textbooks costs was re- placed by talk of increased food costs. “T have really been able to tell a differ- ence in that,” Mrs. Beeler said. “I try to send them a lot of staples from home but still the costs are high.” (A vegetable gar- den is a family project each summer.) “Cindy and her roommate go to the rocery about once every week and one- Pale, and eat most of their meals in the dorm,” the mother continued. “She said she doesn’t eat out very much. Just about once every three weeks.” Mrs. Beeler said, “Ginger has to eat alone most of the time and that makes it more expensive even to cook in the dorm. She and her roommate buy their groceries separately, and she eats a lot of meals at the student center.” Dormitory cost is still another area where the family has faced increase. “The dorm fee has gone up twice since Cindy started,” Mrs. Beeler said. “At first it was $154, then $169 and now $184. It hasn’t been increased since Ginger has been in school.” (The Board of Regents voted to increase the fee $21 at the Janu- ary meeting. The increase will become ibgien in the fall of 1977.) But the family has worked together to make the costs easier, Mrs. Beeler said. “Warren and Cindy have both had jobs to help out with paying for their educa- tion,” she said. “We have paid the initial amount for each of them each semester, but they have paid us back a lot. “We didn’t set down any strict rules about spending when they went to col- lege, but we have told them to watch spending on clothes,” she said. “We don’t want them to feel like they don’t have a penny to spend for anything, and we have encouraged them to go out and do things.” The mother also said the three stu- dents have been very good about han- dling the finances. “They have all been pretty saving. They don’t spend as much as some kids,” she said. “They know that others are coming on and need to be thrifty.” And there is another coming on very quickly. Terri, a senior at Grayson Coun- ty, is scheduled to enroll at Western in he fall of 1977. She has already applied for nursing school. It is possible that the — family may have four in school next fall. The fifth Beeler, Charlie, a high school junior, plans to start in the falf of 1978. Chris, the last of the children, is a little farther beind as a 7th grader at Grayson County Middle erhok “With this many (children) we always wonder where the money will come from,” Mrs. ‘Beeler said. “Sometimes I wonder how we are going to do it, but we have always managed ones the money when the time came.” And when the time comes for the last person in the portraits to graduate from college, the wondering will be over. — DONNA BUCKLES () Left — Cindy and Ginger Béeler Above — Warren Beeler 27 Consumer Report 28 Environmental Sciences and Technology Building Spacious classrooms with better housing for labora- tory equipment were welcomed by the agriculture department. Dr. Robert Schneider instructs a lab for Introduction to Agricultural Engineering 170. i al Yai E.S.T.B. ... Suddenly an abbrevia- tion was born. The announcement was made in schedule bulletins, campus telephone directories and sundry other places. E.S.T.B. ... The Environmental Sci- ences and Technology Building, the newest addition to Western’s physical campus, began serving the agriculture, geography and geology and industrial education departments and the envi- ronmental programs of the engineerin technology department in the fall Dr. Marvin Russell, dean of Ogden College, said the new structure houses classrooms, laboratories, offices and a weather station equipped with a con- trol room. Greenhouses were also con- structed behind the building, he said. “The building is more versatile with better facilities oe instruction, research and public service,” Russell said. The multi-level structure was constructed on the corner of Ogden Drive and State Street at a cost of $4.5 million. Light bulbs cased in circular fixtures added a mod- ern touch to the entrance of the newest building on campus. The structure was built on the corner of Ogden Drive and State Street for $4.5 million. A possible construction flaw in the greenhouses built behind the new building is shown to subcontractors by Dr. Ernest Beal, head of the biol- ogy department. The building’s final inspection was approved. Framed by leaf-shedding trees, the Environmental Sciences and Technology Building serves the agri- culture, geography and geology and industrial edu- cation departments, and environmental programs of the engineering technology department. — H. Sinclair 29 Environmental Sciences and Technology Building A football toss sponsored by Sigma Alpha Epsilon at the Muscular Dyerorty carnival gave Bill Pickler the chance to win a dinner at a local restaurant. Pickler got three chances for his 25 cents. — Jj. Burton Greeks join together in A Week Effort | i i | Taking full advantage of a five-minute break, Lee Webb and Patty Moretz col- lapse at the Muscular Dystrophy dance marathon. Miss Moretz, a special educa- tion major, had the flu earlier in the week, and was suffering from a fever at the dance. The Red Cross Blood Drive, an annual Greek Week event, yielded 360 pints, and Alpha Kappa Psi and Alpha Xi Delta gave the most bleod Bridgett Evans gets her ear pricked by Dave Wurts as he tests the iron content of her blood. — L. Gardner — J. Burton A homemade sign and shrieks of encour- agement are offered to Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity as they try to “pull out’ a victo- ry in the tug-of-war. The AGRs, once a perennial champion in the event, failed to regain the title as AKPsi won the fraterni- ty division. Two months of practice culmi- nated in a second-place Spring Sing per- formance with “rhythm” as the theme for Chi Omega. Bonnie Mitchell of Bowling Green, co-choreographer of the act, pre- sents “I’ve Got Rhythm” with her sisters. Ailisters and rope burns. Aching bodies. Tired feet from dancing all night. The reward? It may be personal satisfaction or community service, but in either case it was part of 1976 Greek Week. The Greeks sponsored three events to show community involvement, two of which are es- tablished parts of Greek Week. The American Red Cross blood drive con- ducted on March 22 yielded over 360 pints, topping the 1976 total of 333 pints. Alpha Kappa Psi fraternity and Alpha Xi Delta soror- ity won first place for giving the most blood. The cae Dystrophy carnival March 23 netted $630. Pi Kappa Phi fraternity and Al- ha Xi Delta sorority raised the most money ee this event. The AZD’s sponsored a coin throwing booth called Odds and Ends. A new event was the Dance Marathon, also for Muscular Dystrophy. Thirty couples start- ed at 8 p.m.,. Friday, March 26. When the marathon was officially over at 4 p.m., Saturday, 10 couples were still on their feet. The groups sponsoring a couple who col- lected the most pledges were declared the win- ners, and Kappa Delta and Alpha Kappa Psi won. Pledges totaled $8,100, according to Mike Smither of SAE. Though the Greeks pulled together in these three events, their efforts were exerted against each other for the tug-of-war March 25. For the first time black Greeks participated. Delta Sigma Theta sorority pulled the Kappa Deltas into the water, but yielded to Alpha Xi Delta in the competition. Phi Mu was the winner in the sorority division and Alpha Kappa Psi in the fraternity division. Other physical events were in the track and field category on March 21. There were some coed events such as 50 and 100-yard dash, and three relay races. Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity and Alpha Delta Pi sorority captured the titles in the overall track and field events. In contrast to physical ability, creativity and talent were seen and judged at Spring Sing in Van Meter Auditorium March 24. There was an apparent state of apathy on the part of some groups over finances, selec- tion of songs and practice time. After winning the fraternity division for 10 years, Lambda Chi Alpha did not compete. Dressed as sailors with navy jackets, white pants and captains’ hats, Pi Kappa Phi fraternity won with a med- ley of nautical songs. Runner-up in the divi- sion was Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Wearing green satin shorts and vests over black leotards and tights, the Phi Mus sang their way to first place in the sorority division with army songs. “Boogie Woogie,” “Over Here” and “You're in the Army, Mr. Jones” were featured as the girls marched across stage. Chi Omega sorority was the runner-up. Winners of the overall Greek Week awards were announced on a point system kept throughout the week. In the fraternity divi- sion, first, second and third place went to Al- pha Kappa Psi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Lambda Chi Alpha, respectively. Phi Mu and Alpha Xi Delta tied in the sorority divi- sion for first place. Alpha Delta Pi and Kap- pa Delta were awarded second and third places, respectively. — BECKY BLAIR UU 31 Flashback — Greek Week 1976 The ghost town that wasn’t Never let it be said that Western becomes a ghost town at the end of May when the graduating seniors and under- classmen return home. Besides those students who attend the summer term of classes on campus, oth- er people of all ages and interests use the facilities for various purposes. One such event was the State Special Olympics, May 21-23, which sponsored 1,000 participants. JoAnn Verner, a faculty member in the physical education and recreation de- partment, and Joseph DeLuca from the Barren River Mental Health-Mental Re- tardation Board co-chaired the event. Special Olympics is a nationwide pro- gram of sports training and athletic com- petition for mentally retarded children and adults. The competitors develop Pee socially and psychologically rom the experience, Miss Verner said. The competition is local, regional, state, national and international, she said. Western volunteered to host the Olympics — because ‘we were dissatis- fied with the events held in the previous year,” she added. The purpose of the event is not compe- tition alone, she said. “In fact, we discourage strong competition ... learn- ing to communicate with people, sharing and socialization are the main objectives.” The athletes competed in track and field, gymnastics, basketball, bowling, swimming and diving and the pentathlon. from the Volunteers majors club, therapeutic recreation recreation Cheers, cartwheels and spirit contests were all part of the Universal Cheerleader Association camps as well as group pictures. The Rus- sell High School cheerleaders, eight of 750 attending, pose. Public Relations organizations and the the visitors class, civic community surrounded with companionship. The basketball team coaching staff is always looking for talented recruits. Per- haps some future recruits will be return- ees who saw their first bit of Western basketball at the Hilltopper Basketball Camp, June 20-25. Fifty to 60 boys, ages 14 to 17, attended the first basketball camp for the sole purpose of technical instruction and ad- vanced basketball teaching, according to coach Lanny Van Eman. “We try to keep the numbers down to allow for individual attention,” Van Eman said. The boys are screened, in part, through recommendations made by their high school coaches. The participants practiced as much as nine or 10 hours each day, and top coaches from the area often con- ducted sessions. Leads, headlines, kickers, gutters and jumps may sound like athletic jargon to the novice, but to more than 96 high school students these words became gos- pel after 10 days on campus. They attended the fifth annual jour- nalism workshop sponsored by the Of- fice of University Publications. “We try to teach them the basics of good journalistic professionalism and ethics,” said Debbie Dickey, work- shop director. The students produced the summer is- sue of the College Heights Herald and attended lectures by six news- paper professionals. Five students received $150 scholar- ships for their freshman year at Western, 10 alternates were also named. Forty members of Dance Educators of America, a national organization of teachers and students interested in dance, came to the Hill July 5-10 to study and work. Beverly Leonard, a faculty mem- ber, fend past meetings were in New York City and this was the first region- al meeting. Participants stayed in the Guest House and were instructed by “top dancers from around the nation,” she said. “The meeting is coming back this year for two weeks,” said Mrs. Leonard, who hopes to receive a grant for special courses in order to teach children. For the fifth consecutive year, Western hosted its All Sports Camp July 11-23, for 237 boys and girls, ages 10 to 17. “Our concern, of course, was to expose individuals to the facilities at Western,” said Russell Miller, camp director. “This is the time of year that facilities are not used. Why not use them for re- cruitment?” Miller said. Each participant majors in one sport Sports events stop in the summer, but not theatre produc- tions. A children’s theatre production, “Mr. Crinkles’ Magic Spring” was presented four times in Russell Miller Theatre. — D. Gibson such as basketball, football, track and field or athletic student training. The camper may also choose two mi- nors among the 10 offered, ranging from tennis to wrestling to archery. The boys and girls are not separated in the sport area and Miller noted that “an enormous amount of girls go in- to basketball.” Miller said that amid the shaving cream fights, the young people “be- come independent for probably their first time.” “With younger people this is the only time of the year they are away from home. We put them on their own,” Mill- er said. What do you have when a couple of distinguished conductors, high school music teachers, Western music majors and high school students all meet together? It’s called Summer Youth Music Week and it happened July 11-24. The camp was divided in two sections, one for band students and the other for cho- ral students. The band camp is much larger than the choral camps, said Dr. Kent Camp- bell, camp director. Workshoppers came from surrounding counties and states to study dance steps, basketball dribbling and clef notes. A more select group came for strategy and safety tips in motorcycle driving. “We use distinguished conductors with a national reputation, high school teachers as specialists on certain instru- ments and Western students as ‘go- phers,’ ” Campbell said. Students were trained in ensembles, private instruction and band _ perfor- mances. Each week ended with two days of concerts. “The musical organization exceeds the level that many of them have in their own schools,” Campbell said. The Universal Cheerleader Associ- ation (U.S.A.) struck campus twice this summer. The U.C.A. is a company that sponsors clinics nationwide. Between July 12 and 15, the Drill Team and Pom Pom Clinics hosted near- ly 150 participants from junior and sen- ior high schools. The girls were taught drill team rou- tines, marching precision drills, dance steps and pom pom routines at the first such Western clinic. It was one of the first in the country, said Gary Ransdell, clinic director. He said the college benefits in recruit- ing by having the high school students on campus. “| have talked to some stu- dents who were there who have decided to attend Western,” Ransdell said. The participants competed among themselves the last two days for various skill and spirit awards. Ransdell said the U.C.A. plans to come back in 1977 and double its numbers. He said they hope to get it up to the scale of the Cheerleader Clinic. With the week of July 25-29, the cam- pus was hit with cheers, chants, stunts — Public Relations and competition as 750 cheerleaders came to improve their skills. “They're a very energetic group,” said Ron Beck, camp director. “Sometimes a couple hundred will do cheers in the stu- dent center.” Almost 550 young members of State Demolay organizations came to the Hill for their annual conclave in August. The Demolays are young men ages 13 to 21 who are not yet eligible for admit- tance into a chapter of the masonic lodge. “Their conclave is a time they can come together for certain ceremonies which cannot be done within a chapter,” said director Larry Howard. The chapters compete in their areas of expertise of performing installation cere- monies, athletic and ceremonial rites. State officers were also elected. So it goes at Western. When the col- lege students leave their shell, it becomes occupied by others who need a tempo- rary home. — MARY PACE [| One-on-one moves are emphasized by pues assistant Dennis King in a basketball camp session. T attended by 237 10-17 year-olds. e fifth annual camp was — D. Gibson EEE TE To eS 72 It was time to blow out the candles on America’s bicentennial cake. The waiting was over as the nation’s much publi- cized birthday party began, sparkled with fireworks, parades and picnics. Western students celebrated from points near Sum- mer Shade, Ky., to Denver, Colo., to Wuerzburg, Ger- many. Others, working in Bowling Green or attending summer school, were close to campus for the Fourth of July activities. Leon Chappell, an Elizabethtown history major, worked at the Bowling Green mayor's office plannin bicentennial programs. He said his committee serve as a clearing house for activities sponsored by area organizations and published weekly articles describ- ing those activities. Chappell said that Citizens National Bank used the Western parking structure for a “bowling on the green.” “It was mainly a symbolic thing to depict how Bowling Green got its name,” he said. Tommy Clemons took his wife to a local park for a picnic, and later the Bowling Green senior went to the Kiwanis Club’s fireworks display. “It was nice; the nation’s celebration is kind of exciting. It should be a big deal every year, not just every 100 years,” Clemons said. William Alan Madison celebrated his home coun- try’s birthday with 2,000 Germans at Wuerzburg where the Morgantown freshman was serving the last month of his Army tour. He said a 10 a.m. parade kicked off the holiday, and later the servicemen went to the parade grounds for sauerkraut, German beer and knackwurst. “The group sang patriotic songs and the German national anthem,” Madison said. Madison said being so far away from his home wasn’t such a bad feeling. “I knew I’d be coming home in less than one month.” Fellow soldiers weren’t so enthusiastic, the freshman said. “The career soldiers who were there with their families were fine. But the single GI who was just getting there and knew he would be there for quite a while found it hard,” Madi- son said. pe students were scattered across the nation on July 4. Shari Cunningham, a Frankfort textiles and clothing major, was home in the state’s capital. ‘I watched a lot of the events on television; a little later I went on a boat ride,” she said. “Frankfort had exhibits at Fountain Square Plaza. The town went crazy,” Miss Cunningham said. ‘There was a big celebration at the capitol, a nd the governor spoke. It was about the neatest thing Frankfort had done in a long time.” Karen Beth Howard from Summer Shade said she played in a softball tournament at Cave City. The sophomore lives on a farm in a small community, and said her parents watched television since they had a day’s vacation. “People in the community went to Glasgow for celebration activities and fireworks dis- plays. Nothing ever happens in Summer Shade,” Miss Howard explained. Steve Drews, a Denver, Colo. junior, said he attend- ed a party at his parents’ home. The Drews’ roasted a pig for their 80 guests. “My dad bought a ‘Happy Birthday America’ sign and put it on top of our house,” Drews said. _ Ted Nalesnik, a Yonkers, N.Y. senior chemistry ma- jor, said things were pretty wild in New York. “Boats were going up the Hudson River and people were glued to the banks,” he said. “The people from outside the city came in. New York from the traffic and mess.” Macy’s Department Store donated $100,000 for fir works, and Walt Disney Productions presented the 10- 15-minute show around the base of the Statue of Liber- ty, Nalesnik said. i ee Ber eeae a Tom Collins, a Potomac, Md. freshman, was close to” : : the nation’s capital on July 4. “The big thing was the Harbor’s Display in Wash- _ ington, D.C. No one from the suburbs went in if they had good sense. They were taking a chance on getting mugged,” Collins said. “When you live there, you don’t appreciate it. We've all seen the sights at least once before,’”’ Collins explained. “I’ve always been a believer in the morals of the country and (been) fairly patriotic. What is 200 years when you look at some countries in Europe that are 700 or 800 years old? It’s just a drop in the bucket,” Collins added. — CONNIE HOLMAN, JANICE HOWARD AND JEFF HOWERTON () | | 35. Flashback: Bicentennial Summer Aberrations: The s-l-o-w-e-s-t race in the world It was 10:15 a.m. when I wheeled my dusty brown Pinto into Diddle Arena parking lot. I had a class at 10:25. “If I can just get a parking space, I'll almost make it to class on time,” I thought. And the radio was singing “It’s a long way there; it’s a long way to where I’m going.” For a moment, I considered parking at the end of a row, in that nebulous space known as Always-Always Land. You al- ways get ticketed there. Which reminded me of one of my pet peeves — the hard-nosed campus cop type I always seem to run into at Garrett Conference Center. It’s the same argu- ment every time; I want to park in the Automobiles weren’t the only vehicles subject to citations for illegal parking. An unidentified mo- torcycle driver returned to his Suzuki to find a ticket strapped to the seat. The bike was not parked in a motorcycle zone. Squeezing 5,901 registered cars into 4,157 spaces would have made a good. “Mission: Impossible” script. Courageous students left cars next to yel- low-painted curbs and sometimes had them towed away to local garages. — H. Sinclair 36 Parking Aberrations no parking zone long enough to get my mail and he says, “Nope.” So I say “But —” and he says, “No if you don’t want a ticket.” While those thoughts ran through my head, I made a run on the parking aisle nearest Smith Stadium. Nothing. And in the next row — nothing. And the next, the next and the next — nothing. I wasn’t upset. I was quite used to making at least four or five swipes along the rows before finding a space. But this was an unusual morning, and I could feel it in my bones. It was a little bit like knowing you were going to trip on your gown at commencement. The effects of an incredibly cold and snowy winter were still evident. The parking lot was covered with ice. If the snow proved anything, it proved that college students have no concept of straight lines. From the air, campus parking lots must have resembled a de- molition derby. A few of us could say the same from our ground level view. I fared rather well during the winter, losing only my rear bumper and two fenders. I guess there’s something about snow that brings out the insanity in everyone. For example, take the case of a perfectly innocent snowball fight. Two girls were enjoying themselves in a friendly snow- — T. Dekle : | = | | ball war near Diddle Arena when one of (the white hand grenades went AWOL -and struck a campus police car. | Thinking he was under attack, the of- 'ficer jumped from his car, chased the coeds to Diddle Arena and, according to the girls, questioned them at gunpoint. _ Ican imagine explaining my actions to ) the chief if I was in his shoes: “Well, ) chief, it was this way — I saw these two girls throwing something at me, and I thought it was an assassination attempt, you know, like they did to Kennedy. Well, I had to draw my gun! They looked so vicious!’ But getting back to the subject, I was looking for a parking space, and it was j;nearly 10:25. I had started to plan my | excuse for walking into class late. Let’s see should I use my-alarm- | clock-didn’t-go-off excuse or the have- you-seen-the-traffic-out-there excuse? And then I saw it. In the next aisle, a car was backing out of a space. I floored it, zoomed down the || ') ) The hunt for a legal or an illegal parking space as a last resort often made students ite for class. Get- | ting a spot for 10:25 classes was the biggest chal- y lenge for 2,186 commuters and off-campus drivers. row and turned the corner in time to see a beat-up Chevy pull into the recently vacated space. I was ready to scream when, miracle of miracles, another car began back- ing from a spot at the end aP my aisle! There was no one in front of me! I was victorious! I took my time driving down the lane because I like to enjoy finding a parking space the way some people enjoy a cup of coffee — slow and easy. I was halfway there when the depart- ing car cleared the end of the aisle. Ever- ything was fine — birds were singing, children were laughing and Vietnam didn’t matter. The lights went out when a Porsche whipped into the aisle against the flow of traffic, and backed into the space. “It’s too late, baby, now; it’s too late, though we really did try to make it,” the radio mocked. My palms were sweating; my knuck- les turned white. Spring term registration was delayed because of hazardous weather conditions in the state. But by Wednesday, parking spaces were again in demand on the southern end of campus. “Arrrrrrrrrh!” I screamed. My nerves were gone, my cool blown and my class missed. But class didn’t matter anymore. My only goal was to get a parking space. actually it was an obsession. Nothing less than a spot within 150 feet of the university center would do. Gritting my teeth, I drove full speed up and down the aisles for another 20 minutes in search of good fortune. “Please, God, give me a parking space up front! I’ve done my time at this school! Can’t I have a break? Please?” He wasn’t taking requests. So I gave in. I settled for a spot some- where in Butler County and walked to the university center. You can’t fight fate. — DON BRUCE Don Bruce is assistant editor for the College Heights Herald, and writes a regular column called “Aberrations.” — J. Burton Parking Aberrations The annual Homecoming bonfire and pep rally was moved from Fri- day to Thursday night for the celebration. Organizers felt that the Thursday scheduling would create greater student response. — J. Burton — L. Wright A remarkably enthusiastic Topper offense plowed the Middle Tennessee Raiders at the game, and the team pulled off a phe 38-7 victory in the midst of an otherwise bland season. A crowd of 20,000 witnessed the 47th annual Homecoming game. — J. Burton Anticipation eased some for Marissa Greene after she was named Homecoming queen. Miss Greene was then able to enjoy the football victory among fans in the stands with her escort for the day. Benefits of being master of ceremonies at the bonfire became apparent to Lee Robertson, alumni affairs director, as he introduced the candidates. He greeted Kathy Wise, who was later named second runner-up. — J. Burton 38 | Homecoming Bt was a beautiful day to celebrate, and since early morning the campus had been buzzing with couples, young and old, dressed in their Homecoming finest. The long weekend started Tharsday evening with the traditional bonfire and would not end until Seals and Crofts walked off the Diddle Arena stage late Saturday night. It was a time to enjoy the present and remember the past as West- ern students, faculty and alumni gath- ered to commemorate “America: The Next 100 Years.” Weekend festivities began Thursday night when about 500 Westerners came to the Keen Hall parking lot for the an- nual bonfire, pep rally and street dance sponsored by the Interfraternity Council and Veterans on Campus. For those interested in the fine arts, Friday offered a variety of entertainment. That afternoon, area artists and crafts- men displayed their works at a reception on the mezzanine of the Downing Uni- versity Center. That evening, the Atlanta Contemporary Dance Company enter- tained a Van Meter Hall crowd as part of the Western Fine Arts Festival. Friday was also a time for alumni to rediscover the hill. Graduates of the old Ogden College, the only school in Bowl- ing Green when it was founded in 1877, gathered at the Holiday Inn on Scotts- ville Road to talk over old times. Back on campus, other alumni attend- ed a banquet in the Garrett Conference Ballroom. Following the dinner, a dance was held at the Bowling Green Country Club. Homecoming morning started bright and early with the Gollece Heights Herald’s annual alumni breakfast at 8 a.m. More than 100 present and former staffers and guests attended in the Downing Center Cafeteria. In another breakfast meeting, the ““W” Club saluted the 1948 Hilltopper football squad in the auxiliary gym of Diddle Arena. Later that morning, the lawn of the Kentucky Museum and Library was crowded with a colorful display of hand- made quilts entered in the quilt competi- tion. Across the street ant had a (continued on page 40) A giant paint brush and tube were props Marissa Greene had at her disposal as she rode the Art Guild float. Miss Greene, a junior commercial art major from Winchester, was later crowned Home- coming queen at the traditional pre-game ceremo- nies-in Smith Stadium. — J. Burton 39 Homecoming 40 Homecoming chance to reunite at the coffee hour in the Craig Alumni Center. By late morning, Homecoming was in full swing as the Big Red Band led a parade of 15 floats and 11 area high Spaceage ideas am idst traditional mums and glowing aulumn weather cont. Spotlighting the class of 1926, the Alumni dance and breakfast was hosted at the Bowling Green Country Club on Homecoming Eve, and was part — L. Wright ‘Spiriting’ down State Street in the Homecoming Parade, the cheerleaders try to boost the crowd before the Saturday Homecoming game with Middle Tennessee. Celebrating Kentucky’s heritage, the Kentucky Museum sponsored a quilt compe- tition, Saturday, Nov. 6. Pat Fredrick and Ruth Anne Bell examine one of approxi- mately 50 entries. The contest was open to students and area residents. school bands down Russellville Road to Smith Stadium. Soon after noon, the stands began to fill for the crowning of the queen and the game with Midde Ten- nessee State University. — L. Wright of the weekend festivities. Dr. Carl Kreisler, a fac- ulty member, dances a different dance than he did in his college days. — M. Lyons In the pre-game ceremonies, Marissa Greene, a junior commercial art major from Winchester, was crowned Home- coming queen. Miss Greene, who was sponsored by the Western Art Guild, was selected by the student body from among 15 candidates representing var- ious campus organizations. Runners-up were Jane Owens, a senior from Green- ville and Kathy Wise, a senior from Win- chester. Selected as members of the court were: Joy Lynne Jackson, Gloria Win- inger and Rhonda Lynne Keown. In the football game that followed, the Hilltoppers beat Middle Tennessee, 38-7, for their 31st Homecoming victory. At the half-time ceremonies, the Marching Band presented their show, “America: The Next 100 Years,” to the crowd of almost 20,000 spectators. Following the game, students, faculty and alumni were invited to a reception in Diddle Arena to celebrate the victory. For many, the highlight of Homecom- ing was the concert Saturday night by Seals and Crofts. Although many stu- dents disagreed over Associated Student Government's choice of performers, the concert was well attended. After the per- formance, Seals and Crofts talked to a few interested students about their reli- ion, the Baha’i faith, which they said Rad a great affect on their music. Al- though the concert was considered a suc- cess from an entertainment standpoint, ASG lost about $3,800, according to Ron Beck, assistant dean of student affairs. For those who preferred livelier Home- Fatigue showing in her face, Marsha Cole takes a breather from the ADPi’s all-night floatbuilding marathon in a warehouse on the Old Louisville Road. The floats were being readied for the Home- coming parade the next day. Following their Homecoming performance, Jim Seals and Dash Crofts, with manager Marcia Day, met with about 80 students in a Diddle Arena class- room for a “fireside follow-up” to discuss their Baha’i faith. — J. Burton coming entertainment, ASG sponsored a dance in the Garrett Conference Center Ballroom featuring the Back Stabbers and Those Perfections. As the long weekend came to a close, alumni returned home and _ students went back to work, but all left with pleasant memories of a beautiful day, a Western victory and a good time. — TOM EBLEN AND MARK GODBEY (| — T. Dekle 41 Homecoming 4 All Deeked Out Fashion photos by Robin Chard Shields What men and women in Atlanta, Los Angeles and New York City are wearing is not what students are wearing to chemistry classes, Greek mixers and frisbee- throwing sessiuns. Fashion trends begin in big cities and evolve as they sift to a medium-sized college campus in Bowling Green, Ky. “If you pick up a magazine like Vogue which has the latest styles you can see that the styles are very different than what we wear at Western,” said Nancy Ferralasco, a senior clothing and textiles major. “In this area of the country we get styles and clothes a lot later than when they come out.” Although Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar and Women’s Wear Daily are among the top magazines women consult for fashion, other magazines like Seventeen provide a guide for students. “If you want to find out what the girls around here are going to be wearing for penne and summer, just pick up a Seventeen magazine,” Miss Ferralasco said. “It oes you little or no good to pick up Vogue or Harper’s Bazaar unless you are going to live in New York City for the summer.” Another point the Jonesboro, Ark. senior stressed was the evolution styles go (continued on page 44) An old schoolhouse near Franklin was a perfect setting fora Less expensive and more comfortable pants and tops are rainy afternoon with Robin Carr dressed in a slicker, a short changing the all-jeans look. Rick Shields’ khaki outfit is from raincoat, and a light weight pair of slacks. At one time slicker Headquarters and Kit Huey’s drawstring pants and white referred to a certain type of lipstick. These fashions can be mesh type shirt are a break from the denim wardrobe. The found at Linear Design in Bowling Green Plaza. outfits are from Headquarters and My Friend’s Place. 43 Fashion ! 1 i 4g All Deekked Quel cn. through before they reach this region. “For last fall and winter Vogue was showing some tailored suits, but they were different from the tailored suits the girls wore here,” she said. “They were much trimmer and the pants were a lot thinner and had narrower legs. They were just modified versions of what we’re wearing now.” Miss Ferralasco added that a trip to New York City during Christmas break increased her beliefs about regional fashion differences, “People have grown out of the conservative age. They are more aware of fashion even with their jeans and tops. They are buying less expensive cotton pants instead of expensive jeans.” — Roiann Robertson, My Friend’s Place “ Almost every man I saw had a knee-length all weather coat of some type and all the women had on furs,” Miss Ferralasco continued. “I don’t know whether or not the furs were real.” Although past evidence shows that styles are often slow in coming, Miss Ferralasco added that styles this year caught on sooner than usual. “I was surprised at how fast some of the new things like gauchos and boots have caught on,” she said. : Echoing Miss Ferralasco’s comment, Theresa Hargis of Headquarters, a local boutique, said, “Gauchos, straight leg jeans and things that are more feminine have been the biggest new selling things this year. There have been more things with lace and embroidered flowers. “Also, jeans aren’t as plain as they used to be,” she said. “They’ve got a lot of ribbon trim and different colors of thread now.” Another Headquarters employe, Andy Wil- kins, said men’s wear for this year is more indi- vidual than it has been. “Used to when something was in style every- body had it,” he said. “Now it seems that every- body is trying to do his own thing with his clothes. “Khaki slacks have been the biggest selling thing as far as slacks go, and cotton long sleeve shirts have been the main thing sold off the shirt- rack,” he added. “Khaki was in style a long time ago and it’s coming back into style now. It’s still your casual jean look, but yet it’s getting away from blue jeans.” Not only do customers have more choice of merchandise, but there has also been a withdraw- al from standby clothing such as blouses, said Roiann Robertson at My Friend’s Place. “Things like T-shirts have been big,” she said. Miss Robertson said a move away from conser- vative dress has caused increased clothing sales. “People have grown out of the conservative age,” she said. “They are more aware of fashion even with their jeans and tops. They are buying less-expensive cotton pants instead of expens- ive jeans.” This year may have held lingering popular- ity for two types of shoes — platforms and Fashion earth shoes. “For women, a low-heel wedge has been popu- lar for casual wear, and shoes with crepe soles and leather uppers have been popular with men,” said Pam Doane of Adams Shoes. “Shoes in general have been a lot more casual and dress shoe heels have been higher.” Miss Doan said the Adidas Rom has been the most popular track shoe followed by the Osaga shoe, a relative newcomer. Other types of recrea- tional clothing are also selling well. “Everybody really seems to be into recreational clothing like warm-up suits,” Miss Ferralasco said. “I think the sport-type shirts like polo shirts are going to be in style for a long time.” Whether they were Aigner, Gi Gi Imports or some other brand, fake and genuine leather coats appeared in the freezing winter as the most prominent form of outerwear by both male and females. The phrase, “everybody has a leather coat” was echoed by several students, including Miss Ferralasco. Besides placing their mark on clothing designs, many designers have moved into eye-glass de- sign, too. “The main thing is that a lot of fashion design- ers have come into it like Bill Blaze, de la Renta and Von Fustenburg,” said Fred Woosley of Southern Optical. “Glasses have gotten a lot larger since the (fashion) designers have come into the field. “They’re getting much pn se and they’ve got a lot more color than they did a year or two ago,” Woosley said. Lisa Hall, another Southern Optical employe, said, ‘There is also a new gradient tint. The most opular tints are dark brown, dark gray and dark bie depending on the color of frames,” she said. Despite annual talk of “in” styles, the new idea of individuality in fashion seemed to stand out in the student mind. “I like to look for things that are different but “Used to when something was in style everybody had it. Now it seems that everybody is trying to do his own thing with his clothes.” — Andy Wilkins, Headquarters in style,” said senior community health major Cheryl Whitman. “If I can find a three-piece suit that is not really to one extreme I'll like it.” Although the Louisville native said she is aware of advertising and examines its persuasive- ness, the appearance of the clothes and their prices determine her final decisions. “When I am at home, advertising influences me quite a bit because I like to look at the ads in the Courier-Journal for the bargains,” she ex- plained. “But if I go to the store and see they have a special on something I find has no flaws, I buy it because I like to catch bargains.” Rickey Buford, a sophomore business adminis- tration major from Glasgow, said he concentrates on what he likes when he shops for clothes. “I look for things I haven’t seen other people here wearing,” he said. “I’ll look at the clothes I (continued on page 46) Lower in price than they were in their first year on the market, digital watches are more practical for college students. Baylor digital watches are just one of many dif- ferent brands carried by Zales Jewelry Store in the Bowling Green Mall. Formal fashion for 1976-77 was characterized by the | eye-let style of the peasant dress and the three-piece vested suit for | men, shown by Kit Huey and | Mark Comfort. These styles | proved to be more than adequate replacements for the halter dress and the leisure suit, once the height of fashion. Diamonds have become one of the most pop- Once simply casual wear, women’s pant ular decorative stones, but, it was not until suits have gradually worked into the formal recently they have been used in pierced ear- wear spectrum. This sheer pant suit from rings. Robin Carr a physical education major Linear Design modeled by Robin Carr com- from Bowling Green, models a simple post liments Mark Comfort’s three-piece suit diamond earring from Zales. rom Jim and Gill’s for a different look. 45 Fashion All Deeked Out .... have seen people wearing on campus and maybe even see what I look like in them, but first I’M] look at what I like. A lot of times what I like isn’t what the other people are wearing. “The black men on campus are trying to im- press others and I think that’s good,” Buford said. “As a black person I know I like to look nice.” Althouch fashion designers like to think peo- ple buy all new clothes and disregard last year’s, Pam Oglesby, a senior from Gallatin, Tenn., be- lieves this may not be so. “Last year’s shorter skirts that went to right below the knee can be put with boots to dress them up,” the elementary education major said. Water from an old pump in the country is a quiet setting for Robin Carr in a shorts outfit from Linear Design. The spring brought similar fashions to sports and casual wear shopping sprees, while the colorful designs brought admiring looks. Fashion “Also, if you have a pair of pants that are too short you can tuck them into a pair of boots.” Even within the limits of Bowling Green the clothes students wear are different, according to David Ballard, a freshman commercial art major from Glasgow. “When I’m on campus it seems like the dress is a lot more casual than what I see off campus,” he said. “V’ve noticed this particularly with the boys who are in fraternities. Basi cally, | think they are more conscious of their social activities and they have a greater need for maintaining an image.” Unlike most men on campus, Ballard purchases a fashion magazine, Gentlemen’s Quarterly, to aid him when he goes shopping. “It shows all the latest styles and I use it along with my own likes and dislikes when I go shop- ping,” he said. This emphasizes that the fashion year was one of individuality in 1977. — ROBIN VINCENT (1 T he International students need a little extra orientation to get accustomed to C eC an American university. ANA WY ““T£ I find the student has a place, his money is in the bank and he has a friend, then everything else takes care of itself,” said Robert Wurster, foreign student and International Club adviser. To further this goal — the Internation- al Student Affairs office developed a pre- orientation program for incoming for- eign students. The program was designed to cover matters such as immigration require- ments, banking, student health and acci- dent insurance, regulations about work- ing in the community, social securit numbers, mental health, intercultural af- fairs and the International C lub. Meetings introduced the student to the university and some administrators and professors. They also provided advise- ment, counseling and English proficien- cy testing. The three-day fall session began Au- gust 19 and 58 students attended. “We get them here on a friendly ba- sis,’ said Dr. Paul Hatcher, director of International Student Affairs. “We break the ice. They get to know us better so that by the time they start classes, they can come to us as friends.” Dr. Ronald Eckard, director of the English as a Second Language program, said the pre-orientation een a more cohesive group, and the students partici- pated more as a group later. Wurster Necenbed the program as “a scheduled methodical thing; the least in- teresting part of the year.” Yet, he stressed the necessity of seeing all the students at once, instead of trying to find time to talk to each one individually. The second pre-orientation, scheduled to start Jan. 7 was better organized but a heavy snowfall interfered. Most of the scheduled events were covered, but in less time than planned. The host-family program is incorpo- rated in the pre-orientation. The Saale the program is to have a family for each student who desires one. Being placed with a family allows the student to visit, have meals and become absorbed in the family, yet maintain independence. Eck- ard said it is a good arrangement for the families and the international students. Unlike the summer pre-orientation for incoming freshmen, parents of the inter- national students are unable to attend. There was one exception in the spring. Emel Duru’s father accompanied her on the 14-hour flight from Turkey. It was a business trip for him as well. Emel said she knew if she came with- A Chinese New Year’s celebration Feb. 18 attracted 80 people to the Newman Center. Four-year-old Mark Lowry and sister Elizabeth enjoyed a dance as well as a buffet dinner and the traditional open- ing of 12 gifts representing the 12-year calendar. 48 International Student Orientation out her father she would make it, but hour class load, nine of them in English. guage. However, she says her instructors _| that it was nice having him with her. F She had about three years of English in have been very helpful. Emel learned about Western through high school, but the concentration was Emel said pre-orientation should be her tennis club in Turkey; three of on listening, not on conversation or continued. Although the program is not her friends are members of Western reading. Her main problems in class financed by the university, Hatcher said men’s team. have been with taking notes because she it will be continued. A chemistry major, Emel has a 16- has to translate them into her own lan- — BECKY BLAIR — D. Gibson Pre-Orientation for international students began with advice and informa- tional session. Local businessmen, faculty and administrators told them about services available and policies they must follow. Juanita Milton from Citizens National Band directed a check-writing session. — J. Burton English as a Second Language is a polishing program for the language skills of international students attending Western. Each new student takes a standarized | English proficiency test to determine his needs in the program. Tan Vo, Vahid Ghahreman and Mohammod Boka were enrolled in the spring semester class. Learning a second language — English “To like,” “to be like,” “to look alike.” Even a native American could have trouble with the difference in these hrases. Try to imagine how an international student would Feel when confronted with them. This is an example of just one of the lessons taught in 051 — English as a Second Language (ESL). The class is an non-degree credit, flexible course set up for three to 12 hours, according to individual needs. Incoming international students are required by Under- graduate Admissions to have a score of 500 on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFEL), according to Dr. Ronald Eckard, director of the ESL program. TOEFEL is the major international test of English, known all over the world. During orientation week, international students must take the Michigan English Test, another standardized test of English proficiency. The student’s score on this test deter- mines his placement in the ESL program. The score indi- cates how heavy a course load and how many hours of 051 the student should take. The program was organized seven years ago but only had part-time personnel. Consequently, a full load of courses could not be offered to international students who were admitted in the spring or summer. In the fall of 1976 Eckard was appointed full-time director of ESL. There are two part-time faculty — Mary Anne Kear- ny and graduate assistant Donna Bunch. With this staff — a more diversified program can be offered for undergraduates and graduates. The fall enrollment was up 40 per cent over 1975, with 50 students in the program, according to Eckard. Spring enroll- ment was estimated at 15 to 25 new students — a higher number than in previous years. Students from over 20 countries come to Western with varying degrees of proficiency in English. According to Eckard, some have studied English for eight to 10 years, while a few have had virtually no English training. Some of the latter go to a language school before coming to Western and get intense practice in the study of English. The purpose of ESL is “not to teach English to people who know no English, but to polish the basics they’ve already mastered,” said Eckard. The approach us ed in the classes is integrated — reading, writing, fisting speaking, grammar, speeches and dra- matics. Basically it consists of textbook instruction and classroom discussions, with emphasis on different language patterns and idioms. Work with function words, such as prepositions, is very important. The students also attend a language lab and listen to tapes in dial access. Some of the students need special work with pronunci- ation. Through cooperation with the speech department and the speech clinic these students take a speech session on an individual basis. “Students realize the grade isn’t counted in the cumula- tive average, but they attend class faithfully,” Eckard said. “They are highly motivated out of the necessity to communicate.” According to Eckard, there is never a dull moment in the 051 class. “They have different language backgrounds from Arabic to Swahili,” he said. “We try to use an approach that suits all.” — BECKY BLAIR 49 International Student Orientation ASG We resolve that... Like the coach for a first-string team of veteran athletes and a rookie bench, Associated Student Government (ASG) began the season with.an exper- ienced lineup. Led by president Christy Vogt, administrative vice president as a junior, the executive board con- sisted of activities vice-president Rick Kelley and treasurer David Payne, both beginning second terms in office. Administrative vice-president Tom Blair and secretary Pam Keown also had ASG experience. Before adjourning for the 1976 summer, John Ev- ans was elected to Stic the student affairs commit- tee and Tim Leigh took responsibility for the aca- demic affairs committee. “We also approved the budget at the last congress meeting,” Miss Vogt said. ‘Later in the summer we had more insight into what the needs would be so we approved revisions in September.” As the fall semester began, so did discussion and passing of resolutions, suggestions to the university about specific policy changes. At the top of the list was housing. “We had immense pressure about housing so we wrote a resolution and submitted it to the Regents at the October meeting,” Miss Vogt said. “With any resolution the research ASG has done is given to the Regents for consideration,” the presi- dent said. ‘Just because we pass a resolution doesn’t mean the university will accept it. “The Regents listened and we went from six visi- tations with the door opened to 12 visits with the door ajar,” Miss Vogt said. An intermission in her ASG-sponsored concert took singer Lori Wolfsohn backstage for extra practice. Miss Wolfsohn per- formed ballads for a small audience at Van Meter Auditorium in September. ASG sponsored five major concerts during the year. The university accepted resolutions to get special parce permits for night clerks and increased the ighting in parking areas. Ice machines in each dorm and a copy machine in the student center were also requested. “These things are on their way and may begin on a trial basis,” Miss Vogt said. Pre-registration was also proposed and a univer- sity committee asked President Dero Downing to start it on a trial basis. “Whether or not these things would have come about without ASG can be questioned,” Miss Vogt said. “But we helped them come sooner.” The rookie congress membership and some apa- thy slowed ASG, according to Miss Vogt. “Sometimes the people are motivated to run for wrong reasons,” she said. “If they’re the most popu- lar people on campus their time is too divided to ent in ASG.” Low voter turnout was a setback, Miss Vogt said. “If you only have a 20 per cent vote how represen- tative is that?,” she et “Tf more students voted, ASG could really represent the student body. “We don’t run the university; the university channels do. We need their respect so they will listen when we share ideas,” Miss Vogt said. ‘““Oth- erwise, we won't get a lot accomplished. “This year we've opened the door wider to the administration. We have a better rapport,” the dager added. “The next ASG can take it rom there.” — CONNIE HOLMAN A slack at the voting window for the ASG election in the fall gave Lisa Raque, a Louisville sophomore, extra time to peruse the just delivered 1976 Talisman. Voter turnout totaled 379 and decided the freshman class president and vice-president. — J. Burton Almost every congress member was new to ASG. President Christy Vogt said the first meetings centered around orienting the rookies into the procedures and policies of the student government organization. When business at the general congress meetings was completed, committees met for discussion. Christy Vogt, Bob Moore, Don Augenstein and Georgiana Carlson organize a rules and elec- tions committee. Interaction and discussion preceded voting for proposed resolutions to be submitted to the university. John Ev- ans, a senior from Prestonburg, ad- dressed the Jan. 18 congress. Three years as an AGS member pre- pared Christy Vogt for her Beeten cy. She said she strived to establish a good Lage with the administration while s e was a Regent. Wel= 52 Center Board oS Ta tien A Sees sh as Third in the entertainment series, the Paul Price Ensemble came to Western on Nov. 18 with a large collection of rhyth- mic precision instruments for a presentation of percussion seen — D. Frank music performed internationally. Price was accompanied by pianist Elizabeth Marshall and the ensemble has a repertoire of 150 percussion pieces and piano solos. Some students never visit more than one or two academic depart- ments during their entire college life. The one place, however, that every stu- dent visits is the Downing University Center (DUC). Campus activity revolves around DUC. From the early morning hours and the first breakfasts in the grill to about midnight, the center is loud with a rush of students. “Downing offers students all kinds of services,” said Bill Lamb, assistant director of university centers. ‘The whole building is a service.” The recreation floor is the main floor of activity. Game lovers scram- ble to be the champ in bowling, table tennis, air hockey, foosball, billiards, electronic games, card games and oth- er table games. “We charge a small fee, but we’re not out to make mon- ey,” Lamb said. Specials enhanced the regular re- creation floor activities. “The Center sponsors Moonlight Bowling, Red Head-pin Bowling, Early Bird Pool and Ladies Night in billiards,’ Bowling classes and bowling league members were treated to a Diane McMullen. She and Bill ition and bowled against two students. day of instruction by professiona Scrock had an echib Lamb said. Tournaments were organized to broaden the sense of competition. Regular tournaments included no-tap bowling, 8-ball bowling, table tennis, foosball and chess. For those desiring a calmer side of life the third floor provides three tele- vision rooms, a study room, art gal- lery and travel center. “The newly developed travel center is a place where students and staff can go to get travel information,” ex- plained Linda Winstead, program coordinator of University Centers. She said this was a very popular fea- ture in the weeks before spring break. “Not only can students use the study room to study, but there are newspapers available, such as the “Wall Street Journal” and nine or 10 popular magazines displayed,” Lamb said. Another source of entertainment is the center theatre. According to the- atre manager David Gordon, more tickets were purchased last semester than in previous years. — L. Gardner The annual Hanging of the Green couldn't begin until a crew moved the 20-foot tree inside the center and fixed it in a sand base. Not only were the games and mov- ies widely used this year, but so was the first floor craft Ae . In an envi- ronment reeking of leather and filled with the whirl of a pottery wheel, stu- dents could handle ceramics, candle making, leather crafts, decoupage, jewelry making and other activities. “We provide enough materials to get students started on a craft, and then it’s up to them,” said Lamb. He said the shop furnishes all tools and dyes for students’ and staff use. Holidays were special days on cam- pus when the university center and the University Center Board spon- sored celebrations for Halloween, Val- entine’s Day and Christmas. “Spook’”’ bowling, pumpkin carving, a haunted house ee Panae competition made DUC one big Halloween party. For those with love on their minds, a Val- entine’s Day celebration included a age night showing of ‘Romeo and Ju- iet.” The Christmas season dawned with “The Hanging of the Green” festivity. (continued on page 54) Suggs, a Duke Ellington Band member. — J. Burton Advice from a professional was what music student David Dorris got from Milton — L. Wright 53 Center Board DP ee ttst—stSeeeeeeee a | be el ae THE HILL'S @@ I=IN] |=|R OF INTEREST cont. —_ _ This tradition, sponsored by the Fac- ulty Wives’ Club, Panhellenic and In- terfraternite Councils and University Center Board, sent the Christmas spir- it booming across campus. The cere- mony included music provided by the University Choir and a special Christ- mas message by Elwyn Wilkinson, Jr. of the Baptist Student Union. The University Center Board Enter- tainment Series created even more things for students to do on campus. According to Miss Winstead, the series is a mini-cultural series of six or seven programs with a variety of in- terest which is offered to students at a minimal cost. The series opened with a Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band concert on Sept. 7. The Band used oil drums to produce a unique repertoire of classical and rock and roll music that captured attention in an outdoor afternoon concert and an evening concert. A somewhat smaller audience at- tended a dramatic presentation by repertory theatre actress M. Tulis Ses- sions. Ms. Sessions presented “Wom- en I Have Known,” and in this chame- leon-like performance, she _ be- came “everywoman.” Truths were told and myths were dispelled as she created the lives of women in American history. Her characters included Anne Hutchin- son, Dolly Madison, Martha Wash- ington, Mary Todd Lincoln and Edith ‘Bolling Wilson. The program was of most interest to theatre majors, Miss Winstead said. Students could witness a_perfor- mance of percussion music at the Paul Price Ensemble’s performance on Nov. 18. The Ensemble presented piano so- los by Elizabeth Marshall and a vari- ety of internationally recognized mu- sic. Selections included Nicolas Fla- gollo’s “Divertimento.” The Duke Ellington Orchestra con- ducted by Mercer Ellington came to town Feb. 24 ina concert that attracted a large crowd. The orchestra presented Duke Ellington’s music as a healthy — T. Dekle and joyous element in 20th century life. The group was greeted with en- thusiasm in hele revival of famous compositions of years ago. With the Ozark Folk Festival on March 2, came a mini-performance in the afternoon and a longer night per- formance. Weaving, fiddle making, doll making and quilting were dem- onstrated by 20 hill people who share their lifestyle with people across the United States. The festival featured Jimmy Drift- wood, a former star of the Grand Ole Opry and composer of “Battle of New Orleans.” The people used banjos, mandolins, gourds, pickin’ bowls and fiddles to perform songs and tunes that have been custom in the Ozarks for generations. Scottish baritone Niven Miller con- cluded the season with a March 31 erformance. Miller sang selections a the operas of Verdi, Mozart, Rossini, Bizet and Massenet as well as a few Scottish songs and Eng- lish ballads. — DEBBIE HARVEY A Monster Mash came to the student center as part of the Halloween celebra- tion. Mike Murphy tries to spook Mary Anne Cecil at the horror house. Ozark Folk Festival member Waco John- son shows Jack Aud, a junior from Whitesville, how to tune a banjo at a handicraft show in April. — L. Gardner A concert by the Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band opened the Entertainment Series. Members Michel Kernehan, Robert Vallentine and Norris George performed classical and rock and roll on oil drums Sept. 7. — J. Burton 34 Center Board bess: On any weekday Bess Gilbert can be heard speaking in the Downing University Center. Her DUC information desk job leaves her plenty of opportunity to answer questions and make intercom announcements. But on Nov. 1, 1977, Mrs. Gilbert will no long- er be heard. She’s retiring. Mrs. Gilbert began her hostess career in Gar- rett Conference Center on Homecoming day, Nov. 1, 1953. The center opened a Rs after the death of her husband and she was asked to be hostess by Kelly Thompson, then her next-door neighbor and later WKU president. Seventeen years later on Homecoming day, 1970, Mrs. Gilbert began a second phase in her career by assuming similar duties in the newly- opened Dero Downing University Center. Mrs. Gilbert has seen some changes in stu- dents during her stay at Western. “Students don’t dance like they used to,” she says. According to Mrs. Gilbert, “sockhops’” were a favorite form of entertainment and a dance of some form was held every weekend. Pool and ping-pong tables along with a televi- sion area rounded out the entertainment forms provided at the student center. The current home of President Dero G. Down- ing (then known as the Schell House) was used at one time as the student location brought new eae such as candy and cookie-making and regular popcorn-popping. Diter ences Nee Gilbert has spent at West- ern, crowds at the Homecoming reception have increased from 700 to 3,500. The reception (one of Mrs. Gilbert’s favorite duties) is one of the eight she works with yearly. Recalling a difference in students of today An instant source of information, hostess Bess Gilbert helps senior Tom McGraft. She has worked in DUC since Homecoming, 1970. After 24 years of service Western’s hostess retires. from those of previous generations, Mrs. Gilbert said students wear jeans more. “They used to really dress up to go to the football game. Now this only happens at Homecoming,” she said. But the students of today have not changed in all respects, Mrs. Gilbert added. “They still have a lot of pep and enthusiasm,” she said. Serving as “my own boss” until the mid-1960s’ renovation of GCC, Mrs. Gilbert has fond memo- ries of her 24 years at Western. One of her favor- ites is seeing former students when they come back at Homecoming and other spec- ial occasions. “They bring their children who are now get- ting pretty big,” she added. Seeing students leav- ing the campus after four years in school, howev- er, is one of her least favorite memories. Her duties include making reservations for dif- ferent clubs, making announcements, handling lost and found articles, compiling news items for the Western Weekly and answering “millions of questions.” One of her all time favorite experiences in- volved the student who approached her DUC desk and asked her, “Where is the Downing Uni- versity Center lobby?” The veteran hostess is busiest between the middle of October and the first of the year, while the May term and the ensuing summer months are the least active times of the year. “The sum- mer of 1976 with its many workshops was the busiest we've ever been,” she said. November 1, 1977, will mark the end of 24 ears of service for Bess Gilbert. It’s the date she tee set to step down from her elevated vantage point in Downing Center. — JEFFREY HOWERTON (1 35 Center Board COMMENTARY Keeping in mind that Bowling Green is not the most exciting place in the western hemisphere, the Friday afternoon exodus of suitcasers often presents a problem for those left behind. As an alternative to staring at the wall for two days, many students find movies, television, records and books (the kind not prefixed with “text”) very entertaining. ... That’s entertainment? Gone were disaster flicks. After mid- air collisions, floundering luxury liners, earthquakes and towering infernos, Hollywood just ran out of things that could go wrong. So, to qualify for this year’s “You've got to be kidding” award, the movie industry resurrected the most famous monkey of them all, “King Kong.” The remake of the 1933 classic was basically a love story — ape meets girl, ape loves girl, ape loses girl. The girl Kong had in mind, as well as in hand, was 27-year-old actress Jessica Lange. Together they ran amuck through New York City until Kong’s death in a tender scene guaranteed to make even the most cold-hearted chimpanzee break down in tears. A movie version of the best seller “All the President’s Men,” by Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, turned one of America’s most trau- matic events into one of the year’s best movies. Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman starred in the film that followed the uncovering and investigation of Watergate. In the tradition of “The Exorcist,” “The Omen,” starring Gregory Peck and Lee Remick, was a film guaranteed to scare the devil out of anyone. In this interpretation of the book of Revelation, the Anti-Christ is born, or apparently born, to the American ambassador to England. After numerous bloody deaths and warnings, Peck is finally convinced of his childs’ real identity — just as it’s too late to do anything about it. Even though it was a bit on the bloody side, the movie was well worth seeing. “A Star is Born,” starring Kris Kristofferson and Barbra Streisand, was a love story set in the multi- million dollar rock music industry. The movie's near-nothing plot made it A reflection from a mirror in the rear right-hand corner of Headquarters Music and Boutique Shop catches consumers checking the displays and re- cord bins for the latest hits. “Frampton Comes Alive” was very popular. 56 Entertainment Entertainment: A collage of monkeys, bionics, Roots ANd debates SS emai — T. Dekle — B. Coffey ae | 5 a ae i te depend on the big-name stars to keep it interesting — which didn’t work very well. Because of this, critics hated it — so did most everyone else. “The Front” starring Woody Allen, was a humorous non-comedy about black-listing in the entertainment business during the 1950s. The clown prince of theatre portrayed a waiter persuaded by a friend to pedal television scripts of several blacklisted writers under his name. When their et finally comes unglued, Allen is rought before the Senate Committee on UnAmerican Activities, where he promply tells the senators what they can do with their blacklist. ... Prime-time players. For those who prefer cheaper entertainment, television this season reflected three basic trends: sex, bionics and roots. One of the year’s biggest hits was “Charlie’s Angels,” featuring the escapades of three beautiful detectives. Farrah Fawcett-Majors, Kate Jackson and Jaclyn Smith starred in the series which was characterized by thin plots, thinner costumes and even thinner acting abilities. But for some reason no one — especially men — seemed to mind. Following last season’s big success, “The Six Million Dollar Man,” networks featured similar shows pitting super-human good guys against the forces of evil. “The Bionic Woman,” starring Lindsay Wagner, and “Wonder Woman,” starring Lynda Carter, were both successful. After 12 years of digging up his Weekends spent on campus gave students bigger chunks of time for entertainment. Sophomore Mary Riley watched “Digest 77” broadcast from a CBS station in Nashville, Tenn. She said the pro- gram focused on fund raising. family tree, Alex Haley’s best seller “Roots” turned out to be one of the most successful television novels made. The eight-part series traced Haley’s origin back 200 years to an African named Kunta Kinte who was captured and brought to America as a slave. The show was dramatic and extremely well done, making it one of the best television shows all year. While not intended as entertainment, “The Jimmy and Gerry Show,” the first presidential debates since John Kennedy kicked Dick Nixon around, made for interesting viewing. It was like two cats fighting — you couldn’t tell who was winning, but it was fun to watch. The biggest thing in music last year was the live album. Two of the most popular: ‘Frampton Comes Alive,”by Peter Frampton, and “Wings over America,” by Paul McCartney and Wings, featured cuts from con- cert performances. Frampton’s album, featuring his smooth guitar work, was recorded live in San Francisco while McCartney's was assembled from concerts during his “Wings over America” sell-out tour last summer. Other popular albums included: “Fly Like an Eagle” by the Steve Miller Band, ‘Songs in the Key of Life” by Stevie Wonder, “Silk Degrees” by Boz Scaggs and “Boston” by Boston. ...Words of Wisdom When the movies are over and the television has gone off, a good book can make for an enjoyable evening. There were two additions to John Jakes’ bicentennial series. “The Titans” and “The Warriors” raised the total to six. More books are planned in the series that may gO as many as 12 volumes. Marabell Morgan’s book, ‘The Total Woman” caused great controversy almost from the day of its publication. The book’s philosophy of total feminism was hailed by some, criticized by some and just laughed at by others. If you thought you could stand some improvement, Dr. Wayne Dyer’s book, “Your Erroneous Zones” told you how to do it. In step-by-step explanations, the RaeAnS and therapist told how to eliminate destructive elements in your personality and lifestyle. Other best-sellers included: “Captains and the Kings” by Taylor Caldwell, “Wicked Loving Lies” by Rosemary Rogers and “Penmarric’’ by Susan Howatch. — TOM EBLEN UU) Album shuffling and single and tape file systems help James Hines broadcast a program popular with the student audience of WKYU. The Louis- ville senior worked at the campus station as part of an Advanced Radio Problems class. 37 Entertainment SONU! Wi oa Pe ao aoe ot as hy ee Turned off but tuned in’ 4h eRared off, but tuned in.” That could have been the na- tion’s campaign slogan during the 1976 electio ns. Pegged as apathetic and uncon- cerned, voters were expected to do little more than watch the debates on TV. Nov. 2 — election day — meant a day’s reprieve from classes and a chance to catch up on some missed sleep and assignments for some students. - “T don’t see any use in voting. I don’t like either of them (Gerald Ford ‘I don’t see any use in voting. I don’t like either of them.” or Jimmy Carter).” For others, it meant a long weekend home as they opted to cut their Mon- day classes. “T don’t see any use in coming all the way back to campus for just one day of classes.” For a few Western students and fac- ulty members, Nov. 2 was a busy da filled with last minute phone ale ef- forts to help others get to the polls and a long Ay at party headquarters. “TY don’t think the voters are apa- thetic; they just haven’t decided who to vote for yet.” The weeks before the election were especially busy for the partisan work- ers, the people generally associated with a campaign. Young Democrats and College Re- publicans spent the pre-election weeks knocking on doors, phoning voters and taking polls to determine the status of their candidate. Young Democrats were assigned to Jeff Durham, Young Democrats presi- dent. He said between 25 and 30 stu- dents worked on the campaign. (continued on page 60) — J. Burton The nationally televised debates covered both do- A piaducte student in mass communications and agri- mestic and foreign policy. Susan Taylor, Tim Sears, culture, Dennis Houghian, served as media coordina- Mike Morton and Pam Page watch one of three tor in Warren County. He works on projects for the debates between Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. campaign amid posters, donuts and city maps. — L. Wright Political give-aways furnish the room Shani Haughian chose for temporary sleeping quar ters as his parents watched the election return: at Republican headquarters on Collet Avenue. — L. Wright A friendly escort is added incentive for elderly citizens to exercise their voting press Gary Thornton, a student, helps Mrs. Carter from the | polling location of 11th Street. — L. Wright 59 Campaign 76 60 For the College Republicans, the phone played a very important part Thursday night was College Repub- lican night at the local Repub- lican headquarters Between 10 and 15 students manned a phone band and canvassed the Og- ‘I’m not sure who would be the best candidate, but Carter doesn’t have to pay anyone back if he gets in office. den College precinct one afternoon a week. Election day on campus. The Ogden precinct, the only vo- ting place on Western’s campus, had approximately 76 per cent of the 508 registered voters turn out to vote, slightly above the national average. Whether they had any effect on the outcome of the election or on voter turnout, Western students did watch the debates, according to a survey tak- en dn campus. When students were asked whether itself was calm Campaign 76 “Turned off but tuned inv...: they watched the debates, 71.7 per cent said they saw the debates, 14.1 ee cent said they saw all of the de- ates, and 14.1 per cent said they had seen none of the debates. The voters were tuned in, and West- ern followed the trend. Often class periods were devoted to analysis of the debates and a discussion of whether Ford or Carter had won. University officials dismissed classes on election day so students could return home to vote. However, many students protested classes being held on Monday. Whether voters were actually turned off became a favorite dis- cussion topic after the surprising voter turnout Some critics said the voters were turned off by the Watergate scandal and other similar affairs involving public officials. But other critics looked to Carter as a fulfillment of America’s promise that any one could be President. College Republican members spent every Thursday night at the local Republican headquarters man- ning a phone bank and conducting a preference poll to determine where their candidate stood. . 4 hy pith 8 U 4 atuayg tall ‘ aay Ma LET: BRUT Ot 1 “tf Nha. il ul 1 i oh e } Rhian Rey y i: hQnen gyal 3 : f — M. Lyons A television set adds to the enthusiasm at the local Democratic headquarters on election night. Warren County voters gave Jimmy Carter 9,657 to Gerald Ford’s 9,439. Carter won the national election. — D. Gibson “I’m not sure who would be the best candidate, but Carter doesn’t have to pay anyone back if he gets in office.” Faculty members added another dimension to campus cam- paign involvement. “It doesn’t matter if I watch the returns. It isn’t going to change who wins or loses.” Dr. Carl Kell, associate professor of speech and theatre, analyzed the sec- ond Ford-Carter debate on foreign policy for rhetorical style instead of its political impact. He evaluated the features, struc- tures and character of the candidate’s arguments of what he considered a liberal Democrat against a moderate- to-conservative Republican. While interest in the election returns was keen at party headquar- ters, many students did not share the enthusiasm. Students went on about their work or play barely noticing the returns, with only a scattered few sitting down to watch them in entirety. “It doesn’t matter if I watch the re- turns. It isn’t going to change who wins or loses.” At six o'clock when the polls closed, other Western students went to work. Members of Sigma Delta Chi and classes of ‘aisle reporting stu- dents Pople the News-Election Ser- vice in New York with election results in Warren County. The students were assigned to each of the 48 precincts and phoned their total into a central headquarters in the Academic Complex. Results were then forwarded to the selection service in New York. But when their job was over many of the students returned to studying or relaxing and forgot about the election. “T didn’t know who won until I got up. It really didn’t make any differ- encentoutie.« Classes the next day were often a rehash of the night’s events — which states went to which candidate and the effect this had. The two-year political campaign ended with the victory speec e president-elect Jimmy Carter. Westerner s were turned in, and for the most part they were also turned on. — DEBBIE GIBSON (1 Sigma Delta Chi members Terry Jones, Don Min- ton and Tom Siwicki tally precinct returns from Warren County. The group then reported the re- sults to News-Election Service in New York. J. Mosely and Jeff Howerton check over computer print-outs of registered voters to see which voters they have not contacted. The local headquarters kept a tally on those favoring Ford. — D. Gibson — D. Gibson 61 Campaign 76 62 Exams Week and Christmas | ‘Exam ining @ the week before Christmas Typical final exams week or Further adventures in the life of Joe College fi | I. just didn’t seem fair, thought Joe as he stared at mountains of class notes and old exam papers that were yellowing around the edges. It was finals week again and it seemed like the semester had just gotten started. And to top it all off it had come — like it _had a habit of doing every year — right in the middle of the holiday season. No- body yet had perfected the art of balanc- ing end-of-semester and Christmas par- ties with studying for exams and writing _ term papers. Joe’s dormitory room was half-empty and drab since his roommate had luckily completed exams and moved out after the first day of the week. But a droopy branch from a pine tree stuck in an old wine bottle full of water added a holiday touch to the room. “You have to do something to keep up the old holiday spirit,’ he muttered aloud as he thought Pout the Christmas shopping he hadn't ) been able to finish since he had been swamped in last minute projects. He had even lost his Christmas list. Study for the first exam took only 15 _ minutes, since Joe realized he had missed several days of class and consequently had missed the notes for them. So Joe turned on the radio and listened to some inspiring holiday music — “Jingle Bells” by the barking dogs — while he waited for his first exam time to come. Two hours later he lifted his head from where he had been bent over his desk and peered at the clock. Frantically he jumped up and jammed two pencils Bnd a blue Beale in his pocket as he scrambled for his coat, toboggan and the } door. There were 30 minutes left in his scheduled exam period, and it took 10 of those to walk to Thompson Complex. When he arrived at Thompson the professor was just collecting the exam _ papers, but he graciously allowed Joe to take an extra 30 minutes to complete the I test. Joe thanked the teacher carefully as he left the room, and made a mental note to say thanks that it was the holiday season. He had a feeling that it had something to do with the professor be- ing in such a generous mood. The rest of the week went much the same for Joe. He spent quite a bit more time studying for the rest of his tests than he did that first one, however, but he still didn’t get to go to many parties. The closest he was able to get to the hectic pace of Christmas shopping was a drugstore when he went to buy some (continued on page 64) Daydreams dispel exam worries as Lexington fresh- man Jeremiah Marks gazes out of a Cherry Hall classroom window. Marks, a physical education Major, was waiting for his English 055 final exam. Paper grading is Dr. Willson Wood's task as his English 302 students perform a different task — taking the final exam. The English final was sched- uled for 12:00 to 1:50 on the last day of finals week. Photos by Mark Lyons “Sleepteaching” is the method used by freshman Reggie Christian to learn shorthand in the dial access center of the library. Miss Christian, a business ad- ministration major, dozed while practic- ing dictation. Propped up on one elbow, an unidentified student expresses his in- terest in botany by barely suppressing a yawn. He was studying ie a final exam in the library’s periodical section on Sunday, Dec. 12. Exams Week and Christmas 63 “Exam ining the week before Christmas .... No-Doz, and the mail order catalog. Only the drugstore atmosphere gave him the customary jostles, bumps, excuse- me’s and “No-I’m-sorry-we-just-sold- the-last one” that are usually associated with Christmas, shopping. He drank plenty of coffee in the Downing ehlleince it was free, and was mesmerized by the artificial chimney and flickering fireplace set up next to the catsup and mustard cart. A Christmas tree in every campus building added a small glow to the dismal week, but Joe could only regret that he had not been able to go out in the woods at home and chop the family tree as was customary. Joe spent one night during the final week writing his term paper ae English 102. He started working at 1 p.m. with the research part, and completed the rough draft at midnight. At that point he decided to let the rough product be the final one, so he was able to complete the paper with plenty of time to spare before its 8 a.m. due date. It was only then that he discovered he had been locked in the library. Friday finally came, and when Joe completed his 2 p.m. exam he had a bad feeling that he had botched the whole week horribly. He jammed a few clean clothes and a bunch of dirty ones in his denim laundry bag and trudged to the now-empty lot beside Pearce Ford. After he had stopped by a local shop- ping center and seed up a few of ae remaining items scattered by the Christ- mas vultures, he was on the road home. Joe stared as I-65 loomed ahead. Just as images of the warmth of home and Christmas mingled with carefully laid plans of intercepting semester grades, he saw a fat, jolly old man ina sleigh driven by eight tiny reindeer rise above the twi- light horizon and dash off into the shad- Ows. “That old fellow’s getting an early start this year,” thought Joe, remember- ing that it was still a week away from the big day. “Maybe that’s what I should do next semester. Maybe I should get an early start.” And with that the week was over — until May. — DONNA BUCKLES |} Final touches are added to the Downing Center Christmas tree by jun ior Donnis Snorton. The tree was decorated before the annual ‘Hanging of the Green’ program began on Dec. 2. 64 Exams Week and Christmas Requesting a “time of commitment and renewal at Christmas time,” President Dero Downing addressed students and faculty at the annual ‘Hanging of the Green’ ceremony in the Downing Center lobby. At a Christmas party in South Hall, Tony Coffey, a junior accounting major, was given a poster of the TV actress Farrah Fawcett-Majors. Denise Bil- brey, a sophomore mass communica- tions major and Ricky Hobdy, a ju- nior accounting major, watch. Many students used dorm kitchens and re- creation rooms for Christmas parties during finals week. — B. Rogers Thoroughbred races, bourbon and Southern drawls are trademarks found only in The Bluegrass. Kentucky — Outsiders associate the state with thoroughbred races, bourbon and southern drawls. Each has played a role in the state heritage which continues to be rich in its focus on Southern travel, dialect and food. Man-made lakes and dams complement nature’s wonders such as Mammoth Cave and a 15,000-acre forest in western Kentucky. Tourists can get a history lesson by visiting Abraham Lincoln’s birthplace in Hodgenville or the Shakertown museum near Bowling Green. Conversation with a Kentuckian is also a lesson in the language of the South. There’s the lower Ohio drawl, the sentences that sound like questions and metaphors (“ugly as homemade sin” and “green as a gourd”). And hospitable Kentuckians bean invitations with “‘ya’ll come.” The country meals usually include victuals like country ham, red-eye gravy, corn bread, greens and vinegar and homemade ice cream and Derby pie. Hospitable and close to nature’s wonders, Kentuckians are at home with their drawls and homestyle cooking. They're proud of the heritage they've made, the one they’re still shaping in the midst of the Bluegrass. [1 CONTENTS 66 Travel In Kentucky Beckvard Retreare 70 Talkin’ Kentucky Who Says We Need Picturesque Speech? 72 Food Tastes of Southern Hospitality 65 Kentucky — D. Sutherland tip of ane eke it ne are recreati 3 a Pe eand there is Pennyri Se ee students can Nae to go to one of — various parks and recreation areas in sas Kentucky to “get away from : Ita y ? Land Between the Lakes is located in tae Besheau which Lyon and Trigg counties between Lake a beach pee and ay ae The 40- mile long peninsula was d by Joni alley Authority (TVA) as a national recreation and conservation education area and is 170,00 acres of s and beaches. Lake Barkley State Resort Poe is located on the Case age lone ae oe aes es of a acre park sit cent contains a' 2 to 62,180-acre atk si overlaps into Tadd Kenlake State Rear ee located counties. The lake lies along the western shore of Kentucky River on the west and take in Sa County, offers ——_—tthe east. tennis, ee riding and Heating. The world’s tallest : tucky Dam was constructed in obelisk was erected in honor ce aly 1940s under wartime sere. Jefferson Davis, president of the oduct of the dam, Kentuc Confederacy. The tower stand oe RE over 2,380 miles of cect ine. above the farm where he was bo Kentucky Dam Village State Resort 1803. Jefferson Davis Monu Park covers 1,200 acres at the northern Shrine in Todd Count The central part of Clockwise Cae Biers Bota ay i | ae e sites tu 76 Falls-Lake Cumberland pu eine ots Abia! — Barren River near Sally’s Rock Lela and My Old — Backpacker in Smokey Mins. Using te orsted by millions of Wi BarrenRiveri Road American school children, the Natio Ne ad a Historial Society erected a ee and — Mammoth Cave-Onyx Colonnade pone ouuneRE coe mee On a ; ao irthplace cabin. The Abra am Lincoln Te eee ee egret Birthplace National Historic Site is (continued on page 68) ats Who says we need picturesque speechr As a result of the Civil War, Kentuck was admitted to the Confederacy al- though it never officially left the Union. For a time the state had two capitals — Frankfort and Bowling Green. In the end the North won the state and the war. But the South won in dialect a thousand times over. There is nothing distinctive about the average Kentuckian’s appearance, but when he opens his mouth, he gives it all away. From that moment everyone with- in hearing distance will “hang on” to every word he utters. The blame can be put on the Southern drawl. According to University of Louisville phonetician Dr. David Maurer, Kentuck- ians not only have a drawl, but four dis- tinct drawl regions: the Mountain area, which comes from the Scotch-Irish set- tlers who migrated through the Shenan- doah Valley; the Bluegrass, which was influenced by the Virginians who came over.the Wilderness Road and brought the speech of south England; the Upper Ohio, which was influenced by the boat- men on the river; and the Lower Ohio which includes Bowling Green. The Lower Ohio drawl region starts at the Ohio River and moves throughout Western Kentucky. The Ohio divided river traffic in the early days so there is a difference between the Lower and Upper Ohio. The Cajun, French and Tidewater boatmen of the Lower Ohio area came up from the Gulf of Mexico and their brand of conversation has developed into the Lower Ohio drawl, Maurer said. Yet, drawl isn’t the only thing that makes Kentucky speech a distinctive type of Southern drawl. According to Dr. John Broderius, an- other University of Louisville professor, Kentucky speech has a_ particular rhythm that sets it apart from other sec- tions of the country and the southern region. Kentucky speech seems to have a questioning tendency to it, said Broder- ius. He added that Kentuckians speak with a rising note at the end of a sentence which always sounds as if they are ask- 70 Kentucky Speech in estions. ; Of course, rhythm patterns and the drawl aren’t the only reasons for distinc- tion. Kentuckians as well as other South- erners have a way of describing things. For example: A girl isn’t simply Be. ater as Bes speckled . Or something . as ugly Perhomeniade: sin. All similes give visual description and are easily un- lerstood, at least by other Southerners. In a crowded room “there’s not eek room to skin a cat without get- ting hair in your mouth.” In the South it doesn’t rain. “It looks like a cloud’s coming up” or “It’s going to weather.” If you haven't seen someone in a long time you haven't seen them in a coon’s age” or “a month of Sundays.” Of course, there is always someone who is as “green as a gourd” or who everyone is invited. WP Yorall' ica tenn for e a person hears “you all that grew out of The word “pl “completel ie I'm going.” And the word “tad” whic means “an still 74 Concerts Students crowded, bumped, pushed and shoved to get in the door. Inside they sat for what seemed like hours watching frisbees glide. At show time they clapped and sang along, then lit a lighter, begging for one more encore. All this was for the sake of (Music It used to be that a person had to drive to a “sprawling metropolis” to see any kind of professional, big-name talent. That’s really not true anymore — all one has to do is enroll at a uni- versity like Western. Professional, big-name talent does appear at Western, and at least once a semester a full-time student can at- tend a particular concert absolutely free. How many “sprawling metropo- lises” can stake that claim? Chicago, Seals and Crofts, Barry Manilow, Rufus and Wild Cherry were the major concert attractions for the year, with Chicago becoming Western’s most financially successful concert. Chicago appeared at Diddle Arena Oct. 15, drew 10,450 persons and grossed $53,092. Reggae, Ltd., a private promoting firm from St. Louis, Mo., along with the Associated Student Government (ASG) brought the group to Bowling Green at an opportune time — its al- bum, “Chicago X” was hot on the LP charts, and the single from the album “If You Leave Me Now,” was on its way to becoming a Grammy award- winner. Ron Beck, assistant dean of student affairs, called the concert ‘one of the best we've ever had here. This is the first year we’ve had any major acts return.” Chicago first appeared at Western in 1972. Despite poor acoustics in Diddle Arena, the concert was ecstatically re- ceived by the large crowd. The group performed such early hits as “Beginning,” “25 or 6 to 4,” and “Colour My World,” as well as more recent hits “I’ve Been Searchin’ So Long,” “Just You n’ Me,” and “If You Leave Me Now.” Chicago provided the crowd with a good deal of professionalism which must have been sensed before the group even set foot in Bowling Green. (continued on page 76) Described by many as the most successful con- cert, Chicago entertained 10,450 people at the enthusiastically-received October performance, grossing more than $53,000. The group first ap- peared on the Hill in 1972. — L. Gardner Chicago’s lead guitarist, Terry Kath, captivates the audience during the October. performance in Diddle Arena. The pte ies enjoying anew . burst of porary after the release of the hit, : “If You Leave Me Now.” ops 16 A homecoming feature was the return of Jim Seals and Dash Crofts (they first appeared at Western in 1973) on Nov. 6. This time the pair mixed their “middle of the road” songs with clapping and hog- calling sessions. They later shared the Baha'i faith (their religion) with interested persons. Concerts — M. Lyons Trombonist for Chicago, James Pankow acted as the gmups spokesman with the crowd and reporters. A lashy dresser, Pankow is also a composer and wrote the hit, “I’ve Been Searchin’ So Long.” A private firm promoted the group’s return to Western which was a financial success. (Music... Approximately 5,000 advance tickets were sold, setting another record. But the concert, was not a sellout despite the record, and this “disap- pointed” the promoters. Rick Kelley, ASG activities vice-president, said: “We've learned a lot from them (Reg- gae, Ltd.). They use good promotional techniques.” The privately-promoted concert, a first for Western, may have opened the door for more big-name groups because of its success. Jim Seals and Dash Crofts, who had also previously appeared (in 1973), returned for a concert on Homecom- ing weekend, Saturday, Nov. 6. Approximately, 5,200 persons at- tended the show which lost approxi- mately $3,800. “Saturday night is a bad night be- cause everyone is worn out from all the other activities on Homecoming day,” said Beck, citing a cause for the low attendance. Despite the low attendance, the concert provided plenty of mu- sical entertainment. Opening the set, which actually started BEFORE the traditional 8 p-m. starting time, were the Cate Brothers from Arkansas. The group — featured brothers Ernie and Earl Cate on keyboards and rhythm gui- tar, respectively. The Cate Brothers’ tour was pro- moting their new album, “In One Eye and Out the Other,” but featured ma- terial from their first album, “The Cate Brothers,” including their only hit single, “Union Man.” Crowd response went from meager to near-chaotic as Seals and Crofts nonchalantly took the stage minus any sort of formal introduction. For the remainder of the evening, the duo and their back-up group cap- tivated the crowd. Performing suc favorites as “Hummingbird,” “Get Closer,” “Diamond Girl,” and “Sum- mer Breeze,” the group met astound- ing applause at each song’s onset. The group also showed off their in- strumental capabilities as Jim Seals abandoned his guitar for a tenor saxophone and Dash Crofts pierced the air with an electronic mandolin on “Thunderbird.” The duo was joined by vocalist Carolyn Willis on “Get Closer,” and “Put Your Love in My Hand.” After the concert, the group con- ducted a “fireside chat” about the ba- hai faith and answered questions about how it has affected their music. On Monday night, Nov. 15, 7,000 persons witnessed entertainment Las Vegas-style as Barry Manilow ap- peared for the only free major concert of the semester. Manilow was quite popular with the female concert-goers, especially those not quite in college. Mauldin numbers such as “Mandy,” “This One’s For You,” “Trying to Get the Feelin’ and “Could It Be Magic?” were quite appealing to the crowd. But going from slow, dreamy bal- lads to up-tempo rockers, or “shifting ears” as Manilow put it, became con- using to the crowd at times. While sitting at an older piano dis- cussing his days of old and preparing to do his “commercial set” (actual commercials Manilow has authored) a star-struck female on the first row yelled an offensive remark that put Manilow in a “bad mood.” The result was Manilow did not do the commer- cial set and cut the show 15 minutes. Much of the show’s “Las Vegas- style” was contributed by Lady Flash, Manilow’s three-female backup vocal- ists. Their rote performance comple- mented Manilow’s own showmanship. Although the concert was a free one, it was not a financial disaster. The total cost of the Manilow con- cert was $23,000, with ticket sales sub- tracting $10,100 from the cost. The show itself was a very visual presentation, with Manilow’s varying wardrobe and the flashing of back- drops related to certain songs. Much of the show was devoted to selections from his latest albums, “Trying’ to Get the Feeling” and “This One’s For You.” The concert, despite much of its pe ralom, was not prompt. It gan 20 minutes late and included a 25-minute intermission. It was also the last major concert of the semester. “An evening of partying” as some people advertised ended up being “an evening of boredom” for some, as Wild Cherry and Rufus headlined the first major spring concert. The March 23 concert opened with Fresh. The six-member Los Angeles group, complete with a female ryhthm guitarist, succeeded in getting re- sponse from the first five rows at selected intervals. The group combined rock, soul and disco to create some sort of sound of its own. Deafening levels of sound cre- ated by Fresh caused many to reach for cotton at times. At one point in the concert, the lead singer donned a chimpanzee mask to aid in their limit- ed visual aura. Wild Cherry, the group that was to receive the greatest amount of crowd response, entered the spotlights after Bah Employing either dry ice or a smoke machine, the group opened their set in a foggy fashion. With a gold single and gold album behind them, and with their new album hot on the charts, Wild Cherry literally had the audience on its feet. (continued on page 80) — G. Lamb — B. Co ey When smoke from dry ice cleared at a March 23 three-group concert, Wild Cherry appeared. The group followed the performance of Fresh and got the biggest crowd response. The musicians spent 15 minutes of their show interacting with the audi- ence. At one point they even conducted a yelling contest. Part of the Center Board Entertainment Series, the Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band performed two outdoor concerts, one at the student center and one at the fine arts center. The group used oil drums to produce their unique sound. Hardly a one-man show, the Barry Manilow concert fea- tured Lady Flash, a three-female backup vocalist group. Lady Flash performed independent numbers and accompanied Manilow on some medleys and skits. They, like Manilow, enjoyed changing cos- tumes for different segments of the production. 77 Concerts ‘A backdrop which resembles his “’T: ait to Get the Feelin’” album cover flashes behind Barry Manilow as he sings “I Write the Songs.” Manilow ae formed the hit from the album with Lady Flash in the last half of his November concert. why Ste — J. Burton OMuSic ... Despite only one hit single “Play that Funky Music,” the group relied on loud disco-rockers from their debut album and from their just-released LP, “Electrified Funk.” Lead vocalist and guitarist Bob Par- issi defined the music of the group as being “the beat and sound mix of black music. We get off on be- ing white musicians playing funky, black sounds.” Rufus took the stage at 9:45 for an hour and a half show. Despite the long set, the group con- tinually excited the crowd with their hits, “Once You Get Started,” “Tell Me Something Good,” “Sweet Thing” and “You Got the Love.” “A lot of the students told me they thought the concert was too loud and that Rufus did not perform to their expectations,” Beck said. According to Beck, the opening group, Fresh, was originally not planned for the concert. “But because they were a favorite of Wild Cherry and they only cost us $500, we signed them,” Beck said. Probably a favorite of the crowd was the female lead singer of Rufus, Chaka Khan. Miss Khan’s vocal range was incredible. From the opening number, “Have a Good Time” to the mellow “Sweet Thing” Miss Khan’s voice sounded strong and healthy. And for a good reason — it was her birthday. Instrumentally, Rufus was better than average at times and at times just average. One highlight of the group’s repertoire was a Stevie Wonder tune, “It Ain’t No Use.” According to Beck, approximately 6,500 persons attended the concert. Approximately 2,500 tickets were sold which meant about 4,000 Western stu- dents were there, he said. Jimmy Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band appeared at Diddle Arena April 2a Highlights from the concert in- cluded selections from the band’s lat- est LP, “Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes,” as well as tunes from the albums, “Livin’ and Dyin’ in % Time,” “A-1-A,” and “Ha- vana Daydreamin.’ ” ASG continued the “mini-concert” series, with the first in Van Meter Auditorium Sept. 10 featuring acous- tical guitarist Lori Wolfson. The second “mini-concert,” Jerico Harp, combined folk and rock music in Van Meter Sept. 22. Group members Jim Thomas and Tom Schmidt combined their tunes with those of other artists, such as Dan Fogelberg’s “Wysteria.” On Valentine’s Day, Ethos ap- (continued on page 83) 80 Concerts Costume changes and stage exits were frequent in Barry Manilow’s concert and added to the showbiz show style. Manilow interspersed up- tempo rockers, love ballads and a medley of 1940s band tunes with a casual rambling con- versation with the 7,000-member audience. — Jj. Burton On her 24th birthday, Chaka Khan, lead singer of Rufus, entertained 6,500 concert-goers with hits such as “Have a Good Time” and “Sweet Thing.” Rufus took the stage for 90 minutes after groups Fresh and Wild Cherry warmed up the audience with theatrics and disco music. A Concerted Effort The executive officer’s career is almost over. Like most politicians, his term has gotten some support but even more numerous and louder were the voices of discontent and criticism. Rick Kelley, Associated Student Government (ASG) activities vice-president for two years, is almost finished with his job — organizing and supervising Western’s concert program. The task hasn’t been simple for the Bowling Green senior, but he doesn’t regret the commit- ment he made two years ago and a year later when he was reelected. Zt “TI wanted to run for an executive office,” Kel- ley said. “This position was one of the most exciting because you can always see some- thing happening. “You negotiate a show and then produc e it — _then you take the criticism or the praise,” he said. “It takes time to see other programs through in ASG. With this you know exactly what you're doing and accomplishing.” Kelley said Ron Beck, assistant dean of student affairs, and the concert selection committee help him manage the program. “For example, with the Chicago concert an agent that represents them called and asked me if Western would be interested in them,” Kelley said. “I discussed it with Ron (Beck) to get his reaction. The show would cost $25,000, so he said if a private promoter would be willing to do the show, we'd be willing.” A promoter agreed and Kelley took the idea to the concert committee for approval. The con- tracts were issued. That is only a fraction of the work that pre- cedes a show, Kelley said. “The committee works with publicity, the ra- dio spots, newspaper ads and posters,” he said. “Those posters take a lot of time because people are always tearing them down for souvenirs.” Beck handles many of the technical details for each performance, Kelley said. They include stage construction by the phys- ical plant, officers to patrol and ticket-takers, Kelley said. Student organizations help set up the stage and equipment and work as ushers. The student affairs office supervises the specta- tors’ conduct. “On the day of the show we work with the artists, getting food to the show for them,” the senior said. “We also work backstage to make our production as smooth as we can. “It takes so much time,” Kelley said. “So many little things have to be done to make a show happen. If you're not organized it’s literally cha- os trying to make it work correctly.” Kelley said private promoters are an asset to the concert program and Western plans to use them again. The administration was very pleased with the Chicago concert,” he said. Private promoters know the market and can predict the success of a certain group, Kelley said. The selection process is an obligation Kelley, | the committee and the university owes students, | Kelley said. Keeping more than 13,000 students | satisfied isn’t easy, he admits. “We listen to every complaint because we’re here to serve students, but it’s just impossible to satisfy the entire student body,” Kelley said. “I’m convinced that if we had the Beatles here some students would be upset about it.” Kelley said he wishes students would take more pride in the shows and names that have appeare d at Western. “Before Chicago came to Western they played in St. Louis, and then flew to Louisville and Pitts- burg afterwards,” the senior said. “Lo and behold in the middle of that schedule was Bowling Green, the only school to play a Chicago date.” The discontent of students puzzles him. “Don’t they examine things like this? Is it just because we don’t bring their top group that they're not happy?,” he said. “Maybe their favorite group won't come here. Students have got to examine the thing, taking an overall view. They should base their criticism or praise on that. “One example I use is a Herald editorial car- toon the day before Chicago,” Kelley said. “It reflected WKU unfavorably, but we sold out of advance tickets and grossed over $50,000. “They criticized before a concert. After it was a success, we heard very little about it. “If students don’t like a concert, they write the Herald. If they like it things are said but not to the open public,” Kelley said. Ron Beck takes a great deal of the criticism, according to Kelley. “When you come to this school his is the first name tarnished. He has a connotation as an evil person,” Kelley said. “I once thought that way too, but it’s not true. There aren’t many activities directors as well-qualified as Ron Beck. The promoter for Chicago said Western produces shows as well as any school.” The solution is the education of students con- cerning the university concert policy and the problems involved, he said. “You just don’t have the opportunity to go out and pick who you want,” he said. Two years as activities vice-president has been an asset to Kelley's college education, according to the business administration major. “After one year I was ready to come back, but ou tend to lose some interest after a year and a alf. The constant criticism eventually drains you and you begin wondering when the year will end,” Kelley said. Kelley plans to train his successor before he graduates. ‘ANhen I came into office my predecessor gave me the keys to the office and wished me well. I want to help my successor establish a relation- ship with the agents. I want to answer as many questions as he has.” Maybe the loud voices of criticism will soften as the executive officer leaves Western and an office where posters or superstars like Manilow, Ronstadt and Chicago hang because he helped bring them to Western for a one-night stand. — CONNIE HOLMAN (1 §1 Concerts Jimmy Buffett obliged appreciative fan Larry DeWeese with a handshake after the country rocker’s third encore at his April 27 concert. Buffett and the Coral Reefer Band entertained a small 18 crowd with new releases and nostalgic tunes. | — R: Hoskins (Music ... peared in Van Meter. The four-man group was the only mini-concert in the spring semester. Opinions on the major concerts var- ied. Karen Gossman, a sophomore pre- law major from Morganfield, said she thought the majority of the crowds couldn’t “get into” the concerts. “But I did think that a lot of people really liked Wild Cherry because they played music people could dance to. I'd like to see more disco groups at Western,” Miss Gossman said. “Overall, I thought ASG could have had a better selection,” said Monte Young, a Paducah journalism major. “The Rufus-Wild Cherry concert was one of the best I’ve seen here. It was a very good selection because it appealed to both blacks and whites,” Young said. “Basically the only other groups | would have liked to have seen were Earth, Wind and Fire and Average White Band,” he said. “I don’t under- stand, though, why they (ASG) brought back Chicago and Seals and Crofts.” According to Beck, some groups re- turn because “There don’t seem to be any new acts in our price range that span the general interest of the stu- ent body.” So the student body got Chicago, Seals and Crofts, Barry Manilow, Ru- fus, Wild Cherry an Jimmy Buffett for 1976-77. — GARY MOORE 0 — J. Burton Caught in the mood of Jimmy Buffett’s music is Leslie Crosby, a student who attended the final concert. The poor attendance was anticipated by the university because Buffett’s music gener- ally appeals to an older audience. eg, RR gm Richard Todd, Barbara Marsh and Mark | Mahew — were in Montpellier, France for a year’s study and Tom was sent by | the Talisman to find out what their stay by oi vI (e G [ , Uni versit fe) ic ast ‘left his home in Bremeckeees | Germany, on Dec. 27, 1976, and caught a Photos by Tom Dekle night train for Frankfurt. From there he | traveled to Paris, France, and made connections with another train bound Tom Dekle was in France over Christ- | They were Western students. for Montpellier, a city of 250,000 in mas vacation and found four people with But the meeting wasn’t merely coinci- southern France. whom he had something in common. __ dental. The students — Cherylynn Ross, Two days of travel put him at his des- 84 en France tination, and the photographer began pe cnung himself with some hasty explo- ration of Montpellier. Two hours after his arrival he met two of his fellow Westerners at Cite Boutonnet, the French equivalent of a women’s dormitory. Tom showed his list of names to a non-English speaking clerk at the foyer of he housing complex and she managed to understand that he needed room numbers. The photographer knew he was sup- A nearly deserted street in an old section of Crescent rolls and other pastries became a mid- Montpellier was the setting for a Sunday walk. afternoon snack shortly after Mark purchased Mark said he and the other students spend them in a bakery. The Chicagoan said he likes much time walking around the southern France _ the French food although they are not living in city when they are not busy with course work. a section of the country noted for good wine. Although they were basically camera-shy, Richard, Chery- lynn and Barbara posed with Mark at a city park monument. The students expressed a desire for more outside travel, and were disappointed because finances hampered them. The women made a trip to Spain at Christmas. The journalistic world is a link Mark uses to keep in touch with the happenings in the States. The Chicago Tribune is only one of several English-language newspapers the student reads daily. Mark was particularly interested in that paper because Chicago is his hemeronit osed to find six women and two men,so_ most of the some 45,000 students attend- e decided the odds were greatest of find- ing the university were foreign. ing the women home. Tom found Barbara and Cherylynn at course work. She was studying Le psy- Cherylynn also told him about her in their top floor rooms and_ chologie et le corps (psychology and the learned that the other two female stu- body), Psychologie sociole (psychology dents were touring Greece. sociology), Geomorphologie (geomor- He also learned th F lived about one mile away in another course work was done in French. complex called Cite Triolet. at Richard and Mark phology) and Espanol (Spanish). All their “To some extent I think in French but The women began to tell Tom a little there is still English in the back of my about their life at the University of Paul Valery, a liberal arts college. They said mind,” said Cherylynn, a native of Al- (continued on page 86) 85 en France Letterwriting is another activity that requires a lot of Mark’s free time. Over Christmas vacation he received a “care” package from his stateside girlfriend that contained a 1976 Talis- man and a 5-lb. jar of peanut butter. Getting the package out of Customs was very expensive, he added. On some days at lunch time the students purchase a “bag lunch” and eat in a small cafeteria or the dormitory. The bag lunch could include such com- modoties as bread, cheese, fruit and yogurt, Mark said. He added that the Beiena food is cheap. Sometimes it is necessary to ask directions of local people, and a gentleman obliged Mark during one of his fais walks. The W said he feels really good when somebody asks him something (in French) and he is able to answer the question. esterner La vie a [Université berta, Canada. “I think in French but daydream in English.” Both women said they could under- stand most everything that was said around them but the terminology was sometimes difficult. Barbara, who is from St. Louis, Mo., had a lot to say about the pace of life in France. “Our pace of life (here) is a lot slower,” she said. ‘We have nothing that is re- quired to do; it’s all based on initiative. “It’s like I haven’t been going to school for six months,” Barbara contin- ued. “I’ve learned a lot of French, but 86 en France that’s all. I feel normal here. I’ve forgot- ten a lot of things (about the states).” The women also found a contrast be- tween the two schools. “Looking back on Western, everything is so easy there,” Barbara said. ‘You're protected and it’s such a secure place.” Although traveling is not easy for them because of financial reasons, the two spent a week in Spain during the week of Christmas. “It was my first Christmas away from home. I really expected it to be depress- ing but it didn’t turn out that way,” Bar- bara said. “We felt really good that it was Seven a.m. can be a lonely time to do laundry, but Mark said he prefers that time so he will not have to fight the crowds later in the day. He also said the laundromat is the only one he knows about, and he doesn’t mind going early since he is usually awake at that time. Christmas, but I didn’t really get upset that the parents weren’t there.” There is no typical day for them, they said. “I spend a lot of time walkin around,” Cherylynn said. “I’m still find- ing new stores. Every street has tons of stores.” “Things we want are expensive,” Bar- bara added. “We're trying to live off 450 francs a month. In France it seems ex- pensive but translated into dollars it’s not really at all.” They eat daily in one of the school cafeterias, and the meals cost about 75 cents. ‘For dinner we get a soup or salad, two vegetables, choice of two meats, and as many refills as you want,” Cherylynn said. ‘For dessert we get cheese, fruit and sometimes ice cream.” They live in single rooms next door to each other, and share a bath with eight other women. Nine hours per week is spent in class. With this briefing about their life in France, it was time for Tom to meet Rich- ard and Mark. The trio walked the mile to the men’s complex. The men were home when they ar- rived, but Richard was still asleep, so the four decided to eat lunch. They gave Tom one of their meal tickets for the student cafeteria, and it was there that the photographer heard Mark’s views of his Fife in France. Mark told Tom that he feels comfort- able now about speaking the language. “At first it was hard but now it’s not too bad,” he said. “It’s a case of either speak- pec Ben yourself shut out.” e added that he is taking a French literature course and is now beginning to ask questions in class. He also told Tom that he feels a little paranoid about being a foreigner. “It’s a different experience, ” said the Chica- goan. “It’s not like being in America.” The paranoia partially came from the French view of Americans, he said. “The French seem to think of Americans as extroverted, carefree and rich. There are misconceptions and lots of stereotypes,” he said. “When I say I am from Chicago they immediately think of Al Capone. A lot of these misconceptions come from films.” But even though the French have these feelings, he said, the people around Montpellier are receptive to the Ameri- can students. ‘Everybody is a foreigner here,” Mark said. “The French society (here) is geared to handle foreigners.” Mark said that every day he got a little more adjusted to French Ae “It’s more relaxing; not nearly as fast-paced,” he said. “For example, they take two hours off for lunch. I’m enjoying life a little for a change.” After the meal the four went back to meet Richard, who is from Bowlin Green. He was awake then but he Had little to say about his new lifestyle. Although Tom saw little of the women after the first day, he spent 10 days in France with EAE and Richard, and he found that they spent a lot of time walk- ing about the city, but they came into a limited amount of verbal contact with the French people. They spent a lot of time reading in their rooms, he said. He found that they were disappointed because they could not travel around as much as they would like to but that they were glad they had come to Montpellier. “If you had to sum it up,” Tom recalls, “they were all very happy about what they were learning about themselves.” On January 6, 1977, Tom Dekle left France to return to Germany and then back to Bowling Green. And those 10 days he spent in Mont- pellier, France, told a lot about what hap- pens when Western students choose to take their campus life to a foreign coun- try. — DONNA BUCKLES AS TOLD BY TOM DEKLE en France Weather and more snow Duns plea annually for a healthy blanket of frozen white stuff and consequently a reprieve from classes, but by February the weatherman had outdone himself. All that snow — and zero temperatures — were getting just a little tiresome. People statewide began getting Bae with the weather when a seemingly never-ending succession of sub-zero days froze water mains and pipes, and taxed energy sources. The Ohio River froze from bank to bank. For the first time since 1918 Louisvillians and visitors could walk across to the Indiana side. The crisis intensified when barge activity on the waterway was crippled and Kentucky was denied the cargoes — fuel and salt for the frozen highways. Such a harsh winter is not common in usually mild Bowling Green. Classes were canceled only once in 1975-76, and none at all for three years prior. That’s one reason why everyone began to be suspicious about the nature of this winter when students were greeted when returning from Thanksgiving vacation with a sleet and ice storm followed by snow. Classes before 11:40 a.m. were canceled on the Monday after the holiday, and students dashed en masse for Western’s hills with sleds — and articles masquerading as sleds. But the Thanksgiving welcome was only a sampling of what was to happen to those returning from Christmas vacation. Two major snowstorms during the last week of December set the stage and a major winter storm dumped four inches of snow on Kentucky the day before spring semester registration began. University officials postponed registration 48 hours, so stu- dents were given extra time to creep along the snow-drifted roads back to Western. Conditions weren’t much better on campus, however, al- though maintenance crews worked rapidly to clear sidewalks and streets of hard-packed snow and ice. Moving back into the dorms was difficult. The parking situation was also much worse than usual be cause drivers could not see the marked parking spaces. Snaking around protruding cars in the parking lots became imperative. Safety and security workers were kept busy an- swering calls about dead batteries. Temperatures also froze the elevator apparatus in the parking structure, so students were able to keep themselves warm by climbing the steps for a week. The way to Diddle Arena registration was a lot slippier than usual, and for most students the event was not as crowded as usual. Students who were unable to make it to campus went through late registration, and the registrar's office was still holding several hundred packets two days after classes began on January 17. Registration at 20 extended cam- puses was postponed. The energy problems that were a direct result of the weather caused thermostats to be lowered to 60 degrees in campus buildings and hot water to be shut off in administrative and classroom buildings. Some dorm residents also had trouble get- ting hot water at certain times of the day. (continued on page 90) — D. Frank The first snowflakes came early as did unseasonably cold weather in October. Doyce Pendleton, a senior speech major from Bowling Green defends himself from the wet stuff in front of McLean Hall. Subfreezing temperatures created an ice skating rink behind the College of Education building. Jim Johnson, a senior from Batavia, N.Y., practices his hockey game an hour and a half after sunrise. | 89 Weather 90 Weather ST VR con The campus physical plant switched from natural gas to coal consumption in November, 1976, to conserve fuel and officials anticipated that the coal stockpile would last the winter. Provisions for the switch were made in 1970 when equipment was revised to adapt to different fuels. In other measures to conserve fuel, night classes were consolidated into fewer classroom buildings and evening events were rescheduled for daytime whenever possible. But the campus was not the only place where normal daily activities crawled to a stop. School systems across the state returned for one day after Christmas vacation and didn’t return until the first of February. State officials negotiated to work out a feasible plan for making up the lost school days, but it appeared that students would be in class until mid-June or even later. Businesses were asked to shorten their hours and keep thermostats turned down to at least 60 degrees. Most of them complied by locking extra doors to cut back on heat loss. Municipal water companies asked their customers to keep a trickle of water running through their faucets to help prevent frozen pipes. The media urged readers to heed the energy crisis and provided information on what to do about low-temperature emergencies. Travel tips were also issued, — T. Dekle Hazardous driving conditions on city streets and county backroads closed local schools in January and part of February. Glenn Leonard and Eddie Petries frolic in the white stuff on the football field. and tables on how to figure the wind-chill factor began appearing early in newspapers. The Herald ran two pages in the January 21 issue A aeittvs: ing information about driving on slippery roads and reduc- ing heating bills. But even though anxiety prevailed for two weeks, it wasn’t all full of cies: Classes weren’t postponed on the Hill after the registration delay, but students found the time for snowball fights, snowman building and related winter activity. In the case of one student, a one-man hockey game on a low place near Pearce Ford tower was made possible. Other students just liked to get out and walk amidst th e fluttering flakes. And so there was snow. And more snow. But for all the problems that came with that coveted white stuff, the winter storm of the decade just wasn’t worth it. The chances are, however, that when the rest of this year fades into next winter, most will have forgotten the hazards of the winter of 1977. The plea will be put up again. — DONNA BUCKLES [| Thousands of personal trademarks were left on an ice-capped field after a February snowfall. A student adds to the collection near Pearce Ford Tower. Radio broadcasts reported the cancellation of the first morning classes after phaneeying break as students donned toboggans and mittens and emerged from dorm rooms for sliding and sledding on the Hill. ; CO ss 4 ey ? e 4 BS 3S . Sam.” Zs ARN aN. it oS ee Sere ™ . “i 7 — L. Wright Framed by snow-covered trees, an unidentified student walks along Nor- mal Drive toward the top of the Hill. Evening and extended campus classes were sometimes canceled because of dangerous driving conditions. A frosted landscape was often the winter setting as students trekked to classes and extracurricular activities. Wool scarves, boots and mittens were wardrobe necessities with the spine-chilling temperatures. 91 Weather — T. Dekle Lecturers had plenty to tell students about comedy, drama and unsolved mysteries. They were anything but ... In Early September it looked as if the lecture series would start off with a bang. Carl Bernstein, the Washington Post re- porter who helped uncover the Water- gate scandal and co-author of “All the President’s Men,” was scheduled to speak. But a few weeks before the lecture, Bernstein contracted pneumonia and it was announced that his partner Bob Woodward, would substitute. Woodward however, canceled speak- ing engagements at the University of Kentucky and Western. Promoters paid advertising expenses for the canceled lecture, but the bull’s- eye drawn on Woodward’s publicity poster picture in the Associated Student Government (ASG) office showed that all was not forgiven. — T. Dekle PEECHLESS ASG activities vice president Rick Kel- ley said he didn’t think Western would try to get Woodward back, but the jour- nalist finally appeared in early April — only six months late. John Sears also talked about Richard Nixon and Washington politics, but from a slightly different point of view than Woodward. Sears, who served as national cam- aign manager for Nixon in 1968 and ees became a special White House counsel, said in a late November lecture that he left the Nixon administration in 1970 because of conflicts with other aides. “I didn’t know enough to become a part of history,” he said. Sears later joined the Ronald Reagan organization as national campaign man- ager in the last election. Sears said Rea- gan’s main obstacle was that most Americans thought he was too conserva- tive to make a good president. As if Dick Nixon hadn’t been kicked around enough, comedian David Frye featured the former president in his long repertoire of impersonations. Frye’s lecture in mid-September kept Van Meter Hall’s capacity crowd rolling Compensation for an error in history is the basis of M. Tulis Session’s dramatic monologues. She re- creates the personalities of famous women who have been ape by recorders of history. She presented “Women I Have Known.” a = Offstage as well as onstage, comedian David Frye entertained Westerners with a combination of ges- tures and voices in his impersonations of Richard — L. Gardner Student members of the ASG lecture committee host visiting speakers. Committeemen David Car- well, Ricky Sheppard and Mike Seiler talk to comedian Robert Klein backstage. Klein had eaten Nixon and other political figures in the capacity- earlier so they didn’t accompany him to dinner. filled Van Meter Auditorium. — L. Gardner 92 Lectures 1 { with laughter at his imitations of politi- cal figures and film stars. Despite the arctic January weather, comedian Robert Klein warmed a crowd of about 700 in the Garrett Conference Center ballroom with his humor. Klein, who has been a Tonight Show host and Grammy Award winner, spoke on growing up on the Bronx, the nation- al anthem and the way a singer is sup- posed to handle a microphone cord. “I was in the DeWitt Clinton High School marching band, which was the lowest,” Klein said. “No one could read music; they used colors like on a toy xylophone. When we played the national anthem, people from every coun- try stood.” While his lecture included little of. the political satire for which he is famous, he did make an observation about our na- tional anthem — a tune based on an old English drinking song with lyrics about a battle America lost. Vincent Bugliosi, prosecutor in the Manson murder trial and author of “Helter Skelter,” provided insight into one of the most bizarre murder cases in American history. In an early December lecture Bugliosi described Charles Manson as an “evil enius” who had complete control over Fis family.” He convinced his followers that they were killing symbols of a sick society instead of human beings,” Bug- liosi said. “It is estimated that 35 people, including actresses Sharon Tate, were killed by the “family.” The trial that followed, which was al- most as bizarre as the crime, was the longest and most expensive murder trial in United States history, according to Bugliosi. The judge wore a 38-caliber re- volver under his robe after Manson tried to attack him, and Manson’s attorney disappeared and was later found mur- dered just before the final arguments of the trial were presented. “He convinced his followers that he was Jesus Christ,” Bugliosi said. “He was an evil, sophisticated con man.” Clive Barnes, drama and dance critic for the New York Times, stressed the need for government subsidy of the arts in an Baily November lecture. “We ought to regard our arts as a na- tional treasure,” Barnes said. “We ought to guard them, save them for children and subsidize them.” In “The Plight of the Theatre Today,” Barnes told how the economy has drasti- cally affected Broadway theater. He said high production expenses have made producers more inclined to “revive a past success than try something new. “We've taken away the artist’s free- dom to fail,” he said. “If he only has freedom to succeed, he doesn’t have free- dom at all.” M. Tulis Sessions, a repertory theater actress, presented her dramatic mono- logue, “Women I Have Known.” Ms. Sessions created the personality sketches of famous women in history because she felt that “history has been a little one-sided written for men, about men — sort of left out half the population.” Other lecturers included Dr. Carl Sa- en, astronomer in charge of the Mars Silane project and Dr. William Castelli, a Harvard heart specialist who spoke on the dangers of heart disease. — TOM EBLEN — J. Burton New York Times drama and dance critic Clive Barnes criticized the economy’s lack of Broad- way theater support. He said the government should subsidize the arts because they are a nation- al treasure. Autograph seekers swarmed to meet Vincent Bug- liosi. He was the prosecutor in the Charles Manson murder trial and later wrote about the “longest and most expensive murder trial in history” in “Helter Skelter,” which is also a movie. — L. Gardner 93 | | | Lectures i THREE FESTIVALS with a cultured refinement Stories by Connie Holman ‘Fine Arts It was there last year and the year be- fore but not many students seemed to care because few attended. But in 1976-77, students began to lis- ten to publicity about the Fine Arts Festi- val. They began to think about go- ing to see award-winning entertainers known internationally. When 180 free tickets were offered be- fore each event, students began to attend the concerts and performances that had been available all along. Community support also season ticket sales increase than 200. John Oakes, committee chairman for the festival, said providing free tickets increased student support which had been lacking in previous seasons. More weekend performances were scheduled so commuters had fewer parking prob- lems, according to Oakes. The mood was right, the support was there and then they began coming. Michael Lorimer was first. The classi- cal guitarist, a protege of Andres Sego- via, shared his technique and talent with Westerners on Oct. 2. An instructor at the San Francisco Conservatory for the past 10 years, Lor- imer was the first American classical gui- tarist invited to perform in the Sov- iet Union. Next on the schedule was the Owens- boro Symphony which borrowed the music department's newest faculty mem- ber, Sylvia Kersenbaum, to solo on the piano. Miss Kersenbaum is a former touring pianist in Europe and joined the 85- member orchestra for a Sunday after- noon concert in October. The Atlanta Contemporary Dance Company used country, classical and modern tunes as the five performers worked as a group, in pairs and individ- ually on Nov. 5. The company is in residence at Geor- gia State University and came to Western a week before Homecoming to lead a workshop for Jones-Jaggers Laboratory School students and plicce students. The children were treated when they rew when jl by more 94 Fine Arts Festival got to see the professionals entertain. They watched the fancy stepping from their balcony seats with adult chaper- ones nearby. A 45-minute delay brought a hurried Van Cliburn to the Van Meter Audito- rium stage. Cliburn’s plane left New York late because of a thunderstorm. The pianist quickly warmed up by playing the “Star Spangled Banner.” Minutes later he captivated the patient audience who responded with standing A reception after his Oct. 2 concert allowed Mi- chael Lorimer to meet Hascal Haile, a guitar maker from Tompkinsville. The classical guitarist played a guitar Haile had just finished making for country music’s Chet Atkins. ovations later in the concert. It was the second time Cliburn had visited Western, but the artist never spoke a word. He let his music commu- nicate for him and no one _ seem- ed disappointed. The spring semester opened with the Leningrad Symphony Orchestra which made its first stop at Western on a tour of the United States. None of the musicians spoke English (continued on page 96) — L. Wright Cellist for the Owensboro Symphony was Susan Trantwein. Her orchestra is directed by Leon Gre- gorian and the concert was accented by soloist Syl- via Kersenbaum, a new member of Western’s mu- sic department and a former touring pianist. — T. Dekle cont. THREE FESTIVALS with a cultured refinement but their music, like Cliburn’s, enter- tained the audience on Feb. 17. They also responded with loud hand clapping and a standing ovation after Rimsky-Korsa- kov’s masterpiece, Schekerazade and Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 4 in Patience paid off for Larry Bush and Kathy Adams who waited for Jerome Hines’ autograph at a reception after his performance on March 27. The bass artist signed autographs for 15 minutes in the Garrett Center lobby. Backstage before the Liningrad Symphony’s performance Feb. 17 is member Boris Shyshaev. Shyshaev plays the French horn for the orchestra which has a very limited tour schedule in America and is directed by Yuri Temirkanov. ‘Film No one stands in line to buy tickets at the International Film Series. There isn’t a popcorn stand near the College of Education Auditorium either, but the filmgoers get a taste of different cultures by listening to the native lan- guages and reading the English subtitles that flash on the screen. The series began in 1973, according to Dr. William Walls, who is in charge of the series. “It began as the foreign language de- partment’s contribution to the Fine Arts Festival, but then we decided to go on a larger scale and make it a community thing,” he said. “Then we offered three films and now we offer 12 each year. 96 Fine Arts Festival F. minor. Metropolitan Opera star Jerome Hines treated season ticket buyers and students with his bass voice and autograph at a reception in his honor after Ris March 27 performance. Other scheduled events which closed the fine arts season were Peter Martins and Heather Watts of the New York City Ballet Company and the Actors Theatre — L. Wright “We get 12 films from 12 different countries generally,” Walls said. “But, not all countries have a film industry to the extent that they sell us (U.S.) films. We get at least one film from each of the languages we teach. Then we branch out. “The series is budgeted, but ticket sales never cover the costs,” Walls said. “It does reduce the budget. Season tick- ets are available and the general admis- sion is $1. “We're always working for better tech- nical quality, but we’re not worried about the size of the audience. We're go- ing to continue to have the series and there’s always that faithful corps.” He said the films are not so concerned of Louisville. The company visited Western last | year. | The entertainers came, some for a week, two shows, or just one performance. The Fine Arts Festival had happened again. This time more students knew | abate it and supported it. : At last they seemed to care. — D. Frank with the languages except for the stu- dents’ benefit. “It’s mostly for the films themselves and what they reflect of the cultures,” Walls added. 1976-77 International Film Series Breathless France Antigone Greece Goad Morning Japan The Seventh Year East Germany Black Peter Czechoslovakia Los Tarantos Spain Red Desert Italy The World of Apu India Lazarillo Spain Le Depart Belgium My Name is Ivan USSR The Virgin Spring Sweden Dance companies visited the campus as part of the Fine Arts Festival. Theatre department produc- tions often featured dancing. Combining the year- round discipline of professionals and student par- ticipation is Western’s Dance Company. Beverly Leonard directs the 31-member company which practices two to six hours daily for an April concert. Mrs. Leonard and her students choreograph their production numbers which include jazz, ballet, tap and modern dance in a condensed version of the year’s work for “An Evening of Dance.” Terry Harris, Susie Denning and Vickie Odum practice “The Ballet of Class” in a March afternoon session. Melanie Waldrop and Dennis Pasley relax while the other members warm up. — M. Lyons 97 Fine Arts Festival Acting the part Happy-go-lucky sailors, the life of a religious figure, a major opera and the yellow brick road were pieces of the giant theatre puzzle of 1977. ‘Diverse when compared, the productions fit neatly together to form a total package for the theatre-goers; there was something for everyone. The first major production of the year, ‘The Fugitive Kind,” adapted from Tennessee Williams’ play “Orpheus Descending,” carried a familiar Williams theme of people of unlike societies in conflict with one another. The cast searched for their places in an unfriendly world in the setting of Glorious Hill, Miss., a lace where life was anticipated to ic less fast-paced and easy. Val Xavier (Bill Hanna), a former nightclub owner, was the main fugitive who goes to the small town to escape his conflicts. There he discovers that people are the same everywhere in their attitudes, and that the small town is no improvement from his past life. The town is run by a man, Jabe Torrance (Eddie Shields), who is very influential. His wife (JoAnn Ballance) hires Val to work in her store. She, too, is trying to get away from an unpleasant life. A reformer (Vicky Davis) who was once arrested for vagrancy is another fugitive. Still another is Vee Talbott (Lezlee Bartholomy), an artist. The production ends with a lynching and a murder. Directed by Dr. William Leonard, the play ran Oct. 5-9. The life of a modern philosopher who lived in the Trappist monaster in Gethsemani, Ky., from 1941 nail 1968 was portrayed through “Under the Sign of the Waterbearer,” a work is Dr. James Baker, a Western history professor. Adapted by director Dr. James Pearse, the narrative showed the life of Thomas Merton whose literary works dealt with social criticism and his religion. An Interpreters Theatre production, the play starred Jim On the afternoon before the opening of the confectionary, Val (Bill Hanna) decides to leave town. Lady (JoAnn Ballance) tries desperately to convince him to stay. 98 — M. Lyons Theatre Simon as Merton. Baker’s story relied on flashbacks, a device used to portray past events in a character's life as though they were happening in the present. The theme of the play and its name centered around Merton’s birth under the sign of Aquarius, the waterbearer. A personality trait of Aquarians is a wandering spirit and a striving for peace. Much of the play is devoted to the way Merton handles this wandering spirit. At one point he expresses to the Abbot at Gethsemani (Geoff Knight) a desire to write as well as a fear it would interfere with his religious life. The Abbot resolves this by telling Merton that perhaps writing is the “will of God. Another moving scene involves an additional influence on his life, John Paul (Mark Globenksy), Merton’s brother. His brother advises him to soothe his wandering spirit by going abroad rather than staying at the monastery as his Abbot wants him to do. Other characters were Kim Robillard as a fellow monk named Brother Paul, and Graham Bedinger and Roland Herndon in three cameo roles apiece. The show attempted to show the life in a monastery as well as Merton’s life, and ran Oct. 20-23. The zany antics of a 1930s musical, “Dames At Sea,” left Gordon Wilson Theatre 100 audiences holding their sides as the characters tap-danced and crooned the lovable story. The action begins when an All- American girl named Ruby (Valerie Timmons) from Centerville, U.S.A. comes to Broadway to act and is hired on the spot. A dreamboat sailor song-writer named Dick (Kevin Lanham) follows her from the bus station with her lost suitcase and it’s love at first sight. The plans are thwarted, however, Her the Broadway bombshell, Mona Kent (Peg Miller), latches onto the sailor and his song- writing talents. From here the show leap-frogs from heart-breaking songs from Ruby to seductive shenanigans from Mona Kent to rousing numbers from Joan (Tracey Shumway), a slap-happy showgirl, and Lucky (Ron Hess), Joan’s old boyfriend who is also a sailor. The hilarious parody grows serious as the Broadway show is evicted from the theater, but frantic pleading with the harried director (Dwayne Hood) relocated it to the sailor's battleship (hence the show’s name.) The inevitable happy ending occurs when Miss Kent falls in love again with the battleship’s Captain “Kewpie Doll” Courageous (Jack Pickett) who is an old boyfriend. Ruby and the sailor are also reunited, and the finale is a gigantic wedding celebration. The production kept the audiences well-entertained during its Oct. 26- 28 billing. In another major production, Eugene O’Neill’s “The Emperor Jones” was produced as the last play of the fall season. The story involved the last day in the life of an escaped convict, Brutus Jones (Phil Cherry), who becomes king of a black island nation. Jones was once a porter on a train, then a murderer and a jailbreaker. He makes the natives on the West Indies island be- lieve he has magical powers, and the superstitious natives make him emperor. The action unfolds as Jones, the protagonist, erodes from his In “Dames At Sea,” Joan (Tracey Shumway) and Lucky (Ron Hess) end “Choo Choo Honey- moon” with big smiles and a quick pause. The show contained 16 production numbers. As the story goes, boys gets girl. That proved true in the wedding scene of the opera “Barber of Seville.” The opera was produced by the the- atre and music departments. kinglike character to a man with a lost identity. The erosion occurs after he cheats the people by overtaxing them, and the natives revolt against the tyranny. The revolution fostered Jones’ flight into a sweltering jungle with an embezzled fortune and his eventual identity crisis. Suffering from hunger and haunted by the distant sounds of drums, Jones experiences unpleasant hallucinations a the black man. He insanely shoots at visions until he uses his ammunition, (continued on page 100) — J. Burton 99 Theatre Acting the part con and ends up with nothing to defend himself. Homer Tracy plays Jones’ white equivalent, a sickening example of a man eaten up with greed. Other cast members were Pam Manley, Bill McKinney, Frank Bevel, Dennis Pasley, Maryann Mager, Joni Atwell, Melanie Waldrop, Teresa Fraley, Keith Allgeier, Jeff Rogers, Don Blasi, Jonathan Sprouse and Diane Richburg. The production ran Nov. 16-20 in Russell Miller Theatre, and was directed by Dr. Loren Ruff. An opera sung in English was the first theatre performance in the spring semester. Rossini’s “The Barber of Seville” was a joint production of the music and theatre departments, and was directed by Dr. Virgil Hale and Dr. William Leonard. The comedy involves the story of the matchmaking barber Figaro (David Gibson) who travels from house to house. He considers himself a traveling jack-of-all-trades. Figaro has to use his wiles, however, to get Count Almaviva (Steve Chambers) and Rosina (Emily Tate), the Count’s beloved, together. Rosina’s guardian, Dr. Bartolo (William Keith), is bewitched by her charm and wishes to marry her, too. Figaro must prevent Bartolo from getting what he wants. Figaro disguises the Count as a student who sings under Rosina’s balcony to gain her attention. When Bartolo interferes, Figaro disguises the Count as a drunken soldier. After he gets inside the house, the Count disguises himself as Rosina’s music teacher. Figaro diverts Bartolo while the Count proposes and A quiet moment between Val (Bill Hanna) and Vee Talbott (Lezlee Bartholomy) is misunder- stood by Sheriff Talbott (Keith Allgeier) when he walks into the room unexpectedly. Tryouts give students a chance at several roles. Dorothy Howard and Mary Jane Stephens wait for parts from Dr. Bill Leonard and Steve Math- ews, directors of “Orpheus Descending.” 100 Theatre Rosina accepts. Bartolo suspects that something is amiss and confronts Rosina and the “music teacher.” Although the barber is stuck with clearing up the mess he has created, it all works out for the best and the ending is happy. The opera featured simple attire of t-shirts with stenciled symbols representing the character and white pants by Dr. Jackson Kesler, costumer for the play. The set was a series of steps and platforms with no interiors or exteriors. Other cast members were played by Michael Dunn, Jack Pickett, Mark Jenkins, Anna Long, Terry Smiley, Terry Hale, Bill Martin, Brian Voelker, and Kyle Duvall. The opera was performed Feb. 8, 10 and 11. ’ A multi-colored set with movable structures and 25 giggling ‘Munchkins replaced the “Barber's” pple set with a February 25-28 performance of “The Wizard of Oz.” Billed as a major theatre production, the children’s show sported a large cast and featured the three friends of the little Kansas girl, the Tinman, Cowardly Lion and Scarecrow — with expert make- up jobs. The Frank L. Baum story was adapted in a production that was very similiar to the famous television version. Vicky Davis as Dorothy sang the 1939 Academy award-winning song “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” which mustered up the best Kansas twister ever witnessed. After the storm, Dorothy lands in Munchkin land where she learns from Glinda, the good witch (Peg Miller), that she has killed the witch there. The bad witch’s sister from another land (Beth Buchanan) vows revenge. When she learns that she can possibly find her way back to Kansas by going to see the Wizard of Oz (Dwayne Hood) in Emerald City, she starts the trip with her dog Toto along the yellow brick road. Along the way she meets the Scarecrow (Bill Hanna), the Tinman (Mike Thomas) and the Cowardly Lion (Irvin White) who want to see this miraculous wizard who can mend their character flaws. The show ends as Dorothy kills (or melts) the witch with a bucket of water and fulfills the requirement for getting back to Kansas. Kevin Lanham, a graduate assistant, directed the show which was held over due to excessive crowds. A play set in 18th century English town known for its spas was a comedy performed in Russell Miller theatre April 12-18. Duels and conquettish love affairs characterized ‘The Rivals,” a comedy written by Richard Sheridan and directed by Whit Combs. The play featured a love affair between Lydia Languish (Sarah Sandefur) and a man she knows as Meeting again after a long separation, Captain Courageous (Jack Pickett) and Mona Kent (Peg Millen hace a song, “The Beguine,” which tells of the first time they met. — M. Lyons Ensign Beverly. Beverly is really Jack Absolute (Mike Thomas), a Navy captain. But Lydia’s Aunt Malaprop (Mary Jane Stephens) is carrying on a love affair of her own by mail with Sir Lucious O’Trigger (Kevin Lanham) and using lacie name. It gets more complicated when Lydia must get her Aunt’s permission to marry before she can get a large endowment. _In the meantime Sir Anthony Absolute (Michael Cheak), Faulkland (Scott Yarbrough), Bob Acres (Homer Tracy) and Julia (Gina Phillips) are also involvd in flirtatious affairs. Other characters were two servants (Robert Trobaugh and Roy Owsley), Fag (Bill Hanna) and Lucy (Pamela Herron). With costumes of the period by Kesler, the production rounded out the season's major productions. Another integral piece of the giant theatre puzzle was the spring series of Studio Productions in which theatre students directed a play for their practicum. Presented in Gordon Wilson Theatre 100, the shows were usually double-billed on weekends and included two performances. Goldie Lare’s “Incident at a Grave” and Lucille Fletcher’s ‘Sorry, Wrong Number” were the first studio productions in the series. (continued on page 102) Graham Bedinger portrays the Chaplain of Thomas Merton’s college days in “Under the Sign of the Waterbearer.” The production was part of the Interpreter’s Theatre series. — M. Lyons 101 Theatre , ————— 102 Theatre Acting the parte: “Incident at a Grave’ was a story set in the 1950s about war and its consequences. The theme of the play was to show people that they consider the past too much. Directed by R. Clarence Herndon, a junior theatre major from Louisville, “Incident” opened the program. “Sorry, Wrong Number” was abou t a sick woman who overhears a telephone conversation in her New York apartment about a murder without realizing that she is the scheduled victim. Directed by Dan Holden, a senior communication and theatre major, the show was originally a radio show. Both shows were billed for Feb. 2-3. Two Tennessee Williams dramas, “27 Wagons Full of Cotton,” and “Lord Byron’s Love Letters” were performed Feb. 22-23. The first Williams play was set in Blue Mountain, Miss., during the 1930s, and dealt with the large plantation owner trying to buy out the small-time farmer. Director Belinda Stark, an Elizabethtown theatre major, also played the female lead in her production after the first actress suffered a twisted ankle. “Lord Byron’s Love Letters” took — L. Wright place in 1890s New Orleans during the Mardi Gras. Sporting typical themes of loneliness and frustration, the play was directed by Dorothy Howard, a Bowling Green senior. A bit of humor mixed with another Williams play was the mood set by the March 8-9 studio productions, “If Men Played Cards As Women Do” and “Confessional.” . A play written by George S. Kaufman, “If Men Played Cards” was about four men and their card game — or at least their attempt at a card game. Directed by Doug Gruden, a Bowling Green theatre major, the lay abounded with humor in one- liners and quick ad-libbing. “Confessional,” another one-act play directed by Steve Chambers, a theatre major from Hartford, dealt with complex characters and symbolism in a standard Williams fashion. The play was set in a southern California bar in the 1920s. The characters are trying to cope with the lifestyles they have built for themselves. The A.A. Milne story “The Ugly Duckling” was adapted for stage by Bill Bernauer, a senior mass communications major and director of the show on April 6-7. With costumes resembling an 18th century time period, the show included a ee tale-like story. “The Ugly Duckling” referred to a plain princess who is promised by With one son lost to war, Ben (Roy Owsley) resists the urging of wife Jane (Sarah Sandefur) to leave the cemetery to say goodbye to a son who has enlisted. “Incident at a Grave” was a spring Theatre 100 production staged in Gordon Wilson Hall. her fairy godmother that the one who falls in love with her will think she is beautiful. The show ends with the traditional happily-ever-after. Neil Simon’s “The Good Doctor,” a collection of stories adapted from the original by Anton Chekhov, was performed April 25-26. The stories included one about a seducer, a girl at a theatre audition and a clumsy dental assistant who tries to ease a priest’s toothache. A simple set eliminated confusion between the alternating themes. The last of the studio productions was “The Serpent” directed by Pam Herron, a Bowling Green senior. Written by Jean-Claud Van Itallie, the story focused on recent and past parallel events from the bible. Itallie wrote the play in the 1960s, and the influence of the period’s political strife comes t hrough as a theme in the production. The 12-member cast wore simple costumes designated by colors. The show ran May 3-4. But none of these productions would have gone as scheduled had it not been for a lot of hard work and planning weeks before the show. Two particular groups of students devoted three hours a day, five days a week and six weeks out of a semester to study. It wasn’t the traditional type of studying but an effective one. Their textbook was a script. Their teacher was a fellow student director. Their homework was to learn their lines, Ruby (Valerie Timmons) is backed up by her “Dames at Sea” cast members (Peg Miller, Jack Pickett, Ron Hess and Tracey Shumway) as she sings of her heartache in the song, “Raining In My Heart.” — M. Lyons choreography and music. These students were involved in two theatre productions — ‘Dames at Sea” and “The Wizard of Oz.” According to Valerie Timmons who played the lead female part in “Dames,” the cast members worked on their choreography and music separate from their scenes. She said that the two weren’t mixed until pibeeate'y three weeks into rehearsal. Miss Timmons, a sophomore geology major from Lagrange, said she participated in theatre roductions in high school, and er interest continued when she came to Western. “This production helped me to gain confidence in myself and to relax and enjoy it,” she said. “I also learned to tap which was something I had never done before.” Kevin Lanham, a theatre graduate assistant, took on the responsibility of directing the children’s movie classic, “The Wizard of Oz.” He combined nine college and 25 child actors and actresses and one Pekingese to recreate the 90- minute play. Lanham spent six weeks of rehearsal working with read- throughs, blocking, choreography, and props. He then combined these with the lighting, the set and finally the costumes. The first two and a half weeks were spent learning lines and blocking the play. Then Lanham broke the play down for scene and character development. According to Lanham he only went through the lay in its entirety about five times see the actual performance. Of course rehearsals contain set- backs and unique incidents which make them special. Lanham recalled one accident when rehearsing “Wizard.” “The dog who played Toto wasn’t used to all the handling he received so he got sick and threw up on stage,” he said. “There was also one little girl — the youngest cast member who was six years old — who always stayed about three pages ahead of me,” he said. “She always knew what was going to happen next.” a fhe main thing that I learned other than it is difficult to handle 26 people on stage at the same time is that you can’t approach cast members as a group,” Lanham said. “T tried to Work with them collectively. You must approach each actor individually.” Doing everything he can to help young love, Figaro, The Barber of Seville (David Gibson) aids Count Almaviva (Stephen Chambers) in courting Rosina (Emily Tate). Surrounded by a dark and deserted forest as night begins to fall, the Emperor Jones (Phil Cherry) proudly escapes his pursuers. The char- acter is a swindler. So the pieces of the theatre puzzle fell together because of these rehearsals, lighting specialists, set designers, costumers and music directors. Everything together made it a year well-rounded in its theatre productions. There was really something for everyone. — DONNA BUCKLES AND VICKI BAGWELL (| — j. Burton — M. Lyons 103 Theatre _— It was completely unique, conceived in the mind of a true artist. Once it was built it lasted only a short time. Once it was torn down it existed only in his memory. For one young set designer, Steve Probus, his creation became A one-time set-up Set design by Steve Probus. The program credit was a brief; no one in the Russell Miller Theatre au- dience applauded his performance. But when the last cast member left the set of “The Fugitive Kind,” Probus was happy. “It did what it was supposed to do,” the graduate student said of his set. “It carried the play; it captured the atmosphere.” The fall production of the Tennes- see Williams script revolved around a group of alienate embers of society who seek their own people. The play's director, Dr. William emrene and Probus agreed on a de- sign that would utilize three pieces, windows and door, a stairway and bar, and a confectionery. Summer research was the first step of his project, and when the fall se- mester began Probus built a model of his ideas before drawing the set on paper. “A model is the best way to get it down,” Probus said, “You can see what you want, but it’s hard to get it on paper.” The model took 3% weeks, and Pro- bus said he destroyed it when he wasn’t pleased. Designers often complete their lans before beginning construction, ut he chose a differen: approach. “I did the drawing for the windows and door and we built that,” he said. “Then I did the stairs and we complet- ed that. Last was the confectionery which had to be confusing, gaudy and realistic,’ Probus added. The most time was spent on con- struction, the graduate student said. Two paid staff members and students in stagecraft classes worked daily on building the set. “The students couldn’t be used for major detail stuff because they hadn’t had experience,” Probus said. “Most of the work comes with final touches, putting a particular tech- nique on it,” he explained. “The touches make it more realistic.” Probus said a few obstacles inter- rupted construction when rehearsals Contrast is the word Steve Probus uses to describe the experience and preference with set design he and director Dr. William Leon- ard had aor to “The Fugitive Kind.” Un- like Leonard, Probus’ work had been with abstract sets, but the designer said Leonard agreed with the student’s concept and de- sign for the Tennessee Williams’ play. Photos by Mark Lyons With Steve Probus as supervisor, students in stagecraft classes and two paid staff mem- bers constructed the three-wall set for “The Fugitive Kind.” The students worked two hours daily and the staff members worked four hours daily for the first five weeks. Later, work was also done on weekends and after cast rehearsals. Cla eae a aa 104 Theatre — Set Design Feature began. “Most of the actors had been around the set atmosphere where it’s not solid,” he said. Some students ac- cidentally banged and kicked the walls, however, and these had to be redone, he said. Props were also a time-consuming adventure, the designer explained. Ini- tially, he and other production mem- bers knew of places to get the needed jukebox, cash register and coke ma- chine, but this fell through, and Pro- bus said he rented the props from a junk owner. “The stuff we wanted was in the back of the shop with mold on it,” he said. ‘We rented it from him for a reasonable price. We cleaned it up and put our own dirt on it with paint and wax.” The young designer hopes to work in films and will probably apply to a graduate school in the west when he receives his master’s degree. “There’s no other experience I can get here and I want to continue to develop my talent,” he said. His work with “The Fugitive Kind” is a step toward those goals, and Probus said he tried to show intimacy through the setting. “The characters were close- knit, fugitives within themselves.” The eon of this set is hard to mea- sure, he said. “Of course, only the au- dience can say. “No one says ‘yeh’ for the lights or set. They applaud the actors; they don’t realize that as much time is put into the set,” he said. “It all has to work together or it doesn’t work. “The set is not there to entertain you Feedback makes you feel good, ut there’s never a standing ovation,” he said. Probus also said he under- stands the situation and calmly ac- cepts it. “It'll do; it’s just the system.” — CONNIE HOLMAN (1 sf =_ r LEE gate the tid St) ies __ EE Early morning and late night work sessions were necessary during the two weeks prior to the production. Steve Probus adjusts a hanging light at 8:00 a.m. the day before the play opened. Ready for the October 5-9 performances, Steve Probus poses with his set. The designer said he sat in the audience all but one show to criticize his work and get the audience’s reaction. 105 Theatre — Set Design Feature 106 Children’s Theatre — M. Lyons Whisked away into a land of make-believe, children’s theatre audiences shrieked in delight, dashed from their stage-side seats in fright and bashfully met the characters at the exit after each performance. The third annual series began Sept. 10 with “Little Red Riding Hood” and continued every other weekend in the fall until a “A Christmas Carol” finale in December. “The Wizard of Oz’ was produced in February. In the setting of a quaint woodland cottage, Little Red Riding Hood (Emily Tate), Grandmother (Anna Hale) and The Wolf (Steven Chambers) charmed their audiences by sing-songing their lyrics in an adaptation of the folktale. Cringing at first at the sight of the formidable looking wolf, the children later clapped in delight at the discovery of the wolf’s one vulnerable spot; he couldn’t stand the mention of food. The play closed after a three-day run and a near capacity crowd at the Sunday performances. Another outdoor atmosphere emerged in the Sept. 24 opening of “Heidi.” Katie Blackerby, a sixt grader from Bowling Green, played the role of the little mountain girl, and Jo Ann Ballance was the director. An unexpected cast member, a goat, mesmerized the children with its antics. October brought a tale set in 16th century China called “The Emperor's Nightingale.” The hi RBI cee production da portraye ing who falls in love with the nightingale’s song and who is gd when a mechanical nig 35-minute show climaxes when the machine breaks and the emperor nearly dies of heartache. The horrors of the Halloween One last look was taken by two young theatre- goers at the dark stage after a children’s theatre performance in the fall. Moments before, the costumed actors and actresses had entertained children with funny lines and songs. To make Ebenezer Scrooge (Mark Globensky) change his ways, the ghost of Christmas past (Karen Harlin) visits him to warn him of the ‘chains’ he would carry in death. — Jj. Burton rough a child’s eve tingale is presented to him. The Unwicked Witch,” a story about Winona, a young girl whose mother, grandmother and great-grandmother are zany and mischievous witches. ) As the story unfolds, Winona | (Elaine Mills) discovers that Hobble | (Carol Cornette), Gobble (Kathy Mayfield) and Wobble (Belinda Stark) are not her true relatives and that she was kidnaped as an infant. Homecoming weekend featured a turn-about “Hansel and Gretel’ with “The Bad Children.” The frantic parents (Penny McVey and Tim Larson) of two terribly obnoxious children (Keith Allgeier) and Beth Buchanan) turn to a witch (Diane Richburg) and an enchanter (Mike Thomas) to find a way to make their children behave. Transforming the children into better-behaved items such as rock cookies, pound cake and cod-liver oil fails when the potion is spoiled. An Italian setting became oe subject of the sixth production, “The Man Who Killed Time.” A man who hates time decides to kill it, but when he finds this is impossible, he opts to destroy timepieces. The old French play draws on Ambrosio’s (Graham Bedinger) eccentricity of removing hands from clocks, cutting radio wires and taking chimes from churches. Charles Dickens’ traditional “A Christmas Carol” ended the fall series by giving a boost to the { . season were reflected in “The | | | | Tired of living by the clock, Graham Bedinger, the lead in “The Man Who Killed Time,” steals the hands from the only clock in town. The play was presented in the fall semester. the win Christmas spirit. Directed by Dorothy Howard, the story of Ebenezer Scrooge (Mark Globensky) and his disgust for Christmas is summed up by his phrase “Bah, Humbug.” Scrooge’s misery ends when the Ghost of Christmas Past (Katie Blackerby), the Ghost of Christmas Present (Irvin White), the Ghost of Christmas Future (Tom Steinback) and the Ghost of his former partner Marley (Karen Harlin) frighten him into reforming his joyless attitude. Children’s theatre jumped back into action with the February production of “The Wizard of Oz.” Billed as a major production, the colorful play Pellened closely to the television version and was directed by Kevin Lanham. Dorothy (Vicky Davis) and Toto A repair job was necessary for the scarecrow (Bill Hanna) in “The Wizard of Oz” after an attack by (Mike Thomas), lion (Ir- ite) and Dorothy (Vicky Davis) helped the scarecrow recover his straw. iy The tin man arrived in Munchkin Land (after a Kansas twister transported her house there) to smash the Wicked Witch of the east. In an attempt to get back to Kansas, Dorothy gathers The Scarecrow (Bill Hanna), the Tinman (Mike Thomas) and The Cowardly Lion (Irvin White) to travel the yellow brick road in search of the Wizard of Oz (Dwayne Hood). The children’s series ended for the season, but echoes of the de- light are o nly postponed until the series returns to Gordon Wilson’s Theatre 100 and Russell Miller Theatre next fall. And just because it’s called children’s theatre doesn’t mean adults can’t appreciate it. I was there, too. — DONNA BUCKLES ee — L. Wright Rehearsal is a creative workout for the actors and actresses as well as the director. Heidi (Katie Black- erby) and Grandma (Sandra Lea) heed the instruc- tions of director Jo Ann Ballance on the set of the children’s theatre show. ner luncheon plates pushed aside, the well-dressed members of the month- ly book discussion hour at the Bowling Green Public Library focused their at- tention on the college actors in front of them. The set was simple — a platform, “Performance concentrates on text, a candelabra and three or four stools. : ; The costumes were simple too — revealing for the audience those Jeane ee some cast members aspects that make it an outstanding were ar A Vn It wasn’t conventional theatre, but the use of language. Green River Readers, a repertory inter- — Dr. James Pearse preters theatre group presented ‘Maria Concepcion,” part of a series at the local public library that included “Women in the Literary World,” “Christmas Show” and “Displaced Person.” “Performance concentrates on the text, revealing for the audience those aspects of the work that make it an outstand- ing use of language,” said Dr. James Pearse, director of interpreters theatre productions. He said the emphasis is on point of view, description and irony in literature, rather than scenery, lighting, costumes, make-up and props. “Interpreters use a minimum of props Literature that came alive and other aids; this allows the readers to Story and photos by peor virtually anywhere without dif- Lynn B. Wright iculty,” Pearse said. Other interpreters’ activities were the monthly S andwich Reading Hours and Faculty and Student Reading Hours. A five-minute warm-up session precedes interpreters theatre pro- : : u ductions as Jo Ann Rogers and Kevin Dew relax together with 10ns wer : “ . The major productions were “Under the other cast members. The Green River Readers presented “Maria S ign of t he rs Waterbearer and Concepcion” in December. It was one of four performances. The Babysitter. “T just fell into this because I love lit- erature,” said Sally Watson, a member of the Green River Readers who directed “Maria Concepcion.” Another member, Carol Harrison, said a program such as the library series “helps the people of the community and helps students come in contact with the outside world.” “My eyes almost popped out of my sockets,” said sophomore Ben Logan, de- scribing his reaction of an offer to try out for the series. Logan hadn’t performed in theatre since the third grade, but he got the nar- rator role in ‘Maria Concepcion.” Like any other organization or endeav- or, the preparation for any of the inter- eel activities 1s long and kind of Green River Readers: (Front row) K. Allgeier, R. Parrott, J. Bartlett, C. Har- ard, but worth it in the end,” Logan rison, S. Watson, D. Kiddy, T. Jenkins, R. Scott, J. Korinek. (Back row) said. After just one performance, he said, G. Knight, J. Lewis, G. Bedinger, J. Harrison, K. Miller, C. Pierce and “Y’m kind of hooked.” M. Stephens. 108 Green River Readers Defending the woman who allegedly killed her grandmother, | Carol Harrison testifies as narrator Ben Logan listens. The randmother defended the scorned woman because she be- Eve that her granddaughter was wrong in breaking up the couple’s marriage. Set in Mexico during the French control of the nation, police- man “Gendarme” (Jonathan Sprouse) and narrator Ben Logan contemplate the testimony of the murdered Maria Con- cepcion, (Joyce Lewis) by Carol Harrison, the murdered woman's grandmother. Action changes in ‘Maria Concepcion” brought a change in the mood of audience member Doris Yelton. Fifty members of the monthly book discussion group at the Bowl- ing Green Public Library watched the inter- preters group perform after a luncheon. In interpreters theatre productions the emphasis is on point of view, description and irony in literature rather than scenery, lighting, costumes, and make-up. 109 Green River Readers Jimmy grinned, Gerald cried, Liz and Dick and Old Blue Eyes married new people, Gary Gilmore begged to be shot, Elizabeth Ray talked, ayne Hays blanched, Rev. Mr. Moon rose, Earl Butz joked, Mao and Daley and two billion- aires died, Baba Wawa made a mint, Billy Carter amused and Nadia amazed. The United States turned its eyes back 200 years and perhaps as a result, Ameri cans revived such old favorites as skate boards, King Kong, discotheques, fad dances (starring the Bump) and Beatle- mania. Neither youth nor a multimillion dollar offer could reunite the Beatles, however, though rumors circulated free- ly. In March, 1977, came the rumor that an anonymous band called Klaatu was Beatles — backed or maybe even John, Paul, George and Ringo themselves. The bicentennial itself was blemished by the thousands of marketers and busi- nessmen who tried to turn the year-long birthday party into gold rush. But that didn’t stop an estimated six million peo- ple who watched the majestic ships from 31 nations parade through New York Harbor and up the Hudson River July 4. The celebration furor was accompa- nied by a presidential election campaign that saw a good ol’ peanut farmer named Jimmy get to the White House. James Earl Carter, Jr., presented himself as a non-Washington politician who wanted to cut Federal farenteacy the de- fense budget and taxes. He narrowly beat Gerald Ford by capturing the big city, big labor, black and southern vote. (see page 114). Most memorable from the campaign trail: Carter's erroneous “ethnic purity” comment and his Playboy interview; Ronald Reagan’s naming of a running mate before the Republican convention, a stab at reversing Ford’s late-summer momentum; the first televised presiden- tial candidate debates since the Kenne- dy-Nixon campaign; the half-hour tech- nical breakdown in the first TV debate; Betty Ford’s reading of her nearly-voice- less husband’s concession speech in No- vember, and Carter and family walking down Pennsylvania Avenue on inaugu- ration day (see page 58.) With Ford the first incumbent to lose since Hoover, and Carter the first deep southerner to win since the Civil War, some viewers were prompted to call 1977 the beginning of a new American politi- cal era. Carter quickly granted amnesty to Vietnam draft evaders and Congress FPLASHPO Looking back on a year — 1976-77 which had a little bit of everything to make it one to remember. gave him a free hand to clean up bu- reaucracy, lending credence to that no- tion. Youth was. also impressed when Carter asked Congress to decriminalize t possession of less than one ounce of ie marijuana. Similar pot laws were consid- ered by more than 30 state legislatures. The saga of the Scandalous Seven- ties continued as the Lockheed Air- craft Corp. admitted paying bribes to high officials abroad to encourage the purchase of aircraft and amuni- tions. Most infamous were the $13 million of fees, commissions and bribes to Japanese officials, including Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka, and payments to the Netherlands Prince Bernhard. Similar disclosures led President Ford to create a Cabinet-level com- mission to investigate foreign bribes by multi-national companies. The country’s intelligence agencies remained under fire by journalists and congressmen. Those two groups’ investi- ators collided when CBS newsman aniel Schorr leaked a House report (which had been leaked to him) to the Village Voice, a liberal New York news- Bebee after Schorr broadcast portions SS imself. A House Ethics Committee tried : for seven months to find Schorr’s source, which he refused to reveal. In September, the Committee gave up and freed Schorr j from his subpoenas. Six days later, he N eae resigned from CBS. Fé. “i Later congressional reports were criti- Nee ™ cal of the agencies and advised a revamp- Ver : : 4 Ceri foe BA 2A ing, including one that criticized both — ie ee Yee, F the FBI and CIA for being lax in investi- ee i a gation and reporting of the assassination ee Cee | of John Kennedy. a (Zain Gah : : é cae Si Much more eek tek to Americans Sy Bes ‘S were the congressional sex scandals i which began with Wilbur Mills and Fan- nie Foxie. In late spring, 1976, a small- town blonde named Elizabeth Ray re- Poet vealed that U.S Rep. Wayne Hays of Ohio kept her on the public payroll as Bh L000 2 his mistress. Her book, “The Washing- ; TW. an ton Fringe Benefit,” was rushed into A ; so ie print and she later posed for Playboy and = Wa, covered the Republician National Con- vention for a stag magazine. A shamed Hays resigned chairman- ship of the House Administration and Democractic National Congressional committees and later survived an over- dose of sleeping pills. In August, he withdrew as a candidate for reelectoin. Similar scandals scathed five other Con- gressmen. (continued on page 112) 110 News rN TH Pte MELEE AR a IL Lit i ecretary of agri- culture Earl Butz was forced to resign because of his racist remark after the Re- publician National Convention. When asked _ privately why the GOP had such little black support, Butz said Negroes wanted only good sex, loose shoes and a warm toilet. Ironically, Wa- tergate scandal figure John Dean III was the reporter who broke the news in Roll- ing Stone magazine. New Times maga- zine linked the indiscretion to Butz. The year was filled with spectacular crimes. During the summer of 1976, 26 Chowchilla, Calif., s chool children and their driver were kidnaped and en- tombed for 18 hours in a moving van buried in a rock quarry near San Fran- cisco. The captives dug out before the air supply diminished. A draft of a $5 mil- lion ransom note was found but never delivered. Three sons of wealthy bay area families were charged with kidnaping. Patricia Hearst went on trial for feder- al charges of the bank robbery she com- mitted after being abducted by the Sym- bionese Liberation Army. The trial be- gan Feb. 4, 1976, exactly two years since her kidnaping. Her flamboyant defense attorney, F. Lee Bailey, said she was brainwashed by her captors. Almost sev- en months later, she was sentenced in federal prison, but with her federal ap- peal and a state trial still ahead, it ap- peste she would be spending most of er next few months in court. In January, 1977, a convicted murderer looked to Utah State Prison warden Sam Smith and said, “Let’s do it.” Moments later, five .30-.30 deer rifles fired and Gary Gilmore became the first prisoner to be executed in the U.S. since 1967. On deathrow, he demanded to be executed, even attempting a sleeping pill overdose in a suicide pact with his girlfriend. The date of execution was set and delayed several times, with appeals by outside groups coming even in the predawn hours before the execution. Other execu tions loomed and a Gallup Poll showed that 65 per cent of the public favors the death penalty for murder, the highest since 1953. Some Frenchmen dug their way from a sewer into the vault of a bank on the Riveria and landed between $10 and $15 million in cash, gold, securities and jewelry. Swine flu and the mysterious “Legion naire’s disease” were at the top of the medical news. The rest of the world watched in amazement at America’s swine flu near-hysteria, which began with a serviceman’s death in New Jersey. The virus, which is found in swine, killed 20 million in 1918-19 and led President Ford to ask Congress for $135 112 News million to produce a vaccine. The immu- nization vaccine supplies and liability insurance disputes delayed its start, while the deaths of several elderly people who received the shots ended the drive. The bizarre Legionnaire’s disease out- break began in late July at an American Legion convention in Philadelphia. Twenty-nine conventioners died and al- most 250 others became seriously ill with fever and nausea. A Philadelphia land- mark, the prestigious Bellevue-Stratford Hotel, was linked to the deaths and the publicity killed the hotel, with operat- ing losses soaring to $10,000 a day. It closed in November with the disease still a mystery. epetitive natural disasters struck the world, with earth- quakes taking the greatest toll. Two ma- jor quakes destroyed the industrial city of Tangshan, China, in late July and for- eign sources claimed 100,000 to one mil- lion killed or injured. A quake in Guate- mala left 22,000 dead and a million homeless, while Turkey, Indonesia, Italy and the Phillipines shook, too. The worst drought in centuries struck Britain and France while a drought in the American west threatened to rival the 1930s’ Dust Bowl. A popular vacation spot in Colora- do became a death trap for 138 people as torrential rains caused a flash flood in the Big Thompson River, sending a 12- foot high wall of water down its salle bed. The National Guard rescued more than 1,000 campers. In Idaho, the Teton River Dam broke, killing nine. And, of course, there was the one they'll talk about for decades: the Winter of ’77, a brutally cold season that created genuine crises throughout the country (see page 88). Transportation accidents were almost costly. Two 747s collided in the Canary Islands, killing more than 575. The worst mid-air plane collision ever left 176 dead in Yugoslavia. A ferryboat and tanker crashed in Louisiana, killing 78, many of whom drowned in their cars. owever other, at-sea accidents made big headlines. The $50 million Onassis-fleet tanker Olym- pic Bravery became the shipping indus- try’s biggest dollar loss ever when it crashed off France. Then, in less than two weeks, four Liberian oil tankers crashed or exploded. The first and most dramatic was that of the Liberian vessel, the Argo Merchant, which in late De- cember dumped almost eight million gallons of oil off Massachusetts in what an Environmental Protection Agency spokesman called the “nation’s biggest oil spill.” Environmentalists nearly ex- ploded, too, and put immediate pressure on Congress to stiffen shipping laws. But war and terrorism were probably this year’s greatest tragedies. Nineteen months of Aekone between Christians and Moslems in Lebanon ended only after Syrian troops intervened. Riots and guerilla activity in South Af- rica and Rhodesia weakened white mi- nority rule. Angola, meanwhile, shook with civil war, with the side that had Soviet-backing and Cuban troops win- ning. A military coup in Thailand set off riots among students. Israel and neigh- bors continued talking, and President Carter’s secretary of state, Cyrus Vance, reported that the parties were closer to peace than ever. Terrorism became big business. Brit- ish ambassador to Ireland Christopher T.E. Ewart-Briggs was killed in a car bombing in Dubliqi while a Washington scare bomb killed Chilean exile Orlando Letelier. Terrorists held Washington breathless as they held 30 hostages, and journalists began talking about reducing terrorist coverage with hopes of discour- aging publicity-hungry factions. But the biggest terrorist story of the year was a daring, movie-inspiring Israeli military rescue of about 100 hostages from pro- Palestine terrorists at Entebbe Airport in Uganda. Such events left little wonder that no Nobel Peace Prize was awarded in 1976. However, a newspaper editorial praising the two women who inspired the North- ern Ireland Peace Movement which unit- ed Catholic and Protestant women brought Betty Williams and Mairead Corrigan a new peace prize: the Norwe- gian People’s Peace Prize, worth $325,000 (twice the Nobel prize). World leadership was fragile, particu- larly in mainland China, where the deaths of Chou En-lai, Chu Teh and Mao Tse-tung brought mourning, rioting, confusion and revolt. Mao’s widow and -her radical colleagues tried to secure power, but the moderates prevailed. President Field Marshall Dr. Idi Amin Dada, Uganda’s publicity-craving 300- pound Big Daddy, continued his bluster ing, both at the majority Christians in his country and at the rest of the world. Canada barred him from a world leader- ship conference there and President Carter criticized him for his ruthless kill- ing of all dissenters. Included in the ca- sualties were an archbishop and two cabinet members. And in India, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi saw her Congress Party fall in election defeat for the first time in 30 years of Indian independence. Mrs. Gan- dhi, who maintained a quasi-dictatorial emergency rule for a year and a half be- fore the March, 1977, elections lost two suporters—a cabinet member and her aunt, a prominent international diplo- mat — and saw the various opposition Baaies unite against her for the irst time. otoreity in death came to other prominent figures, including: Richard J. Daley, the six-term “Boss” mayor of Chicago, who came up through the Illinois Democratic ranks to become one of the most powerful Ameri- can politicians ever; James “I never for- got a face” Farley, an FDR strategist and renowned politician. aire J. Paul Getty, Martha Mitchell, wife of former attorney general John Mitch- ell; Viscount Montgomery, the legend- ary “Monty” who commanded British forces in World War II; Carlo (Don Carlo) Gambino, the real Godfather; Paul Robeson, the stunning black actor who became a socialist; Lee J. Cobb, a power- ful movie and television actor; Don Bolles, an Arizona investigative reporter killed by a bomb while working on a crime story that eventually implicated a governor and Sen. Barry Goldwater, fam- ily and friends; art innovators Max Ernst and Alexander Calder, and Smokey the Bear, the 26 year-old bear who inspired the poster war against forest fires. But short of Mao, probably no death caused more furor than Howard Hughes, the recluse billionaire. Numerous wills were offered as authentic including three pages of handwritten scrawl that split $250 million between the Mormon Church and a gas station owner who ex- plained that in 1968 he gave a bleeding hitchhiker who claimed to be Hughes a ride from the desert to the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas. Kentucky mourned 26 miners and mine safety officials who were killed in two blasts within two days at the Scotia Mine near Whitesburg. Jefferson Coun- ty teachers dissatisfied with low pay and big classes struck for two weeks, while the collective bargaining remained a hot issue among Fayette ‘ane teachers. Environmentalists were incensed by pol- lution from a nuclear waste burial ground in Maxey Flats and by the pro- posed nuclear power plant across the Ohio River near Madison, Ind. Two big buildings were built in the Common- wealth: the $42 million Lexington Civic Center, which includes the 26,000-seat Rupp Arena — largest basketball arena in the country — a mall, 400-room hotel and convention facilities. The Common- wealth Convention Center went up in Louisville at a price tag of $43 million. With troubles like the world saw this year, it was little wonder that Americans sought escape. Rev. Sun Myung Moon, a controversial self-ordained Korean evan- gelist, packed crowds at newly-renovated Yankee Stadium in June, 1976, and at the Washington Monument in September. His Unification Church claimed 30,000 members and $10 million in donations a year, but hundreds of parents fought to retrieve children who left home to join the church. Some 85,000 seeking inner peace went to Werner Erhard and his est training while the Maharishi’s Tran- scendental Meditation training averaged 20,000 graduates per month. Sports was popular despite the many fans disenchanted by the politics and big money of major sports. The United States threatened to boycott the Summer Olympics in Montreal when Canada, un- der pressure by Mainland China, barred Taiwan from the games. Twenty-seven nations did boycott to protest the partici- pation of New Zealand, which they re- garded as racist. Many fans were ired by the million-dollar shenanigans of certain baseball free agents, including Lynn, Kye native Don Gullett, a pitching star who left the Cincinnati Reds for a six- year, $2 million contract with the New York Yankees. Baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn nullified controversial Oak- land A’s owner Charlie Finley’s sale of three stars for $3.5 million because “it was against the best interests of base- ball’. Perhaps w orst of all was New York Mets’ home run hitter Dave Kingman, who demanded several million dollars and a multi-year contract. He hit .238 in 1976. nd nothing could tarnish the popularity of little Na- dia Comanechi, a 14-year-old Romanian gymnastics phenomenon who scored the Olympics’ first four perfect scores in the sport. American Bruce Jenner became the “greatest athlete in the world” by winning the decathlon with a world-re- cord 8,618 points, while Dorothy Hamill struck paidan figure skating in the Win- ter Games and inspired the year’s hottest coiffure fashion, the Wedge. A shy 16-year-old from Walton, Ky., became a national celebrity as he won more than 230 races worth a total of a million dollars as an apprentice jockey. His name was Steve Cauthen and he ap- peared to be the next superstar jockey. While Western suffered through a ter- rible sports year, pollsters ranked the University a Kentucky in the top 20 in both football and basketball for the first time in two decades. The Wildcats didn’t win their conference in either sport but won the Peach Bowl and made it to the NCAA East championship game in basketball. — ROGER STINNETT 113 News Suddenly, there’s a new number one tourist spot in the nation, once totally unknown to everyone. There are no big lights or crowded streets of people waiting to see one of the world’s wonders. In fact, it’s just Plains ... Plains, Ga., home of the United States President Jimmy Carter, and now a haven for tourists. Spring break was a peak of tourism and a busy time for this small town, since many Western students, as well as others, went 80 or even 100 miles out of their way to see it at all hours of the day and night. On their long and dreary ride home from a week in Florida, several students made Plains a welcomed rest stop, taking in the sights. The sights, being few, caneigtee mainly of newly painted stores advertisin souvenirs of their most famous citizen and a bus tour of “Jimmy Carter Country.” Probably the biggest attraction was Billy Carter’s gas station, famous for its cold beer and small talk. Among the visitors from Western were Charlie Hooks and Richard Hagan. Their four- member carload stopped in the little town about 4 p.m. on a Friday. “Plains has been built up so much that it would seem a shame to miss it being so close,” said Hooks, a junior from Cadiz. When first entering Plains, no one would guess that a President had lived there. There were no big illustrious signs, no newly erected statues, nor even any new or rejuvenated buildings built in Carter’s honor. In the middle of the town square, however, there’s a sign which says “Welcome to Plains, Ga., Home of Jimmy Carter, Our President.” Move along the square and it becomes evident that what was once a simple corner drug store has cashed in on the fame and emphasized a new line of business ... souvenirs. “They sold peanuts, peanut butter and Jimmy Carter postcards, among other things,” Hooks said. 114 Spring Break pring break was or wasn’t worth peanuts “The whole place looks like southern town. Cartersville, U.S.A.” “When we drove up I said, The next day, Main Street in ‘Here it is boys,’ but they didn’t Plains was swarmed with men in believe we were there,” red. Western’s baseball team Shollenberger said. which had been on the road for a week, decided to make Plains a rest stop. Head coach Barry Shollenberger termed their brief stay in Plains as an educational gata “At every opportunity we try to interject education as much as possible,” he said. Most of the team was excited about being in the hometown of the President, but were more amazed at seeing such a backroad - : ry ts ry OA SA ENN a at a 7, = A (ERR CAAT san 1 ae ay Grn Ke otal y 5 OY ETSI a) IS Ne Nis JS SAS Sy SS eee — Tin ys Wi, Y 5 ays Wy 4 Vj SSS SSSSSSS ' . : Ky hy mM ) V J = Oe, j - s — =. ) Mf! I} pede Ss Paget Gey } “ne dil. y) es aon Vy i ee Ky eta es nD for) ty Ar} 2 oes Mei , es fee TUNE NW G0 vc i 1 i li z t. | es alee ‘ | My). } | [) -. athe Cat i i i Wy se A} f — 1 h ' hgh Z The team was still in its uniforms after beating Georgia Southwestern in Americus, only a few miles from Plains. They filed off the bus onto Main Street and headed for the well-known gas station owned by the presi- dent’s brother. Wally Moss, one of the three team captains, described Plains with one word. “Peanuts! The town looked normal except for the peanuts sticking up everywhere,” he said. “The old railroad station had i WATT WW iN ¢ 7 ’ ie en] LD | WS been his campaign headquarters and is now the location of a tour service,” he continued as he described Plains. It was the gas station, however, that attracted most of the tourists. “Everybody was drinking beer, and the men working there were just sitting around ahem tobacco and watching the tourists go by,” Moss said. “The only time they'd move was if a good-looking girl walk- ed by.” As for the gas station itself, a person could find one just like it in a 1937 movie. “There were two old couches where the men always sat, and a cash register that was so old it didn’t look like it would work,” Moss said. The only thing new about the gas station was the sign which simply said, “Billy Carter’s Gas Station.” Robin Miller, whose group of nine drove 80 miles out of ake way, found the gas station a special treat. “We stayed there about an hour and a half watching the people and drinking the beer Billy Carter is widely known for selling,” she said. Miss Miller, who'd spent a week in Daytona Beach, Fla., thought Plains was the highlight of her trip. “On the way to Florida, we kept seeing signs about Plains, so we decided to stop on our way back. It was the best part of the whole vacation,” she said. Even though most who stopped in Plains enjoyed seeing what it was like, some were disappointed. Nancy Cox, whose car contained other girls, protested the 80-mile drive required to see Plains. Her wishes were overruled by her passengers and it was 3 a.m. when they finally arrived. “It was completely deserted. All ou could see were closed uildings and the Carter home hidden he a bunch of trees,” Miss Cox said. The Carter home was hidden behind trees, but the bright lights surrounding it, and the blocked driveway with a security guard in a booth set it off from everything else in Plains. The very small town square consisted of approximately five stores, and at eet three contained the Carter name. All in all, the impressions were favorable, but probably because the tourists could simply tell their friends they’d been there once. Where? Plains. President Carter’s hometown — TERRI DARRU 115 Spring Break ——— re ZA YN ' Lit w Ss CULTURE Commentary and Photos by Steve Benson In the summer of 1949, Lyman Johnson was the first man to bring it to a Kentucky state college. In 1956, Dr. J.E. Jones brought it to Western Kentucky University. In 1976-77, more than 8,500 black students brought it to Kentucky colleges and universities. “It” is the socially transmitted behavior and style of social and artistic expression of a people — black people. ltais he black experience, the black behavior, the black perspective. “It’’ is black culture. At Western, black culture is as common as it is unique, as diversified as it is simple, and as evi- dent as it is subtle. Black culture ranges from a “processed doo” to a bush afro to a cornrow. It goes from flashy three-piece suits to blue ‘jeans and monogrammed T-shirts. Black culture is a quick game of spades or ping pong or pool. It’s pledges marching in single file to the li- brary at night. It’s Miller beer and rum and coke. It’s a room of fishnets and posters and turn- tables. It's a pick-up game of basketball behind Pearce Ford Tower or in Diddle Arena. Black culture is suitcasing. At Western, black culture is that common slang heard throughout students’ speech. “What's up?” being the standard greeting, a typi- (continued on page 118) Mons get tired too with a hectic schedule such as Priscilla Harris’s. The sophomore relaxes in Diddle Arena with daugh- ter Tanyita. A full-time student and daily commuter, 9 Harris said her schedule is grueling but she’s determined to obtain a degree and coach college athletics. 116 Black Culture Black performers were popular with both black and white students. The Duke Ell- ington Band performed during Black Awareness Week in the spring semester. Sponsored by the Center Board Enter- tainment Series, the band entertained students and members of the community in Van Meter Auditorium. Isolated from other spectators ape the men’s tennis team in a spring matc are Nate Hill and Terese Miller. Hill is an economics major from Gallatin, Tenn. After transferring last year from Fisk University in Nashville, Tenn., Hill met Miss Miller, a sophomore merchan- dising major from Lexington. 118 Black Culture BLACK CULTURE .... cal afternoon conversation might sound like: “Hey, what’s happ’nin’? Naw, it’s you. What’s going down tonight? ‘Sposed to ie jammin’ on the Hill. You gonna show? Naw, I’m gonna lay up. Is the Cellar gonne be open? Teainie hap: Guess I'll go on and slide. I'll rap to you. Later.” Western's black culture is the Amazing Tones of Joy singing the gospel, and State Street Baptist and New Bethel churches. Within the walls of these two Bowling Green churches, the cry of freedom and equality can still be heard just as it was 100 years ago. And spirituals are still being sung with the deep con- viction that characterized slave songs a century ago. (continued on page 120) Black and white students have opportunities to learn about each other outside the classroom. Fashion is one area where the two often differ. Jean-clad Robert Gray talks to a booted and hatted Frank Bevel outside the Academic Complex. Gray and Bevel are mass communications majors. Hairstyles are a distinguishing feature of black culture, whether it be a bush fro or a cornrow. Stanley Smith gets a cornrow from Ethel Bailey in Pearce Ford. Smith is a Louis- ville junior and Miss Baile ey is a Alansville freshman. | ) Disco music regularly attracts black students to dances and get-togethers in the Cellar of West Hall dormitory. Taffye Hobson and Carl Sub- lett enjoy a boogie session at the popular gath- ering spot. Miss Hobson is a business adminis- tration major from Hopkinsville and Sublett is a physical education major from Cave City. With a muscular brace against the needle prick, Annette McKinney takes a sickle cell anemia test administered by Kathy Powell from the local health department. Fifty-one students took the abnormal red blood cell disease test sponsored by Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. Music and religion are part of black culture. Combing the two is the “Amazing Tones of Joy,”.a well-known gospel group. After cele- brating their sixth anniversary with a program at the Garrett Conference Center, the women performed at the spring “Black Expos 1977.” A black underground The lights are dim and the music alternately blares and lulls as couples in the crowded room dance to stereo music with few interruptions. Other couples sit at the tables placed sparingly around the room and chat under the warm glow of colored lights. It could easily be a nightclub in downtown Bowling Green or a near-by city but this place is right at the center of campus, not far from the student center. For fun and dancing to the disco beat, the Cellar, a sort of underground discotheque, is a place to go. Black students like having a place where they can meet, but they feel the Cellar could be im- proved in certain areas. The Cellar was not ori- ginally planned for entertainment or recreation. “It’s better than nothing,” said Bruce Pierce, a Hopkinsville senior. “If they would put carpet on the floor and add some new tables and ch airs — give it sort of a night club atmosphere — it would be all right,” added junior Gary Willis, also from Hopkinsville. Once used as the University’s grill located on West Hall’s ground floor, the area was remod- eled. Part of it is now being used as a storage area. The Cellar’s basic purpose is for use by Black greeks to raise money for various activities. From time to time, however, it has been used for the Red Cross Blood Drive, VOC Book Exchange and other activities. The established admission price is only 25 cents, and the atmosphere seems to be well worth it. Once keeping in line with the University’s policy, the cellar had to be closed by midnight. It is now open until 1 a.m. The atmosphere is like a discotheque. People who like to dance go there, and it is mainly used for the purpose. The Cellar is used by the black minority on campus which leaves a feeling of obscurity. “It’s all right; it’s all we got,” said Charles Essel a Versailles senior. The University’s policy states concerns for the goodwill of everybody and if the Cellar was dis- continued there would probably not be a suffi- cient or economical way to oblige the black stu- dent body. One of the most accessible places on campus, the West Hall area was once designated for a campus grocery store, but the idea faded. The Cellar has become a busy place with its small night-club-like set-up enelating tables, chairs and colored lights. The stereo equip- ment is usually furnished by the organiza- tions involved. Although the Cellar isn’t as exciting to some as it is to others, it has been proven by the sufficient crowd who wander in almost every Friday and Saturday night for fun and dancing that the Cel- lar is the best remedy for “boogie fever.” — JON ADAMS ( 119 Black Culture Greek sororities and fraternities play an important role in black social life and activities offered on campus. Johnny Williams, den of pledges for Alpha Pi Alpha fraternity, addresses stu- dents at a smoker for potential pledges. Williams is a senior engineering technology major. i Tiaaaiaaaast MICROWAVE RPPRRATUS 120 Black Culture BLACK CULTURE .... “Thro’ many dangers, toils and snares, I have already come, ‘Tis grace has bro’t me safe thus fap And grace will lead me home.” Black culture is fraternities and_ sororities “steppin” high and hard on “the block” in front of Downing Center. It is artists Audrey Johnson and Janis Hill. It’s percussionist Monte Young. It’s Black Awareness Week and the Miss Black Western Pageant. At Western, black culture is a very special un- derstanding among black men and women. It is an understanding and awareness that assures af- fection for one another. It is an understanding bred in the degradation of slavery, an affection heightened because of the humiliation suffered by the black man. Black culture is a bond of affection and togeth- erness among black students — student-to-stu- dent, man-to-woman, person-to-person. It is a bond of knowledge about the desires, disappointments and thoughts of other blacks. This lesa makes it unnecessary for a black to express his circumstances to another black — the message is intuitive. Bice culture is all this and more. It is broaden- ing and prospering. It is prospering, unfortu- nately, at the expense of good race relations. The separatism that black cultural awareness evokes and the dislike and distrust many have toward black affirmation has corroded relations. The year had a segregative atmosphere in its relations. Intercommunications seemed strained and interracial social activities lost significance. Near the completion of a tough degree program as a biology major, Pam Perry works in a physics aban Thompson Com- plex. The Nashville, Tenn. hopes to attend medical school on an internship and become a doctor. Coverage of blacks and their activities and honors by the Herald was often criticized in the form of letters to the editor. Barbara Mitchell, a junior from Hopkinsville, reads the cam- pus newspaper outside the student center. Miss Mitchell is an English and psychology major. — Several seniors noted the change. Pam Perry, a senior biology major, felt that “the rapport be- tween black and white students slackened.” Ray Henderson, a senior mass communica- tions major, noted that in past years interracial Pelavion ships were more congenial. There are reasons for this loss of congeniality. Besides overall student apathy, other issues emerged to cause cleavage between whites and blacks. The lack of minority coverage by the College Heights Herald caused disgruntlement among black students. Assertions by some white Westerners that cer- tain black-oriented activities were discriminatory caused substantial upheaval. The purpose behind black activities is to build moral, spiritual and communal integrity. The purpose of black-oriented functions is to instill a sense of worth and pride in being black and give value and solace to black students at- tending a predominately white institution. All this is possible because of “it’” — the “it” that Dr. Jones brought here in 1956. One of the more popular churches in Bowling Green for black Western students is State Street Baptist Church. Ronald _ Cole and Sharnell Jewell participate in a Sunday morning worship service at the church. Cole is a junior from Atlanta, Ga., and Miss Jewell is a sophomore from Bowling Green. A search through one of the card catalog drawers offers Kathy Oliver a carpeted seat on the floor. Miss Oliver, a sophomore textiles and clothing major from Lynch, was working on the fourth floor of the Helm Cravens Library. 121 Black Culture The temperature is the same, and the boxes, bundles and suitcases are similar, but in May a moving day means fae TE Crore r orrercrr creecere of DERO DOWNING UNIVERSITY CENTER Pore. m=: 4 : = mad, Sime $ ae i et — J. Burton Weaning in Var other arcechon There are 16 dorms at Western with a total of 4,886 men and women residents who have at least two things in common: At the beginning of the semester they have to move in and at the end of the semester they have to move out. The worst part of moving out is that it is coupled with finals, all-night study sessions and finishing projects that were due the week before. Any Westerner can sit in any dorm room and hear the nerve-racking sound of boxes scraping on tile floors, grunts and groans from the owner of the over- loaded box and the disappointing sounds of someone who has been waiting 15 minutes for an elevator. When one final- ly comes, he finds it crammed with 10 other people with boxes. The end of the week brings continu- ous traffic in and out of dorms with peo- ple carrying everything from clothes to television sets to stereos to tables to plants, all of which have to be transport- ed to summer residences. Moving out times vary with different people. “It usually takes me about three hours to strip my room,” said Mary Fogg, a Bridgeton, N.J., senior. “I wae system- atically with a place for everything. I uti- lize every inch of room in the car,” she added. An empty parking lot is the remnant of the first day after fall semester finals. Loaded up with lug- gage and Christmas gifts, Greta McDonough says oodbye to Opal Nasbitt, director of Central Hall. Misi McDonough is assistant dorm director. Perched in an automobile trunk is Cathy Murphy as she keeps an eye on friend Karen O’Hearn’s belongings. Miss Murphy said the break also gave her a chance to rest as she waited for Miss O’Hearn. Both juniors are from Owensboro. 122 Moving Out “T have a 13-hour drive and I have to pack things so they won’t move around,” Miss Fogg explained. Planning for moving day lasts practi- cally all year for Miss Fogg. “Every time I buy something I wonder how I’m going to get it home and how much room it will take,” Miss Fogg said. “T have a birthday gift for my ike! that is rather large ancl don’t know where I’m going to put it.” Miss Fogg said some of the mov- ing problems have finally caught up with her. “For the first time since I have been here I have too much to take back,” she said. “My roommate is going to keep my table for me during the summer, then I'll have to leave something home so I can take it back after the fall semester. “I always sell my books and I kee very little sentimental things aehouele this year I have acquired a few more ob- jects than usual,” Miss Fogg added. Another out-of-state stident had simi- lar problems. “I’m able to leave some things in Ken- tucky with my grandmother or my sis- ter, like dishes, posters, and things that I won't need at home,” said Debbie Con- ner, a Genoa, IIl., senior. “My first couple of semesters here I rode hone with my brother, then he graduated and my parents started com- ing to get me,” she said. “They have come to get me in three different ve- hicles so I never know how much room I will have.” Miss Conner said a system develops after many moving jobs. “T keep the boxes that things come in and I repack them in those boxes because I think they will be safer and won't be as apt to break over the nine-hour trip,” — L. Wright 4 139, KENTUCKY 75 t Ly AS Temperatures hit the 80’s throughout finals week as parents and friends arrived to move students home. No parking tickets were issued that week because of the large number of visitors’ vehicles. Miss Connor said. “T have one box that I have used since I first came to Western in the fall of 1973,” she said. “It holds some things very nice- ly, so I have kept it to reuse it.” She added: “I have gotten into a habit of packing the same things together ev- ery time because it saves time and so far nothing has gotten broken.” Local: students have an advantage because they can move graduall y, but one student suffered tragedy with this technique. “I go home quite a few weekends out of the semester and I used to take some things home gradually until last summer I moved most of my things home the weekend before finals and the house burned. I lost almost everything,” said Peggy Garrett, a Greenville senior. PR this semester I waited until finals were over and I was ready to go home before I began packing,” she said. “When I do start packing I begin at one end of the room and I go to the other,” she said. “Then I load it all on the elevator at one time and carry it down.” Of course, with all the people living in residence halls there are many prob- lems. Some people have a long way to go. Some have too much to carry. Some won- der what they are going to do with it when they get it home. Then the only worry for some is which box to carry down first. _— VICKI BAGWELL © — L. Wright momen cone mates, +e — L. Wright Friday the 13th was a day for superstitious stu- dents to be cautious as they moved out of dorms and apartments. Brenda Boarman guards sister Jan- et’s luggage outside McLean Hall. Miss Boarman is a freshman from Williamsburg, Va. Crowded elevators persuaded many dorm residents to use the steps after wading through halls of boxes, luggage and trash. Freshmen Tim McGuire and Darel Britt make their final exit from Barnes Campbell Hall. — S. Benson 123 Moving Out Im(mortar) With many graduates and no roll call, students decorate their mortarboards to stand out in the crowd and give themselves an identity. Grace Graduate dashed into the liv- ing room of her apartment 10 minutes before commencement exercises were about to begin and pulled on her black cap and gown. “Wait!” her roommate shouted. “You can’t go to graduation looking like that.” “Why not?” Grace asked. ‘“Nobody’s oing to see my cut-offs and T-shirt un- ae: this gown. It will be a lot cooler since Diddle Arena is always so hot.” “That’s not what I meant,” Robbie Roommate said. “You cap is so plain. You haven’t done anything to it at all, and everybody puts something distinc- tive on the tops so friends and relatives sitting high up in Diddle can find them easily. “What sort of things do they use?” Grace asked. “Just wait and see,” Robbie said, grab- bing Grace’s black mortarboard. “Now finish getting dressed and I'll fix this for you.” When Grace arrived at Diddle parking — L. Gardner Theatre symbols were part of JoAnn Ballance’s mortarboard decor. Miss Ballance, who is from Bowling Green, was one of the three theatre majors who graduated at the May 14, 10 a.m. ceremony. Making photographs was an important part of the occasion for graduate Lorraine Cockran and her parents, Maidene and Eugene McMahon. Mrs. Cockran’s husband Patrick watched. — J. Burton 124 Graduation Flashback and Update lot and found the placard where her col- lege was lining up, she looked around and saw all the hat decorations. One graduate’s cap had a peacock feather stuck out of the middle. The people in university publications had flattened film cartons and ad rate cards to accent the tassel. One girl had a huge, red rose painted on hers. A graduate in theater had cut out the symbolic masks of comedy and tragedy and used them as her logo. Another guy broadcasted his feelings with the word “happy” on top of his cap. Still another guy used “Hi, Mom’ as his simple message. As the first strains of the processional were played and the lines started mov- ing, Grace thought that it was a sad day. It was sad because many people would leave behind friends, and it was sad be- cause so many Western graduates had to define their identity with a mortarboard symbol in order to stand out in the crowd. And just as she crossed the threshhold Wasting no time in advertising for a job, five sen- iors plastered their caps with letters that spelled “Unemployed.” The girls were Debbie Griffin (UN), Barbra Casada (EM), Ellen Pryor (PL), Laura Loftin (OY) and Becky Smith (ED). she remembered that she hadn't looked at what Robin had put on top of her cap. She marched past the audience and fel- low graduates and settled down for the 45-minute ceremony, all the time won- dering about her cap. She .listened to the address and the awards, and stood as she was presented as a Potter College graduate. All around her mortarboard decora- tions stood out in the sea of black. At the end, people offered congratula- tions while Grace lifted her cap and read a simple message — “Goodbye W.K.U.” Seconds later Robin was at her side. “That’s just what I wanted to say,” Grace said. “Well, ‘Robin is my roommate’ wouldn't fit,” Robin joked before offer- ing congratulations. As Grace walked to the auxiliary gym to turn in her graduation costume, she saw torn decorations discarded beside a trashcan. “It was a nice day,”she thought. “And it wasn’t too hot. I’m glad I stood out in the crowd for the last time.” — DONNA BUCKLES — L. Gardner Three students declared their unity — and the pet name for their apartment. “The Club members were home economics major Judy Parks (THE) community health major Cindy Ivins (CL) and inte- rior design major Melanie Simpson (UB). — L. Gardner Flashback: A gradual process University officials, faculty and visit- ing dignitaries, attired in traditional cap and gown, led the colorful procession of Western’s 1,862 graduates at the 113th commencement exercises May 8, 1976. Of the total number of graduates, 1,258 received bachelor’s degrees, 428 re- ceived master’s degrees and 166 were awarded associate fecrees Guest speaker was Larry B. Shelton, vice-chairman and chief administrative officer of Genesco, who told the graduat- ing class of its responsibility to “Keep America Great.” Following his speech, Shelton was pre- sented ih a iiscineuiched alumnus award by President Dero Downing. The commencement exercises were a day of recognition for both the graduates and those who distinguished themselves within the graduating class. Eight seniors tied for the top academic honor — the Ogden Cehoteehi Award — including: Mary Lynn McCubbin, journalism major; William Hopewell Orton, Jr., music major; Sarah Tay- lor Hulse, special education major; Robert Brewer Smith, psychology major; Jan Wilson Patterson, English major; Thomas Ray Jackson, government ma- jor; Beverly Norris Nation, mathematics major; and Jackie Lee Lawrence, math- ematics major. The eight also were the top scholar or tied for top scholar in their respec- tive colleges. Named top scholar of the College of Applied of Arts and Health was Reda Mae Foster, a home economics major. Top scholar of Bowling Green Com- munity College was Sherry Genell Blaine, a inl secretarial administra- tion major. At the ceremonies Dr. Raymond L. Cravens presented the Award for Excel- lence in Productive Teaching to Dr. Faye Carroll, government professor. The Award for Distinguished Contri- butions in Research or Creativity for the year went to Dr. Tom Coohill, as- sociate professor of biophysics and Dr. Jim Wayne Miller, professor of for- eign languages. Other special programs surroundin commencement weekend ineluded ROTC Commissioning Exercises May 7, where Brig. Gen. James M. Leslie, com- mander of the second ROTC region, Fort Knox, was speaker. Also, on May 7, the Department of Nursing held its annual Pinning Cere- mony for graduates of the nursing pro- gram. For the majority of the bicentennial graduating nase the commencement ceremony marked an end to the security they had found on the Hill and an en- trance into the working world. — BECKY SMITH L) 125 Graduation Flashback and Update RE thease bee ala dp soca aaah ey — J. Burton Informal discussion precedes and follows Board of Regents meetings. Student Regent Christy Vogt talked to Regent Bill Kuegel at the October meet- ing. Housing was the main topic on the agenda. A year of change for the Board of Regents created The Metamorphosis A slow metamorphosis began three years ago on the Board of Regents. But it was only during the past year that the butterfly finally emerged, spread its wings and considered flight. The metamorphosis has produced a Board of Regents with all its members on their first term. It is a collection of regents who are younger and come from diverse backgrounds than earlier boards. And, ultimately, it could prove to be a board that is somewhat less conservative. The effect of the change was most evi- dent in the past year, when four of the 10 positions on the board were filled by new,men. The result was a year of mild discussion and routine business starkly contrasted to the previous months when heated debate on personnel and tenure divided the board. Only the issue of housing raised its head to challenge the decisions of the regents. The board, in near perfect uni- sion, accepted a slight modification of the housing policy, which opened the On assignment from the Herald, managing editor Richard Halicks reviews his notes with Harry Lar- gen, vice president for business affairs, at the Jan. way for more open houses in the spring semester. The board, however, main- tained a “door ajar” policy that left many students dissatisfied. Yet it was the housing discussion that most clearly portrayed the changing character of the board. The regents were open to opinions, even agreeing to a forum with students, but it was evident that their decisions were made individually. Indeed, the words, “strong” and “inde- pendent” arise frequently when persons discuss the recent appointments. Those appointments include William Kuegel and Ronald Sheffer, who were named last spring, and Tom Emberton and Carroll Katee who were appointed in the fall. Kuegel, a farmer and dairyman, is a state agriculture leader, having served on several related boards, and is executive chairman of the Daviess County Demo- cratic Committee. Sheffer, an attorney in Henderson, has been city prosecuting attorney for Hen- 29 meeting. Dormitory fees were increased at the meeting and the installation of refrigerators in each room was also approved. Oooo) gor 78080 BODO | 0 directa| (9, poggge Saba yo ei eee, i. Ree 128 Regents derson and city attorney for the Hender- son Board of Commissioners. Emberton, an attorney from Edmon- ton, was the Republican nominee for governor in 1971, executive assistant to then Gov. Louie Nunn and was on the state Public Service Commission. Knicely, a newspaper publisher in Glasgow, has been on numerous boards including the Kentucky Advisory, Com- mission on Higher Education, the Ken- tucky Development Council and the Kentucky Commission on Corrections and Community Service. The four range in age from 39 to 52. Two attended Western. But new members have not brought the only changes to the board. In the past year, the board has created a more active committee system and established by- laws. The result, according to some re- — J. Burton gents, has been a more informed board better able to make sound decisions. While the ad hoc committee on hous- ing received most of the students atten- tion, the finance committee caught sever- al regents’ interest. J. David Cole said, “It lets the individ- ual board member become involved in financial planning, which is fundamen- tally a board policy.” Dr. William Buckman, the faculty re- gent, sees a different emphasis in finance emerging. “I think there is more interest in the individuals in the university than the buildings,” he said. The new bylaws provide a definition of the relationship between the president and the board. The lack of such a defini- tion led to some of the division on the board last year. In other business the board estab- Moments before stepping down as Board chairman, Hugh Poland notes an observation made by Presi- dent Dero Downing. J. David Cole replaced the Guthrie native as chairman at the Sept. 11 meeting. lished a faculty senate. The senate was approved last spring and began forming in the fall. The board voted in April to give Presi- dent Dero Downing a four-year contract, which would begin in August when his previous te mn ended. Also in April, the board raised the housing fee by $21. At the same time the housing committee reported that it would be financially impossible to end the housing requirement for freshmen and sophomores. — NEIL BUDDE Posing for photographer Tom Hughes are regents J. David Cole, President Dero Downing and Hugh Poland (seated) Christy Vogt, Dr. William Back man, John Ramsey, Tom Emberton, Ronald Sheffer, Bill Kuegel, Ronnie Clark, Carroll Knicely and secretary Georgia Bates as administrator Dee Gibson observes the session. — T. Dekle Always A President In the remote Nolin reservoir just north of Bowling Green, President Dero Downing went on a very infrequent April fishing trip. In those placid surroundings, so un- like the hectic pace he lives while on the Hill and at functions connected with his office, he was cleaning the fish caught during the mini-vacation. Out of nowhere came a voice. “Dr. Downing?” asked a young girl. “My daddy said you were down here. I wonder if you could help me,” she said. “T will if I can,” the president replied. “Well, I need this book for a corre- spondence course I’m taking and I won- der if you could get it for me when you get back,” she said. Monday morning when Downing was back in the office he got the book for the girl. Being president of a university has a tendency to be a 24-hour job, and that is no exception for Downing. The presi- dent always has obligations to the uni- versity even when he isn’t in his office. Downing knew this was the case when he was reinstated as president for an- other four-year term this year. “T felt the appropriate response should be to accept the challenge,’ Downing said. ‘There had never been any time ugh ; over the last eight years that I could be absolutely certain that I would continue to have the stamina and vitality to con- tinue as university president. I hope the decision that I made will be in Western’s best interest.” The president said that he tries not to look too far into the next four years, however. “We have no indication that there’s any exotic plan for highly unusual pro- grams,” he said. “We will assess the needs to see what has to be done. “Those who profess to crystal ball the future as to size and student body would have to look back over the last 10 years and see if we would have planned for the things that have transpired over the last decade,” he continued. “We have to an- ticipate and be prepared. We must adjust to the unexpected.” Asked about the Council of Public Higher Education’s (CPHE) proposal that Western become a more vocational school, Downing said there is a fallacy in it. “You do not fragment education in that way,” he said. “To have a strong teacher education program we must have strong departments in every field. “The concept is good in the fact that it is to strengthen higher education in Kentucky and erase duplicate pro- grams,” the president said. “We must explore this concept.” Downing also said he believes educa- tion can’t improve at all unless it im- proves at all levels. “We can’t ever make the progress we need to make if we think of it as frag- mented into elementary, secondary or through continuing education,” he said. If the president foresees changes for his next term, he has certainly seen a change over his last eight-year period. “At no point were things exactly like they were at any other time,” Downing said. “At the time I came into position there had emerged an attitude that was an outgrowth of many frustrations. We didn’t experience in our institution the extreme behavior that was on some cam- Downing accepts a $500 check from John McDou- al, general manager of “The Glasgow Daily Rimes,” on behalf of Donrey Media (Donald W. Reynolds Foundation, Ft. Smith, Ark.) for the scholarship program in journalism established by the College Heights Foundation. Also present were Miss Georgia Bates, executive secretary-treasurer and member of the board of the College Heights Foundation, Carroll Knicely, a regent and publish- er of “The Glasgow Daily Times,” and David B. Whitaker, head of the Department of Journalism and director of University Publications. 130 President Downing puses; it was just beginni ng to spread across the country. “After three or four years, a decided change came,” he continued. “Students for the last three or four years have been more committed to academic endeavors. It has come as a natural evolvement.” Downing said, however, that even dur- ing the years of campus unrest Western remained relatively calm. “At the heighth of most active periods of turmoil, we had a stabilizing influence that grew out of students’ family back- grounds,” he said. ‘These students seemed to have an inherently greater ap- preciation for important values. .. “They had a sense of understanding,” Downing said. The president said he still sees this understanding and knows how the course will evolve for him in the next four years by looking back at the last four. He knows that a certain amount of planning is necessary, but it is important not to look too far ahead. And he knows that he will be pres- ident and have the responsibilities of that office even during his infre- quent vacations. And he has decided to meet the chal- lenge. — DONNA BUCKLES aed Fe § ys roe kot 4 BAW OEE RARE LAT Rak BS stig. Spt PL. Dorm fees were increased at the Jan. 29 Board of Regents meeting and the installation of a refrigera- tor in each room was approved. Both drew some negative response but he appointment of Down- ing to a new four-year term netted little attention. dP dew LOT NOI PERE NT TEN — T. Dekle Honored at the Eastern football game was Greta Smith, widow of L.T. Smith. President Downing escorted Mrs. Smith as fans paid tribute to the memory of her husband, a leader in the athletic and industrial arts programs. Smith died Sept. 2. rises a — D. Frank 131 President Downing x oa, aii ui . Completed in 1967 for $1,000,000, the Lawrence W. Wetherby Administration Building has 54,000 square feet of floor space and accommodates 17 administrators. The Offices of the President, Admissions, Scholastic Development,|Public Af- fairs and Community Relations, Registrar, Undergraduate Advisement and Developmental Studies, Business, Academic Affairs, Computer Services and Institutional Research, Uni- versity Attorney and the Vice-President for Administrative Affairs are housed in the four-story facility. 132 Administration The Hill. For years it has been synonymous for the institution of Western. And as the administrators “flashback” and “update” their years on the Hill, students will learn who makes the final decisions. The administrators are at the top of the Hill. They are ... THE REAL “The things that haven’t changed are more important than the things that have changed,” said Dr. Paul Cook, assistant to the resident, when asked how he felt estern has changed since he first came here. “T lived in Potter Hall when I came to school here,” Cook chuck- led, commenting on physical dif- ferences of the campus. “It’s funny because when my mother came here she lived in Potter Hall, too.” Potter Hall is now used as a wom- en’s dormitory again. Cook also said it is easy for anew student to get lost at Western be- cause of its increasing size. ‘The only thing we can do about that is continue to remind students that there are services available to help them,” Cook said. This year at Western is a little different for Cook, too, since his daughter Sheryl has enrolled as a freshman. “I’m pleased that she’s in school here but I really feel for her,” Cook said. “I hope she won’t get tabbed as Paul Cook’s daugh- ter.” Dr. John Minton used to miss teaching and working on the ey school revel as principal, but he Last minute memos before the September Regents meeting helped prepare Dr. Kelly Thompson, College Heights Foundation President. Miss Georgia Bates, board secre- tary, helps with the final details. ° said he doesn’t any more. “T taught U.S. history at a school in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. and I had a principalship in Trigg County for five years,” said the vice-president for administrative affairs. “It was quite a decision to leave high school teaching and administra- tion, but I think I made the right decision.” Minton has more than enough administrative duties on the uni- versity level to keep him busy. Be- sides being responsible for the areas of student affairs, athletics, the health center, university-school relations, public relations and com- munity affairs and the alumni and placement offices, Minton is sub- ject to special assignments from President Downing. Since he has worked in two fac- ets of education, Minton said he feels like he can sympathize with both the problems of teaching and administration. “In lots of ways I serve to bridge the gap between the two,” said Minton, who occasional- ly lectures to history classes on spe- cialized topics. Besides coaching basketball in a flamboyant manner, the late Ed Diddle coached several other A tennis workout gives Dr. Paul Cook, as- sistant to the president for budget and re- sources management, some time with his daughter Sheryl. Miss Cook played the number 1 position on her high school team. HILLTOPPERS sports. One of Diddle’s recruits for the football team, a transfer student from Centre College, still remem- bers his first visit to the campus. “He (Diddle) personally escorted me around campus one Sunday, and when I left that afternoon I was thrilled to death,” said Dr. Kelly Thompson, President Emeritus and College Heights Foundation Presi- dent. “I shook hands with him and (continued on page 134) Mounted on a piece of plywood and coated with shellac, a collage of events in American history made by students hangs in the sec- ond floor office of Dr. John Minton, vice- president for administrative affairs. 133 Administration REAL HILLTOPPE RS cont. told him I’d be here to try to play fullback.” According to Thompson, one ad- vantage today’s students have is be- ing able t o gain career experience while in college. “When I was in college here there was no opportunity whatso- ever for me to participate in a study project that would give me the sat- isfaction of being able to put some- thing in day-to-day practice,” Thompson said. ‘We were very limited in what we could do be- cause the opportunities just weren't there for us like they are today.” Georgia Bates cannot understand why individuals who come to Western do not want to stay and make Western their career. “I don’t think there’s anything comparable to it in the business world,” explained the petite Execu- tive Secretary-Treasurer of the Col- lege Heights Foundation and Secre- tary to the Board of Regents. President Emeritus Thompson, directs the foundation, which han- dles trusts and gifts to the universi- ty. They are invested, and earnings are used for student aid, according to Miss Bates, who said more than $80,000 was awarded to students for 1976-77. “When people give you money, we think it calls for special atten- tion. A lot of my time is spent in keeping in close communication with these people who give West- ern money for aid,” Miss Bates said. “I don’t write them a thank- ou letter and let it go at that. We (eee them posted on their fund and its growth.” Miss Bates said she thought Western was big in 1956 when she came but “it just exploded in those first 15 years.” She said, “All state universities have experienced rowth over the past few years. Maybe I’m just a little prejudiced but I think Western has kept pace with change more adequately than our sister institutions.” Don Armstrong sees himself as a ublic relations man with a client. verything involved with promot- ing the good image of that client falls under his control. The client is Western, a client so large he says you can “almost lose yourself in your work.” Armstrong supervises the news bureau that sends out press re- leases, brochures and feature sto- ries on Western, heads the publica- tion and promotion of programs and sports information, is the edi- tor of Western Alumnus and teach- es several classes. 134 Administration “T have a natural tendency to be for something,” Armstrong said, explaining why he went into the ublic relations field. “I like to Lae a cause or a client and devote my total energies to that purpose.” Armstrong said Western is rede- fining its purposes for existence with changing demands from stu- dents and by going through a con- stant period of adjustment. “Students are looking for posi- tive things about Western and col- lege life in general, and the infor- mation I provide tells them about these positive things.” Although John Oldham ’s first love is basketball, he has become an “all sports person” thanks to his 6-year-old job as athletic director. “Football and basketball are the showcase sports at Western, but we have a well-balanced sports pro- gram,” Oldham said. “We have won the all-sports trophy given in the OVC nine out of 10 years.” Oldham said he thinks the men’s sports programs will remain stable and wait for the women’s programs to catch up. “Women’s sports have made progress in the last two years and should make even more in the near future,” he said. The athletic director said that, depending on financial means, vol- leyball and softball could be the next organized programs for wom- en at Western. He added that wres- tling would probably be next for men. Oldham said he doesn’t regret leaving the coaching profession to take the athletic director’s job be- cause he had 20 years of coaching experience and felt like it was “time to step down.” “And it’s not all glorious,” Old- ham added. “The most distasteful things about coaching are recruit- ing and disciplinary problems.” Finding graduates a place in “this busy, Big world” is what Lee Robertson terms as one of the big- ae responsibilities of his job as irector of alumni affairs and placement services. “We go across the state and find students to come to Western, we educate them when we get them here and then we have a great re- sponsibility when they leave here to find them a place in the sun,” Robertson ‘said. He also said the slowdown of the economy has caused very little ex- pansion in employment possibili- ties, so the job market remains tight. “Companies are looking for ways to cut expenses and they use few people,” Robertson said. “It’s just not like it was in the 1960s when employers were flocking to the campuses hiring everybody in Satisfied Hilltopper fans left the Homecoming game against Middle Tennessee State University early in the fourth quarter. Don Armstrong, director of public rela- tions, and team member Jimmy Woods stayed until Western beat the Blue Raiders, 38-7. Paper work as athletic director doesn’t keep John Old- ham from teaching his tennis classes, but a broken wrist almost did last summer. He recovered before the fall semester began. Strategy is important on and off the field for senior quarterback Done Davis as he e discusses Pes betaduanon plans with Lee Robertson, director of alumni affairs and placement services. | Members of William Bivin’s family, Alice Ann and Amy sit on the first step while the university attorney, his wife Alice, Roger, Mandy and Brownie are seated behind. Collie puppies are the family pets at the Rhea | Lazarus house. The staff assistant to the president said the dogs were 10 weeks old. Two-fold is Charles Keown’s outlook on his position as dean of student affairs. Keown said he tries to help students learn their purpose and enjoy life. sight.” But placement and the tight job market are only two facets of Ro. bertson’s job. As his title indicates, he is also responsible for all alumni affairs. “It’s hard to wear two hats be- cause both are full time jobs,” he said. “Not many universities have these two operations under the same administration.” His responsibilities include keeping alumni informed through the Western Alumnus magazine, maintaining 30 alumni clubs in Kentucky and the eastern United States, planning receptions to bring alumni together in parts of the country and establishing alum- ni funds for scholarships. William Bivin took his three in- terests — education, law and ad- ministration — and merged them into a career at Western as universi- ty attorney. Bivin counsels President Dero Downing on legal problems that concern the university, and inter- prets university legal documents. Although he cannot provide le- gal representation for students, Bi- vin said his office is always open to students who have questions con- cerning a legal problem in a non- university relationship. Bivin, who taught at the Univer- sity of Kentucky Law School before coming to Western in 1969, said he considers the Fine Arts Center the most dramatic physical change on Western’s campus in recent years. Rhea Lazarus and Western have been together for quite some time now. A Bowling Green native, the staff assistant to the president attended the university training school from kindergarten oth the 12th grade. He received his master’s de- ree from Western, and in 1960 he ete student teacher coordinator in the secondary education depart- ment. Later he was named registr ar, and in 1974 he moved into his pre- sent position. Lazarus said his job does not fol- low a set routine. His responsibil- ities include receiving reports from the department of public safety, serving on various committee and handling any special situation which arises. Comparing today’s students to those of his college days, Lazarus said, “Students today are more ma- ture, more knowledgeable and more interested in outside campus activities. Students come from more varied walks of life.” If I have any accomplishments in my job,” explained Charles Keown, dean of student affairs, “It would be in the area of helping indivi- duals find their way.” In his 20 years as dean, Keown has had a chance to do a lot of path- breaking. He oversees the opera- tion of university centers, the hous- ing office, residence halls, recrea- tional and athletic facilities, pro- duction of the university hand- book, student organizations and the concert series. Keown said the student body has undergone some changes since his first days at Western. “They seem better prepared, more sophisticat ed, more exposed to world events,” he said. Keown is quick to add that this phenomenon is “not in-depth there are exceptions in every group.” One contributing factor, though, is what he terms the “climate of society.” He said students today are concerned with rights of the indi- vidual that were just assumed in his day. Apparently no one had cause to make an issue of individ- ual rights then or in the 1950s, Keown added. The dean said he believes this change is good. He said, “Students feel freer to pursue the whys and wherefores of an issue now and they feel more like partners in the educational process than in pre- vious years.” “As an undergraduate, I did not plan to be a registrar, but I did want to be involved in higher educa- tion,” said Dr. Stephen House, uni- versity registrar. “My interests and the opportunity for this job came together.” House said, “So much of what we do in this office is dependent on others, such as the computer center and admissions. We play the role of coordinator. “T don’t experience any difficult in attempting to communicate eh the students,” the registrar said. Al- though not everyone agrees with the decisions he makes, House said most problems are “practical type problems. The answer is based on actual data, so there is not as much counseling involved,” he added. According to House, there is a greater demand for the ongoing services of his office which include workshops and seminars. “It is very challenging to try to meet those needs and, if possible, plan for in advance,’ said House. “School is no longer a nine-month operation. “I view the registrar’s office as being a part of the total academic organization,” said House. “It is not only a record-keeping system. We work closely with faculty and try to reinforce some of the same things that are being taught in the (continued on page 136) 135 Administration cat MILLTOPPERS ..x. classroom,” explained the registrar. Choosing between a career in law or administration was difficult for Dr. Thomas Updike, director of the office of admissions, but he said he thinks he made the right decision. “T had originally planned to be a lawyer, but Paes that it would not allow me to work in a direct manner with people to the extent that I wanted to,” he said. “There- fore, instead of entering law school, I entered graduate school and stud- ied psychology, student personnel services and counseling,” he added. Updike said the administration is able to develop a positive rela- tionship with students when they enter college. However, as the stu- dents enter into college life, their relationship with the administra- tion is likely to change, he ex- plained. “After the student enters the main stream of college life, he gen- erally only has contact with admin- istrators if he encounters some type of problem,” he said. Before coming to Western nine years ago, Updike worked in ele- mentary and secondary education, and at Elizabethtown Community College and the University of Lou- isville. Everything but “routine” is the description Dee Gibson gives to his position as director of public af fairs and community relations. On any given morning Gibson may at- tend a ground-breaking ceremony for a local industrial Sit handle correspondence or meet with stu- dents. “We can help promote Western to the fullest degree through vast mass communications, alumni and friends,” said Gibson. He directs the publication of news releases, university and student publica- tions, brochures and sports infor- mation. He also works with federal and state agencies, faculty, non- profit agencies and social organiza- tions who use Western’s facilities for conference and meetings. Gibson said he and his wife fell in love with Western as students in the 1940s. “During the 15 years we were away we came back to visit frequently. We decided to live in Bowling Green, raise our family and be ree while our kids were at college,” Gibson said. “It has be- come a tremendous part of our lives.” Students are now faced with ad- vantages and disadvantages, ac- cording to Gibson. “Students now are more mature and dedicated stu- dents than those of five years ago,” he said. ‘“‘They’ve lived in a more affluent society, been around more and had more opportunities.” But the director added that the student today doesn’t have the ap- preciation he should have. ‘He can’t imagine how much hard work and dedication his grandparents, parents and people who founded this country have done.” eriousness is the keynote which distinguishes the college student of today from those of his college days, according to Dr. James Davis, dean of faculty programs and inter- im vice-president for academic af- fairs. Davis said the increasingly tight job market is the reason for Student worker Linda McCubbin, a sopho- more history major from Bowling Green, talks over a project with Admissions Direc- tor Dr. Thomas Updike. Miss McCubbin works part-time in the admissions office each fall and spring semester. the more serious attitude of the stu- dent. Davis said in his college days, a student pretty well knew he would get a job if he received an educa- tion. Students are more intelligent now than when he attended college, Davis said. “This is a result of the knowledge explosion through the media forms,” Davis added. The dean said he is especially busy this year filling in during Dr. Raymond Craven’s year-long leave. His working day is filled mostly with staff and faculty meetings, along with his work involving aca- demic affairs. According to Davis, the Western campus has grown and expanded a great deal since he came 12 years ago, but he said the physical pro- ress has not altered the beauty of the campus. Davis said the most outstanding change is that 12 years ago he always hea parking space. “We touch all offices as much as anybody,” said David Mefford, di- rector of university school rela- The 16th Independence Anniversary of Nigeria made an occasion for Dr. Ste- phen House, university registrar, and son Jeff to meet Solar Oluseyi Adeyele, a freshman from Lago State, Nigeria. Ee Ah at A home football game with Troy State brought Dee Gibson, director of public relations and community affairs, to Smith Stadium to coordinate the radio broadcast. The Alabama school tied Western, 7-7, in the season opener. 136 Administration Fried chicken and cole slaw were menu items for 100 persons who attended a picnic sponsored by the Office of University School Relations. David Mefford, director, reets instructor John Carr and his wife Sherrill At the October Board of Regents meeting the mass communications cera ment was reorganized, creating a journalism department. Dr. James Davis, dean of facul- ty programs and interim vice-president for academic affairs, made the proposal. A o ne-man orchard service is a hobby of Curtis Logsdon, director of computer and informational services and director of insti- tutional research. Logsdon has 17 kinds of trees including peach, cherry and apple. tions. “We have to be able to an- swer high school students’ ques- tions. That has such a bearing on our work.” Mefford said his office has a two- fold approach to the coordination and development of university public relations with high schools in the state. “First we go to 220 high schools twice a year to talk to seniors about college. Our other big phase is to maintain good working relation- ships with all the departments and offices here at the university.” On campus, an average of five tours are given daily, according to Mefford. “The peak period hits us in early spring and late winter. Summers are spent in meetings and counselor conferences in prepara- tion for the ‘on the road’ work in the fall,” explained the director. According to Mefford, an ex- tremely clean campus is one of Western’s big recruiting pluses. “T’ve been told that the more people we can get to the campus, the better our chances of enrollment are. Stu- dents are more interested in aca- demic programs than they used to be, and I’m able to tell them about the adequate facilities here,” he said. Conferring with computer oper- ators and programmers, processing payment of computer rental main- tenance, teaching a musical acous- tics class and attending conferences with computer service users are all part of Curtis Logsdon’s daily schedule. Logsdon is director of computer informational services and director of institutional research. “We provide computer services across campus as well as provide research consultation services to people who don’t know how to use the computers,” he said. “We are constantly getting re- quests from other offices for ser- vices,” the director said. “In the fu- ture, we hope to use the computer for car registration and even the in- ventory of caps and gowns.” Looking at changes in the cam- pus, Logsdon said, “The campus is almost unrecognizable from 20 years ago. there are only three aca- demic buildings here now that ex- isted when I first came to Western, and two of these have been renovat- ed extensively.” Logsdon also sees differences in students. “Students have different expectations today than when I was a student, but they are just as intel- ligent and capable.” “Because of our backgrounds and the times, we were conserva- tive,” said Dr. Jerry Wilder about the college students of his day. “The university, more or less, was serving as the parent surrogate.” Chapel meetings were required for the first two semesters, and Wilder said most students usually continued to attend. The chapel meeting was “more or less a social gathering,” according to the direc- tor of undergraduate advisement and developmental studies. Assignment of advisers, approv- al of degree programs and adminis- tration of the general counseling ties. “Everything we do is of the nature to help students achieve their degree objectives,” said Wilder. “My personal goal is to continue to improve academic ad- visement through the University. “There needs to be better com- munication between the student community and the college com- munity, not just between the stu- dents and administration,” said Wilder. According to Wilder, a compre- hensive advisement program would include “development of friendship, evaluation of records to appraise success and talks about ca- reers. It is more than just a me- chanical process,” he explained. Few people realize that Lon as director of food services, is a businessman who supervises a chain of eating places on campus which involves feeding thousands of people e ach day. In his 19th year as director, Slaughter keeps the facilities in the Dero Downing University Center and the Garrett Conference Center Talent He is also responsible for conces- sions at sports events, concerts and other such extra curricular activi- ties, plus all vending operations. “It keeps me busy, but we're just happy to serve the people.” Slaughter’s biggest enterprise is the board plan at the Garrett Con- ference Center cafeteria. For $250.00 per semester, a stu- dent can eat two meals a day, com- plete with seconds except for meat. A salad bar, homemade pies and cakes, a selection of three vegeta- bles and a self-service drink and are included. “The meal plan was completel sold out this year,” Slaughter said. “I’m just as happy as I can be about that.” A lifetime Bowling Green resi- dent, Slaughter has watched the physical university change. “Where I’m sitting right now (his office in Downing University Center) is the exact same spot where I played tennis when I was in college,” said Slaughter, who at- tended Bowling Green Business College. Horace Shrader’s career as direc- (continued on page 138) 137 Administration cea HILLTOPPERS «on. tor of housing happened by acci- dent. ‘When I was attending graduate school here I was fortunate enough to secure a position as a residence hall director. When I got into it I liked it, so when an _ openin evolved here at the housing Brace applied for it and decided to stay,” said Shrader, who was an assistant director at Hugh Poland Hall. Shrader said that communication with students fills most of his work day. “My own personal philosophy that I operate under is that if a stu- dent wants to see me, he or she can walk through that door anytime, unless I have a previously sched- uled appointment,” the La Grange native said. Shrader said that social occur- rences do account for some general differences in the students of past Seated in the same chair as last year for his Talisman picture, Lon Slaughter, director of food services, said he wanted to pose here again because the chair and the greenery around him are his favorites. Slaughter’s home is just a few blocks from campus. 138 Administration and present. “When I went to college here in the 1960s there were activist move- ments and there was a lot of unrest on campus. | think the students to- day have gone back to more peace- falatene of involvement,” he said. Basketball fans did not climb the ramps of Diddle Arena to watch the Hilltoppers play when Dr. Ronnie Sutton was a team member. The team played where the Margie Helm Library is now, according to the dean of scholastic development. “Everything was on top of the hill, and the enrollment was 2,500 then,” said Sutton, who also said he became fond of the place and decid- ed to stay here to work. Sutton now supervises the of- fices of admissions, registrar, un- While his other two children attend a chil- dren’s theatre production at Western, Dr. Jerry Wilder, director of undergraduate ad- visement and developmental studies, plays with his 17-month-cld son Jay. Horace Shrader, director of housing, who is a Bowling Green-Warren County Jaycee, works on some preparations for the annual Southern Kentucky Fair. The event is one of the Jaycees’ major fund raising projects and attracts thousands to the area. dergraduate advisement, counsel- ing services center, veteran affairs and the orientation program. He also serves as a member of the ad- ministrative council, the Council of Academic Deans and Academic Council. In the course of a day, Sutton attends four or five meetings deal- ing with plans — maybe refining an area that did not go well in the previous registration period. “The beginning of each term is a high point because of the offices involved. We are already havin meetings concerning Fall 1977,” he said. Sutton also supervises the op- tional summer orientation-advise- ment-and registration program. In 1976, 1,532 freshmen attended the sessions, as compared to 950 in 1975. There were only 14 buildings on campus in 1963 when President Kelly Thompson asked Owen Law- son to assume responsibility as fa- (continued on page 140) At the October 30 Board of Re meeting, Dr. Ronnie Sutton, dean of scholastic devel- opment, discusses the agenda with Dr. Carl Chelf A new journalism program and the possibility of more dorm open houses, man- adatory neueing and Title IX provisions e meeting. were issues at t Named for Capt. C.J. Van Meter, a Bowling Green philan- thropist, Van Meter Hall was completed in 1911 and has a seating capacity of 1,082. Potter College and the Office of Institutional Research were once housed there. Remodeled in 1968 for $797,702, the building houses the Office of Special | Programs and the Office of Extended Campus Programs. { { j ¥ Be wy Administration -——-- ---—- ca HILLTOPPERS ..... cilities manager and physical plant administrator. Now there are 55 major buildings. “T’ve worked on every buildin on campus since I’ve been here,” the former industrial arts instruc- tor said. ‘We've remodeled all the buildings that were here when I came except two, the Kentucky building and Snell Hall.” Having watched Western “grow up,” Lawson said all improvements are geared toward the comfort of those within the university com- munity. But even though the campus has changed, Lawson said today’s stu- dents aren’t much different than those in the 1950s when he was in college. “Students today seem more aware of what’s going on in the world, but basically they still like to do the same things — go to par- ties, make friends and have a good time,” he said. Traces of the recruiting strategy he sometimes reported during his 17 and ¥% years as sports writer for the Louisville Courier-Journal and Louisville Times best describe Da- vid Whitaker’s philosophy for building a strong print media pro- ram. “With the newspaper and annual staffs here, I find myself in much the same position as a football or basketball coach. Those people don’t just go with a team of people who walk in their door and volun- tarily come there to school; they g0 out and get them,” explained the university publications and jour- nalism program director. The Western graduate who was editor of the eollere Heights Her- ald said the transition from news- paper work to his present job was uncomplicated. “T think that anyone can stay in one field too long. Peter Drucker in his book, The Age of Discontinu- ity, has a chapter where he says that along middle age everyone needs a new challenge, and he rec- ommends changing careers,” Whi- taker said. When he returned six years ago, Whitaker said the chain of commu- nication between students and ad- ministration was not as impersonal as he had expected it to be. “T thought with Western having 10,000 students it would be imper- sonal. I was surprised when I came here that the president has as much contact as he does with the stu- dents, and further that the presi- dent is someone I can see or call on any time I want to,” Whitaker ad- ded. For Dr. Charles Anderson, direc- 140 Administration tor of media services, a semester appointment nine years ago be- came an administrative career. “I like Bowling Green, and the idea of returning to Western as a faculty member appealed to me. Also at that time, some very inter- esting and ambitious plans were being made for the television facili- ties we now have. I came back to be a part of this opportunity.” he said. “It’s not so much that I chose this field of administration. I really chose this field because of a num- ber of interests — starting with ra- dio (which I got into in my teens),” Anderson said. According to Anderson, his area covers such a broad area of inter- ests and responsibilities that a reg- ular work schedule is hard for him to maintain. “Besides the regular administra- tive functions of. purchasing, man- agement of personnel, budgeting and communication with other de- partments, we try to assist every department on campus since we are also a service agency,” he said. We're probably not communi- cating with the students to the ex- tent we should be,” said Harry Lar- en, vice-president of business af- airs. “On the other hand, Western students do have an opportunity to have their voice heard through var- ious student groups. Probably the overall communications are good,” he added. According to Largen, he has re- sponsibility for the business oper- ations of the university — person- nel services, purchasing, account- ie for all university funds, phys- ical plant operation, operation of auxiliary enterprises and student financial aid. His area also assists in the management of the College Heights Foundation-owned laun- derette and bookstore. Largen terms the tremendous pe- riod of growth as the major accom- plishment since his arrival at the university. “After having gone through this period of growth, we have done an effective job and we have a strong, effective operation. It’s not neces- sarily a reflection on me, but a cred- it and reflection on all the people Weng in the business affairs of- ice. Marcus Wallace, director of pub- lic safety, said he came from a fam- ily of law enforcers and his heritage gave him a “natural bend toward it.” But that was not the only rea- son he began working in this area. “IT came to understand the basic needs of citizens everywhere,” he said. “In order to achieve self-real- ization, there is a need to do these things in an atmosphere free from In the 13 years that Owen Lawson has been hysical plant administrator, 41 campus buildings have been constructed and 12 older buildings have been renovated. Ws ny Wego Hedge-trimming with electric clippers be- came a two-day event for David Whitaker, university publications director, when a rainstrom halted the process. Dr. Charles Anderson, director of media services, takes time to inspect some wire copy at the cam- pus radio station, 580 WKYU. | A conference to decide what color to paint his 12-year-old son Kenneth’s Pedal: air- plane requires the attention of Harry Lar- gen, vice-president for business affairs. : ‘| Looking out over the mountain city of Tax- co, Mexico pete. last year’s Mexico May r }) term trip is Dr. International Student Affairs. aul Hatcher, director of fear.” “The major objective is to bring the benefits of professional law en- forcement to campus with re- straint, good judgment, compas- sion and understanding.” Accord- ing to Wallace, the university should “expect these qualities and services from his department be- cause it is their privilege to serve.” Wallace has added some services to the campus since he took the job. All bicycles must be registered with the department, and Wallace said he hopes this listing of each owner’s bicycle description will eliminate the desirability of bicycle thefts. Wallace said it is his duty to bring the benefits of law enforce- ment to the campus whether it is wanted or not. ‘Normally the com- munity considers us unnecessary. Marcus Wallace, director of public safety, who collects cherry wood and enjoys wood- working, said he plans to complete a fence along his backyard patio for privacy. People are not any more secure than they believe they are,” Wal- lace said. When Dr. Paul G. Hatcher came to Western in 1958, he and his fam- ily lived in what is now Bates-Run- ner Hall with three other faculty members. The campus ended at Virginia Garrett Avenue in those days. The director for international student affairs began his career at Western as the only professor in Spanish and the foreign language department head. e came to Western because it was a “big challenge.” “The college was growing fast and developing new programs. It was a dynamic college,” he said. Although Hatcher did not exact- ly choose his field of administra- tion, he said, “We have talked about this for years, and I’ve al- ways been interested in foreign stu- dents. I look on it (international education) as a two-way street, in- ternational students come here and we send students abroad.” For the first time, pre-orientation was offered to incoming foreign students in the fall semester. About 35 students received counseling concerning insurance, immigra- tion, naturalization, work permits, academic matters, financial aid and social security numbers. The Kentucky Library and Mu- seum is being renovated, according to Riley Handy, administrator for the facility. Space is being doubled and more adequate devices are being sought to protect art objects and manu- scripts housed in the building. In- rovements are being made in the eating, plumbing, lighting, air conditioning and humidity control systems, Handy said. Handy graduated from Western with a wk degree in library sci- ence and became administrator in 1971. A freshman in 1959, Handy said Western’s enrollment was 2,900 then. “The Hill was the cam- pus. The area where North Hall is was the limit of the campus, except for the campus farm where Pearce- Ford Tower now stands,” Handy said. The Western graduate said he thinks today’s students are much like those of his day. “All youth at any period are trying to find things out. This is a period of establishing identity; the individual flexing his limits,” he added. “Our administrators are avail- able to our students,” according to Dr. John Scarborough, distin- uished service professor and pro eee of education. “If it (student-administrative communication) bogs down, the students don’t have anyone to blame but themselves because there is a well-known ‘open-door’ policy to all administrative offices at Western,” he said. The professor is a “determinant factor” in student-teacher rela- tions,” said Scarborough. “He ei- ther shuts them up and does it all, or if he chooses the other route he involves the student in the instruc- tional process,” he added. One of Scarborough’s duties is involving students in their educa- tion through different means — in- dependent study courses, group- project work, “round table” discus- sions and student-led discussions on course-related topics. (continued on page 142) | 141 Administration REAL HILLTOPPE RS cont. When “Dr. John,” as he is known to friends and colleagues, came to Western, Cherry Hall was the place where 80 per cent of the classes were held. ‘We've had growth, but it was beautiful when I came here and it still is,” he said. “My work is very exciting and it requires changing gears every min- ute,” explained De Earl Wassom, assistant dean for academic ser- vices and director of library ser- vices. “In my work I really wear two hats.” Wassom is responsible for the administration of programs at the seven campus libraries. As assis- tant dean for academic services, he is responsible for media services which include educational televi- sion, audio visual programs and the Third District Film Library. “T always wanted to be involved with higher education, and instruc- tion is very important, but I feel (like I am) a bigger part of instruc- tion by lending support to all in- structional areas,” explained Was- som. Wassom sees change in students and in the education program. “Ten years ago, there were 6,000 students whereas today there are over 13,000, and there has been a tremendous number of buildings built,” he said. Wassom said the library ee gram has changed since he first came to Western. “Helm had just been moved into and the library staff was rather small. Today there are 80 full-time and 200 student li- brary workers.” Dr. Paul Corts describes himself as “a task-oriented person who likes tasks lined up in front of me.” As director of the university hcn- ors program and coordinator of academic degree programs, Corts said he spends half of each day in meetings and another fourth on the phone. Breaks in between are spent doing all the things that have to be done before and after a meeting. His work day doesn’t end at 4:30 when he leaves the office. Corts works at home a couple of hours each night, “reflecting on the day and organizing for the next day.” He said such organization is neces- sary or everything wouldn’t get done. Corts said he was drawn to his field for two reasons: he enjoys “the intimate relationship of teach- ing” and he is interested in aca- demic administration. He said he was impressed with the pane at Western and the cam- pus “character” — which, he as- serts, is unchanged. He defines this 142 Administration character as the cleanliness of the Broun the natural settings and the attempts at utilizing building designs that harmonize with the environment instead of upsetting it. Five years ago Dr. Glenn Crumb came to Western as director of grant and contract services follow- ing a teaching stint at the Universi- ty of Nebraska and a joint appoint- ment as physical science professor and grants and contracts cee at Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia. Asked why he switched from the sciences to administrative work, Crumb said, “Because of the num- ber of grants I had received, 100 per cent ose time was supported by grants I was directing.” Crumb’s office administers the grant and contract programs which range from research in the sciences to training programs for both un- dergraduate and graduate students. Crumb said today’s students are much like those of his college days. “T really don’t think they’re that much different. They have the same kinds of goals and aspira- tions. Perhaps there’s a more seri- ous mood among students across the country now than there was in the 1960s. “Students today seem to be more calmly pursuant of their goals, more serious in their pursuit. Per- haps that’s reflective of a shift in the economic situation when they face graduation,” Crumb said. Dr. Jim K. Goodrum brought a degree of specialization to his gen- onl practice in 1970 when he began treating over 12,000 students. “Here I’m limiting my general practice to a certain age group, one I like very much,” explained the former Marine who says he sees some interesting medicine on cam- pus. Most people think college-age people are healthy, Goodrum said, but he added that he knows other- wise. “Students can get run down and become vulnerable to illness, too. Sometimes I sound like a mother, fussing about proper eat- ing and rest. I ‘io a lot of lecturing in those regards,’ explained Good- rum. “Most people trust their doctor,” he said, although he admits that most patients want an instant re- covery. “The mononucleosis pa- tient, through guidance, has to learn to overcome his illness. And nobody likes a cast, but it’s the best way if it lets you get around.” Treating the illnesses and injur- ies of students is what Goodrum wants to do, but he said it is hard to find other professionals to work at the university. In his bedroom, Riley Handy, Kentucky Vet and Museum curator, prepares a genealogical wor to be placed in the university archives. “| don’t like for my students to be passive arid just sit there,” said Dr. John Scarborough, professor of education. Scarborough lectures to his Education 5 80 class which met on Thursday nights during the fall. Reading, gardening, and woodworking are hobbies Earl Wasson, director of library services, uses to “get away from it all.” Incoming and Sutromng telephone calls consume about two hours of Dr. Paul Corts’ daily schedule as director of the university honors program. _ Serving as doctor for Western’s football ' team breaks the routine for Dr. Jim Goodrum, director of health services. “They complain about cold stethoscopes, too,” he said with a chuckle. Students complain about the College Heights Bookstore’s ser- vices and policies, but i t uses the same policies as most university bookstores across the nation, said Buddy Childress, director. “Other than textbooks, imprint- ed merchandise such as shirts and jackets are our biggest sellers,” Childress said. “We do custom work for most of the intramural teams.” Since the closing of L and M Bookstore, Childress said policies Playing “fetch” with his 3-month-old Bri- tany spaniel, Duke, is Dr. Glenn Crumb, grant and contract services director. Duke is in quail hunting training. governing new book sales and re- turn book policies have not changed. “We sell new books for the cur- rent publisher’s suggested price and buy back used books at 50 per cent of the current price,” he said. Profits, which range from five to 10 per cent, go to the College Heights Foundation to be used for scholarships, student loan funds, rent to the University for building space, freight rates and other things, Childress said. A Western graduate, Childress worked at Woolworth’s and Ben Franklin stores before joining the university's bookstore as director of purchasing in 1961. “In 1965, we had a sundry and supply center in what is now the TV room in Garrett Conference Center. We sold the textbooks in the basement of Cherry Hall,” he said. “Also, total area of both facilities then was 6,500 square feet. Today, we have 21,000 square feet. I guess you can see how much we’ve grown. Plus, we added many things such as jewelry and cosmetic de- partments. We did not have these in the old set-up,” he said. “Today, it is much easier on me with everything in one store, and it is also a greater advantage to the student,” a added. “Consider me to be a teacher; even more a learner,” Dr. Stanley Brumfield said. “It just so happens I am an administrator.” Brumfield said this is particular- ly important for him, since he is director of the counseling services center. “Counseling is a teaching pro- cess and an educational process,” he said. “We counsel people who have too many or too few dates all the way to and including people with serious personal problems.” Because of the demands of his job as a counselor, Brumfield has no set hours, nor does he have a routine work day. “When people work with human beings, there is no such thing as a work day because human needs ex- tend beyond set hours,” he said. “It depends on the amount of energy you are willing to give.” Brumfield came to Western be- cause “they needed me and I need- ed them. It was no great magic.” Comparing today’s college stu- dent to the ones of his college days, Brumfield said he likes today’s stu- dent better. “The college student of today is freer, more independent in his thinking and not as hung up over insignificant kinds of things — sothes status symbols,” he said. As director of student financial aid, A.J. Thurman said he deals with approximately 70 per cent of the student body who request loans, grants, scholarships, assis- tantships and veterans’ benefits. Thurman said more students are seeking financial aid because of an enrollment increase, greater avail- ability of programs and funds and an increase in the number of quali- fied students, due to inflation. “It is an extremely frustrating job because of the constant change in the federal programs and the Meese We seem to have more than our share of changes,” Thur- man added. The number of scholarships in- creased from 1,600 to 2,000 this ees but Thurman said the prob- em of supplying what is needed has still not been answered. “T have a steady diet of counsel- ing, preceding, during and follow ing registration. We don’t solve all of the students’ problems, howev- er,” he added. Reminiscing about his college (continued on page 145) 143 Administration ee eeeaeaeaars” S™”-S-S—-— —_ ——EEE — — — — _— : Both the historic Margie Helm Library and the Colonnade have been complemented with adjoining modern structures. The library is part of the Raymond Cravens Graduate Center and Library. With a 950 seating capacity, the facility has a volume capacity of 350,000. The Colonnade and permanent seating of the stadium were renovated and preserved as part o f the outdoor theatre serving the Fine Arts Center. Eac of the 3,474 seats in the outdoor theatre measures 17 inches. - od a wl44 = 3 % Administration go WwW THE REAL HILLTOPPERS «on. days, Thurman said that there is a great deal of difference between students in the 1930s and the 1970s. “The competition was much great- er then. College professors were far more demanding then than they are now. Now, college is more so- cially oriented.” “College students today are more creative rather than being mere followers,” according to Dr. J. Crawford Crowe, university archi- vist. Describing Western’s present campus as “bigger and better,” he said that the school provides a greater variety of training for its students. Always fascinated by collections of historical documents, Crowe said he receives and classifies ““ma- terials that pertain to the Universi- ty faculty and student life of West- ern.” These materials include diaries of teachers, minutes of organiza- tional meetings, university reports, publications and newspaper arti- cles. He added, “I’ve always been in- terested in Western; if you're inter- ested in Western, it has a lot to offer.” Instructional support is the ma- jor function of academic services, according to Dr. Henry Hardin, di- rector. “Our job is to support the curriculum of the university,” he said. “Our activities range all the way from purchase to production to actual delivery in the class- room.” Academic services covers the ac- quisition of instructional materials used in libraries and museums, me- dia services and the university ar- chives, Hardin said. Periodical spe- cialists are hired to insure that the university's periodical subscrip- tions cover the wide range of de- A collection of Talismans is under the man- agement of Dr. Crawford Crowe, university archivist. Crowe said his job involves receiv- ing and classifying materials that pertain to faculty and student life. Evening and weekend calendars are booked with family affairs and writing for Dr. Stan- ley Brumfield. The director of the counsel- ing services center enjoys his time with daughters Alyson and Aimie. Brumfield is also interested in writing folk history. Book sales promotion prompted by lecture publicity was what Buddy Childress had in mind when he and an employe displayed novels by Bob Woodward and Carl Bern- stein prior to their scheduled fall lectures. Both men canceled their appearances. partmental studies. Hardin came to Western to teach science education. “I never intend- ed to be an administrator in a col- lege or university. I wanted to teach; I still like to teach,” the vet- eran of elementary education ad- ded. Hardin said most students are frank. “They either tell me they like something or they don't,” he said. He cited an incident several years ago when a student asked him how he censored the library. “I told him I read every one of the books and took out all the bad words,” he said. The student believed Hardin’s straight-faced performance. A fellow in Dr. Wallace Nave’s shoes might never get caught up with the type of work the office of (continued on page 146) Married for 35 years, the A.J. Thurmans are only a hill away from each other when at work. He has been financial aid director since 1959, and his wife Abbie has worked at the campus bookstore since 1971. 145 Administration ca HILLTOPPERS «on. special programs handles. Nave directs that office and said there aren’t that many new pro- grams, just constant revisions and updates on some of the established ones. Coordinating and promotin evening classes, May term an summer school programs, continu- ing education units, independent study and correspondence courses is Nave’s responsibility. His office also provides major advisement and coordination of the associate of liberal studies degree. Students have changed in recent years, according to Nave “Many students strike me as being a little more vocal about their dissatisfac- tion. They exercise a little more voice in the university administra- tion and they enjoy perhaps more freedom and greater student rights,” Nave explained. “The student of today faces a dif- ferent dilemma from when I was in school. Most college students were assured of a good job,” Nave said. “Today, we see a lot of evidence that college students in certain dis- ciplines have a lot of trouble get- ting a job with just a bachelor’s degree,” he said. Sixteen residence hall directors and assistant directors and 110 resi- dent assistants know Anne Mur- ray’s telephone number, and they call her when they have a com- plaint or problem. As assistant dean of student af- fairs, the Western graduate said she spends 80 per cent of her time lis- tening to their problems as well as those of women students, adding that the situation may involve a suicidal attempt, a disciplinary problem or a roommate complaint. “The buck stops here, so to speak, and sometimes I have to ass it on to Dean Keown,” Mrs. urray explained. “We're not here to jump on peoples’ cases all the time. We’re here to help students survive and watch them grow aca- demically and socially.” The assistant dean said there are few barriers to communication in a one-to-one confrontation, but a roup situation may create prob- ems. “With a group the quality of communication in some cases can deteriorate,” she said. “It can be- come a power struggle with the stu- dents trying to push the dean against the wall or a group of ad- ministrators saying they’re not go- ing to deal with student demands.” Readence halls have changed in recent years, according to Mrs. Murray. “We're humanizing resi- dence pale We're no longer stack- ing bodies in and collecting mon- ey,” she said. “We're making a con- centrated effort to provide luxuries. Recreation rooms are well-decorat- ed, nicely furnished and stocked with games. There are kitchens on every floor,” she added. Students have changed, too, since Mrs. Murray graduated in 1962. “The blue jean has become a common denominator. The wealthy don’t want to be stereo- types as rich kids. The poor ones don’t want to look poor. So every- one wears them. You can’t tell if someone is rich or poor,” she said. As assistant dean of student af- fairs, Howard Bailey works in job placement, takes resident hall disci- plinary action and helps prepare students for the job market. Bailey said that the job market is “hit and miss” now because suc- cess in finding a job depends upon the student’s preparation and the type of job available. He also said that although the university enroll- ment has increased, there are not as many applications for job place- ment. Job duties, Bailey said, do not re- quire extensive contact between students. He said, “I have to spend more effort to make myself known. I have to strive a little harder be- cause there are fewer one-to-one re- lationships,’”” he added. Coaches’ wives know football is their bread and butter, says Anne Murray, assistant dean of student affairs and wife of assistant coach Lee Murray. She and daughters Susan, 5 and Leeanne, 11, watch Western beat Aus- tin Peay, 12-7, at Smith Stadium. Machines sometimes need a human touch to perform well. Dr. Henry Hardin, dean of academic services, applies this idea to a vid- eo tape at his office and to his hobbies — clock collecting and farming. One piece of an antique tool collection is a holing bow- saw owned by Dr. Wallace Nave, director of special programs. Members of Nave’s fam- ily once used the bowsaw to saw small trees. 146 Administration Grass fields and shrills of officials’ whistles replace a carpeted office and the pecks of typewriters when Howard Bailey, assistant dean of student affairs, attends a flag foot- ball game at an Industrial Drive Field. os =f tag _A pea-shelling chore allowed David Chelf to have his picture made with his dad Dr. Carl Chelf, dean of Bowling Green Community College. Chelf’s daughter Jennifer appeared in the 1974 Talisman. Jim Pickens hung up ‘| his baseball coaching uniform and moved his office to Potter fiall when he became assistant to the dean of student affairs. He said the change has given him more time to counsel students about their ambitions. A Western graduate in 1971, Bai- ley said that on the whole, students have the same problems today as when he was in school. “Students are not quite as responsible now as when I was in school,” he said. He noted that students yesterday had more serious intentions to complete college and become a suc- cess. Bailey said, however, that his age helps him relate with young people on campus. “It’s easier for me to keep up with the trends of the stu- dent body than an older person could.” Dean of Bowling Green Commu- nity College and Continuing Edu- cation is a long title, but it still does not accurately describe all the du- ties of Dr. Carl Chelf. Under the community college, he is responsible for correlating the less-than-baccalureate degree which includes 35 associate degrees and three certificate programs. Chelf must also coordinate all the areas falling under continuing education. The biggest area under this section is the extended campus which represents all the locations where courses are offered away from Western. For example, this is the third year that courses are being offered through public libraries. Six hun- dred people are enrolled in seven communities. “I have the opportu- nity to see how the people in the extended area appreciate the pro grams. It is all worthwhile,” he said. Chelf did not begin his career at Western as an administrator, how- ever. He was a student who came back as a teacher and then ad- vanced to administration. Western has changed consider- ably from when he first came here, Chelf said. ‘Western had 2,500 stu- dents,” he said. “I worked in the grill and knew almost everyone and they knew me.” Students and their dress too have changed. ‘Students seem to be less in awe of professors,” he said. “And in my day, students would sit and write. They were not very in- quisitive.”’ Both Jim Pickens and Potter Hall have grayed a bit since the young man First unloaded his bags and made the “top of the hill” home during the summer of 1947. The two are together again after a nostalgic 29-year estrangement since Pickens became assistant to the dean of student affairs and moved into his Potter office. Formerly director of university centers and baseball coach, Pickens said the physical campus is much changed from his first summer in Bowling Green. “When I came here there were two dorms, Whitestone (Florence Schneider) for women and Potter Hall for the men. All the class- rooms were in Cherry Hall, and the library was in Gordon Wilson,” he said. “Nothing was below the top of the hill. Everything south, east and west is new since I was a stu- dent. “Regardless of how small or how large Westin gets, Western will al- ways be Western,” he said. “Things the founding fathers laid down years ago will have an effect on the years to come. I don’t believe we'll ever lose that Western tradition.” The word “tradition” brings four thoughts to Pickens’ mind. “First I think of Mr. Diddle and the great basketball powers he made here. I think of the students who walked across the Hill who are now alumni supporters from across the United States,” Pickens said. “I think of the great teachers and per- sonnel who have molded it together and held it together.” Lastly, Pick- ens remembered the leadership Western has experienced under four presidents. Fithian Faries has moved his film projectors, movie screens and overhead projectors five times dur- ing the 16 years he has been direc- tor of the audio-visual service center. “Each time we move, the area gets bigger, but we can never have enough room,” said Faries. The di- rector said his office has been locat- ed in three different spots in Cher- ry Hall. It later moved down the hill a bit to Grise Hall and then a little further to the College of Edu- cation building. Faries is also director of the Third District Film Library and teaches courses. He came to West- ern from Lexington where he was director of the audio-visual educa- tion program in the public school system. “No two days are alike,” said Far- ies, who supervises approximately 45 student workers. He consults with people on campus and han- dles machine repairs. His office is also responsible for showing films on campus. Fairies said the audio-visual equipment is for everyone to use. “deudents can come in and check out anything as a teacher would if they leave their I.D.,” said the di- rector. His weekends are often spent at Western, too, because Faries works as the public address announcer at all home football and basketball games. As assistant dean of student af- fairs and director of the university (continued on page 148) 147 Administration es —— —= ——E Se et a A cea HILLTOPPERS .... centers, Ron Beck can think back a few years to when he was a West- ern student and see the programs he now heads as non-existent. Beck serves as liaison between the associated government and the administration negotiating con- tracts for concerts, fogs and oth- er programs and handling the Shysical arrangements involved with such activities. A student himself eight years ago, Beck said the physical growth of the campus is the one major change that has taken place since his first student days. “There is a danger that as a uni- versity grows bigger, it will lose that personal touch,” Beck said. “I don’t think that has happened with Western. We are even more student oriented today.” Beck said he is going to move into new areas this year. His main objective includes establishing a student darkroom and a eesren lie tening room in Garrett Conference Center, and a reception room in the Downing Center. Sometimes Larry Berry leaves the paperwork on ne desk, walks down the hall to the lobby of Potter Hall and sits there so he can talk to students. “A lot of people who want to talk don’t come in to see us,” the assis- tant dean of student affairs said. Berry considers himself on-the-job 24 hours a day and wants to help students when they need him. Each year Berry edits, publishes and distributes the student hand- book, Hilltopics, and the resident hall handbook. He also plans the budget for student affiars, housing, the university centers and eac resident hall. Residence hall renovation is also a major project in student affairs. “Some halls still don’t have recrea- tion rooms and floor kitchens,” Berry said. His studies show that these things are important to students. The housing Morte in the fall forced some students to be moved into some of the areas to be ren- ovated. “We haven’t had time to think of other plans yet,” the assis- tant dean said. Working with students as both teacher and administrator, Berry has observed many changes in the students since the time he first came to Western. Students in the early 1960s had the same general interests as those today, Berry said. “Today, there is a totally proliferated student body — not at all interested in the same things.” Berry said this individual- ity is good. “With the Vietnam War, stu- dents were awakened emotionally,” Berry said, and he thinks this led to an era of considerable unrest and violence. “People are more pas- sive. Jones Jaggers Laboratory School is under a new administrative um- brella, according to Dr. Donald Rit- ter, director. This umbrella is the Center of Child Study, developed by the Col- lege o f Education. Ritter said the program began with a reexamina- tion of the lab school and its role in the university. “As a result, we are taking a look at what children learn, and what Football at the Ron Beck house is seldom just a family affair. The assistant dean of student affairs and director of university centers said neighborhood kids often join him and his son Matthew in the scrim- mages. Matthew is a first grader. ChE ate, and how teachers teach, and what Sele children from learning,” he explained. itter was an elementary educa- tion teacher in the public school system for 10 years and taught in the elementary education depart- ment at Western before becoming director of the school. “T like to work with elementary education age children. It’s helped me use what I’ve got — what I could offer most,” he said. Ritter said students today have a better education, background and experience as compared to the stu- dents of the past. “Students today are more insis- tent that instructors do their jobs and teach something,” said Ritter. “Students were a little more passive then, whereas now they are more Forty-five student workers call Fithian Faires boss. The director of the audio-visual service center supervises the students who show histo- ry films to students fulfilling course require- ments or getting extra-credit points. | ) Hobbies are sometimes neglected since Larry Berry considers his job as assistant dean of student affairs a 24-hour duty. He did get some time off during the fall semester when an injury sustained in a tennis game forced him into a a cast. Berry was still not able to enjoy his hobbies — gardening, farming or hunting. 148 Administration Mornings for the Jones-Jaggers Laboratory School director begin in the halls and class- rooms where Dr. Donald Ritter greets children and teachers. Budgets are Harold Smith’s con- stant companions. At work, Smith is director of accounts and budgetary control, and at home he budgets his time so he can enjoy gardening, boating and camping. Fix-it-man is Larry Howard’s second career away from his job as director of purchasing. “I love to repair television sets and most of all I enjoy auto mechanics,” Howard said. aggressive and less fearful of ex- pressing their views.” In his spare time, Ritter is a ham radio operator and is building a transceiver. “It gives myself and my son something to do together,” he added. Harold Smith is honest and prac- tical. The director of accounts and budgetary control said he realizes that closer communication between administrators and students is needed, but the work load of an administrator - often limits that communication. “Communication should be as close as possible, but you can’t walk around like a politician shak- ing hands; there is work to be done,” Smith explained. Smith is responsible for super- vising and coordinating the func- tions of accounting, receipting of cash and disbursing of funds. Things have changed quite a bit since he first came to Western. The university's operating budget then was five millon dollars compared to the thirty-seven million dollar cur- rent budget. Students and facilities have changed as well, according to Smith. He said that all the dormi- tories at the base of the hill, Dero Downing University Center and the Wetherby Administration Building have been constructed. “Students have more freedom. We take education for granted,” Smith said. “Before, it was thought of as a privilege to attend college.” Larry Howard doesn’t count sheep when he has trouble falling asleep; he counts red and white stickers. The stickers are used in inven- tory control, one of Howard’s big- gest tasks as director of purchas- ing. “Inventory control is placing a one-inch by one-inch red and white numbered sticker on all items over $20 purchased by the university,” Howard explained. ‘Hopefully ev- ery item has this sticker on it. This helps us total our assets which are reported to Frankfort once a year,” he added. Howard, who began his purchas- ing career as a state purchasing in- spector, is responsible for the print pho central stores, shipping and the warehouse. “Each day presents a new chal- lenge and a new way to eRe an old problem,” said Howard. “One minute I may be handling paperwork at my desk and the next, rit be up on the hill planning rooms for a building.” He said he thinks the adminis- tration and students should get to- gether on university problems. “In my case, if a desk is falling apart, I want to know about it. The admin- istration does not sit in the desks, the students do,” the director said. Students in 1976 don’t pay for as much of their education as students of past times have, according to Howard. “Don’t get me wrong. I’ m not cutting down the students, but back in the 1950s there was not as much money circulating. Today, parents can afford to pay for their SU education,” said How- ard. His job in educational adminis- tration has given Dr. Charles Clark enough Heck etal and training to begin another career — public rela- tions. Assistant dean for extended cam- pus programs, Clark said he feels very much like a public relations man. “The extended campus pro- gram offers valuable opportunities, and is good for Western’s relation- ship with outside communities,” he said. An extended campus, according to Clark, is “the expansion of the educational services outside the physical boundaries of the campus. Classes are offered wherever they are requested,” Clark said. Clark said traveling and meeting Pecks is rewarding. “We_ have een instrumental in giving the op- portunity and motivation to young Becks who normally may not have ad the chance to receive college degrees.” As an administrator, Clark said he enjoys the closeness he has with teachers and students. “The fact that my job requires my personally meeting and planning these courses with the teachers and stu- dents allows me to be very close,” he said. Reflecting on the differences of college students today and when he was a student, Clark said, ‘Stu- dents today are very different; not bad, just different. They seem more aware and more educated. But then there is so much more to be learned,” he added. James B. Tomes said he likes be- ing director of personnel. “I enjoy working with personnel and per- sonnel and people are synony- mous.” Tomes said his department has more contact with the faculty and staff than any office other than the president’s. Tomes must interview anyone hired by the university. Be- cause the personnel department is- sues the payroll and administers the personnel-staff benefits pro- gram and the: Affirmative Action (continued on page 150) 149 Administration pie te aa a ie ca HILLTOPPERS «... program, all employes come through his office at sometime, he added. Tomes said his only student con- tact comes through the student identification system. He said he would like to improve communica- tion with students, especially in the area of student payroll. ‘My area just writes the student parol checks. We don’t decide who gets them or the amount of the check,” he said. ‘Most students don’t realize that the student finan- cial aid office decides these things.” Plans for the personnel depart- ment include a program to pay staff members on a bi-weekly ee in- stead of monthly — and a program to bring the university into compli- ance with the Rehabilitation Act, he said. Tomes, personnel director since 1968, said his greatest accomplish- ment has been the establishment of a formal personnel administration. Before the establishment of the per- sonnel office, Tomes said each de- partment did its own hiring with no central system for salaries and personnel. Since coming to Western, Tomes has watched the physical plant ex- pand and the parking situation get worse. “T think about the parking situa- tion every time I hire a new staff member: That’s one more parking space to come up with,” he said. “The student of today has more buying power and more money to spend than we did,” said Clarence Teamwork is what the Charles Clarks use in their hobbies. The assistant dean for ex- tended campus programs adjusts the water- flow on his handmade fountain in his back- yard. His wife Sybil planted the flowers. 150 Administration Tabor, director of auxiliary busi- ness and services. Tabor supervises areas in which the university receives an income by charging students for services such as food, laundry facilities, a post office, mail delivery and tick- ets. He also has “indirect responsi- bility in the financial end of hous- ing and the recreation area,” in- cluding the movie theatre, bowling alley and the billiards at the stu- dent center. Tabor said he may spend as much as four to five hours each day taking care of his correspondence. “T try to make it a point to visit at least one or maybe all of the food services every day,” he said. “I try to get by the ticket office once or twice a week and the post office, mail room and coin laundry regu- larly.” Student requests have prompted improvement. “We followed the re- ie of the student government this year in that we have a free ve hicle to take students to the coin laundry.” “In food services, we did some upgrading of equipment in trying Grandpas are handy for gentle pushes and words of encouragement down a steep slide. Clarence Tabor, director of auxiliary busi- ness and services, entertains his grandson Derek, 4, in Tabor’s backyard. Fishing one of Kentucky's lakes is one of James Tomes’ favorite hobbies. But when the director of personnel doesn’t have enough time for that, he enjoys reading by a bay window in the Cemetery Road home he recently built. Ee to offer students better food,” said Tabor. “I would like for the stu- dents to give us an honest and frank evaluation of our food ser- vices.” , A graduate of Centre College, the director said students of his college years were less informed. ‘The col- lege student of today has many more up-to-date facilities to help him in education,” he said. 0 _ Pict, % OP « os Se RD | 25a: Yi Fa ae See e 3Bo LP) ai dy yt 2 et; or - a) ‘ yw wee” : IY ao Dedicated Thursday, Nov. 6, 1939, the Kentucky Building Se and Museum is devoted to the preservation of Kentucky historical material. Over $125,000 in gifts from friends and alumni was spent on the building before the Depression caused a halt in construction in 1933. Later funds from the Commonwealth of Kentucky and the College Heights Foun- dation were used to complete construction. - te 5 a : —, P x 3 a ‘ 5 wien : ae Sats eS Shes EE Administration . 7 a a ae 152 Business College of Business and Public Affairs They fit into Grise Hall, a modern building on the slope of the Hill, as they train themselves for Students in the College of Business and Public Affairs are making better lans for a profession, according to Wil- lian Jenkins, dean of the college. “Students today are career oriented and are thinking more about planning for themselves in the future,” Jenkins said. “In this college we tend to get the student who has made up his mind and sticks to a career.” Jenkins also said attitude is a major factor in this. “Students are more pur- poseful today than they were five years ago, and I think this is a reflection of peacetime economy,” Jenkins said. “Their motivation is learning.” Jenkins said the departments are very cooperative with ae other in special events, such as the newsletter of the col- lege called Grapevine. Instigated by Carolyn Fost, instructor of economics, the first issue of the newsletter gave a wrap-up of the depart ments, and report- ed changes that had occurred recently. It also listed special projects of the college. Dr. Vernon Martin, assistant dean for public affairs programs and director of public service institute, echoed Jenkins’ ideas about the attitudes of the student today. He also outlined some changes that have occurred in the college. “There has been a tremendous im- provement on the faculty,” Martin said. “They are well-qualified and come from just about every part of the country. This provides a higher quality of instruction. More emphasis can be placed on re- search nn public service activity,” Mar- tin added. Dr. Robert Oppitz, assistant dean, said there is an increased interest in account- ing, business administration and secre- tarial science. Although popular, these areas need improvement, Oppitz said. “T believe that we need both additional and stronger faculty especially in the ac- counting area. You could say that as and Public Affairs things stand now, we are operating on borrowed time,” he said. “Our classes are too large for effective instruction. If we were working in a more competitive market, I feel our stu- dents would be penalized because we are not able to do as much for them as other schools can in the way of individual in- struction,” Oppitz said. Since coming to Western in 1964, Op- pitz said the university has become a more stable operation. “At the time I came to Western there were few people who had been here for more than a year or two. The turnover is no longer what it once was,” he said. Students have also changed in the past 12 years, Oppitz said. “T think the best students of 1966 are as good as the best students of 1976, but “B-” and “C” students of today are a lot more capable than their 1966 counter- parts,” he concluded. In a year full of presidential politics and Congressional investigations, the government department is trying to keep its students informed through special seminars about the current topics in our governmental system. According to Dr. George Masannat, head of the department, the senior semi- nar class was set up to study current political issues which affect the world. Masannat said the fall class concerned itself with the “Intelligence Communi- ty,” and the class in the spring fo- cused on “The Role of Terrorism in our World.” The government department also con- tinued a special program concerned with the workings of the United Nations. This program included a trip to a region- al model U.N. gathering where students participated in mock U.N. meetings. Dr. Faye Carroll, sponsor of this pro- gram, said the participating students were assigned to a country and had to |Calculated risks familiarize themselves with that country. The students represented that county in the mock meetings. “This will let them see first-hand how the U.N. operates, and will make very clear the purpose of the United Na- tions,” she said. Masannat said job opportunities for Bev euch! majors and minors who ave concentrated in the area of Ameri- can government have been quite good. He also said Western has a good per- centage of its students accepted into law school. ‘The worst job opportunities, ac- cording to Masannat, are in the areas of government theory and _ interna- tional relations. An air of confidence blows gently in the business administration depart- ment when faculty members evaluate its program. “Our programs are as good as any of- fered in the state,” said br. Robert Nel- son, head of the department. “However, business is a very dynamic area, and this means we must be continually changing A painting done by Mrs. Edward Coffman graces the living room of Dr. William Jenkins, dean of the Bowling Green College of Business and Public Af- fairs. The Je year oll Ri all vlc resident studied painting in an extended campus course. our programs to keep up-to-date.” To update the programs, two courses, | Management-Union Relations and Or- i Bepcttion Theory and Behavior, have a een added to the curriculum, Nelson said. Plans are also being made to offer a course in international business. ‘| The increasing size of classes is a 1}, problem in the department, according to Bilson. “Because of the larger classes, there is less interchanging of ideas be- tween students and teacher. There is less )| feedback, and we need more faculty per student because of the very nature of business,” he said. : At Western since 1972, Nelson became department head in 1973. He said addi- tions and deletions from the curriculum | |) were made to meet the constant changes in the business world and to prepare stu- | dents. “It’s been changed for the better,” he added. Revision of the Kentucky court sys- tem means that court stenographers are needed desperately, said Dr. Hollie Sharpe, meee of the department of busi- ness education and office administration. Sharpe said he hopes to initiate a court reporting program, and a committee has been formed to organize a program. He said two machine shorthand classes ‘are offered now, but students must attend another school to get the two- year degree. “It’s a demanding 24-month period, but you’re your own boss,” Sharpe said. “A court stenographer in a big city such as Chicago, New York or Boston makes | $12,000-$40,000 a year while one in Ken- tucky can make $15,000-$25,000.” | The department head said he learned _ the skill at Northern Iowa State Univer- ; | Besides the “regular” hobby of lawn work, Dr. ; Robert Oppitz, assistant dean of the Bowling . Green College of Business and Public Affairs, also | considers the gradual process of grooming his two | white poodles a very active hobby. sity. “Western is the first state university to offer machine shorthand. No one else has promoted it,” he said. A college degree is more prevalent to- day, Sharpe said. “Many jobs that once required a college degree don’t need it. But with the knowledge explosion, it’s next to impossible to have a bare grasp of what’s happening without post-secon- dary education,” fa said. Although a surplus of certified teach- ers exists, Sharpe said people in business education have it easier. “Those people (continued on page 154) A recipient of the distinguished Research Award, Dr. George Masannat, head of the government de- partment, says he would like to add two more in- structors to his staff to lighten the load for those faculty members engaged in research. Better instructors in the Bowling Green College of Public Affairs have improved its programs signifi- cantly, according to Dr. Vernon Martin, assistant dean for public affairs programs and director of the public service institute. hed WE aT We | i! epee [vee bh 153 Business and Public Affairs 154 College of Business and Public Affairs cont have double insurance. They can teach and perform successfully in the busi- ness world.” Other people are more limited in the nature of the jobs they can perform,” he said. “A smaller salary is better than no salary.” “IT wish we could overcome the image of being a tough discipline,” said Dr. enna Cann, head of the department of economics. “We've gotten it because to be successful in economics you must have an analytic mind, and not all stu- dents have that talent.” Cann added that another reason the economics curriculum has a reputation of being tough is that the concepts can- not be learned by memorization. “Eco- nomics deals with abstract concepts which take work to understand,” he said. But in spite of the reputation, there has been a renewed interest in recent eats partially because of national prob- ems with inflation, according to Cann. “People are becoming more conscious of environmental problems,” he said. Most economics majors go to work in the business world, and the job market is good, Cann said. There are also jobs available in government, such as in Civil Service. One of Cann’s goals is to expand ac- tivities in the area of economic education on the elementary and high school level. “Part of the problem with economics is that we’re graduating millions of high school students who know nothin about economics,” Cann said. “We nee to create a basic economic understanding for the community in general.” If any of the 682 students enrolled in Accounting 118 happen to be taking it a second time, they may not recognize it. Dr. Charles Hays, head of the accounting department, said the lab for the introduc- tor y course has been dropped, and ex- aminations are given on a group basis. “There was a physical problem of con- ducting such a lab. Access to a key punch machine to do the work is a real prob- lem,” Hays said. “We also had serious Business and Public Affairs doubts that students were getting the benefits we hoped for.” The lab was required to familiarize students with computers early, although majors must also take an introductory computer science course, Hays said. The department head also said uni- form group examinations give students fair treatment. “All 682 take the same exams an d are graded on the same basis. Why should one student have a more difficult test and get a “B” or a “C” while another student gets an “A” on an easier test and knows the same amount,” Hays said. At Western since 1963, Hays headed the business administration department for five years. He said he watched the university and the accounting depart- ment change. The changes relate more to external forces than to internal events. “As a de- partment, accounting is unique in this college,” Hays said. “It’s the only de- partment where students develop and practice a profession. There’s a fan- tastic Prolite eon of knowledge and roles,” he added. The department head said accounting students do not expect to get by easy. “They have to know a lot nal work at the complicated concepts. It requires an ana- lytical mind. An accountant has to see through a maze of things,” according to Hays. “If he is willing to do the work and pay the price, the rewards are both finan- cial and otherwise. Small businesses de- pend upon Certified Public Accountants (CPAs) who work with taxes, records and financial statements. The CPA often tells them what they can do and what they can’t do.” Hays added. A college education is on Dr. Kirk Dansereau’s priority list. “Once you have a college education, it stays with you, and that can’t be taken away from you,” said the head of the department of sociology and anthropology. “It provides you atts the tools that allow you to ob- serve, to analyze and to make decisions.” Fishing for crappie and bass and water skiing are the main activities Dr. Robert Nelson and his fam- ily enjoy on their 15 ft. Cobia boat. The business administration department head said his family usually goes to Barren River reservoir. ea Y 3943 Xt Dansereau said the department is three-fold in its scope as it includes soci- ology, anthropology and social work. Demography, industrial sociology and criminology and corrections are also in- cluded in the department’s program, Dansereau said. Revisions and improvements are com- ing to the department through a four- year plan, he said. Rather extensive revi- sion is being made to the social work toward accreditation in the spring, Dan- sereau said. Graduates have been rather successful when looking for jobs, according to the department head. One graduate works with the federal prison system in Florida, and another is a department head at a junior college there, Dansereau said. “We've turned out some excellent kids,” he added. (continued on page 160) Because he said he has had his Talisman picture taken doing just about everything else, Dr. Hollie Sharpe, head of the business education and office administration department, had his picture made entering his Cheyenne Drive home. By taking a “working vacation” last March during spring break, Dr. Charles Hays was able to convert his utility room into a study. The head of the ac- counting department laid the carpet and also did all plumbing and electrical work. STUDENT | WORKENS © ONLY This traditional scene of gauchos riding into the dawn is part of the Latin American collection be- longing to Dr. Kenneth Cann, head of the econom- ics department. According to Cann, there are still some gauchos in Latin America. Chatting with Dr. Kirk Dansereau, head of the sociology and anthropology department, are stu- dent workers Deborah Lawhorn, Ann Michelle Cissell and Mary Delaney. All three of the girls come in to work following their morning classes. 155 Business and Public Affairs a features touchy subject rip-off dodgers e Office Administration: Machine shorthand: A e Business Administration: Bargain hunters and Machine Shorthand: A touchy subject Trivia buffs, how much do you remember about the Perry Mason series? It seems that Perry Mason (Raymond Burr) and his sidekick (William Hopper) were always defending unfortunates who happened to be considered the leading suspects for a crime. Also “PEsen ie in the court were the judge, bailiff and a sharp-witted prosecutor, Hamilton Burger (William Talmadge). Is that all who appeared on camera? At first a person might think so. But quietly tucked in the corner, not of any notoriety and barely making a sound, was the court reporter. After all, someone had to keep the “minutes” of the trial. While members of Machine Shorthand 213 are probably not aspiring to be ona lV series, some are getting the first taste of what may lead to a court reporting job. The class instructor, Dr. Hollie Sharpe, emphasized that Western doesn’t prepare the students totally for a court reporting job. He said interested students have to attend an 18-24 month program at one of 42 sanctioned court reporting schools across the nation. In explaining the use of the touch shorthand machine, Sharpe said students use all fingers while taking dictation, but are able to look at the people who are talking. Gregg shorthand relies primarily on the use of symbols whereas machine shorthand requires the student to touch the keys in accordance with pho- netic sounds. In the beginning course, students take three-minute and five-minute speed tests, and are allowed no more than a two per cent margin of error. After taking dictation, students have 20 minutes to complete typewritten transcriptions of what they took in shorthand. This is something new for the beginning machine shorthand class as — M. Lyons Sharpe formerly had the class writing transcripts in longhand. Asked why he changed class procedure, Sharpe said, “We'd found that all of the students had previously had typing, and most were ‘a bit fait er down the road’ than usual.” Students who completed the first course usually take the advanced machine shorthand class and the legal stenography course. Sharpe added that students in the advanced class build up their speed as high as 130-140 words per minute. According to Sharpe, the students are expected to practice one hour per day outside class for the beginning and advanced courses. He said, ‘We don’t think that’s asking too much because it is so demanding. “Court reporting is a field that doesn’t cater to either sex. Men can definitely do as well as women if they are willing to put out,” Sharpe said. Some students who have taken the courses agreed that they preferred the machine shorthand technique over Gregg shorthand. Nancy Orndorff, a sophomore legal secretarial administration major, said she found touch shorthand to be ‘easier and faster” than the Gregg shorthand she learned in high school. She said she now takes 120 words a minute in dictation. Twila Garner, also a sophomore legal secretarial administration major, said she did not mind switching over to machine shorthand although the speed element was more difficult. — JIM SIWICKI After taking dictation, Nanetta Sanders, a freshman from Hopkinsville, looks over what she has taken down on the in shorthand. According to Hollie Sharpe, the class in- structor, 80 per cent of the business letters done in the touch shorthand machine. Following dictation the stu- beginning level of the class must contain no mistakes in or dents have 20 minutes to transcribe what they have taken er for students to get an “A” for the course. 156 Business and Public Affairs Bargain hunters and When it comes to con- sumers, two things are cer- tain. People do buy and are always on the lookout for a bargain. But what about hidden as- pects of consumer behavior? Why do people buy what they do? When they do? Where they do? And what happens after a purchase is made? These questions, although difficult to answer, all in- volve consumer behavior. It is so important that most colleges and universities in the United States now offer a course in it. At Western, the course is Business Administration 321, or Consumer Behavior. “There are people in tex- tiles and clothing, interior design, mass communica- tions, psychology, agricul- ture and business adminis- tration in this class, said Dr. William Shanklin, course instructor. Shanklin said he considers the course to be popular and it is his favorite to teach be- cause it is so relevant to what happens every day. “When the students see something in the paper about a lawsuit and the Fed- eral Trade Commission (FTC), they can relate to this,” he said. Relevancy is a prime rea- son Ronald Brumleve, a ju- nior from Louisville, is tak- ing the class. “I like it be- cause it gives a basic knowl- edge of consumer behavior,” he said. Brumleve said the course is especially relevant in to- day’s society. “It (the course) helps you to be more aware of what goes on and how you are influenced,” he said. Another student, Candace Cornette, agreed with Brum- leve. “I’ve learned a lot from this class. It’s a course you can relate to,” she said. Miss Cornette, a senior from Drakesboro, said she took the class because it counts toward her busi- ness minor. “Of the class- es I had to choose from, this class sounded the q Looking at the Genesco Company exhibit for the College of Business and Public Affairs’ free enterprise is Jim-Ed Veaxey of Bowling Green, who came to see the fair with his mother after school. The Genesco exhibit featured the most interesting.” An inter-disciplinary approach is used in teach- ing the class, Shanklin said. “To understand con- sumer behavior, we draw from such areas as social psychology, psychology, sociology, anthropology, economics. and marketing,” he said. “We see what they contribute to this area of consumer behavior.” Shanklin said class dis- cussion is important. “Oc- casionally, students bring up topics they would like to discuss.” One. such topic, Shanklin said, was the buying process when a death occurs. “They (the classes) wanted to bring in a funeral director to ex- plain funeral costs,” he said. “They also wanted to evalu- ate how people can be ‘ripped off’ when a death oc- curs.” The course is valuable to students for several reasons, Shanklin said. “In my view, the course is valuable to those who plan to deal with consumers. It will also help students be better consum- ers,” he said. In comparison to other cultures, Americans, in gen- eral, are excellent consum- ers, Shanklin said. “Within American society, however, one third of the people are very poor consumers.” To combat this, there are several sources for help. Shanklin said one good source is Consumer Report Magazine. “It lists products and brands and is a good source when you buy dura- ble goods,” he said. The biggest concern of Consumer Report is product performance. “The magazine is concerned that the prod- uct does what it says it can do, and that false and decep- tive advertising is avoided,” Shanklin said. The FTC is another source that can help avoid fraud. Shanklin said the FTC is limited in what it can do, however, because of a short- ness of staff. “They (the FTC) are not rip-off dodgers | — T. Dekle “great American business machine” as its theme. Set up in Diddle Arena in September the fair is an annual event jointly sponsored by each department of the college. Dis- plays are done by the college and private companies. | staffed enough to come to the consumer’s aid on a lo- cal level — unless a massive fraud is involved,” he said. Shanklin said state and lo- cal governments are also taking an initiative by estab- lishing small claims courts. New York and Massachu- setts are very protective of consumers in the laws and measures they have passed. Shanklin said Better Busi- ness Bureaus are also be- coming more effective. But regardless of the aid against fraud, consumer awareness is important. “College students are fairly good consumers,” Shanklin said, but I wish consumer economics was a mandatory course in the secondary level of education.” He said students who do not go to college need to be- come more aware of con- sumer economics and its as- ects. “We need to get them Eater they quit school so they can help themselves,” he added. — TOM SIWICKI 0) 157 Business and Public Affairs fearures e Accounting: An accounting class not open to majors e Government: Mom, put your apple pie back in the oven e Sociology: Affection for a country scorned by many An accounting class not open to majors Accounting for Decision Making and Control (Accounting 480g) is not open to accounting majors. In fact, the accounting department feels that is doesn’t add anything to the program. Dr. Charles Hays, head of the accounting department, said the course is specifically designed for business administration majors, “people who will presumabl be the managers in the world.” Hays said the course is for people who don’t have much accounting background other than 118 or 119, the two basic courses. “We cover comprehensive budgeting, cost volume, pee it, variable costing, and ong-term decision making,” he said. The class helps the students understand “how accounting information is derived and can be used in a decision-making process.” “An accounting major will have 27 to 30 hours in accounting and we feel it (the course) wouldn’t add anything to his program,” he said. Dr. Robert Nelson, head of the business administration department, said he specifically requested Mom, put your apple Imagine taking a course where the instructor wants you to generalize instead of being specific. “In American studies we want the students to make generalizations about what they think the American experience really is,” said Joe Boggs, chairman of the American studies program and one of three instructors for the course. “Students are asked to look for ideas that are uniquely American,” Boggs said. “This can be seen in anything that the student sees or experiences. Books, movies, audio visual aids and students participation are used to achieve the course 158 Business and Public Affairs objectives, he said. The American studies class is offered through the English, government and history departments. Dr. Charles Bussey is the instructor from the history department, Dr. Faye Carroll is from the government department and Boggs teaches the class from the English department angle. he course combines majors and minors from the three departments and brings varied opinions and ideas together at each class meeting, according to Boggs. “The students make the course,” Boggs said. “Their participation and willingness to discuss the subject matter will make the course the course for his Master of Business Administration students to prepare them for top management positions.” He said the course provides tools and techniques which “management can use.” “Very few accounting professors are being produced” in colleges and universities these days, according to Nelson, and Western hasn't been untouched by the scarcity. As a result, business administration major and accounting majors were Peevey taking an upper evel theory course together, and the accounting majors were better prepared for it. The professor “had two classes within the same class,” Nelson said. “What do you do with a dichotomy like that?” He explained that if the teacher structured the class for the slower group the others were bored, yet if he went at the faster group’s level he would lose the slower group. This was the reason he asked Hays to develop a class specifically structured for business administration students. Now the class will consist of “MBA students who will compete with each other on the same level,” Nelson said. — JILL MC SWEENEY (1 pie back in the oven interesting or boring.” Each student is required to keep a journal which includes the student's personal reaction, opinions and feelings about mate- rial studied and about class discussions. “Students may write about a book they're reading, a television show or maybe just a personal experience and how it relates to the American experience,” Boggs said. “The class is operated on a seminar basis,” he continued. ‘We have studied American religion, value system, nationalism, patriotism and the Amer- ican hero.” A.T. Stevens, a senior history major from Nashville, said he wished there were more classes like American studies. “T like it very much; it is the type class that you enter with a certain frame of mind. It’s not something you're used to,”” Stevens said. ‘It’s not like any other class I’ve ever had.” American studies is a two semester course, but students may take one semester without taking the other. “The American experience is something which each person absorbs from his own experience,” Boggs said. “We're looking for a big picture of American life.” — CHERYL SHARP (} Affection for a country scorned by many On the first floor of Grise Hall, one door looks like any other. The fifth door on the left, however, opens into an office that is unique in its collection of Vietnamese items. These have special meanings for Dr. ai Miller. Miller, an assistant professor of anthroplogy and sociology, has toured Vietnam three times. Besides collecting enough material to write a dissertation and two magazine articles, he ‘also acquired an undying interest in the country. “Obviously, I didn’t hate it. I developed an interest in Vietnam,” Miller said. “Quite frankly, there were some ghastly things going on. I guess I felt once the war was over, the country would be a little paradise, at least in the Mekong Delta.” Miller toured Vietnam twice during the war as a naval officer. After sign- ing his commission in 1969, he entered graduate school at Southern Illi- nois University, and visit- ed Vietnam once more in 1973 to gather information for his Wieder anon “Hopefully, the political climate will be such that my wife and I can visit Vietnam as a family,” Miller added. His wife Ngoc-Phuong, has relatives in Vietnam. She left her country 13 years ago and met Miller through a Vietnamese language class she taught in Los Angeles. Their two children, whom Miller adopted during his last visit, are six and seven years old. Their pictures, along with dozens of colorful scenes of Vietnam, plaster Miller’s office like wallpaper. “Tt was inevitable,” Miller said of Vietnam’s fall. “The United States could have put it off had they chosen to do so. In effect, we postponed the fall from ‘65 to ’75 at a cost of $100 billion and 50,000 lives,” he added. “If we had been willing to pay the price, it could have been possible to delay it another 10 years.” Miller said his opinion on United States involve- ment in Vietnam changed with time. “My first tour of duty, I was 100 per cent behind United States action in Vietnam. My second tour, I began to have serious doubts, and of course, when I went back for m fieldwork as a civilian, I must say that my sympathies were with the Viet Cong at that point in time,” he said. “I ran perhaps slightly ahead of our nation’s leadership in doing a 180 degree turn on Vietnam.” Miller watched the soverumental system work uring his fieldwork. By living inconspicuously on the poverty level, he gradually lost the identity of a rich American. “IT was convinced that you couldn’t really understand what was going on while living like an American, he said. “Initially, everyone was convinced that I was involved with the CIA. But I was able to convince most people that I did not work for the United States simply by living in a man- ner unlike the rest of the Americans.” Miller’s expenses totaled about two dollars a day, but as prices and inflation increased, so did his cost of living. “When I got there, gas sold for a dollar a gallon. By the time I left, gas was about $3.50 a gallon.” His only extravagance was a Honda motorcycle he used to tour 18 provinces. Viet Cong were not commonplace in the Mekong Delta, where Miller focused his studies. He did, however, arrange meetings with the National Liberation Front (NLF). “Only once did I feel any fear. The first time I arranged it, it was illegal,” he said. “I had been warned not to have any unauthorized meetings with the NLF. “After having several opportunities to do so, I went ahead and got away with it,” he continued. “Once, I was suspected and was approached by the national police and they asked if I had just met with the NLF. I played ignorant, but I knew they knew.” The war was a learnin experience for the U.S., Miller said. “Generally speaking, while the war was going on it wasn’t pos- sible to try to analyze it objectively.” Miller said it will take time for an objective analysis of the Vietnam War to be written. “History, of course, is oing to reflect that the nited States made a terrible mistake,” he said. “But I think it is also going to reflect that it was an honest mistake. We believed that we were doing the right thing. It was a sobering experience for the country,” he said. — SARA-LOIS KERRICK |_| — S. Benson Although his office contains many shelves of books just like many other offices in Grise Hall, Dr. John Miller, assistant professor of sociology, also has a number of items he collected during his three trips to Vietnam. Miller went to Vietnam twice as a naval officer and once to gather information for the dissertation he was preparing at Southern Illinois University. 159 Business and Public Affairs a ee tae | 160 Ogden College Thompson Complex was home for many, while others began initiating the new Environmental Science building, but they all learned formulas and solved Mind-bogaling problems Because of the now evident limits of our fossil fuel, supply scientists every- where are searching for a solution to the energy problem. There is a correlation to this trend at Western, according to Dr. Marvin Rus- sell, dean of Ogden College of Science and Technology, who said there are more job opportunities related to energy re- search, development and environmental quality studies. This increase in job opportunities and the college’s response to the stu- dents’ needs were the two main reasons Russell cited as causes for the in- creased enrollment. Russell termed job opportunities “ex- cellent in the areas of agriculture, engi- neering technology as well as certain life sciences such as physics, chemistry, mathematics and computer science and special areas of geography and geology. However, he added that follow-up train- ing and specialization are also necessary in many of these areas. Asked about the overall quality of the college’s programs, Russell said he doubts that any university offers the best programs possible. “It depends on how one defines “possible,” he said. “In retrospect, the change (in the col- lege) in just one decade is truly incredi- ble,” Russell said. “This is not only from the point of view of course offerings, but from the size of the college, student ac- tivities, laboratory experience and steady improvement of the faculty,” he added. He plans to abandon his duties as asso- ciate dean of Ogden College for a semes- ter, but Dr. William Stroube’s sabbatical leave will focus on a closely related re- sponsibility of his. At Western since 1966, Stroube will study faculty teaching loads to cor- relate the effect of class size on teaching capabilities. The study involves a number of fac- Ogden College tors, he said. Among these is the equa- tion of faculty loads with duties and re- sponsibilities connected with teaching. Stroube said he hopes to devise a better formula for calculating the loads. After 12 years as a member of the agri- culture faculty at the University of Ken- tucky, Stroube came to Western “be- cause there was an emphasis on un- dergraduate education rather than pri- mary emphasis on graduate education and research.” Asked about the relevance of a college degree today, Stroube said, ‘Maybe it means a little bit more because there is a little more competitiveness — it may not be as unique though.’ . A four-acre hilltop land package was | donated to Western, and it is the site of a new astronomical laboratory, according | to Dr. Frank Six, head of the department of physics and astronomy. Ten miles southwest of campus, a 24- | inch Cassegrain telescope is the heart of the laboratory, and will quadruple the viewing distance over the 12¥%-inch tele- scope now being used, Six said. The in- At a Society of Physics Students picnic, Frank Six, head of the physics and astronomy department, receives a grilled hamburger from Dr. James Parks, also of the department while students Adrian Gooch and Richard Buchanon wait their turn. strument will increase the number of ce- lestial objects vulnerable to investigation by thousands. Six said the telescope will be housed Enrollment has increased for the past six consecutive years but it decreased this year “mostly by design,” Six said. Besides reading, Dr. Lynn Greeley, assistant dean of administration and technical services for Ogden College, enjoys playing tennis in the summer and squashball in the winter. Greeley said he also plays golf about once a month. “We need more freedom to assign facul- ty load components for research efforts involving students,” Six said f “It was limited to more appropriate lev- Lynn Greeley teaches an agriculture it} under a rotating dome and will be served els in the astronomy sections to fit the mechanics course each semester, but the by facilities in the adjacent laboratory small size of the faculty.” assistant dean of administrative and |.| structure, a plate processing room, work- Graduate students in Pasi and as-_ technical services for Ogden College said _ shop and classroom. | When Dr. William Stroube, associate dean of Os- den College, gets a chance he works in the ees - ture department’s indoor plant lab. At home, Stroube said he probably spends six to eight hours a week working with plants. tronomy will find good opportunities open for advanced studies and assistant- ships but will find a tight job market for applied physics, research and develop- ment and teacher education, Six said. He wants to improve the department. Getting shots before the flu season was an all morn- ing affair for Dr. E.O. Beal, biology department head. Beal posed with pet Hamlet bela loading him and three other dogs in the station wagon for a trip to the veterinarian’s office. Beal also visited his physician that same fall day to receive a flu shot. Music has always been a hobby for Dr. Marvin Russell, dean of Ogden College, a music minor in college. He said he is still trying to learn how to lay the banjo he received as a Christease present. ussell also plays the piano. his job consists mostly of technical assis tance and advice to various agencies. Through the direction of the dean’s office, Western has recently negotiated an equipment purchase contract with a university in Valdevia, Chile, Greeley said. The contract involved the purchase of a million dollar order of equipment for the South American school. Greeley’s job also involves working with the dean’s office, which hosts the Third District Science Fair and the Ju- nior Academy of Science Meeting. An open house for the new Environmental Sciences and Technology building and the annual Hilltopper Science Days (for area high schoolers) were scheduled for Ogden College too, Greeley said. A flexible job market is one of the reasons enrollment is up five per cent in the department of biology, according to Dr. Ernest O. Beal, department rea Beal said the department is broad enough to keep the job crunch from hurting graduates. “The best jobs are in Bis particularly pharmaceutical and agricultural sales,” Beal said. ‘““Em- ployers are also looking for students with backgrounds in laboratory analysis and microbiology.” The department head also said teach- ing positions have not become as over- crowded as other fields. “Particularly, high school teachers in science haven't been hurt,” Beal said. “Overall there are more jobs available at the undergraduate level than the graduate level.” Beal, who has headed the department since 1968, said his goal for the depart- (continued on page 162) 161 Ogden College oss a | Ogden College cont ment is to establish closer ties with the psychology department in the relatively new field of psychobiology. The new field studies the connection of a person’s behavior with his molecular makeup, according to Beal. He said he would Fee to add a professor that would specialize in the rapidly growing field. Pre-med, pre-dental, pre-pharmacy, med-technology, dental hygiene, health and safety, nursing, aenealute and biol- ogy students have to take chemistry courses and Dr. Gordon Wilson is happy that they do. “We are a service department,” the head of the chemistry department said. “Take away those students and we wouldn't have a department at all. We'd just need a three-man department. “Sometimes the pre-med students are better than the chemistry majors because of their drive and determination to get into med-school,” the department head said. ‘Their interest is not in chemistry, but in maintaining a 4.0 gpa. Job opportunities for chemists are the best now since 1969 or 1970, according to Wilson. “All our graduates last year had no difficulty obtaining jobs. In fact, some finished their master’s on the job,” he said. “Industry has had to hire more people to meet environmental standards. State and government labs are looking for vio- lators of clear air laws,” Wilson said. “Federal monies are being used to de- crease the crime rate so there’s an in- crease in employment in crime labs.” The only enrollment increase is in the “Chemistry for Health Sciences” course. In its second year, the course is taught to dental hygiene and nursing students, ac- cording to the department head. “In one semester, the course is intend- ed to give you a feeling for the chemistry of.the human body,” explained Wilson. “You're putting seven or eight years of chemistry into one semester.” Wilson said he’s sometimes jealous of the math department. “Blackboards don’t stop working,” he said with a chuckle. ‘We've got a $20,000 instru- ment that some students need to use to get their master’s. If it goes on the blink on Saturday at 6 p.m., we’ve got problems.” Computers now operate systems as well as solve problems, according to Boyce Tate, head of the department of engineering technology. “The one that landed on Mars is doing the digging,” he explained. “Micro com- puters and digital systems are being used more and more in everything from auto- mobiles to wristwatches.” Tate said this sophistication motivated the department to add a course in labora- tory and digital circuits to the electrical engineering technology curriculum. “The course to be taught by William Moore will add more in digitry circuit- ing and the operation of digital comput- ers, focusing on the technical aspects,” Tate said. “Before, we had just one brief course. “A program of this type is flourishing cee well nationwide, but hiring is not the same in engineering. You must look at the industrial experience people have had,” he explained. “You couldn’t get someone with just a master’s degree and stick them in a classroom,” Tate said. “We prefer more industrial experience to teach- ing experience.” Job opportunities look good for those graduates, he said. “This past year it was the best it’s ever been. We've got graduates scattered from New York state to Texas and Oklahoma and Florida,” Tate said. “Approximately 30 per cent leave Kentucky. “Going to college to provide a better income is not as important as 20-25 years Faculty hiring is one of the most time consuming tasks involved in office work, according to Dr. Gordon Wilson, head of the chemistry department. He added that purchasing lab supplies and equip- ment is continual because of high enrollment. Refinishing picture frames is a regular hobby for Boyce Tate, head of the engineering technology department. According to Tate, an annual seasonal hobby, pumpkin carving, competed with picture framing last fall for leisure time attention. ago,” Tate said. “I had one freshman to register in electrical engineering. He wanted to know how much he could make with a degree. I told him he could make $11,000 to $14,000 a year.” The student told Tate he made $25,000 last year working in the coal mines near Madisonville. Before students moved back to Bowl- ing Green for the fall semester, the geog- Braphy and geology department was usy moving across the street to the new Environmental Sciences and Tech- nology building. The move will benefit the department in several ways, according to Dr. Wayne Hoffman, acting department head. “T am really enthused about the num- ber of people you see on the Hill and in 162 Ogden College The move by the geography and geology depart- ment into the new Environmental Sciences and Technology Building will be very beneficial for the department, according to acting head Dr. Wayne Hoffman, who has been at Western since 1970. this building now,” Hoffman said. “Because we are closer to the science college I think we will get more science college enrollment.” He said the moving of the health and safety department into the Science and Technology building will bring in more students. Hoffman said this will increase the enrollment in some of the social sci- ence classes. Besides moving into a new building for this academic year, the geography and geology department has purchased some new equipment and plans to pur- chase more, Hoffman said. “This year we are going to buy a graphics terminal, and that is going to cost us about $8,000,” he said. “With the graphics terminal you will be able to see Despite its success, few people are familiar with Western’s nationally ee university farm pro- gram. Pictured with Dr. L.D. Brown, head of the agriculture department and dairy herd manager, arlie Jones, are two quality dairy cows. til i Lady and her master, Dr. Robert Bueker, head of the mathematics department, pose in the driveway of Bueker’s Wedgewood Way home. Besides four- year-old Lady, the Bueker family also has another dog named Tuffy. things like maps three-dimensionally.” With the graphics terminal, Hoffman said he can just push a button and get a copy. Enrollment is up in the math and com- puter science department, but Dr. Robert Bueker, department head, said the in- crease is more of a reflection of the col- lege-wide growth than anything else. “The size of the computer science pro- gram has increased, and we have added a new calculus sequence for our majors and minors,” Bueker said. As for job opportunities, Bueker said there isa ee demand for math teachers on the secondary level. People are also needed in the computer science area, both in government and industrial jobs, he said, adding that there is an increas- ese for statisticians as well. on-minors and non-majors are also considered when the department con- templates change. ‘We are trying to get better options. We are Pace ne about general education courses,” Bueker said. Students with green thumbs can now get a little touch of theory to supplement their good luck with plants, according to Dr. Leonard Brown, een of the agricul- ture department. A horticulture section has been devel- oped, he said, and it was closed before all interested students could enroll. A greenhouse management class has been added to the curriculum, and a greenhouse is being constructed behind the new Environmental Sciences and Technology building, Brown added. Another branch of the department is the university farm. “The farm is utilized as a lab supportive to agriculture,” Brown said. The Western farm has been rated the “number one” facility in the country and has two of the top five nationally-rated dairy cows, he said. Even so, Brown said some updating needs to be done at the facility. A new milking parlor and a grain handling fa- cility are needed, he said. (continued on page 168) 163 Ogden College . features e Biology: Chilean scholar plants immunobiology seeds e Agriculture: City slicker works to keep oinkers alive Chilean scholar plants immunobiology seeds Many students don’t ask uestions in class for fear the questions are “naive.” That is not the case in Dr. Fernando Morgado’s immunobiology class. He encourages so-called “naive’’ questions. Immunobiology is the study of the immune system or the body’s resistance to disease. It also involves the study of antibodies produced by the system. A native of Chile, Morgado is at Western through the sponsorship of the Mutual Educational Exchange Program, also known as the Fulbright- Hays program. Explaining his selection, Morgado said he chose Bowling Green because of a prior experience with Western. “A team from Western, headed by Dean Russell of the Ogden College, came to Valdivia, Chile in an advisory capacity,” he said. “IT met and got to know them. That is one reason why I chose Western.” The transition from Valdivia, Chile, to Bowling By using rats as subjects, Dr. Fernando Morgado, a native of Chile, and Dr. James Skean hope to find a way to eradicate leukemia in humans by protecting them with marrow grafts. Morgado teaches the new immunobiology class offered by the biology department. — T. Dekle Green was not as different as one might expect. The two towns are alike in many respects. Valdivia, a town of 100,000 people, has a university of 6,000 people. “Both locations are havens for rain throughout the year,” Morgado said. Morgado said his family is very happy with Bowling Green, Blrnough his children have had a time adjusting to the language. ‘Before they came to the United States, my children knew very little English,” he said. In setting up a program in immunobiology at Western, Morgado said he hopes it will expand in future years. The program now consists of two specific courses. The first is immunobiology. “In this class, basic data is extracted from ongoing research and is given to the student,” he eu Those who wish further study in immunobiol- ogy may elect to take a second class, Tissue and Organ Transplantation. “In this class, the student must build upon the knowledge gained from the immunobiology class,” he said. “The advanced course is more lab-oriented.” The field of immunobiology is a relatively new one in colleges and universities. “We have no textbook on the subject of immunobiology,” he said. “For this class, we pull information from other textbooks, notes and research material.” According to Morgado, the immune system itself has a direct connection with cancer. “If it is known how antibodies are formed, we can protect people from diseases,” he said. “We can also run organ and tissue transplantation in humans and treat cancer disease. “It happens that patients with cancer show a low immune system,” Morgado continued. “They are un- able to reject the cancer tumor because they cannot make antibodies.” As for a cure, Morgado said he thinks a combatant will be found in the near future. ‘Scientists will discover something to control cancer within the next 10 years — if there is enough monetary support and joint research,” he said. Morgado’s stay at Western could be described as somewhat of a break from his tri-fold responsibilities in Val- divia, Chile. At the Austral University there, he is a professor of immunology, a department head of experimental research and a vice-president for scientific research. “Science is the basic backbone of medicine,” he said. “A doctor is a qual- ified person who cares for a patient and applies scientific knowledge.” He said a scientist, however, is a person who tries to gain an insight in the biological process in such a way that the knowledge he obtains can be applied to a patient. “Sometimes I am a doctor; sometimes I am a scientist,” he said. — TOM SIWICKI () ‘ ! a — | | | | City slicker works to Peggy Frost is a self- described “‘city-slicker.” She has never lived on a farm or “out in the boonies” in her life. She might be asked what she is doing in a pig parlor. Experimenting is her answer. Miss Frost, a junior pre-veterinary student from Louisville, is doin experiments on baby pigs. She hopes her research will keep the pigs from dying. According to Miss Frost, baby pigs have a fairly high death rate. One of the main causes of the high death rate in their suscepti- bility to bacterial infec- tions and many of these in- fections originate from skinned bones. There are several products on the market that claim to protect the baby pigs’ knees, and during her research Miss Frost will be testing most of them to determine their effectiveness. “So far we haven’t done anything with those yet, and we really aren’t sure which ones are better,” she said. Some of the products are pads for the pig parlor floor; a cream, originally meant to be smeared on the feet of hunting dogs to protect their paws and a non- abrasive substance that can be spread around the floor “like dirt or sand.” According to Miss Frost, another objective of her research will be trying to determine at what age pigs develop a set pattern for nursing and sleeping. “They do have certain nursing patterns,” she said. “They pick one nipple and generally use it. Their pattern is established in about two days,” she added. Miss Frost said the pigs aren't always as cooperative in her experiments as they could be. For instance, she said the baby pigs tend to bunch up at feeding time and an observer can’t read their eartags. Consequently, it is not always easy to tell which one is which. Miss Frost said they haven't developed a technique to tell the baby piss apart when this appens. “The best thing we have found that you can do is just pick up the ones on top so you can read the eartags of the ones on the bottom,” she said. Several setbacks early in the year hindered Miss Frost’s research. Two litters of baby pigs born early in the year died. She said the reason the pigs failed to survive was because they were too inbred. “Pigs are not overly vigorous when the sow and boar (male hog) are kin. But when cross-breedin between a sow and boar that aren't very closely related or aren't related at all occurs, the baby pigs are bouncing all over the place,” she said. However, these setbacks have provided Miss Frost with another research experience she was not expecting — delivering babs pigs. “It was really kind of neat. What you have to do first is tie up their umbilical cord and cut it off. Then ou have to dry them off eos they are really slick,” she said. “Baby pigs are born with eight teeth called needle teeth and you have to cut them off with these things that look sort of like pliers,” she added. According to Miss Frost, she got involved in the research by taking a class in animal breeding last semester. The course was taught by Dr. Gordon Jones, head of the research project, who asked her if she would be interested in doing independent research. Her day generally lasts from nine to five, part of which she serves as secretary and “general opher” for the agriculture depariment During the Due to her research with baby pigs, Peggy Frost, a junior pre-veterinary major from Louisville, had the opportunity to assist in the birth of a litter of pigs. The new litter replaced another litter that died shortly after Miss Frost started keep oinkers alive — T. Dekle research to decrease the high mortality birthrate of pigs. experiment Miss Frost said she expects to spend weekends and evenings at the farm. When she first started her research on nursing habits of the pigs, Miss Frost said she thought there was no previous research done on the subject. Since then she has found some 1966 dated literature dealing with the subject. “It was a small publication in Iowa. We are writing them so we can get their results,” she said. Miss Frost is not the first student at Western to do research with baby pigs. Last year a female graduate student started a study on baby pig anemia. Steve Hieronymus, a graduate student, is finishing the project. Miss Frost said some of her data will overlap with his and they will mostly be using the same pigs. Becoming a veterinarian has been a long-time ambition of Miss Frost’s. ‘It’s something I have always wanted to do ever since I was a little kid,” she said, although she readily admits she has changed her mind “five million times.” Miss Frost said she weeded out other careers and decided on being a veterinarian because “for a lifetime career it would be more enjoyable.” — CINDY MCCALEB (1 165 Ogden College ¢ Chemistry: Lab x chemistry problem = e Computer Science: Computer dialect with a programmed student research vocabulary e Astronomy: Clouds and constellations set to music Lab x chemistry problem= student research Students often complain about the confinement of required class meetings and study materials. Others insist that more emphasis needs to be placed on practical usage instead of traditional “book cram” learning. Research Problems in Chemistry is designed among these lines, according to Dr. Robert Farina, one of three instructors who assist students taking the course. “The size of the class is small, and the meeting times are made up by the professor and the students,” Farina said. “There is no formal lecture, and instruction is done on a person-to-person basis.” According to Farina, the course emphasizes theory application. “All chenier should be able to apply the theories and laws they learn. If they can’t apply this knowledge in the ae they are useless,” he said. However, students taking the class are not put in a lab and told to start working without any preparation. “We generally show them the ropes. The more responsibility they can handle, the more they are given,” Farina said. Bill Judd, a junior from Greensburg, said he took the aes because it is different. “I like to do lab work that is not so much everyday,” he said. “When you do things that are called research that no one has ever done before, it makes you want to learn more. “It has helped me learn reasons for why things are done a certain way, and that you can only learn through time and experience,” the junior Beet Ted Nalesnik, a senior from Yonkers, N.Y., said he took the class because of the amount of practical experience involved. “It’s like taking courses in swimming. You can’t just read out of a book; you have to jump in the water sometime,” he said. “If you aren't planning on going into teaching, you will probably wind up researching, and you've got to get started someplace. “This is what people in industry are looking for,” Nalesnik said. “They want to tell a guy ‘run this’ and not have to wait 30 minutes or two hours for him to figure out how to turn the machine on,” he added. Nalesnik said the most important thing he has learned from erin the class is the value of patience in research. “You can’t expect all your experiments to work. I’d say 70 per cent of the time they flop, and you've just got to expect that,” he said. “You can’t just give up because something doesn’t work out after one of two tries.” Nalesnik also cited the facilities as an asset to the research class. “Many of the smaller universities don’t have this kind of equipment, and at the larger universities there is not enough equipment to go around.” — ROBIN VINCENT — T. Dekle A third-year enrollment in Research Problems in Chemistry class helped give Ted Nalesnik, a senior from Yonkers, N.Y., added experience in his major. In his first year project for the class Nalesnik worked toward getting a patent on his findings. Last fall he began a new project concerning metal complexes in conjunction with Dr. Norman Holy of the department. Nalesnik plans to work in industry after he completes graduate school. 4 166 Ogden College Computer dialect with a programmed vocabulary When you go to Western's library to do research do you know what is used to process your list of books? When you register for classes each semester do you know what is used to process your choices? A computer. More than 17 seniors will graduate during the fall semester with a major in computer science. They will be welcomed in any field of business because they will have the ability to work with an integral part of business — a computer. ‘The department of mathematics and computer science offers three areas in which a student may receive a major in computer science. These are scientific, systems and business applications. Each alternative requires the students to take two basic courses. Introduction to Computer Science 240 and Fortran Language 241. The first course in the sequence, Introduction to Computer Science, instructs the student in programming the computer. The purpose of this course, according to instructor Carol Reagles, is to “speak the language of the computer.” According to Miss Reagles, the process in programming a computer involves four steps after the problem is received. First, the student must figure out an algorithm, which is a means of answering the problem. The student next writes a flow chart, which outlines the process of the algorithm. Thirdly, the student writes out a program for the computer to follow. Then the student runs the problem through the computer utilizing the program he wrote. “Each time you run a program you become more easily adapted to it,” added Miss Reagles. The second required course instructs the student in the fortran, or batch language system, of a computer program. In this type of system, the student uses a key punch machine to set and punch up his program on a sequence of cards. According to John Crenshaw, professor of mathematics, the batch-type system is more popular, while the time-sharing turned out to be extremely fficult for Amon Okala, a sophomore from Lagos, Nigeria. Okala is an economics major with a data processing minor, and the — J. Burton Processing a problem ee preg to match the salesman with the customer i computer problem was prepared for a data processing class. system is easier to teach. Crenshaw said that in Fortran 241 the problems are somewhat closer to real life problems such as math, statistics, and setting up models inside the computer. Many students majoring in areas other than computer science take the first course and find it useful, Miss Reagles said. Clouds and constellations set Hardin Planetarium is one of Western’s “extra added attractions.” The different programs serve as education and entertainment. Putting together a planetarium show can be a difficult process, according to director Paul Campbell. “We do three different types of programs for the general public, special programs for astronomy students and special programs for elementary and secondary school,” Campbell said. The university has a library of Kentucky textbooks and Campbell said he can go to a particular textbook and “see exactly what the students will cover.” He said he tries to use appropriate background music with the shows he produces. “Tf I’m taking the audience to the North Pole I might use a segment from ‘Victory at Sea.’ It has a cold feeling to it. “From there we might swing down to the Equator and Ill play a segment with birds calling and mon- keys barking to remind the audience of the tropical atmosphere.” ar Pel said all of their “special programs” are live but that some of the shows for the public are produced by other planetar- iums and are received as complete “packages.” ‘The Last Question’ which was shown at Western this year, has been shown at many of the major planetariums in North America, Campbell said. “I get a tape and ee with all the cues, visuals, special effects and some of the slides used,” he said. “The problem is taking a program designed for a major planetarium and adapting it to use here.” Hardin Planetarium has a staff of three part-time She added that she has had students in class with a variety of majors ranging from business administration to history. “Practically every field uses a store and retrieve data computer nowadays. The more you know about how it works the better off you are,” Crenshaw added. — MARY PACE to music | workers, according | to Campbell. “None of us have 100 er cent of our duties here,” e added. “We have a lot of technical help; I tell them what kind of effect I want off the dome and Esa usually come up with something.” The projectors can produce effects such as clouds moving across the planetarium dome, planets moving around the sun, the moon orbiting the earth, and one called a “chaos” paces produces lights lashing on and off. — JILL MC SWEENEY (1) 167 Ogden College rr Le College of Applied Arts and Health Some cleaned teeth in Academic Complex, some shelved periodicals in Helm-Cravens, and some performed military maneuvers as they sought Diplomas of discipline Quality rather than quantity in educa- tion is important to Dr. William Houri- gan, dean of the College of Applied Arts and Health. The college has combined both objec- tives with the implementation of two new degree programs — a bachelors de- gree in nursing and an associate degree in medical records. The B.A. in nursing began during the fall semester with 15 students enrolled, and the A.A. degree in medical records began during the spring term. As for employment opportunities, Hourigan said that there are more job openings to be filled. ‘There is still a real need for nurses with B.A. degrees in our region of the state,” Hourigan said. An added advantage to the nursing profession is the increasing popularity of male nurses, according to Hourigan who said they are stronger. The dean said he hopes another new undergraduate program, dietetics, will be accredited soon. Commenting on the value of a college degree, Hourigan said it was more highly regarded in the past. Getting a college education now is “expected,” he said. “Not every student is suited for col- lege degrees and therefore they should go into vocational studies.” Graduates who can list military sci- ence as their major or minor usually get accepted into the branch of military ser- vice they request, according to Lt. Colo- nel Gary Riggs. “Opportunities for a person from Western going on active duty are good,” the head of the military science depart- ment said. “A commissioned cadet puts down what his major is and he gets what branch he asks for 98 per cent of the time,” Riggs said. The department doesn’t plan to initi- ate any course, only to improve the cur- riculum, Riggs said. “We will continue to stress extracurricular programs. The programs include flight training, field training exercise, a rifle team and ROTC societies,” Riggs said. He said about 400 people are in the program and a huge number of those are enrolled in bi-term classes. “People who weren't able to fit it in their regular schedule or people who drop a cee can pick it up as two hours or as a general education elective,” he said. “It gives the department more con- tact with the student body.” Riggs said a college degree is still im- portant today.”We push degree comple- tion like everyone else; college degrees have always been important. Today kids are smarter, sophisticated and have bet- ter facilities,” Riggs said. “But you get out of college what you put in it,” he said. “You need to be a part of the program you're in.” Special instructions were waiting for Dr. A. Fogle Godby when he came to Western in 1969. Godby was supposed to head the den- tal hygiene department, the newest in the College of Applied Arts and Health. Not only did Godby assume admin- istrative duties, he also diagrammed the blue-prints for the floor plan of the dental clinic. Collecting and refinishing antiques, genealogical research and relaxing with his Le divert Dr. William Hourigan from his duties as dean of the college of applied arts and health. He has one daughter, PAS, and two sons, Jon and Scott. 168 Applied Arts and Health Recently those facilities were enlarged with changes made to all the pieces of major equipment, Godby said. Physical differences are abundant, but the enrollment has stayed much the same because the program is operating at its capacity, according to the depart- ment head. “Likewise, the curriculum did not face any major turnovers,” he said. “The cur- riculum was well set, programmed, didn’t lend itself to change,” Godby said. The department trains only dental hy- gienists who are taught minor dental procedure and methods of cleaning and Slow and easy music by the band Hot Dancing gave colonel Gary Riggs and wife Margaret a chance for a few turns around the floor at Scabbard and Blade’s annual Military Ball. Riggs also had the honor of crowning the ball’s queen. scaling teeth, Godby said. What has traditionally been a curricu- lum for teacher education is turning a new face to the job market, according to Dr. William Floyd, head of the department of home economics and family living. “Students are looking for things they can do besides teach because the field is overcrowded,” Dr. Floyd said. “There is a trend toward specializing in hotel and restaurant management, interior design, home management, textiles and clothing merchandising and dietetics.” But the department is still interested Trimming a bush in his yard wasn’t exactly what Dr. A. Fogle Godby had in mind for his Talisman picture. The dental hygiene department head had planned to have his picture made with his 18- month-old grandson, who fell asleep. With Thanksgiving ornamentation around them Dr. Delbert Hayden and Dr. Martha Jenkins of the home economics department chat with Dr. William Floyd. Although it might be unexpected, the topic of discussion was actually Floyd’s coffee mug. in training home economics teachers, Floyd said. “I do think the demand will increase,” he said. “Some (teachers) are leaving teaching now to go into exten- sion or home economist jobs.” Floyd said the department tries to guide freshmen toward the job trends. “We don’t want the senior to wait and find out job opportunities,’’ he said. “We try to help this by pre- registration advisement.” Floyd also pointed out the merits of his department in training students for a job. “There’s nothing wrong in learn- ing how to earn a living in school,” he said. “It’s good to get some specialized training and then get exposed to the real world.” (continued on page 170) 169 Applied Arts And Health 170 College of Applied Arts and Health cont Faculty meetings were small get-to gethers in 1958 when Dr. Vera Guthrie came to Western to teach in the library science department. She was the only faculty member then. Dr. Guthrie is now Eesdane the depart- ment, and things have changed consider- ably since 1958, she said. “Since I’ve been at Western, we have added four full-time and two part-time teachers,” Dr. Guthrie added. The library science department added 11 graduate courses during the fall se- mester, she said. They include Recrea- tional Reading, Listening and Viewing; Creative Experiences fer Elementary Children; and Intercultural Media. “As of July, the department added a degree to Instructional Media,” Dr. Guthrie said. Courses such as In- structional Television for Media Specialists, Media Facilities, and In- structional Media Photography were ad- ded toserve the degree. Although most of her time is occupied by concerns of the library science department, Dr. Vera Guth- rie, the department head, still finds time for domes- tic activities. Guthrie said she enjoys sewing, cro- cheting and growing flowers. Applied Arts And Health Enrollment in the department has increased in proportion to the in- crease in the freshman enrollment, Dr. Guthrie said. Even with the increase, Dr. Guthrie said, “We are still able to place all our graduates, because all our departments are fairly new so they are demanding.” The country is faced with many un- employment problems, but nursing is one field that still offers good employ- ment opportunities, according to Miss Virginia Lehmenkuler, head of the nurs- ing department. “You must be flexible and not tailor- made, so you can go all over the coun- try,” she said. Although the nursing department is small, the number of applicants continue to increase, Miss Lehmenkuler said. “It is very competitive to get in the nursing program.” She said the department has expanded its two associate degrees into a “two- plus-two” bachelors degree program. Miss Lehmenkuler said the new bache- lors degree, an option, adds 34 hours to the associate degree for a 65-hour total. Miss Lehmenkuler said there are sepa rate entrance requirements for the two programs, however, and the B.A. isn’t required for a nursing degree. The major difference between the two is that B.A. candidates must be Registered Nurses, Miss Lehmenkuler said. The nursing department has 20 faculty members, but the department can’t grow At an early morning appointment shortly before Thanksgiving break, Virginia Lehmenkuler, head of the nursing department, took time to discuss the spring semester's class schedule with Susan Jones, a nursing faculty member. Before the start of the fall semester the health and safety department moved from the College of Edu- cation building to the science and technology building. For Dr. David Dunn, department head, the move meant a new fourth floor office. limited, she said. It’s maturing but the health and safety department is still young, according to Dr. David Dunn, head of the depart ment. Dunn came to Western in 1970 and | has helped the department since it began in 1971. “I saw a challenge of being a part of a new department and seeing it develop and grow,” Dunn said. A graduate program for students not in teacher education is the department's main attraction, according to Dunn. Such programs include public health agencies, comprehensive health care and community health, he added. Dunn said there is a degree of flexibil- ity in the department's course selection. “There is the core of requirements and then there are various routes to pursue.” Students in community health and health care administration are generally successful in finding jobs, Dunn said. “It’s a difficult question to answer,” he said. “Job success depends upon what students choose as a minor.” In addition to those fields, Dunn said jobs in health education and driver's education aren’t too hard to locate, add- ing that Kentucky is experiencing a need for driver’s education instructors. Full-time health teachers aren’t needed very often, according to the depart- ment, who said that most high schools only offer a required health course and no electives. Dunn said that he would like to see two programs, health problems in the _ aged, and patient education develop | withing the department to help meet | health education needs. | One course is clinical health education (patient education) has been proposed but there is no full program yet, he said. (continued on page 176) | much larger because clinical facilities are | | Once upon a time (and still today) there was a most interesting class at Western in which students told stories. This “Storytelling” elective was offered by the library science department, and attracted graduate and undergraduate students. Two sections of the class were offered at night and the teachers of the classes were Millie Gwaltney and Evelyn Thurman. The class stressed the history and oral tradition of folk literature as it applies to storytelling, Miss Thurman said. “Think of the things before printed books we would have never known about without storytelling,” she said. Students selected, prepared and presented stories using a variety of methods. Folktales, myths, Bible accounts, teenage recollections and biographies were told. Props such as musical instruments and puppets were used to demonstrate the story. Each two and one-half hour class meeting began with a reature Once upon a time short lecture, and then designated students presented their stories. For Halloween, Miss Gwaltney’s class met at her apartment to exchange ghost stories. Students were evaluated on their choice of story, Pre Date ton and delivery. Miss hurman said, “A seen storyteller has got to like the story before it can be told well.” Joan Sublett, a senior from Paintsville, said she enjoyed the class because she plans to be in a library situation someday and “children enjoy stories more if they are told to them instead of having to rea d them.” Alicia McFarland, a graduate student in library science, said, “The class inspires students to express themselves through storytelling and creative | dramatics.” Mrs. McFarland, | | | the mother of three children, said she sees the importance of storytelling in the home daily. And, of course those who use storytelling in the future will live happily ever after. — ELLEN PRYOR (1 — T. Dekle As one of her 10 assignments for Storytelling, Janet Burks, a senior elementary education major, did this prop story entitled “The Dog who Thought He was a Boy.” 171 Applied Arts And Health oo —— Applied Arts And Health Simulated Emergency For the practical part of the final exam in the emergen- cy care and transportation class Marcia Hall, a fresh- man biology major from Auburn, treats David Hazelip, a freshman from Bowling Green, for a simulated gunshot wound. The class is open to all students unless otherwise specified. Photos by Debbie Gibson The students sit entranced as their professor groans with simulated birth pains during a demonstration in emergency care and transportation class. Henry Baughman teaches the class that trains students to care for others in an emergency. Ambulance attendants, hospital employes, health and safety majors, firemen, policemen, summer camp counselors, pre-med and nursing students take the course, Baughman said. He also said his main concern is making sure students are well trained, and this concern is influenced by his first contact with emergency care. “At my home (Stanford, Ky.) they built a new highway,” he said. ‘They couldn’t get all the land they wanted so they hooked on to the old road by turning the road sharply left, and we had 38 wrecks in two months. “I went up one time when a man had been thrown out of a car into a ditch,” Baughman said. ‘He couldn’t move his legs; I pinched him and he couldn't feel it, so I suspected a back injury. “The people that came weren't trained and they picked him up and threw him on the cot,” he said. “X-rays showed he had a broken neck and he died. I’m convinced they killed him.” Beginning students make some critical but common mistakes, Baughman said. “We try to get people to evaluate the patient to determine what's wrong before they start treating them,” he said. Baughman, who began teaching the course in 1971, said the class is limited to 30 people. It is an offshoot of the 1966 highway safety act which required every hospital to hire emergency room service and ambulance attendants to have emergency training. Any state failing to meet those requirements would have 10 per cent of their federal funds withheld, according to Baughman. “We are always trying to improve the class in any way we can. One of the improvements I think we have made is having each lesson on video-tape,” he said. “When we first started teaching the class we did not have this.” Steve Wilson, a Bowling Green sophomore, said he changed his mind about working for an ambulance service after he started the course, but didn’t drop the class. “The biggest reason I didn’t drop the class is because it’s good to know what to do in case something happens,” he said. “Like Mr. Baughman has said, our parents are at the age where they could easily have a heart attack or something,” he said. Another Bowling Green sophomore, Anne Thomas, said the class was not what she expected. “T expected it to be like a first el course,” she said. “I Bea Working as a team with Steve Wilson, a Bowling Green sophomore, as their lead- er, Anne Thomas, Chester Grey and Bobbi Battle combine efforts to lift a mannequin with a simulated neck wound, while Glyn Stanley steadies the stretcher for the operation. thought we would just be shown how to do things and that we would not actually be doing them. The class itself is really not that hard; it just takes lots of practice,” she added. — ROBIN VINCENT Leny Knight, a senior biology major, immobilizes David chy’s simulated broken bone. Beachy, a local fireman, is one of many law enforcement and public service offi- cials who take the emergency care course. At the lesson on emergency childbirth in Henry Baugh- man’s section of the class, Earl Sanford, a sophomore from Bowling Green, practices the delivery technique with a mannequin while the class watches. 173 Applied Arts And Health college class Vital signs measured by the hands of a Jerry Shoemaker rented a black cap and gown ensemble in Decmeber to receive his second degree from Western. This one was not a master’s degree; it was a nursing degree. Shoemaker, 29, was born in Russellville and moved to Indiana with his family when he was four. He returned to Kentucky to attend Lindsey Wilson Junior College. He met his wife there and the couple moved to Bowling Green to attend Western in 1969. When he graduated in 1973 with a degree in religious studies, Shoemaker wanted to teach. His wife found a teaching job; he did not. After searching for a job, Shoemaker said he became discouraged. He remembered how he Re worked at Greenview Hospital to finance their educations. He then realized that his hospital work has shown him an opportunity for the future in nursing. Shoemaker said he knew working at the hospital would mean working with people, something he had always enjoyed. So, the young man applied to the nursing program and was accepted in 1974. School was a part- time endeavor as Shoemaker continued to work full-time at Greenview. A male nurse is valuable, according to Shoemaker. Although he said some men like to joke about it, he emphasized that male nurses are real and aren’t just made up for joking purposes. Shoemaker said strength is another asset of male nurses. He said that in his orthopedics work at 174 Applied Arts And Health Greenview, he often lifts a patient, a task easier for men. Since entering the nursing program, he said his only bad experience was with a female patient in obstetrics. “She said she preferred that a female take care of her, and that was okay with me,” Shoemaker said. “I would have been glad to have taken care of her professionally,” he said. “Patients should be treated as individuals and nurses should respect their modesty,” he added. When he first began the program, Shoemaker said his wife had some strong feelings about the classroom N The nurses’ station, and piece! the chart rack, is noth- er, a December nursing gra- duate. Before enrolling in the nursing program Shoemak- ing new to Jerry Shoema relationship between males and females. “When I first started we had to give bed baths in the lab classes. I was the only male student, and I had to ive a bath to a female and Pe bathed by her. Well my wife told me ‘I don’t want you to be a nurse now!” He added that his wife is proud of him and knows how much he enjoys medicine. When asked what advice he would offer male nursin students, Shoemaker ah “hang in here and don’t get discouraged. You have to be yourself and want to do it. Men do not have to see nursing as weird be- cause it’s not; it’s being e Nursing: Vital signs measured by the hands | of a non-chauvinist ¢ Home Ec: Moms spy on pre-schoolers’ first non-chauvinist accepted now.” | Shoemaker said some female. nurses have still not fully | accepted the male nursing students, so they should “study harder and stay one step ahead.” Although he has gained a lot of practical experience from classes and work at Greenview, Shoemaker said he is still learning things. He plans to stay in the Bowling Green area and specialize in : either orthopedic surgery or cardiology. Shoemaker said he hopes to teach nursing, do some clinical nursing and per- haps get a B.S. in clinical nursing. — CHARLEA HICKS — D. Frank er worked at Greenview Hospital in orthopedics to help finance his college education. He entered nursing school when he couldn't find a teaching job. i The excited children kiss their moms good-bye and hurry to meet college friends waiting to treat them t to a story, game, snack and | lesson at the Child ' Development Lab. k| Little do the kids know _ that their moms are watching all the activity from pind a one-way mirror in the next room. The lab is the second half of Growth and Guidance of Children, a course in the home economics and family living department, taught by Ellen Hayden. Her husband Dr. Delbert Hayden previously taught ' the course, and said the ) theory presented gives | the college students prin- ciples of child guidance and development. “It gives them practical information about how to stimulate the development of children physically, socially and psychologically,” he said. The one-hour labs provide practical training, according to Hayden. “The students | plan and conduct the | activity sessions.” he said. Mrs. Hayden said the | students visited local schools || to observe pre-school age youngsters. “Films were also _ shown to prepare them for | their work with children,” she added. The children, ages three to five, are brought dere the community for six consecutive lab sessions. The parents are allowed to secretly watch their children _— children were doing.” after dropping them off. Another student, Ramona “They're concerned about what Curl, said the children were their children are doing and intelligent but had short how they’re interacting with attention spans, much to other kids,” Mrs. Hayden said. her surprise. Three or four-member teams “The one-way mirror made conduct the sessions which include a free play period for exercise, an explanation, a lesson, a snack, a game, a story time and another free play segment, according to ' Mrs. Hayden. She said careful planning is “They make their own necessary so each child lesson plan, and each team has_ remains interested at the seven assistants to help with the snack, get the toys out and lined up and to take the kids to the restroom,” she said. Mrs. Hayden said the lab exposes the students to various discipline obstacles and short attention spans children have when learning and working as groups. One child may want everyone’s attention and refuse to cooperate while another may not want to participate with his peers, she said. This contact is often the first for students, Mrs. Hayden said. “It helps them get an idea if they want to work with this age group,” she said. “Some have never had an opportunity to work with kids until this.” Mary Williams, a stu- dent in the class, is a senior community health major and a child de- velopment minor. She said she learned a lot from spending time with the children, and she said common sense is the best tool to use when working with them. Miss Williams said she prepared a lesson about farm animals for the children. “I let them identify sounds and we sang ‘Old McDonald’ at the end,” she said. “It went over pretty good, but I learned you can’t hold their attention too long.” Watching her classmates through a mirror was a valuable experience, according to the senior. ‘The mothers were there and it was fun to see their reaction; they were worried about what their parents were watching,” the junior home economics major said, adding that she eventually grew accustomed to it. me uncomfortable knowing the -Moms spy on pre-schoolers’ first college class they don’t like to be bossed,” she said. “It’s important to answer questions when they’re still young.” She said children learn more in their first three years than any other period. “You've got to make the most of it then. You can’t stop their curiosity. How are they going to learn if you do?” — CONNIE HOLMAN (1) session. “A collage can’t have too many thine and a story can’t be too long,” Mrs. eric A mother of a 6-year-old and an 11-year-old, Mrs. Curl said she wished she had known more about raising children when hers were younger. “In our democratic society children are changing and — T. Dekle As a part of a lab for his child development class, Kathy Bunch, a junior home economics major from Edmonton, was required to plan and conduct an hour lab session along with two or three other class members in which three to five- year-old children are observed by their parents. 175 Applied Arts And Health ‘= ‘= 176 Potter College of Arts and Humanities Classrooms in Cherry Hall and the Fine Arts Center seated those interested in great books and great thinkers of the world as they studied their Lessons Improvements in a college or depart- ment take more than paperwork, accord- ing to Dr. Robert Mounce, dean of Potter College of Arts and Humanities. “T don’t really believe that you im- prove programs very much by sitting down and rearranging something on a piece of paper,” he said. “I don’t think giving everyone a new title and changing the names of all the courses really im- proves a program.” Several programs have been added to the college, according to Mounce. One is a degree in the performing arts, which is a mixture of several programs already offered. Considering the job opportunities for graduates in the college’s program, Mounce said he does not believe it is essential for people to be trained for spe- cific jobs. “We like to think of humanities as preparing people and not as supplyin individuals for slots according to feed for manpower,” he said. Although a college degree is often con- sidered to be a type of vocational! train- ing, the liberal arts degree offered by Potter College is a preparation for life, according to John Oakes, assistant dean for administration. “The emphasis is on liberal arts educa- tion which prepares someone for life. It teaches them to think and to react through a study of philosophy, history and the arts,” he said. Oakes said he believes a liberal arts education is beneficial in the competitive job market. “Many times an employer will feel that someone with a liberal arts back- ground will be able to go into a variety of fields,” Oakes said. “On the whole, it ’s not a technical or vocational type of edu- cation; it will fit into a variety of differ- ent fields.” As assistant dean of administration, Potter College in culture Oakes’ main responsibilities are coordi- nating the Fine Arts Festival and the art allery program. He said he would also fike to see these programs improved. Eleven years ago, Dr. Ronald Nash be- came head of the department of philos- ophy and religion. He was the only facul ty member then, and had 75 students enrolled each semester. Things have changed quite a bit since then as Nash shares teaching responsi- bilities with 12 others. Enrollment aver- ages 1,600-1,700 each semester. Nash said things remain steady in the department although special topics are chosen and rotated in the 401 philosophy course. “The students in the depart- ment publicize it in their other courses.” he explained. “Very few philosophy majors pick philosophy for an immediate career ob- Garrett Ballroom was the site of a lecture given Nov. 3 by Clive Barnes, dance and drama critic for the New York Times. Among those in the audience was Dr. Robert Mounce, dean of Potter College. jective,” Nash said. “Many employers simply want college graduates who have a breadth of cnowledee and an understanding of the history of culture,” Nash said. The department head said that when he was in college, a degree was a magic key that could open the magic kingdom and guarantee employment to a graduate. “Today, not even a Ph. D. can do that in certain fields,” Nash said. “History teaches people to think, and a well-trained mind is the best tool a per- son can have,” said Dr. Richard Trout- man, head of the history department. According to Troutman, the liberal arts eae is a disadvantage in the job market because it is not profession-ori- — ented. Troutman said, however, that lib- eral arts brings a perspective to life that As part of the student center’s Halloween activities, Dr. Lynwood Montell spoke about his latest novel, Ghosts Along the Cinberiek The book tells of folklore in the Kentucky foothills. A magazine idea prompted Richard Troutman, his- tory department head, to build his own green- house. Troutman is assisted in the project by his daughters, Betsy, 2, and Sarah, 11. Refusing to pose in his cluttered Cherry Hall office, Dr. Ronald Nash, philosophy and religion depart- ment head, chose the roof for his picture. At a reception following the September opening of Western’s Fine Arts Festival, ae Oakes, the festi- val coordinator, chats with concert patrons. The opening featured pianist Sylvia Kersenbaum. is valuable in working with people. The department has a new honors pro- gram for majors which is the first imple- mented at Western, Troutman said. The presrant provides a special discussion our and a more rewarding experience for majors, he added. A college degree means less today than when he graduated, Troutman said, add- ing that standards have declined and stu- dents are not as well-educated. ‘Things are too profession-oriented today; there is less emphasis on education for educa- tion’s sake,” he said. Living history farms and villages, and open air museums are some of the places where jobs are most available, said Dr. Lynwood Montell, coordinator for the Center for Intercultural Studies. “The things that deal with folk materi- al culture offer the best job opportuni- ties, he said. Folk arts coordinators and state folklorists are also in demand, Montell said. “T believe in a well-rounded education in liberal arts, but an education should also provide saleable skills,” he said. “Our folklore program is designed for these skills and to meet the job market.” | Enrollment continued to increase this Mee by 15 per cent, Montell said. “We ave experienced an increase every year since folklore has been a separate pro- gram,” he said. Although he sai d he believes Western offers the best masters degree in folk- studies in the country, he said improve- ments need to be made. “A darkroom is | the real pressing need,” Montell said. | “Much of our instruction deals with field documentaries by means of photog- | raphy,” he added. | From shopping mall decorations to | murals on buildings, visual art is used | everywhere. For this reason art education is not an impractical study, said Walter | (continued on page 178) | | 177 Potter College = _ 2a Potter College cont. Stomps, head of the art department. “In all places of our environment visu- al art is demanded,” Stomps said. He ad- ded that there is a greater demand for cultural works of art. Even so, he said he tries to bring a “stronger realization of the practicing artist to the university.” “Highly professional teachers set fine examples by their own work,” Stomps said. Students will have a greater degree of identity with the faculty when the teacher presents a strong example, he said, adding that teachers and students will benefit by practicing their art to make “something (the art program) bet- ter together.” In addition, Stomps said he has a few criticisms of students and wants some new programs. “My criticism of the department as a whole is that students don’t trav- el enough to major cultural centers to see contemporary arts.” Stomps said the department tries to direct ‘student activities more toward their profes- sional pursuits.” Foreign language graduates need an additional skill to find employment, ac cording to Dr. Carol Brown, head of the foreign language department. “There is not just a direct job utility to language outside of teaching,” he said. ‘It generally is in connection with some other saleable skill,” Brown said the decreased number of students in the foreign language department has an effect on the pro- gram’s quality. “We were formally in the arts and sci- ences program as a requirement. Now we are in pretty stiff competition in the gen- eral education guidelines, so we don’t get the number of student we used to,” he said. “Without the number of students it is hard to build the quality program you would want.” The federally funded Latin American Studies Center is the most signif- icant new program in the department, Brown said. Usually when words like recruiting, 178 Potter College Se | J = v-veweee t Bein git new space and new equipment are men tioned as ways of improving a pro- gram it’s almost always assumed that the program being discussed is an athle- tic program. However, according to Dr. Wayne Hobbs, head of the music deparment, these are some of the improvements the music department is seeking. “We are paying particular attention to the music education programs which involve the largest number of students,” Hobbs added. “We feel that there is a need to gear that program to the spe- cific area in which the student plans to teach.” The area of guitar is the most rapidl growing area, the department head eat “Even with no publicity, just word of mouth advertising, the guitar program has grown enormously since last year,” Hobbs said. ‘We have a number of clas- sical guitar majors this year and we had none last year. We also have a very active class of beginners in an _at- tempt to approach the program from both standpoints.” The dissolution of the mass communi- cations department brought about the birth of the journalism department in January 1977. According to David Whitaker, head of the new department, programs will cen- ter around journalism, photo-journal- ism, public relations and advertising. Broadcasting, formerly a part of the mass communications curriculum was added to the speech and communication department in January. Whitaker said the journalism pro- gram’s application for accreditation was part of the reason for the depart- ment’s formation. “Here we were, in our opinion, the most professional journalism program in the state in a department called mass communications,” he said. Whitaker said a professionally orient- ed journalism department like the one Western has will aid its graduates in finding jobs. “Given a choice betwe en a student who has had professional preparation and one who has not had professional preparation, I don’t think there is any question that the editors and publishers will hire the people with the best profes- sional experience,” he said. Since he came to Western in 1962, Dr. Randall Capps, head of the speech and communication department, has seen many changes take place in the field. “When I first came here there was no department of speech and _ theatre,” Capps said. “It was part of English, and I believe there were two classes in speech and four classes in drama.” A practicing artist himself, Walter Stomps poses beside one of his latest works. He said his favorite commission ei is the Center City, Ohio mural which is visible from I-75 near Dayton. A concert by the Owensboro Symphony provides enjoyment for Dr. James Heldman and wife Nan- cy. The Heldmans first planned to visit daughter Julie at college, but postponed the trip. A September 1 autograph party at Claudia Sanders Dinner House gave Dr. Randall Capps, head of the speech and communication department, a chance to sign copies of his latest book. When he isn’t spending his spare time with Muf- fin, Dr. Carroll Brown collects pennies. “I have a nearly complete set of pennies from the first date mint issue,” he said. A fall moving job kept Dr. Wayne Hobbs occupied when he was not busy with the music department. The Hobbs’ family had a house built and the de- partment head said,It took up all my spare time.” In January, what was known as the speech and theatre department under- went another change, and became the speech and communication department. “T think the change will be advanta- geous to the new journalism department and to the existing department here,” Capps said. “I think we will be able to give them (the broadcasting area) an identity they have not had before,” he added. Job opportunities for speech and the- atre majors are good, Capps said. “In the area of speech pathology there is no dif- ficulty finding a job, as long as you are willing to go where the jobs are,” he said. “In theatre, most of the jobs right now are in technical theatre, like building and designing sets, and other things.” Professors in the English department- still teach standard composition, gram- mar and language, but the enroll- ment has jumped, according to Dr. James Heldman. The department head said the main reason for the increase is the number of students enrolled in 055: Introduction to Freshman English. “We had 24 sections in 1975, and now we have 35,” he said. Heldman said ACT scores are used to place students in the course. “It’s a self- evident comment about the way students are being prepared,” he said. “All kinds of things come in for blame and the criti cism the high schools get is probably unjust. It’s much more than that.” Another course which has been updat- ed is the “English as a Second Lan- guage.” Dr. Ronald Eckard is the first full-time faculty member to work with international students in the program, Heldman said. “Before the program had drifted from semester to semester, but already he’s gotten some tape players and listening booths from the foreign language, depart ment to put in the Rock House,” Held man said. “Fifty international students are taking the course which is offered in four sections.” (continued on page 186) Potter College A wardrobe Dr. James Bennett knows a good thing when he sees it. So when a retiring member of Western's English faculty offered to give the history buff a genuine World War I army uniform, Bennett accepted. That uniform now has the distinction of being the first in Bennett’s rapidly growing six-year-old collection of uniforms and costumes. Bennett said the collection includes fatigues and dress uniforms of the armed services from the World War I and World War II eras, an army dress uniform worn by officers on duty at the White House, a Swedish In his six-year hobby of collecting uniforms, Dr. James Bennett, a professor in the history department, has collected man space suit. It took Bennett 15 minutes suit. The uniform is an authentic one. 180 Potter College y types of uniforms, including this to help Gary Dwyer put on the space e History: A wardrobe for every character e Religion: Matthew, Mark, Luke and John with a British touch army officer’s uniform, police uniforms from several American cities, an astronaut’s spacesuit, articles of cowboy clothing and a uniform used in the motion picture “Rollerball.” “It was about two years after I got the first uniform that I got the next one,” said the professor of American history. “Most of them have been acquired through my students.” Bennett said that first World War I uniform has a special significance for him. “The uniform belonged to a close friend of mine, and the cover it is contained in was made with loving care by a young French girl while he was in Europe during the war,” he added with a smile. “It is a unique uniform.” The navy blue Swedish army officer’s uniform trimmed with deep red piping and silver buttons is stitched with silver thread, and is also a favorite of Bennett’s. “It dates back to the late 1800s, and it is certainly a beauty,” Bennett said. “It was given to me by a student from Sweden.” The Rollerball uniform plus the ball and skates was one of the hardest to get, according to Bennett. The movie was filmed in England and Germany, and the uniform was shipped to Bennett from England by the film’s producer. “The hard part was getting the uniform through United States Customs. Although the estimated worth of the outfit was $500, I had to convince Customs that it was actually worth nothing at all,” said for every character Bennett. ‘As far as getting the uniform itself, all I did was write to the producer of the film and ask for it.” Bennett said he got his spacesuit from a naval officer acquaintance. “It is an obsolete model,” he said, “and is one of the prototype uniforms. It may have gone into space but I doubt it,” he added. Uniforms from the Spanish American War period, a paratrooper uniform, a World War II tanker uniform are among the things Bennett said he would next like to collect. “T would really like to have a United States cavalry uniform, but they are hard to find,” he said. Bennett said he regularly scans the advertisements in hobby magazines and other publications to gain information on where he might locate unusual uniforms, and he also has a book he consults to determine their value. “The book also helps when it comes to authenticating the uniforms. It tells you how to study the fabric weaves and the cast of buttons, for instance,” Bennett said. “Civil war uniforms are especially hard to authenticate because they were not standard; they were just made from what was available at the time,” Bennett said. Bennett’s next project might increase further interest in his collection. He said he plans to place a mannequin in his history department office, and periodically change the uniform on the figure. — DONNA BUCKLES (1 Matthew, Mark, Luke and John with a British touch She resembles Petula Clark with her short red locks, her freckle-dotted fair complexion and her non- stop British accent. Dr. Margaret Howe, assistant professor of religion, is indeed British, and the story of her exodus from her home across the ocean is unusual, she admits now when reflecting upon the past seven or eight years. Life was comfortable in England for the religion major when she and a nursing friend quit their jobs, sold most of their possessions and bought one- way tickets on the “Empress of Canada” and sailed to Montreal, Canada. From Montreal, the pair moved by train to Manitoba, and with three traveling trunks, Dr. Howe began to cope with the brisk temperatures and look for sundry jobs. “Looking back, I was crazy,” she said. “I did babysitting and I cleaned houses, but I never ran into debt. You can get in such a rut when you've got a secure thing. It does you good to go out into the unknown.” Born in Essex, east of London, Dr. Howe said she specialized for three years in physics, biology and chemistry at grammar school. “But during the final two years you study what you plan to study ina university,” the religion teacher said. “It was not going to be physics — but English, history or religion. It was a toss-up which of the three I wanted to teach.” She picked religion for two reasons. “I realized b then everything I believe about God and life was based on the Bible. If it wasn’t what it claimed to be, it had just been a big hoax.” A concern for the type of instruction students were getting from their religion teachers was also a factor in her decision to teach, Dr. Howe said. “So many were teaching with no per- sonal conviction and from Since she teaches a college department Sunday school class at First Baptist Church as well as religion classes at West- ern, Dr. Margaret Howe, a British native, often gets to see an unsympathetic point of view.” The English woman complete her undergraduate studies at the University of Sheffield, under F.F. Bruce, a noted scholar in the field. One of the top three students in her class, Dr. Howe did her post-graduate work in education at London University. Under a scholarship and again with F.F. Bruce as her teacher, she earned her Ph.D. at Manchester University. When she was teaching in Canada, Dr. Howe was contacted by Dr. Ronald Nash, head of the philosophy and religion department at Western. “That was 4¥2 years ago; the faculty was smaller then but they were the nicest people,” she said. ‘The courses were exactly what I was trained to teach. It just seemed more sensible.” Dr. Howe said she has no regrets although the American system is much different from the English. “Americans students are much more outgoing and friendly. If students in England like you they wouldn’t tell you,” she said. “Teaching is more fun in a classroom that is much more relaxed.” The transition hasn’t been completely smooth, Dr. Howe said. Tests in England are essay-oriented, not the objective kind so popular in the states. “T didn’t know how to make them out,” she said. “For every right answer you have to find wrong answers. It’s been a battle of conscience to change my style of teaching.” Classes in England are much smaller and students don’t suitcase like Americans do, Dr. Howe said. “Once they’re up for a semester, they're up. They can’t have jobs ‘either.” English students spend five or six hours in the library daily and their work is usually narrowed to one subject, she said. “Americans are very good at expressing themselves verbally. They’ve in- formed about a wider range of subjects.” Life in Bowling Green is good for Dr. Howe, too, she said. “I could never go back — D. Gibson students in a different light from most instructors. At times she has Sunday school class members to her home following Sunday night worship services. to living in a big town. Bowling Green is small enough so you can get anywhere in 10 minutes; in England it takes half an hour. “The pace seems much faster, too, with so many conveniences. You can pack more things into a day,” she said. ‘The pace of life on this side of the water is such that I often wonder if I'll live to be 65.” Dr. Howe returns home once every three years, but she said the trip is emotionally exhausting. “I have my parents and three married sisters with children there,” she said. “Everybody's life has changed in three years. The longer we're apart the less we have to talk about.” She was home in May and was astounded at the economy. ‘Prices are so high there. Houses have tripled in price in the last four or five years,” Dr. Howe said. “It costs $2.00 to park your car and we complain here about putting a quarter in a meter downtown,” she said. — CONNIE HOLMAN (1) 181 Potter College Teachers-to-be draw more than straight The students are pessimistic the first day of class; they’re not artists and they don’t see how they could possibly get an “A” out of the course. But with a little bit of encouragement and a lot of work with tempera, clay, wax crayons and water color, students in Elementary Art Educa- tion 310 emerge ready to reach children to ex- press themselves. Dr. D. Neil Peterie teaches the art course, a requirement for elementary education majors. ‘The first thing they say is “I’m no artist; I can’t draw a straight line,” Peterie said Peterie said the course is p artly a methods course to give the future teachers information to share with their pupils. He said art education has moved through three periods and its present stage is a combination of the first two. “At one time it was all discipline and no creativity,” Peterie said. “An assignment was made and if a student matched the prototype he got an “A”. Progressive education was the next stage, according to the instructor. ‘Teachers told the children to draw whatever they wanted to,” he said. “Kids were draw- ing stereotypes such as feflipee trees.” ‘Now we teach people to observe trees before they draw them,” the instructor said. “They get the best from both ideas and it’s all perfect.” Although his students will be teaching children, Peterie said he doesn’t let features his college students draw as children do. Instead, he encourages them to do their best but not to feel ashamed of any of their work. “Anything goes in art; nobody questions it,” Peterie said. “Art is on the fringe of society and it’s the one thing (of that nature) socially accepted.” Once Peterie conveys that concept to his students, work begins as they experiment with art mediums and make teaching aids. To lead variety, Peterie said students complete projects using wax crayons, water color, tempera, clay and collages. Peterie said many elementary school principals don’t support the teaching of art in the classroom. One student in Peterie’s class, Debbie Betz, said she hadn’t taken art since the eighth grade. The senior said she learned a lot in the class and got some good guidelines for teaching art. “We made lesson Panel visual aids and flashcards,” Miss Betz said. “If there is not an art teacher in the type of system I'll be teaching in I'll be able to use it.” Carol Webb, a senior from Caneyville, said several of her classmates went into the class with the attitude that they couldn’t draw and they wouldn’t draw. She disagrees with their attitude. “Even though you're not talented you can follow the rules,” Miss Webb said. She said her first art project was an assignment to draw a natural object. “J was surprised at what came out. People didn’t think they were artists but he (Peterie) told us that anyone who SERA ES ai PSPSPS ow Euan e Art: Teachers-to-be draw more than straight lines e Theatre: Seams and stitches e Journalism: Pictures worth at least a thousand words lines creates is an artist,’ Miss Webb said. “T had the most fun when he gave us paper and temperas and let us go and do anything we wanted,” she said. “I was more pleased with that then anything I did. That was creativity for real; that’s what I liked about it,” Miss Webb added. The senior said she was introduced to a lot of different mediums that all school children would like to use. She added that children need a variety of exposure and need to be kept away from stereotypes. ‘Building perception in children means a lot,” she said. “I’ve learned not to wait until Thanksgiving to let the children draw turkeys.” — CONNIE HOLMAN Contour drawing, a technique utilized by not looking at the paper was one of the projects by Art 310 students. Class member Debbie Neal posed in this costume. The class had a choice of areweing five different models, and this particular class assignment was completed uring two class periods. — B. Rogers 182 Potter College | = = ’ construction Seams and stitches Shakespeare once said that we are all players on the stage of life. However, he failed to mention that someone has to make the costumes. That’s where the new costuming class of the theatre department comes in. The fall semester marked the first time Western offered a stage costume design course. It began with little more than an empty room, a handful of students and the determination to have the class. But the course instructor, Dr. Jackson Kesler, hopes to build a costume design and rogram that Western can be proud of. “Eventually we hope to establish a whole area of study of costume design and interpretation,” said Kesler, “and hopefully work up to the point where we will offer a credible area.” Although he noted that Western lacks adequate facilities and storage space for the costume program, Kesler spoke confidently of the potential for the program. “This is the fourth costume department I’ve established, so I know the do’s and don’ts,” he said. Anyone going into theatre should consider taking some costuming courses, according to Kesler. He said he tries to teach students “to develop their artistic skills,to take intangible ingredients of the character present to the stage.” Kesler said it is important to ‘be able to design costumes that are “dramatically and artistically effective,” and “to be able to arrive at an interpre- tation and deliver it to the audience.” Costume sewing and tailoring are quite different from street clothes sewing, according to Kesler. For one thing, the costumes are made with no consideration given to the insides. For another, no zippers are used in costumes because during a play there is “no time for a zipper to get hung up.” The average costume takes from 30 to 40 hours to construct, according to Kesler. “It’s very hard and time consuming, but I love it very much,” he said. Kesler said he thinks students who have Pictures worth at least With the fear of humiliation in mind, students began placing their photographs on the judging table. Some tried to keep the ownership of their photos a secret, by backing up to the table and tossing the pictures when every- one’s attention was some- where else. With a sense of reluctance the comments began. “This picture of the men on strike is good but it’s printed terribly,” said one. “Whose is this?” asked the instructor. “It’s mine,” replied another student. “This is the worst print I have ever seen. The content is great but what basic student did you have print this for you?” asked the instructor. The comments continued like this until it was time for a vote. First place went to the terrible print, but he had to print it again to get an “A.” This type of “no holds barred criticism” is commonplace in the Mass Communications 377 Photojournalism class. To teach the students to fill newspaper pages with the “pictures worth a 1000 words,” requires a class which compliments the real world. Jack Corn, a photographer for the Nashville Tennessean, teaches the photojournalism class. His method of teaching is designed to come as close to the real world as possible. Corn estimated that 35 per cent of the daily newspaper is pictures. He said if a concentrated in costume design and construction will have a relatively easy time in finding work. Kesler could set no time table for the progress he hopes to make in the new area of study, but he says a thousand person expects to fill that space to the satisfaction of himself and the editors he must learn “how to communicate” and “how to work with deadlines.” At the beginning of the fall semester, 13 students were given a photographic assignment for each class meeting, ranging from “show a person loves you and you love them in a picture” to a “picture depicting the rise in the cost of living.” Corn allows the students to grade the Page assignments by a vote for best picture. The winner gets an “A,” and the loser get “B's” and “C's”. “This makes them communicate with each other and also adds a little competitive spirit,” Corn said. David Banahan, a member — M. Lyons Drawings of costume designs are often used as illustrations in costuming class by Dr. Jackson Kesler, course instructor. Besides learning the basics of cos- tuming in the classroom, students in the class also gain practical experience by helping with costumes for Western’s dramas and musicals. the university has been “very cooperative for what I needed.” “IT would like to go as fast as possible, but realistically, this is not Sn ne It’s got a long road ahead.” — BILL WOLFE words of the class said, “This method of grading our pictures can really embarrass you, but you usually know when a picture is bad so you are ready for the criticism. Besides, it makes the class a challenge and more fun.” Keith Collie, another student, said, “You can really get your feelings hurt in the class but it just makes you try harder.” In summarizing his method of teaching, Corn said, “I won’t pull any punches and I don’t expect the rest of the class to, either. If the picture’s bad — say so, if it’s good — say so.” “With this method of teaching everyone learns some valuable skills, including me,” Corn said. — MIKE THOMAS () 183 Potter College and chopsticks e Foreign Language: Japanese — Backward sentences ¢ Music: Spotlights traded in for lesson plans Japanese — Backward sentences and chopsticks The description in the course catalog didn’t mention a lesson on Oriental eating style with chopsticks, but students who took Japanese Pronunciation got a free lesson in the art. Kazuzuke Abe taught the one-hour class, and he said he was prompted to teach the class by some American friends who were interested in Japanese culture. Learning ‘everyday things” was a focus of the course, he said. Abe taught students simple phrases such as “is this good?,” “where’s the bathroom?,” “how much?,” “I like this,” and “I don’t like this.” Pronunciation and grammar were also stressed in the class, and Abe said he tried to share the Japanese culture with students through films and discussions. At one class meeting he explained the practice of communal baths. “They don’t take baths to get clean necessarily because the people wash apie getting in,” Abe said, add- ing that giggles from his commentary continued well into the remainder of the class. Each week Abe gave the class two Chinese characters which are also used in Japanese writing. “Each two were basic characters because it would be impossible for the class to learn all of them since there are several thousand.” Time limits the students from learning to read, but Abe said they can speak and understand each other. 184 Potter College “The class deserves more than one hour of credit,” Abe said. The class only meets once a week for an hour, and I can’t expect them to learn much or to teach them much,” he added. Sally Clark, a sophomore from Bowling Green, said the class was fun but not exactly simple. “Japanese is a lot different,” Miss Clark said. “Almost everything about a sentence is backwards and there are a lot of inflections.” The German major said the class learned some useful expressions such as Kazuzuke Abe, the teacher of the Japanese pronunciation class, lectures his students at one of the regular Monday night class meetings. Besides lectures, the class also thank you, greetings and phrases about the weather, a common topic of conversation in Japan. “We always laughed at one another getting the pronunciation wrong,” Miss Clark said. “Nobody sounds anything like Japanese.” Mini-lessons were given on education, religion, women and the family structure in Japan, the sophomores said. The class got an extra treat when their instructor and his wife hosted a Japanese dinner. Boiled egg yolks stuffed with seaweed and covered with boiled rice, rice with sweet and sour pork and chicken were the main dishes, she said. Soup, bean curd with soy sauce, almond cookies and candy made by Abe’s relatives were also menu items, Miss Clark said. The food had a different taste but the real switch was in the wrist action needed when the students were handed chopsticks. “One irl had eaten with them berate and one girl was Chinese,” Miss Clark said. “The rest of us left rice crumbs on our plate that we couldn’t pick up, but those two had their plates clean. I don’t see how they did it.” — DIANE WEBB — M. Lyons viewed films, had class discussions and had an authentic Japanese meal, complete with chop sticks. Abe started teaching the class last spring with a 12-member class. Spotlights traded in for lesson plans Sylvia Kersenbaum, touring concert pianist from Argentina, is the living embodiment of the belief that work is the most important part of con- cert performing. “The facility to perform is only one part of performing. Only about 10 per cent of it is talent; the other 90 per cent of it is work,” said Miss Kersenbaum, who joined the music depart- ment last fall as an as- sociate professor. Miss Kersenbaum, who started playing the piano when she was four, does not slight the importance of natural ability in performing. “ Some things you just don’t teach,” she said. ‘No one ever taught me how to play the piano; I just sat down and played it,” she said. The Buenos Aires native said she least cared for the “business end of performing.” “What I like to do most is make music. I don’t like musical business and the things that go on behind the scenes,” she said. “T dislike everything that happens up to about two minutes before I go on stage. But when it is over I want to do it all again,” she added. According to Miss Kersenbaum, there were several reasons she decided to come to Western. The hectic life of touring was one of the things that influenced her decision to stop full-time touring. “I was doing quite a bit of touring. I like very much just playing concerts here and there, but not long tours,” she said. “Eventually (on long tours) if you make too many concerts you don’t have time to properly prepare them because you are just jumping from one city to another,” she said. “I just want to take it easy.” At the second program of the Fine Arts Festival, Sylvia Kersenbaum, a new music professor at Western, made her Western concert debut with the Owensboro Symphony. Miss Kersenbaum said her sister, a piano instructor at the University of Massachusetts, urged her to come to Western. “IT was looking for someplace to establish myself as a teacher,” she said. “I asked her (her sister) if she knew of a position that would be interesting for me, and she put me in contact with ahs people here.” Miss Kersenbaum also said that her interview with Western was the only one she had. “It was the first interview I had and the first job offer I took,” she said. But one does not give up the glamour of a professional career and start teaching without noticing certain changes, Miss Kersenbaum said. The main difference between her life at Western and her life when she was a pianist, according to Miss Kersenbaum, is the number of immediate responsibilities she now has. She likened her pre- sent occupation to a kind of “marriage.” “When I was on tour somewhere and I wanted to stay there longer, I could,” she said. “Now there are certain appointments that I have to meet at cer- tain times.” Reflecting on her background, Miss Kersenbaum said her parents were not too involved with music. “My mother is from an Italian family, and with them it is traditional that a girl learn to play the violin,” she said. “My father has a very nice voice, but he never Belly used it for anything special.” Miss Kersenbaum graduated from national — M. Lyons Miss Kersenbaum, once a touring concert pianist, still records and occasionally tours when a semester break occurs. She is a native of Buenos Aires, Argentina. conservatory at Argentina in piano at age 12 and in composition at age 21. “They (my parents) never forced me to do one thing or the other. I was always free to choose,” she said. “They always taught me the best example they could, and they are happy with whatever I do.” For her own personal music tastes Miss Kersenbaum said she likes to perform Mozart’s music, Bela Bartok’s modern music and Romantic music. “A lot of what you like in music depends on your own life and your own feelings at a particular moment,” she said. “It’s kind. of like your likes and dislikes in food,” she added. “At one time you may hate oranges, but at another time you may have a need or urge to eat them.” — ROBIN VINCENT (1) 185 Potter College 186 College of Education With classes in the circular Diddle Arena and College of Education buildings, students getting teaching certificates often had to go Round and round Dr. J.T. Sandefus is dean of a college whose students’ homework assignments range from a puppet show for pres- choolers to practicing a tennis serve. As dean of the College of Education, Sandefur oversees the departments of elementary education, school admin- istration, industrial education and tech- nology, secondary education, psycholo- gy, counselor education and physical education and recreation. One new program in the college is a child study and learning center, a service area designed to diagnose public school problems such as social adjustment needs. The center is equipped with a di- agnostic technician, and will serve the public schools in the area, he said. As for the best job opportunities, San- defur said, “Special education teachers are in much demand. We are also having good placement for those graduating with a two-year associate degree in in- dustrial education technology.” The College of Education is “probably one of the most complicated programs,” said Dr. Kenneth Brenner, associate dean. The college’s 10 areas are housed in nine buildings. — 2 gag 3 BR NY 5 0b, ‘War LUT p Education Brenner said identifying education students, especially those following the secondary education program is a prob- lem. A student may major in one area and that department counts him as its major. As associate dean, Brenner keeps re- cords of the teachers in all areas of the college. He includes in this record such things as each teacher’s course load and the number of students in each section. One thing is certain in the College of Education. Dr. Roger Pankratz is at the root of all new projects. “What I do is get projects started in the College of Edu- cation,’ the assistant dean for instruc- tion. said. One addition to the college is a diag- nostic clinic. “We're doing a complete diagnostic work-up on children who have learning and behavior problems,” Pankratz said. “The center is an effort to coordinate activities where we deal with children. At Western since June of 1974, Pank- ratz said a college degree is more valu- able now than when he graduated in terms of promotion, satisfaction and the options an individual will have during his lifetime. “You don’t get the immedi- ate returns you used to get. A degree is not important for initial employment, but it is important for long-term goals in life,” he said. The logic is simple. Dr. Norman Ehresman runs the Center for Career and Vocational Teacher Education the way he thinks an institution should be. “An institution should be alive and growing, not stable and static,” Ehres- man said. The center is now developing a com- munity education program, expanding efforts in adult education and conduct- Taking a weekend practice swing in his yard is Dr. Kenneth Brenner, associate dean of the College of Education. Brenner, who has been at Western since 1966, said he usually does most of his golfing on weekend mornings. ing research in existing programs, Ehres- man said. “In the past year we’ve had an in-ser- vice teacher education program for teach- ers who work with the disadvantaged and handicapped,” he said. “For almost three years we’ve been testing the effects of working with the evaluation of Competency Based Teacher Education in Kentucky.” A teacher education program in public service occupations is also being devel- oped to include information about jobs in fire prevention, police protection and Despite the fact that his job as director of career and vocational services takes up most of his time, Dr. Norman Ehresman still finds time to work on his farm machinery. He said his wife cares for their 17 acre “large garden” and beef cattle. Whenever he gets a chance, Dr. Roger Pankratz, assistant dean for instruction in the College of Education, enjoys playing pool with his three sons in the recreation room of his home. The recreation room also houses the family’s television set. A hand made rifle that shoots black powder is what Dr. J.T. Sandefur uses when hunting. The rifle has silver inlays and is number 1619 in a series of approximately 2,000. It has been owned by the Col- lege of Education dean for less than a year. community service agencies. “It would BiePals teachers who would teach the exploration level of those occupations in preparatory school,” Ehresman said. After 29 years in the Owensboro pub- lic school system, Dr. Kenneth Estes, di- rector of field services, came to Western to teach administration. “It was my goal to spend my last 10 years teaching other people how to be administrators, and I guess that is really the reason why I came here,” he said. Estes works with public school dis- tricts within a 100-mile radius of Bowl- ing Green, informing superintendents of the programs and services of the College of Education. “When a school district wants some- one to come for an in-service program or maybe just to speak to their faculty, they contact me. I sent them whatever person we have available to take care of the needs they have,” he said. (continued on page 188) Time to sit in his office and read a book is some- thing Dr. Kenneth Estes, field services director, rarely has. Besides traveling to nearby school dis- tricts as a part of his job Estes teaches two educa- tion administration c asses. Education College of Education cont The people in the reading and special education department are looking ahead. According to Dr. Curtis Englebright, department head, plans are being made for a revamping of its programs. “We are changing to conform to state uidelines,” Englebright said. “We be- fisve this will make students better ualified and give them more depth for their jobs.” The changes will create a special edu- cation major endorsed for elementary education grades one through eight and certification or teachers for special edu- cation in grades one through 12. Another change will add a “non-categorical” ap- proach to reading and eee education. However, ec on improving will not stop now, Englebright said. “The work will never be finished until all students in public schools are per- forming to their potential. I don’t expect to see that in my lifetime,” he said realis- tically, ‘but I hope there will be signifi- cant visible improvements.” “The basic of counseling is being able to communicate with people,” said Dr. Emmett Burkeen, counselor education department head. “A good counselor will try to give a person as much information as he can to help him in a decision-mak- ing process.” Another key to being a good counselor is impartiality, Burkeen said. “You have to work with the individual; you can’t Finals were over and the three-week semester break was underway eight days before Christmas. Dr. Emmett Burkeen reads an edition of the Condensed Reader’s Digest Book series. Head of the depart- ment of counselor education, Burkeen said reading is his favorite pastime and always has been. Education play God,” he said. “The problem is ceLuns people to decide what is best or them.” He added that people have been placed in jobs all over the area. ‘Positions as counselors in elementary schools are be- coming very good possibilities because more and more schools are adding the position,” Burkeen said. ‘There were not many elementary school counselors in the past.” Rookie department head Dr. Robert Melville is not a newcomer to the secon- dary education department, since he has been a faculty member there for adecade. The shift in his responsibilities has been calm, according to Melville. “So far, so good, but I’ve changed the allocation of my time,” he said. “I’m seeing more people — lots of students, faculty, other administrators and people from other parts of the university.” Melville said field-based activities help students decide if an education ca- reer is what they want. “After several A malfunction of the photographer’s shutter made a retake of Dr. Robert Melville’s Talisman picture necessary. This was the first year the new head of the secondary education department had his pic- ture made for the Talisman. On an average of once a week, Dr. R.L. Sleamaker, elementary education department head, uses his olarcraft boat to go fishing on area lakes. He said e generally launches his boat “wherever there is a puddle big enough to launch it in.” trips, some decide they don’t want to teach, and (they) drop out. They don’t waste time later,” he said. Teaching positions are finally becom- ing more abundant in different fields, and elementary school is no exception, said Dr. Robert Sleamaker, elementary education department head. “As the state increases support for the kindergarten programs, the demand for teachers is becoming greater,” Sleamaker said. ‘The job market in elementary edu- cation is very good right now. We are placing just about all our people.” Sleamaker said the quantity of posi- tions is greatest at the public school lev- el. “I think one reason for this is the amount of turnover that occurs in teach- | er employment,” he said. “There are still many more female elementary school teachers than males, and the female is more susceptible to interrupting her ca- reer with marriage, children or moving with her husband.” Women who want to coach sports or work with recreational programs have a better chance of getting jobs now, ac- cording to Dr. Burch Oglesby, head of the department of physical education jiand recreation. Oglesby said many high schools are Before the Eastern football game Dr. Burch Og- lesby, physical education department head, greeted the Colonels’ players and coaches when they ar- rived at Smith Stadium. Oglesby said he always greets the opponents when they arrive. ae women as they try to comply with e a Title IX order requiring them to offer athletic teams for female students. Oglesby said future improvements in the department will be made in recrea- tion and women’s academic and athlet- ic programs. “T think we need to continue to expand our opportunities for women in the areas of classes that we offer them,” he said. “I think Western also needs a varsity wom- en’s volleyball team. We need to hire ad- ditional faculty to teach recreation too,” he said. The industrial education department is in the new house it helped plan, the Environmental Sciences and Technology Building, according to Dr. Frank Conley, department head. Labs have more space for equipment, he said. ‘Soon the department will have 90 per cent of what I hope will be some of the best facilities in the state,” Con- ley said. Conley said increased enrollment in the department is partially due to the abundance of job openings. “Many jobs in industry have to do with operatin machines that cost half a million dol- lars,” he said. Industry wants to hire educated people for these positions, he added. Part ownership in an airplane not only provides a hobby for Dr. Victor Chris- tenson, but it also provides transpor- tation to Louisville where he teaches night classes. Christenson is head of the de- partment of education administration In his office at the new Environmental Sciences and Technology Building, Dr. Franklin Conley, indus- trial education department head, talks with Dr. Ed- mund Hegen, a geography professor, whose de- partment also moved into the building. and foundations. Christenson said that the best job op- portunities in education administration are those at the elementary and secon- dary administration levels. “But these jobs are difficult for people to get if they are not already part of the school system,” he said. “Normally a person serves an apprenticeship in a cer- tain school system, and then is tapped to move up.” It’s only his second year as psychology department head, but Dr. John O’Con- nor said he has already seen “a whole bunch of changes” within the depart- ment. “I see people more open and willing to take on things,” O’Connor said. “I think there’s more commitment. “Some of these people put in an in- ternship in large cities. Developing cul ture-free tests for firemen and policemen is one of the things these people have training to do,” O'Connor said. Right now, the general experimen- tal program offers the least job op- gg he said, “People are looking or more specialized skills instead of general education. (continued on page 196) Working around the new house he is having built in Shawnee Estates often keeps Dr. John O’Con- nor, head of the psychology department, from his favorite hobby, playing tennis. O’Connor said he plans to do part of the painting in his new home. Reading a magazine about airplanes, an active hob- by, is a favorite pastime for Dr. Victor Christenson, education administration and foundations depart- ment head. Christenson is part owner of a plane he uses to commute to Louisville when he teaches extension classes there. 189 Education : Teaching Kindergarten is With pre-school children crowded around her, elementary education major Gail Pendleton teaches a science lesson about things that roll, complete with examples. The science lesson at Bowling Green Day Care Center was one of three required for kindergarten meth- ods, a bi-term class, offered by the elementary education department. 190 Education More than crayons and construction paper “It’s had such a pronounced effect on me that I don’t want to teach anything else,” said the student. “This is one of those classes you hate when it’s going on but you find it’s bene- ficial afterwards,” said another student. The students are referring to the elementary educa- tion course 412, known as Methods in Kindergarten. Sara Taylor teaches the bi-term course. It is the third in the sequence of required courses for a kindergarten endorsement on an elementary education teaching certificate. The main objective of the course, according to Mrs. Taylor, is to allow the students to apply the theory learned in previous classes to actual pre- school experiences. “They don’t just talk about what can be done; they try it,” Mrs. Taylor said. ‘With he end product you can actually evaluate it.” In addition to readin assignments, each girl haa to prepare three lesson plans, write modules, make visual aids, do research and ob- serve other students teach- ing kindergarten. Each student taught at three kindergartens. At Jones-Jaggers Laboratory School the lesson was on social studies. “At the lab school we can video-tape experiences,” said Mrs. Taylor. The student and teacher critique the lesson later. Sharon O'Hara, a senior elementary education major from Owensboro taught her lesson on sharing. It included a song about taking turns and puzzles to be assembled by the children to teach them to share the pieces. -Marianne Stroube, an elementary education major from Bowling Green, taught her lesson on “the idea that _ everyone was special and unique in their own way.” “The only way to learn is through experience,” said Miss Stroube. “She determines our grade by our lesson plan. The children’s reaction didn’t affect our grade,” she said. The girls taught a math lesson at Jolly Time Pla-school and a science lesson at the Third Street Day Care Center. Miss O’Hara’s lesson was based on taste and touch. She prepared paper sacks with an opening, each filled with Bijects to touch and identify. She described her favorite lesson as a “real challenge.” The children took all the objects out at the same time instead of feeling and identifying each separately. Miss O’Hara said what she liked the most was “getting out there and really being with children and putting into practice what you had learned in previous classes. “We were with children of all types. She (Mrs. Taylor) gave us a real good cross- section,” Miss O’Hara added. “T like working with the children. You can learn a lot from them,” said Debbie Karr, a senior elementary education major from Owensboro. “They are also interested in everything,” she said. “You have to be careful because they mock everything you do.” Mrs. Taylor echoed her student’s frustrations. “When you work with children you Using pipe cleaners, water and dish washing liquid, Debbie Neal, a senior elementary education major from Green- ville, teaches the children a lesson and allows them to blow bubbles, too. Shar- on O’Hara, a senior elementary educa- tion major from Owensboro, uses a mod- el called “Tommy Touch” in a lesson designed to get the children to notice the texture of chjectss A social studies les- son, taught at Jones-Jaggers Laboratory School, and a math lesson taught at Jolly Time Day Care Center, were the other major assignments in the bi-term class, offered in the fall and spring. — D. Gibson — D. Gibson While waiting for Sara Taylor’s kinder- ade methods students to arrive at owling Green Day Care Center to teach their science lessons, Debbie Finn, a teacher at the center, tells a story to the children who are waiting. About 34 chil- dren, ages three through five, attend. must be satisfied,” she said. “The students work for the children. They would feel pretty low to know they failed the children.” On the last day of class, each girl wore a graduation cap with the word “kindergarten” written across the front, startling Mrs. Taylor as she entered the room. So what will they do after graduation? Their dream is to someday have a classroom of iheir own, or possibly be in charge of a kindergarten. — MARY PACE — D. Gibson features e Psychology: Heavenly questions about childish ways e Industrial Education: Spray guns that shoot paint and ink © e Counselor Education: What’s inside the problem solvers Heavenly questions about childish ways “One day my four-year- old daughter brought a broken toy with a request that I fix it. I made a quick inspection and informed the child that the toy could not be repaired. A ‘short time later, the broken toy came to my attention again, this time with an explanation of the importance of the requested repair. With considerable detail I explained why the repair was not possible. Later, a third request was made by a bribe we promised good behavior. Suddenly I realized that my explanations had not meant the same to the child as they had to me.” This story is from an article written by Dr. Dorsey Grice, assistant professor of psychology, about research he has done concerning a child’s concept of God. Last year Grice and graduate student Dennis Feeley did research in the area. According to Grice, neither the type nor the amount of traditional religious training in the children was considered in the research. “In our first study we did not worry about the amount of religious training the children had,” Grice said. “Because of that we aren’t exactly sure what our data means.” This year Grice and Dr. Lois Layne, also an assistant professor of psychology, plan to continue the research. Others have simply theorized about it, Grice said. “We want to determine precisely how the child views the parent and how this view changes with time,” he said. “We want to see how these changes related to changes in his conception of God.” According to Grice, the child’s views of the parent is absolute, much like the usual view of God. “The child views the parents as absolute. He doesn’t perceive the limitations of a parent,” Grice said. “If he sees the parent as a fixer, the parent can fix anything. We are interested in finding out whether his concept of God becomes absolute after his view of the parent as absolute decays.” Grice said the child’s change in his concept of the porns and of God occurs etween ages five and seven. “We want to know why there is a transition between four, five, six and seven- year-olds,” he said. “We want to know if it is As part of their research to determine how children devel- opa con eeR of God, Dr. Dorsey Grice and Dr. Lois Layne dren by use of models and theoretical situa- tested chi because their view of their arents is changing or Heese their view of God is just developing, and therefore beginning to compete with the parent as a primary helper,” Grice said. According to Dr. Layne, both religious training and the child’s cognitive development influence the child’s concept of God, but in different ways. “T think the changes that we are interested in are due to the cognitive development of the child,” she said. “The content of what the child knows would certainly be greatly influenced by religious training.” Grice, who has been involved with this particular study longer than Dr. Layne, said his theory concerning the child’s development of a concept of God has changed since ie tions. In an attempt to refine techniques before into the community to do any formal testing, t their methods out on Dr. Layne’s daughter Emily. began the study. “T first thought that when the child saw ihe parent as having limitations he substituted a concept of God to take the place of the parent,” Grice said. He is less committed to that viewpoint now. “A great deal may now depend on how well the child can focus on the total problem we give him.” Grice said he expects the outcome to show that an age-related separation of authority takes place in the child. “T suspect that what we will find will be that the child has certain authority images and that as he grows older he begins to separate them,” Grice said. “One of these images is the parent. Another one he receives in the form of religious training is God.” — ROBIN VINCENT () going out ey tried — M. Lyons 192 Education Spray suns that shoot Dollar signs flash in front of the student’s face, and dreams of fame bounce in his mind as he plans his future with Beeching: This same student may also dream of buying a van, customizing it and ultimately airbrushing scenes on the sides. Unfortunately, for beginning students in aa uresha this is not the case. Wandel Dye, teacher of Airbrush Rendering 315, said students jump into the course thinking they will be doing all kinds of things in a couple of weeks. He said ‘this happens before the reality of hard work and patience sets in. Airbrush rendering is an introductory course to teach students to use an airbrush. An airbrush is like a conventional spray gun that sprays paint or ink. The source of air is a compressor and tank. Dye said the course starts out with exercises in basic airbrush rendering. Dots, lines, flat and graded washes and checkerboard patterns are attempted by the students. The rest of the course involves advanced airbrush rendering in which the students try to visualize how What’s inside the problem solvers Curiosity killed the cat and it almost got to the faculty in the counselor education department until they began research to solve some mysteries. The department wanted to know why students want to become counselors. “The whole notion of accountability in the preparation of professionals is brought to the surface,” said Dr. Stephen Schnacke, one of the research directors. He said the research will enable the department to evaluate the work of its people. “With this we can say, this is what we are doing and what we are not doing,” Schnacke said. Dr. Richard Greer, light strikes five basic forms — sphere, curve, cone, concave and cylinder. In the basic class, the students control airbrushes which blow black ink on white surfaces. They use template cut from acetate for the outside borders of objects. Dye said the majority of the students in the airbrush rendering class are in technology, commercial art, mass communications and interior design. Some of the students are in a one-year technical illustration program. Dye said the job a student receives after the one-year program depends on the student’s aptitude. “They are capable of rece four or five types of jobs which include being a technical illustrator, airbrush artist, layout (graphics) artist and technical writer,” he said. Dye also said some students are able to do free lance work for companies after they graduate. “They can really make good money but it depends on the type of company you are working for and what they have you doing,” he said. “Airbrushing is used a lot on the commercial level,” Dye said. He added that 90 Schnacke’s co-researcher, said the study involves a battery of tests which are “self-report personal- ity instruments.” The researchers said they are trying to find out also why some students go into different aspects of counselor education. Greer said it was a clinical fact that a lot of people go into counseling because they have problems of their own. Greer said they hope “to see if certain kinds of personality variables have any effect on the job success.” Within a year, Schnacke and Greer hope to further their research into counselor education by evaluating paint and ink — D. Gibson Exam time can often be hectic for students as they try to finish up final piolects and tevin Papery: Tom Kerr began his final project for Airbrush ore endering be anksgiving break because he completed all required as- signments early. His project was an airbrushed replication of a Corvette. per cent of commercial trade advertising employs the use of the airbrush. Tom Kerr said he got interested in airbrushing when he saw the work of one of his fraternity brothers. The junior commercial art major said he took the course because commercial art majors can take many of the courses offered in industrial education. “The hardest part at first was regulating the amount of employed graduates. “Historically, the research is done after the program,” Schnacke said. They hope to look at the Par ehel eae the graduated student and by doing so create a better product, he said. The researchers said the Teacher Preparation Evaluation Program (TPEP) was a model for their study. TPEP picks out a number of student teachers and collects the same type of data but includes observations of teaching style. Then the TPEP studies the teachers again in about two or three years and makes comparisons. The study is funded by a faculty research grant from ink you let through with es finger on the trigger,” e said. Carl Krull has taken the 315, 330 and 380 airbrush courses. He said he took the first course to see what it was like. He enjoyed it and decided to “stick with it.” In independent study, Krull said he structured the course himself with the help of Dye. His major project was the replication of a forest green Datsun 280-Z. — JIM SIWICKI the university. Faculty members and graduate students assisted in gathering data, Greer said. Approximately 126 students were tested last fall. The system “is not a one- shot study,” Greer said. “It’s longitudal.” The study was started in the spring of 1976. Information will be collected every other semester, and each section of study is compared and related to the previous one. A computer is used to record all the information and make the statistical analysis. The first complete statistics will be finished in mid-spring. — MARY PACE (1 193 Education features IO, ‘ 4 ‘§ 4 eet saoeiter es aay t if — D. Beauchamp While looking to her instructor for directions, Susan Porter, a junior physical education major from Falls of Rough, tries her hand at some basic volleyball officiating motions. The class is taught by Julia Yeater, the new women’s basketball coach, who competed in Polley Re l and basketball as an undergrad- uate. The class also includes a segment concerning women’s basketball as well as volleyball, and is offered in the fall. 194 Education e Physical Education: ‘Ref’ factory teaches ladies to produce better calls e Reading and Special Education: A breakthrough to Johnny’s potential “Ref” factory teaches ladies to produce better calls There may be fewer bad calls in future women’s basketball and volleyball panes if Julia Yeater can elp it. Miss Yeater coaches the women’s basketball team and teaches a sports officiating class. The course is designed to acquaint students with the rules and mechanics of officiating a women’s basketball or volleyball game, she said. “Officiating is a marketable commodity and is just starting to pay pretty good,” Miss Yeater said. “The students need to know the rules of officiating and that’s why the class is there.” The “text” for the class is a rule book. The National Association of Girls’ and Women’s Sports rule books help students achieve the several different levels of officiating. “At Western, a person can get up to an intramural level which means that person is qualified to officiate at intramural games only,” Miss Yeater said. “After the intramural level, there are the apprentice, local, state and national levels. To even be considered for officiating at a high school game (local fevely you've got to have had at least three years of previous experience in officiating,” she said. Officiating just one game on a local level can net $35 to $50, much higher than the amount previously offered to women “refs,” according to Miss Yeater. The class is entirely . female with most students being physical education majors, and the instructor said the class is not an easy one to teach. “It is rather difficult at times to teach because I’m really limited as far as visual aids go,” she said. “Sometimes I videotape a game to show techniques to the class.” Diane Embry, a junior Pea education major rom Morgantown, said the class was “very helpful and pretty interesting. ‘Every member of the class is required to officiate at one of the intramural games,” she said, “and that’s pretty good experience.” Miss Yeater also said she has set a few goals for the class. “Hopefully, the girls will have come out of the class being able to see the different types of fouls in volleyball and basketball — that’s what separates a good official from a bad one,” she said. — GARY MOORE A break-through to Johnny’s potential Johnny can’t read. His reading ability may be impaired by physical, mental or emotional problems. The Center for Child Study and Learning in the College of Education building can diagnose Johnny’s problem. The center consists of a diagnostic center, research clinic and Jones-Jaggers Laboratory School which is the instructional center. According to Dr. James Gibbs, diagnostic center _director, the center is designed to provide people of all ages with services not usually available through public schools. “The center provides educational and psychological services for pre-schoolers to adults,” Gibbs said. “When a child enters the diagnostic clinic,” said Gibbs, “he is tested by a battery of vision, hearing, academic and intelligence tests. Then the parents are interviewed.” Gibbs said these steps are necessary to determine the specific program needed for the child. The director said about 60 to 70 per cent of the children have fairly serious problems. He also said most of the problems are that the children are not successful at school and have a poor attitude about it. The clinic has not encountered any problems “we can’t handle,” Gibbs said. “We see about 40 cases per semester, of which one- tenth are high school students,” he added. If a child is in the clinic, he said, “we will keep him however long is necessary, then we will release him if he is competitive.” The second segment of the child study center is the research center headed by Dr. Harry Robe. According to Robe, the research center is geared to collect data and make observations to test the effectiveness of the children’s programs. Robe said he also works with one- and two-year-old infants in addition to adults with learning or adjust- ment difficulties. he two programs which are in experimental stages are the humanistic-oriented and the behavioristic- oriented programs at Jones-Jaggers. According to Robe, the humanistic program is an educational trend which has become popular in the last 10 years. He said the understanding of a person’s self-concept and his ability to relate to others are important. The behavioristic program is concerned with specific skills the children gain, Robe said. “The program focuses on what kinds of rewards or reinforcements for specific kinds of behavior,” Robe added. “We're still developing the details for the two kinds of teaching programs,” he said. “We won't really be able to use them until next August.” econline to Robe, the children at Jones-Jaggers Laboratory School will be divided into two groups, from kindergarten to the sixth grade. The methods for dividing the children have not been decided yet, said Robe. “We'll know by May,” he said. Robe said the children’s parents and the children themselves will be kept informed every step of the way. He said the parents are members of the advisory committee where all Proposal: are submitted or approval. Robe said several parents, teachers and concerned people met to discuss the role of the lab school about 18 months ago. From that, the three-part child study center emerged and was approved by the Board of Regents last spring. obe said that it will probably take at least three years “to really know how it (the program) will do.” “At the end of the first year, we may have an indication,” he added. As principal of the laboratory school, Dr. Donald Ritter also serves as an ex-officio member of the center’s advisory council. Ritter said he will make the final decision in choosing the children to participate in the center’s programs. He said his decision, however, will rely heavily on the advice of people who work pe directly with the children. “I’m excited about the program because it is an effort to further our understanding of what children learn and how they learn,” Ritter said. “The teachers are fairly positive about the program even though it is new at first. There are a few reservations, however,” he added. “We'll all be learning together.” — KATHY WHITSON (C1 — M. Lyons A dance workshop is a fascinating event for a child as Arthur Hall found out when he presented his Afro-American Dance ensemble to children at Jones Jaggers Laboratory School on Nov. 19. Student Debbie Doolin listened to the charismatic Hall as he explained motions. This workshop was only one of the services provided for area public schools by the college besides the new Diagnostic Center for children and young adults. 195 Education 196 Graduate College They been to college before but this time they were more serious. They lived chunks of their time in the library because they'd decided One degree was not enough A five-year-old moratorium on the creation of the new continuing educa- tion programs in Kentucky could possi- bly be Ffted within one year, accord- ing to Dr. Elmer Gray, dean of the Graduate College. Gray said when the moratorium is lift- ed there are programs planned for the college which may be instigated. “Un- til then we can only continue with inter- nal modification and improvement,” Gray said. This improvement has kept enroll- ment in the college on an increase, ac- cording to the dean. “The most in- crease has occurred in part-time en- rollment,” Gray said. “Our program has been strong in teacher alii, and many teachers come back to school eventually.” Gray said it is very difficult to predict graduate enrollment. ‘We aren’t depen- dent on last year’s graduating class,” he said. ‘At this point we have no reason to think it will decrease.” Enrollment is not the only thing con- cerning the graduate college that is hard to predict. “The job market is constantly changing. On the national trend gra- duate work in business administration, engineering and scientific fields appears Eun Gray said. “The education ield is constantly changing.” But even with scarcity of jobs, Gray said he doesn’t try to dissuade a student from entering a field in which he is inter- ested. “We need to make things available to the student, but we can’t discourage. The student has to decide,” Gray said. “You just can’t engineer human lives.” Gray said perhaps he has one of the best jobs on the college campus because he gets to administrate and teach. “I teach Plant Genetics in the fall and Pop- Graduate College ulation Genetics in the spring,” said Gray, who has a speciality in genetics and analysis. ‘Teaching is very impor- tant to an administrator. “Even at this job I don’t get to work as much on the one-to-one with students,” Gray said. “To get more into teaching would probably be my ultimate goal.” The Graduate College doesn’t always take the initiative to generate new pro- grams, according to Dr. Faye Robinson, assistant dean of the college. It often gets help from other departments, she said. “It’s a kind of cooperative effort,” Dr. Robinson said. ‘At the college and de- artment level they are much more Lrewledesble about what's going on in their particular fields. They know better than we do what needs to be changed.” Although she said it is hard to esti- mate job possibilities for students in graduate programs, Dr. Robinson said several programs offer strong job possibilities. “Master of Public Service graduates are being rather successful. I also think a M.A. in health is a particularly good field right now,” she said. “In the area of education both special education and When Dr. Elmer Gray, dean of the Graduate Col- lege, did genetic research he learned that couples with children of both sexes are less likely to want any more children. Gray's child ren Mike, 14, July, 11, Doug, 9, and Rich, 6, provide an exception. speech pathology are good areas to go into at the moment.” _ According to Dr. Robinson, a college | degree is today considered a preparatory _ tool for employment. “It has come to be looked on more as preparation for employment instead of an opportunity for personal growth,” she said. “I guess it really is both, but I still think there is too much emphasis on making money.”L] Since her children have grown up, Dr. Faye Robin- son, assistant dean of the Graduate College, has begun a new hobby, backpacking. However, she also considers her 10-month-old grandson Mark and her other grandchildren an active hobby. From Kuwait As far as students are concerned, an average semester with 15 hours of classes is a hard enough academic load. But these students “have it easy” compared to Ameer Al- Ostad, a graduate student from Kuwait. “Here, school is easier than in Kuwait. When I went to school in Kuwait we had a year semester where you might have 10 big courses,” Al-Ostad said. “That is really very hard, especially if you have exams akan cover from the first of class until the end of a book.” Although Al-Ostad said school here may be easier than it is in his homeland, the geography program at Western is superior to the one in Kuwait. “There are many courses offered here and a lot of material is available to the student,” he said. Al-Ostad, who is especially interested in human geography, said there are several classes he has taken since coming to Western that have helped him. “4 dh a class in conservation of the United States that I really liked. I also took a class in air photo interpretation that was really good,” he said. Al-Ostad especially likes a rearure to Bowling Green course he is now taking, taught by Dr. Wayne Hoffman. ‘Before I took this course I was not very familiar witht he library and how to go about checking out books and information. I think if you can pass this problem it will be easy to write about anything,” he added. Al-Ostad, here on a Pasay et paid study leave rom the University of Kuwait, said he first learned about Western through a friend from home who was studying here. “T had a friend from Kuwait who was here at Western studying economics and he sent me an application and some information about Western,” he said. Al-Ostad also said he is not the only member of his family studying in the U.S. His brother and three cousins study engineering at the University of Louisville. “Since I have been here | have gained a lot of experience about the way teachers teach. When I go back to Kuwait I have some things in my mind that I would like to try to change there that are wrong,” he said. — ROBIN VINCENT Research work in the library took up much of Amere Al- Ostad’s time last fall when he took a research methods class taught by Dr. Wayne Hoffman. The graduate student said the class gave him a better understanding of research methods. After three seasons of finishing no lower than sixth in the NCAA Cross-Country Championships, the Toppers traveled to Denton for the 1976 finals. There, they discovered that ... ‘llexa.e Dust is tiard Photos by Lewis Gardner 200 Cross-Country les) (Se egai ll koneee At 10:59 a.m., Nov. 22, 1976, in the southwestern corner of North Texas State University’s golf course in Denton, Texas, Dave Long stepped to the starting line of the NCAA Cross-Country Cham- pionships. The end of the season was 10,000 meters and about 30 minutes away. Long and his six Western teammates had high aspirations for the race on the hard, flat Texas course. The Hilltoppers had won their third straight Ohio Valley Conference title two weeks earlier and were competing in their fourth consecu- tive national championship meet. They finished sixth, second and sixth the pre- ceding three years. Western had lost its one-time national champion, Nick Rose, but was still packed with three All-Americans — Long, Tony Staynings and Chris Ridler, all Englishmen — and Jon Slaughter, oe er ts Ae who at 19 was already winning in inter- national meets. The Hilltoppers hoped to place Long and Ridler in ae top 10, Staynings in the top 15 and Slaughter in the top 50. It wasn’t likely that Western would de- throne defending team champion Texas- El Paso, but first-year Topper coach Del Hessel said it could be runner-up. For Long, the season had been his fin- est. The junior finished first or second in every meet he ran and was the team’s most consistent performer. The previous season ended in disappointment for “Longy” as he injured his ankle in a pot- hole early in the 1975 NCAA meet and limped in 151st. Coming from the finish area after the race, Long looked at a reporter and shook his head. “Don’t ask me nothing,” he said, “cause all I’ll do is Swear.” Interrupting a game of spades before the champion- ship meet, coach Del Hessel gives Jon Slaughter, Richard Green, Tony Staynings and sports reporter Roger Stinnett some last-minute information. Tom Condit lounges in the Ramada Inn room. At 11:01, the starter’s gun fired and within seconds, Long was lost among the 321 other runners. Three Kenyans from Washington State and eerenuine cham- pion Craig Virgin led the torrid pace, going through the first half-mile in about two minutes. As they said they would, Ridler and Long went out hard. (“You can’t afford to fall behind in a race like this,” Long said the previous day.) As they disappeared behind the golf course’s clubhouse a mile into the race, Ridler was seventh and Long 25th. Criss- crossing the course, Hessel ran after the leaders, shouting encouragement to his runners. At 35, Hessel was incredibly fit. In high school he was a star running back and middle-distance runner. At Colora- do State, he was nationally-ranked in the half-mile and later was invited to the 1964 and 1968 Olympic trials. Ten years out of college, Hessel keeps him- self in condition by training with his team. Just after coming to Western, he beat a freshman Topper in a warm-up meet in Louisville. In the summer of 1976 Hessel as- sumed command of the team Jerry Bean built into a national contender. At Colo- rado State, Hessel turned a poor team (‘It was what I call the garbage pit of colle- giate cross-country,” he said.) into a ma- jor power. He immediately revamped the training program. The training was much tough- er, ‘but it’s hard to complain when the coach does it too,” said one Topper. The season started well for the friend- ly, positive-thinking coach. Western scored easy wins over Southern Illinois, Indiana and Southeast Missouri. Then, two days before the rugged Indiana Invi- tational, Staynings came down with a nosebleed that hospitalized him for four days. Without the Olympian, Western finished second to OVC rival East Ten- nessee at Indiana and second to NCAA District III rival Tennessee in the Fur- man Invitational two weeks later. The ailment cost Staynings 10 days of train- ing he would never make up. “Before the nosebleed, I was in the best shape of my life, including right before che (1976 summer) Olympics,” he said. Staynings returned in time for the conference championship meet in early November. East Tennessee was the only (continued on page 202) With less than a mile to go in the NCAA Cross- Country Championships, Tony Staynings (423) moves through the leaders. Staynings, a 1976 Olympic finalist in the steeplechase, finished 23rd. Cross-Country 202 Cross-Country rliescas Dust Is EFiard TS aes Sxure.llozsr cont. team with a shot at denying Western its third consecutive OVC title, but with Ridler, Long, Staynings and Slaughter finishing first, second, fourth and sixth, the title came easily. So did thoughts of placing high in the NCAA. A national track magazine, however, said Western had no fifth man (cross- country scores are the sums of the fin- ishes of a team’s first five runners) and that the Toppers would be fortunate to duplicate its sixth-place effort in 1975. Hessel spent the whole summer culti- vating a good number five man, working with co-captain Joe Tinius, freshman Englishman Richard Green and Tom Condit. Tinius, however, never recovered from an early-season illness and injury, and Green proved inconsistent over the five-mile, six-mile and 10,000-meter courses Western faced. According to Hessel, Condit, though much improved from 1975 and fully dedicated, lacked the talent to help pull the Toppers into na- tional contention. Hessel also tried to close the time mar- gin between the Toppers’ first and fifth man. A champion’s margin must be around 45 seconds, but Western’s mar- gin was consistently 30 seconds more than that. Western’s concern with these depth problems became apparent when the Toppers placed three men in the top six at the NCAA District III meet, but fin- ished only fourth, its lowest district fin- ish in four years. Hessel said the prob- lems were largely technical: Slaughter, Green, Condit and Tinius went out too slowly and lost contact with the leaders. He was sure that the mistake would not be repeated. Hessel surveyed the Texas course while his runners jogged around it the day before the NCAA meet. The dry, flat, road-like landscape was in sharp con- trast to the steep, hilly courses Western faced in the three preceding national meets. The veteran Englishmen pre- ferred the hills, which pose tactical prob- lems to the inexperienced or overanx- ious. “There'll be no tactics in this meet,” said Hessel as his runners com- pleted their workout. “It’s just a 10,000- meter race.” The pace set by Kenyan Henry Rono of Washington State was incredible as he covered the first mile in 4:15 and the second in 4:30. “Without exception, our guys went through the first half-mile and mile faster than they’ve ever gone before,” said Hessel. Ridler, accustomed to passing the two- mile mark in a 10,000-meter race in about 9:30., went through it in 8:57 in- stead. “That’s when the bear jumped on my back,” he said. He fell to 20th after two and one-half miles and “even con- sidered dropping out. I hurt the rest of the way in.” Meanwhile, Long slipped to 47th and Slaughter was lingering about 100th. Condit, Green and Tinius were lost in the pack. Only Staynings, who went out conservatively mani was then about 80th, was passing people. Halfway through the race, Ridler struggled back to 16th as Hessel ran be- side shouting, “Get your head up! Kee, after it!” Staynings was a few yards back, at 35th, but Long and Slaughter were already falling back. Condit emerged at about 175th. By the four and one-half mile mark, Ridler was 30th. About a mile later, Staynings passed Ridler and moved into the 20s, but he was still almost 300 yards behind Rono. As Rono, his two Kenyan teammates and Virgin made the last turn and headed down the slight hill toward the finish line, they were almost in full spirit. The Western runners stood quietly in the confusion around the scoreboard on the course. Some stood with teammates, some with parents. Long, standing be- side his sitleen watched silently as the individual leaders’ names were post- ed on the cardboard sign. A week earlier, they had expected to see three names among the top 25, but only Staynings, who finished 23rd, was listed. Ridler was 32nd, Long 164th, Slaughter 183rd and Condit 222nd, rounding out Western’s scoring. Tinius and Green finished in the high 200s. The Toppers peered over the heads of the crowd and watched the names of the teams listed in order of finish. Texas—El Paso, Oregon and Washington State fin- ished first, second and right. Hessel wasn’t sure, but said he thought Western would still be in the top 10. Teams the Toppers had beaten last year appeared. When San Diego State, which didn’t qualify for the nationals last year, was listed eighth, a Topper - softly muttered an obscenity. Another groaned when Kentucky, which ran only one man in the 1975 meet, was 12th. Sec- onds later, “Western” was written next to 14. The season was over. At 11:47 a.m., Long was recovering in the finish area when the same reporter he had seen in 1975 approached him. “Do you remember het I said last year?” Long asked. ‘Well, the same goes for this year.” — ROGER STINNETT All American Dave Long struggles during the late stages of the NCAA Championships in Denton, Tex. The junior Eng- lishman had hoped to finish in the top 25 as he did during his freshman season, but lost contact with the leaders before mid-race, finishing a disappointing 164th. The 1976 OVC Cross-Country Champions: (Front row) M. Rickford, J. Slaughter, C. Ridler, J. Tinius, T. Condit, J. Centrowitz, J. Willoughby, D. Long. (Back row) coach D. Hessel, M. Frohlich, R. Hellar, J. Vamras, T. Fath, R. Green, D. Andrews, S. Sheats, T. Staynings, R. Kall, D. Day, B. Hedger and B. Stoner. CROSS-COUNTRY RESULTS WESTERN 20 Southern Illinois 37 WESTERN 21 Indiana 34 WESTERN 22 Southeast Missouri 38 Indiana Invitational (2nd of 20) WKU Invitational (Ist of four) Furman Invitational (2nd of 11) OVC Championships WESTERN 27 Morehead 143 | East Tennessee 38 Tennessee Tech 188 | Murray 74 Austin Peay 202 Eastern 100 Middle Tennessee 215 NCAA District III (4th of 30) NCAA Championships (14th of 34) | Followed by a large pack of runners, Chris Ridler moves up one of the small inclines on the North | Texas Golf Course. The hard, fast pace (8:57 for the } first two miles) burned out Ridler. In pain during the last four miles, Ridler held on, finishing a respectable 32nd. 203 Cross-Country 204 Football After their second appearance in the Division IT football championships in three years, the 1976 season looked optimistic for fans, coaches and players. But for the second time in three years, injury and irony caught the Toppers. The ever year BLUES Whether it be the Big Eight or the Ohio Valley Conference, optimism is at a peak when a football team begins a new season. Such was the case for Western’s football team as it prepared for the 1976 season. The optimism appeared justified. Western had been the team to beat in the Ohio Valley Confer- ence and in Division II for the past few years. Even head coach Jimmy Feix was optimistic. The ’76 season was Feix’s ninth as head coach. In the preceding eight campaigns he produced a winning percentage of .785, in- cluding four OVC titles and trips to the NCAA Division II National Championships in 1973 and 1975. In both games, the Hilltoppers were bridesmaids. (continued on page 206) Running back Jimmy Woods, tripped up by Eastern’s Joe Richard (61) on a draw pee that gained seven yards, was forced to pick up the slack after Lawrence Jefferson’s injury. Woods rushed for a total of 859 yards, third best in the OVC. Poe ee = is — D. Gibbons 205 Football The even year BeWibome But the ‘76 season was to be a strange one for fans, Feix and history. Western didn’t make the playoffs. It didn’t even win the OVC title. Even more bizarre was that the team didn’t have a winning record. It finished the season with four wins and five losses following an opening home game tie with Troy State. It ote the first time in 10 cam- paigns that the Toppers had failed to avert a losing record. For the first time Feix had to weather a mediocre season. For the first time a Feix team finished lower than second in the conference. Western placed third with Austin Peay and East Tennessee, who had identical 3- 4 league records. Feix said three things led to his worst season record. “There were reasons for our end re- sult,” he said. “The basic reason was the fact that we were inexperienced. We had to play a lot of young people. We had sidelining injuries to our speed posi- tions, a our quarterback position was unstable,” he added. “Those were some of the things that kept us from winning most games.” The defense was very young. Onl four starters defensive sa Keit Tandy, cornerback James Jones and line- backers Steve Carrico and Roy Kesterson — returned from the ’75 squad. Others considered “experienced” were line- backers Biff Madon and defensive end Myron Greenfield. The youngsters who filled the gaps were freshman linebacker Carl Estelle and cornerback Mike Gray, sophomore defensive tackles Reginald Hayden and Tony Towns, safety James Atkinson and Quarterback Doug Bartholomew shows his emo- tion after completing his first touchdown pass as a Topper. Due to an injury, the sophomore transfer from Northern Michigan only played in the last three games, but completed 55 per cent of his passes for a total of 585 yards. ae — B. Coffey Western’s defense swarms over an upended More- head running back in the mudfest at Morehead. The Eagles trounced Western in the rain, 21-0. Associated Press All-America center Dave Carter puts a block on noseguard Bob Wolf during West- ern’s first offensive series with Akron. Quarter- back Doug Bartholomew grabs his own fumble in the background. Akron won, 29-16. Wide receiver Eddie Preston outruns two Austin Peay defenders following a desperation pass from quarterback Bill Smith. The play povered 02 yards, giving the Toppers a 12-7 lead with only two min- utes to play. Preston broke a leg in a practice the next week and was lost for the remainder of the season. Pa seal si Ay, 3 c s €, LE . teary i x. i od 3. Saeed e cornerback Jimmy Thomas. Thomas and Greenfield were moved to offense later in the season. The offensive unit was the team’s strong point. Unlike the defense, the offense had a number of key veterans returning. The tailback combination of Lawrence Jefferson and Jimmy Woods plus the muscle blocking and running of senior fullbacks Arnold Snardon and Pat Malone implied a strong ground game. The offensive line’s moving ability would open huge holes for the backs to pour through. To add spice to the recipe, no less than three experienced quarterbacks (senior Doug Davis, junior Bill Smith and soph- omore Steve Larimore) were to battle for the starting spot. It was Larimore who filled in for the injured Smith and Davis in the ’75 Homecoming win over More- head. Although it was Larimore’s first game, he was to lead the Toppers to the national championship contests. The offense, however, sputtered through the season. Ironically, the de- fense was to be the reason Western won as many games as it did. Offensive injuries, which Feix said limited the offensive capability of the Toppers, felled Jefferson and speedy idle receiver Eddie Preston. Jefferson played one full game. He twisted his knee in the UT-Chattanooga game and was out for the remainder of the season. He will return in ’77 as a junior. Preston, who was Western’s only le- gitimate deep threat, broke his leg in practice following the Austin Peay game. (continued on page 209) PM: Se : ae j 5 — L. Gardner 207 Football ra oe’ a baked The even year BieWiEeee Concern etches the face of head coach Jimmy Feix during the 29-16 Akron loss. Feix suffered through his first losing season in nine campaigns. Eastern Kentucky’s turnovers cost them dearly in the Oct. 23 contest. Steve Carrico (30) prepares to srab an Ernie House pass which has been deflected y defensive end Myron Greenfield (86). Western beat the conference champions, 10-6. In that game he had caught a 92-yard desperation bomb from Smith in the closing minutes to nail down Western’s first conference win, 12-7. Preston was out for the season. With no deep threat and no other tested receiv- er except Billy Lindsey, the Topper’s passing game soured. “Injuries to our speed positions on of- fense really hurt,” Feix said. “With Jef- ferson (who was the workhorse in 1975) out, the pressure was put on Woods to do well.” Woods rushed for 859 yards in 10 games. His average of 3.7 yards on 233 rushes was good Tot third in the league in that category. The quarterback situation, which was thought to be strong at the start of the season, caused problems for Feix. Four times Davis started. Smith started three. Larimore started the Homecoming game against Middle Tennessee. Following an injury to Larimore, a fourth quarterback, Doug Bartholomew, emerged to add zest to a dying Topper attack. Feix admitted he should have handled the quarterback situation differently. With three returning signal callers and Bartholomew, a transfer from Northern Michigan, Feix had a surplus of quarter- backs. A broken toe, however, delayed Bartholomew’s progress until late in the season. “If I Peis do it over again,” Feix said, “I would start Larimore and let Doug (Davis) and Bill (Smith) battle for Steve's iob.” The offensive problems showed as the — R. Loewen Toppers averaged only 13 points a game. Much of the time, it was a struggle to get 10 points on the board. It was the defense, led by Madon (who was named OVC Defensive Player of the Year), that was pressured to play a su- perb game. The crew surprised Feix and the fans by finishing second in the league in team defense, for the injury bug had also bitten the in- experienced defense. Cornerback Fred Kixmiller missed the entire season due to a knee injury, and safety Nute Haire sat out the entire sea- son with a hip ailment. Both were expect- ed to start. There were some bright spots offensively. (continued on page 210) — B. Coffey Wide-eyed tailback Mike Hayes looks for an opening in the Austin Peay defense. The Topper’s ground game gained onl y 101 yards, but a desperation pass from Bill Smith to wide receiver Eddie Preston in the closing minutes went for 92 yards and a touchdown. Western came from behind to win its first OVC contest, 12-7. 209 Football The even year BEWESr. The offensive line play was directed by team captain Dave Carter, who was named second team Division II All- American by the Associated Press. The center was one of the top pro candidates in the nation. Other stalwarts on the line were junior uard Chip Carpenter, who was named rst team All-OVC for the second con- secutive year. Another All-OVC choice was senior tackle Bill Murphree. Senior tackle Nathan Huggins and senior guard Billy Linville filled in the other spots. The kicking of walk-on Dave Betz was also a pleasant surprise for Feix. He soc- foretell 10 field goals during the sea- son, a team record. Herod’s senior season was also suc- cessful. He averaged 41.1 yards per punt, second best in the league. Feix said he would like to forget the losses. The first was at East Tennessee, 28-16; the second at Tennessee Tech, 22- 12; the third setback was at Morehead, 21-0; the fourth at home against Akron, 29-16; and the fifth at Murray, 16-6. But the wins were nice, especially the 10-6 home win over conference champi- on Eastern, and the 38-7 Homecoming victory over Middle Tennessee. The outlook for 1977 appears to be, of course, optimistic. Eight starters return on defense. Al- though Woods and Jefferson return, as fs i 4 =e The 1976 Hilltopper football team: (Front row) E. Hollerman, B. Linville, A. Snardon, N. Huggins, B. Murphree, D. Carter, K. Tandy, W. Herod, R. Kes- terson, D. Davis, P. Malone, D. Jones. (Second row) J. Jones, B. Madon, J. Tinius, A. Hayden, B. Henry, B. Smith, B. Lindsey, C. Carpenter, M. Hayes, P. Sheehan, K. Bennett, S. Carrico, R. Van Slyke. (Third row) J. Thomas, D. Bartholomew, R. Hay- den, T. Logan, E. Preston, S. Larimore, J. Woods, C. Brazley, F. Kixmiller, J. Esterling, N. Haire, T. Towns, L. Hardin. (Fourth row) R. Farmer, H. Hunt, M. Gardner, D. McGuire, C. Woodruff, J. Atkin- son, A. Rogan, M. Greenfield, C. Beard, P. Gates, J. Alsup, D. Betz, C. DeLacy. (Fifth row) M. Walrond, C. Estelle, J. Priest, J. Carr, P. Rich, J. Stone, R. White, L. Wade, L. Bodenbender, M. Shaftlien, M. 210 Football do Lindsey and Preston, the offensive line will have four gaping holes to fill. The real hope lies with Bartholomew. Bartholomew started the last three ames. He engineered the 38-point out- bubet against Middle. In those three ames he hit on 55 per cent of his passes or an average of 195 yards per game. Bartholomew and Larimore will be the only experienced quarterbacks return- ing. Smith is expected to relinquish his remaining year of eligibility. The ‘75 knee injury hampered him through most of the season and he will probably return as a student coach. “Bartholomew showed me a lot of courage and self-confidence,” Feix said. “He encouraged me with his ability. He reminds me of Dennis Tomek. Doug would be third-and-inches deep in his own territory and he would want to calla long pass,” the coach added. “In the Murray game we had a third- and-one situation and we told Doug that ‘you've got it.’ To all the other quarter- backs that means they have it on a quar- terback sneak,” Feix said. “But to Doug, that meant he should call the play. He called a slant pass that went for four yards,” Feix recalled. Feix is concerned about the future. “This has truly been a different season for me, the coaches and the players,” Feix said. ‘What we must guard against is overreaction. We must not change our recruiting techniques, practices, rela- tions with the players or coaches. Things just happen sometimes. We won't over- react next season because of what hap- pened this season.” Mercy, T. Heath, B. Gray. (Sixth row) M. Gray, L. Anderson, T. Rose, R. Able, T. Bereiter, G. Allen, C. Horne, R. Vaughn, C. Davis, S. Conger, R. Cra- vens, M. Blanton, J. Lemieux, K. Lathow, B. Jent. (Seventh row) T. Crafton, D. Lewis, J. Hall, T. Nord, M. Appleby, M. Cook, K. Juett, M. Stahl, C. Smith, W. Holloman, P. Padron, R. Burbage, J. Wallace, B. Todd, T. Gibson. (Eighth row) L. Starnes, R. Lyons, R. Pennington, J. Theuerkauf, F. Lohman, S. Whaley, L. Logan, J. Hill, D. Livers, K. Blaine, P. Hough, S. Meacham, W. Hall, J. Haire, R. Napier. (Back row) A. McGuffin, F. Cantler, R. Dunn, R. Miller, P. Turne, S. Clark, L. Murray, B. Gilbert, J. Feix, B. Hape, S. Baker, B. Rafferty, B. Morehead, B. Jones, T. Finn, C. Warren, R. Lathon and J. Biles. Then, being the man that he is, Feix thought about this season and the possi- bilities for next. “You know, it seems that we do better during the odd numbered years (’73 and ‘75, for example) and it is nice to be at home every other Christmas season (in- stead of chasing a national champion- ship),” he said. Next season that same optimism will be present. The only difference is that Feix and Western fans know how it feels to be at the other end of the pole. And being at the bottom is a place they dearly hate and a status they will work to change. — CLYDE HUFFMAN () — T. Dekle Western WESTERN WESTERN Western Western WESTERN Western WESTERN Western Western FOOTBALL RESULT Won 4, Lost 5, Tied 1 10 10 12 16 12 10 0 38 16 6 Troy State UT-Chattanooga Austin Peay EAST TENNESSEE TENNESSEE TECH Eastern Kentucky MOREHEAD Middle Tennessee AKRON MURRAY STATE Tony Towns gets a handful of Akron’s quarter- back, Marty Bezbatchenko, as bandit back Roy Kesterson rushes to help. Western lost 29-16. Ak- ron went on to the NCAA Division II finals. A grimacing Milton Jenkins finds himself twisted between OVC Defensive Player of the Year Biff Madon (50) and defensive tackle Reginald Hayden. Jenkins’ passing (8 of 12 for 173 yards) frustrated the defense as Tennessee Tech gave Western a 22- 12 pasting. pire Bey feet = EES _— isical Chairs IN THE COACHING STAFF Expected changes such as new programs and instructors came with the fall semester — so did six new coaches. Although two of them, Ray Rose and Adele Gleaves Hosmer, were not strangers to Western, their positions were new. Rose took over for retiring men’s tennis coach Ted Hornback, while coach Hosmer took the gymnastics position Rose vacated. Del Hessel, Dr. Barry Shollenberger, Carla Coffey and Julia Yeater came from other areas to fill coaching vacancies left by resignations. For Rose, last spring’s tennis season was his first as a tennis coach. He had coached cross country, track and basketball at other schools, as well as gymnastics for four seasons at Western. “I would have been interested in the position sooner if coach Hornback had retired sooner,” he said. “I would have applied for it five years ago instead of gymnastics, because it’s always been my first love.” The addition of stronger opponents to his team’s schedule was one of the main objectives Rose intended to meet. “A lot of schools are finding that a strong non-conference schedule is necessary if you are going to play well in your conference,” he said. “I think you can learn more by losing to a strong team than you can learn from beating a team 9-0 that you know you can beat.” Another important goal of Rose’s, besides regaining the Ohio Valley Contec title the team won two years ago, 212 Coaching Feature was establishing a level of communication with h is players. “We will get to know each other in the heat of competition, and to me that is where a lot of things are changed and made up within an individual,” he said. According to Adele Hosmer, a former national champion, her team was like all of the other teams for which she has competed. “Gymnastics is a more disci- plined sport than other sports,” she said. “It is a year round sport, and it’s not limit- ed to a season.” Because she was named gymnastics coach prior to the end of the 1976 spring semes- ter, coach Hosmer was the only new coach who had am- Pls opportunity to recruit for er team. She said she hoped recruits Barbara Shields, a for- mer New York state champion, and Kathy Flanary, runner-up in last year’s Kentucky state high school gymnastics cham- pionship, would help bolster the returning squad. Coach Hosmer, who has also coached springboard diving, said the main change she made concerned the structure of practice sessions. “I think the practice sessions this year are rougher,” she said. “Practice used to be most- ly individual, but now it is more group-oriented. This causes closer team work and helps everyone get along better.” For Del Hessel, the new men’s cross country and track coach, coaching is “a challenge and for perfection.” “It is a chance to inspire CARLA COFFEY hs HESSEE RAY ROSE — S. Benson BARRY SHOLLENBERGER — L. Wright = JULIA YEATER — D. Beauchamp — J. Burton ADELE HOSMER young men to search their out- er limits,” he said. “My job as a coach is to bring forth talent and make it productive.” Although he said coaching at Western is no different than coaching at Colorado State, the atmosphere is better. “T see more organization at Western,” he said. “I also think there is better compata- bility between the different programs, which lends itself to a better atmosphere.” Hessel said the main change needed in the track program was one of individual attitudes. “There are definitely some flaws that have to be straight- ened out,” he said. “The ath- letes have to project their goals to perfection. I don’t think they have been pushed to their limit yet.” Athletic competition com- pares in value to a college de- gree, according to Hessel. “The challenge of the sports world to me, is parallel to the challenge of the real world,” he said. “I feel I can teach as much on the track as many people teach in the classroom.” Although coaching at West- ern was a new thing for base- ball coach Barry Shollenberger, the campus was not. Shollen- berger received his master’s de- gree here in 1970. “IT knew a lot more about Western than a lot of the other coaches did,” he said. “I had followed Western’s teams in the six years I was away, and was immediately interested when the coaching position became Reibte here. Rebuilding the program was Shollenberger’s main plan. “It’s going to take a major overhaul, so we're starting at the bottom and working our way up,” he said. “I don’t know how long it will take.” Pitching and defense will be emphasized by Shollenberger, a former major league player for the Cincinnati Reds. “Pitching and defense are the things you can depend on. If you have those you ean stay in any ball game,” he said. “Of course you have to be able to hit in order to win, but hitting is variable. Somedays you have it and somedays you don’t.” Coaching collegiate track and cross country was a new thing for Carla Coffey. “One of my goals besides making the Cipnpies has al- ways been coaching on the col- legiate level,” she said. “I’d also like to be able to coach the Olympic team in 1980.” Coach Coffey said some || team members have received scholarships, but there will not be a double standard. “They’re all equal,” she said. “All of them are out there working and it’s going to go | down the line just like that.” According to coach Coffey, | her team’s two biggest assets | would probably be dedication ] and depth. “Hopefully we will have enough people to put three in ] each event, with the exception | of the distance and field wy events,” she said. “But you don’t build Rome in a day, and you don’t build a team in a year,” she added. Coach Coffey said she coached the Bowling Green High School track team to a second place finish in the 1976 ape, which describes her ultimate feelings as a coach. “That shows that if the kids have someone out there who they think really cares about them and is willing to give up their time to work with them, they will want to do something in return.” Because she came from Kan- sas to coach the women’s bas- ketball team, Julia Yeater’s sit- uation was somewhat different from the other rookie coaches. “Since I am not from the area I don’t know what the team policies and strategies were last year,” she said. “Since the other coach is still here I could go ask her, but | am trying to rely on doing things my own way.” According to Yeater, the pos- sibility that some of the play- ers would not develop to their optimum level was one of her main concerns. “Because of different things like personality clashes, being discouraged and the chance for only five people to play at a time with 13.0n the team, you can’t expect every player to | reach her optimum level,” | she said. | | The team’s quickness was |} probably the team’s strong point while the lack of height was probably the major weakness, coach Yeater said. “If we stay in good shape we should be able to have a good fast break, and we'll probably have a continuity of offense,” she said. “From hearing and looking at the other teams in the state our lack of height : will probably be our weakest point.” — ROBIN VINCENT LC) 213 Coaching Feature 214 Gymnastics “We need some biONiC GYMNASTS. — Adele Hosmer “You ‘can’t ever be two optimistic,” prefaced Adele Gleaves Hosmer in mak- ing predictions for her women’s gym- nastics team in December. “But we do have a good chance to do well in state and regional competition. And I think the talent’s there to qualify for the nationals.” It was a pretty nervy forecast for a newlywed first-year coach fresh out of college. Sure, the team had never fin- ished lower than second in its four years of state and regional competition. Still, she returned only four sopho- mores from the 1975 second-place state and regional squad. By the start, she had lost two recruits. One left the team, and a knee injury two weeks before the season opener ended the year for Kathy Flanary, second in the 1976 Kentucky high school championships. Despite those losses, the ““too-optimis- tic’ coach guided her squad to second place in the state and region, and nearly ualified freshma n Barby Shields in the nationals. The team went 7-1 in the regular sea- son, falling only to defending state and regional champ Louisville, but injuries and ailments marred the year. Three weeks after Miss Flanary’s in- jury, Kim Knapp suffered a season-end- ing leg injury performing at a men’s bas- ketball halftime exhibition. Ankle injuries to Libby Goff, Betsy Terrell and Charlie Farrington, back and foot injuries to Pam Palmer and Susan Rose’s strep throat weakened the squad further. Moaned Mrs. Hosmer, “We need some bionic gymnasts.” In the team’s debut, Miss Shields won all four events — balance beam, vault, Warmups are taken on the balance beam by Barbi Shields before a Memphis State meet. Teammate Pam Palmer spotted for the freshman who won three events in the home dual meet and later almost qualified for nationals. | eee uneven parallel bars and free exercise — to lead the team to an easy tri-meet win over Valparaiso (Ind.) and host Ball State. Memphis State visited in early Febru- ary, but the Toppers didn’t act like hosts as Miss Shields won three events and the all-around while an injured Miss Goff won her only event, the uneven bars. Two weeks later, the Toppers clob- bered host Morehead, Western Carolina and East Tennessee in a quad. But with only a skeleton team to a field against Louisville and Kentucky in a tri-meet, things seemed dim. As expected, they did not beat power- ful U of L, which scored more than 130 points. Western was second, however, with UK third. Coach Hosmer figured Eastern would be one of the three top teams at the Ken- tucky Women’s Intercollegiate Confer- ence (KWIC) state meet in Louisville, but she said she didn’t expect to be trailing the Colonels by almost two and a half points at midmeet. The team regained its composure on the beam, coming through with a meet- leading 32 points. Miss Rose tied for third and Miss Terrell took fifth in the event. Coupled with numerous falls from the beam by Eastern, the event pushed Western into second place to stay. With 122.80 points, the Toppers were second to U of L’s 132.50, hile the Colonels were third with 119.80. All three qualified for the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women’s (AIAW) Region II meet in Boone, N.C. In the region, the team and Miss Shields did a reversal: they did well on the bars but terribly on the beam as onl one Topper did not fall. Miss Shields fell a H. Sinclair Gymnastics team: B. Shields, L. Goff, K. Knapp, C. Farrington, S. Rose, B. Terrell and P. Palmer. three times, and it cost her. While her 34.01 total was above the 34.00 national meet qualifying standard, it placed her in a three-way tie for 28th. Only the coun- try’s top 24 gymnasts compete in the AIAW’s national meet. “She would have qualified if she had fallen only twice,” said Mrs. Hosmer, “and if she hadn’t fallen at all, she would have had 35.60 points, which would have put her in second place in the meet.” Despite its disappointing beam perfor- mance, the team finished second to U of L, which advanced to the nationals with 138.05 points. The Toppers followed with 132.75, their highest score of the year, while Eastern was fourth. Miss Shields tied two other gymnasts for first in free exercise with a 9.00 and Miss Goff tied for first in vaulting with a 9.20. Shields and Goff tied each other for sixth with an 8.55 on bars. — ROGER STINNETT (1 A one-handed back walk-over impressed judges at the Memphis State meet as Betsy Terrell scored a 6.95 in the event. She made one of the best four scores in that event for Western. She also competed in the free exercise event. — M. Lyons First official team spotter Gary Osborne makes a point about the uneven bars competition to Charlie Farrington and coach Adele Hosmer. Osborne worked with the team at daily practices and moved equipment at home meets. a ZB ‘ as 4 —R. Hoskins — H. Sinclair Stopwatches were one of the tools coach Adele Hosmer used to advise Libby Goff on her balance beam routine. Before the girls began individual workouts, they practiced floor exercises together to the beat of toudeetasiel 215 Gymnastics Rebuilding years are tough for coaches, teams and fans. Coach Jim Richards shuffled two experienced athletes with nine not-so experienced players game after game. He was In what could be termed as a rebuild- ing year for the basketball program, the Toppers fought injuries and inexperi- ence to finish with a 10-16 record and a fifth place tie in the Ohio Valley Confer- ence (OVC) with a 6-8 mark. Men‘s Basketball The woes of the rebuilding year had been forecast by the successful 1976 sea- son. Following a 20-9 season that cli- maxed with the conference champion- ship and a trip to the NCAA tourna- ment, Western graduated four starters, ...in search — including its top three scorers. Left with only two players with much By season’s end, Lloyd Terry and Western had im- proved to the point that they trailed OVC champ Austin Peay only 34-32 at the half. The best Peay team Jim Richards ever saw won however, 73-59. — L. Gardner of a first-string team varsity experience,.coach Jim Richards was forced to build a team around nu- merous makeshift lineups. The starting five that emerged to lead the team to five wins in its last seven games included two juniors, a sophomore and two freshmen. With only one senior, the team’s average age was 19. But in the end, it was the nagging in- juries to key players that resulted in the fifth place OVC finish. The position eliminated the Toppers from the confer- ence playoffs, hich returned to the four-team format after including all isnt teams in 1976-77. he key injury came to James John- son, a pre-season All-OVC pick for a team predicted to finish fourth in the league. Johnson fractured a kneecap pri- or to the Florida State game in early Jan- uary and missed the next 10 games — eight of which were Topper losses. When the 6-foot-7 junior returned, the team won five of its last eight games. _ A recurring ankle injury to Lloyd Ter- ry caused the 6-9 sophomore to miss six early games. Guard Steve Ashby missed several games in mid-season because of a leg injury. “T thought we'd finish third or fourth in the league,” Richards said, “but the injuries wiped that out. Had we not had the injuries, our improvements would have come earlier. “The fact that we won five of the last seven in the conference is unbelievable — we made tremendous improvements.” But by then it was too late to repeat the heroics of the previous season. The Toppers opened the season in Ann Arbor against Michigan, the run- ner-up to. Indiana in the national finals in 1976. The Wolverines were rated first in the nation. “It was the day before we played the number one team in the country,” re- flected Richards after the season. “I looked out there at our group of people as they practiced. I saw 11 players. Lloyd Terry had just sprained his ankle. I looked at the other 10. Six hadn’t even been in a college game.” The Wolverines won 94-70 behind All-American Ricky Green’s 25 points. The Toppers led four times before Michigan built a 14-point halftime lead and coasted in the second half. The home season opened with a hard- fought 75-73 win over Arkansas-Little Rae The game resembled a track meet as both teams ran constantly until the Toppers pulled out the win behind John- Jim Burns, the freshman walkon with “a heart big- ger than a valentine,” according to Jim Richards, pinned Murray’s Zach Blasingame to the floor and 13 points to the score in his second varsity game. é . — CM. Schmitt and two pressure son’s 25 points sophomore guard free throws by Dave McConico. Against Dayton, the team committed 38 turnovers in losing, 92-69. Five fresh- men played and combined for one point. Terry topped the Western scoring with 17 points playing with a bad ane The Toppers returned to Diddle to beat a weak Delta State team, 75-72, in overtime. Richards used 12 players against the Statesmen in trying to find a winning combination. Freshman Mike Prince led with 22 points, but Johnson’s layup in the last minute of the overtime proved decisive. The Toppers then lost to Evansville, 78-61, in a renewed rivalry that had pro- duced 41 games, but none in the previous 19 seasons. The Aces took advantage of Western’s 35-per cent field goal shooting to win easily while holding the three leading scorers, senior Bill Scillian, Johnson and Prince, to a combined 22-point total. Scil- lian was ejected from the contest early in the second half for a flagrant technical foul after a scramble for a loose ball with (continued on page 218) Casey Cebula collides with Paul Jones as he gets two of his eight points in the Toppers’ 20-point win over Robert Morris. Cebula sparkled in his first starting assignment in midseason, scoring 20. — L. Gardner 217 Men’‘s Basketball ‘I thought we’d finish third or fourth in the league,” Richards said, “but the injuries wiped that out. Had we not had the injuries, our improvements would have come earlier.” ...in search of a first-string team cont. an Evansville player. The senior’s ab- sence hurt late in the game. After taking a 12-day break for final exams, the squad traveled to Florida to play Jacksonville, a team which stood 1- 5. The Toppers played five minutes be- fore hitting a field-goal and were never in contention as the Dophins won, 83-62. The Toppers closed out the December schedule placing second in the four-team Tangerine Bowl Tournament in Winter Park, Fla. They dumped host Rollins in the opener, 71-61, before losing to Stet- son, 71-70, in overtime. Prince tallied 25 points in the Rollins game to gain all- tournament honors with Johnson. Returning to Bowling Green, the squad closed out its pre-OVC schedule with Florida State. The Metro-Seven team humiliated the Toppers 95-63 — the season’s worst defeat. Ashby scored 14 points in the first half before leaving the game with an injured ankle. A two-game road trip to Tennessee Tech and East Tennessee opened the OVC schedule on a sour note. The team couldn’t stay with its opponents in the two games, as late rallies in both contests proved the difference. Tech won, 88-81, to claim its only OVC win and East tri- umphed, 67-61. The OVC home opener with More- head followed and brought a new hope in the form of a 6-7, 215-pound center Aaron Bryant. Bryant, a transfer from the University of Florida, joined the squad in January. He provided the inside strength that had dwindled since the de- parture of the injured Johnson. Another incentive was the presence of 9,700 fans in Diddle — many of whom were Topper alumni who returned to play in the “old-timers” game prior to the varsity contest. None of the added incentives proved successful. Morehead won convincingly, 81-65, and extended the Toppers’ losing streak to five games — the longest dry spell since Richards’ 1972-73 team lost eight in a row in midseason. Bill Scillian, the only senior, left the team after the Morehead loss. He said he felt inhibited in' his playing because Richards removed him from the game after making small mistakes. He had a 10.5 shooting average. Two nights following the Morehead loss, the “anners found the winning combination against Eastern. Bryant's 27 points led Western in its initial OVC win. Freshmen Prince and Casey Cebula 218 Men‘s Basketball — J. Burton With 10 newcomers, one senior and one returning Though known chiefly as a shooter, Mike Prince starter, Jim Richards was forced to dwell on funda- held Robert Morris’ Sam Washington (21) to seven mentals. “We're not a team,” he said. “We're a__ points in Western’s 90-70 wing. Prince also helped group of individuals doing separate things.” the Toppers deal off 25 assists, a school record. — L. Gardne: Western WESTERN Western WESTERN Western Western WESTERN Western Western Western Western Western WESTERN Western _Western Western Western WESTERN Western WESTERN WESTERN Western WESTERN WESTERN Western WESTERN BASKETBALL RESULTS Won 10 Lost 16 70 MICHIGAN 75 Arkansas-Little Rock 69 DAYTON 75 Delta State 61 EVANSVILLE 62 Jacksonville 71 Rollins 70 STETSON 63 FLORIDA STATE 81 TENNESSEE TECH 61 EAST TENNESSEE 65 MOREHEAD STATE 93 Eastern Kentucky 76 AUSTIN PEAY 87. MURRAY STATE 79 LaSalle 60 MIDDLE TENNESSEE 90 Robert Morris 75 MEMPHIS STATE 70 East Tennessee 101 Tennessee Tech 74 MOREHEAD STATE 85 Eastern Kentucky 82 Murray State 59 AUSTIN PEAY 76 Middle Tennessee provided the enthusiasm that had been lacking as Western rolled, 93-82. Prince tallied 22 points on 10 of 13 shooting from the field, and Cebula, in his first varsity start, added 20. The jubilation of the first OVC win cooled off when the Toppers visited Clarksville to play Austin Peay. The Governors won easily, 92-76, placing five men in double figure scoring. The squad then tangled with Murray, which was tied with Austin Peay for the OVC lead. In the season’s most exciting (continued on page 220) A homemade sign of encouragement for Willie Richardson by a Greek organization wasn’t enough to help the Toppers beat Evansville, Dec. 8. Fan Annette Wilson, a freshman from Louisville watched the team lose, 78-61. Steve Ashby and Morehead’s all-OVC guard, Her- bie Stamper, scramble after a loose ball in the Ea- gles’ 90-70 win. Though just an inexperienced ju- nior, Ashby became the floor leader (105 assists) and do-or-die ball handler. — L. Gardner — L. Gardner 219 Men’‘s Basketball ee Oe ‘I’m very proud of the way our players improved steadily, particularly after our season got off to such a rough start,” Richards said. “It’s good to know they didn’t quit and give up — it would have been easy to have done under the circumstances.’ ...in search of a first-string team cont. encounter at home, Murray pulled out a 89-87 win in double overtime. With 17 seconds remaining in regula- 220 Men’s Basketball tion play, Western held a seemingly comfortable 65-61 lead. The Racers mi- raculously scored six points in the next 12 seconds on a jump ball that was tipped in and four pressure free throws. The Toppers didn’t fold and scored on a last-second shot by Bryant off a beauti- ful Ashby assist. Ashby dealt 13 assists in the game — one short of the school’s single-game record. Western then rallied ahead by four with 39 seconds left in the first overtime, but the Racers caught the team at the buzzer on a 20-footer by reserve guard Lenny Barber. Murray claimed the win on a last-sec- ond 15-footer by Jimmy Warren in the second overtime. Following a 93-79 loss in Philadelphia to East Coast Conference for LaSalle, the Toppers ended the first round of the con- ference schedule with a 67-60 defeat to Middle Tennessee. The Blue Raiders took advantage of Steve Ashby came within one assist of tying West- ern’s single-game record of 14 and the Hilltoppers came within one basket of taking Murray into tri- ple overtime in January. The Racers won, 69-67. A pick by teammate Hans van Rooden didn’t shake Eastern’s Denny Fugate from Mike Prince. Prince didn’t need much help as he hit 10 of 13 from the field to help Western to its first OVC win. Sg a . ey — L. Gardner 7 foul trouble to Bryant and Terry (who combined for 18 points and 13 rebounds) to claim the win. After slumping to 4-13 overall and 1-6 in the conference, Western enjoyed a break from losing by trouncing Robert Morris, 90-70. The Toppers had com- plete control and hit 10 of 12 shots, pulled down nine rebounds and scored 23 points. The second round of the OVC sched- ule began on a somewhat optimistic note as all the Toppers were healthy. The new spirit became immediately re- alized as the Toppers avenged early-sea- son losses to East Tennessee and Ten- nessé Tech to claim the first back-to- back wins. The inside strength of Bryant and Johnson vaulted Western to the dual wins. Against East, the duo totaled 18 apiece to lead five double-figure scorers. The game marked the return of Johnson after a five-week layoff due to the injured knee. The junior was quick to assert himself before the friendly partisans as he hit eight of 10 shots, pulled down nine rebounds, blocks two shots and made two steals. Two nights laters, the Toppers passed the century mark in scoring for the only time all season as they crushed Tech, 101-86. Bryant turned in the premier in- dividual performance in the season as he hit 15 of 22 shots to finish with 38 points and 19 rebounds. Johnson came off the bench to collect 28 points and nine re- bounds and Prince hit seven of 12 shots for 20 points. Following the two OVC wins, Western still hoped to reach the conference play- offs when it visited Morehead. The hopes faded however, as Morehead re- sponded with a 88-74 win. It was the seventh OVC loss and entrenched the Toppers in sixth place. The Toppers thet bounced back to beat Eastern and Murray on the road. In ' beating the Colonels, 85-76, the team hit 27 of 37 free throws, paced by Bryant’s 26 points and 17 rebounds. Johnson tallied 19 and Ashby played one of his finest games by netting 17. Consoled by Jim Richards is Aaron Bryant after the just-eligible transfer missed easy shots in his debut against Morehead at mid-season. Two nights later, he scored 27 points against Eastern. Terry Davis hugs 1972 teammate Tony Stroud after the Oldtimer’s Game in January. Western great Clem Haski ns scored 11 points to lead his Red team to a 95-77 win over the White squad, which included four 1976 starters. A 1929 graduate, 70- year-old Jack Thompson, also Blaved — CM. Schmitt The 82-81 win over the Racers avenged the loss in the earlier double overtime thriller. A layup by Terry in the game’s last minute won the seesaw affair. Austin Peay then extended its league- leading record to 12-1 and 22-3 petal by beating Western, 73-59, after pulling away from a shaky three-point halftime lead. Peay’s win avenged Western's 76-75 win at home that dese the league championship the previous season. The Toppers closed the season with an exciting 76-74 win over Middle Tennesse in Murfreesboro. 1976-77 Basketball team: (Front row) W. Richard- son, G. Burbach, M. Prince, B. Scillian, D. McCon- ico, S. Ashby, G. Gregory. (Second row) assistant trainer R. Dunn, manager M. Jeanette, student trainer M. Bailey, J. Philpot, H. van Rooden, J. Johnson, A. Bryant, R. Wray, T. Shinn, J. Davila, Terry again scored the winning basket — a 15-footer which came with only two seconds remaining. Western had lost an 11-point lead in the last five minutes, allowing Middle to forge ahead, 75-74, on a basket with 16 seconds left. “I’m very proud of the way our players improved steadily, particularly HAS our season got off to such a rough start,” Richards said. “It’s good to know they didn’t quit and give up — it would have been easy to have done under the circumstances.” — DON WHITE (} a, as J. Burton C. Cebula, manager T. Battle, manager D. Evans. (Back row) manager B. Connelly, graduate assistant coach M. Nordholz, assistant coach B. Rascoe, D. Jordan, L. Terry, head coach J. Richards, assistant coach L. Van Eman and graduate assistant coach D. Owens. 221 Men’s Basketball 222 Women’s — M. Lyons A drive down court keeps Morehead’s Birdell Fish close to Linda How- ard. The Lady ad dee scored a 89-68 victory at home, but Miss Fish, a highly touted freshman, got revenge in a 70-68 state tournament win. A high leap in an attempt to steal the basketball is taken by senior guard Brenda Chapman during her team’s home victory over Bellar- mine. Miss Chapman led the team in scoring throughout the season. A drive past UK’s All-State center Pam Browning led toa lay-up by Beth Lane, a sophomore from Rome, Ga. Despite Miss Browning’s 31 points, the Lady Kats lost the state tournament semi-final, 71-63. — L. Gardner mn a8 — CM. Schmitt Seaseom:se Basketball — M. Lyons Seconds after hitting the floor at the free throw line, Linda Howard watches her teammates rush to the opposite end of the court. Miss Howard, a ju- nior from Summer Shade, started at the guard posi- tion in almost every game. The season began with pollsters pre- dicting that strong recruiting by other state schools would shake the Lady Top- pers from the runner-up spot in state play they earned last year. Following Christmas break first year coach Julia Yeater dispelled doubts crit- ics had given the team when she had a serious talk with the basketball players. “T think they had kind of been waiting for an opinion from me all season and | finally just told them. ‘Look, I’ve seen everybody in the state play and I’ve been withholding an opinion. But, after see- ing them play you’re the best,’” she told her squad. The 70-68 loss to Morehead in the state tournament finals left them one game short of the championship goal for two consecutive seasons. Yet, the year was not without other fulfillment. A trip to the regional tournament and a 16-1 record, the best record against state com- petition in regular season, highlighted a 22-9 season. The strength came because the players had matured, coach Yeater said. “T only have one film of last year to go by, but from that I think everyone has improved since last year,” she said. “Pam Kordenbrock’s scoring average has gone up three points and I think Brenda Chapman’s has gone up five,” the coach said. “Beth Lane and Donna Doellman ei- ther stayed the same or went down a little in scoring, and that’s something you can’t explain,” Miss Yeater contin- ued. “Maybe they just keyed in more on defense hes scoring this year.” Perhaps one sign of the team’s overall improvement came against the Tennes- see Tech team in its invitational. Tech had beaten Western by 30 points twice last year. “T don’t think they (the Lady Toppers) realized until the first few minutes of the game when they were making some steals and causing some turnovers that maybe they could beat them,” said Yeater of her team’s 84-75 loss. Beating the University of Kentucky at home in the state tournament semi-fin- als proved to be the Lady Toppers’ best game of the year, according to coach Yeater. Western had lost its only state tegular season game there to the Lady Kats less than a month before. “It was a necessary win in order for us to go to regionals and they had beaten us before up there by 10 points,” she said. “Psychologically they had an advantage over us. Height-wise they had an advan- Be over us and court-wise they had an advantage over us. “With that accumulation of advan- tages they would have had to play the best game of the season to win and they did,” the coach added. The team lost in the finals to More- head, who the Lady Toppers had beaten twice in the regular season. “It’s hard to come off of a game like the UK game and play the same caliber and the same optimum potential that they did the night before. It was almost like an anti-climax,” coach Yeater said. “It was almost like they had given everything they had the night before be- cause it was so crucial and so important. They did it and it was just hard to turn around and do it again,” she continued. “Maybe they haven’t matured enough yet to do it. They may learn they have to turn around and give the same two nights in a row.” Another game of significance for the Lady Toppers was their 100-85 victory over Kentucky State’s Lady Thor- oughbreds. The game marked the second time that Western’s point total reached the century mark. “IT would have to say the Kentucky State game was a very good offensive game for us since we scored 100 points.” the coach said. “I think both teams were a little lax on defense and it was basically an offensive game.” Leading scorers in that game were Beth Lane with 27, Pam Kordenbrock with 23 and Brenda Chapman with 22. Improvement for the next season will depend on recruiting and individual im- provement, according to coach Yeater. “We need to recruit a big girl for a center,” she said. “I think Pam Korden- brock is a natural forward. She can shoot from outside, but she doesn’t get to do that much because she has to play with her back to the basket. “We could also use some help in our outside shooting at guard,” coach Yeater added. “’Brenda’s (Chapman) outside shot has come along quite a bit. From 20 feet out she can shoot a jump shot. “But if the jump means she has to be closer to the basket then I’d rather not have her jump and shoot a set shot from 25 feet out,” Miss Yeater said. ‘We plan to do some work on it.” — ROBIN VINCENT (continued on page 224) beat the odds 223 Women’s Basketball A season to beat the odds cont. WOMEN’S BASKETBALL RESULTS Won 22 Lost 9 WESTERN 77 Murray 50 WESTERN 87 Louisville 67 Western 70 BELMONT 81 WESTERN 78 Purdue 60 WESTERN 63 Bellarmine 45 WESTERN 92 Marshall 56 Western 69 INDIANA STATE 80 WESTERN 70 Austin Peay 55 WESTERN 70 Northern Ky. 64 WESTERN 62 Morehead 58 WESTERN 78 Louisville 70 WESTERN 74 Florida 41 WESTERN 75 TENN. TECH 84 WESTERN 78 UT Martin 68 WESTERN 67 Eastern Ky. 62 WESTERN 89 Morehead 68 WESTERN 100 Kentucky State 85 WESTERN 75 Alabama 73 WESTERN 73 Cumberland 49 WESTERN 66 Northern Ky. 64 WESTERN 78 Austin Peay 49 Western 66 KENTUCKY 76 WESTERN 81 Kentucky State 57 WESTERN 90 Bellarmine 64 Western 61 MURRAY G7. WESTERN 72 Cumberland 48 Western 81 MIDDLE TENN. 89 State Tournament — L. Gardner WESTERN 71 Kentucky 63 A final buzzer sparked the Lady Toppers and fans Coaches Julia Yeater and Lois Holmes are sprayed Western 68 MOREHEAD 70 to crowd the Memorial Coliseum court after beat- with a barrage of water and ice by a happy team Regional Tournament ing UK in the state tournament semi-finals. The following a 71-63 upset over UK in the state tour- Western 52 N.C. STATE 70 joy soon became tears when they lost by two points nament at Lexington. Both women were first year Western 68 MEMPHIS ST. 79 to Morehead in the final the next night. college coaches and new to Western. Junior guard Teresa Condit displays some “arms up” defense in the Lady Toppers’ 78-49 victory over Austin Peay. Earlier in the season the Western squad traveled to Clarksville and won, 70-55, its sixth victory of the season. ee — M. Lyons — J. Burton “It was almost like they had given everything they had the night before because it was so crucial and so important. They did it and it was just hard to turn around and do it again.” — Julia Yeater, — coach. 224 Women’s Basketball M. ng pre-season pick for the state’s second best player, sophomore Pam Kordenbrock, didn’t isappoint very many critics. The Ft. Mitchell native led her team in scoring for the econd consecutive year. In the two games against Austin Peay she scored 36 points. 976-77 Women’s Basketball team: (Front row) E. Penney, B. Chapman, L. Howard, M. Nillis, T. Condit, J. Jams. (Second row) S. Rubin, P. England, V. Smith, B. Lane, S. Price, . Kordenbrock, D. Doellman. (Back row) manager N. Shugard, head coach J. Yeater, taduate assistant coach L. Holmes and manager L. Robinson. A Flaw In Title IX In a fast-paced contest against Kentucky State, the Lady Topper basketball Pier broke the century mark for the second time in history. The roar of the crowd was absent. But in a nearly-deserted locker room following the win, sophomore forward Donna Doellman peered and half-jokingly yelled to teammate Beth Lane: “Who knows, maybe by the time we’re seniors we might have a pretty decent crowd.” The federal Title IX which went into effect two years ago assured women equal opportunity to play amateur sports but it did not assure them equal crowd support. “T think it’s a shame the students don’t support the girls’ basketball team,” said Olmstead senior Carman Atchley. “When you consider their record and consid- er what would happen if the guys’ team was doing that, ven would just know that it would be the talk of the place. “Even if people knew about the team’s record they still wouldn’t come because they think they’re not very good,” Atchley said. “But if they would ever come to one of the games I believe they would change their minds,” he said. Since Western began playing women’s basketball four years ago the crowd problem has not been due to lack of support from the men’s team. Among the spec- tators at the Morehead game were members of the men’s team. “T think I have seen them play about three or four times this year,” said senior forward James Johnson. “T don’t think they get enough publicity,” he contin- ued. “Nobody really pane where their games are or anything about the girls who play for the team.” Attendance at this season’s games increased with many fans remaining loyal game after game. An in- crease of games prior to‘the men’s games has exposed the Lady Toppers to different types of fans. Mrs. Hec Franham, whose ete is a former Western player, compared the Lady Toppers to wom- en’s teams she saw play long ago when the court was divided into four parts. “T think the girls have more speed today,” she said. “All the shooting was confined to the areas under the basket because the forwards scored all the points.” Season ticketholder Garland Westbrook said: “I come to most all their games when they play before the men. I think they are fun to watch,” said the man who was seated with his wife prior to the Lady Toppers’ 100-85 victory over eee State and the men’s loss to Middle Tennessee. “The girls are outplaying the boys this year.” A noticeable figure at most games was Athletic Di- rector Johnny Oldham, a former men’s coach. His beliefs about the future of the team and crowd support are strictly positive. “T enjoy watching our girls because I think they are very proficient in the fundamentals of basketball,” he said, while watching the second half of the More- head game. “T am really surprised at the ability of the girls to shoot,” Oldham said. “Our girls have a better team shooting percentage than our men do. “T can see that each year game attendance is improv- ing and this is the way I would expect it since each year our girls are improving,” he said. “It seems that the crowd is improving with our team.” If that’s true, maybe the Topper sophomores won't have to wait until they’re seniors. Maybe. — ROBIN VINCENT (} 225 Women’s Basketball D The third grade dreams of a girl from Logan County have come true in the past three winters in Diddle Arena and other basketball facilities where the Lady Toppers have played. “When I came to Western I have no idea they were going to start a women’s basketball team,” said Brenda Chapman, senior starting guard. “I came here to play tennis. Tennis was the only sport they had for girls at Olmstead High School.” Miss Chapman said she became interested in bas- ketball in the third grade and began playing tennis as a ninth grader. She won the tennis regionals as a senior and finished fifth in the state tournament. “Just about all I ever think about is basketball,” she said. “I just live from one game to the next.” In her first two college years, the physical educa- tion major played the No. 1 position on the tennis team. But basketball also attracted her attention. “When I was a freshman they had their very first team,” she said. “I was still gearing in to tennis at that time and I didn’t try out. At the end of my sophomore year I start- ed coming to the games and watching girls play. “] didn’t start playing until late that year,” Miss Chapman said. “I saw where I might have a chance to play and | talked to Dr. Carol Hughes, who was the coach then, and she en- couraged me.” Following her sopho- more year when she competed in both bas- ketball and tennis, Miss pen Chapman was offered a tennis scholarship and had to chose between the two sports. “Miss Betty Langley had just gotten the tennis scholarship and offered me one as one of the best players at that time,” the senior said. “I knew just about where I stood in tennis, but basketball was new to me. I talked to Dr. Hughes and she couldn’t promise me anything. She thought I could play, but she knew it would take a lot of hard avenle “Both coaches were really fair about it,” said Miss Chapman of her decision to drop tennis. “They just let me make up my own mind. I still support the tennis team and I play in some tournaments in the summer; but, as far as playing tennis for Western is concerned, I have no regrets that I am doing what I am doing.” By the end of her junior year, the work paid off and Brenda Chapman was the second leading scorer and had earned a basketball scholarship. “Brenda Chapman has improved 100 per cent over last year,” said former coach Hughes. “She has changed from a girl who could hardly play ball at all 226 Women’s Basketball Feature A GIRL WHO HAD A DREAM into a fine player. She is the quickest guard in the state.” Although Miss Chapman’s mother said she “sometimes wishes Brenda was still playing ten- nis,” her father is more positive. “Brenda was never really a polished tennis play- er,” he said as he watched his daughter score a career high 29 points against Morehead State. “I always knew she was a better basketball player.” Despite continual improvement, Miss Chapin is not satisfied with her overall progress. “The fact that basketball is still new to me and that I still have that drive to get better and better has helped me,” she said. “But, I don’t have the exper- ience that other girls have who have played all their life. “Passing is my weakest point,” she said. “I try to concentrate real hard on it during games and in practice. That’s where you really learn.” Her co-captain title does not affect her role as a oy team member, she said. “It is more or less a title and I try to do the best I can with the re- sponsibilities,”” Miss Chapman said. “We have five people who ua together. We don’t ave one dominant per- son who says, ‘Hey you, do this or you, do that.’” There have been no major conflicts between teammates or coaches, Miss Chapman said. “We've got 13 people on the team, two coaches, two managers and a couple of trainers who travel with us. We are lucky because they are dedicated. to the sport,” she said. “They like the game and that helps everybody get along.” The 1976-77 season ended with disappointment when the team finished second behind Morehead in the KWIC tournament. It may not be her last season, however, because she still has one year’s eligibility. “Right now I’m leaning toward coming back,” the five-foot-eight senior said. ‘College life is a sort of easy life because you don’t have many responsi- bilities,” Miss Chapman said. Coaching her own team is one of her ambitions after graduation. “Sometimes I say that I want to get my master’s and coach on the college level, but sometimes I dream about some little junior high girl. Just train- ing her and watching her grow up to be a superstar ” she said. Maybe another third grade girl with a dream will watch it come true, only sooner this time. — ROBIN VINCENT (1) Chapman Photos by Mark Lyons Moments after her team’s 70-68 loss to Morehead in the state tournament final, Miss Chapman sadly buried her head in her hands in disbelief. In West- ern’s two state tournament games the senior tallied 41 points, 19 in the final. Ironically, her 29-point career high score was earned against Morehead. A break in a regular season home game allowed Miss Chapman an opportunity to exchange strate- gy ideas with the team’s other senior, Emily Pen- ney as Beth Lane looks upcourt. Miss Chapman and Miss Penney, a transfer from Cleveland State Junior College, were co-captains. In her junior year Miss Chapman was called “the quickest guard in the state” by coach Carol Hughes. In the Lady Toppers’ 77-61 loss to Murray, her quickness wasn’t enough. Although she spent most of the game chasing the opponent's guards, she scored 15 points. Trips home to her grandparents’ farm in Logan County provide Miss Chapman time to spend with niece Christy and nephew Tom. After the trio prac- ticed basketball on ihe backyard goal they decided to walk toward the college student’s parents’ farm, two miles away. 227 Women’s Basketball Feature 4 i ’.N N ) 228 Old Gym Feature ——) sae! [ aia GI The metamorphosis of Diddle’s ‘Red Barn’ into Margie Helm Library marked the end of a rare brand of basketball in the home of two-point thrillers. i. Need — B. Strode A special honors ceremony on the occasion of his 1,000th game gave Coach Ed Diddle the chance to take the microphone and express his appreciation for the 1,000 silver dollars he received from fans. re rrr rr a erry ne Wien Western students talk about basketball, they talk about such stars as Jim McDaniels and Clem Haskins. They recall the dozens of close games that oc- curred in E.A. Diddle Arena throughout the years. What most Western students don’t re- alize is that all the stars, all the victories, all the last-second wins, and all the un- forgettable moments in basketball in Diddle Arena wouldn’t equal one-sixth of the excitement generated within the walls of the old physical educa- tion building. Most Bien may not know where the physical education building is, but they've probably studied there several times. Its name was changed in 1964 to the Margie Helm Library. The building served as the home of Hilltopper basketball from Feb. 9, 1931, through Dec. 7, 1963. It was called the “Big Red Barn.” The name was a carry- over from the Toppers’ first basketball home, “The Little Red Barn.” This building was a small red barn that seated 250 people. Built in 1920, it stood near the outside bulletin board now located between the Ms Somehow we scored 27 points in four minutes and 15 seconds to come from behind and win. — Dee Gibson YI rear of Cherry Hall and the front of Gar- rett Conference Center. Coach Edgar Al- len Diddle coached his first Western bas- ketball team there in 1922. On Feb. 9, 1931, Dr. Henry Hardin Cherry held dedication ceremonies for a $225,000 basketball palace. That very night 3,500 people watched Western win its first victory there. The score was Western 41, Georgetown 24. They called it “Dr. Cherry’s Follies ” in those years. In the 1930s such a giant arena, capable of seating 5,000 spectators for basketball, was unheard of on a col- lege campus in the South. They said Diddle couldn’t fill the are- na, but in less than 10 years the building was too small. In the immediate postwar peste when the Hilltoppers had a fabu- ous succession of teams to compete in national tournaments, a season ticket was an item only the rich could afford. The Hilltoppers played 374 games in the old physical education gym and won 336 of them. In a six-year stretch — from Feb. 5, 1949, through Jan. 10, 1955 — they won 67 Benes in a row. The size of the largest crowd ever to 44 It was awfully hard for a visiting team to win there. YI see a game in the old gym is unknown. Diddle put automatic clockers on the en- trances one night in 1948 when the Top- pers met Bowling Green of Ohio. Both teams were among the nation’s top 10, and it was later unofficially ieclosed that the count was 6,700. Dee Gibson, director of public affairs, played basketball for Western in 1942 and 1943, and then after the war from 1946 to 1948. Gibson said the old gym had an up- stairs track that encircled the gym floor in front of the stands and before each eau youngsters would sit on the track loor and dangle their feet over the edge. “They rantd kick their heels against a metal guard around the facing of the track and it would sound like a herd of stampeding cattle,” Gibson said. “That, along with the noise from the crowd and the band, would psyche out any team.” The most exciting moments for Gibson came in a 1947 game again- st Nebraska. “We were far behind with only four minutes and 15 seconds to go. Somehow we scored 27 points in that remaining time to come from behind and win,” Gibson said. According to Gibson, the old gym had a cozy atmosphere that Diddle Arena may lack. “Each section had its ‘characters — the referee baiters, the practical jokers, the pessimists and the optimists. If you go to a game in Diddle Arena and your best friend is there, chances are you will nev- er see him,” he said. Gibson said the school was smaller then and students were closer. “My wife was one of the cheerleaders when I played here, and her twin sister married Jim Pickens,’ Gibson said. Pickens, assistant to the dean of stu- dent affairs, is one of several faculty and staff members who were star athletes in the 1940s and 1950s. Owen Lawson, physical plant director, is another alumnus who remembers the great years of basketball at the physical education building. Lawson, who attend- ed Western in 1948 and then again from 1951-1954, recalled the time in 1959 that Eastern’s coach pulled his team off the court over a disputed call. “There was a minute to go in the half and Western was leading by 17. Their coach didn’t like the official’s call, so he and his team just left and forfeited the game,” Lawson said. Everyone who played in the physical education gym said the same thing. It was awfully tough for a visiting team to win there. Former University of Cincinnati coach John Wietle, who never won there al- though he brought a succession of fine teams to the Hill, probably summed up best how opponents felt: “You warm up in a pretty normal atmosphere. Then they throw that ball up at center; the band stands up and plays “Dixie,” and all hell breaks loose!” The physical education building also housed the headquarters for the first ROTC offices. In the 1937 flood, 500 Bowling Green residents took shelter there. The highest score ever achieved at the ym was Jan. 16, 1954, when the Toppers ce Eastern 122 to 78. The lowest scor- ing game occurred in a KIAC semifinal game in 1935 against Morehead. Again Coach Diddle’s squad won with 12 points to Morehead’s four. It was in the early 1960s that Dr. Kelly Thompson’s administration decided that a larger basketball arena was necessary to house the thousands of Southern Ken- tucky basketball fans. So at a cost of $3 million, spacious E.A. Diddle Arena was built. On Dec. 7, 1963, a near-capacity crowd Vi They throw that ball up at center; the band stands up and plays ‘Dixie,’ and all hell breaks loose! — John Wietle 7 of 8,500 watched Western play its first home game in the new arena. No longer would the old physical edu- cation building serve as the home of the Toppers; 32 years of tradition and win- ning spirit synonymous with Hilltopper iediey all had ended. Gibson said Diddle didn’t want to move to the new arena at first, but as it neared completion his attitude softened. “He definitely didn’t want the Univer- sity to tear down the old gym, and he didn’t favor renovating it into a library,” Gibson said. “He hated to destroy a place that held so many memories of great years of basketball. eee COIN 229 Old Gym Feature After spring try-outs, summer camp and biweekly fall practice sessions, the 14 yell leaders put on the red and white uniforms and got psyched for ... Sideline coaching and coaxing The stands weren't filled with scream- ing fans waving red towels. The team wasn’t setting up a play on the field. Only five judges watched as 19 women and 11 men cheered and tumbled during cheerleading tryouts last spring. Once they were chosen, the seven men and seven women began preparing for the athletic season by attending a clinic at Memphis State University. Squad members learned new chants, cheers and pompon routines. New cheers were also created by the squad members. Returning from the clinic, the squad practiced for four hours a day for three weeks before switching to a weekly regi- men of two practices. According to captain Beth Lynn, squad members “try to work on little things” at each two-hour practice. “We make up new cheers, do partner stunts and talk for about 15 minutes about what we do,” she said. A videotape machine is used occasionally to help cor- rect errors. A two-point victory over Arkansas-Little Rock cre- ates some anxious moments for Pam Mosier. The senior said the crowd responded well to the cheer- leaders’ efforts because the game was so close. Western cheerleaders watch a replay of themselves at a fall practice. At far left, Gordon Joffrion of Educational Television runs the video-tape ma- chine. Cheerleaders include: (Front row) Mike Laudenslager and Rich Macias. (Second row) William Cole, Nina Laffosse, Beth Lynn, Elaine Robinson and Pam Mosier. (Back row) Jenni- fer Kimmel, Garry Kellum, Wayne Herner, Scott Triplett, Barry Wilson and Robin Carr. Not pic- tured is Donna Miller. — T. Dekle 230 Cheerleading | In addition to appearances at all home football and basketball games, the squad traveled to all away football games and six away basketball games. When you have to go on weeknights, it gets hard,” Miss Lynn said. Squad members generally felt the East- ern game was a highlight of the football season. Garry Kellum said after Jimmy Thom- as’ 97-yard opening kickoff touchdown run, he enjoyed “looking up there and seeing everybody on their feet.” Donna Miller said she enjoyed coach Jimmy Feix’s remarks about the role Western fans played in the 10-6 victory. “Things like that make cheerleading neat,” she said. According to Miss Lynn, basketball _ cheerleading is easier. “The crowd’s so much closer in basketball; the people are so far away in football,” she said. “T don’t agree with the (crowd) setup here at all.” “Basketball games go so fast,” said Rich Macias, another yell leader. “In football, four quarters is a long time to sit still. The crowd doesn’t get into it unless a touchdown is scored,” the Hop- _ kinsville senior added. Other squad members said they gained experience from their high school cheerleading. Asked if this experience helped, Jenni- fer Kimmel said, “I knew what it was about. You have to be a cheerleader to understand the kinds of cheers you do.” “T love it; I’ve grown up with it. If it hadn’t been for Righ school cheerlead- ing, I wouldn’t be nearly as limber,” Miss Kimmel added. The Beechmont sophomore was a high school cheer- leader for five years. Everything has to be perfect in high school cheerleading,” said Miss Kimmel in citing a major difference between high school and college cheerleading — the stress of competition between squads found in most high schools. “College cheerleaders don’t worry about little de- tails as much,” added Miss Miller. High school cheerleading gave Rob- in Carr experience in being in front of eople. Miss Carr said she led cheers re three years at Bowling Green High School. According to Miss Lynn, motivating the college crowd is more difficult than motivating the high school set. “You just don’t have that enthusiasm,” she said. “I guess you're older,” she said. Becoming a Western yell leader ful- filled long-awaited dreams, according to the squad members. “Since I was little, I’ve told my parents I’ve wanted to be a cheerleader for West- ern. It was a kind of goal I had set for myself,” said Miss Kimmel. Other squad members expressed dif- ferent reasons for being a Pleo lendce After an injury forced Kellum to aban- don his plans to play football, “cheer- leading was the closest thing I could get tonite Macias said he tried out “just for the heck of it. Last year when I went to the games, I saw these guys doing acrobatics and I thought I could do better than them, so I tried and made the team.” “J just like school spirit,’ Triplett said. “I thought I’d go out there and use my gymnastics.” As for the unpleasant aspects of cheer- leading, Kellum said he disliked games where the crowd was unresponsive, while Miss Carr said she felt the overall attitude of Western’s students toward the yell leaders was not always the best. “Cheerleading has made me feel more like a part of the University,” said Miss Kimmel. “I feel like I can contribute something to Western,” she added. — JEFFREY HOWERTON Ankle-to-knee casts kept Donna Miller and Jenni- fer Kimmel from cartwheels and pyramids at the Troy State game. The girls who fell during pre- season practice cheered Western to a 10-10 tie. A fall from her partner’s shoulders during practice forced Donna Miller to the sidelines for four weeks. Despite a bad sprain, Miss Miller celebrates a Topper score in the 10-7 win at Chattanooga. The absence of several yell leaders from the Dec. 8 basketball game against Evansville forced other squad erkbets to devise this formation. The cheer was performed at time-out of the 78-61 victory. — T. Dekle — L. Gardner 231 Cheerleading The season itself wasn’t a cinch for the swim team. The swimmers lost four meets on their way to the KISC where they became pool of Champions Bes ; er A few days after Western’s Feb. 26 victory in the Ken- cy . VW. = er tucky Intercollegiate Swimming Championships (KISC), well- ; ea wishers and happy athletes filled the office of swim coach : Bill Powell. The din was so loud Powell was forced to leave his packed quarters to seek refuge and talk of the team’s victory. “The KISC made the whole season a success,” Powell said. “I’m not going to come down for a whole year.” “You build your whole season around it (the KISC),” Powell said. Among the Toppers’ victims in the meet were Eastern, Lou- isville, Centre and the University of Kentucky. The win over Kentucky — Western’s first ever against the Wildcats — made the championship that much sweeter. “It’s gonna help us (beating UK),” Powell said. “When you believe you can win, it helps a lot.” The victory was built on the performances of three Toppers in particular — Kiko Ledesma, Rick Kral and Jeff Wells. Ledesma, an Ecuador native, won three events. One of his victories was in the 200-yard individual medley, where he defeated the event favorite, Kentucky’s John Denison. Ledesma also won the 100-yard and 200-yard butterfly events. His 1:52 in the 200 qualified him for the National Collegiate Athletic Association swimming meet. Kral scored two pressure-packed victories, taking both the one-and three-meter diving competitions. The junior’s three- meter win was particularly impressive since the team doesn’t have a three-meter board on which to practice. Wells won the 50- and the 100-yard freestyle races. He also placed second in the 200 free. Important victories were claimed in the 800-yard free-style relay and the 400 free relay. Wells, Mark Owens and Tag Garrod were on both squads. Mike Dressman filled out the 800 team and freshman Jay Carter anchored the winning 400 effort. But Powell said he wasn’t enthralled with the team’s season, other than the KISC. “We had a disappointing dual meet season,” he said. “We were snowed out of two wins (Eastern Illinois and Eastern Kentucky) and disqualified from another (Vanderbilt). “We finished 7-4, but it just as easily could have been 10-3,” Powell said. The season began on a rather unspectacular note. The Top- pers placed fourth of six teams in the Nov. 20 Miner Relays in Rolla, Mo. Despite this low overall finish, the swimmers set several school records in relay events. The Toppers’ highest finish was a third-place performance by Garrod, Dressman and Mark Hackler in the 1,500-yard freestyle relay. The unit set a school record of 15:02.04. The Toppers finished second in a triangular meet Dec. SWIMMING RESULTS Won 7 Lost 4 Miner Relays (4th place) Trimeet with West Va. and Morris Harvey (2nd place) Morris Harvey Relays (2nd place) Western 49 KENTUCKY 64 2 Eastern Kentucky Invitational (3rd place) —R. Rogers WESTERN 57 Tennessee gah 45 Two pressure-packed victories by Rick Kral in the one-and three-meter diving peu gh roe competition led the Toppers to the Kentucky Intercollegiate Swimming Cham- Western 54 VANDERBILT 59 pionships in March. The sophomore surprised his opponents with the three- WESTERN 70 Southeast Missouri 38 meter board win. The Diddle Arena pool has no such board for practice. KISC (1st place) 232 Swimming 3, sandwiched between first-place West Virginia and host Morris Harvey. One day later, the Toppers were second in the Morris Harvey Relays, once again losing to West Virginia. The meet served as preparation for a Dec. 9 invasion of power- ful Kentucky. Before the Diddle Arena confrontation, Powell hailed Ken- tucky as the “swimming power of the state of Kentucky.” After the meet no one would dispute his word. The Wildcats sued superior depth to methodically destroy Western, 64-49. But Ledesma gave Kentucky a forecast of what they would see two and one-half months later. Ledesma gained back-to-back victories in the 200-yard indi- vidual medley and the 200 butterfly, setting school records in both events. “Kiki was just fantastic,” praised Powell after the meet. “He just had a super meet.” The team was also victorious in the 400-yard freestyle relay. Wells, Carter, Owens and Garrod triumphed in 3:17.9. 1976-77 Swim Team: (Front row) T. Garrod, S. Merrill, M. Owens, J. Wells, J. Mullikin, R. Kral, Coach B. Powell. (Second row) J. Stringer, D. Holec, J. McClure, D. Mulliken, S. Allgeier, D. Meyers. (Third row) J. Massey, M. Dressman, T. Phillips, L. Davis, A. Logan, S. Borelli, B. Canon. (Back row) J. ene) Carter, K. Hedges, S. Krigbaum, E. Ledesma, T. Heize, M. Roney and M. Hackler. — B. Coffey Powell was philosophical after the loss. “We swam a great meet. Kentucky just swam better.” After Christmas vacation, the team finished third in the four-team Eastern Kentucky Invitational on Jan. 22. The win- ner was Georgia Kentucky finished second and Eastern fin- ished last. Kral won the one-meter dive and was second in the three- meter. He led the whole way in the one-meter competition. Ledesma finished first in the 200 fly and second in the 100 fly. He also finished in the top four in both individual medley events. After swamping Tennessee State 57-45 on Jan. 25, a Jan. 29 home meet was canceled. In the University of Missouri at Rolla Relays Feb. 5, the Toppers finished second to the University of Oklahoma. The swimmers downed Evansville and Missouri-Rolla in the meet. The team led Oklahoma by 19 points at one time, but finally fell to the Sooners. “We really had Oklahoma sweating,” Powell said. “Their coach took them downstairs and gave them a pep talk during the meet.” The team was led by Ledesma, who set pool records in winning the 200 individual medley and the 200 butterfly. Reserves were used to crush Centre, 71-41, on Feb. 9. Next came the Feb. 11 meet against Vanderbilt. West- ern apparently upset the Commodores when Carter, Owens, Garrod and Wells won the 400-yard freestyle relay, the meet’s final event. But an elated Topper swimmer jumped into the pool before one of Vandy’s teams in the race had finished, forcing the disqualification. Western lost the race and the meet, 59-54. The next night the Toppers redeemed themselves, easily beating Southeast Missouri University. That was Western’s last competition before the KISC. Although the season was, in his words, an overall success, Powell voiced a regret following the win in the state meet. He was serine because of Western’s lack of swimming scholarships. the Toppers are only alloted six. Powell said he ae that this will make it hard to defeat the Kentuckys and Oklahomas in the years to come. He reflected on his plight. “Oh, what I could do with just three more scholarships.” But for now, he’s doing just fine. — BRYAN ARMSTRONG OD eR. as Fans; timekeepers and swimmers celebrated the KISC championship title the team won in March. Coach Bill Powell said the win made the season a success. “You build your whole season around it,” Powell said. aid off for senior Mark Owens. He competed in the 800-yard Dar the relay Freestyle stroke practice and the 400-yard free relay in the KISC. Both squads won their events, and the team won the championship. 233 Swimming 234 Riflery LY ON TARGET A strong returning nucleus, a recruit who was a top-ranked high school shoot- er and a new coach shaped the personal- ity of the riflery team. The trio of Chris Carlsen, Steve Brit- tingham and Keith Cerk — all who have scored near the perfect 300, returned for competition. A former cadet coach at an army post, Sg. L.C. John Baker said the civilian- type atmosphere of a university is very different. Team members were pleased with their new coach. “He’s really helped team morale,” said third-year mem- ber Dwayne Robinson. “He’s al- ways smiling.” The second newcomer is a native of Mathematics skill is part of the knowledge sharp- shooters need after target practice. Rifleman Greg Stickler totals his marks in an early spring semes- ter session. It was Stickler’s first year on the team. After missing his mark in practice, Gregg Stickler takes a moment to try to regain his concentration. Stickler, a freshman civil engineering technology major from Louisville, was one of several new faces welcomed to the team. — M. Lyons Shaker Heights, Ohio. Mary Koeckert came to Western following training from U.S. Olympic team members at a Geor- gia camp. “I’ve done much better shoot- ing in college,” she said. The season began with a sound defeat over U.T. Chattanoaga, Sept. 18. Brit- tingham’s 550, a score of 533 by Dwayne Robinson , and a 542 score by Miss Koeckert, John Miller and Cerk added to Western's 2,180 total. Two weeks later, the team faced a Ten- nessee Tech squad equipped with four All-Americans. Two of them didn’t com- pete because of illness and injury. ‘The Toppers’ strong performances edged the Golden Eagles, 2,239-2,231. The Toppers overwhelmed Vanderbilt 2,229-1,987 in the first home meet. Brit- tingham shot a 568 and Cerk bagged al Siseh Despite Brittingham’s 556 score, the marksmen dropped a 2,298-2,189 deci- sion to top-ranked East Tennessee. Contributing to Homecoming’s suc- cess, of the sharpshooters beat Middle Tennessee 2,213-2,094. Consistent scor- ing added to the total with Brittingham pacing the squad with a 561. After competing in the U.K Interna- tional, the team traveled to Manhatten, Kan., in December for the annual Kansas State Turkey Shoot. “It was a pretty ex- citing meet because of the caliber of teams,’ Baker said. The team finished fourth out of 10 teams in the three-man International Shooting Union competition behind Texas Christian University and Murray State. Brittingham, Miss Carlsen and Discipline and practice lead to better scores as ju- nior John Miller take aim at the target. As a sopho- more Miller had a 266.5 average which made him eighth on the 12-member squad. He is one of three team members from Waukegan, IIl. Ransiied Maggy A locker room picture before practice shows the team’s mixture of old and new. Three-year squad Miss Koeckert paced the Toppers’ effort with Brittingham’s 557 score. National Rifle Association competi- tion which allows four-man teams and the use of heavily padded clothing, saw the Toppers’ quartet finish third out of 16 teams. Miss Koeckert’s 564 mark was the highest in the NRA shooting. Brittingham’s identical sets of 565 scores in the first spring meet paced the team to a third place finish in the Ken- tucky Rifle League. Miss Koeckert added totals of 553 and 551. In its most exciting match, Western felled North Carolina State University at Raleigh, Feb. 12. Despite falling behind the first day, the team caught up with strong perfor- — M. Lyons member Keith Cerk adjusts his boots while first year coach Sgt. John Baker finalizes practice plans. mances of Cerk and Miss Carlsen. In the season’s match , the sharpshoot- ers snared first and third places in a 22- team meet at Camp Perry, Mo. Brittingham’s 571 score led the team in a performance Baker termed “fantastic againt the pressure of the match.” — JEFFREY HOWERTON (1) RIFLERY RESULTS Won 5 Lost 1 WESTERN 2,180 UT at Chattanooga 1,959 WESTERN 2,239 Tennessee Tech 2,231 WETERN) 2,229 —- Vanderbilt 1,987 Western 2,189 EAST TENNESSEE 2,298 WESTERN 2,213 Middle Tennessee 2,094 International Shooting Union (4th of 10) NRA Sectional (3rd of 16) Kentucky Rifle League (3rd) Camp Perry (Ist and 3rd) WESTERN 2,132 The 1976-77 Riflery team: (Front row), S. Brittingham, C. Carlsen, M. Yakota, M. Koeckert. (Back row) K. Cain, J. Miller, K. Cerk, T. Dunn, P. Moran and coach J. Baker. 235 Riflery es fT Feix 1941-42 Basketball Team nets Nee Western’s Englishman and country boys are at home Four seconds remained in a game in late February that meant little in terms of the Ohio Valley Conference race. West- ern was leading Murray, 82-81, and ev- eryone wondered if Racer John Randall could convert the pressure one-plus-one free throw situation as he did to put an earlier Western-Murray game at Diddle Arena into double (and almost triple) overtime. Randall’s first shot went awry, howev- er, and Hilltopper Lloyd Terry grabbed the rebound that iced the game. Despite the team’s sub-par 1976-77 season, the win at Murray represented a milestone. Western became the sixth NCAA school to win 1,000 games. Pre- viously, only. Kentucky, Kansas, St. John’s of New York, Notre Dame and Duke had reached the mark. “Those aren't bad records for a bunch of country boys,” said former assistant coach Ted Hornback. “We had some fine ball clubs. I wouldn’t attempt to sa which were the better players or ite were the better teams. They were just in different eras.” First in average wins per season, sec- ond in winning percentages and second in the number of 20-plus win seasons, Western has national records that sup- port Hornback’s statement. .o fh the record hooks A 36-9 thrashing of Wichita State in 1941, however, was one virtually un- known record. The Shockers’ total repre- sented the fewest points scored by a ma- jor college team in modern times since 1940 until 1973. Perhaps the most memorable game of three-time All-American Clem Haskins was one played in Diddle Arena against Middle Tennessee Jan. 30, 1965. He scored 55 points, and holds the team and Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) scor- ing record. “The weather outside was just awful and there weren’t that many people in the crowd that night,” Haskins recalled. “Tl thought we owed it to them to give them a good show. “T really didn’t take that many shots that night. I only took 29,” Haskins said. ‘My teammates were really excited about it, too. Every time I got a basket they got as big a charge out of it as I did, the Campbellsville native added. The 25 field goals the nine-year NBA veteran made in that game also stands as a conference record. From 1955-59, Ralph Crosthwaite, a six-foot-nine center from Cincinnati, Ohio, led the nation in field goal shoot- ing percentage. “T never really shot that much,” Poo , - - ‘ i Ed Diddle Crosthwaite said. “The other guys were shooters. Most of my shots came on tip- ins. Crosthwaite shot an almost unheard of 61.0 per cent from the field in 1958 to lead the nation. His 64.5 percentage in 1959 also led the nation. ‘“T remember my freshman year I had a field goal percentage in the top 10 in the country,” he added. “Another thing I re- member was the big winning streak we had in the gym. I think it was 67 games, and I remember when Xavier of Ohio knocked us off.” Western’s 67-game winning streak at home remains a conference record, too, while Crosthwaite’s .582 career field goal percentage ranks in the nation’s top 20. Other major conference records held by Toppers were set by two of the 15 All- Americans who have played at Western. Three-time All-American and former pro center Jim McDaniels owns the OVC record for the most points scored in one season, 878; most field goals, 935, and most career points with 2,238. Tom Marshall, an All-American who played for the NBA’s Cincinnati Royals, has the OVC record for the most free throws attempted and made in a season. Marshall made 265 of 359 free throw at- tempts in 1953-54. Clem HaskhitS om___acmmommmammen Nick Rost ee Jim McDaniels A list of Western basketball records wouldn’t be complete without those of the late Ed Diddle. Coach for 42 years, Diddle is fourth in all-time coaching vic- .tories and 15th in winning percentages. Tracing one of the earliest individual football records set by a Western player was not difficult. All it took was a visit to Coach Jimmy Feix’s office. “That was the last fall that I played here,” said Feix of his 80 per cent game passing record. “We just had a hot hand early in that game. “T think I had a streak of 11 or 12 ina row,” added Feix who completed 16 of 20 that day. Covering a total of 3,560 yards in 607 rushing attempts is a lot of ground cov- ered for some teams over a four-year span, not to mention an individual. But Dickie Moore did in his college career. A junior in 1967, Moore led the nation in rushing with 1,444 yards in 208 attempts for a phenomenal average of 6.9 yards per play. Although Western football usually has a strong running attack, the most incredible individual record is a quarter- back’s. A 1969 meeting with Akron saw the Hilltoppers lose, 21-18, but not before Johnny Vance threw 59 passes and com- Porter Williams pleted 37. Those statistics, along with the 428 yards total offense he gained that day, are still OVC records. “At the time we played them they were ranked first or second in the nation,” Vance said. “I remember we fell behind, 21-0, and lost, 21-18. We missed three two-point conversions and that cost us the game. “We moved the ball real well between the 10-yard lines,” Vance said. ‘But after we got the ball inside the 10, we got bogged down. They had us 14-0 at the half and the half ended with us on their one-yard line.” Playing Murray meant setting re- cords for receiver Porter Williams, who graduated in 1973 as a college division All-American. In 1970 Williams caught a Leo Pecken- paugh pass and took it in for a 96-yard score. As a senior, Williams caught four touchdown passes against the Racers, another standing OVC record. “We were playing for the title,” said Williams, recalling the long pass. “It was really a short pass and I just ran past them. They were in a man-to-man defense and when the defender came in, Peckenpaugh just lobbed it over his head.” The 1973 Camellia Bowl team not only Clarence Jackson Johnny Vance ASE LIRA EL AGERE TS OH RO PSS 7 VET ENE STS Dickie Moore made an impression on its opponents but one on the record books. The team set records for total points, 377 touch- downs, 54; extra points, 45; scoring average, 37.7 per game and total offense with 4,071. Chicago Bears’ kick return specialist Virgil Livers, who played football and ran track while at Western, is probably the only Topper athlete to hold confer- ence records in different sports. He holds the conference record for yards gained on interception returns in football and shares the conference 440-yard relay mark with Richard Hopkins, Robert Dudley and Emmett Briggs. Englishman Nick Rose helped lead the cross country team to two consecutive championships and also won the indivi- uate title for three consecutive years. An All-American in track and cross country, Rose also owns the conference record in the three-mile run, and the NCAA record for the two-mile run. For basketball it took a bunch of coun- try boys. For track and cross country it took an Englishman, but the result for individuals and teams were records that stand above the others. Western owns more AU-American Athletes than any other school in the OVC. — ROBIN VINCENT (1 Ralph Crosthwait¢ ——— Flashback: Hopes for championships in men’s spring sports faded away Track: Injuries and personnel loss hamper the team Tennis: Hornback’s dream for 19th conference title doesn’t Golf: Efforts to get out of OVC cellar fail Baseball: The story of the year was close games TRACK Blame it on injuries, personnel loss- es or increasing balance among the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) men’s track teams. But it’s hard not to think that the team didn’t win the 1976 conference outdoor track championship because it was after its 13th in a row. Coach Jerry Bean lost 10 conference champions to graduation, most notably All-Americans Nick Rose and Jesse Stu- art. Rose’s elegibility expired after the indoor season, giving him time to break the NCAA two-mile mark 8:30.9. Fellow Britons Chris Ridler and Tony Staynings did well at the NCAA indoor meet, too, with Ridler placing third in the three-mile and Staynings taking fifth in the two-mile, helping Western to a seventh-place finish. In fact, the Toppers did fine in the OVC’s first-ever indoor meet in Febru- ary winning easily and taking five firsts. But Bean realized his Toppers were not the same team. “We're as strong in the 440-relay team (second in the conter- ence). Ridler and Staynings did not com- 238 Flashback — Men’s Spring Sports 1976 the conference as before, though we may not be as strong on the national level,” he said. Yet in midseason came an OVC qua- drangular against Austin Peay, Middle Tennessee and Murray. Peay, Middle and injuries beat the team that week. Next was the Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa, where the team won five events and set six records in 1975. In 1976, however, the Toppers settled for one first place, Staynings in the steeplechase. The conference meet at Austin Peay in May showed Western was not the OVC power. The Toppers, who had won 19 events in the previous two OVC cham- pionships meets, managed only three wins and a third place finish. Staynings won the three-mile, Jaggers won the ‘half-mile and Chuck Durrant won the high jump crown to highlight the performance. Western, which qualified 11 men for the NCAA in 1974, and finished in the top 20 nationally the previous three years, qualified only Staynings and Ridler in the three-mile, Richard Hop- kins (third in the OVC) in the 220 and come true pete because of the Olympic trials, the 440-relay team did not attend and Hop- kins was hampered by a bad leg. Weeks later Bean and assistant coach Kokler resigned to enter pri- vate business. They wonder why 13 is called un- lucky. TENNIS A 19th Ohio Valley Conference cham- phionship would have been a fine retire- ment present for men’s tennis coach Ted Hornback. At the start of the 1976 sea- son, it seemed a cinch. Hornback, in his 34th season, returned four top players from his 1975 confer- ence championship team — Turks Bu- lent Altinkaya and Hasan Ozdemir, and Swedes Svante Malmsten and Stig Ljunggren — and added freshman Gon- zalo Lama Deik and Barrett Lessenberry. But there was no 19th title for Horn- back. The Toppers finished their season, 15-6, and placed second in the conference to Middle Tennessee. The veteran coach must have sensed trouble when Western lost to UK after 11 consecutive wins. The Toppers began with Eastern. Colonel coach Tom Higgins made a point to call Hornback and assure him that Eastern, seventh in the league the year before, would win. “I told my boys what Higgins said to me,” Hornback said. “I don’t really think it had much effect on them. They don’t think they can be beaten.” But they were, the Colonels winning, 4-3. Four days later, Lama Deik was lost for the season to a knee injury. The Toppers fell again to UK and closed with a disap- pointing 4-3 conference record. But come OVC tournament time, Hornback was still calling his team a contender. Altinkaya, Ljunggren, Malm- sten, and the doubles teams of Ljung- gren-Malmsten and Altinkaya-Ozdemir responded with first-round wins. Altinkaya and Ljunggren fell in the semifinals, leaving Malmsten to win the No. 3 singles title and Ljunggren-Malm- sten to take the top doubles title. Altinkaya-Ozdemir fell in the No. 2 doubles finals. Ljunggren and Malmsten were named to the All-OVC team. And Hornback closed his fifth decade Before the last home match of his 35-year coaching career Ted Hornback took time to confer with the team’s top-seeded player Bulent Altinkaya, who returned in 1977 to again lead the team. nal record. 373 wins, 77 losses. But only 18 championships. GOLF While Hornback was trying for a con- ference title, Frank Griffin’s men’s golf team was struggling to get out of the cellar, OVC where it had been mired for five years. But despite returning the bulk of its veterans, the team finished fifth in the conference meet. Most of the problem, Griffin said, was that his golfers had to make a 50- mile round trip to practice at Park Mam- moth. The course didn’t even have bunk- ers, he said. “When we go to places like Pinehurst and the players land in a trap, they just look at me and say, ‘What is this stuff, coach?” Griffin said. Whatever the problem, the Toppers started poorly as they finished low at the Pinehurst Invitational in March and at the First All-American Golf Tournament _in‘Knoxville in April. Heading into the three found OVC golf tournament, Western had faced ev- ery team but Eastern Tennessee, and had lost only to Austin Peay and Eastern. Charlie Bowers’ third-round 71 placed him in fifth place and on the All-OVC team with a four over par 220, but it wasn’t nearly enough to catch East Ten- nessee’s ercle golfers, who shot an even- ar 866 total. Western’s 914 total tied it or fifth win with Austin Peay. BASEBALL In sports, losing a game classified as a “squeaker” means losing by three points or less. The 1976 spring baseball team had several chapters entitled “Squeak- ers” in its book called “7-21.” “7-21” could easily have been renamed “15-13.” Eight more wins with eight few- er losses were just two runs away from Western’s baseballers last spring. But the extra runs never came. The sad twist to the story is that the team often left before losing those “squeakers.” Dropping so many close games leads to frustration. Some examples: 5-3. This was the first game of a dou- bleheader with Southern Illinois. West- ern was tied, 3-3, after four innings. An error put the winning S.I.U. run on sec- ond, followed by an RBI single. The Toppers and the Salukis were tied, 2-2, going into the ninth inning of the sec- ond game. $.I.U. put three runs on the rage that inning and won, 5-2. 3-0 and 4-3. OVC leader Middle Ten- nessee invaded Nick Denes Field for an April 10 doubleheader. The Toppers were shutout in the first game and en- tered the last half of the ninth of the next ame, trailing the Blue Raiders, 4-2. A Riddle Tennessee error, and singles by Olympian Tony Staynings led the pack of Topper distance runners last spring before going to Inns- bruck to compete in the steeplechase. Staynings is a former cross-country All-American. Steve Keck and Jim Atkinson pulled the team to within a run. Runners were on second and third, but the Toppers didn’t manage another hit, ending the rally and the game. 6-5. Jacksonville University beat the Toppers twice by a 6-5 score. 5-3. The team tangled with Mercer University, boasting an 11-3 record. The toppers led Mercer until the bottom of the ninth when two walks and a close call on a fielder’s choice loaded the bases for Mercer. A grand slam followed. 6-4 and 10-4. The Toppers next visited Murray. Despite homers by Terry Ted- der and Steve Keck, the team dropped both games. 8-7. One of the more exciting games occured against Vanderbilt. The Toppers were trailing, 5-1, after eight innings when doubles by Harold Craft and Gary Larimore and a single by Jim Atkinson tied the game, 5-5. Western went ahead, 7-5, in the 10th. Topper base runner Steve Larimore was thrown out on a pick-off play during a doubleheader loss to defending conference champion Murray State last spring. Western lost the games, 5-2 and 4-0. Biagons- De th ee ne raeae! F Two singles, a bunt, a liner that out- fielders misjudged and a bouncer down the third base line pushed Vanderbilt to its victory. 4-3 and 5-4. In the first half of the doubleheader with Kentucky Wesleyan Western lost 4-3, for loss number 19. The Toppers were leading, 3-1, in the top of the seventh inning of the second game, when Wesleyan loaded the bases with a single and a Topper error. Wes- leyan scored two runs and a win. 5-3 and 5-3. Two more OVC losses came at the hands of the league-leader Middle Tennessee. Western had a 3-1 lead in the first game going into the home half of the sixth inning. Four runs helped the Raiders erase the Toppers’ lead. Middle erupted for five runs in the bottom of the first inning in the second game. So the season went, as did coach Jim Pickens, who took a position in the stu- dent affairs office. He had compiled a 167-180 record and an OVC Division Championship in 1969. — GARY MOORE AND ROGER STINNETT (1 239 Flashback — Men’‘s Spring Sports 1976 240 Update — Men’s Tennis and Golf Inches count In Tennis, the men inched from a slow start to an OVC championship. In golf, a Bowers’ putt missed its mark by inches and cost the Toppers the All-Sports trophy. Je: ‘ | — D. Frank Midway through the singles finals at the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) men’s tennis tournament, rain threat- ened to halt play as it had done the day before. For the first time in months, how- ever, the rain didn’t bother first-year coach Ray Rose or the netters. The Toppers were on the threshhold of turn- ing its worst season into an OVC championship. Western lost seven of its first eight matches. Rose, who took over coaching for the 39-year coach Ted Hornback, blamed the weather for the slow start. “I think it helped us out a little,” Rose said. “We might have been a little overconfident at first.” The Toppers lost to Vanderbilt, 7-2, Feb. 22. They rebounded to tie Miami of Ohio for top honors in the Eastern Ken- tucky Invitational one week later. That preceded a spring break trip in which the team lost five matches and won one, against Florida Southern. Those losses, coupled with a 6-3 setback by Vanderbilt, left the squad tied for the most losses in any season. With a 1-7 record, the Toppers went undefeated for the remainder of the sea- son. The streak began when they whipped Cincinnati, 5-4. The entire season came down to the two-day OVC tournament. The team took the lead at the start Svante Malmsten (serving) and Stig Ljunggren went undefeated in dual matches at No. 1 doubles, but lost their tempers during the finals of the OVC tournament and walked off the court. Despite Bulent Altinkaya’s No. 1 singles loss, West- ern, then 1-7, beat Cincinnati to start a nine-match winning streak. The Turkish senior later won the No. 3 OVC singles crown. — L. Gardner of the tourney and never looked back. An unpleasant surprise came in the first round when Malmstem lost in No. 1 singles. He was beaten by defending and eventual champion Gary Boss of Austin Peay. Two unseeded players, Ljunggren and Ozdemir, pulled out preliminary round victories and advanced to the finals. The team captured the championship with two wins in the singles finals. Ljunggren whipped Eastern’s Steve Al- er, 7-5, 6-1, in the No. 2 final and Altin- can who didn’t lose an OVC set all season, topped Middle’s Peter Heffer- man to put icing on the cake. While that would seem to make the doubles finals anticlimatic, anyone watching the No. 1 final between Malm- stem and Ljunggren and Eastern would have thought the tournament hinged on its outcome. In the regular season, Eastern won the first encounter and Western later ‘whipped the Colonels. This time Eastern won ie default. After splitting two sets, Ljunggren called a “let” due to interfer- ence from another ball. Alger wouldn't allow the let and Ljunggren and Malm- stem walked off the court. That loss and a loss in the No. 2 dou- bles final left the team with 30 points, followed by Middle with 24 and Eastern with 17. In golf, coach Frank Griffin probably wasn't surprised when Morehead, pre- dicted to finish last in the OVC tourna- ment at Lexington’s Lakeside Country Club, won the tournament. The Toppers finished in a tie for third with a four-man, 54-hole total of 882, its best finish since 1970. The season began with a team Grif- fin said “should he stronger” than last year’s team. The brightest spot was senior Charlie Bowers, who had won numerous ama- teur titles and was named all-OVC last year. Other golfers included Car- mello Benassi, Chris Rabold, Butch Creek, Denny Vaughn, David Dalton and Tom Urtz. The team got off to a slow start at the OVC with a tie for fourth the first day. The Toppers were led by Bowers, who shot a first-round 71. Things looked bleaker, however, when the team shot 300 the second day and plunged even farther away. The team shot 288 the final day, the day’s lowest team by five strokes. That tied the Toppers for third with Tennes- see Tech. Conference favorite East Ten- nessee shot a final-day 302 and finished in sixth place with an 895, 19 strokes off the Hass set by Morehead. There were disappointments, however, for instance when Bowers’ shot from off the green came up a quarter of an inch too short and cost Western the All- Sports trophy. “They talk about golf be- ing a game of inches and that was less than an inch,” Griffin said. The putt also cost Bowers medalist honors as he placed second with a 214. Other scores included Creek with 225, Benassi with 222, Rabold with 224 and Dalton with 226. Vaughn was unable to compete due to knee problems. “T’m never happy unless we win, but we re not poor losers; if we lose we lose,” Griffin said. “T think our kids did a great job with all the handicaps they had to overcome,” he said. “I’m proud of what the kids have done. — JIM GROVE 0 Respectable scores from (left to right) Carmello Benassi (222), David Dalton (226) and Chris Rabold (224) helped Western to its best OVC match since 1970. Tom Urtz (far right) did not play. ¢ — M. Dowell 1977 TENNIS RESULTS Won 10 Lost 7 Western 2 VANDERBILT Ff Eastern Kentucky Invitational (Ist place tie) YALE Western 4 5 UNIVERSITY OF Western 0 SOUTH FLORIDA 9 SEMINOLE JR. Western 4 COLLEGE 5 WESTERN 8 Florida Southern i Western 4 JACKSONVILLE 5 Western 4 UT-CHATTANOOGA 5 Western 3 VANDERBILT 6 WESTERN 5 Cincinnati 4 WESTERN 6 Eastern Kentucky 5 WESTERN 5 Kentucky 4 WESTERN 7 Louisville 2 WESTERN 6 Middle Tennessee 3 WESTERN 6 Austin Peay 3 WESTERN 7 Murray 2 WESTERN 9 Louisville (e) WESTERN 7 Morehead 2 OVC Tournament Ist place 1977 GOLF RESULTS Collegiate Tournament (2nd of 11) Miami Tournament (3rd of 26) WESTERN 291, Missouri 319) Kentucky Intercollegiate, 2nd Murray State Quadranglar, 4th Tennessee Tech Invitational (4th of 20) Ohio Valley Conference Championship (3rd) The 1977 spring men’s golf team: (Front row) C. Benassi, D. Dalton, C. Bowers, T. Urtz, S. Prather, B. Creek, C. Rabold and E. Tubb, Jr. The 1977 spring men’s tennis team: (Front row) S. Ljunggren, H. Ozdemir, H. Ozgenel, B. Altinkaya. (Back row) T. McElfresh, S. Malmsten, B. Lessen- berry, R. Tipton and M. Nichols. 241 Update — Men’s Tennis Golf Oa aaa Ct TurNabout’s fair 242 ==GM Schmitt play FOR TOPPER BASEBALL He came northward with a dream. “IT want to make Western baseball ex- citing and I want to be a winner,” envi- sioned Dr. Barry Shollenberger less than a month after starting his First year as Topper baseball coach. “You're going to see a new team — one that hustles and one that has fun,” he predicted when he came here from Mid- dle Georgia Junior College. “My goal is to turn the program around. I think the Update — Baseball future is now.” And the future was now. Shollen- berger achieved his goal of turning around a baseball program that had lost three times as many games as it had won the past two seasons. In the process the team finished at 20-23-1 to break a school record for most wins in a single season. The old mark of 18 — set in 1970 and equaled in 1974 — fell as Shollenberger blended his. A catcher’s view of a pitcher was captured in a doubleheader against Louisville. Rick Baker deliv- ers a pitch in the first game which the Toppers lost, 4-3. U. of L. won the second, 5-4. young team with his 11 years of coach- ne experience. oor showing against Middle Tennes- see and Murray, however, helped cause the Toppers to finish last in the western division of the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) for the third straight year. The team finished at 2-10 in divisional play. First baseman Terry Tedder paced the offense. Hitting in the third slot, the Co- lumbia junior ied the squad in eight of- fensive categories, including homeruns (7), RBIs (41) and batting average (.359). The team hit .282 collectively and fea- tured three other .300 hitters besides Tedder. Paul Oberson hit .323 while compiling a 2.70 ERA as one of Shollen- berger’s most consistent pitchers. Fran- kie Hughes, a Middle Georgia transfer, batted .311 and was defensively sound at second. Third baseman Jim AUGHESA hit .307 to complement his excellent base- running and strong throwing arm. Sophomore righthander Mark Biven led the staff with a 2.41 ERA. Starters Tony Martines (4-2, 2.70) and Terry Hackett (4-2, 4.54) anchored the staff along with hard-throwing lefthander Jeff McKinley who finished 4-4 and was in the top 10 in the nation in strikeouts per nine innings with an average of 11. The season opened explosively with a win against Campbellsville, 20-0, in a game that featured five Topper home- runs. Oberson went four-for-five at the plate, scored four times and hit a homer. The squad then went on a nine-day spring break trip to Georgia and Ala- bama and won three of eight games against five teams. The squad faced Evansville in its home opener March 23 after dropping a 4-3 decision to Louisville — the first of three one-run losses to the Cardinals. Evansville scored eight runs in the seventh on seven hits, two walks and an error to break open a close game and win, 13-10. Western opened its western division OVC sheds with a doubleheader split against Austin Peay March 26. In the opener, Peay’s John Sarver threw a no- hitter to win, 5-0. In the nightcap, the Toppers entered the seventh trailing, 4-3, but scored four to win, 7-4. Tedder continued his hot streak against Western Michigan with three RBI hits. His ninth-inning double snapped a 2-2 tie and yielded a 3-2 win. Louisville then took a doubleheader from Western, 4-3, and 5-4, before West- ern bounded back to pound Kentucky Wesleyan, 11-8 and 10-0. The winning streak stretched to four games with wins over David Lipscomb and Indiana Purdue-Ft. Wayne. Three straight games were dropped to western division OVC schools. Murray scored four unearned runs off Oberson in the second inning of a game it won, 4-1. The only hit in the inning oT Np ae i ae SD, 7 SO Sie OR - T 4 _ t _ was a bases-loaded, wind-blown double that hit the chalkline in left. Middle Tennessee’s Bob Hardin and Mike Moore combined to allow just five _ hits and three runs in the Blue Raiders’ 5-1, 5-2 doubleheader sweep April 6. The team bounced back to take two from Bellarmine, 5-3 and 10-5. In the first game, the Knights scored all three runs in the first off Hackett before the Toppers rallied to go ahead on a two-run - homer by catcher Lou Kendall. In the nightcap, Western scored six runs in the third and picked up 13 hits off four Bel- larmine pitchers to support Martines’ nine-hit pitching. A repeat of the previous two double- headers came when Middle’s Hardin and Moore combined once more. The duo surrendered just eight hits and one ruin win winning, 3-0 and 5-1, to end the Toppers’ hopes of challenging for divi- sional honors. The Toppers again bounced back to beat Bellarmine, 8-7 and 13-6, as Hughes sparkled at the plate with six hits include ing two doubles and a homer. The squad then split a doubleheader with Kentucky Wesleyan, taking the opener, 9-6, and losing the nightcap, 0-2, despite a brilliant pitching performance by Martines. The righthander had a no- hitter for 5 2 3 innings before giving up a walk and a run-scoring triple followed _ by a passed ball. McKinley threw a five hitter to beat Austin Peay, 5-2, in the opener of a dou- bleheader April 13, but the Governors bounced back to take the finale, 3-1. After Western blew a 5-0 lead against David Lipscomb to lose, 7-5, Evansville, propelled by a second inning grand slam, hung on to beat the Toppers, 6-5. Murray rapped out 22 hits in pound- ing Western, 10-2, and 12-6, before the | Trying for a double play in the Austin Peay game, shortstop Mike Murray forces out the Governors’ runner and gets ready for the throw to first base. | The teams split a doubleheader. Toppers rallied to beat Vanderbilt, 7-5. The Toppers fell behind, 0-5, in the first three innings against Vandy but a rally begun by a three-run home by right fielder iy Larimore and a solo shot by shortstop Mike Murray sparked the team to a 7-5 win. Darkness ended the second game of the doubleheader in a 3-3 tie after eight innings. The Toppers could manage only four 1977 BASEBALL RESULTS Won 20 Lost 23 Tied 1 WESTERN 20 Campbellsville ) Western 3 MERCER UNIVERSITY 8 Western 6 MERCER UNIVERSITY 7 WESTERN 6 Tennessee Tech 1 WESTERN 7 Tennessee Tech (0) Western 2 VALDOSTA STATE 4 Western 4 MERCER UNIVERSITY 9 WESTERN 2 Georgia Southwestern 1 Western 1 JACKSONVILLE STATE 8 Western 3 LOUISVILLE 4 Western 10 EVANSVILLE 13 Western o AUSTIN PEAY 5 WESTERN 7 Austin Peay 4 WESTERN 3 Western Michigan 2 Western 3 LOUISVILLE 4 Western 4 Louisville 5 WESTERN 11 Kentucky Wesleyan 8 WESTERN 10 Kentucky Wesleyan 0 WESTERN 8 __ David Lipscomb 2 WESTERN 11 Indiana Purdue-Ft. Wayne 3 Western 1 MURRAY 4 Western 1 MIDDLE TENNESSEE 5 Western 2 MIDDLE TENNESSEE 5 WESTERN 5. Bellarmine 3 WESTERN 10 _ Bellarmine 5 Western 0 MIDDLE TENNESSEE 3 Western 1 MIDDLE TENNESSEE 5 WESTERN’ 8. Bellarmine 7 WESTERN 13 _ Bellarmine 6 WESTERN 9 Kentucky Wesleyan 6 Western 0 KENTUCKY WESLEYAN 2 WESTERN 5. Austin Peay 2 Western 1 AUSTIN PEAY 3 Western 5 DAVID LIPSCOMB 7 Western 5 EVANSVILLE 6 Western 2 MURRAY 10 Western 6 MURRAY 12 WESTERN 7 _ Vanderbilt 5 Western 3 Vanderbilt 3 Western 0 SOUTHERN ILLINOIS 7 WESTERN 8_ Trevecca at WESTERN 4 Eatern 3 WESTERN 9 Eastern 3 Western 12 MURRAY 13 — CM. Schmitt singles against perennial power South- ern Illinois April 19, and advanced a run- ner to second only once in the game the Salukis won, 7-0. The squad beat Trevecca, 8-1, to tie the school mark win. Murray drilled a three- run homer and drove in another run with a double to support the five-hit, 10- strikeout pitching ss McKinley. The team swept a doubleheader from Eastern, 4-3, and 9-3, after the Colonels jumped to a 3-0 lead early in both games. Clutch pitching by Oberson and Biven in the opener saved the win after Eastern loaded the bases with one out in the last two innings. In the second game the team exploded for eight runs in the third to ice the victory. The Toppers ended the season in a wide fashion, losing to Murray, 13-12, after a furious rally fell short. Murray built a 13-2 lead through the first 4% innings before the Toppers mounted a 10-run rally sparked by two homers and five RBIs by designate hitter Mike Green. The game featured 31 hits, 12 walks, six errors and five hit batsmen. — DON WHITE (1 The 1976-77 baseball team: (Front row) J. Atkinson, M. Green, D. Kendall, J. Kuzma, M. Murray, R House, G. Owens, T. Kellum, M. Biven. (Second row) W. Moss, G. Larimore, B. Bristow, S. Robert- son, T. Tedder, F. Hughes, L. Cave, P. Orberson. (Third row) Coach B. Shollenberger, M. Collier, D. Hawes, M. Riggs, M. Myder, G. Brown, B. Brana- man, J. McKinley, G. Brooks, and R. Russell. — M. Lyons With the Eastern fielder on the move to make the out, Topper Frank Hughes slides safely into second base. The Toppers won both games of a doubleheader against the Colonels in April. Update — Baseball For 12 years in a row, the men’s track team won the OVC. Now, with a second third place finish in a row the team is Stuck in ano The men’s track team is in another rut. The Toppers won the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) track title every year from 1964 to 1975. The team is era, another pattern, having finished thir the past two years. Middle Tennessee capitalized on the demise by winning its first OVC title May 6-7 at Smith Stadium. The Blue Raiders won five events: the long and triple jumps, the 400-meter hurdles, the discus and the 1,600 relay. Austin Peay, last year’s champion, dropped to fourth. Johnny Williams, who won both the 100 and 200 dash in last season’s meet, pulled a hamstring in the 100. Pat Fogarty, a favorite in the 110 hurdles, fell during his race. Morehead, the 1977 OVC champ, was second in the meet. Despite the conference loss, the Top- pers were not without heroes. Richard Hopkins won the 200 by a safe margin, posting a time of :20.94. Hopkins was second in the 100, be- hind Tennessee Tech’s Ben Simms. Tony Staynings capped off his career by winning the 5,000 in 14:02.5. Stayn- ings, easily pulling away down the indoor 244 Update — Men’‘s Track stretch, outclassed East Tennessee’s Louis Kenny and Topper Jon Slaughter, who finished second and third. Chuck Durrant won the high jump at 7-foot-1, a conference record. Tom An- derson was third with a leap of 6-9. Western’s Donald Dowels finished second in the 400 hurdles with a time of :51.49. Middle’s Russell Holloway, whose previous best was :51.45, won the event in 50-flat. Forrest Killebrew finished third in the long jump at 25-0%. Middle’s Shiekh Faye and John Do Doo were first and second. Do Doo won the triple jump. Bobby Payne posted a time of :14.2 while placing third in the 110 hurdles. Fellow Topper Bill Hocker was third in the pole vault (15-6). Discus-thrower Ken Seapan was fourth. Finishing fifth was the 400 re- lay team (Payne, Hopkins, Killebrew and Randell Burbage), Jim Bowling in the javelin and Jerry Owens in the tri- ple jump. The regular-season performance gave no indication that the Toppers would even finish as high as third in the OVC. Western failed to win a meet. — D. Frank ther rut But Hopkins qualified for the NCAA in the 100 and 200; Staynings in the 5,000 and 3,000 steeplechase; Long in the 10,000; Slaughter in the 5,000; Killebrew in the long jump; Perel in the 400 hurdles; Durrant in the Joe Tinius in the 1,500. The steady Hopkins set the pace in the season opener, the Florida Relays in Gainesville March 26. Hopkins won the open 200 in :21.2 and was second in the university division 100 in :10.4. Long finished second in the open 10,000. Long’s time of 29:09 was 21 sec- onds behind former Topper Nick Rose. Durrant was second in the college high jump at 6-10. Next came Western’s only regular-sea- igh jump, and — D. Frank Topper freshman Buddy Breamer competes in the long jump at the OVC meet May 6-7 at Western. Breamer Pile to place in the event, but teammate Forrest Killebrew finished third. Western was third behind Middle Tennessee and Morehead. Chuck Durrant missed on this attempt to clear 7 feet 1, but later succeeded to set an OVC meet record and win the high jump. Teammate Tom Anderson was third with a 6-9 leap. The men’s track team: (Front row) J. Thomas, S. Thomas, C. Costin, R. Hopkins, D. Douglas, G. Sheats, R. Kall. Gecond row) B. Payne, B. Williford, M. Vaughn, B. Breamer, T. Miller, M. Froelich, H. Sinclair. (Third row) J. Marks, T. Lawrence, V. Tynes, M. Wingo, W. Kaelin, B. Stoner, J. Mark- ham, R. Green. (Fourth row) F. Killebrew, K. Sea- pan, M. Perdue, D. Andrews, J. Willoughby, R. Day, K. Priest. (Back row) J. Centrowitz, J. Smith (mgr.), K. Seapan, J. Bowling and R. Delph. All-American Tony Staynings was the Toppers’ bread and butter at the OVC meet, winning the 5,000 meters in 14:02.5 and placing third in the 1,500 with 3:45.6. son home meet, an April 2 triangular. The Toppers finished between first- place Southern Illinois and Murray. Killebrew won the long jump, leaping 24-5¥2 in his second college meet. Payne and Douglas finished first and second in the 110 hurdles, while Ander- son and Durant tied for first in the high jump at 6-10. Middle Tennessee gave its adversaries a taste of things to come in the OVC Quadrangular meet April 9 at Murray. - Austin Peay was second, Western third and Murray fourth. Slaughter won the 5,000 in 14:12.8. Staynings, running unattached, tied Slaughter for first. Hopkins won the 200 in :20.9, qualify- ing for the NCAA and beating Austin Peay’s Williams. Williams was first and Hopkins second in the 100. Western fell to Indiana, 83-71, in its only dual meet April 16. However, three Toppers qualified for the NCAA meet in the loss. Staynings met the standards with his performances in the 5,000 (14:11.9) and the 3,000 stee- plechase (8:53.1). Hopkins won the 100 in :10.3, good enough to qualify. Durrant qualified in the high jump at 7-1. The Toppers competed in the Illinois Classic in Urbana April 23. The team used the meet as experience for the na- tionals, held on the same track. No team scores were kept. Douglas won the 400 hurdles in :51.5, his best performance before the confer- ence meet. Durrant won the high jump, this time at 7-0. Hopkins was second in the 200 in :21.4, easing off at the finish because of cold weather and slick track. Durrant closed the regular season with only one loss in the high jump. He once again won his speciality, posting a school record of 7-1¥2. Jerry Owens won the triple jump and Payne took the 110 hurdles in :14.0. Hocker was second in the pole vault at 15-6. — BRYAN ARMSTRONG () TRACK RESULTS Triangular with SIU, Murray (2nd of three) OVC Quadrangular at Murray (3rd of four) Western 71 INDIANA 83 OVC Tournament (3rd of eight) Anchor-man Randell Burbage takes the baton from Forrest Killebrew during the 400-meter relay at the OVC meet. The two freshmen combined with sen- ior Bobby Payne and junior Richard Hopkins to place fifth in the race. — L. Gardner a — L. Gardner 245 Update — Men’s Track 246 Flashback — Women’s Spring Sports 1976 a ES = D. Beauchamp FLASHBACK ON 1976 The seasonally separated teams The spring season had different degrees of significance for 35 women whose thoughts turned to tennis, golf and track. Balmy spring winds and budding plants bring a Iot of people outdoors to participate in their favorite outdoor activities, and for the 1976 women’s sports teams, tennis, golf and track were big events in the schedule of spring events. Although tennis is considered to be predominantly a spring and summer sport, Western’s women’s tennis team plays a limited spring schedule and concentrates its main efforts on the fall season, according to the team’s coach Betty Langley. “T just don’t look upon the spring season as being as important as the fall season,” she said. “We like to play in the spring because you can’t just lay off five months out of the year and be a good tennis player.” The team scored victories over Aus- tin Peay, Middle Tennessee State Uni- versity, Vanderbilt and the University of the South. Only the University of the South and Middle Tennessee won an individual match. In its only other match the team was handed its first loss of the season 8-1 by the University of Tennessee- Chattanooga. Katy Strozdas and Shelly Fredlake, the team’s top seeded players, repre- sented the state along with two play- ers from the University of Kentucky and two from Murray at the Universi- ty of North Carolina regional cham- pionships. They advanced farther than any of Between meets on the golf team’s busy schedule Vickie McClurg, like other golf team members, spent many afternoons practicing at Hobson Grove. Miss McClurg, a junior from Coving- ton, and Nancy Quarcelino, a junior from Mad. isonville, led the team in the spring season. the state’s other players, going to the finals of the consolation round in doubles before losing. Like the tennis team, Western’s women’s golf team also played a limit- ed spring schedule, which consisted of three matches. In their only invitational meet of the spring the lady Toppers finished seventeenth in the Lady Cat Invita- tional at Lake Barkley. A Georgia and Florida trip at spring break gave the team two other match- es and some rain. “Most of our players didn’t play particularly well against Georgia,” said the team’s coach Dr. Shirley Laney. “But considering it was our first match after a winter lay-off and considering it’s one of the two or three toughest courses we play, it was kind of to be expected.” Coach Laney added that Nancy Quarcelino and Denise Gupton both performed well in the Georgia meet which the team lost, 12-3. After a day’s rest the team traveled to Florida for a match with Valdosta State, which they won 12-3. “It was a much easier course, and much easier to bounce back on,” coach Laney said. “We reall beat Valdosta fairly easily, Abies there were a couple of matches that were close.” A match with the University of Tal- ahassee was rained out. A third place finish in the Ken- tucky Women’s Intercollegiate Con- ference (KWIC) meet and winning its own invitational highlighted the 1976 spring season for the women’s track team. In the Western Invitational the team scored 91 points, outdistancing second place Mississippi University for Women by 30 points. “They were really high and keyed up for that meet,” said coach Laney. “I'd say overall that our invitation and the meet here with Murray were our two best of the year.” Scoring 95 points in the KWIC meet gave Western a third place finish behind the University ie Kentucky and Murray. In winning the 400 meter hurdles and long jump, freshman Anita Jones set new meet records as did Kay Bush, the winner of the discus. Marcia Cole also won the 440-yard dash while Miss Jones took another first place in the high jump. In ie only other home meet of the season, a dual meet with Murray, the team lost, 77-67. Anita Jones and Marcia Cole placed first in seven events to pace the team. Miss Jones won the 100 and 400 meter hurdles, the long jump and the high jump. Miss Cole won the 440, 220 and 100-yard dashes. “They beat us with their depth,” coach Laney said. “They got points that I didn’t think they would get.” At Eastern’s Becky Boone Relays the team finished eighth in a field of 10 teams by scoring 26 points. The meet was won by Michigan State Uni- versity which scored 111 points. Anchoring Western’s sie in the Boone Relays were Anita Jones, who set a new meet and track record in winning the 400 meter hurdles; Mar- cia Cole, who finished third in the 220-yard dash; Kay Bush, who placed sixth in the discus; and Gail Harris, who finished seventh in the long jump and sixth in the 100 meter hurdles. “T think a lot of our athletes were just surprised that the competition was as tough as it was,” she said. “Most of our girls were used to win- ning pretty easily in high school, but when they go here they found out that some of the other teams had people just as good or better than they were.” — ROBIN VINCENT A home dual track meet against Murray gave freshman Anita Jones an opportunity to display her talent. Besides winning the 100 and 400 meter hurdles, Miss Jones won the long jump and high’ jump events. Unseasonally cold weather forced Shelly Fred- lake to wear a warm-up suit over her tennis dress in a fall match against Middle Tennessee. A freshman last spring, Miss Fredlake was seeded second. — T. Dekle 247 Flashback — Women’s Spring Sports 1976 THE WEAKER SEX is notso weak after all CROSS COUNTRY Youngsters seldom beat the more experienced players in competition, whatever the game. The same was true for the women’s cross country team, the youngest mem- ber of the women’s athletic program. “We didn’t have the depth we needed,” said coach Carla Coffey. “In fact, we had some people running cross country that | weren't even cross country runners.” | In the first meet Sept. 28 at Hobson Grove the team lost to Murray State, 26- 29. Competing for the first time as a Lady Topper, freshman Vicky Holway placed first to lead the team, and sopho- more Anita Jones finished third. The Indiana Invitational followed in which the women finished fourth in a five-team field with a 68-point total. Eastern won with a low 33-point total. | In the Racer Invitational at Murray the team finished third in a four-team field with a 62-point total. A week later the team traveled to Car- | bondale, Ill., for the Southern Illinois In- | vitational where the squad placed 10th in | a 14-team field. The team made another trip to Murray Oct. 23. In the Murray Invita- | tional the women placed fourth. | For the final meet the team travel- ed to Knoxville for the Tennessee In- | vitational and placed seventh in a 11- team field. The KWIC championship meet at Richmond ended the season, and the Lady Toppers placed last in the meet won by University of Kentucky (UK). TENNIS i | A difficult schedule helped the wom- en’s tennis team gain a year of experience ' and suffer a few losses. ( But with tougher matches they still [ sported a 9-1 record. i The team traveled to Bloomington, : Ind., and defeated both Purdue and host [ University of Indiana. After defeating Purdue 7-2, the squad squeaked by Indi- ana University, 5-4. State competition began when the team traveled to Murray where Western won, 6-3, but lost the only meet of the fall season to University of Chattanooga. In the first home meet the team ! took measure of a young UK squad by a : 7-2 score. UK later got revenge in the KWIC tournament. | In two matches played in Louisville the team overwhelmed its opponents. The players defeated University of Lou- isville, 9-0, and Northern Kentucky, 9-0. These two wins were followed by three home victories. The team defeated Mid- 248 Women’s Sports Update dle Tennessee, 6-0, in singles before dou- bles were rained out. “In a home triangular match the team defeated Eastern, 9-0, and University of Tennessee, 9-0. Besides their regular matches the Lady Toppers competed in two fall tourna- ments. In the Kentucky Hard Court Tournament at Murray the team took top honors. Katy Strozdas won the sin- les final and teamed with Shelly Fred- Hic to take the doubles title. In the biggest season disappointment the Lady Toppers came in pene UK and Murray in the KWIC tournament. “We had an excellent draw and excel- lent seeds because of our season record,” said coach Betty Langley. “We had the best record of any team in the tourna- ment and we were seeded number one or two at every position. “It was just one of those things you can’t put your finger on and say this is why it happened,” the coach said. A home meet with Northwestern opened the spring season in March. Al- though her team took a 4-5 loss in the ers coach Langley was pleased. In its second spring match the team traveled to Vanderbilt and won, 9-0. Following that win, the team traveled to the University of Tennessee Martin Invitational Tournament. The Lady Top- pers finished second, 20 points behind UT at Chattanooga. Back on the track after jumping a hurdle in the 400-meter event at the Western Kentucky Invita- tional is sophomore Anita Jones. Miss Jones also competed on the cross country team. The team traveled to Memphis State where the women rebounded after a sluggish start and won, 6-3. They also defeated UT at Martin, 9-0, and Southern Illinois, 8-1. The Lady Toppers ended their spring season with a 9-0 win over Middle. GOLF A mixture ot the old and the new cre- ated the most competitive golf team ever. Freshmen Melissa Losson, Julie Jef- frey and Lynn Thompson complement- ed the veteran nucleus of seniors Nan- cy Quarcelino, Vicki McClurg and Den- ise Gupton. Their strength was evident in the season opener at the Central Michigan University Invitational. The team finished third behind Michi- gan State and Purdue with a 712 two- round total. Miss Thompson’s 175 two- round total earned her a sixth place tie while Miss Losson’s 176 total earned her a ninth-place tie. In the second meet the Lady Toppers finished 10th in the Indiana Invitational with a 905 two-round total. Miss Jeffrey and Miss Losson led Western with two-round totals of 177 and 178, respectively. In what coach Dr. Shirley Laney termed the best fall performance, the (continued on page 250) Jubilant track team members carried first-year coach Carla Coffey 40 feet after they won first place in the Western Kentucky Invitational. The women racked up 138 points and beat 10 teams. — M. Lyons ll a THE WEAKER SEX ... Is not so weak after all women finished in an eighth-place tie with Central Michigan in the Purdue In- vitational. Miss McClurg led the team with a 163 two-round total. In single round dual matches in the fall the team was 1-2, with losses to UK and the University of Georgia and a win over Austin Peay. The team’s first meet in the spring was a dual match with Georgia. The team lost, 8%-6%2, which represented an im- provement from the fall results with Miss Quarcelino and Miss Gupton pac- ing the squad’s efforts. he are Toppers finished eighth in a field of nine teams at the Lady Kat Invi- tational in Lexington. The team scored 1,089 strokes and was paced by Miss Thompson with a 251 three-round total. The University of Tulsa won the tourna- ment with a 905 total, 55 strokes ahead of second-place UK. In the last meet the women finished 10th in a field of 12 at the Marshall Invi- tational at Huntington, W. Va. Anticipating a volley, junior Tarrie Mudwilder gets ready to punch the tennis ball. The action came at the team’s single home meet against Northwestern. Miss Mudwilder’s doubles partner was Tutti Hays, the only senior on the squad. It was called team practice, but once the women golfers hit the course practice was an individual workout. Following through on a swing at Hobson Grove is Julie eis a La Porte, Ind. freshman who often led the team’s scoring. — D. Beauchamp TRACK The coach was new, so were most of the women’s track team members. Their first season together was one in which adjustments were made constantly as they searched for a state championship. “After the first meet we wanted to ad- just the people so they weren’t over- worked too much,” said Coach Carla Coffey. “But we had to put one person in four or five events because we just didn’t have the depth.” In the first spring meet the Lady Top- pers finished ninth in the Memphis xg eee ce De ae tye SS ue ee oh tah SME NS « ee rata gf Sty Sie PR bees . aes oe i State Invitational with a 23-point total. Putting a damper on the team’s perfor- mance was news that distance runner Vicky Holway would be sidelined the entire season with mononucleosis. A week later the team went to Carbon- dale, Ill., for the Southern Illinois Invita- tional. Western finished second to the host school with an 88-point total. Lead- ing the team were Anita Jones who won the 400-meter hurdles and the 440-yard dash, Marcia Cole who won the 200-yard dash and Angie Bradley who won the long jump. Sandra Thomas won the 100- vata dash as the Lady Toppers also fin- ished first in the mile, the 880-yard med- ley and the 440-yard relays. eft’ % The Murray Invitational April 8 gave the women their first taste of state com- petition. They finished fifth in an 11- team field and scored 53 points. Miss Thomas won the 100-yard and 220-yard dashes. Gayle Harris, Miss Thomas, Miss Bradley and Miss Cole won the 440-yard relay. In the only home meet the Lady Top- pers were at their best as they scored a season-high 138 points to take first place in the Western Kentucky Invitational. The team accumulated seven first places, five second places and two third finishes. Another trip to Murray marked the fifth time the Lady Toppers and the Rac- ers competed against each other in the season. Western’s 77-69 victory also marked the Racers’ first loss in a’dual meet in 12 years. Although they scored 122 points, the Lady Toppers finished third benind UK and Eastern in the KWIC meet at Lexing- ton April 23. Miss Cole won first place in the 200- _ méter and 400-meter runs. Also placing first were Miss Jones in the 400-meter hurdles and Miss Thomas in the 100- meter run. Eastern’s Becky Boone Relays April 30 closed the season. A small er squad of members who qualified to compete in the national meet in Los Angeles, fin- ished 11th in the 19-team field. Qualifying for the national meet May 19-21 were Miss Bradley, Miss Harris and Miss Jones in the long jump, Miss Cole and Miss Thomas in the 100-meter dash and Miss Harris in the 100-meter hurdles. the 440-yard relay team com- posed of Miss Bradley, Miss Thomas, ie Harris, and Miss Cole also quali- ied. “Overall, I was pleased,” said coach Coffey about the season. “We kept in- creasing our place finishes as the season went along.” — ROBIN VINCENT WOMEN’S CROSS COUNTRY RESULTS Memphis State Invitational (11th of 16) Indiana Invitational (4th of 5) Racer Run (3rd of 4) Southern Illinois Invitational (10th of 14) Murray Invitational (4th of 6) Tennessee Invitational (7th of 11) KWIC Championships (Sth of 5) Western 26 MURRAY STATE 29 WOMEN’S TENNIS RESULTS Western 4 NORTHWESTERN 5 WESTERN 9 Vanderbilt 0 WESTERN 6 Memphis State 3 WESTERN 9 UT Martin (0) WESTERN 8 Southern Illinois 1 WESTERN 9 Middle Tennessee 0 UT Martin Invitational (2nd place) WOMEN’S GOLF RESULTS WESTERN 8% Georgia 6% Lady Kat Invitational (8th of 9) Marshall Invitational (10th of 12) WOMEN’S TRACK RESULTS Memp his State Invitational (9th of 20) Southern Illinois Invitational (2nd of 5) Murray State Invitational (Sth of 11) Western Kentucky Invitational (1st of 10) KWIC Championships (3rd of 9) Becky Boone Relays (11th of 19) WESTERN 77 Murray State 69 Women’s golf team: (Front row) K. Urbanke, J. Jeffrey, N. Quarcelino, M. Losson. (Back row) Dr. S. Laney, D. Gupton, F. Owens and L. Thompson. Women’s track and cross country team: (Front row) E. Ware, R. Habermehl, M. Cole, K. VanMeter. (Second row) Asst. Coach J. Santopinto, G. Harris, V. Ramsey, Y. Brown, D. Deal, Mgr. J. Pearson. (Third row) Mgr. J. Russell, C. Meeker, S. Thomas, J. Wagner, T. Hobson, C. Taylor, D. Ison. (Fourth row) V. Holway, L. Howlett, K. Foster, A. Bradley, T. Peck, K. Bush and Coach C. Coffey. Women’s tennis team: (Front row) K. Ferry, T. Hays, D. Langridge. (Back row) K. Strozdas, T. Mudwilder, S. Fredlake and S. Johnson. | 648 n q ae i 251 Women’s Sports Update | A ee ee ee FACELIFT A new title, additional programs, more sports and a new assistant director, char- acterized the year for campus recreation, formerly intramurals. Moved from the physical education department, campus recreation became part of student affairs and was relocated in Diddle Arena. Intramurals, sports clubs and free play became the divisions of the new campus recreation program, according to Frank Griffin, university activities director. “We handle more students than any other facet of the university,” Griffin said. “This year we are on the way to set a record for participation in camp- us recreation.” The coed program was added as a new program, necordint’ to Myrna Hebert, as- sistant intramural director. Max Appel became the assistant director and was in charge of faculty staff intramurals. “For years Western was b ehind in the coed program, but now with the addition of coed pillo-polo, basketball, volleyball, table tennis, billards and innertube wa- ter polo, we offer as much as anyone in the state,” Miss Hebert said. In the coed inaugural year, Marco Polo won the pillo-polo championship over the Set ‘em Ups. The Dutch Boys romped over the Mean Machine to win the vol- leyball title. Janice James and David Williams de- feated Cathy Mims and Doug Chenault to capture the table tennis champion- ship, and Mary Fogg and Steve Semer- 252 Intramurals sheim won the coed billards title over Mike Murray and Julie Eisenman. The sports clubs, another facet of cam- pus recreation, experienced growth this year with the addition of a fencing club and the mile club. Griffin added that he believes all mi- nor sports will soon become club sports because of Title IX. “The clubs are going to grow because not every sport can afford to offer a women’s and men’s team,” Griffin said. (Title IX states that for every men’s varsi- ty team there must be a women’s team.”) The mile club, another new program, was instituted to promote non-competi- tive sports, Miss Hebert said. “People can run 100 miles, swim 26 miles, or bicycle 300 miles and receive a certificate of accomplishment,” the direc- tor said. ‘People go out and do it on their own. It gives them a feeling of accom- plishment,” the director said. The intramurals section of campus re- creation was different from past years. Malibu Beach did not win the men’s basketball championship. Two fraterni- ties squared off in the flag football final. and Phi Mu captured the sorority overall intramural trophy they missed by 12 points last year. Out of 150 basketball teams the Bono Leftover eager pillo polo players from the initial organization of squads for competition formed the Extras. Rita Conover played for the team which beat Mike Blackwood’s team, 3-2. Another team called Marco Polo won the championship. — M. Lyons A different title, more programs and a new personality gave campus recreation an updated look All-Stars representing Keen Hall beat the Hustlers 64-42. Leading the way for the All-Stars were Keith Tandy and Greg Snow. Donald Gillmore starred for the Hustlers. Sigma Alpha Epsilon beat Lambda Chi Alpha 13-0 to win the flag football title. “We worked hard all year for the ti- tle,” said SAE David Sears, a sophomore. “It was a great and hard victory.” A bomb threat almost stopped the vol- leyball championship, but the Dutch Boys finally bee the SAEs, breaking a two-year winning streak for the fraterni- ty. The wrestling club won the wrestlin title with Lambda Chi coming in second. In individual competition, Ernest Tubb Jr., was the low scorer in the golf tournament, and Dave Tipton captured the tennis singles title. Lambda Chi Roy Baxter defeated SAE Jim Biles to win the badminton sin- gles championship. In horsehoes, Paul Marcum won the title defeating Rich Kral, the Dutch Boys representative. Lamba Chi Mike Wyatt and Buster (continued on page 254) ” P — J. Burton Intramural competition is a major facet of Greek life. Kappa Delta member Terri Koester, the soror- ity’s athletic chairman, was the only KD partici- pant in fencing competition directed by fencing club adviser Arthur Bush. International students are boosting the popularity of soccer at Western. Iranians Nader Shearian and Ali Karimi are soccer club members and play three times a week. Both students are mechanical engi- neering technology majors. ee FACELIFT .. Tate won their second titles in table ten- nis singles and handball, respectively. Rick Oetzel and Paul Martin of Barnes Campbell teamed to win the table tennis doubles. The Dutch Boys increased their lead in the overall championship with a swim- ming meet victory. Brian Collins, an Erlanger senior, set a record in the 50-yard freestyle heat. He bettered the time of 11.1 by five tenths of a second as he led the Dutch Boys to the championship. Ron Day won the men’s division of 254 Intramurals the Turkey Trot with a time of 10:34 for two miles. In women’s intramurals, the Good- time Gang and Phi Mu dominated the independent and sorority divi- sions, respectively. Gloria Dellario led the Goodtime Gang to beat Phi Mu in the softball champion- ship at Detrex field. Leslie Shearer was named Phi Mu’s outstanding player. Barbara Camp led East Machine to de- feat Phi Mu in volleyball. Nancy Quar- celino was named Phi Mu’s outstand- ing player. Katy Strozdas and Tutti Hayes cap- tured the badminton doubles title with a win over Phi Mus Leslie Shearer and Vicki McClurg. | — D. Pelino ate ae mE te. oe aa Pe . Nanc y Quarcelino out-pointed Renae Cunningham of Bates Runner in the archery championship. Katy Strozdas ran away from a field of 15 girls to win the annual turkey trot with a time of 6:18. Phoebe Denton of Phi Mu placed second. Kathy Mims and Jan Doris of Baptist Student Union teamed to win the table tennis doubles over Phi Mus Janet Wit- tenbraker and Lynn Thompson. In reece till Vicki McClurg and Nancy Quarcelino won the sorority championship from Leslie Shearer and Lynn Thompson. Gloria Dellario and Lois Holmes teamed to win the indepen- dent title over Robyn Fisher and Jan- ice James. Chi Omegas Trina Alley and Tina Hemmer won the sorority tennis doubles over Vicki McClurg and Leslie Shearer, and Sheila Yeater and Ann Lowry of Be- mis Lawrence teamed to beat Jennifer Jackson and Denise Walker of Gilbert in the independent finals. Sissy Carmichael and Jeanie Allison of Bemis Lawrence defeated Kappa Deltas Terry Koester and Marcia Portman in eas up a shot in the women’s billiards cham- pionship is Sigma Kappa sorority member Marsha Kennedy. Sigma Kappas Laura Turok and Arlene Hester and KD’s Terrie Craig and Marcia Portman analyze the action. Appropriately named the Ducks, James Stacy Stid- ham’s water polo team beat the Spiders, 11-9, in an early round of the competition. The Ducks lost their next game in the quarterfinals and the Marco Polo team took the championship. A left-handed tennis player often finds himself in an advantageous spot, strategy-wise. Tim Roberts’ style may have unsettled his opponent. The sopho- more easily won his first singles match, 6-0, 6-0. the billiards championship. In women’s freethrow competition, Debbie Detenber of AZD threw in 17 of 20 to defeat Chris Crowley of Central. In basketball the Goodtime Gang dominated as it took the independent di- vision over the Central Bouncers. Phi Mu came from behind to defeat AOPi in the sorority division. In the campus championship, the Goodtime Gang edged Phi Mu 19-18 to win the title. Men’s Intramurals Flag Football Sigma Alpha Epsilon Golf Ernest Tub, Jr. Tennis (S) Dave Tipton Badminton (S) Roy Baxter, Lambda Chi Alpha Horseshoes (S) Paul Marcum Table Tennis (S) Mike Wyatt, Lambda Chi Alpha Buster Tate Dutch Boys Dutch Boys Wrestling Club Rich Oetzel and Paul Martin Handball (S) Swimmin Volleyball Wrestling Table Tennis (D) Softball Tennis (D) Volleyball Turkey Trot Table Tennis (D) “This was a very successful year for campus recreation,” Miss Hebert said. “More students used the facilities and became more aware of the programs we have. “Students play against teachers, guys play against girls and people have fun,” she said. “After all, we are here to help everyone have a good time,” the director said. — DAN PELINO (1) Women’s Intramurals Goodtime Gand Chi Oemga and Bemis Lawrence Hall East Machine Katy Strozdas and Tutti Hayes Goodtime Gang and Phi Mu Katy Strozdas Kathy Mims and Jan Doris, B.S.U. Archery Nancy Quarcelino, Phi Mu Free Throw Debbie Detenber, Alpha Zi Delta Basketball Goodtime Gan Billiards Bemis Lawrence Hall Badminton (D) Racquetball (D) Co-ed Recreational Events Pillo-Polo Volley Billiards Table Tennis Marco Polo Dutch Boys Mary Fogg and Steve Semersheim Janice James and David Williams — R. Hoskins A ramble around left end on a reverse in a powder puff football game didn’t help freshman Kit Kren- gal’s team. Chi Omega sorority lost to Phi Mu, 6-0, in the contest sponsored by Sigma Nu fraternity. Phi Mu lost in the final to Alpha Xi Delta, 15-6. Rugby practice outside the student center was a common sight to passers-by. Steve Carsh carries the ball as John Ransdell and Pete Hamponstall use different strategy Tae on the sophomore. The team competed against Vanderbilt and the University of Kentucky in the spring. — M. Dowell 255 Intramurals Homerun hitters, bicycling enthusiasts, skateboarders and cliff rappellers didn’t wear red and white uniforms or receive scholarships for their talent, but with dedication, a competitive spirit and fellowship, they created for themselves An arena of non-varsity athletes They’re athletes, but they’re differ- ent. Some are on a team; others compete together while others are loners in their sport. Each is a Western student. Four are members of a local softball team; oth- ers are friends and classmates who rappel off area cliffs, and two others are involved in more individual sports of skateboarding and bicycling. Pat Lutes, Sheila Ghee Joni Taylor and Lisa Coons are teammates on the Simmentals, a team in the Glas- gow Women’s Softball League. The successful team flew to Roches- 256 Non-organized Sports ter, N.Y., on Labor Day weekend to compete in a World Series Soft- ball Tournament. Ranked eighth oing into the competition, the ocal team finished 16th in the 57-team tournament. “We lost our first game Saturday morning,” said Lisa Coons, a junior psychology major. “On Sunday we won three out of four and that last one put us out.” The pitcher said her team qualified for the trip by winning a tournament in June. “Sixteen teams were in the tourna- ment and we lost the very first game,” Miss Coons said. ‘“Then we won sev- en straight. It took a lot of stamina and desire to play so well for that un- godly amount of time.” Sheila Glasscock, a left-fielder, said she has played softball since fifth grade and likes to play on a wining team. “I’ve gotten to know a bunc of girls el I've enjoyed playing,” she said. The physical education major said the New York trip was not what she expected. “A lot of people liked our team, and women stayed and watched our games who were from somewhere else,” Miss Glasscock said. Sidewalks are good skateboarding tracks, but Gor- don Joffrion prefers the hills and slopes the cam- pus provides such as the winding ramps at Diddle Arena. Joffrion has a $50 skateboard. Joni Taylor, the team’s third base- man, said concentrating on the regu- lar season was hard once she knew they were going to New York. “J tried to keep my mind on the league until the state tournament was over,” she said. Torn ankle ligaments, a cast and crutches kept Pam Lutes from com- peting in New York, but the junior said she made the exciting trip. She said that first morning in New York was cold with the sun hidden behind clouds. “We took blankets, off the motel beds with us in the rented vans as we drove to the park,” the junior said. “We sang ‘My Old Ken- tucky Home’ on the way.” The girls are known locally for the original songs and chants they sing before each game as well as from the dugout inning by inning. New York was no exception. Another group of Westerners enjoy rappelling together. Kathy Berry, a sophomore from Anchorage, began the sport last spring before finals. “T never wanted to do it. It really scared me to death,” she said. Several friends and her boyfriend often went rappelling so she finally decided to give ita et “IT rappelled three times that first day,” she said. “We went to a quarry and they helped me down once. You look over the edge and you say — R. Hoskins Rappelling has recently grown in popularit among college-age people. Leon Chappell watches as Danny Shoemate and Andy Hussey bound down a cliff along Barren River. to yourself, ‘What am I doing here?’ Then you go over and you love it,’ she said. The sophomore said there are var- ious ways, some easy and some not so easy. The Australian method involves facing the ground, as the rappeller walks down. “It’s a lot harder and much scarier,” Miss Berry said. She said the sport is not degrading to females. “It depends on the person but there’s nothing at all unfeminine about it,” Miss Berry said. “The hardest part is mental,” she said. ‘You have to get over the fright of the cliff.” Another student, Larry Walden, is often a loner with his favorite sport, bicycling. The junior rides 15 miles — D. Gibson Christmas vacation gave Larry Walden time to paint his 24-pound bicycle which he rides 15 miles daily. The junior broke his bike down before moving out of his Pearce Ford room so he could get in some holiday riding. daily, in spite of weather conditions. “Of course when the weather per- mits I ride outdoors, but Kentucky isn’t the ideal state for an avid bike rider,” Walden said. ‘So I have a set of rollers that allow me to set my bike up in my dorm room and ride.” Walden said the rollers keep the bike in place and he controls the bal- ance and pace. “Actually it’s more dif- ficult to ride this way because there’s no wind resistance and it’s harder to maintain balance,” he said. His bike is a combination road and track bike made for road racing and long distance touring, weighing 24 pounds in.contrast to the usual 35-40 pound bike. Walden rebuilt his bike to suit his needs. “I started with a frame, a ‘Li- bertas’ I ordered from Belgium, and now I have about $500 tied up in the frame, rollers, wheels, etc.,” he said. “I started out riding about two or three miles a day,” he said. “J worked up to 15 miles a day in about a month.” The junior said he hopes to race in the future, although it is very expen- sive. “Besides entry fees, you need parts for at least three bikes, three sets of wheels, uniforms, and there’s al- ways medical expenses because when you crash you usually get hurt.” Another male, Gordon Joffrion, en- joys a sport that is mostly individual. The Miami, Fla., senior is a skate- boarder, and said he first began the sport as a 12-year-old. “It first caught on in the ‘60s, but came back into style in the last year and a half,” he said. Joffrion said skateboarding is pop- ular in Florida, and parks have Ce constructed to accommodate partici- pants. “You don’t have to skate down just sidewalks,” he said. Concrete hills and waves are more challenging than the sidewalks, Jof- frion said. “You pay something for each hour and it gives people some- where to go.” The mass communications major said Western’s campus is a good place for skateboarding with all the hills. “It’s good exercise; you can go down the hill and you have to go Peek up it,” the senior said. “It gives you strong legs, but it does nothing for the upper body.” Joffrion said he goes out two or three or four times a week when the weather is good. “If you feel like go- ing and doing it, you do it,” he ex- plained. “You go by yourself, just you. You don’t need anybody else.” — CONNIE HOLMAN AND ELLEN PRYOR (} Four days before their first game in the World Series Women’s Softball Tournament, the Sim- mentals practiced at Lampkin Park. Debbie Houchins, Karen Singleton and Jay Smith work with Sheila Glasscock at batting practice. 257 Non-organized Sports 260 Kappa Sigma House The loud noises of hammers bangin and saws buzzing, plus the distinct sme of fresh paint and new wood equaled the transformation of a day care center into a fraternity house. Although this change was much easier “said than done,” the Kappa Sigmas, who have been without a house since the spring of 1973, remodeled a large one on Parkside Drive. The house was originally built by an- other fraternity, but was never used by it. Since then, the house has been many things including a day care center and an apartment complex. All the remodeling was done by the fraternity brothers, and special use was made ae each person’s talent which ranged from special artwork to just giv- Mah helping hand whenever Aes: he greatest asset of the new house is the strength it gives the fraternity, ac- cording to the brothers. “It’s done a whole lot for us,” said John Tichenor. “It used to be that you would see everybody on Sunday night at the meetings and just happen to run into them during the week.” The house also gives the Kappa Sig- mas a chance to increase the number of rushees. “Without a house, people would have to go maybe 10 miles to a rush party at somebody’s apartment or somewhere,” { he added. | “It seems to make a lot of difference. Now we have more to offer,” said an- other Kappa Sigma, Donny Downing. The excitement and lifestyle of a fe With a lot of work ahead of him, senior Dennis _ French works on stereo speakers. Since then, the — room has been carpeted and furnished and is used : as a television room. } Taking advantage of beautiful weather, Donny Downing and Rick Eggleston work on a staircase for an exit to the backyard of the house. The stair- case was required to meet fire safety regulations. ternity house is new to this section of town. Because of this there was a prob- lem with zoning in the beginning. The zoning boundaries which were bein used By the university had not been al- tered since 1967. After the fraternity re- ceived a housing permit, the city met with WKU officials to discuss the revi- sion of a zoning map which was ap- proved. They are on a nine-month lease | with the option to buy. Aithough the fraternity house is new to the neighborhood, the members said they have received cooperation from | their residential neighbors as well as their business ones. Besides spending most of their time working on the house, the fraternity brothers participated in the ADPi 500 and placed first in the KD Washboard Kappa Sigma: (Front row) T. Kerr, L. Wheeler, K. Pawley, C. Johns, B. Simp- Jamboree. Kappa Sigma also won the Harbison, K. Harrison, J. Tichenor, C. son, D. Downing, B. Adams. (Back row) spirit Bward during Homecoming ay pene ie rrana Se ee S. Parnell, T. Parrish, M. Palis, J. Knox, | supports the Eu OPP ets with a spirit brecht, D. Mitchell, S. Hubbuch, J. cannon at home football games. H HH HH nny Byes i HT Geaag f : i i | i 5 gage = chery eh iH HH. Gr — act | age nt BRyE Hh vary Bagege AHA I ris G. Barnett, R. Handcock and D. French. In the spring semester the Kappa Sig- |mas had tentative plans to spend a day with boys at the Potter Chil- dren’s Home. They also repeated the Kappa Sigma Road Rally which was started in 1976. | After the long wait and hard work, the Kappa Sigmas have a finished product to be proud of. Not only do they have a )more than ample house for their fraterni- | ty functions it is also a creation of their |own labor. — VICKI BAGWELL (1 There’s nothing better than sitting at home on | Wednesday night and watching a good movie. | 5ome of the fraternity brothers sit in George Bur- nett’s room watching “The Getaway”. The brothers were responsible for furnishing their own rooms. One of the added touches to the house is the Kappa | Sigma crest. Donny Downing receives assistance | from his fraternity brothers while hanging the | crest which was used at their other house. he i Hi ft Bit i Hl tH i it 261 Kappa Sigma House As a whole they are united, but on their own they are INDEPENDENTLY GREEK e ADPis operate eighth ‘500’ e AKAs sponsor Little Miss Black Bowling Green winner ¢ AOPis sell ink pens for Arthritis Foundation A drenching rainfall didn’t dampen the spirits of the ADPis and their annual ice cream social went as planned. The event took shelter under the roof at McLean Hall’s back patio, and it was supported by those who were lucky enough to have umbrellas and by those who weren't and needed shelter. Another annual event of the sorority is the “ADPi 500” which was celebrated for its eighth time. The sorority also walked away with second place ene at the KD Wash- board and third place in November Nonsense. They participated in the Sigma Chi Derby, Greek Week and Spring Sing. The ADPis provided aid for a needy Toy soldiers, alias members of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, wait anxiously at the side entrance to Van Meter Auditorium. The waiting was worth it for the sorority which placed first in Chi Omega’s November Nonsense. Nostalgia of the 50s took pledge hopefuls back to the days of bobby socks and saddle oxfords as the Alpha Delta Pi sorority presented a soda shop skit during formal rush in mid-August. y — D. Gibson 262 Sororities Bowling Green family, and this was a major year-long service project for the sisters. They also collected for the Heart Fund. Alpha Kappa Alpha proved that they could pick a winner by sponsoring the winner of the Little Miss Black Bowling Green Pageant. Many of the sorority’s other projects were to the benefit of young girls in the area. The sorority had eight girls ranging from ages 10, 11 and 12 who were “Little Sisters,” and the sorority members spent time with them in activities. The sorority also worked with Girl Scouts in the Bowling Green area. At Thanksgiving the sorority worked with area churches to give needy families baskets of food. For foreign students, the sorority sponsored a job opportunity clinic which was designed to help the foreign student obtain a summer job or possi- bly a permanent one. Mammoth Cave _ National Park aided the sorority with this project. Charity was the major theme of pro- jects for Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. The sorority sold ink pens for the Ar- thritis Foundation and calendars for Ce- dar Lake Lodge in Louisville, a home for mentally retarded children. They also sponsored a skate-a-thon for the Arthritis Foundation, and collect- ed for the United Givers Fund and the Heart Fund. Both pledge classes sponsored sock- hops to raise money for other philan- thropic projects. Other than its civic projects, the soror- ity placed first in November Nonsense and in the ADPi 500. They also partici- pated in the KD Washboard Jamboree, Greek Week and Spring Sing. In sports the sorority placed second in the softball competition and competed in powder puff football. Their April spring formal was at Bar- ren River Reservoir. (continued on page 264) — R. Hoskins A clinic on American employment was presented to international students by Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority. Barbara Reed, a personnel ay at Mam- moth Cave, clarifies some points at a session in Garrett Conference Center. Alpha Omicron Pi: (Front row) C. Henry, K. Miley, L. Freeland, M. Heckman, A. Rhodes, S. Botts, T. Coombs, L. Phillips, P. Harper. (Second row) P. Wellin hurst, L. Williams, T. Jewell, L. Day, J. Moody, E. Houze, C. Ivins, C. Massie, A. Holt, K. Hughes, L. Weeks. (Third row) E. James, R. Runner, P. Webster, L. Owen, C. Edington, M. Ludington, E. Wilson, V. Stevens, J. Bryant, S. Johnson, B. Sexton, S. Samuels. (Fourth row) C. Haile, S. Spieser, J. Wholleb. (Fifth row) S. Dorroh, J. Joseph, K. Huey, K. Houser, C. Buckles, R. Young, L. Holt, M. Simpson, L. Cretella. (Back row) N. Cox, S. Alford, D. Truesdell, C. Gilliam, W. VanderMeer, A. Gold, T. Mathis, C. Chandler and J. Parks. eee PT 2 FS. = Soa ee SA RL LT Alpha Delta Pi: (Front row) M. Bolan, M. Loving, K. Maddox, S. Hammack, D. Wagner, J. Bertelson, J. Cole, K. Kirkett, B. Britt, M. Cole, G. Moore, C. Rose, J. Kinloch, P. Bailey, A. Roark, N. Holman. (Second row) K. Kyser, A. Pickens, T. Price, C. Lanier, A. Wicks, B. Stafford, J. Nichols, B. Bauer, D. Cundiff, C. Eans, H. MacConaugha, D. Whitfield, P. Elsesser, S. Conners, K. Lewis. (Third row) C. Hunsaker, M. Lowe, K. Maddox, B. Barnes, R. Quinn, J. Renz, S. Sandefur, A. Lowe, L. Emberton, C. Garvin, S. Stitt, S. Casebier, M. Roddy, T. Smith, J. Moss. (Fourth row) J. Chandler, S. Boylan, V. Bechtel, A. Pryor, C. Thompson, M. McCormick, L. Moreland, D. Link, P. Mosier, S. Pardue. (Back row) S. Simons, K. Weddle, M. Nash, D. Pardue, S. Davison, T. Mosier and J. Rose. Alpha Kappa Alpha: (Front row) G. McIntyre, D. Neal, Y. Coleman, D. Massey, M. Thomas, F. Gilmer, J. Moore, R. Curry and H. Trowell. 263 Sororities EE 264 Sororities ¢ AXiDs win Powder Puff football championships e Chi Os tie for first place in Sigma Chi Derby ¢ Delta Sigma Theta aids in voter registration Alpha Xi Delta “kicked off’ to a good start in the fall semester by winning Sig- ma Nu’s annual Powderpuff Football Championships. It was the first time the Alpha Xis participated in the event. The Alpha Xis were also busy defend- ing their first place intramural title over both sororities and independents. The sisters placed first in the track meet, rac- Piet golf and second in basketball, bowling, golf and archery. In other competition the sorority placed second in the 11th annual Sigma Chi Derby and sponsored Brenda Stroud in the Derby Darling Contest. They also participated in KD Washboard and No- vember Nonsense in the fall. Halloween held a different meaning for a local Bowling Green Girl Scout troop when the sisters treated the girls to a party at the sorority house. They also sang for residents of the Turtle Creek Nursing Home before Christmas. Spring Formal ended the year for the nie Xis as they celebrated their 10th year anniversary on campus. A spirited fight led to a first place tie in the field events for the Chi Omegas as they competed in the week-long Sigma Chi Derby. Their sorority’s winning streak con- tinued as they competed in the annual Alpha Xi Delta: (Front row) S. Robbins, J. Everette, V. Leathers, J. Coleman, M. Proctor, B. Morris. (Second row) P. Elward, T. Aberle, S. Winfrey, T. Hightower, R. Adams, R. McNally, W. Meeting, J. Hardison, P. Feed row) B. Stroud, T. Darr, L. Rice, B. Osborn, K. Tapper, K. Flanary, S. Overby, L. Poland, B. Barker, J. Gaible, K. Korfhage, M. Miller, D. Duncan and S. Costanzo. Powers, D. Detenber, A. Burch, C. Oldin. (T “ADPi 500” and finished second in the sorority division. With a medley of country and western songs, the sorority competed in the KD Washboard Jamboree. The sorority also participated in Greek Week and in “Spring Sing.” The Hyatt- Regency in Nashville was the location of their April spring formal. Yet, all their activities weren’t social. The sorority collected for the Heart Fund in the fall. “A Salute to Disney” was the theme of the annual November Nonsense which the Chi Omegas sponsor. Proceeds go to the United Givers Fund. The sisters also treated the children at the Parker-Bennett School to a Christ- mas party. Every month of the semester is packed with service projects which keep the 12 members of Delta Sigma Theta busy. Prior to the presidential elections the members went to the Bowling Green Court House and compiled statistics which were later used in a presentation to encourage people to vote. Rides to the polls were also offered. Working in conjunction with a local church, the girls sent get-well cards to sick people in the community. They also eeehate turkey during Thanksgiving = fn en en ee After each of the home football games members of the black greek organizations assembled near the student center for stepping. The sisters of Delta Sigma Theta perform as students watch. and a ham during Christmas for needy families in the community. In the spring the a free charm clinic Green teenagers. The sorority distributed absentee bal- lots in the student center. At the time they also accepted contri- butions to aid the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. They collected $80. The sorority sponsored the Ruby Awards which gave the student body provided or Bowling _a chance to vote for best dancer, best dresser and best-all-around. At the awards ceremony certificates were given to the winners. The second runner-up in the Little Miss Bowling Green pageant was spon- sored by the sorority. They also participated in “stepping” in the fall and spring semesters. (continued on page 266) Delta Sigma Theta: (Front row) L. Martin, G. Wil- lingham, S. Johnson, M. Horsley, G. Kinchlow. (Back row) P. Johnson, V. Fields, W. Harris and D. Richburg. | Wntelaiae Sa gue, wy: G88 BPEL ELE. es 3 8 8 op Sew 8 ON NESE ee BD a 6 A. pees Chi Omega: (Front row) C. Hemmer, S. Leathers, M. Hermann, R. Robertson, T. Alley. (Second row) S. Hurley, T. Schrantz, L. Clark, T. Dobbs, G. Forkner, C. Arnold, R. Howell, S. Brenzel, J. Scoggins, L. Hahn. (Third row) K. Wise, K. Joiner, S. Franke, T. Prather, C. Hardesty, L. Hall, C. Baker, A. Coffman, B. Thompson, T. Sell, K. Tabor, S. Naveaux, T. Evans. (Fourth row) K. Krengel, S. Poehlein, A. Policastri, P. Walker, M. Manis, T. Hargis, A. Jackel, L. Bishop, L. Cunningham, J. Davies, B. Floyd, J. Perkins, S. Waters, L. Baber. (Back row) K. Little, S. Young, V. Mather, N. Northerner, S. McElfresh, S. Jackson, R. — S. Benson Walker, E. Constans, B. Lane, M. Reynolds and P. Jackel. — J. Burton A stop in Sigma Chi Derby parade gave Alpha Xi Delta Joanie Hardison an audience for her imper- sonation of Mae West on Hall Carrico. The AZDs finished 11th in the Derby events. Since the Mickey Mouse Club has renewed its pop- ularity, the Chi Omegas decided to give their own impression of the Disney group at November Non- sense. Proceeds went to charity. 265 Sororities . rANENKENT a.Y 4 4! INDEPENDENTLY GREEK cont. e KDs make finger puppets for Children’s Home e Phi Mus capture spirit trophy in Sigma Chi Derby e Sigma Kappa sponsors ‘Bunny Run’ e Zeta Phi Beta sponsors Finer Womanhood Week The Kappa Deltas took advantage of each member’s talents in making finger puppets and Christmas ornaments which were sent to the Crippled Chil- dren’s Hospital in Richmond, Va. They also sent doll clothes they made to the Salvation Army. The sorority helped with the Red Cross clinics every month and the swine flu vaccine clinics. They also sponsored the second annu- al KD Washboard Jamboree, and they competed in November Nonsense, Greek Week, Spring Sing, Sigma Chi Derby and the ADPi 500. In the spring the sorority sponsored a Parents Day. This gave the members’ parents an opportunity to visit the Chestnut Street house. The KDs held their spring formal at Pine Mountain State Park. Using the theme of “Disney on Pa- rade”, “Heigh Ho, Heigh Ho to Sigma Chis we go” was the chant which led to Phi Mu sorority’s capture of the spirit trophy in the Sigma Chi Derby. A proud grandmother, Ruth Britt, congratulates granddaughter Bernadette Sweatt who won the “Little Miss Black Bowling Green” pageant. Zeta Phi Beta sorority sponsored the pageant. — L. Wright The sorority also won first place in the coaches’ ransom competition by collect- ing $318. The money aided Wallace Chil- dren’s Village and Project HOPE — Phi Mus national philanthropy. The sorority won first place in the KD Washboard Jamboree. Mixing fun with philanthropy, Phi Mus Pak children from the Big Brother — Big Sister program trick-or-treating in conjunction with their annual Hallo- ween serenade to the fraternities. Posting an impressive record in intra- murals, Phi Mu placed first in softball, volleyball, racquetball, turkey trot, arch- ery and badminton. A bike marathon called the Bunny Run had its beginning this year. It was sponsored by Sigma Kappa sorority in an effort to raise money for charity. Decorated hats and shakers were tossed aside as the Sigma Chi Derby ended. Phi Mus Valerie Abshire and Karen Simmerman share a quiet moment after competing in a relay behind Pearce Ford Tower. Zeta Phi Beta: (Front row) M. Mason, P. Williams, S. Figgs, M. Cross, E. Mason, M. Troutman. (Back row) M. Crump, S. Baker, C. Whitman and T. Whitman. a a a ee a Handmade aprons, crocheted articles, stuffed ani- mals and patchwork pillows cover the furniture in Kappa Delta House as sorority members Jimmi Lou Strader and Ruth Bates organize the sale items. Other civic projects included sending money and clothes to their national philanthropy, the Maine Sea Coast Mission. They also aided the Red Cross Blood Drive and collected for the Heart Fund. The Sigma Kappas came in second in November Nonsense and third in the KD Washboard Jamboree. They also participated in Greek Week and Spring Sing. In intramurals, sorority members Sal- lye Constant and Donna Gaines placed third in racquetball. They also com- peted in volleyball, softball, basketball and badminton. The only sorority with a brother fra- ternity, many of Zeta Phi Beta’s activi- ties are joined with Phi Beta Sigma fra- ternity. The annual Founder’s Day and Finer Womanhood Week were no exception. On Founder’s Day the sorority spon- sored a speaker from each of the greek organizations and a reception. At the Finer Womanhood Week the Zeta Phi Betas had a dinner and spon- sored a statewide stepping contest for black greeks. Sponsoring the first Little Miss Black Bowling Green Contest was the soror- ity’s major activity during fall semester. Proceeds went to Phi Beta Sigma’s attack on diseases. Other spring activities for the Zeta Phi Betas included sponsoring member Mar- sha Troutman in the Miss Black West- ern contest, collecting for the March of Dimes and a spring formal. (continued on page 276) — M. Lyons Fairy tales “Cinderella,” “Tinkerbell” and “Snow White” were told using song and dance by Sigma Kappa which placed second in November Non- sense. Jenny Nunn was Snow White. — T. Dekle Kappa Delta: (Front row) T. Craig, A. Pope, N. East, A. Civils, P. Jones, S. Cloud, J. Randall. Gecond row) A. Johnson, C. Guinn, A. Meffert, K. Mitchell, K. Sloan, V. Pritchett, J. Holeman, L. Dodson, R. Meador, L. Schaffner. (Third row) J. Willoughby, R. Keown, G. Moran, M. Baker, M. Hodges, L. Craver, J. Chandler, M. Bresler, T. Sanders, T. Hardesty, P. Bickett, L. Woodruff. (Back row) K. Hale, T. Koester, D. Witting, C. Tench, C. Sabolchak, D. Sexton, M. Beggs, D. Rowee, J. Strader, D. Dooley, L. Davis, S. Egan, R. Mitchell, P. Hawkins and C. Smiley. Sigma Kappa: (Front row) J. Esche, A. Vanderspool, P. Shelton, R. Bohannon, M. Briggs, S. Constant, E. Ashcraft, G. Pearce, G. Carlson, J. Nunn, T. Coffey, J. Johnson, T. Gamble. (Back row) C. Brown, M. Nance, N. Mosley, D. Gaines, S. Hester, S. Popplewell, B. Schroerlucke, L. Turok, A. Chenault, S. Abell, M. Clark, J. Hormuth and M. Kennedy. Phi Mu: (Front row) L. Pillitteri, J. Wittenbraker, K. Grosshuesch, N. Nahikian, M. Reavis, L. Garell, B. Young, S. Buck, K. York, S. Maddox, K. Simerman, V. Abshire. (Second row) C. Baccus, J. Bauer, J. Burd, M. Terry, J. Minor. (Third row) K. Gruccio, K. Baker, M. Shown, J. Convey, M. Bottego, V. Howe, C. Martin, D. Cornwell, P. Denton, K. Chandler, J. Poor, A. Malone, J. Pierce, S. Zollner, MM Nelson, W. McConnell and M. York. . Wheeler, M. Broken hearts and broken recor 268 Sigma Chi Derby ds — M. Lyons A crisp autumn week in October was the setting. Five sororities were the play- ers. The action? The 11th annual Sigma Chi Derby, and before it came to an end there were plenty of broken hearts and broken records. The broken hearts came for Alpha Delta Pi sorority when its try for an 11th consecutive Derby victory ended in a tie with Chi Omega sorority. This broken record came after the sororities partici- pated in a week’s worth of events which concluded Saturday with an egg toss at the Sigma Chi pledges, a lifesaver relay, a balloon stomp, an orange pass, a medley relay and a mystery event. Other events of the Derby were no less colorful than Saturday’s ritual. The Coaches Ransom, a major event, fulfilled the original purpose of the Derby. The sororities collected $665 for Wallace Children’s Village in Bloomfield, Colo. Although the sororities spent a usual amount of time collecting for the Ran- som there was a considerable decrease in this year’s final tally. Each sorority col- lected on the same day instead of sepa- rate days, said director Tom Menden- hall, and this contributed to the smaller net amount. Although no points were awarded to- ward an overall winner, one of the major events was the Derby Darling Contest in Garrett Ballroom. Eight contestants sponsored by different sororities and fra- ternities competed, as they displayed grace and charm in evening gown com- petition, sportswear modeling and swim- suit competition. Lisa Hahn, a sopho- more from Versailles, placed first and Rhonda Keown, a freshman from Phil- pot, finished as first runner-up. Cathy Garvin, a freshman from Bowling Green, won the second runner-up award. Spirit, an important part of the Derby, was judged throughout the week. Phi Mu won the Spirit trophy, which was given on total points received in Monday night’s serenade at the Sigma Chi house, the poster contest for the Derby Dance and for Saturday’s Derby parade which passed in front of the Sigma Chi house. — VICKI BAGWELL 0 Upset with the judges’ decision in the human pyra- mid mystery event, ADPi Starla Sandefur Se Ahena Lowe in an effort to console her sister. The sorority tied for first place in the event. — J. Burton As toothpicks sprout from their mouths, Charlene Hardesty and Kit kere race to the finish in a lifesaver relay at the Sigma Chi Derby finale. Tina Hemmer watches her Chi O sisters as they lace second in the event. With torches ablaze, Chi Omega sorority prepares to serenade the Sigma Chis in the opening night festivities of the Derby. The girls worked two weeks on their skit which was based on the theme “kiddieland.” — J. Burton Getting ready for bathing suit competi- tion, Lisa Hahn receives help with her lipstick from Roiann Robertson as she waits for the Derby Darling contest to continue. Miss Hahn, representing Chi Omega, won the contest. Winning the spirit trophy brought smiles to the faces of Jenrose Pierce, Sheila Buck and Deb Hertland, Phi Mu sorority sisters. They won first place in the Derby spirit competition. Door-to-door collection was part of par- ticipation in the Coaches Ransom. Phi Mus Jill Burd, Debbie Cornwell and Marcia Terry collect from Burn Fuller on Smallhouse Road. The sorority netted $318 for the Derby. — J. Burton 269 Sigma Chi Derby 2 ET EY Sr ANS om FINE AP Lr een amet Alpha Delta Pi staged an “interview from Corncob County” at Kappa Delta’s Washboard Jamboree. The skit starred Cindy Lanier as the reporter and featured Sherry Casebier’s “one man band.” fi SY Mindy Hodges of Kappa Delta adds the finishing touch to sorority sister Debbie Sexton’s makeup prior to the KD Jamboree. The annual event was resumed last year after a four-year hiatus. 270 Sorority Activities Phy | i] ig r FIMATEUR HOURS—GREEK STYLE — J. Burton } { H ’ : Disney characters in colorful costumes. Coun- try and Western music under the stars. The great American tricycle race. All these things were part of an active fall program for the ee as three sororities — Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi and Kappa Delta — sponsored events to promote Greek unity. Chi Omega’s November Nonsense, the ADPi 500 and Kappa Delta’s Washboard Jamboree blended to bring the Greeks together to have a good time. The first of the activities was the ADPi 500 which took place one warm Sunday afternoon. BEEN REN __ BYA . —_ —s They are on their last lap. It’s handlebar to handlebar all the way to the finish line. Then it’s AOPi by a tricycle. Actually the last lap is the first and it is only 100 yards, but the tricycle race did occur at the annual ADPi 500 at Beech Bend Park Raceway October 3. (continued on 272) Approximately 60 members of Alpha Omicron Pi turned out to cheer their sorority on to a first place finish in the ADPi 500. According to Linda Cretella, a member of the fall pledge class, the girls practiced twice for approximately an hour and a half prior to the competition. — T. Dekle Eleven fraternities competed in the ADPi 500. Sigma Nu compiled the highest point total in the fraternity competition at Beech Bend Bal Members Jim Petty and Tom Sullivan compete in the wheelbarrow race, one of seven events. Behind every successful man is a woman and sometimes two. Sheila Pardue and Candice Hunsaker cheer for Jeff Teague during the “Dizzy Lizzy” competition at the ADPi 500. Tea- pe and three of his Sigma Chi fraternity brothers — Brad iltz, Ricky Newton and Tom Mendenhall — won the event, which consisted of each member placing his head on a base- ball bat, spinning around the bat 25 times and getting up and running a straight line. 271 Sorority Activities 272 Sorority Activities Amateur hours Greek style on Alpha Delta Pi sorori ty sponsored seven events such as the Dizzy Lizzy and Bike Race for four participating sororities and eleven fraterni- ties. Alpha Omicron Pi won the sorority division and Sigma Nu won the fraternity division by accumulating the most points from the events in which they participated. Later in the month, the weather, activity and sorority changed for another outdoor activity. It was a cold night in October and sororities and fraternities were performing at the Ivan Wil- son amphitheatre. What could possible have giv- en them the incentive to get out on a night fike that? What else, buta washboard? A washboard with a gold plaque is awarded to a sorority and a fraternity who wins the Kappa Delta Washboard Jamboree. This is the second year for the event and there was a considerable increase in the participation. All Greeks were invited and participated except for two fraternities and Black Greska Kappa Sigma won in the fraternity division and Phi Mu was awarded the washboard for th sorority division. Pi Kappa Alpha and Sigma Al- ha Epsilon came in second and third, respective- iy as did Alpha Delta Pi and Sigma Kappa. The performance had to be based on a country and or western theme. Kappa Delta began and ended the jamboree with songs and then big brothers performed at intermission with a skit. As the weather got even colder, the activity changed again, but this time it moved indoors and all those participating were celebrities of a sort. The first thing that would cross a person’s mind if he saw a duck in a sailor suit, a mouse in, red shorts with suspenders and a white bow tie, his girlfriend, another mouse, a couple of Tinker- bells flying by and crowds of dwarfs, divided into sevens, would be that Disneyland was hav-. ing a convention. Not quite, but close enough when Chi Omega presented November Non- sense as “A Salute to Walt Disney.” The annual program at Van Meter Auditorium | on November 11 covered Disneyland from the- Mickey Mouse Club to Snow White’s Dwarfs to Peter Pan to chimney sweeps. Sigma Phi Epsilon won the fraternity division with “The Big Switch,” a skit based on the ‘true’ story of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. “Disney Disco” was the winning skit in the so- rority division for Alpha Omicron Pi. It por- trayed the story of Disney’s characters set to disco music. The presidential debates were also given the “Disney touch” by Sigma Alpha Epsilon for sec- ond place as they presented “Peter Pan in’ J Peter Pan combined with Plains, Ga. earned Sigma Alpha es a second place finish in November Nonsense. The skit, a commentary on the absurdities of the 1976 political campaign, featured visits by the seven dwarfs and Elizabeth Ray, and was titled, “Peter Pan in Plains.” Snow White (Bob Haack) meets her chaning) iaeee (Jerry Fogarty) after he has saved her life. The Sigma Nus presented the skit at November Nonsense. — J. Burton “Disco Duck” Karen Miley came to the rescue when dwarf Linda Owens suffered an unplanned mishap during Alpha Omicron Pi’s presentation at November Nonsense. The accident did not stop the performance or influence the judges’ decision. “Disco Disney” won first place in the sorority divi- sion for the AOPis. The wicked stepmother (Arlene Hester) tempts Snow White (Jenny Nunn) with a poisoned apple (Martha Nance) during “’Women in Disney,” Sig- ma Kappa’s musical spoof. The sorority finished second in the competition. — M. Lyons — J. Burton Plains.” Pi Kappa Alpha took third place with its version of “The Truth — Believe It or Not.” Sigma Kappa captured second place in the so- rority division with “The Wonderful Women of Disney.” The version of the Disney fairytales starred female heroines. Alpha Delta Pi was awarded third place with a skit entitled, “A Dizzy Day at Disney.” Dispersed between skits were musical num- bers presented by Chi Omega including a “’Tal- ent Round-up” by the pledges. The grand finale of the show was an arrangement of “It’s a Small World” by the whole sorority. According to Kathy Wise, the coordinator for the show, Chi Omega worked about six weeks on the program, including its own musical num- bers. Each girl was responsible for her costume, but Miss Wise contributed many costumes from her years as a dancer. Dr. A.W. Laird, a Western psychology profes- sor, Sharon Buchanan, from the student affairs office, and Susan Lonas, a Bowling Green resi- dent who was the first Chi Omega president at Western, were judges. For the second year in a row the admission charge was donated to the United Givers Fund. — VICKI BAGWELL — iE Burton 273 Sorority Activities 274 Miss Black Western Crowned Miss Black Western, a happy Marsha Troutman was congratulat- ed by second runner-up Shirley Conner and contestant Marsha Ragland. Miss Conner was sponsored by Phi Beta Sigma fraternity and Miss Rag- land was sponsored by Potter Hall and Ron’s Pizza. Photos by Stevie Benson Heritage Rehearsals and hours of other prepara- tion are given the test of strength that lasts only a few anxious minutes in the Miss Black Western Pageant. The contest was sponsored for the eighth consecutive year by Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority. “Everybody had something to do,” said Mona Thomas, president of the 10- member sorority. “There were out-of- town guests to invite, a tea to plan and many other things to do.” Reciting a poem called “The Judgment Day” in the talent competition, Marsha Troutman, a Morganfield junior won the contest over six other contestants. “T had wanted to use the poem in a high school speech tournament but I wasn’t able to,” said Miss Troutman.” It represents my beliefs. “The pageant hasn’t changed me at all,” she said after the contest. “Miss Black Western is just a title and I am still Marsha Troutman, a person.” Besides talent, Miss Troutman was also judged in swimsuit competition, a question and answer period and creativity. According to Miss Thomas, the event was included in the pageant so the con- testants would have a chance to express their creativity to the judges. First runner-up in the pageant was Shebell Peak, a Louisville sophomore. Miss Peak was sponsored by Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. Miss Shirley Conner was selected sec- ond runner-up. The Ft. Campbell fresh- man was sponsored by Phi Beta Sig- ma fraternity. Eugenia Fletcher was chosen Miss Congeniality by the contestants. Requirements for being in the pageant were that the contestant be single, of black heritage and underclassman status and have a minimum gpa of 2.0. Rev. Jim Miller of Louisville, Miss Margaret Munday of Auburn and Lewis Johnson and Richard Wilson of Bowling Green judged. Other contestants in the Feb. 19 pag- eant were Cross Plains, Tenn., sopho- more Vanessa Benton, sponsored by the Pershing Rifles; Valerie Brown, a War- saw sophomore, sponsored by South Hall; Eugenia Fletcher, a Huntsville, Ala., phonons sponsored by Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority; and Marsha Rag- land, a Bowling Green sophomore, spon- sored by Potter Hall and Ron’s Pizza. | | The pageant met conflict during the sign-up period of Jan. 24 through 28. Two white students tried to enter the contest but were refused. ASG president Christy Vogt was de- nied entry because she was a senior. Su- san Wilk, a Bowling Green sophomore, was refused because she did not have a black heritage. Miss Wilk and Miss Vogt said they tried to enter because they want- ed to prove that the contest was discriminatory. According to Miss Wilk, she and Miss Vogt met with Dean Charles Keown and Lynn Morgan and suggested that the pageant ies be changed or the pag- eant’s name be changed to Miss Western or Miss Alpha Kappa Alpha. Wilk was later allowed to enter the contest but missed the deadline because of a communication problem. — VICKI BAGWELL An evening wear segment was part of the competi- tion in the Miss Black Western pageant, sponsored Be Alpha Kappa sorority. Marsha Troutman won after competing in creativity, talent, swimsuit as well as question and answer segments. Rehearsal for the Miss Black Western Pageant wasn't as glamorous as the pageant itself. Shirley Conner, a freshman from Ft. Campbell, who be- came the second runner-up, took a short nap dur- ing a break. Two other contestants, Marsha Rag- land and Vanessa Benton wait for further instruc- tions about the production. in the spotlight Sorority sisters and friends crowded Marsha Trout- man moments after the announcement was made. She was sponsored by her sorority, Zeta Phi Beta. The junior Hee and theatre major is from Mor- ganfield and succeeds Janelle Johnson, a sopho- more speech and theatre major from Midland, Tex. A talent presentation with a personal meaning was shared with the pageant audience by contestant Shebell Peak. The sophomore from Louisville recit- ed a poem written especially for her. Sponsored by Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, the mathematics major was named first runner-up — from a field of seven participants. 275 Miss Black Western Alpha Phi Alpha: (Front row) S. Huskey, J. Williams. (Second row) F. Godfrey, E. Murrell, J. Suttles, B. Wiley. (Back row) K. Bell and C. Owens. 276 Fraternities NDEPENDENTLY GREEK... e AGR receives the Great Entertainer Award e AKPsis charter alumni association e Alpha Phi Alpha offers black history sessions At a school known for its affinity for parties, winning the WBGN-radio sta- tion Great Entertainer Award for the best party during rush was no small accom- plishment. Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity claimed that Lant in spring 1976 and planned to defend the title. Fun and fellowship were not the only things on the brothers’ minds. They par- ticipated in the Civitan Magic Show with proceeds going to Potter Orphanage and to the Heart Fund Drive. Alpha Gamma Rho placed second in the Blood Drive and third in the Muscu- lar Dystrophy Carnival in Greek Week 1976. The brothers’ participation in intramurals netted them third place honors among fraternities in the softball competition. Sponsoring Sandy Abell as Homecom- ing candidate, the AGRs built a float with Sigma Kappa sorority. Homecoming was a date to remember for Alpha Kappa Psi fraternity. It marked the chartering of an alumni asso- ciation for the Western chapter, as well as a banquet for members and alumni. The AKPsis also sponsored a float and queen candidate, and earned $500 from mum sales. Competition also played a key role in the fraternity’s year as it defended its Greek Week championship title. Mem- bers also planned to defend their first place finish in the Kappa Sigma-AOPi Road Rally in spring. With Potter Orphanage as its phi- lanthrophy, the fraternity also spon- sored a Charity Softball Tournament in the spring. The annual competition be- tween Greeks raised $200 in 1976. Another service project was the spon- sorship of a tea for business administra- tion faculty members and staff. Black History sessions offered to the old and young was one of the major pro- jects of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. Working in conjunction with United Black Greeks, (UBG), the fraternity offered an open discussion to the public in February. A former deejay at Western’s campus radio station, WKYU, Bruce Wiley works with music from a different source as he steps with fellow members of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. Alone in the second-floor bedroom which he | shares with three Alpha Gamma Rho brothers, sophomore Ron Smith writes a letter before a Sun- day night rush meetings in late January. To motivate students scholastically the fraternity also scheduled Black His- | tory discussions at Parker-Bennett grade ) school every month. The fraternity wanted to give the students a chance to express their ideas as well as learn. In April a speaker on black his- tory visited the campus as a part of the project. The Martin L. King Memorial and Awards program was also held in April at Garrett Conference Center. Awards were given to black students who ex- celled scholastically and athletically. The fraternity sponsored a talent show for Bowling Green High School students in March, and trophies were given to first, second and third place winners. The brothers also established a big brother program for the black communi- | ty. Their purpose was to attempt to teach individuals how to teach and be an asset to the children. With a two-fold purpose the fraternity held a sweetheart dance in Elizabeth- town. They wanted to spread the name of the fraternity as well as interest people in Western. 5 Alpha Gamma Rho: (Front row) J. Hopgood, J. Eubank, W. Baskett, S. Straney, S. Boone. (Second row) T. h a gene a He Heras aa Smith, R. Williams, W. Haines, S. Cottrell, R. Bohannon, E. Yates, A. Mattingly, D. Emerson, K. Klumb, etarany pha Dall which was a WOIK p. Bradford. (Third row) D. Pelly, D. French, J. Estes, B. Withers, L. Head. (Fourth row) T. Adkins, M. shop displaying the accomplishments of Wade, S. Neely, J. Fowler, R. Druen, E. Carter. (Fifth row) R. Nance, R. Smith, L. Sorrell, C. Hench, T. the fraternity. Hornbeck, K. Frazier, J. Oldham. (Back row) R. Goss, P. Yocum, S. Wheatley, B. Newton and C. Mitchell. Several on-campus dances were spon- sored by the fraternity and one featured the band, Third World Edition. (continued on page 278) A pinball game between an active and a potential pledge at re Alpha Kappa Psi house was part of a rush party in early fall. The active had almost dou- bled the rushee’s score at the machine which is in the basement of the house on East 14th Street. Alpha Kappa Psi: (Front row) D. Payne, S. Sayres, J. Gale, P. Sowder, A. Whitenack, S. McClamroch. (Second row) B. Stauss, T. Hammond, R. Read, G. Hunter, M. Willett, G. Rosenbaum, J. Chastain. (Back | row) D. Butts, P. Gustafson, E. Kithcart, J. Duke, O. Flener, C. Burden, P. Carroll and T. Siwicki. — J. Burton 277 Fraternities 278 Fraternities INDEPEND ¢ Thirteeners help coordinate Special Olympics ¢ KAPsis celebrate Kappa Week ¢ Lambda Chis host Midwest Conclave Social functions dominated the calen- dar throughout the year, but Delta Tau Delta fraternity members still found time for civic projects. Working for the Special Olympics, collecting money for the Heart Fund and working with the Salvation Army at Christmas were the major civic projects for the brothers. Outstanding members for the fraterni- ty included golfer Carmello Benassi, marksmen Keith Cerk and Steve Brit- tingham and IFC delegates Tom Yunt and Brion Holland. In an effort to unify the frater- nity, eight members of Kappa Alpha Psi ave moved onto the eighth floor of Pearce-Ford. Bicycle relays aren’t too common except as events of ADPi 500. Delta Tau Delta members David Bradford and Mike Simpson fight the clock in an exchange. Sororities had tricycle relays. In the fall semester the fraternity cele- brated Kappa Weekend which was a pre- lude to Kappa Week. Besides exhibiting the fraternity’s accomplishments and so- cial activities, it was a time for growth with other fraternities. The brothers sponsored two fashion shows. The spring show, which was capped off with a dance, featured even- ing wear. The shows were part of a se- mester-long project to change attitudes toward black social life. Along with its social projects, the group also helped with voter registra- tion, sang Christmas carols at Turtle — Rendon A “Mystic Voyage of Fashion” sponsored by Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity took the audience on a seated tour of new styles. Annette Wilson and Wil- lie Richardson model semi-formal wear. Delta Tau Delta: (Front row) M. Simpson, J. Delaney, C. Benassi, R. Graf, M. Lee, D. Graf, R. Napier, D. Dresel, B. Holland. (Second row) D. Crawford, K. Hicks, J. Reamy, S. Brittingham, T. Yunt, R. Blackman, D. Colyer, J. Wilkins. (Back row) M. Bradford, G. McCoy, K. Cundiff, K. Carroll, C. Chancellor, R. Gardner and B. Cunningham. Creek Nursing Home and sponsored a Halloween party at New Bethel Baptist Church for elementary school children. A major project was raising money for a local business owner who had terminal cancer. Greeting approximately 250 brothers from Kentucky and Ohio was the high point of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity’s year when they hosted a Midwest Conclave. Involving 12 collegiate chapters, the workshop-oriented conclave was con- ducted Feb. 26 and 27. The brothers sponsored the annual Charity Bowl Nov. 22, pitting the Greek and Independent All-Stars in football against one another. Santa Claus enter- tained at a Christmas party given with proceeds from the event, and the guests were children from the Big Brother-Big Sister program. Continuing their civic involvement, the Lambda Chis were the campus co- sponsors of the Cerebral Palsy Walk-a- thon in November. Associate members of the fraternity collected goods for the Salvation Army in October. The brothers claimed first place in football, softball and basketball intra- murals competition as well as placing in badminton, table tennis, swimming, ten- nis and horseshoes. The fraternity won the Regents’ Award for its Homecoming house deco- rations. The fraternity also sponsored its annual spirit contest during the Western vs. Eastern game. (continued on page 280) — H. Sinclair Potential pledges get to know fraternity members as well as other rushees and their dates at Lambda Chi Alpha’s party in the basement of the fraternity house on Chestnut Street. be Kappa Alpha Psi: (Front row) J. Haynes, J. Hines, Morgan Pettus. (Back row) O. Maxwell, H. Dorsey, S. Smith and J. Neal. Lambda Chi Alpha: (Front row) B. Goodknight, M. Williams, B. Smith, C. Nahm, T. Zoeller, P. Bullock, M. Martin, P. Hempenstall, D. Allison, B. Gover, K. Estridge. (Second row) T. Glover, D. Lang, S. Blanton, T. Ruble, R. Baxter, G. Whittington, M. Davis, P. Watkins, B. Shockley, D. Wheeler, T. Wilson, T. Moody, S. Edelen. (Third row) B. Dost, C. Hord, M. Wyatt, B. Sherlock, D. Young, B. Jones, P. Thomas, D. Bosma, J. Mathews, T. Looney, K. Hufnagle, J. Winchester, R. McElroy, B. Borror, W. VanderMeer, D. Dunn, D. Moody, B. Dwyer. (Fourth row) D. McNally, T. Blair, P. Burkeen, B. Begel, B. King, T. Sisk, D. Galligan, S. Shipp, G. Houser. (Back row) J. Keffer, R. VanSlyke, J. Johnson, T. Hackett and T. Swyhart. 279 Fraternities 280 Fraternities INDEPENDENTLY GREEK .... ¢ Omega Psi Phis co-sponsor voter registration drive e Three Phi Beta Sigmas attend workshop e Phi Delta Thetas give Scholar Achievement Award Omega Psi Phis know how to pick a winner. Their little sister, Marissa Greene, was named Homecoming queen in November. That night the fraternity co-sponsored a disco dance at the Jaycee Pavillion with Delta Sigma Theta. It was the fraternity’s most successful fall event. The fraternity also co-sponsored a vot- er registration drive with the sorority. Highlighting the spring semester was the Omega Ball in March, which the fra- ternity sponsored. The brothers also par- A house is a fringe benefit that almost half the fraternities offer their members. Phi Delta Theta member Tom Walsh relaxes as he watches a rerun of “McHale’s Navy” in one of the bedrooms. prorat VINO AA Sy p”’%g — H. Sinc lair ticipated in the Pi Kappa Phi-sponsored stake and biskits eating contest at Ire- land’s Restaurant in February. Hours on the highway were useful to Phi Beta Sigma fraternity. The destinations promised information and helpful hints. Three brothers traveled to Michigan State University to attend Phi Beta Sig- ma’s undergraduate workshop, and later fraternity representatives attended a re- gional workshop in Chicago, III. In November the fraternity joined the March of Dimes in the national Sigmas Attack on Drugs and a birth defects pro- ject, and eee $200. In the spring the brothers observed Sigma Week, and interviewed children — L. Wright Puddle dodging wasn’t part of practice, but Pearls of Une Psi Phi Juliana Cummings and Amanda Irwin had to do so as they stepped after the Eastern football game in front of the student center. tH! , : | | = ! TTT Omega Psi Phi: (Front row) R. Washburn, A. Dickerson, J. Roach, B. Coleman, A. Farley, R. Curtis and M. Swain. 9 from area churches to participate in an Easter play which was open to the public. Even though their intramural efforts weren't too successful, the Phi Del- ta Theta fraternity had an otherwise active year. For the first time the fraternity pre- sented the Scholar Achievement Award to the sorority with the highest fall se- mester g.p.a. The ADPis won the travel- ing trophy and were honored with a par- ty in February. The brothers also hosted their elev- enth annual Homecoming fraternity dance and banquet at Ramada Inn. In January members attended a Phi Delta Theta bi-province conference at Tennessee Tech in Cookeville. On Community Service Day the brothers escorted children from Potter Home and School to Beech Bend Park for rides, games and a picnic. The fraternity had its spring formal at Lake Cumberland State Park in April when it also sponsored the Super Greek Competition for all sororities and fraternities. ; (continued on page 282) — J. Burton An arm brand is a personal sacrifice made by Phi Beta Sigma fraternity brothers. They are not forced to have a brand , but 10 of the 22 brothers who do regard it as asymbol of pride. Junior Michael Rives had his brand made in late May. Sey pay Phi Delta Theta: (Front row) T. Witzigreuter, R. Pickerill, G. Storey, P. Steinmetz, T. Cherry, D. Conner. (Second row) C. Hill, J. Bundy, B. Edwards, S. Wall, T. Barna. (Third row) R. Gleitz, L. Forst, W. Story, C. Grove, J. Anderson, G. Beck. (Fourth row) R. Hayes, C. Mudd, A. Cooper, M. Buzzetta, D. Cundiff, T. Johnson. (Back row) J. Kelly, D. McFarland, L. Tomlinson, D. Hagans, C. Helm and J. Irwin. Phi Beta Sigma: (Front row) S. Smith, J. Hopper, M. Mason, N. Baker, N. Cleaver, M. Coleman, T. Hayes. (Back row) A. McKinney, S. Simmons, L. Hagans, W. Vinson, G. Taylor, R. Wilson, M. Rives and G. Bruce. 281 Fraternities e Pi Kappa Phi co-sponsors MD carnival e SAEs move into former ATO house e Pikes earn high GPA award A move for Sigma Alpha Epsilon was their major project this year. The fraternity bought the Alpha Tau Omega house and began remodeling it in December. Working with a professional carpen- ter, the brothers took turns returning to Bowling Green during Christmas vaca- tion to work. In an effort to raise money for the March of Dimes, the fraternity spon- sored a haunted house on the Old Louis- ville Road at Halloween. They also sponsored a Dance Marathon for rok, os Rates Se GY aa Muscular Dystrophy. The “Fanatics” provided the music at the SAE’s Homecoming dance at the C.L. Cutliff building. The brothers also spon- sored two discos with Kappa Delta soror- ity and a Valentine’s Dance. French Lick, Ind., was the location of the fraternity’s spring formal. Being the newest fraternity on campus didn’t stop Pi Kappa Phi from working to become one of the most active. It co- sponsored the Muscular Dystrophy Car- nival during Greek Week. The fraternity co-sponsored a campus- “ay Sigma Alpha Epsilon: (Front row) B. Travis, D. Augenstein, A. Wilkins, D. Clark, J. Draheim, M. Smither, B. Moore, B. Bratcher, J. Biggers, C. Strader, J. Perkins, P. Iracane. (Second row) S. Thornton, D. ai Augenstein, S. Snellen, T. Ats is, R. Taylor, S. Robertson, T. Callis, M. Wampler. R. Quinn (sweetheart), T. Ulmer, K. Ridley, D. Wunderlich, P. Sargent, J. Eckhart, B. Wagner. (Third row) G. Jones, D. Sears, T. Butler, T. Griffen, R. Schocke, B. Steen, E. Hastie, S. Barrick, K. Tharp. P Gueltzow, D. Anderson., S. Hooks, T. Gueltzow, J. Mashek, D. Compton, M. Romeieh. (Back row) R. Hunter, L. Martin, G. Evans and J. Tuell. Beer chugg ing contest candidate Steve Hooks rep- resents his fraternity, SAE, in the competition which accompanied a steak and biscuit eating con- test at Ireland’s Restaurant. Pi Kappa Phi: (Front row) D. Parker, R. Miller, D. Madison, P. Stamp, M. Ricketts. (Back row) R. Gates, J. Wicks, M. Ruark, T. Babb, D. Rexroat, J. Grove, M. Thomas, T. Rogers and B. Masden. ‘ 282 Fraternities wide Stake and Biskits contest with Ire- land’s Restaurant and worked university concerts as fund raising projects. Civically, the fraternity participated in the Heart Fund Blood Drive and the fall associated member class cleaned Turtle Creek Nursing Home in preparation for an open house. Members Paul Stamp, Jim Grove, Morris Ricketts and adviser Larry Davis attended a national leadership confer- ence at Roanoke College in August. There the members learned more about rush, social and civic activities. Despite all the social activities of the fraternity, the Pi Kappa Alphas were still able to excel scholastically. The fraterni- ty received the award for the high- est over-all grade point average. Add- ed to this distinction was the fact that they had more pledges than any other fraternity. The year was full of awards for the fraternity. They received the house beautification award. They placed sec- ond in the KD Washboard Jamboree and third in both November Nonsense and ADPi 500. Working with the AOPis at Home- coming, the fraternity built a float which received the President’s Award, and sponsored Cassandra Henry for Home- coming Queen. At the first of the spring semester the fraternity sponsored a dance at the J.C. Pavillion at Lampkin Park with ADPi sorority. } (continued on page 284) Casino parties were popular rush activities for many fraternities. Pi Kappa Alpha member Chris Rabold deals cards at a party at the Pike House on College Street. Rabel is a junior from Dayton, Ohio. — J. Burton A night at the gambling tables entertained SAE members and their dates as well as rushees. Jeff Morgan and Mark Stahl decide where to place their fake bills before the roulette wheel spins at the College Street house. Morgan and Stahl are Bowling Green freshmen. Pi Kappa Alpha: (Front row) C. Rabold, B. Sensel, C. Bradshaw, R. Foster, W. Crafton, J. Bunnell, D. Pauli, J. Welsh, R. Tucker, D. Waggener, J. Setters, J. McCulloch, K. Greene. (Second row) M. Crum, C. Sowell, M. Cannon, B. Weigel, D. Tepool, D. Stevenson, M. Schaefer, M. Stearns, M. DeStefano, M. Haile. (Third row) C. Gaines, J. Lee, B. Ford, B. Kidd. (Fourth row) B. Huffines, J. Hughard, R. Clark, T. Albani. (Fifth row) M. Nichols, M. Hester, J. Wells. (Back row) M. Collins, R. East, R. Vaughn and D. Sullivan. 283 Fraternities 284 Fraternities ¢ Sigma Chi sponsors 11th Derby ° Sig Eps celebrate 75th anniversary ¢ Sigma Nu sponsors Powder Puff football For the eleventh consecutive year the Sigma Chi fraternity played host to so- rorities battling for the Derby title. The Derby was only one of many activities for the fraternity during the year, however. In the fall semester the brothers co- sponsored the Big Brothers-Big Sisters picnic at the house. In November the brothers accompa- nied 15 to 20 Potter Home children to the Western-Akron home football game. Following the game, the children were served hot chocolate and cake at the Sig- ma Chi house. In the spring the Sigmas Chis hosted a Valentine’s Day show for Potter Home children and sponsored a Civitan Puppet Show at the Fine Arts Center. In April the fraternity sponsored the annual Easter Egg Hunt behind Cherry Hall for children of Western’s faculty and from the Potter Home and School. Sorority women showed an interest in sports as was evident in their participa- tion in the Sigma Nus’ Powder Puff Foot- ball competition. The week-long event is conducted annually at the close of foot- ball season. The Sigma Nus participated in greek activities such as November Nonsense, KD Washboard Jamboree, the ADPi 500 and Greek Week. ‘Tubing’ down Barren River was also a Sigma Phi Epalon: (Front row) W. Beard, E. Joyner, D. Witt, D. Dodd, S. Hicks, P. Jepnes G. Logan, T. Tuzio, S. Wi burn, M. Leneave, W. Johnson, J. Castle, S. Hilton, M. Montgomery, D. Staf ord, J. Wallace. (Second row) E. Shy, E. Reynolds, W. Day. (Third row) M. Herrmann, D. Ryan, R. Smith, T. Angelo, C. Brizendine, R. Martin, M. Mays, B. Nethery, D. Sudderth, R. Bolus, A. Beals, D. Glaspie, D. Chapman, V. Eo ae row) D. Burns, B. Bilyeu, T. Chambers, P. Holland, M. Kiser, J. Collins, W. Thompson and P. Tharat. Sigma Chi: (Front row) B. Kiltz, A. Pedigo, J. Hargrove, C. Schultz, B. Smith, K. Griffith, J. Self, R. Walters, K. Morris, J. Allison, F. Cuffe, W. Koons, K. Shaheen. (Second row) M. Miller, S. Sutton, R. Main, D. Bowling, M. Dillegge, B. St. Clair, P. Jones (sweetheart), J. Teague, M. Howard, H. Carrico, J. Grizzel, M. Carpenter, K. Baker, J. Shaw, M. Cothern. (Back row) T. Mendenhall, G. Shircliffe, B. Hamilton, C. Sutton, R. Newton, C. Phillips, B. Sanders, S. Allgeier, J. Bondurant, D. Vance, D. Minogue, J. Weaver, D Trimble and S. Kiper. big Labor Day event for the Sigma Nus and their rushees. In January the broth- ers sponsored a Bluegrass Beer Blast for rushees. Each year the Sigma Nus send pledges to the national headquarters at the Vir- ginia Military Institute in Lexington, Va., and this one was no exception. Cincinnati, Ohio, provided the setting Atop a haystack on a farm 20 miles from Bowling Green, Kit Krengal and Bobby Hun relax at a Satur- day night Sigma Nu Woodstock. The fraternity provided two campfires, refreshments and music. for the fraternity’s spring formal. ‘With the celebration of the national Sigma Phi Epsilon 75th anniversary and winning the President’s Award for Homecoming house decorations, the first week BeNOven bet was a busy time. Winning the President’s Award, how- ever, was nothing new for the frater- nity, which has won it three times in four years. The fraternity’s third annual car bash, sponsored at the Eastern-Western foot- ball game, was another fall activity. Also, the gio Eps worked with the Optimist Club on its annual Christmas tree sale. A first place finish in November Non- sense highlighted the fraternity’s fall Greek activities which included the ADPi 500, KD Washboard Jamboree, flag football, basketball and softball. After beginning the spring semester with a number of rush parties which in- cluded a playboy party and a barbeque, Sigma Nu; (Front row) A. Cunningham, K. Smith, T. Sullivan, R. Warmath, M. Biggers, C. Burns, B. the group finished the year with a spring Graven, D. Kirsch, J. Fogarty. (Second row) G. Wells, J. Morgan, J. Lee, C. Riley, J. Petty, D. Vaughn, R. formal at Kentucky Dam Village. Pennington, D. Roberts, J. Smith, H. Shunk. (Third row) D. Mills, C. Wadlington, J. Natcher, B. Hack, T. ; Montgomery, D. Wells, G. Carter, M. Thomas. (Back row) J. Hillard, B. Nedrow, N. Wilkins, B. Hawn, R. (continued on page 286) }Yarris, B. Six, D. Ratliff, M. Nedvidek, K. Roberts, and T. Kovach. — T. Dekle | — M. Lyons A little muscle and a lot of devilishness went into every dent ina Volkswagen _A lost sweater cost Brad Kiltz a lot when fraternity brothers Mark Miller and at a car bash ppensored by Sigma Phi Epsilon. Encouraged by the crowd, Barry Clark Schultz scolded him. The three are Sigma Chis and performed “Milk Wilson took his turn after the Eastern football game. White and the Seven Radidumdums” in November Nonsense. 285 Fraternities 286 UBG, IFC And Panhellenic ¢ IFC sponsors Homecoming bonfire ¢ Panhellenic hosts tea during open rush ¢ UBG sponsors dance for black Greeks With the help of discarded wooden crates and other wood surplus, the Inter- fraternity Council set Homecoming weekend to a blazing start by sponsoring the annual bonfire on the Thursday be- fore the celebration. On another special occasion the Ivan Wilson amphitheatre was the setting of a concert geared to raise funds for under- privileged children in the Big Brothers- Big Sisters program. Working jointly with Panhellenic, IFC also sponsored an art print sale in the student center to raise money for Aca- demic Council. The organization sponsored a fraterni- ty Werk choe in January. The leadership A print sale in the student center was a good chance for students to save money on artwork. Cathy Hil- ton, an interior design major, inspects the mer- chandise. The sale was co-sponsored by IFC and Panhellenic Council. seminar was designed to show the par- ticipants how to work better with people. Dr. Randall Capps, a speech and theatre department professor, taught a class in parliamentary procedure and _ par- ticipants received one hour for college credit. Receiving fresh ideas from new coor- dinator Lynn Morgan the Panhellenic Council continued to work for coopera- tion among sororities through rush, sponsorship of events and a State Day involving all Kentucky sororities. Promoting open rush, the group — composed of representatives a all Na- tional Panhellenic Conference sororities — hosted a Panhellenic tea and invited underclasswomen on the open rush list to learn about sororities. Bringing information to prospective rushees, members of each sorority vis- ited all the women’s dorms and conduct- ed question and answer sessions. Panhellenic Council’s activities were not restricted to rush, however, as plans were finalized for a Spring Fashion Show. An official calendar was drawn up with dates for all sorority and fraternity activities to avoid conflict in scheduling. “Dancing all night’’ was made possi- ble by United Black Greeks in the spring semester, as the group sponsored a mara- thon to unify black Greeks. UBG, who meet once a week, spon- sored money-making projects that wouldn’t interfere with other fund- raising projects sponsored by sororities and fraternities. Dances, the most profitable of pro- jects, were held in the Cellar and Garrett Conference Center, but the most success- ful locations were smaller places off cam- pus, according to the members. ] Underclasswomen on the open rush list were invit- ed to a tea sponsored by Panhellenic Council in Garrett Conference Center Ballroom. Each sorority was represented and displayed individualized para- phernalia at the tea. Panhellenic Council: (Front row) C. Tolle, C. Gillium, K. Grosshuesch, N. Nahi kian, K. Huey, C. Edington, P. Shelton, M. Miler, S. Leathers, K. Little, C. Rose, S. Conners and L. Morgan. United Black Greeks; (Front row) T. Whitman, T. Hayes, D. Neal, A. Dickerson, Y. Robey, F. Gilmen, O. Maxwell, M. Troutman, M. Crump. (Back row) C. Bligh and S. Huskie. Interfraternity Council: (Front row) L. Morgan, J. Williams, C. Blythe, P. Sowder, T. Hammond, B. Moore, A. Farley, J. Roach, J. Wilkins. (Second row) M. Coleman, J. Gillis, N. Cleaver, S. Straney, D. Emerson, M. De Sieslcane: J. Wheeler, S. Snellen, K. Polley, R. Gardner, T. Kouach, D. Dunn. (Back row) R. Baxter, B. Holland, B. Hamilton, D. Stafford, G. Logan, C. Rabold, E. Hogg, P. Steinmetz, B. Sanders, C. Schultz, G. Carter, T. Hackett and D. Madison. 287 UBG, IFC And Panhellenic 288 Greek Week 1977 With their strategy outlined, the Greek organizations leaped into a week of academics, athletics, community ser- vice, a talent show, public relations, so- cializing and an awards banquet. It is officially called Greek Week and was celebrated March 24 through April 1. On Thursday the opening rounds of the College Bowl in Garrett Conference Center ran from 4:30 to 11:00 p.m. The Tuesday finals ended with Sigma Kappa and Sigma Alpha Epsilon win- ning in the sorority and fraternity divi- sions, respectively. Alpha Omicron Pi and Phi Mu came in second and third, respectively, as did Pi Kappa Alpha and Sigma Phi Epsilon. The Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaires got their chance to show off Friday and Saturday at the dance marathon spon- sored by Interhall, Interfraternity and Panhellenic councils. The marathon which raised more than $7,000 for muscular dystrophy was staged in the Diddle Arena lobby from 6 p.m. to midnight on Friday and 8 a.m. to midnight Saturday. Thirty four couples signed up for the marathon, but only 17 participated. Four- teen pairs were still dancing when the —H. Sinclair marathon stopped. Kicking off the annual Greek Week activities was the track and field meet, which The dancers received a five-minute included the 440 relay, softball throwing and the broad jump. SAE John Tuell, a break hourly and 30-minute meal sophomore from Lawrenceburg, long jumps during the competition on March 27. _ breaks. The couple that collected the most The annual two-day Greek Week blood drive gives students and faculty members Ski heel L the opportunity to donate blood while on campus. Phi Delta Theta pledge Patrick money was A Churc and Sharon Conrardy’s pint helped boost his fraternity’s donation total. Duncan. According to Miss Duncan — H. Sinclair ae collected nearly $2,000 for the mara- thon. The couple began their work early by organizing a Coffee Day, local merchants donated 10¢ to muscular dystrophy for each cup of coffee they sold. The winners were announced on April 13. The $500 first prize went to the couple who ealiecred, the most pledg- ed money. On Sunday afternoon the Smith Stadi- um football field was swarmed with Greeks participating in the track and field events such as 440 relay, long jump hurdles, broad jump and a softball throwing contest. Alpha Delta Pi soror- ity and Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity captured first place titles. Located in the West Hall Cellar, the American Red Cross took donations for the blood drive. The 500-pint goal was exceeded by three points. According to Warren County Blood Chairman Maxine Neel, the big turn- out was partially due to the Greek competition. The drive usually lasts one day but was extended for the second day because Warren County was behind in its blood quota for the year. Weeks of unofficial singing lessons and choreography were evident in Van Meter Auditorium Wednesday night as six sororities and three fraternities par- ticipated in Spring Sing. Alpha Delta Pi sorority won the first- Leaping into a week typically Greek ‘medley entitle place trophy with its “Sweet Melody” consisting of such songs as “On the Good Ship Lollipop,” and ‘Sunshine, Lollipops and Rainbows.” Fraternity first place was awarded to the Lambda Chis for their “20 Gangster Songs” including “Chicago,” “Speak Softly Love” and “When You’re Good to Papa, Papa’s Good to You.” “Rain” was the medley that won the second place certificate for AOPi. The medley included “Singing in the Rain” and “I Can See Clearly Now.” “If My Friends Could See Me Now” and ‘I’ were included in the Sigma Al- pha Epsilon’s medley entitled “What If” which captured the second-place frater- nity award. Kappa Deltas and Pi Kappa Phis were given the third place awards with “Trish Medley’’ and ‘Westward Ho,” respectively. Alpha Xi Delta also participated with “Dreams” along with Phi Mu and its “Run for the Roses” and Sigma Kappa and its “Medley of the ‘40s.” Greg Goatley was the master of cere- monies, and Jim Brown of the communi- cations and theatre department, Mrs. James Eversoll of the music department and Dr. DeWayne Mitchell and counsel- or education were the judges. Dara Truesdell and Jim England pro- vided intermission entertainment nie with Debbie Lanham, Mike Bochenko, Valerie Timmons, Marla Tharp and Daryl Hancock. A faculty tea was prepared Wednesday morning in the Faculty House. Each so- rority and fraternity sent a representa- ays and all faculty members were invit- ed. A Greek Week activity which required a lot of grit and determination was Thursday’s tug-of-war contest held be- hind Pearce Ford. Participants clad in faded jeans, worn shirts and old shoes had to pull their opposition across a six-foot ditch filled with water. The sorority winners were Sigma Kappa, with Phi Mu placing second and Alpha Omicron placing third. The Kappa Sigmas won the fraternity division with Alpha Kappa Psi and Al- pha Gamma Rho placing second and third, respectively. An all-Greek mixer capped off Thurs- day’s events at the C.L. Cutliff Building from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. The week ended with an Awards Ban- quet on Friday night at the Bowling Green Country Club. Awards were given to the winners of the events, and special awards such as the Reed Morgan Award and a Scholastic Award were given. The Reed Morgan Award is based on academic, athletic and community achievement and was given to Lambda Chi Alpha. Sigma Nu won the scholas- tic award. — VICKI BAGWELL — J. Burton A ’20s gangster routine that consisted of both dance and song guided the Lambda Chis to a first place finish in Spring Sing. Alpha Delta placed first in the sorority competition with a presentation enti- tled, “Sweet Melody.” Each Greek organization has its own way of pre- paring for the tug-of-war. While the Sigma Chis prefer trees for practice, the AGRs use tractors and other machinery to test their heaving strength. as — L. Wright A five-minute break from the music at the dance marathon on March 25 gave sophomore Ron Smith a chance to recharge his energy with help from spectator Reidy Ingram. Hoola hooping and the limbo dance also broke the monotony. SE. — D. Gutherlandl 289 Greek Week 1977 290 Organizations JOINING IN There’s little spare time aside from classes, work, social life and study, but a large portion of students elect to put their time into campus organizations. One girl joined the Jazz Ensemble to keep her “lip in shape.” Another mem- ber joined to get more exposure to music. They joined for different reasons but the goal for practice and performances is mutual, according to member Jeff Janksy. “In this band all the players are more professional and proncienta Jansky said. “I plan to go into music education and the exposure in playing in an ensem- ble will help me handle groups.” The Miss America pageant it may not be, but none-the-less exciting is Delta Omicron’s Mr. Music pageant. The spring event was structured so the contestants had to perform a talent act other than musical. En- trants were male students and faculty of the music department. The honor society also ushered the Fine Arts series and other musical events on campus. Millie Dixon said the biggest advan- tage in JOUMn Eye le Omicron was the togetherness she experienced. “It’s im- portant to be able to have someone to talk to about my field,” she said. Sandy Rogers, the organization’s president, aa an advantage for her was to see “how music fulfills our lives. It’s — L. Wright One of five trumpet players in the Jazz Ensemble, junior Mark Temple rehearses weekly for the band’s major performance each semester. Most of the trombone, saxophone, flugohorn, percussion and bass players are music majors. Jazz Ensemble: (Front row) P. Lombard, D. Jackson, R. Brumley, B. Tucker, M. Bell. (Gecond row) H. McKee, J. Roark, T. Collins, R. Cline, J. Stites. (Third row) M. Temple, S. Clark, L. Dillard, J. Jansky, K. Johnson, D. Mims. (Fourth row) D. Dor- ris, M. Cunningham, J. Jones, R. Kidder. (Back row) Mr. E. Alford. made my standards a lot higher musical- ly,” she said. Celebrities are rare on campus, but Phi Mu Alpha fraternity was honored in the fall by seeing a celebrity with whom they had something in common. Pianist Van Cliburn was in concert in early December, and the Phi Mu Alpha member was presented with an apprecia- tion award by the local chapter. A program on classical music was planned to air over a local radio station in the spring, according to chapter presi- dent Dennis Preston. Preston said the members selected the recorded musical arrangements and conducted interviews. The oom-pah-pahs of shiny tubas are getting softer as the Tuba Ensemble uses the once neglected instrument at con- certs featuring jazz and pop selections, member Jim Morgan said. The campaign is a 20-year-old nation- wide effort to spotlight the potential of the tuba as a Wag instrument, according . to member Keith Campbell. He said the group practices two to three hours weekly. “We enjoy perform- ing because there’s not much pressure. You learn to listen better and know your horn.” Frisbees soared through Diddle Arena Nov. 15 as thousands awaited a concert by Barry Manilow. Up the hill a small- er audience Beate the Percussion Ensemble concert. “There were quite a lot of people there,” said drummer Donnie Johnson. “The audience doesn’t know what a per- cussion ensemble is, and they’re fasci- nated,” Johnson said. Bill Carrel, the only non-percussion major, said the ensemble is a good op- portunity for students to improve their percussion techniques. “Performing helps you overcome a fear and we get compliments on the hard work me hours we put into it,” Carrel added. (continued on page 292) “Performing helps you overcome a fear, and we get compliments on the hard work and hours we put into it.” — Bill Carrel, Percussion Ensemble Tuba Ensemble: (Front row) J. Eaves, J. Roark, W. Sanders, K. Campbell, K. Vinson. (Second row) D. Devore, L. Stofer, B. Hugh, H. Hamilton, R. Jenkins, B. Maples. (Back row) J. Stites, R. Goolsby, T. Stites, D. Martin, R. Whitmer, and J. Morgan. Percussion Ensemble: (Front row) J. Shrode, M. Spenneberg, W. Carrel. (Second row) L. Lloyd, K. Brown, E. Alford, D. Johnson. (Back row) R. Kidder and J. Neal. Delta Omicron: (Front row) Q. Payton, M. Dixon. (Back row) P. Page, D. Sego, | Phi Mu Alpha: (Front row) D. Preston, L. Bush. (Second row) D. Peters, M. K. Abbott, B. Collett, K. Best, P. Pratt, S. Rogers, C. Goodrum, J. Cagle, K. Dunn, J. Godfrey, L. Mosser, B. Howard. (Back row) J. Malone, K. Satterfield Adams, K. Pratt, D. Kemp and P. Stanton. and T. Baker. 291 Organizations 292 Marching Band JOINING UNS cont Formations of note After they surround the football field the halftime buzzer roars. The players clear the field. There is one _ brief silent moment. Then the announcer’s voice comes across the loud speaker. “Western is proud to present its Big Red Band.” Marching onto the field in near perfect form, they begin their halftime performance. What the fans don’t realize is that what looks natural takes weeks of prac- tice which produces professional half- time entertainment. According to band members, they practice five to six hours a week. Their job begins the Saturday before fall se- mester regictration. Along with their music they also have drill Braces to learn. Of 170 members, 113 are non-music majors. Many have been in a marching band since junior high. “I don’t know what it would be like to not be in the band,” said Kathy Woodford, a junior from Paris. “I would be lost without it.” According to Daryl Hancock, a sopho- more from Hopkinsville, it “gets into your blood.” Of course, habit isn’t the only reason for becoming a band member. “It gives me something to do in the afternoons,” said Hancock. “It is also an excellent op- portunity to meet people.” Band members practice and perform in cold weather as well as warm and in wet as well as dry for only one-half hour of credit. “I feel it should be more than a half hour credit,” said Miss Woodford. “Sometimes I think it should be listed under physical education with all the ex- ercise we get.” “The only disadvantage that I can think of is maybe a cold when you are out in the rain or cold weather,” said Karen Johnson, a senior music major from Lafayette, Tenn. Miss Johnson who has been drum major at WKU for two Practices often began with members working with- out their instruments, rehearsing the formations along with twirlers, flag corp and field command- ers. They often started in one spot and progressed to the football field when director Dr. Kent Camp- bell gave the signal. — B. Coffey “Sometimes I think it should be listed under physical education with all the exercise we get.” — Kathy Woodford peer said she and Gwenda Willingham, er co-worker, practice between eight and 10 hours a week including band practice. The musicians in the band aren't the only ones who are experienced band members. WKU’s twirlers, Tina Lewis, Betty Thompson and Tara Gamble, have received several honors in their field. All three are members of the United States Twirling Association (U.S.T.A) and have studied ae eight, 10 and 12 years, respec- tively. The twirlers practice six to eight hours a week. Helping WKU’s band become an asset is the Sie corp which practices nine to 10 hours a week. “The flag corp adds color to the band,” said Jeanie Montgomery, a freshman member from Winchester. Although the band didn’t travel far- ther than Cookeville, Tenn., they gave a lasting impression to those who came to WKU football games. Tina Napier, a sophomore from Bowling Green com- ments, “We set a good example to those who aren't familiar with WKU.” — VICKI BAGWELL — CM. Schmitt A little extra action with his tongue heps sopho- more Monte Young as he plays the drums in an early fall practice. Band members rehearsed music and drilled four times each week. A match-up between the formation and the music at the Akron football game was appreciated b Barry Manilow fans. Director Dr. Kent er pel said the band played one of the soloist’s most pop- ular recordings, “I Write the Songs.” Shadows transform field commander Karen John- son and flute and clarinet players of the “Big Red Marching Band” into “bigger than life” forms while the students perform at halftime. — J. Burton Taking a pause that hopefully refreshes is Mark McChesney, a senior from Bowling Green. The music minor said that he has been involved with a marching band for three years of college and three years bE high school. ASO ES — B. Rogers e fe wae ee 2, Phebe — D. Gibson A banner becomes a wrap for flag corp member Robbie Young as she pauses during an afternoon drill. The girls practiced with the band in addition to separate rehearsal sessions at other times. 293 Marching Band 294 Organizations JOINING IN... R £22 RE, Sr Co Pe deal Advertisements in the College Heights Herald announced the initiation ceremo- ny and meetings of Phi Eta Sigma, fresh- man honor fraternity, to the student body as well as to the 87 members. Homecoming morning, new members who earned at least a 3.5 gpa as freshmen were inducted into the Pe oeniee before the parade and football game. Earlier in the semester, Dr. Carl Kell, a member of the speech and theatre de- partment who wrote articles about the Ford-Carter debates, spoke to the society about his project. “Members are inducted on scholastic merit; their initial goals have been aca- demic,” said president John Gover. Inside the doctors’ cafeteria at a lo- cal hospital hung original art pieces with price tags and the artist’s signature in view. Art Guild members displayed their work at Bowling Green-Warren Co. Hos- pital and at shows downtown, according to member Bob Love. “The Art Guild is not like any other organization,” Love said. “It helps you individually and it helps the school through our advertising of WKU on trips we take.” Love said the members are striving to eo ee : ile WED O Wifoy ep MO MR ANIC WHR — M. Lyons Rounding her mouth for an “O” sound, junior Sheila Harlow watches Madrigal Singers’ director Jim Jones. The 12-member audition sale per- forms popular songs, movie songs and light songs with nonsense words. sell their work and the Guild coaches them on channels to use. They don’t use a piano to cover the flat notes they sometimes hit, but the Madri- gal Singers are a close-knit group, and aren’t embarrassed when someone hits a clinker. “We just use a pitchpipe which is very good for ear training,” said Mike Dunn, a four-year member. “More than any choral group we are sensitive to the sounds around us and we feel free to criticize each other.” Dunn said the singers rehearse five hours each week on difficult contempo- rary chamber works. Another singer, Penny Pratt, said the Madrigals are an audition group. “It’s kind of a pride thing, an honor,’ she said. Parties are more than recreation and refreshments for the Student Honors Organization. “You can encourage the intellectual community by giving parties,” said president Jim Holland. “It’s good for people interested in learning to meet each other because they usually know a little bit about a lot of things; that’s the crux of it.” Holland said the organization pro- vides a forum for people to discuss issues “We extend our learning beyond the classroom and get into the UN gaara Erp nie ei field.” — Rose Davis, Graduate Library Science Student Association national films,” the president added. “A faculty member familiar with the coun- try told us how the film portrayed the culture of the country.” Librarians still reprimand noisy pa- trons, but staying informed about trends in the field takes some time too, accord- ing to members of the Graduate Library Science Student Association. Member Rose Davis said the organiza- tion brings graduate students together to share ideas, problems and questions. “We extend our learning beyond the classroom and get into the field. “We attend state and national conven- tions to keep track of current trends like the closing of the card catalog,” Miss Davis said. (continued on page 296) Madrigal Singers: (Front row) J. Jones, M. Daniel, S. Scott. (Second row) D. Ruggles, S. Harlow, P. Pratt, D. Sego, E. Tate, S. Harris, M. Dunn. (Back row) J. Shadowen, R. Buford and B. Howard. five Phi Eta Sigma officers: (Front row) D. Ralston, C. Wade, B. Bretz. (Back row) J. Gover, J. Miller and J. Sagabiel. Art Guild: (Front row) J. Reiss, S. Hunt, R. Os- borne. (Second row) M. Green, C. Bush, B. McDan- iel. (Back row) S. Calloway, B. Love, S. Carder, B. Merrill and J. Hill. Student Honors Organization: (Front row) Dr. J. Baker, J. Holland, M. Trask, B. Bow, J. Grover. (Second row) R. Jackson, K. Pawley, K. Vanmeter, N. Durbin, W. Benson, J. Mesker. (Back row) A. Logan, D. | Teme incen, J. Travis, R. Norris, D. Davis, W. Booth, K. Marcroft, K. Shay, L. Mead, W. Samiee af. =z Furlong. Graduate Library Science Student Association: (Front row) N. Sims, R. Davis. (Back row) M. Henderson, B. ae Fleming, Z. Grant, R. Moon, M. Ferris, M. Mitchell, S. Hunt, C. Sowards, Dr. R. Smith and R. Van Boduen. | 295 Organizations | A ee a JOINING IN on: Reasons to join the Bowling Club are not hard to find, but members have trou- ble agreeing on them. Member Brenda Carter said the club provided a means of announcing up- coming bowling tournaments, while Annette McKinney said it offered ex- perience and knowledge about bowl- ing competition. Miss McKinney said each person pays for his accommodations on road trips, which she thinks is a disadvantage. Asked why she joined, Miss Carter re- plied, “Because I enjoy bowling and I thought it would help me more to under- stand what's going on.” The sun has been up for a while as dozens of students load inexpensive backpacks. They're not filled with the bare essentials needed for a hike in the mountains, but with textbooks for a 9:10 class. “It’s not very popular in this part of the country,” said Jerry Ralph, a mem- ber of the Backpacker’s Club. He said it takes a certain type of person to go out and backpack. The club’s purpose, according to Ralph is “to bring people together around the campus who are interested in backpacking with varying degrees of skill, and learn from each other.” The club made trips to Mammoth Cave and part of the Appalachian Trail in the Smoky Mountains. “We want to get people who know what's going on instead of those who shoot a white handkerchief sticking out of a back pocket for a deer’s tail,” said Robert Neely, Gun Club member. Neely said education is a main concern of the club and work toward the goal began with plans to sponsor a Hunter Safet Conservation program. The Na- tional Rifle Association would fund the program, and participants would receive certification after learning how to handle themselves with firearms. To shoot trap and skeet, the club vis- ited the Jefferson Gun Club, the Sports- man’s Club and Wildcat Hollow. Refreshments, guest speakers and conventions aren’t guaranteed with membership to the Karate Club. “All you can promise is a good workout in the style of karate,” according to James Pick- ett, a four-year member. Pickett said the club meets three times Gun Club: (Front row) A. Bevarly, R. Neely, B. Bristow, L. Riggs, M. Hankle, T. Cooper. (Second row) W. Zoglmann, D. Tucker, B. McEuen, R. Combest, R. Dillman, Sager, B. Carman. (Back row) M. Blincoe, W. Phelps, R. Wheeler, B. Smith, B. Speakman, M. Johnson, D. Selby and G. Brooks. Fencing Club: (Front row) C. Bush, S. Zeidler, V. Holway, S. Johnson, M. Burnette, D. Bush, S. Buck. (Second row) B. Crider, T. Steele, G. Mayo, E. Bowen, A. Faller, B. McDaniel, T. Hale, J. Langley, T. Stone. (Back row) J. Woosley, M. Morris, A. Soellner, D. Faller, R. Maxham, E. Monroe, D. Faller, A. Bush. . Guinn and a week for workouts and each semester’s lessons begin with basic exercises. “You never waste time on basics,” the senior said. ‘The more you go over the basics, the better you learn it; you’re sharpening what you know.” Member Jeff McCelvey said the club is more like a class than a club. “Master Henry Chai knows what he’s teaching and can get it across. His authority makes you want to work out,” he said. Instructor Master Henry Chai said the club placed third in green belt competi- tion at the first Tack Won Do Tourna- ment in Nashville in September. The college fencers don’t swing from chandeliers like the heroes in late- night movies, but Fencing Club member Candy Bush said the sport is rather dramatic, nonetheless. The sophomore said the club meets weekly for a two-hour session for begin- ners as well as an advanced group. “It’s an individual sport; you need an opponent, but not a team,” Miss Bush said. “Fencing has been called physical chess. It requires skill and agility, but it’s a mental game too. You're trying to outwit your opponent in what used to be a life and Heath struggle.” Her father Arthur Bush is the club’s adviser and he said the students compete regularly at Amateur Fencers’ League of America sponsored meets. (continued on page 298) McKinney. Bowling Club: (Front row) B. Carter, A. McKinney, J. Matthews, J. Johnson, N. A roll-off for Bowling Club members was necessary to pick a team to Williams, C. White, V. Wilson, T. Potts. (Gecond row) G. Walden, D. Holden, C. represent the university in a February tournament. Memb Atchley, K. Owen, C. Hale, M. Martin, A. Lewis, J. Lee. (Back row) W. Holloman. _ keeps score for fellow bowlers. Backpackers Club: (Front row) J. Ralph, J. Meacham, J. Gross, M. Aune and W. : fs i | “Fencing has been called physical chess.” — Candy Bush, Fencing Club Karate Club: (Front row) J. Pickett, H. Chai, E. Mosley, J. McCelvey. (Second row) R. James, D. Brown, M. Smith, C. Thomas, R. Wilkey, S. Ashby. (Third row) S. Turner, T. Padgett, R. Poling, J. Marshall, M. Lawson, D. Grizzle. (Back row) T. Furlong, R. Smith A. Tompkins, M. Wallace and S. Morgan. er Mary Goff — T. Dekle , 297 Organizations 298 Organizations JOINING IN... Encouraged by cheers and yells from spectators in the stands, the last athlete crossed the finish line.- The athletes were participants in the annual Special Olympics at Bowl- ing Green High School, and many of the spectators were Recreation Club members. President Jo Anna Shipley said the club helps organize and recruit volun- teers for the May event. The Olympics give the children the chance to compete like normal children according to member Marla Tharp. “It gives them the opportunity to be them- selves,” she said. The club also sponsored the annual Pet Fair in April and donated the profits to the Kentucky Special Olympics. Miss Shipley also said the club’s aim is to “provide services for the communi- ty. It’s not just a fun and games organiza- tion and not just a service organization either,” she added. The recreation major recommends the club to recreation majors, minors and those in areas of concentration. “I wish more people would join. It would make the club stronger,” ae said. “But it would help them more than the club,” she added. Shooting the rapids is not exactly the case with the annual Veterans On Cam- pus canoe race, but the 12-mile race be- gan on a crowded Warren County stream and ended with a picnic-style chicken and baked beans dinner. Sue Osborne, secretary of the club, said anybody could enter the contest, and added that the only restrictions were that three people had to be in each canoe. One of the occupants also had to be a girl, Miss Osbor ne said. Other activities sponsored throughout the year included a fall hayride, an intra- mural volleyball team, Homecoming dance, a camp-out, spaghetti night and a bingo night. Tom Osborne said the group has a membership fee and also raises money for activities through projects. He added that one money-making project was a booth at the Southern Kentucky Fair. Osborne also said he joined the orga- nization because it helped him adjust to college after being in the armed services for a period. “Tt did a lot for me,” he said. “When veterans come back to college they feel old. There are also people (in the club) who know where jobs are and how to get them,” he added. Every dorm room was filled in the fall, and keeping 4,950 students happy was the major endeavor for Interhall Council. To get ideas about activities that would entertain residents, the council conducted a student-hall interest survey, a faculty-staff interest survey and an open house survey. Homecoming activities, a Western night at a iocalsnaunted house, a window decorating contest at Halloween and a aga) tournament were sponsored by the council. Specialty weeks with themes such as Wild Western Week, A Disney Daffy- ness Week and a Roaring Twenties Week were featured by the council. According to Edna Duggins, the council can do more for students than plan activities. “For one thing the students tell the dorm officers what we need,” she said. “We can give people on the Hill first- hand information about what is needed in the dorms.” Freezing temperatures and snow didn’t keep Sail- ing Club members from storing a wooden Thistle boat donated to the club by Larry and Betsy Bedner. David Danhauer, Joe Powell and adviser Jim Evans moved the boat into Smith Stadium. — B. Coffey Serving on the council is not manda- tory for Rall officers, but Miss Duggins said she wanted to be a member. “When I went to the meeting and saw everyone working together for the re- sidents, I wanted tc be a part of it,” she said. “I like being involved and having a voice in what is going on,” said Andy Hussey, another council member. “Before I could express ideas but without authority I couldn’t get them enacted.” It was the first semester ever for the Sailing Club and one of the main pro- jects was convincing non-sailors that they were welcome as members. _ “Everybody asks if they have to have sailing experience,” said member David Danhauer. “We are trying to empha- size that they don’t have to; we'll give them that.” Danhauer said two boats were donated ta the club in the fall. “We spent most of the time working on them,” _ said, add- ing that another boat was given to the club in January. For freshman Tim Struttmann the club was something to occupy his week- ends. “I like sailing a lot because my family has two boats. It helps because on the weekends I get bored crazy,” Strutt- mann said. ; (continued on page 300) “We can give people on the Hill first-hand information about what — Edna Duggins, Interhall Council Is needed in the dorms.” Recreation Club: (Front row) C. Gilliam, M. Settle, J. Wittenbraker, C. Holmes, T. Phillips, R. Boyle, M. Wright, C. Holl, J. Shipley, J. Verner. (Second row) L. ee A. Grayson, E. Rodgers, S. Branyon, J. Weimer, C. Gibson, S. Wathen, C. Benassi. (Third row) S. McFarland, S. Bennett, B. Baird, K. Shea, M. Tharp, P. Owen, J. Redd, D. Briggs, P. Back row) Burden, S. Cawthan, Y. Slaiman, M. Lee. ( M. Aune, W. Denham, S. Hendrickson, lewski, B. Scillian, M. Clark, C. Clark, J. W. Tate and T. Bulla. D. Kowa- Shutters, Interhall Council: (Front row) M. Pawley, T. Wallace, D. Bridges, C. Bonnieville, B. Harris, R. Dearen, L. Bauer, D. Griggs, C. Zax, S. Cross, K. Hood, A. Griffith. (Back row) S. Buckner, W. Easley, C. O'Neill, ra King, E. Skrag, C. Stockton, M. Kingrey, A. Cage, E. | Duggins and A. Hussey. | Veterans On Campus: (Front row) L. Kerr, J. Osborne, K. Stillman, G. Oliver. (Second row) L. Beam, N. Stannard, J. McDonald. (Third row) F. Alfieri, E. Cunningham, J. Weaver. (Fourth row) B. Klein, S. Osborne, J. Ransdell. (Fifth row) B. Skellie, T. Padgett, W. Cunning- ham. (Sixth row) J. Hagers, J. Lenn, J. Marshall. (Back row) O. Lady and A. Coad. Sailing mh (Front row) M. Willis, D. Danhauer, T. Struttmann, J. Evans, L. Whalen and J. Powell. 299 Organizations JOINING IN ..... The dissecting kit market is small, but steady as a money-making project for Tri Beta, honorary biology society, ac- cording to president Howard Roberts. “We sell the kits at the beginning of each semester to students in the Sa he classes,” Roberts said. A sense of adventure led the club on several exploration excursions into area caves, Roberts said. “It’s more of a re- creation than anything, but it’s interest- ing to see that life does exist at that point,” he said. The group also traveled to Tennessee to Tech Aqua, a biology station equipped with a fishery station. “Here students can get reinforcement and apply what they've learned,” Roberts vit Stripped of money-saving coupons A balmy late summer evening was perfect weather for a Society of Physics Students cookout. Intense volleyball competition took place while advisers of the organization grilled hamburgers. with its news now history, four tons of newspapers were tossed in green and white striped bins and collected by the Engineering Technology Club for recycling. President Steve Wendt said the bins were placed near dormitories, the li- brary, administration building and Grise Hall. Each 100 pounds collected netted one dollar, and was used to finance field trips. Another project was the publication of a newsletter, Technologist, which con- tains information about the engineering technology programs and updates on former students. Printed once each se- mester, the newsletter is sent to alumni. One day they hope to be treating broken arms, cavities and diseased ani- mals, but for the meantime Alpha Epsi- lon Delta members watch and listen to professionals in medicine, dentistry and veterinarian medicine. Cathy Griffing, a Bowling Green pre- vet student, arn the organization looks good on a student’s record when he ap- plies to professional school. “You get ex- posure through the observation program and trips to various medical schools,” she said. Activities of the international pre- medical honor society included money- making projects and social get-togethers. Raffle tickets were sold to add money ——— Tri Beta: (Front row) D. Reeves, P. Weinert, C. Halcomb, H. Roberts, M. Dixon, J. Yates. (Second row) D. Danhauer, S. Merrill, B. Taylor, F. Morgado, C. Hardin, R. Crawford. (Third row) V. Payne, M. Harvey, E. Talton, D. Ralston, T. Flanigan, M. Rader, S. Tucker. (Fourth row) C. Wear, S. Cross, K. Wilhelmi, L. Smith, J. Markland, E. Burchett, T. Jones (Fifth row) M. Frye, K. Wilson, D. Miles, D. Dunn, J. Winchester, C. Hord, Jr., B. Cobb (Sixth row) P. Jackson, E. Fields, M. Yeiser, J. Clagett, C. Jarboe, V. Ray, L. Wellman. (Seventh row) L. Elliott, M. Keen, J. Roe, L. Johnson, L. Pennisi, R. Miller, T. Dahl. (Back row) Dr. Beal, M. Hudnall, R. Davis, G. Boatwright, D. Higgins, B. Battle, P. Clark, B. Sanders, C. Buchanan and J. Winstead. — L. Gardner 300 Organizations a em to the scholarship fund which sup- “Here students can get reinforcement and apply what they’ve ports members who get into profes- learned.” — Howard Roberts, Tri Beta sional schools. President Ritchie Van Bussum said many students think the organization is only open to pre-med students, but it does accept those in pre-dental and pre- vet programs, Van Bussum said. Working in pairs, members observed three-hour sessions in the emergency room at City-County Hospital as well as at a Glasgow hospital. “We've seen ever- ything from broken legs to sore throats to burns,” the president said. Away from ie bunsen burners, com- pound charts and funny smelling solu- tions in Thompson Complex chemistry department faculty members get to know students in a relaxed atmosphere at the annual picnic sponsored by the Chemistry Club. Society of Physics Students: (Front row) E. Ryan, S. Powell, S. Powell, P. Weinert, J. Markland, J. Parks. ” Attendance by faculty members is (Second row) J. Green, D. Higgins, R. Crawford, D. Taylor, E. Buchanan, III, R. Buchanan, R. Turnmire. usually henween 75 and 85 per cent,” said (Third row) D. Chism, J. Thornton, J. Snodgrass, D. Russell, D. McCrackern, B. Boyken. (Back row) R. president erae (Stent, COREE you Graham, Dr. Fenenlly, C. Evans, A. Gooch and J. Woosley. now your instructors a little better, you = ; | can learn better,” he said. — fi 2 me | Harmon said the club’s membership is yt | , split 50-50 between chemistry majors and pre-professional program majors. Bobbi Battle, a first-year member, said upperclassmen in the club conduct help sessions for freshmen chemistry. “You don’t have to minor or major in chemistry to join; you just need an inter- est in it,’ she added. A new by-law in the Society for Phys- ics Students’ constitution triggered a re- cruiting drive for members, according to [iy | as president Jim Woosley. i. ee = “We're trying to develop a better facul- ae on Li ty-student relationship, and the by-law allows faculty to join the society,” Woos- ley said. : } Part two of this campaign included a aot ee ee oi ey ! perley of individual photographs of } Bec hysics oe and minor. Woosley Alpha Epsilon Delta: (Front row) R. Van Bussum, S. Botts, L. Smith, R. Browning, B. Shockley, C. Francke, said this would enable the faculty to rec- H,. Roberts. (Second row) T. Lacy, K. Stein, L. Oakley, C. Griffing, R. Davis, K. Marsh, R. Crawford, Dr. ognize students they haven't taught. Puckett, R. Ballou. (Back row) D. Schell, E. Brown, C. Jarboe, C. Hardin, Jr., E. Burchett, J. Stokes, Jr. and S. (continued on page 302) Hubbuch. Chemistry Club: (Front row) D. Caudill, R. Crawford, Dr. Reasoner, Z. Barnes, Dr. Engineering Technology Club: (Front row) V. Howell, L. Gottula, S. Pearson, Dr. Wilson. (Second row) W. Fraebel, L. McMillian, T. Rhea, D. Higgins, S. Wendt, D. Ryan, C. Darland. (Second row) R. Graham, J. Longaker, B. Meacham, B. Battle. (Third row) T. Padgett, C. Hardin, T. Anyaegbuna, R. Fowler, R. brown, J. Brodt, A. Williams, J. Lee. (Back row) A. Bush, J. Carr, J. Jackson, B. Lorenz. (Fourth row) D. Storte, J. Roe, R. Hardin, C. Lane, K. Casey. (Back Garner, E. Hill, J. Mandrell, R. Eiler and V. Simon. row) Dr. Craig, Dr. Riley, J. Strode, R. Dillman, Dr. Hartman and B. Lawrence. 301 Organizations 302 Organizations JOINING IN ... Club-sponsored poetry readings and a performance by the Green River Read- ers coupled with the regional convention in April highlighted the year for mem- bers of Sigma Tau Delta, English honor society. According to president A.T. Stephens, membership in the club has no disad- vantages — as long as a person had time to come to meetings. Stephens said the club activities “bring the English faculty and students closer together.” Jeff Howerton echoed Ste- phen’s sentiments. — D. Beauchamp More than one shaving cream pie splattered in the face of Dr. Jim Worthington, agriculture club adviser, at the club’s annual Halloween car- nival in October. “Besides the obvious filler for a resume, the club provides a chance to gain a greater appreciation of English,” the sophomore said. “You also get to meet people who have something in common with you; you both are study- ing English.” Faculty members becoming friends is the best part of Eta Sigma Gamma, ac- cording to president Marilynn Flannery. The graduate student said the health department faculty advises the club. “They're really great,” she said. According to Miss Flannery, the club tried to get students interested in public or school health to participate in the Kentucky Public Health Association and Kentucky School Health Association meetings in the spring. “The club is more social right now,” said vice-president Susan Johnson. “We're trying to get everybody to know everybody in the health department.” Most members of the honorary orga- nization are health and safety, communi- ty health or health education majors, Miss Flannery said. Miss Johnson said the club also tries “to involve nurses because they are part of the health field, too.” The Agriculture Education Club took field trips to learn more about farming but they didn’t visit any farms. Instead, members attended a Farm Progress School in Indiana and planned to attend a Farm Machinery Show and a Young Farmers Convention in Louis- ville in February, secretary Robin Shirley said. An advantage of the club is the chance to get to know the agriculture teachers, member Alfred Mattingly said. According to Miss Shirley, advisers Dr. Dwight Cline and Dr. Jim McGuire have a good relationship with members. Sigma Tau Delta: (Front row) J. Laffoon, P. Goodman, J. James, P. Napier, J. Rausch, J. Bondurant, D. Davis, T. Pan (Second row) J. Flynn, J. Howerton. G. Hottinger, D. Hall, J. Jones, S. Smith, H. Zimmerman an A. Stephens. “They don’t dominate or dictate to us,” she explained. | Two bowl games were sponsored by Phi Mu Epsilon, but the teams compet- “Meetings are half social and half intellectual ” ing weren't football stars. 2 The math honor society sponsored a — Terry Tatum, Phi Alpha Theta math bowl at Warren East High School and one for all state high schools at Western. A picnic, bi-monthly meetings with speakers, two colloquium conducted by visiting professors and a Christmas par- ty were major activities. According to Monica Ash, the meet- ings and lectures are beneficial. “Whether or not you understand the lecture is irrelevant,” she. said. . “It serves as a way to open the door to new understanding.” ii Publishing a book or pamphlet is usu- | ally no easy matter, and Phi Alpha The- | ta, an honors history organization, chose | a challenging task. | - The club planned a student researcher |) | which was scheduled to be completed by ii the end of the spring semester, and a $25 cash prize was awarded for the best his- tory paper submitted by a graduate stu- Agriculture Education Club: (Front row) D. Beals, C. Lucas, K. Lucas, R. Shirley, K. Booher, E. Mills J. dent and an undergraduate. Moore. (Back row) Dr. D. Cline, R. Schlotter, D. Patton, K. Frazier, D. Milliken, A. Mattingly, R. Tipton, Activities for the year consisted pri- O. Lambert, M. Newberry, J. Portman and Dr. J. McGuire. | marily of guest speakers and lecturers on | topics of their specialities. i The 32 members in the club also helped with the work for the high school it history contest which is conducted by the department every spring. “You might say we are the student auxiliary for the history department,” said president Terry Tatum. “We just do what needs to be done.” . Tatum said the organization also gives | people in history a chance to know each ii other. “Meetings are half social and | half intellectual” he said. “We try to = EINE — Ya ETE have one or two students per semester Eta Sigma Gamma: (Front row) L. Gammons, S. Johnson, M. Flanner , 5. Bohnenblust, N. Durbi dR. read papers. (continued on page 304) Biggerstaff. M Sees ae Jeannette, J. Brooks, M. Ash. (Second row) Dr. C. Wells, M. Mus rave, M. Held. (Second row) A. Lescalleet, J. Jones, D. Pendleton, N. Wyatt, J. Koedyker, J. Griffin, R. Cheek, J. Sapp. (Third row) S. Carrico, J. Dawson, J. Wheeler, E. Russell. (Third row) R. Norris, N. Holman, S. Lyons, R. Tatum, W. Beck. (Back Pearson, W. Boyken. (Back row) J. Mulliken, B. Ross, D. Russell, L. Fergu- _— row) A. Stephens, C. Bussey, B. Hedger, L. Ferguson, R. Cooper, W. McChesney son, R. Daugherty and E. Buchanan. and G. Maynard. Phi Mu Epsilon: (Front row) D. Massey, A. Thornberry, N. Kesselring, N. Phi Alpha Theta: (Front row) J. Esche, S. Winlock, V. Pile, D. Walker, M. Wood, S. : ) 303 Organizations il JOINING IN ..... An attempt to examine French from a first-hand point of view characterized the activities of Pi Delta Phi. In the fall semester Dr. William Walls, assistant professor of French, and ex- change student G ary Burkart shared some of the experiences of their travels in France. Spring semester activities included a slide show and speech by Judy Wildman and Western graduate Ruth Halicks. Both worked in France over the summer. “We really haven’t done too much un- til this year,” said president Karen Smith. “I guess the only thing it (the organization) really needs is more in- volvement from the members.” It is usually thought that the only so- cial organizations on a college campus are the fraternities and sororities. The International Club, however, offers stu- dents another social alternative. Besides planning Christmas and Hal- loween parties, the club conducted a tal- ent show and dinner in March. Each member brought a food of his national- ity and shared it with other members. Kelly Shay, a freshman from Ontario, Canada, said she became involved with the club because “I thought it would be a challenge to meet people from other countries.” Because of an officer change at the end of the fall semester, Miss Shay said the club lacked organization, however. “We need to sit down and figure out just what we want to establish with the club,” she added. Another member voiced his admira- tion for the foreign students in the club. “T have a lot of respect for someone who can learn another language well enough “It strikes me that a lot of the foreign to go to another country,” said James Holland, a senior from Bowling Green. students are more intelligent than aver- Pi Delta Phi: K. Smith, J. Wildman, Dr. J. Babcock, R. Raymer and J. Reiss. © i a : TA - age and have a lot to share.” There is no such thing as an ordinary meeting of the Russian Club. Roll is never called and no one reads the minutes. Instead, the group meets for a potluck dinner at the home of adviser ania Ritter. According to Cynthia Smothers, meet- ings aren’t centered around Russian to- pics, but members sample Russian rec- ipes and sometimes sing folk songs. “It gives us a chance to learn about each other when not under the strain of a class,’ Miss Smothers said. She al- so said she enjoys the club and Russian classes because they give her a chance to try out recipes and to learn about Rus- sian customs compared to those in the United States. Member Vida-Jane Mitchell said she enjoys meetings because they help stu- dents become better acquainted, “so we aren't self-conscious about speaking Russian in class.” Learning about another culture is a major advantage of being a German Club member, according to Janetlyn Cooke, club president. ‘You learn that there is more than Bowling Green, Kentucky,” Miss Cooke added. Keith Collie echoed Miss Cooke’s sen- timents about the advantages of the club. “You come into more contact with op- portunities to learn more about trips to Germany and different programs,” he said. According to Miss Cooke, club meet- ings “were kind of a pleasure thing. International Club: (Front row) J. Oiboh, A. Fathed- din, L. Reholon, L. Randolph, K. Shay, R. Castillo, A. Okpala. (Second row) R. Wurster, R. Tatum, K. Rubey, A. Karimi, T. Ndubueze, A. Emejiaka, D. Akerejah, O. DeMorales, A. Baali, S. Constantinou. (Third row) L. Nilssen, B. Bell, M. Afzalan, J. Em- mitt. (Fourth row) Dr. A. Malik, Dr. M. Howe, B. Ronnerman, Y. Agel, V. Tan, A. Young, S. Tong, N. Edoho-Ekett, L. Wu. (Fifth row) O. Theodoulou, J. Holland, Dr. P. Hatcher, Y. Kouzarides, R. Lui, L. 304 Organizations s” Meetings would usually have something to do with German culture.” Club members were involved with a summer studies program with Bregenz, Austria, as well as promoting more stu- dent trips to Europe during fhe summer. Alumni of Sigma Delta Pi Spanish honors organization were treated to a “coffee” at Homecoming, according to member James Holland who said a “cof- fee” is similar to a “tea” except for the beverage. Holland said the organization gives him a chance to get to know others in- terested in the language although he thought the group would speak more Spanish. Adviser Clarice Scarborough said’ the roup has declined in number because ewer students are studying foreign lan- guage across the nation. She said the group is not in danger of extinction, however, because nationwide it is very tightly organized, and its main _purpose is to recognize outstanding Spanish students. The annual initiation meeting for Sigma Delta Pi was planned for spring, she added. (continued on page 306) Volleyball competition also required a little team- work before the game at the International Club eas Menjor Umulap, a junior from Murfrees- oro, N.C. uses a little muscle to raise the net. “You learn that there is more than Bowling Green, Kentucky.” — Janetlyn Cooke, German Club Russian Club: (Front row) J. Cooke, J. Schaffner, L. D. Holmes, M. Zaboronak. (Back row) S. Stewart, Berry, J. Howard, J. Eldred, D. Merrick. (Second V. Mitchell, J. Howard, D. Bond, R. Humphries row) M. Ritter, D. Hoffman, C. Smothers, C. Pine, and D. Warner. row) V. Brown, J. Akers, K. Collie, M. Clark, T. Boykin, K. Little, J. Staley, C. Smothers and V. Mitchell. Sigma Delta Pi: (Front row) N. Sims, L. Poole, F. Simpson. (Back row) Dr. P. Hatcher, C. Scarborough, G. Halcomb, V. Brown, Dr. R. Padilla, J. Holland and i German Club: (Front row) T. Baldwin, L. Turok, J. Cooke, L. Smith, L. Berry. (Back | Dr. C. Brown. | | 305 Organizations JOINING IN... Active in the local and national repub- lican campaigns of Sen. Howard Baker and President Gerald Ford, College Re- publicans worked very closely with War- ren County republicans by manning the headquarter’s phones and canvassing the local registered voters. Members J. Lewis Moseley, Marsha Dunn, Becky Rueff, Janet Hawkins and Jerry Johnson traveled to Louisville one eekecn to staff the Jefferson County headquarters. The Western students stuffed envelopes and answered tele- phones for the campaign there. On campus, the group sponsored the Walter Baker speech and sold bum- per stickers. Fame came to the campus chapter of Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA) when it was chosen best in the nation at the national conven- tion in October. Fame doubled when PRSSA member Dan Pelino was elected to a national of- ran — D. Gibson California sunshine, an award and sightseein awaited Sigma Delta Chi members at the nationa convention in Los Angeles, Calif. Edna Duggins enjoys a quiet moment on the beach. fice at the convention. Western was also selected as the site of the PRSSA Regional Caucus over Ohio State, Michigan State and Pur- due Universities. The theme of the March caucus was “Hands on Experience,” and its purpose was to give those attending a chance to actually work with the equipment in- volved in seminar discussion, according to one member. A newly formed campus organization, Young Democrats got off the ground with a spring raffle. The group sold chances for a ride in Sen. Frank Miller’s hot air balloon, and this served as its main money-maker for the year. Like a few other campus clubs, Young Democrats is not restricted to Western College Republicans: (Front row) J. Moseley, K. Cornell, S. Leucht, M. Dunn, J. Johnson. (Second row) B. Humphrey, L. Horton, C. Robinson, R. Reuff. (Back row) M. Burke, G. Thornton, G. Hiesterman and D. Brown. | 306 Organizations || students. Its membership includes WKU “Gy . | Re iis anc Warren County tecidents, Sixty students tabulated election results from all 48 Warren | according to president Jeff Durham. County precincts and phoned results to New York.” | The group participated in the Carter — Debbie Gibson, Sigma Delta Chi and Natcher campaigns last fall. Alpha Delta Sigma got out and sold themselves this year. | | | The campus chapter of the American Advertising Federation spent most of the fall semester recruiting new members. The group also prepared for entry in the district convention competition. The competition, which was spon- sored by different companies, gave stu- _| dents the opportunity to design a com- plete marketing campaign for a new product with the knowledge that the best entries would actually be used to’pro- mote that product when it is marketed. Using airplanes, station wagons and gs their own feet, Sigma Delta Chi members J pas, covered a lot of terri tory en route to na- a pre tional and regional conventions, Louis- Public Relations Student Society of America: (Front row) R. Blann, M. Thomas, D. Pelino, B. Cortus. ville professional chapter meetings and (Second row) W. McConnell, J. Franklin, D. Anderson, S. Maddox, N. Nahikian, E. Pryor, C. Murphy, M. . money-making projects. Thomas. (Back row) B. Collins, J. Kimbrough and D. Hagan. Members Jim Siwicki, Edna Duggins, Neil Budde, Tom Beesley, Debbie Gib- | son and adviser Jim Highland attended a three-day national convention in Los Angeles, Calif., where Western’s chapter of the professional fraternity for future journalists was named one of the na- tion’s top 10. On campus, the fraternity covered the Nov. 2 election for the National News Election Service in New York. President Debbie Gibson said, “Sixty students tab- ulated election results from all 48 War- ren County precincts and phoned results to New York.” A Christmas banquet featured a panel discussion led by Hugh Haynie, Courier- Journal editorial cartoonist, Ralph Ed Graves, commissioner of the department ae a aS ap aay for Local Government and Sandra Early, N WAVE-TV in Louisville. Ey, on a Marya Many iL. ae Clay Book, ee ae ; (Second row) C. Miller, P. Cook, L. Cooper, M. Berryman, J. Durham, D. Newman, S. Held, S. Johnson. peut Bene steels nae Pun enSS (Third row) S. Henry, R. Lacy, B. Shockley, D. Augenstein, D. Witty, E. Coffman, S. Johnson, J. Ladd, J. RY. a4 Eovere elie Spe a pee WIUN- Evans. (Back row) D. Payne, J. Schnapf, B. Harris, K. Share, E. Pearson, T. Fulkerson and M. Alvey. in e€ mass communications an jour- nalism departments. a prezese ame EATER ) ae ih st American Advertising Federation Alpha Delta Sigma: (Front row) R. Sigma Delta Chi: (Front row) D. Buckles, G. Hiesterman, P. Cross, K. Whitson, E. Blann, C Stringer. (Back row) C. Price, T. Thompson, M. Steenbergen, K. Pepe ne R. Vincent, M. Pace. (Back row) K. Steichenoff, D. Pelino, T. Beesley, P. Woodford, M. Robinson, G. Russell and C. Klumb. Hohman, J. Highland, J. Grove, T. Jones, J. Siwicki, G. Kuhl and T. Siwicki. 307 Organizations 308 College Heights Herald JOINING IN .... Inch by inch the pages went together on the light table. From the ad staff to the typesetters to the news staff, the Herald staff worked to make the student newspaper another All-American. The light table in the College Heights Herald office is bare as reporters inter- view student and administrator sources and write copy. Photographers snap shutters for assignments and feature pictures that also tell a story about life at Western. But as editors decide what to use in the next issue, little sheets of paper are clothes-pinned above the light table with rough Senne of each page’s design. The stories come in inch by inch, beat by beat as editors and assistants edit the copy. Meanwhile, all the advertisements have been sold and most have already been sent to the typesetter. The material is reproduced, proofed once more and on its way to the paste-up on the light table. It’s production night in Room 125, Downing University Center and the deadline is creeping closer. Production nights come twice a week. Some went past midnight but the staff didn’t complain as the Herald continued to receive awards. At the April, 1976, meeting of the Ken- tucky Intercollegiate Press Association (KIPA), the Herald garnered the Sweep- stakes Award and was awarded second place honors by the Society of Profes- sional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi in Ads, cutlines, copy, headlines and BeOreereP RE al- ways require approval by other sta thir opinion on a cutline for a January issue. members. Jan ee and Alfina Mami asked Linda Sanders for a — J. Burton News staff meetings brought Herald writers and editors together to discuss story assignments and ideas for possible features. The meetings were scheduled twice a week several days ahead of each production deadline. the Kentucky-Indiana-Illinois region. Neil Budde, editor for both 1976 se- mesters, said the student newspaper was also rated “All American” by the Associ- ated Collegiate Press for the ninth and tenth semester. Working on the staff still seemed to be one of the closest and best places to get experience in writing, editing, advertis- ing and photography. Staff member Jim Grove said he took — L. Wright ——————— es —“—s s—s—SO—. what he learned in class and applied it in his sports writing. “It’s a unique experience,” Grove said. “You're learning, but not in a class- room situation.” Advertising manager Dale Whitfield said she learned about the administrative end of her field in addition to the aspects of ad layout and design. Once reporter, arts editor and copy editor, and editor for the spring semes- ter, Judy Wildman said ie has done some reporting and editing as well as administrative work involved with a pa- per. “It’s easier for me to evaluate my strong and weak points,” the French and journalism major said. Asked about the pros and cons of working on the paper, Grove said he got to know people. “We're accused of being an ‘elite’ group of people that don’t like to associate, but I don’t feel so,” the West Palm Beach, Fla. junior said. Both Miss Whitfield and Grove said the work is time-consuming. “You really have to budget your time,” Grove said. “It cuts into a lot of your time, but the advantages outweigh the disadvantages.” Reporter Greg Kuhl said the spring staff increased and the transition of two new editors was a smooth one. “We keep getting done earlier and ear- lier,” Kuhl said. “The more efficient we get, the more it’s like a newspaper in the real world.” Beat by beat and inch by inch the staff continued the award winning publica- tion. There were news stories as well as editorials on age-old campus policies; there were new pictures and new feature stories on personalities. And on each production night every inch of copy hit the light table in Room 125, Downing University Center. — CONNIE HOLMAN AND JEFF HOWERTON (1 Bb, RESEERD ifs funny agit od — J. Burton Staff meetings were led by editor Judy Wildman, managing editor Richard Halicks and assistant peeine editor Linda Sanders to give reporters a sense of direction of the paper since most fad indi- vidual assignments. A copy desk started on a trial basis in the fall became standard procedure in the spring. Linda Sanders, Betsy Ashcraft, Richard Halicks, Roger Stinnett and Teresa Mears edit stories and write headlines before production. ig ofatr — L. Wright Story assignments were Linda Sanders’ main re- sponsibility as assistant managing editor. With a budget of story ideas not yet taken, Miss Sanders asks editorial assistant Bill Wolfe to take some of them for the next issue. — L. Wright Photo assignments for Herald advertising were the main topic at the second spring semester photogra- phers meeting in the Talisman office. Advertising manager Dale Whitfield explained the ad staff's needs and deadlines. — T. Eblen Fall Staff Editor Neil Budde Managing Editor Alfina Mami News Editor Richard Halicks Opinion Page Editor Terry Cash Copy Editor Judy Wildman Sports Editor Clyde Huffman Arts Editor Richard Ribar Photo Editor Donnie Beauchamp Advertising Manager Dale Whitfield Photography Staff Lewis Gardner Pat Price Steve Benson Beth Rogers Bob Coffey David Frank Tom Dekle Ron Hoskins Jim Burton Mark Lyons Harold Sinclair Spring Staff Editor Judy Wildman Richard Halicks Linda Sanders Managing Editor Assistant Managing Editors Don Bruce Assistant to the Editor Alfina Mami Editorial Assistants Teresa Mears Bill Wolfe Sports Editor Roger Stinnett Arts Editor Richard Ribar Cartoonist Mark Comfort Copy Editors Betsy Ashcraft Pam Eldridge Don Minton Advertising Manager Dale Whitfield Reporters David Crumpler Don White Mary Tougher Bryan Armstrong Sara-Lois Kerrick Mark Schaftlein Cindy McCaleb Jim Grove Greg Kuhl Tom Eblen Gary Moore 309 College Heights Herald 310 Talisman JOINING IN cn: Going for Changing a 53-year-old tradition is not an ae task, but during most of the summer of 1976, members of a yearbook committee appointed by President Dero Downing discussed the possibility of changing the 1977 Talisman to a fall de- livery book. The 1976 Talisman, scheduled for dis- tribution in late April, had been returned for reprinting. Administrators, advisers and staff members believed the printing De eae — D. Gibson four to be below acceptable standards. Al- though the 1976 book won a record third straight Trendsetter from Columbia Berolacne Press Association, the second rinting did not arrive on campus until ee September. By then, the committee had recom- mended that the 1977 Talisman delivery date be changed to August, giving the staff the opportunity to publish a book with an entirely new personality. For the first time, a Talisman would cover a complete school year. In addition, volume 54 would include material from the spring and summer of 1976 which the spring delivery Talisman had not included. As a result, the editors set aside pages for two graduation stories, two Staff meetings weren’t always well attended be- cause of schedule snags, but a Sunday night combi- nation meeting make-your-own-sundae party got perfect attendance. Kathy Whitson, Donna Backles and Harold Sinclair used toppings, pecans and ba- nanas to individualize their desserts. Fewer than 93 hours before Christmas, the staff was still working on the first deadline — 200 pages. Vicki Bagwell took a nap before finishing six pages of the Greek section. Connie Holman gave in to a nap three hours later. — J. Burton a baseball and spring sports stories, and pages for both 1976 and 1977 Greek Week activities. It was also necessary to follow up on the nation’s summer bicentennial cele- bration and the students’ participation in it. The editors decided to flash back on those past events and update fresh mate- rial. The 1977 theme, ‘Flashback and Update,” was born. The year challenged the staff's creativ- ity. As it passed quietly by with few con- troversial issues on campus, the editors stressed adding depth to ordinary topics. Stories in previous books were thought too general, so a new dimension was added with a look at a freshman’s first weekend home, a story about a stu- dent miner and a consumer report on the Long hours together as staff members easily be- came close friendships for Becky Blair and Donna Buckles as well as for other members of the staff. It was the third year the two had worked together. — L. Wright Input from adviser Roger Loewen, chief photogra- pher Jim Burton and editor Donna Buckles directed the staff meetings when deadline schedules were reviewed and the staff brainstormed for more Trendsetter ideas. cost of college. One of the staff photog- raphers shuttled across Europe to do a picture story on Western students in the exchange program at Montpel- lier, France. Although the staff was significantly smaller than those of the past, the exper- ience of the members played a huge role in making the deadlines smoother. The move of the final deadline from mid- March to the first of June eased the pres- sure during the late spring months. As- sistance from College Heights Herald writers and journalism students also helped ease the work load. — ROGER LOEWEN Editor of the Greek and organizations sections, Vicki Bagwell wrote most of he Greek stories once staff members had accumulated the needed list of activities from each sorority and fraternity. Writer for much of the women’s sports section, Robin Vincent attended women’s basketball games and interviewed players, coaches and fans. At a January game Miss Vincent was a guest commenta- tor for WKYU with announcer Tom Beesley. — L. Wright — J. Burton Consideration of a negative’s quality and content usually took more than one opinion. Steve Benson and Mark Lyons critique negatives before deciding which ones to print. Both photesrshers had photo stories in the Herald and Talisman. — L. Wright 311 Talisman | 312 Organizations JOINING IN .... The Church of Christ Student Center has two adoption programs. In one, college students “adopt” grandparents; they get groceries for them and spend one or two hours a week with them, according to campus minister Bruce Breegle. In turn, the college students are “adopted” by families at Greenwood Park Church of Christ. The families pre- pare meals for the students once or twice a week, Breegle said. “Everything we do is study-oriented because everyone needs exposure to the word of God.” Breegle said. Afternoon Bible study periods were added on Mon- days and Tuesdays in the spring semes- ter. An open devotional was conducted on Tie evenings, and Soul Talks were conducted on Tuesdays and Thurs- days for the dormitories. Sherry Clark said it is sometimes hard Maranatha Center: (Front row) M. Caulk, E. Bryant, S. Lewis, A. Dodd, D. Thornton, P. Thornton, M Rowlett, R. Davis, C. Taylor, M. Ferguson, R. Abell, R. Mason, B. Hough, J. Upton. (Second row) R. E Webb, L. Somervill, J. Chick. (Third peepee P. Moretz, E. Taylor, J. Upton, B. Dennis, K. Logsdon, P. Martin, R. Smith, C. Land, P. Stanton. row) J. Muffett, D. Collins, M. Beliles, M. Caulk, C. Stinnett, G. Futch, J. Chamberlin, E. Logsdon, G. Martin, J. Lewis, S. Carder, L. Bartley, (Bac Taylor and F. Johnson. to find time to study for her college classes, but the center has a library and study room. Breegle said the center is a place where the “kids get to be together.” They planned to Fave a meal together once a month on Sunday. Twenty-five to 30 students went on retreats to “get to know each other well,” according to Breegle. The winter retreat was in February at Land Between the Lakes, and an April retreat was at Cumberland Falls. Ben Jones, active in the mission in- fluence in European countries, was the speaker at the Christmas banquet at Across the street from mass fall registration in Did- dle Arena, members of Marcneie Center find a grassy setting appropriate for a sing-a-long. Visi- tors from the Paducah center were in Bowling Green in late August to help the campus center start the semester's activities. row) R. Mason, D. Abney, M. Park Mammoth. A pioneer as a campus organization, the Latter Day Saint Student Association used the same idea to introduce itself to the student body with a homecom- ing float. The covered wagon float with the theme “Pioneers of America’s Future” won the Red Towel Award, according to Holly Rochelle, queen candidate for the group. “We have meetings once a week to study the Bible and talk,” Miss Rochelle said. “It’s just like any other church meeting. The members don’t have to be Western students, but we do meet on campus to discuss things to help us in school and everyday life.” Member Karen Gill said the group already knew each other and had wanted to form an organization for quite some time. “We want to reach out and tell people about the organization. Maybe Home- - coming helped,” she added. Besides continuing to offer a number of concerts, speakers, movies and var- ious other fellowships, members of the Maranatha Christian Center tried to change their overall image on campus. “There are always a lot of rumors that come from a lack of understanding,” said member Mark Caulk. “We have tried to open ourselves up and show them (the students) that we are just ordinary peo- ple who love the Lord.” Sponsoring the performances of music groups Praise and Hope of Glory as well as those of singer Harvey Jett and comedian-author Mike Warnke were the group’s major projects. Although the group is technically an organization, it may be classified falsely, according to Gary Futch. “First off, it’s not an organization. What we are pressing is total commit- ment to the Lord, not an organization,” i | | 5 iasere..- mp) vv T “We have tried to open ourselves up and show them (the students) that we are just ordinary people who love the Lord.” — Mark Caulk, Maranatha Center Futch said. Caulk added, “I urge people to give their life to Jesus and I think it is im- portant to have a fellowship. If this is the fellowship that the Lord is willing for them I urge them to come here. If not, then they should go to anoth- er fellowship.” rozen water pipes and meters didn’t keep members of the Wesley Foundation from serving lunches as usual in January. The volunteer student cooks and dish- washers carried water from the Newman Center across the street, and served food on paper plates, according to member eee rc SUN Church of Christ Student Center: (Front row) B. Lawrence, B. Breegle, C. Billingsley, J. Hodges, D. Harbin, W. Rader, D. Harbin, S. Mattingly, J. Wix. (Second row) S. Kirby, C. White, C. Smith, T. Witty, C. Beeler, L. Jernigan, G. Beeler, D. Cole. (Third row) P. Williams, M. Spears, G. Howlett, B. Ragland, K. Seaton, S. Kirby, J. Hall, H. Seaton. (Fourth row) C. Campbell, M. Wald, P. Stewart, S. Clark, M. Thomas, W. Davenport, T. Hammer, A. McBride, R. Emerson, C. Wells. (Back row) K. Bull, L. Baker, D. Willis, D. Neil Pond. Meals cost 75 cents and the menu selection has everything from chicken pot pies to “Imperial Rolls,” a Viet- namese dish. Pond said there are 30 active members who participate in Sunday services and discussions on subjects that apply to col- lege life. “We don’t keep rosters and have a set schedule for people; it’s more of a leisure thing with rooms with television and stereo,” the member said. “The people there are like high school chums you've known forever.” (continued on page 314) Willis, D. Price, D. Vice, K. Price, G. Raymer and K. Martin. Wesley Foundation: (Front row) J. Ryan, N. Pond, L. Newman. (Second row) D. Newman, T. Jenkins, L. Campbell. (Third row) R. Lyons, K. Gossman, J. Shrode. (Fourth row) D. O’Banion, C. Langford. (Back row) W. McGee, M. Inabnitt, A. Lewis, J. Thorn- ton, R. Williams, R. Browning, D. Spradlin and B. Ogles. Latter Day Saint Student Association: (Front row) H. Rochelle, R. Hall, K. Gill, L. Smith, S. Hamm, L. Robinson, P. Phelps. (Back row) D. Carson, J. McKinney, T. Childers, D. Ison, W. Breedlove, L. Barto, E. Harrison, N. Francom and R. Middleton. 313 Organizations 314 Organizations JOINING WN... Accounting Club: (Front row) D. Bewley, D. Butts, S. Thomas, S. Routt, A. Cage, V. Lowe, W. Jones, N. Collins, G. Nelson. (Second row) M. Peters, R. Brown, J. Zoglmann, L. Augusty, T. Simpson, C. Cullen, P. Williams, B. Humphrey, T. Dixon, D. Caudel. (Third row) R. Curtis, W. Cannon, C. Hen- Graduates often find job hunting a lonely pastime but Accounting Club members get a headstart on the field be- fore they graduate, according to presi- dent Danny Britt. “We educate people on how to get a job, where to look and what to expect after we start work,” he said. “We pull in speakers who are here on campus interviewing students,” he ad- ded. “They represent big and small firms, and we have a social after each one speaks to the club. “Accounting firms aren’t interested in graduates who just studied while they were in college,” Britt said. “They want to know what groups and affiliations you've been part of; it’s very impressive to them to have been a member of the Accounting Club.” Britt anid the club has 40 active mem- bers who attend a picnic each semester and an awards banquet in the spring. With visions of overseas jobs, life in another culture an d travel, AIESEC members search for businesses which are interested in granting inter- national internships. Ginger Holcomb said the members in- terview area businessmen to ascertain whether they are interested in hiring an international student for a six-week to one-year period. Each time the club finds a willing business, it receives an internship out- side the United States. Western students have received jobs in Germany, Spain and South abeiea ry, W. Pierce, R. Hamilton, D. Britt, M. Zimmer- man, J. Graham, J. Hall, E. Fisher. (Back row) J. Shelton, K. White, V. Stobaugh, T. Curtis, S. Bell, J. Lamar, D. Miller, S. Haynes, L. White, M. Daven- port and D. Harris. since the club was organized in 1975. “Even if we don’t get an intern- ship from a business the interview is valuable,” Miss Holcomb said. “You lose your stage fright, and you learn to be at ease in future contacts with businessmen.” An “externship” program sponsored by Eastman-Kodak Co., a trip to Han- over, Ind. for a program sponsored by the Louisville chapter of the American Marketing Association, and lectures by a number of speakers, includin Clyde Payne, the general manager o WBKO-TV, were the most important ac- tivities of the Marketing Club during the fall semester. According to president Ray Read, do- ing an entertainment survey of the Bowl- ing Green area was planned as a spring project. Conducting surveys is not new to the club, which conducted a market- ing survey for the College Heights Her- ald during the 1975-76 school year. Marketing classes help attract new members to the club. “I was taking a marketing class and I thought being in the club would help,” said Janice Cottongim. “If marketing is your thing, it would be helpful as far as meeting people goes.” According to Dwight Maxwell, a membership drive would benefit the club. “The club could use a large mem- bership because you can do more things,” he said. “The chapter is a mem- ber of the American Marketing Associ- ation, but a lot of the members are not. It “You lose your stage fright and you learn to be at ease in future | contacts with businessmen.” — Ginger Holcomb, AIESEC | | { | would help the chapter status if they ‘| T) were,” Maxwell added. High school senior Distributive Edu- cation Clubs of America (DECA) mem- bers don’t have to leave their organiza- tion when they start college, according to member Eddie Yates. Yates said the college club is a support division and serves high school chapters | by sponsoring See. and competi- || tion meets in marketing, management and other business skills. ‘We learn to | help high schools in any way possible,” Yates said. Western has the largest collegiate | | DECA chapter in the nation, Yates said. “We are able to publicize Western and its distributive education program.” AIJESEC: (Front row) G. Holcomb, M. Trask, B. Kern, D. Tomkinson. (Back row) T. Atsalis, P. Okumura, The club also traveled to Californiain 4 Klein and Dr. T. Baldwin. April for the national convention, us- | ing money earned by selling cheese and ff 4 ; ae calendar advertisements. (continued on p. 316) Theat bt. ed poe tes 4 y iu f i ’ Joe Marketing Club: (Front row) C. Cornette, V. Almond, P. Meyer, D. Garner, J. Cottongim, P. Taylor. (Back row) M. Kneer, J. Brown, D. Maxwell, R. Read, M. Cannon and M. Cross. — D. Beauchamp First-hand experience was what senior Myra Trask got last summer in Valencia, Spain, where she | worked on a five-week business internship. Miss _ Distributive Education Clubs of America: (Front row) D. Sutherland, K. Burke, J. Morgan, F. Krebs, R. i Trask is president of AIESEC. Littlejohn. (Back row) E. Yates, D. Preston, A. Taylor, B. Weatherspoon and R. Williams. 315 Organizations JOINING IN... From the first glimpse of National Collegiate Association of Secretaries (NCAS) at a coke party to the formal candlelight initiation in February, new members participate in many activities. Secretary Susan Reagan said the coke party on the fifth floor of Grise Hall in the heart of the business department classrooms is the first step in recruiting members and is lleweaey a sign-up table and a meeting. Later the girls had a “weenie” roast at Covington Woods and gave pledges rib- bons to wear for one week, she said. The association also sponsored a fash- ion show at Garrett Conference Center and a Business Education Conference for faculty members across the state. Spring projects included a Valentine Secretaries Tea and a spring banquet when awards were given to each officer, Miss Reagan said. “I spend about two hours a week working with the association, but it’s not much time for what I get out of it,” she said. Miss Reagan said she contacted 75 alumni members of the association by letter to invite them to a meeting and asked them to write and tell us “how life has been for them since they were in NCAS.” Smart thinkers in Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity have found a foolproof way to motivate members, according to Tom Taylor, first vice-president of the fraternity. “We work with Gamma Sigma Sigma service sorority a lot, and the fraternity works a lot better and gets more done this way,” Taylor said. ‘Besides, it’s more fun and attendance is doubled or tripled at the activities.” The theory proved true when the com- bination won the Regents Award for its Homecoming float and when candidate Jane Owens was named first runner-up in the bid for Homecoming Queen. The organizations also co-sponsored a bloodmobile visit to campus, as well as several socials. Taylor said 10 fraternity members packed paint brushes and cans to Rus- sellville and painted the Pleasant Run Methodist Church where a former broth- er is pastor. In addition, the fraternity worked as ushers at concerts, treated Boys Club to a Games Day and carried luggage in- to dormitories for women _ students each semester. “Our goal is service. The emphasis is on youth. Youth is our future, and help- ing young people is the best way to hate the world.” Actives devote 30 hours and pledges invest 40 hours a semester in projects and activities, Taylor said. “The fraternity gives you a broad aspect of people when you get involved,” he added. “Most people feel a need to help, and the fraternity fulfills this need.” With aprons, dishtowels and menus, members of Phi Beta Lambda profession- al business society began an 11-hour ca- reer day at Frisch’s Restaurant. According to member Joni Tapscott, the amateur restaurant crew washed dishes and waited tables on its way to raising almost $200. “It was pretty fun, but I’m glad I got to be a dishwasher. I could never have wait- ed tables,” the sophomore said. A business suit is a practical outfit for model Rita Browning, a member of the National Collegiate Association of Secretaries (NCAS). The NCAS- sponsored fashion show featured six models. ma va . 4 (me Pe voce. ‘ ¥ SS | ‘ f { 3 2) a ie : National Collegiate Association of Secretaries: (Front row) E. James, J. Bryant, L. Glasscock, S. Reagan. (Second row) L. Easley, J. Franklin, P. Fein P. Anderson. (Third row) W. Easley, C. Howard, V. Moore, K. pryant (Back row) M. Burns, J. Shaw, S. Shepherd, L. Clark and Dr. H. arpe. 316 Organizations She said the group also sold candy and “I spend about two hours a week working with the association, earned another $100 to use toward con- yt it’s not much time for what I get out of it.” ventions and banquets at Christmas and ||| spring semester. — Susan Reagan (NCAS) | “The organization is fun and it’s not like anything we had at high school. You only have to be interested in business to |] join,” Miss Tapscott said. i A state convention in March, a nation- al summer convention at Denver, Colo. and two field trips to Nashville were planned for spring to let members com- pete in business skills and learn more about the field. Pi Sigma Alpha isn’t the easiest orga- nization to get in, but the government honor society is an asset to graduates, |] according to president Tim Leigh. Leigh said the organization isn’t active |] except for an annual awards induction || dinner in the spring. Mere membership in the society, how- ever, is recognized nationally and can in- _ fluence potential employers, the presi- dent Sia “You have to have taken 12 hours in government with at least a 3.3 gpa Phi Beta Lambda; (Front row) J. Cottongim, S. Forshee. (Second row) G. Clark, T. Grimes. (Third row) C. in government and a 3.0 gpa overall,” Ray, K. Caswell, S. Reagan, B. Patmor, J. Cottongim, V. Shockley, K. Pepper. (Back row) J. Shelton, J. i| Leigh said. Tapscott, D. Maxwell, B. Stahl, A. Deweese and J. Marcum. | Classes in data processing and com- i puter science aren't exactly imaginary, but then they’re not the real thing either as far as the professional’ working world is concerned. President Debbie Garner said the Stu- dent Data Processing Club helps stu- dents gain insight into the field of com- puters and their use by local firms. “In a classroom you're in your own little world, and you can’t see how it works. Field trips and guest speakers give you a better understanding,” Miss Garner said. She said the club traveled to Louisville and visited several local businesses that use sophisticated computer systems. More often than not, clubs in the pro- cess of reorganization hesitate to take on programs on a state or national level. (continued on page 318) Pi Sigma Alpha: (Front row) S. Vincent, T. Tatum, R. Sowell, S. Lyons, T. Mauldin, T. Leigh, J. Long, G. Baldwin, Dr. J. Parker and J. Siwicki. Alpha Phi Omega: (Front row) D. Hood, D. Brooks, D. Taylor, J. Stokes. | Student Data Processing: (Front row) K. Landrum, J. Cottongim, D. Garner, N. (Second row) W. Canon, H. Ballard, D. Harlow, M. Young. (Back row) L. | Hazelwood. (Back row) D. Britt, G. Ballard, B. Strauss, Y. Agel and B. Madron. | Leach, K. Young, T. Appling, A. Bombay and R. Ervin. 317 | | | | Organizations | JOINING IW... The Association -of Student Social Workers was an exception to the rule by sponsoring the first Kentucky Confer- ence for Student Social Workers. Revision of the club’s by-laws and constitution, the creation of a faculty curriculum committee, and money-mak- ing projects were other activities. Career information was also provided for members, according to Ann Phillips. “By being in the club, you can find out about job opportunities and how to take a merit exam to get a job with the state department,” Miss Phillips said. “You also get to know the teachers and the Beale in the classes better.” With as many branches as it has mem- bers, the Student Volunteer Bureau lets members decide what type of service they want to perform and finds them a place to work. Cathie Horner said she participated as a tutor and worked with a local elemen- tary school student on reading skills. “ had a personal relationship with him; he just needed a friend and some attention.” Another member, Cheryl Owens, said the bureau also sponsors student work- ers in nursing homes, day care centers and the Big Brother-Big Sister programs. “We also had a telephone reassurance program,” Miss Owens said. “A student was assigned to an older person who doesn’t get out, and called him regularly to reassure him that someone cared.” To give members more insurance for their teaching careers, SNEA activities showed members what teaching will be Student Volunteer Bureau: (Front row) J. Owens, M. Rowlett, R. Howell, R. Covington. (Second row) M. Delaney, D. Childers, C. Horner, M. Rector. (Third row) S. Alvey, C. Owens, C. Ashby, D. Brooks. (Fourth row) R. Correll, T. Appling, M. Harlow. (Fifth row) W. White, R. Ervin, D. Hood. (Back row) D. Stokes and A. Bombay. like by having student teachers and su- pervisors speak to the group. Other activities for the club included Dairy Council workshop, the state fall leadership conference, a workshop on classroom games, an ice cream otal and collection for UNICEF .at Halloween. Four full scholarships were awarded to members on the basis of service to the club, need and scholarship. Last spring a handful of students be- gan revitalizing Gamma Beta Phi, a once- active honor society. By the end of the fall semester more than 200 people had joined, and a variety of activities displayed success. A Halloween party for the children at Potter Children’s Home, a dance featur- ing the Louisville band Copperfield, a watermelon feast and the fall induction ceremony were the main activities of the group in the fall. oes Social Work Club: (Front row) B. Osborn, N. Jeffries, K. Kummer, S. Young, B. Williams. (Back row) C. Knecht, S. Crowdus, M. Rector, D. Perry, D. Bates, J. Pigman and R. Riedlinger. 318 Organizations a hh hLUmUmUmUmUmCmm.CmCmCmCmUmUCmCmCU Many new members found it more than just an entry in their resume. “When I first decided to join it was because it was an honor society and it would look good on my record,” said Melody Berryman. “There really are a lot of nice people in it, but I guess because it’s an honor society nee look down on it and say, ‘well they don’t have good parties’ or something.” The fun they have isn’t intentional, but it happens anyway, according to Lynn Faxon, a member of the Student Council for Exceptional Children. “The main difference about this orga- nization is that we’re not working fof ourselves. It’s not for our enjoyment al- though we enjoy it,” she said. The senior special education major said the group treated special education students at Bowling Green Junior High to a Christmas party. “Kids that age don’t usually have parties,” she said. “Their reaction is great because they don’t get very much individual attention at home,” Miss Faxon said. She added that the council also gave Christmas baskets to students in the Emotionally Disturbed program at Dish- man-McGinnis School. (continued on page 320) An accident midway through a Halloween party at the Boys Club made a youngster unhappy. Junior “The main difference about this organization is that we’re not working for ourselves. It’s not for our enjoyment although we — Lynn Faxon, (SCEC) SNEA: (Front row) V. McGehee, G. Faulk, J. Lovell, M. Kennedy, M. Stroube. (Second row) M. Garrett, J. Cagle, S. Smith, D. Walker. (Third row) S. How- ard, E. Clubb, N. Witten, J. Dowell, B. Stanton, D. Dickenson, P. Clemons, T. Clemons. (Fourth row) Steve Cesler comforts the young boy whose bal- P. Cook, J. Higginson, C. Dickie, B. Cribbs, J. loon was busted in a game. Ralph, J. Coatney. (Fifth row) K. Talley, T. Page, M. Ge ee : . ea Afr Robbins. (Sixth row) J. Roark, C. Galusha, J. Scott, N. Johnson, E. Trenkamp, D. Raef, B. Gholson. (Seventh row) D. Johnson, D. Nevils, L. Walker, G. Holcomb, K. Vanmeter, J. Dickson, J. Blessing. (Back row) T. Hunter, R. Felty, C. Hollowell, T. Fulkerson, D. Newman, R. Otto and R. Shoulders. Gamma Beta Phi officers: (Front row) E. Kelly, G. Cashman, A. Gobble, L. Jernigan, J. Cooke. (Back row) M. Wright, J. Greenwell, J. Clark, R. Brown and J. Weimer. Student Council for Exceptional Children: (Front row) Y. Robey, M. Hicks, M. Faxon, L. Beauford, J. Tinius. (Bac Frey. — M. Lyons row) Dr. W. Greenlee, M. Nash, B. Chase, K. Myers and C. 319 Organizations 320 O. rganizations JOINING IW .... Being prepared for all types of weath- er is one qualification for a Special Forces member. The group very often had morning physical training, rappelling, river cross- ings, field training and other facets of new member training in the rainy fall, and the members have fondly begun to call the rain “Special Forces sunshine.” The Black Berets planned a sky diving exercise in the spring with supervision from the Airborne division at Fort Campbell. Plans were also formulated for an exercise in water survival and tac- tical boat training. Setting up stages and equipment for concerts gave the unit an opportunity to earn funds for the activities. Calvin Minton said the group helps prepare the members for advanced summer camp because it is good phy- sical training. “If you're really serious (about the military) you need to be in one of the- campus organizations,” the junior added. Imagine pledging with no harassment. Scabbard and Blade’s three-week pled- geship is described as ‘“gentlemen’s pled- geship,” and commander Bob Tinsley said the people invited have already proven hemealves in other facets of ROTC. Scabbard and Blade started what is hoped to become a tradition. The event is “dining in,” an old_ established military custom, “kind of like a roast,” Tinsley said. Special Forces: (Front row) J. Davenport, D. McCor- mack, L. Berry. (Second row) M. Schulte, J. Howard, T. Nicholas, L. Chappell, P. Toms, R. Assman. (Third row) Sgt. Mgr. Nord, S. Thomas, M. Cun- The group had its first formal get-to- gether in spring 1976, and continued it this spring. “It gives the students a chance to “get back at the instructor,” said Tinsley. Planning the Military Ball took a semester of work. The band was hired in August, three months before the dance. Bob Yeater, Military Ball chair- man, said it was worth all the work be- cause it was “the best one we've had.” Cindy Thomas was crowned Queen at the November event. Tinsley said the greatest benefit of be- longing to Scabbard and Blade is that it isa naa honor society, consisting of every service branch. ‘The society gives you recognition, and your peers know who is most involved,” he said. The Rebelettes never know what to expect when they go to a drill meet. They have performed in places ranging from a basketball arena to an airplane hangar, according to one member. A drill is prepared to last nine minutes and the girls sometimes add or subtract to adapt it to the size of the competi- tion floor. The Rebelettes had three drill meets in the spring, and planned to go to Mardi Gras in February with money left over from last year. They also planned to go to Purdue. The Rebelettes are the coed affiliate of the Pershing Rifles, and Janet Millen be- longs to both organizations. She de- scribes herself as a person who needs ningham, D. Schumate, R. Heater, D. Miller, H. Hamilton, J. Indalecio, Mst. Sgt., McNalty. (Back row) A. Hussey, T. Jensen, R. Wall, B. Eskridge, C. Minton, B. Ervine and B. Greene. pressure to work well, and she has man- aged to budget her time. Miss Millen said she would like to see new girls com- ing into the Rebelettes so that they could have two teams. Although Marty Lee said the hard work tries her patience, the sophomore said she likes the sense of accomplish- ment, bringing home a trophy and recog- nition provides. To raise money for travel to drill meets, the girls are hired by the Univer- sity to Hiker at football and basket- ball games. In class, at the dorm and in the cafete- ria, they seem little different from the average college student. But when it comes to their involve- ment in Pershing Rifles, members con- form to army regulations and standards, according to Keith Hood. The national military fraternity spon- sors a color guard, rifle team, drill team and the Rebelettes. Hood said PRs has helped him get used to meeting certain set standards and develop more self-discipline. “The main purpose of PRs is to teach a proficiency to instill an attitude of being sharp at what you're doing.” Member Brian Ruff said the organiza- tion’s main purpose is to develop b etter army officers and build confidence. “It provides a good social life because there are lots of nice people you can meet who fit a good example,” he said. (continued on page 322) — R. Hoskins Checking swiss seats to make sure they are tied properly is a vital part of Special Forces rappelling exercises. Calvin Minton checks the ropes for Doris McCormack as Marcia Shulte watches. “If you're really serious (about the military), you need to be in one of the campus organizations.” — Calvin Minton, Special Forces Scabbard and Blade: (Front row) L. Hart, D. Richey, J. Sharp, L. Berry, J. Howard. (Back row) R. Pogrotsky, L. Leach, J. Ward, C. Lewis, R. Tinsley and H. Indalecio. Rebelettes: (Front row) J. Alexander, R. Tooley, M. Lee, J. Millen, S. McFarland, H. Harris, E. Wilhoyte, D. Fletcher, D. Hemmen and V. Benton. Pershing Rifles: (Front row) Capt. Kennedy, F. Haynes, A. Shemwell, T. Leslie, B. Hummer, S. Railey, J. Berg, R. Yeater, B. Hummer, M. Pendley, H. Harvell, D. Kolb. (Back row) K. Hood, L. Ferry, J. Millen, W. McKinney, V. Lopolito, R. Norvell, D. Johnson, J. Yeater, W. White and M. Foster. 321 Organizations JOINING IW .... Both Donjea Jackson and James Dick- son said they believe their member- ship in Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) “will look good on my resume.” Receiving its chapter in the fall of 1976, the club spent the year organizing. “It’s so new, we are still trying to get it together,” said Miss Jackson. According to Dickson, the club pro- jects have included selling IEEE decals and tee-shirts to members, inviting guest speakers and taking field trips. The value of the IEEE, said Dickson, is “to keep in touch with things (jobs) in our area.” Miss Jackson said she would like to see the club attract more female mem- bers. “It does feel funny being the only girl,” she said. Combining business with pleasure, the American Society of Interior Design- ers (ASID) highlighted their fall semester with a dinner meeting. The featured speaker, Dr. Bill Leonard, a communications and theatre depart- ment professor, addressed the members on the relationship of interior design with the theatre. In November, Paula Orrender, fall se- mester club president, attended a profes- sional meeting of the ASID in Colum- bus, Ohio. Senior Candy Cornette, spring semes- Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers: (Front row) L. Smith, D. Jackson, J. Weaver, D. Rule. (Second row) J. Carr, L. Kerr, D. Breit, G. Steirer, J. Dickson. (Third row) M. Ryan, J. Brodt, J. Garner, J. Rankin, W. Moore. (Back row) R. Hemmen, D. Taylor, J. Hammon, R. Dunleavy and T. Patton. tau = 2eee2ese8 American Society of Interior Designers: (Front row) W. Jayne, F. Sanders, P. Orrender, J. Keith, K. Buchanan, K. Allen, M. Moore. (Second row) S. Niswonger, D. Hobson, L. Samples, V. Hunt, C. Cornette, R. McCandless, C. Garner, D. Heines, S. Stewart, R. Mason, M. Simpson. (Back row) B. Walker, T. Coatney, B. Thomas, K. Tapper, G. Phillips, J. Costin and L. Vikre. : 322 Organizations nee ter president, said she joined the club to get “more involved” with her major. “It’s a chance to meet people and stu- dents in the department,” she added. According to Miss Orrender, she joined because “it will be easier to get into the professional chapter.” Both girls said they are “excited” be- cause the club’s membership has dou- bled and now has about 30 members. The Industrial Education and Tech- nology Club prides itself in always plac- ing in the Homecoming float competi- tion, according to Sherlene Spencer, but they work together on other projects. Within the department the club has raffled a router which is a woodworkin tool, participated in intramurals. an sponsored an annual faculty student ri- fle match. Richard Reker said money left over in the spring goes toward a scholar- ship fund, while in the fall it goes for Bachan s Christmas baskets for y families. For members of Phi Upsilon Omicron a Christmas party at Turtle Creek Nurs- ing Home Enkss an adoptive grandparent program as a new service project. Plans for the spring semester included a spaghetti supper served in the Aca- demic Complex dining room, a founder’s day meeting with alumni members, a spring initiation ceremony and return trips to the nursing home. Homecoming week was a busy time for the Pouca berides serving at the re- ception held in Diddle Arena following the game, the group also received a pre- view showing of the quilts entered in the quilting contest by a local quilting club member. Other fall activities included the Christmas party and a fall initiation. As a year-round service to the home economics department the girls serve as tour guides for prospective students when their class schedule permits. According to Martha Nell Wright, working for the organization ie changed her attitudes toward it. “The reason I joined was because it would look good on my resume. Now that I have put some work into it I appre- ciate it more,” she said. The Home Economics Club has a new name. The club was christened the Student Section of the American Home Econom- ics Association (SHEA) in the fall. “T thought joining the club would be good for my profession,” said Grace Cashman. “If I need a reference it would show that I am interested in the field.” Miss Cashman said for several semes- ters they have been compiling a recipe book. The recipes are from faculty mem- bers and students and was to be sold in the spring. The overall goal of SHEA, according to Patti Bratton, “is to give a better under- standing of the department and get peo- ple involved. (continued on page 324) “It’s so new we're still trying to get it together.” — Donjea Jackson, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers ib Industrial Education and Technology Club: (Front row) M. Gottula, J. Harris, M. Bieber, P. England, S. Spencer, S. Ison, C. Zax, O. Stone. (Second row) B. Greer, R. Penner, J. Royalty, B. Nelson, R. Reker, J. Lyons. (Third row) S. Fulner, B. Purcell, T. McGinnis, J. Wurth, C. Grimsley, D. Dobrick, P. Brown, E. Moss. (Back row) H. Lowrey and B. Thomas. Phi Upsilon Omicron: (Front row) Dr. M. Jenkins, M. Every, J. Johnson, V. Driver, A. Ries, R. Dearen, J. Neal, N. Robinson. (Second row) P. Price, T. Coffey, K. Woodford, K. Embry, M. Granacher, C. Cornette. (Third row) J. McMurtry, J. Wellman, M. Wright, F. Anderson. (Fourth row) C. Patey, K. Shirley, R. Niece: G. Runner, J. Davenport. (Back row) J. Simpson, A. Coop, N. Nation, C. Garner and R. ason. Student Section of the American Home Economics Association: (Front row) J. Hershey, P. Bratton, R. Deare, J. Williams. (Second row) S. Melhiser, R. McCandless, N. Peden, M. Rowlett, V. Driver, K. Miller, D. Nichols. (Third row) K. Cohron, K. Schlensker, M. Every, B. Butler, N. Robinson, M. Granacher, D. Hargis, R. Curl. (Back row) G. Cashman, G. Howlett, J. Johnson, J. Anderson, J. Kubale, C. Patey, J. Simpson, A. Coop and D. Frizzell. 323 Organizations 324 Organizations JOINING IN .... Mention theatre and actors onstage come readily to mind. There is more to a theatrical production, however. Ushers, set designers, stagehands, and technical crews comprise an integral part of the production. The Western Players is a combination of all of these. According to treasurer Bill Hanna, the organization provides incoming fresh- men a chance to get involved in theatre. The club sponsored a spring work- shop. According to Hanna, the work- shop series was designed to better pre- pare theatre people for tryouts. Often a Western Player may have been seen off-stage as well as on. The organi- zation ushers for the children’s produc- tions and helps organize the manpower to usher major eraicions) said Hanna. Raising money for theatre scholar- ships and reorganizing the club were the two major functions of Alpha Psi Omega. A touch of theatrics in the Garrett Cafeteria was used by the Marx Brothers, alias Kim Robillard, Keith Allgier and Graham Bedinger, to promote films shown by the Green River Readers. _ i .. x | t ‘ +} oe Western Players: (Front row) B. Hanna, J. Brown, W. Combs. (Second row) D. Stevens, T. Tutino, P. Miller, L. Englehardt, B. Buchanan, L. Bartholomy. (Third row) T. Manion, D. Richburg, K. Allgier, R. Herndon, J. Holden, T. Harris, H. Tracy, W. Kessler. (Back row) W. Leonard, D. Hood, S. Sandefer, P. Vancleavie, L. Ruff, J. Kelly, M. Allison, J. Ballance and D. Greer. Secretary Leslie Englehardt said the- atre professors make recommendations for anew member based on the student's grades and the amount and quality of his work in theatre. With 11 new members, Miss Engle- hardt said she was encouraged about the club’s reorganization. “It'll take us about a year to really get on our feet,” she added. In a candlelight ceremony, six newly inducted Zeta Phi Eta pledges joined their fellow members in reciting the Zeta symphony at the Dec. 2 initiation. According to president Judith Harri- son, the initiation was one of three fall social events. The club also sponsored a “get-to-know-you” and pledge party. In the spring semester, the club planned to read childrens’ stories onto cassette tapes and distribute them to the school systems. Miss Harrison said the ee for the Pieler was to encourage reading and children’s literature. Another spring activity was the Teach- er Appreciation Day, an annual event. According to Miss Harrison, teachers in the Communications and Theatre de- eee got some sort of remembrance rom the club. His face animated, the budding young orator concluded his presentation an crossed his fingers waiting for the judges’ decision. The young orator may not have a sil- ver tongue, on he may have the poten- tial as a member of the Forensics Union. According to president Teresa Jen- kins, forensics includes debate, ora- tory, salesmanship and other indi- vidual events In November, the organization placed second in the OVC Foren- sics Tournament. Elementary education major Janet Burks said the club has “helped me meet new people and made me a little more outgoing.” “T was scared at first,” she added, “but “I was scared at first, but I liked it and stayed with it.” — Janet Burks, Forensic Union SSS EE BE ES SLE a EEE OTL LIED OE ETE EEE AE BG LIE | GG 0 Sas VT TE I liked it and stayed with it.” According to Miss Burks, a speech ma- jor may have a slight advantage. “I would here had more experience and probably be more polished if I were a speech major,” she said. Assisted by the English department and international student advisers, the Speech Pathology Club aided foreign students at the speech clinic, according to president Mary Ellen Smith. Miss Smith said the clinic helped in- ternational students learn things they wouldn’t ordinarily know in a strange country. It also dealt with conversational English problems of the students. Ten members attended the nation- wide Speech and Hearing Association meeting in Houston, Tex. in November. L : Alpha Psi Omega: (Front row) J. Kelly, D. Holden. (Back row) D. Richburg, D. Greer, L. Engelhardt, W. Combs, S. Probus, D. Howard, S. Chambers and J. Ballance. Zeta Phi Eta: (Front row) T. Jenkins, S. Watson, M. Stephens, J. Harrison, C. Harrison, P. Vancleavie. (Back row) J. Korinek, J. Rogers, M. Fitzgerald, J. Bartlett, R. Parrott and J. Harris. Forensic Union: (Front row) D. Kiddy, J. Burks, K. Cooke, W. Cortus, J. | Thomas, T. Jenkins, P. Smith. (Second row) R. Scott, M. Abram, R. Butler, B. } Ze L. Caillouet. (Back row) M. McClean, D. Davis, B. Martin and G. | Gabbart. 325 Organizations Believe it or not ... e There are 1,026 males and 835 females in the senior class. ¢ 107 seniors live on campus. Pearce Ford houses the most males (63), and Central houses the most females (44). e The oldest WKU senior is 60 years old. There are more 21-year-olds than any other age group (674). e Elementary education is the most popular major for seniors (141). There is one senior majoring in each of the following areas: German, Engineering Physics and Earth Science. — Data provided by WKU Computer Center DEBORAH K. ABEL, Business Admin. Cincinnati, Ohio MARSHALL C. ABNEY, Nursing and Philos. Beaver Dam ELIZABETH A. ADAMS, Gov't. and Math. Jeffersontown JON P. ADAMS, Mass Comm. Hopkinsville MICHAEL B. ADAMS, Health Care Admin. Bowling Green MARY J. AHART, Special Ed. Louisville JON R. AKERS, Foreign Language New Albany, Ind. AMELIA G. ALLEN, Elem. Ed. Elizabethtown DONNA B. ALLEN, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green KIM J. ALLEN, Interior Design Louisville ANTHONY R. ALLISON, Special Ed. and Psych. Louisville CONSTANCE A. ALLSPAW, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Lexington BULENT R. ALTINKAYA, Business Admin. Ankara, Turkey DENISE ALVAREZ, Elem. Ed. Ft. Campbell DENNIS J. ANDERSON, Sociology Ed. Louisville MARILYN J. ANDERSON, Sociology Bowling Green JANA M. ARNEY, Elem. Ed. Franklin ANTHONY R. ARNOLD, Elec. Engin. Tech. Russellville DENNIS F. ARTERBURN, Agriculture B owling Green CARTIE L. ARVIN, Secretarial Sci. Louisville +328 Seniors JAMES G. ASBURY, Mass Comm. Bowling Green MONICA R. ASH, Mathematics Louisville JOE F. ASKINS, Mass Comm. Louisville ALLAN CHI MING AU, Biology Hong Kong CONNIE M. AUD, Elem. Ed. Owensboro LEON M. AUGUSTY, Accounting Downers Grove, IIl. LUCIAN C. AYERS, Business Admin. Edmonton RICHARD L. BACON, Business Admin. Glasgow VICKI E. BACON, Social Work Hopkinsville DEBORAH I. BAILEY, Business Admin. Mt. Washington BARBARA J. BAIRD, Recreation Hartford MELANIE A. BAKER, Speech Pathology Ghent SHENEDA C. BAKER, Elem. Ed. Cadiz JOANN P. BALLANCE, Theatre Bowling Green KATHLEEN A. BALTZ, Elem. Ed. Nashville DAVID D. BANAHAN, Photojournalism Glasgow BEVERLY L. BARKER, Advertising and Merch. Lexington ELIZABETH O. BASHAM, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green WILLIAM H. BASKETT, Industrial Ed. Brandenburg THOMAS BATTLE, History and Phys. Ed. Benton, Ill. JANET E. BAUER, Home Ec. Ed. Louisville LAMBERT L. BAUER, Agriculture and Bus. Cave City EDWIN J. BAUMGARTNER, Bus. Admin. and Pub. Rel. Bowling Green ROY G. BAXTER, History Louisville PEGGY A. BEARD, Elem. Ed. Knifley WILLIAM A. BEARD, JR., Mech. Engin. Tech. Bowling Green DONALD G. BEAUCHAMP, Photojournalism and Agri. Falls of Rough LUCY A. BEAVIN, Secretarial Admin. Brandenburg WALTER R. BECK, History and Govt. Bowling Green SHEILA F. BELCHER, Accounting Franklin MICHAEL S. BELL, Music Education Blacksburg, Va. SUZANNE M. BELL, Business Admin. Whites Creek, Tenn. CATHY J. BENSON, Physical Education Slaughters KATHY J. BERRY, Legal Sec. Admin. Anchorage LINDA D. BERRY, Mathematics and Relig. Louisville 329 Seniors LYNNE F. BERRY, French Anchorage ROGER B. BESSINGER, Architectural Draft. Tech. Bowling Green ZYNDA G. BETTS, Elem. Ed Longview, Tex DEBORAH L. BETZ, Elem. Ed Cincinnati, Ohio AMY L. BEVARLY, English Bowling Green DAVID H. BEWLEY, Accounting and Bus. Admin. Glasgow MARK V. BIGGERS, Biology Glasgow DAVID D. BLAGG, Accounting Paducah ELIZABETH F. BLAIR, Accounting Winchester ROBERT E. BLAU, Government and Philos. Ft. Thomas DANIEL K. BLUM, Psychology and Soc. Louisville MONA L. BOARDS, Special Education Bowling Green MOHAMMAD H. BOCA, Engineering Physics Bowling Green MOHAMMAD M. BOCA, Mech. Engin. and Math. Bowling Green MARY A. BOLAN, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Cincinnati, Ohio SUSAN T. BOTTS, Biology Lexington JUDY A. BOUGHTON, Dietetics St. Croix Falls, Wis. PHYLLIS S. BOWLES, Government Edmonton JAMES H. BOWLING, Business Admin. Fraser, Mich. SHERMAN T. BOWMAN, Psychology Bonnieville SANDRA L. BOYKEN, Social Work Owensboro RICHARD L. BOYLE, Mass Comm. and Rec. Louisville CLARK H. BRADSHAW, Business Admin. Lexington PETER A. BRANDT, Elec. and Mech. Engin. Tech. Bowling Green | MARY S. BRANYON, Physical Ed. and Rec. Midlothian, Va. DONALD J. BREIT, Elec. Engin. Tech. Louisville DEBBIE L. BRIGGS, Physical Ed. and Rec. Franklin RANDY R. BRINKMAN, Agriculture Covington, Ohio CONNIE S. BRITT, Business Ed. H Louisville DANNY C. BRITT, Accounting Bowling Green WILLIAM G. BRITTEN, Elec. Engin. Tech Maysville JUDY J. BROOKS, Mathematics Bowling Green RAY E. BROOKS, Recreation Bowling Green BEVERLY BROWDER, Mass Communication Russellville BARRY W. BROWN, Civil Engin. Tech. Bowling Green 330 Seniors DONALD L. BROWN, Art Corinth J.O. BROWN, JR., Journalism Albany JAMES M. BROWN, Chemistry Gallatin, Tenn. KATHY P. BROWN, Music and Elem. Ed. Albany PATRICIA G. BROWN, Social Work Bowling Green ROBERT V. BROWN, Accounting Vine Grove TED S. BROWN, Sociology Locust Hill VICKY D. BROWN, Spanish and Bio. Adolphus STEVEN L. BROWNING, Marketing and Econ. Erlanger THERESA R. BROWNING, Biology Lebanon REBECCA L. BRUCE, Public Relations Versailles MICHAEL B. BRUMFIELD, French Bowling Green JUDITH E. BRYANT, Secretarial Sci. Bowling Green MARILYN A. BRYANT, Library Science Summer Shade ELMER C. BUCHANAN, III, Math. and Comp. Sci. Hartford RICHARD L. BUCHANAN, Biology Lexington JOY L. BUCKINGHAM, Elem. Ed. Park City DONNA R. BUCKLES, Journalism and Hist. Caneyville JAMES P. BUDD, Elem. Ed. Vincentown, N.J. FRANCES H. BUDDE, Distributive Ed. Louisville ANNE T. BURCH, Elem. Ed. Evansville, Ind. EDNA K. BURCHETT, Biology Albany CAROLYN S. BURDEN, Elem. Ed. Morgantown ROBERT B. BURKHEAD, Mech. Engin. Tech. Shepherdsville JANET L. BURKS, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green ELLEN M. BURNETT, Chemistry Mayfield WILLIAM C. BURNS, Bus. Admin. Bowling Green BOBBY E. BURTON, Bus. Admin. and Rec. Louisville DENNIS M. BUSH, Accounting Glasgow LARRY W. BUSH, Music Education Elizabethtown JOHN R. BUTCHKO, Religious Studies Hardyville JANE R. BUTLER, Elem. Ed. Edmonton MARTHA S. BYBEE, Recreation Glasgow JUDY L. BYRN, English Bowling Green KELLY D. CAIN, Agri. and Build. Con. Tech. Elizabethtown 331 Seniors MICHAEL L. CALDWELL, Industrial Arts Ed. Louisville SUSAN S. CALLOWAY, Art Bowling Green KAREN L. CAMPBELL, Chemistry Bowling Green WILLIAM A. CANNON, Accounting Bowling Green WILLIAM H. CANON, IIL, History and Bus. Admin. Frankfort CATHERINE B. CAPPS, Sec. Sci. and Gen. Bus. Bowling Green JAMES S. CAPPS, Sociology Elizabethtown VIRGINIA A. CAPPS, Tex. and Cloth. Merch. and Bus. Admin. Bowling Green TERRY L. CARDONELL, Med. Records Admin. and Psych. Bowling Green DWIGHT C. CARDWELL, Biology Bowling Green JANIE M. CARDWELL, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green CHRISTINE A. CARLSEN, Elem. Ed. Satellite Beach, Fla. MURRAY L. CARNALL, Sociology Russellville KEITH L. CARPENTER, Business Admin. Bowling Green FRANK J. CARR, Biology Bowling Green — M. Lyons A wagon wheel, a fake AauOE license and old barn wood served as the primary materials in the Dutch Boys’ Bar decor. Mark Globinski and John Boes relax in their living room before a finals’ week party. 332 Seniors Louisville Mayfield Owensboro Bowling Green Burkesville Bowling Green Louisville Louisville Hopkinsville Madisonville The Dutch Boys’ ‘bar’dom Say the name “Dutch Boys” and some students will say they know them or have gone to one of their parties. Others know the Dutch Boys as co-ed volleyball team champions or as ex-swimmers. None of these descriptions would be wrong because the Dutch Boys have made a name for themselves in many areas of campus life. The whole Dutch Boys’ saga began three years ago with students John Boes and Rick Zavadil. They grew up together in Holland, Mich., a town noted for thousands of tulips that line the main highways. The town also has a huge windmill which adds even more distinc- tion to the Dutch affiliation. Therefore, the two boys from Holland nicknamed themselves the Dutch Boys. Zavadil and Boes were recruited by swim team coach Bill Powell, also a Michigan native. The two swam for the team two years and then retired. After their retirement they formed the first Dutch Boys’ Bar. The house they shared was on North Sunrise Drive and featured a homemade bar, large rocks with Playboy foldouts shellacked on them and drinks. The two recruited Indiana native Keith Romines and moved their establishment to a house on Nashville Road in 1975. The three remodeled the new Dutch Boys’ Bar. They replastered the walls, sanded and varnished the floors and re- placed the old bar with barn board. With three elevated water beds and a location closer to campus, the Dutch Boys’ Bar was complete. After hundreds of parties in 1975 and early 1976, the Dutch Boys’ house has changed. Zavadil and Romine graduated, so Boes found two new house-members, Steve Drews, from Denver, Colo., and Mark Globinski, another Michigan na- tive. The house has antiques such as wagon wheels, farm tools and homemade plant- ers located throughout. The bar ee a barn board roof over it and the bathroom is paneled with barn board. Perhaps the most striking addition to the house is the large number of intra- mural plaques displayed on the mantle. The awards, mostly for first place, range from ping pong to wrestling. Boes wanted to be a part of a team that would dominate intramural competition, so the Dutch Boys went to work. With help from some friends, they won tro- phies in table tennis, bowling, wrestling and swimming, finishing third in overall campus competition last year. This year the Dutch Boys entered ev- ery intramural .category, hoping to win each possible first prize. Assisted by some Dutch Girls from South Hall, the Dutch Boys won the co-ed volleyball championship. They also took top hon- ors in the fall swimming competition and were favored to win wrestling and co-ed basketball. Additionally, they were a threat to other innertube, waterpolo, football and track teams. As one intramural official put it, “The Dutch Boys are really an organized team, from talented people all the way down to Dutch Boys’ Bar uniforms.” — BRIAN COLLINS ( CARMEL A. CARRICO, Office Admin. STEPHEN C. CARRICO, Mathematics GREGORY H. CARTER, Business Admin. and Soc. JUDITH L. CARTER, Biology MALCOLM D. CARTER, Agriculture Ed. REGINA H. CARTMILL, Special Ed. BARBARA L. CASADA, Mass Communications SHERRY L. CASEBIER, Elem. Ed. MARTHA G. CASHMAN, Dietetics and Inst. Admin. CHERYL L. CASTLEBERRY, Public Rel. and Mass Comm. 333 Seniors DENNIS R. CAUDILL, Chemistry and Agri. Franklin JOSEPH W. CAUSEY, Religion and Psych. Bowling Green NEAL C. CHAMBERLAIN, Inst. Admin. Bowling Green STEPHEN B. CHAMBERS, Performing Arts Hartford JUDY A. CHANDLER, Speech and Theatre Valley Station PRENTICE E. CHANDLER, Agriculture Dixon BRENDA N. CHAPMAN, Physical Ed. Olmstead DEBRA L. CHAPMAN, Elem. Ed. Henderson BARBARA J. CHASE, Reading and Spec. Ed. Versailles REBECCA L. CHEEK, Mathematics Independence DOUGLAS R. CHENAULT, Psychology Owensboro JOSEPH A. CHEWNING, History and Govt. Cerulean JON B. CHICK, Community Health Nicholasville LAURA D. CHILDERS, Social Work Bowling Green TERRY W. CHILDERS, Accounting Drakesboro KATHY S. CHILSON, Office Admin. Pensacola, Fla. JAMES R. CHRISTIAN, Environ. Engin. Tech. Owensboro DONNA J. CLARK, Business Admin. New Haven LANETTA L. CLARK, Office Admin. Summer Shade LAURA K. CLARK, Government and Econ. Owensboro MARTHA E. CLARK, Health Care Admin. Muldraugh MATTIE S. CLARK, Nursing and Comm. Health Hopkinsville STEVEN D. CLARK, Business Admin. Morgantown RICHARD A. CLAUSON, Civil Engin. Tech. Bonnieville WILLIAM A, CLAYTON, Business Admin. Madisonville 334 Seniors PAULA B. CLEMONS, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green WILLIAM T. CLEMONS, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green BARRY C. CLOUSE, Accounting Portland, Tenn. ELIZABETH R. CLUBB, Elem. Ed. Pleasureville JANET K. COATNEY, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green TAMARA D. COFFEY, Home Ec. Ed. Edmonton LAURIE L. COLE, Nursing and Social Work Russellville MARSHA A. COLE, Office Admin. Bowling Green WILLIAM J. COLE, Business Admin. Rutledge, Ga. BRIAN W. COLLINS, Mass Comm. and Pub. Rel. Erlanger ereonomancorm soto Wrdseoasinmoanetoraoscaseine rchomenesteesis . saieeeaitieagenae ee Sky light | With cautious footing, Charles Lowery, a Western electrician, walks along the rim of Diddle Arena, and is silhouetted against the multicolored glass panels. Lowery was adjusting the lighting system for the Chicago concert in the Arena Oct. 13. — J. Burton 335 Seniors Hangover A self-described loner, Lonnie Lynch often retreats to a quiet spot near Pearce Ford Tower to think about his studies in ah wees The Elizabethtown sophomore chose his major after working in the Navy’s psychiatric ward for two years. — E. Hassler a) Wed ve wy a. A, GWEN H. COLLINS, Home Ec. Ed. Bowling Green JAMES E. COLLINS, Recreation Richmond CRAIG T. COMBS, Psych. and Mass Comm. Cave City NANCY A. COMBS, Elem. Ed. New Haven MARK C. COMFORT, Art Louisville PATTY C. COMPTON, Business Ed. Bowling Green MICHAEL D. CONLEY, Business Admin. Bowling Green DEBRA L. CONNER, Dietetics and Inst. Admin. Genoa, Ill. BILLI A. CONRAD, Tex. and Clothing Merch. and Gen. Bus. Canal Winchester, Ohio CLAUDE E. COOK, Civil Engin. Tech. Sharon Grove JANETLYN COOKE, German Elizabethtown ALICE A. COOP, Home Ec. Ed. Smiths Grove CANDACE M. CORNETITE, Interior Design Drakesboro ROXANN CORRELL, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Somerset SARA A. COSTANZO, Elem. Ed. Middlesboro KENNY W. COSTELLOW, Speech and Theatre Bowling Green RICKY COTHERN, Mass Comm. and Rec. Franklin JANICE C. COTTONGIM, Office Admin. Bowling Green STANLEY J. COTTRELL, Agriculture Upton GILBERT B. COVEY, JR., Mech. Engin. Tech. Bowling Green ROXIE G. COVINGTON, Art Education Windsor FRANCES A. COWAN, Business Ed. Monticello BENTON A. COWLES, Industrial Ed. Smiths Grove ALICE L. COX, Elem. Ed. Somerset VANESSA P. COX, Criminology Bowling Green RODERICK R. COY, Mass Comm. Louisville DAVID E. CRAWFORD, Business Admin. Elizabethtown RICKY E. CRAWFORD, Biology Franklin 337 Seniors TROY C. CREECH, Civil Engin. Tech. Cumberland JAMES W. CREEK, Accounting Rockfield REBECCA L. CRESS, Dietetics and Psych. Louisville LINDA 5S. CROPPER, Elem. Ed. Gamaaliel PATRICIA H. CROSS, Mass Comm. Russellville BEVERLY B. CROW, Secretarial Sai. Glasgow SUZANNE M. CROWDUS, Social Work and Coun. Ed Morganfield THOMAS P. CRUMPLER, English Louisville JILL R. CRUSE, Sociology and Psych. Lexington RHONDA R. CURRY, Recreation Louisville VICKIE L. CURRY, Mass Comm. Louisville BARRY D. DANIEL, Economics Bowling Green JANICE L. DAVENPORT, Home Ec. Ed. Greensburg PAMELA J. DAVENPORT, Home Ec. Ed. Greensburg KIM M. DAVIDSON, Community Health Stoneybrook, N.Y. DEBBIE J. DAVIS, Psychology Cadiz DOUG A. DAVIS, Business Admin. Vincennes, Ind. KAREN A. DAVIS, Accounting Franklin MAYME L. DAVIS, Dental Hygiene and Comm. Health Cave City RANDY A. DAVIS, Biology and Agri. Henderson WALLACE D. DAVIS, Business Admin. Cadiz JOHN R. DAY, Geography Caneyville KATHY S. DEAN, Mathematics Smiths Grove THERESA T. DECKARD, Elem. Ed. Tompkinsville RHONDA C. DEDMOND, History Denver, Colo. JOHN S. DELAUTRE, Religion Bowling Green GLORIA A. DELLARIO, Phys. Ed. and Rec. Louisville RICHARD R. DELPH, Mass Comm. Bartow, Fla. MARIE A. DEMAREE, Biology Louisville WILMA K. DENHAM, Recreation Bowling Green LYNN S. DENNING, Recreation Evansville, Ind. JUDITH M. DES JARDINS, Recreation Prospect DEBORAH A. DETENBER, Elem. Ed. Jeffersonville, Ind. JILL L. DEWITT, Accounting Louisville DEBRA A. DICKENSON, Business Admin. Hendersonville, Tenn. 338 Seniors ZETTA M. DILLARD, Business Admin. Hopkinsville MILLIE J. DIXON, Music and Elem. Ed. Caneyville THOMAS L. DIXON, Accounting Henderson DANNY C. DOEGE, Psychology Pensacola, Fla. IMA J. DONNELLY, Dental Hygiene Louisville GUY H. DORSEY, II, Community Health Louisvil le MARY L. DOSS, Dental Hygiene Beaver Dam LINDA L. DOUGHERTY, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green JOHN K. DOWELL, Elem. Ed. Radcliff LOVONNE K. DOWNS, Tex. and Cloth. Merch. and Int. Design Leitchfield GORDON D. DUNBAR, Geology Dawson Springs RANDALL A. DUNLEAVY, Elec. Engin. Tech. Owensboro JAMES M. DURHAM, Industrial Ed. Bowling Green KAREN S. DURHAM, Mass Comm. Harrodsburg TERRY W. DURHAM, Biology Louisville KENNETH W. DUVALL, History Glasgow MARK A. DYE, History and Bus. Admin. Louisville LILLIE M. EASLEY, Office Admin. Louisville WILLIE M. EASLEY, Office Admin. Louisville EVERARD W. EATON, Biology Bowling Green STEPHEN R. EDELEN, Mass Comm. Bowling Green CLAIRE S$. EDGINGTON, Recreation Winchester ROBERT B. EDWARDS, Photojournalism Louisville SHELIA M. EDWARDS, Elem. Ed. Central City CHRISTOPHER N. EICHBERGER, Mech. Engin. Tech. Louisville MICHAEL L. ELDRIDGE, Inst. Admin. Bowling Green LAUREL A. ELMS, History Kevil JAMES M. ELSESSER, Business Admin. Bowling Green AZUBIKE A. EMEJIAKA, Business Admin. and Govt. Abd, (Imo) Nigeria RICHARD M. EMERSON, Business Admin. Franklin SARAH J. EMMITT, Elem. Ed. Glasgow JAMES R. ERSKINE, History Bowling Green CYNTHIA A. ESSLING, Sociology and Tex. and Clothing Merch. St. Joseph, Mich. KEVIN ESTRIDGE, Biology Williamstown JOHN D. EVANS, JR., Admin. Service Prestonsburg 339 Seniors What’s What about Who's Who Selecting the most deserving 50 seniors to Who’s Who from a class of 1,861 is not easy when gpas, honors awarded and extracurricular activities are the measuring devices. The previous method, a student vote after nominations were made by two faculty members from different departments, was often criticized so the system was changed. This time students were nominated by two faculty members from two departments, two student organizations or by one organization and one professor. A committee of students, faculty members and administrators, was appointed by President Dero Downing 34 to name 50 students from the 104 nominees. The announcement was made in January, but the Talisman staff was unable to contact four students who were no longer at Western. They were Shadlea Rene Bennett, Vicky Denise Lambert Lewis Bauer Brown, Martha Ellen Peters and Susan Spieser. Asked by the Talisman staff if they deserved the award, most of the 46 seniors said they did. The staff asked them other questions to pinpoint reasons why they were honored. Their answers tried to tell what’s what about those selected to Who’s Who at Western for 1976-77. He got a high gpa, but Lambert Lewis Bauer is happier with the better O Who’s Who his college days. “If I Photos by Jim Burton understanding and knowledge he obtained in agriculture and business. “I plan to attend graduate school and then work in either the agriculture-business or agriculture- economics field,” the Hiseville native said. Bauer said working on the president’s committee to study residence hall living and being president of Interhall Council were the experiences of ad it to do over, I think I would like to become more involved in student government,” Bauer said. “The Hill has instilled in me a great two most Saar i sense of pride,” he said. “I have a deep feeling for the experiences and people I’ve come in contact with.” The rich historical location and attractive campus lured Roy Glenn Baxter to Western where he said he has matured and become more aware and critical. Roy Glenn Baxter “I sincerely feel I have received a rewarding education, an education that should not be judged on a scale of 1 to 4, but on a personal scale of self- achievement,” Baxter said. President of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, Baxter said he wants to serve his friends, family and society to the best of his abilities. “Life should be taken day by day,” the history and speech major said. “It’s the highest and lowest roller coaster ride one will ever journey.” The faces he sees now on his way to class are mostly familiar ones for Thomas Alan Blair. “My first day I didn’t know anyone,” he said. “Everywhere I go now, I see people I know and it really makes me feel like part of a big family of students.” Blair, who has majors in psychology and business, said students have very little influence on university policy. “Although the university provides student representation on every university committee, I feel that student opinions do not actually carry very much weight.” Ambition is the key to success in such a competitive world, Blair said. “If you have a great deal of ambition and if you are good enough at what you do, then you'll achieve success,” the Bellbrook, Ohio, native said. Preparing for veterinary school often left little time for Susan Talbott Botts’ social. life, but she said she concentrated on her studies on Thomas Alan Blair weekdays and reserved weekends for socializing. “A person can definitely go too far in either direction but I think there’s a happy medium,” she said. With a major in biology and minors in chemistry and animal science, Miss Botts said she matured and learned a lot about people. “College is a time to grow in understanding people,” she said. Emphasis on a high gpa depends on a student’s goals, Miss Botts said. “Personally, I feel it is very important and challenging. After all, you are here to learn,” the Lexington native said. Eric Corbin Brown listened to his own philosophy of life for the past four years, and has been accepted to the University of Kentucky Medical School because of it. “One should choose a reasonable goal and work toward it,” Brown said. Susan Talbott Botts Judith Elaine Bryant “Everyone should try to excel in something.” Brown said he strived to make good grades, and made all “A’s” except for one “B.” “I’ve become more responsible and have developed good study habits,” the Providence native said. “Academically, I think I have accomplished very much.” The chemistry major said gpas are important in job placement so students should strive for the best possible grades. “Unfortunately the gpa is the only concrete record of class performance,” he added. Second thoughts about striving at Western never entered Judith Elaine Bryant’s mind. “I have become more active in campus organizations with each semester, and I have enjoyed college more and more because of this involvement,” she said. Miss Bryant, who has worked in President Downing’s office for two Eric Corbin Brown Edna Kathleen Burchett years, said she gained a geniune interest in her courses. “Most of my classes proved to be real challenges, and education came into focus at the college level,” the Bowling Green native said. She said each student should get involved in either a departmental, service or Greek organization. “It seems that so many students begin college in a vacuum of studying and going home on weekends. They only scratch the surface of real college life,” the secretarial science major said. “Involvement can add excitement and a purpose other than academics to college.” Once Edna Kathleen Burchett mailed her application to medical school, she began wondering if all the time and effort invested in a college education would end in success or failure. When she was accepted to the University of Louisville School of Medicine, she stopped wondering. “I have become very independent and I’m very happy with my academic record because it helped me get into medical school,” Miss Burchett said. ‘‘However, the grade is not the final judge on how much a person has learned or experienced.” The biology major said she wishes she hadn’t worked as a resident ’ assistant. “I had to deal with racial prejudice and feelings of hostility. I was caught in the middle,” Miss Burchett said. Tougher academic standards and a more universal battery of general elective courses are needed at Western, according to Dennis Ross Caudill. “This would assure each student of a good basic background that is needed in modern society,” Caudill said. The chemistry and agriculture major said he has learned how little he knows about the physical universe. “Being a humanist, I can’t say man’s Dennis Ross Caudill role on earth is small, but I have become very impressed with the fact that mankind’s knowledge in general is far outweighed by the mysteries of life,” he said. Caudill said he loves people so he has devoted a great deal of time to his. social life and learned a lot about the makeup of people. “An individual must live for others and for principles of truth as well as for himself in order to make life meaningful,” the Franklin native said. 341 Who’s Who — 3 WHO'S WHO on The first day on campus was very lonely for LaNetta Lynn Clark. She had no one to help her with her first attempt at mass registration. “I might as well have had ‘freshman’ written all over me,” Miss Clark said. “I’m sure it showed I was in total confusion. “Now, I know the ropes, the people, the system and what you have to do to keep that system operating smoothly,” the Glasgow native said. With an area of concentration in office administration, Miss Clark said she has learned to discriminate between advice and demands. “I am changing my attitudes. I tended to be susceptible to control at first; I realize now that I am in control,” she explained. Miss Clark completed her degree program in three years instead of four and knows that sometimes it’s wise to make sacrifices to succeed. “Everythin will not be a fairy tale story,” she said. “The lumps will come so you must accept them.” A perfectionist, Ricky Earl Crawford isn’t completely satisfied with his 4.0 a. “I guess I'll some think that I could have and should have done Austin Butler Daniel better in Class X or that I should have attempted more courses to gain a more complete education,” Crawford said. e biology major will enter the University of Louisville School of Medicine after graduati on, and said it © is important for students to find out who they are and what they want out of life, to study hard and to reach their goals while enjoying themselves. “I try to be the best individual that I can be which is a tough job,” Crawford said. “I try to understand 342 Who’s Who and help as many people as is possible and be content with what life is giving me.” Self-discovery was an overwhelming aspect of Austin Butler Daniel’s college education. Daniel uncovered his talent for debate and music, and learned what other academic areas excite him. “I will graduate with enough hours Lanetta Lynn Clark curious person is on the ball,” he said. “Everyone can cultivate an alert mind, but unfortunately insecure teachers and a rigid educational system make this curious spirit difficult.” College life outside a classroom is the most used learning lab, according to Adrian Wallace Gooch, Jr. “The majority of what you learn at college will take place outside the Adrian Wallace Gooch, jr. in undergraduate study to have a master’s degree,” said the Bowling Green native. “But, as a curious person I chose to explore some of my academic interests.” The speech and psychology major said he plans to attend law school. “My best abilities are suited with the best requirements of a lawyer,” he said. Time is the most valuable asset a person can have, Daniel said. “Those people who waste time should be avoided. The alert, energetic Margaret Anne Griffin classroom,” Gooch said. “Performance and practical use of one’s knowledge is more indicative of one’s knowledge of a subject than a high performance on a test.” Maintaining a competitive gpa for medical school, working as an assistant in the physics laboratories and working on research projects were the challenges of his college career, the biology major said. “Everyone must establish their own set of standards to which they live up % to, and if they set them high enough they will satisfy others’ expectations of them,” Gooch said. “Before I came to college I expected to learn everything I needed to know for survival and happiness in the ‘real’ world,” said Margaret Anne Griffin. “But now, I feel like I’m just beginning to learn and will always be _ learning how to make my life Judith Marshall Harrison gz e 2s =a S = B 3 Charles Richard Hord happier.” Miss Griffin said she wishes more students would stay on campus on weekends. “If more people would stay, then more activities would be planned which would in turn encourage more people to stay. This would help unify the university,” she ait: A math and computer science major, Miss Griffin said a high gpa is not as important as making an effort. “One should strive to do everything as well as he or she can, and should be satisfied with what is then accomplished.” Her advice to underclassmen is simple. “Stay busy by taking part in the activities sponsored by the school when possible,” Miss Griffin said. “Not only will it be entertaining, it will usually be educational.” A test of extremes is Judith Marshall ‘Harrison's definition of college. “To flourish you’ve got to condition yourself for ae bitter disappointments without letting them defeat you,” she said. “You've also got to learn to accept moments of success and recognition without allowing yourself to dwell on them, ceasing to improve.” A born contemplator, the Cartersville, Va., native said she is ver philosophical. ‘My most constant goa is to really use up every moment of every day,” she said. “If we miss the joys of each moment, those moments will never add up to joyous days.” A speech communications major, she said she wants to use her skills to someone else’s advantage. “My avenue could be career, family or civic involvement,” Miss Harrison said. “I'll always care about some academic areas enough to pursue them on my own.” A more relaxed atmosphere with friendly students and faculty members attracted Charles Richard Hord, Jr. to Western, but he almost left after four Sebastian Hubbuch semesters. “I had second thoughts about staying at Western after a disastrous sophomore year,” Hord said. He decided to transfer to another school but changed his mind when he learned that the people were cold and the administration was very bureaucratic there. “If you think Western is bureaucratic, you ought to visit elsewhere,” the biology major said. “We are lucky to have a fine administration.” Hord hopes to practice veterinary medicine in a rural area, and said a high gpa is important. “However, one should stress not only an academic education but an education into life,” the Anchorage native said. “I can’t see living in this world and not ences how to enjoy ife.” An acceptance letter to medical school would make four years of college a worthwhile endeavor for Sebastian “Skip” Hubbuch. The Jeffersontown native hopes to attend the University of Louisville School of Medicine and become a general practitioner or a specialist in emergency medicine. A biology major and biophysics and chemistry minor, Hubbuch said college has made him more aware of his responsibilities and made him more honest with himself. Although the pre-med program limited Hubbuch’s social life, he said, “The fraternity seemed to understand. They have helped me out a lot in learning to understand people.” Transferring from Hopkinsville Community College, Kenneth Wayne Humphries continued a family tradition when he came to Western as a junior. The biology major said he obtained a good base of knowledge while he Kenneth Wayne Humphries matured. “Before I had a rather naive outlook on college and life in general,” Humphries said. “I’ve become less idealistic, but also more liberal.” Attending law school is what Humphries wants so he can use his science background to represent the environment. “I see and understand the threat civilization poses upon the environment,” he said. “It’s almost my duty to work for the preservation and perhaps the rejuvenation of nature.” 343 Who’s Who WHO'S WHO «en. Her post-graduation plans aren’t complete yet, but Nancy Jane Jeannette said she is academically prepared for a career in math or computer science. “Emphasis should be placed on doing your best in a course which does not necessarily mean getting a high gpa,” said the Rackfield native. Having matured as a college student, Miss Jeannette said she now looks at eople “with regard to their inner heclisigs and not just appearances.” Her advice to students is to become an active participant in both the academic and extracurricular aspects of college life, Miss Jeannette said. “To be truly educated, a person has to have more than academic knowledge. He must also be able to get along with people,” she said. Home was just a couple of miles away from the Hill for Teresa Lee Jenkins, a speech and theatre major from Bowling Green. She said students should watch the emphasis they place on their gpas. “It’s like a ballgame,” Miss Jenkins said. “You should certainly play to win, but when winning becomes the joined ASG much sooner,” she said. Western wasn’t her first college home, but Janet Holland Johnson said she was very pleased with her decision to transfer. “I found it met all the needs of a university without the unfamiliar formal atmosphere,” the home economics education major said. “I have become more tolerant of other beliefs, ideas and action which I personally do not feel are ‘right,’”” Mrs. Johnson said. “I have also become more aware of how a person should be well-rounded in all studies and in all areas,” she said. The Fountain Run native plans to teach home economics or go into extension work. “I want to do this because of the opportunities to work with people,” Mrs. Johnson said. “I’m definitely a ‘people person’ and love to work with them.” Sheila LaBlanche Johnson left the industrial region of her home in Dayton, Ohio, to attend Western where adjusting to a slower lifestyle was a daily homework assignment. “I was able to adjust and the gospel choir and sorority had great influence on my remaining at WKU,” the music education major said. Miss Johnson plans to attend graduate school, yg then specialize in personnel and curriculum development Teresa Lee Jenkins only thing, people fall short of their ethics and appreciation for the game.” Miss Jenkins wants to be a forensic coach and said she’s learned a good bit about everything from debate to interpretation at Western. “More importantly, I have learned the value of a forensic program,” she said. Reflecting on her education at Western, Miss Jenkins said she would make two changes. “I would have studied harder my first two years, and I would have 344 Who’s Who Janet Holland Johnson in higher education. “I have accomplished much knowledge in choral conducting, but I’ve accomplished more in my general requirement areas,” she said. Succeeding academically and socially, with still enough time to do volunteer work were the biggest challenges at poliege: Miss Johnson said. “When faced with a mountain, I won't quit,” she said. “I keep striving until I climb over, find a pass, a tunnel or simply turn the mountain into a gold mine with God’s help.” Scheduling concerts that would satisfy the majority of students was Richard Hobson Kelley’s biggest challenge as activities vice-president for ASG. “In my position, you’re always subject to criticism and you have to treat it as such and continue on,” Nancy Jane Jeannette Sheila LaBlanche Johnson Kelley said. The business administraton major said meeting new people and working with different types of people are important learning experiences at college. “There are many things that go together that compose college life,” the Bowling Green native said. “It’s not all academics, it’s not all extracurricular activities, it’s not all partying. It’s a combination of these and many others that round out your college a experience.” Looking back on his college experience, Kelley said there is very little he would change. “There are always things that don’t go exactly like you wish they would, but overall, I’m very happy with the way things have gone,” he said. Leaving the Hill behind is going to be hard for Larry Allen Leach. “I Richard Hobson Kelley THE SPINNERS 3GINS SSINA ssINA TR. Ip ay, April 23, 1976 8:00 P_M. EA. Diddle Arena to Full-Time Western Stydeatian Timothy Yarbrough Leigh would like to make it last a little longer,” the mass communications major said. “I'll miss it. “In retrospect, college was a lot more fun than I thought it would be,” Leach said. “I think I gained quite an insight as to the ever-changing world around me.” The Owensboro native plan s to enter military service and said he tried to enjoy college life, just rolling with the punches. “You shouldn’t spend all your life in a book,” Leach said. “I’ve devoted an adequate portion of my time toward a social life, but I didn’t party every night.” Never living on campus was the biggest void in Timothy Yarbrough Leigh’s college career. “There was a time period when it was difficult to meet people,” the Bowling Green native said. “I wish I Larry Allen Leach Julianna Lovell had lived on campus for awhile.” Leigh, who had an area of concentration in health care administration and a major in government, said he also wishes he had gotten involved in student activities sooner. “I could have gained more expertise in my work with Academic Council and ASG,” Leigh said. “I could have done more than I did.” Leigh said students should become part of the activities at Western. “They should attend plays and Fine Arts Festival events. They should talk to their professors after class,” he said. “You need to drink in as much as you can while you’re at college, away from the ‘real world.” Total involvement was Julianna Lovell’s original plan for college life, but she said those goals were slightly hampered. “Because I lived at home two of m three years at Western I have andased: being totally involved,” the elementary education major said. “When you leave school and come home, you leave a great deal of school life at school until the next day. If you live on campus, there is more opportunity to see what college is all about. “Through my association with others in classes, with my job, and especially through involvement in several organizations, I feel that I am much. more capable of working succe ssfully with others after graduation,” Miss Lovell said. She said she would recommend Western to her younger brothers and sisters. “You should dig in, work hard, make friends, get involved and don’t let anything get you down — just keep smiling.” Extracurricular activities have been part of John Steven Marcum’s philosophy of life and part of his social John Steven Marcum life at college. “I don’t feel my social life has been hurt by academics or extracurricular activities,” he said. “I’ve had the opportunity to meet people through extracurricular activities.” An accounting major, Marcum said becoming acquainted with students and : faculty was an academic accomplishment. “I could share ideas and opinions with them,” he said. “I felt like a part of the campus and its people.” 345 Who’s Who WHO'S WHOae«. More of an individual now than when she was a high school senior, Deborah Gail McGuffey said she chose Western in order to develop a deeper sense of independence. “The college environment has provided me, along with an increased Deborah Gail McGuffey scope of knowledge, the opportunity for reinforcing or discarding old opinions and developing new ones,” the Stanford native said. “In addition, my ability to communicate with others has increased.” Actuality and Miss McGuffey’s expectations of college were often opposite. “I thought the college classroom would be a highly impersonal situation,” the French and government major said. “It’s been quite the opposite. There is an extremely good faculty-student relationship here.” Nancy Dean Nation isn’t sure she deserved the Who’s Who honor, but she said she appreciated it. “Every semester is the most challenging,” the Owensboro native said. “The challenges become greater each year. Maybe I’m just beginning to realize how much more I need to know.” The home economics education major said she approved of recent changes in policies concernin upperclassmen scholarships and drop- add procedures. She said goals for gpas depend on post-graduation plans. “For some jobs or professional schools, grades mean everything,” Miss Nation said. “Other activities can mean just as much. I admit there are worse disasters than getting a grade other than an ‘A.’” Learning how to relate to people will get a person much further in life than a degree, according to Jane Elizabeth 346 Who’s Who Owens. “Students should get involved in something outside of classes and take advantage of the constant education with people,” said the Greenville native. The psychology major said she changed little as a college student. “My values have become stronger, but have hardly deviated from that Nancy Dean Nation David Charles Payne hard core of long-developed ideals,” Miss Owens said. “I have grown less critical of others and I have learned to accept different people.” Using no special formula, David Charles Payne selected Western because “‘it’s just a nice place.” “What a college could offer in academics depended on me,” he said. “All schools were equal in this area.” The business administraton major said he kept busy with his academic loads and participation in ASG and Alpha Kappa Psi fraternity. Grades need to be emphasized more, he said. “I was always told that grades are not everything, but in talking to prospective employers, I see that they are very important,” Payne said. Complacency is a big problem at Western, according to Lawrence Edwin Powell. “The student at Western refuses new Jane Elizabeth Owens Lawrence Edwin Powell ideas, new concepts; he is afraid to change,” Powell said. “Western has a conservative administration, but the administrators are no different ideologically than the majority of the students.” The physics major said he has become more open-minded. “My outlook on life has improved,” he said. “Idealism has been replaced with realism.” Students shouldn’t be afraid of making waves in life, said the Masonville native. “Success in life is not due so much to what you know, but how you deal with your fellow man.” A freshman year loaded with _involvement was enough to keep Mary . Evelyn Reeder at Western three more years. “I got to know a lot of people, both administrators and students,” she said. Mary Evelyn Reeder Laura Lowrey Smith “Overall I was very content in this environment. There was enough fun and work to keep me happy.” The accounting major said her perspectives changed. “I’m more career- oriented and more aware of what’s going on in the world around me,” she said. “I’ve become a leader, not a follower.” Miss Reeder said academic standards should be raised. “It’s too easy,” she said. “Teachers curve too much.” What he expected out of college, Dwight Pritchett Russell doesn’t know. But the physics and math major said he doesn’t think things would have been different at another college. A self-described idealist, the Bowling Green native said little importance should be placed on high gpas. “It inhibits creativity and it tends to replace learning as the main reason for working in a course which is very Dwight Pritchett Russell a James Tutt Snodgrass, III sad,” Russell said. “The problem is that if the job market requires good gpas, then a student is more or less trapped.” Russell said he didn’t give enough time to his social life. “I would have spent more time with social and athletic activities than I did,” he said. Murray State was one of JoAnna Shipley’s college choices, but she said she selected Western because the school had better handball courts. “I had some second thoughts about staying, but they weren’t too serious,” doctor and coll she said. “Out-of-state tuition in Florida was outside my financial capabilities and I don’t tan. I freckle,” said the Cave City native. “There is more to the college experience than maintaining a high gpa,” Miss Shipley said. “I’ve spent a lesser amount of time on my social life than I would have liked, but I don’t feel socially deprived.” : Jo Anna Shipley The biggest change in Laura Dale Lowrey Smith’s college career was a year of work. “I thought my school days were over and found out what it’s like on the outside,” she said. “Since then I’ve decided to become a e has taken on a completely different meaning.” The Leitchfield native said teachers’ salaries should be increased and the — evaluation system sharpened. “In my 150 hours at Western I’ve had every caliber (of teacher) from very poor to two brilliant ones,” she said. “More money should be available to attract high caliber teachers and keep them here,” said the biology major. James Tutt Snodgrass, III, spent his first two years at college as “a virtual recluse,’ Ul ut he said his attitudes and lifestyle changed. “Since my first day on campus, “I’ve matured, mellowed and m the math major said. “However, the greatest change is probably that my entire outloo erated,” has shifted from the hopelessly cynical end of the continuum to the Christian end.” The Louisville native said he should have enjoyed college more. “Sitting in a classroom taking notes, studying those notes or text, and reproducing the material in an intelligent fashion is purely mechanical and can be done by anyone,” Snodgrass said. “However, I have learned a little about living and that is what counts.” 347 Who’s Who WHO'S WHO... “Keep your eyes and ears open, your mind eae fe hates! and make make that you keep a sense of why you are in college and what it’s all abut with you every second,” is Paul Edward Stamp’s advice to students. The Louisville native said his studies in health care administration exposed him to subjects ranging from business to epidemiology. Given the change to change university policy, Stamp said he would alter housing. “For the most part the current policies are an insult to a student's intelligence. Given the opportunity, the students would not take advantage of the situation, but would behave responsibly.” Alonzo Theodore Stephens (“A.T.”) is ready for a change. “I’ve been a faithful student for about 16 years, and with graduate school it will be 17 or more. I'd like to be someone else now,” the history major said. Stephens said college has made him confident and more self-assured. “Being self-serving and honest with myself, I’ve managed my life, academic Joseph Newton Stites and otherwise, handily,” he said. Tutoring in remedial English was Stephen’s most challenging endeavor. ‘ ‘The experience for me was frustrating, in that I felt responsible for his success,” the Ashville, Tenn. native said. “We both passed though. He got a passing grade and I felt useful and flattered that he needed Physical changes ‘and mental changes have touched Joseph Newton Stites. “Aside from growing a beard and 348 Who’s Who gaining 15 pounds, I am more open- minded,” the music education major said. “I am more apt to see more than one side to every issue.” Stites said students should take advantage of the college environment, its classes, teachers, libraries, organizations and people. “It’s probably the richest, most stimulating and productive community you'll be Joseph David Stokes, Jr. part of,” said the Hopkinsville native. “Life is a constant process of becoming,” Stites said. “If you even feel like you’ve arrived, you're in trouble. If you stop contributing, you are detracting.” Compared to other seniors named to Who’s Who, Joseph David Stokes, Jr. said he didn’t deserve the award. The biology and chemistry major said he should have taken a more varied course schedule. “I just don’t know enough ‘about a few areas,” he Paul Edward Stamp said. “In college you’ve got to experience as much as you can and meet as many different people as you can,” Stokes said. “Emphasis on a high gpa should be even with extracurricular activities and experience in the field you’re going into,” he en 9 College wasn’t what Marla Faye Alonzo Theodore Stephens 1993989899 ggar9gaeas Russell H. Miller Theatre November 18, 19, 20, 21, 22- 8:15 p.m. Sunday, November 23 3:00p.m. Marla Faye Tharp Tharp expected. It was better. “My studies haven’t interrupted much of my social life,” the Munfordville native said. “It’s good to mix with people. You can learn a great deal by being involved and working with people.” Miss Tharp said she hopes to work in recreation at a state park. “I enjoy working and meeting interesting people and this type of work offers just that.” Her philosophy of life includes faith and patience. “Try your best, don’t plan too far ahead and make the best of each day,” she said. Midway through college, James Russell Thomas switched his routine. “During my first two years, I spent ‘|| ° 100 per cent of my time partying,” the economics major said. “Since I knew I was an expert partier, it made it easier || for me to study constantly my last two James Russell Thomas E + | Christy Kay Vogt years. When I average those first two years with the last two years, I get a 50 per cent average. That’s not bad,” Thomas said. “Unfortunately, a gpa is essential in obtaining a job in today’s world,” the Bowling Green native said. “Consequently, it should receive foremost attention.” Thomas said students should be optimistic. ‘““You need to absorb everything that goes on around you for future reference.” Robert Ritchie Van Bussum was surprised at how much he learned at college. “I found I was interested in other things than just the sciences,” the biology major said. ‘The liberal arts classes which I dreaded taking proved to be interesting.” Van Bussum plans to attend the University of Kentucky Medical School. He said he studied a great deal Robert Ritchie Van Bussum sick ROOM PORE Rey, CONFERENCE, ROOM Brian Lee West in preparation. “If a person really wants something, he will work for it and in the end, he will be rewarded,” the Henderson native said. “You can’t get caught up in the fun times which is easy to do,” Van Bussum said. “You've got to study when it’s time to study and party when you've finished.” “Definitely, my most challenging experience was my dual role as ASG president and member of the Board of Regents,” said Christy Kay Vogt, a Louisville native. “It required me to think as a student, speak as a student, but often not be expected to act as a student.” “I would see what the students wanted, but I was often in a position to know what was better for the university as a whole,” she said. “When I first came to Western I was overly concerned about what people thought of me,” Miss Vogt said. “Now I’m more concerned about what I think of myself,” the government and special education major said. A member of Pi Kapa Alpha for seven semesters, Brian Lee West said the fraternity is what he’ll remember most about Western. “It was the best part of college,” he said. ‘Preparing for dental school at LSU in New Orleans, La. was also a huge part of West’s emphasis in his college - a ae “I’m ha with my grades, but wished I re eanten aac involved in school government,” the biology major said. “I’ve become more open in groups and can be more comfortable with them.” “Without the social aspects of © college, I believe that the past four years would not have been as meaningful,” Re Gene Yeater, Jr. said, Robert Gene Yeater, Jr. Through participation in Pershing Rifles, intramurals and the Accounting Club, the Vine Grove native said he is a more rounded individual. “The things that help you out the most are those which you don’t learn in the classroom,” Yeater said. “The knowledge you gain at college can never be taken from you.” The military science major is committed to duty as an officer in the U.S. Army and hopes to be stationed in Hawaii after graduation. 349 Who’s Who BETHANY A. EVANSON, Library Science Cinnaminson, N.J. MARIAN L. EVERY, Tex. and Clothing Merch Cincinnati, Ohio MARK E. EZELL, Mathematics Bowling Green DAVID W. FACKLER, Accounting Hanson DAWN R. FACKLER, Inst. Mgmt Hanson ABOLGHASSEM FATHEDDIN, Elec. Engin. Tech. Ahwaz, Iran GERARD FAULK, JR., Elem. Ed. Bowling Green MARTHA B. FERGUSON, Soc. and Lib. Sci. Union NANCY A. FERRALASCO, Psy. and Tex. and Clothing Merch. : Jonesboro, Ark. ROBERT E. FIELDS, Business Admin. Louisville SHELIA M. FIGGS, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Lexington SUSAN N. FINNELL, Interior Design Owensboro ROBYN C. FISHER, Elem. and Spec. Ed. Louisville BRENDA K. FLORENCE, Business Ed. Bowling Green DONNA M. FLOYD, Business Ed. Oakland DAISIE A. FOGG, Business Ed. Louisville GAYLE A. FORKNER, English Versailles WILLIAM P. FOSTER, Industrial Ed. Louisville SUSAN N. FOX, Social Work and Bio. Nebo WILLIAM E. FOX, Accounting Jeffersontown TERESA K. FRALEY, Special Ed. Ashland SUSAN R. FRANKE, Psychology Evansville, Ind. JAN E. FRANKLIN, Business Admin. Erlanger LINDA F. FREDRICKS, Home Ec. Ed. Bowling Green LINDA J. FREELAND, Commercial Art Mayfield MICHAEL E. FUGATE, Biology Bowling Green TONY G. FULKERSON, English Central City DEBRA Y. FULLER, Elem. Ed. Blackford SARAH S. FULLER, Spec. and Elem. Ed. Lakewood, Ohio SANDRA K. GABBARD, Mathematics Cecilia JERRY W. GADBERRY, Civil Engin. Tech. Nancy CHONITA K. GALUSHA, Elem. Ed. Eddyville VICKI L. GAMMEL, Medical Tech. Louisville MICHAEL F. GANTT, Accounting Radcliff TERRILL A. GARMON, Agriculture Burkesville 350 Seniors ————— CAROLYN J. GARNER, Int. Design and Tex. and Cloth. Merch. Russell Springs ANNA D. GARRARD, Distributive Ed. Winchester THEODORE A. GARROD, Government | Titusville, Fla. CLAUDE A. GASS, Business Admin. Marion | WILLIAM R. GENET, Business Admin. Greenville | TRINA J. GEORGE, Spanish | Rockledge, Fla. | BRENDA J. GHOLSON, Art Utica | GARRY L. GIBSON, Agri. and Mass Comm. Falls of Rough LYNNE K. GIBSON, History and Health Ed. Elizabethtown TIMOTHY A. GIBSON, Journalism Hodgenville MARGARET A. GILLENWATER, Biology Scottsville CHARLOTITE B. GILLIAM, Recreation Hopkinsville EMMA K. GILLIAM, Elem. Ed. Hopkinsville JACQUELINE M. GILLUM, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green LYDIA F. GILMER, Community Health Hopkinsville SCRILDA I. GIORGIO, Mass Comm. Lebanon Junction GLENN A. GIVAN, Civil Engin. Tech. Bowling Green MARK K. GODBEY, Journalism Liberty CAROLE J. GONGLOFF, Elem. Ed. Glasgow WILLIAM J. GONGLOFF, JR., Bus. Admin. Glasgow Stanford BARBARA J. GOODWIN, Journalism Ft. Knox CRYSTAL GORDON, Tex. and Clothing Merch. and Psych. Frankfort KAREN L. GOSSMAN, Mass Comm. and Relig. Stu. Madison, Ind. SUSAN P. GRAGG, Art Lexington TERESA F. GRAHAM, Environ. Engin. Tech. Bowling Green MARY J. GRANACHER, Dietetics and Inst. Admin. Brandenburg PEGGY A. GRAY, Dental Hygiene Eddyville MARY A. GREEN, Business Ed. Bowling Green NANCY M. GREEN, Social Work Bowling Green ADRIAN W. GOOCH, JR., Biology ‘| | BERNICE F. GREENE, Undecided Bowling Green MARK A. GREENE, Mass Comm. Louisville | ROBERT L. GREEN, Recreation | Ft. Dix, N.J. : | BETHEL D. GREER, Industrial Arts Ed. Owensboro JIMMIE D. GREGORY, Mass Comm. Bowling Green | 351 | Seniors 352 Seniors MARGARET A. GRIFFIN, Math. and Comp. Sci. Owensboro MARTHA A. GRIFFIN, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green CYNTHIA L. GRIMM, Elem. Ed. Ft. Thomas CHARLES D. GRIMSLEY, Industrial Tech. Columbia KAREN A. GRUBBS, Pre-Speech Path. Bowling Green SHAWN L. GRUBBS, Business Ed. Scottsville LINDA J. GRUMLEY, Special Ed. Paducah ANISE C. GRUNDY, Social Work Louisville SUSAN M. GRUNER, Elem. Ed. and Spec. Ed. Louisville CATHY L. GULICK, Data Processing Covington CHESTER M. GUY, Mass Comm. Hodgenville JAN N. GUY, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green CHARLOTTE M. HALCOMB, Elem. Ed. Woodburn MELANY A. HAMILTON, Biology Delaware, Ohio ALBERT V. HAMM, Mass Comm. Bowling Green JOHN W. HAMMOND, Elec. Engin. Tech. Nashville, Tenn. LAURA T. HANES, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green RICHARD B. HANNA, Religion and Psych. Bowling Green LINDA C. HARDESTY, Journalism Owensboro JOHN F. HARMON, Chemistry and Bio. Benton, Ill. PATRICIA F. HARPER, Physical Ed. Hopkinsville BETTY K. HARRIS, Earth Science Reynolds Station DANNY L. HARRIS, Accounting Lewisburg JOHN D. HARRIS, Industrial Ed. Louisville TERRILL W. HARRIS, Theatre Columbia WILLA M. HARRIS, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Franklin JUDITH M. HARRISON, Speech Communication Cartersville, Va. KENNETH W. HARRISON, Business Admin Hopkinsville KORLIN R. HARRISON, Physical Ed. Lewisburg WARD S. HART, Business Admin Stanford MICHAEL W. HARTWEIN, Business Admin Louisville TERRY HARVEY, Agriculture Breeding JACK E. HASTIE, Accounting Winchester BEULAH G. HAWKINS, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Millwood PAMELA K. HAWKINS, Elem. Ed. Radcliff CAROL A. HAYDEN, Business Admin. Morganfield KAREN M. HAYDEN, Secretarial Admin. Owensboro PATRICIA A. HAYDEN, Elem. Ed. Louisville GARY L. HAYES, History and Psych. Cerulean RANDOLPH K. HAYES, History Middlesboro SUSANNE HAYNES, Accounting and Econ. Louisville MARY E. HAYS, Physical Ed. Henderson Self- Portrait A final project in sculpture class prompted Kim Pace, a ju- nior art education major from Mt. Vernon, Ill., to work on her self-portrait. Miss Pace took the course as an elective in her major. — B. Rogers 353 Seniors ‘ DEBORRA S. HEATH, Speech and Govt. Central City MARCIA K. HECKMAN, Elem. Ed. Louisville WILLIAM R. HEDGER, History Mounds, III. DINAH D. HEFFINGTON, Dental Hygiene Franklin WALTER R. HEIGHTER, Recreation Radcliff CATHY L. HELM, Government and Econ. Frankfort MATTHEW J. HENNECKE, English Clarendon Hills, Ill. CASSANDRA L. HENRY, Mass Comm. and Rec. Glasgow CHARLES D. HENRY, Accounting Allensville MICHAEL R. HENSLEY, Physical Ed. Dawson Springs SUSAN L. HEPPLER, Office Admin. Owensboro MARY J. HERMANN, Nursing Owensboro KATHERINE A. HERNDON, Sociology Russellville SANDRA A. HESTER, Home Ec. Ed. Smiths Grove 354 Seniors Work: From the top of the Hill to the depths of the earth, Bobby Sandidge covers a lot of ground in one day. Like many Westerners, the Madison- ville senior divides his day between the classroom, the jobsite and his family. What makes Sandidge different is that his job is 300 feet below the face of the earth at the Peabody Coal Company Al- ston. No. 3 mine near Centertown in Ohio County. He is a maintenance fore- man trainee there. Sandidge said he didn’t know anyone at the Alston No. 3 operation. He said he learned he was chosen because he is ma- joring in electrical engineering technol- ogy. aee first experience in an underground mine was “different, very different,” Sandidge said. “A coal miner and his family have to have the belief that when your time comes to go, you have to go,” Sandidge said. “There is nothing you can do about rte As far as having second thoughts, he said there were none. “I am pretty well set. I just want to make a decent living for my family,” he said. His wife Laura added, “When it’s his time to go, he will go whether he is work- ing in the mine or anywhere.” A low ceiling and dim light didn’t hamper San- didge and his wife Laura as they toured the mine. The classroom experience gave Laura a positive attitude toward underground mines. Laura’s fears were calmed when she visited the mine on a Sunday morning. “After seeing the mine and knowing it isn’t closed in and you don’t have to crawl on your knees, it doesn’t bother me,” she said. Both Sandidge and his wife have brothers who are miners, and the thought of losing a relative underground is one Sandidge has considered. “T have thought about it, but I couldn’t let it stand in my way,” he said. “TI’d consider it an act of God and let it go. If I let it get to me, it would ruin my goals and life.” Sandidge hopes to become a chief elec- trician at a new mine, a position that would make him responsible for main- tenance on all three shifts. He married Laura his sophomore year at Western, and has supported her and their two-year-old daughter, Jennifer, with summer work at the mines and ath- letic scholarships. Sandidge split his time between foot- ball and track during his career at West- ern. His most outstanding accomplish- ment was winning the Bek vault cham- pionship in the Ohio Valley Conference as a junior in the spring of 1975. When his eligibility ran out, Sandidge decided to keep working in Centertown. The Sandidge’s day begins at 7:30 a.m. They leave Jennifer with a babysitter at 8:30 in order to make their 9:10 classes. After classes, the couple returns home so Sandidge can spend about 30 minutes with his earehite: before beginning the one-hour trip to the second shift which lasts from 3 to 11 p.m. An hour break between classes on Tuesdays and Thursdays is about the only study time Sandidge has. During the fall semester he was able to maintain good grades in all courses except modern electronics. He said the course required a lot of reading and problem-solving. “Under the conditions he is doing ex- ceptionally well,” Laura said. “I am real- ly proud of him.” The Sandidges are expecting a second child in July, but the hlaee responsibil- ity and financial burden, don’t seem to worry the young couple. “The future looks rough, but we are still going to plug at it,” Sandidge said. Bi “Clean cut” jobs are often the type college gradu- ates choose. Sandidge’s electrical engineering ma- jor helped him obtain a mining job where the Mad- Ponville senior discovered keeping clean isn’t easy. Story and photos by Jim Burton As a maintenance foreman trainee, Sandidge is responsible for repair work. Here he works with two min- ers as they splice a shuttlecar cable. Prior to taking his fall semester final exam in modern electronics, San- didge spends some time with two classmates reviewing a problem. 355 Seniors CHARLESETTA HICKS, Journalism Owensboro MELODY J. HICKS, Elem. Ed. Henderson GEORGIA L. HIESTERMAN, Journalism Davenport, Iowa DAN B. HIGGINS, Biology Bowling Green JAMA C. HIGGINSON, Elem. Ed. Henderson RICKIE L. HIGGS, Business Admin. Brownsville SUE A. HIGHTOWER, Medical Tech. Bowling Green CHARLOTTE A. HILER, Spec. Ed. and Rec. Lexington MICHAEL F. HILL, Business Admin. Albion, Mich. JAMES L. HINES, JR., Mass Comm. and Speech Louisville SUSAN J. HINKLE, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green GINGER K. HOLCOMB, Spanish Gamaaliel DAN O. HOLDEN, Speech and Theatre Louisville JAN HOLEMAN, Computer Sci. Owensboro BRION E. HOLLAND, Sociology Bowling Green JAMES H. HOLLAND, II, Asian Studies Bowling Green ELLIS F. HOLLERMAN, Physical Ed. Gallatin, Tenn. CAROLE D. HOLMES, Recreation Glasgow SHARON L. HOLMES, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green DEBBIE A. HONAKER, Nursing Richardsville STEPHEN C. HOOKS, Biology Bowling Green JOHN H. HOPPER, Physical Ed. Hopkinsville CHARLES R. HORD, Biology Anchorage THOMAS E. HORNBECK, Recreation Mt. Washington MARJORIE A. HORSLEY, Undecided Louisville CHARLES D. HOSMER, Recreation Bowling Green DEBORAH A. HOTTELL, Social Work Bowling Green VICKI L. HOVEKAMP, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green DONNA K. HOWARD, Sociology and Mass Comm. Bowling Green JANICE M. HOWARD, Mass Comm. Owensboro SHIRL A. HOWARD, Elem. Ed. Fountain Run VICKIE L. HOWELL, Environ. Engin. Tech. Bowling Green ANN C. HOWELLS, Accounting Harrodsburg BRYAN M. HRYCYK, Environmental Sci. Englishtown, N_J. WILLIAM A. HUGHES, Physical Ed. Bowling Green 356 Seniors a f s 4 ail | Pi KENNETH W. HUMPHRIES, Biology Hopkinsville SUSAN E. HUNDLEY, Elem. Ed. Rineyville JENNIFER L. HUNLEY, Health and Safety Ed. Bowling Green TERRI HUNTER, Elem. Ed. Longview, Tex. SUSAN L. HURLEY, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green DANNY L. HUTCHERSON, Accounting Louisville JUDI M. HUTER, Speech and Theatre Greencastle, Ind. CINDY R. IVINS, Community Health Louisville BOBBIE F. JACKSON, Business Ed. Gallatin, Tenn. JOHN S. JACKSON, Mass Comm. Franklin PATRICK T. JACKSON, Agriculture Bowling Green RACHAEL D. JACOBS, Art Pottstown, Pa. HAROLD C. JAMES, JR., Interior Design Bowling Green JANICE K. JAMES, Recreation Glasgow JANICE S. JAMES, English Evansville, Ind. PRISCILLA D. JAMES, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Bowling Green CHARLES D. JARBOE, Chemistry and Bio. Eastview DAVID M. JARBOE, Retail Management Owensboro NANCY J. JEANETTE, Math. and Comp. Sci. Rockfield TERESA L. JENKINS, Speech and Theatre Bowling Green JULIANNA C. JEPSON, Elem. Ed. Franklin EVA J. JERNIGAN, Legal Sec. Admin. Greenville LESLIE G. JOFFRION, Mass Comm. and Theatre - Bowling Green ANITA G. JOHNSON, Home Ec. Ed. Glasgow AUBREY L. JOHNSON, Art Louisville DEBORAH J. JOHNSON, Elem. Ed. Danville FORREST P. JOHNSON, Industrial Tech. Wytheville, Va. GLENDON G. JOHNSON, Math. and Comp. Sci. Russellville JANET H. JOHNSON, Home Ec. Ed. Fountain Run NORMAN D. JOHNSON, Sociology Owensboro TIMOTHY P. JOHNSON, Mass Comm. and Govt. Batavia, N.Y. JOHN S. JOHNSTON, Geography Bowling Green STEPHEN L. JOHNSTON, Business Admin. Brandenburg DEBORAH K. JONES, Bus. Ed. and Sec. Sci. Bowling Green JOSEPH W. JONES, Business Admin. Madisonville 357 Seniors JOYCE L. JONES, Accounting and Bus. Admin. Scottsville WILLIAM J. JONES, Accounting Owensboro BRIAN A. KANZLER, Environ. Sci. Louisville DEBRA A. KARR, Elem, Ed. Owensboro LAUREN L. KEHR, Sociology Bowling Green MARY M. KELLY, General Bus. Springfield WANDA J. KELTEE, Social Work and Pre-law Louisville CAROL D. KEMP, Music Education Hendersonville, Tenn. STEPHEN J. KEMPF, Agriculture Bowling Green JIMMY D. KENNEDY, Health Care Admin. Cadiz PAMELA M. KEOWN, Secretarial Sci, Bowling Green KAREN L. KERLEY, Elem, Ed. and Elem. Music Bowling Green KEVIN R. KERR, Mass Comm. Louisville MARLINA G., KEY, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Clarkson PAMELA A, KEY, Elem. Ed. Louisville PHYLLIS A. KILPATRICK, English Jamestown JAMES E. KIMBROUGH, Public Relations Nashville, Tenn. SANDRA L. KING, Social Work Louisville GWENDOLYN C. KIRSTEIN, Sociology Bowling Green MARK D. KISER, Data Processing Bowling Green PAULA S. KISER, Psychology Bowling Green LISA K, KLINE, Psychology Ft. Mitchell JAMES H. KNOX, Business Admin. Jamestown, N.Y. SHERRY L. KNOX, Elem. Ed. Louisville THOMAS R. KOVACH, Business Admin, Whiting, Ind. DAVID KOWALEWSKIL, Recreation Wyandotte, Mich. LYNN M. KREMER, Elem, Ed. Louisville JUDY L. KUBALE, Home Ec. Ed. Bowling Green MARY P. LACY, Biology and Chem, Homestead, Fla. JAMES C. LADD, Government and Hist. Bowling Green MARIE D. LADD, Elem, Ed. Cadiz MILAGROS D. LAFFOSSE, Physical Ed. Palm Bay, Fla. JAN R. LAMAR, Accounting Hawesville TERRY R. LAMPTON, Industrial Tech. Louisville DANIEL A, LANDRETH, Broad. Engin. Tech. Bowling Green 358 Seniors A ‘smashing’ race for the Anthony Robert Staynings came to Western from Bristol, England, three years ago. His performance on the track team and in the 21st Olympiad at Montreal has made Western Bre Staynings finished 11th in the fin- als a the steeplechase event at the Olympic games. That along with the opening day ceremonies were the two more vivid memories Staynings brought home from Montreal. “T went in there with a lot of criti- cism, but I proved | was a steeple- chaser by beating many of the favor- ites in the semifinals,” Staynings said. “It was a terrific moment when I knew I’d made it to the finals.” The opening ceremony was ex- tremely emotional, Staynings said. “We walked two miles from our quar- ters to the stadium and the street was lined with people,” he said. When the Summer Olympics recon- vene in Russia in 1980, Staynings plans to “give it a go.” “T learned so much this summer,” the Englishman said. “I ran with the best runners in the world and I want to use that in 1980.” Visiting Russia won't be a new ex- perience is Staynings. He spent one week traveling to various track meets throughout the country. “Seeing Russia was a unique exper- ience. The people were open and friendly, but I was struck by the lack of luxury,” Staynings said. “Just the basic needs are met.” The number of social problems in Only an arm’s length from the best runners in the world, Tony Staynings (379) competes in the Summer Olympics at Montreal, Canada. The senior trackman finished 11th in the 12-man, 3,000 meter event with an 8:29.0. Russia was unbelievable, the athlete said. “You can’t walk down the street without seeing drunks. Venereal dis- ease, drugs, and prostitution are big problems there,” he added. “I guess the people are trying to escape some- how.” Staynings said he also visited Com- munist Poland and East Germany, and found Poland the most depress- ing. ponerse just nothing there. They still hate the Germans after all these ears, and all the people I| talked to ee the Communist system,” he said. “T enjoyed visiting, but I wouldn't want to live there.” Though he enjoys running, Stayn- ings said he primarily runs for the challenge and the test. “You only get out of something GWENDOLYN G. LASHLEY, Nursing Brownsville STEPHEN T. LASKEVICH, Retail Mid-Mgmt Bowling Green DEBORAH A. LAWHORN, History Hustonville JOHN P. LAWLER, Mass Comm. and Hist. Louisville JULIA L. LAWRENCE, Recreation Bowling Green RICHARD L. LAWSON, Business Admin. Bowling Green RICKEY J. LAWSON, Biology Bowling Green LARRY A, LEACH, Mass Comm. Bowling Green SUSAN A. LEATHERS, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Chardon, Ohio ANNA R. LEE, Accounting Auburn Englishman what you put into it,” he said. “Many people don’t realize the dedication it takes to be a runner.” This same dedication is applied to Staynings’ studies in health care ad- ministration. Staynings said he chose this field to help people and plans to remain in the United States after graduation. “T’d like to start on the grade school level anywhere the health care pro- gram system is not doing well,” he said. “I don’t care where I go, just so I’m needed.” Staynings said his number one goal is to retain his individuality. “T don’t want to fit into a mold or put on false airs or graces,” he said. “I want to be myself and be free to do the things I enjoy.” — MEGAN THOMAS [J esa | en ene aod — Newsweek — W. McNamee MARGARET A. LEE, Medical Tech. Elizabethtown SHARON B. LEE, Dental Hygiene Russellville PAMELA J. LEONARD, Recreation Bowling Green SHARON L. LESTER, Secretarial Sci. Bloomfield CARL E. LEWIS, Sociology Bowling Green CATHERINE V. LEWIS, Health Care Admin. Georgetown KENNETH N. LEWIS, Health and Safety Ed. Bowling Green LINDA M. LEWIS, Recreation Columbia SANDRA K. LEWIS, Business Admin. Naperville, Ill. MARTHA J. LIKINS, Special Ed. Clarkson DEBRA H. LILE, Office Admin. Cave City DORIS J. LINDE, Elem. Ed. and Spec. Ed. Louisville ANNETTA G. LINDSAY, Lib. Sci. and Instruct. Media Hopkinsville KATHY L. LINDSEY, Dietetics and Inst. Admin. Louisville DEBRA A. LINK, Speech Pathology Glen Ellyn, Ill. DEBORAH L. LIVELY, English and Philosophy Munfordville GAIL L. LOCKARD, Elem. Ed. Louisville LAURA S. LOFTIN, Social Work Elkton CLYDE P. LOGSDON, English and Applied Lang. Arts Leitchfield JANET M. LONG, Admin. Services Lexington JEFFERY J. LONGAKER, Environ. Engin. Tech. Louisville LINDA S. LOOPER, Mass Comm. Bowling Green ROBERT LORENZ, Chemistry and Environ. Sci. Yonkers, N.Y. JULIANNA LOVELL, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green MARY A. LOWE, Home Ec. Ed. Smiths Grove SALLY F. LOWE, Special Ed. and Psych. Bowling Green THOMAS D. LYNCH, Business Admin. Louisville PATRICIA A. LYON, English Port Jeruis, N.Y. SUSAN C. LYONS, History and Govt. Durham, N.C. SARA N. MADDOX, Public Relations Hopkinsville DAVID L. MADISON, Business Admin. Louisville RALPH E. MAIN, JR., Social Work and Soc. Owensboro WALTER L. MANTOOTH, Pre-Theology Valley Station JOHN S. MARCUM, Accounting Bowling Green CHRISTINE E. MARION, Journalism Wooster, Ohio 360 Seniors KAREN A. MARSH, Biology and Chem. Glasgow GAIL L. MARTIN, Speech Pathology Covington, Ohio LILA D. MARTIN, Community Health Paducah LYNTANAUAN L. MARTIN, Bus. Admin. Louisville MARTHA H. MARTIN, Environ. Sci. Little Rock, Ark. ROBERT D. MARTIN, Biology Calhoun SHEILA G. MARTIN, Government Mt. Washington MARY E. MASON, Community Health Bloomfield RUTH A. MASON, Interior Design Bowling Green DONNA K. MASSIE, Social Work Paducah MADONNA MATTHEWS, Social Work Hiseville ROGER D. MATTHEWS, Elem. Ed. Springfield, Tenn. MARY E. MATTINGLY, Library Science Glasgow TIMOTHY L. MAULDIN, Government and Econ. Bowling Green PAMELA G. MAUZEY, Elem. Ed. Henderson DWIGHT W. MAXWELL, Business Admin. Bowling Green ORVELL A. MAXWELL, Mass Comm. and Speech Hopkinsville EZRA G. MAYNARD, II, History Peoria, Ill. CHERYL A. MCBRIDE, Library Sci. Henderson MICHEAL L. MCBRIDE, Agriculture Franklin BEVERLY K. MCCANDLESS, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Glasgow REBECCA C. MCCANDLESS, Mass Comm. Louisville WILLIAM M. MCCHESNEY, Hist., Govt. and Geo. Bowling Green JERRY A. MCDONALD, Elec. Engin. Tech. Bowling Green MELISSA J. MCDONOUGH, Biology and Chem. Bowling Green WARREN L. MCEDEN, Spanish and Soc. Campbellsburg DANIEL W. MCFARLAND, Mass Comm. Herndon, Va. SUSAN C. MCFARLAND, Recreation Bowling Green VICKIE L. MCGEHEE, Elem. Ed. Owensboro TIMOTHY D. MCGINNIS, Industrial Ed. Hopkinsville JANICE F. MCMURTREY, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Summer Shade VALERIA A. MCNARY, Office Admin. Madisonville BARBARA W. MCREYNOLDS, Home Ec. Ed. Lewisburg DARRELL R. MEADOR, Meteor. Tech. Scottsville TIMOTHY A. MEEKS, Psychology Bowling Green 361 Seniors JANA D. MEFFORD, Chemistry Hawesville STEPHEN W. MERRILL, Chemistry and Bio St. Petersburg, Fla ROY O. MESSERSMITH, Mass Comm McCutchenville, Ohio BETTY B. MILLER, Public Relations Brandenburg CONSTANCE K. MILLER, Sociology Harned DONNA G. MILLER, Physical Ed. Franklin, Ind. JO E. MILLIKEN, Business Ed. Franklin PAMELA M. MILON, Mathematics Elizabethtown CHARLES P. MINTON, Pre-Pharmacy Hartford JAMES E. MINTON, Agriculture Bowling Green CARL D. MITCHAM, Agriculture Ed. Webster WALTER D. MITCHELL, Recreation Beaver Dam BECKY S. MONTGOMERY, Elem. Ed. Kenton, Ohio MICHAEL J. MONTGOMERY, Accounting Painesville, Ohio EMILIE MOORE, Small Bus. Mgmt. Madisonville JAN S. MOORE, Sociology Morgantown VALERIE MOORE, Secretarial Sci. Madisonville JACALYN S. MORGAN, Distributive Ed. Crofton JAMES W. MORGAN, Elec. Engin. Tech. Smithfield SHERRIAN G. MORRIS, Pre-Speech Pathology Gallatin, Tenn BRENT E. MORRISON, Environ, Engin. Tech. Louisville ELIZABETH A. MOSES, Foreign Languages Lexington PAMELA K. MOSIER, Phys. Ed. and Rec. Summer Shade MARY L. MOSS, Psychology Louisville HASSAN K. MOUSSAVI, Mathematics Bowling Green FREDDIE N. MUIR, Pre-Pharmacy Bowling Green DOUGLAS L. MULLIKIN, Psychology Owensboro MICHAEL L. MURPHY, Elem. Ed. Louisville CAREN M. MURRAY, Elem. Ed. Ft. Mitchell DAVID L. MURRAY, Industrial Tech. Bowling Green DAVID T. MURRAY, Mass Comm. and Bus. Admin. Chattanooga, Tenn. KATHERINE C. MURRELL, Social Work Huntington, W.Va RALPH K. MUSE, Civil Engin. Tech. Rineyville BRENDA G. MUTTER, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Mt. Hermon STEVE E. NAGEL, Mech Engin. Tech. Louisville 362 ' Seniors THEODORE E. NALESNIK, Chemistry Yonkers, N.Y. MARY C. NASH, Elem. Ed Louisville NANCY D. NATION, Home Ec. Ed Owensboro DEBORAH L. NEAL, Elem. Ed. Greenville JOHN A. NEALE, Bus. Admin. and Mil. Sci Bowling Green PAUL J. NEEL, Psychology Louisville ROBERT E. NEELY, JR., Agriculture Hartford BRUCE A. NELSON, Industrial Tech. Owensboro DENISE M. NEVITT, Art Louisville DEBORAH J. NEWMAN, Elem. Ed, Greenville DIANA L. NEWMAN, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green LISA A. NEWMAN, Home Ec. Bowling Green JOSEPH A. NEWTON, Physical Ed. Bardstown PATRICK J. NOON, Chemistry and Bio. Louisville SUSAN A. NUTTALL, Commercial Art Madisonville ERIN K. OBRIEN, Mass Comm. Bowling Green MARY J. OECHSLI, Special Ed. Louisville PAMELA L. OGLESBY, Elem. Ed. Gallatin, Tenn. SHARON A. OHARA, Elem. Ed. Owensboro JAMES L. OLDHAM, Agriculture Princeton ROGER S. OLDHAM, Speech and Relig. Louisville PATRICIA J. OLIVER, Medical Tech. Clarkson COLLEEN R. ONEIL, Psychology Silver Spring, Md. ; PAULA K. ORRENDER, Interior Design Louisville JAMES T. OSBORNE, Business Admin. Jeffersonville, Ind. JUDITH L. OSBORNE, Nursing Bowling Green MARIAN R. OSBORNE, Commercial Art Elizabethtown GREGORY A. OSTENDORF, Business Admin. Vincennes, Ind. PATRICIA G. OWEN, Recreation and Relig. Opelousas, La. CURTIS E. OWENS, Business Admin. Louisville JANE E. OWENS, Social Work and Psych. Greenville JERRY L. OWENS, Psychology Ashland ROBERT A. PACE, Business Admin. Bowling Green BEVERLY F. PADGETT, Commercial Art Versailles TERESA A. PAGE, Elem. Ed. and Music Utica 363 Seniors PORNCHAI PANCHAREON, Mech. Engin. Tech Bowling Green DONNA L. PANKRATZ, Allied Health Ed Bowling Green PATRICE M. PAPCIAK, Business Admin Bowling Green CHARLOTTE A. PARKER, Office Admin Bowling Green JUDITH L. PARKS, Home Ec. Ed Signal Mountain, Tenn BETTIE S. PARRISH, Library Sci. Bowling Green REBECCA L. PARROTT, Speech and Theatre Bowling Green PHILLIP W. PATTERSON, Physics Caneyville STEPHEN A. PATTERSON, Agriculture JANICE K. PATTON, Elem. Ed. Henderson Tune-ups Karen Gossman said she felt a little funny when she signed up for auto mechanics last semester. But when she presented her card to the man at the registration desk, he just smiled, looked at her, and said, ‘Bless you.” Miss Gossman wasn’t the only female in the class, howev- er. Renee Whitfield and Carolyn Thessen also took the class which had a male-female ratio of SEO The three weren't trying to knock down the walls of sexual segregation. They simply want- ed to learn more about cars. ‘Most people come to college and take requirements and things you don’t remember,” said Miss Thessen, a senior biol- ogy major. “I decided to get something I could use.” The Franklin native said she took the class to get the basics. “If the car won't start one morn- ing, I’d like to know what to look for,” she said. “I’m auditin the course but there’s no way I’ drop it even if I was flunking.” Miss Whitfield is a senior in- dustrial education major from Louisville and has taken many male-dominated courses such as welding, drafting and electricity. She said she took the course to avoid being taken advantage of by car Richens “They see you coming,” Miss Whitfield said. ‘When we get Upton with a feminine touch through with auto mechanics class, we'll be able to do a lot of simple things you usually go to a repair shop for and they charge $50. We'll save a lot of money.” Miss Gossman said she al- ready knew a little about cars be- cause her grandfather frequently worked on cars. The petite bru- nette said she wanted to know enough to work on her 1968 Ford Galaxy. “Tt has 92,800 miles on it,” she explained. ‘Nothing is really wrong with it, but it is at that age where little things are al- ways tearing up.” A burst water hose last spring also prompted her to take the auto course. “On my way back down here from spring break, I kept smell- ing something funny,” she said. It was then that she noticed steam coming out from under- neath the hood and stopped at the next gas station. The car had a bad waterhose and while the service station at- tendant replaced the hose, Miss Gossman watched. The senior said she noticed that there was nothing particu- larly difficult about changing the hose. The mass communications and religious studies major said her fiance was hesitant about her taking the course. “T guess it’s the old masculine ego,” she said. “He was kind of reluctant because he felt that one of us should know (how to work on cars), but it wasn’t necessary for both of us. “He accepts it more than he did,” Miss Gossman said: “When we get married I can bea lot more self-sufficient,” she ad- ded. She said she began the class fairly confident af het ability. “When I started out, I felt I knew as much as anyone else in there,” Miss Gossman said. “But as lectures went on, I felt awfully dumb.” The car battery, engine and ig- nition system were studied in the course, she said. Because of the limited amount of space, however, half of the class worked on small engines, while the other half worked on cars. Miss Gossman said she won't take another class in auto me- chanics because she didn’t real- ly enjoy it. ‘At times I didn’t mind it,” she said. ‘But I don’t like getting my hands dirty.” — JILL MCSWEENEY AND BILL WOLFE () A learn light helps Karen Gossman tune up her 1968 Ford Galaxy engine in the auto mechanics shop. She said she found some minor oreblene but had a tough time convincing her skeptical fa- ther that she was right. —— tt JERRY T. PATTON, Elec. Engin. Tech. Monticello RITA R. PATTON, Business Admin. Monticello DAVID C. PAYNE, Business Admin. Owensboro ROBERT E. PAYNE, Recreation Louisville CHERIE L. PEARL, Home Ec. Louisville JEAN C. PEARL, Community Health Bowling Green ERNEST M. PEARSON, Math. and Comp. Sci. Scottsville MARLA D. PEARSON, Legal Sec. Admin. Scottsville SANDRA G. PENDLETON, Elem. Ed. Edmonton RANDY E. PENNER, Industrial Ed. Louisville LISABETH S. PENNINGTON, Agriculture and Bio. Old Hickory, Tenn. PATRICIA G. PERKINS, Elem. Ed. Centr al City KATHERINE D. PERRY, Business Admin. Penrod PAMELA S. PERRY, Biology Nashville, Tenn. MARTHA E. PETERS, Accounting Lexington | 365 | Seniors WILLIAM A. PHELPS, Bio. and Anthro. Brooklyn JAMES C. PICKETT, Elec. Engin. Tech. Louisville MICHAEL R. PIERCE, Accounting Leitchfield JULIA B. PIGMAN, Social Work Milton GINNY L. PILLOW, English Russellville LEGAIL POOLE, Spanish and Admin. Serv Slaughters ANITA L. POPE, Legal Sec. Admin. and Med. Sec. Admin. Louisville PAMELA W. POPE, Business Admin. and Sec. Sci. Bowling Green JOSEPH S. PORTMAN, JR., Agriculture Louisville MARGARET A. POTTER, Business Admin. Bowling Green KATHY S. POTTINGER, Sec. Sci. and Psych. Louisville CARITA F. POWELL, Art Clarkson JAMES M. POWELL, Bus. Admin. and Bio. Munfordville LAWRENCE E. POWELL, Physics and Geophysics Utica LYNDA J. PRATHER, Biology St. Joseph, Ill. STEVEN P. PRATHER, Business Admin. Dayton, Ohio PATRICIA E. PRICE, Home Ec. Ed. Owensboro VICKIE L. PRITCHETT, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Henderson LAWRENCE K. PROBUS, Accounting Owensboro DEBORAH J. PRUITT, Elem Ed. and Social Work Chicago, Ill. ELLEN M. PRYOR, Public Relations Georgetown NANCY L. QUARCELINO, Phys. Ed. and Health Ed. Madisonville MARILYN RADER, Biology Louisville HOWARD A. RALPH, History Bowling Green DAVID W. RAMSEY, Psych. and Philos. Bowling Green THERESA L. RANDALL, Nursing Louisville LELA A. RANDLE, Journalism Louisville JAMES B. RANKIN, Elec. Engin. Tech. Somerset DEBRA D. RAY, Speech Path. and Spec. Ed. Louisville VALERIE S. RAY, Biology Owensboro CLARENCE N. REED, Mass Comm. Bowling Green DONNA L. REEVES, Biology Bowling Green JOAN M. RENZ, Spec. Ed. St. Louis, Mo. MARK T. REYNOLDS, Business Admin. Bowling Green ANNE K. RHODES, Community Health and Nursing Owensboro 366 Seniors PATRICIA A. RICE, Art Paintsville HOMER L. RICHARDSON, Agriculture Brandenburg DIANE R. RICHBURG, Mass Comm. Cocoa, Fla. MARY P. RICKE, Accounting Clarksville, Ind. JANICE M. RIES, Interior Design Louisville TERESA L. RIGGLE, Art Bowling Green KATHLEEN L. RILEY, Recreation Hartford JEANE B. ROARK, Elem. Ed. Hopkinsville JOHN A. ROARK, Music Hopkinsville MICHAEL L. ROBBINS, Elem. Ed. and Gen. Bus. Brodhead JOSEPH W. ROBERTS, Environ. Sci. Bowling Green KENNETH W. ROBERTS, Spec. Ed. and Psych . Owensboro VICKI L. ROBERTS, Speech Path. Madisonville FLOYD ROBEY, III, Business Admin. Bowling Green YVONNE E. ROBEY, Sec. Ed. and Spec. Ed. Franklin NANCY C. ROBINSON, Dietetics Owensboro CARL L. RODGERS, Recreation Bowling Green MARTHA E. ROGERS, Gen. Bus. and Sec. Sci. Greensburg JOHN K. ROSEMAN, Environ. Engin. Tech. Brandenburg SUSAN M. ROSO, Elem. Ed. Crestwood SARAH A. ROUTT, Accounting Mt. Washington DEBRA L. ROWE, Office Admin. Bardstown JAMES A. ROYALTY, Industrial Ed. Bardstown DANIEL S. RUSSELL, Business Admin. Dunnville DEBORAH L. RUSSELL, Accounting Glasgow DWIGHT P. RUSSELL, Physics and Math. Bowling Green MAUREEN T. RUTECKI, Art Bowling Green DENNIS J. RYAN, Business Admin. Bowling Green JOANNE M. RYAN, Mass Comm. Bowling Green CAROLYN M. SABOLCHAK, Nursing New Albany, Ind. LESLIE A. SAMPLES, Interior Design Louisville CHRISTINA M. SAMUEL, Library Sci. Louisville SHARON K. SAMUELS, Special Ed. Louisville CARLA A. SANDERS, Art Crossville, Tenn. FRED C. SANDERS, JR., Interior Design Bowling Green RANDALL W. SANDERS, Sociology London JANET L. SAPP, Computer Sci. Hardyville CHARLES J. SAUER, Environ. Sci. Versailles ROBERT J. SCHABEL, Speech Bowling Green ROY J. SCHROEDER, Accounting Weston, Conn. FREDRIC M. SCHULER, Mech. Engin. Tech. Louisville GERALD D. SCOTT, Mathematics Cave City KEVIN G. SCRIBNER, Mass Comm. Louisville KENNETH D. SELBY, Agriculture Russell Springs JOHN C. SELF, Public Relations Hodgenville BARBARA A. SELLERS, Community Health Evansville, Ind. TERESA S. SEMZOCK, Psych. and Spec. Ed. Bowling Green JUDY A. SHARP, Psychology Bowling Green KEITH B. SHARTZER, Business Admin. Louisville JENICE F. SHAW, Business Ed. Marrowbone PAUL J. SHEEHAN, Physical Ed. Ontario, Canada ARTHUR L. SHEMWELL, Industrial Ed. Bowling Green RICKEY S. SHEPPARD, History Rockfield SUSAN D. SHEPPARD, Mass Comm. and Speech Chamble, Ga. REBA K. SHIELDS, Biology Beechmont DAVID J. SHIPLEY, Accounting Bowling Green JO A. SHIPLEY, Recreation Cave City TONYA K. SHIRLEY, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Edmonton ELEANOR SHORT, Community Health Bowling Green TERESA L. SHORT, Physical Ed. and Recreation Horse Cave BOBBY W. SHUTT, Business Admin. Beech Creek ROBERT B. SIDDENS, II, Business Admin. Bowling Green MICHAEL J. SIMMONS, Mech. Engin. Tech. Louisville DEBBIE A. SIMMS, History and Soc. Bowling Green FRANCES J. SIMPSON, Home Ec. Bowling Green MELANIE C. SIMPSON, Interior Design Mayfield TONY W. SIMPSON, Accounting Glasgow CATHY L. SMILEY, Elem. Ed. and Spec. Ed. Louisville AMY G. SMITH, Interior Design Lawrenceville, IIl. BRUCE A. SMITH, Govt. and Mass Comm. Bowling Green 368 Seniors DAVID S. SMITH, Biology Bowling Green KAREN E. SMITH, French Kowloontong, Hong Kong LAURA D. SMITH, Biology and Chem. Bowling Green LYNARD W. SMITH, Elec. Engin. Tech. Paducah PHILLIP L. SMITH, Mass Comm. Louisville REBECCA L. SMITH, Elem. Ed. Owensboro REBECCA L. SMITH, Mass Comm. Germantown, Ohio STEVIE L. SMITH, Mass Comm. Hodgenville ARNOLD E. SNARDON, Physical Ed. Allensville SELENA D. SNEED, History St. Charles CATHY M. SNELLEN, Office Admin. Louisville SARAH J. SNIDER, Elem. and Spec. Ed. Lexington BENITA K. SNODGRASS, Accounting Beaver Dam JAMES T. SNODGRASS, III, Physics and Math. Louisville PHILLIP E. SNYDER, Mass Comm. Blanchester, Ohio JACQUELINE M. SOMMERS, Sociology and Psych. Central City CHERYL L. SOUCY, Recreation Louisville STANLEY L. SOUTH, Accounting Cottontown, Tenn. RONALD G. SOWELL, Economics and Govt. Bowling Green CHARLES B. SPALDING, JR., Health Ed. Bardstown DEBORAH L. SPARKS, English Elizabethtown BOBBY G. SPEARS, Animal Science Collman, Ala. KATHERINE A. SPEEVACK, Social Work Munfordville GEORGE R. SPENCER, Dental Hygiene Paducah KATHERINE A. SPENCER, Dental Hygiene Paducah MARGUERITE SPENNEBERG, Music Carrollton SHERI L. SPRUELL, Speech Path. Bowling Green TERESA M. STAFFORD, Sociology Louisville PATRICIA A. STAGNER, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Bowling Green BILLIE W. STAHL, Recreation Bowling Green ROBERT C. STALLONS, JR., Sociology and Pub. Rel. Cadiz PAUL E. STAMP, Health Care Admin. Louisville LLOYD M. STANLEY, Accounting Russellville BELINDA S. STARK, Mass Comm. Elizabethtown SAMUEL M. STARKS, Social Work Franklin 369 Seniors BRIAN STAUSS, Computer Sci Alvaton MELISSA K. STEEN, Business Admin. Bowling Green DIANE G. STEFFEY, Nursing Louisville GEORGE W. STEIER, JR., Elec. Engin. Tech. Bowling Green KARL D. STEIN, Biology Vincennes, Ind. GEAVONDA C. STEVENSON, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green CONNIE C. STEWART, English Smiths Grove JUDY F. STEWART, Agriculture Scottsville STEPHANIE A. STEWART, French Franklin WILLIAM A. STEWART, Retail and Mgmt. Madisonville BARBARA A. STILLMAN, Mass Comm. Louisville JOSEPH N. STITES, Music Ed. Hopkinsville VIVIAN E. STOBAUGH, Accounting Central City STEPHEN F. STOESS, Elec. Engin. Tech. Anchorage 370 Seniors Dog daze afternoon Mother Nature played a trick on the campus with an unex- pected Nov. 12 snowfall. Mary Nita Gray, a sophomore mass communications major, Pichia: the precipitation from be- hind a front window of the student center. — J. Burton 371 niors 372 Seniors JOSEPH D. STOKES, JR., Biology and Chem. Greenville TINA R. STONE, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Covington PAUL A. STRATTON, Business Admin. Mayfield TIM A. STRATTON, Business Admin. Mayfield SYDNEY T. STRINGER, Dietetics and Inst. Mgmt. Miami, Fla. MARIANNE STROUBE, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green LYNN F. STRUNK, Mathematics Ft. Wright DORIS E. SULLIVAN, Business Ed. Elkton LINDA G. SWORDS, Elem. Ed. Auburn PAUL B. SYMPSON, Art Bardstown GEORGE T. TABOR, Accounting Garfield KRISTIN G. TAPPER, Interior Design Dayton, Ohio WILLIAM W. TATE, Physical Ed. and Rec. Valley Station RAYMOND T. TATUM, History Beaver Dam BARBARA A. TAYLOR, Biology and Chem. Bowling Green JOHN A. TAYLOR, Music Portland, Tenn. MARY C. TAYLOR, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Franklin MARY C. TAYLOR, English and Spanish Owensboro MARLA F. THARP, Recreation Munfordville DIANE K. THARPE, German Lenoir City, Tenn. STEFANIE A. THEIRL, Business Admin. Bowling Green CAROLYN D. THESSEN, Biology Franklin DEBRA A. THOMAS, Elem. Ed. Elizabethtown JAMES R. THOMAS, Economics Bowling Green MARY A. THOMAS, Elem. and Spec. Ed. Palm Bay, Fla. WILLIAM B. THOMAS, III, Business Admin. and Bio. Somerset MARTHA C. THOMPSON, Public Relations Nashville, Tenn. ROBERT T. THOMPSON, Business Admin. Satellite Beach, Fla. JOSEPH C. THORNTON, Geology Shively PAMELA L. THURMAN, Music Ed. Bowling Green DIANE K. TINSLEY, Spec. Ed. and Psych. Marion ROBERT L. TINSLEY, JR., History and Govt. Radcliff LYNNE G. TOBE, Dental Hygiene Davie, Fla. PAULA J. TODD, Spec. Ed. and Health Louisville KRISSY W. TOLLE, Office Admin. Glasgow —ST x” am, LESLIE P. TOMS, History Cave City MYRA P. TRASK, International Business Louisville BAMBIE L. TRAUTMAN, Elem. Ed. Glasgow ELIZABETH A. TRENKAMP, Elem. Ed. Covington HENRI E. TROWELL, Office Admin. Anchorage DAVID G. TUCKER, Sociology Bowling Green JOHN A. TURNER, Pre-Pharmacy Gamaliel KAREN A. TURNER, Interior Design Franklin VIRGIL P. TURNER, Agriculture Livermore RICKY L. TURNMIRE, Math and Comp. Sci. Central City THOMAS A. TWEDDELL, Geo. Meteor. Tech. Henderson CHERYL L. TYLER, Commercial Art Paducah MILTON S. TYREE, Speech Ed. Bowling Green ROBERT S. TYRIE, Marketing Bowling Green SHELLEY J. UMBARGER, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Louisville ALICE O. UNDERWOOD, Industrial Ed. Lexington SHARON L. UPTON, Library Sci. Louisville HELEN C. UTLEY, Physical Ed. Morganfield HOWARD P. VAIL, Chemistry Bowling Green TAQUALIA G. VALENTINE, Elem. Ed. Franklin RITCHIE VAN BUSSUM, Biology Henderson BARRY O. VANDEBRAKE, Environ. Sci. Bowling Green WILLIAM S. VANDERMEER, Mass Comm. Frankfort PERLINE VANDIVER, Elem. Ed. and Spec. Ed. Stanford ALLAN R. VANMETER, Religion Henderson PERRY G. VINCENT, Gen. Bus. and Accounting Bremen SHERRIE D. VINCENT, Government Chester, N.J. CHRISTY K. VOGT, Government and Spec. Ed. Louisville MARCUS L. WADE, Agriculture Summer Shade CARROLL G. WADLINGTON, Admin. Serv. Eddyville MELANIE WALDROP, Elem. Ed. Park City BENITA C. WALKER, Interior Design Louisville CYNTHIA L. WALKER, Elem. Ed. Sparksville JAMES D. WALKER, Bus. Admin. Barbourville JOHN S. WALKER, Accounting Bowling Green Seniors LYNNETTE WALKER, History and Soc. Stu. Elizabethtown TIMOTHY L. WARD, Agriculture Bowling Green ELEANOR R. WARDLOW, Business Ed. Oakland JENNIFER WARREN, Library Sci. Shelbyville ROBERT L. WATHEN, II, Mass Comm. Henderson STEPHEN F. WATHEN, Speech Path. Morganfield BOBBIE J. WATKINS, Music Ed. Louisville GWENDA C. WATKINS, Speech Hopkinsville DEBRA F. WATSON, Office Admin. Frankfort SALLY J. WATSON, Speech and English Bowling Green GERALD J. WEAVER, JR., Elec. Engin. Tech. Louisville CAROL S. WEBB, Elem. Ed. Caneyville ROSE E. WEBB, Elem. Ed. Magnolia SUE A. WEBER, Marketing Boyds, Md. TINA M. WEBER, Nursing Sturgis PATRICIA A. WEDDING, Elem. and Spec. Ed. Fordsville JAN E. WELLMAN, Interior Design and Home Ec. Ed. Louisville PAMELA J. WELLS, Psychology Bowling Green MARY C. WETHINGTON, Office Admin. Campbellsville RUBY J. WHEELER, Elem. Ed. Rockfield JAMES M. WHITAKER, Accounting Bowling Green ANGELA R. WHITE, Nursing Lexington CAROLYN M. WHITE, Music Ed. Bowling Green CHARLES D. WHITE, Mass Comm. and Psych. Franklin JAMES C. WHITE, Business Admin. and Hist. Winchester JAMES T. WHITE, Biology Louisville LENELLE WHITE, Accounting Glendale THERESA F. WHITE, Recreation Shepherdsville ALEX C. WHITENACK, Accounting Harrodsburg RENEE Y. WHITFIELD, Industrial Arts Ed. Bowling Green DOROTHY E. WHITFORD, Social Work Moriah, N.Y. CHARLES L. WHITLEY, Religion Smiths Grove SUSAN S. WHITLEY, Psychology Smiths Grove PAULA R. WHITLOW, English Greensburg CHERYL L. WHITMAN, Community Health Louisville 374 Seniors ROBERT C. WICKLEIN, Philosophy and Industrial Ed. Mt. Olive, Ill. GRANT E. WIEDEMER, Mech. Engin. Tech. Jeffersontown JUDITH G. WILDMAN, Mass Comm. and French Powhatan, Va. DONALD L. WILKERSON, JR., Civil Engin. Tech. Bowling Green RHONDA B. WILKERSON, Accounting Bowling Green CHARLES P. WILLIAMS, Accounting Franklin CONNIE M. WILLIAMS, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Glasgow JAMES C. WILLIAMS, Spec. Ed. Elizabethtown JEFFREY D. WILLIAMS, Civil Engin. Tech. Columbia LARRY E. WILLIAMS, Agriculture Campbellsville MARY H. WILLIAMS, Community Health Hopkinsville PATRICIA A. WILLIAMS, Office Admin. Nortonville PAUL D. WILLIAMS, Accounting London CAROLYN D. WILSON, Community Health and Psych. Louisville GREGORY L. WILSON, Psychology Bowling Green PAMELA K. WILSON, Business Ed. Liberty VIRGINIA M. WILSON, Econ. and Acct. Radcliff GLORIA A. WININGER, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Glasgow KATHY S. WISE, Recreation Winchester BARNEY L. WITHERS, Agriculture Hardyville LINDA S. WOLF, Library Sci. Louisville JO A. WOOD, Psychology and Soc. Beaver Dam NANCY A. WOOD, Recreation Greenville SHERRY G. WOOD, Recration Louisville LYNN B. WRIGHT, Mass Comm. Bowling Green ROBERT G. YEATER, JR., Accounting Vine Grove KEN C. YORK, Public Relations Bowling Green MARILYN J. YORK, Sociology Louisville SUE E. YOUNG, Tex. and Clothing Merch. Franklin! PEGGY A. YUDA, Elem. Ed. Bowling Green DEBORAH J. ZEHR, Dental Hygiene Fairfield, lowa HOWARD E. ZIMMERMAN, Sociology Louisville MICHAEL H. ZIMMERMAN, Acct. and Bus. Admin. Louisville ROBERT A. ZIMMERMAN, Civil Engin. Tech. Bowling Green JOSEPH W. ZOGLMANN, Accounting Owensboro 373 Seniors Believe it or NOts e There are 936 males and 808 females in the junior class. ¢ The oldest junior is 56 years old. The age 20 claims more juniors than any other age (677). ¢ Pearce Ford and Central are the most popular dorms for juniors. 110 males live in Pearce Ford and 63 females live in Central. e Elementary education is the most popular major for juniors (132). There is one junior majoring in each of the following areas: French, Earth Science, Secretarial Administration, Legal Secretarial Administration, Data Processing, Agriculture Technology and Management and Agricultural Mechanization. — Data provided by WKU Computer Center VALERIE A. ABSHIRE, Lexington KATHY A. ADAMS, Hendersonville, Tenn. SUE E. ADAMS, London WILLIAM T. ADAMS, Munfordville PATRICIA C. ADKINS, Louisville HOBART A. ALDRIDGE, Sebree MARTHA F. ALEXANDER, Auburn MARY J. ALEXANDER, Big Clifty VICKI D. ALFORD, Beaver Dam KEITH D. ALLGEIER, Jeffersontown NANETTE L. ALWES, Louisville CHARLOTTE R. ANTOINE, Louisville TIMOTHY D. APPLING, Auburn LEANN M. ARMSTRONG, Russellville PATRICIA A. ARNOLD, Madison, Tenn. SANDRA G. ARTERBURN, Park City MARSHALL F. ASHBY, Madisonville ROBERT H. ASHBY, Auburn ELIZABETH E. ASHCRAFT, Brandenburg JEFFREY R. ASSMANN, Waukesha, Wisc TERRY R. ATWELL, Louisville MARY G. AUBREY, Louisville DWIGHT L. AUSTIN, Bowling Green VICKI S. BAGWELL, Auburn MARK K. BAILEY, Cold Spring JULIE A. BALDWIN, Louisville RICHARD B. BALL, Corydon HAL E. BALLARD, Winchester JENNIFER A. BAREFIELD, Mt. Carmel, Ill. TERRY T. BARNA, Louisville RICK H. BARNES, Bowling Green RICKY Z. BARNES, Princeton ZEXIA K. BARNES, Centertown GEORGE E. BARNETT, Hopkinsville EDWINA M. BARTLEY, Glasgow BOBBI O. BATTLE, Benton, IIl. GARY E. BEAUMONT, Louisville TUCKER G. BEDINGER, Hendersonville, Tenn. CINDY L. BEELER, Spring Lick MERRIE S. BEGGS, Owensboro KATHRYN L. BEST, Owensboro NOEL A. BIDEAU, Louisville KATHY D. BILBREY, Hendersonville, Tenn. DAVID L. BILLINGSLEY, Glasgow KATHRYN J. BIRKETT, St. Charles, Ill. REBECCA L. BLAIR, Columbus, Ohio DONN R. BLANK, Bowling Green BRUCE W. BOHANON, Elkton KATHLEEN!A. BOOHER, Madison, Tenn. SUZANNE F. BOOTH, Winchester BONITA G. BOTT, Louisville ELIZABETH A. BOTTOM, Russell Springs DONNA M. BOUGHEY, Louisville SUSAN E. BOWLING, Fraser, Mich. KAREN S. BRADFORD, Evansville, Ind. PHILLIP W. BRADFORD, Sturgis JODY R. BRANSON, Louisville CAROL F. BRANSTETTER, Edmonton JAMES A. BRATCHER, Bowling Green KAREN S. BRATCHER, Beaver Dam WILLIAM I. BRAZLEY, JR., Louisville BARBARA A. BRETZ, Huntington, Ind. DENNIS E. BRIDGEMAN, Bowling Green 376 Juniors Se BARTON L. BRITT, Bowling Green JOHN C. BRODT, Bowling Green ALAN R. BROOKS, Suitland, Md. CAROL J. BROWN, Bowling Green CHARLES H. BROWN, Fairview Park, Ohio LENWOOD BROWN, Crofton, Md GEORGE E. BRUCE, Louisville CHERYL L. BRYANT, Louisville BETH A. BUCHANAN, Lexington JANET D. BUCHANAN, Duncan, Okla. KAREN L. BUCHANAN, Stanford SHEILA J. BUCK, Louisville MARY D. BUDDE, Louisville KATHY L. BUNCH, Edmonton AMANDA G. BURCHETT, Russellville JILL L. BURD, Cave City PATRICIA L. BURDEN, Morgantown TERESA K. BURDEN, Hartford JOHN R. BURDETTE, Bowling Green VIVIAN P. BURKART, Manassas, Va. PHILLIP C. BURKEEN, Bowling Green CAROLINE M. BURNS, Bowling Green JAMES B. BURTON, II, Madisonville CARLOTTA K. BUSH, Glasgow TERRY L. BUTCHER, Madisonville PAMELA G. BUTLER, Harned DAVID A. BUTTS, Summer Shade RONALD A. CAIN, Clarkson CHARLES R. CALDWELL, Louisville GARRY D. CALLAWAY, Bowling Green GORDON S. CAMPBELL, West Palm Beach, Fla. MICHAEL L. CARDWELL, Franklin JANET L. CARLOCK, Bowling Green BRUCE W. CARMAN, Philpot JOYCE K. CARNEAL; Madisonville GEORGE E. CARPENTER, JR., Bowling Green KENNETH M. CARROLL, Frankfort BRENDA M. CARTER, Tompkinsville DAVID H. CARWELL, Bowling Green NORA C. CASKEY, Bowling Green KARIN L. CASWELL, Louisville DAVID L. CAUDEL, Horse Cave GERALD P. CENTROWITZ, Bowling Green RENEE A. CERRONI, Miramar Isles, Fla. STEPHEN M. CESLER, Louisville THOMAS R. CHAMBERS, JR., Louisville MARILYN J. CHAPMAN, Elizabethtown CARL L. CHAPPELL, JR., Elizabethtown DAVID G. CHERRY, Scottsville CAROL A. CHILDRESS, Leitchfield JESSE R. CHRISTIAN, JR., Chicago, Ill. ANN M. CISSELL, Bardstown CHARLES H. CIVILS, Cerulean DOROTHY B. CLARK, Scottsville GENE P. CLARK, Louisville NORMA B. COATNEY, Bowling Green BRENDA J. COBB, Greenville CAROLYN F. COBB, Horse Cave STEVE I. COBB, Providence TONY H. COFFEY, Edmonton KARYN L. COHEN, Louisville TERRY G. COHRON, Bowling Green DONNA A. COLEMAN, Russellville DONALD L. COLYER, Louisville TERESA H. CONDIT, Cincinnati, Ohio THOMAS W. CONDIT, Cincinnati, Ohio SHARON CONNERS, Jeffersontown PHYLLIS A. COOK, Morgantown PHYLLIS J. COSTELLOW, Russellville PHYLIS A. COTTRELL, Murray DONNA K. COX, Adairville WILLIAM H. CRAFTON, Henderson Beauty stop An urban folklore project on occupa- tional lore of a black beauty shop op- erator gave Barbara Chase, a senior special education major from Ver- sailles, the opportunity to get her hair fixed by Gladys Beasley, who runs her shop in her home. Projects for the new course included collections about magicians, photographers, door-to-door salesmen and a junk store owner, and became part of the folklore archives after the completion of the fall semester. — S. Benson 377 Juniors EY CEG ARES Bee HS Te Te OS EE Gee rr US RSAGEOT et ee Bi ppsuetpeet frase arcu Ssegss bas poco sda foto ia ua ora sw a 2 bee page x= bi sac =p ao = ae ARE a aE Pe Gesa eg otra aa pss L— = so boy By = 9 mane’ ee saad [Sf Spe emp CANDACE G. CRAIN, Danville JOHANN H. CROSS, Louisville BRENDA K. CROWNER, Louisville RHONDA L. CUMMINGS, Brownsville SUE J. CUMMINGS, Franklin DON R. CUNDIFF, Shepherdsville SHARI L. CUNNINGHAM, Frankfort WILLIAM CUNNINGHAM, Bowling Green GLEN J. CURL, Bowling Green RAMONA K. CURL Bowling Green RICHARD L. CURTIS, Bowling Green TERESA A. CURTIS, Bowling Green DAVID E. DANHAUER, Owensboro TIMOTHY P. DANT, Louisville CLEON K. DARLAND, Mt. Washington VICKIE L. DARNELL, Princeton DOUGLAS D. DAVIS, Bowling Green LONNIE J. DAVIS, III, Lake Worth, Fla. CLARENCE E. DAWSON, Bowling Green JOHN L. DAWSON, Owensboro WILLIAM R. DAY, Columbia MARY R. DEAREN, Louisville MARTHA J. DEBERRY, Bowling Green TIMOTHY E. DECKARD, Valley Station MICHELE A. DEGOTT, Louisville MARY P. DELANEY, Bardstown LIBBY C. DENNING, Glasgow ALECIA E. DEWEESE, Bowling Green YVONNE M. DIEMER, Louisville RONALD L. DIERSEN, Louisville DONNA M. DILLINGHAM, Dawson Springs RICHARD D. DILLMAN, JR., Shiner, Tex. KAREN K. DILLON, Hendersonville, Tenn. MICHAEL B. DIXON, Frankfort EVELYN J. DODSON, Louisville ZOE E. DONAHOO, Sebree JANET L. DORRIS, White House, Tenn. SANDRA K. DOSS, Belton JERRY S. DOWELL, Bowling Green JACKIE D. DOWNING, Allensville WANDA D. DOWNS, Fairmont, Ind. NORMAN DOYLE, Bowling Green STEVE M. DREWS, Denver, Colo. MARY S. DRIVER, Bowling Green VICKI L. DRIVER, Gallatin, Tenn. EDNA K. DUGGINS, Falls of Rough JUDY F. DUKE, Nashville, Tenn. JENNY C. DULIN, Hopkinsville LINDA M. DUNCAN, Centertown DAVID S. DUNN, Benton PATRICIA J. DURBIN, Brownsville WENDY A. ECKER, Cedar Rapids, Iowa BROOKS L. EDWARDS, Greensburg JEFFREY S. EDWARDS, Eminence ROBIN S. EDWARDS, Dansville, N.Y. STEVEN A. EDWARDS, Louisville TERRY L. EDWARDS, Lindenhurst, N.Y. LUCY K. EGOFF, Scottsville WILLIAM L. EHLERS, Bardstown CAROL D. EIDSON, White House, Tenn. RONALD D. EILER, Louisville PAMELA K. ELDRIDGE, Orlinda, Tenn. TOMMY L. ELLIOTT, Etoile DANETTE R. ELLIS, Louisville BONITA D. ELMORE, Glasgow SHARON D. EMBRY, Morgantown DOUGLAS E. EMERSON, Lockport, N.Y. LESLIE R. ENGELHARDT, Laramie, Wyo. MICHAEL T. ENGLAND, Summer Shade JANE D. ENGLEBRIGHT, Bowling Green KAREN ESTES, Auburn MARK G. FAITH, Lebanon, Tenn. 378 Juniors Pr tke. ones wat Fe ENE Geese Sawer See eR a i A ‘ HH Ht PE EE a = . Night- capped With hometowns approxi- mately 90 miles apart, Janet Black and Mark Hatch had to come to Western to begin their friendship. Miss Black, a Richmond freshman and Hatch, a Louisville sopho- more, are talking outside the Downing University Center. DANIEL B. FALLER, Bowling Green KENNETH F. FARMER, Prospect GEORGE D. FEARS, Owensboro MIRIAM M. FERGUSON, Union MARY M. FERRY, Louisville EDWIN K. FIELDS, Bowling Green ANDREW P. FISCHER, Louisville LUCIE O. FLAUTT, Nashville, Tenn. BARBARA M. FLOYD, Louisville REBECCA J. FORD, Franklin SANDRA K. FORSHEE, Bowling Green KATHY J. FOSTER, Owensboro REBECCA C. FOSTER, Glasgow JOSEPH E. FOWLER, Bowling Green RICHARD F. FOWLER, Scottsville CHARLES F. FRANCKE, Jeffersontown BEVERLY J. FRAZIER, Louisville KERRY L. FRAZIER, Gilbertsville ALLEN R. FREEMAN, Owensboro KEITH D. FREEMAN, Louisville DONALD A. FRENCH, Morganfield PEGGY L. FROST, Louisville THOMAS C. FULKERSON, JR., Calhoun CATHY Y. FULLER, Princeton DEBRA J. FULLER, Bowling Green JACK M. GALE, III, Smithfield, Va. LARRY W. GAMMONS, Scottsville GRETA L. GARBO, Benton, III. BEVERLY D. GARDNER, Louisville MARY M. GARDNER, Allensville GARY N. GARMON, Louisville REBECCA L. GARMON, Lebanon Junction VICTORIA A. GARMON, Burkesville DEBORAH S. GARNER, Russell Springs MARTHA G. GARRETT, Franklin PEGGY L. GARRETT, Greenville KAREN S. GILL, Greenville PEGGY S. GITTINGS, Tompkinsville VICKIE M. GIVENS, Morgantown SHEILA L. GLASSCOCK, Bowling Green STEVEN M. GLASSCOCK, Alvaton RICHARD A. GLEITZ, Corydon, Ind. THREESAE D. GLOVER, Ghent JULIE M. GMEINER, Dayton, Ohio APRIL R. GOBBLE, Louisville CHRISTINE GODFREY, Lexington KIMBERLY L. GOHEEN, Calvert City SUE A. GOODROW, Bowling Green TERRY L. GOOLSBY, Gamaliel LANA M. GOTTULA, Louisville JOSEPH P. GRAY, Cadiz MARY N. GRAY, Princeton ROBERT P. GRAY, Louisville SUSAN L. GRAY, Florence ALAN L. GRAYSON, Erlanger ANNA K. GRAYSON, Russellville MARISSA L. GREENE, Winchester DWIGHT D. GREENWELL, Taylorsville JOSEPH M. GREENWELL, Valley Station CELESTE C. GRIFFITH, Bowling Green SHARON M. GRIFFITH, Russellville GEORGE L. GRIGGS, Louisville CATHY J. GRINSTEAD, Smiths Grove ERLENE Y. GRISE, Quality DWIGHT L. GROOMS, Dayton, Ohio JAMES E. GROVE, JR., West Palm Beach, Fla. SHERRY L. GUTTSCHALK, Glasgow RACHEL L. HABERMEHL, Bowling Green RICHARD A. HAGAN, Whitesville HENRY N. HAGERMAN, JR., Bowling Green LISA T. HAHN, Versailles NUTE E. HAIRE, Elizabethtown BARRY E. HALL, Franklin DANIEL R. HALL, Louisville DEBORAH M. HALL, Franklin RONALD A. HAMILTON, Owensboro SHIRLEY N. HAMM, Paris DONNA M. HAMMOCK, Westmoreland, Tenn. CARL R. HANCOCK, Hopkinsville JAMES M. HAND, Bowling Green LARRY W. HARBISON, Edmonton RINDA D. HARGIS, Bowling Green SHELIA A. HARLOW, Bowling Green BOBBY S. HARPER, Lakeside Park ROGER L. HARRELL, Russellville BAMBI J. HARRIS, Bardstown BETTY W. HARRIS, Bowling Green GERALD W. HARRIS, Louisville JAMES M. HARRIS, Bowling Green JENNIFER A. HARRIS, Lancaster, Ohio SHEILA A. HARRISON, Lewisburg FRANCES A. HARROD, Elizabethtown CAROL A. HARTMAN, Alvaton MICHAEL S. HARTNETT, Louisville ROBERT C. HARVEY, Glasgow MARGARET M. HATFIELD, Bardstown ELLEN A. HAWKINS, Champaign, Ill. JANET S. HAWKINS, Millwood” PAMELA K. HAWKINS, Mammoth Cave SANDRA L. HAWORTH, Miami, Fla. MICHAEL A. HAYES, Chattanooga, Tenn. THOMAS V. HAYES, JR., Bardstown 379 Juniors DANIEL M. HAYNES, Rockport JAMES C. HAYNES, Nashville, Tenn. ROBIN R. HEFNER, Benton, Ill. DIANE M. HEINES, Louisville DEBORAH D. HEK, Lexington ROBERT W. HEMMEN, Vine Grove CHRISTINA C. HEMMER, Madison, Tenn. KENNETH R. HENDERSON, Louisville SCOTT S. HENDRICKSON, Bowling Green BONNEY K. HEWLETT, Madisonville ANN L. HIBBETT, Florence, Ala. JOAN A. HICKS, Beaver Dam DONNA M. HIX, Bowling Green RICKY D. HOBDY, Portland, Tenn. GREGORY S. HOCKER, Owensboro JEFFERY S. HOCKER, Owensboro KIRKMAN E. HODGES, Bowling Green EDWARD H. HOGG, Shelbyville DALE T. HOLEC, Swartz Creek, Mich. COLLEEN R. HOLL, Bowling Green CYNTHIA A. HOLLOWELL, Henderson CHARLES E. HOOKS, Cadiz EVA C. HORNER, Bowling Green COLLEEN D. HOWARD, Franklin CYNTHIA L. HOWARD, Franklin GREGORY HOWARD, Elizabethtown LINDA G. HOWARD, Summer Shade PENNY L. HUBBARD, Michigan City, Ind. GLORIA D. HUDDLESTON, Central City LOIS J. HUDGENS, Russellville RENA N. HUDGENS, Olmstead JANE L. H UDSON, Hartford MARY J. HUGHES, Auburn NORMAN E. HUGHES, Franklin RUTH A. HUMPHRIES, Hopkinsville CANDICE L. HUNSAKER, Winter Haven, Fla. BOBBY A. HUNTON, Rockfield ANDREW J. HUSSEY, JR., Bowling Green WILLIAM K. IVES, Louisville RICHIE H. JAMES, Bowling Green LAWRENCE E. JEFFERSON, Owensboro NANCY A. JEFFRIES, Horse Cave TERRY E. JENSEN, Marion, Iowa ELBERT O. JENT, JR., Lafayette, Tenn. LUCY J. JERNIGAN, Franklin TERESA J. JEWELL, Lucas CAROL A. JOHNSON, Bowling Green NAOMI F. JOHNSON, Morgantown ROBERT V. JOHNSON, Providence STEVEN R. JOHNSON, Greenville SUSAN JOHNSON, Morgantown TRUMAN E. JOHNSON, JR., Cloverport ANGELA M. JOINER, Franklin BELINDA A. JONES, Roundhill GARY W. JONES, Bowling Green JAMES G. JONES, Bowling Green NORMAN G. JONES, JR., Hopkinsville PAMELA A. JONES, Edmonton RUTH H. JONES, Cave Cit KAREN S. KEELIN, Benton, III. WILLIAM B. KELLEMS, Bowling Green SCOTT A. KELLER, Kettering, Ohio JOHN M. KELLY, Connersville, Ind. DANNY M. KEMBLE, Smiths Grove SHIRLEY E. KEMP, Russellville DAVID L. KENDALL, Bowling Green MARSHA K. KENNEDY, Hopkinsville RUTH A. KENNEDY, Winchester BETTY A. KERN, Louisville RONALD G. KERRY, Glasgow NANCY J. KESSELRING, Louisville CAROL J. KEYS, Louisville WILLIAM KIESSLING, Boonton, N_J. JAYNE L. KILLION, Plano, Tex. SUSAN E. KING, Louisville CHARLES W. KITCHENS, JR., Bowling Green RHONDA J. KITTINGER, Owensboro WILLIAM F. KLEIN, Owensboro LINDA M. KLEINHOLTER, Louisville | JEANNE E. KNAUER, Ft. Thomas | JOHN B. KNOX, Madisonville TERESA D. KOESTER, Derwood, Md. ERIK S. KRAG, Peorio, Ill. RICHARD J. KRAL, Farmington Hills, Mich. FRANCES C. KREBS, Louisville KAREN A. KUSCH, Central City VICTOR C. LACOUR, Beaver Dam SUSAN D. LACY, Russellville STEVEN L. LAMAN, Bowling Green CLIFTON G. LAMB, Central City KIMBERLY R. LANDRUM, Horse Branch CHARLES D. LANHAM, Owensboro CHARLENE R. LARIMORE, Louisville JOSEPH P. LARKINS, Bowling Green BOBBY J. LAWRENCE, Bowling Green TIMOTHY K. LAWRENCE, Louisville RANDY J. LEE, Bowling Green RONALD M. LEFORGE, JR., Bowling Green DEBORAH B. LESCALLECT, Bowling Green TONIA A. LESTER, Henderson KATHY A. LEWIS, Bowling Green MARK J. LIBBY, Mayfield MY LIENVONGKOT, Lexington GARY D. LINDENBERG, Henderson SHARON J. LINGVAI, Bryan, Ohio KATHY A. LITTLE, Franklin | JOHN W. LLOYD, Bowling Green | JANE LOCKWOOD, Bowling Green | BRUCE W. LOGAN, Sturgis CHRISTOPHER L. LOVORN, Louisville PATRICIA L. LOWEN, Louisville CHARLES C. LUCAS, Middleburg DAVID O. LUCAS, Bowling Green PAMELA F. LUTES, Mt.)Washington BETTY J. LUTTRELL, Dundee DAVID M. LYONS, Rockfield SALLY E. MAIN, Owensboro 380 Juniors JONATHAN L. MALLARD, Vine Grove ALESIA L. MANNING, Portland, Tenn. PHYLLIS F. MANSFIELD, Bowling Green CURTISS A. MARTIN, Bowling Cee MICHAEL W. MARTIN, Calhoun BRUCE A. MASDEN, Louisville JAMES W. MASHEK, Potomac, Md. JAMES L. MASSEY, Evansville, Ind. MICHAEL C. MATTINGLY, Owensboro DEBORAH L. MAYES, Franklin KAREN R. MCCANDLES, Knob Lick JOHN L. MCCLURE, Albion, Mich. MITCHELL J. MCCONNELL, Bowling Green WINNIE W. MCCONNELL, Louisville DAVID R. MCCRACKEN, Franklin NADJI S. MCCUBBINS, Lebanon Junction WILLIAM B. MCDANIEL, Somerset MARY A. MCDONALD, Louisville SUSAN C. MCELFRESH, Owensboro RUSSELL L. MCELROY, Bowling Green SUSAN P. MCELROY, Paris GARY L. MCFARLAND, Owensboro JANEY L. MCGRAW, Bowling Green ADRIANNE B. MCGREGOR, Nortonville POLLY A. MCGREW, Fordsville RICHARD J. MCGUFFIN, East View SANDRA L. MCKINLEY, Taylorsville HENRY S. MCKOIN, III, Gallatin, Tenn. THERESA M. MCLEAN, Columbia ROBERT A. MCMICAN, Marion TERESA G. MCMURTYRE, Summer Shade ROSEMARY MCNALLY, Lancaster, Mass. WENDY L. MEETING, Mansfield, Ohio SANDRA J. MEFFORD, Owensboro VICKIE A. MELTON, Hartford GEORGE H. MEREDITH, Leitchfield ROBIN R. MEREDITH, Louisville REBECCA J. MERIDETH, Bowling Green BEVERLY J. MERRILL, Louisville DANIEL M. MEYERS, Bowling Green DAVID MILBY, Greensburg DOUGLAS E. MILES, Collinsville, Ill. KAREN J. MILEY, Evansville, Ind. JANET E. MILLEN, Rockfield JOHN E. MILLER, III, Waukegan, Ill. ‘Be yourself, smile and enjoy it’ Cool as cucumbers, four Western stu- dents smiled as they modeled swimsuits and evening gowns, displayed their tal- ent and won the hearts of beauty pageant judges. Theresa Jones, Patty Royal, Debbie Pardue and Donna Condiff have partici- pated in beauty pageants in the state, winning a crown or finalist honors. Miss Jones, a freshman from Smiths Grove, was crowned the first Miss Southern Kentucky Fair in July. “It was exciting to be crowned and I enjoyed the people in the pageant,” Miss Jones said. She won $120 which helped pay for her fall semester dormitory fee. A Junior Miss Pageant participant as a high school senior, Miss Jones compared the two contests. “I liked the Jr. Miss contest because grades and personality were brought into the judging,” she said. She sae girls in the fair pageant mo- deled swimsuits and evening gowns. A list of their achievements and an auto- biography were read to the audience. Miss Jones said an interview would help bring each girl’s personality into the judging process. Patty Royal’s beauty pageant exper- ience was rather unique, considering its location at Cedar Hill Campground near Cave City. The site was fitting, however, for the Miss Kentucky Teen Queen pageant of the National Campers Club. It was the first time her hometown, Owensboro, had been represented in the competition. The homefolks weren't dis- appointed when she was named first runner-up after modeling a swimsuit and an evening gown, sheep a ques- tion onstage and singing a John Den- ver melody. “No one knew I was going to be in the contest until the day of it, and I didn’t practice the song until the morning of the contest,” Miss Royal said. “T wish I had entered sooner. It was fun, but a little nerve-racking.” Debbie Pardue is not the first one in her family to enter beauty pageants. Sev- eral aunts are veterans of such events and have helped their niece, she said. Miss Pardue won the Miss Hart Coun- ty Pageant and was named first runner- up in the Miss Southern Kentucky Fair, Mountain Dew, Miss Kentucky Teen- {32 and Miss Barren County pageants; she finished third in the Miss Kentucky Dogpatch Pageant. wo pageants had extra surprises for the 23-year-old. Miss Pardue was select- ed ‘Most Photogenic” in the Miss Ken- tucky Teenage contest and ‘Miss Conge- niality” in the Miss Hart County contest. Asked how her family reacted to her beauty contest involvement, she replied, “My parents never treated me any differ- ently than before, and they treated every child the same. They were always willing to help and always supported me in the contests.” Miss Pardue said her pageant involve- ment has helped her seat with people better. She said she is not shy and can teach children more effectively now be- cause she does not mind being in front of people. A contestant should begin preparing a month prior to a pageant and Miss Par- due id a girl should be herself. She also said the girl should practice walking and turning in front of a mirror every spare moment she has. “It takes a lot of self-discipline to prepare properly for a contest.” Donna Condiff, a freshman pre-med major, is Miss Woodford County. “I think it was a great experience,” she said. “The Woodford County Women’s Club asked to sponsor me and I thought it would be a good idea.” Participants submitted a 10 by 12 pic- ture and an autobiography. They also modeled swimsuits and evening gowns and answered questions while onstage. “The judges were fair and any of the judges’ decisions for the five finalists ole have served the county well,” she said. Miss Condiff won a $100 savings bond and will also give interviews for the An- derson county radio station and speak to the Woodford County Women’s Club. Her advice for girls entering contests is simply, ‘be yourself, smile and enjoy it. — LORRAINE COOPER AND . DON ANDERSON nr Ser remanence ac eee JOHN M. MILLER, Versailles DEBRA Y. MILTON, Scottsville CATHY J. MIMS, Springfield, Tenn. JANICE L. MINOR, Owensboro KAREN P. MINTON, Hartford BARBARA S. MITCHELL, Hopkinsville CHARLOTTE D. MITCHELL, Pembroke SALLY A. MITCHELL, Owensboro WILLIAM E. MITCHELL, Bowling Green DAVID M. MOODY, Owensboro DONNA J. MOORE, Radcliff JEFFREY K. MOORE, Louisville JOEY K. MOORE, Central City MARGO K. MOORE, Louisville DAVID L. MOOREFIELD, Gallatin, Tenn. MARSHA A. MORANVILLE, Paducah BEVERLY A. MORRIS, Owensboro SHERRIAN G. MORRIS, Gallatin, Tenn. J. LEWIS MOSELEY, Columbia TERESA F. MOSIER, Summer Shade NANCY C. MOSLEY, Cerulean KATRINA L. MOSS, Hopkinsville FARON D. MOUNCE, Somerset JANE T. MUDWILDER, Anchorage JAN M. MUELLER, Loweville EDWARD L. MUNSON, JR., Bowling Green MARY C. MURPHY, Owensboro ue | exe % aL ert | STANLEY L. MURPHY, Liberty RICHARD L. MUSE, Rineyville GARY W. MYERS, Louisville JOHN K. NAGEL, Louisville CLIFFORD C. NAHM, Bowling Green CLAUDIA A. NALESNIK, Yonkers, N.Y. ROCKY L. NAPIER, Fountain Run JANN E. NEAL, Carmi, IIl. JAMES T. NEELY, Horse Cave ROGER D. NICHOLS, Scottsville LORA S. NISWONGER, Providence PERRY R. NOEL, Bowling Green RANDALL E. NORRIS, Flatwood MARSHA D. OBANION, Campbellsville KAREN A. OHEARN, Owensboro PAUL C. ORBERSON, Danville RHONDA J. OSBORNE, Paducah PAULA I. PAGE, Bowling Green BONNIE L. PAIGE, Louisville LEMUEL B. PALMER, III, Russellville SHARON D. PALMER, Louisville DAVID W. PARROTT, Jeffersontown WILLIAM R. PARSONS, Greensburg JUNE T. PATRICK, Gallatin, Tenn. 42424200 GARY A. PATTERSON, Sturgis RICHARD E. PATTERSON, Sonora DONALD G., PATTON, Liberty MARY E. PAWLEY, Elizabethtown PAMELA J. PAXSON, Russellville ee JENNIE S. PAYNE, Glasgow POLLY A. PAYNE, Bowling Green VICKI A. PAYNE, Elizabethtown NITA L. PENDLETON, Edmonton KATHERINE S. PEPPER, Brandenburg NANCY G. PERROS, Danville CINDY R. PERRY, Bethpage, Tenn. ANN W. PHILLIPS, Campbellsville JAMES E. PHILLIPS, Henderson JOSEPH J. PHILLIPS, Valley Station THALA C. PHILLIPS, Hartford LYNNE K. PIERCE, Glasgow ROBIN A. PIERCE, Powderly VICKI L. PILE, Constantine JANET R. PILLOW, Bowling Green MARIA G. PIPER, Glasgow JOHN J. PLANTINGA, Country Club Hills, Ill. GREGORY S. PODNIERS, Bowling Green WALLACE E. POE, JR., Hopkinsville JEANETTA S. PORTER, Falls of Rough PAUL R. PORTER, Lawrenceburg, Tenn. AUDREY E. POST, Radcliff STEVEN D. POWELL, Campbellsville TERESA B. PRATHER, Evansville, Ind. SHERRELYN J. PRESSON, Nashville, Tenn. CHARLES L. PRICE, III, Louisville HAROLD R. PRICE, Bowling Green JANICE A. PRICE, Bowling Green DEBORAH R. PRITCHARD, Johnson City, Tenn. MARY A. RAFFERTY, Franklin DEBRA J. RALSTON, Bowling Green BECKY D. RANDALL, Thompsonville, III. DEBRA J. RAY, Vine Grove 382 Juniors Examining the plane’s wings before take-off is art of procedure for OTC flight trainee Susan Roma. Miss Roma said the routine is mandatory be- fore each flight. JACK H. RAY, Lebanon MARI R. RECTOR, Bowling Green GARY W. REED, Lexington ANITA L. REEVES, Hendersonville, Tenn. ROBERT L. REEVES, Central City MARILYN D. REID, Bowling Green ERNEST R. REYNOLDS, III, Scottsville BETSY L. RHEA, Bowling Green RICHARD A. RIBAR, Louisville CONNIE A. RICE, Bowling Green BRENTON L. RICH, Kokomo, Ind. CLARA N. RICHARDSON, Bowling Green DONNA K. RICHEY, Bowling Green WANDA L. RIDDLE, Louisville MARILYN K. RIDER, Upton ANNE L. RIES, Louisville DANA W. RIPPY, Scottsville RONALD E. ROBBINS, Johnson, Vt. GARY R. ROBE, Bowling Green- HOWARD W. ROBERTS, Cadiz DWAYNE R. ROBINSON, Crofton ELAINE D. ROBINSON, Louisville JOANN ROGERS, Shepherdsville MARJORIE E. ROGERS, Princeton SHERYL A. ROGERS, Auburn SHARON L. ROMANS, Louisville JONI L. ROSENBERGER, Louisville ELIZABETH P. ROYALTY, Irvine KATHLEEN A. RUBEY, Ft. Thomas NELSON B. RUE, III, Bowling Green RHONA G. RUNNER, Bowling Green EDWIN E. RUSSELL, Hodgenville LAURA G. RUSSELL, Orlinda, Tenn. LAURIE L. RUSSELL, Russell Springs DARREL L. RYAN, Bowling Gre en JOSEPH D. RYAN, Bowling Green Flight plan Susan Roma has lived much of her life doing different things from the girl who grows up on cornflakes and waits for a charming prince to whisk her away from a dull world. At Western, Miss Roma is adding yet another chapter to her fairy tale lifestyle packed with adventure. A three-year veteran of the enlisted army, Miss Roma was the first woman cadet to participate in Western’s ROTC flight training program. “Western had never had a woman in the program, and | wanted to be the first one,” Miss Roma said. “It was okay, but it was hard.” Miss Roma said she studied approxi- mately six hours a week during the pro- ram, and then was tested. Later, she earned about the aircraft in which she learned to fly. “I had to learn to check the engine before each flight,” she said. Miss Roma said completing the course qualifies her to repair small engine planes, and this will add an extra year of service to her duty tour. She said in the beginning she didn’t particularly care to learn flying, but she wanted to find out what it was all about. “Besides, it was free,” she added. Miss Roma said learning to fly would take from six to 12 he She added that only one year was allowed in the program to learn to solo. Following graduation in December, 1977, Miss Roma plans to reenter the army and apply for fener: school as a 2nd lieutenant, she said. As a junior ROTC cadet, Miss Roma was required to sign a contract with the army, guaranteeing her services in the army for four years. “T’ll stay on after the four years,” said Miss Roma. “I’m very career-minded,” she added. She said she hopes to be stationed in Germany where she spent two years of her previous enlistment. She is a little apprehensive about be- coming an officer, however. “It’s going to be a harder job, a tremendous amount of responsibility,” she said. — DIANE WEBB AND KATHY WHITSON BILLIE K. SADLER, Elizabethtown LOWELL P. SALLEE, Bowling Green SUSAN J. SALTSMAN, Edmonton JANICE A. SANDEFUR, Beaver Dam VIRGINIA R. SANDERS, Harrodsburg WILLIAM K. SANDERS, Owensboro GENE T. SAUNDERS, Louisville ANNE C. SAVAGE, Nashville, Tenn. GAYLE M. SCHAAD, Louisville JAMES P. SCHROEDER, Owensboro DEBRA K. SCHWARTZ, Villa Hills JACQUELINE SCOGGINS, Madison, Tenn. STEPHEN D. SCOTT, Bowling Green JENNIFER J. SEARCY, Leitchfield LAURA J. SERGENT, Lexington JEFFREY T. SHADOWEN, Bowling Green SHAROLYN S. SHANNON, Paducah CAROL R. SHAW, Hickman 383 Juniors t ' j | } } PAULA A. SHELTON, Eminence ROBERT D. SHIRLEY, II, Whiteland, Ind. STEVE C. SHIRLEY, Glasgow BRENT E. SHOCKLEY, Scottsville SARAH A. SHOLAR, Princeton MARY S. SHOWN, Louisville STEVE A. SHUMATE, Louisville JERRY L. SHUTTERS, Greensburg, Ind ANTOINETTE SIMMS, Villa Hills PATRICK Q. SIMMS, Bowling Green ROBERT T. SINKS, Hendersonville, Tenn. SUSAN K. SIX, Paris LAURA V. SKILLERN, Bo wling Green PATSY J. SLAUGHTER, Bowling Green TERESA L. SMALL, Caneyville BRENDA L. SMILEY, Vanzant CARL E. SMITH, Louisville DANEILA J. SMITH, Diana, Tex. On the air They’re not Wolfman Jack yet, but eight Western students have an audience all their own when they work as disc jockeys at local radio stations, including Western’s WKYU. Rick Goetz, Dan Landreth and Jill McSweeney work at WKYU, which broadcasts to campus build- ings. Goetz, a sophomore from Alex- andria, said he gets quite a bit of feedback from students concerning the campus station. “We're strictly for the students,” Goetz said. “We play the music they want to hear.” The broadcast engineering tech- nology major also Pacts an after- noon show at WAKQ in Russell- ville. “At KQ we have to program for the teeny-boppers, the red- necks, the high school crowd, the college students and the 25-45 set,” he said. “People over 45 usually don’t listen.” Landreth, a senior from Chatta- nooga, Tenn., is also a disc jockey, and he said he enjoys the frequent feedback from listeners. “It’s nice to get response,” he said. “You get the feeling someone’s listening to you.” Experience is a major reason the students work at the campus sta- tion. “It’s a good opportunity for col- lege students to get commercial ra- dio experience,” Landreth said. “It’s very difficult to get training in a commercial station.” Although the staff is male-domi- nated, one young lady, Jill McSweeney, does regular news shifts at the station. The senior mass communica- tions major said she thinks women are capable of being good disc jock- eys. Noten aren't doomed to sales,” she said. “I'll be the first to admit if a woman is bad on the air. I won't defend her just because she’s a woman,” she said. Another female student, Cindy McCaleb, works weekend shifts at WFKN in Franklin. “We're a ‘middle of the road’ sta- tion,” she said. “I think we skimp on some of the things which are most important.” Miss McCaleb is a journalism major, and she said her work at the radio station is strictly a part-time job endeavor. Her first job was behind a snack bar, frying hamburgers, and it was a job she detested. “I’m lost in a kitchen and I was a klutz behind that snack bar,’”’ she said. “I feel safer at the radio station. I’ve been lucky to find a job that doesn’t put pressure on my weak spots,” Miss McCaleb added. Three other students, Henry Royse, Tim England and Steve Denton, are employed at WBGN, a local station. They work full-time at the sta- tion and agree that they have little leisure time. All are deejays, but each has ad- ditional responsibilities. Royse is production director, England is general manager and Denton is music director. Royse said he likes his full-time work and school schedule. “If I don’t work I just loaf and halfway do what I ought to be doing,” he explained. “But if I can en and go to school, I stay productive.” Denton agrees. “It was hard at first, but now I’ve gotten into it,” he said, adding that sometimes he falls asleep in class. Denton said he likes to distin- euch between the old “deejay” la- el and the newer one, “air person- ality.” “It’s not deejay anymore,” Den- ton said. ‘That title has been re- placed with air personality, a more dignified, descriptive term.” enton said he hopes to become “the voice behind well-known ra- dio and television commercials. You can make a lot of money,” he said, although he added that money is not a factor in his career goals. — BETTY MILLER, SARA MADDOX AND AUDREY POST (1 foenses) | Fe | — D. Gibson Straightening up approximately 500 “give-away” albums is one responsibility of Steve Denton, WBGN music director. Denton said the albums are donated by record companies to be given away to listeners during WBGN-sponsored contests. 384 Juniors JANET SMITH, Glasgow ROSALYN D. SMITH, Lexington SHARON K. SMITH, Horse Cave STANLEY W. SMITH, Louisville TIMOTHY W. SMITH, Brandenburg DAVID D. SNYDER, Louisville JEAN H. SOSH, Russellville CARLA S. SPALDING, Lebanon DOUGALS J. SPISICH, Evansville, Ind. BRENDA A. STAMPER, Louisville VENESSA G. STARKS, Franklin DONALD L, STEARNS, Albany PHILLIP C. STEPHENS, Bowling Green DOROTHY L. STIGALL, Bowling Green KURT C. STILLMAN, Bowling Crean THOMAS A. STITES, Hopkinsville CYNTHIA A. STOKES, Greenville SHIRLEY G. STOLL, Benton Harbor, Mich. GREG STOTELMYER, Connersville, Ind. RITA F. STOVALL, Scottsville STEPHEN A. STRANEY, Brandenburg JOANI M. STUCKE, Lexington ELLEN K. SULLIVAN, Bowling Green KENNETH H. SWEETEN, Smiths Grove THOMAS M. TARTER, Bowling Green ANTHONY E. TAYLOR, Bardstown GARY S. TAYLOR, Central City MICHAEL R. TAYLOR, Jamestown BRENDA L. TEMPLEMAN, Danville MARCIA E. TERRY, Cave City DORIS S. THOMAS, Cadiz MICHAEL C. THOMAS, Cave City SAMUEL THOMAS, Windsor BONITA J. THOMERSON, Glasgow CHARLES R. THOMPSON, Bowling Green ANNA J. THORNBERRY, Poole DEBORAH S. THORNTON, Erlanger GORDON kK. THURTELL, Adairville PATRICIA A. TIGUE, Henderson JAMES A. TINIUS, New Albany, Ind. MANLEY, W. TOBEY, III, Sterling Heights, Mich. KENNETH J. TOLOPKA, Glasgow JAMES B. TOMES, III, Bowling Green CHERI L. TRENT, Elizabethton PAUL E. TURNER, Bowling Green TONY O. UNDERWOOD, Greenville PHYLLIS A. VANCLEAVE, Morganfield MARK A. VANDERHEYDEN, South Bend, Ind. ALAN R. VAUGHN, Bowling Gren LARRY B. VAUGHT, Bowling Green MARTY W. VAUGHT, Owensboro JANET L. VICKERS, Owensboro PRESTON D. VINCENT, Bowling Green RENEVA E. VINCENT, Bowling Green WALTER G. VINSON, JR., Cadiz NAVITA WADE, Guthrie DEBRA S. WALDHART, Gallatin, Tenn. JANET WALDRON, Chesterfield, Mo. BECKY F. WALKER, Edmonton DEBRA A. WALKER, Bowling Green DENISE R. WALKER, Greenville JOHN H. WALKER, Gallatin, Tenn. RODNEY L. WALKER, Louisville STEVEN D. WALKER, Greensburg, Ind. CURTIS R. WALL, Lexington KEITH R. WALL, Phoenix, Ariz. STEPHEN J. WALL, Owensboro CHARLIE M. WALLACE, Louisville MICHAEL E. WALLACE, Fairdale PATRICIA J. WALLACE, Clay RICARDO V. WASHBURN, Louisville CAROL A. WEAR, Bowling Green MICKI WEAVER, Horse Cave PAMELA D. WEBB, Alvaton WILLIAM N. WEBB, Lewisburg JAMES R. WEIMER, Hopkinsville THOMAS T. WELBORN, Bowling Green STEPHEN D. WENDT, Bowling oe RHONDA S. WERNER, Louisville ARTHUR L. WETTERER, Louisville WILLIAM E. WHELAN, Louisville TERRI L. WHISENHUNT, Bradley, Ariz. STEVEN A. WHISMAN, Columbia THELMA F. WHITE, Leitchfield WILLIAM S. WHITE, Cadiz WINONA R. WHITE, Campbellsville THERESA L. WHITMAN, Louisville REGENIA WILKERSON, Gracey NICHOLAS E. WILKINS, Bowling Green LESLIE L. WILLIAMS, Centerville, Ohio RONNIE L. WILLIAMS, Bowling Green GWENDA L. WILLINGHAM, Owensboro JAMIE S. WILSFORD, Winter Haven, Fla. A. COLLEEN WILSON, Owensboro ELIZABETH W. WILSON, Mayfield JAMES L. WILSON, Manitou KERRY D. WILSON, Marcellus, Mich. SHARON K. WILSON, Guston LINDA K. WIMMER, Hawesville JACK T. WINCHESTER, Murray SHERI L. WINFREY, Campbellsville SARAH T. WINLOCK, Glasgow CHARLIE P. WISDOM, Edmonton LINDA M. WISEMAN, Irvine DARRELL W. WITTEN, Clarkson NANCY D. WITTEN, Bowling Green JANET S. WITTENBRAKER, Evansville, Ind. KATHY F. WOODFORD, Paris MARTHA D. WOODSON, Auburn CAROL WOOSLEY, Morgantown TERRY L. WRIGHT, Nashville, Ind. MARVIN J. WURTH, Paducah JAMES R. YATES, Kuttawa MICHAEL F. YEISER, Owensboro NELLISA J. YOKLEY, Henderson SUSAN C. YORK, Bowling Green HEIDI M. ZIMMERMAN, Hendersonville, Tenn. 385 Juniors 4 { i Believe it of nok ° There are 1,081 males and 1,101 females in the sophomore class. ° 1,888 sophomores live on campus. Pearce Ford houses the most sophomore males (179), and Central houses the most females (110). ¢ The oldest sophomore student is 71 years old. There are more 19-year-olds in the class than any other age group. (933) ¢ The most popular major for WKU sophomores is ‘undecided’. The least popular majors are Civil Engineering, Engineering Physics, Institution Administration (Restaurant Management) and Philosophy and Religion. There is one sophomore majoring in each of these areas. — Data provided by WKU Computer Center BECKY J. ABDON, Louisville SANDRA A. ABELL, Louisville DEBORAH S. ABNEY, Calhoun MARVA J. ABRAM, Princeton CATHERINE L. ADAM, Jeffersontown ANITA C. ADAMS, Orlinda, Tenn. ROBYN L. ADAMS, Louisville WALTON R. ALLEN, White Plains LISA K. ALLISON, Madisonville BETSY S. ALSPAUGH, Danville DEBORAH A. ANDERSON, Bowling Green JOHN E. ANDERSON, Sarasota, Fla. RICHARD L. APPLEBY, Owensboro LORI A. ARMES, Elizabethtown CINDY S. ARNOLD, Prospect CATHY J. ASHBY, Russellville KATHY L. ASHBY, Russellville KEVIN B. ASHBY, Beaver Dam JOHN S. ASHER, Leitchfield MARK D. ASHLEY, Huntsville, Ala. LISA A. ASHWORTH, Bowling Green SUSAN K. ASOWITCH, Hollywood, Fla. SHERRY G. ATHERTON, Owensboro LAURA A. BABER, Madisonville SCOTT A. BACHERT, Fern Creek SHARON BAILEY, Franklin WILLIAM C. BAIN, JR., Bowling Green LINDA F. BAKER, Greensburg ra NORRIS C. BAKER, JR., Cadiz fe. TERESA F. BAKER, Louisville Al THOMAS M. BAKER, Bowling Green P BECKY A. BARNES, Princeton 7 LISA A. BARNES, Bowling Green 7 he ce TERRY W. BARNES, Owensboro we THERESE BARNETT, Bowling Green ve LINDA S. BARTLEY, Calhoun JAMES D. BEAL, Owensboro LARR Y K. BEAM, Bowling Green GREGORY R. BECK, Pedonia GERALD L. BELL, Lexington BRENDA K. BENSON, Owensboro JOSEPH H. BENSON, Hendersonville, Tenn. STEVEN E. BENSON, Indianapolis, Ind. VANESSA K. BENTON, Cross Plains, Tenn. CHARLES S. BERGER, Louisville BONNIE L. BERRY, Evansville, Ind. MELODY A. BERRYMAN, Louisville JOHN K. BEVILLE, Bowling Green NANCY G. BISIG, Louisville MARK J. BIVEN, Louisville TIMOTHY L. BLAIR, Elizabethtown SHERYL A. BLAKEY, Russellville KATHY A. BLANKENSHIP, Scottsville FAWN L. BLEVENS, Shepherdsville JERI L. BLICK, Olmstead JEAN A. BLOMQUIST, Owensboro CHARLES BLYTHE, Frankfort GEORGE W. BOATWRIGHT, Paducah GERALD A. BODENBENDER, Louisville RHONDA L. BOHANNON, Eminence EUGENE N. BOLDRICK, Springfield JENNIFER J. BOLIN, Shelbyville CATHY E. BONNEVILLE, Arlington, Va. 386 er a zs | Sophomores Twirlwind In preparation for performances such as the Sept. 25 halftime show of the Austin Peay football game, Western twirlers Tara Gam- ble, Betty Thompson and Tina Lewis work two hours a day during band practice. The _ girls are supervised by Miss Thompson’s | mother, Peggy, a secretary in the physics || and astronomy department. NANCY L. BOOKER. Smiths Grove SANDRA J. BOONE, Leitchfield ROBERT J. BOUHL, Louisville NANCY A. BOWLES, Munfordville PAMELA E. BOWLES, Summer Shade JAMES D. BOWLING, Louisville MARK L. BOWMAN, Bowling Green DAVE L. BOYD, Louisville KAREN L. BOZARTH, Rumsey NANCY E. BRADLEY, Sebree TED E. BRAINARD, Somerset BETTY J. BRANNON, Dothan, Ala. RITA K. BRATCHER, Caneyville PAMELA A. BRAY, Alvaton CARL E. BRAZLEY, Louisville DIANE E. BRENNAN, Atlanta, Ga. HAL O. BRILEY, Portland, Tenn. BEVERLY E. BRITT, Smiths Grove MICHAEL V. BRODARICK, Louisville CORBY H. BROWN, Gamaliel E. DALE BROWN, Jamestown GLORIA J. BROWN, Sturgis LISA B. BROWN, Bowling Green PHILLIP H. BROWN, Scottsville POLLY S. BROWN, Bowling Green RICKIE F. BROWN, Tompkinsville VALERIE S. BROWN, Warsaw VIRGINIA R. BROWN, Bowling Green YVONNE R. BROWN, LaGrange SARAH E. BUCHANAN, Prestonsburg SHELIA L. BUCK, Greencastle CATHY D. BUCKLES, Henderson ROBERT M. BUEKER, Bowling Green RICKY R. BUFORD, Glasgow MARTIN L. BUMM, Owensboro JOSEPH E. BUNCH, Bowling Green RALPH C. BURDEN, Morgantown TOMMY R. BURKS, Bowling Green MARGENA BURNETT, Shepherdsville BERYL C. BUSH, Bowling Green ROBERT T. BUSH, Rockfield DIANNE L. BUTTS, Bowling Green ANN L. CAGE, Gallatin, Tenn. DOREEN J. CAINES, Winchester JAMES T. CALLIS, Owensboro BARBARA A. CAMP, Ft. Campbell VALERIE B. CAMPBELL, Versailles MARK A. CANNON, Madisonville CATHERINE R. CANSLER, Henderson GEORGIANA L. CARLSON, Des Plaines, III. SUSAN P. CARR, Bowling Green WILLIAM S. CARREL, Miamisburg, Ohio CAROL A. CARROLL, Muldraugh LAURA R. CARSON, Gulfport, ace — D. Pasteris 387 Sophomores MARGARET A. CARTER, Hawesville DONALD B. CATRON, Owensboro JEFFREY J. CAVANA, Bellevue MARY A. CECIL, Bardstown AMY K. CHAMBERS, Owensboro NORMAN D. CHAMBERS, Campbellsville COLIN E. CHANCELLOR, Mt. Washington JEFFREY S. CHAPPELL, Griffith, Ind. TERESA G. CHILDERS, Bowling Green CHARLES L. CHILDRESS, Central City TERESA A. CHRISTMAS, Russellville MARK L. CLARDY, Vinegrove DAVID B. CLARK, Brownstown, Ind. DONNA L. CLARK, Versailles ESTHER M. CLARK, Drakesboro MARC J. CLARK, Bowling Green SALLY CLARK, Bowling Green SHERRY E. CLARK, Woodburn SUSAN CLARK, Bowling Green BETTY R. COATS, Horse Cave DAVID S. COCKRILL, Brownsville DAVID R. COLE, Cottontown, Tenn. MARY J. COLLINS, Bloomfield KAREN S. COMPTON, Franklin RUTH A. CONDER, Louisville DWIGHT D. CONNER, Louisville GEORGE W. CONNOR, Lexington “T don’t know about the lifesaving part, but the girls you see in here are dynamite,” said Owensboro sophomore Steve Hughes. Hughes is a lifeguard at the Diddle Arena pool for 15 hours each week. He works weekday nights from 6:00 to 9:00 and occasional weekends. “The best part about the job is that 45 per cent of our customers are girls, and if 388 Sophomores Capsized kayaks and poolside luaus ou call watching girls swim around in bikinis work, then I guess I work pretty hard,” Hughes said. There are some strange sights to be seen at the pool, according to Hughes. He said he walked into the pool area one night and found an elderly man sitting in a capsized the The gentleman was practicing uprighting the Layak with his paddle. — S. Benson Hughes recalled an occasion when the pool area was turned into a luau. “It’s really weird. Every spring this black fra- ternity gets permission from the intra- mural office to bring in a stereo and dance on the deck,” he said “They brin their dates and just dance, swim and hols ler until it’s time to close.” The lifeguarding job has a few low spots, Hughes said. Attendance varies according to the mood of the semester, starting out big and decreasing until three weeks before finals when atten- dance may drop to two swimmers a night. “I’m sort of glad of that because it gives me three fours to study and still oop aee Hughes said. ughes said, “The big attraction around here, other than the girls, is the large beam above the diving boards. Ev- ery guy who goes off the board tries to touch it; that’s why all the paint is chipped off. Ath really funny thing to watch is the guys who race each other using the old Kentucky swimmin’ hole stroke,” Hughes said. A competitive swimmer for eight years, the mass communications major said the stroke is done with the head always above the water. Hughes said the pool has regulars who swim nightly. ‘Most of them are faculty members who swim close to 3,000 yards a night,” he said. “They do it slow, but you've got to admire their dedication.” Hughes said there are better campus jobs, but he feels that his is one of the top 10. “I know some guys who cut grass and rake leaves for the same money I’m getting,” he said. “I think the University should see the difference in the degree of labor and therefore pay accordingly.” — BRIAN COLLINS Bikini-clad girls, elderly men uprighting capsized kayaks and luaus are entertainment possibilities any night Steve Hughes goes to work. The sopho- more is a part-time lifeguard at the Diddle pool. RITA F. CONOVER, Vine Grove KATHY A. COOK, Louisville PATRICIA A. COOK, Scottsville LISA S. COOMER, Cave City CATHERINE L. COOPER, Louisville GARY L. COOTS, Bowling Green HAROLD W. CORNETT, Campbellsville DEBORAH D. CORNWELL, Scottsville WILLIAM J. CORTUS, East Peoria, Ill. MARY A. COSSEY, Bowling Green JILL K. COSTIN, Pekin, Ind. BARBARA L. COTNEY, Louisville GARY L. COTTRELL, Bonnieville DANIEL E. COUDEN, Owensboro CHARLES B. COWAN, JR., Bowling Green ROSEMARIE COWHERD, Elkton CHARLES D. COX, Louisville DEBBIE L. COX, Glasgow PATSY R. COX, Woodburn NANCY A. CRACKEL, Bowling Green TAMA M. CRAVEN, Louisville BARBARA J. CRIBBS, Bowling Green JOHN A. CRICK, Bowling Green JON M. CUDE, Hendersonville, Tenn. TERRY L. CUDE, Hendersonville, Tenn. HERON CUNNINGHAM, JR., Valley Station JAMES A. CUNNINGHAM, Louisville THOMAS C. CUNNINGHAM, Bowling Green WILLIAM CUNNINGHAM, Bowling Green KATHY A. CURNEAL, Elizabethtown REBECCA J. CURRY, Greensburg JEROME DABNEY, Louisville LEE C. DANIELS, Louisville DEBRA L. DARGO, Bowling Green ANTHONY L. DARNELL, White House, Tenn. DAVID S. DARNELL, White House, Tenn. MARY J. DAVENPORT, Louisville JANET L. DAVIES, Prospect JULIO M. DAVILA, Miami, Fla. JILL B. DAVIS, Louisville PAUL L. DAVIS, Louisville WILLIAM C. DAVIS, Hopkinsville LISA L. DAY, Madisonville ROBERT M. DAY, Bowling Green RONALD A. DAY, Louisville ' KAREN L. DEBERRY, Bowling Green DANA A. DENARDI, Louisville CARLOS A. DUPUY, Puerto Armuelles, Panama PATRICIA A. DICK, Dawson Springs DARLENE J. DICKENSON, Hendersonville, Tenn. MARILYN R. DIETRICH, Corydon, Tenn. BETTY J. DODSON, Decatur, Ala. DONNA S. DODSON, Brandenburg DAVID C. DONALDSON, Versailles DENISE B. DONALDSON, Versailles | NANCY G. DONOHO, Portland, Tenn. DEBORAH A. DOOLEY, Middlesboro | DARRELL W. DOTY, Lexington DONALD R. DOUGLAS, Maceo JOANN DOUGLAS, Bowling Green DENISE M. DOWNARD, Louisville DEANNA S. DRAKE, Morgantown MICHAEL R. DRESSMAN, Erlanger ROBERT M. DREXLER, JR., Valley Station CINDY S. DREYER, Ft. Mitchell SHERI L. DRUIEN, Louisville VICTORIA J. DUKES, Greenville } KATHY L. DUNAWAY, Cincinnati, Ohio CHERYL D. DUNCAN, Owensboro | DEBBIE J. DUNCAN, Hartford ANTHONY R. DUNN, Jeffersontown MARCIA A. DUNN, Clarkson TERESA D. DUNSON, Louisville CHRISTINE L. DURANEY, Winchester KATHLEEN A. DURBIN, Brownsville NATALIE DURBIN, Bowling Green SANDRA R. DURHAM, Portland, Tenn. SUSAN C. DURHAM, Owensboro TERESA D. DUTTON, Versailles CAROL L. DYE, Bowling Green MARK D. DUNN, Bowling Green | } RANDOLPH S. EADE, Bowling Green | KAREN G. EDGE, Whitesville LETHA C. EDISON, Alvaton MICHAEL C. EDMONDS, Glasgow | JULIE A. EISENMAN, Ft. Wright BONNIE S. ELMORE, Glasgow JAMES G. EMMERT, Louisville JEFFERY H. ENGEL, Hendersonville, Tenn. | ' { | | ; ROBERT B. ERVIN, Alexandria WENDY J. ERVING, Bowling Green JANICE F. ERWIN, Scotteville KAREN ESTES, Elizabethtown JOHNNY W. EUBANK, Gamaliel CYNDI L. EVERSON, Jacksonville, Fla. KATHY M. FAIRCHILD, Whitesville JAMES C. FARLEY, Louisville CHARMAINE C. FARRINGTON, Woodbridge, Va. LISA'S. FARRIS, Morgantown SCOTT N. FIFE, Louisville KAREN D. FIGLER, Crown Point, Ind. KATHERN M. FIRELINE, Madisonville VALORIE G. FISHBACK, Madisonville EDWARD N. FISHER, Bowling Green BEVERLY A. FISTER, St. Joseph, Mich. PATRICK T. FLAHERTY, Owensboro CREED E. FLEENOR, Bowling Green CYNTHIA M. FLYE, Paducah GARY L. FORD, Munfordville GWENDOLYN D. FORD, Louisville PATRICIA G. FORT, Owensboro KRISTINE R. FOWLER, Franklin JUDITH C. FRENCH, Owensboro JEFFREY R. FREY, Owensboro MARGIE FULKS, Elizabethtown JANET C. FULLER, Radcliff STEVEN G. FULNER, Louisville 389 Sophomores MARGARET A. FULTZ, Louisville JACKIE L. FUQUA, Louisville DAVID S. FURKIN, Campbellsville ALVIN T. FUTRELL, Nashville, Tenn. DONNA M. GAINES, Ekron KIM P. GAINES, Carrollton CHERYL A. GALLOWAY, Evansville, Ind. CATHERLEEN GAMBLE, Franklin CLARICE GAMBLE, Franklin MICHAEL R. GARDNER, Bowling Green LESLIE A. GARELL, Louisville ROBERT H. GARLAND, Louisville LAURA M. GARNER, Somerset TWILA J. GARNER, Russellville GORDON D. GARRETT, Louisville JAMES F. GENTRY, JR., Cadiz JOHN M. GENTRY, Hartford MARTYNA J, GERWECK, South Orange, N.J. LESLIE A. GILBERT, Owensboro PATRICIA L. GILBERT, Owensboro CAROL A. GILL, Madisonville KENNY D. GILLIAM, Bowling Green THOMAS P. GILMARTIN, East Northport, N.Y. LYNN S. GLASSCOCK, Perryville CINDY A. GLAYSBROOK, Madisonville ALECIA D. GLIDEWELL, Campbellsville DALE GOAD, Gamaliel JOHN D. GODFREY, JR., Hendersonville, Tenn. SUSAN J. GODKE, St. Joseph, Mich. ELIZABETH S. GOFF, Louisville TAMARA R. GOFF, Beaver Dam CYNTHIA A. GOODRUM, Greenville DIANA R. GORDON, Florence DEBORAH A. GOSSETT, Summer Shade DEBORAH M. GOTHARD, Bowling Green JOHN D. GOVER, Bowling Green MELONEY K. GRAHAM, Louisville CAROLYN D. GRANT, Bowling Green LINDSLEY A. GRANTHAM, Cottontown, Tenn. NIZIDA S. GRAY, Lexington KATHY J. GREEN, Leitchfield DOUGLAS P. GREENLEE, Hendersonville, Tenn. MARY J. GREENWELL, Waverly ANN E. GREGORY, Louisville LISA M. GREGORY, Bremen GAYLA C. GRIDER, Russellville TERRI L. GRIEF, Kevil DONNA L. GRIGGS, Owensboro MARY F. GRIGGS, Central City PAMELA D. GRIMES, Glendale DEBORAH F. GRINSTEAD, Elizabethtown HELENE M. GROSS, Livingston, N.J. KATHY L. GRUCCIO, Hopkinsville DARYL E. GUFFEY, Russell Springs KEVIN C. GUINN, Hermitage, Tenn. VICKI L. GULLETT, Cave City SUZANNE GUY, Scottsville SCOTT A. HAASE, West Chester, Ohio MICKEY D. HADDOX, Louisville HELEN K. HAFFNER, Louisville MARY J. HAIDUC, Glasgow DEBORAH L. HALBRITTER, Louisville TERRY L. HALE, Paducah REBA A. HALL, Bowling Green SALLY L. HAMMOCK, Owensboro DONNA J. HAMMER, Dubre THOMAS B. HAMMOND, Louisville JAMES D. HANCOCK, Hopkinsville WILLIAM M. HANNA, Lexington LONNIE L. HARDIN, LaGrange LARRY M. HARPER, Portland, Tenn. WILLIAM M. HARRELSON, Russellville BRENT M. HARRIS, Somerset PRISCILLA G. HARRIS, Franklin RUSSELL B. HARRIS, Brandenburg TERRI F. HARSTON, Scottsville SHERRY L. HARTFORD, Sebree JUDY L. HARTNETT, Louisville JOYCE A. HASKINS, Campbellsville MARK E. HATCH, Louisville ANGELA HATFIELD, Glendale BARBARA J. HATFIELD, Evanston, IIl. DONNA M. HATFIELD, Henderson ERNA L. HAY, Greensburg BARBARA A. HAYES, Bowling Green TIMOTHY J. HAYS, Jeffersontown LONNIE K. HEAD, Cedar Hill, Tenn. MARY J. HEAD, New Haven JULIE S. HEBEL, Campbellsville DONNA K. HENDERSON, Hopkinsville PAM K. HENDERSON, Owensboro YVONNE L. HENDERSON, Louisville SHEILA F. HENDRICK, Bowling Green SUSAN E. HENRY, Louisville KIMLIN S. HERALD, Sweeden ROBERT B . HERRICK, Prestonburg JANE E. HERSHEY, South Euclid, Ohio JANINE F. HESS, Auburn CHERYL D. HEYDUCK, Pineville 390 Sophomores r — L. Gardner SUSAN L. HINTON, Portland, Tenn. VICKIE R. HINTON, Greenville CATHERINE M. HOCH, West Chester, Penn. PATRICK J. HOHMAN, Louisville NANCY A. HOLDEN, Cincinnati, Ohio DONNA S. HOLDER, Bowling Green PHILIP G. HOLLAND, Bowling Green CONNIE L. HOLMAN, Bowling Green NANCY L. HOLMAN, Glasgow ROBERT HOLSCLAW, Shepherdsville KAREN L. HOLYOKE, Buffalo Grove, III. CYNTHIA M. HOPWOOD, Paducah JANICE D. HORMUTH, Evansville, Ind. KAREN B. HOWARD, Summer Shade KIMBERLY G. HOWARD, Owensboro LAWRENCE R. HOWARD, Bowling Green MICHAEL G. HOWARD, Calhoun LEA A. HOWELL, Owensboro Dandrift With lazily-falling snowflakes sticking to his hair and clothing, Jack Ray, a junior anthropology major from Malaga, Ohio, tosses a frisbee in the first snowstorm of the year. The snow had melted by that evening. REBECCA S. HOWELL, Louisville JEFFREY S. HOWERTON, Bowling Green LISA J. HOWLETT, Russellville FLOYD D. HUDDLESTON, Monticello GREGORY O. HUDNALL, Lewisburg BRIAN K. HUDSON, Owensboro RHONDA C. HUFF, Round Hill ELANDON D. HUGHES, Barbourville JOHN R. HUNLEY, Hartford RUTH A. HUNT, Smiths Grove VALERIE A. HUNT, Spencerport, N.Y. KATHY A. HUNTER, Portland, Tenn. JULIE A. HURT, Scottsville STUART J. HUSSEY, Bowling Green JUDY A. HYDEN, Prestonsbur PATRICIA A. IACOBELLO, Auburn, N.Y. MARY J. INABNITT, Stab ANNIE F. INGRAM, Louisville 391 Sophomores MARK B. INGRAM, Louisville CARLA E. INMAN, Dayton, Ohio LINDA K. ISENBERG, Gamaliel PATRICIA N. JACKEL, Bowling Green JENNIFER JACKSON, Greenville JOY L. JACKSON, Bowling Green MONICA JACKSON, Lexington ELEANOR E. JAMES, Glasgow RICKY D. JANES, Campbellsville THERESA K. JARVIS, Burkesville MICHAEL W. JEANNETTE, Bowling Green JACQUELINE JENKINS, Olmstead ANN S. JEWELL, Knob Lick BARRY G. JOHNSON, Owensboro BOYD D. JOHNSON, Bowling Green HERBERT L. JOHNSON, Louisville JERRY L. JOHNSON, Louisville JUDY L. JOHNSON, Met. Sterling STANLEY D. JOHNSON, Owensboro VICKI D. JOHNSON, Frankfort WILLIAM L. JOHNSON, Lewisburg HOPE S. JOHNSTON, Owensboro PHYLLIS L. JOHNSTON, Madisonville ALFRED D. JONES, Stanford ANITA JONES, Oak Grove DARRYL A. JONES, Lexington LINDA C. JONES, Bowling Green STEPHEN D. JONES, JR., Glasgow STEVE JONES, Willisburg THOMAS JONES, Calhoun WILLIAM L. JONES, JR., Elizabethtown JACQUELYN A. JOSEPH, Barrington, Ill. JEFFREY E. JOYCE, Milton JAN A. KEETON, Trenton NEYSA J. KELLEY, Bowling Green KAREN J. KELLY, Central City SHERRY L. KELLY, Greensburg MIKE D. KENNER, Sharon Grove KEVIN O. KEOWN, Bowling Green PAM J. KEPLEY, Franklin SARA—LOIS KERRICK, Elizabethtown ALTRICIA C. KEY, Russellville MARK R. KIMBROUGH, Louisville ROBIN T. KIMBROUGH, Bowling Green JENNIFER D. KIMMEL, Beechmont AIMEE R. KING, Paducah KIM A. KING, Burkesville PATRICIA M. KING, Franklin VALERIE L. KING, Louisville MARLA J. KINGREY, Glasgow JUNE E. KINLOCH, Louisville KIM A. KNAPP, Evansville, Ind. BEVERLY K. KNIGHT, Glasgow LORIE J. KOHL, Winchester YIANNAS A. KOUZARIDES, Limassol, Cyprus KITRICK A. KRENGAL, Noblesville, Ind. KATHRYN L. KUMMER, Louisville KIMBERLY A. KYSER, Louisville JULIA A. LAFFOON, Madisonville JOHN S. LAIR, Stanford MEGAN K. LAKE, Lexington LORIFAY LANCE, Washington; Nii CHARLES F. LANGFORD, Shopville KEVIN L. LARSON, Brownsville, Tex. MARY C. LATTIS, Pewee Valley DONALD C. LAWLESS, Owensboro DAVID H. LAWRENCE, Ft. Thomas KATHERINE A. LAWS, Bowling Green RODGER W. LAWSON, Glasgow SANDRA C. LEA, Lebanon, Tenn. JOHN D.LEE, JR., Owensboro VIRGINIA T. LESTER, Harrodsburg SUSAN R. LEUCHT, Owensboro JANICE F. LEWIS, Bowling Green SHIRLEY F. LINDSEY, Bowling Green KAREN R. LITTLEJOHN, Cadiz DAVID T. LIVINGSTON, Bowling Green GAYLA L. LOCKHART, Woodburn ANTHONY W. LOGAN, Lexington ATHENA J. LOGAN, Bowling Green BEN T. LOGAN, Smiths Grove ERIC L. LOGSDON, Bowling Green JAMES P. LOHMAN, Louisville JANICE F. LONDON, Cave City DONNA A. LONG, Lexington CHERYL L. LOVELL, Bowling Green JEFFERY W. LOVELL, Ridgetop, Tenn. LORA A. LOWE, Owensboro BELINDA S. LOWERY, Woodburn MARION L. LUDINGTON, Fulton, N.Y. KATHRYN L. LUKINS, Louisville DEBRA A. LYKINS, Owensboro STEVEN W. LYLE, Scottsville AMY D. LYNCH, Russellville JAMIE W. LYNCH, Bowling Green GLENDA S. LYNN, Bowling Green ALAN D. LYONS, Hendersonville, Tenn. JAMES P. MALLAY, Russellville MELINDA S. MANIS, Marietta, Ga. PAMELLA D. MANLEY, Cincinnati, Ohio BARBARA J. MANNING, Bowling Green KAREN A. MARCROFT, Tell City, Ind. MARILYN J. MARSHALL, Paducah TOM E. MARSTELLER, Louisville KEITH B. MARTIN, Horse Cave MARY L. MARTIN, Clay MELISSA W. MARTIN, Bowling Green ROBERT E. MARTIN, Bowling Green ROBERT S. MARTIN, Corbin RICHARD S. MARX, Louisville JAN M. MASON, Owensboro RUSSELL E. MATTHEWS, Owensboro SANDRA K. MATTINGLY, Elizabethtown SHARON G. MAY, Owensboro DENISE MCBRIDE, Franklin LUCINDA L. MCCALEB, Franklin MARY H. MCCLEAN, Miami, Fla. 392 Sophomores JEFFREY D. MCCONNELL, Louisville MARY L. MCORMICK, Owensboro LINDA M. MCCUBBIN, Bowling Green PATRICIA G. MCCUBBIN, Summersville JULIA A. MCCUBBINS, Rockfield KIM R. MCGOWAN, LaGrange DONALD K. MCGUIRE, Lexington LINCOLN B. MCINTYRE, Edgewood ANGELA D. MCLEAN, Fort Knox JAMES R. MCPEAK, Elizabethtown SHELIA F. MCPHAILL, Russellville KEVIN A. MCREYNOLDS, Russellville LISA M. MEACHAM, Russellville MARSHELLA MEADOWS, Richmond MARELLE G. MEANS, Nashville, Tenn. CAROL MEEKER, Florence SHERREE D. MELHISER, Owensboro MARK J. MERIMEE, Owensboro DIANA L. MERRICK, Louisville SHARON S. MERRILL, Louisville ANITA L. MILES, Anchorage DON A. MILES, Louisville CLIFFORD I. MILLER, Miami, Fla. DEBORA L. MILLER, Bowling Green DEBRA A. MILLER, Harned EDWARD G. MILLER, Greenville JANETTA A. MILLER, Glasgow KATHY M. MILLER, Leitchfield LISA C. MILLER, Maceo PHILIP L.-MILLER, Russell Springs ROBIN L. MILLER, Lebanon Junction KRISTY M. MILLINER, Louisville LILLIAN B. MILLS, Ekron CYNTHIA A. MINGS, Louisville MARY S. MINGUS, Henderson NORMA A. MINOGUE, Louisville MARGARET K. MINOR, Owensboro DONALD W. MINTON, Bowling Green CATHY A. MITCHELL, Bowling Green DINAH G. MITCHELL, Owensboro KATHY J. MITCHELL, Louisville WILLIAM B. MONTELL, Woodburn ROSETTA L. MOORE, Bowling Green STEVEN A. MOORE, Bowling Green SUSAN E. MOORE, Louisville TERRY R. MOORE, Pendleton TIM D. MOORE, Mortons Gap VIRGINIA A. MOORE, Radcliff BARRY MOORMAN, Owensboro ROBERTA E. MOORMAN, Hardinsburg PATRICIA A. MORETZ, Richmond PAMELA C. MORGAN, Niles, Mich. PAMELA J. MORGAN, Russellville TRACEY L. MORGAN, Paducah ROBBIE L. MORIARTY, Louisville RICKIE MORRIS, Horse Branch SUZANNE A. MOSLEY, Glasgow VICKI V. MOSLEY, Lexington JANE A. MOSS, LaCenter PATRICK J. MOUNTAIN, Owensboro DEBBIE A. MOUSER, Horse Cave ANTONIA M. MUDD, Louisville JAMES E. MUFFETT, Owensboro JAMES A. MULLIKIN, Owensboro JENNIFER L. MURLEY, Burkesville KATHLEEN A. MURPHY, Louisville NANCY L. NAHIKIAN, Otsego, Mich. KAREN A. NALLY, Morganfield DAVID E. NAPIER, Morgantown TINA M. NAPIER, Bowling Green MARILYN C. NASH, Hapkinsville NANCY L. NAVITSKY, Jensen Beach, Fla. ANITA C. NEAL, Hendersonville, Tenn. DARLENE E. NEAL, Lexingt on JOHN L. NELL, Columbia DEBORAH E. NESBIT, Cincinnati, Ohio MELESA A. NEWBY, Hopkinsville DOUGLAS L. NICHOLS, Louisville SHARON D. NORSWORTHY, Hartford GINA L. NUTTER, Bowling Green DAVE A. OAKLEY, Louisville PATRICIA A. OBRIEN, Bowling Green EDITH J. OLIVE, Elizabethtown CATHY L. OLIVER, Scottsville KATHY A. OLIVER, Lynch NANCY N. ORNDORFF, Russellville WILL A. OSBORN, Trenton DIANE G. OSBORNE, Glasgow JENI OWEN, Bowling Green CHERYL L. OWENS, Russellville JUDY G. OWENS, Bowling Green KELTON B. OWENS, Munfordville HASAN OZDEMIR, Ankara, Turkey DENISE L. OZGOWICZ, Vero Beach, Fla. FLOYD K. PAGE, JR., Russellville PAMELA S. PALMER, Roanoke, Va. DENNIS D. PARKER, Bowling Green STEVE L. PARNELL, Edmonton DEBRA C. PATTERSON, Sonora JULIA A. PATTERSON, Bowling Green JAMES W. PAWLEY, Owensboro KEITH PAWLEY, Louisville QUENTA A. PAYTON, Hartford SHEBELL PEAK, Louisville JULIE R. PEAKE, Lebanon RAMONA L. PEARSON, Scottsville SHARON L. PEAY, Madison, Tenn. DANIEL S. PELINO, Fairport, N.Y. LAURIE A. PENNISI, Columbus, Ga. DEBBIE K. PEPPER, Russellville WILLIAM L. PERKINS, Louisville KAREN L. PERRY, Louisville GARY S. PERRY, Louisville BRENDA I. PETERS, Lexington DEBRA B. PETERS, Greensburg DAWN L. PHILLIPS, Lexington LAURA E. PHILLIPS, Marion 393 Sophomores MARGARET L. PHILLIPS, Nashville, Tenn. TERESA S. PHILLIPS, Bowling Green TERESA C. PHILPOTT, Burkesville ANNA J. PICKENS, Princeton MARGARET J. PIERCE, Bowling Green LISA M. PILLITTERI, Louisville PIPPA A. PINCKLEY, Tompkinsville CARLA J. PINE, Valley Station SANDRA L. PLANTINGA, Country Club Hills, Ill. ELIZABETH A. POLAND, Bowling Green NEIL A. POND, Cottontown, Tenn. JULIA K. POOR, Greencastle, Ind. ALBERT C. PORTER, Louisville LISA K. PORTER, LaGrange ANN M. POWELL, Louisville ANNA M. POWELL, Paducah JOSEPH D. POWELL, Hendersonville, Tenn. DEBORAH K. POWERS, Mt. Washington EDDIE J. PRESTON, Nashville, Tenn. A. SUZETTE PRICE, Madisonville TONI C. PRICE, Louisville KEN PRIEST, Bowling Green RITA J. PROFFITT, Bowling Green JOAN M. PROVOST, Evansville, Ind. MONICA L. PRUITTE, Madisonville DIANA K. PUGH, Kettering, Ohio CATHY S. PURSLEY, Glasgow DELL M. QUARLES, Hopkinsville LISA K. RAQUE, Louisville SUSAN D. REAGAN, Tompkinsville LARRY A. REAVES, Louisville AMY L. REBEL, St. Charles, III. NANCY J. RECTOR, Bowling Green CONNIE J. REECE, Knob Lick TERESA A. REECE, Edmonton JANETTE M. REED, Springfield FRANCES O. RENEER, Rochester SANDRA K. REVLETT, Sacramento CURTIS A. REXROAT, Russell Springs CATHY A. REYNOLDS, Smiths Grove MARY A. RHODES, Louisville REBECCA E. RICE, Hikes Point KELLY N. RICH, Cincinnati, Ohio ANN E. RICHARDS, Stevensville, Mich. KIMBERLY K. RICHEY, Kettering, Ohio MORRIS G. RICKETTS, Bowling Green MARTINA K. RIGGS, Upton ALICE M. RILEY, Bardstown PAULA S. RISCH, Ft. Thomas JERRY A. RITTENBERRY, JR., Madison, Tenn. JAN ROBBINS, Vincennes, Ind. SANDRA M. ROBBINS, Fordsville BRUCE W. ROBERSON, Fern Creek CAIN E. ROBERTS, Jr., Louisville 394 Sophomores | | Final days | The end of the semester usually | means late hours in the library either working on papers or studying for exams. Ken Porter, a freshman from Chicago, IIl., takes a break from both to look at a newspaper. Special hours were provided by the library on the weekend before finals. DOROTHY W. ROBERTS, Bowling Green WILLIAM L. ROBERTSON, Bowling Green MARIA T, ROBINSON, Lexington STEPHANIE W. RODGERS, Hendersonville, Tenn. CHRIS A. ROEDERER, Louisville ALFRED L. ROGAN, Gallatin, Tenn. DENNIS M. ROGERS, Lewisport MICHAEL A. ROGERS, Hopkinsville TED A. ROGERS, Ft. Collins, Colo. KENNETH E. ROSE, Corbin MARCIA R. ROSE, Bowling Green MARK J. ROSO, Crestwoo MEL D. RUARK, Uniontown PAUL S. RUBLE, Jeffersontown ELIZABETH W. RUBY, Louisville MALINDA A. RUDD, Salyersville JONATHAN L. RUE, Bowling Green DEBORAH S. RUGGLES, Bowling Green CHERYL L. RUNYON, Bowling Green KENNETH D. RUSSELL, Poole STEPHANIE H. RUTLEDGE, Owensboro PAMELA F. SALTSMAN, Glasgow JOY D. SANDERS, Harrodsburg NANCY E. SANDERS, Johnson City, Tenn. DENNIS W. SANGSTER, Louisville STEVE W. SANSOM, Russellville DONALD R. SAPPENFIELD, Sonora PETER W. SARGENT, Auburn ROBBIE L. SARLES, New Albany, Ind. KEITH W. SATTERFIELD, Austin, Tex. TERESA K. SAWYER, Springfield, Tenn. DAWN R. SAYRE, Cincinnati, Ohio JENNIFER A. SCHNAPF, Slaughters BILLIE S. SCHROERLUCKE, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. JANET S. SCOTT, Louisville JOHN I. SCOTT, Bowling Green MICHAEL L. SCOTT, Hardyville BARBARA A. SEXTON, Louisville MAROLYN M. SHANNON, Paducah STUART A. SHANNON, Bowling Green BEVERLY J. SHARP, Kettle STEPHEN B. SHARP, Owensboro JUDY F. SHELTON, Oakland VANA J. SHOCKLEY, Fountain Run VIRGINIA O. SHORT, Louisville VIVIAN A. SHOULDERS, Adairville SHERRIE J. SHULER, Owensboro JANET L. SHUMATE, Louisville TERRI L. SIEMENS, Louisville DEBORAH L. SIMON, Bowling Green ELIZABETH G. SIMON, Bowling Green SARAH A. SIMONS, Dawson Springs DEBORAH G. SIMPSON, White Mills TERRY F. SIMPSON, Marion GARY W. SIMS, Scottsville FRED SINGLETON, JR., Radcliff LINDA K. SKAGGS, Shepherdsville TERRI L. SLATON, Madisonville JULIE A. SLY, Louisville CINDY B. SMITH, Prospect KATHLEEN SMITH, Drakesboro MARY G. SMITH, Somerset MONA G. SMITH, Bowling Green PATRICIA J. SMITH, Russellville REBECCA G. SMITH, Hartford ROBERT J. SMITH, Owensboro Ti Sal OT ne ne RONDALL L. SMITH, Austin SHARON E. SMITH, Lexington STEVEN F. SMITH, Ashland GREGORY A. SNOW, Louisville MONICA F. SNOWDEN, Versailles CHERYL L. SOLOMON, Louisville sea aaa entiegen HAMID SOWDAGAR, Abadan, Iran DARLENE M. SPARKS, Owensboro VICKIE C. SPEAR, Glasgow . SCOSHIA E. SPENCE, Louisville i RETHA K. SPROWLES, Campbellsville JOE W. STALLINGS, Henderson NANCY C. STANGLER, Williamsville, N.Y. PATRICIA A. STANLEY, Russellville , BARBARA E. STANTON, Louisville i JENNIFER M. STAPLES, Silver Spring, Md. , LARRY A. STARR, Glasgow CHRISTI A. STAUSS, Alvaton MILES C. STEENBERGEN, Scottsville MYRL L. STEENBERGEN, Bowling Green i PHILLIP M. STEINMETZ, Louisville BECKY L. STEINWEG, Owensboro MARY T. STEPHENSON, Burkesville VICKIE S. STEVENS, Lawrenceburg LISA M. STEVENSON, Louisville DEBBIE L. STEWART, Cecilia ij JAMES W. STILES, Elizabethtown LINDA N. STILES, Owensboro PRICILLA E. STINSON, Franklin t WILLIAM C. STOCKTON, Glasgow . 395 Sophomores 396 Sophomores LEE A. STOFER, JR., Hopkinsville SANDRA K. STONE, ccottsville CYNDIA L. STRAIN, Franklin KATHRYN J. STROZDAS, Springfield, Ohio RHONDA F. STURROCK, Oxford, Miss. DONNA L. SUTHERLAND, Bardstown DEBORAH S. SUTTLE, Portland, Tenn. JOHN W. SUTTLES, Louisville KATHY K. SWAIN, Bowling Green BARRY A. SWIHART, Philpot DAVID F. TABOR, Garfield RONALD B. TABOR, Bowling Green MICHAEL C. TANDY, Louisville SHERRY C. TAPP, Scottsville JONI W. TAPSCOTT, Bowling Green EMILY A. TATE, Bowling Green GEORGE L. TAYLOR, LaGrange GREGORY D. TAYLOR, Bowling Green JONI S. TAYLOR, Owensboro LOIS E. TAYLOR, Nashville MELINDA J. TEATER, Nicholasville KELCIE J. TEFFT, Kalamazoo, Mich. ANTHONY L. TERRY, Louisville NORMAN L. TERRY, Louisville PAULA J. THESSEN, Franklin CINDY L. THOMAS, Bowling Green KENNETH R. THOMAS, Louisville STEPHEN J. THOMAS, Bowling Green YOLANDA F. THOMAS, Louisville MARK A. THOMPSON, Drakesboro PEGGY J. THOMPSON, Lewisbur. MARY P. THORNE, Rockfiel REBECCA G. THORNTON, Franklin LUVENIA A. THURSTON, Bowling Green JOHN K. TICHENOR, Owensboro ALBERT L. TILLEY, Princeton A family reunion on every school day One by one the Durbins came. Patty, 20, was the first to come to Western. Her younger sister Kitsy came next followed by Tim, who had been out of high school three years. After a three-year stint in the military, John enrolled at Western, and his moth- er Dorothy decided to take some courses after being away from college life for 25 years. The Durbins’ motives, expectations and means for their educations are some- what different. The divorced mother of five has worked to help support her family since they moved eee Colorado in 1962. She is taking a horticulture class and hopes to study real estate. Her aca- demic goals are simply personal growth and enjoyment. John, 22, has a G.I. bill to pay part of the expenses of attending collec’ He lives on a 250-acre farm in Sunfish, a small community, and hopes to become a veterinarian. Mrs. Durbin said John’s delay in be- ginning higher education was the best thing for him. ‘He has more guts, confi- dence and determination — three years in the army has taught him discipline and self-control.” Tim, 21, also waited awhile before making a move to college. In the lapse he said he was able to mature and get settled down enough to study effectively. Tim has two part-time jobs and also uses federal grants to pay it his tuition and books. The two sisters live on campus, “Home” is several addresses for the Durbin family, but on Mondays they are all on campus for classes. Kitsy, John, Patty and Tim teach their mother Dorothy the basic strategy needed for a win in fcchall The family played the game on the fourth floor of the university center. work and receive grants. During the summer they live at home and work in their community. Patty, the more serious and self-con- scious family member, said her motives and directions at college have been “to do what the Lord wants me to do.” The religious studies major said she devotes her time to Campus Crusade, learning about discipleship teaching and building up other Christians. “It (reli- gion) is the most important thing in my life,” she said. Her sister Kitsy has a somewhat more secular college lifestyle. With a full-time class yereaaiol she also is a member of a service sorority. Financing her education is also part of her routine, and she works as typesetter on the College Heights Herald. Kitsy said she wants her education to be productive, active and fun. “I am so proud of all of us going to school,” she said. It has brought the Dur- bins closer together, she added. — CHARLEA HICKS (1 — J. Burton . MARY M. TINGLEY, Louisville RON A. TIPTON, Portage, Tenn. SIU KUI TONG, Hong Kon RACHEL J. TOOLEY, Tompkinsville SHARON L. TORAIN, Madisonville DARLENE D. TOWNS, Louisville WILLIAM J. TRAVIS, Tompkinsville BRUCE D. TRENT, Elizabethtown CONNIE L. TRENT, Wayzata, Mich. ERNEST D. TUBB, JR., Nashville, Tenn. BEVERLY A. TUCKER, Bowling Green MELVIN D TUCKER, Campbellsville CINDY A. TUDOR, Summer Shade DAVID B. TURNER, Henderson JOSEPH W. TURNER, Louisville KATHY L. TURNER, Franklin LAURA J. TUROK, Paducah LEE A. TUSSEY, Catlettsburg TOM J. TUTINO, Bowling Green ROBERT D. ULTSCHI, Frankfort PHILLIP K. VANCE, Cassel Berry, Fla. VICKIE L. VANCE, Glasgow KATHY A. VANMETER, Bee Springs MARY K. VANMETER, Elizabethtown JUDY K. VAUGHN, Bowling Green WALTER G. VICK, Olmstea ROBIN S. VINCENT, Louisville i i j RUBY L. VINCENT. Bowling Green ROBBIE D. VINSON, Cadiz KRISTEN S. VOLK, Louisville CATHERINE E. WADE, Ashland VICKY J. WAGGONER, Hopkinsville RHONDA Y. WALLER, Louisville ROCHELLE L. WARREN, Providence JOHNNIE N. WARRICK, Bowling Green RICARDO V. WASHBURN, Louisville ROSELINE WASHINGTON, Louisville DONNA M. WATTS, Elizabethtown KAREN A. WATTS, Lexington NANCY S. WATTS, Elizabethtown ROSEMARY E. WATTS, Winchester JANET L. WEAVER, Russellville SYLVIA A. WEAVER, Louisville BECKY A. WEBB, Owensboro PATRICK V. WEDDING, Guston JOYCE M. WEIDEMANN, Franklin BRADLEY L. WELLS, Bowling Green GREGORY E. WELLS, Owensboro MARK E. WELLS, Paris SUSAN C. WELLS, Alvaton MELISSA A. WESPISER, Oxford, Ohio GARY L. WEST, Hendersonville, Tenn. DREAMA M. WESTBAY, Louisville ROBIN J. WESTBROOK, Englishtown, N.J. SARA L. WESTFALL, Versailles ROBIN D. WETZEL, Owensboro | i STEVE G. WHEATLY, Hardinsburg JULIE K. WHITAKER, Bowling Green ALAN L. WHITE, Bowling Green DONALD L. WHITE, Hopkinsville KATHLEEN A. WHITE, Auburn KIMBERLEY G. WHITE, Arcadia, Ind. ROCELLA WHITE, Madisonville t GINA D. WHITLOW, Bowling Green } ROBERT C. WHITMER, Central City | DEBRA L. WILCOX, Madisonville KATHY L. WILCOX, Beaver Dam | MARTHA A. WILKERSON, Cadiz | JEANNE C. WILKINS, Lewisburg f JIM K. WILKINS, Bowling Green | ANGELA G. WILLIAMS, Paducsh | ANGELA R. WILLIAMS, Bowling Green ANTHONY G. WILLIAMS, Russellville DEBRANN WILLIAMS, Russell Springs MARY C. WILLIAMS, Manette MARY M. WILLIAMS, Franklin WANDA J. WILLIAMS, Sykesville, Md. MARK WILLIS, Campbellsville MATILDA R. WILLIS, Campbellsville DEBORAH K. WILLOUGHBY, Versailles CHAD M. WILSON, Greenville DONNA G. WILSON, Scottsville STEVE A. WILSON, Bowling Green STEVIE J. WILSON, Tompkinsville CINDY J. WISER, Stockbridge, Ga. | TIMOTHY A. WITTEN, Louisville JACQUELINE D. WIX, Westmoreland, Tenn. CAROLYN J. WOOD, LaGrange MELODY L. WOOD, Bedford MELYDIA R. WOODCOCK, Brownsville | | . | : | | | JAMES W. WOODS, Ft. Campbell DENNIS J. WOOTEN, Mt. Hermon BRADLEY L. WORD, Frankfort RAMONA R. WORTHAM, Leitchfield DOROTHY L. WRIGHT, Glasgow MARK WRIGHT, Lexington MARY K. WRIGHT, Louisville RICHARD L. WRIGHT, Versailles RICHARD K. YANN, Louisville ERNEST W. YATES, Cross Plains, Tenn. THOMAS D. YATES, Harrodsbur BEVERLY A. YOUNG, Hopluncalie KENT YOUNG, Wheaton, IIl. MARY M. YOUNG, Elkton RITA C. YOUNG, Glasgow ROBBI S. YOUNG, Louisville TAMMY K. YOUNG, Dawson Springs VERONICA E. YOUNG, Louisville DIANA F. YOUNGBLOOD, East View CAROL L. ZAX, Louisville HEIDI ZIMMERMAN, Liberty, Mo. SUZANNE ZOLLNER, Louisville f 397 Sophomores LISA R. ABEL, Owensboro REBECCA F. ABELL, Paducah KIM L. ADAMS, Asheville, N.C. KEITH R. ALBRECHT, Louisville REBECCA J. ALFORD, Bowling Green SANDRA L. ALFORD, Bowling Green PAMELA J. ALLEN, Hodgenville TERESA L. ALLEN, Henderson STEVEN M. ALLGEIER, Louisville SUSAN D. ALLGOOD, Custer ABDULLAH Y. ALMALKI, Doha, Qatar JEFFERY W. ALSUP, Goodlettsville MICHAEL J. ALVEY, Beaver Dam MICHAEL W. ALVEY, Leitchfield JO R. ANDERSON, Tompkinsville LINDA J. ANDERSON, Lewisbur. MARK R. ANDERSON, Englishtown, NG SHERRY G. ANDERSON, Glasgow BRENDA K. ANTLE, Russell Springs LEO V. ANTOINE, Louisville LISA G. APPLIN, Auburn RHONDA K. ARMES, Leitchfield BRYAN L. ARMSTRONG, Bowling Green JAMES S. ARNOLD, Perryville JOSEPH R. ARNOLD, Madison, Tenn. SONYA R. ASH, Louisville TIMOTHY J. ASHER, Leitchfield DENA S. ATHERTON, Utica RICKIE N. ATWELL, Greensburg MICHAEL D. AUGENSTEIN, Owensboro TERRI K. AUKERMAN, Shelbyville KATHALEEN M. AUTREY, Paducah PAULA A. AXMAN, Louisville KATHY C. AYDELOTT, Hendersonville, Tenn. KATHRYN L. AYER, Calhoun SELENA B. AYMETT, Alvaton CHRISTI E A. BACCUS, Louisville MICHAEL K. BACON, Tompkinsville KENNETH J. BAGGETT, White House, Tenn. KERRY J. BAGGETT, White House, Tenn. ALICE E. BAILEY, Lexington MARSHA L. BAILEY, Franklin PATRICIA A. BAILEY, Louisville DONNA S. BAKER, Paducah GLORIA D. BAKER, Lewisport KARLA N. BAKER, Elizabethtown KEITH D. BAKER, Louisville LINDA L. BAKER, Hawesville KIMBERLY A. BALLARD, Madisonville DE ETTE BANUCHI, Horse Cave JEFFREY L. BARKER, Mt. Carmel, III. MELINDA S. BARNA, Louisville BRENDA W. BARNETTE, Hendersonville, Tenn. GARY N. BASHAM, Campbellsville DAVID L. BATES, Alvaton DEAN E. BATES, Fairport, N.Y. DOLLY. S. BATES, Indianapolis, Ind. CLAUDE K. BAUGH, Russellville KAREN G. BECK, Auburn GEORGE R. BECKER, Horse Cave WILLIAM B. BEGEL, JR., Middletown LYLE T. BELCHER, Morgantown BILLIE J. BELL, Springfield, Tenn. 398 Freshmen Believe it or not. = e There are 2,322 freshman males and 2,506 freshman females. ¢ Campus residents number 2,721 in the class. The most freshman males live in Pearce-Ford (547), and the most females live in Rodes Harlin (231). e There are 2,018 18-year-olds in the class. There is also one 75-year-old. e There are 619 freshmen with undecided majors. One freshman majors in the following fields: Philosophy, Anthropology, Office Administration, Manufacturing Technology, Data Processing and Civil Engineering Technology. — Data provided by WKU Computer Center The un-rally Western students were given the opportuni- ty to vote in the presidential election on Tuesday, Nov. 2 for the first time because classes were called off. Some students were not satisfied, however, and they advocated that WKU officials give the students Mon- day off also. Bill Cortus speaks to approxi- mately 30 people who attended an Oct. 22 rally to boycott classes. His efforts did not work — classes met on Monday. KENDRICK E. BELL, L ouisville LAWRENCE T. BELL, Owensboro LESA Y. BELL, Hendersonville, Tenn. REBECCA L. BELL, Whites Creek, Tenn. CARYN L. BENNETT, Horse Cave KIRBY BENNETT, Maysville WILMA L. BENSON, New Albany, Ind. DEBORAH K. BENTLEY, Gamaliel CONNIE M. BERRY, Louisville RODNEY J. BERRY, Campbellsville JULIANNE K. BERTELSON, Bowling Green STEPHEN L. BEST, Elizabethtown TONY R. BETHEL, Greenville BRENT R. BIDEAU, Louisville BEVERLY J. BIGSBEE, Springfield, Tenn. BEVERLY G. BINNION, Goodlettsville, Tenn. SANDRA R. BIRDWELL, Franklin JERRY C. BISHOP, JR., Annandale, N.J. LEE R. BLACKBURN, Paducah GEORGINA BLANCO, Weehawken, N.J. BARRY S. BLANKENSHIP, Adolphus CONELLA H. BLANKENSHIP, Scottsville JOY G. BLESSING, Huntsville, Ala. DEBRA L. BLOCH, LaGrange RENO R. BODELL, Wickliffe MARY D. BOEMKER, Louisville KIMBERLY J. BOHANON, Elkton MOHAMAD J. BOKA, Bowling Green SUZANNE BOMAR, Louisville DENNIS B. BOND, Russellville NANCY J. BOONE, Springfield KAREN D. BOSWELL, Owensboro THOMAS E. BOTKIN, Bowling Green LISA F. BOTNER, Harrodsburg MARIA E. BOTTEGO, Hollywood, Fla. CYNTHIA R. BOWERS, Beech Creek GINGER R. BOWMAN, Utica LISA A. BOWMAN, Mt. Hermon TERESA A. BOWMAN, Summer Shade JULIE A. BRADFORD, Bowling Green ANGIE L. BRADLEY, Ft. Campbell BRIDGET E. BRADY, Louisville DEBRA C. BRAKKE, Boca Raton, Fla. TONY A. BRANCH, Chicago, Ill. PATRICIA BRATTON, Youngstown, Ohio RONALD E. BRAWNER, Gallatin, Tenn. DAVID M. BRENNAN, Rock Island, III SHIRLEY A. BRENTS, Bowling Green SALLY L. BRENZEL, Louisville ANGELA A. BREWER, Campbellsville LINDA A. BREWER, Soringticial Tenn. LINDA S. BRIDGEWATER, Bowling Green GREGORY N. BRIGGS, Cave City DONNA L. BRIGHTUP, Bowling Green HOLICE D. BRITT, JR., Scottsville MARY F. BRITT, Glasgow REX D. BRITT, Glasgow CARL D. BROOKS, Louisville JEFFREY B. BROUGHTON, Scottsville BRUCE E. BROWN, Bowling Green DANFORD R. BROWN, Rockfield RICHARD M. BROWN, Woodburn JEAN M. BROWNING, Evansville, Ind. — Jj. Burton 399 Freshmen 400 Freshmen DOUGLAS M. BRYANT, Bowling Green TERESA L. BUCHANAN, Bow ing Green JEAN A. BUCKLIN, Hendersonville, Tenn KENNETH W. BUNCH, Bowling Green NORMA J. CHAPMAN, Rockville, Md JAMES A. BRUNETTE, Willa Park, III ELIZABETH I. BRYANT, Calhoun MARY S. BRYANT, Caneyville VICKIE A. BRYANT, Bowling Green DONALD K. BUCHANAN, Frankfort PAULA K. BUCKLES, Glendale SHEILA V. BUCKLES, Glendal VIRGIL E. BUNTON, Bowling Green KAREN L. BURKE, Rockfield MICHAEL D. BURKE, Lexington JOSEPH A. BURKS, JR., Horse Cave SALLY L. BURKS, Louisville MARY L. BURNETTE, Leitchfield AMY L. BURNS, Smithland MAUREEN T. BURNS, Louisville ROBERT H. BURNS, Bow SAMUEL R. BURNS, Bowling Green TRACEY L. BURTON, Fredonia HEZEKIAH L. BUSH, Louisville RICKY G. BUSH, Austin KATHY S. BUTLER, Owensboro PATRICIA A. BUTLER, Owensboro NANCY K. BYRD, Cave City RONALD B. BYRD, Charlotte, N.C VIRA J. CAIN, Beaver Dam VICKI A. CALHOUN, Benton MARK A. CANNON, Morgantown AVA M. CARLOTTA, Florence MICHAEL G. CARPENTER, Louisville KIM R. CARR, Goodlettsville, Tenn WAYNE R. CARRENDER, Russellville LINDA F. CARTER, Tompkinsville ANN B. CARWELL, Bowling Green SUSAN E. CASH, Albany DONALD L. CASSADY, Smiths Grove JUDY L. CAVANAH, Hopkinsville ANTHONY D. CECIL, Owensboro NANCY M. CHANNELS, Lexington MARY S. CHAPMAN, Allensville TINA V. CHEEK, Ft Campbell Double-take Pensive interest struck Carol Smith and Tom Carawan at an afternoon dance history workshop. The workshop for members of the Western Dance Company was conducted by Dianne L. Woodruff, review editor for Dance Research Journal. tA nett ie ee ees | — CM. Schmitt CHARLES R. CHINN, Beaver Dam JEAN A. CHINN, Utica JULIE A. CHINN, Hartford DENISE A. CHRISTIAN, Bowling Green HAZEL V. CLARDY, Louisville BARBARA F. CLARK, Portland, Tenn. DALE W. CLARK, Russellville ELIZABETH F. CLARK, Bowling Green KAREN L. CLARK, Center PAULA A. CLARK, Owensboro CHERYL L. CLASBY, Bowling Green CATHY G. CLEMENTS, Morganfield DEBORAH K. CLEMENTS, Clay TERRY L. CLEMENTS, Falls of Rough SAUNDRA G. CLOUD, Calvert City BRENDA A. CLOYD, Georgetown TOMMY J. COCANOUGHER, Perryville JACQUELINE D. COCKLIN, Hendersonville, Tenn. KATHLEEN COFFEY, Lexington CONNIE L. COFFMAN, Elizabethtown JEFFREY J. COHN, Lexington KAREN A. COHRON, Rochester, Mich. NANCY L. COKER, Mitchellville, Tenn. BETTY C. COLE, Cottontown, Tenn. CHERYL A. COLE, Bowling Green JANICE A. COLE, Lenteville CATHERYN L. COLLINGS, Calhoun JANE M. COLLINS, Bowling Green JEFFREY D. COLLINS, Portland, Tenn. JOYCE E. COLLINS, Burlington THOMAS D. COLLINS, Potomac, Md. LEISA G. COLOMBO, Benton SHEREN L. COMPTON, Calvert City KATHLEEN CONLIFFE, Bardstown SHIRLEY E. CONNER, Ft. Campbell GARY G. CONSTANT, Louisville DESTA D. COOK, Bowling Green PAMELA S. COOK, Louisville JAMES R. COOKE, Smiths Grove BILLY E. COOPER, Bowling Green RANDALL L. COOPER, Russellville TAMARA M. COOPER, Paducah THERESA A. COOPER, Adairville SHERRY L. COPPAGE, Centertown SHERRY L. CORNELL, Pembroke KITTY F. CORNETT, Louisville MELISSA B. COVERSTON, Hopkinsville KAREN L. COVETTS, Lewisport PATRICIA E. COWDREY, Grosse Isle, Mich. FORD E. COWHERD, Elkton CYNTHIA A. COX, Gamaliel JEFFERY A. COX, Medina, Ohio SARAH E. COX, Versailles ROBERT B. CRAIG, Paris TERESA L. CRAIG, St. Joseph, Ill. DAVID S. CRAIN, Munfordville MARGARET L. CRAMER, Mt. Laurel, N.J. DONA L. CROOK, Corbin TIMOTHY W. CROWDER, Scottsville CRIS A. CROWLEY, Slaughters LINDA S. CROWNER, Louisville JOE D. CUMMINGS, Portland, Tenn. JOSEPH T. CUNAGIN, Louisville TOMI R. CUNNINGHAM, Clarkson NELDA L. DABBS, Hendersonville, Tenn. JOHN R. DALLAS, Paducah MICHAEL G. DAME, Owensboro CATHY A. DARNELL, Morgantown BRAD D. DAVID, LaCenter CHARLES A. DAVIS, Hopkinsville ELIZABETH Q. DAVIS, Louisville GREGORY A. DAVIS, Louisville MARGARET R. DAVIS, Henderson NANCY C. DAVIS, Franklin SANDRA J. DAVIS, Mt. Washington JUDITH A. DAY, Caneyville NATALYN D. DAY, Louisville WILLIAM G. DAY, Bowling Green DONNA M. DEAL, Valley Station RODERICK C. DEAN, Louisville TAMARA K. DECKER, Springfield, Ill. JAMES D. DEDMON, Bowling Green SHEILA M. DENNIS, Upton SHERRY R. DEVASHER, Glasgow VICKI L. DEVINE, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. 401 Freshmen ROBERTA D. DEWILDE, Columbus, Ohio JAMES M. DICKSON, Cave City KAREN J. DIETERICH, Hendersonville, Tenn. NANCY A. DILLON, Louisville RANDALL C. DONALDSON, Nashville, Tenn. TERESA E. DORFLER, St. Joseph, Mich. DAVID A. DOUGHERTY, New Albany, Ind. RUTH M. DOUGHERTY, Nashville, Tenn. DAVID J. DOWNING, Bowling Green ELIZABETH Y. DOWNING, Bowling Green CHARLES M. DRAKE, Morgantown TERESA L. DRAKE, Lexington TINA A. DREYER, Edgewood RICKY D. DRUEN, Magnolia JERRY W. DUKE, Utica MARY E. DUNCAN, Chattanooga, Tenn. SHERRI A. DUNN, Scottsville KYLE D. DUVALL, Greenville LINDA G. DYE, Bowling Green SUSAN K. DYER, Radcliff RICHARD A. EAST, Hopkinsville WILLIAM T. EBLEN, JR., Lexington TERESA E. EDGE, Whitesville KEATHA J. EDISON, Louisville LISA M. EDISON, Louisville NATALIE E. EDMONDS, Guthrie THERESAL G. EDMONDS, Glasgow VICKI R. EDMONDS, Glasgow JEFFERY D. EDWARDS, Glasgow PHYLLIS C. EDWARDS, Louisville JUDY A. EGBERT, Bowling Green WILLIAM S. ELLIS, Lebanon, Tenn. MARY J. ELMORE, Middlesboro SANDRA F. ELMORE, Glasgow NINA A. EMERSON, New Albany, fad JAMIE R. EMMICK, Lewisport VICKIE A. ENGLISH, Bowling Green PHILIPP W. ERHARDT, Newton, N_J. PAMELA L. ERTNER, Portland, Tenn. CARL E. ESTELLE, JR., Louisville BONNIE D. ESTES, Louisville OWEN J. ESTES, Munfordville ROBIN D. FAITH, Owensboro VIRGINIA L. FAITH, Lebanon, Tenn. RONALD D. FARAGO, Farmingdale, N.Y. JONI L. FARLEY, Franklin TIMOTHY S. FEAGIN, Calhoun PENELOPE FELAND, Lawrenceburg DIANE M. FERRIELL, Louisville EUGENE K. FIELDS, Louisville DEBBRA A. FLETCHER, Radcliff CHERYL S. FLORY, Lambertville, Mich. MARY M. FOGARTY, Valley Station PERRI L. FORD, Fairdale SHELIA J. FORSHEE, Franklin LEE H. FORST, Louisville JAMES M. FOSTER, Fairdale DEBRA J. FOWLER, Louisville SUSAN M. FOX, Lewisburg WILLIAM T. FRAEBEL, III, Lexington JAMIE M. FRANCIS, Springfield, Ill. DAVID L. FRANK, Murray THERESA L. FRANKLIN, Hopkinsville JULIA A. FREEMAN, Glasgow MARKLEY M. FREER, Owensboro SARA L. FREIBERT, Louisville MARK W. FROEDGE, Edmonton VICKI D. FROGGE, Russellville STEVEN J. FULLER, Bowling Green MARY E. GALLOWAY, Hendersonville, Tenn. MELODY GALLOWAY, Bowling Green SHERRY L. GARDNER, Louisville ROBERTA S. GARMON, Burkesville PHILLIP A. GARRETT, Cottontown, Tenn. CATHERINE E. GARVIN, Bowling Green JANET R. GARY, Morgantown STANLEY L. GAUS, Fairdale PAULA A. GEISER, Springfield, Ill. DAWN M. GEISLER, Louisville DEBORA K. GENTRY, Bowling Green DOUGLAS A. GENTRY, Louisville NANCY C. GIBSON, Hodgenville SHEILA L. GIBSON, Louisville MARGARET L. GILBERT, Owensboro BOBBI A. GIRVIN, Livermore ROBERT K. GIVEN, Alvaton DAVID A. GLASPIE, Louisville ANTHONY D. GLORE, Louisville PAUL I. GLOVER, Hawesville DANIEL G. GOAD, Bowling Green EDWARD W. GODFREY, Hendersonville, Tenn. JACQUELINE L. GOFF, Beaver Dam MARY E. GOFF, Louisville ANN M. GOLD, Highland Heights MONICA H. GOLD, Naples, Fla. MARGUERITE D. GOOCH, Hendersonville, Tenn. STEVEN W. GOOCH, Stanford MARY J. GOODIN, Lebanon THOMAS D. GOODMAN, Lewisburg JOE L. GOODNER, Springfield, Tenn. CONNIE J. GOODRUM, Franklin BRENDA L. GOODWIN, Ft. Knox DEBORAH J. GORE, Owensboro CAROLE D. GOTT, Scottsville TAMMY D. GOURLEY, White House, Tenn. CHERYL Y. GOWER, Lewisburg KERRY B. GRAHAM, Bowling Green SANDRA F. GRAHAM, Russellville LISA A. GRANTZ, Louisville KENT L. GRAVES, Bardstown BRYAN W. GRAY, Louisville WILLIE R. GRAY, Harlan DEBORAH L. GREEN, Beaver Dam DONNA S. GREEN, Louisville MARIA A. GREEN, Russellville BRADFORD D. GREGORY, Franklin RONALD T. GRENKO, Troy, Ohio 402 Freshmen (ae ee Debbie Whitmer and Vicky Whittaker could play plenty of tricks on unsuspect- ing friends because most people think the roommates are twins. “It’s weird,” Miss Whittaker said of the phenomenon that differentiates them from most roommates. Miss Whittaker added that several people have confused the two. “At a fra- ternity party, one guy looked at Debbie and said, ‘Are you all twins?’ And when we told him no, he kept on saying, ‘Well, are you sisters?”’ she said. “Our R.A. even got us mixed up the first day we moved in.” Both freshmen have short, wheat-col- ored hair and small, triangular faces. They can trade wardrobes because both are just an inch or two above five feet. The only feature that might give them away is their eye color. Miss Whittaker has blue eyes and Miss Whitmer’s eyes are brown. Until the girls came to Western they never noticed the resemblance, Miss Whitmer said. Friends at Owensboro Senior High School had never suggested the pair was similar. “They knew us too well,” Miss Whitmer said. Teachers, however, often confused the two. To complicate matters, the girls sometime wore matching outfits, an old twin trick. They began to realize they had a lot in common, and now as college students they sometimes capitalize on those things. Not one, but two Pisces posters hang on their dorm walls, celebrating the fact that their birthdays are only Rive days apart. The roommates often wear identi- cal football jerseys with their similar Listening to Barry Manilow’s popu release, “Weekend in New England,” freshmen Debbie Whitmer and Vicky Whittaker play gin rummy, one of their favorite pastimes. Miss Whitmer won the game. Manilow visited Western in November. Two of a kind names printed on the back. Behind the casual attempts to be alike, Miss Whitmer and Miss Whittaker are somewhat different, they said. In high school, the two were totally opposite,” according to Miss Whittaker. She was interested in cheerleading and being on the drill team; Miss Whitmer was in art and Future Farmers of Amer- ica Clubs. Their interests continue to vary. Miss Whitmer is a horticulture major and Miss Whittaker is a legal secretarial ad- ministration major. Still, the two believe their personal- ities are basically the same. “We’re crazy,” laughed Miss Whitmer. “She can say, ‘Debbie, guess what?’ and before she can tell me, I'll tell her. Then she'll say, ‘How did you know that?” Things were not always so agreeable however. “We get along better now than DARLA A. GRIBBIN, Owensboro JOHN G. GRIGSBY, JR., Cadiz DEDRA R. GRIMWOOD, Evansville, Ind. CARLENE A. GRINSTEAD, Paducah LINDA G. GRISH, Clinton, N_J. CURTIS D. GROVE, Gallatin, Tenn. THERESE A. GRUNEISEN, Louisville ALISA H. GUFFEY, Bowling Green LISA C. GUMM, Greensburg ERIC V. HABERMEHL, Bowling Green MARK E. HACKLER, Bowling Green TOWANDA J. HADDOX, Louisville DEBORAH L. HAFFNER, Bowling Green DAVID E. HAGANS, Louisville FRANK T. HAGERMAN, Bowling Green SCOTT L. HALE, Louisville TERRY W. HALE, Glasgow AUDREY A. HALEY, Irvington ANNETTE HALL, Elkton CINDY D. HALL, Auburn MARCIA N. HALL, Tallahassee, Fla. SHARON K. HALL, Leitchfield JOHN W. HAM, Hendersonville, Tenn. DENNIS D. HAMILTON, Louisville TIMOTHY D. HAMMER, Tompkinsville CARLENE J. HANCOCK, Hopkinsville DEBORAH F. HANCOCK, Greenville ties we first got here,” Miss Whittaker said. “We were both away from home and we weren't used to each other and seeing each other’s face for 24 hours a day. She would come in and I’d say, ‘What's wrong with you?’ and she’d say ‘Noth- ing. What’s wrong with you?’”’ Miss Whitmer said. With exceptions, the girls said they share most everything ABs “We share food and cook a lot, unless we can bum a ride when somebody is going out to eat,” Miss Whittaker said. They share KP duties, too. “We take turns cooking the stuff and washing the dishes,” Miss Whitmer said. The untwins said they plan to contin- ue to live together in Room 307, Rodes Harlin Hall, and as long as they do, friends should be on the lookout for tricks of the twin trade. — SARA-LOIS KERRICK (1 403 Freshmen KATHLEEN H. HANCOCK, Monticello RICHARD A. HANCOCK, Morganfield CAROLYN E. HANDLEY, Prospect KAREN E. HANKING, Cave City SHERRI L. HARDCASTLE, Alvaton TRACEY J. HARDESTY, Benton RITA A. HARDIN, Huff TAMARA L. HARDIN, Owensboro JANET K. HARDISON, Lewisburg DEBORAH F. HARGIS, Alvaton TERESA L. HARGIS, Bowling Green JAMES E. HARGROVE, Milton KAREN H. HARLIN, Gamaliel GLENDA F. HARLOW, Bowling Green EDWARD H. HARPER, Hendersonville, Tenn CHERYL E. HARPOOL, Sonora BARRY K. HARRIS, Rockfield BILLY E. HARRIS, Bowling Green FREDERICK L. HARRIS, Lexington GERRY L. HARRIS, Lexington JANICE J. HARRIS, Hendersonville, Tenn JOHN B. HARRIS, Louisville JOSEPH R. HARRIS, JR., Lexington LERAE A. HARRIS, Owensboro PAMELA D. HARRIS, Bowling Green DAVID F. HARRISON, Bowling Green HELEN M. HARRISON, Williamstown LAURA E. HARRISON, Valley Station PEGGY S. HARRISON, Fountain Run THOMAS M. HARRISON, Elkton VAN HARRISON, Nashville, Tenn. TERI L. HATCHETT, Russellville PEGGY A. HATLER, Scottsville MARSHA A. HAVEN, Cromwell DAVID W. HAWES, Owensboro SHIRLEY J. HAWES, Philpot 404 | | Freshmen re — H. Sinclair Painted patches Sometimes art majors get stuck doing the “dirty” work when ar- tistic ability is needed. Junior art major Nanette Alwes didn’t vol- unteer, but was appointed to paint a window decoration for East Hall on Halloween. Lynne Gibson helped paint the Charlie Brown theme, “The Great Pumpkin,” in multi-colored tempera. THOMAS R. HAWLEY, Troy, Ohio JOSEPH L. HAYDEN, Loretto RUSSELL M. HAYES, Bowling Green DAVID M. HAYNES, Rockport FOREST D. HAYNES, III, Louisville SUSAN L. HAYNES, Bowling Green HUGH B. HEATER, Bowling Green SCOTTIE E. HEATH, Adolphus VICKI A. HEIN, Owensboro MARK E. HEINTZMAN, Peoria, III. DIANA G. HELM, Owensboro ROBERT N. HELM, III, Louisville SANDRA J. HELSLEY, Louisville DIANE C. HEMMEN, Vine Grove MARK J. HENDERSON, Elizabethtown LESLIE A. HENSHAW, Madisonville DEBORAH L. HERTELENDY, Louisville GERALDINE L. HESTER, Jeffersontown TRACIE L. HEYDUCK, Pineville JILL A. HIGGASON, Merrillville, Ind. DONNA J. HIGGINBOTHAN, Rockfield RHONDA L. HIGH, Casey Creek JANICE L. HIGHTOWER, Hopkinsville BERNITA D. HILL, Bowling Green KAREN R. HILL, Madisonville KENNETH W. HILL, Bowling Green THERESA E. HILL, Scottsville HARRIETTA HIMES, Vanceburg MICHELE L. HINES, Russellville W. KIRK HINES, Bowling Green SANDRA HINKLEY, Bowling Green SHARON K. HOBBS, Hawesville DEBRA K. HOBSON, Salem, Ind. TAFFYE B. HOBSON, Hopkinsville JANE L. HODAPP, Dayton, Ohio JUDY M. HODGES, Tompkinsville PAMELA S. HODGES, Glasgow DIANE E. HOLBROOK, Mayking LARRY D. HOLLAND, Paducah DAVID M. HOLT, Hendersonville, Tenn. PAMELA J. HONAKER, Danville DONALD R. HOOD, JR., Winchester MARY E. HOOD, Glasgow PAUL A. HOOKS, Cadiz STEVEN C. HORNER, Ft. Thomas LAURA A. HORTIN, Evansville, Ind. JANNA L. HORTON, Louisville BRENDA D. HOUGH, Paducah BARBARA M. HOUSTON, Franklin GARY D. HOUSTON, Franklin DANNY J. HOWARD, Tompkinsville FELICIA G. HOWARD, Penrod MARILYN;G. HOWLETT, Auburn MICHAEL R. HOWTON, Dawson Springs DIANNA L. HUBBARD, Louisville SUSAN M. HUDAK, Edison, N.J. TERRI L. HUFF, Bowling Green BILLY W. HUFFINES, Franklin JOHN K. HUGHART, Hopkinsville DAVID G. HUGHES, Franklin JOSEPH M. HUGHES, Loretto KELLY L. HUGHES, Tulsa, Okla. KAREN L. HUMPHREY, Louisville DAVID W. HUNDLEY, Rineyville SUSAN B. HUNDLEY, Hopkinsville BARBARA H. HUNT, Smiths Grove JAMES F. HUNT, Tompkinsville REBECCA D. HUNT, chepherdeville MATTHEW T. HUNTER, Bowling Green TERESA D. HUNTON, Rockfield DANNY HURD, Gamaliel CHESTER C. HURDLE, Hopkinsville 405 Freshmen | | : : JANICE A. HURSTON, Louisville DEBRA A. HUSSEY, Nashville, Tenn. JUDY R. INGRAM, Morgantown TAJUDEEN L. IPAYE, Lagos, Nigeria PAMELA L. ISENBERG, Cave City ANNE M. JACKEL, Bowling Green BARBARA J. JACKSON, Lexington JEFFREY T. JACKSON, Franklin KEVIN L. JACKSON, Smiths Grove MARCIA S. JACKSON, Bowling Green ROBERT D. JACKSON, Elizabethtown RONALD D. JAGGERS, Bowling Green WANDA L. JAMES, Franklin JOHN F. JARBOE, McDaniels THOMAS L. JECKER, Louisville JULIE A. JEFFREY, LaPorte, Ind. RANDAL M. JENKINS, Bowling Green MARTHA J. JENNINGS, Bowling Green LEANN JERNIGAN, Auburn PAMELA J. JOHNS, Princeton ANN R. JOHNSON, Danville BARBARA F. JOHNSON, Bowling Green BRENDA J. JOHNSON, Rockfield CHRISTOPHER A. JOHNSON, Lafayette, Tenn. DAVID D. JOHNSON, Louisville DEBRA F. JOHNSON, Fairdale DONNIE R. JOHNSON, Greenville FRANCES L. JOHNSON, Trenton JEFFREY D. JOHNSON, Bowling Green JERRY L. JOHNSON, Georgetown JOANIE M. JOHNSON, Anderson, Ind. LINDA G. JOHNSON, Bowling Green LOIS A. JOHNSON, Livermore MARGARET M. JOHNSON, Guthrie SARAH A. JOHNSON, Owensboro THOMAS L. JOHNSON, Philpot FRANCES L. JOHNSTON, Cub Run KATHERINE J, JOINER, Hopkinsville DEBBIE J. JOLLY, Bowling Green BONITA M. JONES, Elizabethtown DANIEL C. JONES, Bowling Green FLOYD E. JONES, Webberville, Mich. KAREN S. JONES. Owensboro NANCY E. JONES, Media, Pa. TERESA D. JONES, Smiths Grove 406 Freshmen In anticipation of her first college class, Emi- ly Pierce, a freshman from Leitchfield, dis- played normal nervous reactions over a 15- minute period before the class began. The English 101 class was taught by Joe Boggs. It was one of 80 sections. — Photos by J. Burton VICKY L. JONES, Louisville RICHARD H. JOYNER, Hendersonville, Tern. CARROLL M. KACSUR, Louisville BERNARD W. KAELIN, Owensboro AMY L. KARCHES, Cincinnati, Ohio ALI KARIMI, Tehran, Iran JOHN C. KEELE, Louisville MICHAEL A. KEIDEL, North Bend, Ohio KEE A. KELL, Sparta, Tenn. SHEILA F. KELLEY, Franklin TIMOTHY KELLUM, Fairfield, Ohio LLOYD C. KEMP, III, Bowling Green RONALD C. KENNEY, Bowling Green RHONDA L. KEOWN, Philpot STEPHEN J. KEPHART, Burgin KAREN A. KERR, Louisville REGINA K. KERSEY, Bowling Green JAMIE J. KEY, Bowling Green FORREST C. KILLEBREW, Russellville MILDRED A. KILLIAN, Owensboro ROBERT L. KIMBERLAND, Bardstown BRIAN L. KIMBERLIN, Owensboro DANIEL C. KINSNER, Bowling Green SHIRLEY L. KIPER, Leitchfield SAUNDRA T. KIRBY, Louisville REBECCA R. KIRCHHOFF, California DEBRA L. KIRKLAND, Lebanon ELIZABETH A. KLEIN, Hopkinsville DARYL B. KNAUER, Ft. Bhai SHERRI J. KNOTT, Owensboro STEPHEN L. KOESTEL, Louisville JOSEPH W. KOONS, Louisville KATHRYN A. KRAFT, Barrington, Ill. MARY P. KRAUS, Calhoun OWEN D. LAMBERT, Scottsville TAMMY A. LAMPMAN, Louisville ALICE F. LANE, Woodburn ROBYN D. LANE, Portland, Tenn. SHARLENE LASHLEY, Brownsville ROBERTA L. LEACH, Hartford KENNEY R. LEE, Bowling Green NICKY W. LEE, Scottsville RENEE S. LEE, Louisville SHEILA A. LEE, Leitchfield LAURA J. LEHMANN, Louisville SUSAN M. LEMMON, Louisville KAREN G. LENTZ, Bowling Green CAROL J. LESSLEY,|Bowling Green FANNIELLEN J. LEWIS, Middlesboro LISA C. LEWIS, Bowling Green PRISCILLA A. LEWIS, Russellville CATHERINE A. LICHTEFELD, Louisville JOHN S. LIGHTSY, Louisville MICHELLE M. LINDEMAN, Crestwood SUSAN A. LINDSEY, Glasgow VAN L. LINDSEY, Bowling Green KATHRYN N. LINK, Franklin WILLIAM A. LINNIG, Louisville SUSAN K. LIVESAY, Bowling Green GAYLA L. LOCKHART, Woodburn JANET H. LOFTIN, Elkton 407 Freshmen | | | MARGARET A. LOFTIS, Glasgow NANCY L. LOHMAN, Louisville DENNIS R. LONG, Lewisport NANCY H. LONG, Hendersonville, Tenn. SUSANNE LORD, Owensboro MARGARET M. LOSSON, Bowling Green MARK S. LOVELY, Cadiz KENNETH M. LUCAS, Middlebur LAURA L. LUECHT, Peoria, III DAVID R. LUURTSEMA, Ann Arbor, Mich. LEONARD R. LYONS, Scottsville CYNTHIA K. MABRY, Henderson PEGGY S. MADISON, Bowling Green SELENE MAHAFFEY, Ft. Benning, Ga. ANN M. MANIGOLD, Bardstown MARK A. MANUEL, LaGrange, III. MARCIA E. MAPLE, Louisville DEBORAH R. MARLER, Hardin MICHAELE S. MARLOW, California PAMELA J. MARSH, Glasgow DEENA S. MARTIN, Boonville, ey ELIZABETH A. MARTIN, Nashville, Tenn. KAREN E. MARTIN, Louisville KAREN L. MARTIN, Union City, Tenn. PATRICIA S. MARTIN, Scottsville PAUL E. MARTIN, Lexington ELOISE M. MATHENY, Madisonville CANDY D. MATHIS, Cadiz TAMI M. MATHIS, Benton JOY D. MATTHEWS, Sheppard, Tex. KARON K. MAY, Owensboro GERALD E. MAYO, Henderson MARYANNE R. MCCAULLEY, Louisville JUDY L. MCCLANAHAN, Springfield, Tenn. MARY L. MCCLEESE, Garrison LORA L. MCCLINTOCK, Bowling Green DORIS E. MCCORMICK, Russellville BENJAMIN H. MCCULLOCH, Louisville BILLY J. MCDOUGAL, Murray ROBERT MCFADDEN, Bowling Green SUSAN F. MCGINNIS, Hopkinsville TIMOTHY D. MCGUIRE, Glasgow DAVID T. MCJOYNT, Owensboro ELIZABETH A. MCKENNA, Paducah THERESA L. MCKINLEY, Louisville JULIE A. MCMILLEN, Russellville LAURA J MCMILLIAN, Walton SANDRA M. MCNALLY, Radcliff ELIZABETH A. MCNATTON, Owensboro LISA J. MCNATTON, Owensboro DIANA L. MCQUADY, Beaver Dam SCOTT W. MEACHAM, Benton, III. RALPH S. MEADOWS, Miamisburg, Ohio JOYCE A. MEDLEY, Owensboro ELISSIA G. MEEKS, Bowling Green MARTY R. MEFFORD, Hawesville SHARON A. MEIMAN, Louisville CHRISTINA A. MELCHER; Louisville KAREN. L. MELHISER, Owensboro DION L. MENSER, Baroda, Mich. KAREN M. MERRITT, Louisville JEANNE M. MESKER, LaGrange SARAH M. MIDDLETON, Henderson ROBERT C. MILLEN, Rockfield BARBARA E. MILLER, Nashville, Tenn. CONNIE E. MILLER, Elkton DEANNE M. MILLER, Louisville DONNA E. MILLER, Calhoun HEIDI L. MILLER, Sodus, Mich. JOHN A. MILLER, Louisville KIMBERLY MILLER, Bowling Green KIMBERLY A. MILLER, Bowling Green MARK K. MILLER, Louisville RHYIA M. MILLER, Hollywood, Fla. TRACY A. MILLER, Owensboro CAROLYN A. MILLS, Louisville ELLEN E. MILLS, Westerville, Ohio PAMELA S. MILTON, Louisville TIMOTHY J. MILUK, Parma, Ohio DAVID L. MIMMS, Bowling Green MICHELE J. MINOGUE, Louisville CONNIE J. MINOR, Horse Cave REBECCA A. MINTON, Bowling Green CHRISTOPHER R. MITCHELL, Clay DONNA S. MITCHELL, Lewisport MARY L. MITCHELL, Louisville SHEILA B. MITCHEL, Bowling Green MARK B. MOGAN, Prospect QUANNAH S. MOLLOY, Louisville JEFFREY A. MONROE, Louisville MELVA J. MONTGOMERY, Winchester CRAIG B. MOORE, Louisville GARY R. MOORE, Murray KAREN L. MOORE, Louisville MICHELLE L. MOORE, Symsonia TONIA C. MOORE, Louisville WARREN T. MOORE, JR., Radcliff JAMES D. MOORHATCH, Louisville CORNELIA A. MORGAN, Glasgow KENNETH J. MORTON, Louisville MICHAEL F. MOSS, LaCenter PAMELA G MUCKER, Louisville MELINDA M. MUELLER, Erlanger ANNE L. MULTERER, Bowling Green JAMES D. MURPHY, Bowling Green SUE A. MURRAY, Augusta ELI N. MURRELL, Louisville NAUSHA L. MURRELL, Louisville BETH A. MUSGROVE, Dawson Springs HENRY G. NAGEL, IV, Louisville LINDA J. NAPIER, Morgantown DEBORAH S. NASH, Russellville LAURA L. NATION, Owensboro STEVEN W. NEELY, Somerset BARRY D. NEWTON, Sebree CHOKECHAI NGANTHAVEE, Bowling Green JENNIFER L. NICHOLS, Cincinnati, Ohio 408 Freshmen MARSHA L. NICHOLS, Glasgow THERESA M. NICHOLS, Horse Cave CARYN L. NICHOLSON, Louisville PHYLLIS L. NOEL, Elkhorn SAMMYE H. NOLEN, Glasgow THOMAS J. NORD, Dale, Ind SHERRY V. OCKERMAN, Bardstown SUSAN C. ODANIEL, Louisville HEATHER D. ODONNELL, Bowling Green ANGELA M. OLDEN, Louisville KAREN S. OSBORNE, Owensboro SUE C. OSBORNE, Henderson MARK A. OSTASZEWSKI, Highland, Ind ELIZABETH OTTO, Radcliff ELEANOR K. OVERBEY, Bowling Green KAREN D. OWEN, Princeton CYNTHIA A. OWENS, Louisville JOSEPH R. OWENS, Louisville LAFREATER E. OWENS, Franklin MAUDE E. OWENS, Woodburn KAMIL H. OZGENEL, Ankara, Turkey AGNES W. PAGE, Russellville ; OLA M. PAGE, Glasgow PAMELA L. PAGE, Burkesville TANA L. PALMER, Scottsville SHEILA G. PARDUE, Hopkinsville ; MARY N. PATE, Owensboro CHERYL A. PATERSON, Hendersonville, Tenn. i STACEY L. PATTERSON, Princeton j LUCINDA L. PATTON, Eddyville f CYNTHIA Y. PAYNE, Owensboro j JENIFER K. PAYNE, Owensboro } SANDRA G. PAYNE, Philpot | DEBORAH J. PEARSON, Bowling Green | JOETTA L. PEARSON, Gree nville TERESA K. PECK, Russell Springs | HUGH E. PEDDYCORT, Bowling Green NIKKI L. PEDEN, Glasgow TIMOTHY A. PEMBERTON, Bowling Green EDDIE D. PENDLETON, Campbellsville | VICKI L. PENDLETON, LaGrange | JASON K. PENDLEY, Morgantown | TONY K. PEPPER, Campbellsville I JOHN C. PERKINS, JR., Bowling Green STANLEY T. PETERIE, Bowling Green SHERRY T. PETTY, Louisville DIANA L. PHELPS, Bowling Green KARIN M. PHILLIPS, Hendersonville, Tenn VICKI L. PHILLIPS, Falls of Rough | JOAN J. PHILPOT, Tomplinevilts DANIEL A. PICKERRELL, Jeffersontown KAREN L. PICKWICK, Louisville DARELL R. PIERCE, Louisville DEBBIE J. PIERCE, Owensboro DWAYNE T. PIERCE, Leitchfield EMILY G. PIERCE, Leitchfield ROBERT W. PILLOW, Owensboro CATHY A. PINKSTON, Mt. Washington LAURA E. PINSKA, Princeton THOMASINE D. PLATT, Henderson DEBBIE R. POLLOCK, Harned LINDA C. POPHAM, Rhodelia SANDRA F. POPPLEWELL, Jamestown JOEL H. PORTER, Falls of Rough KENNETH PORTER, Chicago, III MARCIA L. PORTMAN, Hendersonville, Tenn. CHERYL J. POTTER, Bowling Green ' TIMOTHY C. POTTS, Louisville | ERIC W. POWELL, Utica | SANDRA L. POWELL, Clarkson SHARON L. POWELL, Clarkson SHERRILL L. POWELL, Hendersonville, Tenn. JERALD L. POWER, Portland, Tenn ANTHONY E. POWERS, Owensboro | CAROL J. PRECIOUS, Louisville DINAH L. PRESLEY, Louisville DOUGLAS A. PRICE, Owensboro MICHAEL PRINCE, Dearborn, Mich SUSAN J. PROBUS, Owensboro CATHY L. PROCTOR, Olmstead MARY L. PROCTOR, Lexington MARIJANE PRUDEN, Owensboro VALERIE K. PULLIAM, Owensboro MARY E. QUIRE, Louisville RHONDA L. RADCLIFFE, Paoli, Ind. GIGI I. RADER, Louisville ROBIN W. RAGGARD, Louisville LYDIA D. RAGLIN, Harlan MARY A. RALEY, Bowling Green CATHY L. RAMBO, Radcliff MARNA K. RAMEY, ts a Ohio GARY L. RAMSEY, Louisville RHONDA J. RAMSEY, Glasgow VICKIE C. RAMSEY, Russellville LAURA J. RANDOLPH, Midland, Mich RUTH A. RAWLINGS, Lexington CAROL R. RAY, Louisville CHARLES C. RAY, Russellville PATRICIA E. REAM, Dayton, Ohio WILLIAM D. RECTOR, Louisville JONATHAN S. REDFORD, Glasgow MELISSA J. REDMAN, Dawson Springs LOUISE A. REDMON, Louisville SHARON D. REED, Bardstown BRENDA J. REGENBOGEN, Burlington ALAN L. REID, Bowling Green KATHY D. RENICK, Scottsville PAUL F. RESCH, Louisville DANIEL M. REYNOLDS, Scottsville LESLIE P. REYNOLDS, Fern Creek ROGER R. REYNOLDS, Auburn SONIA A. REYNOLDS, Bowling Green WILLIAM T. REYNOLDS, Owensboro TONY A. RHEA, Bowling Green LESLIE RICHARDSON, Paducah DANA J. RICKARD, Owensboro JANET L. RIDDLE, Albany 409 Freshmen ANITA A. RIECKEN, Evansville, Ind LARRY W. RIGS BY, Bondville CATHERINE J. RINEHARD, Cherry Hill, NJ RONNIE W. RIORDAN, Horse Cave MARY M. RITCHIE, Bardstown ANN D. ROARK, Lafayette, Tenn. CHRISTINE A. ROBBINS, Fordsville DIANE J. ROBE, Bowling Green KAREN F. ROBERTS, Franklin’ PATTY A. ROBERTS, Owensboro RUSSELL S. ROBERTS, Paintsville MARSHA L. ROBERTSON, Murray MARY B. ROBERTSON, Hopkinsville CYNTHIA A. ROBINSON, Evansville, Ind. LUCRETIA ROBINSON, Greenville RANDALL P. ROBINSON, Irvington SCOTT G. ROBINSON, Lebanon, Tenn. KIM D. ROBISON, Louisville JEFFREY B. ROGERS, Nashville, Tenn. EDWARD E. RONCONI, Mishawaka, Ind. ROBERT M. RONEY, Huntsville, Ala. DEBORAH C. ROSE, Morgantown SANDRA A. ROSA, Crestwood SUSAN M. ROTHMAN, Bonnieville RHONDA C. ROUTT, Hodgenville JOHN M. ROWE, Burkesville ANTHONY R. RUCKEL, Eubank PATRICIA A. RUEFF, Louisville REBECCA A. RUEFF, Bowling Green KATHLEEN A. RUGGLES, Glasgow REBECCA A. RUSHER, Maceo PAMELA J. RUSSELL, Gilbertsville RICKY G. RUSSELL, Park City REBECCA M. RUTLEDGE, Danville MARY L. SALLEE, Bowling Green NANCY D. SALMON, Owensboro SARAH J. SANDEFUR, Bowling Green STARLA R. SANDEFUR, Dawson Springs MARGARET H. SANDERS, Nashville, Tenn. TAMANY T. SANDERS, Goodlettsville, Tenn. CATHERINE L. SARGENT, Ft. Knox LORIE S. SCHABER, Owensboro MARK D. SCHAFTLEIN, Louisville DEBORAH L. SCHINDLER, LaGrange KARLA A. SCHLENSKER, Milltown, Ind. ANNE C. SCHMIDT, Jasper, Ind. PAMELA J. SCHMOKER, Ft. Campbell KAYE G. SCHNEIDER, Middlesboro MARCIA H. SCHULTE, Bellevue LAURA L. SCHULTZ, Louisville RICK P. SCHUSTER, Cudahy, Wis. BRUCE SCHWARTZ, Freehold, N.J. CYNTHIA K. SCILLIAN, Eddyville ALFREIDA L. SCOTT, Albany JEFFREY S. SCOTT, Bedford LEANN SCOTT, Princeton PAMELA K. SCOTT, Bowling Green ROBERT W. SCOTT, Cave City ROBYN G. SCOTT, Bowling Green SHERYL G. SCOTT, Summer Shade PATRICIA S. SEARS, Alvaton TIMOTHY W. SEARS, Somerset MICHAEL S. SEGO, Brownsville KATHERINE T. SEWARD, Bowling Green DAVID I. SHADOWEN, Bowling Green DEBORAH A. SHAFFER, Hendersonville, Tenn. NANCY C. SHAFFER, Orlinda, Tenn. KEVIN M. SHAHEEN, Owensboro REGINALD G. SHANKS, Rumsey LARRY G. SHARP, Bowling Green LAURA B. SHAVER, Bowling Green PAMELA G. SHAVER, Central City KELLY J. SHAY, Ontario, Canada JOSEPH A. SHECKLES, Bardstown SHERI A. SHEPHERD, Louisville RUEL W. SHEPPARD, Calvert City SANDRA G. SHIVE, Summer Shade CAROL V. SHOCKLEY, Scottsville ANITA M. SHORT, Louisville VICKIE L. SHORT, Tompkinsville CHERYL A. SHRADER, Bowling Green SUSAN N. SHUGART, Oak Ridge, Tenn. SHIRLEY P. SHULTZ, Merrillville, Ind LEIGH A. SIDDENS, Bowling Green WILLIAM K. SILLS, Harned THERESA M. SIMMONS, Louisville WILLIAM J. SIMMONS, Glasgow BETTY L. SIMPSON, Glasgow JOSEPH M. SIMPSON, Hawesville SHEILA C. SIMPSON, Alvaton CLAUDIA M. SIMS, Leitchfield 410 Freshmen Splashdown An autumn downpour was a good time for two strangers to get ac- iainited — especially since one of them had an umbrella. Pam Lewis managed to crouch beneath Susan Schrier’s umbrella on a walk between classes. The two did not know each other before the incident. — D. Beauchamp 411 Freshmen CYNTHIA G. SINGLETON, Owensboro DAVID A. SKILES, Middletown STEVEN C. SKINNER, Paducah SARAH L. SKIPWORTH, Russellville MILA M. SLEDGE, Alvaton MARY D. SLINKER, Central City VITTORIA L. SLOAN, Albany LANA G. SMILEY, Owensboro TERRY L. SMILEY, Owensboro VIKKI J. SMILEY, Louisville BARBARA J. SMITH, Hendersonville, Tenn CHERRY K. SMITH, Mt. Hermon DONNA J. SMITH, Louisville ELIZABETH M. SMITH, Murfreesboro, Tenn KIMBERLY B. SMITH, Horse Cave MICHAEL S. SMITH, Louisville RENEE V. SMITH, Chrisney, Ind. RUSSELL B. SMITH, JR., Crestwood SHEILA F. SMITH, Owensboro SHERRIE J. SMITH, Greensburg SUE E. SMITH, Scottsville JOHN L. SNEAD, Louisville CHARLES M. SOWELL, Hopkinsville CATHY A. SPARKS, Jeffersontown JOHNNIE F. SPEAKMAN, Bowling Green JEFFREY R. SPEARS, Bowling Green GEORGE B. SPEED, Paducah LEONARD R. SPIRES, Campbellsville SAUNDRA L. STAFFORD, Gilbertsville PRICE P. STAHL, Rockfield TERI L. STALLINGS, Louisville DAVID A. STANLEY, Mayfield KURT L. STAPLES, Morgantown LAWRENCE W. STARNES, Sweeden JACQUELINE N. STEENBERGEN, Fountain Run STEPHANIE A. STEENBERGEN, Hendersonville, Tenn. ELIZABETH A. STEILBERG, Louisville AUDREY N. STEPHENS, Bowling Green BARRY S. STEPHENS, Owensboro CONNIE J. STEPHENS, Center JUSTIN D. STEPHENS, Russell Springs KRISANN STEPHENS, Reynolds Station JOSEPH L. STEPHENSON, Louisville MARCIA M. STEVENS, Louisville JUANITA S. STEVENSON, Louisville DESIREE L. STEWART, Louisville KEITH B. STICHTENOTH, Cincinnati, Ohio GREGORY T. STICKLER, Louisville DONNA F. STILES, Bowling Green JANET L. STINSON, Sco ttsville KATHY D. STINSON, Scottsville SUSAN E. STITT, Evansville, Ind. ALICE E. STOCKER, Louisville SHIRLEY A. STOCKWELL, Valley Station GREG P. STOKES, Bowling Green KAREN S. STOKES, Greenville CARDELL STONE, Louisville JEFFREY D. STONE, Paducah CHARLES W. STRADER, JR., Bowling Green JOY D. STRAIN, Bowling Green MARK J. STRANEY, Beno eabiey 412 Freshmen ALBERT R. STRATTON, Mayfield FREDERICKA STURDIVANT, Maysville DENISE G. STURGEON, Horse Cave VANESSA M. STURGEON, Louisville LYNN M. SUDDOTH, Owensboro LINDA K. SULLIVAN, Bowling Green STEVEN Y. SUMMERS, Russellville ANITA L. SUTHERLAND, Louisville KELLEY A. SWALLOW, Owensboro JAMES M. SWEENEY, Owensboro CYNTHIA A. TABB, Cecilia MARGANN TABOR, Scottsville CELESTE TANARO, Bowling Green TERRI L. TAPP, Henderson CARLOS D. TATUM, Central City WALTER F. TATUM, Mt. Holly, N.J BRYAN S. TAYLOR, Centertown ELIZABETH C. TAYLOR, Louisville FEB I. TAYLOR, Centertown MARIE TAYLOR, LaGrange RANDY K. TAYLOR, Bowling Green SANDRA K. TAYLOR, Georgetown SUSAN K. TAYLOR, Bowling Green JOANNE M. TAYNTOR, West Eaton, N.Y CATHY L. TENCH, Orlando, Fla ELIZABETH A. TERRELL, Louisville DENNIS B. TERRY, Louisville GENEVIEVE A. THIES, Ft. Thomas CAREY L. THOMAS, Louisville DEBORAH R. THOMAS, Austin FRANCES A. THOMAS, Earlington LAURIE L. THOMAS, Calvert City MARSHA A. THOMAS, New Albany, Ind PAUL B. THOMAS, Franklin PETER A. THOMAS, Louisville SANDRA THOMAS, Ft. Campbell SCOTT G. THOMAS, Bowling Green CONNIE L. THOMPSON, Tompkinsville ELIZABETH L. THOMPSON, Bowling Green PERCY THOMPSON, III, Louisville STEPHEN K. THOMPSON Greensburg WENDY C. THOMPSON, Owensboro GARY A. THORNTON, Louisville STEVEN O. THORNTON, Bowling Green CAROL A. THURMOND, Portland, Tenn : ) | Old Faithful Class-bound students on a Normal Drive sidewalk made perfect target practice for a car which fell victim to poor drainage along the street. The geyser ef fect occurs with any substantial precipitation. — H. Sinclair 413 Freshmen CATHY J. THURMOND, Franklin ELIZABETH L. THURSTON, Bowling Green VALERIE S. TILFORD, Leitchfield HOLLIS A. TOPOLE, Rocky River, Ohio LYDIA B. TRAVELSTEAD, Franklin JEAN L. TRAVIS, Nashville, Tenn. TERRY W. TUNKS, Bowling Green BILLY A. TURLEY, Marion CHERYL R. TURNER, Louisville JULIE L. TURNER, Livermore KIMBERLY S. TURNER, Smiths Grove VICKI J. TUTTLE, Hendersonville, Tenn. EVELYN D. UNDERWOOD, Louisville GAIL P. VAN BUSSUM, Henderson ARNOLD D. VANCE, Jeffersonville, Ind. KEITH R. VANDER KRAAUTS, Lyndon ANN L. VANDERSPOOL, Liberty Mills, IIL. ELAINE M. VANDRICK, Louisville 414 Freshmen Winning And Losing Gracefully Most little girls imitate their mom- mies — right down to the high heeled shoes. However, few grow up to follow in their mothers’ footsteps. Betty Thompson did. A freshman majorette, Miss Thomp- son said her mother, Peggy Thompson, inspired her to begin eeiline at age sev- en. Miss Thompson and older sister Cin- dy were ‘feature twirlers for Bowling Green High School. A younger sister, Linda also twirls. Mrs. Thompson, physics and astron- omy departmental secretary, instructs her daughters and coaches the major- ettes. Because of the demands of her job and family, she stopped giving lessons after 10 years. According to Miss Thompson, she ractices approximately two hours a day Be days a week with the other twirlers and three hours a week privately. Mrs. Thompson watches the rehearsals. “The majorettes make up the routines themselves. I just advise them on what looks best,” Mrs. Thompson said. “The girls have always given me com- plete cooperation,” she added. “Mother isn’t too hard on me, she just tells me when I can do better,” said Miss Thompson. The textiles and clothing merchandis- ing major said she has participated in approximately 55 to 60 local, state and national contests. The twirler recalled a particular inci- dent which occurred before a Hopkins- ville contest. “Right before I was due to perform, With only a handful of seats occupied in Smith Stadium, Betty Thompson practices her twirlin routine as her mother Peggy operates a tape record- er used with certain segments of each session. The freshman said she and the two other majorettes worked approximately 10 hours each week. my costume zipper broke,” she said. “We had to perform major surgery on it. “Even now, it takes 15 to 20 minutes to get the costume off,” she said, laughing. She said she has traveled to Foada Wisconsin, Michigan and Missouri. She added that the Kansas City contest three or four years ago was the last national competition she has entered. The freshman added that she has not placed in the top seven in any of the national competitions that she entered. She said, however, that she will try to place in the competition at Denver, Colo., in August. Miss Thompson said there are advan- tages to twirling at Western. “The rou- tines in the contests are much more diffi- cult because we have a certain routine to follow,” she added. “There is a lot of pressure because you have to perform for the judges.” Miss Thompson said she Fikes to per- form on the football field because it is “more fun.” “I can see the people be- cause they are right there,” she added. As her mother did, Miss Thompson taught twirling at a local elementary school, assisted by Tina Lewis, another majorette. “I was happy and surprised, too, when my students placed first in the Bowling Green Christmas Parade,” said Miss Thompson. The freshman said she would encour- age her future daughters to twirl. “It teaches you how to win and lose grace- fully,” Ae added. — LORRAINE COOPER AND KATHY WHITSON (J) BRENDA M. VASSIE, Bowling Green RANDY VAUGHN, Louisville RONALD M. VAUGHN, Henderson WILLIAM K. VEITSCHEGGER, Bowling Green JAMES W. VESTAL, Owensboro DONNA C. VICE, Morgantown MARY A. VICE, Burlington FRANCES A. VICK, Greenville LINDA E. VIKRE, Louisville KATHLEEN H. VINCENT, Russellville TERRI J. VINCENT, Brownsville KENNETH W. VINSON, Scottsville TERRI A. VOGT, Louisville JACALYN C. WADDELL, Hendersonville, Tenn DEBRA V. WADE, Owensboro DENISE M. WAGNER, Dawson Springs JEAN E. WAGNER, Owensboro JEAN M. WAGNER, Jeffersontown BETTY D. WALKER, Scottsville MICKY E. WALKER, Marion PAMELA J. WALKER, Warrensburg, Mo. ROBIN J. WALKER, Warrensburg, Mo RANDY V. WALL, Adairville MARK C. WALLACE, Glasgow MELODY A. WALPOLE, Ft. Campbell JOSEPH L. WALTERS, Greensburg TERI K. WAMPLER, LaPorte, Ind. KIMBERLY L. WARD, Owensboro TAMMARA WARD, Louisville EFFIE M. WARE, New Liberty JEFFREY L. WARNER, Liberty DOUGLAS A. WATHEN, Owensboro PAUL L. WATKINS, Frankfort KIM E. WATROUS, Hendersonville, Tenn. DAVID T. WEATHERFORD, Campbellsville VALERIE J. WEAVER, Bowling Green DEBORAH J. WEBB, Lewisburg GREG A. WEBSTER, Calvert City JOHN W. WEDDLE, III, Liberty FREDERICK T. WELCH, Owensboro JANIS K. WELLS, Lewisbur PAULA L. WELLS, Rockfiel CYNTHIA S. WENDT, Bowling Green DONNA K. WESLEY, Jamestown BRYAN G. WESTERBY, Webberville, Mich. LAURA M. WHALEN, Greensboro KATHERINE WHEAT, Auburn CAROL J. WHEELER, Lamb CLARA J. WHEELER, Edmonton CONNIE B. WHITE, Russellvilie CYNTHIA S. WHITE, Mt. Hermon DEBORAH L. WHITE, Russellville JEFF L. WHITE, Russellville LARRY E. WHITE, Hendersonville, Tenn. META C. WHITE, Scottsville DENNIS K. WHITLOCK, Louisville VICKI J. WHITLOW, Louisville DEBORAH L. WHITMER, Owensboro PHYLLIS A. WHITSON, Greenville VICKY E. WHITTAKER, Owensboro JOHN T. WICKMAN, Red Bank, N.J. JOEL D. WICKS, Morganfield RANDALL K. WIDICK, Franklin MARK W. WIEDMAR, Louisville LOU A. WILBUR, Clarksville, Tenn. KENNETH R. WILKERSON, Campbellsville ROBERT D. WILKEY, Owensboro ARTYE R. WILLIAMS, Louisville KAREN D. WILLIAMS, Clarkson NANCY A. WILLIAMS, Louisville SHERMAN A. WILLIAMS, Lebanon TERESA J. WILLIAMS, Bowling Green FRANCES J. WILLIFORD, Russellville MICHAEL L. WILLIS, Elsmere BERRY G. WILLOUGHBY, Scottsville ALAN B. WILSON, Liberty ANNETTE D. WILSON, Louisville COLE B. WILSON, Lucas KAREN R. WILSON, Hartford SCOTT S. WILSON, Louisville WILLIAM M. WILSON, Philpot VICKI E. WIMBS, Louisville DANA L. WINSTEAD, Madisonville ROLINDA K. WISEMAN, Hickman SUE E. WISMAN, Louisville TERESA A. WITHERS, Hardyville TAMMIE J. WITTY, Glasgow TIMOTHY M. WITZIGRELITER, Hendersonville, Tenn. FRANCELIA WOFFORD, Harrodsburg BURCHEL E. WOLFE, Bowling Green CAROL E. WOODALL, Princeton LILLIAN I. WOODARD, Louisville LILLIE M. WOODARD, Russellville LOU A. WOODRUFF, Princeton KRISTAL L. WORTHINGTON, Bowling Green JACKIE L. WRIGHT, Ft. Wayne, Ind. MARGARET WRIGHT, Henderson SHEILA M. WRIGHT, Campbellsville TERRY A. WRIGHT, Marion TONA L. WRIGHT, Greenville PEGGY L. WYNN, Louisville CHARLES E. YATES, Bowling Green THOMAS A. YATES, Scottsville BRENNA L. YEAST, Harrodsburg VICKIE L. YEVINCY, Greenville ALICE A. YOUNG, Burkesville CAROL A. YOUNG, Burkesville DAVID W. YOUNG, Louisville SD JIMMY E. YOUNG, Adolphus TERESA L. YOUNG, Lexington LINDA E. YOUNKIN, Louisville MARIA S. ZABORONAK, Louisville SUSAN E. ZEIDLER, Bowling Green SUSAN G. ZETTLEMOYER, Scottsville RONALD B. ZIKE, Louisville DAVID F. ZILLER, Highland, Ind. : 415 Freshmen A black underground 119 A breakthrough to Johnny’s potential 195 “A Christmas Carol” 107 A collage of monkeys, bionics, roots and debates 56-57 A concerted effort 81 A family reunion on every schoolday 396 A flaw in Title IX 225 A girl who had a dream, Brenda 226-227 A gradual process 125 A one-time setup 104-105 A pool of champions 232-233 A season to heat the odds 222-225 A ‘smashing’ race for the Englishman 35s A wardrobe for every character 180 A Week Effort 30-31 Aaron, Lizabeth Ann Abbott, Joseph William Abbott, Kathleen Sue 291 Abdon, Becky Joleen 386 Abdulhaq, Ibrahim K. Abe, Kazuzuke 184 Abel, Deborah Kay 328 Abel, Lisa Rene 398 Abell, Martha Louise Abell, Mary Gail Abell, Rebecca Frances 312, 398 Abell, Sandra Ann 267, 276, 386 Aberle, Tonya James 264 Able, Forest Ross 210 Abney, Deborah Sue 312, 386 Abney, Debra Ann Abney, Marshall Carroll 328 Abney, Neil Owen Wright Abram, Marva Jean 325, 386 Absher, Jeffery Vance Abshire, Valerie Ann 266, 267, 376 Abuzant, Carolyn D. Wilson Abuzant, Mazen Shukri Academics services director 145-146 Academics services assistant dean and library science director 142 Academics 152-197 Accounting Club 314 Accounting dept. 154-155 Accounting dept. head 154-155, 158 Accounting 480 158 Accounts and budgeting control director 149 Acree, Kenton Ralph Acting the part 98-103 Adam, Catherine Lucille 386 Adams, Anita Carol 386 Adams, Elizabeth Anne 328 Adams, Jeffery Neal Adams, Jon Paul 328 Adams, Kathy Ann 96, 291, 376 Adams, Kim Leigh 18, 398 Adams, Leslie Douglas Adams, Michael Barkley 328 Adams, Robyn Lynn 264, 386 Adams, Saundra Patterson Adams, Sue Ellen 376 Adams, Thomas Patton Adams, Victor Carey Adams, William Franklin 261 Adams, William Todd 259, 376 Adcock, James Edward Adcock, Karen Boyd Addington, Raymond Claude Addison, David Wesley Adeleke, Adedeji T. Adeyele, Oluseyi Sedonu 136, 138 Adkins, Patricia Carol 376 Adkins, Susan Elizabeth Adkins, Teddy Joe 277 Adkisson, Milton Anthony Administration 126-151 Administration and Academics 126-197 Administration assistant dean 176 Administrative affairs, vice-president 133 ‘Administrative and technological services, assistant dean 161 Admissions office director 136, 139 ADPI 500 271 Affection for a country scorned by many 159 Afzalan, Mahmood 304 Afro-American Dance Ensemble 195 Ahart, Mary Joyce 328 Agriculture dept. 163 Agriculture dept. head 163 Agriculture Education Club 302-303 Agriculture Engineering 160, 28 Aicken, Mark Wayne AIESEC 314-315 Airbrush Rendering 315 193 Akerejah, Daniel Irivboje 304 Akers, Alida Bayne Akers, Jonathan Reed 305, 328 Akers, Rebecca Lynn Akers, Robert Ernest Akin, Barbara Jean Akin, Jerry Lane Akin, Wanda Sue Akridge, Deloras Fay Al, Janahi Ali Aquader Al, Kobiassi Nasser Hamed Al, Malki Abdullah Youseff 297 INDEX Al, Ostad Amere 197 All Decked Out 42-49 All Sports Camp 3 “All the President’s Men” 56 Alamo, Allison 19 Alawar, Samir A. Albani, Thomas Anthony 283 Albrecht, Keith R. 259, 261, 398 Albright, James E. Jr. Aldridge, Charles Richard 21 Aldridge, Hobart Allen 376 Aldridge, Thomas Burch Alexander, Carlton Lee Alexander, Charles David 21 Alexander, Cindy Kay Alexander, Cynthia J.S. Alexander, Eveylyn Diane Alexander, Helen Patrice Alexander, Jan Terri Alexander, Jeffrey McLane Alexander, Madeline Eunice Alexander, Martha Faye 376 Alexander, Martin Craig Alexander, Mary Jane 321, 376 Alexander, Michael Tyree Alfieri, Fred Eric 299 Alfieri, Martin A. Alford, Charlene Williams Alford, Emory 290-291 Alford, James Bedford Alford, Janice Louise Alford, Jeanne Lanell Alford, Marsha Leah Alford, Mary Elaine Alford, Rebecca Jo 398 Alford, Richard Lee Alford, Sandra Lynn 261-262, 398 Alford, Vicki Dudgeon 376 Alford, William G.E. Alger, Steve 141 Allaf, Tajer Mohammad Allen, Amelia Gay Ezell 328 Allen, Amy Jill Allen, Bryan Lee Allen, Clifford Kline Allen, David Glenn Allen, David Wayne Allen, Deborah Lynn Allen, Donna Boles 328 Allen, Galen Douglas 210 Allen, Gary Frank Allen, James Dewey Allen, Judith Lynn Allen, Kevin Michael Allen, Kim Janine 328 Allen, Kim Lea 322 Allen, Kim Ross 322 Allen, Leslie Thomas II Allen, Michael Scott Allen, Pamela Jean 398 Allen, Petina Allen, Rexford Vandyke Allen, Rita Lou Allen, Stephen G. Allen, Teresa Kay Allen, Teresa Lea 398 Allen, Walton Ray 386 Allen, Zola Virginia Allender, Joy Lynn Alley, Trina Lee 254, 265 Allgeier, Keith Damien 12, 100, 107-108, 284, 324, 376 Allgeier, Louis Bernard II Allgeier, Mark Joseph Allgeier, Steven Michael 223, 398 Allgood, Kim Lawrence Allgood, Susan Darlene 14-15, 398 Allison, Anthony Ray 328 Allison, Dale Ellis 277 Allison, Deborah Ann Allison, James Patrick 284 Allison, Jean Anne 254 Allison, Lanetta Mitchell Allison, Lisa Kay 386 Allison, Mary Ellen 324 Allspaw, Constance Ann 328 Almalki, Abdullah Y. 304, 398 Almond, V.L. 315 Alpha Delta Chi 307 Alpha Delta Pi 9, 262, 268, 271-273, 288-289 Alpha Delta Sigma 307 Alpha Epsilon Delta 300-301 Alpha Gamma Rho 31, 276, 289 Alpha Kappa Alpha 263, 274 Alpha Kappa Psi 9, 31, 276-279, 289 Alpha Omicron Pi 9, 255, 262-263, 271- 272, 288-289 Alpha Phi Alpha 119, 276-277 Alpha Phi Omega 317 Alpha Psi Omega 324-325 Alpha Xi Delta 9, 255, 264, 289 Alsdurf, Jim 4 Alspaugh, Betsy Sue 386 Alsup, Jeffrey Wade 210, 398 Althaus, Raymond George Jr. Altinkaya, Bulent Ruhi 238, 328 Alumni affairs and placement services director 38, 134, 136 Alumni dance 40 Alvarez, Denise 328 Alvey, Kevin Ray Alvey, Michael J. 307, 398 Alvey, Michael Wayne 307, 398 Alvey, Sharon Ann 318 Always A President 130-131 Alwes, Nanette Lee 376, 405 Amateur Hours — Greek style 270-273 Amazing Tones of Joy 119 American Advertising Federation 307 American Red Cross Blood Drive 31, 288 American Society of Interior Designers 322 American Studies chairman 158 An accounting class not open to majors 158 An arena of non-varsity athletes 256-257 Amos, Charles E. Anderson, Barry Gordon Anderson, Charlene Compton Anderson, Charles 140 Anderson, Clareesa Anderson, Daniel Finis Jr. Anderson, Deborah Ann 307, 386 Anderson, Dennis J. 328 Anderson, Donald Warren Jr. 282 Anderson, Faye 323 Anderson, Helen L. Day Anderson, Jo Rita 398 Anderson, John Edward 281, 386 Anderson, June Scott Anderson, Linda Jo 398 Anderson, Lois Ann Anderson, Marilyn June N. 328 Anderson, Mark Kevin Anderson, Mark Richard 398 Anderson, Nelle Elaine Anderson, Pamela Kaye 316 Anderson, Richard Scott Anderson, Sherry Gale 398 Anderson, Teresa Anderson, Thomas Robert 244-245 Anderson, Warren Lee 210 Anderton Victoria Ann Andreas, Marjorie Brew Andrews, Donald Allen Jr. 203, 244 Andrews, Susan Carol Angelo, Thomas Michael Jr. 284 Angsten, Tom Antle, Brenda Kaye 398 Antle, Joey Dale Antoine, Charlotte Rose 376 Antoine, Leo Vincent 398 Antonetti, Barbara J. Antonetti, Martin Gregory Anyaegbuna, Ndubueze T. 301 Appel, Margaret Schmidt Appel, Max 252 Appleby, Jerry Leon Appleby, Matthew Howard 210 Appleby, Richard Louis 386 Applied Arts and Health 168-175 Applin, Lisa Gay Appling, Anthony Ray Appling, Charles Lynn Appling, Timothy David 317, 318, 376 Agel, Yousef Mohd Ahmad 304, 317 Agel, Zahria Ibrahim Ard, Michael Allen Areephanthu, Boonsong Armad, Allison Armes, Lori Allyson 386 Armes, Rhonda Kaye 398 Armour, Carolyn Lynn Armour, Darrell Conley Armstrong, Bryan Leigh 398 Armstrong, Don 134 Armstrong, Donna Michelle Armstrong, Le Anne Marie 376 Armstrong, Michael R. Arney, Jana Michele 328 Arnold, Anthony Rhea 328 Arnold, Billy Oscar Arnold, Cindy Sue 265, 386 Arnold, David Charles Arnold, Geoffrey Cole Arnold, James Stuart 398 Arnold, Jeffery Allen Arnold, Joseph Richard 398 Arnold, Kevin Dean Arnold, Michael Eugene Arnold, Patricia Ann 376 Arnold, Peggy Jo Art dept. 177-178 Art dept. head 177-178 Art Guild 294-295 Arterburn, Dennis Franklin 328 Arterburn, Sandra Gail 376 Arthritis Foundation skate-a-thon 263 Arvin, Cartie Louise 328 Arya, Seyedala Asbury, James Gary 329 Ash, James Michael Ash, Monica Ruth 303, 329 Ash, Sonya Rose 398 Ashby, Cathy Jo 386 Ashby, Charles Steven 216-221 Ashby, Claudia Ashby, Kathleen Ashby, Kathy Lynn 318, 386 Ashby, Kevin Brent 386 Ashby, Marshall Fletcher 376 Ashby, Robert Henry 376 Ashby, Ronald Clark Ashby, Scott Elwyn Ashcraft, Elizabeth Eva 267, 309, 376 Asher, John Stephen 386 Asher, Timothy Joseph 398 Ashley, Mark David 386 Ashley, Timothy Ray Ashworth, Jeffery Lynn Ashworth, Lisa Ann 386 Askins, Joe Fredrick 329 Asmonga Emilie Jayne Asowitch, Susan Kay 386 Assistant to the president 133 Assistant to the student affairs, dean 147 Assmann, Jeffery Ronald 370, 376 Assmar, Katherine Louise Associated Student Government 50-51 Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women 215 Association of Student Social Workers 318 Atcher, Linda Faye Newton Atchley, Carman Lee 225, 297 Atherton, Dena Sue 398 Atherton, Sherry Gay 386 Athletic director 134, 136 Athletics 198-257 Atlanta Contemporary Dance Company 4, 38, 94 Athy, Donna Marie Veline Athy, Jay Edward Atkins, Kenneth Stewart Atkins, Kenneth Stewart Atkins, Michael Porter Atkinson, James Joseph 204-210, 239, 242-243 Atkinson, John Kirk Atkinson, Tim 239 Atnip, Johnny Michael Atsalis, Thomas Michael 282, 315 Atwell, Joan Tracy 100 Atwell, Rickie Neal 398 Atwell, Terry Randall 376 Au, Allan Chi Ming 329 Aubrey, Mary G. 376 Aud, Connie Marie 329 Aud, Jack Shelwyn 54 Audio visuals service center director 147- 148 Augenstein, Mrs. Don 11 Augenstein, Donald Edward 11, 51, 282 Augenstein, Michael Dale 11, 282, 307,398 Augusty, Leon Michael 314, 329 Aukerman, Terri Kathryn 398 Aull, Joseph Michael Ault, Dori Jill Aune, Michael 297, 299 Austin, Carolyn Denton Austin, Charles Lee Austin, Dwight Lea 376 Austin, Gwendolyn Jo Austin, Thane Gregory Auto mechanics class 364 Autrey, Kathaleen Marie 398 Auxiliary business and services director 150 Avers, Carol Ann Avery, Derwin Eugene Avery, Dwight Lee Avery, Forrest Lynn Avery, James H. Avila, Robert Axman, Paula Ann 398 Aydelott, Kathy Cheryl 398 Ayer, Kathryn Lynn 398 Ayers, Lucian Craig 329 Aylor, Richard Larwence Aymett, Selena Beth 398 Azofeifa Olga Marta Baali, Ahmed Majeed 304 Babb, Tony Glen 282 Babcock, James 304 Baber, Laura Anne 265, 386 Baccus, Christie Ann 267, 398 Bach, Paulin Jerome Bachert, Scott Adrian 386 Back Home Again 24-25 Back, Kerry Eugene Back, Margaret Gwen Back Stabbers 41 Back, Terry Michael Back to the Grind 16-21 Backpackers Club 296-297 Backward sentences and chopstick suppers 184 Backyard Retreats 66-69 Bacon, Janet Mechell Bacon, Michael Keith 398 Bacon, Richard Lee 329 Bacon, Vicki Elaine 329 Baete, Michael Garnett Baete, Timothy Scott Baggett, Jill Marie Baggett, Kenneth Jewell 398 Baggett, Kerry Joe 398 Bagwell, Lorraine Bagwell, Vicki Susan 257, 310-311, 376 Baier, Judy Lynn Bailey, Albert Eugene Jr. Bailey, Alice Elaine 398 Bailey, Deborah Irene 329 Bailey, Denise Ann Bailey, Ethel Lee 118 Bailey, Howard 146-147 Bailey, Janet Sue Bailey, Mark Kevin 221, 376 Bailey, Marsha Lynn 398 Bailey, Patricia A. 263, 398 Bailey, Paul Wayne Bailey, Ricky Frank Bailey, Robert Oakley Bailey, Sharon 386 Bailey, Steven Ray Baillio, Linda Sue Bain, William Cleburne Jr. 386 Baird, Barbara Jean 299, 329 Baise, Barbara D. Turner Baise, Edward Lynn Baise, Sarah Tracy Baize, Wanda Lou Baker, Brenda Fay Baker, Carol Lee Cooper Baker, Charles William II Baker, Cynthia Ruth 265 Baker, Donna Sue 398 Baker, Gloria Diane 398 Baker, James 99, 295 Baker, John 234-235 Baker, Karla Neil 267, 398 Baker, Keith D. 398 Baker, Kenneth Dale 284 Baker, Kenneth Leslie 284 Baker, Layne Franklin Baker, Leveda B. Begley Baker, Linda Fay 313, 386 Baker, Linda Lee 313, 398 Baker, Melanie Ann 267, 329 Baker, Melissa Jean Baker, Nancy Carolyn Baker, Norris Crete Jr. 386 Baker, Ricky Lewis 242 Baker, Robert Glynn Baker, Sharon Denise Baker, Sheneda Carol 329 Baker, Stumpy 210 Baker, Teresa Fontaine 386 Baker, Teresa L. Baker, Thomas Martin 291, 386 Baldock, Michael Wayne Baldwin, Cheryl Anne Baldwin, Gregory Thomas 305, 317 Baldwin, Julie Ann 376 Baldwin, Robert Lee Jr. Baldwin, Thomas 315 Balfour, Brian Peter Balint, Stephen William Ball, Jackie Annette Ball, Lance Gregory Ball, Nancy Ann Jones Ball, Richard B. Ballance, Joann Pence 98, 106-107, 124, 324-325, 329 Ballard, David Ballard, Hal Edward 317, 376 Ballard, Joseph Gerard 317 Ballard, Kimberly Ann 398 Ballard, Marian Ellis Ballard, Terrance Lee Ballinger, Edward Evans Ballou, Olivia Dianne Ballou, Ricky James 301 Ballou, Theresa Beatrice Balls, Curtis Herrick Baltz, Kathleen Agnes 329 Banahan, David Denton 183, 329 Bandy, Carmen Lynn Bandy, Kathryn May Banet, Damon Allan Banks, Ronald Clifton Banton, Lynn Marshall Banuchi, De Ette 398 Barbee, Donna Lynn Barbee, Jeffrey William Barbee, Kathy Carol Barber, James Anthony Barber, Lenny 216-221 Bard, Kurn Reed Bardeson, Peter Joseph Barefield, Jennifer Ann 376 Bargain hunters and rip-off dodgers 157 Barger, Cheri Lynn Barker, Beverly Lynn 264, 329 Barker, Bobby Gene Barker, Jeffrey Lurie 398 Barker, Patrick Wilson Barker, Sara Elizabeth Barkett, Ellen Margaret Barna, Melinda Suzanne 398 Barna, Terry Thaddeus 281, 376 Barnes, Barry Lane Barnes, Becky Anne 263, 386 Barnes, Clive 93, 176 Barnes, Connie Petett Barnes, Douglas Ray Barnes, Lisa Anne 386 Barnes, Patrick Allen Barnes, Richard Glen Barnes, Rick Hamilton 376 Barnes, Ricky Zane 376 Barnes, Teddy Duane Barnes, Terry Wayne 386 Barnes, William Dale Barnes, Zexia Kay 301, 376 Barnett, Carla Gay Barnett, Gary Edward Barnett, George Evans 259, 376 Barnett, Janet Lee Barnett, John Starlin Barnett, Nila Michelle Barnett, Sharon Smith Barnett, Therese 386 Barnett, Tommie Jr. Barnette Brenda Wayne 398 Barr, Jeffrey Neil Barr, Sheila Marie Barrett, Julia Anne Barrett, Katherine Marie 416 A Black Barrett, Katherine Barrett, Lana Sheffield Barrett, Mark Allen Barrett, Shelly Ruth Barrick, Bruce Anthony Barrick, John Steven 282 Barrick, Steve Wayne Bartholomew, Douglas Georg 204, 211 Bartholomy, Lezlee Anne 98-100, 324 Bartl, Anthony Richard Bartleson, George Edwin Bartlett, Judith Lynn 108, 325 Bartley, Dianna Lindsey Bartley, Edwina Mae 376 Bartley, Linda Sue 312, 386 Bartley, Martha Kaye Barto, Lynette 313 Barton, Harold Bryan Jr. Barton, Jennifer Lynne Barton, Steve Lambert Baseball 238-239, 242-243 Basham, Anna D. Basham, Broderick Nelson Basham, Elizabeth Opal 329 Basham, Gary Lee Basham, Gary Lynn Basham, Gary Neal 398 Basham, Judith Neel Basham, Lana Jean Basham, Steven O. Basketball 216-221 Baskett, Bruce Martin Baskett, Susan Lynette Baskett, William Hunter 277,329 Bass, David Eugene Bassett, Connie Elaine Bassett, Lillian Crick Bastien, Charles Olivier Batchelder, Phillip Karl Bateman, Kenneth Allen Bates, David Lee 398 Bates, Dean Edward 398 Bates, Dolly Stephanie 318, 398 Bates, Georgia 129, 133-134 Bates, James Gilbert Bates, Ruth Ann 266 Bates, Stephen Ray Batista, Humberto Coelho Batman, Bruce W. Batson, Ann Loretta Batten, Cherilyn Mundy Battle, Bobbi Ovett 173, 300-301, 376 Battle, Thomas Charles 14-15, 221, 329 Bauer, Janet Elaine 267, 329 Bauer, Joseph A. Bauer, Lambert Lewis 299, 329, 340 Bauer, M. Rebecca 263 Bauer, Nancy Elizabeth Baugh, Chyrie McKinney Baugh, Clyde Kimble 398 Baugh, Dwight Allen Baughman, Henry 172-173 Bauman, Mark Steven Baumgardner, James Dimmick Baumgarten, Robert Joseph Baumgartner, Edwin Joseph 329 Baxter, Barbara Ann Baxter, Charles Max Baxter, Gary Baxter, Jackie L. Baxter, Mary Jo Baxter, Roy Glenn 252, 277, 287, 329, 340 Baxter, Thomas Reed Bayles, David L. Bays, Harold Edward Baysmore, Karen M. ‘Be yourself, smile and enjoy it’ 381 Beach, Cecil Wade Beachy, David 173 Beal, Andrew Allen Beal, E.O. 29, 161-162, 300 Beal, James David 386 Beals, Alan Lynn 284 Beals, Dennis Aaron 303 Beam, David Louis Beam, Larry K. 299, 386 Bean, Danny Lane Bean, Darrell Ray Bean, Donald Earl Bean, Harold Joseph Bean, Jerry 201, 238 Bean, Jerry Stephen Beard, Betty Sanders Beard, Craig Alvin 210 Beard, Peggy Ann 329 Beard, William Allen Jr. 284, 329 Bearden, Steven Randolph Beasley, Gladys 377 Beasley, Larry Michael Beauchamp, Carl Michael Beauchamp, Donald Gene 309, 329 Beauchamp, Sherman Brent Beaudoin, James Leonard Beauford, Lisa Delores 319 Beaumont, Garey Evans ‘| Beaumont, Theresa Ann 376 Beaven, Judy Ann Beaven, Richard Joseph Beavers, Gene D. Beavin, Lucy 329 Beavin, William Herman Bechtel, Deborah Self ‘} Bechtel, Terrance Warren Bechtel, Vicki Lynn 263 Beck, Alice Virginia Beck, Archie Oczell Beck, Glenn Alan 281 Beck, Gregory Robert 386 Beck, Karen Gail 398 Beck, Martha Sue Beck, Matthew 148 | Beck, Philip Eugene Beck, Ron 33, 74, 76, 80-81, 83, 148 Beck, Walter Ralph 303, 329 Becker, Christina Von N. Becker, George Robert 398 Becker, Patricia Edna Becker, Susan Ann Fuchs Beckner, Lola Ruth Bedinger, Tucker Graham Jr. 99, 101, 106-108, 376 Beeler, Charlie 27 Beeler, Cheryl Ann Beeler, Cindy Lou 26-27, 313 Beeler, Ginger Ellen 26-27, 313 Beeler, Mary Lou 26-27 Beeler, Terri 27 Beeler, Warren Francis 26 Beeler, Wendell 27 Beesley, Sam Thomas Jr. 307, 311 Begel, William Bernard Jr. 277, 398 Beggs, Merrie Susan 267, 376 Beisler, Jan Elaine Belcher, Lyle Thomas 398 Belcher, Sheila Burnette 329 Beliles, Mark Alton 312 Bell, Anthony Jerome Bell, Belinda Carol 304 Bell, Billie Jean 398 Bell, Billy Wayne Bell, Bruce Edward Bell, Carol Bernice Bell, Charles Allen Bell, Clarence Thomas II Bell, Denver Warren Bell, Gerald Lamont 386 Bell, Kendrick Earl 276, 399 Bell, Kenneth Jerome 376 Bell, Larry Buel Bell, Lawrence Tilton 399 Bell, Lesa Yvonne 399 Bell, Lindsey Gary Bell, Michael Stephen 290, 329 Bell, Mike Bell, Paul Alan Bell, Rebecca Lynn 399 Bell, Robert Nelson Bell, Ruth Anne 40 Bell, Suzanne Marie 314, 329 Bell, Teresa Layne Bellar, Jimmie Scott Bellar, Pamela J. Bellingham, Sherry Frances Belt, Pamela Ann Belt, Sandra Faye Benassi, Carmello John Jr. 141, 239, 278,299 Bendl, Terry Michael Benecke, Eugene James Jr. Benner, Melody Gay Bennett, Anthony Boone Bennett, Bruce Lee Bennett, Caryn Lee 399 Bennett, Clevie Mack Bennett, Cynthia Anne Bennett, Georgena F. Bennett, Gina Rhea Bennett, Gregory Brian Bennett, Holly Perry Bennett, James 180 Bennett, Jeanne Marie Bennett, Jo Nell Bennett, Kathy Jo Bennett, Kirby 210, 399 Bennett, Ruth Ann Bennett, Shadlea 340 Benson, Brenda Kaye 386 Benson, Cathy June 329 Benson, Joseph Hamilton 386 Benson, Steven Earl 309, 311, 386 Benson, Wilma Louise 295, 399 Bentley, Deborah Kay 399 Bentley, Susan Benton, Vanessa Kaye 274-275, 321, 386 Bereiter, Timothy James 210 Berg, James L. Jr. 321 Berger, Charles Stevens 386 Bergman, Jeannie Posey Bernard, Jeanell Bernauer, William Alfred 102 Berry, Bonnie Lynne 386 Berry, Brian James Berry, Connie Marie 399 Berry, Cynthia Gayle Berry, J. Steven Berry, John M. Berry, Karen Melinda Berry, Kathy Jean 255, 257, 329 Berry, Larry 148 Berry, Linda Dale 329 Berry, Lynne Ford 305, 320-321, 330 Berry, Patricia Ann Berry, Rodney Jason 399 Berryman, Melody Ann 307, 386 Berryman, Stephen Tinsley Bertelson, Julianne K. 263, 399 Bertram, George Barry Jr. Bertram, Kathy Lou Bertram, Lawrence Wayne Bess 55 Bessinger, Roger Brown 330 Best, Helen Gay Best, Kathryn}Lynn 291, 376 Best, Stephen Lewis 399 Bethel, Tony Ray 399 Betts, Zynda Gail 330 Betz, David Charles 204-211 Betz, Deborah Lynne 14-15, 180, 182, 330 Bevarly, Amy Lee 296, 330 Bevel, Frank Edwin 100, 118 Beville, John Kirtley 386 Bewley, David Howard 314, 330 Bewley, James Wallace Bewley, Linda Carol Bewley, Linda J. Freeland Bezbotchenko, Marty 211 Bezek, Barbara E. Legates Bhatnagar, Suresh Chandra Bibb, Toynia Oshea Bicentennial Summer 34-35 Bickel, David William Bickel, James Eric Bickel, Stephen Herman Bickett, Patricia 267 Bicycling 257 Bideau, Brent Robert 399 Bideau, Noel Andrew 376 Bieber, Michael Henry Big Red Barn 228-229 Biggers, Geoffrey Scott Biggers, John Guyron 282 Biggers, Mark Vaughn 285, 330 Biggerstaff, Ray 303 Biggs, Danny Ray Biggs, Don Lynn Biggs, Elizabeth Culbreath Bigsbee, Beverly Jeanne 399 Bilbrey, Kathy Denise 64, 376 Biles, James William 210, 252 Billingsley, Cynthia Ann 313 Billingsley, David Lee 376 Bilyeu, Wilbur O III 284 Binnion, Beverly Gay 399 Biology dept. 161 Biology dept. head 29, 161 Birchett, John Alan Bird, George Murray Birdseye, Deborah Holsclaw Birdseye, Thomas Earl Birdwell, Sandra Ryan 399 Birkett, Kathryn Jean 376 Bisceglia, Kevin Joseph Bise, Joel Steven Bishop, Bradley Dean Bishop, Jerry C. Jr. 399 Bishop, Kevin Michael Bishop, Larry Karris Bishop, Lisa Ann 265 Bishop, Priscella Jane Bishop, Sharon Lynn Bisig, Nancy Gayle 386 Bitner, William T. Biven, Alice 135 Biven, Amy 135 Biven, Ann 135 Biven, Mark J. 242-243, 386 Biven, William 135 Bizer, Michael James Black Awareness Week 11 Black Culture 116-121 Black, Donald Ray Black, Greg Hamilton Black, Janet LaVaughn 378-379 Blackburn, Andrea Lynn Blackburn, John Mark Blackburn, Lee R. 399 Blackburn, Mary Eileen Blackerby, Katie 106-107 Blackford, Kathy B. Blackman, Robert Brent 278 Blackwell, Karen Elizabeth Blackwell, Marilyn Kay Blackwood, Michael Edward 252 Blagg, David Daniel 330 Blaine, Kevin Wood 210 Blaine, Sherry G. 125 Blair, Elizabeth Faye B. 330 Blair, Joe Ann Toler Blair, Patricia Diann Blair, Rebecca Leigh 311, 376 Blair, Theresa Lynn Blair, Thomas Alan 50, 277, 340 Blair, Timothy Laine 386 Blair, William III Blake, Dana Louise Blakeman, Lee Ann Blakey, Sheryl Allison 386 Blanco, Georgina 399 Blandford, George Edward Blandford, Patrick Martin Blaney, Michael James Blank, Donn Robert 376 Blankenship, Barry Scott 399 Blankenship, Conella Hale 399 Blankenship, Kathy Ann 386 Blankenship, Pamela Sue Blankenship, William Zeb Blann, Barry Lee Blann, Robert 306-307 Blanton, Mark Shearin 210 Blanton, Steve Randall 277 Blasi, Donald William 100 Blasingame, Zach 217 Blau, Robert Edward 330 Blaydes, Gary David Bledsoe, Mary Ann Blessing, Joy Gale 319, 399 Blevens, Fawn Lynn 386 Blevins, Ruth Ann Blewett, Vicki Laurice Blick, Arthur Ray Blick, Jeri Lynn 386 Blimm, Steven Robert Blincoe, Michael Lee 296 Bloch, Debra Loveman 7, 399 Block, Nancy Ann Blocker, Fran Marie Blomquist, Jean Ann 386 Bloomingburg, Charles D. Blount, Cassandra Louise Blue, James Dalton Blum, Daniel Kenneth 330 Blythe, Charles Edward 287, 386 Board of Regents 131 Boards, Cindy Houchins Boards, Mona Lisa 330 Boarman, Brenda 123 Boarman, Janet Ann 123 Boatwright, George William 300, 386 Boaz, Gene Dewitt Boca, Mohammad Hady 330 Boca, Mohammad Mehdi 330 Bochenko, Maurella Mary Bochenko, Mike 289 Bodell, Reno Ramont 399 Bodenbender, Gerald Alan 210, 386 Boemker, Mary Dee 399 Boes, John Robert 332-333 Boes, Michael Lee Boggs, Joe 158, 406 Bohannon, David Ralph Bohannon, Elivira Bohannon, John Lee II Bohannon, Rhonda Lynn 267, 277, 386 Bohanon, Bruce Wayne 325, 376 Bohanon, Kimberly Jan 399 Bohnenblust, Steve 303 Boisvert, Roy Leland Boka, Mohamad Jafar 49, 399 Bolan, Mary Ann 263, 330 Boldrick, Eugene Nevin 386 Boles, Don Edward Boles, Jerry Elmer Bolin, Jennifer Jo 386 Bollinger, William Ellis Bolus, Reed 284 Bomar, Rebecca Joy Pardue Bomar, Suzanne 399 Bomar, Teddi Jean Bombay, Anthony John 317-318 Bond, David Keith 305 Bond, Dennis Boyd 399 Bondurant, James Bourbon 284 Bondurant, Jane Elizabeth 302 Boniske, Deborah Jean Bonmon, Bryan J. Bonner, Robert Sydney Bonneville, Cathy Elaine 299, 386 Bono All-Stars 252 Booher, Kathleen Alison 303, 376 Booker, Albert Gene Booker, Nancy Leigh 387 Boone, David Oliver Boone, Nancy Jean 399 Boone, Sandra Jean 387 Boone, Stanley Louis 277 Booth, Michelle Lou Booth, Patricia Floyd Booth, Suzanne Fitzgerald 376 Booth, William York 295 Bordas, Thomas Gerard Borders, Gary Allen Borders, Nathan Allen Borders, Rebecca Ann Borders, Thomas Bryan Borelli, Scott Anthony Born, Julia Anne Borror, Debra Ann Loyd Borror, Robert Edwrd Jr. 277 Bosecker, William Edward Bosma, David William 277 Boss, Gary 141 Boston, Eugene Stevens Boswell, Cynthia Lynn Bgswell, Joseph Edward Boswell, Karen D. 399 Boswell, Susan Lyn Boswell, Teresa Anne Boteler, Janet Faye Boteler, Karen Marie Botkin, Thomas Elwood 399 Botner, Gregory George Botner, Lisa Frances 399 Botner, Stanley Arthur Bott, Bonita Gail 376 Bottego, Maria Elizabeth 267, 399 Bottom, Elizabeth Ann 376 Bottom, Robert Curtis Botts, Susan Juanita 261, 301 Botts, Susan Talbott 263, 301, 330, 340-341 Boughey, Donna Marie 376 Boughton, Judy Ann 330 Bouhl, Robert Jerome 387 Bouldin, Dudley C. Bow, Beverly Ann 295 Bowen, Edwin 296 Bowen, Ginny Lynn Bowers, Charles Edward 141, 239, 241 Bowers, Cynthia Ruth 399 Bowland, Michael Babb Bowles, Joseph Neil Bowles, Nancy Ann 387 Bowles, Pamela Eileen 387 Bowles, Phyllis Sharon 330 Bowling Club 296-297 Bowling Green College of Business and Public Affairs assistant dean 152-153 Bowling Green Communtiy College and Continuing Education dean 147 Bowling, James Daniel 284, 387 Bowling, James Hiram Jr. 244, 330 Bowling, James Lowell Jr. 244 Bowling, Kathleen Bowling, Michael Richard Bowling, Susan Elizabeth 376 Bowling, Ted Robert Bowling, William Edward Bowman, Ginger Rose 399 Bowman, James Garland II Bowman, Lisa A. 399 Bowman, Mark Lynn 387 Bowman, Mickey Joe Bowman, Sherman Thomas 330 Bowman, Teresa Ann 399 Boyd, Bernard Lee Boyd, David Lucian 387 Boyd, Omelia June Boyd, Robert Dallas Jr. Boyken, Sandra Lou 330 Boyken, William Coleman 301, 303 Boykin, Fhermis Juan 305 Boylan, Cathy Diane Boylan, Susan Lynn 263 Boyle, Richard Louis 299, 330 Boysen, Irvin Gene Bozarth, Karen Lea 387 Bracken, Donald Kelvin Bradbury, Craig Ira Braden, Linda Mary Bradford, David Allen 278 Bradford, Julie Ann 399 Bradford, Karen Sue 376 Bradford, Mark Douglas 278 Bradford, Phillip Wayne 277, 376 Bradford, Steven Victor Bradford, William Butler Bradley, Andra Jeanne Bradley, Angie Lagail 399 Bradley, Debra Ann Bradley, Fayetta Bradley, Harry Stephen Bradley, Janet Laverdiere Bradley, Nancy Ellen 387 Bradley, Sandra Jeanne Bradshaw, Clark Howard 283, 330 Brady, Bridget Eileen 399 Brady, Erin 19 Brainard, Ted Ernest 387 Brakke, Debra Coleen 399 Bramblett, Woodrow Wilson Bramel, David Macklin Branaman, William Keith 243 Branch, Tony Anthony 399 Brandner, Steve Jay Brandon, Susan Elaine Brandt, Peter Arlan 330 Branham, Jerry W. Brannon, Betty Joyce 14-15, 387 Branson, Jody Rae 376 Branstetter, Carol Faye 376 Branstetter, Lee Ann Brantley, Delmer Lee Branyon, Mary Suzanne 299, 330 Brashear, Bonita Kay Brashear, Joel Douglas Bratcher, Bennett Farris 282 Bratcher, Carol Sue Bratcher, Deborah Hammett Bratcher, James Allen 376 Bratcher, Karen Suzanne 376 Bratcher, Marcia Stewart Bratcher, Pamela Marie Bratcher, Rita K. Todd 387 Bratcher, Sarah Lee Bratton, Patricia 323, 399 Brawner, John Leland Brawner, Ronald Edward 399 Bray, Pamela Annette 387 Brazley, Carl Eugene 210, 387 Brazley, William Isaac Jr. 376 Breamer, Harry Smith Jr. 244 Breeding, Billy Keith Breeding, David Howard Breedlove, Ronald Gene Breedlove, Wallace 313 Breegle, Bruce 313 Breit, Donald Joseph 322, 330 Breiwa, Gary Robert Brenda Chapman feature 226-227 Brennan, David Michael 399 Brennan, Diane Elaine 387 Brennan, Kristina McKinney Brenner, Kenneth 186-189 Brents, Shirley A. 399 Brenzel, Sally Losson 265, 399 Bresler, May Carroll 267 Bretz, Barbara Ann 376 Brewer, Angela A. 399 Brewer, Gary Dale Brewer, John Edward III Brewer, Linda Ann 399 Brewer, Marilyn Brewer, Rebecca Lee Brewer, Roger Owen Brewington, Thomas Carlyle Brian, Charles Francis Brian, Monica Lynn Briddon, Donald Paul Bridgeman, Dennis Edward 376 Bridges, Derf James Bridges, Donna Kathaleen 299 Bridges, Paul Neville Jr. Bridgewater, Linda S. 399 Bridwell, Ruby Dianne Briggs, Debbie Louise 299, 330 Briggs, Emmett 237 Briggs, Gregory Neal 399 Briggs, Martina 267 Brightup, Donna Lee 399 Briley, Hal Overton 387 Brinkley, Ricky Lane Brinkman, Mare Hans Brinkman, Randy Ray 330 Briscoe, William Albert Bristow, Robert Lovell 243, 296 Brite, James William Jr. Britt, Barton Lee 377 Britt, Beverly Elaine 387 Britt, Connie Suellen 330 Britt, Danny Clay 314, 317, 330 Britt, Darla 123 Britt, Donald James Britt, Elizabeth Marie 263 Britt, Holice Depp Jr. 399 Britt, Mary Frances 399 Britt, Rex Darrell 339 Britt, Ruth 266 Britten, William Gerard 330 Brittingham, Stephen Allen 234-235, 278 Britton, Rita Jane Brizendine, Clint 284 Brizendine, Thomas Swearer Broadus, Richard Louis Broadwell, Timothy William Broady, Gary Lawrence Brock, Nancy Lee Towery Brock, Robert Joseph Brockman, Danny Bingham Brockman, Donnie Brodarick, Michael Victor 387 Broderius, John 70 Brodt, John Charles 301, 322, 377 Broell, Daniel Austin Broell, Douglas Scott Broken hearts and broken records 268-269 Brooks, Alan Ray 377 Brooks, Beverly Ann Brooks, Carl David 317, 318, 399 Brooks, David Lewis 317-318 Brooks, David Lynn 317-318 Brooks, David William 317-318 Brooks, Duren C. Brooks, Gary Dale Brooks, George Dennis 243, 296 Brooks, Herman Jeffery Brooks, James Wayne Brooks, Judy Jordan 303, 330 Brooks, Katherine E. Brooks, Mary Jane Brock Brooks, Ray Edward 330 Brooks, Rebecca Hope Brooks, Stephen Timothy 417 Barrett, Lana Brooks, Stephan Brooks, Walter Bryan Broomall, Sallye Anne Brosche, Alan Murray Brothers, Stephen Bruce Brotherton, Gail Lynn Brotzge, Joan Denise Broughton, Ernest Ray Broughton, Jeffrey Burl 399 Broughton, Michael Lee Browder, Beverly 330 Brown, Barry Wayne 301, 330 Brown, Bruce Edward 399 Brown, Carol 305 Brown, Carol Jean 377 Brown, Carroll 179 Brown, Cathy Sue 267 Brown, Charles Herbert 377 Brown, Cindy Jo Brown, Corby Hugh 387 Brown, Danford Rex 399 Brown, David Allen Brown, David Neal Brown, Deborah Faye Brown, Debra Jolene 306 Brown, Donald Lee 331 Brown, E. Dale 387 Brown, Eric Corbin 301, 340-341 Brown, Gail Lynne Brown, Gary Shannon Brown, Gayle Lynn Brown, Gerald Dale Brown, Gloria Jean 387 Brown, Gregory Keith Brown, J.O. Jr. 331 Brown, James Harold 261, 289, 315 Brown, James Henry 261, 289, 315 Brown, James Michael 261, 289, 315, 331 Brown, James William 261, 289, 315 Brown, Joan Leslie Berry Brown, Katherine Ann Brown, Kathy A. 391 Brown, Kathy Pierce 331 Brown, Kimberly Gayle Brown, Larry Wayne Brown, Lenwood 377 Brown, Leonard 163-168 Brown, Lisa Beth 387 Brown, Lou Ann Brown, Mark Douglas Brown, Mark Edward Brown, Markeata June Brown, Melayna Ann Brown, Pamela Jane Brown, Patricia G. Watkins 331 Brown, Phil Allan Brown, Phillip H. 323, 387 Brown, Polly Sue 387 Brown, Richard M. 399 Brown, Richard Morgan Brown, Rickie Fay 387 Brown, Robert Vincent 314, 319, 331 Brown, Robin Keith Brown, Shelly 462 Brown, Sherry Gail Brown, Stanley Walton Brown, Steven Ray Brown, Ted Snyder 331 Brown, Thomas Owen Brown, Thomas Wayne Brown, Valerie Sue 274, 387 Brown, Vicky Denise 305, 331, 340 Brown, Virginia Ruth 387 Brown, William Henry Brown, William, Henry Jr. Brown, William Patrick Jr. Brown, Winston Alexander Brown, Yvonne Renee 387 Brownfield, Della Ann Browning, Donna Marie Browning, Janet Ruth Browning, Jean Marie 399 Browning, Jimmy Dale Browning, Pam 222 Browning, Robert Ewell 313 Browning, Steven Linn 331 Browning, Susan Annette Browning, Theresa Rita 301, 331 Bruce, Barry Scott Bruce, Deborah Sue Bruce Donald Edward 309 Bruce, F.F. 181 Bruce, George Edward 281, 377 Bruce, Patrick Donald Bruce, Rebecca Lynn 14-15, 331 Bruce, Robert Jackson Bruington, Chester Keith Brumback, Cherie Lynn Brumback, Toni Gail Brumfield, Jane Coles Brumfield, Michael Boyd 331 Brumfield, Stanley 143, 145 Brumleve, Ronald Lee 157 Brumley, Robert Elliott 290 Bruner, Laura Duff Brunette James Allan 400 Bruno, Martin Anthoay Brunton, Stephen Ray Bryan, Margaret Michelle Bryan, Sandra Elaine Bryant, Aaron Lawrence 216-221 Bryant, Cheryl Lynn 377 Bryant, Christopher Neal Bryant, Douglas Maurice 400 Bryant, Elizabeth Irene 312, 400 Bryant, Gary Lee Bryant, Henry Edward III Bryant, James David Jr. Bryant, Judith Elaine 261, 263, 316, 331, 341 Bryant, Karen Sue 316 Bryant, Marilyn Ann 331 Bryant, Mary Sue 400 Bryant, Pamela Sue Bryant, Paul Bryant, Richard John Bryant, Robert Joseph Bryant, Shawn Ratliff Bryant, Vickie Alice 400 418 Brooks, Walter Chemistry Dept. Buchanan, Beth Ann 101, 107, 324, 377 Buchanan, Claudette Donie 300 Buchanan, Donald Kenneth Buchanan, Elmer Clay III 301, 303, 331 Buchanan, Janet Dorene 377 Buchanan, Karen Lee 322, 377 Buchanan, Mary Jane Buchanan, Richard Lavaughn, 301, 331 Buchanan, Sarah Elizabeth 387 Buchanan, Sharon 273 Buchanan, Steve Bruce Buchanan, Teresa Lynn 400 Buchanan, William Dean Buchanon, Rogerlynne Buchert, Patti Ann Buchok, Richard Earl Buchta, Mark Aurther L. Buck, Sheila Jill 267, 269, 296 Buck, Sheila Leigh 296, 387 Buck, William Drew Buckingham, Joy Cox 331 Buckles, Cathy Dean 261, 263, 387 is Buckles, Donna Rae 307, 310-311, 331 Buckles, Paula Kim 400 Buckles, Sheila Vernice 400 Bucklew, Leslie Wayne Bucklin, Jean Ann 400 Buckman, William 129 Buckner, Stephanie Jean 299 Budd, James Perkins 331 Budde, Frances Hilliard 331 Budde, Mary Dale 377 Budde, Neil Frederick 308-309 Bueker, Robert 163 Bueker, Robert Michael 387 Buffett, Jimmy 8, 80, 82-83 Buford, Cynthia Denise Buford, Larry W. 20 Buford, Ricky Ray 46, 295, 387 Bugliosi, Vincent 93 Bulkley, Jeffrey Linelle Bull, April Jacqueline Bull, Katie 313 Bulla, Timothy Louis 299 Bullington, Barry D. Bullins, Doris Sadie Bullock, Bobby Ray Bullock, Peter Sutton 277 Bumm, Martin Louis Jr. 387 Bunch, Brenda McClendon Bunch, Deborah Kay Bunch, Donna Marie Mankey 49 Bunch, Joseph Edward 387 Bunch, Kathy Lynn 175, 377 Bunch, Kenneth Wayne 400 Bunch, Sharon Sue Bundy, John Richard 281 Bunnell, Jeffrey Alan 283 Bunny Run 266 Buntin, Kathy Ann Bunton, Denise Munsel Bunton, Virgil Ellis 400 Burbach, Gregory Carl 216-217 Burbage, Randell 210, 244-245 Burch, Anne Therese 264, 331 Burchett, Amanda Gayle B. 377 Burchett, Edna Kathleen 300-301, 331, 341 Burchett, Myra Gertrude Burd, Jill Lynn 267, 269, 377 Burden, Carolyn Sue 331 Burden, Jacquelyn Sue Burden, James David Burden, Patricia Lou 377 Burden, Ralph Clinton 277, 387 Burden, Teresa Kay 377 Burden, Terry Victor Burdette, John Russell 377 Burditt, Robin Lynn Burfict, Theodore Burk, Steven Dale Burka, Jean Frances Burkart, Vivian Patricia 377 Burke, Detra Lynn Burke, Karen Leeann 315, 400 Burke, Mark Andrew 306 Burke, Michael David 400 Burke, Ted James 14-15 Burkeen, Emmett 188 Burkeen, Phillip Cardwell 277, 377 Burkhart, Gary Marc Burkhead, Robert Bruce 331 Burks, Janet Lou 171, 325, 331 Burks, Janna Linn Burks, Joseph Aldridge 400 Burks, Sally Lynn 400 Burks, Tommy Ray 387 Burness, Wanda Walden Burnett, Ellen Marie 331 Burnett, George 261 Burnett, Margena 387 Burnette, Mary Lou 296, 400 Burnette, Sarah Meeks Burns, Amy Louise 400 Burns, Caroline Morton 377 Burns, Craig Andrews 285 Burns, Danny Ray 284 Burns, James Leland 216-221 Burns, Maureen Theresa 316, 400 Burns, Robert Hoyt 400 Burns, Samuel Ross 400 Burns, William Corey Burns, William Courtney Burns, William Louis Burridge, Joseph Harryson Burris, Robyn Blaine Burton, Barbara Ann Burton, Beatrice Burton, Bobby Eugene 331 Burton, Deborah Sunshine Burton, James Bassett 309, 311, 377 Burton, Jeff H. Burton, Patricia Ellen Burton, Tracey Lynn 400 Bush, Arthur 252, 296, 301 Bush, Beryl Candice 295-296, 387 Bush, Carlotta Kay 247, 377 Bush, Deborah Joann Bush, Dennis Michael 331 Bush, Diane 296 Bush, Hezekiah Leigh 400 Bush, Larry Wade 96, 291, 331 Bush, Ricky Glenn 400 Bush, Robert Thomas 387 Business Administration dept. 152-153 Business Administration dept. head 152-154, 158 Business Administration 321 157 Business affairs vice-president 140-141 Business Education and Office Administration dept. 153-154 Business Education and Office Administration dept. head 153, 156 Business and Public Affairs 152-159 Bushkar, John Jr. Bussell, Judy Catherine Bussert, Barbara Diane Bussey, Charles 158, 303 Butcher, Terry Lynn 377 Butchko, John Richard 331 Butler, Beth Riggs 323 Butler, David Allen Butler, Jane Rhea 331 Butler, Kathy Ann Butler, Kathy Sue 400 Butler, Laura Lee Butler, Pamela Gayle 377 Butler, Patricia Ann 400 Butler, Ralph Cortez II 282 Butler, Raybon 325 Butts, Barbara Genise Butts, David Adrian 277, 377 Butts, Dianne Louise 314, 387 Butts, Edna Clydella Buzzard, Deborah Anne Buzzetta Mark Andrew 281 Bybee Martha Sue 331 Byerly, Terry Dean Byerly, Thomas Clifton Byrd, Bradley Reid Byrd, Brian Joe Byrd, George Keith Byrd, Glenda Lou Byrd, Michael Christopher Byrd, Nancy Kay 400 Byrd, Robert Glenn Byrd, Ronald Bernard 400 Byrd, Samuel Anthony Byrley, William Joseph Byrn, Judy Law 331 Byrn, Philip McSwain Cage Ann Love 299, 314, 387 Cage, Edward Arthor Cagle, Jean Anne 291, 319 Caillouet, Larry 324 Cain, Kelly David 235, 331 Cain, Patrick Michel Cain, Ronald Alan 377 Cain, Vira Joan 400 Caine, Doreen Jaye 387 Calculated Risks 152-159 Caldwell, Charles Robert 377 Caldwell, Karen Corbin Caldwell, Mary Margaret Caldwell, Michael Leroy 332 Calhoun, Jessie Louise Calhoun, Vicki Ann 400 Callahan, Judith Marie C. Callaway, Garry Douglas 377 Callis, James Timmons 282, 387 Calloway, Susan Shelby, 295, 332 Calvert, Kathy Ray Cambron, Cynthia Deann Cambron, George Leonard Cameron, Christopher W. Camp, Barbara Ann 254, 387 Campaign '76 58-61 Campbell, Anne Leslie 313 Campbell, Bruce Lee Campbell, Donna Joy Campbell, Gordon Scott 377 Campbell, Hugh Kolb Campbell, Jack Edward Campbell, James Wilton Campbell, Jennifer Louise Campbell, Karen Lee 332 Campbell, Keith Jay 291 Campbell, Kent 33 Campbell, Kermit P. Campbell, Lloyd Seymour Campbell, Mary Coreeda 313 Campbell, Paul 167 Campbell, Valarie Bonita 387 Campos, Reyes Javier Campus in the Summer 32-33 Cann, Kenneth 153-154 Cannon, Joseph Michael 315 Cannon, Mark A. 400 Cannon, Mark Anthony 283, 387 Cannon, Patrick Terence Cannon, Steven Christopher Cannon, Tony Cannon, Vicky Lynn Glass Cannon, William Alan 314, 332 Canon, William Harold III 233, 314,317, 332 Cansler, Catherine Rose 387 Cansler, Donna Lynne Cantler, Fredrick Q. 210 Cantwell, James Mark Caplan, Joan Laurie Caple, Marie Lonita Caples, Kenneth Lynn Cappony, Nicholas Capps, Carolyn Jean Capps, Catherine Brown 332 Capps, James Stewart 332 Capps, Randall 179 Capps, Randolph 287 Capps, Richie Allen Capps, Roy Fred Jr. Capps, Virginia Ann 332 Capsel, Tracy Lee Capsized kayaks and poolside luaus 388 Carawan, Earl Thomas 400 Carberry, Edmund James Jr. Carby, Betty Lee Carby, Sherry Lynn Card, Michael Judson Carden, Linda Sue Carden, Stephen Ray Carder, Saundra Estelle 295, 312 Cardonell, Terry Lee 332 Cardwell, Allen Keith Cardwell, Dwight C. 332 Cardwell, Janie Miller 332 Cardwell, Michael Long 377 Career and vocational services director 187 Carey, Debra Jo Carey, Ralph William Carl, Margaret Anne Carlock, Janet Lynne 377 Carlotta, Ava Maria 400 Carlsen, Christine Anne 234-235, 332 Carlson, Georgiana Lynn 51, 267, 387 Carlson, Gwen Axel Carman, Bruce Wayne 296, 377 Carman, Donald Irvin Carman, Douglas W. Carman, John Martin Carman, Ralph Hancox Jr. Carmichael, Carol Carmichael, James Alan Carmichael, John Kenneth Carmichael, Sissy 254 Carmon, Patsy Eldean Carnall, Murray Lynn 332 Carneal, Joyce Kennedy 377 Carpenter, George E. Jr. 204-211, 377 Carpenter, Hoyt Alvin Carpenter, John Sidney Carpenter, Keith Lemure 332 Carpenter, Martha Carol Carpenter, Michael Graydon 284, 400 Carpenter, Richard Allan Carr, Del H. Jr. Carr, Frank Jerome 332 Carr, James Gordon, Jr. 210 Carr, John 137, 322 Carr, Jon Clark 301 Carr, Kim Renell 400 Carr, Margaret Louise Carr, Robin S. 43, 45, 47, 228-231 Carr, Sherrill 137 Carr, Susan Patrice 387 Carr, Tammy Sue Carrel, William Stanley 291, 387 Carrender, Wayne Robison 400 Carrico, Carmel Anne 333 Carrico, James Harold Jr. 284 Carrico, Stephen Cloys 303, 333 Carrico, Steven Mathies 204-211, 303 Carrier, Leonard Harel Carrigg, Stephen Carrillo, Pamela Marie Carroll, Alesa Ann Carroll, Carol Ann 387 Carroll, Colleen Marie Carroll, David William Carroll, Faye 125, 152, 158 Carroll, Joseph Michael Carroll, Julian 462 Carroll, Kenneth Morton 278, 377 Carroll, Larry Raymond Carroll, Peter Arthur 277 Carsh, Steve 255 Carson, Don 313 Carson, Laura Ruth 387 Carter, Barbara Ann 8 Carter, Brenda Mae 297, 377 Carter, Christi Jean Carter, David Craig 204-211 Carter, Eric Lynn 277 Carter, Eulin Jr. Carter, Gregory Harold 285, 287, 333 Carter, James Evans Carter, Jay Dean 232-233 Carter, Jeffrey Calvin Carter, Jimmy 59-61, 110, 114-115 Carter, Jinny Clare Carter, Joyce Ann Carter, Judith Lynn 333 Carter, Lee Johnson Carter, Linda Fay 14-15, 400 Carter, Malcolm Dale 333 Carter, Margaret Anne 388 Carter, Neville Bruce Carter, Noel Eugene Carter, Patrick Coleman Carter, Richard Reed Carter, Ricky Joe Carter, Ronnie Wayne Carter, Vickie Lynn Carter, William Starr Cartmill, Regina K. Hall 333 Carty, Kathryn Dee Carwell, Ann Boyd 400 Carwell, David Hargis 93, 377 Casabella, Terry Lee Casada, Barbara Lynn 125, 333 Case, Gerald David Case, Omer Dean Jr. Casebier, Sherry Lee 263, 270, 333 Casey, Kerry Wayne 301 Cash, Hazel Sue Cash, Joseph Terrance 309 Cash, Merritt William Cash, Mildred Gayle Cash, Patricia Jean Cash, Paula Jean Cash, Susan Elayne 400 Cashdollar, Jeffrey James Cashman, Carol Ann 323 Cashman, Martha Grace 319, 333 Caskey, Nora Constance 377 Caspar, Ann L. Jenkins Cassady, Dale Michael Cassady, Donald Lee 400 Cassady, Robert Wayne Cassell, Nathaniel Mark Cassetty Ross Dean Casteel, Vickie L. Vance Castellanos, Gilberto R. Castillo, Rojas Rafael L. 304 Castle, James Steven 284 Castleberry, Cheryl Lynn 333 Castelli, William 93 Castlen, Michael Elwood Caswell, Anthony Wayne Caswell, Karin Lynn 317, 377 Catarozoli, Gina Marie Cate Brothers 76 Cate, Earl 76 Cate, Ernie 76 Cates, Edwin Maurice Catlett, Elizabeth Yvonne Catlin, Hayes Sumner Catron, Donald Barry 388 Catron, William Frank Caudel, David Lynn 314, 377 Caudill, Dennis Ross 301, 334, 341 Caudill, James Edward Caudill, Mary Kim Caulk, Mark Lavell 312 Caulk, Michael Lindsay 312 Causey, Brenda Joyce Causey, Joseph William 334 Causey, Kathy Lee Causey, Larry Glenn Cavana, Jeffrey Jay 233, 388 Cavanah, Judy Lynn 400 Cave, Larry Lee 243 Cawthon, Sarah Ann 299 Cebula, Casey Michael 216-221 Cecil, Anthony Dominic 400 Cecil, James Philip Cecil, Mary Ann 54, 388 Cecil, Michael David Center Board 52-55 Center for Career and Vocational Services director 186 Center for Child Study and Learning 195 Center of Intercultural Studies Coordinator 176-177 Centimole, Marcotte T. Central Bouncers 255 Centrowitz, Gerald Peter 203, 244, 377 Cerebral Palsy walk-a-thon 279 Cerk, Keith R. 234-235, 278 Cero, Craig John Cerroni, Renee Ann 377 Cesler, Stephen Michael 377 Chaffin, Elizabeth Jill Chaffin, Kathy Jo Chai, Henry II 297 Chamberlain, Melinda Ann Chamberlain, Neal C. 334 Chamberlin, John 312 Chambers, Amy Kay 388 Chambers, Edward Clay Chambers, Jackie Lee Chambers, Lisa Maria Chambers, Norman Dale 388 Chambers, Stephen Bruce 100, 102-103, 106, 325, 334 Chambers, Tamara Sue Chambers, Thomas Roper Jr. 284, 377 Chambliss, Randy J. Champion, William Lloyd Chan, Li Ching Chancellor, Colin Embry 278, 35° Chancey, Kathleen Ann Chandler, Cynthia Ann 261, 262 Chandler, Judy Ann 267, 334 Chandler, Kelley Lee 267 Chandler, Larry Daniel Chandler, Mary Jill 263 Chandler, Peggy Lynn Chandler, Phil 103 Chandler, Prentice Elbert 334 Chandler, Suzanne Marie Chandtarasupt, Pimolsuang Chaney, Anita Kay Chaney, Larry Michael Chang, Anchi Chanc, Chom Sun Chang, Chum Chih Chang, Liang Wuen Chang, Sheng Ih Chang, Yang I. Channels, Nancy Mae 400 Chapin, Mona Luise Chapman, Brenda Nell 2, 199, 222-223, 225-227, 334 Chapman, Cynthia Lou Chapman, Daniel Keith 284 Chapman, Debra Lynne 334 Chapman, James Raymond Chapman, Marilyn Jean 377 Chapman, Mary Sue 400 Chapman, Michele Ann 312 Chapman, Norma Jean 400 Chapman, Randall Glenn Chappell, Allen Taylor Chappell, Carl Leon Jr. 34, 255, 257, 320, 377 Chappell, Jeffrey Scott 388 Charlton, Desiree Lynn Charmoli, Sharon Kay Chase, Barbara Jean 319, 334, 337 Chastain, Jeffrey Thomas 277 Chauypong, Preecha Cheak, Michael Erwin Cheatham, Lowell Glynn Cheatwood, Pamela Sue Cheek, Rebecca Louise 303, 334 Cheek, Tina Victoria 400 Cheerleaders clinic 33 Cheerleaders 40 Cheerleading 33, 40, 230-231 Chelf, Carl 147 Chelf, David 147 Chelf, Jennifer 147 Club 301 Chemistry dept. 162 A curtain opens. The young, curly-haired actor strides to center stage and faces a patient audi- ence. His dark eyes twinkle as he releases a quick and easy grin. When he ale the sound of his voice is carried effortlessly to the last aisle in the theatre. In reality, the audience is a congrega- tion, the theatre a church and the actor a Methodist student preacher named John Butchko. A senior, Butchko said he had a case of stagefright during his first sermon. “Some members of the congregation thought I was nervous, but controlled,” he said. “It was a unique experience. It’s a strange situation to go into a communi- ty where no one knows you and be in a Pen leadership position,” Butchko continued. - Not only did he have one church but two when the Methodist organization asked him to serve the Hardyville Union Church in Hardyville and the Ladies’ Chapel in nearby Monroe. “On the first and third Sundays I’d be at Hardyville and on the second and fourth Sundays, I’d be at the Chapel,” the senior said. When he was absent from the Chapel, Sunday School replaced his sermons. When he wasn’t preaching at the Hardy- ville Church, a Baptist congregation used the building for services. Administering the faith Sharing a church with a preacher of another denomination wasn’t hard, Butchko said. “He is an older man and has a different style,” he said. “I have my ways of doing things and am comfort- able doing them.” Butchko, 22, is called “John” by the Ladies Chapel congregation. His youth hasn’ t hampered his rela- tionship or influence on church mem- bers, Butchko said. “Relating to people isn’t age,” he said, adding that “upbringing and the social poctel in the midwest are related.” Speaking before an audience isn’t dif- ficult for Butchko, either, who is a speech minor and has debated often with members of the campus Forensic Union. The commuting, however, has been strenuous, he said. “It’s hard to be a good student and a good pastor at the same time,” Butchko said. And then there are embarrassing mo- ments in the pulpit. “I committed the ‘unforgiveable sin,” he said. “I forgot to collect the offering and had just dismissed the congregation when a little boy reminded me,” Butchko said. “I shouted ‘wait a minute.’” On another Sunday morning Butchko had to cope with a sermon “sleeper.” “About two minutes into the sermon, someone fell asleep and began snoring loudly. For 15 minutes the rest of the congregation tried to keep from laugh- ing,” Butchko said. “Then some saint woke him up.” Membership at both churches is small, according to the student minister. Hardyville Union has 60 members and Ladies’ Chapel has 35. “They're small churches but the probably won't die out,” Butchko ay Each has a central core and an active young membership, the preacher said. “I wouldn’t want to be in a small town church 10 years from now, but it is a good situation for now,” he said. “I like it a whole lot.” Butchko said his senior year at West- ern has been an opportunity for him to be his own boss as he worked with the two churches. “It’s a whole different thing,” he said. “People have been nice by trying to help me adjust. The people ive just been great.” Butchko graduated in May with plans to attend a seminary sometime soon. Meanwhile the first month after com- mencement was hectic for the young man. In June he relocated to a Scottsville church, performed his first wedding and got married. — KATHY WHITSON (} Boyish looks and a friendly manner as well as a special sermon for the young members of Ladies’ Chapel in Monroe make for a happy relationship between student preacher John Butchko and the children in the church. Butchko talks to the young- er congregation before showing them a film. — M. Lyons Chemistry dept. head 161-162 Chen, Yung Lin Chenault , Alica Joy 267 Chenault, Donna Stallings Chenault, Douglas Ray 252, 334 Chenault, Joe Lee Chenault, Keith Brian Chenault, Sarah Elizabeth Cherry, David Glenn 377 Cherry Hall 1 Cherry, Henry Hardin 227 Cherry, Lee Courtland Cherry, Murry Leyton Jr. Cherry, Phillip Lamonte 99, 103 Cherry, Thomas L. 281 Cheser, Donald Bruce Cheser, Robert Lewis Chestnut, David Mason Cheuvront, Karl Russell Jr. Chewning, Joseph Allen 334 Chi Omega 31, 255, 264-265, 269, 271-273 Chiang, Pei Wen Chicago 9, 74, 76, 81, 83 Chick, Jon Blair 312, 334 Chick, Judy Leeman Child Development Lab 175 Childerd, Laura Diana 318, 334 Childers, Melvin Leroy Childers, Steven Childers, Tawana 313 Childress, Teresa Gayle 388 Childers, Terry Wayne 334 Children’s Theatre 106-107 Childress, Buddy 143, 145 Childress, Carol Ann 377 Childress, Charles Lee 388 Childress, Ronnah Lynn | Chilson, Kathy Sue 334 H Chilton, William Michael | Chin, Yen ' Chinn, Charles Ray 401 | Chinn, Jean Ann 401 Chinn, Julie Ann 401 Chism, David 301 Chism, Timothy K. Jr. Christenson, Victor 189 Christian, Denise Ann 401 Christian, James Ronald 334 Christian, Jesse Renaldo 377 Christian, Reggie 63 Christian Virginia Dell Christmas, Teresa Anne 388 Christy, Mary Anne Chuemchit, Namporn Chumley, Marsh William Church of Christ Student Center 312-313 Church, William Stuart 288 Churchman, Susan Lynn Cianciolo, Jean Cissell, Ann Michelle 155, 377 Cissell, John Ferrill | Cissell, Lisa Gayle City slicker works to keep baby oinkers | alive 165 | Civils, Ada Sue Civils, Charles Henry 377 } Clack, Lori Jean Clagett, John Michael 300 Clagett, Mary Lisa Clampitt, Sara E. Marting Clardy, Hazel Virginia 401 Clardy, Mark Lawrence 388 Clark, Anthony Conrad | Clark, Barbara Faye 401 Clark, Carolyan Ann Clark, Charles 149-150 Clark, Charles Dale Clark, Curtis Dencil Clark, Dale Woodall 401 Clark, David Bryce 282, 388 Clark, Donna Jean 334 | Clark, Donna Lynn 388 Clark, Dorothy Bonzene 377 | Clark, Elizabeth Flowers 401 Clark, Esther Marie 388 | Clark, Fred Gerard | Clark, Gary Michael | Clark, Gene Phillip 317, 377 Clark, Howard Brown Clark, Jacqueline Dianne Clark, John Marshall 319 Clark, Julie Ann Clark, Karen Lane 401 Clark, Kathleen Ann Clark, Lanetta Lynn 316, 334, 342 Clark, Laura Katherine 265, 327, 334 Clark, Leo Stephen Clark, Lillie Mae | Clark, Lisa Ellen Clark, Marc Jimmie 388 | Clark, Mark Allan Clark, Mark Anthony Clark, Martha Ellen 267, 334 i Clark, Mattie Susan 334 Clark, Michael Gary 101, 305 Clark, Paula Ann 401 | Clark, Peter Larson 300 Clark, Renee Marie Clark, Rita Lynn Clark, Roger Allan 283 Clark, Roger Dixon 283 Clark, Ronnie 129 Clark, Sally 184, 388 Clark, Sam 210 Clark, Sherry Elaine 313, 388 Clark, Steven Douglas 334 Clark, Steven Lynn Clark, Susan 388 | Clark, Sybil 150 Clark, Vinton Ross Clark, Wayne Scott 290 Clarke, Sandra Christine Clarke, Theodore Hughes Clasby, Cheryl Leanne 401 Classes 326-339, 350-415 Clauson, Richard Anthony 334 Claypool, Jeffrey Clark Clayton, William Alan 334 420 Chemistry Dept. Currence, Williams | Claywell, Kenneth Curtis Cleaver, Norman Allen 281, 287 Clem, Anita Carol Clem, James Lee Clements, Cathy Gail 401 Clements, Deborah Kay 401 Clements, Linda Kaye Clements, Mary Louise Clements, Terry Lee 401 Clemons, Betty Povey Clemons, Mary Theresa Clemons, Paula Baumgart 319, 335 Clemons, William Thomas 34, 319, 335 Cleveland, Martha White Cleveland, Ronald Ralph Cleveland, Wendell L. Cliburn, Van 94 Clifton, Sandra Carol Clinard, Gerald Francis Cline, Allen Eugene Cline Dwight 303 Cline, Roger Allan 290 Closing 460-464 Cloud, Saundra Gail 267, 401 Clouds and constellations set to music 167 Clouse, Barry Clyde 335 Cloyd, Brenda Ann Clubb, Elizabeth Robin 319 Coaching feature 212-213 Coakwell, Mary P. Shelby Coad, Art 299 Coates, Lenora Michelle Coatney, Janet Kay 319, 335 Coatney, Norma Best 377 Coatney, Patricia Ann 322 Coats, Betty Rose 388 Cobb, Bobby Edwin 300 Cobb, Brenda J. Winn 377 Cobb, Carolyn Faye 377 Cobb, Diane Edwards Cobb, James Bruce Cobb, Steve Ira 377 Coburn, Linda Marie Cocanougher, Tommy Joe 401 Cochran, Brooks, King Cochran, Stephen Sanders Cocklin, Jacqueline Diane 401 Cockran, Lorraine 124 Cockran, Patrick 124 Cockrel, Edward Lee Cockrill, David Steven 388 Cockrill, Terry Susan Coe, Barry Joe Cofer, Sharon Elaine Coffey, Carla 212-213 Coffey, Cathy Ann Coffey, Danny Morris Coffey, Daryl R. Coffey, Kathleen 401 Coffey, Rickey Allen Coffey, Robert Bruce 309 Coffey, Roger Lee Coffey, Tamara Diane 267, 323, 335 Coffey, Tony Howard 64, 377 Coffman, Ann Leigh 265 Coffman, Connie Louise 401 Coffman, Mrs. Edward 152 Coffman, Ralph Eric 307 Cohen, Karyn Lynne 377 Cohen, Lawrence Mark Cohn, Jeffrey Jon 401 Cohron, Karen Ann 323, L Cohron, Martin G. Cohron, Merry Beth Cohron, Terry Glynn 377 Coker, Nancy Lee 401 Colburn, Sandra Kay Colcord, Edward Clark Cole, Betty Carolyn 401 Cole, Cheryl Ann 401 Cole, Cynthia Helen Conn Cole, David Russell 313, 388 Cole, Dwayne Emanuel Cole, Evon Louise Cole, Gary Lee Cole, George Curtis Cole, Janice Anne 401 Cole, J. David 129 Cole, Julia Lynn 263 Cole, Laurie Lee 335 Cole, Lonnie Kyle Cole, Marcia Jewel 247, 263 Cole, Mark Lanze Cole, Marsha Ann 40, 247, 335 Cole, Patti Morris Cole, Philo James Cole, Ronald Keith 119 Cole, Sherri Lee Cole, Stephen Dale Cole, Theodore John Cole, William James 228, 230, 335 Coleman, Brian Keith 280 Coleman, Donna Anne 377 Coleman, Janice Lee 264 Coleman, Michael Wayne 281, 287 Coleman, Randall Leo Coleman, Robert James Coleman, Timothy Ray Coleman, Yvonne R. 261, 263 Coley, Julia Leigh Colin, Linda Rae 7 Collard, Debbie Martin College Bowl 288 College Heights Bookstore director 143, 145 College Heights Foundation president 133-134 College Heights Herald 308-309 College of Applied Arts and Health 168-175 College of Appued Arts and Health dean 168 College of Business and Public Affairs 152-159 College of Education 186-195 College of Education associate dean 186-189 College of Education dean 186-187 College Republicans 59-60, 306 Collett, Bonnie Jean 291 Collie, Keith Linn 183, 305 Collie, Linda Rose Jones Collier, Donna Ruth Collier, Michael Eugene 243 Collier, Reginald Spencer Collings, Catheryn Lynn 401 Collins, Angelete A. Collins, Anita Hunter Collins, Barry Anthony Collins, Brian Willard 254, 307, 335 Collins, David John 312 Collins, Garland Collins, Glen Charles Collins, Gregory Lee Collins, Gwen H. 337 Collins, James Edmond 284, 337 Collins, James Samuel Collins, Jane Marshall 401 Collins, Jeffrey David 401 Collins, Joe Terrel Collins, Joyce Elaine 401 Collins, Karen Ann Collins, Lloyd 35 Collins, Mary Elizabeth Collins, Mary Joyce 388 Collins, Mathew 283 Collins, Michael Ray Collins, Nicholas R. 314 Collins, Sue Carol Collins, Thomas David 35, 290, 401 Collins, Wendy Annette Colombo, Leisa Gail 401 Colson, Kathy Dinning Colson, William Gregory Colton, Carole Andrea Columbia Scholastic Press Association 310 Colyer, Donald Lee 278, 377 Combest, Rickey Ray 296 Combined dialect with a programmed vocabulary 167 Combs, Craig Thomas 337 Combs, Debra Ann Combs, Gregory Alan Combs, Nancy Allyn 337 Combs, Teresa Louise Combs, Whit 101, 324-325 Comfort, Mark Christopher 45, 309, 337 Compton, Garry Lane Compton, Karen Sue Compton, Kenneth David 282 Compton, Patricia Campbell 337 Compton, Sheren Lee 401 Computer and informational services director and institutional research director 137, 139 Computer Science dept. 163, 167, 240 Computer Science dept. head Conard, Paul George Concerts 74-83 Concept of God feature 192 Conder, Ruth Ann 388 Condiff, Donna 381 Condit, Teresa Helena 224, 225, 377 Condit, Thomas William 200, 203, 377 “Confessional” 102 Conger, Robert Allen Jr. 210 Conkwright, Marsha Faye Conley, Franklin 188 Conley, Linda Jane Conley, Michael Dale 337 Conley, Pamela Jean Conliffe, Kathleen 401 Connelly, Buddy 221 Connelly, Daniel Nelson Connelly, Paul Crawford Jr. Conner, Debra Lynn 122, 337 Conner, Dwight Douglas 281, 388 Conner, Fonza Lynn Conner, Janet Lee Conner, Shirley Ellen 274-275, 401 Conners, Sharon 377 Conners, Stefanie 263, 287 Connor, George Wallace 388 Conover, Rita Fay 252, 389 Conrad, Billi Ann 337 Conrardy, Patrick John 288 Constans, Elizabeth Leigh 265 Constant, Gary Gene 401 Constant, Sallye Lynn 267 Constantinou Stavros Consumer Report 26-27 Continent jump to grad school 197 Convey, Janet Ruth 267 Conway, Dwight Alan Conyers, Mark Thomas Coohill, Tom 125 Cook, Claude Edward 337 Cook, Cyndra Jackson Cook, Diesta Darlene 401 Cook, Elizabeth J. Givens Cook, Janet Sue Cook, Jeannine Louise Cook, Kathy Ann 389 Cook, Ken Turner Cook, Kenneth Robert Cook, Lisa Marie Cook, Lori Darlene Cook, Martha Jane Cook, Pamela S. 401 Cook, Patricia Ann 307, 389 Cook, Paul 133 Cook, Phyllis Ann 319, 377 Cook, Robert Miles 210 Cook, Sheryl Lynn 133 Cooke, James Ronald 401 Cooke, Janetlyn 305, 319, 337 Cooke, Kenneth Brian 325 Cooksey, Jimmy Donald Jr. Cooley, Steven Thomas Coombs, Terri Lynn 261, 263 Coomer, Lisa Shirley 389 Coomes, William Darrell Cooney, Cindy Marie Coons, Lisa Karol 254, 256 Coons, Robert Lewis Coop, Alice Anne 323, 337 Coop, Donald Charles II Cooper, Albert S. 157, 281 Cooper, Billy Edward 401 Cooper, Catherine Lorraine 307, 389 Cooper, David Alan Cooper, Debra D. Cooper, Gregory Neal Cooper, Jerry Wayne Cooper, Marla Kay Cooper, Nancy Wemhoener Cooper, Phyllis Ann Cooper, Randall Lloyd 401 Cooper, Roxanne Berry 303 Cooper, Tamara Marie 401 Cooper, Theresa Ann 296, 401 Coots, Gary Lee 389 Cope, Kenneth Dewayne Copeland, Joe Thomas Coplen, David Timothy Copley, Sarah W. Coppage, George Harold Coppage, Richard Edward Coppage, Sherry Lynn 401 Coral Reefer Band 83 Corbin, Amelia Harris Corbin, Brenda Kay Corbin, Judith Dianne Corbin, Susan Taylor Corbitt, Gary Edward Corbitt, Larry Wayne Corcoran Margaret Ann Corn, Jack 183, 257 Cornelius, Samuel Earl Cornell, Kathy Dorn 306 Cornell, Sherry Lee 401 Cornett, Denise Marie Cornett, Harold Wayne 389 Cornett, Kitty Frances 401 Cornett, Susan E. Despain Cornett, William Fred Cornette, Candace Marie 157, 315, 322-323, 337 Cornette, Carol Lorene 107 Cornette, Martine Marie Cornwell, Brent Edward Cornwell, Cathy Crane Cornwell, Deobrah Diane 267, 269, 389 Cornwell, Donald Lee Correll, Roxann 318, 337 Corts, Paul 142-143 Cortus, William James 307, 325, 389, 399 Corum, Grover Allen Jr. Cosby, John Michael Cosby, Stevie Laran Cossey, Mary Anne Costantinou, Stavros 304, 389 Costanza, Shirley J.G. Costanzo, Sara Ann 264, 337 Costello, James Emmett Costello, Thomas Michael Costellow, Kenny Wade 337 Costellow, Phyllis J. Cox 377 Costin, Curtis Frazer 244 Costin, Jill Kay 322, 389 Cothern, Ricky Duane 284, 337 Cotney, Barbara Louise 389 Cottongim, Janet 317 Cottongim, Janice Carol 315, 317, 337 Cottrell, Gary Lee 389 Cottrell, Phyllis Ann 377 Cottrell, Stanley Jay 277, 337 Cottrell, Susan Rae Cottrill, James Donald Couden, Daniel Eugene 3, 389 Coulter, G. Gary Counseling services center director 143, 145 Counselor Education dept. 188, 193 Counselor Education dept. head 188 Counts, Marvin Glenn Countzler, Catherine Ann Courtney, Patricia Ann Cousins, David Bruce Coverdale, Jane Ann Coverston, Melissa Beth 401 Covetts, Karen Lynn 401 Covey, Gilbert Bowman Jr. 337 Covington, Charles Ray Covington, Helen Belle Covington, Linda Woodruff Covington, Roxie Genita 318, 337 Cowan, Charles Ben Jr. 389 Cowan, Frances Ann 337 Cowdrey, Patricia E. 401 Cowherd, Ford Edmon 401 Cowherd, Jerry Elliott Cowherd, Rosemarie 389 Cowles, Benton Allan 337 Cox, Alice Lavon 337 Cox, Ben Thomas Cox, Charles David 389 Cox, Cynthia Ann 401 Cox, Debbie Lee 389 Cox, Deborah Marie Cox, Dennis Myron Cox, Donna Kay 377 Cox, Glenda Carol Cox, James Madison Cox, Jeffery Allen 401 Cox, Joe Cooper Cox, Leonard Clark II Cox, Nancy Jane 115, 261, 263, 461 Cox, Patrick Lee Cox, Patsy Rue Cox, Ronald Jackson Cox, Sarah Ann Cox, Sarah Elizabeth 401 Cox, Thomas O. Cox, Vanessa Ann Perry 337 Coy, Roderick Rex 337 Coyle, Kevin Edward Coyle, Timothy Nolan Crabtree, Deborah Sue Crabtree, Nathan Byron Crabtree, William Bemiss Crackel, Nancy Ann 389 Craddock, James Randall Craddock, Juliann Moore Crady, George Chester Crady, Jeffrey Sexton Craft, Harold 239 Crafton, Lee Ross Crafton, William H. 283, 377 Crafton, William Toby 210, 283 Craig, John 301 Craig, Patrick Keith Craig, Robert Bryan 401 Craig, Teresa Lynn 254, 267, 307, 401 Crain, Candace Gay 378 Crain, David Storey 401 Crain, Michael Gene Cramer, Margaret Louise 401 Crane, Michael Andrew Craven, David Lee Craven, Tama Maria 389 Cravens, Raymond L. 125 Cravens, Robert William Jr. 210 Craver, Leigh Ann 267 Crawford, David Eugene 278, 337 Crawford, David Merrill 278 Crawford, David Wayne 278 Crawford, Ricky Earl 300-301, 337, 342 Crawley, Thomas Allen Creech, Troy Caleb 338 Creek, Butch 141, 239 Creek, Donald Keith Creek, James William 338 Creek, Julie Faye Crenshaw, John 167 Crenshaw, Mitzi Hensley Cress, Rebecca Lynn 338 Cress, William Donald Jr. Cretella, Linda Carol 261-262, 271 Creviston, Frank Lynn Creznic, Patricia Ann Cribbs, Barbara Jo 319, 389 Crick, John Anthony 389 Crider, Benjamin Harry II 296 Crissman, Donald E. Crissy, Marianne Regina Croaff, David Brian Crofts, Dash 41, 74, 76, 83 Croley, Ellen Davis Crombie, John Barrett Crook, Dona Lisa 401 Crook, Susan Jane Crooks, Fumiko Makino Crooks, Mary Lynn Cropper, Linda Sue 338 Crosby, Leslie Kendrick 83 Cross Country 200-203 Cross, David Martin Cross, Johann Hannon 378 Cross, Michele Evette 315 Cross, Patricia A. Hodges 307, 338 Cross, Sharon Lee 299-300 Cross, Terry Stuart Crouse, Kim Alison Crousore, Janet S. Crow, Beverly Biggers 338 Crowder, Thomas Michael Crowder, Timo thy Wayne 401 Crowdus, Suzanne M. 318, 338 Crowdus, Veronica Olivette Crowe, Carmen Walker Crowe, Crawford 145 Crowe, J. Lynn Strode Crowe, Robert Bruce Crowley, Cris Ann 255, 401 Crowner, Brenda Kay 378 Crowner, Linda Susan 401 Crum, Mason 283 Crumb, Glenn 142-143 Crumbie, Richard Lee Crump, Marjorie Ann 387 Crump, Mark Steven Crump, Pamela Sue Crumpler, David Hurst Crumpler, Thomas Perry 302, 338 Cruse, Janet Turner Cruse, Jill Rix 338 Crutcher, Barry Joel Cruz, Priscilla Cuarta, Jose Jr. Rene Cubbage, James Clyde Cude, Jon Michael 389 Cude, Terry Leigh Clements 389 Cuffe, Francis Michael 284 Cull, Martin Homan Cullen, Cheri Ladonna 314 Culliton, Sharon Marie Cumings, Erica Denise Cummings, Darrell Everett Cummings, Janet Louise Cummings, Joe David 401 Cummings, Juliana Marie 280 Cummings, Randell Virgil Cummings, Rhonda Lynn 378 Cummings, Sue Jones 378 Cummins, Beverly J. Cree Cummins, Jeffrey Alan Cunagin, Joseph Timothy 401 Cundiff, Don Richard 281, 378 Cundiff, Donna Ann 263 Cundiff, Gregory Wynn Cundiff, Kevin Brent 278 Cunningham, Charles Alan 285 Cunningham, Doyle Ray Cunningham, Edward Joseph Cunningham, Guy Mitchell 320 Cunningham, Heron Jr. 389 Cunningham, James Alvin 389 Cunningham, James Michael 290 Cunningham, Lisa Lynn 265 Cunningham, Shari Lynn 35, 378 Cunningham, Thomas Carey 389 Cunningham, Tomi Renae 254, 401 Cunningham, William 278, 299, 378 Cunningham, William Lewis 278, 299 Cunningham, William T, III 278, 299, 389 Curd, Allison Reed Curl, Glen Joseph 378 Curl, Ramona Kay J. 175, 323, 378 Curneal, Kathy Ann 389 Curran, Arch Joseph Currence, William enr et cae ar eenrene we ee SK eS SS Ye eS SS : x Pk” ee” a ey Se ee wr Se me a Currie, Donald Vagelos Curry, Dale Goodin Curry, Edward Lee Curry, Jo Ellen Ringenberg Curry, Kimberly D. Curry, Rebecca Jo 389 Curry, Rhonda Renea 263, 338 Curry, Scott Thomas Curry, Vickie Lynn 338 Curtis, Alvin Ray Curtis, Richard Lewis 314, 378 Curtis, Robert Allen Curtis, Teresa Ann King 314, 378 Cutler, Gary Wayne Cyr, Constance Mae Dabbs, Nelda Lynn 401 Dabney, Jerome 389 Dadbin, Ahmad Dahl, Barbara Lynn Fite Dahl, Thomas Eric 300 Dale, Keith Tilford Dale, Michael Thomas Dallas, John Robert 401 Dalton, Carl David 141 Dame, Michael Gene 401 “Dames at Sea” 99, 103 Dammassa, Kathleen Ann Dance 97 Dance Education of America 32 Danhauer, David Edward 299, 378 Danhauer, Janice Marie 300 Daniel, Austin Butler 342 Daniel, Barry Douglas 338 Daniel, Danny Joe Daniel, Marvin Gayle 295 Daniel, Mike Keith Daniel, Patricia Joyce Daniels, Lee Clifford 389 Danserseau, Kirk 154-155 Dant, John Michael Dant, Timothy Patrick 378 Dantoni, Joseph Charles Jr. Dantoni, Richard Alfred Darden, Rhonda Deette Dargo, Debra Lynn 389 Darland, Cleon Keith 301, 378 Darnell, Anthony Lee 389 Darnell, Cathy Ann 401 Darnell, David Stone 389 Darnell, Vickie Lynn 378 Darr, Terri Darnise 115, 264 Daugherty, Joyce Arlene Daugherty, Larry Ray Daugherty, Richard Lee 303 Daum, Laura Lynn Daunhauer, Christine Mary Davenport, Beverly Jane Davenport, Dennis Allen Davenport, Janice Lynn 320, 323, 338 Davenport, Mary Ann Davenport, Mary Jo 314, 389 Davenport, Pamela Jean 338 Davenport, Philip Davenport, Wayne 313 David, James R. Davidson, Kim Marie 338 Davidson, Malcolm Russell Davidson, Pryce Clay Jr. Davidson, Richard A. Davidson, Roy Willard Davidson, Sylvianne Davidson, Teresa Lynn Davies, Janet Lynn 265, 389 Davila, Julio Miguel 221, 389 Davis, Bernard Byrd Davis, Brad Dean 401 Davis, Chanda Glyn Davis, Charles Alan 401 Davis, Craig 210 Davis, Daniel Edward 302 Davis, Debbie Joan 338 Davis, Donna Yvette Davis, Doug Arthur 134, 204, 211, 338 Davis, Douglas Dean 295, 325, 378 Davis, Douglas Gene 325 Davis, Elizabeth Quinn 401 Davis, Ernest Winstead Davis, Gary Mack Davis, Gregory Aubachon 401 Davis, James 136-137 Davis, James Harvey Davis, James Richard Davis, Jill Brynn 389 Davis, Joann Davis, Karen Ann 338 Davis, Kenneth Lloyd Davis, Kimberlee Lynn Davis, Larry Lee 283 Davis, Laura Ellen 267 Davis, Lisa Petett Davis, Lonnie James III, 233, 378 Davis, Lorama Sanders Davis, Margaret Rita 401 Davis, Mark Alben Davis, Martha Joyce Davis, Mary Childress Davis, Mary Loraine Davis, Mayme Lou 338 Davis, Mike 277 Davis, Nancy Corinne 401 Davis, Natalie Quinn Davis, Paul L. 389 Davis, Randy Alan 300-301, 338 Davis, Rose Marie 295, 312 Davis, Sandra Jane 401 Davis, Sherie Lynn Davis, Terry 221 Davis, Vicky Lee 98, 101, 107 Davis, Virginia L. Dwyer Davis, Wallace Daniel 338 Davis, Wanda Turner Davis, William Cleland 389 Davis, William Stephen Davison, Elizabeth Ann Davison, Sylvia 263 Dawson, Clarence Edward 378 Dawson, John Leslie 303, 378 Dawson, Johnny Dockins Day, Johnny Richard 338 Day, Joseph Edward Day, Judith Ann 401 Day, Lisa Lonell 261, 263, 389 Day, Marcia 40-41 Day, Marilyn Christine Day, Natalyn Denese 401 Day, Robert Michael 389 Day, Ronald Allen 203, 244, 389 Day, Rosalind Ree Day, William Gerard 284, 401 Day, William Robert 284, 378 De Capua Joe De La Torre, Ugarte Gerard De Morales, Olga 304 Deal, Donna Marie 401 Deal, Jack Allen Dean, Dixie Josephine Dean, Kathy Sue 338 Dean, Roderick Curtis 401 Dearen, Mary Ruth 299, 323 Dearing, Ronald Stephen Deaton, William David Deberry, Karen Louise 389 Deberry, Martha Jacqueline 378 Deberry, Robert Guy Debord, Dennis Gene Deckard, Theresa Turner 338 Deckard, Timothy Elton 378 Decker, David Francis Decker, Escar Jesse Decker, Kathy Elaine Decker, Tamara Kim 401 Dedmon, James Dwight 401 Dedmond, Rhonda Collier 338 Deeb, John G. Defiore, Rosemary Defler, Dannie Lee Defoor, Lori Ann Defreeze, Louis Bennie Degott, Michele Ann 378 Deik, Gonzald Lama 238 Dekle, Thomas Allison 16, 80-87, 309 Dela-Torre-Ugarte, Rebecca Delacey, Charles 210 Delaney, Joseph Michael 278 Delaney, Mary Phyllis 155, 318, 378 Delautre, John S. 338 Dellario, Gloria Anne 254, 338 Dellario, Susan Lynn Deloach, Robert Wayne Delph, Richard Ray 244, 338 Delta Omicron 290-291 Delta Sigma Theta 31, 264-265 Delta Tau Delta 278 Deluca, Angelo Joseph 32 Demaree, Marie Annette 338 Dement, Jerry Dale Demerson, Ann Leslie Demidio, Angela Maria Demolay conclave 33 Demontbreun, Rebekah R. Dempsey, Daryl Dean Demunbrun, Murphy Moran Jr. Demuth, Audrey Lynn Denardi, Dana Ann 389 Denham, Tamela Susan Denham, Wilma Kay 299, 338 Denicola, Jennifer Beth Denison, Eldon Bryan Denison, John 232 Denk, William Charles Denning, Gary Lynn Denning, Libby Carol 378 Denning, Lynn Susan 97, 338 Dennis, Betty Jean 312 Dennis, Bonnie Lou Dennis, Debra Lou Dennis, George Lloyd Dennis, Mary Ann Dennis, Ollie Charles Dennis, Sheila Mae 401 Dennison, Jerry Lee Denniston, Brian Carl Dental Hygiene dept. 168-169 Dental Hygiene dept. head 168-169 Denton, Betty J. Harper Denton, Frank H. Denton, Patricia Robin Denton, Phoebe Ann 254, 267 Denton, Steven Lynn 384 Depuy, Carlos Alberto 389 Derby Darling Contest 168 Derickson, Henry S. Derickson, Kathy Wilson Derickson, Vanessa Raye Derrickson, Charlene Desjardins, Judith M. 338 Desmarais, Carole Mitro Desoto, Ronald Noel Destefano, Mark James 283, 287 Detenber, Deborah Ann 255, 264, 338 Detoma, Phillip Jude Detring, Diana Kay Devasher, Sherry Runell 401 Devine, Vicki Lynn 401 Devore, Dariel Wayne 291 Dew, Joe Kevin 108 Deweese, Alecia Ellen 317, 398 Deweese, Larry Stephen 82-83 Deweese, Michael Edward Dewilde, Roberta Deane 402 Dewitt, Jill L. 338 Dewitt, Susan Lynn Diagnostic Center director 185-186 Dick, John Bradley Dick, Patricia Ann 389 Dickens, Phillip Wade Dickenson, Darlene Jo 319, 389 Dickenson, Debra Ann 338 Dickerson, Anthony Charles 280, 287 Dickerson, Darrell Eugene Dickey, Debbie 32 Dickey, Lorene Ruth Dickey, Minus Thaxter Dickie, Charlene Ann 319 Dickinson, Katie Jo Dickson, James Michael 322, 402 Dickson, Juanita 319 Diddle, Ed 133, 147, 226, 236-237 Diemer, Yvonne Maria 378 Diersen, Ronald Lee 378 Dieterich, Karen Jean 402 Dietrich, Marilyn Ruth 389 Dilegge, Michael O. 284 Dillaha, Kathleen Dillard, Donna Jill Dillard, Edward Bernard Dillard, Larry Dean 290 Dillard, Zetta M. Odom 339 Dillingham, Donna Monroe 378 Dillman, Richard Dean Jr. 296, 301, 378 Dillon, Karen Kay 378 Dillon, Nancy Anne 402 Dillree, John Paul Dinanno, David Allen Dingus, Donna Jo Dinnegan, James Edward Dinsmore, Nancy Paden Diplomas of Discipline 168-175 Distributive Education Clubs. of America 314-315 Ditmore, Samuel Brent Ditto, Jeanette Dix, Theresa Marie Dixon, Clarence Kay III Dixon, Michael Barry 300, 378 Dixon, Millie Jean 291, 339 Dixon, Thomas Lacey 314, 339 Dizon, Philip Jay Doan, Charles Gregory Doane, Pamela Gail 44 Dobbins, Wesley Morgan Dobbs, Tanya Maria 265 Dobrick, David Michael 323 Dockery, Shannon Eve Dockery, Sharron Beth Dodd, Allen Leroy 312 Dodd, David Thomas 284 Dodson, Betty Jo 389 Dodson, Caprice Lynn Dodson, Donna Sue 14-15, 389 Dodson, Evelyn Jeannie 378 Dodson, Larry Donell Dodson, Laura Lou 267 Doege, Danny Chris 339 Doellman, Donna Lynn 119, 223, 225 Doerr, Melvin C. Donahoo, Zoe Ellen 378 Donahue, Lori Beth Donaldson, David Crawford 389 Donaldson, Denise B. 389 Donaldson, Randall Charles 402 Donelson, Teresa Ross Donnelly, Ima Jane 339 Donnelly, John Edward Jr. Donnelly, Robert Thomas Donoho, Alan Neil Donoho, Nancy Gayle 389 Donovan, Laurie Ann Dooley, Brian Flautt Dooley, Deborah Anne 267, 389 Dooley, Jeanne F. Doolin, Debbie 195 Dorfler, Teresa Elizabeth 402 Dorrance, Janet Lynn Dorrance, Robert William Dorris, David Thompson 53, 290 Dorris, Janet Lynn 254, 378 Dorris, William Mark Dorroh, Sandy Lynne 261, 263 Dorsey, Guy Howard III 278, 339 Dorth, Mark Wayne Dorton, Russell K. Doss, Mary L. 339 Doss, Sandra Kay 378 Dossey, Kenneth Wayne Dost, Bill 277 Dotson, Leroy Thomas Doston, Sheila Kay Doty, Darrell Wayne 389 Dougherty, David Alan 402 Dougherty, Josephine D. Dougherty, Kirk Anthony Dougherty, Linda Lee 339 Dougherty, Ruth McQuown 402 Douglas, Donald Ray 244-245, 389 Douglas, Jo Ann 389 Douglas, Michele C. Douglas, Richard Thomas Dowdell, Donna Raye Dowell, Jerry Stephen 378 Dowell, John Alan 319 Dowell, John Keith 319, 339 Dowell, Lisa Gayle Dowell, Michael K. Dowell, Rhonda Lou Downard, Denise Marie 389 Downey, Gregory Dennis Downey, Micheal Jeffery Downey, Vanessa Lamarr Downey, Vida Marie Downing, Carolyn Crook Downing, David John 402 Downing, Dero G. 7, 18, 55, 64, 1°5, 129- 131, 133, 135 Downing, Donald Norris 258-259, 310 Downing, Elizabeth Yarnell 18, 402 Downing, George 130 Downing, Jacqueline 378 Downing, Jacqueline Kim Downing University Center 53, 464 Downs, David Lee Downs, David Wesley Downs, Demita Gail Downs, Lovonne Kathryn 339 Downs, Nicki Sue Downs, Stuart Clifton Downs, Wanda Dalene 378 Doyle, Jane Elizabeth Doyle, Melissa A. Doyle, Norman 378 Dozier, Kim R. Neal Draheim, John Robert 282, 288 Drake, Charles Mark 402 Drake, Darryl Drake, Deanna Sue 389 Drake, Kimberly Schroader Drake, Phil Anthony Drake, Teresa Lanet 402 Drane, Brian Coleman Drane, Edward Lee Draper, David Michael Draper, Malinda Kay Draper, Michael Brent Dresel, Daniel J. 278 Dressman, Michael Ray 232-233, 389 Drew, John Wesley Drews, Steven Michael 35, 333, 378 Drexler, Robert Martin Jr. 389 Dreyer, Cindy Sue 389 Dreyer, Tina Ann 402 Driftwood, Jimmy 54 Drill Team clinic 33 Driver, David Allan Driver, Mary Sheila 378 Driver, Vicki Lynn 323, 378 Drobocky, Oles Basil Druen, Ricky Dean 277, 402 Druien, Sharon Lee 389 Druin, Steve Lewis Drummond, Richard Elbert Drummond, Ronald Edward Ducks 254 Duckworth, Ronald Ray Duckworth, Scot Ellis Dudley, Robert 237 Dudley, Roger C. Dudley, William Steven Duerr, Sandra Lee Duggins, Edna Kay 299, 307, 378 Duke Ellington Orchestra 54, 117 Duke, Jerry Wayne 277, 402 Duke, Judy Faye 378 Dukes, Deborah Leigh Dukes, Victoria Joan 389 Dulin, Freddie Mitchell Dulin, Jenny Carol 378 Dunaway, Kathy Lorene 389 Dunaway, Susan Elaine Dunbar, Frederick Allen Dunbar, Gordon Douglas 339 Dunbar, James Mark Dunbar, Janet Marie Duncan, Cheryl Dyanne 389 Duncan, Dawn Keith Jr. Duncan, Debra Jo 264, 389 Duncan, Frederick Henry Duncan, James Leigh Duncan, Joseph B. Jr. Duncan, Linda Myrtle 378 Duncan, Mary Elizabeth 402 Duncan, Monica Jean Duncan, Sandra Jane Duncan, Sharon Renee 288 Duncan, Sherry Robyn Duncan, Vincent Craig Dunkin, Leonard Allen Dunlap, Robert Neil Dunleavy, Randall Alan 322, 339 Dunlop, Sharon Fields Dunn, Alan John Dunn, Anthony R. 38% Dunn, David 168-171 Dunr, David Smith 277, 287, 300, 378 Dunn, Kenneth Earl Dunn, Kyle Roger Dunn, Marcia Ann 306, 389 Dunn, Mark Duane 389 Dunn, Michael Ratliff 101, 291, 295 Dunn, Ron 210, 221 Dunn, Sherri Ann 402 Dunn, Tony 235 Dunson, Teresa Diane 389 Dunston, Edward Nolan Duran, Edna Duraney, Christine Lynn 389 Durbin, Carolyn Marie Durbin, Christopher S. Durbin, Johh Adrian 396 Durbin, John Thomas 396 Durbin, Joseph Lon Durbin, Kathleen Anne 389, 396 Durbin, Margaret Susan Durbin, Natalie 295, 303, 389 Durbin, Patricia June 378, 396 Durbin, Raymond P. Durbin, Timothy Kirk 396 Durham, James Martin 339 Durham, Jeanell Durham, Jeffrey Lea 59-61, 307 Durham, Karen Sue 339 Durham, Sandra Renee 389 Durham, Susan Charlene 389 Durham, Terry Wood 339 Durham, Theresa Ann Durrant, Charles Palmer 238, 244-245 Duru, Ayse Emel 48 Dutch Boys 8, 252, 254, 332-333 Dutch Boys’ Bar 332-333 Dutel, Thomas Alfred Dutton, Teresa Darlene 389 Duvall, Kenneth Wayne 339 Duvall, Kyle David 101, 402 Dwyer, Gary Wayne 180 Dwyer, William Edward 277 Dyar, Linda Ann Croft Dyar, Richard Michael Dycus, Robert Leon Dye, Anthony Wilson Dye, Carol Lynette 389 Dye, Linda G. 402 Dye, Mark Alan 339 Dye, Stephanie Gadberry Dye, Wandel 193 - Dyer, Robert Lynn Dyer, Susan Kay 402 Dykes, Bryan Dean Dyrsen, Kenneth Alan E.A. Diddle Arena 226-227 Eade, Joel Dean Eade, Randolph Scott 389 Eadens, Debra Jo Eadens, Martha Phelps Eans, Candace 263 Eans, Stephen Leslie Earls, William Randal Easley, Lillie Mae 316, 339 Easley, Willie Mae 11, 299, 316, 339 East Machine 254 East, Nancy Kaye 267 East, Richard A. 283, 402 Easterling, Joseph Sherman 210 Eatmon, Carolyn Louise Eaton, Everard Walter 339 Eaves, John Arlie 291 Eaves, John Thomas Jr. 291 Eaves, Sharon Kay Ebelhar, Julie Ann Eberenz, David Richard Eberly, Martha Joan Eblen, William Thomas Jr. 402 Ebrahimi, Mohammad Reza Eckard, Ronald 48-49 Ecker, Wendy Ann 378 Eckhart, Jeffrey Alan 282 Economics dept. 153-154 Economics dept. head 154-155 Edelen, Steve R. 277, 339 Eden, Teresa Gail Edge, Karen Gail 389 Edge, Teresa Esther 402 Edgington, Claire Summers 261, 263, 287, 339 Edison, Keatha J. 402 Edison, Letha Carol 389 Edison, Lisa Michelle 402 Edmonds, Michael Edmons, Michael C. 389 Edmonds, Natalie Elizabeth 402 Edmonds, Theresal Gail 402 Edmonds, Vicki Rochelle 402 Edmonds, William Alexander Edmonson, Mark Samuel Edmunds, Gwynne William Edohoekett, Nathaniel B. 304 Education 186-195 Educational Administration and Foundations dept. 189 Educational Administration and Foundations dept. head 189 Edun, Folasade Omdbola Edwards, Betty Bruce Edwards, Brooks Lesley 281, 378 | Edwards, Deborrah Perkins | Edwards, Jeffery Donald 40 2 Edwards, Jeffrey Smith 378 Edwards, Marion Eugene Edwards, Michael G. Edwards, Phyllis Chirlon 402 Edwards, Richard Mark Edwards, Robert Bruce 339 Edwards, Robin Susan 378 Edwards, Roger R. Jr. Edwards, Shelia Mae 339 Edwards, Steven Alan 378 Edwards, Terry Lane 378 Egan, Sherry Ann 267 Egbert, Judy Ann 402 Egger, Charles Edward Jr. Eggers, James Andrew Eggleston, Richard Alton 258, 260 Egolf, Lucy Karen 378 Ehlers, William Lloyd 378 Ehresman, Norman 187-189 Eichberger, Christopher N. 339 Eicher, Vickie Delilah Eidson, Alisa Joan Eidson, Carol Denise 378 Eiler, Ronald David 301, 378 Eisenman, Julie Anne 252, 389 Eissapoor, Balal Elder, Linda Karen Eldred, Jean B. 305 Eldridge, Michael Lee 339 Eldridge, Pamela Kay 309, 378 Eldridge, Ronnie Dwayne Eldridge, Steven Louis Elementary Art Education 310 180 Elementary Education dept. 188-189 Elementary Education dept. head 188-189 Elementary Education 412 190-191 Eleson, Suzanne Morehead Elkins, Rhonda Karen Ellington, Mercer 54 Elliott, Beth Ann Elliott, Clinton J. Elliott, Geff Frank Elliott, Harold James Elliott, Jack Watterson Elliott, Larry 300 Elliott, Tommy Lynn 378 Ellis, Danette Renee 378 Ellis,Linda Elaine El lis, Lisa Gail Ellis, Muriel Jent Ellis, Richard P. Ellis, Ronnie Daryl | Ellis, Shannon Lynne Ellis, Vivian Leigh Ellis, William Scott 402 Elmore, Ann Jacobs Elmore, Bonita Dyer 378 | Elmore, Bonnie Sue 389 | Elmore, James Lee | Elmore, Mary Jane 402 Elmore, Sandra Faye 402 1 Elms, Laurel A. 307, 339 421 Currie, Donald Elms, Laurel Elovitz, Wanna Arlecy Elsesser, James Michael 339 Elsesser, Patricia Lee 263 Elstone, Victor Charles Elward, Patricia Ann 264 Ely, Albert Wilson Elzy, Harold Emadi, Safavi Amin Emberton, Laura Lee 263 Emberton, Tom 128-129 Embry, Anne Cooke Embry, Barry Gene Embry, Charles Louis Embry, James Hastings Embry, Judith Ann Embry, Kathryn Elaine 323 Embry, Leslie Gay Embry, Richard Elmer Embry, Sharon Diane 194, 378 Embry, Valerie Joy Emejiaka, Azubike 304, 339 Emergency Care and Transportation class 172-173 Emerson, Douglas Everett 277, 287, 378 Emerson, Nina A.B. 402 Emerson, Richard Mark 313, 339 Emmert, James Gregory 389 Emmert, Randall Marrs, Jr. Emmick, Jamie Rhea 402 Emmitt, Sarah Jeannette 304, 339 en France 84-87 Engel, Jeffrey Howard 389 Engelhardt, Leslie Robyn 324-325, 378 Engineering Technology Club 300-301 Engineering Technology dept. 154 Engineering Technology dept. head 154 155 England, Elizabeth Ann England, Jim 289 England, Michael Timothy 378, 384 England, Pamela Jean 225, 323 Englebright, Curtis 186-189 Englebright, Jane Dee 378 English as a Second Language class 49 English as a Second Language program director 48 English dept. 179 English dept. head 179 English 051 49 English, John Dwayne English, Vickie A. 402 Ennis, Noel Gordon Enteman, Vicki Lynn Entertainment 56-57 Environmental Sciences and Technology building 28-29, 163, 189 Epling, Robert Gene Erhardt, Philipp Whitney 277, 284, 402 Erich, Stephen Christopher Ernspiker, Reta Gay Ernst, Heidi Jean Erskine, James R. 339 Erskine, John Ertner, Pamela Lee 402 Ervin, Robert Bracken 317, 318, 320, 389 Erving, Wendy Joanne 389 Erwin, Jane Frances Erwin, Janice Faye 389 Erwin, Mark Leslie Erwin, Ray Wallace E.S.T.B. 28-29 Esche, Joanne 267, 303 Eshback, Susan Joy Eskridge, Kathy Marie Eskridge, Kimberlie Eskridge, William Edgar 320 Essien, Akpan Moses Essling, Cynthia Ann 339 Estelle, Carl Edward 204-211, 402 Esterle, Linda Ann Esterling, Joe 210 Esters, George William Estes, Bonnie Diane 402 Estes, Jack Loyd 277 Estes, Karen 378 Estes, Kenneth 186-189 Estes, Lisa Karen 389 Estes, Owen J. 402 Estridge, Kevin 277, 339 Eta Sigma Gamma 302-303 Ethos 83 Etscorn, John Boaz Etterman, Pamela Herron Eubank, Johnny Wilson 277, 389 Evans, Bridgett 31 Evans, Charles Ross 301 Evans, Cynthia Evans, David Lewis Evans, Donald Bryant 221 Evans, Elizabeth Ann Evans, Glenn Hurst 282 Evans, James Mark 299 Evans, John David Jr. 50-51, 307, 339 Evans, Laura Ann Evans, Michael Denny Evans, Terri 265 Evans, Vickie Evenson Evanson, Bethany Ann 350 Everette Joann 264 Everhart, Carolyn Jean Everhart, Steven Wayne Eversall, Mrs. James 289 Everson, Cindy Lou 389 Everson, Sandra A. Deadman Every, Marian Lois 323, 350 ‘Exam’ing the week before Christmas 62- 63 Exams week and Christmas 62-63 Extended campus programs dean 149-150 Extras 252 Ezedi, Paul Onyebuchi Ezell, John Thomas III Ezell, Mark Edward Fabel, Brad Scott | 1 1 } Fabel, Carol Jane Facelift 252-255 Fackler, David W. 350 Fackler, Dawn Rebecca 350 Faculty administrator 141 Faculty programs dean and interum vice president for academic affairs 136-137 Faculty tea 289 Fahey, Joan Marie Fairchild, Katherine Marie 389 Fairleigh, Joseph Lee Fairrow, Goree Thelma Faith, Mark Gregory 378 Faith, Robin Diane 402 Faith, Virginia Lisa 402 Faler, Michael P. Fallahi, Amir Parvis M. Fallahi, Behrooz Moghimi Fallahi, Parviz Moghimi Faller, Andy 296 Faller, Daniel Brion 296, 379 Faller, David Alan Falwell, James Reuben Fancher, Michael Eugene Fancher, Suzanne Bealmear Fang, Che Hsin Farago, Ronald David 297, 402 Farajian, Mohammad E. Fard, Parviz Ghaderi Fardi, Majio Faries, Fithian 147-148 Farina, Robert 166 Fariss, Sandra Sue Click Farley, Andre R. 280-281 Farley, James Charles 389 Farley, Joni Lynn 402 Farley, Laura Ann Farley, Paul Kenneth Farley, Richard Smith Farmer, Kenneth Fred Jr. Farmer, Laura Rae Farmer, Mark Allan Farmer, Pamela Jo Farmer, Patricia Ann Farmer, Raymond Ellis 210 Farmer, Roger Dale Farnsley, Patrick William Farrington, Charmaine C. 214-215, 389 Farris, Amy Lisa Farris, Frank Farris, Jenny Sayle Farris, Lisa Sue 389 Farris, Nana Suzann Farris, William Joseph Fashion 42-49 Fath, Gregory James Fath, Tim 203 Fath, Thomas Guy, II 203 Fatheddin, Abolghassem 304, 350 Faulk, Gerard Jr. 319, 350 Faulk, Joyce Ann Mills Faulk, Thomas Grady Faulkner, Mary Angelene Fawc ett-Majors Farrah 64 Faxon, Mary Lynne 319 Faye, Sheikh 244 Feagin, Timothy Shawn 402 Fearheiley, Kevin Charles Fears, George Dale 379 Feather, John Robert Feeney, Susan Aspley Feese, Daniel Stephen Fehrmann, Paul Gordon Feibes, Erica Marie Feibes, Mark Henry Feingold, Alan Brad Feix, Jimmy 204-211, 237 Feland, Millicent Feland, Penelope 316, 402 Feldpausch, Michael Thomas Felts, Lavonna Lynn Felty, Rudy Dale 319 Fencing Club 296-297 Fennelly, Al 301 Fennelly, Sara Bernhardt Fentress, Dennis Britt Fenwick, Vickie Yvonne Ferguson, Jay Myron Ferguson, Lawrence Wayne 303 Ferguson, Martha Baker 307, 350 Ferguson, Michael Brent Ferguson, Michael Lynn Ferguson, Miriam McConnell 312, 379 Ferguson, Sharon Lynn Fernandez, Freddy Antonio Ferralasco, Nancy Alicia 43-44, 350 Ferrell, Rebecca Jean Ferrera, Lisa Maria Ferriell, Diane Marie 402 Ferriell, Laura Ann Ferry, Kathleen Ann Ferry, Larry Eugene 321 Ferry, Mary Martha S. 379 Field Services director 186-189 Field, Sharon Gale Sun(wiched) fans Fans of Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity cheer during prc imingsy contest of the 1977 Greek Week Tug- of-War competition. The AGRs placed third be- hind Kappa Sigma and Alpha Kappa Psi. Sigma Kappa, Phi Mu and Alpha Omicron Pi won the first three places in the sorority division. The event was held behind Pearce Ford Tower. — J. Burton Fields, Charmaine Renee Fields, Edwin Keith 300, 379 Fields, Kevin Eugene 402 Fields, Mary Anne Fields, Paul Bryan Fields, Robert Edsel 350 Fields, Ruth V Fields, Ted Raymond Fields, Vanessa Christina 265 Fife, Diane L. Langston Fife, Scott Noland 389 Figgs, Donald B Figgs, Shelia Maire 350 Figler, Karen Diane 389 Fine Arts Festival 94-97 Fine Arts Festival coordinator 177 Finan, James William Finkbone, John Bryan Finley, Billy Daryl Finley, Jacqueline Sue Finley, Susie Alice Finn, Debbie 191 Finn, Eva Joyce Finn, Judy Diane Tucker Finn, Larry Finn, Timothy Lewis. 210 Finnegan, Kevin James Finnell, Susan N. 350 Fireline, Kathern Mae 389 Firkins, Nancy J. Crumb First week of school 16-21 First weekend home 24-25 Fischer, Andrew Philip 379 Fischer Brian Lawrence Fischer, Hedy Ellen Fischer, Jerry Logan Fischrupp, Jill Ann Fish, Jacqueline Rae Fishback, Valorie Gayle 389 Fisher, Anna Margaret Fisher, Carlton Donovan Fisher, Edward Nicholas 314, 389 Fisher, Jennifer Lee 126 Fisher, Lynne Taylor Fisher, Robin Celeste 254, 350 Fishman, Donald Lee Fister, Beverly Ann 389 Fister, Joseph Mark Fitzgerald, Margaret Stewa 325 Fitzpatrick, Charles E. Fitzpatrick, John B. Fitzpatrick, Katherine E. Flaherty, Patrick Thomas 389 Flanary, Kathy Jo 212, 214, 264 Flanders Lonna Arden Flanigan, Thomas Haynes 301 Flannery, Marilynn Godby 303 Flashback — Bicentennial Summer 34-35 Flashback — Campus in the Summer 32-33 Flashback — For the Record 236-237 Flashback — Greek Week 1976 30-31 Flashback — Men’s Spring Sports 1976 238-239 Flashback — Old Gym — Nostalgia 228- 229 Flashback — Women’s Spring Sports 1976 246-247 Flashpoints 110-113 Flautt, Lucille Oliver 379 Flautt, Margery Ezell Fleenor, Creed Ewing 389 Fleming, Carolyn 295 Fleming, John Douglas Flener, Donald Ray Flener, Oliver Thomas 277 Flener, Richard Fieldon Fletcher, Debbra Ann 321, 402 Fletcher, Eugenia 274 Fletcher, Janie M. Fletcher, Theresa Renee Fleury, Mary Beth Flight plan 383 Florence, Brenda Kay 350 Florence, Susan Antrim Flory, Cheryl Suzanne 402 Floyd, Barbara Mary 265, 379 Floyd, Donna Marie 350 Floyd, Glenn David Floyd, John Frederick Floyd, Sally Ann Floyd, William 168-171 Fluitt, Donald Lee Fly, Marilyn Elaine Flye, Cynthia Marie 389 Flynn, James 302 Fogarty, Jerry 272, 285 Fogarty, Mary Margaret 402 Fogarty, Pat 244 Fogg, Daisie Arene 350 Fogg, Mary Rebecca 122, 252 Foley, Vickie Lynne Follis, Marion Cuthbert Fondren, Rene Michelle Food 72-73 Food services director 137-138 Football 204-211 Forarty, Jerry 285 Ford, Bradley Scott 283 Ford, Gary Louis 389 Ford, Gerald 59-61, 110, 112 Ford, Gwendolyn Denise 389 Ford, Perri Lynn 402 Ford, Rebecca Jo 379 Ford, Reyburn Watson II Ford, Richard Scott Ford, Richard Alan Ford, Samuel Kurt Ford, William Kent Jr. Foreign Languages dept. 178 Foreign Languages dept head 178-179 Forensic Union 325 Forkner, Gayle Ann 265, 350 Forkner, Holly Rufus Formations of note 292-293 Formosa, Lisa Carolyn Forrest, Donald M. Jr. 423 Fabel, Carol Forrest, Donald Forshee, Buddy Ross Forshee, Pamela Kaye Forshee, Sandra Kay 379 Forshee, Shelia Jean 317, 402 Forst, Lee Henderson 281, 402 Fort, Kenneth Wayne Fort, Leslie Keith Fort, Patricia Gail 389 Fortran Language 241 167 Fost, Carolyn 152 Foster, Brent Borders Foster, Cheryl Lynn Foster, Coney Roger Foster, Douglas Lynn Foster, Elizabeth Deane Foster, Eugene Bennett Foster, Gary Alan Foster, James Michael 321, 402 Foster, Kathy Jan 379 Foster, Kathy Lynn Foster, Linda Dickson Foster, Patricia Ann Caulk Foster, Rachel 283 Foster, Randy Wayne Foster, Rebecca Cary 379 Foster, Reda M. 125 Foster, Richard Leland Foster, William Paul 350 Founder, Vickie Marie Fountain, Norma Lorena Fowler, Ann Charmane Fowler, Debra Jean 402 Fowler, Jo Ann Elizabeth Fowler, Joseph Earl 277, 379 Fowler, Joseph, Jr. 277 Fowler, Kristine Rose 389 Fowler, Richard Frank 301, 379 Fowler, Timothy Scott Fox, Bobbie Carol Fox, Charles Herbert Fox, Gary Day Fox, John Melvin Fox, Joyce Lee Stein Fox, Steven William Fox, Susan Marie 402 Fox, Susan Noraine 350 Fox, Tevesa Anne Fox, Theodore Claude III Fox, Vincent Depaul Fox, Wesley Eugene Jr. Fox, William Edward Jr. 350 Fox, William Wesley Fraebel, William Theodore 295, 301, 402 Fraley, Teresa Kay 100, 350 France, Doris Jean Francies, Anita Jo Francis, Jamie Marie 402 Francke, Charlie Fredrick 301, 379 Francom, Neal 313 Franey, Keith Patrick Franham, Mrs. Hec 225 Frank, David L. 309, 402 Frank, Margaret Jean Franke, Susan Rae 265, 350 Franklin, Cheryl Ann Franklin, Gerri Dene Franklin, Jan Elizabeth 307, 316, 350 Franklin, Michael Raymond Franklin, Tammy Lu Franklin, Theresa Lynn 402 Frantz, Theresa Kiyoko Franzell, Roger Dale Franzman, Cynthia Dawn Fraternities 276-285 Frazier, Beverly Jean 379 Frazier, Kerry Lee 277, 303, 379 Freas, George Wilson II Fredrick, Pat 40 Fredlake, Michele Ann 246-247 Fredricks, Linda Forbis 350 Freeland, Linda Jean 263, 350 Freeman, Allen Ray 379 Freeman, Billy Wayne Freeman, Bonita Faye Freeman, Christopher A. Freeman, Galen Harlen III Freeman, Julia Ann 402 Freeman, Keith David 379 Freeman, Sandra Kaye Freepartner, Susan Meyer Freer, Markley Melinda 402 Freibert, Sara Lynn 402 French, Donald Alexander 277, 379 French, Judith Carol 389 French, Linda Ann French, Patricia Eubank French, Robert Dennis 26: 261 French, William Gary Fresh 77, 80 Freshmen 396-416 Frew, John Andrew Frey, Carmen Della 319 Frey, Jeffrey Ray 389 Frey, Robert Ewing Fridy, Katherine Ruth Fritch, Michael David Fritzo, Jerri Ann Frizzell, David Brown Frizzell, Deborah K. 323 Froedge, Mark Wayne 402 Froedge, Rhetta Anne Frogge, Vicki Darlene 402 Frohlich, Mark Charles 203, 244 Frost, Janet Lynn Frost, Peggy Lynn 165, 379 Frost, Summer Jane Frum, David Lloyd Fry, Dennis Gene Fryar, Frank David Frye, David 92-93 Frye, Michael Duane 301 Frye, Patricia Kay Bailey Frymire, Bryan Ge orge Fuangaromya, Charus Fugate, Denny 221 Fugate, Michael Eugene 350 Fulkerson, Douglas Earl Fulkerson, Thomas Carroll 379 424 Forshee, Buddy Grimes, Byron Fulkerson, Tony Gerald 307, 319, 350 Fulks, Marjorie Ann 389 Fullenwider, Gracie Fay Fullenwider, Nancy May Fuller, Bryan Scott 269 Fuller, Cathy Yvonne 379 Fuller, Debra Jean 379 Fuller, Debra Yvonne 350 Fuller, Janet Carolyn 389 Fuller, Randall Craig Fuller, Sarah Sun 350 Fuller, Steven Joe 402 Fullerton, Michael Jay Fullerton, Robert Kelly Fulner, Steven George 323, 389 Fulton, Sidney Potter Jr. Fultz, Margaret Ann 390 Fuqua, Audrey Octavia Fuqua, Jackie Lawanda 390 Fuqua, James Keith Furkin, David Scott 390 Furlong, Timothy J. 295 Fuson, Susan Haywood Futch, Gary Michael 312 Futrell, Alvin Thelma 390 Gabbard, Donna Carol Gabbard, Leslie Earl Gabbard, Sandra Kay 350 Gabhart, Gary Wayne 325 Gadberry, Jerry Wendell 353 Gaddie, Shannon Crutcher Gaddis, Gerald Kendall Gaddy, David D. Gaddy, Felicia Gafford, Ricky Don Gaible, Jane Elizabeth 264 Gailbreath, Katherine D. Gaines, Craig Steven 283 Gaines, Donna Marie 267, 39C Gaines, Douglas Allen Gaines, Kim Perry 390 Gaines, Robert James Gaither, James Jay Gale, Dino Gale, Jack McGee III 277, 379 Galligan, Daniel Joseph 277 Galloway, Cheryl Ann 390 Galloway, Donna Glenn Galloway, Edwin Moore Galloway, Mary Elizabeth 402 Galloway, Melody 402 Galloway, Shirley Ann Galusha, Chonita Kaye 319, 350 Gamble, Catherleen 390 Gamble, Clarice 390 Gamble, Kathryn Gamble, Tara Teresa 267, 387 Gamblin, Linda Ann Gambrel, Thomas Roger Gamma Beta Phi 318-319 Gammel, Vicki Lynn 350 Gammons, Larry Wayne 303, 379 Gann, James Harvey Gann, James Larry Gann, Kenneth Lee Gann, William Edward Gantt, Michael Frank 350 Garbo, Greta Lynne 379 Garcia, Anna Christine A. Garcia, Marissa Aquino Gard, Cynthia Ann Gardner, Beverly Dean 379 Gardner, Jess Lewis III 257 Gardner, Mary Magdalene 379 Gardner, Michael Robert 210, 390 Gardner, Randall L. 278, 287 Gardner, Sherry Lee 402 Gardner, Stephen Edward Garell, Leslie Ann 267, 390 Garland, Robert Howard 390 Garman, Kathy Cheryl Garmon, Connie Garner Garmon, Gary Nelson 379 Garmon, Jimmy Kirk Garmon, Kevin Lane Garmon, Rebecca Lynn 379 Garmon, Roberta Sue 402 Garmon, Terrill Auburn 350 Garmon, Victoria Allen 379 Garmon, William Kenneth Garner, Alvin E. Garner, Andrew Todd Garner, Carolyn Jane 322-323, 351 Garner, Deborah Sue 315, 317, 379 Garner, James Darrell 301, 323 Garner, Laura Marie 390 Garner, Ricky Joe Garner, Twila Jeanette 156, 390 Garrard, Anna Denise 351 Garrenton, Arthur Elstner Garrett, Charles Phillip Garrett, Gordon Douglas 390 Garrett, John Raymond Garrett, Kenneth Daryl Garrett, Martha Gayle 319, 379 Garrett, Peggy Lou 122, 379 Garrett, Phillip Andrew 402 Garrett, Phyllis Rea Garrity, Stella Pauline H Garrod, Theodore Alan 232-233, 357 Garvin, Catherine E. 23, 263, 268, 402 Gary, Greg Leigh 239 Gary, Janet Renee 402 Gary, Lisa Jo Gaskey, Danny Ray Gaskey, James Arthur Gaskin, David Kent Gass, Claude Allen 351 Gates, Alan Louis Gates, Pat F 210 Gates, Robert Henry 282 Gatewood, Bobby Allen Jr. Gatewood, Lydia Mathews Gatliff, Jacqueline A. Gatti, Pamela Jean Gaus, Stanley Leon 402 Gauthier, Teresa Lu Gayles, Joyce Marie Gebhart, Thomas Hilleary Geha, Zafer H. Geidel, Henry Augustus Geiser, Paula Ann 402 Geisler, Dawn Michelle 402 Genet, William Ronald 351 Gensler, Linda Constance Gentry, Christy Ann Gentry, David Warren Gentry, Debora Kay 402 Gentry, Douglas Andrew 402 Gentry, Jacqueline Diane Gentry, James Fisk Jr. 390 Gentry, John Morris Gentry, Ralph Scott George, Donald Brent George, Linda McCool George, Theodore George, Trina Marie 351 Geralds, Karen Gay Gerhart, Philip Boulter Geringswald, Robert Joseph German Club 304-305 Gerrow, Philip Robert Gerstle, Amy Elizabeth Gerweck, Martyna Jayne 390 Gesiskie, John Ghahreman, Vahid 49 Gholson, Brenda Jean 319, 351 Gibbons, Mary Stribling Gibbs, James 186, 195 Gibson, Alan Bertram Gibson, Caren E. Bratcher 299 Gibson, David Paul 100, 103 Gibson, Debra June Gibson, Dee 129, 136, 227 Gibson, Dennis Leigh Gibson, Garry Lynn 351 Gibson, Kathy Skaggs Gibson, Lynne Kathryn 351, 405 Gibson, Nancy Carlene 402 Gibson, Robert Todd 210 Gibson, Ronald Neal Gibson, Sheila Louise 402 Gibson, Terry Owen Gibson, Timothy Allen 351 Gidcumb, Georgie Ann Gierl, David Charles Gieske, Bernard John Gilbert, Bess 54-55 Gilbert, Butch 210 Gilbert, Charles Catlett Gilbert, Charles Mitchell Gilbert, Glenda Brown Gilbert, Leslie Anne 390 Gilbert, Margaret Louise 402 Gilbert, Mary Ellen Gilbert, Patricia Lee 390 Gili, Frances Lynn Vinson Gilkey, Mark Wayne Gill, Carol Ann 390 Gill, Carrie Ann Gill, Daniel Lee Gill, Glen Norman Gill, Karen Sue 313, 379 Gill, Kenneth Wayne Gill, Timothy Ray Gillenwater, Margaret Ann 351 Gillespie, Sandra Mary Gilliam, Charlotte Bates 22, 263, 287, 299, 351 Gilliam, Emma Kay 351 Gilliam, Kenneth Doyle 390 Gilliland, Raymond Keith Gillis, John Robert II 287 Gillum, Charlotte 261, 263 Gillum, Jacqueline Marie 351 Gilmartin, Thomas Patrick 3, 390 Gilmer, Francene 263 Gilmer, Lydia Francene 287, 351 Gilmore, Ann Layton Gilmore, Donald Ray 252 Giorgio, Scrilda Irene 351 Gipson, Carnell Roger Gipson, Martin Edman Girvin, Bobbi Ann 402 Gittings, Peggy Sue 379 Givan, Glenn Aaron 351 Givan, Laura Lynn Given, Robert Kerry 4C_ Givens, Thomas Elry Givens, Vickie Mae 379 Gividen, Michael Allen Glantz, Robert Bruce Glaser, Vanessa Kathryn Glaspie, David Anthony 284, 402 Glass, Vicky Lynn Glasscock, Lynn Stewart 316, 390 Glasscock, Sheila Lynn 256-257, 379 Glasscock, Steven Mitchell 379 Glaysbrook, Cindy Ann 307, 390 Gleitz, Richard Albert 201, 379 Glidewell, Alecia Denise 390 Globensky, Mark Heinze 99, 106-107, 332-333 Glore, Anthony Dan 402 Glover, Paul Ira 402 Glover, Thomas Gregory 277 Glover, Threesae Diana 379 Gmeiner, Julie Marie 379 Goad, Dale Boyd 390 Goad, Daniel Gilbert 402 Goatley, Greg 289 Gobble, April Ruth 319, 379 Godbey, Duke Alexander Godbey, Mark Kevin 351 Godbey, Michael Ray Godbey, Nickey Verlis Godby, A. Fogle 168-171 Godby, Larry Joe Godby, Richard Allan Godfrey, Christine 319 Goodin, Stephen Jay Godfrey, Edward Wolf 402 Godfrey, Fredrick Titus 276 Godfrey, James Godfrey, John Dallas Jr. 390 Godke, Susan Janice 390 Goedde, Theresa Anne Goetz, Beth Ann Goetz, Richard Charles 384 Goetzinger, Herbert G. Jr. Goff, Elizabeth Stevens 214-215, 390 Goff, Florene S. Goff, Jacqueline Lynn 402 Goff, Mary Ethel 402 Goff, Tamara Rhea 390 Goheen, Kimberly Lynn 379 Going for four 310-311 Goins, Denis Paul Goins, Katherine Sue Gold, Ann Marie 263, 402 Gold, Monica H. 402 Goldassteh, Davood Goldberg, Jeffrey Goldberg, Karen Jane Golf 238-241 Gongloff, Carole Jean 351 Gongloff, William J. Jr. 351 Gonzales, Gilbert R. Gooch, Adrian Wallace Jr. 160, 301, 342-343, 351 Gooch, Marguerite Delaine 402 Gooch, Steven Wayne 402 Gooch, Thomas William Goodhue, Michael Ray Goodin, Mary Jane 402 Goodin, Terry Lynn Goodin, Terry Steven Goodknight, William Alan 277 Goodman, Karen Fay Goodman, Lavadia Martenia Goodman, Mark Keith Goodman, Michael Trent Goodman, Peggy W. 302 Goodman, Terry Lindsay Goodman, Thomas Dale 402 Goodner, Joe Larry 402 Goodrow, Sue Ann 379 Goodrum, Connie Jo. 402 Goodrum, Cynthia Ann 291, 390 Goodrum, Jim 142-143 Goodtime Gang 254-255 Goodwin, Barbara Jean 351 Goodwin, Betty Lou Bricka Goodwin, Brenda L. 402 Goodyear blimp 3 Goolsby, Jerry Lane Goolsby, Kerry Ross 291 Goolsby, Teresa Lynn Goolsby, Terry Lee 379 Gordon, Becky Lynn Gordon, Crystal 351 Gordon, David 53 Gordon, Diana Rene 390 Gordon, Sara Jane Gore, Deborah Jean 402 Gorham, Jerry Bruce Gorniak, Gary T. Gorrell, Beverly Louise Goss, Russell Theodore 277 Gosser, Danny D. Gosser, Linda Oliver Gossett,, Deborah Ann 390 Gossett, Lisa Ann Gossman, Karen Lee 83, 313, 351, 364-365 Gothard, Deborah Margaret 390 Gott, Carole Dean 402 Gott, Elizabeth Ann Gottschalk, Barry Lee Gottula, Lana Merties 301, 379 Gottula, Mark Laertes 323 Gourley, Tammy Dawn 402 Gouvas, Ernest Constantin Gover, John David 295, 390 Gover, Robert 277 Government dept. 152 Government dept. head 152 Gowdy, Garry Lee Gower, Cheryl Yvonne 402 Grace, Barry Wayne Grace, Louis Samuel Graduate College 196-197 Graduate College dean 196 Graduate Library Science Student Organization 295 Graduation Flashback and Update 124-125 Graf, Donald Ray 278 Graf, Robert Augustus 278 Gragg, Susan Park 351 Graham, Carlin Alman Graham, Connelly Lynn Graham, Diana Gail Graham, Jacky Leon 314 Graham, John Thomas Graham, Kerry Barton 402 Graham, Lawrence Paul Graham, Meloney Kay 390 Graham, Prentis Alfred Graham, Richard Vere 301 Graham, Sandra Faye 402 Graham, Sarah Miller Graham, Stephen Henry Graham, Teresa Faye Dukes 301, 35° Grainger, Jacqueline Ann Granacher, Mary Jane 323, 351 Grane, Ronald William Grant, Carolyn Diane 390 Grant, Cynthia Smith Grant, Fred Kenneth Grant, Kevin Woodson Grant, Vivian Jacqueline Grant, Zane 295 Grantham, Lindsley Allen 390 Grants and contract services director 142-143 Grantz, Lisa Ann 402 Grantz, Mary Ann Grasch, Cathy Jean Graven, Myron Duane 285 Graven, William Robert II 285 Graves, Gertie Staley Graves, John Philip Graves, Judy C. Ridge Graves, Julia Adele Graves, Kent L. 402 Gray, Arthur Paul Gray, Bryan William 210, 402 Gray, Doug 196 Gray, Elmer 196 Gray, James Edward Gray, Joseph Patrick 379 Gray, Julie Gray, Leon Louis Gray, Loris Faye Gray, Martilla Spring Gray, Mary Nita 370-371, 379 Gray, Michael Glenn 204-210 Gray, Mike 196 Gray, Nizida Sharon 390 Gray, Paul David Gray, Paul Leslie Gray, Peggy A. 351 Gray, Rich 196 Gray, Robert Winslow 118, 379 Gray, Susan Lloyd 379 Gray, Willie Ruth 402 Grayson, Alan Lee 379 Grayson, Anna Katherine 379 Greco, Anthony Michael Greek Week 288-289 Greek Week 1976 30-31 Greeley, Lynn 161 Green, Colleen Marie Green, Deborah Lynn 402 Green, Donna Jo Green, Donna Sue 402 Green, Jimmy 301 Green, Kathy Jean 390 Green, Kathy Jean Green, Laurie Elizabeth Green, Maria Annette 402 Green, Mark Allen Green, Mary Ann 351 Green, Michael Jimmy 243 Green, Nancy Marie 351 Green, Richard 7, 203, 216, 221, 244 Green River Readers 108-109 Green, Terry Lee Greene, Bernice F. 351 Greene, Bo 320 Greene, David Clifford Greene, James Kenneth 283 Greene, Marissa Lynn 38-39, 41, 280, 295, 379 Greene, Mark Allen 351 Greene, Robert Lee 351 Greene, William Douglas Greenfield, Myron Bernard 204-211 Greenhow, Karen Lee Greenlee, Douglas Paul 390 Greenlee, William 319 Greenway, Pamela Faith Greenway, Dwight David 379 Greenwell, Joseph Michael 319, 379 Greenwell, Judy Carol Greenwell, Laura Anne Greenwell, Mary Julia 390 Greenwell, Mary Melissa Greenwell, Virginia Greenwood, Joseph Gary Greer, Bethel Dale 323, 351 Greer, David Dickinson 324-325 Greer, Jerry Lynn Greer, Richard 193 Greer, William Jeffrey Gregorian, Leon 94 Gregory, Ann Elizabeth 390 Gregory, Beverly Ruth Gregory, Bradford Douglas 402 Gregory, David Myers Gregory, Gary Hugh 221 Gregory, Jimmie D. 351 Gregory, Lisa Marie 390 Gregory, Sandy K. Gregory, Terry David Greineisen, Dorothy Lynn Grenko, Ronald Trent 402 Greschel, George Bradley Gresh, Jacqueline Grey, Chester 173 Gribbin, Darla Ann 403 Gribbins, Jeffrey Brian Grice, Dorsey 192 Grider, Gayla Carol 390 Grider, James Bratton Grider, James Thomas Grider, Paula Darlene Grider, Rebecca Ann Grief, Terri Lee 390 Griese, Julie Ann Grieshaber, Joseph Anthony Griffin, Barry Neal Griffin, Deborah Penn 125 Griffin, Donna Jo Griffin, Frank 141, 239, 252 Griffin, Jeffrey Craig Griffin, Jo Ann Stryk Griffin, Lottie Kaye Griffin, Lou Faye Griffin, Margaret Anne 303, 342-343, 352 Griffin, Martha Ann 352 Griffin, Sheila Drake Griffin, Sylvin Mayford Griffin, Timothy Ray 282 Griffin, William Richards Griffing, Catherine Lynn 301 Griffith, Afina Maria 299 Griffith, Celeste Clare 379 Griffith, Larry Keith 284 Griffith, Sharon Marie 379 Griffiths, Paul Joseph Griggs, Donna Lynn 299, 390 Griggs, George Lewone 379 Griggs, Mary Frances 390 Grigsby, John Garton Jr. 403 Grimes, Byron Scott Grimes, Damon Arbed Grimes, Geoffrey Taylor Grimes, Pamela Darlene 390 Grimes, Steve Monroe Grimes, Trina Ann Grimm, Cynthia Leigh 352 Grimsley, Charles Dale 323, 352 Grimwood, Dedra R. 23, 403 Grinstead, Carlene Ann 403 Grinstead, Cathy Jo 379 Grinstead, Deborah Faye 390 Grise, Erlene Yvonne 379 Grish, Linda Gail 403 Grizzell, John Hickam 284 Grizzle, Dennis Dean Groce, Paula Kaye Groce, Ralph Douglas Grooms, Dwight Lane 379 Gross, Helene Meryl 390 Gross, Janice Marie Gross, Jim 297 Grosshuesch, Kendra Sue 267, 287 Grossman, Cathy Blue Grossman, Tod Groth, Nita Lynn Ground, Anita R. Bischof Ground, Nelda Shirlene Grove, Curtis Duane 281, 403 Grove, Elliott Rodgers Grove, James Elliott Jr. 282-283, 307, 309, 379 Grover, John David 295 Grover, Mark Erin Groves, Jeffery Glen Groves, Lisa Joye Grow, Bradford Lee Grown, Gary 243 Growth and Guidance in Children 175 Grubbs, J. Kirtley Grubbs, Karen Arlene 352 Grubbs, Shawn Lee 352 Gruccio, Kathy Lynn 267, 390 Gruden, Douglas Anthony 102 Gruesser, Dennis C. Gruesser, Robert Joseph Grumley, Linda Joann 352 Grundy, Anise Carol 352 Gruneisen, Therese Anne 403 Gruner, Susan Marie 352 Gueltzow, Philip John 282 Gueltzow, Thomas Mark 282 Guenther, Rebecca Alice Guffey, Alisa Harris 403 Guffey, Daryl Eugene 390 Guffey, Debra June Guinn, Carmen Miranda 267 Guinn, Kevin Clay 296, 390 Gulick, Cathy Lane 352 Gullett, Vicki Lynn 390 Gulley, John Orion Gumbel, Frederic Olin Gumm, Lisa Carol 403 Gun Club 296 Gunn, Paul Richard Gupton, Margarett Denise 247 Gustafson, Paul Lance 277 Guthrie, Patricia Lynn Guthrie, Ralphy Lane Guthrie, Vera 168-171 Guttschalk, Sherry Lynn 379 Guy, Chester Marshall 352 Guy, Deniese Guy, Jan Napier 352 Guy, Suzanne 390 Guyon, Rogerlynne Buchanon Gwaltney, Mildred 171 Gymnastics 214-215 Haack, Robert Alfred 272, 285 Haal, Linda Lou Littlejohn Haase, Scott Anthony 390 Habermehl, Eric Vonn 403 Habermehl, Rachel Leah 379 Habermehl, Robert Lynn Haberstroh, Laurie Ann Hack, Nancy Jane Hacker, Walter Pearl Hackett, Terrence Lee 242, 277, 287 Hackett, Veronica Ann Hackler, Mark Elam 232-233, 403 Hadden, Sidney Gene Haddox, Mickey D. 390 Haddox, Towanda Jo 403 Hadley, Burl Dane Hadley, Carvin W. Haffner, Deborah Lynn 403 Haffner, Helen Katherine 390 Hagan, Bobbie Kenneth Hagan, David Alan 307 Hagan, David E. 403 Hagan, Gerald Dennis Hagan, John Kenneth Hagan, Larry Roger Hagan, Mary Jude Hagan, Richard Alan 114, 379 Hagans, David Eugene 281 Hagans, Lewis Dean Hagans, Mark Alan Hagee, Virginia Lee Hagen, Debra Joan Hager, Eva Joyce Hagerman, Frank Turner 403 Hagerman, Henry Norris Jr. 379 Hagers, Jerry 299 Hagewood, Joseph Dallas Haggard, Juanelle Elaine Haile, Hascal 94 Hahn, Catherine Dukes Hahn, Lisa Tarleton 265, 268-269, 379 Haiduc, Mary Jane 390 Haile, Catherine Ann 263 Haile, Michael Andrew 283 Haines, Mark Opp Haines, Walter Grant 277 Haire, James Earl 210 Haire, Nute Edward 204-211, 379 Haj, Hossein Nejad G. Haji-Hossein-Nejad Abdolr Hakanson, Lance Halbritter, Deborah Lynn 390 Halcomb, Charlotte May 352 Halcomb, Cheryl Dean 300 Halcomb, Ginger 305 Halcomb, Larry Lee Hale, Charles Richard 297 Hale, David Bardin Hale, Elizabeth Anne 106 Hale, John Tully Hale, Kathryn Lee 267 Hale, Kevin Carlton Hale, Michael Thomas Hale, Ronald Scott Hale, Scott Lee 403 Hale, Terry Lee 101, 296, 390 Hale, Terry Wayne 101, 296, 403 Hale, Virgil 100 Hales, John Christopher Haley, Audrey Ann 403 Haley, Donald Keith Haley, Margaret Davis Haley, Patricia Karen Halicks, Jill Gott Halicks, John Martin Halicks, Richard August 128, 309 Hall, Annette 403 a Hall, Arthur 195 Hall, Barry Edward 379 Hall, Bennie Keith Hall, Carl Nelson Jr. Hall, Cindy Darlene 403 Hall, Commie J. Hendricks Hall, Daniel Robert 379 Hall, David Bryan Hall, Deborah McGuffey 302, 379 Hall, Debra Ann Hall, Eddie Dickson Hall, Francis Marion Hall, Harriet A. Hall, John Daniel 210, 314 Hall, Joni Lynn 313 Hall, Leslie Ann 265 Hall, Lisa 44 Hall, Marcia Nunn 172, 403 Hall, Reba Ann 313, 390 Hall, Ricky Newman Hall, Sharon Kaye 403 Hall, Shirley A. Park Hall, Susan Christine Hall, Tracy A. Hall, Veronica Lynn Hall, Wesley Menard 210 Hall, William Petrie Halleron, Rockford Lee Halley, Judith Kay Ham, John William 403 Hamilton, Dennis Dean 403 Hamilton, Harry Earl III 291, 320 Hamilton, Janice Sue Hamilton, Melany Ann 352 Hamilton, Nancy Lee Hamilton, Ronald Allen 314, 379 Hamilton, Stephanie Jan Hamilton, William Lang 284, 287 Hamilton, William Richard Hamlin, Stephen Fred Hamm, Albert Vance 352 Hamm, Shirley Neal 379 Hamm, Stephanie Lynn 313 Hammack, Sally Lou 263, 390 Hammer, Donna Jo 390 Hammer, Lisa Beth Hammer, Lynne Marrs Hammer, Michael Ray Hammer, Timothy Don 313, 403 Hammock, Donna Marie 379 Hammond, John William 322, 352 Hammond, Rita Gail Hammond, Thomas Blanford 277, 287, 390 Hammonds, Valerie Jo Hamon, Tony Glen Hampsonstall, Pete 255 Hampton, Carolyn Batson Hampton, Corlos Dewaine Hampton, Ronald Lee Hampton, Sandra Nell Hamric, William Love Hancock, Carl Ray 379 Hancock, Carlene Jo 403 Hancock, Deborah Faye 403 Hancock, Grant Lee Hancock, James Daryl 289, 390 Hancock, Kathleen Henri 404 Hancock, Kenneth Walls Hancock, Richard Allison 404 Hancock, Roger M. Hand, James Michael 379 Handcock, Ray 261 Handley, Carolyn Elaine 404 Handley, Lynnetta Denise Handy, Riley 141-142 Hanging of the Green 64 Haneline, Karen Ann Hanes, Charles Leland Hanes, Laura Taylor 352 Hanking, Karen Elaine 404 Hankins, Paul Mark Hankins, Peggy Ann Hankla, Mel Stewart 296 Hanna, Jimmy Keith Hanna, Richard Bell 352 Hanna, William Morton 98, 100-101, 107, 324, 390 Hannon, Michael John Hansen, Susan Marie Hanses, Robert Joseph Jr. Hanson, Mark Stephen Harbin, Dianna 313 Harbin, Henry Dwight II 313 Harbin, Mark Dewayne Harbison, Larry Wayne 261, 379 Harbolt, Ricky Lyn Hardcastle, Mark Stephen Hardcastle, Sherri Lynn 404 Hardesty, Charlene 265, 269 Hardesty, Linda Carol 352 Hardesty, Tracey Jane 267, 404 Hardiman, William Robert Hardin, Charles Edward Jr. 301 Hardin, Charlotte Marie Hardin, Danny H. Hardin, Deborah Hamilton Hardin, Henry 145-146 Hardin, Lonnie Lee 210, 390 Hardin Planetarium 167 Hardin, Rita Ann 404 Hardin, Robert Franklin 242-243, 301 Hardin, Tamara Leigh 404 Harding, Douglas Gaines Hardison, Janet Kathleen 404 Hardison, Joan Ray 264-265 Hardwick, Lisa Christy Hardy, Louise Crain Hardy, Mark Fletcher Hargis, Deborah Faye 323, 404 Hargis, Rinda Darlene 379 Hargis, Teresa Lynn 44, 265, 404 Hargrove, James Earl 284, 404 Harkins, Wendy Leigh Harl, Vickie Elaine Harlan, Donald Ray Harlin, Karen Hope 106-107, 404 Harlow, David Mark 317, 318 Harlow, Deborah Kaye Harlow, Glenda Faye 404 Harlow, Sheila Ann 21, 295, 379 Harlow, Teresa Jean Harmon, Harold Eugene Harmon, John Frank 352 Harned, Robert Taylor Harp, David Mark Harp, Jerico 80 Harp, Nancy Conard Harpe, Ronald D. Harpe, Sarah Elizabeth Harper, Betty Sue Harper, Bobby Stephen 379 Harper, Edward Herman 404 Harper, Larry Madell 390 Harper, Milburn Lee 4 Harper, Patricia Faye 263, 352 Harper, Robert Estill Harpool, Cheryl E. 404 Harpool, Tyrone M. Harpool, William Richard Harpring, Mary Beth Marie Harrell, Roger Lee 379 Harrell, Traci Ann Harrelson, William Matthew 390 Harrington, Timothy Drew Harris, Bambi Jo 299, 379 Harris, Barry Keith 404 Harris, Betty Kay 352 Harris, Betty Wise 379 Harris, Billy Eugene 404 Harris, Brent Morris 307, 390 Harris, Cliva Walton Jr. Harris, Danny Lee 314, 352 Harris, David Taft Harris, Dawn Mistelle Harris, Deborah Katherine Harris, Deborah Lynne Harris, Fred Leland Harris, Frederick Lee 404 Harris, Gerald Wayne 379 Harris, Gerry Lee 404 Harris, Helen 371 Harris, James David 325 Harris, James Michael 379 Harris, James Paul Harris, Janice Hite Harris, Janice Juanita 404 Harris, Jennifer Ann 379 Harris, John Bernard 404 Harris, John David 323, 352 Harris, Joseph Raymond Jr. 404 Harris, Kenneth Earl Harris, Le Rae Anita 404 Harris, Martine Renea Harris, Pamela Diane 404 Harris, Priscilla Gayle 116, 247, 390 Harris, Robert Kenton 285 Harris, Russell Brian 390 Harris, Sheila Lauren 295 Harris, Tanyita 116 Harris, Terrill Wayne 324, 352 Harris, Terry Lee 97 Harris, Thomas Richard Harris, Vernon Lee Jr. Harris, Willa Mae 265 Harris, Yvonne Delores Harrison, Arcenta Van Harrison, Beverly Kay Harrison, Carol Elaine 108-109 Harrison, Danny Lee Harrison, David Ford 404 Harrison, Elwood 313 Harrison, Helen Marie 404 Harrison, Jan Smith Harrison, Joel Edwin Harrison, Judith Marshall 108, 343, 352 Harrison, Kenneth Wayne 261, 353 Harrison, Korlin Thomas 353 Harrison, Laura Ellen 404 Harrison, Marguerite E. Harrison, Peggy Sue 404 Harrison, Sheila Ann 379 Harrison, Thomas McKinley 404 Harrison, Van 404 Harrod, Frances Ann 379 Harryman, David Eugene Harryman, Judy Lynn Harston, Terri Franklin 390 Hart, Barbara Sweeney Hart, Loren Stephen 321 Hart, Vicki Diann Hart, Ward Sims 353 Hart, William Sinclaire Hartford, Sherry Lynn 390 Hartley, Wendell Rogers Hartman, Carol Ann 379 Hartman, David 301 Hartnett, Judy Lynn 390 Hartnett, Karen Ann Hartnett, Michael Steven 379 Hartney, Cindy Ann Hartshorne, Robert Harold Hartwein, Michael William 353 Hartzog, Jefferson Gordon Harvell, Herbert 321 Harvey, Aaron Charles III Harvey, Debbie Diane Harvey, Mark Harrison 301 Harvey, Robert Clifton 379 Harvey, Terry 353 Harwood, Jonathan Robbie Harwood, Judith Florence Harwood, Orin Lois Haselwood, William Steven Hash, Rita Dean Haskell, Marjorie Jane Haskins, Clem 221, 227, 236 Haskins, Jeffrey Arthur Haskins, Joyce Ann 390 Hassett, Timothy Michael Hassler, Eric Gene Hastie, Jack Eric 282, 353 Hatch, Mark Emmett 378-379, 390 Hatcher, Deborah Lee Hatcher, Paul 141, 304-305 Hatcher, Paul Graham Hatchett, Kenneth Lee Hatchett, Terri Lynn 404 Hatfield, Angela 390 Hatfield, Barbara Jean 390 Hatfield, Donna Marie 390 Hatfield, Janice Hatfield, Karen Ann Hatfield, Margaret Mary 379 Hatfield, Phyllis Franklin Hatler, Peggy Ann 404 Hauck, Robert Lee Jr. Haugh, Patrick William Haughian, Dennis Clarke Haughian, Shane 59 Haven, Marsha Ann 404 Haven, William Charles Hawes, David Wesley 404 Hawes, Shirley Jean 404 Hawkins, Beulah Gail 353 Hawkins, Ellen Anne 379 Hawkins, Janet Sue 379 Hawkins, Marilyn Hawkins, Pamela Kay 267, 353, 379 Hawkins, Rebecca Sue Hawkins, Sherry Leigh Hawkins, Vanissa Mechelle Hawley, Lee Ann Hawley, Thomas Randall 405 Hawn, Pamela Sue 22 Hawn, Robert Meredith 285 Haworth, Elizabeth Nellie Haworth, Sandra Louise 379 Hay, Archie Marion Hay, Erna Lee 390 Haycraft, Launita June Hayden, Alfred Jr. 210 Hayden, Carol Ann 353 Hayden, Cecilia M. Hayden, Christopher Joseph Hayden, Clenton Lee Hayden, Delbert 169 Heyden, Ellen 175 Hayden, Joseph Louis 405 Hayden, Joseph Maurice Hayden, Karen Marie 353 Hayden, Patricia ann 353 Hayden, Reginald Amont 204-211 Hayden, Richard Edward Jr. Haydon, Janet Ruth Hayes, Barbara Ann 390 Hayes, Cheryl Smith Hayes, Francis Martin Jr. Hayes, Gary Lee 353 Hayes, Gayle Elaine Hayes, Michael Anthony 209-210, 379 Hayes, N. Faye Hayes, Paul Barry Hayes, Paul Dale Hayes, Randolph Keith 353 Hayes, Raymond Paul Jr. Hayes, Russell Morgan 405 Hayes, Thomas Vernon Jr. 281, 287, 379 Haynes, Daniel Phillip 380 Haynes, David Mark 405 Haynes, Doris Jean Haynes, Forest Donnell 321, 405 Haynes, Georgette Tilly Haynes, James Charles 278, 380 Haynes, John Arthur Haynes, Susan Leigh 405 Haynes, Susanne 314, 353 Hays, Charles 154-155, 158 Hays, Dean Lorning Hays, Emily Ruth Hays, Joseph Stephen Hays, Mary Edith 254, 353 Hays, Michael Smith Hays, Paul Taylor Hays, Richard Keith Hays, Timothy James 390 Hazel, William Stanley Hazelip, David Edwin Hazelwood, Cherie Lynn Hazelwood, Jeffrey Brent Hazelwood, Nancy Thomason 317 Head, Bryon Keith Head, Carol Loretta Head, Lonnie Keith 277, 390 Head, Mary Judith 390 Head, William Franklin Heading in the other direction 122-123 Health and Safety dept. 168-171 Health and Safety dept. head 168-171 Health Services director 142-143 Healy, Richard David Heater, Hugh Burton 12, 405 Heater, Ronald Louis 320 Heath, Anthony Leon 210 Heath, Deborra Sue 354 Heath, Scottie Edwin 405 Heavenly questions about childish ways 192 Hebel, Julie Starr 390 Hebert, Myrna 252, 254-255 Heckman, Marcia Kay 263, 354 Heckman, Sharon Marie Heddens, Kimber James Jr. Hedger, William Robert 3, 203, 303, 354 Hedges, Henry Logsdon III Hedges, Keith William 233 Hedges, Lily B. Hedges, Steven Michael Hefferman, Peter 141 Heffington, Dinah Darlene 354 Heffington, Lawrence Evans Heffner, James Arthur Hefner, Robin Renee 380 Hegen, Edmund 188 Heichelbech, Bruce Martin “Heidi” 106 Heighter, Walter R. 354 Hein, Vicki Ann 405 Heines, Diane Marie 322, 380 Heintzman, Mark Edward 405 Heinze, John William Heinze, Thomas Edward Heise, Diane Debra Heisley, Holly Jan Heize, Tom 233 Hek, Deborah Darnelle 380 Held, Sam 303, 307 Held, Suzanne Marie Heldman, James 178 Heldman, Julie 178 Heldman, Nancy 178 Hellar, Gregory John Hellar, Roger 203 Helm, Cathy Louise 354 Helm, Christopher Allan 281 Helm, Diana Gaye 405 Helm, Gary Lee Helm, Robert Newton 405 Helm, Steven Duane Helmer, Albert James Jr. Helsley, Sandra Jean 9, 405 “Helter Skelter” 93 Hemmen, Diane Cecilia 321, 405 Hemmen, Robert William 322, 380 Hemmer, Christina Cae 254, 265, 269, 380 Hemmers, Margaret 19 Hempenstall, Peter George 277 Hench, Charles David 277 Hendershot, Philip Mark Hendershot, Shirley Ann Henderson, Donna Kaye 390 Henderson, Eugene Ray 120 Henderson, Kenneth Russell 380 Henderson, Marilyn Jo 295 Henderson, Mark Jeffrey 405 Henderson, Pamela Kaye 390 Henderson, Yvonne Lee 390 Hendon, Glenn Alan Hendrick, Charlotte Faye Hendrick, Larry Morton Hendrick, Penny Lynn Hendrick, Sheila Faye 390 Hendricks, James Martin Hendricks, Kenneth Austin Hendricks, Michael Dee Hendricks, Vickie Hoagland Hendrickson, Rusty M. Hendrickson, Scott Sadler 299, 380 Hennecke, Matthew Justus 354 Hennen, John Carlton Jr. Henney, Joni Kathreene Henning, Debora Kay Henning, Michael John Henninger, Pamela Wilson Henon, Kenneth Joseph Henry, Cassandra Lynn 263, 283, 354 Henry, Charles Darrell 314, 354 Henry, David Wayne Henry, Marilyn Kaye Henry, Phillip Nathan Henry, Philip Wayne Henry, Robert Alton Henry, Robert Lyle Henry, Steve 307 Henry, Susan Elizabeth 390 Henry, William Barry 210 Henshaw, Leslie Ann 405 Hensley, Michael Ray 354 Henson, John Michael Henson, Roy Glen Hepp, Mary Jan 308 Heppler, Susan Lynn 354 Herald, Kimlin Sue 390 Herbert, Stephen H. Herde, Mary Beatrice Heritage in the Spotlight 274-275 Hermann, Mary Jo 265, 354 Hermanski, John Gerard Herndon, Katherine Ann 354 Herndon, Kevin Woodson Herndon, Owen Kenneth Herndon, Rallin Clarence 102, 324 Herndon, Roland Charles 99 Herner, Wayne Gale 230 Herod, Walter Allen 210 Herrick, Robert Bradley 390 Herriford, Pamela Moody Herrington, Debra Anne Herrmann, Laurie Jean Herrmann, Mark 284 Herrmann, Robert Peter Herrmann, Sharon Jean Herron, Helen Travis Herron, Pamela 101-102 Hershey, David Michael Hershey, Jane Elizabeth 323, 390 Hertelendy, Deborah Lynn 269, 405 425 Grimes, Damon Hertelendy, Deborah Hess, Harlan John Hess, Janine Ferne 390 Hess, Ronald Keith 99, 102 Hessel, Del 200-203, 212-213 Hester, Cary E Hester, Geraldine Lynn 405 Hester Matthew William 283 Hester, Mendle Ray Hester, Sandra Arlene 254, 267, 273, 354 Hewlett, Bonney Kay 380 Heyduck, Cheryl Diane 390 Heyduck, Tracie Ladonne 405 Hibbett, Ann Lester 380 Hibbs, George Perry Hickey, Laurie Jean Hickmon, Patsy E. Hicks, Charlesetta 356 Hicks, Jack Jefferson Hicks, James Willard Jr. Hicks, Joan Annette Hicks, Kevin Ray 278 Hicks, Melody Joy 319, 356 426 Hess, Harlan Hobson, Taffye Hicks, Robert Olin Hicks, Stephen Lynn 284 Hicks, Teresa Lynn Hidder, Thomas Lynn Hieronymus, Charles Steven Hieronymus, Mary Vaughn Hiesterman, Georgia Lynn 306-307, 356 Higdon, John Caleb Jr. Higgason, Jill Ann 405 Higginbotham, Darrell Higginbotham, Donna Jean 405 Higgins, Dan Bedster 300-301, 356 Higgins, Katherine Ann Higgins, Tom 238 Higginson, Jama Carole 319, 356 Higgs, Rickie Lee High, Rhonda Lou 405 Highland, James 307 Hight, Bradley William Hightower, Deborah Sue Hightower, Janice Louise 405 Hightower, Sue Ann 356 Hightower, Teresa Lynn 264 Hildebrandt, Kevin Glenn Hildreth, Cheryl Lyn Hiler, Charlotte Ann 356, 461 Hiles, Jerry Wayne Hill, Anthony Clem Hill, Bernita Dean 405 Hill, Brian Kent Hill, Charles Edward Hill, Clyde Russell Hill, James Eddie 301 Hill, Janis Lynette 295 Hill, Josh 210 Hill, Karen Gene Hill, Karen Rea 405 Hill, Kenneth Wendell 405 Hill, Larry K. Hill, Lowell II Hill, Michael Franklin 356 Hill, Nate 117 Hill, Tamara Kay Hill, Theresa Ellen 405 ee Pe oe Hill, William Karl Hilley, Vickie Diane Hilliard, Deborah Moore Hilliard, James Robert 285 Hilltopper Basketball camp 32 Hilton, Catherine Claire 286 Hilton, Luther Ray Hilton, Marian Lea Hilton, Steven Roy 287 Himes, Harrietta 405 Hina, Laurie Lynn Hinders, Catherine Ann Hines, Gregory Scott Hines, James Louis Jr. 57, 278, 356 Hines, Jerome 96 Hines, Michele Leanne 405 Hines, Robert Michael Hines, Thomas Edward Hines, W. Kirk 405 Hines, William Edgar Jr. Hinkle, Susan Jones 356 Hinkley, Sandra 405 a seenathne gies pete tan NAO Ae et te ae as, 2. BP oe’ Es 3 : Atala: at amine ii + Rape oo aes Aan OEE ra Ae ns Ba eT it. in A Ale ani Phe Hinton, Henry Lester Hinton, Susan Lugene 391 Hinton, Vickie Renae 391 Hirst, Elizabeth Anne Hirst, Sarah Lynn History dept. 177 History dept. head 177 Hite, Robert Allan Hiten, Mary Jean S. Hix, Donna M. 380 Hoagland, Sharon Lynn Hoard, Larry Lee Hobb, Julie Anne Hobbs, Sharon Kay 405 Hobbs, Wayne 179 Hobdy, Ricky Dale 64, 380 Hobson, Charles Jeffrey Hobson, Debra Kay 322, 405 Hobson, Kenny Ray Hobson, Randall William Hobson, Robert Bruce Hobson, Taffye Bernice 119, 405 Hoch, Catherine Melinda 391 Hocker, Greg Scott 380 Hocker, Jeffery Stuart 380 Hocker, William A. Hodapp, Jane Lynn 405 Hodges, James Harrison Hodges, Judy Melisa 313, 405 Hodges, Kirkman Edward 380 Hodges, Lea Ann Hodges, Marcella Smith Hodges, Melinda West 267, 270 Hodges, Pamela Sue 405 Hodskins, James Paul Hoegh, Kimon S. Hoffman, Debra Ann 305 Hoffman, Debra Faye 305 Hoffman, Michael Philip Hoffman, Richard Kevin Hoffman, Teresa M. Hoffman, Wayne 162-163, 197 Hogan, Carolyn Logan Hogan, Elizabeth Sharon Hogan, Joseph Robert Hogan, Lenetta Lacaden Hogg, Edward Hiram 287, 380 Hogg, Karen Lynn Hoggard, David Eugene Hogue, William C. Hohman, Patrick Joseph 307, 391 Hoke, Dorothy Lee Holbrook, Diane Elizabeth 405 Holcomb, Ginger Katherine 315, 319, 356 Holden, Dan Oliver 102, 297, 325, 356 Holden, Jo Ann 324 Holden, Nancy Ann 391 Holder, Donna Sue 391 Holder, John Bryant Holder, John Hugh Holder, Philip Hill Holder, Rose Marie Holder, Wanda Borders Holderfield, Robert Lee Holec, Dale Thomas 233, 380 Holeman, Debby June Holeman, Janet Rolene 267 Holl, Christopher Bart 299 Holl, Colleen Rae 380 Holland, Brion Edward 278, 287, 356 Holland, Gregory Leon _ Holland, James Henry II 295, 304-305, 356 Holland, Jeffery Pack Holland, John William Holland, Larry Dale 405 Holland, Philip George 284, 391 Holland, Sandy Irene Holland, Theresa Kim Hollander, Charles Joseph Hollenbeck, Neil Andrew Hollerman, Ellis Franklin 210, 356 Holley, Jean Anderson Holley, Sharon K. Holliday, Anne Marie Holliday, Phillip Riley Hollis, Steven Hanford Holloman, Wayne Milford 210, 297 Hollon, Larry Maurice Holloway, Russell 244 Hollowell, Brenda Carol Hollowell, Cynthia Ann 319, 380 Holman, C harles William Holman, Connie Lee 310, 391 Holman, Nancy Lee 263, 303, 391 Holman, Nicholette Holmes, Carole Dawn 299, 356 Holmes, Deborah Jane 305 Holmes, Deborah Lynn 305 Holmes, Laurence Hasford Holmes, Lois Lynn 224-225, 254 Holmes, Mark Walker Holmes, Richard Gene Holmes, Sharon Lynn 356 Holmgren, Thomas James Holsclaw, Brent Austin Holsclaw, David T. Holsclaw, Jerry Michael Holsclaw, Robert 391 Holt, Allyson Margaret 263 Holt, David Mark 405 Holt, Linda Jean 263 Holt, Lonnie Stephen Holton, Charles Brent Holton, William Brian Holton, William Burroughs Holway, Victoria 296 Holy, Norman 166 Holyoke, Karen Louise 391 Holzknecht, Anna Ruth Home Economics and Family Living dept. 168-171 Home Economics and Family Living dept. head 168-171 Home Sweet Home 260-261 Homecoming 38-41 Homecoming bonfire 439 Homecoming parade 40 Homecoming queen 38-39, 41 Honaker, Debbie Ann 356 Honaker, Harry Michael Honaker, Pamela Jean 405 A toothful tug It’s canine against human as Thor and Pegi Manz, a sophomore agriculture major from Media, Penn., — H. Sinclair major from Beaver lay tug-of-war outside the College of Education uilding. Jodie Dougherty, a freshman agriculture am, enjoys the competition. 427 Hoch, Catherine Honaker, Pamela Honor, Kimberly 263 Hood, Charles Alan Hood, Cindy Loraine Hood, Donald Ray Jr. 317, 318, 405 Hood, Dwayne Keith 99, 101, 107, 299, 321, 324 Hood, Gerald Lynn Hood, Jeanine Rae Hood, Jeffrey Alan Hood, Keith Lancaster Hood, Kim Lee Hood, Lonna Harlow Hood, Lydia Dell Hood, Mary Elizabeth 405 Hooey, John Timothy Hooks, Charles Elliott 114, 380 Hooks, Paul Anthony 405 Hooks, Stephen Carter 282, 356 Hooks, Steven Lester 282 Hooper, Stephen Ray Hope, Bill 210 Hope, Richard Hopgood, John Keith 277 Hopkins, Curtis Lynn Hopkins, Richard John C. 237-238, 244- 245 Hopper, Cheryl Ann Hopper, Donald Wayne Hopper, Jeffrey Garvis Hopper, John Houston 356 Hoppin, Jane Dixon Hopwood, Cynthia 391 Hord, Charles Richard 277, 301, 343, 356 Hormuth, Janice Diane 267, 391 Hornback, Ted 140, 212, 236, 238 Hornbeck, Thomas Earl 277, 356 Horne, Chet Prather 210 Horne, Prudence Ward Horner, Eva Catherine 318, 380 Horner, Lisa Ann Horner, Steven Carl 405 Hornung, Rose Mary Horsley, Marjorie Ann 265, 356 Hortin, Laura Ann 306, 405 Horton, Jacqueline Sue Horton, Janna Leigh 405 Hosch, Ervin Russell Hosek, Valerie Joan Hoskins, Ronald Charles 309 Hosmer, Adele Gleaves 213-215 Hosmer, Charles Donald 356 Hostettler, Roger Alan Hottell, Deborah A. Brown 356 Hottell, Dennis William Hottinger, Gary Lee 302 Houchens, Patricia Carol Houchens, Robbie Leanne Houchin, Donald Nelson Houchin, Gale Michael Houchin, Lloyd Richard Houchin, Mary Ann Houchins, Cherry Patrice Houchins, Debbie 257 Houchins, Earl Jeffrey Houchins, Howard Richard Houck, Judith Britt Houck, Marcia Diane Hough, Brenda Dawn 312, 405 Hough, Pat 210 Houk, David Clinton Hourigan, Jon 168 Hourigan, Leah 168 Hourigan, Scott 168 Hourigan, William 168 House, Ernie 211 House, Jeff 136 House, Ronald 243 House, Stephen 135-136 Houser, Gary Andrew 277 Houser, Kimberly Jeanne Housing director 137-138 Houston, Barbara Morris 405 Houston, Gary Douglas 405 Houze, Elizabeth Ann 263 Hovekamp, Vicki Lee Lyles 356 Howard, Bryan Keith 291, 295 Howard, Colleen Denise 380 Howard, Connie Lee Howard, Cynthia Lee 316, 380 Howard, Danny Joe 405 Howard, David Marion Howard, Donna Kaye 356 Howard, Dorothy Anne 100, 102, 107, 325 Howard, Felicia Gail 405 Howard, George David Howard, Glenda Gay Howard, Gregory 21, 380 Howard, James Edward 305 Howard, James Kirk 305 Howard, Jane Gill Howard, Janice Marie 356 Howard, Jerry Nelson 305, 320-321 Howard, Karen Beth 35, 391 Howard, Karen Marie Howard, Kimberly Gay 391 Howard, Larry 33, 149 Howard, Larry D. Howard, Lawrence Robert 391 Howard, Linda Gail 223, 225, 380 Howard, Michael Gene 284, 391 Howard, Michael L. 284 Howard, Mike William 284 Howard, Pam Ann Howard, Patricia Rose Howard, Rita Jo. Howard, Ronald Howard, Shirl Ann 319, 356 Howard, Stephen Oneil Howard, William Thomas Howe, Margaret 181, 304 Howe, Vicky 267 Howell, Beverly Ann Howell, David Anderson Howell, Karen Elizabeth Howell, Kellye Jill Howell, Lea Ann 391 Howell, Rebecca Susan 265, 318, 391 Howell, Sydney Williams 428 Honor, Kimberly International Student Howell, Vickie Lynn 301, 356 Howells, Ann Caroline 356 Howerton, Jeffrey Scott 61, 126, 302, 391 Howlett, Dean Q. Howlett, Linda Welch Howlett, Lisa J. 391 Howlett, Marilyn Gayle 313, 323, 405 Howton, Michael Riley 405 Hoyt, Evelyn S. Pearl Hoyt, Madrene Rene Hrycyk, Bryan Martin 356 Hubbard, Basil Ray Hubbard, Dianna Lynn 405 Hubbard, Grover Cleveland Hubbard, McKinley Jr. Hubbard, Michael Wayne Hubbard, Penny Lee 380 Hubbuch, Patricia Marie Hubbuch, Sebastian 261, 301, 343 Huber, Kim Maria Huber, Michael Louis Hudak, Susan Marie 405 Huddleston, Charles Alan Huddleston, Charles Ray Huddleston, Floyd Douglas 391 Huddleston, Gloria Lee Day 380 Hudgens, Lois Jean 380 Hudgens, Rena Nell 380 Hudnall, Gregory Owen 391 Hudnall, Mernie 300 Hudson, Andrew Jackson Jr. Hudson, Brian Keith 391 Hudson, James Bradley Hudson, James Edward Hudson, Janet Lee 380 Hudson, Janice Camille Hudson, John Hall Hudson, Paul David Huebschman, Jon Clark Huey, Johnnie Katherine 43, 45, 47, 263, 287 Huff, Danny Gayle Huff, Rhonda Carol 391 Huff, Shari Maxine Huff, Terri Lynn 405 Huff, Wendy Ann Huffines, Billy Wayne 283, 405 Huffman, Clyde Lindel 309 Huffman, Linda Sandmann Huffman, Michael Wayne Hufnagel, Keith E. 277 Hug, Barbara Hugg, Debra Fay Huggins, Jerre Treece Huggins, Nathan Wallis 204-211 Hugh, Burton 291 Hughart, John Kevin 283, 405 Hughes, Carol 226 Hughes, David G. 405 Hughes, David Guthrie Hughes, Deborah Darlene Hughes, Elandon Dailey 391 Hughes, Frank David 242-243 Hughes, Gary Kent Hughes, Gary Robert Hughes, Joseph Michael 405 Hughes, Kelly Lynn 263, 405 Hughes, Kenneth Lee Hughes, Lloyd Darrell Hughes, Mary Janace 380 Hughes, Norman Earl 380 Hughes, Robert Steven 388 Hughes, Ruthanne White Hughes, Tom 129 Hughes, William Allen 356 Huguelet, Guy Alexander Hulette, Steve Hunt Hullett, Mark Wayne Hullett, Robert C. Hulling, William A. Hulsman, Mark Francis Humbert, Patricia Marie Humble, James Francis Humble, Stephen Carnes Hume, Catherine Lynn Hume, Kimberly Ann Humes, Karen Ruth Humes, Melinda Lee Humes, Ronald Dale Hummer, Irby Bradford 321 Hummer, Robert Wilson 321 Humpert, Jon Thad Humphrey, Brian 314 Humphrey, Bridget Elayne 306 Humphrey, Glyn Wilson Humphrey, Karen Lee 405 Humphrey, Mary Alice Humphrey, Nancy Lea Humphrey, Randy C. Humphreys, Rickey Taylor Humphries, Kenneth Wayne 343, 357 Humphries, Robert Glen Humphries, Ruth Ann 305, 380 Humphries, William Andrew Hun, Bobby 285 Hundley, David Wayne 405 Hundley, Susan Beth 405 Hundley, Susan Esther 357 Hunley, Jennifer L. Strange 357 Hunley, John Russell 391 Hunley, Larry Lee Hunsaker, Candice Lynn 263, 271, 380 Hunt, Barbara Helen 405 Hunt, Clara Ann Dawson Hunt, Howard Wayne 210 Hunt, James Frederick 405 Hunt, Joe Northern Jr. Hunt, Meggi Jane Burden Hunt, Rebecca Dawn 405 Hunt, Ruth Anne 391 Hunt, Samuel Clay 295 Hunt, Sue 295 Hunt, Valerie Ann 322, 391 Hunter, Bobby A. 380 Hunter, Carleton Brent Hunter, David Alexander Hunter, Greg Bryan 277 Hunter, Kathv Ann 391 Hunter Hunter Hunter, Hunter, , Kevin Allen , Matthew Todd 405 , Ricky Lee 282 , Terri 319, 357 Huntley, Bruce R. Hunton, Teresa Diane 405 Hurd, Danny 405 Hurdle, Chester C. Jr. 405 Hurley, Susan L. 265, 357 Hurst, Danny Thomas Hurston, Janice A. 406 Hurt, Donald Neil Hurt, Gayle Booher Hurt, Julia Ann 391 Hurt, Michael Allen Huskey, Samuel Wardell 276, 287 Hussey, Andrew Jackson Jr. 257, 299, 320, 380 Hussey, Debra Ann 406 Hussey, Stuart James 391 Hustlers 252 Hutchcraft, Timothy Wayne Hutcherson, Danny Lash 357 Huter, Judi M. 357 a 54% aa . Bie ¢ wee Hutto, Peter Stewart Hyden, Judy Anne 391 lacobello, Patricia Ann 391 “If Men Played Cards as Women Do” 102 Iglehart, Jan Marie ller, F. Elaine Grigsby Im(Mortal) beings 124-125 Imani, Nasrin 304 Immonobiology class 164 . in search of a first string team 216-221 in the record books 236-237 Inabnitt, Mary Jane 313, 391 Inch by inch 308-309 Inches Count 240-241 a3 “Incident at a Grave” 101-102 Indalecio, Joe Vincent 320, 321 Independently Greek 262-267, 276-285 Index 416-459 Industrial Education dept. 188 Industrial Education dept. head 188 Inge, Judith Karen Taylor Ingram, Annie Foley 391 Ingram, Jacqueline Elaine Ingram, Judy Rose 406 Ingram, Mark B. 392 Ingram, Reidy 289 Ingram, Sherry Lynn Inman, Carla E. 392 Inman, Kenneth Harold Inman, Pattye Ann lovine, Patricia M. Institute of Electrical Engineers 322 Instruction in College of Education assistant dean 186 Interfraternity Council 286-287 Interhall Council 398-299 International Club 304 International Student Orientation 48-49 Puppet love i K 1 . 1 i) International Students Affairs Director Ives, William Kelly 380 Jackson, Frankie Thomas Jacob, Jill Diane James, Leslie Colleen 47, 141 Ivey, Dennis Eugene Jackson, Glynise C. Jacobs, Clarence James Jr. James, Marilyn Intramurals 252-255 Ivins, Cindy Ruth 125, 263, 357 Jackson, Jeffrey Trimble 406 Jacobs, Rachael Deborah 357 James, Melvin Garrett Introduction to Computer Science Iwanowicz, Lee Evelyn Jackson, Jennifer 254, 392 Jacobs, William Edward James, Patrick W. | 240 167 i Iwanowicz, Thresa Anne Jackson, Jimmy Bryant Jacobson, Lawrence John James, Priscilla Devereaux 357 i} Ipaye, Aliasau Olasunkanmi Jackson, John Stephen 357 Jaggers, Betty Lynn James, Richie Hale 380 f Ipaye, N. Ayo : Jackson, Joseph Lasselle Jaggers, Dave 238 James, Sabrinna Valinda } Ipaye, Nasser Adisa Jackson, Joy Lynne 41, 392 Jaggers, J. Jeffery James, Stony 1 Ipaye, T. Olutoyian 304 Jackson, Katrina Anne Jaggers, Jane Langley James, Tony Ipaye, Tajudeen L. 406 Jackson, Kenneth Michael Jaggers, Ronald Dean 406 James, Wanda Lou 406 Iracane, Philip John 282 Jackson, Kevin Lynn 406 Jaggers, Sherry Louise Jamison, Elisa Jo Irish, William Donald Jr. Jackson, Marcia Sue 406 James, Brian David Jamison, Mark Waymes Irons, Timothy Collins Jackson, Michael Lawrence James, Charles Edward Janes, Cynthia Ann | Irvin, Anthony : Jabra, Issa Ishaq Jackson, Monica Jean 392 James, Cynthia Diane Janes, Pamela Ann I Irwin, Amanda Britana 280 Jackel, Anne Marie 23, 265, 406 Jackson, Paal Wesley James, Eleanor Elaine 263, 316, 392 Janes, Ricky Dean 392 | Irwin, Jean Jackel, Patricia Noel 265, 392 Jackson, Patrick Treadwell 301, 357 James, Harold C. Jr, 357 Jansen, George Jay Emanuel | Irwin, Jeffrey Lee 281 Jackman, Norris Lynn Jackson, Rebecca Tucker James, Howard Francis Jansky, Jeffrey John 290 Irwin, Karen Wood Jackson, Barbara Jane 406 Jackson, Robert Douglas 290, 295, 301, James, Howard Shelton Jr. Japanese Pronunciation Class 184 Irwin, Thomas Henry Jackson, Bobbie Faith 357 406 James, Ida Jan Jarboe, Charles Daniel 300-301, 357 i i Isbill, Deborah Sue Allen | Isbill, Michael Wayne i Isenberg, Linda Kaye 392 Isenberg, Pamela Lee 406 Ison, Sallie Dawn 313, 323 Jackson, Charles Wayne Jr. Jackson, Daniel Dow Jackson, David Randall Jackson, Dennis Arnold Jackson, Donjea Maria 322 James, Janice Kaye 302, 357 James, Janice Sue 252, 254, 302, 357 James, Joanna Faye 225 James, Joe Harlan James, Kenneth Ray Jarboe, David Michael 357 Jarboe, John Frank 12, 406 Jarboe, Marvin Brown Jarvis, John Stuart Jarvis, Teresa Kay 392 Jackson, Sandra Kimberly 265 Jackson, Thomas Ray 125 Jackson, Vanessa Ann Jackson, Victor Michael Jackson, William Lee Elizabeth Thomas lowers her lightly accented, softly high-pitched Kentucky drawl into a deep raspy croak, suitable for the “riibit’” sound of the domineering frog she is moving around with her fin- gertips. Little Red Riding Hood gets a guile- less, little-girl “squeek,’” while The Wicked Witch is taut and menacing. A puppeteer who is shy in person, Miss Thomas is unrestrained when mov- ing her papier mache and cloth puppets about from behind a homemade box stage with a velvet cutrain. Empty-handed, Miss Thomas is an elementary schoolteacher, back at West- ern for graduate work. Her puppeteerin is a hobby and a teaching at she TnL “I’m a very shy person,” Miss Thomas said. “I always wanted to be an actor, but I was too shy to get on stage. “T can hide behind the stage when I do a show and I guickly get lost in the char- acters,” she mikes “Tt’s an emotional re- lease.” Describing puppeteering, Miss Thom- as chatters with excitement about her love and need for puppets. Her eyes twinkle as she tilts Hes head while re- flecting. “When I was a junior, I saw a film on making papier mache puppets and I went straight home and made one,” she said. “Then I began working on my first set of puppets and reading everything in the library about them.” The love affair continued as Miss Thomas experimented with puppetmak- ing, costume designing, scriptwriting and performing. “Puppetmaking is a disease and once you begin, you can’t stop,” she said. When Miss Thomas finds a story for a puppet show, she tries to imagine how the characters should look and makes sketches. “For cloth puppets I draw my own pat- terns and for papier mache it’s like tak- ing a ball of clay and sculpting a head,” she said. “Newspapers replace the clay. The fea- On stage with a raspy-voiced marsh monster and whispering Winnie the Pooh is Elizabeth Thomas, a graduate student who uses puppets as teaching tools with children ages four to 11. The stage she uses was constructed by her father and has a velvet curtain and spotlight attached. tures must be exaggerated so they won't be lost under six lave of paper towels and newspapers,” Miss Thomas said. Papier mache puppets take at least three hours to make and a full day to dry, she said. Cloth puppets require the same effort but can be made in less time. She frequents remnant sales for felt, material, fake fur and other craft sup- plies to create cloth puppets which are more durable, she said. The Madisonville native adapts fairy tales, folk and Bible stories to puppet scripts. “T read a story several times and then look for natural breaks when I can make scene changes,” she said. “A puppet can’t stay out there too long or you lose the child’s attention. “You've got to have lots of action. I’m against very much violence in my shows so I change some stories to make the ending happier and more suitable for children,” Miss Thomas said. “Some shows teach kindness and un- derstanding and some teach children to accept people the way they are,” the graduate student said. “You can teach a child anything with a puppet. When a puppet talks, fhe listens.” Characterization and voice develop- ment fascinate children, she said. Each uppet’s voice, whether soft, gruff or issing is distinctive. “T use a tape recorder a great deal to develop voices,” Miss Thomas said. “With some characters the voice is part of their appeal.” “You can change your voice simply by changing the shape of your mouth or holding your nose,” she said. “Some puppeteers put a rock in their mouth but if I did I’d swallow it.” Miss Thomas has carried her one- woman show to elementary schools, day care centers, birthday and girl scout par- ties, workshops for college students and a Madisonville Baptist seen “T have 12 different shows with five characters in one show. The most I can manage on the stage at one time is three,” she said. “I can put stuffing in one so it sup- ports another pupper I can use my teeth to pull the string that opens the curtain.” Miss Thomas’ puppeteering debut came while she was student teaching. “T had a little cardboard box and I did ‘The Princess and the Pea,” she said. “This comical, groaning page stacked 20 mattresses. When he got the last one u they all tumbled and he had to start all over. When things like that happen you let the puppet complain and fuss,” the graduate student explained. “That got me gung-ho on puppetry because the children reacted and had naee on their minds for weeks,” she said. “I did shows for each of the six grades in that school. One day I did five shows in two hours,” she continued. Miss Thomas said shy children react much lik e she does when handed a pup- et. 4 “Even the shyest child will talk through the puppet,” she said. “He’s not himself anymore. He expresses himself through the puppets.” Whether it is her version of “Cinder- ella,” “Winnie the Pooh,” “Sleeping Beauty,” “Peter Rabbit” or the story of a mouse and a bloodhound, Miss Thomas captures the attention of pre-schoolers and fourth and fifth graders alike. “A puppet comes Aten for children,” she explained. “Seeing their faces when they begin to talk back to the puppet makes all the work worthwhile.” Work it is, according to Miss Thomas, who said she could work day and night creating puppets. “Puppets are my weekend projects since I’m in school now. If I come home worn out, dream up a puppet and start working on it, eiddenly I’m not tired anymore,” she said. Miss Thomas said she hopes to some- day get a position in a large public pup- pet Byes or as a writer for “Sesame Street.” “Puppets let me forget about my trou- bles,” she said. “I forget I even exist. Everybody has an escape, this is mine.” So, around the area travels the shy schoolteacher whose classmates hardly ever hear her speak. Bu t when she dons the hand puppets for performances at The Thomas Puppet Theatre, she is many entertaining voices ... Little Red Riding Hood, Winnie the Pooh, Cinderella, the Wicked Witch, even a domineering poe re — CONNIE HOLMAN 429 International Student Affairs Jarvis, Teresa Jarvis, Theresa Lynn Jary, Donald Russell Jayne, William Louis III 322 Jazz Ensemble 290 Jeannette, Michael Warren 221, 392 Jeannette, Nancy Jane 303, 344, 357 Jecker, Thomas Lyle 406 Jefferson, James Floyd Jefferson, Jane Ellen Jefferson, Lawrence Edward 204-211, 380 Jeffrey, Julie Ann 406 Jeffries, Nancy Ann 318, 380 Jeffries, William Douglas Jenkins, Cynthia Ann Jenkins, Jacqueline 392 Jenkins, Jessie Marlene Jenkins, Mark Duane 101 Jenkins, Martha 169, 323 Jenkins, Milton 208 Jenkins, Nathan Ray Jenkins, Randal Mark 291, 406 Jenkins, Teresa Lee 108, 313, 325, 344, 359 Jenkins, William 152 Jenkins, William Donald Jennings, Byron Keith Jennings, Martha Johnson 406 Jennings, Paul 284 Jensen, Karan Alana Jensen, Susan Lane Jensen, Terry Eugene 320, 380 Jent Buddy 210 Jent, Carl Wayne Jent, Elbert Olin 380 Jent, John Marvin Jepson, Julianna Childress 357 Jernigan, Eva Jane 357 Jernigan, Leann 406 Jernigan, Lucy Jane 313, 319, 380 Jessee, Brent Alan Jessup, Ronnie Eugene Jessup, Terry Gordon Jewell, Ann Shirlene 392 Jewell, Brenda Rose Jewell, Larry Douglas Jewell, Sharnell Elizabeth 119 Jewell, Tequila Jewell, Teresa Joye 263,, 380 Jobe, Janet Sue Joffrion, Leslie Gordon Jr. 230, 257, 357 Johanson, Jane Joanne Johanson, Susan Edith 303 Johns, Craig B. 261 Johns, Mary Carmella Johns, Pamela Jean 406 Johnson, Anita Gail 267, 357 Johnson, Ann R. 406 Johnson, Anthony Michael Johnson, Artie N. Johnson, Aubrey Louis Sr. 357 Johnson, Barbara Johnson, Barbara Faith 406 Johnson, Barry Glenn 392 Johnson, Bertil Gunnar III Johnson, Betty Dee Johnson, Bonita Gail Johnson, Boyd Deatonne 392 Johnson, Brenda Jane 406 Johnson, Byron Moreau Johnson, Calvin Edwin Johnson, Carol Ann 380 Johnson, Cary Virginia Johnson, Catherine E. Johnson, Christopher Alan 406 Johnson, Craig Miller Johnson, Darrell Layne Johnson, David Duane 321, 406 Johnson, David Whitney Johnson, Deborah Jane 319, 357 Johnson, Deborah Suzanne 319 Johnson, Debra Faye 406 Johnson, Diana Johnson, Donnie Ray 291, 406 Johnson, Forrest Powell 312, 357 Johnson, Frances Lorraine 406 Johnson, Gary Lee Johnson, George Albert Jr. Johnson, George Pryor III Johnson, Glendon Gary 357 Johnson, Harvey C. Jr. Johnson, Herbert Lee 392 Johnson, Irma Jeannelle 275 Johnson, James Alan 225, 277 Johnson, James Carl 216-221, 225, 277 Johnson, James Henry 225, 277 Johnson, James Robert 216-221, 225, 277 Johnson, Janet K. Holland 323, 344, 357 Johnson, Jeanette Proctor Johnson, Jeffery Lynn Johnson, Jeffrey Davis 406 Johnson, Jerry Lamonte 306, 406 Johnson, Jerry Lee 306, 392 Johnson, Jo Evelyn Johnson, Joan Darlene Johnson, Joanie Marie 167, 406 Johnson, Joseph Keith Johnson, Joyce Marie 297 Johnson, Judy Lynn 392 Johnson, Karen 290 Johnson, Keith Robert Johnson, Kenneth Eugene Johnson, Kimberly Jayne Johnson, Kirby Monroe Johnson, Leisa Johnson, Leonard Ervin Johnson, Lewis 274 Johnson, Linda Gail 406 Johnson, Linda M. Johnson, Linda Toohey Johnson, Lisa Raye Johnson, Lois Ann 406 Johnson, Lyman 116 Johnson, Mack Whitfield Jr. Johnson, Margaret Marie 406 Johnson, Marguerite Gayle Johnson, Mark Allen 296 Johnson, Marty Preston Johnson, Naomi Fay 319, 380 430 Jarvis, Theresa Kuhl, Gregory fee. 2. OY. ee eee ee eee ee Johnson, Ned Bell Johnson, Norman Dewey 357 Johnson, Pat C. Shuster Johnson, Patricia King Johnson, Paul Alan Johnson, Paul Edward Johnson, Paulette 265 Johnson, Phyllis Annette Johnson, Robert Dale Johnson, Robert Jay Johnson, Robert Vick 380 Johnson, Roger Hunt Johnson, Rosalyn Ann Johnson, Sandra Lou Johnson, Sarah Ann 296, 406 Johnson, Sheila Diane 265, 344 Johnson, Shirl H. Johnson, Stanley Dewayne 392 Johnson, Steven Patrick 307 Johnson, Steven Reid 307, 380 Johnson, Susan 263, 380 Johnson, Tara Marie Johnson, Terrence Johnson, Thomas Johnson, Thomas Leroy 486 Johnson, Timothy Eric 3 Johnson, Timothy Patrick 3, 357 Johnson, Tony Lee Johnson, Truman Earl Jr. 380 Johnson, Vicki Dale 392 Johnson, Waco 54 Johnson, Wanda Sue Johnson, William Larry 284, 392 Johnson, William Logan 284 Johnson, Yvonne Johnston, Frances Laver 406 Johnston, Hope Suzanne 392 Johnston, John Stanley 357 Johnston, Phyllis Lynn 392 Johnston, Robert William Johnston, Stephen Leroy 357 Johnston, Stephen Leslie Johnston, Valerie Ann Joiner, Angela Marie 380 Joiner, Katherine Jean 265, 406 Jolly, Debbie Jean 406 Jolly, Marty Boston Jones, Alfred Dean 392 Jones, Angela Denise Jones, Angela Lynn Jones, Anita 247, 392 Jones, Arthurine Genrose Jones, Barbara Jean Blakey Jones, Barbara Ann Jones, Belinda Ann 380 Jones, Bobby Louis Jones, Bonita Marie 406 Jones, Carolle Elizabeth Jones, Craig Jones, Curtis Lee Jones, Daniel Carder 406 Jones, Darryl Anthony 210, 392 Jones, David Ray Jones, Debora Lynn Jones, Deborah Kay 357 Jones, Dennis Keith Jones, Douglas Keith Jones, Elizabeth Maria Jones, Floyd Earl 406 Jones, Frank Grant II Jones, Frank Robert Jr. Jones, Gary William 386 Jones, Greg L. 282 Jones, Guy Louis Jones, Howard E. Jones, Irene Delorse Jones, J.E. 116 Jones-Jaggers Laboratory School director 148-149, 195 Jones, James Anthony 88, 204-211, 295 Jones, James Edgar 88, 204-211, 295 Jones, James Gregory 88, 204-211, 295, 380 Jones, James Irvin 88, 204-211, 295 Jones, James Michael 88, 204-211, 295 Jones, Jeffrey Alan 290, 302-303 Jones, Jeffrey Glenn 290, 302-303 Jones, Jewel Jones, Joseph Michael Jones, Joseph William 357 Jones, Joy Wright Jones, Joyce Lewis 358 Jones, Karen Sue 406 Jones, Kathy Douglas Jones, Keith Erwin 463 Jones, Lawrence Omer Jones, Linda Carol 392 Jones, Lisa Renee Jones, Lucinda Springstun Jones, Lynda Lee Jones, Maxine Cortright Jones, Michael Joseph Jones, Michael Ray Jones, Nanci Marie Jones, Nancy Elaine 406 Jones, Norman Gene Jr. 380 Jones, Pamela A. 380 Jones, Patricia Sue 267, 284 Jones, Paul 217 Jones, Raymond Darrel Jones, Rebecca Jean Jones, Robert Stephen Jones, Rocky Lee Jones, Ronald Glenn Jones, Ruth Helen 380 Jones, Stephen Duke Jr. 392 Jones, Steve Hal 392 Jones, Teresa Diane 263, 301, 406 Jones, Terry Hunter Jones, Terry Lee 60, 307 Jones, Thomas Earl 392 Jones, Vanessa Jones, Vicky Louise 407 Jones, William Joseph 210, 277, 314, 358 Jones, William Leon Jr. 210, 277, 314, 392 Jordan, Albert Lawrence Jordan, Andrew Calvin Jordan, Dennis Wayne 221 Jordan, Gail Ann Jordan, John Patrick Jordan, Sandra Jean Jordan, Walter Turner Jos, Philip Henry Joseph, Jacquelyn Ann 263, 392 Josovitz, Mark Steven Jost, Susan Marlene Journalism dept. 178 Journalism dept. head 178-179 Journalism workshop 32 Joyce, Jeffrey Ellis 392 Joyner, E. Monroe Joyner, Eldridge II 284 Joyner, Richard Harvill 407 Judd, James Cleveland Judd, William Dean 166 Juett, Kimberly Ray 210 Jull, Michael Richard Juniors 376-385 Jureka, Pamela Irene Jureka, Theresa Louise Kacsur, Carroll Mary 407 Kaelin, Bernard Wayne 244, 407 Kaelin, Gregory Raymond Kaewilai, Wacharin Kaiser, William Moss Kall, Richard 203, 244 Kampschaefer, Kathryn L. Kanter, Gary Joseph Kanzler, Brian Anthony 358 Kaplan, Lori Jane Kappa Delta 21, 266, 271-272, 289 Kappa Sigma 260-261, 272 Kappa Sigma House 260-261 Karate Club 296-297 Karay, John Karches, Amy Lynn 407 Karimi, Ali 252, 304, 407 Karimi, Friedoon Karl, Walter Gregory Karnes, Michael Francis Karr, Debra Ann 358 Kary, Jody Magann Kasey, Judith Diane Kastman, Douglas Norman Kaston, Terri Kath, Terry 75 Katzman, Thomas Wayne Kaufmann, Chris Harold Kautz, Jeffrey Louis Kays, Donnie R. Kearney, Mary Ann 49 Keck, Steve 239 Kee, Brenda Lynn Keefe, Sean Michael Keehan, Sallyann Peters Keel, David Bruce Keele, John Charles 407 Keeler, Mark David Keelin, Karen Sue 380 Keen, Danny Wayne Keen, Karen Regina Keen, Mark Glenn 300 Keene, Mary Jo Kees, Goebel Marshall Keeton, Jan Annette 392 Keefer, James Thomas 277 Keffer, Melissa Kay Kegg, Diane Lynne Kehr, Lauren Leslie 358 Keidel, Michael Anthony 407 Keightley, Gregory Mark Keiley, Judith C. Snawder Keiningham, Lillie Verma Keith, Dale Vance Keith, Jennifer Lynn 322 Keith, Thomas Joseph Keith, William 100 Keith, Carl 40 Kell, Jonathan Shelby Kell, Kee Annette 407 Kellem, Gary Franklin Kellems, Gloria Gill Kellems, William Brady 380 Keller, Scott Alan 380 Kelley, Charlene Ashby Kelley, Jack Obrien Kelley, Leslie Clay Kelley, Michael Hamilton Kelley, Neysa Joan 392 Kelley, Richard Hobson 50, 76, 81, 92, 344-345 Kelley, Ricky Lynn Kelley, Sheila Faye 407 Kelley, Ted William Kelley, Terry J. Kellum, Garry 230-231 Kellum, Timothy 243, 407 Kelly, Ellen Patricia 319 Kelly, James P. Jr. Kelly, John Michael 324-325, 380 Kelly, Kar en Jo. 392 Kelly, Karen Suszanne Kelly, Mary Lee Kelly, Mary Martina 358 Kelly, Sherrill Lynn 392 Kelly, Timothy Edward Kelsay, Linda Jane Kelso, Audrey Lenita Keltee, Wanda Jean 358 Kelty, Cathy Ann Kelty, Lawrence Anthony Kemble, Danny Martin 380 Kemp, Carol Dawn 291, 358 Kemp, Cynthia Delene Kemp, Lloyd Crewdson III 407 Kemp, Michael Dawson Kemp, Shirley Evelyn 380 Kemper, Michael Allan Kemper, Steven Charles Kemperle, Paula Marija Kempf, Byron Ray Kempf, Stephen Joseph 358 Kempton, Steven W. Kendall, David Lee 243, 380 Kendall, Lou 242 Kennady, Karen Gail Kennedy, Douglas Alan Kennedy, Jimmy Dale 358 Kennedy, Lisa Marie Kennedy, Marsha Karen 257, 319, 380 Kennedy, Marshall Edward 267 Kennedy, Ruth Anne 380 Kenner, Michael David 15, 392 Kenney, Ronald Curtis 407 Kenny, Louis 244 Kentucky 65 Kentucky Intercollegiate Press Assoc. 308 Kentucky Intercollegiate Swimming Championship 232-233 Kentucky Library and Museum Curator 141-142 Kentucky Special Olympics 32, 298 Kentucky Speech 70-71 Kentucky Travel 66-69 Kentucky Women’s Intercollegiate Conference 147-148 Keown Charles 135, 275 Keown, Darrell Edward Keown, Kathy Dianne Keown, Kevin Otto 392 Keown, Pamela Mignon 50, 358 Keown, Rhonda Lynne 41, 267-268, 407 Kephart, Stephen John 407 Kepley, Pamela Jean 392 Kepmiller, Fred 210 Kerekes, Charles Vaughn Kerley, Karen Lea 358 Kern, Betty Ann 315, 380 Kernehan, Michael 54 Kerr, Cynthia Eileen 304 Kerr, Daniel Alan Kerr, Debbie 191 Kerr, Karen Ann 407 Kerr, Kathy Inell Kerr, Kevin Russell 358 Kerr, Loren Edwin 299, 322 Kerr, Thomas Lee 193, 267 Kerr, William John Kerrick, Sara-Lois 392 Kerry, Ronald G. 380 Kersenbaum, Slyvia 94, 177, 185° Kersey, Regina Kay 407 Kerstiens, Greg Kesler, Jackson 101, 183 Kesselring, Nancy Gay 303 Kesselring, Nancy Jean 303, 380 Kessinger, Stephen Ray Kessler, Linda Carol Kesterson, Roy Lynn 204-211 Key, Altricia Carol 392 Key, Gary Walton Key, Jamie Jones 407 Key, Marlina Gale 358 Key, Pamela Anne 358 Key, Steven Mark Key, Vivian Gayle Keys, Carol Jean 380 Khan, Chaka 80 Khatibi, Aghooi Mehdi Kibbons, Steven Ray Kidd, Bryan Chenault 283 Kidd, Richard Craig Kidder, Robert Steven 290-291 Kiddy, Debra Ann 108, 325 Kie, Emma Louise Kie, Frances Lee Kiesler, Joann Kiessling, William 380 Killebrew, Forrest Clinton 244-245, 407 Killian, Mildred Ann 407 Killion, Jayne Lee 380 Kilpatrick, Phyllis Ann 358 Kiltz, William Bradley 271, 284-285 Kimberland, Robert Lynn 407 Kimberlin, Brian Lee 407 Kimberlin, Randall Finn Kimbro, Terry Wayne Kimbrough, James Edward Jr. 307, 358 Kimbrough, Mark Rene 392 Kimbrough, Robin Thomas 392 Kimmel, Jennifer Dawne 7, 230-231, 392 Kimmel, Mary Kaye Kinchlow, Gina Lloyce 265 King, Aimee Rose 392 King, Allen Wayne King, Austina Ann King, Bruce Edward 277 King, Dennis Lee 33 King, Granville III King, James Robert King, John Anthony King, Kimberly Annette 299, 392 King, Lisa Ann King, Lydia Jean King, Mary Bernadene King, Patricia Darlene King, Patricia Margaret 392 King, Ricky Lee King, Robert Garry King, Sandra L. 358 King, Sheryl Denise King, Susan Ellen 380 King, Thomas Michael King, Tracy Keith King, Valerie Lea 14, 392 King, Wanda Jean Kingrey, Marla Jo. 299, 392 Kingsbury, Harvey Burr Kington, John Harlan Kington, Mary Lucile B. Kinkade, Darrell Craig Kinkade, Richard Owen Kinkel, Vickie Rae Kinloch, June Ellen 263, 392 Kinmon, Louis Ray Kinnaird, Karen Jane Kinne, Kevin Robert Kinney, Glenn Alan Kinsman, Karen Ann Kinsner, Daniel Craig 407 Kintigh, James David Kinzel, Anthony Robert Kinzel, Wayne Morris Kiper, James Steven 284 Kiper, Shirley Lynn 407 Kiray, Sharon Elaine Kirby, Helen Joyce Kirby, James Douglas Kirby, John Kent Kirby, Phillip Leo Kirby, Regina F. Kirby, Robert Kim Kirby, Saundra Terrenee 313, 407 Kirby, Steven Keith 313 Kirchhoff, Rebecca Ruth 407 Kirk, Ann Winford Kirk, James Edwin Kirk, Julia Elaine Kirk, Louis Wayne Kirk, Rosemary Kirkett, Kathy 263 Kirkland, Debra Lynne 407 Kirkland, Vicki Lewis Kirkpatrick, Ellen Marie Kirkpatrick, Joseph Donald Kirkpatrick, Susan Bottoms Kirkwood, Nancy Ellen Kirsch, Douglas Shelburne 285 Kirstein, Gwendolyn C. 358 Kiser, Mark David 284, 358 Kiser, Paul S. 358 Kistner, Terry Lynn Kitchens, Betty Patrice Kitchens, Charles W. Jr. 380 Kitchens, Thomas Garland Kithcart, Russell Edward 277 Kittinger, Matthew Todd Kittinger, Rhonda Jo. 380 Kixmiller, William F. Kizer, Franklin Harvey Klein, Allen Henry Jr. 315 Klein, Elizabeth Ann 407 Klein, Richard Allan Klein, Robert 92-93 Klein, William Franklin 299, 380 Kleinhenz, Lawrence Steven Kleinholter, Linda Maureen 380 Kline, Lisa Kathryn 358 Kliner, Wesley Richard Jr. Klug, Jeffrey Lynn Klumb, Kenneth Charles 277, 307 Klunder, Kimberly Sue Klusmeier, Donald Alan Knapp, Kim Allison 214-215, 392 Knauer, Daniel Joseph Knauer, Daryl Bruce 407 Knauer, Jeanne Ellen 380 Knecht, Catherine Anne 319 Kneer, Mark Joseph 315 Knicely, Carroll 128-129 Knight, Beverly Kay 392 Knight, John Geoffrey 99, 108 Knight, Luanne Knight, Terry Joseph Knopf, Cheryl Ann Knott, Michael Dennis Knott, Sherri Jane 407 Knox, James Howard 261, 358 Knox, John Basil 380 Knox, Richard Wayne Knox, Sherry Lynne 358 Kockritz, Kristine Anne Koeckert, Mary Louise 234-235 Koedyker, Judy Maxine P. 303 Koen, Tommy Joe Koenig, Audrey Emma Koenigstein, Robert Lewis Koestel, Stephen Louis 407 Koester, Teresa Diane 252, 254, 267, 380 Koesters, Willi Hans Kohl, Lorie Jean 14, 392 Kolb, Dennis Lee 321 Kolb, Susan Elizabeth Kollmansperger, Deborah L. Koons, Joseph Wayne 284, 407 Koppel, Andrew Alan Kordenbrock, Pamela Kay 223, 225 Korfhage, Karen Ann 264 Korinek, John 108, 325 Koss, Paul Francis Kossick, Paul Victor Koster, Robert Lewis Kothlow, Brad Allen Kouzarides, Yiannakis A. 304, 392 Kovach, Thomas Richard 285, 287, 358 Kovonuk, Alexis Jean Kowalewski, David 299, 358 Kozicki, Thomas Daniel Kraft, Kathryn Ann 407 Kraft, Nancy Lynn Krag, Erik Safford 380 Kral, Richard James 199, 232-233, 252, 380 Kraus, Mary Patricia 407 Krause, Kandace Patricia Krebs, Frances Carol 315, 380 Kreisler, Carl 40 Kreisler, Kimberly Ann Kreisler, Lisa Karol Kreke, Richard Micheal Kremer, Daniel Joseph Kremer, Lynn Marie 358 Krengel, Kitrick Ann 255, 265, 269, 285, 392 Krigbaum, Stephen John 233 Kring, Katrina Susanne Kroeger, Glenn Allen Krontz, Marian W. Kropezynski, Ronald R. Krueger, Gay Nell Krull, Carl Wayne 193 Kubale, Judy Lee 358 Kuddes, Kevin Logan Kuegel, James Scott Kuegel, Joseph Michael Kuegel, William 128 Kuhl, Gregory Michael 397, 309 Kuhn, Mary Jo. Kummer, Cynthia Elaine Kummer, Kathryn Lise 318, 392 Kusch, Karen Ann 380 Kuzma, Daniel Andrew Kuzma, Jerome Albert 243 Kuzmich, Stephen Wood Kwok, George Kyser, Debra Lynn Kyser, Kimberly Ann 263, 392 La vie a I’ Universite’ 84-87 Lab x chemistry problem = student research 166 Lacefield, Gaye Lacefield, Gregory Jerome Lacour, Victor C. 380 Lacy, Martha Anne Lacy, Mary Patricia 301, 358 Lacy, Perry Lee Lacy, Roger Lee 307 Lacy, Susan Diane 380 Ladd, James Charles 307, 358 Ladd, Marie Delores 358 Lady, Ollie 299 Laffoon, Julia Ann 302, 392 Laffosse, Milagros Diaz 358 Laffosse, Nina 230 Lagrange, Robert Paul Laichas, Carol Leslie Laichas, Susan Doris Lair, John Shea 392 Laird, A.W. 273 Laird, Emily Gillenwater Laird, Marilyn Gidcumb Laird, Roger Alan Lake, Megan Kathleen 392 Lally, Mary Ann Lally, Sarah Elizabeth Laloge, Anne Martine Laman, Steven Laurence 380 Lamar, Huston Oliver Lamar, Jan Raye 314, 358 Lamaster, Samuel Sterling Lamb, Bill 53 Lamb, Clifton Gregory 380 Lambda Chi Alpha 31, 252, 279, 288-289 Lambert, John Philip Lambert, Norman Leo Lambert, Owen D. 303, 407 Lambert, Sandra Birdwell Lamont, Deana Marie . . Lampkin, Andrew J. III Lampkins, William Allen Lampman, Tammy Ann 407 Lampton, Terry Russell 358 Lanagan, Elizabeth Lanagan, Mary Kathryn Lancaster, Darrell Wayne Lance, Lorifay 392 Land, Cheryl Kay 312 Landers, Paul Wilmot Landers, Vernon Douglas Jr. Landreth, Daniel Alexander 358, 384 Landrum, Kimberly Rhee 317, 380 Lane, Alice Faye 407 Lane, Beth Kay 222-223, 225-227, 265 Lane, Clarence William 301 Lane, Eric Matthew : Lane, Linda Kaye Lane, Lucy Ann Blume Lane, Robyn Dell 407 Lane, Sandra Lee Lane, Teresa Ann Lane, William Bradley Jr. Lane William Christopher Lane, William Robert Laney, Elizabeth Ann Laney, Shirley 247 Lang, David Richard 277 Lang, George Malcolm Jr. Lang, Margaret Marie Langan, Lesa Gail Lange, Andrew Charles Langford, Charles Filmore 313, 392 Langford, Gary Steven Langford, Luke Henry Langley, Betty 226-227, 246 Langley, James Brent 296 Langley, Melenthia Hodge Langridge, Daphne Robin Lanham, Charles Daniel. 380 Lanham, David Glen Lanham, Debbie 289 Lanham, Harlie Kevin 99, 101, 103, 107 Lanier, Anthony Wayne Lanier, Collins Fenton Lanier, Lucinda 263, 270 Lankton, George Mark Lansden, Dicie Louise Large, James Alden Largen, Harry 128, 140-141 Largen, Kenneth 141 Larimore, Charlene Rhea 380 Larimore, Gary Wayne 239, 243 Larimore, Leslie Steven 204-211, 239 Larkin, Richard Lee Larkins, Joseph Prestley 380 Larsh, Stephen Raymond Larson, Kevin Louis 392 Larson, Timothy Michael 107 Lashlee, Karen Lynn Lashlee, Lois Ann Lashley, Gwendolyn Gayle 359 Lashley, Sharlene 407 Laskevich, Stephen Tracy 359 Lassing, Betty Anne Laster, Jeffrey Neil Lastufka, Mark Robert Lathon, Keith Kyle 210 Lathon, Rickey 210 Latter Day Saint Student Association 312-313 Lattis, Mary Christine 392 Laudenslager, Michael Joel 230 Lauer, Arthur Brian Laukus, Mark J. Lausman, Marsha Jean Lavoie, Thomas Verne Law, Beverly Kay Law, James Dwight Law, Lavonna Jean Lawalin, Perri Ruth Houser Lawhorn, Deborah Anne 359 Lawler, Elizabeth Ann Lawler, John Patrick 359 Lawler, Sandra Vernon Lawless, Donald Charles 392 Lawrence, Bobby Joe 301, 313, 380 Lawrence, David H. 392 Lawrence, Jackie Lee 125 Lawrence, James Henry Lawrence, James Lee Lawrence, Julia Long 359 Lawrence, Lovis Dorlanne Lawrence, Michael Kent Lawrence, Rebecca Clark Lawrence, Sheila Marlene Lawrence, Timothy Keith 244, 380 Laws, Katherine Annette 392 Lawson, Connie Fran Lawson, James Michael Lawson, Kenny Marvin Lawson, Owen 188, 140, 227 Lawson, Penny Delois Lawson, Richard Alan 359 Lawson, Rickey J. 359 Lawson, Rodger Wayne 392 Lawson, Yvonne Renee Layer, Matthew D. Layman, Steven Ray Layne, Emily 192 Layne, Jay Edward Layne, Lois 192 Lazarus, Rhea 135 Lea, Sandra Clair 107, 392 Leach, Larry Allen 317, 321, 345, 359 Leach, Roberta Layne 407 Leach, William Randall Leaping into a week typically Greek 288-289 Leasor, Mark Anthony Leathers, Susan Diane 265, 287, 359 Leathers, Vicki Lynn 264 Lechleiter, John Marshall Lecturers 92-93 Ledesma, Enriq ue Guillermo 199, 232-233 Ledford, Cletus Mae Lee, Anna Randolph 359 Lee, Carryn Kay Lee, Connie Denise Lee, Debra Ann Lee, Derek Ray Lee, Don Earl Lee, Elizabeth Martella Lee, Eugene III Lee, James Carter 283, 285 Lee, James Owen 283, 285 Lee, John Dennis Jr. 392 Lee, John Gilbert Lee, Joseph Burl 297, 301 Lee, Kenny Reed 407 Lee, Kent D. Lee, Leo Harold Lee, Margaret Ann 360 Lee, Marianne 278 Lee, Marty 321 Lee, Nicky Wayne 407 Lee, Randy Joe 380 Lee, Renee Shawn 407 Lee, Robin Elizabeth Lee, R onald Eugene Lee, Sharon Blackwell 360 Lee, Sheila Ann 407 Lee, Shu Yung Lee, Tina Michelle Leech, Janet Marie Leforce, Ronald M. Jr. 380 Lega, Mark Joseph Lehmann, Laura Jo. 407 Lehmenkuler, Virginia 170-171 Leigh, Timothy Yarbrought 50, 317, 345 Lemieux, James F. 210 Lemmon, Susan Marlene 407 Leneave, Charles Kevin Leneave, Mark Douglas 284 Leningrad Symphony Orchestra 96 Lenn, John Herndon 299 Lents, Susan Melissa Lentz, Karen Gayle 407 Lentz, Rebecca Kathryn Leonard, Beverly 32, 97 Leonard, William 99-100, 104, 324 Leonard, Garth Alan Leonard, Glenn 90 Leonard, Jed Alan Leonard, Lisa Frances Leonard, Lorraine Bagwell Leonard, Pamela J. Smith 360 Lescallect, Deborah B. 380 Lescalleet, Alan Franklin 303 Lescalleet, Deborah B. Lescelius, Shirley Ann Lesch, Joseph Thomas Leslie, James Anthony 321 Leslie, James M. 125 Lessenberry, Hugh Barret A. 238, 241 Lessenberry, Leigh L. Lessenberry, Terri Anne Lessley, Carol Jeanne 407 Lessons in Culture 176-185 Lester, Sharon Lee 360 Leste, Tonia Ann 380 Lester, Virginia Trout 392 Leu, Neng Chyang Leucht, Susan Rachel 306, 392 Levatino, Theresa Marie Levens, Alexander John Levy, Lisa Sabel Lewey, William Stephen Lewis, Alex Dywane 297, 313 Lewis, Barbara Sharon Lewis, Carl Eugene 321, 360 Lewis, Carla Ann Lewis, Catherine Vaughn 360 Lewis, Darlene Lewis, Dwight Wayne 210 Lewis, Fanniellen Joyce 108-109, 407 Lewis, James 312 Lewis, Janice Faye 392 Lewis, Joseph Catron Lewis, Kathy Ann 23, 263, 380 Lewis, Kenneth Neal 360 Lewis, Leon Jr. Lewis, Linda Murphy 360 Lewis, Lisa Claire 407 Lewis, Nicholas Porter Lewis, Pam Venise 411 Lewis, Priscilla Ann 407 Lewis, Sandra Kaye 360 Lewis, Susan 312 Lewis, Tina Marie 387 Libby, Mark Joseph 380 Library Science dept. 170 Library Science dept. head 170 Lichtefeld, Catherine Ann 407 Lichtefeld, Mary Margaret Lienvongkot, My 380 Lierman, Diane Carol Lievers, Russell Joseph Lightfoot, Robert Karl Jr. Lightsy, John Sheldon 407 Likens, Terri Lynn 261, 263 Likins, Martha Jo 360 Lile, Debra Hanson 360 Lile, Shannon David Liles, Betty Pierce Liles, Thomas Anthony Lillard, Tommy Calvin Lilly, Craig Barrett Lin, Tay Yean Lind, Rosemary Ann Lindauer, Patricia Carroll Linde, Doris Jean 360 Lindeman, Michelle Marie 407 Lindenberg, Gary David 380 Lindsay, Annetta Gayle 360 Lindsay, Bradley E. Lindsey, Davin Anderson Lindsey, James Robert Lindsey, James Steven Lindsey, Kathy Lynn 360 Lindsey, Leonard Bruce Lindsey, Regina Kay Lindsey, Sheila Lynn Lindsey, Shirley F. 392 Lindsey, Susan Annette 407 Lindsey, Susan Gail Lindsey, Van Lee 407 Lindsey, William Leon 204-211 Linebaugh, George P. III Lingvai, Sharon Jean 380 Link, Daryl Ray Link, Debra Ann 263, 360 Link, Joel Wayne Link, Kathryn Nolf 407 Link, Naomi Bernice Linnig, Deborah Lynn Linnig, William Anthony 297, 407 Linton, Daniel Philip Linville, Billy Michael 204-211 Lipscomb, Terry Durwayne Litchfield, Gerry Glynn Literature that came alive 108-109 Litsey, Kevin Lee Little, Brenda Bailey Little, John William Little, Kathy Ann 265, 287, 305, 380 Little, Penny J. Laminack “Little Red Riding Hood” 106 Littlefield, Freddie Dale Littlejohn, Karen Renee 315, 392 Littlejohn, Robert Thomas Liu, Guang Chyi Liu, Guang Chyi Lively, Deborah Lynn 360 Livers, Don Cameron 210 Livers, Virgil 237 Livesay, Susan Katherine 407 Livingston, David Timothy 392 Livingston, Pamela Kaye Ljunggren, Stig E. 140-141, 238 Lloyd, Jennifer Reynolds Lloyd, John William 380 Lloyd, Keith Stallings Lloyd, Leslie Lynn 291 Lloyd, Lola June Hale Lockard, Gail Lynn 360 Locke, Barry Vandiver Jr. Lockhart, Gayla Lee 392, 407 Lockhart, Linda Carol Lockhart, Thomas Ralph Lockwood Jane 380 Lockwood, Larry Joseph Lockyer, Clifford Allan Loeb, Jacqueline Viola Loewen, Roger 311 Loftin, Janet Hilton 407 Loftin, Laura Susan 125, 360 Loftis, Margaret Ann 408 Loftus, Mary Anne Logan, Anthony Wayne 210, 392 Logan, Athena Jene 295, 392 Logan, Ben Threlkel 108-109, 392 Logan, Bruce Wayne 380 Logan, Glenn Allen 284, 287 Logan, Lloyd Thomas 210 Logan, Terri Davenport Logan, William Allan 233 Logsdon, Clifton Odell Logsdon, Clyde P. 360 Logsdon, Curtis 137 Logsdon, Eric Lee 312, 392 Logsdon, Hershell Logsdon, Janice Marie Logsdon, Janice Sue Logsdon, John Brett Logsdon, Krisann 312 Logsdon, Lawrence A. Jr. Logsdon, Linda Marie Logsdon, Michael Ray Logsdon, Stanley Wayne Logsdon, Timothy Eugene Logsdon, Wilma Rucker Lohman, George Bradley 210 Lohman, James Paul 392 Lohman, Nancy Louise 408 Loid, Kirby Riggs Lombard, Philip Charles Jr. 290 Lonas, Susan 273 London, Janice Faye 392 London, Linda Lou Ellis Long, Anna 101 Long, Carol Ann Long, Charles Larry 12 Long, David Brian 200-203, 244 Long, Dennis Ray 408 Long, Donna Ann 392 Long, James Clifton Long, Janet Morton 317, 360 Long, Marline Long, Nancy Heavrin 408 Long, Patricia Gayle Long, Regina Anne Long, Robin Lynn Long, Sheree Theresa Long, Stephanie Nanette Long, Stuart Walker Long, William David Long, William Eugene Longaker, Jeffery Joel 301, 360 Looft, Mary Jane Loomis, Glenda Carole Looney, Theresa Lynn 277 Looper, Linda Sue 360 Lopkoff, William Whitney Lopkoffantique, David C. Lopolito, Vincent Kenneth 321 “Lord Byron's Love Letters” 102 Lord, Susanne 408 Lorenz, Christina A. Lorenz, Robert 301, 360 Lorimer, Michael 94 Losey, Dennis James Losso, Christopher Edward Losson, Frederick Taylor Losson, Margaret Melissa 408 Losson, Susan Stiles Louis, Wanda Elaine Love, Robert Patteson 295 Lovelace, Kevin Lovell, Cheryl Lynn 392 Lovell, Darrell Wayne Lovell, Jeffery Warren 392 Lovell, Joseph Stephen Lovell, Joyce Ann Smith Lovell, Julianna 319, 345, 360 Lovell, Kenneth Eugene Lovell, Rebecca Sue Lovely, Mark Steven 408 Lovett, Kenneth Michael Loving, Laura Lynn Loving, Margaret Ellen 263 Lovorn, Christopher Lee 380 Lowe, Camille Lowe, James W. Lowe, Joe Stanley Lowe, Kenneth Dean Lowe, Lora Athena 263, 268, 392 Lowe, Mary Ann 263, 360 Lowe, Mitzi Ann Lowe, Sally P. 360 Lowe, Valerie Lee 314 Lowen, Patricia Lynn 380 Lowery, Belinda S. 392 Lowery, Gerald William Lowrey, Howard 323 Lowry, Ann Marie 254 Lowry, Charles 335 Lowry, Elizabeth 48 Lowry, Mark 48 Lucas, Charles Curtis 303, 380 Lucas, David Oneal 380 Lucas, Elizabeth I Lucas, Kenneth Marvin 303, 408 Lucas, Nancy Ellen Lucas, Yvette Denise Luckett, Mary Katherine Ludington, Marion Louise 263, 392 Luecht, Laura Lynn 408 Lui, Raymond 304 Lukins, Kathryn Louise 392 Lummis, Jenifer Lynn Lurding, David Bruce Lutes, Pamela Faye 256-257, 380 Luton, Thomas Herbert Luttrell, Betty Jane 380 Luurtsema, Dave Roger 408 Lykins, Debra Ann 392 Lyle, Cheryl Ann Lyle, Steven Wayne 392 Lyles, Ronald Mitchell Lynch, Amy Diane 392 Lynch, Jamie William 392 Lynch, Linda C. Lynch, Lonnie Marcum 336 Lynch, Thomas Daniel Lyne, Michael Bruce Lynn, Elizabeth Otto 230 Lynn, Glenda S. 392 Lynum, Zebedee Ivan Lyon, Patricia Anne 360 Lyons, Alan Douglas 392 Lyons, David Eugene Lyons, David Mitchell 380 Lyons, Jerry H. 323 Lyons, Leonard Romaldo 408 Lyons, Linda Carol Young Lyons, Mark Edward 311 Lyons, Mary Alice Lyons, Moril Price Jr. Lyons, Nancy Therese Lyons, Robin Ray 313, 210 Lyons, Susan Carol 303, 317, 360 Mabe, Randall Scott Mabry, Cynthia Kay 408 Macconaugha, Hope Ellen 263 Machich, Larry G. Machine Shorthand: A Touchy Subject 156 Machine Shorthand 213 156 Macias, Richard Arrelleno 230-231 Mack, Sandra Lee Macke, Charles Claypool Madden, David Brent Maddox, Karen 263 Maddox, Karen Lynn Maddox, Katherine Leigh 23, 263 Maddox, Sara Nell 267, 307, 360 Mader, Deanna Rae Derr Madison, David Luther 282, 287, 360 Madison, Peggy Sue 408 Madison, Ruth Whitaker Madison, William Alan 34-35 Madison, William Fount Madon, James Robert 204-211 Madrigal Singers 294-295 Madron, Beverly 317 Mager, Maryann Kathleen 100 Magers, Susan Lynn Maggard, Jennifer Ralston Mahaffey, Selene 408 Mahan, Sandra Carter Mahaney, Joel Neal Mahlalela, Reuben Ntunu Mahnke, David James Mahone, Kennetha Marie Mahoney, Charles Patrick Mahoney, Laura Ann Maier, Alan James Maier, Harold Francis Main, Ralph Edward 284, 360 Main, Ronald James Main, Sally Elaine 380 Mainland, Jean Anne Mains, Bruce Edwin Mains, Janke Bakker Majdi, Mehran Malhoit, Darrah Malibu Beach 252 Malik, Ahams 304 Mallard, Jonathan Leonard 381 Mallay, James Patrick 392 Mallory, David Anthony Malmsten, Svante Robert 140-141, 238 Malone, Angela Beth 267 Malone, Felecia Germaine Malone, John William 291 Malone, Patrick Lee 204-211 Malone, Rodney Earl Malone, Shirley L. Mami, Alfina Rose 308-309 Manar, Jane Huey 23 Mandrell, Cindy Lois Mandrell, Jeffrey Wayne 301 Mangus, Michael Charles Manigold, Ann Michelle 408 Manilow, Barry 74-78, 80, 83 Manion, Arthur Toby Manion, James C. Manion, James Henry Manion, Teresa Ann Manion, Toby 324 Manis, Melinda Susan 210, 392 Manley, Carolyn Ruth Manley, Pamella Denise 100, 392 Mannel, Joann Manning, Alesia Louise 381 Manning, Barbara Jane 392 Mansfield, Charles W. Mansfield, Phyllis Fife 381 Mantooth, Walter Lyle 360 Manuel, Mark Alen 408 Manuel, Rebecca Ann Manz, Margaret Mary Maple, Marcia Elaine 408 Maples, Lex Vendy Jr. Maples, Nina Lee Griffin Maples, Terry Vance Maples, William Bruce Jr. 291 Marantha Center 312-313 Marchal, Gerard Edward Marching Band 292-293 Marco Polo 252-254 Marcroft, Karen A. 295, 392 Marcum, Esther Elizabeth Marcum, John Steven 317, 345, 360 Marcum, Paul N. 252 Marion, Christine Elaine 360 Marion, Mark Russell Marketing Club 314-315 Markham, James Edwin Jr. 244 Markham, Linda Kay Markland, Julie Marie 301 Marks, Deborah Lee Marks, Jeremiah R. 62, 244 Marler, Deborah Renee 408 Marlin, William Sanford Marlow, Michaele Shane 408 Maroney, John Daniel Marquess, Lawrence M. Marquette, Jacquelyn L. Marsh, Barbara 84-87 Marsh, Edwin Chastaine Marsh, Karen Ann 301, 361 Marsh, Pamela Jean 408 Marshall, Elizabeth 52, 54 Marshall, James Raymond 299 Marshall, Marilyn Joyce 392 Marshall, Paul William Marshall, Tom 236 Marsteller, Thomas Eugene 392 Martin, Billy Joe 101, 325 431 Kuhn, Mary Martin, Billy Martin, Bobby Gene Martin, Lewis George II 282 Martin, Thomas Sparks Mason, Ruth Ann Blue 322-323, 361 Mathews, Thomas J. Martin, Cassandra Jean Martin, Lila Delores 265, 361 Martin, Timothy Lee Mason, Wayne McKinley Mathias, Robert Derwin Martin, Cindy Jean Martin, Lyntanauan Loann 361 Martin, Vernon 152-153 Mass Communications 377 183 Mathie, Ernest Carl Martin, Curtiss Almonte 381 Martin, Mark 277 Martines, Joseph Anthony 242-243 Massey, Dolores Gail 303 Mathis, Candy Denise 408 Martin, Cynthia Louise 267 Martin, Martha Harriet 361 Martins, Peter 96 Massey, James Lewis 233, 381 Mathis, Gary Wayne Martin, David Robert 291 Martin, Mary Lillian Marx, Richard Scott 392 Massie, Clara Faye 263 Mathis, Tami Michelle 263, 408 Martin, Deborah Madeleine Martin, Mary Lynn 297, 392 Masannat, George 152-153 Massie, Donna Kaye 263, 361 Matlock, Deborah Kaye Martin, Deena Sue 408 Martin, Melissa Wayne 392 Mascetta, William Massie, Mary Margaret Matschke, Marti Marie Martin, Denishia Miller Martin, Michael Wayne 381 Masden, Bruce Alan 282, 381 Matheny, Eloise Marie 408 Matteson, Gail Lea Martin, Donald Lee Martin, Pamela Michell Mashek, James Walter 282, 381 Mather, Vickie Jeanne 265 Matthews, Anthony Craig Martin, Elizabeth Ann Martin, Patricia Sue 312, 408 Masmitja, Maria Josefa Mathematics and Computer Science dept. Matthews, Clarence Gilbert Martin, Elizabeth Ann 408 Martin, Paul Edward 254, 408 Mason, Cynthia Lynne 160-163 Matthews, Herman David Martin, Gail Lynn 361 Martin, Paul Roland 254 Mason, Deshea Mathematics and Computer Science dept. Matthews, Jo Ann Martin, Jane 307 Martin, Robert Daves 284, 312, 361 Mason, Emma Frances head 163 Matthews, Jo Ann Shreve Martin, Joseph David Martin, Robert Earl 284, 312, 392 Mason, Ervin H. Jr. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John with Matthews, Joy Darlene 297, 408 : Martin, Julia Anne Martin, Robert Samuel 284, 312, 392 Mason, Jan Marie 392 a British touch 181 Matthews, Lovic Clay Martin, Karen Elaine 408 Martin, Sheila Diane Mason, Mary Elizabeth 312, 361 Matheson, Daniel Robert Matthews, Madonna 361 Martin, Karen Larane 408 Martin, Sheila Gail 361 Mason, Ralph Jr. Mathews, James Henry 277 Matthews, Michael Henry Martin, Kathy Elaine Martin, Sheryl Jeanette Mason, Randall Scott Mathews, Linda Sue Matthews, Roger Dale 361 Martin, Keith Blaine 313, 392 Martin, Terry Evelyn Mason, Robert E. Lee 312 Mathews, Martin Lea Matthews, Russell Eugene 392 432 Martin, Bobby Matthews, Russell i j i Matthews, Steve 100 Matthews, Terry Lee Mattingly, Alfred Clark 271, 303 Mattingly, Basil Holbert Mattingly, Larry Gene Mattingly, Mary Ellen 361 Mattingly, Michael Clark 381 Mattingly, Robert Raley Mattingly, Rose Marie Mattingly, Sandra Kay 313, 392 Mattingly, Sandra Lee 313 Mattingly, Terence Lee Mattingly, Teresa Ann Mattingly, Thomas Joseph Mattingly, William B. III Mauer, David 70 Mauldin, Timothy Leigh 317, 361 Maupin, Timothy Wayne Mauzey, Pamela Gay 361 Maxham, Robert 296 Maxwell, Dwight Wayne 315, 317, 361 Maxwell, Orvell Alonzo 278, 287, 361 May, Glen Lowry May, John Jennings May, Karon Kay 408 May, Michael Glen May, Sharon Gay 392 Mayberry, Michael Shannon Mayes, Deborah Lynn 381 Mayes, Rita Jones Mayeur, Stephen Gerard Mayfield, Kathy Ann 107 Mayhew, Mark 84-87 Mayhugh, Lecia Kay Maynard, Ezra Gordon II 303, 361 Mayo, Gerald Eugene 296, 408 Mayrose, Mary Elizabeth Mays, Mark Landis 284 Mays, Steven Landis McAdams, Margaret Deen SERS See ¢ McAllister, Petra Robin McBride, Anita 313 McBride, Cheryl Ann 361 McBride, Denise 392 McBride, Micheal Lynn 361 McBride, Sharyn West McBurney, Harriett McCage, Raegena Beatrice McCaleb, Lucinda Lee 384, 392 McCandless, Beverly Kay 361 McCandless, Karen Reyna 322-323, 387 McCandless, Kerry Philip McCandless, Rebecca Creal 361 McCarty, Christopher Lee McCarty, Constance P. McCarty, Donald Elliott Jr. McCarty, Janice Marie McCarty, Steven Donald McCauley, Christopher D. McCauley, Elizabeth Ann — T. Dekle McCaulley, Maryanne Rush 408 McCelvey, Jeff 297 McCay, James Crear McChesney, William Mark 303, 361 McClain, Carol Ann McClamroch, Scott Thomas 277 McClanahan, John Mark McClanahan, Judy Lynn 408 McClean, Mary Helen 325, 392 McCleese, Mary Lou 408 McClellan, Steven Louis McClendon, Thomas Robert McClintock, Lora L. N. 408 McCloud, Charles Daniel McClure, Carol Bratcher McClure, John Lewis 233, 381 McClure, Maurice Rose McClurg, Vicki Lynn 246, 254 McCoin, Olie B. Jr. McConathy, Bryan Tucker Tube-testing Finding the equivalent of the determined weight is Lisa Shaffner, a Louisville junior. Working in a Chemistry 123 lab, Miss Shaffner conducts an acid base titration experiment in Thompson Complex. McConico, David Anthony 217 McConnell, Jeffrey Dale 393 McConnell, Mitchell Jay 381 McConnell, Richard William McConnell, Winnie Ellen 267, 307, 381 McCord, Thomas Ross McCord, William Michael McCormack, Phyllis Anne McCormack, Stephanie Gae McCormack, Susan Anita McCormick, Doris Elaine 320, 408 McCormick, Mary Leslie 263 393 McCoskey, Pamela Sue McCoy, Carmen Denise McCoy, Joseph Glenn 278 McCoy, Karen Rae McCoy, Lisa Catherine McCoy, Teresa Claire McCracken, David Rea 301, 381 McCrory, Kay Horton McCubbin, Linda Mae 136, 393 McCubbin, Mary Lynn 125 McCubbin, Patricia Gail 393 McCubbins, Julia Ann 393 McCubbins, Nadji Sue 381 McCulloch, Benjamin H. 408 McCulloch, James Clarke 283 McCullough, Janet Louise McCullough, Steven Earnest McCurley, Edward Burton McCutchen, Charles Leo McDaniel, Kerry Allen McDaniel, Lennel Forest McDaniel, Lois Jean McDaniel, William Bruce 295-296, 381 McDaniels, Jim 227 McDivitt, Norris Edwin Jr McDonald, Barbara Ellen McDonald, Jerry Allan 299, 361 McDonald, Kevin Ray McDonald, Mary Ann 381 McDonald, Octerloney B. McDonough, Greta 122 McDonough, Joan Melissa 361 McDonough, Kevin Thomas McDonough, Martin Gregory McDougal, Billy Joe 408 McElfresh, Susan Carol 265, 381 McElfresh, Thomas Dean 241 McElroy, Donna Kay McElroy, Linda Anne McElroy, Russell Lee 277, 381 McElroy, Susan Parr 381 McEuen, Marshall Malin McEuen, Robert Aaron 296 McEuen, Warren Lee 361 McFadden, Brenda Maxine McFadden, Robert Lewis 408 McFarland, Alicia 171 McFarland, Daniel William 281, 361 McFarland, Gary Lea 381 McFarland, Susan Curd 321, 361 McGaughey, Gregory Lance McGee, David Louis McGee, Michael Joel McGee, Walter 313 McGehee, Vickie Lynne 319, 361 McGehee, Vivian Lynn McGhee, Bobby Jack McGill, Kevin Mark McGinnis, David Lee McGinnis, Susan Faye 408 McGinnis, Timothy Dale 323, 361 McGinnis, William Roger McGinty, Robert Ray McGlaughlin, Gregg John McGlocklin, Charles W. McGourin, Christine Kranz McGowan, Bettye Louis McGowan, David Richard McGowan, Donald Lewis Jr. McGowan, Kim Ray 393 McGrath, Thomas James 55 McGraw, Janet Leslie 381 McGregor, Adeianne M. Berry 381 McGregor, Holly Millicent 2 McGrew, Polly Ann 381 McGuffey, Deborah Gail 346 McGuffey, Ronald Dean McGuffin, Arthur M. III 210 McGuffin, Pamela Grimes McGuffin, Richard Jay 381 McGuire, Donald Kreis Jr. 210, 393 McGuire, Jim 303 McGuire, Joyce Darlene McGuire, Mary Ann McGuire, Timonthy Dwayne 123, 408 McGurk, Michael Stanley McIntyre, Gloria Lorainne 263 McIntyre, Lincoln Bryan 393 McIntyre, Michael Lee McJoynt, David Thomas 408 McKay, Julia Ann McKee, Anthony E. McKee, Edna Elizabeth McKee, Harold Dean 290 McKeehan, Larry Edward McKenna, Elizabeth Ann 408 McKenney, Jefferson Chase McKenney, Melissa Garrison McKinley, Jeffrey Allen 242-243 McKinley, Sandra Lou 381 McKinley, Theresa Lynn 408 McKinney, Albert Franklin 281 McKinney, Bettie Parrish McKinney, David Anthony McKinney, Frankie Ray McKinney, Gregory Lee McKinney, Joseph 313 McKinney, Paul Simpson McKinney, Timothy Howard McKinney, Valeria Annette 119, 297 McKinney, William Ray 100, 297, 321 McKoin, Henry Sugg III 381 McLaughlin, Joseph William McLean, Angela De Veria 393 McLean, Theresa Marie 381 McLemore, Molly Anne 433 Matthews, Steve McLemore, Molly McLimore, Perry Glenn McLinton, Linda Joan McMahon, Eugene 124 McMahon, Maidene 124 McMican, Robert Albert 381 McMichael, Ben Sherman Jr. McMichael, Lisa Lynn McMillan, Larry Dean McMillen, Julie Ann 408 McMillian, Laura Jean 301, 408 McMinn, William Kenneth McMullen, Diane 52 McMurtrey, Janice Faye 323, 361 McMurtrey, Teresa Gail 381 McNally, David 277 McNally, Gary Wayne McNally, Rosemary 264, 381 McNally, Sandra Marie 408 McNary, Valeria Ann 361 McNatton, Elizabeth Ann 408 McNatton, Lisa Jane 408 McNeil, Martin Douglas McNeill, James Edward McPeak, James Ray 393 McPhaill, Shelia Faye 393 McQuady, Diana Lynne 408 McRae, Randall Glen McReynolds, Barbara Wooten 361 McReynolds, Kevin Alton 393 McSweeney, Jill Jennifer 384 McVey, Harriett Penrose 107 Meacham, Gregory Lee Meacham, Lisa Marie 393 Meacham, Robert Thomas Meacham, Scott Wayne 210, 301, 408 Meachum, Gerald Michael Meachan, John 297 Mead, Leah Kristin 295 Meade, Wayne Thomas Meador, Darrell Richard 361 Meador, Debra Lynn Meador, Gary Dale Meador, John Brent Meador, Lois A. Barnard Meador, Mark Stephen Meador, Rhonda Denise 267 Meador, Scarlett Kay Meador, Virginia Ruth Meadows, Johnny Lee Meadows, Marshella 393 Meadows, Martha Marie Meadows, Ralph Steven 408 Meadows, Richard Earl Meadows, Terry Donald Meads, David Meagher, Kimberly Ann Mean Machine 252 Means, Marelle Gaye 393 Mears, Teresa Ann 309 Medalie, Jamie Elizabeth Medbery, Alice R. Media Services director 140 Medley, Joyce Alma 408 Medley, Robert Michael Mee, Lonzie Edward Meek, Janet Elaine Meek, Robert Lawrence Meek, Robert Leon Meeker, Carol Sue 393 Meeks, Elissia Gail 408 Meeks, Mike Gene Meeks, Timothy Allen 361 Meeler, William James Meeting, Wendy Leigh 264, 381 Meffert, April Lynne 267 Mefford, David 136-137 Mefford, Jana Denise 362 Mefford, Marty Richard 408 Mefford, Sandra Jane 381 Mehramfar, Mohamad Ali Meiman, Sharon Ann 408 Melcher, Christina Anne 408 Melhiser, Karen Lenora 408 Melhiser, Sherree Denise 323, 393 Melloan, Barbara G. Mitchum Meloon, Dallas Gail Melton, Marilann Jo. Melton, Susan Elaine Melton, Vicki Ann 381 Melville, Robert 188 Mendenhall, Thomas William 268, 271, 284 Menetrey, Kathleen Ann Menetrey, Louis Richard Men’s spring sports 238-239 Menser, Dion Lynn Mercer, Lois Ann Mercer, Patricia Joan Mercer, Robert Owen Mercke, David Keith Mercke, William Christophe Mercy, Mark Charles 210 Meredith, Catheryn Melisse Meredith, Daryl Meredith, Deborah Gail Meredith, Emma Cavender Meredith, George Howard 381 Meredith, Lisa Melia Meredith, Malea Gale Meredith, Nancy Elizabeth Meredith, Robert Joseph Meredith, Robin Rea 381 Meredith, Terry Wayne Meredith, Tracy D. Meredith, Travis Gene Merideth, Kenny Joe Merideth, Rebecca Joan 381 Merideth, Treva Nell Merimee, Mark Joseph 393 Merrett, Shelly Ann Merrick, Diana Louise 305, 393 Merrick, Martha Ann Merrill, Beverly Jean 295, 381 Merrill, Sharon Sue 393 Merrill, Stephen Wylie 233, 300, 362 Merriman, Debra Lynn Merritt, Karen Marie 408 Mershon, Richard Brent Mesker, Jeanne Marie 295, 408 434 McLimore, Perry Milon, Pamela Messer, Randy Darrell Messersmith, Roy Owen 362 Metcalf, James Frank Metcalf, Marilyn A. Vuksich Metcalfe, Gary Wayne Methods in Kindergarten 412 190-191 Metzerott, Matt Dewey Metzger, William Robert Mews, Julie Kristine Meyer, George Frederick Meyer, Pamela 315 Meyers, Daniel Mark 233, 381 Middleswarth, Victoria L. Middleton, Richard 313 Middleton, Sarah Martina 408 Midkiff, Rex Brent Mike, Theresa Marie Milan, Winifred Wolfe Milby, David 381 Milby, Gary Milby, Gordon Edward Milby, Ladebra Sue Parker Milby, Michael Wayne Miles, Anita Louise 393 Miles, Donald Alton Jr. 393 Miles, Douglas Earl 300, 387 Miles, Judith Catherine Miley, Karen Jeanne 263, 273, 381 Military Ball 321 Military Science dept. 168 Military Science dept. head 168-169 Millard, Mike Ray Millen, Janet Elizabeth 321 Millen, Robert Curtis 408 Miller, Barbara Ann Decker Miller, Barbara Elaine 408 Miller, Betty Boyd 362 Miller, Carolyn 307 Miller, Cecil Michael Miller, Charles Robert Miller, Chris G. Miller, Clifford Ira 393 Miller, Connie Elaine 408 Miller, Constance Kaye 362 Miller, Dallas Hudson 320 Miller, Dara Girl 314 Miller, Darla Ann Miller, Deanne Michelle 408 Miller, Debora Lynn 393 Miller, Debra Ann 393 Miller, Dennis Eugene Miller, Diane Miller, Doana Elizabeth 408 Miller, Donna Gail 7, 230-231, 362 Miller, Edward Gilbert 393 Miller, Elizabeth Anne Miller, Frank 34 Millerfred, Kix 204-211 Miller, Gary Wayne Miller, Gregory Blaine Miller, Heidi L. 408 Miller, Janetta Ann 393 Miller, Jeffrey Alan Miller, Jerome Anthony Miller, Jim 125, 274 Miller, John 159 Miller, John A. 235, 408 Miller, John Allen 235, 408 Miller, John Edward III 235, 381 Miller, John Mark 235, 382 Miller, Joy Kirgan Miller, Kathy Martine 108, 323 Miller, Kimberly Ann 408 Miller, Kimberly Dawn 408 Miller, Lawrence Lee Miller, Lisa Carole 393 Miller, Lucinda Marie Miller, Margaret Ann Miller, Mark K. 284-285, 295, 408 Miller, Martha Ellen Miller, Mary Ann 264, 287 Miller, Michael Lewis Miller, Ngoc-Phuong 159 Miller, Niven 54 Miller, Pamela Kiper Miller, Patricia Ann Riley Miller, Patricia Bowman Miller, Peggy Dianne 99, 101-102, 324 Miller, Pete E. Miller, Philip Lyle 393 Miller, Rebekah Lynn Miller, Rhea Ellen 300 Miller, Rhyia Marie 408 Miller, Robin Lynn 115, 393 Miller, Roger Franklin 282 Miller, Russell 32-33, 210 Miller, Stanton Tyza Miller, Stephen McKinley Miller, Susan Irene Miller, Teresa Miller, Teresa Anne 117 Miller, Terry Deloris Miller, Thomas Henry Miller, Tracy Ann 408 Miller, Tyza 244 Miller, Wilburn Milton Jr. Milligan, Gary W. Milliken, Bruce Leland Milliken, Douglas Gilbert 203 Milliken, George Hugh Milliner, Clementine E. Milliner, Kristina Marie 393 Mills, Carolyn Anne 408 Mills, Dale 285 Mills, Edgar Frank 303 Mills, Edgar Louis Jr. Mills, Ellen Elaine 107, 408 Mills, George Allen III Mills, George Harvey Mills, Henry T. Mills, James Monaghan Mills, James Thomas Mills, Jonna Gaye Mills, Joseph William Mills, Laverne Edward Mills, Lillian Beatrice 393 Millward, Kathy Lynn B. Milon, Pamela Marie 362 A pa(iJrasol chat Daughters of two army families, Karen Rittgers and Selene Mahaffey have beea friends since their sopho- more year in high school when the parents of both were stationed at Ft. Devens, Mass. Miss Mahaffey moved to Ft. Campbell and the two freshmen were reunited when they enrolled at Western last fall. — B. Edwards Milton, Debra Yvonne 382 Milton, Juanita 49 Milton, Pamela Susan 408 Miluk, Timothy Jon 408 Mimms, David Lewis 290, 408 Mims, Cathy Jo. 252, 254 Mind-boggling problems 160-167 Miner, Robert Scott Mings, Cynthia Ann 393 Mingus, Edward George Mingus, Liza Sue Mingus, Mary Sue 393 Miniard, James D. Minogue, Dennis William 284 Minogue, Michele Joyce 408 Minogue, Norma Ann 393 Minor, Connie Jean 408 Minor, Cynthia Louise Minor, Harold Timothy Minor, Janice Lynn 267, 382 Minor, Karen Suzette Minor, Margaret Kay 393 Minor, Ronald Craig Minor, Vicki Denise Flener Minto, Mary Jane Collins Minton, Calvin Royce 320 Minton, Donald Wayne 60, 309, 393 Minton, James Ernest 362 Minton, John 133 Minton, Karen Perry 382 Minton, Lynda Turner Minton, Rebecca Ann 408 Mischel, Constance Grimme Miss Black Western Pageant 274-275 Mitcham, Carl Dwayne 362 Mitcham, Edwin Dean Mitchell, Arthur M. Mitchell, Barbara Smith 118, 382 Mitchell, Bonnie 31 Mitchell, Cathy Ann 393 Mitchell, Charlotte Diane 382 Mitchell, Christopher Ray 277, 408 Mitchell, Daryl Lamont Mitchell, David Eugene 261 Mitchell, Dewayne 289 Mitchell, Dinah Gail 393 Mitchell, Donna Sue 408 Mitchell, Glenn Stokes Mitchell, James Woodrow Mitchell, Kathy Jean 267, 393 Mitchell, Marilynn 295 Mitchell, Mary Louise 408 Mitchell, Rebecca Jo 267 Mitchell, Sally Ann 382 Mitchell, Sheila Bledsoe 408 Mitchell, Vickie Lynn Mitchell, Vida Jane 305 Mitchell, Walter David 362 Mitchell, Ward Medley Mitchell, William Leslie Mobley, Gregory L. Mock, Gayann Gipe Mock, Gregory Allen Modares, Noredin Moddrelle, David Sherman Modjeski, David Warren Modjeski, Linda Susan Modjeski, Peggy J. Mogan, Mark Bryant 408 Molloy, Quannah Sue 408 Mom, put your apple pie back in the oven 158 Momodu, Napoleon Shake Moms spy on pre-schoolers’ first college class 175 Monahan, Patricia Dawn Moncrief, Joan Patterson Money, Betty Edwards Money, Carolyn Jo. Monks, Melinda Rose Monroe, Ann Carr Monroe, E.G. 296 Monroe, Gary Glenn Monroe, Jeffrey Alan 408 Monroe, Samuel Eugene Montebello, Anthony R. Montell, Lynwood 176 Montell, William Bradley 393 Montgomery, Becky Sue 362 Montgomery, Melva Jean 408 Montgomery, Michael James 287, 362 Montgomery, Robert Craig Montgomery, Thomas L. Jr. 285 Montgomery, William K. Montoya, Gordon Ray Montpellier, France 80-83 Moody, Aza Lee Moody, David Michael 282, 277 Moody, Edward Layne Moody, Janice Mary 263 Moody, Larry N. Moody, Marlin Dale Moody, Thomas Alfred 277 Moody, Thomas Jeffrey 277 Moody, Vivian Sheppard Moon, Ellen Marie Moon, Rebecca 295 Moore, Craig Bruce 408 Moore, David Louie Moore, Donna Jo. 382 Moore, Douglas Dwight Moore, Emilie 362 Moore, Gary Reid 408 Moore, Ginny 262 Moore, James William 322 Moore , Jan Susan 362 Moore, Jeffrey Keller 382 Moore, Joe Michael 303 Moore, Joey Keith 382 Moore, John Allen Moore, Jonnetta Maria 263 Moore, Joyce C. Knight Moore, Karne Leigh 408 Moore, Margo Kent 322, 382 Moore, Mary Lynne Moore, Michelle Lynn 408 Moore, Mike 242-243 Moore, Patricia Moore, Patricia Lynn Moore, Reed Nuland Moore, Robert Earl 51, 282, 287 Moore, Ronnie Moore, Rosetta Lynn 393 Moore, Sharman J. Parks Moore, Stephen Clemmons Moore, Steven Allen Moore, Susan Elizabeth 393 Moore, Teresa Gail Moore, Terry Randal 393 Moore, Theodore Wesley Jr. Moore, Tim Dale 393 Moore, Tonia Cheryl 408 Moore, Valerie 316, 362 Moore, Valerie Michiele 316 Moore, Virginia Anna Sue 393 Moore, Warren T. 408 Moorefield, David Lee 382 Moorhatch, James Dodge 408 Moorman, Barry Deon Moorman, Roberta E. 393 Morales, Gerardo Buganza 304 Moran, Julie Woodson G. Moran, Patrick David 235 Moran, Sandra Renee Moranville, Marsha Ann 382 More than crayons and construction paper 190-191 Morehead, Robert Byron 210 Moreland, Gail Lynn 263 Moretz, Patricia Arlene 31, 312, 393 Morewood, John H. Morgado, Ternando 164, 301 Morgan, Barbara Lynn Morgan, Charles Stuart Morgan, Cornelia Ann 408 Morgan, Dennis Joe Morgan, Gail Ann 267 Morgan, Jacalyn Sue 315, 362 Morgan, James Edgar 291 Morgan, James William 291, 362 Morgan, Janet Carol Morgan, Jeffrey Thomas 283, 285 Morgan, Lynn 23, 275, 287 Morgan, Michelle Susan Morgan, Pamela Claudette 14, 393 Morgan, Pamela Joyce 14, 393 Morgan, Phillip Gordon Morgan, Russell Dwayne Morgan, Steve Upchurch Morgan, Tracey Lynn 287, 393 Moriarty, Robbie Lynn 393 Morris, Beverly Ann 382 Morris, Brenda Louise 264 Morris, Debora Lynn Morris, James Alan Morris, Keith Leonard 284 Morris, Michael Stuart 296 Morris, Pamela Kaye Morris, Rickie 393 Morris, Sherrian Gayle 362-382 Morris, Timothy Morrison, Brent Edward 362 Morrison, Marilyn McMullen Morrison, Phillip Barry Morrison, Ronald K. Morrow, Jacqueline Denise Morrow, Stacy Lynne Morse, Colleen Adele Morse, Rebecca Diane Morton, Kenneth Jerome 59, 408 Morton, Michael Kolumun Moseley, J. Lewis 61, 306, 382 Moseley, Robin Annette Moser, Mark Lovel Moses, Elizabeth Anne 362 Mosier, Pamela Kaye 230, 263, 362 Mosier, Teresa Faye 263, 382 Mosley, Douglas Wayne Mosley, Elizabeth A. 297 Mosley, Gary Neil Mosley, Kenneth Riddell Mosley, Nancy Carol 267, 382 Mosley, Sandra Jones Mosley, Suzanne Adele 393 Mosley, Vicki Valeesa 393 Moss, Edwin Lewis 323 Moss, James Allen Moss, Jane Ann 263, 393 Moss, Katrina Louise 382 Moss, Mary Lynn 362 Moss, Michael Forest 408 Moss, Rivers Benjamin Moss, Virginia Marie Moss, Walter William 114-115, 243 Mosser, Jeffrey Solomon Mosser, Lawrence O'Neal 291 Mosser, Tom Weldon Motes, Donna Marie Mounce, David McTavish Mounce, Faron Dale 382 Mounce, Robert 176 Mountain, Patrick Joseph 393 Mouser, Debora Ann 393 Moussavi, Abolghassem K. Moussavi, Hassan K. 362 Moving Out 122-123 Moyers, Gary Steven Moyers, Paul Edward Moyers, Robert Wayne Moyers, Thomas Jefferson Playing it Kuhl Moyers, Vicki Lynn Mr. Music Pageant 290 Mucker, Pamela Georgette 408 Muckler, Andrew David Muckler, William Clarence Mudd, Antonia Marie 393 Mudd, Charles Daniel Mudd, Columbus E. III Mudd, Donna Mudge, James Scott Mudwilder, Jane Tarres 382 Mueller, Harris Clinton Mueller, Jaci Louise Mueller, Jan Marie 382 Mueller, Melinda Margaret 408 Muffett, James Edward 312, 393 Muir, Freddie Nicholus 362 Mullen, Nancy Carol Mulligan, Anne Conway Mulligan, Michael Lee Mullikin, Douglas Lee 233, 362 Mullikin, James Allen 233, 303, 393 Mullinix, Annette Mullins, Laura Lea Mulloy, Richard C. Jr. Mulqueen, Gerald Lee Multerer, Anne Louise 408 Mulvihill, Kathy Ann Munday, Margaret 274 Munoz, Reinoza L. Alfonso 304 Munroe, Jeffrey Munson, Edward Louis Jr. 382 Murley, Jennifer Lynn 393 Murley, Timothy Arch Murphey, Jeffery Lee Murphey, Julie Ann Murphey, Marvin Wade Murphree, William Monroe 204-211 Murphy, Carol Stover Murphy, Cathy Renee 122, 307 Murphy, Cheryl Marie Murphy, Glen Allen Murphy, Glenn Franklin Murphy, Glenn Russell Murphy, James Murphy, James Dale 408 Murphy, Kathleen Ann 393 Murphy, Keven Maureen Murphy, Mary Catherine 307, 382 Murphy, Michael Allen 54 Murphy, Michael Lee 54, 362 Murphy, Stanley Lyndon 382 Murphy, William Stanford Murray, Anne 146 Murray, Caren Marie 362 Murray, David Lee 362 Murray, David Thomas 362 Murray, Edward H. Jr. Murray, Gail Jean Murray, Joan Elizabeth Greg Kuhl once belonged to “a wan- dering band of gypsies” which cris- scrossed the country en route to athletic stadiums where the “gypsies” donned uniforms and cleats to play professional baseball. Kuhl said the experience gave him op- portunities to associate with others, which he regards as more memorable than the baseball playing. The Detroit Tigers drafted Kuhl as a farm league relief pitcher when he was a senior at Jefferson Davis High School in Montgomery, Ala. “One day while pitching an all-star ame, I looked out and saw a minor eague pitching coach. He saw me, liked what he saw and asked me to enter the majors,” Kuhl said. “I said yes.” Kuhl said he felt good about his deci- sion “to go to pro” and attended college in the September:to March off-season. He sad he was college-motivated be- cause he didn’t want to be like other players who lamented, “what do I do now?” three or four years later. The youngest eiches on the Tigers’ 1972 staff, Kuhl said he played in 110 games between June of that year and July, 1975. He played in the Tigers’ Ap- palachian, Western Carolina, Midwest- ern and Montgomery leagues. “I was able to stay four seasons,” he said. ‘Lots of guys aren’t so lucky.” His first professional game was against the New York Mets’ farm team. The nervousnes wore off because Kuhl pitched for more than four innings in that game. He pitched seven strike-outs in the first three innings.. A self-described Meinberslides pitch- er, Kuhl led the 1972 team in victories. “Some people say playing the game is an ego trip, but I disagree,” he said. “There is something almost magical about it — just you and the batter. There’s a certain joy in playing.” There are other consequences, though, Kuhl said. “You have to learn to persevere and to avoid failure,” he said. “It’s embarrass- ing to stand out there and get your head beat in. “On the pro level, there is so much competition unless you are a superstar,” he said. ‘Then you don’t have to work as hard, but there’s only one Johnny Bench, one Catfish Hunter and one Tom Seaver. “You have to love baseball and be will- ing to spend long hours at it,” Kuhl con- tinued. Players also need another means of income, he said. “If you realize this then you can give it a shot. But some- one’s always waiting to take your place.” Someone had to take Kuhl’s place when he suffered tendonitis in late 1974. He was dropped in July, 1975. “Baseball was lots of fun until I hurt my shoulder, then I was through with it,’ Kuhl said. But baseball on the amateur level soon became part of Kuhl’s college life. He has helped coach Barry Shollen- berger with practice sessions as well as manning the p.a. system and keeping score at Topper games. He has also coached a girls’ softball team in Bowling Green. His ByPsy days are gone, but Kuhl said he wouldn’t hesitate to do it all over again. “You have to have a little kid in you and be a little crazy or it will drive YOU crazy,” he said. __ are WHITSON Scorekeeper and announcer at Topper baseball games are two responsibilities Greg Kuhl handles at the home contests. The former professional play- er is ineligible to compete on the collegiate level, but he often assists coach Barry Shollenberger with practice sessions. 436 Milton, Debra Murray, Joan Murray, John Bedford Murray, Kevin Patrick Murray, Lee 146, 210 Murray, LeeAnne 146 Murray, Michael Shawn 243, 252 Murray, Sue Ann 408 Murray, Susan 146 Murray, Susan Jenice Murrell, Eli Nawatha 276, 408 Murrell, Katherine Cornell 362 Murrell, Nausha L. 408 Muscular Dystrophy dance marathon 31, 288 Muse, Janice Yvonne Muse, Ralph Kenneth 362 Muse, Richard Lorrin 382 Musgrave, Ansel 25 Musgrave, Mrs. Ansel 25 Musgrave, Marcus Robert 25, 303 Musgrave, Sherry Lynn 24-25 Musgrove, Beth Ann 408 Music 74-83 Musical Chairs in the coaching staff 212-213 Music dept. 178 Music dept. head 178-179 Musselman, Edmund Craig Mussnug, Kenneth Joseph Muth, Marcus Whitman Mutter, Brenda Gayle 362 Myatt, Roger Eugene Myers, Anne Gifford Myers, Gary Wayne 382 Myers, Kassandra K. 319 Myers, Lana K. Briggs Myers, Samuel Henry Myers, Terri Lynn Myre, Debbie Elizabeth Naber, Craig Thomas Nagel, Henry George IV 408 Nagel, John Kevin 327, 382 Nagel, Steve Edward 327, 362 Nagle, Dennis Louis Nahikian, Nancy Lee 267, 287, 307, 393 Nahm, Clifford Conrad 277, 382 Nahm, John Samuel Nalesnik, Claudia Ann 382 Nalesnik, Theodore Eugene 35, 166, 363 Nally, Karen Ann 393 Nance, Martha A. 267, 372 Nance, Robert Anthony 277 Nantz, Wendell Glenn Napier, David Elhannon 393 Napier, Eileen Taggart Napier, Linda Jean 408 Napier, Pamela Eileen 302 Napier, Rocky Lane 210, 382 Napier, Rodney Alan 278 Napier, Tina Marie 393 Nasbitt, Opal 122 Nase, Rella Beth Nash, Alan Will Nash, Deborah Sue 408 Nash, Frances Marie Nash, J. Frank Jr. Nash, Marilyn Clark 263, 393 Nash, Mary Carol 319, 363 Nash, Ronald 177 Nash, Walter Dean Nason, Dean Wilbur Natcher, Joe Byron 285 Nation, Barbara A. Harrison 295 Nation, Beverly Norris 125 Nation, Laura Lynn 408 Nation, Nancy Dean 323, 346, 363 National Collegiate Association of Secretaries 316 Nave, Wallace 145-146 Naveaux, Susan Ann 265 Navitsky, Nancy Lynn 393 Naylor, Sherri Lynne NCAA Cross Country Championships 200-201 NCAA Swim Meet 232 Naubueze, Timothy 304 Neagle, Carole Rowe Neal, Anita Carol 393 Neal, Darlene Elizabeth 263, 287, 393 Neal, Deborah Lynn 182, 191, 363 Neal, James Steven 291 Neal, Jann Ellyn 323, 382 Neal, Jerry L. Neal, John Alan 278, 363 Nearly On Target 234-235 Nedrow, Bruce Albert 285 Nedvidek, Michael David 285 Nedvidek, William F. Need, Stephen Paull Neel, Julia Simpson Neel, Maxine 288 Neel, Paul Jarboe 363 Neel, William Hal Neely, James Thomas 382 Neely, Michael Thomas Neely, Robert Ewing Jr. 297, 363 Neely, Steven Wayne 277, 408 Neff, Paul Allen Negre, Christine Marie Nell, John Lawrence 393 Nell, Sandra Nelson, Bruce Allen 323, 363 Nelson, Carl Richard Nelson, Cynthia Ann Nelson, Deborah Ann Nelson, George Guthrie 314 Nelson, Hugh Lewis Jr Nelson, Kathleen Marie Nelson, Lee Northrop Nelson, Mary Elizabeth 267 Nelson, Robert 152-154, 158 Nelson, Susan Lynn Nesbit, Deborah Elaine 393 Nethery, Bradley Dale 284 Neubauer, George Septer Neuberger, Debra Kay Nevils, Delower Jean 319 Nevils, Laura Katherine Nevitt, Denise Marie 363 Newberry, Sherry Kay Newberry, William M. III 303 Newbolt, Denise Newby, Melesa Anne 393 Newby, Rebecca Lynn Newby, Ronald K. Newcomb, Jimmy Lawrence Newlen, Karen Lynn Newman, Deborah Joyce 307, 319, 363 Newman, Diana Lynn 313, 363 Newman, Janet Ann Newman, Lisa Ann 313, 363 Newman, Rebecca Kay News 110-113 News Election Service 61, 307 Newton, Barry Dean 277, 408 Newton, Creighton Gregg Newton, James Austin Newton, John Thomas Jr. Newton, Joseph Arthur 363 Newton, Richard Craig 271, 284, Ng Wing, Lock Johnson Nganthavee, Chokechai 408 Nguyen, Phong K. Ngwu, Matthew Doziem 304 Nicely, Patricia Ann Nicholas, Theodore Charles 320 Nicholls, Mikal Harry Nichols, Douglas Lee 393 Nichols, Jennifer Lee 263, 408 Nichols, Linda Diann 323 Nichols, Mark Douglas 241, 283 Nichols, Mark Wood 241, 283 Nichols, Marsha Lynn 409 Nichols, Roger Denton 382 Nichols, Theresa Michele 409 Nicholson, Caryn Louise 409 Nicholson, Deborah Lynn Nicholson, Laura Lee Nickerson, Ned Bradley Nickfar, Mahmoud Nickols, T. Kevin Nielsen, Janet Lynn Nilan, Margaret Ann Nilssen, Liv 304 Nims, Alva John Niswonger, Lora Sue 322, 382 Nix, Kathy Richey Nixon, Joel Lee Nixon, Richard 93 Noble, Debra Menser Noble, Thomas Kelton Noe, Frederick Booker Noel, Perry R. 382 Noel, Phyllis Lynn 409 Noffsinger, Rick Lynn Nofsinger, Gayle Kay Noland, Steve Thomas Nolen, Sammye Helen 409 Nolting, Lance Warren Non-organized sports 256-257 Nonweiler, Teri Lynn Noon, James Kevin Noon, Patrick James 363 Nord, Thomas Justin 210, 409 Nordholz, Michael John 221 Nordine, Alice Bryant Normand, Irene Ellen Normand, Mark Douglas Norris, Gregory McDonald Norris, Jennifer Kay Norris, John Seton Norris, Lisa Ann Norris, Mary Ann Norris, Randall Edward 295, 303, 382 Norsworthy, Sharon Denise 393 Northern, Keith Joel Northerner, Nancy Jane 265 Northington, Dwight Latell Norton, Carol Elizabeth Norvell, Joni Marie Norvell, Robert Eugene Jr. 321 Norville, Jeffrey Allen Norwine, Jerry W. Nostalgia 228-229 November Nonsense 271-273 Nunn, Donna Ruth Nunn, Douglas Ashby Nunn, Jenny Margaret 267, 273 Nunn, John Barton II Nunn, Phyllis Alany Nursing dept. 170-171 Nursing dept. head 170-171 Nuttall, Susan Allen 363 Nutter, Gina Leigh 393 Nutter, Ronald Grant Nye, Debra Lynn Oakes, John 94, 177 Oakley, David Albert 301, 393 Oakley, Lisa Anne O’Banion, Marsha Diane 313, 382 O’Berg, Stuart Irwin O’Brien, Bette Lynn O’Brien, Daniel Patrick O’Brien, Karen Lea O'Brien, Lisa Ann O’Brien, Patricia Ann 393 O'Bryan, Barbara Ann O'Bryan, Karen Ann O'Bryan, Scott Alan Ockerman, Sherry Von 409 O'Connor, John 189 O'Connor, Michelle Patrice O’Daniel, Susan Catherine Odle, Linda Kay Odle, Patricia Ann O'Donnell, Heather Dianne 409 Odum, Vicki 97 Oechsli, Mary Joyce 363 Oetzel, Richard Steven 252, 254 Offner, William F Offutt, Tracy Alan Ogburn, Diana Lynn Ogden College of Science and Technology associate dean 160-161 Ogden College of Science and Technology 160-167 Ogden College of Science and Technology dean 160 Ogles, Bob 313 Ogles, Theresa Lynn Dunbar Oglesby, Burch 189 Olgesby, Pamela Lynn 46, 363 Ogulu, Promise Ezekiel O'Hara, Sharon Ann 190-191, 363 O'Hearn, Karen Ann 122, 382 Ohio Valley Conference 204-211, 216 Oiboh, Jacob Peter 304 pala, Amon Okechukwu 304 umura, Pakeo 315 den, Angela M. 409 dham, James Larry 277, 363 dham, Johnny 134, 225 dham, Marshall Wayne dham, Roger Singleton 363 din, Cheryl Lynn 264 ive, Edith Jean 393 iver, Cathy Lynn 393 liver, Gary Wayne 299 iver, Kathryn F iver, Kathy Ann 119, 393 iver, Linda Sue iver, Patricia Jean 363 iver, Randy Dee iver, Shelia Freano phie, Ronald Roland O'Meara, Lawrence Omega Psi Phi 280 Omotosho, Michael A.J On the air 384 Once upon a time 171 One degree was not enough 196 O’Neal, Charles Wayne O'Neil, Colleen Roberta 299, 363 O'Neil, Peter James Onyenekwu, Mark Chidi Opening 2-11 Oppitz, Robert 152-153 Orange, Charles R. Orazine, Dougas Ray Orberson, Carla Yates Orberson, Michael Edward Orberson, Paul Clark 242-243, 382 Organizations 290-325 Orientation Advisement and Registration program 20 Orndorff, Debora L. Morris Orndorff, John Christian Orndorff, Nancy Noe 156, 393 “Orpheus Descending” 100 O'Rourke, John Joseph Orr, Charles Herndon Jr Orrahood, James Wyatt Orrender, Paula Kaye 322, 363 Orser, Judith Anne Orton, William Hopewell Jr. 125 Osborn, Barbara Ann 264, 318 Osborn, Will Allen 393 Osborne, Diane Gaye 393 Osborne, Flossie Mae Osborne, Gary Dwight 215 Osborne, James Thomas 299, 363 Osborne, Judith Lowe 363 Osborne, Karen Sue 299, 409 Osborne, Marian Ruth 295, 363 Osborne, Melinda Lou Osborne, Rhonda Jeane 382 Osborne, Sue Carol 409 Ostaszewski, Mark Alan 409 Osteen, Ronald Norris Ostendorf, Gregory Allen 363 Oswald, Rodney Robert Otte, Paul Clarke Otto, Elizabeth 409 Otto, Robert 319 Ou, Weiming Outland, Vickie Iglehart Overbey, Eleanor Kay 409 Overby, Sue 264 Owen, Beth Helen Owen, Charles Douglas Owen, Gary Thomas Owen, Jeni 393 Owen, John Stephen Owen, Karen Diane 409 Owen, Kenneth Ray 297 Owen, Linda 262 Owen, Margaret Janelle Owen, Patricia Gwendolyn 363 Owens, Barney Clifton Owens, Clara Renee Owens, Cheryl Lynn 318, 393 Owens, Curtis Eugene 277, 363 Owens, Cynthia Alisa 409 Owens, Donald Eugene 221 Owens, Gary Wayne 243 lofekoleyoyoyeleleyeyoleyeleyeyeyeye) | 437 Murray, John Owens, Gary Owens, Gina Sanderfur Owens, Jane Elizabeth 318, 346, 363 Owens, Jerry L. 244-245, 263 Owens, Joseph Ray 409 Owens, Joy Renee Owens, Judy Gayle 393 Owens, Kelton B. 393 Owens, Lafreater Elizabeth 409 Owens, Linda 273 Owens, Lisa Carlette Owens, Mark Jeffrey 232-233 Owens, Maude Elaine 409 Owens, Robert Alan Owens, William Sidney Owensboro Symphony 94 Owsley, Pamela Yvette Owsley, Roy Hamilton Jr. 101-102 Owsley, Ruby Gale Ozark Folk Festival 54 Ozdemir, Hasan 141, 238, 393 Ozgenel, Kamil Hakki 141, 409 Ozgowicz, Denise Lynne 393 Pace, Alfonzo Grundy Pace, Billy Joe Pace, Kim McMillan 353 Pace, Mary Julia 307 Pace, Robert Alan 363 Padgett, Beverly Frances 363 Padgett, Thomas Barry 299, 301 Padilla, Carlos Manuel Padilla Raul 305 Padron, Patrick, Steven 210 Page, Agnes Wilcher 409 Page, Floyd Keith Jr. 393 Page, Lacreasa Ann Page, Leslie III Page, Lisa Gail Page, Malcolm Shad Page, Ola Marcelle 409 Page, Pamela Janell 291 Page, Pamela Louise 59, 291, 409 Page, Paula Ioma 382 Page, Shirley Lynn Page, Teresa Ann 319, 363 Paige, Bonnie Lynne 382 Palis, Miles Allen 261 Palmer, Lemuel Burnace 382 Palmer, Neil Craig Palmer, Pamela Susan 214-215, 393 Palmer, Ray Neil Palmer, Sharon. Denise 382 Palmer, Tana Lynn 409 Palmore, Anath Hope Palmore, Jeffrey Michael Palmore, Joel F. Palmore, Melinda Panchareon, Pornchai 364 Panhellenic Council 287 Pankow, James 76 Pankratz, Donna L. 364 Pankratz, Robert 186-189 Pannier, Alice Mary Papciak, Patrice Michele 364 Papps, James Gus Pardue, Deborah Lynn 263, 381 Pardue, Sheila G. 263, 271, 409 Parish, Cynthia Lou Parissi, Bob 80 Parker, Alan Frederic Parker, Charlotte Alene 364 Parker, Daphne Yvonne Parker, Dennis Alan 282 Parker, Dennis Dio 282, 393 Parker, Harold Ray Parker, John 317 Parker, Mary Elizabeth Parker, Rita Elaine Parker, Sandra Lynn Parker, Susan Hurley Parking Aberration 36-37 Parks, James 160 Parks, Jim 301 Parks, Judith Lynn 125, 263, 364 Parmenter, Mar k David Parnell, Kandy Gaye Parnell, Stevie Lynn 261, 393 Parrent, Robert Wayne Parrigan, Pamela Coats Parrigan, William Morton Parrigin, Lyle Moody Parrish, Bettie Sue 364 Parrish, Helen Juanita Parrish, Karen Rose Parrish, Kathryn Joyce Parrish, Terry Wayne 261 Parrott, Carole Lynn Parrott, David Wayne 382 Parrott, Rebecca Lynne 108, 325, 364 Parshall, Scott Eugene Parsley, Don Michael Parsons, John Philip Parsons, William Richard 382 Parton, John Otha Pasco, Pamela Rosalyn Pash, Janet Suzanne Pasley, Dennis Lamar 97, 100 Passafiume, Kathleen L. Pasteris, David F. Pate, Mary Nancy 409 Pate, Stanley Carl Patel, Shreeram M. Paterson, Cheryl Ann 409 Patey, Camellia Gwen 323 Patmor, Betty Louise 317 Patriarca, Anthony Michael Patrick, June Teresa 382 Patrick, Karen Joyce Patrick, Patricia Louise Patrick, Shelley Ann Patrick, Sherry Lynn 438 Owens, Gina Pi Kappa Phi Patterson, Bobby Joe Patterson, Debra Carol 393 Patterson, Gary Alan 382 Patterson, Gary Lynn Patterson, Jan Wilson 125 Patterson, Julia Ann 393 Patterson, Phillip W. Jr. 364 Patterson, Richard Ellis 382 Patterson, Sandra Groves Patterson, Stacey Lynn 409 Patterson, Stephen Avery 364 Patterson, Tamela Michelle Patterson, Terry Neil Patterson, William Clark Patterson, William Michael Patton, Donald Glenn 303, 382 Patton, James Rich Patton, Janice Kay 364 Patton, Jerry Thomas 365 Patton, Lucinda Lee 409 Patton, Rita Roberts 365 Patton, Tom 322 Paul Price Ensemble 52, 54 Pauley, James Watkins 393 Pauli, David Timothy 283 Pawley, Keenan Lowell 295 Pawley, Keith 261, 393 Pawley, Mary Ellen 299, 382 Paxson, Pamela June 382 Payne, Cynthia Yvonne 409 Payne, David Charles 50, 277, 307, 346, 365 Payne, Eunice Inez Payne, Gerald Edward Payne, Jenifer Kaye 409 Payne, Jennie Starlin 382 Payne, Joseph Sylvester Jr. Payne, Lester Dale Payne, Mary Elaine Payne, Polly Anne 382 Payne, Rebecca Holliman Payne, Robert Eugene 244-245, 365 Payne, Sandra Gayle 409 Payne, Thomas Anthony Jr. Payne, Vicki Anne 300, 382 Payne, William Howard Paynter, George Talbott Payton, Earl Thomas Payton, Louis E. Payton, Quenta Ann 291, 393 Pazdan, Dorothy Kay Pea, Gerald Lee Peace, David Edward Peak, Deborah Kay Peak, Sandra Lynne Peak, Shebell 274-275, 393 Peake, Julie Robin 393 Pearce, Gena Ann 267 Pearce, Robert Marline Pearl, Cherie Lynn 365 Pearl, Jean Coleman Pearl, Karen Lynn Pearman, Rocky Lane Pearse, James 99, 160 Pearson, Deborah Jo 409 Pearson, Dennis Alan Pearson, Earl 301 Pearson, Ernest Michael 303, 307, 365 Pearson, Joetta Lynn 409 Pearson, Marla Darlene 365 Pearson, Ramona Lynne 393 Pearson, Richard Moss Pearson, Thomas Everett 261 Pease, Rebecca Lynn Peay, Sharon Lee 393 Peay, Shelia Kay Peck, Chris Robert Peck, Teresa Kay 409 Peckenpaugh, Leo 237 Peckenpaugh, Rebecca Irene Peddycort, Hugh Estis 409 Peden, Charles Howard Jr. Peden, Nikki Lynne 323, 409 Pedigo, Albert William 284 Pedigo, Sheila Furlong Pedigo, Terry Mark Peerce, Karen Elizabeth Pelfrey, Scott Anthony Pelino, Daniel Scot 15, 307, 393 Pelley, Brian Douglas Pelly, David Jewell 277 Pelly, Olivia Vanmeter Pemberton, Anthony Keith Pemberton, Timothy Alan 409 Pendleton, Dency M. Turner 303 Pendleton, Doyle Wayne 88 Pendleton, Eddie Dean 409 Pendleton, Nita Lafail 382 Pendleton, Ronald Edward Pendleton, Sandra Gail 190, 365 Pendleton, Vicki Lynn 409 Pendley, Angela J. Pendley, Jason Kerry 409 Pendley, Michael Steven 321 Penner, Randy Edward 323, 365 Penney, Emily Jane 225, 227, 275 Pennington, Alvin Read 210, 285 Pennington, Lisabeth Sue 365 Pennington, Nancy Arnise Pennisi, Lauri Ann 300, 393 Peperis, Diane Elaine Pepper, Debbie Kay 393 Pepper, Katherine Stuart 317, 382 Pepper, Tony Kenton 409 Percussion Ensemble 291 Perdue, Lisa Rose Perdue, Mark Anthony 244 Pergande, Richard D. Jr. Perkins, Franklin Kyle Perkins, James Paul Perkins, Jill Evelyn 265 Perkins, John Casey Jr. 409 Perkins, John Phillip 282 Perkins, Lawrence Douglas Perkins, Leslie Royce Perkins, Lynette Sue Perkins, Michael Ray Perkins, Patricia Garrett 365 Perkins, William Lee 393 Perpich, Tina Ann Perros, Nancy Glass 382 Perry, Cindy Renee 382 Perry, David Earl 318 Perry, Gary Stephen 393 Perry, Joseph Whitney Perry, Karen Lynn 393 Perry, Katherine Davis 365 Perry, Pamela Shevan 118, 120, 365 Perry, Victor Brian 284 Pershing Rifles 321 Personnel director 149-150 Peter, Elizabeth Catlett Peterie, D. Neil 180 Peterie, Stanley Taylor 409 Peters, Brenda Irene 393 Peters, Brenda Kay Peters, David Nathaniel 291 Peters, Debra Diane 393 Peters, Martha Ellen 314, 340, 365 Petersen, Albert Jepmond Petersen, Lisa Kirsten Peterson, Gary Edwin Peterson, Jackie Lloyd Peterson, Kevin William Peterson, Kurt I. Petries, Eddie 90 Petrzelka, Melody Rose Pettey, James 271, 285 Pettus, Morgan Maurice 278 Bubble trouble A collapsed bubblegum bubble brings ad- vice from 5-year-old Kevin Smith as he and his mother Dianne wait for Kevin’s brother outside the College of Education building. Recovering from the disaster is Carson Rea- gin, a music major from Radcliff. Reagin and Randy Mason, an elementary education pies from Bowling Green, were waiting for ac ass to begin. Petty, Anthony Ray Petty, Donna Jean Stinson Petty, Sherry Theresa 409 Peyton, Candace Jean Pfister, Marsha Renee Pharris, Belinda Sue Phelps, Alice Hampton Phelps, Bobby Joe Phelps, Diana Lynne 409 Phelps, James E. Jr. Phelps, James Ellsworth Phelps, Phyllis Maria 313 Phelps, Susan Diane Phelps, William Alfred 296, 366 Phi Beta Lambda 316-317 Phi Beta Sigma 267, 280-281 Phi Delta Theta 281 Phi Epsilon Theta 303 Phi Eta Sigma 294-295 Phi Mu 31, 252, 254-255, 266, 268, 272, 288-289 Phi Mu Alpha 291 Phi Mu Epsilon 303 Phi Sigma Alpha 317 Phi Upsilon Omicron 323 Philley, Sandra Wisdom Phillips, Ann Wallace 382 Phillips, Bobby C. Jr. Phillips, Charles Lynn Phillips, Chip 284 Phillips, Dawn Lynne 393 Phillips, Eddie Ray Phillips, Georgianna 322 Phillips, Gina Gail 101 Phillips, James Edward 382 Phillips, John C. Phillips, Joseph James 382 Phillips, Karin Marie 409 Phillips, Laura Ellen 263, 393 Phillis, Margaret Louise 394 Phillips, Michael Wayne Phillips, Teresa Sue 394 Phillips, Thala Caroline 299, 382 Phillips, Thomas Edgar Phillips, Tracy Brian 233 Phillips, Vicki Lynn 409 Phillips, Wanda Jean Philosophy and Religion dept. 176 Philosophy and Religion dept. head 176- 177 Philpot, Joan Jennings 409 Philpott, James Oscar 221 Philpott, Teresa Carol 394 Phipps, Robert Gregg Photojournalism class 183 Physical Education dept. 189 Physical Education dept. head 189 Physical Plant director 138, 140, 227 Physics and Astronomy dept. 161 Physics and Astronomy dept. head 161 Pi Delta Phi 304 Pi Kappa Alpha 272-273, 283, 288 Pi Kappa Phi 31, 282-283, 289 i fi F h Pickard, Simeon Taylor Pickard, Stephen Paul Pickens, Anna Jo Pickens, Jim 147, 227, 239, 263, 394 Pickerill, Robert Louis 281 Pickerrell, Daniel Alan 409 Pickerrell, Gregory Gene Pickett, James Clay 297, 366 Pickett, John Henry 99, 101-102 Pickler, Bill 30 Pickwick, Karen Lynn 409 Pictures worth at least a thousand words 183 Pierce, Bruce Douglas 119 Pierce, Cynthia Lu 109 Pierce, Darell Ray 409 Pierce, Debbie Jan 409 Pierce, Dwayne Thomas 409 Pierce, Emily Gayle 406, 409 Pierce, Joe Wade Pierce, Lynn Kay Kerry 382 Pierce, Marcus Edward Pierce, Margaret Jenrose 267, 269, 394 Pierce, Michael Raye 366 Pierce, Robin Ann 382 Pierce, Stewart Jay Pierce, Tristan Gay Pierce, William Ray 314 Pierstorff, William Joseph Pigman, Julia Bach 318, 366 Pike Donovan Sanky Jr. Pike, Mary Salmon Pile, Daniel Howard Pile, Perry Allen Pile, Royce Duane Pile, Vicki Lynne 303, 282 Pillitteri, Lisa Marie 267, 394 Pillow, Donald Earl Pillow, Ginny Lyn 366 Pillow, Janet Ruth 382 Pillow, Robert Wesley 409 Pillow, Ronald Earl Pinckley, Pippa Ann 394 Pine, Carla Jean 305, 394 Pinkerton, James Walker Pinkerton, Joel Warren Pinkston, Cathy Ann 409 Pinska, Laura Elizabeth 409 Pinson, Tina Marie Piper, Maria Gwen 382 Pippenger, Maria Carol Pitchford, Hilda Carol Pitchford, Linda Suzanne Pitchford, Marla Elaine Pitt, Robert William Pittman, Ova 9 Pitts, John Morrison Plains, Ga. 114 Plamp, Roger Miles Plantinga, John J. 382 Plantinga, Sandra Lynn 394 Platt, Christine Anne Platt, Eric Alan Platt, Thomasine Denise 409 Pleiman, Vernon Alan Plenty, Senia Ann Pluschau, John Charles Podbesek, Patricia Anne Podnieks, Gregory Scott 382 Poe, Wallace Edwin Jr. 382 Poe, William Bradford Poehlein, Susan Carol 22, 265 Pogrotsky, Ricky Morris 321 Pogue, David Allin Pogue, Greg Lynn Pogue, Herman Wendell Pogue, Phyllis Jean Pointer, Susan Annette Poitinger, Keith Arlen Poitinger, Wendy Sue Polak, Margaret Poland, Elizabeth Ann 264, 394 Poland, Hugh 129 Policastri, Anne 22, 265 Poling, Richard Forrest Politi, Keith Vincent Politi, Sandra K. Polley, Keith 287 Pollock, David Jon Pollock, Deborah R. 409 Pollock, Ronald Ray Pom Pon clinic 33 Pond, Neil Arthur 313, 394 Ponton, Robert Poole, Deena Jan Poole, Legail 305, 366 Poor, Julia Katherine 267, 394 Pope, Amy Margaret Pope, Anita Lynn 267, 394 Pope, Pamela Weir 366 Popham, Linda Carol Popham, Terry Wayne 409 Popplewell, Sandra Faye 267, 409 Porta, Mark Hammond Porter, Albert C. 394 Porter, Clara Elizabeth Porter, Glen Lane Porter, Jeanetta Susan 194, 382 Porter, Joel Hardin 409 Porter, John Allison Porter, Kenneth 394, 409 Porter, Lisa Kay 394 Porter, Nancy Evelyn Porter, Patti Wash Porter, Paul Randall 382 Porter, Phillip Leroy Porter, Robert Earl Porter, Stephen Gene Portman, Joseph Sanford Jr. 303, 366 Portman, Marcia Lynn 254, 409 Post, Audrey Elizabeth 382 Poston, Gary Ronald Poteet, Clint Poteet, Richard Douglas Potter, Cheryl jo 409 Potter College 176-185 Potter College of Arts and Humanities 176-185 Potter College of Arts and Humanities dean 176-185 Potter, Margaret Ann 366 Potter, Thomas Douglas Pottinger, Kathy Sue 366 Pottinger, Ruth Ann Potts, Barry Duggins Potts, Dale Reid Potts, Timothy Charles 297, 409 Powder Puff football 284 Powell, Ann Michele 394 Powell, Anna Marietha 394 Powell, Bill 232-233 Powell, Carita Fay 366 Powell, Donald Ray Powell, Eric Wayne 409 Powell, Gregory William Powell, Jacqueline Caudill Powell, James Marcus 366 Powell, Joseph Delbert 299, 394 Powell, Kathy 119 Powell, Kevin Lee Powell, Lawrence Edwin 346, 366 Powell, Michael William Powell, Roger Dale Powell, Sandra Faye 301 Powell, Sandra Lynn 301, 409 Powell, Sharon Leigh 301, 409 Powell, Sherrill Lynn 409 Powell, Steven Douglas 382 Power, Jerald Lawrence 409 Powers, Anthony Edward 409 439 Pickard, Simeon Powers, Anthony } Powers, Deborah Kay 394 Powers, Keith Otwell 297 Powers, Margaret Wesner Powers, Peggy 264 Powers, Tama Ann Powers, Tamara Ann Powlenko, Linda Jayne Poynter, Albert Jr. Poynter, Jennifer Monroe Pool, Stefan Lynn Prachasaisoradej, Tavirot Prater, Robert Lee Prater, Steven Douglas 241 Prather, Lynda Jeanne 366 Prather, Steven P. 366 Prather, Teresa Beth 265, 382 Pratt, Dean Michael Pratt, Katherine Mary Pratt, Penelope Jane 291, 295 Precious, Carol Jean 409 Prendergast, John Joseph President Downing 130-131 Presley, Dinah L. 409 Presson, Sherrelyn Joyce 382 Preston, Dean Alan 315 Preston, Debra Ann Preston, Dennis Jewell 291 Preston, Eddie Joe 204-211, 394 Preston, Garry Charles Preston, James Jeffrey Preus, Camille Prewitt, John Roy Jr Pribble, Mark James Price, Agnes Suzette 394 Price, Charles Lee III 307, 382 Price, Deborah Lynn 313 Price, Dennis Ray Price, Douglas Alan 409 Price, Harold Robert 382 Price, Janice Diane 382 Price, John Woodrow Price, Karen Raye 313 Price, Pamela Sue Price, Patricia Elaine 309, 323, 366 Price, Suzette 225 Price, Toni Caryl 263, 394 Price, Wallace Brent Priddy, Coy Brent Priddy, Dennis Oran Priest, Charles McKinley Priest, Donna Faye Priest, Jack 210 Priest, Ken 244, 394 Priest, Patricia Gail Prince, Michael 216-221, 409 Prine, John Russell Pritchard, Deborah Rose 382 Pritchard, James Howard Pritchett, Vickie Lynn 267, 366 Probus, Lawrence Keith 366 Probus, Steve 104-105, 325 Probus, Susan Jane 409 Proctor, Cathy Lou 409 Proctor, Mary Louise 264, 409 Proffitt, Connie Teresa Proffitt, Rita Jean 394 Provost, Joan M. 394 Provow, David Scott Pruden, Marijane 409 Pruitt, Deborah Jean 366 Pruitt, Earlrene Pruitt, Sonja Gay Pruitte, Monica Laurie 394 Pryor, Anita Carol 23, 263 Pryor, Debra Ann Pryor, Ellen McKnight 125, 307, 366 Pryor, Karen Anne Pryor, Marcia Kay Psychology dept. 189 Psychology dept. head 189 Public affairs and community relations director 136, 138 Public Relations director 134 Public Affairs programs assistant dean 152 Public Relations Student Society of America 306-307 Public Safety director 140-141 Public Service Institute director 152 Puckett, Bhrett Scott Puckett, Hugh 301 Puckett, Virgil Tracy Pudlo, Mitzi Minix Pugh, Diana Kay 394 Pulliam, Valerie Kay 409 Pulou, Punivai Purcell, Cathy Lynn Purcell, George Warren 323 Purcell, Sylvia Moorman Purchasing director 149 Pursley, Cathy Starr 394 Putnam, Kimberly Ann Qualls, Michael Stevenson Quarcelino, Nancy Lucia 23, 246, 247, 254, 366 Quarles, Dell Marie 394 Quertermous, Paul Gregory Quimby, Lee Thornton Quinn, Laura Denise Quinn, Robin Wynn 282 Quire, Mary Ellen 409 Rabiee, Massoud Rabold, Christopher Lance 141, 283, 287 Rabold, Robert Fuller Rabuck, Shirley J. Raby, Ron 126 Raby, Sara Ann Radcliffe, Rhonda Lynn 409 Rademaker, Richard Wathen Rader, Gigi Idell 409 Rader, Marilyn 300, 366 Rader, Wendy 313 Raef, Diane Carol 319 Rafferty, Mary Ann 382 Rafferty, Robert C. 210 Rager, Ray Thomas Raggard, Robin Wayne 409 Ragland, Becky 313 Ragland, Mark Sinclair Ragland, Marsha E. 274-275 Ragland, Thomas Bradley Raglin, Charles Wayne Raglin, Laverne Lucille Raglin, Lydia Dionne 409 Raglin, Sharon Elaine Railey, Steven Craig 321 Raisor, Rebecca Kathleen Raleigh, Harold Ray Raley, James Allen Raley, Janet Lee Raley, Mary Angela 409 Ralls, Adrianne Ralph, Dennis Wayne Ralph, Howard Allen 366 Ralph, Jerry Albert 297, 319 Ralston, Al D. Ralston, Micheal Dewayne Ralston, Debra Jean 295, 300, 382 Rambo, Cathy Lynn 409 Ramey, Marna Kaye 409 Ramos, Sheila June Vice Ramsay, John Theodore 129 Ramsey, David William 266 Ramsey, Frank Forrest Jr. Ramsey, Gary Lamont 409 Ramsey, Josine Laverne Ramsey, Michael Scott Ramsey, Rhonda Jean 409 Ramsey, Ronald Joe Ramsey, Vickie Carol 409 Randall, Becky Dawn 382 Randall, Janice Faith 267 Randall, John 236 Randall, Steven Bruce Randall, Theresa Lynn 366 Randall, Walter Clark Randle, Lela Ann 366 Randolph, David Ivan Jr. Randolph, Laura Jean 304, 409 Rankin, James Bolling, 322, 366 Ranney, William Rance Ransdell, Gary 33 Ransdell, John Christopher 255, 299 Ransdell, Matthew Paul Ransom, David Maurice Rappelling 257 Raque, Lisa Kathleen 50, 394 Rascoe, Bobby 221 Rastakhiz, Arab Mehdi Rastegar, Ghodratollah Rastegar, Panah Massoud Ratcliff, Kimberly Jane Ratliff, David Ned 285 Rausch, Jocelyn Drew 302 Ravenscraft, Paul Lee Ravenscraft, Valerie Jane Rawlins, Gregory Allan Rawlings, Kathleen W. Rawlings, Margaret Jane Rawlings, Ruth Annette 409 Ray, Carol Regina 409 Ray, Charles Cooper 317, 409 Ray, Debra Darlene 366 Ray, Debra Jo 382 Ray, Don Franklin Ray, Gary David Ray, Gary Mack Ray, Jack Hewson 383, 391 Ray, Ronald Allen Ray, Terri J. Ray, Terri Lynn Ray, Valerie Sue 300, 366 Raymer, Glen Lindsey 313 Raymer, Miles David Jr. Raymer, Rebecca Elizabeth 304 Raymond, Connie Darlene Read, Denise Greenwell Read, Donna Sue Read, Ray Vaughn 277, 315 Reading and Special Education dept. 187- 188 Reading and Special Education dept. head 186-188 Reagan, Cathy Ann Reagan, Mindy Jane Reagan, Susan Denise 316-317, 394 Reagin, Carson Alexander Reagles, Carol 167 Ream, Patricia Elizabeth 409 Ream, Randy Warren Reamy, Julian Ralph Jr. 278 Reasoner, John 301 Reaves, Larry Allan 394 Reavis, Margaret Estelle 257, 267 Rebel, Amy Louise 394 Rebellettes 320-321 Recreation Club 298-299 Rector, Mari Rose 318, 383 Rector, Nancy Jo 394 Rector, William Dallas 409 Redd, Julius Caesar 299 Redden, James Hale Redford, Dale Thomas Redford, Jonathan S. 409 Redinger, Joan Chanelle Redman, Melissa Jaye 409 Redmon, Louise Ann 409 Reece, Connie Joyce 394 Reece, Elster Wayne Reece, Teresa Annette 394 Reed, Barbara 261, 263 Reed, Clarence Nicholas 366 Reed, Clyde Derek Reed, David George Reed, Donna Gale Reed, Earl Thomas Jr. Reed, Gary W. 383 Reed, Hugh Richard Reed, Janette Marie 394 Reed, Kenneth Ray Reed, Neal Richard Reed, Robert Lee Reed, Rosalyn Elizabeth Reed, Sharon Denise 409 Reeder, Mary Evelyn 347 Reels, Kimberly Joe Reetzke, Daniel William Reeves, Anita Leigh 383 Reeves, Dennis Wayne Reeves, Donna Lynn 300, 366 Reeves, Robert L. 383 Ref’ factory teaches ladies to produce better calls 194 Regenbogen, Brenda Jean 409 Regents 128-129 Regal Ltd. 74, 76 Reholon, Lizandro Jose 304 Reid, Alan Lewis 409 Reid, Marilyn Denise 383 Reid, Robert Paul Reinert, William Gregory Reinholdt, Rodney Dean Reinle, Ricky Bodine Reiss, Jennifer Mary 295, 304 Reker, Richard Raymond 323 Render, Larry J. Reneau, Jo Reneau, Robert Maurice Jr. Reneer, Frances Opal 394 Reneer, Rex Parker Renfro, Michael Gene Renfrow, Debra Lynn Renfrow, John Timothy a OS. 2c oS ee R Ric ee SS _ 8 —lLlLLLhLwLYS SSS SS OS eee oF a 440 Powers, Deborah Renfrow, John Renfrow, Loretta Renick, Kathy Delane 409 Renick, William Robert Renshaw, Paula Rae Renz, Joan Marie 263, 366 Research problems in chemistry class 166 Resch, Paul Francis 409 Revlett, Sandra Kaye 394 Rexroat, Curtis Alan 394 Rexroat, David Ray 282 Reynolds, Cathy Ann 394 Reynolds, Daniel Miles 409 Reynolds, Danny Ray Reynolds, Ernest Robert 284, 383 Reynolds, Gloria Jean Reynolds, Jerry Reynolds, Kelly Wayne Reynolds, Lawrence Cary Reynolds, Leslie Paul 409 Reynolds, Mark Turner 366 Reynolds, Mary Anne 265 Reynolds, Melinda Sue Reynolds, Robert Leonard Reynolds, Roger Reece 409 Reynolds, Sharon Moore Reynolds, Sonia Anne 409 Reynolds, Tracy Howard II Reynolds, William Todd 409 Rezaee, Majid Rhea, Betsy Lou 383 Rhea, Joe Shannon Rhea, Tony Alan 301, 409 Rheaume, Tony Rhoades, Carolyn June Rhoades, Roger Allen Rhoades, Tony Gil 297 Rhodes, Anne Kendrick 263, 366 Rhodes, Britt Davis Rhodes, Mary Ann 394 Ribar, Richard Arthur 309, 383 Rice, Beverly J. Stykes Rice, Connie Ann 383 Rice, Douglas Ward Rice, Ervin Dwayne Rice, Glenn Thomas Rice, Laurie Reynolds 264 Rice, Margo Ruth Rice, Maurice Douglas Rice, Patricia Ann 367 Rice, Ralph Eugene Jr. Rice, Rebecca Eugenia 394 Rice, Steven Wayne Rich, Brenton Lee 327, 383 Rich, Donald Kent Rich, Donny Glen Rich, Gary Alan Rich, Kelly Alexander 394 Rich, Phil Thomas 210 Rich, Phyllis Ann Richard, Joe 204 Richard, June Marie Richards, Ann Elizabeth 394 Richards, Jack Eugene Richards, Jim 216, 221 Richards, Ricky James Richards, Thomas Wayne Richardson, Clara Nelle 383 Richardson, Danny Baker Richardson, Homer Lee 367 Richardson, Leslie 409 Richardson, Melissa Gay Richardson, Patricia B. Richardson, Randolph T. Richardson, Ricky Wayne Richardson, Sarah Young Richardson, Willie James 221, 278 Richburg, Diane Rose 100, 107, 265, 324- 325, 367, 367 Richeson, Stephen Dale Richey, Donna Kay 321, 383 Richey, Janice Kerr Richey, Kimberly Kay 394 Richey, Vicki Cheryl Richey, Victor Lee Jr. Rickard, Dana Joy 409 Ricke, Mary Patricia 367 Ricketts, Kathryn Louise Ricketts, Morris Glenn 282-283, 394 Rickman, Mark Anthony Rickord, Michael Willard 203 Ricks, Beverly Cleghorn Ricks, Edwin Gordon Ridd, Roland William Jr. Riddle, Barry Alton Riddle, Janet Lois 409 Riddle, Wanda Lynn 383 Rider, Marilyn Kay 383 Rider, Terry Lee Ridings, Michael Barry Ridler, Christopher Arthur 200-203, 238 Ridley, Kenneth David 282 Riecken, Anita Ann 410 Riedling, Jonathon Kent Riedlinger, Rhonda Jean 318 Rieger, Paul Scott Rierdon, Debra Lee Ries, Anne Lynn 323, 383 Ries, Janice Marie 367 Riflery 234-235 Rigdon, Lance Carlton Rigelwood, Patricia Kay Riggle, Teresa Louise 367 Riggs, Gary 168-171 Riggs, Lucy Charlotte 297 Riggs, Margaret 169 Riggs, Martina Kaye 394 Riggs, Michael Joe 243 Riggsbee, Barry Alan Ridney, Sandra Kay Mallett Rigsby, Larry Wayne 410 Rigsby, Patricia Dawn Riherd, Susan Barrett Riley, Alice Marie 394 Riley, Craig Steven 285 Riley, Cynthia Ann Riley, Honey Lynn Riley, John 301 Riley, Kathleen Lee 367 Riley, Laura Lee Riley, Linda Susan Riley, Mary Bernadette 51 Riley, Robert Alan Riley, Stephen Douglas Rinehard, Catherine Jo 410 Rinehard, Sharon Lee Ringham, Kerry Dean Riordan, Ronnie Wayne 410 Rippy, Dana Wayne 383 Risch, Paula Sue 394 Risinger, Donna Lyne Ritchie, Mary Margaret 410 Ritman, Christina Lynn Rittenberry, Jerry Albert 394 Ritter, Debra Gail Ritter, Donald 148-149, 195 Ritter, Mania 305 Ritter, Rhonda Gayle Rittgers, Karen Sumner Rivas, Joann Rives, Michael Jerome 280-281 Roach, Joe K. 280, 287 Roach, Kathryn May Roach, Patrick Lee Roark, Ann Douglas 263, 410 Roark, Jeane Bowling 319, 367 Roark, John Asberry 290-291, 367 Robbins, Christine Anne 410 Robbins, Debbie Louise Robbins, Jan 394 Robbins, Margaret Ann Robbins, Miachel Lee 319, 367 Robbins, Ronald Edward 383 Robbins, Sandra Marie 264, 394 Robe, Diane Jean 410 Robe, Gary Roberty 383 Robe, Harry 195 Roberson, Bennie Cecil Roberson, Bruce William 394 Roberson, Lynne Tobe Roberts, Cain Edward 394 Roberts, Charles Keith 285 Roberts, David Norman 285 Roberts, Debra June Roberts, Dorothy Neal 395 Roberts, Elizabeth V. Roberts, Gary Willard Roberts H. David Roberts, Howard Wayne 300-301, 383 Roberts, John Alan Roberts, Joseph William 367 Roberts, Karen Elizabeth 410 Roberts, Kenneth Wayne 367 Roberts, Lloyd Tommy Roberts, Nancy Norma Roberts, Patty Ann 410 Roberts, Phillip Ellis Roberts, Robin Lloyd Roberts, Russell Snow 410 Roberts, Sherry Ann Roberts, Timothy Lynn 254 Roberts, Vicki Lynn 367 Robertson, David Wayne Robertson, Kenneth Edward Robertson Lee 38, 134-135 Robertson, Lindy Lee Robertson, Marsha Lynn 410 Robertson, Mary Beth 410 Robertson, Randy Edmonds Robertson, Roiann 44, 265, 269 Robertson, Steven Bennett 243, 282 Robertson, William Lee 395 Robey, Floyd III 367 Robey, Yvonne Decarlo 287, 319, 367 Robillard, Kim Lane 99 Robinette, Nancy Karen Robinson, Benedict George Robinson, Cynthia Ann 306, 410 Robinson, Donald John Robinson, Dwayne Reed 235, 383 Robinson, Elaine Del 230-231, 383 Robinson, Faye 196-197 Robinson, Lucretia 225, 313, 410 Robinson, Maria Teresa 307, 395 Robinson, Nancy Craig 323, 367 Robinson, Patricia Darlene Robinson, Randall Parks 410 Robinson, Scott Gregory 410 Robinson, Triva Linae Robinson, William McKenzie Robinson, Winfield Scott Robison, Kim Denise 410 Robison, Lucinda Rocco, Ronald Anthony Rochelle, Holly Raye 313 Rockwell, John Herbert Roddy, Mary Evelyn 263 Rodgers, Carl Leroy 367 Rodgers, Donnie Wayne Rodgers, James Barton Rodgers, Stephanie Wynn 395 Roe, Joseph Michael 300-301 Roederer, Chris Alan 395 Roemer, David Lawrence Roemer, Laura Lee Rogan, Alfred Lee 210, 395 Roganovich, Rochelle Rogers, Charles Brent Rogers, Daniel W Rogers, Debbie Lynn Rogers, Dennis Morgan 395 Rogers, Harold Dean Rogers, James Wesley Rogers, Jeffrey Blake 100, 410 Rogers, Jo Ann 108, 325, 383 Rogers, Len Andrew Rogers, Marjorie Elizabeth 309, 383 Rogers, Martha Ellen 367 Rogers, Mary Elizabeth Sue Rogers, Michael Alan 395 Rogers, Randall Rogers, Randy Stuart Rogers, Richard Allen Rogers, Sandra Jane 291 Rogers, Sandra Lee 291 Rogers, Sheryl Ann 383 Rogers, Ted Anthony 282, 395 Rogers, Vick 261 Rognstad, Lorraine Lynn Rohner, Stephen Joseph Rollins, Nelson Kimble Roma, Susan 382-383 Romans, Sharon Lynn 383 Romeieh, Michael Myles 282 Romine, Keith Paul 333 Ronconi, Edward Eugene 410 Rone, Vickie Lynn Roney, Robert Michael Jr. 233, 410 Ronnerman, Bengt Gustav 304 Rono, Henry 202 “Roots” 57 Rosales, Sonia Rose, Anthony Lee 210 Rose, Billy Scott Rose, Christi Ann 263, 287 Rose, Deborah Carmen 410 Rose, Jane Houston 263 Rose, Kenneth E. 395 Rose, Marcia Renee 395 Rose, Mark Bruce Rose, Mary Deborah Duerr Rose, Nicholas Henry 200, 237-238, 244 Rose, Ray 140, 212 Rose, Ronald Dale Rose, Susan Elaine 214-215 Roseman, John Kenneth 367 Rosenbaum, Gary Stewart 277 Rosenberger, Joni Lynn 383 Rosenthal, Linda Sue Rosenthal, Mark Allen 8 Roso, Mark Joseph 395 Roso, Sandra Ann 7, 16, 410 Roso, Susan Marie 367 Ross, Barry Moreman 303 Ross, Cheryl Lynn 84-87 Ross, Nancy Elizabeth Mud daubers What began as a playful soccer contest soon became a soggy mudfight for sophomores Chris Freeman (on round), Diane Lierman (behind Freeman) and freshman Joves Vollmer. The three found the muddy lawn beside the university center enjoyably sloppy, as Miss Lierman demonstrates in the photograph below. — Photos by M. Dowell 441 Renfrow, Loretta Ross, Nancy A great escape When Tony Selthofer escaped from Yugoslavia through a barbed wire fence at age 18, it was just another step in his Pel he become a professional criminal. ‘My dream was to go to Paris and be a criminal in a broad sense of the word,” said the 31-year-old graduate student. Selthofer’s story began when he start- ed fighting with gangs in parks in his hometown, Osijek, Yug., as an eight- year-old. He soon began to want a life of crime. Associating with older guys, Selthofer matured quickly. “I wanted to be the toughest in the group and in a sense | was,” he said. Selthofer was so determined that even when he was bleeding he would boast to his enemy, “The Baie victory you can claim is when I am dead.” Born into a Roman Catholic family, he renounced christianity at age 12. Selt- hofer said he was influenced by his edu- cation which taught evolution and the repressive attitude the government had toward religion. After completing eight years of educa- tion, Selthofer attended technical school in Zagreb where he learned telephone and telegraph installation. He also learned boxing, wrestling and judo. “I was kicked out of the dorm three times because of discipline which in- volved alcohol and black market ticket raffles for shows,” Selthofer said. He bought tickets to movies and operas and sold them three times higher, he added. Selthofer said Yugoslavian cities spon- sor a student’s education and in return, he works four years for the city. His ho- metown, Osijek, sponsored him, but when he returned to work, he stayed only six months. A fight he started in which some of his friends were killed or jailed prompted Selthofer to leave his home. “It will be peg gloat by the people of Osijek,” he said. The fight began at a street dance one evening when Selthofer motioned for a girl to dance with him. As was the cus- to m, a male did not ask a female to dance, but rather pointed to her. This Hone the girl’s boyfriend accompanied er. His hands in his pockets, Selthofer ap- roached the girl’s boyfriend, and arched fis back and hit his opponent between the eyes with his forehead. “With my forehead, I would knock a uy or a door down. It was my strength,” Eeithofer said. “I’d hit them between the eyes; you can actually deform them.” During the ensuing gang fight, Selt- hofer was badly hurt and jailed. Soon he went to Rikjeka on the Adriatic Coast. There he studied Italian and began 442 Index preparing an escape from his communis homeland with its guarded borders. Unlike most refugees, Selthofer’s mo- tives for escape were not political, but adventuresome. Selthofer was never active in the com- munist government that controls Yugos- lavia. “To be acommunist you have to be an ethical man, a moral person. I did not fit that category,” he said. From Rijeka, he took a train to a town 15 miles from Trieste, Italy, which had a border guarded by soldiers and German shepherds. He completed a feat, success- ful for only one in 1,000. It took him almost seven hours to cross rows upon rows of barbed wire fence. When he reached Italy, Selthofer kissed the ground and said. “I am free to be what I want to be.” Without passport papers, Selthofer couldn’t remain in Italy and soon left for France. When he reached the Alps, he had to climb steep frozen mountains by jam- ming his snow shoes into the icy snow. After one failure, he tried again the fol- lowing day, starting at 5 a.m. and reach- ing the top at noon. Selthofer said he had envisioned a bor- der with guards at the top. Endless rows of mountain tops met him instead. He ee i eeey turning back, but decid- ed to continue. “I had nothing to lose,” Selthofer said. ‘There was a strong deter- mination to go on.” From the mountaintop, Selthofer saw a stream and decided to follow it in hopes of finding a town. He fell into a stream while walking on the frozen turf. Aware that he would freeze if he stopped, Selthofer kept walking. Soon two French marines, who were skiing, spotted him and took him to their base to stay. Selthofer said he went to a bar and drank champagne that first night, think- ing, “what a lifel’’ Celthofer traveled illegally throughout France and Germany for two years, drinking and gambling. He said he was on the verge of alcoholism as he contin- ued his adventure. Looking back, Selthofer said, “I see myself as a beast then, running hope- lessly, never trusting anybody. I always saw enemies in those around me. “My whole lifestyle was ‘run, run, run,’ but I didn’t know what I was run- ning from,” Selthofer said. “I was run- ning away from the life I led to some- thing that was to come.” He decided to go to Canada in March of 1967. “I wanted to change my whole lifestyle,” he said. “I erat to be a new person, a good Catholic even though I never knew what it meant.” He was 21 when he arrived in Toronto, Ont., and began looking for a Catholic church, but was disappointed in the one he found. “In that particular church, Roman Ca- tholicism was a political adventure and greed for money,” Selthofer said. “There was no concern for people as people.” His disappointment led him back to alcohol. Later he was invited to a Penta- costal church in Toronto where his search began to wind down. Friends there gave Selthofer a New Testament which he used often. “After reading the New Testament four or five times, I came to realize the word of God is truth,” he said. “My coming to Christ was a change of life. It was a radical transformation,” Selthofer said. “I had no desire for alco- hol, fights or other profane things in life. Now my desire was to know Christ more intimately.” After working several places the next few years, Selthofer sold his possessions and went to British Columbia to attend Vancouver Bible College. He completed undergraduate and graduate work there in four years. After working one year, Selthofer en- tered Western for graduate work in hu- manities. A friend and a poster on the Canadian campus had introduced him to the university. Selthofer plans to marry his Vancou- ver fiancee June 4 and enter full-time ministry. He now fights for “truth and righ- teousness,” rather than revenge. “I am trying to see the oppressed and poor,” Selthofer said. — JIM BURTON () — J. Burton Raised in Yugoslavia, Tony Selthofer left his home as a confused young man searching for another life. Once he arrived in North America, he became a Christian and found the life he had searched for since he left his home in Europe. Ross, Tommy Keith Rossi, Anthony Joseph Rothman, Susan Marie 410 Rothrock, Susan Jean Round and round 186-195 Rounds, Dennis Donavon Rounds, Michele Renee Rountree, Cynthia Gail Rountree, William Donald Rouse, Dennis Mark Rouse, Joe Glenn Routt, Diana Frances Routt, Michael Wayne Routt, Rhonda Cathryn Routt, Sarah Ann 314, 367 Rowe, Ahleen Delaire Rowe, Debra Lynn 267, 367 Rose, John Martin 410 Rowe, Nick Orlando Rowlett, Mary Lane 312, 318, 323 Rowshanaei, Mansour Rowshanaie, Rasool Rowshanaie, Rasool Roy, Danny Michael Royal, Patricia Gail 381 Royalty, Elizabeth Park 383 Royalty, James Andrew 323, 367 Royse, Henry Gilbarre 384 Royse, Ricky Thomas Royse, Teresa Karen Ruark, Melvin Donald Jr. 282, 395 Rubarts, Judith Ellis Rubey, Kathleen Ann 304, 383 Rubin, Joanne Marie Rubin, Suzanne Therese 225 Rubini, Rebecca Anne Ruble, John Anthony 277 Ruble, Paul Scott 395 Ruby Awards 265 Ruby, Elizabeth Ware 395 Ruckel, Anthony Ray 310 Rudd, Malinda Ann 395 Rue, Jonathan Lee 395 Rue, Nancye Louise Rue, Nelson Bright III 383 Rueff, Kenneth Cecil Rueff, Patricia Ann 410 Rueff, Rebecca Ann 306, 410 Ruff, Brian Thomas Ruff, Loren 100 Rufus 74, 77, 80, 83 Ruggles, Deborah Sue 295, 395 Ruggles, Kathleen Ann Rule, David C. 322 Runner, Kathy Adelia Runner, Rhona Gwynne 263, 323, 383 Runner, Teresa Lynn Runyon, Cheryl Lynn 395 Rush 22-23 Rusher, Rebecca Ann 410 Russ, Michael Alan Russell, Barry Kendall Russell, Daniel Scott 367 Russell, Deborah Lynne 367 Russell, Dorothy Lee Russell, Dwight Pritchett 301, 303, 347, 367 Russell, Edwin Eugene 383 Russell, Gary Stephen Russell, Gayle 307 Russell High School cheerleaders 32 Russell, Jo Ann Russell, John William Russell, Judy 303 Russell, Kenneth Dale 395 Russell, Laura Gayle 383 Russell, Laurie Lee 383 Russell, Marcia Lynn Adcox Russell, Marcus Bly Russell, Marilyn Russell, Marvin 28, 160 Russell, Pamela Jean 410 Russell, Ricky Glenn 410 Russell, Robert Oneil 243 Russian Club 304-305 Rutecki, Maureen Theresa 367 Ruth, Pamela Ann Rutherford, Michael Doug Rutherford, Tim Allen Rutledge, Dale Edward Rutledge Kimberly Rutledge, Rebecca Mary 210 Rutledge, Stephanie H. 395 Ryan, Darrel Linn 383 Ryan, Dennis Joseph 284, 367 Ryan, Dowell Key Ryan, Edward Lawrence III 301 Ryan, Jo Anne Mary 367 Ryan, Joseph David 301, 383 Ryan, Judy Kaye 313 Ryan, Matthew R. 322 Ryder, Mitchell L. 243 Saalwaechter, Kareene Sue Saalwaechter, Karen Susan Sabolchak, Carolyn Marie 267, 367 Saddler, Charles Clark Sadeghi, Manijeh Sadat Sadeghipour, Jahromi M.S. Sadler, Billie Kathryn 383 Sadler, Dennis Wayne Saabiel, Jack 295 Sagan, Carl 93 Sager, Michael Chalres 296 Sailing Club 299 Sallee, Lowell Preston 383 Sallee, Mary Lou A. 410 Sallee, Robert Lyman Jr. Sallee, Rodney Wayne Salley, Janice Katherine Salley, Randall Clyde Salmon, Nancy Dean 410 Salsman, Michael Edward Saltsman, Pamela Faye 395 Saltsman, Susan Jill 383 Samples, Leslie Ann 322, 367 Sampson, Robert Martin Samuel, Christina Marie 367 Samuels, Sharon Kay 263, 367 Sanchez, Gerard Sanchez-Marin, Manuel P. Sandberg, Mary Margaret Sandefur, J.T. 186-187 Sandefur, Janice Ann 383 Sandefur, Patrick Kelly Sandefur, Sarah Jo 101-102, 324, 410 Sandefur, Starla Rhea 263, 268, 410 Sander, David Michael Sanders, Burnett Ray 300 Sanders, Buz 284, 287 Sanders, Carla Anne 11, 367 Sanders, Cheryl Kay Sanders, Christy Inez Sanders, Cordie Kersey Sanders, Cyril Anthony Sanders, Dale Thomas Sanders, Deloria Ann Sanders, Fred C. Jr. 322, 367 Sanders, Johnny Lee Sanders, Joy Diane 395 Sanders, Linda Sue 308-309 Sanders, Margaret Harper 410 Sanders, Mark Louis Sanders, Mark Wallace Sanders, Nancy Ella 395 Sanders, Nanetta Kay 156 Sanders, Ramona Lee Sanders, Randall W. 368 Sanders, Ronald Gaylord Sanders, Scott Andrew Sanders, Tamany Terral 410 Sanders, Tommy 21 Sanders, Virginia Ray 383 Sanders, William Gregory 291 Sanders, William Kent 383 Sanderson, James Russell Sanderson, Robert White Sandidge, James Boyd Sandidge, Jennifer 354-355 Sandidge, Robert Woods 354-355 Sandlin, Regina Lee Sanford, Edgar Earl Sangster, Dennis William 395 Sansom, Philip N. Sansom, Steve Wade 395 Santiago, Wanda Aurora Santopinto, Joan Teresa 18 Sapp, Donn E. Sapp, Janet Leigh 303, 368 Sapp, Mary Alice Sappenfield, Donald Ray Jr. 395 Saraceno, John Mark Sargent, Catherine Lynne 410 Sargent, Peter William 282, 395 Sarles, Robbie Lynn 395 Sarver, John 242 Sasse, Jean Marie Satterfield, Keith Wade 291, 395 Sauer, Charles John 368 Sauer, Jeffrey David Saunders, Frances Palmer Saunders, Gene Thomas 383 Saunders, Robert Edward Savage, Anna Charlyne 383 Sawyer, James Carson Sawyer, Lloyd Dixon Sawyer, Teresa Kaye 395 Sayle, Teresa Kay Saylor, Lori Elaine Sayre, Dawn Renae 395 Sayres, Gerald Atlee III 277 Scabbord and Blade 320-321 Scales, Michael Gordon Scandalito, Carol Ruth S. Scarborough, Clarice 305 Scarborough, John 141-142 Scarbrough, Cathy Darlene Schaad, Gayle Marie 383 Schaaf, Donald Joseph Schabel, Robert John 368 Schaber, Lorie Sue 410 Schaefer, Michael Lee 283 Schaefer, Wendy . Schaffner, Grover Clair Schaffner, Jude 305 Schaffner, Lisa Deane 267 Schaftlein, Mark D. 410 Schardein, Donald P. Scheffer, Susan Gail Scheffler, Brenda Louise Scheidt, Emily Aiko Allen Scheidt, Louis Miller Schell, David Hope 301 Schell, Nancy Bowman Schiebel, Mary Mount Schindler, Deborah Lynn 410 Schlensker, Karla Ann 323 Schlilnke, Arnold Joseph Schlinke, Robert Charles Schlotter, Robert Nelson 303 Schmidt, Anne Celine 410 Schmidt, Daniel Joseph Schmidt, Elizabeth C. Schmidt, Ronald Allen Schmidt, Tom 80 Schmitt, C. Morton Hand Schmoker, Pamela Jean 410 Schmuckie, Danny William Schnacke, Janet Elaine Schnacke, Stephen 193 Schnapf, Jennifer Alene 307, 395 Schneider, Janet Talley Schneider, Kaye Gibson 410 Schneider, Robert 28 Schoecke, Randall Wayne 282 Schoeck, Robert Peter Schoen, Ed 4 Schoenberger, Barbara Lee Scholar plants immunobiology seeds 164 Scholastic development dean 138 Scholl, Vivian Gay Scholla, David Edward Schrantz, Trinka 265 Schrier, Susan Marina 411 Schroader, David Glen Schroader, Gerald Lynn Schroeder, James Paul 383 Schroeder, P. David Schroeder, Roy Julian 368 Schroering, Donald Jerry Schroerlucke, Billie Sue 267, 395 Schryber, John William Schuler, Fredric Monarch 368 Schulte, Marcia Helen 320, 410 Schultz, Beverly Sue Schultz, Elaine Clark 285 Schultz, Laura Luanne 410 Schulz, John Maurice Schumate, Dan 320 Schuster, Donna Lea Schuster, Ricky Paul 410 Schwager, Robert Paul Schwartz, Bruce 410 Schwartz, Debra Kay 383 Schwartz, Tamme Jean Schwegman, Carol Ann Sciberras, John Joseph Scillian, Bill 216-221, 299 Scillian, Cynthia Sowash 410 Scoggins, Jacqueline 265, 383 Scott, Alfreida Lynn 410 Scott, Charles T. Jr. Scott, Debra Ann Scott, Gerald Durand 368 Scott, James Edwin Scott, James Richard Scott, Janet Sue 319, 395 Scott, Jeffrey Shane 410 Scott, John Thomas 395 Scott, Julius 181 Scott, Leann 410 Scott, Martha Coffman Scott, Michael Lynn 395 Scott, Pamela Kaye 410 Scott, Reginald Thomas 108, 325 Scott, Robert Franklin Scott, Robert James Scott, Robert Wayne 410 Scott, Robyn Gene 410 Scott, Sheryl Garven 410 Scott, Stephen Dale 295, 383 Scribner, Kevin Gerald 368 Scrock, Bill 52 Scruggs, Deborah Lauvonia Seals, Jim 41, 74, 76, Seals and Crofts 41, 74, 76, 83 Seams and stitches for the stage 183 Seapan, Ken L. 244 Seapan, Kevin John 244 Searcy, Jennifer Jo 383 Searcy, Mark Anthony Sears, David Allen 252, 282 Sears, Jane A. Sears, John 92 Sears, Mark Edwin Sears, Michael Roy Sears, Patricia Sue 410 Sears, Timothy Wayne 59, 410 Seasonally separated teams 246-247 Seaton, Deborah Fentress Seaton, Harold Wayne 313 Seaton, Kimberly Dawan 313 Seaver, Edith Mae Secondary Education dept. 188 Secondary Education dept. dean 188 Secondary Education dept. head 188 Sego, Donna Jean 291, 295 Sego, Michael Shane 410 Segovia, Andreas 94, Seigler, Dewey Lee Seiler, Michael Anthony 93 Seim, Emerson Lee Sekyere, Sylvester Selby, Kenneth Darrell 296, 368 Self, Dale Wayne Self, Jesse Eugene Self, John Clinton 284, 368 Self, Mary Grethcen Self, Richard Joseph Sell, Terri Kent 265 Sellers, Barbara Ann 368 Selove, Rebecca June Selthofer, Anthony Antun Semzock, Teresa Sue 368 Seng, Robert Charles Seniors 328-329, 350-375 Senn, Daniel Lee Sensel, Bruce Cameron 283 Sensel, Craig Scott Senter, Mark Erwin Sergent, Laura Jane 383 Sermersheim, Stephen Allan 252 Sermonis, Bruice Wayne Serrato, Carlos Sessions, M. Tulis 54, 92-93 Set Design feature 104-105 Set ‘em Ups 252 Setters, James Morgan 283 Settle, David Earl Settle, Mona Lynn 299 Settle, Norma Faye Settle, Rhonda Sue Seward, Katherine Todd 410 Sexton, Barbara Ann 263, 395 Sexton, Cynthia Ann Sexton, Deborah Ann 267, 270 Sexton, Garry Thomas Sexton, George Boyd Sexton, Jeffery B. Sexton, Kris Ann Shadowen, David Irvine 410 Shadowen, Jeffrey Tilford 295, 383 Shaffer, Deborah Ann 410 Shaffer, Nancy Carol 410 Shaftlien, Mark 210 Shaheen, Kevin Mark 287, 410 Shanahan, David Gratton Shanahan, Kevin Thomas 443 Ross, Tommy Shanahan, Kevin Shanehsaz, Mahmoud Shanehsaz, Mohammad Reza Shanklin, Nannie L. Shanklin, Tip Harrison Shanklin, William 157 Shanks, Reginald Glenn 409 Shannon, Arthur Roy Shannon, John Franklin Shannon, Marolyn Marie 395 Shannon, Sharolyn Shree 383 Shannon, Stuart Anderson 395 Sharber, Quincie Louise Share, Kevin Christopher 307 Sharer, James Vernon Sharer, Myrtle Jane Sharp, Beverly Jo 395 Sharp, Cheryl Kay Sharp, Judy Agnes 321, 368 Sharp, Kenneth Lee Sharp, Larry Gregg 410 Sharp, Ralph Wade Sharp, Robin Leslie Sharp, Stephen Byrne 395 Sharpe, Hollie 153, 155-156, 316 Sharpe, Margaret Lynne Shartzer, Keith Bennett 368 Shaver, David Harold Jr. Shaver, Debbie Lynne Shaver, James Robert Shaver, Laura Beth 410 Shaver, Martha Lynn Shaver, Pamela Gail 410 Shaw, Carol Reid 383 Shaw, Donald Leland II Shaw, Jenice Faye 316, 368 Shaw, John Bernard 284 Shaw, Kent Roland Shaw, Kim Ellen Shaw, Mary Kaye Rogers Shaw, Stacey Karen Shaw, Terry Lee Shay, Kelly Joann 295, 299, 304, 410 Shearer, Leslie Gay 254 Shearian, Mohammad S. Shearian, Nader 252 Shears, Willie 238 Sheats, Gregory Wayne 244 Sheats, Steve 203 Sheckles, Joseph Albert 410 Sheehan, Paul John 210, 368 Sheeran, William Peter Sheffer, Ronald 128-129 Sheffield, Jawana Sue Sheffield, Rhonda Tracy Cr eC a Shehan, Theodore H. II Shelley, Judith Henson oo cre ae Concentrating on last minute instructions aie nee et jap 808 for the 50-yard dash is Martha Jenkins. Phi Shelton, Keith Wayne Mu Janice Minor prepares her for competi- tigi hne ea , 125 tion during the Regional Seo Olympics Sere ak BELO a iek ue at Bowling Green High School. Western’s Shelton, Sarah Rita 3 ae Shelton, Shelia D. Kerley campus was the site of the state competition Shelton, Thomas James Cowgill: Actes Lathe oat in early June. The state event attracted more Sheng, Ru Shing than 1,000 participants. Shepard, Roy Cage Shepherd, Lela Elizabeth Shepherd, Sheri Ann 316, 410 Shepherd, Steven Dane Sheppard, Rickey Steven 92-93, 368 Sheppard, Ruel Wesley 410 Sheppard, Susan Dean 368 Sheridan, Mary Chris Sherlock, Bruce Alan 277 Sherwin, Sharon Marie Sheucraft, Thomas Edward Shewcraft, Edwin Ray Shiekhi, Shahriar A. Shields, Barbara Ann 199, 212, 214-215 Shields, Charles Bradley Shields, Eddie 98 Shields, Louis Edwin Shields, Reba Kaye 368 Shields, Rick 43, 47 Shinn, Thomas Gordon Jr. 221 Shiplet, Allen Ray Shipley, David James 368 Shipley, Janine Shipley, Jo Anna 347, 368 Shipley, Sherril Ann Shipley, Terry Taylor Shipp, Steve Douglas 277 Shircliffe, Charles Greg 284 Shireman, Brett Shane Shirley, Christina Kay Shirley, Robert Dale II 384 Shirley, Robin Susan 303 Shirley, Stevie Carroll 384 Shirley, Tonya Kim 323, 368 Shive, Jackie Keith Shive, Sandra Gail Shively, James F. Shockley, Brent Edward 277, 301, 307, 384 Shockley, Carol Vivian 410 Shockley, Vana Jane 317, 395 Shoemake, Thomas Howard Shoemaker, Deborah Raye Shoemaker, Jerry Ryan Shoemate, Danny 257 Shofner, Scotty Udell Shojai, Ali Reza Shojai, Mahmoud Reza Sholar, Robert Lee Sholar, Sarah Avis 384 Sholar, Walter Alan Shollenberger, Barry 114, 212-213, 242-243 Short, Anita Marie 410 Short, Eleanor 368 Short, James Eugene Short, Marcia Gay Short, Teresa Loretta 368 Short, Vickie Lou 410 Short, Virginia Orean 395 Shortt, Mitchell Lee Shortt, Ruth A. Glass Shoulders, Reba Lynne 319 444 Shanehsaz, Mohmoud Shoulders, Reba — L. Gardner Shoulders, Vivian Ann 395 Showalter, Janet Lynn Shown, Mary Sue 267, 384 Shrader, Cheryl Aline 410 Shrader, Horace 137-138 Shrewsbury, Jonathan Lee Shrewsbury, Sara Lou Shrode, Jay Wesley III 291, 313 Shubert, Stephen James Shuffit, Margaret E. Shugart, Susan Nannette 225, 410 Shuler, Daniel Glenn Shuler, Sherrie Joy 395 Shull, Elizabeth Ann Shultz, Clifton Kirby 284, 287 Shultz, Deborah L. Shultz, Kimberly Diane Shultz, Shirley Patricia 410 Shultz, Victor Scott Shumate, Daniel Lee Shumate, Janet Lynn 395 Shumate, Pamela Sue Shumate, Steven Allan 384 Shumway, Tracey Dawn 99, 102 Shunk, Harland Webster III 285 Shutt, Bobby Wayne 368 Shutters, Jerry Lee 299, 384 Shy, Eugene Allen 284 Shyskaev, Boris 96 Sickert, Margaret Anne Siddens, Leigh Annette 410 Siddens, Robert B. 368 Sideline coaching and coaxing 230-231 Siegert, Sonja Lynn Siegfried, Mark Alan Siem, Mary Christie Siemens, Terri Lynn 395 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 252, 272-273, 288- 289 Sigma Chi 268-269, 284, 289 Sigma Chi Derby 9, 257, 268-269 Sigma Delta Chi 61, 306-307 Sigma Delta Pi 305 Sigma Kappa 266-267, 272-273, 288-289 Sigma Nu 255, 271-272, 284-285, 289 Sigma Phi Epsilon 272, 285, 288 Sigma Tau Delta 202-203 Sigmon Andra Priscilla Sikora, Walters Stephen Silliman, Deborah Lynn Sills, William Keith 410 Silver, Terrence Lavelle Simerman, Karen Lisa 267 Simmentals 256 Simmerman, Karen 266 Simons, Byron J. Simmons, Douglas P. Simmons, James Franklin Simmons, Michael John 368 Simmons, Patricia Cayce Simmons, Paula Lynn Simmons, Rhonda Gale Simmons, Robert Minor Simmons, Steven Bradford 281 Simmons, Theresa Marie 410 Simmons, William Jeffrey 410 Simms, Antoinette Gale 384 Simms, Charles Richard Jr. Simms, Darrell Wayne Simms, Debra Ann 368 Simms, Lalla Belinda Simms, Lisanne Simms, Mona Renee Simms, Patrick Q. 384 Simon, Deborah Lynn 395 Simon, Elizabeth Gwynn 395 Simon, James Robert 99 Simon, Joseph Wayne Simon, Paul Maurice 18 Simon, Vincent 301 Simons, Marcy Beth Simons, Sarah Ann 263, 395 Simpler, Robert Mark Simpson, Adolfina Vasseur Simpson, Betty Lou 410 Simpson, Bradford Carlton 261 Simpson, Christin Carroll 261 Simpson, Deborah Gail 395 Simpson, Fina 305 Simpson, Frances Jane 323, 368 Simpson, George Slater Simpson, Huey David Simpson, Jerry 19 Simpson, Joseph Marion 410 Simpson, Kimberly Simpson, Melanie Clay 125, 263, 322, 368 Simpson, Michael Earl 278 Simpson, Nina June Simpson, Sheila Clareece 410 Simpson, Sylvia Lynn Simpson, Terry Franklin 395 Simpson, Tony Wade 314, 368 Sims, Anita Jane Sims, Catherine Lois Sims, Claudia Michelle 410 Sims, Gary Wynn 395 Sims, Herman Keith Sims, Janice Kay Sims, Nelda jane 295, 305 Simulated Emergency 172-173 Sinclair, Harold A. 309-310 Sinclair, Henry Lee 244 Singleton, Cynthia Gale 42 Singleton, Fred Jr. 395 Singleton, Karen 251 Sinks, Robert Timothy 384 Sirles, William Douglas Sis, Thomas Eugene 277 Sisler, Peter Howard Sistrunk, Debra Ann Siwicki, James Connell 307, 317 Siwicki, Thomas Alwin Jr. 60, 277, 307 Six, Dorothy Elizabeth Six, Frank 160-161 Six, Robert Lance 285 Six, Susan Kay 384 Skaggs, Kathy Lynn Skaggs, Linda Kay 395 Skateboarding 257 Skean, James Skean, James Dan Skees, Alice Ann Skees, James Allen Skees, Janet Sue Steen Skees, Willie Belle Skellie, William Edward 299 Skiles, David Allen 412 Skiles, Stephen C. Skillern, Laura Vittitow 384 Skinner, Frank James Skinner, Steven Cline 412 Skipworth, Jerry Dale Skipworth, Sarah Lynn 412 Skolka, Suzette Mary Skrag, Erik 299 Slaiman, Yvonne Freida 299 Slate, H. Bruce II Slate, Paula Miller Slater, Kathy Jo Slaton, Claire Cornelious Slaton, Terri Lynn 395 Slaughter, Jon Richard 7, 200-201, 203 Slaughter, Lon 137-138 Slaughter, Patsy J. 384 Sleamaker, R.L. 188 Sledge, Mila Marie 412 Sledge, Randol Lee Slinker, David Allen Slinker, Mary Denise 412 Slinker, Pandora Sloan, Gary Douglas Sloan, Kimberly Lou 267 Sloan, Michael Douglas Sloan, Vittoria Lee 412 Sloan, Vivian Gay Sloate, Keith R. Sly, Julie Ann 395 Small, Nyla W. Small, Teresa Lynnette 384 Smalley, Clay M. Smalling, Lagrada Jo Smalling, Mary Lana Smart, Linda Elizabeth Smialek, Kris J. Smiley, Brenda Lynn 384 Smiley, Cathy Lynn 267, 368 Smiley, Karen Marie Smiley, Lana Gayle 412 Smiley, Terry Lee 101, 412 Smiley, Vikki Jo 412 Smith, Alan Alford Smith, Amy Gail 368 Smith, Barbara Jeanne 412 Smith, Billy Moore Smith, Brenda West Smith, Bruce Alan 368 Smith, Burie Kenneth Smith, Carl Edward 384 Smith, Cawood Gregory Smith, Charles Manning Smith, Cherry Kay 312, 412 Smith, Christine A. Watson Smith, Cooper R. Jr. Smith, Craig F. 210 Smith, Cynthia Bee 395 Smith, Daneila Jean 384 Smith, David Fayette Smith, David Lee II Smith, David Steven 369 Smith, Dennis Micheal Smith, Dixie Lee Smith, Donald Richard Smith, Donna Jean 412 Smith, Edward John Smith, Elinor Carol 400 Smith, Elizabeth Anne Smith, Elizabeth M. 412 Smith, Ellen Kay Smith, Everett Eugene Smith, Felicia Ann Smith, Franklin J. Smith, Gary Houston 257 Smith, Gary Lynn 257 Smith, Gary Thomas 257 Smith, Gene Mitchell Smith, George Noel Smith, Gordon Thomas Smith, Gregory James Smith, Gregory Lane Smith, Gregory Rush Smith, Greta 131 Smith, Harold 149 Smith, Harry Glen Smith, James Douglas Smith, James Ricky Smith, Jane Marie Smith, Janet 385 Smith, Janna Ann Smith, Jean Ann Smith, Jeffrey Craig 285 Smith, John David 244 Smith, Joletta Faye Smith, Karen Elizabeth 304, 369 Smith, Karen Leigh 304-305 Smith, Kathleen 395 Smith, Kendall Kane Smith, Kenny 285 Smith, Kimberly Burd 412 Smith, L.T. 131 Smith, Larry Dean Smith, Laura Dale Lowrey 300-301, 313, 322, 347,369 Smith, Laura Larrane 300-301, 322 Smith, Leonard G. Smith, Leslie McElroy Smith, Leslie Rai Smith, Linda Hagan Smith, Lisa Monay Smith, Lori Lynne Smith, Lynard Wilson 369 Smith, Marion Douglas Smith, Mark Kevin Smith, Markieta Miller Smith, Mary Dianne Smith, Mary Ellen Smith, Mary Glen 395 Smith, Michael Anthony Smith, Michael Steven 412 Smith, Mona Gayle 395 Smith, Patricia Ann L. Smith, Patricia Jane 395 Smith, Paula Annette Smith, Perry Michael Smith, Philip Daniel 325 Smith, Phillip Lee 325, 369 Smith, Phillip Wayne 325 Smith, Rebecca Gale 125, 395 Smith, Rebecca Joy 125, 312 Smith, Rebecca Louise 125, 312, 369 Smith, Rebecca Lynn 125, 312, 369 Smith, Renee Vaughn 412 Smith, Reta Jean Smith, Rhonda Sue Hartis Smith, Richard Smith, Rita Lorraine Smith, Robert Allen 284, 296 Smith, Robert Bewley 284, 296 Smith, Robert Brewer 125 Smith, Robert John 284, 296, 395 Smith, Robert Kent 284, 296 Smith, Rondall Lawrence 277, 289, 395 Smith, Rosalyn Delorna Smith, Russell Brian Jr. 284, 412 Smith, Russell Vance Smith, Sam 112 Smith, Sharon Delorse Smith, Sharon Elizabeth 319, 395 Smith, Sharon Kaye 319, 385 Smith, Sheila Faith 412 Smith, Sherrie Josephine 412 Smith, Stanley W. 118, 278, 385 Smith, Steven French 281, 302, 395 Smith, Steven Patrick 281, 302 Smith, Steven Rick 281, 302 Smith, Steven Wayne 281, 302 Smith, Stevie Lynn 281, 369 Smith, Sue Ellen 412 Smith, Teresa Jane Smith, Terri Laine 263 Smith, Theresa Elaine Smith, Timothy Wayne 277, 385 Smith, Vanetta Faye Hinton Smith, Veronica Dale 225 Smith, Watha A. Bratcher Smith, William Ben 204-211, 277 Smither, James Michael 31, 282 Smothers, Cynthia Suzanne 305 Snapp, Laura Gail Snardon, Arnold Edward 204-211, 369 Snardon, Troy Davis SNEA 318-319 Snead, John Lee 412 Sneed, Milton Rhea Sneed, Selena Del 369 Snell, Kenneth Michael Snell, Patricia Lynn Snellen, Cathy Marie 369 Snellen, Steve 282, 287 Snider, James Henry Snider, Sarah Jane 369 Snodgrass, Benita Kay 369 Snodgrass, James Tutt III 301, 347, 369 Snodgrass, Kent Jay Snodgrass, Stanford C. Snodgrass, Steven Lloyd 63 Snorton, Donnis Payne 64 Snow 88-91 Snow, Gregory Allan 252, 395 Snowden, John Anderson III Snowden, Monica Fran 395 Snyder, David Dyer 385 Snyder, Holly Darcell Snyder, Phillip Edwin 369 Society of Physics Students 301 Sociology and Anthropology dept. 154 Sociology and Anthropology dept. head 154 Soellner, Alan 296 Softball 256 Solaiman, Tehrani Davood Solomon, Cheryl Lynn Somers, James Robert Jr. Somervill, Laura 312 Sommers, Jacqueline Marie 369 Sophomores 386-397 Sorrell, Lee Richard 277 “Sorry, Wrong Number” 101-102 Sororities 262-267 Sorority activities 270-273 Sosh, Jean Hall 385 Soucy, Cheryl Lee 369 South, Patricia Ann South, Stanley Lee 369 Southerland, Joan R. Sowards, Charlotte 295 Sowdagar, Hamid 395 Sowder, Preston Dean 277, 287 Sowell, Charles Michael 283, 412 Sowell, Ronald Gene 317, 369 Soyk, Elmer Ray Spaceage ideas amidst traditional mums and glowing autumn weather 38-41 Spacht, Roger James Spaeth, Melissa Ann Spain, Kenneth Richard Spalding, Arlie Eddie Jr. Spalding, Carla Sue 385 Spalding, Charles Boone 369 Spalding, Kerry Lee Sparks, Catherine Ann 412 Sparks, Darlene Marie 395 Sparks, Deborah Lynn 369 Sparks, Larry Howard Sparks, Sharon Lynne Sparks, William Carl III Sparrow, David Brian Speakman, Bobby Morris 296 Speakman, Johnnie Faye 412 Spear, Marcia Emberton Spear, Steven Kirby Spear, Vickie Cheryl 395 Spears, Bobby Gene 369 Spears, Jeffery Ray 412 Spears, Mary 313 Spears, Raymond Dale Spears, Stan Lee Special Forces 320 Special programs director 145-146 Speech and Communication dept. 178-179 Speech and Communication dept. head 178-179 Speech Pathology Club 325 Speechless 92-93 Speed, George Bryan 412 Speer, Gregg Warren Speer, Sally Jo Speevack, Katherine Anne 369 Speevack, Timothy Maher Speight, Carol Fields Spence, Scoshia Elaine 395 Spence, Shirley May Spencer, Brian Keith Spencer, Dennis Ray Spencer, George Richad 369 Spencer, Kathrine Anderson 369 Spencer, Sherlene 323 Spenneberg, Marguerite A. 291, 369 Spiceland, Jim 4 Spiders 254 Spieser, Susan 263, 340 Spiewak, Frank Bernard Spikberg, Curtis Dean Spiker, Amy Jo Spires, Leonard Ray 412 Spisich, Douglas Joseph 385 Spoede, Rebecca Beth Sports 198-257 Sports officiating class 194 Spotlights traded in for lesson plans 185 Spradlin, David Keith 313 Spray guns that shoot paint and ink 193 Spring break 114-115 Spring break was or wasn’t worth peanuts 114-115 Spring Sing 31, 289 Springs, Willard Malcolm Sprouse, Jonathan Wayne 100, 109 Sprowl, Jerry Michael Sprowles, Retha Karen 395 Spruell, Sheri L. Sharp 369 Spry, Steve Edgar Spugnardi, Donald Joseph Spurlock, James Daniel Stacker, Stacey Jo Staff assistant to the president 135 Stafford, Brenda Marian 263 Stafford, David Heyes 284, 287 Stafford, Saundra Lea 412 Stafford, Teresa Marie 369 Stage costume design class 183 Stagner, Patricia Ann 369 Stahl, Billie Rose White 369 Stahl, Briggs Price 317, 412 Stahl, Mark Kelley 210, 283 Stahl, Terry Kevin Stahmer, Kurt Christopher Staley, James Edward 305 Stallings, Joe William 395 Stallings, Teri Lynn 412 Stallons, Robert Clifton 369 Stamp, Paul Edward 282-283, 348, 369 Stamper, Brenda Adeline 385 Stampes, Herbie 219 Stangler, Nancy Catherine 395 Stanley, Antoinette L. Stanley, David Andrew 412 Stanley, Glyn 173 Stanley, Lloyd Mitchell 369 Stanley, Nathaniel Aaron Stanley, Patricia Ann 395 Stannard, Norman Earl 299 Stanton, Barbara Elaine 319, 395 Stanton, Patti 291, 312 Staples, James Earl II Staples, Jennifer Martha 395 Staples, Jerry Wayne Staples, Kurt Lloyd 412 Stapleton, Doreen Bourque Stapleton, Mark Lewis Stark, Belinda Skees 102, 107, 369 Starks, Marilyn Faye Starks, Samuel Maurice 369 Starks, Venessa Gumm 385 Starnes, Lawrence Wyartt 210, 412 Starr, Larry Andy 395 Stasel, Mildred Lee Stastny, John Francis Staton, Michael Lynn Stauss, Brian Gerard 277, 317, 370 Stauss, Christianne 395 Staynings, Anthony Robert 200-201, 203, 238, 244-245, 359 St. Clair, Michael Brent 284 Stearns, Donald Lee 385 Stearns, Michael Ray 283 Steckler, Jeffrey Michael Steele, Julie Anne Steele, Sara Ann Steele, Thomas 296 Steelman, Paul Leslie Steen, Bernard Leo 282 Steen, Melissa Kay 370 Steenbergen, Frances Kidd Steenbergen, Jacqueline N. 412 Steenbergen, Miles Calvert 307, 395 Steenbergen, Myrl Leann 395 Steenbergen, Stephanie Ann 412 Steffey, Diane Gayle 370 Stegner, Jeffrey Douglas Steier, George William Jr. 322, 370 Steilberg, Elizabeth Ann 412 Stein, Karl David 301, 370 Steinbach, Thomas Leo 107 Steinmetz, Phillip Michael 281, 287, 395 Steinweg, Rebecca LYnn 395 Steller, Keith Everett Stephens, Alonzo Theodore 158, 302-303, 348 Stephens, Audrey Nell H. 412 Stephens, Barry Scott 412 Stephens, Connie Elaine Stephens, Connie Jean 412 445 Shoulders, Vivian Stephens, Connie Stephens, Justin Dean 412 Stephens, Krisann 412 Stephens, Lanny Douglas Stephens, Larry Clark Stephens, Mary Jane 100-101, 108, 325 Stephens, Philip Carroll Stephens, Richard Earl Stephenson, John Robert II Stephenson, Joseph Lollar 412 Stephenson, Mary Todd 395 Stephenson, Rex Lewis Sterkel, Gail Ann Stevens, Barbara Schulte Stevens, Debra Kay 324 Stevens, Gregory Paul Stevens, Kathleen Marie Stevens, Marcia Marquerite 412 Stevens, Mark William Stevens, Vickie Sue 263, 395 Stevenson, Darrell Wayne Stevenson, David Arthur 283 Stevenson, Geavonda Colene 370 Stevenson, George Wallace Stevenson, Juanita Sue 412 Stevenson, Lisa Marie 395 Stewart, Connie Crawford 370 Stewart, Deborah Lynn 395 Stewart, Desiree Lynn 412 Stewart, Joseph Patrick Stewart, Judy Frances 370 Stewart, Kenneth Edward Stewart, Lex Allen Stewart, Michael Greer Stewart, Pamela Anne Stewart, Pat 313 Stewart, Philip Ray Stewart, Robert Harrison Stewart, Stephanie Ann 305, 370 Stewart, Susan Brown 322 Stewart, William Arthur 370 Stichtenoth, Keith Bailey 307, 412 Stickler, Gregory Thomas 234, 412 Stidham, James Stacy 254 Stidham, Riley Gordon Stigall, Dorothy Lynn 385 Stiles, Christopher Cee Stiles, Donna Faye 412 Stiles, James Wayne 395 Stiles, Linda Nan 395 Stillman, Barbara Ann 370 Stillman, Kurt Clifford 299, 385 Stinemetz, Nancy Alice Stinnett, Charles Louis 312 Stinnett, Charles Roger 200, 309 Stinnett, David Maurice Stinnett, Michael Duane Stinson, Janet Lynn 412 Stinson, Kathy Darlene 412 Stinson, Pricilla Eugene 395 Stites, Joseph Newton 290-291, 348, 370 Stites, Thomas Anthony 291, 385 Stitt, Susan Elaine 263, 412 Stobaugh, Vivian Elaine 314, 370 Stocker, Alice Elizabeth 412 Stockslager, Carlton Lee Stockton, Eddy Roger Stockton, William Cornell 299, 395 Stockwell, Shirley Ann 12, 412 Stoess, Stephen Fentress 370 Stofer, Lee Allen 291, 396 Stokes, Cynthia Ann 385 Stokes, Gregory Paul 412 Stokes, Joseph David Jr. 301, 317, 318, 348, 372 Stokes, Karen Sue 412 Stokes, Patricia Ann Quinn Stoll, Shirley Gabi 385 Stoll, Teresa Lynn Stoltman, Jeffrey Joseph Stomps, Walter 178 Stonage, Richard Stanton J. Stone, Cardell 412 Stone, James Kent Stone, James Michael Stone, Jeffrey Dixon 210, 412 Storie, David John Stone, Lorenda Gail Storte, David 301 Stone, Marsha Ann Story, Gregory Issac 281 Stone, Oskar Robert 323 Story, Orick Alonzo Stone, Sandra Kay 396 Story, William Jeffrey 281 Stone, Tina Rae 372 Storytelling class 171 Stone, Tracy Allen 296 Stotelmyer, Greg 385 Stone, William Victor Stotts, Creg Allen Stoner, Robert Allen 203, 244 Stout, Kathy Marie Stoops, Mark Stephen Stout, Richard Helm II Storey, Gregory Lynn 281 Stovall, Rita Faye Fraim 385 Storey, Richard Watson Jr. Strader, Charles Wesley Jr. 282, 412 An exotic finale Mystery was the mood of ‘The Spell,” the finale of the ‘Evening of Dance” in late spring. Mary Ann Mager moves gracefully across the Russell Miller Theatre stage with her cumbersome wings flowing with the music. Company members practiced daily throughout the year with faculty member Beverly Leonard in preparation for the annual production. Twelve other numbers, many choreographed by students, were performed. — L. Wright Strader, Jimmie Lou 266-267 Strader, Shea Anne Strain, Cyndia Leevan 396 Strain, Joy Darlene 412 Straney, Mark Jeffrey 412 Straney, Stephen Allen 277, 287, 385 Strange, Connie Rae Strange, Susan Baker Stratton, Albert Roth 413 Stratton, Paul Armand 372 Stratton, Timothy Allan 372 Straub, Gary Palmer Strawn, Larry Wayne Street, Beverly Dee Stretz, Rosalind Jeanine Stringer, Andrew Howard Stringer, Carolyn 307 Stringer, Jeffrey Wayne 233 Stringer, Robert Lee Stringer, Sydney Tuesday 372 Stringfield, Sandra Strode, John Edward 301 Stroder, Milton Elwood Strong, Tony Ethridge Strong, Vickie Gaye Stroube, Marianne 191, 319, 372 Stroube, William 160-161 Stroud, Brenda Jean 264 Stroud, Tony 221 Strozdas, Kathryn Jean 246, 254, 396 Strunk, Lynn Frances 372 Struttmann, Timothy W. 299 Stuart, Jesse 238 Stuart, Merrill Lynn Stuart, Steven Ray Stubblefield, Donna Karen Stuck in another rut 244-245 Stucke, Joani Marie 327, 385 Stucker, Patrick Gary Student affairs assistant dean 44, 74, 76, 80-81, 83, 146-148, 227 Student affairs dean 135 Student Council for Exceptional Children 319 Student Data Processing Club 317 Student financial aid director 143, 145 Student Honors Organization 294-295 Student Life 12-125 Student Section of the American Home Economics Association 323 Student Volunteer Bureau 318 Stull, Edward Lamar Stumbo, Brian James Stumler, Dan Ray Sturdivant, Fredericka 413 Sturgeon, Denise Gale 413 Sturgeon, Vanessa Marie 413 Sturgill, Belinda Joyce Sturrock, Rhonda Faye 396 Sublett, Alan Todd Sublett, Carl Leslie 119 Sublett, Joan Carol Subotky, Gerson Jacob Sudderth, David Hardy III 284 Suddoth, Lynn Marie 413 Suggs, Milton 53 Sullivan, Denins Wade 283 Sullivan, Doris Elaine 372 Sullivan, Ellen Kay 285 Sullivan, Erin Marie Sullivan, Harry Brown Sullivan, Karen Marie Sullivan, Linda Kaye 413 Sullivan, Rebecca Lou Sullivan, Rickey R. Sullivan, Sheila Gail Sullivan, Terrence Patrick Sullivan, Terry Douglas Sullivan, Timothy Wayne 285 Sullivan, Tom 271 Sumilhig, Freddie Selorio Summer Youth Music Week 33 Summers, Ellis Brown Summers, Mark Stephen Summers, Steven Young 413 Sumner, Elizabeth Higdon Sumner, Lindel Riley Sun, Lih Jen Surface, David Howard Sutherland, Anita Louise 413 Sutherland, David C. Sutherland, Donna Lynne 315, 396 Sutter, Frank James Suttle, Deborah Sue 396 Suttles, John Wesley 277, 396 Sutton, Christopher David 284 Sutton, George Walter III Sutton, Gilbert Wayne Sutton, Marla Sue Sutton, Paula Sue Sutton, Ronnie 138 Sutton, Skip 284 Swafford, Peggy Agee Swain, Kathy Sue 396 Swain, Maurice Lamont 280 Swallow, Kelley Ann 413 Swanberg, Christopher G. Swango, Michael Lee Swanson, Gregory Duane Swearingen, Mark Sweat, Bernadette 266 Sweeney, James Michael 413 Sweeney, Mary Ellen Sweeney, Thomas Francis Sweeten, Kenneth Henry 385 Sweets, Richard Darrell Swigris, Anthony Joseph Swihart, Barry Allen 396 Swimming 232-233 Swine flu 112 Swords, Linda Gail 372 Swyhart, Timothy Lee 277 Sydnor, Harold Alan Sydnor, Wallace 327 Symonds, Jena D. Denney Sympson, Johnny Reid Sympson, Paul Beam 372 Szymula, John Thomas 447 Stites, Thomas Szymula, John ; f j Tabb, Cynthia Ann 413 Tabb, Gary Neal Tabor, Cindy Jo Tabor, Clarence 150 Tabor, Damon Myrlin Tabor, David Franklin 396 Tabor, Derek 150 Tabor, George Thomas 372 Tabor, Kathi Jo 265 Tabor, Margann 413 Tabor, Ronald Brodus 396 Tackett, Robert Lowe Tackett, Teresa Alvarez Taerbaum, Barry Taft, Donald Gilson II Takayama, Kanzi Talabi, Bashiru Adebisi Talbott, Gregory Hay Talbott, Morris Alan Talisman 310-311 Tallent, Jesse Keith Talley, Karon Marlene 319 Talley, Steven Lee Talton, Evelyn Lynn 300 Talty, Colleen M. Tanard, Celeste 413 Tandy, Anna Paulette Tandy, Ensign Keith 204-211, 252 Tandy, Michael Clayton 396 Tanner, Derrick Lee Tanner, Lucinda Luttrell Tanno, Roberta Lou Tapp, Sherry Charlene 396 Tapp, Terri Lynn 413 - Tapper, Kristin Gay 264, 322, 372 Tapscott, Joan Winston 317, 396 Tapscott, John Walter 396 Tarlton, Thomas Oscar 327 Tarrance, Carolyn Miller Tarrance, Richard F. Tarrence, Garry Dean Tarrence, Larry Gean Tarrence, Steven Earl Tarter, Martha Palma Tarter, Mike Todd Tastes of Southern Hospitality 72-33 Tarter, Thomas Mark 385 Tate, Boyce 162 Tate, Buster 252 Tate, Emily Anne 100, 103, 106, 295, 396 Tate, Michael Wayne Tate, William Walter, 299, 372 Tatum, Carlos Dale 413 Tatum, James Timothy Tatum, Raymond Terry 303-304, 317, 372 Tatum, Susan Schendera Tatum, Walter Featherstun 413 Taylor, Andy 315 Taylor, Anne Marie Taylor, Anthony Estell 385 Taylor, Barbara Ann 300, 372 Taylor, Bathesheba Renee Taylor, Bryan Steven 413 Taylor, Cathy 312 Taylor, Cherie Lynn Taylor, Cheryl Annette Taylor, Debra Lynn Taylor, Dennis W. 322 Taylor, Donald Keith 301 Taylor, Donald Patrick 301 Taylor, Donald Thomas 301, 317 Taylor, Elisabeth Carol 312, 413 Taylor, Feb Iler 413 Taylor, Gary Laine 312 Taylor, Gary Steven 312, 385 Taylor, George Lee 396 Taylor, George Wyatt Taylor, Gregory D. 396 Taylor, John Albert 372 Taylor, Joni Sue 256-257, 396 Taylor, Joseph William Taylor, Kathryn Ann Ball Taylor, Lois Elaine 396 Taylor, Lonnie Rhea Taylor, Marie 412 Taylor, Mary Castelli 372 Taylor, Mary Clare 372 Taylor, Michael Anthony Taylor, Michael Raymond 385 Taylor, Nancy Elaine Taylor, Patricia Anne 315 Taylor, Perry Randall Taylor, Randy Kay Bushaw 413 Taylor, Redmond Roberts 282 Taylor, Robert Garland Jr. Tennessee Pulley Bone 20 Tennis 238-241 Tepool, Donald Gene 283 Termini, Richard Sal Termini, Sharon May Smith Terrell, Elizabeth Ann 214-215, 413 Terrell, Jackie Lee Terry, Anthony Lee 396 Terry, Dennis Brian 413 Terry, Georgia Jane Terry Lloyd, Jr. 216-217, 236 Terry, Marcia Ellen 267, 269, 385 Terry, Norman Lee 396 Terry, Ruth Antoinette Tetzloff, Carol Lynn Texas Dust is Hard to Swallow 200-203 Thacher, Daniel Wallace Tharp, Barry Ray 2 Tharp, Kerry Wayne 282 Tharp, Marla Faye 289, 348, 372 Tharpe, Diane Kay 372 “The Babysitter” 108 “The Bad Children” 107 “The Barber of Seville” 99-101 The Bluegrass 65 The Cellar 119 The Dutch Boys’ ‘bar’dom 233 “The Emperor Jones” 99-100 “The Emperor's Nightingale ’ 106-107 The even years BLUES 204-211 “The Fugitive Kind” 9, 98-99, 104-105 The ghost town that wasn’t 32-33 “The Good Doctor” 102 The Hill’s CENTER of Interest 52-54 “The Man Who Killed Time” 106 The Metamorphosis 128-129 The Monster Mash 54 The Real Hilltoppers 133-151 The rising cost of College 26-27 “The Rivals” 101 “The Serpent” 102 The s-l-o-w-e-s-t race in the world 36-37 “The Ugly Duckling” 102 “The Unwicked Witch” 107 The Weaker Sex in not so weak after all 248-251 “The Wizard of Oz” 101, 103, 107 Theatre 98-103 Theatre — Set design feature 104-105 Theirl, Mark David Theirl, Stefanie Ann Theobald, Polly Grace Theodoulou, Othon Leonidou 304 Thessen, Carolyn D. 364, 372 Thessen, Paula Jill 396 Theuerkauf, Jon Eric 210 Thielen, Thomas Edward Thielen, Virginia Louise Thies, Genevieve Anne 413 Thies, Karen Baade Thomas, Anne 173 Thomas, Bernard Dean Thomas, Billy Franklin 323 Thomas, Billy Ray Thomas, Carey Lee 413 Thomas, Carolyn Jean Thomas, Curd Tommu Ford Thomas, Cynthia Lee 396 Thomas, Danny O. Thomas, Darryl Vincent Thomas, David Michael Thomas, Deborah Rena 413 Thomas, Debra Ann 372 Thomas, Donald Douglas Thomas, Donald Paul Thomas, Doris Susan 385 Thomas, Elizabeth Sharon 322 Thomas, Estie Lorene Thomas, Frances A. 413 Thomas, James Edward Jr. 80, 231, 325 Thomas James Russell 80, 204-211, 231, 325, 348-349, 372 Thomas, James Watson 80, 204-211, 231, 325 Thomas, Janice Elaine Thomas, Jeffrey D. 244 Thomas, Joann Marie Thomas, Juanita Maria Thomas, Karen Elaine Thomas, Kenneth Ross 396 Thomas, Larry Wayne Thomas, Laurie Lynn 413 Thomas, Leslie B. Thomas, Linda Key Thomas, Lloyd Gean Thomas, Lucinda Lou Thomas, Marsha Ann 413 Thomas, Mary Ann 372 Thomas, Mary Ann Thomas, Megan Bradford 307 Thomas, Michael Adrian 101, 103, 282, Thompson, Arthur L. Thopmpson, Catherine Marie Thompson, Celeste 263 Thompson, Charles Robert 385 Thompson, Cindy 414 Thompson, Connie Lou 413 Thompson, Debbie Ellen Thompson, Donna Rae Thompson, Donnie Nunnally Thompson, Elizabeth Louise 265, 387, 413-414 Thompson, Guy Marshall Thompson Jack 221 Thompson, James Garry Thompson, Kelly 55, 133-134, 227 Thompson, Linda 414 Thompson, Lynn Ann 254 Thompson, Marilyn Thompson, Mark Allen 396 Thompson, Martha Celeste 372 Thompson, Pamela Ann Thompson, Pamela Denise Thompson, Peggy 387, 414 Thompson, Peggy Joy 396 Thompson, Percy III 413 Thompson, Robert Terry 307, 372 Thompson, Stephen Keene 413 Thompson, Vosteen Maddle Thompson, Warren Thomas Thompson, Wendy Carol 3, 413 Thompson, William Arvil 284 Thompson, William Ernest 284 Thornberry, Anna Jane 303, 385 Thorne, Mary Paula 396 Thornton, Deborah Susanne 312, 385 Thornton, Gary Allen 59, 306 Thornton, Joseph Craig 301, 313, 372 Thornton, Pamela Ruth 312 Thornton, Rebecca Gail 396 Thronton, Steven Owen 282, 413 Thorpe, James Stacey Those Perfections 41 Three Festivals 94-96 Thurman, A.J. 143, 145 Thurman, Evelyn 171 Thurman, Michael Edward Thurman, Pamela Livingston 372 Thurmond, Carol Ann 413 Thurmond, Cathy Jean 414 Thurston, Elizabeth Louise 414 Thurston, Luvenia Ann 396 Thurtell, Gordon Keith 385 Tichenor, Curtis Paxton Tichenor, Janet Gaye Tichenor, John Clifton 260-261 Tichenor, Jon Kevin 396 Tichenor, Teri Lea Tien, Tze Pei Tien, Tzi Pei Tigue, Jeff 271 Tigue, Michal Stephen Tigue, Patricia Ann 385 Tilford, Valerie Susan 414 Tilley, Albert Lee 396 Tilley, Jeffery Reid Tilley, Steven Eugene Time to blow out 200 candles 34-35 Timko, Valerie Susan Timmons, Valerie 99, 102-103, 289 Tingle, Ricky Lee Tingle, Vicky Lynn Tingley, Mary Margaret 397 Tinius, James Anthony 270, 385 Tinius, Joseph Russell 202-203, 238, 319 Tinsley, Diane Kay 372 Tinsley, Donald Joseph Tinsley, Robert Lee 321, 372 Tipps, Rhonda Leanne Tipton, David John 252 Tipton, Kathy Jayne Tipton, Ronald Arthur 241, 303, 397 Tipton, Sherree Lynn Title IX 252 Tobe, Lynne Gaston 372 Tobey, Manley William III 385 Toczko, David Charles Todd, Annette Todd, Doyle Bradley 210 Todd, John Harmon Todd, Paula J. 372 Todd, Richard Grover 84-87 Tokar, Stephen Matthew Tolle, Krissy Wren 287, 372 Tolopka, Kenneth James 385 Tomes, James B. II 149-150 Tomes, James Butler III 385 Tomkinson, Deborah Lynne 295, 315 Tomlinson, Lawrence David 280 Tompkins, Alan David Toms, Leslie Philip 320, 373 Tong, Gary Wayne Trenkamp, Elizabeth Ann 319, 373 Trent, Bruce Darrell 397 Trent, Cheri Lynn 385 Trent, Connie Lynn 397 Tribble, Andrew Bentley Tri Beta 300 Trickey, Lee David Triggs, George Trimble, David Lyle 284 Triplett, Betty Jane Triplett, Scott Kilian 230 Trobaugh, Robert Edward 101 Troutman, Betsy 177 Troutman, Dan David Troutman, Marsha Elaine 267, 274-275, 287 Troutman, Richard 177 Troutman, Sarah 177 Troutt, Stanley Dwight Trowell, Henri Etta 263, 373 Truesdell, Dara Lynn 263, 289 Truitt, Charles Robert Tswana, Mabel Nthabisena Tswana, Sam Abel Tuba Ensemble 291 Tubb, Ernest Dale Jr. 241, 252, 397 Tucker, Beverly Ann 397 Tucker, Bobby Wilson 290 Tucker, David Glenn 297, 373 Tucker, Edward Claude Tucker, Elizabeth Susan 300 Tucker, Joan Tucker, John Gregory Tucker, Melvin Dale 397 Tucker, Randolph Irving 283 Tucker, Stevie D. Tudor, Cynthia Ann 397 Tudor, Nancy Ann Wood Tuell, John Witherspoon 282, 288 Tuggle, Blayre Rebecca Tuggle Morris Jean Tully, William Patrick Jr. Tunget, Gary Whyne Tuning, Elizabeth Boyd Tunks, Terry Wayne 414 Turley, Billy Allen 414 ‘Turned off but tuned in’ 58-61 Turner, Armenda McMackin Turner, Charles Anthony Turner, Cheryl Rae 414 Turner, Connie Jane Turner, Darryl Steven Turner, David Brian 397 Turner, James Harold Turner, Jerry S. Turner, Joan Humphries Turner, John Anthony 373 Turner, Joseph Miller Turner, Joseph William 397 Turner, Julie Lee 414 Turner, Karen Ann 373 Turner, Kathy Lynn 397 Turner, Kenneth Edward Turner, Kimberly Simone 414 Turner, Lester Thomas Turner, Patricia Rochelle Turner, Paul Eric 385 Turner, Philip J. 210 Turner, Rebecca Rhea Turner, Steven Ray Turner, Terry Eldon Turner, Timothy Raymond Turner, Tommy Foster Turner, Virgil Phillip 373 Turnmire, Ricky McClellan 301, 373 Turok, Laura Jane 254, 267, 305, 397 Tussey, Lee Ann 397 Tutino, Thomas James 324, 397 Tuttle, Vicki Jean 414 Tuzio, Tom E. 284 Tweddell, Thomas Alan 373 Tyler, Cheryl Larose 373 Tyler, James Darnell Tyler, Scottie Joe Tynes, Vernon Walter 244 Tyree, Milton Stollings 373 Tyrie, James Sidney Jr. Tyrie, Robert Stanley 373 UBG, IFC and Panhellenic 286-287 Ueltschi, Robert Dowling 397 Uhrich, Thomas Edwin 282 Ulmer, Thomas Stephen 282 Umbarger, Shelley Jean 373 Updike, Thomas 136 Uptain, Stephanie Anne Upton, John Edward 312 Upton, John Robert Bruce 312 Upton, Julia Jeanette 312 Upton, Sharon L. 373 Urban, Johnny Redford Urbanek, Kimberly Kay Urtz, Thomas S. Utley, Helen Christina 373 Uwaibi, Emmanuel Ikhide Vail, Carmen Rose Vail, Howard Peary 373 Valentine, Mary Margaret Valentine, Taqualia G. 373 Valentino, William Donald Valiante, James Ervin Vallentine, Robert 54 Vamvas, Jeffrey Allan 203 Van Boduen, Ruth 295 Van Bussum, Gail Paige 414 Van Bussum, Robert Ritchie 301, 349, 373 Van Eman, Lanny 32, 221 Vanarsdall, Ann Baxter Vance, Arnold Duffy 414 Vance, Douglas Bryan 284 Vance, James Edward D. Jr. Vance, Johnny 237 Vance, Phil Kyle 397 Vance, Vickie Lynn 397 Vancleave, Phyllis Ann 324-325, 385 Vandebrake, Barry Owen 373 Vander Kraats, Keith R. 414 Vanderheyden, Mark Alan 385 Vandermeer, William Samuel 263, 277, 373 Vanderspool, Ann Leslie 267, 414 Vandiver, Perline 373 Vandrick, Elaine Marie 414 Vanfleet, Bruce Wayne Vanmeter, Allan Ray 373 Vanmeter, Kathy Ann 295, 397 Van Meter Hall 1 Vanmeter, Lisa Jacqueline Vanmeter, Mary Kaye 319, 397 Vanrooden, Hans H.M. 221 Vanslyke, Richard Norman 210, 277 Variot, James Matthew Varnadore, Willie Dean Varney, David James Vassie, Brenda Michelle 415 Vaughan, Charles Richard Vaughan, Gary Earl Vaughan, George Herman II Vaughn, Alan Ray 385 Vaughn, Brenda Gail Vaughn, Dennis Green III 141, 239, 285 Vaughn, Diana Kay Vaughn, Donna Ellen Vaughn, Jeffrey A lan Vaughn, Jim W. Vaughn, Judy Karen 397 Vaughn, Moto 244 Vaughn, Randy 210, 415 Vaughn, Ronald M. 283, 415 Vaught, Larry Brent 385 Vaught, Marty Wayne 385 Veach, Pamela Kay Veaxey, Jim-Ed 157 Veitschegger, Melissa Cole Veitschegger, William Kerr 415 Velotta, Mark Allen Veno, Tiomothy- Michael Verner, Joanne 32, 299 Vertrees, Thomas Alan Vest, William Donald Jr. Vestal, James William 415 Veterans on Campus 298-299 Vice, Donna Cheryl 313, 415 Vice, Mary Alice 415 Vician, Jacqueline Marie Vick, Elizabeth Herrron Vick, Frances Annette 415 Vick, Walter Glenn 397 Vickers, Janet Lynn 385 Vickous, Phillip Marshall Vikre, Karen Lise Vikre, Linda Elin 322, 415 Vincent, Belinda Gaye Vincent, Kathleen Hope 415 Vincent, Perry Glenn 373 Vincent, Preston Dwight 385 ; 285, 313, 385 Tong, Siu Kui 304, 397 Umulap, Menjor T. Vincent, Reneva Estelle 385 Lie spe ere Thomas, Michael Alan 101, 103, 282, Tooley, Rachel Jean 321, 397 “Under the Sign of the Waterbearer” 99, Vincent, Robin Sue 126, 311, 305, 397 in a oe - ue TE 285, 313, 385 Tope, Peggy Diane 101, 108 Vincent, Ruby Lynn 397 cine as Roots Thomas, Michael Calvin 101, 103, 282, Topole, Hollis Anne 15, 414 Undergraduate advisement director 137- Vincent, Sherrie Denise 317, 373 ae 285, 313, 385 Torain, Sharon Louise 397 138 Vincent, Terri Jeanette 415 Taylor, Susan Katie 59, 413 Taylor, Tony William Taylor, Vincent Lyon Tayntor, Joanne Mary 413 Teachers’ Preparation Education Program 3 Teohento be draw more than straight lines 180 Teague, Jeffery Lynn 284 Teater, Mary David Teater, Melinda Jane 396 Tedder, Terry Wayne 239, 242-243 Tedesco, Frank Albert Teegarden, John Wesley Tefft, Kelcie Jean 396 Temirkandv, Yuri 96 Temple, Alan Jon Temple, Mark Thomas 290 Templeman, Brenda Lynn 385 Templeton, Donald Alan Templeton, Mark Daniel Tench, Cathy Lee 267, 413 Tengelsen, Joanette Brumby Thomas, Mona Faye 263, 274 Thomas, Patricia Joann Thomas, Paul Banks 277, 413 Thomas, Peter Anthony 413 Thomas, Ricky Wade Thomas, Robert Joseph Thomas, Roger Michael 107, 307 Thomas, Sally Beth Thomas, Samuel 385 Thomas, Sandra 413 Thomas, Scott Glen 244, 320, 413 Thomas, Stephen Joseph 244, 314, 396 Thomas, Timothy Andrew 297 Thomas, TImothy Kibler 297 Thomas, Wade Allen Thomas, William Bradley 372 Thomas, Yolanda Faye 396 Thomason, Donald Edward Jr. Thomason, Nancy Ann Thomerson, Bonita Jean 385 Thompson, Alfred Wayne Thompson, Alfreda Gail Tougher, Mary Catherine Towns, Darlene Denise 397 Towns, Tony Lamont 204-211 Townsend, Debra Lynn Track 238-239, 244-245 Tracy, April Vest Tracy, Bonnie Suzanne Tracy, Homer Wayne 100-101, 324 Trantwein, Susan 94 Trask, Blair William Trask, Myra Page 298, 315, 373 Traughber, Darrell Wayne Traughber, John Raymond Trautman, Bambie Lynn 373 Travelstead, Lydia B. 414 Travelsted, Charles E. Travelsted, Joe Kelley Travis, David Lynn Travis, Jean Laurent 295, 414 Travis, Karen E. Kennedy Travis, William Joseph 282, 397 Tregoning, Todd Johnson Underwood, Alice Oldham 373 Underwood, Evelyn Delorise 414 Underwood, Tony Owen 385 United Black Greeks 287 Universal Cheerl eaders Association 32-33 University archivist 145 University activities director 152 University attorney 135 University Center Board Entertainment Series 54 University center director 148 University Honors director and degree programs administrator 142-143 University registrar 135-136 University publications director 140 University school relations director 136- 137 Upchurch, Lois Jane Update — Baseball 242-243 Update — Men’s Tennis and Golf 240- 241 Update — Men’s Track 244-245 Vincent, Thurman Jr. Vincent, Wayne Allen Vinson, Kenneth Wayne 291, 415 Vinson, Robbie Dannette 397 Vinson, Walter George Jr. 281, 385 Virgin, Craig 201-202 Vital signs measured by the hands of a non-chauvinest 174 Vittetow, Frank Hoyt Vo Tan, Viet 49, 304 Voelker, Brian Allan 101 Vogler, George Anne Vogt, Christy Kay 50-51, 128-129, 225, 349, 373 Vogt, Terri Ann 415 Voils, Danny Gene Volk, Kristen Stahr 397 Vollmer, Joyce Ann Vonsick, Ronald Lee Wall Wall Wall Walls 448 Tabb, Cynthia Vonsick, Ronald Waddell, Jacalyn Carruth 415 Waddington, Shanna Sue Waddle, Marcia Gayle Waddy, Kenneth Duane Wade, Catherine Elizabeth 397 Wade, Debra V. Rene 415 Wade, Marcus Lynn 277, 373 Wade, Navita 385 Wade, Norman Lee Jr. 210 Wade, Sheila Renee Wadell, Robert Joseph Wadlington, Carroll Gordon 285, 373 Waggener, Dan Caldwell 283 Waggoner, Gayle Anne Waggoner, Rebecca Brandon Waggoner, Stephen Leonard Waggoner, Vicky Jean 397 Wagner, Charles Henry Wagner, Dana Ann Wagner, Denise Michelle 263, 415 Wagner, Jean Ellen 415 Wagner, Jean Mary 415 Wagner, Jonathan Edward Wagner, William Nicholas 282 Wagoner, Walter Edmond III Wahl, Karen Adele Waksmunski, Paul Michael Wald, Melanie Lynn 313 Walden, Gary Kipling 297 Walden, Larry David 57, 257 Walden, Mary Patricia Walden, Sammye Sharen Waldhart, Debra Susan W. 385 Waldron, Janet 385 Waldrond, Mickey 210 Waldrop, Alexander Moore Waldrop, Melanie 87, 100, 373 Walker, Becky Faye 385 Walker, Benita Carol 322, 373 Walker, Betty Diann 415 Walker, Cathy Lynn Walker, Cynthia Lou 373 Walker, Debra Aniece 385 Walker, Denise Ruth 254, 303, 319, 385 Walker, James Daniel 373 Walker, James William Walker, John Howard 385 Walker, John Wesley Walker, Kurt Dean Walker, Lynnette 319, 374 Walker, Meloney Renee Walker, Micky Eugene 415 Walker, Nancy Jane Walker, Pamela Jo 415 Walker, Pamela Joann 265, 415 Walker, Paul R. II Walker, Richard Marshall Walker, Robin Jean 265, 415 Walker, Rodney Lee 385 Walker, Steven D. 385 Walker, Susan Kaye Walker, Tawanna Lucille Wall, Curtis Ray 385 Wall, James Robert Wall, Keith Roger 385 Wall, Randy V.J. 320, 415 Wall, Robert Wayne Wall, Stephen Jay 281, 385 Wallace, Charlie Martin 385 Wallace Children’s Village 266, 268 Wallace, David Marcus Wallace, Gregory Rhodes Wallace, James W. II 284 Wallace, John Michael 210 Wallace, Marcus 19, 140-141 Wallace, Mark Curtis 415 Wallace, Michael Eugene 385 Wallace, Patricia Jo 299, 385 Wallace, Timothy George Waller, Connie Wylene Waller, Rhonda Yvette 397 Waller, Sandra Yvonne Waller, Tonetta Ann Waller, Virginia Ellen Wallin, Jack Garry Walls, William 96 Walpole, Melody Ann 415 Walrond, Mickey Lee Walsh, Thomas Edward 280 Walter, Michael Dale Walters, Dianna Lynn Walters, Joseph Lee 415 Walters, Leslie Mark Walters, Ricky 284 Walton, Charles Steven Walton, Donna G. Walton, Paul Andrew Walton, Robert Edward Wampler, Michael David 282 Wampler, Teri Kay 415 Wand, Jeanette Elena Wang, Paul Shih Cheng Wanhainen, John Mark Wanta, Steven Richard Ward, Barry Anthony Ward, Barry Randall Ward, Diana Sue Taylor Ward, Gary Lee Ward, Jerry 321 Ward, Kimberly Lynn 415 Ward, Mary Angela Ward, Reta Jean Ward, Stephen Douglas Ward, Tammara 415 Ward, Timothy Leo 374 Wardlaw, Russell Alan Wardlow, Eleanor Ruth 374 Wardlow, Mark C. Ware, Carlotta Marie Ware, Cary Lynn Ware, Effie Mae 415 Warford, Kevin Thomas “Warmath, Randall Dean 285 Warner, Carrie Lynn Warner, Danny B. 305 Warner, Jeffrey Louis 415 Warner, Michael Henry Warner, Stanley Ray Warren, Charles Allen 210 Warren, Connie Boyer Warren, Donald Scott Warren, Harold Douglas Warren, Jennifer 374 Warren, Pamela Hunter Warren, Rochelle Lea 397 Warrick, Johnnie 397 Washboard Jamboree 271-273 Washburn, Ricardo Veloris 385, 397 Washburn, Richard D. Washington, Michael Renee Washington, Roseline 397 Washington, Sam 218 Wassom, Earl 142 Waters, Sandra Michelle 265 Wathen, Douglas Alan 415 Wathen, Joseph Alfred Wathen, Margaret Elizabeth Wathen, Robert Louis II 374 Wathen, Sheila Anne 299 Wathen, Stephen Flaget 374 Wathen, William Kenneth Watkins, Bobbie Jean 374 Watkins, David Smith Jr. Watkins, Gwenda Carol 374 Watkins, James Richard Watkins, Joy Ann Hahn Watkins, Judith A. Winters Watkins, Paul Lee 277, 415 Watkins, Rita Lynn Watkins, Walter Lee Watrous, Kim Elizabeth 415 Watson, Beverly Jo Watson, Brenda Wigelsworth Watson, David Keith Watson, Debra Faye 374 Watson, Jackie Ray Watson, Jerry Randall Watson, Julie Lynn Gregory Watson, Karen Lois Watson, Mark Edward Watson, Pamela Tracey Watson, Sally Jane 108, 325, 374 Watt, Janis Ann Vincent Watt, Judy Carol Watts, David Wayne Watts, Donna Marie 397 Watts, Heather 96 Watts, Karen A. 397 Watts, Nancy Sue 397 Watts, Rosemary Elizabeth 397 Wayman, Sandra Kae ‘We need some bionic gymnasts’ 214-215 We resolve that ... 50-51 Wear, Carol Ann 300, 385 Weasley, Fred 44 Weather 88-91 Weatherford, David Thomas 415 Weatherford, Sarah E. Weatherhold Harry R. Weatherspoon, Robert Daris 315 Weaver, Gerald Joseph Jr. 374 Weaver, Janet Lynn 397 Weaver, Jay 284, 322 Weaver, Jeffrey Holmes 299 Weaver, Lucille Goodall Weaver, Mark Douglas Weaver, Max Crawford Weaver, Micki 385 Weaver, Patrick Lee Weaver, Sylvia Anita 397 Weav er, Valerie Jill 415 Webb, Carol Sue 374 Webb, Cynthia Lynn Webb, Deborah Joyce 415 Webb, Diane Lynn Webb, Eldon Leroy 312 Webb, Janice Gayla Webb, Lee 31 Webb, Michael Anthony Webb, Pamela Dawn 385 Webb, Paul Harding Webb, Paulette Marie Webb, Rebecca Ann 397 Webb, Rebecca M. Webb, Rickey Byron Webb, Rose Ellen 374 Webb, Sherie Lynn Webb, William Neal 385 Weber, Richard A. Jr. Weber, Sue Allen 374 Weber, Tina Marie 374 Webster, Greg Alan 415 Webster, James William Webster, Karen Renee Webster, Pamela 263 Webster, Tracy Nicholas W edding, Patricia Ann 374 Wedding, Patrick Vincent 397 Weddle, John W. III 415 Weddle, Kimberly Dawn 263 Weedman, Connie Sue Weedman, William Scott Weeks, Leeann 263 Weidemann, Joyce Marie 397 Weigel, Bruce Edward 283 Weimer, James Richard 299, 319, 385 Weinert, Patricia 300-301 Weis, James Burton Weissinger, James David Welborn, Thomas Theodore 385 Welch, Fredrick Thomas 415 Welch, Nina Gayle Welch, Theresa Ann Welder, Carlos Russell Weldon, Gary L. Weldy, Maryhelen Brandewie Welker, Beth Tomas Wellinghurst, Penny Lynn 263 Wellman, Jan Elise 323, 374 ‘Wellman, Lynn Harrison 300 Wells, Bobby G. Wells, Bradley Layne 397 Wells, C.J. 303 Wells, Carol Susan Wells, Carroll 313 Wells, Dana Marie Wells, Daniel Keith 285 Wells, George Oren 285 Wells, Gregory E. 397 Wells, James Harold 283 Wells, Janis Kay 415 Wells, Jeffrey Scott 232-233 Wells, Joe Walt Wells, Kathryn Laine Wells, Kathy Lynn Wells, Mark Edward 397 Wells, Pamela Jeanne 374 Wells, Paula Lugene 415 Wells, Susan Carol 397 Wells, Teena Fay Welsh, James Thomas 283 Welsh, Teresa McMurtrey - Wendt, Cynthia Sue 415 Wendt, Stephen D. 301, 385 Wenzinger, Mark Edward J. Werner, Rhonda Sue 385 Wesley, Donna Kaye 415 Wesley Foundation 313 Wesley, Frank Donald Jr. Wesley, Ronnie Mitchell Wesley, Threasa Lou Wespiser, Melissa Ann 397 West, Brian Lee 349 West, Donald John Henry West, Gary Lawrence 397 West, Robert Allen West, William Terry Westbay, Dreama May 397 Westbrook, Garland 225 Westbrook, Joe Lane Westbrook, Robin Jane 397 Westcott, Mike A. Westerby, Bryan Gerald 415 Westerfield, David Ligon Westerfield, John Keith Westerfield, Kimberly Ann Western Kentucky Cross-Country Invitational 7 W.K.U. — Bowling Green Community Orchestra 4, 12 Western Players 324 Westfall, Sara Lea 397 Wethington, Jay Alexander Wethington, Mary Cecelia 374 Wetterer, Arthur Louis 385 Wettig, Keith Scott Wetzel, George Louis Wetzel, Greg Maurice Wetzel, Robin Denise 397 Whalen, Laura Marie 299, 415 Whaley, Steven Edward 210 What's all the rush about? 22-23 What's inside the problem solvers 193 What’s What About Who’s Who 340-349 Wheat, Gary Eugene Wheat, James Steven Wheat, Katherine 415 Wheat, Stephen H. Wheatley, Dennis Craig Wheatley, Steve Gerard 277, 397 Wheeler, Carol Johnson 415 Wheeler, Clara Devore 415 Wheeler, Donald Gene Wheeler, John Milton 261, 287, 303 Wheeler, Joseph Dean Wheeler, Mary Margaret Wheeler, Michael Neal 267 Wheeler, Micky 267 Wheeler, Richard Kirk 277, 296 Wheeler, Ricky Lee Wheeler, Ruby Jane 374 Wheeler, Timothy Ross Whelan, William Edward 385 Whisenhunt, Terri Lynn 385 Whisman, Steven Andrew 385 Whistle, Delores Yvonne Whitaker, David 140 Whitaker, James Michael 374 Whitaker, Jeffrey Lane Whitaker, Julie Kay 397 Whitaker, Robert Allen White, Alan Lee White, Angela Rae 397 White, Anna Colleen 374 White, Barbara Sue White, Carolyn Marie 374 White, Charles Douglas 374 White, Clint Mac White, Connie Beulah 415 White, Cynthia Sue 313, 415 White, Dana Shari White, David Olen Jr. White, Deborah Lynn‘415 White, Dessie L. Barlow White, Donald Lawson 397 White, Earl Roger White, Ellen Rea White, Gloria Jean White, Irvin Stanley 101, 107 White, James Andrew White, James Craig 374 White, James Thomas 374 White, Jeffery Lynn 415 White, Joel Stephen White, John Mark White, Joseph Eugene White, Kathleen Ashby 397 White, Kimberley Gail 314, 397 White, Larry Allen White, Larry Edward 415 White, Lenelle 314, 374 White, Meta Cheryl 297, 415 White, Michael T. White, Prentice Brady White, Raymond Oscar 210 White, Robert Nicholas White, Robin Lane White, Rocelia 397 White, Statia Marie White, Terry Eugene White, Thelma Faye 385 White, Theresa Faye 374 White, William Letcher 321 White, William Stanley 321, 385 White, Winona Ruth 318, 385 Whitehead, Mary Leslie Whitehead, Roger Glenn Whitehouse, Robin Jeanette Whitenack, Alex Cecil 277, 374 Whiteside, Anna Mildred Whitfield, Dale Elizabeth 263, 309 Whitfield, Renee Yvonne 364, 374 Whitford, Dorothy E. 374 Whitledge, Ricky Alan Whitledge, Robyn Barnett Whitledge, Walter Ray Whitley, Charles Lantas 374 Whitley, Kenneth Neil Whitley, Leonard Darrell Whitley, Susan Smith 374 Whitlock, Dennis Keith 415 Whitlow, Gina Darlene 397 Whitlow, Paula Robin 374 Whitlow, Vicki Joyce 415 Whitman, Cheryl Lynn 46,374 Whitman, Theresa Louise 287, 385 Whitmer, Deborah Louise 403, 415 Whitmer, Marilyn Ruth Whitmer, Robert C. 291, 397 Whitsell, William Franklin Whitson, Kathy Glyn 307, 310, 327 Whitson, Phyllis Ann 415 Whitson, Susan P. Whitston, Richard V. Whitt, Glen Maccaddam Whittaker, Vicky Elaine 403, 415 Whittinghill, William D. Whittington, Gregory K. 277 Whitworth, Daniel Lawrence Whitworth, Patricia L. Who says we need picturesque speech? 70-71 Who's Who 340-349 Why did you choose WKU? 14-15 Wicklein, Robert Carl 375 Wickman, John Todd 415 Wicks, Alice Elizabeth 263 Wicks, Joel David 282, 415 Widick, Randall Keith 415 Wiebmer, Carolyn Jeane Wiedemer, Grant Edward 375 Wiederhold, Robert George Wiedmar, Mark Willard 415 Wi est, Patrick Wietle, John 227 Wiggington, Mildred Lou Wiggins, Michael Griffith Wiggins, Rocky Bruce Wiggins, William Renick Wigginton, Edward W. Jr. Wightman, Georgia Ellen Wiist, Lyle Jan Wilbur, Lou Ann 415 Wilburn, Gilbert R. Jr. Wilburn, Stephen Craig 284 Wilcher, Barbara Jean Wilcher, Larry Allen Wilcox, Debra Lynn 397 Wilcox, Kathy Lynn 397 Wilcutt, Kathryn Elaine Wild Cherry 74, 77, 80, 83 Wilder, Jay 138 Wilder, Jerry 137-138 Wildman, Judith Gail 304, 309, 375 Wiley, Bruce Norris 21, 276-277 Wiley, Debra Ann Wiley, Harold Ricky Wilford, Cheryl Ann Wilhelmi, Keith M. 300 Wilhoyte, Sarah Ellen 321 Wilk, Nancy Elizabeth Wilk, Susan Elaine 275 Wilkerson, Brenda Kay Wilkerson, Donald Lewis Jr. 375 Wilkerson, Jerry Wayne Wilkerson, Kenneth Ray 415 Wilkerson, Martha Alice 397 Wilkerson, Melissa Jayne Wilkerson, Regenia 385 Wilkerson, Rhonda B. 375 Wilkey, Robert Dee 415 Wilkey, Samuel Wade Wilkins, James Andrew 44, 278, 282, 287 Wilkins, James Keith 278, 287, 397 Wilkins, Jeanne Carol 397 Wilkins, Meredith Lee Wilkins, Nicholas Edward 11, 126, 285, 385 Wilkins, Ricky Dee Wilkins, Robert Micheal Wilkinson, Billy Carroll Wilkinson, Elwyn 54 Wilkinson, Stanley Randall Wilkirson, Howard Freeman Willard, Jeffrey Paul Willeford, Sean Rutven Willett, Michael William 277 Willett, Ned Lambert Williams, Amy Mary Williams, Angela Denise Williams, Angela Germaine 397 Williams, Angela Rose 397 Williams, Anthony Glenn 301, 397 Williams, Artye Lamont 415 Williams, Becky Ann Williams, Billy Joe Williams, Bonita Gayle Williams, Brenda Collins 318 Williams, Brenda Riddle 318 Williams, Byron Gleason Williams, Charles Patrick 375 Williams, Connie Marlene 375 Williams, Cynthia Ann Williams, Debra Ann 397 Williams, Doris Jean: Williams, Dwight Edward Williams, Fredrick Lee Williams, Harry Woodrow Williams, Jacqueline Jean 323 Williams, James Carl 375 Williams, Janet Lee Williams, Jeffrey David 252, 375 Williams, Jimmy Lee Williams, John Galen Williams, Johnny Lee 118, 244, 277, 287 Williams, Joseph Michael Williams, Karen Denise 415 Williams, Katherine Ann Williams, Kathy Sue Williams, Larry Edward 375 Williams, Leslie Lorraine 263, 385 Williams, Marjorie Yvonne Williams, Mark Alan Williams, Mark Anthony Williams, Mark Steven Williams, Marva Rae ' Williams, Mary Carolyn 175, 397 Williams, Mary Hilda 175, 375 Williams, Mary Martha 175, 397 Williams, Matthew Joseph 277 Williams, Michael Howard Williams, Michael Wilson Williams, Nancy Ann 297, 415 Williams, Nathaniel Williams, Patricia Ann 312, 375 Williams, Paul David 314, 375 Williams, Philip Parker Williams, Phillip Eugene Williams, Porter 237 Williams, Ralph Williams, Randy Neil Williams, Rayford 313 Williams, Richard Wayne 277 Williams, Robert Andre Williams, Robert Daily Williams, Ronnie Lee 315, 3856 Williams, Rufus Williams, Sammy Leon Jr. Williams, Samuel Morton Williams, Saundra Karyl Williams, Scott Franklin Williams, Sharri Latrice Williams, Sherman Anthony 415 Williams, Stuart Anthony Williams, Teresa Jane 415 Williams, Timothy Lyal Williams, Vickie Lynn Williams, Vincent Peter Williams, Wanda Jeanene 397 Williamson, Jerry Wayne Williamson, Pamela Sue Williamson, Stephen Duane Willian, Mona Kathryn Williford, Bradley William 244 Williford, Frances J. 415 Williford, Lloyd Harold Jr. Williford, Steven Martin Willingham, Gwenda Lenise 265, 385 Willis, Benjamin Coleman Willis, Carolyn 76 Willis, Charles Maurice Willis, Charles Melvin Willis, Dale Edward 313 Willis, Debra Diane Daniel 313 Willis, Gary Merrill 119 Willis, Kaye Dunn Willis, Larry Hope Willis, Mark Allen 299, 397 Willis, Matilda Ree 397 Willis, Michael Lamar 415 Willis, Thomas Dale Willoughby, Betty Gayle Willoughby, Deborah Kaye 397 Willoughby, George Allison Willoughby, James Glenn 203, 238, 244 Willoughby, Jennie Lee 267 Willoughby, John Garvin Willoughby, Lisa Anne Willoughby, Patty Young Wills, Matilda 225 Wills, Robert Vincent Wilmoth, Randal Wilsford, Jamie Sue 385 Wilson, A. Collen 385 Wilson, Alan Brent 415 Wilson, Ann Lamar Wilson, Annette Denise 219, 278, 415 Wilson, August Kent Wilson, Barry Ernest 230, 385 Wilson, Carolyn Darlene 375 Wilson, Catherine Deneace Wilson, Chad Martin 397 Wilson, Charles Daniel Wilson, Cole Barton 415 Wilson, Debra Lynne Wilson, Diana Louise Wilson, Dolores M.H. Wilson, Donna Gail 397 Wilson, Elizabeth Wright 263, 385 Wilson, Gary Dwayne Wilson, Gary Lee Wilson, Gordon 162, 301 Wilson, Gregory Allen Wilson, Gregory Lance 375 Wilson, Harold A. Wilson, Heydon E. Wilson, James Lynn 385 Wilson, Jane Katherine Wilson, Jeffery Paul Wilson, Jerry Wayne Wilson, Julian Anthony Wilson, Karen Renee 415 Wilson, Kelvin Lewis 300 Wilson, Kerry Dean 385 Wilson, Kevin Gordon Wilson, Leslie D. Wilson, Linda Faye Wilson, Lisa Ann Wilson, Lisa Gaye Wilson, Pamela Kay 375 Wilson, Richard Lee 274 Wilson, Robert Alan 281 Wilson, Robert Terrell 281 Wilson, Sarah Lynn 449 Waddell, Jacalyn Wilson, Sarah Wilson, Sarah Taylor Wilson, Scott Samuel 415 Wilson, Sharon Kaye 385 Wilson, Steve Alan 397 Wilson, Stevie Joe 397 Wilson, Stuart Kevin Wilson, Ted 277 Wilson, Tracie Ann Wilson, Virginia Mae 297 Wilson, William Marion 415 Wimberley, James Michael Wimbs, Vicki Elizabeth 415 Wimmer, Linda Kay 385 Wimsatt, Richard Alan Winchester, David Scott Winchester, Jack Tyler 277, 300, 385 Winders, Jeffrey Wayne Winfree, John Tate Winfrey, Calvin Reynolds Winfrey, Sheri Lynne 264, 385 Wingfield, Daryl Eugene Wingfield, Ruth Butler Wingo, Marion Kenneth 244 Wininger, Gloria Ann 41, 375 Winkler, Teresa Eileen Winlock, Sarah Thomas 303, 385 Winning and losing gracefully 414 Winstead, Dana Lynn 415 Winstead, Joe 300 Winstead, Linda 53-54 Winters, Clarence Wayne Winters, Linda Lee Wintin, David Allen Wisdom, Charlie Paxton II 385 Wisdom, Kimberly Kay Wise, Kathy Sue 38, 41, 265, 273, 375 Wiseman, Anthony Dale Wiseman, James Michael Wiseman, Linda Marie 385 Wiseman, Rolinda Kaye 415 Wiser, Cynthia Jean 397 Wisman, Sue E. 415 Withers, Barney Lewis 277, 375 Withers, Teresa Ann 415 Witherspoon, Beth Elaine Withrow, Douglas Henry Jr. Witt, David Alan 284 Witten, Darrell Wayne 385 Witten, David Wayne Witten, Diane Lynne Witten, Mary Kathryn Witten, Nancy Darlene C. 319, 385 Witten, Timothy Allan 397 Wittenbraker, Janet Susan 254, 267, 299, 385 Witty, Deborah Lou 267, 307 Witty, Tammie Jill 313, 415 Witzigreuter, Timothy Max 281, 415 Wix, Jacqueline Dean 313, 397 Wofford, Francelia 415 Wohlleb, Joanne Marie 263 Wolber, Celeste Ann Wolf, Linda Sue 375 Wolfe, Brad Steven Wolfe, Burchel Eugene 415 Wolfe, William Burnley 309 Wolff, Douglas Paul Wolfsohn, Lori 51, 80 Women’s Basketball 222-227 Women’s Cross-Country 248, 251 Women’s Golf 248, 250-251 Women’s Tennis 248, 251 Women’s Track 250-251 Women’s spring sports 1976 246-247 Wood, Barry Lee Wood, Carol Sue Wood, Carolyn Jean 397 Wood, Irene Hansel Wood, Jacqueline Edith Wood, Jo Anne 375 Wood, Larry Herbert Wood, Markeeta Vincent 303 Wood, Melody Lynn 397 Wood, Nancy Ann 375 Wood, Randal Kelly Wood, Rhonda Janet Fleming Wood, Sherry Gale 375 Wood, Virginia Lynn Wood, Wilson 63 Woodall, Carol Elizabeth 415 Woodall, Gary H Woodard, Beverly Jane Woodard, Jo Ann Woodard, Lillian Inez 415 Woodard, Lillie Marie 415 Woodcock, James Rayburn Woodcock, Jeffrey Glenn Woodcock, Melydia Ruth 397 Wooden, Donald Glenn Woodford, Katherine Forman 307, 323, 385 Woodie, Ruth Lane Woodlee, Terry Alan Woodruff, Benjamin 4 Woodruff, Charles Ray 210 Woodruff, Diane L. 400 Woodruff, Harry Edwin Woodruff, Lou Ann 267, 415 Woodrum, Sarah Margaret Woods, Delbra Kay Woods, James Woodrow 134, 204-211, 263, 397 Woods, Linda Marie Woods, Nancy Marie Woods, Phillip Owen Woods, Rodney Doran Woodson, Martha Diane 385 Woodward, Billie Mae Woodward, Bob 56, 92 Woodward, Sharen R Woody, Gerald Franklin Woolum, David Michael Woosley, Carol 385 Woosley, James Kirby 301 Woosley, John Thomas 296 Wooten, Dennis Joe 397 Wooten, Sandra Gail Wooton, Linda Anne 450 Wilson, Sarah Yeager, Donald Word, Bradley Lyman 397 Word, Jo Lynn Word, Lynda Sue Work: A dusty underground shift for Bobby Sandidge 354-355 World Affairs 110-113 World Series Softball Tournament 256 Wortham, Ramona Ray 397 Worthington, Kristal Lynn 415 W ray, Michael Maurice Wray, Ricky Lee 221 Wrestling Club 252 Wright, Charles Albert Wright, Connie Sue Wright, Donald Wayne Wright, Donna Leza Wright, Dorothy Lucille 397 Wright, Forrest Lee Wright, Gwendolyn Pearson Wright, Jackie Lynn 415 Wright, James Ray Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Wright, Louvella Marie Lynn Burton 375 Margaret 415 Mark Frederick 397 Martha Nell 299, 319, 323 Mary Kathryn 397 Reginald Lane 397 Richard Kenneth Richard Lee Ronald Paul Sheila Mae 415 Sherry Marie Susanne Terry Abell 415 Terry Lynn 385 Tona L. 415 William Eugene William Peyton Yvonne Marie Wu Lung, Hsin 304 Wuilleumier, Christopher B. Wunderlich, Dana Lynn Wunderlich, Fredric Dale 282 Wuorenmaa, Lucy S. Jones Wurster, Robert 48, 304 Wurth, James Eugene 323 Wurth, Marvin Jerome 385 Wurtz, Dave 31 Wyatt, Glenn Durr Wyatt, Michael Howard 252, 277 Wyatt, Nelda Kay 303 Wyatt, Steve Whayne Wynn, Peggy Lee 415 Wynn, Wanda Yulett Yaap, Karen Lorraine Yakota, Mosie 235 Yann, Richard Keith 3, 397 Yarbrough, David Mark Yarbrough, Earnest Gregory Yearbrough, Mary Gail Yarbrough, Scott Douglas 101 Yarbrough, Vernon Wayne Yates, Charles Edward 315, 415 Yates, David Harold Yates, Ernest Walton 277, 397 Yates, Gregory Steven Yates, James Ray 300, 385 Yates, John Edward Yates, Joyce Yates, Judith Y. Yates, Owen Thomas Jr Yates, Thomas Arthur 415 Yates, Thomas Daniel 397 Yeager, Donald Hudson Yeast, Bronna Lee 415 Yeater, Jeffrey Alan 321 Yeater, Julia 194, 199, 212-213, 223-225 Yeater, Robert Gene Jr. 321, 349, 375 Yeater, Sheila Diane 254 Yeiser, Michael Fred 300, 385 Yelliott, Susan Scott Yelton, Doris 109 Yelverton, Hursell Bernard Yevincy, Vickie Lynne 415 Yocum, Paul David 277 Yoeckel, Douglas Gene Yokley, Nellissa Jean 385 Yokota, Masuki York, Karen Leslie 267 York, Ken Cornell 375 York, Marilyn Jean 267, 375 York, Susan Carol 23, 385 York, Vickie Carol Aday Young, Alice Ann Young, Ann 304, 415 Young, Beverly Ann 267, 397 Young, Carol Ann 415 Young, David Paul 277 Young, David Wayne 277, 415 Young, Deborah Jean Young, Deborah Lynn Young, Debra Sherryl Young Democrats 59, 306-307 Young, Ian Troy Young, James Anthony Young, James Edward Young, James Manly Young, Jimmy Edward 415 Young, Joe Vernon Young, Judy Ann Young, Kathi Jolette Young, Kenneth Eugene Young, Kent Allen 397 Young, Lamont Young, Mary Margaret 397 Young, Michael David 317 Young, Monte Ray 83 Young, Paul E. Young, Ralph David Young, Rita Cheryl 22, 263 Young, Robbie Sue 397 Young, Robert Medford Young, Ruth Ann Young, Sandie Cary Young, Sandra Kaye 318 Young, Sue Ellen 265, 375 Young, Tammy Kaye 397 Young, Tammy Michelle Young, Teresa Lynn 415 Young, Veronica Eugenia 397 Youngblood, Diana Faye 397 Younkin, Linda Elizabeth 415 Yousof, Danial Yowell, Carol Hall Yuda, Peggy Ann 375 Yunt, Thomas Addison 278 Zelle, Katherine Ann Zellefrow, Becky Lou Zeta Phi Beta 266-267 Zeta Phi Eta 325 Zettlemoyer, Susan Gay 415 Zickel, John Ray Jr. Zike, Ronald Benjamin 415 Ziller, David F. 415 Zimmerman, Heidi Jean 302, 397 Zimmerman, Heidi Marie 302, 385 Zimmerman, Michael Henry 314, 375 Zimmerman, Robert Alan 375 Zoeller, Gregory Zoeller, Tom Andrew 277 Zoglmann, Joseph Wayne 297, 314, 375 Zollner, Suzanne 267, 397 Zorn, Katherine Elizabeth Zyzaner, Joyce 4 1941-42 Hilltopper Basketball team 236 “27 Wagons Full of Cotton” 102 Zaboronak, Maria Stella 305, 415 Zakeri, Mansour Zapp, Joseph Leon Zarkhah, Ayub Zarruk, Luis Armando Zavadil, Rick 333 Zax, Carol Lee 299, 323, 397 Zehr, Deborah Jean 375 Zeidler, Susan Elizabeth 296, 415 Zeigel, William Henry A farewell treat A lollipop accompanied Susan Franke to commence- ment exercises Saturday. May 14. The psychology ma- jor was waiting with other members of the College of Education outside Diddle Arena. After adjusting their mortarboards, the seniors filed into the basketball are- na for the 10 a.m. ceremony. A reception for graduates, families and friends in Downing Center followed. — B. Edwards 451 Yeast, Bronna “27 Wagons ... ” AP Bo - er al 456 Closing O: tne Veambecanic a ee Syl a opeiiestowopeiies cic lc a ce beaalce Aya OAS Cee Siar HAC, LOZG- 7 ey cae een Ofier, ts Gimipiiertyae ttc sani ic aid blended mio cul OF se ee Ordinary van it was oe aatiothee paleo ee duds se the lights dom, Omani therlowers final Che Although the Wowarns oS Coneechowshtites Sin the dorms indicate Ko aeerede Vovbbinals: Bite view is Baring, eels ae ree LAE LL ARE A AR LEA FEES A A A RT NN A smooth finale (continued from front endsheet) But we were the first editors who had no guarantees. We had titles and responsibilities, but we didn’t know whether we would be able to use them. We didn’t know wheth- er we would need an office or a staff. The 1976 Talisman had met much difficulty with printing and reprinting, and the time element involved in compiling the complex 464-page book was subject to examination by the university. Everybody wanted to know if it was worth it to spend so much money putting together a yearbook like the Talisman when there was barely enough time to include every- thing about the year and still get it printed before gradu- ation. So we waited. We waited all summer while a special committee weighed the merits and pro- fessionalism of the Talisman against the trouble the 1976 printing had caused. Finally in late summer it was decided that the 1977 Ta- lisman would be printed as a fall delivery book on a trial basis. The book could include everything in the school year, be printed in the summer months and distributed in the fall. But there was still no guarantee that there would be a Talisman. The contracts had been sent out for bidding after the committee’s decision, so there was a possibility that no printing company would be able to fit our book into its schedule. We spent the autumn making plans about the theme and first sections of the book although we didn’t know when our deadlines would be or if we would even have deadlines. Suddenly the waiting was over. We had a company, we had a staff and a theme, and they told us we had better have a Talisman finished by mid-May. The theme was a natural. We had a lot of catching up to doin our book. We went back and reported the events of spring, 1976 and extended coverage through May, 1977. We had two stories for tennis, golf, baseball, track, Greek Week and graduation — a flashback and an update. Editor Donna Buckles and Managing Editor Connie Holman shaky beginning The theme was a natural. And this is our product. But without the help of certain people who stuck it out through a shaky beginning, we would not have made it to the final deadline. We would like to thank Larry Howard, director of purchas- ing, who helped ease us through the first waiting periods. We also feel it appropriate to thank David Whitaker, James Highland, Paul Ash- down and numerous ad- aT ministrators and journal- A mere §=ism faculty members who CO thought our yearbook was m §©6important enough to con- tinue. We feel we must also ac- knowledge the help from our friends next door at the Herald. They didn’t just walk by our “fishbowl” when they finished their deadlines. They took as- signments, wrote stories and lent moral support to our small staff. Thanks must go to edi- tors before us — Lisa Corn- well, Richard Walker, and Jim and Tom Siwicki — for showing us that putting together the Talisman is not impossible. Outsiders saw us as a small, over-worked staff but we didn’t notice it due to the yearbook experience of Becky Blair, Vicki Bagwell, Kathy Whitson, Robin Vincent, Jeff Howerton and Debbie Gibson. An abundance of photographers — some who were not experienced in yearbooking — soon fell into our task of record- ing the year at Western. They were appreciated, too — right down to the spotone. But more than all these people there was a man who had been through it time and time again. Roger Loewen knew how hard the waiting was, too, and he helped us cope. We would like to thank our adviser for making it easier. Mostly because he has stressed the importance of profes- sional yearbook journalism we realize the waiting has been worth it. — DONNA BUCKLES, Editor-in-Chief 0 We hope you do, too. — CONNIE HOLMAN, Managing Editor 0) 1977 TALISMAN STAFF PUltor nach esas agi he ee, ke py Soe Donna Buckles Managing Editar concer sae er des nti See Connie Holman mac REstranOngediinnc wea Meee. og. S72 Ne Jeff Howerton ACACEDS Ie LCNOn Eras Wee ty Viele shih cd, ook Robin Vincent SDOLES Marre Non Sake fen a hoc a Robin Vincent, Roger Stinnett Don White, Bryan Armstrong Jim Grove, Clyde Huffman Brian Collins, Dan Pelino fore atizationiaseditor® tearre wah A te PRY) hai tN hae Vicki Bagwell Slassesumndes, Editors «thet eee mae ee eee Kathy Whitson Student Life Feature Writers .........5....... Terri Darr, Becky Smith Debbie Gibson, Tom Eblen Don Bruce, Mary Pace, Gary Moore, Stevie Benson Neil Budde, Lynn Wright Roger Stinnett, Debbie Harvey Pena Ce CODTMIVALOr Pama ett Beh Sed) vee Oot, Be oe Becky Blair ehicipemotagiapher cre cate hak Tn fees ee Ne Jim Burton BiOtogranhersna nace, sie oe sr 2) to Mark Lyons, David Frank Ron Hoskins, Harold Sinclair Lewis Gardner, Stevie Benson Tom Dekle, Neil Pond Donnie Beauchamp, Bob Coffey Debbie Gibson, Eric Hassler Mort Schmitt, Lynn Wright Mike Dowell, Beth Rogers EELS ES in deen Ta ce nt ae sr Tc OL Tom Pfannerstill, A.T. Stephens Contributing photographers ........... David Gibbons, Bruce Edwards David Sutherland, Tom Eblen George Wedding, Robin Chard Carl Krull, Bill Strode Roger Loewen, David Pasteris Greg Lamb, Dan Pelino Ricky Rogers, Public Relations J.R. Buckles Colophon Volume 54 of the Western Kentucky University TALISMAN was printed by Jos- ten’s American Yearbook Company in Clarksville, Tenn. All printing was done using the offset lithography process. Paper stock is 80 pound Consolidated Frostbrite Matte. Endsheet stock is Hammer- mill Gray Antique Finish. Staff artist Tom Pfannerstill designed the cover using his own typefaces. The three- color cover was lithographed on white blue-book cover material and stamped with a cordoba finish. Artwork by Tom Pfannerstill includes pen and ink with water color (14-15), hand lettered type with graphics in pen and ink (70-71 and 112-113), water color (110-111), and pen and ink drawing with hand lettered type (114-115). Also included is a pen and ink sketch by A.T. Stephens (116). Special effects used in the 1977 TALISMAN include a direct line screen conversion in 30% black from a Tom Dekle photo (22), hand drawn graphs by Pfannerstill (26),and a headline mask in four-color (67). All special effects in the academics section are eight stage kodalith solarizations from Jim Burton and Mark Lyons negatives. Approximately 30,000 black and white and 800 color frames were shot for the final candid selections used in the 1977 TALISMAN. All color reproductions are from individually separated Ektachrome transparancies, shot at ASA’s ranging from 64 to 3,200. All color was processed in the University Publications’ darkroom. Individual portrait work was done by Graham Studios of Bowling Green. Spot color is done in Pantone Matching System (PMS) inks and Process color inks. Included are the following: PMS 164(65-72): PMS 165(34-35); PMS 185(126-127, 198- 199, 258-250, 326-327, 454-455). PMS 190(cover); PMS 271(74-83): PMS 365(98-107); PMS 465(42-47); process yellow(cover, 1-13, 16, 452-453, 456); process red(1-13, 38, 84, 86, 452-453, 456); and process blue(84, 86). Although a variety of typefaces were used in the book, the basic type comes from the Palatino family. Body type is 10 10 Palatino with cutlines set in 8 8 Palatino. Cutline lead-ins are 8 8 Palatino bold. To facilitate legibility, all type is set in bold face on spreads having dark backgrounds. Headline type not of the Palatino family comes from Formatt, Letraset and Zipatone graphic arts products. All were hand-set by the TALISMAN staff. Page numbers are set in 18 point Souvenir bold italic. The index is set in 5% 6 Palatino and Palatino bold, and cross-referenced by title and page content. Employing a magazine format, the 1977 TALISMAN had a press run of 8,500 copies. Distribution of the sixth consecutive volume to be copyrighted began the last of July, 1977. oa} ¥ a Nk iene he Nodes cmp abaie LINTON Den sige om ene nme a ¥ SSS SSSR SEES RE RE Re ee Oe ERE SR SSSRSEESSH SEES SHEER ES Se Se ee ee ee See eeeeeeee”


Suggestions in the Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) collection:

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

1975

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 1

1976

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 1

1978

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

1979

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1980 Edition, Page 1

1980


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