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er “THERE’S JUST ONE HILL, NO MATTER HOW FAR IT STRETCHES.” In a world where people sip diet colas while munching home-baked sweets and hike back to nature in their earth shoes, it’s not uncommon to find tradition stretching with the times to encompass a broader world. Western’s Hill is the foundation for its traditions and is the symbol of a university on the move. Whether it was international students adopting Western, big-name entertainers gracing our stages or elementary school children watching an eclipse outside our planetar- ium, personalities invaded our Hill in 1977 and ’78. We returned the favor by studying in southern France, working in a mountain mission and taking a field trip in search of a witch. The exchanges weren’t always simple or inexpensive, but they latched onto the Hill and stretched tradition. The traffic to and from the campus continued to flow even in snowstorms as the Hill seemed more like a moun- tain. When a Hill stretches, a yearbook staff must likewise stretch its talents, curiosities and days and nights to record a year of headlines on the hill. Although the staff was a curious blend of beginners and veterans, the two groups met somewhere between the extremes and created a 464- page multi-faceted and authored diary of the year in words and photos. COUNTY PUBLIC WT WAIN ALM 33 01842 3613 GC | 976.902 BO8SWKU, (1978 In this issue: Sage” Oc teas Oh er se RIO eho. fom siete fe. hee ee 64 _i6 Fi eee Ober rie. ne, ce) aod el elle Ashe 46.) “pe be SLPS Reg eee) here a) Velie ke ne Mle) ieray Jey 6 CMe Oe ek oe oon Ne ene) By ge) Bei s,. Sie, Wel ret.wet so 6 Organizations ............. C1AS6ES Mea seer cre eee gy Soe 0 RO Gee! hte wratieew eo a, Vet tes) (o' tey'e Wie. Fe) eh Sie Pi ege ee eae! veLle Melle wie os. 08 Se ie, 6 “SL © Copyright 1978 by the Office of University Publications, Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green, Kentucky 42101 TALISMAN 1978 THERE’S JUST ONE HILL... NO MATTER HOW FAR IT STRETCHES Volume 55 Western Kentucky University Bowling Green, Kentucky 42101 PARKING |, s. zo NE: Dd a PEeRwTS ONLY OO SQO DALY 4s a hed Ron Hoskins THE 1977 TALISMAN occupies Fred Gard as he waits for GOODBYES BETWEEN freshman David Esposito and his daughter Cynthia to move into her Bates-Runner Hall room. family weren’t easy last August after David moved into his The ‘first scheduled fall delivery yearbook arrived in early Pearce-Ford dormitory room at the bottom of the Hill. The August and was distributed during the week of registration. journalism major is from Cincinnati, Ohio. he never-ending traffic to and from the Hill began last August when more than 13,000 students returned to campus or came for the first time and struggled through tearful goodbyes to Mom and Dad and best friends. The Hill again invited the “real” world to enter its auditoriums, step onto its stages and into its classrooms. Jim Burton BRIGHT LIGHTS set up by the local media focus on former at the Bowling Green Warren County Airport. Reagan had just California governor Ronald Reagan during a press conference arrived in Bowling Green to keynote the Free Enterprise Fair. 3 Opening alae HE ATL Ht Ricky Rogers BALLOONS became students’ companions last fall when Holding them are D.D. Johnson, Sherry Ballard, Al Por- a local clothing store distributed them as a promotion. ter and Rita Young. ampus news was confined to state agencies that seemed to take a much bigger role in Western’s budgets and academic programs. National news stories hit home for students whose relatives farm or mine as the groups voted to strike. Weather was big news with another severe winter, but students still savored the lighter moments with snowball fights and sledding on Col- lege Street Hill beneath Henry Hardin Cherry’s statue. SNOWBALL FIGHTS were common campus scenes asa__ Aided by Jo Parish, Terri Ellis hurls a snowball at Darrell severe winter dumped 36 inches of white stuff onthe Hill. Britt. Miss Ellis had never seen snow before. i epi ERE: ste ee Debbie Gibson Opening Scott Robinson A DYE TRACE IS BEGUN by student Mike Dixon and Nick Crawford, a teacher in the geography and geology depart- ment. The trace was a lab exercise for Hydrology 310. Craw- ford said the class dropped the fluorescent dye in Lost River and traced it several miles to Lampkin Park. It took 22 hours for the dye to travel that distance . Mark Lyons “DIALOGUE AT WESTERN” has CBS “On the Road” corre- spondent Charles Kuralt being interviewed by Hal Wolford, an Evansville, Ind., broadcaster, Dr. James Heldman, English department head, and Dr. Bob Teske of the folk studies de- partment. The 30-minute program was taped in the educa- tional television studio in the Academic Complex. A cademic programs were evaluated and strengthened as ac- creditation teams prepared to come to the Hill. Lecturers came from as far as Latin American to inform students of topics ranging from Marxism and Christianity to democracy in the marketplace. Even retired professors returned to the campus to teach part time. And students often took leaves of absence to study in other countries professionals in their fields. or complete internships alongside THE MID-AUGUST heat didn’t bother Jack Kem as he prac- tices with the “Big Red Marching Band” in preparation for the football season. Kem’s wife Nita was also in the band. Debbie Gibson IN HIS FIRST year of retirement, Claude Rose gives a private organ lesson in the fine arts center. The associate professor of music has taught at Western since 1965. Qo record Mark Lyons 1969 ALUMNI Pat and Gary Marsh give children, Andy, 7, and Michael, 5, a campus tour. Mrs. Marsh, a physical education major, was showing them where her classes met in Diddle Arena. They live in Louisville. FOCUSED on egg tosser Cindy Arnold’s target are photographers working for individual Greek organizations, the College Heights Herald and Talis- man. Miss Arnold, a member of Chi Omega sorority, is a junior from ‘ Prospect. She was competing during Chi Sigma Derby Week last fall. Mark Lyons Bi: the year wasn’t all serious and objective. Greeks and clubs competed against each other and state and national groups, often bringing home first-place honors. Activities such as Homecoming worked like magnets, drawing hundreds of alumni to their alma mater for a weekend of fun and nostalgia. Mark Lyons GRANDPA JONES entertains a crowd at the fine arts spring. The Pinnacle Boys, Lester Flatt and the Nashville center amphitheater during a Bluegrass Festival in late | Grass also performed at the ASG-sponsored program. A TIME EXPOSURE at night catches the blur of motion on a street at the base of the Hill near the men’s dormitories. 10 Opening 11 Opening STUDENT The extracurricular activities which revolve around more than 13,000 students on a university campus could be compared to a transit system in a metropolitan area. It all begins with the exodus back to the Hill after a sun-filled summer somewhere else. Then as students get settled into their homes away from home, they look for entertainment and recreation. The entertainment came in forms of musical groups who visited the Hill. They stopped in Bowling Green long enoug h to play their latest hits for the small but enthusiastic crowds who always lit their lighters and begged for encores. More lecturers, dancers, actors and — singers visited the Hill. Sponsored by the University Lecture Series, the Center Board’s Entertainment Series or the Fine Arts Festival, they brought culture to the LIFE on the Hill stages and lecterns on campus. As for recreation, a group of graduate folklore students drove into the country to help their department head raise an 1822 four-room log house in his backyard. More than a dozen students volunteered to become Big Brothers and Sisters. For spring break, students had three options. Some began their student teach- ing, the last leg of their education, while others opted to follow the men’s basket- ball team to two NCAA tournament games. Others rushed southward to play in the sun and surf of Florida. It was a year of traffic to and from the Hill. While people came from all corners of the world to stop for a while at Western, many students likewise stepped out into the community or state, taking a part of the Hill with them. Me ¢ ite 12 7 ae ; ae _ Be Student Life i Ses - Ox Ts In thesection: AS Summer: tlapit sce eee lr 14 A nun from Covington returns to the Hill for the third summer to finish her master’s degree in library science. A Notch in the Past A folk studies department head raises an 1822 four-room log house in his backyard with the aid of industrious graduate students. Blackout A power outage leaves residents in five women’s dormitories without refrigeration, hair dryers and stereos for more than 24 hours. A Great Western Pastime Western's great pastime, Homecoming, descends on the Hill with bonfires, concerts, dances, parades and a football game. A Chinese Wedding Two strangers from Taiwan meet at Western, fall in love and have a wedding mixed with Chinese and American traditions. A Conductor of Note First-year conductor Leon Gregorian commutes from his Owensboro home, bringing a no-nonsense formula for a successful orchestra. 13 Student Life A SUMMER HABII 14 Summer term ummer term is a collage of students and personalities. There are the spring semester’s leftover students, anxious to finish their degree programs early. Many teachers, on vacation from public schools, work on master’s degrees in summer. Nuns also attend Western in a season when a walk up the Hill is accompanied by humidity and sweat beads upon each brow. With the dry summer of 1977 came ap- proximately 16 nuns from Owensboro and one from Covington, near Cincinnati. That nun, Sister Anne Frisch, is a three- year summer-term veteran who has com- pleted her master’s work and regrets leav- ing Western. “T have a lot of friends here and I like the program and courses in the library science department,” she said. “From the checkout counter to the circu- lation desk, this library fascinates me,” Sister Anne said. ‘The other libraries I’ve seen are much smaller. It blows my mind with all the resources and computers. “I’ve checked out every cassette of coun- try and classical music,” she said. “I don’t like rock‘n’roll.” Sister Anne, in her 25th year as a Sister of St. Benedict, has taught elementary edu- cation. However, she now has a new as- signment as librarian at Thomas More College in Florence. “... After the ice is broken they realize we’re real people, too. They know I’m human, just like any- body. We just have different life- styles.” “It’s kinda good to have a second voca- tion,” she said. “In the library you need a general knowledge about everything. School hasn’t been a big burden because I wanted to learn. I sure don’t know every- thing.” In addition to completing independent study in library science, Sister Anne took a swimming class and an industrial arts course. “T had to wear a bathing suit and go into - the pool with guys,” she said. “I’m just used to women using a pool, but I made up my mind to take the course. “I’ve gotten good grades at Western, but I’ve worked for them,” Sister Anne said. “It’s not a snap. You get what you give.” — Blending in with other students haan been a major concern, she said. A CENTRAL HALL dorm room decorated with Cin- cinnati Reds players’ pictures was where Sister Anne spent much time on an independent study course in library science. She wrote a term paper between two other courses and church services. Photos by Beth Rogers “Because it’s summer, most of my classes have only 12 to 20 students. I felt strange, but not for long. It takes a while, but after the ice is broken they realize we’re real people, too. They know I’m human, SWIM COACH Bill Powell demonstrates a drown- proof method for Sister Anne in the Diddle Arena pool. She said she wasn’t used to swimming with | males but was determined to take the course. just like anybody else. We just have differ- ent lifestyles.” She said each day’s schedule included classes, mailbox checks (I got a letter ev- ery day but two”), studying in the library, LEATHER WORK and woodworking were the sub- jects in Sister Anne’s industrial education for elemen- tary teachers course taught by Dr. Delbert Towell. Sister Anne’s project was a toy truck. mass and meditation. Sister Anne said she wore her veil most of the time. “We don’t have to wear a veil,” she said. “It’s not what makes a person a nun, but it means something. “When I’m bicycling downtown I don’t wear my veil. People tend to stare, and I don’t want to cause any accidents.” Sister Anne said church rules have been relaxed and nuns now get more freedom and personal responsibility. ‘Our life is. one of obedience, simplicity of life and “When I’m bicycling downtown I don’t wear my veil. People tend to stare, and I don’t want to cause any accidents.” poverty,” she said. “We're not lacking, but we don’t get everything we want. And we're never out of a job. We're always needed.” Attending Western has given Sister Anne new friendships, she said. “People at Western care about you. They’re full of warmth and concern. “Most students are serious about their field. They're respectful of things as well as people. We have a lot of common goals. We just want to give, share and love.” Connie Holman CLOTHED in a black gown and her veil, Sister Anne Frisch chats with friends Thomas and Linda Freeman before the August commencement program. Sister Anne received her master’s degree in library science after three summer terms at Western. 15 Summer term lc took all sunnier A scrap of paper tumbled across the parched Diddle Arena parking lot. A lone bicyclist rode around the light poles in wide figure eights. Only a few cars clut- tered the thousands of square feet of steamy asphalt. It was May 18, 1977, just five days after the close of the spring se- mester, and the campus was virtually de- serted. Further up the Hill, however, in rooms buzzing with fluorescent lights and IBM i 1 3 4 JUST TWO DAYS BEFORE REGISTRATION, phys- ical plant workers haul registration packets from the registrar's office on the second floor of the Wetherby Administration Building to Diddle Arena. 13,521 stu- dents registered in the fall. 16 Prepping the Hill ete we eee e Selectrics, Western was readying for the beginning of the next school year. Up in Potter Hall, the housing office staff tried to ease the problems of an ex- pected dorm overflow by sending confir- mation cards to applicants in July. The cards asked for verification that the stu- dent still wanted a room in the fall. In 1976 the housing crunch hit and sent students reeling to university-provided motel rooms and placed more than 100 ona Debbie Gibson Ron Hoskins STACKS OF BOOKS surround Karen Minor, a fresh- man data processing major from Auburn, as she files volumes on the second floor of Margie Helm Library. The law library, periodical collection and tape library are housed on that floor. dorm waiting list. “It took us more by sur- prise,” housing director Horace Shrader said. “This year we saw it happening.” Still, by July 10, the 12 women’s dorms (maximum 2,920) were filled, with applica- tions for some dorms running 150 beyond capacity. Then, Shrader said, a “mad rush” to find auxiliary housing began. Later in July, the contractor renovating Florence Schneider Hall agreed to have the third and fourth floors ready for women’s housing. By Aug. 1, the four men’s dorms (capac- ity 2,058) were filled. Workers from ship- ping and receiving moved furniture into study rooms, recreation rooms, dining areas and other spare space, according to Larry Howard, purchasing director. But applications still came. Women were told they would be placed in temporary housing, and men were simply placed on a waiting list. Down the hall from the housing office, the student affairs staff spent the summer trying to make the housing squeeze easier for both students and housing. The battle plan consisted of a series of workshops in August to train resident as- sistants. They were conducted largely by the 26 dorm directors. The workshops trained the 76 new and 85 returning RAs in areas ranging from general dorm proce- Debbie Gibson = to prep tine Mill... dures to handling sensitive problems on their floors. “The returning RAs, having been through last year’s rather hectic and de- manding opening of school, seemed to come into the workshop thinking, ‘We're in this together; we're prepared for the worst,’ ” Anne Murray, assistant dean of student affairs, said. “It’s the feeling you have when you enter a ball game or a war.” In the university center, College Heights Bookstore manager Buddy Childress and his crew concentrated on filling the text- book requests and ordering supplies. “There are always changes in require- ments, late decisions on selections and new faculty coming in who have not submitted A BLAST OF WHITE FOAM from a multipurpose fire extinguisher heads toward a straw fire during a safety demonstration for RAs in August by Dave Murray of the safety department. The RAs returned a week early for their workshop. Ron Hoskins requests,” Childress said. So the staff of 30 spent July and August completing “total book needs as well as receiving, checking, pricing and shelving those books ordered.” “We're caught in the middle between the students who need the books and the pro- fessor who orders them, plus the publish- er,” Childress said. ‘The troubles stay the same — it’s just the titles that change.” Downstairs in the university center, food services kept busy. ‘When I came here 12 years ago, summer was fun time,” said Louis Cook, assistant director of food services. But now it means repairing equip- ment, buying equipment and supplies, and feeding the 4,149 summer term students. Cook said the first food delivery before school included about 1,300 cases of canned goods. Other food needed to start the semester included more than 1,000 pounds of chicken, 5,000 servings of creamed potatoes, 500 pounds of hambur- ger and 240 gallons of Coca-Cola. But in terms of sheer numbers, nothing approached the consumption of the IBM 360 Model 40 computer on the third floor of the administration building. Operations manager John Foe said, “from Aug. 8 to Aug. 22, we ran 24 hours a day.” The staff consisted of 15 full-time workers who were on call constantly, and four advanced computer students who worked up to 60 hours a week. Foe said 438,121 eighty-column data pro- cessing cards — equal to several million lines of information — went through the computer in 15 days. While the center aver- ages 300,000 lines a day, according to Foe, it exceeded 900,000 lines Aug. 11, when most of the information cards were produced. In terms of human effort, however, the physical plant took honors. Director Owen Lawson’s workers spread about 4,000 gallons of paint across 1,310 rooms in four dorms, laid 3,000 yards of carpet in the university center game room and Helm Library, installed about 2,500 re- frigerators, remarked 5,000 parking spaces, built a new parking lot on Regents Ave- nue, painted all handrails, outside doors and signs, reupholstered most of the dorm lobby furniture, placed new dressers in East Hall, installed office petitions and re- furbished the heating plant. Yet while he kept his 375 summer em- ployees (100 more than usual) working overtime throughout August with no vaca- tions, Lawson said it wasn’t until 6 a.m., Saturday, Aug. 20, that the dorms were ac- tually ready ... (continued on page 18) TENS OF THOUSANDS OF LINES were painted by the physical plant staff in about three weeks during the summer. Melvin Pippin paints one of them, a crosswalk near Wetherby Administration Building. 17 Prepping the Hill 18 ror tine MASSES’ Three hours later, doors to the 16 dorms opened and the two weeks of long lines that students dread began. Dorm check-in, registration, buying books: day after day of single-file survival that would tarnish whatever joy there was in starting the academic year. The expected lines formed. But thanks to some planning, plus blind luck, they weren't as long as they had been the year before. Student affairs personnel and dorm di- rectors agreed that check-in went smooth- er. South Hall Director Martha Baker said, “Since we were filled, it was just a matter of checking them into their rooms. We had the system down a little better.” Confirmation cards from the housing of- fice, advance registration for freshmen and luggage carriers (provided by student af- fairs) were mentioned as having eased the big move. But the student affairs staff said the housing shortage made checking go smoothly. for the first week of school Anne Murray and Howard Bailey, assis- tant deans of student affairs, talked about problems with vacancies in the past. Val- uable time was spent moving residents to rooms with eastern windows so their plants would get more light or because the residents had skin problems or because their drapes matched the color of the room, they said. “There's a blessing in being tight,” Bai- ley said. “If you’re full, it eliminates unde- sirable flexibility. You can comfortably say, ‘No’.” Mrs. Murray and Bailey said the greatest complaint was about roommates who smoke. Only a few complained about roommates of a different race or national- ity. Whatever the complaint, Mrs. Murray said it had to wait until after Labor Day. More than 100 students who applied late for a dorm room learned about waiting, too. Eighty-eight women waited in Flor- ence Schneider Hall until space was made available. RA Lee Ann Branstetter, a Glas- gow junior, described it as hectic. “There were girls moving in while oth- ers moved out,” she said. “You didn’t know when you were moving, where you were going, who your roommate would be or what dorm you would live in. When you live for three weeks out of boxes, it’s diffi- cult.” Bonnie Troop, the Schneider director, said the last girls moved out Sept. 11. Others weren't so lucky. Housing direc- tor Horace Shrader said 120 men were placed on a waiting list and most had no place to live until vacancies came up. A dozen men lived in the Ivan Wilson House on Normal Drive; the last one moved out in mid-September. By then, the housing office had contacted and placed 70 men from the waiting list. Shrader said the oth- ers could not be contacted. A few other students lived in dorm kitchens, recreation and study rooms, and in other spare space until regular rooms NEARING THE END OF A 30-MINUTE WAIT, Ruth Dougherty rests against a cash register in the College Heights Bookstore. Although extra cashiers were hired, some students had to wait 90 minutes to pay for their supplies. Jim Burton First week baci became vacant. Most apparently liked their temporary housing, except for the lack of televisions, telephones, ovens, mirrors and other extras. Other lines formed Monday, Aug. 22, at 10:30 a.m., when registration began in Did- dle Arena. The advance registration of 1,658 freshmen in June and July eased reg- istration, registrar Dr. Stephen House said. “When you reduce the numbers, you auto- matically reduce the lines.” Two changes made the fall, 1977, regis- tration easier. First, identification had to be presented before receipt of a registration packet, to make sure “the proper student got the proper packet,” House said. “I was concerned it would take longer, but my observation was that it increased our effi- ciency” by eliminating the clerk’s need to ask a student what his name was and how to spell it. Second, House asked “all departments to place the student’s name on the course cards as they were distributed,” to end the practice of “pulling cards” for a student scheduled to register later. According to House, 13,521 students reg- istered for the fall semester, 135 more than in fall, 1976. The next line started in the College A LARGE TRUNK STRAINS four luggage carriers near East Hall. Dorm directors credited the carriers, here supervised by administrator John Oakes, with making the August move-in one of the easiest. Heights Bookstore. About 9:30 a.m., Thursday, lines at the store’s 11 cash regis- ters began forming. By noon, lines stretched back halfway through the store, and later reached three-quarters of the way back. Waiting in line took 30 to 45 minutes for many, and Childress said the temperature around the registers averaged about 10 de- grees warmer than the rest of the store. Many other lines plagued students the first week. A secretary in financial aid said more than 200 students filed through that office each day. Talisman adviser Roger Loewen said 4,500 students came to the yearbook office that week for their 1977 books. And when the air conditioning in Grise and Cherry Halls went out of opera- tion, classes filed out for relief from the 80- degree-plus heat. But perhaps nothing annoyed Joe and Jane College more than the parking short- age. By Aug. 26, 5,691 cars were registered for about 4,160 spaces. A week later, 6,641 were registered, an increase of about 1,500 from fall, 1976. Roger Stinnett @ FIFTEEN MINUTES OF COAXING BY Dr. Carroll Wells convinced senior Linda Cretella to take math 317 instead of 331. “He said it was harder, but I could do it,’ the math minor said. She agreed to take the course but failed to enjoy it. Ron Hoskins Jim Burton 19 for the first week of school Dressed in straw hats, Levis, boots, T- shirts and bandanas, they arrived in Toyo- tas, Datsuns and Pintos to restore a cabin built more than 100 years ago by people who traveled by horses and buggy and wore homespun clothes. More than 30 folklore graduate students and faculty members took their curiosity and inexperience to Woodburn last August on a sunny, humid Saturday morning. There they found the makings of an 1822 four-room log cabin numbered and stacked on an acre behind Dr. Lynwood Montell’s two-story white frame house. Ten hours later, many of the yellow pop- lar logs had been fitted together in a pen and a half (a side and a half), with Montell directing the operation. Architecture is one of Montell’s interests as well as a main topic in the folk art and technology course he teaches. “I’ve read a lot about it and I just thought it would be neat to do something like that myself,” the department head said. Last spring Montell bought the house and barn for $1,500 and began moving the disassembled planks, windows and logs from Monroe County. “T used every chance I had to rip the boards and roof, and I labeled everything and drew a corresponding sketch,” Mon- A SHOWER OF WOOD CHIPS BOMBARD Gary Davis as he notches a yellow poplar log in the restora- tion of an 1822 cabin. The graduate student also raised logs in the all-day project directed by Dr. Lynwood Montell, the cabin’s owner. ACCOMPANIED BY A GERMAN SHEPHERD NAMED CLEO, Dr. Lynwood Montell and crew pause at 9 a.m. for a group picture before 10 hours of house- tell said. His father and several students also helped strip the lumber and manhandle seven or eight truckloads of logs. Montell laid the concrete foundation and prepared the materials and tools for the late summer house-raising, which also attracted neigh- bors and church friends. Keith Byrd helped Montell begin the project and said the house-raising was eas- ier than the disassembling. AGE DOESN’T MATTER AT A HOUSE-RAISING because everyone contributes. Liz Harzoff photo- graphed much of the day’s work, and Willie Montell (Montell’s father) helped the students with technicali- ties such as chainsaws. raising. The crew included his family, folklore grad- uate students and faculty members, and neighbors from the Woodburn community where Montell lives. “It was a lot harder to take down because it was so dusty and the logs were pegged together,” the senior history and govern- ment major said. Byrd said he cut notches in the logs, helped fit them and worked to keep them straight. “Everyone was enthusiastic and it was a group effort,” he said. “It was a lot of people working together to re-create a house-raising.” Dr. Robert Teske, a new faculty mem- ber, said the house-raising was a good oc- casion to get to know graduate students. “We all got a feeling of pride by putting (continued on page 22) A NOTeH WN THE PAST cont. the cabin up. “I had read a lot about it but that was the first time I participated,” he said. “It was a good opportunity to get involved in mate- rial folk culture.” Gary Foster, a part-time graduate stu- dent, said he developed a respect for the house. “It almost had its own personality,” he said. “It didn’t look like much on the ground, but each log had a hole bored in it for a peg which didn’t fit any other one. The hole had been made by the first people who built the cabin and lived in it. We were giving it a new lease on life, like a reprieve from the dead.” Foster said the back-breaking manual work came in three stages. ‘First there was the lifting of a log,” he said. “Then higher poles were lifted with skid poles and ropes, and skid poles were used to raise the top logs. Tog by log, I had mentally constructed the house further than we did on the ground, but I think we got more done than I would have realistically expected.” Montell was a good foreman, according to the graduate student. “If something didn’t work, he worked around it,” Foster said. “And when he’d notch a log everyone would watch. I thought it was a lost art, but I guess it really isn’t.” Nana Farris of Henderson said she was impressed about the role women played. “The women weren't just watching or cooking,” she said. “They were carrying logs, reading tablets and climbing on logs. There was really no difference in abilities except for physical size. “I moved logs, sighted walls, consulted the plans to find what went where, braced, drove nails and took ample breaks.” She was pleased that Dr. Montell’s fam- ily and neighbors came as well as students and faculty. “Most of them had never met, but it didn’t inhibit them from working together and enjoying each other,” she said. “T remember how Dr. Montell’s father was overseeing the progress of the house and kept talking to one girl who was driv- ing nails,” Miss Farris said. “He’d walk around and ask others if they’d seen ‘that New Jersey girl hammer nails.’ ” The frayed and soiled legal pad of sketches was misplaced three times. “Everything would shut down and every- body would look for it,” she said. “There were a few moments of panic until some- one found it underneath something.” Miss Farris said the dirty, sunburned and sweaty group didn’t goof off and was genuinely concerned about making sure things were done properly. TATTERED AND TEMPORARILY LOST THREE TIMES, a yellow legal pad of sketches of the original cabin was a necessary reference tool. Liz Harzoff, Charles Wright, Judith Schottenfeld, Nana Farris and Brad Montell consider the next step. “T realized that we have a totally differ- ent way of life from the people who first built that cabin,” she said. “Those people cooperated and interacted on a level not present in day-to-day contacts we have.” Although Miss Farris said she barely produced the energy to crawl to her car for the drive to Bowling Green, she savors a feeling of accomplishment from the house- raising. Dr. Montell was also pleased. “I was sur- prised at how much we got done and the fact that it got done so skillfully when they hadn't done that kind of work before,” he said. “Everyone worked; no one just watched.” And when the neighbors, students and faculty members dressed in straw hats, Le- vis, boots, T-shirts and bandanas drove away in their Toyotas, Datsuns and Pintos, Dr. Montell sneaked back to the construc- tion site three times. “I just stood and looked at it and had one super good feeling,” he said. Connie Holman @ LATE AFTERNOON SHADOWS befriended the house-raising crew as they lifted the last logs on the one pen they completed. Half of the other side of the saddlebag house was also completed that day by more than 40 participants. WINDOW INSTALLATION IN LOG CABINS is somewhat different from the modern method. Dr. Lynwood Montell, director of folk studies and cabin owner, directed his crew when the first window was fitted. The process proved tricky as the crew inserted it upside down and had to try again. House-raising he diego tacoma PA Mee HIGH ABOVE THE GROUND, Denis Kiely works to raise one of the logs near the top of the saddlebag cabin. Most of the August 27th morning was spent on the ground as the construction crew lifted and fitted each log. After an on-the-ground lunch the struggle began as skid poles and ropes were manipulated to raise the longer logs. A TIRED AND ACHING BUT PROUD CONSTRUCTION CREW rests in back of the restored 1822 saddlebag house they raised in approximately 10 hours. The yellow poplar house is located adjacent to Dr. Montell’s Woodburn home, 12 miles from campus. Approximately 40 individuals participated in the project. 24 mors are alive and well on the Hill. Ranging from traditional boasts to ter- rifying ghosts, the stories make up part of Western's folklore. Some are “migratory legends” or “mi- gratory rumors,” according to Dr. Lyn- wood Montell, director of intercultural and folk studies. Common throughout the na- tion, these are localized for Western. Oth- ers contain familiar motifs, he said. Bors « folk beliefs and migratory ru- dorms have brought to Western the migratory legend that Montell called “the most popular of all horror stories or superstitions told on college campuses.” ‘Many years ago,” the legend goes, “two girls, Sarah and Jane, stayed in this dorm during spring break, when everyone else was gone. They were uneasy about staying alone, so Jane stayed in Sarah’s room. “One night Jane was walking down the dark upstairs hall to get something from her room. She turned a corner and gasped when she saw the dim outline of an escapee from an asylum. “Jane turned and ran, but the lunatic grabbed a fire ax and chased her. Just as she neared the stairs, he lunged, hitting her in the back with the ax. She dropped and he disappeared into darkness again. “Sarah began worrying but was too scared to look for Jane. Suddenly, she heard scratching at the door, like an anima clawing to get in. Sarah was terrified and hid. “When she opened the door the next morning, she looked down and screamed. There was Jane’s bloody corpse with a hand raised as it had been when she scratched on the door, hoping for help. “Girls who lived in the room later said they heard scratching in the night. They finally turned it into a storage room. No one’s lived there since.” E ate-night ghost story sessions in girls’ ago in telling the story of the Van Meter Ghost. Fonzole Childress, who worked in the department in the 1960s, recalled that some of Western’s “most fan- tastic acting went into telling it,” especially to freshman girls. It went like this: “Back at the beginning of the century when Van Meter Hall was being built, a man was working on the roof. An airplane flew by and the man, who had never seen a plane, stood and stared at the sight. Sud- denly, he lost his balance and fell through the skylight over the stage. He landed on the stage and died, but his body lay there for a weekend before it was found. It left a bloodstain that was scrubbed and washed, but wouldn't come off. It’s been there ever since. Though the telling of the legend slacked off after Russell Miller Theater was built, former actors’ tales linger. One actor said that once, when he was in the dressing room alone after a rehearsal, he happened to look up and see the reflec- tion of a man in the mirror. He turned, but ro heatre students delighted a few years. Folklore on the Hill w a } 4 j j no one was there. Other theatre people spoke of strange blue lights, mysterious occurrences with spotlights and supernatural feats during the years Van Meter Auditorium was the principal theater on campus. Central Hall when word was passed that famed psychic Jeanne Dixon had predicted the murder of a coed in a West- ern high-rise dormitory. Fortunately, it did not occur. Most of the fear came in the spring of 1976. “It was stupid,” said one resident. But she added, “If there had been a killer it would have been worse with a lot of girls in one room.” 5: slept six and seven to a room in Hl house on Chestnut Street claim they share living quarters with a female ghost, the spirit of a woman murdered in the house. Lambda Chis say one fraternity brother woke up in the night when he heard a noise in the next room. The door was pad- locked from the outside, but he claimed he heard typing and saw a light. Residents said that one night the lights in the house went out, but the stereo re- mained on. In a room they call the nursery, the alarm clock goes off at midnight when a person sleeps there for the first time, they claim. But, they said, “It’s a friendly ghost. It never hurt anyone.” Breese of the Lambda Chi Alpha ghosts and murder. Some comes from the classroom. One old story deals with the final exam given by a philosophy professor. The only question was “Why?” Two students got A’s: one who answered, “Why not?” and one who said, “Because.” The other stu- dents wrote long treatises. Students have long maintained that they are obligated to wait only 10 minutes for an instructor, 15 minutes for an assistant or associate professor and 20 minutes for a full professor before leaving class. “It’s become part of the unofficial belief code,’” Montell said. “A lot of students believe it, and so do teachers, frankly.” hl: all campus folklore deals with around the Hill prompted the notion that a biology professor had per- formed genetic experiments with squirrels and then released them, thoroughly upset- ting the local squirrel gene pool. Two biology professors said they never heard the story and doubted it was true. “They've been around as long as I have,” said Dr. H.L. Stephens, a former depart- ment head who came to Western in 1927. Dr. Herbert Shadowen, a mammalogist here since 1961, agreed with Stephens that the squirrels “have experienced a genetic change and survived in a protected envi- ronment.” White squirrels in the wild would not survive, they said. O°: abundance of white squirrels headed for Western listened eagerly with a beer in his hand as a friend told him: “T heard Western is a real party school. Playboy did an article about party schools and one year they rated Western second. The next year, Playboy wouldn’t rank it: They said Western was in a party class of its own!” It was big news, and the student believed it for months and told it as a fact. But Jane Cowen Schoen, manager of Playboy’s reader service, denies all. “It’s a legend,” she said in a telephone interview. “We never did anything like that. Every school in the nation seems to think their school was rated either at the very top or the very bottom.” She said the magazine “started getting questions about it in the late 50s or early 60s,” and eventually prepared a form letter denying the claim. [ orertosk over which of two bluffs Or graduating high school student overlooking Barren River is “the real Sally’s Rock” overshadows the legend of the girl whose name the rock bears. “Early in the century,” the old legend goes, “a beautiful girl named Sally Beck lived by the river. Well known among riverboat captains, she was called the ‘Bride of the Barren.’ “But late one rainy night, she went to the sandstone column that stood near the river, looked into the black waters below, spoke a man’s name and jumped into the darkness. She was found the next day on the river bank — dead.” According to a 1976 College Heights Herald article, however, Miss Beck lived to a ripe age and married a Canadian farmer who had advertised in a newspaper for a wife. The rock column slid into the river in 1910. edar Hill, upon which the campus C sprawls, is near collapse if all the sto- ries about caves under it are true. Some claim a hermit lives in a cave under Van Meter Hall (also suggesting that this is the source of mysterious happenings). Hundreds of truckloads of concrete were poured into a cavern before Pearce-Ford Tower could be built over it, others say. And Smith Stadium has only one grand- stand because the other side of the field is over a cave. Owen Lawson, physical plant adminis- trator, said a cave system could exist under the Hill, but years of core-drilling before construction produced only crevices and small voids. Lawson said that before Pearce-Ford was built a drilling of 100 feet was made, “but we didn’t find anything but solid rock.” Smith Stadium has only one side, he said, because the university wanted a 20,000-seat stadium, which wouldn’t fit on the other side, which is narrower because of the convergence of Russellville Road and University Boulevard. Besides, when construction began, Western hadn't yet bought that side of the field. Roger Stinnett @ 25 Folklore on the Hill nga was enjoying a hot show- n., last Oct. 24, when sudden- kered out in a West Hall jomeone say, ‘Where were you n the lights went out?’ so I thought it was a joke,” the Country Club Hills, IIl., said. “But when I got out I burned out, leaving 894 women in Bates- unner, North, South, East and West halls ut hot water and electricity for more cable was delivered from , Tenn., the next afternoon. In d and darkness, a crew installed it. the power returned to the and then failed again while adjust- vere made. Minutes later residents yed luxuries they had taken for cubes, lights, stereos and hey had coped. Some had adventure. nd games at first,” East Hall Johnson said. “But the stayed off the more the hassle.” Patty Ferguson said creamed when the hey wanted to know as and how long it hey just wandered ing to decide what is were given flashlights L the exit doors more fre- ‘n assistant director from a men’s d in the lobby during the peak til midnight).” Il night clerk Roger Hinderliter eee Sandy Plantinga said most West Hall residents shuffled through the dimly-lit halls and stairways to the lobby when the power vanished. Industrious residents stuffed napkins into a chicken wire-covered wagon frame by candlelight, she said. “It was an outside decoration for Homecoming and we paint- 26 Power outage 20-year-old underground cable had . ed it red.” South Hall resident Mila Sledge buried her goldfish (Rudolph and Oreo) which died during the power outage. “They were in a bowl with an electric pump when it went off,” the Smiths Grove sophomore said. “They died a few hours before the lights came back on. It could have been the water or something else, but it was the most upsetting part of the ordeal. “We had emergency lights in the hall, but after a while their batteries ran down,” Miss Sledge said. “I used a flashlight and a battery-operated lamp until it ran down, too.” Bates-Runner resident Marla Kingrey said some girls went to other dorms or to hotels to study and take showers. “I went to Central Hall to take a shower and there were girls from everywhere taking show- CKOUT ers there.” The Glasgow junior said she missed cooking meals and warm water the most, but she did have some fun. “We took candles in one room and told ghost stories for an hour,” she said. “It was so much fun.” Food was spoiled, eyes were strained by studying by dim lights and showers were taken in foreign dorms, but the women managed to survive the ordeal. “It was sort of neat,” Miss Kingrey add- ed. “It was really different and gave us something to talk about for a long time.” Connie Holman @ A BATTERY-OPERATED emergency light illumi- nates a Bates-Runner Hall corridor as residents study. Other residents spent the night in other dorms or at local hotels. West, East, North and South halls were also struck by the blackout. Mark Lyons Eric Hassler BY THE LIGHT OF THE MOON and a torch held by Kenny Walters, Joe Richards replaces a 20-year-old cable which burned out and caused a power outage. Richards works for Associated Electrics and Walters is a university maintenance worker. “TESS OF THE D’UBERVILLES” is read by Bates- Runner resident Barbara Davenport shortly after the power outage began. The freshman did her required reading for an English 101 class by candlelight. Others used flashlights and battery-operated lamps. Mark Lyons 27 Power outage hannon, Shelbyville junior Charlene Har- desty and Louisville sophomore Pam McCoskey. The Big Red Marching Band, area high school bands and 18 floats carrying the Homecoming queen candidates were part of the parade, which began at 10 a.m., on the square downtown. “Morehead — What a Picnic” won the alumni float for Alpha Omicron Pi soror- ity and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. The float consisted of a picnic table cov- ered with a traditional red and white- checked tablecloth, a tree with a swing, ants and bucket of fried chicken. Alpha Phi Omega fraternity and Gamma Sigma Sigma sorority won the Red Towel Award with “WKU’s Favorite Pastime — Ba 2 7 Ba te Ne wai Lewis Gardner Tilting Morehead’s Game,” which featured a pinball machine with the score 999,999 to 0, in favor of Western. “Eagle Chasin’ Toppers’ Favorite Pastime’ won the President's Award for the Industrial Education and Technology Club. The float showed a clawing, me- chanical eagle pursued by football players in a red and white Model T automobile. The Regents’ Award went to Barnes- Campbell and Potter halls. Their theme was “Disney -—- The Great American Pas- time,”” which consisted of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, a fountain and a wish- ing well. Western’s preparation and celebration were not quite enough for a win. The Top- pers had to settle for a 20-20 tie with More- WAVING TO SPECTATORS on Center Street, Sue Floyd rides the parade float sponsored by Phi Mu and Alpha Gamma Rho. Despite the float’s “Western Trumps Over Morehead” theme, the Tops settled for a tie. MUSIC AND DANCING were especially common during Homecoming. Marcella Williams and Wal- ter Taylor danced to Celebrity Ball’s music at the ASG-sponsored dance Saturday night. Lewis Gardner head before an estimated 19,750 fans in L.T. Smith Stadium and a regional televi- sion audience. Students, faculty and alumni atttended a post-game reception in Diddle Arena. Later Saturday night, Celebrity Ball, an Atlanta, Ga., rock group, entertained at an ASG- sponsored dance in Garrett Conference Ballroom. As conceived in 1927 by Henry Hardin Cherry, Western’s first president, Home- coming was to be “the one thing to make Western's tie with the alumni complete and unbreakable.” Fifty years later, Cherry's dream contin- ues to materialize, creating a special week- end on the Hill. Alfina Mami 31 Homecoming Ron Hoskins ‘A= = C TEAD ano Dien PhovSmb ; , “e A Lc, pw Veririo (i$ you AGREE ) ER 1DAY MoRNN( —-oOVW- rp f). IDuccerm Mopper Mark Lyons SIX HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-FIVE of Pearce-Ford’s 874 residents responded to signs (such as this on a bathroom door) and signed the dorm reform petition. IGNORING VISITATION RULES, two coeds visit friends on the 12th floor of Pearce-Ford during the unofficial open house and dorm policy protest Oct. 27. 32 Dorm Reform spirit, but close doors earce-Ford Tower, the largest men’s dorm on campus, was hav- ing a disco dance on the 27th floor Thursday, Oct. 27, Homecoming Eve. At 7 SUPPORT for liberalized dorm policies came from Sarah Fuller, a North Hall resident, at the Student Rights Alliance demonstration in November. About 200 persons participated in the rally. Ron Hoskins p.m. a crowd of residents and their dates pushed through the front door and headed for the elevators. Some rode all the way up to the dance, but many got off before that. After weeks of planning, the great unof- ficial open house was on. As an organized protest of dorm visita- tion policies, many residents ignored the rules and took women into their rooms. About 200 students participated in the demonstration engineered by residents and most of the tower’s resident assistants. Without RA supervision, it was not until 10 p.m. that student affairs officials learned of the unauthorized activity in the tower. But before the evening was over, illegal guests had been removed, and names and ID cards of about 25 had been taken so they could be questioned. The next morning, a protest representa- tive presented President Dero Downing with a petition, signed by 675 of the tower's 874 residents, asking for more lib- eral visitation rules and more student con- trol over housing policies. The petition called for several changes: more open houses with less supervision, an end to mandatory campus housing for freshmen and sophomores, and a greater student voice in housing decisions. But it seemed that students were more upset with the “door ajar” rule that re- quired residents to keep their room doors open during open house if a member of the opposite sex was inside. It wasn’t the first time students had asked for the rule to be lifted. The year “I’M NOT A MARTYR for anybody,” Bemis Hall RA Sandy Haworth said of her placard at the SRA rally. “Everybody came running to the RAs because we were new pivotal points,” she said. Jim Burton before, the university housing committee had asked the regents to let the position of the door during open house be decided by the residents. The regents rejected that idea, but changed the rule from door “open” to door “ajar.” But that wasn’t enough. At the Homecoming Board of Regents meeting Saturday morning, Downing told about 20 students that he would meet with a protest representative the next week to discuss the petition. At the football game that afternon, the side fence of Smith Stadium was covered with signs. Most said “Beat Morehead!” One said “Dorm Reform Now.” When the big weekend was over and the initial shock had worn off, officials inter- viewed the participants who were caught and Pearce-Ford’s RAs. No disciplinary ac- tion was taken. Downing asked the university housing committee, Interhall Council and Associat- ed Student Government to study the peti- tion and make recommendations to him. And then the big ball began to slow down. But student support for dorm reform was still strong. Protest leaders formed the Student Rights Alliance, circulated their petition across campus and on Nov. 10, organized a dorm reform rally. As an icy wind whistled around dorms and classroom buildings at the base of the Hill, rally leaders tried to inspire the shiv- ering crowd of about 200. It resembled the 1960s with speakers, chant leaders and a protest song. The participants were seri- ous. Some onlookers snickered. As the protesters’ petition was shuffled through the network of committees and sub-committees, dorm councils and stu- dent government, it fared pretty well. All of the groups agreed on at least one point — the “door ajar” rule should go. Associated Student Government, Inter- hall Council, the university housing com- mittee and even the regents housing com- mittee said it should go. And on a cold February afternoon, the Board of Regents agreed. There was only brief discussion on the motion to do away with the rule. When the vote came, only one activist was there to hear it. It was a quiet victory. During the three months of committee hearings, hot tempers had cooled and the popular movement had dwindled. The slow process of administrative study and analysis had become too much for the stu- dents who wanted “dorm reform now.” Tom Eblen Eblen covered the dorm reform move- ment for the College Heights Herald. A LONG ASG DEBATE concerning ratification of the Student Rights Alliance’s petition rolls on as ASG housing chairman John Grizzell talks to representative Brad Ford. 33 Dorm Reform AR, Lewis Gardner Lewis Gardner ASG COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN Brad Ford and Gene GANGSTERS Teena Thornton and Charlie Stinnett A LIGHT MOMENT IN AN ASG MEETING brings Saunders talk with representative Kevin Kinne after a ride in a 1948 Plymouth, campaigning for David laughter from president Bob Moore and smiles from March ASG meeting. Saunders, a senior business ad- | Vance. Vance won, but was chided by ASG president activities vice president David Bass, secretary Sharon ministration major, was also news director at WKYU. Bob Moore for spending $192 on his campaign. May and vice president Cathy Murphy. sao AIEEE Vena Conmemeriacee Presitaant stent Me Nee hae omnes ithe A STRONG VOICE INAS.G. complaints and a little controversy. ASG was accused by several groups of j i | Jim Burton Little action after much controversy For Associated Student Government, the year was typical — little action, the usual taking little action, in both administrative and entertainment affairs; many people complained about their lack of action and poor concert selections, and the presiden- tial election was contested among charges of favoritism shown to one candidate who was already an ASG member. After ASG lost more than $23,000 on major concerts during the year, the student affairs office, which controls the ASG bud- get, decided that control of entertainment should be transferred to another body, probably the University Center Board. A recommendation was made to the Board of Regents by Charles Keown, stu- dent affairs dean, that ASG’s entertain- ment budget be cut in half for 1978-79. Keown also recommended that a com- mittee be appointed to study who should make programming decisions, and if the committee chose the center board, ASG would lose all control of entertainment for 1979-80. Bob Moore, ASG president and student regent, argued at the April 29 regents’ meeting that ASG should retain control of entertainment funds because students would have less involvement in program- ming decisions if the change were made. “There was no input by student govern- ment or any students that I know of, and that upsets me,” Moore said at the meeting. The regents voted to allow ASG to retain its full $62,000 entertainment budget for 1978-79 and directed President Dero Downing to appoint a committee to study whether ASG or the center board should control entertainment spending. ASG was also attacked during the spring semester for lack of action. The College Heights Herald, in an edito- rial, called many of ASG’s actions “more laughable than laudable.” The editorial cited a bill ASG passed to support dental hygenists, that ASG dis- count cards were never mailed to off-cam- pus residents, that $202.50 was spent for an unknown number of red towels to be used by concert performers and an “inner of- fice” joke discussed at a congress meeting that declared the day “Be Kind to Tricia Day,” in honor of Tricia Cook, interim ASG secretary. Several ASG members later said the ac- tions were not laughable. ASG was involved in two major contro- versies during the year, including the dorm reform movement of the fall and a dispute of the results of the election for president in the spring. After heated debate, congress voted to support a petition circulated by a group called the Students Rights Alliance that asked for changes in housing policies. While most ASG members apparently supported the petition, the issue was whether allowing SRA to represent stu- dents to the university administration on any housing matters would hurt ASG. One member said during the debate that recognition of SRA would be a “potential threat to the ASG housing committee.” ASG eventually agreed to support the petition, and the regents in January ap- proved a section that abolished the “door- ajar” rule during open houses in dormi- tories. Questions about ASG’s election appeal system were raised after the loser of the presidential election protested the outcome of the election, and the only course of pro- test was through ASG committees. Ed Johnson, who lost to Steve Thornton by 72 votes, charged that some ASG poll workers had worn Thornton campaign buttons as they signed people in to vote and that the sophomore voting machine was not registering his votes during the April 6 elections. He also alleged that 24 people signed up to vote but did not because of a long line at the junior and senior voting booth. Johnson said most of his support was with upperclassmen. The protest was first rejected by ASG’s rules and elections committee, which runs ASG elections. ASG’s judicial council then rejected the appeal, saying that some of Johnson’s allegations may have been cor- rect, but there was no proof that the actions alleged would have changed the outcome of the election. Thornton, who was sophomore presi- dent at the time of the election, said he knew of no campaigning by poll workers, and he did not ask Paahie to do it for him. The judicial council was Johnson’s last source of appeal, which ended one contro- versy typically — with little action. Alan Judd @ 35 ASG 38 Building Renovations Photos by Lewis Gardner A Constructed Florence Schneider Hall and the Industrial Education Building both had their begin- nings on the Hill in 1929. A shortage of space and the need for an industrial educa- tion complex had created two more campus buildings. Last fall, after renovation, the two build- ings opened their doors again, but with a slightly different look, and in one case, a totally different purpose. Florence Schneider was constructed as an addition to West Hall with funds appro- FROSTED WINDOWS were replaced with tinted glass, an elevator was added and all but one interior wall were torn down during the $740,000 renovation of the Industrial Education Building. priated by the Kentucky General Assem- bly. It was to house 168 women on the west slope of campus. The structure, built for $160,000, was first known as West Hall. Later the name was changed to Whitestone Hall and eventually to Florence Schneider, a bursar of the university. Since its $946,000 renovation, Florence Schneider Hall serves as the Continuing Education Center and houses the career planning and placement office. The build- ing features housing and meeting facilities for groups taking advantage of Western’s continuing education programs. The Industrial Education Building was built at a cost of $89,000 following the de- struction of the original building. The reopening of that building last fall provided students with redesigned facili- ties in which to gain experience in me- chanical drawing, graphic reproduction and woodworking. The $740,000 renovation project left the third floor of the building with an unpeti- tioned set of drafting rooms for basic drawing, technical rendering, architectural drafting and airbrush rendering. The second floor of the building houses a graphic reproduction lab with facilities for both color and black and white enlarg- ing. Other features of the second floor in- PRINTING CALLING CARDS for his Basic Graphic Processes class required Gary Coots to use the platten press in the graphics arts lab on the second floor of the Industrial Education Building. DRAFTING CLASSES spread across the Hill were brought together with the renovation of the Industrial Education Building. Dr. Delbert Towell explains line density to Missy Dargo in a 102 class. Reunion A SELF MOTIVATION LECTURE in the main con- ference room of Florence Schneider Hall was directed to store-management trainees in a General Electric workshop. The room is reserved for overnight guests. clude a horizontal process camera and a computerized photo composition machine. The first floor was left with a centrally- | located lumber room, machine wood area and display space. From buildings with beginnings in the 1920s to completely renovated structures of today, Florence Schneider Hall and the In- dustrial Education Building are living proof that old buildings never die, they just get better. Tim Rutherford @ AFTER ALMOST HALF A CENTURY as a women’s dorm, Florence Schneider Hall underwent a nearly $1 - million renovation and became the Continuing Educa- tion Center. Career guidance is also offered there. Building Renovations PUTER....CAM)PUS... AN IBM SYSTEM 360 COMPUTER is also a board for special instructions, employees’ numbers and a university telephone directory. A sign at the top of the computer reminds programmers to “think” before working the machine. It is located on the third floor of the Wetherby Administration Building. lil -atl|| ner earner ee 36 Computers on the Hill Photos by Ricky Rogers magine waiting 12 hours or more to register, receiving spring semester grades in July or August and getting a transcript updated by hand months later, and you've imagined the Hill without com- puters. But fortunately, Western has computers and is using the administrative computer to its maximum, said Curtis Logsdon, di- rector of the center for computer and infor- mational services. “Our application for an- other computer has been approved and we're waiting word on the funding,” he said. “We hope to acquire it this calendar year. “It’s physically no lar ger than the one we have, slightly higher (in cost) but it can do 7¥2 times more computing.” Western’s computers have come a long way since 1959 when John Foe operated record equipment in the registrar’s office. “It basically recorded registration figures, grade reports and class rolls,” said Foe, now operations manager. Since then the university has owned an IBM 1401 model, which handled registra- tion and business functions. Logsdon said a 3640 model was installed in 1971 after a special committee decided computer use had mushroomed and a com- puter was purchased from U of L to handle the needs. Eighteen full-time and seven part-time student workers are employed in the cen- ter, where 250,000 lines of type are printed each day, Logsdon said. Each day 120 jobs are requested from campus departments, 11,000 teleprocessing accesses (requests through terminals in other offices) are made and 12,000 cards are punched and read. “Thirty to 40 offices are served and we have additional requests,” Logsdon said. The general ledger, expenses and rev- enue, fund balance, student housing rec- ords, the library’s master and circulation files are recorded in the computer. Also fed into it are admissions records, course rec- ords, employee and student payroll files, an alumni file, a graduate records system, a student contact system and ACT scores. Using computers “cuts down on files and helps capability,” Foe said. “It’s a lot easier to type something on a terminal and not keep a file on it. To store in drawers what we have on computers would prob- ably take new buildings.” “Without computers, we wouldn’t be do- ing a lot of things we are,” Logsdon said. “We would need a lot more clerical people. The student has many more services he wouldn’t have without it. “The cost of machines and equipment at Western is almost static,” Logsdon said. “Of the total $37 million budget for 1977- 78, 1.4 per cent or $570,000 was spent by the computer center. Approximately $48,000 was spent for extra equipment.” But the Hill’s computer system also branched into academia. Dr. Thomas Mad- ron is the Academic Computing and Re- search Services coordinator. Beginning in 1967, computers were used by data processing and computer science COMPLETING A REPORT assigned in a data pro- cessing class required for his business administration major is Randall Robinson. He used detailed instruc- tions while working in a Grise Hall lab. students, Madron said. “In 1975 the Ken- tucky Education Computer Network was formed for eight higher education institu- tions. Data recorded all over the U‘S. is stored there. “It’s like a library, only in a form ma- chines can read,” he said. “They (West- erners) can do their own statistical analysis with that data.” Students in data processing, computer science, political science, sociology, psy- chology, English, health, recreation, the Public Service Institute, business, econom- ics, educational statistics and geography use the computer system, Madron said. Faculty members in 21 departments use the computer for research. “Western’s doing a pretty good job ser- vicing undergraduates,” Madron_ said. “Most of our graduates will sooner or later have some job contact with at least some printed output. Often they will need to know how to ask questions for data stored in computers.” Training for that is minimal, Madron said. ‘The computer is just a tool. Some people have got to know how a pen and paper work, but most don’t. A pen makes a mark on a page and that’s all you need to know. “But the pen and paper work more effi- ciently and effectively than quill pens and parchment,” Madron said. “That’s how it is with computers.” Connie Holman DROP-ADD SERVICES are used by students at the registrar's office. A clerk feeds data into a terminal for Donna Vaughn as William Crofton impatiently waits to add a class. Miss Vaughn was dropping one. 37 Computers on the Hill 40 A MOVEMENT from “Allegro Brilliante” is re- hearsed by Judith Gosnell and Thomas Girdir of the Hartford Ballet. Directed by Michael Uthoff, the 18 dancers performed April 12 after conducting work- shops at Jones-Jaggers Lab School. Lynn Wright Fine Arts Festival An artful sellout ome of the world’s greatest dancers, musicians and actors graced West- ern’s stage as the Fine Arts Festival again entertained local patrons of the arts. Chairman John Oakes said good weath- er, more student interest and top touring events combined for a sellout. “We want the finest plays, acts and dances we can attract,” Oakes said. Bar- gaining with the touring events, supple- mental funds from various arts founda- tions and discounts from the groups for a good appearance date helped the festival committee book $60,000 of entertainment for only $40,000. In the fall, that talent included the Acme Dance Company, cellist Janos Starker and the Vienna Choir Boys. Directed by James Cunningham, the Acme Dance Company was in residence at Jones-Jaggers Laboratory School for two weeks. Members conducted classes and workshops before performing their dance- theatre combination Oct. 23. Janos Starker, often called “The King of Cellists,” performed Nov 6. One of the most recorded cellists, he often performs 80 concerts a year. After a tour of the campus, 24 Vienna Choir Boys, ages 10 to 13, performed oper- ettas, sacred songs, secular and folk music for a full house in Van Meter Auditorium Nov. 16. The choir was on its 33rd tour in the U.S. They have also sung in Australia, New Zealand, Fiji, Japan, the Near East and South America. BACKSTAGE before their concert, Vienna Choir Boys Daniel, 11, and Thomas, 10, listen to Herbert Bauer read from Alfred Hitchcock’s “Flaming Footprints.” Ages 10 to 13, the 24 choirboys performed Nov. 16. Mark Lyons The Louisville Orchestra, conducted by Jorge Mester, opened the spring semester’s festival schedule March 19. The orchestra played “Pelleas Et Meli- sande Suite, Op. 80” by Faure, “Symphony No. 77 in B Flat Major” by Haydn and “El Salon Mexico” by Copland. The members were accompanied by Western’s Sylvia Kersenbaum on the piano for “Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in A Minor, Op. 16.” “My Fair Lady,” was presented by American Theatre Productions March 21. Edward Mulhare and Anne Rogers led the cast through the musical comedy about how a bachelor professor transforms a gut- tersnipe into a lady. Songs such as “Wouldn’t It Be Lover- ly?,” “The Rain in Spain,” “I Could Have Danced All Night,” “On the Street Where You Live” and “I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face” were hits with an applauding audience. On April Fool’s Day, the Actors Theatre of Louisville brought “The Lion In Win- ter,” a comedy by James Goldman. Eugene Fodor, the first American violin- ist to win Moscow’s prestigious Tschai- kovsky competition, made his second ap- pearance at Western April 5. A week later, the Hartford Ballet, direct- ed by Michael Uthoff, also taught students at Jones-Jaggers Laboratory eliedl The 18 dancers presented a variety of American dances, from classical ballet to modern, as the Fine Arts Festival ended April 12. Connie Holman Ron Hoskins OFTEN CALLED “The King of Cellists,” Janos Starker performs in the spotlight Nov. 6. Starker is one of the most recorded cellists, and his concert at Western was one of an estimated 80 for him this year. IN RESIDENCE at Jones-Jagger s Lab School for two weeks, members of the Acme Dance Company work with children at the elementary school. Director James Cunningham and company performed Oct. 23. Debbie Gibson 41 Fine Arts Festival Photos by Mark Lyons DONNA AND NORMAN share a laugh during a Campus Cru- sade for Christ meeting in the university center. ‘That movement has changed our entire outlook on life in terms of priorities and goals,” Norman said “WE PLAY POOL when we don’t have anything else to do,” Donna said. “On my better days I can beat him. But then he always gets mad.” hae Se SE GMs A Dating Couple Couples: Since Donna Henderson and Norman Jones met at a dance seven years ago, they've dated through high school and college. Marriage is in their post-college plans, but meanwhile theirs is A marathon romance The dance floor of the country club ballroom was crowded with swirling couples as the band struck up a rock tune. Amid the gaiety and commotion, a meek high school freshman walked unassumingly up toa short girl in a red velvet dress and asked her to dance. “She seemed scared to death of me and ran off to the bathroom,” Norman Jones, a Hopkinsville sen- ior, recalled about meeting the girl he has dated for seven years. “But nobody had ever asked me to dance before,” Donna Henderson said defensively. “I was scared because | didn’t even know how to dance.” Despite the embarrassing introduction, the cou- ple soon began dating. While attending Christian County High School, Donna and Norman devel- oped a close relationship that has continued since they came to Western. The couple said that the stability and concern for each other that comes from a close dating relation- ship has helped them overcome some of college's pressures and problems. “We try to be available to each other in a helping way,” said Donna, a junior accounting major. ‘We depend on each other for quite a lot of things, such as shopping or eating. Why, he would probably starve if it wasn’t for me.” The couple said their involvement in Campus Crusade for Christ has changed their goals for their relationship after they get married. They hope to develop personal ministries in others through their occupations. “Our involvement in Crusade has grown us clos- er together than any other organization we've been involved in,” Norman said. “We've grown closer together spiritually, and that has strengthened oth- er areas of our relationship. “We've learned to share the same goals and, in fact, the same heart. This has helped us develop a lasting relationship.” Although Donna and Norman share many con- cerns and problems, they've found that involve- ment in each other’s hobbies hasn’t been success- ful. Donna’s attempt at hunting and Norman’s at cooking have prompted many laughs. “He tried to make biscuits one time,” Donna said. “They tasted good, but were flat and hard. They looked real funny. “And I even tried hunting once,” she said. “I'll never go again. I sat in poison ivy and got covered.” Norman, a religion and psychology major, planned to be graduated in May and attend grad- uate school in clinical psychology or pastoral coun- seling. The couple plans to get married after Donna is graduated in May, 1979. “We need time to be sure about each other,” Norman said. ‘We're pretty sure now, and after seven years, I’d say we have a jump on some mar- ried couples.” Don White A SPECIAL MOMENT is shared between classes by Donna and Norman behind Grise Hall. The couple has dated seven years, but said they still need time “to be sure about things.” DONNA AND NORMAN often shop together for presents for members of their families. “We like to help each other pick out gifts — even though he has no taste,” Donna joked. 43 A Dating Couple | Couples: Neng-Chyang Leu and Lih Jen-Sun are two Taiwan strangers who wed Neng-Chyang Leu and Lih-Jen Sun grew up in the same Taiwan city, but they were strangers until Jan. oe. 5, 1977, when she looked for an apartment to rent in a his building near campus. The two Chinese graduate students were married Dec. 18, 9,000 miles from home, family and best friends. “We would have liked to have gone home for the wedding, but it takes a lot of money, so we decided to have the wedding here,” Neng said. They were married at the home of a woman par- tially responsible for their meeting. An associate professor of religion from England, Dr. Margaret Howe, offered to help the new Western student (Lih) hunt for a place to live. She was waiting in her car when Lih met Neng, but was pleased Lih had met ‘a boy from home.” The two became friends when Lih rented an up- stairs room in Neng’s building. “We talked together about the future of our coun- try and sometimes joked,” Neng said. In August, they decided to get married, so Neng wrote Lih’s parents. “I asked for the agreement of her parents,” he said. “T had written home about him and sent a photo- graph,” Lih said with a smile. When her parents agreed, his parents drove 15-20 miles across Taipei to Lih’s home to visit. “I have a brother and a sister,” Neng said, “and Lih has seven brothers and sisters. My brother took a box of pic- WEDDING RINGS sent from their families in Taiwan are ex- changed by Lih-Jen Sun and Neng-Chyang Leu. There were mar- tied by a student minister at the home of Dr. Margaret Howe. SOME FORGOTTEN RED CANDLES for the ceremony delayed Lih-Jen Sun’s wedding for about 45 minutes, but gave her extra time to prepare and get nervous. Ou Rowe 4 3 $ ‘ i ‘ $ : A Newlywed Couple Photos by Mark Lyons in America THE CHINESE COUPLE'S 38 guests signed the red board which served as a register for the wedding. Later, a 10-course Chinese dinner was prepared by the groom and friends. FRAMED by red candles and a “double luck” symbol on the wall, Neng-Chyang Leu and Lih-Jen Sun cut out a slice of their wed- ding cake, baked by Dr. Margaret Howe. tures to her house to show her parents what I looked like.” Both their parents sent wedding rings and Lih’s family sent a wedding gown. They decided to have the wedding on the Sunday after finals week, and the wedding plans soon be- came a collage of American and Chinese traditions. “In our country there are two kinds of wed- dings,” Neng said. “In the old-fashioned one, there is a typical gown for the bride and groom. The groom goes to the bride’s house and carries her to the wedding place, which is usually at the groom’s residence. “The most important part of the ceremony is three big salutes,” he said. ‘The bride and groom salute the god, both their parents (since they have brought them from children to adults) and each other. This shows they respect each other. “Both parents seal the wedding certificate and two persons introduce the bride and groom to each other,” Neng said. “Then a witness who is a good reputation man seals the certificate. Then the bride and groom seal it. This is done instead of a signa- ture and ring.” Western student Jimmy Gentry officiated and associate professor of music Dr. David Livingston played an electric piano. Neng and Lih were mar- ried before 38 guests while their families and friends celebrated their union in Taipei, a city of 2 million. Next came a reception with a wedding cake and gift opening. Then Neng and his Chinese friends cooked a 10-dish Chinese dinner. There was no out-of-town honeymoon, Neng said. “After an old-fashioned wedding in China, the bride goes home on the second day to see her par- ents. After the third day the couple may take a honeymoon trip.” But he and Lih stayed in Bowling Green and prepared for the spring semester, when he planned to complete his biology studies. Lih will finish her chemistry work in December. Neng plans to ebtain a Ph.D. in the U.S. before they return to Taiwan, where they want to teach. “We may have some classes together this semes- ter so we might help each other,” Neng said. “It takes lots of studying. An American student can almost understand everything, but we Chinese have to go back to the book if we miss something. “Our studies would have been easier at home, but we're getting better knowledge in the U.S. because it’s the most advanced country in the world in the scientific field.” Connie Holman @ TEN CHINESE DISHES were prepared by groom Neng-Chyang Leu and friends from his home country. The meal followed the ceremony, gift opening and reception with a cake. 45 A Newlywed Couple Couples: Love-struck Mike and Jane Brumfield juggle college life { h © Photos by Stevie Benson nN eC1r Mike and Jane Brumfield sat in the university center looking like the Great American Married College Couple: happy, active and in love. Jane, a fountain of excitement with waist-length hair, draped her arm around her husband, alternately hugging his neck, poking his side, pinching his cheek and messing up his bright blond hair and beard. Mike leaned forward and smiled, calmly re] poking at his pipe. ; “He’s the brains,” Jane said. “I’m the talent.” The Brumfields met three years ago. Mike was a HALF STUDENT, HALF TEACHER, Mike Brum- field leads a double life as a graduate student in French. Last fall, he taught two beginning French classes while taking three courses. A BLACKENED TOOTH and wrinkles are ap- plied by Bruce Barton to Jane Brumfield’s face for her role as the cook in “A Christmas Carol.’ Essen- tial to the part was ‘peeling a lot of potatoes.” BS a P pe Fe WINDING A WARP was a preliminary step to ARM EXTENDED, the Ghost of Christmas weaving a cape in an advanced weaving course, Present (Mike Brumfield) makes his point to Jane Brumfield said. The art education major Scrooge (Jay Gaither) in “A Christmas Carol” has taken five weaving courses. last year. Acting is among his hobbies. A Married Student Couple big-city boy. The son of a corporate executive, he lived in Cincinnati, Louisville and New York before a three-year stay in Paris, where he learned French and completed two years of college. Then he lived in Pittsburgh. But in early 1975, his family moved to Auburn, Ky., population about 1,000. It wasn’t long before Mike’s thoughts turned restlessly back to France. Then he heard about “Shakertown Revisited,” a play performed each summer in nearby South Union. He walked into the recital hall to audition on June 15, 1975, and sat behind two girls. One turned, then did a double-take. “It was his hair,” recalled Jane. “It’s so blond; it’s like it has batteries. It glows.” Jane was a life-long Bowling Green resident and the daughter of a craftsman. She enrolled in West- ern to study art, but her roommate was into theater, and soon Jane was “running around with theater people.” The roommate also talked Jane into trying out for “Shakertown Revisited.” Mike and Jane each won roles, and during the month of rehearsals began liking one another. He was attracted by her outgoingness. ‘She was per- sonable and amiable,” Mike said. “I was used to people in large cities ignoring you, and accepting it.” She was taken by his charm. “I don’t care what people say; girls like sweet-talk. I remember sitting on top of his car, looking at the stars. I said. ‘Aren’t they beautiful?’ and he said, ‘Yes, but not as beauti- ful as you.’ I ate it up with a fork.” And so it was that the big-city charmer and the small-town extrovert fell in love. A few weeks later he asked her to marry him. In a year, they were married. The Brumfields returned to the Shaker play two summers and have done theater work together at Western, including “A Christmas Carol” and “Tom Sawyer.” “Theater is almost like a hobby to me,” Mike said. “Sometimes the smaller the part the better. I just don’t have the time.” Instead he devoted him- self to his graduate work in French and the begin- ning French classes he taught. Though Jane also appeared in “The Hostage” and a student television production, much of her time was spent with art (especially weaving), working and teaching in the craft shop. Mike said when they have a busy schedule, they are lucky to have four waking hours together, which makes married life harder. “I don’t mind sharing her some of the time, but not all of the time. “Another of the things pulling at us is school,” Mike said. “I’m a big stickler on school. I think academics is one of the most important things to do right now. She’s just the opposite.” Jane agreed. “The biggest thing to me is what makes me happy: acting, weaving. I have my priori- ties, and if some week my priority is theater, then that’s all I work on.” Money is also a problem. Mike estimated they had only $80 to live on each month after paying rent. “I had to save all summer for a pair of 79¢ flip- flops,” Jane said. But being broke isn’t all bad, they said. They learned to appreciate luxuries, such as a three-day, $100 trip to Florida after saving for months. “It’s going to get better because it can’t get worse,” Mike said. “But it’s nice to know we can live on nothing. “T think another beauty in our marriage is that we can still do different things,” Mike said. For instance, one night Jane wanted to go dancing in Nashville with friends. Mike didn’t want to go, so instead went to a Western basketball game with friends. ‘We don’t go separate a lot,” Jane said. But when they do, “We mutually trust each other.” In August, Mike finished his master’s and Jane finished her bachelor’s work. The ir future is uncer- tain, but they might go to France, where Mike would like to find a job as a liaison between “the pockets of Americans that live there” and the rest of the country. Would being out of college give them more time together? “Well, it will for a while,” Jane said. “I’ll have to drag him everywhere I go until I learn to speak French.” Roger Stinnett @ “DON’T SIT IN MY LAP. A teacher could see us,” Mike Brum- field warned wife Jane when she visited him in his office late one afternoon. “I think he’s getting used to it,” she said later. 47 A Married Student Couple Couples: On the Hill or at home Howard and Betsy Lowrey are Young at heart Photos by Mike Lawrence Howard and Betsy Lowrey have no children, but much of their lives is wrapped around youth. Lowrey, an assistant professor of industrial edu- cation and technology, and his wife, a secretary in the geology and geography department, work with youth at home, at church and at Western. The Lowreys help care for their 11-year-old twin nephews, Bryan and Barry Payne, the sons of Low- rey’s sister. The fi ve of them live together in Shaw- nee Estates. They also each teach Sunday school classes at the First Church of the Nazarene. And, of course, they work with youth everyday as part of their jobs at Western. The Lowreys met while riding a school bus in high school in Jamestown, Tenn. In fact, the school — York Institute — was built by Mrs. Lowrey’s father, World War I hero Alvin York. After his junior year, Lowrey joined the Army and served in Korea. After returning, he finished high school and eventually entered Western to study industrial education. “I was turned on to teaching by my industrial arts teacher in high school,” Lowrey said. He graduated in 1960 and earned his master’s in 1961. About five years later, he received word that Western wanted him to join a faculty, which he did. He is now working on his Phew} A CRAFT PROJECT by Phoebe Denton in Recreational Crafts I receives help from Howard Lowrey. The doctorate candidate teaches a wide variety of classes, making him “a clean-up man.” A Faculty-Staff Couple CHURCH SINGING GROUPS, suchas and husband Howard also teach Sunday The Troopers, for ages 4 to 11, occupy school classes at First Church of the much of Betsy Lowrey’s free time. She Nazarene. TWINS Barry and Bryan Payne, 11, eat dinner with their aunt and uncle, the Lowreys. The two boys and their moth- er have lived with the Lowreys for more than 10 years. A HIGH SCHOOL COURTSHIP has yielded 25 years of marriage for Howard and Betsy Lowrey. The assistant profes- sor and departmental secretary celebrat- ed their silver anniversary Sept. 6. Mrs. Lowrey, meanwhile, worked as a secretary for several years. She joined Western’s staff in 1970. She said she didn’t come to Western because of her husband, but driving to work together is conve- nient. A few things have changed their working routine in recent years, particularly the construction of the Environmental Science and Technology Building, where the couple works, and the renovation of the Industrial Education Building. ‘We have the same programs,” said Lowrey, who teaches industrial education and woodworking. “But it gives us more room. In the metal and woodworking area, we’re able to do more.” But it didn’t give him more time for personal projects. Although he has built a grandfather clock, tables, lamps and “various and sundry other things,” most of the furniture in their home was bought. “I don’t have time to make that much,” he said. ‘From the outside looking in, you’d think I would, but I don’t really.” Mrs. Lowrey describes she and her husband as “happy go lucky.” And they apparently are a happy pair: they celebrated their 25th anniversary last Sept. 6. “Some friends at church said, ‘Can we take over your house?’ ” and gave the Lowreys a silver anniversary party, Mrs. Lowrey said. The Lowreys don’t think being a “Western cou- ple’ is odd. “In fact, there are three other couples in my department that work here,” Lowrey said. “T don’t see anything unique about it,” he said. “It’s just a place to come to work together. But we like it — and Western’s been good to us.” Roger Stinnett @ STUDENT SECRETARY Karen Sweatt gets instructions from Betsy Lowrey, the secretary in the geography and geology depart- ment. Mrs. Lowrey has worked at Western for seven years. 49 A Faculty-Staff Couple db relanigeenemaesigscaien silat ¥ ‘i 3 “oe i ARR EN IAM ERR RH NE IOR ay ore tite CLOSE ENCOUNTERS Of THE SUN KIND In a year when most of the depressing news hit home, the enter- tainment world was ready with a list of escapes as broad as the — galaxy. Creatures from outer space were common box office attractions. Television paraded its heroes and heroines and debuted a prime ———™ time soap opera. Music uncovered new stars and continued to applaud several veteran music makers. Books were filled with mystery, confessions and life in the upper class. “Star Wars” led the other movies with a spectacular explosion of special effects on another planet for a ‘Bood guys versus bad e a oe guys shootout. Robots such as Artoo Deteoo and See Threepio were wisecrack- ing personalities in the plot. An imprisoned princess is rescued by the robots, a boyish hero and an ace pilot who challenge Storm Troopers and an evil Darth Vader for her freedom. Special effects were also dazzling i in “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” a $19-million, science fiction epic. This time, UFOs — visit earth and the sparks fly. Less flashy but box office favorites were “The Goodbye Girl, a romantic comedy by Neil Simon, “The Turning Point,” a drama revolving around the world of ballet, and “Saturday Night Fe- ver,” a simple story about life on the disco floor. oe favorites included “Julia,” “Annie Hall,” “Pete’s Drag- : ,” “Smokey and the Bandit,” and “The Spy Who Loved Me.” For the television audience, “Spiderman” and “Wonder Wom- an” leaped and crawled great lengths to rescue citizens in distress. — “Soap” was a satirical saga of middle class life while “Fantasy — Island” treated clients to a short trip to their dreamlands. “Holocaust” reminded America of the tragic side of World War II in a 92-hour series about the persecution and destruction of six million Jews ordered by Hitler. Theme songs from movies were on the charts, particularly : “Saturday Night Fever’ by the Bee Gees and “You Light Up My Life” by Debby Boone. Also winners were Fleetwood Mac’s Pear ouret Linda Ron- : stadt’s “Simple Dreams,” and the Eagles’ “Hotel California.” ELO’s “Out of the Blue,” Eric Clapton's “Slowhand” and Rod | Stewart's “Foot Loose and Fancy Free” were also hits. For readers, the pages were full of tragedy, competition and. horror. “The Thorn Birds” by Colleen McCullough is a romantic saga about a sheep-raising family and their encounters with tragedy after small glimpses of success and happiness. “Bloodline” by Sidney Sheldon is another family story. This time a young woman attempts to stay alive and in control of stock for a chain of drug companies. “All Things Wise and Wonderful” by James Herriot, “The Camera Never Blinks” by Dan Rather, and “Blind Ambition” by John Dean were also best sellers. It was all there — mystery, the forces of good and bad, love, ambition and dancing on a disco floor. Entertainment was a ticket, channel, album or book away. Connie Holman 51 SPLASHING CAMPUS FASHIONS ALL AROUND TOWN... Whether it’s a sophisticated college woman stylishly clothed in a dress and high-heeled shoes or a male student attired in corduroy slacks and blazer, local mer- chants agree that students on the Hill are setting the fashion trends in Bowling Green. Bill Green, manager of Headquarters Music and Boutique, said the fashion likes and dislikes of Western students affect his sales. “They set the fashion trends around here,” he said. “The high school kids see what the college kids are wearing and wear the same things b ecause they want to be like them. “A Western student is a little more edu- cated in the fashion world than the Warren County person,” he said. “They are from larger cities or know people who have bought things in the larger cities. They know what people are wearing in places like Nashville and Louisville.” Green said he believes about 60 per cent of his shop’s trade comes from Western students, although he does not cater spe- cifically to them. “We go toward the whole community because the college students aren’t here at Christmas or in the summer,” he said. “We go after the people in the 15-35 age group and this town has a large number of those people, including college students.” Green said the return of the feminine look for women and a sharp decrease in the sale of denim have been the major changes in this year’s fashions. “The feminine look is more popular than ever before,” he said. ‘You are seeing more and more dresses, whereas three or four years ago you could go to most any type of formal event and see people in jeans. “The denim look is beginning to wear out,” Green said. “People are buying more khaki and corduroy. We sell one to one on corduroy, khaki and denim, whereas jeans used to outsell them five to one. “The only big change for men will be plaid shirts,” he said. ‘Half of most lines are plaids. They go well with both khakis and jeans and will continue to be big in 75cm Jennifer Chester, manager of My Friend’s Place, agreed that Western stu- dents are fashion trendsetters and very im- portant to her store’s business. “We try to gear 70 per cent of our adver- tising to Western students as well as our sales and other big events,” she said. “The whole fashion trend in Bowling Green is set by the college students. We go on West- ern’s enrollment figures and the economy when deciding what to buy. At least half our trade comes from Western students.” Ms. Chester said blazers, stick pins and straight-legged pants are popular now. “T guess we've sold a million stick pins this year, or at least it seems that way,” she said. ‘The biggest things this past fall were the three-piece suits and blazers. We also sold a lot of shawls and peg-legged or straight-legged pants. “Sweaters were still popular, and there wasn’t that much change in the tops,” Ms. Chester said. Sam Hall, manager of Golden-Farley of Kentucky Men’s Shops, said his shop’s ap- proach to customers makes it less depen- dent on Western student trade. “In the early 60s the college trade was good and that’s actually how Golden-Far- ley got its start in Bowling Green,” Hall said. “The look that we’re going into now is the same look that was popular then, but in the late 60s and early 70s students stopped wearing these kinds of clothes. Our whole concept had to change. “We try to cater a little more to the whole community now,” he said. “We buy jeans and sportswear with college students in mind, but the bulk of our business comes from the 25-to 55-year-old guy who goes to work every day and has to impress his superiors. Hall said the return to a traditional look and the use of natural fibers rather than synthetics have been the biggest changes in men’s fashions. “The traditional look has always been there. It just has its peaks and valleys,” he said. “The past five or six years we've been going through a period where we've had a lot of changes like pleats and belts and other added things. “This year we have sold a lot of flannel and plaid shirts whereas three years ago we sold none,” Hall said. “Blazers have also made a strong comeback this year in the absence of leisure suits. In fact, we didn’t even have a leisure suit in the store this fall, and they have sold well over the past few years.” Ken Johnson, manager of Dollar Broth- ers Shoes, said his store’s business is also more community-based. “Definitely, I have to cater to the whole community because this is a family shoe store,” he said. “We do try to put an em- phasis on Western, but I can’t say that I focus on just Western even though we do get a lot of business from students.” Johnson said that shoe wear for men has gotten more conservative this year, while more feminine shoes have become more popular for women. “Men are going for a more tailored look in dress shoes with a lower heel,” he said. “Women have gone to the prettier style of shoe that flatters the foot and the leg: the heels are higher and slimmer. They’re not wearing anything clunky like the plat- form.” Johnson said the attractiveness of casual shoes has been played down somewhat. “There has been a lot of interest on the bottoms of the shoes and what they feel like,” he said. “Looks don’t matter that much as long as they are comfortable and a good value for the money.” _ Forest Haynes, a Louisville junior, said he buys the majority of his clothes in Bowling Green. (continued on page 54) 52 Fashion Photos by Tom Dekle NIGHT... FOR SEVERAL YEARS, turquoise has dominated college students’ jew- elry. But last year, gold returned to prominence, with stick pins particu- larly popular. The jewelry is from Zales. DINNER AT THE IRON SKILLET might mean formalwear. Stevie Benson and Mark Powell’s clothes are from Rabold’s. Karen Wilson and Clara Jean Taylor chose fashions from My Friend’s Place. DURING THE DAY... BLAZERS, a stalwart fashion item of the 1960s, came back for both men and women. Marsha Troutman shows a blazer’s suitability for wear in the classroom. Her outfit is from My Friend’s Place. 54 Fashion “The clothes here are a whole lot cheaper and they hold up just as well as the more expensive ones I buy in Louisville,” he said. “I buy my clothes mostly on sale. When a store has a name brand on sale, I go in and see if they have anything I really like. I don’t just buy things at face value.” Jenifer Lummis, an Owensboro sopho- more, said she believes certain stores sup- ply students with clothes they want. “To a certain extent some of the stores in Bowling Green have what the students want, but not.all of them,” she said. “T still buy most of my clothes at home, though,” Miss Lummis said. “It seems like I can find what I am looking for more easily there.” Dennis Kolb, a Louisville junior, said he believes some clothes in Bowling Green are overpriced. WITH SPRING comes blooming flowers, longer days and light-colored clothes. Amid a greenhouse’s lush- ness, Phylis Cottrell and Ibraham Abdul-Haq sport clothes appropriate for that welcomed season. “T think they have a good selection here, but the prices for medium-dress clothing seem to be too high,” he said. “I don’t buy that many clothes on sale, either. I have trouble finding things I like, and if you buy something saith something wrong with it, you can’t take it back.” Pt Cheryl Potter, a Bowling Green sopho- — more, said she often supplements store- bought clothes with home-sewn items. _ “T wait for sales around here if I’m going to buy anything,” she said. “Then if I can’t - find anything I like in the stores, I go to the material shop, check the pattern books, buy material and make something.” Although fashion trends may change from year to year, what Western students wear affects the economy of Bowling Green as well as what residents choose to wear. Robin Vincent @ SPRAWLED ON THE FRONT STEPS of Van Aeter Hall, Janet McGraw features a cowl neck blouse and clogs, equally suitable for class or more formal. sions. The clothes are her own. - AND | ON: EEKENDS! SPORTS PARTICIPATION and fashion have mushroomed among col- lege students. Heidi Miller, Mary Tougher and Brad Thomas wear sport- ing wear from String and Swing at a campus squash court. 4 WITH FOOTBALL SEASON came cooler afternoons, making sweaters both practical and stylish. Linda Wilson wears sportswear from My Friend’s Place and Pat Taylor wears fashions from Rabold’s. 55 Fashion 2acee 5[8ee Li-Ching and Tai-Fang Chan, ‘Taipei, Taiwan _ impossible. He hasn’t been home in three CUSTOM-MADE .... Although the Chans met in Taiwan, they did not marry until they moved to Bowling Green. “We had a completely Western wed- ding,” Chan said. ‘We want to learn West- ern culture while we’re here.” The Chans consider the social aspects of learning as important as the academic. “Practical experience is sometimes more important than the books,” Chan said. “We could buy the books and study them in Taiwan.” There is no traditional costume in Taiwan, according to Mrs. Chan. “The cos- tumes we're wearing were the traditional dress of the Ching dynasty 100 years ago,” she said. Mrs. Chan said she had no trouble ad- justing to English but her husband did. “It took a couple of weeks to get used to the way a professor talked,” he said. Chan said he believes it is the foreign si 3 ; students’ responsibility to approach their in i ! ——— professor if a problem with language de- : ’ hie velops. “Sometimes language is not the main problem,” he said. “It is personality, if a student is too scared to talk to the professor.” lothes may make the man, but for Pawandeep Singh Deepak of New Delhi, India, they also tell something about him, his religion and his class. The turban Deepak wears signifies that he is a member of the Sikh religion. Dee- pak wears the turban every day no matter where he is. The freshman hotel management major traveled half way around the globe to study in the United States because he wanted to excel in his field. “Hotel management has a lot of competi- tion in India and the courses are better in the United States,” Deepak said. He learned about American schools from. the American Embassy and applied to five or six schools. Western was the first to accept him, so he “jumped at it.” The language hasn’t been a major prob- lem for Deepak because he has studied English since age four. “I went to English schools and all the subjects were taught in English so the language was no problem,” he said. Social life required a little more adjust- ing. “India is pretty traditional and people here are much more liberal, especially in their social life,” Deepak said. Coming from a city of about 3,000,000 to a town the size of Bowling Green also caused some adjustments, but Deepak said the people here are friendly and helpful. or Western students who suitcase ev- ery weekend or at least once a month, __ the idea of not going home for three and a half years is unthinkable. _ For Bashiru Adebisi Talabi, suitcasing is bret Niger oe ae = 4 Af ae et LE Cis re 1S not much air se v, acn 4 Vasn t Seana een naaieil . i ee £ f | is tate 8 oe es Ms : ‘ ; — oe a Be ee , for ToT | Sc aeRO ates Motkor Oature’s Rainbow cont veled at the colorful leaves, but moaned when the freshly raked lawns were am- bushed by another leafy flood each night. Snow soon crept into the thoughts of students, and the first flakes were wel- comed a few days after Thanksgiving. Cer- tain that nothing could be as harsh as the winter of ‘77, students were ready to bun- dle up and enjoy a mild winter. But the coldest winter since 1883 dumped 36 inches of snow on the Hill, causing slip- pery strolls and dangerous commuting on icy highways. January brought a snowfall which con- tinued for 10 hours and caused the first of five days of canceled classes. Evening PADDED with layers of warm clothing, Connie Rog- ers tries to move a football away from Gail Smith, Vickie Hartsough and Suzanne Bomar. Frisbee throw- ing was also popular on snowy afternoons. Mark Lyons Loaal Youngsters Share GinduUAhnoods wich Glherr Big Brechers ae SiIscers HELPFUL HANDS of Big Sister Jan Mueller make rollerskate lacing a little less frustrating for Felicia Boyd. The pair rollerskate often and sometimes treat themselves to ice cr eam afterwards. Big Brothers and Sisters Photos by Debbie Gibson Thoughts of baking homemade fudge brownies, learning to hurl a heavy bowling ball or watching a basketball game for the first time release memories from every- one’s childhood. Thanks to some Western students, local children who might not otherwise share these experiences are creat- ing happy childhood memories with their Big Brothers and Sisters. Bowling Green’s Big Brothers and Sis- ters program helps provide friendship and guidance for children who lack family companionship. According to director Connie Barclay, college students play a major role in the volunteer program. “Western students are very important in two ways,” Miss Barclay said. “They are important as volunteers and they help pro- vide activities for the kids.” Almost one-third of the 70 volunteers are-Western students, and the Hill’s frater- nities and sororities sponsor activities such as Halloween costume parties and picnics. Volunteer Janet McGraw said, “I real- FAIRY TALES become more than fantasy as Jan Mueller and Felicia Boyd discuss the moral of “The Three Little Pigs.” Miss Mueller said she reads Felicia one or two stories a week. s ized how lucky I am, and I wanted to share with someone who needed my time.” The senior psychology major from Cadiz combines a full class load with a 15-hour work week. A Big Sister for two years, Miss McGraw said the relationship is re- warding. “Sharon (her Little Sister) knows so many things that I don’t,” Miss McGraw said. “She has a positive attitude on life and gives me a point of view I’m not able to see.” The hardest thing for Miss McGraw to learn as a Big Sister was communication. “It’s hard for me to remember that there are just some things she can’t understand,” the senior said. “She’s funny,” said Sharon Tanksley, Miss McGraw’s 11-year-old Little Sister, about her college pal. Tuesday is “their day.” “Tuesday must be her favorite day of the week,” Sharon said mischievously. For Jan Mueller, having a Little Sister is a fun way to relive her childhood. “I love being able to watch her have experiences that I had when I was growing up,” she said, watching her Little Sister, Felicia, 7, bowl for the first time at the university center lanes. “She might not get to do these (continued on page 66) A VETERAN BOWLER, Jan Mueller teaches Felicia Boyd the proper steps of the sport at the university center lanes. Using an 8-pound ball, Felicia bowled a 15 in her debut game. LESSONS IN NAPKIN FOLDING, silverware place- ment, cooking and godd nutrition accompany Felicia Boyd’s weekly candlelight dinners at the apartment of her, Big Sister, Jan Mueller. 65 Big Brothers and Sisters A FREE BIRTHDAY CAKE from Jerry’s Res- taurant is a treat for Felicia Boyd. But lighting a 66 Big Brothers and Sisters candle on the white cake burned a finger which had to be treated with butter. Big Brochers atic] BSis@elrs things if I weren’t here.” A senior therapeutic recreation major from Louisville, Miss Mueller said she spends at least three hours a week with her Little Sister. “We do all kinds of things. Right now we're studying manners,” Miss Mueller said. “Felicia has learned to set the table and answer the telephone correctly.” According to Miss Mueller, she became interested in the program through work at the Girls’ Club. “I found I enjoyed work- ing with children and I felt I had the time to give some love.” Western basketball player Trey Trumbo learned about the program from advertise- ments. “I thought it would be some thing I would enjoy,” said the Fayetteville, Ark., junior. Trumbo said he has little free time, but decided being a Big Brother was important enough to make time. “Time is hard to allocate,” he said. “But being a Big Brother is good therapy for me. I really enjoy working with kids.” Trumbo and his Little Brother, David, 11, get together once and sometimes twice a week. “He’s just like any other kid,” Trumbo said. “He likes running around. We go to a basketball game and he sits there for about 10 minutes and then he runs around the rest of the game. David's a super kid and a good person.” Western students are also involved in the administrative phase of the Big Broth- ers and Sisters program. Teresa Mosier and Pete Sheeran work in the office at the High Street Community Center. Miss Mosier is a senior social work major from Summer Shade doing field work with the program. One of her responsibilities is working with prospective Big Brothers and Sisters. ; “This is a learning experience for me,’ she said. “I love getting involved with young people. I was interviewed at several places for my field work, but this is where I really wanted to work.” Sheeran is a sophomore work-study stu- dent from Vine Grove who serves as a case worker. He helps match children and vol- unteers and then monitors those matches. “Working here has helped me decide on my major,” Sheeran said. “I’m almost sure I'll major in social work.” The Big Brothers and Sisters program benefits from Western students’ time and energy, but the college students involved agreed it’s a two-way street, and they like the traffic. Ul Cheryl Sharp @ DOZENS OF SMILES and good times are shared be- tween college student Jan Mueller and 7-year-old Feli- cia Boyd. Miss Mueller said she enjoys sharing her lifestyle and love with her Little Sister. illogg fg RED-SHIRTED BASKETBALL PLAYER Trey said David runs around the arena during most FINDING PROSPECTIVE Big Brothers and Sisters, matching them Trumbo and Little Brother David Crouch, 11, games they attend. Trumbo is a sophomore with children and monitoring those matches is the work of Teresa watch Western’s loss to Dayton, 80-72. Trumbo from Fayetteville, Ark. Mosier and Pete Sheeran, both Western students. 67 Big Brothers and Sisters 68 A student-centered home igar smoke spiraled through the early-morning sunlight that poured into Ron Beck’s office. The director of university centers was “philosophizing” about Downing University Center (DUC) when he declared, “We have the nicest stu- dent center in the state of Kentucky. And it’s one of the nicest in the nation.” Last year, Beck and the DUC staff looked both to the past and to the future to help give students “the feeling that they're a part of things.” The University Center Board Entertain- ment Series “developed into a return en- gagement of the most popular performers who have appeared here before,” according to Linda Winstead, program coordinator of the university center. Four of the five acts had been here be- fore, including Bill Monroe and his Blue- grass Boys, who played traditional blue- grass to an enthusiastic capacity crowd in Van Meter Auditorium Sept. 6, and the Mac Frampton Triumvirate with its “alter- native rock” sound that combined pop, Eric Hassler Center Board rock, classical, jazz and folk music for a small Van Meter audience Sept. 27. Mime Keith Berger entertained universi- ty center passersby in the afternoon and about 500 persons in Van Meter later on Oct. 6. Bourbon street music came to the Hill Feb. 23, when the Preservation Hall Jazz Band performed in Garrett Ballroom. The only new act was the Rod Rogers Dance Company, whose “Dance Poems: Black, Brown and Negro” performance in Van Meter March 7 coincided with the Black Awareness Symposium. The travel resource center on the third floor of the university center was “not as functional” in its second year, Ms. Win- stead said. “I think the main reason is that there is no staff member whose sole re- sponsibility is it.” She said she hoped inex- pensive weekend trips could be offered ina couple of years. Special events helped break mid-semes- ter monotony. Freakenstein’s Haunted Hoedown Oct. 31 honored Halloween and included costume and pumpkin-carving A MEMBER OF THE JUGGERNAUT JUG BAND plays a harmonica for a student audience in the uni- versity center lobby during Halloween. A haunted house, pumpkin carving and costume contests were also featured. contests, a magic show, horror movies and a haunted house. The traditional Hanging of the Green brought decorating and sing- ing to the university center Dec. 1. A Val- entine Day special fell on Feb. 14 and an Aprilfest included New Games and Gui- ness World Record attempts. Two 3-D horror movies, “Creature from the Black Lagoon” and “It Came From Out- er Space,” were perhaps the most un- usual of the year at the university center theater. Two first-run shows, “Star Wars” and “Rocky” drew the biggest crowds last year, although no movie “knocked the lid off,” according to David Gordon, staff assistant. “Usually we have one or two in a semester that stand out, but we just had three or four or five that did very well.” About 26,000 saw fall semester movies, Gordon said. About 5,000 came in three weeks of January, giving Gordon hope the spring semester draw would break the 29,000 attendance record. The fourth-floor recreation area did well BILL MONROE and the Bluegrass Boys opened the Center Board’s entertainment series Sept. 6. Originally scheduled to perform outdoors, the group was per- suaded by a threat of rain to strum and sing in Van Meter Auditorium. Ron Hoskins away from home last year, according to Tim Nemeth, who replaced Bill Lamb as manager of the rec- reation floor and first-floor craft shop. Lamb resigned in October. Sixteen Western students participated in the regional recreation tournament of the Association of College Unions Interna- tional in February. Thirty-five teams participated in league bowling, and a Rook tournament was held in conjunction with the All-Dorm Olym- pics in February. More electronic games and foosball tables were added, and more midnight specials were offered. There was also some looking to the fu- ture. The DUC staff prepared a student questionnaire concerning the entertain- ment series, recreation facilities, craft shop, theater and general facilities. Beck said if he could find out what students wanted from the center the DUC might develop into a “student union concept.” Beck foresees the day when DUC could house a deli and grocery on the first floor, or provide a series of minicourses ranging from fixing bicycles to traveling abroad. He said even a miniature golf course could (continued on page 70) TWO EXPRESSIONS OF mime artist Keith Berger are caught by a photographer's negative “sandwiching.” Berger's second appearance at Western in the past three years entertained more than 500 people in Van Meter Auditorium Oct. 6. David Frank 69 Center Board 70 A student-centered home cont. be built on the fourth floor. And Beck would like the University Center Board to expand to include all stu- dent activities, with subcommittees for areas such as concerts or the theater. “I'd EVEN MASQUERADERS eat dinner, so the Cards (Bonnie Payne, Kim Wimsatt, Debbie Fowler, Libby Peter and Melinda Monks) munched on sandwiches in the university center grill before competing in a cos- tume contest Halloween night. Center Board like to get activity programming out of the political process,” he said, referring to ASG. “We're still developing,” Beck said. “We've been improving since we opened.” And it’s still improving. Roger Stinnett @ MAC FRAMPTON and two fellow musicians per- formed a combination of pop, rock, jazz, folk and classical music Sept. 27. The group has given 300 con- certs in the U.S., Canada, Europe and the Near East. is 4 4 3 ‘ a a Lynn Wright SILVER TINSEL is strung onto a Christmas tree by Shu-Yung Lee in the university center grill. The Taiwan graduate student in counselor education dec- orated that tree while other students and staff mem- bers trimmed a tree in the lobby. Lewis Gardner . y ae “ if Ron Hoskins A crafty own the stairs and up a hall from the generally crowded lobby of Downing University Center lies an area where a person can turn an urn or customize a T-shirt. It is Western’s craft shop, and last fall approximately 800 persons aged five to 60 made use of the facility, according to supervisor Joe Buchanan. Buchanan, a graduate student in art, said most persons — about 60 per week — work with ceramics. Others spent their time with candle making, leathercraft, weaving, macrame, silk- screening, painting, sculpture, drawing and jewelry making. Informal classes, conducted mostly at night, offered instruc- tion in all the crafts, with weaving and ceramics the most popular. The turnout last spring was the biggest ever. Buchanan said the use of kits is discouraged. “We show how to take raw materials and use them for crafts.” Along that line, Buchanan occasionally supervises “clay digs,” to obtain the red clay used in ceramics. “The students dig the clay themselves, so it belongs to them,” he said. They dig the clay six months in advance of use to allow it to hideaway dry. Then the “slop method” is used. Water is added to the dry clay to create a liquid, which is screened to remove rocks and debris. Finally, the liquid is spread over plaster to dry into a workable substance. Buchanan also encourages the use of hides for leathercraft- ing, although kits are available. Craft tools are also available, reducing the cost of students’ projects to material costs. Although the classes were popular, some people took advan- tage of the shop’s open-studio structure. “It’s not just a place for art students,” said Bit Logan, a senior geology major from Ashland who works in the shop. “You can refinish furniture or anything. We have some kids building a Soapbox Derby car. “This is a place to relax and meet people,” she said, “and let off frustrations against your teachers.” Pam Wilson @ A COPPER ENAMELING PROJECT captures Bob Reeves’ concentration in the university center craft shop. The shop sponsored classes in sculpture, jewelry, silkscreening, leathercraft and weaving. Scott Robinson 71 Center Board 72 Commuters ON Thhl€ ROAD Photos by Scott Robinson t 7:55 a.m. the fight begins; 3,492 commuters race to find a parking space. Some travel five miles to campus; others, 30 or 40. But once they’re here, they all spend a lot of time and gas searching for a place to park. Most commuters claim that they must get to a parking lot by 8 a.m. to find a space — no matter what time their first class begins. “T have a little place where I can usually find a parking place,” Lisa Ellis, a Franklin junior, said. “There’s one disadvantage to commuting and that’s parking.” Even faculty members are not immune to the parking crunch. Pat Taylor, assistant professor of com- munication and theater, said that arriving after 8 a.m. can create a lot of trouble in finding a parking space. “Sometimes we take two cars,” she said. “My husband, a sociology teacher, will go in early and take our son to the lab school. “Then I leave just before my 10:25. I get out and he takes the car and parks it be- cause he doesn’t have a 10:25. I think that’s a good deal.” A 20-minute drive to campus means get- ting up early for Gary Hughes, a junior agriculture major. “I usually find a parking place easy if I leave by 7:15,” he said The drive to campus can also mean a lot of trouble — in time, gas mileage, and wear and tear. “I’m supposed to get 26 miles to the gal- lon,” Carla Durbin, a Beaver Dam senior, said. “Whoever put those stickers on cars (continued on page 74) A SLOW SHUTTER SPEED catches the turtle-paced lines of commuters searching for an empty space in Diddle Arena parking lot. The busiest time was just prior to 10:25 classes. A PHOTO ILLUSTRATION catches Sally Clark leaving the parking struc- ture after a day of classes on the Hill. The 3,492 commuters could also park in the Chestnut Street lot and in the Did- dle Arena lot. PANNING (moving the camera as the subject moves) leaves Warren County scenery a blur behind commuter Mike Lawrence as he drives to campus. The Brandenburg sophomore lives approxi- mately 10 miles from the Hill. 73 Commuters 74 Commuters A FAMILY FARM in Smiths Grove where there’s plenty of work to do is why Gary Hughes com- mutes daily to campus. He said he has to leave home by 7:15 a.m. to find a parking place. AGE doesn’t stop 32-year-old Laura Ann Durbin from sharing a bedtime story with dad Raymond, brother Brad (17 months) and mom Clara. Mrs. Durbin commuted from Beaver Dam t wice a week. Debbie Gibson ON THE ROAD... after they test drive them are big liars. It’s all a big hoax.” But Mrs. Durbin doesn’t have to com- mute every day. She lives in one of the home management apartments in the base- ment of Bates-Runner Hall. All home eco- nomics education majors are required to live there eight weeks to graduate. “I stay on campus every night except Tuesday during the week and I go home on weekends,” she said. Her mother takes care of the Durbins’ children, Laura Ann, 3%, and Brad, 17 months, in the afternoons. Mrs. Durbin’s hus band picks them up after work. “My husband is very understanding,” she said. “I’m an individual like he is. There aren't too many around that feel that way. I’m privileged.” Janet Kimbrough, a senior art education major, travels 40 miles every day from Cross Plains, Tenn. According to her, the “The hardest thing for me was commuting with no air condition- ing.” — Clara Durbin Beaver Dam drive gets monotonous. Another disadvantage is winter weather. “My husband brought me up here one day because it was so bad,” Mrs. Kim- brough said, “and we stayed the night in the Holiday Inn. We had a lot of fun. It was like a little vacation.” Mrs. Kimbrough said the campus was deserted the next day. “I walked into class and there was one guy in the classroom. We decided that they must have called off classes and got up and left.” Miss Ellis said her Corvette was like roller skates on the snow. “I didn’t get stuck, but I missed a couple of days be- cause I didn’t think it was worth the trou- ble.” “The hardest thing for me was last sum- mer when I was commuting with no air conditioning,” Mrs. Durbin said. “But be- fore the end of the summer we got a new car with air conditioning.” Not only does Mrs. Kimbrough com- mute to school, but she also commutes to work. She has a weekend job in Hender- sonville, Tenn., about 21 miles from Cross Plains. She also commuted for three years to a junior college in Gallatin, Tenn. “When I graduate they ought to give me a truck driver’s license because I’ve been driving so long.” Dawn Kemp A HUSBAND who is a supervisor for a general con- tractor is the reason Janet Kimbrough commutes 40 miles each day from Cross Plains, Tenn. Kimbrough commutes south to his job in Nashville, Janet said. 75 Commuters Close-up: Ken Dossey is an ambitious handicapped student who spends his time . Putting his world Ken Dossey’s focus on the world stops at four feet in front of him, but his ambitions stretch beyond his handicap and inspire a daily workout toward a college degree. “There’s no way to get around a handicap,” he said, “but a handicap is no more than what you make it.” So the business major and economics minor from Cave City is pushing to complete his education before the 2 400 vision in his right eye slips into total A MAGNIFYING GLASS makes minute type readable for Ken Dossey, a handicapped business major from Cave City. Dossey also uses a talking computer to do homework for his business and economics courses. blindness like that of his left eye. ' “My blindness is inherited,” Dossey said. “I always had trouble seeing, but I didn’t know I was legally blind until I tried to get a driver’s license.” His poor eyesight is a rare combination of coch’s disease, retinitis pigmentosis and cataracts, he said. Dossey’s doctor said he may lose all vision next summer, so the junior has ruled out post-graduate work. “I wanted to teach college, but instead I’ll go into THE FRONT ROW is where Ken Dossey sits in a marketing class taught by Dr. John Withey. Dossey said he looks for instructors who are good lecturers, and has sharpened his listening skills a great deal. Photos by David Frank in focus business. I’m tired of taking orders. I want to give some.” Dossey started college in 1972 but flunked English 101, and dropped out. “I didn’t know how to beat Western’s system,” he said. “I didn’t know how to get around and I never thought about talking to my teachers.” Instead, he worked and got married. Then his vision began dropping drastically. He was advised to get additional training, and he opted to return to college. “This time I was older and smarter. I beat the system now,” Dossey said. He is free from registration hassles and talks to instructors before enrolling in their classes. “I judge them on their attitude and what they say,” he said. “I ask what’s going to be expected and if I can have extra time to take exams. Most teachers cooperate.” Dossey takes notes in class with a magnifying glass, but never reads his textbooks. “They’re on tape, but it takes an hour to hear eight pages.” Instead, he reviews notes and memorizes. Sometimes he uses a tutor for math courses or those using dozens of graphs. His wife, Loretta, dictates his term papers while he types. Dossey said his only regret is that he can’t drive and must depend on someone else for transportation. But other extracurricular activities such as bowling, table tennis, tennis, golf and card games present no barriers. He is also involved in Nobody's Perfect, a local organization he helped form for handicapped individuals who want to educate the community and other blind people. “College has made me more aware,” Dossey said. “Courses like sociology teach you to recognize problems and try to take care of them. And I like working with people. I spend four hours a day on the phone working with this club to get information for a member or the group as a whole. It’s a very good cause. “I’m proud I’m in school, which is probably so for anyone,” Dossey said. “I thrive on accomplishments and the ability to do things and help others.” He said he detests sympathy. “It makes me mad to hear people talk to handicapped people like they're babies. There’s no difference between other people and handicapped people. You can get around any obstacle.” Connie Holman PING PONG in the university center is one of Ken Dossey’s extracurricular activities. He also plays ten- nis, golf and card games, bowls, and is a founder of an organization for handicapped individuals. 77 Student Profile Closeup: Dr. Georg Bluhm, an associate professor of government, is ... A German who possesses the 78 Professor Profile Lynn Wright Dr. Georg Bluhm recently returned to a country which once burdened him with a life of war and prison to help the United States, the country he now calls “home.” The associate professor of government at Western took a sabbatical last fall and returned to Germany to research its mining system, hoping his work would especially benefit Kentucky. The sabbatical was only the second time Bluhm has returned to Germany since 1966 when he came to America to teach at the University of Florida. “I was just 6 years old when the Nazis came to power in 1933,” he said. “I recall in the spotlights of my memory a couple AN UPPER LEVEL government course has Dr. Georg Bluhm lecturing about American foreign policy. The associate professor was comparing differences be- tween governmental operations. of huge political demonstrations. Where I grew up, in the middle of Berlin, the demonstrations were mostly by the communist party.” Bluhm said that like all boys in Germany he was destined to become a soldier. Before the war’s end he served in all three branches of the service, including a stint of air defense training he received as a high school student. “After school I was drafted. Since I was not terribly fond of walking I preferred the Navy. I was in it until the war’s end, but during the last month I was assigned to land warfare.” It was then he was wounded and captured by American troops. Although A TERM PAPER is discussed by Jeffrey Munroe, a broadcast and government major, and Dr. Georg Bluhm. Bluhm said he was looking forward to reading the Nassau, Bahamas, native’s paper. Lynn Wright ‘Great American Dream’ his hands are scarred, he believes he was lucky. “We were a bunch of naval cadets with no idea how to behave on land, especially against the well-equipped American units,” he said. “I was just lucky that my hands were wounded and nothing else.” The Americans released Bluhm after a brief period, but the Soviet authorities in Germany later confined him much longer. “The Soviets found that out I engaged in resistance against their policies, so they arrested me,” Bluhm said. “In September, 1946, I was sentenced to the usual 25 years in prison. “What the Russians were doing was another form of what the Nazis had done,” he said. “I was not anymore inclined to accept a second dictatorship since I found the first one bad enough.” Bluhm and thousands of other German political prisoners were released prematurely in 1956 after a number of diplomatic developments. He then received his doctorate at the University of Feiburg, married and worked for the West German state government as a civic education director. But Bluhm’s recent trip seldom touched on his past. Although he met old school friends and discussed THIS PHOTO of a bucket-wheel excavator is one piece of data Dr. Georg Bluhm collected while study- ing Germany's mining. These machines have a daily capacity of 200,000 metric tons and are never replaced. Courtesy of Rheinbraun Corp. governments and international problems with them, he concentrated his energies on learning the differences between mining in Germany and the United States. “Germany is much more densely populated than the United States and they have a very huge strip mining operation,” he said. “Germany has no oil and almost no natural gas. Almost everything depends on coal.” Bluhm said the differences in reclamation planning account for the success of the German system as opposed to the American system. “In Germany, by law, everything has to be taken care of by the companies, even the relocation of interstate highways,” he said. “They have regional strip mining reclamation planning boards with mine operators as members. “In the plan here you have little incentive for a reasonable cooperative effort,” Bluhm said. “When a coal operator wants to plan a new mine he must present a proposal for a mining plan, plus a reclamation plan to a state or federal government agency. He has no influence over what happens to it. “The result is that in a small area you will have 15 or 20 small mining operations and 15 or 20 totally unrelated reclamation plans,” he said. CLASSICAL MUSIC SETS THE MOOD for a late afternoon cup of tea for Marianne and Georg Bluhm. The couple hopes to soon obtain citizenship for them- selves and their five children. A different system of union and industrial relations in Germany, which allows a highly unionized coal industry to function without many threats of strikes, was another contrast Bluhm found. “The capital and labor serve in equal parts on the board of directors in Germany,” Bluhm said. “This might amaze Americans who say, ‘Why should the workers take part in the decisions of what I do with my money?’ But, after all, it’s their jobs. “In the end it brings much more economic reason into the procedures of the labor side,” Bluhm said. He hopes his research will be used to change this country’s reclamation procedures. “With all the technology rather well known in America the problem is how to organize the interactions between state government, federal government, local government, the coal operators and so on,” he said. “I think it can be done, but first it must be decided that it suits our purposes.” Another goal of Bluhm’s is to obtain citizenship for himself and his family. “There was always a dream in me about America, even as a child during the war,” Bluhm said. “So it seems that the ‘Great American Dream’ does belong to others too, even when they were wounded by others seeking it.” Robin Vincent Lynn Wright 79 Professor Profile Talking shop about journa Lecturers on the Hill took their audiences into the afterlife, the marketplace, to Cuba, a poet’s world, the Middle Ages and into recreational drugs. Dr. Raymond Moody Jr., author of “Re- flections on Life After Life,” spoke Sept. 21 about his encounters with hundreds of people who came near death, were believed clinically dead but were resuscitated, or who reported unusual things while dying. The professor of psychiatry at the Uni- versity of Virginia said he has no scientific proof of life after death, but “is convinced of survival of bodily death.” Several weeks later, Peter Myers, chief THE AFTERLIFE was Dr. Raymond Moody’s lecture topic Sept. 21. The author of “Reflections on Life After Life’ spoke about his encounter with people who have experienced another life while near death or dying. counsel for the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), told about 500 people that NORML must re-educate people about marijuana. He said the organization hopes to decri- minalize the use of marijuana, removing the penalties for personal use, purchase or cultivation. A CBS news correspondent who loves to tell stories about Americans he’s met and interviewed for his “On The Road” televi- sion series, shared some examples Oct. 13 in Garrett Conference Ballroom. Charles Kuralt said he travels in a 25- foot van in search of anyone with an attrac- Kd ism, tive way of living and an interesting story to share. “It’s a country rich in yarns and rich in people,” he said. “You could close your eyes and stick a pin in a map, go there, and find a good story.” “The Ethics and the Marketplace” was the title of Dr. Israel Kirzner’s Nov. 9 lec- ture about the role of the consumer in the marketplace. The acting chairman of New York University’s economics department spoke to more than 350 people. He said consumers are to blame for fraud and immorality in trade. He said they often contribute to the problems of the economy while they complain about them. Ron Hoskins JgWea Stevie Benson ANSWERING questions about her speech is poet Nikki Giovanni. Her Feb. 20 audience was mostly black. The author and teacher explained her use of life situa- tions, especially of black people as subjects in her poetry. PONDERING a question from the audience is CBS news correspondent Charles Kuralt. Speaking Oct. 13, Kuralt shared human interest stories he’s featured on his “On the Road” television series. . Ron Hoskins 80 Lecturers the supernatural and minorities Speaking about his experiences as an of- ficer in the guerrilla forces of Fidel Castro in the Pinao de Rio during the Cuban revo- lution, Neill Macaulay told a Feb. 9 audi- ence that the revolution was “a normal his- torical development.” “A revolution can best be defined by its leaders,” Macaulay said. ‘Fidel had to be the prophet as well as the chief, and he was. He was the symbol and the spirit of the revolution.” Black poet Nikki Giovanni spoke about her work Feb. 20. The part-time teacher said the subjects of her poems come from her past. She also explained how her writ- ing relates to common life situations, espe- cially those of black people. The Amazing Kreskin, a famed menta- list, mesmerized an estimated 1,400 people March 1 in Van Meter Auditorium. Deny- ing hyp nosis and the use of paid assistants, Kreskin used members of the audience to demonstrate his mental powers. On March 7 poet Gene Synder spoke about how memory becomes legend, leg- end becomes song and song becomes sac- rament. “Memory into legend, legend into song. Song is true poetics. With song we go through our life cycles,” he said. Dr. Madeleine Pelner Cosman, director of the Institute for Medieval and Renais- sance Studies at the City University of New York, spoke about “Women at Work in the Middle Ages,” March 22. Dr. Cosman is the author of “Fabulous Feasts: Medieval Cookery and Ceremony.” A self-proclaimed doctor of journalism, Hunter S. Thompson, lectured about his use of illegal drugs to write, his belief that journalism is totally subjective and his fear of America’s future. Thompson is a writer for “Rolling Stone” and the author of “Hell’s Angels.” Connie Holman DENYING THE USE of hypnosis or paid assistants, the Amazing Kreskin demonstrates his mental powers. An estimated 1,400 people watched Kreskin locate a hidden paycheck and intertwine three keys. Harold Sinclair 81 Lecturers Tim Millett and Steve Mathews graced Western’s stage as student actors and dancers. Soon after graduation, they moved to New York City, where they experienced unemployment and loneliness in a city of more than 7 million people. But they said the sacrifices were worth ... SOSOSSCHOOOS ©0960 0O6080 SOSOSOOSCCOD POHSOSDOOOES THE PORTRAYAL OF JESUS in the major produc- tion of “Godspell” in November, 1975, was one of Tim Millett’s theatrical roles at Western. He performed four times in children’s shows and three times with the WKU Dance Company. 82 Theatre feature Onn GS Talisman: Why did you decide to go to New York? Mathews: I decided to try New York be- fore I even went to college, but I knew I had to get a lot of training first. I came to NYC this past August and was here only two weeks before I got my present job. Millett: I’ve been in New York since Au- gust, 1976. I moved here because there were more opportunities for jobs in and out of New York. There were varied styles of dance and acting classes offered. Talisman: What kinds of jobs did you seek? Mathews: I auditioned for every theatre job I thought I was qualified for. That in- cluded repertory companies, touring com- panies, off-Broadway musicals, dramas and children’s theatre shows. Millett: Professional theatre jobs (dance and chorus work) ... : Talisman: Describe those tryouts and in- terviews.. Mathews: Most of the people I audi- tioned for were very courteous and respon- sive. I received callbacks for most of my auditions and found them enjoyable, if a bit nerve-wracking. There were usually at least several hundred people at each audi- tion, which makes it seem like a cattle-call, but it wasn’t too dehumanizing. Millett: All the auditions were rough and very competitive, with many others after the same position. Most of the time the directors and choreographers try to make you feel as “at home” as possible. Talisman: What jobs have you had? Mathews: This job with Prince Street Players is the only job I’ve had since being in the city. It is an excellent first job since it gave me my Actor’s Equity Card and the pay is good. Having my Equity Card en- ables me to try out for any Union-affiliated show. I have roles in two shows we alter- nate. I’m the Tin Man in “Wizard of Oz” and the Helper in “Cinderella.” Millett: One week after graduation I au- ditioned for John Kenley in Warren, Ohio. I was hired immediately to do two shows that summer — “Irene” with Jane Powell and “Damn Yankees” with Vincent Price. Two months work ... I moved to New York and auditioned for one month, then was hired as Dancing Curley for Chateau de Ville’s production of “Oklahoma!” in Boston. Three months work ... I returned to New York in January, 1977, and within a UL week was hired for the Broadway Com- pany of “My Fair Lady,” to go on national tour. Unfortunately, the show closed be- fore I ever got to do it. There were no auditions for two months. In April, I was hired as a dancer for a new show to be — presented at the Kennedy Center in Wash- ington, D.C. The show was “Neverland,” a rock and roll musical based on ‘Peter Pan.” Summer of ’77 I returned to Kenley Players and danced Abkar in “Kismet” with Hal Linden, and sang and danced in “Wonderful Town” with Cloris Leachman and Linda Kay Henning. Three months work ... Within a month after returning to New York, I chose to gamble on a new show, “Spotlight,” starring Gene Barry. It opens in Washington, D.C. in January and returns to Broadway in February. Talisman: What is your schedule? Mathews: My schedule is very hectic. I tour about two to three weeks out of every month, mostly in the Eastern U.S. We play mostly grade schools, high schools and civic centers, and have about one day off every two weeks with two days off for Thanksgiving and Christmas. We also play in New York and nearby the remain- ing days of the month. There are usually two to three shows a day. = Millett: My schedule now is free (prior to rehearsals for “Spotlight’”). My days are taken up with classes or sleeping in. My nights are spent seeing other shows or sleeping. And there’s a lot of eating thrown in there somewhere. Talisman: How did you adjust to the NYC lifestyle and pace? Mathews: Adjusting to NYC is not easy since I come from Bardstown, Ky. The pace is faster and the emphasis is on temporary things. Extremely ugly things exist beside extremely beautiful things. There are won- derful things to do if you have a little mon- ey. It will take me a year or two to adjust completely. Millett: The New York lifestyle helps keep me on the go so I don’t accumulate too much weight. I adjusted very well to © New York. I have learned that I must live | by myself, and that I must always have — some project going to help get me through © those stretches of unemployment. = Talisman: What was the biggest obstacle - you encountered? How did you cope? 00000000008 Mathews: The biggest obstacle to over- come is the feeling of anonymity that comes with moving to the city. Although I have a lot of friends here, it’s easy to feel lonely. The best way to handle the problem is to realize that most people feel it and that it’s inevitable for those who live in a some- what transitory existence without a lot of ties. Talisman: Do you regret going to NYC? Mathews: No, it was inevitable for me and I learn best through experience. - There’s not a better place for intensified experience in the world than NYC. Millett: I have no regrets of going to NYC. Due to previous experience living here, it is what I expected. Talisman: How well did Western pre- pare you for a career in the arts? Mathews: Western has an excellent theatre depart- ment, dance department and music department that work in harmony. That is rare since most departments don’t a long. I received my share of indi- vidual consideration plus personal concern from all my teachers. I was enabled to doa great variety of things at the time I needed them. Millett: Western prepared me as well as any other college could have, lacking in some areas, providing more than enough in other areas. WKU gave me plenty of stage experience (both dance and acting) which was very useful. Talisman: Compare your college career to the real world. Mathews: There is little comparison be- tween college and the real world. College is an incubated situation that allows you to study intensely in preparation for the work you will be doing. In the real world, the emphasis is on work. Both have advan- tages and disadvantages. Millett: My college career was much more intense. There was always some pro- duction to be working on. In the real world, you do one thing at a time. And it has to be good, or else your reputation will not be as good, so there will be less chance for being hired. No room for error. REHEARSALS FOR THE production of “Finian’s Rainbow” allowed Steve Mathews to work with chil- dren. Mathews performed in nine dramatic roles and four musicals, and danced in four shows at WKU. SOOO Seo oees 5 4bOO00004 000000000000 SSOSSOOOO O000OS0OC00O 080000000000 ee OOCOSOOOOCOCOCO Theatre feature AS eae bas Bt) ate ty A MIRROR SHIELD helps the Knight of the Mirrors (Homer Tracy) show Don Quijana (Richard Bitsko) that he isn’t the gallant Don Quixote, but just an eccentric old man in “Man of La Mancha.” Judy Watson A mushrooming theatre department presents more major productions with larger casts to involve the dozens of students who are . Se ee oe ed Larger casts, more major productions and long-range planning merged to allow doz- ens of stagestruck students to step from the wings into the spotlight of another the- atre season on the Hill. Of the six major productions, four casts had more then 25 people. One used 40. Students directed two major children’s productions. And the set design for the major musical took 18 months of planning. Lynn Wright THOUGH THEY’RE BROKE, Christopher Isherwood (Michael Thomas) and Sally Bowles (Elizabeth Lane) decide she must get an illegal abortion in “I Am A Camera,” a satire about Nazi Germany. “The fact that the department is growing was only one thing which was considered before the season was decided upon,” said Dr. William Leonard, professor of com- muncation and theatre. “We also considered such things as dra- matic and literary worth of the plays, whether or not it would be a challenge to the people involved and if the play would add to the variety of offerings over a four- year period.” The schedule is planned each spring after faculty members submit names of shows they’re interested in directing, Leon- ard said. The season opened in October with Brendan Behan’s “The Hostage,” directed by Leonard. It was set in 1958, in a disrepu- table lodging house in war-torn Dublin, where an 18-year-old cockney soldier is hostage for an IRA man about to be hanged. The three-act play with a 27-member cast ran for six days in Russell Miller The- GES TUG atre, and was filled with an array of charac- ters which treated the serious story not so seriously. Meg (Peg Miller), the common-law wife of Pat (Bruce Barton), runs the boarding house owned by Monsewer (H. Kevin Lan- ham). The soldier (John Kelly) befriends Teresa (Vicky Davis), a country girl who helps Meg with the chores. In November, Dr. Loren Ruff, assistant professor of communication and theatre, directed John Van Druten’s “I Am a Cam- era.” Adapted from the short story, “Sally Bowles,” by Christopher Isherwood, it was the basis for the musical, “Cabaret.” Ruff described it as a “comic, satirical work of life in Germany.” Sally Bowles (Elizabeth Lane) is a young English girl living in Germany during Hit- ler’s rise. Isherwood (Mike Thomas) and Sally meet and experience the light-hearted life of pre-World War II Germany. Isher- wood is “the camera,” and tries to see and understand what goes on around him. Frit Fritz was Bruce Barton and Natalia was Karen Hines. Fraulein Schneider was portrayed by Lezlee Bartholomy and Sally’s mother was Dorothy Howard. For the second consecutive year, West- ern’s Children’s Theatre presented “A Christmas Carol.” It was guest directed by Marci Woodruff Holland, who is complet- ing a Ph. D. in children’s theatre at Florida State University. She came to Western for the second bi- term of the fall to teach classes and direct the play. The production involved about 40 peo- ple, including two faculty members and six local children. The show’s seven pe rfor- mances ran in four days in Russell Miller Theatre. Another children’s play was the fourth major production and the first in the spring semester. Senior Mike Thomas di- rected “Tom Sawyer” with a cast of 28. “It was one of the quietest children’s shows I have seen,” said Thomas, director of two other children’s shows. “We played to really big houses that contained a large number of junior high kids. “This particular show was different from the other children’s shows I have di- rected,” Thomas said. “It was the first time I had a full budget to work with because this was consider ed a major production.” The two-hour play ran eight times in four days. Three departments pooled their talents to create the fifth major production, “Man of La Mancha.” The Dale Wasserman play ran four days in Van Meter Auditorium. It was set in a common room of a prison (continued on page 88) 85 Theatre 86 SOeeeeeese A PAIR OF ELLIPSOIDAL LIGHTS are moved from a supply room to the balcony of Van Meter Auditorium by Melinda Palmore. The senior theatre major was head lighting technician for “Man of La Mancha.” Eric Hassler Theatre ecoe eooe 3 23335 THE FRAME of part of the “Man of La Mancha” set is talked about by Keith Allgeier, Tom Tutino and cre- ator Dave Greer. The set’s planning began 1% years before the show opened. Lewis Gardner Eric Hassler A THREE-SIDED TV watched by two girls (Clara Phelps and Doris Bowles) is described by narrator Graham Bedinger in “Fahrenheit 451.” Guy Montag (Keith Allgeier) stands in the background. WHILE HELD CAPTIVE by the Irish Republican Army, English soldier Pvt. Leslie Williams (John Kel- ly) tells an Irish girl named Teresa (Vicky Davis) of his boyhood in “The Hostage.” Mark Lyons RRM gt 3-2 ARRAS P MOR BAB rice liitap sing 2) eI SN RN SURGES TE vault in Seville, Spain, at the end of the 16th century during the reign of terror of the Spanish Inquisition. The scenes of a play-within-a-play are lodged in various corners of Miguel de Cervantes’ imagination. Cervantes and his ON HIS DEATHBED with his beloved Lady Dulcinea (Peg Miller) at his side, Don Quijana (Richard Bitsko) remember his impossible dream as Don Quixote in the musical, “Man of La Mancha.” GT manservant acted out the adventures of Don Quixote (Richard Bitsko) and his friend Sancho Panza (Jack Pickett). “We had a large cast (31) for the musical, but a lot of good people were turned down,” Leonard said. “We just couldn’t use everyone.” Dr. Kent Campbell directed music and Beverly Leonard choreographed dancing. The “Man of La Mancha” set was de- signed by Dave Greer, a senior from Con- Lynn Wright nersville, Ind. “I began working on the plans about a year and a half before the production ran,” Greer said. “I had designed for a musical before, but the whole approach to this show was different. You weren’t limited to a specific type of set. “All the script called for was a stone prison and the director and I came up with the idea of a dugout earthen pit.” The set took seven weeks to construct. TWO WOMEN (twins Andra and Sandra Bradley) in 19th century Naples sing of their soldier husbands’ departure to war in the comic opera, “Cosi fan tutte.” “The main problem we had was expected,” Greer said. “We weren't sure whether we could build a drawbridge in Van Meter because of the physical facilities.” The season’s finale, “Medea,” was di- rected by Dr. Whit Combs, assistant pro- fessor of communication and theatre. Combs chose a new adaptation of the Euripedes play written by Robinson Jef- fers. He said the actors used a 19th century acting style. Medea (Vicky Davis) is discarded by husband Jason (Keith Allgeier) for a youn- er woman. Most of the play is devoted to Fas revenge on her spouse which includes killing her sons. In connection with his master’s thesis, Debbie Gibson H. Kevin Lanham designed the set and cos- tumes for “Medea.” He began set planning in November and construction in early March. The show’s 16 characters required 14 dif- ferent costume designs. “The set and costumes had an overall Greek look to the audience, although I am not able to specifically classify the style,” Lanham said. The season demanded more actors and TWO LADIES of the evening (Jane Brumfield and Sandra Lea) sing “O’Riley’s Daughter,” an Irish beer- drinking song, while an IRA guard (Richard Bitsko) watches in “The Hostage.” AFTER CLAIMING he wanted to marry her, Tom Sawyer (Tom Yates) succeeds in getting a kiss from Becky Thatcher (Debbie Stevens) during school recess in “Tom Sawyer,” a children’s play. Lynn Wright technicians, but in a department which doubled its size since last year, plenty of stagestruck students were in the wings and ready to step into the spotlight. Vicki Bagwell @ “WHAT DO YOU ASK OF ME?” queries Scrooge (Jay Gaither). “Much,” Marley's ghost (Craig Taylor) re- plies, and tells of the three spirits that will haunt the old miser in “A Christmas Carol.” Debbie Gibson 89 Theatre Each spring “studio productions” are directed by students in a theatre practicum course. They quickly learn to create ... Cha nL fhes Lome Caer J AUDITIONS cy, FR IFLES Boy Aide cdl Pay laar 14 te Dicom RY ee Pec ccomn ee ss Aesil rx | a} as Will not Cons lier wth Medea “tide 90 Studio Productions “yy One-Man Shows Photos by Lynn Wright CALLBOARDS post tryout announcements for studio productions as well as other theatre productions on the Hill. The difference is that the directors for studio shows are students. WATCHING Lezlee Bartholomy read for a part in “Visitors from London” is director Mary Ellen Alli- son. Miss Allison said she chose the play because she liked the “comedy with a serious subject.” Recorded on film are memorable perfor- mances of a young Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney, who, inspired by “the smell of greasepaint and the roar of the crowd,” cried, “Let’s put on a show!” In a short time the two stars and hundreds of M-G-M extras would assemble a Pater that was fun for everybody. ; Their image of fun and pageantry may be somewhat tarnished in the eyes o f six student directors who each produced a show in the spring. Enrolled in a theater _ practicum class, taught by Dr. Loren See Lo they had to select and direct a play — ie studio show” — and participate in Aa aN aspect of production. we It wasn’t an easy task, they ednuiieee Hf) Leslie Englehart directed the first show, oe “Mrs. Dally has a Lover,” performed Jan. _ 30-31 in Gordon Wilson Theatre 100. She was the first to conduct auditions, _ cast a show, design a set, block a play, — work with a technical crew and publicize her play. ae Miss Englehart had a two-member cast, BLOCKING is the first stage of rehearsal when the director decides on the staging of his characters. Jeff Vaughn, Kathy Ballard, Vicky Davis and Ronnie Veech work on “Come into the Garden, Maud.” A FRESNEL LIGHT is adjusted by Tracy Wilson i in technical preparation for “Come Into the Garden, Maud.” The freshman designed the lighting althou ne she has not studied lighting. ¥ ies nd found the situation worked both for nd against her. “We had no scheduling problems with two people, and we could spend a lot of time rehearsing together,” she said. “But it as really hard to come up with blocking pet variety of blocking — and everything took place in a kitchen.” Putting. together a play, Miss Englehart id, “is a constantly changing process, tight up to dress rehearsal. There’s a lot of mechange, a lot to give and take.” Tom Thielen chose to direct a lightheart- d comedy by Noel Coward, “Come into the Garden, Maud,” performed March 6-7. The play, a comment on the values and morals of different classes of people, _ showed Thielen the pressure time puts on “The final product turned out well,” he id, “but we needed a little polishing, and ere just wasn’t the time.” Tim Larson selected another Coward ork, “Shadow Play,” performed with ‘isitors from London,” which Mary Ellen Allison directed April 6-7. ‘ach director got the chance to discuss oblems with his shows, as well as meth- ods and theories of directing, in biweekly ass meetings. “It’s like group-therapy for us direc- rs,” Larson said. “We help each other and oye each other’s problems. aa learned you have to take over — to take charge — as a director. You have to ean respect (from the actors) professional- y, or you lose control.” “Visitors from London” is an excerpt from Neil Simon’s recent “California Suite,” and Miss Allison was attracted to it because “It’s a comedy with a serious sub- ject.” The show depicted the lives of two people involved in “the fame game.” They survive a series of painfully comical situa- tions because “each is a refuge for our dis- appointments out there,” an actor said. “We have to think objectively about all this,” Miss Allison said. ‘You're asked, at the end of the show’s run, ‘If you had to do the show again, what would you do differ- ently?’ ” The final productions were “Trifles,” di- rected by Phyllis VanCleave, and “The Bald Soprano,” directed by Sandra Lea, per- formed April 24-25. Miss VanCleave described ‘Trifles,’ a one-act drama, as an investigation of a murder in a Midwestern town. Several townspeople become involved in the probe, and a conflict of methods develops between the men and women. Certain little things the women notice help them gradu- ally solve the mystery — but because of human compassion, they withhold their discovery. Rehearsals were a mutual exchange. “I want the actors to find the characters on their own,” she said. But she des cribed the director's concept of the play as a circle,” and when an actor’s performance threatens the unity of the circle, the director has to take charge. Miss Lea wanted to show her audience what the Theatre of the Absurd was all about — thus her choice of Eugene Iones- co’s “The Bald Soprano.” This type of play is intended to “leave the audience con- fused, physically worn-out,” she said. “And it’s been a long time since that type has been done here.” The actors had to be aware of the highly energetic, almost violent part of the play, Miss Lea said. They did improvisations “to get across the nonsensical feeling — and tongue-twisters as vocal exercises.” Working with peers was seldom a prob- lem for the directors, and many found that a close cast made things easier. “I had no problems directing friends,” Miss VanCleave said. “The problems have been working everything around classes, work, other shows — you learn that you must organize.” As their teacher, Ruff, said, ‘Everything comes with experience — and they must earn their wings.” David Crumpler THE FINISHED PRODUCT is the play itself per- formed in Gordon Wilson 100. Felix (Ronnie Veech) receives a tongue lashing from Mrs. Conklin (Kathy Ballard) in “Come Into the Garden, Maud.” It’s child’s play Colorfully costumed and madeup actors, displaying infectious energy and frequent pantomime and slap-stick routines, com- pleted the character transformations neces- sary for child’s play. The season opened Sept. 16 with “Leroy and the Ark.” Directed by Beth Buchanan, the play concerns Leroy (Ronnie Veech), a lovable dragon who wants to be accepted as — but can’t prove he is — real. His attempts to board Noah’s Ark are thwarted by the Captain, Timothy (Ricky Reinle), a hippo. Also aboard the ark are a couple of frogs, Rowena (Janet Hanson) and Rupert (Dar- rell Harvey), who wants to be an alligator. Leroy, sans mate, is finally accepted by the other animals and is granted passage. William Glennon’s adaptation of “The Pied Piper” of Hamlin ran Sept. 23-25. The story concerns a piper (Randy Sledge) who plays a magic flute. The adults in Hamlin “treat the children badly and don’t pay any attention to them,” said director Jo Ann Holden. So the Pied Piper leads the children to fairyland and where they stay until the parents begin to appreciate them. The children were Bernice (Debbie Ste- vens), Bertram (Kevin Guinn), Dorothea (Sara Sa ndefur) and Dexter (Roy Owsley). Bill Hanna directed “The Frog Prince,” Oct. 7-9. The story tells about the escapades of Prince Mosnoff (Jack Pickett) who was turned into a frog by the snake witch (Vicki Odum). The frog prince and his faithful servant, Olaf (Ricky Reinle), escape the snake witch and encounter Princess Tavia (Mary Ann Major) and Nanny-coo (Holly Watts), her lady-in-waiting. NANNY-COO (Holly Watts) attempts to shoo the frog prince (Jack Pickett) away, thus foiling his at- tempts to get the princess to kiss him. The princess’ kiss will break the spell and restore him. Mosnoff thwarts the snake witch, and the princess’ kiss breaks the witch's spell. Carol Lynn Wright’s “Pegora the Witch,” Oct. 22-23, concerned a witch who has to do something evil to keep her pow- ers, said director Vicky Davis. Pegora (Jenny Fisher) has been ordered by the bad witch (Erin Brady) to kidnap seven sisters, named for the days of the week, from a nearby kingdon. She succeeds six times, but is thwarted by the court jester (Bill Hanna) when she tries to kidnap Sunday (Beth Buchanan). Pegora loses her powers, is forgiven and returns with the seven sisters to live in their castle. Directed by Mike Thomas, “The Won- der Hat” ran Nov. 4-6. The plot tells of two young lovers, Har- lequin (Randy Sledge) and Columbine (Me- linda Palmore). Columbine wants to marry and settle down, but Harlequin isn’t ready. Enter two peddlers, one with a wonder hat and the other a magic slipper. Columbine steals the slipper, which makes men fall in love with her, in hopes of making Harlequin jealous. Harlequin steals the hat and becomes in- visible so he can spy on Columbine. The wonder hat remains stuck on Harle- quin’s head and the slipper on Colum- bine’s foot, and there isn’t an ending to the story. The audience was invited to create its own. “Hansel and Gretel,” ended the season Nov. 18-20. Director Steve Chambers said the adap- tation is based on German folksongs and dances. Hansel (Janet Hanson) and Gretel (Vicky Davis) captured the hearts of the children as only fairy tales do. Kathy Whitson @ FRIGHTENED by the witch (Anne Hale) as she tries to lure them into her gingerbread house to eat them, Hansel (Janet Hanson) and Gretel (Vicky Davis) try to elude her grasp. Lewis Gardner Lynn Wright — YOUNG THEATRE GOERS sit entranced as — they watch Pegora the Witch (Jenny Fisher) on — stage. Her costume was trimmed in bright col- _ ors to prove that Pegora wasn’t really bad. Debbie Gibson SINGING for six of the seven sisters, named for the days of the week, the court jester (Bill Hanna) entertains them before they are kidnapped by Pegora the Witch. FLANKED by “The Wonder Hat” cast, the peddler (Richard Bitsko) tells Columbine of a magic slipper which when worn will make men fall in love with her. Lynn Wright Lynn Wright Rie ie a In his first season of conducting the Western Kentucky Orchestra, Dr. Leon Gregorian commuted weekly from his Owensboro home, bringing a formula for building a reputable orchestra on the Hill as .. . Photos by Jim Burton FA Conductor of Note A hush descends on the audience. The university choir is seated. In front of them, the musicians have noisily tuned their instruments. Their conductor briskly moves to the charcoal-colored music stand at center stage. The heels of his shiny black shoes click as he bows to the applauding students, faculty and community folk. Turning, Dr. Leon Gregorian addresses the orchestra. With a swift lift of his baton, the auditorium and its occupants are lost in the sounds of strings, woodwinds, brass and percussion instruments. Handel’s “Messiah” has begun. Last year was Gregorian’s first at Western, but he is experienced where music is con- cerned. He also conducts the Owensboro Symphony Orchestra, a youth orchestra in Owensboro and the University of Evans- ville’s orchestra. Gregorian grew up with music. “I didn’t have much choice,” he said. “My grandfa- ther was a musician. My father was a musi- cian, and there were some musicians on my mother’s side of the fam ily, too.” At 6, Gregorian had his first piano les- son. Hundreds of lessons and several recit- als later, he attended the Boston Conserva- A NO-NONSENSE conducting style is what Leon Gregorian uses with the Western Kentucky Sympho- ny Orchestra. “Any motion must have a purpose. I beat with my right hand and use my left for cuing entrances, dynamics and phrasing,” he said. tory of Music as a high school student. At the New England Conservatory of Music, he earned a diploma in piano, the highest performance prize and a bachelor’s degree in music. He earned his master’s and Ph.D. at Michigan State University. After graduation in 1971, Gregorian be- gan job hunting. “I had two possible posi- tions as a piano teacher, but my secret de- sire was a conducting position,” he said. “Regardless of what it was, I would have taken it.” An American Orchestra League conduc- tor informed him that the Owensboro Symphony needed a conductor. ” ‘Where is Owensboro,’ I thought. The farthest thing in my mind was to end up in Kentucky,” he said. But a whirlwind weekend of meetings and auditions brought him to the Western Kentucky city of 54,000. His position as a commuting conductor for the Western Kentucky Symphony Or- chestra was also a surprise, he said. Dr. Wayne Hobbs, head of the music department, asked him to consider con- ducting the university orchestra. After “two or three weeks of examining every- thing,” Gregorian accepted. The conductor came to the Hill last fall and found relatively few music perfor- mance majors and string musicians. “The majority of the majors in the de- partment are music education majors,” Gregorian said. “That’s wonderful because it prepares young people for teaching ca- reers. But by the same token, the depart- ment lacks performance majors, which are important to raise the caliber.” Gregorian brought string musicians from the Owensboro, Evansville and Bloomington, Ind., orchestras. But it was not a perfect solution. “It places strain on the budget to import players to fill the string section, but it’s so essential,” he said. The best answer is a resident string quartet, Georgian said. “It’s a must. These people will attract students because of their reputations and concerts.” Gregorian said he’d like to see the or- chestra reach these goals in a few years. “What we'd like and reality are two differ- ent things,” he said. “But I think it can happen in the next five to eight years.” In the meantime, Gregorian is shaping and strengthening the university orchestra with his formula. It began with autumn auditions. “I conducted the auditions with three other faculty members,” he said. “My pur- pose was to get acquainted with the stu- dents, hear them, evaluate each and decide where each should be seated (musicians are ranked according to their skill). It also told me what repertoire I should play with that orchestra.” He plans to continue fall auditions. “I want to insure that each student feels an opportunity to move up in his section or to assume a solo role. It also keeps them on their toes.” Gregorian said there is little position shuffling during the regular season. “I don’t believe in musical chairs,” he said. (continued on page 96) 95 A Commuting Conductor ASR eel (= _———__, SE RIOD ees sea o) ae out which entertainers students Shanted became a big, they weren the} groups people deed: to see.” e word bei Ron Beck, assistant dean of student af- ert season at Western. id students prefer 1976-77’s Chicago, Barry Manilow, Crofts, Wild Cherry, Rufus and Jimmy Buffett ylon Jennings, Charlie Daniels, Black Oak Arkan- - sas, Kenny Loggins, Dave Mason, Atlanta Rhythm Sec- ion Brick? Statistics say yes. - During the 1976-77 school year, more than 30,000 stu- _ -dents attended campus concerts. But during 1977-78, ap- proximately 15,600 students came to the concerts. _ Concerts in 1976-77 grossed nearly $30,000, but ones in 1977-78 lost more than $20,000. _ Although the statistics are discouraging, those who an as concerts seemed to enjoy what they saw and ear = Cheryl 5 soe a Harrodsburg freshman, was one of . Z s eed | Or rerr7 y danc er puZzz . Attendance , rn |} l 1! t= YW YU id VU LY the 2,916, who attended the Kenny Loggins-Dave Mason concert in Diddle Arena Nov. “Oh, I just love ‘em to deat friends at the concert and The first concert, with W Jesse Coulter, was almost secretary were arrested in N F ing to possess cocaine But Jennings ¥ was permi itt red to con his ing and appeared Sept. 9 before an audience of a 5,000. Ms. Coulter opened the show with a 30-min followed by a 20-minute intermission and then band Waylon. Opening with “Are You Ready for the Coun try?” Jen nings continued a repertoire including tunes for new (continued on page 100) ALTERNATIVE ROCK came to the Hil _ Mac Frampton and his Triumvirate appeared as part of the University Center Board Series. Their music ranged from Paul McCartney to Bach. aio ee ye ee a came | 4% + i nm. i a a Ron Hoskins Jennings’ an _ siderabl ni num album, “ ‘e | s od oncerts SOME FEARED Waylon Jennings’ cocaine bust would cancel his con- cert at Western. But the joint recorder of the platinum “Outlaws” album HEUTE and wife Jesse Coulter appeared and played before about 5,000. ae rk ROLLER COASTER RUYTIAMS con ing a new effort, “Midnight Wind,” and featured several songs from the album. Songs such as “Long-Haired Country Boy,” “The South’s Gonna Do It Again,” “Orange Blossom Special,” and “I’m A Good Ol’ Boy,” keep CDB fans coming back, and they were there on Homecoming eve. The Dave Mason-Kenny Loggins concert for Nov. 8 had high expectations for many but, unfortunately for the university, also kept a large number of people at home. Only 2,916 showed for the concert, which cost the university about $31,200 and nearly eliminated a free concert. The concert may have been too close to the Homecom- ing festivities for some. For others, their concerts at Van- derbilt and Louisville might have been satisfying enough. Despite the low turnout, Mason and Loggins gave crowd-thrilling performances. Both were riding the crests of their new gold albums. Mason featured several tunes from “Let It Flow,” while Loggins combined old Loggins and Messina favorites with new songs from “Celebrate Me Home.” Mason came aoe for one encore, while Loggins was cheered back for three. Then, on Feb. 14, the Atlanta Rhythm Section again aa to appear at Western bringing fellow Atlantans, Brick. Brick opened the show in a funky style. Featuring the A FRESH GOLD ALBUM, “Celebrate Me Home,” didn’t help Kenny Loggins draw a large crowd. Appearing with Dave Mason, the former Loggins and Messina partner drew only 2,916 but got three encores. DOUBLING UP as keyboard player and pianist, jazz musician Ramsey Lewis plays at the free Ramsey Lewis Trio concert April 18. The concert, drew about 3,300 and was ASG’s last of the year. hits “Dazz” and “Dusic,” as well as other cuts from the albums “Good High,” and “Brick,” the group had the audience on their feet, chairs and even each other. But most of the audience, satisfied with a digestible amount of boogie, headed for the exits before the Atlanta Rhythm Section climbed to the stage. (continued on page 106) COUNTRY ROCKER Charlie Daniels and his band came to Western’s rescue when the Atlanta Rhythm Section canceled its Homecoming concert. ARS later rescheduled a performance on the Hill. Jim Burton 105 Concerts ROLLER COASTER RUY TAINS cont But when ARS took the stage, the former session musi- cians exhibited their own style of Southern rock which has given them the reputation of one of the best bands to emerge from the South. ARS had recently enjoyed the commercial success of their previous album, “A Rock and Roll Alternative,” and a single from the album, “So Into You.” The group was promoting a new album, “Champagne Jam,” but only featured one song from it at the Valentine’s Day concert. The university lost about $12,000 from the ARS Brick concert, when only 2,346 tickets were sold. But the loss didn’t prevent a free spring concert with the Average White Band and the Ramsey Lewis Trio. AWB featured a numer of selections from their latest album, “Warmer Communications,” but also pleased the crowd with cuts from “Soul Searching,” “Cut the Cake,” and “The Average White Band.” The Scottish group charged $10,000 while the talent fee for the Ramsey Lewis Trio was $5,000. One leftover statistic puzzled those interested and per- haps even those disinterested in the complex concert situ- ation. MACHINE FOG AND FUNKINESS make up part of the show offered by Brick, the warmup group for Atlanta Rhythm Section. When Brick left the stage, most of the crowd left the arena. Jim Burton | Dei gy . Ss So res?) I w . q, ) Sr j D The broad, toothy smile of an ex-Georgia peanut farmer seemed to ripple across America in 1977 and early 1978, creating an air of critical retrospect and speculative analysis. America slowed its rapid spiral- ing pace long enough to look into the past with dreams of preparing for the future. The nation sought cures. And with Amer- ica, went the world. Some bemoaned the recent trends in American society. A columnist wrote of the symbolic deaths of two of the century's greatest entertainers, Elvis Presley and Bing Crosby, within two months of each other in late 1977: “Crosby was a lagoon of composure dur- ing Depression and war. Presley was pink Styrofoam dice hanging from the rear view mirror, and a Lucky Stripe pack rolled up in his T-shirt sleeve ... Crosby, 73, died playing golf. Presley died at 42, ruined by calories and chemicals. The contrast be- tween the manners and music of Crosby and Presley suggest the coarsening of pop- ular culture.” Others weren’t so pessimistic and point- ed toward world events as attempts to un- complicate a complicated world. The major continuing news story involved the Middle East and Egyptian president Anwar Sadat’s plea for peace. The rapid fire political events began Oct. 1 when the United States and the Soviet Union issued an unprec- edented joint statement urging Israel to recognize “the legitimate rights of the Pal- estinian people.” In mid-November, Sadat accepted new- ly-elected Israeli prime minister Menahem Begin’s invitation to address the Israeli Knesset on the question of peace in the Middle East, and particularly the critical issue of Israel’s occupation of Egyptian ter- ritory in the Sinai taken during the 1967 Six-Day War. Sadat’s visit to Jerusalem marked the first time an Egyptian head of state visited Israel. Sadat spoke of a “new beginning” and “the end of sorrows” in the Middle East, and in a major diplomatic breakthrough, recognized Israel’s right to exist. But the nations disagreed on Sadat’s call for a Pal- estinian homeland and for Israel’s with- drawal from all occupied Arab lands, in- cluding Old Jerusalem. Sadat’s peace efforts met with disfavor from the hard-line Arab nations. On Dec. 5, Egypt severed diplomatic relations with Syria, Libya, Algeria and Southern Yeman. Sadat called the Arab nations “moronic dwarfs.” 108 News Begin made a reciprocal visit to Cairo on Christmas Day, but two days of summit meetings ended in disagreement on the is- sues of a Palestinian state and Israel's withdrawal from the Sinai, the West Bank of Jordan and the Gaza Strip. The peace talks stalled. In late December, President Carter trav- SUNDAY NIGHT FIRE rages in the third floor of the Elks’ Building on Main Street while a firefighter vain- ly sprays water. The fire resulted in the razing of the building. THE NEWS HIT HOME| eled to six nations on a nine-day tour de- signed to dramatize the United States’ in- terest in the “third world” and to restore the Middle East peace talks. On Jan. 4, Carter and Begin met in the desert in an attempt to move the peace conference for- ward. Four days later, Carter announced (continued on page 110) A TANK CAR leaking poisonous gas is checked by Bowling Green firefighters after a 10-car derailment of an L N train in April. The leak prompted evacuation of about 1,000. Jim Burton Lewis Gardnei THE NEWS ... his support of a limited-choice referendum in which the Palestinians living in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip could vote on their political status. The compromise proposal was rejected and the peace talks stalled until a renewed effort by Begin was initiated in mid-March. On the eve of a scheduled departure by Begin to Washington to confer with Carter on the resumption of the peace conference, Palestinian terrorists attacked two civilian buses near Tel Aviv, killing 37 persons in the worst terrorist attack in Israeli history. The raid was an attempt to halt further peace talks between Begin and Sadat which ignored Palestinian interests. Begin canceled the conference and emo- tionally said, “We shall not forget.” Israel retaliated several days later with Operation Stone of Wisdom — the wide- spread invasion of southern Lebanon de- signed to destroy the Palestinian guerilla bases in the area. Within 18 hours, the Israelis had destroyed the bases and estab- lished a four-to six-mile buffer zone along the entire Israeli-Lebanese border. More than 2,000 Arab civilians were killed. A Carter-Begin summit in early April was a complete failure and the Middle East remained a sensitive area even after French peace-keeping troops from the United Na- tions supervised the gradual Israeli with- drawal from southern Lebanon in the late spring. In mid-May, the U.S. Senate approved the sale of jet fighters to several moderate Arab nations — a move considered by many to signal a growing pro-Arab feeling in the United States. Another controversial foreign policy is- sue was the Senate’s ratification of the Pa- nama Canal treaties in March and April. The treaties, signed in Washington in Sep- tember by President Carter and Panama- nian “Supreme Leader” Omar Torrijos, provides for a period of transition until the year 2,000 when the full control of the ca- nal passes to Panama. A second treaty es- tablishes the permanent neutrality of the canal and the joint responsibility for its defense by Panama and the United States beyond the year 2,000. The treaties were ratified by the Panama- nian people in a national plebiscite in Oc- tober, but Senate approval waned over the issues of the United States’ right of priority passage in wartime and to the defensive power over the canal. After key amend- ments by Sen. Howard Baker of Tennessee, both treaties passed by one more vote than the two-thirds majority required. A major domestic problem was the 109- day coal strike by 165,000 members of the United Mine Workers. The strike, the na- tion’s longest in history, didn’t provoke the mass power shortages and employee layoffs that were predicted, but power cut- backs were ordered and numerous schools were forced to limit classes and extend 110 spring vacations. In Kentucky, the coal trouble began in the summer with a wildcat strike protest- ing a decision to reduce the medical bene- fits provided by the health and retirement funds of the bituminous coal industry. In October, state police arrested a large num- ber of miners and charged them with vio- SHORTLY AFTER DAWN the day after the United Mine Workers went on strike in December, union miners from Muhlenburg County talk with two inde- pendent miners at a mine near Morgantown. lating a court order limiting picketing at mines. In early January, the murder of a retired picketing miner in eastern Ken- tucky resulted in widespread violence and hundreds of arrests. President Carter invoked the Taft-Hart- ley Act in mid-March ordering the miners to return to work, but the order was ig- A CONVOY of trucks carrying coal from an indepen- dent mine in Butler County grinds up a hill en route to a weigh station near Morgantown. State police escort- ed such convoys during the UMWA strike. nored. The UMW finally accepted the management's proposal in early April. The proposal, the third given to the union, granted most of the strikers’ demands, in- cluding a three per cent wage increase over three years, an annual maximum charge of $200 for medical care to miners’ families and a $50 pension increase to $275 for most retired miners. The proposal was accepted by the rank and file by roughly a 14,000- Vv margin. ote marg (continued on page 112) Bruce Edwards THE NEWS ... A recurring theme in American foreign olicy was President Carter’s insistence on fate rights. On Oct. 5, Carter signed two international covenants of human rights, calling for all nations to recognize such needs as freedom of religion, the right to an education, the freedom of speech and the rights of the people to assemble and be provided health assistance. The major domestic scandal involved President Carter’s Georgian friend, Bert Lance, who resigned as director of the Of- fice of Management and Budget Sept. 21 after a lengthy investigation of the bank- er’s business policies. Senate investigations showed extensive SOME OF THE FIRST of more than 270 tractors that comprised a 5-mile tractorcade Dec. 16 roll along Scottsville Road. The caravan wound through town before passing the Western campus. overdrafts and unusual loans on Lance’s record as president of two Georgia banks. Lance continually admitted to no wrongdo- ing, and new evidence late in the spring seemed to indicate that Lance’s banking practices were ethical and legal. Another major scandal involved Tong- (continued on page 114) WITH A SIGN, a protesting farmer invites someone to take his place. His tractor was parked at the Scotts- ville Road tractor dealership where Bowling Green’s December tractorcade began. 4 02 per four G4 hrs per week Country cousins drive a point home for city slickers The city slickers’ country cousins came to visit them last fall, but they didn’t sip tea and nibble crackers. Instead, the farmers rolled in tractorcades to protest the middle- man’s increased profits at their expense. They claimed that greedy middlemen are making it hard to stay on the farm and earn a living with the inflated costs of farm machinery and fertilizer. They also wanted the consumer to realize the importa nce of the farmers who feed them daily. Dozens of Western students grew up on farms, farm their own land or study agri- culture. Some supported the strike; others didn’t. Debbie Bunch, a junior physical educa- tion major from Glasgow, said her family supported the strike but didn’t get directly involved in the protest. “The strike showed the needs of the farmers and the country,” she said. “By demonstrating, the farmers’ power and needs were recognized by the consumers. It didn’t last long enough, but at least the people said, ‘Maybe we ought to listen.’ ” Miss Bunch lives on a Glasgow farm that has been in her family 50 years. To- bacco and hay are the main crops. She said the problems are leading many young people away. “If there’s a mass movement away from farms, farmers can’t produce enough food. The country will “When it hits a crisis point, things will turn around and get better. But things will get worse before they get better.” — Debbie Bunch have to import food from foreign coun- tries.” Miss Bunch said college hasn’t convert- ed her into a city girl. “Farm people have a sense of value of their land,” she said. “People who grow up in a city don’t appre- ciate the land. Country people have a feel- ing of freedom you don’t get in the city. You're never really alone in the city.” But Miss Bunch said even with a farm’s ood points, one has to be realistic and ook at the serious situation. “It’s going to get worse for farmers and consumers,” she said. “Prices are going to keep going up, but the excess is going to the middleman. When it hits a crisis point, things will turn around and get better. But things will get worse before they get bet- ter.” Tim Cottingham, a freshman agriculture major from Sebree, said his family didn’t support the strike. They farm 1,000 acres in north Webster Co. “T felt the strike was radical and wouldn’t do any good,” Cottingham said. “My dad is a county leader with the farm bureau. They believe in lobbying for better agricultural policies. They didn’t see that the strike could do any good. “The strike was good, but it was carried out too far. I don’t see how throwing eggs at anybody is elping.” — Johnny Eubank “The strike helped in that it gave people more knowledge of what’s going on. It’s helped indirectly, but not directly. We need price increases on commodities and lots of other things.” The freshman said he plans to return to farming after completing his studies, al- though it’s a shaky business. ! “T have brothers and sisters who don’t want to go into farming. So that left me in line for our farm (in his family for three generations). I didn’t want to walk away from it.” Johnny Eubank, a junior agriculture ma- jor from Gamaliel, said his family farms dairy cattle and didn’t see a need for such an “overboard” protest. “At first, it seemed like a good thing, but they asked for too much,” Eubank said. He said dairy farmers have voiced their problems through the Dairymen Corpora- tion. “But the grain, beef cattle and swine farmers have no voice.” Eubank said machine, feed and property costs have skyrocketed, discouraging those without relatives who are farmers or those with little cash from investing in a farm. Consumers will soon learn the impor- tance of the farmer, Eubank said, because of decreasing acreage of farm land and a population growth. ‘They have to eat,” he said. “The strike was good, but it was carried out too far,” Eubank said. “I don’t see how throwing eggs at anybody is helping. And when the tractorcades went through town, the consumers were sitting in their cars upset. They saw all the farmers’ big ma- chinery with air-conditioned cabs and lux- uries. The farmers wasted a lot of fuel and wear and tear on their machinery.” Connie Holman 113 News THE NEWS... sun Park, a Korean businessman and lob- byist. Investigations showed that Con- gressmen accepted kickbacks from South Korean lobbyists in return for promises to support legislation favorable to South Ko- rean interests. Park was indicted in September for giv- ing gifts and illegal campaign contribu- tions to about 25 Congressmen. As the in- vestigations by the House Ethics Commit- tee, led by former Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski, continued into the spring, indications seemed to show that several million dollars were given by South Kore- an agents to more than 150 Congressmen in an attempt to gain favorable votes. Another national controversy involved the right of the British and French Con- corde supersonic jetliners to land in the United States. In October, the first Con- corde landed at Kennedy International Air- port after numerous court suits and at- tempts by environmentalist groups to block the landing. Action was also taken on clearing the way for the Concorde to land in 13 other U.S. airports. A national uproar was created in the fall when the federal government announced that it was removing Saccharin, the last non-nutritive sweetner available national- ly, from the market. The sweetner, linked SUPPORT FOR FOOD — that was the trade a woman coal miner, her son and thousands of striking miners made with farmers at a Central City rally in March. It was designed to show the two groups’ unity. Jack Corn QSEE_—— eS eS to cancer by some studies, was left on the market pending extensive testing. In the field of law, the Supreme Court heard the so-called Bakke Case in Wash- ington in October, but hadn’t ruled on it by late spring. The case, the most publi- cized and important civil rights case since the Brown vs. Board of Education of Tope- ka anti-segregation case of 1954, involved the claim by a white student, Allen Bakke, that he was denied acceptance to a Califor- nia medical school because of his race. Bakke claimed less-qualified minority stu- dents were given admission to fulfill affir- mative action quotas. The case initiated the important “reverse discrimination” issue. Several important scientific advance- ments highlighted the year. In August, the Soviet Union announced that its nuclear icebreaker, Arktikea, reached the North Pole to become the first surface vessel to break through the Arctic ice pack. In the fall, the United States launched Voyages 1 and 2 on a decade-long trip that could take them to as many as 15 major bodies of the outer solar system. The suc- cessful testing of the Enterprise, the space shuttle aimed at providing a space “taxi” service, was completed. A nuclear-powered Soviet spy satellite fell to earth in early February and exploded in a remote Canadian wilderness area. The explosion resulted in widespread fears of radiation contamination. The Equal Rights Amendment was slowed by several states’ (including Ken- tucky) rescission of its ratification. And after adopting a platform of action to pro- duce women’s equality, the National Women’s Conference, led by Bella Abzug, adjourned in Houston in late November. The top crime story of the year involved David Berkowitz, the accused “Son of A SACK OF FLOUR is handed to one of several thou- sand striking miners from UMW District 23 at a rally in Central City. Farmers from 11 states brought free food from as far away as Colorado. - ota t Sam” killer who said he killed on the com- mand of a dog. More than 300 policemen conducted New York City’s largest man- hunt before a parking ticket led investiga- tors to the Yonkers’ apartment of Berkowitz, a post office employee. The sensational case involved extensive media coverage of the .44-caliber killer who murdered six and wounded seven in a year. Berkowitz was first denied a trial be- cause it was ruled he was mentally incom- petent to stand trial, but the ruling was later reversed. A major international story was the Sil- ver Jubilee ceremonies of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II who celebrated her 25th anni- versary of the ascension to the throne. The Queen and husband Prince Philip visited most of the British Commonwealth na- tions in a year marked by optimistic eco- nomic recovery in England. In Northern Ireland, the Catholic-Prot- estant clash was relatively. quiet. Two women active in the Northern Ireland peace movement were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for promoting the belief that peace itself is more important than politi- cal PR enys The year was marked by the deaths of several great entertainers. Presley’s death Aug: 16 triggered the largest single record- buying spree in American history. The “King of Rock ‘n’ Roll” died of a severely irregular heartbeat. Crosby died in Madrid, Spain, his “White Christmas” recording having sold more than any other single recording, 40,000,000 copies. The “Little Tramp,” famed actor Charlie Chaplin, died in Switzerland Christmas Day. Heralded as the world’s greatest film- maker, Chaplin was credited with making motion pictures an art form. Other famous celebrities to die during the year were Groucho Marx, Ethel Waters and Guy Lombardo. Perhaps the greatest political figure to (continued on page 116) A family conflict Network news programs and news magazines devoted loads of precious space to the condition of coal miners during last winter’s 109-day strike by the United Mine Workers of America. Little was said about company men. Laura Cooper, a junior library science major from Sturgis, and her family know something about it, however. Her father is a cipely manager for Peabody Coal Company and her uncle and other relatives were UMWA coal miners. “Daddy had a job during the strike, but his hours were cut way down,” she said. “Money was a little tight, but Mama worked at the Western Auto, so it didn’t really affect us.” Miss Cooper said her father and uncle often discussed the strike and its conse- quences, “but they couldn't talk for very long because they'd get into fights. “This strike was more than a differ- ence in opinion between the union and the company. There was a lot of conflict. It wasn’t necessarily the strike but the attitudes of the men, the troublemakers. Daddy said a lot of times he was behind the strike all the way, but not the other stuff going on.” Much of the trouble around Muhlen- burg County dealt with an independent mine there — the Pyro Coal Company — that operated during the strike, she said. Striking miners often stopped or slowed down trucks taking coal from the mine to the Ohio River for ship- ment. Striking miners received help from various sources, particularly farmers. “Farmers came in once or twice with big truckloads of produce to give the min- ers. A lot didn’t want free food, but as my cousin said, ‘You can’t eat pride.’ ” Sturgis was a much different town during the strike, Miss Cooper said. “People had ‘We Support the UMWA’ stickers all over. They painted cars with shoe polish to show they supported it. It’s usually a sleepy little town, but you could tell something was going on.” When the UMWA accepted the third contract in March, “everybody relaxed,” Miss Cooper said. But there wasn’t much celebrating. “Nobody had any money to celebrate with,” she said. Several weeks after the strike ended and miners returned to work, Miss Coo- per reflected on the impact of the strike. “People for so many years have taken coal miners for granted. Now they know how much they need them.” Roger Stinnett @ 115 News THE NEWS... die was Hubert Humphrey, who died on Jan. 13, of cancer at his Minnesota home. Former president Richard Nixon returned to the White House for the first time since his resignation to attend a memorial ser- vice for the “Happy Warrior.” Kentuckians felt the loss of legendary University of Kentucky basketball coach Adolph Rupp, who died Dec. 10. The year had its share of disasters. Per- haps the closest to home was a plane crash outside Evansville which killed all 29 members of the University of Evansville basketball team in early December, two weeks after they had played Western. The DC-3 cartwheeled into a muddy hillside on a foggy, rainy night as the team departed for a game in Murfreesboro, Tenn. The day before the Evansville disaster, seven female students were killed in an early-morning dormitory fire at Provi- dence College. In the fall, flooding around Kansas City, Mo., caused the deaths of 26 persons, and another 39 perished at Toccoa Bible Col- lege in Georgia when an earthen dam col- lapsed. The worst international natural disasters FELLOW RESCUERS HELP a firefighter overcome by smoke inhalation while trying to help prisoners from the burning Maury County Jail in Columbia, Tenn. The fire killed 42 persons, mostly inmates. 116 News occurred in Indonesia when one of the strongest recorded earthquakes (measuring 8.9 on the Richter Scale) killed more than 100, and in India where November cy- clones killed more than 1,500 persons in villages battered by 100-mile-an-hour winds and 18-foot waves. In sports, the University of Kentucky finished in the nation’s top 10 in both foot- ball and basketball. The basketball team won the NCAA tournament and the foot- ball team, ineligible for post-season com- petition because of recruiting violations, finished seventh nationally in post-season polls. Kentucky native Steve Cauthen rode winners of more than $5 million in racing purses and capped his year with a Triple Crown win aboard Affirmed. Pele played his last professional soccer match and Reg- pie Jackson’s five World Series homers ighlighted the New York Yankee’s world championship despite a bickering season between the players and manager Billy Martin. Muhammed Ali lost his world heavyweight boxing crown to upstart Olympian boxer Leon Spinks and Western stunned most observers by beating Syra- cuse in the opening round of the NCAA basketball tournament. Don White @ David Frank A PEACEFUL PARADE of major civil rights activists protests last March’s Davis Cup tennis tournament in Nashville, which allowed players from South Africa, a white minority-ruled nation. Photos by Lynn Wright It was Brent Shockley’s first day as an in- tern in the arena of state government. “I was shown my desk and it freaked me out,” he said. “I saw a tour group of little kids coming through and it dawned on me that the last time I was in the capitol was on a sixth-grade field trip. Now, here I was IN FRANKFORT to work as legislative interns last spring, seniors Brent Shockley and Betsy Ashcraft stand before the capitol. — - as : ARTE we my, Pry vee ely eyewitness capitol experience with my own desk,” the senior said. Shockley and Betsy Ashcraft, also a sen- ior, were two of 18 interns who served leg- islative committees in Frankfort during the spring semester. Shockley worked for the Legislative Re- search Commission. He prepared bill drafts, summaries and kept up with where these bills were in the Senate. “In Frank- fort, nobody is beneath gopher work ei- oo the Scottsville government major said. “Most legislators don’t draft their own PAPERWORK AND GOPHER work comprised much of Brent Shockley’s work for the legislative re- search commission. He helped prepare bill drafts and keep up with bills in the Senate. bills,” he said. “They don’t have time or entirely know how. It’s a very complicated process. They first fill out a bill request form and are assigned to a bill drafter. They get together and write the bill. “We have to hit the statute books then and make sure everything matches up,” Shockley said. “It’s tedious and requires a lot of work.” Miss Ashcraft, a Brandenburg journal- ism and government major, was assigned to one of the standing committees and did research work on bills. “I spent a lot of A BALCONY PERCH gives Betsy Ashcraft a clear view of proceedings on the Senate floor on a February afternoon. Most of Miss Ashcraft’s work was done with committees in the morning. time in the law library,” she said. “I actually helped write some bills,” Miss Ashcraft said. Those included one on writing statutes in every day languagé and one which would allow blind people to take their dogs into public places. Experience was a plus for both interns, especially for Miss Ashcraft, who will en- roll at Harvard Law School this fall. “It’s one thing to learn all this stuff in a book, but it’s different when you come here and see how it really works,” she said. “T can’t compare what I’ve learned from textbooks with what I learned there,” Shockley said. “I'll learn more in one se- mester than in three years of college.” Dawn Kemp Headlines| A measure of debate on the eeeresT |i iii Hill by Roger Stinnett Hopes that dorm revenues would break even may have been hurt by a lower- than-expected dorm occupancy in the spring. Harry Largen, vice president for business affairs, estimated that with a 98 per cent occupancy in the fall and 95 per cent in the spring, the dorms would break even or make money for only the second time ever. However, spring occupancy was only about 88 per cent. The dorms underwent several changes. Housing rates went up about $20 last year and included free refrigerators for the first time. e The university housing committee considered making air-conditioned ad ] It eC ad T Poland Hall a women’s dorm, while making North and East Halls (not air- conditioned) men’s dorms. The reason was to comply with Title IX guidelines by offering men the choice of lower- priced housing (i.e., unair-conditioned dorms). A number of minor fires struck the dorms. Pearce-Ford, which received a sprinkler system after several fires the year before, had eight fires last year, the most of any dorm. Bemis-Lawrence, McCormack, Rodes-Harlin, North, South and Poland also had fires. @ ie + A TRASH CHUTE FIRE forced the evacuation of Mc- Cormack Hall residents Feb. 8, leaving them huddled against the harsh evening cold. Bob Coffey 118 Campus News The saga of the Hub Pizzeria’s efforts to get a beer license had a lot of appeal. It began in spring 1977 when the restaurant applied for the license. The local Alcoholic Beverage Control Board (ABC) turned the Hub down because of a state law prohibiting the sale of alcoholic beverages within 200 feet of a building used exclusively for classrooms. The ABC noted the Hub was next to the university's Rock House. Hub owner Gordon Mills appealed to the state ABC board which voted 2-1 to give the Hub the license because the Hub was more than 200 feet from the nearest classroom buildings. It contended the Rock House did not qualify. The Board of Regents voted to “take whatever steps necessary” to keep the Hub from getting the license, saying Western’s image would be hurt if beer were sold across from campus. Mf EVERY FOOT COUNTS as state Alcoholic Beverage Control Board agent Frank Smith and Western attor- ney Joe Campbell measure the distance between the Hub Pizzeria and Cherry Hall. A FAMILIAR CAMPUS VISITOR, Max Lynch preached for two days in March, wearing his charac- teristic sunglasses and warning university center pass- ers-by of God’s anger “at this wicked nation.” David Frank Campus structures enlarged, Though the Council on Higher Education recommended that universities not begin any construction projects for two years, several building projects already begun carried on as scheduled. The Kentucky Building, Florence Schneider Hall and the Industrial Education and Technology Building were renovated last year. The Public Safety Department moved into new facilities in the parking structure. The $2.7 million agricultural exposition center on the university farm neared completion, and sprinkler systems were installed in Pearce-Ford renovated and McLean dorms. The severely overcrowded parking dilemma prompted Western to pave and make a new entrance to the lot behind the Services and Supply Building. Later, work began on a 192-car lot behind Barnes-Campbell Hall and a 25-car lot on 15th Street. The university also planned to restripe the top level of the parking structure for compact cars as an experiment. RENOVATION OF THE KENTUCKY BUILDING included cosmetic work on its limestone columns. Bill Arnold, an employee of the Hasco of Nashville, sand- blasts the columns. Ron Hoskins 119 Campus News Headlines... Energy erisis shakes Hill A nationwide coal miners’ strike, environmental concern, the rising costs of energy and the coldest winter in almost a century equaled a complex winter energy problem for Western. The troubles began in December when the state Division of Air Pollution turned down Western’s renewal for a coal-burning license because the school’s two boilers were emitting an average of 25 pounds of pollutants per day, twice the state standard. The university had to turn to burning fuel oil, which Harry Largen, vice president for business affairs, estimated would cost an additional $218,000. In late 120 Campus News January, one of the two oil burners malfunctioned, so Western returned to its 2,500-ton stockpile for part of the i da T Te S campus’ heating. In early February, Gov. Julian Carroll ordered a 25 per cent reduction in KIDNAPPING SUSPECT Michael Ray Simmons is electrical consumption by state escorte d by Western’s Lt. Allen Houchin a few days institutions. Western hurried to meet the after the man Simmons allegedly abducted escaped 10-day deadline by reducing lighting in while they stopped for coffee in the university center. corridors and outside, reducing heating in academic buildings, lowering the temperature of hot water in dorms and consolidated night classes. Shortly after that, the state gave permission for the university to burn coal in both furnaces and agreed to pay for the $800,000 scrubbers that would allow Western to burn coal year-round. Despite the energy problems, President Dero Downing said Western would not follow the Indiana universities that extended spring breaks to cut back. After spring break, the temperatures rose, the strike ended and the crisis subsided. Ml A FUEL OIL BOILER with a shorted-out control is repaired by the chief fireman of the heating plant, Charles Yates. The state forced Western to use the cleaner-burning oil instead of coal. Lewis Gardner Academic alterations If things continue as they did last year, students may face a much stricter degree program in the 1980s. Among many changes the Academic Council made was the addition of a three-hour history requirement, either Lewis Gardner Stuck between three agencies Government agencies collided when Western was ordered to construct facilities by two agencies, while yet another agency didn’t appropriate construction funds for the school. In November, the state Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) found 200 violations — mostly minor — of the state safety code and fined Western $394. Among OSHA's directives was the construction of a building to house combustible and flammable materials, estimated at a cost of $100,000. But since the CHE didn’t recommend any construction funds, the building stalled. OSHA granted two extensions as Western considered applying for funds to the CHE. Meanwhile, the university faced possible federal fund withdrawal if it didn’t comply with the federal Handicapped Act of 1973 by making the campus more assessible to handicapped persons. CHE responded in April by granting Western $250,000. Western Civilization to or after 1648. The council also recommended that the requirements of upper-level courses be increased from 32 to 54 hours. Visitors to the library found changes there also, particularly the microfiche index system which replaced the card catalog system last year. With it, the library can save money by using automatic filing with a computer rather than replacing cards by hand. A FREQUENT LIBRARY USER, government and eco- nomics major Mark Miller said the replacement of the card catalog with microfiche makes book-finding much faster. The system also saves money. A better way The first week of each semester traditionally has been the time to register and pay tuition. Last year, seniors and graduate students participated in an experimental advance registration by computer. About 1,600 students registered for spring classes last November. The advantages were knowing their schedule in advance and registering in a more pleasant environment, according to registrar Dr. Stephen House. Blacks unite Two new black organizations tried to get their feet on the ground while a third celebrated its seventh birthday. Inactive for two years, United Black Students (UBS) reorganized in October. “We are not trying to form a radical organization, but an organization that educates blacks about their culture with certain sanctions that will also be beneficial to white students,” interim president Stevie Benson said. UBS announced in January that it would help arrange for rock groups Brick and LTD to appear here. About a month later, Brick played with the Atlanta Rhythm Section, sponsored by ASG, but LTD did not appear. USB also sponsored poet song writer Nikki Giovanni during Black Awareness Week in February. Two academic services provided by UBS were a program to help undecided majors pick a major and a tutorial service. Meanwhile, more than 120 students joined the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) while about 300 others pledged to join, helping start a student NAACP GOSPEL MUSIC prospers as Sheila Harris of the Amazing Tones of Joy sings at the group’s seventh anniversary celebration April 16. Debbie Gibson ADVANCE REGISTRATION with an on-line com- puter system was offered to seniors and graduate stu- dents on a voluntary basis last year. It may soon be offered to all students. : After seniors and graduate students registered for fall 1978 classes last April, a committee was to make recommendations about whether it should be used by all students. However, instead of paying tuition a few days before class, the payment was made weeks in advance. And all students were subject to the Council on Higher Education’s tuition hikes last year of $30 for resident undergraduates and $125 for nonresident undergraduates. chapter. Reginald Collier, who represented the organization, said the chapter could help black students “politically, economically and in any type of discriminatory grievances that they might have problems with.” Both UBS and the NAACP chapter were recognized by the university. Finally, The Amazing Tones of Joy, a gospel group open to anyone but consisting of about 26 black students, celebrated its seventh anniversary by inviting choirs from Eastern, Morehead, Berea and the University of Kentucky to participate with it in a musical program in April. @ Stevie Benson 121 Campus News 122 Campus jobs such as safety patrol, maintenance, postal services and night clerking are unique, but the students who take them say . ts all 1 When Marty Froebel applied for a campus job his choices were washing dishes a’ Garrett cafeteria or walking around cam- pus as a student patrol. He chose the latte: two semesters ago. He said his job is basically one of phys- ical security. “We're there to report any crime,” he said. “We're an extension of the campus police and receive a fairly decent wage for a public service. I usually work three hours, but my area changes every day which breaks the monotony.” The Fort Knox freshman said most stu- dents think his job is one of meeting quo- tas of parking tickets. “T can look the other way, but that’s making my job a joke,” he said. “If I do my job I get criticized. “There wouldn’t be any tickets if there wasn’t such a parking problem,” he said. “But there’s not a lot you can do about it. The problem is with the way classes are structured. Most of them are in the morn- ing. They need to be distributed but that goes against popular opinion.” Froebel said several students have been ready to fight when given a ticket. “They were almost at the point of violence about a $2 ticket,” he said, shaking his head. Debbie Gibson Student Workers in a day orn @ “You're vulnerable to the aggressions of others. In a case like that the best remedy is humor.” Another common situation is the stu- dent driver who parks in roadways but leaves his emergency lights flashing. “They seem to think that will compen- sate for illegally parking,” he said. “They seem to say, ‘look the other way because I’ve got my flashers on,’ ” Froebel said with a laugh. But being a safety patrol keeps a person in shape, Froebel said. “You usually walk five miles in three hours and most of it is uphill.” Margo Bates doesn’t like to work in stuffy offices. She prefers the great outdoors and has found a campus job that keeps her outside every day. Miss Bates works on the grounds crew at the physical plant. It’s a job she started full time before enrolling at Western. Now it’s her part-time job during semesters. “I’ve done just everything,” she said. “I’ve mowed grass, worked on a sod crew, used a jack hammer, raked leaves and done a lot of sweeping. The sweeping is the worst. It’s so boring.” The freshman agriculture major said she must work from 8 a.m. to noon or from noon to 4:30 p.m., which makes scheduling classes hard. “Instead, I schedule all my classes on Mondays and Wednesdays or Tuesdays and Thursdays and work the other days,” she said. She said she likes to be outdoors where she gets tons of exercise, but regrets that she’s always getting so dirty and has to wear layers of clothes during winter months. “We also work in rain and it’s no fun to get wet all the time,” she said. Miss Bates said she looks at the campus from a different perspective than most stu- dents. “I look at the grass and the trash and I notice when something’s new and what's happening maintenancewise,” she said. “Western is a great campus; it’s so pret- ty. After I’ve worked I like to look back and see what I’ve done,”she said. “It gives me a sense of pride.” There aren’t too many dogs on campus to chase student postman Steve Moore, but he’s learned the mail must go out regard- less of weather or the number of workers on duty. But his complaints about his 1-year-old job are few. TICKET WRITING is just one phase of Marty Froe- bel’s job as a safety patrol, but it’s probably the hardest, he said. “If I do my job I get criticized. If I look the other way, I’m making my job a joke.” ight's work “It’s the best job on campus,” he said. “I get to get out and see people.” The red-haired junior said he works part time during school and full time during summer vacations. He must be at the Gar- rett Center post office by 7 a.m. “The mail comes in at seven and we have an hour to put it up (sort it),” he said. “Then we deliver it to departments on campus and pick up their outgoing mail. We come back and sort the campus mail to be delivered the next day. We also sell stamps (at the counter) and work C.O.D.s. There’s always something to do around here.” Moore said three other students work in the morning and four or five work the afternoon shift. “The morning shift is a lot harder because you have to deliver and pick up,” he said. “In the afternoon you mostly pick up and deliver packages that weren't here in the morning. “It’s a lot of teamwork,” Moore said. “You've got to work together to get it out. If everybody is here it’s not a problem, but if one person’s missing, it slows us down.” He said he has learned a great deal about the postal system and Western through his job. “I’ve sorted so much mail I know which department every faculty member is in,” he said. In addition to early hours and below- minimum wage pay, complaints from oth- ers is a disadvantage, Moore said. “People don’t realize what we do before they get their mail. They just get it. I wish they could work in here for a week. Then they wouldn’t complain.” Moore said he likes the exercise and the chance to meet a lot of people by working in the post office, but he doesn’t want to make a career out of it. “Not unless I could be Postmaster Gen- eral. That’d be OK.” Smart people go to bed at midnight. That’s what Jo Davis believes, but three nights a week at the witching hour, she broke her own rule and reported to work. Mrs. Davis was one of three night clerks at Central Hall during the spring semester. She worked from 12 to 8 a.m. As a night clerk, her duties included “answering the phone, opening the door for someone who left her key at home and checking the doors to make sure they're locked. It sounds like nothin’.” Another duty, which she said she did not enjoy, was making sure the dorm was free of males at curfew. . MOWING GRASS is a hot job in the spring, but it’s better than sweeping, according to Margo Bates. The freshman agriculture major has also used a jack ham- mer, raked leaves and worked on a sod crew. “T usually go in five minutes before time,” she said, “so they can get their shoes on, get their pants on, and it’s not as funny as you might think.” Girls return to the dorm in cycles, she said. ‘Most are in by two. But one comes in at 3:30 every morning. I don’t see how she does it. She’s out partying. Even when the weather was bad, she had a taxi get her.” Some lack of dedication, Mrs. Davis said, stemmed from the fact that “I don’t always like arousing people from passion- ate kisses, pushing them out the door. “They pay me to enforce the rules, but they can’t make me like them.” Though her duties may “sound like nothin’,” the job offered Mrs. Davis at least one challenge — staying awake when “smart people” were asleep. She said she walks to stay awake. “In the winter, I stuck my head out the door and woke up for about an hour. You do some- thing with your hands, write, type.” A prime method for staying alert, ac- (continued on page 124) WITH A FLICK of his wrist, Steve Moore sorts after- noon mail in the Garrett Center post office. Most of the time he’s outdoors on a route. “It’s the best job on campus,” he said. It’s all in a day or night's work cont. cording to Mrs. Davis, is television — movies, “Merv Griffin,” “Not for Women Only,” and “PTL” (Praise the Lord”), which she said was “downright funny sometimes.” The business administration and psy- chology major took 22 hours of classes in Debbie Gibson Ka itt jack-of-all-trades foots After a disappointing summer internship at a Louisville television station, journal- ism major Pat Hohman entered his senior year last fall uncertain of his goals but certain he wanted a job. “I was tired of journalism,” the former College Heights Herald reporter said. “It seemed like the same old thing every year: overcrowded dorms, no room in the park- ing lot.” Still, Hohman found work at the newspaper, as an advertising salesman. “I was interested in ads,” the Louisville native said. “There’s a certain aura about ity His job required about 20 hours per week, split equally between selling adver- tising space and putting together ads. His account list included about 25 downtown businesses. “My first account was with a local bank,” he said. “I went in with no confi- dence at all. I presented the man with the facts and figures, and he took right off from there. I completed the sale and from that point on it was a lot easier.” Later, he learned a lesson about the pro- fession at a car dealership. “T went in and asked for the owner. The receptionist pointed out his office, but when I got there, he was on the telephone. I didn’t want to storm in, but at the same time I didn’t want to hang around outside his office door. “Finally his secretary noticed me and asked what I wanted. When I told her why I was there, she told me something I'll nev- er forget. She said, ‘Honey, if you want to be in sales, you have to be aggressive.’ ” So Hohman walked in, waited five minutes and sold a three-quarter page ad. “I'll never forget that,” he said. But the ad job was not all easy sales and good advice. Hohman was the only one of seven Her- ald salesmen without a car. “Everyone else AGGRESSIVENESS was one of the first rules Pat Hohman learned as an ad salesman for the College Heights Herald. Facing a businessman whose ad was incorrect or didn’t generate much business was also a new experience, he said. Scott Robinson 124 Student Workers the spring and said her night clerk job came in handy for studying. After the lobby was emptied of guests, she often had company. “Some people from the dorm came down. Somebody came down and painted her toenails till 4 o'clock, which I thought was silly, but I talked to her.” A COLOR TELEVISION is often the only companion for night clerk Jo Davis. She said she watches “Merv Griffin,” “Not for Women Only,’ and “Praise the Lord” during her midnight to 8 a.m. shift. as an advertis A SALESMAN without a car walks as Pat Hohman did, allowing extra time for footing it to his accounts. Fortunately, 25 of his accounts were nearby downtown businesses. would just go out and sell, but I would have to block out about two hours to allow me to walk and see my accounts,” some a couple of miles away. Other unpleasant aspects of his job in- cluded facing a businessman after getting incorrect information into an ad, or justi- fying an expenditure to a store owner whose ad didn’t generate as much business as expected. “Sometimes, I just dreaded having to go out and be chitter-chatter and smiling to all those people,” Hohman said. He anticipated good pay selling ads. “That sounds crass, but it’s no fun getting thrown out of a store. “Most people were really nice. They'd make it painless as possible to tell you to get lost. But others would just throw you out.” His pay was unpredictable. The first week, he made $130; another week, he earned only $3.50, he said. Still, Hohman enjoyed other aspects of his job. Among them was a new respect for advertising. ‘Advertising pays for the news,” he said. “News people always make cracks about advertising, but it’s the bread and butter of the news business.” And it provided him with another exper- ience, to go along with having been a dish washer, a page in the U.S. House of Repre- sentatives, a tour guide, a dorm night clerk, a news reporter and a writer at two televi- sion stations. “T’d rather have a lot to do than sit and be bored,” Hohman said. “I’m glad I’ve gotten out and tried these things instead of just going to class. I’m glad I’ve experi- mented. I like to feel a sense of accomplish- ment.” Tim Rutherford PASTEUP is a final production step for ad salesman Pat Hohman, a senior from Louisville. He also worked as a news reporter for the College Heights Herald during his three years at Western. Though her job was often lonely, Mrs. Davis said being alone in the wee hours was never scary because “if I don’t want anybody in, they’d have to break the glass to get in.” She said she is a night owl “but night owls shut down at five in the morning.” The hardest time to stay awake was from 5 to 8 a.m., Mrs. Davis said. After work, she went to classes rather than trying to catch up on sleep. “If you go home and sleep two hours,” she said, « ing salesman Scott Robinson “you're not gonna want to get back up. “But boy, as soon as I go home, it’s the bed. No matter if there’s a fire in the apart- ment, I’m asleep.” A drawback to night clerking for Mrs. Davis was that her husband Steve worked from 9 p.m. to midnight on safety patrol. “He comes in and I leave,” she said. Mrs. Davis said that while she liked her job, she wouldn’t want to continue it for- ever. “Not for the rest of my life.” Connie Holman, Steven Stines @ 125 126 Spring Spring breaks a hodsepodge Of i=(€03..- ® “It’s 35 degrees, that’s two degrees Celsius,” reported a Jacksonville FM station as the white Plymouth with Kentucky license plates rolled closer to Florida. Scores of other cars from Western, scattered over hundreds of cold, foggy, southern miles heard similar reports Saturday, March 11, the first day of spring break. But as the cars dispersed from I-75 toward their sundry destinations, the fog lifted, the temperature rose and a week of fairly ideal weather followed. Loaded with 10 girls, three cars headed toward Naples, on the west coast, for a quiet week of shopping and sun. “We wanted to get away from the big party scene in Fort Lauderdale,” Kit Huey said. She and her nine friends stayed at her parents’ house. “It was kind of quiet,” said Miss Huey, who had been to Lauderdale twice. “We had our own fun: shopping, sunning, sitting on the beach.” Miss Huey said she spent about $75, as opposed to $250 vacations in Lauderdale. Other bands of Hilltoppers stayed in the first popular spot they reached: Daytona Beach. For two days they shared the town with hundreds of motorcycle fans in town for a race. “All those old greasy guys would yell at you,” one coed complained. Thieves broke into the house where Janice Danhauer and friends stayed, taking about $800 in cash and property. “That kind of put a damper on things,” said Miss Danhauer, who lost $56 in cash. “It was the first year I didn’t take travelers’ checks. But if they hadn’t been stolen, I would have blown it anyway. I borrowed just $6, and I spent part of that on ice cream.” An $89 offer featuring a week of lodging on the beach plus entertainment attracted about 48 Western students to Daytona. “It turned out to be a better deal than I thought,” Cindy Parish said. “They brought the party to you.” But most students seemed to show up in Fort Lauderdale, the spring break capital. In fact, a disc jockey at The Button, a disco bar, said Western’s contingency of seven girls in its Wet T- Break shirt Contest was the largest of any school’s. James Sattinger called Lauderdale “super great,” despite sharing a room with six friends. He said they flipped a coin nightly to determine who got to eee sleep on the beds, but he had the floor every night but two. Spring break is traditionally a time “Down there, you can do almost when students dismiss any thought of anything you want, and nobody cares,” term papers, tests or classes. But this Lauderdale visitor Linda Odle said. “It year some students used their vacation to was hard to get back to people who support Western’s basketball team in the aren't so friendly.” © Roger Stinnett MH NCAA tournament. ™ ‘J T | a % Cheerleader Craig Moore said having students in the stands “really felt great. It was like there was someone there from home ... family.” Pep band member Chuck Blair agreed. “It really helped the team,” he said. “It also helped the band with spirit.” (continued on page 128) THOUSANDS OF STUDENTS -from the East and Midwest crowd Fort Lauderdale’s South Beach during Western’s spring break in March. CHAMPAGNE SPRAY soaks the crowd after a beer-chugging contest at The Button, a Fort Lauderdale bar that sponsored a party for Western and four other schools. David Frank 127 | : Spring Break Spring break .... Debbie Garner said she had planned to visit her brother in Indiana during spring break. Instead she attended the tournament game in Knoxville, Tenn., using a friend’s ticket won in the lottery. “T felt the game was more important,” she said. “We didn’t want to make the whole trip at one time,” said Debbie Mouser, who also went to the Knoxville game. “We left Friday and stayed in Corbin, went to Knoxville Saturday and then to Gatlinburg.” Several students attending the game had reservations in local hotels. Although Kay Overby had reservations in Knoxville, she had to go home first and get the car. “We didn’t get there (Knoxville) until four in the morning.” Only 42 tickets were available to students for the Knoxville game; more than 200 students, however, attended the second game in Dayton, Ohio. Basketball player Greg Burbach said the team would have preferred more students at the games but “circumstances wouldn’t allow it,” he added, referring to the limited number of student tickets. Nancy Booker said she “nearly tore the den apart” watching Western’s Knoxville victory on television, and was even more excited about going to the Dayton game. “Sitting on the end of the row with the band helped,” she said. “I was excited before the game started.” Though the team lost in Dayton, Debbie Anderson said “the game was a lot closer than the score indicated.” “I got the next to last two tickets” to the second game, Miss Anderson said. “I stood in line three hours, but it was well worth it.” Burbach had no spring break plans to change because “I was planning to be there in the tournament.” The victory at Knoxville, he said was “great ... a payoff for the whole season.” The crowd, according to Booker, “was with them till the end. There were tons of red towels.” f Steven Stines @ and ABCs! While carloads of students raced to fun in the sun or home to Mom’s cooking for spring break, others crawled from bed at 6 a.m. to prepare for their first day as a student teacher. Their spring break would come later with the school’s break in mid-April, that is if the school system hadn’t missed too many days because of the 128 Spring Break harsh winter weather. The students had been warned that their spring break would be delayed, so they adjusted to the predicament. But it would have been nice to have enjoyed Western’s spring break, they agreed. “The main reason I wanted a spring break before I started student teaching was just to rest and get prepared,” said Sheri Winfrey, a senior elementary education major from Campbellsville. “There’s a lot of mental preparation to do to get ready for student teaching. “The last week of school was very hectic and I felt I needed the rest before starting the teaching.” Miss Winfrey taught third grade in Elizabethtown at Valley View Elementary School. She said she was fortunate to get a vacation later in the semester. “I’m glad we got a break and I really feel sorry for those in a county system who didn’t get one,” she said. “After doing something like student teaching, you need some sort of break.” Those who taught during the first bi- term also forfeited a spring break because they had to make up days missed because of the severe winter. Although the seniors had long awaited their practice teaching, it had drawbacks, many of which were related to Western’s spring break. Phyllis Cook, a Morgantown senior, had to move from McCormack Hall to Schneider Hall when her dorm was closed for vacation. “It was really hard to adjust to a new place,” Miss Cook said. “We had to move two times that week, in and out.” FRIENDS Denise Sturgeon and Debora Mouser re- joice at winning two of the 42 student tickets to West- ern’s first-round NCAA Tournament game against Syracuse. The freshmen had already made hotel reser- vations in Knoxville when they won in the lottery. Bre eon ea tong Just like the end of semester, Western seemed to fold up during the break, Miss Cook said. “The whole town seemed deserted,” she said. ‘The bookstore closed before we even got out of school. It really made it hard on us.” Miss Winfrey said she dreaded getting up so early. “I was really anxious about getting started,” she said. “But all I could think about when I got up at 6 every morning was all my friends sleeping late, then heading to the beaches.” Terri Darr @ STUDENT TEACHERS forfeited a March spring break with their college peers, but took a late vacation in April. First grader f Karen Prow chuckles with Becky Blair in Sue Evans’ class while Poona Schoo Mat i ‘ : ae Sue DePalma shares a story with first graders in Sue Jones’ class. ee Both student teachers split their work at McNeil Elementary between kindergartners and first graders. Fa Nec eeS ieee seca aecoceresce cee Debbie Gibson | 129 Spring Break Theyre good sports From behind her tiny glasses, Lisa McMichael peered across two yards of green felt to a dozen scattered billiard balls. She chose her shot — the nine ball in the side pocket — and made it, giving her a moment to talk before she chose her next one. “T can’t practice anywhere at home,” the Harrodsburg native said. ‘There are only two places — Jocko’s and Mercer's — but they’re not cool at all. I’ve never seen a female in either one ...” CLICK. The two ball rolled along the rail into the corner pocket. “ _. There is a country store that has two pool tables. These farmers and field hands come in and play me all the time. But I usually beat them. ...” CLICK. Seven ball into the corner pocket, one rail. And on she went, her eyes peering over her glasses and her tongue stuck out of her mouth, leaning over the table with one leg in the air. CLICK. CLICK. CLICK. The senior’s interest in pool began in 1975. Earlier that year, some of her friends had traveled to Knoxville to represent Western in the Association of College Unions International regional tournament, which features pastimes such as billiards, bowling and table soccer. “They had a lot of fun,” she said, “and I wanted to try it, too.” Although she hadn’t played pool very avidly — “maybe once a month with the guys, but not really trying: just hitting the ball and that’s good” — she chose to try to qualify in billiards. “And then there was the challenge: my friends said I couldn't do it,” she said. With that motivation and a billiards class, she began playing daily in August, 1975. “It was like a ritual,” she said. “I didn’t do anything until I had played pool. I played a couple of hours in the morning and a couple of hours in the afternoon.” She estimated she played about 35 hours a week all fall and most of the winter until the campus qualifying tournament began. Although Western had never sponsored a women’s billiards tournament before, Miss McMichael said about 14 turned out in spring 1976. She won, recording a 35-31 victory in the final. She played in the regionals “and had a blast, which is what it’s all about.” “I went three rounds — I won one and lost two (it was double elimination). I had a lot of stage fright,” she said. In her junior year, Miss McMichael, a sociology major with emphasis in criminology and corrections, had an 130 Recreation internship with the Bureau of Corrections in Frankfort. After the internship, the Bureau offered her a job, so she stayed through 1977. When she returned last January, she hurried to get women pool players for a tournament. “I had to run it: get posters up, ask really nicely to get things done,” she said. JUST BEFORE she competed for her first Western women’s billiards championship, Lisa McMichael practiced about 35 hours a week. The two-time cham- pion said she once ran 18 balls. Lewis Gardner With an 18-hour class load and a full- time job, she had little time to practice. Still, she won her second campus championship easily enough. “This year hurt me,” she said about her second regionals trip. “I got beaten twice by a total of five balls.” But Miss McMichael said her hours of practice had other benefits. BACK DOWN on the ground after a jump, Scott Thomas packs his parachute at Lampkin Park. The sophomore said he began skydiving in Delaware when he was 17. ¥, Debbie Gibson For one, playing pool with the inmates in an institution in Frankfort “helped break the ice.” “The first time I played them, they said, “Haw, she’s gonna play pool.’ But I didn’t get beat all day. They loved it. They had only one table, but they let me play on it all day. It made me a person instead of something else.” The Thomas clan had gathered for their annual July 4th reunion. It was a typically hot day as everyone waited for one last family member to arrive. A spot was seen in the sky, a sure bet that it would soon join the reunion. Within moments, the last member of the group had landed in the backyard and was enjoying the food and conversation. Parachuting has become a way of life and recreation for Scott Thomas. The sophomore has jumped from planes and helicopters 104 times. His hobby has taken him through the sky at 120 mph from heights of 13,500 feet. Thomas was living in Dover, Del., when he first jumped from a plane. Not old enough to parachute, he lied about his age. After an eight-hour ground school, he took the first leap alongside a friend. He said he really didn’t have time to be frightened. “I was on the strut and it was so hard to hang on that I really just wanted to jump,” he said. “Jumping is a lot of fun,” Thomas said. “It is like having a total freedom of movement. When people are jumping beside you, it looks like you are flying because everyone is falling at the same speed.” As with most sports, competition is a part of parachuting. Thomas finished first in the novice class for accuracy (landing on a designated mark) at Fort Campbell last fall. He qualified to compete in the World Military Invitational and placed third. He also competed in the College Nationals and placed fourth in the novice class for accuracy. Thomas enjoys the sport so much he plans to start a club for Western students in the fall. WHACKboing ... The regulation Seamco 558 racquetball compressed briefly as Craig Riley’s racquet slammed it against the front wall. The black rubber ball ricocheted a few feet to the right wall, bounced off the floor and sailed toward the left rear corner, a perfect z-serve. It lost momentum as it bounced against the left and back walls, giving Riley’s opponent only a moment to snag it in mid-fall. By then, Riley had slipped back to take command of the court. After a couple of volleys, he sent his opponent to the back wall with a ceiling shot. On the return, he dipped low and with his adversary still deep in the court, slammed a killer shot five inches from (continued on page 132) 131 Recreation Theyre good sports con: the bottom of the front wall. The ball bounced four times before it reached the other player. Riley was one point closer to 21. Riley, a junior psychology major from Louisville, is at the crest of the kind of wave that rolls through sports every few years, turning a minor, esoteric sport into a enormously popular pastime and a multimillion dollar industry. He plays racquetball, a hybrid of handball that Riley said is driving the older sport into extinction. “IT was in a tournament in Lexington” — the Kentucky Racquetball Championships, which Riley said included 600 competitors — ‘and the club was incredible. It has 12 courts, steam room, sauna, the whole bit. It even had cameras mounted behind glass in STUDENT RACQUETBALL CHAMPION Craig Ri- ley smashes the ball in a Smith Stadium court. He regrets not having enough money to invest in building courts for the rapidly growing sport. the back of the courts to take pictures of important matches.” The bearded blond began playing two years ago, when a friend took him to Smith Stadium’s courts. “I remember I got hit in the eye with the ball the first time I played,” he said. But the incident didn’t stop him. He shook it off and before long was a racquetball freak. “It’s gotten to be a fever.” After two years of practicing and watching others, Riley has proved himself one of the best players on campus. He won the students — only intramural tournament last year in both singles and doubles. On his way to his singles victories, his first six opponents totaled only 14 points against him in the best-two-out-of-three 21-point games. But older veterans such as assistant basketball coach Bobby Rascoe and men’s tennis coach Ray Rose still beat him. In overall campus competition, he finished third in singles and doubles. Such success prompted Riley to tackle tournaments in Morehead and Lexington. 3B sete J “I thought I was pretty good down here, and I thought I could play with those guys” — players who travel from other states to compete —” but they showed me I was wrong.” In the two tournaments, he lost twice in first-round play and twice in consolation matches. “But I learned a lot,” Riley said, adding that he’ll reenter next winter when the tournaments start again. Until then, he'll play almost every day, he said. And when formal competition begins, he'll be in the court every morning and afternoon. “At that rate, playing twice a day, I go through about a can of balls a week, at $3.50 a shot.” It’s the price one pays in his racket. It began innocently enough. About eight years ago, a friend of Dale Rutledge’s took the Bowling Green native to Kentucky Lake to teach him to ski. Rutledge recalled that he made it up on the skis on his third try, about average for a reasonably coordinated person. As he advanced through his teens, Lewis Gardner 132 Recreation Rutledge skied increasingly more, getting out to Barren River Reservoir several times a summer. His interest became chronic during high school and he began asking his parents to buy a boat. After four years of his asking they did. By the summer of 1977, he was hooked. That’s when he began to take “skiing seriously,” as he put it. No longer was it a week-end pursuit. He was at the reservoir four days a week most of the summer. He skied for hours at a time. He skied through driving rain storms. But he especially enjoyed zig- zagging behind the boat like he was running through a slalom course. Back and forth, like a fish’s tail, Rutledge skimmed across the surface, and after awhile, his thoughts turned to competition. He went to a Florida skiing school run by Jack Travers, a former national champion. There, he practiced on a slalom course for the first time, sailed over jumps, met skiers from Canada, Belgium, Sweden and Denmark, and received expert instruction. “I learned more in two weeks than I did in three years,” Rutledge said. He came back serious enough that he bought a high quality ski boat — a Ski Nautique — a few months later. Rutledge, a sophomore interested in going to medical school, is hoping to compete in tournaments this summer. ‘He and some friends are trying to rejuvenate a slalom course at Barren River Reservoir and if possible, get a jump. And he has his eye on skiing in the American Water Skiing Association regionals. Although he’s never been to the regionals, he said he can run through a slalom course with the buoys on a 75- foot line at 36 mph. ‘With that, I could have placed in the top five at regionals last year,” he said. Part of the sport’s enjoyment is teaching others to ski, he said. “I guess I’ve taught 12 or 13 people to ski,” he recalled. “I taught one girl who couldn't even see the boat, literally. Her eyes were so bad that if the rope was in the water five inches from her, she’d say, ‘Where’s the rope?’ ” Still, the sport carries its problems. A late spring in 1977 kept the water cold well through May. Yet he said that on April 1, he was skiing in 48 degree water — in a wetsuit. Rutledge has begun skiing barefoot, a pursuit that he said demands “brute strength.” “Two weeks ago, the wake bounced me so bad that my legs hurt for three days,” he said one April afternoon. And he recalls the day he skied into three boat wakes at once. ‘They claimed I did seven somersaults and four cartwheels before I fell,” he said, smiling. Almost a decade after his initial skiing attempt, Rutledge is waxing enthusiasm over the sport, and in his mind, there’s no end in sight. “I don’t see myself ever quitting skiing,” he said. “I'll ski as long as I can.” Roger Stinnett, Debbie Gibson @ A SILHOUETTE AGAINST the setting sun, Dale Rut- ledge practices short-line slalom on his Accufloat Sys- tem on Barren River Reservoir. Mark Tucker The last lines led us to pomp and circumstance It ended much as it had begun. Almost instinctively we formed lines and helped each other through the final ritual of college. With finals finished, this day’s major worries were how to keep over- sized hats on our heads and collars at- tached to our gowns. Waiting in line had become a way of life throughout college. It began four years ago with alphabetized registration lines, book- store lines and lines of cars searching for a single parking space. It also ended with lines. There were the same lines of cars and almost the same chances of finding a parking space. There were also bookstore lines to order caps and gowns and the traditional line which led to the ceremony’s pomp and circumstance. After four years of training, we knew how to wait. Instead of standing quietly as we did as freshmen, we decorated our mor- tar boards, took pictures of friends and strangers and condensed our college years into 10-minute conversations. Masking tape was passed along as we tried to create designs to help our family and friends recognize us. Greetings such as “Thanks Dad,” “Hi Mom,” and “6 years, I made it,” individualized each graduate. Kiddingly, we discussed feeling like an Oreo cookie dressed in the black and white Seabee gown. We teased friends who ad taken the five-or-six-year college plan rather than the traditional four and ex- changed feelings of disbelief and relief. But there were also serious moments. A PROUD FATHER, Gov. Julian Carroll addresses son Kenny and approximately 1,800 other seniors in Diddle Arena before their degrees were conferred by President Dero Downing. SEAN KEW7, WES ens) 7 Much like high school graduation, we talked about the future. Job prospects or the lack of them were uppermost in our minds. We knew separations from friends were ahead and uncertain futures faced many of our fellow graduates. For the last time, students with a 3.3 overall gpa graduated cum laude. The 1980 cum laude graduates would need 3.4 gpas LINES FORM across the street and Diddle Arena parking lot as seniors prepare to participate in the 117th commencement May 13. Approximately 12,500 friends and relatives attended the 90-minute program. Mark Lyons Lewis Gardner for the honor cords. Honor candidates also included 108 who graduated magna cum laude and 56 who graduated summa cum laude. Five seniors tied for the Ogden Scholar- ship, which goes to the top baccalaureate raduate. The students were: Mona K. Wil- io a Buffalo elementary education major; Kathy Skaggs Gibson, a Bowling Green government major; Teresa A. Curtis, a Lou- isville accounting major; Nancy N. Rob- erts, a Wichita, Kan., religion and psychol- ogy major, and Stephen P. Pickard, a Bowl- ing Green biology and chemistry major. Graduates and their families at the 117th ceremony heard Gov. Julian Carroll pro- claim that anyone who would pledge to stay in the state could become a Kentucky citizen, causing one department head to ask if his out-of-state graduate students could qualify for in-state tuition. Challensin the graduates to conserve energy, Carroll told us we were the leaders of the 21st century. He said it is our re- sponsibility to continue to produce goods and services for the world’s people. When all the awards were presented and the degrees conferred, there was one final line to endure. The familiar alphabetized line to return caps and gowns seemed to go faster. At least it was the last. Debbie Gibson, Cheryl Sharp @ “I’M ABOUT TO FREEZE,” said Susan Lacy, a Rus- sellville sociology major, as she braved a gusty wind. She wore shorts under the gown because of rumors that Diddle Arena gets hot at commencement. A KISS and a rose are presented to Lonnie Kyle Cole by Janice Gibson, R.N., during the nurses’ pinning ceremony. Cole was the only male in the 42-member class. The program was followed by a reception. Mark Lyons Mark Lyons 134 Graduation ‘BEARS: ‘bene Be es ADMINISTRATION AND ACADEMIA on the Hill Vicki Bagwell, Academics Editor Perhaps more than any other chapters in Western’s diary, administration and academics spread from the Hill like bose spreads through a grapevine. Administrators left the Hill to visit high school seniors and answer their questions about the university on a hill. As for academics, at least one class in most departments treated students to field trips. Some groups toured Frankfort and others visited haunted sites in Tennessee. The extended campus program gained momentum in the fall, offering classes in dozens of towns. But the harsh winter pushed spring semester courses weeks behind schedule. There were also forces and people Administration And Academics coming to the Hill. The Council on Higher Education seemed to descend on Western and other state universities by assuming more authority. Bankers and real estate agents came to the Hill to earn degrees and returned to their jobs for an internship before being graduated. Western seemed to thirst for outsiders to stimulate thinking and strengthen academic programs. Likewise, Western spread its scholarship across Kentucky and moved the Hill into surrounding states. But the Hill was still there with © its traditions. Cherry Hall still bulged with students fulfilling general education requirements in English and history, and Cravens Library still was the best place to research term papers. Outdoor Recreational Activities Rappelling, canoeing, backpacking and outdoor cooking lure students to camps, army bases and indoor pools to do their homework. Some Red (Video) Tape A Problems in Broadcast class becomes a problem for senior John Kelly, the creator and director of a 30-minute color television drama. A Mountain Sabbatical Two-lane winding roads into Eastern Kentucky lead three students to a United Methodist mission’s dental clinic in the summertime. Digging Up Dirt and Cultures 7 Field Course in Archaeology 491-2 involves excavation and surveying for possible excavation points in surrounding counties. Greenhouse (d) Nature Roots, dirt, mud and plants are ingredients in Horticulture class in the classroom and the greenhouses at the top of the Hill. Master’s-minded Three students, with sundry reasons for enrolling in graduate school, share their learning experiences. 137 Administration And Academics A board with a council The power to control present and future operation of Western. It once belonged solely to the Board of Regents. In years past, the regents could decide what degree programs to offer; they could decide when to raise tuition and by how much, and they could determine whether to spend money for a new building or to save the money for the future. But that is all in the past. Now, when Western wants to build a new academic building, add a major in the English department or increase tuition, it has to ask the state Council on Higher Education. In the past year, the council was transformed from a board that gave somewhat meek advice — usually only when universities asked for it — to a board that gained the power to approve or disapprove all degree programs and to control the amount of state money each university received. Several regents expressed fear during the year that the council was becoming too powerful and might try to replace the boards of regents at the universities and become a governing, rather than a coordinating, body. Many Western officials, including President Dero Downing, PAINTINGS of dozens of Western’s buildings, many built in the past two decades, line the walls of the regents’ meeting room, but the board’s hopes for building more faded last year. ; L oP RI ‘a Ron Hoskins 138 Board Of Regents knocking at its back door AFTER 15 YEARS as secretary for the regents, Georgia Bates announced her resignation at the Oct. 29 meeting. She was re-elected unanimously every term after she assumed the job in 1963. were opposed to giving the council powers to review all degree programs and other governing powers. Downing said in March that some of the regents’ power and independence would be taken away if a bill making the council’s degree-approval powers permanent was passed. “I recognize at the same time the need for careful coordination of the statewide system of higher education .... yy Now, when Western wants to build a new academic building, add a major ... or increase tuition, it has to ask the state Council on Higher Education. He said how the council fulfills its function as a coordinating body in the future would determine the bill’s effect. “That is more important than any other aspect of it,” Downing said. The bill was routinely approved by the General Assembly. Later the same month, the council announced a review of all undergraduate degree programs in the state, causing many Western officials to believe the council was trying to assume even more power than it already had over the universities. And some officials seemed to fear retribution from the council if they opposed the program review. “I hope you don’t place me in an adversary role to the council,” one administrator told the College Heights Herald. “I don’t want to find myself in a slugfest with the council.” Two regents said they believed the council’s power was already too strong and they thought it might increase during the next few years. Regent Tom Emberton, an Edmonton attorney, said, “My position has been that ever since the Council on Higher Education was strengthened, it has assumed too much authority over the universities at the expense of the individual universities’ autonomy. Jim Burton SE aE Two regents said they believed the council’s power wummememn WaS already too strong and they thought it might increase during the next few years. “It’s sort of a difficult thing to project as to how far it would go,” Emberton said. “We can obviously talk about autonomy eroding gradually to a point at which that (the council taking complete control) would happen.” Dr. William Buckman, faculty regent, said there is no question that the council had strong control over the universities. “And it appears they’re going to get even more power than they've had in the past.” However, another regent, Chairman J. David Cole, a Bowling Green attorney, said the council was not assuming too much power, and the regents’ role was not being affected. “T think what the council is doing is, in a very broad and general fashion, establishing the right to determine what programs a university will offer,” Cole said. (continued on page 140) STOPPING BY for an unofficial visit, U.S. Senator Walter Dee Huddleston of Elizabethtown speaks at the April 29 regents meeting. RS EH a EDN FT TE SP PAE 3 139 Board Of Regents a A board with a council knocking at its back door cont. Another regent told the Herald in April that it might be better if one board governed the operations of all universities, and that might decrease competition among universities. “We have too much interest in our own interests and lose sight of the needs of the state,” Ronald Sheffer, a Henderson attorney, said. “Power can be used for good or bad and it depends on how it is used in the future.” — Dr. William Buckman Faculty regent He said it would be better if the boards of regents were abolished. “Let each president run his own university and have one sort of board, maybe the council, that would be over all the universities.” Buckman and several others said it would be hard to determine whether the council was becoming too powerful. “Power can be used for good or bad and it depends on how it is used in the future,” he said. “From what I’ve seen so far, Western has not benefited from past actions.” Among council actions that Buckman and others thought Western did not benefit from was the council’s recommendations to Gov. Julian Carroll for the operating and construction budgets for the universities. Western requested budget allocations of $27.9 million for the 1978-79 fiscal year and $30.7 million for 1979-80. The council recommended about $3.6 million less. The council later recommended to the governor that no construction be funded on any university campus for at least two years. Western’s already cramped budget was strained even more when the state Occupational Safety and Health Administration ordered the university to correct 220 safety-code violations and the university was also ordered to comply with the federal Handicapped Act. Western’s already cramped budget was strained even more when the state Occupational Safety and Health Administration ordered the university to correct 220 safety-code violations and the university was also ordered to comply with the federal Handi- capped Act. The OSHA corrections might still cost as much as $100,000 — mostly for a building to house combustible materials — and the university has requested $250,000 in state money to make the campus more accessible to handicapped persons. Carroll eventually allocated $24.3 million for 1978-79 and $26.3 million for 1979-80 in his biennial executive budget. He also gave the council $10 million in capital construction funds to be distributed among the universities. The council voted in April to use the money only for 140 Board Of Regents STUDENT REGENT AND ASG President Bob Moore consults with regent Ron Sheffer during the Oct. 29 meeting, when the board voted to appeal the $3.6 million cut from Western’s budget by the CHE. Debbie Gibson Re vais Ron Hoskins ON THE HILL for a question-and-answer symposium concerning the Council on Higher Education, Harry Snyder, executive director of the CHE, is interviewed by Herald reporter Alan Judd. construction and maintenance made necessary by laws such as the Handicapped Act. At its Homecoming meeting, the board appointed Dr. James L. Davis academic affairs vice president. Davis had been in the job on an interim basis since Dr. Raymond Cravens took a year’s sabbatical from the job in 1976. The regents also approved a report from Downing that outlined proposed improvements in campus parking, which had been a problem the previous two autumns. A 192 space addition to the Pearce-Ford Tower parking lot was approved and constructed. The regents in February eliminated the “door ajar” rule that required dorm residents to keep their doors open during open houses. The board also made the establishment of a public FM radio station a priority. The use of coal at the heating plant was banned in December because the plant was violating pollution standards and the university was forced to burn more expensive fuel oil. At the February meeting, Downing said that Western had asked the state for permission to begin designing the pollution control equipment the plant needed before it could legally burn coal. Carroll later made an addition to his executive budget of more than $800,000 to pay for the pollution-control equipment at the heating plant. He also allocated almost $100,000 to help defer the increased costs of fuel oil. At its spring meeting, the regents raised housing fees as much as $76 for some dorms, and added a $10 activity and service fee to tuition. The fee increases were included as part of Western’s $41,002,203 budget for the 1978-79 fiscal year, an increase of about $3 million over the previous year. At its spring meeting, the regents raised housing fees as much as $76 for some dorms, and added a $10 activity and service fee to tuition. One of the regents’ final actions of the year demonstrated the council’s influence on almost all university actions. The board voted to require students graduating after August 1980 to have 54 hours of upper-level courses instead of the 32 previously required. Although Downing said the possibility of increased funding from the education council was not a major factor in the change, the Academic Council earlier passed the proposal on the speculation that the council would consider the number of upper-level courses when allocating money. Whether the council is taking total control of the universities, or is just exerting more effectively powers it already had, as Executive Director Harry M. Snyder believes, is debatable. But one thing is certain: everyone, including the Board of Regents, is more aware than ever that the council exists. Richard Halicks, Alan Judd @ REGENTS CHAIRMAN J. David Cole listens to President Dero Downing during the April 29 meeting, when the board raised housing fees and non-resident tuition, and added a $10 activity and service fee. 141 Board Of Regents 142 The office of changing priorities Although their office doors are always open as a symbolic gesture of an open ad- ministration, few students ever walk in- side. Going to the administration building is often a necessity in undergraduate life. But on the way to the registrar’s office or un- dergraduate advisement, most students A 27-3 LOSS TO THE University of Tennessee-Chat- tanooga in Smith Stadium didn’t keep President Dero Downing from enjoying a moment with Roy Gillig and Bill Wade. Wade, a former Chicago Bears quarter- back, is a “longtime friend,” Downing said. Both Gil- lig and Wade are from Nashville. President’s Office walk past room 135 — the president's of- fice — instead of inside it. Each year the Talisman staff interviews President Dero Downing, Assistant to the President Paul Cook and Staff Assistant Rhea Lazarus. They are asked about the year and their involvement in its events. Since their offices are side by side, it is assumed they work together regularly. When we went inside, however, we found this isn’t the case. Downing has a variety of duties, from policy management at the top level to han- dling student complaints and individual problems. He has direct supervision of the over-all affairs of the university, working accord- ing to a university organizational chart and a master plan for growth and change. From 7:30 a.m. until late in the after- noon, the telephone in his office rings con- stantly. y (continued on page 144) ALTHOUGH JANUARY’S RECORD-SETTING snowfall didn’t keep Downing from his regular walk to work, it did change his footwear. The winter caused major problems for the university in environmental fuel standards, snow removal and class attendance. Bill Mounce Eric Hassler 144 The office of changing priorities cone “TI may come into the office in the morn- ing, thinking that one particular problem will be my foremost project for the day, but this may or may not prove to be the case,” Downing said. “Often a phone call changes what the priority of the day is to be.” In the past year numerous projects moved from a top priority rating to a sec- ond place when the uncertainty of fuel al- location became a pressing concern, Downing said. “We suddenly found ourselves in some- PREPARING THE UNIVERSITY’S BUDGET is a continuous process, according to Dr. Paul Cook, assis- tant to the president for resources management and director of the budget. He said that he and his secre- tary, Liz Esters, spend about six months preparing the year’s budget for the computer print-out. President’s Office thing of a dilemma this year,” the presi- dent said. “We were using natural gas as a major fuel supplement and found that it was no longer available. “We still felt like we were in good shape because of the coal reserves,” he said. “But somewhat more rigid environmental con- trols made it necessary that we resort to fuel oil. “This certainly wasn’t in my plans for the day,” he said. “However, it was very vital to the continuous day-to-day opera- tion. “I always have a number of long-range projects to work on that are laid out in the master plan,” he continued. “There is, of course, a never-ending need to engage in study and review of programs of study.” But the master plan did not include some of the major events of the year for Down- ing. The master plan said nothing of West- ern being designated as a regional univer- sity by the Council of Higher Education (CHE) or CHE’s increased involvement in university affairs. Downing said there was no appreciable changes with the regional designation by CHE. He said he viewed the designation as more of a change in terminology. “In 1966 the General Assembly elevated Western to the university status,” he said. “That brought about no overwhelming changes, but simply opened new and broader opportunities for the school to serve. I think of this in much the same way.” Downing said he has seen several changes in the past few years which he thinks are for the better. “We have recognized the need for more vocational and technical types of pro- grams,” he said. ‘This is really good since we can incorporate into these programs some of the basic elements of a strong gen- eral education while providing a solid skill.” Downing said he also believes the addi- tion of more two-year programs and more continuing education courses has made the university acccessible to a larger number of Bill Mounce . heed SS people. “There is an important national trend with extended campus courses,” he said. “Within reason this can be extremely valu- able to both the basic principles of the uni- versity and the surrounding communities. Of course, there are programs you can’t offer this way because of the equipment needed, but it works well in many cases.” Since this was a legislative year, Down- ing said he spent more time working with General Assembly members. CHE also occupied more of his time as it covered more space on local newspapers’ front pages. The major event pushing CHE into the public’s eye was the ruling that all degree programs must pass its approval. Downing said the council already had this authority, but had never used it. Just as reports on CHE faded, the results of a faculty evaluation of Downing were made public. Several newspapers incorrectly reported that Downing did not receive a majority of faculty votes, causing a surge of skepticism as to whether he could still function well as university president. The viles revealed that one-third of the respondents in the survey voted they have no confidence in Downing’s leadership. Forty-six percent said they have confidence in him and the rest of the approximately 520 eligible to vote did not. Following that survey, the Board of Re- gents decided that any formal evaluation of the president would be conducted by the board, not by the faculty. The policy statement on the evaluation was proposed by the board’s by-laws com- mittee. Its chairman, Tom Emberton, said he considered the adoption of the policy as the regents’ endorsement of Downing’s leadership. The resolution also gave the president responsibility for evaluating other person- nel. The board, however, reserved the right to conduct independent evaluations under certain circumstances. Meanwhile, Paul Cook was working with administrators and department heads on another budget. Cook is often on the run from one office to another, but said he spends too much time at his desk and not enough outside the administration building getting a real insight into problems. In addition to the budget, Cook is re- sponsible for any projects the president gives him. “T really have a dichotomy of responsi- bility,” Cook said. The staff assistant is responsible for overseeing the budget, grant and contract services, computer and A GOLFER FOR 20 YEARS, Assistant to the President Rhea Lazarus says the sport is “a recreation and a pastime.” He also plays in the annual faculty golf tournament in the summer. informational services and academic re- search services. There are also as many as five committee meetings a day which Cook attends. “Each day and each week varies,” he said. “At the beginning of school more people come into the office because they run into more problems during the first weeks. “There is a view today that if you have a problem the best solution is to go straight to the to p,” Cook said. ‘At this university the president is the top.” Rhea Lazarus is in the next office, often helping another student with a problem. He too is assigned to work on special pro- jects. Lazarus said his job has “no real highs and no real lows,” and varies daily. His major responsibility involves work- ing with the public safety department, which tries to improve safety programs and conditions and handles any violations of the law on campus. Lazarus said students are more involved in getting an education than in the past. “They are concerned more with aca- demic programs rather than getting on cause kicks,” he said. “They don’t spend as much time rallying behind this or that cause.” Downing, Cook and Lazarus may meet to discuss a problem of situation, but that seldom occurs in a structured meeting. Their inter-office communication is usu- ally made standing on one side or the other of the door, which is always open. Debbie Gibson @ Ricky Rogers 145 President’s Office we respect those A job description for Dr. John Minton, vice president for administrative affairs, includes responsibilities for student af- fairs, health services, university-school re- lations, public relations, alumni affairs and university committees. A recent assignment was the coordina- tion of Title IX that led Minton to take inventory of Western. “We had one year to correct any viola- tions of Title IX,” he said. “We weren’t Administrators were here when we came. They'll be here when we are graduated. They serve to maintain WKU and its role in directing our learning. Although we sometimes disagree with their policies and practices, in control Change was the name of the game for the libraries, according to director Dr. Earl Wassom. The principle advancement was the ad- dition of Computer Output Microfiche (COM), which “will replace the former card catalog that everyone is familiar with,” Wassom said. PRACTICING ON THE LIBRARY’S NEW COM- PUTER TERMINALS is Dr. Earl Wassom, assistant dean of academic services and director of library ser- vices. He said the terminals keep the catalog up to date for 13 cents a card. More than 600 faculty members are em- ployed in Western’s 285 programs of study. Dr. James Davis, vice president for aca- demic affairs, is responsible for those aca- demic programs and the faculty selection and development needed to maintain them. “A university is for the students, and we try to have the best faculty members and programs for our students,” Davis said. “We have a multi-purpose university where all programs are important.” Changes in academic programs include a required course in Western civilization, the creation of a journalism department, the reorganization of the College of Education and emphasis on career planning. STANDARD POOL IS THE GAME Dr. James Davis plays with wife Nancy and son Neal, 17. The vice president of academic affairs also enjoys traveling and has visited Venezuela and Mexico recently. Special seminars for honor students may be added to each college, according to Dr. Paul Corts, assistant dean for instruc- tion and coordinator for the honors pro- gram. “This past year there was a history honors class which met once a week,” he said. ‘It went in-depth in the subject mat- ter and enriched the students in that class.” Many first-year students who tested out of a year of credit encounter problems, ac- cording to Corts. “It puts tremendous pres- sure on them to make decisions early,” he said. “Suddenly they’re sophomores and it’s their first semester on campus.” Corts said students need to think through their objectives and goals. . a “They should try to be selective and get into organizations so they won't have free time for 100 other unproductive activities,” Corts said. ‘The activities will carry over into class participation.” Corts said studies show that satisfied students are likely to return. “Personal satisfaction is important,” he added. “You should make yourself feel like a valuable part of the community.” YARDWORK IS A HASSLE FOR SOME, but it’s a pleasure for Dr. John Minton, vice president for ad- ministrative affairs. Minton, who is also the head of the athletic committee, said he spends free time caring for the lawn, roses and other plants in his yard. Minton said university catalogs, bulle- tins and brochures had to eliminate male references and equalize the number of male and female photographs. “Hours for men and women hall resi- ; ONE SUMMERTIME ACTIVITY for Paul Corts, di- dents were different and had to be correct- ed,” Minton said. “We've also made con- siderable progress in women’s athletics.” punished for past mistakes. We just had to correct them.” 146 Administration rector of university honors program, includes coach- ing a girls’ softball team. A first-year coach, Corts led his team to second place. “We had a lot of talent.” “Also underway is the renovation and annex construction of the Kentucky Li- brary and Museum,” he said. The projects should be completed this year. Wassom is also responsible for all cam- pus libraries, the university archives and media services. He said he employs 130 students who acquire and process library books. Increased registration and dorm fees may hurt some students, he said. “But if a student really has purpose and goals, he will come to college and make it anyway.” College isn’t getting less expensive, but neither is anything else, according to Dr. Henry Hardin, dean of academic services. “I don’t see any way to reduce college costs, because of the way inflation has grown. Everything is more expensive.” Education shouldn’t be limited by geog- raphy, Hardin said. The recent mission . statement has done this, he said. Although he has mixed feelings about the statement, he sees it as an attempt for more control from state government. His duties include the administration of the university's seven libraries, museum, media services and archives. “We are making plans to move into the new addition to the Kentucky Library and Museum next year,” he said. “We have also just installed a new card catalog computer output system on microfiche which should be a tremendous help to students.” AN IVAN WILSON PAINTING IS THE SUBJECT of a conversation between Dr. Henry Hardin, dean of academic services, and secretary Elda Walker. Many paintings and books from the Kentucky Building (un- der renovation) are stored near his office. Administration in control .... Expansion of existing programs, includ- ing dorm and club activities, interests stu- dent affairs dean Charles Keown. While his office has already assisted in forming such clubs for skydivers, scuba divers, sailing enthusiasts, kung fu and women’s softball, he said expansion was possible. “If sufficient interest exists, I see no reason why there couldn’t be two or three clubs in some sports,” he said. “Let’s get back to the basics,” said Ron Beck, assistant dean of student affairs and director of university centers. Beck said this is the best way to make college less expensive. “Students need to rearrange their spending habits,” he said. As Associated Student Government ad- 148 Administration Keown said his office generally was “concerned and alert to the needs and wel- fare of students, period.” His office directly regulates all student organizations, includ- ing student government, and the student code. Student affairs also controls housing, campus recreation and the university cen- ter. AN OUTDOOR CONVERSATION is one of the three or four daily discussions Charles Keown, dean of student affairs, has with Jim Pickens, assistant to the dean. Pickens works with the recreation program and counsels students. A disciplinarian and an editor describe Larry Berry’s duties as associate dean of student affairs. Berry writes and edits university publi- cations, such as the student handbook, and works with students having disciplinary problems. An alcohol abuse program had been planned by Berry, but he decided he “didn’t want a program just for the sake of having a program. If we have one, it must be student initiated.” He directs the “How to Survive in College” program. “It in- forms students of the way to study.” A NEWLYWED SECRETARY works for Larry Berry, associate dean of student affairs. Cathy Overton began working for Berry last July. viser, Beck works with the congress and schedules entertainers for concerts. Students need to get more involved in the university, Beck said. “Students should be serious about the variety of things of- fered and view everything as an education- al opportunity. They should be their own FROM THEIR 40-YARD LINE SEATS, Ron Beck, director of university centers and an assistant dean of student affairs, and wife Bonnie watch Western lose to UT-Chattanooga in the football opener. Beck said he has attended Hilltopper games since 1964. person. Their thoughts, values and aspira- tions are as valid as anyone’s.” If your child entered Western, what advice would you share with him or her? “Spend the first year, if not the first two years, tending toward general education courses, so at the sophomore or junior year, you can change majors easily. I’ve seen them come in as freshmen saying, ‘I want to study this or that,’ and at the end of the senior year they're not even close to it.” — Horace Shrader, housing director “Geek academic advisement at the earliest possible time. Study hard, play hard and work hard. Keep your faith if you have one, and if you don’t, open your mind to possibilities.” — William Bivin, university attorney “Students shouldn’t expect everyone they eat and live with : to be just like them. A | roommate may burn incense and eat Oriental food, but that doesn’t mean he couldn't be a | compatible roommate. All learning doesn’t take place in the classroom. It can come from a roommate or resident assistant.” — Anne Murray, assistant dean of student affairs “You come to college for many things. But the foremost is to get an education. It’s sort of an apprenticeship to life. I mostly tell students to stick to the basics. Get a good room, make study hours and proportion your time well.” — Dr. Jim Goodrum, director of health services Diversified responsibilities tied to West- ern’s conservative environment make se- lecting and developing residence hall staff members difficult, according to Howard Bailey, assistant dean of student affairs. “It’s not easy to find good people,” Bai- ley said. “It’s easy to find people, but not ones who meet Western’s high standards.” Bailey also supervises student residence ‘hall assistants (RAs). “The RAs should be aware of general lifestyles of the people who live on their floor,” Bailey said. “They should also be capable and knowledgeable to assist people in times of need and crisis. They should be Most of Anne Murray’s time is spent with situations that arise in women’s residence halls. “They’re not always problems,” the assistant dean of student affairs said. “Sometimes students just want informa- tion, suggestions or advice.” Parents of incoming students need ad- vice too, Mrs. Murray said. “Parents must expect change,” she said. “If a college student returns home exactly the same, the university hasn’t been a very effective learning experience. “And students shouldn’t expect every- one they eat and live with to be just like them,” Mrs. Murray said. “A roommate may burn incense and eat Oriental food, but that doesn’t mean he couldn’t be a mature and straightforward enough to challenge immature individuals who don’t conduct themselves as adults.” RAs are staff members and college stu- dents, and the two roles often conflict, he said. “The open house program consumes much of their time and energy,” Bailey said. “We're overworking RAs in an area where few students participate. That time could be spent-in more productive pro- grams and lifestyles.” COMMUNICATION IS THE FOCUS of Howard Bai- ley’s role as assistant dean of student affairs. Bailey and Anne Murray hire and supervise directors, resi- dent assistants and night clerks for the 16 dorms. WINNING TWO WOMEN’S STAFF TENNIS TOURNAMENTS was a breeze for Anne Murray, as- sistant dean of student affairs. She was the sole partici- pant in 1975. The next year, she faced only two oppo- nents, including her secretary, Janice Smith. compatible roommate.” Title IX has changed Western, according to Mrs. Murray. “One tangible thing was the removal of curfews for women. But it’s just beginning to change the subtle uncon- scious kinds of attitudes men and women have been reared to have. “College students are more willing to do non-traditional things than in years past,” Mrs. Murray said. “Their attitudes are promising, and if they instill them in their children we won’t need Title IX.” 149 Administration 150 Administration __}L]} n control .... = Communication is the key to meeting and recognizing the needs of the university, ac- cording to Don Armstrong, director of public relations. His office uses publica- tions to promote school relations and alumni affairs. “I’m a writer, that’s my trait,” said the former newspaperman. Armstrong said he directs the public relations program and edits the alumni magazine. Preserving, projecting and protecting the school’s spirit are also meshed into Armstrong’s duties. Student workers play a significant part in the public relations program, he said. “They work as writers, photographers, sec- retaries and artists. They do frontline work. We trade experience.” Registration and dormitory fees have been raised, but Georgia Bates, executive secre- tary-treasurer of the College Heights Foun- dation and secretary to the Board of Re- gents, doesn’t see either as a serious threat to enrollment. “Western is a state-supported institution primarily for Kentucky students,” she said. “Many out-of-state students have al- ready taken advantage of Western’s lower registration fee. Even with the increase, they’re getting a bargain.” Financial aid is available to most stu- dents, according to Miss Bates, who said the College Heights Foundation annually aids more than 400 students with scholar- ships. “More than $100,000 has been budgeted for awards for 1977-78,” she said. “Awards are made from earnings from the founda- tion’s trust funds to needy and worthy stu- dents who have a potential for success in college.” A SMILE AND A WARM WORD OF GREETING welcome visitors to the College Heights Foundation office. Secretary Georgia Bates is also executive secre- tary-treasurer of the Board of Regents. A HAND WAVING A RED TOWEL, adorned the football field for Homecoming in 1976, and is now a “When I came here to be athletic direc- tor,” said Johnny Oldham, “I didn’t really know what an athletic director did, so I started keeping a list. I’d read magazine articles by athletic directors describing their duties. I’d read something and say, ‘Yeah I do that’ and write it down. Some- times they were things I didn’t realize I did.” Oldham’s list has grown to more than three single-spaced pages and ranges from speaking at high school banquets to man- aging the $807,589 athletic budget. His biggest challenge is meeting Title IX, which bans sex discrimination in edu- cation. “I don’t think anybody (in athletics) knows what it means,” he said. “Our job is to try to do what’s right, what's fair accord- ing to our interpretations of guidelines.” To bring the women’s athletic program closer to the men’s level, Western added 16 partial scholarships for women to the 17 full scholarships offered the year before. The men’s total remained at 106 full scholarships. fixture on the football field and basketball court, thanks to Don Armstrong, director of public relations. Enjoyable experiences at Western shouldn't be forgotten or discontinued when students graduate, according to Lee Robertson, director of alumni affairs. “They’re part of the Western family and should continue to work and have fun to- gether,” Robertson said. Twenty-five or more graduates in a com- munity are needed to form an alumni club, he said. ‘We take one program to each club once a year, and members receive the alum- ni magazine and are invited to Home- coming each year.” Club members also attend receptions when athletic teams compete in away tour- naments, Robertson said. “We want to organize a club in every county in Kentucky and get them more involved in informing prospective stu- dents about Western,” Robertson said. A GOLF CART TRANSPORTS ATHLETIC DIREC- TOR John Oldham and alumni affairs director Lee Robertson as they supervise more than 100 faculty members who greeted and assisted returning students at the 16 dormitories in late August. It’s been a low-key, soft-sell campaign, but the College Heights Foundation has grown from an emergency loan program to a $125,000 scholarship fund, according to Dr. Kelly Thompson, foundation president and president emeritus. “The foundation was established in 1923 and used its resources as rapidly as it ac- quired them until 1970,” Thompson said. “When I was president, I could see it wasn't growing, so I volunteered to take it over and work to make it an institution to serve more adequately. “We've used word-of-mouth advertising and projected Western’s image,” Thomp- son said. “Our program is not like a snow- ball that will roll by itself. You have to keep pushing it.” A VACATION HOME IN FLORIDA coaxes Presi- dent Emeritus Kelly Thompson into his car and onto the road often. Thompson, who is also the president of the College Heights Foundation, spends about six months a year at his second home. Displays honoring former basketball coach Ed Diddle, lettermen and teams in Western’s history will soon decorate Did- dle Arena, according to Dee Gibson, direc- tor of public affairs and community rela- tions. “We are completing pictures of all letter- men and athletic teams in this school’s his- tory,” Gibson said. “We are also collecting memorabilia of Mr. Diddle and hope to have both projects completed in the fall.” Gibson said some out-of-state students will probably consider staying in their home state because of the fee increase. “But it’s going to work that way for Western, too,” he said. ‘Many of our stu- dents who have gone out of the state will probably stay because other schools have done this also. It might just balance out.” Gibson said he encourages freshmen to concentrate on studies their first semester. “That’s the most critical semester as far as grades go,” Gibson said. “And they need patience. It takes a little while to adjust. It’s normal to be homesick.” USING A TEE FOR A TOOL, Dee Gibson, director of public affairs and community relations, cleans an iron. Gibson, who plays about three weekends a month, carries a seven handicap and plays in the College Heights Foundation tournament every May. Administration Labs in journalism were productive before the newly created department began its ca- reer, according to David Whitaker, di- rector of publications. “The College Heights Herald and Talis- man are fully developed,” Whitaker said. “We got the enabling tools with larger staffs, money and more equipment.” All publications advisers are journalism faculty, but Whitaker said he likes to think of them as teachers in both settings. “You awl — COMPLETE RENOVATION OF THE KENTUCKY BUILDING moved the Kentucky Library and curator 152 Administration ad can do more effective teaching in a lab than in a classroom,” he said. “It’s just the very nature of the beast,” Whitaker said. “You can’t learn all in a classroom. You can know every technical point about how to write a story, but un- less you write it and use mechanics, you're nowhere.” Both publications have received national awards, but Whitaker said the challenge for excellence becomes more difficult. Riley Handy to Gordon Wilson Hall. Handy’s staff prepared “suitcase exhibits” from the museum. A FAMILIAR SIGHT IN THE PRESS BOX at home football games is David Whitaker, journalism depart- ment head and director of university publications. Whitaker, a former Courier-Journal sports writer, does the play-by-play reporting for the statistics “book.” “You've got to improve just to stay where you are. No matter how good a newspaper, yearbook or magazine is, you could have done better. A perfect publica- tion has never been printed. That’s the fas- cination of journalism.” “It’s well known that if you're researching the Ohio Valley or Kentucky, you haven’t done your homework unless you've been in our library,” said Riley Handy, Ken- tucky Library and Museum curator. The library and museum house “special collections relating to Kentucky and early America, and consist of rare books, manu- scripts and museum artifacts,” according to Handy. Handy tries to secure authentic materials so “a person can actually use materials from that period, and make his own inter- pretations rather than read those from a book written in, say, 1970.” After more than 45 years of collecting, the library and museum were full. “We had to either stop collecting or ex- pand,” Handy said. Expansion won, so ren- ovation of the original building and con- struction of another building began in the late spring of 1977, at a projected cost of more than $2 million. Handy said the work should be completed in fall 1978. The expansion will double the space and make it the largest collection in the state. A visitor to the university archives might be an administrator on official business or a freshman coming to see a picture of his mom or dad in an old Talisman, according to university archivist Dr. Crawford Crowe. The archives contain the official records of the university, catalogs, campus year- books and newspapers, the papers of de- ceased Western presidents Henry Hardin Cherry and Paul Garrett, and anything else that pertains to Western. “We're always eager to find some mate- rial to fill a gap in what happened 30, 40 or 50 years ago,” Crowe said. For instance, he said, he has “spent the last year seeking information on fraternities and sororities.” “ANYTHING THAT PERTAINS TO WESTERN?” is the concern of university archivist Dr. Crawford Crowe, who collects books, newspapers and catalogs. His latest project was collecting information about Greek organizations. Curtis Logsdon wears three hats as director of the computer services, institutional re- seareh and academic research and comput- er services, but hopes soon to get addition- al responsibility with more equipment. “We have a proposal for the upgrading of our system with a more powerful com- puter,” Logsdon said. “We've reached the maximum capability and speed.” Contrary to popular opinion, computers will never replace humans, he said. “Tremendous analysis and program- ming is necessary to enable a computer to perform a function,” he said. ‘Some think you just push a button and get an answer. That was never the case. “Computers perform functions that could be performed by people. But some- times the task would require dozens of clerical workers and six months. “We've gotten more information for the same amount (of money).” FROM THE THIRD-FLOOR BALCONY of his new office, Curtis Logsdon takes a break from his duties as director of computer and informational services. The Wetherby Administration Building office formerly be- longed to the university attorney. In spring 1977, the Council on Higher Education made a mission statement suggesting Western focus on technological programs, teacher education and career-oriented associate degree programs. What do you think about the statement? How will it limit or improve Western? “The mission statement said we should expand the community college and continuing education, but then limited our. perimeter. It’s somewhat of a paradox.” — Dr. Carl Chelf, dean of the Bowling Green Community College and Continuing Education “We will continue to provide the same programs except for those which are very expensive and have just a few students. However, the university would have made adjustments in these programs anyway. The mission statement just made it happen a little pee ae The character of Western won't be changed. It will still be a multi-purpose institution serving this region of Kentucky.” — Dr. Ronnie Sutton, dean of scholastic development Students working for media services pro- vide and receive a valuable service, accord- ing to director Dr. Charles Anderson. Media services include the educational television station, campus radio station (WKYVU) and the audio-visual department. Anderson relies on skilled students to op- erate the facilities. “They get the experience they need for future jobs and we get the help we need,” he said. Anderson is working on a production of a teacher training course on life science. To be aired on Kentucky Educational Televi- sion, the program will benefit teachers throughout the state, he said. REVIEWING A PROGRAM about the Bowling Green Arts Commission is Dr. Charles Anderson, director of media services. The tape is one of many produced in the educational television studio and was shown in surrounding communities. 153 Administration in control cont. CLIMBING A TELEVISION ANTENNA MAST “was the photographer’s idea,” said Harold Smith, director of accounts and budgetary control. “I don’t even like to climb it. I don’t like to get up high.” Carpentry and yardwork are more his style, Smith said. Balancing the university's account books is part of Harold Smith’s job as director of accounts and budgetary control. He also coordinates the accounting, cashier and accounts payable departments, a job which will get easier once computer capabilities are increased, Smith said. “I hope to get all accounting records on microfiche,” he said. “This will help con- siderably in storage of records and in their access.” Plans also include a comprehensive com- puterized accounts receivable system to keep records up-to-date and make bud- getary control smoother. Registration and dorm fee increases won't alter enrollment much, Smith said. “There are so many scholarships, grants and loans available on the federal and state level that I don’t see any reason someone in need can’t get help in financing his educa- best into an education. “It’s just much too costly to go to college and not take full advantage of its opportu- nities,” he said. Work in Larry Howard’s department hasn’t changed. There’s just more work and less convenient time to do it, the direc- tor of purchasing said. “The work has increased because school is almost continuous,” he said. “We used to catch up over summer but now the long- est break is two weeks.” Year-round occupancy is good, however, Administration Howard said. “I am in favor of using the buildings here all the time. It’s good to utilize them for continuing education and allow students to complete their education in a shorter time.” Howard said his department’s print shop produces publications for the cost of materials. “We try to save money in all operations,” he said. “All major cost items TT oe Se ee xual are bid. T his way we get it down to at least wholesale or distributor price.” HELPING WITH THE HIGH SCHOOL MATH- EMATICS HOMEWORK of Mark Alen is one way Larry Howard, director of purchasing, spends time with his three children. The others are Lawrence, 23, and Patricia, 20. “The mission statement is a significant reference document. I would hope and expect it to not become a strait jacket. I expect it to be applied with the rule of reason.” — William Bivin, university attorney Federal changes in university programs often cause Harry Largen, vice president for business affairs, to shift his energies, but Largen generally supervises personnel, purchasing, physical plant, student finan- cial aid, and auxiliary and business ser- vices. “The time I spend with each department changes from time to time, depending on unique situations,” Largen said. ‘We deal with management and policy questions which often have a wide impact on the university, depending on projects and changes.” One additional responsibility will be the operation of the continuing education cen- ter, Largen said. The increased registration fee provided needed support for 1977-78, Largen said. “State appropriations will also meet needs.” Interaction with students is limited, but Largen said he has found them to be help- ful in terms of suggestions. “They have a good insight into student attitudes and needs and into the needs of the university.” FROM HIS FATHER’S SHOULDERS, basketball gets easier for five-year-old James Breckinridge Largen against brother Kenneth. Their dad, Harry Largen, vice president for business affairs, said he and his four children enjoy sports, games and shopping sprees. Fair pay will be the outcome of a classifica- tion system for staff members, according to James Tomes, director of personnel ser- “vices. Paperwork is often viewed as unnecessary, but Dr. Glenn Crumb, grants and contracts director, works with papers that support research projects beneficial to students and faculty. “We're responsible for processing grant proposals and award documents,” Crumb said. “We establish the budgets and moni- tor the expenditures of funds from awards made to the university,” he said. “Grants provide opportunities for fac- ulty members to get actively involved in research. Financial aid is also provided for “It’s a scientific way to insure equal pay for equal work,” Tomes said. ‘We’re studying every job across campus and its duties and responsibilities, not the person in it.” Tomes said the 750 campus positions and salaries will be compared to those in southern Kentucky to see if any salaries need to be increased. An in-service training program was also planned to acquaint the present staff and newcomers to university policies and prac- tices, Tomes said. “It will benefit everyone because each office will be uniform and consistent in its application of university procedures,” he said. ‘The staff will have a better overall knowledge of university operation.” A BENCH OUTSIDE THE WETHERBY ADMINIS-: TRATION BUILDING is a good place for a break for Jim Tomes, director of personnel, and his secretary, Ivy Roberson. Miss Roberson processes hundreds of employment applications each year. students who get involved in research. It’s a valuable experience as they work with faculty and staff.’ An October seminar brought representa- tives from higher education, business and industry to Western to discuss grant needs and possibilities with faculty members, Crumb said. A FISHING TRIP PROPOSAL bought Dr. Charles Eison to the garden of his boss, Dr. Glenn Crumb, director of grants and contracts. Crumb said he was “working up a little dirt around the beans.” 155 Administration What effect will the increased registration and dorm fees have on the enrollment and makeup of Western’s student body? “Many out-of-state students have already taken advantage of Western’s lower registration fee. Even with the increase, they’re getting a bargain.” — Georgia Bates, executive secretary- treasurer of the College Heights Foundation “I haven't heard any students complaining about the registration fee increase. It seems our housing fee increase didn’t affect our number of dorm applications.” — Horace Shrader, housing director “Many of our students who have gone out of the state will probably stay because other schools have done this also. It might just balance out.” — Dee Gibson, director of public affairs and community relations “There are so many scholarships, grants and loans available on the federal and state level that I don’t see any reason someone in need can’t get help in financing his education.”’ — Harold Smith, director of accounts and budgetary control “Our intention every year is to make the administrative process a less complicated one for the student,” said Dr. Thomas Up- dike, director of admissions. The admissions office establishes the first record of every enrolled student, Up- dike said. Working with these students is a “source of inspiration.” “Today, college students are sincere, dedicated students who in general know where they’re going and how to get there,” Updike said. “They’re an energetic group. It’s difficult to grow old working with them.” A GRADUATION PRESENT once in disrepair is the prized possession of antique collector Dr. Thomas Up- dike, director of admissions. Updike said his father gave him the Governor Winthrop-style desk, which probably was made by a Kentucky craftsman. 156 Administration Academic programs are the most impor- tant link to career planning, accord- ing to Dr. Jerry Wilder, director of the new academic advisement, career planning and placement center. “We plan to have newsletters sent to up- date faculty members about manpower needs, job trends and employment out- looks,” Wilder said. “We want each faculty A TREE BULGING WITH APPLES is trimmed by David Mefford, director of university-school relations. Mefford said his family preserves apples and 28 varie- ties of vegetables grown in its quarter-acre garden. adviser to be more effective and do more than work out a program of studies for students.” Career planning and placement offices are temporarily housed in Florence Schneider Hall, with two full-time career planning advisers employed, Wilder said. The center planned “11 50-minute lec- tures to cover topics such as resume prep- aration and job interviews,” the director said. “We'll also have certain speakers scheduled from education, business, in- dustry and government, and we'll also take requests.” GRAD II, a computerized employer-stu- dent matching program, was scheduled to begin last spring. “We identify a pool of firms and they'll supply qualifications and data and kinds of students they're interested in,” Wilder said. “Our students supply items of infor- mation, and both receive printouts if they match.” STRONG SIDELIGHTING from an afternoon sun highlights the faces of Dr. Jerry Wilder and daughters Kimberly, 7, and Laura Lynn, 9. Wilder is director of the newly-formed center for academic advisement, ca- reer planning and placement. “We're going to make a greater effort to get high school seniors to visit early in the fall,” said David Mefford, director of uni- versity-school relations. “We have four morning tours scheduled on the same days as home football games.” That and expanded visitation in south- eastern Kentucky are the major alterations to the program that have evolved since 1975, according to Mefford. “We have our program pretty well out- lined and organized, but new toll roads in southeastern Kentucky have made West- ern more accessible to those counties,” he said. Concerning out-of-state enrollment, Mefford said he expects little change. “Our out-of-state fee has not been increased competitively through the years. The state fee in Ohio, Illinois and Indiana has been going up, so students can attend Western about as economically as they can stay at home,” he said. Pleas for pre-registration have been heard and studied, but the terminology has been changed, according to Dr. Ronnie Sutton, dean of scholastic development. “The thrust is not to have pre-registra- tion, but advance registration,” Sutton said. With advance registration the process would be completed earlier and a student would simply move to campus and begin classes, he added. To test the feasibility of such a system, seniors and graduate students were sched- uled to register early for spring and fall semesters, Sutton said. Computers will be used as in the three-year-old freshman summer orientation, advisement and regis- tration program. The recent mission statement won't sig- nificantly change Western, Sutton said. “The character of Western won't be changed,” Sutton added. “It will still be a multi-purpose institution serving this re- gion of Kentucky.” A GAME OF CROQUET occupies Dr. Ronnie Sutton, dean of scholastic development, and his sons, Doug, 10, Keith, 6, and Steve, 8. Sutton and his sons play other sports, depending on the season. “We want to eliminate crowded con- ditions in Diddle at registration and make it a more relaxed atmosphere,” Dr. Stephen House, university registrar, said. To do this, the office tried a new on-line registration system in the spring semester for seniors and graduate students. “Students’ classes are fed directly into the computer, eliminating the course cards,” House said. “There is not the con- fusion of going from table to table trying to get classes.” Students play a major role in the regis- trar’s office, according to House. “We hire additional student workers during registration,” he said. “We couldn't perform the necessary functions of this of- fice without student help.” The office is responsible for graduation ceremony preparations, all phases of regis- tration, maintaining a student record sys- tem, recording degrees, mailing diplomas and providing enrollment data. AN OLD WHEELCHAIR-TURNED-RICKSHAW makes traveling easy for 2-year-old Danny House, and his younger brother, Jon. Their father, registrar Dr. Stephen House, provides the pull. 4g 157 Administration in control .... ROOMS IN DR. RAYMOND CRAVENS’ 70- YEAR-OLD HOUSE include antiques, such as the couch he reupholstered. The dean of public service and international programs also makes stained glass windows and maintains a Victorian garden. Two pet projects of Dr. Raymond Cra- vens, former vice president for academic affairs, require his full-time attention as dean of public service and international programs. ‘Public service is one of the university’s missions, and our faculty is mature in this area and has more time due to a stabilizing enrollment,” Cravens said. International programs have much po- tential at Western, according to Cravens. “We're looking for all kinds of methods for students and faculty to work and take their education abroad. We’re trying to in- crease the awareness of the international setting in the total curriculum.” Laboratory schools are becoming extinct in America, but Jones-Jaggers Lab School is progressing into a more vital part of Western, said director Dr. Donald Ritter. “This one has moved from being an ele- mentary education school with observers to a school with faculty who have Ph.D’s or are highly skilled,” Ritter said. “It’s a place to bring kids, diagnose their problems and prescribe an educational program. We’re always trying things,. whether they are educational projects or research.” Ritter said the faculty members are also defining learning and teaching styles so the 180 students and their teachers can be matched more successfully. WHEN HIS SON TOM got a paper route three years ago, Dr. Donald Ritter, director of Jones-Jaggers Lab School, started getting up at 5 a.m. to drive him. Now, both Tom, 16, and sister Beth, 13, have routes. 158 Administratigh If the student can’t come to college, take college to the student. That’s the chore of Dr. Charles Clark, assistant dean for ex- tended campus programs. Last year, 7,383 students in 327 classes were enrolled from Hopkinsville, Ky., to London, England. Most were graduate stu- dents, “primarily teachers working for master’s degrees,” he said. The undergrad- uates are “mostly out of high school and working, or housewives.” Clark said the normal area is in western Kentucky — Louisville, Owensboro, Ft. Knox, Campbellsville, Albany and so forth — though in 1976-77, two classes were far away: a speech and theater class in London during Christmas and a summer dance class in New York. The classes range from general educa- tion to specialty courses, including a mid- management program. A CHAT WITH SECRETARY Dorothy Share is a pleasant moment for Dr. Charles Clark, assistant dean for extended campus programs. Clark said Mrs. Share does everything from regi stering students for off-cam- pus classes to making his travel arrangements. Dr. Carl Chelf said his title, dean of the Bowling Green Community College and Continuing Education, is a “mouthful,” but doesn’t define his job. Rather, he sees his office as a sort of miscellaneous file. “We inherit lots of programs that others didn’t think fit their department,” he said. Included are the extended campus educa- tion and associate degree programs, irde- pendent study, continuing education, evening classes and coordination of the special programs office. Chelf said the council’s mission state- ment may limit Western’s range of off- campus classes. “It said we should expand the communi- ty college and continuing education, but then limited our perimeter,” he said. “It’s somewhat of a paradox.” A GIRLS’ CHURCH LEAGUE SOFTBALL GAME at Lampkin Park gives Dr. Carl Chelf, dean of Bowling Green Community College and Continuing Education, a chance to chat with Dr. Drew Harrington, a history professor. Both have daughters who play in the league. Day-to-day operational-type decisions form the bulk of Dr. Wallace Nave’s duties as director of special programs. He supervises the independent study program, May term, summer school and evening class schedules. He also coordi- nates the Continuing Education Units (CEUs) and is the major adviser for the Associate of Liberal Studies degree. In the past calendar year, about 775 students took correspondence courses through Nave’s office. “The courses are not designed to give the student an easy way out.” Sixteen assignments are com- pleted before the final exam is given. “CEUs are for courses dealing with rath- er limited topics,” Nave said. “They may have just a few class meetings, and no cred- it is given for them.” Each of the courses’ fees was affected by the registration fee increase, Nave said. “But I don’t see any sign of an effect on enrollment. It hasn’t been raised in several years, and most people should expect this with the inflationary conditions we have.” FAMILY OUTINGS are important to Dr. Wallace Nave, director of the office of special programs. Nave has taken his wife, daughters and friends to Barren River Reservoir for the past five years to boat and ski. 159 Administration a ca 4 ca I | control .... Book bargains are what Buddy Childress tries to get for students as director of the College Heights Bookstore. Last summer he traveled to Lexington, Chicago and Nebraska to buy used books. He also purchases supplies, regulates stock and operates the student center lobby shop. Fithian Faries’ job is a massive two-fold assignment: director of audio-visual ser- vices and the Third District Film Library. “Any piece of equipment on the Hill ex- cept TVs” is his responsibility, he said. Perhaps more overwhelming are 6,500 films maintained and provided for 36 pub- lic school systems and all Western faculty 160 Administration The bookstore profit is limited to 10 per cent, Childress said. All profits are invest- ed in the College Heights Founda- tion. Supervising student workers is also part of Childress’ job. “The student workers in the store help the store’s image and keep us up-to-date,” the director said. ONE OF THE LAST APPLES left on his apple tree draws the attention of Buddy Childress, director of the College Heights Bookstore. Childress said he had no particular fondness for the tree. AN ALTEC MICROPHONE MIXER becomes a desk for Fithian Faries, director of audio-visual services and public address announcer at Hilltopper football and basketball games. and students. He said the mission statement shouldn't affect Western “for a year or two. Our role is still primarily teacher education.” How has Title IX affected Western? “College students are more willing to do non-traditional things than in years past. Their attitudes are promising and if they instill them in their children we won't need Title IX. We will have arrived.” — Anne Murray, assistant dean of student affairs “We had one year to correct any violation of Title IX. We weren’t punished for past mistakes. We just had to correct them. We're still probing and pricking so we won't slip back. We've achieved a consciousness level we didn’t have before Title IX.” — Dr. John Minton, vice-president for administrative affairs Planning, leadership, organization and control are priorities Marcus Wallace sets for law enforcement and public safety as director of public safety. “We try to serve the university commu- nity with security and law enforcement,” Wallace said. Wallace’s office has re-emphasized the crime prevention program and developed a daily training program for officers. Communication with student workers is of major importance, Wallace said. “We want to be in touch with the community we are trying to serve. With their coopera- tion we can give better law enforcement.” A COMPUTER TERMINAL in the public safety de- partment aids director Marcus Wallace with a direct lead into the state police department’s computer. A former student worker, Owen Lawson views the university from another angle as physical plant and facilities management administrator. “Supervising and imple- menting the total university program” is how Lawson describes his role. Operating the Agriculture Exposition Center and completing the expansion of Twenty years — that’s how long Lon Slaughter said it has been since he missed a home football or basketball game. That’s also how long he has been director of food services. The superfan administers all campus food services, including the cafeterias and grills in Garrett and Downing centers, con- cessions at home ball games and concerts, and catering for special events. Slaughter estimates that 10,950 persons are served in the grills and cafeterias daily. Slaughter said the board plan, which of- fered 10 meals a week for $270 a semester, was serving 601 persons by Sept. 6. Slaughter recommended that students take advantage of the board plan. “If you have the board plan and it’s paid for,” he said, “then should you get short on cash, you'll still be assured of having a good balanced meal.” MEMENTOS PERSONALIZE THE BUSINESS OF- FICE of Lon Slaughter, director of food services. There he keeps pictures of wife Nancy and dog Mr. Lee. the Kentucky Building were important projects last year. The new public safety building and the renovation of Schneider Hall were also of special interest. Lawson said student workers are valu- able to his department. ‘We used 50 to 100 students in such jobs as secretaries, paint- ers and landscapers,” he said. MEMBERSHIP ON THE ATHLETIC COMMITTEE earns physical plant administrator Owen Lawson a choice reserved seat in the lower deck of Smith Stadi- um. Lawson said he has missed only one game in the stadium, which was constructed in 1967. “They also serve a worthwhile function in keeping the physical plant staff up-to- date about the desires of the students.” 161 Administration 4 Financial aid applicants who earn grants aren’t necessarily as strong academically as students who get loans, according to A.J. Thurman, financial aid director. ‘The stu- dents with loans get an entirely different outlook,” he said. “If they get a loan, they know they have to pay it back.” Thurman estimated a 20 per cent annual increase in aid requests. Most applicants ete are female because of the job’s paperwork nature, he said. To lower university costs, Thurman rec- ommended eliminating the large amount of paperwork which plagues his depart- ment. He added that the department is re- sponsible for 24 annual reports to federal and state agencies. Each involves three to four weeks of research, and he said the 162 Administration FIFTY OR MORE HOUSE PLANTS, ranging from cacti to geraniums, occupy much of the time of A.J. Thurman, director of student financial aid. Thurman said about half of the plants spend the summer out- doors and some must be watered daily. paperwork is “increasing at an alarming rate.” When people identify the excessive de- mand for dorm rooms at Western as part of a national back-to-the-dorm trend, hous- ing director Horace Shrader chuckles. Shrader said his staff has reduced the phenomenon from a crisis to a hassle since the overcrowding began in fall 1976. “Last year, it took us more by surprise. It happened at a quicker rate and closer to school. This year, we saw it coming.” In July, the housing office wrote to stu- dents who had applied for dorm rooms, asking for confirmations. Between 80 and 90 per cent of the applicants replied, ac- cording to Shrader. “If we hadn't sent those out, we would have had maybe 250 TWO SUMMERS OF COPING WITH FULL DORMS, waiting lists and temporary housing have kept housing director Horace Shrader on the phone while other people vacationed. A lawyer referral service sponsored by the Kentucky Bar Association enables univer- sity attorney William Bivin to help stu- dents he couldn’t help before. Since he works for Western, he ex- plained, he couldn’t give legal advice to students having disputes with the univer- sity. Bivin said when he suggested they see an attorney downtown, they were hesitant, fearing expensive fees. Now, Bivin can supply students with a toll-free number to the service, which makes referrals to attorneys who agree to charge $10 for a 30-minute session. Officially, he “performs legal services for the university,” including analysis of federal laws and judicial decisions, and in- terpretation of technical documents. He also defends the university in court and drafts legal documents. Though he said he doesn’t “have a basis to make a guesstimate,” he doubted that the mission statement would have much effect. “It’s a significant reference docu- ment,” Bivin said. “I would hope and ex- pect it not to become a strait jacket.” THE PARK CITY DAILY NEWS AND COURIER— JOURNAL make up part of university attorney Wil- liam Bivin’s daily reading material. Bivin, also a fiction and legal philosophy reader, enjoys bass fishing. on the waiting list.” As many as 100 more students lived in temporary housing until a permanent room could be found. Shrader estimated that “30, 40, maybe 50” students were housed by Bowling Green residents. He referred about 75 students to other off- campus housing. Shrader’s job isn’t limited to fall and spring. Last summer, his office coordinated the dormitory arrangements for 5,000 workshop participants and other visitors. He said he “hasn’t heard any students complaining” about the registration-fee in- crease. “It seems our housing fee increase didn’t affect our number of dorm applica- tions,” he said. The cost of an air-condi- tioned room was raised from $184 to $205 per semester; other room fees rose from $172 to $193. After service as a Marine doctor on Okina- wa and as a private practitioner, Dr. Jim Goodrum found happiness as director of Western’s health clinic. After getting out of the Marines in 1969, he came here “to stay six months just to look for something else.” He found something else, but in 1972 came back. “It’s where I work best,” he explains. “We're basically two doctors and a sup- porting staff of several in a ‘town’ of “Every individual at some point in life can benefit from counseling, so the university counseling services center benefits the nor- mal person,” said director Dr. Stanley Brumfield. Brumfield and his staff help students with personal and social problems. Fears of interpersonal relationships and taking re- sponsibility for one’s self-direction are two basic problems of society, he said. The for- mer often results in loneliness, anxiety and frustration, while the latter leads people to seek “others to make decisions for them, whether in selecting a career, mate or 13,000,” the Western graduate said. “You come to college for many things. It’s sort of an apprenticeship to life. I mostly tell students to stick to the basics, get a good room, make study hours and proportion your time well.” A MID-AFTERNOON DOVE-HUNTING SESSION is one of four annual excursions for Dr. Jim Goodrum, university physician. Dr. Goodrum said he also hunts quail and squirrels, and fishes for trout and bass. A MANUSCRIPT THAT MAY MATERIALIZE into a book is the subject of many hours of proofreading for Dr. Stanley Brumfield, director of the university counseling center. The author’s work has taken years. friend,” Brumfield said. “Of the 13,000 people here, we have 13,000 normal, functioning people,” he said. ‘The abnormal people are like those on TV, kidnapping 28 kids in California.” The center also administers national testing programs, including the General Education Development Test, and con- ducts personal-development seminars. Ml 163 Administration Students in the College of Education returned in August to find three departments had merged into one. There were also better employment prospects for majors who are More graduate than undergraduate de- grees are being granted in the College of Education, Dr. J.T. Sandefur, dean, said. “There are fewer students entering teaching, but more teachers are coming back for more education,” he said. The job outlook is improving, Sandefur said. “Most people are placed satisfactori- ly, especially if they are flexible and will- ing to go where the job is.” Although the college is identified with teacher preparation, it offers other pro- grams, including psychology, physical education and industrial education, he said. “Students are very interested in psychol- ogy,” Sandefur said. “They are also inter- ested in improving skills such as bowling and tennis.” Sandefur said follow-up work on grad- uates is important. The Teacher Preparation Evaluation Pro- ject (TPEP) makes a random selection of graduates and follows their progress for five years so the college can evaluate its effectiveness, he said. “Our program is one of the best in the nation. It’s received na- tional recognition.” Starting a new department is never easy, but the task of Dr. Kenneth Estes, head of the educational leadership department, was made simpler by incorporating several courses offered by two now-defunct de- 164 College Of Education teacher - AMID GAMES OF HORSESHOES AND VOLLEY- BALL, Dr. J.T. Sandefur and Dr. Kenneth Estes enjoy the sunshine at the College of Education picnic at Lampkin Park, Sept. 9. Sandefur is dean and Estes is head of the education services department. partments, school administration and foundations, and guidance. The department “takes people after they've finished their master’s degrees and carries them through certification leader- ship for public schools, as principals, busi- ness managers, supervisors or guidance counselors.” Most of the students are teachers, Estes said. About half of the 1,345 summer term students in 1977 were seeking administra- tive certification, while the other half were in guidance counseling. Education isn’t the only concern of the psychology department, according to Dr. John O’Connor, head. It also involves three funded research projects: Louisville desegregation, aging in Kentucky and teacher corps, which is con- cerned with discipline and classroom man- agement. Another project is the 1-year-old child development center which assists local schools in placing exceptional children. O’Connor said the job market is “too poor to encourage teaching without a Phiba “Fifty to 60 per cent of our graduates minded PLACING THE THREE OF HEARTS ON THE FOUR OF CLUBS, Dr. Kenneth Brenner, associate dean of the College of Education, comes one card clos- er to completing a game of solitaire. Bridge is another favorite of Brenner’s. enter graduate school,” O’Connor said. “Another 40 per cent are double majors, which makes them more competitive.” Other graduates begin careers in clinical and industrial psychology. ‘There is a high demand for clinical psychologists, es- pecially in community mental health cen- ters,” O’Connor said. The department gets a great deal of feed- back from graduates and their employers. “We use the information to modify the course outlines on the graduate levels,” O’Connor said. “Generally, the employers have been very supportive. We've only had to make minor modifications.” “Parents and students have come to the realization that there is nothing wrong with a person’s earning a living with his hands,” Dr. Franklin Conley said. This is one reason the head of the indus- trial education and technology department gives for the increased enrollment. Conley said enrollment was 1,157 last fall, 50 more than the year before. The department has undergone many changes, Conley said. “The old industrial education building has been renovated and houses the woodworking, graphic arts and THE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION’S ANNUAL PIC- NIC at Lampkin Park gave psychology department head John O’Connor and his wife Margaret a chance to chat with dean Dr. J.T. Sandefur. O’Connor said he enjoys talking informally with his colleagues. “ .. THERE IS NOTHING WRONG with a person’s earning a living with his hands,” said Dr. Franklin Conley, head of industrial education and technology. Academic renovation highlighted his year. drafting sections. “The industrial arts and vocational teacher education programs have been re- vised and an associate degree program in printing technology in cooperation with the state vocational school has been add- ed,” he said. “That brings the number of associate degrees offered by the depart- ment to 13. “Graduates have little trouble finding jobs,” Conley said. “Industrial education graduates can go to work teaching or in industry with a starting salary of around $12,000 a year.” BAER SOS ET PE sovemn rcie! Lit Hh i HAY ere (continued on page 166) 165 College Of Education teacher = minded cont. A SUMMER AFTERNOON BIKE RIDE is a chance for Dr. Roger Pankratz and wife Donna to spend time together. The assistant dean for instruction is often 166 College Of Education COHABITATION IS NO TROUBLE FOR MITZI, a 2-year-old poodle, and Tuffy, an 8-year-old cat, the pets of Jack Neel, director of field services. Neel said the pair gets along well — the only trick they know. out of town on business for the College of Education, but enjoys tennis with his wife and a miniature train set with his sons when at home. The field services department is an an- swering service for the College of Educa- tion, according to director Jack Neel. “We like to think we are the one place a person in the field can call if they are in need of the College of Education,” he said. The department assists area public schools in “curriculum and staff develop- ment,” Neel said. “We assess needs and match resources with their needs, whatever they may be.” He said the department manages a part- nership of 20 public school districts, Jones- Jaggers Laboratory School and Western. “We are an outreach program of the educa- tion department.” Four “professional development cen- ters’ are being established to provide a de- livery service between the College of Edu- cation and the public schools, Neel added. Three departments in the College of Education became one last summer and Dr. Curtis Englebright was named head of the teacher education department. Goals for the new department, formerly the elementary education, secondary edu- cation, and reading and special education departments, include efficiency by reduc- ing the number of people reporting direct- ly to the dean, Englebright said. ‘There was also a great deal of common- alty in the mission of the individual de- partments,” he said. “The whole concern is teacher education and the departments seem better served together than separate- ly.” Englebright said the new department would also be advantageous in seeking outside funding and providin g better com- munication among the faculty and admin- istration. Coordinators to serve as liaisons be- tween the faculty and administration were selected for each program area. They in- clude elementary and early childhood edu- cation, secondary and middle school educa- tion, exceptional child and reading pro- grams, Englebright said. “Teaching positions are available if a person is geographically mobile,” he said. “More positions are available in rural areas and for graduates with special education preparation.” A Teacher Preparation Evaluation Pro- gram (TPEP) has been instrumented to vis- it graduates in order to obtain information about the impact their training at Weste rn has had on their career. “It’s the only model for teacher evalua- tion in the U.S.,” Englebright said. “We've collected reams of data and are interpreting it now. We’re going to feed it back to our ongoing programs.” Dr. Burch Oglesby, head of the physical education and recreation department, and his faculty are reworking the physical edu- cation curriculum. “The faculty is writing modules for self- directed learning,” he said. “It’s not going to be all student-teacher lectures.” He add- ed that the trend toward self-directed study is slowly gaining momentum. Oglesby said the department has worked on separate physical education programs for males and females since 1975, to “pre- } ! ! 1 | A PATIO PLUS PIPE EQUALS PEACE for Dr. Curtis Englebright, head of the newly-formed teacher educa- tion department. Englebright said he also enjoys read- ing historical fiction in his leisure time. vent any possible sex discrimination. We hope to use it in the fall of 1978.” Physical education teachers have trouble finding jobs, Oglesby said. “It’s tough, es- pecially for men, but there are more jobs for women who coach than there are wom- en available. “We tell our students to pick up other teaching skills such as driver’s education, health and athletic training, to make them more employable.” The title for educational services couldn’t be any more appropriate, Dr. Nor- man Ehresman, head of the division, said. “Our role is to support the College of Education by providing services to public schools and agencies in Western’s area,” Ehresman said. These services consist of a center for child learning and study, a center for career and vocational teacher education, adult and community education and educational re- search. Ehresman said he considers follow-up studies on graduates important. “By ob- serving and gathering data about teachers in the field and analyzing that data to use in teacher education programs, the pro- grams will continue to improve,” he said. According to Ehresman, two special pro- jects involve developing an associate de- gree in community health and expanding the child diagnostic clinic. CONFLICTS BETWEEN A_ RECREATIONAL MOUNTAIN CLIMBING COURSE and a new moun- taineering course in military science has Dr. Burch Oglesby, physical education and recreation depart- ment head, talking with Dr. Paul Corts. REFLEXES, TIMING AND SOMETIMES STRENGTH are needed to win at box hockey, played by Dr. Norman Ehresman, head of educational ser- vices, and Dr. Kenneth Estes, head of educational lead- ership, at the College of Education picnic. 167 College Of Education Plenty of activity and : ™ Tr. Sece he Outdoor Recreation Activities heey : class met on Mondays, Wednesdays and every other Friday at 10:25 last fall in a Diddle Arena classroom, but the homework led them as far as 50 miles from campus. The 23-member class spent a warm, sun- ny November weekend at Wildcat Hollow Boy Scout camp in Russellville. The stu- dents also traveled to Fort Campbell Army Base to practice rappelling with the aid of some Army personnel. And the class used the Diddle Arena swimming pool for a simulated lake when they practiced canoeing. The 200-level class included canoeing, water and hunting safety, rappelling, back- packing and outdoor cooking. After learning hunting safety, the stu- dents had to pass a state certification test as well as their instructor’s exam. According to the instructor, Dr. William “Biff” Kummer, many of the students were not familiar with some of the activities be- fore they enrolled in the class. “Only five out of 23 students in the class had been in a canoe before,” he said. He also said that most students partici- pated enthusiastically, even during rappel- ling. “Only three students in the last three semesters have refused to rappel.” Kummer said much of their participa- tion can be attributed to the emphasis placed on safety. “We have a lot of high-risk activities, but we treat them safely,” he said. ‘We are very much aware of safety. We have not had injuries because we plan ahead.” The number of females and males en- rolled in the class was about even, he said, and there are non-majors in it as well as recreation majors. “Many of these students didn’t know each other before they enrolled in the class, but they work together and develop new friendships. “The students aren’t taking the class to develop proficiency,” he said. “The stu- dents aren’t pushed into an activity. They are just exposed to an activity so they can enjoy it if they want.” Vicki Bagwell @ PANCAKES AND EGGS COOK OVER A CAMP- — FIRE tended by recreation major Mary Hamilton of Carlisle, Pa. The junior cooked the breakfast on the first morning of a weekend campout at Wild Cat Hol- low Boy Scout Reservation near Russellville. THOUGH NOT LIKING IT AT FIRST, Donna Behm said she enjoyed shooting the .22 caliber automatic pistol after firing a couple of rounds on the campout. Pras iid ee f, ; p ae ‘ a She added that she was better with the 22 rifle. The sleet Sens os 3 ‘ ep, = class also used a shotgun. NE a 168 Physical Education And Recreation Feature “GO!” BARKED THE ARMY SERGEANT, and a moment later, recreation major Donna Behm of Franklin, Tenn., rappelled 35 feet down a wall, military-style, at Fort Campbell. Snow cancelled a trip to Sally’s Rock. Photos by Lewis Gardner IT WAS SAFER TO LEARN ABOUT outdoor recreation class practiced paddling RIGHTING a capsized canoe in the Diddle strokes and safety procedures. Dr. William Arena pool than on a river or lake. The Kummer taught the 23-member class. 169 Physical Education And Recreation Feature 170 With help, Johnny CAN REAd f f he really good learners are the Tere: who set their own goals,” said director Tom Pearce, about the College Reading Im- provement Program. He said the program was designed for the students who need help with reading and study skills. There is also speed reading for honor students. Research revealed that such a program fulfilled the need to lend support to stu- dents with low grades. “Last year we based it on more than indi- vidualism,” Pearce said. “The program is now designed to help students already identified as needing help. The 1.7-2.0 gpa student needs the guidance he is missing. His grades are not low enough to place him on academic probation, but with the proper training and guidance he could pull his grades up,” Pearce said. “I really believe Teacher Education Feature what we have to offer is for that student.” Most students involved in the College Reading Improvement Program scored low on ACT tests, he said. These scores are sent to faculty advisers so they can inform the student about the program. Thirty per cent of the fall 1977 freshman class of 2,500 indicated a need for reading help, Pearce said. “So far, the best we've done is to get 10 per cent of the freshman class.” Students receive two hours credit for the class, which revolves around working on specific tasks. ‘They have to use the study methods that we teach them,” said instruc- tor Donna Tipton. The students work on comprehension, vocabulary or study skills. Tracey Johnson, a freshman from Louis- ville, said her sister told her about the pro- gram. Miss Johnson said that during class she either works on homework from other classes or works on building a skill. One class method is a tape series. The student listens to the tape and completes the accompanying lesson. The program also uses SRA, a reading laboratory which deals with vocabulary skills. Lesley Dorris, a freshman agriculture mechanics major from Greenbrier, Tenn., said he had _ noticed some_ im- provement on test scores since enrolling in CLASS TIME in the College Reading Improvement Program involves improving a reading skill or brush- ing up on other classwork. Sandra Waller, a Hopkins- ville freshman, and Lacreasa Page, a Bowling Green freshman, work with SRA, a reading laboratory. m yy ‘% a 2 the program. The students grade themselves, Pearce said. They sign contracts stating what they want to make on tests in other courses. They are then graded by how close they get to that desired score. ee i eral Helping the student is the target of the program, Pearce said. The main thrust is to counsel a student before he wants to drop out of school and to help him overcome his learning problems. Sandy Alford @ Photos by Jim Burton FLASHCARDS WITH COURSE NOTES help Lesley Dorris prepare for an agriculture exam. The Green- brier, Tenn., freshman is aided by instructor Donna Tipton in a reading improvement class. He received two hours credit for the course. 171 Teacher Education Feature Western civilization became a freshman requirement. Potter College of Arts and Humanities also offered music, theatre, religion, communication and art for those artfully - minded Dx. Robert Mounce says that as dean of Potter College of Arts and Humanities, he favors making courses better rather than adding new ones. “Change doesn’t mean _ progress,” Mounce said. “Change can be for the worse. Primarily, we need to do the central task more efficiently — teachers teaching better and administrators administrating better.” Mounee said his college’s role is one of education, not training. ‘Our basic goal is to educate our student in his cultural heri- A MAP OF LONDON, ENGLAND, occupies Dr. James Heldman, head of the English department. Heldman and some Western students visited London during the 1972 Christmas holiday on the first univer- sity-sponsored London theatre tour. 172 Potter College tage, introduce him to masterpieces in the arts and broaden his outlook,” he said. Mounce said liberal arts graduates don’t move into a related occupation as quickly as some technical-oriented graduates, but recent studies show job satisfaction for lib- eral arts grows several years after gradu- ation. Incompetence in basic language skills of freshmen continues to dominate the Eng- lish department, but Dr. James Heldman doesn’t want the department he heads to be thought of as purely remedial. AUSTRIAN PHILOSOPHER LUDWIG WITTGEN- STEIN’S analysis of St. Augustine’s “The Confes- sions” was wrong, Dr. Ronald Nash told his Philos- ophy 401 class. The head of philosophy and religion said St. Augustine’s “De Magistro” showed this. “That’s not what most of us think we’re supposed to be doing here,” Heldman said. “We used to be teaching supposedly at the college level, teaching students how to write well, not just to write.” But the increase in the number of stu- dents with a 14 or lower ACT score — which requires them to take the non-credit 055 remedial English course — makes that a hard point to remember. Last fall, 615 students were placed in 41 sections of 055. The fall before, only 35 sections were taught, and only 24 were offered in 1975. Heldman said his department has “de- veloped a more careful means of screening and testing and placing them in 055. Frankly, we’re doing better policing.” “We haven't been at 055 long enough to test its success in the long run,” Heldman said, “but there’s no question that there are some we can never help. We caught them too late.” “It’s important to realize that a person still can be a philosopher while earning a living doing something else,” said Dr. Ronald Nash, head of the philosophy and religion department. This is particularly important since teaching jobs are scarce. “I wouldn’t recommend contemplating teaching philosophy and religion unless the student is at the very head of his class,” Nash added. Some non-teaching jobs are available, however. According to a department bro- chure, law schools and theological semi- naries recommend a philosophy major or minor, while religion graduates may find jobs with publishing houses, social agen- RECRUITING BROUGHT A 25 PER CENT IN- CREASE in the number of freshman music majors and a new orchestra conductor, according to Dr. Wayne Hobbs, department head. cies and religious vocations. According to Nash, philosophy courses help the non-major or non-minor under- stand and criticize arguments, and under- stand the ideas of great thinkers. Religion courses, he said, help a student become a “whole person,” and both stress clear thinking, writing and expression. Academic recruiting yielded more than a 25 per cent increase in the number of fresh- man music majors, according to Dr. q oe Wayne Hobbs, music department head. “We had more contacts with high school youth organizations and the Kentucky Music Education Association,” Hobbs said. “We also had a lot of personal con- tacts and correspondence.” -A major change in the department is the addition of personnel, he said. _ “We have a new orchestra conductor, Dr. Leon Gregorian, who also conducts the Owensboro Symphony,” Hobbs said. “We also have a full-time elementary music education teacher and a guitar instructor.” Hobbs said the music education pro- gram is being revamped. New equipment includes a harpsichord, synthesizer, or- chestral instruments and tubas, he said. No matter the major, communication classes contribute to any student’s educa- tion, said Dr. Randall Capps, head of the communication and theatre department. “Communication skills are among the most important things a person can learn,” he said. “An employer likes to know his prospective employees have good commu- nication skills.” The mass communications department merged with speech and theatre last year, and Capps said few changes are planned. Most communications-related fields are yielding good job opportunities, he said. Speech pathology is especially inviting. “If the graduate is willing to go into ru- ral areas where the jobs are plentiful, he will have no problems. In the cities, there is more competition.” (continued on page 174) FALL REGISTRATION MEANT 23-24 WORK HOURS at Diddle Arena for Dr. Randall Capps, head of the communication and theatre department. It was similar to others, he said. “We still had people show up for class who weren’t on the roll.” CLOWNING FOR THE CAMERA, Dr. Robert Mounce, dean of Potter College of Arts and Human- ities, spits water out of his mouth during a Barren River Reservoir skiing trip with his family. Mounce said they go swimming quite often. 173 Potter College ar t f ul | y “Mm in de d cont. Until recently most foreign language graduates were destined to teach, but their options are increasing, according to Dr. Carol Brown, department head. Some students are combining their lan- guage with disciplines such as business, he said. “Combining interests of foreign lan- guage and business is clearly a growing thing,” Brown said. “We don’t rule out teaching, but we don’t lean on it complete- lye The department’s enrollment is fairly stable, Brown said. Patterns are fairly predictable, he said. “Spanish and French are very much in de- mand and German is not too far behind.” The department also offers classes in Russian, Japanese pronunciation and Bra- zilian Portuguese. The Center for Intercultural and Folk Studies is anything but an independent area, according to Dr. Lynwood Montell, director. Areas such as Latin-American, Asian and Afro-American studies are involved in the folk studies program, Montell said. This interdependent relationship adds to the list of reasons folk studies courses benefit students, he said. “I don’t know of any degree in the uni- versity in which a person wouldn’t benefit from a class in folklore,’ Montell said. “We deal with lifestyles. We help people appreciate their own culture and the differ- ences.” He also said the intercultural and folk studies background bridges cultural gaps. “I have yet to see a prejudiced folklorist.” A new requirement of at least three hours in history and the addition of a mi- nor with honors are the biggest changes in the history department, according to head Dr. Richard Troutman. The Academic Council voted in May, 1976, to require all entering freshmen to take either Western Civilization to 1648 or Western Civilization since 1648 as part of the general education requirement, begin- ning last fall. The requirement will go into effect for all students in 1981. ‘In view of the low esteem in which his- tory is held across the country as of late,” Troutman said, “I consider it nothing less than a minor miracle. I think colleges are returning to a more structured program, and it’s nice to know Western is at the vanguard.” The university now requires courses in history, English and mathemat- ics. Enrollment in history increased by about 300 because of the new requirement, Troutman said. History graduates ‘not restricting them- selves to a certain locality” can find teach- ing jobs, Troutman said. He plans to con- tact 1976 and 1977 graduates and learn A RED OAK SHINGLE, one of the first made by graduate student Liz Harzoff, occupies Dr. Lynwood Montell, director of the Center for Intercultural and Folk Studies. The Lyndhurst, Ohio, native learned the craft from a man in Berea. 174 Potter College SCHATTEN VON HEINEKENS OFFERS NO RE- SISTANCE to a stomach rub by owner Dr. Carol Brown, head of the foreign languages department. The a atetares’ titty pb t attr tire ny Fe seatalsntage brite rs “eet 5-month-old miniature Schnauzer is the pup of Muf- fin, Brown’s only other pet. Both are of a champion stock. Brown came to Western in 1967. : ue S44, what they're doing. “On the surface a degree in fine arts seems easy and only fun,” said Walter Stomps, head of the art department. “But if it is approached seriously, it’s hard work.” New classes and faculty members are helping to increase the enrollment and the quality of the students’ work, he said. “The work being produced is of higher quality and perhaps outstanding when compared to the other institutions of this size,” Stomps said. “OLE JOE,” a 1954 Chevrolet, shines in the driveway of Dr. Richard Troutman, head of the history depart- ment. Troutman bought the car in 1969 and added a sticker — ‘History is for Lovers” — to the rear win- dow. With Troutman are daughters Annie and Betsy. i USING A LIGHT METER TO DETERMINE EXPOSURE, John Oakes, assistant dean for administration of Potter Col- lege, prepares to take a picture with his 8 x 10 pinhole camera. Oakes owns three others, which do not require lenses. “The faculty’s responsibility is to work with the students toward their develop- ment in a way that will enable them to compete with graduates from other institu- tions.” Non-majors can learn something valu- able by taking art courses, Stomps said. “They gain the experience involved with fine arts, which has been of primary con- cern to the development of the thinking individual,” he said. “To understand the visual is to be able to use our senses in our lives.” One “birth” has led to others since the journalism department was created last year, according to David Whitaker, depart- ment head. Western is the only Kentucky university offering majors in public relations and photojournalism, and a certified program in journalism education. A minor in cine- matography is also available, he said. An advertising major curriculum “is ready, but must pass many academic hur- dles,” Whitaker said. “It’s simply a matter of formalizing what already exists.” The department is accredited by the American Society of Journalism School Admi nistration. Whitaker said limiting course offerings is better than adding more. “I want to tighten up the program rather than pro- liferate it. We’ve got a good curriculum — I’m convinced of that. But if anything, we're offering too many courses for the number of people we have to teach them.” Whitaker said a top-quality program must be maintained for the students’ good. “If you don’t hold some high standards in journalism today, you're doing a great dis- service to your students,” he said. “They're going to have to go out and compete against the products of many oth- er schools, and many of these schools have very high standards. If you allow the stu- dents to just slip through the program, they’re at somewhat of a disadvantage when it comes to job competition.” Western graduates have had little trou- ble getting jobs, he said. “Right now the demand for journalism graduates far ex- ceeds the supply. As far as we know, every Western graduate in journalism who wants a job and is able to work has a job.” J.W. “IS FRIENDLY AND AMIABLE — he likes horses and people,” according to Walter Stomps, head of the art department and J.W.’s owner. Stomps’ fam- ily rides the western pleasure horse (commonly called an appaloosa) a couple of times a week. 175 Potter College 176 Some red (video) [cjoe vy kay, everybody be cool,” said John Kelly.’ “I’m the one that’s going nuts.” He paced along the winding country road near Richardsville, north of Bowling Green, on a frozen November morning. Less than an hour into the first day’s shooting of a 30-minute color television drama for his Problems in Broadcast class, the first snafu appeared: Kelly had forgot- ten the video tape recorder. Groaning, he dispatched two crew members to campus to retrieve it. Then, as they disappeared over a hill, he realized they had taken his keys, so he couldn’t turn on his car heater. “It’s amazing how one little thread can tear apart a whole production,” Kelly said with a sigh. As he said later, “I guess that’s what this class is all about — problems.” Kelly is a likable fellow who bubbles with quips and energy. By all indications, he is also an immensely talented person whose name frequently appears on West- ern theatre and_ television cred- its. A mass communications major and a theatre minor, Kelly was attracted by the university's “big name” in TV. “When I came here, I found Children’s Theatre. It clicked,” he said. He appeared in “10 or so” children’s plays and did con- siderable technical work. Last fall he won the lead in a major production, “The Hos- tage,” an Irish satire. At ETV he “touched on everything”: di- recting, writing, producing, shooting, even doing makeup on all kinds of productions. In December, 1976, his musical “Christmas on the Hill” was aired on WBKO. “T enjoyed it, but I wanted to go deeper and see if I got everything I thought I had from all these years of going here,” Kelly said. So he enrolled in the 400-level prob- lems class, which is offered on request. The main project was to prepare three 30-minute “magazines,” or variety shows. “But I didn’t think I’d learn as much,” he said. So he proposed a 30-minute adult dra- ma. Dr. Charles Anderson, the instructor, agreed to it. Consulting with Steve Grumbacher, a faculty writer for ETV, Kelly first consid- ered recreating a campus ghost story. “Then Grumbacher mentioned witches,” Kelly said. “We hashed it out. Sitting around by candlelight, trying to think of eerie things.” What emerged was “The Trial of Jessi- ca,” a production about a New England professor and the problems he suffered after discovering an incantation device used by witches. Using the “magic of television,” Kelly Photos by Mark Lyons Mass Communication Feature hoped to “play with people’s minds” with “Jessica.” He wanted to give theatre students some TV experience, although he was concerned with their theatrics, explaining that their acting “must be compressed into a small studio rather than a 40-foot stage.” Kelly said he thought he had conquered most of the likely problems with thorough organization. “I had double-planned every- thing so I always had an alternative. “What I didn’t anticipate was forgetting equipment,” which is how the first day of shooting began. After the forgotten video tape recorder was brought to location, Kelly filmed a car scene several times from three angles ... but forgot to plug the camera into the re- corder, as he discovered hours later when he reviewed the tape. Later that morning, Kelly and his three- man crew moved to a 65-year-old house in Bowling Green for an outdoor shot. But one actor never arrived, and the near-freez- ing temperature nearly drained the cam- era's portable power supply. As he and a few supporters watched the tape at ETV late that afternoon, they saw “IN AUDITIONS, I STRESSED FACES. | explained that 80 per cent of the show was faces. And I got some faces you wouldn't believe,” John Kelly said. He used theatre students to give them some TV experience. EVEN AT JUST 15 MILES PER HOUR, a car scene required close coordination between John Kelly, actor Bruce Barton and the crew. Engineer Rich Goetz runs between the two cars while Kelly tapes the segment. that several technical problems plagued a third scene shot that day. After shooting a studio scene a few days later, he decided his actors “didn’t know how TV really functions.” There was too much theatrics, he said. “And a lot wanted to yell and project like they do on stage,” which wasn’t necessary with a sensitive microphone nearby. So in late November, Kelly got an eight- week extension to make changes for “Jessi- ca,” take two. “We'll do one shot on one day and spend as much time as it takes,” he said. “Now I’ve seen what went wrong. I’ve already got my plans together. I’m always going back to see how I can do it better.” Roger Stinnett @ TEMPERATURES NEAR FREEZING | quickly drained the RCA DK-76 video tape camera and an actor didn’t appear, making an outdoor scene in No- vember a virtual disaster. “I guess that’s what this class is all about — problems,” he said with a sigh. SUPERIMPOSITION OF CHARACTERS was among the special effects John Kelly used “to play with peo- ples’ minds” in his television drama, “The Trial of Jessica.” The senior edited his ¥%-inch video tape on a General Electric switcher. 177 Mass Communication Feature Kodaliths by Beth Rogers Wordy... eorge Simpson had written since @) O| ninth grade. He wanted to improve his writing, but didn’t major in English “because the mechanics of writing and grammar complicate it.” Then the Sturgis native found Creative Writing, described by the course catalog as a course “to assist each student in develop- ing those writing skills needed to express in the short story, novel, poem or play whatever is already in the student him- self.” The history major took all three levels of the one-hour-course — English 203, 303 and 403 — working his schedule around the course, taught by Wanda Gatlin since : 1969. “I have Be written, but Ms. Gat- eee PCIE lin’s class has sort of harnessed me ... I'll always write. I want my best work seen by the greatest amount of people.” Unlike Simpson, most of the students do not hope to be professional writers, Ms. Gatlin said, and very few are English ma- jors. But, she said, “Everybody wants to be a poet. That’s where most of the interest lies.” Her students meet with her individ- ually at their convenience and once a week as a class to read their writing and critique others’. “Criticism does hurt,” said Simpson, “but in the long run, it is very good.” Requirements include writing either sev- en poems, three short stories, three novel chapters or three single-act plays, plus keeping a journal. “These writing classes have really changed my writing style,” said David Sur- face, a Bowling Green senior philos- ophy and religion major who took all three classes. “They have made it much more concise.” Surface said he began writing fantasy in the fifth grade. Pauline Luckey of Bowling Green took the course for a personal reason: she want- ed to write a family tree. “I thoroughly enjoyed the class,” Mrs. Luckey said. “It opened up a whole new area of interest.” But others apparently found the class assignments too much for one hour’s cred- mie the class dropped at midterm last all. “Students take one-hour classes because they think they will be easy,” Ms. Gatlin said. “I still haven’t figured out the reason- ing behind that.” It’s cold now. No special reason, it’s just that time of the year. It seems I’ve changed season too. Not depressed, just not enthused. Not unemotional, cruel, or unkind, I’m just here and that’s not enough. Now I do good not for good’s sake, but because it’s easier things run smoother. My warmth has left me — cool. I’m between winter and spring. Not cold, not warm but cool. I’m dormant. Maybe Christmas will enthuse me. At the moment I’m just here and that’s not good. Vicki Bagwell @ 178 English Feature 4 sk ee Saas Ener wh work Lhe. Jp sR Reel ee STASIS Mp as STEIN OS AOR ae) Watching the other little steel bugs swim past through the inky blackness, I catch a glimpse of a pale face in a window And I feel a strange thrill to know that the cold black space outside is inhabited with warm, breathing creatures like me, encased in their own individual worlds of metal, upholstery, and warmth. Turning to you, I look into your eye’s window for a glimpse of the face inside. David Surface More words . for autumn The youth of March are nearly grown and smell first time the fall’s cologne The apples of the mountain ripe A hunter stalks the hidden snipe The rabbit’s marbled coat grows furry Just in time for sky’s first flurry Beasts in frozen grass draw gaunt and spirits of the autumn haunt All the highland forest splendid with another summer ended A time for loving friends to nestle closely as the seasons wrestle George Simpson 179 English Feature 180 An art not bout 30,000 years ago man first } communicated by drawing on stone. For three years, Western art students have done something similar. It’s called lithography. The process was discovered by accident in Bavaria 180 years ago as a cheap way of making duplicates, according to Laurin Notheisen, a printmaking (Art 250) in- structor. Hodgenville sophomore Connie Weed- man said lithography is difficult because three identical prints are required. “You're not supposed to tell any difference in them at all.” But the art major said lithography was fun because “you never know how it will come out.” The students draw on 18 x 24 inch slabs of Bavarian limestone weighing an average a 80 pounds and moved by an hydraulic ift. Some of the stones are 75 years old, Miss Notheisen said. “Some of the smaller ones date from the late 1800s,” she said. The instructor said the stones range in value from $100 up and vary in color from white to tanish to bluish-grey. “The whiter the stone, the more porous it is,” she said. The largest stone in the art department is 24 x 36 inches and is valued at $900. “These stones will break, just like limestone. AN 18 X 24 INCH SLAB OF BAVARIAN LIME- STONE is the easel for Connie Weedman’s sketch. The sophomore art major said she spent three hours making the drawing, one she had worked on earlier. Art Feature lost in the Stone Age That’s why they’re so expensive,” she added. Miss Notheisen said Bavarian lime- stone is used because it is almost pure cal- cium and contains fewer impurities than any other. “It’s never been found anywhere else,” she said. Black and white images use only one stone, Miss Weedman said. Color images require more than one stone. Sometimes working 10 hours a day, Miss Weedman completed her black and white prints. FANNING QUICKENS THE EVAPORATION OF WATER and asphalt applied to the limestone. Miss Weedman said the fanning, as well as other steps in lithography, are physically strenuous. Photos by Beth Rogers First, she grained the stone to remove the PREPARATION FOR PRINTING IS DONE BY ROLLING ink evenly onto the old image. She said graining could take one Bavarian limestone slab. Although Miss Weedman said the instructor demonstrated ho eight Rocrom Then thetnew image was each step, she enjoyed learning the art by trial and error. drawn in black with a greasy, waxy lithog- raphy crayon in a minimum of five hours. The wax attracts the ink, she said. Any mistakes had to be scraped away. Etching the image onto the stone re- quired nitric acid and about two hours. Then the ink was rolled evenly onto the stone. Printing, the final step, required about four hours, and sometimes as many as 15 prints were pulled at a time. One print from each edition had to be mounted. Miss Weedman said the biggest problem was remembering the steps. ‘There are a lot of things involved. You have to be able to cope. “There’s a lot of pressure because so many things can go wrong,” she said. Miss Weedman said printmaking is an extension of drawing. There is one advan- tage, however. “In lithography, you can get more than one print. In drawings, you can’t.” Kathy Whitson PULLING ONE OF APPROXIMATELY EIGHT PRINTS is the final stage in lithography. Three prints were required from each edition for each of Miss Weedman’s three black and white print assignments. A CRANK-OPERATED PRESS reproduces Miss Weedman’s print. The Hodgenville native said this step takes from three to eight hours. “I prefer to work alone,” she said. “No one gets in anyone’s way.” 181 Art Feature Students preparing to be librarians, nurses, dental hygienists, home economists, or for health or military careers in the College of Applied Arts and Health are service - minded Public-service oriented — that best de- scribes the College of Applied Arts and Health, Dr. William Hourigan, dean, said. “We are involved in all kinds of commu- nity activities and others on the state and national level,” he said. This involvement is an effective method of providing job opportunities for grad- uates, he said, adding that the high per- centages of job placement are increasing the enrollment. “We are just beginning to develop a graduate feedback program and I can al- ready see the benefits for our students,” Hourigan said. He also said a two-year medical records technician degree has recently been added to the college. Depth and variety are being added to the library science curriculum, Dr. Vera Guth- rie, department head, said. Creative Experience for Elementary Children, Museum Procedures and Preser- 182 Applied Arts And Health vation Techniques, and Instructional Me- dia Photography are new courses, she said. A degree in school media has also been added. Dr. Guthrie said enrollment is up slight- ly with 86 graduate students and 28 majors and minors. She said the department can place most graduates. “We employ some graduate as- sistants. The others go into elementary and secondary schools and public libraries,” she said. “The biggest demand is in ele- mentary schools.” The dental hygiene department may be small, but its service is big, according to Dr. A. Fogle Godby, chairman. The 36 students — all females — clean almost 4,000 patients’ teeth at the clinic each year under the supervision of regis- tered hygienists and licensed dentists. “It's real competitive getting accepted into dental hygiene,’ Godby said. “We have eight to 10 applicants for each avail- INVOLVEMENT IN COMMUNITY, STATE AND NATIONAL activities helps provide job opportunities for graduates of the College of Applied Arts and Health, according to Dr. William Hourigan, dean. able position.” Godby said graduates usually have no problem finding a job. He said Western has a cooperative graduate school program with the University of Kentucky in dental hygiene, but no Western graduate has earned a master’s degree in the field. How- ever, several have gone to dental school, he said. Required military labs are releasing stu- dents from the confines of a four-wall classroom and leading them to rappelling sites and campouts. Col. Gary Riggs, head of the military science department, said the labs give stu- dents an opportunity to see how the mili- tary works. “We want all these labs and mini-labs to SMILES WEREN’T ALWAYS COMMON at fall reg- istration, but Dr. Vera Guthrie, head of the library science department, wore one while helping a student register in a library science 101 class. Thirty-six sec- tions of the required course were offered. HIS COFFEE BREAKS AREN’T PLANNED, accord- ing to Dr. A. Fogle Godby, head of the dental hygiene department. Godby said he was in the student center cafeteria, but takes breaks only when “opportunities present themselves.” be a fun thing where students learn the value of working together as a team.” Enrollment is up 25 per cent from last year. Riggs said new courses are attracting more students. Rappelling and marksmanship courses were offered in the fall and movement on water and survival courses were scheduled for the spring semester. He said these courses involved a core of military material, but the main emphasis is directed toward adventure training and “hands on” instruction. (continued on page 184) + ¢ 4, ‘ ’ ‘ 2 (ewe eeereee (wee eee scee 183 Applied Arts And Health service «minded cont Nursing graduates are not far from their alma mater because they must work in the state in which they are licensed, Virginia Lehmenkuler, department head, said. “WKU nurses can be found in any hos- pital in this area,” she said. Louisville and Bowling Green are the most popular, but the state job market is good. The first senior class of the new four- year bachelors’ program was graduated last May, Miss Lehmenkuler said. Nursing students may also opt for a two-year asso- ciate degree program which qualifies them for licensing as registered nurses. Coordinating the university's and state’s board of licensing standards are Miss Leh- menkuler’s responsibilities. She said the department must also observe standards imposed by its accreditation. Before the home economics and family living department begins any more pro- grams, it’s going to check the quality of what it already has. “I believe we should make some of what we have stronger before we go on,” Dr. William Floyd, department head, said. Enrollment has increased and Floyd said he is trying to recruit male students for areas once predominately for women, and vice versa. The old sex role stereotypes don’t need to continue, he said. Restaurant and hotel management and 184 Applied Arts And Health “OLD COUNTRY BOYS LIKE FIREPLACES,” said Col. Gary Riggs, head of the military science depart- ment, so he has two in his home. Fireplaces like wood, however, so Riggs spends part of the fall chopping kindling and logs he gets from local farmers. GREETING STUDENTS RETURNING TO CAM- PUS for the fall semester is Virginia Lehmenkuler, head of the nursing department. Miss Lehmenkuler is an Ohio State University graduate and has taught at Western for three years. dietetics graduates have no problems find- ing jobs, he said. Interior design graduates are entering a very competitive field, how- ever. Courses in health and safety range from general health to emergency care and can make a student a better consumer of health service with an emphasis on prevention, Dr. David Dunn, department head, said. “We have a very diversified depart- ment,” Dunn said. “I like to think our de- partment is important because it not only trains individuals for careers, but provides health education that should be meaning- ful to all students.” Some programs have been revamped to better prepare graduates for the employ- ment market, he said. The master of science program has grown, Dunn said. “The master of science program is important because it meets a need for graduate training of public health in Kentucky.” SHARING THE LIMELIGHT with Dr. William Floyd is 22-month-old Scott Anderson. The head of the home economics and family living department said his son begins each day at 5:30 a.m., wanting to play ball. He is the youngest of Floyd’s five children. FALL REGISTRATION OCCUPIED MUCH of late August for Dr. James Dunn, head of the health and safety department. Most of his summer leisure time is spent coaching Little League baseball. “I enjoy helping and working with young people,” he said. 185 Applied Arts And Health A Mountain wo-lane, winding roads worn by heavily-loaded coal trucks led West- ern students Becky Garmon, Vicky Alford and Mary Ellen Pawley to a patch of flat land that became an adventure in learning and living last summer. The dental hygiene students worked at Red Bird Mission in Queendale, an eastern Kentucky town at the southern tip of the Daniel Boone National Forest. The 2-year-old dental clinic is part of a United Methodist mission that operates dormitories, a school, craft center, laundro- mat, secondhand store, restaurant and hos- pital serving people from a 20-mile radius. Much of each community member’s life revolves around Red Bird, where the stu- dents learned more about dental hygiene and the isolated community. Vicky Alford said she liked the rural set- ting. “I picked that place to work because it was a setting in which we could learn,” the Beaver Dam senior said. Work days began at 8 a.m. as the stu- dents assisted with appointments and walk-in patients. “First we talked to Dr. Burdette (the den- tist) about his procedures,” Mrs. Alford said. ‘He had a different pattern with pa- tients, and I had to make a few adjust- ments. “IT cleaned teeth, took X-rays, made CHECKING THE ANGULATION OF AN X-RAY bite wing is Vicky Alford, who said this was a routine procedure in the cleaning of a patient's teeth. This type of X-ray reveals cavities between teeth. Dental Hygiene Feature Sabbatical examinations and learned to assist,” Mrs. Alford said. “We took each new thing step- by-step and learned as we went along.” She said she often worked 10 or 11 hours when the waiting room bulged with pa- tients suffering from toothaches. ‘“Some- times it was so crowded with patients and personnel that we examined people in Dr. Burdette’s office,” Mrs. Alford said. Some patients had never visited a dentist and many were skeptical of the procedures, according to the senior. “Some were used to going,” Mrs. Alford said, but some were more apprehensive and frightened of the dentist. “One man hadn’t spent a quarter on his teeth in his life,” she said. “I gave him some toothpaste and a toothbrush and he wanted to pay for them. I told him that was part of the visit, but he kept telling me he had money.” One young patient threw a tantrum and left before an examination. Another youngster fell asleep as Mrs. Alford worked. Becky Garmon said her rural patients paid more attention and cooperated better than her patients at the campus clinic. “It took a while for some of them to warm up,” the Lebanon Junction junior said. “They often wanted to know why we had come there, but they were much more TEETH CLEANING TOOK AS LONG AS 45 minutes at times for Becky Garmon. Some of her patients -had never been to a dentist before. She also treated teach- ers, a minister and nurses. Photos by Debbie Gibson appreciative than patients in other places.” Miss Garmon said she liked the Red Bird setting and quickly adjusted to the lifestyle and pace. “The terminology was sometimes differ- ent, especially with patients,” Miss Gar- mon said. “They called Dr. Burdette the tooth dentist.” Both students described Red Bird as a family environment. “The devotion was obvious each day,” Mrs. Alford said. “The personnel treated us super nice. The emphasis is religious, and you fit or mold in before you know it.” “T felt like a part of it,” Miss Garmon said. “The people who come to Red Bird can’t afford to go other places. I felt like I was doing more good there. I was needed. “I got experience there I would never have gotten at Western,” she said. “The assisting broadened my knowledge of working in an office. We put to use the things we had learned academically.” Mrs. Alford said the remote setting was an academic as well as social test. “You don’t really test your ethics until you get out some place like that where no one knows if you’ve cleaned someone’s teeth well,” she said. “At school it comes out on your grade, but we didn’t have that at Red Bird.” Connie Holman Vicky Alford, Becky Garmon 187 Dental Hygiene Feature er = 2 tA 5 Be Coon TH S re = re fe Photos by Military Science Feature 188 t was the first day of mountaineering class. The students looked skeptical as instructor Sgt. Charles McNulty told them, “This class is a challenge and lots of fun, but it does take a little stamina and a little ‘get up and go.’ ” “Get up and go” is what they often did as they crawled from bed before dawn on Sat- urdays to hike to the 65-foot-high cliffs from which they rappelled. But introducing the military's customs and traditions to the cross section of stu- dents was first on the syllabus, McNulty said. “We teach saluting and how to call on commanders,” he said. “We also teach rank structure and dismounted drill. We also give our students the history, mission and organization of the ROTC program.” There are no haircut restrictions, but mountaineering students must wear Army fatigues during labs. In these labs they practice first aid, care and transportation of the wounded, knot tying and rappelling. “We teach kids the basics of rappelling. HER HELMET TIPPED BACK ON HER HEAD, Te- resa Zimmerman climbs a cliff near Mt. Zion Church on Russellville Road, south of Bowling Green. Using the prussil method of climbing, Miss Zimmerman reached the top in 12 minutes. WITH HELP FROM SPECIAL FORCES MEMBER Calvin Minton, Bobby McGhee rappells off an 80-foot high cliff. Instructor Sgt. Charles McNulty said McGhee got down in 30 seconds. Most beginners take a minute to hit the ground, he said. By using hands and feet we do free climb- ing and we teach several holds, such as the push hold and the pull hold.” Survival tactics such as rope bridge building, map reading, land navigation, processing of food, shelter and fire build- ing are also introduced to the students, McNulty said. “Communication is the life line of the military so we show them how to construct a communication line to terrain. According to the climate, you can improvise an anten- na so it will carry 25 miles rather than the average four or five.” Weapons are also part of the military, so his students learned how to handle pistols, ee and machine guns in their weekly abs. Motivating students is easy, McNulty said. “Most of them enjoy wearing the uni- forms during labs. They play the game and look like soldiers.” Freshman Michael Cox said the class of- fered something he’d never done. “Overall, it’s a blast,” he said. “I really enjoyed the rappelling ... It was totally different rappelling off the parking struc- ture and the cliffs. The first time out on labs, the individual has to tell himself he can do it. But there’s no way to fall with the ropes and a man at the bottom.” Sophomore Sharon Powell said she didn’t mind wearing fatigues, boots, jacket and gloves for labs. “Everybody else wears them and at seven or eight in the morning on weekends no one else is up to see you.” She said safety rules were reviewed be- fore rappelling. “There was no way to have EARLY-MORNING HIKES WERE NECESSARY to get to rappelling sites off-campus. Mountaineering students wore Army fatigues as did their instructor and Special Forces members who helped teach. Playing soldier for a grade an accident. But not all of the class mem- bers were anxious to rappel. But once you stop and realize what you're doing it’s not that bad.” Lisa Botler said she never expected to wear green fatigues, but is glad she took the mountaineering course. Miss Botler also never expected to jump from buildings and cliffs. “I’m a big chick- en and I’m scared of heights. I usually get hysterical but this class has been a help with that. I know a safe way over now.” Connie Holman @ DRESSED IN ARMY UNIFORM, Set. Charles McNulty uses body movements to demonstrate points about safety and care and transportation of the wound- ed. He also told stories from his life in the military to motivate student participation. Military Science Feature The College of Business and Public Affairs’ new dean plans to help graduates gain an edge in the competitive employment world after their education to become business «minded Providing graduates from the College of Business and Public Affairs with competi- tive ability in their jobs is the goal of the college’s new dean, Dr. Robert Nelson. “We need to reorganize and re-evaluate our existing programs to make them more competitive with other programs nation- wide in regard to the quality of education given to students,” Nelson said. Formerly the head of the business ad- ministration department, Nelson was cho- sen as dean Oct. 29, after President Dero Downing recommended him to the Board of Regents from a list of 49 applicants. He replaces Dr. William Jenkins, who re- signed. Nelson said h e sees his new position as offering a strong challenge for improve- ment in the college’s accreditation and ser- vice to business and community interests. “One of our long-term goals is accredita- tion for the business administration and social work programs,” he said. ‘Also, the vocational, two-year associate programs need strengthening and evaluating.” Nelson said another goal is the produc- tion of closed-circuit television broadcasts to be transmitted to surrounding towns NA EELS AALS HEE: | Z 2 % ¢ : x GARCON, A 13-YEAR-OLD FRENCH POODLE, is a special member of the family of Dr. Robert Oppitz, interim dean of the Bowling Green College of Business and Public Affairs. Oppitz and wife Elizabeth have no children and have raised Garcon since his birth. LEAFING THROUGH A STACK OF DATA PRO- CESSING CARDS, Dr. Charles Hays, head of the ac- counting department, searches for a course card at fall registration. Hays’ main responsibilities were check- ing enrollments and balancing classes. 190 Business And Public Affairs and offering classroom instruction for credit. ‘This is a very viable alternative that would improve our extended campus programs and increase enrollment.” Regardless of the major, there are two areas of work, government service and business, according to Dr. Robert Oppitz, interim dean of the College of Business and Public Affairs. “Many of our classes will benefit stu- dents in any major because an understand- ing of business is helpful to everyone,” he said. The college includes programs in public service as well as business. “People are insisting on more services, and that means the employment outlook for those in public services is still very good,” Oppitz said. Eight associate degree programs are of- fered by the college, but Oppitz said he expects an increase due to recent changes made by the Council on Higher Education. Changes ranging from restricting who may major in accounting to renumbering the courses dominated the accounting de- partment head Dr. Charles Hays said. Only students planning to be high school teachers may major in accounting, Hays said. Other students may seek the 60- hour area of concentration or the minor. The elementary courses for non-majors and majors were combined, and the inter- mediate courses for majors were expanded from two to three. Some of the contents of the 400-level courses were changed, Hays said, while more logical course numbers and more de- scriptive course titles are being used. Also, CONVINCED THAT THE COURSES WILL BE HARD, students avoid economics, despite a good job market, said Dr. Kenneth Cann, head of the economics department. He said teaching jobs are scarce. THE PACKAGE CONTAINING A PAIR OF SHOES wasn’t for Dr. Vernon Martin, but the assistant dean for the College of Business and Public Affairs and Public Service Institute director helped the United Par- cel Service’s employee deliver it next door. two teachers joined the faculty. The job market has been good, though competition is getting tougher as enroll- ment in accounting rises across the coun- try, Hays said. Most graduates go into pub- lic, government or industrial accounting. Students bypass economics classes be- cause they expect them to be hard, Dr. _ Kenneth Cann, department head, said. “We try to encourage students to sample economics early in their college career,” Cann said. The enrollment has grown slightly, which Cann attributes to an increase of the number of majors and departments requir- ing economics courses. Economics graduates generally get good (continued on page 192) 191 Business And Public Affairs business«minded con jobs, he said, adding that both private and government employment prospects are good and improving. Cann said few students enter economics education because there are not many sec- ondary level openings and a Ph.D. is need- ed to teach college. ia 192 Business And Public Affairs Wir uw Allowing the faculty to participate in de- partmental decisions and offering semi- nars on current issues are among the ways Dr. George Masannat keeps the govern- ment department “democratic” and “up- to-date.” “The job market is quite tight” for gov- WATCHING SONS Richard and Edward play Mono- poly relaxes Dr. George Masannat, head of the govern- ment department. Masannat said he enjoys playing board games with his 12-and 15-year-old sons al- though he admits they sometimes beat him. be po it ulr'” ernment graduates, Masannat said. “But quite a few find employment in industry, and in government on the state and local level. Some jobs require civil service exams. And foreign service jobs require some ex- ams.” Some graduates “who didn’t finish strongly (academically) are without jobs,” Masannat said. He estimated that 12 grad- uates go to law school and about six ad- vance to graduate school each year. Masannat said that 100-level govern- ment courses “enable the student to under- stand the political process that af fects his or her life on a daily basis.” People studying business at a university are usually better equipped for careers than those studying elsewhere, according to Dr. Hollie Sharpe, business education and of- fice administration department head. “There are some very distinct advan- tages that a university has over high school classes and two-year business schools,” Sharpe said. ‘First, the quality of instruc- tion is superior. “Another advantage is that our students are more broadly educated. They have a much broader liberal arts background than regular business schools, where students only learn immediate employment skills.” Interest in business careers seems to be on the rise at Western, he said. Initial re- ports show that there are “100 more stu- dents registered in these classes than there were this time last year. “Many people are realizing that these are bread-and-butter courses and that you can get a job,” Sharpe said. ‘Maybe it won’t be the highest paying job, but it will be hon- orable white-collar employment.” A popular class for non-majors and mi- nors is personal finance, Sharpe said. “Our university is doing an excellent job of teaching people how to make money, but a very poor job of teaching them how to spend their money,” he said. “Our personal finance classes are de- signed to help people know how to spend money as well as the most advantageous places to borrow money,” Sharpe said. “They learn where to invest their money and how to better manage it.” Revamping the social work program (in- cluding a move to the second floor of Grise Hall) has been a recent emphasis in the sociology and anthropology department, according to Dr. Kirk Dansereau, depart- ment head. He said the social work program is being reorganized to meet accreditation require- ments. Many of the instructors in the depart- ment are developing sections of the pro- gram in which they teach, Dansereau said. “We are improving the quality of the programs instead of adding many new classes. “Our enrollment has not climbed rapid- ly,” he added. “More and more, we are get- ting students from other areas that are re- BRUSHING IS PART OF THE GROOMING ROU- TINE of Missy, the 2-year-old pekapoo of Dr. Hollie Sharpe, head of the business education and office ad- ministration department. The dog is half poodle and half pekingese. quired to take classes in our department.” Dansereau said many graduates go to graduate school or work for agencies. Elimination of the business administra- tion major is the biggest change in the business administration program, said Dr. Robert Nelson, department head. “The major was dropped to emphasize the area of concentration, in hopes of achieving national accreditation,” he said. The result will be a “much stronger pro- gram, giving the graduates a stronger edge in the job market.” Although requirements for a business adminstration minor remain unchanged, the area of concentration now requires 63- 66 hours rather than 51 hours. Students will also choose from five rath- er than four emphases. They are fi- nance, marketing, management, manage- ment science and comprehensive. Classes in labor union relations, and or- ganization, behavior and theory were also added, he said. A good job market is emerging because “we're beginning to get a reputation that can help the student find work,” Nelson said. He advises students with a bachelor’s degree to go directly to a job, instead of graduate school. “We've got jobs and no people.” A STEAK AND HAMBURGER CHEF, Dr. Robert Nelson said he isn’t an accomplished cook, but enjoys barbecuing. The head of the business administration department said the sirloin steak was delicious and he especially enjoyed cooking his own meal. REGISTRATION GIVES Dr. Kirk Dansereau, head of the sociology and anthropology department, a chance to see many people he won't see later in the semester, he said. Dansereau was in charge of enrollment and adding sections for his department. Business And Public 193 Affairs Photos by David Frank MILES FROM CAMPUS, students and their instruc- tor in Field Course in Archaeology search for signs of life in Logan County about A.D. 600. Wednesday afternoon outings lasted three hours and some Satur- day excursions took all day. 194 Sociology And Anthropology Feature Re ON HANDS AND KNEES, Dr. Jack Schock excavates ASKED TO COMPLETE A VERTICAL PROFILE on a portion of a pit inch by inch, in search of flint, a trench, Dr. Jack Schock’s students asked for help. animal bones or seeds. Uncovered material can provide Measurements were taken to ascertain the trench’s information about the Woodland Indian culture in depth and its depth below the plow zone. Graphs were this area more than 1,300 years ago. also made of the dimensions. dirt and buried cultures oaded with No. 2 long-handled shov- els, wire screens, empty cigar boxes and a tool kit, a white university van leaves the Hill with six students and their instructor en route to an excavation site where Woodland Indians once lived. Taught by Dr. Jack Schock, Field Course in Archaeology 491-492 involves excava- tion and surveying for possible excavation sites and points. Last fall, the site was in Logan County, where the students dug a 5 x 10 foot trench. They then began digging and searching for artifacts that could tell modern man how his ancestors lived, worked and recreated more than 1,300 years ago. He said the site was close to school and the owner had no plans to sell it. “Some- times you work on a site just before it’s cleared for construction. This way you take it slower. You don’t worry about it being gone when you come back to it later.” Looking for tools, food remains and even traces of a house is what the students did by picking away at the plow-zone soil and digging further to reach soil untouched by modern man. “You look for anything you can get,” Schock said, “anything that will tell the way a particular people lived in the past.” He said they fortunately selected a rich site. “Most don’t have so much mate- rial,” he said. “This way, you get more information for less work.” But the searching got a little monoto- nous, senior Terry Jureka said. “I’ve always been interested in archaeo- logy, but then I’d never gone out and looked for projectile points,” she said. “In class you sit there and it’s just talk, but this class shows you how it really is.” Miss Jureka said at first the instructor had to show them what to do, what to haul back to the lab and what to toss aside. “At first I picked up everything, and it was just bags of junk,” she said. ‘That was discouraging. I thought I got better, but one day I thought I’d found a special piece of pottery. Everyone I showed it to said it looked like pottery. But when I showed it to Schock he crumbled it and said it was just dirt. I was discouraged again.” But, according to Schock, finding mate- rial that reveals a long lost culture is only the first step in learning. “Ten per cent of fieldwork is collecting data while 90 per cent of it is finding what it consists of and what it means,” he said. “It takes months to process, wash, classify and analyze it.” Connie Holman A HOMEMADE SCREEN worked by Jim Mallay sifts through plow-zone soil tossed by Marshall McEuen. Most artifacts are found in deeper soil levels, but flint chips, charcoal, burnt wood and projectile points are often seen in top soil. 195 Sociology And Anthropology Feature 196 Studying on the job n December Paul Bach and Roger Brooks traded in 80 hours’ work on a banking internship for three hours of credit toward an associate degree. The men were both students here 10 years ago. For the past five years, Bach has worked at the Morgantown Deposit Bank while Brooks has worked at the Morgan- town Deposit Branch Bank. Drafted in 1967 after his freshman year, Brooks worked at a finance company in Leitchfield and later transferred to Mor- gantown. He usually works in the collection de- partment, which includes letters, phone calls and visits on delayed payments. For the internship, however, he changed his routine. “For my internship I have been making installment and note loans, and working ant Master Charge and as a teller,” he said. Bach, who also planned to be graduated in December, said the courses required in ay ARK AL Ay “Shand Business Internships his degree program were practical. “A lot of my instructors were people who have worked in banks,” he said. ‘“Be- cause my classes were small in enrollment, we had a chance to compare ideas. My in- ternship forced me to take time to learn things I normally wouldn't.” Bach didn’t live on campus as a student 10 years ago, so he said he can’t make many comparisons. “But it seems like a different breed of students attend Western now,” he said. “I feel like an old man in most of my classes .” But having already worked in a bank has been an advantage over fellow students, he said. “I wasn’t scared or awed of working with other people’s money,” Bach said. “I wasn’t afraid to try new things because I’ve been here for a while.” Vicki Bagwell @ A POSTING MACHINE records the Morgantown Deposit Bank’s transactions for Paul Bach. Older than most of his fellow students, Bach said he felt more confident when working with clients’ money. A DELINQUENT SUMMARY BOOK helps Roger Brooks keep track of past due accounts at the Morgan- town Deposit Branch Bank. During his internship he was responsible for making installment and note loans and handling Master Charge. Photos by Debbie Gibson hen 54-year-old Bob Gren- inger told a house-hunting client he was a sophomore at Western, the woman was quite amused. He was serious. Greninger, a real estate agent for West- ern Realty Co. of Bowling Green, is work- ing toward an associate degree in real es- tate. Last fall he left the classroom and completed an internship worth 12 hours credit. He had to struggle through mid-terms and finals, but most of his coursework was full-time, on-the-job experience. “Studyi ng distracts from real estate sales,” Greninger said. Courses such as ac- counting, small-business management and marketing consumed much time he once used for selling. “This fall is a lucrative, peak time and I’m benefiting from this work experience,” Greninger said. “But after this semester it will be back to six hours (of coursework a semester) for me.” But the studying is already paying off for Greninger, who said the degree will help him become more professional. His first course, real estate essentials, prepared him to apply for a license. Mar- keting class was also beneficial, he said. “You learn to market and sell and it teach- es you to organize.” Accounting and appraisal courses were also valuable, he said. “In accounting, the arithmetic helps when figuring closing statements. We also talked about financing homes and organizing presentations. “In appraisals we learned factors to use in appraising houses, real estate property and personal property to reach a realistic value,” he said. Greninger said the internship allowed him to establish goals, but reaching them is time-consuming. “You have to be at the disposal of the public, which means work- ing seven days a week. “You talk to them, show them the town and WKU,” he said. “They either just got married, divorced, a new job, fired, a pro- motion, or they're going down. “Developing a clientele of people to come to you is work, but talking and devel- oping trust aren’t work — that’s fun,” Greninger said. ‘The secret of real estate is contact. People are your work.” Connie Holman A HOUSE WITH RAFTERS, INSULATION AND WIRING still uncovered is shown by Bob Greninger of Western Realty. The part-time student helped Nor- way native Anne Waage find a home in Bowling Green when her husband got a job in Scottsville. 197 Business Internships Although each student must take 12 hours in the Ogden College of Science and Technology, majors and minors go even more in-depth in studies for the science - minded te HANDS POISED, Dr. Marvin Russell and son make the opening moves of a chess game. Kelly, 18, a fresh- man at Southwestern University, usually wins, said the dean of Ogden College, but his other son, Dwight, 20, is better than both. 198 Ogden College f. 7 4 POINTING TOWARD THE PACIFIC NORTH- WEST, Dr. Wayne Hoffman, head of the geography and geology department, discusses a map picture tak- en by a NASA satellite with Jim Bingham, an assistant professor in the department. Enrollment in the Ogden College of Sci- ence and Technology was at an all-time high last year, Dr. Marvin Russell, dean, said. General education science requirements contribute to the college’s growth and function, he said. “We think the general education compo- nent of our academic program is an ex- tremely important part of our total curricu- lum,” Russell said. “It gives the student an opportunity to understand and learn more about issues of science and the nature of our existence and gives an insight that would be totally lack- ing otherwise.” Majors and minors in the college find employment opportunities excellent, Rus- sell said. “Especially with the great need for energy conservation, the opportunities are steadily improving. “We are now prepared to increase our activity in research and public service to achieve an optimum balance and to keep with the major missions of the university.” Field trips to strip mine sites and field- work in caves and streams break the lec- ture-test syndrome in the geography and geology curriculum, Dr. Wayne Hoffman, department head, said. “We've revamped our geography major this year,” Hoffman said. The department previously offered a broad major, but now allows students to specialize in areas such as city and regional planning. “One of the problems we have with in- coming students is that in most high schools no geology courses are offered,” he said. Those students often choose better known subjects, such as biology. “We operate by word-of-mouth,” Hoff- man said. “Most of our students are not freshmen but upperclassmen who have learned of our sources since they've been here.” He said the department is becoming more job-oriented. “We now teach courses such as aerial photography, which is very valuable in government and _ business jobs.” With a new building and facilities, Hoff- man said the instructors’ and students’ en- thusiasm is great. “We have a greater in- flow of students mainly because we are in the mainstream of the campus now.” A new math sequence is being struc- tured, according to Dr. Robert Bueker, math and computer science department head. Algebra and calculus courses for bus- iness majors and a statistics course for biology majors have been added. A general education math requirement helps increase the enrollment in the de- partment, but Bueker said the computer en el A 22-YEAR-OLD PROJECT ended with the publish- ing of Dr. Ernest Beal’s “A Manual of Marsh and Aquatic Vascular Plants of North Carolina.” He re- tired as biology head in December, but still teaches. A STRONG GRIP AND A HIGH TOSS of the tennis ball lead Dr. Robert Bueker into a serve at Spero Ker- eiakes Park. The math department head was playing a regular opponent, Lynn Greeley, an administrative as- sistant in Ogden College. science area is attracting more students. Employment is good in “applied areas and for secondary school teachers,” Bueker said. Most graduates teach on the secondary level or work in business and industry, he said. Feedback from graduates reveals “we've prepared them well,” Bueker added. With rapid expansion and “simply tre- mendous research advances” have come new jobs in the biology field and new courses to the biology department. Courses as complex as Pathophysiology II, Immu- nology and Organ Transplantation were first offered last year, along with a new area of concentration in psychobiology. The biology job market is especially good for those with master’s degrees, ac- cording to Dr. Ernest Beal, who was de- partment head until December, 1977. “Quite a few of our graduates go on to get their master’s or doctorate, or go to medical or dental school,” Beal said. “Of all the state institutions, we have the best rec- ord of placing graduates into dental or medical school.” Beal, who came to Western in 1968, re- tired as department head after the fall se- mester, but continues teaching and re- search. His replacement was Dr. Jeff Jen- kins, who came in 1963 and became a full professor in 1975. (continued on page 200) 199 Ogden College science - minded cont. Dissatisfied with the textbooks available for a chemistry course, two professors re- cently wrote their own book, according to Dr. Gordon Wilson, department head. Larry Byrd and Dr. Charles Hendrickson wrote a textbook for Chemistry for the Health Sciences 109. Wilson said the book would also be used at other universities. Enrollment has remained fairly con- stant, he said, because most students who take chemistry do so because it’s required in their major. “It’s just not a subject stu- dents flock to.” Employment has been especially good in the past two years. Wilson said he gets more calls from prospective employers than he has graduates. 200 Ogden College A TIMING LIGHT ENABLES Dr. Gordon Wilson, head of the chemistry department, to tune his 1967 Ford. Wilson also replaces parts and lubricates his automobiles. He said he enjoys the work and thinks he may save a little money doing it. bw r Soy TE dx WE ate OSE GRASS FLIES when Dr. Leonard Brown, head of the agriculture department, mows his half-acre lawn on Ridgecrest Drive. Brown does other yardwork, but said he prefers camping and hunting quails. About a half to a third of the students attend graduate or professional school, he said. Some become chemists, while others go into areas such as plant taxonomy, bio- chemistry or computer science. An interest in gardening, house plants, growing a good corn crop, raising horses or even learning the difference between a prime-rib and a choice T-bone steak can be satisfied in the agriculture department. Dr. Leonard Brown, department head, said there’s something for everyone in his A BACKHAND RETURN BOUNCES OFF THE RACKET of Lynn Greeley, assistant dean for admini- strative and technical services for Ogden College. Greeley was competing at Spero Kereiakes Park with Dr. Robert Bueker, head of mathematics. department, which is experiencing steady enrollment and expansion. The new greenhouse is in use, and a new horticulture program is being developed. Brown hopes that within two years West- ern will have an equestrian science class to deal with horse breeding and riding. Brown also hopes to get an exposition center on the university’s 800-acre farm in a year. Part of it would be used for horse shows, he said. The job market in agriculture is very good, Brown said. About 25 per cent of the graduates go into farming or professional farm management. Others go to graduate school, and about 15 per cent teach. The most significant development in the engineering technology program last year was its accreditation by the Engineers’ Council for Professional Development, said Boyce Tate, department head. Western’s department is the first in Ken- tucky to receive accreditation. “Another significant development last year was the establishment of a national certification program for our graduates,” Tate said. Since the accreditation, a grad- uate can be certified as an engineering technologist after five years of training in his field. “Of course this helps greatly with em- ployment opportunities,” Tate said. Each year 46 to 50 graduates usually receive four to six job offers each, he said. The department, consisting of degree areas of civil, mechanical, electrical and en- vironmental engineering, experienced a seven per cent enrollment increase in the fall and an eight per cent increase in the number of majors. The physics and astronomy department found itself minus three faculty members, USING A ROLLER BRUSH AND LADDER, Boyce Tate, head of the engineering technology department, repainted the tepee sign at the entrance of Shawnee subdivision, where he has lived for 12 years. Tate’s daughters Emily, 20, and Amy, 13, helped. SEARCHING FOR LOW FREQUENCY RADIO EMISSIONS from celestial sources, Dr. Frank Six, head of the physics and astronomy department, oper- ates a strip chart recorder at a radio observatory on a farm southwest of Bowling Green. and put much effort into replacing those positions, according to Dr. Frank Six, de- partment head. “We hired one bio-physicist, one applied experimental physicist and one plasma physicist,” he said. “We hope to have new research areas as a result of these new in- structors, for graduates and undergrad- uates.” Construction of a road to the off-campus astronomical laboratory has begun, he said. ‘There was a lot of detailed work dealing with it, and we’re now ready to go with the final laying of the road.” According to Six, the department allows students to design their degree programs. “This allows them to branch out into other areas and provides more job areas.” 201 Ogden College 202 Greenhouse(d) Nature TWO OF THREE CAMPUS GREENHOUSES are viewed from atop the Environmental Science and Agriculture Feature Technology building. Dr. Wilbert Normand said only one greenhouse is available for horticulture students. ixing dirt and having mud ooze (M down your arm is not what one expects to do in class, but in Hor- ticulture (Agriculture 312) getting muddy is part of learning. Dirt is part of greenhouse work, an im- portant part of horticulture, according to instructor Dr. Wilbert Normand. “We cover all fields of plant work in this class,” Normand said. “We doa lot of work in the greenhouse, but we also work in landscaping and design, visit orchards and study all types of plants and plant design.” The three-hour credit class comprises two hours of lecture and two hours of lab each week, Normand said. Most students enjoy their work in the greenhouse and wish they could work there more. “The greenhouse shows you what the lecturer is talking about. It gives you the practical experience you need,” said Letha Edison, a sophomore agriculture major. Normand realizes the advantages of working in the greenhouse, but said lim- ited space prohibits students from spend- ing more time there. “We have three greenhouses on campus and only one of them can be used for the agriculture department,” he said. “We sim- ply don’t have room for the students to do as much work there as I would like.” He hopes this can be corrected by build- ing a larger greenhouse on the university farm. Lab work in the greenhouse and on the university farm not only helps students learn but also gives them important exper- ience, students said. “This class gives me the experience I will need when I apply for a job,” said Harold Elliot, a senior agriculture major from Bowling Green. Patricia Hubbach, a senior agriculture major from Louisville, said the class was not what she expected, although she en- joyed it. “I thought we would spend more time in the greenhouse,” she said. ‘There is more lecture than I thought there would be.” Normand said more students are inter- ested in horticulture. “Five years ago we offered only one class in horticulture, and now there are 11 classes,” he said. Horticulture is growing rapidly, accord- ing to Normand. While most students in his class are agriculture majors and mi- nors, the number of non-majors is begin- AN AFTERNOON LAB in the greenhouse has Dr. Wilbert Normand demonstrating for Tim Appling, Letha Edison, Sarah Graham and Jane Smith. Horticul- ture students said they wished they had more time to work in the greenhouse. Photos by Lynn B. Wright ning to increase. “The class is worth taking on its own merit, not just because you are majoring in agriculture,” Miss Hubbach said. “You don’t realize what you can do with plants to make a house look better,” Miss Edison said. She also said the class helps her enjoy nature. “It’s fun to walk or drive down the road and be able to recognize the different trees and plants.” The increased interest in plants among students is apparent to Normand. “I get many phone calls from people wanting me to diagnose their sick plants. I do the best I can, but it’s hard to make a diagnosis over the phone.” Normand attributes the increased inter- est in plants to an increased awareness of the environment. “T think the surge in plant interest will level off, but it’s not just a fad,” he said. Cheryl Sharp REPOTTING A SPIDER PLANT took Clay Boyd only a minute, but he said it is often necessary when healthy plants outgrow their pots. The sophomore said he also took cuttings from plants and rooted them. PRUNING A TREE so it will take a better shape is Joey Bunch, a junior agriculture major from Bowling Green. Troublesome limbs must be eliminated so healthier areas won't be deprived of food. . @ 203 Agriculture Feature 204 A 24-HOUR j WEA i. HER WATCH t was just another cool autumn day for most students. Some turned on radios to learn if a sweater or light jacket was needed before embarking for class. But most paid little attention to the Bowling Green weather on Tuesday, Oct. 11, except for nine students who became weather technicians for one day. The students were members of the Ob- servational and Analytical Meteorology course in the geography and geology de- partment. In lieu of two class meetings they spent 24 hours (beginning at 6:30 p.m., Oct. 10) studying national weather printouts and recording local weather con- ditions in four-hour shifts in the Environ- mental Science and Technology (EST) building. “Boy, it was great,” said David Couden, an Owensboro junior who worked the first four-hour shift. “I’d do it every week to miss a week of classes.” Professor Willard Cockrill said the lab gives students a chance to read weather instruments and make synoptic weather observations. “They enjoy it very much,” he said. “It’s kind of a highlight for them during the semester.” Cockrill, head of the 3-year-old meteoro- Geography And Geology Feature logical technology program, said the stu- dents are learning to be weather techni- cians, not forecasters. “Most of our students are training to be weather technicians for the Federal Avi- ation Administration, the National Park Service or the National Weather Service,” Cockrill said. The students monitored hourly teletype printouts, and facsimile air depiction and surface maps and charts from the weather service. The facsimile machine produced 126 printouts during the 24-hour period. Included in the printouts were surface weather maps, satellite photographs, na- tional precipitation maps and constant pressure charts. The students also moni- tored remote radar printouts from about 35 weather stations located mostly east of the Rocky Mountains. The students made hourly observations of local weather conditions, logging and coding the data as if they were sending it over the wire. Pressure, wind, precipitation, tempera- ture, relative humidity, visibility, sky con- ditions and sunlight intensity were mea- sured and monitored from the weather in- struments on the top of the EST building. “They operated the weather instruments as if it were a Class A weather station,” Cockrill said. Couden and Sherrill Powell, a sopho- more meteorology major from Henderson- ville, Tenn., said their shift didn’t get bor- ing because of the work and the stories Cockrill told of his meteorology work at 50 Air Force weather stations. Powell said her favorite story concerned Cockrill’s tracking 200-mile-per-hour winds off the Alaskan coast. Another fa- vorite was his recollection of the April 18, 1969, storm in Bowling Green that includ- ed hailstones as large as four inches in diameter that broke more than 1,000 cam- pus windowpanes. Although some students were disap- pointed when an expected thunderstorm didn’t move into the area, Cockrill said an unusual weather phenomenon occurred. “Radiation fog came into the area and the fog formed before the clouds came in,” Cockrill said. “There was a vast change in cloud cover during a one-hour period. It’s something that is very unusual. It only happens about once every 100 days.” Don White i Photos by Ron Hoskins IN THE GLOOM OF MIDNIGHT, Creed THERMOMETERS IN AN INSTRUMENT Fleenor checks the temperature and dew point SHELTER are checked by Dennis Bond during spread with a psychrometer. Fleenor said the his four-hour shift. The roof top shelter shades sky was real clear until about 1 or 2a.m., when the instruments so direct sunlight will not dis- a little ground fog came in.” tort their readings. THUNDERSTORMS CROSSED THE GULF WIND SPEED AND DIRECTION are mea- OF MEXICO along a stationary front, which sured and graphed by an anemometer at the Creed Fleenor marked on the large map on the campus weather station. Don Schroering and fourth floor of the Environmental Science and Creed Fleenor averaged the data every 10 min- Technology Building. utes and recorded the observations. 205 - Geography And Geology Feature 206 aster'’s - minded Folks in the Graduate College could get mobbed if all Western’s potential graduate students enrolled at the same time. “We have 28,500 graduates wit h bachelor and associate degrees who may decide to come to graduate school,” dean Dr. Elmer Gray said. “Their reasons could be for per- sonal enrichment, various requirements in their work or to prepare for a second ca- reer.” More than 2,700 students are now en- rolled in graduate programs ranging from plant and animal life studies to research on How many students take a siesta after lunch? Olga Azefeifa, a graduate student in education from Costa Rica, does. Mrs. Azefeifa, the first graduate student at Western from Costa Rica, is in her sec- ond year and will finish with about 30 hours beyond her master’s degree in educa- tion and counseling. Mrs. Azefeifa got a scholarship to West- ern and came to the United States with her husband Guerado three weeks after their wedding. She enrolled in graduate school and Guerado began taking business courses. “I like my classes better than Guerado likes his,” Mrs. Azefeifa said. “There is much more interaction between students in grad- uate classes than undergraduate classes.” A typical day for Mrs. Azefeifa starts at 9 a.m., when she studies counseling and edu- cation techniques in seminar classes. About 1 p.m., Mrs. Azefeifa and her hus- band return to their apartment for lunch and a short siesta, or nap. By 3 she goes to Cravens Library to read and research until 8 or 9 p.m. Graduate College an English writer, Gray said. “In 1967, teachers began to have to get a master’s degree in 10 years or less to renew their teaching certificate,” he said. ‘We're at the end of the 10-year period. Because of work or family commitments some of them are pressed to finish right now. Obvi- ously, teacher education is our biggest pro- gram.” A weakened job market for college grad- uates is also making graduate school an attractive option, Gray said. “People are concerned about the job market and want “The library is my treasure. The research methods are much more sophisticated here. “Looking for economic gain is not my motivation for being in the states,” she said. “I have a job in my country, and | want to take the many ideas I’ve gotten here back to the Costa Rican educators.” The petite brunette said she believes both she and her husband enjoyed learn- ing about America and its culture. ‘“Guer- ado is becoming an expert on football, and we are now taking square-dancing les- sons,” Mrs. Azefeifa said, laughing. The Azefeifas organized the Latin American Association for Students here and often invite foreign students to their home for dinner and discussions about their respective countries. Mrs. Azefeifa has not visited Costa Rica since 1975. “I sometimes get homesick on Sundays, because in Costa Rica that is the day we get together with our families for conversation and dinner. I find myself placing several long-distance calls.” Laura Phillips @ to better prepare themselves,” he said. “Some are ready to change careers and need retooling.” WITH TORTILLA CHIP IN HAND, Dr. Faye Robin- son enjoys the College of Education’s September pic- nic at Lampkin Park. The assistant dean of the Grad- uate College was talking to Dr. Norman Ehresman, head of the division for educational services. LONG BEFORE THE CHILL OF WINTER, Dr. Elmer Gray, dean of the Graduate College, cuts a mulberry tree for kindling in his fireplace. Gray said he works in the yard and garden on Saturdays with his children. Olga Azefeifa Of Western 6 13,606 students, 2,777 are graduate students. The oldest is 61 years old, the youngest is 22. The average age is 29. There are 1,402 graduate students in education. More psychology majors go directly into graduate work, and students come from all over the world to work on their master’s degree at Western. -- Linda Kay Warren Ye ja ia betas Steve Hooper Steve Hooper is “psyched” about working on his master’s degree, and rightly so. He is a second-year graduate student in psy- chology. “Each day provides a different learning experience,” he said. “I like graduate school because the classes are openly struc- tured and the teachers aren’t as strict about deadlines.” Like many psychology majors, Hooper went immediately into graduate school be- cause the job opportunities with a bache- lor’s degree are limited. “Much of the studying I do is time-con- suming, like learning how to give and in- terpret intelligence tests,” he said. Hooper has discovered that graduate school is not all lectures and tests. He does As do most students, Linda Kay Warren, a graduate student in education, worries about grades. Not whether she might flunk, but if she will get another “A.” Miss Warren has maintained a 4.0 gpa since she came to Western as an under- graduate. She was named Scholar of the University when she was graduated in 1974. “T don’t feel the pressure now as much as when I was a junior or senior, but I would still be disappointed in myself if I didn’t maintain my record,” she said. She has completed more than half of the 30 hours beyond the master’s degree need- ed to earn a Specialist Degree in Education and Administration. Fortunately, Miss Warren enjoys school. She teaches fifth-grade reading at Russell- ville Middle School and studies at night. “It’s a big job coordinating teaching and studying,” Miss Warren said. “I feel as though my students come first, but I really enjoy graduate classes because they give me more diversity.” She went directly into graduate school and got a graduate assistantship after re- ceiving her bachelor’s degree in elementary education. “I’m glad I went ahead and got my mas- ter’s, because I didn’t feel as pressured as I would if I had waited six or seven years,” she said. (In Kentucky, teachers must get a master’s within 10 years after they start teaching.) “I enjoy continuing my education be- cause it makes me feel as though I am bettering myself. My classes are interest- ing, too, and I like my professors, even though some are threatening to flunk me.” Laura Phillips @ clinical psychology work every week and has regular patients. He has counseled hy- peractive children, children with learning disabilities and adolescents who lie or steal. “You really get involved with the pa- tients, since you get to know so much of their background. Often I deal with par- ents, too,” he said. When Hooper is graduated he would like to continue clinical psychology work with children, perhaps in a public school. “T decided I wanted to be a child psychol- ogist in the 11th grade after working as a volunteer with Easter Seals. But when | graduate I'll take about any job in psychol- ogy because I just want experience now.” Laura Phillips @ 207 Graduate College year 5: Optional in four graduate assistants in agricul- ture. They are pursuing different, yet related areas in one of the smallest graduate programs on campus. “Being such a small department has a lot of advantages,” said Wilson Stone of Scottsville. “You know everyone, and, be- cause of that, there’s a free exchange of ideas.” Having several options for so few people also has advantages, he said. “The program is varied, and the four of us are doing totally different things,” Stone said. “I am working mainly with freshmen, teaching plant science.” Debbie Horton of Russellville took a dif- ferent route with agriculture. Her mass communication major and agriculture mi- nor became intertwined. “IT am very attached to agriculture,” she said. “I grew up on a farm and through journalism I can best communicate new farm ideas and benefits of agriculture. I can do more through journalism than I could directly on the farm.” After her 1975 graduation, she began working as a free-lance journalist, but also decided to go to graduate school. D epartmental size isn’t bothering the AN ADJUSTMENT IS MADE to a ph meter used for soil testing by Edward Kithcart in a soil lab in the Environmental Sciences and Technology building. The graduate assistant said he enjoys agricultural re- search and plans to study for a Ph.D. in the field. Photos by Debbie Gibson 208 Graduate College Feature A MOCK-UP OF A BROCHURE is one of Debbie Horton’s projects as a graduate assistant in agriculture A journalism major, Miss Horton takes photograph: and designs the departmental brochures. “T feel that going back to school will make me more experienced and desirable to other job areas,” she said. For now, the agriculture department is supplying plenty of work for her. “T am working on the publications of the agriculture department right now,” Miss Horton said. “We have a departmental bro- chure and one brochure for each aspect of agriculture. “T prefer the personal interaction that we have,” she said. ‘There are three of us in the same office. We share our ideas, which is much to our benefit. I like the individual attention with the teachers and with the students themselves.” The job market is healthy for agriculture graduates, according to Mike Hurt, an agri- culture education major. “There were job openings everywhere,” Hurt said. “They were really calli ng the ones of us who were certified.” But the openings were not what Hurt was looking for. “TI didn’t want to leave Western,” he said. ‘My wife was here in school, and I decided I wanted to stay and get my master’s.” The Future Farmers of America (FFA) was also an important factor in his student GRADUATE ASSISTANT AND PART-TIME IN- STRUCTOR Wilson Stone evaluates his plant-science, students’ final exams and grades with Gordon Jones, an associate professor of agriculture. Stone taught two sections of the course. more than one way life at Western. Hurt organized the chapter and became its first adviser. Still in that position, Hurt said he wants to see the chapter join the state FFA. “We got started so late that we didn’t have enough time to draw up a constitu- tion and get approved,” he said. “When we do, we'll be the first collegiate chapter in the state.” While doing his graduate assistantship, a job opportunity opened up. He now teaches agriculture to about 66 students at Auburn High School and advises the school’s FFA chapter. “Western has been a great experience,” Hurt said. ‘You meet people and develop good relations through the ag department.” Graduate assistant Edward Kithcart found his individual goals in research work. “My undergraduate work was in agri- business,” he said. “I worked a short time in that field and found that I wanted to get more specifically into the scientific aspects of agriculture. “Through research, I’m learning how to conduct efficient research and handle equipment, which helps me prepare for my doctoral work,” he said. “As a graduate assistant, I learn things | don’t know through students who come to me with questions,” Kithcart said. Terri Darr WELDING A SEAM ON A METAL PIECE (running a bead) is Auburn High School student Todd Ashby. His teacher, graduate student Michael Hurt, is also the FFA chapter adviser at Ashby’s school. 209 Graduate College Feature 210 A stretch of the academic nature hree senior citizens, all sisters, T learned about drawing in a Thurs- day night art class at the Russell- ville Public Library. Three weeks of rotat- ing laboratory work in area _ hos- pitals comprises a May term class for medical technology students. Twenty-one students went to a dance workshop in New York in summer 1977 and 10 students toured theaters in London, England, in De- cember, 1976. Though enormously varied, all of the classes fell under the Extended Campus Program. In public libraries in Kentucky and on the ocean in Florida, the program brings both the classes to the student and the students to the classes. The clientele is varied. “The undergrad- uates are mostly people out of high school and working or housewives,” Dr. Charles Clark, head of the program, said, while about half of the graduate students are teachers seeking their master’s. “The undergraduate program in nearby towns and libraries is also for kids who can’t afford school or go full time,” Clark said. He estimated that about 10 or 20 per cent “end up on campus.” Some of the classes are relatively exotic. The medical technology course (biology 407) took Western students “out of the Ivory Tower and into practical experience, out where the action is,” said Dr. Larry Elliot, who has taught the May Term course since 1972. “What students do is go to a good hospital that performs tests on medical specimens. They actually work in the labs for three weeks, rotating in the lab under the supervision of the chief of the section, chief of the lab, a pathologist and myself.” Bowling Green medical technology ju- nior Bill Zeigel worked at Union County Hospital in Morgantown, studying chem- istry, hemotology and urinalysis. “It was real good experience,” he said. “It rein- forced my desire to go into the field.” Students received three hours of 400-lev- el credit for two weeks of theatre touring in London during Christmas breaks. They saw 12 shows and met British actors. Occa- sionally, the program offers such classes as a geology field course in Wisconsin, an aquatic biology class in Florida or a fashion tour to Dallas. But far more common are general educa- tion courses such as English, art, sociology, psychology or music. For instance, the three sisters in Russellville — Gertrude Dyche, Cleo Linton and Audrey Price — Extended Campus Program were members of the Logan County Art- ists’ Guild and saw an Art 140 drawing class advertised. Mrs. Linton said they “en- joyed it thoroughly, but it’s a little deep for us. We’ve never had anything this techni- cal before.” More than 2,800 students enrolled in fall 1977 extended campus classes, according to Dr. Carl Chelf, dean of the Bowling Green Community College and Continuing Edu- cation. Also, about 260 students enrolled in Ea- gle University classes, though Chelf said the state considers them “in a special cate- gory.” He said 166 courses were taught in 30 locations. Ft. Knox was the largest enrollment area, with more than 550 students, mostly in industrial technology or associate degree studies. Louisville classes drew 550 stu- dents, 404 enrolled in Owensboro and Glasgow reached 233, with a “growing en- rollment.” “Western is in a unique position in of- fering extended campus classes, as other institutions are not very close,” Chelf said. “Elizabethtown Community College is 60 or 70 miles away; Henderson Community College is 80 or 90 miles away. Other insti- tutions usually have another school within 30 or 40 miles, such as Murray and Hen- derson, UK and Eastern. We have a bigger service area, the way we look at it.” Chelf said the Council on Higher Educa- tion could take Western’s Louisville classes away. “The Council has expressed consid- erable concern about duplication of efforts in extended campus locations, especially in Jefferson County, with U of L (University of Louisville), Jefferson Community Col- lege and others such as Western, Murray and Eastern,” he said. “There is also talk in the legislature and other government agencies about unneces- sary competition between institutions,” Chelf said. “They have the impression that we're like fighting cats and dogs for stu- dents.” He said he thought the impression “was erroneous,” and that rather than making geographical boundaries, the Council should make field of study boundaries. Chelf said Clark tries to get “fairly reli- able feedback in various locations of what people need to complete their programs. Then we come back to the departments and say, ‘Okay, Louisville needs ...’ We bring together available faculty and instructional resources to match the needs.” Roger Stinnett Photos by Debbie Gibson Dr. Robert Stevenson: A roving professor ON THE ROAD is where Dr. Robert Stevenson is found as he commutes to different towns where groups of his 85 students in Science Materials and Methods course are located. Stevenson lectures to each group four times a semester to reinforce their viewing of 14 TV tapes. Stevenson said he drove 7,000 miles last year to teach courses in the extended campus program. 211 Extended Campus Program 212 Sports SPORTS on the Hill Don White, Editor Athletic competition provided a means for the Hill to extend from Canada to Florida, and from the East coast to the Midwest. The basketball team enjoyed one of the year’s biggest thrills as it ventured to Knoxville, Tenn., to beat Syracuse in the opening round of the Mideast Reviceel in the NCAA tournament. The win was the last for retiring coach Jim Richards. The baseball team found some light- hearted moments in Florida and Georgia between games with several of the nation’s strongest teams. Diver Rick Kral, a four-time state winner in two events, failed to qualify for the national championships but was a major reason coach Bill Powell called his 1978 team Western’s best ever. The football team, national runners- up in Division II in both 1973 and 1975, couldn’t repeat its recent performances in odd-numbered years and fell to its worst record ever, 1-8-1. The cross country team was molded around freshmen and several experienced runners, and couldn't measure up to conference powers Murray and East Tennessee. Several of coach Del Hessel’s runners competed in international competition throughout the year proving Western could fare well against some of the world’s best runners. Some of the key athletes who contributed to Western’s sport successes in 1977-78 were married. A feature story looks at their difficulties and rewards. But in both defeat and victory, Western’s athletic teams proved that the expanded Hill could be a learning experience in the field of competition. Hl In thesection: rs - e Only One Win Inexperience, adjustment to a new offense, injuries and a lack of motivation beset Western as it falls to its worst record ever — eight losses, a tie and only one win. A Storybook Ending ................. 226 A retiring coach suffers through a lackluster December with an injury-plagued Christmas break, but rallies to an OVC tournament championship and an opening-round victory in the NCAA. Win or Lose, They Cheer A disappointing football season and a roller coaster basketball season keep Topper cheerleaders busy sparking enthusiasm. An lajired Potential Three post-season injuries dampen the gymnastics team’s potential for winning the state tournament. Off the Deep End Diver Rick Kral ends record-making, four-year career at Western, by being named Western’s Most Valuable Swimmer. 213 Sports Married athletes find success and happiness by going through college ... Two by Two The star athlete marries the cute captain of the cheerleading squad. The couple sup- ports each other through hard times — the victories far outnumber the defeats, the team wins a championship and love ex- tends from the locker room to life. They live happily ever after. Such are the stories found in books read on rainy afternoons and in the fantasies of pig-tailed girls. And for several Western athletes, the se- curity and mutual support of marriage is a fantasy-come-true. Three baseball and two football players and their wives. believe marriage plays an important part in their athletic success. “We feel like we’re as much a part of the team as they are,” said Tammy Green, whose husband Mike is the designated hit- ter on the baseball team. The baseball couples — the Greens, Paul and Carla Orberson, and Terry and Phyllis Tedder — believe married life has in- creased the husbands’ academic and athle- tic stability. “If I wasn’t married, I would struggle academically,” Tedder said. ““Now I can get three meals a day and enough sleep. And she gives me encouragement and comfort. “But when I have a bad day, she jumps on me as soon as I come into the door. It puts a little more pressure on me knowing she’s there pulling for me.” The Tedders married two days before Terry entered Western as a freshman. Al- HIGH SCHOOL SWEETHEARTS Sandy and Steve Larimore walk to their car after a home football game. Sandy, a staff member at Western, said she has only missed four of Steve's collegiate games. though they said the initial adjustment was hard, Tedder, a three-year starting first baseman, said knowing he had a sup- portive wife helped his playing. The Orbersons grew up together in Dan- ville and got married soon after high school graduation. Their son Jeffrey is three and attends most games. — ' Orberson, who pitched eight wins last season, believes marriage has helped boost his gpa to 3.3. “I have fewer late hours now and I study more,” he said. “I’d probably flunk out if I wasn’t married.” Unlike his married teammates, Orberson doesn’t discuss baseball with his wife. “Yeah,” reasoned Orberson, “like (coach) Shollenberger says, there are a bil- lion Chinese who could care less how I pitch. Win or lose, I don’t like to talk about it much. I just try to be the same.” The baseball wives attended most of Western’s games and traveled to road games with friends. Their vocal support was loudly recognizable at most games. The Greens attended kindergarten in Johnson, Ga., dated as high school sopho- mores and were married Aug. 20, 1977. Green, who hit well early in the season before slumping down the stretch, said he depends on his wife for encouragement. “She has always been there,” he said. “I need support and we need each other. She keeps me straighter.” “Yeah, and he gets his uniform washed FOOTBALL WIFE Sheila Gates yells encouragement to husband Pat, an offensive guard, and his team- mates. “He likes to leave football at the stadium, but I like to know more than he wants to tell,” she said. Ron Hoskins free,” Tammy said with a smile. For sprinter Gayle Harris, marriage and a 3-year-old ahist present a challenge. She commutes from Franklin where she lives with her family. “I’m dead tired when I get home,” she said. “The earliest I get home is 6:30 p.m. and then I have to give her a bath and put her to bed. “Sometimes she (her daughter) tells me, ‘Momma, I want to go bye-bye with you,’ and when I tell her she can’t, she says she doesn’t love me anymore. It’s rough be- cause I miss her.” Ron Hoskins Pat Gates, an offensive guard on the football team, said the encouragement of married teammate Steve Larimore helped persuade him to get married while con- tinuing playing. His wife Sheila was a cheerleader at Christian County High School when Gates played football. They were married July 31, 1977. Despite the strains and sacrifices foot- ball demands, Sheila said she has adjusted well. “I’m used to it,” she said. “It has al- ways been football, football, football. And it doesn’t even bother me to see him get injured. He’s a big boy; he can take care of himself.” Larimore, called the “old married man” by teammates, got married after his fresh- man season in which he quarterbacked Western to the national finals in Division II. His wife Sandy grew up with him in Bullitt County. Since his freshman season, Larimore ie cs played sparingly. In the last two seasons, Western has won only five of 20 games. Not playing and the team’s losing have troubled Larimore, but his wife has helped, he said. “It has made us closer,” Sandy said. “We've gone through a lot, his not playing and the team’s losing. You grow up fast when you have to make hard decisions.” One of the hardest decisions for the Lar- imores came when he decided to quit play- ing and become an assistant coach. “I brought it home with me,” he said. “I didn’t play much and that was hard to understand.” Through Larimore’s decision to quit playing, his wife stood by him, offering encouragement and understanding. It was a nice chapter to a storybook-marriage. “I was the football player and she was the captain of the high school cheerleading squad,” Larimore said. “It’s the kind of sto- ry they make movies out of.” Don White WIFE AND SON Carla and Jeffrey Orberson focus on the baseball field where husband and father Terry is a first baseman. Three-year-old Jeffrey plays his own game near a screen behind home plate. Harold Sinclair Inexperience, adjustment to a new offense, injuries and a lack of motivation beset Western as it fell to its worst record ever — eight losses, a tie and ... ONLY ONE WIN Jim Burton hen Western’s football team finished the 1976 season with a 4-5-1 record — its first losing year since 1960 — most observers viewed it as a fluke. Surely the Hilltoppers, who had been Division II national runners-up in 1973 and 1975, would rebound in 1977. An experienced defense returned, combined with a new, speed-oriented offense implemented by coach Jimmy Feix. And after all, those two second-place finishes had been in odd- numbered years. Things seemed to point in the team’s favor. But the hard times that had plagued the Toppers in 1976 continued. In fact, matters worsened. Western finished 1-8-1, its worst record ever, and was last in the Ohio Valley Confer- ence with a 1-5-1 mark. But the season wasn’t without bright spots. Junior running back Jimmy Woods rushed for 906 yards and the conference coaches voted him second-team All-OVC. The season gave Woods a three-year rushing total of 2,158 yards. Linebacker Biff Madon, guard Chip Carpenter and defensive tackle Tony Towns made first-team All-OVC and honorable mention All-America. Wideout Eddie Preston, offensive tackle Jeff Alsup, kicker Dave Betz and defensive tackle Reginald Hayden were chosen second-team all-conference. Western’s downfall couldn’t be found in the season statistics. Topper opponents gained only five more yards passing and had just five more first downs than Western, although the team was beaten in total rushing yardage 2,297-1,828. Early in the season, injuries did in the Toppers. Lawrence Jefferson, Kirby Bennett, Paul Sheehan and Troy Snardon, all of whom figured heavily in Feix’s plans, suffered knee injuries before the First game. The defensive backfield, considered a strong point, was hit especially hard. Cornerback James Jones, a two-year starter, underwent surgery unrelated to football and missed most of the season. Jim Atkinson, a junior safety, injured a knee two minutes into the season opener and never regained full mobil- ity. His replacement, freshman Mark Stahl, also was beset by knee problems. Madon hurt his knee late in the season, costing him a possi- ble second straight OVC Defensive Player of the Year award. Madon, who led the league in tackles for seven games, missed most of the last two games. Those injured veterans were replaced mostly by inexperi- enced players. And by the time the veterans returned, their jobs had been taken. “We couldn’t use them when they came back,” Feix said. “They just never did recapture their positions. The young players had gotten some experience. In the last three games, our young folks did a great job. I was real pleased with them by the end of the season.” With all its youth, the team made a bundle of mistakes. The Toppers lost 21 of 48 fumbles, and threw 19 interceptions to their opponents’ seven. Western’s trademark in recent years has been defense. The Toppers have led the OVC in rushing defense seven times, in passing defense three times and in scoring defense eight times in the past 14 seasons. But the 1977 defense didn’t escape the mistake epidemic. (continued on page 218) DOUBLED OVER but still holding the ball, Jimmy Woods endures a tackle by Tennessee Tech linebackers John Dethridge (45) and Mark Shrum. Woods ran for 73 yards and a touchdown, but the Golden Eagles won, 31-20. 217 Football ONLY ONE WIN on. Of the Topper foes’ 34 touchdowns, 23 came from outside the 10-yard line. The University of Tennessee — Chattanooga broke open a close game in the opener with third-quarter runs of 65 and 56 yards, and the barrage never seemed to stop the re- mainder of the season. “Inexperience caused us not to be able to handle the early competition,” Feix said. “We made some mistakes and showed a lack of confidence that you have when you are inexperienced. The season was over by the time we got organized.” The new offense was another trouble at the year’s outset. Feix’s plan called for starting two fast scatbacks and running to the outside instead of using a blocking fullback and having the tailback run off- tackle. Western also planned to use the option more than in recent years. But the offensive adjustment took time. The Toppers averaged only 148 yards total offense in losing their first three games to UTC, Akron and Austin Peay by a com- (continued on page 220) A GRIMACE AND MUSCLE helped defensive tackle Reginald Hayden pull down East Tennessee’s Jimmy Dykes in Western’s only win. Chet Horne (82) and Alfred Hayden offer help in the 33-13 win. Football The 1977 Hilltopper football team: (Front row) B. Henry, J. Jones, B. Lindsey, C. Carpenter, B. Madon, P. Sheehan, J. Thomas, M. Hayes, N. Haire. (Second row) D. Drake, R. Hayden, A. Hayden, J. Woods, M. Gray, P. Rich, G. Hines, C. Beard, K. Bennett, L. Hardin, C Estelle, J. Alsup, A. Rogan, R. Gwinn. (Third row) T. Rose, D. Betz, T. Towns, F. Kixmiller, M. Stahl, C. DeLacey, B. Todd, J. Bowling, E. Preston, C. Smith, L. Dodson, D. Jones. (Fourth row) R. White, G. Gallas, D. Lewis, J. Brewer, K. Lathom, T. Bereiter, B. Gray, R. Burbage, C. Brazley, J. Hall, S. Larimore, P. Walters. (Fifth row) T. Mosley, G. Oost, J. Tinius, T. Ketten, C. Horn, C. Freeman, W. Smith, D. Bartholomew, C. Woodruff, T. Nord, R. Farmer, C. Brodhacker, G. Ed- munds. (Sixth row) P. Holt, M. Barnes, T. Stockman, D. Cross, D. Wester, T. Travis, J. Florence, W. Hale, J. Dent, T. Williams, J. Badenbender, E. Caldwell, M. Jaggers, B. Farris, K. Kinslow. (Seventh row) G. Hub- bard, T. Jackson, R. Hinkle, J. Ochap, D. Livers, D. Borman, K. Kast, D. Elliott, B. Lewis, T. Highley, T. Gill, P. Evans. (Eighth row) T. Barron, D. Eaton, F. Cantler, K. Hollen, D. Geary, B. Taylor, Z. Lynun, T. Jones, E. Tischnor, M. Bailey, A. McGuffin, T. Henry, T. Crafton, R. Napier, R. Lathon. (Back row) L. Mur- ray, P. Padron, B. Gilbert, J. Turner, R. Dunn, J. Shan- non, B. Hape, J. Feix, S. Clark, B. Rafferty, C. Smith and C. Baker. Ricky Rogers SESE Mark Lyons Western Western Western WESTERN Western Western Western Western Western Western FOOTBALL RESULTS Won 1, Lost 8, Tied 1 UT-CHATTANOOGA 27 AKRON 24 AUSTIN PEAY 21 East Tennessee 13 NORTHERN 39 MICHIGAN TENNESSEE TECH 31 EASTERN KENTUCKY 35 Morehead 20 MIDDLE TENNESSEE 21 MURRAY 21 PRESEASON KNEE INJURIES made spectators out of wideout Paul Sheehan, linebacker Troy Snardon and tight end Kirby Bennett. The trio watched West- ern fall to UT-Chattanooga, 27-3. A HANDFUL of Carl Estelle’s face is what Murray guard Dan Hutchinson got while blocking for Austin Perine. Western had 13 more first downs and 76 more total yards than the Racers but lost, 21-13. ail Ricky Rogers 219 Football ONLY ONE WIN aon. bined score of 72-9. Inexperience also affected the newly in- stalled offense. Quarterback John Hall and running backs Nate Jones and Craig Free- EYES CLOSED TIGHT, linebacker Tony Towns and Murray quarterback Mike Dickens prepare to collide while defensive back Mike Gray tumbles away. Mur- ray won, 21-13, on three short scoring drives. man, all freshmen, usually composed the Toppers’ backfield when Feix called for the option. The rookies, however, seemed to im- prove. Hall ended the year with 27 comple- tions in 54 attempts and started several games. Jones and Freeman gained 58 yards between them in the second to last Topper scoring drive of the season, a 67-yard march against Murray. Tight end Ricky Gwinn, also a freshman, caught 17 passes for 195 yards, fourth best on the team. That progress has encouraged Feix to stick with the offense. ‘We never could get option-oriented early,” he said. “We’d run it once and then get away from it. But I’m gonna go with it again. We gained some valuable experience.” And with those factors — injuries, inex- perience and a new style — combining to send the Toppers to some lopsided losses early, Feix found the team confronted with a new problem — motivation. “The momentum was in the wrong di- rection,” the 10th-year Topper coach said. “You have to fight that type of thing. It wasn’t a lack of effort, and a good attitude will come as you win. Then even the inferi- or athlete gets the idea he can do the job.” The season in review: University of Tennessee-Chattanooga at Western, Sept. 10 — Long third-quarter runs by Moccasins Mike Smith and Gwain Durden sent the Toppers to their worst loss ever in Smith Stadium, a 27-3 whip- ping. Western had lost only one opener since 1960 and hadn’t been beaten at home since 1972. Western gained only 57 yards on the ground to UT-C’s 292 and lost four of sev- en fumbles. “Chattanooga really whipped us, physically whipped us,” Feix said. Western at Akron (Ohio), Sept. 17 — For the second consecutive week, the Top- pers were held without a touchdown, los- ing to Akron, 24-3. Once again, the team was hurt by a rash of errors. Western fumbled twice and quar- terback Doug Bartholomew threw five in- terceptions. ‘We just made mistakes that killed us,” Feix said. “They’re a good team Ron Hoskins and they took advantage.” The Topper pass offense, despite its lack of point-production, partially got on track. Bartholomew completed 13 of 25 passes for 123 yards and eight first downs. Preston caught four passes. Western at Austin Peay, Sept. 24 — The Governors used Western as a springboard to their first OVC title, beating the Top- pers, 21-3. All-conference fullback Waddell White- head rumbled for two touchdowns on runs of 60 and 64 yards, both up the middle. Western had just 19 yards total offense and two first downs (one by a penalty) in the second half. The Toppers had gone 16 consecutive quarters without a touchdown. East Tennessee at Western, Oct. 1 — Western broke its touchdown drought with five scores and snapped a five-game losing streak by crushing the Buccaneers, 33-13. Midway through the second quarter, Woods, who rushed for 158 yards, swept around left end for 25 yards — the team’s first touchdown since the next to last game of 1976. A 30-yard pass from Bartholomew to Preston 22 seconds before halftime put the Toppers ahead to stay, 14-10. “Oh, it feels good to win and do the things you know you can do,” said a happy Feix. Western at Northern Michigan, Oct. 8 (continued on page 222, THREE STRAIGHT LOSSES and 12 touchdownless quarters was too much for running back Mike Hays as he mourns a 21-3 loss to Austin Peay. The Toppers had not lost to the Govs since 1969. Jim Burton 221 Football yews CISY 5 Sah? | ONLY ONE WIN ... — Western was brought back to earth — a wet and muddy earth — in a 39-0 loss to Northern Michigan, the team that beat the Toppers, 16-14, for the 1975 Division II title. The Toppers fumbled the ball nine times, a school record. Wildcat quarterback Steve Mariucci burned Western’s second- ary for 16 completions in 29 attempts and 234 yards. Bartholomew hit on just two of 10 for nine yards, both to Woods, who had 79 yards rushing. Tennessee Tech at Western, Oct. 15 — Using sweeps and options, Tech rolled up 247 yards rushing in beating Western, 31- 20. “We've known for 10 years that what- ever you do against Western, you do it quick,” Golden Eagle coach Don Wade said. Preston caught two scoring passes for the second time in three games. Tech went into the game ranked eighth in the nation. Western at Eastern Kentucky, Oct. 22 — Eastern, struggling with a 2-3 record, re- covered against Western, winning 35-10. Senior Colonel quarterback Ernie House threw for three touchdowns, all from out- side the 20-yard line. Tight end Jim Nelson caught two of them. Western’s only touchdown came when running back Mike Hayes threw a four- yard pass to Billy Lindsey with eight sec- A coach’s gestures attempt to console and encourage doleful players. That’s why, during tense situations, Western’s football players looked to The faces of Feix Heading into a football game Sept. 24 at Austin Peay, coach Jimmy Feix found him- self in an unfamiliar position. Feix, who sported a 70-24 career record before the encounter and had won four Ohio Valley Conference titles since 1970, was riding a four-game losing streak. He decided it was time for a change. Feix almost always wears grey slacks, a blue blazer with a Western emblem and a porkpie hat on the sideline. But in an effort to turn the Toppers’ fortunes around, he switched to red pants and a red coaching shirt. “T thought maybe I needed to change it,” Feix said. “I thought maybe it (the old garb) was too stuffy and gave an impression of aloofness, so I put on my _ coaching clothes.” The change didn’t help. Western was beaten by Austin Peay, 21-3. So Feix changed back to the traditional outfit. “The players expressed the opinion they didn’t want me to change what I wear,” he said. “You don’t want them to say, ‘He’s WITH A SHOUT and a point, Jimmy Feix directs his squad against Morehead at Homecoming. A 10-yard Eagle touchdown with 46 seconds left tied the score, 20-20. Seconds later, Morehead intercepted a pass and nearly scored again. different than he was.’ It’s pride and tradi- tion.” Feix tries to maintain consistency on the sideline in more than his dress. He tries to be a constant for his players, seldom changing mannerisms and reactions, and most importantly, remaining calm when a Topper makes a mistake. “Your gestures can be distracting to your players,” Feix said. “You don’t want them to worry about it; you want them to con- centrate on the game. You tell the player, ‘You're going to make the play next time.’” Bryan Armstrong @ NERVOUS ANTICIPATION marks Jimmy Feix’s face as he watches Dave Betz attempt a 44-yard field goal late in the first half against Austin Peay. The kick was short and to the left. onds left. Morehead at Western, Oct. 29 — West- ern appeared to be on the way to its sec- ond win before Eagle quarterback Phil Simms hit Dorron Hunter for a touchdown pass and a two-point conversion to tie the score at 20-20 with 46 seconds remaining in the game. Morehead got the ball back quickly on an interception, but stalled at the Topper 18 when a fourth-down pass from Simms to Hunter fell incomplete. Preston had five catches for 67 yards and two touchdowns. Western at Middle Tennessee, Nov. 5 — Confronted with the situation Morehead had succeeded in a week earlier, the Top- pers failed on a two-point conversion in the-final two minutes. Middle won, 21-19. Hall was stopped on a run-pass option play on the conversion attempt after Bar- tholomew had brought the team within two by throwing a TD pass to Woods. Middle won despite fumbling seven times, six of which Western recovered. Murray at Western, Nov. 19 — Early Topper mistakes led to Racer scoring drives of 13, 21 and 19 yards and Western couldn’t quite recover, losing 21-13. Late touchdown throws from Bartholo- mew to Gwinn and Woods almost brought Western back. “We're not a 1-8 or 1-9 football team,” Feix said. ‘We've come so close. We’re used to eating better than this.” Bryan Armstrong @ Photos by Jim Burton HANDS RAISED, JIMMY FEIX offers thanks for the facemasking penalty against East Tennessee that moved the ball to Western’s 39-yard line and helped a 90-yard scoring drive. Western won, 33-13. A HUG and words of consolation were all Jimmy Feix could offer a disappointed Jeff Alsup after a loss. An offensive tackle, Alsup graded second to guard Chip Carpenter and made second-team All-OVC. 223 Football Freak Fall to Fourth It was a cool, overcast November morning. The last cross country fans were leaving Hobson Grove Park, the site of the Ohio Valley Conference championship race. The place erupting with excitement and tension less than an hour before was once again a quiet golf course, stirred only by a brisk wind and several golfers. Walking alone was a small-framed man clad in a yellow warmup suit and a frown reflecting a season of disappointment. Coach Del Hessel seemed isolated from the world as he walked up a hill and sat on a bench to reflect on Western’s worst con- ference finish in six years. “Fourth place is no place for Western,” he said sternly. The season had begun two months earli- er with Hessel confident that his infant team of seven freshmen, a junior and four seniors could mature through his program of “progressive training and optimism” and contend for its fourth straight OVC title. Even without the top four runners — including three All-Americans — from the 1976 team that finished 14th in the NCAA, Hessel hoped the Toppers could qualify for the nationals for the fifth consecutive year. But the veteran coach, in his second year at Western, knew his freshmen must fully respond to his training program if they were to offset the loss of top runners Jon Slaughter and All-American Dave Long, who had been red-shirted after being in- jured in the summer. And he cautioned against comparing it to the four previous Western teams, which placed sixth, second, sixth and 14th in the nation. “This will be an important year in estab- lishing the future,” he said of the team that included only two scholarship runners — freshmen Bob Swann and Ron Becht — and one returnee, senior Tom Condit, the team’s captain and inspirational leader. 224 Cross country In the first six weeks of training, Hessel emphasized mileage rather than meets. The runners each averaged more than 100 miles each week, and the team practiced even the day before meets. Running tired to build strength, Western easily beat Southeast Missouri in the opener but finished fifth in the prestigious Indiana Invitational and third in the Kentucky Intercollegiate Invi- tational in October. “T don’t think there’s any reason to panic at this time,’ Hessel said after Western finished behind two OVC teams in the Kentucky Intercollegiate. “This doesn’t have any relation at all to the OVC meet. I am not disappointed because we put no importance at all on the meet.” By mid-October, Hessel had narrowed the team to five freshmen, a junior and three seniors, and began his runners on speed work, hill practice and other special- ized training that he had found successful in his six years as a cross country coach. “From this point forward, they are going to hurt,” he promised four weeks before the OVC meet. “If we peak out right, I think we have a good chance of qualifying for the nationals.” He felt his training strategy had worked and his team had reached a “great physical and mental peak” when it gathered at Hob- son Grove for the conference meet Nov. 5. He predicted a third-place finish in the 10,000-meter race behind East Tennessee and Murray ranked fourth nationally and ninth respectively, by a track magazine. Swann entered the meet as Western’s top runner, having paced the Tops in four Oc- tober invitationals, while never finishing lower than ninth. But Swann wasn’t among the 52 runners who lined up for the race a few minutes before 11 a.m. A freak fall on the slippery course 10 minutes earlier injured Swann’s back and forced his withdrawal from com- petition. Hit by the last-minute psycho- logical injury, Western slumped to fourth, nine points behind Eastern. Even a tenth- place finish by Swann would have placed Western nine points ahead of the Colonels and in third place. “The idea of Eastern beating us kinda grinds in my guts,” Condit said later. East Tennessee and Murray finished one-two, placing 11 of the top 14 runners. They later finished seventh and 14th, re- spectively, in the NCAA. A partially-recovered Swann missed qualifying for the nationals by five sec- onds at the NCAA District III meet, while the Tops were a disappointing 15th. “Looking back over the season,” Hessel said, “I wouldn’t have done anything dif- ferent. I’m proud that we got as much ac- complished as we did. We feel like we let ourselves and the school tradition down, but we accomplished our goals in terms of training and competitive experience. At least that’s a step in the right direction.” And perhaps that’s why as he walked alone at Hobson Grove on a gloomy No- vember morning, a faint gleam of anticipa- tion could be seen through an otherwise gloomy expression. Don White @ STRUGGLING MIDWAY through the OVC race, Steve Carrigg faded to 35th in the 52-man field. Car- rigg, one of only three seniors on the team, had little competitive experience before the season. Ricky Rogers te The 1977 Hilltopper cross-country team: (Front row) S. Carrigg, J. Frazier, B. Swann, P. Curl, E. Grumbach, P. Chapman, T. Condit, R. Becht. (Back row) D. Hes- sel, M. Clay, D. Jordan, T. Fath, C. Waltrip, T. Brooks, J. Centrowitz, M. Settle, J. Willoughby and C. Powell. . CROSS COUNTRY RESULTS Southeastern Missouri 36 (Sth of 24) WESTERN 20 Indiana Invitational Kentucky Intercollegiate (3rd of 5) Furman Invitational (4th of 15) WKU Invitational (2nd of 7) OVC Championships (4th of 8) NCAA District III (15th. of 29) A LEAF-COVERED DOWNHILL SLOPE helps Top- pers John Frazier (5), Tom Condit (3) and Ron Becht (6) build up speed at the conference championship. All three finished in the top 20, 23 seconds apart. David Frank A fourth-place finish in the OVC left the Hilltoppers ... run down (Clockwise from top far left) A FALL ON WET GRASS moments before the OVC meet injured the back of Bob Swann, Western’s top runner. He watched the race tearful- ly from a fence near the finish line. Exhausted after finishing 20th, team captain Tom Condit rests beside a traffic sign. He said Swann’s with- drawal “made me more aggressive. It helped me emotionally. It made me ready to run.” Alone among the trees, coach Del Hessel sits reflect- ing on his team’s finish in the con- ference meet. “Fourth place is no place for Western,” he said. The Toppers had won the previous three OVC titles. Praying in solitude, Pat Curl sought a quiet part of Hobson Grove Golf Course after the race. Ron Hoskins 225 Cross-country The team lost eight of its first 11 games. When the veteran coach announced his resignation at midseason, things turned around. It was destined to be ... season which read like bestseller | A MISSED FREE THROW by Steve Ashby late in the | NCAA first-round game is batted away by Syracuse’s Roosevelt Bouie. Western rallied two minutes later and won the game in overtime, 87-86. Jim Burton EARLY IN THE SECOND HALF, seniors Steve Ashby and James Johnson and coaches Jim Richards and Lanny Van Eman watch Western contend with Syracuse. Ashby and Johnson combined for 33 points. Jim Burton t was like a happy-ending novel. | The season began slowly. The beloved team continually lost and its coach an- nounced his retirement at midseason. The team caught fire and won a cham- pionship. The coach smiled as he won a game in a national tournament and frowned as the season and his career ended in Dayton. A new coach arrived with enthusiasm and promised more wins. Spring came with the belief that all would live happily ever after in the world of Western basket- ball. Perhaps it’s a simplified summary of Western’s 58th basketball season, but it describes coach Jim Richard’s farewell sea- son, a campaign highlighted by an emo- tional conference championship and West- ern’s first win in the NCAA tournament since 1971. The Hilltoppers finished 16-14 to give Richards a seven-year Western coaching record of 102-84. His teams have been known to start slowly and finish strong. The 1977-78 team lost eight of its first 11 games, but rallied to win three of its last four regular season Ohio Valley Conference games to finish third in the OVC with a 9-5 record. Western won the OVC tournament to advance for the second time in three years to the Mideast Regionals. It marked the last time an OVC team received an auto- matic bid to the national tournament. (The NCAA had voted the previous fall to with- draw the automatic bids of the five confer- ences with the worst won-lost records in tournament play over the previous five years. The OVC, which hadn’t won since 1972, was included.) The Toppers beat Syracuse, 87-86, in overtime, in the tournament's first round in Knoxville, Tenn. The season ended in Dayton, Ohio, against Michigan State. The Spartans won, 90-69. The team leaders were a curious blend of veterans, transfers and freshmen. Four starters were transfer students. The other, senior guard Steve Ashby, was the only (continued on page 228) 227 Men’s Basketball a bestseller .... Kentuckian among the team’s top seven players. Senior James Johnson led the team in scoring, rebounding and field goal percent- age. The 6-foot-7 forward averaged 18.5 points and 9.7 rebounds and hit more then 56 per cent of his floor shots. He was named to the All-OVC team. The other forward was 6-5 Greg Jackson, a junior college transfer who averaged 14.1 points and 7.7 rebounds. The other inside scorer was 6-7 center Aaron Bryant, who averaged 12.6 points and 8.4 rebounds. In the first nine games, six of which were losses, most of the scoring came from the starting front line of Johnson, Bryant and Jackson. The opposition soon learned that Western was vulnerable to the zone de- fense, particularly the 1-3-1 or 2-3 zones designed to stop the inside game. Western was also weak against the press and the running game early in the season. Although Ashby and Mike Prince were de- pendable ball-handling guards and good perimeter shooters, they lacked the quick- ness to stay with the speed of Michigan, Memphis State, Maryland and St. John’s, all national-caliber teams Western lost to. Richards also had trouble finding a suc- cessful starting lineup early in the season. Guards Greg Burbach and freshman Mike Reese drew starting assignments when Ashby was slowed by an illness during the Maryland Invitational and when Prince played inconsistently. Casey Cebula, a starter the previous season, also started several games in place of Bryant before he left the team in mid-January, citing dissat- isfaction with the team’s attitude. In January, guard Darryl Turner became eligible and immediately emerged as the team’s floor leader. The 6-2 transfer from Indian River Junior College provided needed speed and lessened the scoring bur- den of the front line. Because Turner generally directed the of- fense, Ashby was frequently freed to take 1 5-to-20 foot jumpers from the wings. Through Turner’s first six games, four of which were Topper wins, Ashby doubled his scoring average and the team’s offen- sive production improved by an average of 10 points a game. When Turner, who averaged 16.4 points, joined Ashby in the starting backcourt, Prince, the only player to start every game in 1976-77, lost his starting role. But the 6- 5 sophomore swingman quickly fit into his role as the team’s sixth man. Prince sparked the team when coming off the bench during a six-game winning streak in late January. Prior to Western’s road trip to East Ten- nessee and Tennessee Tech in early Febru- ary, Prince has scored 86 points in the pre- vious six games on 68 per cent shooting from the field. With Turner directing the offensive at- tack, Western soon develope into a strong running team complimented by the strong offensive rebounding of Jackson and John- son. The team’s 81.6 scoring average dur- ing the OVC’s regular season ranked first in the league. Defensively, the Toppers relied on the 2- 3 and 1-3-1 zones. Western’s press never really was effective and it repeatedly had trouble defending the passing lanes. The team finished last in the league in team defense, yielding an avera ge of 79.8 points a game. Another problem was free throw shoot- ing. The team hit 60 per cent of its free throws compared to 70 per cent for the opposition. But the biggest seasonal problem was mental. During preseason practice, Rich- ards thought his team had the individual talent to win the conference, but he was concerned with the team’s enthusiasm and emotional incentive. He continually asked his team to “reach down and play with its heart.” During a four-game losing streak in De- cember, Richards said, “The biggest factor about winning is getting the players to be- lieve they can win by developing self-con- fidence. We’re trying to convince our play- ers we're good enough to win the confer- ence.” Initially, Western played well. Two six- point losses to highly-regarded Michigan and Memphis State were sandwiched around wins over Evansville and Bowling Green State in the first four games. In the two losses, Western was victimized by the late rallies of their opponents’ more exper- ienced players. Against Evansville, Reese came off the bench to score 12 second-half points to car- ry Western from a six-point second-half deficit to an 82-72 win. The game was only two weeks before coach Bobby Watson and the Evansville team were killed in a plane crash as they were leaving Evansville for a game with Middle Tennessee. The Toppers then lost close games to Butler and Wisconsin-Milwaukee, two of the weakest teams they faced. Again, emo- tionalism was the key. After Butler, winless in six games going into the Diddle Arena contest, beat West- ern, 90-86, Richards said, “We came into the game as emotionally flat as I can recall. There just isn’t any free ice cream in this business. You have to go and get it.” The loss in Wisconsin epitomized West- ern’s early offensive troubles. UM-M, us- ing a strong sagging man-to-man defense, held Johnson to only two points in the second half and won, 73-70. After easily beating a California State Polytechnic team that hit only 33 per cent from the field, Western lost both of its games in the Maryland Invitational. The Toppers played with a rash of injuries and illnesses. Johnson missed the invitational with a severely sprained ankle suffered in practice and Ashby and Burbach were slowed with colds. Richards was forced to start a lineup that included freshmen Reese and John Rahn. Christmas vacation wasn’t very festive for the team. Injuries and illnesses pre- (continued on page 230) Mark Lyons THOUGH HIS FIRST SHOT against Butler didn’t come until almost 13 minutes had passed, James John- son scored 30 points. Yet the Bulldogs surprisingly beat Western, 90-86. ONE OF ONLY TWO SENIORS and the only starter from Kentucky, scrappy Steve Ashby gets off a pass to Greg Jackson in the 87-81 loss to Michigan. Ashby led the team with 104 assists. so Ricky Rogers Mark. Lyons A FORMER state high school hurdling champion, Mike Reese has the spring to compete for a rebound against Michigan State’s Terry Donnelly. Reese scored six points in the 90-69 NCAA loss. 228 Men’s Basketball gs 2 A RELELALELALZASL VERE BOREL AENEAN RS Se eta TO ¥ i he = + 2, SALOME gy, t ania ements AN! A 77-69 OVERTIME WIN over Austin Peay in the OVC tournament championship game gave West- MEN’S BASKETBALL TEAM: (Front row) M. Reese, G. Burbach, M. Prince, J. Rahn, G. Jackson, C. Cebula, D. Turner. (Second row) D. Thomas, A. 230 Men’s Basketball ern its eighth trip to the NCAA in 18 years and Steve Ashby a chance to help cut the nets. Lewis Gardner Bryant, R. Wray, T. Jensen, V. Morgan, J. Johnson S. Ashby. (Back row) C. Haskins, J. Richards, B. Rascoe and L. Van Eman. , a bestseller .... vented Richards from implementing many needed team adjustments. “We just aren’t prepared for a strong push the rest of the season,” he said in early January. It was evident the next game. Western probably played its worst game of the sea- son against LaSalle, losing 78-64. The Top- pers, minus Johnson, hit only nine of 37 first-half shots and 28 of 80 in the game for 35 per cent. Johnson and Ashby returned to the starting lineup for the OVC opener with Eastern in Richmond and scored 18 and 16 points, respectively. But they weren't enough to stop Eastern’s 14 of 18 free throw shooting in the overtime period as the Colonels won, 85-79. Turner scored 18 in the game and pro- vided a needed offensive spark. And with him came a renewed enthusiasm. Turner scored his season-high 26 points and had seven assists in the 97-82 win over More- head on the road. It was the beginning of a six-game Western winning streak. The Toppers then won overtime games against East Tennesssee and Jacksonville in Diddle Arena. East Tennessee’s strong full-court press forced repeated Topper turnovers in the last minute of the second half, allowing the Bucs to score the last seven points of the half to send the game into overtime. Clutch play by Turner, Jack- son and Prince salvaged the win. The Jacksonville game was perhaps the season’s most exciting. It featured 12 ties and 32 lead changes as neither team could mount more than a five-point lead. West- ern set a school record with 29 assists, most of which were inside feeds to Jackson, Johnson and Bryant, who combined for 52 points. Richards sensed a new enthusiasm in his team after the game. “Human beings can do remarkable things if they really want to,” he said. ‘All it takes is a little confi- dence and the faith of a mustard seed.” Bryant also responded with new enthu- siasm. He scored 27 points and had 13 re- bounds in Western’s 86-75 win over Ten- nessee Tech that put the Toppers in a first- place tie in the conference. Following the Tech win, Richards an- nounced his resignation effective at the end of the season. He cited the changing attitudes of modern players and a desire to spend more time with his family as his reasons for leaving. After beating Murray, 91-75, behind Jackson’s 22 points, Western improved its OVC record to 5-1 with a 91-83 win over Austin Peay in Clarksville. Johnson and Jackson each hit nine of 12 floor shots against Peay to score 27 and 19 points, re- spectively. cues After an 80-72 loss to a hot-shooting Dayton team, Western traveled to Mur- freesboro with a chance to take sole posses- sion of first place in the conference going (continued on page 233) LOOSE BALLS, an overtime and guard Darryl Turner made the 98-94 win over East Tennessee an exciting one. Turner hit 10 of 19 shots, scored 23 points and grabbed 10 rebounds. Lewis Gardner WITH ONE DEFENDER, Eastern’s Lovell Joiner, pinned to the floor, Mike Prince looks to Steve Ashby (right) and James Johnson for help in the Tops’ second loss to the Colonels. Jim Burton A BOUNCE PASS from Mike Reese slips under the arm of Michigan State’s Earvin Johnson. Reese, a freshman, played more than half the game because of Steve Ashby’s illness and Darryl Turner’s fouls. Men’s Basketball Jim Burton FOUR INCHES TALLER than James Johnson, Syra- cuse’s Roosevelt Bouie controls the opening tip in the first-round game of the NCAA. Although Syracuse was 22-5 and ranked 18th, the Tops won, 87-86. DEJECTED Aaron Bryant sits alone during a timeout of the NCAA second-round loss to Michigan. Bryant had fouled out with 10 minutes left, followed a minute later by James Johnson. Mark Lyons HIS LAST WAS A LOSS. Coach Jim Richards and Greg Burbach leave the floor after falling to Michigan, 90-69, in the second round of the NCAA. Richards’ record at Western was 102-84. a bestseller .... into the OVC’s second round of play. But Middle Tennessee played with extreme emotion and handed Western its worst conference loss in 10 years, 98-69. “It was like two prize fighters,” Richards said. “One was punching hard and the oth- er was falling back hard.” But Western rebounded quickly. In beat- ing Morehead, 106-69, Western set an OVC record with 69.8 field goal shooting. Johnson and Prince each hit eight of nine floor shots against a Morehead team with only one starter over 6-5. Western then lost overtime games to Eastern and East Tennessee. Again, deadly free throw shooting by Eastern proved the difference in the overtime. In Johnson City, East Tennessee beat Western, 80-77, in triple overtime. A des- peration follow shot by Prince in the first overtime sent the game into the second extra period. Johnson hit two free throws after time had expired in the second over- time to send the game into the third extra period. East Tennessee won by hitting five free throws in the last two minutes. After an 81-69 win over Tennessee Tech in Cookeville, Western dropped its OVC record to 7-5 with a 66-64 loss to Austin Peay in Diddle Arena. Austin Peay’s small- er starting front line outscored Bryant, Johnson and Jackson by 11 and outre- bounded them by nine to forge the win despite Turner’s 26 points. The season climaxed with the type of play Richards had continually hoped for. In beating Murray and Middle Tennessee to finish one game behind Middle and East Tennessee in the OVC, Western played with extreme emotion. Down by 12 or more points six times in the second half against Murray, Western repeatedly rallied behind Johnson’s nine of 12 and Turner’s eight of 13 second-half shooting and won, 100-98, in overtime. “The Murray win gve us the knowledge of what winning meant,” Richards said after the season. “There we learned what it took to win and there we finally realized we were capable of being real winners.” The regular season finale five days later against Middle was the culmination of Richards’ call for enthusiasm. Screaming “attack, be aggressive” during an emotion- al pre-game team meeting, Richards tore a T-shirt proclaiming Middle as the “1978 OVC champ.” It helped propel his team to an 87-78 win. “We reached an emotional peak against Middle Tennessee,” Richards said later. “We probably played our best game of the season against them.” The climactic emotionalism was best ex- hibited by Bryant, who finally played to his full potential. In the win over Middle and the OVC tournament wins over East Tennessee and Austin Peay, Bryant hit 26 of 33 shots, scored 60 points and had 31 rebounds. His 25 points paced Western to a hard- fought 79-75 win over East Tennessee in the opening round of the tournament. In the championship game, Austin Peay jumped to a 10-point lead midway through the second half before Bryant, who fin- ished with 21 points, and Prince, who had 14 coming off the bench, rallied Western to send the game into overtime. Sparked by six points from Bryant and Turner, West- ern built an 11-point lead in the overtime and won, 77-69. In Knoxville, Syracuse, ranked 18th na- tionally with a 22-5 record, built a 10-point lead six minutes into the second half. Western rallied behind the double-figure scoring of all five starters and the inspira- tional play of Burbach and Reese. Burbach hit a key free throw and contributed three assists, while Reese hit three long shots, the last a 22-footer with 27 seconds remain- ing that sent the game into overtime. Bryant hit three shots during the over- time to propel Western to an 85-80 lead. Syracuse rallied in the last 53 seconds and had a chance to win with three seconds left when All-American Marty Byrnes went to the line for a one and bonus after a contro- versial charging call on Ashby. He missed the first shot and Jackson rebounded to give the OVC its first NCAA win in six years. In Dayton, Michigan State, the Big 10 champions that entered with a 24-4 record, jumped to a 21-6 lead over a shaky Western team and fought off several rallies to win, 90-69. The Toppers were in the game until Johnson, Bryant and Turner, who each scored 12 points, fouled out in the second half. After the game, Turner epitomized his team’s late season surge that carried West- ern to 13 wins in the final 19 games. “Desire, that’s all it was,” he said slowly. “We just wanted to win. We wanted to win bad.” Don White @ MEN’S BASKETBALL RESULTS Won 16 Lost 14 Western 81 MICHIGAN 87 WESTERN 82 Evansville 72 WESTERN 78 _ Bowling Green State 65 Western 80 MEMPHIS STATE 86 Western 86 BUTLER 90 Western 70 WISCONSIN- MILWAUKEE 73 WESTERN 72 = Cal-Poly (SLO) 50 Western 78 MARYLAND 91 Western 63 ST. JOHN’S 80 Western 64 LASALLE 78 Western 79 EASTERN KENTUCKY = 85 WESTERN 97 Morehead 82 WESTERN 96 Jacksonville 94 WESTERN 98 East Tennessee 94 WESTERN 86 Tennessee Tech 75 WESTERN 91 Murray 75 WESTERN 91 Austin Peay 83 Western 72 DAYTON 80 Western 69 MIDDLE TENNESSEE 98 WESTERN 106 Morehead 69 Western 74 EASTERN KENTUCKY 78 Western 77. EAST TENNESSEE 80 WESTERN 81 Tennessee Tech 69 Western 64 AUSTIN PEAY 66 WESTERN 100 Murray 98 WESTERN 87. Middle Tennessee 78 WESTERN 79 East Tennessee 75 WESTERN 77 Austin Peay 69 WESTERN 87 Syracuse 86 Western 69 MICHIGAN STATE 90 233 Men’s Basketball Photos by David Frank NAPS are a pre-game ritual with coach Jim Richards. He relaxes near a den wall covered with awards from his basketball coaching career before shaving and changing clothes for the last game of the season. BLEACHERS at Warren Central High School are a playground for coach Jim Richards and Brent Has- kins, son of assistant coach Clem Haskins. Between their playful punches, the pair watched Brent’s 11- year-old sister, Clemette, play basketball. LE TE 2 ae ey SB iN a opp ME ei ee agemcee = is taped by WKCT’s Wes Strader. The tape included Richard's expectations of the last game of the regular season, and was broadcast prior to the tip-off. ATTACK, be aggressive! was the message coach Jim Richards wrote on a chalkboard while his players warmed up before their game with Middle Tennessee. The coach also ripped a Middle Tennessee T-shirt to i | A PRE-GAME INTERVIEW with coach Jim Richards psych his team before a 87-78 victory. 234 Coach Jim Richards It was April, 1971. Jim Richards strolled out on to the Did- dle Arena floor with his good friend, Butch Gilbert. They were a pair who had often been seen together. Gilbert had been head football coach at Glasgow High School while Richards was the head basketball ia 3 coach. They looked at the 13,500 seats sur- rounding them. Richards quietly told Gil- bert (now a Western assistant football coach) that he thought he would soon in- 2 herit the coaching responsibilities of the great arena, its team and tradition. Richards’ statement soon came through. He became the successor to Johnny Old- ham, who had just led the Toppers to their highest national finish ever — third place in the NCAA tournament. It was a highlight of Richards’ coaching career that had begun in 1959 at Auburn High School. After three years at Auburn and five years at Glasgow, the last where he won a state championship, Richards re- turned to his alma mater as an assistant. It was a return to the school he loves. As a student in the mid-50s, Richards played baseball and kept statistics for basketball coach Ed Diddle. Although Richards never started in high school or played basketball on the colle- giate level, he dedicated himself to the sport after his junior year. In his initial season at Western he earned a distinction shared only by Oldham — he won a share of the league title in his first year. His 1975-76 team won the regular season championship and the OVC tournament and represented the conference in the NCAA tournament, only to lose in the first round to Marquette. Richards made his second trip to the NCAA last season when his team became the first OVC team to win in the national tournament since Austin Peay beat Jack- sonville in 1972. Richards announced his resignation in the midst of a six-game winning streak. He said it was a decision he had been consider- ing for several years. He cited the increas- ing demands of the job, the changing atti- ABAD CALL brings coach Jim Richards off the bench to protest tudes of modern athletes and a desire to in his last season which ended with a trip to NCAA tournament. spend more time with his family as the Richards finished his career at Western with a 102-84 record. reasons for leaving. He finished his career at Western with a 102-84 record. In February he was reas- signed as coordinator of men’s athletics. Gene Keady, an assistant at Arkansas, was named the new head coach. The rise to the head coaching position at Western was a lifelong dream for Richards. “I’m just awestruck,” he said, “to think that a skinny, 145-pound freshman from Burton Ridge who was as naive as they possibly come, who had never drank a drop of beer or other alcoholic beverage in his life, who dreamed but was scared and who was one of the biggest introverts who ever walked, eventually obtained what I did. “To think that I rose to become head basketball coach, well, my eyes swell to A QUICK KISS in the hallway is shared by coach Jim Richards and wife Annette before he leaves for the gym. Mrs. Richards is a mathematics teacher at Bowling Green High School. A LIVE RADIO question and answer show March 8 was a dis- uise for the presentation of a golf cart to retiring coach Jim : ? _ Richards. Mayor Bernie Steen and Richards’ wife Annette were tears when I think about it all. The thrill is present when a group of supporters surprised the coach. above all imagination.” Don White 235 Coach dim Richards te Race re na “We don’t mind second. ut wed rather have first.” As far as coach Julia Yeater is concerned, second place is no place for the women’s basketball team. But that’s where Western found itself for the third straight year. This time Western finished 22-9 and lost to the University of Kentucky in the state finals, 61-49. In 1977, the culprit was More- head, which beat Western, 70-68. “Even though we didn’t bring back the big one, I don’t think we have anything to be ashamed of,” said Miss Yeater, who fin- ished her first two years at Western with a 44-18 record. “We don’t mind second when you compare it to the rest of the places. But we'd rather have first.” Although Western didn’t bring back the big one this year, Miss Yeater was happy A 22-POINT HALFTIME LEAD against Kentucky was dwindled to four midway through the second half, but Western won, 84-82, behind the scoring of Brenda Chapman. One of only two seniors on the team, Miss Chapman hit 10 of 11 free throws and scored 30 points. David Frank NICKNAMED “THE HAMMER,” senior Linda Howard sparked the Lady Toppers with her defense and floor leadership. Her 102 assists almost doubled the total of any of her teammates. Ricky Rovers with the team’s success. “We just keep hanging in there,” she said. “I think probably the hardest thing to do besides staying in first is to stay in second. During the first years of women’s basketball in Kentucky, Eastern dominated for five or six years in a row. You'll notice the caliber is coming up and people are starting to even out. “Nobody really stays up there but us, and we're No. 2. I think that as long as we hang in there, we're eventually going to win it.” Miss Yeater started the season optimisti- THE FACES AND EXPRESSIONS of the coaches and players on the bench change as quickly as play moves on the floor. In a home game against Louisville mid- way through the season, the Lady Toppers’ bench cringed in disbelief when a play didn’t work as it should have. But moments later, the bench was rejuve- nated with a Western comeback. The Lady Toppers won, 82-72. They also beat Louisville in their first meeting, 61-59, and in the state tournament, 90-81. -coach Julia Yeater cally and with good reason. She had all five starters back from her first team, which also went 22-9. In addition, Miss Yeater was forced to cut five members of her previous team be- cause of talented freshmen and transfers. The spark plug of the team continued to be 5-foot-7 guard Brenda Chapman, who had averaged 17.7 points the year before. Miss Chapman led the team in shooting and her 81 per cent average at the free- throw line was tops in the Ohio Valley Conference. Her 20.2 scoring average was second in the OVC to Morehead’s Donna Murphy. She and Miss Murphy were the only unanimous picks on the All-OVC team. Miss Yeater realizes the near-impossible task of replacing Miss Chapman next year. “It would be extremely tough consider- ing the total ball player she is,” Miss Yeater said. “It’s not only that she was our (continued on page 238) oy 8 T 3 we Ron Hoskins 37 Women’s Basketball “We don't mind second. cont leading scorer, but she is really a good stealer, she handed out her share of assists, got her share of rebounds and was prob- ably the best defensive player on the team. “There’s no doubt, at least in the Ken- tucky coaches’ opinions, that Brenda is one of the top players in the state,” Miss Yeater said WOMEN’S BASKETBALL RESULTS Won 22 Lost 9 Western VANDERBILT WESTERN Belmont WESTERN Purdue WESTERN Bellarmine WESTERN Vanderbilt WESTERN Louisville Western MOREHEAD Western NORTHERN KY. WESTERN East Tennessee WESTERN Murray WESTERN Austin Peay WESTERN Louisville Western MIDDLE TENNESSEE WESTERN Kentucky WESTERN Morehead WESTERN Cincinnati Western EASTERN KENTUCKY Western KENTUCKY WESTERN Wisconsin-Oshkosh WESTERN Eastern Illinois WESTERN Missouri-St. Louis Western TENNESSEE TECH WESTERN Northern Kentucky WESTERN Austin Peay Western MURRAY WESTERN Eastern Kentucky WESTERN Middle Tennessee WESTERN Belmont WESTERN Murray WESTERN Louisville Western KENTUCKY IT WAS JUST MORE of the same for second-year coach Julia Yeater. Her team finished second in the state for the third consecutive year and ended with a 22-9 record for the second straight year. Mark Lyons Mark Lyons 238 Women’s Basketball Stevie Benson A MIDCOURT COLLISION involving Western's Linda Howard gives evidence of why the senior guard is called “Hammer” by her teammates. Miss Howard teamed up with the team’s only other senior, Brenda Chapman, to give Western one of the strongest back- courts in the state. GIRL’S BASKETBALL ISN’T for the weak. Donna Doellman, Western’s leading rebounder, is wedged be- tween two opponents as she attempts a drive. ee Chapman’s teammate at guard, Linda “Hammer” Howard, was the only other senior on the squad. Howard played in ev- ery game and contributed 102 assists de- spite averaging only 2.1 points per game. But while Miss Chapman and Miss Howard were playing every game, West- ern’s front line — Donna Doellman, Pam A TALENTED GROUP of freshmen forced coach Ju- lia Yeater to drop five members of her previous year’s team. Included in the group of talented newcomers was Wanda Blane from Christian County. Kordenbrock and Beth Lane Blanton — was being hampered by injuries and ill- nesses. Miss Kordenbrock was bothered in De- cember with an ankle injury, and a throat ailment in January sidelined Miss Doell- man. Despite the difficulties, all three aver- aged in double figures. Miss Doellman, an honorable mention ALL-OVC pick, led the team and was 14th in the conference in (continued on page 240) WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: (Front row) P. Korden- brock, L. Howard, L. Stokely, B. Chapman, W. Blane. (Second row) A. Polson, S. Fulkerson, V. Higgs, B. Blanton, D. Doellman. (Third ro w) D. Sutton, K. Fier- son, J. Myers, S. Rubin, A. Fields. (Back row) J. Yeater, L. Holmes, E. Penny, K. Robinson and N. Shugart. Jim Burton BETH BLANTON dribbles between three East Ten- nessee defenders in Western’s 81-70 win in January. Blanton hit seven of 13 floor shots and eight of 11 free throws to lead her team with 22 points. The only married player on the squad was fourth in the OVC in free-throw percentage. Lewis Gardner 239 Women’s Basketball “We dont mind second. cont. rebounding with a 7.9 average. Mrs. Blan- ton was fourth in the OVC in free-throw percentage. Miss Kordenbrock hit more than 52 per cent of her floor shots to lead the team. “Donna was really coming on at the first of the season when we had our first six games and Miss Kordenbrock was out,” Miss Yeater said. “Donna and Brenda were working so well together, Brenda from the outside and Donna from the inside. But the month layoff right after Christmas just took everything she had worked for and made her start all over again.” Miss Yeater didn’t hesitate to go to her bench. The other members of the team were Wanda Blane, a Hopkinsville fresh- man; Alesia Fields, a transfer from Louis- ville; Karen Frierson, a Louisville fresh- man; Shirley Fulkerson, a Louisville fresh- man; Vivian Higgs; an Owensboro fresh- man; Jennifer Myers, a Tompkinsville BEST ALL-AROUND PLAYER Brenda Chapman blocks a Northern player. Against Murray in Diddle Arena, Miss Chapman scored a school-record 40 points in an 89-63 win. She was elected unanimously to the All-OVC team. RECOVERED from a throat operation, Donna Doell- man scores against Morehead in February as Western revenged an earlier road loss, 89-84. The junior aver- aged in double figures for the season despite an early- season ankle injury. Women’s Basketball freshman; Alicia Polson, a Glasgow High School star; Sue Rubin, a La Grange, IIL., sophomore; Lee Stokely, a Murray, Ga., transfer, and Donna Sutton, a 6-0 Kings- land Ga., freshman. “ As far as I’m concerned, you can’t name the best sixth person on our team because anybody could have done it,” Miss Yeater said. “I thought we had the best freshmen in the state.” Miss Yeater was forced into some new things this year. Although the Kentucky Women’s Intercollegiate Conference (KWIC) was still used as the preliminary to the regionals, Miss Yeater had to play OVC foes as well. “I had 16 games scheduled before I even started scheduling,” Miss Yeater said. “Those games take up the bulk of our sea- son; they fall right in January and Febru- ary.” For the second year, Miss Yeater re- quired her players to participate in a condi- tioning program. “T think the conditioning program is ab- solutely necessary,” Miss Yeater said. “It’s one of my, basic philosophies. If you look at it from the style of play we have — pressing, fast break — it’s important that we have it,” she said. One of Miss Yeater’s goals was to aver- age 10 points more than the opposition. Western averaged 76 points per game to the opposition’s 68.6. “I don’t think we sacrificed our speed this year, even though we did get a little more size,’ Miss Yeater said. “We were pretty quick. We liked to press and we used a zone press instead of a man-to-man. The people who set traps were quick enough on their feet to harass.” Western started the season with a heart- breaking 63-62 loss to Vanderbilt. Western battled back from a 12-point deficit but still fell short. “I think the low points of the season were getting beat by Vandy in the season opener and getting beat by Northern Ken- tucky by 36 points up there,” Miss Yeater said. The loss to Northern was seven games later, and dropped Western’s record to 5-3. Mark Lyons The Lady Toppers won the next four before falling to Middle Tennessee, 74-70, in Murfreesboro. Western beat Kentucky, 84-82, in the first meeting between the two teams in late January, and won its next two games to improve its record to 12-4. But losses to Eastern, 94-85, and Kentucky, 72-53, dropped Western to 12-6. The team won all but two of its next 12 games before losing to Kentucky in th e KWIC finals. Jim Grove Ron Hoskins ill: mane THE TEAM’S TALLEST PLAYER was 6-foot Donna Sutton, a freshman from Kingsland, Ga. Miss Sutton played well off the bench in reserve of Pam Korden- brock and Donna Doellman. A 61-49 LOSS to Kentucky in the finals of the state tournament in Lexington brings tears to the eyes of Pam Kordenbrock. It was the third straight year Western fell in the state tournament finals. Miss Kordenbrock is a 5-10 junior from Covington. Mark Lyons 241 Women’s Basketball Win or lose, they cheer The near-capacity crowd in Smith Stadium seemed stunned. The excited cheers that had shaken the stadium only minutes be- fore became murmurs of disbelief. What had seemed to be a certain Home- coming win over Morehead became a tie game. With less than a minute to play, Morehead tied the score with a touchdown and a two-point conversion and was again threatening to score following an intercep- tion return deep into Western territory. The fans were shell-shocked. Don Armstrong, public relations direc- tor, rushed to cheerleading captain Pam Mosier on the sidelines and yelled, “Get ‘em up, Mosier.” The cheerleaders responded with a des- peration cheer that helped arouse the crowd’s enthusiasm and aided the Toppers’ defensive stand that halted the Morehead drive and preserved the tie. It was one of countless times last year when the 14-member cheerleading squad guided the Topper fans to positive, sports- manlike reactions to tense athletic situa- tions. It is a leadership role adviser Ron Beck believes is sometimes overlooked. “Tl think cheerleaders on college cam- puses are still an important part of the overall environment of athletic contests,” Beck said. “They perform the important function of channeling the en- thusiasm created by the team into positive, organized expres- sion.” But generating support for a football team that won only one game was difficult, most of the group said. “It takes a dif- ferent kind of person to be a cheerleader — one that doesn’t get down easily,” said Miss Mosier, a second-year cheer- leader. “It’s hard and discour- aging sometimes. It’s like you're cheering to nothing. You just echo back to your- self.” Despite the disappointing football season, Beck believed the squad remained cohesive and enthusiastic. “This group is probably the best bunch of cheerleaders I’ve worked with,” said the fifth- year adviser. “Their one distin- guishing factor has been their good attitude and ability to get along with each other during a long, hard season when it was rough.” Austin Peay. ’ Jennifer Kimmel, a Beechmont junior, said, “The best thing about being a Western cheerleader is the friendship involved. This group gets along very well.” Beck said the ability to get along with other squad members is a major factor in selecting a cheerleader. He said the selection com- BASKETBALL SEASON brought hopes of better times for Sarah Jane Gordon, Chris Swanberg and the other cheerleaders. Miss Gordon rides Swanberg’s shoulders prior to the 91-75 win over Murray. Scott Robinson ” she said. ‘I was just surprised at the team, personality, a neat appearance and the physical ability required for stunts and cheers. “The judging emphasis has recently changed from a popularity contest to the selection of the best-qualified people with the ability and leadership to make strong cheerleaders,” Beck said. Candidates for the seven female and sev- en male positions first completed a two- week training session conducted by the previous squad. Those completing the clin- ic got references from faculty and staff per- sonnel before being judged by Beck, athle- tic director Johnny Oldham, two students (usually the previous squad’s senior co- captains) and Anne Murray, assistant dean of student affairs. The squad members are selected on a point-system basis. Beck said one-half of the points are based on a personal inter- view, academic standing and recommenda- tions. The remaining points are accumulat- So wee the candidate’s appearance and skill. The new squad practiced daily for about four weeks learning sideline cheers, group stunts and pompon routines. Practice was narrowed to twice weekly after the cheers were learned. The squad attended a cheerleading clinic at Memphis State University in August and won the “spirit stick’’ as the most improved group. The cheerleaders tried to in- crease interest in athletics by various activities off the field. “Cheerleading is a lot more im- portant than people realize,” Miss Mosier said. “Most peo- ple don’t realize the things we do behind the scenes.” The squad _ silk-screened about 550 T-shirts with em- blems promoting the football team and placed “spirit notes” in the dorm mailboxes of foot- ball players before home games. The cheerleaders also helped with a high school cheerleading clinic sponsored by the YMCA and worked with cheerleaders from Potter Child- ren’s Home and School. Although the cheerleaders were generally disappointed with the university policy that restricts cheering at away games to only conference games (except East Tennessee) Ron Hoskins RED TOWELS ARE FOR WAVING when the Hilltoppers are doing well and clutching when they are not. Lisa Norris clutched her’s as Western fell, 21-3, to and nearby non-conference games, they agreed the great thrill comes during exciting home games. “The biggest thrill comes when we run through the ‘T’ formas mittee also looks for leadership capabilities, a good attitude and 242 Cheerleaders tion and see all the people waving red towels,” Rounds, a Pierre, S.D. junior. said Dennis Don White @ POSED after a home basketball game are (Bottom row) S. Gordon, C. Hester, B. Wilson, C. Swanberg, W. Herner, D. Rounds, C. Moore. (Top row) L. Norris, E. Mills, P. Mosier, J. Kimmel and D. Miller. Absent were R. Hornug, R. Macias and D. Basham. MAILBOX ENCOURAGEMENT was given to foot- ball players before home games by the cheerleaders. Captain Pam Mosier got help from Keen Hall RA Lewone Griggs before the East Tennessee game. AEE) ES il ii (imag Stevie Benson Lewis Gardner A 13-POINT Topper lead against East Tennessee dwindled to nothing in less than four minutes, mak- ing tense cheerleaders out of Pam Mosier and Barry Wilson. Western won in overtime, 98-94. FISTS CLENCHED, Elaine Mills watches a crucial moment in the football game against East Tennessee. The game also had good moments for Miss Mills as the Toppers won their only game, 33-13. i: Lewis Gardner Stevie Benson 243 Cheerleaders An @ Oo 2 = e ; David Frank 244 Gymnastics GYMNAST Susan Rose competes on the uneven parallel bars against a weak More- head team, which the Toppers beat, 117.55.- 109.85. Miss Rose took fourth all-around. IN FLIGHT, Betsy Terrell performs a floor exercise in Diddle Arena against East Ten- nessee, Dec. 3. The Toppers easily won their second meet of the season. Mark Lyons Judy Watson TOP GYMNAST Barby Shields adds a little personality to her floor exercise routine. Miss Shields qualified for regionals, but was sidelined by an injury. Gymnastics Team: (Front row) G. Vamvas, S. Krakoviak, P. Palmer, L. Vessels, S. Tip- ton, K. Flanary. (Back row) B. Terrell, C. Farrington, S. Rose, L. Goff and B. Shields. Between late fall and early spring, the gymnastics team watched its potential for winning the state tournament drift into a cloud of doubts that it would be anything more than post-season competi- tion. “The potential was there at the first of the year,” first-year coach Sally Krakoviak said. ‘But injuries just put a definite damper on our potential.” The team finished fourth in the state behind the University of Kentucky, Eastern and University of Louisville. Western scored 113.80 points. It wasn’t wher e Miss Kravokiak had expected her seven veterans and two freshmen to finish. In a pre-Christmas meet, the Toppers over- whelmed Southeast Missouri, 125.55 to 11.35. Good all-around performances by Barby Shields, Libby Goff, Susan Rose and Betsy Terrell combined for the win. East Tennessee also proved a pushover for the Toppers, who won, 127.85.-101.00. The team returned from Christmas vacation to bad weather which canceled its meet at Indiana University. The next meet was postponed for a few days because of more bad weather. When Eastern finally arrived, it beat Western, 126.6-123.65. The team’s first away meet was at Memphis State. A 90-minute vehicle delay in Bowling Green forced the Toppers to rush warmups and didn’t allow for proper adjustment to the new environment. They finished jee behind Mississippi University for Women and Memphis State, but Miss Shields cap- tured meet all-around honors with a 32.99 score. The next road trip was more successful. The team swept every event to beat Ball State and Illinois State in Muncie, Ind. The winning continued at home against More- head, a 117.55-109.85 victory. More injuries left only four gymnasts eligible to compete against U of L and UK in Lexington. West- ern finished last with 96.25 points. The state tournament was only two weeks away when the injuries peaked. An ankle cast benched Pam Palmer, torn liga- ments sidelined Kathy Flanary and a cast-covered wrist kept Libby Goff from competing. Miss Shields, Miss Terrell, Miss Rose and Lynnie Vessels competed for the Toppers but their perfor- mances weren't strong Sarna “Knowing their abilities, they performed well,” Miss Krakoviak said. “I just told them to do their best. Considering the other teams, we knew we couldn’t win.” Connie Holman CONTRIBUTING to Western’s 29.10 points against Morehead’s 26.15 score on the beam is Charlie Farrington. She scored the team’s high, 8.05, on the uneven parallel bars. a gy Lynn Wright CAW Mark Lyons FIRST-YEAR COACH Sally Krakoviak ad- vises Susan Rose at the state tournament in Richmond. The team finished fourth. 245 Gymnastics Photos by Mark Lyons FIFTY FEET from his target, Greg Stickler prepares to shoot in the standing position. Resting the gun on the back of the fist is more relaxing than in an open palm during the long matches, Sgt. John Baker said. WITH SPONGE PLUG in ear and cap on head, Mary Koec kert peers through the rear sight of her precision Anschultz 1413 free style rifle. Perfect 200 scores won her the prone position competition at two matches. 246 Riflery A Bang-up Season Although Western lost one of its top shooters during the spring semester, Sgt. 1st Class John Baker, the coach, said his team had a good season. Keith Cerk, a Waukegan, IIl., senior, was ineligible in the spring because he received money for tutoring high school shooters in 1975. “It would have been a fantastic year,” Baker said. “Keith was peaking. He realized he could break into the 570s.” (600 is a perfect score.) Cerk was the second-leading scorer last year and led the team as a sophomore. He shot rounds of 555, 561, 550 and 572 in fall matches. Baker said Cerk’s ineligibility could have “had a trying effect on the team.” However, the team’s average still improved from 562 to 565. “Overall, I’m really happy with their performances RESTING HIS RIFLE after a practice session, Eric Sack looks over his score sheet. Sack’s highest score of the year, 559 out of 600, helped Western to a 2,236-2,212 win over Murray. RIFLERY TEAM: (Front row) M. Koeckert, E. Sack, S. Brittingham, C. Rupe, Coach J. Baker. (Back row) D. Robinson, J. Miller, G. Stickler and K. Cerk. because the teams that slaughtered us last year didn’t this year,” Baker said. Steve Brittingham, the team captain, shot in the 560s in nine of 11 matches and was top scorer. His best score was a 572 at Tennessee Tech, which tied him for sixth place among 41 shooters. “He’s a fantastic individual and competitor,” Baker said. “He gives 100 per cent in every way.” Mary Koeckert was another top scorer. The sophomore recorded her highest score (565) in a shoulder-to-shoulder match against East Tennessee. She also won the prone position competition with perfect 200s at the Kansas and Midwest Camp Perry matches. John Miller and Eric Sack were the other starters. Mill- er shot his highest score (562) at the Eastern Invitational and Sack’s 559 at Murray was his best. Western opened its season with a 2,236-2, 212 victory over Murray in September. In October, the team scored easy wins over Vanderbilt by 2,224-1,866 and 1,673-1,507 margins. The weekend of Oct. 15-16 was the team’s climax, ac- cording to Baker. Although Western lost to East Tennes- see, 2,278-2,244, the score tied for the team’s seasonal best. Western competed next in the Big Bird match at Ten- nessee Tech and finished fifth of eight teams with a 2,234 score. “We were cookin,’ ” Baker said. After contending with a broken heater and two tire blowouts in their van en route to Kansas State, the team scored poorly in the November Turkey Shoot. But their 2,193 score was good enough for sixth of 16 teams in the National Riflery Association (NRA) three-position com- petition. In the International Shooting Union (ISU) competition at Kansas, Western finished fourth of 13 teams with a 1,672 score. Brittingham scored a perfect 200 to win the prone position. In the November Eastern Kentucky Invitational, the team placed fifth of 12 teams and beat Eastern, 2,254- 2,199 in a shoulder-to-shoulder match. After Christmas break, the Toppers resumed competi- tion in February. At Murray in the NRA Air Rifle Sec- tionals the team shot a 1,416 score. Koeckert placed sec- ond overall with a 371. Later that month, Western returned to Murray for the NRA-ISU sectionals. They recorded a 1,115 in NRA com- petition and a 2,244 in ISU competition. Murray set a national record with a 2,317 score in the ISU. In March, the team competed in the Midwest Camp Perry match at Booneville, Mo., and placed second of 20 teams with a 2,211. The season ended in April with the league match at Middle Tennessee. A 1,650 total placed Western fifth of 20 teams. Beth Taylor @ RIFLERY RESULTS WESTERN 2,236 Murray 2,212 WESTERN 2,224 Vanderbilt 1,866 WESTERN 1,673 Vanderbilt 1,507 Western 2,244 EAST TENNESSEE 2,278 Big Bird at Tennessee Tech (Sth of 8) NRA (6th of 16) International Shooting Union (4th of 13) Eastern Kentucky Invitational (Sth of 12) WESTERN 2,254 Eastern 2,199 NRA Air Rifle Sectionals 1,416 NRA Sectionals 1,115 ISU Sectionals 2,244 Midwest Camp Perry (2nd of 20) League Match (Sth of 20) 247 Riflery 11:0, but disappointed... If it’s possible for a team to have a disap- pointing season despite finishing unbeat- en in dual meet competition for the first time in its history, Western’s swim team did it last season. The Hilltoppers’ hopes of repeating as winners of the Kentucky Intercollegiate Swimming Championships (KISC) were intensified after they finished with an 11-0 dual meet season. But the disqualification of the KISC medley-relay team killed hopes of another championship, coach Bill Powell said. The team of Ron Finley, Jim Massey, Kiko Ledesma and Jay Carter would have set a meet record in the event if it hadn’t been disqualified. But Kentucky was awarded the victory and went on to take the KISC crown. Western’s lack of depth was more evi- dent in the KISC than it had been in dual meets. The Toppers won nine of 18 events, but Kentucky and Eastern, which have twice as many swimming scholarships as Western, placed high in enough events to edge Western in total points. IN HIS PREMIERE performance in the KISC, Bill Jackson swims the butterfly stroke. He placed second in the 100 and 200 breaststroke events and fourth in the 400 individual medley. A 100 BUTTERFLY LEG of a 400 medley relay by Kiko Ledesma begins the Toppers’ home meet against UK. Western won eight of 13 events and won, 58-55. Kentucky won with 567 points, followed by Eastern, 502; Western, 476; and Louis- ville, 125. “Finley was the outstanding swimmer of the meet,” Powell said. A triple winner, the freshman set KISC and school records in the 200 meter free- style (1:43.09), 100 backstroke (:53.567) and 200 backstroke (1:56.68). He teamed with Carter, Butch Dy- mowski and Jeff Wells to win the 400 freestyle relay in 3:08.70, a KISC record. Finally, he placed second and set a school record in the 800 freestyle with a 6:59.20. His teammates voted him the team’s most dedicated swimmer after the season. Senior Rick Kral, voted the team’s most valuable swimmer, won the one-meter and three-meter diving events. His 447.95 score in the three meter was a school record. Kral had practiced only a few times on the higher board before the meet because the Diddle Arena pool only has a one-me- ter board. The senior finished 17th in the one-meter division in the NCAA southeast diving regionals at Columbus, S.C., on March 10. Ledesma won the 200 butterfly and the 100 butterfly, the latter in a KISC record time of :50.748. Freshman Dymowski won the 50 free in :21.526. Freshman Bill Jackson was second in the 100 and 200 breaststroke events, and fourth in the 400 individual medley. Massey placed fourth in the 100 backstroke and sixth in the 200 backstroke. Wells was third in the 100 freestyle be- hind teammate Carter, who was second. Mark Hackler set school records with times of 16:41.8 in the 1,650 free and 4:48.6 in the 500 free. He finished third and fifth in the events, respectively. Western’s season began with a 63-50 up- set of West Virginia in a double dual meet on Dec. 2. “They were expected to win,” Powell said. “We had to win the last relay and we did.” Western won 10 of 13 events against West Virginia. The Toppers also beat Mor- ris Harvey, 80-31. The Toppers competed in the Morris Harvey Relays and set four meet records the next day, winning with 114 points. Eastern finished second and Morris Har- vey was third. Tracy Phillips, Jeff Cavana, James Mul- likin and Finley combined for a meet rec- ord 3:46.9 in the 400 backstroke relay. Cavana, Carter, Roberto and Kiko Ledesma teamed for a time of 3:39.6 in the 400 butterfly relay; Carter, Wells, Finley, FRESHLY SHAVEN HEADS psyched Western swim- mers at the KISC. Bill Jackson and Mark Ritter watch Kiko Ledesma snip hair from Steve Krigbaum’s head on the second day of the three-day competition. Ricky Rogers Dymowski and Mark Klaine combined for a 4:06.8 clocking in the 500 crescendo relay; and Finley, Jackson, Ledesma and Wells SWIMMING RESULTS Won 11 Lost 0 swam a 3:39.2 in the 400 medley relay. All WESTERN 63 West Virginia 50 were meet records. WESTERN 80 Morris Harvey 31 5 é Morris Harvey Relays (1st of four) Western won eight of 13 events in a wectERN 58 Kenrick 5 home meet against highly regarded Ken- WESTERN 72. Southern Missouri 35 tucky to win, 58-55. Dymowski beat Rick WESTERN 68 Louisville 45 Yeloushan’s four-year-old school record in WESTERN 70 Eastern Kentucky 43 the 50 free with a time of :21.51 WV ESTERN I 0) Evanisville a ec saoal , WESTERN 65 Missouri-Rolla 48 Western coasted over Southeast Missou- — Saluki Invitational (ard of 18) ri and Louisville in a home double dual _ WESTERN 71 __ Eastern Illinois 42 meet. The Toppers won every event and Weeren 51 epee mae 37 beat the Cardinals, 68-45, and SEMO, 72- SO GME he = KISC (3rd of four) ONS, Finley became the first Hilltopper to break the 10-minute barrier in the 1,000 SIDELINE CHEERING by Ron Finley and Butch Dy- free. He swam a 9:59.8. mowski encourages teammates at the Jan. 14 home rn suffered its first dual meet loss meet against University of Louisville and Southeast Easte Missouri. The Michigan freshmen did a good job. The Toppers beat both squads. to Western on Feb. 3. The Toppers won 10 of 13 events and won, 70-43. Hackler broke Finley’s record with a 9:45.9 in the 1,000. Finley won three events to lead Western to routs of Evansville and Missouri-Rolla. The Toppers won, 70-42 and 65-48, respec- tively. Western “pushed Purdue to the end,” according to Powell, before finishing third in an 18-team field at the Saluki Invita- tional. National power Southern Illinois won and Purdue was a distant second. Kiko Ledesma set a school record in the 200 butterfly with a time of :51.3. Hackler beat Division II All-American Joe Nitch in two events to pace Western to a surprisingly easy 71-42 win over Eastern Illinois. “We thought it would be a tough meet, but it turned out to be the opposite,” Powell said. Kral won both diving events. The Toppers finished their dual meet season with wins over Tennessee State, 57- 37, and Alabama A M, 53-25, in a double- dual meet that turned out to be a “breath- er,” Powell said. The squad was “the best I’ve ever coached. No doubt about it,” he said. But the third-place finish in the KISC dampened the season. “That will stick in my craw forever,” £ Powell said. ff David Whitaker @ Ricky Rogers Swimming Team: (Front row) T. Mauntell, E. (Third row) M. Ritter, J. Cavana, R. Finley, T. Ross, P. Ledesma, B. Jackson, R. Ledesma, R. Kral, M. Buckley, Eggler, R. Chinery. (Back row) S. Swisher, M. Roney, J. Wickman. (Second row) J. Wells, S. Hughes, J. Mas- | B. Dymowski, M. Bezold, M. Klaine, M. Hackler, M. sey, S. Krigbaum, M. Wells, J. Carter, J. Mulliken. Dressman, T. Phillips and B. Powell. 249 Swimming A winner who goes off the deep end every day Rick Kral: Photos by Ricky Rogers He sits calmly in the stands awaiting his turn. The other divers go before him, per- forming a variety of forward and backward flips and twists. His time arrives. Rick Kral walks coolly to the one-meter board in the Diddle Arena pool. As the public address announcer calls out his name, Western fans become silent, seemingly in reverence. With the tension mounting, Kral strides to the end of the board. A subserviant Hill- topper diver splashes water to let his tutor know exactly where the surface is. Kral takes two steps, springs and “nails” the dive. “The KISC is the only big three- 250 meter competition I get into. I don’t have much time to learn the dives, so I throw easy ones. Consistency is the name of that game. I can’t afford to blow any of them.” — Rick Kral It’s the form Kral has used since coming to Western to dive four years ago. The Far- mington Hills, Mich., senior has been quite successful with it, to say the least. Culminating his career, Kral was named Western’s Most Valuable Swimmer for the 1977-78 season. Among Kral’s most noteworthy accom- plishments are titles in the one-and-three- meter events in the last two Kentucky In- tercollegiate Swimming Championships (KISC). In 1977, Kral’s two victories spurred the team to its first KISC title. The one-meter win, in the meet’s next to last event, clinched the championship for Western. AN OFTEN PRACTICED one meter dive is carefully executed at the KISC by senior Rick Kral. He won both the one and three-meter titles for the second consecu- tive year. Diver Feature The University of Kentucky had four of the top six divers in the meet, but Kral’s efforts staved off the deeper Wildcats. “Kentucky’s divers were going before Rick and hitting their dives well,” Topper coach Bill Powell said. “All the pressure in the world was on Rick and he didn’t crack.” Kral repeated the performance this sea- son in Western's third-place KISC finish in Richmond. The brown-haired diver bet- tered his 1977 KISC three-meter total by 30 points to set a school record. He also holds the school mark at one meter. UK again had four of the top seven KISC finishers in the diving events. “Every year there’s 10-15 points difference between me and second place,” Kral said. “The funny thing was that when we swam Kentucky in the dual meet (which Western won) they got first and I got second in the one-meter, and in the three-meter, they took 1-2-3.” Kral then competed in the one-meter di- vision of the NCAA southeast regional March 10 in Columbia, S.C. He finished a disappointing 17th. Kral said the region was the “largest in the country and the second toughest. The competition was that good. I don’t know; maybe I’m not national caliber. “I did get sick the night before, after a 10-hour drive. My first dive was a back, and my feet were too far apart. I blew it. That psyched me out.” Kral’s success on the one-meter board is not that surprising. He has practiced al- most daily for the last decade. He generally dives for two hours a day in Western’s “When I prepare for a meet, I think of it as a practice and I do all right. If I think of it as a meet, there’s more pressure and I'll get nervous and lose.” — Rick Kral practice sessions. The team also went to Florida during spring break and had three two-hour sessions a day. His success in three-meter competition is surprising, considering Western doesn’t have a three-meter Cee although all the Toppers’ KISC opponents do. “The KISC is the only big three-meter competition I get into,” Kral said. “I don’t have much time to learn the dives, so I throw easy ones. Consistency is the name of that game. I can’t afford to blow any of them.” Like most athletes, Kral credits diligent practice as being the key to diving tri- umphs. The way he dives in meets is geared to his practice procedure. “When I prepare for a meet, I think of it as a practice and I do all right,” he said. “If I think of it as a meet, there’s more pres- sure and I'll get nervous and lose. “T don’t even watch the other divers. If I watch one and he hits a dive, I'll think, ‘Damn, he’s going to beat mel!’ At the KISC, I sat in a room at the back of the pool. I didn’t watch anybody do a single dive.” Bryan Armstrong @ AFTER HIS DIVES, Rick Kral cheers for teammates against highly regarded UK. The Toppers won, 58-55, for their first dual meet victory over UK. COACH TOM MCKENZIE eyes a dive by Rick Kral during a practice. McKenzie, a former UK diver, ironi- cally helped his former competitor prepare to beat all of UK’s divers at the KISC. A DESERTED STORAGE room at Eastern is a safe refuge for diver Rick Kral between dives at the KISC The senior said he doesn’t like to watch his opponents af GIRLFRIEND PATTY BAILEY chats with Rick Kral between meet events. The coed is a sophomore psy- chology major from Prospect. 251 Diver Feature 252 Intramurals here’s nothing fancy about room 148 in Diddle Arena. The office doesn’t have wall-to-wall carpet or a receptionist greeting visitors. It’s just an ordinary office filled with desks and cabinets. But within the small room functions one of Western’s most suc- cessful programs — campus recreation. With almost 90 per cent of its students and faculty involved in campus recreation, Western again offered a well-rounded pro- gram of intramurals, sports clubs and free play. It was a year of improvement, accord- ing to Frank Griffin, campus recreation di- rector. “I’ve seen a definite improvement in our program this year,” Griffin said. “I think we've done an excellent job in providing the student body with the kind of recrea- tion program they want.” Assistant director Max Appel coordinat- ed both the men’s and faculty staff pro- grams. He credited the program’s improve- ment to a group of hard-working graduate assistants. “Mark Thomas, Ray Brooks, Jack Fass, Teresa Short and Randy Davis all did a super job for us this year,” Appel said. “They r eally made our program a stronger one.” Several new programs were begun last year. In men’s competition, free-throw shooting was introduced, and in faculty staff competition, slimnastics, a program designed for conditioning and weight loss, was popular. A new face in the office was Betsy Child, coordinator of the women’s co-recreational and sports clubs programs. She said the number and popularity of sports clubs in- creased last year. “The sports clubs have become a very strong facet of our program,” she said. “Rugby, soccer and women’s softball, which will become a varsity sport next year, are probably the most active clubs at this time.” THE GROUND never looked so close for Jim Muf- fost, who catches a pass for Charlie’s Squad. Sigma Chi fraternity finished a 12-0 season by beating the Wild Hares, 28-16, for the championship. COMPLETE WITH COWBOY HAT, Joey Bowling throws a horseshoe while competing for Sigma Nu. About 10 minutes later, the competition behind Keen Hall was rained out. as ae Campus recreation provided travel ex- penses and entry fees for the sports clubs last year. But, according to Ms. Child, the program’s best years are ahead. “We only had a limited budget to work with this year,” she said. “Western has been a little slower in developing sports clubs than most other schools, but the fu- ture looks promising.” Appel said, “We definitely need more space for our program to fully reach its potential. An all-purpose recreational fa- cility could turn our program around.” Plans for a recreational building were approved by the Board of Regents, and Ap- pel anticipated construction to begin with- in the next few years. The competitiveness of intramurals be- came a growing concern for Ms. Child. “T think that competition is over-empha- sized here,” she said. “Intramurals should provide an outlet for the student to relax and enjoy himself. Maybe in the future the program can be divided into two leagues, one for those who are skilled in the par- ticular sport and another for those who just want to have fun.” The all-sports trophy, given to the group (continued on page 254) QUICKNESS, JUMPING ABILITY and strength dic- tate front line play in volleyball. Emily Porter uses all three in returning a volley while competing in coed volleyball in Diddle Arena. Mike Dowell 253 Intramurals Scott Robinson Ron Hoskins Anyone can play... or individual displaying the best overall competitiveness, increased student inter- est. “Even though intramurals is basically for fun, everyone wants some kind of prize to go after,” Appel said. “It gets more peo- ple involved and creates more enthusi- asm.” The Dutch Boys won the men’s all- sports trophy with 53 points, followed by Sigma Nu and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. In the girls’ division, Goodtime Gang edged Al- GOOD EYE CONTACT helps Kevin Warford connect on a letters-high pitch in a softball game against the Trojans. The Trojans won the independent champion- ship with a win over the Nobody’s. WITH TONGUE stuck out and head turned, Willi Koesters, a senior from Louisville, blocks a shot-on- goal while practicing as goalie for his intramural soc- cer team last fall. Intramurals = pha Delta Pi to win the all-sports trophy. The Dutch Boys dominated the men’s competition by winning five sports. They won the swimming competition and de- feated the Bad Spikes to win in volleyball. They also won in handball, table tennis doubles and track and field. When the flag football season began last fall, 26 teams competed for the campus championship. Sigma Chi won, capping off a 12-0 season by defeating Wild Hares, 28-16, in the finals. Wild Hares was the season’s Cinderella team, as they scored in the closing seconds to beat defending champ Sigma Alpha Ep- silon, 14-12, in the semifinals. Ricky New- ton quarterbacked Sigma Chi and teamed with standout receivers Mike Carpenter and Brent St. Clair to give the champions an explosive offense. Sigma Nu’s Craig Riley won in racquet- ball singles and teamed with Mike Thomas to win he doubles. They defeated Pi Kappa Eric Hassler Phi’s Tom Albani and Jim Wells in the finals. SAE’s Chuck Strader said he sur- prised himself by shooting a 78 at Hobson Grove to win the campus golf champion- ship. Sigma Chi’s Mike Carpenter finished second. Bono’s All-Stars won the men’s basket- ball championship for the second year in a row by defeating People’s Choice, 43-25, in the finals. Keith Tandy and Corlos Hamp- ton led the Bono’s, which easily defeated almost every team they faced. SAE’s Dale Wunderlich and Mark Ches- nut edged Kin Quek and Barney Owens to win in badminton doubles. Wunderlich had lost to Quek in the singles competi- tion. “T was really fired up by playing against him again,” Wunderlich said. “He’s a tough player, but I wanted to win it all this time.” Kappa Sigma beat the Trojans, 10-5, to win the campus softball crown. They came from behind to beat Sigma Chi, 10-9, in the finals of the fraternity division. The Tro- jans defeated the Nobody’s to win the in- dependent division. Steve Parnell, Larry Harbison and Donny Downing starred for Kappa Sig. In eats competition, the Goodtime Gang won seven sports. They beat Alpha Delta Pi to win in volleyball. They also won Pillo Polo and had first-place finish- ers in raquetball singles and doubles, ten- nis doubles, badminton singles and golf. Central Hall beat Phi Mu, 27-0, to win the campus softball championship. Kim Knapp of Rodes-Harlin and Sandy Dorroh of Alpha Omicron Pi were chosen out- standing players in the girls’ league. In basketball, East Hall beat ADPi, 50-8, HIS HANDS raised in triumph, Larry Phillips, a Nashville freshman, celebrates a strike. Some intra- mural competitors received instruction from touring pro Bob Bunetta in January. AFTER LEARNING FENCING FUNDAMENTALS in a brief workshop, Orland Park, Ill., freshman Carrie Watson (lunging) and Louisville freshman Stacy Me- Mahan compete in the five-girl tournament. Debbie Gibson in the final. ADPi had beaten Chi Omega to win the sorority division. Diana Camp of Central Hall, Susie Garrott of Chi Ome- ga and Mary Berst of Sigma Kappa re- ceived outstanding players’ honors. In bowling, Cheryl White of the first- place finisher Deviants and Teri Stallings of Phi Mu White were chosen the out- standing bowlers. The Dutch Girls followed in the foot- steps of the Dutch Boys and won in swim- ming and diving. Kathy Assmar of the Dutch Girls and Julie Bertelson of runner- up ADPi were selected as outstanding par- ticipants in the meet. With Western’s campus recreation pro- gram on the upswing and plans for a new building, Appel stressed the importance of intramurals. “A school’s intramural program prob- ably reaches more students than any other program,” he said. “The student needs a chance to get away from it all and intra- murals is a good way for him to do it.” Kerry Tharp WOMEN’S INTRAMURALS RESULTS Archery Julie Fulkerson (Sigma Kappa) Badmintion (D) Missy Shelton, Kathy Nutter (Kappa Delta) Janet Wittenbraker (Sorority) Katie Rooney (Independent) Badminton (S) Basketball East Hall Billiards (D) Kay Bush, Lisa Howlett Bowling Deviants Free Throw Tori Tucker (Alpha Xi Delta) Golf Matilda Willis, Lee Stokely (Goodtime Gang) Pillo Polo Racquetabll (D) Goodtime Gang Janice James, Robyn Fisher (Goodtime Gang) Lois Holmes (Goodtime Gang) Central Hall Table Tennis (D) Linda Johnson, Jessie Calhoun Table Tennis (S) Diane Riley (Alpha Delta Phi) Tennis (D)Lois Holmes, JoAnn Rivas (Goodtime Gang) Track Dusters Turkey Trot Katy Strozdas, Betsy Bogdan Volleyball Goodtime Gang Racquetball (S) Softball CO-ED RECREATIONAL EVENTS RESULTS Badminton Matilda Willis, Tom Zoeller Basketball Deviants Inner Tube Water Polo Water Spiders Pillo Polo Marco Polo’s Volleyball Barroom Blitz MEN’S INTRAMURALS RESULTS Steve Castle (Sigma Phi Epsilon) Dale Wunderlich, Mark Chestnut (Sigma Alpha Epsilon) Kin Quek Archery Badminton (D) Badminton (S) Basketball Bono’s All-Stars Billiards Jeff Smith (Sigma Nu) Bowling Sigma Nu Flag Football Sigma Chi Free Throw Ken Reynolds (Sigma Nu) Golf Chuck Strader (Sigma Alpha Epsilon) Handball (D) John Boes, Kimon Hoegh (Dutch Boys) Handball (S) Tom Zoeller (Lambda Chi Alpha) Horseshoes (D) Steve Parnell, Ken Harrison (Kappa Sigma) Horseshoes (S) Jim Allen (Pi Kappa Phi) Racquetball (D) Craig Riley, Mike Thomas (Sigma Nu) Racquetball (S) Craig Riley (Sigma Nu) Softball Kappa Sigma Swimming Dutch Boys Table Tennis (D) Paul Martin, Kin Quek (Dutch Boys) Table Tennis (S) Paul Martin Tennis (D) Bob Gover, Roger Reynolds Tennis (S) Roger Reynolds Track and Field Dutch Boys Volleyball Dutch Boys Wrestling Wrestling Club 255 Intramurals 256 Men’s Track say Rs rd . ee mt rs = Ricky Rogers AHEAD at the curve, Donald Douglas held on to win the 400- meter intermediate hurdles at the OVC quadrangular meet, but finished second — as did the team — at the championship meet. LONG SHADOWS fall from the runners in the 5,000-meter run at the OVC quadrangular meet. Jon Slaughter, preparing to pass a Murray runners, finished third to help Western win the meet. AN EXPRESSION of exertion covers Ludy Chambul’s face as he works his way to third place in the OVC quad meet. His 53-foot 10-inch put in the OVC championships got him second place. Ricky Rogers BE DED EB ST OAD, A Credible Performance The men’s track team was credible. Not incredible. The Hilltoppers seldom looked bad, but inexperience and stiff competition pre- vented Western from dominating a meet, except for the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) Quadrangular at home April 7. Western finished second to Middle Ten- nessee in the OVC outdoor championships at Murfreesboro May 5-6. The Toppers tied for fourth with Middle in the OVC indoor championships Feb. 16-17 at John- son City. Austin Peay won with 94 to the Toppers’ 82%. After Western drubbed Middle in the OVC Quad, 71-49, it looked as if the Top- pers would run away with the outdoor crown. But the Blue Raiders scored 40 points in the long jump and triple jump and the Toppers didn’t get a point in any of the jumps at the championships. “I predicted we’d get 111 and we got 101,” coach Del Hessel said. “We were weak in all three jumps. Inexperience was a prime factor, and it’s a matter of experience TRACK TEAM: (Front row) G. Wilson, N. Jones, E. Grumbach, F. Killebrew. (Second row) T. Martin, J. Cummings, S. Brandon, G. Houser. (Third row) D. Andrews, D. Douglas, V. Quan, R. Ray. (Fourth row) D. Mobley, J. Kunz, J. Chappell, D. Ziller. (Fifth row) J. Goolsby, J. Deller, R. Becht, L. Cuzzort. (Sixth row) iv ib a Lae ee David Frank in the technique events.” Richard Hopkins won the 200-meter dash in :20.7, was second in the 100-yard dash and ran on the winning 440 relay team. Hopkins, Vernon Tynes, Alfred Agee and Marion Wingo ran :40.6 to win the 440, one-tenth of a second off the NCAA cham- pionship qualifying time. Wingo, Hopkins, Ernie Halstead of East Tennessee and Peay’s Johnny Williams all ran the same time in the 100 meters. Wil- liams was awarded the win, Hopkins was second and Wingo fourth. Hessel protested the decision to no avail. Topper Donald Douglas was edged out for first by Middle’s Russell Holloway in the 400 intermediate hurdles. Hessel said Western performed well in the indoor championships despite being hampered by illness. Tony Staynings, who maintains West- ern records in the six-mile and 5,000 me- ters, had a virile infection. Distance standouts Dave Long and Jon L. Wildman, C. Losso, R. Marshall, B. Swann. (Sev- enth row) J. Morton, W. Stanley, B. Ward, B. Willi- ford. (Eighth row) K. Hunter, V. Tyne, T. Anderson, M. Wingl, coach W. Powell, coach D. Hessel. (Back row) H. Sheats, D. Pogue and A. Agee. Slaughter dropped out of the three mile because they were slowed by flu. The coach got a chance to look at his recruits in the indoor opener, the East Ten- nessee State Invitational Jan. 14. | Agee and Wingo ran :06.19 and :06.16, respectively, to qualify for the nationals in the 60-yard dash. Douglas and Forrest Killebrew won the 600-yard run and the long jump, respec- tively, at the Michigan Relays Jan. 28. The Toppers were again weakened by illness, but Hessel said the experience would im- prove his team’s chances in the conference championships. Western “didn’t do anything right” at the Indiana Relays Feb. 4, Hessel said. Western didn’t place in any event. “It was a very disturbing meet. We have the coaching, the talent and our determina- ti on is good, but we didn’t get anything done at the meet,” Hessel said. Running in place of the injured Long, freshman Ron Becht won the mile in 4:11.9 at the Mason-Dixon games Feb. 11. The next weekend the Toppers per- formed to their “true potential,” according to Hessel, in the OVC indoor champion- ships and tied for fourth. Western sent a distance medley relay team and a mile relay team along with Agee and Wingo in the sprints to the NCAA outdoor championships March 11, but failed to score a point. Freshman David Mobley won the fresh- man triple jump with a leap of 49 feet 5 inches at the Florida Relays March 24-25 in the Toppers outdoor opener. “Everything we did down there was an accomplishment,” Hessel said. “We placed well in just about everything we ran in.” Western finished second to Southern I]- linois 112-42, at Carbondale April 1. Becht ran 14:08 and Long ran 29:31 to qualify for the nationals in the 5,000 and 10,000, respectively, at the Dogwood Re- lays at Knoxville April 14-15. Douglas’ :51.5 in the 400 intermediate hurdles also earned him a trip to the nationals in Eu- gene, Ore., June 1-3. The 880 relay team of Hopkins, Wingo, Agree and Tynes finished fourth of 56 teams at the Penn Relays on April 28-29. The team ran a 1:24.7. “It was a building year and a big recruit- ing year for us,” Hessel said. “It indicates we'll be a contender for the next two years.” David Whitaker @ TRACK RESULTS OVC Indoor Tournament Triangular with SIU, Murray OVC Quadrangular at Western OVC Outdoor Tournament (tied for 4th of eight) (2nd of three) (1st of four) (2nd of eight) AFTER CLEARING 16 feet 3 inches — a personal best — Billy Hocker lies on the po le vaulting pad for a moment's rest. The vault got him second place at the OVC championship meet. 257 Men’s Track In the winners’ circle “Guarded optimism.” It was a phrase baseball coach Dr. Barry Shollenberger liked to use as the winter faded into spring and the grass grew reener at Nick Denes Field. With his top Five hitters and eight pitchers returning from the 1977 team, Shollenberger spoke of winning 30 games and a conference championship. “I think pitching depth is a strength for us, but quality pitching is going to be the key to the season,” the coach said three weeks before the season opener. The state- ment proved prophetic. Western, a blend of veterans and trans- fers, won 19 of its first 27 games (including its first six OVC games) and finished 26- 19-1 to win the Western Division of the OVC for the first time in eight years. The team’s 8-3-1 divisional record was its best since 1969. But key injuries to the pitching staff doomed the team’s chance of winning the OVC championship. The Toppers dropped two of three games to East Tennessee in the conference championships. In late March, Shollenberger had only seven able-bodied pitchers left from the 21 who had reported to fall practice. “It’s al- most been like Murphy’s Law,” he moaned. “If anything can go wrong, it does.” Sidelined were four front-line pitchers who had combined to win 12 of Western’s 20 games the previous season. Tony Mar- tines was declared academically ineligible, Terry Hackett missed the season with an injured elbow, Mike Riggs was hospital- ized with bleeding ulcers and Tim Kellum was out with a broken foot. Kellum and Riggs returned to the lineup late in the season but only combined to pitch 22 in- nings and lose two games. Left were veteran lefthanders Paul Or- berson and Jeff McKinley and righthand- ers Mark Biven and Ricky Baker. Orber- son, who finished with an 8-4 record and a 2.19 E.R.A., was the most consistent pitch- er and the team’s only “stopper.” His victo- ry total and innings pitched (78) were school records. Biven (4-2, 2.83 E.R.A.) finished strong, but Baker (4-2, 4.53) and McKinley (3-3, 5.25) were inconsistent. Offensive production was consistently strong. The team hit .303 collectively and had five players, all All-OVC picks in the Western Division, who hit .296 or better. Rightfielder Jim Atkinson paced the team with a .408 average, 11 homers and 43 RBI's — the latter two figures school records. Outfielder Frankie Hughes (.396) had 57 hits and scored 45 runs, both school records. THIRD BASEMAN Ron Rocco gets caught between third and home in the fourth inning of the second game of the OVC playoffs against East Tennessee. WKU lost this game, and the title, one game to two. 258 Baseball Mark Lyons oO First baseman Terry Tedder hit .325 with 15 doubles and shortstop Mike Murray batted .317 and stole 13 of Western’s 56 bases. Ron Rocco batted .296 as the team’s third baseman. The team outscored its opponents, 309- 246, on the season, but was hampered by inconsistent defense (86 errors for a .943 fielding average) and a pitching staff that combined for a 4.27 E.R.A. The team hit with power (46 homers and 105 doubles) A PITCH is delivered to an Austin Peay batter by Mark Biven during his 10 innings on the mound. He allowed eight hits and three walks, but the 11-inning game was called at 2-2 because of darkness. hotns ool hw a ee and nine hitting records were included among the 23 school records set during the season. After a “super” fall training season, ac- cording to Shollenberger, in which West- ern won eight of 12 exhibition games and played 38 intrasquad games, the team logged 109 hours of hitting practice in the combative gymnasium of Smith Stadium last winter. The team had only practiced outdoors three times when it departed to THE TAG is put on a Murray runner by shortstop Mike Murray in the Hilltoppers’ 7-4 division-clinch- ing over the Racers. Murray hit a key double to drive in a run as Western came from behind to win. Georgia and Florida during spring break to play some of the nation’s best teams. Western was 2-4 on the trip. The Toppers had raised their record to 8- 8 when they faced Murray at home April 1. The team swept the doubleheader from the Racers and gained a strong emotional boost that carried over the next two weeks and a 13-game winning streak. Four days later, Orberson five-hit Mid- (continued on page 260) GES A itt Rl a David Frank SCORING against Middle Tennessee is Western's se- condbaseman Freddie Carlisle, an Albany, Ga., sopho- more. During 1978 the Hilltoppers beat Middle Ten- nessee four times by 12-1, 6-4, 2-0 and 7-1 scores. oe Scott Robinson 259 Baseball 1978 BASEBALL RESULTS Won 26 Lost 19 Tied 1 In the winners’ circle cont. WESTERN 8 Georgia Southern 3. WESTERN 2 Middle Tennessee ) Western 2 UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI 3. WESTERN 7 Middle Tennessee 1 4 2 Western 4 FLORIDA STATE 13. WESTERN 16 Tennessee State 4 dle Tennessee to win the first game of a Western 3. FLORIDA STATE 16 Western 7 AUSTIN PEAY 10 doubleheader in Murfreesboro, 12-1. Inthe WESTERN 13 Ohio University 11 WESTERN 7 Austin Peay 3 nightcap, back-to-back, run-scoring dou- yiceter nee v4 cee COLLEGE ; esters 8 Wha 9 : W 8 pper lowa estern 2 6 bles by Hughes and Atkinson sparked a WrereRN 8 Upper lowa 5 WESTERN 7 Murray 4 come-from-behind rally as Western won, WESTERN 11. Grand Valley State 6 Western 0 AUSTIN PEAY 2 6-5, to take a two-game divisional lead. Western 4 ESN NL STATE 9 Western 2 Austin Peay 2 n and McKin with only two WESTERN’ 11 _ Eastern Illinois 8 Western 2 MOREHEAD 9 eae Pas a Ueyine Middle in Western 1 EASTERN ILLINOIS 5 Western 10 MOREHEAD 14 YES Western 4 EASTERN ILLINOIS 10 WESTERN 4 Kentucky 4 Bowling Green, 2-0 and 7-1. Orberson al- Western 2 LOUISVILLE 10 WESTERN 12. David Lipscomb 8 lowed four hits and only one Middle run- WESTERN 15 __ Louisville 10 Western 6 SOUTHERN ILLINOIS 2 ner to advance past first base in winning Vest ERS 5 eae Wein 7 SOE ILLINOIS 10 é a 3 urray estern 0 5 the opener. McKinley, behind a Western WeereRN 4 Murray 3 WESTERN 17 Kentucky Wesleyan 0 attack that included five homers, two each WESTERN 12 Kentucky Wesleyan 3. WESTERN 11 Kentucky Wesleyan (0) by Hughes and Atkinson, allowed only WESTERN’ 14 _ Kentucky Wesleyan 0 OVC PLAYOFFS three singles as he won. The winning WESTERN 12 Middle Tennessee 1 WESTERN 8 East Tennessee 4 streak was snapped four days later in W ESTERN 6 Middle Tennessee 4 Western 2 EAST TENNESSEE 3 : 25 y WESTERN —9_sIndiana-Purdue (Ft. Wayne) 0 Western 5 EAST TENNESSEE 7 Clarksville as Austin Peay pounded Baker wesTERN 15 Campbellsville Aen facta for seven runs in the second inning en route to a 10-7 win. In the second game, Atkinson hit a long homer to start a five- run Western rally in the seventh inning as the Toppers won, 7-3. A two-run homer by Atkinson, his sev- enth in eight days, gave Western its only runs as it lost to Murray on the road, 6-2, April 15. The Toppers rebounded to clinch the divisional title with a 7-4 win in the second game. Three-hit relief pitching by Biven over four 2-3 innings and two homers and five RBIs by Hughes rescued Western from an early 4-0 deficit in the second game. Its emotions deflated after clinching the divisional title so early, Western lost six of its final 11 regular-season games. The Top- pers won only one of three games on a trip to eastern Kentucky before Hughes hit a grand slam in the bottom of the 10th in- oHTPING (ore ning to give Western a 12-8 win over David : (Front row) C. Payne, R. Gittens, TT. Sapp, L. Phillips, M. Biven, J. Atkinson, L. Willi- Li 8 i ph D. Kendall, F. Hughes, R. Rocco, F. Carlisle, J.T. Buck, ford, J. McKinley, M. Murray, M. Williams, T. Tedder, a Wertorer there eeped matcbleheniettn M. Atwell. (Back row) R. Zarate, W. Denton, R. Baker, B. Shollenberger and J. Murrie. national-power Southern Illinois and was shut out by Trevecca before ending the regular season with a doubleheader rout of Kentucky Wesleyan. In the opening games of the OVC play- offs, Orberson scattered seven hits before allowing East Tennessee a run in the bot- tom of the ninth on two singles and a force out. East Tennessee righthander Kerry Burchett, who had allowed Western only three hits in nine innings, surrendered six hits and was hurt by three errors as West- ern scored seven runs in the 10th and won, 8-4. Western scored all of its runs after two were out and the big blow was a three-run triple by Atkinson. Buc lefthander Atlee Hammaker limited Western to four hits, including a solo homer by Hughes, as he beat Biven in the second game, 3-2. Four Western pitchers allowed East Ten- nessee 12 hits, including a pair of two-run homers by Mike Shifflett, as the Bucs won the OVC championship game, 7-5. Don White @ Mark Lyons , sep ™ . ™ , _ UPENDED by Middle Tennessee’s Tom Nichting is Charlie Payne as he throws to first to complete a dou- ble play which gave Western a 2-1 win and a sweep of the defending Western Division OVC Championship. 260 Baseball A week in the sun It was always the last line on the list of statistics baseball coach Dr. Barry Shollen- berger periodically released during the sea- son. It looked somewhat obscure, and the players and Shollenberger always smiled when it was mentioned. “Others” became a joke. Listed under the names of Western pitchers and their statis- tics, “Others” stood for four infielders who pitched and won a game on the Toppers’ spring break trip to Georgia and Florida. Although the team won only two of six ames, the trip established the foundation ‘or the team’s 26-19-1 record and its first divisional championship in nine years. Shollenberger was left with an injury- depleted and tired pitching staff when his team faced Ohio University in Columbus, Ga., on Saturday, March 18. The team had layed an afternoon exhibition double- hod before playing the University of Miami, the nation’s seventh-ranked team, at night. The b usy schedule had left the pitchers tired. Western, which hadn’t played a game and had only practiced outdoors three times prior to the trip, had surrendered 29 runs in a doubleheader with Florida State the previous day. It confirmed what Shollenberger had said several days before the team’s three vans had departed Bowling Green for Georgia: “We're going to be green — green as the flour barrels up north.” In addition, three front-line pitchers who had combined to win 10 of Western’s 20 victories in 1977, were sidelined. Terry ‘Hackett and Tim Kellum were injured and Tony Martines had been declared academi- cally ineligible. First baseman Terry Tedder, second baseman-outfielder Frankie Hughes, third baseman Ron Rocco and shortstop Mike Murray hurled Western to a 13-11, 10-in- ning victory over Ohio University. West- ern scored five runs in the 10th on five hits and a walk to give Murray the win. Tedder, who pitched in high school, re- membered his brief stint on the mound with a smile. “Hey, I was out there just wondering how hard they’d hit it,” he said. Shollenberger said with a laugh, “They (Ohio University) thought it was our regu- lar pitching staff. They never knew differ- ent.” Western played some of the nation’s best in six cities. Florida State was ranked third nationally at the time. Western also played Valencia Community College, the nation’s fifth-ranked junior college. “Playing the good teams down south en- abled us to develop a strong mental ap- proach to our conference games,” Shollen- berger said. “We were able to peak for the OVC games and we weren’t in awe of Mur- ray or Middle as our record indicates.” A highlight of the trip was playing Mi- ami in the Hurricane’s 5,000-seat stadium. The stadium, with a $250,000 electronic scoreboard and an Astroturfed playing surface, impressed the Toppers, who played a strong ballgame in losing, 3-2. eS : Judy Watson EVEN FLORIDA isn’t without rain as the parents of Rene Zarate watch their third baseman son in a game in Orlando. The Florida natives later treated the team and coaches to a spaghetti dinner. “It was like playing in heaven,” desig- nated hitter Mike Green said. “It was the nicest field most of us have ever played on.” Paul Orberson, Mark Biven and Rick Baker dueled Miami lefthander Augie Ruiz. Western took a 2-1 lead into the bot- tom of the seventh, but four consecutive singles and an error gave the Hurricane the winning runs. While in Miami, the team was treated to a spaghetti supper by the parents of Rene Zarate, Western’s third baseman and the team’s only native Floridian. “She (Mrs. Zarate) had so much spaghetti that it al- most killed me,” Green said. There were other highlights. The team conducted a clinic at Sequoia High School in Atlanta and attended a Cincinnati Reds- St. Louis Cardinals exhibition game. As the three vans departed Florida, Shol- lenberger knew his team had gained valu- able experience against good competition and aed molded into a closer unit by living and traveling together. That was evident as Western won 17 of its next 21 games in a season that resulted in 23 team and individual records. Much of the credit went to that week in the sun. Don White @ THE SUNSHINE STATE had plenty of citrus for freshman J.T. Buck. He played in 12 games and hit 133 as a first baseman-outfielder. The Hilltoppers won two of six games in Florida and Georgia during spring break. + Nal 1a lhc NO Judy Watson 261 Baseball 262 Men’s tennis: “Whatever could go wrong, did!” Ricky Rogers — Ray Rose One day last May, tennis player Ron Tip- ton was in coach Ray Rose’s office to see whether he’d earned a varsity letter. Rose told the marginal player he would receive the “W” for playing in some matches over a two-year period. Then the coach turned peddler and gave Tipton a large bundle of tennis brochures distribut- ed by the public affairs office. “Take a package of these,” Rose said. “I don’t want to hand these out to anybody else. I may use them to paper my walls.” Tipton reluctantly accepted the “gift.” They were hardly a hot commodity, since Western had gone 2-17 during the regular season and finished last in the Ohio Valley Conference tournament. Rose, a two-year Topper coach, had now seen both ends of the OVC spectrum — his 1977 team finished first in the league. But Rose knew he would have trouble in 1978 because four top players on the 1977 team — Svante Malmsten, Stig Ljunggren, Bulent Altinkaya and Barrett Lessenberry — finished their eligibility. Rose was left with two experienced play- ers, seniors Hasan Ozdemir and Mark Ni- chols. Ozdemir, 15-7 while playing in the No. 4 position in 1977, was the only proven competitor. Western was further damaged when Oz- demir turned an ankle against Appalachian State in an April 21 match. The other players — freshmen Jorge Alemparte, John Mark Fones and Ken Stone and sophomore Bengt Ronnerman — lost many close matches because of in- experience. One of the Toppers’ problems in recent years had been their idle winters when teams in the South practiced outside. But last year Rose secured practice time at a new local indoor tennis facility. When Western beat Belmont, 9-0, to open the sea- son, it looked as though the indoor practice might have helped. The real test came on the annual trip to Florida during spring break. Western failed, losing four matches by a combined score of 34-2. Things never got much better. Western lost 17 straight matches, only once coming as close as 5-4. The team never beat an OVC opponent. The team also lost to non-conference op- ponents Louisville, Kentucky, Appala- chian State and Cincinnati before shutting out Evansville, 9-0, May 2. At the OVC tournament May 5-6 at Murfreesboro, Tenn., the Toppers placed fourth in four of the nine divisions, leaving them in last place. A rundown of Western’s seeded players and their performances: NO. 2 singles player Bengt Ronnerman serves against a Middle Tennessee opponent April 8. The sophomore from Sweden finished the regular season at 6-13. He placed fifth in the OVC tournament. Ozdemir, the No. 1 seed, was 7-9 during the season. He was severely slowed by the ankle injury, however, and lost all three of his matches in the OVC tournament to finish last. Ronnerman, a Swede, finished the regu- lar schedule at 6-13. He placed fifth in the tournament. Alemparte, the No. 3 player, was a disap- pointment in the tournament. After win- ning half of his 14 regular-season matches, the Chilean finished sixth. Nichols was the No. 4 seed. Winless at that position during the season, he surpris- ingly finished fourth in the tournament. Fones, the No. 5 seed, performed much like Nichols. He was 2-17 for the year, but also finished fourth in the OVC. Stone was 3-12 for the season at No. 6 and was at times spelled by John Gover of Bowling Green. Stone finished last in the tournament. NO. 1 SEED Hasan Ozdemir, a junior from Turkey, slams a forehand at the Western courts. Ozdemir went 7-9 during the season, but an ankle injury slowed him in the OVC tournament where he finished last. iiiiccismpammaeuill SS MEN’S TENNIS TEAM: (Front row) H. Ozdemir, J.M. Fones, B. Ronnerman, J. Gover. (Back row) R. “IT have nothing but regrets about the season,” Rose said. “It was the perfect ex- ample of Murphy’s Law — whatever could go wrong, did.” Bryan Armstrong @ TENNIS RESULTS WESTERN 9 Belmont College Western 1 JEFFERSON STATE COM. COLLEGE Western 1 CENTRAL FLORIDA COM. COLLEGE Western 0 SEMINOLE COM. COL- LEGE 9 Western 0 FLORIDA TECH 9 Western 4 AUSTIN PEAY 5 Western 0 MIDDLE TENNESSEE 9 Western 2 MOREHEAD STATE 7 Western 4 MURRAY STATE 5 Western 2 MIDDLE TENNESSEE 7 Western 2 LOUISVILLE 7 Western 3 AUSTIN PEAY 6 Western 2 MURRAY STATE i Western 2 KENTUCKY 7 Western 2 KENTUCKY 7 Western 2 APPLACHIAN STATE Vf Western 1 EAST TENNESSEE 8 Western 0 KENTUCKY 9 Western 3. CINCINNATI 6 WESTERN 9 Evansville 0 OVC Championships (8th of eight) David Frank SOY Tipton, J. Alemparte, M. Nichols, K. Stone and C. Scott. “They gave it their best shot.” — Frank Griffin Injuries and sickness plagued the men’s golf team last season as at least one or two of the Hilltopper. golfers were sidelined throughout the year. “This is the first year I can remember us having so many injuries and sickness,” coach Frank Griffin said. ‘Dave Dalton, our No. 3 player, almost had pneumonia, and there were several others who were injured.” The team began play with a trip to Flor- ida in March. They finished fourth of 14 teams in the Sunshine Intercollegiate Tournament and fourth of 19 teams in the Colonial Classic. Senior Butch Creek was the team’s most consistent player, and according to Griffin, can play with anyone in the OVC. Western finished seventh in the OVC golf tournament May 14-16 at Falls Creek State Park near Murfreesboro, Tenn. The team’s 914 score was 35 strokes off Middle Tennessee’s winning score. Creek tied for third individually with a 54-hole score of 219. Middle’s Chris Hall (213) and Sy Mandell of Austin Peay (214) finished one-two. Griffin said the team lacked the overall talent of some of his previous teams, but he was impressed with the players’ attitudes. “The team always gave it their best shot and did the best job they could,” he said. Once again, the team practiced at Hob- son Grove and Park Mammoth, not having its own course to play on daily. “A regular place to practice is our big- est need at this time,” Griffin said. “A ine course for us could really turn our program around.” Griffin said Eastern Kentucky and the Florida teams were the toughest Western faced last season. “The Florida teams are always tough be- cause they play year-round,” he said. “Be- sides, there’s a big difference in the courses around here and the ones in Florida.” Griffin, Western’s only golf coach, re- tired after the season. He coached at West- ern for 32 years. His teams won nine OVC crowns and he was twice selected “Coach of the Year” in the conference. “Our golf program has been on par with anyone’s,” he said. “I’m extremely proud when I hear or read about the success of my former players.” Kerry Tharp @ 263 Men’s Tennis And Golf Women’s track and cross country teams: Working their way up The women’s cross country team found it still had some learning and growing to do in its third year of competition. The young squad, which included sever- al freshmen and sophomores, failed to win any of its meets and finished last in four of its six meets. Coach Carla Coffey said inexperience and the loss of a top recruit, Jill Scuastakis, handicapped the team. “T think it (losing the recruit) probably had a very negative effect, because we were expecting some help in the cross country area,” she said. “But the kids still put themselves together and did the best they could. “We did not have a good season at all. In fact, I’d venture to say this was our worst season,” she said. “But we had some fairly decent individual performances from Vicky Holway and Jane Terrell and some of our other people. A SLOW SHUTTER SPEED DRAMATIZES a solitary Vicky Holway, on her way to a seventh-place finish in the Lady Topper Invitational. She later finished 33rd in the regionals. “Overall, I just think it was a learning experience for us.” Miss Holway finished fourth in the Top- pers’ first meet, a triangular with Illinois State and Northeast Missouri. The team placed last. Illinois State won the meet with a score of 19, followed by Northeast Mis- souri with 51 and Western with 66. In the Purdue Invitational, the Toppers finished second behind Purdue, which won the meet with a perfect score of 15. Western had 45, and Ball State had 79. Miss Holway placed second and Miss Ter- rell was seventh. The Toppers placed last in their first home meet despite an 11th-place finish by Holway. Eastern won the meet with a score of 18. Kentucky was second with 83, fol- lowed by Murray, Morehead and Western with scores of 90, 103, 134, respectively. The Toppers again finished last in a tri- angular meet at Murray. The host Racers won the meet with a score of 24. Miss Hol- way again paced the Toppers with a third- place finish. In the Volunteer-Spartan Invitational at Knoxville, the Toppers placed ninth in an 11-team field with a team total of 229. Miss Holway was 31st to pace the team, and Miss Terrell placed 39th. Eastern won the meet with a score of 50. Despite running their best times of the year at home, the Toppers placed last in the four-team Lady Topper Invitational. Miss Holway and Miss Terrell paced the Top- pers with seventh and eight-place finishes. Kentucky won the meet with a score of 28, followed by Murray, 49, Memphis State, 71, and Western, 83. Miss Holway ended the season by plac- ing 33rd among 79 runners in the Region II Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) meet in Raleigh, N.C. Coach Coffey said a strong recruiting year will be an important key for improve- ment in the cross country program. “I’ve got 12 top people I’m working on,” she said. “I don’t mean just average people. I mean the top ones. I’ve got to get them.” “You can have some average people, but you've got to have some people who can finish in the top five or so in all your meets in order to do well,” coach Coffey said. “Right now, I think it’s just a matter of going out and getting them.” Robin Vincent David Frank Before the women’s track season began, coach Carla Coffey said she believed her small squad could prove that quality run- ners could beat a quantity of runners. The team won two meets and qualified five individuals and two relay teams for the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) nationals, but lost the Kentucky Women’s Intercollegiate Con- ference title to Eastern. In their first indoor meet, the Purdue Invitational, the Hilltoppers finished fourth. Anita Jones placed first in the 60-yard hurdles and the 600-yard run. Marcia Cole finished first in the 300-yard dash. ‘Eastern again beat the Toppers in a tri- angular meet including Morehead. Sandra Thomas placed first in the 60- yard and 300-yard dashes. Angie Bradley finished first in the long jump and Gayle Harris finished first in the 60-yard hurdles. The Toppers finished sixth out of 12 teams at the Lady Volunteer Invitational in Knoxville. Miss Bradley placed second in the long jump and Mrs. Harris placed third in the 60-yard hurdles. The Toppers traveled to Columbia, Mo., during spring break for the AIAW nation- al indoor meet where Miss Bradley fin- ished fourth in the long jump. In the outdoor season the team moved from a 10th place in the Memphis State Invitational in 1977 to third in 1978, and from 11th place at the Becky Boone Relays to fifth. In their first outdoor meet, the Memphis State Invitational, the Toppers finished third with 52 points behind the University of Tennessee and Tennessee State Univer- sity. Mrs. Harris won the 100-meter hurdles. Her 14.3 time qualified her for the AIAW nationals. At the Purdue Invitational the Toppers improved to a second place finish, with 128 points. Mrs. Harris finished first in botl. the 100-meter hurdles and the long jump. Miss Jones placed first in the 400-meter hurdles and Lindy Willingham set a school record in the shot put, finishing third. The Toppers finished first in the Murray Invitational. Miss Bradley set a school record in the long jump with 20-1% and qualified for the AIAW nationals. Miss Jones finished first in the 400-me- ter hurdles and third in the long jump. Mrs. Harris placed first in the 100-meter hurdles. The 880-yard medley relay also placed first. Three days later the Toppers were disap- pointed with a 89-93 loss to Murray in a triangular including Austin Peay. Finishing first were Miss Thomas in the 100-meter dash, Miss Cole in the 200-meter dash, Mrs. Harris in the 100-meter hurdles, and Miss Jones in the 400-meter hurdles. Nyra Hayes took first in the shot put while A SLOW HANDOFF from Gayle Harris to Sandra Thomas gives Tennessee State an edge in the 880 med- ley relay at the Lady Topper Invitational. Western later caught up and won. Dawn Ison placed first in the javelin. The Tennessee State Tigerbelles out- scored Western 1024 to 87% to win the 11- team Lady Topper Invitational. Mrs. Harris finished first in the 100-me- ter hurdles and qualified for nationals with a 19-8 long jump. Eastern took three or four places in many of the distance events, erasing the Toppers’ hopes for the state title. Placing first were Miss Cole in the 400- meter and 200-meter dashes, Mrs. Harris in the long jump and 100-meter hurdles, and the 400-yard relay and 880-yard med- ley relay teams. The Toppers’ fifth place in the Becky Boone Relays was highlighted by Miss TRACK TEAM: (Front row) S. Thomas, A. Jones, G. Harris. (Second row) C. McGee, T. Logan, L. Chest, S. Clay. (Third row) M. Cole, V. Hartsough, B. Taylor, A. Jones’ :60.8 time in the 400-meter hurdles. She won the event, set a school record and qualified for the AIAW nationals. The 880- yard medley relay team qualified for na- tionals with a 1:45.9 time. A partial team won the Illinois State In- vitational with 56 points. Mrs. Harris ran her season best with a :13.8 time in the 100-meter hurdles. Placing first were Miss Cole in the 200-meter and 400-meter dashes, Miss Thomas in the 100- meter dash (qualifying her for nationals) and Miss Jones in the 400-meter hurdles. Miss Cole qualified for nationals when she ran a 55.8 in the 400-meter dash at the Tom Black Classic May. 20. Robin Vincent @ Bradley. (Fourth row) Y. Hill, K. Bush, R. Young, J. James. (Back row) assistant coach J. James, N. Hayes, D. Ison and V. Holway. POM Women’s tennis: Giants at their game The women’s tennis team and David have quite a bit in common. They both knocked off giants and made it look easy. The Hilltoppers finished with a 10-2 record in the fall, winning the Ohio Valley Conference Tournament. They tied with Kentucky for first place in the Kentucky Women’s Intercollegiate Conference tour- nament. Western was 3-0 in spring dual meet play and finished third of five teams at the Tennessee-Martin Invitational. The Top- pers also played in the National Collegiate Athletic Association Region II Champion- ships at Memphis State, where they were eighth of 13 teams. Coach Langley did not approve of the tournament's format because “you could have No. 6 players going against No. 1 players.” Only Shelley Fredlake, the No. 2 singles TENNIS TEAM: (Front row) S. Johnson, P. Wood, C. Summers, K. Ferry, B. Bogdan. (Back row) K. Stroz- das, B. Galloway, T. Mudwilder and S. Fredlake. A FOREHAND SHOT is made by No. 4 player Betsy Bogdan against a Murray opponent at the Western courts. Miss Bogdan had a 13-0 singles record, the team’s best. She is a freshman from Albuquerque. Pa player, made it past the first round in up- per bracket play. She lost in the third round. The No. 1 doubles team of Katy Stroz- das, Western’s No. 1 singles seed, and Miss Fredlake lost in the first round of the upper bracket but made it to the semifinals of the consolation round. Western opened the fall season at home with 9-0 routs of Purdue and Middle Ten- nessee. Miss Strozdas’ three-set victory over the Blue Raiders’ Finnish star Elina Durch was the highlight. Tennessee-Chattanooga, last year’s NCAA junior college champion, beat Western, 5%-1'% in a rain-shortened tri- meet. In the other match, Western easily topped Indiana. Freshman Betsy Bogdan, playing No. 4, managed the only singles victory, beating UT-C’s Susan Carson, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4. Western bombed Eastern, 7-2 and Louis- ville, 9-0. The Toppers and Kentucky finished in a 24-24 tie at the KWIC tournament. Miss Bogdan and Tarrie Mudwilder won the No. 4 and No. 5 singles titles. In doubles, Miss Strozdas and Miss Fredlake beat UK’s Jackie Gibson and Su- san Nolan, 2-6, 6-3, 6-3, to take the No. 1 crown. Miss Bogdan and Suzanne Johnson won the N. 3 doubles competition. Western ran away with the OVC title the next weekend, taking first everywhere ex- cept No. 1 singles and No. 2 doubles. Miss Strozdas lost to OVC Player of the Year Miss Durchman, 6-3, 6-3, in the No. 1 singles. The No. 2 doubles team of Cathy Summers and Kathy Ferry lost to Murray’s Karen Weis and Yvonne Utley. Western eased by Michigan State, 6-3, in the spring opener. Western’s No. 6 seed Pat Wood claimed a marathon win over Suzanne Asher, 6-1, 7-5, 7-5. Four Hilltoppers reached the final round at the UT-Martin Invitational, but none of them won. The Toppers ended the regular season by trouncing Memphis State and Vander- bilt. Western won both matches, 8-1. Coach Langley wasn’t surprised. “T think Western is one of the top two powers within quite a radius,” she said. Unlike many coaches, she had a record to prove it. David Whitaker @ David Frank Women’s golf: A split season, but continued improvement Two third-place finishes ended the wom- en’s golf season that was marked with con- tinued improvement throughout the year. The team set school records for a team low score in both a single day an d an entire tournament as it finished third in the Uni- versity of Cincinnati Invitational. The Toppers ended the season the next week- end with a third-place finish among 10 teams in the Marshall Invitational. Melissa Losson, Beth Taylor and Lea Ann Toftness were consistently the team’s top players. Miss Losson and Miss Taylor had 18-hole averages of slightly more than 85 during the team’s three-tournament fall schedule. Miss Toftness’s individual average of 83, nine strokes better than her fall average, paced the team during its three-invita- tional spring season. Consistency was the team’s major prob- lem during the year. The team had five freshmen, including Cindy Peshka, a sev- en-stroke handicap player who showed considerable improvement throughout the year. The team finished sixth of 18 teams in the Illinois State Invitational and 10th of 16 teams in the Purdue Invitational before the fall finale tournament at Indiana Universi- ty. The team improved by an average of five strokes apiece in the second round of the prestigious tournament and finished 10th of 20 teams. Miss Losson’s 82-83-165 score GOLF BALL IN FLIGHT, Lea Ann Toftness watches it land during a spring practice round. Her 83 average paced the team during its three-invitational spring season. Her fall average was 92. led Western. Miss Taylor, who had an opening round 78, finished at 170, five strokes better than Miss Toftness. Western’s improvement at the Indiana Invitational excited coach Dr. Shirley Laney. “T really think we have the nucleus of a good team,” she said after the fall season. “Our program is moving along fine.” The team started the spring season with a seventh-place finish in the 15-team Lady Buckeye Invitational at Ohio State Univer- sity. Miss Taylor and Miss Toftness, with scores of 170 and 175, respectively, paced Western. Miss Taylor finished 20th indi- vidually in the tournament that was won by the University of Georgia. In the University of Cincinnati Invita- tional, Western finished third behind Michigan and Kentucky. The tournament was highlighted by Miss Toftness’s 160, a school record for the low score in a two-day tournament. Miss Toftness’s rounds of 84 in the Mar- shall Invitational paced Western to a third- place finish behind Penn State and Ken- tucky. She finished seventh individually, two strokes ahead of Miss Taylor. Don White WOMEN’S GOLF RESULTS Illinois State Invitational (6th of 18) Purdue Invitational (10th of 16) Indiana Invitational (10th of 20) Lady Buckeye Invitational (7th of 15) University of Cincinnati Invitational (3rd of 12) Marshall Invitational (3rd of 12) GOLF TEAM: B. Taylor, J. Bolle, D. Allen, L.A. Toft- ness, M. Losson and coach S. Laney. 267 Women’s Tennis And Golf 268 ORGANIZATIONS AND GREEHSsn the nit Cheryl Sharp, Organizations Editor Terri Darr, Greeks Editor Bruises from charity football games, reading to children at local community centers and importing a little sunshine to the lives of Bowling Green’s elderly were paragraphs in the story about organizations and Greeks on the Hill. Both groups stretched the university through civic projects which were as common as social functions. Clubs were more than dues and meetings. One group sponsored a 30- minute weekly radio program to expose Bowling Green residents to different types of music. The 69 clubs recorded in the Talisman drew from the community’s resources as well. Businesses sent representatives to Organizations And Greeks speak to the clubs, sharing their insight into a particular career. cule stretched the Hill with their graduates who continued to stay interested in Western. Alumni were encouraged to find their way back to the Hill at Homecoming for dances, banquets and open houses. Also active in philanthropic projects, the Greeks contributed money raised from dance-a-thons, kidnappings, car washes and collecting door-to- door. Some students chose to “go Greek” _ because their friends had. Others sought a more structured social life. Others wanted to identify with a group. ine Clubs attracted students with common _ activity. In thesection: How to Survive Dorm Life Interhall Council members entertain campus residents with olympic competition, exercise programs, dance contests and minstrel shows. Youthful Sparks or Grown-up Pals Gamma Sigma Sigma sorority members share their time and energy with the elderly and youth in nursing homes and day care centers. A Company on its Toes Daily workouts are part of WKU Dance Company members’ lifestyles as they strive for perfection on stage. Greek Fall Festivities Autumn is a season of the KD Washboard Jamboree, ADPi 500, Chi Omega’s November Nonsense and Sigma Chi’s Derby Week. A Star-studded Victory ADPis win Sigma Nu Powderpuff Football Tournament after applying mascara stars to their cheeks after defeating the Alpha Xis, Phi Mus and AOPis. A Mist of Blackness Dianne Butts wins Miss Black We stern title in a 10-contestant pageant sponsored by Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority. 269 Organizations And Greeks Entertainment and activities sponsored by the 45-member Interhall Council helped direct campus residents on ... How to survive Debbie Gibson “All the comforts of home” are not always Boon: in a college dorm, but the Interhall Council (IHC) tries to make life on campus a little more like home. The IHC membership includes the president and administrative vice presi- dent of each hall, according to adviser Sharon Dyrsen. Members try to organize activities to make campus life more fun. “We're trying to make students see that there are things happening on campus,” she said. A more home-like atmosphere is what “I BECAME KNOWN from the dance contest,” Rosa- lyn Russell said about the contest sponsored by West Hall. Miss Russell and her partner Michael were one of eight couples who participated in the event. Ron Hoskins “l WENT for the fun of it,” said Barb Stoner about a cake decorating class sponsored by Potter Hall. Miss Stoner tried her hand at decorating as Missy Hagans gave advice. Twenty girls attended the class. SORE MUSCLES and aching bones are the result of a night’s exercise for Teresa Harlow of Center. “We had aroom full of people the first night,” she said. “But the last night there was just a handful.” 270 Interhall Council | : POTTER HALL residents enjoy the songs of Mark Rosenthal during an ice cream party and puppet show sponsored by the dorm’s officers. : Rosenthal is a sophomore art major from New York City. IHC vice president Ann Cage wants to pro- vide. “We are trying to be more involved with the students’ needs and gripes so we [ can make program improvements and make dorm life more home-like,” she said. The IHC uses a two-fold approach. It has one committee to plan activities and an- other to study dorm policy and proposed changes. The members sponsored a Science Fic- tion Week, Hall Olympics, Entertainment Week and Homecoming activities. “The Hall Olympics was a big success,” said president Daryl Hancock. “We had about 350 participants.” Hancock said he believes the council has become more visible to students through its recent activities. “We've had a growing year and have de- veloped into a more credible organization,” he said. Central Hall resident Donna Hatfield agreed with Hancock. “I’ve become more = aware of the council because of the activi- Ricky Becer ties it sponsored.” : : 1 Miss Hatfield said she participated in the activities, “because I get to meet people from my dorm and other dorms.” The IHC affects the campus residents’ lives in other ways. The members express a representative voice for residents on mat- ters of dorm policy and programs. “The council has been listened to in the past,” Mrs. Dyrsen said. “What they say is listened to more than unorganized groups.” Council members and their adviser agreed that it is developing into a more organized and responsible group. “The council is only five years old,” . | “imterhall Council plan a workshop for Mrs. Dyrsen said. “I think they realize that ca I i all Ohio Valley schools. IHC met they do represent a large number of stu- j _ By afernoon, dents and their influence will continue to grow.” Debbie Gibson According to second-year member Miss Cage, organization is the key to more influ- ence. “If we can reach a more organized level and if everyone in office can feel the im- portance of their position, then we can be- come more effective,” she said. Also a second-year IHC member, Han- cock said that he wants to continue to build the credibility of the organization, but that council members must not neglect their own halls. “I want Interhall Council to be a first- class organization, but members must re- member that they represent their halls.” Cheryl Sharp @ INTERHALL COUNCIL: (Front row): P. Schnoker, A. Arnold, D. Bridges, M. Galloway, M. Boze, K. Rich. _ (Second row): M. Head, B. Sadler, S. Hayden, A. Cage, M. Freer, C. Crowley, E. Duggins. (Back row): R. Per- kins, P. Watkins, M. Kingrey, D. Hancock and D. Glaspie. 271 Interhall Council 4 4 Some are called clubs. Others are known as societies, unions, associ- ations or ensembles. But no matter the label, they are ... The Forensic Union could be renamed the Globetrotters with all the mileage its mem- bers collect. Director Larry Caillouet said the 18 members competed in 17 tournaments, some as far away as Detroit, Birmingham, Georgetown, Tenn., and in the national tournament in Champagne, Ill. A trip to Morehead for the OVC Foren- sic Tournament rewarded the Western group with first-place honors. But the group also sponsors three indi- vidual tournaments at home each year. “An individual tournament includes ever- ything but debate,” Caillouet said. To keep in shape, the Union sponsors two public debates each year and partici- pates in demonstrator debates for other or- ganizations. Awards for Debater of the Year and the individual with the greatest contribution to the Union are presented at a spring ban- quet. Five forensic scholarships are also awarded, Caillouet said. The Green River Readers is a theatre group with a different twist. The members perform everything but plays. “We use works of literature in ways most people haven’t thought of,” adviser Dr. James Pearse said. Short stories, novels or poetry may be used in their presenta- tions, he said. Pearse said the literary work isn’t altered to fit a script, however, but is simply per- formed. “It’s a case of the narrator of char- acters coming to life.” The Readers participate in various festi- vals each year. These are not structured for competition, but attract noted critics who observe and offer constructive criticism, Pearse said. Western, along with Murray and UK, co-sponsored the Commonwealth Inter- FORENSIC UNION: (Front row) L. Caillouet, D. Stapleton, M. Brown, K. Littlejohn (Back row) K. Ladd, T. Barnes, D. Davis, R. Paine and K. Cooke. 272 Theatre And Debate Organizations Organized for... pretation Festival in the fall. Benjamin De- Mott, a novelist, teacher and columnist, observed this event which revolved around a theme dealing with American Literature since WW II. Western's contribution was a performance of John Gardner’s “October Light.” The Green River Readers also represent- ed Western at Central Michigan’s Invita- tional Festival in October. The group trav- eled to Boston, Terre Haute, Ind., and Springfield, Mo., for festivals in the spring. The Readers also perform at home on the Hill. Their fall show featured the science fiction work, ‘Farenheit 451,” and a spring production highlighted the Golden Age of Radio. A small theatre department which seems to be suddenly mushrooming may help boost membership in Alpha Psi Omega, according to president Peggy Miller. “We're an honorary fraternity designed to give national recognition of achieve- ment for work done in theatre,” Miss Mill- er said. In the past the group has been small, but with an enrollment which jumped from 50 to 100 majors this year, more students may get involved in the fra- ternity. Members are selected through a point system, according to the president. “Points are given for positions held during theatre productions,” she said. Quality of work is screened, and a 2.6 gpa is also required, she said. The organization annually awards two scholarships with profits from fund-rais- ers. This year the activities included a car wash and a punch concession stand during the intermission of major productions. Stumbling around a dark theatre in search of a vacant seat is not a pleasant way to Zimmerman. begin to appreciate a theatrical perfor- mance, and the Western Players try to pre- vent this dilemma by serving as ushers at each performance. “We're a supporting organization,” president Peggy Miller said. The group also handles the box office duties and works with the technical aspects of pro- “TOM SAWYER’ tickets are sorted and stacked ac- cording to rows in Russell Miller Theatre by Mary Ellen Allison, a member of Western Players. Members also served as ushers during theatrical productions. Lynn Wright GREEN RIVER READERS: (Front row) C. Harrison, Dr. J. Pearse, G. Bedinger, M. Neagley. (Back row) C. Pierce, S. Watson, J. Knight and H. Travel and performance... duction. The 75-member organization also worked with the March of Dimes’ Haunted House. “They had it set up by rooms and we worked one of the rooms,” Miss Miller said. Some members guided the unsuspect- , Fi APLHA PSI OMEGA: (Front row) P. Miller, J. Kelly, B. Buchanan (Back row) W. Hanna, M. Allison and D. Greer. WESTERN PLAYERS: (Front row) K. Guinn, B. Brady, J. Hanson, M. Kingrey, T. Wilson, A. Blakely. (Second row) B. Berry, J. Fisher, P. Miller, B. Buchan- an, J. Kelly, D. Stevens. (Third row) R. Reinle, R. Owsley, A. Gorman, R. Veech, S. Yarbrough, W. Long, D. Blasi. (Back row) S. Lea, B. Owen, S. Jones, W. Hanna, M. Allison and D. Greer. ing customers through the maze of goblins and gook, while other members were dressed in eerie costumes. Parties and a spring banquet were also on the Western Players’ schedule, Miss Miller said. Departmental awards and scholarships were presented at the ban- quet. (continued on page 274) DEBATES necessitate strategy as Forensic Union members Steve Thornton and Ken Cooke prepare for competition in the Western Forensic Invitational. Stevie Benson 273 Theatre And Debate Organizations Leadership and discipline... If students pass stringent mental and physical tests required to join Special Forces, it’s doubtful they'll consider turn- ing in their berets later. “In Special Forces we do orienteering, water training, rappelling and small unit tactics,’ said adviser Sgt. Charles McNulty. But before that comes a five-week train- ing period when candidates learn demoli- tion, use of weapons and rappelling. Phys- ical training begins at 5:15 a.m. “To quali- fy, the candidates must have a 2.0 gpa, be able to swim, pass a physical exam and be willing to work out in the field and suffer with the rest of us,” McNulty said. He said 12 of 18 candidates were gradu- ated in the fall and three of five candidates were presented berets in March. “Special Forces helps students look at themselves, how strong they are physically and mentally,” McNulty said. “They learn to adapt to changing situations.” In addition to field training, Special Forces members enjoyed an annual picnic, dance and dinner and two parties a semes- ter, he said. “We also marched in the Homecoming parade and set up the concerts which pro- vided our funds.” Churches and civic groups also called on Special Forces to teach their youth camp- ing, rappelling and survival tactics. It’s 10:30 p.m. on a weeknight and while most students are studying or watching Johnny Carson, the Rebelettes are practic- ing drills in Diddle Arena. “That’s the only time we can get the floor to practice,” member Lois Riddle said. “It’s inconvenient and we’ve lost some girls because of it, but it’s the only time we have.” She said the group uses a stylized type of SPECIAL FORCES: (Front row) D. McCormick, R. Puckett, C. Chappell, J. Indalecio, L. Berry, J Smith, C. White. (Second row) D. Williams, M. Schulte, R. Howard, H. Hamilton, D. Brewer, T. Hill, J. Howard, J. Assmann, R. Causey. (Third row) C. McNulty, D. Shumate, R. Ervin, B. Kaelin, D. Beech, M. Froebel, R. Heater. (Back row) C. Filip, S. Thomas, T. Jensen, B Eskridge, T. Nicholas, T. Black, M. Cox and C. Minton. 274 Military Organizations drill as an exhibition team. “It’s not the Army regulation type drill.” A four-day clinic is sponsored at the first of the year to recruit and train girls in drill basics, Miss Riddle said. New members are chosen during tryouts. “We marched in the Homecoming pa- rade and performed at the halftime of the Dayton basketball game,” Miss Riddle said. The Rebelettes also traveled to St. Louis, Eastern Kentucky and Bowling Green University to compete. “We also worked at the announcer’s ta- ble and the information desk during regis- tration,” Miss Riddle said. The members also ushered at football and basketball games. The group also enjoyed a Homecoming dance and a spring formal. “Being a Rebe- lette allows you to travel to a lot of places and meet lots of different people,” Miss Riddle said. “You learn to work with other people and make a lot of friends.” “Pershing Rifles stresses efficiency in a military career,” said member Vince Lopo- lito, “but it also stresses discipline in regu- lar life. You learn to cope with things with- gut going to pieces. You learn to have con- trOlse The PRs learn discipline during pledge- ship when they practice physical training drills in early morning hours and attend afternoon lesson programs where they learn skills such as rappelling. After becoming actives, they practice as much as 12 hours a week on rifle drills. “We usually compete at three drill meets in the spring,” said Brian Ruff. “We have afternoon drills and one on Wednesdays at 6 a.m.” He said the group traveled to New Or- leans, St. Louis and Bowling Green Univer- sity. They also formed the color guard which performed at basketball games and for community programs. One project, a high school invitational drill meet, consumes most of the year, ac- cording to DeWayne Johnson. “We begin working on the next one about three weeks after one is done,” John- son said. “We wrote 1,200 schools and about 24 brought four to 15 teams to com- pete from North Carolina, Florida, Rhode Island and other places.” He said the two-day event is run by the PRs and judged by 25 individuals from Ft. Knox. “Once we get started, one team goes on the floor and 30 seconds after leaving, another group gets on the floor,” Johnson said. Dozens of trophies are awarded to both female and male teams in categories ranging from platoon to color guard. Scabbard and Blade’s annual Military Ball produces a lot of pomp and circumstance, but it’s not as stuffy as it sounds, according to member Jill Baggett. “It’s not like a prom, but it has the basics of a prom,” she said. The event is one of the group’s major undertakings and in- volves most members. “We have to get a band and send invita- tions to officers and reserve officers in this region.” The standard military receiving line is featured with special guests and the department head. Miss Baggett said the organization also works to educate area citizens about the current issues and standards of the mili- tary. Membership is open to ROTC students with a 2.5 overall gpa and a 3.0 military science gpa. “Scabbard and Blade is an honor society for ROTC and members earn five points toward their permanent Army record,” she said. (continued on page 276) . REBELETTES: (Front row) J. Millen, E. Lee, M. Alexander, J. Miller, M. Proctor. (Second row) A. McLean, K. Marlow, D. Wilson, L. Woodard, R. Tooley, V. Benton. (Back row) K. Walker, J: seen Y. Thomas, T. Lawson, M. Lee, G. Seay, J. Malone and . ite. PERSHING RIFLES: (Front row) W. McKinney, D. Johnson, H. Har- vell, S. Haworth, J. Millen, K. Hood. (Second row) J. Berg, W. Kennedy, J. Eatherly, E. Sullivan, V. Lopolito, J. Foster. (Back row) P. Haynes, D. Kolb, J. Leslie and B. Ruff. MILITARY BALL QUEEN Lovis Lawrence dubs Scab- bard and Blade pledge Ed Miller during the December dance. Miss Lawrence was elected queen from a field of nine contestants nominated by military organizations. AN 11 P.M. practice was common for the Rebelettes since it was the only time the Diddle Arena floor was available. “It’s inconvenient and we've lost some girls because of it,” said member Lois Riddle. Stevie Benson SCABBARD AND BLADE: (Front row) J. Ward, G. Howard, L. Chappell, T. Nicholas, M. Ransdell, T. Jensen, R. Heater. (Second row) K. Kolb, J. Davenport, D. Johnson, E. Miller, H. Harvell, K. Day, R. Smith, J. Baggett, L. Berry, R. Tinsley. (Back row) V. Richey, F. Haynes, B. Bowers, J. Indalecio, J. Assmann and A. Hussey. 275 Military Organizations Professionalism and promotion... Although still an infant organization, the student chapter of National Press Photog- raphers Association (NPPA) is working to promote the photojournalism program and student photographers. President Jim Burton said the chapter is just getting itself on the ground financially with $25 dues. Funds are used to help with speakers’ expenses. “We still can’t afford to wine and dine them so we chip and dip them,” he said. Burton said membership gives student photographers rapport with professionals. “They pay more attention to us and we compete along with them in the regional Clip Contest. It’s a tremendous opportuni- ty for interaction and job possibilities.” Attendance at a convention in Atlanta also exposed the student group to photog- raphers from across the nation, he said. Member David Frank said “photogra- phy classes hit on the techniques and the wrong and right ways to do things,” but NPPA can stir interest in photographers. “It makes you want to go out and look for pictures in hopes of winning the Clip Con- test,” he said. “If you win, your name gets spread around. “The chapter’s not just for people who know how to take pictures,” Frank said. “It’s to show them what can be done through photography.” Frank said the group needs more critique sessions to improve the quality of their submitted photos. “We'd also like to get a seminar together on our own which would involve members from our area.” The “Viewfinder,” a regional NPPA publication, is edited by the Western chap- ter. The group also sponsored a photo dis- play in the bookstore during Homecoming week. With the chance of winning its third na- NATIONAL PRESS PHOTOGRAPHERS ASSOCIATION: (Front row) K. Chedd, L. Wright, M. Lyons, J. Burton, D. Frank. (Back row) M. Morse, B. Coffey, M. Dowell, R. Rogers and S. Benson. 276 Journalism Organizations tional award, the Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA) kept busy this year. Thirteen members and adviser Robert Blann attended the national convention in San Diego, returning with the only nation- al award presented, the 1977 Chapter De- velopment Award, presented for exception- al work in membership, motivation and promotion of the chapter on campus and in the community. “It’s professionalism that attracts mem- bers to PRSSA,” president Joan Provost said. ‘We are successful. It’s good to be associated with a progressive group.” aes ™, Members worked all year on a project for Children’s Hospital in Louisville. They hope this project will win the 1978 Com- munity Service Award. Planning seminars, arranging for guest speakers, publishing a newsletter, organiz- ing a major awards banquet, conducting student workshops, planning a national convention and arranging plans for social events give members a chance for exper- A PHOTOGRAPHY critique session captures West- ern photographer Jim Burton’s attention as he listens to Don Rutledge, a Black Star Agency photographer. They were at the National Press Photographers Asso- ciation convention in Atlanta. Lewis Gardner PUBLIC RELATIONS STUDENT SOCIETY OF AMERICA: (Front row) S. Taylor, C. Kemp, J. Provost, D. Anderson, M. Cossey, M. Murphy, F. Rowland. (Second row) L. Niemann, N. Nahikian, R. Tooley, M. Ferry, K. Cheuvront, J. Johnson, J. Philpott, D. Hagan, D. Pelino, J. Lane, R. Ericksen, S. Rosenbaum, M. Clagett. (Back row) C. Smith, J. Williams, R. Buford, M. Hebert, R. Roberts, W. Cortus, T. Witten, R. Weber and K. Freeman. ience in the public relations field. “The opportunities for experience are available to anyone who is willing to put forth the effort to learn,’ Miss Provost said. Winning awards has become second na- ture to Sigma Delta Chi members. For the second consecutive year, the or- ganization of student journalists won the outstanding chapter award for their region, according to president Debbie Gibson. Chapter members join for different rea- sons, Miss Gibson said. “Involvement with professionals, learning what employ- ers look for when hiring students and the possibility of internships attract mem- bers,” she said. Full-time jobs have developed for many students involved in SDX. ‘Past members have actually met who they are working for now through the organization,” Miss Gibson said. Members attended the national conven- tion in Detroit and the regional convention in St. Louis. Among SDX activities were a $250 Re- gents scholarship, a discussion of commu- nity journalism by publisher George Jo- plin, a panel on the issue of cameras in the courtroom, publication of a newsletter sent to all Kentucky news media and a spring banquet with national president Alf Goo- dykoontz. Western Ad Club members are getting a jump on their careers by practicing their skills on campus organizations. Adviser Carolyn Stringer said the 30- member club formed a campus agency to design logos, artwork and posters for cam- pus organizations. A small fee is charged to cover printing costs. “They've done work for Panhellenic and IFC and posters for Rush Week and a po- litical campaign,” Mrs. Stringer said. President Charles Price said all Greek organizations and other large campus groups were notified about the agency. “We've had a good response,” he said. “We can do the work cheaper f or them than off- campus agencies and we need the exper- ience. Mrs. Stringer said the club also “pro- vides students exposure to professional ad people who are actively working in the business and allows them to enter student competition.” The group attended the fifth district meeting in Louisville last September and met professionals from three states. Price said the students enjoy meeting the pros in the advertising field. “They often tell us to look them up when we graduate,” he said. (continued on page 282) MEETINGS were more than social events for PRSSA members Snow Roberts, Dawn Kemp and Mark He- bert as they discuss designing a pamphlet to promote Western. Their meetings are often used as workshops. SIGMA DELTA CHI: (Front row) T. Eblen, R. Malone, G. Jones, J. Highland. (Second row) J. Moss, T. Hurst, D. Boyer, T. Be- shear, S. Beasley. (Back row) D. Duggins, J. Bennett, W. McCon- nell and K. Whitson. WESTERN AD CLUB: (Front row) B. Rich, B. Barker, B. Blann, J. Grizzell, C. Castleberry, C. Stringer. (Second row) M. Steenbergen, J. Gross, K. Nagel, K. Woodford, C. Price, R. DeFiore, D. Knauer, R. Clark. (Back row) R. David, J. Hepner, P. Hohman, T. Yunt, J. Stucke and M. Draper. 277 Journalism Organizations staff of greenhorns Working on the Talisman staff could be compared to the shaky plot of a noonday soap opera. Things are seldom calm or ra- tional. Once a set of obstacles is overcome, another course of hurdles is erected. So it was with the 1978 Talisman staff. The 1977 Talisman, the first “scheduled” fall delivery book, had seemed to please most readers. It also pleased the judges as Columbia Scholastic Press Association awarded the yearbook its fourth consecu- tive Trendsetter in mid-October. Once again pressure was on the staff to organize and produce a journalistic year- book to tell the story of another school year, but most of the staff members were new at “yearbooking.” Early in September the four experienced staffers began orient- ing the seven rookies. Together they decid- ed to use a theme which illustrated how Western moves in sundry directions through athletic competition and academic programs. “There’s just one Hill, no matter how far it stretches” suddenly found a staff search- ing for stories which illustrated the Hill’s mobility. A commuting orchestra conduc- tor, two Taiwan students who met and married at Western and a nun who earned a master’s degree during summer terms were just samples of the theme-related sto- ries covered by the photographers and re- porters. Deadline schedules were slightly altered from previous ones, but the staff adjusted to them in hopes of securing more polished YAWNS were natural reactions when staff members began the monotonous proofreading of a 464-page yearbook. Cheryl Sharp was editor of the organiza- tions section, which contained 69 stories. proofs and less revising of pages before printing began in early summer. | A “new staff” gradually meshed with the elder staff and worked long hours and through parts of vacations to put their package together. There were lots of ques- _ tions and dozens of mini-teaching ses- sions, but the new staff members proved valuable as they brought a refreshing look at the campus into the office and helped the “old timers” create a Talisman which would not be a carbon copy of past books. Connie Holman Jim Burton Jim Burton A CAKE decorated by chief photographer Debbie Gibson was a surprise for editor Connie Holman. The ’78 staff celebrated after learning the ‘77 Talisman had won its fourth consecutive Trendsetter award in October. ALL CLUB PHOTOS were shot in the campus TV studio to provide uniformity. Adviser Roger _ 2 Loewen assembles Phi Eta Sigma, one of the 65 clubs photographed by nine staff members. — 278 | Talisman Staff and old-timers David Frank Neslebng bee cae te Is locke, bee hing ties Jeane Haas Yo yet Neat f vaytinieg ona Z Be eoeet wart, } A the wor trnathte exancet David Frank Debbie Gibson “APTIONS FOR THE candid photographs in the Greek section required teamwork. Manag- ng editor Chuck Stinnett and Greeks editor Terri Darr wrote dozens for the March 7 deadline. SPORTS EDITOR Don White scribbles notes after questioning basket- ball coach Jim Richards after a home game in February. White also f served as assistant sports editor on the College Heights Herald. % 279 Talisman Staff | | | | | 280 Herald Staff Herald staffers learned that time often moves too swiftly as they worked on deadlines in A race against the clock On Monday and Wednesday mornings, the Herald newsroom comes to life. The advertising staff finished their work the night before and the half-empty pages sit on the light tables waiting to be filled. The morning wears on and reporters EDITOR Linda Sanders and assistant managing editor Tom Eblen discuss Letters to the Editor policy at a Sunday night staff meeting. The bi-weekly meetings were often used to inform new staff members about editorial policies. who spent their days off chasing leads and taking notes begin occupying the news- room desks. Students who came in to fin- ish stories before morning classes are re- placed by those finished with classes and by 11:30, the scattered tapping has grown to a full chorus of 10 typewriters churning out the contents of tomorrow’s Herald. As the 1 p.m. deadline draws nearer, the office become a frantic scramble of people and paper. Stories are finished and fun- neled to the copy desk where editors, parti tioned away in a cubbyhole, review eacl word before passing it on to the typesetter As sheets of paper pass through th typewriters, yards of freshly processe film come out of the photo lab before a fev chosen frames are printed and turned ove} to the photo editor. The pieces begin fitting together about . p.m. when editors meet to review today’ material and decide how it will be used Stories and pictures are scrutinized and ar- gued over until the group comes to an agreement. Pages are then designed and pasted up. The physical process of putting the Her- ald together takes all evening, often run- ning right up to the midnight deadline. After pasting up copy, staff members write headlines and picture captions while edi- tors answer a seemingly endless string of questions. The office clock seems to race between 11 p.m. and midnight as it does the rest of the day. Problems still unanswered are quickly taken care of by last-minute neces- sity as everything that will be tomorrow’s Debbie Gibson Herald must now be in order. As pages are finished and packed for the trip to the printer in Franklin, staff mem- bers don their coats and head home in the early-morning darkness to study, sleep and begin work on the next Herald in a few hours. The care that goes into producing each Herald issue is reflected in more than 70 framed certificates that line one wall of the newsroom. During the fall semester the Herald re- ceived its 11th consecutive All-American rating, the highest given by the Associated Collegiate Press. The citation included marks of distinc- SUNDAYS AND MONDAYS were the regular times Jenny Searcy set type for the Herald. Shelley Barrett and Janice Danhauer also set type for the advertising and news copy in addition to special issues. Harold Sinclair A SPRING FASHION ISSUE in the Feb. 23 Herald left photo editor Mark Lyons exhausted in an empty news- room. The 14-page section included six fashion photos and 19 photos used in ads. tion in all five categories: content and cov- erage, writing and editing, editorial leader- ship, appearance and photography. Individual effort was also recognized. Three staff members were among 40 in the nation chosen to serve Newspaper Fund editing internships. Last summer staff members served in- ternships at: the Tampa (Fla.) Times, the Austin (Texas) American-Statesman, the Courier-Journal, the Louisville Times, As- sociated Press in Louisville and Nashville, and several small daily and weekly news- papers in Kentucky and Tennessee. Tom Eblen SPORTS EDITOR Bryan Armstrong talked with bas- ketball player Mike Prince after Western's overtime victory over Austin Peay in the OVC Tournament. They discussed a crucial basket in the win. Debbie Gibson AD MANAGER Tim Rutherford discusses billing with first-semester salesman Roger Miller. They talked after a staff meeting in which Rutherford ad- vised salesmen about problems with advertisers. | begs mB = 281 Herald Staff Honors Honor societies are visible proof of an in- dividual’s productivity and achievements, according to Dr. John Sagabiel, Omicron Delta Kappa adviser. “More than half our members are pre- med students,” he said. “Every one of our members who applied for admission to law or medical school has been accepted.” A 3.2 gpa is required for membership, he said, but grades are only part of the story. A student must also excel in athletics, stu- dent government, student publications or achieve high standing in another area of campus life. Activities included donating money to and working at the local Boys’ Club. An initiation in the spring involved about 15 new members, Sagabiel said. Membership in Phi Eta Sigma is a life- time thing,” vice president Debbie Ralston said about the honor society of students with a 3.5 gpa after 30 hours of college. Phi Eta Sigma is a sister organization of Omicron Delta Kappa, Miss Ralston said. “It serves as a recognition of achievement while promoting productivity within each student's area.” The “Ugly Person on Campus” is an an- nual activity of the society. Chosen from 12 outstanding faculty members, nominated by the student members, was Dr. Norman Holy of the chemistry department. Other activities included an initiation at Homecoming with more than 100 new members attending. Mark Russell of WTVF in Nashville and Holy were the guest speakers. Phi Eta Sigma also sponsored general topic lectures. A lecture on tornadoes was given by Dr. Willard Cockrill last fall. OMICRON DELTA KAPPA: (Front row) M. Fritch, D. Danhauer and J. Sagabiel. PHI ETA SIGMA: (Front row) D. Bates, B. Kaeline, D. Pillow, M. Bizer, H. Bays, T. Sears, S. Peterie, D. Clark. (Second row) J. Sagabiel, J. Miller, W. Ecker, D. Ral- ston, J. Gover, D. Danhauer, J. Foster, (Third row) K. Baker, J. Bucklin, D. Holmes, B. Smith, J. Collins, M. Cramer, K. Goldberg, S. O’Daniel, N. Durbin, M. Za- boronak, A. Haley, C. Morgan, B. Cloyd, D. Christian, G. VanBussum. (Back row) P. Mercer, P. Blankenship, R. Kirk, L. Crowner, D. Phelps, J. Bennett, L. McLin- ton, L. Shaver, R. Taylor and S. Crook. 282 Honors Organizations and recognition... The Student Honors Organization is a “social institution for people who like to talk,” president Doug Davis said. He said one of its main purposes is to encourage interaction between students and faculty as well as other students. “We attempt to contribute to the intellectual community of the college,” Davis said. The organization consists of students with a 3.2 or higher gpa, but meetings were open to anyone. Members sponsored discussions after viewing films presented in the Internation- al Film Series last fall. Dr. and Mrs. Tom Coohill spoke to members about the interaction between arts and science. Dr. Jimmie Price lectured about society's attitudes toward death for members. Other activities included a Halloween party and disco early last fall. Sponsored by the University Honors Committee, the disco was designed to give the Student Honors Organization members an oppor- tunity to explain the honors program and their organization. They also traveled to Alabama for the Regional Honors Conference in the spring. ne of Pi Omega Pi’s main objectives is fellowship with business educators, both present and future. “It’s an opportunity for an exchange of ideas,” said Carol Hartman about the busi- ness honor society. Members must main- tain a 2.8 gpa. The society's national project was a booklet concerning shorthand motivation. The finished product was sent to other chapters. Other activities included a picnic at Cov- ington Park and a Free Enterprise Banquet on campus. The annual spring banquet was a formal affair, according to member Marilyn Chap- man. It featured the initiation of new mem- bers and officers. Sigma Tau Delta members have the “op- portunity to form communication with those interested in major works of litera- ture,” according to adviser Dr. James Flynn. Students must maintain a 3.0 overall gpa and a 3.3 English gpa to join the English honor society. Nine hours beyond the 183 level is also required. Activities provided forums for English department faculty members to present re- search or information about their special interests. Professor John Spurlock presented the manuscript of his book about author and poet Jesse Stuart. Dr. James Heldman, head of the English department, presented a program on modern novelist John Fowles. A banquet and initiation in December was at the home of Dr. Robert Mounce. Dean of Potter College of Arts and Hu- manities, Mounce spoke about the value of humanities. Spring events included the national con- vention at Indiana State. Sigma Tau Delta also supported creative and critical writing by its members. They were encouraged to submit works to the national magazine, “Rectangle.” (continued on page 284) WTVFE BROADCASTER Mark Russell addresses new members of Phi Eta Sigma at an induction ceremony before the Homecoming game. Russell, a Western gra- duate, is also a member of Phi Eta Sigma. Lynn Wright STUDENT HONORS ORGANIZATION: (Front row) J. PI OMEGA PI: (Front row) Dr. K. Utley, A. Manning, SIGMA TAU DELTA: (Front row) D. Walker, 2 Holland, D. Davis, R. Malone, J. Gover, J. Howerton. P. Vincent, J. Harrington. (Back row) D. Dillingham, Zimmerman, J. Rausch, J. Jones. (Back pew) ; (Back row) L. Potts, S. Arterburn, E. Webb, N. Durbin, W. M. Chapman, K. Perry, V. Shockley and C. Hartman. Glaysbrook, P. Napier, Dr. J. Flynn and J. Lafoon. Ecker and K. VanMeter. 283 Honors Organizations Study and insight... “We're kind of new and don’t know how to get into things yet,” said Toni Alpe of the Latter Day Saint Student Association. This, she explained, is why the group’s campus activities were limited to making a Homecoming float and nominating Holly Rochelle for Homecoming queen. But off-campus activities were another story, according to Lisa Potts. Miss Potts said the association met weekly to discuss business and to hear a lesson from the Bible and the Book of Mor- mon. Although one must be a Mormon to be- long to the association, the Wednesday night meetings were open to anyone. The association doesn’t preach to the non- members, she added. “We don’t want to bombard people.” In other activities, the association held “family home evenings” which involved activities, discussions and teaching by LDSSA members. We do a lot of different things in LATTER DAY SAINTS STUDENT ASSOCIATION: (Front row) L. Potts, K. Gill, L. Smith. (Back row) J. Whittinghill, G. Matteson, S. Childers, T. Alpe and K. McKinney. SNEA,” said president Phyllis Cook, “but above all we gain valuable insight into our careers in education.” Members of the Student National Edu- cation Association held programs on job placement, student teaching and classroom activities. Miss Cook said SNEA also hosted a statewide Fall Leadership Conference, pro- vided a coat check service at basketball games and decorated Potter Children’s Home and School at Christmas. Eight education majors received scholar- ships in the spring from a fund set up by the Western chapter. In Gamma Beta Phi the emphasis is on honor and service,” said president Jim Weimer. Weimer said members are invited to join from the top 10 per cent of students en- rolled at Western. The membership totals about 135, following revitalization of the honor society in spring, 1976. Activities included participating in a “Toys for Tots” drive with the Salvation Army and sponsoring a Homecoming float and a queen candidate. usic and personal testimonies came from around the world to the Marantha Center with visiting speakers and enter- tainers. Jamie Owen Collins, Don Francisco, Paul Clark, Debbie and Ernine Rettino and Shiloh were some of the musicians spon- sored by the religious student organiza- tion. Speakers on the center’s calendar includ- FREE COAT CHECK services were offered by Student National Education Association members at home basketball games. Gary Cottrell and Denise Walker said their job wasn’t very exciting, however. Debbie Gibson STUDENT NATIONAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION: (Front row) P. Cook, J. Dowell, M. Kennedy, R. Felty, S. Fuson, J. Ralph. (Second row) D. Walker, S. Lingvai, S. Bachert, C. Potter, B. Morris. (Back row) T. Jewell, K. Gill, V. Pile, N. Byrd and R. Jones. GAMMA BETA PHI: (Front row) J. Clark, C. Patey, M. Cossey, V. Mitchell, C. Benson, J. Weimer, C. Farrington. (Second row) R. Vincent, T. Gamble, S. Simpson, R. Akers, C. Wright, A. Gobble, V. Dukes, C. Ashby, J. Hershey. (Back row) K. Knapp, S. Rogers, N. Donoho, J. Powell, J. Tichenor, K. Dunaway and K. Russell. 284 Honors And Religious Organizations ed: Joe Smith, a chemist; Tony Fitzgerald from Great Britain; Bob Noltie, a former reporter for the Chicago Tribune; Enoch Nelson from Canada; and Don Northrip, a missionary to South Africa. Member Jim Lewis said the speakers’ main subject was “the overcoming life of a believer.” Lewis said members usually visit the Maranatha Leadership Training School in Murfreesboro, Tenn., once a month. Pushing a wheelbarrow from Bowling MARANATHA CENTER: (Front row) M. Smith, G. Taylor, D. Johnson, J. Chick, W. Adams, R. Mason. (Second row) D. Abney, K. Giles, E. Thompson, P. Moretz, B. Hough, R. Smith, L. Ellis. (Third row) D. Thornton, P. Thornton, C. Taylor, E. Bryant, M. Ferguson, M. Holder, J. Abney, L. Bartley, C. Goodrum, R. Davis, J. Anderson, M. Rowlett, S. Carder, T. Thornton, Al Riley. (Fourth Green to Clarksville, Tenn., is more than a day’s work as Alpha Phi Omega members discovered. Hal Ballard, corresponding and alumni secretary, said the wheelbarrow push was one of the service fraternity’s most success- ful projects. “We did this to collect money for St. Jude Children’s Hospital,” Ballard said. “When we got to Clarksville, the Austin Peay chapter pushed it on to Memphis.” row) D. Vance, A. Okpala, C. Stinnett, R. Edwards, G. Futch. (Back row) R. Mason, J. Muffett, E. Webb, J. Upton, J. Lewis and S. Lewis. Members also co-sponsored bloodmo- bile visits and trips to area nursing homes with Gamma Sigma Sigma service sorority, in addition to directing activities at Wild- cat Hollow Scout Camp in Russellville. (continued on page 288) SIGNING HER Gamma Beta Phi membership card is Lisa Page at a fall induction dinner at Lone Oak Res- taurant. Forty-two new members, who must be in the top 10 per cent, were inducted. Eric Hassler ALPHA PHI OMEGA: (Front row) J. Fairleigh, M. Young, D. Mayes, H. Ballard, D. Lawrence. (Second row) D. Brooks, R. Leach, J. Johnson, R. Delph, R. Ervin, L. Leach. (Back row) C. Stockton, D. Harlow, M. Onyenekwu, A. Bombay, T. Appling and D. Elder. 285 Honors And Religious Organizations Gamma Sigma Sigma service sorority members gave more than 600 hours a semester to others less fortunate than themselves. Depending on the setting, they were Youthful spark or grown-up pals Photos by Debbie Gibson 286 Gamma Sigma Sigma A LITTLE LOVE goes a long way as Phylis Cottrell gives two residents of Medco Center a hug at a western style cookout. Rain forced the group indoors, but didn’t dampen any spirits. | a By reaching out to a community whose children need adult attention and whose elderly need a spark of youth, members of Gamma Sigma Sigma service sorority carry a little sunshine in to the sometimes cloudy lives of both groups. “We try to bring happiness to them,” said service chairman Nancy Sanders, “but it’s on an individual basis not with so much of a big impact.” Miss Sanders said approximately 30 ac- tive members meet weekly to plan their service projects for the next seven days. Their projects included visiting one of four local nursing homes weekly, working with children at the Girls’ Club and the Bowling Green Day Care Center, helping with the bloodmobile and escorting indivi- duals from Exceptional Industries to a Hilltopper basketball game. Financial backing came from mailing College Heights Heralds to alumni and business subscribers, ushering and taking tickets at concerts. Members also ushered at lectures and sponsored bake sales and ) Spade hy bs eas , eee $534 ile HT, hy k NS P eee A ‘ j , ‘ iy ib dt a x 2 raed apap ay ’ Lara NAG x FABLE Me AY Wii yaik AUS Aah ‘ SWAN SAA NY ah thas 1 tala AAV AY : wed Wik VWAl SM ivoaal VAM yo ad a pee ea HART Ea ie sO IN A WEEKLY ACTIVITY, Linda Bell reads to chil- dren at the Bowling Green Day Care Center. “We try to present words to the kids,” said service chairman Nancy Sanders. Activities included crafts and films. paperback book sales. “We require that actives have 20 hours of service a semester and that pledges have 30,” Miss Sanders said. “Some girls may work 60 or 70 hours, but the average is 30. “Our common goal is service to the com- munity, the school and the nation,” Miss Sanders said. “We enjoy doing service for others and making others happy who are not as well off as we are. “It makes you a better citizen,” she said. “Besides, college is more than learning books and going to classes. You need to get involved in things and with people at col- lege. If you're service-oriented and you like to work with people the sorority would be good to get into.” Pledge Debbie Wilson said pledging took much time, but it hasn't hurt her studies. “I’m interested in counseling and work- ing with people and the sorority has helped me decide about a major,” she said. “The kids really enjoyed playing with us and said ‘thank you, thank you,” Miss Wilson said. “We got a lot of positive feed- back and self-satisfaction. We're doing something for someone, not just having a good time.” Member Karen Owen said she likes to visit nursing homes. “The people are so lonely and when we show movies such as ‘W.C. Fields as the Dentist’ it’s a lot of fun. “The sorority has helped me overcome my shyness,” she said. ‘Working with all groups of people helps you grow up. “Every girl is so different but the one thing we have in common glues us togeth- er,” she said. “It’s good to walk somewhere on campus and see a sorority sister and know you've worked with her.” COMBINING WORK and pleasure, members of Gamma Sigma Sigma and Alpha Phi Omega mail Her- alds to subscribers once a week. One member said, “It’s a nice, easy hour. We get a chance to talk.” Sorority president Kathy Ashby said the group’s purpose is to do things to help other people. “We're service oriented all year round and we always have different activities. “We vote on our projects as a sorority and we’re always looking for suggestions,” she said. “We'll always be there for people if they need us. “Experiences with both older people and smaller kids have helped me experience life so much,” Miss Ashby said. “You see how other people live and what can happen to them. You never know, something similar may happen to you someday.” Connie Holman @ THE FINER POINTS of basketball are explained to Jessica Driver by Kathy Ashby. Gamma Sigma Sigma members treated children from the Girls’ Club to a Hilltopper home basketball game. GAMMA SIGMA SIGMA: (Front row) V. Dukes, S. Murray, D. Hancock, C. Strain, C. Owens, W. Poi- tinger, P. King, K. Ashby, W. White. (Second row) M. George, C. Fuller, L. Grish, M. Boemker, R. Sarl es, N. Chapman, D. Turrentine. (Third row) T. Appling, R. Vincent, F. Vick, D. Littlejohn, L. Elms, K. Sullivan, S. Smith, E. Ruby, B. Hurd, K. Littlejohn, N. Sanders, C. Keown. (Back row) E. Shoemaker, K. Owen, C. Lovell, J. Rogers, M. Kingrey, T. Glover, K. Stokes, C. Martin, B. Manning and D. Mayes. 287 Gamma Sigma Sigma Learning and service... Keeping the attention of more than 3,000 high school students is a big job, but that’s what the Collegiate Distributive Education Club of America (DECA) did. DECA sponsored a workshop for area high school DECA clubs. According to member Howard Moudy, the students took part in conferences ranging from how to run for national office to different facets of DECA. Working with high school students is important to the club members, Moudy said. “We are trying to help develop future leaders.” COLLEGIATE DECA: (Front row) W. Moudy, S. Payne, F. Krebs, M. Gilbert, R. Jarboe, B. Ramsey, S. Webb, K. Littlejohn, J. Day. (Second row) T. Tapp, B. Bartsch, P. Morgan, E. Vance, L. Thomas, K. Nunn, D. Robbins, D. Helm, D. Sutherland, J. Foster, T. Sinclair, q as The organization also sponsored two re- gional high school competitions. Moudy, who represents the high school clubs in the north Atlantic region as vice president, said Collegiate DECA’s main goal is to educate high school students in marketing and distribution. “By getting involved you gain leadership ability, gain exposure to the business com- munity and meet people and compare notes and learn from them.” Although the Student Data Processing Or- ganization changed its name to the Student Data Processing Management Association, A. Hill, R. Dukes, S. Greer, S. Garrett, K. Tipton. (Back row) M. Scott, R. Harrell, D. Whitlock, S. Stuart, C. Hullett, D. Dresel, T. Zimmerman, S. Knight, A. Glore and R. Reeves. president Gerard Ballard said that it is es- sentially the same organization. “We have joined the Data Processing Management Association (DPMA) which is an international organization,” he said, “but we are the same group.” The chapter’s goal is to see and learn about computer installations by touring installations in the area. “We have visited several area firms this year,” Ballard said. “We have received full cooperation from the businessmen in the community for our installation tours.” The chapter is also involved with the South Central Kentucky chapter and meets throughout the year to exchange ideas and information. The students hosted a dinner in February for the professional chapter. espite popular belief, accountants are not dry people who only add and subtract digits and try to keep people on a budget, according to Accounting Club president Terrie Curtis. Getting to know each other is one of the club’s main goals, Miss Curtis said. “When we get to know each other, that dispels any myth that accountants are dry people. They can be a lot of fun.” Miss Curtis said the 80-member club is open to anyone with an area of concentra- tion in accounting. An associate member- ship is open to those students minoring in accounting. At a spring banquet the club members presented an Outstanding Senior Award and gave a scholarship to one of next year’s seniors. Money for the first-year scholar- ship came from membership fees and dues, Miss Curtis said. ervice is the foundation of everything members of Delta Sigma Pi do. Require- ments for joining the business fraternity STUDENT DATA PROCESSING: (Front row) K. Landrum, C. Jones, B. Madron, S. Tapp, K. Perry. (Second row) C. Desmarais, D. Garner, M. Loftis, K. Vance, P. Thompson, N. Hazelwood, E. Shull, J. Cottongim. (Back row) C. Civils, S. Lyle, G. Ballard, A. Nims and S. Anderson. 288 Business Organizations ACCOUNTING CLUB: (Front row) M. Terry, C. Cullen, W. Miller, M. Wurtz, D. Marlin J. Shelton, T. Geralds. (Second row) M. Jackson, T. Curtis, S. House, A. Cage, G. Wil- lingham, D. Butts, P. Fort, B. Kern, S. Arterburn. (Third row) R. Nichols, S. Thomas, G. Smith, B. Carney, K. Baggett, R. Curtis, R. Hamilton, S. Rice. (Back row) D. Greenlee, C. Dixon, T. Barron, V. Jackson, R. Browning, G. Reed, W. Pierce and S. Johnson. , include a willingness to work and an eager- ness to provide service. Initiation involves completing a service project for the community or the fraterni- ty, according to Dr. John Herrick. Lt. Gov. Thelma Stovall was a guest speaker last fall at a coffee house spon- sored by the organization in Grise Hall. The fraternity also recognized Dr. Wil- liam Jenkins, former dean of the College of _ Business and Public Affairs. Members were visited by other speakers at least four times a semester and took four field trips each term. The presentation of a scholarship key was made to the accounting, business ad- ministration or economics major with the highest gpa. The group also had a spring formal. To Marketing Club members, experience is worth a thousand words in a textbook. | Member Carol Keys said the experience _ gained by viewing the marketing field first hand is better than any textbook. “You learn more when you get to see everyday situations,” she said. The Marketing Club sponsors a Career Day in order for members to spend a day with a marketing firm and see how it oper- ates. An emphasis on career planning is im- portant to the club. Junior Karen Korfhage said the club is planning a Career Planning Day next year for seven area university marketing clubs. : In cooperation with other business clubs, the Marketing Club helped with the university-sponsored Free Enterprise Fair. “We helped usher and promote the fair,” Miss Korfhage said. There are no requirements for member- _ ship in the club, Miss Korfhage said. “You _ just have to be interested in marketing.” (continued on page 290) EATING HOT PIZZA is tricky business for DECA member Ricky Dukes. The group had a pizza party at the Hub Pizzeria for one of their monthly social activi- ties. Others were a picnic and Christmas banquet. Scott Robinson MARKETING CLUB: (Front row) C. Keys, S. Weber, S. Presson, K. Korfhage. (Back row) H. Haffner, M. Howard, G. Collins and L. Almond. DELTA SIGMA PI: (Front row) B. Reid, S. Presson, Dr. J. Herrick, M. Fultz, R. Smith, M. Hill. (Second row) B. Kiessling, M. Brooks, L. Clasby, S. King, L. Smart. (Back row) J. Massey, J. Wells, D. Wathen and J. Haynes. 289 Business Organizations Scholarship and Work... The honor of membership and the recog- nition of scholarship attracts government students to membership in Pi Sigma Al- pha, the national honorary government so- ciety, according to adviser Dr. John Parker. The group is not an active organization, according to Parker. “The students have chosen not to make it an active organiza- tion,” he said. The membership of Pi Sigma Alpha is constantly changing, Parker said. “So many of our members are seniors before they are inducted, they graduate right after joining.” New members are inducted annually at a spring banquet. They must have completed 12 hours in government and have a 3.0 overall gpa and a 3.0 government gpa. “To go beyond the classroom” is the ob- jective of the Graduate Library Science Student Association, according to presi- dent Rose Davis, who said library science majors are encouraged “to get more exper- ience in the field with the actual library.” To do this, members took field trips to the public library, “although we mostly worked at Western in the library,” she said. They also attended meetings of the Ken- tucky Library Association and the South- eastern Library Association. The trips “are one way to get exposed to what’s in the field,” in terms of employ- ment, Miss Davis said. Activities included a panel discussion with local elementary, junior high and sen- ior high school librarians in the fall and a guest speaker from UK’s library science department. Another guest speaker and a film festival highlighted the association's observance of National Library Week in April. PI SIGMA ALPHA: (Front row) J. Parker, G. Baldwin. (Back row) M. Anderson and D. Sta- pleton. Davis, E. Scheidt. (Back row) S. Upton, R. “We also try to have a social function each semester,’ Miss Davis said. The association sponsored a reception for undergraduate library science students in the fall and a Christmas tea for the facul- ty. They planned a picnic with the faculty at the end of the spring semester. Starting all over again takes time, patience and a lot of work, as members of the Soci- ology Club have learned. A once existent Sociology Club “went defunct,” said president Mike Fritch. “Now we're trying to spread an awareness of sociology.” The club is open to anyone interested in sociology, although most members are ma- jors or minors. There are no dues and “we try to be as liberal as possible in the rules,” Fritch said. The club sponsored several guest speak- ers, helped the Kentucky Council on Crime Deliquency conduct the District Court Workshop in January and sponsored a Symposium on Sociobiology, which looked at sociology from a genetic view- point. Spring events included sponsoring a speaker as part of the Black Heritage Week in March. In April, Dr. Faud Baali spoke to the group about Iben Khaldun, who he be- lieves is the father of sociology. Fritch also represented the group at the Southern Sociology Association conven- tion in New Orleans. At a final banquet the group gave the Sociology Student of the Year Award. “We take all kinds of people,” said Susie Reagan about Phi Beta Lambda, a profes- sional business organization. “It was formed to promote professional business students, but attracts a wide vari- ety of people,” she said. ‘You just have to tine. Smith and M. Henderson. 290 Business Organizations be interested in business. Here, your major doesn’t matter, but in some schools it does.” Campus activity was “mainly the Free Enterprise Fair,” Miss Reagan said. The club was also “in the second year of a three-year project to educate members about free enterprise.” They also heard guest speakers, includ- ing the national president of the Future Business Leaders of America, and planned a spring banquet. But the primary activities involved var- ious annual conventions, Miss Reagan said. The State Leadership Training Confer- ence in the fall concentrated on “getting you ready for the school year so you'll know what you're doing.” At another state convention in the spring, Miss Reagan said there were events for almost everything. They included areas such as community service projects, ac- counting, speaking and vocabulary. Mr. and Ms. Future Business Teacher and Mr. and Ms. Future Business Executive were also chosen. Conventions also included the Southern Region Leadership Conference at Hot Springs, Ark., in November, and the Na- tional Conference in San Francisco which is “a larger version of the state conference. We have chapters in about 48 states,” Miss Reagan said. The chapter won six national and 13 state awards. Miss Reagan served as state secretary. President Briggs Stahl was state vice president and adviser Dr. Charles M. Ray was state adviser. Alpha Kappa Delta, Western’s sociology honor society, “works in conjunction with the Sociology Club,” president Mike Fritch GRADUATE LIBRARY SCIENCE STUDENT SOCIOLOGY CLUB: (Front row) W. Burden, K. Kalab, M. Fritch, L. ASSOCIATION: (Front row) C. Fleming, R. Aaron. (Back row) G. Currie, R. Miller, K. Fairchild and D. Turren- said. Neither club was active until last spring, said Fritch, who is president of both groups. “We're getting back on our feet now,” he said. ‘We're not a big group. Really, we’re just getting started.” Members of the group, which according to Fritch, “honors the top sociology stu- dents” must have a 3.0 gpa and 18 hours in sociology. Those eligible must then be vot- ed in by current members, who include both faculty and students. Fritch said AKD further recognizes good students. “It says you go beyond just being in the Sociology Club.” In planning the two groups’ “co-pro- jects,” Fritch said, “we mainly stick to seminars through the semester.” The semi- nars included the presentation of papers by members of Western’s sociology depart- ment faculty and a speech by a University of Kentucky sociology professor. The groups also planned a “co-party” or “co-banquet” with a guest speaker and an initiation ceremony for new members in the spring. The banquet also included the presentation of the first Sociology Student of the Year Award. In a co-project that spanned both semes- ters, members collected used postage stamps for the Salvation Army, which in turn planned to redeem them for money to buy food in India, Fritch said. (continued on page 292) GLANCING OVER Mayor Bernie Steen’s shoulders, Phi Beta Lambda members Darrel Doty, Joni Tapscott and Kenny Cooke watch as he signs a proclamation for Phi Beta Lambda Week in Bowling Green. Mark Lyons ALPHA KAPPA DELTA: (Front row) K. Fairchild, M. Fritch, C. Taylor. (Back row) Z. Ahmand, J. Krenzin and K. Kalab. PHI BETA LAMBDA: (Front row) T. Turner, J. Shel- ton, K. Pepper, A. Marcum, J. Boteler, K. Korthage, S. Reagan. (Second row) J. Marcum, K. Cooke, H. Haffner, J. Tapscott, T. Edmonds, V. Shockley, P. Madison, E. Simon, D. Simon, J. Cottongim, S. For- shee, S. Decker, C. Ray. (Back row) B. Price, D. Doty, P. Burn, J. Howerton, B. Stahl, D. Parsons, R. Brown- ing and R. Williams. 291 Business Organizations Music and publicity... An opportunity to meet professionals in music education gives Student Music Edu- cation Conference members an advantage in pursuing their careers, president Kent Sanders said. “We participate in state and national conventions and meet with the profession- als,” Sanders said. “We are able to get an outlook on our career before we get into it. We can see what's involved.” This has been a year to rebuild the club, Sanders said. “This is the first year we have been active as a club in 10 years.” The 24-member club has sponsored sev- eral guest lectures at meetings so members could learn about the different aspects of music in public schools. “Our lecturers have presented subjects that we don’t get in our regular curriculum such as how to start a beginning band,” Sanders said. Delta Omicron members support Title IX as they work to recognize women as professionals in the music field. “We try to help women musicians into more professional levels,’ said Kathy Best, president of the women’s music fraternity. The women also strive to promote West- ern’s music department. The group sup- plies refreshments and campus tours for visitors involved in high school seminars on the Hill. Delta Omicron members also usher at musical functions and perform in two open concerts each year. “The concerts give us an opportunity to perform for other stu- dents and ourselves,” Miss Best said. Major activities included Christmas car- oling and a puppet show at a local day care center. Effort is also made among the 19 mem- bers to get to know one another and learn about the music department. “The girls like to get involved and have fellowship,” Miss Best said. Two chapter members attended the Tri Annual National Convention at Carson Newman Univers ity in Jefferson City, Tenn. “The convention revised and made new rules for the national organization,” Miss Best said. The development of an alumni chapter has also been a major project for the group, according to Miss Best. “An alumni chap- ter would give us good backing and sup- port the chapter.” STUDENT MUSIC EDUCATION NATIONAL CONFERENCE: (Front row) D. Pursley, C. Howard, D. Martin, P. Wells, L. Hendrix. (Back row) J. Godfrey, J. Vincent, T. Stites, D. Goodrum, S. Sansom and W. Sanders. 292 Music Organizations Every Sunday afternoon Bowling Green citizens have a chance to broaden their musical knowledge, courtesy of Phi Mu Alpha, the professional music fraternity. “We sponsor a half-hour show on WKCT every Sunday,” secretary John Scott said. ‘We want to reach out to the community and show them different types “WHY DO I LOVE?” sings Delta Omicron (DO) Kathy Adams at the DO spring concert. Miss Adams, a senior voice major from Hendersonville, Tenn., is accompanied by Kathy Best. DELTA OMICRON: (Front row) K. Abbott, K. Adams, K. Best, Q. Payton, D. Pritchard, K. Pratt. (Second row) P. Pratt, M. Dixon, S. Dyer, T. Napier, P. Wells, D. Martin, R. Leach. (Back row) W. Benson, B. Collett, B. Gregory, D. Ruggles, E. Tate and S. Harlow. PHI MU ALPHA: (Front row) J. Godfrey, M. Daniel, K. Satterfield, B. Howard, J. Scott, H. Hamilton. (Second row) B. Duvall, H. Bradley, D. Peters, L. Bush, M. McChesney, G. Lyons. (Back row) T. Collins, J. McDonald, S. Hollis, R. Littlejohn, G. Smith and D. Marsh. Stevie Benson of music. The program provides a much broader exposure to the public.” In addition to the radio show, Phi Mu Alpha performs at a spring concert, ushers at Fine Arts Festival events and provides a $50 scholarship to the Performer of the Semester. Outstanding performers selected by the music department faculty give recitals at the end of each semester. Scott said the fraternity then selects the Performer of the Semester. Singing Valentine greetings was also among the group’s activities. Scott said quartets sang the Valentine messages. Phi Mu Alpha members are able to meet professionals across the state, he said. “We are able to gain recognition from music professionals because of the fraternity.” Phi Mu Alpha is an organization of professionals whose goal is to encourage the highest standards of creativity, perfor- mance, education and research in music. Playing the tuba consists of more than marching around the football field playing “uhm-pahs,” according to Alan Clark, Tuba Ensemble adviser. “There has been a lot of music written for other instruments that is now being transposed for the tuba,” Clark said. “The music is increasing and we are trying to expose the public to the tuba.” According to Clark, the ensemble per- forms one concert each semester and tours area high schools each spring. “Exposure to the group is a good educa- tional experience for high school students interested in music,” Clark said. Tuba majors are required to join the en- semble, but several members are non-ma- jors. “Anyone who wants to sit in and play and who can handle the parts can be a member,” Clark said. (continued on page 296) CONCENTRATING on his music during Tuba En- semble practice is Tim Tatum of Henderson, Tenn. The group rehearsed twice a week for their March 7 concert. They also toured area high schools. TUBA: (Front row) K. Vinson, A. Clark, T. Tatum, K. Sanders. (Back row) J. Vincent, T. Stites, M. Jenkins, K. Campbell, L. Stofer and G. Smith. 293 Music Organizations A Band for All Seasons “Ladies and gentlemen, for your half-time entertainment, the ‘Big Red Band.’ ” Onto the field they march — 170 mem- bers dressed in red, white and black, carry- ing instruments as light as two pounds and as heavy as 27. About 30 hours of practice before the fall semester and six hours of practice a week during the semester shape the band for their half-time performances. According to director Dr. Kent Camp- bell, it was “the good attitude of the fresh- men and the leadership ability of the up- perclassmen that made this year’s band so good.” “The band gets behind the team more than anybody else,” said Tina Napier, a senior music education major. “Even this year when the team was losing the band spirit appeared high.” A trip to Lexington and the Eastern Ken- tucky University campus highlighted the band’s fall. Karen Johnson, a music educa- tion graduate student, said the band spirit wasn’t very high during the first half of the losing battle with Eastern. “We marched onto their field and Eas- SURVEYING the crowd at Eastern Kentucky is sopho- more Tim Tatum. One member said the performance at Eastern was the best of the year. “The band became a whole band, not 170 members,” she said. DOING HIS PART to lead Western to victory is Pep Band member Harold McKee. The band entertained fans at Diddle Arena during basketball games. McKee is a sophomore pre-med major from Morgantown. 294 Band tern’s fans went wild during our first song,” Miss Johnson said. “The band be- came one whole band, not 170 members. “There was one point in the middle of our entrance where everybody was blow- ing so loud you couldn’t hear yourself play,” Miss Johnson said with a gleam in her eye. “And usually you can hear your- Jim Burton self play. The spirit never came back down after halftime.” Miss Napier believes the opportunity to get involved attracts students to the band. “There are no pledgeships and you can start in all the activity right away,” she said. “It’s also a great way to meet people with a common interest.” For freshmen Tim Matthews and Becky Campbell, conducting a college band was a little different from high school. “Back home I had to do all the yelling when band members messed up,” Matthews said. “Down here, Dr. Campbell did all the yell- ing and I was really glad since I was a freshman.” Miss Campbell said things went smoothly after she got to know everybody. “There was still the freshmen-upperclass- men difference though.” “We messed up a couple of times at first and I think they called us darn freshmen or something behind our backs,” Matthews said. “Then we got it together and they said, ‘Hey, they’re not so bad after all.’ ” Campbell was aided this year by grad- uate assistants Alan Clark from Tennessee Technological Institute and Greg Glover from the University of Louisville. Clark was responsible for 24 flag girls, six more than last year. Glover was assis- tant band director and helped Campbell with rehearsals. The band added one new twirler to the three-member squad. The fourth, Julia Ashtown, is a freshman from Battle Creek. The returning twirlers were Tina Lewis, a junior physical education major, Betty Thompson, a sophomore textiles and clothing major, and Tara Gamble, a senior elementary education major. Band, however, is not only for football fans’ entertainment. “The band does not have a season,” Campbell said, “just sea- sons of various types of activities.” The fall is devoted to football and marching, but the spring included two concert bands, a spring tour, a children’s concert and a basketball pep band. For senior Kathy Abbott, concert band is more enjoyable than marching band. “In concert band all you have to concentrate on | is the music,” Miss Abbott said. “In marching band you not only have to con- centrate on making music, but also on staying in formation.” Not many students attend the spring concerts, however, she said. “People at WKU should feel lucky because we have one of the finest college concert bands around.” Dawn Kemp PRACTICE makes perfect for concert band members directed by Dr. Kent Campbell. The two concert bands involve approximately 120 musicians. The bands’ sizes vary each year, according to Campbell. PRECISION timing make formations of the Big Red Band look flawless to football fans. Melonie Briggs, a Goodlettsville, Tenn., freshman, leads a line in one of eight performances. EACH CONDUCTOR has his own style, according to Dr. Kent Campbell. Campbell is in his « seventh year as director of the concert band. Each year the group tours area high schools. SEs Mark Lyons Lynn Wright att Lynn Wright 295 Band Fellowship and culture Informality is the key to the Russian Club, if it can be called a club, according to presi- dent Maria Zaboronak. There are no dues, no rules and no regu- larly scheduled meetings. Meetings consisted of an evening at the home of Russian teacher Mania Ritter. They dined on Russian food and usea Rus- sian music to set the atmosphere. Any student of Russian can belong to the club, Miss Zaboronak said. “We are modest in our goals, we learn a lot of the Russian ways from each other and Mrs. Ritter,” she said. The club does not participate in many service or social activities, but members did get the opportunity to practice the Rus- sian language when they spent an evening with the Leningrad Symphony. Russian films are shown periodically through the International Film Series sponsored by the foreign language depart- ment, with Russian dialogue. Members tried to learn more about Rus- sian culture than what their textbooks taught them. “We just have a good time together,” Miss Zaboronak said. It takes a special type of student to major in Spanish. At least that’s what the mem- bers of Sigma Delta Pi believe. “Spanish is not quite as popular a major as a lot of others,” president Laura Jane Sergent said. While preferring the description “more selective, unusual and challenging,” advis- er Clarice Scarborough agreed, saying the organization unites people with the same specialized interest in Spanish. She said Sigma Delta Pi is an esoteric organization rather than a service organi- zation. Activities included a slide program in the fall, a spring dinner and initiation RUSSIAN CLUB: (Front row) R. Humphries, M. Ritter, J. Cooke. (Back row) V. Mitchell, T. Shoemake, C. Smothers and M. Zaboronak. 296 Foreign Language And Honors Organizations REALITY couldn't be more convincing than mime as Romeo Montes entertains at a performance sponsored by the International Club. Montes is a native of the Philippines. ceremony. In addition, “We have a scholarship fund that we are building with contribu- tions from graduate members of Sigma Delta Pi, current members and faculty members, so we can grant scholarships,” Mrs. Scarborough said. Sigma Delta Pi’s national organization sponsors an annual writing contest. A poem by Miss Sergent won this year’s re- gional first place award. Dr. Paul Hatcher, a faculty member of Sigma Delta Pi, serves as state chairman of the organization. He also has received the order of Don Quixote, the highest national honor. The organization has four classes of members: active, alumnus, honorary and associate. Membership includes students, alumni and faculty. Active or student membership is open to those with three semesters of Spanish course work, a ““B” average in Spanish and an overall standing in the upper 35 per cent of the student body. The organization, according to its consti- tution, honors “those who seek and attain excellence” in the study of Spanish and encourages interest, understanding and re- spect between Spanish and English-speak- ing cultures. According to Miss Sergent, “It’s kind of an honor to say that you belong to it. It kind of says something about you as a student.” An overall gpa of 3.2 and a 3.0 in science plus pursuing a pre-medical, dental, or vet- erinary degree may seem like tough re- SIGMA DELTA PI: (Front row) L. Sergent, D. Tomkinson, C. Galloway,-B: Mor- gan. (Back row) R. Padilla, P. Hatcher, C. Brown and C. Scarborough. quirements, but to the Alpha Epsilon Delta members it’s not impossible. Members must also have completed 45 hours of study. Speakers from various fields visited the society. Members toured the medical schools at the University of Kentucky and University of Louisville. They planned to arrange a trip to Vanderbilt’s medical school. Ron Hoskins In February the society attended a ban- quet sponsored by the Tri County Medical Association. A retired professor from Co- lumbia University was the guest speaker. The society also helped inform pre- medical students about how to get into graduate school. The society “provides a means for pre- medical, dental and veterinary students to get together and talk about medical break- throughs they understand,” said member Charles Hardin. estern has its own version of the United Nations in the International Club. Adviser Raymond Lui said between 25 and 30 different countries are represented in the club’s membership. In the past membership included “basi- cally all the international students,” Lui said. “Now, with the international student body so big — about 180 — only those who pay the dues are officially members.” Members also include American stu- dents and faculty interested in internation- al students. “Some are thinking of study- ing aboard,” Lui said, “and they like to learn a little bit more” about the country from one of its natives. Activities included field trips, cultural exhibitions, films and dinners, Lui said. The club sponsored a ping pong tourna- ment in the fall and planned a food-tasting dinner and talent show for the spring. The International Club is frequently in- volved with civic and church groups in the community. Lui said several students spoke to the Rotary Club about their homelands. The First Baptist Church spon- sored a dinner for the students and the Baptist Student Center took members on an “international retreat’ to Mammoth Cave during the fall semester. It is Lui’s first year as adviser. The club is also in its early stages, he said. “A lot of colleges have International Clubs,” Lui said. “We're still trying to build the program at Western.” (continued on page 298) INTERNATIONAL CLUB: (Front row) B. Arre- phanthu, J. Emmitt, M. Siukul Tong. (Back row) R. Lui, H. Batista and S. Tswana. ALPHA EPSILON DELTA: (Front row) D. Higgins, R. Dillman, D. Ralston, W. Ecker, P. Pinckley. (Sec- ond row) D. Danhauer, C. Hardin, S. Pickard, C Francke, T. Ballard, D. Vaughn. (Back row) W. Travis, J. Gover, J. Lair, D. Harrison, H. Roberts and M. Yeiser. 297 Foreign Language And Honors Organizations Fun and recreation... Sailing is a somewhat seasonal sport, but the Sailing Club is not a seasonal club, according to adviser James Evans. The club members sail from March to October, Evans said, but they may spend many hours year round working on four of their five boats which need repair. Affiliation with Bowling Green’s Port Oliver Yacht Club has benefited the Sail- ing Club members, Evans said. They are invited to the club’s races and socials, and are able to learn useful tips about boating. An interest in sailing and a willingness to work with boats are the only require- ments for membership, Evans said. “Some try it, like it and go out and buy their own boats and some don’t,” he said. “Most are trying to see what it’s like with- out investing a lot of money.” A bunch of “old-timers” are trying to keep a young Women’s Swim Club active, ac- cording to co-captain Mary Tingley. “We haven’t had any major achieve- ments, but we’re still young,” she said. “Most of the girls swam in high school or at a country club, so we have a lot of old swimmers.” The club’s goal is to become a varsity team, and the members work out to build strength and speed for more frequent com- petition. “The girls are going in on their own when the pool is open to the school,” Miss Tingley said. In the fall they practiced to- gether daily. In their one meet against the University of Louisville and Southeast Minnesota, Miss Tingley won the 50-yard backstroke and Heidi Miller placed third in the 50- yard breast stroke. “Rugby players make better lovers,” the bumper sticker says. If that’s the case, then Western now has a whole team of better SAILING CLUB: (Front row) S. Shugart, S. Sherwin, A. Hopkins, L. Farmer, L. Whalen. (Back row) S. Cottrell, T. Chambers, D. Danhauer, J. Evans, D. Ralph, B. Miller and C. Oberst. 298 Recreation Organizations lovers. Though the Rugby Club was unofficial- ly organized in spring, 1977, this was its first year as an officially recognized club. Team captain Bill Whelan, the self-de- scribed “old man” of the team, organized the Ruggers because driving to Louisville every week to play “got to be old quick. I thought we ought to be able to get a team together.” Adviser Al Fennelly said the team tries SWIMMING is more than mere exercise for Women’s Swim Club member Heidi Miller as she practices. She is one of the club’s strongest swimmers and placed third in the breast stroke event at their meet. Debbie Gibson not only to provide a chance for its mem- bers to compete but also to “promote the principles of sportsmanship.” The “temptation to play dirty” is small he said, possibly because of the players’ lack of any padding or protection. He ad- ded that the referee can remove a player from the game “with no ifs, ands or buts,” and can award the game to a team because of the opponent’s misbehavior. Whelan said, ‘“Rugby’s more of a social type of game. After the game there’s a so- cial gathering,” with rituals including singing contests. “The actual verses of the songs don’t bear repeating, ” Fennelly said. “You leave all your animosity on the field,” Whelan said. “You become closer.” Students, faculty and alumni can join. “It’s an excellent way to get in really good physical condition,” Fennelly said. “Injur- ies aren’t that common.” , He said the Rugby Club competes against teams from other universities, against All-City teams, which are usually “tougher more experienced,” and against teams from military bases, which are “among the best. They play (rugby) in all the military academies.” “It’s such a new sport, you have to play whomever has a club,” Whelan said. An Ohio Valley Union for rugby teams may be formed in the region; the team now belongs to the Indiana Union. If the OVU is formed, the Rugby Team would be eligible to become a varsity team. “But there are some disadvantages to being a varsity sport,” Fennelly said. Regulations could limit competition to games against other NCAA teams and “that would limit us to playing the worst teams.” Fall competition included games in Ten- nessee, Indiana and Kentucky. Western also took part in the Mardi Gras Tourna- WOMEN’S SWIM CLUB: (Front row) K. Swallow, M. Donaldson, E. Peek, J. Russell, J. Cook. (Second row) V. Martin, K. Cousineau, B. Davenport, D. Green, P. Modjeski, D. Kowalewski. (Back row) H. Miller, S. Fuller, T. Dreyer, M. Tingley, K. Assmar and L. Meyers. ment in New Orleans. For the spring season, the Ruggers planned games in the same region, includ- ing tournaments at Vanderbilt, St. Louis and Illinois, plus an invitation to the Derby Tournament in Louisville. “We may not have the best players in the state, but we have the most enthusiastic,” said Table Tennis Club president Paul Martin. Last fall eight club members traveled to the Hopkinsville Open and brought back four trophies. Equally impressive were in- dividual honors. Debbie Foley competed in the Kentucky Intercollegiate at the University of Ken- tucky and won the women’s singles. She also placed fifth in the state tournament. Martin placed second in Class B compe- tition in the Ohio Valley Closed Tourna- ment in Louisville. He represented Ken- tucky, Indiana and Ohio in the tourna- Martin. ment. In the Columbus Open he placed fourth in Class D competition. He has also played in tournaments in Ohio, New York and Michigan. (continued on page 300) SPEED AND AGILITY are important factors in rugby as club member Dale Holec slips past Grant Jones and George Bowling. The Rugby Club competed against several teams in the region. David Frank TABLE TENNIS CLUB: (Front row) D. Foley, B. Owens, W. Carrender, R. Habermehl. (Back row) B. Logan, D. Veech, W. Nash, K. Hobson and P. RUGBY TEAM: (Front row) D. Holec, C. Truitt, T. Asher, P. Ouderkirk, P. Hempenstall, F. Jones, G. Bowling. (Second row) J. Ransdell, W. Riebsame, M. Murphy, D. Pitt, L. Bertram, D. Bowling, B. Whelan. (Back row) D. Matheson, J. Hale, J. Lesch, P. Jones, S. Hadden, D. Turner and A. Fennelly. 299 Recreation Organizations Exercise and competition... In its 11th year as a club, the Veterans on Campus experienced a sharp decline in membership. “We're one of the last VOC groups in the area,” member Mike Fritch said, “so we’re hoping to hold on if we can.” Fritch said there are more veterans re- turning to college than in past years. The reason for the decline “is a question we've been asking, too, and we can’t come up with an answer.” Past president Bill Klein said, “There’s a new breed coming out (of the services); they want to get back into college life. They don’t want to socialize like some of us ‘old-timers.’ “Now that the Vietnam War is over, a lot of the goals we were striving for when we first formed have changed,” he said. “So we're going to try to change the club — go for the modern vet.” Consequently, Fritch said, this year’s club concentrated on rewriting the club constitution. The present constitution “just doesn’t suit our purposes.” Klein said the club planned to “get back to community service and cut back on so- cial activity.” During the fall, the VOCs participated in the St. Joseph’s Bike-a-thon and worked with the Humane Society. They also spon- sored the Homecoming bonfire. Members planned a spring formal, an outgrowth of last year’s 10th anniversary formal. “It was a real good one last year,” Klein said. “The alumni asked to be invited again.” Membership is open to students who PUNCH, COOKIES and a chance to meet old friends or make new ones attracted alumni to the Homecom- ing reception sponsored by the Recreation Majors Club. Martha Nell Wright ladled punch for guests. Lewis Gardner VETERANS ON CAMPUS: (Front row) J. Ransdell, S. Os- borne, W. Jacobs. (Back row) M. Fritch, L. Payton and L. Kerr. W.K.U. FENCERS: (Front row) M. Morris, D. Givan, C. Bush, D. Stigall, J. Woosley, A. Bush, (Second row) K. Quek, G. Cherry, D. Kolb, R. Polak, G. Ritchie. (Back row) T. Rogers, N. Johnson, L. McCul- lough, M. Card and D. Fenwick. 300 Recreation Organizations have served at least 180 consecutive days of active duty in any of the armed services. Klein said the club has 14 male members and one female member. “NG ke a move, your opponent mak ou ma ,y pponent makes a move and you have to counter. It’s like chess in that respect,” Ar thur Bush said, describing fencing. The Fencing Club adviser said the club “gives a chance for recreation, a chance to improve your skills and provides competi- tion with other members.” Students, faculty and staff are eligible and do not have to have fencing experience. But to compete, Bush said, a member should be a full-time student. Members are drawn to the Fencing Club because “they share an interest in knowing more about fencing after seeing movies like ‘The Three Musketeers,’ ” Bush said. He added that fencing offers “marvelous exercise and is a friendly sport.” Bush said fencing is “one of the safest of all sports because of the mask and the pad- ding. It’s not like football; you don’t carry people off the field. “We need more women,” he said. “They have some women’s team meets and we need three women for a team and we don’t have three women.” Competition with groups in Louisville, Lexington and Nashville comprises most of the club’s outside activity. Members take part in meets sponsored by the Ama- teur Fencers League of America. They also participated in the fourth annual WKU meet for Western's fencers. But Bush said, “We have to look outside other colleges for competition” because fencing at Western is not a varsity sport. The university owns no scoring equip- ment, and cannot sponsor competition. “This holds up our inviting other schools.” The club and its members buy their equipment and receive no financial aid from Western, Bush said. “It’s a shame because fencing would be a good recruiting tool.” “It’s our job to help people play,” Recrea- yen Majors Club president Mary Aubrey said. Membership is open to recreation ma- jors and minors and students with recrea- tion as an area of concentration, member Colleen Holl said. “Even though rec classes don’t start until your sophomore year, we ute let the freshmen know about it,” she said. Members help plan programs for com- munity organizations such as the Girls’ Club. They also do “the main planning and organization” for the Special Olympics, Miss Aubrey said. Among this year’s activities were the Haunted House at Downing University Center, the Big Brothers and Big Sisters Valentine’s party, candy and T-shirt sales and the second annual Spring Fest Week. The club also planned “lots of mini-con- ferences,” the president said. A mini-con- ference in March included workshops and a speech by the public relations director for Kings’ Island. Miss Aubrey, named the state’s out- standing senior in recreation by the Ken- tucky Parks and Recreation Society at its fall meeting, said meetings and conven- tions play a big part in the club. “The curriculum emphasizes attending conventions. You have a good time and meet people with job opportunities.” The conventions include state, regional and na- tional meetings. “The kids really get hyped up” for the regional convention, she said. Members planned to attend the South- eastern Regional Recreation Conference at Biloxi, Miss., Miss Holl said. Word of mouth helped the Karate Club get new members this year, member Jeff McCelvey said. “A lot of people knew be- fore that they wanted to sign up because a brother or friend had shown them some- thing,” McCelvey said. People are more likely to sign up for a class rather than join the club because they don’t get credit in the club and the class isn’t as hard, he said. Most members are beginners, McCelvey said, so instructors teach all different levels of karate. “A lot of time is spent working with beginners,” he said. They learn the basic skills, then advance to kicks and free fighting with pads. (continued on page 304) TRUCKLOADS of wooden crates donated by seven local businesses were unloaded and piled high by Vet- erans on Campus vice president Willie Jacobs in prep- aration for the Homecoming bonfire. Lewis Gardner RECREATION MAJORS: (Front row) B. Hug, W. Denham, C. Holl, T. Dorfler, J. Patterson. (Second row) M. Lee, M. Aubrey, M. Tingley, K. Shay, J. Wittenbraker, J. Mueller. (Back row) J.C. Redd, J. Carman, L. Prochazka, W. Poe and M. Fullerton. KARATE CLUB: (Front row) J. Pickett, J. Howard, B. Elmore, K. Powers, J. McCelvey. (Back row) N. Walker, M. Baxter, J. Noel, A. Shipp, S. Penn and J. Gayles. 301 Recreation Organizations WKU Dance Company LEARNING new techniques and styles is important in becoming an accomplished dancer. Members of the WKU Dance Company watch James Cunningham of the Acme Dance Company demonstrate a movement. Photos by Debbie Gibson AN UNNATURAL POSE for most people is a cinch for first-year company member Dorothy Howard as she stretches her legs during practice. Members practice for an hour each afternoon. important as Helen | other members. of the. sn any pract Hic at ne ve ‘The dancers are doing in preparation for their class. Toe, heel, ball change, jump, step back, and jump sound like a foreign language or a new form of pig Latin to most people, but to the dancers in room 218 Smith Stadium, the unusual chant activates a well-timed and graceful dance. The dances are part of Western’s 5-year- old Modern Dance Company, which is building a reputation and attracting stu- dents to Western. First-year member Jill Heaberlin said the dance company was one of her main con- siderations in deciding to attend Western. “I knew about the company through summer workshops,” she said. “If it wasn’t for the company I might not be here.” According to instructor Beverly Leonard, the ideal number for the group is 24, but its membership is 30. “I get some people that are really good and I like to give them a chance,” she said. company on its Members have different reasons for au- ditioning for the company. Melanie Wal- drop, a senior elementary education major, _ said her reason was different from most _ members.’ “It’s kinda funny,” she said. “I wanted something to do in the afternoon.” Miss Waldrop said working with the company has given her a sense of purpose. “You work as hard as you can and you can tell that you've done better.” Bill Hanna, a junior theatre major, said he was encouraged to study dance to com- plement his theatre work. “It helps you to be able to move on stage.” Dance is also an excellent way to keep in shape, he said. “It’s a great opportunity for exercise and helps me express myself through movement.” Just as in other types of performance, there is some competition, but according to Miss Waldrop, the competition is healthy. “There is no cut-throat competition,” she said, “because everyone gets to per- form. There is more competition within yourself to do better.” “This isn’t like a sport,” Hanna added. We all work together.” Miss Heaberlin said the atmosphere sur- rounding the company’s workouts is help- ful. “The relationship we have with each other and Mrs. Leonard helps me learn.” Although the company performs only once a year as a group at the “Evening of Dance,” members spend many hours working on other theatrical productions. “We oe a very close working relation- MODERN DANCE COMPANY: (Front row) A. Moore, D. Howard, B. Leonard, L. Engelhardt, V. _ Odum. (Second row) M. Mager, T. Hatchett, A. Bu- chanan, L. Cooper, J. Heaberlin, B. Buchanan, M. Na- kashige. (Third row) H. Parrish, S. Sandefur, K. Smith, K. Elloitt, M. Waldrop, M. Palmore, L. Firkins. (Fourth row) J. Gaither, R. Bitsko, D. Kowalewski, T. Harris, R. Hess, J. Nell. (Back row) S. Chambers, T. Soe M. Leonard, W. Hanna, R. Milburn and J. ickett. ship with the theatre department,” Mrs. Leonard said. “We have many overlapping students.” Working in theatrical productions de- mands long hours of rehearsal, but mem- bers agreed that the time isn’t wasted. Miss Waldrop said performing is impor- tant to members. “Dance is both physical and artistic. The physical we enjoy in class, but the artistic we must share.” To Hanna, the time he invests indicates he is learning more. “When I get out of school they (employers) are not going to look at my degree. They're going to look at what I can do.” The work is hard, but the dancers think the benefits are great. “Each little bit of success makes you that much more deter- mined,’ Miss Waldrop said. Cheryl Sharp @ op and Mark Nakashige. t MOVEM reflected in a mirror, members. are led in a tap routine by Maryann Mager, Melanie. toes 303 WKU Dance Company speakers and researcn... Unfruitful is how Dr. Charles Henrickson described the Chemistry Club’s year. The adviser said the meetings haven't been as frequent as usual and other prob- lems have made the year different. Despite the hangups, they had some speakers, usu- ally faculty members. Member Rick Dillman said the speakers talked about the research they’re doing. The club also tries to bring graduate stu- dents from other schools to speak to the seniors. Several members also belong to the Stu- dent Affiliated Chemical Society (ACS). It is the largest society in the world dedicated to one science, according to Hendrickson. ACS membership benefits students in job placement, appointments at graduate schools and placing advertisements in na- tional magazines. “It’s really a clearing house,” Henrickson said. CHEMISTRY CLUB: (Front row) R. Hunt, M. Lee, R. Dillman, J. Jenkins, K. Meagher. (Back row) Dr. G. a This has been an organizational year for us,” said Curtis Lucas of the Collegiate FFA. Western’s Future Farmers of America, the first collegiate chapter in Kentucky, is trying to give students a chance to contin- ue their high school FFA activities in col- lege and advance in the organization, Lucas said. For its first year, the club has been ac- tive. Trips to the National Farm Machinery Show in Louisville and the Processor Voca- tional School in New Albany, Ind., high- lighted the year. The club also sponsored speakers, in- cluding William Kuegel, who was named 1977 Man of the Year for service to Ken- tucky agriculture by the Progressive Farm- er Magazine. Promoting vocational agriculture in the high schools is a major function of Colle- Wilson, K. Casey, J. Strode, H. Roberts, D. Higgins and Dr. C. Henrickson. x COLLEGIATE FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA: (Front row) S. Lescelius, S. Kuegel, C. Lucas, R. Russell, D. Strode, J. Fowler. (Back row) M. Kenner, S Rogers, T. Harrison, J. Sauer, R. Smith, T. Gibson and M. Hurt. giate FFA. Members co-sponsored a FFA Field Day for area high school at Western’s farm with the Agriculture Club. Darth Vader and “Close Encounters of the Third Kind” have made the public more aware of astronomy, but the members of the Physics and Astronomy Club keep up with their field. By sending representatives to national conventions, the group keeps abreast of developments in physics and astronomy. Adviser Dwight Russell said 10 students attended the Southeastern Section of the American Physical Society meeting in Mi- ami Beach. Regional meetings are annual events for the group and according to associate advis- er Al Fennelly, the trips attract members. “The members get far more from their club than any other chapter I’ve been associated with,” he said. Other activities included programs every third week featuring faculty speakers, and a fall and spring picnic. Although the year started off shakily with a picnic in the midst of a rainstorm, Tri Beta had an active and successful year, ac- cording to president Mark Keen. The international organization of biol- ogy students has sponsored many speakers at meetings, had an indoor picnic on Ground Hog Day and spent a weekend at the Tech Aqua Biological Field Station in Tennessee. “The field station is an educational cen- ter which is run by Western, Tennessee Tech, Vanderbilt and other area universi- ties,” Keen said. Tri Beta officers attended a regional con- vention at the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, according to Keen. “We sold mistletoe during Christmas to raise money for the trip,” he said. PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY CLUB: (Front row) J. Markland, P. Weinert, B. Law- rence, K. Casey, K. Shao, A. Fennelly. (Second row) S. Balint, G. Vaughan, G. Wetzel, M. Robinson, R. Detsch, D. Higgins, C. Chang. (Back row) W. Kinzel, R. Cain, K. Johnson, F. Jones, J. Woosley and D. Russell. 304 Science Organizations Members join Tri Beta to get to know each other and the faculty, according to Keen. “The science fields are very competitive and being a member is a good release,” he said. “You get to know each other and the professors on a friendly, social basis.” “Unlike a lot of honorary organizations that just meet once a year, we meet six times a semester,” said Dr. Carroll Wells about Pi Mu Epsilon. “The members seem TRI BETA: (Front row) J. Fuller, M. Hudnall, K. Meagher, J. Jenkins, N. Strong, A. Policastri, B. Benson. (Second row) P. Weinert, J. Markland, M. Keen, B. Battle, D. Skean, J. McCurry, D. Higgins. (Third row) W. Osborn, L. Jones, C. Lovell, S. Carr, C. Pine, R. Fondren, P. Belt, W. Ecker, J. Eisenman. (Fourth row) C. Stauss, M. Burchett, D. Rickard, N. Humphrey, W. Mason, G. to enjoy the activities.” Activities included attending the region- al Pi Mu Epsilon meeting at Southern IIli- nois University in November and visiting the Actuarial Division of the National Life Insurance Company in Nashville. Actu- aries use math and computer science in creating insurance programs, Wells said. At a January meeting, Western’s Dr. Pauline Loman presented a slide program about her visit to China with the National Johnson, J. Skean, M. Dixon. (Back row) T. Simpson, J. Winstead, J. Lair, L. Elliott, J. Hays, J. Strode and B. Johnson. Council of Teachers of Mathematics. Social events included a Christmas party and a spring picnic with the faculty. In the spring, members helped conduct the Re- gional Junior High Math Bowl, the Senior High Math Bowl and the Third District Math Contest for grades 7-12. (continued on page 306) JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL students from the area compete in a Math Bowl sponsored by Pi Mu Epsilon on Feb. 25. Eric Hassler MATH CLUB: (Front row) A. Neal, A. Thornberry, J. Daugherty, L. Howard, S. Dellario. (Second row) J. Mullikin, P. Mountain, R. Daugherty, R. Kerry, C. Wells, J. Dawson. (Back row) T. Neely, P. Hays, B. Boykin, J. Snodgrass and T. Harrington. 305 Science Organizations Conventions and tri It’s not easy to build an organization into an active group, but for the Industrial Edu- cation and Technology Club the work has paid off. “We've just gotten on our feet this year,” member Richard Reker said. Members were treated to picnic s, a Christmas dinner and club-versus-faculty sports. Their Homecoming float was one of the biggest projects of the year, Reker said. He credited the float, along with word-of- mouth advertising from members and fac- ulty, as being a magnet for new members. The float won second place and received a perfect score, Reker said. In November they attended the Ken- tucky Industrial Education Association convention in Louisville. Members pre- sented a demonstration of such crafts as silkscreening and glass staining. The pre- sentation received a first place award. We had about a million speakers, I guess,” president Jeff Mandrell of the In- stitute of Electrical and Electronic Engi- neers said jokingly. The speakers, usually from local com- panies producing electronics and related goods, were part of the “materials and in- formation” that the club offered members, he said. Mandrell said the institute hoped “to create an atmosphere where students can get to know each other.” There are benefits such as conventions and meeting people in the professional world, which provided contact between students and their field of interest, he said. Students studying anything to do with electronics are eligible to join, according to Mandrell. The attractions are both aca- demic and social. The group had a spring picnic and so- cials after meetings. Members also attend- | + INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION AND TECHNOLOGY CLUB: (Front row) R. Wicklein, B. Thomerson, P. England, P. Bowles, W. Reiter. (Back row) T. Jaggers, D. Ison, D. Dobrick, D. Brockman, R. Reker, D. Pickerell. 306 Engineering Organizations ed a “social meeting” at Ireland’s Restau- rant in March, he said. The “million speakers” talked to mem- bers at their monthly non-social meetings. Members also went on field trips, includ- ing a tour of Opryland, which according to Mandrell, is completely controlled by elec- tronics. A lack of new members has made presi- dent Glyn Humphrey fearful that the American Society of Mechanical Engi- neers chapter may soon fade. “We're not attracting as many freshmen and sophomores as we'd like to,” Hum- phrey said. “Most of our members were here when we started. I don’t know if they don’t like the people or what, but the new students don’t seem too interested.” Approximately 15 to 20 mechanical engi- neering technology students remain in the club, which is the student chapter of a pro- fessional engineers society. “Student mem- bers can transfer directly into a senior chapter,” Humphrey said. Still, the club kept active. Members vis- ited the Owensboro utility company and the Western Craft Paper Mill in Hawes- ville, he said. Three members went to the national winter convention in Atlanta. The first baby for Janet and Jim Skees was neither a boy nor a girl. It was the Ameri- can Society of Civil Engineers. Mrs. Skees served as the group’s presi- dent during the fall and her husband took charge in the spring. “Last semester was our first,’ Mrs. Skees said. “We're still in the process of writing bylaws. We’re not an affiliated chapter yet.” Members organized a picnic, a football game and a movie screening in the fall. In the spring they heard guest speakers, in- cluding a representative from a large steel INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS: (Front row) J. Broot, A. Williams, D. Jack- son, K. Riedling, J. Scoberras, C. Hester. (Second row) W. Moore, A. Dorsey, M. Mangus, D. Mounce, D. Roy, J. Little, J. Carr. (Back row) K. Bishop, K. Cook, J. Handrell, B. Grace, J. Hammond, S. Thomas and R. Leach. A SOLAR COLLECTOR is a project to be entered in competition, according to Bobby Hunton and T,J. Moyers, both members of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. They said the winner will be judged by the amount of temperature change recorded when water runs through the collector. company. Members purchased lab equipment for the civil engineering labs with their profits from the project. “We voted down a schol- arship fund over the lab equipment,” Mrs. Eric Hassler Skees said, “because the lab equipment was needed more and was harder to get frorn the university.” All the objectives of the Industrial Graph- ics International are professional, accord- ing to member Marissa Greene. The organization, open to all industrial education majors, “will help us to get jobs,” she said. For a $5 fee, members’ resumes and pho- tographs are included in the group’s book- let. The booklet is sent to more than 200 different companies that employ IGA members, Miss Greene said. The members, usually art and technical illustration majors, make field trips which are also professionally advantageous. On trips to advertising agencies, Miss Greene said members get tips on preparing their portfolios and ask questions to pre- pare for jobs. “We made several trips to Nashville to visit agencies and a publishing company,” she said. They also visited agencies in Cin- cinnati in the fall and went to Atlanta in the spring. (continued on page 308) INDUSTRIAL GRAPHICS: (Front row) M. Greene, F. Alfieri, C. Porter. (Back row) J. Hill, G. Wilson and K. Terry. AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS: (Front row) L. Got- tula, K. Lee, D. Givan, R. Lee. (Back row) J. Skees, J. Skees, P. Waksmunski, P. Pennington and E. Boston. AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS: (Front row) R. Brandt, T. Moyers, H. Healey, G. Humphrey, D. Sparks. (Second row) B. Hunton, R. Hagan, H. Goetzinger, N. Cham- bers, R. Smith. (Back row) J. Stiles, T. Webster, D. Pollock and D. Robinson. 307 Engineering Organizations Experience and involvement. Jim Burton WKU NURSING STUDENT ASSOCIATION: (Front row) D. Fowler, B. Frazier, K. Kinnaird, S. Bishop, T. Bowman, T. Weber, J. Farley. (Back row) L. Williams, N. Hurt, N. Caskey, K. Cole, A. Key, C. Reece, J. Meers and D. Mitchell. PHI UPSILON OMICRON: (Front row) M. Wright, C. Patey, R. Hargis, M. Dearen, V. Driver, T. Phillips. (Second row) J. Neal, L. Hortin, K. Coffey, K. Lentz, T. Burton, J. Hershey. (Third row) R. Young, C. Buckles, M. McCormick, S. Simons and M. Howlett. 308 Health And Home Economics Organizations :: Conventions are an educational experience for members of the WKU Nursing Student Association, according to recording secre- tary Tina Weber. “They are a learning ex- perience,” she said. Members attended both the state con- vention in Louisville and the national in St. Louis. “We went to workshops on different medical fields,’” Miss Weber said. “We also got to meet people from other schools and find out about their programs.” Helping with blood pressure screening and bake sales highlighted the group’s ac- tivities. “We also had a potluck dinner for all the nursing students and their guests at Christmas,” Miss Weber said. “We want to develop individual nursing students as future health professionals and to improve health care for all people.” The multi-talented and skilled members of Phi Upsilon Omicron can do everything from dishing out mouth-watering lasagna to teaching grooming to teenagers from low income homes. President Vicki Driver said the 38 mem- bers keep busy with both service and fund- raising activities. “Some of our members are in fashion, some are in dietetics, some are in educa- tion, so everyone works in her special area,” Miss Driver said. “Whatever you're good at, you do.” The organization sponsored a district workshop on the Hill for groups from Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia. The weekend-long event brought speakers who helped students with projects. In February while snow and ice froze the Hill, students and faculty could warm up with a lasagna dinner prepared by the di- etetic students in the organization. Salad, bread, drink and dessert were served by IT TAKES a lot of sauce to fix 22 pans of lasagna, as Phi Upsilon Omicron members Camellia Patey and Sharon Conners learned. Profits from the dinner were contributed to the group’s scholarship fund. members in the Academic Complex Din- ing room. “This is our major money-making pro- ject and we use the profits for three schol- arships,”” Miss Driver said. “We made $550 and about half was profit.” The group also sponsored a series of self improvement sessions covering grooming, nutrition, and health care at the Victory Baptist Teen Center. eeping in touch with the constantly ad- vancing technology in dental hygiene is reason for students to join the Junior Membership of American Dental Hygien- ists Association. Freshman class representative Lee Ann Tussey said the local chapter meets month- ly and is active in politics for dental hy- giene. “We recently wrote our congress- men to support House Bill No. 35, which would require people to be licensed by the dental board to practice dental hygiene.” Miss Tussey said the group also saw films and heard speakers with information about advancements in the field. “A bi- monthly publication, Dental Hygiene, also has articles about new techniques and equipment in our profession,” she said. The first university chapter of the Ken- tucky Public Health Association was born on the Hill this year. According to vice president Lillie Clark, the organization was officially recognized in the KPHA state newsletter. “Because we are such a young group on campus, we haven’t had time to accomplish much yet, but we have a lot of plans for the years ahead,” she said. The members plan to compile a booklet of resumes of students graduating with de- grees in health-related fields. The booklet will be mailed to organizations where stu- dents are interested in working. “Another plan is to participate in this year’s city-wide health fair,” Miss Clark said. The purpose of the fair is to educate the public health needs. A variety of health officials from the community spoke at their meetings. “Re- cently we had the supervisor of the Barren River Comprehensive Care Center come to discuss field work with us,” she said. he snow is great when folks can just sit inside and watch it fall, but when they have things to do and places to be, it’s not so great. “We had so many plans,” wailed Karen Schlensker, president of the Student Mem- ber Section of the Home Economics Asso- ciation. ‘But a lot of our plans got messed up this winter, thanks to the unpredictable weather.” The organization had planned a Christ- mas party at the Turtle Creek Nursing Home. It seemed like a good idea since a lot of concern had been put on the elderly at the association’s fall workshop at More- head. But bad weather forced cancellation. “Then we were going to co-sponsor a foods and nutrition workshop on campus. Just our luck, the snow started falling again,” Miss Schlensker said. Not everything fell through for the group. “We did finish our project of selling cookbooks,” she said. Some of the best rec- ipes of former students were contained in each edition, and sold for $3 to help sup- port chapter activities. STUDENT MEMBER SECTION OF THE HOME ECONOMICS ASSOCIATION: (Front row) J. Her- shey, K. Schlensker, M. Rowlett. (Back row) D. Mer- edith, S. Melhiser, C. Patey and M. Howlett. KENTUCKY PUBLIC HEALTH ASSOCIATION: (Front row) P. Lutes, J. Millen, N. Caskey, L. Clark, J. Hawkins, K. Howard. (Back row) D. Dunn, P. Garrett, S. Need, S. Peak, J. Bolin and L. Hughes. JUNIOR MEMBERSHIP OF AMERICAN DENTAL HYGIENISTS ASSOCIATION: (Front row) A. Gold, N. Davis, R. Holder, S. Hammack, T. Mathis, E. Croley, M. Greenwell, M. Wortham. (Second row) C. Oliner, E. Eldridge, M. McClean, J. Lewis, L. Nation, H. Johnston, L. Mead, M. Kennedy, M. Sallee, C. Corley, L. Tussey, M. Pauley, M. Newby, R. Edwards. (Back row) R. Garmon, D. Harris, C. Roundtree, V. Harrison, C. Fabel, L. Carter, L. Meacham, J. Collins, M. Cramer, D. Allison, R. Pearson and V. Alford. 309 Health And Home Economics Organizations Autumn had descended and Greeks began A season of jamboree hours, field days, From the track to the stage, the Greeks at Western can be found, competing in the race of the day or singing in a hoedown. Each fall the activities become more involved, more competitive and more fun. This year was no exception. It all began one Sunday when rain ‘ turned the annual ADPi 500 into a race for shelter. The derby at Beech Bend Park featured events ranging from an innertube squirm to the King for a Day contest, which crowned Tommy Zoeller. After the rain allowed only four events to be completed, the AOPis, who’ve won the event for the past 12 years, and Sigma Chis were awarded the 310 Greek Fall Festivities first place honors. Following the kickoff event, all eyes turned to the football field, but they weren’t watching the guys. They were nervously watching members of six sororities participate in the Sigma Nu Powerpuff Football Tournament. ADPi came out on top by defeating AOPi in: the championship game. With things in full swing, another event made its annual appearance. For the 12th straight year, Sigma Chi Derby Week was held in October and five sororities participated, raising $1,800 for Wallace Village for Children in Bloomfield, Colo., and $500 for other charities. The Derby Darling contest was held DERBIED SPECTATORS from Kappa Delta and Alpha Omicron Pi took pic- tures and shouted encouragement dur- ing the egg toss at the Sigma Chi Derby. Sigma Chi pledges served as targets for the competition. FRECKLED MUNCHKIN Lenora Coates sits on the knee of Tammy Sanders at the conclu- sion of Kappa Delta's variation of “The Munchkin Song” in their November Nonsense skit, “The Wizard of West- ern.” “It was a blast,” Miss Sanders said. ROLLING A POTATO yp a hill with a pencil — the mystery event of the Sig- ma Chi Derby — was no easy task for Chi Omega’s Trina Alley, but she won anyway. “It was hard to keep it going straight,” she said. THE QUESTION- ABLE BEAUTY of the “girls” of Phi Delta Theta didn’t hurt their perfor- mance in the KD Washboard of “We’re Not Ones To Go Around Spreading Ru- mors.” The skit, taken from the TV show “Hee Haw,” took third place. Ron Hoskins during the week for contestants sponsored by sororities and fraternities. Chi O Elaine Robinson, a senior from Louisville, won the event and became the third consecutive contestant from her sorority to win the title. Throughout the week, theme parties were given for each participating sorority. Near the end of the week, 10 members from each sorority composed teams which went from door to door in Bowling Green, collecting money for charity. The final day was Events’ Day and the five sororities competed to obtain their final points. Chi Omega won the first place award and ADPi finished second. Ron Hoskins honsense nights and derby weeks A hoedown jamboree also highlighted October when Kappa Delta sorority sponsored KD Washboard for fraternities and sororities. With standing room only, the audience was presented with hoedown songs from each participating group. SAE, featuring “Kuntry Kurds and the Nurds,” captured first place among the fraternities, while Sigma Kappa’s “Wailings of Sigma Kappa” brought them first place in the sorority division. KD members also presented a variety of songs throughout the program. Rounding out the semester, Chi Omega’s November Nonsense provided entertainment to the theme of “That's Entertainment-Movie Madness.” Skits with elaborate costumes and props were presented from fraternities and sororities. ADPi, who presented “The Sound of Music,” and Sigma Chi, who presented a Japanese version of “The Wizard of Oz,” received the first place awards. The event raised $350 for the March of Dimes. The hard work invested in the fall activities proved worthwhile for both fraternities and sororities. “In a sense, it all serves a purpose,” said AOPi Vickie Stevens. “The Greeks participate with each other and learn to compete in a friendly spirit and enjoy it at the same time.” The competition serves to bring the Greeks closer to their final goals, according to AZD Cheri Oldin. “The organizations work together to bring out their talents and qualities. And, most of the time, the events we participate in are fund-raisers for charity,” said Miss Oldin. “We work together, compete with each other, and in the meantime it’s fun. But, our goals are the end product and they show that Greeks are concerned with helping each other and those who can benefit from our help.” Terri Darr @ “THERE’S NOTHING LIKE A DAME,” sang the. Southern Gents for Chi Omega Patty Jackel in a skit finale in November Nonsense. Miss Jackel pore the sole female on a Pacific island. ; Lewis Gardner 311 Greek Fall Festivities THE GREEK LIFE AGRs make plans for new house AKPsis sponsor softball tourney With the construction of a house in the near future, Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity members concentrated their time and effort on fund raising and planning. Projects ranging from hauling hay for alumni to accepting individual pledges for money were initiated this year. The AGRs also raised money for the heart fund in the fall. For another service project, the fall pledge class assisted Bowling Green officials in conducting the population census. Homecoming was a special event for the AGRs. Building a float with Phi Mu sorority, they sponsored Sue Flory for Homecoming queen. An alumni breakfast at the AGR house also highlighted the Homecoming festivities for members and alumni. The AGRs also participated in the Lambda Chi Alpha Rodeo, intramurals, Greek Week and Spring Sing. They sponsored their first disco dance and held their spring formal at Barren River Lodge. A SHIRTLESS Tim Cottingham of Alpha Gamma Rho jumped center against Lambda Chi Alpha’s Tom Blair in an intramurals losers’ bracket game. AGR lost, knocking them out of competition. Mark Lyons ALPHA GAMMA RHO: (Front row) E. Yates, W. Mes es Haines, L. Sorrell, D. French, R. Druen, M. Loftus, J. Hicks, L. Oldham, S. Wheatley, S. Boone, R. Goss, J. Fowler, D. Hench. (Second row) K. Frazier, K. Colson, S. O’Nan, D. Goad, J. Hughes, R. Smith, C. Mitchell, D. Emerson, K. Jackson, T. Adkins, K. Hopgood, W. Beavin. (Back row) T. Cottingham, J. Eubank, A. Thompson, T. Thomas, R. Tingle, K. Head, B. Baskett, M. Henning, S. Straney, S. Fuller, C. Klumb, A. Mat- tingly, E. Johnson, T. Hornbeck and J. Estes. 312 . Fraternities “NVictory, Soft as an Easy Chair,” was the theme of the float Alpha Kappa Psi fraternity co-sponsored with Alpha Xi Delta sorority at Homecoming. The two also jointly sponsored Karen Hogg as Homecoming queen candidate. In honor of returning alumni, the AKPsis gave a party at their house, had a brunch before the Homecoming game and challenged alumni to a flag football game on Sunday after the Homecoming festivities. Active in intramurals, the brothers participated in flag football, basketball, softball and bowling. An annual AKPsi event was a charity LITTLE SISTERS of Alpha Kappa Psi entertain pro- spective pledges at an Hawaiian party near the end of the spring rush. An active said the occasion let them “get away from the party, party thing.” Lewis Gardner softball tournament. The competition between fraternities and sororities raised money for the Potter Orphanage. A disco dance kicked off the weekend event. For a civic project, pledges helped the city of Bowling Green by cleaning the parks around town. Following participation in Greek Week and Spring Sing, the AKPsis had their spring formal at Barren River Lodge. (continued on page 314) HALF A BISKIT stood between Alpha Kappa Psi’s Greg Rader and victory in a preliminary round of Ireland’s Stake and Biskits Eating Contest. He ate I1in five minutes; his opponent gulped 11 2. Scott Robinson ALPHA KAPPA PSI: (Front row) G. Rosenbaum, E. Yates, G. Hunter, J. Chastain, G. Clark. (Second row) G. Rader, P. Byrn, T. Hammond, P. Gustafson, J. D’Antoni, M. Henderson. (Back row) C. Burden, P. Sowder, D. Antique and R. Kithcart. 313 Fraternities THE GREEK LIFE ... Alpha Phi Alpha wins honor Delts capture academic honors CONSIDERABLE RESPECT is paid by Alpha Phi Al- pha pledges to their actives. Six pledges bow dutifully to Alpha Phi Alpha dean of pledges Bruce Wiley out- side his Pearce-Ford Tower room. With an emphasis on organizational structure and increased academic awareness, Alpha Phi Alpha prided itself on involvement in social and civic activities on both the chapter and national level. “We try to be a well-rounded fraternity, with a special emphasis on civic involvement,” president Curtis Owens said. The brothers conducted a drive for the United Negro College Fund and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in association with the national fraternity’s $1 million drive. The chapter was selected as the outstanding chapter in the state by the national organization. The Alphas also sponsored Dianne Butts, a little sister, in the Miss Black Western Pageant. Miss Butts won the contest. They continued the sickle cell anemia and blood pressure testing service. The brothers conducted an Easter basket drive by collecting canned goods © for needy Bowling Green families and sponsored a party for nursing home residents in Russellville. The Alphas also contributed to the annex of the Elizabethtown Recreation Center and gave $15 to each Bowling Green church. The fraternity also conducted a Christmas drive for local children and ee aa : conducted a black history session for Ron Hoskiaa local junior high and elementary school : : x Bie ae fg arn io students at Parker Bennett School. A spring dance and a basketball tournament highlighted Alpha Week in April. ALPHA PHI ALPHA: (Front row) B. Wiley, A. Snar- don. (Back row) P. Harris, D. Peyton, D. Avery, C. Owens, E. Murrell, K. Bell and J. Suttles. 314 Fraternities After making academics its top priority, Delta Tau Delta fraternity captured the three top honors in the fraternity division at the Academic Awards Banquet in the spring. The Delts won the awards for the highest pledge class gpa, the highest chapter gpa, and the highest overall fraternity gpa for the fall semester. “Academics were our major emphasis this year,” said president Keith Wettig. The Delts worked with Kappa Delta on a Homecoming float entitled “Kentucky Fried Eagles,” reflecting a hopeful victory in the game against Morehead. They sponsored Debbie Sexton as a Homecoming queen candidate. Jim Burton The brothers were active in intramurals, participating in softball, water polo, basketball and flag football. In Greek events, the Delts participated in KD Washboard, Greek Week and Spring Sing. Louisville was the site of the fraternity’s spring formal in April. (continued on page 316) TWO-BY-FOURS make up the frame of a bedroom wall built by Delta Tau Delta pledge carpenters, John Logdson, Mark Clements and Rick Waddle. The Delts have had the College Street house one year. BACKGAMMON IS THE FAVORITE GAME among Delta Tau Delta mem- bers, but Spades occupies Scott Parshall and Carmello Benassi. Played with partners, the game resembles bridge. Jim Burton DELTA TAU DELTA: (Front row) R. Gardner, D. Robertson, M. Clements, C. Antoine, C. Tung, S. Hu- lette, C. Benassi. (Second row) M. Wiedmar, S. Par- shall, R. Gee. (Third row) J. Wilkens, B. Blackman, T. Terry, J. Brawner. (Fourth row) D. Crawford, R. Uelts- chi, J. Reamy. (Fifth row) K. Wettig, B. Heichelbech, C. Chancellor, R. Waddle, C. Jones. (Back row) J. Semens, D. Colyer, K. Hobbs, J. Griffin and K. Carroll. 315 Fraternities THE GREEK LIFE .. KAPsi raises academic standing Kappa Sigmas boost membership FAMOUS MEMBERS of Kappa Alpha Psi were fea- tured in the fraternity’s national magazine during Black Awareness Symposium. Members John Moore and George Bartleson (at left) showed the story. Scott Robinson KAPPA ALPHA PSIS Tony Bell and Tony Byrd re- bound over Alpha Phi Alpha Sam Huskie in the first round of the Kappa Alpha Psis’ tournament during Kappa Week in March. The Kappas won, 49-39. KAPPA ALPHA PSI: (Front row) R. Reed, G. Bell, J. Hanes, T. Bell, T. Irvin, J. Moore, C. Smalley, T. Byrd and W. Richardson. 316 Fraternities Lifting their fraternity out of academic problems became the project of Kappa Alpha Psi brothers last year, president Jimmy Haynes said. “Since we’ve had problems with grades, we've stressed academics and cut down on our social functions,” Haynes said. The fraternity raised its gpa above 2.0 through programs that resembled pledging, he said. “We persuaded brothers who were academically in trouble to spend more time in the library. They were urged by their brothers to do better. They had to give a report to the brothers about their progress. And we offered special honors to members who achieved a 3.0 gpa by the end of the semester.” George Bartleson won the award. Kappa Alpha Psi sponsored a Halloween party for about 150 children of the New Bethel Baptist Church. They also played intramural basketball. Through the help of a couple of older members who came back, the fraternity kept its membership at 12, Haynes said. Lewis Gardner “A lot of individual rushing” went into rebuilding Kappa Sigma’s membership, according to president George Barnett. Kappa Sig’s membership had dwindled to only 16 members early last fall, he said. But “by going into the dorms, meeting people and making friends,” the fraternity built itself up to 28, plus 10 pledges last spring. “We're getting our feet back on the ground,” Barnett said. “We want to expand and get back to doing stuff.” The Kappa Sigs redecorated the living room of their house, which they moved into in 1976, and planned to do some landscaping in the summer. Barnett said a national Kappa Sigma philanthropy is developing: a camp in the southwest for underprivileged children. Kappa Sigs finished fifth in intramural football. “It was our second winning season in a row, Barnett said. Thanks to a couple of money-making discos and membership dues, “our financial picture is looking good,” Barnett said. “We haven’t been able to do a lot of things before. Our hands were tied.” The Kappa Sigs got “a lot of good exposure,” thanks to their spirit cannon at home football games. (continued on page 318) Mike Dowell AN OCTOBER CHILL didn’t keep Kappa Sigma can- non tenders from their 17-year-old job. Miles Palis, Tom Pearson, Rick Capps and Barry Blann watched Western lose to Tennessee Tech, 31-20. KAPPA SIGMA: (Front row) D. Clark, J. Hepner, K. Harrison, D. Smith, J. Brown, T. Pearson, R. Atwell. (Second row) R. Bell, R. Drummond, M. Clark, K. Pawley, D. French, R. Hancock, B. Lindsey, C. Fleenor, H. James, S. Parnell. (Back row) B. Simpson, G. Cren- shaw, F. Harbison, B. Blann, M. Denning, S. Adams, B. Murrey, T. Kaine, L. Harbison, G. Barnett and M. Palis. De, 317 Fraternities THE GREEK LIFE ... Lambda Chis sponsor rodeo Omegas emphasize service Ron Hoskin LAMBDA CHI ALPHA: (Front row) D. Stanley, C. Burkeen, S. Peck, J. Tomes, S. Cochran, F. Kellem, J. Winchester, J. Mosley, C. Hopkins, J. Horner. (Second row) G. Zoeller, J. Keffer, T. Wilson, D. Wheeler, B. Goodknight, T. Zoeller, S. Naveaux, B. Shockley, D. Bosma, T. Ruble, J. Roberts, T. Martel, G. Allen. (Third row) R. Hemmen, J. Martin, G. Emmert, B. Dost, B. Lauer, K. Trauman, D. Dunn, C. Nahm, P. Bullock, M. Wheeler, D. Billingsley, H. Shehan, B. Sherlock, J. Newcomb, I. Young, J. Keller, M. Thomas. (Back row) B. Chumley, S. Shipp, B. Bishop, P. Smith, T. Wright, J. Moore, B. Parker, T. Blair and J. Johnson. Would-be cowpokes and star football players competed in events sponsored by Lambda Chi Alpha, president Jim Tomes said. The fraternity rented a traveling rodeo, secured a farm 10 miles outside Bowling Green and offered bull riding, cow milking and other events to Greeks. Later in the fall semester, Lambda Chi held its annual Charity Bowl, a Greek coed all-star football game. The game and a dance afterwards raised nearly $1,000 for the Big Brothers and Big Sisters Program of Bowling Green. Lambda Chi did some competing of its “I WAS DRUNK the day my mom got out of prison” sings “The Backbone of America” (Lambda Chi Alpha) during the KD Washboard. The skit included songs by Merle Haggard and David Allen Cole. own. It entered all of the intramural sports, placing second in fraternity basketball and wrestling. Lambda Chi also performed in November Nonsense and KD Washboard. The Lambda Chis’ house decoration for Homecoming placed third. About 4,000 Christmas presents were wrapped by Lambda Chis for the Salvation Army. They also spent about $6,000 in renovating their “back house.” “It was a year of a lot of changing attitudes,” Tomes said. “We're trying to base more energy in doing things for the community.” A LOT OF BULL didn’t want Chuck Penn aboard at the Lambda Chi Alpha rodeo in October. Penn, a for- mer Lambda Chi, fell off too soon to place. The compe- tition took place at a local farm. Ron Hoskins 318 Fraternities An active participation in community affairs hi ghlighted the activities of Omega Psi Phi, according to president Monte Young. “T think our fraternity has grown immensely and we’re one of the leading contributing fraternities on campus as far as community projects are concerned,” Young said. “We take pride in helping others.” The brothers organized a voter registration drive in the fall and the fall pledge class had a Halloween party for elderly Bowling Green citizens. The fraternity sponsored a Thanksgiving party for a needy Bowling Green family and the Omegas’ little sisters, the Pearls, organized a Christmas party for local elementary school students. The brothers sponsored the Second Annual Supermarket Sweepstakes in March and donated its proceeds to charity. A basketball tournament, concert and a spring ball at the Jaycee Pavilion high- lighted the annual Omega Week in April. The fraternity presented awards to All- Ohio Valley Conference football players the fraternity selected as valuable to Western's football team. The spring semester was highlighted when the Omegas met brother Ray Ranson, the bass player for Brick, a rock group that played in Diddle Arena in February. “We learned a lot about what it means to be a professional entertainer,” Young said. The Omegas ended a busy year with plans for the chapter’s 10th anniversary celebration in 1979. (continued on page 320) STEPPING, a folk dance of black Greeks, was among the features of the Black Awareness Symposium last spring. Craig Moore, an Omega Psi Phi member and a cheerleader, stepped at Snell Hall. Stevie Benson OMEGA PSI PHI: (Front row) B. Coleman, M. Wingo. (Back row) M. Swain, J. Roach, R. Curtis, P. Holland, B. Boyd, T. Johnson, C. Moore, M. Young and A. Farley. 319 Fraternities WHITE CANDLES symbolized Phi Beta Sigma’s cele- Founders’ Day in March. Tom Hayes was named Sig- bration of the national fraternity’s 64th year during its ma of the Year that night. THE GREEK LIFE .. Phi Beta Sigma organizes canned food drive for Christmas Phi Delts celebrate 130th year The Seventh Street Baptist Church was the beneficiary of a canned food drive sponsored by Phi Beta Sigma fraternity. Rev. J.E. Jones, pastor of the church, is a Phi Beta Sigma alumnus. The pre-Christmas drive was a competition between the dorms on campus. McCormack Hall was awarded the first place plaque. Phi Beta Sigma was also involved in the Big Brothers and Big Sisters program throughout the year. Sigma Week in April provided displays, parties, a dance, a picnic and basketball and softball tournaments. In intramurals, the brothers captured the fraternity league title in basketball. They also participated in softball. In preparation for the Homecoming game, the brothers stepped before a large crowd at the student center. Tom Hayes escorted Homecoming queen Joyce Haskins during pre-game festivities. Phi Beta Sigma’s Founders’ Day in March commemorated the group’s 64th Stevie Benson year as a national fraternity. Tom Hayes “GIVE A SHOUT,” Phi Beta Sigma’s traditional step, PHI BETA SIGMA: (Front row) G. Bruce, J. Price, T. was named Outstanding Sigma. The entertained other black Greeks at the Step-a-thon in Hayes, J. Rives. (Second row) J. Covington, N. Cleav- event was co-sponsored with Zeta Phi February. Sigmas stepped four times last year. er, R. Byrd. (Back row) L. Haggans, R. Green and T. Burfict. Beta sorority. Lewis Gardner 320 Fraternities Phi Delta Theta fraternity’s national organization celebrated its 130th year of existence in March. The fraternity was founded in 1848 at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. March 15 was selected because of its proximity to the birthday of one of Phi Delta Theta’s founders. In campus activities, the Phi Delts finished third in KD Washboard. They performed the song “We’re Not Ones To Go Around Spreading Rumors.” Phi Delts Glen Beck and Dave Chandler won the Sigma Nu-sponsored foosball tournament for Greeks in February. They went through the double- elimination competition undefeated. The Phi Delts also participated in Chi Omega’s November Nonsense, Greek Week and Spring Sing. Fraternity community service projects included helping in the Bowling Green Big Brothers and Big Sisters program in the fall and assisting in the Red Cross blood drive during the spring semester. “T think that’s (service) an important factor that a lot of people outside the fraternities don’t realize,” president Don Cundiff said. ‘We're more than just party organizations.” The Phi Delts present a trophy each semester to the Greek organization with the highest gpa for actives and pledges. Alpha Omicron Pi sorority won the award in the fall and was second to Alpha Delta Pi sorority in the spring. To top off the year, the Phi Delts had their spring formal at Fairfield Glades in Springfield, Tenn. (continued on page 322) CHAPEAU DE LA FIBER OPTICS and a feathered cap adorned heads at a Phi Delta Theta Mad Hatter party. The party celebrated the induction of pledges and new little sisters last spring. PHI DELTA THETA: (Front row) D. Lester, R. Gleitz, S. Wall, J. Brandenburg, B. Armstrong, J. Anderson. (Back row) O. Stone, T. Johnson, D. Chandler, T. Walsh, D. Mudd, J. Irwin, D. Cundiff, C. Kuckens, C. Helm, B. Pickerill, K. McReynolds, G. Story, M. Max- well, L. Forst, P. Conrardy, R. Milograno and R. Col- 321 Fraternities THE GREEK LIFE ... Pi Kappa Phis get first home Pikes restructure rush Scott Robinson AFTER TWO TRIPS to the disco movie ‘Saturday Night Fever,” Pi Kappa Phi Morris Ricketts and little sister Debbie Clements had a new repertoire of dances. They showed them off at a rush party. A FOOSBALL TOURNAMENT for Pi Kappa Phi lit- tle sisters had Traci Harrel and Patty McCubbin at the rods. The fraternity makes up to $50 a week with the table, which was installed in the fall. PI KAPPA PHI: (Front row) H. Ricketts, R. White, M. Ricketts, R. Jaggers, B. Shouse, R. Miller, D. Rexroat, M. Vanderheyden, J. Wicks, J. Grove, D. Minton, B. Masden. (Back row) S. Estok, K. Harkin, S. Shields, R. Diersen, W. Cornett, C. Tatum, B. Johnson, S. Peterie, M. Ruark and G. Floyd. 322 Fraternities The school year began for Pi Kappa Phi when it got its dream — a house. The house at 411 E. 12th St., had been a dream for the fraternity since it was founded locally in April of 1972. That dream became reality last May. The fraternity became involved in civic events by singing at Turtle Creek Nursing Home, sponsoring a Halloween party for the Big Brothers and Big Sisters Program, and collecting door-to- door to purchase playground equipment for retarded children. A major emphasis for Pi Kappa Phi was membership, claiming 10 men in the fall semester rush and six more in the spring. Another big plus was the Master Chapter Award, given at the Supreme Chapter meeting in August. The Western chapter’s 386 points out of a possible 400 earned it the award. The fraternity was also active in most intramural events and Greek activities, including Greek Week, Spring Sing and KD Washboard. For the second time, Pi Kappa Phi sponsored the Stake and Biskits eating contest at Ireland’s Restaurant during the spring semester. | A new two-weekend rush program in the summer featuring parties and softball helped Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity add 15 pledges and build its membership to about 55, member Steve Brown said. Their residence also kept the Pikes busy, as they purchased new downstairs and bedroom furniture and searched for a new house. They live on College Street. The Pikes did well in competition, winning the campus billiards and horseshoes championship, finishing third in the ADPi 500 and earning recognition from their national headquarters for chapter improvement. In the spring, the Pikes were looking for a way to raise money for their national philanthropy, Big Brothers and Big Sisters, Brown said. The Pikes’ “reputation has improved from the things we sponsored,” president Buddy Welsh said. He said the fraternity had a disco dance with Alpha Delta Pi sorority. “Everyone is younger,” Welsh said. “We're dominated by sophomores. We're growing in number, and we'll be growing for the next two years.” (continued on page 324) Scott Robinson i Jim Burton A PIKE PADDLE is a gift to a pledge from his big brother. Pi Kappa Alpha Bob Perry showed a paddle to Brett Leucht during a rush party. That night, Leucht accepted a bid to join. PI KAPPA ALPHA: (Front row) R. Sutton, T. Van- Arsdall, J. Crawford, L. Dodson, J. Welsh, B. Sensel, M. Smith, D. Pauli. (Second row) M. Seifert, T. Higgs, M. Crum, C. Sowell, J. Hughart, T. Albani, B. Weigel, R. Perry. (Third row) J. Grunow, J. Langdon, B. Ren- ner. (Fourth row) K. Day, L. O'Bryan, R. Foster. (Fifth row) M. Held, B. Ford, B. Bowser. (Sixth row) G. Tong, D. Sullivan, G. Greene. (Back row) M. Purd, J. Lee, D. Stevenson, B. Huffines, C. Sensel, C. McCulloch, D. Tepool and M. Nichols. 323 Fraternities THE GREEK LIFE ... SAEs sponsor Dance-a-thon Sigma Chis win November Nonsense Competition Ron Hoskin: ENTHUSIASM sends Mike Wampler and Rick Hunt- er over their huddled teammates, and helped SAE to a 7-2 intramural football record. SAE fell in the semifin- als to Wild Hares, 14-13. “Dance for those who can’t” was the theme for the Muscular Dystrophy Dance-a-thon co-sponsored by Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity with Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. The event which kicked off Greek Week in the spring was held in Diddle Arena. Awards were given to the couples raising the most money in pledges. The SAEs also raised $1,100 for the United Givers Fund and worked at a haunted house during the Halloween season to raise money for the March of Dimes. Working with AOPi at Homecoming, the SAEs sponsored Penny Wellinghurst as a Homecoming queen candidate. The float, entitled “Morehead: What a Picnic’, built by the two groups, received the Alumni Award. “Homecoming was the highlight of the semester,” said John Tuell. “About 75- 100 alumni returned for the activities.” The SAEs also made their traditional “Run to Victory” for the Western-Austin Peay game in the fall. This marked the 13th time the local chapter has made the run. The SAEs captured the first place award in KD Washboard and participated in the ADPi 500 and November Nonsense in the fall. Continuing to be active, they participated in Greek Week, Spring Sing, and had their spring formal in Nashville, Tenn. As a special honor, the Western chapter of SAE was the host of a province meeting for all the Kentucky SAE chapters. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON: (Front row) R. Napier, B. Moore, S. Robertson, M. Smithers, K. Birkett, D. Clark, R. Cheuvront, S. Thornton. (Second row) B. Travis, R. Lee, R. Carey, T. Callis, J. Peay, J. Perkins, S. Hooks, B. Steen, H. McClure. (Third row) S. Snod- grass, B. Henry, S. Wilson, C. Callis, M. Wampler, C. Ray, J. Rue, J. Pickens. (Fourth row) R. Ford, S. Snel- len, T. Griffin, D. Pelino, L. Heffington, M. Wright, C. McGuire, R. Poling, B. Bratcher, J. Tuell, D. Augen- stine. (Back row) M. Romeigh, C. Strader, P. Sargent, J. Biggers, K. Tharp, P. Henry, W. Moore, D. Sears, J. Eckhart, G. Jones and F. Cantler. 324 Fraternities Sigma Chi apparently thrives on competition. The fraternity won the rain-shortened ADPi 500 by winning four events; took first in November Nonsense with “The Wizard of Oz,” and won the campus intramural football title with a 12-0 record, the first undefeated team ever, according to president George Sutton. And competition by sororities in the Sigma Chi Derby raised more than $2,000 that went to the fraternity’s national philanthropy (the Wallace Village for brain damaged children) and two local charities (the Civitan Club and Big Brothers and Sisters Program of el Tet Bowling Green). Finally, five fraternity members participated in intercollegiate athletics: David Tench in football, Eric Sack in riflery and Sutton, Danny Bowling and Mark Edwards in Rubgy. Sigma Chi petitioned its national organization to start an alumni association in Bowling Green. Sutton said that about 30 Sigma Chi alumni live in town. Basketball fans got a treat when Sigma Chi sponsored two nights of dancing at the Jaycee Pavilion during the Ohio Valley Conference Tournament. (continued on page 326) Lewis Gardner DOROTHERICO (John Self) and faithful dog Toko pin the Wicked Witch of the West (Danny Bowling) to the ground during Sigma Chi’s first place “Wizard of Oz” at November Nonsense. SIGMA CHI: (Front row) K. Wilson, K. Hamilton, T. Feagin, R. Wetherill, E. Sack, M. Hoskins, D. Tench, M. Schaftlein, P. Sheeran, D. Shaw, S. Ragan, R. Rob- inson, C. Bastien. (Second row) K. Shaheen, R. Skeet- ers, S. Allgeier, S. Ruble, B. Rhodes, R. Main, K. Grif- fith, J. Jordan, C. Lanier, K. Morris, T. Rhoades, D. Spisich, D. Fleming, J. Hargrove, R. Cothern, B. Kiltz. (Third row) P. Peterson, S. Byrne, M. Straney, R. Wal- ters, C. Phillips, M. Howard, D. Lovell, J. Weaver, K. McDonald, W. Hamilton, M. Harvey. (Back row) M. Krenowitz, B. St. Clair, M. Miller and B. Sanders. 325 Fraternities THE GREEK LIFE... Sigma Nus co-sponsor radiorama Sig Ep alumni organize chapter THE WILLIAM TELL OVERTURE suffered in the hands of Alexander’s Ragtime Band (Sigma Nu) at its 75th reunion. The feeble band succumbed at the end of the November Nonsense skit. SIGMA NU: (Front row) J. Morgan, M. Brodarick, S Woosley, J. Lee, J. Miller, M. Biggers, R. Warmath, K Smith, B. Graven, J. Harris, S. VanMeter. (Second row) D. Wells, D. Pierce, J. Pettey, A. Cunningham, B. Six, J. Smith, J. Aull, T. Scott, M. Grover, J. Johnson, K. Reynolds. (Third row) D. Roberts, W. Sholar, R. Haack, R. LaGrange, J. Natcher, H. Shunk, J. Stone, M. Stahl, P. Hutto, M. Stahl, G. Mitchell, C. Riley, S. Biggers. (Fourth row) B. Griffin, D. Harris, M. Thom- as, B. Pennington, D. McCracken, B. Moreland, C. Delacey, M. Crampton. (Back row) R. Taylor, G. Sloan, T. Anderson and M. Nedvidek. 326 Fraternities Acting as coaches, cheerleaders and sponsors, members of Sigma Nu fraternity kicked off their annual Sigma Nu Powderpuff Football Tournament. Six sororities vied for the championship which the Sigma Nus helped them prepare. The three-day event also served as a fund-raiser for charity. The money collected was given to the Boys’ Club. They also sponsored a Radiorama for the March of Dimes in cooperation with WBGN and Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. At Homecoming, the Sigma Nus were honored by the presence of three charter members. “Our alumni turnout was great. We had a dance and cocktail party to honor them,” said president Mark Biggers. With their version of “The 75th Reunion of Alexander’s Ragtime Band,” the Sigma Nus captured second place in November Nonsense. They also won second place in KD Washboard. The Sigma Nus won first place in racquetball and participated in other intramurals throughout the year. They sponsored their first foosball tournament for fraternities in the spring. Along with Sigma Chi fraternity, the Sigma Nus sponsored Spring Festival, a beer blast during Greek Week and Spring Sing. The Sigma Nus had their spring formal at Barren River Lodge. Lewis Gardner Homecoming became a special event for Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity when the visiting alumni organized a local alumni chapter. More than 40 graduates returned for the dinner, open bar, and dance given by the Sig Eps during the Homecoming activities. “Homecoming was definitely one of our most successful events. Everyone who was here enjoyed every activity we GREEK FLAGS went on display at the Homecoming bonfire the night before the game. Steve Smiley and Robert Rowley carry Sigma Phi Epsilon’s flag while other Sig Eps hol d a “WKU 1” banner. had,” said Gene Shy. The Sig Eps were also honored by receiving the Regents Award for their house decoration. Connie Gibson, a little sister to the fraternity, received first runner-up in the Homecoming queen court. Throughout the year, the Sig Eps sponsored fund-raising activities, including a canned food drive at Christmas, a Christmas tree sale for the Optimist Club and a car bash sponsored each year at a home football game. Proceeds from the event went to the Big Brothers and Big Sisters program of ae | hi F . i i : TEPER Bowling Green. During football season, the Sig Eps were awarded the Spirit Towel for spirit and enthusiasm displayed at football games. The Sig Eps were active in both Greek and campus events. They presented a special version of Charlie Chan in November Nonsense and were awarded second place in a foosball tournament sponsored by Sigma Nu fraternity. A spring formal ended the year for the Sig Eps. Huntsville, Ala., was the site of the weekend event. (continued on page 334) Lewis Gardner A FAN MOTOR is installed by Gene Shy, David Witt and Scott Triplett to Sigma Phi Epsilon’s revolving Homecoming display. The motor broke, so a pledge turned the award winner by hand. SIGMA PHI EPSILON: (Front row) G. Logan, P. Er- hardt, C. Brizendine, J. Wallace, W. Beard, D. Witt, S. Triplett, J. Simpson, D. Potts, M. Leneave, D. Dodd, R. Macias, T. Rhoades, T. Nunnaly, B. Nethery. (Second row) T. Chambers, L. Powell, D. Chapman, M. Meyer, H. Price, D. Pearson, D. Stafford. (Third row) D. Huff, R. Bruce, C. Cameron, P. Holland, L. Cherry, D. Burns, G. Stickler. (Fourth row) J. Czipo, J. Patterson, E. Reynolds, R. Rowley, W. Thompson, M. Mays. (Fifth row) W. Herner, K, Webb, T. Angelo, S. Mays. (Back row) E. Shy, J. Holland, R. Brown, C. Sawnberg and S. Wilburn. ——— 327 Fraternities Star-studded Victory Photos by Debbie Gibson “I really didn’t think girls could be so rough, especially in a sports event,” said one bystander. “It was rough, but fair. No one seemed to play dirty.” So much for the gentle jock. The idea that a rough-and-tough football game is only for boys is on its last leg. This competition likewise is stiff, the game is action-packed, the crowd is psyched and the players are sorority sisters. Powderpuff football emerged again in October in the Third Annual Sigma Nu Classic at Hobson Grove Park. Representing Chi Omega, Alpha Omicron Pi, Kappa Delta, Alpha Xi Delta, Phi Mu and Alpha Delta Pi, 70 girls braved sore muscles, steady rain and mouth guards to play in the single- elimination tournament. “It’s very competitive, and the girls are really getting good,” said chairman John Erskine. “There are some real athletes that play.” With star-studded faces, the ADPis survived preliminary games against the Alpha Xis and Phi Mus, earning the right to play the AOPis in the championship game. In a steady rain, ADPis won, 6-0. . ADPi freshman quarterback Carrie Watson said “getting psyched” was a big part of the team win. “I thought we’d win, I did, I really did,” she said. “I thought we had the ability. We were psyched. We wore the same clothes (game uniforms) three days in a row. We added a star each night for good luck.” Applied with eyeliner, the stars were the brainchild of coach Terry Jenkins. He suggested they wear them during the 328 Powder Puff Football game to psych out their first opponent and defending champs, the Alpha Xis. With each victory a star was added. “The stars grew into a sign of victory, giving us more hope and faith in ourselves and in our team,” Miss Watson said. One common aspect of the game was roughness. AOPi Beth Metzker said, “I didn’t get to play much, but from the sidelines it looked really rough.” “Last year’s games were rougher,” said - Chi O offensive end Lisa Hahn. “The officials tried to eliminate some of it, but -AN END RUN by Alpha Omicron Pi’s Kim Robison didn’t produce a badly-needed touchdown against Al- pha Delta Pi in the championship game. She said it was “heartbreaking” after AOPi lost, 6-0. THE STAR-SPANGLED FACES of Laurie Emberton, Susan Boylan and other Alpha Delta Pis became a symbol of pride for the eventual champions. The ADPis wore one star for each game they played. sometimes if you told a referee they didn’t do anything.” ADPi Kathy Birkett said, “Sure I was bumped and bruised a little, but when you win, it’s all worth it.” Most participants seemed to believe the games should be double-elimination. Erskine said the tournament might be structured that way next year. “It is disappointing for a team to prepare so much and get eliminated the first night.” Another suggested alternative was extending the competition to a full week rather than three consecutive nights. ADPi senior Pam Mosier said, “If you’re really into it, a lot of bruises and soreness would happen. You can get really drained playing back to back. Spreading it out over a week or so would be better.” Win or lose, powderpuff football brought a lot of Greeks together. Sophomore Anne Jackel, running back for the Chi Os, said, “I think it’s great for the Greek system. The frats come to see a bunch of girls get out there and hit each other. It’s good for spirit. While it’s going on, you kind of hate everybody not on your team, but when the time is up, everyone is crying and laughing. It’s just two hours when you can’t stand each other.” Kathy Lam, Terri Darr, Laura Phillips AN INJURED KNEE hampered Phi Mu quarterback Tamme Schwartz against Alpha Delta Pi, so coach Peter Hutto urged her to rest before returning. Phi Mu lost, 26-0, but she said it was fun. A MID-FIELD CELEBRATION follows Alpha Omicron Pi’s 6-0 victory over Chi Omega. “We felt just like real football players. We were dying to win,” said Claire Edgington, hugging Kit Huey. “WE JUST GOT so caught up in the game,” Alpha Omicron Pi linebacker Claire Edgington said. She sobs on the shoulder of referee Mark Biggers after AOPi lost to . Alpha Delta Pi, 6-0. Powder Puff Football THE GREEK LIFE ... Panhellenic funds scholarship IFC has sundry fund-raisers United Black Greeks reorganize The College Heights Foundation Trust Fund, a newly established scholarship given once a year, was the product of the Panhellenic Association’s efforts to improve public relations between the university and Greeks. “The scholarship is given to a non- Greek student, based on need, scholarship and leadership abilities,” said Kathy Watson, assistant for sorority affairs. Miss Watson, who came to Western in August to work with the 10 sororities, is In order to work more closely with Panhellenic Association, the Interfraternity Council (IFC) co- sponsored the first annual Academic Awards Banquet in January. More than 300 Greeks were invited in honor of their academic achievements for the fall semester. Under the new leadership of Bob Anderson, assistant for fraternity affairs, IFC sponsored various fund-raisers. The big event for IFC was co- sponsoring Greek Week. The annual event included a blood drive and a dance-a-thon, and concluded with an awards banquet. The Reed Morgan Award and an award for the outstanding fraternity and sorority member was presented at the banquet. A major emphasis of IFC was placed on expanded programs designed to help each fraternity. “We want to provide more help for each of the 16 fraternities and their activities,” said president Jamie Hargrove. INTRAFRATERNITY COUNCIL: (Front row) J. Hargrove, K. Hopgood, K. Pawley, B. Simpson, T. Ru- ble. (Second row) T. Johnson, J. Roach, K. Bell, C. Smalley, D. Livers, D. Sullivan, D. Tepool. (Third row) B. Masden, R. Miller, B. Heichelbech, S. Brit- tingham, K. Wettig, C. Chancellor, W. Beavin, D. Hench, V. Williams. (Fourth row) D. Witt, S. Wil- burn, D. Lang, K. Inman, R. Walters, M. Biggers, J. Natcher, D. Roberts, G. Rader, G. Rosenbaum, T. Hayes, L. Hagans. (Back row) B. Anderson, L. Morgan, S. Hendrickson, B. Pickerill, P. Sargent, M. Wampler, J. Brown, M. Palis and D. Bowling. 330 Panhellenic, UBG, IFC pleased with their efforts. “There’s definitely a more positive view between the Greeks and the university,” she said. Panhellenic Day, set aside in the fall to promote Panhellenic and its scholarship, was also a fund-raiser for the trust fund. Special Panhellenic T- shirts were made for sorority members and a candied apple and bake sale helped boost the fund’s balance. Panhellenic also co-sponsored the first Academic Awards Banquet for Greeks with a 3.0 or higher gpa for the fall semester. Special speakers included President Dero Downing, Board of Regents chairman J. David Cole and Top Orndorff, president of the local First Federal Savings and Loan Association. To update rush, leadership and other chapter-related areas, Panhellenic sent members to the Big 10 IFC-Panhellenic Conference in Columbus, Ohio. Along with Western’s IFC, they represented the largest group at the weekend conference. PANHELLENIC ASSOCIATION: (Front row) R. Vinson, C. Gamble, L. Morgan. (Second row) S. Hart- ford, T. Aberle, G. Carlson, V. Barker, T. Price, T. Alley, S. Alford. (Third row) T. Craig, S. Brenzel, G. Willingham, S. Sandefur, T. Hardesty, L. Turok, N. Holden, M. Houchin, C. Whitman. (Back row) K. Watson, E. Constans, D. Bates and G. Kinchlow. Lynn Wright HELD FOR RANSOM, Greek officers await the arri- val of the money collected by their organizations for the March of Dimes. Sophomore Sandy Alford con- ducted the kidnapping through Panhellenic and IFC. In order to help each other, the members of United Black Greeks (UBG) realize that working together is the only way to be an effective organization. The four fraternities and three sororities kicked off their reorganization in October by sponsoring Joyce Ann Haskins as Homecoming queen candidate. Miss Haskins proved a wise NEW TO WESTERN’S STAFF, Bob Anderson, assis- tant for fraternity affairs, works with Interfraternity Council officers (IFC). Anderson looks over papers regarding pledgeship with vice-president Greg Storey. ENIOINEL TWO! | @) 1 NICKEL COVERING PORTION OF ADIN Lines BLA SIS 2.$100 ane $10.00 BILESFed NICKEL MUST BE IN CENTER BLACK PORTION OF BILL HORTHATEES choice when she was elected queen during the festivities. Meeting weekly, two representatives from each organization and elected officers planned activities to bring the Black Greeks closer. UBG was active in Black History Week and sponsored a Step-a-Thon. The group also sponsored a UBG Weekend and invited black Greeks from other college campuses to spend the weekend at Western. Special activities and an awards banquet highlighted the April event. Lynn Wright Lewis Gardner HANDS RAISED in unison, black Greeks join togeth- er toward the end of a Step-a-thon sponsored by the United Black Greeks. The event, the first of its kind, was at Snell Hall. The groups involved were also members of Interfraternity Council and the Panhellenic Association and worked with the 19 other Greek organizations. UNITED BLACK GREEKS: (Front row) D. Averey, R. Coulter, M. Hayes, J. Moore. (Back row) V. Fields, M. Thomas and L. Hanley. Panhellenic, UBG, IFC ADDING the finishing touches to her costume, Pam English prepares backstage for talent compe- tition. Sponsored by her parents, the Elizabeth- town sophomore performed a dance routine to the Pink Panther. — CHECKING the program backstage are second runner-up Shirley Conner and Miss Congeniality, Cindy Tinsley. Miss Conner was sponsored by Phi Beta Sigma fraternity and Miss Tinsley by McDonalds. A Mist of Black Through the darkness, the spotlights silhouetted the contestants and created a mood — “A Mist of Blackness.” The event was the ninth annual Miss Black Western Pageant and Dianne Butts was the winner. The contest, sponsored by Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, was part of Black © History Week, commemorated in the spring. ‘I think the pageant’s a form of identity,” said Miss Butts, a junior from Bowling Green who was sponsored by Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. “It gives the black woman a chance to use her talents | in a meaningful way.” The pageant consisted of three areas in which the contestants could express themselves; talent, swim suit and creativity. There were also a question and answer period, according to AKA president Mona Thomas. “Each category has 10 things to be judged on, such as poise and personality,” she said. The most expressive part of the competition was the creativity area, according to Miss Butts. “This is the part where you reveal yourself through some sort of costume,” she said. Dressed as the Statue of Liberty, and arrayed in the Black Liberation colors of red, green, and black, Miss Butts said she “felt the need to express Black Liberty” in choosing her costume. During the contest, the 10 contestants were asked what qualities a black woman should : “1 think a black woman should have a 332 Miss Black Western good relationship with God,” Miss Butts said. “Once she has this, then she is able to help her fellow man and the younger children that come behind her.” In the talent competition, Miss Butts played a jazz waltz, “Bluesette.” “I play the piano for my church, and they really helped me out a lot during the contest,” she said. “Without God’s will, I wouldn’t have made it.” First runner-up in the pageant was Shirlene Jewell, an Edmonton sophomore sponsored by Bates Runner Hall. Second runner-up was Shirley Conner, a Clarksville, Tenn., sophomore sponsored by Phi Beta Sigma. Cindy Tinsley, a freshman from Owensboro, was named Miss Congeniality. She was sponsored by McDonalds. Other contestants in the pageant were Juliana Cummings, a Louisville junior sponsored by Omega Psi Phi; Pam English, an Elizabethtown sophomore sponsored by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest English; Robin Grove, a Louisville freshman sponsored by her mother, Mrs. Sue Groves; Helen Parrish, an Elizabethtown junior sponsored by Delta Sigma Theta; Shebell Peak, a Louisville junior sponsored by Sailin’ Shoes and My Friend’s Place; and Marcella Williams, a Jamestown junior sponsored by Central Hall. Weeks of practice and preparation went into the contest, according to Miss Butts, and it was all for the ultimate goal; to represent black women from Western. Terri Darr @ DIANNE BUTTS walks down the aisle after being crowned Miss Black Western. Miss Butts is a junior from Bowling Green and represented Alpha Phi Al- pha fraternity. SURROUNDED by the finalists, Dianne Butts is crowned by former Miss Black Western Marsha Troutman. “A Mist of Blackness” was the theme of the ninth annual pageant. Photos by Judy Watson : MAKING last minute checks before going on stage, Shirlene Jewell prepares for the evening — gown competition. The Edmonton sophomore, © sponsored by Bates Runner Hall, was named first runner-up. : ae hs ee a 4 a é 3 s SE ee ea BEI IANO 333 Miss Black Western THE GREEK LIFE ... ADPis win powderpuff football Alpha Kappa Alpha sponsors Miss Black Western Pageant An all out effort paid off for Alpha Delta Pi sorority as it won the Sigma Nu Powderpuff Football Tournament. Melody Hill, running back for the ADPis, was named Most Valuable Player. The ADPis continued to win as they placed first in November Nonsense and intramural volleyball, billiards and table tennis. They also placed second in Sigma Chi Derby and sponsored Debbie Pardue in the Derby Darling contest. The annual ADPi 500 got off to a good start but was cut short by rain. The sorority also sponsored an ice cream social at McLean Hall. Working with a needy family, the ADPis presented food and gifts throughout the year with special emphasis at Thanksgiving and Christmas. The ADPis worked with Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity on a Homecoming float and sponsored Kathy Birkett as a Homecoming queen candidate. Miss Birkett was elected second runner-up in the competition. REMAINS OF A LAYERED CAKE are divided be- tween Sally Hammack and Nancy Holden of Alpha Delta Pi at the KD house. The KDs treated the ADPis to dinner to get better acquainted. ; ALPHA DELTA PI: (Front row) B. Holloway, C. Fowler, J. Schmetter, S. Adams, N. Holden, K. Kyser, T. Sager, V. Hawkins, S. Morgan, D. Wagner, S. Moo- ney, L. Hail, M. McClanahan, D. Riley, K. Maddox, D. Miller, L. Newby, K. Birkett. (Second row) A. Roark, 334 Sororities L. Emberton, C. Rose, J. Cole, L. Harvey, B. Newby, P. Price, S. Braden, T. Price, C. Lanier, D. Deal, J. Mont- gomery, T. Mosier, M. Crumby, S. Sandefur, P. Mo- sier, B. Stafford. (Third row) B. Myers, G. Moore,K. Maddoz, V. Bechtel, A. Wicks, J. Bertelson, J. Kinloch, Mike Dowell L. Driver, C. Garvin, L. Moreland, M. McCormick, S. Boylan, C. Hancock, C. Boylan, S. McGinnis, K. Lewis. (Back row) C. Fitz, L. Simms, H. Watts, S. Conners, J. Embry, L. Sidwell, M. Hill, S. Woodrum, L. Mead, S. Simmons and B. Bretz. Lewis Gardner ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA performs at the Step-a-thon sponsored by United Black Greeks. Stepping in Snell Hall were Donna Massie, Shebell Peak, Jonetta Moore, Gloria McIntyre, Mona Thomas and Darlene Neal. A small sorority can still do big things. Although Alpha Kappa Alpha’s membership has dropped from 40 to 12 in recent years, it still sponsored Miss Black Western, offered scholarships, helped the United Negro College Fund and kept active in civic affairs, according to president Mona Thomas. An October fashion show that included models from nearly every Greek organization on campus raised $100 for the United Negro College Fund. Ten girls vied for the ninth annual Miss Black Western contest in February, ‘one of the larger groups lately,” Miss Thomas said. The sorority’s second annual Ivy League Tennis Tourney attracted aspiring netters in April. And, after the Murray football game in November, the AKAs sponsored a stepping contest, Greek show and disco at Garrett. The AKAs also gave a children’s Halloween show with the cooperation of local churches. They also prepared fruit baskets, played games and sang carols for the residents of Bowling Green Manor at Thanksgiving and Christmas. They offered a $100 scholarship to an outstanding local high school student in need of financial aid. “We're small, but we try to stay busy, doing things to keep people interested in us and show we're alive.” (continued on page 336) PAGEANTS are packed with emotion as Shebell Peak absorbs a tear during the Miss Black Western Pageant sponsored by her sorority, Alpha Kappa Alpha. She was sponsored by Sailin’ Shoes and My Friend’s Place. ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA: Y. Brown, G. Brown, G. McIntyre, E. Fletcher, D. Bates, M. Thomas, S. Peak and C. Gamble. LE EEE 335 Sororities THE GREEK LIFE... AOPi wins special award from national headquarters Alpha Xis sponsor second annual Alpha Xi Grand Prize A ROAR by the MGM Lion (Beth Metzker) added realism to Alpha Omicron Pi’s “Behind the Scenes at MGM” skit for November Nonsense. AOPi took third in the sorority competition. ROOMMATES Libby Smith and Nancy Taylor of Alpha Omicron Pi filled the roles of the twins, Twidd- ledee and Twiddledum, in the “AOPi Disneyland” skit during formal rush in August. Mike Dowell ALPHA OMICRON PI: (Front row) J. Huey, S. Hart- ford, T. Coomes, M. James, J. Holt, C. Hildreth, C. Edgington. (Second row) A. Boyd, C. Lamb, L. Phil- lips, J. Goodin, M. Becht, M. Stallings. (Third row) J. Bryant, M. McCreery, D. Ellis, K. Houser, L. Perdue, P. Brown, L. Suddoth, C. Buckles, R. Young. (Fourth row) L. Spain, S. Westfall, N. Petros, P. Wellinghurst, N. Cox, M. Holt. (Fifth row) R. Jarboe, C. Pursley, L. Williams, C. Precious, S. Alford, R. Andrews, L. Cre- tella. (Sixth row) J. Douglas, D. Bloch, C. Sisco, T. Jewell, N. Taylor, T. Johnson, R. Maglinger. (Seventh row) B. Metzker, S. Mabry, G. Runner, S. Dorrah, S. Roso, K. Robison, S. McCullough, M. Forbes. (Back pat Wilson, L. Smith, J. Joseph, E. Porter and L. mith. 336 Sororities Receiving an award at its national convention highlighted Alpha Omicron Pi sorority’s fall semester. The sorority received the Central Office Cooperation Cup for working closely with its national headquarters. In addition, AOPi received the Panhellenic Scholarship Award for the highest gpa among sororities. Charity played a big part in AOPi’s projects. Along with its annual Skate-a- thon for the Arthritis Foundation, the sorority co-sponsored a Dance Marathon for Muscular Dystrophy and a Radio- rama for the March of Dimes. AOPi also collected for the United Givers Fund and gave theme parties for the children at the Day Care Center. For the 12th consecutive year, the AOPis won the ADPi 500. They placed second in both softball and Sigma Nu powderpuff football. AOPi also participated in KD Washboard, November Nonsense, Sigma Chi Derby and Greek Week. AOPi Jacki Joseph received first runner-up in the Derby Darling contest. Working with Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity at Homecoming, AOPi built a float which received the Alumni Award, and sponsored Penny Wellinghurst as a Homecoming queen candidate. Lewis Gardner SUDSY SLAPSTICK left Alpha Xi Delta pledges Mar- sha Sanner and Stacy McMahon soaked near the end of their fall semester car wash. The pledges sponsored a dance with the $105 they made. Concentrating the fall semester on a local Girl Scout troop, Alpha Xi Delta sorority was involved in projects enjoyable to both the Girl Scouts and sorority members. The Alpha Xis had weekly meetings for the Girl Scouts and, as a special treat, sponsored a Christmas party with Santa Claus as the guest of honor. Participating in each intramural sport also kept the Alpha Xis busy. They placed first in basketball freethrows and third in volleyball. They also participated in Sigma Nu powderpuff football, KD Washboard, and worked with Alpha Kappa Psi fraternity on a Homecoming float. They sponsored Karen Hogg for Homecoming queen and gave a reception for alumni at the Alpha Xi house. Planning, preparations, and a lot of fun was the product as the Alpha Xis sponsored their second annual Alpha Xi Grand Prix. “Promoting the event was our major emphasis since it’s a fairly new event on campus,” said president Brenda Stroud. Participation in Greek Week, Spring Sing, and a Spring Formal at the Mariott Inn in Louisville finished off a busy year for the Alpha Xis. (continued on page 338) A 15-YEAR-OLD MITT of her father’s is “the only glove I’d use,” said Alpha Xi Delta pitcher Terri Darr, who was warming up for an intramural softball game against Alpha Delta Pi. Mark Lyons ALPHA XI DELTA: (Front row) T. Darr, M. Powers, B. Korell, K. Hogg, M. Proctor, D. Raef. (Second row) B. Osborn, K. Woodburn, C. Robinson, C. Oldin, S. Gunts, M. Wampler. (Third row) C. Damer, M. San- ner, P. Elward, T. Aberle, J. Everette, T. Hightower. (Fourth row) B. Barker, K. Murphy, J. Coleman, S. McMahon, B. Tucker, M. Dietrich, V. Leathers, S. Winfrey. (Back row) S. Decker, J. Shinnick and B. Stroud. i EEE 337 Sororities 338 Sororiti THE GREEK LIFE 44 cont. Chi Os win Sigma Chi Derby Delta Sigma Theta emphasizes community involvement Lewis Gardner A CHORUS LINE of about 50 Chi Omegas opened their annual November Nonsense talent show, which raised $350 for the March of Dimes. The show’s theme was “That’s Entertainment.” CHI OMEGA: (Front row) K. Scheible, T. Borders, S. Moore, L. Hahn, A. Jackel, M. Robertson, S. Cornell, C. Hancock, K. Vaden, L. Chitwood, C. Arnold. (Sec- ond row) R. Henry, L. Donahue, C. Hahn, E. Robin- son, S. Waters, J. Cloar, S. Haynes, J. Collins, R. Watts, K. Joiner, T. Hemmer, B. Thompson. (Third row) S. Poehlein, R. Rue, J. Wagner, C. James, D. Hitron, K. Ward, K. Krengel, S. Garerott, C. Hardesty, M. Manis, K. Little, S. Jackson, S. Brenzel. (Fourth row) C. How- ard, R. Howell, L. Modjeski, R. Walker, A. Coffman, C. Baker, R. Chancey, B. Binnion, D. Ray, K. Wells, B. Floyd, S. Wisman. (Back row) N. Northerner, J. Scog- gins, L. Baker, L. Constans, T. Prather, P. Jackel and S. McElfresh. es The chant “Three in a Row for Chi O” rang true as Elaine Robinson was crowned Sigma Chi Derby Darling, making it the third consecutive year for a member of Chi Omega sorority to win the Derby Darling title. The Chi Os also won the Derby and collected $300 for Sigma Chi’s philanthrophy, Wallace Village for Children. Second place finishes in the ADPi 500 and KD Washboard helped enlarge the sorority’s winning record. The Chi Os also participated in Sigma Nu powderpuff football. Active in intramurals, the Chi Os competed in softball, basketball, badminton, bowling, archery, tennis and racquetball. ‘ At Homecoming, the Chi Os worked with the Sigma Chis on a float entitled ag oy b A scammer ene “Wipe Out the Eagles” and sponsored Charlene Hardesty as a Homecoming queen candidate. The Chi Os also gave a tea at the student center for their visiting alumni. “That’s Entertainment-Movie Madness” was the theme of the Chi O- sponsored November Nonsense. The annual event consisted of skits and songs performed by competing fraternities and sororities. The March of Dimes received the $350 raised from the event. Spring semester included participation in Greek Week and Spring Sing. Gatlinburg, Tenn., was the site of the sorority’s spring formal in April. THE SPIRIT AWARD was eliminated from this year’s Sigma Chi Derby, but Chi Omegas kept up sideline cheers and applause anyway during the orange pass. The Chi Os won the event and the Derby. oe. TY oy, ot eit “s . : . We're more involved in the community and in the region than just on campus,” said Delta Sigma Theta sorority president Gina Kinchlow. “We're giving services to the people who need them most,” she said. Among those services were food drives at Thanksgiving and Christmas, a clothing collection for needy persons and Christmas caroling in “some of the poorer sections of town and for a lot of older citizens,” Miss Kinchlow said. ee Delta Sigma Theta stepped for the first home football game and at Homecoming and sang at 11th Street Baptist and New Bethel Baptist churches during the year. Joyce Ann Haskins brought special honors to her sorority at Homecoming. Sponsored by United Black Greeks, Miss Haskins was voted Homecoming queen from among 18 contestants. Celebrating their first National Founders Day in the spring, Delta Sigma Theta remembered its 22 founders ty through a reception and was honored by Dr. Livingston Alexander who spoke at the event. The membership rose to 12 despite “increased requirements,” Miss Kinchlow said. “It was a very productive year,” she said. ‘We're becoming a lot more business-like, and that’s definitely a step in the right direction.” (continued on page 340) Stevie Benson SINGING AND STEPPING by Delta Sigma Theta sorority entertained passersby after the Homecoming game against Morehead. Black Greeks stepped regu- larly after football games beside the university center and at a Step-a-Thon. DELTA SIGMA THETA: (Front row) L. Clark, G. Willingham, J. Haskins, R. Smith, G. Kinchlow, E. Cole and P. Berry. 339 Sororities THE GREEK LIFE .. KDs win progress award Phi Mus sponsor Halloween serenade for local children BEACH BOYS’ SONGS sung by Cathy Tench (in Rag- gedy Ann garb), Janet McCullough and Terri Craig of Kappa Delta entertained prospective pledges at a rush party. Eighteen pledges joined KD. Tom Dekle A BRAIN to pass classes with was what the Scarecrow (Mary Mitchell) wanted in Kappa Delta’s “Wizard of Western” skit for November Nonsense. The KDs re- hearsed for about three weeks, she said. Earning a progress award at the national convention was a highlight of the year for Kappa Delta sorority, according to president Becky Mitchell. The chapter was honored in the KD magazine, “Jet Angels,” for its work in raising money for the sorority’s national philanthropy: a Richmond, Va., crippled children’s hospital an d three annual research grants for orthopedic surgeons. KDs also worked monthly for the Red Cross Bloodmobile and collected for the Heart Fund. The annual KD Washboard featured Greek competition in country skits. Jimmie Lou Strader received an honor for her sorority as she was named runner-up in the Sigma Chi Derby Darling competition. “We're not real good in sports,” Miss Mitchell said, but they played softball and Sigma Nu powderpuff football. Cathy Nutter and Missy Shelton won the intramural badminton doubles tournament. Mona Wortham was nominated as Western’s representative to the Mt. Laurel Festival beauty pageant. “It’s been a real good year,” Miss Mitchell said. “We had-18 pledges each semester, and we have 68 actives, so we're almost at our ceiling. We’re the largest sorority on campus.” KAPPA DELTA: (Front row) M. Wortham, S. Egan, B. Mitchell, L. Davis, J. Randall, M. Portman, P. Bickett. (Second row) S. Bradshaw, D. Holmes, P. Hawkins, S. Adams, M. Mitchell, T. Craig, A. Meffert, D. Dodey, C. Tench, K. Harper, J. McCullough, S. Minogue, S. Hemingway, J. Willoughby, S. Rybij. (Third row) T. Bell, B. Goodwin, L. Dodson, L. Woodruff, M. Gra- ham, T. Hardesty, V. Lindsey, B. Smith, T. Sanders, G. Rager, A. Schmidt, P. Tuttle, K. Nutter. (Back row) G. Nutter, J. Higgason, K. Ashby, S. Helsley, A. Reece, J. Harris, K. Davis, M. Berryman, L. Gilbert, T. Fishback, L. Nation, L. Morrow, M. Shelton, T. Koester and R. Meador. 340 Sororities A Halloween serenade, annually A special trophy sponsored by Phi Mu | sponsored by Phi Mu sorority, made was given to the fraternity and sorority Halloween special for the children in the | with the most participation during the Big Brothers and Big Sisters Program of | weekend event. Bowling Green. Defending their first place intramural Dressed in their favorite costumes, the | championship, the Phi Mus won children joined the Phi Mus as they racquetball, softball, table tennis and serenaded the fraternities on campus. placed second and fourth in billiards. The Phi Mus also sponsored the ’ They also participated in November annual Special Olympics in the spring, Nonsense, Sigma Chi Derby and Sigma working with children in the special Nu powderpuff football in the fall. They education program in Bowling Green and | sponsored Debbie Dukes in the Derby surrounding counties. Darling contest, participated in Greek “The Special Olympics is the most Week and Spring Sing and had their rewarding thing we do,” said president spring formal at Ken Bar Inn at Mickey Wheeler. “The children really Kentucky Lake. enjoy it, as well as the fraternities and Phi Mu Marsha Terry brought special sororities that participate.” honors to her sorority when she received the award for the highest gpa during four years at Western at the Academic Awards Banquet for Greeks. (continued on page 342) MORE THAN 4,000 NAPKINS and a week of work at night went into Phi Mu’s Homecoming float, “West- ern Trumps the Eagles.” The float, co-sponsored by Alpha Gamma Rho, featured a card game. Lynn Wright z Ron Hoskins A BRISK AUTUMN WIND forced the Phi Mus to hold on to their derbies as they walked to the field events competition in the Sigma Chi Derby. “We didn’t do too well,” said president Mickey Wheeler. PHI MU: (Front row) B. Young, K. Grosshuesch, L. Redmon, B. Fyock, K. Chandler, V. Abshire, L. Pillit- teri, L. Garell, M. Wheeler, D. Hertelendy. (Second row) L. Daum, V. Tuttle, T. Schwartz, B. Barnette, M. Shawn, V. Howell, K. Baker, C. Gruccio, D. Cornwell, J. Poor. (Third row) K. Simerman, R. McGary, K. Slater, M. Houchin, K. Booher, C. Caldwell, L. Grider, A. Phillips, D. Dukes, L. Hortin, N. Strong. (Back row) M. Terry, T. Haley, S. Johnson, C. Weddle, J. Wittenbraker, S. Flory, W. McConnell, C. Baccus, P. Iacobello, A. Carlotta and S. Buck. 341 Sororities THE GREEK LIFE... Sigma Kappa wins Washboard Zetas sponsor Mr. Brickhouse Ss) Scott Robinseer LEFT-HANDED BOWLING causes no problems for Sigma Kappa Gale Williams, competing against Alpha Xi Delta in the intramural bowling league. She bowled games of 104, 106 and 90. “JINGLE BELLS” greets Mrs. Jennie Taff as Sigma Kappa sings Christmas carols at Colonial Manor nurs- ing home. “It helped me have the true meaning of Christmas,” Cathy Brown said. SIGMA KAPPA: (Front row) J. Jenkins, B. Ashcraft, M. Riggs, C. Brown, C. Wheeler, M. Michaels, L. Turok, G. Carlson, S. Melhiser, B. Hewlett, D. Green, L. Jordan, R. Bohannon. (Second row) M. Key, G. Williams, K. Cook, D. Cole, J. Fulkerson, J. Nunn, J. Esche, M. Berst, J. Johnson, P. Shelton, J. Hormuth, G. Pearce. (Back row) T. Gamble, M. Kennedy, M. Har- gan, M. Cooper, J. Kinduell, S. Popplewell, S. Wilson and D. Gaines. 342 Sororities “The Wailings of Sigma Kappa,” a country-western medley, clinched first place at the KD Washboard for Sigma Kappa sorority. The Sigma Kappas captured second place in November Nonsense and third place in the ADPi 500. They also participated in the Steak and Biskits competition at Ireland’s Restaurant, Greek Week and Spring Sing. Rhonda Bohannon represented Sigma Kappa in the Sigma Chi Derby Darling contest. “Turning into a Victory” was the name of the float Sigma Kappa constructed with Pi Kappa Phi fraternity. The two groups jointly sponsored Rhonda Bohannon as a Homecoming queen candidate. Miss Bohannon was named second runner-up. In intramurals, the Sigma Kappas placed first in racquetball and participated in softball, basketball, volleyball, badminton and bowling. The second annual Bunny Run, a 20- mile bike marathon to raise money for gerontology, was sponsored by the Sigma Kappas in April. The spring formal was held at the Lexington Hyatt Regency. The best-looking black men on campus competed in Zeta Phi Beta’s first Mr. Brickhouse competition in November, and president Brenda Baker hopes it will become an annual event. But Zeta Week, Feb. 26 to March 4, remained the main event of the sorority’s calendar. It included three days of fashion shows, a disco at Pearce-Ford Tower and a stepping contest at Downing University Center. The Zetas rang bells for the Salvation Army before Christmas, sponsored an Easter egg hunt at Lampkin Park for ZETA PHI BETA: (Front row) C. Whitman, R. Brit- ton, B. Baker, R. Vinson and P. Smith. children and another hunt at Potter Children’s Home. They also contributed money to SAD, a charity for underprivileged black children, according to Miss Baker. The sorority also entertained once at the Cellar and sponsored the Little Miss Black Bowling Green Pageant in April. FINAL MOMENTS of a Founder’s Day program ob- served by Phi Beta Sigma and Zeta Phi Beta included singing their theme songs. They joined hands to sing at Garrett Conference Center March 5. WATCHING STEPS CLOSELY, members of Zeta Phi Beta perform in the Step-a-thon sponsored by UBG. Stevie Benson Marjorie Crumps and Rita Britton join other sisters. Lewis Gardner 344 From fierce COMPETITION TO Friendly GET—TOGEThERS Judy Watson kappa alphas: GIVING IT ALL HE’S GOT, David Tench hurls the shot-put for Sigma Chi during Greek Week track and field. The freshman architectural drafting technology major is from Orlando, Fla. By the end of Greek Week, fraternity and sorority members had shifted their gears from neck-and-neck competition to friendly social events. The week was kicked off when fraternity and sorority members took to the track. Placing first in several of the track and field events, Alpha Delta Pi placed first in the sorority division and Sigma Nu placed first among fraternities. Alpha Xi Delta sorority and Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity placed second. Testing their strength against fellow Greeks, the tug of war was one of the main attractions. A sizable crowd near WITH THE WEIGHT of the world on his shoulders, Brad Kiltz portrays Atlas in Sigma Chi’s Spring Sing presentation of “It’s a Small, Small World.” Other members dressed in costumes from different countries. Judy Watson THE NEWEST KIDS ON THE BLOCK Kappa Alpha fraternity became the new kid on the block in the Greek community when it joined the 16 other campus fraternities last spring. President John Deeb said starting the chapter was the beginning of a tradition. “Rather than joining a tradition, our guys have the opportunity to make a tradition,” he said. “Being a charter member has a certain amount of prestige about it,” but also involves a lot of work. “There's a lot of red tape you have to go through to bring a new fraternity on campus,” he said. Deeb, who promoted the fraternity’s Greek Week initiation, is a transfer from Oklahoma: City University where he was a KA. “National headquarters contacted me about starting a chapter at Western,” he said. “I was very receptive to the idea.” Through the help of KA alumni J. David Cole, a Bowling Green attorney, and faculty member Dr. Norman Deeb, they found other KAs at Western who had transferred from other schools. They began recruiting members. Fifteen were recruited and recognized as an interest group on the Hill. “After we became an interest group, we awaited an invitation from the University Committee on Greek Affaiis,” _ Deeb said. They were invited April 11 and installed April 12. The KAs immediately began participating in Greek events, the first of which was Greek Week. But, their top priority became the search for a house. “We will participate in fall rush and a house is a necessity,” Deeb said. Stressing both social and philanthroic functions, the KAs’ goal is to be “Southern gentlemen,” Deeb said. “We want well-rounded men. We're selective and feel like we have a lot to offer.” Terri Darr @ Pearce-Ford parking lot watched Sigma Kappa defeat Kappa Delta in the sorority championship. Alpha Gamma Rho outlasted their opponents and won. Sigma Nu placed second. With questions based on a mixture of trivia and general knowledge, Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity and Alpha Delta Pi survived three rounds of the college bowl competition to place first in the event. Phi Delta Theta and Phi Mu were second. New to Greek Week was a spades tournament for sororities and a foosball tournament for fraternities. Alpha Kappa Alpha defeated Phi Mu in the spades tournament final and Sigma Nu placed first in foosball with Alpha Gamma Rho finishing second. Also new to Greek Week was a bed race for fraternities. A bed frame propelled by fraternity members was used to carry a little sister. Sigma Chi had the best time for first place. Lambda Chi Alpha finished second. Greek Week reached its peak as hoe of practice were showcased in the Spring Sing competition. It provided — entertainment from Elvis tunes to Broadway musical selections. Paying tribute to the “King,” Chi Omega | sorority took first place with a selection of Presley’ s songs. A “Sesame Stre presentation by Phi Mu placed : secon For the 13th year in the pas Lambda Chi Alpha won the f division with their present “Smiles.” Pi Kappa Phi plac presenting “Beatlemania. donation was made to Mt Dystrophy from the profi Throughout the week, prevailed, but in the end competitive spirit was put Greeks worked together. . The reception for Western’s new coach, Gene Keady, and con each other as the winners we announced at the Awards B ADPi and Lambda Chi wer place overall followed by Ph AGR placing second and Sigma Nu with third. An a mixer also highlighted th According to sorority member Hemmer, the new events Greek Week better. “I was see some new events thi “It generates more interes PRACTICING their vaythatd againg h Bratcher, the eight-member Chi Omeg team warms up before the compas defeated by Sk in the first tone: KAPPA ALPHA: (Front Row) R. Barnes, B. Sublett, L. Sharp, B. McGinnis, R. ned Py B. Puckett, D. Rutledge, M. Mulligan, M. Drake, J. Deeb. (Second Row) B. Cowan, K. Key, B. Cunningham, G. Johnson, R. Wall. (Third Row) P. Hendershot, G. Porter, G. Cline, T. Hooey and S. Shannon. 345 Greek Week 346 Classes PEOPLE on the Hill Sandy Alford, Editor People. No other creature or object comes to and goes from the Hill as much as students. Whether they lived on campus or off, they commuted a great deal if not daily. They came from sundry backgrounds, hometowns and countries to get a college education. Sooner or later, they would leave and take something or someone from the Hill with them. One art student started a business while in college. He began silk- screening T-shirts he had designed for customers who were students or in business. A graduate student worked in the campus speech clinic, helping young and older people with communication handicaps. A senior, infatuated with Elvis since the first time she saw him in concert six years ago, mourned his death last August. But she kept him alive in her memory by playing dozens of albums she had collected along with books, buttons, scarves and posters. Three football players took their musical talents from the campus.as they entertained in different groups, one with a barbershop style singing organization. Another graduate student left the campus on Sunday mornings to teach a two or three-member Sunday school class of children with special learning needs. She was able to use teaching methods she studied at Western to share Bible stories with the youngsters. Last summer, the fourth Gemini group left Bowling Green and took its _ musical show to the Caribbean where it entertained soldiers. Whether it was to another continent or around the corner, each student found a way to stretch the Hill a little farther in 1977-78. A Fan Keeps the King Alive ........ .. 354 Elvis Presley is dead, but one fan keeps him alive with memories of his concerts and a 6-year-old collection of albums, books and posters. Tops in His Business Bart Britt is an artist and businessman who creates silk-screened T- shirts, which he calls walking billboards. Talking it Out People of all ages are receiving help to correct their communication disorders at the campus speech clinic. A Special Sunday School . Children with exceptional learning needs are no longer deprived of formal or religious education. Graduate student Karen Johnson teaches a small Sunday school class for such children. All That Stuff... Mounting a large-mouth bass with her dad prompts D’esta Cook’s fascination and interest in becoming a taxidermist. Musical Enlistments ..... . On its fourth musical tour since 1965, Gemini provides musical entertainment for soldiers stationed in the Caribbean in the summer. 347 Classes | Seniors: Home Free It all began four years ago. Nearly 4,000 freshmen entered Western in August of 1974. They were the first students bound to the dorms by mandatory housing. The NCAA and OVC further welcomed the Class of 1978 to college by slapping the Hilltopper basketball team with a probation extension for recruiting violations. That year, freshmen read “All the President’s Men,” listened to Olivia Newton-John and went to a host of disaster movies. Kiss’s concert in Van Meter was the surprise of the year. Nick Rose won the NCAA cross-country championship. And the basketball team went 16-8, with Mike Odemns unanimously named AIl-OVC. But by May, 1978, more than 40 finals and at least 128 semesters hours later, only about half of the class remained. Now even those must face the Real World. KATHLEEN ABBOTT, Music Performance and Econ. Lexington VALERIE ABSHIRE, Community Health Lexington KATHY A. ADAMS, Music Education Hendersonville, Tenn. MICHAEL B. ADAMS, Community Health Bowling Green SUE ADAMS, Speech Pathology London BOLATITO K. ADESAMYA, Biology Nigeria, West Africa PATRICIA C. ADKINS, Psychology Louisville JON R. AKERS, Foreign Language Bowling Green BARBARA J. AKIN, Nursing Summersville CHARLES D. ALEXANDER, Biology Scottsville VICKI D. ALFORD, Sociology and Dental Hygiene Beaver Dam GARY F. ALLEN, Journalism Lafayette, Ind. MARY E. ALLISON, Theatre and Bus. Admin. Harrodsburg NANETTE L. ALWES, Art Education Louisville HELEN L. ANDERSON, Art Hendersonville, Tenn. MARK K. ANDERSON, Mass Communication and Govt. Covington THOMAS M. ANGELO JR., Public Relations and Speech Comm. Uncasville, Conn. CHARLOTTE ANTOINE, Sociology Louisville TIM APPLING, Biology Auburn ANTHONY ARNOLD, Electrical Engineering Technology Russellville 348 Seniors PATRICIA A. ARNOLD, Biology Madison, Tenn. ROB ASHBY, Business Administration Auburn ELIZABETH E. ASHCRAFT, Journalism and Govt. Brandenburg JEFFREY R. ASSMANN, History Waukesha, Wis. MARY G. AUBREY, Recreation Louisville DON AUGENSTEIN JR., Textiles Clothing and Merch. Owensboro DWIGHT L. AUSTIN, Music Composition Bowling Green JANET M. BACON, Accounting Tompkinsville VICKI BAGWELL, Journalism Auburn MARK K. BAILEY, Health and Safety Education Cold Springs PAUL W. BAILEY, Biology Wickliffe JULIE BALDWIN, Office Administration Louisville SHELLY BARRETT, English and Theatre Russellville PEGGY BARTLEY, Elementary Education Tompkinsville JOHNNIE W. BASKETT, Public Relations Bowling Green WILLIAM H. BASKETT, Industrial Technology Brandenburg BOBBI BATTLE, Biology Benton, Ill. TOM C. BATLE, History, Phys. Ed. and Recreation Benton, IIl. JERRY S. BEAN, Agriculture Tompkinsville GRAHAM BEDINGER, English and Theatre Hendersonville, Tenn. TOM BEESLEY, Mass Communication Murfreesboro, Tenn. TERESA BELL, English Edmonton CATHY BENSON, Physical Education Slaughters SUSAN BENTLEY, Nursing Montville, N.J. KATHRYN L. BEST, Music Owensboro NOEL A. BIDEAU, History Louisville DENISE BILBREY, Journalism and Sec. Science Hendersonville, Tenn. DAVID L. BILLINGSLEY, General Business and Acct. Haywood KATHRYN BIRKETT, Physical Ed. and Recreation St. Charles, Ill. REBECCA L. BLAIR, Elementary Education Columbus, Ohio DONN BLANK, Accounting Bowling Green CHUCK BLOOMINGBURG, Business Admin. and Mass Comm. Paducah MOHAMMAD H. BOCA, Engineering Physics Tehran, Iran BRUCE W. BOHANON, Public Relations Elkton SUZANNE F. BOOTH, Public Relations Winchester 349 Seniors BONNIE BOTT, Elementary Education Pleasure Ridge Park DONNA BOUGHEY, Adverti sing Louisville P. SHARON BOWLES, Government Edmonton SUSAN BOWLING, Interior Design Fraser, Mich. JAMES G. BOWMAN, II, Mass Communication Louisville THERMIS J. BOYKIN, Biology Louisville SUSAN BOYLAN, Recreation Hopkinsville KAREN BRADFORD, Community Health Evansville, Ind. STEVE BRANDNER, Agriculture Erlanger PETER BRANDT, Mechanical and Elect. Engin. Tech. Bowling Green JODY R. BRANSON, Library Science Louisville CAROL F. BRANSTETTER, Art Edmonton DELMAR L. BRANTLEY, Broadcast Communication Bowling Green JAMES A. BRATCHER, Agriculture Horse Cave K. SUZANNE BRATCHER, Mass Communication Beaver Dam BARBARA A. BRETZ, Elementary Education Huntingburg, Ind. DENNIS BRIDGEMAN, Public Relations Bowling Green PAUL BRIDGES, Biology Glasgow WILLIAM G. BRITTEN, Electrical Engineering Tech. Maysville 350 Seniors Mark Lyons Bowling Green CAROL J. BROWN, Elementary Education Bowling Green LENWOOD BROWN, Administrative Service Crofton, Md. MARK D. BROWN, Agriculture Woodburn DONALD E. BRUCE, Mass Communication Connersville, Ind. GEORGE E. BRUCE, Physical Education Louisville JANE BRUMFIELD, Art Education Bowling Green CLAUDETTE D. BUCHANAN, Biology and Nursing Greensburg JANET. BUCHANAN, Home Economics Education Duncan, Okla. KAREN L. BUCHANAN, Interior Design Stanford MARY D. BUDDE, Distributive Education Louisville BARRY D. BULLINGTON, Data Processing Franklin JILL L. BURD, Home Economics Education Cave City TERESA K. BURDEN, Clothing and Textiles Merch. Hartford JANNA BURKS, Biology and Nursing Bowling Green | The run around PACED BY A BICYCLE, Jeff Vamvas, a member of the cross-country team, runs on the Smith Stadium track in late afternoon. Vamvas, a senior from Detroit, said Ricky Barnes helped him keep his timing and gave encourage- ment. Barnes is a senior from Princeton. JOHN C. BRODT, Electrical Engineering Tech. and Bus. Admin. 351 Seniors CAROLINE BURNS, Art Bowling Green JIM BURTON, Photojournalism and Business Admin. Madisonville PATRICIA BURTON, Dietetics Sebree CARLOTTA BUSH, Physical Education Glasgow DEBORAH J. BUSH, English and Psychology Crofton PAMELA BUTLER, Biology Harned RAYBON BUTLER, Speech Munfordville RON CAIN, Computer Science and Math. Clarkson CHARLES R. CALDWELL, Business Administration Louisville GARRY D. CALLAWAY, Biology and Math. Bowling Green J. MARK CANTWELL, Photojournalism Vincennes, Ind. FRED CAPPS, History Bowling Green VIRGINIA A. CAPPS, Textiles and Cloth. Merch. and Bus. Admin. Bowling Green MICHAEL L. CARDWELL, Industrial Arts Education Franklin JANET L. CARLOCK, Elementary Education Bowling Green JOYCE K. CARNEAL, Elementary Education Madisonville BRENDA M. CARTER, Biology Tompkinsville DARLENE M. CARTER, Geology Bowling Green GAYLE CASH, Secretarial Administration Campbellsville MERRITT CASH, Business Administration Paducah PATRICIA CASH, Animal Science Campbellsville CHERYL CASTLEBERRY, Mass Communication and Pub. Rel. Madisonville KARIN CASWELL, Textiles and Cloth. Merch. and Bus. Admin. Louisville DAVID L. CAUDEL, Accounting Horse Cave KATHY L. CAUSEY, Textiles and Cloth. and Int. Design Henderson MARY A. CECIL, Textiles and Merchandising Bardstown GERALD CENTROWITZ, Government New York, N.Y. STEPHEN M. CESLER, Business Administration Louisville STEPHEN B. CHAMBERS, Performing Arts Hartford THOMAS R. CHAMBERS JR., Business Admin. and Comp. Sci. Louisville KATHLEEN A. CHANCEY, English and History Louisville MARILYN J. CHAPMAN, Business Education Owensboro DAVID CHERRY, Business Administration Scottsville CHARLES H. CIVILS, Data Processing Cerulean DOROTHY B. CLARK, English Scottsville 352 Seniors FRED G. CLARK, Economics and Religious Studies Bowling Green GENE P. CLARK, Business Admin, and Government Louisville SUSAN CLARK, Nursing and Community Health Hopkinsville BRENDA W. COBB, Library Science Greenville CAROLYN F. COBB, Social Work Horse Cave STEPHEN S. COCHRAN, Journalism Bowling Green CATHY COFFEY, Journalism and French Louisville KATHY B. COFFEY, Home Economics Education Edmonton TONY H. COFFEY, Business Admin. and Economics Edmonton KYLE COLE, Community Health and Nursing Albany DONALD L. COLYER, Business Administration Louisville TERESA H. CONDIT, Physical Education Bowling Green DEBBIE CONNER, Dietetics and Inst. Administration Genoa, IIl. PHYLLIS A. COOK, Elementary Education Morgantown CATHY C. CORNWELL, Biology Bowling Green KENNY COSTELLOW, Speech and Theatre Bowling Green P. JANE COSTELLOW, Elementary Education Bowling Green PHYLIS COTTRELL, Government and Spanish Murray DANNY W. COX, History Clarkson CANDACE G. CRAIN, Community Health Danville LINDA C. CRETELLA, Elementary Education and Music Bowling Green LORA N. CROWELL, Interior Design Providence PAMELA S. CRUMP, Elementary Education Magnolia CHERI L. CULLEN, Accounting Madisonville RHONDA CUMMINGS, Business Education Brownsville SUE J. CUMMINGS, Elementary Education Franklin DON CUNDIFF, Mass Communication Shepherdsville DALE CURRY, Public Relations Columbia J. E. CURRY, Elementary Education Bowling Green RICHARD CURTIS, Accounting Bowling Green TERRIE CURTIS, Accounting Bowling Green LISA DAILY, Sociology and French Louisville DAVID E. DANHAUER, Biology and Pre-Med. Owensboro JANICE DANHAUER, Office Administration Owensboro TIM DANT, Mass Communication Louisville 353 Seniors DONNA D. DARBY, English Bowling Green RHONDA D. DARDEN, Elementary Education Russellville CLEON DARLAND, Civil Engineering Technology Mt. Washington TERRI DARR, Psychology and Journalism Henderson JOYCE A. DAUGHERTY, Computer Science and Math. Custer A fan kee he first time Debra Fuller saw Elvis Presley perform live was in 1972 at a concert in Louisville. “He sang ‘Are You Lonesome Tonight?’ and | cried.” She’s been a devoted fan ever since. The senior elementary education major from Bowling Green has collected albums, tapes, mirrors, glasses, necklaces with his name stamped on them, posters and color photographs of the performer, who died last August. She has saved every magazine, news- paper article and paperback written in tri- bute to him. But more exciting to her are recollections of the 22 times she saw his live perfor- mances. Miss Fuller’s parents and sister, her boy- friend’s family and her friends often tra- veled with her to Evansville, Ind., Nash- ville and Louisville to see Elvis. But more spectacular than those was a trip to Las Vegas, Nev., after Miss Fuller’s high school graduation. Her parents paid her expenses as a gift and she went with her boyfriend’s mother, aunt and sister. Seniors} They saw Elvis’ show twice daily for six days. It was there she got two of the white signature scarves he tossed to front-row fans and a kiss from the star. “It was completely different in Las Ve- gas,” she said. “He was closer to the au- dience and there weren’t any policemen fighting you back. “Elvis cut up more with the crowd there. In other concerts sometimes he wasn’t in a good mood.” Through such dedicated following of El- vis, Miss Fuller once nibbled breakfast with his father, made friends with his doc- tor’s son, his Uncle Vester and various se- curity guards. “Once we took a Winnebago to Mem- phis and parked in front of his house,” she said. “We hooked up to their electricity and it blew a fuse in his home.” One time they toured Graceland’s grounds with a guard who drove them in a golf cart. And when Elvis died, a friend of Miss Fuller’s called her at work to relay the in- formation. “My dad said we had lost one of the ps the King alive family, but he wouldn’t let me go because of all the traffic,” she said. “But I’m glad I didn’t go because I probably would have fainted. I want to remember him as I saw him on stage, singing and dancing. I wouldn’t want to see him for the last time in a casket.” Miss Fuller later visited the cemetery where his casket lay in a mausoleum. Since then it has been moved to the garden at Graceland. Although the King is dead, he lives on for many people, Miss Fuller said. “People will remember him as an enter- tainer for people of all ages. Any song he sang sounded right. Nobody can take his place. No one can look, dance or sound like him. People flocked to see him no matter where he was. He was hard to get to, but I tried my best.” Connie Holman PART OF HER ELVIS COLLECTION surrounds De- bra Fuller, a senior elementary education major from Bowling Green. She said the albums, books, photo- graphs, newspapers, buttons and signature scarves are kept in three large drawers and in her closet. She’s been a devoted fan since 1972. Lewis Gardner RICHARD DAUGHERTY, Mathematics and Comp. Science Central City JAN DAVENPORT, Home Economics Education Greensburg JO DAVIS, Business Administration Hopkinsville JOANN DAVIS, Elementary Education and Sp. Education Paducah MARK A. DAVIS, Agriculture Horse Cave NANCY C. DAVIS, Dental Hygiene Franklin SHERIE DAVIS, Elementary Education Jonesboro, Ind. STEVE DAVIS, Business Administration Cadiz JOHN L. DAWSON, Computer Science and Math Owensboro LISA DAY, Interior Design Madisonville MARY R. DEAREN, Home Economics Education Louisville TIM DECKARD, Geography Valley Station KATHY DECKER, Business Administration Bowling Green ROSEMARY DEFIORE, Advertising Gallatin, Tenn. THOMAS A. DEKLE, Photojournalism Bowling Green JERRY D. DEMENT, Accounting Bowling Green LIBBY DENNING, Environmental Engineering Technology Glasgow DEBRA A. DICKENSON, Business Administration Hendersonville, Tenn. RONALD L. DIERSEN, Mathematics and Comp. Science Louisville DONNA DILLINGHAM, Business Education Dawson Springs RICHARD D. DILLMAN JR., Chemistry Shiner, Texas DAVID T. DODD, Biology Bowling Green CAPRICE L. DODSON, Physical Education and Rec. Bowling Green EVELYN DODSON, Community Health Valley Station : ZOE E. DONAHOO, Elementary Education Sebree JEANNE F. DOOLEY, Psychology and Special Ed. Bowling Green JERRY DOWELL, Commercial Art Bowling Green JOHN K. DOWELL, Elementary Education Radcliff JACKIE D. DOWNING, Psychology Allensville WANDA DOWNS, Journalism Fairmount, Ind. STEVE DREWS, Geography and Psychology Denver, Colo. MARY S. DRIVER, Nursing Bowling Green VICKI L. DRIVER, Textiles and Clothing Merchandising Gallatin, Tenn. JENNY C. DULIN, Textiles and Clothing Merchandising Hopkinsville LINDA DUNCAN, Accounting Centertown 355 Seniors LEONARD DUNKIN, Agriculture Silver Spring, Md. CARLA W. DURBIN, Home Economics Education Beaver Dam RAYMOND P. DURBIN, Agriculture Beaver Dam JANET H. DYER, Textiles and Clothing Merchandising Hartford WENDY ECKER, Pre-Dentistry Cedar Rapids, Iowa JEFF ECKHART, Advertising St. Charles, IIl. CLAIRE EDGINGTON, Therapeutic Recreation Winchester BROOKS L. EDWARDS, Social Work Greensburg JEFFREY EDWARDS, History Eminence ROBIN EDWARDS, History and Dental Hygiene Dansville, N.Y. STEVEN A. EDWARDS, Psychology and Mass Comm. Louisville TERRY EDWARDS, Nursing Lindenhurst, N.Y. LUCY K. EGOLF, Elementary Education Scottsville RONALD D. EILER, Civil Engineering Technology Louisville PAM ELDRIDGE, Journalism Orlinda, Tenn. TOMMY L. ELLIOTT, Agriculture Etoile DANETITE ELLIS, Sociology Louisville BONITA D. ELMORE, Elementary and Special Education Glasgow BONNIE S. ELMORE, Art and Spanish Glasgow LAUREL ELMS, Library Science Kevil KATHRYN E. EMBRY, Dietetics Henderson LESLIE G. EMBRY, Special Education Millwood SHARON D. EMBRY, Physical Education Morgantown VALERIE J. EMBRY, Nursing and Community Health Owensboro DOUGLAS E. EMERSON, Agriculture Lockport, N.Y. KAREN ESTES, Elementary Education Auburn JOANN EVERETTE, Elementary Education Princeton ABOLGHASEM FATHEDDIN, Electrical Engineering Tech. Iran JOYCE A. FAULK, Interior Design Louisville KEVIN FEARHEILEY, Psychology Mt. Carmel, Ill. LEANNA A. FELTS, Social Work Russellville LYNNE M. FERGUSON, Commercial Art Glasgow MIRIAM M. FERGUSON, Public Relations Union M. MARTHA FERRY, Mass Communication Louisville VANESSA C. FIELDS, Office Administration Bronx, N.Y. 356 Seniors PAT FLAHERTY, Business Administration Owensboro LUCYLLE O. FLAUTT, Interior Design Nashville, Tenn. SUSAN A. FLORENCE, Elementary Education Cox’s Creek BARBARA M. FLOYD, Elementary Education Louisville MARY R. FOGG, Biology Bridgeton, N.J. VICKIE L. FOLEY, Business Administration Prospect SANDY FORSHEE, Elementary Education Bowling Green CHARLES F. FRANCKE, Biology Bowling Green PATRICK K. FRANEY, Business Administration Owensboro KERRY L. FRAZIER, Horticulture Gilbertsville ALLEN R. FREEMAN, Commercial Art Owensboro KEITH FREEMAN, Public Relations and Speech Louisville GARY FRENCH, Physical Education Elizabethtown PATRICIA E. FRENCH, Elementary Education Elizabethtown JEFFREY R. FREY, Banking Owensboro MICHAEL D. FRITCH, Sociology Bowling Green PEGGY J. FUDGE, Secondary Education Columbia THOMAS C. FULKERSON JR., Business Administration Calhoun CATHY Y. FULLER, Elementary Education Princeton DEBRA J. FULLER, Elementary Education Bowling Green MIKE FULLERTON, Recreation Bowling Green MARGARET FULTZ, Business Administration Louisville TARA GAMBLE, Elementary Education Hopkinsville LINDA GAMBLIN, Business Administration Madisonville LARRY W. GAMMONS, Community Health Scottsville GRETA L. GARBO, Music Education Benton, III. MARY GARDNER, Medical Technology Allensville GARY N. GARMON, Interior Design Bowling Green REBECCA L. GARMON, Dental Hygiene Lebanon Junction VICTORIA A. GARMON, Community Health Burkesville DEBBIE GARNER, Office Administration Russell Springs MARTHA GARRETT, Elementary Education Franklin PEGGY GARRETT, Health Care Administration Greenville HENRY A. GEIDEL, Medical Technology Lowville, N.Y. LINDA M. GEORGE, Elementary Education Hendersonville, Tenn. 357 Seniors 358 Seniors GAYLE GIBBS, Recreation Hendersonville, Tenn. R. TODD GIBSON, Community Health Oxford, Ohio KAREN GILL, Elementary Education Greenville JAMES M. GIORGIO, Mass Communication Bowling Green VICKIE M. GIVENS, Elementary Education Morgantown RICHARD GLEITZ, Mechanical Engineering Technology Corydon, Ind. JULIE GMEINER, Elementary Education Kettering, Ohio APRIL R. GOBBLE, Secretarial Science Louisville HERBERT G. GOETZINGER, Mechanical Engineering Tech. Bowling Green PEGGY W. GOODMAN, English Glasgow TERESA L. GOOLSBY, Psychology Henderson TERRY L. GOOLSBY, Chemistry and Biology Gamaliel LANA GOTTULA, Civil Engineering Technology Louisville STEPHEN H. GRAHAM, History Greensburg GERTIE GRAVES, Home Economics Education Campbellsville art Britt says that T-shirts are walking billboards. If that’s so, Britt has painted a lot of billboards n his time. _ The senior art major from Bowling Green owns and operates T-Tops, a silk- screening business for T-shirts and other sportswear items. “T-shirts are popular because they sug- gest the personality of human beings with he colors and artwork they like on them,” Britt said. “Jeans are the No. 1 fashion wear, but everybody wears T-shirts with em. The industry has just skyrocketed.” So the art student combined his interest n silk screening with a $2,000 investment. (‘That was for necessities, no luxury items”) and has juggled his small business with studies. “Td like to study under a printmaker one day so I could learn as much as possible bout the art,” Britt said. “It’s an old art from the Orient. I like it because I can relate it to the way I think. “There are a range of techniques you can use, and it’s always exciting to see the out- come of the finished product. It’s an an- cient art form you can do yourself, using palk, Glmandink” —_— — Britt said friends and family have invest- ed more than 300 hours of unpaid labor to help manage the business demands. “I spend more than 200 hours a month nego- tiating deals, printing and assisting in pre- paring the art work,” he said. “It often takes weeks to get a final product because people are so demanding.” His orders range from a top-stitched _ football jersey which retailed for $10 or $15 A SILKSCREEN ENTHUSIAST, senior Bart Britt taught classes in the art on Tuesdays and Thursdays last spring. Each session lasted four hours in the uni- versity center’s craft shop. to a one-color simple T-shirt for $3. His clients have included individuals, businesses such as Godfather’s Pizza and Fantastic Sam’s (haircut salon) and city commissioners wanting political shirts. His biggest order was 25 dozen shirts, which took about 3% hours, using just one color. “I screen every shirt by hand to cut down my expenses. They have machines that can do 80 dozen in an hour.” Britt hopes to sell an entire line of sports shirts to some national magazines and de- sign shirts for touring musical groups. “My sights are to be in a multi-thousand BOB GRAY, Broadcast Louisville JOSEPH P. GRAY, Business Administration Cadiz SUSAN L. GRAY, Textiles and Clothing Merchandising Florence ANNA K. GRAYSON, Recreation Russellville MARISSA L. GREENE, Commercial Art Wincester MARK A. GREENE, Mass Communication Louisville ROBERT L. GREENE, Recreation Ft. Dixons, N_J. JOSEPH M. GREENWELL, Music Louisville MARY J. GREENWELL, Dental Hygiene Bowling Green LINDA D. GRIFFIN, Psychology London dollar business in two or three years, but first I have to get out and pound the pave- ment and beat the bushes. I have to see what I can do. “ My big dream is to make something from nothing.” he said. “I know screening shirts is not where it’s at in art work, but with monetary backing you can come into your own. “People tell us we do good work, but I’m not satisfied with mediocre work. With every shirt I strive to make it the best.” Connie Holman Mark Lyons Tops in his business 359 Seniors WILLIAM R. GRIFFIN JR., Business Administration Newburgh, Ind. L. KEITH GRIFFITH, Mass Communication Jasper, Tenn. SHARON GRIFFITH, Nursing Russellville GEORGE L. GRIGGS, Elementary Education Louisville MARY F. GRIGGS, Secretarial Science Central City CATHY J. GRINSTEAD, Office Administration Smiths Grove JOHN H. GRIZZELL, Advertising Evansville, Ind. JANICE M. GROSS, Mass Communication Evansville, Ind. JAMES E. GROVE JR., Journalism West Palm Beach, Fla. ANNE GUDAITIS, French Bowling Green SHERRY GUTTSCHALK, Elementary Education Glasgow RACHEL HABERMEHL, Agriculture Zionsville, Ind. RICHARD A. HAGAN, Mechanical Engineering Technology Whitesville BARRY HALL, Business Administration Franklin 360 Seniors Cs ees ge a Abridged FAR FROM THEIR CLASSROOMS, geography and geology students cross a footbridge to Fall Creek Falls State Park in Tennessee on a overnight field trip to study erosion and weathering. Asso- ciate professor Nick Crawford led the students, as he has about 20 times since 1968. The students camped in Lost Creek Cave and hiked five miles. David Banahan i 361 Seniors DEBORAH M. HALL, English Franklin DEBRA A. HALL, Dietetics and Institutional Admin. Mt. Pleasant, Tenn. RONALD A. HAMILTON, Accounting Owensboro SHIRLEY N. HAMM, Office Admin. and Data Processing Paris SALLY HAMMACK, Dental Hygiene Owensboro LISA HAMMER, Health Care Administration Franklin DONNA HAMMOCK, Elementary Education Westmoreland, Tenn. SANDIE HAMPTON, Physical Education Elkton LARRY W. HARBISON, Elementary Education Edmonton LOUISE HARDY, Elementary Education Horse Cave DARLENE HARGIS, Home Economics Education Bowling Green SHEILA HARLOW, Elementary Music and Elem. Education Bowling Green CYNTHIA A. HARMON, Elementary and Special Education Bedford BOBBY S. HARPER, Business Administration and Econ. Lakeside Park ROBERT W. HARPER, Psychology Wooster, Ohio ROGER L. HARRELL, Small Business Management Russellville TIM HARRINGTON, Computer Science and Math. Bowling Green BAMBI J. HARRIS, Home Economics Education Bardstown JAMES M. HARRIS, Business Administration Bowling Green JENNIFER A. HARRIS, Mass Communication Lancaster, Ohio SHEILA L. HARRIS, Music Education Franklin TERRILL W. HARRIS, Theatre Columbia KORLIN HARRISON, Physical Education Lewisburg CAROL HARTMAN, Business Education Alvaton HERBERT HARVELL JR., Government and Mil. Science Odenton, Md. ROBERT C. HARVEY, Accounting Glasgow JANET S. HAWKINS, Health Care Administration Millwood PAMELA K. HAWKINS, Textiles and Clothing Mammoth Cave SANDY HAWORTH, History Miami, Fla. JOSEPH M. HAYDEN, Geology Nicholsville PATRICIA A. HAYDEN, Elementary Education Louisville FAYE HAYES, Elementary Education Munfordville MICHAEL HAYES, Business Administration Chattanooga, Tenn. GEORGETTE HAYNES, French and English Rockport JAMES C. HAYNES, Business Administration Nashville, Tenn. 362 Seniors JOSEPH S. HAYS, Biology and Chemistry Portland, Tenn. WILLIAM R. HEDGER, History Mounds, IIl. ROBIN R. HEFNER, Elementary Education Benton, Ill. DIANE HEINES, Interior Design Louisville DEBORAH D. HEK, Community Health Lexington CATHY HELM, Administrative Services Rock Falls, Ill. ROBERT HEMMEN, Electrical Engineering Technology Vine Grove KENNETH R. HENDERSON, Broadcast Communication Louisville BARRY HENRY, Industrial Technology Bowling Green MARY J. HEPP, Journalism Louisville BONNEY HEWLETT, Home Economics Education Madisonville TERESA L. HIGHTOWER, Psychology Bowling Green JANIS L. HILL, Commercial Art Louisville MICHAEL F. HILL, Business and Economics Albion, Mich. BETSY A. HIRST, Interior Design Bowling Green MARY J. HITEN, Textiles and Clothing Owensboro DONNA M. HIX, Nursing Bowling Green GREG HOCKER, Distributive Education Owensboro JEFF HOCKER, Horticulture Owensboro PAT HOHMAN, Journalism Louisville DALE HOLEC, Psychology Swartz Creek, Mich. COLLEEN R. HOLL, Recreation Bowling Green JAMES H. HOLLAND, II, Asian Studies Bowling Green BRENDA C. HOLLOWELL, Office Administration Hopkinsville CHARLES E. HOOKS, Business Administration Cadiz RICHARD HOPE, Accounting Bowling Green BETTY H. HORNBACK, Home Economics Education Elizabethtown GREG HOWARD, Business Administration Elizabethtown LINDA G. HOWARD, Mathematics Summer Shade VICKIE HOWELL, Environmental Engineering Technology Bowling Green LISA J. HOWLETT, Physical Education Russellville PENNY HUBBARD, Speech and Communication Disorders Michigan City, Ind. PATRICIA M. HUBBUCH, Agriculture Louisville GLORIA D. HUDDLESTON, Physical Education Central City LOIS J. HUDGENS, Business Education Russellville 363 Seniors RENA HUDGENS, Home Economics Education Olmstead JAMES E. HUDSON, Civil Engineering Technology Columbia JANICE C. HUDSON, Mass Communication Louisville NORMAN E. HUGHES, Elementary Education Franklin RUTHANNE W. HUGHES, Elementary Education Richardsville MARY A. HUMPHREY, Psychology Calhoun RUTH A. HUMPHRIES, Math. and Computer Science Hopkinsville MEGGI HUNT, Accounting Echols BRUCE R. HUNTEY, Communication and Theatre, and Anth. Bowling Green ANDREW J. HUSSEY JR., Pre-Law and Government Bowling Green CHARLES E. JAMES, Mass Communication Karnak, Ill. PAM JANES, Interior Design Edmonton JEFFREY J. JANSKY, Music Education Leesburg, Fla. NANCY A. JEFFRIES, Social Work Horse Cave JACQUELINE JENKINS, Medical Technology Olmstead ee ow, is this a square or a circle? That's right — a circle.” This wasn’t a scene from a children’s television show. It was part of a normal . day’s work at the campus speech clinic by Emily Laird, a graduate student in speech pathology last fall. Mrs. Laird was working at Bowling Green-Warren County Hospital as a physi- cal therapy aide when she found she en- joyed working with people. “You have to get along well with people, and I think I do.” She works with all age groups, helping correct communication disorders. ‘Things like stutters, delayed speech development and brain damage due to strokes are the types of disorders I work with,” she said. Quite a few of her patients are Western students, “foreign students especially,” who need help with articulation. A therapy session with children could involve anything from playing with dolls to identifying shapes and colors. “No two sessions are exactly alike,” Mrs. Laird said. Most of her work with older people deals with some type of communication loss. With a patient suffering from brain dam- age as a result of a stroke, “You use what you have.” She said the therapist has to 364 Seniors Talking it out work out a system to draw out whatever language skills the patient still has and go from there. “Children are a little more enjoyable to work with perhaps, but each case is inter- esting,” Mrs Laird said, then smiled. “Of course, the fact that I have a son may color my feelings.” Her husband Roger is a psychologist and is often her unofficial consultant. “In the ideal situation, the psychologist would already be there” to deal with any emo- tional or behavioral problems that might arise, she said. Mrs. Laird graduated in December and works at Medco Center in Bowling Green. “In a nursing home, you work with a com- pletely different philosophy,” she said. “You find people who need your help spe- cifically.” Mrs. Laird notes only one drawback to working so closely with people. “You tend to get involved, and sometimes it’s de- pressing.” Pam Wilson @ ACCOMPANIED BY A DOLL FRIEND, a child works with Emily Laird in the campus speech clinic. The graduate student in speech pathology from Bowl- ing Green said she worked with all age groups as well as some international students at Western. LUCY JERNIGAN, Dietetics and Institutional Admin. Franklin LARRY D. JEWELL, Mass Communication Bowling Green TERESA J. JEWELL, History Lucas ANITA G. JOHNSON, Home Economics Education Glasgow ANTHONY M. JOHNSON, Business Administration Louisville CAROL A. JOHNSON, Sociology Bowling Green CHRIS JOHNSON, Business Administration Lafayette, Tenn. GEORGE A. JOHNSON JR., Government and Mass Comm. Bowling Green JAMES R. JOHNSON, Public Relations Cadiz NAOMI JOHNSON, Elementary Education Bowling Green PAUL A. JOHNSON, Government Henderson STEVEN R. JOHNSON, Accounting Greenville CAROLLE JONES, Data Processing Louisville GARY W. JONES, Journalism Bowling Green JAMES G. JONES, History and Government Bowling Green Lewis Gardner JEWEL JONES, Journalism Paducah JOYCE L. JONES, Accounting Scottsville RUTH H. JONES, Elementary Education Cave City STEVE H. JONES, Mass Communication Louisville JIM KEFFER, Speech Communication and History Winchester GREG KEIGHTLEY, Broadcast Communication Bowling Green BRADY KELLEMS, History and Philosophy Bowling Green SCOTT KELLER, Business Administration Kettering, Ohio 365 Seniors JACK O. KELLEY, Accounting Radcliff JOHN M. KELLY, Mass Communication Connersville, Ind. DAWN KEMP, Public Relations Hendersonville, Tenn. DAVID KENDALL, Physical Education Bowling Green KAREN KENNADY, Commercial Art Paducah MARSHA KENNEDY, Dental Hygiene and Elem. Ed. Hopkinsville RUTH A. KENNEDY, Special Education and Psych. Winchester BETTY A. KERN, Accounting and French Louisville LOREN KERR, Electrical Engineering Technology Bowling Green RONALD KERRY, Computer Science and Math. York, Pa. NANCY J. KESSELRING, Mathematics Louisville VIVIAN G. KEY, Elementary Education Lewisburg WILLIAM A. KIESSLING, Business Administration and Econ. Boonton, N_J. GINA L. KINCHLOW, Psychology and Afro-American Studies Louisville ALLEN W. KING JR., Office Administration Madisonville PATRICIA KING, Elementary Education Franklin JULIA KIRK, Textiles and Clothing Merchandising Philpot CHARLES W. KITCHENS JR., Mathematics and Comp. Sci. Bowling Green WILLIAM F. KLEIN, Electrical Engineering Technology Bowling Green LINDA M. KLEINHOLTER, Physical Education and Recreation Bowling Green MICHAEL D. KNOTT, Industrial Technology Owensboro JOHN B. KNOX JR., Broadcasting Technology Madisonville ERIK S. KRAG, Health Care Administration Peoria, Ill. FRANCES C. KREBS, Distributive Education Louisville KAREN A. KUSCH, Accounting and Business Admin. Central City GAYE LACEFIELD, Medical Technology Bowling Green ROGER LACY, Government Breeding SUSAN D. LACY, Sociology Russellville JULIE LAFFOON, English Madisonville MEGAN K. LAKE, Government and Economics Lexington NORMAN L. LAMBERT, Environmental Science Radcliff KIMBERLY LANDRUM, Data Processing Horse Branch MARGARET LANG, Business Administration Grand Rapids, Mich. CHARLES D. LANHAM, Business Administration Owensboro CHARLENE LARIMORE, Business Administration Louisville 366 Seniors JOSEP P. LARKINS, Broadcast Communication Bardwell BOBBY J. LAWRENCE, Chemistry and Mathematics Bowling Green TIM LAWRENCE, Social Work Louisville MARGARET LEE, Medical Technology Elizabethtown RANDY J. LEE, Civil Engineering Technology Scottsville RONALD M. LEFORGE JR., Electrical Engineering Tech. Bowling Green KATHY LEWIS, Social Work Bowling Green GARY LINDENBERG, History Henderson SHARON J. LINGVAI, Elementary Education and Special Ed. Bryan, Ohio KATHY A. LITTLE, Psychology Franklin PENNY LITTLE, Interior Design Greenville ROBERT LITTLEJOHN, Music Education Batavia, III. BILL LLOYD, Mass Communication Bowling Green JANE A. LOCKWOOD, Office Administration Bowling Green MARY A. LOFTUS, Administrative Services and Crim. Just. Princeton BRUCE LOGAN, Data Processing Sturgis REBECCA A. LOGAN, Geology Ashland CLYDE P. LOGSDON, Sociology Leitchfield LINDA LONDON, Elementary Education Franklin CHRIS L. LOVORN, Psychology and Sociology Louisville CHARLES C. LUCAS, Agriculture Middleburg PATRICIA LYON, English Bowling Green CHARLIE MACKE, Elementary Education Louisville SALLY E. MAIN, Office Administration and Data Proc. Owensboro JEAN A. MAINLAND, Mass Communication Hendersonville, Tenn. JONATHAN L. MALLARD, Economics and Philosophy Vine Grove ALFINA MAMI, Journalism Swedesboro, N.J. JEFFREY W. MANDRELL, Electrical Engineering Tech. Franklin ; ALESIA MANNING, Business Education Portland, Tenn. BECKY MANUEL, Special Education Winchester JULIE M. MARKLAND, Biology Baton Rouge, La. DENISHIA M. MARTIN, English Morgantown MICHAEL W. MARTIN, Agriculture and Business Calhoun ROBERT D. MARTIN, Biology Calhoun JAMES W. MASHEK, Sociology and Government Potomac, Md. 367 Seniors CYNTHIA L. MASON, English and Speech Paducah JIM MASSEY, Business Administration Bowling Green MICHAEL C. MATTINGLY, Industrial Technology Bowling Green SANDRA L. MATTINGLY, Psychology Campbellsville PAM MAUZEY, Elementary Education Henderson DEBORAH L. MAYES, Art Franklin STEPHEN G. MAYEUR, Data Processing Franklin MARY H. MCCLEAN, Dental Hygiene Miami, Fla. JOHN L. MCCLURE, Physical Education Albion, Mich. WINNIE MCCONNELL, Public Relations Louisville KAREN R. MCCOY, Textiles and Clothing Glasgow DAVID R. MCCRACKEN, Psychology Franklin NADJI S. MCCUBBINS, Elementary Education Lebanon Junction BRUCE MCDANIEL, Art and Commercial Art Bowling Green JERRY A. MCDONALD, Electrical Engineering Technology Bowling Green xceptional children have special learning needs, not only in formal education, but in other areas of life, said Karen Johnson, a special education graduate assistant. That is why Miss Johnson and two other graduate students teach Sunday school for such children. “These children have the same need and the same right as any other child to learn and know about God, but it is harder for them to learn in a regular Sunday school class,” she said. Miss Johnson, Robyn Fisher and Bonnie Johnson teach the class at Cecelia Memor- ial Presbyterian Church in Bowling Green. The class began two years ago for children from the Jones-Jaggers Center for Excep- tional Children. 368 Seniors A special Teaching the children has rewards, Miss Johnson said. “One Sunday, one of the girls asked if she could say the prayer because she want- ed to talk to Jesus. That made the whole thing worthwhile.” Miss Johnson said she didn’t hesitate at the opportunity to teach. “I felt that the Lord was saying that this was something | should do. “T want the kids to realize who Jesus is, and that He loves them and cares about them,” she said. Class participation is not as enthusiastic as Miss Johnson and her co-workers had hoped it would be, but she said they aren’t discouraged by low attendance. “It’s a touchy thing to go to parents and ask them to bring their children to Sunday ee ee wee a ee Sunday school school. We want to rely on them to bring their children.” Miss Johnson, who was a music major, teaches songs and leads the singing. She also plays the piano for the congregation before Sunday school. The class format is usually the same every week, because the students can learn better that way. “When the weather is good we go out- side and show the kids the trees and birds and tell them that God takes care of trees and birds just as God takes care of them.” Cheryl Sharp @ WITH COOKIES FOR REFRESHMENT, two stu- dents listen as Karen Johnson reads a story in Sunday school class. Miss Johnson and two other graduate students teach the exceptional children at Cecelia Me- morial Presbyterian Church in Bowling Green. Debbie Gibson MARY A. MCDONALD, Music Education Louisville SUSAN C. MCELFRESH, Psychology Owensboro E RUSS MCELROY, Recreation and Psychology Bowling Green SUSAN MCELROY, Biology Paris JANET MCGRAW, Psychology Bowling Green ADRIANNE MCGREGOR, Elementary Education Nortonville POLLY MCGREW, Home Economics Education Fordsville RICHARD J. MCGUFFIN, Agriculture Bowling Green SANDRA L. MCKINLEY, Elementary Education Taylorsville LISA M. MEACHAM, Dental Hygiene Russellville MARTHA M. MEADOWS, Art Education White House, Tenn. KIM MEAGHER, Biology Bowling Green ROBERT L. MEEK, Biochemistry Oxon Hill, Md. WENDY MEETING, Recreation Mansfield, Ohio BARBARA G. MELLOAN, Elementary Education Munfordville VICKI MELTON, Interior Design Bowling Green DEBORAH MEREDITH, Textiles and Clothing Leitchfield ROBIN R. MEREDITH, Public Relations Louisville REBECCA J. MERIDETH, Distributive Education Bowling Green DAVID MILBY, History Greensburg DOUG MILES, Geography Collinsville, Ill. BETTY B. MILLER, Public Relations Brandenburg JOHN M. MILLER, Government and Economics Bowling Green PATRICIA B. MILLER, Sociology Tompkinsville PEGGY D. MILLER, Theatre Owensboro DEBRA Y. MILTON, Secretarial Science Scottsville HAROLD T. MINOR, Business Administration Auburn BARBARA MITCHELL, English and Psychology Hopkinsville BONNIE MITCHELL, Business Bowling Green CHARLOTTE MITCHELL, Health Education Pembroke JAMES W. MITCHELL JR., Broadcasting Valley Station JANEY MITCHELL, Foreign Language Valley Station NAPOLEON S. MOMODU, Mass Communication Bendel State, Nigeria DONNA J. MOORE, Mathematics Radcliff PATRICIA L. MOORE, Social Work Elizabethtown 369 Seniors SUSAN E. MOORE, Home Economics Education Louisville DAVID L. MOOREFIELD, Mass Communication Gallatin, Tenn. MARSHA MORANVILLE, Business Administration and Mgmt. Paducah LYNN MORELAND, Community Health and Biology Owensboro BEVERLY A. MORRIS, Elementary Education Owensboro J MOSELEY, Accounting Columbia TERESA F. MOSIER, Social Work Summer Shade FARON D. MOUNCE, Electrical Engineering Technology Somerset PAT MOUNTAIN, Computer Science Owensboro JANE T. MUDWILDER, Physical Education Anchorage JAN M. MUELLER, Therapeutic Recreation Louisville EDWARD L. MUNSON JR., Mass Communication Bowling Green CATHY MURPHY, Government and Public Relations Owensboro KEVEN M. MURPHY, Music Education Newburgh, Ind. STANLEY L. MURPHY, Agriculture Education Liberty JOHN K. NAGEL, Business Administration and Mass Comm. Louisville PAMELA E. NAPIER, English and German Bowling Green ROCKY L. NAPIER, Animal Science Fountain Run JANN NEAL, Dietetics and Institutional Administration Carmi, IIl. STEPHEN P. NEED, Community Health Louisville CHRISTINE NEGRE, Folklore Montpellier, France THEODORE C. NICHOLAS, Government Harrodsburg ROGER D. NICHOLS, Accounting Scottsville LANCE W. NOLTING, Industrial Arts Education Bowling Green ALICE NORDINE, Elementary Education Hanson RANDALL E. NORRIS, History Flatwoods MARSHA D. O’BANION, Textiles and Clothing Campbellsville PATRICIA O'BRIEN, Legal Secretarial Administration Bowling Green RHONDA OSBORNE, Accounting Paducah CURTIS E. OWENS, Business Administration Louisville JUDY OWENS, Social Work Bowling Green KIM M. PACE, Art Mt. Vernon, IIl. MILES PALIS, Environmental Science Danville ALICE PANNIER, Psychology Tampa, Fla. DEBORAH L. PARDUE, Elementary Education Hopkinsville 370 Seniors DAVID W. PARROTT, Accounting Bowling Green WILLIAM R. PARSONS, Commercial Art Greensburg CAMELLIA PATEY, Dietetics Hendersonville, Tenn. BETTY PATMOR, Business Administration Marion GARY A. PATTERSON, General Business and Accounting Sturgis DONALD G. PATTON, Agriculture Liberty KEITH PAWLEY, Business Administration Bowling Green MARY E. PAWLEY, Dental Hygiene and Community Health Elizabethtown JENNIE PAYNE, Nursing Glasgow GEORGE T. PAYNTER, Civil Engineering Technology Middlesboro GENA PEARCE, Physical Education Nashville, Tenn. MICHAEL PEARSON, Math. and Computer Science Scottsville THOMAS E. PEARSON, Accounting Franklin DAVID PELLY, Agriculture Smiths Grove NITA PENDLETON, Textiles and Clothing Merchandising Edmonton DONNA PENDLEY, Elementary Education Bowling Green MICHAEL S. PENDLEY, Psychology Morgantown EMILY PENNEY, English Cleveland, Tenn. PAUL C. PENNINGTON, Civil Engineering Technology Somerset KATHERINE PEPPER, Accounting Brandenburg LAWRENCE D. PERKINS, Agriculture Glasgow CINDY R. PERRY, Business Bethpage, Tenn. KATHERINE D. PERRY, General Business, Acct. and Data Proc. Bowling Green ANN W. PHILLIPS, Social Work Campbellsville JAMES E.. PHILLIPS, Business Administration Henderson JOSEPH J. PHILLIPS, Political Science Valley Station THALA C. PHILLIPS, Recreation Hartford LYNNE K. PIERCE, Elementary Education Glasgow ROBIN A. PIERCE, Elementary Education and Special Ed. Powderly WILLIAM R. PIERCE, Accounting Bowling Green JULIA B. PIGMAN, Social Work and Sociology Milton ROYCE D. PILE, Agriculture Shepherdsville VICKI L. PILE, Social Studies Constantine MARLA PIPER, Elementary Education Glasgow JOHN J. PLANTINGA, Accounting Country Club Hills, Ill. 371 Seniors DAVID A. POGUE, Psychology Valley Station LIZ POLAND, Small Business Management Bowling Green ANNE POLICASTRI, Biology Greenville DAVID J. POLLOCK, Mechanical Engineering Technology Owensboro CLARA E. PORTER, Industrial Technology Lebanon PAUL PORTER, Biology and Chemistry Bowling Green SUSAN PORTER, Physical Education Falls of Rough THOMAS D. POTTER, Physical Education and Nursing Bowling Green JAMES M. POWELL, Business Administration Munfordville MARGARET W. POWERS, Elementary Education Hodgenville LYNDA J. PRATHER, Biology St. Joseph, Ill. SHERRELYN PRESSON, Business Administration Nashville, Tenn. GARRY PRESTON, Psychology and Industrial Tech. Leitchfield CHARLES L. PRICE, Ill, Advertising Louisville DEBORAH L. PRICE, Elementary Education Louisville HAROLD R. PRICE, Accounting Bowling Green PAM PRICE, Accounting Hartford DEBORAH PRITCHARD, Music Johnson City, Tenn. LARRY PROCHAZKA, Recreation Bowling Green SONJA PRUITT, Business Education Louisville MARY A. RAFFERTY, Secretarial Science Franklin SHARON E. RAGLIN, Psychology Versailles DEBBIE RALSTON, Biology Bowling Green BECKY RANDALL, Journalism Thompsonville, Ill. JACK H. RAY, Anthropology Lebanon MARI R. RECTOR, Criminal Justice Bowling Green J.C. REDD, Recreation Cadiz CONNIE REECE, Nursing Knob Lick GARY W. REED, Accounting Lexington ANITA L. REEVES, Speech Pathology Hendersonville, Tenn. ROBERT L. REEVES, Industrial Arts Education Central City MARILYN REID, Home Economics Education Bowling Green JENNIFER M. REISS, Art Louisville RICHARD REKER, Industrial Arts Education Bowling Green DEBBIE RENFROW, Nursing Louisville 372 Seniors CATHY A. REYNOLDS, Pre-Speech Pathology Bowling Green ERNEST R. REYNOLDS, III, Biology and Meterological Tech. Scottsville BETSY L. RHEA, Nursing Franklin ROGER RHOADES, Industrial Technology Fordsville STEVE RICE, Accounting Bowling Green BRENTON L. RICH, Mass Communication Kokomo, Ind. WANDA L. RIDDLE, Health Care Administration Louisville MARILYN RIDER, Social Work Upton ANNE RIES, Dietetics and Institutional Administration Louisville SUSAN RILEY, Elementary Education Olmstead DANA W. RIPPY, Agriculture Scottsville CHRISTINA L. RITMAN, Accounting Bowling Green RONALD E. ROBBINS, Accounting Johnson, Vt. GARY ROBE, Chemistry Bowling Green HOWARD W. ROBERTS, Biology Cadiz TIMOTHY L. ROBERTS, Cartographic and Mapping Tech. Shelbyville JACQUE T. ROBERTSON, Sociology Adairville DWAYNE ROBINSON, Mechanical Engineering Technology Crofton ELAINE ROBINSON, Accounting Louisville JOAN T. ROGERS, Elementary Education and Music Russell Springs MARJORIE E. ROGERS, Commercial Art Louisville MARY E. ROGERS, Community Health New Haven SHERYL A. ROGERS, Agriculture Auburn SHARON L. ROMANS, Sociology Louisville VICKIE L. RONE, Physical Education Bowling Green JONI L. ROSENBERGER, Business Administration Louisville SUSAN M. ROSO, Elementary Education Crestwood MARY L. ROWLETT, Home Economics Education Hopkinsville DANNY M. ROY, Electrical Engineering Technology Somerset RHONA G. RUNNER, Textiles and Clothing Merchandising Bowling Green DWIGHT RUSSELL, Physics and Mathematics Bowling Green LAURA G. RUSSELL, Public Relations Orlinda, Tenn. LAURIE L. RUSSELL, Elementary Education Russell Springs KIMBERLY RUTLEDGE, Music Education and Performance Bowling Green BILLIE K. SADLER, Elementary Education Elizabethtown 373 Seniors bea} A flip in time SIDEARM FLIPS CAN PENETRATE, even the stiffest defense, as Howard Clark demonstrates against Stuart Arnold, a Frisbee Master. Clark, a Glasgow senior, and Arnold, a sophomore from Perryville, helped form a team to play Ultimate, a kind of Frisbee soccer. They played on the band practice field. nme Photo by Eric Hassler LINDA SANDERS, Journalism and Psychology Carbondale, Ill. VIRGINIA SANDERS, Psychology and Mass Communication Harrodsburg W. KENT SANDERS, Music Education Owensboro JEFFREY D. SAUER, Agriculture Louisville CHARLYNE SAVAGE, Psychology Nashville, Tenn. ROBERT N. SCHLOTTER, Agriculture Education Alvaton JAMES P. SCHROEDER, Electrical Engineering Technology Owensboro DEBRA K. SCHWARTZ, Elementary Education Villa Hills JACKIE SCOGGINS, Business Administration Madison, Tenn. JENNIFER SEARCY, Journalism Leitchfield MARK E. SEARS, Environmental Science Sacramento HAROLD SEATON, Agriculture Caneyville KIM SEATON, Agriculture Caneyville JOHN C. SELF, Undecided Hodgenville KEVIN C. SHARE, Government and Psychology Bowling Green CHERYL SHARP, Mass Communication Hendersonville, Tenn. PAULA A. SHELTON, Elementary Education Eminence RICKEY S. SHEPPARD, History Rockfield | | | F _° BRUCE SHERLOCK, Special Education Louisville SHERRIL SHIPLEY, Art Owensboro JANET L. SHOWALTER, Mass Communication and Speech Bowling Green 375 Seniors MARY S. SHOWN, Sociology and Psychology Jamestown SARA SHREWSBURY, Data Processing Beaver Dam STEVE SHUMATE, Special Education Louisville JERRY SHUTTERS, Recreation Greensburg, Ind. KAREN SIMERMAN, Business Administration Ft. Wayne, Ind. TIM SINKS, Business Administration Hendersonville, Tenn. SUSAN SIX, Accounting Paris KATHY L. SKAGGS, Medical Secretarial Administration Scottsville JAMES A. SKEES, Civil Engineering Technology Louisville JANET SKEES, Civil Engineering Technology Louisville CORNELIOUS SLATON, Biology and Chemistry Madisonville TERESA L. SMALL, Textiles and Clothing Caneyville BRENDA L. SMILEY, Textiles and Clothing Merchandising Vanzant CARL E. SMITH, Accounting Louisville CAWOOD G. SMITH, Environmental Science Harlan GREGORY L. SMITH, Environmental Engineering Technology Bowling Green LESLIE M. SMITH, Recreation Henderson ROBERT J. SMITH, Accounting Owensboro ROBERT K. SMITH, Mechanical Engineering Technology Troy, Ohio STAN SNODGRASS, Pre-Veterinary Centertown JEAN SOSH, Elementary Education Russellville CARLA SPALDING, Elementary Education and Sp. Ed. Lebanon GREGG W. SPEER, Business Administration Bowling Green SALLY SPEER, Office Administration Owensboro CAROL F. SPEIGHT, English White House, Tenn. BRIAN K. SPENCER, Biology Philpot DOUGLAS J. SPISICH, Accounting Evansville, Ind. BRENDA STAFFORD, Public Relations Wilmington, Ohio BRENDA A. STAMPER, Speech and Nursing Louisville VENESSA G. STARKS, Elementary Education Franklin MARY T. STEPHENSON, Biology Burkesville GEORGE STEVENSON, Business Administration North Middletown DEBORAH L. STEWART, Elementary Education Cecilia LEX STEWART, Special Education Louisville GORDON STIDHAM, Computer Science Beaver Dam 376 Seniors DOROTHY STIGALL, Office Administration Ft. Thomas KATHY D. STINSON, Legal Secretarial Administration Scottsville THOMAS A. STITES, Music Education Hopkinsville CYNTHIA STOKES, Art and Interior Design Greenville SHIRLEY STOLL, Elementary Education and Special Ed. Benton Harbor, Mich. MARK STOOPS, Distributive Education Owensboro GREGORY L. STOREY, History and Military Science Clarksville, Tenn. KATHY STOUT, Special Education Rockton, Ill. STEPHEN STRANEY, Business Administration Brandenburg BEVERLY D. STREET, Elementary Education Portland, Tenn. JOHN E. STRODE, Chemistry and Mathematics Tompkinsville LYNN F. STRUNK, Mathematics Ft. Wright JOANI M. STUCKE, Mass Communication Louisville BELINDA J. STURGILL, Accounting Pikeville JOAN C. SUBLETT, Library Science Paintsville ELLEN SULLIVAN, Office Administration Bowling Green ELIZABETH A. SUMNER, Business Administration Bowling Green DAVID H. SURFACE, Philosophy and Religion Bowling Green KENNETH SWEETEN, History Smiths Grove CHERYL TAYLOR, Elementary Education Rockport GARY S. TAYLOR, Health Care Administration Central City MARY C. TAYLOR, English and Spanish Owensboro TERRY W. TEDDER, Accounting and Business Admin. Bowling Green BRENDA TEMPLEMAN, Computer Science Danville MARCIA E. TERRY, Accounting Cave City RUTH A. TERRY, Commercial Art and Tech. Illustration Louisville POLLY THEOBALD, Interior Design Bowling Green MONA F. THOMAS, Sociology and Psychology Paducah SAMUEL THOMAS, Electrical Engineering Technology Windsor SUSAN THOMAS, Business Administration Cadiz WILLIAM B. THOMAS, Business Administration Somerset BONNIE J. THOMERSON, Industrial Education Glasgow PAM THOMPSON, Philosophy and Government Lewisburg ANNA J. THORNBERRY, Mathematics Poole MICHAEL E. THURMAN, Music Performance and Ele. Ed. Bowling Green 377 Seniors 378 Seniors JAN TICHENOR, Art Education Hartford PATRICIA A. TIGUE, Elementary Education Henderson VICKY L. TINGLE, Elementary and Special Education Carrollton JIM TINIUS, Physical Education New Albany, Ind. RONALD A. TIPTON, Agriculture Portage, Ind. MANLEY W. TOBEY, IIL, Advertising Sterling Heights, Mich. KENNETH J. TOLOPKA, Accounting Glasgow MICHAEL S. TONG, History and Business Administration Hong Kong CHERI L. TRENT, English Elizabethtown DAVID G. TUCKER, Sociology Bowling Green arin and bare it HALF A UNIFORM WAS ALL SENIOR ROTC officer Donna Pendley needed for a head and shoulders picture to be used for a chain of command board and general file use. Senior officer Bruce Bohanon of Elkton took the picture of the Louisville native, whose shorts are barely visible. Bi oc on AEE we A x fe Ag Be a ‘a JAMES H. TURNER, History Magnolia JERRY S. TURNER, Health and Safety Burkesville MILTON TYREE, Special Education Bowling Green TONY O. UNDERWOOD, Distributive Education Greenville ANN VANARSDALL, Government and Mass Communication Burgin PHYLLIS VANCLEAVE, Theatre Morganfield WILLIE D. VARNADORE, Biology Elizabethtown PAM VEACH, Social Work Owensboro PRESTON D. VINCENT, Sociology Brownsville RONALD L. VINSON, Industrial Education Rockfield CHERI J. WADDLE, Accounting Frankfort NAVITA WADE, Restaurant Management Guthrie DEBBIE WALDHART, Elementary Education Gallatin, Tenn. JAN WALDRON, Journalism and English Chesterfield, Ohio MELANIE WALDROP, Elementary Education and Dance Park City BECKY F. WALKER, Home Economics Education Edmonton DEBBIE WALKER, Business Administration Florence DENISE R. WALKER, History Greenville KURT WALKER, Psychology Paducah RODNEY L. WALKER, Business Administration Louisville David Frank 379 | Seniors KEITH WALL, Public Relations Phoenix, Ariz. PATRICIA J. WALLACE, Elementary Education Clay RICK WALTERS, General Business and Accounting Elizabethtown THREESAE G. WASHER, Elementary and Special Education Bowling Green ROBERT V. WEATHERSPOON, Distributive Education Franklin WILLIAM N. WEBB, Mass Communication Lewisburg SUE A. WEBER, Business Administration Boyds, Md. TINA M. WEBER, Nursing Sturgis JAMES R. WEIMER, Recreation Hopkinsville PENNY WELLINGHURST, Institutional Administration Lexington JEFF WELLS, Accounting Seminole, Fla. TERESA WELSH, Elementary Education Summer Shade STEPHEN D. WENDT, Environmental Engineering Tech. Bowling Green RHONDA WERNER, Elementary Education Louisville MELISSA A. WESPISER, Secretarial Administration Oxford, Ohio GEORGE L. WETZEL, Environmental Science and Bio-Physics Edison, N.J. TERRI L. WHISENHUNT, Interior Design Bradley, Ark. JAN H. WHITE, Elementary Education Bowling Green WILLIAM S. WHITE, Psychology Cadiz DARRELL WHITLEY, Anthropology Smiths Grove CHERYL L. WHITMAN, Community Health Louisville RICHARD WHITSTON, Environmental Science Morehead LYLE WIIST, Agriculture Cadiz HAROLD R. WILEY, Biology Glasgow S. ELLEN WILHOYTE, Industrial Technology Owensboro BRENDA K. WILKERSON, Elementary Education Cadiz REGENIA WILKERSON, Social Work Gracey BRENDA WILLIAMS, Social Work Bowling Green DW IGHT E. WILLIAMS, Social Work Henderson KATHIE WILLIAMS, Public Relations Trenton LORI WILLIAMS, Interior Design Dayton, Ohio ROBERT D. WILLIAMS, Physical Education Bowling Green RONNIE L. WILLIAMS, Distributive Education Bowling Green MONA WILLIAN, Elementary Education Buffalo STEVE WILLIFORD, Business Administration Bowling Green 380 Seniors GWENDA L. WILLINGHAM, Accounting and Business Admin. Owensboro JOHN WILLOUGHBY, Speech Bowling Green ELIZABETH W. WILSON, Sociology Mayfield GARY WILSON, Business Administration Russellville JAMES L. WILSON, Accounting Manitou KERRY WILSON, Soil Science Marcellus, Mich. KEVIN WILSON, Biology Bowling Green SARAH T. WILSON, Elementary Education Smithfield SHARON K. WILSON, Accounting Guston LINDA K. WIMMER, Speech and Communication Disorders Hawesville JACK WINCHESTER, Biology Murray SHERI L. WINFREY, Elementary Education Campbellsville SARAH WINLOCK, History and Psychology Glasgow PAT WISDOM, Art Edmonton DOUG WITHROW JR., Civil Engineering Technology Bowling Green DAVID WITT, Mechanical Engineering Technology Louisville DARRELL WITTEN, General Business and Accounting Clarkson NANCY D. WITTEN, Nursing Bowling Green JANET WITTENBRAKER, Recreation Evansville, Ind. CHRISTINE S. WOOD, English Bowling Green KATHERINE F. WOODFORD, Advertising Bowling Green SHAREN R. WOODWARD, Home Economics Education Bowling Green JOHN WOOSLEY, Civil Engineering Technology Lebanon, Tenn. MONA WORTHAM, Dental Hygiene Leitchfield CONNIE WRIGHT, Elementary Education Greensburg LYNN B. WRIGHT, Photojournalism Bowling Green MARTHA N. WRIGHT, Recreation Glasgow TERRY WRIGHT, Business Administration Evansville, Ind. KAREN L. YAAP, General Business and Secretarial Sci. Lockport, Ill. JAMES YATES, Biology Kuttawa JOHN E. YATES, Broadcasting and Business Admin. Bowling Green MICHAEL YEISER, Chemistry and Biology Owensboro DEBRA S. YOUNG, Music and Elementary Education Auburn J. KAREN YOUNG, Home Economics Scottsville MICHAEL D. YOUNG, Biology Bowling Green 381 Seniors JUNIOPS: On the downward slope To be a junior is to be at an awkward year; you’re too far from graduation to relax and too far along to quit. So it went for the class that enrolled in August of 1975 and two months later saw women’s hours abolished in accordance with Title IX. Freshmen found historical novels such as John Jakes’ series popular in the bicentennial year. Several Western professors contributed to Kentucky’s Bicentennial Bookshelf series, too. But the most read word of the bicentennial was “Buy.” Music fans swarmed to the Linda Ronstadt Homecoming concert, which made $4,000 for ASG, but students ignored Kenny Loggins and Jim Messina, and their concert lost $7,000. Everyone saw “Jaws” and bought “Frampton Comes Alive.” The football team came within two points (16-14) of winning a Division II champion- ship, while the basketball team won 20 games and the OVC. Women’s sports were coming of age. Two years later, the juniors were free from the dorms, but not from school. LIZABETH A. AARON, Dawson Springs DEBBY ABNEY, Calhoun ANITA C. ADAMS, Orlinda, Tenn. REBECCA AKERS, Glasgow JERRY L. AKIN, Morgantown MOHAMMAD H. ALLAF-TAJER, Zahadan, Iran DEBBIE ANDERSON, Bowling Green JOHN E. ANDERSON, Bowling Green KEVIN ANDERSON, Paducah RICHARD L. APPLEBY, Owensboro LORI ARMES, Elizabethtown CINDY S. ARNOLD, Prospect CATHY J. ASHBY, Russellville KATHY L. ASHBY, Russellville LISA ASHWORTH, Bowling Green PATRICIA ATNIP, Glasgow SCOTT A. BACHERT, Fern Creek LORRAINE BAGWELL, Bowling Green LINDA F. BAKER, Greensburg R. GLYNN BAKER, Owensboro GREGORY T. BALDWIN, Calhoun, Ga. HAL E. BALLARD, Winchester ELLEN BARKETT, Cairo, IIl. LISA A. BARNES, Bowling Green TERRY BARNES, Owensboro JOHN BARNETT, Lewisport GEORGE E. BARTLESON, Harrodsburg LINDA BARTLEY, Calhoun DAVID BEAL, Owensboro PATRICIA BEAUCHAMP, Leitchfield GREG BECK, Fredonia GINGER BEELER, Spring Lick DONNA L. BEHM, Franklin, Tenn. GERALD L. BELL, Lexington PAUL A. BELL, Louisville KIRBY BENNETT, Maysville BRENDA K. BENSON, Bowling Green DEBBIE M. BENSON, Slaughters BONNIE L. BERRY, Evansville, Ind. MELODY A. BERRYMAN, Louisville GAY BEST, Danville JOHN BICGERS Murfreesboro, Tenn. - ARK BIVEN, Louisville 1 : a iil 4, ®. JOY BLESS? Huntsville, Ala. 2 ; 4 . a +5Q 4 wy JERI L. BLICK, Olmstead - 2 i, Bay) Att aay JEAN A. BLOMQUIST, Owensboro GERALD A. BODENBENDER, Louisville RHONDA BOHANNON, Eminence JOY BOMAR, Scottsville NANCY BOOKER, Smiths Grove LISA F. BOTNER, Harrodsburg BOBBY S. BOWERS, Russellville JANET BOWLES, Bowling Green NANCY BOWLES, Munfordville PAMELA E. BOWLES, Summer Shade TED E. BRAINARD, Somerset JANET M. BRADLEY, Cave City WOODY BRAMBLETT, Shelbyville JOE W. BRANDENBURG, Monticello SUSAN BRANDON, Rome, Ga. LEE A. BRANSTETTER, Glasgow CARL BRAZLEY, Louisville DIANE BRENNAN, Atlanta, Ga. 382 Juniors Lewis Gardner DONNA K. BRIDGES, White House, Tenn. MICHAEL BRODARICK, Louisville MALIA BROOKS, Morganfield CORBY H. BROWN, Gamaliel GINGER BROWN, Bowling Green GREG BROWN, Millwood PHILLIP H. BROWN, Scottsville POLLY BROWN, Bowling Green RICKIE F. BROWN, Tompkinsville VALERIE S. BROWN, Warsaw ROBERT E. BROWNING, Cross Plains, Tenn KAREN BRYANT, Columbia SHAWN R. BRYANT, Glasgow BETH A. BUCHANAN, Lexington STEVE BUCHANAN, Madisonville SHEILA J. BUCK, Louisville CATHY BUCKLES, Henderson MIKE BUEKER, Bowling Green RICKY R. BUFORD, Glasgow MYRA G. BURCHETT, Albany THEODORE BURFICT, Clarksville, Tenn. JEAN BURKA, Louisville MARGENA BURNETT, Shepherdsville TERESA M. BURTON, Russell Springs BERYL C, BUSH, Bowling Green HEZEKIAH L. BUSH JR., Louisville LISA BUSH, Glasgow ROBERT T. BUSH, Rockfield DAVID A. BUTLER, Clarkson PAT BUTLER, Owensboro DIANNE BUTTS, Bowling Green DEBBIE BUZZARD, Bowling Green ANN L. CAGE, Gallatin, Tenn. DOREEN CAINES, Winchester JAMES T. CALLIS, Owensboro BARBARA CAMP, Lawton, Okla ANNE L. CAMPBELL, Columbia VALARIE B. CAMPBELL, Versailles PATRICK T. CANNON, Scottsville CATHY CANSLER, Henderson DEBRA J. CAREY, Glasgow BILLY H. CARNEY JR., Hendersonville, Tenn. DEL H. CARR, El Paso, Tex. JON C. CARR, Louisville SUSAN P. CARR, Bowling Green LAURA R. CARSON, Gulfport, Miss MARGARET CARTER, Hawesville KATHY D. CARTY, Fairdale KERRY W. CASEY, Beaver Dam AMY K. CHAMBERS, Owensboro NORMAN D. CHAMBERS, Campbellsville JEFF CHAPPELL, Griffith, Ind. JEFF CHASTAIN, Evansville, Ind. KEVIN CHEDD, Louisville KARL R. CHEUVRONT JR., Winchester TERESA CHRISTMAS, Russellville DAVID B. CLARK, Brownstown, Ind GARY M. CLARK, Owensboro SALLY CLARK, Bowling Green JULIA G. CLAYWELL, Columbia TERRY S. COCKRILL, Bowling Green RALPH E. COFFMAN, Frankfort DAVID COLE, Cottontown, Tenn. JULIA COLE, Salem, Ind. MARY J. COLLINS, Bloomfield RONALD COLTER, New York, N.Y GEORGE W. CONNOR, Lexington RITA CONOVER, Vine Grove PATRICIA COOK, Scottsville LORRAINE COOPER, Louisville TERRY COOPER, Adairville KENNETH D. COPE, White House, Tenn. machine HOT, SOAPY SPRAY from the cleaning hose at the Morgantown Road Car Wash helped Cheryl Patterson's car sparkle again. The Nashville sophomore waited in line an hour to take advantage of a free offer, good only for Western students. 383 Juniors LARRY CORBITT, Bowling Green CAROL CORLEY, Hopkinsville SAM E. CORNELIUS, Russellville DEBORAH D. CORNWELL, Scottsville WILLIAM J. CORTUS, E. Peoria, III. MARY-ANNE COSSEY, Bowling Green JAMES E. COSTELLO III, Louisville JILL K. COSTIN, Pekin, Ind. GARY L. COTTRELL, Bonnieville DANIEL E. COUDEN, Owensboro ROSEMARIE COWHERD, Elkton DEBBIE L. COX, Glasgow PATSY R. COX, Woodburn RONALD L. COX, Bowling Green DAVID H. CRUMPLER, Louisville JON M. CUDE, Hendersonville, Tenn. TERRY L. CUDE, Hendersonville, Tenn. BILL CUNNINGHAM, Bowling Green PATRICK F. CURL, Vernonia, Ore EDWARD L. CURR olumbia REBECCA J. CURRY, ensburg RICHARD H. DANIEL, Robards LEE C. DANIELS, Louisville DANON DASTUGUE, Bowling Green MARY J. DAVENPORT, Louisville JANET DAVIES, P ect SANDRA J. DAVIS, Mt. Washington VICKY L. DAVIS, Louisville JOHN G. DEEB, Bowling Green MICHELE DEGOTT, Bowling Green BILL DENK, Fairport, N.Y PHOEBE A. DENTON, Owensboro CARLOS ALBERTO DEPUY, Puerto Armulles, Panama PATRICIA DICK, Dawson Springs DARLENE J. DICKENSON, Hendersonville, Tenn KATIE J. DICKINSON, Glasgow YVONNE M. DIEMER, Louisville MARILYN DIETRICH, Corydon, Tenn. BETTY J. DODSON, Decatur, Ala. DONNA 5S. DODSON, Brandenburg DONNA L. DOELLMAN, St. Bernard, Ohio NANCY DONOHO, Portland, Tenn MARK W. DORTH, Owensboro DARRELL W. DOTY, Lexington DONALD R. DOUGLAS, Guenter 384 Juniors A touch of mist STREETLIGHTS GLOW THROUGH THE FOG of a late October evening as senior Neal Webb walks junior Robyn Ericksen back to Bemis-Lawrence after a date. It was the first heavy fog of the semester. Webb is a mass communication major and Miss Ericksen is a public relations major. MICHELE C. DOUGLAS, Bowling Green DEANNA DRAKE, Morgantown EDWARD L. DRANE, Louisville MIKE DRESSMAN, Erlanger ROBERT DREXLER, Louisville SHERI DRIVEN, Louisville ERIC DRYER, Strasburg, Va. KATHY L. DUNAWAY, Cincinnati, Ohio CHRISTINE DURANEY, Winchester CHRISTOPHER S. DURBIN, Bowling Green KATHLEEN ‘A. DURBIN, Bowling Green JEFF DURHAM, Greensburg SANDRA DURHAM, Portland, Tenn. SUSAN K. DYER, Radcliff WILLIAM T. EBLEN JR., Lexington KAREN G. EDGE, Whitesville LETHA C. EDISON, Alvaton MICHAEL EDMONDS, New York, N.Y. DENISE EIDSON, White House, Tenn. JULIE EISENMAN, Ft. Wright DENNIS E. ELDER, Louisville MARILYN F. ELLIS, Danville JEFFREY H. ENGEL, Hendersonville, Tenn. ROBYN ERICKSEN, Henderson WENDY ERVING, Bowling Green MARK L. ERWIN, Owensboro CYNDI EVERSON, Jacksonville, Fla. KATHY FAIRCHILD, Whitesville JAMES-CHARLES L. FARLEY, Bowling Green PAT FARNSLEY, Bowling Green CHARMAINE FARRINGTON, Woodbridge, Va. LYNN FELTS, Bowling Green KAREN D. FIGLER, Crown Point, Ind. BRYAN FINKBONE, Evansville, Ind. KATHERN M. FIRELINE, Madisonville DARRELL W. FLEMING, Bowling Green RENE FONDREN, Erlanger GWENDOLYN FORD, Louisville PAMELA K. FORSHEE, Franklin GAIL FORT, Owensboro ROGER D. FRANZELL, Caneyville JUDY FRENCH, Owensboro RHETTA A. FROEDGE, Bowling Green JANET FULLER, Radcliff JACKIE L. FUQUA, Louisville DAVID S. FURKIN, Campbellsville CYNTHIA FLY, Paducah DONNA M. GAINES, Ekron KIM GAINES, Carrollton CHERYL A. GALLOWAY, Evansville, Ind. MIKE GARDNER, Bowling Green LAURA GARNER, Somerset PAT GATES, Bowling Green MELBA GEORGE, Cottontown, Tenn. AMY GERSTLE, Louisville LESLIE GILBERT, Owensboro MARGARET L. GILBERT, Owensboro PATTY GILBERT, Owensboro CARNELL GIPSON, Rockfield SHEILA GLASSCOCK, Bowling Green CINDY A. GLAYSBROOK, Madisonville 385 Juniors DALE GOAD, Gamaliel ELIZABETH S. GOFF, Louisville MELONEY GRAHAM, Louisville CAROLYN GRANT, Bowling Green LYNN A. GRANTHAM, Cottontown, Tenn. LISA F. GRAVES, Burkesville TRIBBY D. GRAVES, Portland, Tenn. LEON L. GRAY JR., Louisville KATHY J. GREEN, Leitchfield TAMMY GREEN, Bowling Green DOUGLAS P. GREENLEE, Hendersonville, Tenn. LISA GREGORY, Bremen JACQUELINE GRESH, Belle Vernon, Pa. GAYLA GRIDER, Russellville ANNA GRIFFITH, Ft. Campbell TRINA GRIMES, Louisville DEBORAH F. GRINSTEAD, Elizabethtown LEONARD GUERRA, Quito, Ecuador KEVIN GUINN, Hermitage, Tenn. SUZANNE GUY, Scottsville TERY HACKETT, Bowling Green HELEN HAFFNER, Louisville SCOTT J. HALL, Poolesville, Md. | DONNA J. HAMMER, Dubre | TOM HAMMOND, Louisville J. DARYL HANCOCK, Hopkinsville PAULA J. HANEY, Gallatin, Tenn. WILLIAM M. HANNA, Lexington LONNIE L. HARDIN, LaGrange LOUISE C. HARDY, Horse Cave COLLEEN M. HARPER, Hodgenville BILLY E. HARRIS, Bowling Green BRIAN HARRIS, Brandenburg JOSEPH HARRIS JR., Lexington PRISCILLA G. HARRIS, Franklin FRAN A. HARROD, Elizabethtown BARBARA HATFIELD, Evanston, Ill. ERNA HAY, Greensburg REGINALD A. HAYDEN, Nashville, Tenn. FORREST D. HAYNES, Louisville JUDY HEAD, New Haven JOHN HEIN, Owensboro DIANA G. HELM, Owensboro YVONNE L. HENDERSON, Louisville WILLIAM P. HENRY, Nashville, Tenn. JOHN HEPNER, Kewanee, III. WAYNE HERNER, Brooks ROBERT B. HERRICK, Prestonsburg JANE HERSHEY, South Euclid, Ohio CHERYL HEYDUCK, Pineville LARRY HILL, Gallatin, Tenn. MARK D. HILL, Louisville SUSAN HINTON, Portland, Tenn. SARAH L. HIRST, Bowling Green RICKY HOBDY, Portland, Tenn. EDWARD H. HOGG, Shelbyville NANCY HOLDEN, Cincinnati, Ohio DONNA HOLDER, Bowling Green LARRY HOLLON, Louisville CONNIE L. HOLMAN, Bowling Green NANCY HOLMAN, Glasgow | PAULA B. HOLMAN, Park City | KAREN L. HOLYOKE, Buffalo Grove, II. MARY E. HOOD, Glasgow STEVE HOOKS, Owensboro KEITH HOPGOOD, Morganfield JANICE HORMUTH, Evansville, Ind. NONA HORSLEY, Louisville LAURA HORTIN, Evansville, Ind. MIMA HOSKINS, Bowling Green MARY A. HOUCHIN, Brownsville CORNELIA HOUSE, Hendersonville, Tenn. COLLEEN HOWARD, Bowling Green GLENDA G. HOWARD, Morgantown KAREN B. HOWARD, Summer Shade KIMBERLY G. HOWARD, Owensboro KIRK HOWARD, Fountain Run MICKEY HOWARD, Calhoun PATRICIA R. HOWARD, Bowling Green REBECCA S. HOWELL, Louisville GREGORY HUDNALL, Lewisburg RHONDA C. HUFF, Round Hill GARY R. HUGHES, Smiths Grove CATHY HUME, Bowling Green KATHY A. HUNTER, Portland, Tenn. DEBBIE ICE. Hendersonville, Tenn. MARY J. INABNITT, Stab ANNIE INGRAM, Louisville DEBRA D. ISON, Elizabethtown CHARLES W. JACKSON JR., Elizabethtown DANNY C. JACKSON, Gallatin, Tenn. DONJEA JACKSON, Louisville JOY L. JACKSON, Bowling Green MARCIA JACKSON, Bowling Green VICTOR JACKSON, Clarksville, Tenn. WILLIAM E. JACOBS, Louisville JANE JAGGERS, Leitchfield JOANNA JAMES, Glasgow SABRINA JAMES, Owensboro RICKY JANES, Campbellsville TERESA K. JARVIS, Burkesville MIKE JEANNETTE, Bowling Green THOMAS L. JECKER, Bowling Green PAMELA M. JEWETT, Clinton, Mass. BARRY G. JOHNSON, Owensboro BOB JOHNSON, Providence DIANA JOHNSON, Herndon JERRY L. JOHNSON, Louisville LISA R. JOHNSON, Louisville STEVEN P. JOHNSON, Riverside TOM JOHNSON, Sussex, N_J. HOPE S. JOHNSTON, Owensboro PHYLLIS JOHNSTON, Madisonville KATHY JOINER, Hopkinsville ANTHONY G. JONES, Bowling Green BECKY J. JONES, Bowling Green DEAN JONES, Stanford 386 Juniors FRANK G. JONES IL, Burlington LINDA JONES, Bowling Green STEVE JONES, Bowling Green JACQUELYN A. JOSEPH, Columbus, Ind. GREGORY R. KAELIN, Bowling Green JAN KEETON, Trenton SHERRY KELLY, Greensburg RANDY KEMPER, Elizabethtown MIKE KENNER, Sharon Grove KEVIN O. KEOWN, Bowling Green ALTRICIA KEY, Russellville MICHAEL A. KIETA, Radcliff AIMEE KING, Paducah GRANVILLE KING II, Louisville KIM KING, Burkesville MARLA J. KINGREY, Glasgow BRENDA KINNETT, Russell Springs ZANE KITTRELL, Gallatin, Tenn. W. FRED KIXMILLER, Ft. Myers, Fla. ELIZABETH A. KLEIN, Hopkinsville KIM KNAPP, Evansville, Ind. BEVERLY KNIGHT, Glasgow LORIE J. KOHL, Winchester DENNIS L. KOLB, Valley Station KAREN A. KORFHAGE, Louisville GAY N. KRUGER, Reed VICKI L. KRUWELL, Ft. Campbell KATHY KUMMER, Louisville JERRY KUZMA, Merrillville, Ind. GEORGE KWOK, North Point, Hong Kong CATHIE LACY, Asheville, N.C. SHEA LAIR, Stanford LORIFAY LANCE, Washington, N_J. CHARLES LANGFORD, Shopville DENNIS K. LANTHORN, Maysville DAVID LAWRENCE, Cold Springs CONNIE F. LAWSON, Murray JAMES M. LAWSON, Albany RENEE LAWSON, Louisville SANDRA LEA, Lebanon, Tenn. RICHARD L. LEACH, Owensboro DANNY LEAHY, Louisville DENNY LEE, Owensboro CHARLES K. LENEAVE, Paducah DONALD R. LESTER IL, Henderson SUSAN R. LEUCHT, Owensboro DIANE LIERMAN, Ft. Mitchell KAREN R. LITTLEJOHN, Cadiz TIM LIVINGSTON, Bowling Green PHILIP LOCKHART, Russellville BEN T. LOGAN, Smiths Grove JANICE F. LONDON, Cave City DONNA LONG, Lexington CARL LORD, Clermont, Fla CHERYL L. LOVELL, Bowling Green JEFFERY W. LOVELL, Ridgetop, Tenn. DEBRA LYKINS, Owensboro STEVEN W. LYLE, Bowling Green AMY LYNCH, Russellville DEBRA L. LYNCH, Bowling Green JAMIE LYNCH, Bowling Green NANCY LYONS, Palos Heights, Ill. ROBIN R. LYONS, Centralia, Ill. BEVERLY MAINLAND, Hendersonville, Tenn. JAMES MALLAY, Russellville MELINDA MANIS, Marietta, Ga. MARCIA MAPLE, Louisville ALECIA MARCUM, Bowling Green DONNA MARLIN, Henderson JAMES R. MARSHALL, Bowling Green KEITH B. MARTIN, Bowling Green MELISSA MARTIN, Bowling Green ROBERT S. MARTIN, Corbin SANDY MARTIN, Bowling Green RICHARD S. MARX, Louisville JAN MASON, Owensboro GARY MATHIS, Valley Station TAMI MATHIS, Benton HERMAN D. MATTHEWS, Bonnieville LUCINDA L. MCCALEB, Franklin MARY L. MCCORMICK, Owensboro PATRICIA MCCUBBIN, Summersville KERRY MCDANIEL, Horse Cave BRENDA M. MCFADDEN, Owensboro GARY L. MCFARLAND, Owensboro KREIS MCGUIRE, Lexington BRYAN MCINTYRE, Edgewood GLORIA L. MCINTYRE, Georgetown ANGELA D. MCLEAN, Ft. Knox SHELIA MCPHAILL, Russellville DIANA L. MCQUADY, Beaver Dam DARRELL R. MEADOR, Scottsville CAROL MEEKER, Florence SHERREE MELHISER, Owensboro BEVERLY MERRILL, Concord, N.H. KAREN MERRITT, Louisville RICHARD B. MERSHON, Campbellsville REX B. MIDKIFF, Hartford DEBORA L. MILLER, Bowling Green DEBRA MILLER, Harned DIANE MILLER, Bowling Green EDWARD G. MILL ER, Greenville LISA C. MILLER, Maceo REBEKAH MILLER, Trafalgar, Ind. RHEA E. MILLER, Bowling Green ROBIN MILLER, Lebanon Junction WANDA MILLER, White Mills LILLIAN B. MILLS, Ekron RAYMOND A. MILOGRANO, Annandale, Va. NORMA A. MINOGUE, Louisville MARGARET K. MINOR, Owensboro DONALD MINTON, Bowling Green CATHY A. MITCHELL, Bowling Green DARRELL V. MOORE, Columbia JOHN A. MOORE, Lexington ROSETTA L. MOORE, Bowling Green VIRGINIA MOORE, Radcliff 387 Juniors Golaiden lines LONG SHADOWS CROSS THE basketball courts behind Pearce-Ford Tower and Keen Hall as 15 boys play against a late-afternoon October sun. The 19 courts are on the south end of campus. ROBERTA E. MOORMAN, Hardinsburg PATRICK D. MORAN, Slidell, La. PATRICIA A. MORETZ, Richmond PAMELA C. MORGAN, Niles, Mich. PAMELA J. MORGAN, Russellville PHILLIP MORGAN, Burkesville | TRACEY MORGAN, Paducah TOM W. MOSSER, Danville, III. DEBBIE MOUSER, Horse Cave WAYNE MOYERS, Smiths Grove JAMES MULLIKIN, Owensboro CHERYL M. MURPHY, Lexington MICHAEL E. MURPHY, Owensboro JOHN MURRAY, Lexington KAREN A. MURRY, Lacenter HENRY G. NAGEL, Louisville CLIFF NAHM, Bowling Green BONNIE L. NANCE, Madisonville TINA NAPIER, Bowling Green JOEY NATCHER, Bowling Green LYNN NAVITSKY, Jensen Beach, Fla. ANITA C. NEAL, Hendersonville, Tenn. DARLENE E. NEAL, Lexington PAUL NEFF, Hardinsburg MELESA A. NEWBY, Hopkinsville DOUGLAS L. NICHOLS, Louisville JAMES NOON, Louisville DEBORAH R. NORRIS, Livermore JENNIFER K. NORRIS, Louisville PHYLLIS A. NUNN, Paducah GINA L. NUTTER, Bowling Green CHERYL L. OLDIN, Northbrook, III. EDIE OLIVE, Elizabethtown KATHY OLIVER, Lynch WILL OSBORN, Trenton WILLIAM R. OWEN JR., Hardinsburg ANNETTE M. OWENS, Louisville CHERYL L. OWENS, Russellville RUBY G. OWSLEY, Danville HASAN OZDEMIR, Etlik-Ankara, Turkey MARY J. PACE, Bowling Green THOMAS B. PADGETT, Portsmouth, Va. DAVID PARSONS, Gallatin, Tenn. JULIE PATTERSON, Bowling Green RITA M. PATTERSON, Bowling Green LUCINDA L. PATTON, Eddyville MARY PAYNE, Cottontown, Tenn. LYNDELL PAYTON, Clifty QUENTA A. PAYTON, Hartford SANDRA L. PEAK, Henderson SHEBELL PEAK, Louisville DENNIS A. PEARSON, Bowling Green SHARON PEAY, Springfield, Tenn. BECKY PECKENPAUGH, Henderson 388 Juniors Ron Hoskins y Sa DANIEL S. PELINO, Fairport, N.Y. DEBBIE K. PEPPER, Russellville STEVE PERRY, Louisville DEBBIE PETERS, Greensburg, Ind. JUDY PETTY, Columbia CINDY PHELPS, Madisonville CHARLES L. PHILLIPS, Lewisburg LAURA E. PHILLIPS, Marion TERESA PHILLIPS, Bowling Green TRACY B. PHILLIPS, Liverpool, N.Y. DAVID A. PICKWICK, Louisville KAREN PICKWICK, Louisville JENROSE PIERCE, Bowling Green STEWART J. PIERCE, Falls Church, Va. MARY G. PIKE, Bardstown PERRY A. PILE, Cox’s Creek PIPPA A. PINCKLEY, Tompkinsville SANDY PLANTINGA, Country Club Hills, Ill. ERIC PLATT, Bowling Green NEIL POND, Cottontown, Tenn. JULIE POOR, Greencastle, Ind. ALBERT C. PORTER, Louisville LISA PORTER, LaGrange MICHELE POWELL, Louisville JOHN PRENDERGAST, Owensboro SUZETTE PRICE, Madisonville TONI PRICE, Louisville PUNIVAI PULOU, Horse Cave CATHY S. PURSLEY, Glasgow DELL QUARLES, Hopkinsville ELLEN QUIRE, Louisville SARA A. RABY, Bowling Green TERRI J. RAY, Owensboro CONNIE RAYMOND, Owensboro SUSAN D. REAGAN, Tompkinsville LARRY REAVES, Louisville JANETTE M. REED, Springfield ALAN L. REID, Bowling Green CURTIS A. REXROAT, Russell Springs MARTINA RIGGS, Upton ALICE M. RILEY, Bardstown ROBERT A. RILEY, Carrollton BERNICE RIPLEY, Lexington BRUCE W. ROBERSON, Fern Creek CAIN E. ROBERTS JR., Louisville SHERRY ROBERTS, Owensboro KENNETH E. ROBERTSON, Adairville WILLIAM L. ROBERTSON, Jamestown DONALD M. ROBINSON, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. RONALD ROCCO, Pittsburg, Pa. CHRIS A. ROEDERER, Louisville BILLY S. ROSE, Hazel Green KENNY ROSE, Corbin SABRINA ROSENBAUM, Louisville MARK A. ROSENTHAL, Bowling Green DENNIS ROUNDS, Pierre, S.D. CYNTHIA ROUNTREE, Hendersonville, Tenn. PAULA M. ROY, Russell Springs ROBERT K. ROY, Whitley City KATHLEEN RUBEY, Ft. Thomas ELIZABETH W. RUBY, Louisville JON RUE, Bowling Green DEBBIE RUGGLES, Glasgow KENNETH D. RUSSELL, Poole KIM M. RUTHERFORD, Alvaton JOY D. SANDERS, Harrodsburg STEVE SANSOM, Russellville ROBBIE SARLES, New Albany, Ind. CATHY SCARBROUGH, Russellville SHARON A. SCHWAB, Franklin JANET SCOTT, Louisville JOE SCOTT, Paducah MICHAEL L. SCOTT, Hardyville ROBERT F. SCOTT, Greensburg STEVE SHARP, Owensboro JUDY F. SHELTON, Oakland MARY C. SHERIDAN, Louisville BRENT SHOCKLEY, Scottsville VANA J. SHOCKLEY, Fountain Run JAY W. SHRODE, Ill, Sebree ELIZABETH G. SIMON, Bowling Green SARAH A. SIMONS, Dawson Springs TERRY SIMPSON, Marion GARY SIMS, Scottsville LINDA SKAGGS, Shepherdsville WILLIE B. SKEES, Bowling Green TERRI L. SLATON, Madisonville RANDOL L. SLEDGE, Bowling Green CLAY M. SMALLEY JR., Springfield CHARLES M. SMITH, Atlanta, Ga. CRAIG F. SMITH, Bardstown S. GAIL SMITH, Owensboro GREGORY J. SMITH, Louisville MONA G. SMITH, Bowling Green PATRICIA J. SMITH, Russellville PAULA A. SMITH, Cottontown, Tenn. 389 Juniors PHILIP D. SMITH, Scottsville REBECCA J. SMITH, Bowling Green ROBERT SMITH, Paducah ROSALYN D. SMITH, Lexington KENT SNODGRASS, Beaver Dam GREGORY SNOW, Louisville CHERYL L. SOLOMON, Louisville JACKIE SOUTH, Cottontown, Tenn. PRESTON SOWDER, Bowling Green DARLENE SPARKS, Owensboro RETHA SPROWLES, Campbellsville JOE STALLINGS, Henderson ANTOINETTE STANLEY, Radcliff LARRY STARR, Glasgow CHRISTIANNE STAUSS, Alvaton BRENT ST. CLAIR, Evansville, Ind. BECKY STEINWEG, Owensboro VICKIE STEVENS, Lawrenceburg LISA STEVENSON, Louisville KEITH B. STICHTENOTH, Cincinnati, Ohio NANCY STINEMETZ, Columbus, Ohio CHARLES R. STINNETT, Lexington PRISCILLA STINSON, Franklin EDDY R. STOCKTON, Albany LEE A. STOFER JR., Hopkinsville KAREN STOKES, Greenville SANDRA K. STONE, Scottsville SHEA A. STRADER, Greenville CYNDIA STRAIN, Franklin KATY STROZDAS, Springfield, Ohio BRIAN STUMBO, Newark, Ohio RHONDA F. STURROCK, Oxford, Miss. DEBORAH S. SUTTLE, Portland, Tenn. JOHN W. SUTTLES JR., Louisville KATHY SWAIN, Bowling Green MAURICE L. SWAIN, Louisville RONNIE TABOR, Bowling Green VICKIE TABOR, Burbank, III. JONI TAPSCOTT, Bowling Green EMILY TATE, Bowling Green CLARA TAYLOR, Henderson ELAINE TAYLOR, Nashville, Tenn. JONI TAYLOR, Bowling Green RHEA TAYLOR, Bowling Green RHONDA TAYLOR, Columbia JOANETTE TENGELSEN, Macon, Ga. NORMAN TERRY, Louisville KERRY THARP, Louisville PAULA THESSEN, Franklin CINDY THOMAS, Rockfield KAREN THOMAS, Bowling Green TIMOTHY A. THOMAS, Portage, Ind. YOLANDA F. THOMAS, Louisville GUY THOMPSON, Ashland MARK A. THOMPSON, Drakesboro GAIL THORNTON, Franklin LUVENIA A. THURSTON, Bowling Green J. KEVIN TICHENOR, Owensboro MARY M. TINGLEY, Louisville RACHEL TOOLEY, Tompkinsville MARY TOUGHER, Louisville WILLIAM J. TRAVIS, Tompkinsville BILL TRENT, Louisville BRUCE D. TRENT, Elizabethtown CONNIE TRENT, Wayzata, Minn. SCOTT TRIPLETT, Bowling Green ERNEST TUBB JR., Nashville, Tenn. BEVERLY TUCKER, Bowling Green DALE TUCKER, Campbellsville CINDY TUDOR, Summer Shade DAVID TURNER, Henderson KATHY TURNER, Franklin LAURA J. TUROK, Paducah DALE TURRENTINE, Hendersonville, Tenn. LEE A. TUSSEY, Catlettsburg VERNON W. TYNES, New York, N.Y. JOHN C. UPTON, Greensburg KIM URBANEK, Henderson TERRY R. UTWELL, Louisville GATHA J. VANCE, Glasgow PHIL VANCE, Casselberry, Fla. KATHY VANMETER, Bee Springs KAYE VANMETER, Elizabethtown DIANA VAUGHN, Lexington DONNA VAUGHN, Franklin GLENN VICK, Olmstead VICKY WAGGONER, Hopkinsville CATHY WALKER, Elkton JOHN H. WALKER, Gallatin, Tenn. DAVID S. WATKINS JR., Smiths Grove JUDY WATSON, Winter Garden, Fla. ROSSAN WATTS, Clarksville, Tenn. DIANE WEBB, Caneyville SHERI L. WEBB, Bowling Green GREGORY E. WELLS, Owensboro MARK E. WELLS, Paris SUSAN WELLS, Alvaton GARY L. WEST, Hendersonville, Tenn. ROBIN WETZEL, Owensboro 390 Juniors KIM WHITE, Arcadia, Ind. PRENTICE B. WHITE, Bowling Green MARILYN R. WHITMER, Owensboro MIKE WIGGINS, Bowling Green JAMES W. WILEY, Western Springs, Ill. KATHY B. WILKINSON, Portland, Tenn. BARRY E. WILSON, Valley Station CHAD WILSON, Greenville PATRICIA WILSON, Dawson Springs STEVE A. WILSON, Bowling Green STEVE WILSON, Tompkinsville ANGELA WILLIAMS, Bowling Green DEBBIE WILLIAMS, Albuqurque, N.M. GILES WILLIAMS, Evansville, Ind. JIMMY L. WILLIAMS, Green Cave Springs, Fla. MARCELLA WILLIAMS, Jamestown MARK S. WILLIAMS, Tompkinsville MARVA WILLIAMS, Louisville TERESA WILLIAMS, Madison, Tenn. TIM WILLIAMS, Franklin WANDA J. WILLIAMS, Sykesville, Md. LISA WILLOUGHBY, Bowling Green MARK WILLIS, Campbellsville MATILDA WILLIS, Campbellsville RICHARD A. WIMSATT, Owensboro TIM WITTEN, Louisville LYDIA WOODCOCK, Brownsville MARTY WOODCOCK, Mt. Carmel, III. JAMES WOODS, Ft. Campbell MARVIN J. WURTH, Paice SANDY WURTZ, Paducah RICHARD K. YANN, Louisville SALLY YOKLEY, Franklin VERONICA YOUNG, Louisville DIANA YOUNGBLOOD, East View DONNALYNN ZUBA, Schaumburg, IIl. Pins BACKSPIN, CONCENTRATION make freshman Noble Jones among t! players on the university center's fourth ‘floor: T kinsville native said he began playing about S| Juniors Sophomores: In the middle Sophomores take it on the chin. They’ve usually learned the ropes of the school. But their once-popular reputation for hazing freshmen lingers. The word “sophomoric” is defined as “immature and overconfident.” And the sophomore jinx is a feared malady among athletes. When the class of 1980 arrived, two years of mandatory housing faced them. Although more open houses were allowed, the Regents’ “door ajar” policy was still enforced. Freshmen in 1976-77 watched the movie-version of ‘All the President’s Men” and the remake of “King Kong.” Many stayed home during the frightful winter of 1977 to view “Roots” on TV. Readers pored over “Your Erroneous Zones,” a self-help book. Music fans licked up “Wings Over America,” a three-record investment. Chicago played at Diddle Arena and grossed more than $50,000. But few went to see football or basketball, as they suffered a poor season. Women’s and minor sports boomed. One year later, sophomores were half through. ADEDEJI T. ADELEKE, Ede, Oyo State, Nigeria JAN T. ALEXANDER, Burkesville REBECCA J. ALFORD, Bowling Green SANDY ALFORD, Bowling Green PETINA ALLEN, Louisville STEVEN M. ALLGEIER, Louisville KEVIN R. ALVEY, Clarkson MICHAEL W. ALVEY, Leitchfield LINDA ANDERSON, Lewisburg SHERRY G. ANDERSON, Glasgow TOM ANDERSON, Vincennes, Ind. BRENDA K. ANTLE, Russell Springs NDUBUEZE T. ANYAEGBUNA, Enugu, Nigeria ALLISON ARMAO, Edgewood DONNA M. ARMSTRONG, Rockfield JAMES S. ARNOLD, Perryville JOSEPH R. ARNOLD, Madison, Tenn. KEVIN D. ARNOLD, Columbus, Ind. SONYA ASH, Louisville RICKIE N. ATWELL, Greensburg TERRI AUKERMAN, Shelbyville KATHALEEN M. AUTREY, Paducah KATHRYN L. AYER, Calhoun CHRISTIE A. BACCUS, Eddyville TIMOTHY S. BAETE, Fern Creek KENNY BAGGETT, White House, Tenn. KERRY BAGGETT, White House, Tenn. DIANE BAKER, Lewisport KARLA N. BAKER, Elizabethtown STEPHEN W. BALINT, Vienna, Va. JACKIE BALL, Hardinsburg KIM BALLARD, Madisonville DE ETTE BANUCHLI, Horse Cave BRENDA BARNETHTE, Hendersonville, Tenn. BRUCE BARTON, Somerset DAVID L. BATES, Alvaton DOLLY S. BATES, Indianapolis, Ind. ARCHIE BECK, Russellville GLENN A. BECK, Louisville MARTHA BECK, Louisville KEVIN BECKMAN, Louisville AMY BEHM, Franklin, Tenn. MIKE BELCHER, Auburn LESA Y. BELL, Hendersonville, Tenn. PAMELA A. BELT, Springfield, Tenn. MARK A. BELVA, Morganfield RUTH A. BENNETT, Hardinsbur WILMA L. BENSON, New Albany, rl DEBORAH K. BENTLEY, Gamaliel RODNEY J. BERRY, Campbellsville MARIA Y. BERTRAM, Monticello STEVE BEST, Elizabethtown BRENT BIDEAU, Louisville JERRY C. BISHOP JR., Annandale, NJ. MICHAEL J. BIZER, Ft. Knox MICHAEL E. BLACKWOOD, Hendersonville, Tenn. PAMELA BLANKENSHIP, Hendersonville, Tenn. BARRY BLANN, Bowling Green DEBRA L. BLOCH, LaGrange MARY D. BOEMKER, Louisville KIMBERLY J. BOHANON, Elkton MOHAMMAD J. BOKA, Ahwaz, Iran DENNIS BOND, Russellville 392 Sophomores DAVID BOSMA, Franklin KAREN BOSWELL, Owensboro MARIA BOTTEGO, Hollywood, Fla. SUSAN J. BOTTS, Versailles HUBERT S. BOWERS, Mortons Gap THERESA BOWLING, Middlesboro LISA BOWMAN, Mt. Hermon TERESA BOWMAN, Summer Shade ADRIAN C. BOYD JR., Owensboro OMELIA J. BOYD, Hopkinsville JULIE A. BRADFORD, Bowling Green ANGIE BRADLEY, Ft. Campbell BRIDGET E. BRADY, Louisville DEBBIE BRAKKE, Boca Raton, Fla. PATRICIA BRATTON, Youngstown, Ohio DAVID BRENNAN, Rock Island, Ill. SALLY BRENZEL, Bowling Green , JOHN E. BREWER, III, Louisville SUSIE BRIDGEWATER, Bowling Green SHERYL BRISBY, Morganfield JIMMY BRITE, Bowling Green MARY F. BRITT, Glasgow LINDA BROCK, Columbus, Ind. BILL BRODSKY, Henderson BEVERLY A. BROOKS, Dayton, Ohio JEFFREY BROUGHTON, Scottsville DAVID A. BROWN, Bowling Green MARKEATA BROWN, Marion PAMELA J. BROWN, Owensboro PHIL A. BROWN, Hardinsbur RICHARD M. BROWN, Franklin STANLEY W. BROWN, Central City LAURA D BRUNER, London SANDY BRYAN, New Haven ELIZABETH I. BRYANT, Calhoun MARY S. BRYANT, Caneyville KIM BUCKLES, Glendale JEAN BUCKLIN, Hendersonville, Tenn. KENNY BUNCH, Bowling Green ROBIN L. BURDITT, Lewisburg MICHAEL D. BURKE, Lexington TED BURKE, Lexington DONALD B. BURNETT, Brandenburg MARY BURNETITE, Leitchfield SARAH BURNETITE, Bowling Green MAUREEN T. BURNS, Louisville SAMUEL R. BURNS, Bowling Green JANE B. BURTON, Bowling Green RICKY BUSH, Austin NANCY K. BYRD, Cave City VICKI CALHOUN, Benton CHRISTOPHER CAMERON, Hopkinsville TONY CANNON, Morgantown CAROLYN CAPPS, Bevel BETTY CARBY, Utica AVA M. CARLOTTA, Florence VICKIE A. CARMODY, Albany ALESA CARROLL, Elizabethtown CAROLYN S. CARTER, Leitchfield LINDA F. CARTER, Tompkinsville ANN B. CARWELL, Bowling Green SUSAN E. CASH, Albany YVONNE CATLETT, Hopkinsville RUSSELL W. CAUSEY, Bowling Green TONY CECIL, Owensboro KELLEY L. CHANDLER, Indianapolis, Ind. NANCY CHANNELS, Lexington MARY S. CHAPMAN, Allensville NORMA J. CHAPMAN, Rockville, Md. THOMAS CHENAULT, Frankfort JULIE A. CHINN, Hartford HAZEL V. CLARDY, Louisville BARBARA CLARK, Portland, Tenn. ELIZABETH F. CLARK, Russellville KAREN CLARK, Center SCOTT CLARK, Owensboro SHERRY CLARK, Woodburn SUSAN CLARK, Owensboro LEANNE CLASBY, Bowling Green DEBORAH CLEMENTS, Clay TERRY L. CLEMENTS, Falls of Rough MARTHA CLEVELAND, Versailles MARY K. CLOUD, Danville BRENDA CLOYD, Georgetown TOMMY COCANOUGHER, Perryville CONNIE COFFMAN, Elizabethtown KAREN COHRON, Rochester, Mich. BETTY C. COLE, Cottontown, Tenn. CHERYL COLE, Bowling Green TIMOTHY R. COLEMAN, Morgantown MIKE COLLIER, St. Joe, Mich. REGINALD S. COLLIER, Russellville LEISA G. COLOMBO, Benton TERESA COMBS, Beaver Dam SHEREN L. COMPTON, Calvert City JANE CONLEY, Nashville, Tenn. PAM CONLEY, Paintsville SHIRLEY E. CONNER, Ft. Campbell GARY CONSTANT, Louisville CHARLOTTE E. COOK, Mt. Eden D’ESTA D. COOK, Bowling Green LESLIE A. COOKE, Hendersonville, Tenn. TERRI L. COOMBS, Glasgow BILLY E. COOPER, Bowling Green JIMMY COOPER, Bowling Green SHERRY CORNELL, Pembroke KITTY CORNETT, Louisville STEVIE L. COSBY, Henderson CATHY COUNTZLER, Greenville KAREN COVETITS, Lewisport DAVID CRAIN, Munfordville SUSAN J. CROOK, Louisville CHRIS CROWLEY, Slaughters LINDA CROWNER, Louisville LYNN DABBS, Hendersonville, Tenn. JOHN DALLAS, Paducah DAVID DALTON, Bowling Green 393 Sophomores MIKE DAME, Owensboro LAURA DAUM, Newburgh, Ind. CHARLES DAVIS, Hopkinsville GREG DAVIS, Louisville LIBBY DAVIS, Louisville MARGARET DAVIS, Henderson JOHNNY DAWSON, Olmstead JUDITH DAY, Caneyville DONNA DEAL, Louisville DWIGHT DEDMON, Bowling Green LORI DEFOOR, Merrillville, Ind. ROBERT W. DELOACH, Louisville SHEILA DENNIS, Upton DIANA DETRING, Morganfield SHERRY DEVASHER, Glasgow VICKI L. DEVINE, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. MIKE DICKSON, Cave City DONNA J. DINGUS, Burkesville CLANCY DIXON, Jeffersontown LYNNE R. DIXON, Nashville, Tenn. PHILIP DIZON, Columbia, S.C. KATHRYN DODD, New Albany, Ind. RANDY DONALDSON, Nashville, Tenn. TERESA E. DORELER, St. Joseph, Mich. RUTH M. DOUGHERTY, Nashville, Tenn. DAVID DOWNING, Bowling Green ELIZABETH DOWNING, Bowling Green CHARLES M. DRAKE, Morgantown MICHAEL B. DRAPER, Ft. Thomas TIMOTHY W. DRURY, Bardstown DEBBIE DUKES, Madison, Tenn. STEVE DUNCAN, Louisville SHERRI DUNN, Scottsville TERESA J. EDEN, Franklin LISA M. EDISON, Louisville THERESAL G. EDMONDS, Glasgow VICKI R. EDMONDS, Glasgow SHADE EDUN, Lagos, Nigeria JEFF EDWARDS, Glasgow ROGER R. EDWARDS JR., San Antonia, Tex. LINDA E. ELLIS, Paducah SHANNON ELLIS, Bowling Green WILLIAM S S. ELLIS, Lebanon MARY J. ELMORE, Middlesboro PATRICIA A. ELWARD, Barrington, Ill ypical NOT A GOOD TYPIST, Ronnie Howard got Marguerite Rice to help him with a term paper in a university center classroom. Using a lolli- pop, Howard, a sophomore government major from Munfordville, explains part of the paper for his speech communications 449 class. Miss Rice is a freshman business major. 394 Sophomores Ricky Rogers MARY L. EMERINE, Vine Grove JAMIE R. EMMICK, Lewisport ELIZABETH ENGLAND, Edmonton PAM ERTNER, Portland, Tenn. SUSAN J. ESHBACK, New Village, N.J. DONALD B. EVANS, Owensboro JOE FAIRLEIGH, Louisville ROBIN FAITH, Owensboro RONALD FARAGO, Farmingdale, N.Y. JONI FARLEY, Franklin PAM FARMER, Owensboro TIM FEAGIN, Calhoun KEVIN E. FIELDS, Louisville SUSIE FINLEY, Tompkinsville CINDY FITZ, Springfield, Tenn. KATHY FLANARY, Lexington MARGERY E. FLAUTT, Nashville, Tenn. SUE FLORY, Lambertville, Mich. HOLLY R. FORKNER, III, Bowling Green SHELIA J. FORSHEE, Franklin LEE H. FORST, Louisville ELIZABETH FOSTER, St. Louis, Mo. J.M. FOSTER, Fairdale DAVID FRANK, Murray THERESA L. FRANKLIN, Hopkinsville SANDRA FREEMAN, Bowling Green MELINDA FREER, Owensboro SARA FREIBERT, Louisville KATHY FRIDY, Bowling Green MARK W. FROEDGE, Edmonton BRYAN FRYMIRE, Jeffersontown STEVEN J. FULLER, Bowling Green DONNA GALLOWAY, Bowling Green MARY E. GALLOWAY, Hendersonville, Tenn. CYNTHIA A. GA RD, Daytona Beach, Fla. KATHY GARMAN, Smiths Grove ROBERTA S. GARMON, Burkesville PHILLIP A. GARRETT, Cottontown, Tenn. CATHY GARVIN, Bowling Green JANET R. GARY, Morgantown STANLEY L. GAUS JR., Fairdale DAWN M. GEISLER, Louisville CONNIE GIBSON, Hodgenville SHEILA GIBSON, Louisville VICKIE GIBSON, Bowling Green GLEN N. GILL, Bowling Green TYLER L. GILL, Allensville BOBBI A. GIRVIN, Livermore ANTHONY D. GLORE, Louisville ALEX GODBEY, Perryville JACQUELINE L. GOFF, Beaver Dam ANN GOLD, Highland Heights MONICA GOLD, Naples, Fla. KAREN GOLDBERG, Lebanon, N.J. JANE GOODIN, Lebanon TERRY GOODMAN, Louisville BRENDA GOODWIN, Ft. Knox JE RRY L. GOOLSBY, Gamaliel CAROLE GOTT, Scottsville CYNTHIA L. GRACE, Roseville, Mich. BRYAN GRAY, Louisville MARTILLA S. GRAY, Hardinsburg MICHAEL G. GRAY, Clarksville, Tenn. WILLIE R. GRAY, Harlan DEBBIE GREEN, Beaver Dam STEVE GREENE, Centralia, Ill. GARY GREENWOOD, Stephensport BARBARA GREGORY, Alvaton BEVERLY GREGORY, Goodlettsville, Tenn. JEFF GRIFFIN, Louisville LINDA GRISH, Horse Cave DENNIS GRIZZLE, Jeffersontown GARY B. GROVE, Hendersonville, Tenn. JEFF GROVES, Lewisburg MARK HACKLER, Russell WALTER G. HAINES, Greensburg AUDREY HALEY, Irvington CINDY HALL, Auburn JOHN D. HALL, Goodlettsville, Tenn. JONI HALL, Louisville SHARON HALL, Leitchfield DEB ORAH F. HANCOCK, Greenville GLENDA D. HAMILTON, Cloverport TIMOTHY D. HAMMER, Tompkinsville KATHLEEN HANCOCK, Monticello JAMES E. HARGROVE, Milton KAREN HARLIN, Gamaliel GLENDA F. HARLOW, Bowling Green SARAH E. HARPE, Philpot CHERYL HARPOOL, Sonora DEBORAH HARRIS, Hardinsburg FREDERICK L. HARRIS, Lexington GERRY L. HARRIS, Lexington 395 Sophomores DONNA S. HART, Leitchfield BRIAN C. HARTON, Hopkinsville TERRI HATCHETT, Russellville KAREN HATFIELD, Shepherdsville DAVID HAWES, Owensboro MARILYN HAWKINS, Georgetown VANISSA M. HAWKINS, Portland, Tenn. LAUNITA HAYCRAFT, Bowling Green CHRISTOPHER J. HAYDEN, Bowling Green TERESA L. HAYDEN, Lebanon Junction RUSS ELL HAYES, Bowling Green SUSAN L. HAYNES, Bowling Green PAUL T. HAYS, Portland, Tenn. BRYON K. HEAD, Owensboro HUGH B. HEATER, Bowling Green VICKI A. HEIN, Owensboro CHARLES D. HENCH, Lexington MARK J. HENDERSON, Elizabethtown YVONNE L. HENDERSON, Louisville GLENN HENDON, Paducah JAMES M. HENDRICKS, Jeffersontown LESLIE HENSHAW, Madisonville DONNA HIGGINBOTHAM, Rockfield RHONDA L. HIGH, Casey Creek JANICE L. HIGHTOWER, Hopkinsville BERNITA HILL, Bowling Green THERESA HILL, Scottsville DEBBIE HOBSON, Salem, Ind. KENNY HOBSON, Hopkinsville JANE HODAPP, Dayton, Ohio JUDY M. HODGES, Tompkinsville KIMON HOEGH, Chicago, IIl. PAMELA J. HOGAN, Park City KAREN L. HOGG, Shepherdsville DAVID HOGGARD, Bowling Green GREGORY L. HOLLAND, Hartford LARRY D. HOLLAND, Paducah PHILIP G. HOLLAND, Bowling Green STEVEN HOLLIS, Cincinnati, Ohio WAYNE HOLLOMAN, Louisville DEBORAH J. HOLMES, Glasgow DAVID HOLSCLAW, Bowling Green JOHN T. HOOEY, Andover, N.J. PAUL HOOKS, Cadiz STEVE HORNER, Ft. Thomas VALERIE HOSEK, Bowling Green MARK P. HOSKINS, Ft. Pierce, Fla. PATRICIA C. HOUCHENS, Glasgow MARCIA HOUCK, Madisonville BRENDA HOUGH, Paducah DANNY J. HOWARD, Tompkinsville RONALD HOWARD, Munfordville GAYLE HOWLETT, Auburn MICHAEL R. HOWTON, Dawson Springs Ron Hoskins Lassoed WILD COW MILKING has its share of knocks, as Walter Haines discovered during the Lambda Chi Alpha Rodeo in October. Haines and Ernie Yates roped and milked a cow in “about three or four minutes” to win the contest for Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity. Haines, a sophomore, had milked cows before. “That was the easy part,” he said. 397 Sophomores SUSAN M. HUDAK, Edison, N.J. TERRI HUFF, Bowling Green GARY K. HUGHES, Cadiz KELLY HUGHES, Tulsa, Okla. PAM HUGHES, Hopkinsville KIMBERLY HUME, Louisville NANCY HUMPHREY, Livermore DAVID W. HUNDLEY, Rineyville TERESA HUNTON, Rockfield DANNY HURD, Gamaliel NASSER A. IPAYE, Bowling Green PAM ISENBERG, Cave City SALLIE D. ISON, Harrodsburg ANNE JACKEL, Bowling Green JEFF JACKSON, Franklin RONALD D. JAGGERS, Cape Girardeau, Mo. CYNTHIA A. JANES, Elizabethtown JOSE R. JAUREGUI, Quito, Ecuador JULIE JEFFREY, LaPorte, Ind. RANDAL M. JENKINS, Bowling Green LEANN JERNIGAN, Auburn BRENT JESSEE, Richland, Ind. BARBARA F. JOHNSON, Tompkinsville BERTIL G. JOHNSON, III, Hendersonville, Tenn. BRENDA J. JOHNSON, Rockfield DAVID D. JOHNSON, Louisville DONNIE JOHNSON, Greenville FRANCES L. JOHNSON, Trenton JERRY JOHNSON, Georgetown MARGARET JOHNSON, Guthrie SARAH JOHNSON, Owensboro TARA M. JOHNSON, Louisville FRANCES JOHNSTON, Cub Run DEBBIE JOLLY, Bowling Green BONNIE JONES, Elizabethtown CURTIS L. JONES, Glasgow DANIEL C. JONES, Bowling Green KAREN JONES, Owensboro LYNDA JONES, Nashville, Tenn. TERESA D. JONES, Smiths Grove CARROLL M. KACSUR, Louisville WAYNE KAELIN, Owensboro ALI KARIMI, Tehran, Iran MICHAEL KARNES, Benton JOHN KEELE, Louisville RICKY L. KELLEY, Milton TIM KELLUM, Fairfield, Ohio KAREN S. KELLY, Philpot CATHY KELTY, Louisville KAREN A. KERR, Valley Station MARKITA A. KEY, Glendale STACEY KEY, Minneapolis, Minn. KATHY L. KILLE, Radcliff FORREST KILLEBREW, Russellville MILLIE KILLIAN, Owensboro KAREN KINNAIRD, Franklin GLENN KINNEY, Calhoun SHIRLEY L. KIPER, Leitchfield SAUNDRA T. KIRBY, Louisville REBECCA KIRCHHOFF, California NANCY KIRKWOOD, Bowling Green MATTHEW KITTINGER, Rumsey DARYL KNAUER, Ft. Thomas 398 Sophomores ANDREW KOPPEL, Miami, Fla. PATTI KRAUS, Calhoun CRAIG A. KUCKENS, Rockville Centre, N.Y. SCOTT KUEGEL, Owensboro JOHN F. KUNZ JR., Marlton, N.J. MARY A. LALLY, Louisville TAMMY LAMPMAN, Bowling Green DAVID LANE, Lexington LINDA K. LANE, Owensboro JOIE LANHAM, Corbin SHARLENE LASHLEY, Brownsville MARK J. LAUKUS, St. Joseph, Mich. KEN LAWSON, Henderson PENNY D. LAWSON, Franklin MATTHEW D. LAYER, Stanford MARTIN LAYMAN, Louisville JAY E. LAYNE, Louisville ROBERTA L. LEACH, Hartford VICKI LEATHERS, Louisville HAROLD LEE, Campbellsville KENNEY LEE, Bowling Green KAREN LENTZ, Bowling Green TONY LESLIE, Bardstown CAROL J. LESSLEY, Bowling Green TERRI L. LIKENS, Burlington SHEILA LINDSEY, Caneyville SUSAN A. LINDSEY, Glasgow VAN L. LINDSEY, Bowling Green DARYL R. LINK, Bowling Green DON C. LIVERS, Indianapolis, Ind. TOM LOCKHART, Bowling Green MARGARET A. LOFTIS, Glasgow 2 JOHN B. LOGSDON, Lewisburg iano’ LINDA LOGSDON, Louisville eae ce o ‘ NANCY LOHMAN, Louisville me . £4 AG CEE Sook | ; : : : SN GEORGE LOHMANN, Evansville, Ind wat Kee? oN SuUNn-Uup shuffle SOME STRUGGLE, OTHERS HUSTLE to 8 am. classes, guided by the sun rising over the Colonnade. Waking up for early classes was the subject of a photo- graphic essay by Mark Lyons in the October 18 Col- lege Heights Herald. Mark Lyons 399 Sophomores KIRBY R. LOID, Bowling Green DENNIS R. LONG, Lewisport MARLINE LONG, Eminence SUSANNE LORD, Owensboro TIMOTHY LOVELL, Dawson Springs MARK S. LOVELY, Cadiz KENNETH LUCAS, Middleburg NANCY E. LUCAS, Owensboro LAURA LUECHT, Peoria, IIl. JENIFER LUMMIS, Paducah CHERYL LYLE, Louisville ZEBEDEE LYNUM, Nashville, Tenn. WILLIAM A. MADISON, Morgantown MARK MAGLINGER, Bowling Green LAURA MAHONEY, Louisville ROGER MALONE, Louisville MICHAEL C. MANGUS, Louisville MARK MANUEL, LaGrange Park, III. JAMES E. MARKHAM JR., Louisville MICHAELE S. MARLOW, California PAM MARSH, Glasgow CASSANDRA MARTIN, Bowling Green CINDY MARTIN, Riverside, Ill. CYNTHIA L. MARTIN, Greenville DEENA S. MARTIN, Boonville, Ind. KAREN E. MARTIN, Louisville PATRICIA S. MARTIN, Scottsville bout nine years ago, D’esta (Dee) Cook’s father brought home a large-mouth bass he had caught. “T don’t remember how big it was,” she said, “but he wanted it mounted and no- body around Bowling Green could do it.” Her father kept the head frozen for six years before he decided to do it himself. He asked Dee for help. “Tt doesn’t look bad,” she said, chuck- ling about the effort. “But it’s the wrong color, and it doesn’t have any eyes.” After that, the Cooks decided to become taxidermists. After studying through a cor- respondence course, they applied for a li- cense and began their part-time craft. The tall, slender sophomore in special education and library science doesn’t look as though she’d have the stomach for skin- ning and preserving animals. But, “ever since I can remember, I have skinned animals, chickens; butchered hogs. I’m used to it.” She said everybody ought to be able to do taxidermy. She said taxidermists skin the animal, preserve the head with a special liquid or powder, and replace the eyes with glass representatives. Then the skin is wrapped around straw-like material bundled with Taxidermy and all that stuff wires or around a form, which is more common with larger animals. They charged $1.50 per inch for a snake or fish, $75 for a deer head, $25 for birds and $15 for squirrels. “Can you believe people would pay those prices?” she exclaimed. “I can’t,” even though they were lower than what most other taxidermists charged. “We had little profit considering the time we spent working on a very neat product.” Miss Cook said taxidermists are the sub- jects of considerable teasing. “We were once called in the middle of the night by someone who wanted to know if we could mount an elephant. My father asked the caller if he had one. It turned out to be my uncle teasing us.” Other people asked jokingly if the Cooks would mount their spouses. Some people wanted their pets stuffed, but the Cooks refused. “Animals have dif- ferent expressions, and the owner sees that. When an animal,is mounted, it has only one expression. The owner wouldn't recog- nize their pet. It would be like having their dead pet around the house.” She once tried to make an exception for a boys’ club mascot, a hamster. “It was too hard,” she said. “They would have been disappointed.” More appropriate, Miss Cook said, is to mount “the first thing a kid killed” or an animal for a hunter with a collection. She said she thought the most unusual things they mounted were two albinos, a raccoon and a squirrel. “But most people think it’s a rattlesnake we have at home, especially when they see it lying next to them in a glass-topped end tabie.” The Cooks won a bear form at a national taxidermists’ convention, but never got a chance to use it. Although the Cooks didn’t re-apply for their license a couple of years ago (“We wanted to keep all the animals”), Miss Cook decided to apply last summer. “After you do it for so long, it makes good money,” she said. “If you see some- thing you want to buy, you just go out to the deep-freeze, get an animal and mount it. Before long, you have the money.” Charlea Hicks @ PRESERVED ANIMAL FRIENDS surround D’Esta Cook, a sophomore special education and library science major from Bowling Green. Miss Cook and her father became taxidermists after studying a correspon- dence course and applying for a license. Lewis Gardner 4 % 4 ® ae me pes t PAUL E. MARTIN, Lexington ELOISE MATHENY, Madisonville LINDA MATHEWS, Bowling Green JOY MATTHEWS, Sheppard Air Force Base, Tex. LECIA MAYHUGH, Morgantown MARYANNE R. MCCAULLEY, Louisville JUDY MCCLANAHAN, Springfield, Tenn. THOMAS R. MCCLENDON, Russell Springs CHARLES D. MECLOUD, Bowling Green MARGARET MCCOMBS, Princeton, Iowa DORIS MCCORMICK, Russellville BILLY MCDOUGAL, Murray DONNA MCELROY, Woodburn SUSAN F. MCGINNIS, Hopkinsville PAM MCGUFFIN, Bowling Green LAURA J. MCMILLIAN, Walton MARTIN MCNEIL, Paintsville KEVIN MCREYNOLDS, Russellville LEAH MEAD, Keokuk, Iowa JOY MEDLEY, Owensboro MARTY MEFFORD, Hawesville KAREN MELHISER, Owensboro DION MENSER, Baroda, Mich. TREVA N. MERIDETH, Park City JEANNE MESKER, LaGrange SARAH M. MIDDLETON, Henderson RICHARD MILBURN, Louisville CHUCK MILLER, Vincennes, Ind. DONNA E. MILLER, Calhoun GREGORY MILLER, Martinsville, Va. HEIDI MILLER, Sodus, Mich. JOHN A. MILLER, Louisville KIMBERLY MILLER, Bowling Green RHYIA MILLER, Hollywood, Fla. STEVE MILLER, Hendersonville, Tenn. BRUCE MILLIKEN, Middletown CONNIE J. MINOR, Horse Cave QUANNAH MOLLOY, Eddyville TONY MONTELLI, Bowling Green JODY MONTGOMERY, Somerset GARY MOORE, Murray KAREN L. MOORE, Louisville MICHELLE L. MOORE, Symsonia RUDOLPH B. MOORE, Nashville, Tenn. TONIA C. MOORE, Louisville JAMES W. MOORHATCH, Louisville CORNELIA A. MORGAN, Glasgow KENNETH J. MORTON, Louisville JAMES A. MOSS, Portland, Tenn. NANCY MULLEN, Lewisburg PATRICK M. MULLEN, Louisville CATHY MURPHY, Louisville JAMES D. MURPHY, Bowling Green SUE A. MURRAY, Augusta NAUSHA L. MURRELL, Louisville EUGENE MYATT, Mt. Hermon TERRI MYERS, New Milford, Conn. SHERRI L. NAYLOR, Dayton, Ohio THOMAS S. NEELY, Franklin CINDY NELSON, Fayetteville, N.Y. BECKY NEWBY, Hopkinsville JOHN D. NEWLON, Louisville BARRY D. NEWTON, Sebree MIKAL NICHOLLS, Camp Zama, Japan MARSHA L. NICHOLS, Glasgow ALVA J. NIMS, Dixon PHYLLIS NOEL, Elkhorn GAYLE K. NOFSINGER, Central City THOMAS J. NORD, Dale, Ind. LISA NORRIS, Louisville CAROL E. NORTON, Louisville RICH NOWACZYK, Flushing, Mich. KAREN O’BRYAN, Owensboro SHERRY OCKERMAN, Bardstown SUSAN C. O’DANIEL, Louisville PATRICIA ODLE, Tompkinsville HEATHER O’ DONNELL, Bowling Green GLEN OLAND, Des Plaines, IIl. KAREN S. OSBORNE, Owensboro SUE C. OSBORNE, Bowling Green KAY OVERBY, Calvert City BETH OWEN, Owensboro CYNTHIA A. OWENS, Louisville ELAINE OWENS, Woodburn PATRICK PADRON, Louisville PAMELA L. PAGE, Burkesville TANA PALMER, Scottsville CHERYL PATERSON, Nashville, Tenn. KEENAN PAWLEY, Louisville CHRIS PAYNE, Manchester, Tenn. SANDRA PAYNE, Philpot DOROTHY K. PAZDAN, LaGrange Highlands, Ill. MICHAEL C. PEAK, Louisville DEBORAH J. PEARSON, Bowling Green DOUGLAS PEARSON, Alvaton NIKKI L. PEDEN, Glasgow TIM PEMBERTON, Bowling Green VICKIE PENCE, Elizabethtown TONY PEPPER, Campbellsville JOHN C. PERKINS JR., Bowling Green KYLE PERKINS, Corbin DONNIE PERRY, Greensburg STAN PETERIE, Bowling Green DALE PEYTON, Lexington DIANA PHELPS, Bowling Green PHYLLIS PHELPS, Woodbury KARIN PHILLIPS, Hendersonville, Tenn. VICKI PHILLIPS, Falls of Rough JOAN J. PHILPOT, Tompkinsville TERESA PHILPOTT, Burkesville DANIEL PICKERRELL, Jeffersontown DWAYNE PIERCE, Leitchfield EMILY PIERCE, Leitchfield CATHY A. PINKSTON, Mt. Washington LINDA PITCHFORD, Scottsville THOMASINE D. PLATT, Henderson DEBBIE POLLOCK, Bowling Green 401 Sophomores Harmony in the off-season SANDRA POPPLEWELL, Jamestown CHERYL J. POTTER, Bowling Green JERALD C. POWER, Portland, Tenn. KEITH POWERS, Middletown CAROL J. PRECIOUS, Louisville BRENT PRICE, Bowling Green DOUG PRICE, Owensboro TERRY J. PRICE, Bonnieville CATHY L. PROCTOR, Olmstead MARY L. PROCTOR, Lexington MARIJANE PRUDEN, Owenibacs KAREN A. PRYOR, Drakesboro VALERIE K. PULLIAM, Owensboro RHONDA RADCLIFFE, Paoli, Ind. DIANE RAEF, Lexington ROBBIE RAGGARD, Louisville LAVERNE RAGLIN, Versailles LYDIA RAGLIN, Harlan DAVID I. RANDOLPH JR., Valley Station KIMBERLY J. RATCLIFF, Rochester, Mich. VALERIE RAVENSCRAFT, Hebron JANIE RAWLINGS, Elizabethtown JULIAN R. REAMY JR., Louisville LOU A. REDMON, Louisville BRENDA REGENBOGEN, Burlington JO RENEAU, Bowling Green LORETTA RENFROW, Caneyville DAVID R. REXROAT, Russell Springs DAN REYNOLDS, Scottsville LES REYNOLDS, Fern Creek SONIA A. REYNOLDS, Bowling Green VYETTA REYNOLDS, Munfordville TONY RHEA, Bowling Green PHIL RICH, Bee Springs DANA J. RICKARD, Owensboro KEN RIDEOUT, Henderson 402 Sophomores Lewis Gardner ne started as a member of a church choir. Another hap- pened to be in the right place at the right time when a bass fiddle was for sale. Another began when a box guitar was given to him in high school. But for football players Billy Lindsey, Chip Carpenter and Jimmy Woods, the obscure musical beginnings developed into enjoyable hobbies. Lindsey, a flanker and the team’s leading pass receiver as a junior, started singing publicly in his home church in Glasgow. That led him to join the Mammoth Cave Chorus, a group of about 40 men who sing with the Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barbershop Singing in America. The group, composed mostly of men from Glasgow and Bowling Green, per- form about once every two weeks at ban- quets and conventions in the area. Lindsey has been singing tenor in the group for about three years. “We usually put on a show here at school and last year’s is one I'll remember for a long time,” Lindsey said. “When we sang the song ‘Rubber Ducky,’ I came out on stage playing with a rubber duck. “A lot of guys on the team got a big kick out of that,” he said. Carpenter, Lindsey's roommate and an All-Ohio Valley Conference guard for three years, plays bass fiddle in a band PROVIDING ENTERTAINMENT OFF THE FOOT- BALL FIELD takes the form of musical involvement for players Billy Lindsey, Chip Carpenter and Jimmy . Woods. Lindsey, a barbershop quartet singer; Car- penter, a bass fiddle player, and guitarist Woods play at various restaurants and nightclubs in the area. called Bluegrass Kin. Carpenter’s sister and brother-in-law, Kim and Dale Rainey, and other fiddle players compose the group, which has played mostly in restau- rants, nightclubs and in several fiddling conventions in Alabama and Indiana. Carpenter joined the group about three years ago when his brother-in-law encour- aged him to learn to play the bass fiddle. The 6-foot-2, 225-pounder bought a bass fiddle from the L M Bookstore for $70 and now plays with the group several times a month after football season. “T get a big kick out of playing in front of everybody,” Carpenter said. “I guess everyone’s got a little hot dog in him.” Woods began playing guitar when he was 17 and his girlfriend gave him a Su- zuki box guitar. The tailback, Western’s leading rusher the last two sea sons, organ- ized Hejira, a rock group, early in the fall semester. The group includes three other Western students and played at a fashion show and various other functions last fall. “T hope our band can get a sharp enough act so someone will back us financially and we could play at nightclubs for a while before moving on to a professional record company,” Woods said. “Oh man, that would be a right-on.” Woods often plays his guitar in his dorm room after games. “It helps me to relax and release my frustrations. “T would like to run through the airports with a guitar in my hand like O.J. Simpson runs through airports carrying a_ brief case,” Woods said. “I think a football run- ning back-guitar player is a unique idea.” Kerry Tharp and Jewell Jones @ BARRY A. RIGGSBEE, Indianapolis, Ind. LARRY RIGSBY, Bondville CATHERINE J. RINEHARD, Cherry Hill, N.J. KATHRYN M. ROACH, Kettle CHRISTINE A. ROBBINS, Fordsville DIANE ROBE, Bowling Green KAREN ROBERTS, Franklin RUSSELL S. ROBERTS, Paintsville MARSHA L. ROBERTSON, Murray MARY B. ROBERTSON, Hopkinsville LUCRETIA ROBINSON, Greenville RANDALL ROBINSON, Irvington KIM ROBISON, Louisville HOLLY R. ROCHELLE, Hendersonville, Tenn. WALTER E. RODGERS, Louisville SANDRA A. ROSO, Crestwood SUSAN ROTHMAN, Bonnieville KAREN M. ROUNTREE, Russellville RHONDA C. ROUTT, Murray PATTY ROYAL, Owensboro REBECCA A. RUBINI, Louisville BECKY RUEFF, Bowling Green DENISE RUSSELL, Lamoni, Iowa JOANN RUSSELL, Pearl City, Hawaii PAMELA J. RUSSELL, Gilbertsville RICKY G. RUSSELL, Park City STARLA R. SANDEFUR, Dawson Springs CATHERINE L. SARGENT, Ft. Knox MARK SCHAFTLEIN, Louisville RONALD SCHILDKNECHT, Louisville KARLA SCHLENSKER, Milltown, Ind. ANNE C. SCHMIDT, Jasper, Ind. PAMELA J. SCHMOKER, Ft. Campbell DAVID SCHROEDER, Calvert City MARCIA SCHULTE, Bellevue DONNA SCHUSTER, Louisville RICK P. SCHUSTER, Cudahy, Wis. CAROL SCHWEGMAN, Richmond, Ind. A. LYNN SCOTT, Albany ANN B. SCOTT, Vine Grove LEANN SCOTT, Princeton ROBERT W. SCOTT, Cave City ROBYN SCOTT, Bowling Green SHERYL SCOTT, Summer Shade MARK SEARCY, Louisville PATRICIA SEARS, Alvaton CYNTHIA SEXTON, Scottsville DAVID I. SHADOWEN, Bowling Green REGINALD G. SHANKS, Rumsey MARGARET L. SHARPE, Harrodsburg MARTHA L. SHAVER, Central City PAMELA SHAVER, Central City KENT R. SHAW, Ft. Knox LYNN SHEARER, Somerset SHEILA SHELTON, Glasgow SHERI A. SHEPHERD, Louisville WES SHEPPARD, Calvert City ALLEN SHIPP, Louisville DEBORAH R. SHOEMAKER, Russellville VICKIE SHORT, Tompkinsville SUSAN N. SHUGART, Oak Ridge, Tenn. LEIGH SIDDENS, Bowling Green MARK SIEGFRIED, Ft. Knox BILL SILLS, Hardinsburg TERRI SIMMONS, Louisville DARRELL SIMMS, Louisville MARCY SIMONS, Evansville, Ind. JOEY SIMPSON, Hawesville LISA B. SIMPSON, Glasgow MICHELLE SIMS, Leitchfield GALE SINGLETON, Owensboro STEVE SKINNER, Paducah SUZETTE M. SKOLKA, Plainfield, NJ. MILA M. SLEDGE, Alvaton DENISE SLINKER, Central City VITTORIA SLOAN, Albany LANA SMILEY, Owensboro ALEXANDER P. SMITH, Covington, Tenn. BARBARA SMITH, Hendersonville, Tenn. CHERRY K. SMITH, Mt. Hermon DONNA J. SMITH, Louisville KIM SMITH, Horse Cave LANA L. SMITH, Columbia MICHAEL S. SMITH, Louisville RENEE SMITH, Chrisney, Ind. SHERRIE SMITH, Greensburg LAURA G. SNAPP, Mattoon, IIl. STEVE SUMMERS, Russellville CATHY A. SPARKS, Jeffersontown BOBBY SPEAKMAN, Hodgenville JOHNNIE F. SPEAKMAN, Bowling Green JEFFREY R. SPEARS, Bowling Green JERRY M. SPROWL, Bowling Green SAUNDRA STAFFORD, Gilbertsville BRIGGS P. STAHL, Rockfield RICHARD STALBAUM, Radcliff LAWRENCE STARNES, Sweeden JULIE STEELE, Nashville, Tenn. SARA STEELE, LaGrange BARRY STEPHENS, Owensboro CONNIE J. STEPHENS, Center JUSTIN D. STEPHENS, Russell Springs KRISANN STEPHENS, Pellville KATHY STEVENS, Bethesda, Md. MARCIA STEVENS, Louisville DESIREE STEWART, Louisville MIKE STEWART, Shepherdsville PAT STEWART, Bowling Green DONNA STILES, Bowling Green MIKE STINE, Louisville JANET STINSON, Scottsville RITA R. STOCKWELL, Bowing Green SHIRLEY A. STOCKWELL, Valley Station OSKAR STONE, Radcliff ROBERT STONER, Pineville CHUCK STRADER, Bowling Green STEVEN R. STUART, Russellville 403 Sophomores DAN STUMLER, Louisville FREDERICKA STURDIVANT, Maysville DENISE STURGEON, Horse Cave LINDA SULLIVAN, Bowling Green RILEY SUMNER, Bowling Green KELLEY A. SWALLOW, Owensboro CHRIS SWANBERG, Henderson THOMAS F. SWEENEY, Bowling Green MARGANN TABOR, Scottsville CELESTE TANARO, Bowling Green TERRI TAPP, Henderson TERRI TARRANTS, Drakesboro CARLOS TATUM, Central City WALTER TATUM, Mt. Holly, N_J. GARY L. TAYLOR, Lexington RANDY K. TAYLOR, Bowling Green SUSAN K. TAYLOR, Bowling Green ELIZABETH A. TERRELL, Louisville ANTHONY L. TERRY, Louisville BARRY THARP, Munfordville JOHN THEUERKAUF, Evansville, Ind. GENA THIES, Ft. Thomas CINDY THOMAS, Glasgow DONALD D. THOMAS, Oak Grove LAURIE L. THOMAS, Calvert SANDRA THOMAS, Ft. Campbell SCOTT THOMAS, Bowling Green BETTY THOMPSON, Bowling Green | WENDY THOMPSON, Owensboro | GARY A. THORNTON, Louisville STEVE O. THORNTON, Bowling Green CATHY J. THURMOND, Franklin ELIZABETH THURSTON, Bowling Green MICAHEL TIGUE, Henderson SHERREE TIPTON, Merrillville, Ind. LYDIA B. TRAVELSTEAD, Franklin JEAN L. TRAVIS, Nashville, Tenn. JULIE TURNER, Livermore THOMAS J. TUTINO, Bowling Green | VICKI J. TUTTLE, Hendersonville, Tenn. | GAIL VAN BUSSUM, Henderson DONNA C. VICE, Morgantown FRANCES A. VICK, Greenville | KAREN VIKRE, Louisville | TERRI J. VINCENT, Brownsville JOYCE A. VOLLMER, Ft. Mitchell LEE WADE, Louisville DENISE M. WAGNER, Dawson Springs JEAN WAGNER, Jeffersontown JEANIE WAGNER, Owensboro JONATHAN E. WAGNER, Lexington MELANIE L. WALD, Nashville, Tenn. MARK WALLACE, Glasgow JOSEPH L. WALTERS, Greensburg KIMBERLY L. WARD, Owensboro TAMMARA WARD, Bowling Green CARLOTTA WARE, Henderson CARY L. WARE, Paducah CARRIE WARNER, Bloomfield JEFFERY WARNER, Liberty DOUGLAS WATHEN, Owensboro KIM WATROUS, Hendersonville, Tenn. BEVERLY J. WATSON, Leitchfield JILL WEAVER, Bowling Green DEBORAH J. WEBB, Lewisburg JANIS K. WELLS, Lewisbur. PAULA L. WELLS, Rockfiel CYNTHIA WENDT, Bowling Green LAURA WHALEN, Greensboro, N.C. KATHERINE WHEAT, Auburn CAROL J. WHEELER, Lamb BARBARA WHITE, Leitchfield CHERYL WHITE, Scottsville CYNTHIA S. WHITE, Mt. Hermon IRVIN WHITE, Hopkinsville RAY WHITE, Corbin WILLIAM L. WHITE, Bowling Green 404 Sophomores KEITH WHITLOCK, Louisville ROBERT WHITMER, Central City PHYLLIS WHITSON, Greenville VICKY WHITTAKER, Owensboro JOHN WICKMAN, Red Bank, N_J. GEORIGA WIGHTMAN, Owensboro LOU A. WILBUR, Clarksville, Tenn. ANGELA D. WILLIAMS, Louisville ARTYE WILLIAMS, Louisville BECKY WILLIAMS, Nashville, Tenn. JUDY WILLIAMS, Glendale SUE WILLIAMSON, Falls of Rough CHUCK WILSON, Louisville KAREN R. WILSON, Hartford STUART K. WILSON, Bowling Green BETTY G. WILLOUGHBY, Scottsville BOB WILLS, Owensboro DEBBIE WILMORE, Bowling Green Flooded out NOT EXPECTING A HEAVY RAIN, Mark Bowman parked his Monte Carlo in the field next to the Univer- sity Boulevard parking lot, which was full. Despite the heavy September shower that flooded the field and part of Russellville Road, the junior business adminis- tration major from Glasgow got his car out. is Ron Hoskins SALLY WILSON, Louisville SCOTT S. WILSON, Louisville VICKIE S. WILSON, Nebo DANA WINSTEAD, Madisonville CLARENCE W. WINTERS, Central City TERESA A. WITHERS, Hardyville TAMMIE J. WITTY, Glasgow CELESTE A. WOLBER, Nicholasville RETTA A. WOOD, Bowling Green at he NUMER LOU A. WOODRUFF, Princeton NANCY M. WOODS, Garfield SANDRA G. WOOTEN, Glasgow JACKIE L. WRIGHT, Ft. Wayne, Ind. RICHARD WRIGHT, Versailles TONA L. WRIGHT, Greenville PEGGY WYNN, Louisville EARNEST YARBROUGH, Madisonville CHARLES E. YATES, Bowling Green BRONNA YEAST, Harrodsbur BEVERLY YOUNG, Heplinenile JUDY A. YOUNG, Hartford TERESA L. YOUNG, Lexington LINDA E. YOUNKIN, Louisville MARIA S. ZABORONAK, Louisville SUSAN ZETTLEMOYER, Scottsville RON ZIKE, Bowling Green DAVE ZILLER, Highland, Ind. 405 Sophomores Freshmen: Just starting out A stranger in a strange place. A freshman. The class of 1981 showed up last August. A few weeks later, dorm reform rekindled student displeasure about residence hall regulations, including mandatory housing, the “door ajar” rule and open houses, among other issues. “Star Wars” kept freshmen in intergalactic wonder along with the rest of the country. Punk rock and groups like Kiss fed some musical appetites. Fleetwood Mac and Linda Ronstadt were the powerhouses, however. The sports program seemed on an upswing, but with the University of Kentucky a top 10 giant in both football and basketball, it was tough to be a Hilltopper. When Richard Nixon fans screamed, “Four More Years!” in 1972, they didn’t realize he wouldn’t even get close to that many. But barring impeachment, nothing like that will cut short the entering freshman’s wait. JUDY ABNEY, Calhoun MARK ACKERMAN, Louisville CHARLES E. ACREE, Edmonton DAWN ACREFE, Atlanta, Ga. SCOTT H. ADAMS, Munfordville ROBBIE J. ADAMSON, Franklin BETSY AGEE, Cottontown, Tenn. MATTHEW AIKINS, Princeton ALMA L. ALLEN, Louisville DARLENE ALLEN, Adairville EDNA ALLEN, Glasgow KERRY ALLEN, Cadiz RAYMOND K. ALLEN, Louisville TANGA D. ALLEN, LaGrange VIVIAN M. ALLEN, Sebree MARY A. ALEXANDER, Bethpage, Tenn. VICTORIA ALLISON, Russellville ADBULLAH Y. ALMALKI, Bowling Green LAURIE AMBROSE, Owensboro KEITH A. AMBS, Louisville DENO ANDERSON, Gamaliel JANNELL ANDERSON, Louisville KEVIN ANDERSON, West Paducah REBECCA L. ANDERSON, Eddyville SANDRA ANDERSON, Bowling Green SHEILA F. ANDERSON, Auburn THERESA L. ANDREWS, Castalian Spring, Tenn. TONIA ANTHONY, Gallatin, Tenn. GEORGE J. ARMSTRONG, III, Eminence TONY ARNOLD, Danville JANICE ARRINGTON, Brandenburg THERESA ASH, Munfordville JULIE ASHDON, Battle Creek, Mich. EDMOND D. ATHERTON, Owensboro BRIAN AUSTIN, Franklin JAMES AYDLETT, Crestwood NICHOLAS G. BACHERT, Fern Creek LORETTA M. BAILEY, Louisville ROCHELLE E. BAILEY, Louisville SHERRIE L. BAILEY, Gallatin, Tenn. VICTORIA BAINES, Jeffersonville, Ind. DANIEL BAKER, Bowling Green LISA BAKER, Bowling Green SID BAKER, Bowling Green CHESTER D. BALDWIN, Livermore KATHY BALLARD, Louisville SHERRY BALLARD, Bowling Green BUTCH BARNARD, Bowling Green BECKI BARTSCH, Louisville MARY E. BASHAM, Bowling Green MIKE BAUGH, Russellville JEFF BAXLEY, Hartford JUDY BEARD, Hartford BETTY BEASLEY, Terre Haute, Ind. MARCIA BECHT, Floyd Knobs, Ind. MELODY BECKETT, Cynthiana BRUCE BECKLER, North Bay, Ont. DAVID BECKLEY, LaGrange LINDA J. BELL, Whites Creek, Tenn. REBECCA BELL, Hopkinsville ROBERT L. BELL, Edmonton SANDRA BELT, Sullivan JENNIFER A. BENNETT, Eddyville 406 Freshmen PERI L. BENNETT, Louisville RALPH BERGMANN, Louisville THOMAS L. BERRYMAN, Louisville MARY BERST, Louisville THOMAS A. BESHEAR, Dawson Springs BECKY BICKERS, New Castle MARK BILLER, Jeffersontown JENNY J. BILLINGSLEY, Glasgow CINDY BIRDWELL, Bowling Green BEVERLY BISHOP, Glasgow BENITA BIVENS, Bardstown THOMAS BLACK, Central City CHARLES A. BLAIR, Columbus, Ohio KATHY E. BLAIR, Bowling Green TINA BLAIR, LaGrange SUSAN BLICK, Olmstead BILL BLINCOE, Owensboro DELORIS J. BLINCOE, Louisville JANET BOARMAN, Williamsburg, Va. STEVE BOARMAN, Owensboro STEVE BOEHM, Louisville BETSY BOGDAN, Albuquerque, N.M. KENNY BOLES, Glasgow JANET BOLLE, Richmond, Ind. ANN BOLLINE, St. Joseph, Mich. BEVERLY B. BOND, Versailles DAVID BOONE, Evansville BILL BORDERS, Bowling Green DAVID BORMANN, Louisville DENISE BOSTON, Nashville, Tenn. SHERRY L. BOWEN, Hodgenville MICHAEL B. BOWLAND, Paducah KAREN BOWLIN, Bowling Green GEORGE S. BOWLING, Louisville JOEY BOWLING, Middlesboro DONALD E. BOWMAN, Louisville ALLISON BOYD, Nashville, Tenn DAVE W. BOYER, Campbellsburg RICHARD A. BOZARTH, Hartford MELINDA F. BOZE, Bethpage, Tenn. DENNIS BRADFORD, Bowling Green DAVID BRAINARD, Somerset JOHN BRAMSCHREIBER, Owensboro STEVE BRANDON, Rome, Ga. DANA BRECKEL, Frankfort PHIL BREEN, Ft. Wright BUTCH BREWER, Bowling Green DEBORAH BREWER, Ft. Campbell TERESA BREWINGTON, Lexington CHERIE BRIDWELL, Corydon MELONIE BRIGGS, Goodlettsville, Tenn WILLIAM A. BRISCOE, Louisville DEBBIE S. BRITT, Glasgow GINGER BRIZENDINE, Owensboro ANTHONY BROADLEY, Calhoun PAM BRODARICK, Louisville BILL BROWN, Fountain Run DAVID K. BROWN, Woodburn JAMES E. BROWN, Lewisburg MARY E. BROWN, Brandenburg MICHAEL BROWN, Louisville MIKE BROWN, Bowling Green ROBERT L. BROWN, Franklin Hlead-to-head BONING UP FOR AN ANATOMY AND PHYSIO- LOGY test, freshman Cindy Webster of Warsaw ponders a human skull. The dental hygiene major said there are “a lot’”’ of bones in the skull. She also said she did “fairly well” on the test. Mark Lyons 407 Freshmen 408 SERITA C. BROWN, Beaver Dam JIMMIE BROWNFIELD, Smiths Grove BECKY BUCHANAN, Stanford ROBERT BUEHL, Caneyville DENISE BUNTON, Scottsville KIM BURDEN, Hartford LILLIAN BURGHER, Rockfield SUZANNE BURGHER, Auburn DENNIS C. BURKE, Elizabethtown MARY J. BURNS, Auburn SHERRON A. BUSBY, Eminence DEBRA BUTLER, Tompkinsville DONNIE C. BUTLER, Harned ROBIN L. BUTLER, Louisville STEPHEN L. CALLIS, Cottontown, Tenn. LIZ CALLOWAY, Beacon, N.Y. STEPHANIE L. CALO, Henderso nville, Tenn. SAM CALVERT, Ridgefield, Conn. Loo(king glass 411 HUGH POLAND HALL RESIDENT Terry Joiner chats with sister Angela after he and room- mate Tim Crocker bought a mirror for their room. Joiner, a business administration major, Miss Joiner, a government and biology major, and Crocker, a pre-med freshman, are from Franklin. Freshmen : oe, aot HAAN i WANA Meat ACU ab ie hie He lk EAR, Eric Hassler DIANA CAMP, Lawton, Okla. GWEN CAMPBELL, Hazard SUSAN E. CAMPBELL, Versailles CATHY L. CAPPS, Pineville MICHAEL F. CARD, Pineville KITTY CAREY, Louisville ROBBIE CARPENTER, Bowling Green STEVE CARPENTER, Munfordville TINA CARPENTER, Livermore GINA S. CARR, Bowling Green JEFFREY W. CARR, Cadiz TAMMY CARSON, Bowling Green ANN CARTER, Glasgow PAM CARTER, Glasgow PATTY CARTER, Hawesville STEVEN A. CARTER, Hardinsburg RHONDA CARY, Burkesville DEBBIE CASE, Winchester PAULA C. CASSADY, Park City TERRIE CASTLE, Albany JULIE CHAMBERS, Owensboro RONICA CHANCEY, Madison, Tenn. JERRY CHAPMAN, Bowling Green PAUL CHAPMAN, E. Bridgewater, Mass. W. SCOTT CHAPMAN, Owensboro LAURA L. CHATARI, Louisville KATHY CHATELAIN, Anchorage SHERRY CHAUDOIN, Summersville DINAH E. CHERRY, Woodburn 409 Freshmen SANDE K. CHERRY, Bowling Green SYLVIA L. CHERRY, Louisville NORMA CHILDRESS, Morgantown ANNA-MARIE CHOBOR, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. JOAN CHRIST, Pittsburgh, Pa. BECKEY CLARK, Monticello CHARLOTTE CLARK, Brandenburg JACKIE CLARK, Bowling Green ROBERT L. CLARK, Lewisburg VIKKI CLARK, Louisville LEONARD CLAY, Bowling Green WENDI CLEAVER, Winfield, Ill. NORA CLEEK, Adolphus SANDRA CLEMENTS, Tompkinsville JAN CLOAR, Louisville ANGELA COCKREL, Oakland JOSEPH COFER, Bowling Green ANNA M. COFFEY, Cave City JANIE COFFIE, Nashville, Tenn. TAMMY COKER, Paintsville TINA COLBURN, Calvert City ROSALYN Y. COLE, Louisville SHEILA A. COLE, Hartford BILLY J. COLEMAN, Lewisburg TUWANDA COLEMAN, Cadiz MARYBETH COLES, Bowling Green AL COLLINS, Hopkinsville BETTY T. COLLINS, Auburn LAMONT COLLINS, Louisville JAMES COMBS, Pineville TAMMY L. COMBS, Quality MARK G. COMPTON, Louisville CYNTHIA J. CONKIN, Tompkinsville SHARON CONNER, Ft. Campbell JANET L. COOK, Central City PAMELA S. COOK, Bowling Green CINDY COOKE, Bowling Green LINDA COOPER, Adairville DEBORAH COOTS, Allensville PATRICIA COOTS, Finchville CHRIS COPAS, Dayton, Ohio BELVIA COPASS, Glasgow JOSEPH D. COPPAGE, Hartford WILLIAM V. CORBETT JR., Louisville JILL COSBY, Bowling Green SHAWN COSMAN, Louisville MERA S. COSSEY, Cadiz RHONDA COTHRAN, Eddyville TIMOTHY L. COTTINGHAM, Sebree JOE COTTRELL, Bonnieville STUART P. COTTRELL, Murray SUSAN COTTRELL, Upton FELICIA A. COUCH, Ft. Campbell KIM COUSINEAU, London YVONNE COWLES, Bowling Green MICHAEL L. COX, Bowling Green TIM COX, Shelbyville DAVID CRABTREE, Bowling Green DONNA CRAMER, Madison, Tenn. LAWRENCE B. CRAVENS, Owensboro JEFF CRAWFORD, Louisville KEVIN L. CRAWFORD, Louisville TANYA CRAWFORD, Tompkinsville BRENDA CREASY, Westmoreland, Tenn. TIM CREASY, Adolphus CYNTHIA Y. CREEKMORE, Hendersonville, Tenn. GARY J. CRENSHAW, Edmonton DAVID W. CROSS, Newburgh, Ind. JANET CROUSORE, Smiths Grove SHERREE M. CRUM, Louisville MELISSA CRUMBY, Nashville, Tenn. LAURA CULLEN, Gilbertsville JIM CUMMINGS, Bowling Green PATSY CURRAN, Goodlettsville, Tenn. COZETT M. CURRY, Louisville MARLA CURRY, Horse Cave KIMBERLY D. DAILY, Elizabethtown CINDY L. DAMER, Glen Ellyn, IIl. DELORES DANIELS, Bowling Green MISSI DARGO, Bowling Green LYNDA DARNELL, Springfield, Tenn. KEVIN J. DARST, Louisville TERESA DAUSE, Cincinnati, Ohio PATRICIA DAVENPORT, Williamsburg BETTY DAVIDSON, Louisville COURTNEY DAVIS JR., Valley Station KIM DAVIS, Adairville WANDA DAVIS, Bowling Green WARD G. DAVIS, Bowling Green PAM DAWSON, Herndon BONNIE DAY Falls of Rough JUDITH K. DAY, Westmoreland, Tenn. KYLE DAY, Villa Hills SHIRLEY DAY, Belton SANDRA DEAREN, Louisville KATHY DEATON, Greensburg DAVID DEBERRY, Louisville MARK D. DEBERRY, Russellville SUSAN DECKER, Sidney, Neb. SUSAN N. DECKER, Hardinsburg KENNETH A. DEFREECE, Nashville, Tenn. LISA DEL BUONO, Princeton JOHN DELLER, Bowling Green LISA K. DEPP, Glasgow SHARON DILLARD, Louisville TERRI DILLON, Glasgow CAROLYN S. DINGUS, Burkesville PEGGY DINSMORE, Bowling Green CHARLES R. DIXON JR., Sturgis HARRIET M. DIXON, Upton BECKY DOLAN, Louisville MARGARET DONALDSON, Bowling Green TIM DONOVAN, Bowling Green LAURA L. DORENFEST, Lake Bluff, Ill. MILLIE R. DOTSON, Benton SHEILA DOTSON, Caneyville LISA DOWNING, Gamaliel 410 Freshmen SO shows didn’t stop with Bob Hope or the end of the Vietnam War. There are still soldiers to be entertained. Gemini, a group of Western students, has entertained troops for more than 10 years. Directed by Dr. David Livingston, an associate professor of music, the group was formed in 1965, when some female march- ing band members wanted to start a stage band. “The girls said if the men could have a stage band, why couldn’t they,” Livingston said. ‘We practiced in secret and made our debut at a band party. Then we applied to the Defense Department for our first tour.” Since then, Gemini has toured twice in Europe and performed in the Caribbean last summer. Karen Johnson, a special education grad- uate assistant, has made the past two tours. “T really feel like we’re making a contri- bution, just talking to the guys and letting them know that people appreciate them,” she said. ; Miss Johnson said though she enjoyed her trip to Germany in 1975, she liked the Caribbean trip better. “I knew more of what to expect this time,” she said. “I made so many close friends.” Gemini '77 did 17 shows in four weeks, but the members also took time to enjoy the paradise-like environment. _ “The scenery was outstanding,” said Jeff Jones, a history graduate student. ‘The cli- mate was great. Even in winter it never gets below 71 degrees.” Beaches were a big drawing card, accord- ing to Jeff Janskey, a music major from Leesburg, Fla. “You could go swimming in crystal Aa water, and I learned to sail and snorkle.” . The students enjoyed their work as well. “Everybody appreciated us so much,” said Ed Marsh, a music graduate student from Blacksburg, Va. If the group enjoyed their work, the crowd enjoyed it more, according to Capt. Al Schramm, a Marine pilot who was sta- tioned at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. “The show was great,” Schramm said. COSTUMED in outfits they made, Patience Nave, Karen Johnson and Pam Greenway sing for a home- town audience. The Western students did 17 shows in the four weeks they toured the Caribbean. “It gave us an outlet, and we all enjoyed it.” Schramm, who visited several group members while on leave in November, sur- prised the Western students by bringing slides of their performance. “T had to bring the slides so they could enjoy them as much as we did,” he said. The eight-member stage band must be very versatile, because of its size, Living- ston said. Gemini ’77 is half the size of the original group because of decreased funds from the USO. “Everybody in the group must play more than one instrument and sing,” he said. Only 10 college groups are selected to make overseas tours. Livingston said the competition was very stiff. “It’s a challenge to see if I can form a group that can compete on a national lev- el,” he said. “It keeps me thinking young.” The band members agree that they would like to make another trip. “T think we perform a worthwhile ser- vice,” Livingston said, ‘especially in peace time, when soldiers have a tendency to be forgotten.” Cheryl Sharp GEMINI ’77 director Dr. David Livingston is also part of the USO stage show. On his fourth tour, the asso- ciate professor of music played the saxophone, clarinet and keyboards in the Caribbean. MARLA F. DOWNING, Fountain Run VONNA L DOWNS, Buffalo STEVE A. DOYLE, Bowling Green MIKE DRAKE, Bowling Green JAMES DRIVER, Red Boiling Springs, Tenn LYNN DRIVER, Goodlettsville, Tenn SHERRY M. DRIVER, Bowling Green ALAN DUNCAN, Mayfield FRED DUNCAN, Dixon TERRI DUNCAN, Edmonton STEVEN DUNLEAVY, Owensboro BRYAN DURHAM, Magnolia MELODY DURHAM, W. Dundee, III. BARRY DUVALL, Millwood JEFF DYE, Louisville THOMAS F. EASON, III, Valley Station TIMOTHY L. EBELHAR, Owensboro JENNIFER M. EDLIN, Louisville usieal enlistments 411 Freshmen 412 Freshmen HOWARD EDMONDS, Bowling Green BRUCE K. EDWARDS, Eminence CHANA EICHER, Bowling Green RONALD L. EICHER, Auburn TABETHA ELLER, Morgantown KATHI D. ELLIOTT, Winchester CRAIG ELLIS, Glasgow DONNA ELLIS, Hopkinsville MICHAEL K. ELMORE, Clarkson PAMELA J. ELROD, Valley Station TODD S. ELWERT, Cincinnati, Ohio KEVIN D. EMBRY, Louisville RICHARD EMBRY, Morgantown LISA EMMICK, Lewisport BEVERLY ENGLAND, Columbia FRANCES A. ENGLISH, Elizabethtown JULIE EPLEY, Drakesbore NANCY ESKRIDGE, Hardinsburg CHARLES M. ESTES, Greensburg STEVE ESTOK, Bowling Green DONALD EVANS, Beaver Dam NAN EVERSON, Jacksonville, Fla. DONNA EWINGS, Central City MICHAEL R. FAIN, Louisville ROBERT E. FAIRCHILD, Henderson TERESA L. FAIRCHILD, Henderson PAULA FAIRFAX, Nova Scotia MARIJANE FELDHAUS, Owensboro DEBORAH K. FERGUSON, Horse Cave CARL S. FILIP, Dover, Del. PAUL T. FISH, Connersville, Ind. TAYLOR FISHBACK, Louisville CATHY FITZGERALD, Versailles ALEX FITZPATRICK, Bowling Green ROGER FITZPATRICK, Lexington SHARON FOLEY, Prospect Posted MEANT TO KEEP CARS OFF THE GRASS, the white posts behind Pearce-Ford Tower served well as a backrest for Dewayne Sims. The Louisville freshman said he studied there sometimes “when the sun was out.” He was studying English 055. Ron Hoskins MARY A. FORBES, Edmonton LAURA FORD, Louisville MARGARET FORD, Tompkinsville BILL FORT, Cadiz KATHY L. FOSTER, Lexington KELLY D. FOSTER, Brandenburg LESLIE FOSTER, Owensboro DAVID FOWLKES, West Paducah N. ELISE FREDERICK, Trenton MONA FRIZZELL, Beaver Dam MARTIN C. FROEBEL JR., Ft. Knox SHERRI D. FROST, Scottsville JUDITH E. FULKERSON, Owensboro DAVID L. FULLEN, Bowling Green BOB FUNKHOUSER, Danville KIM FUQUA, Owensboro BARBARA FYOCK, Louisville LISA GAINES, Hodgenville JOSE GALVIS, Columbia, S. America PATTI-KATE GARMON, Shelbyville ALISON GARRETT, Auburn JOETTA GARRETT, LaGrange SANDRA GARRETT, Hartford GREGORY R. GARRISON, Horse Cave SUSIE J. GARROTT, Gallatin, Tenn. GINA GARY, Morgantown ROBERTA A. GATES, Clinton, Mass. GAYNEL GAYNOR, Hawesville KERRY D. GEARY, Louisville RICKEY GEARY, Beaver Dam PRISCILLA D. GEORGE, Lexington TRUDY GERALDS, Gamaliel MARTHA A. GERMANY, Louisville JACK GERUGHTY, Tompkinsville ROLAND L. GIBBONS, Vine Grove JIM GIBBS, Bowling Green GEORGANNE GIBSON, Winchester NANCY GIBSON, LaFayette, Ga. DAVID GILBERT, Glasgow JAY GILLIAM, Danville NENA GILLIAM, Russellville MICHAEL K. GILLIGAN, Ocala, Fla. DENICE GILLUM, Bowling Green SHERRIE GIRTEN, Owensboro DAVID M. GIVAN, Valley Station SHARON GLASSCOCK, Perryville LUTRESA GLIDEWELL, Campbellsville TERAH GLOVER, Ghent DANIEL L. GOFF, Owensboro AMY GOLDAY, Henderson JEANNE GOLDEN, Louisville MARK GOODLETT, Bardstown MARY A. GOODLETT, Bloomfield ROBERT S. GOODMAN JR., Louisville FELICIA GOODRICH, Versailles GREGORY GOODWIN, Louisville FLORA S. GOOCH, Franklin PATRICIA A. GORE, Mayfield RHONDA GOSSETT, Summer Shade JAMES P. GOTOWICKI, Calhoun SUSAN J. GOULD, Pleasure Ridge Park JEFFERY GRACE, Louisville JOHN K. GRACE, Dunmar STACIE GRAF, Jeffersonville, Ind. JULIA GRAHAM, Russellville LAURIE GRANT, Owensboro MARY A. GRANTZ, New Albany, Ind. TAMI R. GRAY, Taylorsville THERESA GRAY, Cadiz TIM GRAY, Glasgow BROOKS GREELEY, Bowling Green THOMAS K. GREEN, Louisville 413 Freshmen ANTONIA R. GREENE, Louisville GREGORY D. GREENE, Louisville CHERYL L. GREER, Somerset JAMES M. GREER JR., Pease Air Force Base, N.H MARK A. GREER, Hodgenville MELANIE GREER, Louisville SHERRY L. GREER, Vine Grove SCOTT GREGORY, Russellville LISA GRIDER, Shelbyville, Tenn. DON A. GRIFFIN, Henderson AMY GRIMM, Ft. Thomas JOANNY GROSSHANS, Louisville ROBIN M. GROVES, Louisville STEVE GUESS, Cadiz JENNIFER E. GUILL, Cottontown, Tenn. SHERI GUNTS, Lake Forest, Ill HOLLY GUY, Scottsville BETTY HADLEY, Clarksville, Tenn PAULA HAFFNER, Louisville DEBI HAGAN, Owensboro MELBA HAGAN, Tompkinsville THERESA R. HAGAN, Whitesville MELISSA A. HAGANS, Lexington CARIN C. HAHN, Versailles CINDY HALBRITTER, Louisville BILL HALL, Hardinsburg GARY W. HALL, Bowling Green NANCY HALL, Glasgow TERRY B. HAM, Hendersonville, Tenn. KEVIN HAMILTON, Brandenburg EDDIE HAMPTON, Mayfield PATRICIA HANCE, Louisville MARY K. HANCOCK, Louisville VICKIE N. HANDLEY, Henderson LUANNE HANSFORD, Liberty JANET HANSON, Hartford FREDERICK L. HARBISON, Edmonton ARTHUR HARDIN, Louisville DAPHNE HARDIN, Louisville MELNA HARGAN, Vine Grove KEITH HARKINS, Hartford TERESA HARLOW, Center TERESA HARNEY, Frankfort CYNTHIA HARPER, Louisville KANDACE J. HARPER, Fredonia KAREN M. HARPER, Hendersonville, Tenn. PEGGY HARPER, Beaver Dam DEBORAH L. HARRIFORD, Smiths Grove LINDA F. HARRIS, LaGrange R. CRAIG HARRIS, Springfield, Va. SHERRY HARRIS, Louisville TAMI HARRIS, Franklin VICKI HARTSOUGH, Cincinnati, Ohio LITA HARVEY, Antioch, Tenn. JERRY B. HATCHETT, Glasgow EDDIE HATFIELD, Evanston, Ill. DANNY HAWES, Owensboro ALLISON HAWKINS, Providence ANICIA S. HAWKINS, Versailles VICKI HAWKINS, Hendersonville, Tenn. THOMAS R. HAWLEY, Troy, Ohio. SARAH HAYDEN, Calhoun VICKI HAYDEN, Campbellsburg CYNTHIA M. HAYES, Bowling Green JOHN D. HAYES, Louisville PATRICIA J. HAYNES, Midway RONALD D. HAYNES, Bowling Green NYRA E. HAYS, Bowling Green JILL HEABERLIN, Paris JOANNE HEAD, Cedar Hill, Tenn. KAREN M. HEAD, Bowling Green LISA HEARN, Nashville, Tenn. MARK HEBERT, Fairport, N.Y. JEANNE HECK, Stockton, N_J. DANIEL HEILE, Bowling Green ALAN HEIN, Bowling Green BETSY HEIN, Owensboro MARK HELD, Louisville DEBBIE HELTON, Danville TOM HELTSLEY, Bowling Green SARA HEMINGWAY, Utica CARMEN D. HENDERSON, Georgetown DEBBIE G. HENDERSON, Morgantown LORETTA HENDERSON, Franklin KIM HENDERSON, Benton MARILYN A. HENNING, Hawesville BRUCE HENRY, Glasgow MARY J. HENSLEY, Munfordville BOB HEPNER, Utica, Mich. TORI HERMANN, Lexington GABRIEL HERNANDEZ, Louisville DALE HERRING, White Plains CLARENCE F. HIAM, Gallatin, Tenn. RUTH HICKS, Henderson STEPHEN HIGGINS, Glasgow TERESA HIGGS, Bowling Green TONY HIGHLEY, Louisville LISA HILDEBRANDT, Harrodsburg ANN HILL, Smiths Grove ANTHONY C. HILL, Glasgow ANTHONY O. HILL, Winchester BOBBY E. HILL JR., Hanson IREATHEA J. HILL, Ft. Campbell JANET R. HILL, Morganfield LEA A. HILL, Versailles THERESA K. HILL, Hanson RITA HINES, Louisville LOU A. HINTON, Harned DEBORAH A. HITRON, Louisville JUDY L. HOERNI, Louisville SHERRI HOFFMAN, Jasper, Ind. WANDA HOLDER, Portland, Tenn. KATHY S. HOLLOWAY, Richmond, Ind. KELLY S. HOOD, Glasgow WANDA M. HOOSIER, Louisville BEVERLY HOOVER, Glasgow ALLYSON HOPKINS, Newburgh, Ind. 414 Freshmen SHARON A. HOPPER, Jeffersonville, Ind. JESSE L. HORN, Bowling Green JOHN C. HORNER, Bowling Green JANE C. HOUSTEN, Owensboro ROBYN HOUSTON, Gary, Ind. FELICIA HOWARD, Penrod LINDA HOWARD, Leitchfield THOMAS D. HOWARD, Lewisport GREGORY W. HOWE, Owensboro KERRY HOWELL, Hardyville JAY HOWSER, Henderson, Tenn. GEORGE HUBBARD, Winnetka, IIl. VIVIAN HUDSON, Bowling Green DARREL HUFF, Olaton JACQUE HUGHES, Adairville MELODYE HUGHES, Munfordville MICHAEL HUGHES, Hopkinsville JOHN M. HULSEY, Calhoun TERRI R. HUME, Bowling Green TIMOTHY D. HUME, Tompkinsville BILL HUMMER, Bowling Green eas oe R. HUMPHREY, Farmington Hills, ich. LINDA HUMPHREY, Louisville NANCY HUMPHRIES, Russellville LISA G. HUNN, Lexington ELLEN HUNT, Tompkinsville NAOMI HUNT, Jeffersontown PAM HUNTLEY, Louisville JANET HUNTON, Rockfield BRENDA HURD, Lebanon, Tenn. DALE HURT, Breeding KAREN G. HUSK, Lewisport RICKEY HUSK, Hawesville CATHY HUTTO, Nashville, Tenn. WANDA IRVIN, Louisville CLARENCE JACKSON JR., Louisville DAWN JACKSON, Georgetown JILL A. JACKSON, Bowling Green ALONZA JACOB, Laaieville MARK JAFFRE, W. Bloomfield, Mich. MARTIN L. JAGGERS, Elizabethtown KATHY JAMES, Owensboro MARLA JAMES, Glasgow TERESA JAMES, Penrod DAVID W. JAMESON, Benton piste, Si el SNS Seed BOBBY W. JANES, Milltown RHONDA JARBOE, Louisville MARLA G. JARVIS, Greenville KAY JENKINS, Portland, Tenn. GREGORY L. JEWELL, St. Louis, Mo MARSHA JOHNS, Russellville ANGIE JOHNSON, Philpot CAROL L. JOHNSON, Cave City CAROLYN JOHNSON, Bowling Green DONALD M. JOHNSON, Browder JILL JOHNSON, Franklin REGINA G. JOHNSON, Ashland RICHARD JOHNSON, Louisville SHERRY JOHNSON, Lamb TONJA JOHNSON, Sebree TRACEY JOHNSON, Louisville MIKE JONES, Bowling Green NOBLE JONES, Hopkinsville PERRY A. JONES, Burlington ROBERT JONES, West Paducah TONY JONES, Owensboro VANESAH JONES, Winchester JOHN JORDAN, Louisville LISA JORDON, Ekron MARGARET JUKES, Hazard TIMOTHY KAINE, Kewanee, III. KARL N. KAPOOR, Franklin CAROLYN A. KEENE, Louisville BOBBY KEFFER, Nashville, Tenn. JEFFREY KEGARISE, Pittsburgh, Pa. PAULA KELLEY, Franklin TYRONE KELLY, Owensboro AUDREY L. KELSO, Madisonville MICHAEL KEMPER, Gary, Ind. HOWARD D. KENNER, Elizabethtown SHARON KENT, Louisville CHARLOTTE R. KEOWN, Bowling Green JEFFREY S. KERR, Mayfield NANCY N. KEY, Russellville LATANYA KIMBLEY, Louisville CAROL KIMBROUGH, Ashland YOLANDA R. KINCAID, Owensboro JILL KINDUELL, Park Hills DEBRA KING, Pikeville KAREN KING, Jeffersonville, Ind. SHEILA KINGERY, Eighty Eight BETH KINGHAM, Winter Haven, Fla. MARY J. KINGTON, Madisonville DEBORAH KIRBY, Bowling Green TISH KIWIET, Riverside, iit KATHRYN A. KLARER, Jeffersontown DAN KLICKER, Louisville SHERRI D. KNIGHT, Henderson STEVE KNIGHT, Bowling Green RICKY KNIGHTS, Louisville KATHY KNOX, Louisville BARB KORELL, LaPorte, Ind. DON KRAMER, Newburgh, Ind. LEESA KRAMPE, Owencats JEFF KRANTZ, Franklin KAREN KRAUSE, Radcliff JANET KREMER, Jeffersontown DAPHNE L. KRIGGER, Louisville PAMELA KRUSE, Louisville DARLENE KUCHENBROD, Louisville DAVE KUENZEL, Wilmette, III. JAMES P. KUPSTAITIS, Hendersonville, Tenn. MARK A. KUZMA, Glasgow ELLEN LAGUTCHIK, Ft. Knox PATRICIA LAINE, Louisville KATHY LAM, Philpot LEE A. LAMB, Central City 415 Freshmen DAWN LAMPERT, Jasper, Ind. JAMES LANE, Harrodsburg JOHN LANE, Wilmington SELINA LANGFORD, Bowling Green JEANETTE M. LANHAM, Owensboro KEVIN P. LARKIN, Lexington GENTRY LARUE JR., Lexington BEVERLY LAWLER, Munfordville ANDY LAWLESS, Owensboro GLEN LAWRENCE, Scottsville WILLIAM LAWRENCE, Bolivar, Tenn. TONYA LAWSON, Beaver Dam SHARON LEAMON, Tompkinsville ROBERTO LEDESMA, Quito, Ecuador KATHY LEE, Beaver Dam ROBERT B. LEIDGEN, Louisville GREG LENEAVE, Cadiz PATTY LEVASSEUR, Glasgow BARBARA LEVERIDGE, Bowling Green PATRICIA A. LEWIS, Ft. Campbell JODI LIEGL, Edina, Minn. SANDRA M. LILES, Ft. Knox TOM LILLY, Morganfield STEVEN D. LINDSEY, Glasgow NANCY LINK, Adairville SHERI LINK, Jeffersontown MARISHA LIPHFORD, Paducah DEBORAH LITTLEJOHN, Cadiz JIM LLOYD, Constantia, N.Y. JAMES R. LOCKHART, Bowling Green BETH LOEFFLER, Louisville TERESSA LOFTIS, Nashville, Tenn. TERESA D. LOGAN, Lexington BENJAMIN C. LONG, Bowling Green TIMOTHY T. LONG, Bowling Green KEVIN LORTON, Danville CHRISTINA LOVENZ, Yonkers, N.Y. LINDA LUKASZEWSKIL, St. Joseph, Mich. JUANITA LUSCO, Louisville LESLIE LUTTRELL, Hartford MELISSA LYLES, Lewisport MICHAEL B. LYNE, Adairville PATRICIA A. LYON, Cave City SUSAN MABRY, Hopkinsville LARRY G. MACHICH, Sturgis CAREY MAGEE, Mt. Vernon, Ill. ROBIN MAGLINGER, Owensboro | : 1 SUSANNE MAIN, Bowling Green E; . mI eae 7, q a GREGORY L. MAJORS, Louisville JANET C. MALONE, Louisville JANICE D. MALONE, Louisville LAURA D. MALONE, Nashville, Tenn. BILL MANLEY, Nashville, Tenn. DAVE MAPLES, Elkmont, Alaska DENISE MARR, Scottsville DONALD G. MARSH, Marion ROB MARSHALL, Versailles THOMAS W. MARTEL, Louisville KENNETH A. MARTIN, Smithland MONA MARTIN, Bowling Green PAT MASTERSON, Louisville LEANN MATLOCK, Louisville MARK MATTHEWS, Louisville TIM MATTHEWS, Ekron JOHN MATTINGLY, Henderson SHARON MAYHUGH, Bowling Green MARGARET MCADAMS, Elizabethtown CARYL L. MCCARTHY, Louisville DEBBIE MCCARTHY, Louisville DEBBIE K. MCCHURE, Cadiz MARISSA MCCLANAHAN, Springfield, Tenn. MARY L. MCCLARNON, Gallatin, Tenn. DWIGHT MCCOMBS, Brownsville MARIANNE MCCREERY, Madison, Tenn. GLENDA MCCRORY, Louisville PAULA MCCUBBIN, Summersville LEVY MCCULLOUGH, Bowling Green SHAWN MCCULLOUGH, Edgewood JOHN MCDONALD, Greenville VICKI MCDONALD, Drakesboro LINDA A. MCELROY, Bowling Green VICELIA K. MCFARLAND, Nashville, Tenn. TERRY MCGEHEE, Frankfort JULIE A. MCGEHEE, Rumsey SCOTT E. MCGILL, Wadsworth, Ohio ROSALIND MCGINNIS, Peoria, Ill. DONALD L. MCGOWAN JR., Bowling Green JENNIE MCGREW, Fordsville RUSTY MCINTOSH, Louisville TERRY MCKENZIE, Russellville TIM MCKENZIE, Russellville KENNETH MCKINNEY, Indianapolis, Ind. PAM MCKINNEY, Morgantown PHYLLIS J. MCKINNEY, Bowling Green TAMI MCKINNEY, Leitchfield AUDREY P. MCLEAN, Ft. Knox LINDA MCLINTON, Lake Worth, Fla. STACY MCMAHAN, Louisville MELANIE MCNALLY, Louisville KATHY MCNECE, Scottsville LAWRENCE W. MCPHAIL, Bowling Green MICHAEL D. MCROY, Central City DEBRA G. MCWHORTER, Albany HARRIET M. MEANS, Louisville 416 Freshmen | Drop-pop FIFTEEN HOURS OF CLASSES and working from 4:30 to midnight as a housekeeper in the fine arts center didn’t leave Dennis Rone enough time with his eight-month-old daughter, Dena. The freshman was in the registrar's office to drop a history course. His wife Pam works during the day for the physical plant. Stevie Benson 417 Freshmen RAYMOND A. MEECE, Russell Springs SUSAN MEERS, Buffato JIM MEFFORD, Bowling Green BECKY L. MEGUIAR, Portland, Tenn. KAREN MELTON, Owensboro ALICE MEREDITH, Louisville BECKY MERIDETH, Ekron MICHAEL H. MEYER, Louisville LINDA A. MEYERS, Hendersonville, Tenn. MEG MICHAELS, Wyoming, Ohio RENEE MIDDLETON, Versailles JUDY MILLAY, Owensboro BRENT L. MILLER, Sonora CRAIG MILLER, Hendersonville, Tenn. DAWN A. MILLER, Washington, N.J. DEBRA D. MILLER, Somerset GINA MILLER, Elkton JOHN W. MILLER, Hardinsburg KATHY MILLER, Louisville MARK MILLER, Danville NANCY MILLER, Louisville VICKY L. MILLER, Bowling Green SHARON MILLS, Whitesville SHEILA MINOGUE, Wilmette, IIl. KAREN S. MINOR, Auburn DAVID MITCHELL, Benton, III. JEAN MITCHELL, Owensboro LORRAINE, A. MITCHELL, Radcliff JACKIE MITTLER, Jeffersontown ROGER MOHON, Central City G. PATRICK, MOLLOY, Bowling Green MARYLEE MONROE, Elizabethtown CHARLES A. MOORE, Hardinsburg JERRY MOORE, Central City SUSAN E. MOORE, Madisonville SUSAN M. MOORE, Bowling Green JOSE L. MONTESINOS, Quito, Ecuador LUIS MONTESINOS, Quito, Ecuador THERESA L. MONTGOMERY, Russell Springs SALLY MORGAN, Bowling Green JEFFREY MORRIS, Louisville REBECCA G. MORRIS, Shepherdsville STEVEN S. MORRIS, Lexington LESLIE MORROW, Newburgh, Ind. JOSEPH L. MORTON, Jeffersontown BILL MOSER, Hendersonville, Tenn. DALE MOSLEY, Bowling Green JACQUELENE MOSLEY, Elkton JAMES U. MOSLEY, Cerulean JOHNNY MOSLEY, Alvaton TOM MOSLEY, Bowling Green LINDA A. MOTES, Depo: W. HOWARD MOUDY, Wilmington, Del DEE A. MOUNT, Owensboro JEFF MOUSER, Horse Cave REGINA A. MUMPHREY, New Castle JEFFREY MUNROE, Nassau, Bahamas JUDY MURPHY, Tompkinsville LAQUIDA B. MURRAY, Winchester TAMMY MURRAY, Cave City ELI N. MURRELL, Louisville WILLIAM H. MURREY JR., Pulaski, Tenn. ANN MYERS, Bowling Green BETSY A. MYERS, Wilmington, Ohio DEBBIE NAGEL, Louisville LEA A. NAGEL, Louisville MARY E. NAKASHIGE, Paris, Tenn. GARY NAPIER, Portland, Tenn. LINDA J. NAPIER, Bowling Green JEFF NAUMAN, Bowling Green DEBRA A. NELSON, Campbellsburg LIBBY NETHERTON, Louisville CATHY NEWBY, Cloverport MARK F. NEWMAN, Owensboro LAURA NIEMANN, Louisville JEFFREY L. NOEL, Hopkinsville JEAN K. NOSS, Stanton AMYE NUCKOLS, Glasgow LARRY O’BRYAN, Louisville ELIZABETH J. O'DONNELL, Bowling Green OLUFUNKE, A. ODUKOYA, Lagos, Nigeria GEORGIA K. ORNDORFF, Russellville SATORU OTAKI, Tokyo DELAINE OVERTON, Henderson CHRIS OWEN, Owensboro LOIS OWEN, Hardinsburg JANE OWSLEY, Owensboro FELECIA PARE, Lamb CHARLES P. PARKER, Olmstead KELLY PARKER, Quality RICK PARKER, Owensboro ALICE PARKS, Richmond JO PARRISH, Glasgow ANN L. PARROTT, Greensburg NANCY PATTERSON, Upton TERESA PAULLEY, Louisville BONNIE PAYNE, Owensboro ELISABETH S. PECK, Versailles BARBARA S. PEDEN, Mt. Hermon TONY PELASKI, Waverly STEPHEN PENN, Louisville VICKIE PENNINGTON, Louisville CYNTHIA J. PERKINS, Horse Cave ELIZABETH C. PETER, Lexington CECILIA PETETT, Tompkinsville PATRICIA A. PETRIE, Louisville CHRIS PFEIFFER, Alexandria, Va. APRIL L. PHELPS, Woodbury GREG PHELPS, Beaver Dam JEANIE PHELPS, Auburn J.R. PHELPS, Bowling Green LARRY PHILLIPS, Henderson, Tenn. KENNETH H. PICKETT, Russell Springs FREDIA PIERCE, Glasgow MICHELE L. PINAIRE, Louisville DOROTHY PIRTLE, Bowling Green JOYCE PLANTINGA, Country Club Hills, Ill. 418 Freshmen JUDITH PLANTING, Country Club Hills, Ill. RICHARD S. POLAK, Rochester, N.Y. ALICIA POLSON, Glasgow ALICE C. POPE, Bowling Green STACY POPE, Lexington CATHY POPP, Louisville SHARRON D. PORTER, Hopkinsville MISSI POTEET, Bowling Green LISA POTTS, Nashville, Tenn. VIRGINIA POTTINGER, Jeffersontown GREGORY POWELL, Boonville, Ind. TERESA J. POWELL, Glasgow SUNNI POWERS, Franklin TAMARA A. POWERS, Owensboro BARBARA PRICE, Louisville JAY PRICE, Liberty LISA PRICE, Bowling Green LIZBETH R. PRICE, Owensboro PAM PRICE, Louisville JULIE PRIDDY, Hodgenville PAM PRITCHARD, Hazard MARILYN PROCTOR, Jeffersontown TAVIROT PRACHASAISORADEYV, Bourgkok, Thailand NINA E. PRUITT, Scottsville VICTOR QUAN, Calgary, Alberta, Can. JANET RADER, Louisville STEVE RAGAN, Hendersonville, Tenn. PENNY R. RAGER, Clifty JOHN RAHN, Burlington, Iowa KATHY D. RAINWATER, Springfield, Tenn. LISA RAMSEY, Louisville SUSAN RAND, Milton LISA J. RASCOE, Owensboro DEBORAH RAY, Goodlettsville, Tenn. RANDY RAY, Bowling Green ARTHUR W. RAYBOLD, IIL, Worchester, Mass JUDY RECTOR, Bowling Green ROBERT REDMON, Louisville BARBARA REESE, Russell Springs RON REINSCHELD, Louisville LISA REMALY, Ft. Thomas LORI REMALY, Ft. Thomas KAREN REXROAT, Russell Springs OZANDAL REXROAT, Russell Springs TRACY REXROAT, Louisville SHELLEY RHOADES, Fordsville SYLVIA D. RHODES, Louisville BECKY RICE, Hendersonville, Tenn. MARGUERITE RICE, Horse Cave KATHY RICH, Dundee, Ill. SAM RICHARD, Owensboro DONNA RICHARDSON, Lawrenceburg MARK RICHARDSON, Horse Cave PAM RICHARDSON, Lewisport STEPHEN D. RICHESON, Owensboro NANCY RICHEY, Mt. Hermon CAROL RIDER, Upton DIANE L. RIELY, Louisville SHERRI RIGGS, Alvaton STEPHEN RIGGS, Calhoun SHEILA RILEY, Owenton RHONDA G. RITTER, Lebanon Junction JOYCE ROBBINS, Evarts ‘ BRENDA ROBERTS, Bowling Green LISA E. ROBERTS, Waverly, Ohio STEVE ROBERTS, Owensboro MARK ROBERTSON, Louisville KATHY ROBINETTE, Jeffersontown AUDREY ROBINSON, Louisville MITZI C. ROCHELLE, Hendersonville, Tenn. RHONDA ROCK, Hardyville MARCELINO RODRIGUEZ, Canal Zone, Panama CONSTANCE ROGERS, Central Square, N.Y. ELIZABETH A. ROMANS, Hartford MICHAEL ROOF, Paducah RANDY ROY, Louisville SHARON K. ROYAL, Owensboro BARBARA RUCKRIEGEL, Jeffersontown NANCY RUDOLPH, Louisville REBECCA S. RUE, Bowling Green MARK A. RUMFELT, Hickman TAMIE SABENS, Bowling Green PAMELA SACKS, Louisville TERRI SAGER, Hendersonville, Tenn. NANCY SALATO, Columbia MAURICE SALTER, Louisville RENE SANDER, Nashville, Tenn. CHRIS A. SANDERS, Elizabethtown JENNIFER SANDERS, Elizabethtown NOLAN SANDERS, Adairville MARSHA SANNER, Orchard Lake, Mich. JAMES D. SARTAIN, Livermore EDDIE SCOTT, Mt. Sherman LYNN SCOTT, Windham, N.H. PATRICIA SCHARKLEY, Cross Plains, Tenn. KAREN SCHELER, Bowling Green MARY L. SCHEPERS, Whitesville RICHARD L. SCHIESS, Russellville DANNY SCHMIDT, Louisville MATHEW SCHMIDT, Hopkinsville SHARON SCHMITTOW, Cadiz BARBARA CAROL SCHOCKE, Owensboro TERRY SCHOLL, Owensboro ELLEN SCHWARTZ, Skokie, Ill. KIMBERLY SEABOLT, Round Hill ANITA SEALS, Madison, Tenn. GREG SEATON, Caneyville SUZANNE SEMONES, Louisville MITCH SETTLE, Owensboro MAUREEN K. SHANAHAN, Leitchfield ARTHUR R. SHANNON, Bowling Green RHONDA SHARP, Louisville JANICE SHAW, Owensboro KATIE SHAY, Niagra Falls, Ontario, Can. LISA SHEEHAN, Georgetown, Ontario, Can. MARTHA SHELBURNE, Louisville TERESA A. SHELLEY, Summer Shade 419 Freshmen MISSY SHELTON, Vienna, Va. CHERYL SHEPERSON, Harrodsburg SHERRY SHEPHERD, Columbia KATHLEEN B. SHERRERD, Clinton, NJ JANICE SHINNICK, Lexington JERRY SHILTS, Irvington ANITA SHORT, Louisville LAURA SHORT, Louisville WILLIAM T. SHOUSE, Morganfield DAVID SHULHAFER, Louisville FELIECIA SHULL, Horsebranch KEVIN SHUMATE, Louisville MARY B. SIDDENS, Glasgow LAURA L. SIDWELL, Albany SONJA SIEGERT, Bowling Green WAYNE SIEMER, Villa Hills DENNIS A. SIMMON, Louisville JEAN SIMMONS, Glasgow MARK SIMMONS, Glasgow CLARK SIMPSON, Ft. Mitchell NINA SIMPSON, Sturgis ROBERT M. SIMPSON, Bowling Green SHEENA SIMPSON, Middlesboro LEA SIRCY, Gallatin, Tenn. BARRY SIRLES, Louisville KEVIN L. SKAGGS, Scottsville CINDY SLEETH, Danville Mae ON GIR RR EE NIPIin o AS pyres acne reanteamenete iy SRE £ : j : ARR ato 8 geen RRR nie Sahm gear om . ¥ % : ‘ued up IN THE SIDE POCKET, insisted David Beckley. But fellow freshman Mark Robertson doubted that Beckley could make the shot. Robertson, a medical technology major from Louisville, said he broke his arm playing basketball, changing his pool style. Beckley, a photojournalism major, is from Oldam County. 420 Freshmen DONNA SLOAD, Owensboro BRENDA SMITH, Ft. Campbell DAVID L. SMITH, Bowling Green ELLEN SMITH, Hendersonville, Tenn HARRY G. SMITH, Bowling Green JANE A. SMITH, Mortons Gap KEITH SMITH, Guston LISA SMITH, Glasgow MARK F. SMITH, Simps MOLLY SMITH, Bowling Green SANDY SMITH, Prospect SHAUNE SMITH, Brandenburg SHAWNA A. SMITH, Bowling Green SHEILA K. SMITH, Leitchfiel SHELLEY SMITH, Birmingham, Ala. SUE E. SMITH, Scottsville SHERRI SNELL, Bowling Green LINDA SNELSON, Louisville SUSAN SNIDER, Franklin CHRIS SNYDER, Louisville ELIZABETH SNYDER, Bowling Green CHERYL SOPPENFIELD, Sonora LADONNA SPAIN, Hopkinsville NANCY SPECK, Sebring, Ohio KELLY SPEIGHT, Cincinnati, Ohio GARY SPERRY, Alexandria SUELLYN SPIEGELMAN, Memphis, Tenn. Ricky Rogers 2 SOE RES RETR RENE: SSC Dg RARER ORAS ENR ORR TTS Sg ERASED ORRIN TRIN BE | SOE AGOGO ‘ i L Spe RI ‘ —e ss Ne 2 a fs ne ae aE RAEI AR RSE P LIE LRT IEEE AES NETL Freshmen ANNITA SPIKER, Hendersonville, Tenn. LESLEY SPINKS, Hartford MARTY D. STAHL, Rockfield JUDITH A. STARLING, Owensboro KEVIN STAUSS, Alvaton PAM STEAGALL, Hendersonville, Tenn. SHEILA C. STEARNS, Albany DONNA STEELE, Salvisa CHERI STELZIG, Louisville JOHN STEPHENSON, Burkesville MARILYN STEWART, Bowling Green MIKE STEWART, Bowling Green NANCY STEWART, Louisville STEPHANIE A. STEWART, Brownsville RONNIE STEWART, Central City WILLIAM P. STIGALL, Louisville STEVEN STINES, Louisville DAVID G. STINSON, Scottsville MARY B. STOCKLER, Louisville CORNELIA STOCKTON, Glasgow SHARON L. STONE, Louisville SUE L. STONE, Bowling Green KIMBERLY STORIE, Mayfield JOHN E. STORY, Mt. Sterling JANET STOTTS, Hardyville MARGARET STOUT, Versailles ELIZABETH S. STOWERS, Louisville J. KEVIN STRADER, Belton ROSALIND J. STRETZ, Louisville JEANNA STRODE, Cave City NAN STRONG, Mt. Dora, Fla. SABRINA STROUD, Cadiz KAREN STUART, Drakesboro JEANNE STURGILL, Pikeville GARY M. SUITER, Noblesville, Ind. STEVE SULLIVAN, Louisville BRET M. SUMMERS, Bowling Green DONNA SUTTON, Kingsland, Ga. JOHNNY SWACK, Bowling Green SHEILA SWALLOWS, Russellville DEBBIE SWIFT, Danville GLORIA J. SZYMULA, Opa Locka, Fla. DEBORAH L. TACKETT, Hendersonville, Tenn. MASAAKI TAMIGUCHI, Kagoshima, Japan MARK TANNER, Danville LISA TAPP, Henderson JINNI TAPSCOTT, Bowling Green MARY C. TATUM, Mt Holly, NJ. ANTHONY TAYLOR, Jamestown BILL TAYLOR, Scottsville BRENDA J. TAYLOR, Central City BRENDA K.C. TAYLOR, Prospect GINA L. TAYLOR, Lexington JEFFERY TAYLOR, Central City LAWANA TAYLOR, Rockport MARC TAYLOR, Louisville MEL TAYLOR, Calhoun MICHAEL A. TAYLOR, Calloway NANCY TAYLOR, Scottsville TERESA TAYLOR, Russellville TERESA K. TAYLOR, Morgantown VICKIE L. TAYLOR, Mammoth Cave DAVID W. TENCH, Orlando, Fla. JANE TERRELL, Louisville REBECCA L. TESTERMAN, Blacklick, Ohio KELLY THACKER, Louisville AUDREY THOMAS, Ft. Campbell BECKY THOMAS, Louisville KEVIN THOMAS, Bowling Green LARRY J. THOMAS, Bowling Green SONJA R. THOMAS, Gracey ELAINE R. THOMPSON, Lebanon KATHEY M. THOMPSON, Campbellsville SANDRA THOMPSON, Munfordville STEPHEN R. THORNBERRY, Lewisburg PEGGY THORNTON, Louisville DAVID TICHENOR, Calhoun JAMES E. TICHENOR, Owensboro SHEILA J. TICHENOR, Beaver Dam NEAL R. TINDLE, Cloverport CYNTHIA TINSLEY, Utica ROY T. TOEBBE, Louisville LESA TODD, Hendersonville, Tenn. LEA TOTTNESS, Owenton DEBRA J. TRAVIS, Tompkinsville RECARDO A. TRAVIS, Louisville SUSAN TREECE, Elizabethtown DANIEL L. TROOST, Bowling Green RODNEY TRUGMAN, Hopkinsville ROSALIE A. TRUJILLO, Millington, Tenn. KAREN TUCKER, Russell Springs TORI TUCKER, Ft. Benning, Ga. SAMUEL P. TUGGLE, III, Indianapolis, Ind. DESIREE TURNER, Smiths Grove LISA TURNER, Bowling Green PAT TURNER, South Union SHERRY L. TURNER, Drakesboro TORIE M. TURNER, Gamaliel BUDDY UPCHURCH, Bowling Green ROBIN UPTON, Greensburg KAYLA URBANEK, Henderson KATHERINE VADEN, Newport News, Va. DAVID H. VANCE, Paducah ERIC W. VANCE, Akron, Ohio KATHLEEN VANCE, Michigan City, Ind. JACK D. VANDERCOOK JR., Hendersonville, Tenn. MONICA L. VANMETER, Elizabethtown MARY B. VANOVER, Louisville GREGORY L. VAUGHN, Murray DAVID VEECH, Loretto RONNIE L. VEECH, Bardstown VICKI VENRICK, Nashville, Tenn. LEA A. VESSELS, Louisville MARK VICK, Russellville MINERVA A. VICK, Russellville PATRICIA D. VICK, Olmstead TOM VIERS, Shepherdsville 422 Freshmen TERESA A. VINCENT, Louisville LINDA VISE, Benton, Ill. CARL VOGEL, Berea CINDY WADDINGTON, Scottsville JILL WADE, Summer Shade ALLAN R. WALKER, Bowling Green JERRY WALKER, Glendale NANCY K. WALKER, Atlanta, Ga. PAMELA J. WALKER, Adolphus DONNA C. WALL, Owensboro DON WALTER, Columbus, Ind. MELINDA WALTERS, Shelbyville RONNIE WALTERS, Paducah JOHN WALTON, Owensboro CRAIG WALTRIP, Utica MARCIA WAMPLER, La Porte, Ind. TOM WAMPLER, Louisville ZOE WASHINGTON, Louisville SIDNEY C. WARE, Louisville TERI S. WARNER, Centerville, Ohio DON WATHEN, Louisville FRANCINE WATKINS, Louisville TERRI L. WATKINS, Louisville CARRIE WATSON, Orland Park, Ill. JACKIE WATSON, Gamaliel HOLLY K. WATTS, Lawrenceburg THOMAS WEAKLEY, Utica MARTHA WEAVER, Dickson, Tenn. ELIZABETH L. WEBB, O'Fallon, III. PAUL H. WEBB, II, Louisville LYDELL WEBSTER, Louisville CINDY WEDDLE, Liberty ALESA J. WELLS, Elkton ELIZABETH WELLS, Paris GENEVA G. WELLS, Kettle JUDITH WELLS, Aaron TONY WELLS, Louisville VANESSA WELLS, Glasgow GARY WERNER, Louisville GAIL WEST, W. Chicago, Ill. MIKE WEST, Williamstown DON WESTER, Galloway, Ohio BEVERLY J. WESTERMAN, Springfield, Va MARTHA WESTFALL, Versailles REX WETHERILL, Cincinnati, Ohio MARY B. WETHINGTON, Owensboro GAIL WHALEY, Eminence RUTH A. WHEAT, Fairdale JACK T. WHEELER, Rockfield JEFF WHITAKER, Rockport, Ma. RHONDA WHITAKER, Frankfort ALICIA A. WHITE, Bowling Green ANNA M. WHITE, Louisville DONNA S S. WHITE, Russellville MELINDA G. WHITE, Franklin MELISSA L. WHITE, Nashville, Tenn. RAY WHITE, Bowling Green ANDREW M WHITNEY, Bowling Green RUSSELL WHITNEY, Glasgow JANET L. WHITTINGHILL, Greenville SCOTT WIGGINTON, Louisville TAMMY WILDER, Corbin DEBORAH K. WILLIAMS, Belfast, Tenn. GALE M. WILLIAMS, Elizabethtown GARY A. WILLIAMS, Hendersonville, Tenn. JENNIE L. WILLIAMS, Beaver Dam LINDA WILLIAMS, Ft. Thomas MARIE WILLIAMS, Bowling Green VIVIAN WILLIAMSON, Russellville MELINDA WILLINGHAM, Henderson DEE A. WILLIS, Campbellsville PAMELA WILLIS, Greenville SCOTT WILLIS, Louisville EDE WILMOTH, Bowling Green DAWANA L. WILSON, Louisville DEBBIE WILSON, Nashville, Tenn. RICK WILSON, Bowling Green TIMTHY C. WILSON, Horse Cave TOM WILSON, Kokomo, Ind. TRACY L. WILSON, Louisville STEPHANIE WILWAYCO, Franklin KIM WIMSATT, Owensboro DIANA WINLOCK, Glasgow RUSS WITCHER, Red Boiling Springs, Tenn. JENNIFER L. WITT, Glasgow PAM WOHLLEB, Louisville PAT WOOD, Corvallis, Ore. VERONICA WOODARD, Adairville KAREN WOODBURN, Madisonville RONNIE B. WOODS, Rochester VELMA WOODS, Hardinsburg LINDA WOODSON, Nashville, Tenn. BILLIE M. WOODWARD, Cave City TONYA WOODWORTH, Lawrenceburg LEE A. WOOLDRIDGE, Louisville STEVE WOOSLEY, Louisville PAUL WOOTITEN, Seaford, Del. DIANE E. WRIGHT, Jeffersontown BLAIR WRIGLEY, Madisonville JACQUELINE WYATT, Smiths Grove JAY YALE, Bowling Green JOHN E. YANCY, Pleasant Shade, Tenn. ROY I. YANKEY, Perryville BARRY E. YATES, Kuttawa TRACEY J. YONTS, Greenville CATHY YOUNG, Clarksville, Tenn. CONNIE YOUNG, Providence KIM YOUNG, Bowling Green LISA YOUNG, Bowling Green MARY A. YOUNG, Russellville RITA K. YOUNG, Louisville KATHI L. ZIEGLER, Shively TERI ZIMMERMAN, Robards TIMOTHY F. ZIMMERMAN, Nancy MARY B. ZINSIUS, Louisville CHRISTOPHER J. ZIRKELBACH, Newburgh, Ind. ANN R. ZOELLER, Louisville 423 Freshmen A Band for all Seasons 294-5 A Bang-up season 246-7 A Better way 121 A board with a council knocking at its back door 138-141 “A Christmas Carol” 46-7 A Commuting Conductior 94-7 A company on its toes 302-3 A Computer Campus 36-7 A conductor of Note 94-7 A Constructed Reunion 38-9 A Crafty Hideaway 71 A Credible Performance 256-7 A family conflict 115 A fan keeps the King alive 354 A Freak Fall to Fourth 222-3 A German who possesses the ‘Great American Dream’ 78-9 A jack-of-all-trades foots it as an advertising salesman 124-5 A Legendary Hill 24-5 A Marathon Romance 38-9 A measure of debate 118-9 A Mist of Blackness 332-3 A Mountain Sabbatical 186-7 A Notch in the Past 21 A patio preacher 118-9 A Season of Jamboree Hours, Field Days, Nonsense Nights and Derby Weeks 310- 1 A Season which read like a bestseller 327- 231 A special Sunday school 368 A split season, but continued improvement 267 A Student-Centered Home 68-71 A Star-Studded Victory 328-9 A staff of greenhorns and old timers 278-9 A stretch of the academic nature 210-1 A summer habit 14 A 24-hour weather watch 204-5 A race against the clock 280 A roving professor 210 A week in the sun 261 A winner who goes off the deep end everyday 250-1 Aaron, Allene Collins Aaron, Lizabeth Ann 290, 382 Abbasnezhad, Abdulrahim Abbassian, Nasser Abbott, Kathleen Sue 292, 294, 348 Abbott, Tracie Diane Abdulhagq, Ibrahim K. 54, 57-8 Abel, Porter Neal Abell, Donna Marie Abell, Martha Louise Abell, Mary Gail Abell, Norman Dale Jr. Abell, Sandra Ann Aberle, Tonya James 330, 337 Abney, Deborah Sue 285 Abney, Debra Ann Abney, Gail Anderson Abney, Judy Ellen 285, 406 Abram, Marva Jean Academic Advisement, Career Planning and Placement center, director 156 Academic Affairs, Vice President 146 Academic Services, Asst. dean 146 Academic Services, dean 147 Accounting dept. 191 Accounting dept. head 190-1 Accounts and Budgetary Control, director 154, 156 Abshire, Valerie Ann 341, 348 Ackerman, Mark Lee 406 Ackerson, Lucy Ellen Acme Dance Company 40-1 Acree, Charles Edward 406 Acree, Deborah Ann Gossett Acree, Patricia Dawn 406 Actors Theatre of Louisville 41 Adams, Anita Carol 382 Adams, David Kelly Adams, Janet Allen Adams, Jeffery Neal Adams, Jon Paul Adams, Kathy Ann 292, 348 Adams, Leslie Douglas Adams, Michael B. 348 Adams, Robyn Lynn Adams, Scott Howard 317, 406 Adams, Sherry Jo 340 Adams, Sue Ellen 334, 348 Adams, Susan Beth Adams, Veeda Jane Adams, Victor Carey Adams, William Todd 285 Adamson, Robbie Jean 406 Adcock, James Edward Addison, Sandra Jean Addleton, David F. Adeleke, Adedeji T. 392 Adesamya, Bolatito K. 348 Adeshakin, Joseph A. Adeyele Oluseyi Sedonu Adkins, Dana Janise Adkins, Lea Ann Adkins, Patricia Carol 348 Adkins, Teddy Joe 312 Adkisson, Milton Anthony 424 A Band Bartley, P. INDEX Administrative affairs, vice president 146, 160 Admissions, director 156 Advance registration 121 Age, Suzanne Lynette Agee, Alfred Baron 257 Agee, Betsy Gail 400 Agriculture dept. 200, 208-9 Agriculture dept., head 200 Ahmad, Zafar 291 Ahmadi, Karim Abdol Ahmadilari, Hossein Aikins, James Matthew 406 Aikins, Rebecca Jane Aikins, Ronald Gene Akerejah, Daniel Irivboje Akers, Alida Bayne Akers, Jan Neil Akers, Jonathan Reed 348 Akers, Rebecca Lynn 284, 382 Akin, Barbara Jean 348 Akin, Jerry Lane 382 Akridge, Deloras Fay Al, Janahi Ali Agader Al, Kobiassi Nasser Hamed Al, Malki Abdullah Youseff 406 Albani, Thomas Anthony 255, 323 Albin, Dianne Marie Alcoholic Beverage Control Board 118-9, 139 Aldrich, Kevin John Aldridge, Hobart Allen Alemparte, Jorge Eugenio 262-3 Alexander, Anita Rae Alexander, Carlton Lee Alexander, Charles D. 348 Alexander, Cynthia J.S. Alexander, Helen Patrice Alexander, Jan Terri 392 Alexander, Jeffrey McLane Alexander, Laurie Anne Alexander, Dr. Livingston 339 Alexander, Madeline Eunice = Alexander, Martha Faye Alexander, Mary Ann 406 Alexander, Mary Jane 274 Alexander, Michael Tyree Alexander, Nancy G. Alexander, Rebecca Louise Alexander, Sandra Jean Alfieri, Fred Eric 307 Alford, Jeanne Lanell Alford, Marcus Edwin Alford, Marsha Leah Alford, Rebecca Jo 392 Alford, Richard Lee Alford, Sandra Lynn 330-1, 336, 392 Alford, Vicki Dudgeon 186-7, 309, 348 Alford, William G.E. Aliakbar-Beik, Mostafa All That Stuff 400 Allaf-Tajer, Mohammad H. 382 Allard, Sue Lavonne Allen, Alma Lynn Allen, Amy Jill Allen, Bryan Lee Allen, Clifford Kline Allen, David Wayne Allen, Deborah Kay Allen, Doreen Marie Allen, Edna Mae 406 Allen, Elsie Darlene 406 Allen, Gary Frank 318, 348 Allen, George J. Allen, James Dewey 255 Allen, Jeffery Layton Allen, John Vincent Allen, Keith Edward Allen, Kerry Lyn 406 Allen, Kim Lea Allen, Kim Ross Allen, Michael Scott Allen, Petina 392 Allen, Raymond Keith 406 Allen, Rexford VanDyke Allen, Stephen G. Allen, Tanga Denise 406 Allen, Ted Eugene Allen, Vivian Marie 406 Allen, Walton Ray Allen, Zola Virginia Allender, Joy Lynn Alley, Trina Lee 310, 330 Allgeier, Keith Damien 89 Allgeier , Louis Bernard II Allgeier, Mark J. Allgeier, Steven Michael 325, 392 Allgood, Ann Elizabeth Allgood, Susan Darlene Allison, Dale Ellis Allison, Deborah Ann 309 Allison, Jean Anne Allison, Kent Allison, Mary Ellen 90-1, 272-3, 348 Allison, Victoria M. 406 Almond, Leroy 289 Alphe, Lorrie E. 284 Alpha Delta Pi 269, 310-1, 321-2, 328-9, 334, 337, 345 Alpha Delta Pi 500 269, 310, 334, 344 Alpha Gamma Rho 31, 312, 341, 344, 345 Alpha Kappa Alpha 269, 331-2, 335, 345 Alpha Kappa Psi 30, 313, 337 Alpha Omicron Pi 31, 269, 310-1, 321, 324, 326, 328-9, 336 Alpha Phi Alpha 314, 316, 332 Alpha Phi Omega 31 Alpha Xi Delta 30, 269, 311, 313, 328, 337, 342, 344 Alshenaifi, Mohammed S. Alspaugh, Betsy Sue Alsup, Jeffrey Wade 217-8, 222 Althaus, Raymond George Jr. Altinkaya, Bulent Ruhi Alumni Affairs, director 150 Alvey, Kevin Ray 392 Alvey, Michael Wayne 392 Alvey, Monica Jo Alvey, Sharon Ann Alvey, Stacy Lynn Alwes, Nanette Lee 348 Amazing Kreskin 81 Amazing Tones of Joy 121 Ambrose, Laurie Susan 406 Ambs, Keith Andrew 406 American Theatre Productions 40 Amos, Charles E. An Arrest 120 An Artful Sellout 40-1 An Art not Lost in the Stone Age 180-1 An Injured Potential 244-5 Anderson, Barry Gordon Anderson, Bob 330-1 Anderson, Brian Scott Anderson, Dr. Charles 153, 176 Anderson, Deborah Ann 128, 276, 382 Anderson, Helen L. Day 348 Anderson, Jannell 406 Anderson, Jody Dianne 285 Anderson, John Edward 321, 382 Anderson, Kevin Deneen 382, 406 Anderson, Linda Jo 392 Anderson, Margaret Madonna Anderson, Mark Kevin 290, 348 Anderson, Phillip Deno 406 Anderson, Rebecca Lynn 406 Anderson, Richard Scott 288 Anderson, Robert Kevin Anderson, Sandra 406 Anderson, Sheila Fay 406 Anderson, Sherry Gale 392 Anderson, Thomas Robert 257, 326, 392 Anderson, William Andrew Anderton, Victoria Ann Andress, Bruce Kevin Andrews, Cynthia Meader Andrews, Donald Allen Jr. 257 Andrews, Robin Sue 336 Andrews, Theresa Lynn 406 Andrews, Toni Lea Andriakos, William Allen Anene, Emeka Basil Angel, John William Angelo, Thomas Michael Jr. 327, 348 Angle, Daniel Wayne Anthony, Tonia Yvette 406 Antique, David 30, 313 Antle, Brenda Kaye 392 Antle, Kevin D. Antle, Peggy Ann Shearin Antoine, Charlotte Rose 315, 348 Anyaegbuna, Ndubueze T. 392 Anyone Can Play 252-5 Appel, Max 253-4, 255 Appleby, Jerry Leon Appleby, Mary Ellen Appleby, Matthew Howard Appleby, Richard Louis 382 Appling, Timothy David 202, 285, 287, 348 Agel, Yousef Mohd Ahmad Agel, Zahria Ibrahim Ard, Michael Allen Areephanthu, Boonsong 297 Arflin, Tracy Thomas II Argo, David Allen Ariaz, Nancy Doris Ark, Deborah Sue Ark, Thomas Edward Arkens, Debra Jeanne Armao, Allison 392 Armes, Lori Allyson 382 Armes, Rhonda Kaye Armour, Carolyn Lynn Armour, Darrell Conley Armstrong, Bryan Leigh 281, 321 Armstrong, Don 150, 242 Armstrong, Donna Michelle 392 Armstrong, George John III 406 Arnd, Carol Anne Arnold, Anthony Rhea 348 Arnold, Anthony Vincent 406 Arnold, Bill 119 Arnold, Cindy Sue 10-1, 338, 382 Arnold, James Stuart 374, 392 Arnold, Jeffery Allen Arnold, Joseph Richard 392 Arnold, Kevin Dean 392 Arnold, Michael Eugene Arnold, Patricia Ann 271, 349 Arnold, Peggy Jo Arnold, Sally Curb Arnold, Yvonne Burchett Arrington, Janice Lynn 406 Art dept. 174 Art dept., head 174-5 Arterburn, Dennis Franklin Arterburn, Sandra Gail 283, 288 Artfully-minded 172-5 Ash, James Michael Ash, Monica Ruth Ash, Sony4 Rose 392 Ash, Theresa K y 406 Ashayeri, Abdollah M. Ashbrook, Sharron Kay Ashby, Cathy Jo 284, 287, 382 Ashby, Charles Steven 226-231, 232 Ashby, David Wayde Ashby, Kathy Lynn 340, 382 Ashby, Robert Henry 349 Ashby, Scott Elwyn Ashby, Todd 209 Ashcraft, Elizabeth Eva 116-7, 342, 349, 426 Ashdon, Julia Kay 294, 406 Asher, John Stephen Asher, Timothy Joseph 299 Ashton, Lily N. Sanders Ashur, Salah Eddin A. Ashwill, William Thomas Ashworth, Jeffery Lynn Ashworth, Lisa Ann 382 Asmonga, Emilie Jayne Asowitch, Susan Kay Assmann, Jeffrey Ronald 274-5, 349 Assmar, Katherine Louise 255, 298 Associated Stud ent Government 31, 33-5, 100, 105, 107, 121, 140, 148, 312 Atchley, Carmen Lee Atherton, Edmond Dale 406 Atherton, Jo Bailey Atherton, Sherry Gay Atkinson, Deborah Louise Athletics, director 150, 160 Atkinson, James Joseph 9, 217, 258-260 Atkinson, John Kirk Atlanta Rhythm Section 98, 100-1, 105-6, 121 Atnip, Patricia Ann 382 Atwell, Michael Emerson 260 Atwell, Rickie Neal 317, 392 Atwell, Terry Randall Atwood, Tammy Jean Atzinger, Timothy Linus Aubrey, Mary G. 301, 348 Audio-visual services, director 160 Augenstein, Donald Edward 324, 349 Augenstein, Michael Dale Aukerman, Terri Kathryn 392 Aull, Joseph Michael 326 Ault, Donna Jo Ault, Dori Jill Austin, Brian Connely 406 Austin, Carolyn Denton Austin, Charles Lee Austin, Dwight Lea 349 Austin, Gwendolyn Jo Autrey, Kathleen Marie 392 Average White Band 105-6 Avers, Carol Ann Avery, Derwin Eugene 314, 331 Avery, Dwight Lee Avery, Forrest Lynn Avery, James H. Avila, Robert Aydlett, James Hufham 406 Ayer, Anne Ward Ayer, Kathryn Lynn 392 Aymett, Selena Beth Azefeifa, Guerado 206 Azefeifa, Olga 206 Baali, Ahmed Majeed Baali, Faud 290 Baccus, Christie Ann 341, 392 Bach, Paulin Jerome 196 Bach, Richard Henderson Bachert, Nicholas George 406 Bachert, Scott Adrian 284, 382 Back, Barry Radcliffe Back, Margaret Gwen Back, Terry Michael Bacon, Janet Mechell 349 Bacon, Michael Keith Badami, Deborah Kaye Baete, Michael Garnett Baete, Timothy Scott 392 Bagby, Andra Lynn Baggett, Jill Marie 274-5 Baggett, Kenneth Jewell 288, 392 Baggett, Kerry Joe 392 Bagwell, Lorraine 382 Bagwell, Vicki Susan 349 Bahler, Stacee Jo Bailey, Charles Alan Bailey, Denise Ann Bailey, Ethel Lee Bailey, Howard 18, 149 Bailey, Janet Sue Bailey, Loretta Marie 406 Bailey, Mark Kevin 218, 349 Bailey, Marsha Lynn Bailey, Patricia A. 251 Bailey, Paul Wayne 349 Bailey, Ricky Frank Bailey, Rochelle Elaine 406, 444 Bailey, Sherrie Lyne 406 Bailey, Steven Ray Bailey, William Bruce Bain, Jeffrey Alan Baines, Victoria Lynn 406 Baird, Jane Louise Baird, Sherry Ann Baise, Sarah Tracy Baize, Roy Ferguson Baize, Wanda Lou Baker, Bradley Allen Baker, Brenda Fay 343 Baker, Connie Frances Baker, Curtis Sidney 218, 406 Baker, Cynthia Ruth 338 Baker, Daniel Alan 406 Baker, Everett Francis Jr. Baker, Gloria Diane 392 Baker, John 246-7 Baker, Karla Neil 282, 341, 392 Baker, Kenneth Dale Baker, Kenneth Leslie Baker, Kimberly Joyce Baker, Leveda G. Begley Baker, Linda Fay 382 Baker, Lisa Ann 338, 406 Baker, Martha 18 Baker, Michael J. Baker, Nancy Carolyn Baker, Norris Crete Jr. Baker, Pamela Jo Walker Baker, Ricky Lewis 258-261 Baker, Robert Glynn 382 Baker, Teresa L. Baker, Twyla White Baktashmehr, Bozorgmehr Baldock, Michael Wayne Baldwin, Chester Dwane 406 Baldwin, Gregory Thomas 290, 382 Baldwin, Julie Ann 349 Bale, Thomas Medley Balint, Stephen William 304, 392 Balkus, Francis Ball, Jackie Annette 392 Ball, Nancy Ann Jones Ball, Richard B. Ballantyne, Robet Ray Ballard, Hal Edward 285, 382 Ballard, Joseph Gerard 288, 426 Ballard, Kathryn Lea 90-1, 406 Ballard, Kimberly Ann 392 Ballard, Richard Newman Ballard, Sherry Faye 4, 406 Ballard, Terrance Lee 296 Ballou Olivia Dianne Ballou, Ricky James Ballou, Theresa Beatrice Balls, Curtis Herrick Banahan, David Denton Bandy, Randy Joey Banks, Janet Lynn Jones Banuchi, De Ette 392 Barbee, Kathy Carol Barbee, Ramona Ann Wheeler Barclay, Connie 65 Barefield, Jennifer Ann Barger, Cheri Lynn Barger, Susan Elizabeth Barker, Beverly Lynn 277, 330, 337 Barker, Jeffrey Lurie Barker, Larry D. Barker, Marvin Barker, Patrick Wilson Barker, Roger Dale Barkett, Ellen Margaret 382 Barkhau, Tracy Lenore Barlow, Michael Stewart Barna, Terry Thaddeus Barnard, Kenneth Lee Barnard, Victor Charles 406 Barnes, Connie Petett Barnes, Diane Patricia Barnes, Douglas Ray Barnes, Lisa Anne 382 Barnes, Michael Stephen 218 Barnes, Richard A, 345 Barnes, Richard Glen Barnes, Rick Hamilton Barnes, Ricky Zane 351 Barnes, Terry Wayne 272, 382 Barnes, Zexia Kay Barnett, Denise Marie Barnett, Frederick Grav Barnett, Gary Edward Barnett, Gary Mitchell Barnett, George Evans 317 Barnett, Janet Lee Barnett, John Starlin 382 Barnett, Nila Michelle Barnett, Patricia Lynn Barnett, Philip Wayne Barnett, Sharon Smith Barnett, Therese Barnette, Brenda Wayne 340, 392 Barr, Timothy Lee Barrett, Julia Anne Barrett, Katherine Lynn Barrett, Katherine Marie Barrett, Lana Sheffield Barrett, Shelly Ruth 281, 349 Barrett, Thomas Allen Barrick, Bruce Anthony Barrick, John Steven Barrick, Terri Beth Barron, Timothy Martin 218, 288 Barry, Ann Guthrie . Barry, Melinda Gail White Bartholomew, Douglas Georg 218, 221, 223 Bartholomy, Lezlee Anne 85, 90 Bartl, Anthony Richard Bartleson, George Edwin 316, 382 Bartley, Dianna Lindsey Bartley, Edwina Mae Bartley, Linda Sue 285, 382 Bartley, Martha Kaye Bartley, Peggy S. Gittings 349 Barton, Bruce Thompson 46, 85, 176, 392 Barton, Jennifer Lynne Barton, Steve Lambert Bartsch, Rebecca Ann 289, 406 Baseball 258-1 Basham, Anna D. 238 Basham, Connie Faye Basham, Elizabeth Opal Basham, Gary Lee Basham, Gary Lynn Basham, Judith Neel Basham, Julie Starr Basham, Mary Alford 406 Basham, Mildred Nancy Baskett, Brenda Joyce Baskett, Johnnie Warrick 349 Baskett, Susan Lynette Baskett, William Hunter 312, 349 Bass, David Eugene 34 Bassett, Connie Elaine Bassett, Gregory James Bassett, Lillian Crick Bastien, Charles Olivier 325 Batchelder, Phillip Karl Bates, David Lee 282, 392 Bates, Dean Edward Bates, Dolly Stephanie 330, 335, 392 Bates, Georgia 139, 150, 156 Margo B. 122-3 Bates, Ruth Ann Bates, Velma Lynne Batista, Humberto Coelho 297 Battle, Bobbi Ovett 426 Battle, Gregory Darnell Battle, Thomas Charles 349 Baucum, Cindie Jean Bauer, Herbert 40 Bauer, Joseph A. Jr. Baugh, Clyde Kimble Baugh, Michael Joe Bauman, Carl Nicholas Baumgardner, James Dimmick Baxley, Donna Marie Baxley, Jeffrey Darrell 406 Baxter, Mary Jo 301 Baxter, Thomas Reed Bayles, David L. Bays, Harold Edward 282 Beal, Andrew Allen Beal, Dr. Ernest 199 Beal, James David 382 Beals, Alan Lynn Beam, David Louis Beam, Kathy Lou Beam, Kimberly Ann Bean, Jerry Stephen 349 Beard, Betty Sanders Beard, Craig Alvin 218 Beard, James Douglas Beard, Judith Lee 406 Beard, Tommy Gerard Beard, Wendy Irene Beard, William Allen Jr. 327 Beasley, Betty Lou 406 Beasley, Larry Michael Beasley, Sam Thomas 277 Beaty, Michael Anthony Beaty, Patricia C. Beauchamp, Carl Michael Beauchamp, Patricia W. 382 Beaudoin, James Leonard Beamont, Garey Evans Beavin, Nancy Garell Beavin, William Herman 312, 330 Becht, Marcia Ann 336, 406 Becht, Ron Jack 224, 257 Bechtel, Deborah Self Bechtel, Terrance Warren Bechtel, Vicki Lynn 334 Beck, Alice Virginia Beck, Archie Ozell 392 Beck, Betty Ann Beck, Bonnie 148 Beck, Glenn Alan 321, 392 Beck, Gregory Robert 382 Beck, Martha Sue 392 Beck, Philip Eugene 142, 148 Beck, Ron 68-9, 98, 106, 142, 148 Beckelheimier, Pamela Becker, Christina Von N. Becker, George Robert Beckett, Melody Kay 406 Beckler, Bruce Howard 406 Beckley, George David 406, 420 Beckman, Chuck 63 Beckman, Kevin Welsch 392 Beckner, Lola Ruth Bedinger, Tucker Graham Jr. 272, 349 Beech, David 274 Beeler, Cheryl Ann Beeler, Cindy Lou Beeler, Ginger Ellen 382 Beeler, Terri Lynn Beesley, Sam Thomas Jr. 349 Begel, William B. Jr. Behm, Amy Franelle 392 Behm, Donna Lee 168-9, 382 Belcher, John Michael 392 Belcher, Lyle Thomas Bell, Anne Brooks Bell, Anthony Jerome 316 Bell, Billie Jean Bell, Bruce Edward Bell, Carol Bernice Bell, Clarence Thomas II Bell, Denver Warren Bell, George Stanley Bell, Gerald Lamont 316, 382 Bell, Jay Ronald Bell, Karen Denise Bell, Kendrick Earl Bell, Kenneth Jerome 314, 330 Bell, Lesa Yvonne 392 Bell, Linda Jean 287, 406 Bell, Lisa J. Bell, Patricia Lee Bell, Paul Alan 382 Bell, Rebecca 406 Bell, Rebecca Lynn Bell, Robert Dean 317 Bell, Robert Lowell 317, 406 Bell, Teresa Layne 340, 349 Bell, Thomas March Bell, William Michael Bellar, Jimmy Scott Bellingham, Sherry Frances Belt, Pamela Ann 305, 392 Belt, Sandra Faye 406 Belva, Mark Allan 392 Bena, Bernard Gene Benassi, Carmello John Jr. 315 Bendl, Terry Michael Bennett, Anne Braun Bennett, Anthony Boone Bennett, Bruce Lee Bennett, Clevie Mack Bennett, Cynthia Anne Bennett, Gina Rhea Bennett, Jennifer Ann 406 Bennett, Jo Nell 277, 282 Bennett, Kathy Jo Bennett, Kirby 217-9, 382 Bennett, Maury Thomas Bennett, Peri Lynn 407 Bennett, Ruth Ann 392 Bennett, Ty Sandford Bennight, Kathryn Affolter Bennight, Mark Alan Benningfield, Arland W. III Benningfield, Jerry Ray Benningfield, Kitty C. Benson, Brenda Kaye 305, 382 Benson, Cathy June 284, 349, 426 Benson, Debra Marie 382 Benson, Joseph Hamilton Benson, Steven Earl 53, 121, 276 Benson, Wilma Louise 292, 392 Bentley, Amy Louise Bentley, Deborah Kay 392 Bentley, Susan 349 Benton, Vanessa 274 Bereiter, Timothy James 218 Berg, James L. Jr. 275 Berger, Charles Stevens Bergmann, Ralph George 407 Berke, Margo Sue Berley, Benjamin Gordon Berlin, Kevin Jules Bernard, Wilson Wade Bernhardt, Sara Berry, Bonnie Lynne 273-5, 382 Berry, Cynthia Gayle Berry, Larry 148 Berry, Patricia Ann 339 Berry, Rodney Jason 392 Berry, Tamela Beth Berryman, Melody Ann 340, 382 Berryman, Roger Mitchell Berryman, Thomas Lynn 407 Berst, Mary Kathleen 255, 342, 407 Bertelson, Julianne K. 255, 334 Bertram, George Barry Jr. Bertram, Lawrence Wayne 299 Bertram, Maria Yvette 392 Bertram, Terry Carroll Beshear, Thomas Aubrey 277, 407 Best, Deborah Lynne Best, Helen Gay 382 Best, Kathryn Lynn 292, 349 Best, Stephen Lewis 392 Betts, Pamela Kay Betz, David Charles 217-8, 222, 249 Bewley, Gary Lee Bezek, Michael Leo Bezold, Mark Eugene Bibb, Toynia Oshea Bibbs, Sandra J. Bickel, David William Bickers, Rebecca Jo 407 Bickett, Patricia 340 Bideau, Brent Robert 392 Bideau, Noel Andrew 349 Bieber, Michael Henry Big Brothers and Big Sisters 12, 64-7, 318, 320-1, 322-3, 325, 327, 341 Biggers, Geoffrey Scott 326 Biggers, John Guyron 324, 382 Biggers, Mark Vaughn 326, 329-330 Biggs, Danny Ray Biggs, Elizabeth Culbreath Biggs, Roger Dale Bilbrey, Kathy Denise 349 Biller, Mark D. 407 Billingsley, Amy Lynch Billingsley, Cynthia Ann Billingsley, David Lee 318, 349 Billingsley, Jenny Joy 407 Bilyeu, Wilbur O. III Bingham, Jim 198 Binkley, Debra Lynn Binkley, Sally Ann Binnion, Beverly Gay 338 Biology dept. 199 Biology dept., head 199 Bird, Darrell Gene Birdwell, Cynthia Louise 407 Birkett, Kathryn Jean 30, 324, 328, 334, 349, 426 Bisceglia, Kevin Joseph Bise, Joel Steven Bishop, Beverly Rose 407 Bishop, Bradley Dean. 318 Bishop, Jerry C. Jr. 392 Bishop, Kevin Michael 306 Bishop, Robert N. Jr. Bishop, Sharon Lynn 308 Bitsko, Richard George 85, 88, 93, 303 Biven, Mark J. 258-261, 382 Bivens, Benita Gale 407 Bivins, Cynthia Faye Bivin, William 149, 155, 163 Bizer, Michael James 282, 392 Black Awareness Week 121 Black History Week 344 Black Oak Arkansas 98, 100, 105 Black, Rodger K. Black, Thomas Wayne 274, 407 Blackburn, Andrea Lynn Blackburn, Lee R. Blackburn, Mary Eileen Blackford, Betty J. Maddox Blackford, Kathy B. Blackman, Robert Brent 315 Blackout 26-7 Blacks Unite 121 Blackwood, Michael Edward 392 Blaine, Kevin Wood Blaine, Mary Linda Logan Blair, Charles Alan 127, 407 Blair, Kathy Elaine 407 Blair, Patricia Diann Blair, Rebecca Leigh 129, 349 Blair, Thomas Alan 312, 318 Blair, Timothy Laine Blair, Tina Ann 407 Blair, William III Blake, Yvonne Miller Blakely, Andrea Maye 273 Blakey, Gary Dean Blakey, Sh eryl Allison Blandford, Patrick Martin Blane, Wanda F. 239 Blaney, Michael James Blank, Donn Robert Blankenbaker, Katherine L. 349 Blankenship, Barry Scott Blankenship, Pamela Sue 282, 392 Blankenship, William Zeb Blann, Barry Lee 277, 317, 392 Blanton, Beth Kay Lane 238-9 Blanton, Mark Shearin Blanton, Randall Howard Blasi, Donald William 273 Bledsoe, James Harold Bledsoe, Ronnie Lee Blessing, Joy Gale 382 Blevins, Matt Dabney Blevins, Ruth Ann Blick, Jeri Lynn 382 Blick, Susan Cheryl 407 Blimm, Steven Robert Blincoe, Deloris Jean 407 Blincoe, Michael Lee Blincoe, William J. 407 Bloch, Debra Loveman 336, 392 Blomquist, Jean Ann 382 Bloomingburg, Charles D. 349 Blount, Cassandra Louise Bluegrass Boys 68 Bluhm, Dr. Georg 18-9 Bluhm, Marianne 79 Board of Regents 33, 35, 118, 138-141, 146 Boards, Mona Lisa Boarman, Janet Ann 407 Boarman, Steven Joseph 407 Boatwright, George William Boaz, Gene Dewitt Boberg, Bonnie Jean Boca, Mohammad Hady 349 Boca, Mohammad Mehdi Bochenko, Maurella Mary Bock, David Westbrook Bodenbender, Gerald Alan 382 Boeckmann, Terry Bernard Boehm, Steven Scott 407 Boemker, Mary Dee 287, 392 Boes, John Robert 255 Bogdan, Betsy 255, 266-7, 407 Boggess, John P. Boggs, Michael David Bohannon, John Lee II Bohannon, Rhonda Lynn 30, 342, 382 Bohanon, Bruce Wayne 349, 378 Bohanon, Kimberly Jan 392 Boka, Mohamad Jafar 392 Boldrick, Eugene Nevin Boles, Don Edward Boles, Kenny Dale 407 Boles, Wanda Joyce Bolin, Jennifer Jo 309 Bolle, Janet Louise 267, 407 Bolline, Ann Marie 407 Bollinger, Joe E. Jr. Bollinger, William Ellis Bolser, Mark Lyndan Bolt, Jon Christopher Bomar, Rebecca Joy Pardue 382 Bomar, Suzanne 62 Bombard, Luann Strausbaugh Bombay, Anthony John 285 Bond, Beverly Browning 407 Bond, David Keith Bond, Dennis Boyd 205, 392 Bondurant, Mary Nita Gray Bone, Kimberly Jean Boniske, Deborah Jean Bonmon, Bryan J. Bonner, Robert Sydney Bonneville, Cathy Elaine Bonney, Mary Ellan S. Booher, Kathleen Alison 340 Booker, Nancy Leigh 128, 328 Boone, David Brant 407 Boone, David Oliver Boone, Sandra Jean Boone, Stanley Louis 312 Booth, Suzanne Fitzgerald 349 Booth, William York Borders, Ann Hardesty Borders, Charles Terry Borders, Gary Allen Borders, Joseph Michael Borders, Teresa Ann 338 Borders, William Leon Jr. Boren, Connie Sue Borgstrom, Steven Robert Borho, Connie E. Lynch Bormann, David Patrick 218, 407 Borthick, Cindy Lee Bosma, David William 318, 393 Bossetta, Gloria Mary Boston, Charles Leroy Jr. Boston, Denise Lynne 407 Boston, Eugene Stevens 307 Boswell, Cynthia Lynn Boswell, Joseph Edward Boswell, Karen D. 393 Boswell, Susan Lyn Boteler, Janet Faye 291 Boteler; Karen Marie Botkin, Thomas Elwood Botler, Lisa 189 Botner, Gregory George Botner, Lisa Frances 382 Bott, Bonita Gail 350 Bottego, Maria Elizabeth 393 Bottom, Elizabeth Ann Bottom, Robert Curtis Botts, Susan Juanita 393 Boucher, Melissa Hope Boughey, Donna Marie 350 Bouhl, Robert Jerome Bow, Beverly Ann Bowen, Ginny Lynn Bowen, Hoyt Edwin Bowen, Sherry Lynne 407 Bowers, Bobby Stephen 275, 382 Bowers, Cynthia Ruth Bowers, Hubert Smith 393 Bowland, Michael Babb Bowles, Betty Ann Bowles, Bobby Linwood Bowles, Janet Stargel 382 Bowles, Nancy Ann 382 Bowles, Pamela Eileen 306, 382 Bowles, Phyllis Sharon 350 Bowlin, Karen Joy 407 Bowling, George Sinclair 299, 407 Bowling Green Community College and Continuing Education, dean 153, 159, 210 Bowling, James Daniel 299, 325, 330 Bowling, Joseph Kevin 218, 253, 407 Bowling, Kathleen Bowling, Susan Elizabeth 350 Bowling, Theresa Kim Bowman, Arlene Elliott Bowman, Donald Anthony 407 Bowman, Donald Edward Bowman, Ginger Rose Bowman, James Garland II 350 Bowman, Lisa A. 393 Bowman, Mary Lyn 405 Bowman, Sherman Thomas Bowman, Teresa Ann 308, 393 Bowser, Bryan Wade 323 Boyd, Adrian Clayton, Jr. 203, 393 Boyd, Allison Anne 336, 407 Boyd, Bernard Lee 319 Boyd, Betty Jean Boyd, David L. Boyd, Felicia 64-6 Boyd, Omelia June 393 Boyd, Robert Dallas Jr. Boyd, William Houston Jr. Boyer, Dave Willard 277, 407 Boyken, William Coleman 305 Boykin, Thermis Juan 350 Boylan, Cathy Diane 63, 334 Boylan, Susan Lynn 328, 334, 350 Boyles, Douglas Allen Bozarth, Richard Alan 407 Boze, Melinda Frances 271, 407 Brackin, Billie June Braden, Linda Mary Braden, Shawn Marie 334 Bradford, David Allen Bradford, Dennis Vass 407 Bradford, Julie Ann 393 Bradford, Karen Sue 350 Bradford, Mark Douglas Bradford, Steven Victor Bradley, Andra 88 Bradley, Angie Lagail 264, 393 Bradley, Fayetta Bradley, Harry Stephen 293 Bradley, Janet Laverdiere 382 Bradley, Nancy Ellen Bradley, Sandra 88 Bradshaw, Anthony Miguel Bradshaw, Judy Gail Fann Bradshaw, Sheri Lyn 340 Brady, Bridget Eileen 92, 273, 393 Brady, Michael Lee Brady, Sallie Patricia Brainard, David Alan 407 Brainard, Ted Ernest 382 Brakke, Debra Coleen 393 Braley, Michael Charles Bramblett, Woodrow Wilson 382 Bramer, Benita Margaret Bramer, George David Bramschreiber, John K. 407 Brandenburg, Joe William 321, 382 Brandner, Steven Jay 350 Brandon, Steven Lemuel 257, 407 Brandon, Susan Elaine 382 Brandt, Peter Arlan 307, 350 Branson, Jody Rae 350 Branstetter, Carol Faye 350 Branstetter, Lee Ann 18, 382 Brantley, Allison Brantley, Delmer Lee 350 Braselton, Debra Ann Kiddy Brashear, Joel Douglas Brashear, William Harold Bratcher, Bennett Farris 324, 345 Bratcher, Deborah Hammett Bratcher, James Allen 350 Bratcher, Karen Suzanne 350 Bratcher, Rita K. Todd Bratcher, Sarah Lee Bratton, Patricia 393 Brawner, John Leland 315 Bray, Christopher Earl Bray, Jeannie Kay Bray, Patricia M. Sears Brazley, Carl Eugene 218, 382 Brazley, William Isaac Jr. Breckel, Dana Sue 407 Breeden, Kenneth Ray Breeden, Roger Dale Breeding, Lou Anne Breedlove, Ronald Gene Breen, Philip James 407 Breiwa, Gary Robert Brennan, David Michael 393 Brennan, Diane Elaine 382 Brenner, Dr. Kenneth 164 Brents, Shirley Ann Brenzel, Sally Losson 330, 338, 393 Bresler, Rebecca Jane Bretz, Barbara Ann 334, 350 Brevit, Valery Lee Brewer, David Robert 274, 407 Brewer, Deborah Lynn 407 Brewer, John Edward III 218, 393 Brewington, Teresa Anne 407 Brian, Charles Francis Brian, Christopher Lee Brian, Monica Lynn Brick 98, 100, 105-6, 121 Bridgeman, Dennis Edward 350 Bridges, Derf James Bridges, Donna Kathaleen 271, 383 Bridges, Paul Neville Jr. 350 Bridgewater, Linda S. 393 Bridwell, Cheryl Louise 407 Bridwell, Ruby Dianne Brieske, Tom Al Briggs, Gregory Neal Briggs, Melonie Diane 295, 407 Brightup, Dale Allen Brisby, Sheryl Ann 393 Briscoe, William Albert 407 Brite, James William Jr. 393 Britt, Barry Lynn Britt, Barton Lee 347, 358-9 Britt, Beverly Elaine Britt, Deborah S. 407 Britt, Donald James Britt, Mary Frances 393 Britt, Rex Darrell 4 Britt, Vicki Hatcher Britten, William Gerard 350 Brittingham, Deborah Ann Brittingham, Stephen Allen 247, 330 Britton, Rita Jane 341 Brizendine, Clint 327 Brizendine, Ginger Darlene 407 Broadley, Anthony Lynn 407 Broadwell, Timothy William Brock, Linda Susan 393 Brockman, Debra Lynn Brockman, Donnie 306 Brodarick, Michael Victor 326, 383 Brodarick, Pamela Therese 407 Brodhacker, Clyde Lloyde 218 Brodsky, William David 393 Brodt, John Charles 306, 351 Brooks, Alan Ray Brooks, Beverly Ann 393 Brooks, Connie Elizabeth Brooks, David 285 Brooks, Gary Dale Brooks, Giles Alice Faye Brooks, Katherine E. Brooks, Malia Shaw 289, 383 Brooks, Paula B. Johnson Brooks, Ray Edward 253 Brooks, Rebecca Hope Brooks, Regina Lou Brooks, Roger 196 Brooks, Timothy Glen 224 Broomall, Sallye Anne Brosche, Alan Murray Brosche, William C. Brothers, Stephen Bruce Brotzge, Joan Denise Broughton, Ernest Ray Broughton, Jeffrey Burl 393 Browder, Bever ly Browder, Joe Alexander Brown, Anthony Maurice Brown, Carl Lee Brown, Carol 174, 296 Brown, Carol Jean 351 Brown, Cathy Sue 342 Brown, Charles Herbert Brown, Cindy Jo Brown, Corby Hugh 383 Brown, Danny Lee Brown, Danny Leon Brown, David Allen 393 Brown, David Bradford Brown, David Kent 407 Brown, Debra Jolene Brown, Donald Lee Brown, Douglas Wayne Brown, Ernest Eugene Brown, Gail Lynne 335 Brown, Gloria Jean 335, 447 Brown, Gregory Keith 383 Brown, James Elmore 317, 330, 407 Brown, James Seay Jr. 317, 330 Brown, James William 317, 330 Brown, Judy Karen Vaughn Bro wn, Katherine Ann Brown, Kevin Gilbert Brown, Kimberly Gayle Brown, Lenwood 351 Brown, Leonard 200 Brown, Lisa Beth Brown, Lou Ann Brown, Mark Dana Brown, Mark Douglas 351 Brown, Markeata June 393 Brown, Mary Eleanor 407 Brown, Mary Louise Brown, Melayna Ann 272 Brown, Michael Lawrence 407 Brown, Mike Anthony 407 Brown, Pamela Jane 336, 393 Brown, Patricia Ellen Brown, Phil Allan 383, 393 Brown, Phillip H. Brown, Polly Sue 383 Brown R. Gail Lutz Brown, Richard M. 327, 393 Brown, Richard Morgan Brown, Rickie Fay 383 Brown, Robert Lewis 407 Brown, Robin Hammond Brown, Serita Colette 409 Brown, Sherry Gail Brown, Stanley Walton 393 Brown, Steven Ray 322 Brown, Thomas Wayne Brown, Valerie Sue 383 Brown, Virginia Ruth 383 425 Barton, B. Brown, V. Brown, William H. 407 Brown, William Henry Brown, Yvonne Renee 335 Brownfield, James Alan 409 Browning, Darla Jill Browning, Janet Ruth Browning, Mary Louise Browning, Robert Ewell 288, 291 Bruce, Donald Edward 351, 383 Bruce, George Edward 320, 351 Bruce, Rebecca Lynn Bruce, Robert Carrol Jr. 327 Bruce, Robert Jackson Bruce, William Lynn Brumback, Cherie Lynn Brumback, Toni Gail Brumfield, Jane Coles 4 6-7, 89, 351 Brumfield, Michael Boyd 46-7 Brumfield, Stanley 163 Brumleve, Ronald Lee Bruner, Laura Duff 393 Brunette, James Allen Brunton, Stephen Ray Bryan, Sandra Elaine 393 Bryant, Aaron Lawrence 227-8, 230, 233 Bryant, Brenda Kay Bryant, Cheryl Lynn Bryant, Christopher Neal Bryant, Douglas Maurice Bryant, Elizabeth Irene 285, 393 Bryant, Gary Lee Bryant, Henry Edward III Bryant, James David Jr. Bryant, Judith Elaine 336 Bryant, Karen Sue 383 Bryant, Mary Sue 393 Bryant, Pamela Sue Bryant, Shawn Ratliff 383 Buchanan, Beth Ann 92, 273, 303, 383 Buchanan, Claudette D. Onie 351 Buchanan, Cynthia Louise Buchanan, Janet Dorene 351 Buchanan, Joe Reid 71 Buchanan, Karen Lee 351 Buchanan, Mary Jane Buchanan, Rebecca Gail 409 Buchanan, Steve Bruce 383 Buchanan, Teresa Lynn Buchert, Patti Ann Buchta, Mark Aurther L. Buck, James Thomas 260-1 Buck, Sheila Jill 341, 383 Buck, Sheila Leigh 341 Buck, William Drew Buckles, Cathy Dean 308, 336, 383 Buckles, Paula Kim 393 Bucklew, Leslie Wayne Bucklew, Patricia R. Buckley, Matthew Welsh 249 Bucklin, Jean Ann 282, 393 Buckman, William 140-1 Buckner, Darlene Buckner, James F. Buckner, Stephanie Jean Bucy, Harold Thomas Budde, Mary Dale 351 Buehl, Robert Frederick 409 Bueker, Robert 199-200 426 Brown, W. Carter, B. Bueker, Robert Michael 383 Bueker, Susan Elizabeth Buford, Cynthia Denise Buford, Ricky Ray 276, 383 Buford, Theresa Ann Bui, Thuy Van Building Renovations 38-9 Bullington, Barry D. 351 Bullock, Bobby Ray Bullock, Peter Sutton 318 Bunch, Brenda McClendon Bunch, Deborah Kay 113 Bunch, Joseph Edward 203 Bunch, Kenneth Wayne 393 Bunch, Marcella Ree Bunch, Sharon Sue Bunch, Susan Beth Bundy, John Richard Buntin, Cheryl Ann Buntin, Karen Ann Buntin, Kathy Ann Bunton, Denise Munsel 408 Burbach, Daniel Raymond Burbach, Gregory Carl 128, 228, 230, 233 Burbage, Randell 218 Burchett, Amanda Gayle B. Burchett, James Roger Burchet t, Myra Gertrude 305, 383 Burd, Jill Lynn 356 Burd, Larry 200 Burden, Gerald Ray Burden, Kimberly Jo 409 Burden, Patricia Lou Burden, Ralph Clinton 313 Burden, Teresa Kay 351 Burden, Wayne 290 Burden, Wayne Andrew Burden, William Randell Burdette, John Russell Burditt, Robin Lynn 393 Burfict, Theodore 320, 383 Burgher, Lillian 409 Burgher, Suzanne 409 Burgin, Harriette Anne Burka, Jean Frances 383 Burkart, Vivian Patricia Burke, Dennis Craig 409 Burke, Mark Andrew Burke, Michael David 393 Burke, Michael Gregory Burke, Ted James 393 Burkeen, Phillip Cardwell 318 Burket, Robert Mahlon Burkey, Edward G. Burks, Janna Linn 351 Burks, Joseph Aldridge Burks, Tommy Ray Burn, Phil M. 291 Burnam, Claudia Elizabeth Burness, Wanda Walden Burnett, Donald Bruce 393 Burnett, Judy Lynn Burnett, Margena 383 Burnette, Mary Lou 393 Burnette, Sarah Meeks 393 Burns, Amy Louise Burns, Bernard Dale Burns, Caroline Morton 352 Burns, Danny Ray 327 Burns, Mary Jane 409 Burns, Maureen Theresa 393 Burns, Samuel Ross 393 Burns, William Courtney Burrell, Thomas Robert Burris, Marion Hall Burrus, John Edward Burt, Catherine Pogue Burton, Anita C. Burton, James Bassett 276, 352, 427 Burton, Jane Blair 393 Burton, Jeff H. Burton, Jennifer Susan Burton, Karen Lee Burton, Patricia Ellen 308, 352 Burton, Sharon Yvonne Burton, Stephen Douglas Burton, Teresa Marlene 383 Burton, Tracey Lynn Burtt, Maria Gallini Busby, Sherron Annie 409 Busche, David Allan Bush, Arthur J. 300 Bush, Beryl Candice 300, 383 Bush, Carlotta Kay 255, 264, 352 Bush, Deborah Joann 352, 427 Bush, Hezekiah Leigh 383 Bush, Larry Wade 293 Bush, Lisa Coomer 383 Bush, Ricky Glenn 393 Bush, Robert Thomas 383 Bushong, Robert Hudson Business administration dept. 193 Business administration dept., head 193 Business Affairs, vice pres. 118, 120, 155 Business education and office administration dept. 192 Business education and office administration dept. head 192 Business-minded 191 Bussell, Judy Catherine Bussey, Donna Nelson Butcher, Terry Lynn Butler, Beth Ann Riggs Butler, Bryant Arthur Butler, David Allen 383 Butler, Debra Jean 409 Butler, Donald Carrol 409 Butler, Frankey Leon Butler, Kathy Ann Butler, Kathy Sue Butler, Kenny Dewayne Butler, Pamela Gayle 352 Butler, Patricia Ann 383 Butler, Raybon 352 Butler, Robin Lester 409 Butt, Ronald Dean Butts, Barbara Genise Butts, Dianne Louise 269, 288, 314, 332-3, 383 Butts, Selvin Hardin Buzzard, Deborah Anne 383 Buzzard, Jeffrey Mitchell Bybee, Martha Sue Byerly, Thomas Clifton Byrd, Brian Joe Byrd, George Keith 21 Byrd, Glenda Lou Byrd, Nancy Kay 284, 393 Byrd, Ronald Bernard 320 Byrd, Samuel Anthony 316 Byrn, Philip McSwain Byrne, Steven Michael 325 Cage, Ann Love 271, 288, 383 Caillouet, Larry M. 272 Cain, Kelly David Cain, Peter James Cain, Ronald Alan 304, 352 Caines, Doreen Jaye 383 Caldwell, Catherine Clark 340 Caldwell, Charles Robert 352 Caldwell, Elmer Ray 218 Caldwell, Mary Margaret Calhoun, Jessie Louise 255 Calhoun, Richard Kevin Calhoun, Vicki Ann 393 Calk, Joe Kevin Callahan, Judith Marie C. Callaway, Garry Douglas 352 Callis, James Timmons 324, 383 Callis, Stephen Lewell 409 Callis, William Casey 324 Calloway, Elizabeth Lee 409 Calo, Stephanie Lynn 409 Calvert, Gary Samuel 409 Calvert, Marla Moore Calvert, Steve Alan Calvert, Todd Bascom Calvin, Raymond Bruce Cambron, Joseph William Cameron, Christopher W. 327, 393 Camp, Barbara Ann 383 Camp, Diana Mae 255, 409 Campbell, Anne Leslie 383 Campbell, Gwen Dahl 409 Campbell, James Wilton Campbell, Joe 119 Campbell, Judith Sue Campbell, Keith Jay 293 Campbell, Kent 294-5 Campbell, Melissa Jean Campbell, Rebecca Lynne 294 Campbell, Susan Elaine 409 Campbell, Timothy Lee Campbell, Valarie Bonita 383 Camplin, Kirk Daniel Campos, Reyes Javier Campus Structures enlarged, renovated 119 Cann, Kenneth 191 Cannon, Patrick Terence 383 Cannon, Steven Christopher Cannon, Tony 393 Canon, William Harold III Cansler, Catherine Rose 383 Cansler, Donna Lynne Cantler, Fredrick Q. 218, 324 Cantwell, James Mark 353 Caples, Kenneth Lynn Cappony, Nicholas Capps, Carolyn Jean 393 Capps, Cathy Lynn 409 Capps, Randall 173 Capps, Richie Allen 317 Capps, Roy Fred Jr. 352 Capps, Virginia Ann 352 Capsel, Tracy Lee Carby, Betty Lee 393 Carby, Bobbi Jo Carby, Sherry Lynn Card, Michael Flynn 63, 409 Card, Michael Judson 350 Cardenas, Jorge M. Cardenas, Juan Manuel Carder, Saundra Estelle 285 Cardwell, Allen Keith Cardwell, Mary Ann Cardwell, Michael Long 352 Carey, Debra Jo 383 Carey, Kitty Colleen 409 Carey, Ralph William 324 Carl, Margaret Anne Carlisle, Wendell Freddie 259-260 Carlock, Janet Lynne 352 Carlotta, Ava Maria 340, 393 Carlson, Georgiana Lynn 330, 342 Carlson, Gwen Axel Carman, Douglas W. Carman, John Martin 301 Carman, Ralph Hancox Jr. Carmichael John Kenneth Carmody, Vickie Ann 393 Carneal, Joyce Kennedy 352 Carney, Billy Howard 288, 383 Carpenter, George E. Jr. 29, 217-8, 223, 402 Carpenter, James Dennis Carpenter, Martha Carol Carpenter, Michael Graydon 255 Carpenter, Robbie Suzette Carpenter, Steve 409 Carpenter, Steven Paul Carpenter, Tina Ruth 409 Carr, Del H. Jr. 383 Carr, Gina S. 409 Carr, Jeffrey Wade 409 Carr, John B. 306 Carr, Jon Clark 383 Carr, Margaret Louise Carr, Robin Serese Carr, Susan Patrice 305, 383 Carrel, William Stanley Carrender, Wayne Robison 299 Carrier, Donna M. Floyd Carrigg, Stephen 224 Carroll, Alesa Ann 393 Carroll, Colleen Marie Carroll, Gov. Julian 120, 134, 139 Carroll, Kenneth Morton 134, 315 Carroll, Larry Raymond Carroll, Victoria L. Carson, Donald Dale Carson, Laura Ruth 383 Carson, Tammy Sue 409 Carter, Arthur Stanley Carter, Barbara Ann Carter, Brenda Elaine Carter, Brenda Mae 352 Carter, Carolyn Sue 393 Carter, Daniel William Carter, Darlene Marie 352 Carter, Elizabeth Ann 408 Carter, Eric Lynn Carter, Eulin Jr. Carter, James Evans Carter, James Warren Carter, Jay Dean 248-9 Carter, Jeffrey Calvin CCarter, Judith Lynn Carter, Kathleen Lee Carter, Larry Wayne Carter, Linda Fay 309, 393 Carter, Margaret Anne 383 Carter, Marilyn Faye Carter, Neville Bruce Carter, Pamela Jo 409 Carter, Patricia Gayle 409 Carter, Patrick Coleman Carter, Phillip Jeffery Carter, Richard Reed Ca rter, Rita Faye Whitely Carter, Steven Allan 409 Carty, Glenn David Carty, Kathryn Dee 383 Carver, Stephanie M. Carver, Timothy Marvin Carwell, Ann 393 Carwell, David Hargis Cary, Rhonda Kay 409 Casady, Melanie Kay Case, Debra Jeanne 409 Case, Gerald David Case, Omer Dean Jr. Casey, Kerry Wayne 304, 383 Cash, Cynthia Lynn Cash, Hazel Sue Cash, Joseph Terrance Cash, Merritt William 352 Cash, Mildred Gayle 352 Cash, Patricia Jean 352 Cash, Susan Elayne 393 Cash, Susan Ennis Caskey, Nora Constance 308-9, 427 Cassady, Donald Lee Cassady, Paula Gail 409 Cassady, Robert Wayne Cassilly, Karen Ruth Castellanos, Gilberto R. Castiglioni, Frederick Castillo-Roja s, Rafael L. Castle, James Steven 255 Castle, Joey Edward Castle, Terrie Ann 409 Castleberry Cheryl Lynn 277, 352 Castlen, Michael Elwood Caswell, B. Katherine T. Caswell, Karin Lynn 352 Catarozoli, Gina Maria Cates, Shirley Ann Russ Catlett, Elizabeth Yvonne 393 Catron, Donald Barry Caudel, David Lynn 352 Causey, Kathy Lee 352 Causey, Russell Woodson 274, 393 Cavana, Jeffrey Jay 249 Cave, Larry Lee Cavender, Rhonda Durham Cavin, John Phillip Cebula, Casey Michael 228, 230 Cecil, Anthony Dominic 393 Cecil, Guy Alan Cecil, James Philip Cecil, Mary Ann 352 Cecil, Michael David Center Board 12, 68-71 Center for Intercultural and Folk Studies 174 Center for Intercultural and Folk Studies, director 174 Centimole, Marcotte T. Centrowitz, Gerald Peter 224, 352 Cerk, Keith R. 247 . Cero, Craig John Cerroni, Renee Ann Cesler, Stephen Michael 352 Chaffee, Georgia Carolyn D. Chaffin, Elizabeth Jill Chambers, Amy Kay 383 Chambers, Barry Fount Chambers, Edward Clay Chambers, Julie Ann 409 Chambers, Lisa Maria Chambers, Norman Dale 307, 383 Chambers, Stephen Bruce 92, 303, 352 Chambers, Thomas Roper Jr. 298, 327, 352 Chambers, Vivian Rochelle Chambliss, Randy J. Chambul, Lubomyr 256 Chan, Li Ching 56-7 Chan, Tai-Fang 56-7 Chancellor, Colin Embry 315, 330 Chancey, Kathleen Ann 352 Chancey, Ronica Lynn 338, 409 Chandler, Benjamin F. Chandler, David Gerald 321 Chandler, Kelley Lee 341, 393 Chandler, Mary Jill Chandtarasupt, Pimolsuang Chang, Chun Chih 304 Chang, Liang-Wuen Chang, Yang I Channels, Nancy Mae 393 Chapman, Brenda Nell 237-246 Chapman, Cynthia Lou Chapman, Daniel Keith 327 Chapman, Jerry Wayne 409 Chapman, Marilyn Jean 283, 352 Chapman, Mary Sue 393 Chapman, Michele Ann Chapman, Norma Jean 287, 393 Chapman, Paul Edward 409 Chapman, William Scott 409 Chappell, Carl Leon Jr. 274-5 Chappell, Jeffrey Scott 257, 383 Charlie Daniels Band 98, 100, 105, 107 Charlton, Desiree Lynn Chase, Barbara Jean Chase, William John Chastain, Jeffry Thomas 313, 383 Chasteen, Gregory Taylor Chatari, Laura Lee 409 Chatelain, Kathleen M. 409 Chaudoin, Sherry Delene 409 - Who's Who “WHO'S WHO IN AMERICAN COLLEGES AND UNIVERSI- _ TIES: (Front row) T. Edge, C. Benson, J. Provost, R. Dearen, J. Markland, K. Birkett, B. Stafford, T. Gamble, B. Battle. (Second row) M. Hankla, B. Moore, R. Williams, D. Ralston, P. Miller, B. Ashcraft, C. Caskey, B. Thomerson, T. Jewell, D. Dunn, J. Weaver. (Third row) G. Ballard, D. Emerson, D. Garner, D. ‘Witten, K. Pepper, T. Curtis, C. Murphy, B. Osborn, D. Bush, C. Edgington, J. Mueller, V. Driver, D. Danhauer. (Back row) C. Hardin, J. Burton, D. Spisich, P. Clark, J. Hayden, R. Reker, B. Miller, T. Appling, R. Daugherty, M. Fritch. (Absent) G. Broder- ick, D. Gibson, E. Hastie, K. Sanders, L. Sergent, D. Stapleton, T. Stites. : : Chauypong, Preecha Cheatwood, Pamela Sue Chedd, Kevin Glenn 276, 383 Cheerleaders 242-3 Cheirs, Ricky Gene Chelf, Carl 153, 159, 210 Chemistry dept. 200 Chemistry dept. head 200 Chen, Wenkuan Chenault, Alicia Joy Chenault, Keith Brian Chenault, Thomas Edward 393 Cherry, David Glenn 352 Cherry, Dinah Ellen 409 Cherry, Doris Elizabeth Cherry, Gregory Wayne 300 Cherry, Kathy Jan Cherry, Laymon Strother Cherry, Lee Courtland 327 Cherry, Murry Leyton Jr. Cherry, Sande Kay 410 Cherry, Sylvia Lorette 410 Chesnut, Mark Cameron 255 Chest, Louise Carolyn 264 Chester, Jennifer 52 Cheuvront, Karl Russell Jr. 276, 324, 383 Chi Omega 269, 310-1, 328-9, 338, 345 Chiang, Pei Wen. Chick, Jon Blair 285 Child, Betsy 253 Childers, Shawn Brian 284 Childers, Steven Childers, Teresa Gayle Childress, Buddy 17, 19, 160 Childress, Charles Lee Childress, Fonzole 24 Childress, Norma Jean 410 Chilson, Kathy Sue Chinery, Randall Nye 249 Chinn, Jean Ann Chinn, Julie Ann 393 Chitwood, Lisa Ann 338 Chobor, Anna Marie 410 Chou, Nee Yin Norma Chrappa, Richard 345 Chrappa, Robert Lee Chrisman, Celeste P. Christ, Joan Lynne 410 Christian, Denise Ann 282 Christian, James Ronald Christian, Katherine B. Christian, Virginia Dell Christmas, Teresa Anne 383 Chuemchit, Namporn Chumley, Marsh William 318 Church, Sharon Duncan Chyle, Vicki Costello Cianciolo, Jean Cissell, Lisa Gayle Civils, Charles Henry 288, 352 Clagett, Mary Lisa 274 Claiborne, Martha Ann Clardy, Hazel V. 393 Clardy, Mark Lawrence Clark, Alan Martin Clark, Allan 293-4 Clark, Anthony Conrad Clark, Barbara Faye 393 Clark, Beckey Eilene 410 Clark, Carolyan Ann Clark, Charles 158 Clark, Charles Dale Clark, Charlotte, Elai..e 410 Clark, Christopher Lynn Clark, Curtis Dencil Clark, Dale Woodall 317 Clark, David Bryce 282, 324, 383 Clark, Donna Lynn Clark, Dorothy Bonzene 352 Clark, Elizabeth Flowers 393 Clark, Emmett Michael Clark, Esther Marie Clark, Fred Gerard 352 Clark, Gary Michael 313, 383 Clark, Gene Philip 353 Clark, Howard Brown 374 Clark, Jackie Lynn 410 Clark, Jacqueline Dianne Clark, John Marshall 284 Clark, Jolene J. Clark, Julie Ann Clark, Karen Lane 393 Clark, Leo Stephen Clark, Lillie Mae 309, 339 Clark, Lisa Ellen Clark, Marc Jimmie Clark, Mark A. Clark, Mark Allan Clark, Mark Anthony Clark, Mattie Susan Clark, Miteh 317 Clark, Paul 284 Clark, Paula Ann Clark, Peter Larson 427 Clark, Rita Lynn Clark, Robert Lindsay 410 Clark, Robert Lloyd Clark, Roger Allan 277 Clark, Roger Dixon Clark, Sally 73, 383 Clark, Sam 218 Clark, Saundra Karen Clark, Sherry Elaine 393 Clark, Steven Lynn Clark, Susan 353 Clark, Susan Gayle 393 Clark, Victoria Lynnee 410 Clark, Wayne Scott 393 Clarke, Sandra Christine Clarke, Theodore Hughes Clasby, Cheryl Leanne 289, 393 Clay, Leonard Erskine 410 Clay, Michael James 224 Clay, Sheila Renette 214 Clayton, Joseph Allen Clayton, Sharon Rose Clayton, William Alan Claywell, Julia Goodin 383 Claywell, Kenneth Curtis Cleaver, Norman Allen 320 Cleaver, Wendi Dee 410 Cleek, Nora 410 Clem, Anita Carol Clem, James Lee Clements, Deborah Kay 322, 393 Clements, Donald Perry Clements, Joseph Francis Clements, Linda Kaye Clements, Mark Timothy 315 Clements, Mary Louise Clements, Robert Harold Clements, Sandra Wilson 410 Clements, Steve Clements, Terry Lee 393 Cleveland, Martha White 393 Cleveland, Ronald Ralph Cleveland, Wendell L. Clifford, James Carroll Cline, Allen Eugene Cline, Danny Joe Cline, Grant P. 345 Cline, Roger Allan Cline, Susan Elaine Cloar, Jan Camille 338, 410 Close Encounters of the Fun Kind 50-1 Close, Gisela H. Cloud, Mary Kay 393 Cloud, Patricia Laurene P. Cloyd, Brenda Ann 282, 393 Coates, Lenora Michelle 310 Coates, Regina F. Woodcock Coatney, Patricia Ann Coats, Betty Rose Cobb, Bobby, Edwin Cobb, Brenda J. Winn 353 Cobb, Carolyn Faye 353 Cobb, James Bruce Cocanougher, Tommy Joe 393 Cochran, Stephen Sanders 318, 353 Cocke, Mary Elizabeth Cockrel, Angela Dawn 410 Cockrill, Terry Susan 383 Cockrill, Willard 204 Cofer, Joseph Herbert 410 Coffey, Anna Marie 410 Coffey, Carla 264-5 Coffey, Cathy Ann 353 Coffey, Daryl R. Coffey, Kathy Lynn Bunch 308, 353 Coffey, Robert Bruce 276 Coffey, Ronald Steven Coffey, Tony Howard 353 Coffie, Jane Marie 410 Coffman, Ann Leigh 338 Coffman, Charles Thomas Jr. Coffman, Connie Louise 393 Coffman, Ralph Eric 383 Coffman, Tammy Lynn Coffman, William Anthony Cohen, Lawrence Mark Cohron, Karen Ann 393 Cohron, Merry Beth Cohron, Terry Glyn n Cohron, Van Carlton Coile, Melinda Jean Coker, Nancy Lee Coker, Tammy Gaye 410 Colburn{ Tina Oneil 410 Cole, Alice Denise 342 Cole, Benjamin Mark Cole, Betty Carolyn 393 Cole, Cheryl Ann 393 Cole, Clarence Thomas Cole, Cynthia Helen Conn Cole, David Russell 383 “ale, Dwayne Emanuel cole, Evon Louise 339 Cole, Gary Lee Cole, J. David 139-141, 330, 334 Cole, Jeffery Lynn Cole, Julia Lynn 334, 383 Cole, Kathryn Duncan Cole, Lesli Jeanenc Cole, Lonnie Kyle 134, 308, 353 Cole, Marcia Jewel 264 Cole, Mark Lanze Cole, Patti Morris Cole, Paul Franklin Cole, Ronald K. Cole, Rosalyn Yvette 410 Cole, Sharyn Jeanine Cole, Sheila Anne 410 Cole, Sherri Lee Cole, Stephen Dale Cole, Talma Anna Cole, Theodore John Coleman, Billenda Coleman, Billy Joe 410 Coleman, Brian Keith 319 Coleman, Charles Edward Coleman, Donna Anne Coleman, Janice Lee 337 Coleman, Mary Jean Coleman, Randall Leo Coleman, Timothy Ray 393 Coleman, Tuwanda 410 Coles, Marybeth 410 College Heights Bookstore, director 160 College Heights Foundation 151 College Heights Foundation, executive secretary-treasurer 150, 156 College Heights Foundation, pres. 151 College Heights Herald 152 College of Applied Arts and Health 182-5 College of Applied Arts and Health, dean 182 College of Business and Public Affairs 190-3 College of Business and Public Affairs, asst. dean 191 College of Business and Public Affairs, dean 190 College of Business and Public Affairs, interim dean 190-1 College of Education 164-7 College of Education, associate dean 164 College of Education, asst. dean for instruction 166 College of Education, dean 164 College Reading Improvement Program 170-1 : Collett, Bobbie Ann Collett, Bonnie Jean 292 Collier, Hollis Rogers Collier, Michael Eugene 3 93 Collier, Reginald Spencer 121, 393 Collins, Al Harold 410 Collins, Ann Tracy Collins, Barry Anthony Collins, Betty Teresa 410 Collins, David John Collins, Garland Collins, Geraldine Chaffin Collins, Glen Charles 289 Collins, James Samuel Collins, Jamie Owen 284 Collins, Jane Marshall 338 Collins, Jaska Ann Collins, Joe Terrel Collins, Joyce Elaine 282, 309 Collins, Karen Ann Collins, Mary Chamberlain Collins, Mary Joyce 383 Collins, Molly Sue Collins, Nancy Sue Collins, Roy Del 321 Collins, Stephanie M. Collins, Thomas David 293 Collins, Wendy Annette Collins, Willard Lamont 410 Colombo, Le isa Gail 393 Colson, Richard Kelly 312 Colter, Ronald Roosevelt 331, 383 Colyer, Deborah Tyann Colyer, Donald Lee 315, 353 Combest, Rickey Ray Combs, Craig Thomas Combs, Eddie Borton Combs, James Clinton 410 Combs, Nancy Allyn Combs, Tammy Lynn 410 Combs, Teresa Louise 393 Combs, Whit 88-9 Comfort, Paul Motley Communication and Theatre dept. 173 Communication and Theatre dept., head 173 Commuters 72-5 Compton, Daniel Lee Compton, Mark Gregory 410 Compton, Sheren Lee 393 Computers 36-7 Computers and informational services 153 Concerts 98-107 Conder, Ruth Ann Condit, Teresa Helena 353 Condit, Thomas William 224-5 Conkin, Cynthia Jo 410 Conkin, Robert Daniel Conley, Franklin 165 Conley, Linda Jane 393 Conley, Pamela Jean 393 Conn, Kenneth Craig Connell, Rita Eileen Connelly, Paul Crawford Jr. Conner, Debbie 353 Conner, Fonza Lynn Conner, Sharon Denise 410 Conner, Shirley Ellen 332, 393 Conners, Sharon 309 Conners, Stefanie 334 Connor, George Wallace 383 Conover, Rita Fay 383 Conrardy, Patrick John 321 Conrardy, St - = © in Constans, Elizabeth Leigh 330, 338 Constant, Gary Gene 393 Constant Sallye Lynn Constantinou, Stavros Conventions and trips 306-7 Convey, Janet Ruth Conway, James Aubrey Conway, Joseph Hunter Conyers, Mark Thomas Coohill, Tom 282 Cook, Charlotte Elaine 393 Cook, Desta Darlene 347, 393, 400 Cook, Elizabeth J. Givens Cook, Ellen Jeanniene Cook, Janet Leigh 410 Cook, Jeannine Louise 298 Cook, June Elizabeth Cook, Kathy Ann 342 Cook, Ken Turner 306 Cook, Lea Ann Hodges Cook, Lesa F. Cook, Lisa Marie Cook, Lori Darlene Cook, Louis 17 Cook, Pamela S. 410 Cook, Patricia Ann 35, 383 Cook, Paul 142-5 Cook, Phyllis Ann 128, 284, 353 Cooke, Cynthia Lynn 410 Cooke, Janetlyn 296 Cooke, Kenneth Brian 223, 272, 291 Cooke, Leslie Ann 393 Cooksey, Teresa Jane 336, 393 Coombs, Terri Lynn Coomer, Betty Jean Coomer, Bobbie J. Powell Coomes, Scott Anthony Coomes, William Darrell Cooney, Cindy Marie Coop, Alice Anne Cooper, Albert Stephen Cooper, Billy Edward 393 Cooper, Catherine Lorraine 383 Cooper, Debra D. Cooper, Donna Lynn Cooper, James Dawson 393 Cooper, Laura Loraine 115, 303 Cooper, Linda Louise 410 Cooper, Marla Kay 342 Cooper, Randall Lloyd Cooper, Theresa Ann 383 Coots, Cheryl Dawn Coots, Deborah Lee 410 427 Carter, B. Coots, D. Coots, Gary Lee 38 Coots, Margaret Trammel Coots, Patricia Ann 410 Copas, Christopher Michael 410 Copass, Belvia Lynn 410 Cope, Kenneth Dewayne 383 Copeland, Joe Thomas Coplen, David Timothy Coppage, Donald Jeffrey Coppage, Joseph Duane 410 Corbett, William Victor 410 Corbin, Amelia Harris Corbin, Judith Dianne Corbin, Susan Taylor Corbitt, Larry Wayne 384 Corcoran, Margaret Ann Corder, David Noel Corley, Carol Faith 309, 384 Cornelius, Jane Renee Cornelius, Samuel Earl 384 Cornell, Kathy Dorn Cornell, Sherry Lee 338, 393 Cornett, Denise Marie Cornett, Harold Wayne 322 Cornett, Kitty Frances 393 Cornette, Carol Lorene Cornwell, Brent Edward Cornwell, Cathy Crane 353 Cornwell, Deborah Diane 341, 384 Correa, Paul R. Corts, Paul 146, 167 Cortus, William James 276, 384 Cosby, Bobbie Jill 410 Cosby, Morrion Darlene Cosby, Stevie Laran 393 Cosby, Walter Thomas Jr. Cosman, Madeleine Pelmer 81 Cosman, Shawn Douglas 410 Cossey, Mary Anne 284, 384 Cossey, Mera Sue 276, 410 Costello, James Emmett 384 Costellow, Kenny Wade 353 Costellow, Phyllis J. Cox 353 Costin, Curtis Frazer Costin, Jill Kay 384 Cothern, Ricky Duane 325 Cothran, Rhonda Jane 410 Cottingham, Timothy Lee 113, 312, 410 Cottongim, Janice Carol 288, 291 Cottrell, Gary Lee 284, 384, 410 Cottrell, Joe Alan Cottrell, Phylis Ann 54, 286, 353 Cottrell, Stuart Paul 298, 410 Cottrell, Susan Rae 410 Couch, Felicia Adele 410 Couden, Daniel Eugene 204, 384 Coulter, Jesse 98, 100, 102 Council on Higher Education 119, 121, 136, 139-141 Country Cousins drive a point home for city slickers 113 Counts, Gary Alan Counts, Marvin Glenn Countzler, Catherine Ann 393 Countzler, Mildred Merle L. Coursey, Anita Jo Cousineau, Kim Marie 298, 410 Cousins, David Bruce Couture, Stephen A. Covetts, Karen Lynn 393 Covington, Jerry 320 Covington, Jerry Covington, John Ewin III Covington, Linda Woodruff Cowan, Charles Ben Jr. 345 Cowan, Frances Ann Cowherd, Ford Edmon Cowherd, Rosemarie 384 Cowles, Jacqueline Ree Cowles, Yvonne 410 Cox, Barry M. Cox, Ben Thomas Cox, Cynthia Ann Cox, Daniel Clayton Cox, Danny Wayne 353 Cox, Debbie Lee 384 Cox, Deborah Marie Cox, Dennis Myron Cox, Leonard Clark II Cox, Mary Cleveland Cox, Michael Lee 189, 274, 410 Cox, Nancy Jane 336 Cox, Patsy Rue 384 Cox, Richard Lee Cox, Robin Bruington Cox, Ronald Lee 384 Cox, Sandra Jane Cox, Sarah Ann Cox, Sarah Elizabeth Cox, Timothy Michael 410 Cox, Vanessa Ann Perry Crabtree, David Anthony 410 Crabtree, Deborah Sue Crabtree, Douglas Eugene Crabtree, Nathan Byron Crabtree, Robert Dean Crabtree, William Bemiss Crackel, Nancy Ann Craddock, James Randall Craddock, Juliann Moore Crady, George Chester Crady, Jeffrey Sexton Crafton, William H. Crafton, William Toby 218 Craig, Janet Webb Craig, Patrick Keith Craig, Robert Bryan Craig, Teresa Lynn 330, 340 Crain, Candace Gay 353 Crain, David Storey 393 Cramer, Donna Lynn 410 Cramer, Margaret Louise 282, 309 Crampton, Mark Phillip 320 Crane, Michael Andrew Craven, David Lee Craven, Steven Rodger Cravens, Lawrence Bernard 410 Cravens, Raymond 158 Cravens, Robert William Jr. Craver, Leigh Ann Crawford, David Wayne 315 Crawford, Diane M. Crawford, Jeffrey David 323, 410 Crawford, Kevin Lee 410 Crawford, Ltanya Ann 410 Crawford, Nick 6, 361 Crawford, Nola Denise Crawford, Susan Marie Creasy, Brenda Gail 410 Creasy, Timothy Owen 410 Creative Writing 178-9 Creek, Butch 263 Creek, Donald Keith Creek, James Hugh Creekmore, Cynthia Yvonne 410 Crellin, Lewis Lee Crenshaw, Gary Joseph 317, 410 Crenshaw, Mitzi Hensley Cretella, Francis Michael Cretella, Linda Carol 19, 336, 353 Crider, Benjamin Harry II Crissman, Donald E. Crissy, Marianne Regina Critchelow, Barbara M.G. Crittenden, Ardis Richard Crittenden, John Mackie Crocker, Timothy John 408 Crofton, William 37 Croley, Ellen Davis 309 Crombie, John Barrett Crook, Susan Jane 282, 393 Crooks, Fred Boone Crooks, Fumiko Makino Crooks, Mary Lynn Cropper, Kathleen Vincent Cross, Carolyn Ann Cross, David Martin 218 Cross, David Walling 218, 410 Cross, Johann Hannon Cross, Michele Evette Cross, Stephen Orrin Crotts, Rolanda Yvonne Crouch, David 66-7 Crousore, Janet S. 410 Crowder, Thomas Michael Crowdus, Suzanne M. Crowdus, Veronica Olivette Crowe, Carmen Walker Crowe, Crawford 153 Crowe, J. Lynn Strode Crowell, David Douglas Crowell, Lora Niswonger 353 Crowley, Catherine Bernice Crowley, Cris Ann 271, 393 Crowner, Linda Susan 282, 393 Crum, Donald Lee Crum, Mason 323 Crum, Sherree Marie 410 Crumb, Glenn 155 Crumbie, Richard Lee Crumby, Melissa Lynne 334, 410 Crumhorn, Wayne John Crump, Marjorie Ann 343 Crump, Mark Steven Crump, Pamela Sue 353 Crumpler, David Hurst 384 Crumpler, Thomas Perry Cruse, Janet Turner Cruz, Priscilla Cuarta, Jose Jr. Rene Cubbage, James Clyde Cubero, Jose U. Cude, Jon Michael 384 Cude, Terry Leigh Clements Cuellar, Clara Ines Cuffe, Francis Michael Cull, Martin Homan Cullen, Cheri Ladonna 288, 353 Cullen, Laura Anne 410 Culver, Rebecca Elaine Cumings, Erica Denise Cummings, James Lee 257, 410 Cummings, Janet Louise Cummings, Joe David Cummings, Juliana Marie 344 Cummings, Rhonda Lynn 353 Cummings, Sue Jones 353 Cummins, Jeffrey Alan Cundiff, Don Richard 321, 353 Cundiff, Donna Ann Cundiff, Kevin Brent Cunningham, Bruce Alan Cunningham, Charles Alan 326 Cunningham, Edward Joseph Cunningham, Guy Mitchell Cunningham, James 40-1, 302 Cunningham, Tomi Renae Cunningham, William Cunningham, William T. III 345, 384 Curd, Allison Reed Curd, Shelia V. Curl, Patrick Francis 224-5, 384 Curran, Arch Joseph Curran, Patsy Jean 410 Currence, William Currie, Gaylon D. 290 Curry, Cozett Marie 410 Curry, Dale Goodin 353 Curry, Edward Lee 384 Curry, Jo Ellen Ringenberg 353 Curry, Kimberly D. Curry, Marla Ladawn 410 Curry, Rebecca Jo 384 Curry, Vickie Lynn Curtis, Alvin Ray 319 Curtis, David Blaine Curtis, David Skaggs Curtis, Debra Renee Curtis, Richard Lewis 288, 353 Curtis, Robert Allen Curtis, Teresa Ann King 134, 288, 353, 427 Custead, Shirley G. Custom-made 56-9 Cuzzort, Larry Joe 257 Cyr, Constance Mae Czipo, Joseph Phillip 327 Dabbs, Nelda Lynn 393 Dabney, Linda Diana Dadbin, Ahmad Dadey, Eric John Dahl, Thomas Eric Dailey, Dennis Alan Daily, Kimberly Dawn 410 Daily, Lisa Ann 353 Dale, Michael Thomas Dallas, John Robert 393 Dalton, Carl David 263, 393 Dam, Norma Jean Dame, Michael Gene 394 Damer, Cindy L. 337, 410 Daneshuar, Reza Danhauer, David E. 298 Danhauer, David Edward 282, 296, 353, 427 Danhauer, Janice Marie 126, 281, 353 Danhauer, Karen Phillips Daniel, Barry Douglas Daniel, Danny Joe Daniel, Marvin Gayle 293 Daniel, Richard Hunter 384 Daniel, Sheree Deanne Daniell, William Weimer Daniels, Delores Gaye 410 Daniels, Gloria Diane Daniels, Lee Clifford 384 Daniels, Nathan Oneal Dansereau, Kirk 192-3 Dant, Timothy Patrick 353 Dantoni, Joseph Charles Jr. 313 Dantoni, Richard Alfred Darby, Donna Fay Darnell 354 Darden, Rhonda Deette 354 Dargo, Debra Lynn Dargo, Michele Ann 38, 410 Darland, Cleon Keith 354 Darlington, Charleen A. Darnell, Cathy Ann Darnell, David Stone Darnell, Lynda Diane 410 Darr, Terri Darnise 279, 337, 354 Darst, Kevin James 410 Dastugue, Danon 384 Daugherty, Joyce Arlene 305, 355 Daugherty, Richard Lee 305, 355, 427 Daugherty, Stephen Willard Daum, Laura Lynn 341, 394 Daunhauer, Christine Mary Daunt, Diana Oneill Dause, Teresa Lynn 410 Davenport, Barbara 27, 298 Davenport, Dennis Allen Davenport, Janice Lynn 354 Davenport, Mary Jo 373, 384 Davenport, Patricia Gail 410 David, James R. 277 Davidson, Betty Ann 410 Davidson, Kim Marie Davidson, Malcolm Russell Davidson, Pryce Clay Jr. Davidson, Sheila Gale Davies, Janet Lynn 384 Davis, Barbara J. Davis, Bernard Byrd Davis, Brad Dean Davis, Charles Alan 394 Davis, Colin Randolph Jr. 253 Davis, Cynthia Sue Davis, Daniel Edward Davis, Diane Widick Davis, Donald Lee Davis, Douglas Dean 272, 282-3 Davis, Douglas Gene 283 Davis, Elizabeth Quinn 393 Davis, Gary Mack 21 Davis, Glen Lewis Davis, Gregory Allen Davis, Gregory Aubachon 394 Davis, James 146 Davis, Jo Lynn Word 122-5, 355 Davis, Joann 355 Davis, Katherine Elizabeth Davis, Kathy Garner 340 Davis, Kenneth Lloyd Davis, Kimberley Denise 410 Davis, Laura Ellen 340 Davis, Lisa Petett Davis, Lonnie James III Davis, Lorama Sanders Davis, Margaret Rita 394 Davis, Mark Alben 355 Davis, Marvin Leon Davis, Mary Childress Davis, Mike Lewis Davis, Nancy 146 Davis, Nancy Corinne 309, 355 Davis, Nancy Elaine C. Davis, Natalie Quinn Davis, Neal 146 Davis, Neal Charles Davis, Paul L. Davis, Roscoe C.P. Jr. Davis, Rose Marie 285, 290 Davis, Rose P. 290 Davis, Sandra Jane 384 Davis, Sherie Lynn 355 Davis, Terri Vance Davis, Vicky Lee 85, 88, 91, 384 Davis, Wanda Turner Davis, Ward Gaines 410 Davis, William Stephen 355 Davison, Nancy Elise Davison, Patric S. Dawson, Anita Dean Haynes Dawson, Clarence Edward Dawson, John Leslie 305, 355 Dawson, Johnny Dockins 394 Dawson, Marcia Gretter Dawson, Pamela Lane 410 Day, Bonnie Jean 410 Day, Joseph Edward Day, Judith Ann 394 Day, Judith Karen 289, 410 Day, Karen Kathleen 275 Day, Kyle 323, 410 Day, Lisa Lonell 355 Day, Natalyn Denese Day, Peter L. Day, Robert Michael Day, Ronald Allen Day, Shirley Jean 410 Day, William Gerard Day, William Robert De Armond, Donald Layton Deal, Donna Marie 334, 394 Deal, Jack Allen Deal, John Robert Jr. Deal, Paula Adams Dearen, Mary Ruth 308, 355, 427 Dearen, Sandra Jean 410 Dearing, Ronald Stephen Deaton, Kathy K. 410 Deavours, Stacy Lee Deberry, David Maurice 410 Deberry, Karen Louise Deberry, Mark David 410 Deberry, Richard Earl Deckard, Timothy Elton 355 Decker, Kathy Elaine 355 Decker, Neil Thomas Decker, Susan Kay 291, 337, 410 Decker, Susan Nelle 337, 410 Decker, William Edward Dedman, Kathleen Ashwill Dedmon, James Dwight 394 Deeb, John G. 344-5 Deb, Norman 344 Deepak, Pawandeep Singh 58-9 Defiore, Rosemary 277, 355 Defoor, Lori Ann 394 Defreece, Kenneth Andrew 410 Degaris, Neil Scott Degott, Michele Ann 384 Dehbozorgi, Fatemeh Dekle, Thomas Allison 355 Delacey, Charles 218, 326 Delautre, John S. Delbuono, Elizabeth Ann 410 Dellario, Susan Lynn 305, 410 Deller, John Edwin 257 Deloach, Robert Wayne 394 Delorimier, John Andrew Delph, Richard Ray 285 Delta Sigma Theta 339, 344 Delta Tau Delta 315 Dement, Jerry Dale 355 Demontbreun, Rebekah Ruth Dempsey, Daryl Dean Demunbrun, Murphy Moran Jr. Demurray, Tony Lee Demuth, Audrey Lynn Demuth, Donald Austin Denham, Wilma Kay 301 Denison, Eldon Bryan Denk, William Charles 384 Denney, Martha Jane Denning, Libby Carol 355 Denning, Mark Anthony 317 Dennis, Mynette J. Dennis, Patricia Wooden Dennis, Russell Dennis, Sheila Mae 394 Dennison, Anna Holzknecht Dennison, Sharon Kaye Dent, John Robert 218 Dental Hygiene dept. 182 Dental Hygiene dept., head 182-3 Denton, Betty J. Harper Denton, Horace Wayne Jr. 260 Denton, Patricia Robin Denton, Phoebe Ann 48, 384 DePalma, Sue 129 Depp, Lisa Kaye 410 Deputy, Amy 303 Depuy, Carlos Alberto 384 Depuy, Margarita C. Derickson, Kathy Wilson Derr, Paula Jane Power Desimone, Kelly Deloris Desmarais, Carole Mitro 288 Despain, Daniel Alan Detoma, Phillip Jude Detring, Diana Kay 394 Detsch, Richard Mark 304 Devasher, Sherry Runell 394 Devine, Vicki Lynn 394 Devries, James Stuart Dew, Donald J. Deweese, Larry Stephen Dewilde, Roberta Deane Dewitt, Susan Lynn Dick, John Bradley Dick, Patricia Ann 384 Dickenson, Darlene Jo 384 Dickenson, Debra Ann 355 Dickerson, Virginia Lynn Dickey, Minus Thaxter Dickey, Mitchell Lynn Dickinson, Katie Jo 384 Dickson, James Michael 394 Dickson, Michael Anthony Diddle, Ed 234 Diemer, Minnie Lee Diemer, Yvonne Maria 384 Diersen, Ronald Lee 322, 355 Dieterich, Karen Jean Dietrich, Marilyn Ruth 337, 384 Digging up dirt and buried cultures 194-5 Dillard, Charles Oliver Dillard, Cindy Ann Dillard, Debbie Lane Dillard, Dennis Herschel Dillard, Edward Bernard Dillard, Larry Dean Dillard, Sharon Kay 410 Dillard, Zetta M. Odom Dillingham, Donna Monroe 283, 355 Dillman, Richard Dean Jr. 296, 304, 355 428 Coots, G. Dillman, R. Heaven! angles SILHOUETTED AGAINST THE SKY, Dr. Charles Forrester seemingly becomes part of his art work as he sets up the “Blue Sphere” outside Ivan Wilson Fine Arts Center. The art professor said the wire, steel tube and sheet metal creation is in “con- tinuing development ... “My goal is to be able to loosen one or two wires and let the whole thing collapse into a suitcase. It'll take years.” Mark Lyons Sa ERE a SO A ee i 4 4 3 a 429 Index Dillon, Terri Leigh 410 Dinanno, David Allen Dingus, Carolyn Sue 410 Dingus, Donna Jo 394 Dinnegan, James Edward Dinsmore, Nancy Paden Dinsmore, Peggy Sue 410 Dixon, Charles Richard 288, 410 Dixon, Clarence Kay III 394 Dixon, Harriet Melinda 410 Dixon, Lynne Renee 394 Dixon, Michael Barry 6, 305 Dixon, Millie Jean 292 Dixon, Tina Faye Dizon, Philip Jay 394 Dlamini, Maxwell Do, Oanh Chau Dobbins, Wesley Morgan Dobrick, David Michael 306 Dockery, Shannon Eve Dockery, Sharron Beth Dodd, David Thomas 327, 355 Dodd, Kathryn Jaye 394 Dodd, Lisa Denise Dodds, Mark Anthony Dodds, William David Dodey, Debbie 340 Dodson, Betty Jo 384 Dodson, Caprice Lynn 355 Dodson, Donna Sue 384 Dodson, Evelyn Jeannie 355 Dodson, Larry Donell 218 Dodson, Laura Lou 323, 340 Doellman, Donna Lynn 238-241, 384 Doerr, Melvin Conrad Dohoney, Steven Gene Dolan, Rebecca Ann 410 Dolinger, Aleta Dawn Dollar Brothers 52 Donahoo, Zoe Ellen 355 Donahue, Lori Beth 338 Donaldson, David Crawford Donaldson, Denise B Donaldson, Desiree Doreen Donaldson, James Larry Donaldson, Margaret Ann 298, 410 Donaldson, Randall Charles 394 Donnelly, Hermance Garde Donoho, Nancy Gayle 284, 384 Donovan, Laurie Ann Donovan, Timothy John 410 Doolat, Abadi Mehdi Dooley, Brian Flautt Dooley, Deborah Anne Dooley, Jeanne F. 355 Spectacles HIS MOTHER'S SUNGLASSES shield third grad- er Tim Holy’s eyes while the Jones-Jaggers Lab School student watched the partial eclipse of the sun Oct. 13 from near Hardin Planetarium. 430 Dillon, T. Edmonds, M. Dorenfest, Laura Lynn 410 Dorfler, Teresa Elizabeth 301, 394 Dority, Jeffery Scott Dorm Reform 32-3 Dorm reformers lose spirit, but close doors 32-3 Dorrance, Robert William Dorris, David Thompson Dorris, Deborah Lynn Dorris, Thomas Lesley 170-1 Dorris, William Mark Dorroh, Helen Hugg Dorroh, Sandy Lynne 255, 336 Dorsey, Allison Powell 306 Dorth, Mark Wayne 384 Dossey, Kenneth Wayne 76-7 Dossey, Loretta 77 Dossey, William Allen Dost, William Frederick 318 Dotson, Millie Renae 410 Dotson, Sheila Kay 410 Doty, Darrell Wayne 291, 384 Dougherty, Deborah Lynn Dougherty, Ruth McQuown 18, 394 Douglas, Charles Russell Douglas, Donald Ray 256-7, 384 Douglas, Jo Ann 336 Douglas, Michael Earl Douglas, Michele C. 385 Douglas, Richard Thomas Dowdell, Donna Raye Dowdy, Ben Wade Dowell, Janet Elaine Dowell, Jerry Stephen 355 Dowell, John Alan Dowell, John Keith 284, 355 Dowell, Michael K. 276 Dowell, Rhonda Lou Dower, Douglas James Downey, Vida Marie Downing, David John 394 Downing, Dero 33, 35, 120, 139-141, 142-5 Downing, Donald Norris 255 Downing, Elizabeth Yarnell 394 Downing, Jacqueline 355 Downing, Jacqueline Kim Downing, Lisa Ann 410 Downing, Marla Faith 411 Downs, Cecilia Tyre Downs, Nicki Sue Downs, Stephen M. Downs, Vonna Lynd 411 Downs, Wanda Dalene 355 Doyle, Jean Anne Cagle Doyle, Melissa A. Doyle, Norman Doyle, Steve Allen 411 Drake, Charles Mark 394 Drake, Darryl 218 Drake, Deanna Sue 385 Drake, Michael Paul 345, 411 Drake, Patricia Dianne Drake, Paula Lee Drane, Brian Coleman Drane, Edward Lee 385 Drane, Linda Carol Draper, Michael Brent 277, 394 Dresel, Daniel J. 289 Dressman, Michael Ray 249, 385 Drews, Steven Michael 355 Drexler, Robert Martin Jr. 385 Dreyer, Tina Ann 298 Driskill, James T Driskill, Judith Smith Driven, Sheri 385 Driver, Carol Lynn Driver, David Allan Driver, James Barron 411 Driver, Jessica 287 Driver, Mary Sheila 355 Driver, Sherry Maria 411 Driver, Vicki Lynn 308-9, 334, 355, 411, 427 Drobocky, Oles Basil Druen, Ricky Dean 312 Druien, Sharon Lee Drummond, Ronald Edward 317 Drury, Timothy William 394 Dryer, Eric Thomas 385 Duckworth, Scot Ellis Dudley, Deborah Elaine Duerr, Sandra Lee Duffett, Dixon Lester Duggins, Edna Kay 271, 277 Duhovnik, Lorraine A. Duke, Jim W Duke, Linda Gail Dukes, Deborah Leigh 341, 394 Dukes, Georgia Nell Dukes, Richard Allen 289 Dukes, Victoria Joan 284, 287 Dulaney, Earl Franklin Duley, Sarah Jane Dulin, Jenny Carol 355 Dumstorf, Mary Colette Dunaway, Kathy Lorene 284, 385 Dunbar, Janet Marie Duncan, Chery! Dyanne Duncan, Debra Jo Duncan, Fred M. 411 Duncan, Howard Alan 411 Duncan, Joseph B. Jr. Duncan, Kathleen Duncan, Linda Myrtle 355 Duncan, Marlin Darel Duncan, Monica Jean Duncan, Rebecca Jean Duncan, Steven A. 394 Duncan, Terri Lynn 411 Duncan, Vincent Craig Dunkin, Leonard 356 Dunlap, Robert Neil Dunleavy, Randall Alan Dunleavy, Steven Glen 41 Dunlop, Sharon Fields Dunn, Anna Sue Dunn, Dr. David 184-5 Dunn, David Smith 309, 318, 427 Dunn, Elizabeth Jean Dunn, Grecia Lynn Dunn, Mary Hautie Dunn, Patricia Jean Dunn, Ron 218 Dunn, Sherri Ann 394 Dunn, Terry Lynn Dunn, Wyan Austin Dunson, Teresa Daine Dunston, Edward Nolan Duran, Norma Duraney, Christine Lynn 385 Durbin, Brad 75 Durbin, Christopher S. 385 Durbin, D. Carla Wilson 75, 356 Durbin, Kathleen Anne 385 Durbin, Laura Ann 75 Durbin, Michael Scott Durbin, Natalie 282-3 Durbin, Patricia June Durbin, Patrick Allen Durbin, Raymond P. 75, 356 Durbin, Rita Clare Durbin, Timothy Kirk Durham, Jeanell Durham, Jeffrey Hardin 385 Durham, Jeffrey Lea Durham, Mark Edward Durham, Melody Marie 411 Durham, Sandra Renee 385 Durham, Susan Charlene Durham, Terry Bruce Durham, Terry Wood Durham, William Bryan 411 Durrant, James Kenneth II Duru, Ayse Emel Duskin, Timothy Alan Dutton, Teresa Darlene Duvall, Barry Dale 293, 411 Dyche, Gertrude 210 Dycus, Robert Leon Dye, Anthony Wilson Dye, Carol Lynette Dye, Jeffrey A. 411 Dye, Stephanie Gadberry Dyer, Janet L. Hudson 356 Dyer, Robert Lynn Dyer, Susan Joan Spear Dyer, Susan Kay 292, 385 Dymowski, Harold Dean 248-9 Dyrsen, Kenneth Alan Dyrsen, Sharon 270-1 Eadens, Debra Jo Eadens, Martha Phelps Eans, Stephen Leslie Earls, William Randal Easley, Cassandra VonJean Eason, Thomas F. III 411 Eatherly, Jay G. 275 Eaton, Daniel Alan 218 Eaves, Sharon Kay Ebbert, Edith Artemisia Ebelhar, Julie Ann Ebelhar, Timothy Lee 411 Eberenz, David Richard Eblen, William Thomas Jr. 277, 280, 385 Ecker, Wendy Ann 282-3, 296, 305, 356 Eckhart, Jeffrey Alan 324, 356 Economics dept. 191 Economics dept., head 191 Eddins, Jerome Anthony Eden, Sheila Ellen Eden, Teresa Benson 394 Eden, Teresa Gail Edge, Karen Gail 385 Edge, Teresa Esther 427 Edgington, Claire Summers 329, 336, 356, 427 Edison, Keatha Juanita Edison, Letha Carol 178, 202-3, 385 Edison, Lisa Michelle 394 Edlin, Freddy Lee Edlin, Jennifer Marie 411 Edmonds, Hazel Edmonds, Howard Wallace 412 Edmonds, Michael 385 Edmonds, Steven Allen Edmonds, Theresal Gail 291, 394 Edmonds, Vicki Rochelle 394 Edmonson, Mark Samuel Edmunds, Gregory Bruce 218 Educational leadership dept. 164 Educational Leadership dept., head 164, 167 Educational Services 167, 206 Educational Services, head 167 Edun, Folasade Omobola 394 Edwards, Brooks, Lesley 356 Edwards, Bruce Kevin 412 Edwards, Deborrah Perkins Edwards, Jeffery Donald 394 Edwards, Jeffrey Smith 356 Edwards, Johnie Louis Edwards, Leandra Edwards, Lisa Kay Wilson Edwards, Mary Coday Edwards, Michael G. Edwards, Rebecca Helm Edwards, Richard Harold Edwards, Richard Mark 325 Edwards, Robert High Edwards, Robin Susan 309, 356 Edwards, Roger R. Jr. 285, 394 Edwards, Roger Shawn Edwards, Samuel Dale Edwards, Steven Alan 356 Edwards, Terry Lane 356 Egan, Sherry Ann 340 Egger, Charles Edward Jr. Eggler, Paul Edward 249 Eggleston, Richard Alton Egolf, Lucy Karen 356 Ehlers, William Lloyd Ehresman, Norman 167, 206 Eicher, Chana Mlynn 412 Eicher, Michael Wayne Eicher, Ronald Louis 412 Eicher, Vickie Delilah Eidson, Alisa Joan Eidson, Carol Denise 385 Eiler, Ronald David 356 Eisenman, Julie Anne 305, 385 Eison, Charles 155 Elder, Dennis Edward 285, 385 Eldridge, Elaine Carol 309 Eldridge, Pamela Kay 356 Eldridge, Ronnie Dwayne Eldridge, Steven Louis Elkins, Stephen Grant Eller, Tabetha Ann 412 Elliott, Audrey Diane WIT Si .aett re aan gis Elliott, Clinton J. Elliott, Dwayne Neal Elliott, Geff Frank Elliott, Harold James 202 Elliott, Jack Watterson Elliott, Kathi Diane 303, 412 Elliott, Larry 210, 305 Elliott, Stevenson Elliott, Tommy Lynn 356 Ellis, Craig Larry 412 Ellis, Danette Renee 356 Ellis, Donna Jan 336 Ellis, Ernest Lee Ellis, Gregory Scott Ellis, Helen Theresa 4 Ellis, John William Ellis, Linda Elaine 285, 394 Ellis, Lisa Gail 72, 75 Ellis, Lucy Jane Ellis, Marilyn Faye 385 Ellis, Muriel Jent Ellis, Richard P. Ellis, Ronald Edward Ellis, Shannon Lynne 394 Ellis, William Scott 394 Elmore, Bonita Dyer 356 Elmore, Bonnie Sue 301, 356 Elmore, Howard Ezra Elmore, Mary Jane 394 Elmore, Michael Kerry 412 Elmore, Sandra Faye Elms, Laurel A. 287, 356 Elrod, Pamela Jean 412 Elsesser, Patricia Lee Elvart, Judith Lynne Elvers, Daniel Brian Elward, Patricia Ann 337, 394 Elwert, Todd Stuart 412 Ely, Bryan Scott Emadi, Safavi Amin Emberton, Billy Joe Emberton, James Luther Emberton, Joseph Lee Emberton, Laura Lee 63, 328, 334 Emberton, Sheila Sherfey Embry, Barry Gene Embry, Charles Louis Embry, Kathryn Elaine 356 Embry, Kevin Dale 412, 450 Embry, Larry Huston Embry, Leslie Gay 356 Embry, Richard Elmer Embry, Sharon Diane 356 Embry, Valerie Joy 334, 356 Emerine, Mary Lou 395 Emerson, Douglas Everett 312, 356, 427 Emmert, James Gregory Emmick, Jamie Rhea 395 Emmick, Lisa Gaye 412 Emmitt, Sarah Jeannette 297 Energy Crisis Shakes Hill 120 Engel, Anthony Todd Engel, Jeffrey Howard 385 Engelhardt, Leslie Robyn 303 Engineering technology dept. 200 Engineering technology dept., head 200-1 England, Beverly Ann 412 England, Elizabeth Ann 395 England, Jeffery Stuard England, Michelle Renee England, Pamela Jean 306 Englebright, Curtis 166-7 Englebright, Jane Dee Englehart, Leslie 90-1 English dept. 172 English dept., head 172 English, Mr. Mrs. Ernest 332 English, Frances Ann 412 English, John Dwayne English, Michael David English, Pamela Kaye 332 Enteman, Vicki Lynn Epley, Julie Lynn 412 Epling, Robert Gene Erhardt, Philipp Whitney 327 Erich, Stephen Christopher Ericksen, Robyn Elaine 276, 385 Ernspiker, Reta Gay Ernst, Heidi Jean Eskine, John 332 Ertner, Pamela Lee 395 Ervin, Robert Bracken 274, 285 Erving, Wendy Joanne 385 Erwin, James Perry Erwin, Jane Frances Erwin, Janice Faye Erwin, Mark Leslie 385 Esche, Joanne 342 Eshback, Susan Joy 395 Eskridge, Kathy Marie Eskridge, Nancy Louise 412 Eskridge, Patricia Ann Eskridge, William Edgar 274 Esposito, David Anthony 3 Estes, Kenneth 164, 167 Essien, Akpan Moses Estelle, Carl Edward 218-9 Esters, George William Estes, Charles Michael 412 Estes, Jack Loyd 312 Estes, Karen 356 Estes, Kevin Lee Estes, Lisa Karen Estes, Owen Johnson Jr. Estok, Steven Michael 322, 412 Eubank, Jo Elizabeth Eubank, Johnny Wilson 113 Eubank, Mary Jane Haiduc Evans, David Litton Evans, Donald Bryant 395 Evans, Donald Ray Evans, Elizabeth Ann Evans, James 298 Evans, Kerry Ann Evans, Laura Ann Evans, Michael Denny Evans, Phillip Wayne Jr. 218 Evans, Sue 129 Evans, Susie Anna Evans, Terri Ann Evans, Vickie Evenson Everette Joann 337, 356 Everson, Cindy Lou 385 Everson, Nan Lowe 412 Ewings, Donna Fay 412 Exercise and competition 300-1 Experience and involvement 308-9 Extended Campus Program 210-1 Extended Campus Program, assistant dean 158 11-0, but disappointed 248-9 Ezell, Susan Carroll Fabel, Brad Scott Fabel, Carol 309 Fackler, Darice Sue Faenza, Matteo Fahey, Joan Marie Fain, Michael Rex 412 Fairchild, Katherine Marie 290-1, 385 Fairchild, Robert Eugene 412 Fairchild, Teresa Lynn 412 Fairfax, Paula Patricia 412 Fairleigh, Joseph Lee 285, 395 Faith, Mark Gregory Faith, Robin Diane 395 Faith, Virginia Lisa Faler, Michael P. Fallahi, Behrooz Moghimi Fallahi, Parviz Moghimi Fallahi, Shahrooz Moghimi Faller, Andrew Charles Faller, Daniel Brion Faller, David Alan Falwell, Colleen Denise Falwell, James Reuben Fan, Du Chung Fang, Che Hsin Farago, Ronald David 395 Fard, Parviz Ghaderi Fardi, Majid Faries, Fithian 160 Farley, Andre R. 319 Farley, James Charles 385 Farley, John Stephen Farley, Joni Lynn 308, 395 Farley, Paul Kenneth Farmer, Laura Rae 298 Farmer, Pamela Jo 395 Farmer, Raymond Ellis Farnsley, Patrick William 385 Farrington, Charmaine C. 245, 284-5 Farris, Amy Lisa Farris, Billie Kay Burton Farris, Elisa Carlene Farris, Gregory L. Farris, Lisa Sue Farris, Nana Suzann 22 Farris, Perry Kenneth Farris, William Joseph 218 Farrow, Julie Ann Farry, William Michael Fashion 52-5 Fass, Jack Richard 253 Fath, Douglas Jay 224 Fath, Thomas Guy II Fatheddin, Abolghassem 356 Fatheddin, Bahman Faulk, Joyce Ann Mills 356 Faulknér, Terry Wayne Faxon, Mary Lynne Feagin, Timothy Shawn 325, 395 Fearheiley, Kevin Charles 356 Federico, Antonia Maria Feese, Betty Sue Chelf Feese, Daniel Stephen Feese, Teresa Ann Feese, William Robert Feghali, Donnagene Bonnita Fehrmann, Paul Gordon Feibes, Erica Marie Feingold, Alan Brad Feingold, Gail Mitchell Feix, Jimmy 217-8, 220-3 Feland, Millicent Feldhaus, Mary Jane 412 Feldpausch, Michael Thomas Felgner, Kurt Neil Fellowship and Cultures 296-7 Felts, David Russell Felts, Debora Denise Felts, Lavonna Lynn. 385 Felts, Leanna Armstrong 356 Felty, Julia Ann Felty, Rudy Dale 284 Fennelly, Alphonsus J. 298-304 Fentress, Dennis Britt Fenwick, David Louis 300 Fenwick, Vickie Yvonne Ferguson, Deborah Kaye 412 Ferguson, Jackie Dole Ferguson, Jay Myron Ferguson, Lawrence Wayne Ferguson, Lynne Hammer 356 Ferguson, Michael Lynn Ferguson, Miriam McConnell 285, 356 Ferguson, Patty 26 Ferguson, Steven George Fernandez, Freddy Antonio Ferry, Kathleen Ann 267 Ferry, Larry Eugene Ferry, Mary Martha S. 276, 356 Fertig, Robert Franklin Jr. Field, Beverly Gaye Field Course in Archaeology 137, 194-5 Field Services director 166 Field, Sharon Gale Fields, Alesia Ann 239 Fields, Edwin Keith Fields, Kevin Eugene 395 Fields, Laura Lynn Fields, Mary A. Fields, Paul Bryan Fields, Ruth V. Fields, Vanessa Christina 331, 356 Figgs, Donald B. Figler, Karen Diane 385 Filip, Carl Stephen 274, 412 Finan, James William Fine Arts Festival 12, 40-1 Finkbone, John Bryan 385 Finley, Billy Daryl Finley, Ronald William 248-9 Finley, Susie Alice 395 Finn, Jeffry Lane Finnegan, Kevin James Fireline, Kathern Mae 385 Firkins, Barbara Lynne 303 Firkins, Nancy J. Crumb Fischer, Andrew Philip Fischer, Brian Lawrence Fischer, Jerry Logan Fish, Mark Gregory Fish, Paul Timothy 412 Fishback, Mary Taylor 340, 412 Fisher, Clarence Edward Jr. Fisher, Edward Nicholas Fisher, Jane Susan Fisher, Jennifer Lee 92, 273 Fisher, Lillie Perkins Fisher, Lynn Fisher, Robin Celeste 255, 368 Fitz, Cindy Lynn 334, 395 Fitzgerald, Catherine L. 412 Fitzgerald, John Martin Fitzgerald, Margaret Stewa Fitzgerald, Thomas Patrick Fitzgerald, Tony 284 Fitzpatrick, Eileen Marie Fitzpatrick, John B. Fitzpatrick, Julian A. II 412 Fitzpatrick, Katherine E. Fitzpatrick, Linda S. Heath Fitzpatrick, Roger P. 412 Flaherty, Mary Patricia Flaherty, Patrick Thomas 357 Flaherty, Timothy Alan Flanary, Kathy Jo 245, 395 Flanders, Danny Leigh Flanders, Lonna Arden Flaugher, Terri Lee Grief Flautt, Lucille Oliver 357 Flautt, Margery Ezell 395 Fleenor, Creed Ewing 205, 317 Fleenor, Janet Drake Neel Fleischer, Daniel Steven Fleming, Carolyn E. Cossey 290 Fleming, Darrell Wayne 325, 385 Fleming, Kathryn Laster Fleming, Linda Johnson Flener, Richard Fieldon Fletcher, Eugenia 335 Fletcher, James Ralph Fletcher, Theresa Renee Flood, Patricia Ann Flora, Michael Richard Flora, Vickie Lynn Florence, James Lake Florence Schneider Hall 16, 38-9, 119, 156, 160 Florence, Susan Antrim 357 Flory, Cheryl Suzanne 312, 341, 395 Flowers, Ronald Wayne Floyd, Barbara Mary 338, 357 Floyd, Glenn David 322 Floyd, Remona Denise Floyd, Scott Anderson 185 Floyd, Sue 31 Floyd, William 184-5 Fly, Cynthia Marie 385 Flynn, James 283 Fodor, Eugene 41 Foe, John 17, 37 Fogarty, Sandra Lee Fogg, Mary 57 Fogle, Gatherine Jane Foley, Burley James Foley, Deborah Carol 299 Foley, Sharon Yvonne 412 Foley, Vickie Lynne 357 Fondren, Rene Michelle 305, 385 Fones, John Mark 262-3 Food Services, director 166 Football 216-223 For the Masses ’ first week back 18-9 Forbes, Mary Ann 336, 413 Forbes, Michael Edward Forbes, Valerie Ray Forbes, William Scott Ford, Bradley Scott 33-4, 323 Ford, Cindy Constance Ford, Gwendolyn Denise 385 Ford, Jan Renee Hornbuckle Ford, Laura Ann 413 Ford, Margaret Ann 413 Ford, Perri Lynn Ford, Rebecca Jo Ford, Richard Alan 324 Ford, Richard Scott 324 Ford, Samuel Kurt Ford, Timothy L. Ford, William Kent Jr Foreign languages dept. 174 Foreign languages dept., head 174 Forgy, Alice Lynn Forkner, Holly Rufus 395 Formosa, Lisa Carolyn Forsee, Glenn Alan Forshee, Buddy Ross Forshee, Pamela Kaye 385 Forshee, Sandra Kay 357 Forshee, Shelia Jean 291, 395 Forst, Lee Henderson 321, 395 Fort, Kenneth Wayne Fort, Patricia Gail 288, 385 Fort, Susan Lynette Fort, Willie Cowherd Jr. 413 Fortner, Neil Alan Foshag, Karen Sue Foster, Brent Borders Foster, Coney Roger Foster, Elizabeth Deane 395 Foster, Gary 22 Foster, James Michael 275, 282, 289, 395 Foster, James William Foster, Kathy Jan Foster, Kathy Lynn 413 Foster, .Kelly Densil 413 Foster, Leslie Ann 413 Foster, Randy Wayne Foster, Rebecca Cary Foster, Richard Leland 323 Founder, Vickie Marie Fowler Ann Charmane 334 Fowler, Debra Jean 70 Fowler, Joseph Earl 304, 308, 312 Fowler, Kristine Rose Fowler, Richard Frank Fowlkes, David Earley 413 Fox, Bobbie Carol Fox, Charles Herbert Fox, John Melvin Fox, Steven William Fox, Susan Marie Fox, Vincent DePaul Fox, William Wesley Fraebel, Wendy Gail Fraebel, William Theodore Frampton, Mac 99 France, Grace Marie Francies, Anita Jo Francis, Coty Clifton Francis, Jamie Marie Francisco, Don 284 Francke, Charlie Fredrick 296, 357 Franey, Patrick Keith 357 Frank, David L. 276, 395 Frank, Leo William Franke, Susan Rae Franklin, Brian Russell Franklin, Tammy Lu Franklin, Theresa Lynn 395 Fransway, David John Franzell, Roger Dale 385 Frazier, Beverly Jean 308 Frazier, James Allen Frazier, John Robert 224 Frazier, Kelly 312, 357 Frazier, Kerry Lee Freas, George Wilson II Frederick, Jeffery Dale Frederick, Marcia Jo Frederick Melissa Celeste Frederick, Nancy Elise 413 Fredlake, Michele Ann 266-7 Fredrick, Russell Monroe Free Enterprise Fair 290 431 Edmonds, S. Free Fair Freedle, Linda Ann 15 Freeman, Allen Ray 357 Freeman, Bonita Faye Freeman, Christopher A. Freeman, Craig Douglas 218-9 Freeman, Galen Harlen III Freeman, Gayle Forkner Freeman, Keith David 276, 357 Freeman, Sandra Kaye 395 Freeman, Thomas 15 Freer, Markley, Melinda 271, 395 Freibert, Sara Lynn 239, 395 French, Cindy L. French, Dennis 317 French, Donald Alexander 312 French, Gary 357 French, James Timothy French, Judith Carol 385 French, Patricia Eubank 357 French, William Gary Freville, Anne Austin Frew, John Andrew Frey, Christine Ann Frey, Jeffrey Ray 357 Fridy, Katherine Ruth 395 Friel, Cheryl Ann Frierson, Karen Mable Frisbee, Joanne K. Jackson Frisch, Anne 14-5 Fritch, Michael David 282, 290-1, 300, 357 Fritzo, Jerri Ann Frizzell, David Brown Frizzell, Mona Gail 413 Froebel, Martin Charles 122, 274, 413 Froedge, Bobby Dale Froedge, Mark Wayne 395 Froedge, Rhetta Anne 385 From Fierce Competition to Friendly Get- togethers 344-5 Frost, Janet Lynn Frost, Sherri Dawn 413 Fry, Dennis Gene Frye, Mike 411 Frye, Patricia Kay Bailey Frymire, Bryan George 395 Fudge, Peggy Jane 357 Fugate, Michael Eugene Fulkerson, Douglas Earl Fulkerson, Judith Elaine 255, 342, 413 Fulkerson, Shirley Rose M. 239 Fulkerson, Siegrid Ann 445 Fulkerson, Thomas Carroll 357 Fulks, Marjorie Ann Fullen, David Lloyd 413 Fullenwider, Gracie Fay Fullenwider, Nancy May Fuller, Bryan Scott Fuller, Cathy Yvonne 287, 357 Fuller, Debra Jean 354, 357 Fuller, Janet Carolyn 305, 385 Fuller, Ronnie Lane Fuller, Sarah Sun 33, 298 Fuller, Steven Joe 312, 395 Fullerton, Michael Jay 301, 357 Fullerton, Robert Kelly Fulton, Garry Wayne Fulton, Sidney Potter Jr. Fultz, Margaret Ann 289, 357 Fun and Recreation 298-9 Funk, Clifton Lake Funkhouser, Robert Edward 413 Fuqua, Audrey Octavia Fuqua, Jackie Lawanda 385 Fuqua, Kimberly Ann 413 Furgerson, Peggy Jo Furgeson, Nancy Ellen Furkin, David Scott 385 Fuson, Susan Haywood 284 Futch, Gary Michael 285 Futrell, Kathleen Valeria Future Farmers of America 208 Fykes, Danny Atwell Fyock, Barbara Jo 341, 413 Gabbard, Donna Carol Gabbard, Foy Curtis Gabbard, Leslie Earl Gabbard, Richard Donovan Gaddie, Patricia Louise Gaddis, Gerald Kendall Gaddy, David D. Gaddy, Felicia Gailbreath, Katherine D. Gaines, Allen Lee Gaines, Craig Steven Gaines, Donna Marie 342, 385 Gaines, Douglas Allen Gaines, Kim Perry 385 Gaines, Lisa Ann 413 Gaither, James Jay 46, 89, 303 Gale, Dino Gale, Jack McGee III Gallaher, Stephen Neill Gallaher, Susan Martin Gallas, Charles Gregory 218 Galloway, Cheryl Ann 296, 385 Galloway, Donna Glenn 395 Galloway, Edwin Moore Galloway, Mary Elizabeth 267, 271, 395 Galloway, Melody Galloway, Shirley Ann Galloway, Wayne Thomas Galvis, Jose Joaquin 413 Gamble, Catherleen 330, 335 Gamble, Clarice 335 Gamble, Kathryn Gamble, Tara Teresa 427 Gamblin, Linda Ann 357 Gamma Sigma Sigma 31, 269 Gammel, Vicki Lynn Gammons, Larry Wayne 357 Gann, Kenneth Lee Garbo, Greta Lynne Garcia, Anna Christine A. Garcia, Guia Martha Garcia, Marissa Aquino Garcia, Mark Steven Gard, Cynthia Ann 3, 395 Gard, Fred 2-3 Gardner, Beverly Dean Gardner, Jess Lewis III Gardner, Mary Magdalene 357 Gardner, Michael Robert 385 Gardner, Randall L. 315 Gardner, Richard Allen Gardner, Sherry Lee Garell, Leslie Ann 341 Garland, Robert Howard Garman, Kathy Cheryl 395 Garmon, Gary Nelson 357 Garmon, Pattikate 413 Garmon, Rebecca Lynn 186-7, 309, 357 Garmon, Roberta Sue 395 Garmon, Terrill Auburn Garmon, Victoria Allen 357 Garmon, William Kenneth Garner, Alvin E. Garner, Beth Ann Johnson Garner, Deborah Sue 128, 288, 357, 427 Garner, John Rodney Garner, Laura Marie 385 Garner, Ricky Joe Garner, Twila Jeanette Garrard, Anna Denise Garrett, Alison 413 Garrett, Charles Phillip Garrett Conference Center 30 Garrett, Dale Wayne Garrett, Gene Wayne Garrett, Gordon Douglas Garrett, Joetta 413 Garrett, John Raymond Garrett, Kenneth Daryl Garrett, Martha Gayle 357 Garrett, Paul 153 Garrett, Peggy Lou 309, 357 Garrett, Phillip Andrew 395 Garrett, Sandra Fay 289, 413 Garrison, Garri Lynn Garrison, Gregory Ray 413 Garrison, Terri Lea Garrity, Stella Pauline H. Garrity, Terry Lynn Garrott, Susie Jane 255, 338, 413 Garst, Kathleen Garvey, Maureen Helen Garvin, Catherine E. 334-395 Gary, Gina Gay 413 Gary, Janet Renee 395 Gary, Marla Ann Gast, Linda Kay Gaston, Robin Gaye Gates, Pat F. 214-5, 385 Gates, Robert Athur Gates, Robert Henry Gates, Roberta Ann 413 Gates, Sheila 214-5 Gatewood, Bobby Allen Jr. Gatewood, Dale Scott Gatewood, Lydia Mathews Gatewood, Phyllis Elayne Gatlin, Wanda 178 Gatti, Pamela Jean Gaus, Stanley Leon 395 Gauthier, Teresa Lu Gautier, William Howard Gayles, Joyce Marie 301 Gaynor, Gaynel 413 Geary, James David Geary, Kerry Dean 218, 413 Geary, Rickey Wayne 218, 413 Gebhart, Thomas Hilleary Gee, Rickey Dewayne 315 Geidel, Henry Augustus 357 Geiser, Carolyn Marie Korb Geisler, Dawn Michelle 395 Gemini 347, 411 Genet, William Ronald Gensler, Linda Constance Gensler, Michael Douglas Gentry, Christy A. Gentry, Douglas Andrew Gentry, Jacqueline Diane Gentry, James Fisk Jr. 45 Gentry, Jerry Hamilton Gentry, Keith Allan Geography and geology dept. 192 Geography and geology dept., head 192 George, Linda McCool 357 George, Melba Lee 287, 385 George, Priscilla Denise 413 George, Theodore George, Trina Marie Georgoulakis, James M. Geralds, Clayton Edward Geralds, Trudy Jelayne 288, 413 Germany, Martha Ann 413 Geron, Kathy Marie Geroy, Kathi Susan Gerrow, Philip Robert Gerstle, Amy Elizabeth 385 Gerteisen, Shirley Marie Gerughty, Jack Ray 413 Gerweck, Martyna Jayne Gesell, Gregory Lynn Ghafoori, Dariush Ghahreman, Vahid Giants at their Game 266-7 Gibbons, Mary Stribling Gibbons, Roland Lowell 413 Gibbs, Carla G. Gibbs, Gayle Leigh 358 Gibbs, James F. Jr. Gibbs, James Warren 413 Gibbs, Robin Elizabeth Gibbs, Suzanne Michele Gibson, Alan Bertram Gibson, Connie 30, 327 Gibson, Debra June 277, 427 Gibson, Dee 151, 156 Gibson, Dennis Leigh Gibson, Georganne 413 Gibson, James Leon Gibson, Kathy Skaggs 134 Gibson, Larry Willard Gibson, Laurel Faye Jones Gibson, Lynne Kathryn Gibson, Nancy Carlene 395 Gibson, Nancy Jane 413 Gibson, Robert Todd 358 Gibson, Sheila Louise 395 Gibson, Terry Owen 304 Gibson, Vickie Bickett 395 Gierl, David Charles Gifford, Gerald Dean Gifford, James Pierce Gilbert, Butch 218 Gilbert, Charles Catlett Gilbert, Charles Mitchell Gilbert, David William 413 Gilbert, Glenda Brown Gilbert, Leigh Anna Gilbert, Leslie Anne 340, 385 Gilbert, Margaret Louise 289, 385 Gilbert, Patricia Lee 385 Giles, Kathy Taylor 285 Gill, Carrie Ann Gill, Daniel Lee Gill, Glen Norman 395 Gill, Karen Sue 284, 358 Gill, Michael Earl Gill, Richard Joseph Gill, Timothy Ray 218 Gill, Tyler Landthrip 218, 395, 453 Gillham, Edward Hugh Gilliam, James Boyd 413 Gilliam, Mena Colette 413 Gilliam, Sandra Lee Gilligan, Michael Kelly 413 Gilliland, Raymond Keith Gillis, Phillip A. Gillum, Orlanda Denice Gilmer, Marcia Ellen Gilmore, Donald Ray Gilmore, Robert Shackett Giorgio, James Michael 358 Giovanni, Nikki 80-1, 121 Gipson, Carnell Roger 385 Girdin, Thomas 40 Girten, Sherrie Ann 413 Girvin, Bobbi Ann 395 Gittens, Ricky Alonzo 260 Givan, David Michael 300, 307, 413 Given, Robert Kerry Givens, B. Suzanne Givens, Vickie Mae 358 Glantz, Robert Bruce Glanzer, Martin Lee Glaser, Vanessa Kathryn Glaspie, David Anthony 271 Glasscock, Larry Thomas Glasscock, Sharon Beth 413 Glasscock, Sheila Lynn 385 Glasscock, Steven Mitchell Glaysbrook, Cindy Ann 283, 385 Gleitz, Richard Albert 321, 358 Glennon, William 92 Glidewell, Lutresa Gail 413 Globensky, Mark Heinze Glore, Anthony Dan 289, 395 Glover, Gregory Leonard 294 Glover, Terah Deiniece 287, 413 Gmeiner, Julie Marie 358 Goad, Dale Boyd 312, 385 Gobble, April Ruth 284, 358 Godbey, A. Fogle 182-3 Godbey, Duke Alexander 395 Godbey, Mark Kevin Godbey, Michael Ray Godbey, Nickey Verlis Godby, Richard Allan Goddin, Stephen Jay Godfrey, Frederick Titus Godfrey, James 292-3 Godfrey, John Dallas Jr. Goetz, Glenn Perry Goetz, Richard Charles 176 Goetzinger, Herbert G. Jr. 307, 358 Goff, Daniel Lee 413 Goff, Elizabeth Stevens 245, 385 Goff, Jacqueline Lynn 395 Goheen, Kimberly Lynn Goin, Gary Lee Goins, Denis Paul Goins, Katherine Sue Gold, Ann Marie 309, 395 Gold, Monica H. 395 Goldassteh, Davood Golday, Amy Ann 413 Goldberg, Karen Jane 282, 395 Golden-Farley of Kentucky Men’s Shoppes 52 Golden, Jeanne Lynn 413 Gomer, Mary Ann Green Gomez, Jose Antonio Gongloff, Carole Jean Gonzalez, Susana Gooch, Flora Spencer 413 Gooch, Steve Wayne Good, Sarah Jane Goodhue, Johnny Michael Goodin, Mary Jane 336, 395 Goodknight, William Alan 318 Goodlet, William Eugene Goodlett, Mark Clifton 413 Goodlett, Mary Ann Goodman, Karen Fay Goodman, Lavadia Martenia Goodman, Michael Trent Goodman, Peggy W. 358 Goodman, Robert Sherman Jr. 413 Goodman, Terry Lindsay 395 Goodrich, Felicia Dale 413 Goodrum, Cynthia Ann 285 Goodrum, David Wayne 292 Goodrum, Janet Michele Goodrum, Jim 149, 163 Goodwin, Betty Lou Bricka Goodwin, Brenda L. 340, 395 Goodwin, Gregory Steven 413 Goodwin, Michael Arnold GoodyKoontz, Alex 277 Goolsby, Jerry Lane 257, 395 Goolsby, Teresa Lynn 358 Goolsby, Terry Lee 358 Gordon, David 68 Gordon, Diana Rene Gordon, Sara Jane 242 Gore, Patricia Ann 413 Gorman, Anne Elizabeth 273 Gorniak, Gary T. Goshell, Judith 40 Goss, Russell Theodore 312 Gosselin, Laurent Alden Gosser, Danny D. Gosser, Linda Oliver Gossett, Belinda Gaye Gossett, Lisa Ann Gossett, Rhonda Jo 413 Gossett, Robert Harrison Gothard, Deborah Margaret Gotowicki, James Paul 413 Gott, Carole Dean 395 Gottula, Lana Merties 307, 358 Gould, Susan Jeanette 413 Gover, James Morris Gover, John David 267, 282-3, 296 Gover, Robert Joseph 255 Government dept. 192 Government dept. head 192 Gower, Cheryl Yvonne Grace, Barry Wayne 306 Grace, Cynthia Lynn 395 Grace, Jeffrey 413 Grace, John Kevin 413 Grace, Michael Lynn Graduate College 206-7 Graduate College, asst. dean 206 Graduate College, dean 206 Graduation 134-5 Graf, Stacie Jo 413 Graham, Connelly Lynn Graham, Diana Gail Graham, Donald Eugene Graham, John Thomas Jr. Graham, Julia Gayle Graham, Meloney Kay 340, 385 Graham Sarah Miller 202 Graham, Stephen Henry 358 Grane, Ronald William Grant, Carolyn Diane 385 Grant, Kevin Woodson Grant, Laurie Denise 413 Grant, Wendell Van Grants and contracts, director 155 Grantham, Lindsley Allen 385 432 Freedle, L. Grantham, L. Grantz, Lisa Ann Grantz, Mary Ann 413 Graven, Butch 326 Graven, Myron Duane Graves, Gary Alan Graves, Gertie Staley 358 Graves, Lisa Francis 385 Graves, Lycrecia Ann Graves, Trilba Dianne 385 Gray, Arthur Paul Gray, Bryan William 218, 395 Gray, Connie Allison Gray, David F. 63 Gray, Elmer 206 Gray, Joseph Patrick 359 Gray, Kenneth E. Gray, Leon Louis 385 Gray, Martilla Spring 395 Gray, Mary Theresa 413 Gray, Michael Glenn 218, 220, 395 Gray, Nizida Sharon Gray, Robert Winslow 28, 359 Gray, Susan Lloyd 359 Gray, Tami Ruth 413 Gray, Timothy Powell 413 Gray, Willie Ruth 395 Grayson, Alan Lee Grayson, Anna Katherine 359 Grayson, Maurice Raymond Greco, Anthony Michael Greeley, Lynn 199-200 Greeley, Steven Brooks 413 Green, Bill 52 Green, Colleen Marie Green, Deborah Lynn 395 Green, Donna Jo 298, 342 Green, Donna Sue 342 Green, Jimmy Green, Kathy Jean 385 Green, Laurie Elizabeth Green, Maria Annette Green, Michael Jimmy 214-5, 261 Green, Michael Louis 214-5, 261 Green, Nancy Mar ie % Green, Tammy P. Carpenter 214-5 Green, Thomas Keith 413 Greene, Antonia Rhea 414 Greene, Christopher W. Greene, Gregory David 323, 414 Greene, James Kenneth Greene, Marissa Lynn 307, 359 Greene, Mark Allen 359 Greene, Robert Lee 320, 359 Greene, Stephen James 395 Greene, William Douglas Green house (d) Nature 202-3 Greenleaf, Mark Allen Greenlee, Douglas Paul 288, 386 Greenwald, Joseph Bernard Greenway, Pam 411 Greenwell, Dale Wayne Greenwell, Joseph Michael 359 Greenwell, Mary Julia 309, 359 Greenwell, Mary Tobin Greenwell, Virginia Greenwood, Joseph Gary 395 Greer, Cheryl Lynn 414 Greer, David Dickinson 89, 273 Greer, James McKay Jr. 414 Greer, Jerry Lynn Greer, Mark Alan 414 Greer, Melanie Lynn 414 Greer, Sherry Lynn 289, 414 Greer, William Jeffrey Gregoire, Kevin F. Gregorian, Leon 12-3, 94-7, 172 Gregory Ann Elizabeth Gregory, Barbara Majors 395 Gregory, Beverly. Ruth 292, 395 Gregory, Ernest Gregory, Gary Hugh Gregory, Joseph Eldridge Gregory, Lisa Marie 386 Gregory, Mark Alan Gregory, Sandy K. Gregory, William Scott 414 Greineisen, Dorothy Lynn Greninger, Robert R. 197 Grenko, Ronald Trent Greschel, George Bradley Gresh, Jacqueline 386 Gresham, Richard Carl Gribbins, Jeffrey Brian Grider, Gayla Carol 386 Grider, James Thomas Grider, Lisa Elizabeth 341, 414 Grieshaber, Joseph Anthony Griffin, Don Allen 414 Griffin, Donna Jo Griffin, Frank 253, 263 Griffin, Jeffrey Craig 315, 395 Griffin, Linda Davidson 359 Griffin, Lottie Kaye Griffin, Lou Faye Griffin, Mark Chamberlain Griffin, Timothy Ray 324 Griffin, William Richards 28, 326, 360 Griffith, Anna Maria 386 Griffith, Larry Keith 325, 360 Griffith, Sharon Marie 360 Griggs, George Lewone 243, 360 Griggs, John T. YSNOW STORMS left Russelville Road in fre enter a sheet of ice, permitting Columbus, Ind., , ice skate ahead of sliding traffic. ae Griggs, Mary Frances 360 Grigsby, John G. Grimes, Damon Arbed Grim es, Geoffrey Taylor Grimes, Trina Ann 386 Grimm, Amy Lynn 414 Grimwood, Dedra R. Grinstead, Cathy Jo Grinstead, Deborah Faye 386 Grise, Claudette Marie Grise, Erlene Yvonne Grise, James Russell Grise, James Stephen Grise, Pamela Gay Grish, Linda Gail 287, 395 Griswold, Carolyn T. Grizzell, John Hickam 33, 277, 360 Grizzle, Dennis Dean 395 Grizzle, Kevin Patrick Groce, Ralph Douglas Groschelle, Karla Ann Gross, Janice Marie 277, 360 Grosshans, Joan Dale 414 Grosshuesch, Kendra Sue 341 Grossklag, Nancy Jo Grossman, Tod Groth, Mark Lee Grove, Elliott Rodgers Ron Hoskins front of the fresh- Grove, Gary Bethel 395 Grove, James Elliott Jr. 322, 360 Grover, Mark Erin 326 Groves, Ella Wanda Roberts Groves, Jeffery Glen 395 Groves, Robin Marie 344, 414 Groves, Sue 332 Grubbs, Gary Lin Grubbs, J. Kirtley Grubbs, Robert Edwin Gruccio, Kathy Lynn 341 Grumbach, John Eric 224, 257 Grumbacher, Steve 176 Gruneisen, Therese Anne Grunow, James George 323 Guardia, Georges Gudaitis, Anne W. 360 Guenther, Rebecca Alice Guerra, Leonardo Enrique 386 Guess, Donald Eric Guess, Steven Bennett 414 Guffey, Alisa Harris Guill, James Robert Guill, Jennifer Ellen 414 Guinn, Kevin Clay 92, 273, 386 Gullett, Vicki Lynn Gulley, John Orion Gulson, Mary Catherine Gulson, Mary Catherine Gumm, Lisa Carol Gunn, Paul Richard Gunts, Sheri Lyn 337, 414 Gustafson, Paul Lance 313 Gutermuth, Stephen Anthony Guthrie, Patricia M Guthrie, Vera 182-3 Guttschalk, Sherry Lynn 360 Guy, Chester Marshall Guy, Deniese Guy, Holly Lynn 414 Guy, Juliette Guy, Suzanne 386 Gwinn, Mari Elgin Gwinn, Richard Stewart 28, 218, 220, 223 Gymnastics team 244-5 Haack, Robert Alfred 28, 326 Habermehl, Eric Vonn Habermehl, Kyle David Habermehl, Rachel Leah 299, 360 Hackett, Terrence Lee 258, 261, 386 Hackler, Mary Elam 249, 395 Hadden, Michael Norris Hadden, Sidney Gene 299 Haddock, Frances Bjalobok Hadley, Betty Brown 414 Hadley, Burl Dane Haffner, Deborah Lynn Haffner, Helen Katherine 289, 291, 386 Haffner, Paula Marie 414 Haga, Lucille Anne Hagan, Bobbie Kenneth Hagan, David Alan 274 Hagan, Deborah Kaye 414 Hagan, John Kenneth Hagan, Melba 414 Hagan, Richard Alan 307, 360 Hagan, Stephen Joseph Hagan, Theresa Rose 414 Hagans, Lewis Dean 320, 330 Hagans, Melissa Ann 270, 414 Hagee, Virginia Lee Hager, James Roy Hager, Jan Faye Hagerman, Frank Turner Hagewood, Joseph Dallas Haggard, Juanelle Elaine Hahn, Carin Carr 338 Hahn, Catherine Dukes Hahn, Lisa Tarleton 332, 338 Hail, Leslie Anne 334 Haines, Mark Opp Haines, Walter Grant 312, 395, 397 Haire, James Earl Haire, Nute Edward 218 Haire, Steven W Haj, Hossein Nejad G. Haji-Hossein-Nejad, Abdolr Halbritter, Cynthia Ann 414 Halbritter, Deborah Lynn Halcomb, Larry Lee Halcomb, Meredith D. Hale, Anna 92 Hale, David Allen Hale, David B Hale, Jeffrey Lynn Hale, John Tully 299 Hale, Marlene Swanson Hale, Michael Thomas Hale, Ronald Scott Hale, Sheryl Diane Hale, Terry Lee Hale, Terry Wayne Hale, Timothy Glen Hale, Wayne C. 218 Haley, Audrey Ann 282, 395 Haley, Donald Keith Haley, Margaret Davis Haley, Patricia Karen 341 Halicks, Richard August Hall, Annette Hall, Barry Edward 360 Hall, Bennie Keith Hall, Brian Lawton Hall, Charles William 414 Hall, Cindy Darlene 395 Hall, Commie J. Hendricks Hall, Daniel Robert Hall, David Bryan Hall, Deborah McGuffey 362 Hall, Debra Ann 362 Hall, Eddie Dickson Hall, Gary Wayne 414 Hall, John Daniel 218-9, 223, 395 Hall, Joni Lynn 395 Hall, Joseph Marion Hall, Marcia Nunn Hall, Nancy Jo 414 Hall, Reba Ann Hall, Ricky Newman Hall, Robert Wayne Jr. Hall, Ronald Wayne Hall, Sam 52 Hall, Scott Jordan 386 Hall, Sharon Kaye 395 Hall, Sonja Gay Pruitt Hall, Susan Christine Hall, Veronica Lynn Hall, William Petrie Hall, William Todd Halleron, Rockford Lee Halsel, Garry Allen Haltom, Julia Ellen Ham, John William Ham, Terry Beth 414 Hamby, Janet Meleah Hamilton, Dennis Dean Hamilton, Glenda Denise 395 Hamilton, Harry Earl III 274, 293 Hamilton, Janice Sue Hamilton, Kevin Ambrose 325, 414 Hamilton, Mary Elizabeth 168 Hamilton, Robert Alan Hamilton, Robert Wayne Hamilton, Ronald Allen 288, 362 Hamilton, Stephanie Jan Hamilton, William 325 Hamlett, Tamela Denise Hamlin, Stephen Fred Hamm, Ritchie Allen Hamm, Shirley Neal 362 Hammack, Sally Lou 309, 334, 362 Hammer, Donna Jo 386 Hammer, Lisa Beth 362 Hammer, Timothy Don 395 Hammock, Donna Marie 362 Hammond, John William 306 Hammond, Thomas Blanford 313, 386 Hammonds, Valerie Jo Hampton, Corlos Dewaine 255 Hampton, Ronald Lee Hampton, Sandra Nell 362 Hampton, William Edward 414 Hampton, William Paul Jr. Hance, Patricia L. 414 Hancock, Carlene Jo 334 Hancock, Catherine Evans 338 Hancock, Deborah Faye 287, 395 Hancock, Grant Lee Hancock, James Daryl 271, 386 Hancock, Kathleen Henri 395 Hancock, Kenneth Walls Hancock, Mary Katherine 414 Hancock, Matthew Herbert Hancock, Monty Glenn Jr. Hancock, Ray 317 Handley, Carolyn Elaine Handley, Lynnetta Denise 331 Handley, Vickie Norise 414 Handy, Riley 152 Hanes, Charles Leland Hanes, Patricia Louise Haney, Paula Jeanette 386 Hanging of the green 68 Hanking, Karen Elaine Hankins, Paul Mark Hankla, Billie Sue Hankla, Mel Stewart 427 Hanna, Jimmy Keith Hanna, William Morton 93, 273, 303, 386 Hannon, Michael John Hansen, Barbara Cynthia Hansen, Michael Vernon Hansen, Susan Marie Hanses, Robert Joseph Jr. Hansford, Luanne 414 Hanson, Janet Lynne 92, 273, 414 Hanson, Julie Leigh Harbin, Henry Dwight II Harbison, Frederick L. 414 Harbison, Larry Wayne 255, 317, 362 Harbison, Robert Lee Jr. Harbolt, Ricky Lyn Hardcastle, Lisa Gaye Hardcastle, Mark Stephen Hardcastle, Sandra Jo Hardcastle, Sherri Lynn Harden, Brenda Gail Hardesty, Charlene 30, 338 Hardesty, Linda Carol Hardesty, Ricky Price Hardesty, Tracey Jane 330, 340 Hardin, Arthur Lee 414 Hardin, Charles Edward Jr. 296, 427 Hardin, Charlotte Marie Hardin, Danny H. Hardin, Daphne Elyce 414 Hardin, Diana Lee Hardin, Henry 147 Hardin, Lonnie Lee 218, 386 Hardin, Maurice Terrell Hardin, Rita Ann Hardin, Robert Franklin Hardison, Doris Whitmer Hardwick, Christopher Mark Hardy, Louise Crain 362, 386 Hardy, Mark Fletcher Hare, Gary Thomas Hargan, Melna Katrin 342, 414 Hargis, Deborah Faye Hargis, Rinda Darlene 308, 362 Hargreaves, Sally Jo J. Hargrove, James Earl 325, 330, 395 Harkins, Keith Douglas 322, 414 Harkins, Wendy Leigh Harl, Carolyn Sue Harlan, William Steve Harlin, Karen Hope 395 Harlow, David Mark 285 Harlow, Glenda Faye 395 Harlow, Robert Spence Jr. Harlow, Sheila Ann 292, 362 Harlow, Teresa Jean 270, 414 Harman, Samuel Ray Harmon, Claudia Elaine Harmon, Cynthia Alice 362 Harmon, Sara Kerr Dexter Harney, Teresa Lynn 414 Harp, Donnie Wilber Harpe, Ronald D. Harpe, Sarah Elizabeth 395 Harper, Bobby Stephen 362 Harper, Colleen Moss 386 Harper, Cynthia Louise 414 Harper, Edward Herman Harper, Kandace Jane 414 Harper, Karen Michelle 340, 414 Harper, Peggy Sue 414 Harper, Rebecca Fay Harper, Robert Wallace 362 Harpool, Cheryl E. 395 Harrell, Roger Lee 289, 362 Harrell, Traci Ann 322 Harriford, Deborah Lynn 414 Harrington, Drew 159 Harrington, JoAnn 283 Harrington, Timothy Drew 305, 362 Harris, Bambi Jo 362 Harris, Barry Keith Harris, Betty Kay Harris, Billy Eugene 386 Harris, Brent Morris Harris, Cliva Walton Jr. Harris, David Taft Harris, Deborah Katherine 395 Harris, Deborah Lynne 309 Harris, Doc 326 Harris, Fred Alvin Harris, Fred Leland Harris, Frederick Lee 395 Harris, Gerald Wayne Harris, Gerry Lee 395 Harris, James Michael 362 Harris, James Paul Harris, Janice Juanita 340 Harris, Jeffery Dean 326 Harris, Jennifer Ann 362 Harris, Joseph Raymond Jr. 386 Harris, Linda Faye 414 Harris, Pernell 314 Harris, Priscilla Gayle 215, 264, 386 Harris, Ralph Virgil Harris, Robert Craig 414 Harris, Robert Kenton Harris, Russell Brian 386 Harris, Sheila Lauern 121, 362 Harris, Sherry Lynn 414 Harris, Tami Lynn 414 Harris, Terrence Russell 303 Harris, Terrill Wayne 362 Harris, Thomas Gary Harris, Thomas Richard Harris, Yvonne Delores Harrison, Beverly Kay 309 Harrison, Carol Elaine 272 Harrison, Danny Lee 296 Harrison, David Ford Harrison, Helen Marie Harrison, James Anthony Harrison, Kenneth Wayne 255, 317 Harrison, Korlin, Thomas 362 Harrison, Peggy Sue Harrison, Rebecca J. Harrison, Thomas McKinley 304 Harrison, Virginia Mary Harrod, Frances Ann 386 Harryman, David Eugene Harryman, Judy Lynn Harston, Terri Franklin Hart, Barbara Sweeney Hart, Donna Sue 396 Hart, Vicki Diann Hartel, Erwin Benedict Hartford, Ballet 41 Hartford, Sherry Lynn 330, 336 Hartman, Carol Ann 282-3, 362 Hartnett, Michael Steven Hartney, Michael F. Harton, Brian Cooper 396 Hartshorne, Robert Harold Hartsough, Vicki Susan 62, 264, 414 Hartwein, Michael William Harvell, Herbert 275, 362 Harvey, Aaron Charles III Harvey, Darrell Walter 92 Harvey, Debbie Diane Harvey, Lita Dawn 334, 414 Harvey, Mark Allen 325 Harvey, Robert Clifton 362 Harwood, Karen Ruth Harwood, Orin Lois Harzoff, Elizabeth Gail 21-2, 174 Haselton, Waring Blake Hash, Rita Dean Haskell, Marjorie Jane Haskins, Brent 234 Haskins, Clem 230, 234 Haskins, Clemette 234 Haskins, Joyce Ann 29-30, 320, 331, 339 Hassler, Eric Gene Hastie, Jack Eric 427 Hasting, Ronnie Allan Hastings, Richard Damon Hatch, Mark Emmett Hatcher, Anthny Creel Hatcher, Paul G. 296 Hatchett, Jerry Bradford 414 Hatchett, Terri Lynn 302-3, 396 Hatchett, Terry Lee Hatfield, Angela Hatfield, Barbara Jean 386 Hatfield, Donna Marie 271 Hatfield, Eddie Orean 414 Hatfield, Karen Ann 396 Hatfield, Margaret Mary Hatfield, Phyllis Franklin Hatfield, Terri Lynn Hathcock, Joseph Daniel Hatler, Peggy Ann Hauck, Robert Lee Jr. Haugh, Patrick William Haven, Marsha Ann Hawes, Carl Daniel 414 Hawes, David Wesley 396 Hawes, Harold Anthony Hawes, Shirley Jean Hawkins, Allison Vanessa 414 Hawkins, Anicia Stanhope 414 Hawkins, David Glenn Hawkins, Ellen Anne Hawkins, James Robbert Hawkins, Janet Sue 309, 362 Hawkins, Jeffery L. Hawkins, Marilyn 396 Hawkins, Pamela Kay 340, 362 Hawkins, Paul Clayton Hawkins, Sherry Leigh Hawkins, Terri Lynn Hawkins, Vanissa Mechelle 396 Hawkins, Vicki Lynn 334, 414 Hawley, Thomas Randall 414 Hawn, Robert Meredith Haworth, Sandra Louise 33, 275, 362 Hay, Archie Marion Hay, Erna Lee 386 Haycraft, Clifford Charles Haycraft, Launita June 396 Hayden, Alfred Jr. 218 Hayden, Christopher Joseph 396 Hayden, Glenward Dale Hayden, Joseph Louis Hayden, Joseph Maurice 362, 427 Hayden, Patricia Ann 362 Hayden, Reginald Amont 217-8, 386 Hayden, Richard Edward Jr. Hayden, Sarah 271, 414 Hayden, Teresa Lynn 396 Hayden, Vicki Marie 414 Haydon, James Lee Hayes, Barbara Ann Hayes, Cheryl Smith Hayes, Cynthia Maria 414 Hayes, Danny Raymer Hayes, Debra Anne Hayes, John Douglas 414 Hayes, Lloyd George Jr. Hayes, Michael Anthony 218, 320, 331, 362 Hayes, N. Faye 362 Hayes, Russell Morgan 396 Hayes, Thomas Vernon 320, 330 Haynes, David Mark Haynes, Forest Donnell 52-3, 275, 386 Haynes, Georgette Tilly 362 Haynes, James Charles 289, 316, 362 Haynes, John Arthur Haynes, Patricia Jean 414 Haynes, Ronald David 414 Haynes, Stephen C. Haynes, Susan Leigh 338, 396 Hays, Charles 190-1 Hays, Joseph Stephen 305, 363 Hays, Marcia Lynne Hays, Nyra Elaine 264, 414 Hays, Paul Taylor 305, 396 Hays, Sheila Jane Hays, Shelby Kenneth Hays, Timothy James Hayter, Bob Duwayne Hazel, Michael Chandler Hazel, William Stanley Hazelwood, Cherie Lynn Hazelwood, Jeffrey Brent Hazelwood, Nancy Thomason 288 Heaberlin, Jill Evans 303, 414 Head, Bryon Keith 396 Head, Carol Loretta Head, Joanne 414 Head, Karen Marie 312, 414 Head, Lonnie Keith Head, Mary Judith 271, 386 Headlines on the Hill 118-121 Headquarters Music and Boutique 52 Healey, Henry 307 Health and safety dept. 184 Health and safety dept., head 184-5 Health services, director 149, 163 Heard, Edrick Ricardo Hearn, Lisa Gay 414 Heather, Hugh Burton 396 Heater, Ronald Louis 274-5 Heath, Scottie Edwin Hebel, Mark Newman Hebert, Mark Richard 276, 414 Heck, Jeanne Marie 414 Heckman, Carol Jean Heddens, Kimber James Jr. Hedger, William Robert 363 Hedges, Lily B. Hedges, Steven Michael Heeter, Gregory Dewayne Heffington, Lawrence Evans 324 Hefner, Robin Renee 363 Hegedus, Alice Kay Heichelbech, Bruce Martin 315, 330 Heile, Daniel Clayton 414 Hein, Alan E. 414 Hein, Jo Elizabeth 414 Hein, John Anthony 386 Hein, Vicki Ann 396 Heines, Diane Marie 363 Heintzman, Mark Edward Heinze, John William Heinze, Steve Bryant Heinze, Thomas Edward Heisley, Holly Jan Heizer, Ann Katharine Hek, Deborah Darnelle 363 Held, Mark Steven 323, 414 Held, Suzanne Marie Heldman, James 6, 172 Hellenthal, Betty Williams Helm, Cathy Louise 363 Helm, Christopher Allan 321 Helm, Diana Gaye 289, 386 Helsley, Sandra Jean 340 Helton, Deborah Ann 414 Heltsley, Thomas Edward 414 Hemingway, Sara Ann 340, 414 Hemmen, Robert William 318, 363 Grove, G. Hemmen, R. from a prof TURNED SURREAL by a photographic meth- od called solarization, government assistant professor Joerg Seitz leans from a Grise Hall window to talk to a student, or as he joked, “bless the multitudes.” Judy Watson Hemmer, Christiana Cae 338, 345 Hemmer, Mara Christine 338, 345 Hempenstall, Peter George 299 Hench, Charles David 312, 330, 396 Hendershot, Janet Marlene Hendershot, Philip Mark 345 Henderson, Carmen Denise 414 Henderson, Debbie Genean 414 Henderson, Donna Kaye 42-3 Henderson, Eugene Ray Henderson, Kenneth Russell 363 Henderson, Kimberly Ann 414 Henderson, Lamont Benjamin Henderson, Loretta Faye 414 Henderson, Marilyn Jo 290 Henderson, Mark Jeffrey 313, 396 Henderson, Sheila Faye Henderson, Yvonne Lee 386, 396 Hendon, Glenn Alan 396 Hendrick, Penny Lynn Hendricks, James Martin 396 Hendricks, Kenneth Austin Hendricks, Michael Dee Hendricks, Vickie Hoagland Hendrickson, Charles 200, 304 Hendrickson, Scott Sadler 330 Hendrix, Linda Louise 292 Hendrix, Martin Webb Henneman, Kenneth Hennessy, Sally Mozelle Henning, Marilyn Anne 414 Henning, Michael John 312 Henon, Kenneth Joseph Henry, Bruce Allen 414 Henry, David Wayne Henry, Gary Parker Henry, Philip Nathan 324 Henry, Philip Wayne 324 Henry, Robert Lyle 324 Henry, Rosemary Annette 338 Henry, Susan Elizabeth Henry, Tony Ashton 218 Henry, William Barry 218, 363 Henry, William Patrick 386 Henshaw, Leslie Ann 396 Hensley, Mary Jane 414 Henson, John Michael Hepner, John Raymond 277, 317, 386 Hepner, Robert Le Roy 414 Hepp, Mary Jan 363 Hep pler, Susan Lynn Herald, Kimlin Sue Herbert, Stephen H Hermann, Victoria Lynn 414 Hernandez, Gabriel A. 414 Herndon, Owen Kenneth Herner, Wayne Gale 238, 327, 386 Herrick, John S. 289 Herrick, Robert Bradley 386 Herring, Dale 414 Herrington, Debra Anne Herrmann, Robert Peter Herrmann, Sharon Jean Herron, Robert Wilburn Jr. Hershey, Jane Elizabeth 284, 308, 386 Hertelendy, Deborah Lynn 341 Hess, Harlan John Hess, Janine Ferne Hess, Ronald Keith 303 Hessel, Del 212, 224-5, 257 Hessig, Richard Alan Hester, Cary E. 238, 306 Hester, Celisa Ann Hester, Matthew William Hester, Warren Ray Hewlett, Bonney Kay 342, 363 Heyduck, Cheryl Diane 386 Heyduck, Tracie Ladonne Hiam, Clarence Franklin 414 Hibbett, Ann Lester Hibbs, William Damon Hickerson, Charles Hilton Hickerson, Rolinda Wiseman Hicks, Jack Jefferson 312 Hicks, Joan Annette Hicks, Larry Donald Hicks, Nathana Ruth 414 Hicks, Peggy Lynne Hicks, Stephen Lynn Hicks, Teresa Lynn Higdon, Helen Wheeler Higdon, John Caleb Jr Higgason, Duke Alton Higgason, Jill Ann 340 Higginbotham, Donna Jean 396 Higginbotham, Ronny Lee Higgins, Dan Bedster 296, 304-5 Higgins, Katherine Ann Higgins, Quinton Higgins, Roy Owen Higgins, Stephen Eugene 414 Higgs, Teresa Lynn 414 Higgs, Thomas Edmund 323 Higgs, Vivian Lynette 239 High, Anthony Wayne High, Connie Jo High, Rhonda Lou 396 Highland, James 277 Highley, Anthony Bret 218, 414 Hight, Bradley William Hightower, Janice Louise 396 Hightower, Roderick Eugene Hightower, Teresa Lynn 337, 363 Hildebrandt, Kevin Glenn Hildebrandt, Lisa Dawn 414 Hildreth, Cheryl Lyn 336 Hill, Ann Elizabeth 414 Hill, Anthony Clem Hill, Anthoy Oneal 289, 414 Hill, Bernita Dean 396 Hill, Bobby Ellsworth 414 Hill, Brian Kent Hill, Ireathea Jaye 414 Hill, Janet R. 414 Hill, Janis Lynette 307, 363 Hill, Karen Rea Hill, Larry K. 386 Hill, Lea Anne 414 Hill, Lowell II Hill, Mark Dewayne 386 Hill, Mary Ann Hill, Melody Beth 63, 334 Hill, Michael Franklin 289, 363 Hill, Nancy Annette Hill, Tamara Kay Hill, Theresa Ellen 396 Hill, Theresa Kay 274 Hill, Thomas Joseph Hill, Yolon Mischelle 264 Hillard, Jon Rex Hilliard, James Robert Hilton, Luther Ray Hilton, Marian Lea Hilton, Robert Allen Himes, Harrietta Hina, Laurie Lynn Hinderliter, John Roger 26 Hinders, Catherine Ann Hines, Debra Carole Hines, Elizabeth Wood Hines, Gregory Scott 218 Hines, John Porter Hines, Karen Lynn 85 Hines, Rita Collette 414 Hines, Thomas Edward Hines W. Kirk Hinkebein, Dale Frank Hinkle, Roger Neil 218 Hinson, Peggy Lynn Mills Hinton, Lou Ann 414 Hinton, Susan Lugene 386 Hinton, Vickie Renae Hirst, Elizabeth Anne 363 Hirst, Sarah Lynn 386 Hiryak, Peter Jeffery History dept. 174 History dept., head 174-5 Hitchel, Benny Luther Hite, Lisa Ann Hiten, Mary Jean S. 363 Hitron, Deborah Ann 338, 414 | Hix, Donna Marie 363 Hoagland, Dawn Marie } Hoagland, Sharon Lynn Hobbs, Robert Kevin 315 Hobbs, Wayne 95, 172-3 : Hobdy, Ricky Dale 386 Hobson, Charles Jeffrey Hobson, Debra Kay 397 Hobson, Kenny Ray 299, 397 Hobson, Lana Lovvorn Hobson, Mark Alan Hobson, Randall William Hocker, Greg Scott 363 Hocker, Jeffery Stuart 363 Hocker, William A. 257 Hodapp, Jane Lynn 397 Hodge, Betty J. Money Hodge, Ellen Tatum Hodges, John Wade Hodges, Judy Melisa 397 Hodges, Kirkman Edward Hoegh, Kimon S. 255, 397 Hoerni, Judy Lynn 414 Hoffer, H. Craig Hoffman, Debra Ann Hoffman, Debra Faye Hoffman, Sherri Lynn 414 Hoffman, Teresa M. Hoffman, Wayne 198 Hogan, Carolyn Logan Hogan, Elizabeth Sharon Hogan, Pamela Jo 397 Hogg, Edward Hiram 386 Hogg, Karen Lynn 313, 337, 397 Hoggard, David Eugene 397 Hogue, Charles David Hohman, Patrick Joseph 124-5, 277, 363 Hoke, Dorothy Lee Holbrook, Harriette Anne Holden, Dan Oliver Holden, Jo Ann 92 Holden, Nancy Ann 330, 334, 386 Holder, Donna Sue 386 Holder, Margot E. 285 Holder, Rose Marie 309 Holder, Stephen C. Holder, Wanda Borders 414 Holec, Dale Thomas 299, 363 Holeman, Janet Rolene Holl, Colleen Rae 301, 363 Holladay, Sue Ellen Holland, George K. Holland, Gregory Leon 397 Holland, James Henry II 283, 363 Holland, Jeffery Pack 327 Holland, Kenneth Reece Holland, Larry Dale 397 Holland, Mark 85 Holland, Monika Yvette Holland, Patrick 319 Holland, Philip George 327, 397 Holland, Sandy Irene Holland, Stephanie Lee Hollander, Charles Joseph Hollands, Stephen Jonas Holley, Sharon K. H olliday, Anne Marie Hollis, Steven Hanford 293, 397 Holloman, Wayne Milford 397 Hollon, Kathy Levon Hollon, Larry Maurice 386 Holloway, Becky Faye 334 Holloway, Kathy Sue 414 dollowell, Brenda Carol 363 Hollowell, Cynthia Ann Holman, Charles William Holman, Connie Lee 278, 386 Holman, Gregory Keith Holman, Nancy Lee 386 Holman, Paula 386 Holmes, Deborah Jane 282, 340, 397 Holmes, Laurence H. Jr. Holmes, Lois Lynn 239, 255 Holmes, Richard Gene Holmes, Susan Elizabeth Holmgren, Thomas James Holsclaw, David T. 397 Holsclaw, Jerry Michael Holsclaw, Robert Holt, Allyson, Margaret 336 Holt; David Hudson Holt, David Mark Holt, Julie Anne 336 Holt, Linda Fitzgerald Holt, Preston Tatum 218 Holthofer, August Joseph Holton, Charles Brent Holton, Monica Dale Holton, William Brian In step A STUDENT moves inside the geometric design created by the staircase of the Cravens Graduate Center and Library. One of the newest campus structures, the building has nine floors. Mark Lyons Holway, Victoria 9, 264-5 Holy, Norman 283 Holyoke, Karen Louise 386 Home economics and family living dept. 184 Home economics and family living dept. head 184-5 Homecoming 28-31 Homecoming — a great Western Pastime 28-31 Honaker, Anne Craighead Honors and recognition 283 Honors Program, coordinator 146 Honus, Gary Paul Honus, Linda Marrie Hood, Charles Allen Hood, Gerald Lynn Hood, Keith Lancaster 275 Hood, Kelly Sue 414 Hood, Lydia Dell Hood, Mary Elizabeth 386 Hooey, John Timothy 345, 397 Hooker, Michael Joseph Hooks, Charles Elliot 363 Hooks, Lisa Michele Hooks, Paul Anthony 397 Hooks, Stephen Carter 324 Hooks, Steven Lester 324, 386 Hooper, Stephen Ray 207 Hoosier, Wanda Marie 414 Hoover, Beverly Sue 414 Hope, Richard Hopgood, John Keith 312, 330, 386 Hopkins, Allyson Lynn 298, 414 Hopkins, Clayton Ray Hopkins, Curtis Lynn 318 Hopkins, Richard John C, 257 Hopkins, Richard John C. Hopper, Deanna Lynn Hopper, Donald Wayne Hopper, Gregory Jack Hopper, John Houston Hopper, Sharon Ann 415 Horan, John Lee Hord, Charles Richard Hormuth, Janice Diane 342, 386 Horn, Jesse Lee 415 Horn, Sylvester Hornback, Betty Heady 363 Hornbeck, Thomas Earl 312 Horne, Chet Prather 218 Horner, Eva Catherine Horner, John C. 318, 415 Horner, Steven Carl 397 Hornung, Rose Mary 238 Horsley, Nona Kay 386 Horticulture 137, 202-3 Hortin, Laura Ann 308, 341, 386 Horton, Deborah Lynn Aeby 208 Horton, Jacqueline Sue Horton, Robert Joseph Hosek, Valerie Joan 397 Hoskins, Mark Page 325, 397 Hoskins, Mima 386 Hoskins, Ronald Charles Hoskinson, Kevin Lee Hostettler, Roger Alan Hottell, Dennis William Hottinger, Gary Lee Houchens, Patricia Carol 397 Houchin, Allen 120 Houchin, Donald Nelson Houchin, Mary Ann 330, 341, Houchin, Ricky Neal Houchins, Cherry Patrice Houck, Marcia Diane 397 Hough, Brenda Dawn 285, 397 House, Jon 156 House, Joy Lynch House, Sandra Cornelia 288, 386 House, Stephen 19, 121, 156 Houser, Gregory Allen 257 Houser, Kimberly Jeanne 336 Housing, director 149, 156, 162 Houston, Gary Douglas Houston, Jane Critser Houston, Robyn Dale 415 How to Survive Dorm Life 270 Howard, Bryan Keith 293 Howard, Colleen Denise 292, 386 Howard, Cynthia Lee 338 Howard, Danny Joe 397 Howard, Danny Wayne Howard, Dorothy Anne 85, 302-3 Howard, Felicia Gail 415 Howard, George David Howard, Glenda Gay 386 Howard, Gregory 275, 363 Howard, James Kirk 386 Howard, Jerry Nelson 274 Howard, Karen Beth 309, 386 Howard, Karen Marie Howard, Kathy Lorea Howard, Kimberly Gay 386 Howard, Larry 16, 154 Howard, Laurence 154 Hoard, Linda Gail 236-9, 305, 363 Howard, Linda June 301, 415 Howard, Mark Allen 154 Howard, Michael Gene 386 Howard, Mike William 289, 325 Howard, Patricia Rose 154, 386 Howard, Rodney Gene 274 Howard, Ronald 394, 397 Howard, Thomas Dalkeith 415 Howard, William Allen Howard, William Thomas Howe, Gregory Wayne 415 Howe, Margaret 44-5 Howell, Karen Elizabeth Howell, Kellye Jill Howell, Kerry Wayne 415 Howell, Rebecca Susan 338, 386 Howell, Vickie Lynn 341, 363 Howerton, Jeffrey Scott 283, 291 Howlett, Linda Welch Howlett, Lisa J. 255, 363 Howlett, Marilyn Gayle 308, 397 Howser, James Donald 415 w S o 437 Hines, G. Howser, J. Howton, Michael Riley 397 Hoyt, Madrene Rene Hrycyk, Bryan Martin Huang, Kao Huei Billy Hub Pizzeria 118-9, 139 Hubbard, Basil Ray Hubbard, Dianna Lynn Hubbard, George Alan 218, 415 Hubbard, Michael Wayne Hubbard, Penny Lee 363 Hubbuch, Patricia Marie 202, 363 Hudak, Susan Marie 398 Huddleston, Charles Ray Huddleston, Floyd Douglas Huddleston, Gloria Lee Day 363 Huddleston, Walter D. 139 Hudgens, Lois Jean 363 Hudgens, Rena Nell 364 Hudgins, Paula Denice Hudnall, Gregory Owen 386 Hudnall, Mernie 305 Hudson, Brian Keith Hudson, James Edward 364 Hudson, Janice Camille 364 Hudson, John Hall Hudson, Kenneth Harold Hudson, Remus Allen Jr. Hudson, Vivian Carol 415 Huebschman, Jon Clark Huey, Johnnie Katherine 126, 329, 336 Huff, Darrel Dene Jr. 327, 415 Huff, Patricia Ann Huff, Rhonda Carol 386 Huff, Terri Lynn 398 Huff, Wendy Ann Huffines, Billy Wayne 323 Huffman, Michael Wayne Hufnagel, Keith E Hug, Barbara 301 Huggins, Nathan Wallis Hughart, John Kevin 323 Hughes, Frank David 258-261 Hughes, Gary Kent 398 Hughes, Gary Robert 72, 75, 386 Hughes, Jacqueline Lee 415 Hughes, James Willis 312 Hughes, Joe Darrell Jr. Hughes, Joseph Michael Hughes, Julie Robin Hughes, Kelly Lynn 398 Hughes, Kenneth Lee Hughes, Kevin Ray Hughes, Lloyd Darrell 309 Hughes, Melodye Carol 415 Hughes, Michael Dewayne 415 Hughes, Norman Earl 364 Hughes, Pamela Jo 398 Hughes, Robert Steven Hughes, Ruthanne White 364 Hulette Steve Hunt 249, 315 Huling, Charles Bryan Hullett, Mark Wayne Hullett, Robert C. 289 Hullett, Rose Marie Hulsey, Jo Clay Hulsey, John Mark 415 Hulsizer, Barry Keith Hume, Catherine Lynn 386 Hume, Kimberly Ann 398 Hume, Terri Rejean 415 Hume, Timothy D. Humes, Karen Ruth Humes, Kathy Sue Humes, Ronald Dale Hummer, Robert Wilson Hummer, William Fredrick 415 Humpert, Jon Thad Humphrey, Alan Humhrey, Bridget Elayne Humphrey, Donald Ray Humphrey, Glyn Wilson 306-7 Humphrey, Kathryn Rose 415 Humphrey, Linda Ann Humphrey, Mary Alice 364 Humphrey, Nancy Lea 305, 398 Humphries, Nancy Kaye 415 Humphries, Ruth Ann 296, 364 Humphries, William Andrew Hundley, David Wayne 398 Hunley, John Russell Hunn, Lisa Gay 415 Hunt, James Frederick Hunt, Lura Ellen 415 Hunt, Luther Mark Hunt, Mark Anthony Hunt, Meggi Jane Burden 364 Hunt, Naomi Irene 415 Hunt, Rebecca Dawn 304 Hunt, Samuel Clay Hunter, Greg Bryan 313 Hunter, Karl Jerome 257 Hunter, Kathy Ann 386 Hunter, Kevin Allen Hunter, Matthew Todd Hunter, Ricky Lee 324 Huntey, Bruce R. 364 Huntey, Pamela Kaye 415 Hunton, Bobby Allen Hunton, Janet Sue 415 Hunton, Teresa Diane 398 Hurd, Brenda Jo 287, 415 Hurd, Danny 398 Hurd, Danny Hurdle, Chester C. Jr. Hurst, Timothy Wade 276 Hurt, Gayle Booher Hurt, Jacqueline Cramer Hurt, John Harper Hurt, Julia Ann Hurt, Michael Allen 208-9, 304 Hurt, Nina Disman 308 Hurt, Otha Dale 415 Hurt, Valina Kay Husk, Karen Grace 415 Husk, Rickey Earl Huskey, Samuel 316 Huskisson, Dennis Darrell Hussey, Andrew Jackson Jr. 275, 364 Hussey, Debra Ann 438 Howton, M. Johnson, R. Hussey, Stuart James Hutchinson, Diane Verene Hutchinson, Sharla Elise Hutchison, David Moorman Hutto, Catherine Elaine Hutto, Peter Stewart 326, 328 Hyde, John Charles Hyden, Judy Anne lacobello, Patricia Ann 341 Ice, Debra Lou 386 Iglehart, Jan Marie In the winner's circle 258-261 Inabnitt, Mary Jane 386 Indalecio, Joe Vincent 274-5 Industrial Education Building 38-9, 119 Industrial education and technology dept. 48-9, 165 Industrial education and technology dept., head 165 Inge, Judith Taylor Ingram, Annie Foley 386 Ingram, Judy Rose Ingram, Nelda Clorice Ingram, Robert Bruce Ingwersen, Ronald Wayne Inman, Carla E. Inman, Kenneth Harold 330 Instruction, assistant dean 146, 167 Interfraternity Council 29, 312, 330-1 Interhall Council 30, 33, 269 Interns eyewitness capitol experience 116- ve Intramurals 252-5 Ipaye, Nasser Adisa 398 Irish, William Donald Jr. Iron Skillet 53 Irons, Frank Charles Irvin, Anthony 316 Irvin, Wanda Denise 415 Irwin, Jean Irwin, Jeffrey Lee 321 Irwin, Thomas Henry Isbill, Michael Wayne Isenberg, Billy Mark Isenberg, Linda Kaye Isenberg, Pamela Lee 398 Isley, James Joel Ison, Debra Darlene 386 Ison, Sallie Dawn 264, 306, 398 It took all summer to prep the Hill 16-17 It’s all in a day or night’s work 122-5 It’s Child’s Play 92-3 Iwanowicz, Thresa Anne Jabra, Issa Ishaq Jackel, Anne Marie 328, 338, 398 Jackel, Patricia Noel 311, 338 Jackman, Norris Lynn Jackson, Alan Lawrence Jackson, Anthony Dawayne Jackson, Charles Wayne Jr. 386 Jackson, Clarence Jr. 415 Jackson, Cynthia Ann Jackson, Daniel Dow Jackson, Danny Clark 386 Jackson, David Randall Jackson, Dawn O. 415 Jackson, Dennis Arnold Jackson, Donald Wayne Jackson, Donjea Maria 306, 386 Jackson, Frankie Thomas Jackson, Glynise Cuyler Jackson, Gregory Bernard 227-8, 230, 233 Jackson, James A. Jackson, Jeff Alan Jackson, Jeffrey Trimble 398 Jackson, Jennifer Jackson, Jill Ann 415 Jackson, Jimmy Bryant Jackson, Joy Lynne 386 Jackson, Karen Anne Nipper Jackson, Katrina Anne Jackson, Kenneth Michael Jackson, Kevin Lynn 312 Jackson, Marcia Sue 288, 386 Jackson, Michael Lawrence Jackson, Patrick Treadwell Jackson, Randall Wynn Jackson, Robert Douglas Jackson, Sandra Kimberly 238 Jackson, Susan Gail Jackson, Teresa Ann Lane Jackson, Victor Michael 288, 386 Jackson, William Lee Jackson, William Patrick 248-9 Jacob, Milburn Alonza 415 Jacobs, William Edward 300-1, 386 Jaffre, Mark Robert 415 Jaggers, Jane Langley 386 Jaggers, Martin Lee 218, 415 Jaggers, Ronald Dean 322, 398 Jaggers, Rondell Clayton Jaggers, Sherry Louise Jaggers, Timothy R. 306 James, Brian David James, Charles Edward 364 James, Cynthia Diane 338 James, Howard Francis 317 James, Howard Shelton Jr. 317 James, Ida Jan James, Janice Kaye 255, 264 James, Joanna Faye 264, 386 James, Kathy Ann 415 James, Kenneth Ray II James, Leslie Colleen James, Marla Jo 336, 415 James, Melvin Garrett James, Priscilla Devereaux James, Richie Hale James, Sabrinna Valinda 386 James, Teresa Janett 415 James, Wanda Lou Jameson, David Warren 415 Jamison, Elisa Jo Janes, Bobby Wayne 415 Janes, Cynthia Ann 398 Janes, Pamela Ann 364 Janes, Ricky Dean 386 Jansky, Jeffrey John 364, 411 Jarboe, Charles Daniel Jarboe, Charles V. Jarboe, John Frank Jarboe, Marvin Brown Jarboe, Rhonda Lynn 289, 336, 415 Jarboe, Sharon Beck Jarvis, Marla Gaye 415 Jarvis, Teresa Kay 386 Jauregue, Jose Ricardo 398 Jayne, Mary Marlene Jeannette, Michael Warren 386 Jecker, Thomas Lyle 386 Jefferson, James Floyd Jefferson, Jane Ellen Jefferson, Lawrence Edward 217 Jeffrey, Julie Ann 398 Jeffries, Mary Margaret Jeffries, Nancy Ann 364 Jenkins, Cynthia Ann Jenkins, Jacqueline 304-5, 342, 364 Jenkins, Jeff 199 Jenkins, Kenneth Carlise Jenkins, Linda Helayne Jenkins, Loretta Kay 415 Jenkins, Mark Duane 293 enkins, Nathan Ray enkins, Randal Mark 398 Jenkins, Terry 328 Jenkins, William 190, 259 Jenkins, William Donald Jennings, Byron Keith ennings, Earl J. Jr. Jennings, Martha Johnson Jennings, Waylon 98, 100, 102 ensen, Terry Eugene 275 ensen, Timothy John 230, 274 Jent, Carl Wayne Jent, John Marvin Jent, Rhonda Ellen Jernigan, Gregory Juan Jernigan, Leann 398 Jernigan, Lucy Jane 365 Jerry’s Restaurant 66 Jessee, Brent Alan 398 Jessie Lonnie Ray Jessup, Beverly Harvey Jewell, Ann Shirlene 332-3 Jewell, Donna Lynne Jewell, Gregory Lee 415 Jewell, Kathy Jewell, Larry Douglas 365 Jewell, Patricia Louise Jewell, Sharnell Elizabeth Jewell, Teresa Joye 284, 336, 365, 427 Jewett, Pamela Marie 386 Johanson, Jane Joanne Johns, Dana Lynn Johns, Marsha Sue 415 Johnson, Abraham Johnson, Alan Hugh Johnson, Angelita Marie Johnson, Anita Gail 415 Johnson, Anthony Michael 365 Johnson, Artie N. ohnson, Barbara Faith 398 ohnson, Barry Glenn 386 ohnson, Benny Tom 322 Johnson, Bertil Gunnar III 305, 398 ohnson, Bonita Gail ohnson, Bonnie J. Owens 368 ohnson, Boyd Deatonne ohnson, Brenda Jane 398 ohnson, Calvin Edwin Johnson, Carol Ann 365 ohnson, Carol Lynn 415 Johnson, Carolyn 415 Johnson, Catherine E. Johnson, Cheryl Ann 365 Johnson, Christopher Alan Johnson, Craig Miller Johnson, Darrell Layne Johnson, David Duane 4, 398 Johnson, Deborah Suzanne 267 Johnson, Debra Faye Johnson, Diana 386 Johnson, Donald Mack 415 Johnson, Donnie Ray 285, 398 Johnson, Edward Lee 35, 312 Johnson, Elizabeth Ann Johnson, Ernest Randal Johnson, Eugene Johnson, Frances Lorraine 398 Johnson, Gary Lee Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, 318 Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, ohnson, Johnson, ohnson, ohnson, ohnson, ohnson, Johnson, ohnson, ohnson, ohnson, ohnson, ohnson, ohnson, ohnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, George Albert Jr. 365 George Pryor III 305 Greg Allen 345 Herbert Lee Iretta Kathleen James Alan James Carl James Henry 8-9, 227-233, 318 James Laurane James Raymond 365 James Robert 8-9, 227-233, 276, Jeanette L. Jeanette Proctor Jeffrey Allen 326 Jeffrey Davis 326 Jerry Lamonte 398 Jerry Lee 285, 386 Jill Vick 415 Joan Darlene Joanie Marie 342 John Herbert Joseph Keith Joseph William Joyce Marie Judy Lynn Karen Lynn Karen Yvonne 294, 347, 368, 411 Keith Robert 304 Ken 52 Kenneth Eugene Larry Darnell Leisa Jo Leonard Ervin Linda Francine 255 Linda Gail 255 Linda M. 255 Lisa Raye 386 Margaret Marie 398 Marguerite Gayle Mark Allen Mark Lee Martha Ann Martha Spinks Marty Preston Naomi Fay 365 Nathan Patrick 300 Nita Rochelle Paul Alan 365 Paul Edward Phyllis Annette Regina Gail 415 Richard Hall 415 Robert Dale ] i | Johnson, Robert Jay Johnson, Robert Vick 386 Johnson, Rosalyn Ann Johnson, Sarah Ann 341, 398 Johnson, Sheila Diane 26 Johnson, Sheila LaBlanche Johnson, Sherry Lynn 415 Johnson, Shirl H. Johnson, Stanley Dewayne 274-5 Johnson, Steven Patrick 365, 386 Johnson, Steven Reid 288 Johnson, Stewart David Johnson, Susan Johnson, Tara Marie 398 Johnson, Teresa Lynn 336 Johnson, Thomas 321 Johnson, Thomas A. 321, 386 Johnson, Thomas Leroy 321 Johnson, Tim D. Johnson, Timothy Wayne Johnson, Tonja Elaine 415 Johnson, Tony Lee 319, 330 Johnson, Tracey Gail 170, 415 Johnson, Vicki Dale Johnson, Wanda Sue Johnson, William Larry Johnson, William Leroy III Johnson, Yvonne Johnston, Frances Laver 398 Johnston, Hope Suzanne 309, 386 Johnston, Phyllis Lynn 386 Johnston, Stephen Leroy Johnston, Valerie Ann Joiner, Angela Marie 408 Joiner, Judy A. Joiner, Katherine Jean 338, 386 Joiner, Terry V. 408 Jolly, Byron Scott Jolly, Debbie Jean 398 Jones-Joggers Lab School, director 158 ones, Alfred Dean 386 Jones, Alicia ones, Angela Lynn Jones, Anita 264 Jones, Anthony Gaylon 386 Jones, Arthurine G. Jones, Barbara Jean Blakey ones, Becky Boyd 86 ones, Belinda Ann ones, Bonita Marie 398 ones, Carolle Elizabeth 288, 365 ones, Curtis Lee 315, 398 ones, Daniel Carder 398 ones, Darryl Anthony 318 Jones, David Ray Jones, Dennis Keith Jones, Donald Anthony Jones, Elbert Ray Jr. Jones, Frank Grant II 299, 304, 386 Jones, Gary William 277, 365 Jones, Gordon 208 Jones, Howard Michael 415 ones, Irene Delorse Jones, J.E. 320 ones, James Anthony 217-8 Jones, James Edgar 217-8 Jones, James Gregory 324, 365 Jones, James Irvin Jones, James Michael ones, Jeffrey Alan 411 ones, Jeffrey Glenn 283, 411 Jones, Jewel 365 Jones, John Thomas Jones, John William III Jones, Joseph Michael ones, Joseph William ones, Joy Wright ones, Joyce Lewis 365 ones, Karen Sue 398 Jones, Kathy Douglas Jones, Keith Erwin Jones, Kenneth Franklin II ones, Lawrence Omer ones, Linda Carol 305, 387 ones, Lynda Lee 398 ones, Mark Anthony 415 Jones, Max R. II Jones, Melvin Douglas Jones, Nancy Carol Adams Jones, Nancy Elaine Jones, Nathaniel 219 Jones, Noble Henry, Jr. 257, 391, 415 Jones, Norman Gene Jr. 42-3 Jones, Othello Ben II Jones, Pat Diane Jones, Patricia Lynne Tones, Perry Andrew 299, 415 Jones, Richard Dowell Jones, Robert Eugene Jr. 415 Jones, Robert Stephen Jones, Rocky Lee Jones, Ruth Helen 284, 365 Jones, Scott III Jones, Stephen Charles 273 Jones, Steve Hal 365, 387 Jones, Steven Eugene Jones, Sue 129 Jones, Teresa Diane 398 Jones, Terry Lee Jones, Vanessa Jean 415 Jones, Veronnie Faye Jones, Vicky Louise Jones, Wayne Jones, William Leon Jr. Joplin, George 277 Jordan, Dean Patrick 224 Jordan, Gail Ann Jordan, John Franklin Jr. 325, 415 Jordan, John Patrick 325 Jordan, Lytus Jordan, Robert Lee Jordan, Sandra Jean Jordan, Walter Turner Jordan, William Joseph Jordon, Lisa Lynn 342, 415 Joseph Jacquelyn Ann 337, 387 Joseph, Julie Ann Journalism dept. 175 Journalism dept., head 152, 175 Joyner, David William Joyner, E. Monroe Judd, Alan Keith 140 Judd, Matthew Darryl Judd, William Dean Juett, Kimberly Ray Juggernaut Jug Band 68 Jukes, Margaret Carol 415 Jureka, Pamela Irene Jureka, Theresa Louise 195 Jurgens, Megan Lee Kacsur, Carroll Mary 398 Kaczmarek, Nancy Mae Kaelin, Bernard Wayne 282, 398 Kaelin, Byron Aloysius 274 Kaelin, Gregory Raymond 387 Kaewilai, Wacharin Kaine, Timothy Kevin 317, 415 Kalab, Kathy 290-1 Kall, Richard Kane, Michael Edward Kapoor, Karl Narain 415 Kapp, Donald Francis Kappa, Alpha 344 Kappa Alpha Psi 316 Kappa Delta 269, 310-1, 315, 328, 334, 340, 344-5 Kappa Sigma 317 Karay, John Karimi, Ali 398 Karimian Ghodratotlah Karnes, Michael Francis 398 Karshenas, N. Mohamad Ali Kass, Mary M. Kast, Kevin Lemoine 218 Katchen, Tony Eugene Katzman, Paul Ray Katzman, Thomas Wayne Kautz, Joan 433 Kawas, John Anthony Keach, David Preston Keady, Gene 139, 234, 345 Keck, Thomas Bradford Keech, Christine Anne Keel, David Bruce Keele, John Charles 398 Keen, Karen Regina Keen, Mark Glenn 304-5 Keene, Carolyn Ann 415 Keene, Janice Carol Wheat Keene, Mary Jo Keeton, Jan Annette 387 Keffer, James Thomas 318, 365 Keffer, Richard Archer Keffer, Robert Clinton 415 Kegarise, Jeffrey Lee 415 Kegg, Diane Lynne Keightley, Gregory Mark 365 Keiley, Judith C. Snawder Keith, Thomas Joseph Kellem, Gary Franklin 318 Kellems, William Brady 365 Keller, Joseph Noble 318 Keller, Scott Alan 365 Kelley, Jack Obrien 366 Kelley, Neysa Joan Kelley, Paula Ann 415 Kelley, Ricky Lynn 398 Kelley, Sheila Faye Kelley, Ted William Kelley, Victor Louis III Kellum, Timothy 258, 261, 398 Kelly, Ann Denise Kelly, Charles Timothy Kelly, James P. Jr. Kelly, John James Kelly, John Michael 85, 176-7, 273, 366 Kelly, Karen Jo Kelly, Karen Suszanne 398 Scott Robinson Kelly, Marsha Kaye Kelly, Mary Lee Kelly, Mary Martina Kelly, Sherrill Lynn 387 Kelly, Terry J. Kelly, Timothy Edward Kelly, William Tyrone 415 Kelsey, David Terrill Kelso, Audrey Lenita 415 Keltner, David Randall Kelty, Cathy Ann 398 Kem, Jackie David 6 Kem, Nita Napier 6 Kemble, Danny Martin Kemp, Carol Dawn 276, 366 Kemp, Charles Ray Jr. Kemp, Elizabeth Ann Kemp, Ina Joan Kemp, Lloyd Crewdson III Kemp, Michael Dawson Kemper, Michael Allan 415 Kemper, Randy Allen 387 Kemper, Sandra C. Clifton Kempf, Byron Ray Kenady, Donald Brent Kendall, David Lee 260, 366 Kennady, Karen Gail 366 Kennedy, Dennis Michael Kennedy, Janet Lynn Kennedy, Lisa Marie Kennedy, Mark Gordon Kennedy, Marsha Karen 284, 309, 342, 366 Kennedy, Ruth Anne 366 Kennedy, William 275 Kenner, Howard Dudley 415 Kenner, Michael David 304, 387 Kennedy, Mary Haddock Kent, Sharon Myra 415 Kentucky Building 119 Kentucky Educational Television 153 Kentucky Library and Museum, director 152 Keown, Charles 35, 148 Keown, Charlotte Ruth 287, 415 Keown, Darrell Edward Keown, Kathy Dianne Keown, Kevin Otto 387 Keown, Paula Elaine Keplinger, David Charles Kerekes, Charles Vaughn Kern, Betty Ann 288, 366 Kerns, Cathy Diane Kerr, Jeffrey Scott 415 Kerr, Karen Ann 398 Snowtunda THE 36 INCHES OF SNOW that fell on Bowling Green during one of the coldest winters in history painted dozens of artistic scenes on the Hill. Two students carry their laundry across the ground floor of the seven-floor parking structure. 439 Johnson, R. Kerr, K. Kerr, Lisa Gayle Dowell Ker, Loren Edwin 300, 366 Kerr, Rhonda Ann Kerr, Thomas Lee Kerrick, Sara-Lois Kerry, Ronald G. 305, 366 Kersenbaum, Slyvia 40 Kersey, Regina Kay Kesselring, Nancy Gay Kesselring, Nancy Jean 366 Kessinger, David Lynn Kessler, Kenneth Edward Kessler, Kevin James Kessler, Linda Carol Kettler, Meryl Lee Long Kettler, Ronnye Edwin Key, Altricia Carol 308, 387 Key, Gary Walton Key, Jamie Jones Key, Kelly Patrick 345 Key, Markita Ann 342, 398 Key, Nancy Norreta 415 Key, Sandra Anne Key, Stacey Jeanine 398 Key, Vivian Gayle 366 Keys, Carol Jean 298 Khatibi, Aghooi Mehdi Kidd, Bryan Chenault Kidder, Robert Steven Kie, Emma Louise Kiely, Denis Owen 23 Kiessling, William 289, 366 Kieta, Michael Anthony 387 Kiger, Alica Jean Kiger, Russell Ray Kikuchi, Kazue Kille, Kathy Louise 398 Killebrew, Forrest Clinton 257, 398 Killian, Mildred Ann 398 Killion, Jayne Lee Kiltz, William Bradley 325, 344 Kimball, Richard Hart Kimberland, Robert Lynn Kimberlin, Brian Lee Kimbley, Latanya Marie 415 Kimbrough, J. Laughton Kimbrough, James Edward Jr. Kimbrough, Janet Leigh 75 Kimbrough, Judith Carol 415 Kimbrough, Mark Rene Kimmel, Jennifer Dawne 242 Kincaid, Yolanda Renee 415 Kinchlow, Gina Lloyce 330, 339, 366 Kindschi, Greg Allen Kinduell, Jill Patricia 342, 415 King, Aimee Rose 387 King, Allen Wayne 366 King, Barbara Jane King, Debra Renae 415 King, Dennis Lee King, Granville III 387 King, Karen Beth 415 King, Kimberly Annette 387 King, Lydia Jean King, Marcia Ann King, Patricia Margaret 287, 366 King, Phillip Vernon King, Robert L. King, Sheryl Denise 289 King, Thomas Edwin King, Thomas Michael King, Tracy Keith King, Valerie Lea Kingery, Sheila Ann 415 Kingham, Elizabeth Carole 415 Kingrey, Marla Jo 26, 271, 273, 287, 387 Kington, John Harlan Kington, Mary Jane 415 Kington, Mary Lucile B. Kinkade, Darrell Craig Kinkade, Richard Owen Kinkel, Vickie Rae Kinloch, June Ellen 334 Kinnaird, Edward Cortez Kinnaird, Karen Jane 308, 398 Kinnamon, Kevin Patrick Kinne, Kevin Robert 34 Kinnett, Brenda Sue 387 Kinney, Glenn Alan 398 Kinsinger, Joseph John Kinslow, Kenneth Allan 218 Kinsman, Karen Ann Kintigh, James David Kinzel, Wayne Morris 304 Kiper, Shirley Lynn 398 Kirby, Deborah Faye 415 Kirby, Helen Joyce Kirby, James Douglas Kirby, John Kent Kirby, Phillip Leo Kirby, Robert Kim Kirby, Ronnie Rector Kirby, Saundra Terrenee 398 Kirby, Steven Keith Kirchdorfer, Melode Kae Kirchhoff, Rebecca Ruth Kirchner, Maurice Eugene Kirk, James Edwin Kirk, Julia Elaine 366 Kirk, Rosemary 282 Kirkland, Vicki Lewis Kirkpatrick, Susan Bottoms Kirkwood, Nancy Ellen 398 Kirsch, Douglas Shelburne Kirtley, Jeffery Lynn Kirzher, Israel 80 Kitchens, Charles W. Jr. 366 Kitchens, James Gregory Kithcart, Russell Edward 208-9, 313 Kitt, Nicolette H. Johnson Kittinger, Matthew Todd 398 Kittrell, Zane Gray 387 Kiwiet, Laetitia Liesbeth 415 Kixmiller, William F. 218, 387 Klaine, Mark Lawrence 249 Klarer, Amy Klarer, Kathryn Ann 415 Klein, Barbara-Christina Klein, Elizabeth Ann 387 Klein, William Franklin 300, 366 440 Kerr, L. Lovell, W. Kleinholter, Linda Maureen 366 Kleinholter, Mary Jo Anne Klicker, Walter McDaniel 415 Kline, Karen McCombs Klinger, Mark Anthony Kluever, Terresa K. Klumb, Kenneth Charles 312 Klunder, Kimberly Sue Knapp, Kim Allison 255, 284, 387 Knauer, Daryl Bruce 277, 398 Kneer, Mark Joseph Knell, David Mark Knight, Ballarie Jan Knight, Beverly Kay 387 Knight, Charles Keith Knight, Charles Stephen Knight, John Geoffrey 272 Knight, Sherri Denise 415 Knight, Stephen Howard 289 Knight, Terry Joseph Knights, Charles Richard 415 Knott, Michael Dennis 366 Knott, Sherri Jane Knox, John Basil 366, 455 Knox, Kathryn Anne 415 Knox, Sherry Lynne Koeckert, Mary Louise 246-7 Koenig, Sally Ann McLeod Koester, Teresa Diane 340 Koesters, Willi Hans 254 Kohl, Lorie Jean 387 Kolb, Darrell Leigh 300 Kolb, Dennis Lee 53, 275, 387 Kollmansperger, Deborah L. Koppel, Andrew Alan 399 Kordenbrock, Pamela Kay 238-9, 241 Korell, Barbara Jean 337, 415 Korfhage, Karen Ann 287, 289, 291 Korn, Michael Edward Korniotes, Patricia Elaine Koss, Paul Francis Kovonuk, Alexis Jean Kowalchick, Bonnie Tracy Kowalewski, David 298, 303 Kowalke, Wilbur Fred Kraesig, Gerald William Krag, Erik Safford 366 Krajewski, Mark Joseph Krakoviak, Sarah Caroline 245 Kral, Richard James 212-3, 248-251 Kramer, Donald Lee 415 Krampe, Leesa Kay 415 Krantz, Jeffrey Lane 415 Kranz, Keith Norman Kraus, Mary Patricia 399 Krause, Karen Jean 415 Krauss, John David Krebs, Frances Carol 289, 366 Kreisle, Paul Frederick Kreisler, Lisa Karol Kreke, Richard Micheal Kremer, Janet Ann 415 Krengel, Kitrick Ann 338 Krenkowitz, Michael S. 325 Krenzin, Joan 291 Krigbaum, Stephen John 249 Krigger, Daphne Lynn 415 Kring, Katrina Susanne Kruger, Gay Nell 387 Krull, John Joseph Jr. Kruse, Pamela M. 415 Kruwell, Jeanne Marie Kruwell, Vicki Lynn 387 Krzeminski, Joyce Lynn Kubera, Rosanne Marie Kuchenbrod, Darlene Ann 415 Kuckens, Craig Alan 321, 399 Kuddes, Kevin Logan Kuegel, James Scott 304, 399 Kuegel, Joseph Michael Kuegel, William 304 Kuenzel, David Symmes 415 Kuhl, Gregory Michael Kuhn, Douglas Bernard Jr. Kuhn, Mary Jo Kummer, Kathryn Lise 387 Kummer, William 168 Kung-Chuan, Shao 304 Kung, Hsiang Ching Kunz, John Francis 257, 399 Kupstaitis, James Pierce 415 Kuralt, Charles 6, 80 Kusch, Karen Ann 366 Kuzma, Daniel Andrew Kuzma, Jerome Albert 387 Kuzma, Mark Andrew 415 Kwok, George 387 Kwok, Laurie L. Russell Kyle, George Willard Kyser, Kimberly Ann 334 La Coste, Robert Wayne Lacaden, Lenetta Lacefield, Gaye 366 Lacy, Catherine Elizabeth 387 Lacy, Perry Lee Lacy, Roger Lee 366 Lacy, Susan Diane 134-5, 366 Ladd, Kenneth M. 272 Ladd, William Benjamin Laduke, Jack Lee Laffoon, Julia Ann 283, 366 Lafollette, Mary R. Foushee Lagrange, Robert Paul 326 Lagutchik, Ellen Camille 415 Laine, Patricia Renee 415 Lair, John Shea 296, 305, 387 Laird, Emily Gillenwater 364-5 Laird, Roger 364 Lake, Megan Kathleen 366 Lally, Mary Ann 399 Lam, Kathy Oneal 415 Laman, Steven Laurence Lamar, Huston Oliver Lamb, Bill 69 Lamb, Clifton Gregory Lamb, Cynthia 336 Lamb, Lee Ann 415 Lamb, Sara L. Mercer Lamba, Chi Alpha 24, 30, 312, 318, 345 Lambert, Norman Leo 366 Lambert, Owen D. Lambert, Sandy Birdwell Lamont, Deana Marie Lampert, Dawn Elizabeth 416 Lampkins, William Allen Lampman, Tammy Ann 399 Lampton, Terry Russell Lanagan, Elizabeth Lancaster, Alisa Kay Lancaster, Darrell Wayne Lance, Lorifay 387 Land, Cheryl Kay Landers, Vernon Douglas Jr. Landreth, Daniel Alexander Landrum, Kimberly Rhee 288 Landrum, Scott Mills Lane, David W. 399 Lane, Elizabeth Ellen 85 Lane, James Carter 416 Lane, Jeffrey Allen Lane, John Richard 276, 416 Lane, Linda Kaye 399 Lane, Sandra Lee Lane, Teresa Ann Lane, William Bradley Jr. Laney, Elizabeth Ann Laney, Shirley 267 Lang, David Richard 330 Lang, George Vincent Lang, Margaret Marie Lang, Patrice Morris Langan, Lesa Gail Langan, Patricia Eileen Langdon, Jerry Wayne 323 Lange, Janice Sims Langford, Charles Filmore 387 Langford, Selina Iris 416 Langley, Betty 266-7 Langley, Melenthia Hodge Lanham, Charles Daniel 366 Lanham, David Glen Lanham, George Lindsay Lanham, Harlie Kevin 85, 89 Lanham, Jeanette Marie 416 Lanham, John Anthony Lanham, Joie 399 Lanham, Timothy Jensen Lanham, Wayne Edward Lanier, Anthony Wayne Lanier, Collins Fenton Lanier, Lucinda 325, 334 Lankenau, Judith Margaret Lanphear, Donald Scott Lanthorn, Dennis Keith 387 Largen, Harry 155 Largen, James Breckinridge 155 Largen, Kenneth 155 Larimore, Charlene Rhea 366 Larimore, Gary Wayne Larimore, Leslie Steven 214-5, 218 Larimore, Sandy 214-5 Larkin, Kevin Paul 416 Larkin, Mary Jo Larkins, Joseph Prestley 367 Larson, Kevin Louis Larson, Richard Earle Jr. Larson, Timothy Michael 91 Larue, Gentry Carnelius Jr. 416 Lashlee, Karen Lynn Lashley, Sharlene 399 Latham, Barbara Lynn Latham, Jerry Neal Lathon, Keith Kyle 218 Lathon, Rickey 218 Lauer, Arthur Brian 318 Laukus, Mark J. 399 Lavoie, Denise Ann Lane Law, Holly Angela Law, James Dwight Law, Jerriann, Marcella Law, Lavonna Jean Lawalin, Perri Ruth Houser Lawler, Beverly Ann 416 Lawler, Judy Timberlake Lawler, Sandra Vernon Lawless, Andrew Paul 416 Lawless, Donald Charles Lawrence, Bobby Joe 304, 367 Lawrence, Carol Sue Lawrence, David H. 285, 387 Lawrence, Glen Herman Jr. 416 Lawrence, Lovis Dorlanne 275 Lawrence, Michael Kent 73 Lawrence, Timothy Keith Lawrence, William Emerson 416 Lawrence, Timothy Keith 367 Laws, Elizabeth Lynette Laws, Judy Kay Laws, Katherine Annette Laws, Sarah Monita Hooks Lawson, Connie Fran 387, 449 Lawson, David Gene Lawson, James Michael 387 Lawson, Kenny Marvin 399 Lawson, Owen 17, 25 Lawson, Patricia A. Lawson, Penny Delois 399 Lawson, Tonya Michalle 274, 416 Lawson, Yvonne Renee 387 Lay, Sandra Kepley Layer, Matthew D. 399 Layman, Martin William 399 Layne, Jay Edward 399 Layne, Sarah Rice Layne, Susan Anne Malchow Lazarus, Rhea 142-5 Lea, Sandra Clair 89, 273, 387 Leach, Deborah Evans Leach, Larry Allen 285 Leach, Richard Lee 285, 307, 387 Leach, Roberta Layne 292, 399 Leadership and discipline 274 Leahy, James Daniel 387 Leamon, Sharon Gertrude 416 Learning and service 288-9 Leary, Larry Lamont Leath, Jo Ann Leathers, Arlon Edward Leathers, Vicki Lynn 337, 399 Lecturers 80-1 Ledesma, Enrique Guillermo 248-9 Ledesma, Roberto A. 249, 416 Ledford, Cletus Mae Lee, Carryn K. Lee, Elizabeth Martella 274 Lee, Gary C. Lee, James Carter 323, 326 Lee, James Owen 323, 326 Lee, John Dennis Jr. 387 Lee, John Gilbert Lee, Kenney Reed 307, 399 Lee, Kent D. Lee, Leo Harold 399 Lee, Lisa Graves Lee, Margaret Ann 304, 367 Lee, Marguerite Laverne 274 Lee, Marianne 301 Lee, Mary Kathryn 416 Lee, Randy Joe 307, 367 Lee, Renee Shawn Lee, Robin Elizabeth Lee, Ronald Eugene 324 Lee, Shu Yung 70 Lee, Thomas Charles Lee, Tina Michelle Leech, Cathy Lee Leffew, Jimmie Dale Leforge, Ronald M. Jr. 367 Lehman, Wendell Haynes Lehmenkuler, Virginia 183-4 Lehn, Nancy Shimer Leibfreid, Teresa Rose Leidgen, Robert Blaine 416 Lemasters, Camilla Jeanne Lemieux, James F. Lemmon, Susan Marlene Leneave, Charles Kevin 387 Leneave, Mark Douglas 327 Leneave, Robert Gregory 416 Leningrad Symphony 296 Lenn, John Herndon Lentz, Karen Gayle 308, 399 Leonard, Beverly 303 Leonard, Michael 303 Leonard, William 85 Lepping, Julie Clair Lescalleet, Alan Franklin Lescalleet, Deborah A. Lescelius, Shirley Ann 304 Lesch, Joseph Thomas 299 Leslie, James Anthony 275, 399 Lessenberry, Leigh L. Lessley, Carol Jeanne 399 Lester, Donald Robert II 321, 387 Lester, Drew David Lester, Virginia Trout Leu, Neng Chyang 44-5 Leucht, Brett Ethan 323 Leucht, Susan Rachel 387 Levasseur, Patricia Lynn 416 Levens, Alexander, John Leveridge, Barbara Jean 416 Levy, Lisa Sabel Lewey, William Stephen Lewis, Alex Dywane Lewis, Barbara Sharon Lewis, Billy 218 Lewis, Cheryl Shillistina Lewis, Darlene Lewis, Dwight Wayne 218 Lewis, Fanniellen Joyce Lewis, Janice Faye 309 Lewis, Jim P. 285 Lewis, Joseph Catron Lewis, Kathy Ann 334, 367 Lewis, Leon Jr. Lewis, Lisa Claire Lewis, Margaret Ann Lewis, Mark Boyd Lewis, Marla Lee Lewis, Patricia Ann 416 Lewis, Priscilla Ann Lewis, Ramsey 107 Lewis, Richard Wayne Lewis, Robert Jesse Lewis, Susie G. 285 Lewis, Teddi Rae Lewis, Tina Marie 294 Library science dept. 182 Library science dept., head 182-3 Library sciences, director 146-7 Lieber, Keith M. Liegl, Jodi Ann 416 Lierman, Diane Carol 387 Lievers, Russell Joseph Lightsy, John Sheldon Likens, Terri Lynn 399 Likness, Steven Dean Lile, James Michael Lile, Shannon David Liles, Sandra Marie 416 Liles, Thomas Anthony Lilly, Thomas Ross 416 Lin, Chueng Hsueh Lin, Tay Yean Linarez, Maria Auxiliadora Linarez, Oswaldo Ignacio Linch, Virginia Ruth Lind, Jennifer Louise Lindenberg, Gary David 367 Lindsey, Anne Pittman Lindsey, Davin Anderson Lindsey, George Thomas Lindsey, Gregory Gene Lindsey, James Robert 317 Lindsey, James Steven Lindsey, Leonard Bruce Lindsey, Ricky Dale Lindsey, Sheila Lynn 399 Lindsey, Steven Douglas 416 Lindsey, Susan Annette 399 Lindsey, Susan Gail Lindsey, Van Lee 340, 399 Lindsey, Vira Joan Cain Lindsey, Walter Glen Lindsey, William Leon 28, 222, 318, 402 Linebaugh, George P. III Lingvai, Sharon Jean 284, 367 Link, Daryl Ray 399 Link, Debra Ann Link, Kathleen Pence Link, Margaret Ann Link, Nannie Elizabeth 416 Link, Naomi Bernice Link, Sheri Lyn 416 Linney, Jacqueline Sue Linnig, Deborah Lynn Linnig, William Anthony Linton, Cleo 210 Lipford, Nancy Lynn Liphford, Marisha Nell 416 Litchfield, Gerry Glynn Littell, Robert Bruce Litterall, Roy Edgar Little action after much controversy 34-5 Little, Alan Lloyd Little, Brenda Bailey Little, John William 306 Little, Kathy Ann 338, 367 Little, Patsy Jane York Little, Penny J. Laminack 367 Littlejohn, Deborah Faye 287, 416 Littlejohn, Karen Renee 272, 287, 289, 387 Littlejohn, Robert Thomas 293, 367 Liu, Guang Chyi Lively, Leonard Stirling Livers, Don Cameron 218, 330, 399 Livesay, Susan Katherine Livingston, David 45, 411 Livingston, David Timothy 387 Livingston, Pamela Kaye Lloyd, James Charles 416 Lloyd, John William 367 Lloyd, Keith Stallings Lloyd, Leslie Lynn Lloyd, Lola June Hale Loafman, Carole Ann Loane, Jeffrey Daird Local youngsters share childhoods with their Big Brothers and Sisters 64-7 Locke, Barry Vandiver Jr. Locke, Donald Lee Locke, Martha Ann Locke, Melinda Lee Locke, R. Ann Humphries Lockhart, James Ray 416 Lockhart, Phillip Sydnor 387 Lockhart, Thomas Ralph 399 Lockwood, Jane 367 Loeffler, Beth Ann 416 Loewen, Roger 19, 278 Loftis, Margaret Ann 288, 399 Loftis, Teressa Carol 416 Loftus, Mary Anne 312, 367 Logan, Athena Jene Logan, Ben Threlkel 387 Logan, Bruce Wayne 299, 367 Logan, Glenn Allen 327 Logan, Rebecca Ann 71, 367 Logan, Tamara Lynn Logan, Teresa Darlene 264, 416 Loggins, Kenny 98-9, 105 Logs, Clyde 367 Logsdon, Curtis 37, 153 Logsdon, David Thomas Logsdon, John Brett 315, 399 Logsdon, John Paul 315 Logdon, Linda Marie 399 Logsdon, Rhonda Laureen Logsdon, Timothy Eugene Logsdon, Trena Lee Logsdon, Wilma Rucker Lohman, James Paul Lohman, Nancy Louise 399 Lohmann, George Bradley 399 Loid, Kirby Riggs 400 Loman, Pauline 305 Lombard, Philip Charles Jr. London, Janice Faye 387 London, Linda Lou Ellis 367 London, Nova Lynn Long, Benjamin Craig 416 Long, Beverly Jean Long, Carl Wayne Long, Charles Russell Long, Clifton Eugene Long, David Brian 224 Long, Dennis Ray 400 Long, Donna Ann 387 Long, Eugena Charlene Long, James Clifton Long, Marline 400 Long, Robin Lynn Long, Stephanie Ann Long, Stuart Walker Long, Timothy Thomas 416 Long, William Eugene 273 Longmire, Joseph Yadon Looney, Theresa Lynn Lopkoff, Antique David C. Lopolito, Vincent Kenneth 274-5 Lord, Carl David 387 Lord, Susanne 400 Lorenz, Christiana A. Lorrig, Katherine Margaret Lorton, Kevin Clark 416 Losso, Christopher Edward 257 Losson, Frederick Taylor Losson, Margaret Melissa 267 Losson, Susan Stiles Lotfi, Abdolkarim Louisville Orchestra 40 Love, Robert Patteson Lovell, Cheryl Lynn 287, 305, 387 Lovell, Darrell Wayne 325 Lovell, Jeffery Warren 387 Lovell, Joseph Stephen Lovell, Joyce Ann Smith Lovell, L ista Ann Lovell, Rebecca Sue Lovell, Timothy Joseph 400 Lovell, William A. II Lovely, Mark Steven 400 Lovenz, Christina 416 Loving, Margaret Ellen 63 Lovorn, Christopher Lee 367 Lowe, Donna Lloyd Lowe, Mitzi Ann Lowe, Todd Parker Lowe, Valerie Lee Lowery, Reginia Ann Lowrey, Betsy 48-9 Lowrey, Howard 48-9 Lowry, Ann Marie Lowry, Gary Alan Lowry, Robin Kathleen Lowry, Sheryl E. Hohman Lowther, William M. Lu, Ho Lucas, Charles Curtis 304, 367 Lucas, David Oneal Lucas, Keith Anthony 400 Lucas, Kenneth Marvin Lucas, Nancy Ellen 400 Lucas, Yvette Denise Luckett, Gloria Faye Luckey, Pauline 178 Ludden, Keith J. Luecht, Laura Lynn 400 Lueke, Deborah Ann Luellen, Robert Jeffrey Lugo, Isabel Lui, Raymond 297 Lukaszewski, Linda Mae 416 Lummis, Jenifer Lynn 53, 400 Lurding, David Bruce Lusco, Juanita Rochelle 416 Lutes, Pamela Faye 309 Luton, Thomas Herbert Luttrell, Howard S. Jr. Luttrell, Leslie Jo 416 Luurtsema, Dave Roger Lykins, Debra Ann 387 Lyle, Cheryl Ann 400 Lyle, Steven Wayne 288, 387 Lyles, Mary Melissa 416 Lynch, Amy Diane 387 Lynch, Debra Davis 387 Lynch, Jamie William 387 Lynch, Lonnie Marcum Lynch, Max 119 Lynch, Melinda Lee Humes Lyne, Michael Bruce 416 Lynn, Sandra Kay Lynum, Zebedee Ivan 218, 400 Lyon, Patricia Alexander 416 Lyon, Patricia Anne 367 Lyons, David Eugene Lyons, David Mitchell Lyons, Gregory Lynn 293 Lyons, Linda Carol Young Lyons, Mark Edward 276, 281, 399 Lyons, Moril Price Jr. Lyons, Nancy Therese 387 Lyons, Robin Ray 387 Lyons, Susan Carol Mabry, Norma Susan 336, 416 Mac Frampton Triumirate 68, 70 Macaulay, Neill 81 MacConaugha, Hope Ellen Machich, Larry G. 416 Macias, Richard Arrelleno 238, 327 Macke, Charles Claypool 367 Macorig, Paul Lee Madden, Shannon Eve Maddox, Alan Wayne Maddox, Karen Lynn 334 Maddox, Katherine Leigh 334 Maddox, Theresa Wood Madge, Marcia Marzetta Madison, Peggy Sue 291 Madison, William Alan 400 Madon, James Robert 29, 217-8 Madron, Beverly 288 Madron, Thomas 37 Magee, Carey Lynn 416 Mager, Maryann Kathleen 303 Magers, Susan Lynn Maggard, Robert Print Maglinger, Mark Allen 400 Maglinger, Robin Jo 336, 416 Mahaffey, Julie Anne Mahaffey, Selene Mahlalela, Reuben Ntunu Mahnke, David James Mahone, Deborah Elestine Mahone, Kennetha Marie Mahoney, Charles Patrick Mahoney, Laura Ann 400 Mahoney, Michael James Maier, Harold Francis Main, Ralph Edward 325 Main, Sally Elaine 367 Main, Susanne Erica 416 Mainland, Beverly Jane 387 Mainland, Jean Anne 367 Mains, Bruce Edwin Mains, Janke Bakker Majdi, Mehran Major, Mary Ann 92 Majors, Gregory Lee 416 Makosholo, Margaret C. Mallard, Jonathan Leonard 367 Mallay, James Patrick 195, 387 Malone, Danny Marcus Malone, Felecia Germaine Malone, Janet Cathleen 274, 416 Malone, Janice Denise 274, 416 Malone, Laura Denise 416 Malone, Rodney Earl Malone, Roger Allen 277, 283, 400 Malone, Sylvia Ruth Malone, Trelawney Ann Mami, Alfina Rose 367 Mandrell, Cindy Lois Mandrell, Jeffrey Wayne 306-7, 367 Mangin, Pamela Kaye Mangus, Michael Charles 306, 400 Manion, James Henry Manion, Teresa Ann Manis, Melinda Susan 338, 387 Mankin, Jane Cato Manley, Alanson Billings 416 Manley , Carolyn Ruth Mann, Michael Dale Mannel, Joann é Manning, Alesia Louise 283, 367 Manning, Barbara Jane 287 Manning, Jackie Glenn Mansfield, Charles W. Mansfield, Elva Joyce Mansouri, Hossein Manuel, Mark Alen 400 Manuel, Rebecca Ann 367 Manz, Margaret Mary Maple, Marcia Elaine 387 Maple, Mona Leisa Maples, Terry Vance Maples, William David Jr..416 Mappin, Timothy E. Marchionne, Tullio Joseph Marcroft, Karen A. Marcum, Alecia D. 291, 387 Marcum, John 291 Marion, Harold Wayne Markham, James Edwin Jr. 400 Markham, Patrick Thomas Markland, Julie Marie 304-5, 367, 427 Markley, Shirley Maxwell Marks, Deborah Lee Markwell, Alvin Ray Marlin, Donna Jane 288, 387 Marlow, Keitha Lynn 274 Marlow, Michaele Shane 400 Marlow, Wanda Lee Marquess, Lawrence M. Marquette, Jacquelyn L. Marr, Denise Michelle 416 Marsh, Andy 11 Marsh, Barbara Sue Marsh, Donald Golden 293, 416 Marsh, Ed 411 Marsh, Gary 11 Marsh, Michael Marsh, Pamela Jean Marsh, Pat 11 Marshall, James Raymond 387 Marshall, John Glasgow Marshall, Marilyn Joyce Marshall, Mary Judith Marshall, Paul William Marshall, Robert Rodimon 257, 416 Marsteller, Thomas Eugene Martel, Thomas William 318, 416 Martin, Ann Farnsworth Martin, Billy Joe Martin, Carmen Guinn Martin, Cassandra Jean 400 Martin, Cindy Jean 400 ’ Martin, Connie Marie Martin, Curtiss Almonte Martin, Cynthia Louise 287, 400 Martin, Daniel Mark Martin, David Robert Martin, Deena Sue 292, 400 Martin, Denishia Miller 367 Martin, Donna Carroll Martin, Donna Gayle Martin, Donna Marie Martin, Elizabeth Ann Martin, Elizabeth Ann Martin, Jayne Ann C. Martin, Jeffery Thomas 318 Martin, Jessie M. Worley Martin, Joseph David Martin, Karen Elaine 400 Martin, Karon Lee Martin, Kathy Elaine Martin, Keith Blaine 387 Martin, Kenneth Allen 416 Martin, Lewis George II Martin, Marcia Ann Martin, Mark Daniel Martin, Melissa Wayne 387 Martin, Michael Wayne 367 Martin, Mona Lee 416 Martin, Pamela Michell Martin, Patricia Sue 400 Martin, Paul Edward 255, 299, 401 Martin, Robert Alan Martin, Robert Daves 367 Martin, Robert Earl Martin, Robert Samuel 387 Martin, Sandra K. Mattingly 387 Martin, Sheryl Jeanette Martin, Shirley Holzapfel Martin, Terry Evelyn Martin, Thomas Allin Martin, Timothy Lee Martin, Tommy Lyle 257 Martin, Vickie Lynn 298 Martin, William Stanley Martines, Joseph Anthony 258, 261 Marx, Richard Scott 387 Masannat, George 192 Masannat, Edward 192 Masannat, Richard 192 Masden, Bruce Alan 322, 330 Mashek, James Walter 324, 367 Mason, Cynthia Lynne 368 Mason, Dave 98-99, 105 Mason, Jan Marie 387 Mason, Randall Scott 285 Mason, Robert E. Lee 285 Mason, Sharon Kay Mason, Wayne McKinley 305 Massey, James Lewis 248-9, 289, 368 Massie, Cathy Price Massie, Clara Faye 335 Massie, Donna Kaye Master’s-minded 206 Masterson, Pat Vincent 416 Mastropasqua, Cheryl Kay Mastropasqua, Joseph Adam Math and computer science dept. 199 Math and computer science dept., head 199 Matheny, Eloise Marie 401 Matherly, Kimberly Elaine Matheson, Daniel Robert 299 Mathews, James Henry Mathews, Linda Sue 401 Mathews, Pamelia Rene Mathews, Steve 82-3 e Mathis, Gary Wayne 387 Mathis, James Edward Jr. Mathis, Tami Michelle 309, 387 Matlock, Vena Leann 416 Matteson, Gail 284 Matthews, Anthony Craig Matthews, Deborah K. Matthews, Herman David 387 Matthews, Joy 401 Matthews, Lovic Clay Matthews, Mark Allen 416 Matthews, Michael Henry Matthews, Pamela Sue Matthews, Russell Eugene Matthews, Timothy Allan 294, 416 Mattingly, Alfred Clark 312 Mattingly, John Samuel 416 Mattingly, Laura Suzanne Mattingly, Mary Ellen Mattingly, Michael Clark 368 Mattingly, Michael Thomas Mattingly, Rose Marie Mattingly, Sandra Lee 368 Mattingly, Terence Lee Mattingly, William B. III Mauntel, Robert Timothy 249 Maurice, Diane Irene Mauzey, Pamela Gay 368 Maxey, Eric Emils Maxwell, Milton Burnice Jr. 321 Maxwell, Orvell Alonzo May, Connie Warren May, George Edward May, Glen Lowry May, Michael Glen May, Roger William May, Sharon Gay 34 Mayberry, Janet Elizabeth Mayberry, Michael Shannon Mayes, Deborah Lynn 285, 287, 368 Mayes, Randy McGowan Mayeur, Stephen Gerard 368 Mayfield, Bryan C. Mayfield, Michael Eugene Mayhew, Karen Watson Mayhew, Mark Allen Mayhugh, Joel Marce Mayhugh, Lecia Kay 401 Mayhugh, Sharon Elaine 416 Maynard, Betty Jo Mayo, Rebecca Lynn Mays, Mark Landis 327 Mays, Steven 327 McAdams, Margaret Deen 416 McAninch, Carol Jean McBride, Lonnie Ray McCaleb, Lucinda Lee 387 McCall, David Loran McCandless, Kerry Philip McCann, Michael Paul McCarthy, Caryl Lynne 416 McCarthy, Deborah Ann 416 McCarthy,. Erin Marie McCarty, Cathleen Mary McCarty, Constance P. McCarty, Donald Elliott Jr. McCarty, Janice Marie McCarty, Michael Jordan McCarty, Steven Donald McCathern, Michael Lynel McCauley, Elizabeth Ann ; McCaulley, Maryanne Rush 401 McCelvey, Jeff 301 McChesney, William Mark 263 McCaure, Debbie 416 McClamroch, Scott Thomas McClanahan, John Mark McClanahan, Judy Lynn 401 McClanahan, Marissa Jo 334, 416 McClarnon, Mary Lee 416 McClean, Mary Helen 309, 368 McCleese, Mary Lou McClendon, Thomas Robert 401 McCloud, Charles Daniel 401 McClure, Debbie Kay McClure, Howard Willis Jr. 324 McClure, John Lewis 368 McCombs, Dwight Travis 416 McCombs, Margaret Anne 401 McConnell, Jeffrey Dale McConnell, Mitchell Jay McConnell, Winnie Ellen 276, 341, 368 McCord, Thomas Ross McCormack, Phyllis Anne McCormack, Susan Anita McCormick, Doris Elaine 274, 401 McCormick, Mary Leslie 308, 334, 387 McCoskey, Pamela Sue 31 McCoy, Carmeen Denise McCoy, Claude David McCoy, Joseph Glenn McCoy, Karen Rae 368 McCoy, Lisa Catherine McCoy, Mary Ellen McCoy, Teresa Claire McCracken, David Rea 326, 368 McCrady, Carol Jones McCreery, Marianne Miriam 336, 416 McCrory, Glenda Ann 416 McCrory, Kay Horton McCubbin, Kimberly Joan McCubbin, Linda Mae McCubbin, Patricia Gail 322, 387 McCubbin, Paula Robin 416 McCubbins, Julia Ann McCubbins, Nadji Sue 368 McCulloch, James Clarke 323 McCullough, Janet Louise 340 McCullough, Levy Hunter 300, 416 McCullough, Robert James McCullough, Shawn Elise 336, 416 McCurley, Edward Burton McCurry, James 305 McCutchen, Charles Leo McDaniel, Kerry Allen 387 McDaniel, William Bruce 368 McDivitt, Norris Edwin Jr. McDonald, Gregory Keith McDonald, James Robert McDonald, Jerry Allan 368 McDonald, John Martin 293, 416 McDonald, Joseph Bryant McDonald, Kevin Ray 325 McDonald, Mary Ann 368 McDonald, Octerloney B. McDonald, Sharon Lee McDonald, Vicki Lynn 416 McDonough, Greta Jo McDonough, Joan Melissa McDonough, Kevin Thomas McDonough, Laura Kathleen McDonough, William D. III McDougal, Billy Joe 401 McDowell, Mark Edward McElfresh, Susan Carol 338, 368 McElroy, Donna Kay 401 McElroy, Linda 416 McElroy, Mary V. McElroy, Russell Lee 369 McElroy, Susan Parr 369 McEuen, Marshall Malin 195 McEuen, Warren Lee McFadden, Brenda Maxine 387 McFadden, Robert Allen McFarland, Alicia Rawlins McFarland, Cynthia Renea McFarland, Gary Lea 387 McFarland, Mark A. McFarland, Vicelia Kay 416 McGaha, Ronnie Edward McGary, Robbie Lou 341 McGaughey, Gregory Lance McGaughey, Nick W. McGee, Carey 264 McGehee, Julie Anne 416 McGehee, Terry Lee 416 McGhee, Bobby Jack 189 McGill, Kevin Mark McGill, Scott Edward 416 McGinnis, Rosalind Gay 416 McGinnis, Susan Faye 334, 401 McGinnis, William Roger 345 McGowan, Donald 416 McGrange, Robert 28-9 McGraw, Janet Leslie 54, 65, 67, 369 McGregor, Adrianne M. Berry 369 McGregor, Holly Millicent McGrew, Jennie Lynn McGrew, Polly Ann 369 McGuffin, Arthur M. III 218 McGuffin, Pamela Grimes 401 McGuffin, Richard Jay 369 McGuire, Donald Kreis Jr. 324, 387 McGuire, Lisa Gayle McGuire, Mary Ann McGurk, Michael Stanley McIntosh, James Russell 416 McIntyre, Gloria Lorainne 335, 387 McIntyre, Kevin Virgil McIntyre, Lincoln Bryan 387 Mclvor, Mark Edward McJoynt, David Thomas McKay, John Barber McKay, John Barber McKee, Anthony E. 294 McKee, Harold Dean McKenzie, Marla D. Cash McKenzie, Terry William 416 McKenzie, Thomas Joseph 251 McKenzie, Timothy Russell McKinley, Jeffrey Allen 258-260 McKinley, Lois Faye Cooley McKinley, Sandra Lou 367 McKinney, Albert F. McKinney, David Anthony McKinney, Donald Terry McKinney, Frankie Ray McKinney, Gregory Lee McKinney, Kenneth Ray 284, 416 McKinney, Laura Jean McKinney, Pamela Sue 416 McKinney, Phyllis Jean 416 McKinney, Robert Franklin McKinney, Tami Suzanne McKinney, Timothy Howard McKinney, Valeria Annette McKinney, William Ray 275 McKoin, Henry Sugg III McLaughlin, John Joseph McLaughlin, Linda Mae McLean, Angela De Veria 387 McLean, Audrey Patrice 274, 416 McLevaine, Floyd Patrick McLinton, Linda Joan 282, 416 McLucas, James Robert McMahan, Carol Stacy 255, 337, 416 McMican, Robert Albert McMichael, Ben Sherman Jr. McMichael, Lisa Lynn 130-1 McMillan, Larry Dean McMillian, Laura Jean 401 McMullan, Nancy Catherine McMurray, Patton Wallace McNally, Gary Wayne McNally, Melaine Marie 416 McNally, Rosemary McNece, Katherine Lynn 416 McNeil, Martin Douglas 401 McNeill, James Edward McNulty, Charles 188-9, 274 McNulty, Mark A. McPeak, Lisa Laine McPhail, Lawrence William 416 McPhaill, Shelia Faye 387 McQuady, Diana Lynne 387 McRae, Randall Glen McReynolds, Kevin Alton 321, 401 McRoy, Michael David 416 McVey, Harriett Penrose McWhorter, Deborah Gaye 416 Meacham, Lisa Marie 309, 369 Meacham, Scott Wayne Mead, Leah Kristin 309, 334, 401 Meade, Archie Curtis Meade, Jeffery Wade Meador, Darrell Richard 387 Meador, Debra Lynn Meador, John Brent Meador, Lois A. Barnard Meador, Nina Parker Meador, Rhonda Denise 340 Meador, Scarlett Kay Meadows, John Mark Meadows, Johnny Lee Meadows, Martha Marie 369 Meadows, Ralph Steven Meads, David Meagher, Jan Ellen Meagher, Kimberly Ann 304-5, 369 Means, Carla Jean Fessel - Means, Harriet Marie 416 Means, Marelle Gaye Mears, Teresa Ann Medalie, Jamie Elizabeth Medbery, Alice R. Media services 153 Medich, Dane Alexander Medley, Joyce Alma 401 Mee, Lonzie Edward Meece, Beverly Jane Geiger Meece, Raymond Allyn 418 Meek, Janet Elaine Meek, Robet Lawrence 369 Meeker, Carol Sue 387 Meeks, Jenny Lynn Meeks, Mike Gene Meeler, William James Meers, Janet Susan 308, 418 Meeting; Wendy Leigh 369 Meffert, April Lynne 340 Mefford, David 157 Mefford, G. Mae Swinney Mefford, James David 418 Mefford, Marty Richard 401 Mefford, Sandra Jane Meguiar, Becky Lynne 418 Mehramfar, Mohamad Ali Melhiser, Karen Lenora 401 Melhiser, Sherree Denise 308, 342, 387 Melloan, Barbara G. Mitchum 369 Meloon, Dallas Gail Melton, Karen Elizabeth 418 Melton, Susan Elaine Melton, Vicki Ann 369 Men’s basketball 126-8, 226-233 Men’s cross country 224-5 Men’s golf 263 Men’s tennis 262-3 Men’s track 256-7 Menetrey, Kathleen Ann Menetrey, Louis Richard Menser, Dion Lynn 401 Mercer, Lois Ann Mercer, Patricia Joan 282 Mercer, Travis Fay Mercke, David Keith Mercolm, Michael Ray Meredith, Alice Marie 418 Meredith, Charles William Meredith, Deborah Gail 308, 369 Meredith, Deborah Hargis Meredith, Malea Gale Meredith, Nancy Elizabeth 369 Meredith, Robert Joseph Meredith, Robin Rea Meredith, Tracy D. Merideth, Becky Lynn 418 Merideth, Rebecca Joan 369 Merideth, Treva Nell 401 Merrick, Cynthia Rice Merrill, Beverly Jean 387 Merriman, Debra Lynn Merritt, Karen Marie 387 Mershon, Richard Brent 387 Mesker, Jeanne Marie 401 Messer, Randy Darrell Mester, Jorge 40 Metzerott, Heidi Amanda Metzerott, Matt Dewey Metzger, Mary Cecilia Metzger, William Robert Metzker, Beth Ellen 328, 336 Meyer, George Frederick Meyer, Michael Henry 327, 418 Meyer, Steven Douglas Meyers, Linda Ann 298, 418 Michaels, Margaret P. 342, 418 Middleton, Sarah Martina 401 Middleton, Therese Renee 418 Midkiff, Angela Faye Midkiff, Rex Brent 387 Mike, Theresa Marie Mikel, Leroy Milam, Kimberly Jo Milam, Milton E. Milburn, Matthew Durrett Milburn, Richard Hurst Jr. 303, 401 Milby, Bryon Neal Milby, David Miles, Anita Louise Miles, Donald Alton Jr. Miles, Dora Mae McKinney Miles, Douglas Earl 369 Miles, Randall Keith Military science dept. 183 Military science dept., head 183-4 Millay, Judith Gayle 418 Millen, Janet Elizabeth 274-5, 309 Millen, Robert Curtis Miller, Barbara Ann Decker Miller, Betty Boyd 369, 427 Miller, Brent Lyle 418 Miller, Bruce 298 Miller, Carolyn Lee Miller, Charles Robert 401 Miller, Charlotte B. Miller, Cheryl Denise Miller, Chris G. Miller, Clifford Ira Miller, Craig Richard 418 441 Lovely, M. Miller, C. Miller, Dallas Hudson Miller, Gregory Blaine 401 Miller, Lawrence Lee Miller, Pete E Miller, Terry Leigh Miller, David Pat Miller, Heidi L. 55, 298, 401 Miller, Linda Faye Miller, Rebekah Lynn 290, 387 Miller, Tracy Ann Miller, David Todd Miller, Janet 274 Miller, Lisa Carole 387 Miller, Rhea Ellen 387 Miller, Vicky L. 418 Miller, Dawn Ann 418 Miller, Jeffrey Alan 326 Miller, Mark Howard 121, 325, 418 Miller, Rhyia Marie 401 Miller, Wanda Joy 288, 387 Miller, Debora Lynn 387 Miller, John A. 247, 401 Miller, Mark K. 325 Miller, Robin Lynn 387 Miller, Wilburn Milton Jr Miller, Debra Ann 387 Miller, John Allen 247 Miller, Martha Ellen Miller, Roger Franklin 281, 322, 330 Miller, William Marcus Miller, Debra Denise 418 Miller, John Edward III 247 Miller, Mary Ann Miller, Sondra Lee Millet, Tim 82-3 ; Miller, Diane 387 Miller, John Mark 247, 282, 369 Miller, Michael W. Miller, Stephen Duke 401 Milliken Bruce Leland 401 Miller, Donna Elizabeth 334, 401 Miller, John William 274, 418 Miller, Monica Maurice Miller, Stephen McKinley Milliken, Douglas Gilbert Miller, Donna Gail 238, 334 Miller, Kathleen Ann 418 Miller, Nancy Joann 418 Miller, Susan Irene Milliken, Gre Hugh Miller, Edward Gilbert 275, 387 Miller, Kimberli Joi Miller, Patricia Bowman 369 Miller, Tandra Lynn Millsaeeh Caceres ere Miller, Gina Louise Miller, Kimberly Da wn 401 Miller, Peggy Dianne 85, 89, 273, 369 Miller, Terese Ane Milliner, Rudolph Wayne Scholarly nook [| A DESK AND CHAIR are not prerequisites for studying, as senior Nancy Roberts of Witchita, Kan., discovered while studying for a seminar about the Book of Romans. The reli- gion and psychology major said, “Cherry Hall is my favorite place to study ... It’s just home.” $42 Miller, D. Milliner, R. Mills, Carolyn Anne Mills, Edgar Frank Mills, Edgar Louis Jr. Mills, Ellen Elaine 242-3 Mills, Gary Dean Mills, Gordon 118-9 Mills, James Monaghan Mills, James Thomas Mills, Joni Mills, Judy Kinnaird Mills, Lillian Beatrice 387 Mills, Sharon Marie 418 Milograno, Raymond A. 321, 387 Milon, Pamela Marie Milton, Debra Yvonne 369 Miluk, Timothy Jon Miner, Robert Scott Miniard, James D. Minix, Dennis Orville Minnick, Cynthia Gail Minogue, Norma Ann 387 Minogue, Sheila Mary 340, 418 Minor, Connie Jean 401 Minor, Cynthia Louise Minor, Deborah Kay Minor, Harold Timothy 369 Minor, Karen Suzette 16, 418 Minor, Margaret Kay 387 Minor, R. Craig Minton, Calvin Royce 189, 274 Minton, Donald Wayne 322, 387 Minton, Fain Edmond Minton, Gateward Darrel Minton, Hobert Micheal Minton, John 146, 160 Minton, Rebecca Ann Minton, Tommy Lynn Miracle, Lisa Anne Miss Black Western 269, 314, 332-3, 335 Mitcham, Edwin Dean Mitchell, Allan A. Mitchell, Anthony Joseph Mitchell, Barbara Jean 418 Mitchell, Barbara Smith 369 Mitchell, Barnard Lynn Mitchell, Barney Leamon Mitchell, Bonnie Lizabeth 369 Mitchell, Cathy Ann 387 e [ i Mitchell, Charlotte Diane 369 Mitchell, Christopher Ray 312 Mitchell, David Joe 418 Mitchell, Donna Sue 308 Mitchell, Glenn Stokes 326 Mitchell, Granville Mitchell, James Woodrow 369 Mitchell, Janey 369 Mitchell, Joni Marie Mitchell, Lawrence E. Jr. Mitchell, Lorraine Ann 418 Mitchell, Mary Louise 340, 462 . Ron Hoskins Mills, C. Mitchell, M. Index Sleepy hall A YAWN interrupts Rochelle Bailey’s studying for a biology quiz. The Louisville freshman said she had been studying on the second floor of Helm Library for two hours. Mark Lyons At the crack of yawn NOT FULLY AWAKE, Siggy Fulkerson yawns during her 8 a.m. history class. The Louisville freshman said Dr. David Lee’s Western Civilization to 1648 class “isn’t really boring, it’s just early in the morning.” ‘ Mitchell, Rebecca Jo 340 Mitchell, Sally Ann Mitchell, Sheila Bledsoe Mitchell, Timothy Mark Mitchell, Vickie Lynn Mitchell, Vida Jane 284, 296 Mitchell, Ward Medley Mittler, Jackie Suzanne 418 Mobley, David Bernard 257 Mock, Gregory Allen Modjeski, David Warren Modjeski, Linda Susan 338 Modjeski, Peggy J. 298 Moezzi, Abolhassan Mogan, Mark Bryant Mohon, Roger Lynn 418 . Molamohammadi, Gholamreza Molloy, George Patrick 418 Molloy, Quannah Sue 401 Momodu, Margaret O. Momodu, Napoleon Shaka 369 Monahan, Patricia Dawn Monks, Melinda Rose 70 Monroe, Bill 68 Monroe, Gary G. Monroe, Jeffrey Alan Monroe, Mary Lee 418 Montell, Lynwood 21-5 Montell, William Bradley 22 Montell, Willie 21 Montelli, James Anthony 401 Montelli, Penny Hubbard Montes, Romeo Danganan 296 Montesinos, Jose Luis 418 Montesinos, Luis Enrique 418 Montgomery, Jody 401 Montgomery, Joel Andra Montgomery, Kevin Lee Montgomery, Melva Jean 334 Montgomery, Theresa Lynn 418 Montgomery, Thomas L. Jr. Moody, Aza Lee A hard doze work PEN RAISED BUT HEAD FALLEN, Neena Patterson dozes dur- ing her Process and Effects of Mass Communication class. The Louisville sophomore’s 2 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday class was taught by Dr. James Wesolowski. Ron Hoskins Mark Lyons Moody, David Michael Moody, Guy Samuel Moody, Larry N Moody, Raymond 80 Moody, Thomas Jeffrey Moody, Vivian Sheppard Mooney, Sherrie Renae 334 Mooney, Teresa Elaine Mooney, William Lee III Moore, Angela Louise Moore, Ann Murray 303 Moore, Charles Anthony 238, 418 Moore, Craig Bruce 126, 128, 238, 319 Moore, Darrell Vernon 387 Moore, David Louie Moore, Dayna Leigh Moore, Donna Jo 369 Moore, Gary Reid 100, 401 Moore, Gerald Lee Moore, James McDowell Jr. Moore, James Michael Moore, Jeffrey Keller Moore, Jerrold Thomas 418 Moore, Joey Keith Moore, John Allen 316, 318, 331, 387 Moore, John David 316, 318, 331 Moore, Jonnetta Maria 335 Moore, Karen Leigh 401 Moore, Kathleen Riley Moore, Kelley Gayle Moore, Larry Eugene Moore, Mary Lynne Moore, Maurice Anthony Moore, Michelle Lynne 401 Moore, Mickey Elaine Moore, Patricia Lynn 369 Moore, Rebecca Shrewsbury Moore, Regina Doris Moore, Robert Earl 34-5, 140, 324, 427 Moore, Ronnie Moore, Rosetta Lynn 387 Moore, Rudolph Barry 401 Moore, Sandra Kae Moore, Stephen Clemmons Moore, Steven Allen 122-3 Moore, Susan Elizabeth 370, 418 Moore, Susan Elizabeth Moore, Susan Marie 338 Moore, Teresa Gail Moore, Terry Randal Moore, Tim Dale Moore, Tonia Cheryl 401 Moore, Valerie Moore, Virginia Anna Sue 334, 387 Moore, Wallace Coombs 324 Moore, Warren T. Moore, William R. 306 Moorefield, David Lee 370 Moorhatch, James Dodge 401 Moorman, Roberta E. 388 Moosmann, Trina Lynn Morales, Gerardo Buganza Moran, Patrick David 388 Moran, Sandra Renee Moranville, Marsha Ann 370 Moreau, Delton Ray Jr. Moreau, Renee Elizabeth Moreland, Bradley Samuel 326 Moreland, Gail Lynn 334, 370 Moretz, Patricia Arlene 285, 388 Morford, Jacqueline Fay Morgado, Ines Astorquiza Morgan, Ann Allison Morgan, Barbara Lynn 296 Morgan, Bonnie Ruth Morgan, Cornelia Ann 282, 401 Morgan, David Brian Morgan, David R. Morgan, Gail Ann Morgan, Gerald Lee Morgan, Jacalyn Sue Morgan, Jeffrey Thomas 326 Morgan, Larry Joe 330 Morgan, Lynn 330 Morgan, Pamela Claudette 388 Morgan, Pamela Joyce 289, 388 Morgan, Phillip Gordon 388 Morgan, Robert Lee Morgan, Russell Dwayne Morgan, Sally Lowell 334, 418 Morgan, Steve Upchurch Morgan, Tracey Lynn 388 Morgan, Vance Rene 230 Moriarty, Robbie Lynn Morris, Beverly Ann 284, 370 Morris, Cathy Ann Morris, James Alan Morris, Jeffrey Ross 418 Morris, Keith Leonard 325 Morris, Kenneth Earl Morris, Margaret D. Morris, Michael Stuart 300 Morris, Rebecca Gale 418 Morris, Rickie Morris, Sherrian Gayle Morris, Steven Scott 418 Morris, Timothy Morris, Valerie Jean Morris, Vickie Groce Morrison, Beverly D. Wilson Morrison, Marilyn McMullen Morrison, Phillip Barry Morrison, Ronald K. Morrow, Jacqueline Denise Morrow, Leslie Susan 340, 418 Morrow, Stacy Lynne Morse, Mike 276 Morton, Cheryl Ann Morton, Joseph Lee 257, 418 Morton, Kenneth Jerome 401 Morton, Lynferd Ross Morton, Michael Kolumun Mosby, Dale Moseley, J. Lewis 318, 370 Moseley, Robin Annette Moser, Paul K. Moser, William A. 418 Mosier, Pamela Kaye 242-3, 328, 334 Mosier, Teresa Faye 66-7, 334, 370 Mosley, Cassandra Mosley, Mosley, Mosley, Mosley, Mosley, Mosley, Mosley, Moss, J Moss, Rivers Benjamin Moss, Robert McKenzie Moss, Walter William Mosser, Mosser, Lawrence Oneal Mosser, Tom Weldon 388 Motameni, Shahriar Motes, Mother Moudy, Mounce, David McTavish Mounce, Faron Dale 306, 370 Mounce, Robert 172-3, 283 Mount, Mountain, Patrick Joseph 370 Mountaineering 188-9 Mouser Mouser Moyers Moyers Moyers Moyers Muckle Muckle Mudd, Mudd, Mudd, Mudge, Dale 418 Gary Neil Jacqueline Janice 418 James 418 Johnny Lee Johnny Lee Willie Thomas 218, 418 ames Allen 277, 401 Jonell Linda Ann 418 Nature's Rainbow 60-3 William Howard 287, 289, 418 Dee Ann 418 a a , Debora Ann 128, 388 , Jeffrey Loring 418 , Belinda Gay , Robert Wayne 388 , Thomas J. II 306-7 , Vicki Lynn r, Andrew David rt, William Clarence Antonia Marie Charles Daniel 321 Donna James Scott Mudwilder, Jane Tarres 266-7, 370 Mueller, Jan Marie 64-6, 301, 370, 427 Mueller, Melinda Margaret Muffett, James Edward 285 Muir, Gregory Mulhar Mulhol Mullen Mullen e, Edward 40 land, James C. , Nancy Carol 401 , Patrick Michael 401 Mulligan, Michael Lee 345 Mulliki Mulliki n, Douglas Lee n, James allen 249, 305, 388 Mullins, Laura Lea Multerer, Anne Louise Mumphrey, Regina Ann 418 Mundy Munoz, , Dwight Allen Reinoza L. Alfonso Munroe, Jeffrey 78, 418 Munson, Edward Louis Jr. 370 Murley Murley , Jennifer Lynn , Timothy Arch Murphey, Julie Ann Murphey, Marvin Wade Murphey, Nathan Wayne Murphy, Carol Stover Murphy, Cathy Renee 401 Murphy, Cheryl Marie 388 Murphy, Christopher C. Murphy, Glen Allen Murphy, Glenn R. Murphy, James Dale 401 Murphy, Judy Lynn 418 Murphy, Keven Maureen 337, 370 Murphy, Kim Marie Murphy, Mary Catherine 34, 276, 370, 427 Murphy, Michael Allen 299 Murphy, Michael Eugene Murphy, Peter David Murphy, Stanley Lyndon 370 Murphy, William Stanford Murray, Alan Leroy Murray, Dave 17 Murray, Deborah Gayle Murray, Gail Jean Murray, John Bedford 388 Murray, Karen 388 Murray, Kevin Patrick Murray, Laquida Bernadette 418 Murray, Lee 218 Murray, Mark Allen Murray, Michael Shawn 258-261 Murray, Sue Ann 287, 401 Murray, Tammy Renea 418 Murrell, Eli Nawatha 314, 418 Murrell, Nausha L. 401 Murrell, Thomas Earl Murrey, William Harwell Jr. 317, 418 Murrie, Joel Kevin 260 Murry, Karen Arleen Muse, Richard Lorrin Musgrave, Marcus Robert Musgrave, Sherry Lynn Music and publicity 292-3 Music dept. 173 Music dept., head 172-3 Musica Mussel 1 enlistments 411 man, Edmund Craig Mussnug, Kenneth Joseph Myatt, My Fri Myers, Myers, Myers, Myers, Myers, Myers, Myers, Myers, Myers, Myers, Myers, Roger Eugene 401 end’s Place 52-5, 335 Anne Gifford Betsy Ann 334, 418 Charles Barton Douglas Earl Elizabeth Ann Gary Wayne James Stuart Jennifer Anne 239 Peter 80 Samuel Henry Terri Lynn 401 Myre, Debbie Elizabeth Naama, Ahmed Hussain Ahmed Naderi, Nagel, Nagel, Bijhan Afshar Deborah Lynne 418 Henry George IV 388 445 Mitchell, R. Nagel, H. 446 Index Booked up BOOKSTORE WAITS HAD BEEN LONG BEFORE, but junior Gloria Brown said the wait after fall registration in August was her longest yet. “It was at least an hour,” the secretarial science major from Sturgis said. Bookstore manager Buddy Childress said the fall 1976 lines were longer. Ricky Rogers Nagel, John Kevin 277, 370 Nagel, Lea Ann 418 Nagle, Dennis Louis Nahikian, Nancy Lee 276 Nahm, Clifford Conrad 318, 388 Najafi, Ali Akbar 303, 413 Nakashige, Mary Ellen Nalley, Lisa Ann Nallia, Susan Lynn Nally, Karen Ann Nance, Bonnie Lea 388 Nance, Robert Anthony Nance, Will Ed Napier, Eileen Taggart Napier, Gary Wilson 418 Napier, John Gilbert Napier, Linda Jean 418 Napier, Pamela Eileen 283, 370 Napier, Rocky Lane 218, 324, 370 Napier, Tina Marie 292, 294, 388 Nash, Frances Marie Nash, Ronald 172-3 Nash, Tony Lee Nash, Walter Dean 299 Nason, Dean Wilbur Nason, John Charles Natcher, Joe Byron 326, 330, 388 Natcher, Melody Petrzelka Nation, Laura Lynn 309, 340 Nation, William Tate National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 121 National Press Photographers Association 276 Nauman, Jeffrey John 418 Nave, Patience Clement 411 Nave, Wallace 159 Naveaux, Susan 318 Navitsky, Nancy Lynn 388 Naylor, Sherri Lynne Neace, Dianna Marie Neack, Douglas Ervin 401 Neagley, Mary Lynne 272 Neal, Anita Carol 304, 388 Neal, Darlene Elizabeth 335, 388 Neal, James Steven Neal, Jann Ellyn 308, 370 Neal, Karen Lynn Neal, Roger Wayne Necco, Ronald Wayne Nedrow, Bruce Albert Nedvidek, Michael David 326 Nedvidek, Thomas Lorne Nedvidek, William F. Need, Stephen Paull 309, 370 Neel, Jack 166 Neel, Jacquelyn Neel, Samuel Joseph Neel, William Edward Jr. Neely, David Bruce Neely, James Thomas Neely, Michael Thomas Neely, Thomas Scott 305, 401 Neff, Paul Allen 388 Negre, Christine Marie 370 Nell, John Lawrence 303 Nelson, Carl Richard Nelson; Cynthia Ann 401 Nelson, Debra Ann 418 Nelson, Enoch 284-5 Nelson, Hugh Lewis Jr. Nelson, Jennie Haley Nelson, Linda Gail Nelson, Robert 190, 193 Nelson, Tanya Clarice Nemeth, Tim 69 Netherton, Elizabeth Ann 418 Nethery, Bradley Dale 327 Neuberger, Debra Kay Nevils, Delower Jean Nevils, Laura Katherine New York City’s Curtain Calls and Bright Lights 82-3 Newberry, Sherry Kay Newberry, William M. III Newby, Annette Newby, Cathy Lynn 418 Newby, Melesa Anne 309, 334, 388 Newby, Paulette Newby, Rebecca Lynn 334, 401 Newby, Ronald K. Newcomb, Jimmy L awrence 318 Newlen, Karen Lynn Newlon, John D. 401 Newlon, Marcia Lynn Newman, Janet Ann Newman, Mark Franklin 418 Newman, Thalia Marie News 108-117 Newsom, Mark Stuart Newton, Barry Dean 401 Newton, Creighton Gregg Newton, Gary Eugene Newton, Richard Craig 255 Ngwu, Matthew Doziem Nicholas, Theodore Charles 274-5, 370 Nicholls, Mikal Harry 401 Nichols, Brent M. Nichols, Douglas ‘Lee 388 Nichols, Linda Diann Nichols, Mark Douglas 263, 323 Nichols, Mark Wood 262-3, 323 Nichols, Marsha Lynn 401 Nichols, Roger Denton 288, 370 Nicholson, Caryn Louise Nickell, David Louis Nickfar, Mahmoud Nielsen, Janet Lynn Niemann, Laura Ann 276, 418 Nilan, Margaret Ann Nims, Alva John 288, 401 Nims, Donald Read Nitch, Tina Marie Nix, Kathy Richey Noble, Debra Menser Nobody’s Perfect 77 Noe, Joseph Dale Noe, Rose Anne Noel, Jeffrey Lynn 301, 418 Noel, Phyllis Lynn 401 Noffsinger, Deborah Jean Nofsinger, Gayle Kay 401 Nolan, Donna Marie Noland, Lisa Meilani Noland, Steve Thomas Nolen, Sammye Helen Noltie, Bob 284 Nolting, Lance Warren 370 Nolton, Lisa Renee Noon, James Kevin 388 Nord, Thomas Justin 218, 401 Nordine, Alice Bryant 370 Normand, Irene Ellen Normand, Keith Patrick Normand, Mark Douglas Normand, Wilbert 202-3 Norris, Deborah Renee 388 Norris, Gregory McDonald Norris, Jennifer Kay 388 Norris, Lisa Ann 242, 401 Norris, Oscar Lewis ; Norris, Randall Edward 61, 370 Norsworthy, Sharon Denise Northern, Keith Joel Northern, Rondall Ray Jr Northerner, Nancy Jane 338 Northrip, Ron 285 Norton, Carol Elizabeth Norton, Jr. Douglas Tyson Noss, Jean Kimberly 418 Notheisen, Laurin 180-1 November Nonsense 310-1, 338 Nowac, Zyk Rich 401 Nowroozi, Aliakbar Zarandi Nuckols, Amye Lou 418 Nunn, Donna Ruth Nunn, Gregory Roberts Nunn, Jenny Margaret 342 Nunn, Kimberly June 289 Nunn, Phyllis Alany 308 Nunn, Ricky Wayne Nunn, Robert Bruce Nunnally, T. Maria 327 Nursing dept. 183-4 Nursing dept., head 183-4 Nutter, Gina Leigh 340, 388 Nutter, Kathy Lue 255 Nutter, Ronald Grant Nwosu, Godson Jeje Oakes, John 19, 40, 175 Obanion, Marsha Diane 370 Oberg, Stuart I Obermark, Peter Raymond Oberst, Christopher Mark 298 Obrien, Cheryl Lynne Obrien, Kerry Lynn Obrien, Lisa Ann Obrien, Patricia Ann 370 Obryan, Barbara Ann Obryan, Karen Ann 401 Obryan, Lawrence Joseph 323, 418 Obryan, Steven Craig Observational and Analytical Meteorology 204-5 Occupational Safety and Health Administration 121 Ochap, John Thomas 218 Ockerman, Sherry Von 401 O'Connor, John 164-5 O'Connor, Margaret M. Tandy 165 O'Connor, Michelle Patrice O’Daniel, Susan Catherine 282, 401 Odle, Linda Kay 126 Odle, Patricia Ann 401 O'Donnell, Elizabeth Joyce 418 O'Donnell, Heather Dianne 401 O'Donovan, Cheryl Renee O’Dukoya, Olufunke A. 418 Odum, Victoria Elizabeth 92, 303 Ogden College 29, 199-201 Ogden College, dean 198 Ogden, James Robert Ogden, Vickie Lee Ogles, Theresa Lynn Dunbar Oglesby, Burch 166-7 Oglesby, Pamela Lynn Ogulu, Catherine Biobele Ogulu, Promise Ezekiel Ohearn, Karen Ann Oiboh, Jacob Peter Okere, Owuamana Geoffrey Okpala, Amon Okechukwu 285 Oland, Glen Curtis 401 Olatayo, Afolabi A. Olden, Angela M. Oldham, James Larry 312 Oldham, Johnny 150, 160, 234, 242 Oldham, Vanessa Yolanda Oldin, Cheryl Lynn 311, 337, 388 Olinu, Cathy 309 Olive, Edith Jean 388 Oliver, Cathy Lynn Oliver, Charles Robert Oliver, Gary Wayne Oliver, Kathryn Vanosdoll Oliver, Kathy Ann 388 Oliver, Patricia Jean Oliver, Randy Dee Oliver, Shelia Freano Oliver, Terry Ann Olphie, Ronald Roland Olmosreveron, Sara Maria Omeara, Lawrence Omega Psi Phi 319, 344 Omicron Kappa Delta 282 Omokaiye, Olubukunola A. Omotosho, Michael A.J On the Road 72-5 On their merry (d) go-round 46-7 Onan, Stephen Wright 312 Onbirbak, Bizhan 447 Nagel, J. Onbirbak, B. One-man shows 90-1 O'Neal, Charles Wayne O'Neil, Peter James Only one win 216-223 Onyenekwu, Mark Chidi 285 Oost, William G. 218 Oppitz, Elizabeth 190 Oppitz, Robert 190-1 Orange, Charles R Orberson, Carla Yates 214-5 Orberson, Jeffrey 214-5 Orberson, Paul Clark 214-5, 258-261 Orndorff, Debora L. Morris Orndorff, Georgia 418 Orndorff, John Christian Orndorff, Nancy Noe Orndorff, Top 330 Orr, Anita Rocherelle Orrahood, James Wyatt Orser, Judith Anne Osborn, Barbara Ann 337, 427 Osborn, Will Allen 305, 388 Osborne, Diane Gaye Osborne, Flossie Mae Osborne, James Thomas Osborne, Karen Sue 401 Osborne, Linda West Osborne, Mark Duane Osborne, Rhonda Jeane 370 Osborne, Rickey Dale Osborne, Sue Carol 300, 401 Ostaszewski, Mark Alan Osteen, Ronald Norris Ostrofsky, Martin Bruce Otaki, Satoru 418 Otegbeye, Olusegun Otis, Sheryl Lynn Otte, Paul Clarke Ouderkirk, Paul Edward 299 Outdoor Recreational Activities 168-9 Outland, Vickie Iglehart Outlaw, John Baxter Overbey, Eleanor Kay 128, 401 Overmann, Gary James Overton, Cathy 148 Overton, Ivan Andrew Overton, Nancy Delaine 418 Owen, Beth Helen 273 Owen, Charles Douglas Owen, Chris Marie 418 Owen, Cynthia Lee Owen, Karen Diane 287 Owen, Kenneth Ray Owen, Lois Marie 418 Owen, Margaret Janelle Owen, William Robert 388 Owens, Annette Dix 388 Owens, Barney Clifton 255, 299 Owens, Carla Renee Owens, Carmen Milana Owens, Cheryl Lynn 287, 388 Owens, Curtis Eugene 314, 370 Owens, Cynthia Alisa 401 Owens, Gary Wayne Owens, Gina Sanderfur Owens, Joy Renee Owens, Judy Gayle 370 Owens, Karen Eve Owens, Lafreater Elizabeth 401 Owens, Lisa Carlette Owens, Mark Jeffrey Owens, Maude Elaine 401 Owens, Robert Alan Owens, Sherry Lynn Owsley, Jane Marie 418 Owsley, Roy Hamilton Jr. 92, 273 Owsley, Ruby Gale 388 Ozdemir, Hasan 262-3, 388 Ozgowicz, Denise Lynne Pace, Billy Joe Pace, Kim McMillan 370 Pace, Mary Julia 388 Pace, Susan Gay Padgett, Thomas Barry 388 Padilla, Raul 296 Padron, Patrick Steven 218, 401 Page, Agnes Wilcher Page, Floyd Keith Jr. Page, Joe Wallace Page, Lacreasa Ann 170 Page, Leslie III . Page, Lisa Gail 285 Page, Ola Marcelle Page, Pamela Janell Page, Pamela Louise 401 Page, Robert Allan Paige, Bonnie Lynne Paine, Richard Earl 272 Painter, Kenneth Ray Palis, Miles Allen 317, 330, 370 Palmer, Ginger Anne Palmer, Larry Fletcher Palmer, Lynetta Anne Palmer, Neil Craig Palmer, Pamela Susan 245 Palmer, Paul Warren Palmer, Ray Neil Palmer, Samuel John Jr. Palmer, Tana Lynn 401 Palmore, Melinda 92, 303 Panagos, Evangela Shannon Panchareon, Pornchai Panhellenic Association 330-1 PanKratz, Donna 166 PanKratz, Roger 166 Pannier, Alice Mary 370 Pardee, Stuart Dale Pardue, Deborah Lynn 334, 370 Pare, Felecia Betty 418 Parish, Cynthia Lou 126 Parker, Charles Phillip 418 Parker, Dennis Alan $48 One-man Shows Peshka, C. Parker, Dennis Dio Parker, James Brent 318 Parker, Janice Lynn Parker, John D. 290 Parker, Kelly Lee 418 Parker, Linda Kay Parker, Richard Reynolds 418 Parker, Rita Elaine Parker, Sandra Popplewell Parker, Shirley Sue Parks, Alice Marie 418 Parnell, Kandy Gaye Parnell, Stevie Lynn 255, 317 Parr, Deborah Lynne Parrigan, Pamela Coats Parrigin, Harold Wayne Parrigin, James Harold Parrigin, Lyle Moody Parrish, Alma Jo 418 Parrish, Helen Juanita 302-3, 344 Parrish, Jan Elizabeth Parrish, Kathryn Joyce 4 Parrish, Terry Wayne Parrott, Althea Graves Parrott, Angelia Jean Parrott, Ann Lee 418 Parrott, Carole Lynn Parrott, David Wayne 371 Parshall, Scott Eugene 315 Parsley, Don Michael Parsons, Billy Glen Parsons, David Kirk 291, 388 Parsons, John Philip Parsons, William Richard 371 Pasteris, David F. Pate, Robert Samuel Pate, Stanley Carl Paterson, Cheryl Ann 401 Patey, Camellia Gwenn 284, 308-9, 371 Patmor, Betty Louise 371 Patriarca, Anthony Michael Patrick, June Teresa Patrick, Karen Joyce Patrick, Patricia Louise Patrick, Ronald Lynn Patrick, Shelley Ann Patrick, Sherry Lynn Patterson, Bobby Joe Patterson, Debra Carol Patterson, Gary Alan 371 Patterson, Gary Lynn Patterson, Jack Kelly Patterson, Joe Earl 327 Patterson, Julia Ann 301, 388 Patterson, Nancy Carol 418 Patterson, Neena Saunders 445 Patterson, Richard Ellis Patterson, Rita M. Drazer 388 Patterson, Robert Lee Patterson, Stacey Lynn Patterson, Tamela Michelle Patterson, Terry Neil Patterson, Tony Allan Patton, Donald Glenn 371 Patton, Lucinda Lee 388 Paul, Robert Lynn Pauley, James Watkins 309 Pauli, David Timothy 323 Paulk, Rebecca Powell Paulley, Teresa Diane 418 Pawley, Keenan Lowell 401 Pawley, Keith 317, 330, 371 Pawley, Mary Ellen 186, 371 Paxson, Pamela June Payne, Barry 48-9 Payne, Bryan 48-9 Payne, Bonnie 70 Payne, Chris Steven 401 Payne, Dennis Wayne Payne, James Nelson Payne, Jennie Starlin 371 Payne, John Charles 260 Payne, Mary Elaine 388 Payne, Polly Anne Payne, Rodney William Payne, Sandra Gayle 289, 401 Payne, Thomas Anthony Jr. Payne, Veronica Susan 418 Paynter, George Talbott 371 Payton, Lyndell Ray 300, 388 Payton, Patricia D. Payton, Quenta Ann 292, 388 Payton, Richard Allen Pazdan, Dorothy Kay 401 Pea, Gerald Lee Peak, Michael Christopher 401 Peak, Sandra Lynne 309, 388 Peak, Shebell 332, 335, 388 Peake, Christopher Phillip Pearce, Gena Ann 342, 371 Pearce, Tom 170-1 Pearl, Gloria Jean Pearl, Michael Lawrence Pearl, Stephanie L Pearse, James 272 Pearson, Deborah Jo 401 Pearson, Dennis Alan 326, 388 Pearson, Ernest Michael 371 Pearson, James Douglas 401 Pearson, Ramona Lynne Pearson, Richard Moss Pearson, Thomas Everett 317, 371 Pease, Rebecca Lynn Peay, Jerry 324 Peay, Sharon Lee 388 Peck, Donna Alice Peck, Elisabeth Salter 418 Peck, Elizabeth Roxanne Peck, Janet Kay Peck, Stephen Kent 318 Peck, Tammy Lynn Peck, Teresa Kay Peckenpaugh, Rebecca Irene 388 Peddycort, Hugh Estis Peden, Barbara Sue 418 Peden, Charles Howard Jr Peden, Nikki Lynne 401 Pedigo, Albert William Pedigo, Bonnie Renee Pedley, Grace Ann Peek, Elizabeth 298 Pelaski, Tony K. 418 Pelfrey, Scott Anthony Pelino, Daniel Scot 276, 324, 389 Pelly, David Jewell 371 Peltz, Rickey Gale Pemberton, Timothy Alan 401 Pence, Vickie Lynn 401 Pendleton, Dency M. Turner Pendleton, Nita Lafail 371 Pendley, Donna Richey 371, 378 Pendley, Michael Steven 371 Penix, Randy Keith Penn, Chuck 318 Penn, James Lawson Penn, Stephen Douglas 301, 418 Penney, Emily Jane 239, 371 Pennington, Alvin Read 326 Pennington, Nancy Arnise Pennington, Paul Clayborn 307, 371 Pennington, Vickie Lynn 418 Pennisi, Laurie Ann Penrod, Tamela Roy Peperis, Diane Elaine Pepper, Debbie Kay 389 Pepper, Katherine Stuart 291, 371, 427 Pepper, Sarah Joe Pepper, Tony Kenton 401 Perdue, Linda G. Perdue, Lisa Rose 336 Perkins, Cynthia Jo 418 Perkins, Edwina Perkins, Franklin Kyle 271, 401 Perkins, Jack H Perkins, Jill Evelyn Perkins, John Casey Jr. 324, 401 Perkins, Lawrence Douglas 371 Perkins, Lynette Sue Perkins, Patricia Brewer Perkins, Vickie Lee Perkins, William Lee Perry, Cindy Renee 371 Perry, David Earl Perry, Donald Joseph 401 Perry, Gary Stephen 389 Perry, Joseph Whitney Perry, Karen Lynn Perry, Katherine Davis 283, 288, 371 Perry, Robert Randolph 323 Pershing Rifles 272 Pershing, Laurie Sue Pershing, Robert Keith Personnel Services, director 155 Peshka, Cynthia L. 267 Peter, Elizabeth Catlett 70, 418 Peterie, Stanley Taylor 282, 322, 401 Peters, Brenda Kay Peters, Charles Albert III Peters, David Nathaniel 293 Peters, Debra Diane 389 Petersen, Albert Jepmond Petersen, Lisa Kirsten Peterson, John Dwight III Peterson, Kevin William Peterson, Pete 325 Petett, Cecilia Ann 418 Petosa, Richard A. Petrie, Patricia Anne 418 Petros, Nancy Jean 336 Pettey, James 326 Petty, Judy Lynn 389 Petty, Kathy Ray Calvert Petty, Patrick Michael Peveler, Kimberly Jane Peyton, Candace Jean Peyton, Dale Cooper 314, 401 Pfeiffer, Christian Albert 418 Pfister, Marsha Renee Pharris, Dewey Kent Phelan, Kenneth John Phelps, Alice Hampton Phelps, April Lane 418 Phelps, Cindy Kaye 389 Phelps, Diana Lynne 282, 401 Phelps,Glenna Jean Phelps, Gregory Dale 418 Phelps, James E. Jr. 418 Phelps, Jeanie 418 Phelps, Judy Lindsey Phelps, Kathy Sue Phelps, Larry Lynn Phelps, Phyllis Maria 401 Phelps, Susan Diane Phelps, William Robert Phi Beta Sigma 320, 343-4 Phi Delta Theta 310, 321, 345 Phi Eta Sigma 282-3 Phi Mu 31, 269, 312, 328, 341, 345 Phillips, Ann Wallace 341, 371 Phillips, Betty Jo Coffey Phillips, Bobby C. Jr. Phillips, Charles Lynn 325, 389 Phillips, James Edward 371 Phillips, Joseph James 371 Phillips, Karin Marie 401 Phillips, Laura Ellen 336, 389 Phillips, Lawrence Dillard 255, 418 Phillips, Leonard Bernard Phillips, Margaret Louise Phillips, Melinda Kay Phillips, Robert Rufus Phillips, Roy Cabell Phillips, Shelley Lynn Phillips, Teresa Sue 308, 389 Phillips, Terry Joseph Phillips, Thala Caroline 371 Phillips, Thomas Edgar Phillips, Tracy Brian 249, 389 Phillips, Vicki Lynn 401 Philosophy and religion dept. 172-3 Philosophy and religion dept., head 172-3 Philpot, Joan Jennings 276, 401 Philpott, Dwight Steven Philpott, James Oscar Philpott, Teresa Carol 401 Physical education and recreation dept. 166-7 Physical education and recreation dept., head 166-7 Physical plant and facilities management administrator 160 Physics and astronomy dept. 201 Physics and astronomy dept., head 201 Pi Kappa Alpha 322, 334, 345 Pi Kappa Phi 323, 342, 345 Pi Omega Pi 283 Pickard, Stephen Paul 134, 296 Pickens, Helen Elizabeth Pickens, James Edward 324 Picken, Jim 148 Pickerill, Robert Louis 321, 330 Pickerrell, Daniel Alan 306, 401 Pickerrell, Timothy Lane Pickett, James Clay 301 Pickett, John Henry 89, 92, 303 Pickett, Kenneth Haden 418 the experience. Pickett, Leo Allen Pickett, Marcella Gale Pickwick, David Allen 389 Pickwick, Karen Lynn 389 Pierce, Cynthia Lu 272 Pierce, Darell Ray 326 Pierce, Donald Wade Pierce, Dwayne Thomas 401 Pierce, Emily Gayle 401 Pierce, Fredia Marie 418 Pierce, Lynne Kay Kerry 371 Pierce, Margaret Jenrose 389 Pierce, Richard Allen Pierce, Robin Ann 371 Pierce, Stewart Jay 389 Pierce, Tristan Gay Pierce, William Ray 288, 371 Pigman, Julia Bach 371 Piispanen, Brian Lee Pike, Donovan Sanky Jr. Pike, Mary Salmon 389 Pile, Daniel Howard Pile, Perry Allen 389 Pile, Royce Duane 371 Pile, Sharon Lynn Pile, Vicki Lynne 284, 371 Pillitteri, Lisa Marie 341 Pillow, Donald Earl 282 Pillow, Ginny Lyn Pillow, Janet Ruth Pillow, Philip Reeves Pillow, Robert Wesley Pinaire, Michele Lee 418 Pinckley, Pippa Ann 296, 389 Pine, Carla Jean 305 Pinkerton, Joel Warren Pinkston, Cathy Ann 401 Pinkston, Vicki Lane Pinson, Barbara L. StClair Pinson, Jeffrey Alan Pinto, Linda Christine 371 Piper, Maria Gwen Piper, Nancy A. Pippen, Melvin 17 Pirtle, Dorothy Ann 418 Pitchford, Hilda Carol ‘Triple feature A 1950’s 3-D HORROR MOVIE, “The Creature from the Black Lagoon” captivates Murray junior Connie Lawson at the DUC theater last fall. “I thought it was great, ” she said of Pitchford, Linda Suzanne 401 Pitchford, Marla Elaine Pitcock, Mark Edward Pitt, Daniel Tyler 299 Pitt, Robert William Pittman, Roger Gayle Pittman, T homas James Pitts, Donald Alan Pitts, John Morrison Plamp, Roger Miles Plantinga, John J. 371 Plantinga, Joyce Ellen 418 Plantinga, Judith Elaine 419 Plantinga, Sandra Lynn 26, 389 Platt, Christine Anne Platt, Eric Alan 389 Platt, Thomasine Denise 401 Playing soldier for a grade 188-9 Plenty of activity and outdoor recreation 168-9 Plummer; Richard McCurdy Podbesek, Patricia Anne Poe, William Bradford 301 Poehlein, Susan Carol 338 Pogrotsky, Ricky Morris Pogue, David Allin 372 Pogue, Don Keith 257 Pogue, Phyllis Jean Poitinger, Keith Arlen Poitinger, Wendy Sue 287 Polak, Margaret Polak, Richard Steven 300, 419 Poland, Elizabeth Ann 372 Policastri, Anne 305, 372 Poling, Richard Forrest 324 Politi, Sandra K. Polizzi, Dixie Presson Polley, Terry Lynn Pollock, David Jon 307, 372 Pollock, Deborah R. 401 Pollock, Ronald Ray Polson, Alicia Dawn 239, 419 Pond, Gary Wayne Pond, Neil Arthur 389 Ponton, Robert Poole, Cathy Lynne Poor, Julia Katherine 341, 389 Pope, Alice Carolyn 419 Pope, Pamela W. Pope, Rececca Kay Reid Pope, Stacy Lonnette 419 Popp, Catherine Marie 419 Popplewell, Sandra Faye 342, 402 Porchia, Denise Portaro, Joseph Gerard Porter, Albert C. 4, 389 Porter, Clara Elizabeth 307, 372 Porter, Emily Susan 253, 336 Porter, Glen Lane 345 Porter, Jeanetta Susan 372 Porter, Joel Hardin Porter, Lisa Kay 389 Porter, Paul Randall 372 Porter, Phillip LeRoy Porter, Sharon Denise 419 Portman, Joseph Sanford Jr. Portman, Marcia Lynn 340 Porto, Eugenia Maria Posey, Brian LeRoy Post, Audrey Elizabeth Poston, Sondra Jean Poteat, Wanda J. Erskine Poteet, Malesia Ann Poteet, Melissa Gail 419 Poteet, Richard Douglas Pothasuthon, Navitta Potter College 172-5 Potter College, asst. dean for administration 175 Potter College, dean 172-3 Potter, Cheryl Jo 53, 284, 402 Potter, Deborah E. Thompson Potter, Jeannie Cummings Potter, Richard Alan Potter, Ronald Lynn Potter, Thomas Douglas 372 Pottinger, Virginia Ann 419 Potts, Dale Reid 327 Potts, Lisa Spring 283-4, 419 Potts, Thomas Wahl Powell, Ann Michele 389 Powell, Anna Marietha Powell, Bill 14, 212, 248-9, 251 Powell, Charlie 224 Powell, Edward Albert Powell, Gregory Wayne 419 Powell, James Marcus 53, 284, 372 Powell, Jeanne Knauer Powell, Joseph Delbert Powell, Joseph Michael Powell, Kevin Lee Powell, Lawrence Edwin 327 Powell, Michael Wiliam Powell, Sandra Lynn Powell, Sharon Leigh 189 Powell, Sherrill Lynn 204 Powell, Steven Douglas Powell, Teresa Jo 419 Power, Jerald Lawrence 402 Powers, Keith Otwell 301 Powers, Margaret Wesner 337, 372 Powers, Ronald James Powers, Sherry June Powers, Sunni Denise 419 Powers, Tamara Ann Poynter, Albert Jr. Poynter, Jennifer Monroe Poynter, Jinny S. Prachasaisoradej, Tavirot 419 Prater, Steven Douglas Prather, Charles Michael Prather, Lynda Jeanne 372 Prather, Teresa Beth 338 Pratt, Dean Michael Pratt, Katherine Mary 292 Pratt, Mildred E. Gavel Pratt, Penelope Jane 292 Precious, Carol Jean 336, 402 Prendergast, John Joseph 389 Presley, Elvis 347, 354 Presson, Sherrelyn Joyce 289, 372 Preston, Dennis Jewell Preston, Eddie Joe 217-8, 221-2 Preston, Garry Charles 372 Preston, James Gregory Price, Agnes, Suzette 389 Price, Audrey 210 Price, Barbara Jane 419 Price, Charles Lee III 277, 372 Price Deborah Lynn 372 Price, Dennis Ray Price, Douglas Alan 402 Price, Harold Robert 327, 372 Price, Janice Diane 320 Price, Jimmie 282 Price, John Woodrow Price, Karen Raye Price, Lisa Jean 419 Price, Lizbeth Renee 419 Price, Martin Anthony Price, Pamela Ann 334, 419 Price, Pamela Sue 372 Price, Terry Jean 334, 402 Price, Thomas Jay 419 Price, Toni Caryl 330, 389 Price, Wallace Brent 291, 402 Priddy, C. Brent Priddy, Dennis Oran Priddy, Julie Kay 419 Priest, Charles McKinley Prince, Michael 228, 230-1, 233, 281 Prine, Joel Thomas Prine, John Russell Printmaking 180-1 Pritchard, Deborah Rose 292, 372 Pritchard, James A. III Pritchard, Pamela Jean 419 Problems in Broadcast 176-7 Probus, Patricia Leslie Prochazka, Larry Joseph 301, 372 Proctor, Cathy Lou 402 Proctor, Marilyn Annette 419 Proctor, Mary Louise 274, 337, 402 Proctor, Terry Glenn Proehl, Donald Erwin Professionalism and Promotion 276 Proffitt, Rita Jean Provost, Joan M. 276, 427 Prow, Karen 129 Pruden, Marijane 402 Pruden, Marilyn Lee Pruitt, Deborah Jean Pruitt, Earlrene Pruitt, Nina Eloise 419 Pruitt, Sonja Gay 372 Pruitt, Tommy Allen Pruitte, Monica Laurie Pryor, Anita Carol Pryor, Debra Ann Pryor, Karen Anne 402 Psychology dept. 164 Psychology dept., head 164 Public affairs and community relations, director 151, 156 Public relations, director 150 Public Relations Student Society of America 276 Public safety dept. 169 Public safety, director 161 Public cervice and international programs, dean 158 Publications, director 152 Puckett, Bhrett Scott 345 Puckett, Ronald Lewis 274 Pugh, Diana Kay Puhek, Kevin Scott Pulliam, Valerie Kay 402 Pulou, Punivai 389 Purcell, Cathy Lynn Purcell, Jack Wayne Purchasing, director 154 Purd, Melvin 323 Purpus, Michael Gregory Purlsey, Cathy Starr 336, 389 Pursley, Teresa Dawn 292 Purvis, Gregory Dennis Putnam, Charles Duane Jr. Putnam, Sharon Lee Putting his world in focus 76-7 Qualls, Michael Stevenson Quan, Victor John 257, 419 Quarles, Dell Marie 389 Quek, Chuen Kin 255, 300 Quig, William Russell Quire, Mary Ellen 389 Rabold’s 53, 55 Raby, Sara Ann 389 Radcliffe, Rhonda Lynn 402 Rademaker, Richard Wathen Rader, Gregory LeRoy 313, 330 Rader, Janet 419 Rader, Marilyn Raef, Diane Carol 337, 402 Rafferty, Mary Ann 372 Rafferty, Robert C. Ragan, Stephen Marshall 325, 419 Ragar, Robert W. Rager, Glenda Ann 340 Rager, Penny Rhea 419 Raggard, Robin Wayne 402 Ragland, John Thompson Ragland, Mark Sinclair Ragland, Thomas Bradley 449 Peter, E. Ragland, T. Raglin, Charles Wayne Raglin, Laverne Lucille 402 Raglin, Lydia Dionne 402 Raglin, Sharon Elaine 372 Rahn, John William 228, 230, 419 Railey, Steven Craig Rainey, Dale 402 Rainey, Kim 402 Rainwater, Kathy Diane 419 Raleigh, Harold Ray Raley, Carla Gaye Raley, Janet Lee Ralls, Adrianne Ralph, Dennis Wayne 298 Ralph, Jerry Albert 284 Ralph, Luwana Diane Ralston, Al D Ralston, Micheal DeWayne Ralston, Peggy Cullom Ralston, Debra Jean 282, 296, 372, 427 Ramsay, John Theodore Ramsey Lewis Trio 105-7 Ramsey, Barbara Gerard 289 Ramsey, Barbara Powell Ramsey, Fleecie Ramsey, Lisa Gayle 419 Ramsey, Rhonda Jean Ramsey, Ronald Joe Rand, Susan 419 Randall, Becky Dawn 372 Randall, Janice Faith 340 Randall, Robert John Randall, Steven Bruce Randall, Walter Clark Randolph, David Ivan Jr. 402 Randolph, Ronald Wayne Ranney, Charles Timothy Ranney, William Rance Ransdell, John Christopher 299-300 Ransdell, Matthew Paul 275 Raque, Lisa Kathleen Rascoe, Bobby 230 Rascoe, Lisa Jane 419 Rastegar, Panah Massoud Ratcliff, Kimberly Jane 402 Ratliff, James Clinton Rausch, Jocelyn Drew 283 Ravenscraft, Paul Lee Ravenscraft, Valerie Jane 402 Rawlins, Margaret Jane 402 Ray, Carol Regina AMIDST DARK CLOUDS and steel drainage pipes des- Fly away Se iat arag eyo tined for a new parking lot behind Barnes-Campbell Hall, Ray, Debarsh Lyonsss cis Louisville freshman Kevin Embry sails a Frisbee. Ray, Jack Hewson 372 Ray, Jerry Wayne Ray, Randy T. 257, 419 Ray, Terri J. 389 Ray, Terri Lynn Raybold, Arthur W. III 419 Raymer, Ernest Clinton Raymer, Glen Lindsey Raymer, Preston Avery Raymond, Connie Darlene 389 Read, Donna Sue Read, Shannon Rice Reagan, Ronald 3 Reagan, Susan Denise 290-1, 389 Reagan, Terry Joe Reagin, Carson Alexander Ream, Patricia Elizabeth Ream, Randy Warren Reamy, Julian Ralph Jr. 315, 402 Reasonover, Patricia D. Reasons, Timothy Faynne Reaves, Larry Allan 389 Reavis, Robert Scot Rebelettes 274 Rector, Judy Ann 419 Rector, Mari Rose 372 Rector, William Dallas Red Bird Mission 186-7 Redd, Julius Caesar 301, 372 Redd, Walter Wayne Redding, Gloria Juanita Redford, Jonathan S. Redman, Clara A. Redmon, Louise Ann 341, 402 Redmon, Robert Edward 419 Reece, Connie Joyce 308, 372 Reece, Teresa Annette 340 Reed, Celeste Griffith Reed, Clyde Derek Reed, Daniel Fredrick Reed, Donna Gale Reed, Gary W. 288, 372 Reed, Hugh Richard 316 Reed, Janette Marie 389 Reed, Kenneth Ray Reed, Linda Gail Reed, Neal Richard 316 Reed, Sharon Annette Reed, Sharon Denise Reed, Steven Hires Reed, Stevenson Leonard Reese, Barbara Jean 419 Reese, Charlotte Jane Reese, Michael 228, 230-1, 233 Reese, Thomas Nesbitt Reetzke, Daniel William Reeves, Anita Leigh 372 Reeves, Donice Elaine Reeves, Robert L. 71, 372 Reeves, Ronald Kane 289 Regenbogen, Brenda Jean 402 Reholon, Lizandro Jose Reid, Alan Lewis 389 Reid, Marilyn Denise 372 Reid, Robert Paul 289 Reid, Terri Sue Reinert, William Gregory Reinholdt, Rodney Dean Reinle, Ricky Bodine 92, 273 Reinscheld, Ronald Lee 419 Reiss, Jennifer Mary 372 Reiter, Walter Lawrence 306 Reker, Richard Raymond 306, 372, 427 Remaly, Lisa Rae 419 Remaly, Lori Kay 419 Render, Larry J. 450 Raglin, C. Render, L. Scott Robinson Reneau, Jo 402 Reneer, Frances Opal Renfro, Michael Gene Renfro, Sallie Kathleen Renfrow, Debra Lynn 372 Renfrow, Loretta 402 Renfrow, Randall Lee Renick, William Robert Renner, Barry Wade 323 Renshaw, Paula Rae Renusch, Therese Ann Resch, Sharon Kay Restrepo, Jaime Mauricio Rettino, Debbie 284 Rettino, Ernie 284 Rexroat, Curtis Alan 389 Rexroat, David Ray 322, 402 Rexroat, Karen Faye 419 Rexroat, Ozandal Coolidge 419 Rexroat, Tracy Lynne 419 Reynolds, Cathy Ann 373 Reynolds, Daniel Miles 402 Reynolds, Ernest Robert 327, 373 Reynolds, Kelly Wayne 326 Reynolds, Laura Marie Reynolds, Leslie Paul 402 Reynolds, Robert Kennan 255 Reynolds, Roger Reece 255 Reynolds, Sonia Anne 402 Reynolds, Tracy Howard II Reynolds, Vyetta Woodworth 402 Rhea, Betsy Lou 373 Rhea, Joe Shannon Rhea, Tony Alan 402 Rheaume, Deloras Akridge Rheaume, Tony Rhoades, Carolyn June Rhoades,. Roger Allen 373 Rhoades, Shelley Sue 419 Rhoades, Timnothy Craig 327 Rhoades, Tony Gil 325 Rhoads, Patricia Darlene G Rhodes, Britt Davis 325 Rhodes, Sylvia Denise Ribadeneira, Hernan A Ribar, Richard Arthur Rice, Laurie Reynolds Rice, Margo Ruth Rice, Marguerite Dolores 394, 419 Rice, Patricia Ann Rice, Ralph Eugene Jr Rice, Randy Craig Rice, Rebecca Lynn 419 Rice, Steven Wayne 288, 373 Rich, Brenton Lee 277, 373 Rich, Donald Kent Rich, Kathy Lynn 419 Rich, Kelly Alexander 271 Rich, Phil Thomas 218, 402 Richard, Samuel Hamilton 419 Richards, Annette 235 Richards, Jack Eugene Richards, Jim 139, 212, 227-8, 230-1, 233-5 Richards, Joe 27 Richards, Nathan Edward Richards, Ricky James Richards, Thomas Wayne Richardson, Charlotte W Richardson, Clara Nelle Richardson, Danny Baker Richardson, Darrel Edwin Richardson, Donna Kay Richardson, Dwight Darold Richardson, Mark Hudson Richardson, Pamela Suzette Richardson, Patricia A Richardson, Patricia B. Richardson, Randolph T. Richardson, Teresa G Richardson, Willie James 316 Richeson, Stephen Dale 419 Richetts, Harold 332 Richey, Kimberly Kay Richey, Nancy Caroll 419 Richey, Victor Lee Jr. 275 Rickard, Dana Joy 305, 402 Ricke, John Charles Ricketts, Kathryn Louise Ricketts, Morris Glen 322 Ridd, Roland William Jr Riddle, Janet Lois 274 Riddle, Sherry Moore Riddle, Wanda Lynn 373 Ridenhour, Virginia Groom Rideout, Kenton Wayne 402 Rider, Carol Ann 419 Rider, Greg Alan Rider, Marilyn Kay 373 Ridge, Holly M. Share Riebsame, William Edward 299 Riedling, Jonathan Kent 306 Riely, Diane Louise 334, 419 Riely, Richard James Jr Ries, Anne Lynn 373 Riflery team 246-7 Rigdon, Lance Carlton Riggs, Col. Gary 183-4 Riggs, Martina Kaye 342, 389 Riggs, Michael Joe 258 Riggs, Sherri Linne 419 Riggs, Stephen Hansford 419 Riggsbee, Barry Alan 403 Rigsby, Larry Wayne 403 Riley, Alice Marie 285, 389 Riley, Craig Steven 131-2, 326, Riley, Cynthia Ann Riley, Diane 255 Riley, Honey Lynn Riley, Jeff David Riley, Laura Lee Riley, Linda Susan 373 Riley, Pat Jackman Jr Riley, Robert Alan 389 Riley, Sheila Ann 419 Riley, Stephen Douglas Rinehard, Catherine Jo 403 Rinehard, Sharon Lee 389 Ring, Ray Jessee Ripley, Bernice Lee Rippy, Dana Wayne 373 451 Reneau, J. Rippy, D. Rippy, Tammy Gwynn Risdon, Peter Ashley Risen, Michael Hollis Risinger, Donna Lyne Ritchie, Bernie Lee III Ritchie, Gregory Murray 300 Ritman, Christina Lynn 373 Rittenberry, Jerry Albert Ritter, Beth 158 Ritter, Dr. Donald 158 Ritter, Kathryn Georgia Ritter, Mania 296 Ritter, Mark Leonard 249 Ritter, Rhonda Gayle 419 Ritter, Thomas Fredrick Ritter, Tom 158 Rittgers, Karen Sumner Rivas, Joann 255 Rivera, Sharon Brown Rives, Michael Jerome 320 Rizio, Eugene Frank Rizzo, Candice Ann Roach, Joe K. 319, 330 Roach, Kathryn May 403 Roark, Ann Douglas 334 Robart, Marion Joyce Smith Robbins, Christine Anne 403 Robbins, Debbie Louise 289 Robbins, Joyce Lynn 419 Robbins, Ronald Edward 373 Robe, Diane Jean 403 Robe, Gary Robert 373 Roberson, Bruce William 389 Roberson, Ivy 155 Roberson, Philip Ray Roberts, Brenda Lee 419 Roberts, Cain Edward 389 Roberts, Charles Keith Roberts, David Norman 326, 330 Roberts, Elizabeth V Roberts, H. David Roberts, Howard Wayne 296, 304, 373 Roberts, Joseph Thomas 318 Roberts, Karen Elizabeth 403 Roberts, Lisa Ellen 419 Roberts, Lloyd Tommy Roberts, Nancy Norma 134, 433 Roberts, Patricia Ann Roberts, Patty Ann Roberts, Phillip Ellis Roberts, Richard Lynn Roberts, Russell Snow 276, 403 Roberts, Sherry Ann 389 Roberts, Stephen Allen 419 Roberts, Sue Conner Roberts, Timothy Lynn 373 Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, David Wayne 318 Jacque 373 Janice Lynn Kenneth Edward 389 Lee 29, 150 Lindy Lee Mark 419-420 Marsha Lynn 403 Mary Beth 338, 403 Steven Bennett 324 William Lee 389 William Pinkney Robillard, Kim Lane Robinette, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Kathryn Ann 419 Audrey Lachelle 419 Benedict George Cynthia Ann 337 Donald John Donald Mark 61, 389 Dwayne Reed 247, 307, 373 Elaine Del 338, 373 Faye 206 Keith Howard 310 Kenni Kay Lucretia 239, 403 Maria Teresa Max 304 Randall Parks 37, 325, 402 Robinson, Scott Gregory Robinson, Triva Linae Robison, Kim Denise 328, 336, 403 Rocco, Ronald Anthny 258, 260-1, 389 Roche, Brian Keith Rochelle Holly Raye 284, 403 Rochelle, Mitzi Carol 419 Rock, Rhonda Raye 419 Rod Rogers Dance Company 68 Roddy, Mary Evelyn Rodgers, David Wallace Rodgers, James Barton Rodgers, Stephanie Wynn Rodgers, Walter Ephriam 403 Rodriguez, Marcelino Sola 419 Roederer, Chris Alan 389 Roemer, David Lawrence Roemer, Laura Lee Rogan, Alfred Lee 218 Rogers, Anne 40 Rogers, Charles Randall Rogers, Constance Kay 62, 419 Rogers, David Ray Rogers, Debbie Lynn Rogers, Harold Dean Rogers, James Wesley Rogers, Jeffrey Blake Rogers, Jo Ann 287 Rogers, Joan Tucker 373 Rogers, Kenneth Lee Rogers, Len Andrew Rogers, Linda L. Gribben Rogers, Marjorie Elizabeth 373 Rogers, Mary Elizabeth Sue 376 Rogers, Richard Allen 276 Rogers, Sandra Jane Rogers, Sheryl Ann 284, 304, 373 Rohner, Stephen Joseph Rolwing, Julie Ann Romans, Elizabeth Ann 419 Romans, Sharon Lynn 373 Romeieh, Michael Myles 324 Romich, Gary Lee Ronconi, Edward Eugene Rone, Dennis Wayne 417 Rone, Vickie Lynn 373 Roney, Robert Michael Jr. 249 Ronnerman, Bengt Gustav 262-3 Roof, Charles Michael 419 Rooney, Kathleen Ann 255 Rosa, Julie Ann Rosdeutscher, James Howard Rose, Anthony Lee 218 Rose, Billy Scott 389 Rose, Christi Ann 334 Rose, Claude 6-7 Rose, Jane Houston Rose, Johnny Tapley Rose, Kenneth E. 389 Rose, Marcia Renee Rose, Mark Bruce Rose, Pamela Sue Rose, Patricia Ann Rose, Ray 262-3 Rose, Ronald Dale Rose, Susan Elaine 245 Rosenbaum, Gary Stewart 313, 330 Rosenbaum, Sabrina Ann 276, 389 Rosenberger, Joni Lynn 373 Rosenthal, Linda Sue | Rosenthal, Mark Allen 270, 389 Roso, Sandra Ann 336, 403 Roso, Susan Marie 373 Ross, Barry Moreman Ross, Donna Fay Ross, Thomas Joseph 249 Ross, Troy Franklin 249 Rossi, Gregory Joe Rothey, Mark Steven Rothman, Susan Marie 403 Rothstein, Carol Andrea Rotoni, Mary Christina Rounds, Dennis Donavon 242, 389 Rountree, Cynthia Gail 309, 389 Rountree, Karen Michelle 403 Rountree, William Donald Rouse, Dennis Mark Rouse, Joe Glenn Rousseau, Mary Lynne Routt, Diana Frances Routt, Michael Wayne Routt, Rhonda Cathryn 403 Routt, Sally Jane Rowe, Alice Crittenden Rowe, Nick Orlando Rowe, Vince Edward Rowland, Frances Ann 276 Rowland, Gail Rowland, Pam Reasonover Rowlett, Mary Lane 285, 309,.373 Rowley, Robert Emmett 327 Rowshanaei, Mansour Rowshanaie, Rasool Roy, Danny Michael 306, 373 Roy, Paula Miller 389 Roy, Randy Eugene 419 Roy, Robert Kevin 389 Royal, Patricia Gail 403 Royal, Sharon Kay 419 Royalty, Donald Keith Royalty, Elizabeth Park Royalty, James Carroll Royse, Henry Gilbarre Royse, Linda Sue Royse, Mark Charlton Royse, Ricky Thomas Royse, Sam Bailey Royse, Teresa Karen Ruark, Melvin Donald Jr. 322 Rubey, Kathleen Ann 389 Rubin, Joanne Marie Rubin, Suzanne Therese 239 Rubini, Rebecca Anne 403 Ruble, John Anthony 318, 330 Ruble, John Wesley Ruble, Paul Scott 325 Ruby, Elizabeth Ware 287, 389 Ruby, John Robert Ruckriegel, Barbara Ann 419 Rudd, Malinda Ann Rudd, Marla Jo Rudolph, Kurt Rudolph, Nancy Leigh 419 Rue, Jonathan Lee 324, 389 Rue, Nancye Louise Rue, Nelson Bright III Rue, Rebecca Susan 338, 419 Rueff, Kenneth Cecil Rueff, Rebecca Ann 403 Rueff, Renona Browning Judy Watson Rueff, Theresa Harriett Rueff, Warner Lawson Ruemmele, Stephen Barth Ruff, Brian Thomas 274-5 Ruff, Loren 85, 90 Ruggles, Deborah Sue 292, 389 Ruggles, Kathleen Ann Rumfelt, Mark Alan 419 Runk, Randolph Louis Runner, Benjamin Thomas Jr Runner, Peggy Ann Honaker Runner, Rhona Gwynne 336, 373 Runner, Terry Wayne Runyon, Cheryl Lynn Rupe, Carol Lynnette 247 Rush, Cynthia Denise Rush, Patricia Anne Rushin, Gary Lamont Russell, Denise June 403 Russell, Dorothy Lee Russell, Dwight Pritchett 198, 304, 373 Russell, Edwin Eugene Russell, Jo Ann 298, 403 Russell, Kelly 198 Russell, Kenneth Dale 284, 389 Russell, Kenneth Wayne II Russell, Larry Gene Russell, Laura Gayle 373 Tired out HIS BIKE HAD A FLAT TIRE, so Tyler Gill, an Elk- ton sophomore, hopped aboard a United Parcel Service truck by the university center. But moments later, the truck stopped, ending the ride. Russell, Laurie Lee 373 Russell, Marcus Bly Russell, Mark 282-3 Russell, Marvin 198 Russell, Michael Lee Russell, Pamela Jean 403 Russell, Ricky Glenn 304, 403 Russell, Robert Bryan Russell, Robert O'Neil Russell, Rosalyn 270 Russell, Terry Lee Rust, Freddie Elaine Rutecki, Maureen Theresa Rutherford, Kim McClure 389 Rutherford, Marvin Ray Rutherford, Michael D Rutherford, Tim Allen 281 Rutledge, Dale Edward 132-3, 345 Rutledge, Kimberly 373 Rutledge, Rebecca Mary Rutledge, Stephanie H Ryan, Darlene Pendleton Ryan, Dowell Key Ryan, Joseph David Ryan, Judy Kaye Ryan, Matthew R Ryan, Robert David Rybij, Susan Mary 340 Sabens, Tammy Shawn 419 Sack, Eric R. 247, 3 Sacks, Pamela Jean 419 Sadeghi, Manijeh Sadat Sadler, Billie Kathryn Sadler, Dennis Wayne Sagabiel, Jack 282 Sager, Terri Lyn 334, 419 Sagraves, Michelyn Anita Sahihi, Masood Sailin’ Shoes 335 Salato, Nancy Jan Sallee, Lowell Preston Sallee, Mary Lou 309 Sallee, Robert Lyman Jr Sallee, Rodney Wayne Sallee, Scott Edward Salley, Janice Katherine Salley, Randall Clyde Salter, Maurice Calvin 419 Saltsman, Valerie Gail Salu, Tokunbo Shakur Samnick Sam Harry Sanchez-Marin, Manuel P Sandefur, Dorthea 92 Sandefur, F.L. 164-5 Sandefur, Sarah Jo 303 Sandefur, Starla Rhea 330, 334, 403 Sander, Sandra Rene 419 Sanderlin, Kacy Sanders, Burnett Ray Sanders, Buz 325 Sanders, Christopher Alan 419 Sanders, Cordie Kersey Sanders, Cyril Anthony Sanders, Dale Thomas Sanders, Deloria Ann Sanders, Donna Griggs Sanders, Elmer Wesl Sanders, Jeffrey Glenn Sanders, Jennifer Dawn 419 Sanders, Joy Diane 389 Sanders, Julie Elaine Sanders, Linda Sue 280, 374 Sanders, Mark Wallace Sanders, Nancy Ella 286-7 Sanders, Nannetta Kay Sanders, Nolan Stephen 419 Sanders, Randall W Sanders, Ronald Gaylord Sanders, Scott Andrew Sanders, Steven Wayne Sanders, Tamany Terral 310, 340 Sanders, Virginia Ray 374 Sanders, William Gregory Sanders, William Kent 292-3, 374, 427 Sanderson, Robert White Sandidge, James Boyd Sandley, Barbara Kay Sanford, Edgar Earl Sangodare, Samuel Olusegun Sanner, Marsha Lee 337, 419 Sansom, Steve Wade 292, 389 Sapp, Jane Pyles Sapp, Thomas H. 260 Sappenfield, Cheryl Ann Sappenfield, Donald Ray Jr Sargent, Catherine Lynne 403 Sargent, Peter William 324, 330 Sarles, Robbie Lynn 287, 389 Sartain, James Herman 419 Satterfield, Keith Wade 293 Sattinger, James 126 Sauer, Jeffrey David 304, 374 Saunders, Gene Thomas 34 Saunders, Gregory Lee Saunders, Reann Selita Saunders, Robert Edward Savage, Anna Charlyne 374 Savage, Kevin Anthony Sawyer, Lloyd Dixon Sawyer, Teresa Kaye Sayle, Teresa Kay Saylor, Lori Elaine Sayres, Gerald Atlee III Scabbard and Blade 275 Scarborough, Clarice 296 Scarbrough, Cathy Darlene 389 Schabel, Robert John Schaffner, Lisa Deane Schaftlein, Mark D, 325, 403 Schardein, Donald P Scharkley, Patricia Ann 419 419 jT 453 Rose, J. Scharkley, P. Scheible, Kimberly Ann Scheidt, Emily Aiko Allen 290 Scheidt, Louis Miller Scheler, Karen Ann 419 Schepers, Mary Lou 419 Schibel, Mary Mount 338 Schiess, Richard Lewis 419 Schildknecht, Ronald Keith 403 Schimmel, Terrance Jeffrey Schlaughenhoupt, Janet G Schlensker, Karla Ann 308-9, 403 Schlichter, Lisa Anne Schlinke, Robert Charles Schlotter, Robert Nelson 374 Schmetter, Jane M. 334 Schmidt, Anne Celine 340, 403 Schmidt, Daniel Joseph 419 Schmidt, Elizabeth C Schmidt, Mathew George 419 Schmittou, Sharon Marie 419 Schmitz, Roger Dale Schmoker, Pamela Jean 271, 403 Schock, Jack 194-5 Schocke, Barbara Carol 419 Schoeck, Robert Peter Schoen, Jane 25 Schoenberger, Barbara Lee Schofield, Volice Ann Scholarship and work 290-1 Scholastic development, dean 153, 156 Scholl, Steven Wayne Scholl, Terry Gebhardt 419 Scholl, Vivian Gay Scholla, David Edward Schottenfeld, Judith Diane 22 Schramm, Al 411 Schroader, Karen Kay Schroeder, James Paul 374 Schroeder, P. David 403 Schroering, Donald Jerry 205 Schulte, Marcia Helen 274, 403 Schultz, Laura Luanne Schuster, Donna Lea 403 Schuster, Ricky Paul 403 Schwab, Sharon Ann 389 Schwager, Mary Kay Schwartz, Bruce Schwartz, Christl Liesner Schwartz, Debra Kay 374 Schwartz, Ellen 419 Schwartz, Tamme Jean 328, 341 Schwegman, Carol Ann 403 Sciberras, John Joseph 306 Science-minded 198-201 Scoggins, Jacqueline 338, 374 Scott, Alfreida Lynn 403 Scott, Ann Bondurant 403 Scott, Arthur Glen Scott, Charles T. Jr. 263 Scott, Eddie Walton 419 Scott, James Anthony Scott, James Richard Scott, Janet Sue 389 Scott, Joe T. 389 Scott, John Thomas 292-3 Scott, Leann 403 Scott, Lynn Ann 419 Scott, Mark Anthoney Scott, Mark Thomas Scott, Michael Lynn 289-389 Scott, Pamela Kaye Scott, Ralph Scott, Robert Franklin 389 Scott, Robert James Scott, Robert Wayne 403 Scott, Robyn Gene 403 Scott, Sheryl Garven 403 Scott, Stephen Dale Scott, Thomas Clayton 326 Scruggs, Deborah Lauvonia Seabolt, Kimberly Ann 419 Seagrave, Marlyn Wright Seals, Anita Jo 419 Seapan, Ken L Seapan, Kevin John Searcy, Jennifer Jo 281, 374 Searcy, Mark Anthony 403 Sears, David Allen 324 Sears, Dietra Kay Sears, Mark Edwin 374 Sears, Michael Roy Sears, Patricia Sue 403 Sears, Timothy Wayne 282 Seaton, Gregory O'Neil 419 Seaton, Harold Wayne 374 Seaton, Kimberly Dawan 374 Seaver, Edith Mae Seay, Glenda Faye 274 Sebastian, Randy Truman Sedgwick, Scott Gregory See, Kari Frances Sego, Richard Nelson Jr Seifert, Mark Alan 323 Seigler, Dewey Lee Seiler, Roxanne Beth Sekyere, Sylvester Self, Jesse Eugene Self, John Clinton 325, 374 Self, Mary Gretchen Self, Regina Sue Self, Richard Joseph Sellmer, Janna Maria Selove, Rebecca June Semones, Suzanne 419 Senn, William David 323 Sensel, Bruce Cameron Sensel, Craig Scott Sepulveda, Benjamin A Sergent, Laura Jane 296, 427 Sermonis, Bruice Wayne Serrato, Carlos Service-minded 182-5 Seth, Daniel Lee Setters, James Morgan Settle, Angela Gaye Settle, Norma Faye Settle, Raymond Mitchell 224, 419 Settle, Rhonda Sue Settles, Mary Cathyann Settles, William T. 454 Scheible, K. Small, N. Sevastakis, Jill Emilia Seward, Katherine Todd Sexton, Cynthia Ann 403 Sexton, Deborah Ann 312 Sexton, George Boyd Sexton, James Douglas Sexton, Jeffery B Shackelford, Donna C Shadowen, David Irvine 403 Shadowen, Herbert 25 Shadowen, Jeffrey Tilford Shaffer, Deborah Ann Shaffer, Nancy Carol Shaheen, Kevin Mark 325 Shanahan, David Gratton Shanahan, Kevin Thoms Shanahan, Maureen Kay 419 Shanehsaz, Mahmoud Shanehsaz, Mohammad Reza Shanks, Reginald Glenn 403 Shannon, Arthur Roy 419 Shannon, David Wayne Shannon, John Franklin 218 Shannon, Marlolyn Marie Shannon, Sharolyn Shree Shannon, Stuart Anderson 345 Shao, Kung Chuan Jimmy Sharber, Sue Ann Goodrow Share, Dorothy 158 Share, Kevin Christopher 374 Share, Lori Anne Shariatzadeh, Abdolhossein Sharif, Osama Yasseen Sharp, Cheryl Kay 278, 374 Sharp, Kenneth Lee Sharp, Larry Greg 345 Sharp, Lola Harris Sharp, Marsha Kay Sharp, Phillip Wayne Sharp, Ralph Wade Sharp, Rhonda Lynn 419 Sharp, Stephen Byrne 389 Sharpe, Hollie 192 Sharpe, Margaret Lynne 403 Shaver, Debbie Lynne Shaver, Laura Beth 282 Shaver, Lisa Dennis Shaver, Martha Lynn 403 Shaver, Pamela Gail 403 Shaw, Carol Reid Shaw, Donald Leland II 325 Shaw, Gloria Devon Shaw, Holly Denise Shaw, Janice Lynne 419 Shaw, John Bernard Shaw, Katie 419 Shaw, Kent Roland Shaw, Kim Ellen Shaw, Larry Dawain Shaw, Michael Frederick Shay, Kathy Anne Shay, Kelly Joann Shearer, Elizabeth Arlynn Shearer, Leslie Gay Shearer, Martha Carolyn O Shearian Mohammad S. Sheats, Gregory Wayne Sheats, Hondo 257 Sheehan, Lisa Margaret 419 Sheehan, Paul John Sheehan, Paul John 217-9 Sheeley, Carol J. Mullins Sheeran, William Peter 66-7, 325 Sheffer, Ronald 140-1 Sheffield, Jawana Sue Sheffield, Rhonda Tracy Shehan, Theodore H. II 318 Shelburne, Martha Lucille 419 Shelby, William R Shelley, Judith Henson Shelley Sharon Sue Shelley, Teresa Ann 419 Shelly, Barbara Burns Shelly, David Bartlett Shelman, Jacky Ray Shelton, Judy Faye 288, 291, 389 Shelton, Melissa Jo 255, 340, 420 Shelton, Paula Ann 342, 374 Shelton, Sarah Rita Shelton, Shelia D. Kerley 403 Shelton, Steven Randal Shelton, Thomas James Shelton, Willard Anthony Sheperson, Cheryl Ann 98, 420 Shepherd, John Scott Shepherd, Lela Elizabeth Shepherd, Sheri Ann 403 Shepherd, Sherry Francis 420 Shepherd, Steven Dane Sheppard, Rickey Steven 374 Sheppard, Ruel Wesley 403 Sheridan, Mary Chris 389 Sherlock, Bruce Alan 318, 374 Sherrell, Stuart Curtis Sherrerd, Kathleen Beth Sherwin, Sharon Marie 298 Shewcraft, Edwin Ray Shiekhi, Shahriar A. Shields, Barbara Ann 245 Shields, Barbara Martin Shields, Randolph Shields, Wilbur Scott 322 Shilts, Gerald Carden 420 Shinnick, Janice Elaine 337, 420 Shiplet, Allen Ray Shipley, Janine Shipley, Sherril Ann 374 Shipp, Allen 301, 403 Shipp, Steve Douglas 318 Shireman, Brett Shane 389 Shirley, Christina Kay Shirley, Robert Dale II Shirley, Tonya Kim Shively, John Allen Shockley, Brent Edward 116-7, 318 Shockley, Vana Jane 283, 291, 389 Shoemake, Thomas Howard 296 Shoemaker, Deborah Raye 287, 403 Shojai, Ali Reza Shojai, Mahmoud Reza Sholar, Tamela Jo Sholar, Walter Alan 326 Shollenberger, Barry 213, 215, 258-261 Short, Anita Marie 420 Short, Freda Davis Short, James Eugene Short, Jeffrey Owen Short, Laura Lou 420 Short,Teresa Loretta 253 Short, Vickie Lou 403 Shortt, Mitchell Lee Shortt, Ruth A. Glass Shouse, William Taylor 322, 420 Showalter, Janet Lynn 374 Shown, Mary Sue 341, 376 Shrader, Cheryl Aline Shrader, Horace 16, 18, 149, 156, 162 Shrewsbury, Sara Lou 376 Shrode, Jay Wesley III 389 Shuffitt, Margaret E Shugart, Susan Nannette 239, 298, 403 Shuler, Daniel Glenn Shuler, Nancy Guffey Shuler, Sherrie Joy Shulhafer, David 420 Shull, Elizabeth Ann 288 Shull, Feliecia Gayle 420 Shultz, Deborah L. Shumate, Daniel Lee 274 Shumate, Joseph Kevin 420 Shumate, Pamela Sue Shumate, Steven Allan 376 Shumway, Tracey Dawn Shunk, Harland Webster III 28, 326 Shutters, Jerry Lee 376 Shy, Eugene 327 Sibilia, Judith Chism Sibley, Joseph Jr. Siddens, Lee Robin Siddens, Leigh Annette 403 Siddens, Mary Elizabeth 420 Sidwell, Laura L. 334, 420 Siegert, Sonja Lynn 420 Siegfried, Mark Alan 403 Siem, Martie Bea Siem, Mary Christie Siemens, Joseph Paul Jr. 315 Siemens, Terri Lynn Siemer, Wayne Anthony 420 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 31, 311, 324, 336, 338 Sigma Chi 269, 310-1, 325-6, 338, 344-5 Sigma Delta Chi 277 Sigma Kappa 311, 342, 344 Sigma Nu 326, 344-5 Sigma Nu Powderpuff Football Tournament 28, 30, 269, 310, 328-9, 334 Sigma Phi Epsilon 30, 327, 344 Sigma Tau Delta 283 Sikora, Walter Stephen Sills, William Keith 403 Silver, Terrence Lavelle Simek, Thomas Charles Simerman, Karen Lisa 341, 376 Simmon, Dennis Allan 420 Simmons, Donald Mark 420 Simmons, Douglas P Simmons, Edgar Paul Simmons, Ernestine Simmons, Mary Jean 420 Simmons, Michael Ray 120 Simmons, Rhonda Gale Simmons, Robert M. Simmons, Theresa Marie 403 Simmons, Tommy Herman Simms, Antoinette Gale Simms, Charles Richard Jr Simms, Darrell Wayne 403 Simms, Lalla Belinda Simms, Lisanne 334 Simms, Therese Suzanne Simon, Deborah Lynn 291 Simon, Diane Michelle Simon, Elizabeth Gwynn 291, 389 Simon, James Robert Simon, Joseph Wayne Simon, Vincent Simons, Marcy Beth 403 Simons, Sarah Ann 308, 334, 389 Simpao, Val Anthony Simpler, Robert Mark Simpson, Alice Young Simpson, Bradford Carlton 317, 330 Simpson, Clark R. 420 Simpson, Deborah Gail Simpson, George Slater 178-9 Simpson, Huey David Simpson, Jean C. Simpson, Joseph Marion 327, 403 Simpson, Lisa Beryl 403 Simpson, Nina June 420 Simpson, Robert Mark 420 Simpson, Sheena 420 Simpson, Sheila Clareece Simpson, Sylvia Lynn 284 Simpson, Terry Franklin 305, 389 Simpson, Vicki Sue Sims, Anita Jane Sims, Claudia Michelle 403 Sims, Dewayne Reece 412 Sims, Diane Marie Sims, Gary Wynn 389 Sims, Herman Keith Sims, Vicki Ann Sinclair, Harold A. Sinclair, Henry Lee Sinclair, June Garrott Singleton, Cynthia Gale 403 Singleton, Edythe Ann Sinks, Robert Timothy 376 Sircy, Lea Anne 420 Sirles, Barry Lee 420 Sisco, Cynthia Marie 336 Sisler, Peter Howard Sistrunk, Debra Ann Sites, Michael Owen Sitzler, Jean M. Grinstead Six, Dorothy Elizabeth Six, Frank 201 Six, Robert Lance 326 Six, Susan Kay 376 Skaggs, Karen Sue Skaggs, Kathy Lynn 376 Skaggs, Kevin Leigh 420 Skaggs, Linda Kay 389 Skean, James Dan 305, 307 Skean, Mark Edgar Skees, Cynthia Ann Skees, James Allen 306-7, 376 Skees, Janet Sue Steen 306-7, 376 Skees, Matthew Wayne Skees, Theresa Marie Skees, Willie Belle 389 Skeeters, Richard Patrick 325 Skellie, William Edward Skidmore, Victor Henry Skiles, David Allen Skiles, Mary Alice Skiles, Stephen C Skillern, Laura Vittitow Skinner, Frank James Skinner, Steven Cline 403 Skipwroth, Donald Baker Skolka, Suzette Mary 403 Slack, Marilyn F. Meyers Slaiman, Yvonne Slater, Kathy Jo 341 Slaton, Claire Cornelious 376 Slaton, Terri Lynn 389 Slaughter, Jon Richard 224, 256 Slaughter, Lon 161 Slaughter, Nancy 161 Slaughter, Patsy Joyce Slaughter, Stephen Russell Sledge, Mary Jane Sledge, Mila Marie 26, 403 Sledge, Randol Lee 92, 389 Sleeth, Cynthia Gae 421 Sleets, Derek Rex Slinker, Mary Denise 403 oad, Donna Carole 421 oan, Gary Douglas 326 oan, Kimberly Lou oan, Ned Tarter Jr oan, Vittoria Lee 403 oan, Vivian Gay Sloate, Keith R. Slone, Lana Jo Slone, Vernis Small, Edward Allan Small, Nyla W. NDNNNWNW } q ! i | | Small, Teresa Lynnette 376 Smalley, Clay M. 316, 330, 389 Smart, Linda Elizabeth 289 Smeathers, Rita Beard Smeathers, Stephen Jay Smedley, Vicki Lee Smialek, Kris J. Smiley, Brenda Lynn 376 Smiley, Karen Mari e Smiley, Lana Gayle 403 Smiley, Steven Eugene 327 Smiley, Terry Lee Smith, Alan Alford Smith, Alexander Palmer 403 Smith, Barbara Jeanne 282, 340, 403 Smith, Bradley Caldwell Smith, Brenda Renee 421 Smith, Burie Kenneth Smith, Carl Edward 376 Smith, Cawood Gregory 376 Smith, Charles Manning 276, 389 Smith, Cherry Kay 403 Smith, Christopher William Smith, Cooper R. Jr. Smith, Cooper Ray III Smith, Craig Allen Smith, Craig F. 218, 389 Smith, Cynthia Layne Smith, Daneila Jean Smith, David Jr. Smith, David Lawrence 421 Smith, David Lee II Smith, Dixie Lee Smith, Donald Richard Smith, Donna Jean 403 Smith, Elinor Carol Smith, Elizabeth Anne 336 Smith, Elizabeth M. 336 Smith, Ellen 421 Smith, Ericha Lee Smith, Felicia Ann Smith, Frank 119 Smith, Frankie Duane Smith, Gary Houston Smith, Gordon Thomas Smith, Gregory James 288, 293, 376, 389 Smith, Gregory Lane 293 Smith, Gregory Mark 293 Smith, Gregory Rush Smith, Harold 154, 156 Smith, Harry Glen 421 Smith, James Douglas Smith, James Keith 421 Smith, James Ricky 274 Smith, Jane Ann 202, 421 Smith, Janet Smith, Janice 149 Smith, Janna Ann Smith, Jeffrey Craig 255, 326 Smith, Jennifer Suzanne Smith, Joe 284 Smith, John David Smith, Joletta Faye Smith, Joy Cinda Smith, Karen Leigh 303 Smith, Kathleen Smith, Kendall Kane 326 Smith, Kimberly Burd 403 Smith, Lana Lee Smith, Laura 284 Smith, Leslie McElroy 376 Smith, Leslie Rai Smith, Lisa Monay 336, 421 Smith, Loretta Shanklin Smith, Lucy A. Smith, Mark Anthony 285 Smith, Mark Fulton 421 Smith, Mark Kevin Smith, Martha McDaniel Smith, Mary Dianne 317 Smith, Mary Lisa Smith, Michael Anthony Smith, Michael Steven 323, 403 Smith, Michele Denise Smith, Molly Jo 421 Smith, Mona Gayle 389 Smith, Norma F. Zimmerman Smith, Pal 318 Smith, Pamela Rose Smith, Patricia Ann L. Smith, Patricia Jane 389 Smith, Paula Annette 343, 389 Smith, Peggy Sue Smith, Perry Michael Smith, Philip Daniel 390 Smith, Powell 318 Smith, Rebecca Gale 390 Smith, Rebecca Joy 285 Smith, Renee Vaughn 403 Smith, Reta Jean Smith, Richard 275 Smith, Rita Lorraine Smith, Robert 290 Smith, Robert Allen Smith, Robert John 289, 376 Smith, Robert Kent 307, 376 Smith, Robert Reed 390 Smith, Rondall Lawrence 304, 312 Smith, Rosalyn Delorna 339, 390 Smith, Russell Vance Smith, Sandra J. Smith, Sandra Kay 421 Smith, Sharon Elizabeth Smith, Sharon Gail 62, 389 Smith, Shaune Marie 421 Smith, Shawna Alexsis 421 Smith, Sheila Faith Smith, Sheila Kaye 287, 421 Smith, Shelley Wynelle Smith, Sherrie Josephine 403 Smith, Sherry Anne Smith, Steven French Smith, Steven Joe Smith, Steven Patrick Smith, Sue Ellen 421 Smith, Tammy Lou Smith, Teresa Jane Smith, Theresa Elaine Smith, Thomas Allen Smith, Timothy Wayne Smith, Vanetta Faye Hinton Smith, Veronica Dale Smith, Victor Smith, Watha A. Bratcher Smith, William Ernest 218 Smither, James Michael 324 Smithhisler, Dan Francis Smock, Rex Maurice Smothers, Cynthia Suzanne 296 SNEA 284 Snapp, Laura Gail 403 Snardon, Arnold Edward 314 Snardon, Troy Davis 217, 219 Snead, John Lee Sneed, Benjamin Addison Sneed, Debbie Dawn Sneed,Milton Rhea Sneed, Patsy Lee Snell, Patricia Lynn Snell, Sherri Ann 421 Snellen, Steve 324 Snelson, Linda Marie 421 Snider, Craig T. Snider, James Henry Snider, Mary Susan 421 Snodgrass, James Tutt III 305 Snodgrass, Kent Jay 390 Snodgrass, Stanford C. 376 Snodgrass, Steven Lloyd 324 Snorton, Donnis Payne Snow, Angela Robertson Snow, Gregory Allan 390 Snow, Lindy Ann Snowden, John Anderson III Snowden, Monica Fran Snyder, David Dyer Snyder, Elizabeth Anne 421 Snyder, Gene 81 Snyder, Harry 139-141 Snyder, Holly Darcell Snyder, Mary Christine 421 Snyder, Ricky Lynn Sociology and anthropology dept. 192-3 Sociology and anthropology dept., head 192-3 Solheim, Lisa Gay Solomon, Cheryl Lynn 390 Some red (video) tape 176-7 Somers, Pamela Saxton Somerville Exum Lydell Ron Hoskins Soong, Jahonr Soppenfield, Cheryl 421 Sorrell, Lee Richard 312 Sosh, Jean Hall 376 Soucy, Cheryl Lee South, Jackie Donald 390 South, Patricia Ann Southerland, Joan Rhee Sowder, Chris Bradley Sowder, Preston Dean 313, 390 Sowell, Charles Michael 323 Spain, LaDonna Lea 336, 421 Spalding, Carla Sue 376 Spalding, Charles Boone Sparks, Bryan Lee Sparks, Carla Sue Sparks, Catherine Ann 403 Sparks, Darlene Marie 390 Sparks, Darrell Gene 307 Sparks, Michael David Sparks, Mildred Jean D. Sparks, Sandra Kay Sparks, Sharon Lynne Sparks, Steve Grant Sparrow, David Brian Spaulding, Janice Elaine Spaulding, Patrick Donald Speakers and research 304-5 Speakman, Bobby Morris 403 Speakman, Johnnie Faye 403 Speaks, Deborah Diane Spear, Steven Kirby Spears, Jeffrey Ray 403 Special Forces 274 Special programs, director 159 Speck, Nancy Ann Speer, Gregg Warren 376 Speer, Sally Jo 376 Speevack, Timothy Maher Speight, Carol Fields 376 Speight, Keely Lynne 421 Spence, Scoshia Elaine Spence, Shirley May Spencer, Brian Keith 376 Sperry, Gary Michael 421 Speth, Stephen Christoher Spicer, Jack Andrew Spiegelman, Suellyn Tyler 421 Spikberg, Curtis Dean Spiker, Amy Jo Spiker, Annita Marie 422 Spinks, Lesley Gay 422 Spires, Leonard Ray Spisich, Douglas Joseph 325, 376, 427 Spivey, Steven Randall Splashing campus fashions all around town 52-5 Sponberg, Kyanne Spring break 126-9 Springmier, Lynne Sprouse Jonathan Wayne Sprowl, Jerry Michael 403 Sprowles, Retha Karen 390 Spruell, Sheri L. Sharp Spugnardi, Donald Joseph Spurlock, James Daniel Spurlock, Jefferson Tarter Spurlock, John 283 Squires, Robert Paul Stabenfeldt, Stephen A. Stacker, Stacey Jo Stafford, Brenda Marian 334, 376 Stafford, David Heyes 327 Stafford, Saundra Lea 403 Stage Struck 84-9 Stagner, Phillip Wayne Stahl, Briggs Price 291, 403 Stahl, Christine Stahl, Mark Kelley 217-8, 326 Stahl, Martin Dale 422 Stalbaum, Richard Lee 403 Staley, James Edward Stallings, Joe William 390 Stallings, Maria C. 336 Stallings, Teri Lynn 255 Stamper, Brenda Adeline 376 Stanley, Antoinette L. 390 Stanley, David Andrew 318 Stanley, Jon Kent Stanley, Lloyd Mitchell Stanley, Luanne Knight Stanley, Nathaniel Aaron Stanley, Teresa Faye Stanley, Wallace Conrad 257 Stannard, Norman Earl Stanton, Barbara Elaine Staples, James Earl II Staples, Jennifer Martha Staples, Richard Scott Stapleton, Doreen Bourque 272, 290, 427 Starker, Janos 40-1 Starks, Brenda Sue Starks, Venessa Gumm 376 Starling, Judith Arlene 422 Starnes, Lawrence Wyartt 403 Starnes, Linda A. McElroy Starr, Larry Andy 390 Stasel, Mildred Lee Staton, William Keith Statton, Pamela Darlene Stauss, Christianne 305, 390 Stauss, Kevin Leon 422 Staynings, Anthony Robert St Clair, Michael Brent 255, 325, 390 Steagall, Pamela 422 Stearns, Donald Lee Stearns, Sheila Charlene 422 Steckler, Jeffrey Michael Steele, Donna Jean 422 Steele, Julie Anne 403 A mask task AFTER SEEING “Star Wars” four times last fall, Madis- onville senior John Knox sculpts a mask of Darth Vader, the popular movie's villian. Knox said he spent about $40 on the project. 455 Small, T. Steele, J. Steele, Sara Ann 403 Steele, Stacy Maria Steele, Tony Berle Steen, Bernard Leo 324 Steen, Bernie 235, 291 Steenbergen, Miles Calvert 277 Steenbergen, Sonya Lynn Steff, Diane Stegner, Jeffrey Douglas Steiden, Patrick Thomas Steinbach, Thomas Leo Steinweg, Rebecca Lynn 390 Stelzig, Cheri Lynn 422 Stenberg, Virginia Heflin Stephens, Barry Scott 403 Stephens, Connie Jean 403 Stephens, Debbie 92 Stephens, Frederick Irvin Stephens, H.C. 25 Stephens, Justin Dean 403 Stephens, Krisann 403 Stephens, Mary Jane Stephens, Philip Carroll Stephens, Richard Earl Stephenson, John Glynn 422 Stephenson, Joseph Lollar Stephenson, Mary Todd 376 Stephenson, Rex Lewis Sterling, Michael Thomas Stevens, Barbara Schulte Stevens, Debra Kay 89, 273 Stevens, Gail Louise Stevens, Kathleen Marie Stevens, Marcia Marquerite 403 Stevens, Vickie Sue 311, 390 Stevenson, Craig Lee Stevenson, David Arthur 323 Stevenson, George Wallace 376 Stevenson, Joey Ray Stevenson, Juanita Sue Stevenson, Lisa Marie 390 Stevenson, Robert 211 Stewart, Deborah Lynn 376 Stewart, Desiree Lynn 403 Stewart, Joseph Patrick Stewart, Katherine L. Cross Stewart, Lex Allen 376 Stewart, Linda Diane Stewart, Marilyn Rose 422 Stewart, Michael Anthony 422 Stewart, Michael Greer 403 Stewart, Michael William Stewart, Millard Lee III Stewart, Nancy Jean 422 Stewart, Pat 403 Stewart, Rita Lynn Stewart, Ronnie Gene 422 Stewart, Scott James Stewart, Stephanie Ann Stewart, Stephanie Ann 422 Stewart, Vaughan Morgan Stichtenoth, Keith Bailey 390 Stickler, Gregory Thomas 246-7, 327 Stidham, Riley Gordon 376 Stigall, Dorothy Lynn 377 Stigall, William Paul 422 Stiles, Christopher Cee Stiles, Deborah Ruth Stiles, Donna Faye 403 Stiles, James Wayne 307 Stillman, Kurt Clifford Stine, Michael Price 403 Stinemetz, Nancy Alice 390 Stines, Steven Ray 422 Stinnett, Charles Louis 34, 285 Stinnett, Charles Roger 279, 390 Stinnett, David Maurice Stinson, David Gene 422 Stinson, Janet Lynn 403 Stinson, John Milton Jr. Stinson, Kathy Darlene 377 Stinson, Priscilla 390 Stirsman, Edith Ann T. Stites, Thomas Anthony 292-3, 377, 427 Stivers, Catherine Ann Stocker, Alice Elizabeth Stockler, Mary Elizabeth 422 Stockman, Thomas Ray 218 Stockton, Cornelia A. 285, 422 Stockton, Eddy Roger 390 Stockton, William Cornell Stockwell, Rita Ruth 403 Stockwell, Shirley Ann 403 Stofer, Lee Allen 293, 390 Stokes, Cynthia Ann 377 Stokes, Gregory Paul Stokes, Joseph David Jr. Stokes, Karen Sue 287, 390 Stokes, Lloyd Randall Stokley, Lee Dawson 239, 255 Stoll, Shirley Gabi 377 Stoll, Teresa Lynn Stoltman, Jeffrey Joseph Stoltzfus, Carl Leroy Stomps, Walter 174-5 Stonage, Richard Stanton Stone, Dena Francine Stone, James Kent 326 Stone, James Michael 326 Stone, Jeffrey Dixon 326 Stone, Kennon Davis Jr. 262-3 Stone, Lorenda Gail Stone, Oskar Robert 321, 403 Stone, Richard Farris Stone, Sandra Kay 390 Stone, Sharon Lavon 422 Stone, Sue Lynn 422 Stone, Tina Rae Stone, Wilson Lee 208 Stoner, Barbara Ann 270 Stoner, Robert Allen 403 Stoops, Mark Stephen 377 Storey, Gregory Lynn 377 Storie, David John Storie, Kimberly Ann 422 Story, Gregory Issac 321, 331 Story, John Edward 422 Story, Orick Alonzo Stotts, Creg Allen Stotts, Janet Fay 422 456 Steele, S. Travelsted, J. Stout, Kathy Marie 377 Stout, Margaret Elaine 422 Stovall, Thelma 289 Stowers, Elizabeth Sue 422 Strader, Charles Wesley Jr. 255, 324, 403 Strader, Cynthia O. Strader, Jimmie Lou 340 Strader, John Kevin 422 Strader, Malcoln Earl II Strader, Shea Anne 390 Strader, Wes 234 Strain, Cyndia Leevan 287, 390 Straney, Mark Jeffrey Straney, Stephen Allen 312, 377 Strange, Joe Maurice Strange, Shelley Strange, Stephen Lee Strange, Susan Baker Stratton, James Marion Straub, Gary Palmer Straub, Russell Owen Jr. Street, Beverly Dee 377 Street, Virginia Grinter Streets, Harold Mason Jr. Stretz, Rosalind Jeanine 422 String and Swing 55 Stringer, Carolyn 277 Stringer, James Courtney Stringer, Robert Lee Strode, David 304 Strode, Jeanna Rhea 422 Strode, John Edward 304-5, 377 Strohman, Robert Kelton Strom, Carolee Clark Strong, Nancy Jane 305, 341, 422 Strong, Tony Ethridge Strong, Vickie Gaye Stroud, Brenda Jean 337 Stroud, Sabrina Machelle 422 Strozdas, Kathryn Jean 255, 266-7, 390 Strunk, Lynn Frances 377 Struttmann, Timothy W. Stuart, Jesse 283 Stuart, Karen Lynn 422 Stuart, Steven Ray 289, 403 Stubblefield, James Edward Stuck between three agencies 121 Stucke, Joani Marie 277, 377 Student affairs, associate dean 148 Student affairs, assistant deans 148-9, 160 Student affairs, assistant to the dean 148 Student affairs, dean 148 Student financial aid, director 162 Student Honors Organization 283 Student Rights Alliance 33, 35 Student Workers 122-5 Study and insight 284 Studying on the job 196-7 Stull, Harry E. Jr. Stumbo, Brian James 390 Stumler, Dan Ray 404 Sturdivant, Fredericka 404 Sturgeon, Brian Kieth Sturgeon, Denise Gale 128, 404 Sturgeon, Jennifer Jayne Sturgill, Belinda Joyce 377 Sturgill, Jeanne Marie 422 Sturrock, Rhonda Faye 390 Sublett, Alan Todd Sublett, Bradley Keenan 345 Sublett, Carl Leslie Sublett, Joan Carol 377 Suddarth, Sandy Suddoth, Lynn Marie 336 Suiter, Gary Michael 422 Sulbaran, Magaly Sofia Sullivan, Dennis Wade 323, 330 Sullivan, Ellen Kay 377 Sullivan, Erin Marie Sullivan, Eugene 275 Sullivan, James Russell Sullivan, Karen Marie 287 Sullivan, Linda Kaye 404 Sullivan, Samuel Thomas Sullivan, Sheila Gail Sullivan, Steve Wayne 422 Sullivan, Terry Douglas Sullivan, Timothy Reece Sumilhig, Freddie Selorio Summers, Bret Michael 422 Summers, Emily Louise Summers, Mark Stephen Summers, Michael Alan Summers, Rita Catherine 267 Summers, Steven Young 403 Sumner, David Bradley Sumner, Elizabeth Higdon 377 Sumner, Lindel Riley 404 Sumner, Mary Anne Heflin Sun Lih Jen 44-5 Surface, David Howard 178-9, 377 Sutherland, Donna Lynne 289 Sutter, Frank James Suttle, Deborah Sue 390 Suttles, John Wesley 314, 390 Sutton, Donna Laverne 239, 241, 422 Sutton, Doug 156 Sutton, George Walter III 325 Sutton, John Michael Sutton, Keith 156 Sutton, Richard Donald 323 Sutton, Ronnie 153, 156 Sutton, Steve 156 Swack, Johnny Perry 422 Swafford, Peggy Agee Swain, Eddie Dennis Swain, Kathy Sue 390 Swain, Maurice Lamont 319, 390 Swallow, Kelley Ann 298, 404 Swallows, Shelia Ann 422 Swan, Jeffrey Lee Swanberg, Christopher G. 242, 327, 404 Swann, Kenneth Ray Swann, Robert Vincent 224-5, 257 Swanson, Gregory Duane Sweat, John Edward Sweat, Karen Springer 49 Sweat, Robert Blondell Sweatt, William H. Sweeney, Alana Faye Sweeney, Thomas Francis 404 Sweeten, Kenneth Henry 377 Sweets, Richard Darrel Swetmon, Vonda Defae Swift, Deborah Lee 422 Swift, Kimberly Joe Swift, Richard Wayne Swigris, Anthony Joseph Swihart, Barry Allen Swiler, Todd Allen Swimming team 248-9 Swisher, Searle Duane 249 Swyhart, Timothy Lee Sydnor, Harold Alan Sympson, Paul Beam Szczapinski, Larry T. Szymula, Gloria Jean 422 Szymula, John Thomas Tabb, Gary Neal Tabb, Kenneth Larry Tabor, Cindy Jo Tabor, Kathi Jo Tabor, Margann 404 Tabor, Ronald Brodus 390 Tabor, Vickie Lee 390 Tackett, Deanna Lynn Tackett, Deborah Lynn 422 Tackett, Robert Lowe Taerbaum, Barry Taff, Jennie 342 Taft, Donald Gilson II Tague, Duane Evan Talaat, Iman Mohamed Talabi, Bashiru Adebisi 58 Talbott, Gregory Hay Talbott, Jeanell Bernard Talbott, Jenny Bow Talbott, Morris Alan Talisman 152 Talking it out 364-5 Talking shop about journalism the supernatural and minorities 80-1 Talley, Patsy Ann Talty, Colleen M. Tambornini, Jeffrey Lee Tanaro, Celeste 404 Tandy, Anna Paulette Tandy, Ensign Keith 255 Taniguchi, Masaaki 422 Tanksley, Sharon 65, 67 Tanner, Beverly Brooks Tanner, James Mark 422 Tanner, Lucinda Luttrell Tanner, Michael Joseph Tapp, Lisa Faye 422 Tapp, Sherry Charlene 288 Tapp, Terri Lynn 289, 404 Tapscott, Joan Winston 291, 390 Tapscott, Virginia Ann 422 Tarrance, Richard F. Tarrants, Terri Claudette 404 Tarrence, Garry Dean Tarrence, Larry Gean Tarrence, Robert Dale Tarter, Thomas Mark Tate, Amy 201 Tate, Boyce 200-1 Tate, Emily Anne 201, 292, 390 Tate, Michael Wayne Tatum, Carlos Dale 322, 404 Tatum, James Timothy 293-4 Tatum, Mary Carroll 422 Tatum, Walter Featherstun 404 Tavakoli, Mansoor Taiwan Strangers Who Wed in American 44-5 Taylor, Anne Marie Taylor, Anthony Warren 422 Taylor, Barbara Clark Taylor, Betty Lynn Taylor, Brenda Joyce 422 Taylor, Brenda Joyce Taylor, Brenda Katherine 264, 422 Taylor, Bryan Steven 218 Taylor, Cathy 285 Taylor, Cherie Lynn Taylor, Cheryl Annette 377 Taylor, Clara Jean 53, 390 Taylor, Craig 89, 291 Taylor, Debra Kay Taylor, Debra Lynn Taylor, Donald Keith 55 Taylor, Donald Patrick Taylor, Elisabeth Carol Taylor, Elizabeth Anne 267 Taylor, Gary Laine 285, 404 Taylor, Gary Steven 285, 377 Taylor, Gina Lanette 422 Taylor, Gregory D. Taylor, Ivy Edgar Taylor, Jeffery Ray 422 Taylor, Joe Donald Jr. Taylor, John Albert Taylor, John Scott Taylor, Joni Sue 390 Taylor, Joseph William Taylor, Joyce Lynne Taylor, Kathryn Ann Ball Taylor, Lawana Lynn 422 Taylor, Leslie Eugene Taylor, Linda Doss Taylor, Lois Elaine Taylor, Lonnie Rhea 326, 390 Taylor, Marc Louis 422 Taylor, Mark Francis Taylor, Mary Clare 377 Taylor, Mary E. McDonald Taylor, Melvin Benjamin 422 Taylor, Michael Anthony 422 Taylor, Michael Anthony Taylor, Nancy Elaine 336, 390 Taylor, Nancy Elizabeth 336, 422 Taylor, Pat 72 Taylor, Perry Randall Taylor, Randy Kay Bushaw 282, 404 Taylor, Redmond Roberts Taylor, Rhonda Jean 390 Taylor, Robert Louis Taylor, Robert S. II Taylor, Sandra Kaye Taylor, Sheila Renee Taylor, Stephaine Parrish Taylor, Susan Katie 276, 404 Taylor, Teresa Kay 422 Taylor, Teresa Sue Taylor, Timothy Scott Taylor, Tony William Taylor, Vickie Lee 422 Taylor, Vicky D. Brown Taylor, Virginia Dianne Taylor, Walter 31 Taylor, William Henry III 422 Taylor, William P. Taylor, William Paul Tayntor, Joanne Mary Tays, Allen Reed Teacher education dept. 166 Teacher education dept., head 166 Teacher-minded 164-7 Teague, Jeffery Lynn Teater, Mary David Teater, Melinda Jane Tedder, Terry Wayne 214, 258, 260-1, 377 Tedder, Phyllis 214 Tedesco, Frank Albert Tefft, Kelcie Jean Temple, Alan Jon Temple, Mark Thomas Templeman, Brenda Lynn 377 Tench, Cathy Lee 340 Tench, David Wilson 325, 344, 422 Tengelsen, Joanette Brumby 390 Tepool, Donald Gene 330 Termini, Richard Sal Termini, Sharon May Smith Terrell, Elizabeth Ann 245, 404 Terrell, Jane Ellis 265, 422 Terry, Anthony Lee 315 Terry, Dennis Brian Terry, Karen 304 Terry, Marcia Ellen 288, 341, 377 Terry, Norman Lee 390 Terry, Ruth Antoinette 377 Teske, Robert 6, 21-2 Teson, Charlene Ruth Testerman, Rebecca Lynn 422 Thacker, Kay Christman Thacker, Kelly Elizabeth 422 Tharp, Barry Ray 404 Tharp, John R. Tharp, Kerry Wayne 324, 390 The Faces of Feix 22-3 The Greek Life 312-327, 330-1, 334-343 “The Hostage” 47, 176 The last lines led us to pomp and circumstance 134-5 The newest kids on the block 344-5 The news hit home 108-117 Theirl, Mark David Theobald, Polly Grace 377 Theodoulou, Othon Leonidou Thessen, Paula Jill 390 Theuerkauf, Jon Eric 404 They gave it their best shot” 263 Thielen, Thomas Edward 91, 303 Thielen, Virginia Louise Thies, Genevieve Anne 404 Thomas, Anita Kay Chaney Thomas, Audrey 422 Thomas, Bernard Dean . Thomas, Billy Ray Thomas, Carolyn Jean Thomas, Cynthia Lee 390, 404 Thomas, Darryl Vincent Thomas, David Evan Thomas, David Michael Thomas, David William Thomas, Donald Douglas 404 Thomas, Donald Lee 230 Thomas, Donald Paul Thomas, Doris Susan 377 Thomas, James Watson 218 Thomas, Janice E laine Thomas, Jeffrey D. Thomas, Jeffrey Tabb Thomas, Joann Marie Thomas, Juanita Maria Thomas, Judy Ann Lewis Thomas, Karen Elaine 390 Thomas, Kevin Michael 422 Thomas, L. Sinclair 289 Thomas, Larry Joe 289, 422 Thomas, Laurie Lynn 404 Thomas, Linda Bernice Thomas, Lucinda Lou Thomas, Mark Alan 92, 318 Thomas, Mark Leo 92, 318 Thomas, Mark Lynn 92, 318 Thomas, Mark Stephen 92, 253, 318 Thomas, Michael Adrian 85, 92, 255 Thomas, Michael Calvin 85, 92, 255, 326 Thomas, Mona Faye 331-2, 335, 377 Thomas, Patricia Ann Thomas, Patricia Lee Thomas, Pet er Anthony 312 Thomas, Rebecca Jean 422 Thomas, Ricky Wade Thomas, Robert Joseph Thomas, Sally Beth Thomas, Samuel 306, 377 Thomas, Sandra 264, 404 Thomas, Schekilla Faye Thomas, Scott Glen 130-1, 224, 404 Thomas, Sonjia Renee 422 Thomas, Stephen Joseph 288 Thomas, Terry Lane Thomas, Timothy Andrew 390 Thomas, Viola Evelyn C. Thomas, William Bradley 55, 377 Thomas, Yolanda Faye 274, 390 Thomason, Jo Ann Thomason, Nancy Ann Thomerson, Bonita Jean 306, 377, 427 Thompson, Alfreda Gail Thompson, Amanda Kay 294, 404 Thompson, Brian Allan Thompson, Catherine Marie Thompson, Charles Robert Thompson, Donna Rae Thompson, Donnie Nunnally Thompson, Elaine Rene 285, 422 Thompson, Elizabeth Louise 338 Thompson, George Alan 312 Thompson, Guy Marshall 390 Thompson, Hunter 81 Thompson, Jack 9 Thompson, James Garry Thompson, Karen Anne Thompson, Kathey Mae 422 Thompson, Kelly 151 Thompson, Kenneth Foster Thompson, Marilyn Thompson, Mark Allen 390 Thompson, Mark Aloysius Thompson, Martha Celeste Thompson, Mary Ann Thompson, Pamela Ann 288, 377 Thompson, Pamela Denise 288 Thompson, Sandra Jean 422 Thompson, Stephen Keene Thompson, Stephen Wayne Thompson, Teresa Lynn Thompson, Vosteen Maddle Thompson, Wendy Carol 404 Thompson, William Arvil 327 Thompson, William Ernest Thomsen, Richard Francis Thornberry, Anna Jane 305, 377 Thornberry, Carolyn Jane Thornberry, Stephen Ray 422 Thorne, Mary Paula Thornton, Deborah Susanne 285 Thornton, Gary Allen 404 Thornton, Margaret Mary 422 Thornton, Pamela Ruth 285 Thornton, Rebecca Gail 390 Thornton, Steven Owen 35, 273, 324, 404 Thornton, Teena Marie 34, 285 Thrasher, Barry Lloyd Thrasher, Sheila Kay T. Thurman, A.J. 162 Thurman, Earl Marc Thurman, Michael Edward 377 Thurmond, Cathy Jean 404 Thurston, Elizabeth Louise 404 Thurston, Luvenia Ann 390 Thurston, Mark Alan Thurtell, Carla Faye Thurtell, Gordon Keith Thweatt, Susan Love Tichenor, Curtis Paxton Tichenor, David Gerard 422 Tichenor, James Edward 218, 422 Tichenor, Janet Gaye 378 Tichenor, Jon Kevin 284, 390 Tichenor, Kimberly Simpson Tichenor, Sheila Jean 422 Tichenor, Teri Lea Tigue, Michael Stephen 404 Tigue, Patricia Ann 378 Tilford, Brad Calvin Tilford, Valerie Susan Tilley, Jeffrey Reid Timko, Valerie Susan Timmons, Valerie Tindle, Neal Ray 422 Tingle, Ricky Lee 312 Tingle, Vicky Lynn 378 Tingler, Harry Curtis Tingley, Mary Margaret 298, 301, 390 Tinius, James Anthony 218, 378 Tinsley, Cynthia Curine 344, 422 Tinsley, Donald Joseph Tinsley, James Edward Tinsley, Robert Lee 275 Tipps, Rhonda Leanne Tipton, Donna Marie 170-1 Tipton, Kathy Jayne 289 Tipton, Ronald Arthur 262-3, 378 Tipton, Sherree Lynn 245, 404 Toberman, Wayne Carl Tobey, Manley William III 378 Toczko, David Charles Todd, Brenda Marie Todd, Doyle Bradley 218 Todd, Lesa Dianne 422 Todd, Paula J. Toebbe, Roy Timothy 422 Tofighi, Mohammad Toftness, Lea Anne 267, 422 Tokar, Stephen Matthew Tolopka, Kenneth James 378 “Tom Sawyer” 46 Tomes, Barry Christopher Tomes, James 155 Tomes, James Butler III 318 Tomkinson, Deborah Lynne 296 Tomlinson, Elizabeth S. Tompkins, Alan David Toms, Hal Butler Tong, Gary Wayne 323 Tong, Michael Siu-Kui 297, 378 Tooley, Rachel Jean 274, 276, 390 Toomey, Hal Wade Tope, Peggy Diane Tops in his business 358-9 Tores, Jose Joaquin Galvis 59 Torrens, Kevin Durfee Tougher, Mary Catherine 55, 390, 462 Tovar, Deborah Gabbard Towell, Delbert 15, 38 Towle, Susan Carole Towns, Tony Lamont 217-8, 220 Townsend, Debra Lynn Townsend, George Thomas Trabue, Dwight M. Tracy, Homer Wayne 85 Trammel, Willard Enlo Jr. Tr, sk, Blair William Travel and performance 273 Travelstead, Lydia B. 404 Travelsted, Joe Kelley Travis, Bradley Kevin 324 Travis, David Lynn Travis, Debbie Jane 422 Travis, Jean Laurent 404 Travis, Recardo Dale 422 Travis, Todd Oliver 218 Travis, William Joseph 296, 390 Treece, Susan Joy 422 Tregoning, Todd Johnson Trent, Bruce Darrell 390 Trent, Cheri Lynn 378 Trent, Connie Lynn 390 Trent, William Joseph 390 Trice, Veoletta Marie Oby Trickey, Lee David Triggs, George Spencer Trimble, David Lyle Triplett, Linda Sue Triplett, Scott Kilian Tripp, David Lawrence Troop, Bonnie 18 Troost, Daniel Lee 422 Troutman, Annie 175 Troutman, Betsy 175 Troutman, Dan David Troutman, Marsha Elaine 54, 332 Troutman, Richard 174-5 Trowell, Henri Etta Trugman, Rodney M. 422 Truitt, Charles Robert 299 . Trujillo, Rosalie Ann 422 Truman, Ken 318 Trumbo, Don Trey 66-7 Tswana, Mabel Nthabisena Tswana, Sam Abel 297 Tubb, Ernest Dale Jr. 390 Tucker, Bettina Estoria 337 Tucker, Beverly Ann 390 Tucker, David 378 Tucker, Fred Jr. Tucker, John Gregory Tucker, Karen 422 Tucker, Laura Rene Tucker, Mark Allen Tucker, Melvin Dale 390 Tucker, Ronald Dean 255, 422 Tucker, Steven Tucker, Tori 255, 422 Tudor, Cynthia Ann 390 Tuell, John Witherspoon 324 Tuggle, Morris Jean Tuggle, Ricky Allan Tuggle, Samuel Patton III 422 Tully, John Kinther Tully, Susan Lynn Tully, William Patrick Jr. Tung, Charlie 315 Tunks, Nicholas Lee Tunks, Terry Wayne Turner, Cheryl Rae Turner, Darryl Steven 228, 230-1, 233 Turner, David Brian 299, 390 Turner, Desiree Pavon 422 Turner, James Harold 379 Turner, Jerry S. 379 Turner, Joan Humphries Turner, Joseph William Turner, Julie Lee 404 Turner, Kathy Lynn 390 Turner, Lester Thomas Turner, Lisa Gayle 422 Turner, Neal Edward Turner, Patricia Carol 422 Turner, Paul Eric Turner, Philip J. Turner, Richard Romano Turner, Ronnie Marc Turner, Sherry Lynn 422 Turner, Steven Ray Turner, Terry Eldon Turner, Torie Marie 291, 422 Turok, Laura Jane 330, 342, 390 Turpin, James Thomas Turrentine, Dale Anne 287, 290, 390 Tussey, Lee Ann 309, 390 Tussey, Thomas Allen Tutino, Thomas James 404 Tuttle, Patti Sue 340 Tuttle, Terri Gail Tuttle, Vicki Jean 341, 404 Tweddell, Thomas Alan Twejiri, Gamaleddin Ali Two by Two 214-5 Tyler, Cheryl Larose Tynes, Vernon Walter 257, 390 Tyree, Milton Stollings 379 Ueltschi, Robert Dowling 315 Ugochukwu, Nwabufo Ernest Ulm, Jeanne Alexander Umulap, Menjor T. Underwood, Margaret Underwood, Patricia Lynn Underwood, Tony Owen 379 United Black Greeks 30, 325, 335, 339, 343 United Black Students 121 University archivist, 153 University attorney 149, 155, 163 University counseling services center, director 163 University Lecture Series 12 University registrar 156 University school relations, director 157 Upchurch, Daniel Edwin Upchurch, David Hugh Upchurch, Erwin Amos 422 Upchurch, Lois Jane Updike, Thomas 156 Upton, John Cowherd 390 Upton, John Edward 285 Upton, Robin Iona 422 Upton, Sharon L. 290 Urban, Johnny Redford Urbanek, Kayla Rae 422 Urbanek, Kimberly Kay 390 Urtz, Thomas S. Uthoff, Michael 40 Utley, David Adrian Utley, Joann Utnell, Terry R. 390 Uttey, Kenneth 283 Vaden, Katherine Reed 338, 422 Vail, Carmen Rose Vail, Howard Peary Vaithayavatana, Narumol Valentine, Larry D. Valentino, William Donald Vamvas, Augustus John 245 Vamvas, Jeffrey Allan 351 Van Bussum, Gail Paige 282, 404 Van Eman, Lanny 227, 230 Vanarsdall, Ann Baxter 379 Vanarsdall, Thomas Edward 323 Vance, Arnold Duffy Vance, David Holland 34, 285, 422 Vance, Douglas Bryan Vance, Edith Kay 289 Vance, Eric Wallingford 422 Vance, Gatha Jean 390 Vance, James Edward D. Jr. Vance, Karen Denise Vance, Kathleen 288, 422 Vance, Phil Kyle 390 Vancleave, Phyllis Ann 379 Vander, Kraats Keith R. Vandercook, Jack Douglas J. 422 Vanderheyden, Mark Alan 322 Vandermeer, Rebecca Leigh Vanderspool, Ann Leslie Vanderwoude, Berend T. Vandiver, Jennifer Vandiver, Perline Vaneaton, Valerie Lynn Vanenk, Richard Arthur Vanhalsema, Mark Emmett Vanmeter, Darrell Douglas Vanmeter, Kathy Ann 283, 390 Vanmeter, Lisa Jacqueline Vanmeter, Mary Kaye 390 Vanmeter, Monica Lynn 422 Vanmeter, Nelson P. IV Vanmeter, Shane Nelson 326 Vanmilligen, Judy Carol Vanover, Mary Elizabeth 422 Vanover, Richard Allen Vanthournout, Sheila Jo Vanwinkle, Karen Rae Variot, James Matthew Varnadce, Marty Varnadore, Willie Dean 379 Varney, David James Vaughan, Gary Earl 304 Vaughan, George Herman II Vaughn, Alan Ray Vaughn, Diana Kay 296, 390 Vaughn, Donna Ellen 37, 390 Vaughn, Donnie Wayne Vaughn, Gregory Leonard 422 Vaughn, Jeffrey Alan 90 Vaughn, M. Susan Beggs Vaughn, Patricia Ann Vaughn, Randy Vaughn, Ronnie Wayne Vaught, Larry Brent Vaught, Mark O'Neal Veach, Pamela Kay 379 Veech, David Scott 299, 422 Veech, Paul Joseph Veech, Ronnie Lee Jr. 90, 92, 273, 422 Velotta, Mark Allen Venrick, Vicki Caryl 422 Vertrees, James Kenneth Vertrees, Thomas Alan Vessels, Carolyn Louise 245 Vessels, Lea Ann 422 Vest, Carol Sue Veterans on Campus 29 Vice, Donna Cheryl 404 Vick, Frances Annette 287, 404 Vick, Franklin David Jr. Vick, Mark Alan 422 Vick, Minerva Ann 422 Vick, Patricia Denise 422 Vick, Walter Glenn 390 Vickers, Janet Lynn Victor, Joseph Edward Vienna Choir Boys 40 Viers, Tommy Joe 422 Vikre, Karen Lise 404 Villegas, Machado Nicholas Vincent, Belinda Gaye Vincent, David Lee Vincent, Joel Miles 292-3 Vincent, Kevin Joseph Vincent, Perry Glenn 283 Vincent, Preston Dwight 379 Vincent, Reneva Estelle Vincent, Robert Alan Vincent, Robin Sue 284, 287 Vincent, Teresa Ann 422 Vincent, Terri Jeanette 404 Vincent, Timothy Letranze Vincent, Wayne Allen Vinson, Kenneth Wayne 293 Vinson, Robbie Dannette 330, 343 Vinson, Ronald Lester 379 Vinson, Walter George Jr. Vise, Linda Kay 423 Vo, Tan Viet Voelker, Brian Allan Vogedes, Glenn Allen Vogel, Carl William 423 Vogt, Mary Suzanne Voils, Danny Gene Vollmer, Joyce Ann 404 Vondoersten, Jeffrey W. WBGN 100 WKU Dance Company 269 WKYU 153 Waage, Anne 197 Waddell, William Buford Jr. Wassington, Cynthia Jane 423 Waddington, Shanna Sue Waddle, Cheri J. 379 Waddle, Marcia Gayle Waddle, Ralph Richard Jr. 315 Wade, Catherine Elizabeth Wade, Deborah Lynn Wade, Debra V. Rene Wade, Hugh Woodford Wade, Marsha Jill 423 Wade, Navita 379 Wade, Norman Lee Jr. 404 Wade, Rebekah Ruth Wade, Sheila Renee Wade, Ursula Quinn Wade, Vanda Sue Wadell, Robert Joseph Waggener, Dan Caldwell Waggoner, Rebecca Brandon Waggoner, Stephen Leonard Waggoner, Vicky Jean 390 Wagner, Dana Ann Wagner, Denise Michelle 334 Wagner, Jean Ellen 338, 404 Wagner, Jean Mary 404 Wagner, Jonathan Edward 404 Wagner, Jr. Norbert Thomas Wagner, Mark Wayne Wagoner, Mark Shawn Wagoner, Walter Edmond III Wailing 102-3 Waiters, Beverly Michele Wakefield, Frank H. II Waksmunski, Paul Michael 307 Wald, Melanie Lynn 404 Walden, Gary Kipling Walden, Larry David Walden, Mary Patricia Waldhart, Debra Susan W. 379 Waldron, Janet 379 Waldrop, Alexander Moore 379 Waldrop, Melanie 303 Walker, Alfred B. Walker, Allan Ray 423 Walker, Barry Alan Walker, Becky Faye 379 Walker, Betty Diann Walker, Cathy Lynn 390 Walker, Debra Aniece 379 Walker, Denise Ruth 283-4, 379 Walker, Donald Clifton Walker, Elda 147 Walker, Eugene Levon Walker, James Daniel Walker, James William Walker, Jerry Lee 423 Walker, John Howard 390 Walker, Karen 274 Walker, Kurt Dean 379 Walker, Lynnette Walker, Meloney Renee Walker, Nancy Jane Walker, Nancy Kay 423 Walker, Pamela Joann 423 Walker, Robin Jean 338 Walker, Rodney Lee 379 Walker, Tommy Howard Wall, Curtis Ray Wall, Donna Gail 423 Wall, James Robert Wall, Keith Roger 379 Wall, Melanie Geeslin Wall, Randy V. 345 Wall, Stephen Jay 321 Wallace, Bruce Martin Wallace, Don Vertrees II Wallace, Gregory Rhodes Wallace, James W. II 327 Wallace, John Michael Wallace, Lydia M. Wallace, Marcus 161 Wallace, Mark Curtis 404 Wallace, Matthew Wallace, Michael Wallace, Michael Eugene Wallace, Patricia Jo 379 Wallace, Timothy George Waller, Sandra 170 Walls, Sandra Jean Walsh, Thomas Edward 321 Walter, Donald Thomas 423 Walter, Michael Dale Walter, Paul Edward Walters, Dianna Lynn Walters, Janet Lynn Walters, Joseph Lee 404 Walters, Kenneth Dean Walters, Kenny 27 Walters, Melinda Clark 423 Walters, Peter Hudson 218 Walters, Ricky 325, 330, 379 Walters, Sylvia Lee Walters, Veronica Renee 423 Walton, Charles Steven Walton, George E. Walton, John Thomas 423 Walton, Ricky Dean Walton, Robert Edward Waltrip, Richard Craig 224, 423 Wampler, Marcia Lynne 337, 423 Wampler, Michael David 324, 330 Wampler, Thomas Nelson 423 Wand, Jeanette Elena Wang, Yuan Yee Wangler, Louis Brent Wanta, Steven Richard Ward, Barry Anthony 257 Ward, Barry Randall 257 Ward, Daniel Lee Ward, Diana Sue Taylor Ward, Dorothy Sheila Ward, Jerry 275 Ward, Karen Miller Ward, Kimberly Lynn 338, 404 Ward, Larry Ward, Stephen Douglas Ward, Tammara 404 Warden, Larry Winburn Wardlow, Mark C. Wardrip, Charles Howard Ware, Carlotta Marie 404 Ware, Cary Lynn 404 Ware, Effie Mae Ware, Peggy Darlene Allen Ware, Sidney Clark 423 Warford, Kevin Thomas 254 Warmath, Randall Dean 326 Warmbold, Sheryl Knudson Warner, Carrie Lynn 404 Warner, Jeffrey Louis 404 Warner, Teresa Suzanne 423 Warnock, John David Warren, Debra Ann Warren, Jennifer Warren, Linda Kay 207 Warren, Pamela Hunter Wartell, Holli Beth Washburn, Ricardo Veloris Washer, Threesae Glover 379 Washington, Earl Washington, James Bernard Washington, James Lewis Washington, Zoe M. 423 Washko, John Michael Wassom, Earl 146-7 Waters, Sandra Michelle 338 Wathen, Donald Edward 423 Wathen, Douglas Alan 289, 404 Wathen, Joseph Alfred Wathen, Margaret Elizabeth Watkins, David Hunter Watkins, David Smith Jr. 390 Watkins, Denis Warren Watkins, Francine Adella 423 Watkins, James Richard Watkins, Linda Watkins, Paul Lee 271 Watkins, Priscilla Harris Watkins, Rita Lynn Watkins, Sarah Elizabeth Watkins, Terri Lynn 423 Watrous, Kim Elizabeth 404 Watson, Beverly Jo 404 Watson, Carrie Ann 63, 255, 328, 423 Watson, Jackie Ray 423 Watson, Judy Ann Watson, Judy Marie 390 Watson, Kathy 330 Watson, Pamela Tracey Watson, Sally Jane 272 Watts, Holly K. 92, 334, 423 Watts, Karen A. Watts, Rossan 338, 390 “We don’t mind second, but we’d rather have first,” 236-41 Weakley, Thomas Wayne 423 Weatherford, David Thomas Weatherholt, Harry R. Weatherspoon, Robert Daris 379 Weaver, David Lee Weaver, Gerald Joseph Jr. 427 Weaver, Heather Elizabeth Weaver, Jay 325 Weaver, Mark Douglas Weaver, Martha E. 423 Weaver, Max C. Weaver, Micki Weaver, Patrick Lee Weaver, Valerie Jill 404 Weaver, William Thomas II Webb, Brenda Sue Nichols Webb, Cherrie Zillner Webb, David Paige Webb, Deborah Joyce 404 Webb, Dennis Layne Webb, Diane Lynn 390 Webb, Eldon Leroy 285 Webb, Elizabeth Lane 283, 423 Webb, Janice Gayla 404 Webb, Jerry Dale Webb, Jill Angeline Webb, Joseph B. Webb, Kevin Ladon 327 Webb, Paul Harding 423 Webb, Rickey Byron Webb, Sherie Lynn 289, 390 Webb, Sherri Webb, William Neal 380, 385 Weber, Richard A. Jr. 274 Weber, Sue Allen 288, 380 Weber, Tina Marie 308-9, 380 Webster, Cynthia D. 407 Webster, Lydell 423 Webster, Robert Clayton Webster, Tracy Nicholas 307 Wedding, Patrick Vincent Weddle, James Bryan Weddle, Lucinda Jane 341, 423 Weedman, Connie Sue 180-1 Wehby, Jennifer Leigh Wehlage, John Victor Weigel, Bruce Edward 323 Weiland, Roy David Weill, Rhoda Joan Weimer, James Richard 284, 380 Weinert, Angela Merici 304-5 Weis, James Burton Weisenberger, Geralyn Sue Weissenger, James Wood Welch, Theresa Ann Welker, Beth Thomas Wellinghurst, Penny Lynn 324, 336, 380 Wellman, Lynn Harrison Wells, Alesa Jane 423 Wells, Anthony Eugene 423 Wells, Carroll 19 Wells, Daniel Keith 28, 326 Wells, Elizabeth Anne 423 Wells, Geneva Gayle 423 Wells, Gregory E. 390 Wells, James Harold 255 Wells, Janis Kay Wells, Jeffrey Scott 248-9, 289, 380 Wells, Joe Walt Wells, John Whayne Wells, Judith Kaye 423 Wells, Judy Farris Wells, Kathryn Laine Wells, Kathy Lynn 338 Wells, Mark Edward 390 Wells, Mark Edward 390 Wells, Michael David Wells, Paula Lugene 292, 404 Wells, Sharn R. Wells, Susan Carol 390 Wells, Teena Fay Wells, Vanessa Jill 423 Welsh, James Thomas 321 Welsh, Teresa McMurtrey 380 Wendt, Cynthia Sue 404 Wendt, Stephen D. 380 Werner, Gary Lee 423 Werner, Rhonda Sue 380 Wesley, Donna Kaye Wesley, Ronnie Mitchell Wespiser, Melissa Ann 380 West, Gail Maureen 423 West, Gary Lawrence 390 West, Joseph William Jr. West, Mary Alice McCall West, Mary Kathleen West, Michael A. 423 West, Michael Allen West, William Keith West, William Terry Westbay, Dreama May Westbrook, Robin Jane Wester, Don Alan 218, 423 Westerfield, David Ligon Westerman, Beverly Jean 423 Western Ad Club 277 Westfall, Martha Ellen 423 Westfall, Sara Lea 336 Weston, Janice Lee Kidd Wetherill, Rex Albert 325, 423 Wethington, Mary Elizabeth 423 Wethington, Van Allen Wettig, Keith Scott 315, 330 Wetzel, George Louis 304, 380 Wetzel, Robin Denise 390 Whalen, Laura Marie 298, 404 Whaley, Barbara Gail 423 “Whatever could go wrong, did.” 262-3 Wheat, Gary Eugene Wheat, Katherine 404 Wheat, Ruth Ann 423 Wheat, Stephen H. Wheatley, Dennis Craig Wheatley, Stephen Gerard 312 Wheeler, Carol Johnson 342, 404 Wheeler, Debra Lynne Wheeler, Debra S. Waldhart Wheeler, Jack Timothy 423 Wheeler, Jimmy D. Wheeler, Mark Stephen 318 Wheeler, Mary Margaret Wheeler, Michael Neal Wheeler, Micky 341 Wheeler, Richard Kirk 318 Wheeler, Ricky Lee Wheeler, Robert Alfred Wheeler, Samual Fred Whelan, William Edward 298-9 Whisenhunt, Terri Lynn 380 Whisman, Steven Andrew Whitaker, Billy Russ II Whitaker, David 152, 175 Whitaker, David Taylor Whitaker, Jeffrey Lane Whitaker, Jeffrey Wendell Whitaker, Rhonda Lynne 423 Whitaker, Robert Allen White, Alicia Ann 423 White, Anna Marie 423 White, Barbara Sue 404 White, Carolyn Jasper White, Cheryl Jean Bush 255, 404 White, Connie Beulah 274 White, Cynthia Sue 404 White, David Olen Jr. White, Donald Lawson 279 White, Donna Sue 423 White, Ellen Rea White, Fred Milton White, Gloria Jean White, Irvin Stanley 404 White, James Dale Jr. White, Jeffery Lynn White, Jeffrey L. White, John Edward White, Kimberley Gail 391 White, Lenelle White, Lisa Ann White, Mary Janace Hughes 380 White, Melinda Gail 423 White, Melissa Lynn 423 White, Meta Cheryl White, Peggy Lynn White, Prentice Brady 391 White, Ray Buchanan II 218, 322, 423 White, Raymond Oscar 404 White, Rita Gail White, Robin Lane White, William Letcher 405 White, William Stanley 380 White, Winona Ruth 287 Whitehead, Mary Leslie Whitehead, Roger Glenn Whitehouse, Sherry Von Whiteley, David Foster Whitfield, Donald Boyd Whitfield, Warren Lee Whiting, Charles Mark Whitledge, Ricky Alan Whitledge, Walter Ray 457 Travis, B. Whitledge, W. Librrry THOUGH TEMPERATURES OUTSIDE were in the 80’s, many students in Cravens Graduate Center found the air conditioning too cold, in- cluding Kathy Wells, a sophmore nursing ma- jor from Franklin. Two months before, the Cra- vens cooling system was broken. Stevie Benson te YEO SOG IE MY Whitledge, Wanda S. Hughes Whitley, Kenneth Neil Whitley, Leonard Darrell 380 Whitlock, Dennis Keith 289, 405 Whitman, Cheryl Lynn 330, 343, 380 Whitmer, Marilyn Ruth 391 Whitmer, Robert C. 405 Whitmer, Tony Lynn Whitney, Andrew Madison 423 Whitney, Jane Clark Whitney, Jeffery L. Whitney, Russell Evans 423 Whitsell, William Franklin Whitson, Kathy Glyn 277 Whitson, Phyllis Ann 405 Whitston, Richard V. 380 Whittaker, Ramona Sue : Whittaker, Vicky Elaine 405 Whittinghill, Becky Ann Whittinghill, Janet Lynne 284, 423 Whittinghill, William D. Whittington, Dennis Jay Whitworth, Daniel Lawrence Wicklein, Robert Carl 306 Wickman, John Todd 249, 405 Wicks, Alice Elizabeth 334 Wicks, Joel David 322 Widick, Randall Keith Wiebmer, Carolyn Jeane Wiedmar, Mark Willard 315 Wiggins, Donna Freedle Wiggins, Michael Griffith 391 Wigginton, Edward W. Jr. Wigginton, Hancy Humphrey Wigginton, Scott Evan 423 Wightman, Georgia Ellen 405 Wiist, Lyle Jan 380 Wilbur, Lou Ann 405 Wilburn, Stephen Craig 327, 330 Wilcher, Brenda Loyce Wilcher, Linda Joyce Wilcox, Kathy Lynn Wilcox, Paul Allen Wilcutt, Kathryn Elaine Wilder, Jerry 156 Wilder, Kimberly 156 Wilder, Laura Lynn 156 Wilder, Mary Earl Wilder, Tambra Louise 423 Wildman, Warren Lee Jr. 257 Wiley, Anthony Twain Wiley, Bruce Norris 314 Wiley, Harold Ricky 380 Wiley, James Wilson 391 Wilford, Cheryl Ann Wilhite, Gerald Wilhoyte, James David Wilhoyte, Sarah Ellen 380 Wilk, Susan Elaine Wilkerson, Brenda Kay 380 Wilkerson, Martha Alice Wilkerson, Regina 380 Wilkerson, Thomas Kyle Wilkerson, Thomas Kyle Wilkins, James Andrew 315 Wilkins, James Keith Wilkins, Martin Curtis Wilkins, Meredith Lee Wilkins, Nicholas Edward Wilkins, Ricky Dee Wilkins, Robert Micheal Wilkins, Ronald Lynn Wilkinson, Kathy Briley 391 Wilkinson, Mark Allen Wilkinson, Stanley Randall Wilkirson, Howard Freeman Williams, Angela Denise 405 Williams, Angela Germaine Williams, Angela Rose 391 Williams, Anthony Glenn 306 Williams, Artye Lamont 405 Williams, Becky Ann 405 Williams, Billy Joe Williams, Brenda Riddle 380 Williams, Charles Patrick Williams, Darryl Taylor Williams, Deborah Kay 423 Williams, Debra Ann 391 Williams, Dwight Edward 274, 380 Williams, Gale Marie 324, 423 Williams, Gary Allen 423 Williams, Giles Buford 391 Williams, Harold G. Williams, Harry Woodrow Williams, Jacqueline Jean Williams, James Carl Williams, Janet Lee Williams, Jennie Lee 423 Williams, Jimmy Lee 276, 391 Williams, John Galen Williams, Judith Ann 405 Williams, Karen Denise Williams, Katherine Ann 380 Williams, Kathy Ann B. Williams, Larry Owen Williams, Leslie Lorraine 336, 380 Williams, Linda Ann 308, 423 Williams, Linda J. Williams, Marcella Ann 31, 332, 391 Williams, Marie Antionette 423 Williams, Mark Alan Williams, Mark Steven 391 Williams, Marva Rae 391 Williams, Mary Carolyn Williams, Mary Jo Cooper Williams, Michael Wilson Williams, Micheal Wayne Williams, Nancy Ann Williams, Penny Renee Williams, Peter Kelley Williams, Philip Parker Williams, Phillip Eugene Willia ms, Randy Neil Williams, Richard Dale Williams, Robert Andre Williams, Robert Daily 380 Williams, Ronnie Lee 291, 380 Williams, Scott Franklin Williams, Sharri Latrice Williams, Sherman Anthony Williams, Tammy Lynn Williams, Teresa Claire 391 Williams, Teresa Jane Williams, Thomas Scott William, Timothy Lyal 218, 391 Williams, Vicki Gail Williams, Vickie Lynn Williams, Vincent Peter 330 Williams, Wanda Jeanene 391 Williams, Willie Douglas Williamson, Celia Lynette Williamson, Jerry Wayne Williamson, Pamela Sue 405 Williamson, Patricia P. Williamson, Stephen Duane Williamson, Vivian Carol 423 Willian, Mona Kathryn 134, 380 Williford, Bradley William 257 Williford, Frances J Williford, Lloyd Harold Jr. 260 Williford, Steven Martin 380 Willingham, Gwenda Lenise 288, 330, 339 381 Willingham, Melinda Ann 264, 423 Willis, Charles Maurice Willis, Dale Edward Willis, David Joe Willis, Dee Ann 423 Willis, Eric Wade Willis, Gary M. Willis, Mark Allen 391 Willis, Matilda Ree 255, 391 Willis, Pamela Joy 423 Willis, Scott Lowry 423 Willis, Thomas Dale Willoughby, Betty Gayle 405 Willoughby, Deborah Kaye Willoughby, George Allison Willoughby, James Glenn 224 Willoughby, Jennie Lee 340 Willoughby, John Garvin 224, 381 Willoughby, Lisa Anne 391 Wills, Robert Vincent 405 Wilmore, Deborah Elaine 405 Wilmoth, Edythe 423 Wilsford, Jamie Sue Wilson, Angela Jean Wilson, August Kent 325 Wilson, Barry Ernest 242-3, 391 Wilson, Brent Edward Wilson, Catherine Deneace Wilson, Chad Martin 391 Wilson, Charles Daniel 405 Wilson, Darrell O.J. Wilson, David Arnold Wilson, Dawana Lee 274, 423 Wilson, Deborah Suzanne 287, 423 Wilson, Donna Gail Wilson, Earl W. Wilson, Elizabeth Darlene 336, 381 Wilson, Elizabeth Wright 336 Wilson, Gary Dwayne 307 Wilson, Gary Lee 381 Wilson, Gary Wayne Wilson, Gregory Allen 257 Wilson, Gregory Antonius 257 Wilson, Gordon 200, 304 Wilson, James Lynn 381 Wilson, Jeffery Paul Wilson, Julian Anthony Wilson, Karen Renee 53, 405 Wilson, Kelvin Lewis Wilson, Kerry Dean 381 Wilson, Kevin Gordon 381 Wilson, Larry Allan Wilson, Leslie Lynn Wilson, Lettie Winona Wilson, Linda Faye 55 Wilson, Lisa Ann Wilson, Lisa Gaye Wilson, Lucia Sanchez Wilson, Marcia Kay Wilson, Mary Alice Wilson, Patricia McClaren 391 Wilson, Richard Neal 423 Wilson, Robert Clark Wilson, Robert Terrell Wilson, Sally 405 Wilson, Sarah Lynn 342 Wilson, Sarah Taylor 342, 381 Wilson, Scott Samuel 405 Wilson, Sharon Ann Wilson, Sharon Kaye 381 Wilson, Steve Alan 324, 391 Wilson, Stevie Joe 391 Wilson, Stuart Kevin 405 Wilson, Ted 318 Wilson, Thomas Charles 423 Wilson, Timothy Clay 423 Wilson, Tracy Lee 90, 273, 423 Wilson, Vickie Sue Capps 405 Wilson, William Marion Wilwayco, Stephanie Dawn 423 Wimberley, James Michael Wimbs, Vicki Elizabeth Wimmer, Linda Kay 381 Wimsatt, Kimberly Ann 70, 423 Wimsatt, Richard Alan 391 Win or Lose, They Cheer 242-3 Winchester, Clara May Winchester, David Scott Winchester, Jack Tyler 318, 381 Winfrey, Calvin Reynolds Winfrey, Sheri Lynne 30, 128, 337, 381 Wingfield, Daryl Eugene Wingfield, Ruth Butler Wingo, Marion Kenneth 257, 319 Wininger, Audre June G. Winkleman, Donald Lee Winlock, Diana Lee 423 Winlock, Sarah Thomas 381 Winn, Christine Mary T. Winn, James Kyle Winn, Timothy Wayne Winstead, Dana Lynn 405 Winstead, Donna Jean Winstead, Joe 305 Winstead, Sara Carlisle Winter, Janice Marie Winters, Clarence Wayne 405 Wirth, Vincent Gordon Wisdom, Charlie Paxton II 381 Wise, John Lawrence Wise, Kimberly Jane Wise, Mark Jenkins Wiseman, Linda Marie Wiser, Cynthia Jean Wisman, Sue E. 338 Witcher, Russell Yates 423 With help, Johnny can read 170-1 Withers, Teresa Ann 405 Withey, John 77 Withrow, Douglas Henry Jr. 381 Withrow, Richard Anthony Witt, David Alan 327, 330, 381 Witt, Jennifer Lynn 423 Witten, Darrell Wayne 381 Witten, David Wayne Witten, Mary Kathryn Witten, Nancy Darlene C. 381, 427 Witten, Timothy Allan 276, 391 Wittenbraker, Janet Susan 255, 301, 341, 381 Witty, Deborah Lou Witty, Tammie Jill 405 Wohlleb, Pamela Marie 423 Wolber, Celeste Ann 405 Wolf, Patricia Marie Wolfe, Burchel Eugene Wolfe, Janet Morton Long Wolfe, William Burnley Wolff, Douglas Paul Wolford, Hal 6 Women’s basketball 236-241 Women’s cross country 265 Women’s golf 267 Women’s tennis 266-7 Women’s track 264-5 Wood, Barry Lee Wood, Carol Sue Wood, Christine Schon 381 Wood, Edward James Wood, Frankie Dale Wood, Gregory Allen Wood, Irene Hansel Wood, Jacqueline Edith Wood, Larry Wayne Wood, Patricia Marie 267, 423 Wood, Retta A. 400 Wood, Samela Ann Wood, Teresa Glynn Wood, Thomas Gregory Woodall, Gary H. Woodard, Beverly Jane Woodard, Lillie Marie 274 Woodard, Ronnie Edward Woodard, Shelia Elaine Woodard, Veronica Ardella 423 Woodburn, Karen Gail 337, 423 Woodcock, Jeffrey Glenn Woodcock, Margaret Nell Woodcock, Marty 391 Woodcock, Melydia Ruth 391 Wooden, Donald Glenn Wooden, Richard L Woodford, Katherine Forman 277, 381 Woodie, Ruth Lane Woodlee, Terry Alan Woodruff, Charles Ray 218 Woodruff, Lou Ann 340, 405 Woodrum, Sarah Margaret 334 Woods, James Woodrow 28, 217-8, 221-2, 391, 402 Woods, Nancy Marie 405 Woods, Ronnie Bruce 423 Woods, Velma Jean 423 Woods, William Michael Woodson, Linda Faye 423 Woodward, Billie Mae 423 Woodward, Hardy Bailey Woodward, Jimmy J. Woodward, Sharen R, 381 Woodward, Timmy K Woodworth, Tonya Dee 423 Wooldridge, Lee Ann 423 Woosley, James Kirby 304 Woosley, John Thomas 300, 381 Woosley, Steve 326, 423 Wooten, Judith Roxanne Wooten, Sandra Gail 405 Wootten, Paul Edgar Jr. 423 Word, Edward Levi Wordy 178-9 Working their way up 264-5 Workman, Mark Douglas Worley, David Harold Worsham, Jackie Lynn Wortham, Ramona Ray 309, 340, 381 Worthington, Kristal Lynn Wray, Ricky Lee 230 Wright, Carol Lynn 92 Wright, Carolyn Payne Wright, Charles 22 Wright, Charles David Wright, Connie Sue 284, 381 Wright, Diane Elizabeth 423 Wright, Donna Leza Wright, Dorothy Lucille Wright, Forrest Lee Wright, Jackie Lynn 405 Wright, James Ray Wright, Lynn Burton 276, 381 Wright, Margaret Wright, Mark Frederick 324 Wright, Martha Nell 301, 308, 381 Wright, Reginald Lane Wright, Richard Lee 405 Wright, Sherry Marie Wright, Teresa Lee Wright, Terry Lynn 318, 381 Wright, Tona L. 405 Wright, William Eugene Wrigley, Blair Ralph 423 Wrigley, Blair Ralph Wu, Lung Hsin Wunderlich, Fredric Dale 255 Wurth, Marvin Jerome 391 Wurtz, M. Sandra 288, 391 Wyatt, Jacqueline Beth 423 Wynn, Peggy Lee 405 Yaap, Karen Lorraine 381 Yale, Jay Arl 423 Yancey, John Charles 423 Yankey, Harold Dee Yankey, Roy Isaac 423 Yann, Richard Keith 391 Yarbrough, Earnest Gregory 405 Yarbrough, Mark Duane Yarbrough, Mary Gail Yarbrough, Scott Douglas 273 Yarbrough, Vernon Wayne Yates, Barry Eugene 423 Yates, Charles 120 Yates, Charles Edward 313, 405 Yates, David Harold Yates, Ernest Walton 312, 397 Yates, Frank Byron Yates, Gregory Steven Yates, James Edward Yates, James Ray 381 Yates, John Edward 313, 381 Yates, Joyce Yates, Mark Allen Yates, Owen T. Jr Yates, Rita Jo Yates, Thomas Arthur 89 Yates, Thomas Daniel 89 Yazdaniahmadabadi, Hamid Year 5: Optional in more than one way 208-9 Yeast, Bronna Lee 405 Yeast, Steve Lawrence Yeater, Julia 236-240 Yeiser, Michael Fred 296, 381 Yocum, Paul David Yoeckel, Douglas Gene Yokley, Sally McCready 391 Yokota, Masuki Yonts, Tracey June 423 York, Judy Lynn Burnett Young at heart 48-9 Young, Beverly Ann 341, 405 Young, Catherine Atkins 423 Young, Connie Frances 423 Young, David Paul Young, Deborah Jean Young, Deborah Lynn Young, Debra Sherry] 381 Young, Ian Troy 318 Young, James Anthony Young, Jimmy Edward Young, Joe Vernon Young, Judith Karen Smith 381, 405 Young, Judy Ann Young, Kent Allen Young, Kim Elaine 423 Young, Laura Ellen Young, Lisa Ann 423 Young, Mary Ann 423 Young, Mary Margaret Young, Maurice Young, Michael David 285, 381 Young, Michael Dennis Young, Monte Ray 319 Young, Peggy Jeanmarie Young, Ralph David Young, Rita Cheryl 4, 264, 308, 336, 423 Young, Rita Kaye 4, 264, 308, 336, 423 Young, Robbi Sue Young, Sandie Cary Young, Sandra Kaye Young, Steven Lewis Young, Teresa Ann Young, Teresa Lynn Young, Veronica Eugenia 391 Young, William Alan Youngblood, Diana Faye 391 Younkin, Linda Elizabeth 405 Youthful sparks or grown-up pals 286-7 Yovichin, Richard Duane II Yowell, Carol Hall Yunt, Thomas Addison 277 Zaboronak, Maria Stella 282, 296, 405 Zachari, Anne Cecile Zakeri, Mansour Zales 53 Zamani, Mohammad E Zapp, Joseph Leon Zarate, Rene Jose 260-1 Zarkhah, Ayub Zarruk, Luis Armando Zeidler, Susan Elizabeth Zeigel, William Henry 210 Zelle, Katherine Ann Zentner, Bonnie Gail Zeta Phi Beta 320, 343 Zettlemoyer, Susan Gay 405 Ziegler, Kathi Lynn 423 Zielke, Sheryl Ann Zielke, Steven William Zier, Jonathon Paul Zike, Ronald Benjamin 405 Ziller, David F. 257, 405 Zimmerman, Heidi Marie 272, 283 Zimmerman, Teresa Lynn 189, 423 Zimmerman, Timothy F. 289, 423 Zinsius, Mary Elizabeth 423 Zirkelbach, Christopher J. 423 Zoeller, Ann R. 423 Zoeller, Gregory 318 Zoeller, Julia Ann 61 Zoeller, Tom Andrew 255, 310, 318 Zomchek, John Michael Zuba, Donnalynn 391 Zwicker, William Brian 459 Whitledge, W. Zwicker, W. Ker t had been a year when the traffic seemed bumper-to-bumper even on foggy mornings. Snowstorms couldn’t keep students and faculty away from the Hill where there was still a great deal of learning and living to do. The Hill sent its representatives into the world and the world returned the favor by sending its cultures and personalities to make an impression on Western. Lynn Wright IMPATIENT FOR THE BED RACE to begin during Greek LEADING EARLY MORNING TRAFFIC slowed by fog is Week activities is Mary Mitchell, a Little Sister for Sigma Chi senior Mary Tougher. The speech pathology major was on her fraternity. The new event involved fraternity brothers pulling | way to Jones-Jaggers Laboratory School on University Boule- a bed with a Little Sister aboard. vard where she taught an 8 a.m. reading class. Mark Lyons Panes bye au AE My saree Nine de pong, 4 é CISA GAS: Pahte phe so ae ie ame Sy | ? : Ke % ‘ d Dae ‘ q e Luisa ted oe Sige aie ie Kisdi5 Hee Fy ks TRE I Bes AT es ¢ ey Abram set ge AS eens Sia ‘a geting Ge th SUA Enea ang le : aah py tet: spurs , wate ag bh ahs Epi Ae ae ME Om Khe scetn ge Se GNI ES ppt oot we ‘ i BibT EN S gah a y J scene ntl ptt Beoolg: Sd Heaney oe ean Racca am as SILOAM Ce Nae ceds cae DN . ashen! en ike Sel as might pha from the wear. and tear. But Westerners Hele care of their one Hill. To them it was still a mountain. “FRAMED BY CLOUDS, . moon ities eee near the top of the Hill. A ‘s slowed shutter speed catche: motion of two Westerners outside the structure. 464 Closing Jim Burton It would take inches and inches of space to thank each one for every minute they gave to the 1978 Talisman. The book, itself, is a much better token of appreciation. However, a noiseless, inner round of applause is owed to Chuck Stinnett, Debbie Gibson, Cheryl Sharp, Kathy Whit- son, Vicki Bagwell, Don White, Terri Darr and Sandy Alford. That small staff, along with an army of photographers, contributing writers, journalism faculty and staff members, yearbook representatives Gary Rowe, John DePalma and Jim Crosland and adviser Roger Loewen, collaborated to present this volume to you, the Westerner. Whether you are a freshman, an alumnus, a faculty or staff member or just someone who by chance opened this book, the contents are devoted to a story about one Hill which stretched miles and miles in one year. Please stretch your schedule far enough to relive that year within these pages. Take care to observe the collage of tradition and new horizons on the Hill. Connie Holman, Editor @ A LATE NIGHT CRITIQUE SESSION of the 1977 TALISMAN involves man- aging editor Roger Stinnett, chief photographer Debbie Gibson, Col. Charles E. Savedge and editor Connie Holman. Savedge, a director of the College Yearbook Workshop at Ohio University, is one of the nation’s most highly. respected yearbook authorities. The session lasted until early in the morning. 1978 TALISMAN STAFF Editor jigs a0 deabGn Labs oGtn oo Gh aan ener Ate ear Gens Sas ae Connie Holman ManagingsE ditore arin wate ete inte atta ee Wee ee RE a a: Roger Stinnett Academics Editoraenmaie tetanic eh es Mae ele Vicki Bagwell SportsyEditorwea eye Weve cee Ree wc oe EW ay Don White Organizations Editorpe eke sous. poke ee ee Cheryl Sharp Greeks Editor mnecayue cps Leet an le ae een ere Ca Terri Darr Sache Editors nue sah piee Yep ch tae at ety td Tt Bic hea! Sandy Alford Editorial Assistants ............. Kathy Lam, Theresa Montgomery, Pam Wilson, Lisa Roberts, Steven Stines, 'Sara- Lois Kerrick Feature Writers(.% nee x. ee Bryan Armstrong, Beth Taylor, David Whittaker, Robin Vincent, Kerry Tharp, Laura Phillips, Tom Eblen, Richard Halicks, Alfina Mami, Alan Judd, Gary Moore, David Crumpler, Dawn Kemp, Charlea Hicks, Tim Rutherford, Denise Bilbrey photo CoordinatormaAc as race cle ere ee ok Kathy Whitson Chief Photopraphersmaete top aa ee ee ie oe ah Debbie Gibson DNS Ee SR Me Pe Me Se MM ee SCs Mae ie Tom Pfannerstill Photographersitae. ct mee Ske hoes Mark Lyons, David Frank, Jim Burton, Stevie Benson, Beth Rogers, Ricky Rogers, Harold Sinclair, Eric Hassler, Ron Hoskins, Scott Robinson, Judy Watson, Lynn Wright, Mike Dowell, Lewis Gardner Contributing Photographers ...... Tom Dekle, Bruce Edwards, David Banahan, Mike Lawrence, Tom McCord, Jack Corn, Gary Suiter, Connie Holman, Tom Eblen, Bob Coffey, Public Relations A VIS CEES VM Serelay PML SE. vehee, Spats os tye ne Taye | eee Roger Loewen Colophon Volume 55 of the Western Kentucky University TALISMAN was printed by Josten’s American Yearbook Company in Clarksville, Tenn. All printing was done using the offset lithography process. Paper stock is 80 pound Consolidated Dull. Endsheet stock is 65 pound Champion Sand Carnival Text cover weight. Staff artist Tom Pfannerstill produced the four-color cover artwork using water colors. The six-color cover was lithographed on white blue-book cover material with a PMS 107 background and PMS 160 type. Artwork by Pfannerstill includes pen with water color (24-25) and a water color with chalk collage (50-51). Also included is a line conversion from a photograph on page 36. Approximately 30,000 black and white and 900 color frames were shot for the final candid selection in the 1978 TALISMAN. All color reproductions are from individually separated Ektachrome transparencies shot at ASA’‘s ranging from 64 to 2,400. 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 107(cover, 1-13, 136-137, 212-213, 268-269, 346-347, 460-464); PMS 150(94-97); PMS 160{cover): PMS 165(60-63); PMS 185(28-31); PMS 278(14-15); PMS 292(56-59); PMS 298(98-105); PMS 352(52-55); PMS 4682-93); PMS 467(20-23); process yellow(cover, 24-25,51); process red(cover); and process blue(cover, 24-25). Although a variety of typefaces are used in the book, the basic type comes from the Palatino family. Body type is 942 10 Palatino with cutlines set in 742 8 Palatino. Cutline lead-ins are 72 8 Palatino bold. To facilitate legibility, all type is set in bold face on spreads having dark backgrounds. Headline typefaces not of the Palatino family come from Letraset, Formatt and Zipatone graphic art products. All were hand-set by the TALISMAN staff. Page numbers are set in 14 point Souvenir bold italic. The index is set in 51 6 Palatino and Palatino bold, and cross-referenced by title and page content. Employing a magazine format, the 1978 TALISMAN had a press run of 8,200 copies. Distribution of the seventh consecutive volume to be copyrighted began during the month of September, 1978. ee ER ee ne teres Oe Eee ae ee See ene here Me ae ny re a en
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