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

 - Class of 1978

Page 22 of 472

 

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 22 of 472
Page 22 of 472



Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 21
Previous Page

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 23
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 22 text:

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

Page 21 text:

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



Page 23 text:

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

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

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

1975

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

1976

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

1977

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

1979

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

1980

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 1

1981


Searching for more yearbooks in Kentucky?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Kentucky yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.