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

 - Class of 1979

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Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1979 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 462 of the 1979 volume:

a a ee ee hemes ae = ¥ NS EO NS DO OOP SIE MOE CR eae OR ON i tC an ag TN: a a de [eee What could be more natural as a theme than a word that characterizes each stu- dent’s life? But it wasn’t an easy theme to develop — even though it was right under our noses. As the year began, we planned stories about how students live. We called our pack- age “‘lifestyles.”’ And while we assigned reporters and pho- tographers to record parties, classes, suit- casing and jobs, we struggled with themes — which, after a day’s thought, were judged either trite or awful. It wasn’t until we stopped struggling that we realized we had our theme. And it sound- ed better every day. While the theme was difficult, story ideas were not. They came by the hundreds, but we gradually limited them to a few. In order to cover the year accurately, we knew we had to come up with a mixture of personal and general stories. We searched for interesting personalities and found sever- al, including a legless freshman and a 5-feet- tall female ROTC member who couldn’t ac- cept defeat. Common lifestyles were easy to find. Suit- casing, the nightlife and housing were a bond between all students. Major news stories were practically hand- ed to us. President Dero Downing unexpect- edly resigned, perhaps the biggest story of the year. The presidential selection commit- tee, besieged by rumors of political intrigue, fumbled its way to find a president by May 1s; While the stories came easy, finding the best ways to present them did not. Much thought went into story angles, picture ideas and layout. The academics and administration section was the first to undergo a major change. To spark student interest, candid photographs were added; to give equal coverage to each administrator, mug shots were taken; for better organization, administrators were di- vided into sections. Throughout the book, clean layouts, shorter stories and larger pictures were de- signed to make reading easier. Picture sto- ries, such as the ones about jogging and Sigma Nu tubing, were also added. Each page was the result of a team effort, and the team was composed of more than Talisman staff members. The registrar’s and student affairs offices were patient with us, looking up answers to everything from which dorm had the most open houses to which student had the high- est grade-point average. Dr. Charles Anderson, media services di- rector, helped the clubs section achieve con- tinuity by allowing us to use the television studios for group pictures. Herald staff writers and freelance writers and photographers combined to give us the help we needed. continued on back endsheet In Lifestyles: Opening Student Life Academics Organizations Classes Copyright 1979 by the Office of University Publications, Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green, Kentucky, 42101 Fi 2 Li ma el Verdes REN Bi aS, — Mark Lyons THE HOMECOMING PARADE wasn’t just for students. Cladice and Claud Tarison watch the festivities from their front porch on Center Street. The couple has lived in the house since 1924, and their children went to Western. Haus before the first football game, Western’s course was changed. While students were getting ready to go to the game Sept. 9, President Dero Downing tearfully resigned at a regents meeting. But the game went on. And so did the university as the football team became the topic of conversation. The season was expected to be humdrum, but the team won the Ohio Valley Conference and hoped to go to a bowl. But they didn’t. And life went on. a. “es BO! — David Frank THE AFTERNOON SUN and a 14-6 victory over Murray warm coach Jimmy Feix and his team. The Nov. 18 game gave Western first place in the Ohio Valley Confer- ence, but the victory was short-lived because Western was not invited to the National Collegiate Athletic Association tournament. FLAGS of Kentucky, the United States and Western frame Dero Downing in the regents conference room in Wetherby Administration Building. Downing resigned as president Sept. 9 and was on sabbatical in the spring. 4 i Opening — Mark Lyons White the regents searched for a new the championship game against Eastern, a president, and Downing prepared for his foul was called — seconds after the final spring sabbatical, basketball season got buzzer sounded. The referees and timer had underway. not heard the buzzer and awarded the free With a new coach, the men’s team was throws to Eastern. expected to do well. They were not expected They won. to be “robbed’”’ of the OVC championship. In But life went on. Bee ae erie GS ae ei lan oes PORE Tae en ore ene iz = snp acs abate lie tos £ a5 y +m Be ajietleni ananclnnia serene Opening CN SZ ee eee Opening | eae for Downing’s resignation, the academic and administrative world stayed much the same. Some freshmen and sophomores got a surprise when they found that graduation requirements had been changed. At the end of last year, the regents slipped in an increase in the number of upper-level courses, sending some students into a frenzy. And some administrators joined the frenzied race for the presidency. But they lost. And classes still went on. — Bob Skipper WHILE A DOG scratches its fleas, Dr. Edward DiBella, a part-time student and a retired professor, concentrates on the lecture in Dr. Ronald Veenker’s Hebrew 383 class. The class met outside Gordon Wilson Hall to celebrate the warm spring day. DiBella used to teach sociology. “JESUS and the 12 Disciples” pose for a photographer after a re-enactment of the Last Supper at First Baptist Church. Deacons of the church portrayed the characters, and eight of the 13 were university staff members. After the supper, a portrait was taken to hang in the church. ‘ae A — David Frank A LONG CORD snakes around the Diddle Arena floor as William Bast replaces = ; vacuum bags on his sander while refinishing the floor early in the fall semester. Bast : works for the Cincinnati Floor Co., which installed the original floor in 1964. — Mark Lyons 9 Opening Fae nimi __ va eae eae a aka In the section: BRO. JIMMY GENTRY — a stu- 26 dent who dares to be different ... and a minister. SAM EARLY — a legless freshman who startles passers-by and insists he isn’t handicapped. GAYLE WATKINS — a full-time student, wife and mother who hopes to become a full-time Olympic cham- pion. KAREN MARTIN — a five-feet tall woman who is “one of the guys” in an air assault school. THE NIGHTLIFE — from dusk to dawn, life doesn’t fade on or off cam- pus. JOGGING — a popular exercise 64 that’s becoming a popular sport. IN HER SECOND attempt at a 10-mile road march, Ka- ren Martin crosses the finish line. The Louisville junior completed the road march and graduated from the Air Assault School in Fort Campbell in April. A ROTC student, Miss Martin failed in her first attempt. (See page 44) — Judy Watson Student Life Student life. It’s full of lifestyles. From the very basics of life in a dorm to life as a suitcaser, lifestyles are as varied as a handicapped student or a combination mother wife student track star. Many styles are shared in common. Who at Western hasn’t pondered religious questions, at least heard of Homecoming or talked about concerts? But some lifestyles are special stories that only special people can tell. Either way, they all have life. And they all have style. 13 Student Life i ee ee eee ee ee Ses enel 14 School Opening Getting admitted to Western is a cinch. There are only two require- ments — a mind of sorts and money. But registering, moving into the dorm and finding a place to park will cause the average student to forfeit both requirements. Preregistration is not just a convenience, it’s a lifesaver for incom- ing freshmen. No long lines in Diddle Arena to worry about, no danger of getting only four of the 18 hours you want, three of which are an “‘Introduc- tion to .. .” course that has nothing to do with your degree program. And the other hour is an archery class taught by someone recommended by some- one who goes to your church in Glasgow. As a second-semester freshman, register- ing in Diddle Arena is like driving down the By-Pass with your eyes closed. It is best to go with someone who knows all the tricky turns and understands the signs. First they tell you to register at 10:46 a.m. Thursday, and when you arrive at 10:50 the next group of people with names that start with the next letter is waiting in line. Warning: Registration is one thing at school that starts on time. To go through all the processing at regis- tration, one needs at least an unlimited checking account or a wife going into labor. Only people you don’t know get scholar- ships. Follow the signs, fill out the forms and don’t take advice from other freshmen and you will get through registration, unless you forget your car registration. Should you forget that, it is highly unlike- ly that you will ever make it through school. If you decide to go ahead and park your car on campus without a sticker, go ahead and meet the people down at public safety. You'll be seeing them often. For sophomores, registration is very sat- isfying. It’s almost fun knowing where to go and who to pay. But the thrill leaves with the coming of the junior year. Trying to fill out the punched cards is easier than driving blind, but if you forget your car registration again, you needn’t worry about that. Public safety will own your ’64 Valiant. Seniors get the royal treatment. They don’t care how much it costs, they just If you can make it through registration, moving in and parking, the rest is uphill register first and get out. For girls, living in a dorm means meeting lots of other girls and trading clothes with them, but for guys it’s not that way at all. The neighbors seem to play music you don’t like much louder than you can stand. They also stay up late and throw rotten fruit at your door or pull fire alarms, which is even worse than being awakened by the deafening sound of an apple smashing into your door, The best place to study is in the stair- wells. If you have to scream, nobody will ever know. Except the other people study- ing in the stairwells. It’s no secret. Hot water is available in the showers only before you get up. Sheet exchanges take place only on nights when it is impossible to participate. Dorm living is not all bad. Potential crimi- nals will find it a seasoning time for lengthy prison terms. Comparisons between prisons and dorms are not all that farfetched. The visiting hours are much the same and the rooms are similar. But at least elevators don’t get stuck in prisons. When your parents finally mail your car registration to you, it’s time to collect your diploma. On the eve of graduation you go out and get inebriated with several undergraduate friends who swear they'll have you back before graduation in the morning. They wheel your car into the parking lot long before starting time, only to discover that all the parking spaces are filled. You sense something is wrong while lying face down on the back seat of your car. They find a parking space near your church in Glasgow and you end up walking to the ceremony. 2 All too sober from the long, wet trek, you wander into Diddle Arena an hour late for graduation, which has been moved inside because of the rain. The emcee calls a name that starts with a letter five letters after your name. Warning: Graduation is another thing at school that starts on time. — David Whitaker (|) 15 School Opening 16 Housing Whether it be in dorms or apartments, students search for plenty of ... [LOV7UnDE] ee: and bottles lie in the floor along with a few shirts and pants, an empty keg, cigarette butts and leftover Fritos. “Excuse the mess,” the resident says to the reporter. ‘‘We had a pretty wild party yesterday.” The resident of this duplex apartment on Kentucky Street, Ben Zike, lives there with two — Harold Sinclair RULES were made to be broken, and some Keen Hall residents enjoy an “‘illegal’’ party in the dorm. Alcoholic beverages are not permitted on campus, but some students find their way around the rule. | — Harold Sinclair A SPLINTERED DOOR and cracked wallpaper are part of Belinda Bell’s one-room apartment. The Louisville soph- omore said she’s lived in the Center Street apartment for two years. She pays $50 a month. other hometown buddies, Scott Wilson and Jeff Stegner. The Louisville natives’ apartment is prob- ably not that much different from some of the other off-campus apartments where students live, study, party and get away from dorm life. “TI couldn’t take dorm living any longer,” Zike said. “I got tired of living in one small room.”’ He lived in Poland Hall for two years. Zike said the main disadvantage of apart- ment living is rent. He and his roommates pay $225 monthly with utilities included. “Our landlord is a jerk, really lazy,” he said. “I called him three times about our roof leak- ing and ended up fixing it myself, and he didn’t pick up the garbage for a month.” The three roommates said they alternate doing the dishes and cleaning the apartment. Most of the furniture they have was brought from home. Zike sleeps on box springs and a mattress, which lie in the floor. “‘We were wrestling one night and the bed frame broke, but I don’t mind the floor,’’ he said. Zike said the apartment was expensive for its quality, but that they had decided to get an apartment a few weeks before school and had to take what they could find. “It’s a dump. I’ll never live in a place like this again,” he said. Except for the sorority paddles hanging on the wall and a few textbooks lying around, it would be hard to tell that three coeds live in the apartment. The Rock Creek Drive duplex shared by Sara Westfall, Jane Goodin and Sandy Dorroh is decorated with healthy plants, stylish furni- ture and a colorful feminine touch. In looking for an apartment, Ms. Westfall, a Versailles senior, said they tried to find a place not too far from campus and one “‘that had enough room for all our stuff.” The two-bedroom duplex costs the sorority sisters $225 a month. Utilities and telephone are not included, but the residents agree it’s continued on page 18 COUPLES decorate the lobby of Central Hall after a Sunday night open house. The number of possible open houses was increased to 24 per semester, but Bemis Law- rence and East halls had the most with 20. 3 S 8 G s G 3 a 3 8 = 18 Housing [LOV7ENE) SHAGGE con worth it. Ms. Goodin, a Lebanon junior, said she The three roommates say they discuss meals “T study better out here,”’ Ms. Westfall said. wished the apartment were closer to campus and what food to buy at the beginning of the ‘“‘My grades have definitely improved.” so that they wouldn’t have to worry about week and take turns cooking everything from She added that she liked the freedom of finding a parking space on campus in the morn- hamburgers to lasagna. having male guests over and not being ing. Their apartment stays neat “because every- | cramped in one room, as she was while living in “And sometimes it’s scary when you are body picks up after themselves,” Ms. Westfall the dorm for three years. here by yourself,” she said. said. — Harold Sinclair RELAXING on a waterbed, Sherree Tipton and Steve Krig- baum take time out from fall semester finals week. The two were at her apartment. _ lark Tucker WHILE HIS WIFE relaxes, Dwight Harbin completes a pro- ject for class in their Elm Street apartment. Harbin and his wife, Wendy, said they planned to move soon to Sweden to do missionary work. — Harold Sinclair A c : : ‘ff 4 f GREASE SPLATTERS and Vince Williams winces after he ; CALL, waa }-pfoug ‘Sa of Jf put chicken in a frying pan while the grease was too hot. The ; 2 Py TL 9s OG by os’ AL f {f } mass communications major lived in an apartment just off LIMA LL SOF Lf, LLL IDA LS LIS GF PARAL LT A IES Center Street. ; FS WALL LPP Poke i i ia oe For married students, finding apartments near campus can be a real challenge, as Mohammad and Mehvash Boca found. The Bocas were on a waiting list for one of the four on-campus married student apart- ments for almost two years before they got one in the basement of South Hall. Horace Shrader, housing director, said that the university has two apartments in South Hall and two in West Hall that are available for married students. The university has also acquired several oth- er apartments surrounding the campus, Shrader said. ‘ — Harold Sinclair He said that the lack of funds was the major reason there was not more university married housing. Bowling Green has more apartments avail- able in the community for married students than most other state schools, Shrader said. The Bocas say they like their two-bedroom, $95 a month apartment because it’s cheaper than the one-bedroom apartment they had lived in before. Boca, a fifth-year business major from Iran, said he liked being close to classes and the libraries and not having to worry about driving to class. Noise from 200 upstairs neighbors has not been a problem, Boca said. ‘‘The only time its really noisy is at the first of the year,” he said. The Bocas have a two-year-old son, Ali, and they often socialize with other married stu- dents on campus. Their neighbors across the hall have children and a swing set outside the dorm, where Ali sometimes plays. “Ali likes having all the girls’ attention,”’ his father said. ““They’ve even offered to babysit for him.” When Sandy and Greg Kemper began looking for an apartment before they were married 214 years ago, they began to realize the shortage of married student housing close to campus. Mrs. Kemper, a sophomore business admin- istration major, needed to be in walking dis- tance of campus since her husband drove to work. “We couldn’t find a place fit to live in,’’ she said. “It was hard to find a place without holes in the walls or bugs.” The Kempers finally found a one-bedroom apartment in a new complex near campus. And they ended up finding a job as well — Sandy and Greg are resident managers at West Q Apartments on Fourth and Clay Streets. As resident managers, the Kempers take care of the grounds and do odds and ends, such as cleaning snow off the sidewalks. The Kempers get their rent and utilities free for being resident managers. Their cozy apartment is decorated in rusts, browns and earthy colors with lots of plants, pictures and brightly colored afghans and pil- lows in the living room. Mrs. Kemper said they received several of the furnishings as wedding gifts, but most of the furniture came from family. A refinished whiskey barrel serves as a small table in the living room. ‘‘Someone left it in the front yard o f the apartment, so we decided to use it,” Mrs. Kemper said. She said the only thing bad about their continued on page 20 SURROUNDED BY TILE, Magsoob Ahmed Choudry shaves in the third floor restroom of Pearce-Ford Tower. Choudry is a graduate student from Pakistan. 19 Housing 20 Housing LLUOWIME) SDAGE con apartment was that it was getting crowded as they accumulated more items and that they had to leave their cat at home, since no pets are allowed. She said it bothered her that some college students had to live in apartments that are “filthy,” like the ones they first looked at. “T had almost decided to live in the dorm and Greg live at home before we found this one,” she said. For freshmen and sophomores dorm life is saan eran | | their only choice — unless they have a good excuse. John Osborne, a housing official who often handles requests for exemptions from on-cam- pus housing, said that 14.6 percent of the freshmen and sophomore classes have been granted exemptions and are living off campus. Students commuting or living with parents and relatives may be exempt but the only oth- er reasons for exemption are situations that are “‘out of the ordinary,”’ he said. Often students request exemptions because — Harold Sinclair of special medical reasons. ‘‘The reasons range from psychological problems to handicapped problems, where students believe they have better facilities off campus,” Osborne said. Students may also be exempt for financial reasons if they can show that living off campus with relatives would be more economical. George Bachert, a Fern Creek sophomore, lived in an apartment his freshman year after requesting to live off campus for financial rea- sons. “I thought it would be cheaper living in an apartment with my brother,” Bachert said. He moved back into Poland Hall this year because he found the dorm was less expensive. Osborne said some students have asked to be exempt because they “‘felt they couldn’t study in a residence hall.” “If you gave everyone an exemption for this, we would no longer have an on-campus policy,” he said. Osborne said they review each request on an individual basis and try to take everything into consideration. A sophomore, who asked not to be identi- fied, said she wrote a note saying she was going to be living at home, when she was actu- ally living in an off-campus apartment with two other sophomores. “My father signed the note because he thought I was mature enough to have my own apartment,” she said. For the remaining 4,344 students living in campus residence halls, the year was fairly typical with sharing one-room homes, commu- nity bathrooms and friendships with a variety of neighbors. But the new closed-door policy may have added some zest to open house visitation. However, Sharon Dyrsen, coordinator of hall programming, said participation decreased slightly, but she attributed this to th e fact that there are now more open houses allowed by the university, with the maximum being 24. In the fall, each dorm conducted a survey asking residents the number of open houses they wanted. The housing office took the total number voted on in each dorm and then divid- ed this by the number of residents in that dorm — which means that it would take a 100 per- cent vote to get the maximum 24 open houses approved. Ms. Dyrsen said that she believed the open houses were more relaxed now and “‘less of a hassle.”’ The doors can be locked with the new policy. The closed-door policy has made the job easier for resident assistants, too. ‘“‘All we do now is make sure the guests are checked in and A FLAG serves as a tablecloth for Phil Evans, Jenny Connerly and Roger Hinkle. Evans cooked steak, baked potatoes and corn for the dinner during an open house at Keen Hall. He and Hinkle were roommates. out,’ Randy Sallye, a Barnes-Campbell RA, said. Sallye said that more students used open houses during the fall, probably because of the football season. Stu Wilson, a Poland Hall resident assist, said he thought that participation had not changed that much with the new policy. He said that most of the men used the open houses to “‘cook meals, watch television and just spend some time with their girlfriends.” Sallye said that Barnes usually had an aver- age of 30 to 40 guests during open house. He said he thought open houses were good be- cause “sometimes you just don’t feel like going out and spending a lot of money.” — Laura Phillips — Harold Sinclair BOWLING GREEN apartment dwellings run the gamut from well-kept to obviously run-down. This Kentucky Street apartment is similar to several surrounding campus. — Harold Sinclair A SMALL DANCE FLOOR was created during a Keen Hall open house for Carl Brazley, a Louisville junior, Rhonda Taylor, a Columbia junior, and Sharyn Cole, a Nashville sophomore. They were in Brazley’s room. 21 Housing Miass exodus Photo illustration by Mark Lyons uitcases packed, laundry bags bulging, textbooks conveniently left behind, the weekly exodus beings. By midafternoon Friday the once-bustling campus seems almost lifeless. And Western’s self-made reputation as a “suitcase school” remains indisputable. On Sunday students flock back; some early, to search out those forgotten textbooks. Others postpone their return for as long as possible. Why do so many students travel home weekend after weekend? The most obvious answer lies in the location of the school. A large percentage of students live within a 100-mile radius of Bowling Green and think nothing of frequently making the trip home. To visit friends, to see family, to work and to escape from studies are other common reasons for suitcasing. Lynn Cowan, an Elizabethtown junior, said she goes home every weekend. “I work at a radio station, so I’ve never stayed here,”’ she said. Miss Cowan said the 70-mile drive to Elizabethtown ‘“‘doesn’t bother me.’’ She said she likes to visit with friends when she gets home. The rising cost of gasoline has not caused Miss Cowan to consider giving up her weekly trip. ‘I don’t know for sure, but I’ll probably still go home if I have to work,” she said. Another student who travels home every weekend to work is Billy Blincoe, an Owensboro freshman. Blincoe said he has worked at a furniture store in Owensboro “‘since I was a little kid.” ““Gas prices bother me,”’ he said. “But the money I make at work is more than it costs me to buy gas.” Blincoe said he also goes home to see his girlfriend. “I never stay here,” he said. ‘‘Even in bad weather I always seem to make it.” For some students, the money squeeze threatens their weekly suitcase-itis. “If gas prices continue to go up, I’ll have to stay here most weekends next semester,” Teresa Vincent said. Miss Vincent, a junior nursing major from Louisville, said she drives home every other weekend. Some students have given up suitcasing to enjoy the “good life’? on campus. Linda Karnes, a Columbia freshman, is a former suitcaser. She said that every Friday, she would pack up and head down the Cumberland Parkway to Columbia. “I would go home to see my friends,” she said. “I would go to Lindsey (Lindsey Wilson College) ballgames and to the Jaycees’ disco dances. “‘But then I made more new friends down here and | only go home once every three or four weeks now,’ Miss Karnes said. “There are about six of us that get together at their apartments,’’ she said. “We have parties, cook supper, watch TV and play cards.” Jennifer Sanders is another former suitcaser. The Elizabethtown sophomore said she has been home “‘only three times this semester.” “T used to go home every weekend,” she said. ‘‘But I stopped because | became a little sister for Pi Kappa Alpha.” Miss Sanders said she suitcased ‘‘because I didn’t have anything to do here. There | could go out with friends.” There are also students who consider themselves permanent suitcasers. They call themselves commuters. Budgeting their time to include traveling is one problem experienced by commuters. Robert Carter, a Glasgow freshman, said he has to leave home before 8 a.m. although his first class is not until 9:10. He said he makes the trip ‘nine days every two weeks — I usually have every other Friday off.” Carter rides from Glasgow with two friends, Terry and Jerry Hatchett, who are also students. Carter said he helps pay for the gas “because I would feel guilty if | didn’t. They didn’t want me to at first.” Carter said he commutes because ‘“‘when | started school | had a job on a newspaper in Glasgow and | had to get back over there at night.” The biggest problem, he said, is having to stay late on campus for field trips and assignments for photography class. He said he usually gets home by 2 p.m. In his freshman year, Chuck Powell of Franklin has commuted, lived in an off- campus apartment and moved into a dorm. Powell said he used to commute every day, but then he decided to get an apartment so he would have more privacy and ‘‘to get out of Franklin.” Powell moved into Pearce-Ford Tower for the spring semester. “I could save money and | was tired of getting up early and driving. “Parking places were a very big reason for my decision. It was just a big hassle having to hunt for one every day.” Powell said he now feels “more like a part of the campus.” He said he has joined several clubs and ‘‘now I don’t have to keep going back and forth to meetings.” Powell said he goes home ‘“‘very sporadically. It might be three times a week or once a month.” He said Western is definitely a place for suitcasers. — Margaret Shirley [| 24 Religion t’s Sunday morning. Scattered jog- gers trudge up the Hill in search of physical fitness. Some students climb to the third floor of the Down- ing University Center in search of a quiet place to study. Other students scurry to their Hondas or Chevrolets en route to Sunday school, Mass or a late-morning wor- ship service at the church of their choice. At least 24 religions are represented in the student body, according to students’ biographi- cal information listed in their registration pack- ets. More than 4,000 didn’t answer the inquiry, and 868 claimed not to be affiliated with any denomination. Beliefs ranged from Assembly of God to Baptist (with 3,265) to Jehovah’s Witnesses to Quaker. Many students admit that the freedom they’ve experienced at college allowed them to reaffirm, deny or alter their beliefs. Some of them answered questions about how their reli- gious beliefs have been affected and chal- lenged on a campus in what is often described as the buckle on the Bible belt. Luke Matthews, a PK or preacher’s kid, said his parents never pressured or forced him to attend church, but his first year away from home gave him a chance to ponder his beliefs. “‘Nothing’s really changed,”’ the Utica native said. “I was able to find a church here that I liked.” But he visits other churches so he won’t get stuck in a ritual rut. “Church is just not a place to go where the preacher tells you you’re a sinner,” the Baptist said. ‘It’s a place to learn how God can use your life. “Since I’ve been away my relationship to God has gotten better. ““At home I was 50 yards from the church. Here I’m not, but I’m closer to God.” Senior Mimi Ferguson’s attitude and pur- pose in life has changed drastically since she came to Western. She reflects on her freshman and sophomore years when God took a back- tag — David Frank AFTER a re-enactment of the Last Supper at First Baptist Church, Mary Elizabeth Rascoe decides she doesn’t like her father’s makeup job. Bobby Rascoe, university staff mem- ber, played Jesus, and eight other faculty members played roles in the supper. seat to Greek parties and an education for the career-minded feminist. She remembers looking through a fraternity house window next door to a religious center where a group of college students were wor- shiping in prayer and song. She had wondered aloud why that put smiles on their faces. Later, she would spend several evenings a week at the Maranatha Center. “I don’t base my belief in Maranatha, but in Jesus,” she said. “My faith is not in an organization. “T can’t imagine how I ever lived without the Lord,” the blonde said. ‘‘Christ is not a crutch. Being a Christian allows me to be real and not a hypocrite.” According to the computer center, there are 11 Jews at Western, quite a minority out of 13,024 students. They are at least 50 miles from a synagogue, and several of them don’t have cars. That, however, is not a stumbling block in their faith. Martin Ostrofsky, a folk studies graduate student, said he is ‘‘a middle of the road Jew,” a cross between a Jew and a Catholic. “Tm not non-religious, but I didn’t go to synagogue when I was at home where there were many,” the Brooklyn, N.Y., native said. “Tf there is one God, I can pray for him in a Protestant or Catholic church.” Debra Klompus, another Jewish student, said the lack of a local synagogue isn’t a prob- lem. “When we were young we learned that a good Jew follows God and his commandments in his heart.” But respect for her religion is almost non- existent here, the Madisonville native said. “They react like I have a disease,” she said. “But some are really interested and ask ques- tions about our holidays or what I think about Jesus Christ. “Jews have red blood just like everyone else. We have the same insides. This just comes from an ignorance of Jewish belief. Jews are not looking for pity. We just want to accept them and have them accept us.” International students also represent sundry beliefs, several unique to southern Kentucky. But many of them are at home in the Bible belt because they are Christian, Raymond Lui, in- ternational student adviser, said. “The Moslems from the Middle East have the most problems,” Lui said. ““Some of them drive to Louisville or Nashville for worship. “The Spanish-speaking students are Catho- lic so they have no problems finding a Catholic church in Bowling Green,” Lui said. “The Iran- ians have their own religious rituals at some- one’s home.” Finally, a common belief is that of atheists, who worship no God. But their belief, too, is a religion; it’s just different. A student and university staff member who asked not to be identified, said his atheism evolved after he came to Western. “I was raised a Catholic and for four years went to church six days a week. I eventually stopped going and moved toward not believing in God. “T don’t know the reason,”’ he continued. “T’m interested in astronomy and science and | think that helped me make my decision. | just can’t accept the beginning (creation) doctrines of Christians. I can accept the teaching of Christ and his philosophy.” But he doesn’t advertise his religious beliefs. “It makes people nervous and it tends to make them think I’m not moral or I don’t have ethical values. Some start to feel sorry for me. “But I believe it’s wrong to hurt someone or steal,’’ he said. “I agree with most of the teach- ing in the Bible even, but I believe in a religion of Man. I don’t believe in God.” — Connie Holman [| HASH BROWNS and bacon, lettuce and tomato sand- wiches are lunch for students Bill Rector and Laura Mat- tingly at the Wesley Foundation. The foundation offers lunch every weekday for $1. Cooks and helpers are stu- dents who volunteer their time. — Mark Tucker A fountain of faiths MARANATHA members say they live for one thing: to serve Jesus. Donna Clark raises her hand in praise during: one of the Maranatha meetings. Bere PERS anny — Scott Robinson ..and.a young man Shall lead them | naan i te Nate $M ae BOR NORE aes my mene NNER RO | Photos and story by David Frank The voice rolls through the little brick church, filling 30 pairs of ears, bouncing off the wood- en floors and pews. The voice is soft yet force- ful. It sounds like a big man’s voice, a practiced preacher’s voice. But follow the voice to its source and one finds Brother Jimmy Gentry, 22, hands in flight, his train of thought at full throttle. He is telling his congregation that when he was 12 years old his father died, and God called him. Kids on the front row sit quietly, their eyes never leaving his. They’re hearing preaching like they have never heard it before. Then a baby cries and Brother Jimmy pauses for several seconds, silent. There was a time at Emmanuel Baptist Chapel when babies always cried during his sermons. But now the congregation knows what he thinks about it, and the mother scoops the child up and carries him out. The congregation scarcely fills the 20 pews, and the little building almost seems empty. But the congregation is growing as the Sunday School attendance sign hanging behind the pul- pit testifies: attendance a year ago, 21; atten- dance last Sunday, 43; attendance today, 54. Jimmy Gentry has made a difference in Em- manuel Baptist Chapel, 901 W. Main St., since his arrival two years ago. The Cadiz senior says BRO. JIMMY GENTRY baptizes Dale Kessinger, who was one of three children baptized at Emmanuel Baptist Church that fall day. he is performing a lifelong desire. Gentry was reared in a ‘‘very beautiful Christian home”’ in Cadiz, and while most chil- dren his age were playing hopscotch, house, red rover or cowboys and Indians, he was playing church. “As a child I can remember, being by myself back in my bedroom, that I pretended we were in church and would have the songs and the prayers. And I can remember literally preach- ing sermons,” Gentry said. But by high school he had gotten away from preaching because he was ‘‘wanting to have a good time. | think that was what it was all about.” He played in the high school band and be- came a disc jockey at the local radio station, and since Cadiz isn’t very big, it wasn’t long before his name was well known. “They know you even though they don’t know you,” he said. Gentry’s uncle, a Trigg County pastor, even asked him to come and lead his church’s ser- vice. “T just talked about faith. I didn’t preach. After it was over I thought I would be slick and offer an invitation for all those who wanted to become Christians to come forward,” Gentry said. “IT wasn’t expecting anything to happen,” he said. “I just did it as a formality, and five BEFORE being baptized, Penny Lake professes her faith to Gentry while music minister Tommy Katzman leads the congregation in song. Dale Kessinger waits his turn. Be __tttt eee ree people came walking down the aisle. It really bothered me a lot; I didn’t know how to inter- pret it.” His radio job and his membership in the high school band reflect Gentry’s musical inclina- tion. He was asked to lead the choir in his own church, and as a result, he got back in contact with the ministry. It was also a trying time, for he was a senior in high school and was going to continued on page 29 USING HIS HANDS expressively, Gentry delivers an- other sermon to the congregation. Gentry prepares two sermons a week — for Sunday morning and evening. 27 Bro. Jimmy Gentry ho man cometh unto the Father, but by Me. youns mabd.. have to make some decisions upon graduation. “All of a sudden it became a struggle be- cause I had thought about going into broadcast engineering, thought about going into law, and then I thought about going into teaching also,” he said. “T realized that I was a senior in high school and was going to be in college next year and it was time to start finding out what I was going to do with myself.” Gentry was convinced by several friends and his minister to stay in the church. He became a supp ly preacher for Trigg County, which meant he would preach wherever he was need- ed. He had also begun taking classes at Murray State, but after one semester, he transferred to Western. He took a job during that summer as the youth minister at Edgewood Baptist Church in Hopkinsville. “For the first time, I had gotten my feet wet as a minister,” he said. “‘I knew what it was like -by myself. I didn’t have anybody to run to. It was just me.”’ When he returned to school in Bowling Green he was approached by Dr. Rollin Bur- hans, pastor of the Bowling Green First Baptist Church, and Di ck Bridges, associate pastor, several times in reference to a ministry avail- able at the Emmanuel Baptist Chapel, a First Baptist mission church. In November 1976, he accepted the job. “I knew the situation was not good there, and I really got scared,” Gentry said. “It had 38 members and it was split 38 ways and I made it split 39 ways.” At his first sermon he was confronted with about 40 faces, half of which belonged to some of his college friends who had come to encour- age him. HOUSECALLS to 91-year-old Era Johnson are one of Gentry’s favorite times, he said. He prays with her at home because she can’t get to the church. “It was depressing that first Sunday. I won- dered if I could do it,”’ Gentry said. “Some of them wondered if they could trust a 20-year- old pastor.” For the first four months, Gentry was consis. tently getting about 15 people. Twice he got 11, and he was at the point of quitting. He cried when he told Dr. Burhans about it, but the older pastor gave him a pep talk that bolstered Gentry’s confidence. The church’s atmosphere improved. There were still small numbers, but his work became more enjoyable and the numbers no longer bothered him. “Preaching gives me a sense of personal satisfaction, but during the two years as a pas- tor I have discovered there are two things you’ve just got to do — prepare two sermons a week — and sometimes it becomes a burden. I just don’t have time to write the sermons being a full-time student,” he said. But he gets help from volunteers, including two students: Tommy Katzman, the music min- ister and a Bowling Green senior; and organist Sherry Gardner, a Louisville junior and Gen- try’s girlfriend. “Youth is what Emmanuel needs,” he said. “They need somebody who’s excited, some- body who’s fired up, somebody who really believes in what they’re doing and I believe in what I’m doing. “Some of the things that I do with those people make them think that I am just a little bitty kid, but then there are times that they look at me as a respectable adult.” “Jimmy is awful good, but I think years will do him better,” admitted Sidney Gregory, a member of Emmanuel since its establishment in 1955. “He’s an awfully good minister, never sees a stranger.” Gentry prides himself with visiting people who can’t get to church, and he hopes his congregation will pick up his ways. DURING A PRAYER meeting at Gentry’s house, Gentry and Richard Smith go over a section of the Bible which was being discussed that evening. “The goal I want to see is for Emmanuel people to walk up to somebody in a tactful way — and I don’t mean just come out and say, ‘Are ye saved? Are ye going to hell?’ — but in a genuine, tactful way, be able to say to someone ‘What’s the Lord doing in your life? I want to share with you what he’s doing in my | life.’ I really think that Christ expects Chris- | tians to witness, but I believe he expects us to use tact in doing it.” Gentry said in November that he expected to graduate in May and enroll in Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville. But he said he hopes to preach at Emmanuel on the weekends. “Things are just now happening at Em- manuel,”’ he said. “‘I don’t feel I need to leave yet.” LJ NOAH and the flood are discussed by Gentry and his Sunday School class. The students in his class range from 12 to 20 years old. FIVE-YEAR-OLD Ear! Smith gets a handshake and a few words from Gentry after a Sunday morning service. Gentry said one of his primary goals is getting to know the people at Emmanuel. 29 Bro. Jimmy Gentry own. talk | Photo illustration by Mark Tucker ea t’s a strange love affair. Bowling Green can’t live without Western, and Western can’t live without Bowling Green. College trade is a boost to the town. But bad checks are a problem. And some students don’t like the reception of the townspeo- © ple, although others say Bowling Green is a friendly, small south- ern town. Bowling Green has “‘a real sense of southern hospitality,’’ Mary Ann Forbes, an Edmonton sophomore, said. Linda Skaggs, a Shepherdsville senior, said, ‘Most of the mer- chants are pretty eager to serve college students since the col- lege is pretty much the mainstay of Bowling Green.” But for all the good, there’s also the bad. “A lot of people, especially in more expensive olaces: aren't too nice and trustful,”” Martha Zettlemoyer, a Scottsville fone: more, said. = She said clerks don’t want to wait on students who are nat pas fashionably dressed. “They resent you because yeu re not their. — kind of clientele.” Bad ‘checks have caused: many a businessman to be wary of students. “I haven’t been able to cash a check,” Miss Zettlemoyer said. “I can’t cash a valid payroll check.” Daryl Hancock, a Hopkinsville senior, said a department store refused to cash his check because he didn’t live within 50 miles = of Bowling Green. He left the merchandise on the counter. But students definitely help business. Wendy’s, a fast-food restaurant, experiences a 40 percent drop in business when the university is not in session, according to ee employee Bonnie Clark. Sa head Houchen’s Market in the Plaza Shopping Center has a sinall reduction in business according to a store employee. = Although there’s some entertainment on campus with the Cen- Sa ter Theater and the Downing University Center recreation floor, some students try to find things to do in town. The Parakeet, a local restaurant, has several student custom- © ers, according to manager Chuck Witt. Boge The town has an “‘amazing”’ amount of “nice” restaurants, according to Melanie Greer, a Louisville sophomore. But Charlie Peden, a Glasgow junior, said, ‘There are a lot of really nice restaurants where you don’t get your money’s worth.” At the opposite end of the scale, there are cheaper restaurants. which are noted for their good quality food. Mary’s a home-style restaurant, is one such place, Peden said. “It’s a place where you get good home-cooked food,” he said. “But you wouldn’t want to take a date there.”’ After eating, there’s little place to go. Part of the problem is that the legal drinking age is 21, according to Eric Sack, a Cipcin: nati sophomore. For those who want to wander farther from campus, Nashville is a popular entertainment center. Nashville people are “much more receptive, more helpful,” according to Miss Zettlemoyer. “You don’t have a place to go (in Bowling Green),” Miss Greer said. “I’ve learned that in Bowling Green.” She said a dinner theater would improve the town’s cultural life. . But Sack said Bowling Green is ‘‘a pretty little town that’s kept up nice.” He said he’s learned that it’s different from his first impression of a rural small town surrounded by farmland. But even though Bowling Green is a nice place, Miss Greer said ' she wouldn’t want to live here. “That’s no reflection on Bowling ; Green,” she said. “I like a college town. It gives the town a lot of spice.” - u Neier eileen ng LL A - Peet innae Seed — Jeff Howerton [| TAILLIGHTS STREAKING, cars wind around Bowling Green’s By-Pass. The road, which is within walking distance of campus, is chockfull of grocery stores, pizza parlors, hamburger chains, small shopping centers and gas stations. 32 Sam Early Hardly handicapped... Ez A SUM fee ape be 3AM Photos by Ron Hoskins Sam Early and Newtie Fane met six years ago at a summer camp. They didn’t know then that during several September days in 1978, they would talk to a reporter and a photographer about their lives and love. Here is Sam’s story: When Sam Early’s hands are soiled it means he’s been walking. Dozens of people on the Hill have taken a second look or stared as the legless freshman walked on his hands at registration or through the university cen- ter cafeteria. But Sam is at home with the curious glances. He can even joke and chuckle about the times he’s startled people. Living without legs has not been a stop sign or roadblock for Sam. Instead, his life is centered ona girlfriend, homework and adjusting to college life. Sam is one of seven children of a truck driver and nurse who live on a small farm in Mount Victory (near Somerset). He was born with his legs crossed and learned to walk on his hands. Six years ago, surgery freed him of almost useless legs, but it required almost two years in the hospital, he said. “I’m a lot better off without the legs,’’ the blue- eyed 18-year-old said. ‘“They were more and more in the way, and I get around a lot better without them.” Artificial legs, which weigh about 50 pounds, slow him down, he said. They are difficult to use on continued on page 35 ON THE SEVENTH FLOOR of Cravens Library, Sam talks to Rebecca Moore, his library science teacher. The class was studying government docu- ments that day. F well || ON HIS WAY to pick up his girlfriend, Sam dodges and splashes through puddles on a soggy September day. MOVED from their regular classroom to the periodical floor of Helm Library, Sam and Butch Fain complete an in- class assignment using periodicals. Sam Early Sam Early A ROW OF HATS in a local department store proves irresistable to Newtie, who loves hats. A hat several sizes too large amuses Sam, but he vetoed her choice. He said he doesn’t like her to wear hats. A LOWERED PHONE makes it easier for Sam to talk to Newtie. The shelves and clothes rack in the closet were lowered, and a door mirror was added. cont. grass, gravel or stairs. But doctors and his mother have encouraged him to use them be- cause they fear this arms and hands may be- come arthritic. A wheelchair is the last way Sam wants to move around. “‘That doesn’t appeal to me: at all,” the agriculture major said. “I set my mind to something and just do it. There are no problems.” He isn’t kidding. He spends about eight hours of the day with his girlfriend, Colleen “‘Newtie” Fane. They met six years ago at a summer camp. Most weekends they drive to his home. They shop for hats at the Bowling Green Mall. They buy ice cream at Baskin-Robbins and go to the drive-in. He plays pool, fishes, swims and plays the three chords he knows on his guitar. Sam drives a 1978 Nova with hand controls and plans to teach Newtie to drive. One of his teachers opens a side door in Grise Hall so Sam won’t have to walk as far, but getting to class is seldom a hassle, he said. He drives to each class and parks in a space reserved for the handicapped. But on occasion his space is taken by a faculty member and Sam has to park farther away. “One day it made me mad and | went to public safety and told ’em,” he said. “They said they’d take care of it.”” Since then, a few cars have been towed, Sam said. Perhaps the biggest change in Sam’s life has been Newtie, who walks with crutches because she has cerebral palsy. The two had written to each other off and on since they met at camp and unknowingly enrolled at the same school. “I had already registered before | knew he was coming here,’’ Newtie said. “‘Now he’s here and he wouldn’t leave. Neither would I.”’ One fall afternoon the couple giggled and poked each other as they sat side by side ona Keen Hall lobby couch. They watched muscu- lar guys hobble on crutches in and out of the dorm. “It’s getting where everybody around here continued on page 36 HAND CONTROLS, taking the place of the brake and accelerator, and a special seat help Sam drive his 1978 Nova. Sam said he planned to teach Newtie to drive. IN A PLAYFUL MOOD, Neutie tries to blow the cover of a straw at Sam in a local ice cream parlor. Sam averted the attack with a grimace. 35 Sam Early A CHAIR gives Sam the vantage point in playing a game of eight ball in Downing University Center. He won the game against photographer Ron Hoskins. A RUG protects the guitar Sam had just finished polishing. In his Keen Hall room, Sam strings the instrument. He knows three chords. SAM... is walking on crutches,”’ Sam said, chuckling. The two recalled frequent disagreements and pranks they play on friends such as Sam’s Angels, students who carry Sam’s and New- tie’s trays in the cafeteria or help in some other way. Both agreed college isn’t exactly what they expected. “Everyone has a different image of what college will be,” Newtie said. ‘And it gets shattered a bit when you get here.”’ “The first week my image was ruined,” Sam said. ‘‘I didn’t expect college to be so nice. It’s totally different from high school. It’s better and it’s an adjustment, but I like the freedom.” Newtie wants Sam to maintain a B average, and so far he’s doing fair in classes, he said. But they don’t study together. “We don’t get anything done,’’ Newtie said. ‘‘But I miss him if I don’t see him once or twice a day.” Sam said she gets hostile when they’re apart very long. “People here at school think we’re brother and sister,” Sam said. “‘We mashed their egos the first time they saw us kissing.” Newtie occasionally leaned over to kiss Sam, but he protested. ‘‘Not here in the lob- by,” he said. “I’m a private lover. We try to participate in all open houses.” They giggled again. Sam said it would be ridiculous for him to be bitter about his handicap. Newtie said there’s a reason each of them is handicapped. “It’s to set a good example, just to show that the handicapped carry on normal lives,” the curly haired Louisville freshman said. Newtie likes to say hello and smile at people she notices staring at her. Sam may do the same if he’s in a good mood. If something’s bothering him, he may not be as cordial. ‘It’s not hard for people my own age,”’ Sam said. “It’s old people who get all sentimental and cry. I try to stay away from them.” Both plan to finish their educations at West- ern. Then Sam wants to teach agriculture and run a “‘decent-sized farm” where he can raise pigs. A city girl, Newtie said she may learn to like life in the country. “‘I guess I’ll put up with it, but I’m not going to cut pigs’ tails. “We have our ups and down, but we’re happiest when we’re together.”’ “Yeah,” Sam said. “We always have a good time.” — Connie Holman [| Sam and Newtie were married during Christ- mas break and settled down near Somerset. Neither returned to school. TOUCHING HEADS AND HANDS, Sam and Newtie share a root beer at a local ice cream parlor. A STORE CLERK stoops to give change to Sam, who balances on a well-muscled arm. BEFORE GOING to dinner, Sam and Newtie kiss in the handicapped parking zone near Helm Library, where New- tie had been waiting for him. 37 Sam Early With small attendances, the Black Awareness Symposium suffered from A lack awarelt — Mark Tucker STRESSING a point about mistreatment of blacks, Dick Gregory talks at a press conference before his speech. The lecture was in Downing University Center. 38 | Black Awareness Symposium B, scheduling events over the entire spring semester, the former Black Awareness Week was stretched into a Black Awareness Sympo- sium. The events were originally scheduled for Feb. 11-19, but Tim Nemeth, university pro- grams coordinator, said the “‘symposium”’ be- came necessary when U.S. Rep. Shirley Chis- holm canceled her February lecture. The lec- ture was rescheduled for April 18. To open the symposium, an afternoon per- formance by the gospel group God’s Company and the Tennessee State University gospel choir was Feb. 11. More than 100 attended the program in Center Theater. A film and narration titled ‘‘Martin Luther King Jr.: A Portrait’’ gave students an oppor- tunity to learn more about the life of the hu- man rights leader. The Feb. 14 portrayal by the Rev. Arthur Langford attracted only 36. Featuring its special Dixieland jazz sound, the Heritage Hall Jazz Band from New Orleans entertained a half-filled Van Meter Auditorium March 22. Earlier that day some students heard a free lecture by civil rights activist Dick Gregory in the Center Theater. Gregory, a former comedian, began his lec- ture with a series of comic lines that soon had the audience roaring with laughter. After about a half hour, however, his tone became more serious. In his flamboyant, crowd-commanding man- ner, Gregory rampantly criticized the United States’ actions in Vietnam, the Middle East, Iran and Jonestown, Guyana. His disapproving remarks on many of Presi- dent Jimmy Carter’s decisions brought approv- ing rounds of applause from the audience. Gregory said that he has become a propo- nent of worldwide human rights instead of limiting himself to the civil rights battle. The final event of the symposium was the rescheduled lecture by Shirley Chisholm. In a talk flowing with highly emotional mo- ments, Ms. Chisholm spoke about America’s unfulfilled legacies, many dealing with the plight of blacks. The crowd of about 250, predominantly black, shouted and chanted in response to Ms. Chisholm. Ms. Chisholm said that she is a people’s politician who in her efforts to represent the people ‘‘cannot be manipulated.”’ She said that she is ‘“‘here to teach and to tell people what they don’t like to hear.” Nemeth said that although the symposium started out a little slow, “‘attendance seemed to grow and interest increased’’ over the se- mester. “The King portrayal drew only 36 people, but about 400 people showed up to hear Dick — Mark Tucker Gregory. That was quite a turnaround,” he said. “T don’t know whether it was the time or interest or what that caused the early atten- dances to be so low, but I think having some of the activities in the afternoon gave more stu- dents a chance to participate. “It was more handy for them because they were already here at the center and it wasn’t like going home and having to get up the ener- gy to come back at night,” he said. Nemeth said the symposium may or may not be continued. ‘But I think it’s a good idea,”’ he said. — Margaret Shirley | — Mark Lyons MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. is portrayed by the Rev. Arthur Langford in a play Langford wrote. Part of the symposium, “‘Martin Luther King Jr.: “A Portrait” attract- ed 36 viewers. This section of the play dealt with King’s role as a city councilman in Atlanta. . — SaneannnenEnEananion — Stevie Benson AN AFTERNOON performance by the Tennessee State University gospel choir follows the gospel group God’s Company in the opening program of the symposium. BACKSTAGE in Van Meter Auditorium and away from the rest of the band so he can hear himself play, Teddy Riley of the Heritage Hall Jazz Band practices. 39 Black Awareness Symposium Ae 40 Gayle Watkins Life in the fast lane Photos by Mark Lyons As children growing up in Franklin, Gayle Watkins and her cousin Sheila Harris used to share their dreams. Sheila wanted to sing in the Metropolitan Opera while Gayle wanted to go to the Olym- pic Games; she idolized her mother who was a runner at one time. Today the senior hurdler’s cousin is studying opera in Philadelphia and her mother is work- ing in a factory. And Gayle’s dream might come true. “I don’t think she has reached her potential yet,” track coach Carla Coffey said. “I think she has a very good chance to make the Olym- pic team.” So far, Gayle has certainly set the stage to live up to her coach’s expectations. Last sea- son she finished seventh in the AIAW national meet and fifth in both the AAU meet and the Olympic Committee’s Festival of Games in the 100-meter hurdles. In 1978 at an indoor AIAW sanctioned national meet, she placed second in both the 60-meter hurdles and the long jump. But achieving so much has been hard work and not a dream for Gayle. Married and the mother of a three-year-old girl, the 20-year-old physical education major commutes daily from Franklin and maintains a 3.6 grade-point aver- age. “T usually get up at five to get Ricky off to work and get Teenie ready to go to the baby- sitter,’’ she said. “‘Then, I usually get to Bowl- ing Green by 7:30 or so. I go to classes and the library if I need to before I go to practice and | usually don’t get home until around 6:30. “After I get home, I attempt to straighten things up, cook dinner and get Teenie ready for bed. I study later on, if I don’t fall asleep.” Although the stress from her hectic lifestyle is great, she says it is actually a catalyst that helps her do better. “Just the fact that I am married and have a kid makes me want to excel,” she said. “I SOMETIMES Gayle and Tanyita spend the night in South Hall with Gayle’s longtime friend, Sandra Thomas. don’t want people to say, ‘Hey, look at her. She’s got this responsibility and that responsi- bility and she runs and she’s not doing any good.’ “It hurts me, too, because sometimes I don’t have all the energy I need. I quess the hardest thing for me is just to stay awake in class and give it all I’ve got in practice every day.” Despite the fact that Gayle is totally dedi- cated to her athletic career now, just about two years ago she was considering quitting. “I did quit once for about two weeks and just ran on my own and didn’t come to prac- tice,’ she explained. ‘Ricky wasn’t sure I could take care of everything at home and at school and | had decided that my family should come before my running. “But I was so sad just being around the house that Ricky told me to go ahead and start running again if it would make me happy.” Ricky Watkins, a self-proclaimed non-ath- lete, takes pride in his wife’s accomplishments, even though he rarely sees her compete be- cause of his job as a factory worker in his hometown of Gallatin, Tenn. He says he doesn’t “brag” at work. “I’m just kind of keeping it to myself,’’ he said. “If I told them the things she’s done, I don’t think they would believe me. I don’t think they would believe that I could get that good of a woman.” Being alone a lot because of his wife’s sched- ule has been difficult for Watkins, but he has made adjustments and tries to be understand- ing. “T have always wanted what she has wanted for herself, and I didn’t want to come between her and her running because it means so much continued on page 42 ANGELA GAY hands off to Gayle during practice at Smith Stadium. In order to help out the team, Gayle com- petes in other events such as relays and long jump. GAYLE COMPETES in the Mason-Dixon Games in Louisville. She was edged out in the 60-meter high hurdle preliminaries as the result of a photo finish. A month later, at the AIAW national indoor meet, she finished second with a time of 7.82 which placed her among the top four hur- dlers in the nation. Life in the fast lane con to her,” he said. “‘“She comes in tired a lot and I just sit through the night watching TV because I know she is tired.” Like her husband, Gayle has adjusted to the lonely times and relies upon the moral support and encouragement he gives her. “It’s not all fun and laughs like it used to be before we got married,” she said. “He has us to support and he has a lot on his mind some- times, but | always look to him because he’s always there to tell me ‘You can do it’ if I get discouraged.” Another person who has been important in her career is Ms. Coffey, her coach at Western WHEN GAYLE misses practice at Western, she pulls out her hurdles, which she keeps in her kitchen, and practices in the church parking lot next door. — - ca Ear ay ee = papresniatere Se. Re anv oa eer eens s for three of her four years. “She has been the push for me,”’ Gayle said. “When I was in high school and my first year down here I never really trained. Then, when coach Coffey came, she ran us to death.” Ms. Coffey, one of the top 10 hurdlers in the nation between 1971 and 1973 while an un- dergraduate at Murray State University, agrees that Gayle’s change of attitude toward training has contributed greatly to her success. “When I came here | knew that Gayle had the potential to do the things she is doing now and even more,” she said. “‘She just hadn’t been made to work at it, and I think as soon as she realized that she had a chance to become a world class athlete it made a big difference.” Besides imposing opponents, who may be blocking her path to the Olympics, Gayle may also face another obstacle — injuries and ill- ness. During the past year she sustained several muscular injuries, such as a pulled hamstring muscle which almost kept her from running in last summer’s Festival of Games. She also con- tracted pneumonia last Thanksgiving and lost nearly two months of training time. She also was in a cast for two weeks. “I try not to think about it, but sometimes I’m afraid I just won’t be able to do it because my body is going to give out,” she said. Besides impressing her coach and competi- tors, Gayle also leaves a lasting impression on her teammates because of her attitude. “You have to learn her moods, but after that there’s no problem getting along with her,” sprinter Sandra Thomas, a three-year teammate, said. ““She makes you work, and unless she is sick she doesn’t know what a slow pace is. She helps me a lot and I just hope | help her.” But in spite of the praise and support she has received, Gayle is not satisfied with her progress in hurdling. “Perfection. I need to work on coming out of the blocks for one thing,” she said. “I always seem to be the last one out of the blocks for some reason. I also need to work on getting my trail leg and getting it quick. I need to work on trying to maintain speed, too.” Eventually she hopes to get her master’s in the physiology of exercise, while her husband hopes to attend vocational school and become an auto mechanic. But for now, running is top priority. “I hope I can get invited to some of the bigger meets, like some of the ones out in California and a pre-Olympic meet that’s going to be held in either North Carolina or South Carolina,” she said. “I thought the national competition I was in last year was good, and it was really the best I have ever run against.” When asked if she thought it would be easier to run in the bigger meets this year, she man- aged a tired grin and answered the same way her husband did when asked if he hoped his wife might make the Olympic team: “T sure hope so.” — Robin Vincent x he Lhe % oe oe ol co TAKING A BREAK, Gayle rests in the weight room. She lifts weights every other day. SPENDING a long day at school and practice can make Tanyita tired. Gayle takes time out from practice to pay attention to her daughter. BECAUSE of Gayle’s schedule, the family is seldom to- gether. After she had practiced in Franklin, she, her hus- band and Tanyita walk back to the car. 43 Gayle Watkins Story and photos by Judy Watson “ Just one more mile. If I could have pushed myself one more mile.” When Karen Martin collapsed one mile short of completing a 10-mile march — the last test of the Army Air Assault School in Fort Camp- bell — her week-long struggle had ended. Miss Martin, a junior physical education ma- EVERYTHING has to be just right in the Army, and some of the ROTC students found it difficult to adjust their chinstraps Army-style. On the first day of the course, Miss Martin helps Mark Holt, another Western student, with his helmet before the first inspection. jor from Louisville, was one of nine Western ROTC students selected to go to the Air As- sault School during spring break. She was the first female student ever from Western at the school and one of only four women in the 118-student class at Fort Camp- bell. She knew what she had to do to earn her air assault ‘“‘wings” — finish a 10-mile march with- WITH HER HELMET ASKEW, Miss Martin tries to finish the last mile. She had fallen down once before, and the medic, at right, had put her helmet on and urged her to continue. Five or six steps later, seconds after this picture was shot, she collapsed. in the two-hour, 20-minute time limit. But she stopped after nine miles; her shoes tore her heels after three miles and slowed her. But sergeants were everywhere yelling to keep going, to not throw away seven days of hard training. Dressed in fatigues, a steel helmet, boots and backpack and carrying a rifle, Miss Martin pulled her body through nine miles before her legs gave way. She picked her body up and tried to make another attempt. She had 10 minutes to go, and she could have practically walked the last mile in that time. But she went down again. It was over. “I wanted to keep going, but every step I took felt like I just wasn’t getting anywhere.” She said she would try the 10-mile march again in April. If she were to finish, she would graduate from the Air Assault School. ““Maybe I could have made it, but I’ll never know that until I go back. But it won’t be the same test because I will be rested.” Capt. William Kennedy of the military sci- ence department said that Miss Martin had prepared well for the march — better than most of the men there. “If it hadn’t been for her boots, she would have made the march,” LEARNING to get out of a helicopter quickly and safely was also part of the training. Miss Martin hugs the ground after running out of the helicopter. he said. Miss Martin said she was angry with herself after the race. “IT was mad at myself because I couldn’t get my running right because of my blisters,” she said. ‘“‘That was the main problem. | could kick myself for wearing those boots.” Kennedy said the air assault course is a “‘self-confidence builder.” Air assault is a tech- nique by which troops and equipment may be moved quickly by helicopter into an otherwise inaccessible area. On the first day at the school, the students continued on page 46 TUG OF WAR, part of the physical training exercises, helps develop strength and concentration. Miss Martin’s team won their round. Karen Martin 45 The longest mile oun were introduced to the obstacle course. That, in turn, quickly introduced them to pain and soreness. Attacking the last obstacle, Miss Martin’s hands slipped, and she fell about six feet onto her back, which remained sore the rest of the week. She didn’t mention her soreness because she feared being dropped from the program. After resting a few minutes, she had to get up — a two-mile run was waiting. The days weren’t always that strenuous. Some days included classroom lectures in which the students could sit and relax. Miss Martin’s days began at 5 a.m., when two alarm clocks sounded to ensure that she awoke in time. The students sometimes worked until after dark rapelling from helicop- ters. “It didn’t seem like you had any social life because you have to go back and get your uniform ready,” Miss Martin said. ‘““You dare not fall into formation with a dirty uniform.” If anything were missing or out of place on the uniform, points needed for graduation from the course were taken off. At the beginning of the course, chief instruc- tor Sgt. George Lane predicted that only one of the four women enrolled would graduate, and only one did. The students feared but respected Lane. Lane’s respect for Miss Martin equaled hers for him. “She was my kind of person,’’ Lane said. “There are very few people in the world | respect, but she’s one of them. I’d be proud to have her in my organization because she didn’t quit. It takes a special person to say ‘I can’t quit.’ She’s a good soldier.” “This story isn’t finished until I complete the 10-mile road march at the end of April and earn my air assault wings,” she said. “I don’t want to be a quitter.” LJ Sure enough, at the end of April, Karen Martin completed her story. She ran all 10 miles and graduated from the Air Assault School. (See page 13) 3 a CLIMBING A TROOP LADDER into a helicopter 50 to BEFORE GOING to sleep, Miss Martin checks her helmet 55 feet off the ground isn’t easy. Miss Martin leads the way to make sure it’s ready for the next day’s inspection. Her into the Chinook, a very large helicopter. days often began at 5 a.m. and ended after dark. SURROUNDED by much larger men, Miss Martin takes ONE MILE before her goal, Miss Martin collapsed. Medics part in the morning exercises. The exercises were after try to cool her off, since she was perspiring heavily. Her inspection and before a two-mile run. feet were also badly injured. 47 Karen Martin THE TUBERS took a break when they came to a shallow portion of Barren River, a half-hour away from their destination. Carrie Watson, Laura Emberton and Teresa Harrison wait in the water for the others after walking on shore. Miss Emberton said, “‘It was good to stand up and stretch after riding so long.” WARMED by a September sun, Sigma Nus and guests drift down river toward the Louisville Nashville railroad bridge. The Sigma Nus began the trip by jumping off the Louisville bridge, from which this picture was taken. x — Lewis Gardner SHALLOW WATER a half-mile up river from Beech Bend JUST OUTSIDE Beech Bend Park, John Erskine, Otto Park gave the tubers a chance to stand up and splash ___ Hilliard and Butch Graven catch the Labor Day sun as they around awhile. Some of the Sigma Nus and guests went wind down from the four-mile trip. Hilliard, an alumnus, ashore and slid down the river bank. said he was tired after sliding down the river bank. — Harold Sinclair AS Sigma Nu Tubing soloshnaoun Girl after girl and guy after guy jumped into Barren River Sept. 1, taking innertubes with them. The annual Sigma Nu tubing had begun. Sigma Nu has sponsored the four-mile trip since before it was chartered in 1965. About 150 friends, little sisters and dates joined the fraternity in its “tubing” to Beech Bend Park. The tubing starts at the Louisville and Nash- ville bridge, and after about three or four hours, ends up at Beech Bend. It’s actually a rush party, according to some members. And not just the rushees enjoy it. “It’s nice to be out in the warmth,” senior Jim Petty said. ‘It doesn’t cost a whole lot. You can just float around leisurely for a couple of hours with friends.” About the only cost is for food and drinks and, of course, the innertubes. Most of the tubes came from a local tire center and cost 50 cents to $1 each. Although it may be a rush function, it’s the event of the year for many Sigma Nus. They talk about it all year, according to Chris Zirkelbach, a Newburgh, Ind., sopho- more. “It?s one of the best times I’ve had this year,” he said. “It’s sort of laid back.” U AS COMFORTABLE on land as in water, innertubes give Mike Riggs and David Harrison a place to relax. Before their ride arrived and the tubes were deflated, ‘‘the police told us to hurry and get out of there,’ Jerry Bodenbender said. ‘There were a lot of campers coming in and they didn’t want us bothering them. They weren’t mad.” — Lewis Gardner Something happened. Along with the mums and mums and mums, the floats, the high school bands, the new suits and hats, there was something else. Homecoming just wasn’t the same. It was fun. It hadn’t always been that way. In 1977, Homecoming was e @ rotavery pleasant event. The football team was struggling to O mM C G Om | a e maintain a 1-6 won-lost record, and students and alumni couldn’t seem to get enthused about losing week after week. But what a difference a year makes. } Wh ether you Wi n or | O S @ There was a new spirit, a new interest in the university and A FUMBLE late in the Western vs. Middle Tennessee game didn’t help or hurt Western. Guard Pat Gates recovered the ball, but the play was nullified when does make a different¢ 322353323 Homecoming = ram its football team. The team was 6-2 and had hopes of getting a national Division I-AA playoff bid, which tends to make Home- coming more interesting. Predicting how much the team would lose by was no longer a campus pastime. And people actually cheered at the annual bonfire. At the parade, they laughed and clapped and waved hello to the smiling women on the floats. Little kids waved balloons, and women, with huge mums pinned to their dresses, hugged their boyfriends and smiled. It was Homecoming. Long before the alumni arrived, long before the last piece of tissue paper was stuffed in the floats, and long before the last banner was hung, Homecoming began. The bonfire was moved up to Wednesday, Nov. 1, and hundreds came to cheer the Toppers on. Dorm after dorm planned dances and rallies with the theme CONNIE GIBSON of Hodgenville was crowned Homecoming queen before the game. Her escort was Phil Lockhart, a Russellville senior. “Big Red Letter Day in History” in an effort to win the Interhall Council programming award. Central Hall won, with its recreation room decorated as a club car, celebrating the first transcontinental railroad. As the clock ticked closer to Homecoming, and as more and more tissue was frantically stuffed in chicken wire, the alumni trickled back home. They were greeted with the annual alumni dinner and dance Friday night. Special guests were from the 1928, 1958 and 1968 classes. And everywhere there were red “Welcome to Western” signs. While the alumni were getting special treatment, 4,296 students entered Diddle Arena to hear Player and Exile’s Homecoming concert. Although Friday ended late for some, Saturday began early. continued on page 52 a I ee ee ernie SS | PRESIDENT DERO DOWNING presented red towels to the 1968 football team before the game. Jay Davis, former receiver and now Christian County assistant coach, gets a handshake and a towel. — Mark Lyons A SPARSE AUDIENCE of 4,296 attended the Player-Exile concert in Diddle Arena. Ron Moss, Peter Beckett and J.C. Crowley of Player present what Herald reviewer Amy Galloway called the better of the two concerts. The group had two hits to its credit — ‘“‘This Time I’m In It For Love” and ‘‘Baby Come Back ”’ — before their appearance. — Mark Tucker — Ron Hoskins — Mark Tucker 51 Homecoming shville to a concert or a bar. But when the action gets to be a bit too much, there is always a quiet evening dur- ing an open house or a nice evening listen- ing to the music from a party four houses down. , and just as the sunset was a signal to begin, the sunrise is a signal to end and go to bed. Another night of fun and games lies ahead. There’s also one bad aftereffect of the nightlife — trying to get out of bed for the first class. — David Frank _) — Harold Sinclair — Harold Sinclair a: : y THE NIGHTLIFE begins as the sun sets behind the campus, as shown in +.¥ thisgew shot from the top of Cravens Library. : Bhs — David Frank sy “ “— : ; se | e. — we Sr ery pon : LONG TOE Os PEE TOE 5 ; (3 Saarca Nema ore Lepage eam | 4 i | ao ude 1 i ite hes RL OS fice Moka SK SRA i vB -. Sit tee he ROL FO PRR ARISEN SENNA lI OPO Nc ent RENE MAE frm etl a at rape meron etn tty man Wo iene 0 Py NC a areca TST I Lato —_—SS——=__—-—. TT ere eee ERE There’s only one thing that can be said about constantly changing Kentucky sapeeibbien rt takes Gil Kinga Kentucky s got it all. From rain to sleet to snow to tornadoes to sun, it’s all here. Only hurricanes and monsoons are absent. And sometimes the state has all | kinds almost at once. The temperature may be in the 70s one day and in the | 40s the next. It may rain for days on end, or the rain may be interrupted by tornado watches or bright days of | warm sunshine. WARM SPRING WEATHER attracted more than sunbathers as dandelions dotted the campus. Although Kentucky weather is spiced with violent, beautiful or calm weather, it’s most frequented by rain — torrential or misty. The streets of Bowling Green were flooded time and time again as water fell by the buckets full in the fall and spring. At times, stores and schools closed | early, so that employees and children could get home before the streets were closed. And Western students often — David Frank had to park their cars on higher ground, as the University Boulevard parking lot was drowned by near monsoons. The rain, which came and went all year, was interspersed with periods of sunshine. Mild temperatures in the high 50s or low 60s were perfect for walks to the By-Pass or for shorter journeys up the Hill. | The weather dipped into the freezing — Mark Lyons WHITE SNOW turns golden brown as the late afternoon sun warms the field behind the university center. range for winter. But it was a mild winter, and there was no white Christmas. The only substantial snowfalls were in early February. But the little snow that came was quickly adapted to snowmen and snowballs. Unpredictability characterized the spring. Some students would change into their swimsuits and race outside to lie in the sun in the late morning, and by 2 p.m., rain would have muddied the campus and clouds would have hidden the sun. A tornado touched near Glasgow in April, and from day to day there were threats of tornado watches. It’s never a dull moment in Kentucky, although it is difficult to — Harold Sinclair decide how to dress for the weather. L] 4 SNOW-COVERED TREE stands lifeless behind SHELTERED by an umbrella, a lone student walks Pearce-Ford Tower. The winter was relatively mild. through the leafy field behind the university center. — Mark Tucker 62 7 a a : Weather _— Jogging ; Os Che Russ hey came in the thousands, each holding his own space and each worshiping the ground their feet tread upon. They didn’t come for a Sunday walk; they came for a distance run. dogging has quickly become one of the most popular means of exercise — and it shows just by observing Bowling Green sidewalks and streets. Joggers come in all shapes and sizes, and many have goals of winning a mara- thon while others aspire to make it around the track once without having to walk. There are serious runners who run by the mailman’s motto in rain, hail, sleet or snow. Then there are those who get the yearly case of spring fever which motivates them during the first few days of warm weather. But after the first cou- — Mark Lyons — FOG covered the Smith Stadium track early in the morning as Genie Whitesell, 13, and her brother John Bell-Whitesell go for a run. They are track members at Fulton City High School and were in Bowling Green visiting their grandmother on Easter weekend. They started their run at 5:30 a.m. ple of outings, the sore muscles override the weight loss and they quit until the same time next year. One woman during a jogging session with a friend on the track said, “We only run when we get the urge, which is about once a month.” So if one makes it through the sore, muscles and blisters, then he might be on his way to enjoying jogging — that is, if he can afford the proper running shoes and the double-knit warm-up suit. — David Frank JOGGING Is an everyday routine for staff members Tom Foster and Sally Krakoviak. They are both regular participants in the weekly Fun Run which was created about a year ago by Foster and takes place at 9 a.m. on Saturdays. — David Frank — David Frank MEMBERS of the 2’p.m. jogging class go another lap around the Smith Stadium track. For most of the class it is their first experience with jogging on a regular basis, and according to some students, it gives'them “an excuse to run.” ‘co ‘David Frank _‘, BEFORE STARTING hiis es. Dan Stumler,,a Louis- s ville junior, goes ,through, his stretching exercises. | Stumler, who triés to run at least four or five miles a day, started running during Christmas vacation and was hoping to run in the mini-marathon.in Lou- ieville qutins the summer. of Pd rd A Ea ie i seein’ Chic, but not cheap Goadtue. jeans. Hello, dresses. That was the word for fall and spring fashion. It was also ‘‘goodbye, old wardrobe,” and “hello, expensiveness.”’ While the fall continued the Annie Hall look, and students could make do with Dad’s old ties and last year’s skirts, spring fashions required a whole new look and a wallet full of money. Even Annie Hall didn’t stay quite the same. String ties were added to last year’s crocheted or hand-me-down ties. Spike heels made the news, and banded collars appeared. Tuxedo shirts, worn with black string ties, were a fad. And the classic Annie combined with new accessories for a different look. The full, long skirt was combined with a tuxedo shirt or banded collar, topped with a knitted vest and a tweed blazer. Tights and kneesocks completed the layers, and low- heeled loafers made it comfortable for walking to class. If her father wouldn’t loan his 10-year-old ties or if she weren’t willing to plunk down $6 for a knitted tie, a woman might have turned to thrift stores, whose college student business picked up during the Annie Hall days. But with spring, Annie Hall died down. 66 Fashion A 1940s influence brought more tailored blazers and padded shoulders. A variety of belts dressed up narrower skirts, which were sometimes slit to show off patterned, seamed or colored hose. Although skirts were still an important wardrobe piece, dresses had renewed popularity. Sheer fabrics in feminine, often ruffled, designs were worn for dressy occasions. Cottons, poplin and other “natural” fabrics were for everyday. Polyester all but disappeared. Magazines and some merchants mentioned a return to shorter skirts and dresses, but it . wasn’t evident on campus. Much of the leg was still hidden. While some women were saving money, trying to buy more feminine dresses and slimmer skirts, others were planning to overhaul their pants and shirts wardrobes. Both changed almost overnight. Pointed collars went the way of miniskirts, and rounded collars took their place. “Menslook”’ shirts were replaced by shirts decorated with lace, embroidery or faggoting. “Big” shirts were still in style, often left untucked over peg leg pants and cinched with a belt. Dolman sleeves added a flair to some shirts. Pleats and straight legs summed up the news in fall and spring trousers. Corduroys and “natural” fabric pants often had pleated waistlines, which accented the stomach. But the narrow pant legs emphasized thin legs. Although many wardrobes had to be revamped to be in style, many accessories could still be worn. Gold was still the leader in jewelry, and many still wore their serpentine necklaces and bracelets. Wood was a close second, accenting the natural fabrics. While stickpins lost some popularity, bar pins and Art Deco pins and necklaces took their place. Costume jewelry was on its way back. Belts were everywhere in every style imaginable. Wide, cinch belts were for continued on page 69 A WHITE SCARF adds contrast to Jimmy Williams’ black vested suit, and strappy sandals complete the dressy look for Linda Watkins. The dress’ earthy blue color and shirred sleeves are an elegant part of fall fashion. Miss Watkins’ clothes are from My Friend’s Place, and her shoes are from Sailin’ Shoes. His suit is from Golden Farley’s. NATURAL FABRICS and variations of brown are the fall fashion look for Cynthia Tucker and Jeff Vaughn. While women began wearing unconstructed jackets, men took up scarves and comfortable shoes. Miss Tucker’s tie, vest and pleated pants set the pace for fashion. Her clothes are from My Friend’s Place and her shoes from Sailin’ Shoes. His suede jacket and clothes are from Headquarters, and his shoes from Dollar Brothers. — Ron Hoskins h Cy 3 i s = Fashion Giic dresses and big shirts, and belts which were wrapped around the waist twice went with almost anything. Gold was still a hit with jeans. In shoes, spike heels made the headlines, although flats were popular for everyday wear. Clogs and high-heeled mules, which are the classic, one-strap shoes, were worn with jeans. Clogs, paired with kneesocks, also doubled as a shoe for skirts. T-straps were often seen at discos or church, and in the spring, cutouts decorated the toe. Boots were still a winter fashion essential, and most had higher, slimmer heels which made walking on ice difficult. Straight-leg jeans continued to be the leader in casual wear, especially when worn with high-heeled mules. All cotton, orange- stitched blue jeans were a definite return to ‘the ’50s and replaced the faded, torn and embroidered jeans of the early ’70s. Even leotards and tights made the fashion scene, as women began wearing them with matching skirts to the disco. For those who preferred to dance in pants, ‘“‘transparent jeans” were a brief fad. Dancers wore the plastic pants over jeans or bikinis. Transparent tops were also sold. Men’s fashions for spring and fall reflected some trends in women’s wear. THRIFT SHOPS can supply the Annie Hall look. Jeff Vaughn wears his own clothes and some provided by Jane Coles — all purchased at a second hand store. The tie, button-down collar and baggy pants are almost the same as seen in men’s stores. PMarl Tucker FADED JEANS faded out of sight, while the new style was dark and tailored. Candy Bush wears her straight- Tapered shirts with banded collars were popular. Worn with pleated pants, suspenders and perhaps a skinny necktie, the shirts were a focal point of the Annie Hall look for men. Other men opted for a more traditional look, which was generally described as “preppie.”” The “‘preppie”’ look included button-down collared shirts, straight-leg denim or corduroy jeans, cardigan sweaters and loafers or deck shoes. The woman who dressed in a snazzy style — Mark Tucker METALLIC GOLD and fire-engine red predominate at the disco scene. Sunni Seiff wears a black feather boa, which complements Ron Hess’ satin jacket and black shirt and pants. Hess’ clothes are from Headquarters, and Ms. Seiff’s are her own. leg ‘‘cigarette’’ jeans with high, spiked heels, and Steve Grayson models the popular banded collar shirt. Their for a night at the disco didn’t outshine her partner, because men’s disco fashions became more evident as the school year wore on. Socks, shoes and slacks were adapted for disco wear. Pants styl ed especially for disco dancing were beltless, with wide bell legs and no outside seams. Disco shoes had higher heels and narrow toes. Colors were brighter, too. continued on page 70 — Ron Hoskins A BANDED COLLAR adds a new look to Jeff Vaughn’s corduroys, and Ron Hess and Lisa Hahn layer up in shirts and sweaters. Miss Hahn’s clothes and boots are from My Friend’s Place. The men’s outfits are from Headquarters; shoes from Dollar Brothers. — Mark Tucker clothes are from Headquarters, and Miss Bush’s shoes and belt are from Sailin’ Shoes. 69 Fashion 70 Caneel Like women’s clothes, more men’s styles were made of natural fabrics in natural colors. Cottons, wool and leather, as well as silk for formal wear, became more popular than polyester. It was a return to the natural and an empty pocketbook. — Steven Stines art director ANNIE HALL and the ’40s look sum up fall and spring fashion. Cynthia Tucker models the classic Annie, complete with full skirt, tie, hat, and tights. A narrower, slit skirt, worn with spike heels and a padded jacket, take Linda Watkins into the past. The clothes are from My Friend’s Place and the shoes from Sailin’ Shoes. @ — Mark Tucker LAYERS OF GOLD decorate Sunni Seiff and Ron Hess. Gold was everywhere — in necklaces, bracelets, rings, earrings and watches. The jewelry is from Zales. FROM HIGH TO LOW, heels make the shoe. Leather boots featured higher, slimmer heels, while clogs remained a favorite paired with kneesocks. Mules and high-heels were for jeans and dress up. The men favored low-heeled casual shoes, as did some women. Fashion — Mark Tucker peanut unancvonrne will in RUA REBEL ES — Ron Hoskins WHITE is right for spring fashion. A slit skirt and sleeves dress up Cynthia Tucker, while Ron Hess and Jeff Vaughn wear pleated pants and banded or small- collared shirts. A silky blouse and neutral belt accent Candy Bush’s narrow trouser legs. The clothes are from Headquarters and the women’s shoes from Sailin’ Shoes. CREDITS: Plants, page 67, courtesy of The Bouquet Shoppe; coattree, page 68, courtesy of Margaret Tucker; hat and boots, page 68, courtesy of Spot Cash; flowers, page 71, courtesy of Royal Barn Florist; shoes, page 70, courtesy of Sailin’ Shoes and Dollar Brothers. Addi tional — Mark Tucker clothes and accessories courtesy of Candy Bush, Jane Coles, Millie Dotson, Lisa Farris, Ron Hess, Kathy Lam, Miles Steenbergen, Steven Stines, Cynthia Tucker, Jeff Vaughn and Jimmy Williams. 71 Fashion a amb tn bennett aie hives HEART opened the show with hua’ Wilson, bead singer and flutist, singing “High Times.” Western made about $5,200 from the February concert. Aaa was accompanied by her sister, Nancy. a: — David Prank ager heard ee spot,” 7 Tim N Ne n dinator, ead t Player could percent of 2 was little fi- | ae Ort ot Cocker song Saad ve _ Ann said, nts were br ee ty OW na SEEMINGLY DWARFED by a cloudy sunset, John Prine plays before a sellout crowd at Van Meter Auditorium. The enormous backdrop set the atmo- sphere for performances of such Prine favorites as . “Spanish Pipedream,” “Dear Abby, ” “The Bottom: less Lake” and “Sam Stone.” — Mark Lyons ETE audience. But the ape reas we es of Sunshine Western ir ical g gro up had Up are ive-man : 2d num ern’: tudents, abou ,000, came out to O a capacity country ers he ling, hard-hit- — andy Cra’ and ne Crusaders at | | rs e ] x ; | Bes i: | EEE | y rs i | em 80 University Center Board — Mark Tucker Student-centered entertainment Some things just don’t stay the same. The University Center Board is one of those things. Beginning in fall 1979, the center board will have a new look and new responsibilities. Committees of students and administrators will run activities, such as lectures and con- certs, that had been run by Associated Student Government. The Board of Regents approved the change March 31 and funded $80,000 to the center board for programming. The committees will be composed of ASG’s president, activities vice president and one member of congress; representatives of the Interfraternity and Panhellenic councils and United Black Students; one person each from the men’s and women’s residence hall councils; two other students; and three faculty mem- bers. Contemporary music, lectures, arts and ex- hibits, recreation and leisure activities will be continued on page 82 TAKING A BREAK FROM WORK, Rita Jo Yates listens to a Dionne Warwick tape in the stereo listening center. Miss Yates works in the reading room. og — Stevie Benson — Robert W. Pillow THE WESTERN MOVIES are the focus of Harry TWO NEW FOOTBALL pinball machines were Carey Jr.’s one-man show. Carey, a veteran movie - added to the university center. Vonda Messer gets star, appeared on campus Oct. 5 and talked about some instruction from Scott Girder on how to play the Westerns and their stars. against Bob Buckley. Marketta Bell watches. 81 University Center Board Student- centered entertainment ..... the responsibilities of the committees. Members will be appointed by a personnel committee composed of the ASG president and activities vice president, two other stu- dents and one faculty member. The university centers director will be an ex-officio member. The new cent er board will ‘involve more student participation,’ Tim Nemeth, university programs coordinator, said. ‘““You’re going to have people specializing in some areas. The personnel committee will make sure that good people are selected to the committees. ‘““At the maximum, (the new center board) will have 10 students involved in lectures and concerts. With ASG, 50 students are _in- volved,”’ Nemeth said. The new center board will also eliminate confusion about sponsorship, Nemeth said, and it will make publicity and advertising smoother. The center board also had its share of changes in the programs it offers. A 6-foot TV was installed on the fourth floor of Downing University Center at a cost of $3,500. The TV is on from 4 p.m. to closing and is tuned to whatever the crowd wants to watch. ‘And, of course, we don’t have it on a soap opera when the World Series is going on,” Nemeth said. ‘“‘There are still the three TVs on the third floor if anybody wants to watch some- thing else.” The screen is washable, unlike some models, and so far, ‘“‘everybody’s taken real good care of that thing,” Nemeth said. The fourth floor patio was also reopened. ‘hh — Lewis Gardner A HUSBAND AND WIFE duo won first prize for the ugliest costume during the Halloween party. Jeff Kautz was the wife, and Bill Champion was the husband. A WORLD TRICK-SHOT champion, Paul Gerni tries to run the ball in a game of equal defense during a two-hour billiards exhibition. Gerni performed for the crowd Oct. 24 on the university center fourth floor. University Center Board When the patio is complete with lights, furni- ture, plants and speakers, it will have cost about $2,800, Nemeth said. “The patio has been sitting there since the building was opened,” he said. “‘And it’s only been used once. They bought improper furni- ture and it didn’t give the atmosphere that we wanted.”’ So, the patio was left unused. Redwood furniture and table umbrellas give it a casual look, and the patio is for those who want to relax, study or even sunbathe, Nemeth said. “We can’t say anything if somebody shows up in shorts and a halter top,’’ he said. “‘But they can’t come up here in a swimsuit.” A stereo listening center was added to the study room on the third floor at a cost of $3,500, Nemeth said. “‘A lot of students have to have a stereo on to study,” he said. ‘‘This gives them that option.” There are 110 tapes to choose from in the center. In addition to its new programs, the center board also offered its traditional fare. In its lectures and concerts program, the center board had the Silver Stars Steel Orches- tra, Harry Carey Jr. and The Westerns, Martin Luther King Jr.: A Portrait, the Heritage Hall Jazz Band and the Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band. Audiences were small at the programs. Heri- tage Hall had 200, Harry Carey had 180, Sil- ver Stars had 300 and Rev. Arthur Langford’s presentation of “King: A Portrait’ had 36. Trinidad Tripoli performed on the steps of the university center and had a larger crowd, Ne- meth said. “I don’t know why some things go over and others don’t,” he said. The center board lost money on the pro- grams, he said. However, the “parties” the center board Serewe ee ee EE ig i Pr 3 NE s gave went over well. ‘Halloween was huge,’ Nemeth said. ““We had probably 3,000 in the center.” The cele- bration included costume and pumpkin carving contests, a horror movie, and a haunted house. The Hanging of the Green before Christmas break also had a good turnout. A tree was decorated, and a special service and a crafts shop were offered. Aprilfest included a barbecue dinner and a pet show. The center board also offered bowling, foos- ball, ping pong and billiards tournaments. The bowling lanes were updated with new ball returns, costing about $15,000, and the crafts shop was reduced to half its original size when the journalism department’s darkrooms were installed in the university center. Attendance at the Center Theater de- creased, and the center board tried to attract more students with a week of popular movies, including “‘The Sound of Music,” ‘“M A S H”’, and “‘The Paper Chase.” Nemeth said he didn’t know why the audi- ences were smaller. “It’s not the movies,” he said. ‘‘According to the survey we took (a random survey of several classes), the movies are above average. ‘There are more things for students to do than sit in a movie theater.”’ The prices of movies fluctuate, Nemeth said, and whether they lose or make money depends on that. For ‘‘Theater of Blood,” the Halloween movie, 700 tickets were sold at 75 cents each. The movie cost just $35. For more recent movies, the price may be $500 or above. With all its changes, the University Center Board will never be the same. [1] — Sara-Lois Kerrick |_| — Bob Skipper — Lewis Gardner STEEL DRUMS are the main instruments for the Sil- ver Stars Steel Orchestra. The group performed Sept. 7 in Van Meter Auditorium. — Mark Lyons COAXING his ball down the lane is Mike Holland of Marshall University. Holland was here for the Coca- Cola Bowling Invitational. It was the first time the invita- tional was at Western. WHERE TO PLACE the next shot is the concern of Kim Seabolt, a Roundhill sophomore. She was playing billiards in the university center. as ra — Robert W. Pillow 83 University Center Board EMS se — Scott Robinson STUFFING his pouch full of letters, Bill Madison prepares to deliver mail to Downing University Center. Madison, a Morgantown senior, has worked for the campus post office for two years. — Mark Tucker THE NEW student darkrooms in the first floor of Downing University Center were usually full of students working on their class projects, which left little time for the lab : Deeg OG 9 : : ; p assistants to relax. After the 8 p.m. closing time, Mike Boggs finds a little time to play a a Sai i cane se teria, Sie “fin fi REY CO Yo RS AM a, “Pa his guitar in the film developing area of the labs. = 2. ‘ Sdanadl ra if ; «ont ame oer z —. 4 Working working class or the love of money. What other motive could compel so many students to actually search for employment out in the real world of work? But whether or not the motive is materialistic, few students find that they can make it through college without some means of employment. The work may range from construction work to bartending to milking cows, but the goals are the same — to make money and to gain work experience. Sallye Constant dresses for her part- time job in old jeans, a work shirt and a hard hat. She works in the afternoon, but not as a waitress or typist or sales clerk. Ms. Constant is a construction worker. SUBSTITUTE lifeguard at the pool in Diddle Arena, Barbara Saurer said she doesn’t mind working, but that it sometimes can be boring, especially on Saturdays. She is a sophomore library science major from Fisherville. — Mark Lyons Her fellow workers (75 men) at the construction site of a new mall on Scottsville Road call Ms. Constant the “little runner,’’ because that’s what her job is all about. The industrial arts major said she orders construction materials, applies drywall, fills out time sheets and is learning to weld. The Bowling Green senior said she learned about the job from her industrial arts teacher. “I was the only student in the department that had already taken two construction classes,”’ she said, ‘‘so I thought I would give it a try. “The carpenters gave me a few smart remarks and whistles at first, but after a couple of months, they treated me like everyone else,” Ms. Constant said. Ms. Constant said she enjoys the job because it has given her needed practical experience. She mainly observes construction techniques but she said she hoped to apply her learning in the summer, since she has decided to stay on with the company. Because she wants practical experience in her field, Cindy McCaleb, a Franklin senior, drives home every weekend to her job as disc jockey at WFKN radio station. Ms. McCaleb began working at the station in high school and now does newswriting, as well as announcing. “T think I would have done more growing up if I had stayed at school on the weekends,” she said. But she said that she believed this job helped her in getting a news director’s continued on page 86 — Mark Lyons TIM COTTINGHAM prepares his stake for tobacco stalks in a field owned by James Jenkins north of Bowling Green. Cottingham and his Alpha Gamma Rho brothers worked to raise money to make improvements at the fraternity house. 86 Working The working class ...: position in Waverly, Tenn., where she will work after graduation. For three years, senior accounting major Bernie Steen has worked as a sales clerk and bookkeeper for Headquarters Boutique. Steen said the flexible hours and “‘casual working atmosphere”’ were the deciding factors in his staying with the job. “T started out at minimum wage, but I make quite a bit more now,” he said. He said there are other advantages to the job, such as a 25 percent discount on clothes and getting record albums at cost. “I’ve got about 750 albums now,” Steen said. know this experience will look good on my resume.” Being a waitress can “really drain your energy,” Cheri Hildreth, a junior biology major, said. But Ms. Hildreth said the nice part was that she didn’t have to wait for a paycheck at the end of the week; she could take her tips hame each night. She said she usually made $30 to $50 in tips each night at Gatsby’s Restaurant. Ms. Hildreth said the job has helped her budget her time — or what time she has left. “The other night I got home at 12:30 a.m., studied for a test until 6 a.m. and then went to bed for His 28 to 36 hours a week on the job also provide experience in accounting. “‘It’s helped me learn to deal with practical accounting situations,” he said. continued on page 89 THE DORMS are a routine stop for most pizza delivery men. Rick Wheeler, a Hodgenville junior, makes a delivery to one of the students in Barnes- Campbell Hall. Wheeler said the busiest time is Elise Frederick, a Trenton sophomore, said her job as a general assignment reporter for the Park City Daily News allowed for flexibility and practical work experience. Ms. Frederick works around her class schedule and on Saturdays. Besides writing news stories, she does feature writing and court reporting, which she describes as “‘not too exciting.” “My school work has to come second,” Ms. Frederick said, ‘‘but I THE INFORMATION DESK on the main floor of Downing University Center is a popular place to stop and talk with employees. Becky Curry, a Greensburg senior, attracts some company during her shift at the desk. from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. — Harold Sinclair NOW PROGRAM DIRECTOR for WBGN, Gary Moore poses amid the clutter of the radio station. Moore, who has been a disc jockey since his junior year in high school, has been working for WBGN since he started at Western three years ago. Working — David Frank .. BRCRS RASOT TE ERS Meee ees i a 7” Sper, Taare oe RE The working class cont. a whole hour,” she said. Last fall Linda Odle, a Henderson senior, wanted a job in a restaurant or bar but didn’t want to be a waitress. So she decided to be a bartender, since she already “knew how to mix a lot of drinks.” Her 20-hour-per-week job at the Literary Club paid between $80 to $120, depending on tips. “Being a girl, I got more tips than the male bartenders,” she said. As a bartender, Ms. Odle said she listened to a lot of stories, “especially divorce stories.” “I liked the three feet of space the bar allows between you and the customers,”’ she said. ‘Waitresses can get pinched on the rear, but bartenders can’t.” She said the disadvantages of the job included the long hours and the physically strenuous work. “I had to lift heavy cases of liquor every night,” she said. After the fall semester, Ms. Odle decided to get a job in her major, accounting. In the spring, she worked as an accounting assistant for a local construction company. ‘“‘The hours are better, and | make more money,”’ she said. Sometimes there is a lot of pressure in John Gover’s work. Gover, an orderly at the Bowling Green-Warren County Hospital, has had emergency medical training and is sometimes required to perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation on dying patients. But Gover said most of h is work involves “‘routine’”’ hospital work, like DURING LUNCH BREAK at Keen Hall, Vic Con- ner offers Lisa Petersen some of his lunch. Ms. Petersen worked during the first semester as a member of the grounds maintenance crew and at- tended school part time. WHEN BUSINESS WAS SLOW, Debbie Kemp, part-time worker for the Downing University Cen- ter crafts shop, had the opportunity to do a little crafts work for herself. The New Albany, Ind., sophomore works on a silk screen for a Pearce- Ford Tower T-shirt. transporting patients, emptying bedpans or bathing patients. “T wanted to supplement my medical training,”’ the pre-med major said. ‘“This has given me an idea of what it’s like to work in a hospital.” Through permission from the hospital doctors, Gover spends some time watching surgery. “The first time I saw surgery, it made me a little light-headed, but now it’s no big deal,” he said. Since he works about 37 hours a week, Gover said he is sometimes so tired when he comes home from work and classes that he ‘‘can’t even get to rs — Stevie Benson sleep.” Gover said he likes the job because of the experience, not the money. “I only get a little over minimum wage, but I’m trying to save for a honeymoon when I get married in May.” About 3,000 working students have the same employer — Western. “‘Student jobs range from secretarial to maintenance,’ Mona Logsdon, financial aid staff assistant, said. They are employed by every department, as well as some local non-profit agencies in the community, such as the Red Cross, which have contracts with Western. Ms. Logsdon said the student affairs office employs the most people, since about 300 students work as resident assistants and dorm personnel. The library system is the second largest employer with about 200 student employees. Ms. Logsdon said the greatest need continued on page 90 WATER LEAKS cause senior John Ransdell to climb on top of a washing machine to investigate. Ransdell is an attendant at the campus laundry. x — Judy Watson 89 Working Se ae ——————$————————— 90 Working The working class cont. for students is probably in clerical work for the individual departments. When most students are sleeping soundly in their warm beds, Paula Thorne is out milking cows at 3:30 a.m. at the university farm dairy on Nashville Road. Ms. Thorne said she grew up on a farm, so the work was nothing new. When she applied for student employment, she requested an outdoor job. She said she thought her job, which she has had for four years, was a help in getting accepted to veterinary school, which she will attend in the fall. “TI guess they realized I like animals and was dedicated,’ Ms. Thorne said. “And it shows that I don’t mind the cold and dirt that veterinarians work in. Nancy Petros, a Canton, Ohio, senior, said it takes her about two days to get rested up from one night of work as night clerk at Gilbert Hall. Ms. Petros works every third night as a clerk, and said the only really scary thing that has happened to her was when the lights went out all over campus one night while she was working. “ don’t think I would take the job again,” she said. “‘It’s really hard taking 21 hours and staying up all night.” When Danny Couden had his stereo stolen from his car, he decided to apply for a job as a student patrol officer. “I thought that maybe I could help someone else out if they got in a jam like that, and I thought that maybe I could do a better job than was being done on campus,” he said. As a student patrolman for four years, the Owensboro senior said he directs traffic for special events, gives parking tickets, works with the escort service and assists motorists. “Some students are grateful for the work we do as student patrolmen, but some aren’t,”’ he said. The attitudes, conditions and reasons may differ, but the results are the same. To earn money as a student, you’ve got to work for it. — Laura Phillips SINCE no one else ever cleans the windows, Schocke usually ends up doing it once every two weeks before he leaves at night. He said that it really doesn’t make any difference whether the windows are clean, but that it gives him something to do on a slow business night. ONE of the regular customers, who is called XL, tells Schocke a story about a strong drink he once made. Talk- ing with some of the regulars is common for Schocke, but most just get what they need and leave, he said. Photos and story by David Frank 6G booboo.”’ “A pint of blood.” “Give me a yogi.” ‘“« _. and a bag of skins, man.” These phrases refer to a half pint, a bottle of Wild Irish Rose wine, a pint and a bag of pork rinds. They’re common phrases to Randy Schocke, an Owensboro senior who works-at Kentucky Street Liquors. Schocke is one of three students who work nights at the tiny liquor store, which is in the low-rent section of town on the north end of Kentucky Street. It’s next to the train depot and an old abandoned restaurant that used to be one of the “hottest spots’ in Bowling a Green. Most people who hang around the area would be classified as winos, and there are about 20 to 25 who frequent the liquor store, Schocke said. Once, a middle-aged lady drove up to the drive-in window, and Schocke, as he normally does, asked what she wanted. But this time, he got a slightly different request. “Could you read my mail for me?”’ the lady asked. Schocke did. He started working at the liquor store in October after another student quit. “The guy who worked before me was held at gunpoint and quit,’ Schocke said. “I knew one of the other guys working here, and the pirits in the night next day after he quit, I started working. “It (working at a liquor store) kind of goes against the principles I was taught as a kid, but as you grow older, your ideas about things change,” he said. ‘But I needed the money. ‘““My mom was totally against it, my dad was indifferent. He knew I had to pay for my schooling somehow.” The very first day of work, Schocke entered a different world because most of his main customers are winos. “One of the hardest things about working down here is learning to understand the se guys,” he said. Schocke knows most of them by names like Chicken Man, XL, Leon (the black Fonz), Fred, Sonny and Elmo. “I can really cut up with these guys,’ he said. “‘They keep me company. “I don’t worry about the regular customers, it’s the younger guys that I don’t know that bother me.” “Everyone is real close down here,” one regular said about there not being much theft or disturbances around the liquor store. The worst thing that ever happened to Schocke was when a knife was pulled on him by a younger man one night, but the man ran off when a car pulled up to the drive-in win- dow. “I told him he could have whatever he want- ed,’”’ Schocke said. “I was scared.” Because he deals mainly with regulars who come to the store at their usual times, Schocke gets plenty of time to study. “I sometimes try to teach them (the regu- lars) whatever I am studying ’cause they will bug you to death about it,” he said. Leon, a regular, called Schocke ‘‘a good teacher.” During the time he has spent at the liquor store he has developed a good relationship with the customers. Evidently they must like him, too, because many have brought him such things as chickens and country hams. Schocke gave XL his grandfather’s overcoat because XL didn’t own a coat. Leon said in his grumbling voice about Ran- dy: ‘‘We is friends to the nitty gritty; we is brothers.” pses = Witt re ORIVEIN wiNOOW a THE SMALL CONCRETE structure that Schocke works in is located at the corner of Kentucky and Depot streets, next to the train depot. The building was once surrounded by houses but now stands alone. 91 Working 92 Miss Black Western — Mark Tucker Quality but not quantity F.; the judges at the Miss Black Western pageant, there may have been a lot of quality, but there was little quantity. There were only four contestants to choose from after four dropped out before the Feb. 24 pageant in Garrett Conference Center Ball- room. And of the four who remained, three got prizes. Anita Orr, a Nashville, Tenn., sophomore, was crowned Miss Black Western and Miss Congeniality. Iretta Johnson, a Bowling Green freshman, was first runner-up, and Carmen Henderson, a Georgetown sophomore, was second runner- up. Gwendolyn Ford, a Louisville senior, was the fourth contestant. Time was the main reason why some of the women dropped out. Patricia Lewis, a Fort Campbell sophomore, said she withdrew be- cause she didn’t have time to make her cos- tumes for the pageant and do schoolwork. Marilyn Epison, a Whitesville freshman, also said schoolwork and lack of time made her decide not to run. But victory was just as sweet for those who stuck with it, and Ms. Orr, newly crowned, had tears streaming and plenty of smiles. “I was scared,”’ she said after the pageant. DRAMATIC LIGHTING strikes Gwendolyn Ford, a phys- ical education major from Louisville, as she models her swimwear. The bathing suit competition was one of five categories in which points were scored. — Harold Sinclair MAKING LAST MINUTE adjustments to her hair, Car- men Henderson, who was named second runner-up, pre- pares to go on stage for the group dance. “’m happy the hustle and bustle is over with.” The pageant, sponsored by Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, included competition in talent, swimwear, evening gown and a group dance. Each contestant was also asked “‘What are the changing roles of the young black woman in today’s society?” Ms. Orr, president of the campus chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, answered that black wom- en need to realize that they can do things as well as men. “It’s necessary for us to realize that we are important, too.” The four contestants performed the group dance, choreographed by Louisville sopho- more Yvette Lucas, to ‘“‘Ease on Down the Road” from the movie and Broadway musical “The Wiz.” It was also the pageant’s theme. In the talent competition, Miss Ford danced to “Everybody Rejoice,’ and Ms. Orr sang “Home.” Both songs are from ‘“‘The Wiz.” Miss Henderson sang ‘“‘Believe in Yourself,” and Miss Johnson presented a dramatic mono- logue from Langston Hughes’ ‘“‘Negro Moth- er About 300 attended the pageant, and some of the proceeds went to the AKA’s regional office. For Miss Henderson, her first time in the pageant was nerve-racking. “It'll be good to get back to being a normal person. I feel like people have been looking at me like ‘she’s the one in the pageant.’ ”’ — Kathy Lam () MISS BLACK WESTERN Anita Orr is congratulated by Diane Butts, 1978 Miss Black Western, and Iretta Johnson, first runner-up. Ms. Orr, a sophomore from Nashville, Tenn., was also named Miss Congeniality. — Mark Tucker BEFORE PERFORMING their dance routine to ‘“‘Ease on Down the Road,” Anita Orr and Carmen Henderson wait in the dressing room for their cue. The group dance was a new part of the pageant’s program. — Harold Sinclair Miss Black Western 93 94 Miss Western LAST MINUTE DETAILS are taken care of before the talent competition as Robin Carr sprays her hair and Gwen Ford snips loose threads from Miss Carr’s dress. Miss Carr was third runner-up and Miss Participation. A TROPHY, roses, crown and scholarship were all awarded to Laura Hubbard when she was named Miss Western. Vicki Harned, the pageant’s ‘‘emcee’”’ and 1976 Miss Kentucky, crowns Miss Hubbard. ee a ee ee ee | Rebirth of tradifion Aitter disappearing four years ago, the Miss Western pageant has returned. The audience at Van Meter Auditorium March 31 saw not only the crowning of Laura Hubbard, but also the revival of a Western tradition. . Mary Anne Chinn, pageant coordinator, said the event was discontinued in 1975 because no one would sponsor it. “It got to be too much work for an office like student affairs or a group like IFC (Interfrater- nity Council) to handle, so it just died,” she said. Miss Hubbard, a freshman music major from Leitchfield, was chosen from 11 contestants by a panel of three judges. Markita Key, a Glendale junior, was first runner-up; Kim Gauthier, a Louisville fresh- man, was second runner-up; Robin Carr, a Bowling Green sophomore, was third runner- up; and Betty Thompson, a Bowling Green junior, was fourth runner-up. Miss Carr was also named Miss Participation for selling the most advertising space for the program. LIP GLOSS adds a finishing touch for Markita Key before the talent competition. Miss Key was first runner-up. “T still haven’t really soaked it all in yet,” Miss Hubbard said after the pageant. “I was surprised that I had won. “I was nervous at first until the talent com- petition. After that, I was okay.” Miss Hubbard sang “I Am Woman,” by He- len Reddy. The contestants were judged in talent, swim- wear and evening gown competition. They were also interviewed by the judges: Kathy Witt of Bowling Green, the 1970 Miss West- ern; and Lisa and Ray DeCamillis of Louisville. Mrs. DeCamillis is a former runner-up in the Miss Kentucky pageant, and her husband is vice president of the Miss Kentucky Pageant Board of Directors. As Miss Western, Miss Hubbard competed in the Miss Kentucky pageant in June. Finalists received a total of $1,150 in schol- arships. Miss Hubbard won a $400 scholarship; the first runner-up got $300; the second run- ner-up got $200; the third and fourth runners- up got $100; and Miss Participation got $50. The Houchens Foundation donated $250, and the rest of the scholarship money came from pageant proceeds. The Western Jazz Ensemble provided the music. — Mark Tucker In the talent competition, Miss Key sang “Songbird,” by Barbra Streisand. Miss Gauth- ier performed a dramatic monologue, “Prayer for a Daughter.”’ Miss Carr did a modern dance routine to “Ease on Down the Road”’ from “The Wiz.’’ Miss Thompson performed a ba- ton twirling routine to the theme from ‘Star Wars.” Phi Mu Alpha music fraternity sponsored the pageant. The members served on commit- tees, sold tickets and advertising, and worked on lights, curtains and sets. Mrs. Chinn, a former Miss Western, said she revived the pageant because “‘I believe in the scholarships and the worth of it.” She asked Phi Mu Alpha to sponsor the pageant because she was a music major and because the pageant is closely related to enter- tainment and music, she said. The group made a $300 profit, she said. Mrs. Chinn said the pageant went well enough that it would be continued. “’m just so relieved that it’s all over with,” she said. “‘You can’t imagine all the things that have to get done. “There’s more to it than meets the eye.” — Kathy Lam | THE LAST CONTESTANT to perform in the talent com- petition, Markita Key sings ‘‘Songbird.”’ Miss Key later said “it was a good experience being in the pageant. I’m glad | did it and I'd like to do it again.” — Mark Tucker 96 Lectures mae — Mark Tucker THE PRESS interviews Howard Jarvis, California’s Pro- position 13 co-sponsor, after he had-arrived at the Causey Field Airport in Bowling Green. Jarvis outlined his tax program before an audience of 300. | Fests taxing words by a California congress- man to proposals of space colonies by a phys- ics professor, visiting lecturers gave students a chance to learn firsthand about national events, instead of just reading about them. In September Howard Jarvis, talking to an audience of about 300, outlined his program to ease the tax burden in the United States. The co-sponsor of California’s Proposition 13 said he still hasn’t ended his war on proper- ty taxes and the “elite dictatorship — the bureaucrats.” Jarvis said that the battle to cut California’s taxes began about 15 years ago, when some people feared that young couples and the el- derly were being squeezed out of the economy by excessive taxation. Jarvis told the crowd gathered in Van Meter Auditorium that “death and taxes are inevita- ble, but I’ve learned something in the past few years — that death from taxes is not inevita- ble.” Dr. Eberhard Bethge, chief biographer and interpreter of Christian theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer, spoke Jan. 23 about his exper- iences in Nazi Germany during World War II. About 700 persons in the Garrett Confer- ence Center Ballroom listened to tales about resistance acts of Bonhoeffer and his followers during the war in Germany. A close friend and colleague of Bonhoeffer, Bethge has been responsible for making his writings public. Bethge, also imprisoned during World War ing it firsth — Mark Tucker AFTER speaking on infanticide, euthanasia and abortion, Dr. C. Everett Koop, professor of pediatrics and pediatric surgery at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School, answers a question from a member of the audience. II, justified resistance acts by saying “‘only an act of violence could assure an end to terror.” For his part in the resistance movement, Bonhoeffer was ordered killed by Adolf Hitler in 1945, Bethge said. A former Supreme Court justice, noted law- yer, diplomat and educator, Arthur J. Gold- berg spoke to about 150 people in Van Meter Auditorium in early March. Goldberg, who served on the court from 1962 to 1965, gave an inside view of the Supreme Court and his opinion on issues fac- ing it today. “The court has the final word, but it is not infallible,” he said. Goldberg, who now practices law in Wash- ington, D.C., said the Supreme Court ‘‘has to adapt to a changing society. We are interpret- ing a document that survives through the ages.” Dr. C: Everett Koop, professor of pediatrics and pediatric surgery at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School, lectured March 20 on ‘‘Abortion, Euthanasia and Infanticide: Who Makes the Rules?” Koop said that concern about economy, overpopulation and possible food shortages are causing abortion, infanticide and euthana- sia to become accepted. Koop, who is also surgeon-in-chief of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, said that infanticide — killing of newborn babies — is being done widely in the United States. He said that deformed children are often +h peer erretie aes os ee .. 5 4 . a : % bee | — Harold Sinclair — Mark Lyons SPACE COLONIZATION will eventually happen, ac- cording to Gerald O’Neill, physics professor at Princeton University. O’Neill illustrates a point from his book, “The High Frontier.” O’Neill also discussed solar energy and his concern over the militarization of space. allowed to die because of their handicaps. The decision on whether life should contin- ue, Koop said, “‘is better left to the realm of trust between the patient and physician and the family and physician rather than the law.” Solar power stations could be one way to relieve the earth’s energy crisis, said Dr. Ger- ald O’Neill, physics professor at Princeton Uni- versity. O’Neill, author of the book ‘‘The High Fron- tier,” said in his April 2 lecture that space colonies and solar power stations are possible with current technology. The 100 people in the Center Theater were told that electricity produced by solar cells could be transmitted back to Earth in the form of low energy microwaves. O’Neill said that plans have been made for the space colonies, but that President Jimmy Carter had abolished a National Aeronautics and Space Administration office that was ex- ploring space colonization. O’Neill said he is also concerned about the militarization of space because Carter signed a bill for the development of a particle beam weapon (which emits atomic particles that can destroy satellites) to be placed in space. — Margaret Shirley A RECEPTION before Rep. Shirley Chisholm’s lecture gives Lisa Grider, a Shelbyville, Ind., sophomore, a chance to ask Ms. Chisholm what she thought about Bella Abzug’s firing. Ms. Abzug had been a member of President Carter’s committee for women’s rights. Ms. Chisholm’s lecture was part of the Black Awareness Symposium. 97 Lectures | eer Stocku Canal IP “Directed ey tvis liam -eonard, | “The Miser” ran in N embe bee lay by Moliere ' Th y Vio eee _ around Harpa (Roy ( dV m on-traditio mse veron of ns ooge was | “The play ca e same plot,” tor a se said. “But | ers in lines. ow e modernized | pane uses music.” one of the biggest cies eves See ade have ealin ad: al umor. The i ra ia fer eae ig ee jz SNORED by 2 produ ria nisies Sa m Ee, ieee nce of the “The Miser. Tedd Wood an Keith ipssnt had the leadir ling role _ of Scrooge. Tiny T im was played y : Roh Pesaacds Ricl ard Bitsko and 1 ‘ oe’ Gorman Oe Violett, ie doublecast for Emil Tetweeneocuie site ues ar play ‘was par by Delores Clam nan, Richard Aorris The Sone: cast included children. cast as Mr. and eG eee Cr. SE _A major opera, “La Traviata” by iseppe Verdi, was presented Feb. Tate and Vicky Davis. Dr. Virgil Hale, music: I director, said the part was | e of strenuous singing teqlted and as a backup in case one of the actresses became ill. The i a portrays the story of a ie ill Parisian cc Cian joletta, Me falls love with sp steiah (Steve Chambers). The story revolves s around Violetta is forced to leaw because of the social v the | late 1800s. — Giorgi Giorgio (¢ Germont, Alfredo’s was p played | by David ee Other characters were Baron Douphal (Richard Bitsko), FI (Debbie Ruggles), Annine (Ja contint SER ein) wim OG asses 1 ; : é q Caras Se a a a a a eS fe ae ee oe. . | aan = s _ . z i | y ry) VY ; 1S C a) Co = = ¥ 3 « 3 = ¢ ne | © oC - “ | aren = a) © naenonsneern : E . c 1° ery f =I 1S Q - 4 ) ¥ of Y) Y ‘ (C - .) Y ) a - (S r Y @ z a yp Q ; ) ; oS o © Q : yn Tk - ) = aC ) $ - AW WS —_— j 106 All work and all Photos by Mark Lyons Putting on a play is a lot of work. It takes months of planning, rehears- als and labor to produce five days of shows. And after the closing show, the months of work are gone. For director Patricia Minton-Taylor, “Blood Wedding” began years ago. “lve wanted to do this show for at least four years,” she said. ‘“‘One of the reasons | picked the play was that I like the strong roles, the focus on the wom- en. Also, the Spanish drama by Federico Garcia Lorca is educational. The assis- tant theater professor said she wanted to make students do something new. The play revolves around a wedding, after which the Bride runs away with her former fiance, whose family at one time was involved in a feud with the Groom’s family. The Groom chases after them, and both he and the lover are killed, com- pleting the family’s bloody cycle. The “‘something new”’ began at audi- tions, which were in January — months before the April 3 opening night. Students crowded into Gordon Wilson Hall’s rehearsal room to watch one an- other improvise in situations provided by Ms. Minton-Taylor. Improvisations were used because “‘I believe in trying out for the show rather than trying out for a role,’ she said. At most auditions, ‘‘a person will take a role he or she really wants and come in and outread”’ someone less experienced or less prepared, she said. “With the kind of auditions I do, everyone starts out even.” Her strategy worked. The major role of the Groom was only Blood Wedding the second part for David Gregory. “IT was surprised,” he said. ‘‘Every- body was surprised, but I was delight- ed. “For two years I didn’t do anything but design lights and do set construction. I’ve always wanted to act. I specifically put I wanted a lead on the tryout sheet.” Vicky Davis, who has played several lead roles, was cast as the Mother, whose conflict with the Bride is a central element of the play. She said the part was the hardest she had done. “T’ve never been stricken the way the Mother is,”’ she said. “‘So I had to find things that would make me feel the way she feels.” The way the characters feel was dis- cussed at the first rehearsals, in which the actors sat around a table and ana- lyzed their characters. Next came readthroughs, in which the play was read in its entirety, and then blocking rehearsals, in which the director told the actors what movements to make and when. Then there were rehearsals of individ- ual scenes. From rough beginnings, the actors developed their characters, work- ing with the director on motivation, movement, emotion, enunciation and volume. The music was a major element of the play. Junior Jay Gaither composed the music, using the play’s poetry as lyrics. He said that he and Ms. Minton-Taylor decided to work for a mood, rather than an authentic Spanish sound. While cast members rehearsed, the set and costume construction crews worked from drawings sent by the de- signer, Allen Shaffer. play Shaffer, a professional designer from Dallas, was hired to design the sets, cos- tumes, props and makeup. He visited the campus once before he came to stay before the play’s run. He did the designing in Dallas. Several weeks before the show opened, lighting designer Jonathan Sprouse attended rehearsals and made notes on how each scene should be lit. And several days before opening night, costumes got a review in the cos- tume parade. Suddenly it was opening night. The makeup room was warm with bright lights and filled with actors and friends. Amid flowers and opening night gifts, the visibly nervous and excited ac- tors applied makeup according to Shaffer’s instructions. Then the actors, in costume and ma- keup, had a final meeting and pep talk with the director. After the final matinee performance April 8, Ms. Minton-Taylor had a cast party — traditionally the final step in a production. But she asked actors and crew mem- bers to schedule appointments with her the week after closing to “talk about what you’ve learned.” After all, she said, “‘this is educational theater.” — Steven Stines [| ALL THE HOURS and long nights of work pay off as the production reaches its final form. Vicky Da- vis, who plays the Mother in “Blood Wedding,” grieves for her dead son in the last scene. PREPARING for the final dress rehearsal, Debbie Stevens applies part of her character as the wife of Leonardo. It was her first serious role at Western. LIGHTING, important for setting mood and add- ing texture to the set and characters, was designed by Jonathon Sprouse. Sprouse, a Magnolia junior, chooses gels to color the lights. pte Pyke i. ” From togas to ‘Mork and Mindy,” the entertainment scene had a lot of ... Tisnting lights and thumping rhythms, a man who could actually fly, a group of naughty fraternity brothers, Hobbits, and a gibberish- erins alien from Ork. Those characterized the entertainment scene in music, movies, books and television. One of TV’s biggest hits was “Mork and Mindy,” a comedy about the adventures of an alien transplanted in Colorado and his ensuing discoveries of earthlings. Pam Elrod, a Louisville junior, said, ‘I like it because you never know what’s going to be said. I’m usually very slow to catch on to jokes, and I can understand the ones on the show.” Briggs Stahl echoed Miss Elrod’s statements. “It’s just a good situation comedy,’ the Rockfield senior said. “‘It’s fresh, believable. If you think about it, it could possibly happen. Fifty years ago, people thought it would be crazy to go to the moon.” Another fantasy-oriented, science-fiction show was “‘Battlestar Galactica.”” The multi- million dollar show, with its special effects, recalled memories of ‘‘Star Wars”’ (especially from critics) and earlier shows such as “‘Star Trek’ and “‘Lost in Space.” Other popular shows included ABC’s highly successful Tuesday night comedy bloc: “Three’s Company,” ‘“The Ropers,” ‘Happy “Family” “It shows some of today’s prob- lems, but some of the solutions aren’t real.” — Pam Elrod Days” and “Laverne and Shirley.” Ken Smith said “Three’s Company’”’ is ‘‘fun- n oes “It’s something I could picture somebody getting into,” he said. The show deals with two women and a man who platonically share a California apartment. Social commentary was also a prevalent theme in television. “‘The Paper Chase,” a saga of the trials and tribulations of first-year law students, earned excellent reviews from critics and its small, but loyal, audience. “T like it because I could feel for the peo- THE STAR of ‘“‘Animal House,” John Belushi was behind the toga fad. In the movie, the popular comedian played a slovenly fraternity brother. ple,’ Smith, a Louisville senior, said. ‘‘I know what they’re going through.”’ “Family,” the story of an upper-middle-class family, drew tremendous acclaim from both critics and audiences. Miss Elrod found one flaw with the series, however. “It’s a storybook tale,”’ she said. “It always Soaps “You can really get wrapped up in it. It’s like you’re almost there with them.” — Ricky Geary works out for the best. It shows some of to- day’s problems, but some of the solutions aren’t real.” Soap operas were faithfully watched in dorm rooms and lobbies, apartments, houses and Downing University Center. They attract- ed the attention of many students — not all of them female. “You can really get wrapped up in it,” Ricky Geary, a Beaver Dam sophomore, said. “It’s like you’re almost there with them.” Geary said he watched as much as four hours of the shows daily, depending on how interested he was in the various storylines. Realism and escapism were not restricted to television. Audiences seemed to enjoy the trend toward carefree themes, according to Time magazine, since box office receipts set record levels, especially during the summer. Successes included ‘‘Grease,”’ a film version of the Broadway musical about life in the ‘50s; ‘Heaven Can Wait,” a remake of an old movie about a pro football player who is reincarnated as a corporate executive; and ‘National Lam- poon’s Animal House,” a favorite of most col- lege students. The tale of an irreverent, misbehaving fra- ternity is “just funny,’ Robin Jones said. “Animal House” spawned dozens of toga parties — for fraternities, sororities and inde- pendents. It also spawned a promising career for star John Belushi, a regular on TV’s ‘‘Sat- urday Night Live.” December saw the release of the most ex- pensive movie ever made. “Superman’”’ and the career of its star, Christopher Reeve, took off at the box office almost simultaneously. J.R.R. Tolkien’s ‘“‘Lord of the Rings” was Comic relies immortalized in a movie of the same name. The animated fantasy drew thousands of Tol- kien and Hobbit fans to the box office. The Travolta fever of 1978 continued in the fall semester. Discos flourished and so did new “disco” fashions. Disco found a whole new corps of perform- ers, including Cher, Rod Stewart, Gloria Gaynor, Peaches and Herb, and Ethel Mer- man. Some sold; others did not. “I like disco music; it gets my blood run- ning,” Debbie Lykins said. “I like to dance. Disco is a different kind of dancing. “There’s more co ntact with people. I like the twirling and the dance steps themselves.” Gloria Gaynor’s “‘I Will Survive” is Ms. Ly- kins’ favorite. ‘““There’s a good beat to it,” she said. “I also like the message — ‘Get out. I don’t like you anymore.’ ” Rodney Young has a different viewpoint. “The modern musical trend is away from Discos “The modern musical trend is away from ‘listening music’ to music that says nothing but has a good beat.” — Rodney Young ‘listening music’ to music that says nothing but has a good beat,’’ he said. “T like variety in music — that’s why I don’t like disco,” the Louisville sophomore said. “Disco requires no musical talent, so a lot of musicians play it and a lot of people enjoy it.” Boston’s ‘Don’t Look Back” and Kansas’ “Point of Know Return” — both top sellers during the year — were Ken DeFreece’s favor- ites. With two highly successful albums — “‘The Stranger” and ‘52nd Street” — Billy Joel vaulted to the foreground of the musical scene. Ms. Lykins termed Joel a “‘vivacious singer.” “‘He’s easy to sing along with,’’ she said. “The music doesn’t overpower the words.” That was entertainment — a wideranging spectrum of traditional and non-traditional, meaningful and frivolous, and good and bad depending on the student’s taste, of course. — Jeff Howerton |_| 111 Entertainment Fe ee 112 JOHN PHILIP SOUSA’S “E] Capitan” was presented by 12 artists of the National Opera Company. Wiian Shakespeare, John Phillip Sousa and ballet all made an appearance on campus — as part of the Fine Arts Festival. Shakespeare opened the festival when the Oxford and Cambridge Shakespeare Company presented “‘A Comedy of Errors’’ Oct. 28. The 27-member company is composed of graduates of the two prestigious universities. The play, set in India, is about twin brothers and their twin servants, who were separated when they were young. The father searches for them; they search for each other; and ev- eryone is confused. Concentus Musicus, a Viennese music en- semble, was next on the agenda. Nov. 2, they performed selections from Bach, Vivaldi, Ra- — Mark Lyons BACKSTAGE, two members of the Moscow Symphony rehearse before their concert at Van Meter Auditorium. Fine Arts Festival meau and Telemann on authentic and restored instruments dating back to the times of these 17th-century composers. The group is the “best performing Baroque ensemble anywhere,” according to Dr. Wayne Hobbs, music department head. Among the collection of instruments used were 17th-century violins, an 18th-century tra- verse flute, three Baroque oboes, three bas- soons, a violone, a viol de gamba and the university’s harpsichord. “Our harpsichord comes pretty close to the original,’’ Hobbs said before the concert. “Ours has a plastic picking device, whereas the originals were made with feathers.” The strings on a harpsichord are plucked rather than struck, as on a piano. Concentus Musicus was founded in 1954 by Nikolous and Alice Harnoncourt and other members of the Vienna Symphony. All the performers are present members of the sym- phony. Opera followed when soprano Marilyn Horne performed Nov. 19. Ms. Horne’s per- formance included Jocopo Peri’s ‘“‘Invocazione di Orfeo,” from ‘‘Euridice,”” Francesco Dur- ante’s ‘Danza, Danza, Fanciulla Gentile” and Benedetto Marcello’s “‘Il mio bel foco.”’ John Philip Sousa’s ‘“E] Capitan” was per- formed by the National Opera Company Jan. 28. The operetta centers on a timid Spaniard, continued on page 115 — David Frank — Mark Tucker SOPRANO Marilyn Horne sings selections from classical works during her Nov. 19 performance. “BOOMFALLERA” was the opening act for the Joffrey II Dancers, a group of young ballet artists. — Stevie Benson ssaarbactatina — Stevie Benson 114 Fine Arts Festival In fine tune ... Don Medigue, who masquerades as the legend- ary hero “El Capitan.” “El Capitan” was presented by 12 young professional artists who continue the com- pany’s tradition of performing in English. “The best small ballet company in the coun- try,” according to New York Times critic Clive Barnes, is the Joffrey II Dancers. The group appeared in Van Meter Auditorium Feb. 5. Ranging in age from 16 to 20, the dancers participate in the Joffrey II Company to obtain performance experience so thay may move into soloist roles in the Joffrey | Company. Controversy surrounded the American tour of the Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra, which appeared Feb. 13. Violinist Veronica Rostropovich, a 20-year veteran of the orchestra, was not allowed to come on the American tour. Her brother, Mstislav Rostropovich, music director of Wash- ington’s National Symphony Orchestra, held a press conference in January protesting his sis- ter’s absence. According to a Washington Post story, R os- tropovich believed his sister was being perse- cuted for statements he had made. But despite national publicity about Ms. Ros- tropovich, the 122-member orchestra per- formed in Van Meter. An automobile accident postponed the ap- THE “PAS DE DEUX” was the second number for the Joffrey II Dancers. The critically acclaimed group appeared in Van Meter Auditorium Feb. 5. pearance of the Alvin Ailey Repertory Ensem- ble, a New York-based dance company. Originally scheduled for the fall semester, the group performed March 28. The group, which was developed in 1974, comprises junior members of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. The group’s 15 young professionals, de- scribed as ‘‘total dancers,” are students of jazz, ballet and modern dance. (1 JUNIOR MEMBERS of the Alvin Ailey Repertory Ensem- ble, a New York-based dance company, rehearse before their performance. They also had a three-day residency. — Stevie Benson A “SWINGING NUMBER’”’ was part of the Joffrey II Dancers’ performance. The members are from 16 to 20 years old and are training for soloist roles in Joffrey I. — Mark Lyons 115 Fine Arts Festival CSET OS Se cue 116 Remodeling APPLYING a final coat of paint, Ralph Millin works in the addition to the Kentucky Library and Museum. Millin is an employee of Radden Sons Decorators of Lexington, which did all the painting and wall coverings in the addition. — Mark Lyons Since it was born in 1911, Western has grown and improved through construction and ren- ovation. This growth is contributing to a new campus look. The Kentucky Building, which houses the Kentucky Museum and Library, has been ren- ovated, and an addition has been built at the rear of the building, providing more space for the museum and library. “Essentially, it was complete remodeling and air-conditioning of the original building,” Owen Lawson, physical plant administrator, said. “There is about 45,000 square feet of new museum space.” Because of renovation, the library was tem- porarily housed in Gordon Wilson Hall and the museum in Garrett Conference Center. The museum is scheduled to open in July 1980, but the library was moved into the build- ing in late May, according to Riley Handy, Kentucky Library and Museum director. According to Handy, the building is almost twice as large as the original one constructed in the 1930s. Because of the growing collections, more space was needed. “Our library is either the first or second DIDDLE DORM came back to life when the speech and hearing clinic was moved to Academic Complex and the basketball team was moved in the dorm. Greg Jackson hangs up his phone in the carpeted, well-furnished room. y largest collection in the state,” he said. ‘““We have a broader-based collection of Kentucky materials than any other library in the state.” Renovation began in spring 1977 and was 95 percent complete in April. The cost was about $2.5 million, Lawson said. As long as the sky doesn’t fall, the roof replacement at the College of Education build- ing should be a success. Work on the main section of the roof was almost complete in April, according to Law- son. Construction began in the fall. The roof was damaged in a 1969 hailstorm. Kemble Johnson, assistant physical plant ad- ministrator, said he thought the building had leaked since it was built in 1968. The repair cost more than $200,000. During construction, several classrooms were relocated, and garbage cans were used in some rooms to catch rainwater leaks. Some workers in CEB complained that the smell of tar permeated the walls. Another replacement was the Keen Hall roof, which was also damaged during the 1969 hailstorm. The cost was estimated at $160,000, and construction was halfway com- pleted in the spring. Construction of an agricultural exposition center began in May 1977, but its finish was delayed. The center, located on the 800-acre univer- 4 ‘ ct it i + — Mark Tucker A new look sity farm, three miles south of Bowling Green, was scheduled to be finished in October, but bad weather caused delays. Containing about 70,000 square feet, the center consists of a main show arena that seats 2,000, a teaching and demonstration arena, a lobby, classrooms, offices and an animal-hold- ing area. a, ge PRP gg 2p 4 Widen a : Meena gas 199, ‘ y . Thay); ii imag 99995. ‘ a ee. WO eteane cw @a,- “S88 9gaa.. - “MAST, ‘ SnD 883iay,7 “WHT ts Wie ES Figg Stay) feel 8g aaa. so¥g47 : q a ; 109-07 -¢ Ft. “Fe: , % thf ff f Bon: a Feeds mene 4Feeece « Welty, “hi in en Uti lete ne” 4g Ste thbes: tPA EGG a htte _- mio semen - @ ow. “ OPe. 08 Pd ve st Sa eas A SelM BF, Ve O0e@ ‘eres eves 5. 4 @eae-. a - . ae WM Giestes ° LLG 6 Sees nnaneny, Pesbstriorsecs FOCAL S OBB ' OGM i POOLE SC : © AF ORR NNEES eer The main show arena is for spectator events, including livestock judging and horse shows. The demonstration arena seats 300 and serves as a classroom and sale ring. The animal-holding area includes washing areas, a locker room and walkways to the show and demonstration arenas. Lawson estimated the cost at $2.7 million. Minor construction and repairs included adding ramps for the handicapped to various campus buildings. That was an effort to make the university more accessible to handicapped persons and to comply with laws protecting the handicapped. Western is seeking funds for total implemen- tation, Lawson said. — Linda Watkins (| IN THE NEW SPEECH CLINIC, Debbie Hancock works with an elderly patient. Some students and faculty were upset when the move was made, saying that athletics had taken precedence over academics. CONSTRUCTION of the new agricultural exposition cen- ter at the university farm began in May 1977. The $2.7 million project was expected to have been finished by October, but because of bad weather, the center was still incomplete at the end of the school year. lca ke Wh MAM NAT Life — Mark Tucker — Scott Robinson 117 Remodeling The three Rs— radiation, revolution, ‘religion’ strange religious cult carried devo- tion to its leader to the limit. A minor accident at a nuclear power plant could have been a disaster. President Jimmy Carter nego- tiated a peace treaty in the Middle East as fighting raged in Iran. Relations with Commu- nist China were re-established, angering Chi- nese residents of Taiwan. A former Western student was charged with performing an illegal abortion on herself and was tried in Bowling Green, with considerable publicity. And what seemed like a hundred people announced that they wanted to be Kentucky’s next governor, despite an FBI investigation and a federal grand jury inquiry into Gov. Ju- lian Carroll’s administration. Nothing unusual, maybe. But the events of the school year blended in such a way that just when it seemed as though everything possible had happened, something else did. The year on campus was like that, too. The president resigned, Western was given what it considered a dirty deal in the Ohio Valley Con- ference basketball tournament, the selection of a new president became permeated with con- troversy and politics, and some of the above national and international events had strong effects on students here. Though some of the events may not have been exciting, their timing was. It was always something, it seemed, and that made the year unique. For no other year had so much, so often, to entertain, inform and confuse. ‘U.S. Rep. Leo J. Ryan, D-California, mem- bers of his staff and several American journal- CANDIDATES for Kentucky governor were invited to speak at Forum ’79 by the Young Democrats, the College Republicans and ASG. Out of several invited, two candi- dates and one representative showed up. Candidates George Atkins and Ray White listen as John Huffman (representing Rep. Carroll Hubbard) speaks. ists flew to the village of Jonestown, Guyana, in November to investigate a religious cult whose members were from the United States. The group observed the members of the Peoples’ Temple and talked with the cult’s leader, the Rev. Jim Jones, an Indiana native who had formed the group in San Francisco, Calif., several years earlier before moving to the South American country. Ryan’s group had looked into reports of the cult’s mistreatment of U.S. citizens, and that apparently caused Jones to order members of the cult to kill Ryan and the other members of his party. Ryan and four others were killed, but sever- al others survived. When Jones learned that some of the group members were still alive, he which hit the area March 31. — Harold Sinclair _ Mark Lyons FRIENDS and neighbors of Walter Allen help him pick up pieces of his barn from around his Merry Oaks home near Glas- gow. The barn was scattered by a tornado called his followers together and told them that the time had come for them to commit the mass suicide they had rehearsed several times before. “They started with the babies,” administer- ing a potion of soft drink mix combined with cyanide, Odell Rhodes, the only known survi- vor of the tragedy told a Washington Post reporter who himself had been wounded in the attack on Ryan’s party. Within a few days, the bodies of 912 cult members were found, many of them swelled and bloated. Some had been shot, but most had taken the doses of cyanide poison. The reasons for the mass suicide were never made clear. continued on page 120 — Scott Robinson DALLAS COWBOY FANS are up in the air over the late game rally by Dallas in the Super Bowl. After the last Pittsburg Steelers’ score, much of the Dallas crowd left the fourth floor of the Downing Center. The Steelers won, 34-31. ait 1 — Ron Hoskins ALTHOUGH John Y. Brown Jr. was the one campaigning for Democratic candidate for gov- ernor, his new wife, Phyllis George, was the main interest in his appearance in Bowling Green. She is a former Miss America. 119 News Se AOE RR IRIN CS The three Rs... Unprecedented attention was placed on the safety of nuclear power plants in March after an accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant near Harrisburg, Pa. It started out as a minor problem, but then a hydrogen gas bubble developed inside the core of the nuclear reactor, increasing the chances of a mel tdown. Some radiation leaked from the reactor into the atmosphere. If the reactor had melted down, the heat from it would eventually have hit underground IMMEDIATELY after her acquittal, Marla Pitchford and her lawyers Kelly Thompson Jr. and Flora Stuart face an onslaught of national and local press. In what was coined a landmark case, Miss Pitchford was acquitted for performing an abortion on herself. The first case of its kind to be brought to court, the trial received national coverage. water, causing a blast of radioactive steam to be shot into the air, possibly killing thousands of nearby residents. The immediate area was evacuated, and all pregnant women and pre-school children living in a 10-mile radius of the plant were evacuat- ed. Officials worried about the safety of people living within a 50-mile radius of the plant. That would have been the area most severely affect- ed by a meltdown. After more than a week of tension, the hy- drogen gas bubble inside the reactor reduced in size, and officials brought the accident under control. Some disturbing facts came to light after- ward, however. For one, it was revealed that in closed hear- enpesnanicrete dette SL a en ings during the accident, federal nuclear power officials said they were more worried about keeping the possibility of danger a secret than they were about correcting the problem. “What’s the (constitutional) amendment guaranteeing freedom of the press? Well, I’m against it,’’ one official reportedly said. And it was reported that numerous similar accidents had occurred but had never been made public. Finally, U.S. Health, Education and Welfare Secretary Joseph Califano told a congressional subcommittee that the chances of cancer cases related to the radioactive fallout from the plant were greater than first predicted. He said in early May that at least one additional cancer death, one additional birth defect and several — Mark Lyons 120 News cases of non-fatal cancer attributable to the fallout would be caused. Meanwhile, construction plans continued for a nuclear power plant near Madison, Ind., a few miles up the Ohio River from Louisville. After months of summits, global diplomacy and political rhetoric, President Carter an- nounced in March the formal signing of a his- toric peace treaty between Israel and Egypt, two countries that had been fighting sporadi- cally since Israel was formed in 1947. Carter spent several months meeting with the leaders of the two countries — Menachem Begin of Israel and Anwar Sadat of Egypt. The meetings included one summit at Camp David, Md., the mountain presidential retreat. The final treaty was approved by the parlia- ments of both countries after much debate and controversy. It was speculated that neither Sa- dat nor Begin could have remained in power had the treaties been rejected. Sadat was faced with potential opposition from other Arab states, but resisted and pushed for the treaty. Finally it was signed in Washington, D.C., in late March. President Carter was involved in other histo- ry-making diplomatic news during the year — the normalizing of relations with Communist China. It marked the first time the United States and Communist China had traded am- bassadors. Several trade agreements were also signed between the two countries. The announcement sparked demonstrations against Carter in Taiwan, which had been a U.S. ally since the Communist takeover of mainland China in 1949. Since then, the Com- munist regime had often threatened Taiwan, advocating the “‘re-uniting’”’ of Taiwan with the Mainland. Taiwanese students at Western said they resented the new U.S. policy toward Taiwan, which would include continued military sup- port and protection from a forceful take-over by Communist China. “It’s a very pragmatic world,”’ Western gra- duate student Nee-Yin Chou of Taiwan said. “People take what they need, but it’s wrong to sell out your old friend to make another. “1 will not live under Communist control.” While news about normalizing relations was being made in China, conflict was brewing in Iran. It ended with Islamic rightists overturning the government of Shah Mohammed Reza Pah- lavi. As several thousand protesters took to the streets of Iran in support of the Ayatollah Kho- meini, an exiled religious leader, the violence spread to the United States. In January Iranian protesters in California burned cars and rioted outside the shah’s sis- ter’s home in Beverly Hills, Calif. Two Western students from Iran explained the actions and said they condoned them. “If you saw one person who killed your brother, killed your sister ... and killed your friends, I guess you would try to kill her, too,” one student said. The students said the violence had been misinterpreted. “We love the American peo- ple, but we hate their government,” said a 25- year-old member of the Iranian Students Asso- ciation who asked not to be identified. Ironically, one reason behind the Iranian protest had been the hope of more freedom. But the new leader, Khomeini, banned modern Western dress in the country and tried to make all citizens conform to the Moslem religion. And opponents of the shah had criticized his killing of what they considered innocent peo- ple. But Khomeini condoned and approved the — Ron Hoskins AFTER ANY HEAVY RAIN, flooding near the Russell- ville Road underpass is common. Jerry Garner of South- land Manufacturing Inc. gets into his truck after it had stalled in the water. Heavy rain also affects the university’s parking lot near the area. 3 iL? 1 Ee — Bob Skipper execution of numerous supporters of the shah, all in the name of his religion. Politics and Kentucky are almost synony- mous. There is an election every year in the state, and campaigning goes on almost continu- ously. But 1979 was special — it was the year to elect a new governor, and seemingly every politician in the state decided he wanted to be governor. There were six major candidates for the Democratic Party nomination and two for the Republican Party bid. The high number of can- didates turned out despite an FBI investigation into the administration of the outgoing Carroll, as well as an inquiry by a federal grand jury. continued on page 122 — Ron Hoskins COWS GRAZING at the university farm were surprised one morning when a Bowling Green resident’s plane landed in the pasture. Donald Schardein suffered minor head and leg cuts. The plane lost altitude when Schardein switched fuel tanks on his approach to Causey Field Airport. — Scott Robinson RUSSIAN DIPLOMAT Vladimar S. Mikoyan talks with staff member Dr. Edmund Hegen at a press conference in the regents conference room, Mikoyan and fellow Russian Vasili D. Sredin were on a six-state tour through mid- America when they stopped at Western Dec. 6. NEW YORK TIMES reporter Myron Farber addresses the Sigma Delta Chi convention in Birmingham, Ala. Farber spent 40 days in jail for not releasing his files in connection with stories on hospital patients’ deaths in 1966. 121 The three Rs ... Among the candidates for the Democratic nomination in the May 29 primary were Lt. Gov. Thelma Stovall; Terry McBrayer, Car- roll’s choice; Harvey Sloane, former Louisville mayor; State Auditor George Atkins; Carroll Hubbard, a U.S. congressman from Mayfield; and John Y. Brown Jr., a former owner of the Kentucky Colonels basketball team and king of Kentucky Fried Chicken. Republican candidates included former Gov. Louie Nunn and Bowling Green attorney Ray White. The president’s resignation and the loss of the OVC basketball championship weren’t the only stories to make headlines on campus. A reported rape and an apparent suicide also concerned students. A student told campus police she was raped at 2:15 a.m. Nov. 21 in Ivan Wilson Fine Arts Center. She had been working on an art project on the fourth floor, and as she left to go to the bathroom, a man grabbed her. She was taken to an unlocked room on the second floor and raped. Randy Joey Bandy, a former custodian, pleaded guilty to an amended charge of sexual — Mark Lyons misconduct. He had been charged with rape in the first degree. He was sentenced to a year in the Warren County jail. It was the first rape reported on campus since 1974. The victim was not seriously in- jured physically. The end of the spring semester was marred when a freshman from LaPorte, Ind., was found dead in her Potter Hall room April 20. The Warren County deputy coroner said that Treasa Watkins apparently hanged her- self. From Chattanooga, Tenn., to Houston, Tex- as, the rumor flew. “Did you hear about the ‘60 Minutes’ show? They said that Wendy’s puts worms in their hamburgers. “I didn’t see the show. But my brother told me that his roommate saw it.” “McDonald wouldn’t comment. ‘60 Min- utes’ asked them if they put worms in their burgers, and the guy just said ‘no comment.’ ” “T’ll never eat there again.” No one knew how the rumor started, but it was finally quelched after hamburger chains repeatedly insisted, in commercials and news stories, that ‘we use only 100 percent pure beef.’ It was also reported that worms cost more than hamburger. But for several weeks, a disbelieving Ameri- can public shied away from Wendy’s, McDon- ald’s and other burger joints when it heard the “news.” The most popular story was that “ 60 Min- utes,” a TV documentary show that sometimes uncovers fraud or corruption, had found that some hamburger chains used worms as filler. No one had seen the show, but they all knew someone who had. Dan Davis, owner of Bowling Green’s Wendy’s restaurant, said that the rumor start- ed in Chattanooga and spread over the United States. It hit Bowling Green in September, Oc- tober and November. ‘Everybody was affected,’ he “‘Wendy’s, McDonald’s, Krystal’s .. .” Although the crowds were noticeably small- er at all hamburger fast-food restaurants, Davis said that Wendy’s did not lose much business. said. And there was Marla Pitchford. Miss Pitchford, a former Western student from Scottsville, was tried in Warren Circuit Court in September on a charge of performing an illegal abortion on herself. She faced a possible 10- to 20-year jail sen- tence under Kentucky law after being indicted June 14 on the illegal-abortion charge. (The manslaughter charge was dropped Aug. 16.) It apparently was the first time in U.S. histo- ry th at a woman had been tried for a self- performed abortion. Because of the oddity of AN ANTI-SHAH protester hides behind his sign, afraid that the shah’s secret police might recognize him and ter- rorize his family. About 50 protesters participated in the protest in downtown Bowling Green Dec. 15, one day after Christmas break began for Western students. the case, Miss Pitchford’s trial received nation- al attention. All three major television net- works sent reporters and photographers to the trial, as did most major newspapers and wire services, all apparently expecting a precedent- setting decision. An eight-man, four-woman jury deliberated less than an hour before finding Miss Pitchford innocent on the grounds of temporary insanity. After the trial, Miss Pitchford and her attor- ney, public defender Flora Stuart, appeared on national television and became celebrities to some extent. But Miss Pitchford said she want- ed to return to school and become a psycholo- gist. After the verdict was reached on Aug. 30, Miss Pitchford faced a barrage of television cameras and reporters. “I don’t think anyone should have to go through this ordeal,” she said. “I couldn’t be- lieve that they would ... put someone in jail for 10 years for this.” Since the trial was over, she said, “‘I’ll prob- ably just go somewhere and scream because I’m so happy.” — Alan Judd [1] | RESTAURAN] EQUIPMENT SUPPLY CO itt S s CLAGET OUYE ‘OF IRAN. @ Mark Lyons BRAVING a cold and chilly drizzle, 50 Iranian protesters walk down Bowling Green’s Main Street shouting anti-shah slogans. The group also had short pep rallies before and after the early afternoon parade. — Lewis Gardner A 10,000-METER RUN attracted 200 to 300 people to Covington Park Sept. 23. The run, sponsored by television station WBKO, ended in downtown Bow ling Green at Foun- tain Square. The winner, Tony Staynings, took about 30 minutes to complete the run. 124 Finals Shhhhh! If your parents are around, don’t read this out loud Photos by Larry Hayden | don’t know why they call it finals. AFTER STUDYING SIX HOURS for a physics final, Greg Catron, a It’s not the end of time. Cloverport freshman, rubs a pair of tired eyes. Catron was studying in his room in Pearce-Ford Tower. And final exam week can even be the best time of the year. Shhhhhh. Don’t tell anyone I said that. Let’s face it. During finals week, there are no classes — just tests, about one or two a day. If you happen to have three scheduled for one day, cry to one of your teachers and he’ll let you take it another day. Sometimes I think I could take finals all year long. Sleeping until noon, taking a leisurely shower, eating a long and delicious lunch and dinner (off campus), study- ing from 7 to 9 p.m., socializing until 2 a.m. — what a life. And who can’t afford an hour or two to study for a measly test? The rest of the time can be spent in the sun, cleaning your room, going on dates or packing your bags so you can leave on Tuesday. Maybe I shouldn’t be writing this. Most parents and teachers think we all study 24 hours a day. Shhhhh. What they don’t know won’t hurt them. Of course, some students put up a good front. Like my best friend. She stayed up every night during finals week. Two of those nights were with Steve. And of the other three, she studied ... or rather, she alternated a half hour of studying with an hour of talking. And some think finals is really called cramming. Right before the Big Test, they study the whole book, read their sketchy notes and pray to God, hoping for one passing grade. In the middle of the night, plaintive pleas can be heard — “Does anyone know the name of my art teacher? I can’t remember.” Well, you and I know finals ain’t hard. It’s the next best thing to spring break in Florida and the first lazy week after school’s out. It’s almost better than Christ- mas. It’s 10 times better than Thanksgiving. Except for the food. There are only three things wrong with exams week. The first is grades. Those exams make up a third of the grade in some classes, and if you blow the final, you blow the class. But by the time the end is near, who cares anyway? After having 20 tests in the class, what’s one more? The second is that I get tired of tests after taking about three. It gets boring. The third is that the 10:25 TThF class always has its final at 8 Friday morning. That’s an ungodly hour for people who took the class to get out of taking 8 o’clocks. But finals sure beats getting up at 9 every morning DAVID LEE, assistant history professor, grades another class’ finals and sleeping through lectures. while he gives a New South final. Shhhhh. Don’t tell my teachers. A WINDOW SILL in Cherry Hall provides a study seat for Whitesville senior Kathy Fairchild. She was studying for a History 120 final. FINALS can make students grimace, as Bill Whelan finds while ponder- ing a question in his New South history class. But course instructor — Sara-Lois Kerrick |] David Lee said the test “was a blow to the intelligence of the class.” so ee ee - Sa = —— a = “ = eee e serene SND UNNI We ETN NEAT I I IE TTT TE Graduation— A beginning and an end Dark billowy clouds covered the sky as a steady, light sprinkle dampened the capped- and-gowned, soon-to-be graduates waiting to march into Diddle Arena for Western’s 119th commencement. For some, the overcast sky seemed to fit their moods. “‘It’s really sad,” Robin Andrews said. “‘College is something I’ve always looked forward to, and now it’s over.” “T feel like I’m saying goodbye to part of my life,’ Sherry Hartford, a business major from Sebree, said. ‘“Going to school is all I’ve known for the past 16 years.” But for others graduation meant more of a new beginning than a long goodbye. “’m excited; it’s the first time I will really be on my own,” Sandy Roso, a nursing major, said. “‘T’ll find out what I truly want in life.” Except for the weather, the scene outside Diddle Arena wasn’t unusual. Graduates gathered in clusters of friends, talking about their jobs (or lack of jobs), their college escapades, and the celebrating they had done the night before. Some worked diligently taping figures and signs onto their mortarboards, so they would stand out in the black-robed crowd. Dave Roberts, an accounting major from Lexington, decided to give his parents a gradu- — Mark Lyons A PINWHEEL helped Owensboro senior Pat Mountain stand out in the graduation crowd, but university officials told Mountain he would have to leave his toy behind before marching into Diddle Arena. ation gift with the slogan, ‘““‘Thanks Mom and Dad,”’ atop his cap. Others used their initials or Greek letters and even fresh flowers. ‘“‘Unemployed”’ seemed to be a popular phrase. One guy summed up his academic life on his mortarboard with “I am a college graduate.”’ Dero Downing, past president, delivered the commencement address, telling the audience to pursue worthwhile ideals in life if they want success. Downing drew a round of applause as he described Western as “‘the best school in Ken- tucky.” Scholars of the colleges, outstanding faculty members and honor graduates were recog- nized. For the first year, cum laude standings were raised to a 3.4 grade-point average based on fall semester standings, leaving some who had expected to be honored out in the cold. Cindy Lamb, a Paducah elementary educa- tion major, got a 4.0 GPA in the spring semes- ter to bring her average above the 3.4 mark. But her fall semester’s GPA was below the new requirement. “My parents would have liked to see me wearing an honor cord,” she said. ‘After you’ve worked your butt off your last semes- GRADUATION IS PAR for the college course to Keith Stichtenoth, a journalism major from Cincinnati, Ohio. He said his 19th-hole design represented going on to the future after completing the college game. — Mark Lyons ter, you'd like some recognition.” Acting president John Minton conferred 1,106 bachelor’s degrees, 474 graduate de- grees, 223 associate degrees and six one-year certificates. Perhaps the most humorous part of the ceremony occurred when Minton asked the audience to join in singing the alma mater “College Heights.” Minton accidentally called it the “College Heights Herald,” which drew scattered applause from some journalists in the Potter College section. To many, the commencement seemed to end quickly, just as their college careers had. Some new graduates threw their caps in the air, others screamed and hugged their friends, a few had tears in their eyes, but many walked calmly away, thinking that college was now just a memory. “It'll be nice to come back as an alumnae,”’ Sandy Dorroh, a Princeton graduate, said. “But it will never be the same.” — Laura Phillips (| GRADUATION LEFT John Szymula, from Opa-Locka, Fla., free time to glide down the hill in front of Van Meter on his skateboard. Szymula had planned to ride his skate- board to commencement, but rain postponed his plans. — Mark Lyons — Lisa Roberts SIX-YEAR-OLD Lesli King tries on her mom’s cap while Mrs. Florence King, an education and guidance counseling major, arranges her hair. Leslie’s dad, Maj. Marc King, also graduated in public service administration. es ill Eamets, 126 Graduation Ca A wy reall pate Now Cachrneeaiiealcel — Mark Lyons The top five A very high grade-point average — that’s all it takes to graduate in the top five of the class. But as the women who graduated with that honor will testify, getting that average isn’t easy. “T had to learn a different way of studying,’ Jane Englebright, scholar of the Bowling Green Community College, said. “‘It took a lot of psychological prepara- tion.” Miss Englebright, 21, of Bowl- ing Green, received an associate degree in nursing in December and a bachelor’s degree in allied health occupation education in May. She earned a 3.9 GPA. Miss Englebright, who planned to work in Lexington at St. Joseph Hospital during the summer, said she ‘‘always seemed to make time for studying.” Finding that time was not al- ways easy, though. Miss Engle- bright was president of the Ken- tucky Association of Nursing Stu- dents and a member on the nation- al level. In her nursing class, she re- ceived the Florence Nightingale award and the Kentucky Medical Association academic award. She said the highest award that she had won was the KANS Ideal Student Nurse. In the fall, Miss Englebright will enter the University of Kentucky to study for her master’s degree. Although many students strug- gle through a 12- or 15-hour class load, Mary Tougher kept up a 3.9 GPA while averaging 18 hours per semester. Miss Tougher, 21, of Louisville, was the College of Education scholar. With majors in child speech and communication disor- SURROUNDED IN a sea of black robes, over the commencement exercises. Minton interim president John Minton presides officially conferred the degrees. — Mark Lyons RETIRING PRESIDENT Dero G. Down- told graduates they must pursue worth- ing, delivering the commencement address, __ while goals if they expect success in life. Graduation ders and psychology, she plans on becoming a speech pathologist. Miss Tougher was a member of the Swim Club, Phi Eta Sigma, a resident assistant in North Hall and wrote for the College Heights Herald her sophomore year. She was named to Who’s Who Among American College Stu- dents, was university scholar for speech and communication disor- ders and outstanding psychology _ student. She was awarded a Regents scholarship her freshman year and College Heights Foundation schol- arships for three years. Miss Tougher said the hardest thing about keeping her grades up was that “in some classes there were a lot of papers and stuff that I really had to work hard to do.” “But they were in my major so I didn’t really mind working that hard because I wanted to learn the material.” Miss Tougher will begin gra- duate work in speech pathology at Vanderbilt in the fall. Linda Kay Skaggs, a 21-year- old from Shepherdsville, graduat- ed with a 3.97 GPA. The Potter College scholar double-majored in mass communications and English. Miss Skaggs said she averaged taking 18 to 19 hours for her first five semesters, “‘but I’ve sort of taken it easy these last semesters. I’ve only been taking 12 to 15 hours.” An Alpha Delta Sigma nomi- nee, Miss Skaggs was also a mem- ber of the Western Ad Club, vice president of the Broadcasting As- sociation and worked at the edu- cational television station. Last year she was named out- standing scholar in the communi- cation and theater department. As a freshman, Miss Skaggs re- ceived a Regents scholarship. She also received College Heights Foundation scholarships for up- perclassmen. Sally Clark, a 21-year-old from Bowling Green, said she is now “waiting to hear about a job in translation in Washington.”’ Miss Clark said she spent much of her time studying German and French, her two majors. She was a member of Pi Delta Phi, the French honor society, and Delta Phi Alpha, the German honor soci- ety. Miss Clark’s studying paid off as she graduated with a 3.96 GPA. A new academic award this year was presented to Miss Clark in honor of Dr. William R. Walls, a French professor who died during the school year. The award, pre- sented by Pi Delta Phi, was to be given to a senior French major who showed excellence in the lan- guage. Miss Clark was also awarded the Finley Grise Award for foreign language. Miss Clark received undergrad- uate Regents scholarships for three years. Graduating with the highest overall average in the entire sen- ior class was Penny Jean Little of Greenville. She was also scholar of the College of Applied Arts and Health. or design major, accumulated a 3.99 GPA. “‘The only ‘B’ I got was in Bowling,” she said. 18 hours of classes per semester, Miss Little spent a final year in a design internship. “not really any different than in high school,” Miss Little said. “‘ just always kept up.” said, was economics. ‘But I hap- pened to like most of my classes. | didn’t take anything I didn’t like. class better,’’ she said. good out of everything I took.” design department of Henderson- Moorefield, a lumber company in Hopkinsville. 1 Miss Little, a 21-year-old interi- After four years of averaging Studying for college classes was The hardest subject for her, she “Interesting teachers make any “l always tried to get something Miss Little is now working in the q f e os, y “Wi gee 4 2 7 te —— - La — Mark Tucker GRADUATION MEANS goodbye and good luck as Lesa Newby, a Hopkinsville graduate, hugs fellow dental hygiene major Cathy Oliver. A DENTAL HYGIENE majors Cindy Roun- tree, Lesa Newby, Cathy Oliver and Laura Nation give toothy smiles as they pose for a graduation photograph. — Mark Tucker Graduation In the section: BOARD OF REGENTS — the 132 search for a president runs into complications. Administration and Academics An education. Supposedly, that is what everyone is here for. Some work hard for it. And some try to intermingle professional experience with it. Nursing students spend up to 20 hours a week at local hospitals; some students traveled to New York in May to learn more about fashion merchandising; some students work with underprivileged children or the HELP line to learn more about social work. . HOUSE ARCHITECTURE was the subject of conversa- Whether it’s intermingled with work or touched by a tion as Folk Art and Technology class students study an old president’s resignation, academics is the basis for farmhouse in Tennessee. Dr. Lynwood Montell, the class’ teacher, took the students on the two-day field trip. college lifestyles. — David Frank DERO G. DOWNING — after 10 years as president, Downing sud- denly resigns. NURSING — students divide their time between class and patients. LEZHNEV ALI —two “foreign” teachers add spice to academics. SOCIAL WORK — working with crisis lines and poor families is part of class. FASHION TOUR — New York is the classroom for fashion merchan- dising students. 131 Administration and Academics Looking for Mr. President Amid controversy, allegations and withdrawals, the regents battled to find a president. They found one. Compared to some earlier meetings, the May 13 gathering of the Board of Regents was anticlimactic. There was little drama or sense of conflict. Although it lacked excitement, the May 13 meeting had something none of the year’s oth- ers had — the naming of a president. Dr. Donald W. Zacharias, executive assistant to the chancellor of the University of Texas system, was named Western’s fifth president, effective July 31. He succeeded Dero Down- ing, who had unexpectedly announced his res- ignation the previous September. Zacharias’ appointment was approved by an 8-2 vote. Regents Tom Emberton of Edmonton ee and Ron Sheffer of Henderson were the only dissenters. Zacharias, 43, is a native of Salem, Ind., 35 miles north of Louisville. He received his bach- elor’s degree in 1957 from Georgetown (Ky.) College. He has held several positions at Indi- ana University and in the University of Texas system. The regents spent practically the whole year selecting a president. The search started with Downing’s Sept. 9 resignation and wasn’t over until the process had gone through about all it could and still survive. The process was basically one that allowed almost everyone on campus at least a small say in how a new president was chosen. The original presidential screening commit- tee was composed of regents, faculty, alumni and an elected student member. But the board expanded the committee from 13 to 15 by adding two “minority members’’ at the request of Steve Thornton, Associated Student Gov- ernment president and student regent. About 40 blacks had attended an ASG meet- ing to ask representation on the committee. Once the screening committee and then the board had narrowed the list of more than 170 applicants or nominees to five, three candi- dates withdrew from the running. But, many said, because the search was so — Mark Lyons 132 Board of Regents open and democratic, too many outside influ- ences went into the process. Calls were made to several regents by peo- ple supporting particular candidates, and one regent reported that he received three threat- ening telephone calls in the waning weeks of the search. This was brought to light a few days after the leading candidate for president, Dr. Kern Alexander of the University of Florida, dropped out of the race. He said he had been the target of personal attacks by people on Western’s campus and elsewhere, and he said there had been attempts at political interfer- ence in the selection. A large political contribution was alleged to have been offered to the state Democratic Par- ty if Gov. Julian Carroll would intervene in one candidate’s behalf. Carroll denied that there was an offer. Just after Alexander dropped out of the race, another candidate, Dr. James Drinnon, left the race because he said he liked his job at ‘the University of Tennessee-Chattanooga and his family wanted to stay there. That left the board with three candidates, but the selection was delayed two more weeks. In the meantime, another candidate — Dr. Todd H. Bullard of Rochester (N.Y.) Institute of Technology — withdrew. With just two candidates left, many people thought it would have been better to have started over. Emberton voiced this opinion when he voted against hiring Zacharias. “?’m concerned that we’ve placed more im- portance on the public image of the process than on being sure we are choosing the right man,” Emberton said. ‘‘This board is not acting in the best interests of the university.” Sheffer gave this reason for voting no: “I think problems will be encountered by Dr. Zacharias that would not have been encoun- tered by someone closer to the university.” IN CLOSED SESSION, the regents meet in the presi- dent’s office. While in the May 6 session, they agreed to meet with Dr. Kern Alexander. Despite Emberton’s and Sheffer’s objec- tions, the board pursued its plan to select a new president by the end of the semester, even if the selection were delayed until the Sunday after graduation. The faces of the regents seemed to tell the story of the decision — some were happy, some sullen, others expressing relief. “People’s faces tell you more than words,” board chairman John David Cole said. “I have the very highest respect for every member of this board. We have strong, independent indivi- duals. “This is not a time to relax ... this is the first step in what I would perceive to be a new era in Western. I have very strong and positive feelings about that era.” After the meeting, Cole said he was proud of the selection process. “We have set out to do something in terms of openness and objective processes, and we have accomplished it,”’ he said. Cole said he hopes that neither Zacharias nor anyone else would think that Zacharias was not the regents’ first choice. “These are unique processes,”’ Cole said. “‘ don’t feel that way, and I have no reason to believe that he would feel that way.” When it was all over after nine months, Cole smiled and talked about how it felt to have the process behind him. “T feel a sense of relief,” he said. “And a very great sense of responsibility the next three years to make darn sure these are the best three years Western has ever had.” Although it may appear that way, not all the year was spent selecting a president. The regents spent part of their time battling the Hub Pizzeria, a local restaurant that was trying to get a beer license. The Hub went out of business after being granted a license. The university appealed the granting of the license, citing a state statute outlawing the sale of alcoholic beverages with- — Mark Lyons JUST BEFORE naming Dr. Donald Zacharias president, Dr. John Minton and several regents discuss granting ten- ure to Zacharias. The resolution passed. in 200 feet of a building used exclusively for classrooms. Western contended that the Rock House, which is next door to the Hub, should be in- cluded under the law because it contains class- rooms and the foreign student adviser’s office. The state Alcoholic Beverage Control Board issued the license Feb. 3. But Feb. 26, while the case was being con- sidered by the state Court of Appeals, the state bought the pizzeria for Western’s use. It was bought for $98,000 — about $8,000 less than its appraised value. The board also talked about leaving the Ohio Valley Conference. In November the re- gents’ ad hoc athletics committee discussed exploring membership in the Metro 7 Confer- ence, forming a new conference or becoming an independent. But Sheffer had polled the coaches about remaining in the OVC, and they agreed that the OVC suited Western’s present needs. But the conversation took a different turn when the basketball team “‘lost”’ the OVC bas- ketball championship to Eastern because of an obscure rule. Still, by the year’s end, no deci- sion had been made about leaving the OVC. The regents also decided to buy a home at 1700 Chestnut St. for the new president. The house and its 1% acres cost the university and College Heights Foundation $165,000, while renovation was estimated at $35,000. The foundation will pay $97,000, and the universi- ty will cover the difference in annual payments of $6,500. President Dero Downing had lived in a presi- dent’s home at 1536 State St. Minton lived in his own home. The regents also raised tuition for non-resi- dents by $25 a semester. The activities fee was also raised $10 a semester, and dorm fees were increased $20, making the cost $235 for non-air-conditioned rooms and $255 for air- conditioned rooms. But except for picking a president, the year was relatively calm for the regents. — Alan Judd L) — Mark Lyons AFTER President Dero Downing had delivered his final remarks at the December regents meeting, board chairman John David Cole thinks for a moment. 133 Board of Regents ee .UUUNU._....._.. rrr : | | | AS GUARD for the 1942-43 Hilltoppers, Downing poses for an individual basketball portrait for the program and the Talisman. Downing originally came to Western to play basketball on a scholarship. AT THE CLOSE of his emotional speech at the apprecia- tion banquet Dec. 13, Downing is consoled by his wife Harriet. Downing had received letters and comments in appreciation of Harriet, and his final words in the speech concerned this praise “‘so richly deserved.” eee — Courtesy of Dero Downing — Mark Lyons DERO G. DOWNING, president of Western Kentucky University, resigned Sept. 9. In December, Downing works at his desk covered with paraphernalia collected over the years and paperwork of the moment. He took a sabbatical in the spring semester. After resigning his 10-year post, Downing has now found time for one of his favorite things. He has Dero Downing is changing. He can take a nap without feeling guilty. He has fewer telephone calls and more time to fish Kentucky’s lakes. A list of pending decisions, both minute and monstrous, is being erased gradually from his thoughts. Though Downing is still a part of the Hill, he is no longer president of it. In a voice made ragged by emotions, Down- ing resigned Sept. 9. The intensity wasn’t much different from that of the fall of 1969, when he accepted the responsibilities and pres- sures of leading a university into the 1970s. Last fall he was touched by remarks of grati- tude and best wishes, but he was confident. His long-range health was his major reason for the unexpected letter of resignation in the midst of Ua eae, eae RA halk ie le ete dhe ede. Laake tk A yon 134 Dero Downing Gone fishing his third term. “There are those who have suggested that I would experience regret and frustration later and wish I hadn’t done it,’”’ a relaxed Downing said in February as he began reflecting on his life at Western. “I have felt and continue to feel it was the right decision. I felt very good about the fact that it was timely.” Reflecting wasn’t simple. Capsuling a 40- year relationship with a university into a cou- ple of hours is almost impossible. But he was willing to start from the beginning of what he describes almost a “‘fateful” career. The year was 1939. Young Dero Downing was eager to enroll at Western, but a family with seven children rebounding from Depres- sion years could not guarantee him the needed )ERO 6. DOWNING | a . wv finances. “But when Mr. (Ed) Diddle (the basketball coach) visited our home and indicated to me he was offering me a scholarship to attend West- ern ... well, there was no question in my mind where I’d be going,’ Downing said with a smile. ‘“There was never another place I want- ed to go.” He moved to the Hill fr om a strict and Chris- tian family. His father entertained few excuses for failures, while his mother was compassion- ate and understanding. It always has been a close family, Downing said. Downing played basketball and tennis for Western, worked in the bookstore for 25 cents an hour (“that did a lot more then’’), met his wife-to-be, Harriet Yarnell, was elected presi- dent of his senior class and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in mathematics in June 1943. Without interruption he can quickly name a dozen or more faculty, administrators and coaches who made a difference in his life. “Their interest in my welfare and their support for my endeavors have continued over the years and tend to sustain and strengthen me.” Athletics also helped him carve out a set of qualities and beliefs he would shoulder throughout his life. ““Athletics are so much of life itself,’ the blue-eyed Downing said. “‘There are so many intangibles, so many uncertainties. You often find yourself wondering about it (life, athletics), its value or importance. I’m convinced athletics has been beneficial in my continued on page 136 — Mark Lyons 135 Dero Downing 136 Gone fishing .. life. You can’t succeed if you’re faint of heart or unwilling to train and prepare and commit yourself.” The young graduate left the Hill to serve in the Navy during World War II. Not long after returning to the Bluegrass state, Downing was on the Hill again. ‘One of the first things after being in the service during WW II was getting home. Then one of the next things was to get back to this Hill,’ he said. During the visit he was offered a teaching and coaching job at College High, part of Western’s training school. President Paul Gar- COMMITTEES, paperwork, individual problems and visi- tors filed through the president’s office daily. During one afternoon appointment Downing and agriculture depart- ment members discuss the possibility of acquiring additional land for the university farm. BEING GREETED AT 8:30 A.M. on Sept. 6, 1972, by 250 dissatisfied blacks was one of the low points of Down- ing’s tenure. The peaceful sit-in was in protest of cheer- leader selection. After much discussion by administrators and votes by Associated Student Government, the number of cheerleaders was increased from six to 10, and two black cheerleaders were appointed. — George Wedding Dero Downing rett warned Downing and his bride that $1,800 wasn’t a handsome salary and that a better one could be earned elsewhere. But the newlyweds took the offer and never regretted it, Downing said. During that time Downing earned a master’s degree. In 1958 he was awarded the educa- tional specialist degree by George Peabody College for Teachers. But he seemed destined to leave teaching for administration. “Call it fate or accident or timing,’’ Downing says now about his transfer from laboratory school to registrar in 1959, to admissions di- rector in 1962, to business affairs dean in 1964, to administrative affairs vice president in 1965. He confesses he was never prepared or Woolly trained for the positions he accepted, but when the president asked him to try, he didn’t re- fuse. “It’s like when the coach says ‘play this position on the team,’ ”’ Downing said. ““You do it if it will make the team better even if you’d prefer not to change. You don’t tell the coach ‘if I can’t play point guard, I won’t play at all.’ ” And when Downing was named vice presi- dent and worked in an office only steps from that of President Kelly Thompson, being presi- dent still wasn’t a personal ambition. “All through that series of changes, on no occasion was | seeking that position,”’ he said. “IT expressed the willingness to attempt that if it was in the best interest of the university. I just thought I ought to do whatever the coach of the team thought would be best. That’s always been the philosophy I’ve had.” Downing has been described as a settling force during his 9'2-year presidency. He makes no apologies for his somewhat reserved personality. His handshakes are friendly, but firm. He is a serious and conserva- tive man, but one who can laugh and smile easily. Three years before he was named president, Western received its university status. But Downing continued to refine the university. “We continued to improve and add empha- sis on library sources, holdings and services. We continued to develop the university’s mas- ter plan. “A significant part of our efforts was devot- ed to the retention and continual strengthening of some of those aspects of the university some forces wanted to see us relinquish or lose.” An example is the university farm operation, which was criticized often, Downing said. Some thought that the university shouldn’t expand the farm, but Downing thought it should since Western attracted many agriculture majors. “Hardly a day passed that there weren’t some disappointments,” he said. ““Some were small; some were more significant. I think there has never been a time I felt we accomplished everything we aspired to. We fell short of that which could have been done by our limited imagination and anticipation. But there was never a lack of effort, desire and willingness to work.” The semesters passed quickly, and the dead- lines and target dates always loomed closer than was comfortable. But Downing tackled his position and its demands with loads of energy, time and com- mitment. He forfeited two-week vacations and fishing trips through his presidency. He was ‘ton call,” much like a physician, day and night, weekends, holidays, always. “When I took this office I was well aware of continued on page 138 INFORMAL MOMENTS were part of the president’s day, too. Downing jokes with budget director Paul Cook and Mary Hawes, his secretary, after thanking them for their participation in his appreciation banquet the night before. me y — Mark Lyons 137 Dero Downing 138 Gone fishing ” many of its demands and responsibilities,” he said. “But like so many things you observe from a distance or through others, there is absolutely no way to fully appreciate that until you experience it. I don’t want to give the impression that it was burdensome or unduly demanding and unpleasant. It was challenging and rewarding.” While Downing stressed academics, he also enccuraged students to educate their hearts. “There’s considerably more to the educa- tional process than the mastery of knowledge, skills and facts,” he said. “It is a process of human development of qualities that go be- yond that. Integrity and the willingness to work are characteristics which aren’t as measurable in quantity or quality. They’re important intan- gibles which we believe to be basics to go to make up that thing we know as the Western spirit.” Spirit. It was a part of each speech Downing made. It was the theme in countless conversa- tions and letters of congratulations to students earning honors at Western. It’s the spirit that helped to sustain and encourage Downing him- self, he said. It’s a spirit he wears still, despite the subtrac- tion of the top position on the Hill. It’s also the spirit he admires in others. “When I resigned, one reaction was an over- whelming sense of appreciation and gratitude to Harriet and me.”’ There was an appreciation — Lewis Gardner A FIRM GRIP and eye contact heavy with emotion say more than words as Downing talks to football coach Jimmy Feix after Western lost the U.T.-Chattanooga game. Long- time friend Feix had just heard of Downing’s resignation. WITH A PUFF of breath, smilingly approved of by Down- ing, Anne Downing Patterson celebrates her 24th birthday Jan. 27, 1976. Ray Patterson watches as his wife receives the attention Downing always reserved for his family. The celebration was in the Downing home. Dero Downing dinner, a red fishing boat, a cruise, countless telephone messages and letters from students, faculty, staff and alumni. “In many instances they were more generous in their comments than we might deserve, but we both appreciat- ed it so much. “The friendly, personal relationships with a great number of university employees at all levels has been beneficial because that sense of friendship has continued. There is hardly an employee I’ve not had an opportunity, in pass- ing, to get to know. They’ve been very gra- cious.” Although he has attempted to keep a low profile during his sabbatical, he still bumps into his countless long-time associates. For example. One noon Downing invited university attorney Bill Bivin to his home for a sandwich. On their return to the office, they met a maintenance worker who was shoveling the latest snowfall. Downing told the man he was sure he’d be glad to mow grass again. In response the man asked Downing when he was going to take him fishing. Downing chuckled and answered, “‘I’ll be calling you because you know where all the good fishing holes are.”’ His titles have not been forgotten either. “Titles tend to continue with a person, such as with a judge. There are people around here whom I coached at College High many years ago. They still call me coach,”’ Downing said. “Some people continue to use the title of president as carryover, but with most people I hope to be known just as Dero.” Meanwhile, the former president spends several days in an office in the Alumni Center, once the president’s home. This comfortable second-story office is void of the red carpet of his former office, but familiar objects decorate his desk. His nameplate, pen set, red and white desk telephone and a well-worn color photo- graph of his family surround him. The door remains open like the one in his former presi- dent’s office in Wetherby Administration Build- ing. His tasks now involve “‘winding down”’ as he tries to put his files of Western history in order. The transition has been relatively smooth but not immediate or drastic. Flu, pneumonia and family illnesses retarded much thought to the future. “We're trying to get moved (to their home on Highland Drive), but we’re confronted with sorting an accumulation of a 10-year span,” Downing said. “‘That hasn’t been easy, but I find some satisfaction in getting back into a familiar and friendly neighborhood where we spent so many years. It’s a homecoming that has made me feel good. The neighbors sug- gested they missed us and even brought food over. It’s not that this wasn’t a comfortable and pleasant period, but I welcome a return to normal. “In many respects living close to campus was helpful and convenient,’ he added. “‘ could walk to the office and could be readily available day and night. Sometimes you wish you weren't so readily available.” Downing said he has no immediate or specif- continued on page 140 i — Bob Coffey Md ia Nain mes be ai RE SR Rg = Aa FP le Ms FRB BP S55, — Lewis Gardner KNOWN FOR HIS COMPULSION for campus cleanii- ness, Downing stoops to pick up trash after the U.T.- Chattanooga football game. Only hours before he had re- signed as president. ON JAN. 18, 1976, Downing addressed the State Street United Methodist Church on “‘Life’s Anchor Posts.’’ The talk was for the church’s annual President’s Day. The for- mer president and his wife have attended the church since they were students at Western in the early °40s. This special day was started after Downing took office in 1969. — Bob Coffey 139 Dero Downing 140 Dero Downing Gone fishing ... ic health problem. “But I had a recognition of the fact that in the long range I needed to have a better control of my health situation,” he said. “It’s awfully hard to accomplish that when you are president. “There will always be in the position of president so many unmet demands. You never feel you can break away from those and do some of the things you’d personally like to do. As you are pressed to meet those responsibil- ities there is less and less time for your person- al life and family. It tends to take its toll after a long time.” So Downing found a time when he felt he could step down from the presidency without leaving Western in a shambles or distress. He plans to spend more time with his five children and six grandchildren, one of whom was born in March. He’ll relax more with vaca- tions, fishing trips, antique sales and basketball games with his son, Alex. He is ready to switch his priorities. Near the end of the sabbatical (Aug. 8) he will make more definite plans for his future. “‘I need a better focus on my overall health situa- tion first,’’ he said. “But I’m always going to remain close to the university in my belief in it and a desire to see it prosper and develop. I have a willingness in one way or another to give support to universi- ty affairs. “Tl never be indifferent to what goes on on the Hill. It’s just meant too much to me ...” — Connie Holman [] TAKEN Oct. 1943, this photo of Dero and Harriet Down- ing was made soon after the two were married. TENDERLY, the Downings cuddle Harriet Elaine Patter- son. Born March 31 to their daughter Anne Downing Pat- terson, Harriet Elaine is their sixth grandchild. The Patter- sons stayed at the Downing’s home four days after the mother and child came home from the hospital. — Mark Lyons HER 142 Temporarily at the top Photos by Mark Lyons Dx. John Minton is a company man. For 21 years, he’s been steadfastly devoted to Western, whether teaching in the history department or sitting in the president’s office. When Dero Downing left the presidency in early January, Minton became interim presi- dent, leaving his post as administrative affairs vice president. And as his days in Western’s top job wound down, he spoke of the experience in terms of his relationship to the university. As always, the loyalist in him showed. “T imagine I’ll go back to my former position and be of help to the new president,’’ Minton, 57, said in his office in late April. “I'll be of what assistance I can. “‘T have enjoyed it (the presidency); it’s been a good experience for me. It has given me a view (of Western) that I would not have had the opportunity to have.” Although Minton had observed Downing — and before him, Kelly Thompson — in the presidency, he was a little overwhelmed after taking over the office. He had difficulty finding enough time for the day-to-day tasks, he said. “It’s been much broader and more demand- ing than I ever would have thought,”’ he said, a slight smile crossing his face. “Tf you do the job well, you have very little control over your time. That’s something you have to learn — to schedule your time. “It’s just the red tape of getting the job done. But I could not have had better support from the Board of Regents, faculty, staff and students. ““You have to depend on competent people to advise you. I feel we have that.” Minton was also helped by having two ex- perts on the presidency nearby. He sought the advice of Downing and Thompson in several times of confusion. “Td say I’ve had a very good working rela- tionship with President Downing,” Minton said. ‘On the day he indicated he wanted to resign, | said I’d help to make the transition as easy as possible. DURING A MEETING in April, business affairs vice presi- dent Harry Largen, budget director Paul Cook and aca- demic affairs vice president James Davis discuss the budget with Minton in the regents conference room. Interim President ‘“‘He’s been a source if I’ve needed him, but not in any way has he projected himself too much. He said he wouldn’t be looking over my shoulder, and he has kept to that. I’ve had the same type of working relationship with Dr. Thompson.” With the possible exception of problems in- volved in the search for Western’s fifth full- time president, Minton’s greatest difficulty in office arose from preparing the 1979-80 uni- versity operating budget. “The first Thursday in here, I had to appear before a subcommittee of the (state) legislature on reducing the budget. That was a new exper- ience and a challenge. “Those are tough decisions that have to be made. But again, the people I work with have made it much easier for me.” However, Minton chose not to act on some issues that would directly affect the new presi- dent, leaving them to the newcomer. “By the very nature of the short term, you have to make a judgment on the decisions to be made and what to put in the hold cate- gory,” he said. Although Minton said he enjoyed his term, he said he looked forward to returning to ei- ther teaching or administrative work. Again, a concern for Western is among his motives. “It’s been a (difficult) routine; I'll tell you that. For the good of the university, we need to have a new president on the job. We need to have a permanent president. “That’s good for all of us.” — Bryan Armstrong | A PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, Dr. Norman Baxter of California State University at Fresno, sits with Minton dur- ing a regents meeting. Controversy surrounded Baxter since he had received a no-confidence vote from his faculty. THE PAST is ever present as Western’s third president, Kelly Thompson, is pictured above Minton as he awaits the return of the regents, who were in closed session discussing the selection of a president. Fmd PRESIDENT MINTON displays a toy turtle given to him by his sons. The gift, which was prompted by a book on the presidency, was to remind him that ‘“‘you can’t make any progress without sticking your neck out,”’ he said. 144 Administration — Harold Sinclair = ae E ear At the top Life at the top of the Hill is not far removed from students. Everyday, in the offices of Wetherby Admin- istration Building, decisions are made which affect students, faculty, administrators and oth- er university employees. Making those decisions are four men who are just a few steps away from the president. Preparing the budget takes most of Dr. Paul Cook’s time. LAUGHTER helps Dr. James Davis, academic affairs vice president, make it through the day. Davis is also chairman of the Academic Council. Cook is budget director and assistant to the president for resources manage- ment. The 1978-79 budget, including estimated in- come and expenditures, totaled $41,004, 203, Cook said. And since salaries are the largest single item in the budget, they take first priority in budget preparation, he said. Most of the school’s income comes from state and federal funds and grants, with tuition making up about 15 to 20 percent of the in- HIS DESK covered with paper, Harry Largen and person- nel director Jim Tomes discuss the 1979-80 budget. Largen said it was his “paperwork day.” — Harold Sinclair t | come. “Some students have the impression that tuition covers the entire cost of their educa- tion, but that’s not the case,’’ Cook said. ‘‘And the state Council on Higher Education sets student registration fees, not the university.” Cook also supervises the computer services center and the grants and contracts office. The controversial “54-hour rule” put Dr. + | James Davis, academic affairs vice presi- dent, in the news. Davis, as Academic Council chairman, often had to answer questions about the rule, which _ states that students graduating after August 1980 must have 54 hours of upper-level | courses — instead of 32. When the requirement was passed in late spring 1978, members cited both educational and financial reasons for the change. Davis said it was for an ‘‘academic reason.” With the 32-hour requirement, students might — Harold Sinclair be able to take upper-level courses only in their senior year. With the 54-hour rule, it would take two years. Also, the council had hoped that CHE would give additional funding to Western if the rule were enacted. As it turned out, CHE did not. Part of the controversy stemmed from the fact that courses would have to be renum- bered. Some argued that changing a 200-level class to 300-level, without making the course more difficult, would create other problems. “The Academic Council meetings were calm until the December meeting, when course num- ber changes were brought up,” Davis said. The council voted to give departments the responsibility for renumbering courses. When he isn’t dealing with the Academic Council, Davis oversees the planning and de- velopment of the six colleges, academic ser- vices and the continuing education programs. He helps determine faculty salaries and ap- pointments and evaluates recommendations from the faculty research committee. It was an extremely busy year, according to Harry Largen, business affairs vice presi- dent. “Events determined our actions more than any year I’ve known,” he said. Largen said he is in charge of eight offices: accounting and budgeting, financial aid, phys- ical plant, food services, postal services, per- sonnel, purchasing and ticket management. Largen said the federal government has tightened the criteria for awarding grants, mak- ing it more difficult for some students to get federal aid. The Office of Education now reviews a ran- ALONG EINE of figures litters Dr. Paul Cook’s desk and floor. Cook, budget director, was getting totals from each college’s requests for the 1978-79 budget. dom number of students’ financial aid applica- tions to see if the data they submit is consistent with their families’ reported income. Fewer than 200 of the 2,600 Western stu- dents eligible for financial aid were asked to verify their information, Mona Logsdon, finan- cial aid staff assistant, said. Of these 200, less than one percent were denied federal aid because of discrepancies. “Most of the discrepancies were caused from students filling out forms too hastily or estimating, rather than actually knowing, their family’s exact income,” she said. Rhea Lazarus, staff assistant to the president, says he does more than shuffle pa- perwork — he deals with people. “The president’s office is the ultimate ap- peal ground,” he said. ‘‘A student can always have access to our offices.” Almost daily, he listens to students with fi- nancial aid questions or housing problems, he said. “In reality most of their questions can be answered elsewhere, but they don’t know where to get help,” he said. Lazarus also supervises the public safety de- partment, including overseeing the depart- ment’s budget and personnel. He is also in frequent contact with the student affairs and registrar’s offices. One of his main concerns has been oversee- ing Western’s compliance with the Handi- capped Act. Lazarus said this includes ev- erything from ensuring program accessibility to class scheduling. — Laura Phillips _] — Harold Sinclair BEFORE LUNCH, a series of phone calls kept Rhea Lazarus occupied. Six or seven calls were made while the photographer was in the office. 145 Administration 146 Administration — Harold Sinclair It’s not much, but it’s ‘home’ Horace Shrader Home to more than 5,000 students is four concrete-block walls, a bed, a desk and closet. It’s not much. But Linda Jones, a senior biology major from Bowling Green, likes dorm life. “Being a student involved in work and studies on cam- pus, I like how convenient the dorm is,”’ she said. ““And moneywise you can’t do any bet- ter.”’ Miss Jones has lived in Central Hall three years. Central is one of 16 dorms — four men’s and 12 women’s. They’re directed by the hous- ing office and Horace Shrader, housing di- rector. Dorm maintenance and inventory and pur- chasing of equipment are among the housing office’s responsibilities. In addition, the office receives about 6,000 housing applications each fall semester and 4,500 each spring. Students living in the dorms may request certain rooms before assignments for new stu- dents are made. About 1,000 freshmen apply before the application deadline for upperclass- men, Shrader said. Room assignments are made by computer, except for requests for specific roommates, which are processed by hand, Shrader said. “We grant requests as far as we can,” he said. “‘But we just can’t place 1,000 girls in Central Hall.” Ten-floor Central Hall, located behind Downing University Center, is the most re- quested of the women’s dorms. It houses about 400 women. The housing office contacts students twice during the summer to confirm applications. Shrader said the “double check’’ gives stu- PINUPS AND MORE PINUPS line the walls of Daniel Tolopka’s Barnes-Campbell dorm room. A beer can collec- tion shares the space. He is a Glasgow freshman. A FRIEND’S ROOM in Pearce-Ford Tower doubles as a weightlifting room for freshman John Crider, an electrical engineering major from Greenville. — Harold Sinclair dents two chances to make housing changes before the semester begins. “We opened at 99 percent occupancy this fall,” Shrader said. Temporary housing for 75 women was provided in Schneider Hall the first six week. of the term, until arrangements could be maae for placement in regular dorms. “We always have a few no-shows,”’ Shrader said. He said some decide to live off campus or to attend another school. He said students complain most about the ever-increasing housing fee, which includes rent, water and electricity, maid and mainten- ance service, garbage disposal, weekly linen exchange, telephone and refrigerator. For an air-conditioned room, the fee is $235 per semester. It had been $205 in 1977-78 and $184 in 1976-77. A non-air-conditioned room is $225. It had been $193 and $172. “Inflation is forcing our fees up,” Shrader said. “Right now we’re holding tight but it could go up.” He said the office is financially self-support- ive. LIVING AWAY FROM HOME may have its advantages, but dorm life offers no escape from cleaning chores. Sherri Hoffman, a sophomore from Jasper, Ind., said she doesn’t Vandalism creates additional expense. Shrader refers to the problem as ‘“‘passive van- dalism.”” “I believe they (residents) are just expending energy,” he said. ‘“They’re not really trying to be destructive.’”’ He also said the problem is more extensive in men’s dorms than in wom- en’s. At Western, as with most state-supported schools, freshmen and sophomore students are required to live on campus unless they com- mute. Veterans and married students are also exempt. Four years ago the dorms opened with 80 percent occupancy, Shrader said. At least 85 percent occupancy is needed to raise enough money to pay the bond debt on the buildings. Otherwise, the money must be drawn from other university funds, Shrader said. Housing officials also act as counselors for dorm residents having roommate conflicts. “We handle the cases on an individual ba- sis,” Shrader said. ‘“We ask them to wait at least two weeks before making a move to give — Judy Watson clean very often, but she occasionally vacuums her carpet. The carpet, along with curtains, plants and furniture, pro- vides ‘“‘atmosphere,”’ she said. the situation time to work out.” The problems range from “a flat-out racial situation’’ to incompatibility of ‘‘best friends from home,” he said. In fall 1979, North and East halls, currently women’s dorms, will become men’s dorms and Poland Hall will be converted into a women’s dorm. “We started trying to get it (the change) done three years ago to give a better balance of men’s and women’s dorms on campus,” Shrader said. North and East halls are in the central part of campus and are not air-conditioned, giving men a choice of location and housing fees. The housing office’s responsibilities have changed little in the last five years, according to Shrader. “Residence life used to be more in this of- fice,’ he said. ‘“‘And now it has shifted to stu- dent affairs. Our responsibilities are with the physical aspects of the dorms themselves.” — Susan Taylor 147 Administration Say goodbye to long lines ma — Harold Sinclair FRESHMAN STEVE CROSS uses the Diddle Arena floor as his table and chair during fall semester registration. Cross, a computer science major from Bowling Green, was adding a math class. Upperclassmen had registered months before. Thousands of computer cards and registration forms are filled out by students and processed in the registrar’s office each semester. It has long been recognized as an imperfect system and one that meant hassles for a lot of people. That’s why the university has moved toward advance registration for more students and come up with a system that “‘up to this point has been very successful,” according to Dr. Steve House, registrar. Students with 60 hours or more and grad- uate students can register in advance by the on-line terminal system. The students’ tenta- ti ve schedules are entered into the terminal and quickly checked for errors. There are no long lines, no cards for individ- ual classes, no rows of tables — there’s simply one schedule card and a computer terminal. The advance system is much easier and quicker for students, House said. The student knows his schedule before the semester and mistakes are less likely to occur. Candace Peyton, an Evansville, Ind., junior, agreed with House. After spring semester reg- istration, she said, ““You didn’t have to go through the hassle you have to at regular regis- tration — the tables down below and the mess on the upper concourse.” House said the system is more costly be- Students have an alternative to Art Apprecia- tion and French 120. Say hello to advance registration cause of the extra expense of terminals and key punch operators. Departmental preregistration is also gaining popularity. Majors and minors in some depart- ments can register in advance for specific classes, and this helps in scheduling faculty and classes, House said. Not only do the registrar and his office take care of registration, but they also keep records of current and former students, determine which students are eligible to graduate and keep data used by the financial aid office, the state Council on Higher Education and other organizations. There are 16 full-time staff members and 10 student workers. During the peak registration periods, the office hires another 50 student workers. During 1977-78, the registrar’s office regis- tered 32,105. Of these, 5,520 registered in advance. The number of drop-adds was 31,403, House said. House said his office handles a large amount of “‘traffic.”’ Yet the effort is made to deal with each student and faculty member individually, he said. Whether it’s done by people or computer, “‘we work with practically the entire universi- ty,” House said. — Mary Julia Pace (| Special programs offer something for everyone They can learn about love, take correspon- dence courses or do summer field research in Latin America. They can even take classes with a Pakistani professor in Cherry Hall. All this and more comes under three offices — public service and international programs, honors program and special programs. Dr. Raymond Cravens, public service and international programs dean, issues work and travel permits. But more important- ly, he deals with faculty exchanges and foreign study programs. A Fulbright professor from Nigeria was as- signed to the history department, eight Argen- tinian schoolteachers began a development program, nine students studied at Paul Valery University in France, one student from Paul Valery studied here, two professors taught in Iran and Nigeria and two spent two months in Argentina. The number of visits abroad has increased, Wallace Nave Raymond Cravens Faye Robinson Administration and Cravens said he is adding a study program in England comparable to the one in Latin America. His office is preparing a foreign study library that will give information on international pro- grams, he said. Cravens also publishes News-Link, a public- service newsletter, and his office provides fac- ulty and student speakers to community agen- cies, businesses and organizations. Like the international program, the honors program gives students the opportunity to work independently and study some unusual topics. “‘The Meaning of Love”’ is the most popular honors colloquia, according to Dr. Faye Rob- inson, honors program coordinator. Departmental honors courses in psychology were offered for the first time in the fall semes- ter, Mrs. Robinson said. Students may also design their own majors. Usually four or five develop an area-study ma- jor, she said. Mrs. Robinson, who became honors pro- Seessseereyryreree — Harold Sinclair gram coordinator in the summer, said she would like to make some changes and wants more student opinions. “I can see a need for more environmental studies courses,’ she said. Rewriting and redesigning the honors mailer gave Mrs. Robinson a chance to simplify and clarify the honors message: classes are de- signed to be harder, but grading doesn’t in- clude harsh curves that destroy grade-point averages. ; “IT hope to get to know the students, get involved and keep in contact with them,” she said. She said her Counseling for Education class keeps her near students and that she intends to stay close to honors students. The special programs office offers corre- spondence courses, continuing education courses and liberal studies associate degrees. “We are not in competition with regular campus courses,” Dr. Wallace Nave, spe- cial programs director, said. ‘‘We don’t want to detract from them — that would be at odds with our goals.” Steve House THE LONG WAIT in line to drop and add classes can be tiring, as Joy Eldridge, a Henderson freshman, discovered. The nursing major had enrolled in the wrong English class. The office works directly with summer school — soliciting courses, notifying depart- ments about teaching positions, producing the summer bulletin and developing payrolls for teachers not in the 12-month program. It also works with continuing education classes, which are for those who can’t attend daytime classes, Nave said. Nave also deals with the liberal studies asso- ciate degree program. Two extremes — freshmen with no hours and students with many hours — enroll in the program, he said. The office compiles a degree program for the freshman with no hours and who has not decided upon a major. Students with a lot of hours may wish to list their majors as liberal studies. The most popular correspondence courses are general education classes, Nave said. After all, it’s hard to learn about love through the mail. — Lisa Roberts 149 Administration 150 Administration Buddy Childress Bill Bivin iy 7 Defining the law for the university eX A ns iy F cape’ og — Mark Lyons Unlike Perry Mason, Bill Bivin doesn’t spend his time badgering witnesses and solving “‘un- solvable’’ cases. Instead, Bivin, university attorney, spends his days diafting or reviewing universi- ty regulations, contracts and other legal docu- ments, advising officials, reading law literature and talking to students. He does not represent the university in courtroom litigation, but he assists and recom- mends outside counsel when the need arises. A former professor at the University of Ken- tucky School of Law, Bivin said his role in the university is still being defined. Until about 12 or 15 years ago, colleges and universities had little or no need for their own attorneys, he said, since they operated “‘in loco parentis’”’ — doing what they wanted with students, as a A student can expect to buy books each se- mester. He can also expect to spend about $60 for them at the College Heights Book- store. The bookstore is owned and supervised by the College Heights Foundation, and profits are recirculated into scholarships and the work-study program, according to Buddy Childress, university stores director. The foundation is a non-profit organization, an “‘instrument of handling money to help stu- dents,”’ Childress said. The bookstore has expanded in the last 20 years. It used to be in the Cherry Hall base- ment, and it sold only textbooks and supplies. Now in the Downing University Center, the bookstore also sells record albums, cosmetics, jewelry, sporting goods and more. “We have these items in stock for student convenience,’ Childress said. “‘We don’t have massive buying power, though, so it’s the stu- dents’ choice whether to buy what they need here and now or save a couple of pennies by buying it later somewhere else.”’ Childress said that many students believe that “‘lack of competition” keeps the book- store prices high. The university bought L M Bookstore, the bookstore’s only competition, in 1975. “They did well until we expanded,” Chil- dress said. ‘But they couldn’t compete on our larger scale.” A commentary in the Sept. 28, 1978, Col- lege Heights Herald said the purchase was an CHECKING OUT CUSTOMERS is a family affair for cashier Jewell Keown. Mrs. Keown waits on her grand- daughter, Jennifer Keown, and Jennifer’s cousin, Stacey Hendrick. Stephanie Keown, another grandchild, watches. LONG LINES await students at the beginning of each semester. The temperature and tempers soared as some students waited as long as an hour to buy books. example of “the university’s ambiguous atti- tude toward free enterprise.” “Publicly, Western promotes it (free enter- prise),’’ the commentary read. ‘‘But when its ideals are put into practice to the point that they conflict with university interests or mono- polies, the attitude changes quickly.” Books are bought from about 400 indepen- dent publishers, Childress said, and they’re bought at 80 percent of the retail price. Students may sell used books to the book- store for half of the original price. The books are marked up 25 percent for resale. “There’s a risk in dealing with used books,” Childress said. ‘“We buy a book back at half the new price with no guarantee that it will be used again.” If used books are sold to wholesalers, the aw. “@ 4 purchase price is 25 percent of the original price, Childress said. And if a textbook is revised, the earlier edi- tion cannot be sold again. “We offer 50 cents for dropped books just so the students can get rid of them, even though we can’t,” Childress said. The bookstore also orders graduation caps, gowns and announcements. It will order books upon request, and it oper- ates a check-cashing service from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday. Childress said his job is a challenge. “It’s tough satisfying the demands of some 14,000 students, trying to anticipate what they’re going to want, need and buy.” — Susan Taylor L) — David Frank parent might. But with the civil rights movement in the 760s and students’ involvement on campuses other than their own, university attorneys were needed to advise on re-admitting students after they had been arrested during protest activi- ties, he said. Today, according to Bivin, a university attor- ney advises school officials on federal and state laws, such as Title IX and Occupational Safety and Health Administration standards, which deal with sex discrimination and safety ha- zards. In the last 10 years, the school has been involved in four lawsuits. Bivin said he consid- ers litigation a last ditch effort to resolve a legal problem because neither party is usually satis- fied with the outcome. ee _ Eee The most recent lawsuit involved the Hub Pizzeria, a local restaurant, and its fight to obtain a beer license in 1977-78. State law prohibits sale of alcoholic beverages within 200 feet of a building used exclusively for classrooms. The pizzeria was next door to the Rock House, a building that houses the interna- tional programs office and some classrooms. The university contended that the Rock House should be included in the law. The state Alcoholic Beverage Control board voted to give the pizzeria a license, but the university filed several appeals — the last in the Kentucky Court of Appeals. The restaurant went out of business in the fall semester and asked the university to buy the property, which lies in Western’s “buffer zone.” The university asked the state to ap- praise the property and allow its purchase. However, the appeal was not dropped. Although Bivin’s job is not to provide free legal advice to students, Bivin sometimes ad- vises them. He said most of the students’ prob- lems ‘‘are consumer education problems” — rent and repair bill hassles. A University of Kentucky law school grad- uate, Bivin said the jobs of most university attorneys are similar. Fifteen years ago, there were fewer than 20 university attorneys na- tionwide, Bivin said. Now there are more than 1,000 who belong to the National Society of University Attorneys. ““My days are not routine, by any stretch of the imagination,” Bivin said. — Cindy McCaleb [_} 151 Administration 152 Earl Wassom Riley Handy Crawford Crowe Big, ‘intimidating’ — that’s the 6 libraries It’s big, it’s different and it can be intimidating. It’s the library system, containing 750,000 bound volumes, 500,000 manuscript pages in the Kentucky Library and a vast assortment of other educational materials, according to Dr. Earl Wassom, library services director. Any field of study can be pursued in one of the six libraries — Helm, Cravens, Science Library, the Educational Resources Center, the Jones-Jaggers instructional materials cen- ter and the Kentucky Library, Wassom said. Students are sometimes overwhelmed by the library’s size, Wassom said. ‘‘When these youngsters come in as freshmen from Yellow- butt High School where they had a different classification system and maybe 10,000 books and suddenly come into a place where they get lost just walking around, I’m sure they’re intimidated. That’s why we initiated 101 (Use of the Library),”’ he said. Once students become familiar with the li- brary, it serves as ‘‘an enhancement arm for the professor,” Wassom said. “‘The professor could introduce a concept in class, but he can’t develop it very far in 60 minutes. “Many students come here for comfort, too. They’re surrounded by people, but there’s an atmosphere of solitude,’’ Wassom said. Wassom said the library also offers enjoy- ment, especially since a committee has been formed and money allocated to buy popular books. Riley Handy, Kentucky Library and Museum director, also said he believes the libraries have a multiple attraction. ‘‘Any student can find something of interest in the Kentucky Library,” he said. ‘For exam- ple, a geography student and an art student would both be interested in an old map, but Administration they would look at it in a different way.” The Kentucky Library and Museum, which Handy said will be moved to the renovated Kentucky Building by 1980, is the third largest collection of its type in the state. It includes books, manuscripts, maps, diaries, photo- graphs and bibliographies pertaining to Ken- tucky. Handy said the Kentucky collection is used mainly for research and study “serious study like term papers, master’s theses and dissertations.” Genealogists ‘“‘from as far away as Hawaii or Washington state’ and historical researchers also use the library, Handy said. For articles pertaining to Western, one can turn to the university archives. The archives contain ‘‘documents of the uni- versity considered to be worthy or useful for research purposes,” Dr. Crawford Crowe, archivist, said. Located in Helm Library, the archives in- clude financial records, photographs, maps, university presidents’ papers, back issues of the College Heights Herald and copies of the Talisman “everything published here on campus,” Crowe said. Crowe said one of the biggest demands is from people who write to ask if a person went to school here. ‘“‘We keep a running file on all Western students,” he said. Most students have used one or more of the libraries. And according to Wassom, the more they are used, the more familiar the libraries become, despite the initial shock at their vast- ness. ‘Familiarity breeds confidence, strangeness breeds fear,” he said. — Steven Stines [| eer @ Presidents Home @ While Stone Hail @ Swimnung Pool @ Guest House @ Music Bldg @ Mclean Hal @ Regents hat Z @ Nort Ha @ East Hall @ West Hal © @ South Halt @ Central Hall @ Tennis Courts PLEASE STOP AND PLACE YOUR BOOKS NOTEBOOKS BRIEFCASES, AND BAGS ON DESK IN ORDER THAT THE CHECKER MAY EXAMINE THEM - THANK YOU ® Basvoall Fei ® College Housing 6 log cain @ Kentucky Bldg, @ Stat Hall” @ Terrace Hall . ® Heating Plant Laundererte ® Maintenance Service @ Acaokmic Athlene B da LEA Diddle @ Kelly Thompson Hale @ Ogden Hal a @ Snel Hale A CAMPUS MAP covers the wall behind the check-out SCOPES HELP locate books in all six libraries. Brent desk in Helm library. James Sacrey works at the desk part Price, a junior advertising major, and Brent Law, a fresh- time and inspects materials taken from the library. man business major, look up sources for a term paper. A PROBLEM for Chemistry 120 occupies the mind of freshman Joe McCarty, a pre-dental major from Bowling Green, as he faces the blackboard in a study room in Cravens Library. — Mark Lyons — Mark Lyons Students come first in public safety’s work Where there are people, there’s a community. And where there’s a community, there’s usual- ly a police force. Western is no exception. Its 25 police officers are concerned first with helping students, then trying to catch ‘‘wrong- doers,”’ according to Marc Wallace, public safety director. There are also 25 student patrol workers. Wallace said about one-fourth of the student patrollers have become full-time officers on campus. Being a policeman or student patroller means being involved in arrests, writing traffic tickets or escorting students around campus at night. Fewer than 100 arrests were made in 1978 by campus police, Wallace said. ‘‘Routine”’ ar- rests include those for marijuana possession (14) and drunken driving (13). Howard Zeigel 154 Administration The most frequent crime is theft, which is also the most difficult to solve, Wallace said, because few witnesses are available to give information. Wallace, a former FBI agent, said arrests have declined because fewer non-students come on campus. Thefts have also declined. For example, in 1974, 82 bicycles were stolen; 18 were stolen in 1978. Crime prevention is also a major duty, ac- cording to Wallace, and the escort service is part of that. Students may call the department and ask for police to walk with them across the campus at night. Handicapped students may ask police to drive them to class. More than 1,800 students are escorted each year, Wal- lace said. The university police officers are trained po- licemen, Wallace said. Each has the same in- struction as any other police officer — 10 Low pay, long hours mark doctors’ careers Stanley Brumfield Marc Wallace weeks at Eastern Kentucky University, with courses in arrests, interviewing, the penal code, photography and others. Each officer must pass a firearm training and target practice once a month, according to Paul Bunch, assistant public safety director. The campus police also have investigative power throughout the state if the crime is com- mitted on campus. However, Wallace said the Bowling Green police department and the campus police have a “‘gentleman’s agreement’? on keeping the city and campus jurisdictions separate. Some- times they work together. A new building for the public safety depart- ment was completed in the summer. It should give the department more room, Wallace said. And so, where there are people, there’s a policeman. — Mary Julia Pace (| Student health services is more than just push- ing a few aspirins. Each day Dr. Howard Zeigel, health services director, must di- agnose a multitude of illnesses — anything from a sore throat to venereal disease. “You’ve got to probe, ask questions and give thorough examinations when treating pa- tients,” Zeigel said. And when the illness is too severe to be handled at the university clinic, Zeigel must get the patient to the right doctor. In one case, a male student came into the clinic with epidemic meningitis. Zeigel referred him to another physician and issued medicine to persons the student had been in contact with. “Almost every day I see a case that is just as bad as this one,” Zeigel said. Zeigel left private practice seven years ago because “federal regulations and paperwork drove me out of business,” he said. Zeigel, who practiced privately 23 years ina small Mississippi town, also said that it was too difficult to find qualified personnel in rural | | areas. “I wish I had left private practice 10 years earlier. I like treating young people. Their problems are very unique,” Zeigel said. Treating college students is often demand- ing because they do not take care of their health as much as older people do, Zeigel said. “They expect to be cured of an illness too quickly,” he said. As a university doctor, Zeigel can’t just give a patient an aspirin and send him along his way. ‘“‘Medicine is an art more than a science,” he said. “It deals with people as well as dis- ease.” Overworked is one way to describe the stu- dent health director. When Dr. Jim Goodrum resigned in the summer, Zeigel worked 65 to 70 hours a week ‘“‘without a dinner hour or coffee break.”’ The university eased his workload by hiring Dr. Frank Vannier in November. Vannier had previously worked in private practice in Indi- ana and in industrial medicine in Ashland. He said the campus, the city and the clinic — Harold Sinclair attracted him to Western. Most schools of Western’s size have six to eight practicing physicians. Zeigel said universi- ty officials are aware of the problem and have authorized funds to hire another doctor. He said it is very hard to find university doctors because of the relatively low salaries and bad hours. “A lot of the doctors I have talked with are like women shopping for a pair of new shoes — very choosy,” Zeigel said. Zeigel said he was optimistic about getting new doctors because ‘‘our facilities are excel- lent and there are good retirement and insur- ance programs provided.” To generate more income for the clinic, $3 is charged for a student’s first visit. Prescrip- tions and tests are sold at cost, according to Lucy Ritter, health services administrator. The fee was initiated in the fall. “The fee is still cheap if you consider what an office call at a private physician’s office is,” she said. For those who ne ed counseling rather than STUDENT PATROLMAN Hugh Heater Jr., a Bowling Green junior, helps an injured Stiles Corum up the steps of the Downing University Center. The freshman linebacker from Louisville sprained his ankle during football practice. THE ESCORT SERVICE is more than driving students home at night. Officer James Hesson took sophomore Robin Butler to the health clinic after she felt faint in a hospital lab in Thompson Complex. Mary Rose provides a pillow while Hes- son provides concern. — Harold Sinclair medical help, there is the counseling center. “In this area, we handle every problem from p arent and or roommate conflict to severe mental depression,” Dr. Stanley Brumfield, director, said. The center also offers a testing area, which handles high school equivalency tests, the ACT, GRE and Attitude and Aptitude Tests. Brumfield said students are normal people with normal problems. They rarely need fur- ther psychiatric counseling, he said. There is no charge for counseling, and all counselors have doctorates or education de- grees, Brumfield said. He estimates that 10,000 visit the center each year for either counseling or testing. “There is not one person who hasn’t had a problem that didn’t need counseling at one time or another,” he said. “It takes great strength to say, ‘I need help.’ It is not a weakness that most people think it is. “Counseling people are paid friends.” — Laura Phillips |) 155 Administration 7, Lee Robertson might be described as a fam- ily man. But his family is so large that he can’t keep up with all its members. He has established contact with about 30,000 of them — though they’re scattered throughout the country and across the ocean. Robertson is alumni affairs director, and he said his office was created to keep in touch with all alumni. Robertson said that means run- ning a program with a great amount of mailing and public relations, since the number of alum- Alumni are still part of the family 156 Lee Robertson Public relations, radio, television What’s news with the Movies, magazines and television — they’re all a part of the university’s effort to train journalists, aid education and project its image. Dee Gibson, public affairs director, and Don Armstrong, public relations di- rector, take care of Western’s public image through press releases, magazines, special events and other functions. Armstrong supervises three areas of the public relations department — the news bu- reau, which takes care of press releases; major publications, including maps, exhibits and ad- vertisements; and publications and photogra- phy that deal with athletics. Armstrong also supervises Western Alum- nus, a magazine with articles about current campus issues sent to alumni. “The main objective of the public relations department is to generate positive communica- tions through the media from the campus com- munity to Bowling Green residents, surround- ing counties and hometowns,” Gibson said. Gibson coordinates special events, work- shops and seminars. He also helps with the Fine Arts Festival and the Free Enterprise Fair, a program of exhibits and speakers supporting P Bis. ac “tre See Administration free enterprise. Gibson is a goodwill ambassador who at- tends meetings, community functions and busi- ness luncheons. Both Armstrong and Gibson stressed the im- portance of communication between adminis- tration, faculty and students. “Today, the student is more conscientious than in the 60s,” Gibson said. ‘‘His attitudes, attention, understanding and motivation have improved and those can be critical factors when determining whether an organization suc- ceeds or fails.” With more than 400 students enrolled in the journalism department, David Whitaker, university publications director, can af- ford to be choosy. “We don’t want just anybody; we want cali- ber students who want to develop professional skills,” Whitaker said. As director, Whitaker oversees the College Heights Herald and the Talisman, which have a combined staff of about 60. Whitaker said the publications offer practi- cal work for the students, and that the depart- ment tries to stress a high degree of profession- ni increases yearly by at least 1,500. “Our philosophy is that Western considers its alumni important members of the family — university alism and to train students for professional careers. WKYU radio station is also a training ground for students interested in broadcasting. Campus publications and the campus radio are not the only educational media services offered. Educational television, audio-visual equipment and a film library are available to faculty. Educational television includes closed circuit television in classrooms and Kentucky Educa- tional Television programs, according to Dr. Charles Anderson, media services direc- tor. “Right now, we have ambitious plans to de- velop public service-type programs to be aired this year on KET,” Anderson said. Speakers, profiles, the performing arts and concerts are included in the programs, he said. Videotapes and 16mm motion pictures are produced by a staff of television production specialists, Anderson said, and the videotapes are provided for faculty. About 50 students work in media services, Anderson said, and they are trained in 16mm equipment. “Ours is an institutional educational aca- demic service,” Jim Sanders, assistant media services director, said. Sanders said although the center is in charge of television, radio and audio-visual production and use on campus, “‘we’re just instructional.” Media services helps teachers employ mate- rials in their classes, he said. “Our whole goal is the student,”’ he said. The center wants to improve the quality of 16mm motion pictures, he said, calling it ‘‘our bread and butter.” And their bread and butter is the university’s — media. — Debra Tilley (| THE END OF THE WORKDAY comes a little late for disc jockey Robert Roy. The senior broadcasting major paused an hour before his shift at WKYU ended at 1:30 Sunday morning. CAMERAS from Educational Television are likely to crop up anywhere. Bryce Combs, media services producer and director, focuses on a scene for “Genealogy: A Search for Heritage,” taped on location in Brownsville. its team,” he said. “Our job is to keep them informed as to what’s going on here.” Most of the office’s work is accomplished through the mail. Letters, announcements and the Western Alumnus, a quarterly magazine, are part of the effort to keep “the team” informed. The mailing list is never complete, he said, since there are about 700 address changes each year. Alumni clubs also help graduates keep in touch. Former students and graduates usually form the clubs. “We have alumni clubs in Portland, Maine, Charles Anderson in New York City, as far south as Fort Lauder- dale and as far west as Kansas City,” Robert- son said. He said his office works closely with most campus groups. A student group may be formed to “‘let them know now the importance of alumni to Western,” Robertson said. Gary Ransdell, assistant alumni affairs direc- tor, is working on the project, Robertson said. The group’s purpose ‘‘would be to educate the students while they are here that there is an alumni affairs center and that it is a link between the alumni and the university,”’ Rob- ertson said. dim Sanders Dee Gibson Few students have direct contact with the office until graduation. Then, a card requesting a forwarding address is placed in every diplo- ma. The cards are returned to Robertson’s office. The graduates are put on a mailing list and they receive, free, all the material that a dues- paying alumnus gets for six months. Robertson said he hopes this will encourage alumni to keep in contact and to become dues- paying members. After all, it takes money to raise a family. — David Crumpler Don Armstrong — Mark Lyons 157 Administration Pope nat tener ne nies eine hid ee agent we sia Libons Mucieioe ter Owen Lawson Curtis Logsdon James Tomes Administration 158 If they quit, the campus would notice There’s a group on campus whose work goes largely unnoticed — as long as the job gets done. But come the day that physical plant employees lay back and take it easy, the uni- versity might take a little more notice. “‘We’re the support group for the campus,” Owen Lawson, physical plant administra- tor, said. He said most of the work done by maintenance crews is unseen, such as the all- night cleanup after a basketball game. And without those crews, campus buildings would be run down and the dormitories consid- erably less livable, he said. Besides cleaning up, the physical plant main- tenance crew also does landscaping and con- struction. Lawson has had to give much attention to the federal Handicapped Act, which calls for buildings to be made more accessible to handi- capped people. Lawson said it may never be possible to comply with renovations called for by the act, because the Hill presents extensive problems. The physical plant office tries to keep the campus a pleasant place to live, go to school and work, Lawson said. “The students are a lot of help,” he said, and he said there is less vandalism than on any other campus he has seen. Because of that, WITH PEARCE—FORD TOWER towering behind him, Gary Finn, a Geoghegan Roofing Co. employee, mops tar on the roof of the College of Education Building. Work began July 19 and was to be completed in January. a a Lawson said he believes Western students are more satisfied with their surroundings. Without computers, the university could cease to function, according to Curtis Logs- don, computer center director. ‘Western would come to a grinding halt in three or four days,” he said. The staff to re- place the computer would have to be very large, he said, because the computer prints about 200,000 lines a day. Speed and accuracy are other reasons why the computer is useful. “‘We can have the first class roll in two or three hours after registra- tion closes at five,’ he said. The computer also recognizes errors, and it will shut down after it finds one, which hap- pens about 10 times a day, Logsdon said. It takes two to three minutes to correct errors. Logsdon said the computer in Wetherby Ad- ministration Building has a capacity for 464 million characters on magnetic disks and bil- lions more on tape. There is also a System 3 computer in Grise Hall operated by the Data Processing class and another in Thompson Complex called the Mini Comp. Both computers are connected to larger computers operated by the University of Ken- tucky and the University of Louisville. AFTER MOWING the football field, physical plant worker Joe Helson gives Melvin Pippin a lift. Pippin had been painting lines on the field in preparation for the season opener against UT-Chattanooga Sept. 9. Judy Watson In Grise Hall is the Remote Job Enter Termi- nal, which gives access to the larger computer. Information about the university, student registration and records, library circulation and master files, personnel information, accounting information and more are stored in the com- puter. Everyone on campus has access to it in one way or another, Logsdon said, and the termi- nals in the library are a part of the computer system. However, some of the information is restricted to certain people, he said. “Most people misunderstand the comput- er,” Logsdon said. “It’s a mass production machine. “Tf you want to add two and two, you could have it done before the computer. But if you wanted to add two and two or two columns of numbers a million times, the computer could have it done before you even thought about it. “You can’t just push a button and there is the answer. Months or weeks of preparation are needed. Pushing the button for the answer is the last thing done.” But as far as James Tomes, personnel services director, is concerned, the universi- ty needs all offices — the computer center, the physical plant and his office. ‘Personnel services and payroll are the most essential services at Western other than the students,” he said. For instance, teachers wouldn’t teach if they didn’t get paid, he said, but they might try to teach without electricity or too few desks. As personnel services director, Tomes over- sees the hiring of all staff members except faculty. He is also the affirmative-action offi- cer, and he makes sure that the university’s policies comply with state and federal laws and regulations on hiring and admissions practices. Tomes said a variety of workers are hired — from the highly skilled to the unskilled — and the jobs include electrical specialists, sec- retaries, TV repairmen and dairy herdsmen. He estimated there is a staff of 1,500, and 248 were hired from 1,225 applicants in 1978. The office also handles student, faculty and staff identification cards. In 1978, 11,000 cards were issued, and 17,000 were validated. Tomes said other department heads prob- ably think the university couldn’t function with- out their services. But it has to be a team effort, he said. — Theresa Montgomery 159 Administration David Mefford Attracting students is ‘half the battle’ Getting students interested in Western and getting them enrolled is almost half the battle for the university. The university-school rela- tions and admissions offices have plenty of work to do in attracting and admitting stu- dents. David Mefford, university-school rela- tions director, and four preadmissions coun- selors work to find prospective students and keep them interested until orientation and reg- istration. Then the admissions office takes over. It tries to familiarize students with the campus and registration, according to Dr. Tom Up- dike, admissions director. It also sends in- formation to interested students, processes ad- mission applications, medical forms and other material necessary for enrollment. About 30 to 40 percent of Mefford’s time is spent attracting students to the university. Alumni help in contacting students, the office Johnny Oldham His work is the university’s play Tom Updike sends representatives to the schools, college representatives are sometimes sent back to their hometown high schools and the depart- ments are encouraged to send materials to students. Proximity and cost are Western’s main at- tractions, Mefford said. “The strength of the academic programs, campus facilities and the warmth of the student body and faculty also help in attracting stu- dents,” Mefford said. About 100 students were refused admission for the fall semester, Updike said. “In some cases, the office didn’t think the university was right for the students and vice versa.”’ Foreign students make up about 8 percent of the admissions, he said. But high school students and their futures are still the offices’ focus. — Mark Tucker AN ORIENTATION SESSION during the fall semester at Bowling Green High School gave Rick Parrent, university- school relations preadmissions counselor, a chance to tell stu- dents how to apply to Western. — Kathy Lam [J For Johnny Oldham, his job isa sport — or suchas golf or track, Oldham said. Total schol- rather, sports. As athletic director, Oldham oversees purchasing, budgets, travel, scholarships, schedules and sports facilities. ‘Athletics serve a useful function on campus for the entertainment of students and also al- low the excellent athlete to reach maximum potential,’ Oldham said. Attendance is above Ohio Valley Confer- ence average, Oldham said. About 13,000 at- tend home football games, and 8,000 attend home basketball games. Attendance at men’s sports has remained stable, while women’s sports are growing in popularity. Oldham said 115 scholarships are awarded to athletes each year, ranging from 55 in foot- ball to four in men’s and women’s golf. Partial scholarships, which may pay for tu- ition or housing, are usually awarded in sports arships are given in major sports. Although each scholarship is for one year only, 90 percent of the grants are renewed, Oldham said. Recruiting is also subject to Oldham’s ap- proval, and it may involve watching the athlete perform, visiting him and explaining what Western has to offer, and talking to his par- ents. The tendency to underrate or overrate ath- letes adds to the difficulty of successful recruit- ing, Oldham said. But in the end, it’s all a sport. — Karen Tucker [| THE “E” IN “TOPPERS” on the football field gets a new coat of paint from Royce Dethridge before the Akron football game. Johnny Oldham is in charge of making sure the field is maintained. 160 : | Administration —n College Heights Foundation ‘Every nickel’ goes to students On paper, the College Heights Foundation, which pays for some scholarships and student loans, is a private, non-profit, tax-free corpora- tion. But in reality, according to Kelly Thomp- son, foundation president, it’s hard to tell any difference between the foundation and any university office. The foundation is private in that it acts as a corporation under a state-approved charter, and Western has no direct control over it, Thompson, former Western president, said. But this private organization operates two virtual monopolies on campus — the College Heights bookstore and laundry. The bookstore limits its profits to 10 per- cent, Thompson said. ““One of the purposes of the bookstore is to provide a place where students could get a break in this respect,” he said. The foundation pays rent for the bookstore space. It pays no rent for the laundry. Thompson said he sees nothing wrong with operating these businesses. “I think it’s justifiable,” he said. ““Western also has a monopoly on its cafeterias and snack bars.” Profits from the bookstore and laundry go to the student loan fund, he said. Scholarship money comes from a memorial fund, which is invested in government-guaran- teed securities. The foundation has grown a lot since — Thompson became president in 1969, he said. “In 1969, our scholarship support amount- ed to $5,537,” he said. “This year, it is $163,850. We have budgeted for the coming year $175,000 and for 1980 we have commit- ted $200,000. All of that will go to students in the form of scholarships.” The student loan fund has also grown. “In 1923, the total amount of loans made to students was $11,885,” he said. “‘We estimate that for this school year it will amount to $250,000.” The foundation had assets of $4,218,709.41, as of Oct. 1, 1978, according to an article in the Western Alumnus. The assets include money in the foundation’s me- morial and operating funds and in the book- store and laundry. Georgia Bates, the foundation’s secre- tary-treasurer, said the foundation began to offer more services when Thompson became president. “The foundation has rendered an outstand- ing financial service to students .. . especially with the scholarships that have been added.” Thompson said, “Everything we do, in fact every dollar we raise, is for Western’s benefit and no other in the world. “Every nickel that’s made in the foundation, in the bookstore, every nickel that’s made in the laundry goes back to Western students.” — Alan Judd Georgia Bates — Mark Tucker 161 Administration For some, classes are close to home From ages 17 to 78 there are plenty of stu- dents in the continuing education and off-cam- pus programs. And the course offerings are just as varied. Graduate-level courses, general education courses and classes such as Folk Guitar are taught in 26 cities as near as Glasgow and as far away as Louisville. “Interest in off-campus programs is expand- ing, since institutions such as Western are mak- ing their offerings more accessible,’ Dr. Carl Chelf, dean of Bowling Green Communi- ty College and continuing education, said. Chelf said people enroll in off-campus Carl Chelf Charles Clark courses because they need more education to seek higher-paying jobs and because there is more leisure time available. Although graduate-level courses have the highest enrollment, some students obtain their undergraduate degrees through the off-cam- pus programs. Dr. Charles Clark, assistant extended campus programs dean, said the programs are popular because “‘most of the students are working people and they don’t have to drive far to take classes.” He also said that senior-citizen enrollment is increasing because persons 65 or older do not pay tuition. Most off-campus courses are taught by facul- ty; others are taught by community college instructors, Clark said. Each department decides which classes it will offer and who will teach them, he said. The continuing education program is publi- cized through newspapers, radio stations, com- munity colleges, public libraries and by word- of-mouth. “Our continuing education program has been in existence for over 50 years and is evidently well known, since the enrollment for 1978-79 is near 8,000,” Clark said. — Laura Phillips (| Helping students get jobs is a big job for one office Jerry Wilder 162 Administration Things change — fads and fashions, hair styles and heroes, prices and presidents, to name a few — but face it, there is one thing a college graduate can always look for, and that’s a job. In recent years, college graduates have seen the employment outlook drop and the compe- tition rise. Fields of study are jam-packed with “experts.” To deal with an uncertain professional fu- ture (as well as an unpredictable college ca- reer), there is the Center for Academic Advise- ment, Career Planning and Placement. Jerry Wilder, director, is proud of the office’s role. “It provides a service for the entire student body,” he said. ‘“‘“At Western we’re committed to helping students find jobs.” Wilder said changes in the job market and students’ dissatisfaction with what their de- grees get them boosted the need for such an office. “Students today are far more realistic con- cerning job outlooks” than those of several years ago, who thought that merely a degree was enough to secure a job, he said. The Board of Regents approved the cre- ation of the center in May 1977. The new center was to assume the responsi- bilities of a few other administrative offices: career planning settled in Schneider Hall and academic advisement remained in the Weth- erby Administration Building. During the first years, according to the of- fice’s annual report, more than 7,000 students got advice or counseling relating to careers. This number was reached through numerous programs aimed at deciding on and getting a job: a minilecture series, a career library in Schneider and recruiting interviews with pro- spective employers invited to campus. One part of the career program that Wilder praises is GRAD II, in which more than 150 businesses list qualities they want in employ- ees. Wilder’s office then tries to find students with those qualities. The program is available to all graduating students, and fewer than six other universi- ties in the nation have this service, accord- ing to Wilder. The program is new, and about 500 stu- dents signed up for it in the fall semester, Wilder said. It’s also fairly inexpensive, costing about $200 for each computer run. The academic advisement office contin- ues to review and approve undergraduate degree forms, handle student transfers and re-admissions and provide academic advise- ment for undecided students, Wilder said. The annual report for the first year said that 18,000 “walk-ins” sought advice and counseling relating to academics. Several thousand scheduled sessions with students meant there was a lot of advice and direc- tion given. — David Crumpler (| Photos by Mark Lyons REAL LIFE is the subject of a game called “They Shoot Marbles, Don’t They?” Psy- chology and sociology students play the game in an extended campus class in Glas- gow. According to the teachers, the game is a break from the usual class routine. State trooper Leroy Buckner was late for class, so he takes advantage of the time to study his notes. The game’s results left Danny Kiernan bewildered, and Robert Davis voices his disapproval of the government in charge during the game. Davis, a state pa- trolman, is sitting between Harold Fisher and Jane Huffman. | 163 Administration Taking care of students is their affair A VOLLEYBALL TOURNAMENT was part of the Hall Olympics in the fall semester. Saeed Banifatemi, a sopho- more engineering major, and Tim Bell, a sophomore phys- ical education major, battled for the ball in the finals be- tween the Rodes-Harlin and Pearce-Ford Cardinals team and the Potter and Pearce-Ford Cumberland team. Rodes and the Cardinals won. ‘= and students A.J. Thurman 164 Administration Money matters to financial aid Ne et — Mark Tucker Money matters — that’s what the financial aid office deals in. And that’s what its staff is quick to recognize — that money matters. Without the many financial aid programs, most students wouldn’t be here, according to A.J. Thurman, financial aid director. About 70 percent of the students get help from Thurman’s office. It comes mostly by way of grants, loans, scholarships and work pro- grams. Though money to students comes from a fairly limited number of programs, it comes from a great number of sources, Thurman said. The bulk of grant, loan and work funding is federally or state-allocated. There are also oth- er groups in the region — churches, clubs and businesses — that set up scholarship programs = Anne Murray It is Saturday night and Anne Murray, assis- tant student affairs dean, has just returned home with her husband from a basketball game. The telephone rings. A dorm director tells her that a young wom- an with a history of emotional problems has just put her hand through a dorm window. Mrs. - Murray leaves her home to talk with the stu- dent and to call the student’s parents. After-hours calls are not uncommon for Mrs. Murray or any of the five deans in the student affairs office. “T deal with all sorts of students’ problems, everything from roommate troubles to home- sick students to students with financial prob- lems,”’ Mrs. Murray said. Mrs. Murray and assistant dean Howard Bailey work closely with dorm directors and staffs to accommodate the almost 5,000 stu- dents living on campus. “We try to make Western a comfortable place to live and study and to deal with any problems a student might have,” Bailey said. “The key to helping students 80 percent of the time is to be a good listener. The solution will usually arise just in talking things out,” Mrs. Murray said. Charles Keown, student affairs dean, said his office acts as a liaison between s tu- dents and other university officials. “1 don’t consider myself totally as an admin- istrator,” Keown, dean for 22 years, said. “I try to maintain personal contact with the stu- dents.” Keown said financial problems make up a Howard Bailey Larry Berry large portion of the complaints received by the student affairs office. “Often a student will come to us with a financial problem, and we will help them get in contact with the right person in the financial aid office,” he said. During the school year, 60-hour work weeks are common for Ron Beck, assistant stu- dent affairs dean and university centers director. Beck is a student counselor, Associated Stu- dent Government adviser and is in charge of booking concerts and lectures. Beck is also responsible for cheerleader se- lection and training, as well as working with student organizations. “I think two factors determine success in the student affairs office — attitude and ability to cut the red tape in helping a student,” Beck said. As university centers director, Beck is in charge of recreational and craft programs, Center Theater and the University Center Board. He is also responsible for scheduling programs in Garrett Conference Center. “‘We try to develop programs and facilities that will enhance student life outside the class- room and to create programs students will participate in,’ Beck said. He said his busiest time is from August to November, but his duties don’t end when May rolls around. “This past summer there were 36,000 peo- ple on campus for various camps and confer- ences, and our office must see to their needs,”’ Charles Keown Ron Beck he said. Larry Berry, associate student affairs dean, describes himself as a “‘behind-the- scenes man.” Berry administers the budget for the dorms and the student affairs office. He also serves on several university committees. He also recommends policy changes to the Board of Regents and represents the university in disciplinary actions. “‘Summer is really the busiest time for me, because that is when we must complete our publications, such as Hilltopics, which deals with residence living at Western,” Berry said. This year Berry started a new publication called Faces, which is designed to familiarize freshmen with the campus and their class- mates. “I think the student affairs office deals well with the residence halls and university center programs, but we have been weak in initiating new recreational facilities. There just isn’t enough space or intramural equipment,” Ber- ry said. Although the five student affairs deans differ in their duties and the ways in which they handle student problems, they all agree that meeting the needs of the students is their main concern. ‘Meeting the needs of lively, diverse college students is always a challenge and one that requires a lot of after-hours work,’’ Keown said. ‘‘This is definitely not an 8-to-4 job.” — Laura Phillips to encourage students. That’s not to say that funds are unlimited, however. Far from it, Thurman said. With the rising cost of a college education, more and more people are qualifying for financial aid, he said. “The continuing challenge is to make money available to everyone who qualifies,’ Thurman said. Thurman said dealing with financial aid pro- grams “‘is a process of pioneering and frustra- tion. We’re always trying to meet the challenge of new regulations, new programs, and bend them to the university’s benefit.” That means getting the most money out of a program for as many students as possible, he said. As director, Thurman “‘assists in coordina- ee tion in all segments of financial aid.’’ But much of his job, he said, goes back to counseling. “T suspect I’ve counseled more students (on monetary matters) than any other person in the history of the university,” he said. “That job doesn’t stop at any time. We don’t close down in the summer.” Thurman has been the director about 20 years, and he said Western was one of the first universities in the state to establish a financial aid office. Thurman told about a few ‘“‘facts of life” concerning financial aid. It’s true, he said, that incoming students are more likely to receive scholarships than upperclassmen, although it’s less common than it used to be. “It’s a recruiting tool,” he said. And it’s also true that Kentucky residents are more likely to receive scholarships than students coming from other states, he said. When the money is university-controlled, or funded by the state (which usually means by Kentucky residents), “by and large, in-state residents are the ones to get it.”’ This is not so with departmental scholarships, he said. The financial aid office, however, recognizes the needs of all students, he said, and makes the effort to help them all. “At least $8 million a year comes through this office, and if we withdrew that, there would be thousands of students who, but for us, wouldn’t come to college.” — David Crumpler 165 Administration 166 It’s not Mom’s cooking, but it feeds Jimmy Feix cheeseburgers. Big W hambur- gers. Roast beef. Instant mashed potatoes. Pi- miento cheese sandwiches. Gourmet food it isn’t. But hundreds of students and some faculty and administrators eat it every day. For some, it’s a matter of choice. For others, it’s a neces- sity — for either lack of transportation off campus or cooking skills. And at the snack bar and cafeteria in Garrett Conference Center or at the grill or cafeteria in Downing University Center, students file in to feed their growling stomachs. Lon Slaughter, food services director, said about 10,000 pass through the cafeterias and grills every day. ““But some of them might just be getting a Coke or a bag of potato chips,”’ he said. “And some of them might pass through several times in a day.” At any rate, food services goes through a lot of food in a year — about $38,000 alone in milk, according to Slaughter. CASH REGISTERS ring constantly when the Downing University Center cafeteria is in business. Operating the machines is a daily chore for cafeteria workers Josephine Owens and Jo Rogers. Administration the masses Students, in a variety of ways, bear most of that financial burden. Meal tickets, of which about 400 were sold in the fall semester, are $295. Breakfast tickets, a new program, are $90. About five were sold. But those have a disadvantage. They’re good only at Garrett. “In the evenings, students are down this way (at the university center) and it’s a little harder for them to go up the Hill,’ Slaughter said. So some students opt for the university center grill and cafeteria. There, for $1.75, a student can buy a roast beef sandwich, mashed potatoes, a small salad and a pint of milk. At the grill, 95 cents will buy a grilled cheese sandwich, potato chips and a small Coke. But is the food worth it? “Td die if they ever served a good meal in here,’ Scott Bachert, a Fern Creek senior, said. And Jerry Johnson, a Louisville junior, said — Mark Lyons A PINCH OF SALT is multiplied several times for the cafeteria’s chicken batter recipe. Mildred Stice prepares the mix for about 400 servings in the Downing University Center kitchen. he was served cold french fries. ‘““They (the grill workers) told me they were left over from lunch and that they had to use them all up before they could cook a new batch.” Slaughter said he knew nothing of the mat- ter and that he had told the grill and cafeteria workers not to save food. “‘That’s my biggest gripe,” he said. “‘I’ll check into it. But if they’re doing that, that’s their doing, not mine.” Some meats will be “saved” and served at the next meal, Slaughter said, and some of the more popular meats are roast beef, veal par- mesan and liver. “We rotate menus every three weeks,”’ Slaughter said. ‘We try not to have the same thing every week. “We used to have liver and onions every three weeks, but there was such a demand for it, we had to start serving it every week.” Slaughter said the staff is continually looking — Scott Robinson for new recipes, and after they’ve been sam- pled by the staff, a sample is given to students. If it’s popular, it’s put on the menu. However, Slaughter said that nothing has been added to the menu in a while. “Some things don’t go over after a while,”’ he said, citing little interest in Mexican foods and others. Slaughter said the cafeterias have received quite a few compliments along with com- plaints. ‘““There’s always going to be someone who doesn’t like the food,” he said. “‘It’s fun- ny. If they like the food, they’ll sign the letter. If they don’t, they won’t.” And then, there are always people like Ed- die Sherroan, a Rough River freshman. “T like the food,” he said. — Sara-Lois Kerrick EVERAGES 7 SELF-SERVICE ee eee eee Lon Slaughter THE CAFETERIA’S WORK doesn’t end at cooking and serving food. After students deposit their trays on a con- veyor belt, John Haynes wipes the plates clean and pre- pares them for the dishwasher. SALISBURY STEAK PROVIDED a meal for Janie Dowell, a freshman nursing major from Irvington. Serving the steak are Elizabeth Rogers and Yo French. Beef and noddles was also on the menu. — Mark Lyons 167 Administration COM EMER) A dn ee Glenn Crumb Henry Hardin Harold Smith Ronnie Sutton Administration 16 Spending time spending money Cashing checks, ordering supplies for classes, paying the university’s bills. All are those “‘lit- tle’ things that somebody has to do but every- body takes for granted. The somebodies that do them can be found in several departments — accounts and bud- getary control, purchasing, and grants and con- tracts. “‘Somebody has got to collect money, some- one has got to account for it and someone has to write checks for it,’ Harold Smith, ac- counts and budgetary control director, said. ‘‘We handle the physical affairs for the university.” Smith has a $41 million budget to handle. The budget was increased $3 million from 1978. Smith said inflation used most of the in- crease. “It’s a problem in past and coming years,” he said. “Money is just getting tighter everywhere, I guess.” Faculty and staff salaries cost $27 milllion, or 66 percent, of the budget. Scholarships and grants, including athletic scholarships, cost $1 million, he said. The accounts and budgetary control office has three divisions, Smith said. One receives all university funds. Another pays the school’s bills and the third is the cashier’s office, which collects and deposits money in addition to cashing checks for students, faculty and staff. AN OFFSET PRESS helps offset printing costs on univer- sity material. Jerry Gilland works on a football flip sheet, which compares offensive and defensive teams. The press is in the services and supply building, a division of the purchasing office. — Mark Tucker Smith said his office contacts students about bad checks. “We try to keep from turning (bad) checks over to collection agencies. We try to work with the student as much as possible,” he said. “The majority of returned checks is the result of carelessness on the part of students.” Smith said this was the first year his office collected both the registration and housing fees. “Used to be, you would pay the dorm fee to the housing office,” he said. The office also helps keep track of 6,000 accounts for departmental budgets, Smith said. “Each department has its own budget,” he said. ‘‘Every month we send them a computer printout showing the budget allocations, what they charged, and what the balance is.” When departments want to spend that bal- ance, they can get help at the purchasing of- fice. ““We spend the money from the budgets of other departments,’ Larry Howard, pur- chasing director, said. “They request us to buy for them.” Once the goods arrive, Howard and his of- fice are responsible for delivering them to the proper department. They keep track of all the equipment — $9 million worth. Inventory numbers are assigned to about 42,000 items, Howard said. But Howard said his main responsibility is purchasing quality items at the cheapest price. He said the state requires the university to contact at least 14 qualified vendors before buying anything. But before materials can be delivered, be- fore bids can be accepted, before ledgers can be balanced, money has to come from some- where. Helping find that money and making plans for its use are the responsibility of the grants and contract services office. “We work in a pressure cooker,’ Glenn Crumb, director, said. “We have to give attention to detail and deadlines.” When a department wishes to initiate a new program it must present a preliminary propos- al to Crumb’s office. After a proposal is accepted, Crumb is re- sponsible for finding agencies with money available and learning about their guidelines. “The key is targeting your activities to the source of the money,” Crumb said. His office keeps a file of agencies that regularly have funds available. Success in obtaining funds has increased in past years, but Crumb said he expects a level- ing off because of devaluation of the dollar. “Competition is keen,”’ he said. Once grants are accepted, the money be- comes state funds and is subject to state regu- lations. “This is when the negotiating comes in. State regulations and the agency’s regulations must be worked out,” Crumb said. Getting the money, budgeting it, spending it, receiving the order, delivering it. It’s a process which can be involved and taken for granted. — Mary Julia Pace and Steven Stines Helping students from start to finish It a student is suspended because of low grades, he may end up talking to Dr. Ronnie Sutton, appeals committee chairman and scholastic development dean. Sutton said appeals are rare. One student came before his committee last year. As scholastic development dean, Sutton is responsible for the admissions and registrar’s offices and the academic advisement and coun- seling services centers. ‘“My office covers a broad area of services,” he said. ‘‘We must meet the needs of the stu- dents from the time they are admitted, through registration and advisement and finally helping them find jobs.” This requires much planning and work, some of which is taken care of in weekly staff meetings or impromptu sessions. “Our weekly meetings usually last two hours and cover everything from budgeting and staff- ing to review of our present policies,’ Sutton said. If the Kentucky Library and Museum direc- tor needs money for restoration of its art col- lection, he would usually contact Dr. Henry Hardin, academic services dean. Hardin helps in the budgeting, planning and staffing of the university archives, library ser- vices and media services. “My job is basically one of planning,” Har- din said. “If one of these groups needs money, I have to convince the vice president that the funds are necessary.” Hardin said that purchasing books is the largest single cost in the budget he works with. The book budget was allotted $485,000 this year. Through the summer and at the beginning of the fall semester Hardin spent a great deal of time completing a five-year report for the Southern Association of Colleges. “This report is required for us to receive accreditation,” Hardin said. The 138-page re- port covers information on everything from new departmental programs to the amount of money spent on athletic scholarships. — Laura Phillips 169 Administratio Sometimes it’s a pain But working as a student-nurse has its Photos by Judy Watson ummies can’t scream. People do. And although nursing students practice on dummies, they need screams and patients to learn how to do things well. “With a dummy, it’s just lying there,” Bar- bara Price, a Louisville sophomore, said. “Say you're doing a catheter or something and you insert it and the patient screams. You know you did it wrong.” So to find out what they’re doing wrong — and right — nursing students work in local hospitals for clinical experience. A BED FULL OF TOYS wasn’t enough to keep Jeremy Hope from crying during his stay at Bowling Green-Warren County Hospital. Pat Eskridge, a Hardinsburg sophomore, tries to cheer up the child. TTT “You learn a lot more on the job,”’ Mary Pat Flaherty, a Louisville sophomore, said. “It’s more realistic. ‘When you just go to a lecture, when you’re just taking classes for your major, you haven’t really gotten into your field.” Even lab experience is not the same as actu- al hospital work, Mike Edwards, a Bowling Green junior, said. “A lab is very sterile,” he said. ‘‘Like in giving shots, we have this pillow you stick, and I mean what’s a pillow? It (hospi- tal experience) is essential.” Clinical training is a requirement for every nursing student. The students work in Bowling Green-Warren County and Greenview hospi- tals. Nursing instructors accompany the students benefits, too to observe, and Ms. Price said it can be intimi- dating. ‘“‘With the instructor standing over you and watching, you don’t know if it’s your heart beating or the patient’s,”’ she said. Advanced students also visit the public health department and the school system’s health service, according to Virginia Lehmen- kuler, nursing department head. The students have six weeks of nursing the- ory and lab practice. Then they begin work at the hospital. , continued on page 172 A DUMMY’S ARM is a good place to practice veni- puncture, or surgically penetrating a vein. Cathy Darnell, a Morgantown junior, learns how to insert the needle at a hospital lab in Academic Complex. 171 Nursing Sometimes it’s a pain cont. “They wean you in very slowly,” Darlene Kuchenbrod, a Louisville sophomore, said. “First you go in and talk to a patient for five minutes. Then you write out the whole conver- sation. You learn to communicate first. “You work your way up to a bath, then care. When you graduate, you’re supposed to know everything.” Each student visits two patients a week to get information for a care plan. The student decides what he needs to accomplish with the patients and how, according to Ms. Kuchen- brod. Using the care plan as a basis, the student returns the next day and takes care of the patients. Six to 20 hours a week is spent at the hospi- tal. Edwards said the 18 to 20 hours he spends at the hospital tend to interfere with his per- sonal life, which includes a wife and son. Ms. Price said it can also interfere with school. “I can’t have any classes on Tuesdays and Thursdays,” she said. “It also interferes with band. I can’t go on Mondays.” NURSING STUDENTS have a variety of duties at the hospital — from assisting in childbirth to walking with patients. Linda Horner, a Fort Thomas senior, walks a patient at Greenview Hospital. STERILE GOWN, GLOVES, hat and mask protect both Retta Wood, a Bowling Green sophomore, and patients. Nursing students learn to keep their hands in the gown’s sleeve before putting on the gloves, which supposedly keeps their hands free of germs. 172 Nursing Pittsburgh sophomore Sue Meers said, “There are a lot of hours you don’t get credit for, preparation time. The whole night before you go and the whole day are shot, twice a week, plus classes.” During the time spent at the hospitals, stu- dents learn a variety of procedures, from giv- ing bed baths to assisting during childbirth. “The catheter is the most traumatic thing because it’s the first real procedure you learn,’’ Ms. Kuchenbrod said. A catheter is a tube which is inserted in a vein or other cavity. Working under the gaze of an instructor “almost shakes your confidence,” according to Ms. Meers. “When they start questioning you, you just might be doing it right,”’ she said. “They might start questioning you just to see how firm you are.” The instructors are responsible for the stu- dents while they work, but a student may also accompany the doctor when he examines cer- tain patients. “Some of the doctors really get off on teach- ing our poor, young, impressionable minds, and some would rather not have us there,” Edwards said. The nurses are similar, Ms. Kuchenbrod said. “Sometimes they think of us as a nui- sance,”’ she said. ‘“But they have to appreciate us; we take the load off them.” The first brush with hospital work can be a surprise. ‘I had no idea that so many things were involved in nursing,” Betty Davidson, a Louisville sophomore, said. “It surprised me how many things a nurse really does.”’ Miss Lehmenkuler said ‘‘adjusting to the rea- lities’”” of the hospital can sometimes be diffi- cult. But Ms. Flaherty said, “‘There’s not that much blood and guts. It may be a little nauseat- ing, but if you’re going to be a nurse, you have to get over it. “If it’s not my own blood, it doesn’t bother me.” The program helps students gain confidence as nurses. That’s important, Ms. Davidson said, because “when you know you can do something, it comes across to your patients.” The hospital work is graded on a pass-fail basis and is part of a course, Miss Lehmenkuler said. Ms. Flaherty said it is an important part. “You can get an ‘A’ in class and flunk the clinical and ‘bye-bye,’ ”’ she said. But to fail, “you would have to do just hor- rendous things — a number of them — before they would fail you. You’d have to be really bad,’’ Ms. Kuchenbrod said. Ms. Price said she dreaded her first hospital visit. ““Your first patient, you know you'll go in and trip all over him,” she said. The second year of nursing is less frighten- ing, Ms. Kuchenbrod said, but every year in the program is time-consuming. “‘You learn to budget your time, to get up a little earlier in the morning, to get used to standing on your feet all the time,’ Jane Engle- bright, a Bowling Green senior, said. “It’s not easy,” Ms. Flaherty said. ““You gotta put your time in. Most people in nursing are really into it, and if you’re into something, you work hard.” ‘Being a nurse has its terrible aspects,”’ Ms. Davidson said. ‘‘But every once in a while some patients will say ‘thank you’ in a special way that makes all those terrible times worth itd But between thank you’s and terrible times are a lot of hard work and long hours of study- ing. A nursing student can’t afford to be a dum- my — even if the patient sometimes is. — Steven Stines |_| eee Lifesaving A matter of course for EMT students One victim lay thrown under the battered car while the powerful Jaws of Life, hydraulic-powered prongs, operating with a pushing force of 10,000 pounds, were being used to release someone trapped inside the automobile. It appeared to be a horrible car crash scene. But it actually was a mock crisis staged by the Bowling Green Fire Department and the Emergency Medical Technician class in November so students could participate in a simulation of a real-life emergency situation. Students in the mock crisis were asked to take the “‘victim’s’’ vital signs, determine injuries and prepare the “‘injured”’ for mobilization. The five-hour EMT class teaches students how to give ‘““emergency care”’ to victims with injuries such as fractures, breathing malfunctions, shock, bleeding, cardiac arrest and poisoning. According to Dr. Henry Baughman, course instructor, the three main groups of students taking the EMT class are persons interested in the medical field, firemen and potential ambulance attendants. Before the Emergency Medical Services Act of 1973, “anyone who had a driver’s license could be an ambulance attendant,” Baughman said. Several nursing students are now taking the class to learn more about emergency care on their own “because believe-it-or-not, they are not required to take first-aid courses,” he said. One of the requirements of the EMT class is for students to work 10 hours in the emergency room of the Bowling Green-Warren County Hospital. Last year, while one student was doing his emergency room practical, he helped deliver three babies on the way to the hospital, Baughman said. Carol Hughes, a physical education instructor who took the class, said the emergency room experience was rather traumatic because she had never witnessed severe emergency situations. Ms. Hughes said that one victim, whose finger had been amputated in a door, was brought in. “I had to walk out, I felt so woozy,” she said. Ms. Hughes said that during her weekend duty at the hospital she took vital signs, helped when the staff asked for assistance, and observed. “It helped me get used to reacting to emergency situations, because it was the ‘real thing,’ ”’ she said. Since Ms. Hughes teaches tennis and adult physical fitness classes, she said she felt more secure after taking the EMT class. “If an accident happened during class, and | couldn’t help the person, I don’t think I could live with myself,” she said. Ken Painter, a Bowling Green sophomore, thought he knew a lot about the medical field until he took the EMT course. “I found out how much I didn’t know,” he said. Painter, who wants to enter the medical field, said he came upon a minor car accident and was better able to assist because of what he had learned in class. He said he helped get the persons calm and reassured them that help was coming. To Kelly DeSimone, a Jenkins sophomore, learning CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) was the most important part of the class. CPR involves starting breathing and circulation in a victim whose lungs and heart have stopped. Miss DeSimone said that she had worked as a lifeguard in the summer, but that she hadn’t known about some of the procedures she has since learned in the EMT course. Students in the class are expected to be able to perform, as well as know about, the many different emergency-care procedures covered during the course. Baughman said each student must pass four written exams and four skills tests, in which outside persons in the medical field evaluate students’ performances. He said many of the students inform others about what they have learned, and many use their knowledge in a variety of situations. “I never knew a person that didn’t require first-aid treatment at some time in their life,’ Baughman said. “From this standpoint, everyone needs to know what to do in order to help others.”’ — Laura Phillips 173 EMT Class The best of two worlds Willard Cockrill has them both in teaching and meteorology Willard Cockrill has got the best of two worlds. Officially, he’s a geography and geology professor. Unofficially, he’s the university’s meteorologist. “TI enjoy the weather, and I enjoy teaching,” the 63-year-old said. “I have the best of two jobs.” Cockrill’s been at Western 32 years, and in that time he’s become the university’s weather expert. “I get a lot of calls,’ he said. “I get calls when they’re trying to decide whether to dis- miss school (because of snow). “The president used to call me when they were having outdoor graduation.”’ He even gets calls when the physical plant wants to know when to turn on the heat or the air conditioning. The tall, gray-haired man spends a lot of his time helping people. Many of his former stu- dents ask him to lecture to their elementary or high school classes. BEFORE THE SUN RISES, Willard Cockrill is at the weather station. Each day of the year, he gets up early to change the graph on the sunshine duration recorder, which ; records how many minutes a day the sun shines. The station is on the fourth floor of the Environmental Sciences and Technology Building. — Greg Lamb — Greg Lamb i Attorneys ask him to testify in court about weather which may be pertinent to the case. One woman wanted to know when would be a good time in November to have an outdoor wedding. Cockrill studied some long range forecasts and came up with an answer. “She gave me two weekends and asked which one would be the best,” he said. ““One ended up being rainy, and the one we picked was beautiful.” Cockrill’s workload has eased a lot, he said. “For 20 years I taped radio programs for two radio stations and then I did the early weather for channel 13 (WBKO TV),” he said. ““My day started at 5 a.m. and ended at 7 p.m.” But his doctor advised him to slow down, so “three or four years ago I gave up all that,” he said. He’s helped the university devise a tornado plan in the past three years. All the buildings now have bells which will sound a warning, and his Geography 222 classes have been trained to be tornado watchers. “I keep wishing they’d try those bells out, like a fire drill, ” he said. “‘But they haven’t yet. “When it’s March, April and May, I’m on 24- hour call.” But he’s also on call the rest of the year — to help attorneys, teachers or whoever needs him. And he’s always on call to students. “If I didn’t like to teach, I wouldn’t be doing it now,” he said. LJ — Greg Lamb WEATHER FORECASTS, surveys and radar reports from all over the world come over the teletype during the night. Willard Cockrill spends about 10 to 15 minutes each morning separating the forecasts. WILLARD COCKRILL shows Greg Powell, a Richmond junior, how to fix a small needle in the pyrheliometer, which measures the intensity of sunshine. pase — Mark Tucker ei 0: Sct Glen Conner Temperamental A job as changeable as the weather When Glen Conner, meteorology and geography instructor, was appointed as Kentucky’s official climatologist in May 1978, he didn’t suspect that he’d soon help a lawyer with an important case, be involved in an insurance claim or settle a domestic argument. As Kentucky’s climatologist, Conner is organizing a data base with weather records dating from 1896 and including information on daily temperatures and all types o f weather conditions, including rainfall and snowfall. “Our data is available to anyone, and the practical uses are innumerable,” Conner said. ‘‘A local resident, who was filing an insurance claim for weather damage to his house, called to get specific weather statistics to use in his report.” Conner has also received a request from a lawyer who needed to know the rainfall on a certain date to complete his case, and a request from a geological survey to identify areas where weather conditions are suitable for plant growth. Although most requests for weather data come from local governments and industries, Conner has received his share of curiosity calls. “I had a call recently from a husband who wanted to settle an argument with his wife about the amount of rainfall the day before,’’ Conner said, laughing. Conner also receives requests from local television and radio stations for data on record temperatures and rainfalls, but he does not aid them in weather forecasting. “I don’t even have a wooly worm,” he said. Kentucky has been without a climatologist since 1973, when the National Weather Service discontinued its funding of state data bases. Believing there was a need for a state climatologist, Western offered to fill the gap, since the university has the necessary equipment and offers an associate degree in meteorology. As Kentucky’s climatologist, Conner works with the National Weather Service and the National Climatic Center. “The importance is not the individual who holds the job, but the fact that Western has assumed this public service role,”’ he said. Since his work is just beginning, Conner has been busy organizing data on microfiche and writing computer programs. Glancing around his crowded office, which is filled with maps, weather records and diagrams, Conner said, ‘‘After we get all of this data organized, it looks as though I might be needing some more space.” — Laura Phillips | 175 Climatologist — — _ CV aw La aaa Sam 176 Lezhnev, Transplanted A Russian cellist and a Pakistani professor settle into Western life The sun will always rise in the West for Ah- med Ali and Vsevolod Lezhnev. Born in the East, 20 years and thousands of miles apart, both Lezhnev and Ali discovered Western in the fall. Lezhnev, a music professor, first visited the United States in 1960 when he was touring with the Moscow State Symphony Orchestra. A cellist, he had completed 15 years of exhaus- tive training and competed with more than 50 others to secure his position as assistant princi- pal cellist. Then, in 1969, he defected to the United States when the orchestra returned here. He said he didn’t regret the decision. For Ali, a visiting Fulbright professor in the history department, Pakistan’s political situa- tion encouraged him to accept an invitation to lecture in the United States in 1975. recy ue Ali Each man, sitting in his office surrounded by books, papers and photographs, talks of his disciplined education, the agony of separation from his home and his surprise at his treatment by Americans. Ali, who served as a diplomat in China and Morocco and is a scholar of international re- pute, said he nevertheless envisioned Ameri- cans as “arrogant” and ‘‘dollarmen.” Ironically because of American propaganda, “1 somehow had the impression that America was still adolescent — not fully of age,” he said. But when he arrived for his first visit, “‘I actually found you (Americans) human.” Since serving at Western, Ali said he has begun con- sidering immigrating here. “If America gave me an immigration visa, I would certainly come,”’ he said. Lezhnev is already an American citizen. “I find that my homeland is here,”’ he said. “I don’t consider myself a double citizen — I’m an American citizen. “People here accept you as what you are, maybe because the country itself was made from immigrants.” Immigration wasn’t easy, he said. He gave it “considerable thought.” It meant giving up a comfortable music ca- reer that he had worked for almost from his birth in Moscow 47 years ago. He was enrolled in a 10-year program of study at Central Music School in Moscow when he was eight. “Actually my mother was re- sponsible for that,” he said. No concessions were made to the students, Lezhnev said. Music and practice were in addi- tion to the regular course of study. Lezhnev later entered the Moscow Conser- vatory and performed with the Moscow Phil- harmonic — all on the road to the Moscow State Symphony. “It’s a long, long way. To get a high education, you got to work like hell,’’ he said, laughing. The work with the Moscow State Symphony was lucrative — it paid almost three times what he had previously been earning — and it was exhilarating, he said. Besides performing in the Soviet Union, the orchestra toured abroad about two months ev- ery two years. The fear and secrecy that pervaded his life led him to think of emigrating, he said. _ In 1969, he left the orchestra and was grant- ed asylum by the United States. Since then he has performed with the Pittsburgh Symphony and has begun work on a doctorate degree at the University of Pittsburgh. He taught at the University of Evansville before coming to Western. His American-born wife, Dr. Virginia Lezhnev, teaches English to foreign students at Western, he said. Ali, 68, with brownish-black wavy hair, a slight frame and a penchant for English-cured tobacco, has experienced another world of se- crecy and uncertainties: diplomacy. A Moslem, Ali had been displaced from his native Delhi, India, in 1947 when the newly independent country became primarily Hindu and the newly created Pakistan became a ha- ven to Moslems. After serving in a government post in Paki- stan’s capital, Karachi, Ali went to China in 1951 as head of a Pakistani delegation at- tempting to establish diplomatic relations be- tween the two countries. “At this time, the Communists hadn’t start- ed taking a strong line,” Ali said. A ‘‘liberal’’ policy was being followed. Almost daily, for several weeks, Ali met with Chou En-Lai, then foreign minister, working out the details of diplomatic recognition. Ali met with Chairman Mao Tse-tung rarely during his Peking negotiations. ‘We hardly ex- changed any views and Mao was a man of few words,” Ali said. About 20 years earlier, in 1932, Ali was a lecturer in English at Lucknow University in northern India, when he became embroiled in a literary movement. Ali and a few of his Oxford-educated friends had formed a literary circle, reading and dis- cussing each other’s work. “We found that our social order was suffer- ing from decay,” Ali said. The “‘inanity and indifference to the political situation in the country” prodded the group to action. They published a volume of short stories in December 1932 illustrating their view of soci- ety. “‘We knew there would be a reaction, but we didn’t know it would open the flood-gates of a storm,” Ali said. ‘““There wasn’t a newspaper that didn’t condemn us. One newspaper said there was no punishment but stoning.” Why the reaction? ‘‘We had criticized the social conditions and the mental and moral outlook and intellectual attitude of people in our short stories,” Ali said. Eventually, a manifesto was written, the group’s influence spread and the Progressive Writers movement was born. Ali continued writing, publishing short sto- ries, novels, poetry and translations of Urdu works. He’s also translating the Koran, the holy book of Islam, into English. On leave from his position at the University of Karachi, which he has had since 1977, Ali said Western students reminded him of stu- dents “‘in my own day.” But he was shaken by the lack of interest here in foreign events. Lezhnev shared his thoughts. “That attitude of naivete (in Americans), that sometimes really startles me,’’ Lezhnev said. “Especially the attitude, ‘oh, that’s so far away from us.’ ” Just as Ali said he wants to bring ‘“‘the East- ern perspective” to Americans, Lezhnev wish- es Americans would get to know the Russian people better. “I think the great majority of the people here know they aren’t the enemies of the Rus- sian people.” Russians and Americans, he said with a smile, are ‘‘very similar.” — Tom McCord [| © o- . —. = ee ee tee oe ae ee ’ — David Frank “A LONER” is one way to describe Ahmed Ali, accord- ing to photographer David Frank. Frank took this portrait for his Photojournalism class, trying t o show Ali’s love for reading and his solitude. A PERFORMANCE by cellist Vsevolod Lezhnev was taped by media services for broadcast on Kentucky Educa- tional Television. Arthur Raybold, a sophomore broadcast major, works the camera. — Mark Tucker 177 Lezhnev, Ali | Beth Metzker didn’t realize the significance of | her social work community lab (Sociology 106) until one night at a ballgame when one of the children she was working with ran up to hug her. “T realized then that the children I work with are full of affection they don’t get in return at home,”’ Miss Metzker, who assists at the Bowl- ing Green Girls’ Club, said. ‘“‘When Jessica hugged me, I knew I was doing some good.”’ Miss Metzker, a Miami sophomore, and 44 other students are participating in the social work community lab, which requires each stu- dent to work with a community agency for 28 hours during the semester. Although the class can be taken with Soci- ology 105, Introduction to Social Work, some students are taking only the one-hour lab. “We’re very open to this,’ Dr. Vernon Moore, social work instructor, said. ““There are a lot of kids on campus who enjoy doing volun- i ‘ ‘ : ‘ 3 2 : i 178 | Social Work teer work and this gives them a chance to receive credit for their efforts,’ he said. Moore said the course was designed ‘“‘to allow students to get in touch with their values and to see if they are cut out for social work.”’ The lab students work with community agencies, such as the health department, the Head-Start program, the Comprehensive Care Center and state public assistance offices. Some of the students have had very little exposure to poverty or severe situations and are quite shocked when exposed to these things, Moore said. Many of them begin to question their own values and traditional ideas about human be- havior, he said. Tammi Devine, a Danville freshman, and Kevin Vaught, an Owensboro junior, work as assistants in the Comprehensive Care Center HELP Line, a 24-hour crisis intervention cen- ter. | Socializing: Labs bring human rewards The two take phone calls and refer persons to agencies that can help them with their prob- lems. “We have calls from alcoholics, potential suicide victims and unwed mothers,” Vaught said. Miss Devine said that many of the calls are from pre-teenagers and teenagers requesting abortion referrals. In most cases, they encour- age the women to consider other alternatives, such as giving up their babies for adoption. If the mothers decide on abortion, they are usual- ly referred to clinics in Nashville or Louisville, Miss Devine said. Vaught said one couple came into the clinic to request an abortion referral. ‘I don’t think we discuss the alternatives enough. In this case it was obvious the lady didn’t want the abor- tion, but her husband did,” Vaught said. Sophomore Ron Wilkins, who is working as a professional social worker’s assistant for the — Stevie Benson Bowling Green Health Clinic, goes along with the social worker to visit clients in five sur- rounding counties. Most of the clients are from lower income brackets and ‘‘some are even living in one-room houses,” he said. Wilkins said he mainly listens to people’s problems and then helps them get aid. He said that it was sometimes difficult not to get per- sonally involved, but “‘you can be empathetic without being sympathetic.” Moore said students are encouraged to look at all sides of a problems. The emphasis is on a professional, rather than a personal, relationship, which stresses attaining certain goals to benefit the client. “A personal approach might make you respond purely out of haste and emotion,” he said. Moore said this doesn’t mean the students should get calloused to people’s problems. “The day I see an abused child or a neglected elderly person, and I don’t get a nauseous feeling, will be the day I will get out of social work myself.” . Working with prenatal care at the Bowling Green Health Clinic has been a challenge for Louisville freshman Carla Baker. Miss Baker visits expectant mothers to see whether they are receiving the health care and services they need. She said she deals mostly with unwed mothers between 14 and 18 years old. Miss Baker said she admired many of these young women because “‘they handle their situ- ation better than I think a lot of older women would.” “I knew some girls in high school who got pregnant and couldn’t talk to anyone about it, not even their parents,” she said. ‘So I’m listening to these people because I want to help.” — Laura Phillips — Stevie Benson THE ALPHABET was the lesson of the day for six-year- old Tiffany Ragland. Freshman Barbara Howard helps Tif- fany at an afternoon class at the Girls’ Club on West Main St. It was Miss Howard’s first day at the club. A DEFENDANT rests his hands on the jail’s bars while sophomore Debbie Gothard interviews him as part of her community service lab. Miss Gothard, a 23-year-old Bowl- ing Green native, was assigned to pre-trial services in the Park Row Executive Building. A fashionable class 18 students tour New York City With their suitcases of new clothes and their billfolds almost as heavy, 18 students headed for New York this summer __. for a class. They studied fashion for the Fashion Fundamentals class. “New York is so fashion-conscious,” Sara Westfall, a Versailles senior, said. “You can find anything you want shopping in New York; you don’t have to pick and choose like you do here.” Cathy Buckles, a Henderson senior, said, ‘“‘The girls I saw walking down the streets looked like they just stepped out of Vogue magazine. “T bought a lot of new clothes for the trip, but I still felt out of style,” she said. The fashion-study tour is designed to get students better acquainted with the fashion industry and to let them see job possibilities, according to Dr. Sallye Clark, course instructor. During the May 16-26 trip, the students visited well-known department stores, such as Bonwit Teller and Macy’s, and were shown new lines of clothing, how fashion displays are arranged and different advertising techniques. The professionalism of the displays and the arrangement of the stores were the two aspects of the tour that impressed Ms. Westfall most. “A whole floor would be devoted to one type of clothing,’’ she said. Each class member was asked to do a retail survey by visiting boutiques of her choice. “T liked going to the different boutiques. That’s the way I learned how to ride the subway, even though I accidentally ended up in Harlem once,”’ Gloria Wininger, the only graduate student who went on the tour, said. “One of the Greenwich Village boutiques I went to was really different,” she said. “‘They sold used clothing from the ’30s and ’40s.” Ms. Wininger said one of the most exciting parts of the tour was visiting the historic costume exhibit in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Jeannine Cook, a Lexington senior, said she was impressed that a famous fashion publicist, Eleanor Lambert, took the time to talk with their class. Ms. Cook said that she was fascinated by the designer fashions seen in most New York stores. “One dress that caught my eye was priced at $2,000,” she said. Planning a fashion tour is a lot of work, according to Mrs. Clark, who worked with a travel agency in making hotel and airplane reservations. Local stores helped her in making professional contacts. “I also used the yellow pages a lot and got ideas for store visits from publications like Women’s Wear Daily,” she said. To familiarize the students with the New York fashion world, Mrs. Clark required each woman to research one of the places they were to visit and then present a class discussion during the May term seminar before the tour. The fashion world wasn’t the only part of New York the women got to see. Mrs. Clark said the tour was designed to allow plenty of free time for sightseeing and “‘just getting the feel of city life.” Included in the tour fee were admissions to Broadway plays, such as The Chorus Line and Dracula. Dressed in “‘disco attire,” the women often went out at night for a whirl in one of the famous New York discos. “We got a lot of stares,” Ms. Cook said, ‘“‘when we would walk in a disco in a big group.” She said they got in free at one disco after they told the doorman they were tourists from Kentucky. Besides the $60 May term tuition fee, the students had to pay $425, which included transportation and hotel accomodations and entertainment and museum fees. Most of the women said they spent $600 to $700. But the expense was worth it, according to Ms. Buckles, who said it helped her in learning what jobs are available in the fashion industry and how to apply for them. Ms. Cook said the trip made her want to try out all of the latest fashions. “I was ready to come back to Kentucky wearing all straight-leg pants and high-heel shoes.” She also said she learned to keep up with the fast-moving pace of city life. “By the second or third day I walked just as fast as most New Yorkers, but my roommate and I went through a whole box of Band-Aids in the process.” — Laura Phillips _) 179 Fashion Tour Ogaden College Machines aren’t taking over society, but computer science majors may be 180 Ogden College Marvin Russell James Worthington Jeff Jenkins Are machines taking over society? Maybe not, but they’re becoming more im- portant all the time, according to Dr. Marvin Russell, Ogden College dean. And interest in them is certainly up, he said. It’s meant a bigger-than-ever enrollment for computer science. Computer science isn’t the only area with more students. Enrollment in agriculture, phys- ical science and engineering technology has increased because of more jobs and better work in those fields, Russell said. Russell said the college is planning a pro- gram called Research Management Instruction, which will include providing public service in research of energy, weather, regulatory plan- ning and environmental concerns. Master’s degrees in computer science and geology have yet to be approved by the state Council on Higher Education, as have an area of concentration in biology and a degree in biochemistry. Russell said he is proud that Ogden is the only college with an overall increase in enroll- ment. He said that says quite a bit about their recruiting efforts. Russell said Western has more students en- tering medical school than any other Kentucky university. He also said seven students entered veterinary school in 1978 compared to the University of Kentucky’s 11 and Murray’s one. There was also an increase in the number en- tering dental school. Despite the addition of an equine science class, the agriculture department isn’t just horsing around. A class in equine (horse) science was added to the department in its efforts to expand the program, according to Dr. James Worthing- ton, department head. A specialist in horticulture and two new hor- ticulture classes were also added. The department had some changes in ad- ministration. Dr. Leonard Brown, former agri- culture department head, was named Ogden College associate dean for one year. Worthing- ton, formerly an associate professor, replaced Brown. Having the interest of the students at heart, a large faculty and a good course selection are several of the reasons Worthington said he believes the agriculture department is second MILKING COWS can be quite a. kick, literally. Chris Sowder, a Bardstown sophomore, discovered that at the university farm when he tried to milk the last cow. He ended up frustrated — and his head in the cow’s side — before the cow settled down. only to the University of Kentucky’s. About 450 students have a major, minor or area of concentration in agriculture, he said. The graduate program has about 15 part- time students and six to 10 full-time students. Agriculture assistantships are awarded on a competitive basis. The department requires 54 credit hours for a major, 50 for an area of concentration and 18 to 20 for a minor, he said. Most depart- ments require a combined major-minor total of 54 hours, he said. “This is a great area for jobs,”’ he said. ‘‘We train people to meet the needs of industry and government. All of our people are getting jobs and getting good jobs.”’ With 400 majors, two proposed degrees and good job prospects, the biology department is “holding steady,” according to Dr. Jeff Jenkins, acting department head. Jenkins replaced Dr. E.O. Beal, who re- signed because of health reasons. The universi- ty is now looking for a permanent department head, Jenkins said. A proposed area of concentration in biology and a degree in biochemistry have to be ap- proved by the Council on Higher Education, he said. The proposed area of concentration in biol- ogy will be an asset to students, Jenkins said. “With the area, they don’t have to have a minor in another field,”’ he said. ‘““They can major in one area of biology and minor in another area of biology.” Most biology students go to medical school after graduation, Jenkins said. A survey of 130 graduates revealed that 51.5 percent went to med school, 22.3 went to graduate school, 20 went into biology-related jobs, and 6.1 had non-biology-related jobs. The biology program is successful, he said. “I don’t know that we have ever had a student to say that he didn’t have good train- ing,” he said. ““You’re only as good as your product, and our products have been really successful. “We have a good program.”’ Majoring in the geography and geology de- partment is more than coloring Arctic tundras on a map. Dr. Wayne Hoffman, department head, said he is distressed over what he calls Ameri- ca’s concept of geography as child’s play. Hoffman said he wants students to realize that geography takes technical skill. continued on page 182 181 Ogden College Ogden College con Most geography majors enroll in one of three tracts — city and regional planning, me- teorology and climatology or cartography. Al- though the department offers other tracts, these prepare the student for the most popular jobs, Hoffman said. Students work with city housing, zoning, an- nexation and revitalization of downtowns in the city-planning tract. Jobs with the National Weather Service are available after the student has graduated from the meteorology and cli- matology tract, Hoffman said. On the graduate level, the department of- fers a historical preservation concentration. Students completed a historic analysis of Oak- land and developed a preservation plan for the area. Shifting in the past eight years from teacher education, the geography department has a higher percentage of professional graduates today, Hoffman said. Geology majors have good job opportuni- ties, he said. “Oil companies are especially grabbing them up.” he said. Busy adjusting to his new job, chemistry department head Dr. Lawrence Boucher is proudest of his department’s community re- lations. “The faculty is becoming involved with local industries — helping them solve practical problems like quality control,” he said. Industries are giving as well as taking. Dr. | Francis Byrne, a retired Westinghouse chem- | ist, used his “‘real world”’ experience to teach a | spring semester class. Boucher said he would also like to upgrade teaching in high schools and grade schools. Since the department produces few teach- ers, starting from scratch would cause little effect, he said. The next best way is to educate existing teachers. Even with the university’s willingness to de- ie ne vise special courses, teachers still resist taking mass 7 = Mark Lyons science classes, Boucher said. : | Enrollment stayed constant but the depart- By GESTIVE ORGANS TONY ment is always able to handle more, he said. aaa Bis ates | In the stage of doing a little and plannin se DD oe ai Fe ies, more, the department ane to vale sas ; O NOT KAN SECT students in community and regional projects, | Boucher said. - : Any Muse FES 7THOUT | Math teachers are sitting in on biology and : : — ie ? FERMIss ox hie ¢ business classes. No, they’re not spying. They’re researching , for service courses. Instead of turning out teachers or profes- sionals, the math department is primarily ser- vice-oriented, offering classes for the benefit of other departments and for general-education requirements. “We are talking to the departments to see what they want. Then we tailor our courses to | serve them better,” said Dr. Robert Bueker, | mathematics and computer science de- partment head. | HEADS BENT LOW, students concentrate on dissecting wrote the terse message on the blackboard; ‘‘transect”’ continued on page 184 cats during biology class. Blaine Ferrell, biology instructor, | means to cut crosswise. — Mark Lyons 182 Ogden College — - —_ Wayne Hoffman Lawrence Boucher Robert Bueker WHILE WAITING for information from the computer, WITH A MURAL of the moon as a background, Gary Zexia Barnes, a chemistry major, sleeps in Thompson Com- _- Vaughn, a Stubbins sophomore, and Mike Morris, a Padu- plex. The Centertown senior had been doing computer _cah senior, study for their Keller system astronomy class in research for her chemistry class. Thompson Complex. — Mark Tucker 183 Ogden College 184 Ogden College con. “We are looking into biology courses, get- ting ready to start a biomathematics course,” he said. Other service programs include a year-old class in business algebra, followed by calculus. A new master’s degree in computer science is awaiting approval by the state council on Higher Education, he said. Construction has begun on a new observa- tory for the physics and astronomy department, and a new computerized pro- gram for basic astronomy courses is being planned. The observatory is 10 miles southwest of Bowling Green, according to Dr. Frank Six, department head. It will house the depart- ment’s newest and largest telescope. The 24-inch telescope cost $38,000. To be effective, the telescope needs to be outside of town, Six said. “You need a dark site to make observations of faint sources because dust stirred up by the town causes a background glow,” he said. “So if you have a very big telescope, you need to put it outside of town.” The observatory should be completed by spring 1980, Six said, and it will cost about $45,000. The land was donated. The department is also working on comput- erized classrooms. FINALS FRUSTRATION comes in two forms — prema- ture relief and pretest frenzy. Somewhere in between, Jim Ogden College By 1980, Six said he hopes that minicom- puters will be available to teach students. Questions will appear on the computer’s screen, and students will key in the answers, Six said. Tests for some classes are now being made by computer. Starting salaries of $21,600 make people sit up and notice. And more people are noticing engineering and technology, Dr. Boyce Tate, engineering technology department head, said. Tate said employment prospects are up. “In my 24 years in and associated with colleges, | have never known the job market to be better than it is now,” he said. He attributes this to the demand for technol- ogy and engineering backgrounds — “people who know how to do things.” The department added eight courses, in- cluding three general-education courses rec- ommended by the Engineering Council for Pro- fessional Development Inc. Two new solar energy courses offer formal instruction in solar collectors and analyzing en- ergy systems by computer, he said. “Solar energy is a prominent topic of discus- sion in the field and nationwide,” Tate said. The department added the courses because “there is little formal instruction in the area.” L] 13) [wt DE — Mark Lyons Green, a physics graduate student from Bowling Green, studies for a test in the physics study room. — Mark Lyons Frank Six Boyce Tate COMPUTER SCIENCE is rapidly gaining popularity, ac- cording to Dr. Marvin Russell, Ogden College dean. Com- puter science majors Al Collins of Hopkinsville and John Tapscott of Bowling Green work on problems in the com- puter lab in Thompson Complex. DISSECTING CATS is a routine part of Comparative Anatomy, a required course for biology majors. Mary Hood, a senior biology major from Glasgow, wears rubber gloves and wields forceps while cutting on a cat in anatomy lab in Thompson Complex. — Mark Lyons me en pheetie rT hele Neues) Kenneth Estes — Mark Lyons Curtis Englebright Norman Ehresman Sandefur J.T cist ee PELE. es os College of Education College of Education Some people may think the College of Edu- cation prepares students to be teachers — and that’s about all. Not so, according to Dean J.T. Sandefur. Sandefur said less than half of the courses involve professional education. Along with the teacher education and educational leadership departments, the college contains industrial education, physical education and recreation, educational services and psychology. Enrollment is fairly stable in each depart- ment, he said. While the undergraduate level is decreasing slightly, the number in graduate programs has increased. It’s surprising perhaps that there is no great concern in the department about the oversup- ply of teachers. The oversupply is reduced, Sandefur said, as students decide not to go into education. There are even shortages in some areas, he said, “‘One of the first is in the area of special education. We also need teachers in the basic sciences, such as chemistry, mathematics and physics.”’ Finding jobs for graduates has generally been successful, Sandefur said, especially with WORKING on a homemade Christmas gift, Greg Beck, a Fredonia senior, examines the leg joints of an Early Ameri- can bedside table. The industrial technology major said he planned to give the table to his father. those who are not “‘location-bound.”’ The College of Education’s programs are constantly being updated and improved, he said. A current objective involves using a sys- tem for reviewing and evaluating the programs to improve quality. Sandefur said developing new programs is a continuous process, and many new ones origi- nate at the department level. They are studied by the College Curriculum Committee or the Teacher Education Council before Sandefur approves them. Long-range plans include creating programs for continuing education. Sandefur predicts the number of 18-year-olds entering college will decrease. “We also need a number of professional and educational programs for older persons,” he said. Researching and evaluating schools is a new program in the educational services divi- sion, according to Dr. Norman Ehresman, director. The program is called PREPS, or the Pro- gram of Research and Evaluation of the Public BEFORE TAKING a spelling test, third-grade students at Warrren County Elementary School get instruction from stude nt teacher Darrell Moore, a Columbia senior. There were 149 student teachers in the fall semester. — Mark Lyons Teaching oversupply reduced: shortages found in some areas Schools. Western, the state education depart- ment and about 20 schools provide funding for the evaluations. The schools that provide fund- ing are evaluated. Western is the only university in Kentucky to offer this program, Ehresman said. The educational services division also dir- ects the Child Study and Learning Center, which consists of Jones-Jaggers Laboratory School, the Child Diagnostic Center and the Research Department. Education students observe, try out ideas and try model teaching at Jones-Jaggers, Ehresman said. “‘Jones-Jaggers is an attempt to provide us with a chance to stay on the cutting edge of new developments, things which should be go- ing on in education,” he said. Making teachers better prepared is the goal of the teacher education department, ac- cording to Dr. Curtis Englebright, depart- ment head. Englebright said the department tries to blend lectures and practical experience. Stu- dents may observe teachers or serve as teach- ers’ aides. The department includes elementary educa- tion and early childhood education, exception- al child education, reading education, and sec- ondary and middle school education. The department uses the standards of the Kentucky Teacher Preparation and Certifica- tion Handbook, Englebright said. It requires 30 credit hours of education courses for elemen- tary education majors and 20 for secondary education majors. The Kentucky State Board of Education has also passed new professional standards which increase student teaching from eight to 12 weeks. One semester of education courses is also required. Also, all students must have some training in exceptional child education, the metric system, consumer education and multicultural educa- tion. Students in the educational leadership de- partment are unique, according to Dr. Ken- neth Estes, department head. Most have their master’s degrees and are employed in school systems. Since the students work during the day, an extended campus program is required, he said. Evening classes are within an 100-mile radi- us of Bowling Green, such as Greenville, Ma- disonville, Albany and Campbellsville. At least 15 teachers who want to be princi- continued on page 188 187 College of Education College of Education cont. | L John O’Connor pals or counselors must be interested before a class is offered in a new area, according to Estes. The average enrollment in each class is about 30, and it’s growing because of higher salaries for teachers and administrators. The department has three basic curriculum areas — foundations (which is concerned with educational philosophies), higher administra- tion and counseling. Classes are offered in advanced curriculum, the organization and administration of elemen- tary schools, school law, school finance, the organization and administration of secondary schools, and school plant management. One of the first courses taken, Fundamen- tals of School Administration, requires an in- ternship of working at least 20 hours for a principal, Estes said. The psychology department is researching a new style of teaching, according to Dr. John O’Connor, department head. Called ‘“‘guided design,” the teaching deals with group progress and learning. It’s being used in general and developmental psychology classes. Guided design can be used in just about any class, O’Connor said. It began in West Virginia, and Dr. Neil Cohen, an instructor, is heading the research. It is funded by a grant from the Exxon Foundation. Self-paced courses are also offered in some introductory classes. The department’s master’s degree program is highly competitive, O’Connor said. There were 24 chosen for the program out of 120 applicants. However, a master’s degree isn’t necessary to get a good psychology-related job, he said. Health-related jobs, technical writers and ad- ministrative positions do not require a mas- ter’s. The faculty is involved in several research projects, he said. More than 30 publications and about 40 presentations were made at re- gional and national conventions by faculty. About 3,300 students are enrolled in the department, O’Connor said. But eight courses and two teachers were dropped. The field services office is ‘the outreach of the College of Education,” according to Jack Neel, director. 188 College of Education Jack Neel It offers workshops for high school and ele- mentary school teachers, Neel said. In the fall semester, about 62 are offered, ranging from student motivation to evaluating test results. A survey of the workshops is made in the spring, and a group of teachers decides how to update the workshops. Neel said the office tries to involve teachers in certain areas and to teach them. Learning about air conditioning and refrigera- tion is a matter of course for industrial educa- tion and technology students. Air Conditioning and Refrigeration is a new course in the industrial education and technology department, according to Dr. Frank Conley, department head. Other new courses include Technical Illus- tration, Quality Control, and Motion and Time Analysis. Conley said some of the courses may benefit other majors. Technical Illustration, for exam- ple, could help the commercial art major, he said. The department offers three programs — industrial art teacher education, which is for high school teachers; vocational industrial teacher education for vocational school teach- ers; and a broad program in industrial technol- ogy. More women are majoring in the depart- ment, Conley said, and job opportunities are good. “‘Western’s program is as good as any in the country and better than any in the state,” he said. Changing the traditional major program to a competency-based program will be a big change for the physical education and re- creation department, according to Burch Oglesby, department head. The new program, which must be approved by university officials, will include more physio- logical information than the traditional pro- gram does. “The students will learn what happens when a golf ball is hit, not just how to hit it,” Oglesby said. After the students have taken the courses, they will then go to local schools and teach what they have learned, he said. They will have t aught a minimum of 200 hours by the Frank Conley Burch Oglesby time they are ready to start their student teach- ing, Oglesby said. He said most of the program will be self- paced. “It is possible that a student may have to go longer than the usual four years — probably four and one-half,’’ Oglesby said. To get a degree, the student must take and pass a test; if the student doesn’t pass, he must take more classes. Oglesby said about 99.9 percent of the stu- dents who come into the program want to teach or coach. He said some go into commer- cial education, which leads to jobs in health spas, boys clubs, military service and major corporations. While there are two men for every coaching job, the opportunities for women are much greater, Oglesby said. Title IX has much to do with availability of jobs for women, since schools need more women coaches to meet the requirements. Oglesby said his department has also had to meet Title IX requirements. Many of the courses that were open to men only are now available for women to take. LJ THE CLICK, CLICK, SLIDE rhythms of tininkling can be tricky. Student teacher Rick Barnes, a Princeton senior, helps Jones-Jaggers third-grader Stacy Roberts with rhythm and timing for the Philippine dance. — Mark Tucker Aro atari olen cn tang teas brw sien crgrntned “BETTER NUTRITION makes us better” according to Dietra Sears’ poster. The elementary education major was putting together the sign in an Academic Complex hallway for her Nutrition in Elementary Schools class. A DANCE STUDIO MIRROR is for more than watching ballet movements. Sheryl Otis, a Louisville freshman, uses one while fixing her hair after practicing. The studio is on ad the second level of Smith Stadium. — Mark Tucker Bawa pa Lc — Mark Lyons 189 College of Education CO tééééeéé.. .6. § oa ree College of : Applied Arts and Health Highly ranked, one-of-a-kind programs bring optimism, improvement to college — Mark Lyons 190 College of Applied Arts and Health William Hourigan Dr. William Hourigan, College of Ap- plied Arts and Health dean, is riding high on optimism these days. “We’re continuing to improve,” he said. “We have refined the curriculum in nu rsing and medical records technology and have im- plemented a master of public health.” The nursing program is also on the upswing ‘with an addition of five undergraduate students and 19 graduate students. Hourigan said he predicts a 25-student in- crease in upper-level nursing classes within the next year or two. The public health master’s degree is the only one of its kind in the state, he said. The new program, with 78 students, is a “great help to the university,’ Hourigan said. A family study center has also been devel- oped, and its programs include infant stimula- tion and aging. Perhaps the biggest boost for the college is the dental hygiene department, which has been ranked in the top 10 to 15 percent in the nation, Hourigan said. The college is also closely watching the job market, he said. We’re not adding enrollment to the extent that they won’t get employment.” Hourigan said the faculty is highly motivat- ed, cooperative and conscious of community service. ‘‘Their primary interest is in teaching young people,” he said. “With enrollment continuing to increase, graduates finding employment and the caliber of students coming into the program appearing to improve, I’m very optimistic in this college.” The home economics and family living department is reaching for ‘quality’ instead of “quantity,” according to Dr. William Floyd, department head. “We’re working to solidify important quali- ties of what we’re doing,”’ Floyd said. “‘We’re going to sit back and assess what we’re doing, correct our problems and strengthen our pro- grams.” Through a cooperative educational pro- gram, graduate students worked during the summer in their fields. Floyd said the program CHILDREN with learning problems and their parents are in the infant stimulation program, located on the third floor of the Academic Complex. Joyce Pharris and her son Ronald, 1, test what they learned in separate sessions. AS PART OF A UNIT on extrication (removing injured people from wrecks), students in Health 271, Emergency Care and Transportation, practice removing an immobi- lized Pam Herriford from a simulated accident. William Floyd Vera Guthrie “exposed students to actual job situations. They see some relevance between classroom and career.” Job opportunities are excellent in dietetics, hotel and restaurant management, textile and clothing merchandising, and child and family care, he said. Competitive fields are interior design and home economics teaching, he said. “We now have a master’s program ap- proved in interior design and housing. There’s also more research underway for individual goals within the department,” Floyd said. Just “‘settling down” describes the library science department, according to Dr. Vera Guthrie, department head. After a period of changes in the department, it is now ‘‘settling down and observing these changes,”’ she said. The number of courses necessary for a ma- jor has increased, she said. Also, “there has been a gradual decrease in major and minor degrees over the past few years,” she said. Library Science 101, a required course, has not affected enrollment in the department, Mrs. Guthrie said, but it has been advanta- Robert Halbman geous. “‘I think freshmen no longer fear coming to the library,” she said. Library science majors and minors are find- ing that job salaries are increasing, she said. Industries and newspapers are also hiring li- brary science graduates. The department gives workshops in Ken- tucky high schools and public libraries. ““We’ll give them on whatever subject a group wants, and we’ll go whenever they want us,”’ she said. In Col. Robert Halbman’s office, a sign that reads ‘“‘ROTC is the Cadet’’ hangs on the wall. And Halbman, military science depart- ment head, said he means it. “‘We’re here as a part of the university and we devote a lot of time to the individual stu- dent,” he said. Halbman, who was transferred from Fort Knox, said he believes Western has “‘one of the better programs around.” The ROTC image is continually changing, he said. It is steering away from drills, at least for the first two years of the program. In those two years, students may decide how they want to wear their hair and whether to purchase a continued on page 192 — Judy Watson 191 College of Applied Arts and Health College of Applied Arts and Health con 192 College of Applied Arts and Health — Mark Tucker uniform, Halbman said. If a student wishes to sign up for the third year, he then signs a contract, which allows a salary of $100 a month. It also obligates him to serve in the Army for one to two years after graduation. Halbman said many officers come out of Western’s program, and cadets receive the military branch they request, whether it is the Army, National Guard or Reserve Unit. Halbman describes ROTC as a “‘challenge, both physically and mentally,” no matter what the student’s goals may be. “We offer something for all career fields,” he said. Seven new graduate courses and proposed changes in other parts of the curriculum may alter the health and safety department, according to David Dunn, department head. Public health courses were added to strengthen the graduate program and to give students more freedom in choosing classes, Dunn said. The department also offers three under- graduate degrees, three areas of concentra- tion, two minors and three associate degrees. They cover several areas — from school health to health care administration. Dunn said the department foresees some changes in the focus of the school health edu- cation program. “The health education program should be directed toward prevention,” he said. “This is the time (in elementary and secondary schools) when the young people are developing atti- tudes. ‘‘A great deal can be done to influence these attitudes that will lead to a longer life.” The department also plans to offer cardio- pulmonary resuscitation classes for faculty and others, Dunn said. Why do people major in health and safety? “One of the reasons is to get a job,” Dunn said. ‘In our area, the employment is pretty good.” Washing hands and making beds, memorizing names of muscles, and reading about catheters is all just homework for nursing students. There are about 200 students in the two- year nursing program, according to Virginia Lehmenkuler, nursing department head. About 28 are in the new four-year program. “‘Many (go into nursing) because they like to help people,’ Miss Lehmenkuler said, ‘‘or be- cause they like to work with people.” Job opportunities are good for nurses, she said. “I have never seen a graduate who couldn’t get a job if she wanted it.” Most graduates work in hospitals, ranging from City-County Hospital in Bowling Green to Jewish Hospital in Louisville, she said. Gradu- DENTAL HYGIENE students help themselves and the community by performing services for a small fee, accord- ing to Dr. A. Fogle Godby, department head. Lesa Newby, a Hopkinsville senior, cleans Tamera Carver’s teeth. Ta- mera is a student at Parker-Bennett Elementary School. ; ee ax David Dunn ates of the four-year program are eligible to take on more demanding jobs. The four-year program leads to a bachelor’s in nursing and teaches community health and leadership, Miss Lehmenkuler said. The two-year, or associate degree, program is accredited, and the four-year program is in the process of accreditation, Miss Lehmen- kuler said. Students receive some practical experience before graduating, she said. They observe op- erations and may act as a registered nurse during childbirth. Still, it’s a big jump from student to nurse. ““You’re responsible then,” she said. ““When — Mark Tucker Virginia Lehmenkuler A. Fogle Godby you’re a student, you’re being supervised. When you’re an RN, you're the one.” If there’s one word to describe the dental hygiene department, it’s “competitive.” About 110 applied for the 18 openings, ac- cording to Dr. A. Fogle Godby, depart- ment head. However, the number of applications has decreased. “‘When we were getting anywhere from 175 to 200 applications, word got out that you could forget about getting in unless you had a 4.0 GPA (grade-point average),”’ he said. “A lot of pretty fair students were discour- aged.” Also, University of Kentucky began dental hygiene programs in two community colleges, which led to the decrease in applications to Western, he said. A 4.0 GPA isn’t necessary to gain entry to AN ALLEN COUNTY FARM was a classroom Nov. 11 for ROTC students learning about map reading and land terrain. The drill was a practice session for an orienteering meet in December. Janet Malone, a Louisville sophomore, the competitive department, however. Extra- curricular activities, high school grades, ACT scores and others are taken into consideration. Most majors have a 2.8 GPA, Godby said. To become licensed dental hygienists, graduates must pass national and state tests. Western is above the 87th percentile in licens- ing in the nation, Godby said. Students in the two-year program do minor dental work for students, faculty and some Bowling Green residents. A ‘“‘token fee’”’ is charged, he said. ““Of course, it’s a great service for the com- munity,” he said. ‘‘But it’s primarily training. Its mission is educational — to train hygien- ists.” It’s fairly easy for graduates to find jobs, Godby said, although the demand has de- creased. “It’s popular. And we hope it stays that way,” he said. L] a ’ ee — Mark Tucker ponders her next move while Eugene Walker, a Fort Camp- bell freshman, and Steve Spivey, a Cave City freshman, hurdle a small stream during the land terrain tour. Forty- five cadets took part in the drill. 193 College of Applied Arts and Health Robert Mounce Joseph Gluhman Potter College Life is more than wrinkle-free shirts The meaning of life is not permanent press. “It’s nice to have cars and shirts that don’t wrinkle, but that’s not what life is all about,” Dr. Robert Mounce, dean of Potter Col- lege of Arts and Humanities, said. “The humanities record the great ideas of mankind,” he said. ‘‘They remind us that life is essentially an experience to be lived rather than a technological orientation.” This is why the humanities are important, according to Mounce. Mounce said that exposing students to the heritage of humanities is the main objective of his college. Potter College includes art, com- munication and theater, English, foreign lan- guages, history, intercultural and folk studies, journalism, music, and philosophy and religion. The number of students in Potter College is about 23 percent of the total enrollment, Mounce said, and there are 216 professors in the college. As for the professional advancement of hu- manities students, Mounce said, “‘Liberal arts graduates arrive at their first major job more slowly, but five years later the personal satis- faction is much greater than that of a vocation- ally educated person.” ““A wide range of employment opportunities is open” for humanities students, he said, citing jobs in the ministry, diplomatic service, archi- tecture, speech pathology and education among many others. The department attempted to make the range still wider by offering two new degree programs — a bachelor’s in fine arts in theater and a bachelor’s of art in advertising. In the fall Mounce said the programs had not been ap- proved by the state Council on Higher Educa- tion. But he said, “I think the degrees will go A TOMBSTONE becomes homework for Ben Burley, a Columbia senior. Burley examined the stone when the Folk Art and Technology class went on a two-day trip to study graveyards and log buildings in Kentucky and Tennessee. — David Frank ON A FIELD TRIP to the Bowling Green police depart- ment, journalism assistant professor Jim Highland submits to a lie detector test. Highland said the test, administered by officer Pat Thomas, showed he is ‘‘basically honest.” through.” Mounce said he believes the college’s courses are designed “‘to train to create jobs, not to fill jobs’ by developing creativity and imagination. Emphasis on vocational training has “shrunk the imagination of the nation,” he said. The major change in Dr. Joseph Gluhman’s department is Dr. Joseph Gluhman. Gluhman is the new art department head. His immediate plans include “nothing revolu- tionary,” he said. “‘We’ll be perfecting what we do here. I’ll be finding out what the ropes are.” The ropes include responsibility for the uni- versity’s largest degree program, the bachelor of fine arts, Gluhman said. He said the department hopes to add a ma- jor in art history and a master’s degree in fine arts to existing programs in fine arts, commer- cial art and art education. These programs train students for jobs in visual communication. But graduates with EE bachelor of fine arts degrees teach, Gluhman said. He also said museums, design firms, publish- ers and advertising agencies offer opportuni- ties, and both government and corporations are increasing their involvement in the art world. Success in that world depends on the proper mixture of talent, luck and background, Gluh- man said. Training can only provide the last of these. But for ‘‘a pretty visual generation” knowl- edge of art “‘makes your life a lot richer and more interesting,” Gluhman said. “1’m prejudiced, but I think it’s pretty neat stuff.” Communication and theater students could become the Walter Cronkites and Helen Hayeses of tomorrow — even if they don’t want to. “Kentucky is a funny state if you want to continued on page 196 — Lewis Gardner 195 Potter College a a EA I I RII 196 Potter College cont teach theater,” Dr. Randall Capps, commu- nication and theater department head, said. “It’s not certified as a high school teach- ing major.” So a lot of students go into profes- sional theater, he said. Students going into professional areas are helped by the faculty’s contacts, Capps said, cit ing Dr. William Leonard and Beverly Leon- ard as examples. Both the Leonards have worked with dance and theater in New York. Capps said strong programs in broadcasting and theater help, too. ‘‘We have one of the largest (departments) in the south in the field,” he said. “‘I’d like to think that along with size, we have quality.” Students also get practical Capps said. “Everybody in broadcast communications has experience’”’ working for the campus radio and television stations, he said. “‘It helps them understand what their jobs are going to be like when they get out.” experience, Potter College Prospects for getting those jobs vary, ac- cording to Capps. “If you want to get into acting, it’s competitive ... you have to audi- tion. “Tf you want to get into producing, some- thing backstage, it’s not quite so difficult.” In broadcasting, finding a job is fairly easy, Capps said. “‘We get almost continual calls from radio and TV stations wanting to know if we have students who are qualified,” he said. The English department doesn’t stop at courses in linguistics and literature. It offers courses for students who speak English as a second language, high school stu- dents and even elementary school students. Despite such a wide range of classes, enroll- ment has decreased, according to Dr. James Heldman, department head. University en- rollment decreased by about 300, he said, “and that affects us because we get them all.” Where the department “‘gets them all”’ is in English 101, 102 and 183. In the past, some students have been able to avoid the first two courses by scoring well on the College Level Examination Program test. But Heldman said, ‘‘We just eliminated the exemption for English 102 by means of CLEP. It was a major step. We’d been wanting to do it for a long time. “It (English 101) is the kind of knowledge and skill that can be measured, but I don’t think anyone should be able to CLEP out of writing. “There’s not a student around who can’t learn something from 102. If he’s a good writ- er, he will be a lot better writer” after taking 102, Heldman said. Heldman said foreign students have trouble WORK IS PLAY and a play is work for junior Sarah Sandefur and sophomore Tom Yates as they rehearse lines for ‘‘The Miser.”” The comedy, by Moliere, played Nov. 14- 19 in Russell Miller Theatre. David Whitaker Lowell Harrison GEARS FROM FARM MACHINERY become a A STRAY DOG becomes a footstool for senior work of art as Jo DiBella, a Bowling Green art major, Brad Montell during an Urban Folklore class in Gor- welds them in the pottery room in the fine arts center. don Wilson Hall. The dog followed the teacher, She said the final product would “‘resemble common graduate assistant Terry Jureka, into the room ona objects to give them beauty.” cold, rainy fall day. — Harold Sinclair — Mark Lyons Potter College cont “You can’t tell me that you can’t take Afro- American literature for a broad educational experience. Frankly, English majors and mi- nors need it,” he said, because it is an often ignored literature. The center created an option in historic preservation for the master of arts in folk stud- ies. This option and the new internship program were coordinated by Dr. Robert Teske. Interns worked at sights such as Land Between the Lakes and Shakertown. While undergraduate enrollment has leveled off, graduate enrollment “‘is spiraling every year,’ Montell said. The graduate program is one of seven in the nation and ‘“‘it’s very much my pride and joy,” he said. Montell said the function of the international and folk studies center, which “‘is in the pro- cess of getting named a department” includes coordinating classes in other departments. Russian literature and Russian history, for ex- ample, would come under a heading of Asian studies, he said. Folklore students will find a job field which “‘is varied to say the least,” Montell said. ““The biggest chunks go to work for the public sec- tor’ as folklorists and preservationists. Others work for museums and newspapers. ‘‘We all know the ready and waiting jobs are in the field of business ... but I don’t see how they can stand the stuff,” he said. Montell said he prefers a broader version of education, and folk studies is an ideal area. “‘We transcend the humanities and social sci- ences — we’re both.” WASHINGTON POST photo editor Sandra Eisert draws layouts with sophomore Alice Meredith during a weekend field trip to Land Between the Lakes. The trip, organized by instructor Jack Corn, provided plenty of pictures and professional help for students in Photojournalism class. While most departments allow students to ma- jor in only one area, the music department allows majors to combine music, theater and dance in a general liberal arts major. “Our interdisciplinary liberal arts major has really been cat ching on in the past few years,” Dr. Wayne Hobbs, department head, said. Hobbs said the department offers partial and full tuition scholarships to both freshman and upperclassmen. “Unfortunately, we can’t offer room and board like the athletes get,” Hobbs said. Participation in ensemble groups, as well as good grades, are required to renew the grants. Hobbs said that about 50 percent of the students enrolled in music classes are non-ma- jors. These students take Music Appreciation and performance classes, such as guitar and piano. “Over one-half of the marching band mem- bers are not music majors,”’ Hobbs said. The music departm ent has helped with the Fine Arts Festival. “We have a good working committee and we’ve gotten support from both the university and the community,” Hobbs said. ‘“‘We’ve sold out for the past three years.” The second greatest philosopher of the 20th century is the head of the philosophy and religion department. At least that’s what Dr. Ronald Nash, de- partment head, jokingly said as he placed himself behind Austrian philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein in his list of great philosophers. PUTTING THE FINAL TOUCHES on his painting of a model in the Ivan Wilson Fine Arts Center studio is Angel Vargas, a graduate student from Venezuela. According to the scholastic development office, 189 students were work- ing for art minors and areas of concentration in the fall. — Jack Corn Nash is convinced that his department can teach students how to be great philosophers, too, or at least provide them with background in the philosophy and religion of others, he said. This background is important to a student in any field, he said. “I don’t think a person is entitled to be called educated simply because he has developed some skill like adding col- umns of numbers or balancing ledgers. “A truly educated person ... should know something about the educational heritage of the Western world. “Philosophy and religion are the central in- gredients in a college curriculum,” he said. About 3,500 students take philosophy and religion courses each year, often using these to fulfill general education requirements. The New Testament course is the most popular, Nash said. 200 Potter College Since the number of 300- and 400-level gen- eral education classes required for graduation has been increased, a 400-level general educa- tion course in Religion and America has been added. Most students majoring in philosophy and religion go to law schools or seminaries or become teachers, Nash said. “But I want to stress that in combination with the proper second major, philosophy or religion can make an important and exciting | contribution to a student’s total college prep- | aration,” he said. “Being a philosopher doesn’t mean earning | one’s living as a philosopher,’”’ Nash said, pointing out that most of history’s great think- ers supported themselves in other ways. | -Before he headed the philosophy and reli- Lynwood Montell Wayne Hobbs Ronald Nash | ° gion department, for instance, Ronald Nash | was a Fuller Brush salesman. L] — Mark Tucker 201 Potter College College of Business and Public Affairs College of Business and Public Affairs A ‘board of directors,’ chairman run college almost like a business His job as College of Business and Public Affairs dean is “really like a management position in a business firm,” Dr. Robert Nel- son said. “The department heads are my board of directors. We meet weekly to discuss any re- quests or problems they may have,” he said. As dean, Nelson must be able to predict the needs of the sociology, anthropology, govern- ment and business departments because the faculty must be hired and the budgeting com- pleted a year in advance. Helping department heads plan their cur- riculum is another of Nelson’s responsibilities. Nelson said ideas for new courses usually come from faculty members and occasionally from students. “I try to keep my door open to students, and they sometimes bring course ideas to me,”’ he said. Finding qualified business instructors is top priority for Dr. Harold Fletcher, business administration department head. “‘T suppose the business department has the highest turnover rate for faculty members than any other university department, but that is true of most schools, since finding business teachers is a very competitive market,” Fletch- er said. Five classes were cancelled at the beginning of the fall semester because of a lack of teach- ers. Three instructors went to other schools that offered them higher salaries, he said. “It’s hard to compete with out-of-state schools, where teacher salaries are much high- er and where there is often no state income tax,”’ Fletcher said. Fletcher attended professional conferences with the hopes of hiring business instructors. Another challenge for Fletcher has been working to help the department get national accreditation. About 120 business schools in the country are accredited. “We are doing a self-evaluation of our pro- gram, and then we will submit our report to a national assembly of business schools,” Fletch- er said. It’s hard for Dr. George Masannat, gov- ernment department head, to be impartial when comparing his department to govern- ment departments at other Kentucky colleges, but he supports his remarks. “I think we have more qualified and active instructors than anywhere in Kentucky,” Ma- sannat said. Almost all of the 14 faculty members have done independent research and have been ac- tive in professional political associations. “‘Our department is respected by out-of-state schools as well,” he said. The government department has a dual function — to give students a better under- standing of political systems and to prepare students for public service. Although many government majors go into teaching or public service, Masannat said the majority apply for law school. ‘Our record has been good; we have had students to be accept- ed at Princeton, Yale and Harvard,” he said. Courses in international terrorism and inter- national and national security have been cre- ated. Classes with the highest enrollments were American Presidency and International Law, Masannat said. Enrollment is something the government de- partment head is concerned with, because it decreased by 165 students. Masannat said he thought the decrease is because fewer students are attending college and there are not as many people in the liberal arts fields as in the past. Each spring semester, the government de- partment sends students to Frankfort to serve as legislative or administrative interns. “T’m very proud of our program,” he said. “In the past few years we have sent more students to Frankfort than any other Kentucky university has.” Graduates of the sociology, anthropology and social work department have little trouble finding jobs after completing school, Kirk Dansereau, department head, said. “Bowling Green has a need for this type of work,” he said. “It’s a predominantly rural area and students have plenty of opportunity in this setting.” Students may work as liaisons to judges, A DEPARTMENT-HEAD MEETING became the site of a political campaign when Harvey Sloane, Democratic can- didate for governor, dropped in. Sloane visited the campus during his walk across the state in the fall. Dr. George Masannat, government department head, welcomes him. NUMBERS, NUMBERS, NUMBERS make up a large part of Accounting 200. Keith Gabehart, assistant account- ing professor, explains the use of a worksh eet on a black- board. A worksheet lists all the accounting data required at the end of an accounting period, which is usually a year. Robert Nelson probation or parole officers and employees of community agencies. Many students acquire additional skills by helping with the department’s research pro- jects. One project is the evaluation of shock pro- bation in Kentucky by Dr. John Faine and Dr. Edward Bohlander. Three years of research led to an evaluation of the state’s correctional system. Faine and Bohlander, with about 40 stu- dents, examined records of 582 prisoners who J) U) | cy Up RE NOSSO Aa ew sk Bes: tke eB SP ne ise eg. Harold Fletcher George Masannat had been released through shock probation. The study concluded that shock probation is as effective as any other form of sentencing alternative. The research allowed students to become familiar with criminology and social science re- search. They interviewed inmates, probation officers, prison administrators and judges, Bohlander said. The study was funded by the Law Enforce- ment Assistance Administration through the state planning agency. wT, “ Kirk Dansereau John Wassom The economics department has a new de- partment head — Dr. John Wassom. Wassom took the position in the fall when Dr. Kenneth Cann, former department head, went on sabbatical. Faculty research has increased, Wassom said. He, along with Dr. John Crenshaw and Dr. Daniel St. Clair, researched and compiled a directory of information for class one and two regulated motor carriers. It took two years to complete “‘Newtruck: continued on page 204 — Mike Lawrence 203 College of Business and Public Affairs College of Business and Public Affairs con Charles Hayes Hollie Sharpe Directory of Motor Carrier Data,’’ Wassom said. The class one directory is being printed. Charles Roberts researched regional differ- ences in hourly wage rates in the 1800s. Dr. John Morgan has been researching the de- mand for higher education in Kentucky. The department sponsored a workshop for high school teachers in the summer. The work- shop was designed to make teachers aware of data sources and publications that could be used in teaching, Wassom said. The department is trying to be accredited, Wassom said. The accounting department is trying to develop a master’s program, according to Dr. Charles Hays, department head. The pro- gram may be available in fall 1979. About 450 students are accounting majors, he said, and the enrollment has increased about 2.5 percent. There were no women in the department 10 years ago, he said, but now SWISHER. ae Pry HUNG I OWAR wot wrrL : HONG FOWARD half of those enrolled are women. Students need to learn more about insurance, loans and using money wisely, according to Dr. Hollie Sharpe, business education and office administration department head. The department teaches “students not only how to make money but how to spend it,” Sharpe said. Sharpe said one of his major concerns is women’s role in business. He said he wants to “help our women improve their self-image so that once they graduate they can compete for higher-level jobs.”’ “Women must not feel guilty about being a mother and having a career,’”’ Sharpe said. The annual Free Enterprise Fair is spon- sored by the department, and Sharpe said re- sponse has been good. Exhibits and speakers promoting free enterprise make up the fair. ] PILES AND PILES of cigar boxes are used for storing artifacts in the archeology lab in the Rock House. Peter Obermark, a Paducah junior, and Martin Ostrofsky catalog rocks and bones before storing them. — Mark Lawrence 204 College of Business and Public Affairs Elmer Gray To graduate and get a job or to go back to school — it’s a hard decision for some. But the enrollment in graduate school is in- creasing, according to Dr. Elmer Gray, gra- duate college dean. “Enrollment was up last summer and is ex- pected to rise in the fall,” Gray said. ‘I would like to see more students enroll in the pro- gram.” To ease the financial burden of graduate school, there are 250 assistantships available. As a graduate assistant, a student receives a grant, usually about $2,000, to work in some area of his department. The number of graduate students directly affects the number of assistantships, Gray said. SMOOTH TRANSITIONS between numbers are essen- tial for formation changes. Greg Glover, a music graduate student from Roselle, Ill., and Donnie Johnson, a Greenville junior, decide which cadence to play at the last band prac- tice before the Murray game. “The requirements for graduate school in- clude the student’s undergraduate experience in the area and what he or she plans to do with the degree,” Gray said. “All students must have a grade-point aver- age of 2.5, along with a reasonable score on the Graduate Record Examination to be eligi- ble for the program.” The GRE is required before admission ex- cept for students in business administration, who must pass a Graduate Management Ad- mission Test. “If a student’s score on the entrance exam is low, the grade-point average is taken into con- sideration,” Gray said. Also, each department decides which scores are acceptable. There are master’s degrees available in pub- lic service, education, science and business ad- ministration. There are also four education specialists degrees, two college teaching pro- Graduate College To go back to school or not — financial aid finds the answer grams and two joint doctorate programs with the University of Kentucky and University of Louisville. In the joint programs, the student completes half the work at Western and the rest at either UK or U of L. Physical education and special education are offered at Kentucky; biology and chemistry are at Louisville. Gray said 80 percent of the graduate stu- dents are in the education program, which is the oldest academic division. “TI would like to see more financial support for the graduate program,” Gray said, adding that its funding competes with other areas of the budget, including faculty salaries. BULLRUSHES occupy much of Sally Arnold’s atten- tion as she uses a microscope to help classify them. The process of classification is called taxonomic treatment, according to the biology graduate student. — Mark Lyons — Mark Lyons 205 Graduate College Bieta, etn In the section: SPORTS MONEY — free meals, 208 free tuition, free housing. Is it worth it to be an athlete? FOOTBALL — the season was supposed to be bad. It wasn’t. Sports It’s a foreign life for most students. Only a few are chosen to be athletic stars. Only a few receive full scholarships and live in a private dorm. But it’s a lifestyle that affects most students. The Eastern fiasco hardened the hearts of almost everyone. The outstanding football season warmed the hearts of almost everyone. The sudden departure of coach Julia Yeater left several wondering the fate of the women’s basketball SNOW AND 35-DEGREE TEMPERATURES greeted team the only men’s home track meet. Judges at the March 24 9 invitational bundle up while timing the nine sprinters in the For athletes and non-athletes, sports is a common 100-yard dash. Eastern Michigan won the meet, and West- Se iaurcd sacond, bond ... and a common lifestyle. MEN’S BASKETBALL — the season was supposed to be great. It was. Until Western was “‘robbed”’ of its just reward. COACH GENE KEADY — anew 228 coach brings a breath of fresh air to Western basketball. COACH EILEEN CANTY — 235 nine days before the first game, she was suddenly put in charge of the women’s basketball team. — Mark Lyons 208 Brawn vs. Brains Score: Athletic scholarships, $350,000; Academic scholarships, $200,000 A big, husky athlete, muscles bulging in his football jersey, carries a tray !oad- ed with cafeteria delicacies through the check- out line without paying a cent. He is followed in line by a smaller student wearing horn-rimmed glasses who scrounges through his pockets for enough change to pay for his grilled cheese sandwich. These are two somewhat stereotyped views of the ‘‘jock’’ and the “‘brain.”’ Although both of these students are attending college with financial aid provided by scholarships, the dis- similarity between their scholarships can scarcely be overlooked. For the athletes at Western receiving the 139 full scholarships, worth a total of nearly $350,000, the cost of a college education is not a worry. These scholarships are worth an average of $2,500 each per year and, in effect, give the athlete a free ride. These students pay no tuition, besides get- ting free meals to eat in the comfort of their special dining area. They buy no books and don’t pay rent for their dorm rooms. Some live in a private athletic dorm that was converted from a speech clinic. The second group — students receiving aca- demic scholarships — is composed of about 800 students. A little more than $200,000 is awarded, for an average of about $250 each per year — 90 percent less than the ‘‘jocks.” Those scholarship figures come from athle- tic director John Oldham and David Mefford, university-school relations director and a schol- arship committee member. Oldham said most athletes retain their schol- arships throughout four years. But most aca- demic scholarships are for the freshman year only and are not renewed, Mefford said. More than half the $200,000 in academic scholarship money is awarded to incoming freshmen, Mefford said. Some of the 50 to 75 groups that award scholarships through the College Heights Foundation and the university scholarship committee require at least a 3.6 grade-point average. While most athletic scholarships are for all expenses, there is a limit on academic scholar- ships. “The largest scholarship awarded ... by the scholarship committee is $500, I believe,” Charles Keown, student affairs dean and schol- arship committee chairman, said. The scholarship committee awards grants from university funds and from trust funds ad- ministered by the foundation. Oldham said that a Western athlete must successfully complete 23 semester hours each year to remain on scholarship. He doesn’t have to maintain a high grade-point average. Sports Money The only requirement is that the student remain eligible for re-admission to the universi- ty. The National Collegiate Athletic Associ- ation has no such requirement, Oldham said. “The NCAA says he (the athlete) must be making normal progress toward a degree, but nobody has ever defined that,” Oldham said. “I don’t guess we know what normal progress is. It is hard to decide whether giving athletes an average of 10 times more scholarship mon- ey than other students is fair, Oldham said. “Some (athletes) absolutely are deserving. Others, I’d say, absolutely are not deserving. “I'd like to see more done for gifted stu- dents. We ought to give them consideration,” Oldham said. He said a major difference between athletes and other students is that athletes’ actions and performances are more publicized. Keown said it is not necessarily bad that athletic scholarships are for considerably more money than academic scholarships. “It would be nice, though, if we had aca- demic scholarships, in some cases, for the full expense of going to college,”’ he said. This opinion is also shared by many stu- dents. “I think there should be larger acad emic scholarships,” Cornelia Stockton, a Glasgow sophomore, said. “‘They should at least be able to have more than one department scholarship if they qualify.” David Bosma, a Franklin sophomore, said athletes are sometimes given too much prefer- ential treatment. “I think they carry it to a bit of an extreme,” he said. “Sure, they should have some free stuff, but I don’t think they should get a completely free ride.” Of course, the athletes have no qualms about accepting the money. Brandon Smith, a Gainesville, Fla., freshman who received a football scholarship, said: ‘‘I definitely think athletes deserve a free education. “It’s really like a job. We have to work for someone else, on their time, according to their rules, doing what they want us to do. We’re like trained animals.” Looking at the other side, Smith said that outstanding academic students deserve the same benefits. “I think a smart person should be able to get more than one scholarship. They have to have talent, too.” Donna Foster, a Columbia freshman, said the athletes are entitled to the free meals. “They work out a lot. It’s one of the benefits of being an athlete.” Miss Foster, who received a one-year Col- lege Heights Foundation scholarship for $200, said she thought academic scholarships should be for more than one year. ‘‘But full scholar- ships should be given only if a student has a very high grade-point average — all A’s.” But Miss Foster said she didn’t know wheth- er the basketball team needed a special dorm. Diddle Hall, which previously housed the speech clinic, was remodeled as living quarters for the team. The clinic was forced to move to the first floor of the Academic Complex after basket- ball coach Gene Keady asked in spring 1978 that his team be housed in Diddle Hall. The dorm had housed the team until coach E.A. Diddle retired in 1964. While necessary renovations of the clinic’s new observation rooms and offices had been postponed for months, the basketball dorm was quickly remodeled — at more than twice the cost originally estimated. Despite the rather obvious disparity, Dr. Frank Kersting, clinic director, said in Septem- ber that he understood why the change was made and that he was not upset. “The tradition at Western is a winning tradi- tion,” he said. ‘‘To recruit the type of player they want they needed certain enticements, and one of them was a dorm.” The university allocated about $2,500 for the speech clinic remodeling; the cost of ren- ovating Diddle Hall was $48,253. The reason for the cost overrun on the dorm repairs was that the building’s electrical and plumbing systems needed more work than ori- ginally thought, Harry Largen, business affairs vice president, said. The university originally had allocated $23,000 for renovating the building. Several thousand dollars in carpeting and other furnishings were donated, Largen said. Another $16,789 was spent for furniture in the dorm — for larger beds, chests of drawers, lounge furniture, desks and chairs. Now a space shortage in the clinic has been worsened by increased enrollment. “A lot of the training that goes on deals with the observation of clinic management. It’s diffi- cult now to observe,”’ Kersting said. ‘But our students have been understanding and very cooperative. That reflects in the change we’re in right now.” But whether it’s right or wrong that more money is put into athletic scholarships than academic scholarships, it looks like it’s going to stay that way. After all, as Kersting said once, Western has “a winning tradition.” — Alan Judd and Margaret Shirley _) | AS _ A runner took flight and the cross country team’s chances of winning went with him 210 Cross Country — Mark Lyons Two out of three ain’t bad. That’s the story of a cross country season that ended with far less pomp than it had begun. with. From August to November, coach Del Hes- sel said he had three goals: to win the confer- ence championship, to qualify for the national finals and to finish in the top 15 of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. All but the third materialized. Realistically, Western’s chances of finishing in the top 15 flew away with a Scotland-bound jet on Nov. 14 — six days before the NCAA championships in Madison, Wisc. On the plane was a disillusioned John Gra- ham, a freshman from Bellshill, Scotland. Three months earlier, he had sold his car and with a young wife had headed for the Hill anda track scholarship. Graham was imported out of desperation. In late August, Hessel received an alarming phone call from the father of Jon Slaughter, a proven cross country veteran who had decided to get married and not to return to Western. ‘We learned from Jon’s father at about 1:30 Thursday afternoon (Aug. 24) that he wouldn’t be returning,’ Hessel said. “‘And at about 2:30, we had a recruit to replace him.” Graham’s name came to Hessel’s attention from Tony Staynings, a former Hilltopper All- American, who had trained with the Scot the previous summer in Canada before the Com- monwealth Games. Graham brought impressive credentials: a 4:30 mile, a 8:39 steeplechase and strong showings in international races in more than six European countries. Hessel, whose 1977 team had slumped to fourth in the conference, saw Graham as the savior who would bring his program back into national contention. But such was not the case. Early in the fall, Hessel received a call from an English coach who said that Graham had a reputation in Eur- ope of being a “‘choker’’ and lacked the “‘men- tal tenacity” to be a big winner. But Hessel thought he could mold a cham- pionship team around Graham; Dave Long, the team’s only senior; Jim Groves, a highly regarded Canadian freshman; and three sopho- mores, Tim Brooks, Ron Becht and Mike Clay. Early in the season, things worked according to Hessel’s schedule. Western beat Murray in late September despite the absences of an in- jured Long and Graham, who wasn’t eligible because his grades hadn’t been processed. Graham looked impressive in mid-October when he ran a 1:03:54 half-marathon in Day- A 10TH PLACE FINISH in the OVC Championships didn’t please coach Del Hessel or John Graham, and Hessel tries to find out what happened to the runner who was expected to win the race. Graham quit the team later in the season and returned to Scotland. ton, Ohio, and beat several Olympic and inter- national runners. His fourth-place and winning times in the Indiana and WKU invitationals were only seconds ahead of Groves and Brooks, who strengthened each week. The team’s downfall began Oct. 28 in Mur- freesboro, Tenn., at the Ohio Valley Confer- ence Championships. Graham, who a week before had said that he would not be chal- lenged for the conference championship, lost his composure three miles into the 10,000- meter run and fell to 10th — more than 40 ‘seconds behind Groves’ winning time. “He succumbed to the pressure,’”’ Hessel said. “‘When his head fell down, his form and mental attitude fell apart. John is very fortu- nate that he was surrounded by enough people to make up for his inability to cope with the situation.” After Western’s 30-50-71 win over Murray and Eastern in the OVC, Hessel’s team was ranked seventh in the nation in a track maga- zine’s coaches’ poll. It was favored to win the 54-team District III Championships in Green- ville, S.C. Coming off two of the team’s best weeks of training all season, Hessel knew Western must run well together in the district, which also included strong Tennessee, Clemson, Auburn and East Tennessee tearns. FUTURE, present and past run together at the Indiana Invitational. Dave Murphy, a transfer from University of Nevada-Reno, was second, but he was ineligible for the But a freak fall by Graham, who finished 29th after tripping over a dog that ran across the course, and a heel injury to Long during the race helped Western fall to fourth in the district and out of national contention. “We showed confusion on what our inten- tions were,” Hessel told his team in a memo after the race. “‘Basically, we got split up as a team for one reason or another and we each ran our own unstable race.” From then on, the instability increased. Three days after the district, Graham left the team and returned home, saying that he was having academic difficulty and that his wife was unhappy with the United States. Several of his friends said later that the freshman wasn’t mentally prepared for the na- tionals and feared that he would again run poorly. Although citing Graham’s contributions to the team, Hessel said, “‘I’ve never seen a guy on Western’s team choke as bad.” Without a strong fifth man, Western ran without a united team spirit in the snow and bitter, sub-freezing temperature of the NCAA meet. Long’s 79th paced Western, which fin- ished 22nd in the nation in a season when two out of three wasn’t bad — only a little disap- pointing. — Don White L) team until the second semester. John Graham, the team’s top runner, finished fourth. Tony Staynings, a former West- ern All-American, won. — Mark Lyons CROSS COUNTRY RESULTS WESTERN 27 Murray 29 Kentucky Intercollegiate [st of 6 Indiana Invitational 1st of 17 WKU Invitational Ist of 8 OVC Championships Ist of 7 NCAA District III 4th of 29 NCAA Championships 22nd of 29 CROSS COUNTRY TEAM: D. Hessel, R. Becht, J. Groves, M. Clay, T. Brooks, G. Conner. — Mark Lyons A SURPRISE WINNER, Jim Groves heads toward the finish line at the OVC Championships. Groves won the race that No. 1 runner John Graham was expected to win. Tim Brooks, a sophomore, finished second. 211 Cross Country ' With a 1978 record of 11, ic football team hoped mr Iie more than restitution. : They got even more. ee: Coach Jimmy Feix exults after Western's game- winning field goal over Eastern fs called good. Regionally televised by ABC, the Toppers victo- ry came after time had expired as a last-secome field goal attempt was replayed because of em Eastern penalty. ee — Merk tyne Sid: Se: The winningest... assignment, whenever a pass was dropped or a tackle missed, “‘1-8-1’’ was the outcry. It meant restitution — the pride of a winning football team that had only one win and a tie the previous year, the worst record in West- ern’s 59 years of playing football. In November the cry for a turnabout was realized. Defying the expectations of even the most ardent of red-towel wavers, Western won eight of 10 games and its seventh Ohio Valley Conference championship when it was sup- posed to have only a break-even season. “We're a second-year team and we’re may- be a year away from being as dominating as we want to be,” Feix said before the season. “Right now, I’d be tickled to death with a 6-4 season.” He got even more. The reasons for the turnabout were many, but not among the least was the determined pride that caused a young team to want to forget its previous season of embarrassment. Western’s 8-2 record and 6-0 mark in the OVC, the third time the team had won the conference championship with a perfect re- cord, were not enough to earn it a playoff spot in the new Division I-AA of the National Colle- giate Athletic Association. Th e division, with 38 schools divided into three regions, struc- tured its first year of playoffs around four teams, unlike the eight-team format Western had played in while a member of Division II. JOHN HALL COMPLETED 13 of 25 passes for 116 yards against UT-Chattanooga to rank first in the Ohio Valley Conference after the opening game. He never lost his top billing among OVC quarterbacks as the Goodletts- ville sophomore finished with 106 completions for more than 1,400 yards in 1978. One team from each of the regions and a wildcard team were selected for the playoffs, and although Western finished its season witha fourth-place national ranking, it wasn’t given a playoff bid because two of the three teams above it were also from the South Region. Jackson State and Florida A M, both South Region teams, were selected for the playoffs ahead of Western, which practiced in vain for a week in late November after the regular sea- son ended and before the wildcard bid was awarded. The wildcard bid was given to A M in early December after it beat previously un- defeated Grambling. A M went on to defeat Jackson State and Massachusetts to win the first I-AA championship. Although it was denied a seemingly earned playoff spot, Western took solace in its league championship and 6'2-game turnabout from 1977 — the best among the nation’s I-A and I- AA schools. The nine sophomores and two freshmen who started against the University of Tennessee-Chattanooga in the opening game matured steadily throughout the season. The offense, which seemed almost nonexistent at times during the 1977 season, more than dou- bled its scoring average and the defense ranked first in the OVC, giving up averages of 15.7 points and 258 yards — 30 fewer than any other conference team. A major reason for the team’s success was that it avoided serious injuries. No offensive starter was lost with injuries for more than three consecutive games. When several defen- sive linemen and linebackers were nagged with minor injuries early in the season, freshmen stepped in and performed well. The injury-free season was the result of a stricter emphasis on conditioning. Western lost four front-line players with injuries in the pre- season in ’77 when half of its injuries occurred before the second game. 214 Football — David Frank It taught the coaches a lesson. For the first time, Feix used all of the three required days in shorts during the first week of fall practice for conditioning and the emphasis was continued for the remainder of the fall. The team built a strong tolerance to injury. The conditioning was evident during the sea- son as Western scored more than three times as many points as its opponents in the fourth quarter. In the last five games, all wins, West- ern allowed only 23 points in the second half and outscored the opponents, 146-49, in the last two quarters. Several changes during spring practice also contributed to the turnabout. Feix shifted from the three-deep to the four-deep secondary hoping that by sacrificing size for speed his team could cut down on the number of big plays that had killed it the previous season. The plan worked. After a season when 23 of the opponents’ 34 touchdowns came on plays of longer than 10 yards, the figure dropped to only seven of 20 in 78. Feix abandoned the split-backfield offense in the spring in favor of the I-formation, a set he had used in seven of his previous 10 years as head coach. With Jimmy Woods, who entered the season having rushed for more than 2,100 yards at Western, at tailback, the key position in the I, Feix hoped to bolster a ground attack that had been outrushed by almost 700 yards the previous season. Again, the strategy worked. Although Woods was injured at midseason and missed most of the last five games, sophomore Nate Jones and freshman Barry Skaggs filled in ade- quately. Jones led the team in rushing with 467 yards and three touchdowns and George Stevenson, continued on page 216 A CONSTANT DEEP threat, Eddie Preston led Western in receiving for the second consecutive season. The junior split end caught six passes for 57 yards against UT-Chattan- ooga in Western’s 42-15 loss. PILEUPS AT THE LINE of scrimmage were frequent during the Akron game. The Zips rushed for 277 yards, the most against Western all season. Alfred Rogan (without helmet) had 12 tackles and linebacker Charles DeLacey -(60) led Western with 17 hits. Seactvoa ey cin Bees si ae Shae é Ree — David Frank he s - : ad é 4 — Judy Watson Fe — Fess Se ms Fa ae ee whe | 216 Football The winningest... a transfer fullback from Mississippi Valley, ran for 440 yards. But probably the most potent of the rushers was Skaggs, a six-foot, 190 pound freshman from Henderson, who was used as the team’s ‘‘designated scorer.” Running as a tailback in the team’s goal-line offense, Skaggs scored nine touchdowns, all on runs of seven yards or less, while rushing only 60 times. Despite its well-balanced ground game, Western’s main force was its passing. The play- er who probably contributed the most to West- ern’s success was quarterback John Hall, a six- foot, 180-pound sophomore from Goodletts- ville, Tenn., who led the conference in both passing and total offense. Hall completed 106 of 209 passes for 1,439 yards and 12 touch- downs. He was an All-OVC pick and lost the OVC Offensive Player of the Year honors by one vote to Murray’s Danny Lee Johnson. Hall, primarily a drop-back passer who got good protection all season from a line that included second-team All-OVC picks Pete Wal- ters and Jeff Alsup, averaged 145 yards a game and set a school record with five touch- down passes against Morehead. Hall’s favorite targets were All-OVC split end Eddie Preston, flanker Darryl Drake and tight end Ricky Gwinn, the fourth-, sixth-, and eighth-leading receivers, respectively, in the OVC who combined for 87 catches. Preston was the team’s big-play receiver. He averaged 17.5 yards a reception for his 37 continued on page 219 FOOTBALL TEAM: (Front row) L. Hardin, J. Woods, T. Towns, R. Hayden, F. Kixmiller, D. Drake, D. Jones, G. Stevenson. (Second row) C. Brazley, C. Estelle, K. Bennett, E. Preston, J. Hall, P. Gates, C. Smith, J. Alsup, B. Todd, A. Rogan, R. Colter. (Third row) M. Davis, T. Wells, T. Snardon, R. Hinkle, R. Farmer, T. Bereiter, R. White, R. Gwinn, G. Gallas, P. Rich, T. Rose, C. Freeman, E. Cald- well. (Fourth row) C. Dillard, C. DeLacey, D. Cross, C. Horne, K. Key, W. Hale, K. Kast, P. Walters, M. Stahl, G. Oost, P. Evans, P. Holt, M. Jaggers, N. Jones. (Fifth row) M. Curnutte, C. Long, R. Klecka, M. Kunkel, B. Bumm, L. Meachum, R. Antone, J. Boyd, H. Chappell, B. Tate, J. Chinn, M. Nelson, S. Collins, P. Thomasson, M. Eddings, M. Evans. (Sixth row) J. Francioni, S. Catey, M. Miller, P. WESTERN’S DEFENSE RECOVERED 20 fumbles — second highest in the OVC — in 1978. Overall, the defense ranked first in the conference, yielding slightly less than 259 yards a game. A crucial fumble recovery against Austin Peay stopped a Governor drive in Western’s 17-13 win. Dever, M. Blackburn, B. Skaggs, L. Taylor, J. King, G. Turner, T. Templeton, J. Flippin, D. Suggs, S. Catlett, R. Seymour, D. Elliott, R. Hunter, G. Lee. (Seventh row) R. Roudenbush, T. Riggs, J. Newby, J. Birdwell, G. Nicks, J. Hall, E. Hammons, J. Lennon, B. Smith, D. Mullen, G. Goodwin, S. Corum, M. Hicks, R. Lee, K. Massey, R. Jackel, D. Neikirk. (Eighth row) K. Pickett, R. Clemons, T. Barron, R. Rennington, K. Holland, G. McReynolds, W. Brown, E. Prange, N. Berryman, K. McGrath, T. Smits, J. Lullo, J. Feix, Z. Lynum, B. Taylor, L. Starnes, J. Tinius, E. Tichenor, T. Bruggeman, S. Howard, P. Revelett. (Back row) P. Padron, D. Watkins, C. Smith, R. Dunn, B. Raf- ferty, B. Gilbert, J. Feix, B. Hape, F. Tate, S. Larimore, C. Carpenter, K. Goodwin, J. Lewis. “TRIPLE T” (Terrible Tony Towns) was the nickname given to the senior defensive end who was named to several All-American teams. Towns led the conference in tackles for losses and had 13 hits in Western’s 17-13 win over Austin Peay. — Roger Stinnett — Lewis Gardner are ae aes ae rae — as The winningest .... catches and scored seven times. Gwinn recov- ered from an early season injury to catch 19 passes, nine of which were for crucial first downs. Another factor that contributed to the team’s success was its surprisingly low number of turnovers. Despite its young offensive back- field, Western committed only 18 turnovers, 13 fewer than the opponents. The defense ranked among Division I-AA’s best all season. Allowing averages of 165 yards rushing and 93.5 yards passing a game, Western led the OVC in team defense for the eighth time in the last 16 years. Two-time All-OVC end Tony Towns (6-2, 220), who led the conference in tackles for losses (18 for 72 yards), led a defense that included two other All-OVC picks, linebacker Reggie Hayden and deep back Carl Brazley. Hayden and Brazley led the conference in in- terceptions with five each. Linebacker Charles -DeLacey, who had 99 tackles, and back Fred Kixmiller were second-team All-OVC picks. Here is a summary of the season: UT-CHATTANOOGA, 42; Western, 15 — UT-C quarterback Tony Merendino ran for three touchdowns and threw for two others as the Mocs routed Western for the second straight year. Three fumbles and a blocked punt allowed Chattanooga to score four times on drives of less than 40 yards. Western out- gained UT-C in total yardage, (156-67) in the second half as Hall and freshman Marty Jag- gers combined to hit 16 of 29 passes in the game. “There’s nothing wrong with our team at all,” Feix said. ‘If we come on and continue to improve, I foresee a lot of bright spots.” WESTERN, 28; Illinois State, 6 — Western scored on drives of 56, 57, 60 and 83 yards and limited Illinois State to two field goals as the Toppers won a non-conference game for the first time in two years. Woods rushed for 107 yards (the only game that a Western run- ner gained 100 yards on the ground all sea- son), and Hall hit 10 of 14 passes for 80 yards. Pe i i a a - = oa , 7” $ rt a . P IS UG 6: Abn a= : N = . s ‘ TAILBACK NATE JONES had a long afternoon in Coo- keville, Tenn., Oct. 14. The Tennessee Tech defense held Jones, Western’s leading rusher for the season, to 24 yards on 14 carries, but couldn’t overcome several crucial tur- novers as the Toppers won, 26-20. CALLING HIMSELF THE SMALLEST starting defen- sive lineman in American college football, freshman Tony Wells (5-foot-9, 185 pounds) played much bigger. Despite his quickness and determination, he was unable to block any of Eastern kicker Dave Flores’ three successful field goal attempts in Western’s 17-16 win. — Scott Robinson ee rrr WESTERN, 27; East Tennessee, 21 — Playing in Johnson City’s ‘‘mini-dome,”’ West- ern’s defense forced the Bucs into several key mistakes that decided the game. Towns recov- ered a fumble on the East Tennessee 29 in the first quarter to set up a score. A 42-yard inter- ception return by Brazley, who picked off three passes in the game, led to another. The game marked the debut of Skaggs, who rushed on 13 of Western’s 20 fourth-quarter offensive plays. Hall hit 12 of 20 passes for 181 yards, including a 36-yard pass to Preston that tied the score just before halftime. AKRON, 26; Western, 21 — Akron rushed for 292 yards, mostly coming on runs up the middle, to beat Western at home. ‘‘We used everything but a blackjack and a shotgun to stop them, and we still couldn’t,” Feix said. Akron’s offensive line, which averaged 23 pounds a man heavier than Western’s defen- sive line, was a deciding factor in the game. Hall passed for 206 yards, but hit only three of 13 passes during Western’s last four posses- sions. WESTERN, 26; Tennessee Tech, 20 — De- spite being penalized 11 times for 132 yards, Western relied on Hall, who passed for 159 yards and ran for two touchdowns, to spoil Tech’s homecoming. A 37-yard acrobatic catch by Drake that set up a touchdown run by Skaggs in the second quarter highlighted the game. WESTERN, 17; Eastern, 16 — ABC Sports regionally televised the game between the OVC’s only two teams unbeaten in league play, and the players didn’t let the network down. The hero was an obscure freshman place kicker, Kavin McGrath, whose 25-yard field goal with no time left gave Western the win and a permanent lead in the OVC race. The winning kick was McGrath’s second at- tempt. The first kick, from 32 yards with 11 seconds remaining, was wide left, but was nulli- fied by a roughing-the-kicker penalty against Eastern defensive end Rickie Rhodes. The game was probably Western’s best de- fensive effort of the season, but Hall and Pres- ton stole the show. Hall completed 15 of 27 passes for 190 yards and Preston caught eight passes for 114 yards and a touchdown. WESTERN, 35; Morehead, 7 — Hall broke the touchdown passing record held by Johnny Vance and Leo Peckenpaugh as he hit 14 of 22 passes for 230 yards and five scores. Pres- ton caught touchdown passes of 52, 23, and 20 yards on his way to a seven-reception, 162- yard afternoon. The defense held highly re- garded Morehead quarterback Phil Simms to five completions for 86 yards and the More- head team to just 204 total yards. WESTERN, 54; Middle Tennessee, 0 — Six Hilltoppers scored touchdowns as Western highlighted Homecoming with a rout that as- sured it of at least a tie for the OVC champion- ship. The’ winning margin was the highest for any Western team in 10 years and the 54 points was the most scored by the Hilltoppers since 1969. Western rushed for 291 yards, its highest total of the season, and limited Middle to 140 total yards. Western had five drives of less than 50 yards and Skaggs scored three times on short runs. WESTERN, 14; Murray, 6 — Western won its seventh OVC title and first since 1975 on the strength of a defense that limited Murray to 249 yards and the alert play of freshman deep back Barry Bumm who intercepted a Murray pass late in the game and ran it in fora touchdown. Bumm’s play was set up by Gwinn who downed a Ray Farmer punt on the one- foot line. Western’s first touchdown came on a one-yard run by Skaggs that was set up by a 60-yard Hall pass to Preston. — Don White ||) FOOTBALL RESULTS Won 8 Lost 2 Western 15 UT-CHATTANOOGA 42 WESTERN 28 Illinois State 6 WESTERN 17 Austin Peay 13 WESTERN 27 East Tennessee 21 Western 21 AKRON 26 WESTERN 26 Tennessee Tech 20 WESTERN 17 Eastern Kentucky 16 WESTERN 35 Morehead 7 WESTERN 54 Middle Tennessee 0 WESTERN 14 Murray 6 — Bryan Armstrong 219 Football aS = Series by Scott Robinson : AFTER THE FINAL BUZZER, Eastern’s Dave Boot- FIGHTING FOR A REBOUND, Western’s Rick Wray TRUMBO SEEMINGLY points to the expired time on the check attempts a shot as Western’s Trey Trumbo raises his and Eastern’s Dave Tierney wrestle for the ball. Trumbo _ clock as Tierney gets the ball and prepares to shoot. The arms in a premature victory signal. still had his arms raised in a victory signal. foul on Wray was called after this picture. When the buzzer sounded, Western thought it had won the OVC championship. But the game wasn’t over. Republicans in 1964 rallied around an arch- conservative from Arizona named Barry Gold- water. Party faithfuls clung to him to the bitter end, although opinion polls rightly predicted a stunning defeat in November. “Tn your heart you know he’s right”’ was the slogan Goldwater hoped would turn national sentiment his way. The Democrats, rallying behind a Texan named Lyndon Johnson, countered with the jeer, “Yeah, and in your guts you know he’s nuts.” Fifteen years later, the two slogans epito- mize Western’s 1978-79 basketball season. Yes, in their hearts Westerners knew they had won the Ohio Valley Conference tournament championship, but in their anger they knew the OVC was nuts to allow those pretenders from Richmond, the Eastern Kentucky Colonels, to represent the conference in the national tour- nament. For weeks after the OVC tournament in early March, the atmosphere on the Hill was like a forgotten man’s funeral. People tried to forget March 3, the day they believed time had betrayed the most sacred of Western institu- tions, its basketball team. In room 141 of Diddle Arena, the office of coach Gene Keady, the rookie coach was lost within himself for several days before the dis- — Mark Lyons OVC OFFICIALS Burrell Crowell and Ralph Stout confer in the hectic minutes at the end of the Eastern-Western OVC tourney championship game. SEVERAL VIDEOTAPES and films of the final 16 sec- onds of the Eastern-Western game were shown to the two officials, conference commissioner Bob Vanatta and East- ern athletic director Don Combs in a special meeting called two days after the disputed game. — Mark Lyons ROBBED! appointment wore off and his thoughts turned to the future. “It basically comes down to the fact that someone didn’t have the courage to make his decision,”’ Keady said. “‘This is supposed to be America. If I wanted to be treated like that, I’d move to Russia and be told what to do.” The ‘‘three-and-a-half-second fiasco” came at a time when Keady had captured the hearts of Western’s fickle fans. In a sense, the season had been an uphill struggle for Keady, a for- mer Arkansas assistant coach who knew little about Western and had never seen an OVC game when he was hired to replace Jim Rich- ards in March 1978. When Keady’s patient offensive style was attacked early in the season by fans accus- tomed to fast breaks in Diddle Arena, the coach waited for wins. When his team, which depended heavily on two freshmen, two trans- fers and only one senior, began to jell at mid- season and beat league-leading Eastern twice and national power Dayton, the skeptics got quiet and the bandwagon began to fill. The drama in the conference tourney final was set when Western and Eastern beat More- head and Middle Tennessee, respectively, in the first round of the tournament in Richmond. Eastern was on its way to the most number of wins in a season in its history (21), but had been beaten by Western twice, including a 78-77 loss at home a month before. The Colonels desperately wanted a berth in the opening round of the NCAA tournament in Murfrees- boro, Tenn., and a chance to show off James “Turk” Tillman, the nation’s third-leading scorer who averaged almost 29 points a game. When sophomore guard Mike Reese hit two free throws to put Western ahead by three points in the last minute of the championship game, it appeared Western would be making its 10th trip to the national tournament and its second in as many years. But a basket by Eastern’s Donnie Moore and a turnover by Reese gave Eastern a chance to win in the last 15 seconds. The Colonels missed three shots before substitute guard Dave Tierney grabbed a rebound and was fouled by Western center Rick Wray. Then confusion engulfed Alumni Coliseum. Officials Ralph Stout and Burrell Crowell said they didn’t know if the foul had occurred after the final buzzer because the crowd noise had prevented them from hearing the horn. They conferred with Eastern timer Roger Williams who said he was “‘in the dark” about the time of the foul and couldn’t make a judg- ment. Stout, the supervisor of OVC officials, then referred to Rule II, Section 12 of the basketball rule book. It says that when the officials and the timer cannot agree on whether a foul occurred after time expired, the foul shall be assessed. Tierney then stepped to the line and hit both free throws to give Eastern a 78-77 win. In the bedlam that followed, Western offi- continued on page 223 221 Men's Basketball LANKY CENTER Rick Wray (6-8, 200) lacked heft to rebound well against stronger opponents. Wray, who played sparingly as a freshman and was then redshirted for a year, averaged 3.9 rebounds and 10 points and hit 57 percent of his floor shots. — Mark Lyons a — Mark Lyons SENIOR Greg Jackson twisted a knee in practice a week before Western’s opener in Diddle against Duke, which was the preseason favorite to win the national championship. Jackson, the team’s leading rebounder and scorer, missed the first three games, two of which were Western losses. — Mark Lyons ROBBED!. cials sought media evidence of the game’s last few seconds and immediately protested the game to OVC commissioner Bob Vanatta. On the next day, Vanatta called a meeting for the following morning to hear evidence that the game had ended before the foul. Athletic director Johnny Oldham and Jim Richards, men’s athletic coordinator, present- ed three films, two taped radio broadcasts and a series of three still photographs at the meet- ing of Vanatta, Eastern athletic director Don Combs and the two officials. Vanatta and the two officials ruled that al- though the evidence presented them clearly showed that the foul occurred about 32 sec- onds after time had expired in the game, they had no jurisdiction to hear protests of NCAA tournament games. They conferred with Dr. Ed Steitz, secretary-editor of the NCAA rules committee, who told them that the conference could not recognize protests of disputed games under rule BR57 of the NCAA basketball rule book. For weeks, editorials in the local media urged Western to consider leaving the OVC in protest and numerous signs and banners on the Hill spoke of the obscure rule that cost West- ern a championship and of the Eastern timer who was accused of not having the heart to do his job. A fraternity marketed a T-shirt proclaiming “Entering Eastern Time Zone — add 342 sec- onds.” The shirt pictured a Western bus enter- ing Richmond and sold well on campus for several days. Two Western coeds spent five hours solicit- continued on page 224 MEN’S BASKETBALL: (Front row) K. Dildy, G. Burbach, K. Ellis, K. Townsend, D. Thomas, M. Reese, M. Prince. (Second row) M. Edmonds, B. Burns, D. Geary, J. May, J. Washington, J. Rahn, R. Wray, C. McCormick, G. Jackson, T. Trumbo, A. McGuffin, L. Starnes. (Back row) D. Evans, J. Williams, C. Haskins, G. Keady, R. Hite, B. Edwards, M Jeannette. WESTERN STAYED within four points of Duke for the first 16 minutes of the opener in Diddle Arena, but a combined 49-point effort by All-Americans Mike Gminiski and Jim Spanarkel was too much for Western, which lost to the nation’s then top-ranked Blue Devils, 78-53. Western substitute Greg Burbach was held scoreless by Steve Gray late in the game. 223 Men’s Basketball — Bob Skipper CENTER RICK WRAY reflects Steve Mitchell’s shot in Western’s 85-61 OVC win against Austin Peay. Wray had the finest game of his career against Austin Peay, scoring 21 points on eight of 10 from the floor. all FOUR-YEAR-OLD Brent Haskins, son of assistant coach Clem Haskins, couldn’t bear to watch the action in the close OVC game against Middle Tennessee. His companion is Kurtis Townsend, who tore cartilage in his right knee in the Dayton game and missed the remainder of the season. 224 Men’s Basketball ROBBED‘!.. ing money in front of the Downing University Center to buy the team a replica of the trophy that was given to Eastern. In part, it read “‘to the real OVC tournament winners” and it was presented to Keady at the basketball banquet. In the aftermath of the conference tourna- ment, few Westerners remembered that the 1978-79 season was a success. Although the team finished 17-11, beat a nationally ranked team and was the best shooting team in West- ern history, fans chose to remember the East- ern disaster of March 3, a day when one stu- dent said he “‘lost a little faith in truth and justice.” In a way, the Eastern controversy should have been expected. In a year when Western’s team was as unpredictable as the chances of finding a lone parking space on campus during the week, irony characterized the season. Western lost twice to Murray, a team that finished 4-22 and lost every other conference game. Western beat Eastern twice (some say three times) and the Colonels lost only one other conference game. The Hilltoppers beat nationally ranked independent Dayton by six points on the road, but had to rally in the second half to beat Division II unknown Missis- sippi College by three points in Diddle Arena. The team was a somewhat motley assort- ment of freshmen, transfers and holdovers from the Richards regime. It had only one senior, forward Greg Jackson, but he had played only a year at Western after transfer- ring from a junior college. Early in the season, Keady started four transfers and a redshirt. Western’s main weakness was its lack of a center. The players who had occupied the dou- ble-post in Richards’ last year had left the team, and Keady had taken over too late to — Mark Lyons SOPHOMORE Mike Reese steals a pass from Tennessee Tech’s Pat Kannapel in Western’s 80-66 win. Reese hit 11 of 14 floor shots and scored a career-high 26 points in the win in Diddle Arena. Reese’s 29 steals was three less than Trey Trumbo’s team-high total. — David Frank find a strong rebounder to fill the void. Thus, he was forced to sacrifice height and the fast- break for quickness and the passing game, the offense he had learned under Eddie Sutton at Arkansas. In the passing game, the ball is passed around the perimeter until a gap is found in the defense that allows an entrance pass for a layup or until an open 18-footer is available. Western’s offense was designed to free Jack- son for quick cuts across the lane for easy scores or to find 6-8 lanky center Rick Wray alone on the baseline for a short jumper. Forwards Jack Washington and Mike Prince and guards Trey Trumbo, Mike Reese and Kurtis Townsend were the men Keady wanted to take outside jumpers. The fast break wasn’t abandoned, as Western discovered late in the season, but it was severely curtailed because of the Toppers’ lack of a dominant rebounder to consistently start runouts. On defense, Western primarily used a man- to-man, but reverted to a 2-3 zone when it got into foul trouble. Keady tinkered with a half- court man-to-man press and a full-court trap press but both never were successful. The man-to-man carried Western down the stretch, particularly on road games. The de- fense limited Tennessee Tech and Eastern to 38 percent shooting games late in the season as Western won important OVC contests. Western’s 68.7-point defensive average was the best in the conference, as was its 45 per- cent average for field goal defense, but the 3y Toppers consistently had trouble defending teams with strong centers. On offense, Jackson, an All-OVC choice along with Trumbo, paced Western with a 18.2 scoring average on 58 percent shooting from the field. The 6-5 senior from Atlanta led the conference with a 8.7 rebounding average and had high games of 28 points against Morehead and 14 rebounds against Dayton. Wray averaged 10 points and only 3.9 re- bounds and slumped badly in the last month of the season. His 21-point effort against Austin Peay midway through the season was his last strong inside game of the season. The starting guard tandem of Trumbo and Townsend averaged 9.3 and 8.5 points, re- spectively. The 6-5 Trumbo was considered the best defensive big guard in the conference and gave out a team-leading 95 assists. Townsend tore cartilage in his right knee in the Dayton game and missed the last 12 games after he had surgery. The transfer from Menlo Park Junior College played his best in the last two weeks before the injury when he averaged 17 points on 65 percent shooting from the field. His ability to direct the offense was sorely missed down the stretch. “Kurtis’ injury probably meant the differ- ence in two, maybe three, games,” Keady said. “‘We needed a good ball handler in the East Tennessee and Murray losses. Kurtis could have done it. “We got off to a bad start with an injury continued on page 226 net 226 Men's Basketball ROBBED!. (Jackson missed the first three games with a sprained knee) and we closed in bad shape with Kurtis’ injury.” Reese was pushed into the starting lineup after Townsend’s injury. He responded with 56 percent floor shooting during the OVC sea- son and ended with a 9.8 average, third high- est on the team. Late in the season, Reese’s outside shooting rescued Western several times when its passing offense was befuddled by strong zone defenses. The team’s 52.1 percent floor shooting for the year broke the Western record of 50.2 percent set in 1974-75. Western shot better than 55 percent in its 7-5 OVC season. There were no major surprises in the first month and a half of the season. In fashioning a 7-4 record before the OVC opener against Tech, Western beat who it was supposed to and lost to whom it was supposed to — name- ly Duke, which came to the opener in Diddle as the nation’s top-ranked team, Florida State, Illinois State and LaSalle. The LaSalle game in the Spectrum in Phila- delphia was typical of one of Western’s biggest problems all season. Western hit only 35 per- cent of its free throws (six of 17) as it allowed LaSalle to pull away in the second half to win, 90-66. For the season, Western ranked last in the conference in free-throw percentage for the second straight year. It hit 65 percent from the line compared to 71 percent for the oppo- sition. Perhaps the most memorable game in the pre-OVC schedule was the 56-53 win over Mississippi College in Diddle in mid-December. In that game, Western jumped to an 8-0 lead in the first six minutes, but then went 9:45 with- out a score as the Division II team scored 18 points. Western went to the dressing room at halftime trailing 21-14 and was booed by the crowd of 6,300. After Western rallied behind Jackson and Trumbo — the men who carried Western in its comebacks all season — in the second half to win, Keady lashed out at the fans. “T’ve been coaching for 21 years,” he said, “and that’s the first time I’ve ever been booed at home. The fans just don’t understand our system and what we’re trying to do. “And that doesn’t bother me at all. They can boo until they turn blue — just so they don’t boo my kids. They’re working too hard. “If they d on’t accept me, that’s their fault.” The early offensive problem was caused by Western’s lack of practice against a zone. In the last six weeks of practice, Keady said his team concentrated on running its passing game against a man-to-man defense and virtually ig- nored the zone. Hence, after the Mississippi College game, Western saw a steady diet of zones. In late January, Western seemed to cure its offensive woes. In a two-week period starting in late January, the team peaked. It won three conference home games, against Austin Peay, continued on page 228 COACH GENE KEADY’S insistence on enthusiasm and team unity led him to adopt a team motto and have it imprinted on the rear of Western’s practice shorts. — Mark Lyons — Mark Lyons MEN’S BASKETBALL RESULTS Won 17 Lost 11 Western WESTERN Western WESTERN WESTERN WESTERN WESTERN Western WESTERN WESTERN Western Western WESTERN Western WESTERN WESTERN WESTERN WESTERN WESTERN Western WESTERN Western WESTERN WESTERN Western Western WESTERN Western DUKE Jacksonville State FLORIDA STATE Bowling Green State Mississippi College Evansville Davidson ILLINOIS STATE Butler Wisconsin-Milwaukee LASALLE TENNESSEE TECH Morehead State MURRAY Austin Peay Dayton Middle Tennessee Eastern Kentucky City College of NY MOREHEAD STATE Eastern Kentucky EAST TENNESSEE Tennessee Tech Austin Peay MURRAY STATE MIDDLE TENNESSEE Morehead State EASTERN KENTUCKY A MIDSEASON knee injury to point guard Kurtis Town- send forced junior Trey Trumbo to direct the Western offense and bring the ball up court against Eastern’s tough full-court press. Trumbo’s 95 assists led Western, but so did his 82 turnovers. QUICK HANDS and good court anticipation made sopho- more Mike Reese one of the best defensive guards in the nation, assistant coach Clem Haskins said. Reese, who started half of Western’s games, had 29 steals, three less than Trey Trumbo who led Western. — Bob Skipper 227 Men's Basketball pleremenenettbeaditens R Oo 8 ie E D cont. Middle and Eastern, beat Dayton on the road Ge ¢ @ pe and City College of New York in Diddle. The Dayton game was the finest for Western all season. Behind the 17 of 19 floor shooting from the front line of Jackson, Wray, Washing- ton and freshman reserve center Craig McCor- mick, Western hit a conference record 78.4 percent from the field in winning 78-72. During late January and early February, Western had a string of nine consecutive games that it hit better than 50 percent from the field. The hot shooting and pressure de- fense carried it into the tournament. Four teams tied for second in the confer- ence race with 7-5 records. Western was seed- ed second because it had beaten Eastern, the regular-season winner, twice. Western beat Morehead, a young team it had split with during the season, in the first round, 90-85, behind 55 percent team shoot- ing and the 40-point combined effort of Jack- son and Reese, who gave Western a potent outside-inside scoring attack in the last month of the season. Seven crucial free throws by freshman guard Kevin Dildy in the last two minutes kept Western ahead. In the championship game, Western held Tillman to four points on one-of-seven floor shooting and rallied behind Jackson and Reese, who combined for 42 points on 19 of 28 shooting, to stay close to Eastern the entire game. — Don White — Judy Watson CENTER RICK WRAY battles a Jacksonville State Ga- mecock player for a rebound. Western won, 71-59. It was the first win of the season. 228 Men's Basketball “Ss — uccess is a journey — nota destination,” Gene Keady liked to say during his first year at Western. It was an adage he’d use when asked about the importance of winning in collegiate basketball, but, in the end, it was an ideology that helped Keady keep his emotions restrained when 12 months of perspiration yielded a heartbreak. All in all, Keady took the disappointment well. Several hours after Eastern was declared the tournament champion, although the game’s officials were to later admit that Western was leading by a point when the game ended, Keady was on a plane bound for the East Coast, his thoughts on how he would woo a top high school player he thought could bolster Western’s front line the next season. “ve had so many things like that (the Eastern incident) happen to me in my 21 years of coaching that I’ve learned to accept it,’ he would say later. “It happens to every coach. We become callous to it.” Keady’s ability to put aside the despair of the tournament attests to his resiliency, his belief that although winning a particular game is all-important, it’s only temporary and should drift into memories with the coming of another year, another challenge. Ironically, the Eastern dispute came at a time when Keady had things peaking — both on the basketball floor and with the sentiments of Western fans. The former Arkansas assistant coach came to Western in March 1978 amid the excitement of Western’s win over Syracuse in the national tournament. The athletic atmosphere was euphoric. Westerners talked of taking bold steps to drastically increase private donations to athletics, and Keady quickly championed their zeal. Within several months, he had spoken to about 50 civic, business and alumni groups in Kentucky. He went to Washington, D.C., and New York expounding on his gospel of the “‘Three Ds”’ that are the foundation of his coaching philosophy. Dedication, discipline and defense composed Keady’s sales pitch and are the components he believes can build a program of national championship caliber at Western. His efforts were successful. The 42-year- old Kansan with the dark complexion and straightforward personality was a major reason the donations to the Hilltopper Hundred Club, the athletic booster organization, increased fourfold during the spring and fall of 1978. In the process, Keady’s recruiting budget doubled. Basketball worshipers on the Hill began to drool about the prospects for the rejuvenated program. Keady was at his best when he was wheeling and dealing for Western basketball. His insistence on improving Western’s recruiting appeal, something that had waned during Jim Richards’ last several seasons as head coach, resulted in the $48,000- renovation of Diddle Hall as the home for the basketball team. He once boasted of personally selling about 60 of the elite Red Towel Club memberships to the Hundred Club. Keady’s adherence to hard work and enthusiasm soon won him over to Western fans. ‘‘The thing I’ll remember the most about my first year at Western is the way the selection committee made me feel comfortable when I was interviewed for the job,” he said. “They were really down-to- earth people. “I liked the way I was accepted from the first and the way the players and the fans supported my philosophy. “Folks around here take a lot of pride in A 74-75 LOSS to Illinois State left the team dejected in the dressing room. Keady tried to relieve some of the depres- sion by giving the players some words of incentive. a eRe — Mark Tucker being class people. From the beginning, they wouldn’t let me be a second-class person.” But there were skeptics. When his insistence on offensive patience and several poor home games caused booing in Diddle Arena early in the season, he stuck to his guns, determined to ride the storm out. Keady turned to his weekly television show and the press to educate the public on the style of play he thought could make Western a winner. He believed his young ANOTHER CLOSE GAME kept Keady on the edge of his seat watching the action along with his assistant coaches. Western slipped by Morehead by two in the game. — Mark Lyons team, which had only one starter taller than 6 foot 6, could win with a patient passing offense and a strong man-to-man defense. With no dominating rebounder capable of starting a consistent fast break, Keady downplayed the running game, which created criticism in December when Western’s passing attack was bewildered by several strong zone defenses. In a story he wrote for the Herald, Keady explained his system and appealed for support. When the team won four of its next five games, the criticism dwindled. A five-game winning streak at midseason which included a six-point road win over national power Dayton, silenced all skeptics. By early February, Keady’s system was well implemented and accepted. Forging a 17-11 record with a team without a true center attests to the success of the Keady system. The team’s success is an extension of Keady’s personality. ‘“‘Aggressiveness and enthusiasm are the two biggest aspects of my personality, Keady said. “Enthusiasm — I guess a better way to say it is intelligent courage.”’ And intelligent courage is what carried Western during its first season under Keady. — Don White — Mark Tucker REFEREE BURRELL CROWELL tells Coach Keady that he had better stay on the bench. — Harold Sinclair A LATE WHISTLE on a time out call got Keady off the bench to argue that there were seven seconds left on the clock. The referees said there were only two seconds left during the televised game with Middle Tennessee. The referees won out in the end. — Mark Lyons BEFORE THE FINAL FREE THROWS were awarded to Eastern, Keady had a long heated discussion with referees Ralph Stout and Burrell Crowell. 229 Men’s Basketball 230 With 15 wins and 14 losses, the women’s basketball team had .. . Nothing to brag about I; was a turnaround season. But for the women’s basketball team, the season turned around the wrong way. It fin- ished with 15 wins and 14 losses. The Hilltoppers were favored to win the Kentucky Intercollegiate Women’s Champion- ship after finishing second for the past three years. They didn’t make it out of the opening game against the University of Louisville. The season looked promising a few weeks before the first game. The recruits were ke a 4 im — Mark Lyons A FRAMED POEM vas one of the gifts coach Julia Yeater received when she resigned in November. The poem was autographed by the team after their first and last scrim- mage before Ms. Yeater left. DEJECTED, Laurie Heltsley sits alone after Western lost to Morehead, 77-72, in the OVC tournament final. The tournament was one of the season’s high points. — David Frank Women's Basketball strong, and only two team members had gradu- ated the previous year. “We’ve got the best team we’ve ever had,” coach Julia Yeater said Nov. 9. But four days later, she accepted a coaching job with the Minnesota Fillies of the Women’s Professional Basketball League. Assistant coach Eileen Canty was promoted to interim coach nine days before the first game. As if getting used to a new coach weren’t enough, the team was plagued with injuries, sparse crowds and games lost in the final seconds. An example is the Jan. 27 Middle Tennes- see game. There had been a “‘Red Towel Spirit Con- test” shortly before the men’s basketball game which was broadcast as the Ohio Valley Con- ference “‘Game of the Week.” The men beat Middle by one point in double overtime. But most of the screaming, ecstatic fans who had witnessed the men’s victory were gone by the start of the women’s game. An eerie si lence hung in the air as the wom- en warmed up for their game. “I’m really dis- appointed in the student support,” Ms. Canty said, looking up at the empty stands. In the game, Western had been down as much as 10 points but had a one-point lead at halftime. When the clock stopped with three minutes and 18 seconds left, the Toppers were down by seven. Senior Donna Doellman lay under the bas- ket, clutching her knee. As she was carried off in a stretcher, a handful of spectators applaud- ed. When play resumed, each team scored four more baskets. Western lost, 86-79, and its re- cord was seven wins, eight losses. But the season did have some high points. Western sneaked in a one-point victory over the University of Kentucky in Lexington and upset nationally ranked Tennessee Tech in the OVC tournament in Richmond. It’s just that many pre-season speculators had thought the 1978-79 team would be one of Western’s best. The Toppers had recruited their tallest cen- ters ever — 6-foot-3 Jane Lockin and 6-2 Belinda Bradley. Three seniors returned — Pam Hart, Donna Doellman and Beth Blanton. All had averaged in double figures the year before. Brenda Chapman, the leading scorer, and point guard Linda Howard had graduated. But freshman Shari Price and sophomore Karen Frierson were expected to fill in. But the resignation of Ms. Yeater was a tough blow to many on the team. The unexpected loss of Ms. Hart was also devastating. In the opening game against Bel- mont, she injured her knee, never to return to the lineup. She had scored 19 points and seven rebounds in Western’s 72-58 victory. “The injuries definitely plagued us,” Ms. Canty said. “Pam was out the whole year; Donna was out half the year — you never knew when she would be there. “And Jane Lockin would have come along a lot sooner if she hadn’t been bothered by a bad ankle off and on.” With others sidelined occasionally by flu or stomach virus, Ms. Canty never found a consis- tent lineup. “Injuries are something you have to deal with every day,”’ she said. ‘““You have to hope that they won’t come during a crucial time of the season. But they did.” Another blow was the Toppers’ 70-67 loss March 1 to the University of Louisville in the KWIC tournament. The game in Diddle Arena ended the season. It was another tear-jerking, last-minute loss. continued on page 232 — Mark Lyons GUARD Shari Price tries to manuever the ball around Murray’s Barbara Herndon. Western won the home game, 72-68, in overtime. 231 Women's Basketball Nothing .. The team missed four of its last five shots in the final three minutes, turned the ball over twice and let Louisville beat its press for easy layups. Ms. Blanton ended her career two points short of Ms. Chapman’s 1,436-point re- cord. “We lost so many heartbreakers,” Ms. Canty said. “‘I’d almost rather get beat by 20 points. Then you can look at the statistics and say, ‘OK, we did this and this wrong, and we’ll work on it.’ “With the close ones, though, you can’t tell what went wrong from looking at a piece of paper. You just have to wonder.” With the absences of Ms. Hart and Ms. Doellman, 5-10 forward Alicia Polson stepped into a starting role and improved her 4.3-point freshman average. She was second in scoring with a 12-point average and hit 55 percent of her field goal attempts. Ms. Blanton, who switched from forward to guard, led the team in scoring with a 13.6 average. ‘““She was a main contributor to the team in her leadership and experience,” Ms. Canty said. ‘Beth was always there.” Ms. Price scored 20 points in the first home game and drove for several layups and loose balls. The endless energy remained, and by season’s end, she had an 11-point average and WOMEN’S BASKETBALL TEAM: (Front row) P. Hart, B. Bradley, J. Lockin, A. Polson, D. Doellman, (Second row) V. Higgs, S. Fulkerson, C. Van Fleet, L. Heltsley, P. Herriford, E. Canty. (Back row) A. Gay, K. Frierson, B. Blanton, S. Price, C. Robinson. TRYING TO PASS the ball, Morehead’s Connie Ryan loses control and is charged by guard Shari Price. Western lost the home game, 67-60. — Bob Skipper 232 Women's Basketball + - Beh Ese led the team in assists with 105. Ms. Doellman was hospitalized briefly after she had a back muscle spasm a few days be- fore the season started, and she later injured her knee. But she struggled to an 8.4-point average and was second in rebounding with 6.5 a game. “We were really balanced in scoring this year,” Ms. Canty said. “‘They were unified and the common goal was there.”’ The Toppers were 4-2 before Christmas break. They won their first game afterward but fell into a five-game losing slump in January. A total of 25 points separated Western and its five opponents during that stretch. “We couldn’t get over the hump,” Ms. Canty said. ‘‘We weren’t losing bad — two or three points — but we couldn’t get out of it. “We had a tendency to pattern ourselves. They didn’t want to go past the first option and tried to force the first option — even when it wasn’t there.’’ Western averaged 25 turnovers a game because of its sloppy passing. The slump was broken by a 28-point victory over Austin Peay at home Jan. 22. Two nights later Ms. Doellman sank a 20-foot jump shot at the buzzer to give Wetern a 67-66 victory over Kentucky, which had beaten the Tops in the KWIC final the year before. It was the Tops’ first KWIC win in six games. WOMEN’S BASKETBALL RESULTS Won 15 Lost 14 WESTERN 72 Belmont 58 WESTERN 62 Vanderbilt 52 WESTERN 67 Bellarmine 53 Western 58 LOUISVILLE 64 Western 60 NORTHERN KENTUCKY 69 WESTERN 65 New Orleans 38 WESTERN 76 Bellarmine 44 Western 66 NORTHERN KENTUCKY 69 Western 73 EAST TENNESSEE 78 Western 60 TENNESSEE TECH 63 Western 60 MOREHEAD 67 Western 68 MURRAY 75 WESTERN 85 Austin Peay 57 WESTERN 67 Kentucky 66 Western 79 MIDDLE TENNESSEE 86 WESTERN 90 Eastern 66 WESTERN 80 Belmont 75 Western 77 MOREHEAD 94 WESTERN 80 _ Eastern 62 WESTERN 75 Murray 67 WESTERN 69 Tennessee Tech 67 Western 72 MOREHEAD 77 Western 68 TENNESSEE TECH 69 WESTERN 59 Louisville 57 WESTERN 91 Austin Peay 67 WESTERN 72 Murray 68 Western 58 KENTUCKY 62 Western 63 MIDDLE TENNESSEE 82 Western 67 LOUISVILLE 70 The chance for a high finish in the seven-team league was growing dim. But Ms. Canty ex- pected the team to peak around state tourna- ment time, when the winner advances to the region. Western won three of its next five games in preparing for the first OVC tournament. Only prestige rode on the February tournament’s outcome, since the winner didn’t advance to another tournament. Despite their fifth-seeded ranking, the Top- pers put together some of their finer efforts in capturing the runner-up trophy. A 75-67 victory over Murray in the first round left Western paired against No. 1-seed- ed Tennessee Tech, which had beaten the Tops by three points in January. Ms. Price, who scored a career-high 24 points in the second match-up with Tech, tapped in a cross-floor in-bounds pass from Ms. Polson at the buzzer to give Western a 69-67 win. But Morehead, which later won the KWIC crown, downed Western, 77-72, in the OVC tournament final. Ms. Price was named the tournament’s Most Valuable Player, and Ms. Lockin, who had 16 — David Frank TRAPPED by Morehead’s Robin Harmon and Donna Ste- phens, Alicia Polson looks for an open player. Western lost the game in Diddle Arena, 67-60. BUBBLEGUM belps Cretia Robinson pass the time during the final day of tryouts. The Greenville junior is a manager for the team. rebounds against Tech, also made the all-tour- nament team. The season was anticlimactic after the OVC tournament. Western split the last six games, including a 62-58 home-court loss to Ken- tucky. A win would have allowed Western to pass Kentucky into fourth place in the KWIC and to be paired in the lower bracket of the KWIC tournament. The loss kept Western in fifth place, as the Tops finished 5-7 in the KWIC. Ms. Canty was optimistic about beating third-seeded Louis- ville — a task Western had done two weeks before — until those disastrous three minutes at the close of the season. Ms. Canty said the team accomplished some noteworthy goals. Western outrebounded its opponents, 42.7-41.9, for the first time. “We also played good defense and held a lot of teams way below their averages,” she said. “Nobody came in here knowing they were going to roll over us.”’ — Beth Taylor — Mark Lyons 233 Women's Basketball ’ j } | | | : | } | | sc ae cn Or ten , ae Ed et ; | OS 90, DUNS SO eee ey ee ee | : ; | | ) | | | ] . | s j | | | | | | | | aS a : 234 Women's Basketball Nine days notice I. was a rainy 16th of November, and Eileen Canty was making her debut at the Ohio Valley Conference pre-season press day. She was nervous. The seven men coaches had just finished expounding on the trials and tribulations of their teams. _ “Everybody told me to be sure and start out with a joke, but I decided against it,” the wom- en’s basketball coach said. She was the first to address the room full of writers, most of them men. “I don’t know many jokes I could tell in mixed company, and I didn’t think it would be right for me to ask the women to leave.” A ripple of laughter broke through the room. She was in. A week earlier, Ms. Canty had attended another press conference — as assistant coach. But Julia Yeater, who had coached the Hill- toppers to a two-year 44-18 record, resigned in mid-November to become coach of the Women’s Professional Basketball League’s — Scott Robinson COACH EILEEN CANTY shouts “Play No. 4” to her team in the tournament game against Tennessee Tech. AFTER BEATING the OVC tournament’s No. 1 seed, Cyndi Van Fleet and Jane Lockin embrace on the court at Eastern. The Toppers beat Tennessee Tech, 69-67, in their second tournament game. — David Frank Minnesota Fillies. Ms. Canty was named inter- rim coach nine days before the first game. Not only did she have to think up a quick joke for the OVC press conference, she had to think up some quick plans for the 1978-79 season. “IT was scared,” she said. “Instead of coming in and asking, ‘What are we going to do in practice today?’ I was coming in and making all the decisions.” A head coaching job was a goal she had hoped to reach in a few years. But suddenly the 23-year-old was thrown into coaching 14 women who had established a winning tradi- tion. There was also the pressure of knowing her job could be temporary. “People were calling here all year long wanting to know if there was a coaching job open,” Ms. Canty said. The Sterling, Va., native was an assistant coach for scouting at the University of Tennes- see, a nationally ranked team, and she taught classes there while working on her Master of Science degree in 1977-78. She earned her Bachelor of Arts degree in physical education at Emory and Henry in Vir- ginia, and as a senior she was voted the basket- ball team’s Most Valuable Player. She aver- aged 15 points and 11 rebounds a game. Her youth didn’t affect her ability to main- tain authority over the team. ‘“‘They all thought I was older,’’ she said at the end of the season. “It doesn’t matter now if they know my age because I think I’ve gained their respect.” When the team played well, the job was easy. But the Hilltoppers didn’t have a great season, finishing 15-14 and losing a lot of close ball games. When they played badly, she was the first to say so. But the close ones baffled her. “One of the hardest things is walking into the locker room after a close loss. What do you say to them?” She walked into the gym before each game looking up into the stands, which were usually empty. In doubleheaders, when the women played before the men, the crowd, coming in to get good seats for the men’s games, often caught the tail-end of the women’s. She said she had heard some of her players CO et ea.........g . allee ree say they enjoyed the crowds — but that they didn’t expect them. “People just aren’t ready to accept it (wom- en’s basketball) here,’’ Ms. Canty said. “You can talk to people and tell them we work just as hard as the men and practice and play the same game. They won’t say anything bad about you. But they just won’t come in and support us.” She said she feels disheartened for the wom- en not receiving the crowds she thinks they deserve. But she enjoys her work and makes plans on how to improve the program with recruits, a new booster club, a new office and the team itself. A sparkle comes to her eyes. “‘They’re so outgoing and sincere. That has been the most enjoyable part of it all.” — Beth Taylor NEW COACH Eileen Canty gives instructions to Laurie Heltsley during an OVC tournament game. amma SS — David Frank 235 Women’s Basketball 236 Cheerleaders New faces and a new home Moving to the end of the basketball court to lead “‘sideline’’ cheers was a change that cheerleader captain Wayne Herner said caused the squad “‘grief.”’ The men’s basketball and football cheer- leaders were moved from the sidelines because they were in front of seating for the Hilltopper Hundred Club, a group of athletics benefac- tors. The seating had been for students. “T realize we shouldn’t be directly in front of the seats, but we shouldn’t be stuck in the corner either,’’ Herner, a Brooks junior, said. “It seems like we’re slowly losing our recogni- tion.” The only time the fans see the cheerleaders now is during time outs, Herner said. ““We need more direct eye contact.” He said the squad is cramped in its new location, making it difficult to do as many part- ner stunts. Another change was Mr. Hilltopper, the school mascot, who made his debut at the season’s first basketball game. Dressed in red coattails, bow tie and top hat, and with red towel in hand, Jim Pauley, an Owensboro senior, entertained the crowd dur- ing time outs. Pauley said he improvised his actions ac- cording to the crowd’s response. ‘‘The whole idea is just to help the team.” To increase spirit at women’s basketball games, a six-member cheerleading squad was elected in September. The squad was selected from interviews, skill tryouts and a final tryout judged by a group of faculty members and a WOMEN’S BASKETBALL CHEERLEADERS: (Front row) J. Dockery, B. Crowe. (Back row) S. Graves, T. Daugherty, B. Morgan, K. Parker. FOOTBALL AND MEN’S BASKETBALL CHEER- LEADERS: (Front row) L. Vessels, J. Kimmel, L. Norris, S. Gordon, S. Phillips. (Back row) J. Pauley, W. Herner, T. Rhoades, R. Carr, D. White, C. Moore. student member. The procedure was the same as for the men’s basketball and football cheer- leaders. Kelly Parker, a Quality freshman, was the squad’s new captain. “‘It gives a lot more stu- dents a chance,”’ she said. “Before, you either got varsity or nothing at all.” Miss Parker, who tried out for the men’s squad but didn’t make it, said the tryouts for the new squad weren’t as hard. Cheering for the women’s team was “a little hard to adjust to,” Miss Parker said. “‘It doesn’t really matter who you cheer for, though. It’s all the same, really.” Barry Morgan, a Nashville freshman, said he was dissappointed with the fans’ attendance and participation at women’s games. ‘‘The least they could do is yell,” he said. ‘“‘We feel bad if they don’t.” A new supervisor was hired to direct both squads. Mary Anne Chinn, a graduate assistant under supervision of Ron Beck, the squad’s faculty adviser, attended practices with the squads, went to home games to supervise them and traveled to away games with the members. Besides cheering, the cheerleaders silk- screened T-shirts during football season, pro- moted spirit contests by placing notes in mail- boxes in dorms and helped at the YMCA cheerleading clinic for high school and grade school squads. The squad attended the Universal Cheer- leaders Association camp at Memphis State University in August. The group attends the camp every year. Sara Jane Gordon, a Princeton sophomore, said she expects a little more participation from fans. “I like them to show a little interest in the team,” she said. ‘They want superstars, but they seem to discourage them by not being behind them.” Miss Gordon and Herner said memorable events of the year included the Illinois-Western football game, when some Illinois State fans removed their clothes and ran onto the field, and the Eastern-Western football game in Oc- tober, which was regionally televised by ABC- Ve Herner said the hardest part of being a cheerleader, for him, was being captain. “‘ have to keep everybody motivated, wanting to cheer. The new ones seem to get down when we’re losing,” he said. “We eat, sleep and drink together,” Miss Gordon said. “‘The hardest thing to accept is everyone’s pessimistic viewpoint about us. They think we’re in it for the show. We’re out there for them, not us.” — Nancy Jane Salato and Margaret Shirley (| EMPTY SEATS face the women’s basketball cheerleaders at the Jan. 17 game against Morehead. The seats for the Hundred Club were not used during the women’s games, and there were regular crowds of about 300. F — Mark Lyons MR. HILLTOPPER Jim Pauley is tossed in a blanket at the Ohio Valley Conference basketball championship game at Eastern. Pauley got his job after basketball coach Gene Keady’s daughter suggested a mascot. APART FROM THE CROWD, the men’s cheerleading squad _ the sidelines because they blocked the view of the Hundred Club, leads cheers in the endzone. The cheerleaders were moved from which took over seating formerly for students. | — Bob Skipper A 67-65 LOSS at Murray State University leaves Jennifer Kimmel, a Beechmont senior, upset. The men’s cheerleading squad usually attended Ohio Valley Conference away games and ga mes close to Western. ‘E os { “Speen Re — Mark Lyons 237 Cheerleaders 238 Gymnastics i S@ASOR S© bac] 1G NUrPG 66 Giranast? and “injury” became almost synonymous words when all seven of the Hill- toppers fell victim to bruises and scrapes. “‘An inch can make the difference between making and missing a move,” second-year coach Sally Krakoviak said about the numer- ous spills her gymnasts made. But in the state tournament in March, the team recovered enough to post its highest score of the year — 130.45. But it still finished third of four teams. By virtue of a new qualifying system, West- ern was eligible for regional competition, but the Toppers finished eighth of 12 teams witha 120.80 in its last meet of the season March 16 and 17 at James Madison University in Harri- sonburg, Va. ‘“‘We definitely hit everything in the state but not in the region,” Miss Krakoviak said. It was the end of a season that had been somewhat less than satisfying. Freshman recruit Annette Thurman quit the team a week before its opening meet, Western was ineligible for a team score in one meet, and the team finished with a 4-8 won-lost record. In their first meet, Dec. 2 against Memphis State here, the Toppers’ string of injuries start- ed, and the team lost, 118.8-110.25. Senior Charlie Farrington was on crutches with an injured foot, senior Libby Goff couldn’t com- pete in her best event — the uneven parallel bars — because of a jammed finger, and junior Betsy Terrell hyperextended her elbow in the middle of her bar routine and had to leave the meet. Junior Barby Shields placed first all-around A 7.25 was Kathy Flanary’s reward for her performance on the uneven parallel bars in the Feb. 5 UK meet. Western won the meet, 121.55-117.95. and junior Kathy Flanary was fourth. In a Jan. 13 quadrangular meet at Indiana University, Western finished last with a 111.75 score. Miss Shields placed third all-around and won the vaulting event with an 8.5 score. Miss Farrington returned to the lineup, and Miss Goff was able to compete on the bars. Just as the Hilltoppers were regaining strength, Miss Shields’ back was injured, and she had to miss an away meet against Eastern Jan. 28. Western lost, 127.35-107.75. The Toppers experienced victory’s sweet taste in their Feb. 5 home meet against the University of Kentucky — Western won, 121.55-117.95. Miss Shields was back after her injury and was first. Miss Goff was third all- around. At the Southeast Missouri quadrangular Feb. 16, Western placed third with 111.9 points. Freshman Mary Ellen Schreiner injured her foot on the balance beam and spent the remainder of the season in a cast. In one of its better meets of the season, Western placed second of three teams in a home meet against Ball State and nationally ranked Louisville. Louisville won with a 135.85, and Western posted a 127.5. Miss Shields was second all-around and Miss Goff was fourth. They won their last meet before the state tournament, 122-120.4, over Kentucky. Miss Goff placed first, Miss Shields was second, and Miss Farrington won the bars event. “I was pleased with the end of the season,”’ Miss Krakoviak said. “The scores were begin- ning to show what we’re capable of when we’re healthy.” — Beth Taylor — Mark Tucker CELEBRATING after one of their best meets of the sea- son are Kathy Flanary, Charlie Farrington, Pam Moss, Barby Shields and coach Sally Krakoviak. Western placed second in the home trimeet against the University of Louis- ville and Ball State. 7 B ZY Ss, Le, GYMNASTICS TEAM: K. Flanary, L. Goff, B. Terrell, M. Schreiner, B. Shields, P. Moss. — David Frank — Harold Sinclair ACCIDENTS do happen, and when Charlie Farrington miscalculated her dismount from the balance beam, she landed on the mats. Pam Moss and Kathy Flanary were helping as guides during the practice session. Be E : a 4 stag A — Harold Sinclair PRACTICE makes perfect, or so the gymnastics team hoped. Coach Sally Krakoviak helps a team member with floor exercises during a practice session. WHILE WARMING UP before the UK meet, Charlie Farrington takes time out to talk with Pam Moss, who had a cyst on her ankle and couldn’t compete. — David Frank 239 Gymnastics i eee ny « = TEAMMATE Mark “‘Tex”’ Ritter and a timer cheer on Ron eg. = Finley during the home meet against Kentucky. Finley set a : record in the 200-yard freestyle swim with a time of i .= 1:43.319, but lost the 200-yard backstroke. Ce eee ee eee ee) a ee ree 4 oe tem ’ ee eee - te eee SO Oe eee ee © © — Mark Lyons COACH BILL POWELL SHOUTS encouragement to Ron Finley in the home meet against Evansville and Missou- ri-Rolla, which Western won. Finley finished first in the 200- yard backstroke and the 200-yard individual medley. gt ge yin i gli td a Sa 240 Swimming Almost perfect A perfect record for the swim team was blemished in its last dual meet of the season. The Toppers headed into the meet with a winning streak of 20 dual meets, but the Uni- versity of Kentucky stopped the streak with a 63-50 victory. The Toppers made up for it, though, by winning the Midwestern Independent Intercol- legiate Championship. It was the first year Western had competed for the title. “We worked for the Midwestern meet all season long,” coach Bill Powell said. ““Winning it was the highlight of the year.” Although there were six teams competing for the title, the affair soon turned into a dual meet between Western and Eastern, the de- fending champion. The Toppers had a 27-point lead over East- ern and needed combined wins by Notre Dame’s Don Casey and Western’s 400-yard freestyle relay team to win, 446-443. Mark ‘Tex’ Ritter, who was named the team’s most improved swimmer for the second consecutive year, was a pleasant surprise dur- ing the championship meet. According to the pre-meet seeds, Ritter was expected to score four points, but he had four top-10 finishes in his events for 42 points. Six school records were set in the meet. Butch Dymowski had a :21.3 in the 50-yard freestyle and a :47.01 in the 100-yard frees- tyle. Ron Finley had a 1:41.09 in the 200-yard freestyle and a 1:55.3 in the 200-yard back- stroke. Freshman Rich Rodenbeck had a 1:01 in the 100-yard backstroke, and the 400-yard freestyle relay team of Dymowski, Ritter, Fin- ley and Jay Carter had a 3:08.6. Western opened its 8-1 season in Charles- ton, W. Va., beating Morris Harvey in a dual meet and winning the Morris Harvey Relays the following day. Before the first home meet against Eastern, Powell said he had figured the Toppers could win by nine. He was wrong, as Western won by 7S). Diver Tom Angsten was the key to the victo- ry as he won both the required and optional diving events. It was his first competition in 142 years. The Toppers took nine of 13 events to beat Vanderbilt, 74-39, for the first time in seven meets. In Charleston, Ill., the Toppers were led by Finley and Roberto Ledesma as they beat Divi- sion II power Eastern Illinois, 66-47. Finley, who was named the team’s most valuable and most dedicated swimmer, took first place in both the 200-yard freestyle and the 200-yard backstroke. He had times of 1:44.6 and 1:58.9. Ledesma, a sophomore from Quito, Equa- dor, had three career bests in the meet. He swam the 200-yard individual medley in 2:01.7, the 200-yard butterfly in 2:01 and the butterfly leg of the 400-yard medley relay in DZS In the last meet of the season, Kentucky beat the Toppers, 63-50. It was Western’s first loss since Feb. 11, 1977, when Vanderbilt beat them. In the Kentucky meet, Finley set a pool record in the 200-yard freestyle with a 1:43.319. But for the second time in his two years at Western, Finley lost a race when Ken- tucky’s Matt Williams won the 200-yard back- stroke. — Mark Lyons Freshman Rusty Myers set a school record in the 500-yard freestyle with a 4:45.4. The winning streak ‘‘was nice while it last- ed,” he said. “But you can’t be too disappoint- ed when you lose to a team that has twice the scholarships that you have.” — Rick Wood SWIMMING RESULTS WESTERN 52 Morris Harvey 35 Morris Harvey Relays 1st of 5 WESTERN 54 Southeast Missouri 41 WESTERN 69 Eastern 44 WESTERN 72 Louisville 41 WESTERN 74 Vanderbilt 39 WESTERN 66 Eastern Illinois 47 WESTERN 66 Evansville 47 WESTERN 73 Missouri-Rolla 39 Western 50 KENTUCKY 63 MIIC 1st of 6 SWIM TEAM: (Front row) J. Mason, J. Cavana, T. Ang- sten, C. Jircitano, T. Heinze, T. McClure. (Second row) J. Millikin, S. Irwin, R. Ledesma, B. Jackson, J. Westfall, R. Finley. (Back row) S. Strait, R. Vizzari, R. Myers, D. Ge- rard, M. Hackler, M. Bezold, S. Krigbaum, T. Mauntel, J. Carter, M. Ritter, B. Dymowski, R. Rodenbeck, J. Green- wald, B. Powell. ee a © Nemmnmemener — weateeete pene! — Mark Lyons STEVE KRIGBAUM sits in dejection along the side of the pool in Diddle Arena after failing to finish high in a race he had competed in against Kentucky. Western lost the meet. STROKING his way toward the finish line of the 200-yard butterfly, Roberto Ledesma came up a bit short with a third-place finish behind two Kentucky swimmers in West- ern’s only loss of the season. 241 Swimming The riflery team was expected to have its worst season ever. With the loss of three of the team’s top four shooters and the entrance into a stronger league, the riflery team faced adversity before the season started. However, Western still had a chance of shooting high scores in the sectionals and fin- ishing in the nation’s top 10 teams to advance to the first championships sanctioned by the National Rifle Association and the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The only returning first-team shooter on the ONE OF THE TOP RIFLERS, Mary Koeckert reloads her rifle after checking the position of her last shot. She is a junior from Shaker Heights, Ohio. — Harold Sinclair Riflery But getting close to national competition was A SH@T it THE AR young squad was junior Mary Koeckert. Junior Joyce Laubenheimer and sophomore Eric Sack also started while sophomore Carol Rupe and freshman Kim Sage exchanged turns as the team’s fourth shooter. The team changed from NRA standards to those of the International Shooters Union in which 75 percent of riflery’s All-Americans come from. As the all-important ISU sectionals at Kan- sas neared, Baker had high hopes of a top-10 national finish and a shot at the NRA-NCAA championships. “If nothing goes wrong, we should finish in the top 10 and go to the nationals,” coach Sgt. John Baker said. “We’ve shot well enough to do that.” But something did go wrong. Ms. Laubenheimer, the team’s leading shooter during the season, shot well with a 1,141, as did Ms. Koeckert with a 1,124. Sack followed with a 1,108, but the team’s fourth member, Ms. Rupe, shot a below-average 1,044. “It?s a shame,” Baker said. ‘‘Carol’s rear gun sight fell apart at the sectionals. She had a 1,100 average going into the tournament and the 1,044 really hurt us. “We later found out the rifle manufacturer had set the front sight wrong, also.”’ When the smoke cleared, Western had shot a 4,417 and still had a chance to reach the nationals. But when the other sectionals from across the country came in, Western had fin- ished 14th, four places out of a trip to the nationals. Baker later said the 66 points lost from Ms. Rupe’s score would have put the team in the top 10. Ms. Laubenheimer and Ms. Koeckert shot well enough to make it in the nation’s top 40 shooters and to qualify for the nationals as individuals. The pair traveled to the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md., April 6 and 7 where Ms. Laubenheimer finished 29th in the small bore rifle division with a 1,130 and 23rd in the air rifle division with a 364. Ms. Koeckert competed in the air rifle divi- sion and shot a 371, good for 15th. “I was very happy with the way we ended,” Baker said. “‘The big disappointment was not finishing in the top 10, but Joyce and Mary had excellent seasons and represented us in An- napolis.”’ The team started the season slow, losing shoulder-to-shoulder matches to Murray and Eastern. Both matches were at home as the team shot identical 2,186s. Murray shot a 2,236 and Eastern a 2,246. Murray was the nation’s No. 1 team at the time. The Toppers picked up their first win of the season when they traveled to Murfreesboro, Tenn., for a match with Middle Tennessee. Western came out on top, 2,195-2,129, with Ms. Koeckert shooting a 564, Ms. Lauben- heimer a 553, Sack a 559 and Ms. Sage a 519. In October the team met its first ISU compe- tition in the All-American Intercollegiate Rifle League Tournament. Western shot a 2,206, its highest score of the year, the first day to hold second place. But a second-day score of 2,185 dropped the team to sixth place out of nine teams. Western had its highest finish of the season when it traveled to Lexington for the Universi- ty of Kentucky Invitational Tournament. The Toppers finished second of 15 teams as Ms. Laubenheimer shot a 1,140 and Ms. Koeckert a 1,126 to pace a 4,420 score. The team “put four good scores together for the first time”’ in the Big Bird Invitational at Cookeville, Tenn., as they shot a season-high 4,482, Baker said. Ms. Koeckert had a team-leading 1,147, and Ms. Rupe had her season’s best — a 1,129 to help pace a third-place finish among 12 teams. “Overall I was expecting our worst season ever because we were in a rebuilding year,” Baker said. “A lot of the tournaments had teams with All-Americans and they were ex- pecting to beat us, but we beat a lot of them, too.” — Kevin Stewart (J RIFLERY RESULTS Western 2,186 MURRAY 2,236 Western 2,186 EASTERN 2,246 WESTERN 2,195 Middle Tenn. 2,129 WESTERN _ 2,204 Morehead 2,147 League Tournament 6th of 10 East Tennessee Tournament 5th of 8 Eastern Kentucky Invitational 3rd of 12 Big Bird at Tennessee Tech 3rd of 12 Western Kentucky Invitational 2nd of 15 ISU Sectionals 992 Midwest Camp Perry 498 PRACTICING at the rifle range under the parking struc- ture, Joyce Laubenheimer, a Cocoa Beach, Fla., junior, lines up with the target before firing her next shot. RIFLERY TEAM: (Front row) M. Koeckert, G. Stickler, C. Rupe, J. Laubenheimer. (Back row) J. Baker, E. Sack, J. Chaney, T. Young, K. Sage. AFTER being on the team only a few weeks, Louisville freshman Doug Lee examines his practice targets to learn how much he has improved. — Scott Robinson — Bob Skipper 243 Riflery — Mike Lawrence — Scott Wigginton PRIMARILY a javelin thrower, Chris Losso practices the long jump. Losso also competed in the decathlon. EES — Harold Sinclair BEFORE PRACTICE in the fall semester, Rockfield senior Chris Losso stretches. 244 Men's Track he men’s track team picked the most impor- tant time of the season to peak — during the Ohio Valley Conference outdoor champion- ships. The Hilltoppers dominated the two-day af- fair to claim the OVC crown for the first time since 1975. LEADING THE PACK, Ron Becht, Larry Cuzzort and Dave Murphy compete in the 5,000-meter run at the WKU Invitational. They took second, third and fourth. Western scored 166 points to finish first; favored Middle Tennessee was second with 105; Austin Peay was third with 102%. OVC track Athlete of the Year, Marion Wingo, led the Toppers as the junior sprinter won both the 100- and 200-meter dashes. Win- go’s time of :10.51 in the 100 and :21.24 in the 200 were good enough to upset the favor- ite, Austin Peay’s Johnny Williams, in both races. — Mark Lyons The Toppers left five top athletes at home because of injuries, but that didn’t stop them from winning. “Depth is what saved us in this meet,” said coach Del Hessel, who was later voted OVC track Coach of the Year by his peers. “‘Depth and the excellent attitude that the team dis- played is what won the title.” Western proved its depth in the high jump. The Toppers took first, second and third place with Jim Durrant, Daniel Holmes and Roger Fitzpatrick, respectively. Dave Murphy set a conference record in the 10,000 meters with a time of 28:39.6. Fresh- man teammate Jim Groves placed third in the 10,000 and his 29:38.7 time qualified him for the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s outdoor championships in Urbana, Ill., June 2- 4, Senior Donald Douglas rebounded from a second-place conference finish last year to win the 400-intermediate hurdles with a time of Asy). 39). Larry Cuzzort won the 5,000 meters with a time of 14:11.9. Earlier in the day, Cuzzort finished second to Murray’s David Warren in the 1,500 meters. The 440-yard relay team of Wingo, Douglas, Wallace Stanley and Ben McCloud took first place with a time of :41.82. Sophomore Dave Mobley won second place in the triple jump. Mobley’s 53 feet, 8 inches was not good enough for first, but qualified him for the NCAA championships. According to Hessel, Mobley’s jump was the eighth best in the na- tion this year and was “‘the best for any sopho- more in the nation.” Western opened the track season on a cold, wet day for the Western Invitational in Smith Stadium. The Toppers finished second to East- ern Michigan. Unseasonably cold temperatures, snow and rain caused slow times in races and poor per- formances in the jumping events. Despite the inclement weather, Tim Brooks opened the meet with a 10,000-meter victory for the Top- pers with a time of 30:54.9. Luby Chambul won the hammer throw, the first time the hammer had ever been thrown at Western, but Chambul injured his knee and was out for the remainder of the season. At the Dogwood relays in Knoxville, Tenn., Murphy ran the eighth fastest 10,000-meter continued on page 247 IN HIS FINAL ATTEMPT at clearing 6 feet, 10 inches, Jim Durrant misses. He placed second in the college divi- sion of the Mason-Dixon Games. 245 Men's Track — Mike Lawrence AT THE WKU INVITATIONAL, Chris Losso com- petes in the javelin throw. He placed second. MEN’S TRACK TEAM: (Front row) R. Fitzpatrick, R. Becht, J. Willoughby, L. Cuzzort, V. Quan, M. Wingo, D. Mobley, S. Brandon, K. Hunter, S. Tarleton. (Sec- ond row) R. Colter, D. Holmes, F. Killebrew, J. Chap- pel, N. Freeman, J. Currant, L. Johnson, G. Sheats. (Third row) L. Fleming, J. Fox, J. Kunz, J. Fillman, N. Davis, R. Ritchie, C. Turner, R. Marshall, G. Houser. (Fourth row) J. Groves, D. Murphy, D. Smithhisler, A. Wilhelm, C. Payne, T. Brooks, J. Morgan, W. Godwin, T. Hale, C. Powell. (Back row) J. Goolsby, D. Max, D. Hessel. ON HIS WAY to winning the triple jump, Dave Mob- ley reaches for the sky at the WKU Invitational. Men's Track — Mark Tucker 2 ba ii i-th «Ll ee — Mack’ Lyons GETTING A GOOD START, Marion Wingo competes in ALMOST ALONE on the track, Eric Grumbach completes the 60-yard dash at the Mason-Dixon Games in Louisville. his leg of the distance medley relay at the Mason-Dixon Wingo placed fourth in the meet. Games. Western’s team didn’t place in the event. — Mark Lyons On the right track con run in NCAA history. Murphy, a sophomore from Liverpool, England, beat the NCAA qualifying time of 29:30 with his 28:14.7. His previous best was 29:55, and his time on this day was only six seconds short of the Olympi- an qualifying mark. “This is definitely a world class perfor- mance,” Hessel said after Murphy’s run. “He is definitely a national contender, and should the training go well, he will be an international threat.” Cuzzort, who is also a sophomore, qualified for the NCAA championships in the 5,000 meters. His time of 13:39.7 was well below the 14.08 qualifying time. Western finished third behind Austin Peay and Middle Tennessee in the OVC quadrangu- lar meet April 20 in Clarksville, Tenn. Austin Peay won the last two events of the meet to win with 57 points. Middle followed with 51. Western had 43%, and Murray was fourth with 32%. “Considering our youth and inexperience, we had a tremendous year,” Hessel said at the season’s end. “I was really pleased with our progress. We are beginning to show talent in all events — the sprints, the jumps and the distance runs.” Six members of the team qualified for the NCAA outdoor championship meet. They were: Murphy, 10,000-meter run; Cuzzort, 5,000-meter run; Groves, 10,000-meter run; Douglas, 400-meter intermediate hurdles; For- rest Killebrew, long jump; and Mobley, triple jump. None of the athletes scored or placed in the Ha — Rick Wood (1 MEN’S TRACK RESULTS WKU Invitational 2nd of 4 WESTERN 103 Murray 34 OVC quadrangular 3rd of 4 OVC championships 1st of 7 247 Men’s Track With its middle of the road finishes, injuries and a few high points, the track team had .. . ups and downs — Mark Lyons — Robert W. Pillow Women’s Track and Cross Country Lack of depth, inexperience, injuries and a resignation all affected the women’s cross country and track teams. At the team banquet, coach Carla Coffey announced her resignation. She will become the head track and field coach and assistant supervisor of physical education at the Univer- sity of California-Davis. A MEMBER of both the cross country and track teams, Cathy Ann Hyde c ompetes in the Lady Topper Invitational mile-run. Miss Hyde was one of the top runners on the cross country team. oe al WOMEN’S TRACK TEAM: (Front row) S. Thomas, G. Christofferson, A. Jones, T. Strickland, C. Hyde. (Back row) Y. Hill, L. Willingham, M. Embry, V. Holway, A. Bradley, K. Barbour, S. Seith, S. Graves. WOMEN’S CROSS COUNTRY TEAM: (Front row) C. Hyde, J. Terrell, K. Van Meter, G. Christofferson. (Second row) T. Strickland, E. Mathany, K. Gradwell, K. Horn. (Back row) V. Holway, K. Barbour. TEAMMATES congratulate Anita Jones on her perfor- mance as the anchorman in the two -mile relay at the Lady Topper Invitational. Miss Jones was elected Most Valuable Player in the meet, and Western placed fourth. ‘You have to go where the opportunities are,”’ Miss Coffey said. “I’ve enjoyed my three years (as Western’s coach). It’s been a building process. “The foundation is laid for an excellent pro- gram.” The cross country team experienced several individual improvements, Ms. Coffey said. But the team “needs two or three top athletes.” Western finished fourth of seven teams in the Kentucky Intercollegiate Cross Country Championships, which was won by the Univer- sity of Kentucky. Western’s top finisher was Cathy Ann Hyde, who was 12th with a time of PNW, In the Region II cross country meet, Miss Hyde and Erika Christensen placed 42nd and 52nd, respectively. There were 100 runners in the meet. The team competed in seven fall meets. The top runners, besides Miss Hyde and Miss Chris- tensen, were Vicky Holway and Karen Horn. For the track team, inexperience and injur- ies characterized the season. Seventeen of the 25 members were underclassmen. The low point of the season struck when Gayle Watkins had a cast on her foot for torn ligaments in the first week of April. Angie Bradley had shin splints; Sandra Thomas in- jured her leg; and Angela Gay had an injured knee. But the Toppers recovered to finish third of seven teams in the Ohio Valley Conference. Eastern won with 216 points, Murray was sec- ond with 143. Western had 99. First-place finishes were in the two-mile re- lay (Miss Hyde, Julie Pendygraft, Anita Jones and Sandy Seith); 400-meter dash (Miss Jones); 800-meter run (Miss Seith); 400-meter low hurdles (Miss Jones); and the mile relay (Gretchen Kemp, Gail Christofferson, Miss Seith and Miss Jones). At the University of Tennessee Invitational, Mrs. Watkins won the 60-yard hurdles in :07.9. The time was a meet record and the sixth best in the nation. Four school records were set at the Murray State Invitational, while the team finished fifth TRACK RESULTS Indoor season Ohio State Invitational 7th of 14 Morehead 3rd of 4 Mason-Dixon Games no score kept UT Invitational 4th of 14 Outdoor season Lady Gator Relays no score kept Memphis State Invitational 8th of 16 Ohio State Invitational 4th of 10 Murray Invitational 5th of 11 KWIC state meet 3rd of 8 Becky Boone Relays 8th of 27 Lady Topper Invitational 3rd of 7 of 11 teams. Miss Seith won the 800-meter run in record time of 2:16.0. The two-mile relay team set a record with a time of 9:30.5. Joyce Fowler set a school pentathlon record with 3,012 points; she placed fifth in the event. Miss Hyde placed fifth in the 1,500-meter run with a record time of 4:57.1. In the KWIC championships, the team won the 800-medley relay, the 440-yard relay and the one- and two-mile relays. — Linda Younkin 1] — Mark Lyons AT THE Mason-Dixon Games in Louisville, Gayle Watkins competes in the long jump. She placed third with a jump of 5.68 meters in the invitational division. Women’s Track and Cross Country 249 OOOO Te The women’s team “was : more of a team together, k and the men’s team was “balanced,” according to the coaches. At any rate, k the tennis teams had eC ral f : ; : if plenty of ... , — Harold Sinclair 250 Men's and Women’s Tennis | | | With the top six players returning, a blue-chip freshman and the state tournament on its home court, the women’s tennis team looked to be in the driver’s seat in September. But by the year’s end the team had com- piled a 10-4 dual-meet record, had lost one of its senior players and had finished a disappont- ing third in the Kentucky Women’s Intercolle- giate Conference tournament. Katy Strozdas Tinius, playing No. 2 after three years in the No. 1 spot, quit the team five weeks into the season because of a disagree- ment with coach Betty Langley. As a result, everyone moved up a spot, and the doubles teams were thrown out of kilter for awhile. Among the season’s sore spots was the loss to Eastern, the one-sided romp the University of Kentucky enjoyed over Western, and the third-place KWIC finish. “But this group came around and solidified and was more of a team together than any other in the past,”’ Miss Langley said. ‘They wanted to win for themselves and for the team and school.”’ Western had accumulated a 6-3 record go- ing into the KWIC tournament as defending co- champions. Kentucky, which tied with Western in last year’s tournament, easily took the title. Western and Eastern tied for second, but the Colonels were awarded runner-up and a con- gruent trip to the region because they had more winners in the seeded playoffs. Freshman Sandy Leslie won the KWIC indi- vidual title and lost in the first round of the region. She and Kathy Ferry represented the state in the region in doubles play but lost in MEN’S TENNIS TEAM: (Front row) J. Fones, A. Thom- sen, A. Anderson, R. Reynolds. (Back row) B. Ronnerman, J. Alemparte, A. Thanas, H. Ozgenel, J. Gola. BEFORE THE EASTERN SIU MATCH, senior Shelley Fredlake (No. 2 seed) and Cathy Summers (No. 6 seed) warm up in practice. Miss Fredlake, of South Bend, Ind., finished with a 15-9 singles record. Miss Summers, of Hen- derson, finished with an 8-6 record. the first round. In the spring, after a winter conditioning program, the Toppers stormed back to win the University of Tennessee-Martin Invitational, a crown that had eluded them for three years. Western also repeated as Ohio Valley Con- ference tournament winners, in its second year. Three of six all-tournament spots were awarded to senior Shelley Fredlake, sopho- more Betsy Bogdan and senior Suzanne John- son. Their records were Miss Leslie, 22-3; Miss Fredlake, 15-9; Miss Ferry, 15-9; Miss Bogdan, 18-7; Miss Johnson, 16-9; Cathy Summers, 8- 6; and Pat Wood, 1-3. With a 10-8 won-lost record and fourth place in the Ohio Valley Conference, the men’s tennis team had only a so-so season. But according to coach Ray Rose, the team was ‘‘the most balanced I’ve seen in 12 years as spectator and coach.” The No. 1 player was Jorge Alemparte, followed by Jeff Gola, Hakki Ozgenel, Bengt Ronnerman, Andres Thomsen and John Mark Fones. Arthur Anderson was the team’s alter- nate. The doubles teams were Gola and Ozgenel, Alemparte and Thomsen, and Ronnerman and WOMEN’S TENNIS RESULTS Western 1 INDIANA 8 WESTERN 9 Purdue 0 Western 2 EASTERN 7 WESTERN’ 8 Southern Illinois 1 WESTERN 5 Murray 4 WESTERN 7 Southwest Missouri 2 WESTERN’ 8 _ Southern Illinois 1 Middle Tennessee Invitational 4th of 7 Western 1 KENTUCKY 8 WESTERN 9 Louisville 0 KWIC tournament 3rd of 7 UT-Martin Invitational 1st of 10 WESTERN 6 Middle Tennessee 3 Western 3 ALABAMA 6 WESTERN 6 South Alabama 3 WESTERN’ 8 Austin Peay 1 WESTERN’ 8 Vanderbilt 1 OVC tournament Ist of 7 MEN’S TENNIS RESULTS WESTERN 9 Tufts 1 WESTERN 9 Haverford College 0 WESTERN 6 Central Florida 3 Western 4 SEMINOLE COLLEGE 5 Western 3 FLAGLER COLLEGE 6 Western 0 FLORIDA STATE 9 WESTERN 5 Morehead 4 Western 0 EAST TENNESSEE 9 WESTERN 9 Eastern 0 WESTERN 7 Akron 2 Western 2 MIDDLE TENNESSEE 7 WESTERN 6 Austin Peay 3 Western 6 MURRAY 7 WESTERN 6 Kentucky 3 WESTERN 9 Tennessee Tech 0 Western 4 AUSTIN PEAY 5 WESTERN 7 Eastern 2 Western 3 KENTUCKY 6 OVC tournament 4th of 7 Fones. A highlight of the season, in which Western peaked, was a 6-3 win over the University of Kentucky. “We were up for Kentucky because it’s al- ways great to beat them — even if it’s in checkers,’ Rose said. — Beth Taylor and Tommy George [| — Judy Watson AFTER TRAVELING worldwide with his tennis, senior Bengt Ronnerman (No. 2 seed) came from Stockholm, Sweden, to play for Western. Ronnerman posted a 9-8 singles record and played in the No. 3 doubles position with John Mark Fones. a! 8 | mm A WOMEN’S TENNIS TEAM: (Front w) S. Fredlake, S. Leslie, B. Bogdan, S. Bomar. (Back row) P. Wood, K. Ferry, C. Summers, S. Johnson. 251 Men's and Women’s Tennis With a few good scores and a few bad ones, the golf teams found they were Still in the rough A new coach, a new program and practically a new men’s team took to the golf course in the fall, with hopes of regaining a prestigious foothold in the Ohio Valley Conference after finishing in the cellar the year before. Western blazed through the fall, struggled through the spring and finished a disappointing fifth of seven in the OVC tournament at Ken- tucky Dam Village in May. Coach Jim Richards, who had retired from his seven-year basketball coaching position, signed six men to compete. Together with two returning Hilltoppers, they won a tournament for the first time in two years and had some outstanding individual performances. Jim Bagnardi, a Florida junior-college trans- fer, set a course record in the opening tourna- ment with a 77 at Indiana State. Bagnardi led Western in the spring with a 75.5-stroke average. He also won the South- ern Illinois-Edwardsville Invitational with a four-over-par 147. Tom Urtz, the only senior on the squad, won the Evansville tournament with rounds of 74- WOMEN’S GOLF TEAM: (Front row) S. Williams, M. Losson, B. Taylor, E. Justiss, S. Douglas. (Back row) S. Laney, C. Peshka, J. Bolle, S. Mercke, L. Toftness. MEN’S GOLF TEAM: (Front row) J. Richards, T. Swiler, D. Dalton, S. Madden, T. Urtz. (Back row) J. Bagnardi, K. Perry, M. Naton, S. Collins, J. McCord. Men's and Women’s Golf 76 and was third in the Opryland and Eastern invitationals, with scores of 149 and 144, re- spectively. Western ended the fall season on the up- swing with a win at Evansville, a tie for first with Eastern at Opryland and a third-place finish in Eastern’s Invitational. In the spring, David Dalton, a consistent scorer from Bowling Green, pulled a shoulder muscle at the Evansville Invitational, which was rained out. He missed the OVC Quad and played only three holes in the Kentucky Inter- collegiate before withdrawing. “It seemed to demoralize us when David got hurt,”’ Richards said. ‘‘He was one under at the time, and then we had only four players left — to everyone else’s five.” Western started to make a comeback at Southern Illinois-Edwardsville, finishing second of 10 teams. Richards thought the team might peak at the OVC, but it didn’t. “I thought Eastern had the strongest team and we would finish anywhere from second to — Robert W. Pillow LEADING THE TEAM with a 75.5-stroke average in the spring, Jim Bagnardi of Hollywood Hills, Fla., misses a putt during a practice round. He won the Southern Illinois- Edwardsville Invitational with a four-over-par 147. fifth,” Richards said. ‘Unfortunately, it was fifth.” The women’s golf team had reason to think that things would be better. Everyone was back. An assistant coach was manning the ship; and the team had a new practice course — at Indian Hills. But things weren’t better. “We never could get everybody going at the same time,” assistant coach Gina Owens, who traveled with the team, said. Sophomore Cindy Peshka won the low score trophy for the year and set a school record, breaking Lea Anne Toftness’ 160 mark by a stroke. Freshmen Savona Williams and Susan Mercke added the needed depth to the Hilltop- per squad, which competed in seven tourna- ments. The team finished seventh of 12 in the North Carolina Blue Ridge Invitational. West- ern had been fourth after its first-day 328 score, but stumbled to a 344 the second day. Miss Peshka’s 77-82 set the school record and she placed eighth of 74 golfers in the tourna- ment. The Toppers’ best round of the year was during the second day of the Purdue Invita- tional. Their score of 324, four short of the school record set in the 1978 spring, brought them into a fifth-place finish among 16 teams. Melissa Losson was low for the team with rounds of 81-80. ; Western’s 10th of 22 finish in the Indiana Invitational was a strong note to end the fall season on. “T really thought after that we might tear them up in the spring,” Mrs. Owens said. “‘We were fairly consistent, for once.” Miss Mercke’s two-day 166 total was low for the Toppers, followed by Miss Losson with a 167 and Janet Bolle and Beth Taylor with 168s. Miss Peshka and Miss Losson accumulated identical 82.8 averages in the fall to lead the team but fell to 88 and 90 averages, respec- tively, in the spring. — Beth Taylor | MEN’S GOLF RESULTS Indiana State 6th of 13 Murray 8th of 12 Evansville 1st of 7 Opryland, USA Tied. Ist of 9 Eastern Invitational 3rd of 18 Padre Isles Tournament 5th of 15 Colonel Classic 7th of 20 OVC Quad 3rd of 4 Kentucky Intercollegiate 5th of 6 Southern Illinois 2nd of 10 Oovc 5th of 7 WOMEN’S GOLF RESULTS Blue Ridge Invitational 7th of 12 Purdue Invitational 5th of 16 Indiana Invitational 10th of 22 Lady Kat Invitational 6th of 13 Marshall 4th of 10 Southern Illinois 2nd of 4 Bowling Green 5th of 9 WITH A SHOWER of sand, Melissa Losson, a Bowling Green junior, blasts out of a sand trap during practice. She was low for Western in the Purdue Invitational with rounds of 81-80. Western placed fifth of 16 teams at Purdue. — Mark Tucker No luck at allm With a little bit of help from Lady Luck, the baseball season could have been a winner The season ahead looked favorable for base- ball coach Barry Shollenberger as he sat com- fortably in his office running his index finger down the player roster. “Our pitching depth is excellent and our hitting is sufficient,’’ Shollenberger said. ‘All we'll need is a little luck, and we could have a really good season.” As the season progressed, the fourth-year coach got enough pitching and hitting to win 31 games (a school record), while losing 22 and tying one. But the luck never came. With the loss of one league member, the seven-team Ohio Valley Conference adopted a double elimination post-season tournament with the top four regular season finishers quali- fying. second in the doubleheader against Morehead. Western won the first game, 6-4, but lost the second, 4-7. 1.95 earned run average, the team ERA was a high 3.96. Junior college transfer Marty Mason was the staff's No. 2 pitcher, winning six games in a row. Three of those were consecutive shutouts in mid-season, but he faltered near the end, finishing 6-4 while compiling a 3.55 ERA. Western opened conference play March 31 at Middle Tennessee and promptly took a back seat in the conference race, losing 5-4 and 7-1. The first game epitomized the rest of West- ern’s conference losses. With Western leading 4-0, going into the bottom of t he seventh, Mid- dle rallied for five runs on key hits helped by sloppy Western fielding and a few ‘“‘breaks.”’ Western put itself back into the conference race when it swept Middle Tennessee at home, After a 12-7 won-lost start, Western lost 4-1 and 2-0. Leonard Phillips drove in two runs bain om pee : four out of its last five conference games to with a homer and a single in the first game as Western 1 AUBURN 17 finish 10-10-1 — a game and a half out of Biven got his first complete-game win. Rick WESTERN 6 Columbus 1 fourth place. Becker and reliever Rick Gittens combined for WESTERN 7 Columbus 2 Of the 10 conference losses, six were one- the second game win we tere = rabtneat 1 , 8 WESTERN 13 Jacksonville 5 run losses and seven were lost in the last three Following two losses to league-leading More- Western 2 FLORIDA 3 innings, an unofficial school record for ‘‘un- head and two wins over Eastern, Western was Western 3 FLORIDA 4 luckiness.”’ at fourth place in the conference at 8-6. WESTERN us Canteius 4 Siete : : : Western 1 SOUTH FLORIDA 14 The team’s hitting, which some had thought But a split with Austin Peay left Western Wesiera 4 FLORIDA STATE 14 would be weak, finished strong as the team having to win three of four games against first- WESTERN 9 Ferris State 1 batted .316, beating last year’s school record place Morehead at home and second-place WESTERN 6 Ferris State 1 of .306. Murray away to have a chance at fourth place WESTERN 7 Ferris State 3 Sophomore first baseman Mike Williams set and a playoff spot WESTERN Ferris State ms ophom ; Pio pola WESTERN 4 Eastern Illinois 0 school records with the most hits (63) and most Western won the first game against More- WESTERN 7 Eastern Illinois 1 runs batted in (50) in a season. head, 6-4, behind Biven’s pitching and Gittens’ WESTERN 3 Eastern Illinois 4 The team had 42 home runs, five short of | seventh-inning relief work. But Western was all Western 4 MIDDLE TENN. 5 ) : Poop Western 1 MIDDLE TENN. 7 last year’s record. Catcher Mike Green had but eliminated from the OVC playoff when, WESTERN 6 Louisville 2 | nine, Williams eight, and designated hitter Joe _ with holding a 4-3 lead in the sixth inning of the Western 1 LOUISVILLE 2 Hathcock and outfielder Leonard Phillips sev- second game, it surrendered three runs to Western 3 DAVID LIPSCOMB 10 en apiece. Morehead to seal a 7-4 win for the visitors. Western 6 DAVID LIPSCOMB 10 ; : ; 4 i WESTERN 3 Eastern 0 With the loss of the team’s top three hitters, There was only a slim chance for making the western 3 EASTERN 4 Western reverted to speed on the basepaths. tournament when the Hilltoppers traveled to Western 2 AUSTIN PEAY 3 Shortstop Mike Murray stole 27 bases (a Murray that Sunday and those hopes were WESTERN 1 Murray 0 school record), outfielder Ronnie Stewart stole doomed when the Racers downed Western, Western 5 Murray 5 18, and outfielder Rick Despaux had 13 10-4 and 3-2 bearded OME repre : ee SSP : pg eli! asta WESTERN 2 =“ Middle Tennessee 0 The pitching was satisfactory. Although WESTERN 4 Louisville 2 Mark Biven won seven of 10 games and had a — Kevin Stewart |] WESTERN 4 Louisville 3 WESTERN 11 Tennessee Tech 1 = WESTERN 15 Tennessee Tech 0 ce WESTERN 12 Northeast Illinois 0 WESTERN 10 Northeast Illinois 7 ikea WESTERN 13 Northeast Illinois 3 Western 12 MOREHEAD 13 ‘ Western 7 MOREHEAD 11 WESTERN 16 Eastern 6 wer. WESTERN 12 Eastern 1 K WESTERN 6 Kentucky Wesleyan 3 ; Western 2 KY. WESLEYAN 7 WESTERN ti Austin Peay 1 Western 3 AUSTIN PEAY 4 WESTERN 6 Morehead 4 a Western 4 MOREHEAD 7 Western 4 MURRAY 10 Western 2 MURRAY 3 WESTERN 13 Kentucky Wesleyan 7 : — David Frank — Mark Lyons WESTERN 13 St. Joseph’s 6 TRYING TO BEAT THE BALL, Mike Murray slides into © AFTER SEVERAL ERRORS had been made in the game Western 1 KENTUCKY 2 against Austin Peay, pitcher Marty Mason and catcher Mike Green listen to coach Barry Shollenberger. — Scott Robinson IN THE FIRST GAME against Kentucky Wesleyan, Rick Baker prepares to pitch. Western won the first game, 6-3, but lost the second, 2-7. BASEBALL RESULTS Won 31 Lost 22 Tied 1 254 Baseball es mE SSE eres es vo) — Mark Lyons AFTER MAKING a catch that ended the second game against Middle Tennessee, second baseman Ron Rocco is congratulated by shortstop Mike Murray. Western won the second game, 2-0, and the first game, 4-1. FIRST BASEMAN Mike Williams tries to catch a Middle Tennessee player off base in the second game of the dou- bleheader. The player was ruled ‘‘safe.”’ — Mark Lyons 255 Baseball 4 4 256 Intramurals From pillo polo to basketball, intramurals offers A sport for all seasons There is only so much a student can take. With term papers, outside projects and other classwork combined with jobs and money has- sles, most students soon find they need some way to relieve the pressures. Many choose to “et it out” by way of intramural sports. The aggressive but unpressured atmosphere of the competitive program attracted almost 5,200 participants. But nearly 90 percent of all students use the recreational facilities. “Participation was up this year,’ Max Ap- pel, recreation staff assistant, said. “But due to the lack of facilities, I can’t foresee much growth. “This is one of my pet peeves (the lack of facilities),”’ Appel said. “We offer more pro- grams to meet interest and needs of the cam- pus, but we’re limited at this point.” He said that more emphasis is being placed on “‘leisure-time activities.” Because of this, Western is in need of added recreational facilities, he said. “Specifically, we’re only asking for the bare minimum, not anything elaborate. What we DEVIANT team member Katy Rooney, a Louisville sopho- more, tries to steal the ball from recreation staff assistant Max Appel of Appel’s Ciders. Appel’s Ciders defeated the Deviants, 50-45. need is more gym space and more racquetball and handball courts.” Western has two racquetball courts and one handball court. Gym classes must share the Diddle Arena floor with the varsity sports pro- gram. An added bonus to the new facilities, Appel said, is that it would cause “‘less wear and tear on the varsity arena.” About 3,382 men participated in the pro- gram, and activity increased during the spring semester. With the warm weather, students just want to get out and do something, Appel said. He said it is much easier to get a racquetball or handball court as the spring semester ends “because everyone wants to be outside, but that does not alleviate the problems during the winter.” Softball and flag football attracted more competitors than any other sport. In the spring 940 men played softball, with the Trojans win- ning the overall championship. About 528 men played flag football, a fall — = Mark Tock: GOODTIME GANG member Melinda Coile, a Nashville, Tenn., sophomore, spikes a ball over a Volleyball All-Stars team member. The Goodtime Gang defeated the Volleyball All-Stars three games straight in a five-game series. sport. The 24 Sigma Chi team members won first place. There were three divisions in racquetball competition. In singles, Sigma Nu Craig Riley won out of 48 participants. Riley and Sigma Nu Mike Thomas won the doubles competi- tion. Bobby Rascoe won the open racquetball tournament. The People’s Choice was the winning bas- ketball team in the spring tournament. Sigma Nu won the team bowling competi- tion. Almost 120 men participated. The nine members of The Happy Crowd volleyball team won the championship play- off. The number of players increased to 264. Track and field competition gave Hook’s All-Stars the opportunity to demonstrate their skills as they won first place. For the second year in a row, Paul Martin continued on page 258 HOOK’S ALL-STAR Tony Towns, a Louisville senior, puts the shot in the intramural track meet at Smith Stadi- um. Towns won the event with a put of 46 feet, 5 inches. — Robert W. Pillow — Mark Tucker 257 Intramurals OS AEE et 258 Intramurals FAST MOVES enable Eddie Johnson of the independents All-Star Team to avoid tackles during the Lambda Chi Alpha Charity Bowl. The Greek All-Stars won the game with a last minute score. A sport for all seasons con was the table tennis singles champion. J.D. Williams and Al Rechmond won the doubles competition. In women’s competition, the number of par- ticipants increased to 1,773. Central Hall again won the softball cham- pionship, defeating the East Ridge Runners. With 70 games in the basketball season, the Hookettes were the overall winners. About 253 women played in the three leagues. In racquetball singles Janice James was the winner. Doubles champions were Bev Wester- man and Mary Katherine Hancock. Last year’s winner, Julie Fulkerson, again was the champion in archery. Overall winner in volleyball for the second consecutive year was the Goodtime Gang. More than 110 women participated in the bowling round-robin tournament. The champs, continued on page 260 — Mark Tucker FROM SECOND TO HOME, David Parrott scores on the batter’s single-base-hit. Parrott was on the Delta Sigma Pi team, which defeated Sigma Alpha Epsilon. PITTED against a smaller wrestler, Morrie Popelier battles Mike Wimberly in the 167-pound class. Popelier, a sopho- more from East Moline, Ill., was trying to get under Wim- berly for a take-down. — Scott Robinson 259 Intramurals A sport for all seasons con North Chicks 1, won after playoff games. Alpha Delta Pi won the eight-event swim- ming competition with 78 points. Debbie Foley was undefeated in 16 season matches in table tennis singles. There were 10 participants. Kappa Deltas Susan Jenkins and Jamie Grif- fin won the table tennis doubles title in the single-elimination tournament. Co-educational recreational events gained popularity with more than 500 participants. There were two leagues of co-recreational volleyball. The Nashville Canadians won the League One title, and the Tennessee Gang was the League Two champion team. Twelve season games and a double elimina- tion tournament made up the schedule for co- recreational pillo polo. The Tennessee Gang won, and Phi Mu No. 2 was second. Snapper, tuna and sardine were the league names in co-recreational innertube water polo. In the 19 season games, 116 women and 106 men participated. The Water Spiders won the championship undefeated. — Margaret Shirley 1 Men’s Intramurals Archery Badminton (D) Badminton (S) Basketball Billiards Bowling Flag Football Free Throw Golf Handball (D) Handball (S) Horseshoes (D) Horseshoes (S) Racquetball (D) Mark Van Meter (Sigma Phi Epsi- lon) Phil Rine and Kim Swift Steve Peck (Lambda Chi Alpha) People’s Choice Duke Laha Sigma Nu Sigma Chi Mark Chestnut (Sigma Alpha Epsi- lon) Kevin Kuddles (Phi Delta Theta) Kimon Hoegh and Dan Matheson Rod Ebert Al Pedigo and Mike Carpenter Gary Walden Craig Riley and Mike Thomas (Sig- ma Nu) Intramurals 3 f } i Racquetball (S) Softball Swimming Table Tennis (D) Table Tennis (S) Tennis (D) Tennis (S) Track and Field Volleyball Wrestling Craig Riley (Sigma Nu) Trojans Sigma Chi J.D. Williams and Al Rechmond Paul Martin Bob Grover and Scott Tilton (Lambda Chi Alpha) Tony Rhoades (Sigma Chi) Hook’s All-Stars The Happy Crowd Wrestling Club Women’s Intramurals Archery Badminton (D) Badminton (S) Basketball Billiards Julie Fulkerson (Sigma Kappa) Jenny Watkins and Katie Rooney Valerie Brown (South Hall) Hookettes Pam Livingston (Kappa Delta) Bowling Free Throw Racquetball (D) Racquetball (S) Softball Table Tennis (S) Table Tennis (D) Tennis Turkey Trot Volleyball Co-Ed Recreational Inner Tube Water Polo Pillo Polo Volleyball fie e ay ee Sst tig ORES a — Mark ALPHA OMICRON PI Sandy Dorroh, a Princeton junior, scores over Tom Baker, a non-student representing Chi Omega. Baker is married to Chi Omega Pam Baker. AOPi defeated Chi 0, 9-6. Lyons SIGMA PHI EPSILON David White, a Bowling Green graduate student, tackles Sigma Nu Jeff Stone, a Paducah sophomore, in an intramural football game. Sigma Nu won, 13-0. — Scott Robinson North Chicks 1 Melinda Coile Bev Westerman and Mary Kather- ine Hancock Janice James Central Hall Debbie Foley Susan Jenkins and Jamie Griffin (Kappa Delta) Temisha Bybee and Prissy Thomp- son Betsy Bogdan Goodtime Gang Water Spiders Tennessee Gang Nashville Canadians Tennessee Gang 261 Intramurals In the section: BAND — the music doesn’t end 272 when football season is over. HERALD — they work double 278 time as students and journalists. ASSOCIATED STUDENT GOV- 288 ERNMENT — little by little, they try to improve entertainment. RUGBY — when the game’s over, haven ...| Organizations collars and identical clothes, they strive for unity. For independents and Greeks, organizations are a SIGMA GAMMA RHO — April1 312 | Way of life. Some members of the College Heights was a happy birthday for the one- Herald and Associated Student Goverment are not just year-old sorority. full-time students — they’re full-time journalists and “student politicians.” BETWEEN HOT DOGS AND GAMES, Jennifer Sorrell Some, like Omega Psi Phi pledges, will go through and AOPi Susan Mabry share a moment. AOPi and Omega “hell’’ for the Greek way of life. Psi Phi sponsored a cookout April 3 for youngsters from Potter Children’s Home and School. Either way, it’s a way of life that has its own style. — Stevie Benson 263 Organizations 7 CO OIC. OGD O— = | | | | | | 264 Organizations Getting organized Skydiving Club Soccer Club Women’s Volleyball Club Sailing Club As far as the Skydiving Club is concerned, there’s only one way to go — up ... and down. The club got its start in the fall with about 20 members, president Scott Thomas said. “T don’t try to recruit people because it’s something you don’t want to push people into,” he said. ‘‘Most people want to try it.” The group usually jumps at Bardstown, and an inexperienced member can be trained in one day. Fees are $35 for the first jump and training; $9 for each jump afterward. Thomas and Neil Taylor, a Munfordville ju- nior, represented the school at the National Collegiate Parachute Meet in Deland, Fla., Dec. 28-31. Thomas said he placed sixth in the style event, and Taylor was in the top 10 in accuracy. “It’s a lot of fun.”’ Trina Grimes, a Louisville senior, said. “‘It’s sort of scary, but it’s fun.” Thomas said the club should be well on its feet by the next fall semester and said he hoped for more support from the school. One way to do that, he said, is to jump at the football games. It started out as nothing. But today the Soccer Club is on its way to becoming a team. At least its members hope so. “Eight hundred million people do not come to see us p lay,” Ralph Bergmann said. ‘““But more and more people are showing up every time we play. “Some of our more devoted followers even come to our practices.” The club members think of themselves as a team, not a club. They have no president or vice president, but they have a captain and a co-captain. They meet to discuss upcoming games and the strategy necessary to win. For the past two years, they’ve won the SKYDIVING CLUB: (Front row) G. Hartung, E. Sandman, L. Farmer, S. Bahler, M. Hille- brand, B. Stowers. (Second row) B. Haynes, C. Oberst, T. Ebelhar, M. Rich, B. Eskridge, T. Chambers, S. Thomas, T. Grimes. (Back row) T. Ray, D. Griffin, G. Revolinski, R. Stone, M. Mattingly, S. Johnson. — Judy Watson Ohio Valley Conference title. After the fall semester, their won-lost record was 5-1. “Considering that Western does not allow athletic scholarships for soccer, we feel that we are very good,” adviser Dr. R. Elwyn Bellis, assistant physics and astronomy professor, said. ‘‘We also consider ourselves to be very good because we compete against other uni- versities who do give scholarships for soccer. “We do not consider our team to be a form of intramurals. We only compete against other universities.” There are 25 members, most of whom have played soccer in high school. To join the team, however, experience isn’t necessary. The club is 3% years old. It began when Bellis, a native British player, crossed campus one day and saw a group of people practicing. He asked if he could join. Lou Menetrey said one of the benefits of the club is ‘‘the constant exercise and the advan- tage to keep playing. I love soccer and felt lost until I found Western had a soccer team.” ““My personal feelings are that most of the players benefit from the fact that they are playing in the name of Western,” Bellis said. “There is a certain amount of pride in being able to compete for the university. “The overall aim of the soccer team is to someday become a varsity sport. There are enough interested people who would gladly take a scholarship in the sport. “It can’t be considered an up-and-coming sport because it’s been around too long. It’s time for soccer to be put in the class it be- longs.” Melinda Coile and Susan Dellario had split personalities in the fall. They coached and MOVING through the haze, boats are towed to the starting point of the Freeman Cup Challenge at Barren River Reser- voir. The Sailing Club had a boat in the Port Oliver Yacht Club, which won the September race. Because of the haze and absence of wind, the race lasted about two hours. SOCCER CLUB: (Front row) C. Onyejekwe, M. Doolatabadi, R. Bergmann, A. Nays-Rivas, R. Fernandez. (Second row) T. Denk, V. Hays, M. Sahihi, M. Najem, J. Araya. (Back row) N. Papaioannou, H. Shunk, J. Whitaker, R. Bellis. played for the Women’s Volleyball Club. Early in the fall semester, their coach, Julia Yeater, left Western to coach a professional women’s basketball team. Miss Dellario, club president, said the club’s record was 3-5, an improvement from the pre- vious season. The club competed against squads from Murray, Trevecca, Vanderbilt and other schools. Because of a lack of facilities, there were no home matches, Miss Dellario said. Miss Coile said the club record was good, considering some of the competition. “We played UT-Martin, which has full schol- arships as a varsity sport,” she said. “They have a full-time coach and a lot more exper- ience.”’ Western paid the travel expenses, she said. “They say if there is enough interest we might get a varsity sport and go all out for it. But right now each year it’s tentative if there’s going to be a club.” One member had never been in water deeper - than her bathtub, while another left her sail- boat at home when she came to Western. Both women and their fellow Sailing Club members got plenty of chances to learn about sailing and to skim across the lake in a season interrupted only from in November until March. Perry Locke, who advised the club in the fall, said $15 dues per semester were worth many hours in the water as the members used the club’s one sailable boat and shared rides with members of the Port Oliver Yacht Club. The Sailing Club members are also members of the Port Oliver Club, and in the spring that club offered sailing lessons for novices. The lessons began indoors with slides, advanced to the lakeside and finally onto the waves, Locke said. He said the club has been restructured with more planned outings and recruiting drives. The club also planned to repair four boats it owns. Locke said the members hoped to enter at least one regatta in the spring and to observe various others across the state. continued on page 266 WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL CLUB: (Front row) M. Coile, S. Dellario, M. Hancock, B. Bowley. (Second row) C. Bush, K. Rooney, B. Westerman, J. A SMILE on her face, Laura Farmer, a Newburgh, Ind., sophomore, prepares to jump during a Skydiving Club trip. Coomes. (Back row) T. Whitson, N. Gilliam, S. Howell, C. Hawkins. — Judy Watson Club members paid for training and plane rides. Miss Farm- er said it was the second time she had jumped. ‘ep aa ee, Se ——— SAILING CLUB: (Front row) B. Rice, A. Bennett, P. Steagall, P. Beasley, J. Corbin, W. Kelso. (Back row) T. McCoy, S. Stone, W. Hester, T. Guerrant, B. Milliken, R. Leach, P. Locke. 265 Organizations 266 Organizations Getting organized con Frisbee Club Karate Club Western Horsemen’s Association Block and Bridle Club The Frisbee Club is a friendly group — according to its members. Even against an opposing team, “‘there’s a sense of competition, of course, but you’re still friends,’ Steve Ruemmele said. Janet Sawyer said one benefit of member- ship is social. ““You meet a lot of new people you wouldn’t have met otherwise.” Frisbee also helps to get in shape, she said. “If you do it right, you can get a lot of exercise.” Frisbee “‘is like any competition,’ Ruem- mele said. ““You learn from doing something yourself.” He said Frisbee is like any sport, although most people tend to take it lightly. But he said, “when they see us do something with it, they change their minds.” The club’s activities included tournaments with other colleges, exhibitions at halftime of basketball games and Ultimate Frisbee games, which Miss Sawyer said is “‘like football Frisbee — you run up and down the field making passes with the Frisbee.” Jane Simcox, a Washington, D.C., junior, wanted to “try something new and different,” so she joined the Karate Club. The club meets twice weekly for a formal meeting and to work out. Beginners learn basic karate skills and exer- cises to develop leg muscles and arm move- ment. Advanced members perform karate with each other on Friday nights. “Karate teaches strength and agility, as well as self-defense,’ Miss Simcox said. FRISBEE CLUB: (Front row) S. Celsor, S. Ruemmele, J. Sawyer, B. Speakman, R. Vincent, J. Terrell. (Second row) M. Aoun, W. Lee, J. Atkinson, C. Gillis, E. Wells, J. Nirmaier, S. Arnold. (Back row) J. Portaro, D. Pickwick, H. Clark, D. Grizzle, M. Weaver, C. Dixon, L. Phillips. Ted Guerrant, a Louisville junior, said he joined the club because he wanted “‘to get in shape.” Guerrant said he believed the club offered more intensive practice and study than a regu- lar class. “P’ve gained more self-confidence from be- ing in the club,”’ he said. A certified master black belt observes the members’ skills to see if they are qualified to gain or increase their karate rank. “I think everyone increased their rank dur- ing the fall semester,”’ Guerrant said. Sometimes Karate Club members leave their belts at home and just get together social- ly. In January they had a banquet. ‘‘Sometimes we stay out together until 3 a.m.,’’ Guerrant said. You don’t have to be the Lone Ranger or Tonto to join the Western Horsemen’s As- sociation. All it takes is an interest in horses. Two years old, the club wants to ‘‘get peo- ple involved with others who care about horses,” Frances Haddock said. “We plan activities, especially for the riding team, that involve horses,” she said. ‘‘We show films, sometimes have speakers and have cookouts.” According to Ms. Haddock the intercolle- giate riding team was formed before the club and now provides rodeo riders within the club. “‘We’re hoping to sponsor a horse show for the intercollegiate, and there’s been talk of a rodeo,” she said early in the spring semester. In the fall, the County Extension Agency spoke to members about horse feeding and farm management. The club worked on estab- lishing a constitution and planned to support the Agricultural Council in a T-shirt contest. They planned to help in the Future Farmers of America Day at the university farm where high school students challenged each other in horsing events. Beth McCauley said she joined because “I’m interested in horses and wanted to learn more about farm management. The club offers clin- ics for beginning horsemen, too.” The club meets twice a month with adviser Charles Anderson. The membership fee is $5. “ P ‘Y ve never been exposed to large animals because I’m from the suburbs, so this is prov- ing to be a fantastic experience for me,” Block and Bridle Club member Jean Wag- ner said. “T’ve learned a lot about animals, which is important since I’m an agriculture major.” Meeting twice a month, the club had various speakers during the fall semester. Diana Vaughn, a Lexington senior, said, “These speakers open up new pathways for jobs. People in the club have gotten jobs through some of them.” Other fall activities included a barbecue and a dance. The club’s leading activity was in the spring — the Little North American competition at the university farm. The chapter was issued untrained beef and dairy heifers, which they had a month to pre- pare for show. Following the show, a banquet was given and awards presented for reserve champion and grand champion in three classes of animals and for academic excellence in ani- mal science. Also in the spring, the club sponsored the Future Farmers of America field day for high school students at the university farm. They also sponsored an intramural day of livestock judging during the spring. ‘You would be surprised who shows up there (at the university farm) to try their hand at judging,” club president Lynn Graham said. Miss Graham, a pre-veterinary major, was interested in learning the practical end of the profession when she joined the club. “Tt taught me the productive end of showing new animals and has opened new pathways as far as jobs go,” she said. Several members attended the National Block and Bridle Convention in Louisville in April. continued on page 268 KARATE CLUB: (Front row) B. Hulsey, K. Powers, J. Pickett, A. Shipp, B. Borden. (Second row) B. Harris, B. Simon, V. Simon, A. Nays-Rivas, J. Burton, J. Simcox. (Back row) H. Haddad, T. Guerrant, B. Scott, M. Whitaker, J. Cottrell, J. Warren. An : SR — Mark Lyons BEFORE a Karate Club meeting, Keith Powers stretches by touching his head to his knees. Powers, a junior business administration major, has a yellow belt in karate. He has been a club member for 2! years. A FRISBEE DEMONSTRATION during halftime of the Morehead-Western basketball game Jan. 17 finds Frisbee Club captain Corky Gillis on the floor. Gillis, a Louisville senior, helped form the club, which became an official organization this year. WESTERN HORSEMEN’S ASSOCIATION: (Front row) G. Imwiehe, L. Starnes, K. BLOCK AND BRIDLE CLUB: (Front row) D. Brown, D. Vaughn, R. Moseley, J. Wagner, Winsett, L. Cunningham, M. Sledge. (Second row) M. Hall, C. Wheeler, A. Miles, F. T. Zimmerman, T. Edge. (Second row) G. Jones, C. Beeler, J. Smith, T. Cottingham, W. Haddock, P. Manz, T. Logan. (Back row) M. Wheeler, L. Sorrell, C. Anderson, R. Haines, M. Burchett, D. Seymour, L. Graham. (Back row) K. Kapoor, D. Maples, J. Noel, Langford, T. Gibson. R. Swift, M. Stewart, R. Brawner, R. Napier. 267 Organizations Getting organized cont 268 Organizations WKU Fencers Table Tennis Club Women’s Swim Club Recreation Majors Club About 16 students get fenced in twice a week — when the WKU Fencers practice in Diddle Arena. Dr. Arthur Bush, adviser, started the club five years ago. ‘Members can enjoy the thrill of competi- tion without danger,” he said. Members com- pete at the Amateur Fencers’ League of Amer- ica. This meet may lead to the Olympics. Dan Faller, a two-year member from Leslie, said his interest developed after watching Errol Flynn and Zorro on television. “Good fencers have tolerance,” Faller said. “The director’s word is law. Everybody ac- cepts his decision. At meets everybody talks to each other. It isn’t like some sports where the WKU FENCERS: (Front row) L. McCullough, D. Faller, A. (Second row) A. Bush, K. Simmons, M. Mortland, J. Hancock, J. Seelig, C. Bush. (Back row) B. Barton, A. Brelsford, C. Powell, G. Geelig, R. Hull. teams separate and only interact while the game is going on.” Freshman Troy Allen was walking down the ramp at Diddle Arena during registration when a fencer interested her in joining. “Most actors and actresses know how to fence,” she said. “‘The body movement is good to learn, and I find it is fun.” Dave Himmelheber is also a new member. “‘I plan to stay in the club if I survive,” he said. The youngest member is 15-year-old Adam Glaser who has won five state titles after fenc- ing 1% years. Why did he join? “Out of curiosity,” he said. Table tennis, believe it or not, is a sport. “It just hasn’t had the publicity other sports have had,’”’ Thomas Holmgren, a Table Ten- nis Club member, said. ‘‘But it requires just as much physical fitness.”’ Sometimes, the pros’ salaries are just as high, too. Holmgren said some ping pong players make as much as $50,000 a year. Kathy Studdard said some people don’t take the sport seriously, however. Mark Tucker Faller, A. Glaser, D. Faller. The club has weekly meetings, a tournament in which members form their own leagues and tournaments with other clubs. Ms. Studdard said members help each other work on serves and technique at meetings. Holmgren said one of the club’s benefits is that “people who know more about the sport can help other people.” He also said the club “gets us together as a group” and allows members to play in off- campus tournaments. One of the goals of the Women’s Swim Club is to get its name changed to Women’s Swim Team. As a team supported by university funds they would be able to recruit, award scholar- ships and have scheduled practices. The Women’s Swim Club has existed for three years, but this was the first year they were able to raise enough money to go on the road for meets. “T his is the first year there’s been a lot of enthusiasm,’ Tate Nation, coach and former Western swimmer, said. “‘We’ve got the ball rolling, so we can get it in the hands of others,” the Louisville senior said. “‘There’s a lot to go through before we can get to be a team.” The intramural department gave the club $130 for travel expenses, but the club had to raise money to pay for most expenses. A swim-a-thon helped raise money for trav- el, and they also sponsored a beer blast, which brought in about $60. Nation said he has stressed self-improve- ment by keeping records on the individual members. Although the club had one tie and lost all the other meets, club secretary Mary Tougher, a Louisville senior, said she was satisfied. ‘‘We held our own. It’s the first year we’ve traveled, and every college we competed against was a university-supported team,”’ she said. “This year we were more organized than ever before,’’ Miss Tougher said. ‘“‘Our goal is ON THE FOURTH FLOOR of Downing University Cen- ter, Doug Chenault plays during a Table Tennis Club meet- ing. The meetings usually consist of a series of matches. Chenault is a ’77 graduate and works in Bowling Green. TABLE TENNIS CLUB: (Front row) K. Studdard, M. Matlock, M. Kieta, B. Owens, K. Hobson, D. Chenault. (Second row) S. Whisman, M. Hoots, T. Holmgren, J. Kelarise, D. Williams, C. Case, P. Martin, W. Carrender. (Back row) T. Nash, K. Massie, B. Knight, D. Greenwell, W. Nash, M. Firat. to be a team — we hope within three years.”’ Members “being involved”’ is the key to the Recreation Majors Club’s reputation as an active club. “People in recreation are naturally active and serious about getting involved and working with people,” president Mark Willis said. Mary Tingley, a Louisville senior, said she joined the club because she wanted some ex- perience in her field. Volunteer work is one way she has gained this experience, she said. She has worked with the Girls’ Club, the Big Sister program and senior citizens. Each year the club helps with the Special Olympics for handicapped children. They also sponsored a skating party for the Big Brother- Big Sister program and had a Valentine’s party for the Girls’ Club. They sponsored the Hal- loween haunted house in Downing University Center. The club also helped with Pass, Punt and Kick competition for young athletes in October and sponsored a pet fair during Aprilfest. Several career-oriented workshops were given by the club, including workshops on out- door cooking, resume writing, arts and crafts and cardio-pulmonary resuscitation. Libby Smith, a Murfreesboro, Tenn., junior, said this “‘professional emphasis” is one of the main reasons she joined the club. “Tt really helps with job interviews if you’re involved in professional clubs,”’ she said. continued on page 270 A COFFIN on the sidewalk in front of Downing University Center provides a seat for Recreation Club members wait- ing for a ride to return it to its supplier. The club used the coffin in its haunted house in the university center. BE te neh in es lbw — Mark Lyons WOMEN’S SWIM CLUB: T. Nation, K. Theuerkauf, K. Swallow, M. Donaldson, K. Assmar, S. Fuller. (Second row) L. Riherd, S. Boyd, M. Leaman, C. Francis, V. Martin, J. Russell, M McNally. (Back row) M. Tougher, C. Banks, J. Russell, B. Moffatt, M. Tingley, H. Miller, C. Sheridan. RECREATION MAJORS CLUB: (Front row) K. Martin, D. Buselmeier, J. Verner, A. Stanley, S. Thomas. (Second row) A. Williams, R. Routt, S. Esh- back, P. Theobald, M. Elmore, L. Lewis, J. Calhoun. (Back row) L. Bell, M. Tingley, J. Johnson, M. Willis, R: Muse, J. Tambornini, J. Biggers. 269 Organizations Getting organized con Amazing Tones of Joy SMENC Phi Mu Alpha Delta Omicron Tuba Ensemble Music is how the Amazing Tones of Joy serve their Lord, member Charles Dixon said. “We don’t go just to perform, but to give our audiences a message,” Dixon said. “‘Most of our members were a part of a gospel choir at home, and like me, they just wanted to keep performing for the Lord.” And the group did perform, according to adviser Charleeen Darlington. She said the Amazing Tones regularly sang at four of the local predominately black churches and trav- eled to Lexington, Louisville, Richmond, Mount Sterling, Georgetown and Alabama. “They do a lot of traveling with no budget,” she said, adding that contributions are used for their expenses. The group celebrated its sixth anniversary in late April, Miss Darlington said. The group practiced at least two to three hours a week and doubled that before a perfor- mance, Dixon said. “We try for our best, but the feedback we get depends on the style of the church,” he said. Miss Darlington said the group tries to pro- mote Christianity on campus. ““They have no set objectives except to extend the gospel community from Western to various surround- ing communities,” she said. “As college students they all have quite a few other commitments, so they can’t make the choir their number one commitment. But they try to do their best when singing for the | Lord,” she said. THE FOUNDERS’ DAY program for Phi Beta Sigma fraternity included a performance by the Amazing Tones of Joy. The gospel frequently sang at university events and around Bowling Green. — Harold Sinclair AMAZING TONES OF JOY: (Front row) C. Nelson, R. Houchin, M. Hagans, A. McLean,C. STUDENT MUSIC EDUCATORS NATIONAL CONFERENCE: (Front row) S. Dixon, J. Story, A. O’Hill. (Second row) T. Middleton, D. Walters, Q. Lyton, D. Hagans, M. _Shiley, K. Blaine, K. Burns, K. Rexroat. (Second row) D. Reed, B. Collett, L. Vaught, Moore, R. Churchill, S. Dodson. (Back row) B. White, B. Thomas, H. Oldham, B. Smith, E. _M. Jenkins, D. Sturgeon. K. Pogue, G. Glover. (Back row) P. Wells, A. Clark, M. Lane, Bailey, S. Cole, D. Wilson. H. Yankey, S. Sansom, B. Morgan, J. Godfrey. 270 Organizations AT A CLINIC at Royal Music Co. in Bowling Green, SMENC member Greg Glover looks at part of a clarinet as Even with the most complete program, class work can’t do it all. That’s why there’s the Student Music Educators National Con- ference, members say. “We try to schedule topics that aren’t nor- mally presented in classes,” president Greg Glover said. ‘‘We cover topics you might not get in class, or we expand on topics there’s not enough time in class” to cover extensively. Among the topics covered by guest speak- ers were the pros and cons of marching band competition, music theater in high schools and junior highs, and fund raising for school music programs, he said. The group sponsored a program in which first- and second-year teachers talked about problems they faced on the job. The club also sponsored an instrument-re- pair clinic at a local music store. — Harold Sinclair Dean Preston, an instrument repairman for the store, watches. SMENC members sponsored the clinic. “You learn a lot of things you’ll never learn in a classroom,” Alan Clark said. “‘That’s the biggest thing about SMENC.”’ “We aren’t classified as a social fraternity, but we do have social activities,’ John Scott, a member of Phi Mu Alpha professional music fraternity, said. Although Scott is a computer science major, he said he joined Phi Mu Alpha because of his interest in music and because he knew “‘a lot of guys in it and thought the club was active on campus.” The fraternity gave a Christmas party with the other music groups in December. They also had a fall picnic for the music department. Fraternity members ushered at the events of the Fine Arts Festival. They also gave public concerts. In March Phi Mu Alpha sponsored the Miss Western Pageant. Proceeds helped fund the two $100 scholarships the fraternity gives to two members each year. Practice makes perfect and Delta Omicron, professional women’s music fraternity, prac- tices a lot. Each semester the honor organization gives a concert. Members perform solo or in ensem- bles. Before giving their March 20 concert, Delta Omicron members practiced together weekly. Delta Omicron members ushered for the Fine Arts Festival and gave a scholarship to a music student who had given an outstanding recital. The club also raised money to donate new records to the music library in Ivan Wilson Fine Arts Center. Sheila Harlow said the club sponsors com- munity projects, such as singing at local nurs- ing homes. There are two reasons a tuba student joins the Tuba Ensemble — it’s unique, and it’s also required. The ensemble is unique because the instru- ment itself is, according to Tim Tatum. The group performed in the fall, participat- ed in the Southeastern U.S. Tuba and Euphoni- um Symposium and Clinic in Lexington, and recruited at local high schools. Performing and rehearsing outside of class allows tubists to show their diversity, according to Lee Stofer. “We’re given more of an awareness of what type of literature is being written for the instru- ment,” he said. “Most of it is very recently composed. It calls for the member to play a lot better than what’s required for a marching band. It’s a challenge.” David Peters said members ‘“‘really have to listen a whole lot to each other to play in tune” because the instruments are all the same. “This year, we’re pretty small,” Tatum said. “So it gives everybody a chance to show their true colors.” ‘¢ continued on page 274 DELTA OMICRON: (Front row) D. Pritchard, R. Leach, B. Gregory, D. Ruggles, E. Tate. (Second row) S. Harlow, K. Best, S. Dyer, T. Napier, F. Howard, D. Martin. (Back row) B. Collett, L. Lloyd, P . Wells, B. Morgan, W. Benson. TUBA ENSEMBLE: (Front row) K. Campbell, A. Clark, K. Vinson. (Back row) J. Vincent, J. Cole, L. Stofer, T. Tatum. PHI MU ALPHA: (Front row) B. Howard, S. Neal, J. McDonald, K. Satterfield, D. Peters. (Second row) J. Godfrey, J. Scott, W. McChesney, L. Stofer, S. Bradley, G. Lyons, S. Riggs. (Back row) D. Boyer, D. Elvers, K. Vinson, R. Mudd, D. Montgomery, R. Manning. 271 Organizations A concerted effort When the last halftime show draws to an end, the last musical note is played and the last band member marches off the field, the band season doesn’t end. Some may think there is only one band — the marching band. But in actuality, there are four bands: the marching band, the two con- cert bands and the pep band. “‘We have the best concert band this year we’ve ever had in my eight years at Western,” Dr. Kent Campbell, band director, said. Because there are too many members to practice at one time, there are two bands. “With 55 students in the first concert band and about 50 in the second band, coordinating the variety of instruments used (21) is hard,” Campbell said. The two concert bands toured western states, giving four concerts. March 27 they gave a “Young People’s Concert ”’ for local high school students. Richard Withrowe, a member of both the marching and concert bands, said he enjoys the marching band more “because you meet more people.” As a Bowling Green native, he said he looked forward to being in the Big Red March- ing Band when he was in high school. With- rowe, who works as a part-time cook at a local — Harold Sinclair AFTER CUTTING her leg on broken glass, Betty Thomp- son, a junior twirler from Bowling Green, was unable to practice. Julie Ashdon, a Battle Creek, Mich., sophomore, talks to her about the injury. IN THE SOLITUDE of an Ivan Wilson Fine Arts Center practice room, Joel Vincent, a sophomore from Decatur, Ala., practices the tuba for the concert band. _ restaurant, said although it was sometimes hard to shuffle work and band practice, he still managed. “‘I like band; that’s why I stay in it,” he said. According to Campbell, two-thirds of the 170 marching band members are not music majors. ‘They enjoy it. That’s why they’re there. And to be a member of one band, you don’t have to be in another,” he said. Because of limited time for practice, Camp- bell said a lot of responsibility is with the indi- vidual. Each member must learn movement and position charts, as well as his music part. The hardest part is working to meet a dead- line, Melonie Briggs, a White House, Tenn., sophomore, said. ‘Finally, when you show to- gether and it works out, it’s a good feeling,” she said. The Big Red Marching Band usually goes to one or two away games during the football — Mark Lyons season. This year they went to Murray. They also help sponsor band contests for area high schools, although they don’t partici- _ pate in any contests themselves. In directing the marching band, Campbell gets help from two graduate assistants and Peggy Thompson, who instructs the twirlers. Mrs. Thompson said she has directed the twirlers for six years. ‘“We’re twirlers, not ma- jorettes,” she said. “‘Majorettes don’t twirl, but twirlers really twirl. “We tape the music from the band’s shows and then we work our routine to the music while they’re learning their marching routine.” The four twirlers practice everyday during marching season and go with the band to away BEFORE PRACTICING a new marching routine, Hugh Heater, a Bowling Green junior, scribbles notes on his music. He has played the sousaphone in the Big Red March- ing Band for three years. Beso — Lewis Gardner — David Frank games. One of the graduate assistants, Alan Clark, is in charge of the 16-member flag corps. Clark said the corps practiced on its own but had two rehearsals with the band before each showtime. The pep band, which plays only at basket- ball games, had 35 members. Joining it is pure- ly voluntary, Campbell said. “Members realize that they may have to give up their spring break if we get a tournament bid,” he said. It’s unusual for graduate students to be band students, but fifth-year student Mark McChes- ney said he stayed on as a member because “all my friends are in the band.” McChesney said he thought Western had one of the best bands in the state because of the good arrangements and because they in- corporate all types of music into their show. Band shows revolve around a continuous theme — ‘The Wonderful World of Music.” “I think that theme describes our half-time shows,” McChesney said. ‘‘We reach all kinds of people since we play everything from big band music to disco.” — Laura Phillips and Margaret Shirley C — Lewis Gardner RESTING his trumpet, Mark Faith, a Lebanon, Tenn., senior, listens to instructions during practice. The band usually practiced outside Downing University Center. WHILE THE REST of the band practices its marching routine, Susan Gould, a Louisville sophomore, relaxes as she plays the marching bells. She didn’t have to march in that part of the routine. Getting organized con Sociology Club ASSW SCEC SNEA Hundreds of aluminum cans and 1,100 pounds of newspapers accumulated in Mike Fritch’s office in the fall. They were part of a fund-raising project for the Sociology Club, and members brought them in a few at a time and collected them CATIO ASSOC SOCIOLOGY CLUB: (Front row) J. Dowell, V. Richey, J. Nielson. (Back row) B. Baker, S. Brantley, K. Fairchild. COAT CHECI from around the campus at the end of the fall semester, Fritch, president, said. Under the Comprehensive Employment Training Act, the newspapers and cans were recycled into insulation for a federally funded low-rent housing project in this area. CETA paid the club 16 cents for every pound of material collected. The 25-member club sponsored lectures which drew as many as 70 students and faculty to each. Criminology, divorce conflicts and gerontology were among the lecture topics. A sociology major or minor is not a require- ment for joining the club, but Dr. Kathleen Kalab, adviser, said many students join to learn about recent research and methods in sociolo- gy that are not in textbooks. r oe aol aia Freshman Dwayne Vick said his membership brings him in contact with graduate students and teachers who give him advisement about job opportunities and advancement in the field. It’s almost a must to know fellow workers in the social work field, Laura Shaver, president of the Association of Student Social Workers, said. And that’s one of the club’s benefits. The club provides unity and an outside-the- classroom education, she said. “‘It’s beneficial for all the students who are into social work to belong.” A three-year member, Ms. Shaver said she now knows the faculty and community social 1 hee | ——-. brea “4 j f ASSOCIATION OF STUDENT SOCIAL WORKERS: (Front row) M. Sims, R. Miller, R. Garmon, T. Devine, J. Steele, L. Carson. (Second row) S. Young, A. Pederson, K. Tussell, A. Vick, D Banuchi, D. Hammer, K. Vaught, V. Williams. (Back row) K. Ritter, L. Shaver, J. Fitzgerald, M. Drexler, K. Gaines, J. Lanham, G. Bennett. workers better. The club sponsored the first convention of the Kentucky Coalition of Student Social Workers and has participated in it ever since. “It’s a fellowship that you really can’t do without,” she said. ‘“The group is an asset to social work education.” Instead of caring in silence, members of the Student Council for Exceptional Children have the chance to actively work with handi- capped children. In cooperation with the United Cerebral Pal- sy Association, the club worked as college coordinators and informed students of the as- sociation programs. Later, members volun- teered to answer phones at the Holiday Star STUDENT COUNCIL FOR EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN: (Front row) C. Meeker, J. Lange, G. Kirby, D. Noble, B. Stevens. (Second row) V. Waggoner, L. Donovan, L. Clements, C. LeNeave, C. Simms, S. Lingvai, N. Lyons, T. Noble, M. Telethon. In October a fall festival with games, prizes and food entertained handicapped students from Richardsville and Bristow. They gave a Christmas party for mentally handicapped children. The Bowling Green-Warren County Associ- ation for Retarded Citizens provided the space for the party and refreshments, and the club brought gifts and a Santa. T-shirt sales continued through the year and the $100 profit went to the Cerebral Palsy Telethon. Lecturers included Judy Collins, a represen- tative from United Cerebral Palsy, and Dr. Frank Kersting, speech and hearing clinic di- rector. Kersting talked about the clinic’s infant A COAT CHECK in Diddle Arena occupies SNEA mem- ber Scott Bachert’s time during a home basketball game. Bachert, a Fern Creek senior, said the club tried to run the coat check during every home game but had a “‘lot of problems this year because there were no volunteers.” Proceeds paid the club’s expenses and were added to its scholarship fund. — Stevie Benson Persac. (Back row) B. Paige, K. Duckworth, D. Grinstead, J. McConnell, C. Bonneville, P. Mauzey, S. DeLacey. stimulation program. In April the club sponsored a bowl-a-thon. The club attracts mostly special education or speech and pathology majors. It “gives students who are interested in handicapped children an opportunity to work with them and help them,” Jan Lange, fall semester president, said. It also “helps them meet professionals al- ready in the field of special education,” she said. SNEA is “the organization to belong to,” ac- cording to Dr. Robert Otto, adviser. The Student National Education Associ- ation “‘is the only pre-professional organization for all teachers,” he said. “If you’re in secon- dary or elementary education, it doesn’t mat- ter.” The organization has monthly meetings which include guest speakers and topics relat- ing to both education groups. “We’re trying to show them what they’re getting into,’’ Otto said. “Most of our meetings are designed around telling them what they’re going into.” Speakers included Bowling Green and War- ren County Education Association representa- tives and the Kentucky Education Association president. SNEA is affiliated with KEA and the Nation- al Education Association. That’s a benefit in itself, Otto said. Students also receive educational journals and liability insurance with their $8 member- ship fee. The insurance covers students while they are working in public schools under uni- versity programs such as student teaching or practicums. About 50 of the 180 members are active, Otto said, and the club operates a coat check at basketball games and sells cookbooks to finance a scholarship fund. The $300 to $400 profit helps pay for six $250 scholarships, which are given to SNEA members. continued on page 276 AT A MEETING of the Student Council for Exceptional Children, president Bonnie Paige talks to new member Fran Johnston. Ms. Johnston, a Cub Run junior, said it was her first meeting and that she was asking about the application, dues and club activities. STUDENT NATIONAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION: (Front row) J. Blessing, N. Byrd, C. Potter. (Back row) L. Mullins, D. Moore, R. Felty, S. Bachert. 275 Organizations 276 Organizations Getting organized con Sigma Delta Chi PRSSA Ad Club Broadcasting Association Sigma Delta Chi members aren’t joking when they say their organization allows them to “rub shoulders” with professional journal- ists. Member Margaret Shirley met and joked with Myron Farber at the national convention in Birmingham, Ala., in November. Farber, a New York Times reporter, spent 40 days in jail in 1978 for contempt of court. His newspaper was fined $285,000 for not releasing his files to a Bergen County, N.J., judge in the case of Dr. Mario Jascalevich, accused of murder in deaths of hospital pa- tients in 1966. SIGMA DELTA CHI: (Front row) M. Shirley, C. Scott, N. Salato, A. Scott. (Second row) J. Highland, G. Jones, R. Malone, T. Eblen, D. Krider. (Back row) B. Skipper, D. Beard, R. Reeves, T. Beshear, C. Smith. Miss Shirley and other members also heard speeches by Jody Powell, President Jimmy Carter’s press secretary, and “‘Bear’’ Bryant, Alabama football coach, who discussed allow- ing female journalists into the locker room. SDX also brought speakers to the Hill, ac- cording to vice president Roger Malone. David Hawpe, Louisville Times city editor, Sy Ram- sey, Associated Press Frankfort bureau chief, and Western graduates Alfina and Don Bruce and Bill Wolfe discussed business and political reporting and community journalism with the college journalists. Malone said the members sponsored a Mark of Excellence competition for high school stu- dents in Kentucky. The winners were honored at a spring luncheon at Western where a $400 scholarship was presented. Malone said the members also attended a regional convention in South Bend, Ind., and sponsored a luncheon where Freedom of Infor- mation spokesmen made presentations. Dona- tions made at the event were forwarded to the Legal Defense Fund, a nationwide focus of the professional journalism society. — Judy Watson PRssa’s major activity didn’t take place any- where near campus. In fact, the club went all the way to New Orleans to do it. Western’s chapter of PRSSA — the Public Relations Student Society of America — acted as host chapter for the national conven- tion in New Orleans in October. Several members played prominent roles at the convention. Dan Pelino was national chair- man and seniors Joan Provost and Debbie An- derson planned and scheduled the convention, beginning a year in advance, Ms. Provost said. PRSSA also created public relations cam- paigns for Norton Children’s Hospital in Louis- ville and for the financial aid office. The group also planned several workshops and seminars throughout the year, secretary Laura Niemann said. Joie Lanham, a Corbin sophomore who was elected district secretary at the convention, said being in PRSSA “‘is just experience while you’re still in college. Now you can afford your mistakes — it won’t cost you a job.” The Ad Club is a blend of professionalism and pleasure. At least that’s what member Lisa Farris said, explaining why she joined. “I thought it would be fun, actually,” she said. But she said she might be able to ‘‘meet people, make connections that could be advan- tageous later on.” According to member Miles Steenbergen, the club functions on a professional level. He said the club prepared an entry for the American Advertising Federation district com- petition. Steenbergen said the competition and con- tact with professional advertisers is the prima- ry benefit of the Ad Club. Although this was its first year, the Broad- casting Association was busy — making connections. DEBBIE ANDERSON, Susan Taylor, Sherry Egan and other PRSSA members paste up a financial aid supplement to the Herald. The supplement explained financial aid op- portunities for students and was one of several PRSSA projects. ‘‘Pasting up” is placing copy, headlines and pic- tures exactly as they will appear on the page. PUBLIC RELATIONS STUDENT SOCIETY OF AMERICA: (Front row) M. Bryant, R. Redding, M. Hebert, T. Witten, D. Pelino, R. Carey, R. Blann. (Second row) A. Reece, L. Niemann, S. Crook, S. Rosenbaum, G. Ballance, C. Smith. (Third row) J. Lane, S. Roberts, D. Hagan, M. Newton, K. Rideout, W. Cortus, J. Lanham. (Back row) J. Reed, F. Rowland, K. Kille, S. Bray. The connections are “‘a working relationship _ hardt said. with the Birmingham Youth Orchestra at the national Sig- ma Delta Chi convention. The convention was in Birming- according to vice president Roger Malone. on cable TV. AD CLUB: (Front row) R. Whitaker, L. Whalen, M. Hillebrand, C. Sheridan, N. Saunders. (Second row) M. Draper, G. Allen, M. Peak, T. Hammond, M. Steenber- gen. (Back row) T. Evans, D. Knauer, L. Farris, A. Curran, M. Reid, A. Williams, P. Nunn. Erhardt said he decided to form the club with outside professionals,” president Phil Er- Member Richard Stone said the Broadcast- because “there was a need for a broadcasters ing Association “brings together all the people _ association on campus just as there was a need FACULTY ADVISER Jim Highland joins in a singalong interested in the same type of thing.” for SDX (Sigma Delta Chi, professional jour- “The same type of thing” included lectures, _ nalism society) and PRSSA (Public Relations ham, Ala., in November. About 15 members attended, 2 Planned video festival and a panel discussion Student Society of America).” continued on page 282 { — Bob Skipper BROADCASTING ASSOCIATION: (Front row) R. Stone, S. Anderson, J. Mor- ris, G. Hartung, M. Mangus. (Second row) J. Fulmer, T. Glore, T. Johnson, P. Garrett, D. Garrett, J. Keeton. (Back row) B. Berry, M. Marlow, P. Erhardt, S. Rosenbaum, G. Goin. 277 Organizations — Mark Lyons PRODUCTION NIGHTS can get crowded as staffers assemble around the three light tables to proofread, write headlines and fit copy and pictures. Photo editor David Frank maneuvers around fall semester editor Tom Eblen to measure the space for the front page picture. Behind the bylines Juggling school and work is not new to them. And for many on the College Heights Her- ald, work is where they get some of their real education. Bryan Armstrong, spring semester editor, said he worked from 40 to 60 hours a week. A lot of decision making, writing, interviewing and production work make up those hours. “GPAs have suffered from it,”’ he said. ‘“But we have a professional attitude, and we take pride in putting out a good paper.” Being professional, for most Herald staffers, means more than beating deadlines and put- ting out an attractive paper. A lot of profes- sionalism goes into deciding what to put in the paper and how to treat it. The staff tries to ‘reach a compromise be- tween what the people need to know and want to know,” Armstrong said. “It’s all subjective. We have a lot of disagreement on the staff. “Sometimes the little things you never really think about, you get a big response about,” he said. ‘‘Like the rape story (which reported a student was raped in Ivan Wilson Fine Arts Center). We said she wasn’t hurt, but a lot of people came down on us and said she wasn’t hurt physically.” HIS FIRST INTERVIEW after being named interim presi- dent, Dr. John Minton talks to editor Bryan Armstrong. Minton told Armstrong that he was going to be president and that he didn’t look at it as a fill-in job. — Mark Lyons SRO NR ACTS OM. And decisions that occupy hours of discus- sion and cause heated arguments are passed over by the readers, he said. “A lot of tempers flared” over the question of running a picture of Marla Pitchford, a for- mer student who was the first woman to be tried for performing an abortion on herself. “Td never been under pressure like that,” Armstrong, who was fall managing editor, said. He finally decided to run the picture because “it was news, and it was a news picture.’”’ No readers complained. The Herald is also professional in that it sometimes gets the story before “‘profession- al” newspapers do, according to some staffe rs. A knowledgeable source who leaked the names of presidential candidates gave the Her- ald several scoops. “A scoop is not the objective of getting the news,” managing editor Alan Judd said. “‘It’s nice that other newspapers have to quote us. It’s satisfying to see.” The paper wasn’t as successful financially as it has been, Armstrong said. Part of the prob- lem was that the fall and spring advertising staffs were completely new, with the exception of the ad manager and one salesperson. Another change for the staff was the naming of two managing editors, rather than one. Da- vid Whitaker and Judd shared the title in the spring. “It’s a new concept for us,”’ Whitaker said. “We’re kind of new at it, but it’s worked out. — David Frank A GOAL is a prop for Scott Robinson at the women’s basketball game against Morehead in the OVC tournament. Western lost, 77-72. The away game was one of few that the photographers covered. Robinson was chief photogra- pher and photo editor in the spring semester. “It’s my first semester in any kind of leader- ship position. But the job descriptions are spe- cific, and we know what we’re supposed to do.” The paper continued its string of awards, winning its 14th consecutive All-American rat- ing for the 1978 spring semester. The award, from Associated Collegiate Press, is the high- est given and recognizes excellence in content and coverage, writing and editing, editorial leadership, appearance, and photography. Adviser Bob Adams was named the nation’s outstanding newspaper adviser for four-year colleges at the national ACP convention in Houston, Texas. Armstrong, fall semester editor Tom Eblen and ad manager Miles Steenbergen also at- tended the ACP convention, and several mem- bers went to the Kentucky Intercollegiate Press Association convention in Louisville. Working together, attending conventions and partying together make the Herald a close- knit staff. “Working together so much, people tend to become friends,” Judd said. ‘‘But still, you don’t have to like everyone. Some of my clos- est friends work for the Herald, and some of my closest friends don’t even read it.” Reporter Amy Galloway said: “It’s hard not to be biased. But I think it’s one of the best college papers I’ve ever seen.” — Sara-Lois Kerrick [| — Harold Sinclair A LEAD leaves sports editor Beth Taylor frustrated during a late night at the office. d — Mark Lyons FREQUENT VISITORS, Donna Stringer and Angela Thompson watch ad manager Miles Steenbergen work. Donna is the daughter of journalism instructor Carolyn St.inger, and Angela’s mother is university publications secretary JoAnn Thompson. iA IR ALE NE — Mark Lyons A BALLOON and handmade “arts”’ sign lend a little cul- ture to the arts editor’s desk. Elise Frederick, fall semester arts editor, looks over notes while writing a story. The arts page covered plays, concerts and movies. GETTING A PIE in the face is a tradition for graduating seniors on the staff. Terri Darr is drenched with whipped cream after being hit by David Whitaker. The ritual took place on her last production night before her graduation after the fall semester first bi-term. — Mark Lyons 279 Herald 280 Talisman 4 ' +] | | | } | | q q { 4 t] 5 i f } | | i Behind the book f isn’t easy. But then, no one said putting together a 456-page book would be. For the 1979 staff, completing a Talisman may have been a little more difficult than usual — or at best, a little more confusing. The whole staff combined may have had a year’s experience in college yearbooks. With little experience to guide them, the road was often rocky for the editors and staff. Editor Sara-Lois Kerrick, who was Herald assistant managing editor in spring 1978, had never worked on a book before. And although managing editor Lisa Roberts was editor of her high school yearbook, she had worked only a semester on the Talisman. It was a similar story with the rest of the staff. But the year’s work became smoother and smoother with Miss Kerrick’s past in newspa- pers, Miss Roberts’ knowledge about year- books in general, the staff’s patience and will- ingness and adviser Roger Loewen’s guidance. The book actually began in May 1978 when Miss Kerrick and Miss Roberts were named editors. The two, who had barely known each other before, exchanged ideas and plans at a college yearbook workshop in Athens, Ohio, in August. Because neither had been personally in- volved in the makings of previous books, it was easy to praise and criticize the books’ layouts, stories and ideas. With a new perspective, the two suggested focusing more on students in the administra- tion and academics section, and putting some Greek activities, which had been in student life, in the organizations section. As the year progressed, changes and changes were made. When President Dero Downing resigned, the administration section suddenly gained 10 pages. When the men’s basketball and football teams had outstanding seasons, color and more pages were added. But perhaps one of the more important im- provements was in the concept of the book itself. The book returned to cleaner layouts and bigger pictures, and the editors tried to keep stories as concise as possible. Stories and pictures were designed to touch each of 13,000 students. The staff had high standards and goals to maintain, along with a reputation to keep. The 1978 Talisman won a Trendsetter, the highest national award from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association, for the fifth consecutive year. It placed an added pressure to “‘keep up the good work.” The fact that it was Loewen’s last year as adviser also placed pressure on the staff. Loewen, who came to Western in 1971 and guided five Trendsetters, resigned to do free- lance photography and become a regional dis- tributor for Supreme Industries, a major manu- facturer of ski boats. Work was divided between pondering who would be the next adviser, lamenting Loewen’s decision and trying to make the book as good as possible. Often, it was difficult to reach such stan- dards. The photography staff, which shrank from 14 to 8 members since last year, received WEARY after a long day of work, editor Sara-Lois Kerrick takes a break at her desk. Miss Kerrick worked primarily with writing and editing, while managing editor Lisa Roberts dealt with layouts and photos. — Harold Sinclair CHEERLEADER Shelley Phillips provides some pictures for chief photographer Mark Lyons. Four out of six photos on the cheerlead- ing spread were taken by Lyons. an additional burden when chief photographer Lewis Gardner broke his leg in September. With a hip-high cast, Gardner found it hard to keep up with his job, and Mark Lyons stepped in to take his place. There were only a handful of steady work- ers, but Herald reporters and “freelancing” students contributed several stories. During the rocky fall semester, moral sup- port was frequently needed and frequently gotten from Donna Buckles, graduate assistant and 1977 Talisman editor. Working up to 70 hours a week, each staff member still found time to play, and office hours were combined with pizza eating, deco- rating the chalkboard with caricatures and slo- gans, teasing each other endlessly and just talk- ing. The year wasn’t easy. But it was fun. LC] 5 A NVM (1Gd 861 1) Opa Ay f omcecwnobe | Ul x oe — Mark Lyons THE CHALKBOARD in the office was often covered with art. Staff member Steven Stines draws a whip-cracking caricature of editor Sara-Lois Kerrick after she had re- turned from a convention with a souvenir whip. — Mark Tucker BITS AND PIECES of the classes section surround man- aging editor Lisa Roberts as she prepares the Homecoming spreads for the first major deadline. The February deadline included 156 pages. COVERING THE NEWS as it happened helped in writing stories accurately and promptly. Greeks editor Kathy Lam interviews Anita Orr minutes after she was crowned Miss Black Western in Garrett Conference Center. — Mark Tucker — Mark Tucker 281 Talisman | | | Getting organized con Home Economics Association Phi Upsilon Omicron ASID Western Players Alpha Psi Omega Kappa Pi They’re misunderstood. “Home economics is more than just cooking and sewing ,” Sherree Melhiser, Home Eco- nomics Association member, said. According to Miss Melhiser, most people aren’t aware of the many areas in the home economics field. In addition to the more traditional roles, the home ec department includes textiles and clothing, family relations, consumer education, energy conservation and dietetics. The 15 club members are all working to- ward a major in some area of home economics, according to dietetics major Rosemary Kirk. The club’s main objective is to “promote professionalism among students by encourag- ing them to become active in the Kentucky Home Economics Association and the Ameri- can Home Economics Association when they get out of school,’’ Miss Melhiser said. Miss Melhiser, the state student association president, said she would like to see more members in the student chapter. “Membership in the student organization has helped me build contacts with people in many areas of home economics at various loca- tions,” she said. Miss Kirk said the club allows her to partici- pate in activities students don’t do in home ec classes. Demonstrations at the club’s monthly meetings in the fall included cake decorating, oriental cooking and crafts. The association had a one-day workshop in the fall for student chapters across the state. Speakers lectured and demonstrated non-tra- ditional roles in home ec. The speakers includ- ed a former food photographer and a repre- HOME ECONOMICS ASSOCI- ATION: (Front row) E. Thompson, R. Kirk. (Back row) C. Harper, G. Howlett. PHI UPSILON OMICRON: (Front row) J. Hershey, L. Hortin, K. Schlensker, J. Costin, M. Pike, T. Withers. (Back row) D. Wilmore, S. Melhiser, D. Robe, R Kirk, K. Lentz, C. Wade, D. Hobson, B. Walker. sentative from the Indiana Dairy and Nutrition Council. The state meeting, April 5-6 in Louisville, featured exhibits from publishing and manufac- turing companies around the United States. Students sampled products, received discounts on purchases and observed new products on the market. Miss Melhiser said, “‘I’d like to see the stu- dent organization promote the home econom- ics image in Bowling Green by getting more involved in community events.”’ Rita Young, a Glasgow senior, joined Phi Up- silon Omicron “because it was an honor to be asked to join. You have to have good grades and show leadership qualities,” the in- terior design major said. Phi Upsilon Omicron is a home economics honorary society with 50 members from var- ious fields, such as home economics education, textiles and clothing, merchandising and interi- or design. After going to a tea the fraternity spon- sored, Laura Hortin, an Evansville senior, de- cided she wanted to join Phi U. “‘It’s helped me get to know about the different fields in home ec and about the kids I have classes with,” she said. This year the fraternity sponsored several projects for charity, particularly with the Little Sisters program and the Lyon’s School for the Handicapped. “We gave skating and Halloween parties and a Christmas tree-trimming party for the children at the Lyon’s school,” club president dill Costin said. In February the group sponsored a lasagna dinner to raise money for their projects, one of which is to award a scholarship to a club mem ber. Being a member of the American Society of Interior Designers is one step toward a career in interior design, president Patty Brat- ton said. ““ASID prepares members for professional- ism — after you are licensed as a designer you can affiliate with the professional ASID club,” Miss Bratton said. The club meets several times during the year and has guest speakers on subjects relat- ing to interior design. During one meeting the club invited a local realtor to speak on buying at auctions. The 48-member organization also goes to regio nal professional ASID meetings. Sandy Potter, a Floyd Knobs, Ind., freshman, said she enjoyed a trip to Columbus, Ohio. ‘We learned more about how the job works after touring old houses in Columbus that had been restored and refurnished,” she said. Miss Potter said she joined ASID because it is a professional organization that she can stay active in after college. Since ASID is a stepping stone to the profes- sional organization of licensed designers, many members join with the hopes that membership will help in finding jobs after graduation. Margie Fulks, an Elizabethtown senior, said she joined because “‘I thought it would help me get a job, and it looks good on a resume.” Although actors generally prefer to flaunt re- sumes full of accounts of past work, inexperi- ence is the best reason to join the Western Players. At least that’s why Tracy Wilson joined. “I'd heard all the people were very nice and very talented, and I thought I could learn from them,” the Louisville sophomore said. She said she thinks people join the group to “meet new people and start learning the ropes. | don’t think you can ever really learn it all.” Member Erin Brady agreed. She cited the group’s Cabaret as one way of gaining exper- ience. Anyone at all can come and do an act at the variety show staged every semester, she said. In addition to the Cabaret, the Western Play- ers also sold punch and cookies during chil- dren’s theater productions, went to Barren River Reservoir for a picnic and had several holiday parties. Ms. Brady, a Louisville junior, said the social aspect of the club is important. “It serves to unite the students, especially AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERIOR DESIGNERS: (Front row) J. Howe, J. Lowe, S. Potter, M. Durham, N. Lacy, E. Hay, D. Stone. (Second row) D. Wilmore, L. Cissell, J. Kain, J. Rader, P. Bratton, P. Ertner, K. Osborne, J. Williams, D. Case, D. Hobson, L. Branstetter. (Back row) M. Fulks, S. Jackson, C. Stockton, E. McDivitt, D. Caines, J. Fuqua, D. Galloway, S. White, C. Harper. the freshmen who are in it. It’s tough to break into a theater department.” Ms. Wilson said it helps upperclassmen, too. “Tf you think you know it all, you might as well hang it up,” she said. ““There’s always more to learn.” Membership in Alpha Psi Omega is “just an honor.” The club provided a scholarship for one of its members, sold punch at the major theater productions, sold children’s theater T-shirts and kept a photographic record of major pro- ductions. But at its base, “‘it’s just kind of an honor among the actors,” Louisville junior Erin Brady said. Beth Buchanan, a Lexington senior, said, “It’s an honor. You do it because it looks good on your resume and because a lot of kids in the department are in it. It’s not really a club.” The members are chosen on the basis of achievement in theater, Ms. Brady said. The national organization emphasizes acting, but because Western also emphasizes the technical aspects of theater, “‘we had to change (the guidelines) to emphasize a lot of tech,” she said. Beyond the professional aspects, Bill Hanna a Lexington senior, said Alpha Psi “‘is kind of a social organization. You get to work with some of the best people in school.” Kappa Pi is still “‘quite in the embryo stage,” Candy Bush, one-third of the honorary art or- ganization’s members, said. The other two members are Louisville junior Jeff Griffin and Bowling Green junior Kathy Hancock. Griffin said he and the two women were eligible because of their grade-point averages and because a faculty member asked them to join. Ms. Hancock said because of the size of the group ‘‘we barely have enough people to elect officers. continued on page 284 AT RUSSELL Miller Theatre’s box office, Western Play- érs member Kathy Ballard sorts through reserved tickets for ‘“‘You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown.” The club man- aged the box office and ushered at several of the theater department’s productions. WESTERN PLAYERS: (Front row) D. Hussey, J. Fisher, K. Ballard, A. Carlotta, H. Watts, C. Bush, T. Wilson. (Second row) B. Barton, T. Yates, E. Brady, M. Elmore, R. Bitsko, R. Reinle, R. Owsley, J. Gaither, D. aa Se ee ALPHA PSI OMEGA: (Front row) A. Gorman, J. KAPPA PI: C. Bush, J. Griffin, K. Hancock. Pickett, J. Fisher, S. Chambers. (Back row) B. Hanna, B. Buchanan, T. Tutino, E. Brady, R. Reinle. Lacaden. (Back row) D. Ransdell, R. Stockwell, P. Shirey, R. Veech, J. Prather, A. Gorman, P. Spaulding, T. Tutino. Getting organized con. Ragland Library Club GLSSA Marantha FCA Speculative Fiction Society International Students RAGLAND LIBRARY CLUB: row) C. Patton, K. Best, A. Marcum, L. Elms. (Back row) L. Cooper, C. Hall, M. Gwaltney. 284 Organizations (Front row) D. Miller, J. Leffew, C. Cyr. (Second GRADUATE LIBRARY SCIENCE STUDENT ASSOCIATION: (Front row) R. Smith, B. Blair, M. Linarez, O. Linarez. (Back row) L. Smith, B. Moore, J. Branson. There’s not a single little old lady in the Rag- land Library Club. “Librarians are one of the most stereo- typed things on this campus,” Cindy Patton, an Eddyville senior, said. ‘‘We aren’t all little old maids with our hair up in buns.” Members sponsored a Homecoming candi- date and won a Homecoming float award. They planned to spend the award money ona field trip to Nashville, Tenn., Ms. Patton said. It looks good on a resume. That’s why students join organizations like the Graduate Library Science Student As- sociation, president Becky Moore said. ‘“‘Employers like to see things like that,”’ she said. ‘‘Plus, it gives us a chance to get together and share ideas.” The club has been relatively inactive, Mrs. Moore said. ‘“‘The graduate students are so involved in other things,” she said. ‘Things like clubs take a back seat.” But some members have attended meetings with the Ragland Library Club, and the two — Scott Robinson MARANATHA: (Front row) P. Moretz, B. Smith, L. Conradi, S. Lewis, M. Ferguson, D. Clark, E. Thompson. (Second row) M. Riley, S. Hook, K. Futrell, S. Hoagland, I. Bryant, M. Holder, R. Coghill, D. Thornton, D. Abney, C. Taylor, T. Ndubueze, C. Owens. (Third row) B. Janes, B. Greschel, C. Kelly, J. Muffet, G. Taylor, G. Futch, D. Vance, A. Okpala, D. Johnson, K. Morris. (Back row) C. Goodrum, M. MacDonald, K. Giles, R. Mason, J. Lewis, E. Anene, L. Klein, J. Abney, C. Bonner. clubs made a Homecoming float together. The float won the Red Towel Award. Critics of Maranatha don’t understand the purpose of the group, members say. That purpose, according to Margaret Mac- Donald, an Eminence sophomore, is to provide “a practical place for Christian training and friendship with other Christians.”’ “It’s inevitable that there will be criticism in any house of God,”’ she said. “‘Criticism moves you to want to excel even more.” Maranatha members are involved in an as- sortment of activities, Ms. MacDonald said. The group sponsored speakers and music groups as parts of religious programs, she said. “All of the people at Maranatha house have their hearts and minds set on one thing — to make Jesus the Lord of th eir lives in exper- HANDS RAISED, Maranatha members sing during a Jan- uary meeting featuring Tony Fitzgerald, a “lover of God”’ from Great Britain. Maranatha sponsored several programs featuring guest speakers and musicians. CONVERSATION over dinner keeps Neda Fardi, 2%, and her mother, Ghoodsi Fardi, wide-eyed. The two were at the International Club’s celebration of Confucius’ birth- day. Mrs. Fardi’s husband, Majid, is a graduate student. sgt hs FELLOWSHIP OF CHRISTIAN ATHLETES: (Front row) A. Polson, M. Jeannette, P. Walters, S. Wigginton, P. Wood, S. Buhay, S. Reynolds. (Second row) D. Van Atti, S. Harris, V. Dixon, B. Bogdan, C. Meeker, A. Speicher, B. Merideth, B. Carby, B. Bell, B. Haynes, J. Feix. (Third row) R. White, F. Tate, J. Gifford, C. Van Fleet, J. Lockin, B. Bradley, J. Morgan, C. ience rather than just in words.” Every other Thursday evening the football locker room lights are on, but the pep talks focus on athletes’ relationships with Jesus Christ instead of on game plans. The Fellowship of Christian Athletes mushroomed from 10 to more than 40 mem- bers who are athletes, team managers and spectators, according to president Pete Wal- ters. “We try to love everybody, athlete and non- athlete, for what they are,’ Walters said. “If they’re not starters for the football team, we accept them as people, and our stars are peo- ple, too.” The non-denominational group watched filmed testimonies of well-known athletic per- sonalities such as Dallas Cowboys coach Tom Landry. A picnic and February banquet were also featured, Walters said. Everything from “The Lord of the Rings” to “Battlestar Galactica” — that’s what specula- tive fiction is, and that’s what the Speculative Fiction Society deals with. “It’s more than just science fiction,’ Debra Hussey, a Nashville, Tenn., junior, said. Long, T. Smits, T. Rose. (Back row) M. Curnutte, M. Blackburn, J. Tichenor, J. White, M. Miller, T. Barron, J. Tinius, B. McDonald. “That’s why we call it speculative fiction.” Club member Anita Ramsey said there’s a lot going on now because of the current sci- ence-fiction craze caused by movies and televi- sion. This popularity helps in interesting a lot more people in the club, the Bowling Green freshman said. Once they join, members go on field trips, hear lectures about trends and phenomena like UFOs, and socialize together — they watch “Battlestar Galactica’”’ on a wide-screen televi- sion every Sunday night at a local pizza parlor, Ms. Hussey said. The evening news is sometimes their only glimpse of home in months. Being able to get together to talk about international developments is a major benefit of the International Students, Oanh Do, a sophomore biology major from Vietnam, said. Volunteers help bewildered newcomers move into dorms and set up banking. They also brief foreign students in city and state laws and help them buy insurance and cars. The members raised $600 in one semester in hopes of giving foreign students partial assis- tantships of $60 to $70 per month, Miss Chou said. continued on page 286 INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS: (Front row) N. Chou, B. Lawrence, Z. Jweihan, O. Do, M. Sadeghi. (Second row) N. Papaioannou, S. Aoeyemi, S. Ghuniem, K. Ghuiveim, M. Jembe, F. Boisse. (Back row) V. Miller, A. Zant, L. Perkins, O. Sharif, R. Lui, C. Patton. SPECULATIVE FICTION SOCIETY: (Front row) R. Sheppard, A. Fennelly, P. Molloy, J. Woosley, M. Robertson. (Second row) V. Hagee, D. Hussey, A. Ramsey, D. Shaw, S. Cox. (Back row) B. Hirst, R. Tyler, G. Robe, R. Halleron, T. Cannon. Getting organized con. Pershing Rifles Scabbard and Blade Special Forces Rebelettes Students join Pershing Rifles for reasons ‘fas varied as the people in the organization,” Capt. Greg Lowe, adviser, said. “First, there’s the desire to develop profes- sionalism,”’ he said. “Then there’s the competi- tive aspect. The drill team competes against other schools.” Finally, there’s ‘“‘wanting to belong to a group,” he said. Members provided the color guard and ushered at ballgames and were traffic control- lers for a 10-kilometer run through Bowling Green. _At the beginning of the spring semester, they prepared for the March drill season, which included competition at Fort Campbell and Cincinnati. Michael Bizer, a Fort Knox junior, said the Pershing Rifles offered the ‘“‘best all-around deal for becoming an officer” in the Army. Field training helps members “‘learn how to run and carry a weapon. The national honor society for military science students, Scabbard and Blade, has found a way to break the routine of club meetings. Once a month, at 6:45 a.m., the organiza- tion meets in a local restaurant for a breakfast meeting and to hear a guest speaker. Of the three military science organizations on campus, Scabbard and Blade is the largest with 38 members. Each fall they sponsor a military ball and in AN ARM’S LENGTH is the correct distance apart for the Rebelettes. Tonya Lawson, a Beaver Dam freshman, touch- es Audrey McLean, a Fort Knox sophomore, to make sure she’s got the right distance during practice. Sabers added a new look to the drill team, and Lillie Woodard, a Russell- ville sophomore, said they had to be careful in using them. “They’re real sharp,” she said. — Scott Robinson PERSHING RIFLES: (Front row) G. Lowe, C. Ashby, F. Haynes. (Back row) D. Kolb, M. Bizer, S. Johnson, S. Lyle. SCABBARD AND BLADE: (Front row) B. Bewley, V. Richey, B. Bowers, J. Baggett, D. Kolb, K. Day. (Second row) M. Schulte, D. Crowell, S. Johnson, J. Kem, D. Shaw, W. Eskridge, T. Crafton, E. Miller, F. Haynes, V. Lopolito, C. Burden. (Back row) M. Koeckert, L. Chappell, S. Thomas, K. Wettig, T. Leslie, M. Bizer, S. Lyle. 286 Organizations Eee the spring have a formal dinner called ‘Dining Bobby Bowers, a Russellville senior and the club’s executive officer, said the group is also involved with community service projects. “‘When we have time, we try to help others out,’ Bowers said. Scabbard and Blade took that time out to sponsor a marathon run and also helped the local health clinic with a high-blood pressure and immunization clinic for the elderly. Bowers said he joined because it represent- ed the “‘elite of the military science class.”’ Capt. Bill Bewley, adviser, said he believes the organization prepares students for active military duty. “It’s really a maturing process,”’ he said. Special Forces offers that little extra. That is, extra training, according to its members. Scott Thomas, a Rockfield junior, said he joined ‘‘for the extra training. I was trying for a scholarship and it helped me.”’ Membership in the group allows one to “know more about military tactics and to be prepared for advanced ROTC camp, Joyce Laubenheimer, a Cocoa Beach, Fla., junior, said. “At first I hated it,” she said. “It was all just PT (physical training). Now I can see why it’s considered an elite organization because it takes a lot to go through it.” The “elite” are ahead of other ROTC mem- bers, according to Radcliff sophomore Ron Puckett. “T’ve learned a lot more than you do just in ROTC,” he said. ‘““You get ahead of every- body else in your class. “You get the enjoyment of going repelling more often.” He said for members who decide to join the Army, Special Forces “‘just gives you a little more insight” into tactics and weapons. Thomas said members “get a little more self-confidence.” “As far as Army material, you get more of a chance at leadership positions,” he said. All this extra derives from activities like the field training exercises the group sponsored and from individual projects like mountaineer- SPECIAL FORCES: (Front row) M. Schulte, B. Eskridge, L. Chappell, D. Shumate, S. Thomas. (Second row) C. Filip, R. Puckett, C. McNulty, M. Cox, D. Veech, M. Froebel, R. ing, Puckett said. The field training exercises involved several days of training, Ms. Laubenheimer said. “What I like mainly about it is that you don’t learn it in a classroom. You learn from your mistakes,”’ she said. “T like the people in it. We’re all just a big group.” It’s 11 p.m. on Tuesday or Thursday and most students are getting ready for bed or going out — except the Rebelettes, who are practicing in Diddle Arena. “That’s the only time the floor is available to practice on,” captain Tonya Lawson said. “‘It’s inconvenient, and some girls have quit the Re- belettes because of it.” The only membership requirement is a tryout. The Rebelettes have a four-day clinic at the first of the year to recruit and train women in drill basics. The women are then judged by the Pershing Rifles and the Rebelettes. During the fall they marched in the Home- coming parade and performed at several bas- ketball games. “‘We also worked at the an- nouncer’s table and the information desk dur- ing registration,” Connie White said. Howard, B. Stowers. (Back row) S. Doyle, M. Koeckert, J. Laubenheimer, G. Wilson, M. Jaffre, N. Taylor, K. Day, K. Martin. To raise money for travel to drill meets, the Rebelettes ushered at football and basketball games. They also had a Homecoming dance, a Thanksgiving dinner and a Christmas party. During the spring the Rebelettes competed at Dayton, Ohio, Cincinnati and Fort Campbell for the National Drill Team competition. Lillie Woodard said they use a stylized type of drill. “It’s not the Army regulation-type drill,” she said. ‘‘A drill is prepared to last nine minutes and sometimes we have to add or subtract to it, to adapt to the size of the floor.” Vicki Compton said she had no experience before joining the Rebelettes. “‘I went to one of the practices and decided to try out,”’ she said. “IT made it, and I’m so glad I did. I’ve learned a lot about discipline — a whole lot. “Being a Rebelette allows you to travel toa lot of different places and meet lots of different people. You learn to work with other people and make a lot of friends.”’ continued on page 290 A SMOKER provides an informal atmosphere for pledge- master Stanley Dewayne Johnson to explain the benefits of the Pershing Rifles to C.J. Taylor, a Henderson junior and Rebelette. Karin Neergaard, a Marcellus, N.Y., freshman, and Forest Haynes, a Louisville junior, watch the discus- sion. Miss Taylor later pledged. Sa 7.) ohm, his go ie — Harold Sinclair REBELETTES: (Front row) L. Woodard, T. Lawson, C. White, J. Malone. (Back row) C. Shelton, C. Taylor, D. Pursley, V. Compton, A. McLean, K. Neergard, V. Hannah. 287 Organizations EMPTY ROWS stare at president Steve Thornton during USING HIS HANDS, Victor Jackson makes a point dur- A GAVEL serves as a chin rest and a parliamentary tool a Jan. 23 meeting. Thornton said “‘it’s kind of like church ing a meeting. Jackson was on several committees and was _ for president Steve Thornton during a meeting. ASG met — everyone gets there early to sit in the back.” very active, according to Herald reporter Tom Beshear. each Tuesday in Downing University Center. Making news about entertainment Photos by Mark Lyons Entertainment occupied most of Associated Student Government’s time in the fall and spring semesters. But perhaps the most important issue was minority representation on the Board of Re- gents’ presidential screening committee. _ Forty black students, most of them members of the campus chapter of the National Associ- ation for the Advancement of Colored People and of the United Black Students, asked ASG to appoint a minority student to the screening committee at an October meeting. Two stu- dents were to be chosen in a campus election for the committee. NAACP president Anita Orr said there was little chance that Victor Jackson, the only black student running, could win the election, since minority students constitute only 6'2 per- cent of students. The regents eventually appointed a black elementary school principal from Russellville err 2 and a female associate professor of home eco- nomics and family living from Western to the committee. Steve Thornton, ASG president and student regent, had requested that the regents appoint the minority members. Though the representation issue was an at- tention-getter, problems with ASG’s entertain- ment planning were harder to solve. In the early fall, ASG said it would sign a contract with Sunshine Promotions, an Indiana- polis concert promotion firm. According to ASG activities vice president David Carwell, Sunshine met the three require- ments for an outside promoter: having an of- fice within 500 miles of Western, having pro- moted at least 75 major concerts and having grossed at least $2 million on those concerts. Shortly before the Nov. 3 Player and Exile concert, however, it was revealed that the con- tract between Western and Sunshine had nev- er been signed. Sunshine had refused to sign because of a $100,000 performance bond, which would guarantee payment of all bills. Sunshine said the bond was unreasonable because Indiana insurance companies were asking for 100 per- ASG NEWSLETTERS, many unread, lie on the floor of Pearce-Ford Tower. The $800 for the newsletter was once given to the Student Volunteer Bureau, which served as a liaison between students and community agencies. But in late spring 1978, Steve Thornton said the bureau was not a “student service” and ASG voted to cut its funds. cent collateral and a $2,000 service fee for the bond. Sunshine later posted an “‘irrevocable letter of credit,’’ a check Western could cash if the concert bills were not paid. ASG also began publishing a newsletter. At its last meeting in 1978, the congress voted to cut funding to the Student Volunteer Bureau and give $800 to start a newsletter. Copies were put in dorm residents’ mailboxes. The bureau had shared office space with ASG and worked with students and community agencies. During the spring semester, entertainment was still the topic of discussion. The regents approved a proposal that took some responsibility for activities from ASG and placed it under a revamped University Center Board. The move takes effect in fall 1979. “The center board proposal will be impor- tant,’ Thornton said. ‘““Many would think we (ASG) lost some power, but it was the best proposal for the student body.” ASG came a step closer to a student evalua- tion of the faculty when it approved a question- naire form with the unlikely name of the Pur- due Cafeteria System. Under the system, teachers may choose questions from a list of several hundred for their evaluations. Thus, each teacher can make out an evaluation form different from forms used by other teachers. Each form, however, will have “‘core’’ ques- tions that are the same for each teacher. Jack- son, faculty evaluation committee chairman, said the core questions are the only ones that will be made public because of the printing expense involved. Jackson said the system will cost about $6,500 to purchase and execute the first year and about $5,000 each year after that. The evaluations are scheduled to begin in the fall 1979 semester, he said. ASG also approved a new constitution which was approved by the student body at the April general elections. It established 24 separate races for the 24 representative-at-large seats on ASG congress. David Young, administrative vice president, said this was done to “force some heads-up competition” between candidates. The new constitution also changed the du- ties of the activities vice president so they would be in line with the new center board. — Tom Beshear and Catherine Hancock | Getting organized con. Pi Sigma Alpha Phi Eta Sigma Pi Mu Epsilon Gamma Sigma Sigma Omicron Delta Kappa Membership in Pi Sigma Alpha, the political science honor society, helped Alan Reid adjust to a job as a state administrative intern. “Being in Pi Sigma Alpha gives a lot of personal motivation,” the Bowling Green ju- nior said. “It also looks good on a transcript.” According to Reid, most members plan to go to law school. “T’m heading for a career in politics,” he said, ‘‘and I’m now getting an opportunity to be with people who are studying the same discipline.” Adviser Dr. John Parker said, ‘“We don’t do a heck of a lot as far as activities are concerned — our main role is to recognize political func- | tions. “We sponsor speakers and have our annual banquet for initiation. Pi Sigma Alpha also car- ries the benefit of starting at a higher grade in civil service jobs.” Nancy Holman, a Glasgow senior, said she joined Pi Sigma Alpha because it recognized her academic achievement. ‘‘And to be honest, it looks good on a resume,” she said. Strictly honorary in nature, Phi Eta Sigma had few planned activities, according to mem- ber Jamie Hargrove. The annual initiation dur- ing Homecoming and the Outstanding Faculty and Alumnus awards were among the group’s activities. Consisting of members who have achieved a AFTER DONATING a pint of blood, Karen Stokes watch- es the nurse remove the needle from her arm. She was at the Bloodmobile sponsored by Gamma Sigma Sigma at the West Hall Cellar. Miss Stokes, a Greenville senior, said she has given blood for years. — Scott Robinson PI SIGMA ALPHA: (Front row) L. Phillips, N. Holman. (Back row) G. Baldwin, W. Sholar, C. Scott. PHI ETA SIGMA: (Front row) C. Snyder, S. Penn, L. Luttrell, A. Kiger, S. Gerteisen, P. Garmon, M. Schepers, V. Schofield. (Second row) V Woodard, J. Ashdon, S. Cossey, M. Shanahan, J. Cosby, S. Smith, J. Stotts, M. Browning. (Third row) L. Hill, C. Harper, S. Vogt, T. Thompson, M. Nakashige, R. Middleton, K. Tucker, D. Wilson, S. Wilwayco, M. Jackson, M. Jarvis, B. Hoover, L. Driver, M. Boze, K. Miller, B. Cherry. (Fourth row) J. Buckner, M. Hebert, H. Toomey, J. Sagabiel, A. Walker, S. Wigginton, M. Newman, S. Stone, B Fort, M. Greer, L. Fields. (Back row) L. Hunn, J. Plantinga, J. Hill, C. Massie, J. Hargrove, M. Froebel, L. Krampe, L. Del Buono, K. Young, V. Brevit, J. Cook. —— 290 Organizations 3.5 grade-point average either semester of their freshman year, the club “‘provides recog- nition for the academic achievement of its members,’’ Steve Penn said. Melanie Greer agreed. She called the organi- zation’s activities ‘‘like a pat on the back. It is for those who realized the seriousness of col- lege.” When asked why he joined, Bill Fort said, “It is a very good honor. I had wanted to make good grades the first year to prove I could make it on my own.” For underclassmen, getting accepted into Pi Mu Epsilon, math and computer science hon- orary society, can be a real challenge. Sophomores must have a 4.0 grade-point average in math or computer science classes and a 3.0 overall GPA. For juniors and seniors, getting in is a little easier — a 3.0 GPA in their major and a 2.9 overall GPA is required. “ We have one of the more active chapters in the nation,’ Dr. C.G. Wells, adviser, said. Several members have had their papers pub- lished in the honorary’s national magazine, he said. Pi Mu Epsilon annually sponsors a calculus contest for Western students, and cash prizes are given to the top winners. Members also work with Warren East High School in sponsoring a “‘math bowl.” Club members compose the test and keep score and time. Donald Taylor, a Beaver Dam senior, said he joined because “‘it looks good on my record and because the club has interesting programs on writing resumes and job possibilities.” Guest speakers are usually included at meet- ings. Three alumni discussed their careers in the math field. They also sponsored a skating party with the Computer Science Club and a picnic with the math faculty. President Dan Troutman said he joined after receiving the club’s math award when he was a sophomore. Troutman said he has “‘gotten to know a lot of teachers I wouldn’t otherwise know.” “We’re really a friendly bunch.” Providing service to others is what Gamma Sigma Sigma is all about. The 35-member service sorority visits Bowl- ing Green nursing homes, the Girls’ Club and day care centers as part of its weekly planned activities. Debbie Shoemaker said they teach children at day care centers the alphabet, colors and songs. The sorority also sponsored a disco as a fund-raising project for their community ser- vice activities. They also ushered at concerts and lectures, prepared the College Heights Herald for mail- ing and sent letters to alumni. In the fall the group went to Oakwood, a center for mentally retarded children in Somer- set, where they gave candy and balloons to the children, Marla Jo Kingrey said. They had a celebrity auction Feb. 20, ac- cording to Miss Kingrey. The money was given to the March of Dimes and other charities. Miss Kingrey said she got involved because she heard the sorority worked with children. The requirements for membership change each semester, according to Miss Kingrey. The fall pledges had to put in 30 service hours, while the spring pledges had only 25. They also have to do three projects, attend one pledge meeting a week and attend three active meetings. To maintain a minimum 3.2 grade-point aver- age and remain active in extracurricular activi- ties may seem a bit difficult to some students, but to members of Omicron Delta Kappa, it’s a way of life. ODK, the National Leadership Honor Soci- ety, recognizes achievement in scholarship and in major phases of campus activity, including athletics, campus government and the media. Adviser Jack Sagabiel said that honor soci- eties are the backbone of a university. “It’s an award for what a student does as an undergraduate,” he said. ““There is only one benefit of an honor society — prestige.” Member Bob Moore, former Associated Stu- dent Government president, said that prestige is the main reward. ‘““ODK is the most presti- gious honor society here,” he said. “It recog- nizes the things you’ve done — your activities and accomplishments. I was honored by just being offered an application to ODK.” According to Sagabiel, the term “‘honor soci- ety” is used loosely. “‘We just haven’t been using the term long enough for it to be a part of our tradition, but it will be in time,” he said. “‘Western is more football and basketball oriented. That’s why you see very little about honor societies here on campus.” Moore said that because honor societies are not publicized and emphasized, some qualified students don’t seek membership. “‘A lot of qualified people don’t join because they’re not even aware of the organization,” he said. ODK means a lot to students pursuing busi- ness fields, Sagabiel said. “When recruiters come in and observe honor societies, they know what they want,’ he said. “And of course, mention of an honor society always looks good on resumes.” ODK members aren’t very active. ““We pre- sent awards on awards day to outstanding leaders on campus,” Sagabiel said. “But we don’t do too much. The types of members we have are too active in other things.” continued on page 292 OMICRON DELTA KAPPA: (Front row) R. Moore, P. Pinckley, R. Henry. (Back row) D. Clark, S. Snodgrass, J. Callis, J. Sagabiel. GAMMA SIGMA SIGMA: (Front row) C. Ashby, M. Boemker, D. Shoemaker, D. Turrentine, M. George, N. Chapman, R. Davis. (Second row) C. Harper, P. Morgan, V. Dukes, D. Wilson, C. Owens, M. Kingrey, C. Turner, L. Elms, R. Vincent. (Back row) K. Stokes, D. Hancock, A. Vick, C. Martin, K. Owen, C. Strain, N. Stevenson, P. Payne. PI MU EPSILON: (Front row) B. Day, L. Daum, K. Kerr, A. Greenlee, M. Boucher, T. Logan. (Second row) D. Taylor, J. Snodgrass, D. Davis, J. Woosley, D. Troutman, G Wells. (Back row) S. Musgrave, D. Seth, J. Scott, R. Aikins, T. Neely, D. Cornett. 291 Organizations Getting organized con. Alpha Phi Omega Sigma Tau Delta Phi Alpha Theta Sigma Delta Pi Pi Delta Phi Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity is stuck in the middle. “To me, it’s a fraternity; it always will be,” club president Roy Mellott said. “I think some of the Greeks sell us short, and some of the independents don’t want to know us because we’re a fraternity.” As a fraternity, APO members “party” some, he said. “‘But our main function is help- ing other people. We’re different. APO is not for everybody; you have to be a special person to be a member. You have to care about your fellow man.” As a service organization, APO had projects with the Girls’ Club, the Boy Scouts and the Humane Society. Members also ushered at concerts, raised money for St. Jude Hospital in Memphis, Tenn., worked at the Special Olym- pics and sponsored the Ugly Man on Campus contest, in which organizations submit photos of “ugly men” and students vote with pennies for the ugliest. Two women were admitted to the group in the fall semester. “APO, as a national service fraternity, is not exempt from Title IX,”’ Mel- lott said. In 1976 the national office decided that women should be offered full member- ship. “They fit in pretty good,’ Mellott said. “Some people are against it mainly because we have Gamma Sigma Sigma (service soror- ity) on campus. Personally, I feel like if we pledge girls, why should we be affiliated with Gamma Sigma Sigma?”’ David Lawrence, a member for more than two years, said, “I’m against it. It’s not really together like it should be. It was more of a unity (before women were admitted).”’ ALPHA PHI OMEGA: (Front row) D. Harlow, S. Zimmerman, L. Elms, K. Ziegler, D. Elder. (Second row) J. Fairleigh, T. Appling, R. Mellott, J. Johnson, The unity came about from diversity, he said. ‘‘We’re all pretty different — from one extreme to another. We never have any con- flict because we all want to do the same thing.” But the women are becoming accepted, Mel- lott said. ““Most members are liberal and they think it’s a good idea. There’s really no hard feelings. They fit right in; they’re one of the guys.” Sigma Tau Delta members are imaginative- ly and intellectually stimulated, according to Dr. James Flynn, adviser to the English honor society. “They get an additional dimension to their education,” he said. The club’s activities included an initiation banquet with speaker Dr. Ahmed Alli, a slide presentation by Dr. Edwin Bowen on his trip to England, a poetry reading session with faculty and students, and a wiener roast. Member Cynthia Harper said, “Sigma Tau Delta gives you a better opportunity to be around people in your own field, which is hard to get in the classroom.” “In an honor society, you’re not as isolated as you tend to be by just going to class,” senior Gary Hottinger said. “In Sigma Tau Delta, you get a chance to excel academically and socially.” Phi Alpha Theta history honor society may not help members remember when the Battle of the Bulge was, but it helped them meet people who do. “T really like the people in it,’ secretary- treasurer Nancy Holman said. “We always have speakers at our meetings who are really interesting. “Last time Dr. Carlton Jackson spoke. He had just returned from Iran, and he spoke on his personal observations there.”’ Jackson, who was on sabbatical, taught at Pahlavi University by appointment of the Iran- ian government. The history professor was supposed to stay a year, but because of polliti- cal unrest, returned after three months. Member Vicki Pile said, ‘““Sometimes we even have noted historians at our meetings. We had Willie Rose, a professor from John R. Leach, A. Yungbluth. (Back row) J. Parton, A. Bombay, D. Lawrence, K. Young, C. Smith. Hopkins University, once. “It’s a good club to belong to,”’ she said. “You get to meet more people in your field. You get to know teachers on a different level. “The professors contribute a lot to PAT. They’re proud of anyone who joins. It shows that people are interested in history.” “ When I was initiated I was scared to death. It was dark, candles were burning, and you had to have a password. The ceremony was in Spanish, so you had to know the language well.”” That’s according to secretary Becky Akers, speaking about Sigma Delta Pi, the Spanish honor society. Sigma Delta Pi meets once a semester for an initiation and a dinner. According to its constitution, Sigma Delta Pi promotes a greater understanding of Hispanic culture while fostering friendly relations be- tween Spanish-speaking countries and the United States. Adviser Clarice Scarborough said the orga- nization serves a much needed purpose on campus. “It gives recognition to students who achieve academic excellence and provides an exchange of ideas,”’ she said. Pi Delta Phi isn’t doing much these days, probably because six of the 10 members are in France ‘‘studying everything,’ Dr. William Walls, adviser, said. “We’re fairly inactive right now,” he said. “The problem is with some members not being here. We never have a large enough group for anything. A French night, which is dinner and a movie, is the only thing planned.” Recognition is the club’s main purpose, Walls said. ‘“‘We have no pretense of being some highly intellectual organization,” he said. “This is just a chance to get together and be recognized with people in the same area of interest.” Membership requires a 3.0 grade-point aver- age, a minor or major in French, and the com- pletion of one 300-level French course. “We’re trying hard to do something this year. But we have only four members here, so we can’t be very active,’’ Beth Evans said. continued on page 294 Pe SIGMA TAU DELTA: (Front row) C. Harper, J. Medley, L. Estes, C. Glaysbrook, D. Walker, G. Haynes, E. Jamison. (Back row) G. Hottinger, M. West, N. Pond, J. Howerton, B. Logan, J. Flynn. A BLACK MARKER helps Dennis Elder address newspa- pers. Alpha Phi Omega and Gamma Sigma Sigma members fold and label the College Heights Herald each Tuesday and Thursday as a service project. The Heralds are then mailed. Gamma Sigs Karen Owen and Kathy Jo Ashby work on the papers in the Herald office. — Bob Skipper PHI ALPHA THETA: (Front row) N. Holman, D. Walker, S. SIGMA DELTA PI: (Front row) C. Scarborough, R. Akers, A. Pan- PI DELTA PHI: (Front row) E. Evans, Brown. (Back row) K. Hunter, C. Bussey, J. White, S. Bachert. nier, P. Cottrell, K. Houser. (Back row) R. Padilla, C. Galloway, B. K. Bennight. (Back row) S. Clark, D. Morgan, P. Hatcher, C. Brown. Walker. 293 Organizations 294 Organizations Getting organized con. Circle K College Republicans United Black Students NAACP Circle K has a connection in the outside world — they’re the college version of Kiwanis International, a worldwide service organiza- tion. According to president Jim Mefford, Circle K tries to “provide opportunity for student service on campus and in the community.” The club sponsored a Homecoming queen candidate with the Student National Education Association, and the two clubs won the Alumni Award with their float. They also gave several parties at Oakwood, a center for the mentally retarded, and worked with elderly people in Bowling Green. Why join Circle K? Members gave varied reasons, but most agreed on one thing: the club’s activities sounded interesting and worth- while. “T like the way the club affords its members a chance to really get out and do something,” Jeff Howerton said. ““The projects we do not only aid others, but they help us become a closer group of people.” Tonya Woodworth said she liked what she saw in Circle K. She said she “‘liked getting to do different things with people.” Cathy Morris said, “‘I like the idea of work- ing with other people, for other people.”’ According to Mefford, the club is an infor- mal group that provides friendship and fellow- ship along with worthwhile activities. The College Republicans are available. “We basically try to present ourselves to a political candidate and let them know we want to work for them,’’ member Natalie Durbin said. Joyce Plantinga said the group worked pri- marily with local politicians. They had a rally CIRCLE K: (Front row) C. Morris, C. Horn, T. Woodworth, K. Allen. (Second row) J. Jackson, B. Anderson, B. Law, J. Mef- ford, K. Shoulders. (Back row) B. Price, G. Rader, S. Brown, J. Mefford. for senatorial candidate Louie Guenther and a fund-raising dinner for Ray B. White and Ray Overstreet, Republican candidates for gover- nor. Members also helped plan a program featur- ing the candidates for governor. “When you talk to people like that, you want to be informed,” Ms. Durbin said. ‘““That encourages you to get more informed, to read newspapers.” She said the desire to be more informed was one reason she joined the group. “I wanted to find out about political events that were occur- ring,” she said. Ms. Plantinga said she had always been a Republican, so the College Republicans seemed a natural choice when she decided to get involved. ““My freshman year here, I wasn’t involved in anything, and it sounded like it would be a lot of fun,” she said. I may be an organization of students, but more than anything it teaches. That’s what Frederick Harris said about the United Black Students. “It teaches responsibility,” the Lexington ju- nior said. ‘“They give you something to do and you learn how to go about solving the prob- lem.” Marilyn Epison, a Whitesville freshman, agreed. She said the group teaches more per- sonal things, too. “T’m black, but the town I grew up in, there were hardly any blacks there, so I’ll learn more about them,” she said. “‘I’ll learn more about myself.” Harris said the club’s main activity was working for black representation on the Board of Regents’ presidential screening committee. He said the group also ‘“‘worked on trying to get a black affairs committee set up in ASG” and to organize a drive for the Big Brother-Big DIRECTING her arguments to ASG president Steve Thornton, Anita Orr, NAACP president, presents a case for minority representation on the Board of Regents’ presi- dential screening committee. Ms. Orr said at the October ASG meeting that minority representation is ‘something that is needed.” Thornton had said that representation was not feasible for ASG’s form of government. — Harold Sinclair COLLEGE REPUBLICANS: (Front row) J. Plantinga, K. Groschelle, S$. Furkin, M. Zaborouak, M. Appleby. (Back row) N. Durbin, K. Shoulders, T. Leslie, D. Remble, D. Krider, M. Burke. Sister program. Harris said UBS offers a feeling of unity. “First of all, being an independent, I just felt it was something I could become involved in without becoming a Greek. “Second, I truly believe in what UBS is do- ing — working for better relations between minorities and whites on campus.” The National Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored People is not just for blacks. It’s for any minority, chapter president Anita Orr said. “Really, everyone’s colored,” the Nashville, Tenn., freshman said. “‘We have some foreign student members and some white members.” Being a member, Carl Nelson, a Bowling Green senior, said, “‘helps you be more of a leader, to be more aware of yourself, to be more aware of problems and situations around campus.” One problem the group sought to remedy, _ Ms: Orr said, was a lack of minority represen- tation on the Board of Regents’ presidential screening committee. The appointment of a black member “‘was something that was needed,”’ she said. “I won’t call it a victory — so many other things need to be accomplished. I see it as a starting point.” She said NAACP’s goals are somewhat dif- ferent than those of the United Black Students and the United Black Greeks. “Most of their activities are social, although they do some civic work,” she said. ‘‘Most of us on campus realize that the power is in the numbers. We don’t want to create dissension among ourselves. There’s already enough dis- sension.” Nelson said one of the goals of the group is to develop programs that interest blacks. “Everyone should be a member,” he said. “It helps you not only socially, but politically as well.” continued on page 296 CIRCLE K president Jim Mefford directs construction of the Homecoming float built by Circle K and the Student National Education Association. The float won the Alumni Award for best construction. Mefford estimated that 250 man-hours were spent in building the float. UNITED BLACK STUDENTS: (Front row) C. Nelson, V. Jackson, G. Harris, F. Harris, M. Williams, J. Harris. (Second row) J. Brown, B. White, D. Gillum, S. Bell, D. Walters, E. Hughes, — Scott Robinson NAACP: (Front row) B. Taylor, N. Ray, A. Orr. (Back row) G. Harris, F. Harris, C. Nelson. P. Lewis, N. Murrell, T. Laine. (Back row) J. Shively, D. Hagans, M. Jones, D. Doty, M. Hagans, C. Stockton, M. Epison, I. White. 295 Organizations Getting organized con Pre-Law Club Young Democrats Interhall Council Pi Omega Pi There aren’t many women in law, according to Keenan Pawley, a Pleasure Ridge Park ju- nior. And he can’t say exactly why. “T don’t think there are any women in the Pre-Law Club right now,” he said. “I guess some think that law won’t benefit them. And maybe some just don’t know about the club.” The club sponsored a Law School Day with speakers from the University of Kentucky, Uni- versity of Louisville and Chase law schools. “So far this is the first group that has told me what classes I should take to prepare for law school,” Pawley said. “It has given me chances to meet represen- tatives and receive catalogues and literature from law schools.” The Young Democrats want to be more attractive. In order to do that, they’re trying to make membership more “‘official,” according to Steve Thornton. “‘We’ve never had any type of certificate before,” he said. ‘But this year we’re giving a certificate and a pin when someone becomes a Young Democrat.” The $10 membership fee covers both. The 35 club members are usually more in- volved in local than state politics, he said. But this year is a little different. “This is one of the most important times for the Young Democrats because we are trying to get a governor elected,” he said in February. Because of that, the Young Democrats, As- sociated Student Government and the College Republicans sponsored a seminar in the spring semester with the candidates for governor. : Thornton and a few other members went to the state convention and to the national con- (Back row) J. Rue, S. Wilson. 296 Organizations PRE-LAW CLUB: (Front row) M. Mefford, K. Pawley. vention in Nashville. Thornton also went to Lexington to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Young Democrats. A Feb. 15 meeting was one highlight for the Young Democrats. Dale Emmons, former state president of Young Democrats; Sarah Smith, a Western graduate and paid employee of Terry McBrayer; and Mary McBrayer, McBrayer’s wife, attended. “When you get that kind of act together at the same time, it’s terrific,” Thornton said. A ‘stay-on-campus weekend”’ and brochures describing each of the dorms were two pro- jects Interhall Council planned for the spring semester, according to vice president Marion Tabor. The new brochures are to give “the atmo- sphere of the hall and more information than is on the back of the housing form,’’ Miss Tabor said. The council also sponsored discos, picnics, teas and the Hall Olympics. The council also boycotted machines that dispense soft drinks in cups rather than cans and asked that ice machines be installed in the dorms, according to Miss Tabor. No new machines were in- stalled. Working on a project for their national con- vention kept Pi Omega Pi members busy. The business education honorary society fo- cused its project on ways to motivate students to learn accounting. “We try to get members to acquire teaching ideas to prepare them for their careers in busi- ness education,” Dr. Kenneth Utley, adviser, said. Every two years, there is a national conven- tion. Utley said Western’s chapter has attend- ed every convention. Pi Omega Pi has monthly meetings, which may be either formal or informal. A Christmas party and a fall picnic were two of their social events. continued on page 298 A FRISBEE sails toward the final hole as Tracy Capsel competes in a Frisbee golf match. The event was part of the Hall Olympics sponsored by the Interhall Council. Capsel, a Louisville junior, won the game. YOUNG DEMOCRATS: (Front row) J. Payne, T. Craig, S. Pardue, A. Hughes. (Back row) B. Moore, B. Shockley, M. Jeanette, S. Bachert. JIM NIRMIAER and Larry Phillips measure the distance of a Frisbee throw during the Hall Olympics in the fall. Nirmaier is a freshman history major from Paducah, and Phillips is a Henderson, Tenn., freshman. i — Mark Lyons — Mark Lyons INTERHALL COUNCIL: (Front row) C. Crowley, R. Maiuri, S. Semones, M. PI OMEGA PI (officers): (Front row) J. Harrington, K. Utley. (Back I Tabor. (Second row) L. Bell, J. Hancock, M. Kingrey, R. Wheat, J. Lindsey. (Back row) V. Shockley, J. Shaw, R. Bohannon. row) B. Mountain, T. Woods, T. Cocaougher. 297 Organizations Getting organized con Marketing Club Phi Beta Lambda Delta Sigma Pi NCAS Accounting Club DECA Joining the Marketing Club can help mem- bers get ‘‘professional contact,” club president Melody Berryman said. Miss Berryman said she joined the club two years ago because she wanted to meet persons with marketing backgrounds and “wanted to learn more than was in the textbooks.” The club members called Bowling Green residents and interviewed them about their ra- dio listening habits and preferences. A tour of The Courier-Journal and the Brown-Forman Distillery, both in Louisville, helped members learn more about marketing techniques in businesses. Social activities, such as fall hayride, a pizza party and a picnic, also kept members busy. Jokingly referred to as a ‘‘stolen”’ adviser, Dr. Marvin Albin had barely become Murray State University’s Phi Beta Lambda adviser before he took the same job here. “We wanted Dr. Albin because we had worked with Murray, and we knew he was good,” president Susan Reagan said. In the third stage of a three-year project to educate members about free enterprise, the club worked with the annual Free Enterprise Fair. ““The members know about it by now,” Miss Reagan said. ‘‘We focused on educating the community.” At the fall leadership training conference in Louisville, the chapter, with 18 representa- tives, was the largest group in the state. A visit to Eatons Inc. and Donnelly’s in Glas- gow gave members a chance to ask executives questions and observe procedures. Contacts are important in getting jobs, and that’s one reason why Kim Houser, a Fort Knox senior, decided to join Delta Sigma Pi business fraternity. One way the club makes contacts is through field trips to area businesses. They toured Fire- stone and several Nashville banks and insur- ance companies. Besides weekly meetings, Delta Sigma Pi had a “recognition dinner,’ where they recog- nized a local businessman who had excelled in business and professional competence. They also had a Homecoming dance for members and alumni, a spring formal and a picnic. The National Collegiate Association of Secretaries tries to “help people majoring in secretarial science or business education real- ize there’s more to being a secretary than just typing and shorthand,” according to president Karen Bryant. Miss Bryant said NCAS shows its members how the profession has changed. “‘In the past, MARKETING CLUB: (Front row) H. Haffner, PHI BETA LAMBDA: (Front row) P. Underwood, J. Rob- M. Berryman, L. Cuzzort, J. Ashworth. (Sec- ertson, S. Reagan, S. Semones, D. Bristow. (Second row) J. ond row) G. Gill, J. Pendergast, D. Doty, V. Nash, A. Marcum, P. Cox, D. Simon, V. Shockley, J. Almond. (Back row) J. Neely, R. Hobdy, N. Shelton, W. Miller, D. Slaven. (Back row) P. Hale, J. Davis, M. Howard. Howerton, B. Stahl, D. Parsons, R. Browning, S. Penn. DELTA SIGMA PI: (Front row) D. Wathen, L. Clasby, K. Figler, L. Smart, S. King, B. Reid. (Second row) J. Herrick, N. Minogue, B. Stumbo, L. Sawyer, B. Deuk, T. Cunningham, K. Baggett, D. Parrott, K. Holyoke, K. Houser. (Back row) A. Bennett, M. Schulte, M. Karnes, J. Hill, C. Wendt, D. Colyer, M. Fultz, M. Brooks. 298 Organizations a secretary answered the phone, typed and took shorthand,” she said. The secretarial job today places more emphasis on “‘the people aspect,”’ she said. Members heard speakers on a variety of subjects, including duties in a bank, protection against rapists and assistance in passing the Certified Professional Secretary exam. Dinner at the Red Carpet Inn was more than dinner when Accounting Club members got to eat with the ‘‘big wheels’? — Bowling Green — Harold Sinclair NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ASSOCIATION FOR SECRETARIES: (Front row) K. Bryant, C. Clasby, B. Agee, J. Kremer, S. Dearen, D. Butler, S. Cooper. (Second row) E. Guill, J. Robertson, P. Garrett, A. McLean, K. Roy, R. Pyle, D. McWhorter, C. Tabor, M. Wheeler, D. Harrell, K. Plott. (Back Row) D. Gailbreath, L. Wallace, S. Durham, T. accountants. The Cumberland Certified Public Accoun- tants chapter invited the club to its meeting at the motel and discussed what it took to be successful in the field. In February the club met at Citizens National Bank, where they “‘got to see people who were in public accounting and how they reacted to people like auditors,’’ Sandy Wurtz, a Paducah senior, said. The 30-member club had seven speakers with a lecture every two weeks, according to Miss Wurtz. DECA moved from third to second. They didn’t win an award — they and their department moved down a floor in Grise Hall. The move shifted their emphasis and eliminat- ed 40 members. Formerly named mid-management and dis- tributive education, the department combined FREE POPCORN and Coke lured David Dennis, a Bowl- ing Green sixth-grader, to a Free Enterprise Fair booth. Phi Beta Lambda worked with the fair, which was sponsored by the university. row) C. ACCOUNTING CLUB: (Front Conklin, C. Wilcoxson. Murray, T. Watkins, S. Pasco, S. Good, K. Wooldridge, L. Hudgens, K. Money. Scarbrough, C. Stumbo, L. Hill, M. Jackson, K. Stephens, S. Kelly. (Second row) J. Shelton, S. Wurtz, W. Miller, P. Blankenship, N.-Miller. (Back row) R. Olphie, S. Cottrell, D. Bates, M. Risen, M. with data processing to form information sys- tems and distributive education. The students in the former program were no longer in DECA. They also changed advisers. Dr. Don Brad- ley, acting department head, took the position. But the 64 members of the Distributive Education Clubs of America still had the largest chapter in the nation, Kathy Thomp- son, a distributive education major from Camp- bellsville, said. In March more than 20 members were judges at the state career development confer- ence in Louisville. Collegiate-level conferences were in Detroit and Houston. The club also had a booth at the Free Enter- prise Fair. continued on page 300 IN A CORNER at a Phi Beta Lambda cookout, Alecia Marcum writes a check for her fee for a leadership training conference the club attended. The “‘cookout” was indoors because of the weather. — Ricky Rogers DISTRIBUTIVE EDUCATION CLUBS OF AMERICA: (Front row) J. Wells, K. Peveler, K. Ashby, R. Cox. (Second row) B. Haynes, J. Campbell, R. Dukes, K. Thomp- son, T. Tapp. (Back row) P. Wootten, R. Hall, T. Hill, R. Atwell. 299 Organizations i a aa I I a = 300 Organizations Getting organized con. Chemistry Club Gamma Theta Upsilon Society of Physics Students Tri-Beta Geology Club Interest is the only requirement for member- ship in the Chemistry Club. “It’s not an honor society. It’s open to all,”’ member Becky Hunt said. ‘“‘We hang out to- gether. We discuss chemistry matters and spend time on the graduate research program. CHEMISTRY CLUB: (Front row) C. Carter, A. Camp- bell, Z. Barnes, L. McMillan. (Back row) C. Henrickson, J. Strode, T. Rhea, D. Troutman. “Most of us also spend eight to 10 hours in in lab every week outside the classroom.” Members also had picnics, a raffle and lec- tures. “The club seems to be a group of people learning and experiencing on an equal level,” she said. “It has goals worth working for. Over- all, it’s a good organization that has helped me over some barriers in chemistry.” ‘The club is affiliated with the American Chemistry Society, she said. Porky Pig wouldn’t like Gamma Theta Upsi- lon. The group roasted a hog in a spring cook- out. But the geography honor society offers more than picnics. “We’re one of the honorary fraternities that GAMMA THETA UPSILON: (Front row) P. Haugh, J. Carmichael, D. Couden, G. Powell. (Back row) S. Melton, N. Crawford, T. Martin, R. Sarles. has loan funds available,’’ president Tom Mar- tin said. “We also give scholarships.” Martin, a graduate student, said the honor society encourages growth in the field of geog- raphy. “It brings people together who are studying geography,”’ he said. “‘Once you’re in the orga- nization, it’s a lifetime membership. So you’re always involved.” More than a room with carpeting, the Soci- ety of Physics Students’ office in Thomp- son Complex is a place to “hang out” and discuss more than the weather. Kerry Casey, a physics major from Beaver Dam, said he spends a “couple of hours a day” there. He said it was better than going down the Hill or sitting in Downing University Cen- — Mark Lyons SOCIETY OF PHYSICS STUDENTS: (Front row) B. Bowles, B. Lawrence, M. Schepers, S. Brisby. (Second row) W. Miller, J. Parks, J. Woosley, L. Norris, W. Kinzel. (Back row) K. Casey, A. Fennelly, M. Thompson, D. Taylor, R. Hudson. ter; ‘you can talk about something other than the weather,” he said. Each person has a mailbox, and lockers are available for books. Equipped with tables, bean bag chairs, a couch, reference books and even a plant, the room is one of the club’s main resources. Another advantage of joining is a free dinner at Iron Skillet, according to Wayne Kinzel, a math and physical science major from Bowling Green. Initial fees are $7, and members receive Physics Today, a national magazine, and are eligible for reduced rates on other magazines. Each Wednesday the group tutored students | from any physics class. Casey said at least three regularly attended but business boomed | AN ASIAN COBRA arches itself when teased by Tony | Wilson, an Indiana conservation officer, at a venomous snake display sponsored by Tri-Beta in January. CONFRONTED by poisonous snakes at the Tri-Beta exhi- | bition, Kathy Kimmel displays a variety of emotions. Miss Kimmel, an Anchorage freshman, and David Tench, an Orlando, Fla., sophomore, were seeing the display as a biology class assignment. TRI-BETA: (Front row) W. Allen, K. Wilson, L. Elliott, J. Winstead, D. Skean, S. Lair. (Second row) A. Taylor, C. Stauss, J. Burch, J. Upton, B. Pippengeu, D. Rickard. (Back row) T. Slaton, K. Milliner, P. Pinckley, C. Pine, K. Pickwick, D. Endens. right before tests. Tri-Beta was chosen as one of the nation’s outstanding chapters of Beta Beta Beta Bio- logical Society. The biology honor society, which has about 90 members, is active in local and district ac- tivities, according to Carla Pine, president. She was elected district president and presided at the district convention in April in Chattanooga, Tenn. Tri-Beta meets monthly. One of the more interesting meetings was a presentation on poi- sonous snakes by an Indiana conservation offi- cer. It was standing-room-only. Several Tri-Beta members have presented their research at district meetings and have had research published in the national organi- zation’s scientific journal. “We emphasize scholarly activities, since you must have a 3.2 grade-point average to be a member,” Dr. Larry Elliott, faculty adviser, said. He said they also encourage club mem- bers to do research on their own. Bell. Rocks leave no scent, so when Geology Club members go “rock hounding,”’ they use other skills to track their prey. “Rock hounding’ — hunting rocks — is what brings club members together, Boyd Sex- ton said. It provides “ta chance to associate with people who know the difference between quartz and calcite.” To develop the members’ tracking skills, ad- viser Dr. Jackie McGregor showed slides from his summer field courses over most of North America. Seven members and McGregor went to Mount Mitchell in Sprucepine, N.C., in Sep- tember chasing a special type of rock — one with a spot of igneous rock surrounded by metamorphic rock. In November and February the club had a hot dog roast. Members also had an all-day, open-pit pig roast. One advantage of the club, Sexton said, is that club members have access to the cutting and polishing gemology machines in the Envi- ronmental Science and Technology Building. continued on page 302 a hss Series by Mark Lyons GEOLOGY CLUB: (Front row) J. McGregor, B. Sexton, V. Hagee, V. Timmons, J. Chambers, D. Price, G. Ritchie. (Back row) T. Tarter, M. Hancock, T. Morris, R. Dyer, H. Sydnor, R. Willis, B. 301 Organizations 302 Organizations Getting organized con ASME ACM IEEE IETC The American Society of Mechanical En- gineers tries to bridge the gap between the theoretical and the actual, according to mem- ber T.J. Moyer. They try by having speakers at the meet- ings, sending students to national and regional meetings, and the national organization helps out by sending the members Mechanical Engi- neering magazine. They also visited several plants during the year. Darrell Sparks said it is good to be a mem- ber because the association controls all the requirements in the industry and because it looks good on a resume. They try to help the underclassmen with the program and teach members about the indus- AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS: (Front row) B, Hunton, H. Healey, D. Sparks. (Back row) J. Stiles, N. Cham- bers, T. Moyers. try, Sparks said. Moyer said they try to mingle with professionals. It’s a worthwhile club, Moyer said, because engineers tend to be loners since they have to study so much. At least this way they can associate with other engineers, he said. For the Association for Computing Ma- chinery, the future has a lot in store. “T’m sure that the future holds a lot in store that we don’t even know about,” Jacqueline Wyatt said about the new club. Membership requires a major or minor in computer science, she said. ‘“‘As a computer science major, it was just a club that would include a lot of my interests,” she said, explaining her decision to help form the club. Member Candy Peyton agreed. “I’m inter- ested in computer systems,”’ she said. The club “shows me the different areas of application common to computer science — different types of machinery, different types of languages,”’ she said. Among the club’s activities were lectures sponsored by the national professional ACM, examinations of computers owned by faculty members and attendance at the national con- vention in Dayton, Ohio. Not everything was computer-related, how- ever. The club also had a skating party with Phi Mu Epsilon, the math and computer science honorary society. Speakers are a main benefit of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. Members try to get speakers who are for- mer students, according to Cary Hester, and lecturers have included the chief engineer from a Glasgow plant, the field engineer from a Motorola plant, and a representative from the graduate placement office. Getting the student in touch with what he will be doing is the club’s main objective, Hes- ter said. They try to do this through projects which are shown at some of the meetings. The IEEE is a student chapter of the national organization. Hester said the national organiza- tion has from 25 to 30 divisions for specialized fields. The club offered a tutorial service, and members posted notices on a bulletin board in the Science and Technology Hall to keep stu- dents up-to-date on what’s happening in the industry. Recruiting new members for the spring semes- ter was the main project for the Industrial Education and Technology Club. According to Arthur Hayden, the club’s membership and attendance at meetings were down from the fall semester. Because of that, Hardin said the club didn’t have many activities. The club sponsored a few field trips to some local industries such as the FMC company, a plant that manufactures cranes; Cassady, a plant that reproduces furniture; and Cutler- Hammer. The members went to several state universi- ties to check out the programs that they offer and how the departments are run. continued on page 304 A FOOSBALL GAME adds a new twist to a meeting of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. The club gathered at a local nightspot for the March 15 meeting. ASSOCIATION FOR COMPUTING MACHINERY: (Front row) C. Peyton, C. Morris, J. Wyatt, S. Musgrave, P. Coker. (Second row) P. Hayes, T. Chambers, K. Satterfield, P. Locke, A. Nims, C. Davis. (Back row) C. Jackson, A. Greenlee, J. Scott, D. Wheatley, M. Means, V. Dukes. ee SD Le ae i a aa A FIELD TRIP to the Cassady Cherry Reproductions Co. in Bowling Green allowed members of the Industrial Educa- tion and Technology Club to watch a lathe machine in action. Lloyd Cassady Jr., a company employee, demon- strates the machine, which makes furniture parts. Se INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION AND TECHNOLOGY CLUB: A. Hardin, T. Jaggers, row) C. Hester, D. Jackson, M. Bacon, J. Schroeder. (Second row) W. Moore, T. Reynolds, D. Dobrick. A. Williams, D. Brown, P. Garrett. (Back row) M. Ryan, D. Roy, M. Mangus, R. Leach. INSTITUTE FOR ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS: (Front 303 Organizations Getting organized con Eta Sigma Gamma KPHA Alpha Epsilon Delta ADHA KANS Psi Chi Sometimes a professional, major-related orga- nization can help in getting a job. Lee Davis said Eta Sigma Gamma helped her. Eta Sigma Gamma, an honorary society for health students, is designed to increase com- munity involvement with its health programs. Miss Davis said the club tries to increase the awareness of health services, both professional and personal. Members cite two reasons for joining — the club provides help for health majors, and “‘it looks good on your resume,” according to Greg Wells. The Kentucky Public Health Association chapter has expanded and improved since its formation last year, president Sharon Alvey said. “I’m getting a chance to meet people in- volved in community health, and I’m learning what they’re doing with their health degrees,” she added. Among other objectives, the KPHA tries to make the community aware of health-related programs. The organization worked w ith the American Cancer Society in a fund-raising project called “Send a Mouse to College.” The group planned to participate in the statewide Student Health Education Confer- ence and to compile a booklet of resumes of graduating students with degrees in health fields. With about 40 members, KPHA offers mem- “MARK TWAIN” sits nearby as Sue Meers, a Buffalo sophomore, models a uniform in the Kentucky Association 3 . of Nursing Students’ fashion show. “Twain,” played by af : : — Gene Rich, was the narrator for the show. ia: : : — Judy Watson ETA SIGMA GAMMA: (Front row) N. Don) KENTUCKY PUBLIC HEALTH ASSOCI- ALPHA EPSILON DELTA: (Front row) T. Drury, W. Travis, H. Puckett, R. oho, R. Wheat, L. Kleinholter, T. Lewis. (Sec- ATION: (Front row) J. Bolin, T. Slaton, S. Alvey, Henry, D. Clark, J. Huebschman, D. Rutledge. (Second row) J. Cardenas, J. A ond row) R. Biggerstaff, D. Dunn, G. Wells, N. _ K. Milliner. (Back row) C. Martin, S. Peak, L. Tus- Cardenas, S. McElroy, P. Pinckley, P. Mercer, L. Price, P. Kraus, T. Alley, K. C Small, B. Goodorow, (Back row) T. Dutton, S. sey, D. Dunn. Kapoor, G. Hernandez. (Third row) H. Bays, J. Callis, S. Snodgrass, S. Shelton, Burton, D. Tucker, T. Marsteller, C. Perry. S. Lair, J. Gover, S. Chapman, D. Storie. (Back row) D. Shadowen, D. Harrison, D. Rickard, M. Boucher, P. Roy, S. Cash, T. Hume, D. Curtis. 304 Organizations bership to anyone attracted to or pursuing health-related careers. Alpha Epsilon Delta does more than just look good on a resume, according to members of the pre-med student organization. They say the group’s activities help prepare them for admission to medical school and for life as doctors. Programs included lectures by medical school admissions officers, trips to the Univer- sity of Louisville, the University of Kentucky and Vanderbilt University, and two banquets. Members also observed surgery at a Glas- gow hospital and hoped to work out an intern- ship program with local physicians and den- tists, member Robert Henry said. Meeting others in the field, the Ridgecrest senior said, “‘gives you insight where you can meet and talk with the faculty on more casual terms.” 66 2 Sweet snack, no; sweet smile, yes.” — — a: AMERICAN DENTAL HYGIENISTS ASSOCIATION: (Front row) C. Rountree, M. Sallee, L. Carter, M. Cloud, E. Collins, M. Cramer, L. Nation. (Second row) V. Little, C. Oliver, D. Harris, K. Justiss, T. Dav is, L. Newby, C. Fabel. (Third row) D. Dorris, H. Johnston, L. Hinton, ie That was the theme followed by the junior membership of American Dental Hygien- ists Association during American Dental Health Week Feb. 5-9. The 30-member club had clinics in Bowling Green and presented puppet shows in local schools during the week. Cindy Rountree, a Hendersonville, Tenn., senior, said most dental hygiene majors are involved with the club. Members attended the state KDHA meeting in Louisville in April. They were hostesses at a pizza party for 12 visiting dental hygiene students from Paducah Community College. Their two-day visit includ- ed speakers and workshops on maintaining body and dental health. Several members taught lessons on nutri- tional dental health in local rest homes in the fall. Geriatric aides, taught by the students, trav- eled to 800 patients’ homes and worked with them on an individual basis. Willis, C. Carrico, L. Mead, J. Cavanah. (Back row) R. Dougherty, R. Miller, L. Luttrell, L. Scott, S. Raffensperger, P. Oliver, P. Hughes. KENTUCKY ASSOCIATION OF NURSING STUDENTS: (Front row) K. Hawes, T. Thompson, L. Hawes, T. Weber, V. Sloan. (Back row) J. Englebright, J. Plantinga, J. Gary, M. Stewart, T. Jones, E. Curtis, K. Young, J. Farley. Learning to be assertive, coping with death and dying and getting away from “‘the same people” are among the benefits of member- ship in the Kentucky Association of Nurs- ing Students. “Nursing students are locked into their pro- gram,” president Jane Englebright said. “‘We have only one elective, and we get tired of seeing the same old people.” Being in KANS, she said, allows a student nurse to meet new people with similar inter- ests. Aside from the social aspect, the organiza- tion sponsored programs on child abuse and death and dying, and an assertiveness training workshop, which helped in “learning to speak out and not allow yourselves to be dominat- ed,” Ms. Englebright, a Bowling Green senior, said. The group also sponsored a uniform fashion show and a nurses’ job fair. Having a rat race can be fun, as Psi Chi members say. Psi Chi, the psychology honor society, had such a race as part of Psi Chi Week. “Some students will train their rats to run in a maze probably a straight one,” vice president Kathryn Brinegar said before the race. ‘‘Psychology as a science is 100 years old this year and Psi Chi Week is a celebration of ita Other activities included a picnic, lectures, movies and an initiation. Members also visited the state hospital in Hopkinsville. “Psi Chi is really just getting started again after about two years of inactivity,’ president Vickie Evans said. Ms. Evans, a graduate student, said she liked the interaction between different class levels in the organization. “I get a chance to know the undergraduates and the professors — people at all classifica- tion levels. It’s a good way to learn through the interaction with people,” she said. DRESSED as a mouse for a Kentucky Public Health Asso- ciation drive, Lee Ann Tussey amuses passersby. A 51-cent donaton allowed the American Cancer Society to buy a mouse for a cancer research lab. The Ashland senior was on the publicity committee for the drive. PSI CHI: (Front row) K. Brinegar, V. Evans, J. Utley. (Back row) R. Hall, J. Pauley, J. Molen, C. Burris. 305 Organizations RUGBY CLUB: (Lying in front) S. Gallaher. (Front row) F. Cowherd, D. Matheson, M. Murphey, G. Bowling, B. Whelan, T. Cox, T. Gourley, G. Jones. (Back row) D. Jackson, J. Teuerkauf, K. Cain, M. Rosenthal, B. Irvin, D. Bates, K. Williams, J. Hale, M. Riggs, J. Ransdell, J. Woosley, N. Wade, T. Asher, D. Gill, P. Griffiths. WESTERN “KILLER BEES” (second team) and Vanderbilt’s “Second Fif- teen’’ compete for the ball in a formation called the “scrum.” Using their feet the teams push against each other and try to move the ball. Photos and story by Mark Lyons Anhhiiieee! The shrill cry pierces the air filled with the heavy breathing and grunts accom- panying a rugby game. Jon Teuerkauf, the scream’s author, lies sprawled on the field next to Pearce- Ford Tower, holding onto his injured knee. Two teammates help him from the field and rush him to the hospital. It could have been worse, but he is back home that night with only a badly twisted knee. He might be able to play in a couple of weeks. The team, formed two years ago by Billy Whelan and Paul “Bear” Otte, compiled a 10-6 record in the fall. Rugby is a continuous 40-minute “kill the man with the ball’? game, stopped only for halftime, injuries and penalties. Each 15-man team tries to move the ball to its goal by running, passing later- ally or kicking it forward. A score is made by moving the ball across the goal or kicking it through the goalposts. Playing the sport without the protec- tion of pads can be painful, but all rug- gers agree it’s worth it for the “third half,” a party hosted by the home team after the game. The teams “‘lick their wounds,”’ per- forming crude songs and skits and trying to drink each other under the table. But by Monday the wounds have be- gun to heal, and the team practices for another game that weekend. [| UNNECESSARY ROUGHNESS is just part of the game. Jon “Turk” Teuerkauf finds himself im- mobile during a game against Evansville in the fall. Western split the two games, 12-8, 14-8. INJURIES COME EASY when the only protec- tion is knee pads and a mouthpiece. Vanderbilt rugger David Malone is helped from the field by a teammate in a game in which Western and Vandy had several players hurt. Rushed in and partied out The red was barely out of the sunrise when the girls began flocking to Garrett Conference Center Friday, Aug. 25. A few rubbed their eyes and yawned. Others slumped quietly in chairs around the lobby. There was a sleepy tension in the air. It was just 7 a.m. when the more than 100 remaining rushees filed into a meeting room for the last event of formal sorority rush: bid distribution. In a few moments, they began walking back out, bids in hand. Rush counsel- ors stepped forward to see what sorority their rushees were invited to join. Envelopes ripped, cards were pulled out and the shouting began. Rushees and counselors squealed as they hugged each oth- er, and the rushees — now pledges — hurried off to join their sororities in other meeting TALKING is a big part of Getting to Know You parties, and AOPi members Lisa Downing and Robin Andre ws try to get to know Tammy Cole- man. Miss Coleman pledged Sigma Kappa be- cause she ‘“‘felt like she fit in,’ she said. rooms. There, sorority members waited anxiously to greet their new sisters. The hugging and squealing continued as the pledges and actives spotted each other. Tears were shed and shrieks were emitted as the week-long formal rush drew to a close. The distribution of bids to 102 rushees end- ed a week of rapid-fire parties, skits, songs, ceremonies, confusion, costumes, punch bowls and sundresses. It began Monday, Aug. 21, when 212 girls met at Garrett for the first of seven “‘Getting to Know You” parties, which continued for two days. After the parties Sunday and Monday nights, each sorority decided who would be invited back for theme parties Tuesday and Wednesday nights. — Mark Lyons HUGS AND SMILES were exchanged be- tween Sharon Tabor, a new KD pledge, and Barb Smith. Miss Tabor, a Bowling Green fresh- man, depledged a few weeks later when her father suggested that she wait a while to join. — Lewis Gardner Rushees could attend five theme parties which. consisted of conversation, skits and songs. Alpha Delta Pi, for instance, chose a 1950s malt shop theme and a Wizard of Oz theme, although most sororities used only one theme. All but the two sororities with houses — Alpha Xi Delta and Kappa Delta — had parties in Garrett. Having seen the rushees twice, the sororities decided Wednesday night who to invite to the three solemn, ceremonial parties Thursday night. Rushees could go to three preference parties, but, unlike past years, were not obli- gated to accept a bid if they went. The sorority preferences of the rushees who decided to accept a bid were matched as well as possible with the rushees preferences of the sororities. A group of rush personnel handled 4 = Ricky Rogers TROPHIES, PICTURES and plaques helped tell rushees about sorority life. Lisa Sidwell shines the ADPi’s 1977 Powder Puff trophy for a party in Garrett Conference Center. ADPi got 25 pledges during formal rush. SQUEALS RANG tthrough Garrett after the rushees opened their bids. Kathy Kimmel hugs her new sorority sister, AOPi Sandy Dorroh. Miss Dorroh was her rush counselor during a week of parties, skits and songs squeezed between registration and classes. — Lewis Gardner the matchings. “Most got the sorority they wanted,” Kathy Watson, student affairs assistant for sorority affairs, said. “It was a mutual selection, and in the end there were few disappointments,” save, perhaps for the four who received no bid. A Sigma Kappa active summarized the week: ‘“‘The first part is a ‘Nice to have you party.’ The theme party is ‘Glad you’re back’ and the preference party is ‘I’ll just die if you don’t join.’ ” Not all sorority members favor formal rush. Some members of small sororities said that formal rush favors larger sororities, allowing them to grow even larger. An alumna said informal rush is a better way to get to know rushees. “You can talk to them easier, have night parties and invite them over to get to know them,”’ she said. “And you don’t have the silence rule,” which prohibits actives from talk- ing to rushees or rush counselors except at the parties until rush is over. And a Chi Omega said that “‘informal rush is better because you can get to know rushees without all the pressure.” “I think the best thing is to go through for- mal rush, then drop out and go through infor- mal,”’ she said. ‘““That way you get to know and see all the sororities, then spend time with the one you think you want.” But an Alpha Delta Pi pledge said the proce- dure didn’t matter to her. “‘I just knew I want- ed to be in a sorority. My whole family is Greek.” About half of the women who signed up for rush dropped out by the Thursday night dead- line. ““They drop out because they came to meet people and see what a sorority’s like, they decided to go through open rush or they had work or band practice conflicts,’’ Ms. Wat- son said. She said fewer dropped out this year than last. A few changes were made in this year’s formal rush. Instead of rushing the week be- fore registration, formal rush was conducted during registration week, causing inconven- iences for some. “I heard a couple of comments that with this rush, it was hard for freshmen to register and get in the dorm and get settled,’ Nancy North- erner, Panhellenic rush chairman, said. “The scheduling was inconvenient, early in the morning and at night, around registration and classes,’ Ms. Watson said. “But when it comes down to the pros and cons, this kind of rush was less hectic than everyone moving on campus a week early.” Rush included one less party than last year, which sorority members said they disliked. “You don’t have as long to get to know them,” an Alpha Xi Delta said. And a new summer rush party, given by Panhellenic for Bowling Green freshmen, “really helped a lot,” Miss Northerner said. Still, for the rushees it was more than five days of new surroundings, strangers and pres- sure. And it was little wonder that many of the girls wore the same expression: Thank God It’s Friday. — Roger Stinnett [| WEARING IDENTICAL sunglasses, David Weaver, Rob- ert Bruce and Patrick Carter listen with their Omega big brothers to professional football player Ken Johnson talk about his religious beliefs. Sponsored by Athletes for Ac- tion, Johnson, of the Cincinnati Bengals, spoke along with Brad Cousino, of the Canadian Football League. | | ——_——o™ = et — a ltsa Dogs life Story and photos by Stevie Benson You may have seen them clad in Army fatigue jackets, blue jeans and thermal T-shirts. You may have heard them humming or singing in unison over and over again “‘Zoom, Zoom, Zoom, Zoom, Que Psi Phi.” You may have even spoken to them in pass- ing only to be given a silence. And you prob- ably thought all these were silly antics of some black fraternity pledges. But to seven black students who joined Omega Psi Phi in the spring, their pledgeship was far from amusement. Fraternities serve many purposes, ranging from social to political to academic. The rea- sons these young men sought to join a fraterni- ty range just as widely. Some sought reassurance. “Tf I could make Omega,” freshman Robert Bruce said, “‘I knew I could make anything.” Some sought a challenge. Freshman Darryl VanLeer said, “I wanted to see how I would perform under pressure.” But all of them sought to fulfill a desire to belong. Freshman David Suggs said, “‘I was looking for someone | could talk to, someone to trust . a brother.” And so David Weaver, Robert Bruce, Darryl VanLeer, David Suggs, Patrick Carter, Marc Johnson and Exum Somerville began their journey through Omega pledgeship. The Omega Psi Phi pledgeship is generally an eight-week, three-stage process. First, the puppy stage gives the pledges a DOG STAGE, the last of three pledging stages, requires the pledges to wear dog collars. Darryl VanLeer studies on the ninth floor of Cravens Library. He and his pledge brothers studied every weeknight from 7-10 p.m. ON A CIVIC PROJECT at Fairview Healthcare Center, the pledges kneel to pray for a patient. They sang gospel hymns to many of the elderly and brought apples and oranges as gifts. SCRUTINIZING each other’s pledge tasks, work request- ed by big brothers, played a big part in Omega pledging. Exum Somerville helps Darryl VanLeer analyze his project. chance to become acquainted with each other and the fraternity members, as well as provid- ing them with insight into the commitments they were to accept. Second, the lamp stage, designated by wooden lamp collars, initiates the performance of attitudes and ac tions which educate the pledges into the domain of Omega Psi Phi. The pledges learn not only from their own personal manuals but through the practical supervision of their dean of pledges. Symbolized by the wearing of dog collars, the dog stage is the third and final and perhaps the most intense stage. It involves physical, mental and emotional treatment — and some- times mistreatment — to wring the pledges’ senses, providing the pain against which they may measure the pleasure of being acceped into the fraternity. During the last two stages the pledges are at the complete whim and fancy of their big brothers. Pledge David Suggs said, ‘““You nev- er really knew what was going to happen. | sf BS re 4 AT 10 P.M. STEPPING PRACTICE, David Suggs, Pat- rick Carter, Marc Johnson and Exum Somerville practice their routine on the top concourse of Diddle Arena. didn’t know if I’d make it.” A typical day began at 6 a.m. with requested visits by big brothers, classes and the search for each big brother and his signature (a daily re- quirement), followed by a quick snack, then to the library for three hours of study and finally to step practice. Curfew was at 11 p.m., but every night held the possibility of late night excursions for some unknown activity with a big brother’s supervi- sion. Not only did the Omega pledges walk and talk together, they ate together, played and sometimes slept together. Pledge-line president Patrick Carter said, “‘It took me back to the slave days. Maybe that’s the difference between white and black pledg- ing — persevering together. Because no mat- ter how bad and low down you felt about your situation and what you were doing, you knew there was a brother right beside you doing the same thing and sticking with it. And that in- spires you.” CL] pel i age tere ao Spe « vi 4) am 4 rer aE oy or? . Bic foci ae pee as des 311 Omega Pledges J ea % — Mike Lawrence GETTING READY for a fall rush party, Felicia Malone and Karen Smiley prepare the punch. VICKI WIMBS, a Louisville sophomore, presides over one of the sorority’s weekly meetings. They met at Garrett 3 S BS ig — Mike Lawrence Conference Center to discuss activities and business. The chapter was one year old in April. Here to stay Being accepted as the new kid on the block is often hard, especially when the block is Greek. April 1 marked Sigma Gamma Rho’s first year as a Western chapter. President Vicki Wimbs, a Louisville sopho- more, said she thinks that after a year, her sorority was accepted by other Greeks, for the most part. “I think we have been pretty much so,”’ she said. “I hope so anyway. I think we’re still kind of new in their minds, but we’ve blended pretty well.” Worrying about being accepted was one thing, but getting started was another. “It was almost a closed door situation,” Miss Wimbs said. “‘They (the university) didn’t feel the need for a new sorority. They thought it would eliminate members among the other black sororities.” Karen Watts, a Lexington junior, said she thought the university was ‘“‘worried about splitting the black women four ways.” “Their thinking was that in order for a new sorority to begin, one already present had to die. We found that to be wrong.” Thought was first given to starting a Sigma Gamma Rho chapter during fall 1976. Sigma Gamma Rho graduates of Tennessee State DRENCHED WITH WATER, Jack Ray clenches his prize after bobbing for apples at the sorority’s Halloween party for the children of the Bowling Green Big Brother-Big Sister program. — Scott Robinson University were contacted about starting a chapter at Western. Dean Charles Keown and Lynn Morgan, then student organizations director, planned a meeting with the other black Greek organiza- tions to get their reactions and opinions about starting a new black sorority. Sigma Gamma Rho national officers Kary Davis and Adah Hull then visited Western and talked with Keown and Morgan. The women who were interested in pledging then had their grade-p oint averages checked and other information verified by the national office. A two-week period called Gammette Stage, in which the women are under no obli- gation to pledge, followed. After the Gam- mette Stage, an eight-week pledge period be- gan for the 14 women. All the sisters agreed that being a building block of a new organization was special. “It’s different when you’re a part of a new foundation — not walking in someone else’s shoes, but making your own path,” Karen Smi- ley, a Louisville senior, said. Being part of the foundation meant working together in order to stay together. “Being new was a challenge,”’ Lydia Raglin, a Harlan sophomore, said. “It made us work harder and accept each other as we were. We discovered pledging with 14 other people meant learning to make adjustments, yet we also found out things about ourselves.” Miss Smiley said she thought there was no 7 Sac se a a nD. Paice i ll in OE genuine sisterhood between the black sorori- ties. “‘The intense competition will probably always be there. But I feel that our biggest competition is ourselves.” Marcia Stevens summed up her sisters’ feel- ings, saying, ‘‘We ain’t going nowhere; we’re here to stay.” — Kathy Lam SIGMA GAMMA RHO: (Front row) L. Raglin, D. McCor- mack, T. Franklin, K. Smiley, F. Malone. (Back row) S. Jordan, S. Gibson, M. Stevens, V. Wimbs, K. Watts, L. Raglin. 313 Sigma Gamma Rho a Jun-Jilled Salt From playing football to walking on stilts to imitating coneheads, sororities and fraternities showed their athletic prowess and theatrical talents in the fall semester. The 15th annual ADPi 500, sponsored by Alpha Delta Pi, started the series of fun and games Sept. 24 at Beech Bend Park. Sororities and fraternities participated in crazy events including the 500’s trademark, the Dizzy Lizzy, in which a person places his head on a baseball bat, spins around the bat 25 times, then tries to run a straight line. Walking on stilts, an innertube squirm and the King for a Day contest were also featured. Alpha Omicron Pi won the 500 for the 13th consecutive year and had first-place finishes in the tricycle and centipede races and the Dizzy Lizzy. Sigma Chi won the fraternity division for the second year in a row, with first places in the bike and sack races and the Dizzy Lizzy. Tommy Zoeller of Lambda Chi Alpha was crowned king for the second consecutive year. Chi Omega and Sigma Nu were second; Kappa Delta and Sigma Alpha Epsilon were third. The proceeds, $198, were given to ADPi’s philanthropy, Cedar Lake Lodge, a home for mentally retarded children in Louisville. An unusual assortment of football players gathered Oct. 10-12 at Hobson Grove Park for the fourth annual Sigma Nu Powder Puff Foot- ball Classic. Six sororities played in the tourna- ment, and fraternity members were coaches. Chi O defeated AOPi in the championship game, 19-0. ADPi, the KDs, Alpha Xi Delta and Phi Mu also played. The 13th annual Sigma Chi Derby was Oct. 15-22. Chi O won for the second consecutive year, after winning first place in the sack race and the Coaches Ransom. Chi O collected more than $1,000 in the ransom for the Sigma continued on page 316 PEDAL PUSHER Shawn McCullough gets some last min- ute coaching from Melody Hill in the ADPi 500 tricycle race. Evidently it helped, as AOPi won. Miss Hill is an ADPi, but she served as AOPi’s coach. AFTER PERFORMING onstage, Chi O members ham it up for a photographer backstage at the Chi O November Nonsense. Kappa Delta and Sigma Chi won first place. — David Frank ” 314 Fall Activities SORORITY SISTERS swarm around ADPi Kim Birdsong after she was crowned Derby Darling. She broke the “‘win- ning streak”’ of the Chi Os, who had won the pageant three consecutive years. A POLISH THEME PARTY at the Sigma Chi house turned up some unusual fashions. Chi O Sharon May hes donned an ADPi jersey, while Sigma Chi Mark Straney e opted for shorts and a jacket. — Harold Sinclair — Harold Sinclair 315 Fall Activities 316 Fall Activities A Sun-Silled Sat eon Chi’s philanthrophy, the Wallace Village for Children in Broomfield, Col. Derby Week, which is filled with activities and theme parties, was highlighted by Friday night’s Derby Darling pageant. ADPi Kim Bird- song, a Cadiz freshman, was crowned queen. Chi O Jan Cloar and KD Pam Livingston were first and second runners-up. Sunday was Events’ Day, featuring the egg toss, orange pass, lifesaver relay and other unusual games. Chi O was first, ADPi was second, and AOPi third. Seventeen sororities and fraternities got the chance to ham it up onstage in the KD Wash- board Jamboree Oct. 25. Dressed in jeans, overalls and cowboy hats, the groups present- ed their versions of country songs by stars like Hank Williams and Glen Campbell. AOPi’s imitation of Dolly Parton, entitled “Hello, Dolly,’’ won first place. ‘“Trucker’s Top 10,” presented by Sigma Chi, won the fraternity division. Chi O won second with a country version of ‘“‘Grease,”’ entitled ‘‘Grits.”’ SAE was also second with “Country Curds and the Nurds.” Phi Mu and Sigma Nu were third. Chi O’s annual November Nonsense was Nov. 30 in Van Meter Auditorium. The theme, ‘“‘Chi O Land USA,” included entries from Sat- urday Night Live’s coneheads to Barry Mani- low’s ‘‘Copacabana.” KD’s “‘Not So Civil Times” and Sigma Chi’s “Marineland After Hours” won first place. ADPi won second place with “Musical Time Tunnel”; SAE presented a skit about the Chi O’s effort to obtain a sorority house; and Sig- ma Nu won third with ‘Salute to the ’50s.”’ No third place was given in the sorority division. And with the end of November Nonsense, the Greeks had gotten their semester’s share of games, fun and parties. — Kathy Lam [J — David Frank IT’S NO LAUGHING MATTER in real life, but Chi Ome- ga’s effort to get a sorority house was the butt of SAE’s skit in November Nonsense. Bailiff Larry Heffington laughs it up on stage while “Chi O defendant” Buzz Smith waits in the witness box. BARRY MANILOW’S “COPACABANA” came to life in Sigma Kappa’s November Nonsense skit. Stephanie Wood plays Lola, the showgirl ‘‘with yellow feathers in her hair and a dress cut down to there.” — David Frank “eager a eee ie EVADING ADPi members, Cathy Buckles carries the ball for AOPi in the first game of the Sigma Nu Powder Puff Football Classic. AOPi won, 6-0, but was defeated by Chi O in the championship game, 19-0. — Mark Lyons PLACING SECOND in the lifesaver relay made ADPi members jump for joy at the Sigma Chi Derby. The relay consists of holding a toothpick with the mouth, then passing lifesavers from toothpick to toothpick. a — Judy Watson MOUTHPIECES IN HAND, ADPi sisters Kathy Assmar, Lisa Stone and Melody Hill ponder what moves to make on the football field in the Sigma Nu Powder Puff Football Classic. Their strategies didn’t work as they lost to AOPi. — Ron Hoskins 317 Fall Activities 318 Greek Week IT’S ALPHA GAMMA RHO tradition that tug-of-war victories are celebrated with the dunking of the team coach and team members. Kelly Colson, Dennis Chinn and coach Alfred Mattingly enjoy the mud and water while Richard Flener is waist deep in the mess. — dudy Watson WINNING TUG-OF-WAR is easy with ‘“‘good holes’’ to stay in. Markita Key, a Glendale junior, digs a hole for her feet before the start of the competition. Apparently Sigma Kappa’s strategy worked since they won the sorority divi- sion for the fourth consecutive year. a — Larry Hayden Emotion is an important part of any competi- tion, and Spring Sing competition during Greek Week was no exception. A hush fell over the crowd in Van Meter Auditorium when it was announced that 13- time winner Lambda Chi Alpha had placed second in the fraternity division. After the initial shock wore off, gasps could be heard and surprised faces could be seen throughout the auditorium. Cheers and applause quickly followed from the supporters of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, who were hoping for the title. When the announcement finally came, the applause was thunderous. The SAEs’ presen- tation, “‘The Musical ’20s,’ captured first place and ended Lambda Chi’s traditional reign as Spring Sing winners. Steve Wilson, who coordinated Spring Sing for the SAEs, said the brothers practiced for 2% weeks for the competition. “When they announced that second place went to Lambda Chi, we really went nuts,” he said. ‘‘We weren’t sure we’d won it, but every- one was screaming and yelling anyway.” Chi Omega won the sorority division for the second straight year. “City Lights” and ““AZDs Salute the West”’ captured second place for Lambda Chi and Alpha Xi Delta in their respective divisions. Greek Week, a tradition among fraternities and sororities on many college campuses, made its annual appearance in April. The week officially started April 8 with the track and field competition at Smith Stadium. Alpha Gamma Rho and AOPi walked away with first place. Sigma Phi and Alpha Delta Pi continued on page 320 319 Greek Week GREEK WEEK .. finished second. One of the new Greek Week features was a pancake breakfast sponsored by the Sig Eps at a local restaurant. The AGRs and AOPis were recognized as having the most people to attend the breakfast. The banner contest was another new fea- ture. The banners, which were hung in Down- ing University Center, were added to the com- petition in an effort to promote unity among all the Greeks participating in Greek Week. AGR and Kappa Delta won the contest. The Sig Eps and Chi Os were second. Although it didn’t count toward points in winning Greek Week, the blood drive was sponsored by the Red Cross; 340 pints were collected. In the spades tournament, ADPi and Phi Mu tied for first place. Chi O finished third. Kappa Sigma won the fraternity foosball — Margaret Shirley AS FRONT MAN for his tug-of-war team, AGR Keit h Head watches the red tie between the markers which signal victory or defeat. The AGRs successfully pulled the tie across to their side four times. THE ’20s were revisited when SAE presented “The Musi- cal ’20s” during Spring Sing. The winning presentation included a barbershop quartet composed of Scott Neel, Jon Rue, Kreis McGuire and Steve Wilson. Their win ended Lambda Chi Alpha’s 13-year title as Spring Sing winners. tournament. Sigma Nu finished second. In the College Bowl, Phi Mu and Pi Kappa Alpha survived the preliminaries and finished in first place. AOPi and Sig Ep were second. Making its second appearance in Greek Week, the bed race was won by AGR. Lambda Chi was second. The red wagon race, in which sorority sisters pull a big brother, was added as the equivalent of the fraternity’s bed race. Chi O won the race while AZD was second. A keg throw was added to both the fraterni- ty and sorority competitions. In the fraternity division, Sig Ep Dan Pitt threw the 16-gallon keg 33 feet, 6 inches. AGR Tim Cottingham HEAVING a 16-gallon keg, Dan Pitt wins the keg throw for Sigma Phi Epsilon. New to Greek Week, the event was added for both the fraternities and sororities. His throw was 33 feet and 6 inches. — David Frank was second. Sorority members threw 8-gallon pony kegs. AZD Marilyn Dietrich won, Sigma Kappa Mary Berst placed second. One of the week’s highlights and oldest tra- ditions, tug-of-war, was won by the AGRs and Sigma Kappas for the second consecutive year. The AGRs tugged a total of four times, de- feating the Kappa Sigs for the title. The Sigma Kappas survived preliminary pulls against the Chi Os and Phi Mus to pull against AZD in the finals. It was the fourth consecutive first place for Sigma Kappa. AZD placed second. The AGRs and AZDs were honored as win- ners of Greek Week at an awards banquet. Sig Ep and Chi O finished second overall. — Kathy Lam L) : “1m ae e ¥ ‘ we i 8 — Scott Robinson ABOUT TO LOSE a passenger, Jamie Nichols and Be- linda Lee pull AOPi big brother Tim Feagin in the red wagon race. The race, which was won by Chi O, was added as the equivalent of the fraternity’s bed race. ALPHA DELTA PI Kim Fuqua, an Owensboro sopho- more, joins her sisters in their Spring Sing presentation, “Send in the Clowns,”’ from the Broadway production, “A Little Night Music.” — Mark Tucker — Mark Tucker From ADPi to Zeta Phi Beta, Although only three sororities participated, the annual ADPi 500, sponsored by Alpha Delta Pi, was successful, according to Ann Roark, ADPi 500 chairman. Cedar Lake Lodge, a home for mentally retarded children, was the beneficiary of the $198 made from the 500. The ADPis also sponsored their annual Ice Cream Social on the McLean Hall patio. The presentation of two awards at their na- ALPHA DELTA PI: (Front row) S. Mooney, D. Travis, K. Bean, C. Fowler, S. Adams, L, Stone, T. Sager, S. Morgan. (Second row) D. Driver, D. Crabtree, R. Sanders, V. Haw- kins, D. Wagner, A. Roark, H. Bertelson, K. Maddox, P. Buchanan, P. Price. (Third row) L. Driver, C. Watson, C. Rose, B. Newby, S. Finn, J. Bertelson, C. Boylan. (Fourth row) S. Hoffman, B. Bailey, C. Rizzo, R. Willey, L. Lee, T. sister to sister sororities foster togetherness tional convention was one highlight for ADPi. The sorority received the Diamond 4 Point for being a well rounded chapter. They were also one of two chapters in the nation to receive the Virginia Anderson Award for excellence in fi- nances. A SPIRIT CONTEST prompted AOPi members to yell and wave red towels during the Western-Middle Tennessee basketball game. Western won, 72-70, in double overtime, but AOPi didn’t even place in the contest. Harrison, J. Sauer. (Fifth row) L. Emberton, K. Maddox, J. Cole, S. Columbia, T. Kaufman, J. Montgomery, L. Hail, S. Braden. (Sixth row) M. Hill, C. Sparks, S. Taylor, M. McCormick, S. Sandefur, H. Watts, L. Sidwell. (Seventh row) N. McGinnis, C. Garvin, K. Assmar, J. Cavanaugh, E. Cornelius, M. Crumby. (Back row) C. Keene, L. Simms, L. Bendigkeit, C. Fitz, S. Simons, S. McGinnis. Participation in Greek activities kept the ADPis busy throughout the fall. They placed second in November Nonsense and Sigma Chi Derby. Kim Birdsong, a Cadiz freshman, won the Derby Darling title. Active in intramurals, ADPi won first place in sorority division basketball while Kay Bean and Carrie Watson placed second overall in badminton doubles. ADPis also participated in softball, tennis and volleyball. Presenting food and gifts throughout the year to a needy Bowling Green family, with special emphasis at Thanksgiving and Christ- mas, -was a year-long service project for the ADPis. The sisters a lso helped with the Bowl- ing Green Run for Fun. At the academic banquet, ADPi walked off with the award for the highest active sorority grade-point average. Sue Ellen Adams won the award for the graduating sorority member with the highest GPA. Thirty-three members earned at least a 3.0 GPA for either the fall or 1978 spring semesters and were invited to the ban- quet. “ T rue sisterhood is in the quality and not the quantity of the membership,” Shebell Peak, Alpha Kappa Alpha president, said. Miss Peak said she believed the nine-mem- ber sorority accomplished as much as one of the larger sororities. “We’re out for community service, not to compete with anyone,” she said. At Christmas the AKAs gave food baskets to two needy families in Bowling Green. Other community projects included taking girls from the George Washington Carver Club on a pic- nic and sponsoring a fashion show in April at a local elementary school. In November the sorority hosted a retreat for surrounding chapters of Alpha Kappa Al- pha. With their regional director presiding, the members exchanged ideas and learned new ways to run their chapters. When asked about her sorority’s success during the year, Miss Peak replied, “‘Every- thing we set out to accomplish we accom- plished. I think we’ve grown stronger because we’re small and closer together.” “Ease on Down the Road” from the Broad- way play ‘“‘The Wiz” was the theme for the AKA-sponsored Miss Black Western Pageant. The Feb. 24 pageant included competition in talent, swimwear and evening wear for the four contestants. Anita Orr, a Nashville, Tenn., sophomore, was crowned Miss Black Western. The sorority presented trophies to the win- ner, and first and second runners-up. The AKA’s regional office received some of the proceeds from the pageant. Winning the ADPi 500 for the 13th consecu- tive year gave an early boost to Alpha Omi- cron Pi. A Dolly Parton skit earned AOPi first place in the KD Washboard Jamboree. In the Sigma Chi Derby, the sorority took fourth place. In intramurals, the AOPis won first place in sorority division tennis and were second in Greek division basketball. The AOPis were also runners-up in the Sigma Nu Powder Puff Football Classic. — Judy Watson ALPHA OMICRON PI: (Front row) C. Gibson, C. Buck- les, P. Marsh, K. Houser, M. Forbes, K. Clendenin, M. James, M. Yokum, V. Kinkel, M. Holzknecht. (Second row) L. Smith, L. Phillips, L. Berry, S. Kinsner, J. Goodin, L. Cretella, S. Alford, D. Tomes, K. McDonough, T. Johnson, S. Hartford, (Third row) A. Bentley, K. Urbanek, B. Ed- wards, B. Lee, C. Pursley, R. Jarboe, J. Hedde, S. Mabry, K. Kimmel, M. Killian, L. Spain, J. Holtz, K. Huey. (Fourth row) R. Miller, V. Stevens, D. Wade, R. Young, J. Stinson, K. Niva, K. Robison, S. McCullough, E. Porter, L. Ogle, R. Faith, L. Downing, A. Boyd. (Back row) S. Freucht, C. Stark, M. Mayhugh, L. Dickenson, W. Kinkel, B. Metzker, S. Westfall, M. Becht, D. Taylor, V. Pinkston, L. Gaines. The AOPis were host to a state day for all Kentucky AOPi chapters Sept. 30. More than 200 attended the workshops and the dinner and reception that followed. AOPi pledge Connie Gibson was chosen Homecoming queen. Miss Gibson was spon- sored by Sigma Phi Epsilon, Kappa Sigma and Alpha Gamma Rho fraternities. Helping others was an integral part of the year for AOPis, as they raised more than $1,200 in their annual skate-a-thon for the Ar- thritis Foundation. The sorority also helped with the United Giver’s Fund fall campaign, sponsored a Hal- loween party for the Bowling Green Day Care Center and gave a Christmas party for children at the Delafield Community Center. In March, the AOPis and members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity sponsored a muscular dystrophy dance marathon. continued on page 324 THE SIGMA NU Powder Puff Football Classic was not without its pains. ADPi Cathy Boylan sprained her ankle in the game against Kappa Delta. ADPi won, 18-2, but lost its next game to AOPi, 6-0. TAKING A BREAK between football plays at the Lambda Chi Alpha Charity Bowl are ADPis Kathy Assmar and Cindy Stone. The bowl was Nov. 11, and fraternities, so- rorities and independents participated. ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA: (Front row) S. Malone, S. Peak. (Back row) D. Neal, E. Fletcher, D. Caines, S. Taylor, A. Hawkins. 323 Sororities nS eS gn ee ee eee sister to sIstef con One of two sororities to have a house, Alpha Xi Delta was faced with the problem of find- ing a new housemother when Mrs. Sue Overby retired in August. The sisters lived in the house during the fall semester without a housemother, but Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jones moved in the house during Christmas. They’re the first ‘“houseparents”’ for the AZDs. The AZDs sponsored an open house at Homecoming and a dinner party at Christmas for their alumni. They won first place in sorority division soft- ball and participated in basketball and volley- ball. Actives and pledges went on a weekend retreat in September at Kentucky Lake. Bren- da Stroud said the retreat was an inspirational time. “It gave us the chance to really get to know each other,” she said. The AZDs participated in KD Washboard Jamboree and the Sigma Nu Powder Puff Football Classic. In November the eight-member pledge class traveled to their national headquarters in In- dianapolis, Ind. Pledge Teresa Taylor said, “‘It was a real treat to be the first pledge class to CARD TABLES, checkered cloths and paper plates were the setting for a dinner party AZD gave for rushees. The AZDs, one of two sororities to have a house, gave the party in their house at 1405 State St. A CASINO PARTY brought some good natured laughs to members of Delta Sigma Theta. Sondra Hunt, a Delta and Western graduate, junior Mary Starks and senior Phyllis Gatewood entertain rushees at the party in West Hall Cellar. — Stevie Benson ALPHA XI DELTA: (Front row) D. Miller, K. Woodburn, T. Taylor, C. Proctor, C. Oldin, M. Proctor, R. Mormon, M. Dietrich. (Second row) K. Hatfield, D. Raef, D. Williams, A. McKee, B. Korell, K. Hogg, S. Hemingway, J. Halton, C. Robinson, S. Madewell. (Back row) R. Adams, P. Jewitt, K. Carter, C. Damer, M. Sanner, T. Tucker, S. McMann, K. Flanary, A. Girvin, B. Stroud. go to our national headquarters.” At Thanksgiving, the AZDs visited the Colo- nial Manor Nursing Home. The sisters present- ed a program, sang and served refreshments. Chi Omega wasn’t greeted by the Welcome Wagon when it tried to buy a house on Univer- sity Boulevard. Although the sorority won a zoning change in September in order to buy the house, resi- dents appealed the change, and the Chi Os’ plans were stalled. Six members would have lived in the house, and it would have been used for meetings, storage and one party a year. Without letting its involvement in Greek ac- tivities suffer, Chi O walked off with two of the top four honors at the Greek academic awards banquet in January. Chi O received awards for the highest soror- ity grade-point average for pledges and the highest combined GPA (actives and pledges). The fall semester proved to be a successful one after they defeated Alpha Omicron Pi for the first-place title in Sigma Nu Powder Puff Football Classic and won the Sigma Chi Derby for the second consecutive year. The Chi Os collected more than $1,000 in the Coaches Ransom for the Sigma Chi’s phil- anthropy, the Wallace Village for Children in Broomfield, Col. Continuing their winning streak, the Chi Os placed second in KD Washboard Jamboree with a countrified version of ‘“‘Grease,”’ entitled “Grits.” They also placed second in the ADPi 500. The sisters participated in softball, basket- ball and volleyball intramurals. The March of Dimes was the recipient of the $300 made from their annual November Non- sense. The theme was “‘Chi O Land USA.” Chi O had 66 members at the end of the fall semester and did not have a spring pledge class. They received 27 pledges in formal and open rush in the fall. It was the first time the Chi Os did not have a spring pledge class. “A group of ladies who are dedicated to their organization” — that’s Delta Sigma Theta, according to Joyce Haskins, who was president in the fall semester. “I think people see us as being intelligent college women who have high standards,”’ she said. Those standards are reflected in their pledg- ing policies and activities, she said. The minimum grade-point average for pledges is 2.5, and the sisters try to help each other study, she said. The group also plans three or four service 324 Sororities aR Pa TPES a are A PATE — David Frank projects a month, she said. They took children from the Boys’ and Girls’ clubs to basketball and football games; gave a reception for the basketball players in Diddle Hall; visited a nursing home and presented Valentines to the residents; and gave a needy child an outfit to wear to school. For social activities, the Deltas sponsored discos. Delta Week was March 25-31, and the 11 sisters recognized Founder’s Day and sang at a local church. There were no pledges in the fall semester, but about 11 women expressed interest in the spring, Miss Haskins said. “T really don’t know why young ladies aren’t pledging as much as they did,” she said. “I don’t know if it’s that there are other things to get into.” The spring semester president was Mikki Brooks. continued on page 327 “ELTON JOHN” and “‘Kikki Dee”’ made an appearance at November Nonsense. Lisa Harper, a Chi O, and Darrell Pierce, a Sigma Nu an d Chi O big brother, sang ‘‘Don’t Go Breaking My Heart’’ between acts. DELTA SIGMA THETA: (Front row) P. English, J. Has- kins, H. Parrish. (Back row) B. Hatfield, P. Nunn, S. Jewell. CHI OMEGA: (Front row) L. Harper, S. May, S. Brenzel, S. Moore, T. Borders, J. Blick, L. Farmer, P. Burnette, J. Collins. (Second row) M. Bryant, B. Thompson, T. Martin, B. Beasley, S. Poehlein, L. Modjeski, T. Truell, D. Ray, L. Triplett, S. Cornell, S. Resh, J. McClure, B. Kremmer, B. Morris. (Third row) R. Branham, J. Barclet, K. Ruble, L. Donahue, B. Binnion, J. Cloar, C. Hardesty, R. Watts, K. Joi ner, M. Manis. (Fourth row) D. Ballance, P. Constans, L. Robinson, M. Robertson, R. Mayo, L. Vise (Fifth row) L. Constans, M. Borders, B. Rue, E. Martin, S. Waters, D. Hitron, R. Bruner, A. Lee. (Sixth row) S. Mitchell, S. Jack- son, C. Barger, S. Gilliam, L. Baker. (Back row) A. Henry, R. Walker, J. Thompson, S. Garrott. €M_ FACTS Founded: March |S82 pons Rose £ hate lowers: Rose Carnation Mascot: Sir Fidel- Lion Philanthropy: Project HOPE Cars Activities: b Serenade ’ etl ypc r M Fownees Pledge fee $35% | paid immediatly after pledging Fhilplede)dues: Q Initiation Fee. se ational Dues: : hapler Dues: ¢ Oummer Dues: | | fe NOTE ER A fe Ne — Mark Lyons rush in Garrett Conference Center. The posters outline some of the fees that Greek membership brings. “PHI MU FACTS AND FINANCES” provide a back- drop for Phi Mu Julie Poor and a rushee during fall formal is, a Aaa BROT Be ie ons ZETA PHI BETA: (Front row) B. Baker, M. Crump. (Back row) R. Vinson, R. Britton, P. Smith. Sororities KAPPA DELTA: (Front row) K. Melton, S. Minogue, D. Harrington, L. Chambers, L. Sims, S. Treece, V. Pence, M. Boze, M. Mitchell, B. Goodwin, J. Griffin, B. Smith. (Second row) G. Nutter, L. Gilbert, K. Ashby, A. Schmidt, S. Hem- ingway, B. Mitchell, J. McCullough, T. Craig, T. Sanders, K. Houston. (Third row) S. Egan, T. Hardesty, M. Minogue, S. Lynn, K. Nutter, C. Coffman, D. Holmes, B. Gregory, M. Phillips, B. Alford, J. Burton, S. Adams, A. Bordas, S. Bradshaw, J. Bucklin. (Back row) K. O’Hearn, P. Living- ston, B. Alvey, S. Mahan, M. Seig, J. Francis, L. Morrow, M. Graham, M. Shelton, K. Sloan, T. Duncan, S. Jenkins, D Lacy, V. Lindsey. sister to sister con Inspired by the football team’s capture of the Ohio Valley Conference title, Kappa Delta won first place in November Nonsense. Wearing Confederate caps and waving min- iature flags, the KDs’ song-and-dance number included ‘When Western Comes Marching Home”’ and “Western Has Won The OVC.” The KDs placed third in the ADPi 500. They also participated in Sigma Chi Derby, Sigma Nu Powder Puff Football Classic and intramur- als. ; The KDs sponsored their annual Washboard Jamboree in October. Barb Smith, who helped coordinate the event, said, ‘‘This year was probably the best we’ve ever had. Participa- tion was good among the fraternities and so- rorities, and the attendance was great.”’ After receiving 20 pledges in fall rush, the “KDs became one of two sororities to have 70 members, the maximum for sororities. The KDs raised money and sent toys and games each month to their national philanthro- py, a hospital for crippled children in Rich- mond, Va. The sisters also worked throughout the year for the Red Cross Bloodmobile. The KDs won the spirit contests in the foot- ball and basketball seasons. Their spring formal was in March at Lake Malone near Central City. “Hung Up On Hank,” a medley of songs by country-western great Hank Williams won sec- ond place for Phi Mu in KD Washboard Jam- boree. The medley included ‘Hey Good Lookin’,”’ “Your Cheatin’ Heart,” “I Can’t Help It If I’m Still In Love With You” and ‘“‘Jambalaya.”’ The Phi Mus sponsored their annual Hallow- een Serenade for children in the Big Brother- Big Sister program. The costumed children “trick or treated” at fraternity houses while the Phi Mus serenaded the brothers. The Phi Mus also sponsored the annual Spe- cial Olympics in the spring for children in the special education programs in Bowling Green and surrounding counties. Trophies were PHI MU: (Front row) L. Camp, L. Redmon, V. Tuttle, L. Pilliteri, J. Poor, J. Pierce, P. Williams, D. Moore, L. Grider, D. Payne, D. Dollinger. (Second row) S. Flory, S. Buck, L. Nortin, K. Booher, C. Caldwell, B. Fyock, B. Barnette, D. Marks, D. Dukes, D. Wilmore. (Third row) V. awarded to the fraternity and sorority with the most participation during the weekend event. The sorority donated $50 to their national philanthrophy, Project HOPE (Health Oppor- tunities for People Everywhere). On the local level, at Christmas the Phi Mus supplied and replenished the toy cart at Bowling Green- Warren County Hospital. The Phi Mus participated in Sigma Chi Derby, Sigma Nu Powder Puff Football Classic and intramurals during the fall semester. Work- ing with Kappa Alpha fraternity on a Home- coming float, the Phi Mus sponsored Debbie Dukes for Homecoming queen. Sigma Kappa sponsored a “Fright Factory” at Halloween with the Greenwood Optimist Club and made $500. Some of the proceeds went to its local philanthrophy, gerontology, in which members work with senior citizens. Therese Gruneisen, chairman of the event, said, “‘The girls had a lot of fun. It was hard work, but it paid off.” This was the first year the sorority sponsored the haunted house. Receiving an award at their national conven- tion was one of the year’s highlights, according to president Donna Green, who accepted the award for doubling their membership. Mary Berst was named outstanding athlete for 1977-78 by the intramurals department. Sigma Kappa also received the sportsmanship award for 1977-78. They participated in soft- ball, basketball and volleyball. Julie Fulkerson won the archery championships. The ‘Rhinestone Sigmas’’ performed a medley of Glen Campbell songs in the KD Washboard Jamboree. They also participated in November Nonsense and the Homecoming spirit contest. Markita Key was Sigma Kappa’s Homecoming queen candidate. The Sigma Kappas had their annual Parents’ Day in September, and the sisters gave a tea for visiting alumni at Homecoming. Twenty-five members were invited to the Greek academic awards banquet in January. At least a 3.0 grade-point average was re- Phillips, K. Grosshuesch, L. Garrell, L. Daum, L. Hilden- brandt, T. Willis, B. Young, P. Carter, B. Galloway, K. Harlin, J. Howe, S. Daniels. (Back row) M. Caldwell, D. Davis, R. Kerr, M. Wheeler, M. Barret, D. Olsen, C. Young, D. Cornwell, J. Convey. quired for an invitation to the banquet. Zeta Phi Beta is just “‘a moderate group of ladies.”’ That’s according to Brenda Baker, who was Zeta president in the fall semester. “I think Zeta is in the middle,” she said. “We’re not uppity and we’re not at the bot- tom. We’re a moderate group of ladies, and I think people are impressed on how we get along with each other. “We’re real close.” The 11 sisters sponsored several civic activi- ties, along with some social programs. Miss Baker said the sorority tries to even out social and charitable events. They sponsored the Little Miss Black Bowl- ing Green Pageant, and proceeds went to sev- eral organizations around Bowling Green, she said. Girls between about kindergarten age to about six years old are eligible. They have a talent competition, and they model clothes. The sorority also recognized Zeta Week Feb. 25 through March 3. The Mr. Brickhouse competition was one highlight along with a fashion show and disco. Mr. Brickhouse contestants have swim trunk and talent competitions, among others, and the winner is chosen on the basis of his body build, Miss Baker said. “Independents,” including athletic coaches, were the judges, she said. Easter received special focus from the Ze- tas. They gave an egg hunt for children at Lampkin Park and made Easter baskets for needy families. L SIGMA KAPPA: (Front row) R. Bohannon, T. Watts, E. Guill, S. McDaniel, S. Wood. (Second row) T. Gruneisen, S. Panagos, C. Wheeler, L. Hewson, L. Jordan, D. Winlock. (Third row) G. Carlson, M. Riggs, B. Hewlett, D. Green, J. Alexander, J. Fulkerson. (Fourth row) C. Brown, L. Grish, S. Utley, S. Melhiser, M. Michaels, J. Nunn. (Fifth row) D. Cole, A. Vanderspool, E. Ashcraft, D. Hatfield, S. Johnson, M. Key. (Sixth row) D. Gaines, C. Minor, G. Williams. (Seventh row) K. Lam, M. Berst, S. Constant. (Eighth row) C. Oldham, C Eden, M. Young, M. Selems, S. Stiltner. (Back row) M. Hargan, A. Cunningham. 327 Sororities With fall and spring pledge classes totaling 27, AGR’s membership increased to 63. j I ® r “We did so well because we set our goals O Cc O @) C ; higher and worked toward them,” Mitchell said. With a skit entitled “Night at the Opry,” the he AGRs participated in KD Washboard Jambo- Fraternities reach out to each other and others ‘ce. they also participated in the ADP: 500. At Homecoming the AGRs worked on a The myth that good grades and social life AGR president Chris Mitchell said, “We en- float with Kappa Sigma and Sigma Phi Epsilon. don’t mix was proven wrong when Alpha courage everyone to study and make good The three fraternities jointly sponsored Connie Gamma Rho won the award for the highest grades, but it’s mainly left up to the individ- Gibson, who was crowned queen. grade-point average for actives and pledges at ual.” A breakfast at the house and dance after the the Greek academic awards banquet in Janu- Eighteen brothers made a 3.0 or higher GPA game were given for the 40 alumni who re- ary. and were invited to the banquet. turned for Homecoming. In April the AGRs sponsored their second annual Foxy Lady Disco with the proceeds going to the American Cancer Society. Throughout the year the brothers visited and entertained the residents of the Colonial Manor Nursing Home. Their spring formal was April 21 at the Ex- ecutive Inn in Owensboro. Working in tobacco fields around Bowling Green, the AGRs cleared about $1,800 for maintenance and improvement on their frater- nity house. The brothers worked throughout the fall se- mester cutting, spiking and drying the tobacco. Aside from general upkeep on the house, some of the profits went for a new television and stereo system. | ALPHA GAMMA RHO: (Front row) J. Chaney, W. Bea- Hornbeck, R. Smith, M. Hardison, R. Druen. (Back row) C. | vin, T. Goodman, K. Grace, T. Jones, D. Goad, J. Lane. Mitchell, K. Jackson, M. Stewart, S. Straney, E. Yates, J. T q . | (Second row) R. Tingle, M. Peden, K. Head, L. Sorrell, S. | Estes, K. Hopgood, R. Goss, E. Coleman, T. Cottingham, he Martin Luther King awards program Murphy, J. Fowler, S. Melhiser, S. Fuller, J. Noel, T. |W. Haines, K. Coalson, J. Estes. kicked off Alpha Phi Alpha’s “Alpha Week”’ j Lee nell oat % ‘e : s ; x MLLER Nes EET oe si ere ¢ e te é ty : Re s ‘ : ee 3 ) ail Ss | Z ie | a 4 % 4 r x | : 4 A . BP 7 = t : — Scott Robinson s STEPPING in front of Downing University Center was a — Ricky Rogers major event after the Homecoming game, and hundreds ALPHA PHI ALPHA’S scrapbook was the topic of con- man at a Sept. 27 rush party. Dolman pledged the fraterni- _ gathered to watch. Irvin White, Alpha Phi Alpha president, versation between Michael Hughes and rushee Michael Dol- ty in the fall. joins his frate rnity in the stepping. Fraternities April 15-21. The awards were given to black Greeks for academic and athletic achieve- ments. The week included the Alpha Classic, a bas- ketball tournament; sickle cell anemia testing; discos; and the fraternity’s spring dance. With 10 pledges, the Alphas’ membership rose to 14. President Irvin White said, ‘‘We’ve changed our pledge program. We’ve modified and im- proved our standards. We’re more academic minded than in previous years. ISOLATED between rows of spiked tobacco, Kevin Grace, an AGR and Muhlenburg County sophomore, carries sticks to an uncut part of the field. For the fifth year, the 40 AGR members cut, spiked and hung tobacco in two fields near Bowling Green. The $1,800 profit bought a new TV and went toward a new stereo system and house repairs. | DELTA TAU DELTA: (Front row) K. Wettig, K. Cundiff, S. Parshall, J. Wilkins, R. Ueltschi. (Second row) R. Wad- dle, S. Brittingham, J. Logsdon, M. Weidmar. (Third row) M. Clements, T. Terry, B. Nunn. (Fourth row) S. Hulette, J. Siemens, K. Larkin, C. Jones, S. Allen. (Back row) D. Crawford, R. Kemper, B. Henry, Z. Arnold, D. Orne, M. Sotherland. “Out of all the chapters in the Ohio Valley Conference region, ours is the most modern and progressive.” At Homecoming the brothers hosted a re- ception for eight visiting chapters of Alpha Phi Alpha. The Alphas also stepped after the game. The brothers gave a Valentine’s party for residents of a local nursing home. They pro- vided refreshments and entertainment. Three members were invited to the Greek academic awards banquet. “We stress academ- ics as part of our pledge programs,” White said. The Alphas sponsored a disco in November with a canned good as admission. More than 300 cans were collected and distributed to needy Bowling Green familes through a local ALPHA PHI ALPHA: P. Carter, C. Nelson, I. White, B. Wiggington, M. Hughes, J. Suttles, E. Murrell, W. Holloman. church, The Alphas planned to sponsor another drive in the spring. Delta Tau Delta ranked among the top five fraternities in overall grade-point averages, and their pledges placed second in GPAs. Ten members were invited to the Greek academic awards banquet. Fall and spring pledge classes of seven gave the Delts a total membership of 25. Delt presi- dent Rob Ueltschi said the membership was about the same as last year. “We tried to get our little sisters more in- volved in the total rush picture,” he said. “We also tried to make more use of personal con- tacts.” continued on page 330 329 Fraternities See brother to brother cont The Delts appeared as ‘“‘The Ballads of 1351 College Street” in KD Washboard Jam- boree. They also participated in ADPi 500 and intramural football, basketball, volleyball, bowling and wrestling. At Homecoming the Delts entertained more than 30 alumni with an open house before the game. A dinner and dance followed. They also participated in the house decorating contest. Working with the Department of Human Re- sources, the brother s had a chili supper for about 25 children from the Delafield School. The Delts’ spring formal was March 31 in Gatlinburg, Tenn. Jan. 12 was named Kappa Alpha Day by Mayor Bernie Steen in celebration of the fra- ternity’s first year on the Hill. The KAs received the key to the city of Bowling Green and their national charter at a banquet. Guests were national officers, par- ents, alumni, dates and little sisters. The KAs’ national philanthrophy, muscular dystrophy, was the recipient of about $100 the brothers raised from a slave auction. The sec- ond largest check donated to the Jerry Lewis Telethon for MD came from the KA national. The KAs participated in intramural football, basketball, softball, tennis, golf, bowling, rac- quetball, and basketball freethrow. The KAs had 45 members with 32 pledges in the fall and spring. The KAs ranked eighth overall in fraternity grade-point averages. Twelve members were invited to the Greek academic awards banquet in January after making a 3.0 or higher GPA during the past two semesters. In March the KAs celebrated Old South Week, a national KA tradition. A week of par- ties and events was highlighted by the KAs’ formal Dixie Ball. James Dockemeyer was activities vice presi- dent for the Interfraternity Council. — Harold Sinclair MAN TO MAN full court pressure didn’t help the KAs in the first game of the intramural basketball tournament as KA John Deeb tries to force a turnover from Sigma Chi Randy Robinson. Sigma Chi won, 51-48. Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity celebrated its 10th year on campus in March with displays, a softball tournament, dances, a fashion show and a banquet. “We place our main emphasis on academ- ics,” president Gerald Bell said. ‘‘Pledges, along with actives who feel they need it, study every night in the library from 7:30 to 10:30.” The brothers finished 14th overall among fraternities in grade-point averages. Two mem- bers were invited to the Greek academic awards banquet. The fraternity contributed $1,000 to a scholarship fund for students needing short- term loans. KAPPA ALPHA: (Front row) G. Cline, D. Rutledge, J. Deeb, B. Sublett, P. Hendershot. (Second row) B. Cunning- ham, B. Puckett, B. Nedvideck, M. Drake, S. Kuegel, L. Sharp, N. Deeb. (Third row) S. Shannon, B. McGinnis, R. At Homecoming, the Kappas stepped after the game with many of the other black Greek organizations. Bell said instead of sponsoring any Homecoming activities of their own, they participated in activities the university spon- sored and helped Omega Psi Phi fraternity celebrate its 10th year anniversary. Taking children from the Bowling Green Big Brother-Big Sister program to football and bas- ketball games was a year-long project for the brothers. KAPPA ALPHA PSI: M. Edmonds, C. Smalley, K. Mor- ton, G. Bartleson, R. Reed, J. Moore, D. Livers, W. Rich- ardson, L. Griggs. Wall, M. Lastufka, R. Chrappa. (Fourth row) T. West, J. Dockemeyer, T. Bright, R. Wise, R. Tuggle, R. Osborne, L. Hicks, T. Nedvidek, M. Hunter. (Back row) R. Taylor, P. Markle, B. Jordan, D. Cooksey, T. Lowe. The fraternity’s membership increased to 15 after a fall pledge class of three. The Kappas require a 2.3 GPA for pledgeship. Bell said their membership was ‘‘about the same as last year.” Thanks to Kappa Sigma, the spirit cannon is fired at all home football games. This was the 13th year the brothers fired the cannon after touchdowns and at halftime. The brothers worked with Potter Children’s Home throughout the fall and spring semes- ters. They treated 25 children to sports events and cookouts. Working for the Heart Fund was a major project for the Kappa Sigs. The brothers col- lected $500 throughout the year. Kappa Sig’s membership reached 43 after combined fall and spring pledge classes of 20. President Tim Kaine said that membership had increased. “Our rush was more organized this year,” ‘he said. “‘Our little sisters were a big help in rush. They brought in as much as 25 percent of the guys that came to parties.” A skit entitled ‘Bland Ole Opry”’ was pre- sented by the brothers in KD Washboard Jam- continued on page 333 RATE-A-CHICK was an October afternoon pastime for some Kappa Sigs. The group gathered in front of Schneider Hall, and using notebooks as scorecards, “‘rated”’ the wom- en who walked by. Tim Kaine, Kappa Sigma president, said most of the women were flattered and that the fraternity plans to make Rate-A-Chick a semi-annual event. They came up with the idea one night at the fraternity house, he said, and decided to try it out. ie a= « — Mark Lyons A KU KLUX KLAN costume covers rushee Ricky Sowers at a Kappa Sigma “‘Bizarre Costume Rush Party.’’ Sowers played foosball at the party — one of several he attended. He pledged the fraternity because ‘“‘it was a lot of fun.” KAPPA SIGMA: (Front row) D. Adams, D. Clark, J. Hepner, R. Earls, B. Murrey, G. Crenshaw, L. Menetrey. (Second row) R. Sego, B. Simpson, G. Barnett, M. Clark, S. MSY Adams, C. Fleenor. (Back row) H. James, M. Walters, Storie, K. Pawley, T. Kaine, M. Vick, L. Harbison, Atwell. — Lewis Gardner vo 331 Fraternities se ae ee ee ee ee ee or 332 Fraternities AT THE END of their Founder’s Day Jan. 28, Phi Beta Sigma members join hands and sing “‘Our Cause Speeds On Its Way,” which celebrates their founding. The day includ- ed displays, guest speakers and a reception. The chapter began at Western in 1971. LAMBDA CHI ALPHA: (Front row) D. Bosma, B. Chum- ley, B. Goodnight, D. Adams, C. Burkeen, T. Swyhart, K. Inman, M. Cook, D. Wheeler, D. Holt. (Second row) J. Roberts, R. Hemmen, H. Shehan, E. Vinton, T. Ruble, T. Groves, S. Wanta, S. Tilton, D. Mattingly, M. Bell, D. Winchester, B. Langley. (Third row) D. Buzzard, G. Zoeller. M. Kittinger, I. Young, S. Barton, D. Young, G. Casada, D Stanley, J. Keller, A. Edging, P. Hempenstall, B. Dost. (Back row) J. Penn, B. Barker, J. Johnson, J. Mosley, K. Stone, J. Greer, S. Peck, R. Hardesty. brother to brother cont. boree. “‘Dixieland”’ was the theme of their No- vember Nonsense skit. The Kappa Sigs also participated in ADPi 500 and played intramural football, swimming, volleyball, horseshoes and basketball. About 20 alumni returned for the Home- coming festivities. The Kappa Sigs provided brunch before the game and a dance at Park Manor afterward. LAMBDA CHI Terry Hackett gets a handful of SAE Larry Heffington’s face in an intramural football game Sept. 14. Rick Poling blocks for SAE quarterback Roger Lee. But it didn’t help as SAE lost, 8-0. The Kappa Sigs had their spring formal March 31 at Owensboro’s Executive Inn. Lambda Chi Alpha “kidnapped’’ Bowling Green Mayor Bernie Steen, and they got a lot of ransom money — $500 in cash and $2,500 in food. But it all went to the Salvation Army. In the spring the fraternity sponsored a pen- ny drive for charity, hoping to collect one mil- lion pennies through donations from students and Bowling Green residents. Lambda Chi is a sporting bunch. They won second place in intramural football; first place in badminton singles; second in volleyball; sec- ond in swimming; and second and third in table tennis doubles. They participated in ADPi 500, KD Wash- board Jamboree and November Nonsense. In November Lambda Chi sponsored its an- nual Charity Bowl, and the proceeds went to the Bowling Green Big Brother-Big Sister pro- gram. Their membership rose to 70 with 26 pledges in the fall and spring. At Homecoming the fraternity placed sec- ond in house decorating with its depiction of the landing on the moon. Eighteen members were invited to the Greek academic awards banquet. The Lambda Chis had their spring formal at Barren River April 14-15. Phi Beta Sigma came under fire when it chose to follow its national office’s ruling not to disband its little sister organization. The National Pan-Hellenic Council had ruled that all black fraternities could not sponsor or recognize little sisters. This raised the question of whether campus chapters should follow rules of their national organization or the Pan-Hellenic Council. Phi Beta Sigma believed that the ruling did not apply to its chapter since its national orga- nization voted against the ruling and chose not to follow it, according to past president Mi- chael Hayes. Hayes said they would rather be recognized by their national organization than the Pan- Hellenic Council. Phi Beta Sigma has about 35 little sisters. The fraternity worked throughout the year for its national philanthropy, Project SAD or Sigmas Attack Defects. The brothers collected donations, sold heli- um balloons and gave $100 for the fight against birth defects. At Christmas the brothers and the Seventh Street Baptist Church gave food baskets to several needy Bowling Green families. They also included toys and gifts for the children. After fall and spring pledge classes of eight, they had 18 members. President Norman Cleaver said the membership was ‘“‘down some’”’ from last year. They celebrated their annual Founder’s Day Jan. 28. Dr. Mingo Scott, who was one of the fraternity’s co-founders, spoke at a reception, and Hayes was named Sigma of the Year. In April the Sigmas had their annual Sigma Week. One of the highlights was a gospel jam- boree which included campus and community groups. A gospel group from Nashville also sang. Phi Delta Theta received two awards from its national office — the General Headquarters Award for consistently turning in financial and officer reports on time and the Outstanding Improvement for Chapters Award based on improvements in finance, scholastics, brother- hood and house condition. The brothers won the football and basketball season spirit contests sponsored by Interfrater- i ouncil and Panhellenic. BENS continued on page 334 PHI BETA SIGMA: (Front row) L. Hagen, V. Williams, M. Hayes, S. Conner, M. Sneed, Z. Lynum, N. Cleaver. (Back row) R. Byrd, N. Baker, J. Haire, A. McKinney, R. Vaughn, S. Reed, J. Hopper. i 333 Fraternities PHI DELTA THETA: (Front row) O. Stone, L. Forst, C. Kuckens, G. Story, M. Phillips, D. Moore, T. Johnson, B. Armstrong, J. Brandenburg, S. Calvert. (Second row) K. Bagget, K. Kuddes, T. Russell, J. Anderson, G. Cherry, R. Schultz, P, Solverson, J. Spurlock. (Back row) M. Stater, D. Elbon, K. McReynolds, T. Cunningham, D. Mudd, D. Chan- dler, R. Collins, G. Graves, R. Milograno. brother to brother cont. “Dear Abby”’ was the Phi Delts’ skit in KD Washboard Jamboree. They also participated in the ADPi 500 and played intramural volley- ball and bowling. The Phi Delts raised $650 for the New Year’s Eve Cerebral Palsy Telethon by “‘kid- napping” coach Jimmy Feix and coach Gene Keady and asking for ransom. The Red Towel Club, the Hilltopper Club and faculty were among those who helped pay the ransom. The Phi Delts raised more money for the telethon than any other Western group. At Homecoming the Phi Delts gave a dance for the 20 alumni who returned. The Phi Delts finished third overall among the fraternities in grade-point averages. Twelve brothers made at least a 3.0 GPA and were invited to the Greek academic awards banquet. After combined fall and spring pledge classes of 15, the Phi Delts had 25 members. The brothers presented Chi Omega with their annual scholarship trophy, which is pre- sented to the Greek organization with the high- est grade-point average. This was the 12th year the fraternity made the presentation. Owensboro’s Executive Inn was the site of the Phi Delts’ spring formal in March. Pi Kappa Alpha’s pledge class was honored at the Greek academic awards banquet for earning the highest grade-point average of fra- ternity pledge classes. Clay Scott, who pledged in the fall, said, “We were encouraged to study. If we had to study for a test, they wouldn’t take us away from it.” The Pikes ranked fourth among the fraterni- ties in active members’ GPAs. Sixteen made the 3.0 or higher GPA required for an invita- tion to the banquet. “Old McDonald Had a Farm” was the theme of the Pikes’ skit in KD Washboard Jamboree. Selling programs at football and basketball games was a year-long project for the Pikes, and they collected 10 percent of each program sold. About $500 was made from the sales each semester. The Pikes took about 30 children of the Big Brother-Big Sister program to two home foot- ball games. More than 30 Pike alumni returned to the Hill for Homecoming. The Pikes gave a dinner and dance for the alumni. ‘Sew It Up Toppers”’ was the theme of the float the Pikes sponsored with Kappa Delta. Pike dreamgirl Janet McCullough was spon- sored by the two groups for queen. The float won the Regents’ Award in the Best All- Around category. Louisville’s Ramada Inn was the site of the fraternity’s spring formal March 14. At the end of the spring semester, the Pikes LEIS completed the “‘costumes”’ at the Pikes’ luau party in the fall semester. Susan Treece, an Elizabethtown sopho- more and Kappa Delta member, laughs it up with Scott Irwin, a Pike and freshman from Ypsilanti, Mich. — Lewis Gardner had 39 members after spring and fall pledge classes of 10. Pi Kappa Phi had a conference for area chapters of their fraternity in February. Chapters from Kentucky, Tennessee and Arkansas attended the meetings and the dance provided by Pi Kappa Phi. Kerry Baggett, a White House, Tenn., ju- nior, said the conference tried to promote bet- ter relations between the chapters. Throughout February and March, the Pi Kapps sponsored a pizza eating and beer chug- ging contest for fraternities and sororities at a local restaurant. “We wanted the fraternities and sororities to get together and have a good time,” Baggett said. The fraternity celebrated its Founder’s Day in November with a banquet and dance. They received their charter in April 1974. The fraternity ’s membership increased to 19 with 14 pledges in the fall and spring. At Homecoming Pi Kappa Phi gave a dance at Riviera Apartments for the 15 returning alumni. The brothers won the participation award for Sigma Kappa’s Haunted House in October, Member Gerard Ballard received the award for the highest grade-point average among continued on page 336 PHI DELTA THETA joined other fraternities and sorori- ties in supporting the football team in the Western-Eastern game Oct. 21 by hanging a banner at the stadium. The game was televised on ABC. — Mark Tucker A CASINO RUSH PARTY draws rushee Bo Bardin to the tables to try his luck with the dice. One of five fraternities without a house, Pi Kappa Phi had the party at the apart- ment of two of its members Feb. 1. The fraternity had four pledges in the spring. — Mark Lyons PI KAPPA PHI: (Front row) D. Holt, S. Shields, M. Rick- etts, J. Grove, D. Rexroat, H. Ricketts. (Back row) C. Tatum, G. Ballard, T. Pulaski, K. Baggett, G. Floyd, S. Estok, J. Weissenger, R. Dierson, K. Yann. PI KAPPA ALPHA: (Front row) J. Wright, T. Pauli, M. Smith, D. Lane, T. Vanarsdale, J. McCullough, J. Craw- ford, B. Bonser, K. Hughart, J. Lynch, M. Held, G. Green, R. Miles, M. Seifert. (Second row) B. Ogden, T. Higgs, L. O’Bryan, T. Atzinger, M. Crum. (Third row) A. Hurt, S. Brown, C. Green, D. Brown. (Fourth row) C. Sensel, B. Leigden, C. Scott, J. Lee, M. Sowell, J. Grunow, R. Red- ding. (Back row) S. Irwin, C. Gaines, B. Huffins. 336 Fraternities brother to brother cont graduating fraternity members at the Greek academic awards banquet. The Pi Kapps had their spring formal at lake Malone near Central City April 20-21. Four out of six isn’t bad. For four out of six years, Sigma Alpha Epsilon has won the M. Reed Morgan Award for fraternity excellence. The SAEs received the 1977-1978 award during Greek Week in 1978. The SAEs were also honored for having the highest grade-point average among fraternity actives at the Greek academic awards banquet. Billy Joe Travis won the highest GPA award for graduating fraternity members. They also finished second overall among the fraternities in combined active and pledge GPAs. “‘Can’t Stop Dancin’ ”’ was the theme of the muscular dystrophy dance marathon spon- sored by SAE and Alpha Omicron Pi in March. Mike Murphy, dance marathon chairman, said the marathon was expanded to include a run-a-thon, a six-mile run through Bowling Green. During October the SAEs worked a haunted house to raise money for the March of Dimes. Underprivileged children were treated to a Christmas shopping spree courtesy of the SAEs and local businessmen. A skit entitled “Country Curds and the Nurds”’ won second place for the SAEs in KD Washboard Jamboree. They also placed sec- ond in November Nonsense with the skit ‘‘Chi Os Go to Court.” The brothers finished third in the ADPi 500. They participated in all the sports offered by the intramural department. Chi Omega and the SAEs built a Homecom- BEER STEINS and beer were part of the props for Sigma Chi’s October Fest mixer during Sigma Chi Derby Week. Sigma Chi Ricky Cothern and Phi Mu Dawn Dollinger enjoy a joke at the party. po RESTING his elbows on a pile of notebooks, SAE Kreis McGuire watches the fraternity’s cook, Margaret Demun- brun, mix up a batch of potatoes. Mrs. Demunbrun cooks dinner for about 30 SAEs, and she said, “‘It seems like they like good, plain cookin’.”’ ing float and sponsored SAE sweetheart Betty Thompson for Homecoming queen. More than 200 SAE alumni returned for the weekend festivities. Sigma Chi members won it all. Not only did they win first place in the ADPi 500, KD Washboard Jamboree and November Nonsense, but they also won first place in intra- mural swimming and football. Sigma Chi had its 13th annual Sigma Chi Derby in October. With five sororities partici- pating, more than $1,300 was collected through the Coaches Ransom. Chi Omega won the ransom, collecting more than $1,000. Sigma Chi’s national philanthropy, the Wal- lace Village for Children, and the Bowling Green Big Brother-Big Sister program received the profits. “The attitudes were good between the so- rorities,’ Jamie Hargrove, Sigma Chi presi- dent, said. “The competition was good, and Event’s Day was the smoothest it’s ever been run. The sororities were well informed so things went well.” At Halloween the Sigma Chi house was in- vaded by 60 to 70 costumed ghosts and gob- lins when the brothers gave a party for the children of the Big Brother-Big Sister program. They provided games, entertainment and re- freshments. “Around the World in Eight Days” was the theme of the Homecoming float that Sigma Chi and Alpha Omicron Pi sponsored. They also participated in the bonfire competition and the banner contest. In a contest sponsored by Interfraternity Council, Sigma Chi won the award for the most improved fraternity house. continued to page 338 SIGMA CHI: (Front row) K. Shaheen, K. Hamilton, J. Booher, R. Cothern, A. Bramen, R. Robinson. (Second row) M. Johnson, T. Feagin, J. Jordan, J. Hargrove, T. Irons, T. Rhoades, C. Allen. (Third row) B. St. Clair, G. Sutton, M. Schaftlein, D. Will, S. Williams, S. Allgeier, W. Hummer. (Back row) M. Miller, M. Straney, R. Maggard, R. Lovell, B. Ray, C. Phillips, K. McDonald. — Lewis Gardner — Mark Lyons BEFORE GOING back to dance, ADPi Sherrie Mooney and Sigma Chi Randy Robinson exchange a kiss in the fraternity’s kitchen. The two were at a toga party. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON: (Front row) D. Pelino, C. Henry, C. Callis, B. Bratcher, T. Callis, B. Travis, M. Chest- Warren, J. Rue, B. Johnson, L. Heffington, G. Hernandez, nut, D. Augenstein, K. Tharpe, S. Snellen, R. Cheuvront, T. Elwert, B. Thompson, B. Moore, T. Briske, S. Robert- K. McGuire. (Fourth row) J. Warren, D. Walter, S. Neel, B. son, S. Wilson. (Second row) D. Rue, S. Rideout, B. Mor- Buckberry, S. Snodgrass, T. Wright, L. Logue, B. Davis, K. gan, D. Clark, J. Pickens, T. Keck. (Third row) R. Carey, R. Blaine, J. Perkins, J. Outlaw. (Back row) W. Moore, J. Poling, S. Thornton, M. Murphy, J. Morris, B. Fane, B. Eckhart, C. Strader, D. Wunderlich. RTE EEE EA ERT a Th 337 Fraternities | 1% eee brother to brother cont. With 16 pledges from the fall and spring semesters, Sigma Chi’s membership rose to Bile Sigma Chi finished seventh overall among the fraternities in combined active and pledge grade-point averages. Sigma Nu members like intramurals — just look at their records. They took third place in football, second and third in golf, and first in bowling. Member Craig Riley won first place in the campus rac- quetball championships. Sigma Nu’s ‘Hole in the Wall Gang”’ cap- tured third place in KD Washboard Jamboree. Their skit in November Nonsense, ‘‘Big Wheel and the Hubcaps,” also won third place. They took second place in the ADPi 500. Their total membership reached 48 with fall and spring pledge classes of 14. The Sigma Nus sponsored their annual Pow- der Puff Football Classic in November. Chi Omega defeated Alpha Omicron Pi for the title. The $200 profit from the classic was used to set up a 10-year scholarship fund with the College Heights Foundation for Sigma Nu members. At Homecoming the Sigma Nus won the Red Towel Award in house decorating with a display of the landing on the moon and Colum- bus’ discovery of America. The brothers gave a reception and a dance for the 45 returning alumni during Homecom- ing weekend. Seventeen members made a 3.0 or higher grade-point average and were invited to the Greek academic awards banquet in January. | They finished ninth in fraternity GPAs. Sigma Nu pledges finished sixth overall in GPAs. The members of Sigma Ph i Epsilon went trick or treating on Halloween, but they didn’t ask for candy. They wanted money. “CONEHEADS” performed for sororities and fraternities at Chi Omega’s November Nonsense. Sig Eps Mark Van Meter and Joe Patterson donned super-sized cones for the skit entitled ‘Saturday Night Live Fever.” BEHIND TEAMMATE Todd Travis’ block, Sigma Nu quarterback Jeff Stone attempts a short pass against Sigma Phi Epsilon. Sigma Nu won, 13-0, with two touchdowns in the first half. The Sigma Nus finished third in intramural football with a 7-2-1 won-lost-tied record. SIGMA NU: (Front row) D. Cross, M. Broderick, J. Er- Harrison. (Third row) J. Pettey, S. Woosley, G. Mitchell, G. skine, D. Pierce, K. Reynolds, J. Link, O. Hilliard, R. Sloan, C. Riley, J. Morgan, R. Mimms. (Back row) B. Jones Hinkle. (Second row) D. Sturgeon, J. Bodenbender, C. R. Warmath, D. Roberts, M. Stahl, J. Natcher, D. ; Zirklebach, T. Scott, K. Foster, C. Miller, S. Van Meter, J. | McCracken, J. Stone, B. Haack, T. Anderson, D. Fuqua, T. = Harold Staclair Johnson, P. Cuppy, T. Wilkes, G. Edmond, T. Nord, D. Montgomery. , a 338 Fraternities The $510 they collected went to UNICEF. At Christmas the Sig Eps helped the Bowl- ing Green Optimist Club with its annual Christ- mas tree sale. The Sig Eps also participated in the Home- coming house decorating competition with a presentation of the landing on the moon. The brothers gave a dance after the game for their 40 returning alumni. The Sig Eps also participated in November Nonsense with a skit that included “Little Ne- mo’s,” “North to Alaska’? and “Saturday Night Live Fever.”’ Twenty-five pledges from the fall and spring semesters increased the Sig Eps’ membership ixe) Sis). “Membership was up a little,” president Bill Trusty said. “We just had an intensive rush last OMEGA PSI PHI: (Front row) C. Moore, M. Swain. (Back row) M. Young, J. Scott, T. Bell, B. Boyd, R. Washburn, T. Johnson, M. Wingo, B. Coleman. SIGMA PHI EPSILON: (Front row) S. Castle, B. Thomp- son, S. Triplett, S. Hicks, S. Jones, J. Simpson, M. Patton, D. Potts, D. Stafford. (Second row) C. Swanberg, B. Brown, P. Holland, M. Van Meter, J. Coffer, S. Starks, T. Cham- fall.” Fifteen members made a 3.0 or higher grade-point average and were invited to the Greek academic awards banquet. The Sig Eps moved from 12th place in 1978 to sixth place overall in fraternity GPAs for 1979. Owensboro’s Executive Inn was the site of their spring formal in April. Omega Week April 1-7 was a highlight for Omega Psi Phi. The week included a memorial service, re- vival service, displays and the fraternity’s spring formal. The Omegas sponsored several community and service projects and awarded several $50 scholarships to incoming freshmen who gradu- ated from the Warren County school system. The brothers also sponsored a blood drive in the spring. “Our national wants each chapter to be ac- tive in helping with the blood drive since it’s bers. (Back row) G. Logan, S. Willburn, J. Johnson, L. Cherry, J. Griggs, M. Mayr, K. Strauss, J. Czipo, W. Am- met, P. Evheart, D. Huff, B. Trusty, M. Quark, R. Martin, D. Pitt, D. Bevil, H. Price. one of our philanthropies,” president Tony Johnson said. The Omegas and Alpha Omicron Pi spon- sored a picnic in the spring for children from Potter School. In the fall the brothers treated 15 children from Delafield School to several home football games. At Homecoming the Omegas celebrated their 10th year at Western with a banquet for the more than 50 alumni who returned. The brothers also sponsored two discos at J.C. Pa- vilion during Homecoming weekend and joined other black Greeks in stepping after the game. The Omegas’ membership increased to 19 with fall and spring pledge classes of nine. “We try to stress academics,”’ Johnson said. “Our pledges study in the library Sunday through Thursday night from 6:30 to 10:30.” Two members made a 3.0 or higher grade- point average and were invited to the Greek academic awards banquet. — Mike Lawrence A DISCO sponsored by Omega Psi Phi offers an opportu- nity for Daniel Holmes, a Radcliff freshman, and Trudy Moore, a Hopkinsville freshman, to do a little slow dancing. The disco was at a local restaurant. 339 Fraternities Image breaking Greek leadership organizations try to change ‘Animal House’ image Beer guzzling and endless parties — that’s part of the stereotype of Greek organizations. But the Interfraternity Council, Panhellenic Association and United Black Greeks don’t agree with that stereotype. “We're trying to eliminate the ‘Animal House’ image,’ Mike Stewart, 1978-79 IFC president, said. IFC and Panhellenic tried to do that by spon- soring the second annual Greek academic awards banquet Jan. 30. A 3.0 or higher grade-point average was required for an invita- tion to the banquet, and 413 Greeks from 27 AN IMPROMPTU DANCE interrupted the Harlem Globetrotters’ game in Diddle Arena Nov. 11. ‘“‘Geese”’ Ausbie does a number on the floor with a spectator during a fraternities and sororities were invited. Stewart, a member of Alpha Gamma Rho, and Sigma Kappa Sherree Melhiser were co- chairmen of the banquet. “We tried to show that Greeks are academi- cally capable and in that respect, I think we succeeded,” Stewart said. IFC and Panhellenic also sponsored State Day Weekend, a leadership seminar for sorori- ties and fraternities from eight state universi- ties and colleges. “It probably would have gone a lot better if it hadn’t snowed, but the response was still lull in the game. The Globetrotters had contacted Western about appearing here, and IFC and Panhellenic volunteered to sponsor the game. great,’ Brenda Barnette, state day chairman, said. The Harlem Globetrotters even helped out IFC and Panhellenic when they appeared in Diddle Arena Nov. 11. 1977-78 IFC president Jamie Hargrove said the event was their major fund-raiser. “It looks like we might get to have them back every other year or maybe even on an annual basis,”” he said. “It really helped support our other activities financially.” There was a crowd of 3,861, and admission was $3 to $6. IFC and Panhellenic made $1,800 each. In December Sigma Nu Charles DeLacy played Santa Claus for the 60 children who attended IFC’s and Panhellenic’s Christmas party. Sororities and fraternities donated gifts, and the children were entertained and served re- freshments. Panhellenic also took 25 children from Dela- field School to the Sigma Kappa Fright Fac- tory, a Halloween haunted house. Chi Omega Sally Brenzel was Panhellenic president for 1977-78, and Kappa Delta Jamie Francis was president for 1978-79. The IFC treasurer and secretary offices were changed to financial and services direc- tors. United Black Greeks was relatively inactive, according to president Irvin White. White, who was also Alpha Phi Alpha presi- dent, said UBG had few activities because he had two time-consuming titles. He also said interest was down. UBG, United Black Students and the Nation- al Association for the Advancement of Colored People sponsored Susan Campbell for Home- coming queen. |_| 340 IFC, Panhellenic, UBG INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL: (Front row) S. Reed, M. Kittinger, D. Young, T. Irons, J. Hargrove. D. Pierce, S. Murphy, By: M. Stewart, J. Hughes. (B ack row) S. Shannon, G. Bartleson, R. Reed, R. Ueltschi, D. McCracken, R. Tingle, J. Wright, R. oes Dh) Rares oe. Kemper, E. Sack, E. Coleman, T. Cottingham. — Harold Sinclair } A STATE DAY speaker keeps Monte Young’s interest. Young was Omega Psi Phi president and was the only black | Greek to attend the seminar. The United Black Greeks i didn’t join IFC and Panhellenic in sponsoring the workshop. CONGRATULATIONS were in order when Chi Omega won the award for the highest actives and pledges grade- Pere point average at the Greek academic awards banquet. SAE A eee Dan Pelino commen ds Cheri Barger, Phyllis Constans and : ’ - Se Ses, of Rossan Watts after the dinner in Garrett Conference Cen- ter. The ChiOs’ combined GPA was 2.939. PANHELLENIC ASSOCIATION: (Front row) C. Wheeler, S. Melhiser, S. Brenzel, L. Cretella, B. Barnette. (Second row) J. Francis, D. Hitron, K. Smiley, K. Watson, T. Franklin, S. Taylor. (Back row) S. Egan, T. Hardesty, L. Garrell, P. Nunn, D. Cole. Bt g UNITED BLACK GREEKS: (Front row) R. Britton, V. Wimbs, S. Jewell, M. Stevens. (Back row) J. Moore, M. Hayes, I. White, M. Hughes, J. Scott. — Mark Lyons 341 IFC, Panhellenic, UBG é LOS MENACE iN, etc. He SEN MPN OJ semen epeeecitenypentwrestairatnican 9 peuraniecuivaamnsidierms sypee- peat pacseafezees tenteamemnn eset ioe ees Fb reane® mt hy Pydbe - ef ss In the section: ERNEST TUBB JR. — a Nash- 357 ville senior copes with his father’s name. EDITORS — Jenny Searcy and 372 Edna Duggins juggle time between school and newspapers. ANN KELLY — cooking for 30 fraternity members is a full-time job. SUNNI SEIFF — a former high- fashion model settles into Western life. TWINS — students often do a 414 double take when Sharon and Shei- la Radford walk by. ON HIS MONTHLY trip to the campus laundry, Ron Farago, a Farmingdale, N.Y., junior, pushes milk crates loaded with dirty clothes. He uses one crate for each week’s load of clothes. — Mark Tucker Classes and Index There are thousands of pictures in this section. But each one represents an individual. Some stand out from the crowd — like a senior who is the son of Ernest Tubb Sr., two women who are full- time students and full-time newspaper editors, a freshman who was a high-fashion model. But there’s one thing that can be said about every student — they all have life, and they all have style. 343 Classes SENIORS | Graduation. It’s not the end for seniors. It opens up a world of uncertainties and unfamiliar situations while it signals the end of a relatively peaceful and safe four years. Although almost everyone is glad to get out of school, they also reflect on what they’ve learned. “T’yve matured a lot,”’ Terri Ray, a 21-year-old from Henderson, Tenn., said. “‘I try to look at the heart of the matter to see if a person put his heart into it and came away with his best.” The senior year is also a time to reflect on “‘practical’’ learning. “T’ve learned how to manage money,” Karen Howard, a 22-year-old from Whitesville, said. “I budget it. I don’t spend on what | don’t need.” “Responsibility,” Pamela Key, a 23-year-old from Louisville, said. “I’ve learned to put my priorities in order.”’ But the road to graduation isn’t easy. | ‘Four years is a long time,”’ Marilyn Marshall, a 21-year-old from Paducah, said. “I thought of quitting many times, but I had a dream of going to college.”’ L| LIZABETH A. AARON, sociology Dawson Springs SANDY ABELL, psychology Louisville DEBORAH S. ABNEY, elem. ed. Calhoun I DEBRA A. ABNEY, government Louisville ANITA C. ADAMS, health ed. Orlinda, Tenn. KATHY A. ADAMS, music ed. Hendersonville, Tenn. REBECCA AKERS, Eng. and Span. Glasgow JERRY AKIN, health care admin. Morgantown JANIE ALEXANDER, interior design Big Clifty REBECCA J. ALFORD, tex. and cloth. merch. Bowling Green ALI AL-JANAHI, health care admin. Bowling Green CURTIS M. ALLEN, psychology Bowling Green GARY F. ALLEN, advertising Lafayette, Ind. j WALTON ALLEN, biology } White Plains KEITH D. ALLGEIER, theater Jeffersontown BETSY A. ALSPAUGH, biology Athens, Ohio RAY ALTHAUS, industrial tech. } Bowling Green CHERYL ANDERSON, bio. and earth sci. ; Bowling Green DEBBIE ANDERSON, public relations Bowling Green JOHN E. ANDERSON III, inst. admin. Bowling Green 344 | Seniors BRENDA K. ANTLE, elem. ed. Russell Springs LORI ARMES, elem. ed. Elizabethtown MICHAEL ARNOLD, bus. admin. Madisonville JAMES M. ASH, bus. admin. Louisville SHERRY ATHERTON, home ec. ed. Owensboro TERRY R. ATWELL bus. admin. Louisville ANN L. AYRE, accounting Hendersonville, Tenn. SCOTT A. BACHERT, history Fern Creek JILL M. BAGGETT, health care admin. Madisonville MICHAEL A. BAKER, broadcast engin. tech. Louisville GERALD BALLARD, data processing Loretto PAT BARKER, community health Bowling Green MIKE BARLOW, economics Louisville THERESE BARNETT, secretarial sci. Bowling Green ANN G. BARRY, hist., phil. and gov’t. Bowling Green DIANNA L. BARTLEY, art Glasgow LINDA BARTLEY, biology Calhoun JAMES D. BEAL, biology Owensboro PATRICIA BEAUCHAMP, accounting Leitchfield GREGORY R. BECK, industrial tech. Fred onia DEBBIE BENSON, office admin. Slaughters JOE BENSON, bus. admin. Hendersonville, Tenn. CHUCK BERGER, civil engin. tech. Bowling Green LISA D. BERRY, interior design Madisonville MELODY BERRYMAN, bus. admin. Louisville H. GAY BEST, speech and comm. disorders Danville KATHRYN L. BEST, music ed. Owensboro MARK BIVEN, bus. admin. Louisville JOY BLESSING, elem. ed. Bowling Green MIKE K. BLINCOE, elec. engin. tech. Owensboro RHONDA BOHANNON, bus. ed. and psych. Eminence EUGENE N. BOLDRICK, bus. admin. Springfield JENNIFER J. BOLIN, community health Shelbyville JOY P. BOMAR, elem. ed. Scottsville CATHY E. BONNEVILLE, elem. and special ed. Arlington, Va. KATHLEEN BOOHER, agri. and bio. Madison, Tenn. NANCY BOOKER, psychology Smiths Grove C. LYNN BOSWELL, office admin. and data proc. Bowling Green ROBERT BOTTOM, phil., rel. and industrial tech. | Springfield | GINNY BOWEN, social work Mount Washington BOBBY S. BOWERS, accounting Bowling Green | CINDY BOWERS, elem. ed. Beech Creek NANCY BOWLS, nursing Munfordville PAMELA BOWLES, commercial art Summer Shade KATHLEEN BOWLING, agriculture Hopkinsville JANET BRADLEY, community health Cave City BENITA BRAMER, nursing Louisville JOE BRANDENBURG, journalism Monticello LEE A. BRANSTETTER, interior design Glasgow DIANE E. BRENNAN, history Atlanta, Ga. RUBY D. BRIDWELL, social work Pewee Valley BEVERLY E. BRITT, English Smiths Grove WILLIAM G. BRITTEN, elec. engin. tech. Maysville MICHAEL BRODARICK, economics Louisville MALIA BROOKS, bus. admin. Morganfield CATHY BROWN, elem. ed. Plantation, Fla. CORBY H. BROWN, agricultural Gamaliel DEBRA J. BROWN, history Albany RICKIE F. BROWN, accounting Tompkinsville VALERIE S. BROWN, phys. ed. and rec. Warsaw ROBERT E. BROWNING, bus. admin. Cross Plains, Tenn. JANE BRUMFIELD, art Bowling Green : SHAWN R. BRYANT, chem., bio. and psych. Glasgow BETH A. BUCHANAN, theater and dance i Lexington | STEVE BUCHANAN, industrial tech. Madisonville 346 | Seniors SHEILA J. BUCK, broadcasting Louisville SHEILA L. BUCK, public relations Franklin CATHY BUCKLES, bus. admin. and tex. and cloth. merch. Henderson STEPHANIE BUCKNER, elem. ed. Elizabethtown RICKY R. BUFORD, public relations Glasgow MYRA BURCHETT, biology Albany THEODORE BURFICT, recreation Clarksville, Tenn. HARRIETTE BURGIN, biology Sarasota, Fla. JANE B. BURTON, elem. and special ed. Bowling Green PATRICIA BURTON, dietetics and inst. admin. Sebree Cast party A CAR BECOMES A DESK as Stuart Arnold, a Perryville junior, does a little cast writing. David Pickwick, a Louisville senior, had already gotten a few signatures before Arnold signed it in front of Bates-Runner Hall. Both are Frisbee team members, so Arnold drew a Frisbee. — Mark Tucker 347 Seniors TERESA M. BURTON, sec. sci. and bus. ed. Russell Springs CANDY BUSH, art and theater Bowling Green LISA C. BUSH, gen. bus. and sec. sci. Glasgow ROBERT T. BUSH, civil engin. tech. Rockfield DAVID A. BUTLER, bus. admin. Clarkson PAT BUTLER, community health Owensboro THOMAS C. BYERLY, civil engin. tech. Danville PHILIP M. BYRN, bus. admin. and econ. Murray DOREEN CAINES, interior design Winchester JESSIE CALHOUN, recreation Owensboro JAMES T. CALLIS, biology Owensboro ANNE L. CAMPBELL, chemistry Columbia MARK CANTWELL, photojournalism Vincennes, Ind. DEBRA J. CAREY, elem. ed. Glasgow STEVE CARRIGG, mass comm. Bowling Green LAURA R. CARSON, social work Kailua, Hawaii MARGARET CARTER, elem. ed. Hawesville 348 Seniors Making tracks THE TRACK around the football field is outlined only by footprints as Dr. Bill Meadors, physical education and re- creation assistant professor, runs two miles. Bowling Green got three to four inches of snow during registration week, and the first day of class was dismissed. — Mark Tucker KERRY W. CASEY. physics Beaver Dam JEFF CAVANA, biology Bellevue Waukesha, Wis. ED CHAMBERS, phys. ed. Leitchfield KAY CHAMBERS, industrial tech. Owensboro ae ” “Sete. RENEE A. CERRONI, comm. health and soc. a 349 Seniors NORMAN D. CHAMBERS, mech. engin. tech. Campbellsville THOMAS R. CHAMBERS, JR., bus. admin. Louisville JILL CHANDLER, accounting and public rel. Campbellsville KARL R. CHEVRONT JR., public relations Winchester DAVID B. CLARK, biology Brownstown, Ind. SALLY CLARK, German Bowling Green SUSAN CLARK, French Bowling Green JULIA G. CLAYWELL, bio. and chem. Columbia GRANT P. CLINE, recreation Bowling Green BETTY R. COATS, psychology Horse Cave CAROLYN F. COBB, social work Horse Cave TERRY COCKRILL, elem. and special ed. Bowling Green R. ERIC COFFMAN, government Frankfort RHONDA COHRON, home ec. ed. Bowling Green JULIA L. COLE, interior design Salem, Ind. BONNIE J. COLLETT, music Louisville WENDY COLLINS, tex. and cloth. merch. Bowling Green DEBBIE COLYER, bus. admin. Monticello RITA CONOVER, rec. and elem. ed. Vine Grove SALLYE CONSTANT, industrial arts ed. Bowling Green JANET R. CONVEY, elem. ed. Indianapolis, Ind. 350 Seniors rl a Lae vs i Ane ome [SO Dans cao Footloose A SLOW DAY at the library gives Debbie Lueke, a stu- dent employee, a chance to study her accounting assign- ment. The Hendersonville, Tenn., sophomore was in the library dial access center. — Ricky Rogers 351 Seniors 352 Seniors JEANINE L. COOK, tex. and cloth. merch. Lexington CATHERINE L. COOPER, admin. services Louisville MARLA K. COOPER, social work, Hartford CAROL F. CORLEY, community health Hopkinsville CAROL L. CORNETTE, adv. and soc. Madisonville DEBORAH D. CORNWELL, elem. ed. Scottsville WILLIAM J. CORTUS, public relations E. Peoria, Ill. MARY-ANNE COSSEY, elem. ed. Bowling Green JILL K. COSTIN, inst. admin. Pekin, Ind. RICK COTHERN, mass comm. and rec. Franklin GARY L. COTTRELL, elem. ed. Bonnieville DANIEL E. COUDEN, geography Owensboro PATSY R. COX, bus. admin. and tex. and cloth. merch. Franklin CANDACE G. CRAIN, community health Danville BUTCH CREEK, bus. admin. Lafayette, Tenn. LINDA CROWNER, tex. and cloth. merch. Louisville JON M. CUDE, agriculture Hendersonville, Tenn. TERRY CUDE, elem. ed. Hendersonville, Tenn. ERICA D. CUMINGS, elem. ed. Louisville JOE D. CUMMINGS. accounting Portland, Tenn. KEVIN B. CUNDIFF, industrial tech. Shepherdsville EDWARD CUNNINGHAM, phys. ed. Louisville PATRICK F. CURL, math and jr. high ed. Vernonia, Ore. ARCH CURRAN, advertising Louisville EDWARD L. CURRY, broadcasting Columbia JO E. CURRY, elem. ed. Bowling Green REBECCA J. CURRY, public relations Greensburg CONSTANCE M. CYR, library sci. Henderson LEE C. DANIELS, bus. admin. Louisville DANON DASTUGUE, broadcasting New Orleans, La. MARY J. DAVENPORT, bus. admin. Louisville JANET L. DAVIES, health care admin. Prospect NANCY C. DAVIS, comm. health and dental hygiene Franklin NANCY E. DAVIS, Eng. and allied lang. arts Scottsville SANDRA J. DAVIS, commercial art Mount Washington JUDITH A. DAY, elem. and special ed. Caneyville RONALD A. DAY, biology Louisville TIM DECKARD, geography Valley Station MICHELE DEGOTT, nursing Bowling Green LIBBY C. DENNING, env. engin. tech. Glasgow CARLOS DEPUY, pre-vet. Puerto Armuelles, Panama DARLENE J. DICKENSON, elem. ed. | Hendersonville, Tenn. KATIE DICKSON, speech and comm. disorders Glasgow MARILYN DIETRICH, phys. ed. Corydon, Ind. JAMES E. DINNEGAN, bus. admin. Louisville DAVID M. DOBRICK, industrial tech. Louisville DONNA DODSON, nursing Brandenburg DAVE C. DONALDSON, foreign languages Versailles DENISE B. DONALDSON, special ed. Versailles NANCY DONOHO, health and safety Portland, Tenn. LAURIE DONOVAN, elem. and special ed. Irvington, N.Y. DARRELL W. DOTY, bus. admin. Lexington MICHELE C. DOUGLAS, public relations Bowling Green JEAN A. DOYLE, elem. ed. Horse Cave DEANNA DRAKE, psychology Morgantown ROBERT M. DREXLER JR., social work Louisville EDNA K. DUGGINS, photojournalism and gov't. Falls of Rough VICTORIA J. DUKES, computer sci. Greenville KATHY L. DUNAWAY, horticulture Cincinnati, Ohio JEFF DURHAM, office admin. Greensburg SANDRA DURHAM, secretarial sci. Portland, Tenn. KAREN G. EDGE, social work Whitesville TERESA EDGE, agriculture and biology Whitesville LETHA C. EDISON, agriculture Alvaton ROBIN EDWARDS, social studies Dansville, N.Y. SHERRY EGAN, public rel. and psych. Leitchfield DENISE EIDSON, sociology White House, Tenn. DENNIS ELDER, sociology Louisville BONITA D. ELMORE, elem. and special ed. Glasgow - LAUREL ELMS, library sci. Kevil 353 Seniors KATHRYN E. EMBRY, dietetics and inst. admin. Henderson VALERIE J. EMBRY, nursing and comm. health Owensboro MARY L. EMERINE, elem. ed. and library sci. Vine Grove JEFFREY H. ENGEL, bus. admin. Hendersonville JANE ENGLEBRIGHT, nursing Bowling Green PHILIPP W. ERHARDT, broadcasting Newton, N.J. ROBYN ERICKSEN, public rel. and broadcasting Henderson WENDY ERVING, nursing Winter Park, Fla. JAN ERWIN, pre-pharmacy Scottsville JANE F. ERWIN, bus. ed. Scottsville PATRICIA A. ESKRIDGE, nursing Hardinsburg KAREN ESTES, English Elizabethtown JOHNNY W. EUBANK, agriculture Gamaliel MARY J. EUBANK, elem. ed. Glasgow CYNDI EVERSON, interior design Jacksonville, Fla. KATHY M. FAIRCHILD, sociology Whitesville MARK G. FAITH, music ed. Lebanon, Tenn. COLLEEN FALWELL, music ed. Bowling Green JIM FALWELL, classical guitar Bowling Green PAT FARNSLEY, finance Bowling Green CHARMAINE FARRINGTON, phys. ed. and rec. Woodbridge, Va. AMY L. FARRIS, advertising Bowling Green ELISA FARRIS, nursing Louisville | MIRIAM FERGUSON, public relations | Union KAREN D. FIGLER, accounting Crown Point, Ind. DARRELL FLEMING, health ed. j Gallatin, Tenn. EUGENIA FLETCHER, special ed. Huntsville, Ala. DEBORAH C. FOLEY, journalism Russell Springs 354 Seniors Bubbly WALKING TO AND FROM CLASS every day can get a little boring — unless a student tries variety. Joey King, a Valley-Station freshman, puts a little bubble in his life while walking back to Pearce-Ford Hall late one fall afternoon. — Mark Tucker BECKY FORD, biology Franklin GWENDOLYN FORD, phys. ed. and health Louisville LISA FORMOSA, journalism Nashvillle, Tenn. PAMELA K. FORSHEE, medical records tech. Franklin GAIL FORT, accounting Owensboro RICHARD F. FOWLER, chem. and bio. Scottsville LINDA FREEDLE, elem. ed. Portland, Tenn. ANGELA FRENCH, special ed. Louisville JUDITH C. FRENCH, medical secretarial admin. Owensboro MARGIE FULKS, interior design Elizabethtown GRACIE F. FULLENWIDER, elem. ed. Maceo NANCY FULLENWIDER, elem. ed. Maceo MARGARET FULTZ, bus. admin. Louisville JACKIE L. FUQUA, interior design Louisville 355 Seniors DAVID S. FURKIN, hist. and gov't. Campbellsville DONNA M. GAINES, office admin. Brandenburg KIM P. GAINES, social work Carrollton CATHERLEEN GAMBLE, community health Franklin GRETA GARBO, music ed. Benton, Ill. J. LEWIS GARDNER, photojournalism Lexington MICHAEL R. GARDNER, env. engin. tech. Bowling Green LESLIE GARELL, bus. admin. Louisville REBECCA L. GARMON, allied health ed. Lebanon Junction GORDON D. GARRETT, broadcasting Louisville JANET R. GARY, nursing Morgantown JAMES F. GENTRY JR., religion Cadiz MELBA GEORGE, English Cottontown, Tenn. LESLIE GILBERT, tex. and cloth. merch. Owensboro RICHARD J. GILL, agriculture Allensville DONALD R. GILMORE, phys. ed. Hopkinsville ELIZABETH S. GOFF, pre-med. Louisville CYNTHIA GOODRUM, music ed. Greenville BRENDA GOODWIN, elem. ed. Bowling Green JOHNNY GORDON, journalism ed. Vine Grove JOHN D. GOVER, biology Bowling Green HAROLD F. GRACE, elem. ed. Franklin MELONEY K. GRAHAM, community health, Louisville CAROLYN GRANT, home ec. ed. Bowling Green LINDSLEY A. GRANTHAM, bus. admin. Cottontown, Tenn. NIZIDA S. GRAY, special ed. Lexington ALAN GRAYSON, bus. admin. Erlanger | DONNA GREEN, English Louisville MIKE GREEN, bus. admin. Bowling Green TAMMY GREEN, phys. ed. Bowling Green : ANITA N. GREENLEE, computer sci. Hendersonville, Tenn. DOUGLAS P. GREENLEE, bus. admin. Hendersonville, Tenn. JOSEPH M. GREENWELL, music ed. Louisville VIRGINIA GREENWELL, nursing Lebanon ANN E. GREGORY, elem. and special ed. Prospect 356 Seniors —————— LISA M. GREGORY, commercial art Bremen GAYLA GRIDER, elem. ed. Russellville WILLIAM R. GRIFFIN, business admin. - Newburgh, Ind. ANNA GRIFFITH, accounting Enterprise, Ala. MARY F. GRIGGS, office admin. Central City GEOFFREY GRIMES, sociology Bowling Green TRINA GRIMES, data processing Louisville DEBORAH F. GRINSTEAD, elem. and special ed. Elizabethtown LEONARDO GUERRA, information systems Quito, Ecuador HELEN K. HAFFNER, bus. admin. Louisville DAVID HAGAN, public relations Owensboro CATHERINE HAHN, nursing Bowling Green DEBBIE HALBRITTER, elem. ed. Louisville JEFFREY L. HALE, bus. admin. Springfield TERRY W. HALE, music ed. Bowling Green Like father, unlike son The son shares his father’s famous name. But Ernest Tubb Jr., the son of country musician Ernest Tubb, would rather swing golf clubs than play a guitar. “T play a little bit of guitar,” the senior physical education major said. ‘‘When it’s in your family like it is mine, you can’t help but pick up a little bit of the music. But what I really like to do is like, go work out on the golf course or something like that.” But Tubb, who likes to be called Ernie, has not turned his back on the industry that is home turf for his father. “I love music,” he said. “I don’t want any- body to get me wrong about that. I love coun- try and western music more than any other type there is. But it would be impossible for me to match what my dad has accomplished as a country musician. “People used to tell Hank Williams Jr. by the thousands that ‘you’re not as good as your dad.’ People won’t let you be yourself in that kind of situation. They’re comparing you all the time.” So Tubb decided to make a path of his own and major in physical education instead of try- ing to follow in this father’s footprints. “I looked at all the areas at Western, and sure, there’s other areas I could have gone into with greater job opportunities, but I figured that I might as well get a degree in something | enjoy doing.” But his position as the son of a singing star still places him in the midst of the country- music stream. ” “T’ve met a lot of people I never would have had my father not been Ernest Tubb,” he said. He met Loretta Lynn and Crystal Gayle when they traveled on road trips with his father. And he remembers when one of the singers he admires, Charlie Daniels, met his father for the first time. “Charlie had always been a big fan of Dad’s, and when they first met, Charlie was like a little kid, he was so thrilled,”’ he said. “‘I said to myself, ‘Gee, it’s just Dad.’ ”’ Tubb remembers the first time he appeared with his father on the Grand Ole Opry. “It was in 1969. I was 14 years old,” he said. “It was scary. I felt like somebody that needed a hole to crawl into. The greatest entertainers in the business get scared when they walk out onto that stage because of all the tradition that’s there.” And he sometimes finds that just having his father’s name is a bit of a problem. ‘‘People are always asking me, ‘What’s it like to have a famous name?’ That’s like me saying, ‘Hey, John Smith, what’s it like to have a name like John Smith?’ “Ernest Tubb just happens to be my name, and that’s that. “But with that name,” he said, ‘“you’re gonna raise a lot of eyebrows. Sure, it carries a lot of advantages. But it could also carry some disadvantages, like when I go looking for em- ployment and people think to themselves, ‘Well, we won’t hire him because he’s Ernest Tubb’s son he doesn’t really need the work.’ ” But Ernie Tubb likes to think of himself as just another student. “That’s one of the things I sure appreciate about Western,” he said. “Everybody here ac- cepts me for me. My peers have accepted me and not made a big fuss about my name.” — Neil Pond [1] — Courtesy of Ernest Tubb Jr. Ernest Tubb Jr. and Ernest Tubb Sr. 357 Seniors 358 Seniors DEBRA HALL, hist. and gov't. Owensboro RONALD W. HALL, distributive ed. Ferguson SCOTT J. HALL, agribusiness Poolesville, Md. SONJA HALL, bus. ed. Bowling Green DONNA HAMMER, admin. services and social work Dubre DARYL HANCOCK, gov’t. and bus. admin. Hopkinsville WILLIAM M. HANNA, theater and dance Lexington LARRY W. HARBISON, elem. ed Edmonton SHEILA HARLOW, elem. ed. and music Bowling Green CINDY HARMON, elem. and special ed. Louisville ‘Boning up TWO IS BETTER than one — espe- cially when practice space is limited. Senior Mark Jenkins and sophomore Teresa Wood both wanted to practice in the Recital Hall in Ivan Wilson Fine Arts Center. So the two music majors ended up playing a duet. — Stevie Benson COLLEEN HARPER, interior design Hodgenville BILLY E. HARRIS, agriculture Bowling Green BRIAN HARRIS, photojournalism Brandenburg DEBORAH L. HARRIS, comm. health and dental hygiene Bowling Green JERRY HARRIS, speech comm. Louisville JOSEPH HARRIS JR., elec. engin. tech Lexington DANNY L. HARRISON, chem. and bio. Franklin PEGGY S. HARRISON, tex. and cloth. merch. Fountain Run REBECCA HARRISON, elem. ed Caneyville FRAN A. HARROD, music and elem. ed. Elizabethtown SHERRY HARTFORD, bus. admin. Sebree JOYCE HASKINS, speech path. Campbellsville PEGGY HATLER, elem. ed. Scottsville ERNA HAY, math and interior design Greensburg REGINALD HAYDEN, bus. admin. Nashville, Tenn. FOREST D. HAYNES III, history Louisville GEORGETTE HAYNES, English and French Rockport JEANNE HECK, tex. and cloth. merch. Stockton, N.J. SUSAN HENRY, photojournalism, Louisville WILLIAM P. HENRY, elec. engin. tech. Nashville, Tenn. WAYNE G. HERNER, psychology Brooks DEBBIE HERRINGTON, tex. and cloth. merch. Smiths Grove JANE E. HERSHEY, tex. and cloth. merch. S. Euclid, Ohio CHERYL HEYDUCK, phys. ed. and rec. Bowling Green HARRIETTA HIMES, elem. ed. Vanceburg SUSAN L. HINTON, elem. ed. Portland, Tenn. RICKY D. HOBDY, bus. admin. Portland, Tenn. KIRKMAN E. HODGES, geography Bowling Green HUGH V. HOGUE, agriculture Elizabethtown KATHY S. HOLLOWAY, medical records tech. Richmond, Ind. 360 Seniors NANCY L. HOLMAN, history Glasgow KAREN L. HOLYOKE, bus. admin. Buffalo Grove, Ill. KEITH L. HOOD, commercial art Hodgenville MARY E. HOOD, biology Glasgow LAURA A. HORTIN, tex. and cloth. merch. Evansville, Ind. BRYAN HOWARD, music Penrod GLENDA B. HOWARD, hist. and library sci. Morgantown JAMES K. HOWARD, agriculture Fountain Run KAREN B. HOWARD, community health Summer Shade KIMBERLY G. HOWARD, elem. ed. Owensboro LINDA G. HOWARD, math Summer Shade JEFFREY S. HOWERTON, Eng. and allied lang. arts Bowling Green GREGORY HUDNALL, gov't. and library sci. Lewisburg DIANE W. HUGHES, elem. ed. Auburn CATHERINE L. HUME, elem. ed. and early childhood ed. Bowling Green JOHN R. HUNLEY, elec. engin. tech. Hartford KATHY A. HUNTER, social work and soc. Portland, Tenn. BOBBY A. HUNTON, mech. engin. tech. Rockfield GAYLE B. HURT, elem. ed. Auburn PATTY IACOBELLO, commercial rec. and tourism Auburn, N.Y. DEBRA L. ICE, elem. ed. Hendersonville, Tenn. MARY J. INABNITT, home ec. Stab JOHN ISABELE, business Glasgow DEBRA D. ISON, special ed. Elizabethtown CHARLES W. JACKSON JR., computer sci. and bus. admin. Elizabethtown DONJEA JACKSON, elec. engin. tech. Louisville JOY JACKSON, community health Bowling Green MARCIA S. JACKSON, accounting Bowling Green VICTOR JACKSON, acounting Clarksville, Tenn. JOANNA JAMES, phys. ed. Glasgow ELISA JAMISON, English Olaton RICKY JANES, accounting Campbellsville TERESA K. JARVIS, biology Burkesville MICHAEL W. JEANNETTE, public admin. Bowling Green NATHAN R. JENKINS, bus. admin. Drakesboro s: Ni NY SH DIANNA JOHNSON, history Herndon LISA JOHNSON, interior design Louisville PAUL JOHNSON, government Henderson PHYLLIS A. JOHNSON, music ed. Henderson SUZANNE JOHNSON, phys. ed and rec. Indianapolis, Ind. TOM JOHNSON, theater and broadcasting Sussex, N.J. TONY L. JOHNSON, industrial tech. Louisville HOPE S. JOHNSTON, comm. health and dental hygiene Owensboro DEAN JONES, phys. ed. Stanford DONALD A. JONES, industrial tech. Louisville F. GRANT JONES II, environmental sci. Burlington LINDA C. JONES, biology Bowling Green GREGORY KAELIN, broadcasting Louisville RICHARD KALL, industrial arts ed. Bethpage, N.Y. JAN KEETON, broadcasting and gov't. Trenton SHERRY KELLY, accounting Greensburg RANDY KEMPER, sociology Lexington MARSHA KENNEDY, elem. ed. Hopkinsville MIKE KENNER, agriculture Sharon Grove JENNIFER D. KIMMEL, nursing Beechmont GRANVILLE KING III, mass comm. Louisville KIM KING, agriculture Burkesville MARLA J. KINGREY, speech path. Glasgow BRENDA KINNETT, bus. ed. Russell Springs HELEN J. KIRBY, elem. ed. Woodburn STEVEN K. KIRBY, elem. ed. and hist. Louisville ZANE G. KITTRELL, bus. admin. Gallatin, Tenn. W. FRED KIXMILLER, rec. and real estate Fort Myers, Fla. LINDA KLEINHOLTER, phys. ed. and rec. Louisville LORIE KOHL, psychology Winchester ALEXIS J. KOVONUK, agriculture Bridgewater, N.J. DAVID KOWALEWSKI, recreation Wyandotte, Mich. GAY N. KRUGER, elem. ed Reed VICKI KRUWELL, accounting Clarksville, Tenn. KATHRYN L. KUMMER, social work Louisville 361 Seniors 362 Seniors Treading on ice ICE AND SNOW attacked the campus throughout Janu- ary and made walking disagreeable. Head hanging low, this student bundled up for the treacherous walk from the Downing University Center toward the lower campus. Al- though the campus received much less snow than in past years, it was just enough to make life more difficult. Seieeenaitieietnene sd — David Frank JERRY KUZMA, bus. admin. Merrillville, Ind. JOHN S. LAIR, biology Stanford CINDY LAMB, elem. ed. Paducah GREG LAMB, photojournalism Central City LORIFAY LANCE, elem. ed. Washington, N.J. CHARLES F. LANGFORD, art Shopville MELENTHIA H. LANGLEY, elem. and special ed. Bowling Green JOSEPH P. LARKINS, broadcasting Bowling Green MARK LASTUFKA, business Bowling Green DAVID LAWRENCE, bus. admin. Cold Springs RICHARD L. LEACH, elec. engin. tech. Owensboro DANNY LEAHY, engin. tech. Louisville JOHN D. LEE JR., psychology Owensboro LISA G. LEE, home ec. Glasgow CHARLES K. LENEAVE, special ed. Paducah LEON LEWIS JR., elec. engin. tech. Summerville TINA LEWIS, phys. ed. Vandalia, Ohio GARY LINDENBERG, history Henderson JAMES R. LINDSEY, real estate Glasgow VICKIE H. LITTLE, bio. and dental hygiene Franklin KAREN R. LITTLEJOHN, distributive ed. Cadiz PHILIP S. LOCKHART, phys. ed. Russellville TOM LOCKHART, bus. admin. Owensboro CLYDE P. LOGSDON, sociology Leitchfield DONNA A. LONG, recreation Lexington CARL LORD, health and safety Clermont, Fla. JEFFREY LOVELL, phys. ed. Ridgetop, Tenn. CHERYL R. LUCAS, env. engin. tech. Bowling Green 363 Seniors JENNIFER LUMMIS, banking Paducah DEBRA A. LYKINS, bus. admin. and data proc. Owensboro STEVEN W. LYLE, office admin. and data proc. Scottsville JAMIE W. LYNCH, recreation and bus. Bowling Green NANCY LYONS, elem. and special ed. Palos Heights, Ill. ROBIN R. LYONS, phil. and rel. Centralia, Ill. MARGARET S. MACDONALD, journalism Eminence KAREN MADDOX, speech and comm. disorders Sturgis HAROLD MAIER, psychology Bethpage, N.Y. BEVERLY J. MAINLAND, elem. and special ed. Hendersonville, Tenn. MELINDA MANIS, elem. ed. Marietta, Ga. ALECIA E. MARCUM, library sci. Bowling Green DENISE MARR, legal secretarial admin. Scottsville JAMES R. MARSHALL, elec. engin. tech. Bowling Green MARILYN MARSHALL, psychology Paducah ROBERT D. MARTIN, bio. and chem. Calhoun ROBERT S. MARTIN JR., religion Corbin SANDRA M. MARTIN, elem. ed. Bowling Green RUSSELL MATTHEWS, health and safety Owensboro 364 Seniors Drop-add(vice) ADVICE from Chris Grinstead, a Bowling Green graduate student, drew a visual reaction from Joann Thomas, a biology and accounting major. Grinstead offered his help while Miss Thomas was dropping a spring semester class. — Harold Sinclair BILL MATTINGLY, rel. and psych. Campbellsville MICHAEL C. MATTINGLY, industrial tech. Owensboro GLEN L. MAY, phys. ed. Westmoreland, Tenn. DEBRA MAYES, elem. ed. Beaver Dam LUCINDA L. MCCALEB, journalism Franklin MARY L. MCCORMICK, tex. and cloth. merch. Owensboro LINDA MCCUBBIN, hist. and gov’t. Bowling Green JULIA MCCUBBINS, elem. ed. Rockfield JERRY A. MCDONALD, elec. engin. tech. Bowling Green SUSAN MCELROY, biology Paris BRENDA M. MCFADDEN, gov't. and hist. Owensboro ARTHUR M. MCGUFFIN III, biology Valley Station KREIS MCGUIRE, phys. ed. Lexington BRYAN MCINTYRE, English Edgewood VALERIA A. MCKINNEY, phys. ed. and rec. Louisville 365 Seniors ANGELA D. MCLEAN, office admin. Fort Knox DARRELL R. MEADOR, geog. and meteorology tech. Scottsville DANE A. MEDICH, bus. admin. and speech comm. Duquesne, Pa. SHERREE MELHISER, home ec. ed. Owensboro CYNTHIA MERRICK, social work and soc. Nancy BEVERLY MERRILL, commercial art. Concord, N.H. ANITA L. MILES, dietetics and inst. admin. Bowling Green DEBORA L. MILLER, library sci. Bowling Green DEBRA A. MILLER, bus. admin. Harned KIM MILLER, nursing Bowling Green LAWRENCE MILLER, distributive ed. and bus. admin. | Burkesville | REBEKAH L. MILLER, social work | Trafalgar, Ind. ROBIN MILLER, elem. ed. Lebanon Junction ROGER F. MILLER, industrial tech. Louisville WANDA J. MILLER, accounting White Mills KRISTINA A. MILLLINER, community health Louisville RAYMOND A. MILOGRANO, broadcast engin. Annandale, Va. NORMA A. MINOGUE, bus. admin. Louisville DON MINTON, journalism Bowling Green BONNIE L. MITCHELL, real estate Bowling Green SALLY MITCHELL, interior design Owensboro DARRELL V. MOORE, elem. ed. Columbia TIM MOORE, bus. admin. White Plains. DAVID MOOREFIELD, mass comm. Hardinsburg PATRICK MORAN, sociology Slidell, La. PATRICIA A. MORETZ, elem. and special ed. Richmond GAIL A. MORGAN, home ec. ed. Glasgow PAMELA C. MORGAN, history Niles, Mich. PAMELA J. MORGAN, distributive ed. Russellville PHILLIP G. MORGAN, elec. engin. tech. Bowling Green Gallatin, Tenn, ROBERTA E. MOORMAN, tex and cloth. merch. . . 366 Seniors TRACEY MORGAN, gen. bus. and accounting Paducah JAMES A. MOSS, photojournalism and Eng. Bowling Green TOM W. MOSSER, bus. admin. Danville PATRICK J. MOUNTAIN, computer sci. Owensboro THOMAS J. MOYERS, mech. engin. tech. Bowling Green MICHAEL L. MULLIGAN, advertising Henderson DOUG MULLIKIN, psychology Owensboro JAMES MULLIKIN, math Owensboro JENNIFER L. MURLEY, biology Burkesville JULIE A. MURPHEY, business ed. Greenville CAROL S. MURPHY, elem. ed. Burkesville KAREN A. MURRY, office admin. Lacenter RICHARD L. MUSE, recreation Rineyville GARY MYERS, bus. admin. Louisville HENRY G. NAGEL, industrial tech. Louisville Winter warfare WHEN DAN FEESE began walking up the Hill Jan. 24, he didn’t know he’d soon be a target for snowballs. Robin Moseley had been throwing them at photographer Judy Watson, but when Feese walked around Gordon Wilson Hall, she turned her attack. Miss Moseley, a Franklin junior, didn’t know Feese, a Columbia senior, but the two soon became “‘enemies.”’ — Judy Watson 367 Seniors BONNIE NANCE, elem. ed. Sacramento ROCKY L. NAPIER, animal sci. Fountain Run TINA NAPIER, music ed. Bowling Green FRAN NASH, speech and comm. disorders Louisville TATE NATION, commercial art Louisville NANCY L. NAVITSKY, biology Jensen Beach, Fla. DARLENE E. NEAL, accounting Lexington SHERRY K. NEWBERRY, bus. admin. Calvert City RONALD K. NEWBY, inst. admin. Bakerton MIKAL H. NICHOLLS, environmental sci. Camp Zama, Japan DEBBIE NOBLE, speech and comm. disorders Bowling Green JIM NOON, geology Louisville PHYLLIS A. NUNN, advertising Paducah GINA L. NUTTER, bus. admin. Bowling Green KATHY NUTTER, bus. ed. Hendersonville, Tenn. EDITH J. OLIVE, community health Elizabethtown CATHY L. OLIVER, dental hygiene Scottsville KATHY A. OLIVER, tex. and cloth. merch. Bowling Green DIANE G. OSBORNE, agriculture Glasgow ANNETTE M. OWENS, community health Bowling Green CHERYL L. OWENS, data processing Russellville BONNIE L. PAIGE, elem. and special ed. Louisville DAVID PARSONS, accounting Gallatin, Tenn. DEBBIE PATTERSON, tex. and cloth. merch. Sonora LUCINDA L. PATTON, library sci. Eddyville JAMES W. PAULEY, psychology Owensboro POLLY PAYNE, elem. and special ed. Bowling Green LYNDELL PAYTON, history Clifty QUENTA PAYTON, Eng. and public rel. Hartford SANDRA L. PEAK, community health Henderson SHEBELL PEAK, data processing Louisville REBECCA PECKENPAUGH, tex. and cloth. merch. Henderson NIKKI L. PEDEN, tex. and cloth. merch. Glasgow DANIEL S. PELINO, bus. admin. and public rel. Fairport, N.Y. READ PENNINGTON, health and safety Franklin 368 Seniors LAURIE A. PENNISI, biology Columbus, Ga. LARRY PERKINS, agri. and bio. Glasgow GARY S. PERRY, psychology Louisville CINDY PHELPS, social work Madisonville CHARLES L. PHILLIPS, civil engin. tech. Lewisburg LAURA E. PHILLIPS, gov’t. and jour. Marion MARGARET PHILLIPS, biology Nashville, Tenn. THALA C. PHILLIPS, recreation Bowling Green THOMAS E. PHILLIPS, geography Bowling Green JOAN J. PHILPOT, nursing Tompkinsville DAVID PICKWICK, industrial tech. Louisville JENROSE PIERCE, psychology Bowling Green MARY G. PIKE, interior design Bardstown LISA PILLITTERI, bus. admin. Bowling Green PIPPA A. PINCKLEY, biology Tompkinsville CARLA PINE, biology Bowling Green CATHY A. PINKSTON, medical secretarial admin. Mount Washington SANDRA PLANTINGA, recreation Cottontown, Tenn. WENDY POITINGER, psych. and health ed. Roundhill NEIL A. POND, photojournalism Cottontown, Tenn. JULIE POOR, tex. and cloth. merch. Greencastle, Ind. JOSEPH D. POWELL, government Hendersonville, Tenn. MICHELE POWELL, secretarial sci. Louisville STEVEN D. POWELL, tex. and cloth. merch. Campbellsville JOHN PRENDERGAST, bus. admin. Owensboro HAROLD R. PRICE, accounting Bowling Green SUZETTE PRICE, interior design Madisonville DEBORAH PRITCHARD, music Johnson City, Tenn. DONALD E. PROEHL, health ed. Cheektowaga, N.Y. JOAN PROVOST, public rel. and bus. admin. Evansville, Ind. MARIJANE PRUDEN, elem. ed Owensboro EARLRENE PRUITT, public relations Louisville LAURIE PRUITTE, nursing Madisonville PUNIVAI PULOU, phys. ed. Horse Cave CATHY S. PURSLEY, elem. ed. Glasgow 369 Seniors 370 Seniors DEBORAH H. PUTMAN, elem. ed. White Plains DELL QUARLES, social work Hopkinsville ELLEN QUIRE, nursing and psych. Bowling Green GREGORY L. RADER, bus. admin. Hopkinsville TED RAMSAY, industrial tech. Louisville SUSAN D. REAGAN, bus. ed. Tompkinsville JANETTE M. REED, public relations Springfield BOB REID, bus. admin. Louisville RICKY REINLE, speech and theater Taylorsville RICHARD R. REKER, industrial ed. Louisville CURTIS A. REXROAT, agriculture Russell Springs HERNAN RIBADENEIRA, bus. admin. Quito, Ecuador MARGO R. RICE, technical illus. Nashville, Tenn. KELLY A. RICH, bus. admin. Cincinnati, Ohio MORRIS RICKETTS, history Bowling Green Lettered ANIMAL DRAWINGS, which look like letters, occupy senior Cindy Thomas’ attention at the Gallery in Ivan Wilson Fine Arts Center. The exhibition of student art works, which ran Jan 16. through Feb. 8, contained works of some of Ms. Thomas’ friends. Ms. Thomas is an art major. — Scott Robinson I I I i MARTINA K. RIGGS, social work Upton ROBERT A. RILEY, gov't. and bus. admin. Bowling Green DANA W. RIPPY, agriculture Scottsville GARY R. ROBE, chemistry Bowling Green BRUCE W. ROBERSON, bus. admin. Fern Creek TIM ROBERTS, geography Shelbyville DON ROBINSON, bus. admin. Springfield CHRIS A. ROEDERER, public relations Louisville KENNETH E. ROSE, bus. admin. Corbin SABRINA ROSENBAUM, public relations Louisville MARK A. ROSENTHAL, commercial art and tech illus. Silverspring, Md. DENNIS ROUNDS, env. engin. tech. Pierre, S.D. CYNTHIA G. ROUNTREE, dental hygiene Hendersonville, Tenn. MICHAEL W. ROUTT, speech comm. and hist. Louisville PAULA ROY, biology Russell Springs Seen 371 Seniors JONATHAN L. RUE, hist. and gov't. Bowling Green JOANN RUSSELL, occ. safety and health Pearl City, Hawaii KENNETH D. RUSSELL, bus. admin. Poole KIM M. RUTHERFORD, music ed. Alvaton RANDY SALLEY, biology - Park City JOY SANDERS, elem. ed. Harrodsburg STEVE W. SANSOM, music ed. Russellville ROBBIE SARLES, geog. and psych. New Albany, Ind. KEITH SATTERFIELD, computer sci. and bus. admin. Austin, Texas CATHY SCARBROUGH, accounting Rockfield Newsmakers Dividing time between school and work made fall more hectic than usual for Jenny Searcy and Edna Duggins. In addition to being full-time students, the Leitchfield seniors edited the Grayson County News-Gazette, a semi-weekly newspaper in their hometown. Doubling as editors and students, Miss Searcy and Miss Duggins discovered that their weeks were filled with reporting, writing and editing, which left little time for classes or studying. Driving from Leitchfield on Tuesdays and Thursdays occupied much of their time. After classes on Tuesdays, they each repeat- ed the hour-long trip between Bowling Green and Leitchfield for another eight to 10 hours of work, preparing the Wednesday edition of the News-Gazette. Production for the newspaper sometimes lasted until 2 or 3 a.m. They did all the layout, and one took the paper to Russellville about 4:30 a.m. to be printed. They mailed the paper to subscribers on Wednesday and Saturday mornings. While they did all the writing, Miss Searcy and Miss Duggins, who became editors in June, did not do everything on the paper. Two type- setters, one proofreader and an advertising staff helped. When they first were told they would be editors, ‘‘we were scared to death,’”’ Miss Dug- gins said. Miss Duggins and Miss Searcy began their editing careers idealistically. “We were out to change the world,’ Miss Duggins said. “We wanted to show the world just how good we were,” Miss Searcy said. But they soon found the newspaper business to be less than perfect. Miss Searcy almost got the paper su ed because of a story she printed, and Miss Duggins made a prominent mistake — in a front-page headline. The editors had their successes, too. 372 g News-Carvette Edna Duggins and Jenny Searcy Miss Duggins covered a helicopter crash at Nolin Lake. Despite spraying water and 50 mile-per-hour winds caused by the helicopter blades, she stayed at the scene 13 hours and got photos of the wreckage being removed from the lake. Miss-Searcy said her job included “‘anything I see that needs to be done,” including writing most of the news stories. Miss Duggins said she took photographs and wrote feature stories. Miss Searcy and Miss Duggins have found that being editors is more challenging than holding their previous jobs at the News-Ga- zette as typesetter and photographer, respec- tively. In summer 1977, Miss Duggins worked as an intern for the paper. Miss Searcy had worked at the paper part time for six years as a typesetter and on the advertising staff. The journalism major’s writ- ing experience consisted of nothing but class- room assignments. Her promotion to editor was “‘more or less expected,”’ Miss Searcy said. Jim Allen, the paper’s editor and publisher, had told her that she would become editor when she completed her journalism courses. Having the same title and the same power sometimes caused conflict. “It would be unique for two people with the same authority not to get mad occasionally,” Miss Duggins said. Both said they would probably stay at the News-Gazette after they were graduated in De- cember. “Tl probably stay here until they make me leave,’ Miss Searcy said. “It’s my home.” — Vickie Stevens [_]| JAMES P. SCHROEDER, elec. engin. tech. Owensboro SHARON SCHWAB, elem. ed. Franklin JOHN T. SCOTT, computer sci. and bus. admin. Bowling Green BOYD SEXTON, geol. and geog. Campbellsville MAROLYN M. SHANNON, phys. ed. Paducah SHAROLYN S. SHANNON, phys. ed. Paducah STEPHEN B. SHARP, gov't. and soc. Owensboro KIM SHAW, psychology Owensboro MOHAMMAD SHEARIAN, civil engin. tech. Tabriz, Iran JUDY SHELTON, accounting Oakland SHERI SHEPHERD, secretarial admin. Louisville CHRIS SHERIDAN, advertising Louisville EDWIN SHEWCRAFT, accounting Fredonia VANA SHOCKLEY, bus. ed. Fountain Run THOMAS H. SHOEMAKE, music ed. Paducah CHRISTIE SIEM, French and sec. ed. Gig Harbor, Wash. TERRI SIEMENS, undecided Louisville ELIZABETH G. SIMON, bus. admin. Bowling Green SARAH SIMONS, tex. and cloth. merch. Dawson Springs TERRY F. SIMPSON, environmental sci. Marion HENRY SINCLAIR, bus. admin. Bowling Green KATHY L. SKAGGS, medical secretarial admin. Scottsville LINDA K. SKAGGS, mass comm. and Eng. Shepherdsville YVONNE SLAIMAN, recreation Niagara Falls, N.Y. TERRI L. SLATON, community health Madisonville NYLA W. SMALL, health care admin. Bowling Green LINDA SMART, accounting Louisville CARL E. SMITH, accounting Louisville CHARLEY SMITH, public relations Atlanta, Ga. GORDON SMITH, industrial tech. Bowling Green GREGORY J. SMITH, accounting Louisville JANET SMITH, phys. ed. Glasgow JOHN D. SMITH, phys. ed. Louisville LANA L. SMITH, elem. ed. Columbia MONA G. SMITH, commercial art Bowling Green 373 Seniors 374 Seniors REBECCA J. SMITH, chemistry Bowling Green RITA SMITH, elem. ed. Bowling Green ROBERT SMITH, bus. admin. Paducah SHARON G. SMITH, bus. admin. Frankfort KENT J. SNODGRASS, bus. admin. Beaver Dam GREGORY SNOW, office admin. Louisville CHERYL SOLOMON, special ed. Louisville JACKIE D. SOUTH, bus. admin. Cottontown, Tenn. DARLENE SPARKS, agriculture Owensboro DARRELL G. SPARKS, mech. engin. tech. Bowling Green CAROL F. SPEIGHT, English White House, Tenn. JEFFERSON T. SPURLOCK, broadcasting Nashville, Tenn. LUANNE K. STANLEY, dietetics and inst. admin. Leitchfield JENNIFER STAPLES, bio. and agri. Silver Springs, Md. LARRY A. STARR, agriculture Glasgow Ladies in waiting A SHORTAGE OF TOMATOES left several women waiting in line at a salad bar sponsored by Rodes-Harlin Hall. Cathy Correll, a Paris freshman, and Vicky Vencill, an Elizabethtown fresh- man, munch on lettuce until more top- pings arrive. The salad was 25 cents per serving and the 200 patrons had to supply their own plates and forks. — Judy Watson CHRISTIANNE STAUSS, biology Alvaton BRENT ST. CLAIR, industrial ed. Evansville, Ind. TONY STEELE, recreation Brownsville MILES STEENBERGEN, advertising Scottsville BECKY STEINWEG, accounting and bus. admin. Nickolasville VICKIE STEVENS, jour. and gov’t. Lawrenceburg LISA M. STEVENSON, bus. admin. Louisville JAMES W. STILES, mech. engin. tech. Bowling Green NANCY A. STINEMETZ, biology Columbus, Ohio CHARLES R. STINNETT, journalism Lexington ANNE E. STITES, history Hopkinsville SANDRA STONE, tex. and cloth. merch. Scottsville CYNDIA L. STRAIN, bus. ed Franklin BRIAN STUMBO, agribusiness Newark, Ohio CHRISTINE STUMBO, accounting Winchester JOHN SUTTLES, government Louisville KATHY SWAIN, English Drakesboro VICKIE TABOR, elem. ed. Burbank, Ill. EMILY TATE, music ed. Bowling Green DONALD K. TAYLOR, math and engin. physics Beaver Dam JONI TAYLOR, biology Philpot L. ELAINE TAYLOR, tex. and cloth. merch. Bowling Green NORMAN TERRY, voc. ind. and tech. teacher ed. Louisville KERRY W. THARP, public relations Louisville CINDY THOMAS, art Rockfield MARK A. THOMPSON, engin. physics Drakesboro PAMELA D. THOMPSON, office admin. Hendersonville, Tenn. 375 Seniors | | 376 Seniors Portable art A WALKING PIECE OF ART startled some passers-by when Tom Fath, a senior psychology major, carried a painting he had completed in art class. He said the fall wind gave him a few problems. — Ron Hoskins WENDY THOMPSON, elem. ed. Owensboro J. KEVIN TICHENOR, tex. and cloth. merch. Owensboro MARY M. TINGLEY, recreation Louisville JAMES A. TINIUS, phys. ed. New Albany, Ind. KATHY TIPTON, distributive ed. Louisville RONALD TIPTON, agriculture Portage, Ind. ERNEST TUBB JR., phys. ed. and health Nashville, Tenn. BEVERLY TUCKER, office admin. Bowling Green DALE TUCKER, health and safety Campbellsville JOHN TUCKER, bus. admin. Campbellsville CINDY TUDOR, home ec. ed. Summer Shade MORRIS J. TUGGLE, phys. ed. Henderson DAVID TURNER, advertising Henderson DEBBIE TURNER, gen. bus. and accounting Lucas LAURA J. TUROK, psych. and mass comm. Paducah DALE A. TURRENTINE, sociology Hendersonville, Tenn. LEEANN TUSSEY, comm. health and occ. safety Catlettsburg JOHN C. UPTON, biology Greensburg KIM URBANEK, geog. and metereology Henderson WILLIAM D. VALENTINO, psychology Corbin GATHA J. VANCE, elem. ed Glasgow | 377 Seniors 378 Seniors KATHY VANMETER, English Bee Springs ANNETTE VICK, social work Greenville JANET VICKERS, nursing Owensboro CHRYSTAL VINCENT, elem. ed. Bremen ROBIN VINCENT, jour. and psych. Louisville ROBBIE VINSON, community health Cadiz SHANNA WADDINGTON, psychology Scottsville CATHERINE E. WADE, tex. and cloth. merch. Ashland JOHN H. WALKER, industrial tech. Gallatin, Tenn. CURTIS R. WALL, elem. ed. Rockfield STEPHEN J. WALL, bus. admin. and ind. tech. Owensboro MICHAEL E. WALLACE, industrial tech. Fairdale BARRY R. WARD, elec. engin. tech. Miamisburg, Ohio GAYLE H. WATKINS, phys. ed. Franklin RITA L. WATKINS, commercial art and mass comm. Louisville JUDY WATSON, photojournalism Winter Garden, Fla. DENNIS L. WEBB, biology Bowling Green TINA M. WEBER, nursing Sturgis BRUCE E. WEIGEL, industrial tech. Louisville BETH WELKER, public relations Bowling Green GREG WELLS, health care admin. Owensboro MARK WELLS, biology Paris VANESSA WELLS, secretarial sci. Glasgow STEPHEN D. WENDT, env. engin. tech. Bowling Green GARY WEST, industrial tech. Hendersonville, Tenn. WILLIAM T. WEST, accounting Portland, Tenn. SARA WESTFALL, tex. and cloth. merch. Versailles KEITH S. WETTIG, hist. and gov’t. Bowling Green STEVE WHEATLEY, government Hardinsburg MARY M. WHEELER, office admin. Hendersonville, Tenn. CAROLYN J. WHITE, elem. ed. Russell Springs CYNTHIA S. WHITE, elem. ed. Mount Hermon DAVID O. WHITE JR., accounting Bowling Green DONALD L. WHITE, jour. and hist. Hopkinsville KIM WHITE, gen. bus. and accounting Arcadia, Ind. WINONA R. WHITE, nursing Campbellsville WARREN WHITFIELD, bus. admin. Madisonville CAROLYN WIEBMER, recreation St. Charles, Ill. DONNA F. WIGGINS, bus. ed. Portland, Tenn. JIM WILKINS, hist. and gov't. Bowling Green ANGELA R. WILLIAMS, recreation Bowling Green DEBI WILLIAMS, speech path. Jamestown J. DAVID WILLIAMS, math Columbia MARCELLA WILLIAMS, bus. admin. Jamestown MARVA R. WILLIAMS, sociology Louisville TERESA C. WILLIAMS, elem. ed. Madison, Tenn. WANDA J. WILLIAMS, fashion merch. Sykesville, Md. MARK WILLIS, outdoor rec. Campbellsville DEBORAH K. WILLOUGHBY, speech path. Versailles KEVIN WILSON, bio. and chem. Bowling Green PATRICIA WILSON, Eng. and jour. Dawson Springs STEVE WILSON, agriculture Tompkinsville JAMES M. WIMBERLEY, broadcasting Louisville TIM WITTEN, public rel. and speech Louisville SHEILA WOODARD, medical secretarial admin. Cleveland, Ohio JAMES W. WOODS, music Fort Campbell MARK F. WRIGHT, economics Lexington SANDY WURTZ, accounting Paducah PEGGY L. WYNN, elem. ed. Louisville RICHARD K. YANN, bus. admin. Louisville EDDIE YATES, civil engin. tech. Hopkinsville JAMES R. YATES, history Kuttawa JOYCE A. YATES, comm. art and mass comm. Louisville BEVERLY YOUNG, recreation Hopkinsville IAN YOUNG, agriculture Radcliff JUDITH K. YOUNG, home ec. ed. Scottsville RITA YOUNG, interior design and tex. and cloth. merch. Glasgow ROBBI S. YOUNG, data proc. and office admin. Louisville SANDRA K. YOUNG, social work Bowling Green AYUB ZARKHAH,, civil engin. tech. Tabriz, Iran 379 Seniors JUNIORS _ Impatience. It’s the junior’s plague. “I want to get out, get a job and get married,”’ Shirley Kiper, a 20-year-old from Leitchfield, said. But there’s also a few things that juniors are in a hurry to accomplish before that last year. “I want to have good grades ... and to know before I get out in the big world I can serve people the way I should,” Ms. Kiper said. “A 4.0 average — that would be unusual for me,”’ John Tapscott, a 23-year-old from Bowling Green, said. ‘I want to learn more in class,” Donald Miles, a 22-year-old from Louisville, said. But the juniors have college life almost down pat. “| don’t party as much. I study more,” Shirley Franklin, a 20-year-old from Hopkinsville, said. “I study more daily, not as much cramming,” Tapscott said. “I don’t go to huge parties anymore,”’ Mary Kuhn, a 20-year-old from Louisville, said. “I don’t get into as much trouble. I take school a lot more seriously.”’ C1 DEBBIE ACREE, Summer Shade CARLA AGUANNO, Fort Campbell JAN ALEXANDER, Burkesville SANDY ALFORD, Bowling Green STEVEN M. ALLGEIER, Louisville SUSAN D. ALLGOOD, Custer MIKE ALVEY, Leitchfield CHUCK AMOS, Clinton SHERRY G. ANDERSON, Glasgow EMEKA B. ANENE, Nigeria TOM ANGSTEN, Southfield, Mich. RHONDA ARMES, Leitchfield BRYAN L. ARMSTRONG, Bowling Green JAMES S. ARNOLD, Perryville JOSEPH R. ARNOLD, Louisville BRENT C. ARRITT, Upper Saddle River, N.J. SONYA R. ASH, Louisville | KATHY ASHBY, Russellville | CURTIS ATKINS JR., Radcliff | RICKIE ATWELL, Greensburg | TAMMY ATWOOD, Franklin | TERRI AUKERMAN, Shelbyville | KATHLEEN AUTREY, Benton PHOEBE BABER, Maysville J KERRY BAGGETT, White House, Tenn. - LINDA F. BAKER, Greensburg NORRIS BAKER JR., Bowling Green DEETTE BANUCHI, Bowling Green BRENDA BARNETTE, Hendersonville, Tenn. THOMAS J. BASSETT, Willoughby Hills, Ohio DAVID L. BATES, Alvaton DEAN BATES, Bowling Green JUDY L. BEAN, Bowling Green PAM BEASLEY, Morehead City, N.C. ARCHIE BECK, Russellville HAMID BEHZADNIA, Tabriz, Iran CLARENCE T. BELL Il, Bowling Green LAWRENCE T. BELL, Owensboro LESA BELL, Hendersonville, Tenn. PAMELA A. BELT, Springfield, Tenn. ANNETTE BENNETT, Hardinsburg KIRBY BENNETT, Maysville WILMA L. BENSON, New Albany, Ind. DEBORAH K. BENTLEY, Gamaliel RODNEY J. BERRY, Greensburg STEVE BEST, Elizabethtown BEVERLY BINNION, Goodlettsville, Tenn. MICHAEL J. BIZER, Fort Knox TOM BLACK, Central City MIKE BLACKWOOD, Hendersonville, Tenn. PAMELA BLANKENSHIP, Hendersonville, Tenn. JANET BOARMAN, Williamsburg, Va. DENNIS BOND, Russellville BEVERLY J. BONSEE, Bowling Green SUSAN J. BOTTS, Versailles MELISSA H. BOUCHER, Scottsville JULIE A. BRADFORD, Bowling Green ANGIE BRADLEY, Fort Campbell ERIN BRADY, Louisville PATRICIA BRATTON, Youngstown, Ohio DAVID BRENNAN, Rock Island, Ill. SALLY L. BRENZEL, Jeffersontown SUSIE BRIDGEWATER, Bowling Green Juniors SHERYL A. BRISBY, Morganfield DARRELL BRITT, Glasgow MARY BRITT, Glasgow JEFFREY BROUGHTON, Scottsville CINDY J. BROWN, Cave City RICHARD M. BROWN, Franklin ROBIN BROWN, Shelbyville STAN BROWN, Central City LAURA D. BRUNER, London ELIZABETH I. BRYANT, Calhoun MARY BRYANT, Philpot LYNN BUCHANAN, Bowling Green MIKE BUEKER, Bowling Green JOHN T. BURCH II, New York, N.Y. MICHAEL D. BURKE, Lexington MAUREEN T. BURNS, Louisville BILLIE J. BUSBY II, Radcliff DAN K. BUSELMEIER, Decatur, Ga. RICKY BUSH, Austin GAIL V. BUSSUM, Henderson SUE BUTLER, Owensboro NANCY BYRD, Cave City RITA CAMPBELL, Columbia CAROLYN CAPPS, Burkesville AVA M. CARLOTTA, Florence MIKE CARPENTER, Louisville STEVEN CARPENTER, Coshocton, Ohio JON C. CARR, Louisville BARBARA A. CARTER, Crestwood CAROLYN S. CARTER, Leitchfield LINDA CARTER, Tompkinsville VONDEL CARTER, Tompkinsville SUSAN E. CASH, Albany RUSS CAUSEY, Bowling Green KELLEY CHANDLER, Indianapolis, Ind. JEFFRY CHASTAIN, Evansville, Ind. STEVE CHERRY, Bowling Green SHAWN CHILDERS, Morgantown JEAN A. CHINN, Utica RHONDA CHURCHILL, Bardstown JULIE CLARK, Louisville KAREN CLARK, Center MIKE CLARK, Bowling Green LEANNE CLASBY, Bowling Green DEBBIE CLEMENTS, Clay MARY K. CLOUD, Danville TOMMY COCANOUGHER, Perryville KAREN COHRON, Rochester, Mich. BETTY C. COLE, Cottontown, Tenn. CHERYL COLE, Bowling Green MARK L. COLE, Monticello MIKE E. COLLIER, Saint Joseph, Mich. ELAINE COLLINS, Burlington PATRICIA COLLINS, Glens Fork TERESA COMBS, Beaver Dam SHEREN COMPTON, Bowling Green JANE CONLEY, Nashville, Tenn. PAM CONLEY, Paintsville SHIRLEY CONNER, Oak Grove GEORGE W. CONNOR, Lexington CHARLOTTE E. COOK, Mount Eden SHERYL L. COOK, Bowling Green ALLISON L. COOKE, Hendersonville, Tenn. DAVID COOKE, Anchorage LESLIE COOKE, Hendersonville, Tenn. CAROLYN B. COOKSIE, Glensfork BILLY E. COOPER, Bowling Green PATTY C. CORBIN, Milltown JENNIFER L. CORNELL, Gallatin, Tenn. SHERRY CORNELL, Pembroke DENISE CORNETT, Erlanger JIM COSTELLO, Bowling Green Hunt and pick CHOOSING between about 3,700 classes is no easy task. Adrianne Ralls, Carmen Giles and Regina Giles try to do just that at spring semester registration in Diddle Arena. The three are from Hopkinsville, and the Gileses are sisters. — Harold Sinclair 381 j Juniors 382 Juniors CATHY COUNTZLER, Greenville KAREN COVETTS, Lewisport FORD COWHERD JR., Elkton CYNTHIA A. COX, Gamaliel GEORGE CRADY, Bowling Green MARGIE CRAMER, Mount Laurel, N.J. JACK CRAVENS, Brentwood, Tenn. JOHN DALLAS, Paducah MIKE DAME, Owensboro STEVE DAUGHERTY, Lexington CHARLES DAVIS, Hopkinsville GREG A. DAVIS, Louisville ROSE M. DAVIS, Burkesville DWIGHT DEDMON, Bowling Green LORI DEFOOR, Merrillville, Ind. CHARLIE DELACEY, Owensboro MARK DENNING, Cross Plains, Tenn. SHEILA DENNIS, Upton SHERRY DEVASHER, Glasgow DEAN DILLEY, Greenville LYNNE DIXON, Nashville, Tenn. KATHRYN DODD, New Albany, Ind. RANDY DONALDSON, Nashville, Tenn. DEBBIE DORRIS, Gallatin, Tenn. MARK DORTH, Owensboro RUTH M. DOUGHERTY, Nashville, Tenn CHARLES M. DRAKE, Morgantown Blackeyed beauty A GIANT SNOWWOMAN vas an afternoon project for several students outside Bates-Runner Hall Feb. 7. Martha Beck, a Louisville junior, plants coal for eyes, and Phil Cole, a food services employee, helps work on the body. A Feb. 6 snowstorm left five inches on the campus, and classes were called off the next day. — Harold Sinclair MICHAEL DRAPER, Fort Thomas DANIEL J. DRESEL, Muldraugh TINA A. DREYER, Edgewood DEBBIE DUKES, Madison, Tenn. JEANELL DURHAM, Owensboro MICHAEL EDMONDS, Bronx, N.Y THERESAL G. EDMONDS, Glasgow MARY J. ELMORE, Middlesboro JANICE EMMICK, Lewisport LIBBY ENGLAND, Edmonton PAMELA J. ENGLAND, Louisville PAM ERTNER, Portland, Tenn. SUSAN J. ESHBACK, Broadway, N.J. GINGER FAITH, Lebanon, Tenn. ROBIN FAITH, Owensboro RONALD FARAGO, Farmingdale, N.Y. JONI L. FARLEY, Franklin LAVONNA L. FELTS, Bowling Green KATHY FERRY, Canton, Ohio BRYAN FINKBONE, Bowling Green KATHY FLANARY, Lexington CREED FLEENOR, Bowling Green SUE FLORY, Lambertville, Mich. LEE FORST, Louisville MICHAEL FOSTER, Fairdale JOEY FOWLER, Magnolia KENNETH L. FOX, Nassau, Bahamas THERESA L. FRANKLIN, Hopkinsville MELINDA FREER, Owensboro MARK W. FROEDGE, Edmonton STEVEN J. FULLER, Bowling Green DIANE GAILBREATH, Brandenburg MARY E. GALLOWAY, Hendersonville, Tenn. CYNTHIA A. GARD, Daytona Beach, Fla. CONNIE L. GARDNER, Tompkinsville TERRY J. GARDNER, Bowling Green ROBERTA S. GARMON, Burkesville ALISON GARRETT, Auburn PHILLIP A. GARRETT, Cottontown, Tenn. STANLEY L. GAUS, Fairdale TOM GEBHART, Fort Mitchell DAWN GEISLER, Louisville DIANE GENTRY, Mount Hermon TIM GILL, Stanford KERRY GIVEN, Alvaton ALECIA GLIDEWELL, Campbellsville TONY GLORE, Louisville FELIPE E. GOMEZ. Laureles, Colombia JOSE A. GOMEZ, Medellin, Colombia JANE GOODIN, Lebanon JAMES GOVER, Monticello LISA GRANTZ, Louisville DONNA C. GRAVES, Fairplay BRYAN GRAY, Louisville DAVID F. GRAY, Bowling Green MARTILLA S. GRAY, Hardinsburg WILLIE R. GRAY, Harlan MARY T. GREENWELL, Lebanon RON GRENKO, Troy, Ohio PAUL J. GRIFFITHS, Winchester LINDA GRISH, Clinton, N.J. ALISA A. GUFFEY, Bowling Green ERIC V. HABERMEHL, Shelbyville MARK HACKLER, Russell PATRICIA L. HALCOMB, Radcliff CINDY HALL, Auburn TIMOTHY D. HAMMER, Tompkinsville DEBORAH HANCOCK, Greenville KATHLEEN H. HANCOCK, Bowling Green CAROLYN HANDLEY, Prospect JULIE L. HANSON, Park City TRACEY L. HARDESTY, Benton LONNIE L. HARDIN, LaGrange JAMES E. HARGROVE, Milton KAREN HARLIN, Gamaliel MARK HARLOW, Louisville BOB HARRER, Hawesville BRENT M. HARRIS, Somerset GERRY L. HARRIS, Lexington ERIC G. HASSLER, Liberty, Ind. PAT HAUGH, Trafalgar, Ind. DAVID W. HAWES, Owensboro JUNE HAYCRAFT, Bowling Green CHRIS HAYDEN, Bowling Green HUGH B. HEATER, Bowling Green SCOTTIE HEATH, Adolphus DINAH HEFFINGTON, Franklin TOM HEINZE, Glenview, Ill. GLENN HENDON, Bowling Green JAMES M. HENDRICKS, Jeffersontown DEB L. HERTELENDY, Louisvil le MARK D. HILL, Louisville THERESA HILL, Scottsville SHARON L. HOAGLAND, Louisville DEBBIE HOBSON, Salem, Ind. JUDY M. HODGES, Tompkinsville STEVEN H. HOLLIS, Cincinnati, Ohio LARRY HOLLON, Louisville DAVID HOLT, Sturgis PAUL HOOKS, Cadiz DEANNA HOPPER, Bowling Green BARBARA M. HOUSTON, Bowling Green JACQUE HOWE, Speedway, Ind. GAYLE HOWLETT, Auburn DIANNA HUBBARD, Louisville JON C. HUEBSCHMAN, Evanston, Ind. KELLY L. HUGHES, Tulsa, Okla. PAM HUGHES, Hopkinsville TIMOTHY D. HUME, Tompkinsville JAMES F. HUNT, Tompkinsville SHARON L. HUNTON, Torrance, Calif. BRAD HUTTON, Elizabethtown GRETA IMWIEHE, Louisville NASSER A. IPAYE, Lagos, Nigeria JEFF JACKSON, Franklin REGINALD JACKSON, Oak Grove HOWARD JAMES JR., Harrodsburg 383 Juniors | CYNTHIA A. JANES, Elizabethtown JOSE R. JAUREGUE, Bowling Green MARGARET L. JENKINS, Harrodsburg WILLIAM D. JENKINS, Danville BRENDA JOHNSON, Rockfield DONNIE R. JOHNSON, Greenville MARGARET JOHNSON, Guthrie ROSALYN A. JOHNSON, Danville TARA M. JOHNSON, Louisville ANGELA M. JOINER, Franklin LYNDA JONES, Nashville, Tenn STEPHEN JONES, Willsburg WILLIAM J. JORDAN, Bowling Green ZUHAIR JWEIHAN, Amman, Jordan WAYNE KAELIN, Owensboro FARIDOON KAMIRIM, Tehran, Iran GHODRATOLLAH KARIMIAN, Ahwaz, Iran JEFFREY L. KAUTZ, Bowling Green DAVID P. KEACH, Hopkinsville JOHN C. KEELE, Louisville SHEILA KELLEY, Franklin JIM KELLY, Russellville LISA M. KENNEDY, Louisville KAREN KERR, Valley Station MARKITA KEY, Glendale MILDRED A. KILLIAN, Owensboro SHIRLEY L. KIPER, Leitchfield SAUNDRA T. KIRBY, Louisville ROSEMARY KIRK, Philpot AMY KLARER, Jeffersontown ELIZABETH A. KLEIN, Hopkinsville DARYL KNAUER, Fort Thomas BARRY A. KNIGHT, Elizabethtown PATTI KRAUS, Calhoun SCOTT KUEGEL, Owensboro JOHN F. KUNZ JR., Marlton, N.J. LINDA LANE, Lebanon, Tenn. JOYCE LAUBENHEIMER, Cocwa Beach, Fla. D. CHARLES LAWLESS, Owensboro BETH LAWSON, Springfield, Tenn. MATTHEW D. LAYER, Stanford ROBERTA L. LEACH, Hartford HAROLD LEE, Campbellsville KENNEY R. LEE, Bowling Green KAREN LENTZ, Bowling Green TONY LESLIE, Bardstown CAROL J. LESSLEY, Bowling Green VIRGINIA T. LESTER, Harrodsburg SHELDON LIGHTSY, Louisville | TERRI L. LIKENS, Burlington | LISA LINDENSCHMIDT, Newburgh, Ind. SUSAN LINDSEY, Glasgow NANCY LITCHFIELD, Cadiz DON LIVERS, Indianapolis, Ind. TIM LIVINGSTON, Bowling Green MARGARET A. LOFTIS, Glasgow ATHENA J. LOGAN, Bowling Green GLENDA H. LOGAN, Bowling Green NANCY LOHMAN, Louisville DENNIS R. LONG, Lewisport MARLINE LONG, Eminence VINCE LOPOLITO, Westchester, Pa. TIMOTHY LOVELL, Dawson Springs | MARK S. LOVELY, Cadiz YVETTE D. LUCAS, Louisville '} MELINDA H. LYNCH, Bowling Green | SUSAN MAGERS, Smiths Grove }| CHARLES P. MAHONEY, Fort Mitchell LAURA A. MAHONEY, Louisville ROGER MALONE, Louisville MICHAEL C. MANGUS, Louisville MIKE S. MARLOW, California DEENA S. MARTIN, Boonville, Ind. KAREN E. MARTIN, Louisville KEITH MARTIN, Bowling Green PATRICIA S. MARTIN, Scottsville PAUL E. MARTIN, Lexington TERRY MARTIN, Russellville ELLIE MATHENY, Madisonville DANIEL MATHESON, Decatur, Ill. JACK MATTHEWS, Morganfield CAROL MCANINCH, Bethelridge MARYANNE R. MCCAULLEY, Louisville JUDY MCCLANAHAN, Springfield, Tenn. MARY L. MCCLEESE, Bowling Green THOMAS R. MCCLENDON, Russell Springs DORIS E. MCCORMICK, Bowling Green JOHN M. MCDONALD, Greenville GARY L. MCFARLAND, Owensboro 384 Juniors SUSAN F. MCGINNIS, Hopkinsville GEORGIANNA MCKOIN, Gallatin, Tenn. AUDREY P. MCLEAN, Fort Knox KEVIN MCREYNOLDS, Russellville WALTER MCTHENNY, Melbourne, Fla. LEAH MEAD, Keokuk, lowa JOSEPH E. MEDLEY, Elizabethtown MARTY R. MEFFORD, Hawesville TREVA N. MERIDETH, Park City NORMAN MERRICK, Nancy S. MARTINA MIDDLETON, Henderson DONALD A. MILES JR., Louisville CHUCK MILLER, Vincennes, Ind. DAVID T. MILLER, Hendersonville, Tenn. GREGORY MILLER, Martinsville, Va. JOSEPH R. MILLER, Bowling Green R. CRAIG MINOR, Bowling Green CATHY A. MITCHELL, Bowling Green DONNA MITCHELL, Lewisport JEANNIE MONTGOMERY, Winchester CRAIG B. MOORE, Louisville GARY MOORE, Bowling Green RUDOLPH MOORE, Nashville, Tenn. TONIA C. MOORE, Louisville WALLY MOORE, Bowling Green JAMES MOORHATCH, Louisville CORNELIA A. MORGAN, Glasgow SHERYL S. MORGAN, Bowling Green CATHY A. MORRIS, Louisville LESLIE S. MORROW, Newburgh, Ind. KENNETH J. MORTON, Louisville BECKY MOSELEY, Columbia DEBBIE MOUSER, Horse Cave ANTONIA M. MUDD, Louisville LAURA L. MULLINS, Louisville SUE A. MURRAY, Augusta SHERRY MUSGRAVE, Owensboro ALI NAJAFI, Ramhormoz, Iran JANET NASH, Vine Grove LAURA NATION, Owensboro SHERREE NATIONS, Lake Wales, Fla. PAUL NEFF, Hardinsburg BARRY B. NEWTON, Sebree MARSHA NICHOLS, Glasgow THOMAS J. NORD, Dale, Ind. LISA NORRIS, Louisville SUSAN C. O’DANIEL, Louisville JOANE OSBORNE, Bowling Green KAREN OSBORNE, Owensboro SUE C. OSBORNE, Bowling Green KAY OVERBEY, Calvert City KAREN D. OWEN, Princeton COBY OWENS, Bowling Green LISA OWENS, Versailles Running water ARCHES OF WATER adorn the football field as Jack Washington and Kevin Dildy run around the track early in the fall semester. Both are members of the basketball team. — Scott Robinson 385 Juniors 386 Juniors ROBERT A. OWENS, Radcliff PATRICK PADRON, Bowling Green TANA PALMER, Scottsville KEENAN PAWLEY, Louisville JENIFER K. PAYNE, Owensboro DOROTHY PAZDAN, LaGrange Highlands, Ill. BONNIE PEDIGO, Cave City SCOTT PELFREY, Lexington TONY PEPPER, Campbellsville JOHN C. PERKINS JR., Bowling Green KYLE PERKINS, Corbin DONNIE PERRY, Greensburg STAN PETERIE, Bowling Green LEONARD PHILLIPS, Roswell, Ga. TERRY PHILLIPS, Henderson VICKI PHILLIPS, Falls of Rough DANNY PICKERRELL, Louisville KAREN PICKWICK, Louisville DARELL PIERCE, Louisville EMILY PIERCE, Leitchfield YVONNE M. PLEASANT, Fort Knox TERRY POLLEY, Upton ALBERT C. PORTER, Louisville CHERYL J. POTTER, Bowling Green DALE POTTS, Elizabethtown KEITH POWERS, Middletown BRENT PRICE, Bowling Green Fris(beat) WITH HIS FEET propped up and a Frisbee for a hat, Bobby Speakman, a Frisbee team member, rests after throwing for hours. The Hodgenville ju- nior was practicing for a match with the University of Kentucky Frisbee team. BRENT PRIDDY, Louisville MARY L. PROCTOR, Lexington RAMONA PYLE, Hopkinsville SHARON RADFORD, Burkesville SHELIA RADFORD, Burkesville DIANE RAEF, Lexington ROBBIE RAGGARD, Louisville THOMAS B. RAGLAND, Louisville MICHEAL D. RALSTON, Louisville KIMBERLY J. RATCLIFF, Rochester, Mich. VALERIE RAVENSCRAFT, Hebron SONIA M. RAY, Brandenburg PATRICIA D. REASONOVER, Franklin SHARON REED, Bardstown LORETTA RENFROW, Canevville PERRY D. REVLETT, Owensboro DANIEL M. REYNOLDS, Scottsville SONIA A. REYNOLDS, Bowling Green TONY RHEA, Bowling Green TONY G. RHOADES, Central City RALPH E. RICE JR., Louisville SHERRI RIGGS, Alvaton BARRY RIGGSBEE, Indianapolis, Ind. LARRY W. RIGSBY, Bondville ALICE M. RILEY, Bardstown MICHAEL H. RISEN, Greensburg CHRISTINE ROBBINS, Fordsville DIANE ROBE, Bowling Green KAREN ROBERTS, Franklin RUSSELL S. ROBERTS, Paintsville MARSHA L. ROBERTSON, Murray CYNTHIA A. ROBINSON, Evansville, Ind LUCRETIA ROBINSON, Greenville KIM D. ROBISON, Louisville JANE ROGERS, Owensboro RONALD D. ROSE, Haze! Green SANDY ROSO, Crestwood RHONDA C. ROUTT, Bowling Green KAREN J. ROY, Russell Springs PATRICIA G. ROYAL, Owensboro MALINDA A. RUDD, Salyersville BECKY RUTLEDGE, Danville JUDY K. RYAN, Mount Washington SCOTT A. SANDERS, Owensboro MARK SCHAFTLEIN, Louisville RONALD SCHILDKNECHT, Louisville KARLA SCHLENSKER, Milltown, Ind. ANNE C. SCHMIDT, Jasper, Ind. MARCIA H. SCHULTE, Bellevue DONNA L. SCHUSTER, Louisville RICK SCHUSTER, Cudahy, Wis. CAROL SCHWEGMAN, Richmond, Ind. ANN SCOTT, Vine Grove CHERYL SCOTT, Columbia JOE SCOTT, Paducah LEANN SCOTT, Bowling Green LYNN SCOTT, Albany ROBERT W. SCOTT, Cave City TIM SEARS, Somerset MARGARET A. SELEMS, Montague, N.J. CYNTHIA SEXTON, Scottsville DAVID I. SHADOWEN, Bowling Green NANCY SHAFFER, Orlinda, Tenn. REGINALD G. SHANKS, Rumsey STUART SHANNON, Alvaton ABDUL H. SHARIATZADEH, Tehran, Iran PAMELA SHAVER, Central City LYNN SHEARER, Somerset SHELIA SHELTON, Glasgow ALLEN SHIPP, Louisville DEBORAH R. SHOEMAKER, Russellville FREDA F. SHORT, Park City CHERYL SHRADER, LaGrange JAY W. SHRODE III, Sebree SHERRIE SHULER, Owensboro JOSEPH K. SHUMATE, Louisville HAL SHUNK, Euclid, Ohio MARK A. SIEGFRIED, Fort Knox GALE SINGLETON, Owensboro SHARON SKAGGS, Hodgenville SUZETTE M. SKOLKA, Plainfield, N.J. MILA M. SLEDGE, Alvaton CHERRY K. SMITH, Mount Herman DONNA J. SMITH, Louisville JOLETTA SMITH, Horse Cave MICHAEL S. SMITH, Louisville TIMOTHY L. SMITH, Owensboro DAN SMITHHISLER, Harper, Kan. LAURA G. SNAPP, Mattoon, Ill. SANDRA K. SPARKS, Elizabethtown GLORIA SPURGEON, Bradley, III SAUNDRA L. STAFFORD, Symsonia BRIGGS P. STAHL, Rockfield MARY STARKS, Oakland, Calif. LARRY STARNES, Sweeden 387 Juniors 388 Juniors CONNIE J. STEPHENS, Center KRISANN STEPHENS, Pellville GREG STICKLER, Louisville JANET STINSON, Scottsville PRISCILLA STINSON, Franklin EDDY R. STOCKTON, Albany DEBORAH L. STOKES, Nashville, Tenn. BARBARA STONER, Pineville BOB STONER, Pineville CHUCK STRADER, Bowling Green SHEA STRADER, Greenville MARK STRANEY, Brandenburg DENISE STURGEON, Horse Cave STEVE SUMMERS, Russellville KELLEY A. SWALLOW, Owensboro CHRIS SWANBERG, Henderson GREG SWANSON, Silver Spring, Md. MARGANN TABOR, Scottsville TERRI TAPP, Henderson TERRI C. TARRANTS, Drakesboro CARLOS TATUM, Central City C. J. TAYLOR, Henderson NEIL TAYLOR II, Munfordville SUSAN K. TAYLOR, Bowling Green ALLEN TAYS, Bowling Green MARY D. TEATER, Lexington BETSY TERRELL, Louisville GENEVIEVE A. THIES, Fort Thomas DEBORAH A. THOMAS, Madisonville DONALD P. THOMAS, Oak Grove PETER A. THOMAS, Louisville SANDRA THOMAS, Mount Holly, N.J. SCOTT THOMAS, Bowling Green STEPHEN J. THOMAS, Bowling Green BETTY THOMPSON, Bowling Green CATHY J. THURMOND, Franklin PHILIP A. TOMS, Park City DAVID TRAVIS, Owensboro JEAN L. TRAVIS, Nashville, Tenn. VICKI J. TUTTLE, Hendersonville, Tenn. PAMELA G. UNDERWOOD, Buffalo KEITH R. VANDER, Louisville VALERIE VANEATON, Bowling Green TERRI VINCENT, Brownsville JOYCE VOLLMER, Fort Mitchell DEBRA V. WADE, Owensboro DENISE M. WAGNER, Dawson Springs JEAN WAGNER, Jeffersontown MELANIE WALD, Nashville, Tenn. ROBIN WALKER, Madisonville MICHAEL L. WALLACE, Kingston Springs, Tenn. JOSEPH L. WALTERS, Greensburg CARRIE WARNER, Bloomfield PAUL L. WATKINS, Frankfort KIM WATROUS, Bowling Green BEV WATSON, Leitchfield KAREN WATTS, Bowling Green STEVE WEAFER, Bowling Green DAVID S. WEATHERFORD, Campbelisville VALERIE WEAVER, Bowling Green JANIS K. WELLS, Lewisburg CYNTHIA S. WEN DT, Bowling Green LAURA WHALEN, Greensboro, N.C. KATHY WHEAT, Auburn CAROL WHEELER, Lamb RICKY L. WHEELER, Hodgenville ROBERT A. WHITAKER, Owensboro IRVIN WHITE, Hopkinsville JIM WHITE, Tompkinsville PHYLLIS WHITSON, Greenville GEORGIA WIGHTMAN, Owensboro ARTYE WILLIAMS, Louisville JUDY WILLIAMS, Glendale KIMBERLY WILLIAMS, Paducah SHARRI WILLIAMS, Albany, Ga. BETTY G. WILLOUGHBY, Scottsville DEBORAH E. WILMORE, Gallatin, Tenn. DEBRA L. WILSON, Radcliff GREGORY A. WILSON, Columbus, Ga. TAMMIE J. WITTY, Glasgow JEANNE K. WOODALL, Hendersonville, Tenn NANCY M. WOODS, Garfield LEE A. WOOLDRIDGE, Louisville KRIS WORTHINGTON, Bowling Green DONNA L. WRIGHT, Louisville TONA L. WRIGHT, Greenville DOUGLAS G. YOECKEL, Bowling Green MARY M. YOUNG, Elkton LINDA YOUNKIN, Louisville MARIA S. ZABORONAK, Louisville Spare time BOWLING helped Danny McCloud, a Bowling Green ju- nior, take his mind off spring semester registration. The business administration major took advantage of the alley on the fourth floor of Downing University Center. — Mark Tucker SOPHOMORES They’re stuck in the middle. The newness of college has worn off, but graduation isn’t in sight. For sophomores, there are two more years of classes to look forward to. But they can relish in the fact that they know what to expect from the university, and that they don’t have to worry about jobs or graduate school. They can look back on what they’ve learned. “You know the campus, the people and you don’t go home as much,”’ 19-year-old Lisa | Smith said. | “You know the system better and how it works,’ Tracey Capsel, a 21-year-old from | Louisville, said. | And, as said by Ms. Smith, perhaps the best lesson of all is “I’ve learned how to wash clothes.” L1 ABBASNEZHAD ABDOLRAHIM, Bowling Green JUDY ABNEY, Calhoun SCOTT ADAMS, Munfordville SHERRY ADAMS, Elkton BETSY AGEE, Cottontown, Tenn. KERRY ALLEN, Cadiz VIVIAN M. ALLEN, Sebree JOY ALLENDER, Fort Mitchell VICTORIA ALLISON, Russellville ABDULLAH AL-MALKI, Bowling Green JOSE L. ALONZO, Carrizal, Venezuela MONICA ALVEY, Clarkson TERI AMATO, Bowling Green SHEILA ANDERSON, Auburn TONIA Y. ANTHONY, Gallatin, Tenn. MICHAEL A. AOUN, Florissant, Mo. TRACY T. ARFLIN II, Fort Knox } KATHY ASKEW, Morgantown | GEORGE BACHERT, Fern Creek | KENNY BAGGETT, White House, Tenn. | VICKIE BAINES, Jeffersonville, Ind. i SHERRY A. BAIRD, Louisville | LISA BAKER, Bowling Green i CHESTER BALDWIN, Livermore || KIMBERLY L. BALL, Worthville | KATHY BALLARD, Louisville SHERRY BALLARD, Louisville PHIL BARNETT, Bowling Green TIMOTHY M. BARRON, Henderson NANCY BASHAM, Hawesville GINA BATES, Bowling Green JUDY BEARD, Hartford KEVIN BECKMAN, Louisville A. BROOKS BELL, Springfield, Tenn. | GEORGE S. BELL, Allensville | REBECCA BELL, Hopkinsville I SANDY BELT, Sullivan MAURY BENNETT, Hartford RALPH BERGMANN, Louisville | MARY K. BERST, Birmingham, Ala. THOMAS A. BESHEAR, Dawson Springs DEBBIE BEST, Owensboro BECKY BICKERS, New Castle JOY BILLINGSLEY, Glasgow DARRELL BIRD, Elizabethtown BEVERLY BISHOP, Glasgow CHARLES A. BLAIR, Columbus, Ohio BILL BLINCOE, Owensboro STEVE BOEHM, Louisville MOHAMMAD BOKA, Ahwaz, Iran JANET BOLLE, Richmond, Ind. SCOTT B. BOSSERT, Clarence, N.Y. SHERRY L. BOWEN, Hodgenville KAREN BOWLIN, Bowling Green DOUG BOYLES, Bowling Green RICHARD A. BOZARTH, Hartford MELINDA F. BOZE, Bethpage, Tenn. ANTHONY BRADSHAW, Louisville STEVE BRANDON, Rome, Ga. ALLISON BRANTLEY, Louisville KATHY BRINEGAR, Salvisa 4 GINGER BRIZENDINE, Owensboro PAM BRODARICK, Louisville Sophomores — Harold Sinclair WILLIAM C. BROSCHE, Woodburn ANTHONY M. BROWN, Crofton, Md. PAULA BROWN, Tompkinsville SERITA C. BROWN, Beaver Dam MATTHEW W. BUCKLEY, Bridgeville, Pa. JIM BUCKNER, Franklin MARY J. BURNS, Auburn DEBRA J. BUTLER, Tompkinsville CATHERINE C. CALDWELL, Nashville, Tenn. STEPHEN L. CALLIS, Cottontown, Tenn W. CASEY CALLIS, Owensboro ELIZABETH L. CALLOWAY, Louisville DIANA CAMP, Lawton, Okla. BECKY CAMPBELL, Winchester SUSAN E. CAMPBELL, Versailles TRACY L. CAPSEL, Louisville BOBBI J. CARBY, Utica KITTY CAREY, Louisville DEBORAH B. CARNEY, White House, Tenn. JAMES G. CARR JR., Rockfield ANN CARTER, Glasgow KATHLEEN L. CARTER, Owensboro PAM CARTER, Glasgow PATRICIA G. CARTER, Hawesville RHONDA K. CARY, Burkesville PAULA G. CASSADY, Park City TERRIE CASTLE, Albany JULIE CHAMBERS, Owensboro VIVIAN R. CHAMBERS, Morganfield RONICA CHANCEY, Madison, Tenn. PAUL CHAPMAN, East Bridgewater, Mass. LAURA CHATARI, Louisville KATHY M. CHATELAIN, Louisville SANDE K. CHERRY, Bowling Green NORMA CHILDRESS, Morgantown BECKEY CLARK, Monticello DONNA L. CLARK, Versailles LISA D. CLARK, Greensburg SANDRA W. CLEMENTS, Glasgow ANGELA COCKREL, Oakland ANNA M. COFFEY, Cave City TINA COLBURN, Calvert City JEFF COLE, Millwood ROSALYN COLE, Louisville SHEILA COLE, Hartford TUWANDA COLEMAN, Cadiz MARYBETH COLES, Bowling Green BOBBIE A. COLLETT, Valley Station HOLLIS COLLIER, LaFayette, Ga. AL COLLINS JR., Hopkinsville STEPHANIE M. COLLINS, Louisville JAMES C. COMBS, Pineville MARK G. COMPTON, Louisville SHARON CONNER, Oak Grove LISSA CONRADI, Milford, Ohio JANET L. COOK, Central City SCOTT A. COOMES, Owensboro DEBBIE COOTS, Allensville CHRISTOPHER M. COPAS, Dayton, Ohio JEFF COPPAGE, Dundee JOSEPH D. COPPAGE, Hartford JANE CORNELIUS, Russellville JILL COSBY, Bowling Green MERA S. COSSEY, Cadiz RHONDA COTHRAN, Eddyville SUSAN COTTRELL, Upton FELICIA A. COUCH, Oak Grove KIM COUSINEAU, London YVONNE COWLES, Bowling Green MARY C. COX, Owensboro TIMOTHY M. COX, Shelbyville KEVIN CRAWFORD, Louisville Hungry as a Bear SHARING LUNCH are Donnie Jackson, a Louisville sophomore, and “Bear,” his roommate’s dog. The two were eating in front of Cherry Hall as sophomore Regina Johnson looks on. Bear is 24 years old. Sophomores 392 Sophomores L’TANYA CRAWFORD, Tompkinsville CHERIE CRUM, Jeffersontown SHERRE CROM, Louisville KIM CURRY, Louisville MARLA CURRY, Horse Cave CINDY DAMER, Glen Ellyn, Ill. KEVIN DARST, Louisville TERRIE DAUSE, Bolingbrook, Ill SHEILA DAVIDSON, Park City TERESA DAVIS, Providence BONNIE DAY, Falls of Rough KAREN DAY, Westmoreland, Tenn SANDRA J. DEAREN, Louisville MARK DEBERRY, Russellville FATEMEH DEHBOZORGI, Shiraz, Iran LISA DEL BUONO, Princeton JOHN DELLER, Bowling Green ROBBIE DEWILDE, Columbus, Ohio SHARON DILLARD, Louisville CAROLYN DINGUS, Roxana PEGGY DINSMORE, Bowling Green CHARLES R. DIXON JR., Sturgis CHAU OANH DO, Bardstown BECKY DOLAN, Louisville ALETA D. DOLINGER, Clarksville, Tenn. MARGARET DONALDSON, Bowling Green MILLIE R. DOTSON, Benton JANICE G. DOWELL, Irvington MARLA F. DOWNING, Fountain Run STEVE A. DOYLE, Bowling Green JAMES B. DRIVER, Red Boiling Springs, Tenn. LYNN DRIVER, Goodlettsville, Tenn. SHANNON DUCHENOIS, Tell City, Ind. DEBORAH E. DUDLEY, Russellville LAURA DUKE, Paducah RICHARD DUKES, Owensboro ALAN DUNCAN, Mayfield TERRI DUNCAN, Edmonton STEVEN DUNLEAVY, Owensboro HAROLD D. DYMOWSKI, Flint, Mich. THOMAS F. EASON III, Valley Station TIMOTHY L. EBELHAR, Owensboro DWAYNE ELLIOTT, Covington KATHI ELLIOTT, Winchester CRAIG ELLIS, Bowling Green — Mark Lyons Hat trick ANDRE WILLIAMS, an Aurora, Ill., sophomore, should have known better before challenging Don Lehn to pull a red rabbit out of his hat as Lehn performed in front of Downing University Center in the fall. Lehn, who prefers to be called “Moonbeam,” had no problem in producing a toy red rabbit. Lehn is a former engi- neering student at the University of Michigan who now works as a traveling magician. PAM ELROD, Valley Station DANIEL B. ELVERS, Mayfield SHEILA EMBERTON, Tompkinsville KEVIN EMBRY, Louisville LISA EMMICK, Lewisport TODD ENGEL, Hendersonville, Tenn. SISSY ENGLISH, Elizabethtown DAVE ERICKSON, Fairfield, lowa NANCY ESKRIDGE, Hardinsburg NAN L. EVERSON, Jacksonville, Fla. DONNA EWINGS, Central MICHAEL R. FAIN, Louisville THOMAS FARMER, Hendersonville, Tenn. JULIA FELTY, Hartford BARRY FEOLE, Hendersonville, Tenn. DEBBIE FERGUSON, Horse Cave LAURA L. FIELDS, Bowling Green CARL S. FILIP, Dover, Del. TAYLOR FISHBACK, Louisville RHONDA L. FITZGERALD, Atlanta, Ga. EILEEN FITZPATRICK, Columbia ROGER FITZPATRICK, Lexington VICKIE H. FLENER, Morgantown MARY A. FORBES, Edmonton LAURA A. FORD, Louisville BILL FORT, Cadiz KATHY L. FOSTER, Lexington ELISE FREDERICK, Trenton LESLIE A. FREELS, Cadiz YOLANDA FRENCH, Bowling Green PHILLIP FRIZZELL, Hendersonville, Tenn. SHERRI FROST, Scottsville JULIE FULKERSON, Owensboro DAVID L. FULLEN, Bowling Green BRYAN S. FULLER, Central City LISA GAINES, Hodgenville JOSE GALVIS, Bowling Green ROCKY GAMBLIN, Nortonville PATTI-KATE GARMON, Shelbyville ROBERT A. GATES JR., Nashville, Tenn. GAYNEL GAYNOR, Hawesville MAXIE GBANITE, Enugu, Nigeria KERRY D. GEARY, Louisville TRUDY GERALDS, Gamaliel MARTHA A. GERMANY, Louisville JACK GERUGHTY, Tompkinsville ROLAND GIBBONS, Vine Grove DEBBIE GIBSON, Henderson JAMES L. GIBSON, Brownsville KATHY GILES, Frankfort NENA GILLIAM, Russellville DENICE GILLUM, Bowling Green SHERRIE GIRTEN, Owensboro DAVID M. GIVAN, Valley Station SUZANNE GIVENS, Gallatin, Tenn. CATHLEEN GOETZ, Jeffersontown DANIEL L. GOFF, Owensboro JEANNE GOLDEN, Louisville MARK GOODLETT, Bardstown FELICIA GOODRICH, Versailles DEBBIE GORE, Owensboro RHONDA GOSSETT, Summer Shade SUSAN GOULD, Louisville JOHN K. GRACE, Dunmor JULIA GRAHAM, Russellville WENDELL V. GRANT, Elizabethtown MARIA A. GREEN, Russellville CHERYL L. GREER, Somerset MELANIE GREER, Louisville BARBARA GREGORY, Alvaton W. SCOTT GREGORY, Russellville V. KAREN GREVIOUS, Shaker Heights, Ohio LISA GRIDER, Shelbyville, Tenn. DON A. GRIFFIN, Providence JOHN GRIGSBY, Cadiz STEVE GUESS, Cadiz JENNIFER E. GUILL, Cottontown, Tenn. SHERI GUNTS, Lake Forest, Ill. DOVER HALCOMB, Central City DAVID A. HALE, Owensboro GARY HALL, Bowling Green NANCY HALL, Glasgow TERRY B. HAM, Hendersonville, Tenn. GLENDA D. HAMILTON, Cloverport MARY K. HANCOCK, Louisville 393 Sophomores 394 Sophomores CAROLYN HANDLEY, Prospect VICKIE N. HANDLEY, Henderson LUANNE HANSFORD, Liberty FREDERICK L. HARBISON, Edmonton ARTHUR HARDIN, Louisville MARK HARDWICK, White Plains MELNA HARGAN, Vine Grove CAROLYN S. HARL, Owensboro BOB HARLOW, Bryan, Ohio CYNTHIA HARPER, Louisville KANDACE J. HARPER, Fredonia LINDA HARRIS, LaGrange SHERRY HARRIS, Louisville TAMI HARRIS, Franklin JERRY B. HATCHETT, Glasgow EDDIE HATFIELD, Evanston, Ill. DANNY HAWES, Owensb oro ANICIA S. HAWKINS, Versailles TERRI HAWKINS, Vine Grove VICKI HAWKINS, Hendersonville, Tenn. JOHN HAYES, Louisville TRICIA HAYNES, Midway JILL E. HEABERLIN, Paris MARK HEBERT, Fairport, NY. DEBORAH A. HELTON, Danville SARA HEMINGWAY, Utica CARMEN D. HENDERSON, Georgetown dah dats OW Black(out) light AN AUG. 27 BLACKOUT finds Keen Hall roommates Roger Hinkle and Phil Evans studying in the dark. The power failure left Keen, Pearce-Ford and Poland halls without electricity for 22 hours. Although university policy states that candles should not be used in dorms, the two, along with other students, used several in helping them study. Hinkle, a Cincinnati sophomore, and Evans, an Atlanta sophomore, were reading their next day’s assignments. KIM HENDERSON, Benton LORETTA HENDERSON, Franklin LINDA HENDRIX, Union Grove, Ala. MARILYN A. HENNING, Hawesville MARY J. HENSLEY, Munfordville BOB HEPNER, Utica TORI HERMANN, Lexington DALE HERRING, White Plains CELISA A. HESTER, Louisville ANTHONY HIGH, Tompkinsville LISA HILDEBRANDT, Harrodsburg JANET HILL, Morganfield THERESA HILL, Hanson DAVID J. HIMMELHEBER, Commack, N.Y. LOU A. HINTON, Harned LISA A. HITE, Russellville DEBBIE HITRON, Louisville SHERRI HOFFMAN, Jasper, Ind. DAVID HOLCOMB, Russellville WANDA HOLDER, Portland, Tenn KELLY S. HOOD, Glasgow WANDA HOOSIER, Louisville BEVERLY S. HOOVER, Glasgow ALLYSON HOPKINS, Bowling Green KIM E. HOULTON, Rock Island, Ill. GREG HOUSER, Paducah THOMAS D. HOWARD, Lewisport ALLEN HUDSON, Hartford VIVIAN HUDSON, Bowling Green MICHAEL D. HUGHES, Hopkinsville ROSE M. HULLETT, Ferguson BILL HUMMER, Bowling Green LINDA HUMPHREY, Louisville LISA G. HUNN, Lexington NAOMI HUNT, Jeffersontown JANET HUNTON, Rockfield ALAN HURT, Summer Shade OTHA D. HURT, Breeding RICKEY HUSK, Hawesville DAVID HUTCHISON, Columbia WILLIAM IRISH, Louisville WANDA IRVIN, Louisville CLARENCE JACKSON JR., Bowling Green DAWN JACKSON, Georgetown JEFFREY JACKSON, Fort Mitchell JILL A. JACKSON, Bowling Green WILLIAM JACKSON, Warren, Mich. M. ALONZA JACOB, Bowling Green MARLA JAMES, Glasgow RHONDA JARBOE, Louisville MARLA G. JARVIS, Greenville KAY JENKINS, Portland, Tenn. RHONDA JENT, Franklin BERTIL G. JOHNSON III, Hendersonville, Tenn. DON JOHNSON, Browder MARK JOHNSON, Cincinnati, Ohio RICHARD H. JOHNSON, Bowling Green ROBERT JOHNSON, Brewster TRACEY JOHNSON, Louisville JUDY JONES, Bowling Green MIKE JONES, Bowling Green NOBLE JONES, Henderson PERRY A. JONES, Burlington JOHN F. JORDON JR., Louisville LISA JORDON, Ekron MARGARET JUKES, Hazard KARL N. KAPOOR, Franklin KEVIN KAST, Tell City JEFF KEGARISE, Bowling Green — Ricky Rogers JOHN KELLY, Franklin AUDREY L. KELSO, Bowling Green MICHAEL KEMPER, Gary, Ind. BYRON R. KEMPF, Radcliff CHARLOTTE R. KEOWN, Bowling Green CATHY KERNS, Bardstown RHONDA A. KERR, Williamstown, N.J. STACEY KEY, Louisville RENEE KINCAID, Owensboro DEBBIE KING, Pikeville SHEILA KINGERY, Eighty Eight DEBORAH KIRBY, Bowling Green LAETITIA KIWIET, Riverside, Ill. ANN KLARER, Jeffersontown KATHY KNOX, Bowling Green LEESA KRAMPE, Owensboro KAREN KRAUSE, Fort Knox JANET KREMER, Jeffersontown 395 Sophomores DARLENE KUCHENBROD, Louisville ELLEN LAGUTCHIK, Fort Knox PATRICIA LAINE, Louisville CLIFTON LAKE, Fordsville KATHY O. LAM, Miami Springs, Fla. DAWN LAMPERT, Jasper, Ind ALISA K. LANCASTER, Louisville JAMES LANE, Harrodsburg JOHN LANE, Wilmington, Ohio SELINA LANGFORD, Quality JACQUELYN LAWLESS, Bowling Green GLEN LAWRENCE, Scottsville JUDY K. LAWS, Lexington TONYA LAWSON, Beaver Dam ROBERTO A. LEDESMA, Quito, Ecuador MARGUERITE LEE, Leitchfield NANCY LEHN, Louisville ROBERT B. LEIGDEN, Louisville FERNANDO E. LENNIS, Cali, Colombia CHERYL S. LEWIS, Madison, Ga JODI LIEGL, Edina, Minn SANDRA M. LILES, Ft. Knox JEFFERY LINDSEY, Doblin, Ga. STEVEN D. LINDSEY, Glasgow SHERI L. LINK, Jeffersontown NANCY LIPFORD, Dawson Springs MARISHA LIPHFORD, Paducah JAMES R. LOCKHART, Bowling Green LINDA LOGSDON, Louisville W.A. LOVELL, Bowling Green LESLIE LUTTRELL, Hartford MELISSA LYLES, Lewisport ROBIN MAGLINGER, Owensboro SUSANNE MAIN, Bowling Green REGINA MAIURI, McMurray, Pa. GREGORY L. MAJORS, Louisville Hell, fire and a lollipop EVANGELIST “Jed” Smock and a lollipop keep Gina Johnson’s interest. The Ashland sophomore, along with several other students, listened to Smock outside Downing University Center during one of his several visits. — Mark Lyons JANET C. MALONE, Louisville DAVE MAPLES, Elkmont, Ala. KEITHA L. MARLOW, Leitchfield MARK D. MARTIN, Bowling Green LEANN MATLOCK, Louisville HERMAN MATTHEWS, Bonnieville ‘TIMOTHY A. MATTHEWS, Ekron DENNIS L. MATTINGLY, Owensboro LAURA MATTINGLY, Caneyville SHARON MAYHUGH, Bowling Green BETTY J. MAYNARD, Brandenburg CARYL MCCARTHY, Louisville HOLLY MCCLARNON, Franklin MARY L. MCCLARNON, Gallatin, Tenn. LEVY MCCULLOUGH, Greensburg STEPHEN G. MCCULLUM, Hodgenville KEITH MCDONALD, Winchester CYNTHIA R. MCFARLAND, Madisonville KEVIN MCINTYRE, Edgewood TERRY MCKENZIE, Russellville TIMOTHY R. MCKENZIE, Russellville PAMELA S. MCKINNEY, Morgantown TAMI S. MCKINNEY Leitchfield LINDA MCLINTON, Lake Worth, Fla. STACY MCMAHAN, Louisville MELANIE M. MCNALLY, Louisville MICKEY MCROY, Central City DEBRA MCWHORTER, Albany SUSAN MEERS, Buffalo JAMES D. MEFFORD, Bowling Green BECKY MERIDETH, Louisville LINDA MEYERS, Hendersonville, Tenn. BRENT L. MILLER, Sonora DEBRA D. MILLER, Somerset NANCY J. MILLER, Louisville VICKY L. MILLER, Bowling Green SHEILA A. MINOGUE, Wilmette, Ill. LORRAINE A. MITCHELL, Radcliff GEORGE P. MOLLOY, Bowling Green MARYLEE MONROE, Elizabethtown THERESA L. MONTGOMERY, Russell Springs SHERRIE MOONEY, Madisonville ANGELA L. MOORE, Nashville, Tenn. DAYNA MOORE, Madisonville GERALD L. MOORE, Frankfort SANDY MOORE, Louisville SUSAN MOORE, Madisonville RENEE MOREAU, Lansing, Kan. SALLY MORGAN, Bowling Green JEFFREY MORRIS, Louisville ROBERT MOSS, Hopkinsville LINDA MOTES, Depoy W. HOWARD MOUDY, Wilmington, Del. JEFF MOUSER, Horse Cave REGINA A. MUMPHREY, Louisville TAMMY R. MURRAY, Cave City DEBBIE NAGEL, Louisville MARY NAKASHIGE, Paris, Tenn. GARY NAPIER, Portland, Tenn. PATIENCE NAVE, Bowling Green MARGARET NEAL, Hendersonville, Tenn. DEBRA A. NELSON, Campbellsburg TANYA C. NELSON, Maysville MARK NEWMAN, Owensboro MARK S. NEWSOM, Hopkinsville CARYN NICHOLSON, Louisville LAURA NIEMANN, Louisville ROSEANNE NOE, Lexington ELIZABETH O’DONNELL, Bowling Green HEATHER D. O’DONNELL, Bowling Green CHERYL R. O’DONOVAN, Naperville, Ill. OLUFUNKE A. ODUKOYA, Lagos, Nigeria 397 Sophomores DIANA OGBURN, Louisville VANESSA Y. OLDHAM, Bowling Green AMELIA ORTALE, Nashville, Tenn. RICKY OSBORNE, Bowling Green SHERYL OTIS, Louisville JACQUELINE OWEN, Burkesville LOIS M. OWEN, Hardinsburg FELECIA PARE, Lamb CHARLES P. PARKER, Russellville KELLY PARKER, Quality ROBERT S. PATE, Lewisport J. KELLY PATTERSON, Franklin NANCY C. PATTERSON, Upton MARK PAYNE, Lewisport ELISABETH S. PECK, Versailles TONY PELASKI, Waverly VICKIE L. PENNINGTON, Louisville SARAH J. PEPPER, Brandenburg CYNTHIA PERKINS, Horse Cave LAURIE S. PERSHING, Germantown, Tenn. CECILIA PETETT, Tompkinsville PATRICIA A. PETRIE, Louisville GREG PHELPS, Beaver Dam LARRY PHILLIPS, Hendersonville, Tenn. SHELLEY L. PHILLIPS, Louisville KENNETH PICKETT, Russell Springs MICHELE L. PINAIRE, Bowling Green JOYCE PLANTINGA, Cottontown, Tenn. JUDITH PLANTINGA, Cottontown, Tenn. RICHARD PLUMMER, White House, Tenn. GREG POGUE, Bowling Green RICHARD S. POLAK, Rochester, N.Y. ALICIA POLSON, Glasgow CATHERINE M. POPP, Louisville ANITA C. POSTON, Hopkinsville MIKE PRATHER, Jeffersontown GREG PRESTON, Bowling Green BARBARA PRICE, Louisville THOMAS J. PRICE, Liberty JULIE PRIDDY, Hodgenville SHARI PRINCE, Louisville MARILYN A. PROCTOR, Jeffersontown RONALD L. PUCKETT, Vinton, Va. VICTOR QUAN, Calgary, Canada PENNY RAGER, Clifty SHARON G. RAINS, Hartford VICKIE C. RAMSEY, Russellville BOB RANDALL, Louisville LISA J. RASCOE, Owensboro JUDY RECTOR, Bowling Green LINDA REED, Elizabethtown STEVENSON L. REED, Fort Campbell MIKE REESE, Hopkinsville JOANN REINERT, Elgin, Ill. DAVID R. REXROAT, Bowling Green KAREN F. REXROAT, Russell Springs SHARON REYNOLDS, Owensboro TRACY H. REYNOLDS II, Bowling Green PAM RICHARDSON, Lewisport STEPHEN D. RICHESON, Owensboro CHERYL RICKS, Greenbrier, Tenn. SHERRY RIDDLE, Bow CAROL A. RIDER, Upton STEPHEN RIGGS, Calhoun SHEILA RILEY, Owenton TAMMY RIPPY, Springfield, Tenn. MARIA RITCHIE, Brandenburg MARK RITTER, Belleville, Ill. JANICE L. ROBERTSON, Portland, Tenn. MARK ROBERTSON, Louisville KATHY ROBINETTE, Jeffersontown MITZI ROCHELLE, Hendersonville, Tenn. RHONDA R. ROCK, Hardyville CONSTANCE ROGERS, Central Square, N.Y. DAVID ROGERS, Auburn SUSAN E. ROGERS, Beaver Dam ELIZABETH A. ROMANS, Hartford } KATIE ROONEY, Louisville THOMAS J. ROSS, Jeffersonville, Ind. SHARON K. ROYAL, Owensboro BARBARA RUCKRIEGEL, Jeffersontown SUSAN RYBIJ, Leitchfield PAMELA SACKS, Louisville TERRI SAGER, Carmel, Ind. ASHUR SALAH, Tripoli, Libya NANCY J. SALATO, Columbia MARY L. SALLEE, Bowling Green JENNIFER D. SANDERS, Elizabethtown MAGGIE SANDERS, Owensboro MARSHA SANNER, Orchard Lake, Mich. iI MARY L. SCHEPERS, Whitesville JANET SCHLAUGHENHOUPT, Jeffersontown SHARON SCHMITTOU, Cadiz THOMAS C. SCOTT, Gallatin, Tenn. KIMBERLY A. SEABOLT, Round Hill SUZANNE SEMONES, Louisville MITCH SETTLE, Owensboro CATHY SETTLES, Mount Washington MAUREEN SHANAHAN, Leitchfield ART SHANNON, Alvaton RHONDA SHARP, Jeffersontown LISA SHEEHAN, Ajax, Canada TERESA A. SHELLEY, Summer Shade STEVEN R. SHELTON, Scottsville SHERRY SHEPHERD, Columbia JANICE SHINNICK, Lexington ANITA SHORT, Louisville LAURA SHORT, Louisville MARY B. SIDDENS, Bowling Green LAURA L. SIDWELL, Albany CLARK SIMPSON, Fort Mitchell ROBERT M. SIMPSON, Bowling Green KAREN S. SKAGGS, Campbellsville DONALD SKIPWORTH, Greenville 4 DONNA SLOAD, Owensboro VICKI SMEDLEY, Louisville DAVID SMITH JR., Williamsburg Sophomores The little brown mice — one brown, the other spotted — raced around their cages, nibbled at their food, then looked up as if to say, ‘“‘We know we don’t belong here, but we ’re “having fun.” The mice, named First National Bank and Spots, are mother and daughter. They live in a dorm room. Keeping animals in a dorm is pro- hibited at Western, as well as at most universi- ties. ‘Some students, however, sneak pets into dorms and keep them for months without get- ting caught by resident assistants or dorm di- rectors. The owner of the mice said she is an animal lover and that she can’t resist peeking into a pet store. She has three dogs and two cats at home. “One day I just got bored,” she said. “I went out and saw this pet store, so my friend and I bought these mice. We named the moth- er First National Bank because of all the mon- ey we spent on her equipment.” She sneaked the mice up her dorm’s back- stairs early in the fall semester, and just a few women know about them, she said. “The girls are afraid that they’ll get loose,” she said. ‘But nobody really minds you keep- ing pets in your room as long as you take care of them. My roommate plays with the mice as much as I do.” The cage is cleaned once a week, and the food trough is filled every three days. “If I go home on weekends, I just clean the cage be- fore I leave and put food in,’ she said. “They’re fine when I return.” The mice aren’t very noisy. ‘‘They holler at each other sometimes,”’ she said. ‘“‘And they don’t stink. Their cage smells like the cedar chips that are inside.” During room inspection, she covers the cage with a cloth. Horace Shrader, housing director, said that animals are prohibited for many reasons, in- cluding sanitation. “If you had 40 people on a floor and everyone had a hamster, it would be pretty messy,” he said. Shrader said that goldfish are not prohibit- ed, but that small animals could create a health problem, he said. ‘‘As hall directors encounter pets, they can deal with the situation by telling the owners that animals must go.”’ Another student, who owns a hermit crab, said she thinks all pets should be allowed, pro- vided they’re non-poisonous. “As long as students are willing to care for them properly, I don’t see that it would be so much of a problem,” she said. Her neighbors do not object to the crab, she RAMONE the Hermit Crab is held by his owner in a photography studio. Although Ramone is male, he lives ina women’s dorm. Is that a violation of two university rules? Animal houses said. It is quiet, odorless and looks like a large sea shell on first glance. She had a cat in her room for two weeks. “When I had that cat, I kept the door closed at all times. It was really hard to keep it a secret,” she said. Anne Murray, assistant student affairs dean, said she thinks the pet regulation is enforced. “We think we do enforce it,” she said. “I recognize that one of the separation anxieties for some students is the loss of their pet when they enter college. “When they get out of class for the day, they miss their old pets. Yet, it’s not fair to allow pets to create a problem for others. “About five years ago, a hamster was found in a rotten, smelly cage,” Mrs. Murray said. “The student had neglected the animal, and her roommate neither told the dorm director nor took care of him. The room had to be cleaned and fumigated, which cost quite a bit of money.” The university tries to be as kind as possible, Mrs. Murray said. When someone is caught, they are given time to make other arrange- ments for the pet. Two women had a hamster for three weeks before the RA caught them. ‘‘We sneaked him on the elevator. Our RA was standing right beside us, but she never knew,” one said. “The first night, he kept us awake all night. He played on his wheel, which had a terrible ERICHA SMITH, Glasgow MARY L. SMITH, Glasgow MOLLY SMITH, Bowling Green SANDRA K. SMITH, Prospect SHAUNE SMITH, Brandenburg SHEILA K. SMITH, Leitchfield SHELLEY SMITH, Birmingham, Ala. JOHN SNEAD, Louisville LINDA SNELSON, Louisville squeak. We took the wheel away, but we felt guilty and put it back. It finally stopped squeaking.” The women said they knew of dorm resi- dents who had pet crabs, snakes, a duck and a cat. Another student mentioned a tarantula. One student, whose roommate owned a snake, said, “It shocked me a little at first. | wasn’t used to having a snake around. but | finally got used to it.” Charles Keown, student affairs dean, said that room inspection is rather superficial and hiding a pet isn’t extremely difficult. ‘We haven’t prohibited goldfish, but cats and dogs aren’t allowed. “If a pet becomes a problem, then we have to deal with it. A couple of years ago, one girl even had a pet monkey,” he said. One woman owned a hamster for six weeks and said she’d never keep another pet in her room. ‘Actually you don’t have time to care for a pet. It’s almost cruel,” she said. “I had a hamster who got sick mainly be- cause of the air conditioning. It was just too cold for him.” She said, “I think a lot of keeping a pet is to see if you can get away with it. “But it does give your room a homey envi- ronment, which can make living in a dorm a bit more comfortable.” — Linda Watkins Sophomores BETH SNYDER, Bowling Green CHRIS SNYDER, Louisville EXUM SOMERVILLE, Louisville ELAINE SPAULDING, Morganfield ROSS SPEARS, Burkesville JACK SPICER, Vienna, Va. SUELLYN SPIEGELMAN, Memphis, Tenn CHRISTINE STAHL, Marietta, Ga. MARK STAHL, Bowling Green BRENDA STARKS, Elizabethtown LINDA STARNES, Bowling Green CYNTHIA J. STATTON, Russellville KEVIN STAUSS, Alvaton KATHLEEN M. STEVENS, Clarksville, Tenn. MARILYN STEWART, Bowling Green NANCY STEWART, Louisville RONNIE STEWART, Central City STEPHANIE STEWART, Brownsville CORNELIA STOCKTON, Glasgow LEE STOLL, Fairfield, lowa RICHARD STONE, Bowling Green SHARON G. STONE, Evansville, Ind. SUE L. STONE, Bowling Green KIMBERLY A. STORIE, Mayfield JANET STOTTS, Hardyville BETTY S. STOWERS, Louisville J. KEVIN STRADER, Belton ROSALIND J. STRETZ, Louisville KAREN L. STUART, Drakesboro GARY SUITER, Noblesville, Ind. REBECCA L. SUITER, Bowling Green BRET M. SUMMERS, Bowling Green JOHNNY SWACK, Bowling Green SHEBA SWALLOWS, Russellville MARION TABOR, Hopkinsville SHARON TABOR, Hopkinsville DEBBIE TACKETT, Hendersonville, Tenn. JENNY B. TALBOTT, Burkesville MARK TANNER, Danville LISA TAPP, Henderson JINNI TAPSCOTT, Bowling Green CHERIE TAYLOR, Philpot LAWANA L. TAYLOR, Rockport MEL TAYLOR, Calhoun NANCY TAYLOR, Scottsville Elderly disco ELDERLY PATIENTS at the Fairview Healthcare Center are treated to a disco session as Libby Smith, a Murfreesboro, Tenn., sophomore, demonstrates arm movements. She and Robin Walker, a Ma- disonville junior, taught the patients dances in a music movement class. Miss Smith said the patients especially liked disco. 400 Sophomores TERESA K. TAYLOR, Morgantown VICKIE TAYLOR, Mammoth Cave WILLIAM P. TAYLOR, Lewisport DAVID W. TENCH, Orlando, Fla. JANE TERRELL, Louisville BECKY THOMAS, Louisville SCHEKILLA THOMAS, Owensboro SONYA THOMAS, Gracey ELAINE THOMPSON, Lebanon JAMES TICHENOR, Owensboro CYNTHIA C. TINSLEY, Utica LEA A. TOFTNESS, Owenton HAL TOMS, Cave City HAL W. TOOMEY, Bowling Green GROVER TOWLER, Elizabethtown BRAD TRAVIS, Beaver Dam DEBBIE TRAVIS, Tompkinsville SUSAN TREECE, Elizabethtown RODNEY TRUGMAN, Hopkinsville ROSALIE TRUJILLO, Millington, Tenn. KAREN TUCKER, Russell Springs TERESA TUPMAN, Brandenburg PAT TURNER, South Union TERRI G. TUTTLE, Hendersonville, Tenn. ROBIN UPTON, Greensburg JO A. UTLEY, Hopkinsville KATIE VADEN, Bowling Green DAVID VANCE, Paducah DUFF VANCE, Jeffersonville, Ind. JACK VANDERCOOK, Hendersonville, Tenn. VICKI VENRICK, Nashville, Tenn. LEA A. VESSELS, Louisville LYNNIE VESSELS, Bowling Green PATRICIA VICK, Olmstead JOEL VINCENT, Eva, Ala. TERESA A. VINCENT, Louisville LINDA VISE, Benton, III. SUZANNE VOGT, Louisville CINDY WAGGINGTON, Scottsville MARSHA J. WADE, Summer Shade EUGENE L. WALKER, Fort Campbell ANNE WALLACE, Phoenix, Ariz. RICHARD C. WALTRIP, Utica LARRY WARD, Cave City SIDNEY C. WARE, Louisville KATHY WATHEN, Niagara Falls, Canada TERRI WATKINS, Louisville HOLLY WATTS, Lawrenceburg THOMAS WEAKLEY, Utica JERRI WEBB, Paducah SHERRI WEBB, Paducah ANGELA WEBER, Fort Knox GERI WEISENBERGER, Mayfield ELIZABETH WELLS, Paris JUDITH K. WELLS, Albany SHARON WELLS, Loveland, Ohio GAIL M. WEST, West Chicago, Ill. RUTH A. WHEAT, Bardstown JEFFREY W. WHITAKER, Rockport, Mass. RHONDA WHITAKER, Frankfort ALICIA A. WHITE, Bowling Green ANNA WHITE, Louisville CONNIE WHITE, Russellville PEGGY WHITE, Franklin STEVE WHITE, Danville RUSSELL E. WHITNEY, Glasgow GERALD WIBLE, Louisville SCOTT WIGGINTON, Louisville LEE WILDMAN JR., Bedford, Ind. DARRYIL T. WILLIAMS, Lexington GALE M. WILLIAMS, Elizabethtown CELIA WILLIAMSON, Princeton LINDY WILLINGHAM, Henderson DEEANN WILLIS, Campbellsville TAMMY WILLIS, Morgantown DEBORAH S. WILSON, Nashville, Tenn. MARCIA WILSON, Warsaw MARY A. WILSON, Bowling Green TOM WILSON, Kokomo, Ind. TRACY L. WILSON, Louisville STEPHANIE WILWAYCO, Franklin CLARA WINCHESTER, Bronston RUSS WITCHER, Red Boiling Springs, Tenn. JENNIFER WITT, Glasgow PAM WOHLLEB, Louisville LILLIE WOODARD, Russellville VERONICA A. WOODARD, Adairville TONYA WOODWORTH, Lawrenceburg PAUL E. WOOTTEN, Seaford, Del. DIANE WRIGHT, Louisville BLAIR WRIGLEY, Billings, Mont. BARRY YATES, Kuttawa va ( eer CATHY YOUNG, Clarksville, Tenn. ‘ a f “x, MICHAEL D. YOUNG, Elizabethtown RIFA K. YOUNG, Louisville SUSAN E. ZEIDLER, Bowling Green KATHI L. ZIEGLER, Shively TERI L. ZIMMERMAN, Rodards MARY B. ZINSIUS, Louisville ANN R. ZOELLER, Louisville 401 Sophomores FRESHMEN They’ve come a long way and they have a long way to go. No wonder many are homesick, as they leave familiar hometowns and high school friends to enter communal living in dorms and classes which are said to be hard. What’s the biggest difference between high school and college? “IT have more self discipline,’ Margaret Bresler, an 18-year-old from Owensboro, said. “The classes are harder.” But perhaps the most shock comes when the myths about Western are shattered. “The people are friendlier than I expected,’’ Nancy Johnson, an 18-year-old from Allensville, said. “It’s not as wild down here as | heard,”’ Gloria Edwards, an 18-year-old from Edmonton, said. “It didn’t live up to what I heard — a party school,’ Claudia Schmidt, a 19-year-old from Owensboro, said. And what’s the biggest personal change? “If | want to go somewhere I just go,’’ Ms. Edwards said. “‘I don’t have to ask my parents.” [_] DEBRA ADAMS, Louisville SUSAN ADCOCK, Owensboro SAMUEL Y. ADEYEMI, Bowling Green MELINDA AGEE, Portland, Tenn. HABEEB M. AL, Riyada, Saudi Arabia JORGE E. ALEMPARTE, Vina del Mar, Chile ANITA ALEXANDER, Hayward, Calif. RANDALL L. ALFORD, Brownsville MOSTAFA ALI-AKBAR-BEIK, Tehran, Iran MELANIE ALLBRIGHT, Edmonton JACKIE ALLEN, Grand Rivers JOHN D. ALLEN, Lexington JULIE ALLEN, Cloverport STEPHON ALLEN, Buffalo TIMOTHY W. ALLEN, Harrodsburg MARTHA ALLES, Jasper, Ind. KIM ALLEY, Russellville MYRA ALVEY, Cub Run JOHN D. ANGLIN, Smithland JOSE ARAYA, Vina del Mar, Chile ROBERT S. ARCHER III, Williamsville, N.Y. DIANA ARGO, Hickman PAMELA S. ARNDELL, Dunbar ROGER ARNOLD, Russellville ELAINE ASHCRAFT, Brandenburg JACK AUGUSTY, Downers Grove, Ill. MARY E. AVANT, Lexington JEANETTE R. BACON, Hopkinsville KENNETH D. BAGWELL, Auburn ELIZABETH A. BAILEY, Bowling Green ETHEL BAILEY, Allensville SUSAN BAILEY, Wickliffe CARLA BAKER, Louisville DENISE BAKER, Henderson KORAL K. BAKER, Lexington TONJA D. BAKER, Madisonville KEN BAKKER, Glasgow CONNIE BALE, Fairdale GABRIELLE BANKS, Fordsville LARRY BARKER, Franklin ROGER D. BARKER, Franklin JULIA A. BARNHART, Glen Ellyn, Ill. RICKY BARR, Battletown BRETT BARRETT, Alvaton KIMBERLY BARROW, Auburn TAMMY BARTLEY, Tompkinsville KAY BEAN, Benton, Ill. LISA A. BEATY, Albany LAURA BECKER, Louisville VALERIE BEDWELL, Green Brier, Tenn. SHARON J. BELL, Lebanon REGINA BELT, Smithland GARY L. BENCH, Woodburn ALAN BENTLEY, Gamaliel ARTHUR BERRY, Louisville SHEILA D. BERRY, Scottsville BRYAN BERTRAM, Hodgenville CHERYL D. BICKETT, Bardstown KIM BIRDSONG, Cadiz ELLA BLAINE, Louisville KEITHA BLAINE, Philpot YVONNE M. BLAKE, Belton LEANNE BLAKEMAN, Greensburg 402 Freshmen BONNIE BLANTON, Olmstead WOODROW BOGGS III, Elizabethtown FLORENCE BOISSE, Carpentras, France MONICA BOLAN, Louisville CINDY BONNER, Paducah JANET K. BORCHELT, Franklin, Tenn. AIMEE BORDAS, Winchester BRENDA BOWLEY, Owensboro BARRY BOWLING, Owenton TAMMY BOWMAN, Benton, III RANDY BRACEY, Green Brier, Tenn. KIM L. BRADEN, Evansville, Ind. DEENA BRADSHAW, Louisville LESA J. BRADSHAW, Greensburg JAMES J. BRADY III, Louisville DEBORAH BRANDES, Newark, Del. DONNA L. BRANHAM, Summer Shade TAMMIE T. BRANSTETTER, Hardyville TIM BRASHEAR, Elizabethtown SANDRA BREWER, Anchorage JANET BRIGGS, Cave City C. TODD BRIGHT, Kokomo, Ind. DONNA BRISTOW, Benton WILMA BROCK, Warbranch JUDY BRODERICK, Louisville CHRISTY BROOKS, Franklin REGINA BROOKS, Lewisburg JOEL D. BROUGHTON, Scottsville ALICIA BROWN, Henderson BILL BROWN, Franklin JOANNA BROWN, Lebanon ROBERT BROWN, Morgantown PAMELA BRUCHAS, Hendersonville, Tenn. JIM BRUMFIELD, Wilmore KAREN BRYAN, Brandenburg TIMOTHY L. BRYANT, Campbellsville TIMOTHY L. BRYANT, Columbia JACKIE BRYCE, Smiths Grove BILL BUCKBERRY, Bowling Green SUSAN BUHAY, Marietta, Ga. ELIZABETH A. BUNCH, Portland, Tenn. ELIZABETH BURRES, Leitchfield VALERIE BURROWS, Pensacola, Fla. LOUISE BUTLER, Clarksville, Tenn. ELAINE BUTTS, Bowling Green MALABY BYRD JR. Lexington WILLIAM CALLIS, Pendleton SANDEE CALLOWAY, Rineyville LOU CAMP, Hopkinsville TAMMY CAMPBELL, Louisville VICKI CANNADY, Vine Grove SHARON CAPPS, Burkesville GALE CARMAN, Philpot JEFF B. CARMAN, Hendersonville, Tenn. TAMMY CARSON, Bowling Green LORETTA G. CARTER, Tompkinsville ROBERT L. CARTER, Glasgow TIM W. CARTER, Hawesville TRACY CARVER, Greenville KATHY CASH, Louisville CYNTHIA CATE, Louisville VICKY CATHEY, Louisville KIMBERLY A. CESSNA, Central City Photoplay TAKING PICTURES of friends outside Gil- bert Hall is Teri Borders, a Shelbyville sopho- more. Miss Borders, freshmen Susan Mercke and Katie Vaden, and sophomore Debbie Hi- tron said they were “just wasting film.’’ The four lived on the second floor of Gilbert. apy — Mark Lyons 403 Freshmen LAURIE CHAMBERS, Louisville TAMMY CHAMBERS, Newport BRIAN R. CHEANEY, Louisville CAROL CHEATHAM, Bradfordsville MITZI CHEATHAM, Calhoun VANESSA CHILDRESS, Cub Run CAROLINE Q. CHIPLEY, Lookout Mountain, Tenn. DAVID CIVILS, Hodgenville CAROL P. CLARK, Nashville, Tenn. DENISE CLARK, Bardstown SADIE CLARK, Danville RONALD CLAXTON, Bloomfield VENITA CLAY, Louisville RICHARD CLEMONS, Kenton, Ohio ROSE CLEMONS, Leitchfield KAY CLENDENIN, Bellevue, Wash. TERRI CLINARD, Adairville TERESA COCKREL, Caneyville During her first year in college, Ann Kelly often attended parties at the Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity house. But a year later, she spent much of her time there stirring large kettles of chili or pouring mushroom sauce over 30 chicken breasts. Monday through Friday, the Greensburg na- tive spent at least three hours in the kitchen, fighting the aggressive and hungry flies that moved in circles. She also tolerated the brothers who ignored the menu posted on the milk machine. Giggling at a hug or a tickle aimed at her apron-covered ribs, she continually answered menu questions. She protested kicks to the backside, but knew the brothers loved her when they called her ““Mom”’ or “Cookie.” Miss Kelly, an experienced cook, helped her father cater meals for large groups. For her dad, a retired electrician, cooking in quantity is a hobby. But for Miss Kelly, it became a part- time job when she was hired in August. “He didn’t think I could do it,” she said as she tasted her simmering chili on a cool au- tumn afternoon. “He said it was an awful big responsibility, but he taught me how to do it. I ‘Mom's’ home cooking didn’t ever think I’d be offered a job like this, though.” Miss Kelly plans the dinner menus, and the fraternity brothers shop for food, set the table and clean the kitchen. They pay $50 a month for breakfast and dinner five days a week. They prepare their own breakfast: cereal, toast, eggs, sausage and ham. “It’s like I’m their mother,” Miss Kelly said. “It’s sort of an adventure, like I have 30 sons. I try to keep the pan covers on the vegetables so the vitamins won’t get out.” The AGR kitchen is without measuring spoons and cups, so Miss Kelly “‘just puts some in and starts tasting.” Each meal includes at least two vegetables, meat, rolls or light bread, and tea. The AGRs seldom have dessert. “‘They like normal food better,”’ she said. She said they like her baked chicken with crumbled cheese crackers best. Sometimes they are skeptical of her dishes. “T fixed a Jello salad with Cool Whip and cottage cheese. They came through the kitch- en and saw the cottage cheese, and said, ‘Ooh, you’re ruining it.’ But none of it was left.”’ Miss Kelly said she’s never sure whether she has cooked enough to feed a house full of brothers. If she runs short, it’s a quick trip to a grocery store where she has a charge account. She wears her apron there, too. Miss Kelly, who lights the gas-piloted burners by swiftly waving a telephone directo- ry across them, said she uses mixes for mashed potatoes. ‘‘Peeling 20 pounds of potatoes gets to me.” She said she is proud when the brothers compliment her meals. But often they are teas- ingly critical. “They told me before I came that some of them would gripe about everything,” the brown-haired, blue jean-clad cook said. “I just don’t pay any attention to that. They don’t bother me a bit. “Sometimes I come to work depressed and wonder how I’m going to cook for 30 people. But by the time I leave at 6, I feel lots better. They cheer me up.” — Connie Holman [| ANN KELLY takes a break from cooking to talk with two AGR members finishing up their dinner. The Greensburg freshman spends about three hours a day in the kitchen. — Lewis Gardner 404 Freshmen MARK S. COCKRIEL, Bowling Green REBECCA COGHILL, Hopkinsville PATTY COKER, Bowling Green JEFF COLE, Vanceburg TOM COLE, Bowling Green KATHY COLLIER, Owensboro SCOTT V. COLLINS, Denver, Colo. STEVENS W. COLLINS, Clay MARY CONKLIN, Nashville, Tenn. GEORGE CONNER, Middleton, N.J. REBECCA E. CONNER. Smiths Grove STACIE CONRARDY, Park Ridge, Ill. PHYLLIS CONSTANS, Bowling Green CARLA COOMER, Glasgow BRUCE -COOMES, Owensboro JOY COOMES, Owensboro SHEILA COOPER, Bowling Green MARGARET T. COOTS, Franklin EMMALINE CORNELIUS, Hopkinsville CATHY CORRELL, Paris LAURA L. CORUM, Louisville MATT COSTELLO, Louisville CINDY K. COTTRELL, Bonnieville LEA COTTRELL, Alvaton CINDY COWAN, Clay DONNA S. COWLES, Brownsville SUSAN COWLES, Bowling Green CHERYL L. COWLEY, Elizabethtown CAROL E. COX, Greenville DAVID G. COX, Louisville KERRY G. COX, Battletown DONNA CRAIG, Winchester SUSAN CRAIG, St. Joseph, Ill. SHEILA CRASK, Owensboro TERI CRICK, Hopkinsville PENNY CROSS, Albany SALLY N. CROW, Hartford DIANE R. CROWELL, Bowling Green DAVID CUMMINGS, Louisville KATHY R. CUMMINGS, Calhoun CHRIS CUNDIFF, Greenville LINDA C. CUNNINGHAM, Scottsville RICHARD C. CUNNINGHAM, Bowling Green PHILIP CUPPY, Louisville ELAINE CURTIS, Westmoreland, Tenn. VICKIE L. CURTIS, Beaver Dam DEBBIE DAIGLE, Henderson CHERYL L. DALTON, Albany PAM DAME, Sebree ANN B. DARDEN, Springfield, Tenn. JANET DAUGHERTY, Beaver Dam LAURA DAUGHERTY, Elizabethtown TOM DAUGHERTY, Nicholasville BAMBI DAVIS, Owensboro CARL DAVIS, Bee Spring LISA DAVIS, Paris MICHELLE E. DAVIS, Louisville ROBERT W. DAVIS, Bowling Green SARAH DAVIS, Horse Cave TERYL A. DAVIS, Morgantown JAMES R. DELK, Albany LEATHA L. DEMAREE, Shelbyville ANDY DEMUTH, Louisville THOMAS J. DENK, Fairport, N.Y. ROBERT S. DESHA, Louisville PATTY DIERSON, Louisville DENNIS DILLARD, Bowling Green FRANK F. DIXON, Fort Knox VALERIE DIXON, Benton, Ill. JOANNA DOBBS, Franklin LISA DODD, Bowling Green SHONNA L. DODSON, Bardstown JULIE D. DOWNING, Fountain Run MELISSA L. DOWNS, Scarsdale, N.Y. TERRI L. DOYEL, Glasgow RANDY DRAFFEN, Beaver Dam JEFFERY DRAKE, Greenville GLENN E. DREXLER, Louisville KEVIN P. DUCKWORTH, Bowling Green MICHELLE DUKE, Louisville GEORGIA N. DUKES, Greenville FELICIA DUNLAP, Campbellsville CATHY D. DUNN, Bowling Green PAMELA J. DURHAM, Greensburg PATRICIA DWYER, Morgantown CINDY EALY, Louisville VICKIE EAST, Hopkinsville BOBBI J. EDGAR, Bowling Green DEBBIE EDRINGTON, Louisville PAM EDRINGTON, Louisville AMY EDWARDS, Bowling Green ANDRE EDWARDS, Dayton, Ohio BRUCE K. EDWARDS, Eminence LORNA EDWARDS, Louisville CLAUDIA EISENMANN, Cadiz ROBIN EKMAN, Louisville JOY B. ELDRIDGE, Henderson MICHAEL F. ELLIOT, Auburn LINDA F. ELMORE, Roundhill JANE B. ENGLAND, Edmonton JAMIE E. ENGLERT, Owensboro MARILYN K. EPISON, Whitesville KEVIN L. ESTES, Lewisport MARJORIE L. ESTES, Louisville LISA A. EVANS, Logansport MARILYN F. EVANS, Owensboro PAULA J. EVANS, Morgantown JEANNE E. EYSTER, Louisville TINA FANT, Smiths Grove JULIE A. FARMER, Bowling Green BAHMAN FATHEDDIN, Bowling Green TERI FEEBACK, Burgin JAMES R. FENTRESS, Bethlehem LYNN R. FENWICK, Bardstown R. MAXIMINO FERNANDEZ R., Rio Grande, Panama TINA FIELDS, Morgantown JOLENE FILLMAN, Hawesville 405 Freshmen ‘ SUZANNE FISHER, Springfield, Tenn. | JOHN FITZGERALD, Louisville TRUDY FLEENOR, Bowling Green KIM FLEMING, Greenville DONNA FLOYD, Shelbyville DEBORAH FOSTER, Hartford DONNA FOSTER, Columbia CYNTHIA A. FOX, Louisville SARAH FOX, Elkton JOYCE FOWLER, Bayshore, N.Y. KAREN FRANCIS, Indianapolis, Ind. PATRICIA FRANKLIN, Smiths Grove ANTHONY R. FRAZIER, Nashville, Tenn. NEIL R. FREEMAN, Waynesboro, Va. REBECCA A. FRENCH, Owensboro JUDY J. FRITZ, Cynthiana CAROLYN FRYMAN, Lawrenceburg DAVID B. FULKERSON, Calhoun LISA A. FULLER, Cadiz MYRA FURLONG, Glasgow AMY GALLOWAY, Lexington SUZANNE GALLOWAY, Leitchfield DWAYNE GARDNER, Cave City JEANINE GARLAND, London WILLIAM C. GARMON, Burkesville DEATRA L. GARRARD, Winchester BILL GARRISON, Oakland MICHAEL GARY, Morgantown TOMMY GEORGE, Paducah CHERYL L. GIBBONS, Cave City WESLEY GIBSON, Connersville, Ind. | WAYNE GIDDINGS, Winter Haven, Fla. THELMA V. GILBERT, Central City TAMMY GILLIAM, Louisville DAVE GIRARD, Bay City, Mich. ANGIE GIRVIN, Livermore PATRICIA S. GLIDEWELL, Albany DEBBIE GODWIN, Evansville, Ind. DENNIS GOETZINGER, Middletown CRYSTAL L. GOLD, Cadiz a 7 wancra CRYSTAL L COU, Co a eS Steam room STEAM fogs up the window of the weight room, and Tony Smith tries to wipe it off. Smith, a Philadelphia freshman, was taking a break from his workout in Smith Stadium. GARRY GOODIN, Shepherdsville KEVIN GOOLSBY, Bethpage, Tenn. LISA A. GOSSETT, Cave City DEBORAH J. GRAHAM, Evansville, Ind. JEANNE GRANT, Bowling Green DONNA GRAVES, Louisville 406 Freshmen GREGORY GRAVES, Rochester, Mich. SHULANDA GRAVES, Louisville KAREN GRAY, Glasgow GARY GREEN, Nashua, N.H. JANICE L. GREEN, Sacramento NANCY GREEN, Sacramento ROBERTA GREENE, Owensboro WANDA L. GREENE, Lawrenceburg DENNIE L. GRIDER, Centertown LYNN GRIGGS, Woodburn JERRY GROOMS, Owensboro DARLENE GRUBBS, Drakesboro GARRY D. GUPTON, Campbellsville JULIE GUYTON, Louisville DEBBIE HALE, Rockfield PATRICIA S. HALE, Columbia ANITA HALL, Bowling Green MITCH HALL, Auburn TAMMI HALL, Maysville GARRY HAMMER, Dubre LARRY HAMMER, Dubre WILLIAM HANCOCK, Cadiz BRENDA HARDEN, Columbia JANE K. HARDY, Owensboro BRIAN K. HARLAN, Cave City RICKY HARLOW, Glasgow DAVID HARMON, Bedford O20 SES RMRS — Scott Robinson 407 Freshmen , LISA D. HARPER, Lexington DONNA HARRELL, Falls of Rough VANESSA G. HARRIFORD, Smiths Grove JOAN HARRIS, Burkesville LISA R. HARRIS, Bowling Green MATTHEW B. HARRIS, Louisville MICHAEL E. HARRIS, Bowling Green NIKITA M. HARRIS, Lexington VIOLA R. HARRIS, Louisville BETH HARTSOCK, Hendersonville, Tenn. GREG HARTUNG, Bloomington, Ind. LISA HAST, Owensboro ALETHA HATFIELD, Evanston, Ill. CHERYL HAWKINS, Tell City, Ind. CUBA HAWKINS, Owensboro JANA R. HAYES, Auburn BILLIE J. HAYNES, Brandenburg MARCIA HAYS, Munfordville ELIZABETH A. HAYWOOD, Byesville, Ohio DEBORAH K. HEADY, Hodgenville KELLY HEFNER, Benton, Ill. ALAN D. HELBING, Fort Knox LAURIE HELTSLEY, Beechmont SUSAN HEMINGWAY, Edgewood ANGELA HENDERSON, Lexington BECKIE HENDRICK, Hardinsburg PAULA HENDRICKS, Jefferstontown MARY A. HENEGAR, Louisville BECKY HENRY, Lexington TOMILYNN HERNDON, Cedar Hill, Tenn. SUSAN L. HERRINGTON, Smiths Grove LISA HESTER, Gallatin, Tenn. WENDY HESTER, Park City JILL HICKMAN, Franklin MARKIDA G. HIGGS, Livermore JANICE HILL, Lawrenceburg B.J. HINKLE, Louisville SHERRI L. HINTON, Lewisburg | EDDIE HOGAN, Franklin | JUDY HOGGARD, Hodgenville KEVIN HOLT, Louisville MONICA D. HOLTON, Bowling Green MARK HOOD, Glasgow | VICKI S. HOPPER, Russell Springs | CINDY HORN, Bowling Green | KAREN A. HORN, Frankfort i EDWIN R. HOSKINSON, Brandenburg JANICE HOUSE, London SANDRA W. HOUSE, Woodbury JAY F. HOUSEHOLDER, Mi amisburg, Ohio JANIE HOUSTON, Owensboro BARBARA HOWARD, Hodgenville GEORGETTE HOWARD, Maceo JOHN S. HOWARD, Louisville LINDA A. HOWELL, Bowling Green SALLY HOWELL, Mount Sterling SHERRY HOWELL, Cadiz TERESA HOWELL, Horse Cave CURT HUBBELL, Speedway, Ind. JUDY R. HUDSON, Bowling Green AMY HUGHES, Bowling Green EDER HUGHES, Louisville JOYCE HUGHES, Auburn ROBERT S. HUGHLEY, Lexington ANITA HUME, Tompkinsville TERRI R. HUME, Bowling Green GLENN HUMPHREY, Bowling Green CARLENE HUNT, Cave City KATHY HUNT, Glasgow TERESA HURST, North Middletown JENNIFER IMEL, Pleasureville ROBERT JACKSON, Central City DIANNA L. JACOBS, Louisville DIANE JAMESON, Park City BOBBY W. JANES, Milltown | DRAGO LUIS M. JARQUIN, Jinotega, Nicaragua DEBORA E. JEFFRIES, Smiths Grove MATTHEW JENKINS, Auburn KAREN JEWELL, Bettendorf, lowa iY CHRIS A. JIRCITANO, Sanborn, N.Y. JEFF JOHNSEN, Crown Point, Ind. BRIDGITTE L. JOHNSON, Campbellsville ELIZABETH JOHNSON, Guthrie SANDRA L. JOHNSON, Hopkinsville BARRY D. JONES, Alvaton BEN JONES, Stanford DAVID L. JONES JR., Radcliff JOHN JONES, Owensboro JOY JONES, Lewisport KAREN JONES, Hillsborough, N.C. KATHY JONES, Mableton, Ga. KIMBERLY JONES, Springfield, Tenn. LINDA J. JONES, Clay MELISSA D. JONES, Madisonville ROBERT L. JONES, Portland, Tenn. WILLIAM B. JONES, Louisville MARY JORDAN, Auburn ELLEN JUSTISS, Trotwood, Ohio KAREN JUSTISS, Trotwood, Ohio JAYNE C. KAIN, Georgetown, Ind. ADRIENNE KARL, Bethel Park, Pa. LINDA J. KARNES, Cane Valley DIANNE KARR, Owensboro PAM KEARNEY, Campbellsville KAREN E. KEEL, Edmonton STEVE KELLEY, Franklin DEBBIE KEMP, New Albany, Ind. GRETCHEN KEMP, Richmond DOUG KEPLEY, Franklin PATRICIA R. KIMBERLAND, Bardstown SANDRA A. KIMMEL, Owensboro DONNA J. KINCAID, Rockport, Ind. CARY C. KING, Owensboro SANDY KINSNER, Bowling Green CARRIE L. KITCHEN, Horse Cave 1 BOBBY KLECKA, Huntsville, Ala. ah JANE KLINKERS, Edmonton 408 Freshmen Sunni Seiff is out of place. In an elevator, women exchange wide-eyed stares behind her back. On the steps outside Downing University Center, a student photographer is immediately drawn to her. ““You want a pose?”’ she asks, and, without waiting for an answer, obliges him with several. Sunni Seiff knows the effect she has on oth- ers — she can even control it to a certain extent. It’s her job. Sunni Seiff is a model. She has what she terms “‘attitude,”’ a frame of mind she can change to vary the way she looks. In general, though, “I’m a stuck-up bitch,” she said. ‘““That’s my look ... a high- fashion, kind of uppity look.” She is tall (5-foot-8) and thin (106 pounds), and her naturally arrogant look is emphasized by dark lipstick and black-rimmed eyes. Ms. Seiff, a freshman from Wilmette, Ill., also dresses differently than most students. She frequently wears designer clothes, which she gets at a discount when she models them. During an interview she wore a tight, black, knitted dress, black spike-heeled shoes and black seamed hose. ‘“‘They’re a pain to keep straight,’ she said. ‘But I love ’em. “T’m usually into whatever is the current rage,” she said. And this, too, causes some commotion when she walks by. “I get off on it (the reaction) when it’s posi- tive,” she said. ‘‘The negative feedback — I just ignore it. “The looks I get are from girls, not guys. I’m doing real good with guys.” Ms. Seiff has worked as a high-fashion model for the past five of her 19 years. She was “14 and high” at a concert when a woman approached her and asked if she would be interested in modeling, Ms. Seiff said. That led to courses in a Chicago finishing school, she said. The students practiced var- ious aspects of modeling and went through about 40 photo sessions before starting to mo- del professionally. She worked for, among others, photogra- pher Francesco Scavullo and designers Yves St. Laurent and Calvin Klein. She has ap- peared in L’Officiel magazine and in ads in Viva and Vogue magazines. BOTH PHOTOGRAPHER Harold Sinclair and model Sunni Seiff got in a little practice when Sinclair shot this picture for his Photojournalism class. Ms. Seiff hadn’t mo- deled in several weeks, Sinclair said, so she was glad to model for his fall fashion photo. The clothes are her own; the Fiat was borrowed. Sinclair got an ‘‘A”’ on the picture. model student But her main employer was Saks Fifth Ave- nue in Chicago, which ‘‘is home to me.” Eventually, she said, she began to question her way of life. “Women don’t usually begin to acquire a high-fashion look until about 21,”’ she said, so she worked with women older than she. “I had school to go home to, a house to go home to, friends,”’ she said. The older women seemed limited to only their modeling, she said. ‘“Something was miss- ing from their lives. “When things become stagnant ... I be- come bored and I have to change,”’ she said. That change meant coming to Western. Ms. Seiff had originally visited Western with a friend who came to see her brother. “It was so different,” she said. “T think it’s time; I need to slow down,” she said. ‘‘I would be 90 by the time I was 20” if she continued modeling. Her father, Jerry Seiff, a furniture designer, thinks going to school is good for her, she said. “He didn’t think my associations (in the fashion world) were healthy. He thought I was not ready for that social crowd.” Her friends had a different reaction, she said. ‘‘When I told everybody where I was going to school, they just lost it.” She almost ‘“‘lost it” herself, she said. ‘‘At first I would cry a lot. It was such a change.” JO KLINKERS, Edmonton DEBBIE KLOMPUS, Madisonville CHRISTOPHER KNIGHT, Bowling Green PAMELA KOHLS, Alexandria MICHAEL D. KOLLER, Philpot BILLY KRAUSEN, Bardstown BETSY KREMMER, Nashville, Tenn. SINA KUFEJI, Lagos, Nigeria DOUGLAS B. KUHN, Louisville DOBEHI LACADEN, Radcliff NATASHA F. LACY, Lewisport DUKE T. LAHA, Hodgenville SHERRY LAMB, Russellville CINDY C. LAMBIRTH, Louisville HOLLY LANE, Lakewood, Ohio MARK LANE, South Hamilton, Mass KIM LANGLEY, Big Clifty ROBERT LANGLEY, Clarkson But now, she said, “I’m enjoying it. The people are real earthy, good, nice.”’ There are differences between the Chicago Sunni and the Bowling Green version, she said. “T can’t really dress the way I want to — super high fashion. I don’t feel right doing it. It stands out a little too different, and I don’t like to be looked at in an ‘inunderstanding’ way. “Tm just another person; I’m just another student. There’s 12,000 other me’s here.’’ Not only her wardrobe, but also her person- ality has changed, she said. Chicago friends tell her she has slowed down, she said. “When I’m home, I go wild,” she said. Despite her continuing concern with her ap- pearance, Ms. Seiff said she doesn’t foresee a modeling career. “Two years at Western, if I last, will be good enough,” she said. Then she hopes to go to Europe to continue her studies in architecture and interior design. “T’d like to create a structure and design the inside,”’ she said. “I could go by and say, ‘I did thats But modeling gave her at least one thing — it taught her how to look good, she said. “When I look good, I feel good,” she said. “‘I feel like I’m on top of everything; I feel nice.” And one thing Sunni Seiff can do is look good — and different. — Steven Stines [| — Harold Sinclair 409 Freshmen 4 HARRIET LARGEN, Bowling Green { KENDALL R. LASLEY, Munfordville DONNA R. LATHAM, Russellville BRENT LAW, Bowling Green CHARLES E. LAWSON Il, Louisville CYNTHIA LEACH, Bowling Green DWIGHT LEACH, Louisville KAREN LEACH, Hartford ANNABEL LEE, Lexington DEBORAH L. LEE, Greenville SHEILA LEE, Owensboro ERNIE LEHMAN, Albany CARLA LEONARD, Stanford GREG LESLIE, Louisville WENDELL L. LEWIS, Lexington CINDY LILLARD, Bowling Green JEFF LINK, Glen Ellyn, Ill. CONNIE LITTLE, Albany REBECCA S. LIVERS, Brandenburg JANE LOCKIN, Benton, Ill. DARRYL LOGSDON, Bowling Green THERESA LOGSDON, Caneyville CRAIG LONG, Palatine, Ill. SHELLY LONG, Louisville ALVARO LOPEZ, Sogamoso, Colombia JEAN LOPOLITO, Anchorage CHARISE LORD, Owensboro LAURA LOUGH, Danville DONNA LOWE, Bowling Green JUDY A. LOWE, Bowling Green JAN LOXLEY, Morganfield ROBERT LUCAS, Louisville JAMES LYNCH, Prospect SHARON M. LYTHGOE, Jasper, Ind. QUINTIN D. LYTON, Allensville JUDY L. MADDOX, Beaver Dam SHERRY MADEWELL, Marion, Ind. | NANCY MADISON, Auburn DONNA MARKS, Providence | EDWINA MARTIN, Providence ! LISA MARTIN, Whitesville SABRA E. MARTIN, Frankfort JOE MASON, Walton, Ill. | PERRY R. MASON, Montgomery, Ala. ANGELA E. MATLOCK, Pembroke KAREN MATLOCK, Auburn ANN M. MATTINGLY, Greenville JOE MATTINGLY, Louisville MIKE MATTINGLY, Bardstown ALESHA MAXFIELD, Louisville JUDI MAXFIELD, Cadiz LINDA MAYHEW, Lorain, Ohio MONICA MAYHUGH, Bowling Green LEIGH MCBRIDE, Louisville ROBIN MCCANE, Bedford MELANIE MCCARTHY, Louisville LADONNA MCCARTY, Greenville JOLYN MCCLURE, Lexington DONNA MCCOY, Bowling Green TIM MCCOY, Barlow RICHARD MCCROCKLIN, Beaver Dam TAMMY MCCUBBINS, Horse Cave DAVID L. MCDANIEL, Owensboro MARTHA MCDANIEL, Danville MARY A. MCDANIEL, Lewisport STACY A. MCDANIEL, Horse Cave SANDI J. MCDONALD, Leitchfield PAULA MCFARRON, Corydon TERRY MCGEHEE, Frankfort NADA MCGINNIS, Hopkinsville KAVIN MCGRATH, Louisville DENIECE MCGUFFIN, East View BETH MCINTOSH, Brandenburg KEVIN M. MCINTOSH, Greenville KENNETH R. MCKINNEY, Morgantown TERRY MCKINNEY, Morgantown LAUREEN MCMACKIN, Rindge, N.H. MONTE MCMICAN, Marion JANET MCMURTREY, Summer Shade LAURIE MCMURTREY, Summer Shade HUGH MCREYNOLDS, Lewisburg JUDY L. MCREYNOLDS, Lewisburg DONNA MEADOWS, Louisville DAVID MEANS, Albany JEFF MEFFORD, Bowling Green MICHELLE MELSON, Hendersonville, Tenn. SUSAN MERCKE, Louisville BETH MEREDITH, Louisville DANNY R. MEREDITH, Bee Springs BARRY C. MERTZ, Owensboro DEDE METCALFE, Calhoun THERESA MEYERS, Lewisport TANYA MICHAEL, Hamilton, Ohio VICKI MICHALSKI, Crestwood DARLA MILLER, Alvaton MADONNA MILLER, New Albany, Ind. MARK J. MILLER, Greenville MIKE MILLER, Frankfort rT RICK MILLER, Louisville 410 Freshmen WILLIAM L. MILLER, Owensboro CHERI MILLS, Louisville MARCIA E. MINCY, Hendersonville, Tenn. CINDY MINTON, Echols GINNY MITCHELL, Shelbyville JEANNE MITCHELL, Burna SANYA MITCHELL, Vine Grove SHERRY L. MITCHELL, Mayfield TANYA MITCHELL, Vine Grove TOM MOAK, Covington TRACY MOHON, Owensboro CYNTHIA MONTGOMERY, Burgin SHERRY MONTGOMERY, Greensburg LATANYA MOORE, Louisville LAURA B. MOORE, Morgantown SHERRY MOORE, Madisonville TERESA MOORE, Auburn TRUDY D. MOORE, Bowling Green BARRY MORGAN, Nashville, Tenn. JOHN MORGAN, Bettendorf, lowa MICHAEL P. MORGAN, Henderson BELINDA J. MORRIS, Russellville JEFFERY A. MORRIS, Bowling Green MELODY MORRIS, Bowling Green BRENDA J. MORROW, Louisville MINDY MORTLAND, Hopkinsville TERRY MOULTON, Bowling Green GREGORY MUIR, Allensville KATHERINE MURPHEY, Greenville WILLIAM H. MURREY JR., Pulaski, Tenn. KELLY M. NAPIER, Bowling Green YAHYA YOUSUF NASER, Jordan HOWARD M. NATALIE, Louisville KARIN NEERGAARD, Marcellus, N.Y. RHONDA NESBITT, Cadiz KATHY NEUBAUER, Lindenhurst, Ill. Sidewalk artists LINES AND SHADOWS outline Art 140 students as they draw outside Ivan Wilson Fine Arts Center. Kim Sage, a Rochester, Mich., freshman, keeps her crutches near- by; and Julie Tharpe, an Elizabethtown freshman, consults her teacher, Ivan Earl Schieferdecker. Miss Sage hurt her knee in a Halloween haunted house. — Scott Robinson 411 Freshmen 412 Freshmen VALERIE D. NEW, Lewisburg SCOTT NEWCOMB, Philpot BARBARA NEWMAN, Greenville MICHAEL J. NEWTON, Clyde, Ohio LEROY NICHOLAS, Payneville JAMIE NICHOLS, Lexington MITZI NICHOLS, Princeton KIMBERLY A. NIVA, Bowling Green CYNTHIA A. NOBLE, Winchester STEPHANIE J. NOPLIS, Louisville SANDY NORFLEET, Middletown PAM NORMAN, Glasgow KIMBERLY A. NOTT, Lima, Ohio AMYE NUCKOLS, Glasgow KELLEY OATTS, Hopkinsville RON O’CONNOR, Andes, N.Y. LORI OGDEN, Horse Cave GENA OGLESBY, Greenville CAROLYN OLDHAM, Henderson HAZEL D. OLDHAM, Lexington LINDA OLDHAM, LaGrange DIANE L. OLSON, St. Charles, Ill TERESA O’NEAL, Adolphus CHIKE ONYEJEKWE, Okigwe, Nigeria DAVID P. ORNE, Newport CYNTHIA OWEN, Bowling Green SANDRA OWEN, Burkesville LEIGH E. OZIER, Greenville RAMONA PACE, Pembroke MARTHA PADDIE, Bowling Green JEFF PAGE, Russellville LISA E. PAGE, Albany SUSAN PARDUE, Scottsville DENNIS T. PARHAM, Fort Campbell BONNIE C. PARKER, Russellville PHILLIP PARKER, Quality BARRY PARKS, Hardinsburg MARTHA PARKS, Glasgow VENETTA PARMLEY, Burkesville DAVID PATTON, Eddyville MICKI PEAHL, Bowling Green RONDA PEAK, Milton CHERYL PEAY, Bowling Green NELLIE PEDIGO, Gamaliel MARLA PEERCE, Clarkson CATHY PENDLEY, Owensboro JULIE PENDYGRAFT, Glasgow BARRY PERKINS, Glasgow FREDDY PERKINS, Fort Campbell LONNIE PERKINS, Glasgow KIMLA L. PETERS, Louisville SHELIA PETETT, Tompkinsville KIMBERLY J. PEVELER, Greenville DONNA PHILLIPS, Hardyville — Harold Sinclair —— experience REGISTRATION can be upsetting, even for those who are not registering. Carl Brown, an Owensboro freshman, is undaunted by his search for a class. But his friend, Anthony Meadows, who is not a student, is tired of the process. The two were at fall semester registra- tion in Diddle Arena. KAREN PHILLIPS, Franklin NELEDA PHILLIPS, Ekron SUSANNE PIERCY, Paducah SUE PILARSKI, Bowling Green ROGER PINKSTON, Owensboro TERESA PIPER, Beaver Dam BARNEY PIPPENGER, Bowling Green JANET PITCOCK, Louisville PERRY PITCOCK, Horse Cave JUNE PLANK, Green Brier, Tenn. KAREN PLOTT, Bowling Green KIMBERLY D. POE, Dawson Springs RITCHIE L. POND, White House, Tenn. CYNTHIA POTTER, Bowling Green SANDRA POTTER, Floyd Knobs, Ind. LISA A. POTTS, Louisville CHARLIE POWELL, Franklin JOHN POWELL, Campbelisville JEFF PRATHER, Jeffersontown SHARI PRICE, Campbellsburg PATRICIA PRIDDY, Bowling Green TAMMY PRIDDY, Hodgenville JOHN PROVOST, Evansville, Ind. NINA E. PRUITT, Scottsville LUCENA L. PUCKETT, Louisville SHANNON QUEENAN, Louisville CATHY QUENZER, Glasgow FAWN M. QUICK, Bowling Green JULIE QUIRE, Louisville CHRIS RADFORD, Louisville DOUG W. RAEF, Lexington SALLY RAFFENSPERGER, Atlanta, Ga. RENIAA RAFFERTY, Calhoun MARGARET RAGAN, Mount Sterling MARIETTA RAINS, Hartford LENNY RALEY, Cadiz ANITA RAMSEY, Bowling Green’ DARREN RANSDELL, Louisville LEANNE RANSDELL, Florence LINDA S. RAWLING, Woodburn NORMAN RAY, Louisville RANDY RAY, Bowling Green TERRY RAY, Vine Grove RICK REDDING, Louisville DEBBIE A. REED, Springfield JENNIFER A. REEL, Evansville, Ind. MARTHA REID, Jeffersontown DEBBIE REINHARDT, Crete, Ill. TINA RENEAU, Bowling Green MARY RESS, Tell City, Ind. GREG REVOIINSKI, Kokomo, Ind. MARY A. REXROAT, Russell Springs DAVID W. REYNOLDS, Fern Creek RONNIE REYNOLDS, Louisville SAM REYNOLDS, Bowling Green STEPHANIE RICE, Smiths Grove MARK J. RICH, Evansville, Ind. RENEE RICHARDSON, Cave City TONDA L. RICHARDSON, Hardyville ROBERT K. RICKENBAUGH, Newburgh, Ind. MELVIN RIDDLE, Albany MICHAEL W. RIGGS, Fort Bragg, N.C. MELODY J. RIGGSBEE, Bowling Green ALLEN K. RILEY, Bardstown WAYNE R. RITCHIE, Ekron ANTONIO N. RIVAS, Maracay, Venezuela ROBIN E. ROACH, Hanson MICHAEL ROBBINS, Fordsville ROSEMARY ROBERTS, Lewisport TIMOTHY L. ROBERTS, Lewisport KIRSTIE ROBERTSON, Calhoun CLIFFORD A. ROBINSON, Bowling Green JENNIFER S. ROBINSON, Cincinnati, Ohio LISA A. ROBISON, Owensboro JORGE E. ROBLEDO, Manizales-Caldos, Colombia RODNEY ROCK, Cave City RICHARD RODENBECK, Bettendorf, Iowa DENIECE ROGERS, Connersville, Ind. GERONIMO ROMERO, Auburn VIRGINIA A. ROOT, Corona, N.M. PHILLIP A. ROSS, Echols JOE ROTHMAN, Bonnieville LORI ROYSE, Knob Lick KAREN L. RUBLE, Shelbyville LAURA RUDOLPH, Paducah DAVID RUE, Bowling Green TRAM RUNNELS, Bowling Green REXANNA RUSH, Tompkinsville JILL RUSSELL, Calhoun 413 Freshmen PAM RUSSELL, Bowling Green ROBERT SALING, Louisville LANEAN SALTSMAN, Leitchfield ABDULLAH SAMMAN, Bowling Green MARY D. SANDERS, Owensboro CHARLENE A. SARGENT, Rye, N.H. JENNIE SAUER, Louisville EARL G. SAXTON, Bowling Green KIMBERLY A. SCHAAF, Louisville CATHY SCHIESS, Russellville HEDDA SCHMIDTHUBER, Elizabethtown DANIEL J. SCHNURR, Louisville MARY E. SCHREINER, Nicholasville KIMBERLY K. SCOTT, Morgantown ALLISON S. SEIFF, Wilmette, Ill. BRENDA J. SETTLE, Brandenburg GATES SETTLE, Calhoun DEBBIE C. SEYMOUR, Island LYNN G. SHADOAN, Somerset BOB SHANK JR., Glasgow STEVEN D. SHANKLIN, Louisville LORI SHARE, Bowling Green OSAMA SHARIF, Bowling Green BRIAN D. SHAW, Henderson PEGGY SHAW, Summer Shade CINDY SHELTON, Hopkinsville NAOMI R. SHELTON, Madisonville Heads turn when Sheila and Sharon Radford walk across campus. ‘“ You’d be surprised how many people stop and stare,’’ Sharon said. Sheila added, ‘Yeah, people in cars almost wreck goin’ by.” The Radford sisters are identical twins. They dress alike. They both have curly brown hair. Sometimes they even walk in step with each other. Their “‘mirror image’”’ has caused quite a few second glances. “Walking up the Hill, just about every day we've been here people will walk on past us and we'll hear them say, ‘There go the twins,’ ”’ Sheila said. “It happens all the time,” Sharon said. “‘ guess it’s just a normal reaction.” Junior transfer students from Lindsey Wil- son Junior College, both women agreed that they had received more than their share of attention in their first year at Western. They have all their classes and labs together. “‘Most of our teachers looked really shocked when they looked up from their roll books for the first time and saw two of us,”” Sharon said. Sheila said they try to help their instructors out by always sitting in the same seat. And Sharon always sits to the right of Sheila. The only time they do not dress alike, Shar- on said, is when they are “just sitting around the house or something’ when they go home on the weekends to Burkesville. “We enjoy dressing alike,” Sheila said. “It just seems to me that twins would want to.” ‘All our outfits are exactly alike,” Sharon said. “You wouldn’t believe how much trouble it is finding two of every piece of clothes we decide to buy,” Sheila added. Their striking similarities have sometimes been put to good use. Sheila said that in high school, if one was called on to go to the black- board or answer a question but wasn’t pre- pared, the other would fill in and the teacher would never know the difference. “People are always asking just how to tell us apart,’’ Sheila said. The surest criterion is a mole on Sharon’s forehead. But her hair cov- ers it. As babies they got mixed up and had to be 414 Freshmen se | ; ray, Tat pie 4 — Neil Pond Sheila and Sharon Radford taken back to the hospital to get their foot- prints checked, Sharon said. ‘“‘We’ve some- times wondered what if she’s really me and I’m really her,” she said jokingly. Both agreed that they have some personal- ity differences. “‘A lot of people say that I’m more serious than she is,’ Sheila said. ‘“‘And I’m more the outdoor type,” Sharon added. Sheila said that the women on their Bemis- Lawrence dorm floor are not able to tell them apart. ““The RA will see us and say, ‘Hi, Rad- ford,’ and not even try to guess,”’ she said. There are no disadvantages to having an identical twin, they agreed. Sheila said, “‘We’ve always had each other through every- thing. It makes us wonder how it would be if one of us wasn’t here. I don’t think either one of us could have made it without the other.”’ Sharon said, ““Some people wonder what it would be like to have a twin. Well, we wonder what it would be like not to.” They plan to continue to keep a “twin im- age’’ for as long as they can, at least until they have to go separate ways. “‘And even then we’ll plan to dress alike any time we get to- gether,” Sheila said. Statistically, Sheila is 25 minutes older than her sister. Their weight varies from time to time, within two or three pounds of each other. “And for a while she’ll be taller, then for a while I’ll be taller,” the oldest said. But to the casual observer, there is little, very little, differ- ence between the pair. They like it that way. “‘I think it’s great,” Sheila said. “T love it,’’ Sharon said. And they looked at each other and smiled the same wide smile, and four identical green eyes sparkled. — Neil Pond [| LYNNETTE SHEPHARD, Cannelton, Ind. EDDIE SHERRON, McQuady FOUNT SHIFFLETT JR., Russellville SHERI SHILEY, Louisville PATTY J. SHIPLET, Bowling Green SHARON SHIPMAN, Madison, Tenn. LORRI A. SHIRLEY, Edmonton MARGARET SHIRLEY, Columbia STEPHANY SHRIVER, Bowling Green JAMES D. SHUFFETT, Greensburg LESLIE SIBALICH, Glasgow ROBERT G. SIMMONS, Cincinnati, Ohio SABRINA K. SIMMONS, Russellville CATHY SIMON, Elizabethtown JIM SIMPSON, Campbellsburg TERRI A. SIMPSON, Glasgow KEVIN SKAGGS, Scottsville ROBERT A. SKIPPER, Mount Washington DONNA SLAVEN, Columbia CAROL S. SMITH, Albany CYNDI SMITH, Finchville JOHNNY SMITH, Cullman, Ala. LYNN SMITH, Hendersonville, Tenn. MARK F. SMITH, Simpsonville PAM SMITH, Louisville RICKEY K. SMITH, Albany SABRENA D. SMITH, Cave City SHARON R. SMITH, Bowling Green SHEILA J. SMITH, Philpot THOMAS C. SMITH, Hopkinsville TONY SMITS, Paris PAMELA J. SNELL, Bowling Green J. PAUL SOLVERSON, Rochester, Mich. MIKE SOUTHERLAND, Russellville DEBBIE SOWDER, Louisville DONNA M. SPANIER, Covington ROBIN SPENCE, Louisville BOBBY SPINNER, Louisville NANCY SPIRES, Columbia JAYNE SPRINKLE, Louisville CATHEY STAMPS, Hendersonville, Tenn. MICHAEL W. STAPLES, Payneville GREG STAPLETON, Elizabethtown CINDY STARK, Bowling Green SIDNEY M. STARKS, Franklin MIKE STATER, Brighton, Mich. MARK STEEDLY, Shepherdsville CINDY STEENBERGEN, Hendersonville, Tenn. KIM STEWART, Utica THOMAS STEWART, Ekron VICKI L. STEWART, Sweeden MARY E. STICE, Glendale SYLVIA STOKES, Greenville ALLYSON STONE, Barlow CYNDI STONE, Madison, Tenn. DENA F. STONE, Central City MCKINLEY STONEWALL JR., Edmonton KAREN D. STRONG, Liberty MERRY SUMMERS, Oak Hill SHERRY SUMMERS, Greenville SUSAN E. SUTER, Nashville, Tenn. EDWINIA SUTTON, Island ALANA F. SWEENEY, Bowling Green BRENDA SZORCSIK, Newburgh, Ind. TAMI TANARO, Bowling Green TANIA TANARO, Bowling Green STUART TARLETON, Baltimore, Md MANSOOR TAVAKOLI, Tehran, Iran ANTHONY W. TAYLOR, Jamestown BILL TAYLOR, Louisville DANA L. TAYLOR, Evansville, Ind FRED L. TAYLOR, Bowling Green GAIL TAYLOR, Bowling Green JEANNIE M. TAYLOR, Scottsville PAULA TAYLOR, Hartford TAMARA L. TAYLOR, Paris TODD A. TEMPLETON, LaFontaine, Ind. JULIE THARP, Elizabethtown DEBORAH L. THOMAS, Glasgow JACQUELINE THOMAS, Fort Campbell JAMES THOMAS, Lexington SHARON THOMAS, Owensboro LYNETTE M. THOMPSON, Owensboro MARY J. THOMPSON, Tompkinsville SHERI L. THOMPSON, Louisville STEPHEN THOMPSON, Utica TERI THOMPSON, Jeffersontown ANNETTE THURMAN, Evansville, Ind. LISA A. TIDWELL, Franklin, Tenn. SCOTT K. TILTON, Bettendorf, lowa ROBIN G. TOLL, Greenville DEBBIE TOMES, Bowling Green KATHY TOOMEY, Utica VANITA TOWNSEND, Bedford ANN J. TRICE, Hopkinsville TINA TUNKS, Bowling Green RITA TUPTS, Versailles GREGORY A. TURNER, Cincinnati, Ohio STEWART B. TURNER, Mount Hermon TERESA TURNER, Albany ROLANDA URBAN, Nashville, Tenn. LISA UTLEY, Madisonville POWELL UTLEY, Morganfield SHERRIE K. UTLEY, Bowling Green LOU A. VALE, Alvaton CARLOS VALENCIA, Cali, Colombia DARRYL VAN LEER, Madisonville PATRICIA VANHOOK, New Carlisle, Ohio JOHN P. VAUGHN, Campbellsville VICKY VENCILL, Elizabethtown DWAYNE H. VICK, Russellville RANDY V. VINCENT. Lindseyville KAREN VINSON, Scottsville JEFFREY R. WALLACE, Bowling Green KEVIN WALLACE, Bowling Green DANNY WALTERS, Hebron DON A. WARREN, Bowling Green 415 Freshmen LULA WASHINGTON, Bowling Green GREG WATKINS, Madisonville SONYA WATKINS, Owensboro DEBBIE WATSON, Madison, Tenn. PATRICIA WATSON, Whitley City CHRISTINA M. WATTS, Louisville MARIA WATTS, Brandenburg SHERRY WAYMAN, Cross Plains, Tenn. JULIA WEBB, Lewisburg CHARLOTTE WELCH, Tompkinsville ALESA WELLS, Elkton CHARLES E. WELLS, Brownsville ROY W. WELLS JR., Greenville BRENDA WEST, Springfield, Tenn. JULIE WEST, Louisville MOI J. WEST, Louisville CHERI WESTERFIELD, Lewisport JEFF WESTFALL, Vincennes, Ind. RITA R. WHEAT, Versailles VIKKI WHEELER, Bowling Green LINDA C. WHELAN, Brandenburg ANNETTE WHISTLE, Russellville DIANE E. WHITE, Paris FLOYD E. WHITE, Bowling Green JEFF WHITE, Bettendorf, lowa KAREN WHITE, Springfield, Tenn. KATHY WHITE, Leitchfield Snow job TWO’S COMPANY and three’s definitely a help when shoveling a car out of the snow. Stephanie Wood, a Las Vegas, Nev., freshman, and Rosalie Trujillo, a Memphis, Tenn., sophomore, had planned to go shopping. But when they got to the car, they found it had been deluged with snow. Alfredo Hernandez, who was on duty clearing roads, helps dig them out. According to Glen Conner, climatologist, two snowstorms Feb. 6 and Feb. 8 left about 10 inches on the campus. RITA WHITE, Bowling Green SHARI WHITE, Newburgh, Ind. KIM WHITEHEAD, Murray Hill, N.J LINDA WHITEHEAD, Cincinnati, Ohio JENNIFER WHITFIELD, Owensboro DIANE WHITLOW, Glasgow CYNTHIA WHITSETT, Russellville TAMMY WHITTINGHILL, Owensboro CARLA WILCOXSON, Greensburg DAVID WILL, Louisville SHARON WILLEN, Burkesville KIMBERLY A. WILLHOITE, Frankfort BONNIE J. WILLIAMS, Providence DONNA J. WILLIAMS, Bowling Green GERALDINE WILLIAMS, Middlesboro JANET WILLIAMS, Henderson MIKE WILLIAMS, Bowling Green ROB WILLIAMS, Shepherdsville SHARON F. WILLOUGHBY, Versailles DONNA L. WILSON, Glasgow JENNIFER WILSON, Connersville, Ind. SUSAN WILSON, Morgantown VICKI WILSON, Tompkinsville KATHY WINSETT, Crofton LINDA K. WITTER, Owensboro FRANKIE WOOD, Bowling Green GAYLE WOOD, Russellville — Harold Sinclair 417 Freshmen 418 Freshmen ae CANDY WOODALL, Russellville CONNIE M. WOODALL, Bowling Green TIM WOODS, Louisville LEE WOODWARD, Paris KATHY F. WOOLDRIDGE, Columbia MADONNA WOLFORD, Burnside DEBBIE WOLFE, Bowling Green MIKE WRIGHT, Cadiz MELISSA YOKOM, Brentwood, Tenn. Sitting it out SHARING A QUIET MOMENT, Johnathan Newby and Ce- leste Ellis sit in the stands at Smith Stadium. Newby, a wide receiver, was waiting for football practice to begin. Both are freshmen from Clairton, Pa., and they’re engaged. KAY YORK, Smyrna, Tenn AMANDA YOUNG, Eighty Eight CYNTHIA J. YOUNG, Alvaton DEBRA YOUNG, Nashville, Tenn 4 MARIE YOUNG, Bowling Green eae PATRICIA A. YOUNG, Fort Bragg, N.C RODNEY E. YOUNG, Louisville KAREN ZIMMERMAN, Mount Juliet, Tenn SANDEE ZIMMERMAN, Elizabethtown PR ea gales aaa snamenenatooa — Harold Sinclair : 419 Freshmen A A beginning and an end 126-7 A ‘board of directors’, chairman run college almost like business 202-3 A bookstore and more 150-1 A chance to dance 108-9 “A Comedy of Errors” 112 A concerted effort 272-3 “A Christmas Carol’ 98-9, 103 A fashionable class 179 A fountain of faiths 24-5 A fun-filled fall 312-5 A heady experience 412-3 A lack of awareness 38-9 A model student 409 A new look 116-7 A runner took flight 210-1 A season so bad it hurt 238-9 A shot in the arm 242-3 A sport for all seasons 256-61 Aaron, Lizabeth Ann 344 Abbasnezhad, Abdolrahim 390 Abbasnezhad, Donna Jean Abbott, Kathleen Sue 198 Abbott, Tracie Diane Abdolvahab, Hassan Abdulhag, Ibrahim K. Abdulmalik, Walid Mahmood Abell, Richard William Abell, Sandra Ann 344 Abell, Thomas Randall Abney, Deborah Sue 284, 344 Abney, Debra Ann 344 Abney, Judy Ellen 284, 390 Abram, Marva Jean Abrams, Charles Morris Abromitis, William Drew Absher, Jeffrey Gordon Abuzant, Ahmad Shukry 285 Academic advisement, career planning and placement director 162 Academic affairs vice president 145 Academic services dean 168-9 Academics 170-205 Academics and administration 130- 205 Accounting Club 298-9 Accounting department 204 Accounting department head 204 Accounts and budgetary control director 168-9 Acero, Alejandro Ackerman, Kenneth Lee Jr. Acree, Deborah Ann Gossett 380 Acree, Patricia Dawn Adams, Anita Carol 344 Ad Club 276-7 Adams, Bob 279 Adams, David Kelly 332-3 Adams, Debra Pear! 402 Adams, Jeffery Neal Adams, Kathy Ann 344 Adams, Leslie Douglas 331 Adams, Robyn Lynn 324 Adams, Scott Howard 330-1, 390 Adams, Sherry Jo 326, 390 Adams, Sue Ellen 322 Adams, Timothy Spencer Adamson, Robbie Jean Adcock, James Edward Adcock, Susan Lea 402 Addison, Sandra Jean Addleton, David F. Adeleke, Adedeji T. Adeoye, Ayanladun Ezekiel Adeshakin, Joseph A. Adeyanju, Adekunle Solomon Adeyele, Oluseyi Sedonu Adeyemi, Yemisi Samuel 285, 402 Adkins, Hugh P. Adkins, Lea Ann Administration 144-169 Admissions director 160 Agbatse, Benjo Benjamin Agee, Betsy Gail 299, 390 Agee, Melinda Carol 402 Agnew, Brooks Alexander Agriculture department 181 Agriculture department head 181 Aguanno, Carla Louise Ahmadi, Karim Abdol Ahmadilari, Hossein Ahmed, Ali 292 Ahmed, Seema Aikins, Rebecca Jane Aikins, Ronald Gene 291 Akers, Alida Bayne Akers, Rebecca Lynn 292-3, 344 Akin, Jerry Lane 344 Akin, Thomas Andrew Akkari, Khodr Khaled Al, Habeeb Moustafa I. 402 Al, Janahi Ali Aqader 344 INDEX Al, Kobiassi Nasser Hamed Al, Malki Abdullah Youseff Al-Fayoumi, Ihsan A. Albani, Thomas Anthony Albin, Marvin 298 Aldrich, Kevin John Aldridge, Murl Edwin Alemparte, Jorge Eugenio 251, 402 Aleshire, Harold Lee Alexander, Anita Rae 402 Alexander, Cynthia J.S. Alexander, Helen Patrice Alexander, Jan Terri 327, 344, 380 Alexander, Kern 132-3 Alexander, Madeline Eunice Alexander, Mary Ann Alexander, Mary Jane Alexander, Sandra Jean Alexander, Theresa Mary Alfieri, Fred Eric Alfonso, Richard Wayne Alford, David Eugene Alford, Jeanne Lanell Alford, Randall Leon 402 Alford, Rebecca Jo 326, 344 Alford, Rodney Mitchell Alford, Sandra Lynn 323, 380 Ali, Ahmed 176-7 Ali-Akbar-Beik, Mostafa 402 Alimi, Mukaila Abayomi All work and all play 106-7 Allbright, Melanie Lee 402 len, Bernard Lee llen, Curtis Morgan 344 len, David L. len, David Wayne len, Deborah Frances len, Deborah Kay len, Dolores Lauette len, Edna Mae len, Gary Frank 277, 344 len, George J. len, Jacqueline Melinda 402 len, Joe Brian len, John Douglas 402 len, John Vincent en, Julia Lynn 402 en, Kerry Lyn 294, 390 en, Mark Shane en, Michael Joseph en, Patsy J. Duvall en, Raymond Keith en, Rexford Vandyke en, Robert Raymond en, Ronald Bryan en, Ronnie Michael en, Sarah Jo en, Stephon Lee 328-9, 402 en, Steven Eric en, Tammy Denise en, Tanga Denise en, Ted Eugene en, Timothy Wayne 402 en, Troy 268 en, Vivian Marie 390 en, Walter 119 en, Walton Ray 301, 344 len, Zola Virginia ender, Joy Lynn 390 les, Martha Jane 402 ley, Kimberly Ann 402 ley, Russell C. ey, Trina Lee 304 geier, David Edward geier, Keith Damien 98, 344 geier, Louis Bernard II geier, Steven Michael 104, 380 Igood, Ann Elizabeth good, Kim Lawrence good, Stacey Elinor Igood, Susan Darlene 380 ison, Dale Ellis lison, Jean Anne lison, Mary Ellen ison, Victoria M. 390 -Malki, Abdullah 390 mand, David Forrest Almost perfect 240-1 Alonzo, Jose Luis 390 Alpha Delta Pi 322 Alpha Delta Pi 500 314 Alpha Epsilon Delta 304-5 Alpha Gamma Rho 328 Alpha Kappa Alpha 92-3, 322-3 Alpha Omicron Pi 322-3 Alpha Phi Alpha 328-9 Alpha Phi Omega 292-3 Alpha Xi Delta 324 Alpe, Toni Eldith Alquallaf, Hassan Abd Alspaugh, Betsy Sue 344 Alsup, Jeffrey Wade 216, 219 Althaus, Raymond George Jr. 344 Alumni affairs director 156 Alumni are still part of the family 156-7 Alvey, Berdette Ann 324 Alvey, Jane McFarland Alvey, Michael Wayne 380 Alvey, Monica Jo 390 Alvey, Myra Lynn 102, 402 ee A a a A a A A a A ee de ee ee Pe a A oe de a ee ae ee a a a 420 A beginning Barnette, Brenda Alvey, Sharon Ann 304 Alvey, Stacy Lynn Alvin Ailey Repertory Ensemble 115 Amato, David Fitzpatrick Amato, Teresa Jean 390 Amazing Tones of Joy 270 Ambrose, Laurie Susan Ambs, Judy Potts Amburgy, Michael Howard America Dental Hygienists Association 304-5 American Society of Interior Designers 382-3 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 302 Ammet, Wes 338 Amos, Charles E, 380 ... and a young man shall lead them 26-29 Anderson, Arthur Newton 251 Anderson, Charles 156-7, 266-7 Anderson, Cheryl Lynn 344 Anderson, Deborah Ann 276, 344 Anderson, John Edward 334, 344 Anderson, Karl J. Anderson, Kevin Deneen Anderson, Linda Jo Anderson, Mary Beth Anderson, Phillip Deno Anderson, Randall Grant Jr. Anderson, Rebecca Lynn 294 Anderson, Richard Scott Anderson, Robert Eugene Jr. Anderson, Robert Kevin Anderson, Rudolphus Anderson, Sandra Anderson, Sheila Fay 390 Anderson, Sherry Gale 277, 380 Anderson, Teresa Jean Anderson, Thomas Robert 338 Anderton, Victoria Ann Andress, Bruce Kevin Andrews, Cynthia Meader Andrews, Donald Allen Jr. Andrews, Lorraine Kay Andrews, Robin Sue 126, 306 “Androcles and the Lion’ 103 Anene, Emeka Basil 284, 380 Angarita, Astrid Mendoza Angarita, Rafael Simon Angle, Daniel Wayne Anglea, Sherry Beth Anglin, John David 402 Angsten, Thomas 241, 380 Anthony, Sandra Reynolds Anthony, Theresa Anthony, Tonia Yvette 390 Antle, Brenda Kaye 345 Antle, Kevin D. Antle, Peggy Ann Shearin Antone, Ralph Angelo 216 Antonelli, David Joseph Anvari, Vida Anyaegbuna, Ndubueze T. 284 Aoun, Michael Alan 366, 390 Appel, Max 256 Appleby, Mary Ellen 292 Appleby, Matthew Howard Appleby, Richard Louis Appling, Anthony Ray Appling, Timothy David 292 Aprilfest 82 Agel, Yosef Mohd Ahmad Agel, Zahria Ibrahim Araya, Jose Antonio 264, 402 Arbogast, Albert John III 98 Archer, Robert Stuart II] 402 Arflin, Tracy Thomas II 390 Argo, Diana Gail 402 Aristidou, Marios Andrew Ark, Thomas Edward Armaghan, Ahmad Armao, Allison Armes, Lori Allyson 345 Armes, Rhonda Kaye 380 Armour, Darrell Conley Armstrong, A. Jane Lowe Armstrong, Bryan Leigh 278-9, 334-5, 380 Armstrong, Don 156-7 Armstrong, Donna Michelle Armstrong, Patricia Clark Arndell, Pamela Suzanne 402 Arnett, Wanda Jean Arney, John Malton Arnold, Anthony Vincent Arnold, Cindy Sue Arnold, James Stuart 266, 347, 380 Arnold, Jeffery Allen Arnold, Joseph Richard 380 Arnold, Karen Lynn Arnold, Kevin Dean Arnold, Michael Eugene 345 Arnold, Neal Dwyane Arnold, Robin Ann Arnold, Roger Louis 402 Arnold, Sally Curb 205 Arnold, William Edward Arnold, Yvonne Burchett Arnold, Zack 329 Arritt, Brent Carl 380, 430 Arrowood, Cathy Diane Art department 195 Art department head 195 Arterburn, Sandra Gail Asali, Muhieddin Marwan Asayesh, Javid Ash, James Michael 345 Ash, Sonya Rose 380 Ashayeri, Abdollah M. Ashby, Cathy Jo 286, 291 Ashby, Kathy Jo 293, 326 Ashby, David Wayde Ashby, Kathy Lynn 299, 380 Ashby, Mark Johnson Ashcraft, Elaine Kae 327, 402 Ashdon, Julia Kay 272, 291 Asher, John Stephen Asher, Timothy Joseph 306 Ashley, John David Ashton, Lily N. Sanders Ashur, Salah Eddin A. Ashworth, Jeffery Lynn 298 Askew, Kathy Ellan 390 Aspley, Sue Lynn Assmar, Katherine Louise 269, 317, 322- Associated Student Government 53, 73, 82, 119, 262, 288-9 Association for Computing Machinery 302-3 Association of Student Social Workers 274-5 At the top 144-5 Atcher, Linda Faye Newton Atchley, Connie Marcella Atherton, Edmond Dale Atherton, Sherry Gay 345 Athletic director 160 Atkins, Beth Adelle Atkins, Carl Russell Atkins, Curtis Jr. 380 Atkins, George 118-9 Atkinson, James Joseph Atkinson, John Kirk Atkinson, Jonathan Guy 266 Atnip, Patricia Ann Attig, David Wendall Attracting students is ‘half the battle’ 160 Atwell, Cynthia Gale Atwell, Darryl Rhea Atwell, Karlotta Allie Atwell, Rickie Neal 299, 330-1, 380 Atwell, Terry Randall 345 Atwood, Tammy Jean 380 Atzinger, Timothy Linus 335 Augenstein, Michael Dale 336 Augusty, Jack W. 402 Aukerman, Terri Kathryn 380 Ault, Donna Jo Austin, Brent Smith Austin, Carolyn Denton Austin, Dwight Lea Austin, Gwendolyn Jo Autrey, Kathaleen Marie 380 Avant, Mary Elizabeth 402 Avery, Dwight Lee Avery, Forrest Lynn Axman, Paula Ann Aydelotte, Gregory Ray Ayers, Mark Gilliam Aymett, Selena Beth Aymett, Wesley Harold Ayre, Ann Love 345 Azaga, Adokiye Solomon Azimi, Mehdi Azode, Louis Azubuike B Baali, Ahmed Majeed Baber, Phoebe Ann 380 Baccus Christie Ann Bachanan, Patty 322 Bachert, Nicholas George 390 Bachert, Scott Adrian 162, 166, 274-5 293, 296, 345 Back, Barry Radcliffe Back, Margaret Gwen “The Bachelor Mouse” 103 Bacon, Emily Marie Bacon, Jeanette Regina 402 Bacon, Michael Keith 303 Badami, Deborah Kaye Baete, Michael Garnett Baete, Timothy Scott Bagby, Andra Lynn Baggett, Jill Marie 286, 345 Baggett, Kenneth Jewell 334, 390 Baggett, Kerry Joe 298, 335, 380 Baghadadi, Habib Ahmad Bagnardi, James Francis 252-3 Bagwell, James Gregory 337 Bagwell, Kenneth Dale 402 Bahler, Stacee Jo 364 Bailey, Elizabeth Anne 322, 402 Bailey, Ethel Lee 270, 402 Bailey, Howard 165 Bailey, Jesse Lynn Bailey, Kimberly Jill Bailey, Lonnie Willis Bailey, Marsha Lynn Bailey, Patricia A. Bailey, Ricky Bailey, Sherrie Lyne Bailey, Steven Ray Bailey, Susan Diane 402 Bailey, Tammy Michelle Bailey, William Bruce Baily, Rod 337 Baines, Victoria Lynn 390 Baird, Jane Louise Baird, Sherry Ann 390 Baird, Timothy Lee Baise, Sarah Tracy Baize, David Gene Baize, Roy Ferguson Baize, Wanda Lou Baker, Anna Jewell Baker, Brenda Fay 274, 326-7 Baker, Carla 179, 402 Baker, Connie Frances Baker, Deana Diane Baker, Denise 402 Baker, Denise R. Walker Baker, Faye S. Baker, John 242-3 Baker, John David Baker, Kenneth Dale Baker, Kimberly Joyce Baker, Koral Kathleen 402 Baker, Linda Fay 380 Baker, Lisa Ann 325, 390 Baker, Michael Allen 345 Baker, Nancy Carolyn Baker, Norris Crete Jr. 332-3, 380 Baker, Pamela Jo Walker 261 Baker, Ricky Lewis 254 Baker, Robert Hardin Baker, Terri Lynn Baker, Tom 261 Baker, Tonja Decarole 402 Baker, Valerie Jo Hammonds Bakker, Peter Kenneth 402 Baktashmehr, Bozorgmehr Baldwin, Chester Duane 390 Baldwin, Gregory Thomas 290 Bale, Connie Sue 402 Bale, Thomas Medley Ball, Darrell Wayne Ball, Kimberly Lane 390 Ball, Wilber Louis Ballance, Donna Neal 325 Ballance, Launa Gay 274 Ballard, Hal Edward Ballard, Joseph Gerard 335 Ballard, Kathryn Lea 99, 104, 283 Ballard, Sherry Faye 390 Ballinger, Judith K. Ballou, Olivia Dianne Ballou, Ricky James Ballou, Theresa Beatrice Bamm, Barry 216 Banahan, Ellen White Band 263, 272-3 Banifatemi, Kashi Seyed 164 Banks, Cheryl Lee 269 Banks, Gabrielle 402 Banks, Peggy Fay Banks, Wanda Jean Banuchi, De Ette 274, 380 Barbalace, Frank 77 Barbee, Kathy Carol Barber, Christopher Allan Barbour, Kelley Jean 249 Barcelet, Janet 325 Bardin, James Clayton 335 Barefield, Jennifer Ann Barefoot, Yvonne Lucas Barger, Cheri Lynn 325 Barker, Jeannie Martine Barker, Jeffrey Lurie Barker, Larry D. 402 Barker, Marvin Barker, Patrick Wilson 345 Barker, Roger Dale 402 Barkett, Ellen Margaret Barlow, Michael Stewart 345 Barna, Terry Thaddeus Barnard, Gayla S. Pfeiffer Barnard, Victor C. Barnes, Olive 112 Barnes, Connie Petett Barnes, Diane Patricia Barnes, Rick Hamilton 188 Barnes, Ricky Zane Barnes, Terry Wayne Barnes, Zexia Kay 183, 300 Barnett, Gary Mitchell Barnett, George Evans 330-1 Barnett, Janet Lee Barnett, Nila Michelle Barnett, Philip Wayne 390 Barnett, Therese 345 Barnette, Brenda Wayne 327, 341, 380 Barnewell, Alisa Diane Barnhart, Julie Ann 402 Barnsdale, Ronald Charles Barr, Richard James 402 Barret, Mary Ann 327 Barrett, Brett Mitchell 402 Barrett, Julia Anne Barrett, Katherine Marie Barrett, Mitchell Clayton Barrett, Shelly Ruth Barrick, Christy Ann Barrick, John Daniel Barrick, John Steven Barrick, Mary Ann H. Barrick, Terri Beth Barriga, Carl Luis Barron, Timothy Martin 216, 285, 390 Barrow, Kimberly Wood 402 Barry, Ann Guthrie 345 Bartels, Carmela Underwood Bartholomew, Douglas Georg Bartholomy, Lezlee Anne Bartleson, Francis Austin Bartleson, George Edwin 330-1, 340 Bartley, Dianna Lindsey 345 Bartley, James David Bartley, Linda Sue 345 Bartley, Phil David Bartley, Tammy Sue 402 Bartley, Tema Rochelle Barton, Bruce Thompson 268 Barton, Catherine Jean Barton, Charlotte Goodman Barton, Jennifer Lynne Barton, Steve Lambert 332-3 Baseball 254-5 Basham, Hayward Briggs Basham, Judith Neel Basham, Mildred Nancy 390 Basil, Eugene Jr. Baskett, Bruce Martin Baskett, Johnnie Warrick Bass, Anthony W. Bassett, Connie Elaine Bassett, Gregory James Bassett, Thomas Joseph 380 Bast, William 9 Bastien, Charles Olivier Batchelder, Phillip Karl Bates, David Lee 299, 380 Bates, Dean Edward 306, 380 Bates, Georgia 161 Bates, Gina Gary 390 Bates, Margo B. Bates, Mark Evan Bates, Mary W. Phelps Bates, Pamela Dorris Bates, V. Lynne Batson, Nicholas Hatton Baugh, Clyde Kimble Baugh, Michael Joe Baugh, Tracy Lee Baughman, Henry 173 Bauman, Car! Nicholas Baxley, Donna Marie Baxley, Jeffrey Darrell Baxter, Karen Sue Plott Baxter, Mary Jo Baxter, Norman 120, 142 Bayles, David L. Bays, Harold Edward 304 Bazzell, James Paul Beal, James David 345 Beam, Carrie Ann Beam, Michael Scott Beamish, Richard Joseph IV Bean, Joseph Onell Bean, Judy Lynn 380 Bean, Kay Linda 322, 402 Bean, Tony Edwin Beard, Cheryl Rae Beard, James Douglas 276 Beard, Judith Lee 390 Beard, Tommy Gerard Beasley, Betty Lou 325 Beasley, Larry Michael Beasley, Pamela Ann 265, 380 Beasley, Patsy Morgan Beaty, Douglas Hugh Beaty, Lisa Anne 402 Beaty, Patricia C. Beauchamp, Carl Michael Beauchamp, Patricia W. 345 Beaumont, Garey Evans “Beauty and the Beast” 103 Beavin, William Herman 328-9 Becht, Marcia Ann 323 Becht, Ron Jack 210-1, 246 Bechtel, Deborah Self Beck, Alice Virginia Beck, Archie Ozell 380 Beck, Glenn Alan Beck, Gregory Robert 187, 345 Beck, Janice Marie Beck, Martha Sue 382 Beck, Mavis Regina Beck, Ron 72, 77, 165, 237 Becker, Gregory Todd Becker, Laura A. 402 Becker, Richard Howard 254 Beckett, Peter 76 Beckler, Bruce Howard Beckley, George David Beckman, Kevin Welsch 390 Bedinger, Tucker Graham Jr. Bedwell, Valerie Dee 402 Beeler, Charlie Howard 267 Beeler, Cheryl Ann Beeler, Cindy Lou Beeler, Kenneth Howard Beeler, Lisa A. Beeler, Terri Lynn Beever, Vicki Collins Begel, William B. Jr. Begin, Menachem 121 Behind the book 280-1 Behind the bylines 278-9 Behm, Donna Lee Behzadnia, Hamid 380 Behzadnoori, Kourosh Belcher, Helen Scalf Belcher, Jennifer Rush Belcher, John Michael Bell, Amy Katherine Bell, Anne Brooks 285, 390 Bell, Belinda 16 Bell, Bruce Edward 2, 301 Bell, Clarence Thomas II 380 Bell, Debra Ann Bell, Denver Warren Bell, Donald Eugene Bell, George Stanley 390 Bell, Gerald Lamont Bell, Gregory James Bell, Gwenave Edwina Bell, Lawrence Tilton 296-7, 380 Bell, Lesa Yvonne 380 Bell, Linda Jean Bell, Lisa J. Bell, Marketta Lane 81 Bell, Rebecca 390 Bell, Rebecca Lynn . Bell, Robert Dean Bell, Robert Lowell Bell, Sharon Jeanette 295, 402 Bell, Thomas March 339 Bell, Timmy Lynn 164 Bell, Vicki Leigh Bell, William Michael 332-3 Bellis, R. Elwyn 264 Bellonis, Terry Edward Beloat, Hollis Ann Belt, Pamela Ann 380 Belt, Regina Joyce 402 Belt, Sandra Faye 108, 390 Bemis, Janet Gail Bena, Bernard Gene Bench, Gary L. 402 Bendigkeit, Leighann 322 Bennett, Anne Forbes Bennett, Bruce Lee Bennett, Clevie Mack Bennett, Cynthia Anne Bennett, Gina Rhea 274 Bennett, Jo Nell Bennett, Kirby 216, 380 Bennett, Maury Thomas 390 Bennett, Peri Lynn Bennett, Ruth Ann 265, 298, 380 Bennett, Teresa Ann Benningfield, Arland W. III Benningfield, Kitty C., Bennight, Katherine J. 293 Benson, Debra Marie 345 Benson, Joseph Hamilton 345 Benson, Steven Earl Benson, Wilma Louise 271, 380 Bentley, Amy Louise 323 Bentley, Charles Alan 402 Bentley, David Ellis Bentley, Deborah Kay 350 Bereiter, Timothy James 216 Berg, Gerald W. Berg, James L. Jr. Berger, Charles Stevens 345 Bergmann, Ralph George 264, 390 Berke, Margo Sue Berley, Benjamin Gordon Berry, Arthur Lee 402 Berry, Betsy Delynn Berry, Bonnie Lynne 105, 277 Berry, Larry 165 Berry, Lisa Day 323, 345 Berry, Lori Ellen Berry, Randy Loring Berry, Rodney Jason 380 Berry, Sheila Darlene 402 Berry, Tamela Beth Berryman, Melody Ann 298, 345 Berryman, Nicholas G. Jr. Berryman, Roger Mitchell Berryman, Thomas Lynn Berst, Mary Kathleen 327, 390 Bertelson, Holly Susan 322 Bertelson, Julianne K. 322 Bertram, Bryan 402 Bertram, Debra F. Johnson Bertram, George Barry Jr. Bertram, Glen Lee Bertram, Lawrence Wayne Bertram, Maria Yvette Bertram, Mary A. Middleton Bertram, Terry Carroll Beshear, Thomas Aubrey 276, 288, 390 Best, Deborah Lynne 390 Best, Helen Gay 345 Best, Kathryn Lynn 271, 284, 345 Best, Stephen Lewis 380 Besuden, Julia Anne Bethge, Eberhard 96 Bevil, David Richard 338 Bewley, Bill 286-7 Bewley, Terry Doloris Bezek, Michael Leo Bezold, Mark Eugene 241 Bice, Lynne Ann Bickel, David William Bickers, Rebecca Jo 390 Bickett, Cheryl Denise 402 Bideau, Brent Robert Big ‘intimidating’ — that’s the 6 libraries 152-3 Biggers, John Guyron 296 Biggers, Lisa Wilson Biggers, Mark Vaughn Biggerstaff, Ray P. Jr. 304 Biggs, Elizabeth Culbreath Biggs, Roger Dale Biggs, Sonya L. Bilbro, Sandra Annette Biller, Mark Billingsley, Amy Lynch Billingsley, Jenny Joy 53, 390 Binnion, Beverly Gay 325, 380 Biology department 181 Biology department head 181 Bird, Darrell Gene 390 Birdsong, Kim Deanna 315-6, 402 Birdwell, Cynthia Louise Birdwell, James Mark 216 Bise, Joel Steven Bishop, Beverly Rose 390 Bishop, Bradley Dean Bishop, Jerry C. Jr. Bishop, Sharon Lynn Bitsko, Richard George 98, 100, 103, 283 Bivin, Bill 150-1 Biven, Mark J. 254, 345 Biven, Roger 422-3 Biven, Stephen Anthony Bivins, Teresa Ann Bizer, Mark Randall Bizer, Michael James 286, 380 jalobok, Rita M. lack awareness symposium 96-7 ack, Thomas Wayne 380 ackburn, Andrea Lynn 285 lackburn, Mark 216 ackburn, Mary E ileen lackburn, Walter Alex lackeyed beauty 382 lack(out) light 394-5 ackwell, Marilyn Kay lackwood, Michael Edward 380, 438-9 aine, Ella Marie 402 laine, Keitha Gay 270, 402 laine, Kevin Wood 336 lair, Aaron Samuel air, Charles Alan 390 lair, Kathy Elaine lair, Marilyn Sue lair, Patricia Diann lair, Rebecca Leigh 284 lair, Timothy Lane lake, Yvonne Miller 402 lakely, Andrea Maye akeman, Leanne 402 akey, Sheryl Allison landford, Tamra Joan - lane, Wanda F. lankenship, David Eugene lankenship, Pamela Sue 299, 380 ann, Robert 276 Blann, Jon Scott lanton, Beth Kay Lane 231-2 anton, Bonnie 232, 403 Blanton, Mark Shearin lanton, Paula Allyson anton, Robert Joe asi, Donald William edsoe, James Harold essing, Joy Gale 275, 345 evins, Jill Lynne levins, Ruth Ann lick, Jeri Lynn 325 ick, Susan Cheryl lincoe, Deloris Jean lincoe, Michael Lee 345 incoe, William J. 22, 390 Block and Bridle Club 267 “Blood Wedding” 102, 106-7 Board of Regents 73, 82, 120, 131, 132-3, 289 Boarman, Janet Ann 380 Boatman, Tammy Elaine Boberg, Bonnie Jean Bobo, Julie Merie Boca, Mohammad Mehdi Bock, David Westbrock Bodenbender, Gerald Alan 49, 338 Boeckmann, Terry Bernard Boehler, Kevin James Boehm, Steven Scott 390 Boemker, Mary Dee 291 Bogdan, Betsy 251, 257, 261, 285 Boggess, Pamela Diane Boggs, Michael David 84 Boggs, Rachel Suzanne Boggs, Woodrow 403 Bohannon, Rhonda Lynn 297, 327, 345 Bohanon, Alan Kent Bohanon, Kimberly Jan Bohr, David W. Boink, Brian K. Boisse, Florence 285, 403 Boka, Mohamad Jafar 390 Bolan, Monica Elizabeth 403 Boldrick, Eugene Nevin 345 Bolin, Jennifer Jo 304, 345 Bolin, Sandra Kay Coffey Boling, Barbara Naomi Bolle, Janet Louise 252, 390 Bollinger, Joe E. Jr. Bolt, Stephen Lynn Bomar, Rebecca Joy Pardue 345 Bomar Suzanne 251, 357 Bombard, Luann Strausbaugh Bombay, Anthony John 292 Bond, Dennis Boyd 380 Bondurant, Mary Nita Gray Bonhoeffer, Dietrich 96 ‘Boning up 359 Bonmon, Bryan J. Bonner, Cynthia Lee 284, 403 Bonneville, Cathy Elaine 275, 345 Bonney, Mary Ellan S, Bonsee, Beverly Jo R. 380 Bonser, Bryan 335 Booher, Jeffrey Allen Booher, Jody P. 337 Booher, Joseph Pickens II Booher, Kathleen Alison 327, 346 Booker, Nancy Leigh 346 Boone, David O. Boone, Deborah Frances ww jesBecBesBorBocwecHexox ec BeBexdoxMoehooos Mor Mox Moc MoeMoeMoel--M--MesMeeMoeRoeMool--[es) ferforesMesles DOWDWDWOODD Boone, Sandra Jean Bootcheck, Dave 220 Booth, Batonya Seabolt Booth, William York Borchelt, Janet Katherine 403 Bordas, Amelia 326, 403 Borden, William Reed 266 Borders, Anna Marie J. Borders, Charles Terry Borders, Joseph Michael Borders, Linda Zoe Borders, Mary Leona 325 Borders, Teresa Ann 325 Borders, William Leon Jr. Born, William Harris Borne, Mary Jean Borthick, Cindy Lee Bosma, David William Bosse, David Carl 208 Bossert, Scott Brian 390 Bossetta, Gloria Mary Boston, Charles Leroy Jr. Boswell, Cynthia Lynn 346 Boswell, Michelle Marie Botkin, Thomas Elwood Botner, Gregory George Bottom, Elizabeth Ann Bottom, Robert Curtis 346 Botts, Susan Juanita 380 Boucher, Lawrence 183 ° Boucher, Melissa Hope 291, 304, 380 Boucher, Terry Wayne Bouchie, Debra Lynne Bow, Beverly Ann Bowen, Ginny Lynn 346 Bowen, Hoyt Edwin 292 Bowen, Sherry Lynne 390 Bowers, Bobby Stephen 286-7, 346 Bowers, Cynthia Ruth 346 Bowers, Hubert Smith Bowers, Linda Carol Bowland, Michael Babb Bowles, Betty Ann 300 Bowles, Nancy Ann 346 Bowles, Pamela Eileen 346 Bowles, Rex Randall Bowley, Brenda Sue 265, 402 Bowlin, Ford Franklin Bowlin, Karen Joy 390 Bowling, Billy Ray Bowling, George Sinclair 306 Bowling Green Attitudes 30-1 Bowling Green Community College and continuing education dean 162 Bowling, James Daniel 337 Bowling, Joseph Kevin Bowling, Kathleen 346 Bowling, Maurice Barrett 403 Bowman, Lisa Anne Bowman, Mark Lyn Bowman, Sherman Thomas Bowman, Tammy Lynn 403 Bowser, Bryan Wade Boyd, Adrian Clayton Jr. Boyd, Alice Susan Boyd, Allison Anne 323 Boyd, Bernard Lee 339 Boyd, Clarence Dwight Boyd, David L. Boyd, James H. 216 Boyd, Omelia June Boyd, Pamela Christine Boyd, Robert Dallas Jr. Boyd, Suanne 269 Boyer, Dave Willard 271 Boylan, Cathy Diane 317, 322-3 Boyle, Melanie Kay Boyles, Douglas Allen 390 Bozarth, Lisa Faye Bozarth, Richard Alan 390 Boze, Melinda Frances 291, 326, 390 Bracey, Randall Wade 403 Bracken, Tamela Carol Braden, Kimala Lynn 403 Braden, Linda Mary Braden, Shawn Marie 322 Bradford, Dennis Vass Bradford, Julie Ann 380 Bradford, Kalva Lynn Bradford, Steven Victor Bradley, Angie Lagail 248, 380 Bradley, Bari Allen Bradley, Belinda Kay 231, 232, 285 Bradley, Don 299 Bradley, Fayetta Bradley, Harry Stephen 271 Bradley, Janet Marie 346 Bradley, Nancy Ellen Bradshaw, Anthony Miguel! 390 Bradshaw, Deena Gaye 403 Bradshaw, Lesa Jean 403 Bradshaw, Sheri Lyn 326 Bradshaw, Walter E. Brady, Bridget Eileen 98, 104, 282-3, 380 Brady, James John III 403 Bragg, Donald Lee Brainard, David Alan Brainard, Ted Ernest Brakke, Debra Coleen Braley, Michael Charles Braman, Andrew Lawrence Brame, Kathy Ann Bramer, Benita Margaret 346 Brandenburg, Joe William 334-5, 346 Brandes, Deborah Harrison 403 Brandon, Steven Lemuel 246, 390 Brandon, Susan Elaine Branham, Donna Lee 403 Branham, Rita Faye 325 Branson, Jody Rae 285 Branstetter, Lee Ann 282, 346 Branstetter, Linda Bartley Branstetter, Tammie Trent 403 Brant, Debra Lynn Brantley, Allison 390 Brantley, Tonya Seanna 274 Brashear, Timothy Ray 403 Bratcher, Bennett Farris 336 Bratcher, Rita K. Todd Bratton, Patricia 282, 380 Brawn vs. brains 208 Brawner, John Leland Brawner, Ronald Edward 267 Bray, Christopher Earl Bray, Jeannie Kay Bray, Susan Michelle 274 Brazley, Carl Eugene 216, 219 Brazley, William Isaac dr. Breckel, Dana Sue Breeden, Roger Dale Brelsford, Allen K. 268 Brennan, David Michael 380 Brennan, Diane Elaine 346 Brent, Timothy Ray Brenzel, Sally Losson 325, 341, 380 Bresler, Margaret Ellen 402 Bresler, Rebecca Jane Brevit, Valery Lee 291 Brewer, David Robert Brewer, Gary Wayne Brewer, John Edward III Brewer, Pamela Louise Brewer, Sandra Elaine 403 Brewer, Terry L. Rafferty Brian, Christopher Lee Bridgeman, Dennis Edward Bridges, Dick 27 Bridgewater, Linda S. 380 Bridgman, Michael Lewis Bridwell, Ruby Dianne 346 Bridwell, Tammy Jo Brieske, Tom Al 336 Briggs, Gregory Neal Briggs, Janet Lee 403 Briggs, Melonie Diane 272 Bright, Charles Todd 330-1, 403 Brightup, Dale Allen Bridley, Therese Dawn Brinegar, Kathryn Joan 305, 390 Brisby, Sheryl Ann 300, 381 Briscoe, William Albert Bristow, Donna Gale 298, 403 Bristow, Hazel Bowley Britt, Barry Lynn Britt, Beverly Elaine 346 Britt, Gretchen Sue Britt, John Wesley Britt, Juanita Rowena Britt, Mary Frances 381 Britt, Rex Darrell 381 Britten, William Gerard 346 Brittingham, Stephen Allen 328-9 Britton, Rita Jane 326, 341 Brizendine, Ginger Darlene 390 Bro. Jimmy Gentry 26-9 Broadcasting Club 276-7 Broadwell, Timothy William Brock, Wilma Dale 403 Brockman, Clara Dean Rice Brockman, Donnie Brockman, Frank Owen Brockman, Sara Mae Clark Brodarick, Michael Victor 126, 338, 346 Brodarick, Pamela Therese 390 Broderick, Judith Lynn 403 Brodt, John Charles Brooks, Alan Ray Brooks, Amy Dukes Brooks, Christine Lynn 403 Brooks, Katherine E. Brooks, Malia Shaw 298, 324, 346 Brooks, Ray Edward Brooks, Rebecca Hope Brooks, Regina Lou 403 Brooks, Stephen Timothy Brooks, Timothy Glen 210-1, 244, 246 Brooks, Vanissa Mechelle Broomall, Sallye Anne Brosche, William C. 391 Brother to brother 329-40 Brothers, Michael Wayne Broughton, Jeffrey Burl 381 Broughton, Joel Dean 403 Brown, Alicia Kay 403 Brown, Anthony Maurice 391 Brown, Bill 338, 403 Brown, Bruce Allen Brown, Carl Lee Brown, Carla June Brown, Carol P. 197, 293 Brown, Cathy Sue 327, 346 Brown, Charles Herbert Brown, Cindy Jo 381 Brown, Corby Hugh 346 Brown, Danny Lee Brown, Danny Leon Brown, David Allen 303 Brown, David Kent 267, 335 Brown, David Scott Brown, Debra Jolene 346 Brown, Donald Ray Brown, Elbern Dale Brown, Gregory Keith Brown, Hugh Barton Brown, James Carl Brown, Jimmy K. Brown, Joanna 295, 403 Brown, John Y. 119 Brown, Katherine Ann Brown, Lana Karen Brown, Lisa Beth Brown, Mary Eleanor Brown, Melayna Ann Brown, Mike Anthony Brown, Patricia Ellen Brown, Paula Beth 391 Brown, Phil Allan Brown, Phillip H. Brown, Richard M. 381 421 Barnewell, Alisa Brown, Richard Brown, Rickie Fay 346 Brown, Robert Burns 403 Brown, Robert Lewis Brown, Robin Hammond Brown, Robin Keith 381 Brown, Sarah Lynn Brown, Serita Colette 391 Brown, Shelia Eileen 293 Brown, Sherry Gail Brown, Stanley Walton 294, 381 Brown, Steven Ray 335 Brown, Valerie Sue 261, 346 Brown, Virginia Ruth Brown, William Henry Brown, William James Brown, Yvonne Renee Brownfield, James Alan Browning, Bianca Ann Browning, Darla Jill Browning, David Kyle Browning, Mary Louise 291 Browning, Robert Ewell 298, 346 Broyles, Joy Louise Bruce, Alfina 276 Bruce, Don 276 Bruce, Rebecca Lynn Bruce, Robert Roscoe 310-1 Bruchas, Pamela 403 Brueggemann, Timothy J. 215-6 Bruington, Bettyruth F Brumfield, James Clay 403 Brumfield, Jane Coles 346 Brumfield, Stanley 154-5 Brummett, William Columbus Bruner, Laura Duff 381 Bruner, Robin Renee 325 Brunson, Karen Jane Brunton, Stephen Ray Bryan, James Ellsworth Jr Bryan, James Ronald Bryan, Karen Marie 403 Bryan, Sandra Elaine Bryant, Brenda Kay Bryant, Christopher Neal Bryant, Elizabeth Irene 284, 381 Bryant, James David Jr. Bryant, James Douglas Bryant, Karen Sue 298-9 Bryant, Mary Evelyn 274 Bryant, Mary Sue 325, 381 Bryant, Paul 276 Bryant, Peter McNally Bryant, Shawn Ratliff 346 Bryant, Timothy Lee 403 Bryant, Tiomthy Len 403 Bryant, William Bryce, Jacqueline A. 403 Bubbly 355 Buchanan, Beth Ann 283, 346 Buchanan, Janet Dorene Buchanan, Joe Reid Buchanan, Patricia Susan Buchanan, Ramona Routt Buchanan, Rebecca Gail Buchanan, Steve Bruce 346 Buchanan, Teresa Lynn 381 Buchert, Patricia Ann Buck, Sheila Jill 347 Buck, Sheila Leigh 327, 347 Buckberry, William Ray 336, 403 Buckles, Cathy Dean 179, 315, 317, 323, 347 Buckles, Donna Rae 280 Bucklew, Leslie Wayne Bucklew, Patricia R Buckley, Matthew Welsh 391 Buckley, Robert Irvin 81 Bucklin, Jean Ann 326 Buckner, James F. 291, 391 Buckner, Leroy 163 Buckner, Stephanie Jean 347 Bucy, Harold Thomas Budget director and assistant to the president for resources management 144 Bueker, Robert 183 Bueker, Robert Michael 381 Bueker, Susan Elizabeth Buffington, Susan Phyllis Buford, Cynthia Denise Buford, Ricky Ray 347 Buford, Theresa Ann Buhay, Susan Elizabeth 285, 403 Bullard, Todd H. 133 Bulle, Francine Rnea Bulle, Frederick Lee Bullock, Bobby Ray Bumm, Barry Joseph 216 Bunch, Deborah Kay Bunch, Elizabeth Ann 403 Bunch, Kenneth Wayne Bunch, Marcella Ree Bunch, Paul 154 Bunch, Rebecca Pash Bunch, Sharon Sue Bunch, William David Bunner, Kathy J Buntin, Cheryl Ann Buntin, Karen Ann Buntin, Kathy Ann Buntin, Phillip Wayne Bunton, Felix M Burbach, Daniel Raymond Burbach, Gregory Carl 223 Burbage, Randell 216 Burch, John Travis 301, 381 Burchett, Connie Lynn Burchett, James Roger Burchett, Jerry 61 Burchett, Jerry Bryan Burchett, Myra Gertrude 267, 347 Burden, Anthony Wayne Burden, Elizabeth S Burden, Kimberly Jo Burden, Lorri Ann 422 Brown, Rickie Busby, Billie Burden, Patricia Lou Burks, Janet Lou Burden, Ralph Clinton 286 Burks, Joseph Aldridge Jr Burditt, Donna Gaye Burks, Laura Lee Burfict, Theodore 347 Burks, Tommy Ray Burford, Kevin Bernard Burnett, Donald Bruce Burgin, Harriette Anne 347 Burnett, Edwin Lee Burhans, Rollin 27 Burnett, Margaret L Burke, Dennis Craig Burnett, Margena Burke, Mark Andrew 294 Burnett, Peggy 325 Burke, Michael David 381 Burnley, Jane Cook Burke, Michael Gregory Burns, Amy Louise Burke, Ted James Burns, Bernard Dale 223 Burke, Theresa Gail Burns, Caroline Morton Burkeen, Phillip Cardwell 332-3 Burns, Elizabeth Barrett Olympic hug AFTER COMPETING in the Special Olympics, Roger Biven gets a hug from Susie Cossey, a Cadiz sophomore. The olympics for the handicapped was at Smith Stadium in the spring. Students served in a variety of ways — one of the most important as ‘“‘huggers.”’ Burns, Kimberly Jean 270 Burns, Mary Jane 391 Burns, Maureen Theresa 381 Burns, Samuel Ross Burns, William Courtney Burns, William Louis Burr, Kathleen Nora Burr, Martha Dianne Burrell, Thomas Robert Burres, Elizabeth Lynn 403 Burris, Cynthia Lane 305 Burris, Marion Hall Burrows, Valerie Ann 403 Burton, Anita C Burton, Betty Lou Thorne Burton, Deborah Sunshine Burton, Glenn Darrell Burton, Jane Blair 326, 347 Burton, Jeff H Burton, Judy 266 Burton, Kathy M Burton, Patricia Ellen 347 Burton, Sharon Yvonne 304 Burton, Stephen Douglas Burton, Teresa Marlene 348 Burysek, Jennifer Sue Burysek, Phyllis Ann Busby, Billie J. Il 381 Busby, Sherron Annie Busche, David Allan Buselmeier, Dan Karl 296, 381 Bush, Bush, Bush, Bush, Bush, Bush, Bush, Bush, Bush, Bush, Bush, Arthur, 268 Beryl Candice 69, 71, 268, 283 Bradley W. arlotta Kay Cheryl Jean 265, 348 Diane Denise Hezekiah L. Lisa Coomer 3 Ricky Glenn ¢ Robert Thomas 348 Steven Hascal Business adminstration department 202 Business administration department head 202 Business affairs vice president 145 Business education and office administration department 204 Business education and office administration department head 204 Bussell, Judy Catherine Bussey, Charles 293 Bussey, Donna Nelson 293 Bussum, Gail V. 381 Bute, Randolph Butler, Bobbye G. Lawless Butler, Cary Dwight Butler, David Allen 348 Butler, Debra Jean 299, 391 Butler, Donnie Carrol Butler, Frankey Leon Butler, Kathy Ann Butler, Kathy Sue 381 Butler, Maria Louise 403 Butler, Patricia Ann 348 Butler, Robin Lester 155 Butrum, Elwood Thomas Butts, Dianne Louise Butts, Frances E. 403 Butts, Selvin Hardin Buzan, David Charles Buzzard, Dave 332-3 Buzzard, Jeffrey Mitchell Bybee, Temisha Faye 261 Byerly, Thomas Clifton 348 Byers, David Martin Byram, Kimberly Sue Byrd, Malaby Morrow Jr. 403 Byrd, Nancy Kay 275, 381 Byrd, Raynard 337 Byrn, Philip McSwain 348 Byrne, Steven Michael @ Cain, Kelly David 306 Cain, Teresa Caroline Cain, Thomas Michael Caines, Doreen Jaye £ Cairns, William Arthur Calafiore, Carmela — Ron Hoskins 423 Busby, Sherron Calafiore, Carmela Caldwell, Catherine Clark 327, 391 Caldwell, Charles Robert Caldwell, Elmer Ray 216 Caldwell, Mary Margaret 327 Caldwell, Richard Aylette Caldwell, Wayne Aline Calhoun, Jessie Louise 296, 348 Calhoun, Vicki Ann Califano, Joseph 120 Calisi, Lisa Gaye Calk, Joe Kevin Callahan, Erin Ruth Callaway, Garry Douglas Callis, James Timmons 291, 304, 336, 348 Callis, Stephen Lewell 391 Callis, William Camp 403 Callis, William Casey 336, 391 Calloway, Curtis M. Calloway, Elizabeth Lee 391 Calloway, Sandra Lynne 403 Calvert, Gary Samuel Calvert, Marla Moore Calvert, Steve Alan 334-5 Calvert, Todd Bascom Camak, James Xavier Cambron, Carrie Lynn Cambron, Cynthia Deann Cameron, Christopher W. Cameron, Vanessa Camp, Diana Mae 391 Camp, Mary Louise 327, 403 Campbell, Anne Leslie 300, 348 Campbell, Charles P. Campbell, David George Campbell, Gwen Dahl Campbell, Hugh Campbell, James Wilton Campbell, Janine Hess Campbell, Judith Sue 299 Campbell, Keith Jay 271 Campbell, Kent 272 Campbell, Rebecca Lynne 391 Campbell, Rita Baker 381 Campbell, Robert Ernest Campbell, Susan Elaine 53, 391 Campbell, Tammy Lynn 403 Campbell, Valarie Bonita Campos, Reyes Javier Canafax, Cherie Rae Canary, Brenda Mason Cannady, Vicki Lynn 403 Cannon, Steven Christopher Cannon,. Tony 285 Cansler, Catherine Rose Cansler, Donna Lynne Cantwell, James Mark 348 Canty, Eileen 230-3, 235 Cappony, Nicholas Capps, Carolyn Jean 381 Capps, Sharon Denise 403 Capps, Randall 197 Capsel, Tracy Lee 296, 390-1 Carby, Betty Lee Carby, Bobbi Jo 391 Card, Michael Judson Cardenas, Jorge M. 304 Cardenas, Juan Manuel 304 Cardot, Joseph James Cardwell, Allen Keith Cardwell, Janet Goff Cardwell, Rochelle Carey, Debra Jo 348 Carey, Harey Jr. 81 Carey, Kitty Colleen 391 Carey, Ralph William 274, 336 Carl, Margaret Anne Carl, Nancy Clay Carlisle, Wendell Freddie Carlotta, Ava Maria 283, 381 Carlson, Georgianna Lynn 327 Carman, Gale Ellen 403 Carman, Jeffrey Bryan 403 Carman, Ralph Hancox Jr. Carmichael, John Craig Carmichael, John Kenneth 300 Carmody, Albert Joseph Carmody, Vickie Ann Carney, Billy Howard Jr. Carney, Deborah Bowles 391 Carpenter, George E. dr. Carpenter, Howard Ralph Carpenter, Martha Carol Carpenter, Mary Sue Carpenter, Michael Graydon 260, 381 Carpenter, Steven Paul 381 Carr, Del H. Jr. Carr, Gina S. Carr, James Gordon Jr. 391 Carr, Jeffrey Wade Carr, Jon Clark 381 Carr, Robin Serese 94, 236 Carrel, William Stanley Carrender, Wayne Robison 268 Carrico, Margaret C. 305 Carrier, Donna M., Floyd Carrigg, Stephen 348 Carroll, Alesa Ann Carroll, Colleen Marie Carroll, Julian 118, 123, 132 Carroll, Larry Raymond Carroll, Thresa Saling Carson, Donald Dale Carson, Laura 52 Carson, Laura Ruth 274, 348 Carson, Tammy Sue 403 Carter, Arthur Stanley Carter, Barbara Ann 100, 381 Carter, Bracie Louis Carter, Brenda Elaine Carter, Brenda Mae Carter, Carolyn Sue 300, 381 Carter, Cecil Lynn Carter, Charles Mark Carter, Constance Hope 424 Caldwell, Catherine Coogan, Paul Carter, Daniel William Carter, Darrell Kevin Carter, Elizabeth Ann 391 Carter, Eric Lynn Carter, James Evans Jr. Carter, James Paul Carter, Jay Brian Carter, Jay Dean 241 Carter, Jeffrey Calvin Carter, Jimmy 11, 97, 118, 120-1 Carter, Karen M. Mosier Carter, Kathleen Lee 324, 391 Carter, Lewis Darrell Jr. Carter, Linda Fay 305, 381 Carter, Loretta Gay 403 Carter, Margaret Anne 348 Carter, Pamela Jo 391 Carter, Patricia Gayle 327, 391 Carter, Patrick Coleman 310-1 Carter, Phillip Jeffery 329, 338 Carter, Ricky Joe Carter, Robert Lee II 23, 403 Carter, Roger Dale Carter, Sherri Denise Carter, Steven Allan Carter, Timothy Wayne 403 Carter, Tom Parker Carter, Vondell Lea 55, 381 Carter, William Russell Carver, Richard Gene Carver, Tamera 192 Carver, Timothy Marvin Carver, Tracy Layne 403 Carwell, David Hargis 73, 289 Carwell, Lee Kaleher Cary, Rhonda Kay 391 Casada, Mary Ann Casada, Rhesa G. Casada, Richard Glen 332-3 Case, Chris Alan 268 Case, Debra Jeanne 282 Case, Omer Dean Jr. Casey, Don 24 Casey, Kerry Wayne 300-1, 349 Cash, Joseph Terrance Cash, Kathryn Lynne 403 Cash, Susan Elayne 304, 381 Cash, Susan Ennis Cassaday, Mary K. Kinnaird Cassady, Donald Lee Cassady, Lloyd Jr. 303 Cassady, Paula Gail 391 Cassella, Cacilia K. Cast party 347 Castiglioni, Frederick Castle, James Steven Castle, Joey Edward Castle, Steve 334 Castle,Terrie Ann 391 Catarozoli, Gina Maria Cate, Cynthia Anne 403 Catey, Stanley J. 216 Cathey, Vicky Lynn 403 Catlett, Steven Pruett 216 Catron, Donald Barry Catron, John Gregory 124 Catron, Robert Paul Cauble, Diana Lynn Caudill, James Jeffrey Caudle, Michael] Norman Causey, Joseph William Causey, Russell Woodson 381 Cavana, Jeffrey Jay 241, 349 Cavanah, Judy Lynn 305 Cavanaugh, Janet Baker 322 Cave, Alicia Lynn Cavender, Rhonda Durham Cayce, Andrew Taylor Cecil, Anthony Dominic Cecil, Guy Alan Cecil, Kimberly Sue Cecil, Mary K. Cecil, Michelle Ruth Cecil, Richard Dennis Cecil, Robert Jr. Celsor, Karen Denise 266 Celsor, Sharon Denise Center Board 80-3, 289 Centrowitz, Gerald Peter Cerk, Keith R. Cero, Craig John Cerroni, Renee Ann 349 Cessna, Kimberly Ann 404 Chadwick, Edward Dunn Chambers, Amy Kay 349 Chambers, Barry Fount Chambers, Edward Clay 349 Chambers, Julie Ann 301, 391 Chambers, Laurie Kimberly 326, 404 Chambers, Lisa Maria Chambers, Norman Dale 302, 350 Chambers, Stephen Bruce 100, 283 Chambers, Tammy Lou 404 Chambers, Thomas Roper Jr. 264, 302, 338, 350 Chambers, Vivian Rochelle 391 Chambliss, Randy J. Chambul, Lubomyr 244 Champion, Bill 82 Chan, Li Ching Chancellor, Colin Embry Chancey, Ronica Lynn 391 Chandler, Benjamin F. Chandler, David Gerald 334 Chandler, Kelley Lee 381 Chandler, Mary dill 350 Chandler, Suzanne Marie Chandler, Wanda Gail Chaney, Johnny Allen 243, 329 Chang, Karrie Kung-Tsai Chaplin, Stephen James Chapman, Brenda 231-2 Chapman, Jerry Wayne Chapman, Mary Sue Chapman, Michele Ann ’ Chapman, Norma Jean 291 Chapman, Paula Edward 391 Chapman, William Scott 304 Chappell, Carl Leon Jr. 286-7 Chappell, James Henry 213, 216 Chappell, Jane Parrott Chappell, Jeffrey Scott 246 Charlton, Desiree Lynn Chase, William John Chastain, Jeffry Thomas 381 Chasteen, Gregory Taylor Chatari, Laura Lee 391 Chatelain, Kathleen M. 391 Chatman, Ricky Lynn Cheaney, Brian Raymon 404 Cheatham, Carol Iona 404 Cheatham, Mitzi Jean 404 Cheatwood, Pamela Sue Check, Joseph James Chedd, Kevin Glenn Cheerleaders 236-7 Chelf, Carl 162 Chelgren, Beverly R. Wolf Chemistry Club 300 Chemistry department 182 Chemistry department head 182 Chenault, Douglas R. 268-9 Chenault, Keith Brian Cherry, Daniel Potts Cherry, David Glenn Cherry, Doris Elizabeth 291 Cherry, Douglas Wayne 334 Cherry, Gregory Wayne Cherry, James Richard Cherry, John Stephen 381 Cherry, Lee Courtland 338 Cherry, Murry Leyton dr. Cherry, Sande Kay 391 Cherry, Thomas Lee Chesnut, Mark Cameron 260, 336 Chester, Ronald E. Cheuvront, Kar! Russel Jr. 336, 350 Chi Omega 324-5 Chi Omega November Nonsense 338 Chic, but not cheap 66-71 Childers, Shawn Brian 381 Childress, Buddy 150-1 Childress, Charles Lee Childress, Georgia Esters Childress, Lisa Kem Childress, Norma Jean 391 Childress, Sherry Lois Childress, Vanessa Ann 404 Childs, Tamara S. Chinn, Dennis Morgan 319 Chinn, Jean Ann 214, 216 Chinn, Julie Ann 381 Chinn, Mary Anne Sowers 95, 236 Chipley, Caroline Quillian 404 Chisholm, Shirley 97 Chism, Judith Chitwood, Lisa Ann Chop, Daniel Eugene Chou, Nee Yin Norma 121, 285 Choudhry, Maqsood Ahmed Chrappa, Richard 303-1 Chrappa, Robert Lee Chrisman, Celeste P. Christ, Joan Lynne Christensen, Erika Lynn 248 Christian, Denise Ann Christian, Jesse R. Christian, Virginia Dell Christofferson, Gail M. 249 Christy, Victoria Lynn Chuemchit, Namporn Chumley, Marsh William 332-3 Chung, Yui Tan Church, C.D. Churchill, Rhonda Gail 270, 381 Circle K 50-3, 294, 296 Cissell, Lisa Gayle 282 Civils, David Reed 404 Claman, Delores 98 Clagett, Mary Lisa Clancy, Daniel B. Clark, Alan Martin 270-2 Clark, Barbara Faye Clark, Beckey Eilene 391 Clark, Bernard Jackson Ill Clark, Bonnie 31 Clark, C. Robert Clark, Carol Denise 404 Clark, Carol Petrie 404 Clark, Charles 162 Clark, Chary! Ann Clark, Christopher Lynn Clark, Dale Woodall 330-1 Clark, David Bryce 291, 304, 336, 350 Clark, David Wayne Clark, Donna Carol Kyle 25 ‘Clark, Donna Lynn 284, 391 Clark, Emmett Michael 381 Clark, Esther Marie Clark, Gary Michael Clark, Howard B. 266 Clark, Jackie Lynn Clark, Janet C. Campbell Clark, Jeffrey Lynn Clark, John Marshall Clark, Julie Ann 381 Clark, Karen J. Kuchenbroo Clark, Karen Lane 381 Clark, Kimberly Jane Clark, Larry T. Clark, Laura Duell Clark, Linda Gail Clark, Linda Lewis Clark, Lisa Ann Clark, Lisa Dawn 391 Clark, Lloyd Matthew Clark, Marc Jimmie Clark, Mark Kelvin 331 Clark, Rita Lynn Clark, Roger Dixon Clark, Sadie K. 404 Clark, Sally 129, 293, 350 Clark, Sallye 179 Clark, Saundra Karen Clark, Steven Lynn Clark, Susan 350 Clark, Victoria Lynnee 108-9 Clark, Wayne Scott Clark, William Nelson Jr. Clasby, Cheryl Leanne 298-9, 381 Classes 342-419 Claxton, Ronald Wayne 404 Clay, Michael James 210-1 Clay, Scott Lane Clay, Venita Yvonne 404 Claypool, Cindy R. Clayton, Karen Joyce Clayton, Shari Lynn Clayton, Sharon Rose Claywell, Julia Goodin 350 Claywell, Kenneth Curtis Cleaver, Norman Allen 332-3 Cleaver, Wendi Dee Cleek, Nora Cleland, George Aloysius Clements, Deborah Kay 381 Clements, Joseph Francis Clements, Linda Kaye 275 Clements, Mark Timothy 328-9 Clements, Robert Harold Clements, Sandra Wilson 391 Clements, Terry Lee Clements, Thomas Edward Clemons, Richard Eugene 216, 404 Clemons, Rose Annice 404 Clendenin, Mary Kathryn 323, 404 Clever, Suzanne Weltman Climatologist 175 Climer, Terry 53 Clinard, Terri Ann 404 Cline, Grant P. 330-1, 350 Cline, Roger Allan Cline, Susan Elaine Cloar, Jan Camille 316, 325 Cloar, Robert Turner Clore, Patti Madison Clore, Robert Covington Close, Gisela H. Cloud, Mary Kay 305, 381 Clover, Greg 271 Cloyd, Brenda Ann Coalson, Kelly 328-9 Coates, Lenora Michelle Coatney, Patricia Ann Coats, Betty Rose 350 Cobb, Carolyn Faye 350 Cobb, Diane Edwards 350 Cobb, James Bruce Cobb, Janet Hendershot Cobb, Mattie Jane Ball Cocanougher, Tommy Joe 297, 381 Cochrane, Timothy Scott Cockes, James Jonathan Cockrel, Angela Dawn 391 Cockrel, Teresa Lynn 405 Cockriel, Mark Steven 405 Cockrill, David Steven Cockrill, James Daymon Cockrill, Terry Susan 350 Cockrill, Willard 131, 174-5 Cofer, Joseph Herbert 338 Coffey, Anna Marie 391 Coffey, Carla 40-2, 249 Coffey, Cynthia Gail Coffey, Daryl R. Coffey, Jackie Lynn Coffey, Jennifer S. Hodges Coffey, Ronald Steven Coffie, Jane Marie Coffman, Charles Thomas Jr. Coffman, Connie Louise 326 Coffman, David T. Coffman, Ralph Eric 350 Coffman, Tammy Lynn Coghill, Rebecca Elizabeth 284, 405 Cohen, Neil 188 Cohron, Karen Ann 381 Cohron, Rhonda Carol Huff 350 Cohron, Van Carlton Coile, Melinda Jean 256, 261, 264-5 Coker, Nancy Lee Coker, Patricia Ann 302, 405 Coker, Robert Franklin Colburn, Tina Oneil 391 Cole, Alice Dnise 327, 341 Cole, Betty Carolyn 381 Cole, Cheryl Ann 381 Cole, Clarence Thomas 405 Cole, Cynthia Helen Conn Cole, Jeffery Alan 405 Cole, Jeffery Lynn 271, 391 Cole, John David 133 Cole, Julia Lynn 322, 350 Cole, Marcia Jewel Cole, Mark Lanze 381 Cole, Patricia Susan Cole, Patti Morris Cole, Paul Franklin Cole, Phil 382 Cole, Ronald Keith Cole, Rosalyn Yvette 391 Cole, Sharyn Jeanine 270 Cole, Sheila Anne 391 Cole, Sherri Lee Cole, Stephen Dale Cole, Tami Tanaro Cole, Teresa Lynn Coleman, Billy Joe Coleman, Charles Edward 328-9, 339, 340 Coleman, Jimmy 61 Coleman, Tammy Carol 306 Coleman, Tuwanda 391 Coles, Jane 69, 71 Coles, Marybeth 391 Collard, Debbie Martin } Collard, Mary Carla College Heights Bookstore director 150-1 College Heights Foundation 161, 208 College Heights Foundation executive secretary-treasurer 161 College Heights Foundation president 161 College Heights Herald 61, 120, 263, 278-9 College of Applied Arts and Health 190-3 College of Applied Arts and Health dean 191 College of Business and Public “ Affairs 202-5 College of Business and Public Affairs dean 202 College of Education 116, 186-9 College of Education dean 187 College Republicans 294 Collett, Bobbie Ann 391 Collett, Bonnie Jean 270-1, 350 Collier, Hollis Rogers 391 Collier, Kathryn Dale 405 Collier, Michael Eugene 351 Collier, Vicki Rae Collins, Al Harold 185, 391 Collins, Ann Tracy Collins, Barry Anthony Collins, Betty Teresa Collins, Frank Gregory Collins, Geraldine Chaffin Collins, Jane Marshall 325 Collins, Joe Terrel Collins, Joyce Elaine 305, 381 Collins, Karen Ann Collins, Mary Chamberlain Collins, Mary Joyce Collins, Patricia McGee 381 Collins, Roy Del 334 Collins, Scott Vaughn 252, 405 Collins, Stephanie M. 391 Collins, Steven Eugene Colins, Stevens West 405 Collins, Thomas David Collins, Wendy Annette 350 Colson, Kevin Paul Colson, Mary Marcia Colson, Richard Kelly 319 Colter, Ronald Roosevelt 216, 246 Columbia, Sandra Kay 322 Colwell, Ellen Marie Colyer, Deborah Tyann 298, 350 Combest, Patricia Lynn Combest, Rickey Ray Combs, Bryce 156 Combs, Don 221 Combs, Donovan Lee 221 Combs, Eddie Borton Combs, James Clinton 391 Combs, Martha Clare Combs, Tammy Lynn Combs, Teresa Louise 381 Combs, William Ray 98, 104 Combs, Wit 98, 103 Comeau, James Raymond Comfort, Paul Motley Comic relief 110-1 Communication and theater department 196 Communication and theater department head 196 Compton, Daniel Lee Compton, Kendra Bishop Compton, Kenneth William Compton, Mark Gregor y 391 Compton, Sheren Lee 381 Compton, Vicki Marlene 287 Computer center director 159 Conahan, Cormac Michael Concentus Musicus 112 Concerts 72-9 Condit, Thomas William Conkin, Cynthia Jo Conkin, Gary Leon Conkin, Joyce Krzeminski Conkin, Robert Daniel Conklin, Mary Jane 299, 405 Conley, Frank 188 | Conley, Linda Jane 381 | Conley, Marilyn F. Ellis Conley, Pamela Jean 381 Conn, Susan Kay Connell, Rita Eileen : Conner, Fonza Lynn Conner, George Albert 405 Conner, George W. 381 Conner, Glenn 175 Conner, John Payton Conner, Rebecca Elaine 405 | Conner, Robert Patric | Conner, Sharon Denise 391 | Conner, Shirley Ellen 332-3, 381 Connerley, Jennifer Tebbs Conners, Stefanie Connor, George Wallace | Connor, Vic 89 | Conover, Rita Fay 350 ! Conrad, Jennifer Ann | Conradi, Lissa Francene 284, 391 ' Conrardy, Stacie Ann 405 ( Constans, Elizabeth Leigh 325 | Constans, Phyllis Evalyn 325, 405 Constant, Sallye Lynn 85, 327, 350 ( Conti, James R. Conti, Joni Ann ( | | | { { Conti, Mary Susan Contract services director 169 Convey, Janet Ruth 327, 350 Conway, Beverly Anne Conway, James Aubrey Conyer, Tony Edward Coogan, Paul Edward Cook, Charlotte Elaine 381 Cook, Desta Darlene Cook, Ellen Jeanniene Cook, Janet Leigh 291, 352, 391 Cook, Jeannine Louise 179 Cook, June Elizabeth Cook, Ken Turner Cook, Lesa F. Cook, Lori Darlene Cook, Mark Franklin Cook, Michael Crady 332-3 Cook, Paul 120, 137, 144-5 Cook, Sheryl Lynn 381 Cooke, Allison Louise 381 Cooke, David Neal 381 Cooke, Janetlyn Cooke, Kenneth Brian Cooke, Leslie Ann 381 Cooksey, Dan Wilson 330-1 Cooksie, Carolyn Beatrice 381 Coombs, Terri Lynn Coomer, Bobbie J. Powell Coomer, Carla Ann 405 Coomer, Cynthia Ann Loy Coomer, Gerald Wade Coomes, Bruce Alan 405 Coomes, Joy Lou 265, 405 Coomes, Karen Marie Coomes, Michael Ray Coomes, Paula Cambron Coomes, Scott Anthony 391 Coomes, William Darrell Coon, Scott Louis Cooney, Cindy Marie Cooper, Billy Edward 381 Cooper, Catherine Lorraine 352 Cooper, Debra D. Cooper, James Dawson Cooper; Karen Renee Cooper, Laura Loraine 284 Cooper, Marla Kay 352 Cooper, Randall Lloyd Cooper, Richard Darrell Cooper, Shelia Elaine 299, 405 Cooper, Theresa Ann Cooper, Thomas Cecil Coots, Cheryl Dawn Coots, Deborah Lee 391 Coots, Gary Lee Coots, Margaret Trammel 405 Coots, Patricia Ann Copas, Christopher Michael 391 Copas, Kelly Edward Cope, Kenneth Dewayne Copeland, Dale Rand Coppage, Donald Jeffrey 391 Coppage, Joseph Duane 391 Coppage, Timothy John Corbin, Julia Dawn 265 Corbin, Patty Carol 381 Corbitt, Larry Wayne Corley, Carol Faith 352 Corn, John Felton Jr. 200 Cornelius, Emmaline B. 322, 405 Cornelius, Jane Renee 391 Cornell, Jennifer Lynn 381 Cornell, Sherry Lee 325, 381 Cornett, Denise Marie 291, 381 Cornett, Kathy Ann Cook Cornett, Nanci Eileen Cornett, Wilma J. Morgan Cornette, Carol Lorene Cornwell, Brent Edward Cornwell, Deborah Diane 327, 352 Correa, Paul R. Correll, Cathy Cay 405 Cortner, Katherine L. Cortus, William James 274, 352 Corum, Laura Lee 405 Corum, Stiles William 155 Cosby, Bobbie Jill 291, 391 Cosby, Michael Ray Cosby, Stevie Laran Cosby, Walter Thomas Jr. Cosman, Shawn Douglas Cossey, Mary Anne 352 Cossey, Mera Sue 291, 391 Cossey, Susie 422-3 Costello, James Emmett 381 Costello, Matthew Robert 405 Costin, Curtis Frazer Costin, Jill Kay 282, 352 Cothern, Ricky Duane 336, 352 Cothran, Jackie David Cothran, Rhonda Jane 391 Cottingham, Timothy Lee 267, 320, 328- 9, 340 Cotton, Ross Wade Cotton, Sheila Rae Cottrell, Cindy Kay 405 Cottrell, Gary Lee 352 Cottrell, Joe Alan 266 Cottrell, Lea Kelly 405 Cottrell, Pamela Kaye Cottrell, Phylis Ann 293 Cottrell, Susan Rae 299, 391 Couch, Alice Lynn Couch, Deborah Ann Hay Couch, Felicia Adele 391 Couch, Jimmy L. Couden, Cheryl Lynn Couden, Daniel Eugene 90, 300, 352 Council for Higher Education 145 Counts, Gary Alan Countzler, Catherine Ann 382 Courtney, Patrick Joseph Cousineau, Kim Marie 391 Cousino, Brad 310 Covetts, Karen Lynn 382 Covington, Connie Elaine Covington, Jan Romelle Covington, John Ewin Ill Covington, Karen Leigh Covington, Linda Woodruff Cowan, Charles Ben Jr. Cowan, Cindy Jo 405 Cowan, Julia Ann Cowan, Lynn 22 Cowden, Jeffrey Frederic 337 Cowherd, Ann Boyd Cowherd, Ford Edmon 306, 382 Cowherd, Rosemarie Cowles, Ava Lynn Cowles, Donna Sue 405 Cowles, Jacqueline Ree Cowles, Linda Phelps Cowles, Susan 405 Cowles, Yvonne 391 Cowley, Cheryl Lynne Cox, Barry M. Cox, Carol Elaine 405 Cox, Cheryl Jean Cox, Cynthia Ann 382 Cox, David Gerald 405 Cox, Dennis M. Cox, Donna Kay Cox, James Craig Cox, Juanita Wright Cox, Kerry Gene 405 Cox, Leonard Clark II Cox, Mary Cleveland 391 Cox, Michael Lee 287 Cox, Patsy Rue 298, 352 Cox, Phillip Wayne Cox, Robin Bruington Cox, Roger 426-7 Cox, Ronald Lee 299 Cox, S.D. 285 Cox, Sandra Jane Cox, Sandra Samuell Cox, Sarah Elizabeth Cox, Timothy Michael 306, 391 Crabtree, Christopher B. Crabtree, David Anthony Crabtree, Deborah Jean 322 Crabtree, Deborah Sue Crabtree, Douglas Eugene Crabtree, Nathan Byron Craddock, Barry Steven Crady, George Chester 382 Crady, Jeffrey Sexton Crady, Nona Christy Craft, Norma Ruth Brown Crafton, William Toby 286 Craig, Donna Jean 405 Craig, Janet Webb Craig, Patricia Hagan Craig, Susan Denise 405 Craig, Teresa Lynn 296, 326 Crain, Candace Gay 352 Cramer, Margaret Louise 305, 382 Crane, Michael Andrew Crask, Sheila Gail 405 Craven, Mark Shea Craven, Steven Rodger Cravens, Jackie Carroll 382 Cravens, Kathy Jo Cravens, Raymond 148-9 Crawford, David Wayne 328-9 Crawford, Diane M. Crawford, Jeffrey David 335 Crawford, Kevin Lee 391 Crawford, Ltanya Ann 392 Crawford, Nick 300 Crawford, Nola Denise Crawford, Randy Dean 77 Creasy, Timothy Owen Creek, Donald Keith 352 Crenshaw, Gary Joseph 330-1 Cretella, Francis Michael Cretella, Linda Carol 323, 341 Creviston, Frank Lynn Crick, Teri Sue 405 Crider, Benjamin Harry II Crider, John Earl Jr. 147 Crittenden, Ardis Richard Crittenden, Gary Lee Crittenden, Jo Ann Crittenden, Rebecca A. Reid Crocker, Denice Lynn Crocker, Timothy John Crombie, John Barrett Cromwell, Charles Michael Cromwell, Rita Lou Crook, Susan Jane 274 Crooks, Mary Lynn Cropper, Kathleen Vincent Cropper, Thomas Delano Croslin, Ronnie Lee Cross Country 210-1 Cross, David Martin Cross, David Walling 216, 338 Cross, James Sherman Cross, Penny Darlene 405 Cross, Stephen Orrin 148 Cross, Susan Marie Crotts, Rolanda Yvonne Crousore, Janet S. Crow, Barbara Louis Crow, Sally Nalley 405 Crowder, Cynthia Beth Crowder, Thomas Michael Crowe, Christopher M. Crowe, Crawford 152 Crowell, Burrell 221, 229 Crowell, David Douglas 286 Crowell, Diane Robin 405 Crowell, Michael Daniel Crowley, Catherine Bernice Crowley, Cris Ann 297 Crowley, J.C. 76 Crowner, Linda Susan 352 Cruce, David Arlen Crum, Cherie Lynn 392 Crum, Mason 335 Crum, Sherree Marie 392 Crumb, Glenn 168-9 Crumbie, Jon Eric Crumbie, Richard Lee Crumby, Melissa Lynne 322 Crumhorn, Wayne John Crump, Marjorie Ann 326 Crump, Steven Gerard Crumpler, David Hurst Crus, Priscilla Crusaders 77 Cruse, Nancy K. Reed Cruz, Joe Jesus Dorsey Cruz, Kathy Grace Cuarta, Jose Jr. Rene Cude, Jon Michael 352 Cude, Terry Leigh Clements 252 Cuffe, Frances Michael Cull, Martin Homan Cullen, Laura Anne Cumings, Erica Denise 352 Cummings, David Owen 405 Cummings, Janet Louise Cummings, Joe David 352 Cummings, Juliana Marie Cummings, Kathy Rachelle 405 Cummins, Jeffrey Alan Cundiff, Christopher Lynn 405 Cundiff, Donna Ann Cundiff, James Michael Cundiff, Kevin Brent 328-9, 352 Cunningham, Anne 327 Cunningham, Bill 330 Cunningham, Bruce Alan Cunningham, Chris Sims Cunningham, Edward Joseph 352 Cunningham, Guy Mitchell Cunningham, Julia Lensing Cunningham, Leah Lynne 267 Cunningham, Linda Cheryl 405 Cunningham, Richard Craig 405 Cunningham, Thomas Carey 334 Cunningham, William Cunningham, William T. Ill 298, 330-1 Cuppy, Philip Craig 338, 405 Curd, Allison Reed Curl, Patrick Francis 352 Curneal, Charles Anthony Curnutte, Michael Dean 216-7, 285 Curran, Arch Joseph Jr. 277, 352 Currant, Jim 246 Currence, William Curry, Cozett Marie Curry, Edward Lee 352 Curry, Jo Ellen Ringenberg 352 Curry, Kimberly D. 392 Curry, Marla La Dawn 392 Curry, Rebecca Jo 86, 352 Curry, Sandra Lynn Curtis, David Blaine 304 Curtis, Debra Lynne Curtis, Patricia Elaine 305, 405 Curtis, Robert Allen Curtis, Vickie Lynne 405 Cusick, Tammy Joyce Cuzzort, Larry Joe 244, 246, 298 Cyr, Constance Mae 284, 354 Czipo, Joseph Phillip 338 D Dadbin, Ahmad Dadey, Eric John Dahl, Barbara Fite Daigle, Deborah Lynn 405 Dale, Steven Gary Dallas, John Robert 382 Dalton, Car! David Dalton, David 252 Dalton, Cheryl Lea 405 Daly, Kathleen Mary Dam, Norma Jean Dame, Michael Gene 382 Dame, Pam Gayle 405 Damer, Cindy L. 324, 392 Dameron, Marilyn Rhea Gass Damm, Julie Ann Dance Company 108-9 Daneshuar, Reza Daniel, Austin Butler Daniel, Danny Joe Daniel, Marvin Gayle Daniel, Mike Keith Daniel, Richard Hunter Daniel, Sheree Deanne 327 Daniels, Glenn Dean Daniels, Lee Clifford 352 Daniels, Nathan Oneal Dansereau, Kirk 203 Dant, Richard Joseph Dantoni, Joseph Charles Dantoni, Richard A. Darby, Donna Fay Darnell Darden, Ann Bruce Darden, Donna Jo Dargo, Michele Ann Darlington, Charleen A. 270 Darnall, Peggy June Peace Darnell, Cathy Ann 171, 405 Darnell, Danny Lee Darr, Terri Darnise 279 Darst, Kevin James 392 Dastugue, Danon 352 Daugherty, Janet Denise 405 Daugherty, Laura Ann 405 Daugherty, Stephen Willard 382 Daugherty, Thomas Todd 236, 405 Daum, Laura Lynn 291, 327 Daunhauer, Christine Mary Dause, Teresa Lynn 392 Davenport, Brian Alan Davenport, Dennis Allen Davenport, Mary Jo 352 Davenport, Patricia Gail David, Chester 302 David, James R. Davidson, Betty Ann Davidson, Linda Gail Davidson, Richard A. Davidson, Roy Willard Davidson, Sheila Gale 392 Davies, Janet Lynn 352 Davis, Bambi Lynn 405 Davis, Brad Dean 336 Davis, Carl Edmund Jr. Davis, Carl Woodley 405 Davis, Carolyn Mae Davis, Charles Alan 382 Davis, Diane Widick Davis, Douglas Dean 291 Davis, Douglas Gene Davis, Edward Lee Davis, Ernest Winstead Davis, Eugenia Lee Davis, Glen Lewis Davis, Gregory Allen 382 Davis, Gregory Aubachon David, James 120, 144-5 Davis, James Lester Davis, James Richard Davis, James William Davis, Jay 51 Davis, Jeffrey Warren Davis, Joann Jeannett Davis, Kary 313 Davis, Kathy Garner Davis, Laura Ellen Davis, Lisa Petett Davis, Lisa Ralls 405 Davis, Lisa Zahn Davis, Margaret Ann Davis, Marilyn Denise 327 Davis, Marvin Leon 216 Davis, Mary Childress Davis, Mary Leslie Sarver Davis, Mayme Lou Davis, Michael Glenn Davis, Michelle Elise 405 Davis, Nancy Corinne 352 Davis, Nancy Elaine C, 352 Davis, Neal Charles 298 Davis, Neal Robert Davis, Robert Lee 163 Davis, Robert William Jr. 405 Davis, Roger Dale Davis, Rose 291 Davis, Rose Marie 382 Davis, Sandra Jane 352 Davis, Sarah Rebecca 405 Davis, Susan C. Davis, Tamya Lynn Davis, Teresa Kay 305, 392 Davis, Teryl Ann 405 Davis, Thomas Allen Davis, Vicky Lee 98-9, 105-6 Davis, Virginia L. Dwyer Davis, Wanda Turner Davis, Wynemia J. Robertson Davison, Betty 172-3 Davison, Nancy Elise Dawson, Charles Fenton Jr. Dawson, Johnny Dockins Dawson, Pamela Lane Day, Bonnie Jean 291, 392 Day, Gloria E. Ashworth Day, Judith Ann 353 Day, Judith Karen 392 Day, Karen Kathleen 286-7 Day, Kyle Day, Peter L. Day, Ronald Allen 353 Day, Shirley Jean Day, William Robert De Armond, Donald Layton De Sha, Robert Steven Deal, Jack Allen Dean, Henry Sanford Dean, Lesa Kim Dearen, Sandra Jean 299, 392 Dearing, Lisa Garr Dearing, Ronald Stephen Dearmond, Glenda Joy Dearmond, Marcia Kate Deavours, Stacy Lee Deberry, Karen Louise Deberry, Mark David 392 Deberry, Richard Earl Deboe, John Henry DeCamillis, Lisa 95 DeCamillis, Ray 95 Deckard, Timothy Elton 353 Decker, Anita Jessica Decker, John William Jr. Decker, Susan Kay Dedman, Kathleen Ashwill Dedmon, James Dwight 382 Deeb, John G. 330-1 Deeb, Norman 330-1 Deemer, Merrill Willard Defining the law for the university 150-1 Defoor, Lori Ann 382 Deforest D. Joan Staton Defreece, Kenneth Andrew Degott, Michele Ann 353 Dehart, Hollis Dehart, Rosie Jane Z. Dehbozorgi, Fatemeh 392 Del, Carmen Lucia Del-Carmen, Lucia Delacey, Charles 216, 219, 382 Delacey, Linda Sue 275 Delbuono, Elizabeth Ann 291, 392 Delk, James Raymond 405 Dellario, Susan Lynn 264-5 Deller, John Edwin 392 Deller, Kathryn Ann Deloach, Robert Wayne Delta Omicron 270-1 Delta Sigma Pi 258, 298-9 Delta Sigma Theta 324-5 Delta Tau Delta 329-30 Deltito, Benjamin John Jr. Demaree, Leatha Louise 405 Dempsey, Daryl Dean Demunbrun, Margaret 336 Demunbrun, Murphy Moran Jr. Demurray, Tony Lee Demuth, Andrew Martin 405 Demuth, Anita Ann Denes, Anne Marie Denham, Wilma Kay Denison, Eldon Bryan Denk, Thomas Joseph 264, 405 Denk, William Charles 298 Denning, Libby Carol 323 Denning, Mark Anthony 382 Dennis, David 298-9 Dennis, Patricia Wooden Dennis, Russell Dennis, Sheila Mae 382 Dennison, Sharon Perkins Dental hygiene department 193 Dental hygiene department head 193 Denton, Betty J. Harper Denton, Horace Wayne Jr. Depp, Doris Jean Browning Depp, Lisa Kaye Depuy, Carlos Alberto 353 Depuy, Erick Rafael Depuy, Margarita C. Dero, Downing 134-141 Desha, Robert S. 405 Desimone, Kelly Deloris 173 Desmarais, Carole Mitro Despaux, Charles Fredrick Despaux, Rick 254 Dessott, James Donnie Dethridge, Royce 160 Detring, Brian Scott Detring, Diana Kay Detsch, Richard Mark Devasher, Sherry Runell 382 Dever, Phillip Owen 216 Devine, Tammi Terrietta 178-9, 274 Devine, Vicki Lynn Devries, James Stuart Dewayne, Stanley 287 Dewilde, Roberta Deane 392 Dewitt, Susan Lynn “The Dairy of Adam and Eve” 100, 102 Diazcruz, Pablo Julio Diazcruz, Rebekah Lynne Dibella, Edward Engel 9 Dibella, Jo W. 199 Dick, Patricia Ann Dicken, Eric Lee Dickens, Michael Anthony Dickens, Phillip Wade Dickenson, Darlene Jo 353 Dickerson, Carla Gail Dickey, David Jackson Dickinson, Katie Jo 353 Dickinson, Laura Diane 323 Dickson, James Michael Diddle, E.A. Jr. 50-3 Diersen, Patricia Ann 405 Diersen, Ronald Lee 335 Dieterich, Karen Jean Dietrich, Marilyn Ruth 320, 324, 353 Digby, Joe Little Digby, Marylee Heery Dildy, Kevin 223, 224, 385 Dillard, Charles Oliver 216 Dillard, Debbie Lane Dillard, Dennis Herschel 405 Dillard, Edward B. Dillard, Larry Dean Dillard, Linda Sue Dillard, Sharon Kay 392 Diller, Tomi Tara King Dilley, Dean Pegues 382 Dillingham, James Carlie Dillon, Terri Leigh Dingus, Carolyn Sue 392 Dinnegan, James Edward 353 Dinsmore, Peggy Sue 392 Dipietro, Joseph Leon Distler, Roger Alan Distributive Education Clubs of America 298-9 Divita, Joseph Michael Dixon, Charles Richard 270, 392 Dixon, Clarence Kay III 266 Dixon, Frank Flemming 405 Dixon, Lynne Renee 382 Dixon, Valerie Jo 285, 405 Dlamini, Maxwell Do, Oanh Chau 285, 392 Dobbins, Wesley Morgan Dobbs, Joanna 405 Dobrick, David Michael 303, 353 Dockemeyer, James Louis Jr. 330-1 Dockery, Janice Lynn 232 Dockery, Sharron Beth Dodd, Kathryn Jaye 382 Dodd, Lisa Denise 405 Dodds, Mark Anthony Dodge, Allen Curtis Dodson, Donna Faye Dodson, Donna Sue 353 Dodson, Larry Donell Dodson, Shonna Lynn 270, 405 Doellman, Donna Lynn 231-3 Doerr, Melvin Conrad Dokupil, Stanley Roy Dolan, Rebecca Ann 392 Doleman, Michael J. 328 Dolinger, Aleta Dawn 327, 336, 392 Dollins, Billie Jean Doman, Thompson Neil Domiguez, Kenneth Wayne 425 Cook, Charlotte Domiguez, Kenneth 426 Donahue, Lori Beth 325 Donaldson, David Crawford 353 Donaldson, Denise B. 353 Donaldson, Desiree Doreen Donaldson, Margaret Ann 269, 392 Donaldson, Randall Charles 382 Donati, John Phillip Donnelly, Berry Michael Donnelly, Hermance Garde Donnelly, John Edward Donoho, Nancy Gayle 304, 353 Yonovan, Laurie Ann 275, 353 Don’t worry 14-5 Doolat-Abadi, Mehdi 264 Doolatabadi, Mehdi Dooley, Jeanne F Dorris, Deborah Lynn 305, 382 Dorris, Steven Loyd Dorris, Thomas Lesley Dorroh, Sandy Lynne 126, 261, 306 Dorsey, Allison Powell Dorth, Mark Wayne 382 Dorton, Russell K Dossey, Kenneth Wayne Dossey, William Allen Dost, William Frederick 332-3 Dotson, Millie Renae 392 Wine, Dotson, Sheila Kay Dotty, Darrell Wayne 295, 298, 353 Double image 414 Dougherty, Deborah Lynn Dougherty, Ruth McQuown 305, 382 Doug! Doug Doug! Doug) Douglas, as, as, Douglas, as, Dowdell, Doug) Doug) Doug , Charles Russell , Donald Ray 244 , Jerry Alan , Michael Newton Michele C. 353 Richard Thomas Sandra Kaye 252 Sandra Lee 252 Walter E Donna Raye Dowding, Alfred Glenn Ill Dowd vy, Dowell, Dowell, Dowell, Dowell, Dower, Downey, Vida Marie Downing , Benjamin H. Downing, David, John Downing, Dero 4, 51, 128, 131-42, 280 Downing, Donald N Susan Lynn Janice Gwynn 167, 392 John Alan 274 Michael K Rhonda Lou Douglas James Downing, Elizabeth Yarnell 306 Downing, Harriet 134-5, 140 Downing, Jacqueline Downing, Julie Dee 405 Downing, Lisa Ann 323 Downing, Marla Faith 392 Downing University Center Craft Shop 189 Downs, Bonnie Downs, David Barton Downs, Melissa Louise 405 Downs, Nicki Sue Downs, Stephen M. Downs, Vonna Lynd Doyel, Terri Lou 405 Doyle, Dana Warren Doyle, Hazel Sue Cash Doyle, Jean Anne Cagle 353 Doyle, Steve Allen 287, 392 Doyle, Theresa Ann Draffen, Randle Dwayne 405 Drain, Ellen Joy Drake, Charles Mark 382 Drake, Darryl 214, 219 Drake, Deanne Sue 353 Drake, Jeffery Neal 405 Drake, Michael Paul 330-1 Drake, Patricia Dianne Drake, Paula Lee Drake, Paula Lee Drane, Brian Coleman Draper, Michael Brent 277, 383 Draves, Bettie Marie Dresel, Daniel J. 383 Dressman, Michael Ray Drexler, Glenn Earl 405 Drexler, Robert Martin Jr. 274, 353 Dreyer, Tina Ann 383 Dringenburg, David Harold Drinnon, James 133 Driver, Carol Lynn 291, 322, 392 Driver, James Barron 392 Driver, Nancy Dawn 322 Driver, Penelope Carlene Drop-add(vice) 364-5 Druen, Ricky Dean 328-9 Druen, Veronica Gayle Druien, Sharon Lee Druin, Steve Lewis Drummond, Ronald Edward Drury, Pamela Jo Farmer Drury, Timothy William 304 Dryer, Eric Thomas Dubree, Michael Glenn Duchenois, Shannon Jo 392 Duckett, Cynthia Kay Duckworth, Kevin Patrick 275, 405 Duckworth, Scot Ellis Dudgeon, Marilyn Diane C Dudley, Deborah Elaine 392 Duff, Lou Ann Duffett, Dixon Lester Dugas, Wayne Foster Jr Duggins, Edna Kay 343, 353, 372 Duhovnik, Lorraine A Duke, Gary Spencer Duke, Jerry Wayne Duke, Laura Beth 392 Duke, Michelle Renee 405 Dukes, Deborah Leigh 327, 383 Dukes, Georgia Nell 405 Dukes, Richard Allen 299, 392 Dukes, Victoria Joan 291, 302, 353 Dulaney, Earl Franklin Dumit, Diego Dunaway, Kathy Lorene 353 Dunbar, Bradley Alan Duncan, Chery! Dyanne Duncan, Howard Alan 392 Duncan, John Carr Duncan, Monica Jean Duncan, Steven A. Duncan, Terri Lynn 326, 392 Duncan, Vincent Craig Dunlap, Felicia Gail 405 Dunleavy, Steven Glen 392 Dunn, Anna Sue Dunn, Cathy Dewayne 405 Dunn, David 192-3, 304 Dunn, Mark Duane Dunn, Mary Carol Dunn, Mary Hautie Dunn, Wyan Austin Dunsmore, John Michael Dunston, Edward Nolan Dupree, Cydnee Susan Durall, Lisa Joy Duran, Norma Durbin, Aprile Robin Durbin, John Adrian Durbin, Kathleen Anne Durbin, Natalie 293-4 Durbin, Patricia June Durbin, Rita Clare Durham, Jeanell 383 Durham, Jeffrey Hardin 353 Durham, Jeffrey Lea Durham, Kim Denise Durham, Mark Edward Durham, Melody Marie 282 Durham, Pamela Jo 405 Durham, Sandra Renee 299, 353 Durham, Susan Charlene Durham, Terry Bruce Durrant, James Kenneth II 244 Duru, Ayse Emel Dusk to dawn 54-61 Dutton, Teresa Darlene 304 Duvall, Barry Dale Duvall, Freddy Thomas Dwyer, Gary Wayne Dwyer, Patricia Ann 405 Dycus, Pamela Thompson Dycus, Robert Leon Dye, Amy Jo Dye, Anthony Wilson Dye, Carol Lynette Dye, Jeffrey A. Dyer, Leah J. Dyer, Patrick Eugene Dyer, Robert Lynn 301 Dyer, Susan Kay 271 Dykes, Neal Chris Dymowski, Harold Dean 241, 341, 392 Dyrsen, Sharon 21+ ES Eadens, Debra Jo 301 Eadens, Martha Phelps Eades, William Mark Eaker, William Bryan Ealy, Cindy Renee 405 Eanes, Sandra Kaye Eans, Stephen Leslie Earhart, Alfred Lynn Earls, William Randal 330-1 Early, Robin Denise Early, Samuel 13, 32-7 Eason, Thomas F. II] 392 East, Vickie Ann 405 Eastham, Gregory Lynn Easton, Gina Kaye Ebbert, Edith Artemisia Ebelhar, Julie Ann Ebelhar, Timothy Lee 264, 392 Ebelhar, William Russell Eberenz, David Richard from Burrington. Eberhard, Christopher W. Ebert, Rodney William 260 Eblen, William Thomas Jr. 276, 278 Eckhart, Jeffrey Alan 336 Economics department 203 Economics department head 203 Eddings, Michael Joseph 216 Eden, Cathy Darlene 327 Eden, Teresa Gail Edgar, Bobbi Jo 405 Edge, Karen Gail 353 Edge, Teresa Esther 267, 353 Edging, Robert Alan 332-3 Edison, Keatha Juanita Edison, Letha Carol 353 Edlin, Jennifer Marie Edmonds, Greg 338 Edmonds, Hazel Edmonds, Mel Torme Edmonds, Michael 223, 330-1, 383 Edmonds, Theresal Gail 383 Edmonds, William Alexander Edmondson, Karen Lee Edmonson, Mark Samuel Edmunds, Gregory Bruce Edmunds, Kelvin Eugene Edrington, Debbie Ann 405 Sidewalk cafe TAKING A LUNCH BREAK lying down, maintenance worker Roger Cox draws a stare from Terri Likens, a public relations major — Mike Lawrence Edrington, Pamela Kay 405 Educational leadership department 187 Educational leadership department head 187 Educational services director 187 Edun, Folasade Omobola Edwards, Amy Joe 405 Edwards, Andre K. 405 Edwards, Bruce Kevin 405 Edwards, Edna Pauline S Edwards, Gloria Ann 402 Edwards, Jane Katherine Edwards, Jeffery Donald Edwards, Joni Lynn Hall Edwards, Leandra Edwards, Lisa Kay Wilson Edwards, Lorna Kay 405 Edwards, Martha Ann Edwards, Mary Coday Edwards, Michael G, 171, 172 Edwards, Rebecca Helm 323 Edwards, Richard Harold Edwards, Richard Mark Edwards, Robert H. Edwards, Robin Susan 353 Edwards, Timothy L. Egan, Sherry Ann 276, 326, 341, 353 Eggers, Gerald Josef Ehresman, Cindy Lou Ehresman, Linda Lou Ehresman, Norman 186-7 Eicher, Ronald Louis Eicher, Vickie Delilah Eidson, Carol Denise 353 Eidson, Houston, Rev Eidson, Terry Lynn Eisemann, Eric Lee Eisenbeis, Cynthia Kay Eisenmann, Claudia Anne 405 Ekman, Robin Lynn 405 El-Moghrabi, Mohamad Zaki “El Capitan” 112, 115 Elam, Dixie Leigh Elbon, Daniel Jay 334 Elder, Dennis Edward 292-3, 353 Elder, Larry Eugene II Elder, Timothy Wayne Elderly disco 400-1 Eldridge, Darell Dean Sr. Eldridge, Joy 149, 405 Elia, Elias Papapieris Eller, Tabetha Ann Elliot, Kenny 200, 299 iott, Dwayne Neal 216, 392 liott, Jack Watterson iott, John Robert iott, Joseph Mark iott, Kathi Diane 392 iott, Larry 301 iott, Michael Frank 405 iott, Stevenson F. iott, Tommy Lyn n is, Celeste Lafawn 418 is, Craig Larry 392 is, Ernest Lee is, Kenneth Leon 223 is, Linda Diane Hughes is, Lisa Gail lis, Marilyn Faye is, Shannon Lynne is, Troy Allan is, William Scott Elmore, Bonita Dyer more, Bonnie Sue 353 Elmore, Gary Keith more, Howard Ezra more, Linda Fay 405 more, Mary Jane 296 more, Michael Kerry 99, 283 more, Paula Richards more, Sandra Faye ms, Laurel A. 284, 291, 292, 353 rod, Pamela Jean 111, 113, 393 rod, Ruth 31 sesser, Patricia Lee Eltaher, Maidi Asim vart, Judith Lynne Elvers, Daniel Brian 271, 393 Elward, Patricia Ann Elwert, Todd Stuart 336 Ely, Bryan Scott Emadi-Safavi, Amin Emberton, Francine Nell Emberton, James Luther Emberton, Joseph Lee Emberton, Laura Lee 48, 322 Emberton, Sheila Sherfey 393 Emberton, Tom 132 Embry, Charles Louis Embry, Joanna Schaeufele Embry, Kathryn Elaine 354 Embry, Kevin Dale 393 Embry, Kimberly Embry, Larry Huston Embry, Leslie Gay Embry, Missy Dborn 249 Embry, Richard Elmer Embry, Valerie Joy 354 Emergency Medical Training 131, 173 Emerine, Mary Lou 354 Emmert, James Gregory Emmert, Randall M. Emmick, Jamie Rhea 383 Emmick, Lisa Faye 393 Emmitt, Sarah Jeannette Emmons, Dale 296 EMT class 173 Engel, Anthony Todd 393 Engel, Jeffrey Howard 354 Engineering technology department 184 ODOmMmOmmMoOmomOMm OmMmMmMmOmOmmmMm ONOmMoOmMmoOmMoMm m Engineering technology department head 184 427 Duncan, Steven Engineering England, Elizabeth Ann 383 England, Jane Beth 405 England, Pamela Jean 383 Englebright, Jane Dee 128, 173, 305, 354 Englert, Jamie Elizabeth 405 =nglish, Frances Ann English department 196 English department head 196 =nglish, John Dwayne English, Karen Sue English, Pamela Kaye 325, 393 English, Steven Bryant Entertainment 110-1 Epison, Marilyn Kaye 294-5, 405 Epley, Bobby Lynn Epley, Donald Wayne Epley, Julie Lynn Erhardt, Philipp Whitney 277, 338, 354 Erich, Stephen Christopher Ericksen, Robyn Elaine 354 Erickson, Burton C. dr Erickson, Dave J. 393 Erickson, Nancy C. Rice Erskine, James R Erskine, John G. 48, 338 a Ertner, Pamela Lee 282, 383 Ervin, Robert Bracken Erving, Wendy Joanne 354 Erwin, Jane Frances 354 Erwin, Janice Faye 354 Eshback, Susan Joy 296, 383 Eskridge, Kathy Marie Eskridge, Nancy Louise 393 Eskridge, Patricia Ann 170-1, 354 Eskridge, Rita Geary Eskridge, Soretta Lynne Eskridge, William Edgar 264, 286-7 Espino, Remedios P Essien, Akpan Moses Estelle, Carl Edward 214 Estep, William David Esters, George William Estes, Albert J Estes, Charles Michael Estes, Jack Loyd 328-9 Estes, Joe Clifton 328-9 Estes, Karen 354 Estes, Kenneth 186-7 Estes, Kevin Lee 405 Estes, Lisa Karen 291 Estes, Marjorie Lee 405 Estes, Owen Johnson Jr Estok, Steven Michael 335 Eta Sigma Gamma 304 Eubank, Johnny Wilson 354 Eubank, Mary Jane Haiduc 354 Evans, Charles David Evans, David Lewis Evans, Donald Bryant Evans, Donald Gene Evans, Donald Ray Evans, Elizabeth Ann 292-3 Evans, Kerry Ann Evans, Lisa Anne 405 Evans, Marilyn Faye 405 Evans, Michael Denny 216 Evans, Paula Joan 405 Evans, Phillip Wayne Jr, 216, 394 Evans, Robert Michael Evans, Sandra Lillard Evans, Stacey Lea Evans, Terri Ann 277 Evans, Vickie Evenson Evans, Vickie J. 305 Evans, Vickie Lee Howard Evening of Dance 108 Everly, Randall Lee Everson, Cindy Lou 354 Everson, Nan Lowe 393 ‘Every nickel’ goes to students 161 Ewings, Donna Fay 393 Eyster, Jeanne Elizabeth 405 Exile 51, 73, 76-7, 289 Extended campus program assistant dean 162 Ezell, John T. Ezell, Susan Carroll fe Fabel, Carol Jane 305 Fackler, Darice Sue Faenza, Matteo Faerber, Judith Lynn Fahey, Joan Marie Fain, Michael Rex 33, 393 Fairchild, Katherine Marie 124, 274, 354 Fairchild, Teresa Lynn Fairleigh, Joseph Lee 292 Faith, Mark Gregory 273, 354 Faith, Robin Diane 323, 383 Faith, Virginia Lisa 383 Faler, Michael P Falkenburg, Kimetha S Fall activities 314-7 Fallahi, Shahrooz Moghimi Faller, Andrew Charles 268 Faller, Daniel Brion 268 Faller, David 268 Falwell, Colleen Denise 354 Falwell, James Reuben 354 Fane, Colleen Marie 32-7 Fane, William Herbert IV 336 Fant, Tina Kathleen 405 Farago, Ronald David 383 Farber, Myron 121, 276 Fard, Parviz Ghaderi Fardi, Ghoodsi 285 Fardi, Majid 285 Fargen, Monica Loretta Farley, Bob 31 Sunny side up THE SMITH STADIUM bleachers are for more than football games, as freshman Jane Lockin discovered. The stadium’s upper level was a popular sunbathing spot. Ms. Lockin is a member of the women’s basketball team. 428 England, Elizabeth Farley, Bob Farley Farley Farley Farley Farme Farme: Farme Farme Farme Farme , James Charles , Jeffrey Dean , Joni Lynn 305, 383 , Paul Kenneth r, Dennis Wayne r, Julie Anne 405 r, Laura Rae 264-5, 325 r, Raymond Ellis 214 r, Sabrina Yvette r, Thomas Charles 393 Farnsley, Patrick William 354 Farrington, Charmaine C. 238-9, 354 Farris, Farris, Farris, Amy Lisa 71, 73, 276-7, 354 Elisa Carlene 354 Linda Sue Fashion 66-71 Fashion tour 179 Fass, Jack Richard Fath, Douglas Jay Fath, Timothy Lee 376 Fatheddin, Bahman 405 Faulkn er, Terry Wayne Fay, John Joseph Feagin , Timothy Shawn 320, 337 Feamster, Abby Lynn Feather, Terry Turner Federico, Antonia Maria Feeback, Teresa Gayle 405 Feeny, Michael Francis Feese, Daniel Stephen 367 Feese, Randell Lee Feese, Teresa Ann Feibes, Erica Marie Feix, Jeffrey McCoy 216 Feix, Jimmy 4, 138, 214-9 Feldhaus, Martha Ann Fellowship of Christian Athletes 284-5 Felts, David Russell Felts, Debora Denise Felts, Lavonna Lynn 383 Felts, Leanna Armstrong Felty, Julia Ann 393 Felty, Rudy Dale 275 Fenn, Sebrina Rene Fennelly, A.J. 285, 300 Fentress, Dennis Britt Fentress, James Richard 405 Fenwick, Lynn Frances 405 Feole, Barry Jay 393 Ferguson, Deborah Kaye 393 Ferguson, Gary Lee UII PNRM A I TS MFI SVEN AEE RS NDA AS ARBRE Shi RR Ferguson, Jackie Dole Ferguson, Jay Myron Ferguson, Lucinda J. Perdue Ferguson, Miriam McConnell 24, 284, 354 Ferguson, Tony Pritchard Fernandez, Freddy Antonio Fernandez, Rudy Maximino 264, 405 Ferraioli, Donald Anthony Ferrell, Mary Felice Ferry, Daniel Lee Ferry, Kathleen Ann 251, 257, 383 Ferry, Larry Eugene Ferry, Mary Martha S. Field, Beverly Gaye Field, Sharon Gale Fields, Alesia Ann Fields, Laura Lynn 291, 393 Fields, Mary A. Fields, Tina Louise 405 Fields, Vanessa Christina Fienen, Daniel Henry Fife, Sonya Lea Figler, Karen Diane 298, 354 Filip, Carl Stephen 287, 393 Fillman, Jay Dean 246 Fillman, Jolene Mary 405 Filsinger, Henry John “Final Payments” 100 Finals 124-5 Financial aid director 164 Fine Arts Festival 112-5 Finkbone, John Bryan 383 Finley, Billy Daryl Finley, Ronald William 240-1 Finley, Susie Alice Finn, Linda L. Froggett Finn, Mary Ann Finn, Sabrina 322 Finnegan, Kevin James Finnell, Christopher John Firat, Mehmet Ulku 268 Fireline, Kathern Mae Firkins, Barbara Lynne 102 Fischer, Andrew Philip Fish, Mark Gregory Fish, Paul Timothy Fishback, Mary Taylor 393 Fishburn, Robbin Nelson Fisher, Edward Nicholas Fisher, Harold Garnett 163 Fisher, James Edwin Fisher, Jane Susan Fisher, Jennifer Lee 98, 103, 104, 283 Fisher, Suzanne 406 Fister, Beth Ann Fister, Joseph Mark Fitz, Cindy Lynn 322 Fitzgerald, Catherine L Fitzgerald, John Martin 274, 406 Fitzgerald, Rhonda Lynn 393 Fitzgerald, Tony 285 Fitzpatrick, Charles E. Fitzpatrick, Eileen Marie 393 Fitzpatrick, Julian A. II Fitzpatrick, Roger P. 244, 246, 393 Flaherty, Mary Patricia 171-3 Flaherty, Patrick Thomas aherty, Timothy Alan lanagan, Debra Jane Drury lanary, Kathy Jo 238-9, 324, 383 anders, Danny Leigh att, Pamela K. Coffey laugher, Terri Lee Grief leenor, Creed Ewing 330-1, 383 eenor, Trudy 406 leming, Brian Charles leming, Darrell Wayne 337, 354 eming, Don Alan 77777 7°77 T7777 — Scott Robinson 429 Farley, James Fleming, Don Fleming, Kimberly Ann 406 Fleming, Lionel 246 Fleming, Susan M. Flener, Richard Fieldon 318-9 Flener, Sheila Sullivan Flener, Vickie House 393 Fletcher, Eugenia 323, 354 Fletcher, James Ralph Fletcher, Michael David Fletcher, Theresa Renee Flippin, Brenita Carol Flippin, Jerry Jr. 216 Flora, Michael Richard Flora, Vickie Lynn Flory, Cheryl Suzanne 327, 387 Flowers, Marjorie Anne Floyd, Donna Sue 406 Floyd, Glenn David 335 Flynn, James 292 Fogarty, Sandra Lee Fogle, Teresa Marie Foley, Deborah Carol 258, 261, 354 Foley, Sharon Yvonne Foley, Vickie Lynne Fones, John Mark 251, 257 Food services director 166 Football 2, 212-9 For some classes are close to home 162 Forbes, Mary Ann 33, 323, 393 Forbes, Michael Edward Ford, Catherine Louise Ford, Gwendolyn Denise 94, 355 Ford, James Timothy Ford, Laura Ann 393 Ford, Margaret Louise Ford, Perri Lynn Ford, Rebecca Jo 355 Ford, Richard Scott Ford, Timothy L. Ford, Tracy Miller Foreign language department 197 Foreign language department head 197 Formosa, Lisa Carolyn 355 Foroozesh, Hooshang Forrest, Gary W. Forshee, Buddy Ross Forshee, Pamela Kaye 355 Forst, Lee Henderson 334-5, 383 Fort, Patricia Gail 355 Fort, Willie Cowherd Jr. 291, 393 Fortner, Neil Alan Fortner, Patricia Jane Foshag, Karen Sue Foster, Deborah Marie 406 Foster, Donna Lee 208, 406 Foster, Douglas Lynn Foster, Elizabeth Deane 103 Foster, James Michael 383 Foster, James William Foster, Kathy Lynn 393 Foster, Kelly Densil 338 Foster, Lee Allen Foster, Randy Wayne Foster, Richard Leland Foster, Tom 64 Fotouhi, Nader Founder Vickie Marie Fowler, Ann Charmane 322 Fowler, Debra Jean Fowler, Joseph Earl 328-9, 383 Fowler, Joyce 248, 406 Fowler, Richard Frank 355 Fowlkes, David Earley Fox, Cynthia Ann 406 Fox, James Richard 246 Fox, John Melvin Fox, Kenneth Leon 383 Fox, Michael Patrick Fox, Sarah Jane 406 Fox, Steven William Fox, Susan Marie Fox, William Wesley Fraebel, William Theodore France, William Donald Francioni, John Dante 216 Francis, Catherine Lynn 269 Francis, Coty Clifton Francis, Jamie Marie 326, 341 Francis, Karen Alice 406 Frank, David L. 278 Frank, Leo William Franke, John Kevin Franklin, Brian Russell Franklin, Patricia Kaye 406 Franklin, Shirley 380 Franklin, Theresa Lynn 313, 341, 383 Fransway, David John Franzell, Roger Dale Frasure, David Gleen Fraternities 328-39 Frazier, Anthony Robert 406 Frazier, Audrey Ann Haley Frazier, Beverly Jean Freas, George Wilson II Freas, John Romann Frederick, Jeffery Dale Frederick, Marcia Jo Frederick, Melissa Celeste Frederick, Nancy Elise 86, 278, 393 Fredlake, Michele Ann 251, 257 Fredrick, Russell Monroe Fredricks, Linda Forbis Free, Dennis Wayne Freedle, Linda Ann 355 Freels, Leslie Ann 393 Freeman, Bonita Faye Freeman, Christopher A. Freeman, Craig Douglas 216 Freeman, Galen Harlen IIl Freeman, Garvin Lee Freeman, Jennifer Koehn Freeman, Neil Ross 246, 406 Freeman, Sandra Kaye Freer, Markley Melinda 383 Freibert, Sara Lynn French, Angela Jewell 355 French, Bernard Ray French, Cindy L. French, Judith Carol 355 French, Keith M. French, Mark Owen French, Rebecca Ann 406 French, Sandra Pitcock French, William Clarence French, Yolanda Eve 393 Freville, Anne Austin Fridy, Katherine Ruth Friedel, Sharon Dockins Frierson, Karen Mable 231, 232 Frisbee Club 267 Fritch, Michael David 274 Fritz, Judy Jo 406 Frizzell, David Brown Frizzell, Mona Gail Frizzell, Phillip Dewayne 393 Froebel, Martin Charles 287, 291 Froedge, Bobby Dale Froedge, Mark Wayne 383 Frost, Janet Lynn Frost, Sherri Dawn 393 Fruecht, Sheila Lynn Fryman, Caroline Ruth 406 Frymire, Thomas Henry Fulkerson, David Brice 406 Fulkerson, Douglas Earl Fulkerson, Judith Elaine 261, 327, 393 Fulkerson, Randy Joe Fulkerson, Shirley Rose M. 232 Fulkerson, Siegrid Ann Fulks, Marjorie Ann 282, 355 Fullen, David Lloyd 393 Fullenwider, Gracie Fay 355 Fullenwider, Nancy May 355 Fuller, Bryan Scott 393 Fuller, David Carl Fuller, Lisa Anne 406 Fuller, Ronnie Lane Fuller, Sarah Sun 269 Fuller, Steven Joe 328-9, 383 Fullerton, Robert Kelly Fulmer, Joseph 277 Fulton, Sidney Potter Jr. Fultz, Margaret Ann 298, 355 Funkhouser, Robert Edward Fuqua, Jackie Lawanda 282, 355 Fuqua, Kimberly Ann 320-1 Fuqua, William Robert 338 Furkin, David Scott 256, 294 Furlong, Myra Lynn 406 Fussell, Karen Marie 274 Futch, Gary Michael 284 Futrell, Kathleen Valeria Fykes, Danny Atwell Fyock, Barbara Jo 327 G Gabbard, Donna Carol Gabehart, Keith 202 Gable, Terre Blair Gage, Steven Russell Gailbreath, Katherine D. 299, 383 Gaines, Craig Steven 335 Gaines, Donna Marie 327, 356 Gaines, Kim Perry 274, 356 Gaines, Lisa Ann 323, 393 Gaines, Yolanda Suzette Gaither, James Jay 104, 283 Gallaher, Susan Martin 306 Gallas, Charles Gregory 216 Gallini, Maria A. Galloway, Amy L. 51, 279, 406 Galloway, Cheryl Ann 293 Galloway, Constance Mae M. Galloway, Dana Lynn 282 Galloway, Donna Glenn Galloway, Mary Elizabeth 327, 383 Galloway, Rita Suzanne 406 Galloway, Shirley Ann Gallrein, Elizabeth Faye Galvis, Jose Joaquin 393 Gamble, Catherleen 356 Gamble, Spencer Tracy Gamblin, Rocky Earl 393 Gamma Sigma Sigma 290-1, 293 Gamma Theta Upsilon 300 Gann, Kenneth Lee Garbo, Greta Lynne 356 Gard, Cynthia Ann 383 Gardner, Beverly Dean Gardner, Connie L. 383 Gardner, Connie Thompson Gardner, Jacqueline Louise Gardner, James Kevin Gardner, Jess Lewis Ill 280, 356 Gardner, Leatrice V. Baker Gardner, Michael Robert 356 Gardner, Sherry Lee 29 Gardner, Terry John 383 Gardner, Virgil Dwayne 406 Garell, Leslie Ann 327, 341 Garland, Jeanine 406 Garland, Robert Howard Garman, Kathy Cheryl Garmon, Jeffrey Steven Garmon, Pattikate 291, 393 Garmon, Rebecca Lynn 356 Garmon, Roberta Sue 274, 383 Garmon, Vicki Diann Hart Garmon, William Charles 406 Garner, Alvin E Garner, Beth Ann Johnson Garner, Laura Marie Garner, Nila Faye Turner Garner, Ricky Joe Garner, Twila Jeanette Garnett, Karen Louise Garrard, Deatra Laverna 406 Garrett, Alison 383 Garrett, Dale Wayne Garrett, Gordon Douglas 277, 356 Garrett, John Raymond Garrett, Mary Belle Garrett, Patti Annette 299 Garrett, Phillip Andrew 277, 303, 383 Garrison, Bill Ray 406 Garrison, David Lee Garrison, Garri Lynn Garrison, Rosemary Garrison, Terri Lea Garrity, Stella Pauline H. Garrott, Susie Jane 326 Garrott, Susie Jane Newton Garst, Joseph Ray Garvey, Maureen Helen Garvin, Catherine E. 322 Gary, Janet Renee 305, 356 Gary, Joe Ann Gary, Michael Bernard 406 Gast, Linda Kay Gaston, Robin Gaye Gates, Pat F. 50, 216 Gates, Robert Arthur 393 Gates, Roberta Ann Gatewood, Bobby Allen dr. Gatewood, Freida Ladell Gatewood, Lydia Mathews Gatewood, Marlene R. Gatewood, Michael Douglas Gatewood, Phyllis Elayne 324 Gault, Clarissa B. Clark Gaus, Stanley Leon 383 Gauthier, Kimberly Lynn 95 Gautier, William Howard Gay, Angela Aleice 140, 232, 248 Gayle, Watkins 40-3 Gayheart, Ronald Scott Gaynor, Gaynel 393 Gbanite, Maximas U. 393 Gearlds, Mima Denise Geary, Kerry Dean 111, 223, 393 Geary, Rickey Wayne 111 Gebhart, Thomas Hilleary 383 Geisler, Dawn Michelle 383 Genet, William Ronald Gensler, Linda Constance Gensler, Michael Douglas Gentry, Jacqueline Diane 383 Gentry, James Fisk Jr. 13, 26-9, 356 Geography and geology department 181 Geography and geology department head 181 Geology Club 300-1 George, Phyllis 119 George, Melba Lee 291, 356 George, Priscilla Denise George, Thomas Anthony 406 Geraghty, Denis James Geralds, Trudy Jelayne 393 Gerard, Joe Stark Germany, Martha Ann 393 Gerrow, Phillip Robert Gerstle, Amy Elizabeth Gerteisen, Shirley Marie 291 Gerughty, Jack Ray 393 Gerweck, Martyna Jayne Gerni, Paul 82 Ghafoori, Dariush Ghahreman, Vahid Ghuneim, Khaled Saleh 285 Ghuniem, Salah Saleh 285 Gibbons, Cheryl Laine 406 Gibbons, Mary Stribling Gibbons, Roland Lowell 393 Gibbs, James F. Jr. Gibbs, Margie Estes Gibbs, Pamela K. Richerson Gibson, Connie 322-3 Gibson, Connie 51, 53 Gibson, David Paul 100 Gibson, Debra Ann Gibson, Debra June Gibson, Debra Sue 393 Gibson, Dee 156-7 Gibson, Gary Richardson Gibson, Georganne Gibson, James Leon 393 Gibson, Larry Willard Gibson, Nancy Carlene Gibson, Ronald Neal Gibson, Russell Keith Gibson, Sheila Louise 313 Gibson, Terry Owen 267 Gibson, Velvet Kaye Gibson, Victoria Lynn Gibson, Wesley Jay 406 Giddings, Wayne David Il 406 Gierl, David Charles Gies, James Matthew Gifford, Gerald Dean Gifford, James Pierce 285 Gilbert, David William 216 Gilbert, Leslie Anne 326, 356 Gilbert, Margaret Louise Gilbert, Patricia Lee Gilbert, Thelma Victoria 406 Gilbert, Vivian Elaine Giles, Carmen Denise 381 Giles, Corettea Regenia 381 Giles, Kathy Taylor 284, 393 Gilkerson, Rita Heidi Gill, Carrie Ann Gill, Glen Norman 298 Gill, Karen Sue Gill, Richard Joseph 356 Gill, Timothy Ray 383 Gill, Tyler Landthrip Gillespie, Catherine L. Gilley, James Kent Gilley, Timothy R. Gillham, Edward Hugh Gilliam, Jeffrey Gilliam, Nena Colette 265, 393 Gilliam, Sandra Lee 325 Gilliam, Tamela Jane 406 Gillians, Julia Beth Gilligan, Michael Kelly Gilliland, Raymond Keith Gillis, Phillip A. 266-7 Gillum, Orlanda Denice 295, 393 Gilmer, Marcia Ellen Gilmore, Donald Ray 356 Gino, Robert Steven Gipe, John Dean Gipe, Timothy Edward Gipson, Carnell Roger Girard, David K. 241, 406 Girten, Sherrie Ann 393 Girvin, Angela Kaye 324, 406 Gittens, Ricky Alonzo 254 Givan, David Michael 393 Given, Robert Kerry 383 Given, William Scott Givens, B. Suzanne 393 Givens, Thomas Elry Glanzer, Martin Lee Glaser, Adam 268 Glaser, Vanessa Kathryn Glass, Anna Lea Glass, Vickie Lynn Glasscock, Larry Thomas Glasscock, Sharon Beth Glaysbrook, Cindy Ann 291 Glaysbrook, Melanie Denise Glazier, Frank Whitfield Gleitz, Richard Albert Glick, John Robert Glidewell, Alecia Denise 383 Glidewell, Patricia Susan 406 Glore, Anthony Dan 277, 383 Glover, Angela Maria Glover, Gregory Leonard 270 Gminiski, Mike 223 Goad, Dale Boyd 329 Godbey, Duke Alexander Godbey, Nickey Verlis Godbey, A. Fogle 192-3 Goddin, Stephen Jay Godfrey, James H. 270-1 Godfrey, John Dallas Jr. Godwin, Deborah Marie 406 Godwin, William Keith 246 Goehring, Regina Haggerty Goetz, Cathleen Elizabeth 393 Goetz, Debra Lynn Goetz, Glenn Perry Goetz, Richard Charles Goetzinger, Dennis Bryan 406 Goff, Daniel Lee 393 Goff, Elizabeth Stevens 238, 356 Goff, Jerry Lee Goin, Gary Lee 277 Goins, Jim 61 Goins, Lola Katherine Gola, Jeffery Louis 251 Gold, Crystal Lorraine 406 Goldassteh, Davood Goldberg, Arthur J. 96-7 Golden; Jeanne Lynn 393 Gone fishing 134-41 Gomez, Felipe Eduardo 383 Gomez, Jose Antonio 383 Gomez, Jose Antonio Gonterman, Marita Lynn 406 Gonzales, Michael Alan Gonzalez, Jose Oscar Gonzalez, Santiago L. Gonzalez, Susana Gooch, Flora Spencer Gooch, Steven Wayne “The Good Doctor” 99-100 Good, Sarah Jane 299 Goodhue, Johnny Michael Goodin, Cynthia Ann Goodin, Garry Gale 406 Goodin, Larry Paul Goodin, Mary Jane 323, 383 Goodknight, Brian David 332-3 Goodknight, William Alan Goodlet, William Eugene Goodlett, Mark Clifton 393 Goodloe, Oliver Goodman, John Stephen Goodman, Karen Fay Goodman, Terry Lindsay 328-9 Goodrich, Felicia Dale 393 Goodrow, Brenda 304 Goodrum, Cynthia Ann 284, 356 Goodrum, David Wayne Goodrum, Janet Michele Goodrum, Jim 154-5 Goodwin, Brenda L. 326, 356 Goodwin, Bruce Charles Goodwin, Edward Keith 216 Goodwin, Gregory Steven Goodwin, Michael Arnold Goolsby, David Kevin 406 Goolsby, Jerry Lane 246 Gordon, Diana Rene Gordon, Jeffery Scotty Gordon, Johnny 356 Gordon, Sara Jane 236 Gordon, Deborah Jean 393 Gorin, Leah Anne Gorman, Anne Elizabeth 98, 283 Goss, Russell, Theodore 328-9 Gosselin, Laurent Alden Gossett, Charles Hayes Gossett, Kim Myron Gossett, Lisa Ann 406 Gossett, Lisa Ann Gossett, Rhonda Jo 393 Gothard, Deborah Margaret 179 Gott, Carole Dean Gott, Rebecca Jean Gould, Susan Jeanette 273, 393 Gourley, Tammy Dawn Gourley, Todd William Gover, James Morris 383 Gover, John David 304, 356 Gover, Robert Joseph Jr. Government department 202 Government department head 202 Gower, Cheryl Yvonne Grace, Harold Forrest 356 Grace, John Kevin 328-9, 393 Grace, Michael Lynn Graduate College 205 Graduate College dean 205 Graduate Library Science Student Association 284 Graduation 126-9 Gradwell, Kimberly Joan 249 Graham, Connelly Lynn 266-7 Graham, Deborah Jeanine 406 Graham, Dian Graham, Diana Gail Graham, Donald Eugene Graham, John Ephraim 210-1 Graham, Julia Gayle 393 Graham, Lorena G. Pauley Graham, Meloney Kay 326, 356 Graham, Sarah Miller Grant, Carolyn Diane 356 Grant, Jeanne Ann 406 Grant, Laurie Denise Grant, Wendell Van 393 Grants and contracts director 168-9 Grantham, Lindsley Allen 356 Grantz, Lisa Ann 383 Grantz, Mary Ann Graven, Myron Duane Graves, Donna Carol 383 Graves, Donna Maria 406 Graves, Gregory Brian 334, 407 Graves, Harvey Guinn Graves, Jeffrey Ray Graves, Lycrecia Ann Graves, Marilyn G. Graves, Pellie G. Graves, Shulonda R. 236, 249, 406 Graves, Trilba Dianne Gray, Arthur Michael 216 Gray, Arthur Paul Gray, Bobby Gene Gray, Bryan William 216, 383 Gray, David F. 383 Gray, Elmer 205 Gray, Gale Frances Gray, Martilla Spring 383 Gray, Michael G. Gray, Nizida Sharon 356 Gray, Rosemarie 100 Gray, Sally Lou Gray, Shirley Karen 407 Gray, Steve 223 Gray, Tami Ruth Gray, Timothy Powell Gray, William Mark Gray, Willie Ruth 383 Grayson, Alan Lee 356 Grayson, Steven Joe Greathouse, Bobby Dwayne Greeks 310-41 Greek Week 318-21 Green, Colleen Marie Green, Donna Sue 327, 356 Green, Gary Alan 407 Green, Janice Lee 407 Green, Jimmy 184 Green, Maria Annette 393 Green, Michael Jimmy Green, Michael Louis 356 Green, Mike 254-5 Green, Nancy Gail 407 Green, Tammy P. Carpenter 356 Greene, Christopher W. 335 Greene, Dawn Carol Greene, Deborah Sue Greene, Gregory David 335 Greene, Kenneth Warren Greene, Roberta Susan 407 Greene, Ronald Lee Greene, Sharon Elizabeth Greene, Stephen James Greene, Wanda Lee 407 Greenleaf, Mark Allen Greenlee, Anita 291, 302, 356 Greenlee, Douglas Paul 356 Greenwald, Joseph Bernard 241 Greenwell, Barbara E. Greenwell, Dale Wayne 268 Greenwell, Dorothy Vernon Greenwell, Joseph Michael 356 Greenwell, Julia Varga Greenwell, Mary Tobin 383 Greenwell, Richard Patrick Greenwell, Virginia 356 Greenwood, Joseph Gary Greer, Cheryl Lynn 393 Greer, Jerry Lynn 332-3 Greer, Mark Alan 337 Greer, Melanie Lynn 31, 291, 393 Greer, Sherry Lynn Gregg, Andrew Harris Gregoire, Kevin J. Gregory, Amber Lee Gregory, Ann Elizabeth 356 Gregory, Barbara Majors 393 Gregory, Beverly Ruth 271, 326 Gregory, Brenda S. Gregory, David M. Gregory, Ernest Gregory, Euderia Denise Gregory, Joseph Eldridge Gregory, Laura Ann 430 Fleming, Kimberly Gregory, Laura Gregory, Lisa Marie 357 Gregory, Philip Allen Gregory, Sidney 29 Gregory, Tracey Dawn Gregory, William Scott 393 Grenko, Ronald Trent 383 Greschel, George Bradley 284 Greulich, Christen Marie Grevious, Velma Karen 393 Grey, Andre Jerome Grider, Angel Elizabeth Grider, Charles Scott Grider, Deborah L. Piercey Grider, Debra Jean Grider, Dennie Lee 407 Grider, Elizabeth Elaine Grider, Gayla Carol 357 Grider, Lisa Elizabeth 327, 393 Grider, Robert Dwayne Grider, Scott 81 Grieshaber, Charles E. Griffin, Don Allen 264, 393 Griffin, Donna Jo Griffin, Jamie 258, 261, 326 Griffin, Jeffrey Craig 283 Griffin, Lottie Kaye Griffin, Lou Faye Griffin, Orliff Denton Griffin, Timothy Ray Griffin, William Richards 357 Griffith, Anna Maria 357 Griffith, Gwendolyn C. Griffiths, Paul Joseph 306, 383 Griggs, George Lewone 330-1 Griggs, James Robert Griggs, John T. 338 Griggs, Mary Frances 357 Griggs, Mary Lynn 407 Grigsby, John G, 393 -Grim, Joseph Scott Grimes, Connie Belinda Grimes, Geoffrey Taylor 357 Grimes, Trina Ann 264, 357 Grimm, Amy Lynn Grimwood, Dedra R. Grinstead, Christopher T. 364 Grinstead, Deborah Faye 275, 357 Grise, Bettie J. Pogue Grise, James Russell Grise, Pamela Gay Grise, Ramona Dawn Grish, Linda Gail 327, 383 Grizzle, Dennis Dean 266 Grizzle, Kevin Patrick: Groce, Myra Sue Groce, Norma Willadeen Groeschen, Anne Marie Grogan, Charles Stephan Groneck, Connie Sue Grooms, Jerry Louis 407 Groschelle, Karla Ann 294 Grosshuesch, Kendra Sue 327 Grove, Curtis Duane Grove, Elliott Rodgers Grove, James Elliot Jr. 335 Grover, Bob 260 Grover, John 89 Grover, Mark Erin Groves, Howard Wilson Groves, James 210-1, 244, 246 Groves, Jeffery Glen Groves, Timothy Alan 332-3 Grubbs, Alma Darlene 407 Grubbs, Gilbert Wayne - Grubbs, John Kirtley Grudzielanek, Donald John Grumbach, John Eric 246 Gruneisen, Therese Anne 327 Grunow, James George 335 Guenther, Louie 294 Guerra, Leonardo Enrique 357 Guerrant, Ted Mcguire 265, 266 Guess, Steven Bennett 393 Guffey, Alisa Harris 383 Guffey, Mitchell Blane Guffey, Ronnie Ray Guffy, Donnie Ray Guill, James Robert Guill, Jennifer Ellen 299, 327, 393 Guion, Jane Terrell Gullett, Vicki Lynn Gulley, John Orion Gumm, Brenda Humbles Gumm, Huetta B. Gumm, Tony Alan Gunnels, Katherine Louise Gunning, Beverly Ann Gunts, Sheri Lyn 393 Gupton, Garry Dale 407 Gustafson, Holly Beth Gustafson, Paul Lance Gutermuth, Stephen Anthony Guthrie, Vera 191 Guy, Deniese Guy, Suzanne Guyton, Juliet Rose 407 Gwaltney, Mildred 284 Gwinn, Richard Stewart 216, 219 Gymnastics 238-9 H Haack, Robert Alfred 338 Habermehl, Eric Vonn 383 Habermehl, Kyle David Hack, Arnold Wayne Hack, Jerry Lee Hacker, Walter Pearl Hackett, Terrence Lee 333 Hackler, Mark Elam 241, 383 Haddad, Hussain Abdulla 266 Haddock, Frances Bjalobok 266-7 Hadley, Betty Brown Hadley, Burl Dane Hadley, Cynthia Lou Haffner, Helen Katherine 257, 298 Haffner, Paula Marie Haga, Lucille Anne Hagan, David Alan 274, 357 Hagan, John Kenneth Hagan, Terri Ann Hagans, Danny Ray 270, 295 Hagans, Lewis Dean Hagans, Melissa Ann 270, 295 Hagee, Virginia Lee 285, 301 Hagen, Julie Ann Peterson Hagen, Louis 333 Hagerman, Frank Turner Hahn, Carin Carr Hahn, Catherine Dukes 357 Hahn, Lesa Gail Hahn, Lisa Tarleton 69 Hail, Leslie Anne 322 Haines, Walter Grant 267, 329 Haire, James Earl 332-3 Haji, Hossein Nejad Gholam Halbman, Robert 191, 192 Halbritter, Cynthia Ann Halbritter, Deborah Lynn 357 Halcomb, Dover 393 Halcomb, Patricia Lynn 383 Hale, Charlene Aaron Hale, David Allen Hale, David B. 393 Hale, Deborah Leah 407 Hale, Delores Jean Hale, Jeffrey Lynn 306, 357 Hale, John Tully 216, 219 Hale, Patricia Sue 298, 407 Hale, Ronald Scott Hale, Sheryl Diane Hale, Terry Wayne 100, 357 Hale, Timothy Glen 246 Hale, Virgil 98 Hale, Wayne C. 216 Haley, Donald Keith Haley, Teresa Lynn Hall, Anita Celeste 407 Hall, Carla Jean Hall, Charles Wesley Hall, Charles William Hall, Cindy Darlene 383 Hall, Commie J. Hendricks 284 Hall, Daniel Robert Hall, David Bryan Hall, Deborah McGuffey Hall, Debra Ann 358 Hall, Gary Wayne 393 Hall, Helen Darlene Hall, James Ray Hall, Jeffrey Robert Hall, John Daniel 216 Hall, Karen Jo Hall, Karen Sue Hall, Marcia Nunn 267 Hall, Mitchell Alan 407 Hall, Nancy Jo 393 Hall Olympics 297 Hall, Reba Ann Hall, Robert Wayne Jr. 305 Hall, Ronald Wayne 299, 358 Hall, Scott Jordan 358 Hall, Sonja Gay Pruitt 358 Hall, Susan Christine Hall, Tamara Lou 407 Hall, Thomas Alan Hall, Timothy Harold Hall, William Todd Halleron, Rockford Lee 285 Haltom, Julia Ellen 324 Ham, John William Ham, Terry Beth 393 Hamer, Gregory Allan Hamill, Thomas Scott Hamilton, Dennis Dean Hamilton, Glenda Denise 393 Hamilton, Harry Ear! III Hamilton, Janice Sue Hamilton, Jo Leta Russell Hamilton, Joseph R. Hamilton, Kevin Ambrose 337 Hamilton, Mark Alan Hamilton, Mary Elizabeth Hamilton, Randall Dwayne Hamilton, Robert Alan Hamilton, Stephanie Jan Hamlett, Tamela Denise Hamn,, Ritchie Allen Hamm, Shirley Neal Hammer, Donna Jo 274, 358 Hammer, Garry Wayne 407 Hammer, Larry Dwayne 407 Hammer, Sondra Jean Hammer, Timothy Don 383 Hammond, Thomas Blanford 277 Hammons, Earl L. 216 Hampton, Corlos Dewaine Hampton, Ronald Lee Hanashi, Mohammed Mehemed Hance, David Bland Hancock, Bernard Gregory Hancock, Catherine Evans Hancock, Deborah Faye 117, 291, 383 Hancock, Grant Lee Hancock, James Daryl 31, 297, 358 Hancock, Kathleen Henri 282-3, 383 Hancock, Kathy Jean Hancock, Kenneth Walls Hancock, Mary Katherine 261, 265, 393 Hancock, Monty Glenn Jr. 301 Hancock, Tracy Lynn Hancock, William Jeffery 268, 407 Handley, Carolyn Elaine 383, 394 Handley, Lynnetta Denise Handley, Vickie Norise 394 Handy, Riley 116, 152 Hanes, John Edward Haney, Paula Jeanette Hanging of the Green 82 Hanking, Karen Elaine Hankins, John Turner Hankins, Johnny Webb Hankins, Wanda Kaye Hanks, Kathleen Rose Hanna, Jimmy Keith Hanna, William Morton 98, 103, 283, 358 Hannah, Vickie Darlene 287 Hansen, Anna Marie Felty Hansen, Barbara Cynthia Hansen, Michael Vernon Hanses, Linda Joyce Hanses, Robert Joseph Jr. Hansford, Luanne 394 Hanson, Janet Lynne 100 Hanson, Julie Leigh 383 Hapak, Tracy Ann Hape, B. 216 Harbin, Dianna Lynn Harbin, Henry Dwight II Harbin, Wendy Rader Harbison, David L. Harbison, Frederick L. 394 Harbison, Larry Wayne 330-1, 358 Hardcastle, Gregory Scott Hardcastle, Sandra Jo Harden, Brenda Gail 407 Hardesty, Charlene 325 Hardesty, Jan Marie Hardesty, Louis Gerard Hardesty, Patrick Lewis Hardesty, Ricky Price 332-3 Hardesty, Tracey Jane 326, 341, 383 Hardin, Arthur Lee 303, 394 Hardin, Charlotte Marie Hardin, Danny H. Hardin, Henry 168-9 Hardin, Lonnie Lee 216, 383 Hardin, Rita Ann Hardin, Robert Franklin Hardin, William Earl Hardin, William Gentry Hardison, Mark Irvin 328-9 Hardly handicapped ... Sam 32-7 Hardwick, Christopher Mark 394 Hardwick, J. Byron Hardy, Jane Kae 407 Hargan, Melna Katrin 327, 394 Hargis, John Wayne Hargrove, James Earl 290-1, 340, 383 Harkins, Keith Douglas Harl, Carolyn Sue 394. Harlan, Brian Keith 407 Harlan, Lauri L. Harlan, William Steve Harlin, Karen Hope 327, 383 Harlow, David Mark 292, 383 Harlow, Richard Neal 407 Harlow, Robert Spence Jr. 394 Harlow, Sheila Ann 271, 358 Harlow, Teresa Jean Harmon, Cynthia Alice 358 Harmon, David Lee 407 Harmon, Robin 233 Harned, Vicki 94 Harp, Donnie Wilber Harpe, Clifford Edmund Harpe, Ronald D. Harpe, Sarah Elizabeth Harper, Colleen Moss 282, 359 Harper, Cynthia Louise 291, 292, 394 Harper, Gina Beth Harper, Kandace Jane 394 Harper, Karen Michelle Harper, Lisa Dawn 325, 408 Harper, Robert Wallace Harper, Suzanne Jean Harrell, Donna Jean 299, 408 Harrel, John 7 Harrell, Traci Ann Harrer, Robert Fred 383 Harriford, Deborah Lynn Harriford, Vanessa Gail 408 Harrington, Debbie 326 Harrington, JoAnn 297 Harris, Bambi Jo Harris, Beverly Jo 266 Harris, Billy Eugene 359 Harris, Brent Morris 383 Harris, Chris 7 Harris, Cliva Walton Jr. Harris, Deborah Lynne 305, 359 Harris, Diana May Harris, Donald Brent Harris, Eric Allen Harris, Fred Leland Harris, Frederick Lee 294-5 Harris, Gerald Wayne Harris, Gerry Lee 295, 383 Harris, James Paul Harris, Janice Juanita Harris, Jerry 359 Harris, Joan Iva 408 Harris, Joanna Harris, Joseph Raymond Jr. 295, 359 Harris, Linda Faye 394 Harris, Lisa Renee 408 Harris, Matthew Brent 408 Harris, Michael Eugene 408 Harris, Michael Thomas Harris, Nikita M. 408 Harris, Petice L. Harris, Phyllis Kaye Harris, Robert Kenton Harris, Russell Brian 359 Harris, Shelia Ann Stone 40 Harris, Sherry Lynn 285, 395 Harris, Tami Lynn 394 Harris, Thomas Gary Harris, Viola Regenia 408 Harris, William Bart Harris, Yvonne Delores Harrison, Arthur Ray Jr. Harrison, Beverly Kay Harrison, Carla Sue Harrison, Cowell 199 Harrison, Danny Lee 304, 338, 359 Harison, David Ford 49 Harrison, Glenda S. Harrison, Lola Marie Harrison, Patricia Ann Harrison, Peggy Sue 359 Harrison, Randy Clark Harrison, Rebecca J. 359 Harrison, Teresa Jo 48, 322 Harrison, Thomas McKinley Harrison, Virginia Mary Harrod, Frances Ann 359 Harryman, David Eugene Harryman, Judy Lynn Harston, Pamela Kaye 232 Harston, Terri Franklin Hart, Kerry Marshall Hart, Marshall Allen Hart, Pamela K. Kordenbrock 231, 232 Hartford, Sherry Lynn 126, 323, 359 Harting, Mark Stephen Hartlage, Carol Ann Harton, Brian Cooper Hartshorne, Robert Harold Hartsock, Elizabeth Lynn 105, 408 Hartung, Gregory Wayne 264, 277, 408 Harvey, Aaron Charles III Harvey, David Earl Harvey, Robert Clifton Harwood, Lisa Ann Harwood, Orin Lois Harzoff, Elizabeth Gail Haselton, Waring Blake Haskins, Brent 224 Haskins, Clem 277, 323-4 Haskins, Hearie Haskins, Joyce Ann'325, 359 Hassler, Eric Gene 383 Hast, Lisa Ann 408 Hasting, Ronnie Allan Hasty, Phillip Hoover Hat trick 393 Hatch, Mark Emmett Hatcher, Anthony Creel Hatcher, Paul 293 Hatchett, Jerry Bradford 23, 394 Hatchett, Terry Lee 23 Hatfield, Aletha Ann 408 Hatfield, Angela Hatfield, Barbara Jean 325 Hatfield, Donna Marie 327 Hatfield, Eddie Orean 394 Hatfield, George Edward Hatfield, Karen Ann 324 Hatfield, Robert Donald Hatfield, Terri Lynn 100, 104-5, 298 Hatfield, Terry Ray Hatfield, William Hayward Hathcock, Joseph Daniel 254 Hatler, Peggy Ann 359 Hauck, Robert Lee Jr. Haugh, Patrick William 300, 383 Haugsby, Richard Allen Havrilek, Christopher M. Hawes, Carl D aniel Hawes, David Wesley 383, 394 Hawes, Kerry Ann 305 Hawes, Laurie Ann 305 Hawes, Mary 137 Hawes, Shirley Jean Hawkins, Allison Vanessa Hawkins, Anicia Stanhope 323, 394 Hawkins, Cheryl Ann 408 Hawkins, Cuba Jewell 265, 408 Hawkins, David Glenn Hawkins, Donald B. Hawkins, Marilyn Hawkins, Paul Clayton Hawkins, Robert Blackburn Hawkins, Terri Lynn 394 Hawkins, Vanissa Mechelle Hawkins, Vicki Lynn 322, 394 Hawpe, David 276 Hawwas, Saleh M. Hay, Archie Marion Hay, Erna Lee 282, 359 Haycraft, Launita June 383 Hayden, Alfred Jr. 216 Hayden, Arthur 302 Hayden, Christopher Joseph 383 Hayden, G lenward Dale Hayden, Larry Dean Hayden, Reginald Amont 216, 219, 339 Hayden, Richard Edward Jr. Hayden, Ronald Keavin Haye, Larry James Hayes, Charles 204 Hayes, David Neil Hayes, Jana Renee 408 Hayes, John Douglas 394 Hayes, Lloyd George Jr. Hayes, Michael Anthony 332-3 Hayes, Thomas Vernon Haygan, Jerry Lee Haygan, Stephen Ray Haynes, Billie Jean 264, 285, 299, 408 Haynes, Forest Donnell 286-7, 359 Haynes, Georgette Tilly 291, 359 Haynes, John 167 Haynes, John Arthur Haynes, Mark Donald Haynes, Mike 341 Haynes, Pat 50 Haynes, Patricia Jean 394 Haynes, Stephen C. Haynes, Sus an Leigh Hays, Marcia Lynne 408 Hays, Nyra Elaine Hays, Paul Taylor 302 Hays, Shelby Kenneth Hays, Timothy James Hays, Victor D. 264 Hayse, Paul Elbert Hayter, Barbara Susan Hayter, Bob Duwayne Haywood, Elizabeth Ann 408 Hazelwood, Cherie Lynn Hazelwood, Jeffrey Brent Hazelwood, Rachel Ann Heaberlin, Jill Evans 394 Head, Annette Head, Karen Marie Head, Lonnie Keith 320, 328-9 Head, Mary Judith Head, William Franklin Headley, Ronald Wade Heady, Deborah Kay 408 Heady, Kenneth Wayne Healey, Henry 302 Health and safety department 192 Health and safety department head 192 Health services director 154-5 Heard, Patricia Ann Hearing it first hand 96-7 Hearn, Lisa Gay Heart 73, 75, 77 Heater, Hugh Burton 273, 353 Heater, Hugh Jr. 155 Heath, Scottie Edwin 383 Heatherly, Jean Woodall Hebert, Mark Richard 291, 394 Heck, Jeanne Marie 359 Heckman, Carol Jean Hedde, Janet R. 323 Heddens, Kimber James Jr. Hedges, Cletus Daryl Hedges, Henry Logsdon III Hedges, Lily B. Hedgespeth, Anthony Dwayne Hedgespeth, Joanne L. Rea Heeter, Gregory Dewayne Heffington, Lawrence Evans 314, 333, 336, 383 Heflin, Jeffrey Joe Hefner, Jill Kelly 408 Hegen, Edmund 121 Heil, Betty J. Gahafen Heile, Daniel Clayton Heile, Jeffrey Richard Hein, Alan E. Hein, John Anthony Heinsohn, Marcella Kay Heintzman, Mark Edward Heinze, John William Heinze, Steve Bryant 241 Heinze, Thomas Edward 241, 383 Helbing, Alan David 408 Held, Mark Steven 335 Held, Suzanne Marie Heldman, James 197 Hell, fire and a lollipop 396-7 Hello, advance registration 148 Helm, Betty Sadler Helm, Christopher Allan Helm, Diana Gaye Helm, Judy Bogle Helping students from start to finish 168-9 Helping students get jobs is a big job for one office 163 Helson, Joe 158 Helton, Deborah Ann 394 Helton, Harold Neil Helton, Shirley Mollyhorn Heltsley, Larry Daniel Heltsley, Laurie Lee 230-2, 335, 408 Hemingway, Sara Ann 326, 394 Hemingway, Susan Jane 324, 408 Hemmen, Robert William 332-3 Hempenstall, Peter George 332-3 Hendershot, Philip Mark 330-1 Henderson, Angela Claudine 408 Henderson, Carmen Denise 394 Henderson, Debbie Genean Henderson, Donna Kaye Henderson, Kenneth Gale Henderson, Kimberly Ann 394 Henderson, Loretta Faye 394 Henderson, Mark Jeffrey Henderson, Melanie Lee Hendon, Glenn Alan 383 Hendrick, Beckie Sue 408 Hendrick, Larry Morton Hendrick, Penny Lynn Hendrick, Stacey 151 Hendricks, James Martin 383 Hendricks, Michael Dee Hendricks, Paula Marie 408 Hendrickson, Scott Sadler Hendrix, Linda Louise 394 Hendrix, Marcia Christine Hendrix, Martin Webb Henegar, Mary Ann 408 Henning, Bernard Anthony Henning, Marilyn Anne 394 Henning, Michael John Henon, Robert Anthony Henrickson, Charles H. 300 Henry, Bruce Allen 328-9 Henry, David Wayne Henry, Diana Duckworth Henry, Gary Parker Henry, Kevin Joseph Henry, Philip Nathan Henry, Rebecca Lynn 408 Henry, Robert Lyle 291, 304-5, 336 Henry, Rosemary Annette 325 Henry, Susan Elizabeth 359 Henry, Tony Ashton Henry, William Patrick 359 Henshaw, Leslie Ann Hensley, Mary Jane 394 431 | . Gregory, Lisa Hensley, Mary Hensley, William Claude Hepner, John Raymond 330-1 Hepner, Robert Le Roy 394 Heppler, Thomas Neil Herald, Kimlin Sue Herbert, Ronald 274 Here comes the Sunshine 72-9 Here to stay 312-3 Heritage Hall Jazz Band 82 Hermann, Victoria Lynn 394 Hernandez, Alfred 416 Hernandez, Gabriel A. 304, 336 Hernandez, Maria Amparo Hernandez, Mauro Jose Herndon, Barbara 231 Herndon, Owen Kenneth Herndon, Tomilynn 408 Herner, Wayne Gale 236, 359 Herrenbruck, Rodney Ken Herrick, Alan Jeffrey Herriford, Pamela Moody 191, 232 Herriges, Jean Terese Herring, Dale 394 Herrington, Debra Anne 359 Herrington, Susan Lanise 408 Herrit, Gary Lee Herrmann, Robert Peter Herron, Robert Wilburn Jr. Hershey, Jane Elizabeth 282, 359 Hertlelendy, Deborah Lynn 383 Hess, Harlan John Hess, Mark Fallis Hess, Ronald Keith 70-1 Hessel, Del 210-1, 244, 246 Hesson, James 155 Hester, Cary E. 302-3 Hester, Celisa Ann 394 Hester, Elizabeth Anne 408 Hester, Jeanne D. Callaway Hester, Melanee Marie Hester, Mendle Ray Hester, Warren Ray Hester, Wendy Ann 265, 408 Hewitt, Keith Alan Hewitt, Keith Alan Hewlett, Bonney Kay 327 Hewson, Lori Lee 327 Heyduck, Cheryl Diane 359 Heyduck, Tracie Ladonne Hiam, Clarence Franklin Hickerson, Charles Hilton Hickman, Melanie Jill 408 Hicks, Betty Allen Hicks, Jack Jefferson Hicks, Joan Annette Hicks, Larry Donald 330-1 Hicks, Matthew Orville Hicks, Nancy Shirl Hicks, Nathana Ruth Hicks, Peggy Lynne Hicks, Stephen Lynn 338 Hicks, Teresa Lynn Higdon, Elizabeth Ann Higginbotham, Dana T. Higgins, Katherine Ann Higgins, Patricia Higgins, Stephen Eugene Higgs, Markida Gaye 408 Higgs, Thomas Edmund 335 Higgs, Vivian Lynette 232 High, Anthony Wayne 394 Highbaugh, Don Gene Highfill, Linda Diane Highland, Jim 195, 276-7 Highly ranked, one-of-a kind programs bring optimism, improvement to college 190-3 Hight, Bradley William Hightower, Roderick Eugene Hildebrandt, Lisa Dawn 327, 394 Hildreth, Cheryl Lyn Hildreth, Sharon Level 86-9 Hill, Anthony Oneal 270, 299 Hill, Bobby 56-7 Hill, Bernita Dean Hill, David William Hill, Garry Leo Hill, Janet R. 291, 298, 394 Hill, Janice Marie 408 Hill, Larry Hill, Lea Anne 291, 299 Mark Dewayne 383 Hill, Mary Ann Hill, Mary Lois Keplinger Hill, Melody Beth 314, 317, 322 Hill, Nancy Annette Hill, Steve Murray Tamara Kay Hill, Theresa Ellen 383 Hill, Theresa Kay 394 Hill, Thomas Joseph Hill, William Mack Hill, Yolon Mischelle 249 Hillebrand, Mary Regina 264, 277 Hilliard, Otto 48, 338 Hills, Jennifer Lynn Hilton, Luther Ray Hilton, Robert Allen Himes, Harrietta 359 Himmelheber, David 100, 105, 268, 394 Hines, Elizabeth Wood Hines, Gregory Scott Hines, Thomas Edward Hinkebein, Dale Frank Hinkle, Burwell John 408 Hinkle, Roger Neil 216, 338, 394 Hinton, Bryant Wesley Hinton, Lou Ann 305, 394 Hinton, Sherri Lynn 408 Hinton, Susan Lugene 359 Hirst Elizabeth Anne 285 Hiryak, Peter Jeffery His work is the university's play 160-1 History department 198 History department head 198 432 Hensley, William James, Melvin Hitchel, Benny Luther Hite, Lisa Ann 394 Hitron, Deborah Ann 325, 341, 394 Hitsman, Michael Larry Hoagland, Dawn Marie Hoagland, Sharon Lynn 284, 383 Hobbs, David W. 112 Hobbs, Wayne 112, 201 Hodby, Ricky Dale 298, 359 Hobson, Debra Kay 282, 383 Hobson, Kenny Ray 100, 268 Hobson, Lana Lovvorn Hobson, Mark Alan Hockenbury, Deanna Lynn Hocker, Greg Scott Hodge, Ellen Tatum Hodge, Laurel Franklin Hodge, Martha Glenn Hodges, John Wade Hodges, Judy Melisa 383 Hodges, Kirkman Edward 359 Hodges, Sandy Gayle Hoegh, Kimon S. 260 Hoerni, Judy Lynn Hoff, Robert N. Il Hoffer, H. Craig Hoffer, Eugene 61 Hoffman, Debra Ann Hoffman, Howard Craig Hoffman, Sherri Lynn 147, 322, 394 Hoffman, Wayne 183 Hogan, Carolyn Logan Hogan, Elizabeth Sharon Hogan, Thomas Paul Hogan, Thomas Paul Hogan, Waymon Edward 408 Hogg, Edward Hiram Hogg, Karen Lynn 324 Hoggard, David Eugene Hoggard, Judy L. 408 Hogue, Hugh Vinson 359 Hoke, Dorothy Lee Holcomb, David 395 Holden, Ann Hunter Holder, Cynthia Ann Holder, Donna Sue Holder, Margot E. 284 Holder, Richard Wayne Holder, Stephen C. Holder, Wanda Borders 395 Holladay James Holladay, Sue Ellen Holland, David Allen Holland, Gregory Leon Holland, John William Holland, Kenneth Reece 216 Holland, Linda Wester Holland, Mike 83 Holland, Monika Yvette Holland, Philip George 338 Holland, Sandy Irene Hollander, Charles Joseph Hollars, Roger Gene Holley, John R. Holley, Shannon Kathy Holliday, Anne Marie Holliday, Suzanne Page Hollingsworth, Paul Edward Hollis, Steven Hanford 383 Holloman, Wayne Milford 329, 330 Hollon, Kathy Levon Hollon, Larry Maurice 383 Holloway, Kathy Sue 359 Holman, Connie Lee Holman, Elizabeth Jewel Holman, Nancy Lee 290, 292-3, 360 Holmes, Albert Calloway Holmes, Daniel Solomon 244, 246, 339 Holmes, Deborah Jane 326 Holmes, Debra Ann Holmes, Laurence Hasford Holmes, Mark Walker Holmes, Richard Gene Holmes, Thomas Edward Jr. Holmgren, Thomas James 268 Holsclaw, David T. Holsclaw, Jerry Michael Holt, David Hudson 335, 383 Holt, David Mark 40 Holt, Dennis Logan 332-3 Holt, Kevin Ray 408 Holt, Linda Fitzgerald Holt, Preston Tatum 216 Holt, Thomas Edwin Holtinger, Gary 292 Holton, Charles Brent Holton, James William Jr. Holton, Monica Dale 408 Holtz, Johnnie Brooks 323 Holway, Victoria 248-9 Holyoke, Karen Louise 298, 360 Holzknecht, Mary Ann 323 Home economics and family living department 191 Home economics and family living department head 191 Home Economics Association 282-3 Homecoming 50-3 Homoelle, Carol Ann Honaker, Anne Craighead Honeycutt, Charles Timothy Honors program coordinator 149 Honshell, Jason Honus, Linda Marrie Hood, Gerald Lynn Hood, Herb N. Hood, Keith Lancaster 360 Hood, Kelly Sue 395 Hood, Lydia Dell Hood, Mark Edward 408 Hood, Mary Elizabeth 185, 360 Hood, Rainey L. Hood, Susan Gail Hook, Sheri Ann 284 Hooker, Joyce Ann Hooker, Mary C. Rotoni Hooker, Michael Joseph Hooks, Lisa Michele Hooks, Paul Anthony 383 Hoosier, Wanda Marie 395 Hoots, Michael Ray 268 Hoover, Beverly Sue 291, 395 Hoover, Dianna Lynn Hoover, Ruth Ann Hope, Jeremy 171 Hopgood, John Keith 328-9 Hopkins, Allyson Lynn 395 Hopkins, Clayton Ray Hopkins, Curtis Lynn Hopkins, Stella A. Hancock Hopper, Deanna Lynn 383 Hopper, Donald Wayne Hopper, John Houston 332-3 Hopper, Kenton Wayne Hopper, Marcia Marquerite Hopper, Vicki Shirlene 408 Horan, John Lee Horgan, John W. 285 Horn, Cindy Sue 294, 408 Horn, Karen Ann 249, 408 Hornbeck, Thomas Earl 328-9 Horne, Chet Prather 216 Horne, Marilyn 112 Horner, Eva Catherine Horner, John C. Horner, Linda Ann Williams 172 Horner, Steven Carl Horsley, Nona Kay Hortin, Laura Ann 282, 360 Horton, Alan Lynn Horton, Myra Renee Hosek, Valerie Joan Hoskins, Mark Page Hoskins, Ronald Charles Hoskinson, Edwin Reese 408 “Hot | Baltimore” 98-9, 105 Hottell, Dennis William Hottinger, Gary Lee 291 Houchens, Lori Berry Houchens, Patricia Carol Houchin, Donald Nelson Houchin, Lloyd Richard Houchin, Ricky Neal Houchin, Rochelle Toney 270 Houck, Marcia Diane Houlton, Kim Elizabeth 395 Hour, Yih Yuan Hourigan, William 191 House, Janice Lynne 408 House, Linda Marlene House, Sandra Suzette House, Sandra White 408 House, Stephen 148-9 Householder, Jay Frederick 408 Houser, Gregory Allen 246, 395 Houser, Kimberly Jeanne 298, 323, 326 Housing 16-21 Housing director 146-7 Houston, Barbara Morris 293, 383 Houston, Gary Douglas Houston, Jane Critser 408 Howard, Barbara Leslie 179, 408 Howard, Brian Keith 271, 360 Howard, Bryan Keith Howard, Danny Joe Howard, Donna J. Howard, Felicia Gail 271 Howard, Frederick Eugene Howard, George David Howard, Georgette 408 Howard, Glenda Gay 360 Howard, Henry 168-9 Howard, James Kirk 360 Howard, Joann Marie Howard, John Steven 408 Howard, Karen Beth 344, 360 Howard, Karen Marie Howard, Kimberly Gay 360 Howard, Linda Gail 231, 360 Howard, Lois Alane Howard, Mike William 298 Howard, Opal Lee Sadler Howard, Philip Alen Howard, Rodney Gene 287 Howard, Thomas Dalkeith 395 Howard, William Thomas Howe, Gregory Wayne Howe, Jacqueline Sue 282, 327, 383 Howell, Kerry Wayne Howell, Linda Ann 408 Howell, Sara Frances 265, 408 Howell, Sherry Lynn 408 Howell, Teresa Renee 408 Howerton, Jeffrey Scott 291, 294, 298, 360 Howlett, Linda Welch Howlett, Lisa J. Howlett, Marilyn Gayle 282, 383 Howser, James Donald Hoy, Joseph Richard Hub Pizzeria 133 Hubbard, Basil Ray Hubbard, Carroll 118-9 Hubbard, Dianna Lynn 383 Hubbard, George Alan Hubbard, Laura Ann 94-5 Hubbard, Michael Wayne Hubbell, Curtis Todd 408 Huddleston, Charles Ray Huddleston, Patty Ann Hudgens, Lois Jean 299 Hudgins, Charles Fredrick Hudgins, Paula Denice Hudnall, Gregory Owen 360 Hudson, Brian Keith Hudson, Janice Camille Hudson, Jeanne Beth Hudson, John Hall Hudson, Judy Ronelia 408 Hudson, Kenneth Harold Hudson, Peggy Jo Arnold Hudson, Remus Allen Jr. 300, 395 Hudson, Vivian Carol 395 Hudspeth, James Graham Huebschman, Jon Clark 304, 383 Huey, Johnnie Katherine 323 Huff, Darrel Dene Jr. 338 Huff, Patricia Ann Huff, Terri Lynn Huffines, Billy Wayne 335 Huffman, Jane White 163 Huffman, John 118-9 Huffman, Michael Wayne Hughart, John Kevin 335 Hughes, Amy Jeanette 296, 408 Hughes, Eder Jane 295, 408 Hughes, Carol 173 Hughes, Diane W. 360 Hughes, Gary Kent Hughes, Gina Marie Hughes, Jacqueline Lee Hughes, James Michael 330, 340 Hughes, James Willis Hughes, Joe Darrell Jr. Hughes, Joseph Michael Hughes, Joyce Ann 408 Hughes, Julie Robin Hughes, Kelly Lynn 383 Hughes, Kevin Allen Hughes, Kevin Ray Hughes, Martha D. Woodson Hughes, Melodye Carol Hughes, Michael Dewayne 328-9, 395 Hughes, Pamela Jo 305, 383 Hughes, Robert Steven Hughley, Robert Searcy Jr. 408 Hulette, Elizabeth Ann Hulette, Steve Hunt 328-9 Hull, Adah 313 Hull, Richard Wayne 268 Hullett, Rose Marie 395 Hulsey, Debra Hulsey, William Edward 266 Humble, Cassandra Malone Hume, Anit a Faye 408 Hume, Catherine Lynn 360 Hume, Kimberly Ann Hume, Terri Rejean 408 Hume, Timothy D. 304, 383 Humes, Karen Ruth Humes, Kathy Sue Humes, Ronald Dale Hummer, Irby Bradford Hummer, William Fredrick 337, 395 Humphrey, Carter Leroy Humphrey, Glenn Douglas 408 Humphrey, Linda Ann 273, 395 Humphreys, Bradley Eugene Humphries, William Andrew Hundley, James S. Hungler, David Lee Hungry as a Bear 391 Hunley, John Russell 360 Hunn, Lisa Gay 291, 395 Hunt, Becky 300 Hunt, Brian E. Hunt, Carlene Sue 408 Hunt, James Frederick 383 Hunt, Kathryn Maureen 408 Hunt, Luther Mark Hunt, Naomi Irene 395 Hunt and pick 381 Hunt, Rebecca Dawn Hunt, Sondra 324 Hunt, Sue Sweatt Hunter, James Jeffrey Hunter, Karl Jerome 246 Hunter, Kathy Ann 360 Hunter, Kevin Allen 293 Hunter, Mark Alan Hunter, Matthew Todd 330-1 Hunter, Michael Gilbert Hunter, Nelson Eric Hunter, Ricky Lee 216 Hunter, Ronald Bishop Huntey, Pamela Kaye Hunton, Bobby Allen 302, 360 Hunton, Janet Sue 395 Hunton, Sharon Lee 383 Huntsman, Marilyn G. Graves Huntsman, Rickie Gene Hurdle, Chester C. Jr. Hurley, Michael William Hurst, Teresa Lynne 408 Hurt, Alan Martin 335, 395 Hurt, Gayle Booher 360 Hurt, John Harper Hurt, John L. Hurt, Julia Ann Hurt, Nina Disman Hurt, Otha Dale 395 Hurt, Valina Kay Husk, Karen Grace Husk, Rickey Earl 395 Hussey, Debra Ann 283, 285 Huston, Donnie Edward Hutcherson, Jane Kelley Hutchinson, Sharla Elise Hutchinson, Stephen Kent Hutchison, David Moorman 395 Hutto, Catherine Elaine Hutton, Bradley P. 383 Hyde, Cathy Anne 248-9 Hyde, Donna Lynn Hyde, John Charles I lacobello, Patricia Ann 360 Ice, Debra L. 360 IFC, Panhellenic, UBG 341 If they quit, the campus would notice 158-9 Iglehart, Jan Marie Igleheart, Jonathan Lee Iheme, Noel Uzoma Image breaking 340-1 Imel, Jennifer Lynn 408 Imwiehe, Greta Ann 267, 383 In fine tune 112-5 Inabnitt, Mary Jane 360 Industrial Education and Technology Club 302-3 Industrial education and technology department 188 Industrial education and technology department head 188 Ingram, Annie Foley Ingram, John Curtis Ingwersen, Charlotte Kay Inman, James E. Inman, Kenneth Harold 332-3 Inman, Sylvia Sue Osborne Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 302 Intercultural and folk studies 198 Intercultural and folk studies director 198 Interfraternity Council 82, 95, 340 Interhall Council 296 Interim president 142-3 International students 284-5 Intramurals 256-61 Ipaye, Ganiu Olatumde Ipaye, Islamiat D. Ipaye, Nasser Adisa 383 Irish William Donald Jr. 395 Irons, Timothy Collins 340 Irvin, Wanda Denise 395 Irwin, Debbie Myre Irwin, Jeffrey Lee Irwin, Scott David 241, 334-5 Irwin, Thomas Henry Isabele, John A. 360 Isbill, Michael Wayne Isenberg, Linda Kaye Isenberg, Pamela Lee Ison, Debra Darlene 360 It takes all kinds 62-3 It’s a dog’s life 310-1 It’s not mom’s cooking, but it feeds the masses 166-7 It’s not much, but it’s ‘home’ 146-7 J Jackel, Richard Allan Jackson, Alan Lawrence Jackson, Carlton 292 Jackson, Charles Wayne Jr. 302, 360 Jackson, Clarence Jr. 395 Jackson, Danny Clark Jackson, David W. Jackson, Dawn O. 395 Jackson, Dennis Arnold Jackson, Donald Wayne 391 Jackson, Donjea Maria 303, 360 Jackson, Frankie Thomas Jackson, Gregory Bernard 116, 223, 224, 226 Jackson, James A. Jackson, Jeff Alan 395 Jackson, Jeffrey Glenn Jackson, Jeffrey Trimble 383 Jackson, Jennifer Jackson, Jill Ann 294, 395 Jackson, Jimmy Bryant Jackson, Joy Lynne 360 Jackson, Julie Ann Jackson, Karen Anne Nipper Jackson, Kendra Ruth Jackson, Kevin Lynn 328-9 Jackson, Kimetha Shockley Jackson, Marcia Sue 291, 299, 360 Jackson, Paula Gayle Davis Jackson, Randall Wynn Jackson, Reginald Wayne 383 Jackson, Rita Jane Jackson, Robert Douglas Jackson, Robert Ellis 408 Jackson, Ronald Wayne Jackson, Sandra Kimberly 282, 325 Jackson, Susan Gail Jackson, Teresa Ann Lane Jackson, Timothy Scott Jackson, Vedie Jackson, Victor Michael 288-9, 295, 360 Jackson, William Lee Jackson, William Patrick 241, 395 Jaco, Lisa Karen Jacob, Milburn Alonza 395 Jacobs, Dianna Lynn 468 Jacobs, William Edward Jaffery, Adnan Osman dJaffre, Mark Robert 287 Jaggers, Jane Langley daggers, Martin Lee 50, 216, 219 Jaggers, Rondell Clayton Jaggers, Timothy R. 303 James, Angela Faye James, Cynthia Diane James, Dorita Daniella James, Howard Francis James, Howard Shelton Jr. 331, 383 James, Janice Kaye 261 James, Joanna Faye 360 James, Marla Jo 323, 395 James, Melvin Garrett James, Richie Hale James, Roger Lyle James, Ruth Penoyar James, Teresa Janett Jameson, Marilyn Diane 408 Jamison, Elisa Jo 291, 360 Janes, Bobby Wayne 284, 408 Janes, Cynthia Ann 384 Janes, Ricky Dean 360 danitz, Alfreda Ann Jansky, Jeffrey John Jarboe, Marvin Brown Jarboe, Rhonda Lynn 323, 395 Jarquin, Drago Luis M. 408 darquin, Drago Luis M. Jarvis, Howard 96 Jarvis, Marla Gaye 291, 395 Jarvis, Teresa Kay 360 dasko, Catherine Jean dJauregue, Jose Ricardo 354 Jayne, Mary Marlene Jeannette Michael Warren 223, 285, 296, 360 decker, Thomas Lyle Jefferson, David Wayne Jefferson, Jane Ellen Jefferson, Lawrence Edward Jeffries, Byron Douglas Jeffries, Debora Elaine 408 Jeffries, Mary Margaret Jenkins, David Franklin Jenkins, James 85 Jenkins, Jeff 181 Jenkins, Lee Michael Jenkins, Linda C. Hightower Jenkins, Linda Helayne Jenkins, Lisa Barnes Jenkins, Loretta Kay 395 Jenkins, Margaret Lynne 384 Jenkins, Mark Duane 358 Jenkins, Matthew Clinton 408 Jenkins, Nathan Ray 360 Jenkins, Randal Mark 270 Jenkins, Sam 326 Jenkins, Susan Emery 258, 261 Jenkins, William Donald 384 Jennings, Byron Keith Jennings, Gregory Alan Jennings, Gregory Alan Jennings, Jeff Bennett Jensen, Karan Alana Jent, Carl Wayne Jent, John Marvin dent, Rhonda Ellen 395 Jernigan, Jon Gilbert Jernigan, Leann Jessee, Brent Alan Jessie, Lonnie Ray Jewell, Ann Shirlene 325, 341 Jewell, Donna Lynn Jewell, Karen Lea 408 Jewell, Larry Douglas Jewell, Patricia Louise Jewell, Sandra Kay Jewell, Sharnell Elizabeth Jewett, Pamela Marie 324 Jimenez, Cabezas Manuel dircitano, Chris Anthony 241, 306, 408 Joffrey Il Dance Company 112, 115 Joffrion, Leslie Gordon dr. Jogging 64-5 Johanson, Jane Joanne 296 Johns, Dana Lynn Johns, Marilyn Glee Johnsen, Jeffery Lee 408 Johnson, Abraham Johnson, Alan Hugh Johnson, Angelita Marie Johnson, Artie N. Johnson, Barry Glenn Johnson, Benjamin Finney Johnson, Bertil Gunnar II] 395 Johnson, Beverly Shaver Johnson, Boyd Deatonne Johnson, Brenda Jane 384 Johnson, Brian Keith Johnson, Bridgitte L. 408 Johnson, Carolyn Johnson, Catherine E. Johnson, Chery! Lynne Johnson, Craig Miller Johnson, Cynthia Goodrum Johnson, Debora Denise Johnson, Deborah Suzanne 361 Johnson, Diana 361 Johnson, Donald Mack 395 Johnson, Donna Jo Johnson, Donnie Ray 284, 384 Johnson, Edward Lee 255 Johnson, Elizabeth Ann 408 J ohnson, Eloise B. Fogle Johnson, Era 28-9 Johnson, Eve Catherine Johnson, Gary Lee Johnson, George Pryor III Johnson, George Wayne Johnson, Glenn Ford Johnson, Herbert Lee Johnson, Iretta Kathleen Johnson, James Carl Johnson, James Henry 332-3 Johnson, Jeanette L. Johnson, Jeffrey Allen 338 Johnson, Jeffrey Davis 338 Johnson, Jerry Lamonte 166, 292 Johnson, Jerry Lee Johnson, dill Vick Johnson, Joan Darlene Johnson, Joanie Marie Johnson, John Bruce Johnson, Johnny Carl Johnson, Joseph Keith Johnson, Joseph William Johnson, Joyce Marie Johnson, Judy Lynn Johnson, Kathleen Marie Johnson, Kathryn Dee Carty Johnson, Keith Randall Johnson, Kelly Lee Johnson, Kemble 116 Johnson, Ken 310 Johnson, Kimberly Ann 116 Johnson, Larry Darnell 246 Johnson, Leonard Ervin Johnson, Lisa Ann Johnson, Lisa Raye 361 Johnson, Mare Edward 311 Johnson, Margaret Marie 384 Johnson, Marguerite Gayle Johnson, Mark Andrew 395 Johnson, Mark Lee Johnson, Martha Ann Johnson, Martha Spinks Johnson, Marty Preston Johnson, Michael Eugene Johnson, Michele Hines Johnson, Nancy Elaine 402 Johnson, Nancy Michelle Johnson, Nita Rochelle Johnson, Patricia Ann Johnson, Patricia C.S. Johnson, Paul Alan 361 Johnson, Paul Edward Johnson, Phyllis Ann Johnson, Phyllis Annette 361 Johnson, Regina Gail 391, 397 Johnson, Richard H. 395 Johnson, Rita Faye Johnson, Robert Jay Johnson, Robert Lou is 395 Johnson, Rodney Norris Johnson, Rosalyn Ann 384 Johnson, Ross Elwin Johnson, Sandra Leigh 408 Johnson, Sara Loree Johnson, Sarah Ann Johnson, Sherry Lynn 327 Johnson, Stanley Dewayne 286 Johnson, Stephen Lawrence 264 Johnson, Steven Patrick Johnson, Susan 251 Johnson, Tara Marie 384 Johnson, Teresa Lynn 323 Johnson, Thomas A, 277, 361 Johnson, Thomas Leroy 334 Johnson, Tonnette J. Johnson, Tony Lee 339, 361 Johnson, Tracey Gail 395 Johnson, Vicki Dale Johnson, Warren Edward Johnson, Wayne Kelly Johnson, William Leroy III 336 Johnston, Frances Laver 275 Johnston, Hope Suzanne 305, 361 Johnston, Phyllis Lynn Johnston, Stephen Leroy Johnston, Valerie Ann Joiner, Angela Marie 384 Joiner, Judy A. Joiner, Katherine Jean 325 Joiner, Terry V. Jolly, Byron Scott Jolly, Jerri Lynn Jolly, Joseph Dale Jolly, Loyde Allen Jones, Alfred Dean Jones, Alicia Jones, Angela Lynn Jones, Anita 249 Jones, Barry Dean 408 Jones, Barry Wesley Jones, Becky Boyd Jones, Benjamin Howard 408 Jones, Charles Benjamin Jr. 324 Jones, Charlotte Joan Jones, Curtis Lee 328-9 Jones, Cynthia Ann Jones, Daniel Carder Jones, Darryl Anthony 216 Jones, David Lee 408 Jones, David Ray Jones, Dean 361 Jones, Deborah Carol Jones, Debra Jean Jones, Donald Anthony 361 Jones, Elbert Ray Jr. Jones, Evelyn Green Jones, Floyd Jerry Jones, Frank Grant II 361 Jones, Gary William 276 Jones, Gordon F. 267 Jones, Howard E. Jones, Howard Michael Jones, James Michael Jones, Jeffrey Alan Jones, Jewel Jones, Jim 119 Jones, John Thomas Jones, John Thomas 408 Jones, John Thomas Jones, John William III Jones, Joy Renee 408 Jones, Joy Wright Jones, Judy Claire 395 Jones, Karen Arlette 408 Jones, Karen Sue Jones, Katherine Darlene 408 Jones, Kathy Douglas Jones, Keith Erwin Jones, Kenneth Franklin II Jones, Kimberly Watson 408 Jones, Laura Elizabeth Jones, Linda Carol 146, 361 Jones, Linda Jo 408 Jones, Lynda Lee 384 Jones, Mare Ivan 295 Jones, Mary Ellen Jones, Mattie Regina Jones, Max R. II Jones, Melanie Jan Jones, Melissa Diane 408 Jones, Michael Dale Jones, Micheal Ray 395 Jones, Nancy Elaine Jones, Nathaniel 216 Jones, Noble Henry Jr. 395 Jones, Othello Ben II Jones, Patricia Lynne Jones, Perry Andrew 395 Jones, Phyllis Jean Royal Jones, Robert Lee 408 Jones, Robert Stephen Jones, Robin Gale 111 Jones, Sandra Faye Jones, Sheryl Denise King Jones, Stephen Charles 338, 384 Jones, Steven Allan Jones, Steven Eugene Jones, Teresa Diane 305 Jones, Thomas Earl! 328-9 Jones, Vanessa Jean Jones, Veronnie Faye Jones, Victor Owolabi Jones, William Brent 408 Jones, William Leon Jr. Jordan, Dean Patrick Jordan, Gail Ann Jordan, John Franklin Jr. 395 Jordan, John Patrick 337 Jordan, Mary Martha 408 Jordan, Robert Lee Jordan, Ross Kimball Jordan, Sandra Jean 313 Jordan, William Joseph 330-1, 384 Jordon, Lisa Lynn 324, 395 Jos, Philip Henry Joseph, Julie Ann Journalism department 197 Journalism department head 197 Joyner, David William Judd, Alan Keith 278 Judd, Charles Mark Judd, David Michael duett, Kimberly Ray Juett, Lucy Franklin Jukes, Margaret Carol 395 Jung, Ralph Henry Jr. Jureka, Pamela Irene Jureka, Terri 199 dureka, Theresa Louise Justice, Shelia Diane dustiss, Ellen Sue 252, 408 dustiss, Karen Lynn 305, 408 Jweihan, Zuhair Arif 285, 384 K Kaczmarek, Nancy Mae Kaelin, Bernard Wayne 384 Kaelin, Byron Aloysius Kaelin, Gregory Raymond 361 Kaelin, Timothy Jean Kaewilai, Wacharin Kain, Jayne Clay 282, 408 Kaine, Timothy Kevin 330-1 Kall, Richard 361 Kalter, Carol Elaine Kamber, Douglas Allen Kane, Michael Edward Kannapel, Pat 224 Kapoor, Karl Narain 267, 304, 395 Kapp, Donald Francis Kappa Alpha 330 Kappa Alpha Psi 330-1 Kappa Delta 326-7 Kappa Delta Washboard Jamboree 316, 322, 324, 327 Kappa Pi 282-3 Kappa Sigma 320, 323, 331, 332 Karay, Hanne Happ Karate Club 266 Karen Martin 44-7 Karimi, Ali Karimi, Fereidoun 384 Karimian, Ghodratollah 384 Karl, Adrienne Elizabeth 408 Karl, Walter Gregory Karnes, Linda Jane 23, 408 Karnes, Michael Francis 298 Karr, Diane Marie 408 Kast, Kevin Lemoine 216, 395 Kaszynski, Billie Jean Katzman, Thomas Wayne 27, 29 Kaufman, Tamara Sue 332 Kaufmann, Michael Louis Kautz, Jeffrey Louis 82, 384 Kautz, Joan Kawas, John Anthony Kaylor, Rick D. Kazemi, Tabrizi Kazem Keach, David Preston 384 Keach, Glenda Kay Keady, Gene 7, 27, 208, 224, 226, 228- 9, 236 Keane, Patricia Anne Kearney, Pamela Kay 408 Keck, Thomas Bradford 336 Keel, David Bruce Keel, Karen Elaine 408 Keel, Patricia Ellen Keele, John Charles 384 Keen, Angela Lea Keen, Karen Regina Keene, Carolyn Ann 322 Keene, Janice Carol Wheat Keene, Lewis Young Keene, Mary Jo Keeney, Jenny L. Phelps Keeton, Jan Annette 277, 361 Kegarise, Jeffrey Lee 268, 395 Keith, Dale V. Keith, Deborah Kay Keith, Linda Lou Keith, Susie M. Keith, Thomas Joseph Kellem, Gary Franklin Keller, Joseph Noble 332-3 Keller, Patrick Thomas Kelley, Gary Steven 408 Kelley, Jacquelyn Ellen Kelley, Sheila Faye 384 Kelley, Ted William Kelley, Victor Louis Kelley, William Brent Kelly, Ann Denise 343, 404 Kelly, Charles Timothy 284 Kelly, James P. dr. Kelly, Jimmy Wayne 384 Kelly, John James 395 Kelly, John Martin Kelly, Karen Jo Kelly, Marsha Kaye Kelly, Mary Lee Kelly, Sherrill Lynn 299, 361 Kelly, Terry J. Kelly, Timothy Edward Kelsey, Lloyd Donald Kelsey, Martha Shuford. Kelso, Audrey Lenita 395 Kelso, Wendy Ellen 265 Keltner, David Randall Keltner, Terry Lee Kem, Jackie David 286 Kem, Nita Napier Kemble, Danny Martin 294 Kemp, Deborah Jane 89, 408 Kemp, Elizabeth Ann Kemp, Gretchen 408 Kemp, Ina Joan Kemp, Lloyd Crewdson III Kemp, Rene Marie Kemper, Michael Allan 395 Kemper, Randy Allen 328-9, 340, 361 Kemper, Sandra C. Clifton Kempf, Byron Ray 395 Kempt, Gretchen 249 Kenady, Laura Kaye Kendall, David Lee Kennedy, Auddie Conway Kennedy, Lisa Marie 384 Kennedy, Mark Gordon Kennedy, Marsha Karen 361 Kennedy, Ruth Anne Kennedy, William 45 Kenner, Howard Dudley Kenner, Michael David 361 Kenney, Mary Haddock Kentucky Association of Nursing Students 304-5 Kentucky Library and Museum 116 Kentucky Library and Museum director 152 Kentucky Public Health Association 304-5 Keown, Charles 165, 208, 313, 399 Keown, Jennifer 151 Keown, Jewell 151 Keown, Stephanie 151 Keown, Charlotte Ruth 395 Keown, Paula Elaine Kepley, Douglas Miles 408 Kepley, Susan Rene Keplinger, David Charles Keplinger, Dennis Lee Ker, Eric Liang Uin Kereiakes, Dean Bartley Kerns, Cathy Diane 395 Kerr, Daniel Alan Kerr, Karen Ann 291, 384 Kerr, Lisa Gayle Dowell Kerr, Rhonda Ann 395 Kerr, Thomas Lee 327 Kerr, William John Kerrick, Sara-Lois 280 Kerrigan, Ann Frances Kersey, Regina Kay Kersting, Frank 208, 275 Kessinger, David Lynn 27 Key, Jamie Jones Key, Kelly Patrick 216 Key, Kimmy Cecil Key, Markita Ann 94-5, 318-9, 327, 384 Key, Nancy Norreta Key, Pamela Anne 344 Key, Stacey Jeanine 395 Key, Wanda Jane Keys, Carol Jean Khabbaz, Saberi Hamid Khamaktchian, Ali Khannajad, Majid Khanzad, Farshied Khomeini, Ayatollah 121 Kidstuff 102-5 Kie, Emma Louise Kieta, Michael Anthony 268 Kiger, Alica Jean 291 Kikuchi, Kazue Kikuchi, Kazue Kille, Bruce Ralph Kille, Kathy Louise 274 Killebrew, Forrest Clinton 246 Killebrew, Mark Clark Killian, Mildred Ann 323, 384 Kiltz, William Bradley 337 Kimberland, Patricia Renee 408 Kimberlin, Brian Lee Kimbler, Jane Tucker D. Kimbler, Robert Michael Kimbro, David Scott Kimbro, Melissa L. White Kimbrough, J. Laughton Kimbrough, Janet Leigh Kimbrough, Ray Edward Kimmel, Jennifer Dawne 53, 236-7, 361 Kimmel, Kathryn Layne 301, 306, 323 Kimmel, Sandra Ann 408 Kincaid, Donna Jill 408 Kincaid, Yolanda Renee 395 Kindschi, Greg Allen King, Cary Cloyse 408 King, Danny Ray 395 King, Debra Renae King, Dennis Lee King, Florence Morse 126 King, Gordon Harold King, Granville III 361 King, James Robert King, John A. King, Joseph Anthony 355 King, Julia Anne Devine King, Karen Carter King, Kimberly Annette 361 King, Lesli 126 King, Lydia Jean King, Mare Alan 126 King, Phillip Vernon King, Randall Edward King, Robert Garry King, Robert L. King, Sheryl Denise 298 King, Thomas Edwin King, Thomas Michael King, Tracy Keith King, Valerie Lea Kingery, Sheila Ann 395 Kingrey, Marla Jo 291, 297, 361 Kinkade, Darrell Craig Kinkel, Vickie Rae 323 Kinkel, Wendy Jean 323 Kinnaird, Mark Steven Kinnamon, Kevin Patrick Kinnett, Brenda Sue 361 Kinney, Glenn Alan Kinney, Sherida Thompson Kinser, George Earl Kinslow, Robert W. Kinsner, Daniel Craig Kinsner, Sandy Gail 323, 408 Kinzel, Wayne Morris 300 Kiper, Beverly Ann Calvert Kiper, Shirley Lynn 380, 384 Kirby, Deborah Faye 395 Kirby, Elizabeth Gail 275 Kirby, Helen Joyce 361 Kirby, Peggy L. Kirby, Phillip Leo Kirby, Robert Vernon Kirby, Ron R. Kirby, Saundra Terrenee 384 Kirby, Steven Keith 361 Kirk, James Edwin Kirk, Rosemary 282, 384 Kirkwood, Elizabeth Rae Kirkwood, Jon Kevin Kirkwood, Nancy Ellen Kirtley, Jeffery Lynn Kitchen, Carrie Lynne 408 Kitchen, Phyllis Diannie Kitchens, Betty Patrice Kitchens, Charles W. Jr. Kittinger, Matthew Todd 332-3, 340 Kittrell, Zane Gray 361 Kiwiet, Laetitia Liesbeth 395 Kixmiller, William F. 216, 361 Klaine, Mark Lawrence Klarer, Amy 384 Klarer, Kathryn Ann 395 Klecka, Robert Allen Jr. 216, 408 Klein, Barbara-Christina Klein, Elizabeth Ann 284, 384 Kleinholter, Linda Maureen 304, 361 Kline, Caryl Ann Klinkers, Jane Marie 408 Klinkers, Jo Ann 409 Klinkers, Jo Ann Klompus, Debora Maureen 24, 409 Klunder, Kimberly Sue Knauer, Daryl Bruce 277, 384 Knicely, Carrol] 133 Knight, Ballarie Jan Knight, Barry A. 268, 384 Knight, Beverly Kay Knight, Charles Stephen Knight, Christopher David 409 Knight, Stephen Howard Knight, Sylvia Bowers Knott, Deborah Elizabeth Knox, Kathryn Anne 395 Koeckert, Mary Louise 241, 285 Koenig, Laura Winton Koester, Teresa Diane Kohl, Lorie Jean 361 Kohls, Pamela Kay 409 Kohls, Pamela Kay Kokalis, Nancy Mary Kolb, Darrell Leigh Kolb, Dennis Lee 286 Koller, John Jeffrey Koller, Michael David 409 Kollmansperger, Deborah L. Koop, C. Everett 96-7 Koper, Kelly Ann Korell, Barbara Jean 324 Korn, Michael Edward Koruschak, Phillip Arthur Koss, Paul Francis Kothlow, Bradley Allen Kovonuk, Alexis Jean 361 Kowalewski, David 361 Kowalke, Wilbur Krajewski, Mark Joseph Krakoviak, Sally 64, 238-9 Krampe, Leesa Kay 291, 395 Krantz, Jeffrey Lane Kraus, Eugenia A. Linam Kraus, Mary Patricia 304, 384 Krause, Karen Jean 395 Krausen, William Scott 409 433 James, Richie Krausen, William Krausse, Kimberly Karole Kreisler, Lisa Karol Kreke, Richard Michael Kremer, Janet Ann 299, 395 Kremmer, Elizabeth A. 325, 409 Krenkowitz, Michael S. Kreutzer, Jon Adryan Krider, Donald William 276, 294 Krigbaum, Stephen John 241 Krisle, Marcia Ann Kruger, Gay Nell 361 Kruwell, Jeanne Marie Kruwell, Vicki Lynn 361 Kuchenbrod, Darlene Ann 171-3, 396 Kuckens, Craig Alan 334 Kuddes, Kevin Logan 260, 334 Kuegel, James Scott 330-1, 384 Kuegel, John Keith Kuegel, Joseph Michael Kuenzel, David Symmes Kufeji, Sina Olayinka 409 Kuhn, Douglas Bernard Jr, 409 Kuhn, Mary Jo 102, 380 Kukleski, Robert Mark Kummer, Kathryn Lise 361 Kung, Hsiang Ching Kunkel, Mark Allen 216 Kunz, Jack 246 Kunz, John Francis 384 Kupferle, Leonard Trommer Kupstaitis, James Pierce Kuster, Elaine Elizabeth Kuykendall, Teresa Collins Kuzma, Jerome Albert 363 Kuzma, Mark Andrew Kwok, George Kyle, George Willard L La Coste, Robert Wayne “La Traviata” 98-100 Laborda, Lee Manuel Lacaden, Dobehi L 108-9, 283, 409 Lacaden, Lenetta Lacy, Deborah Jeane 326 Lacy, Natasha Faith 282, 409 Lacy, Perry Lee Lacy, Rebecca Ann Ladd, Kenneth M. Ladd, William Benjamin Ladies in waiting 375 Laffoon, Julia Ann Laforge, Cynthia Lu Lagrange, Robert Paul Lagutchik, Ellen Camille 396 Laha, Duke Tyrone 260, 409 Laine, Gordon Edward Laine, Patricia Renee 295, 396 Lair, John Shea 301, 304, 363 Lake, Clifton Blaine 396 Lake, Denny 27 Lally, Mary Ann Lam, Kathy Oneal 71, 281, 289, 327, 396 Lamaster, Samuel Sterling Lamb, Clifton Gregory 363 Lamb, Cynthia 126, 363 Lamb, Lee Ann Lamb, Sherry Lanette 409 Lambda Chi Alpha 332-3 Lambda Chi Alpha Charity Bowl 323 Lambert, Owen D. Lambert, Sandy Birdwell Lambirth, Cindy Cornell 409 Lampert, Dawn Elizabeth 396 Lampman, Tammy Ann Lampton, Debra Lynn Lancaster, Alisa Kay 396 Lancaster, Darrell Wayne Lancaster, Joe Lacy Jr. Lancaster, William Reece Lance, Lorifay 363 Land, Cheryl Kay Landahl, James Edward Landers, Vernon Douglas Jr. Landry, Tony 285 Landrum, Sandra Gail Lane, David W. 335 Lane, George 46 Lane, Holly Susan 409 Lane, James Carter 328-9, 396 Lane, James L. Lane, John Richard 274, 396 Lane, Linda Claire 384 Lane, Mark Timothy 270 Lane, William Bradley dr. Laney, Elizabeth Ann Laney, Sandra J. Rightmyer 252 Laney, Shirley 252 Lang, George Malcolm Jr. Lang, Patrice Morris Langan, Lesa Gail Lange, Janice Sims 275 Langford, Arthur 82 Langford, Charles Filmore 363 Langford, Randy Dewitt 267 Langford, Selina Iris 396 Langley, Betty 251 Langley, Kimberley Jean 409 Langley, Linda Sue Snapp Langley, Melenthia Hodge 363 Langley, Robert Leroy 332-3, 409 Lanham, Charles Daniel Lanham, David Glen Lanham, George Lindsay Lanham, John Anthony 274 Lanham, Joie 274-5 434 Krausse, Kimberly Lewis, Wendell Lanham, Wayne Edward Lanier, Anthony Wayne Lanier, Dinah Claire Lanier, Lucinda Lanman, William L. Lanphear, Donald Scott Largen, Harriet Renee 410 Largen, Harry 120, 144-5, 208 Larimore, Leslie Steven 216 Larkin, David Lewis Larkin, Kevin Paul 328-9 Larkins, Joseph Prestley 363 Larson, Kevin Louis Larson, Timothy Michael Larue, Gentry Carnelius Jr. Lashlee, Karen Lynn Lashley, Sharlene Lasley, Kendall Ray 410 Lastufka, Mark Robert 330 -1, 363 Latham, Barbara Lynn Latham, Danny Latham, Donna Rosalie 410 Latham, Jerry Neal Lau, Lilyc Bee Jin Lee Lau, Theodore Robert Laubenheimer, Joyce Ann 242-3, 287, 384 Law, Brent Holman 153, 294, 410 Law, James Dwight Lawhon, Teresa Suzanne Lawlace, Lawrence Jay Lawless, Andrew Paul Lawless, Donald Charles 384 Lawless, Jacqulyn J. 396 Lawless, Janis Slinker Lawless, Micheal Edward Lawrence, Bobby Joe 285, 300 Lawrence, Carol Sue Lawrence, Claudia Eileen Lawrence, David Anthony 292-3 Lawrence, David H. 292, 363 Lawrence, Glen Herman Jr. 396 Lawrence, Lisa Ann Lawrence, Michael Kent Laws, Judy Kay 396 Laws, Katherine Annette Lawson, Beth Ann 384 Lawson, Charles Edward II 410 Lawson, Connie Fran Lawson, Kenneth Ray Lawson, Owen 116-7 Lawson, Patricia A. Lawson, Shirley M. Stephens Lawson, Tonya Michalle 286-7, 396 Lawson, Warren Michael Lawson, Yvonne Renee Lay, Sandra Kepley Layer, Matthew D. 284 Laying down the law for the university 150-1 Layman, Martin William Layne, Bruce B. Layne, Jay Edward Lazarus, Rhea 145 Lea, Sandra Clair Leach, Cynthia Chryl 410 Leach, Deborah Evans Leach, Dwight A. 410 Leach, Karen J. Cook 410 Leach, Richard Lee 265, 292, 303, 363 Leach, Robert Layne 271, 384 Leahy, Chris Clark Leahy, David Joseph 363 Leahy, James Daniel Leaman, Michelle Elaine 269 Leath, Jo Ann Leathem, Mickel Owen Leathers, Arlon Edward Jr. Lebkuecher, Jefferson G. Lecraw, Cynthia D. Frost Lectures 96-7 Ledesma, Roberto A. 240-1, 396 Ledford, Cletus Mae Lee, Annabel 410 Having a (snow)ball IN THE BEGINNINGS of making a snowman, Brent Arritt and Jeanne Woodall roll snowballs in the field behind Pearce-Ford Tower. The juniors said it was too early that day to study, so they decided to have some fun. Lee, Belinda Kay 320, 323 Lee, Cheryl Denise Lee, Cynthia Ellen Lee, David 124 Lee, Deborah Lynn 410 Lee, Derek Ray Lee, Doug 243 Lee, Gregory Vincent 216 Lee, Insung Oaks Lee, James Carter Lee, James Owen 335 Lee, Jeffrey Lynn Lee, John Dennis Jr. 363 Lee, Joseph Burl Jr. Lee, Kenney Reed 384 Lee, Kent D. Lee, Laura Melissa 322 Lee, Leo Harold 384 Lee, Lisa Graves 363 Lee, Lori Ann Lee, Marguerite Laverne 396 Lee, Renee Shawn Lee, Robert Edgar Jr. Lee, Robin Elizabeth Lee, Roger Dale 333 Lee, Ronald Eugene Lee, Sheila J. 410 Lee, Thomas Charles 100 Lee, Tommy A. Lee, William Douglas III 266 Leese, Howard 73 Leffew, Jimmie Dale 284 Legler, David Matthew Lehman, Ernie L. 410 Lehmenkuler, Virginia 171-2, 192-3 Lehn, Nancy Shimer 396 Leibfreid, Bobby Ray Leidgen, Robert Blaine 335, 396 Leneave, Charles Kevin 275, 363 Leneave, Robert Gregory Lenn, John Herndon Lennis, Fernando Enrique 396 Lennon, John Michael 216 Lentz, Alfred W. Jr. Lentz, Karen Gayle 282, 384 Leonard, Beverly 108 Leonard, Carla Dean 410 Leonard, Julia Rose Leonard, Paul Konrad Leonard, Rob 98 Leonard, Willi am 78, 100 Lescelius, Shirley Ann Lesch, Joseph Thomas Leslie, Gregory Leon 410 Leslie, James Anthony 286, 294, 384 Leslie, Sandy Lee 257 Lessenberry, Leigh L. Lessley, Carol Jeanne 384 Lester, Donald Robert II Lester, Virginia Trout 384 Lettering 370-1 Leu, Lih Jen Sun Leu, Neng Chyang Leucht, Brett Ethan Leung, Edward Yee Chung Leung, Euphemia Yee-Fun Leveridge, Barbara Jean Levi, Karen Yvonne Lewis, Alex Dywane Lewis, Chery! Shillistina 396 Lewis, Darlene Lewis, Fanniellen Joyce Lewis, James P. 284 Lewis, Joseph Catron 216 Lewis, Leon Jr. 363 Lewis, Lisa Claire 296 Lewis, Margaret Ann Lewis, Patricia Ann 295 Lewis, Richard Wayne Lewis, Sandra Jean Lewis, Susie G. 284 Lewis, Teddi Rae Lewis, Tina Marie 304, 363 Lewis, Wendell Lamont 410 Lezhnev Ali 176-7 Lezhnev, Vsevold 176-7 Library science department 191 Library science department head 191 Library services director 152 Liegl, Jodi Ann 396 Lierman, Diane Carol Lievers, Russell Joseph Life in the fast lane 40-3 Lifesaving 173 Lightsy, John Sheldon 384 Like father, unlike son 357 Likens, Terri 384, 426-7 Likness, Steven Dean Lile, James Michael Liles, Sandra Marie 396 Lillard, Cindy Jo 410 Lillard, Tommy Calvin 284 Linarez, Maria Auxiliadora 284 Linarez, Oswaldo Ignacio Lincoln, Frank Charles Lind, Jennifer Louise Lindenberg, Gary David 363 Lindenschmidt, Lisa Kay 384 Lindsey, George Thomas Lindsey, James Robert 363 Lindsey, Jeffery 297, 396 Lindsey, Steven Douglas 396 Lindsey, Susan Annette 384 Lindsey, Susan Gail Lindsey, Van Lee 326 Linguai, Sharon J. 275 Link, Daryl Ray Link, Jeffery David 338, 410 Link, Kathleen Elaine Link, Kathryn Lynn Link, Naomi Bernice Link, Sheri Lyn 396 Linnig, Deborah Lynn - Linz, Carol Lee Lipford, Nancy Lynn 396 Liphford, Marisha Nell 396 — Mark Lyons Litchfield, Nancy Rebecca 384 Little, Alan Lloyd Little, Brenda Bailey Little, Connie Lesa 410 Little, John William Little, Michael Allen Little, Penny J. Laminack 128-9 Little, Vickie R. Hinton 305, 363 Littlejohn, Deborah Faye 456 Littlejohn, Karen Renee 363 Littlejohn, Robert Thomas Littrell, Janine Ann Liu, David Hon Nam Liu, Walter W-T Lively, Marsha Ann Livers, Don Cameron 330-1, 384 Livers, Rebecca Sue 410 Livesay, Donna Lee Livesay, Susan Katherine Living space 16-21 Livingston, David Timothy Livingston, Pamela Kaye 261, 316, 324 Lloyd, Leslie Lynn 271 Lloyd, Lola June Hale Loafman, Carole Ann Loague, Lanny Henry Jr. Lobb, Anthony Leo Lobb, Ralph E. Locke, Barry Vandiver Jr. Locke, Perry 265, 302 Locke, R. Ann Humphries Locke, Scott Childs Locke, Vanessa Lynn Lockhart, Debra Lynn Lockhart, James Ray 396 Lockhart, Phillip Sydnor 51, 363 Lockhart, Thomas Ralph Lockhart, Tony Warren Lockin, Jane Ryan 231, 232, 234-5, 285, 410, 428-9 Loewen, Roger 280 Loftis, Margaret Ann 384 Loftus, Mary Anne Logan, Athena J. 384 Logan, Ben Threlkeld 291 Logan, Glenda F. Harlow 384 Logan, Glenn Allen 338 Logan, Rebecca Ann Logan, Tamara Lynn 267, 291 Logan, Teresa Darlene Logsdon, Clyde Patrick 363 Logsdon, Curtis 89, 90 Logsdon, Darryl Dwayne 410 Logsdon, David Thomas Logsdon, Janice Skaggs Logsdon, John Brett Logsdon, John Paul 328-9 Logsdon, Linda Marie 396 Logsdon, Rhonda Laureen Logsdon, Theresa Burnette 410 Logsdon, Timothy Eugene Logsdon, Wilma Rucker Logue, Vernice Eugene 336 Lohman, Nancy Louise 384 Loid, Kirby Riggs Lombard, Philip Charles Jr, Long, Benjamin Craig Long, Craig Allen 216, 410 Long, David Brian 210-1 Long, David Nathan Long, Dennis Ray 384 Long, Donna Ann 363 Long, Dorothy Elizabeth Long, Hugh Randall Long, James Clifton Long, Marline 384 Long, Martha Taylor Long, Richard Dewayne Long, Robin Lynn Long, Shelly Sue 410 Long, Stuart Walker Long, William Eugene 102 Looking for Mr. President 132-3 Lopez, Alvaro 410 Lopez, Belkys Esperanza Lopez, Jorge A. Lopez, Sandra Carol Homan Lopezsalmeron, Maria E. Lopolito, Jean Marie 410 Lopolito, Vincent Kenneth 286, 384 Lord, Carl David 363 Lord, Leah Charise 410 Lorenz, Christina A. Lorson, Tony 103 Lorton, Kevin Clark Losso, Christopher Edward 244, 246 Losson, Margaret Melissa 252 Lough, Laura Ann 410 Lovell, Darrell Wayne 337 Lovell, Jeffery Warren 363 Lovell, Joseph Stephen Lovell, Lista Ann Lovell, Randy Scott 337 Lovell, Rebecca Sue Lovell, Sarah Bratcher Lovell, Timothy Joseph 384 Lovell, William A. III 396 Lovely, Mark Steven 384 Loving, Laura Lynn Lovorn, Saundra L. Stafford Lowe, Donna Lloyd 410 Lowe, Gregory 286 Lowe, Judy Ann 282, 410 Lowe, Mary Ann Lowe, Todd Parker 330-1 Lowe, Valerie Lee Lowery, Reginia Ann Lowery, Renita Colleen Low pay, long hours mark doctors’ careers 154-5 Lowry, Ann Marie Lowry, Kathy Jean Money Lowther, William M. Loxley, Janice Marie 410 Loy, Linda Sue Swanson Loy, Nancy Kate Depp Lu, Ho Lucas, Cheryl Lynn Runyon 363 Lucas, David Oneal Lucas, Keith Anthony Lucas, Kenneth Marvin Lucas, Nancy Ellen Lucas, Robert Edward 410 Lucas, Yvette Denise 384 Lucker, Debbie 351 Ludden, Keith J. Ludlow, Beverly Melton Lueke, Deborah Ann Luepnitz, Nancy Elizabeth Lullo, John Felix 216 Lummis, Jennifer Lynn 364 Lunsford, Connie K. Turner Lusby, Mark Alan Lusco, Juanita Rochelle Luton, Thomas Herbert Luttrell, Leslie Jo 291, 305, 396 Luurtsema, Dave Roger Luxon, Robert Edwin Lykins, Debra Ann 111, 364 Lyle, Peggy Emily Jean Lyle, Steven Wayne 286, 364 Lyles, Lisa Michelle Lyles, Mary Melissa 396 Lynch, Debra Davis Lynch, James Douglas 335, 410 Lynch, Jamie William 364 Lynch, Lonnie Marcum Lynch, Melinda Lee Humes 384 Lynch, Tommy P. Lynch, William Joseph Lynn, Sandra Kay 326 Lynum, Zebedee Ivan 216, 332-3 Lyon, Debra Larimore Lyon, Patricia Alexander Lyons, David Mitchell Lyons, Debra Gay Lyons, Gregory L. 271 Lyons, Mark Edward 280 Lyons, Nancy Therese 275, 364 Lyons, Robin Ray 364 Lythgoe, Sharon M. 410 Lyton, Quintindale 270, 410 M Mabry, Norma Susan 323 MacConaugha, Hope Ellen MacDonald, Margaret S. 285, 364 Machines aren’t taking over society, but computer science majors may be 180-5 Macke, Charles Claypool Macy, Thomas Bruce Madden, David Brent Madden, Sean Michael 252 Madden, Shannon Eve Madden, Shawn 252 Maddern, Brenda Jean Maddox, Judy Lynn 410 Maddox, Karen Lynn 322, 364 Maddox, Katherine Leigh 322 Maddox, Theresa Wood Madewell, Sherry Lynn 324, 410 Madison, Nancy Elaine 410 Madison, William Alan 84 Madon, Celia Lee Magee, Carey Lynn Magers, Susan Lynn 384 Maggard, Jennifer R. Maggard, Robert Print 337 Maglinger, Robin Jo 396 Mahan, Sally Elizabeth 326 Mahaney, Joel Neal Mahlalela, Reuben Ntunu Mahnke, Colleen Marie Mahoney, Charles Patrick 384 Mahoney, Laura Ann 384 Maier, Harold Francis 364 Main, Susanne Erica 396 Mainland, Beverly Jane 364 Maiuri, Regina Anne 297, 396 Majors, Gregory Lee 396 Making news about entertainment 288-9 Making tracks 349 Makosholo, Margaret C. Mallay, James Patrick Malone, David 307 Malone, Felecia Germaine 313 Malone, Janet Cathleen 193, 287, 397 Malone, Roger Allen 276-7, 384 Malone, Shirley L. 323 Malone, Sylvia Ruth Malry, Susan 263 Maltry, Rose M. “Man in the Moon” 104 Manasco, Kimberly Jo Mangin, Lindsay Ross Mangus, Michael Charles 277, 303, 384 Manis, Melinda Susan 325, 364 Manis, Susan Renee Manley, Carolyn Ruth Mannel, Joann Manning, Barbara Jane Manning, John S. Manning, Robin Kay Manning, Ronald 271 Mannino, Cheryl Anne Mansfield, Elva Joyce Mansfield, Leah Margaret 267 Mansouri, Hossein Maple, Barry Dwight Maple, Marcia Elaine Maple, Mona Leisa Maples, Terry Vance Maples, William David Jr. 267, 397 Maranatha 24, 284-5 Marbury, Marjorie R.A. Marcroft, Karen A. Marcum, Alecia E. 284, 298-9, 364 Marcum, Alecia D. Marion, Harold Wayne Markham, James Jr. Marketing Club 298 Markle, Paul Stuart 330-1 Marks, Deborah Lee Marks, Donna Lynn 327, 410 Marlow, Keitha Lynn 397 Marlow, Michaele Shane 277 Marlow, Mike S. 384 Marohnic, Linda Dupree Marquess, Lawrence M. Marquette, Jacquelyn L. Marr, Denise Michelle 364 Marsh, Berlinda Ann Marsh, Donald Golden Marsh, Pamela Jean 323 Marshall, Charles Earl Marshall, James Raymond 364 Marshall, John Glasgow Marshall, Marilyn Joyce 344, 364 Marshall, Mary Judith Marshall, Robert Rodimon 246 Marshall, Teresa Kaye Marsteller, Thomas Eugene 304 Martell, Raymond Flynn Martin, Billy Joe 104 Martin, Bonnetta Michelle Martin, Charles Edward Martin, Cindy Jean Martin, Connie Marie Martin, Cur tiss Almonte 304 Martin, Cynthia Louise 291 Martin, David Robert Martin, Deena Sue 271, 384 Martin, Edwina Ruth 410 Martin, Elizabeth Ann Martin, George David Martin, Glyn Sandford Martin, Jim Martin, Johnny Craig Martin, Joseph David Martin, Karen Elaine 13, 44-47, 287, 296, 384 Martin, Keith Blaine 384 Martin, Kenneth Allen Martin, Linda Stiles Martin, Lisa Gay 410 Martin, Margaret Louise Martin, Mark Daniel 397 Martin, Mona Lee Martin, Pamela Michell Martin, Patricia Sue 384 Martin, Paul Edward 260, 268, 384 Martin, Phyllis Elaine 325 Martin, Robert Alan Martin, Robert Daves 338, 364 Martin, Robert Earl Martin, Robert Samuel 364 Martin, Russell Jr. Martin, Ruth Matney Martin, Sabra Elaine 410 Martin, Sandra K. Mattingly 364 Martin, Sheila Diane Martin, Shirley Holzapfel Martin, Susan Haynes Martin, Terry Evelyn 325, 384 Martin, Thomas Allin 300 Martin, Timothy Lee Martin, Tommy Lyle Martin, Tony 300 Martin, Vickie Lynn 269 Martin, William Stanley Marvel, Paul Alan Marx, Richard Scott Masannat, George 202-3 Mason, Carole Lynn Parrott Mason, Cecelia A. Mason, Cynthia Lynne Mason, Joseph William 241, 410 Mason, Kimberly Ann Mason, Martha Bryant Mason, Martin Lee 254-5 Mason, Perry Richard 410 Mason, Randall Scott Mason, Robert E. Lee 284 Mason, Sharon Kay Mason, Wayne McKinley Mass exodus 22-3 Massie, Cathy Price 291 Massie, Kevin David 268 Massie, Thelma Mae Masters, Debra Rose Mastropasqua, Cheryl Kay Mastropasqua, Joseph Adam Mathematics and computer science department 182 Mathematics and computer science department head 182 Matheny Eloise Marie 249, 384 Mather, Cathy Lynn Matherly, Kimberly Elaine Matheson, Daniel Robert 306, 384 Mathews, Orval Ray Mathews, Pamelia Rene Mathis, Candy Denise Mathis, Gary Wayne Matlock, Angela Elizabeth 410 Matlock, Karen Marie 410 Matlock, Michael Owen 268 Matlock, Vena Leann 397 Matterson, Dan 260 Matthews, Herman David 397 Matthews, Jack Lambert 384 Matthews, Joy Darlene Matthews, Kevin Todd Matthews, Lovic Clay Matthews, Luther Kevin 24 Matthews, Mark Allen Matthews, Russell Eugene 364 Matthews, Terri Lee Matthews, Timothy Allan 397 Mattingly, Alfred Clark 318-9 Mattingly, Ann Michelle 410 Mattingly, Bryan Taylor Mattingly, Dennis Lee 397 Mattingly, John Samuel Mattingly, Joseph Ernest 410 Mattingly, Laura Suzanne 24, 397 Mattingly, Michael Clark 365 Mattingly, Michael Kenneth 264 Mattingly, Michael Thomas 410 Mattingly, Robert Raley f Mattingly, Thomas Daniel 332-3 Mattingly, William B. III 365 Mauney, Paul Brian Mauntel, Robert Timothy 241 Maurice, Diane Irene Mauzey, Pamela G. 275 Mauzy, William Alex Max, D ouglas Dean 246 Maxey, Eric Emils Maxfield, Alesha Irene 410 Maxfield, Judith Catherine 410 May, George Edward May, Glen Lowry 365 May, Joel Andrew 223 May, Sharon Gay 315, 325 Mayberry, Michael Shannon Mayer, Mark 338 Mayes, Debra Jo Duncan 265 Mayes, Dennis Lee Mayes, Lucinda Lee Mayes, Randy McGowan Mayes, Rita Jones Mayes, Rodney D. Mayes, Roger Clarence Mayeur, Stephen Gerard Mayfield, Michael Eugene Mayhew, Linda Sue 410 Mayhew, Mark Allen Mayhugh, Joel Marce Mayhugh, Lecia Kay Mayhugh, Monica Lee 323, 410 Mayhugh, Sharon Elaine 397 Maynard, Betty Jo 397 Mayo, Rebecca Lynn 325 Mays, Mark Landis Mazzolini, Edward F. McAninch, Carol Jean 384 McBrayer, James H. McBrayer, Mary 296 McBrayer, Terry 123, 296 McBride, Leigh Allyson 410 McCaleb, Lucinda Lee 85, 365 McCall, David Loran McCandless, Belvia Copass McCandless, Bobby Clinton McCandless, Kerry Philip McCane, Robin Lou 410 McCann, Michael Paul McCarthy, Caryl Lynne 397 McCarthy, Deborah Ann McCarthy, Erin Marie McCarthy, Melanie Marie 410 McCarty, Donald Elliott Jr. McCarty, Joseph Stewart 153 McCarty, Ladonna Sue 410 McCarty, Michael Jordan McCarty, Steven Donald McCathern, Linda Fay McCauley, Elizabeth Ann 266 McCauley, Robert Allen McCaulley, Maryanne Rush 384 McChesney , William Mark 271, 273 McClain, Susan Elizabeth McClamrock, Scott Thomas McClanahan, Judy Lynn 384 McClarnon, Holly Shaw 397 McClarnon, Mary Lee 397 McClean, Audrey P. 270 McCleese, Diana Lynn McCleese, Mary Lou 384 McClendon, Margaret K. McClendon, Thomas Robert 384 McClendon, William H. McCloud, Ben 244 McCloud, Charles D. 389 McClure, Deborah Jolyn 325, 410 McClure, Thomas Jay 241 McConnell, Harold Owen McConnell, Jeffrey Dale 275 McCord, James Grover 252 McCord, Thomas Ross McCormack, Phyllis Anne McCormack, Susan Anita McCormick, Craig Charles 223, 226 McCormick, Doris Elaine 313, 384 McCormick, Mary Leslie 322, 365 McCoy, Claude David McCoy, Donna Jean 410 McCoy, Karen Rae McCoy, Lisa Catherine McCoy, Mary Ada McCoy, Teresa Claire McCoy, Thomas Wayne McCoy, Timothy Allen 265, 410 McCracken, David Rea 338, 340 McCray, Curtis Earl McCreery, Marianne Miriam McCrocklin, Richard Wayne 410 McCrory, Glenda Ann McCubbin, Kimberly Joan McCubbin, Linda Mae 365 McCubbin, Paula Robin McCubbins, Julia Ann McCubbins, Tammy Jean 410 McCulloch, James Clarke McCullough, Janet Louise 50-3, 326, 335 McCullough, Levy Hunter 268, 397 McCullough, Shawn Elise 314, 323 McCullum, Stephen Grant 397 McCutchen, Brenita Flippin 435 Lezhnev McCutchen, Brenita McDaniel, David Lynn 410 McDaniel, Kerry Allen McDaniel, Martha Kaye 410 McDaniel, Mary Ann 410 McDaniel, Stacy Ann 327, 410 McDaniel, William Bruce McDavitt, Robert Wayne McDivitt, Norris Edwin Jr. 282 McDonald Ann Renee McDonald, Gregory Keith 337, 397 McDonald, Jerry Allan 365 McDonald, John Martin 271, 384 McDonald, Joseph Bryant 285 McDonald, Sandra Jo 410 McDonough, Joan Melissa McDonough, Kevin Thomas McDonough, Laura Kathleen 323 McDougal, Irvin Bradley McElroy, Donita Elaine McElroy, Mary V. McElroy, Susan Parr 304, 365 McElroy, Vicki J. Whitlow McFadden, Brenda Maxine 365 McFadden, Donna Renea 397 McFadden, Tyra Roshella McFall, Steven Micheal McFarland, Cynthia Renea McFarland, Gary Lea 384 McFarland, Vicelia Kay McFarron, Paula J. 410 McFinnis, Nada 322 McGahee, Kimberly Kay McGaughey, Gregory Lance McGaughey, Nick W. McGee, Walter Burchett McGehee, Terry Lee 410 McGhee, Bobby Jack McGinnis, Nada Edith 410 McGinnis, Susan Faye 322, 385 McGinnis, Thomas Dean McGinnis, William Roger 330-1 McGirk, John Turner McGlothlin, Denita Lee McGowan, Bettye Louis McGrath, Kavin Dale 219, 410 McGraw, Janet Leslie McGregor, Holly Millicent McGregory, Jackie 301 McGuffey, Robbie Alan McGuffin, Arthur M. Ill 223, 365 McGuffin, Deniece Ann 410 McGuire, Donald Kreis Jr. 320, 336, 365 McGuire, Lisa A. Gossett McGuire, Michael Thomas McHorney, Colleen Ann McIntosh, Gwen Elizabeth 410 MclIntosh, Kevin Mark 410 McIntyre, Kevin Virgil 397 McIntyre, Lincoln Bryan 365 Mclvor, Cheryl Anne McJoynt, David Thomas McKay, John Barber McKee, Anne Elizabeth 324 McKee, Anthony E. McKee, Harold Dean 52 McKenzie, Terry William 397 McKenzie, Timothy Russell 397 McKeown, Wendell Bruce McKinley, Jeffrey Allen McKinley, Linda Louise McKinley, Patricia Vick McKinley, Sandra Lou McKinney, Albert F. 332-3 McKinney, David Anthony McKinney, Gregory Lee McKinney, Kenneth Ray 410 McKinney, Laura Jean McKinney, Michael Darrell McKinney, Pamela Sue 397 McKinney, Paul Simpson McKinney, Phillip Victor McKinney, Tami Suzanne 397 McKinney, Terry Lynn 410 McKinney, Timothy Ray McKinney, Valeria Annette 365 McKinney, William Ray McKoin, Georgianna H. 385 McLaughlin, John Joseph McLaughlin, Linda Mae McLean, Angela De Veria 299, 366 McLean, Audrey Patrice McLeod, Benjamin Frank McLevaine, Floyd Patrick 286-7, 385 McLinton, Linda Joan 397 McLucas, James Robert McMackin, Laureen Eva 410 McMahan, Carol Stacy 324, 397 McManus, Lincoln McMican, Monte Joseph 410 McMican, Robert Albert McMichael, Lisa Lynn McMillan, Larry Dean McMillian, Laura Jean 300 McMullan, Nancy Catherine McMullen, Pierre Richard McMurtrey, Donald Keith Jr. McMurtrey, Janet Sue 410 McMurtrey, Janice Faye McMurtrey, Laurie Ellen 410 McNally, Gary Wayne McNally, Melaine Marie 269, 397 McNally, Rosemary McNeill, Sherri R. McNulty, Charles M. 287 McNulty, Mark A. McPhail, Lawrence William McPhaill, Shelia Faye McRae, Randall Glen McReynolds, Barbara Jill McReynolds, David Camille McReynolds, David Keith McReynolds, Gary Lee 216 McReynolds, Hugh Curtis 410 McReynolds, Judy L. 410 McReynolds, Kevin Alton 334, 385 436 McDaniel, David Murley, Timothy McRoy, Michael David 397 McSparin, Michael Joseph McThenny, Walter Terry 385 McVoy, Lynette Anita McWhorter, Deborah Gaye 299, 397 Meacham, Lamont 216 Mead, Leah Kristin 305, 385 Meade, Archie Curtis Meade, Jeffrey Wade Meador, Alice Annette Meador, Darrell Richard 366 Meador, Deborah Kay Meador, Debra Lynn Meador, John Brent Meador, Nina Parker Meador, Rhonda Denise Meador, Scarlett Kay Meador, Virginia Ruth Meadors, Bill 348 Meadows, Anthony 413 Meadows, Donna Jo 410 Meadows, John Mark Meads, Freda Meagher, Jan Ellen Mealy, James Webb Means, David Wayne 410 Means, Marelle Gaye 302 Media services assistant director 156-7 Media services director 156-7 Medich, Dane Alexander 366 Medigue, Don 112 Medley, Joseph Eugene 385 Medley, Joyce Alma 291 Meece, Raymond Allyn Meeker, Carol Sue 275, 285 Meeks, Billy Jack Meeks, Catherine Hale Meeks, Donald Kieth Meeks, Jenny Lynn Meeks, Mike Gene Meers, Janet Susan 172, 304, 397 Meers, Ronald Edward Meffert, April Lynne Mefford, David 160, 208 Mefford, James David 294-5, 397 Mefford, Jeffrey Glenn 294, 410 Mefford, Marty Richards 296, 385 Mefford, Sandra Jane Mefford, Timothy Darrel Meguiar, Becky Lynne Mehramfar, Mohamad Ali Meier, Bryan Alan Melendro, Lozano Ana V. Melhiser, Sherree Denise 282, 327-9, 341, 366 Mellott, Roy Baltzer 292 Melson, Michelle Deann 410 Melton, Karen Elizabeth 326 Melton, Susan Elaine 300 Menetrey, Louis Richard 264, 330-1 Men’s basketball 220-9 Men’s golf 252-3 Men’s tennis 250-1 Men’s track 244-7 Menser, Dion Lynn Mercer, Lois Ann Mercer, Patricia Joan 304 Mercke, Susan Elizabeth 252, 403, 410 Meredith, Alice Marie 200 Meredith, Anna Lisa Mered ith, Beth Jo 410 Meredith, Brenda Sue Meredith, Charles William Meredith, Cheryl L. Hale Meredith, Danny Ray 410 Meredith, Gary Nelson Meredith, Janssen Wayne Meredith, Lillian Marlene Meredith, Malea Gale Meredith, Raymonde L.V. Meredith, Robert Joseph Meredith, Sandra Kaye Meredith, Becky Lynn 285, 397 Merideth, Treva Nell 385 Merrick, Cynthia Rice 366 Merrick, Norman 385 Merrick, Regan Glenn Merrill, Beverly Jean 366 Merrill, Stephen Wylie Merriman, Debra Lynn Mershon, Richard Brent Mertz, Barry C. 410 Mesker, Jeanne Marie Messer, Vonda M. 81-2 Metcalf, Anna Louise Metcalfe, Dede Faye 410 Metereologist 174 Metheny, James Michael Metzerott, Heidi Amanda Metzger, Mary Cecilia Metzker, Beth Ellen 178, 323 Metzmeier, Clara Lancaster Meyer, Eve Bevans Meyer, George Frederick Meyer, Richard Alan Meyer, Steven Douglas Meyers, Linda Ann 397 Meyers, Theresa H. 410 Michael, Tanya Marie 410 Michaels, Margaret P. 327 Michalski, Vicki Lynn 410 Michewicz, Elaine Marie Middleton, Sarah Martina 385 Middleton, Therese Renee 270, 291 Mike, Theresa Marie Mike, Vicki A. Mikel, Leroy MiKoyan, Vladimar S. 121 Milam, Denny Gardner Milburn, Matthew Durrett Milburn, Richard Hurst Jr. Milby, Bryon Neal Milby, Terrell Gene Miles, Anita Louise 267, 366 Miles, Donald Alton Jr. 380, 385 Miles, Randall Keith 335 Military science department 191 Military science department head 191 Millar, John Matthew Miller, Amy Beth Miller, Barry Charles Miller, Bradford Lee Miller, Brent Lyle 397 Miller, Bruce Miller, Cecelia Victoria Miller, Charles Robert 338, 385 Miller, Charlotte B. Miller, Clifford Ira Miller, Dallas Hudson Miller, Darla Ann 410 Miller, David Todd 345 Miller, Dawn Ann Miller, Debora Lynn 284, 324, 366 Miller, Debra Ann 366 Miller, Debra Denise 397 Miller, Debra Jean Miller, Diane Miller, Edward Gilbert 286 Miller, Gina Louise Miller, Gregory Blaine 385 Miller, Heidi L. 269 Miller, Jacqueline Kay Miller, Jacqueline Ruday Miller, Jeffrey Alan Miller, John A. Miller, John Edward III Miller, John William Miller, Joseph Robert 385 Miller, Joy Kirgan Miller, Kathleen Ann 291 Miller, Keith David Miller, Kimberly Dawn 366 Miller, Lawrence Lee 366 Miller, Leslie Scott Miller, Madonna Sue 410 Miller, Mark Howard Miller, Mark Joel 410 Miller, Mary K. Miller, Mark Randall Miller, Mary Marlene Jayne Miller, Michael David Miller, Michael Glen 216, 285, 410 Miller, Michael Wayne Miller, Nancy Joann 299, 397 Miller, Pamela Lee Miller, Paula Long Miller, Rebekah Lynn 274, 366 Miller, Rhyia Marie 305, 323 Miller, Richard Todd 410 Miller, Robin Lynn 366 Miller, Roger Franklin 366 Miller, Sheilia Ann Miller, Stephen Duke Miller, Terese Ane Miller, Terry Leigh Miller, Vicky L. 285, 397 Miller, Wanda Joy 298-9, 366 Miller, William Louis 411 Miller, William Marcus 300 Miller, Yvette Marie Milliken, Bruce Leland 265 Milliken, George Hugh Milliken, Mark Stephen Millin, Ralph 116 Milliner, Kristina Marie 301, 304, 366 Mills, Carolyn Anne Mills, Cheri Lynn 411 Mills, Edgar Louis Jr. Mills, Gary Dean Mills, Gregory Mark Mills, James Monaghan Mills, Joni Mills, Jr. Henry Thomas Mills, Judy Kinnaird Mills, Lillian Beatrice Milograno, Raymond A. 197, 334, 366 Milon, Cynthia Laverne Milon, Pamela Marie Miluk, Timothy Jon Mims, Margaret Webb Mims, Richard Lee 338 Mincy, Marcia Elizabeth 411 Minnick, Cynthia Gail Minogue, Mary Isabel 326 Minogue, Norma Ann 298, 366 Minogue, Sheila Mary 326, 397 Minor, Connie Jean 327 Minor, Harold Timothy Minor, R. Craig 385 Minton, Cindy Lea 411 Minton, Donald Wayne 366 Minton, Gateward Darrel Minton, Hobert Micheal Minton, John 126, 128, 133, 142-3, 278 Minton , Rebecca Ann Minton, Tony Ray Minyard, Ricky Nelson Mirlohi-Seyed Gamaledin “The Miser” 98, 100, 105 Miss Black Western 92-3, 322 Miss Western 94-5 Mitcham, Linda Sue Lawson Mitchell, Anthony Joseph Mitchell, Barbara Jean Mitchell, Bonnie Lizabeth 366 Mitchell, Cathy Ann 385 Mitchell, Charlotte Diane Mitchell, Christopher Ray 328-9 Mitchell, David Lee Mitchell, Dianna Lynn Mitchell, Donna Sue 385 Mitchell, Eileen Frances Mitchell, Frederick Joseph Mitchell, Gary Lance Mitchell, Glenn Stokes 338 Mitchell, Jeanne Denise 411 Mitchell, Lawrence E. dr. Mitchell, Lorraine Ann 397 Mitchell, Martha Virginia 411 Mitchell, Mary Louise 320 Mitchell, Rebecca Jo 326 Mitchell, Sally Ann 366 Mitchell, Sanya 411 Mitchell, Scott Alan Mitchell, Sheila Bledsoe Mitchell, Sherry Lynn 325, 411 Mitchell, Steve 224 Mitchell, Tanya 411 Mitchell, Timothy Mark Mitchell, Ward Medley Moak, Thomas Wayne 411 Mobley, David Bernard 244, 246 Mocini, Kathleen M. Modica, Tina Lawrence Modjeski, Linda Susan 325 Modjeski, Peggy J. Moezzi, Abolhassan Moffatt, Brenda R. 269 Mohon, Gary Scott Mohon, Roger Lynn Mohon, Tracy Ann 411 Mojdeh, Nasrin Mojesky, Mark Twining Molamohammadi, Ahmao Reza Molamohammadi, Gholamreza Molden, Linda Joy Molen, Jennifer Lois 305 Molloy, George Patrick 285, 397 Molloy, Quannah Sue Momeni, Afsar ‘Mom’s’ home cooking 404 Money, Kathy Jean 299 Money matters to financial aid and students 164-5 Monks, Melinda Rose Monroe, Barry Keith Monroe, Brenda Garrity Monroe, Larry Wayne Monroe, Mary Lee 397 Montazer, Fazlollah Montell, Lynwood 131, 201 Montell, William Bradley Montelli, John Allison Montgomery, Cynthia Ann 411 Montgomery, Duane Owen 271 Montgomery, Jackie Carol 322 Montgomery, Kevin Lee Montgomery, Melva Jean 385 Montgomery, Sherry Leigh 411 Montgomery, Teresa Montgomery, Theresa Lynn 397 Montgomery, Thomas L. Jr. 338 Moody, Aaron 61 Moody, Craig Stephen Moody, Guy Samuel Moody, Thomas Jeffrey Mooney, Sherrie Renae 322, 337, 397 Mooney, William Lee III Moore, Angela Louise 397 Moore, Angela Patricia Moore, Ann Murray Moore, Annette Todd Moore, Charles Anthony Moore, Charlotte Kay Moore, Christie Ann Moore, Craig Bruce 236, 339, 385 Moore, Darrell Vernon 187, 275, 334, 366 Moore, Dayna Leigh 327, 397 Moore, Donnie 221 Moore, Gary Reid 86, 385 Moore, Gerald Lee 397 Moore, James McDowell Jr. Moore, James Michael Moore, Jeffrey Keller Moore, John Allen 330-1, 340 Moore, John Da vid Moore, Karen Louise Moore, Kathleen Riley Moore, Kelley Gayle Moore, Latanya Euneice 411 Moore, Laura Beth 411 Moore, Mary Lynne Moore, Maurice Anthony 270 Moore, Michelle Lynne Moore, Mickey Elaine Moore, Nancy K. Milligan Moore, Patricia Lynn Moore, Phillip Harvey Moore, Rebecca Shrewsbury 284 Moore, Regina Doris Moore, Robert Earl 291, 296, 336 Moore, Rudolph Barry 385 Moore, Sandra Kae 397 Moore, Shari Lou Moore, Sherry Dawn Moore, Sherry Deval 411 Moore, Stephen Clemmons Moore, Steven Allen Moore, Susan Elizabeth Moore, Susan Elizabeth 325 Moore, Susan Elizabeth Moore, Susan Elizabeth Moore, Susan Marie 397 Moore, Teresa Gail Moore, Teresa Jane 411 Moore, Terry Randal Moore, Tim Dale 366 Moore, Tonia Cheryl 385 Moore, Trudy Dianne 339, 411 Moore, Wallace Coombs 336, 385 Moore, Warren T. Moore, William Anthony Moore, William R, 303 Moorefield, David Lee 366 Moorhatch, James Dodge 385 Moorman, Roberta E. 366 Moosmann, Laura Denise Moosmann, Trina Lynn Morales, Josue Moran, Patrick David 366 Moreau, Delton Ray Jr. Moreau, Renee Elizabeth 397 Moreland, Bradley Samuel Moretz, Patricia Arlene 284, 366 Morgan, Ann Allison Morgan, Anna Ceccarani Morgan, Barbara Lynn 236, 293 Morgan, Barry Michael 236, 411 Morgan, Bonnie Ruth 270-1 Morgan, Byron L. Morgan, Cornelia Ann 385 Morgan, David R. Morgan, Gail Ann 366 Morgan, George Warren Morgan, Jeffrey Thomas 338 Morgan, John William 246, 411 Morgan, Larry Joe Morgan, Lynn 313 Morgan, Mary K. Witten Morgan, Michael Paul 411 Morgan, Pamela Claudette 366 Morgan, Pamela Joyce 291, 366 Morgan, Phillip Gordon 366 Morgan, Robert Lee 366 Morgan, Russell Dwayne Morgan, Sally Lowell 322, 397 Morgan, Sheryl Scott 385 Morgan, Steve Upchurch Morgan, Tracey Lynn 367 Morgenthal, Shirley Risen Morman, Linda Eileen Mormon, Roberta 324 Morr, Donald E. Morris, Belinda Jo 325, 411 Morris, Cathy Ann 294, 302, 385 Morris, Jeffery Allen 411, 442-3 Morris, Jeffrey Ross 277, 336, 39 Morris, Joe Thomas Morris, Keith Leonard Morris, Kenneth Earl 284, 337 Morris, Margaret D. Morris, Melody Gaye 411 Morris, Michael Stuart 183 Morris, Nadine Boyd Morris, Richard 100 Morris, Rickie Morris, Sherrian Gayle Morris, Timothy 301 Morris, Valerie Jean Morris, Vickie Groce Morrison, Gregory Lee Morrison, Keith Dewayne Morrison, Owen Morrison, Phillip Barry Morrison, Ramona Kay Morrow, Brenda Jeanne 411 Morrow, Leslie Susan 326, 385 Morrow, Stacy Lynne Morse, Phillip Cotter Morse, William Patrick Mortland, Melinda Lee 268, 411 Morton, Joseph Lee Morton, Kenneth Jerome 330-1, 385 Morton, Lynferd Ross Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra 112, 115 Moseley, Betty J. Wyant Moseley, Rebekah Ellen 385 Moseley, Robin Annette 267, 367 Moser, Paul K. Mosley, Alex Mosley, Gary Neil Mosley, Johnny Lee 332-3 Mosley, Juliana Elizabeth Moss, David Allen Moss, James Allen 367 Moss, Katrina Louise Moss, Pamela Palmer 238-9 Moss, Robert McKenzie 397 Moss, William Henry Mosser, Jonell 11, 99 Mosser, Tom Weldon 367 Motameni, Shahriar Motes, Linda Ann 397 Moudy, William Howard 397 Moulton, Terry Joe 411 Mounce, Robert Douglas Mountain, Patricia 126 Mountain, Patrick Joseph 297, 367 Mouser, Debora Ann 385 Mouser, Jeffrey Loring 397 Moyers, Belinda Gay Moyers, Thomas J. II 302, 367 Muckler, William Clarence Mudd, Antonia Marie 385 Mudd, Charles Daniel 334 Mud, Columbus E. III Mudd, Joseph Lamont Mudd, Kevin Leroy Mudd, Phillip Junior Mudd, Ricky Eugene 271 Mudge, James Scott Mueller, Harris Clinton Mueller, Melinda Margaret Muffett, James Edward 284 Muir, Denise Michele Muir, Gregory 411 Mull, Alice V. Wright Mullen, Davlin 216 Mulligan, Michael Lee 367 Mullikin, Douglas Lee 367 Mullikin, James Allen 241, 367 Mullins, Alice Marie Mullins, Laura Lea 275, 385 Multerer, Anne Louise Mumphrey, Regina Ann 397 Mungo, Carolyn Munoz, Eduardo Munoz, Jose Luis Munoz, Reinoza L. Alfonso Munroe, Jeffrey Murayama, Toshiko Murayama, Toshiko Murillo, Murillo Ramon C. Murillo, Ramon Olier Murley, Jennifer Lynn 367 Murley, Timothy Arch Murphey, Julie Ann 367 Murphey, Katherine Jane 411 Murphey, Marvin Wade Murphey, Nathan Wayne Murphy, Betty Jo Holland Murphy, Carol Stover 367 Murphy, Cathy Renee Murphy, Chery! Marie Murphy, Christopher C. Murphy, Glen Allen Murphy, Glenn R. Murphy, James Dale Murphy, Jane Desloge Murphy, Michael Allen 336 Murphy, Michael Eugene Murphy, Peter David 211, 244, 246 Murphy, Stanley Lyndon 328-9, 340 Murphy, William Stanford Murray, Anne 165 Murray, Alan Leroy Murray, Gail Jean Murray, Karen A. 367 Murray, Kevin Patrick Murray, LaQuida Bernadette Murray LaQuida Bernadette Murray, Linda K. Lane Murray, Mark Allen Murray, Michael Shawn 254-5 Murray, Sue Ann 385 Murray, Tammy Renea 299, 397 Murrell, Eli 329, 330 Murrell, Nausha L. 295 Murrey, William Harwell Jr. 330-1, 411 Murrie, Joel Kevin Murry, Karen Arleen Muse, Richard Lorrin 296, 367 Musgrave, Sherry Lynn 291, 302, 385 Music department 200 Music department head 200 - Musselman, E. Craig Mussnug, Kenneth Joseph Mwakalu, Jembe 285 Myatt, Roger Eugene Myers, Anne Gifford Myers, Betsy Ann Myers, Douglas Ear! Myers, Gary Wayne Myers, Jennifer Anne Myers, Rusty 241 Myers, Samuel Henry Myers, Steven E. Myers, Terri Lynn Myrick, Cynthia Darlene N Naama, Ahmed Hussain Ahmed Nabati, Daryoosh Ahmadi Nadali, Akram Naderi, Bijhan Afshar Nagel, Deborah Lynne 397 Nagel, Henry George IV 367 Nagle, Dennis Louis Nagle, Keith Alan Nahay, Stephen Anthony Jr. Nahm, Clifford Conrad Najafi, Ali Akbar 385 Najarzadeh, Effat Najarzadeh, Reza Najem, Mohammad A. 264 Nakashige, Mary Ellen 291, 397 Nall, Thomas Anthony Nalley, Lisa Ann Nance, Bonnie Lea 368 Nance, Joseph H. Nance, Norma Lee Nichols Napier, Carol Jean Napier, David Elhannon Napier, Eileen Taggart Napier, Gary Wilson 397 Napier, John Gilbert Napier, Karen Lynn Napier, Kelly Mitchell 411 Napier, Linda Jean Napier, Rocky Lane 267, 368 Napier, Susan Jean Napier, Tina Marie 271, 368 Naser, Yahya Yousuf Mohd 44 Nash, Frances Marie 368 Nash, Janet 298, 385 Nash, Jeffrey Alan Nash, Paul Leslie Nash, Ronald 201, 203 Nash, Tony Lee 268 Nash, Walter Dean 268 Nason, John Charles Natalie, Howard Michael 411 Natcher, Joe Byron 338 Nation, Laura Lynn 128-9, 305, 385 Nation, Veronica Jane Nation, William Tate 268-9 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 298-9 National Collegiate Association of Secretaries 298-9 National Opera Company 112 Nations, Sherree Geraldean 385 Naton, Michael R. 252 Nave, Patience Clement 397 Nave, Wallace 148-9 Navitsky, Nancy Lynn 368 Nays-Rivas, Antonio 264, 266 Neace, Dianna Marie Neagley, Mary Lynne Neal, Darlene Elizabeth 323, 368 Neal, James Steven 271 Neal, Judith Margaret 397 Neal, Roger Wayne Nedvidek, Michael David Nedvidek, Thomas Lorne 330-1 Nedvidek, William F. 330-1 Neel, Gregory Scott 326, 336 Neel, Jack 18 Neel, Jacquelyn Neel, Karon Faye Neel, Sharon Kaye Neel, William Hal Neely, David Bruce Neely, James Thomas 298 Neely, Thomas Scott 291 Neergaard, Karin Elizabeth 287, 411 Neff, Paul Allen 385 Neikirk, David Edward 216 Neil, Nancy Leigh Nell, John Lawrence Nelson, Carl Richard 270, 295, 297, 329- 30 Nelson, Cynthia Ann Nelson, Debra Ann 397 Nelson, Jennie Haley Nelson, Kathleen Marie Nelson, Lee Northrop Nelson, Linda Gail Nelson, Mark Steven 216 Nelson, Robert 206 Nelson, Tanya Clarice 397 Nelson, Thomas Marshall Nemeth, Tim 77, 82 Nesbitt, Rhonda Lewis 411 Nethero, Michael David Nettles, Karen Elizabeth Neubauer, Kathleen Jo 411 Neuber, Melanie Ann Neuberger, Debra Kay Nevils, Delower Jean Nevils, Laura Katherine New faces and a new home 236-7 New, Valerie Danette 412 Newberry, Sherry Kay 368 Newby, Annette Newby, Johnathan Lee 216, 418 Newby, Lesa 190 Newby, Melesa Anne 128, 192, 305 Newby, Rebecca Lynn 322 Newby, Ronald K. 368 Newcomb, Jerry Scott 412 Newcomb, Jimmy Lawrence Newcomb, Martha Rebecca Newlon, John D. Newlon, Marcia Lynn 446-7 Newman, Barbara June 412 Newman, Marilyn Mills Newman, Mark Franklin 291, 397 Newman, Stephen Dwight News 118-23 Newsmakers 372 Newson, Mark Stuart 397 Newton, Barry Dean 385 Newton, Creighton Gregg Newton, Douglas Mark Newton, Michael James 274, 412 Newton, Rodney Allen Nganthavee, Chokechai Ngwu, Matthew Doziem Nicholas, Leroy Dale 412 Nicholls, Mikal Harry 368 Nichols, Brent M. Nichols, Douglas Lee Nichols, Jamie 320, 412 Nichols, Marsha Lynn 385 Nichols, Mitzi Jo 412 Nichols, Pennie Ann Nichols, Veronica Dell Nicholson, Caryn Louise 397 Nickell, David Louis Nicklaus, Janice Marie Nicks, Edward Bailey Jr. Nicks, Frank Andrew Nicks, Gregg Ford 216 Nielsen, Janet Lynn 274 Niemann, Laura Ann 274-5, 397 Nilan, Margaret Ann Nilseen, Liv Nims, Alva John 302 Nims, Donald Read Nine days’ notice 234-5 Nirmaier, James Frank 266, 297 Niva, Kimberly Ann 323, 412 Nix, Kathy Richey No Luck at all 254-5 Noble, Cynthia Ann 412 Noble, Debra Menser 275, 368 Noble, Thomas K. 275 Noe, Joseph Dale Noe, Rose Anne 397 Noel, Jeffrey Lynn 267, 328-9 Noel, Lisa Walters Noland, Lisa Meilani Noon, James Kevin 368 Noplis, Stephanie Jo 412 Nord, Thomas Justin 338, 385 Norfleet, Larry Edward Norfleet, Sandra Kay 412 Norman, Kelly Ann Norman, Pamela L. 412 Normand, Irene Ellen Normand, Mark Douglas Norris, Christy Michelle Norris, Gregory McDonald Norris, Jennifer Kay Norris, Lisa Ann 236, 385 Norris, Mary Ann Norris, Mary Nell Norris, Oscar Lewis 300 Norris, Peggy West Norris, Sarah E. Talbot Norris, Sherrell Frances Norris, Walter Keen Norsworthy, Jane Marian Norsworthy, Sharon Denise Northern, Rondall Ray Jr. Northerner, Nancy Jane Nortin, Laura 327 Norton, Carol Elizabeth Norton, Jr. Douglas Tyson 86 Nothing to brag about 230-3 Nott, Kimberly Ann 412 Nowroozi, Aliakbar Zarandi Nuckols, Amye Lou 412 Nuckols, Paul Houston Nunn, Gregory Roberts Nunn, Jenny Margaret 327 Nunn, Louie 119 Nunn, Phyllis Alany 277, 325, 341, 368 Nunn, Robert Bruce 328-9 Nunn, Tony Harold Nunnally, Jane Rhea Butler Nursing 131, 170-3 Nursing department 192 Nursing department head 192 Nutter, Gina Leigh 326, 368 Nutter, Kathy Lue 326, 368 O Oatts, Kelley Layne 412 Oberg, Stuart I. Obermark, Peter Raymond 204 Oberst, Christopher Mark 264, 452 O’Brien, Bette Lynn O’Brien, Dennis Elliott O’Brien, Kerry Lynn O'Bryan, Barbara Ann O'Bryan, Lawrence Joseph 335 O'Bryan, Mary Michelle O'Bryan, Steven Craig Ockerman, Sherry Von O’Connor, John 188 O'Connor, Margaret M. Tandy O’Connor, Ronald Fred 412 O'Daniel, Joseph Patrick O’Daniel, Susan Catherine 385 Odle, Linda Kay 89 Odle, Patricia Ann O'Donnell, Elizabeth Joyce 397 O'Donnell, Heather Dianne 397 O'Donnell, Thomas Joseph O'Donovan, Cheryl Renee 397 Odukoya, Olufunke A. 397 Odum, Victoria Elizabeth Oettle, Craig Anthony Offutt, Anna E. Ogburn, Diana Lynn 398 Ogden College 180-5 Ogden College dean 181 Ogden, James Robert 335 Ogden, Lori Ann 412 Ogden, Vickie Lee Ogle, Linda 323 Ogles, Theresa Lynn Dunbar Oglesby, Burch 188 Oglesby, Gena Gail 412 Ohearn, Karen Ann 326 Okafor, Edwin Chukwuma Okere, Owuamana Geoffrey Okes, Danny Ray Okpala, Amon Ckechukwu 284 Okugo, Samuel Ezumah Olatayo, Afolabi A. Olden, Angela M. Oldham, Carolyn A. 327, 412 Oldham, Hazel Deloris 270, 412 Oldham, Johnny 133, 160, 208, 223 Oldham, Linda Dale 412 Oldham, Pamela Marie Oldham, Vanessa Yolanda 398 Oldin, Cheryl Lynn 324 Olive, Edith Jean 368 Oliver, Cathy Lynn 128, 305, 368 iver, David Earl liver, Kathryn Vanosdoll liver, Kathy Ann 368 iver, Patricia Goodman iver, Patricia Jean liver, Pat L. 305 liver, Terry Ann ler, Gwendolyn Jinel lliver, Jodie Eileen Imosreveron, Sara Maria phie, Ronald Roland 299 Olson, Bruce Edward Olson, Diane Lynn 327, 412 Olyai, Hossein Omega pledges 310-1 Omega Psi Phi 339 Omicron Delta Kappa 290-1 Omokaiye, Olubukunola A. Omotosho, Michael A.J. On the run 64-5 Onbirbak, Bizhan O'Neal, Charles Wayne O'Neal, Teresa Faye 412 O'Neil, Gerald 97 O'Neil, Peter James Oney, James David Onyejekwe, Chike Onyekachi 264, 412 Oost, William G. 216 Opperud, Kathalene Annette Orberson, Carla Yates Orberson, Paul Clark Organizations 262-341 Ormsby, Mililani Daniel Orndorff, Georgia Kennerly Orndorff, John Christian Orndorff, Nancy Noe Orne, David Paul 328-9, 412 Orr, Anita Rocherelle 92-3, 281, 294-5 Orrahood, James Wyatt Ortale, Amelia Elizabeth 398 Osborne, Diane Gaye 368 OSOOO0000000 Osborne, Joane M. 385 Osborne, Karen Sue 282, 385 Osborne, Linda West Osborne, John 21 Osborne, Mark Duane Osborne, Rhonda Jeane Osborne, Rickey Dale 330-1, 398 Osborne, Sue Carol 385 Ostaszewski, Mark Alan Ostrofsky, Martin Bruce 24, 204 Otegbeye, Olusegun Otis, Sheryl Lynn 189, 398 Otte, Paul Clarke Otto, Robert 275 Outland, Danny Keith Outlaw, John Baxter 336 Overbey, Eleanor Kay 385 Overby, Sue 324 Overmann, Gary James Overstreet, Ray 294 Overton, Nancy Delaine Owen, Chris Marie Owen, Cynthia Lee 412 Owen, Daniel Scott Owen, Jacqueline Clark 398 Owen, Karen Diane 291, 293, 385 Owen, Lois Marie 398 Owen, Sandra Kay 412 Owens, Annette Dix 368 Owens, Barney Clifton 268 Owens, Beverly Sue Guffey Owens, C. Coby 284, 385 Owens, Cheryl Lynn 291, 368 Owens, Curtis Eugene Owens, Cynthia Alisa Owens, Gary Wayne Owens, Gina Sanderfur 252 Owens, Josephine 160, 166 Owens, Joy, Renee Owens, Kelton B. Owens, Lisa Carlette 385 Owens, Margaret Montgomery Owens, Robert Alan 386 Owsley, Roy Hamilton Jr. 98, 100, 102, 104, 283 Oxford and Cambridge Shakespeare Company 112 Ozdemir, Hasan Ozgenel, Kamil Hakki 251 Ozgowicz, Denise Lynne Ozier, Leigh, Ellen 412 P Pace, Bonny Ruth Pace, Mary Julia Pace, Ramona Alicia 412 Pack, Alison Jane Paddie, Martha Lynn 412 Padgett, Thomas Barry Padilla, Raul 293 Padron, Patrick Steven 216, 386 Page, Garland Bruce Page, Jeffery Scott 412 Page, Lacreasa A. Page, Lisa Elaine 412 Page, Lisa Gail Page, Ola Marcelle Page, Pamela Janell Pahlavi, Mohammed Reza 11, 121 Paige, Bonnie Lynne 275, 368 Painter, Kenneth Ray 173 Pais, Mark Anthony Palmer, Elma Jean Palmer, Ginger Anne Palmer, Neil Craig Palmer, Paul Warren Palmer, Tana Lynn 386 Palmerball, Lucy Lee Palmiter, Lloyd Frank Panagos, Evangela Shann on 327 Panhellenic Association 82, 341 Paniello, Sandy Joe Pankratz, Donna L. Pannier, Alice Mary 293 Papaioannou, Neophytos M. 264, 285 Pardue, Peggy Denise Pardue, Susan Elizabeth 296, 412 Pare, Felecia Betty 398 Parham, Dennis Tyrone 412 Parham, Parke Lewis Jr. Paris, Francis Rene Parish, Cynthia Lou Parrish, Helen 325 Parker, Bonnie Carol 412 Parker, Charles Phillip 398 Parker, James Brent 332-3 Parker, John 290 Parker, Kelly Lee 236, 398 Parker, Linda Kay Parker, Martha Ann Parker, Michael Eugene Parker, Mona Carin Parker, Phillip Lewis 412 Parker, Terry Lee Parks, Barry Scott 412 Parks, Jim 300 Parks, Martha Geraldine 412 Parmley, Venetta Jane 412 Parnell, Kandy Gaye Parr, Judith Ann Brantley Parrent, Joan Tapscott Parrent, Lilybeth Parrent, Rick 166 Parrish, Helen Juanita Parrott, Althea Graves Parrott, David Wayne 258, 298 Parshall, Scott Eugene 328-9 Parsley, Don Michael Parsons, David Garnett 368 Parsons, David Kirk 298 Parsons, John Philip 185 Partin, Mary Ann Parton, John 292 Pasco, Sandra Elizabeth 299 Pasteris, David F. Pate, Robert Samuel 398 Paterson, Cheryl Ann Patey, Camellia Gwenn Patriarca, Anthony Michael Patrick, Karen Joyce Patrick, Patricia Louise Patrick, Ronald Lynn Patrick, Sherry Lynn Patterson, Anne Downing 138 Patterson, Bert Arthur Jr. Patterson, Bobby Joe Patterson, Carla Jean Patterson, Debra Carol 368 Patterson, Jack Kelly 398 Patterson, Joe Ear] 338 Patterson, Joseph Edward Patterson, Julia Ann Patterson, Nancy Caro! 398 Patterson, Ray 138 Patterson, Richard Ellis Patterson, Ricky Lee Patterson, Rita M. Drazer Patterson, Terry Neil Patterson, Thomas Magill Patterson, Tony Allan Pattison, Marinelle Tennis Patton, Bobbie Pierson Patton, Cindy 284 Patton, David Okay 412 Patton, Donald Glenn Patton, Lewis Jr. Patton, Lucinda Lee 284-5, 368 Patton, Michael Lee 338 Patton, Timothy Paul, Robert Lynn Paul, Russell Joseph Paul, Twila Faye Krebs Pauley, James Watkins 236, 368 Pauli, David Timothy 335 Paulley, Teresa Diane Pawley, James Louis 305 Pawley, Keenan Lowell 296, 386 Pawley, Keith 330-1 Payne, Anthony Glen Payne, Chris Steven 246 Payne, Connie Yvonne Payne, David Currie Payne, David Graham Jr. Payne, Deborah Lynn 327 Payne, Eunice Inez Payne, Gerald Edward Payne, Jenifer Kaye 296, 386 Payne, John Charles Payne, Kenneth David Payne, Mark Alan Payne, Mark Kevin 398 Payne, Mary Elaine Payne, Polly Anne 291, 368 Payne, Rebecca Holliman Payne, Rodney William Payne, Thomas Anthony Jr Payton, Lyndell Ray 368 Payton, Mary Ann Lacy Payton, Quenta Ann 368 Payton, William Earl Pazdan, Dorothy Kay 386 Pea, Gerald Lee Peahl, Micki 412 Peak, Michael Christopher 277 Peak, Ronda Jean 412 Peak, Sandra Lynne 304, 368 Peak, Shebell 322-3, 368 Peak, Steven Allen Peake, Christopher Phillip Peake, Jana Marie Peake, Raymond Howard Pearl, Jean Coleman Pearl, Stephanie L. Pearman, Rocky Lane Pearson, Brenda Cornette Pearson, Dennis Alan Pearson, Gregory L. Peay, Cheryl Lynn 412 Peay, Sharon Lee Peck, Donna Alice Peck, Elisabeth Salter 398 Peck, Janet Kay Peck, Stephen Kent 260, 332-3 Peckenpaugh, Rebecca Irene 368 Peckenpaugh, Terry Alan Peddycort, Hugh Estis Peden, Charles Howard Jr. 31 Peden, Michael Jon 328-9 Peden, Nikki Lynne 368 Pedersen, Amy Susan 274 Pedigo, Albert William 260 Pedigo, Bonnie Renee Pedigo, Joyce Elaine Pedigo, Judy Thomas Pedigo, Nellie Mae 412 Peerce, Marla Rose 412 Pegues, Elizabeth Ann Pelaski, Tony Keith 398 Pelfrey, Scott Anthony 386 Pelino, Daniel Scot 274, 276, 336, 368 Pemberton, Timothy Alan Pence, Vickie Lynn 326 Pendley, Cathy J. 412 Pendley, Dianna Jean Pendygraft, Julie Danette 248, 412 Penix, Randy Keith Penn, James Lawson 332-3 Penn, Rhonda Sue Penn, Stephen Douglas 290-1, 298 Pennington, Alvin Read 368 Pennington, Jimmy Ray 77 Pennington, Nancy Arnise 437 Murphey, Julie Pennington, Nancy Pennington, Vickie Lynn 398 Pennisi, Laurie Ann 369 Penrod, Tamela Roy Pepin, Richard F Pepper, Anne Hart Robey Pepper, Sarah Joe 398 Pepper, Tony Kenton 386 Perdew, Nita Faye Piercey Perdew, Quentin R Perdue, Lisa Rose Perez, Eduardo Perez, Jimenez Manuel Perkins, Barry Lee 412 Perkins, Cynthia Jo 398 Perkins, Diana Hines Perkins, Franklin Kyle 386 Perkins, Frederick Bernard 412 Perkins, James Britt Perkins, Jill Evelyn Perkins, John Casey Jr. 336, 386 Perkins, Lawrence Douglas 285, 369 Perkins, Lonnie Lee 412 Perkins, Michael Ray Perkins, Patti Brewer Perkins, William Howard dr Perkins, William Lee Perrella Gerard Raymond Perry, Cindy Renee 304 Perry, David Earl Perry, Donald Joseph 386 Perry, Gary Stephen Perry, Guan Anton Perry, James Kenneth 252 Persac, Mary Ann 275 Pershing, Laurie Sue 398 Pershing Rifles 286 Personnel services director 159 Peshka, Cynthia L. 252 etaia, Tupou Ilaoa Peterie, Stanley Taylor 386 Peters, Charles Albert Ill Peters, David Nathaniel 271 Peters, Debra Diane Peters, Kimla Lynne 412 Petersen, Lisa Kirsten 89 Petett, Cecilia Ann 398 Petett, Frances Farmer Petett, Shelia Van 412 Petrie, Patricia Anne 398 Petros, Nancy Jean 90 Pettey, James Pettit, David Howard etty, Jim 49, 338 Petty, Patrick Michael Peveler, Kimberly Jane 299, 412 Peyton, Candace Jean 302 Pfahl, Michelle Lyn Pfannerstill, Peter Edward Pfister, Marsha Renee Pharris, Dewey Kent Pharris, Joyce 190 harris, Ronald 190 Phebus, Melissa Ann Akin Phelps, Cindy Kaye 369 Phelps, Diana Lynne Phelps, Gregory Dale 398 Phelps, Judith J. Coffey Phelps, Judy Lindsey Phelps, Phyllis Maria Phelps, Steven Bryant Phi Alpha Theta 292 Phi Beta Lambda 298 Phi Beta Sigma 333 Phi Delta Theta 333-4 Phi Eta Sigma 290-1 Phi Mu 327 Phi Mu Alpha 95, 270-1 Phi Upsilon Omicron 277, 282-3 Phillips, Betty Jo Phillips, Betty Jo Coffey Phillips, Charles Lynn 369 hillips, Christopher Dale Phillips, Deena Jean Phillips, Donna Faye 412 hillips, James Chad Phillips, Joan Kaye Phillips, Karen Jo 413 illips, Karin Marie Phillips, Laura Ellen 290, 323, 369 Phillips, Lawrence Dillard 266, 297, 398 Phillips, Leonard Bernard 254, 386 Phillips, Margaret Louise 326, 334, 369 Phillips, Melinda Kay hillips, Nancy Helena Phillips, Nelda Ann 413 Phillips, Robert A ?hillips, Robert Rufus Pp hillips, Shelley Lynn 236, 280, 398 hillips, Teresa Sue hillips, Terry Joseph 386 Phillips, Thala Caroline 369 Phillips, Thomas Edgar 369 Phillips, Tracy Brian Phillips, Vicki Lynn 327, 386 Philosophy and religion department 200 Philosophy and religion department head 200 Philpot, Joan Jennings 369 Phipps, John Michael Physical plant administrator 158 Physical education and recreation department 188 Physical education and recreation department head 188 Physics and astronomy department 184 Physics and astronomy department head 184 Pi Delta Pi 292 Pi Kappa Alpha 334-5 Pi Kappa Phi 335-6 Pi Mu Epsilon 290, 302 Pi Omega Pi 296 Pi Sigma Alpha 290 438 Pennington, Vickie Pitt, Daniel Pickens, James Edward 336 Pickerrell, Daniel Alan 386 Pickett, Alan K Pickett, Jack 100 Pickett, James Clay 266 Pickett, John Henry 283 Pickett, Kenneth Haden 216, 398 Pickett, Lawrence Edwin II Pickett, Robert Clayton Pickwick, David Allen 266, 347, 369 Pickwick, Karen Lynn 301, 386 Pierce, Darell Ray 325, 338, 340, 386 Pierce, Emily Gayle 386 Pierce, Fredia Marie Pierce, Kelly Lenia Pierce, Margaret Jenrose 327, 369 Pierce, Richard Allen Pierce, Stewart Jay Piercy, Susanne Palmer 413 Pieters, Christine Isabel Pieters, Jacobo Guillermo Piispanen, Brian Lee Pike, Donovan Sanky Jr Pike, Mary Salmon 282, 369 Pilarski, Susan Lynn 413 Pile, Sharon Lynn Pile, Vicki Lyn ne 292 Piles, Cynthia Jo Pillitteri, Lisa Marie 327, 369 Pillow, Janet Ruth Pillow, Robert Wesley Pillow, Ronald Earl Pinaire, Michele Lee 398 Pinckley, Pippa Ann 291, 301, 304, 369 Pine, Carla Jean 301, 369 Pinkerton, Joel Warren Pinkston, Cathy Ann 369 Pinkston, Roger Dale 413 Pinkston, Vicki Lane 323 Pinson, Barbara L. St. Clair Pinson, Jeffrey Alan Piper, Nancy A Piper, Teresa Carolyn 413 Pippenger, Bernard George 301, 413 Pippin, Melvin 156 Pirtle, Dorothy Ann Pirtle, Jon Wales Jr Pitchford, Glenn Everett Pitchford, Linda Suzanne Pitchford, Marla 120, 279 Pitchford, Murl Milton Jr Pitcock, Chris V Pitcock, Janet Rae 413 Pitcock, Mark Edward Pitcock, Perry James 413 Pitt, Daniel Tyler 320, 338 Pitt, Robert William Pittman, Thomas James Pitts, John Morrison Plank, June Ellen 413 Plantinga, Joyce Ellen 294, 398 Plantinga, Judith Elaine 291, 299, 305, 398 Plantinga, Sandra Lynn 369 Player 51, 73, 76, 77, 289 Platt, Eric Alan Platt, Thomasine Denise Pleasant Yvonne Michelle 386 Ploeg, Randy Lee Plott, Karen Sue 299, 413 Ploumis, Mary Plummer, Richard McCurdy 398 Poe, Kimberly Davis 413 Poe, Tana Shea Poe, Wallace Edwin Jr. Poe, Wynn 337 Poehlein, Susan Caro] 325 Poer, Dennis Dewayne Pogue, Danny Ray Pogue, David Allin Pogue, Greg L. 398 Pogue, Kerry Duane 270 Pogue, Phyllis Jean 56 Poindexter, Leon Lee Poitinger, Keith Arlen Poitinger, Wendy Sue 369 Polak, Richard Steven 398 Poling, Kent Bradley Poling, Richard Forrest 333, 336 Polley, Terry Lynn 386 Pollock, David Jon Pollock, Delma Mae Pollock, Ronald Ray Polson, Alicia Dawn 230, 232-3, 285, 398 Pond, Neil Arthur 291, 369 Pond, Ritchie Lee 413 Ponton, Frank Hope Ponton, Robert in the Central Hall lobby. — Margaret Shirley Pool, Bobbi Faye Poor, Julia Katherine 326-7, 369 Popelier, Maurice T Popelier, Morrie 258 Popp, Catherine Marie 398 Portable Art 376-7 Portaro, Joseph Gerard 266 Porter, Albert C. 386 Porter, Billy Ray Porter, Don Lee Porter, Emily Susan 323 Porter, Glen Lane Porter, Joe Hardin Porter, Phillip Leroy Flower power THRILLED with her Valentine’s gift, Cretia Robinson exam- ines her flowers with boyfriend Mike Blackwood. The two were Porter, Ramsey Kyle Portman, Marcia Lynn Porto, Eugenia Maria Post, Audrey Elizabeth Poston, Anita Carol 398 Poteet, Donald John Potter, Brent Jay Potter, Cheryl Jo 275, 386 Potter College dean 195 Potter, Cynthia Karen 413 Potter, Martin Andrew Potter, Sanda Lea 282, 413 Potts, Dale Reid 338, 386 Potts, Lisa Ann 413 Potts, Mary Annette Pounds, John Kirk Powell, Ann Michele 369 Powell, Anna M Powell, Bill 240-1 Powell, Bruce McDonald Powell, Charles Marvin 23, 246, 268, 413 Powell, Edward Albert Powell, Ginny L. Pillow Powell, Gregory Wayne Powell, Gregory William 174, 300 Powell, Jody 276 Powell, John Kevin 413 Powell, Joseph Delbert 369 Powell, Julie Ann Powell, Kevin Lee Powell, Melody Jay Powell, Michael William Powell, Sharon Leigh Powell, Sherrill Lynn Powell, Steven Douglas 369 Powell, Teresa Jo Power, Jerald Lawrence Powers, Keith Otwell 26-7, 266, 386 Poynter, Albert dr. Poynter, Jennifer Monroe Poynter, Jinny S. Prange, Eric Eugene Prather, Charles Michael 398 Prather, Jeffrey Carl 98, 102, 283, 413 Pratt, Katherine Mary Pre-Law Club 296 Precious, Carol Jean Prendergast, John Joseph 298, 369 Preston, Alesia Marie Preston, Dean 271 Preston, Dennis Jewell Preston, Eddie Joe 216, 219 Preston, Gregory Alan 398 Preston, James Gregory Preston, Robert Steven Price, Agnes Suzette 369 Price, Athena Jene Logan Price, Barbara Jane 171-2, 398 Price, Brent 294 Price, Charles Lee Ill Price, Donna Sue Price, Douglas Alan 301 Price, Harold Robert 338, 369 Price, Janice Diane Price, John Woodrow Price, Karen Raye Price, Lizbeth Renee 304 Price, Martin Anthony Price, Pamela Ann 322 Price, Pamela Sue Price, Rebecca Harris Price, Sandra Kay 232 Price, Shari Lee 230, 232-3, 413 Price, Thomas Jay 398 Price, Toni Caryl Price, Wallace Brent 153, 386 Priddy, C. Brent 386 Priddy, Deborah Ann Priddy, Dennis Oran Priddy, Julie Kay 398 Priddy, Patricia Ann 413 Priddy, Tammy Lea 413 Priest, Neva Nadine Primel Randy Louis Prince, Michael 223 Prince, Shari Leann 398 Prine, John 77-8 Pritchard, Deborah Rose 271, 369 Pritchard, Pamela Jean Probus, Patricia Leslie Prochaska, Lissa Michelle Proctor, Alice Celeste 324 Proctor, Lora Anne Proctor, Marilyn Annette 398 Proctor, Mary Louise 324, 386 Proctor, Terry Glenn Proehl, Donald Erwin 369 Proffitt, Rita Jean Proffitt, Sharon Barnes Provost, Joan M. 276, 369 Provost, John Joseph 413 Prow, Tina Marie Pruden, Marijane 369 Pruden, Marilyn Lee Pruitt, Brian Edwin Pruitt, Charles Kevin ruitt, Earlrene 369 Pruitt, Nina 413 Pruitt, Sandra Sephens ruitt, Sandra Stephens Pruitte, Monica Laurie 369 Pryor, Debra Ann Pryor, Karen Anne Psi Chi 304-5 Psychology department 188 Psychology department head 188 Public affairs director 156-7 Public relations director 156-7 Public Relations Student Society of America 276-7 Public safety assistant director 15 Public safety director 154 Public service and international programs dean 148-9 Puckett, Bhrett Scott 330-1 439 Pitt, Robert Puckett, Bhrett Puckett, Lucena Louise 413 Puckett, Melanie Ann Puckett, Rebecca Mae Puckett, Ronald Lewis 398 Pulaski, Tony 335 Pulliam, Sylvia Lynn Clark Pulou, Punivai 369 “The Puppet Prince” 103 -urcell, Cathy Lynn Purcell, Jack Wayne Purcell, Sharon Rinehard Purchasing director 168-9 Purdue, Lisa 58 -urdy, Debra Ann Purdy, William Ross Purpus, Michael Gregory Pursley, Cathy Starr 323, 369 Pursley, Teresa Dawn 287 Purvis, Gregory Dennis -urvis, Michael Dean Puryear, Anne Leslie Putman, Deborah Herring 370 - yke, Harry Leslie Pyle, Ramona Jean 299, 386 Q Quality but not quantity 92-3 Qualls, Michael Stevenson Quan, Victor John 398 Quarcelino, Nancy K. Parker Quark, Mark 338 Quarles, Dell Marie 370 Quan, Victor 246 Queenan, Shannon Marie 413 Quenzer, Cathy Kay 413 Quick, Fawn Michelle 413 Quigg, Benjamin Franklin Quinlan, Patricia H. Hessom Quinn, Mark Alan Quire, Ellen 370 Quire, Julie Ann 413 Quirk, Mark Stephen R Raby, Sara Ann Radcliffe, Ronald Ray Rademaker, Joseph Edward Rader, Gregory Leroy 294, 370 Rader, Janet 282 Radford, Christopher 413 Radford, Sharon Kay 343, 386, 414 Radford, Shelia Gay 343, 386, 414 Radley, Michael George Raef, Diane Carol 324, 386 Raef, Douglas Wolter 413 Raffensperger, Sally L. 305, 413 Rafferty, Debra Loveman Rafferty, Sonja Reniaa 413 Ragan, Margaret Katherine 413 Ragan, Rink Ray Rager, Penny Rhea 398 Raggard, Robin Wayne 386 Ragland, Elizabeth Anne Ragland Library Club 284 Ragland, Mark Sinclair Ragland, Ruth A. Woods Ragland, Thomas Bradley 386 Ragland, Tiffany 179 Raglin, Laverne Lucille 313 Raglin, Lydia Dionne 313 Rahn, John William 223 Rainey, Patricia Doreen Rains, Marietta 413 Rains, Sharon Gail 398 Raley, Leonard Jay 413 Ralls, Adrianne Ralph, Dennis Wayne Ralph, Luwana Diane Ralston, Michael Dewayne 386 Ramsay, John Theodore 370 Ramsey, Anita Kay 285, 413 Ramsey, Lisa Gayle Ramsey, Rhonda Jean Ramsey, Vickie C. 398 Ramsey, Sy 276 Randall, Robert John 398 Randall, Steven Bruce 337 Randles, James David Randolph, Joel Lee Ransdell, Darren Lee 283, 413 Ransdell, John Christopher 89 Ransdell, Leanne Marie 413 Rascoe, Karen Marie Rascoe, Lisa Jane 398 Rascoe, Mary Elizabeth 24 Rascoe, Robert B. 24, 261 Rastegar, Panah Massoud Ratcliff, Kimberly Jane 386 Rausch, Donald Matthew Ravenscraft, Valerie Jane 386 Rawling, Linda S. 413 Rawlings, Gregory Allen Rawlings, Margaret Jane Rawls, Ricky James Ray, Debbie Nell 325 Ray, Deborah Lynn Ray, Jack 312.3 Ray, Norman John 295, 413 Ray, Randy T. 413 Ray, Sonia Marie 386 440 Puckett, Lucena Rhoads, Patricia Ray, Terri J. 344 Ray, Terry Dean 264, 413 Ray, William Perry Raybold, Arthur W. III Raymer, Ernest Clinton Raymond, Jay Raymond, Paula Jo Read, Robert Story Read, Shannon Rice Reagan, Susan Denise 298, 370 Reagan, Terry Joe Reagin, Carson Alexander Reamy, Julian Ralph Reasonover, Patricia D. 386 Reaves, Larry Allan Rebelettes 286-7 Rebirth of tradition 94-5 Recreation Majors Club 268-9 Rector, Alice G. Nethery Rector, Judy Ann 398 Rector, William Dallas 24 Redd, Micheal Wayne Redding, Richard Scott 274, 335, 413 Redford, Dennis Rae Redmon, Louise Ann 327 Redmon, Robert Edward Redmond, Albert Paul Reece, Beverly Kay Reece, Pamela McKinney Reece, Teresa Annette 274 Reece, Vivian Denise Reechmond, Al 256, 260-1 Reed, Clyde Derek Reed, Daniel Reed, Deborah Ann 270, 413 Reed, Donna Gale Reed, Earl Thomas Reed, Hugh Richard 330, 340 Reed, Janette Marie 274, 370 Reed, Linda Gail 398 Reed, Michael Joseph Reed, Neal Richard 330-1 Reed, Rosalyn Elizabeth Reed, Sharon Denise 386 Reed, Steven Hires Reed, Stevenson Leonard 332-3, 398, 400 Reed, Timothy Brian Reeder, Jennifer Lynn Reel, Jennifer Ann 413 Reese, Charlotte Jane Reese, Kenneth Patrick Reese, Michael 221, 223, 224, 226-7, 398 Reesman, Elizabeth K Reesman, Kurt Lee Reetzke, Daniel William Reeves, Anita Leigh Reeves, Christopher Ill Reeves, Donice Elaine Reeves, Robin Lacy 276 Registrar 148 Reholon, Lisandro Jose Reid, Alan Lewis 290 Reid, Kelley Stevens Reid, Martha Ellen 277, 413 Reid, Rhonda Lee Reid, Robert Paul 298, 370 Reid, Terri Sue Reinert, Diana Marie Reinert, Joann 398 Reinert, Joseph Thomas Reinhardt, Deborah Kay 413 Reinhart, Louis Edward Reinle, Ricky Bodine 283, 370 Reinscheld, Ronald Lee Reiter, Walter Lawrence Reker, Richard Raymond 370 Religion 24-5 Remodeling 116-7 Reneau, Cecil Ervin Reneau, Robert Maurice Jr. Reneau, Tina Lynn 413 Reneer, Frances Opal Renfrow, Loretta 386 Renick, Leslie Thomas Renick, William Robert Rennegarbe, Robert William Renusch, Joseph Allen Renusch, Therese Ann Resch, Sharon Kay 325 Ress, Mary Elizabeth 413 Restrepo, Jaime Mauricio Revlett, Perry Dean 216, 386 Revolinski, Gregory Allen 264, 413 Rexroat, Curtis Alan 370 Rexroat, David Ray 335, 398 Rexroat, Karen Faye 270, 398 Rexroat, Mary Ann 413 Rexroat, Ozandal Coolidge Reynolds, Belinda C Reynolds, Daniel Miles 386 Reynolds, David Wayne 413, 456 Reynolds, Laura Marie Reynolds, Leslie Paul Reynolds, Marcia Norton Reynolds, Robert Kennan 338 Reynolds, Roger Reece 251 Reynolds, Ronald Dewane 413 Reynolds, Samuel Robert 413 Reynolds, Scott Louis Reynolds, Sharon Jean 285, 398 Reynolds, Sonia Anne 386 Reynolds, Tracy Howard II 303, 398 Reynolds, V. Gail Murphy Reynolds, Vyetta Woodworth Rhea, Joe Shannon Rhea, Tony Alan 300, 387 Rheaume, Deloras Akridge Rheaume, Tony Richards, Jim 221, 223-4, 228, 252 Rhoades, Deborah Jane Rhoades, Odell 116 Rhoades, Tony Gil 236, 260, 337, 387 Rhoads, Patricia Darlene G. Music man STRUMMING his way to work, Bowling Green senior Kevin Wilson walks to Thompson Complex. The biol- ogy major was going to the physics lab to grade papers. — Mark Lyons Ribadeneira, Hernan A. 370 Ribar, Richard Arthur Rice, Gracie Marie Rice, Joann Rice, Margo Ruth 370 Rice, Patricia Ann Rice, Ralph Eugene Jr. 387 Rice, Randy Craig Rice, Rebecca Lynn 265 Rice, Stephanie Ann 413 Rich, Donald Kent Rich, Donna Denise Rich, Fred L Rich, Gene 304 Rich, Kathy Lynn Rich, Kelly Alexander 370 Rich, Mark Joseph 264, 413 Rich, Oma Jean Rich, Phil Thomas 216 Richards, Nathan Edward Richards, Thomas Wayne Richards, Vickie Ann Richardson, Angela Renee 413 Richardson, Brenda Elouise Richardson, Clara Nelle Richardson, Judith Lynne Richardson, Pamela Suzette 398 Richardson, Randolph T. Ill Richardson, Roy Jennings Richardson, Tonda Leigh 413 Richardson, Willie James 330-1 Richeson, Stephen Dale 398 Richey, Victor Lee Jr. 274, 286 Richie, Kimberli Ann Richter, Douglas James Rickard, Dana Joy 301, 304 Ricke, John Charles Rickenbaugh, Robert Keith 413 Ricketts, Kathryn Louise Ricketts, Morris Glen 335, 370 Rickman, Mitchell Brian Ricks, Cheryl Lynn 398 Ridd, Roland William Jr. Riddle, Anna R. McLerran Riddle, Jeffery Alan Riddle, Melv in E. 413 Riddle, Sherry Moore 398 Rideout, Kenton Wayne 274 Rideout, Stanton Keith 336 Rider, Carol Ann 398 Riely, Diane Louise Riely, Richard James Jr. Riesenberg, Christopher L. Rife, Debi Sue Riflery 242-3 Riggs, Martina Kaye 327, 371 Riggs, Michael Woodrow 48, 306, 413 Riggs, Sherri Linne 387 Riggs, Stephen Hansford 398 Riggs, Thomas Leslie 216 Riggsbee, Barry Alan 387 Riggsbee, Melody Jewel 413 Rigsby, Larry Wayne 387 Riherd, Elizabeth White 269 Riley, Alice Marie 284, 387 Riley, Allen King 413 Riley, Craig Steven 260-1, 338 Riley, Darlene Booher Riley, Pat Jackman Jr Riley, Regina Jeanette Riley, Robert Alan 371 Riley, Sheila Ann 398 Riley, Stephen Douglas Riley, Timothy Ray Riley, Vance Timothy Rine, Philip John 260 Rinehard, Catherine Jo Rinehard, Sharon Lee Ring, Ray Jessee Ripley, Bernice Lee Rippetoe, Patricia L. Smith Rippy, Cynthia Lynn Rippy, Dana Wayne 371 Rippy, Tammy Gwynn 398 Risdon, Peter Ashley Risen, Michael Hollis 299, 387 Risinger, Donna Lyne Risley, Derrick Eugene Ritchie, Bernie Lee Ill Ritchie, Gregory Murray 301 Ritchie, Maria Ann 398 Ritchie, Ricky 246 Ritchie, Wayne Reed 413 Ritman, Christina Lynn Ritter, Kathryn Georgia 274 Ritter, Mark Leonard 240-1, 398 Ritter, Thomas Fredrick Rivas, Evasmo 413 Rivera, Sharon Brown Rizi, Mohammad Moradian Rizio, Eugene Frank Rizzo, Candice Ann 322 Roach, Robin Edward 413 Roach, Ruby McKinney Roark, Ann Douglas 322 Robbed! 220-9 Robbins, Christine Anne 324, 387 Robbins, Debbie Louise Robbins, Joyce Lynn Robbins, Michael Robert 413 Robbins, Sandra Marie Robe, Diane Jean 282, 387 Robe, Gary Robert 285, 371 Roberson, Bruce William 371, 442 Roberson, James Arthur Roberson, Philip Ray Roberts, Cain Edward Roberts, Charles Keith Roberts, David Norman 126, 338 Roberts, Joseph Robin Roberts, Joseph Thomas 332-3 Roberts, Karen Elizabeth 387 Roberts, Karl Joseph Roberts, Lisa Ellen. 280-1 Roberts, Lloyd Tommy 441 Ribadeneira, Hernan Roberts, Lloyd , Nancy Norma , Patricia Ann 5 ) Louise 41 Roberts, 1 Snow 274, Roberts, Stacy 188 3 3 Roberts, Stephen Michael 336 Roberts, Sue Conner Roberts, Timothy Lee 413 Roberts, Timothy Lynn 371 Robertson, Connie Lisa Robertson, David Wayne Robertson, Denise Lyrae tue obertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robertson, Robinette, Kathryn Ann 39 Robinson, Benedict George Janice Lynn 298-9 Kirstie Jean 413 Lee 152 Lisa Gail Mark 398 Marsha Lynn 285 Mary Beth 325 Scotty Eugene Steven Bennett William Lee Robinson, Clifford Allen 413 Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Robinson, Cretia 237 Cynthia Ann 232, 3 Donald John 371 Donald Mark Faye 148-9 Jennifer Sue 413 Kathryn Lynne Kenni Kay Kim D. 323, 387 Lisa T. 325 Lucretia 387, 438-9 de enn, PUG rr seg Robinson, Mary C Robinson, Patricia Darlene Robinson, Randall Parks 330, 337 Robinson, Richard Jeffery Robinson, Scott Gregory 27 Robison, Kim Denise Robison, Lisa Annette 413 Robison, William Allen Robledo, Jorge Enrique 413 Robson, Simon Rodman Rocco, Ronald Anthony 255 Roche, Tony Lee A Rochelle, Mitzi Carol 398 Rock, Randy Smith Rock, Rhonda Raye 398 Rock, Rodney 413 Rocketts, Harold 335 Rodenbeck, Richard Henry 241, 413 Rodgers, Phyllis McCuiston Rodgers, Walter Ephriam Roederer, Chris Alan 371 Roemer, Linda Sue Rogan, Alfred Lee 216 Roganovich, Rochelle Rogers, Constance Kay 398 Rogers, David Ray 398 Rogers, Debbie Lynn Rogers, Deniece Lynn 413 Rogers, Elizabeth 167 Rogers, Harold Dean Rogers, Jane 387 Rogers, Jerry Wayne Rogers, Karen Ann Rogers, Kathy Lynn Wilcox Rogers, Linda L. Gribben Rogers, Richard Allen Rogers, Sandra Jane Rogers, Sheryl Ann Rogers, Susan Elaine 398 Rogers, Sylvia K. Williams Rogers, Thomas Jefferson Role playing 98-105 Rollings, Michael Edwin Rolls, Adrianne 381 Romans, Elizabeth Ann 398 Romero, Geronimo 413 Romich, Barbara E. Bass Romich, Gary Lee Ronconi, Edward Eugene Ronnerman, Bengt Gustav 251, 257 Rooney, Kathleen Ann 256, 261, 265, 398 Roose, William James Root, Virginia Annette 413 Roquemore, Patti Lynn Rosdeutscher, James Howard Rose, Allen Dale Rose, Anthony Lee 216, 285 Rose, Billy Scott Rose, Christi Ann 322 Rose, Darryl! Flynn Rose, Debra Carole Rose, Kenneth E. 371 Rose, Mark Bruce Rose, Mary 155 Rose, Ray 251 Rose, Ronald Dale 387 Rose, Willie 292 Rosenbaum, Kathryn Cyrena Rosenbaum, Sabrina Ann 274, 277, 371 Rosensteel, Paul Allen Rosenthal, Mark Allen 306, 371 Roso, Sandra Ann 387 Roso, Sharon Therese 126 Ross, Anthony Dwayne Ross, Phillip Andrew 413 Ross, Terri Fox Ross, Thomas Joseph 398 Ross, Troy Franklin Rossi, Gregory Joe Rossi, Ramona E Rostaminejad, Mohammad Rothman, Joseph Allen 413 Rothman, Linda Elizabeth Base blur A CLOUDY DAY didn’t interfere with an intramural softball game. Jeff Morris, a Bowling Green freshman, runs toward first, but he was tagged by first baseman Bruce Roberson, a Fern Creek senior. — Mark Tucker BAS Rogers, Constance Rothman, Linda Rothman, Susan Marie Roudebush, Rick Roger 216 Rounds, Dennis Donavon 371 Rountree, Cynthia Gail 305, 371 Rouse, Dennis Mark Rouse, La Tanji Rousseau, Mary Lynne Routt, Michael Wayne 371 Routt, Rhonda Cathryn 296, 387 Rowe, Nick Orlando Rowe, Vince Edward Rowland, Francis Ann 274 Rowland, Pam Reasonover Rowshanaei, Mansour Roy, Danny Michael 303 Roy, Karen Jolette 299, 387 Roy, Marilyn Graham Hale Roy, Paula Miller 304, 371 Roy, Robert Kevin 156 Royal, Patricia Gail 387 Royal, Sharon Kay 398 Royalty, Donald Keith Royalty, Patricia Lynn Royse, Henry Gilbarre Royse, Lori Ann 413 Royse, Ricky Thomas Ruark, Jacki Leigh Ruark, Melvin Donald Jr. Rubey, Kathleen Ann Rubin, Joanne Marie Rubini, Rebecca Anne Ruble, John Anthony 332-3 Ruble, John Wesley Ruble, Karen Lisle 325, 413 Ruckriegel, Barbara Ann 398 Rudd, Malinda 387 Rudolph, Donna Leigh Rudolph, Kurt Rudolph, Laura D. 413 Rudolph, Nancy Leigh Rue, David Harrison 336, 413 Rue, Jonathan Lee 296, 320, 336, 372 Rue, Nelson Bright III Rue, Rebecca Susan Ruemmele, Stephen Barth 266 Ruff, Brian Thomas Ruff, Loren 102 Rugby 263, 306-7 Ruggles, Deborah Sue 100, 271 Ruggles, Kathleen Ann “Rumpelstiltskin” 103, 104 Runk, Randolph Louis Runnels, Tramuel Lane 413 Runner, Kathy Adelia Runner, Teresa Lynn Runner, Terry Wayne Running water 385 Rupe, Carol Lynnette 242-3 Rush 308-9 Rush, Cynthia Denise Rush, Patricia Anne Rush, Raymond Milton Rush, Rexanna Gay 413 Rushed in and partied out 308-9 Russell, Bryan Blanton Russell, Donna Gail Russell, Dorothy Lee Russell, Jill Denise 269, 413 Russell, Jo Ann 269, 372 Russell, Kenneth Dale 372 Russell, Kenneth Wayne II Russell, Laura Gayle Russell, Mark Alan Russell, Marvin 181 Russell, Pamela Jean Russell, Pamela Sue 414 Russell, Ricky Glenn Russell, Robert Bryan Russell, Robert Max Russell, Sarah Elizabeth Russell, Terry Lee 334 Rust, Freddie Elaine Rust, Judith Marie Rutherford, Kim McClure 372 Rutherford, Tim Allen Rutledge, Dale Edward 304, 330-1 Rutledge, Ollie Eugene Rutledge, Rebecca Mary 387 Rutledge, Stephanie H. Rutledge, Suzanne Fant Rutledge, Tammy Ann Ryan, Connie 230 Ryan, Darlene Pendleton Ryan, Dowell Key. Ryan, Judy Kaye 387 Ryan, Kim Denise Ryan, Leo J. 115 Ryan, Matthew R. Ryan, Robert David Rybij, Susan Mary 398 S Saadati, Alireza Sabens, Tammy Shawn Sack, Eric R. 31, 243, 337, 340 Sacks, Pamela Jean 398 Sacrey, James 153 Sadat, Anwar 121 Sadeghi, Sayed Mahmoud-R Sadeghi, Zeinatolsadat M. 285 Savary, Paul Everett Sagabeil, Jack 290-1 Sage, Kimberly Sue 243, 411 Sager, Terri Lyn 322, 398 Sagraves, Michelyn Anita Sahihi, Masood 264 444 Rothman, Susan Sloan, Kimberly Sailing Club 264-5 Sainato, Gina Ann Saint, Pierre Mark Wayne Salah, Ashur 398 Salato, Nancy Jane 276, 398 Saling, Robert 414 Saling, Sharon Ruth Sallee, Mary Lou A. 305, 398 Sallee, Robert Lyman Jr. Sallee, Scott Edward Salley, Randall Clyde 372 Saltsman, Lanean 414 Saltsman, Valerie Gail Salu, Tokunbo Shakur Sam Early 32-7 = Samman, Abdullah Ali 414 Sams, Melvin Paul Sanchez, Gerard Sandage, Dana Gene Sandefur, J.T. 186-7 Sandefur, Sarah Jo 68, 196 Sandefur, Starla Rhea 322 Sander, Sandra Rene Sanders, Carolyn P. Bullock Sanders, Christopher Alan Sanders, Christy Inez Sanders, Cordie Kersey Sanders, Cyril Anthony Sanders, Deloria Ann Sanders, James Darryl Sanders, Jennifer Dawn 23, 398 Sanders, Joy Diane 372 Sanders, Lisa Kim Sanders, Margaret Jane 398 Sanders, Martin Elijah Sanders, Mary Dean 414 Sanders, Nancy Ella Sanders, Nolan Stephen Sanders, Rene 322 Sanders, Scott Andrew 387 Sanders, Steven Wayne Sanders, Tamany Terral 326 Sanderson, Robert White Sandidge, James Boyd Sandidge, Thomas Evans II Sandman, Ellen Onkles 264 Sands, Debra Lee Cole Sanner, Marsha Lee 324, 398 Sansom, Paul Neal Sansom, Steve Wade 270, 372 Sapp, Jane Pyles Sapp, Michael Steven Sapp, Thomas H. Sappenfield, Donald Ray Jr. Sargent, Charlene Alice 414 Sargent, Peter William Sarles, Robbie Lynn 300, 373 Sass, Mary Rose Sattar-Shamsabadi, Gholam Satterfield, Keith Wade 271, 302, 373 Sauer, Jennie L. 414 Saunders, Jeffrey Bernard Saunders, Neena Karen 277 Saurer, Barbara Ann 82 Savage, Anna Charlyne Savage, Donna Claire Savage, Kevin Anthony Savage, William George Sawyer, Hilda Gay Mayberry Sawyer, Janet Carol 266 Sawyer, Lloyd Dixon 298 Sawyer, Teresa Kaye Sawyers, Homer Keith Jr. Saxe, Joseph Eugene Saxton, Charles P. Jr. Saxton, Earl Gilliam 414 Say hello to avance registration 148-9 Sayle, Teresa Kay Scabbard and Blade 280-1 Scarbrough, Cathy Darlene 299, 372 Scarbrough, Clarice 292-3 Scent, Sara Katherine Schaaf, Kimberly Ann 414 Schabel, Robert John Schaffner, Lisa Deane Schaffrick, Jon Alan Schafstall, Timothy Joseph Schaftlein, Mark D, 337, 387 Schardein, Donald 121 Scheible, Kimberly Ann Scheidt, Louis Miller Schepers, Mary Lou 291, 300, 398 Schepers, Theresa Mary 452 Schieferdecker, Ivan Earl 411 Schiess, Catherine Anne 414 Schildknecht, Ronald Keith 387 Schlaughenhoupt, Janet G. 398 Schlensker, Karla Ann 282, 387 Schlosser, Kerry Lee Schlotter, Robert Nelson Schmidt, Anne Celine 326, 387 Schmidt, Claudia Marie 402 Schmidt, Daniel Joseph Schmidt, Mathew George Schmidt, Ronald Allen Schmidthuber, Hedda Susan 414 Schmittou, Sharon Marie 398 Schmitz, Roger Dale Schnurr, Daniel Joseph 414 Schocke, Barbara Carol Schocke, Randall Wayne 91 Schofield, Volice Ann 291 Scholastic development dean 168-9 Scholl, Stephen Wayne Scholl, Terry Gebhardt Scholla David Edward School opening 14-5 Schreiner, Mary Ellen 238, 414 Schrembs, Bernard Joseph Schroader, Karen Kay Schroeder, Eitel Herman Schroeder, James Paul 303, 373 Schroeder, P. David Schulte, Marcia Helen 286-7, 298, 387 Schultz, Cliff 55 Schultz, Laura Luanne Schultz, Richard Lee 334 Schureck, Sara Jean Schuster, Donna Lea 387 Schuster, Douglas Frank Schuster, Ricky Paul 387 Schwab, Edmond Schwab, Sharon Ann 373 Schwager, Mary Kay Schwalm, Diane Lee Schwartz, Bruce Schwartz, Tamme Jean Schwegman, Carol Ann 387 Sciberras, John Joseph Scites, Raymond David Scoggins, Charles Rayburn Scott, Alfreida Lynn Scott, Ann Bondurant 274, 387 Scott, Barbara Ann Scott, Charles T. Jr. 290 Scott, Cheryl Ann 276, 387 Scott, Clay 335 Scott, Cora Viann Scott, Eddie Walton Scott, James Anthony Scott, Joe T. 387 Scott, John Thomas 271, 291, 302, 339, 340, 373 Scott, Kimberly Jayne Scott, Kimberly Kay 414 Scott, Leann 305, 387 Scott, Lynn Ann 387 Scott, Michael Lynn Scott, Pamela Kaye Scott, Ralph Scott, Robert Franklin Scott, Robert Wayne 387 Scott, Thomas Clayton 398 Scott, Tony 338 Scott, William Lee 266 Screetch, Duncan Renaldo Seabolt, Batonya Gwen Seabolt, Kimberly Ann 83, 398 Seagrave, Marlyn Wright Searcy, Jennifer Jo 343, 372 Sears, David Allen Sears, Dietra Kay 189 Sears, Michael Roy Sears, Patricia Sue Sears, Richard Allen Sears, Timothy Wayne 387 Seaton, Gregory Oneil Seay, Glenda Faye Sebree, Elizabeth Deneice Sedgwick, Scott Gregory See, Kari Frances Seelig, George C. 268 Seelig, Jane 268 Sego, Richard Nelson Jr. 330-1 Seifert, Mark Alan 335 Seiff, Allison Sunni 69-70, 343, 409, 414 Seig, Melissa Lynne 326 Seigler, Dewey Lee Seiler, Roxanne Beth Seith, Sandra Lee 248 Selems, Margaret Alice 327, 387 Self, John Clinton 337 Semones, Suzanne 297-8, 398 Semones, Timothy Alan Seniors 344-79 Senn, Jack T. Senn, Janet Marie Sensel, Craig Scott 335 Sepulveda, Benjamin A. Seth, Daniel Lee 291 Settle, Angela Gaye Settle, Brenda Joanne 414 Settle, Gates Erwin 414 Settle, John Allen Settle, Raymond Mitchell 398 Settles, Mary Cathyann 398 Settles, William T. Seward, Christopher Todd Seward, Katherine Todd Seward, Robert Todd Sexton, Cynthia Ann 387 Sexton, Deborah Ann Sexton, George Boyd 301, 373 Sexton, Jeffery B. Sexton, Juanita Gayle Seymour, Deborah Carol 267, 414 Seymour, James Michael Seymour, Ronnie Lewis 216 Shackelford, James Coleman Shadburn, Theresa Lynn Shadoan, Lynn 414 Shadowen, David Irvine 304, 387 Shaffer, Alan 104 Shaffer, Nancy Carol 387 Shahan, James Noble Shaheen, Kevin Mark 337 Shanahan, Kevin Thomas Shanahan, Maureen Kay 291, 398 Shanei, Shahram Shank, Barbara Oleary Shank, Bobby Lee Jr. 414 Shanklin, Steven Derk 414 Shanks, Randall Lynn Shanks, Reginald Glenn 387 Shannon, Arthur Roy 398 Shannon, David Wanye Shannon, Marolyn Marie 373 Shannon, Robert Samuel Jr. Shannon, Sharolyn Shree 373 Shannon, Stuart Anderson 307, 330-1, 340 Shannonhouse, Jalynn P. Shao, Kung Chuan Jimmy Share, Kevin Christopher Share, Lori Anne 414 Shariat, Zadeh, Abdul H. 387 Sharif, Osama Yasseen 285, 414 Sharp, Larry Greg 330-1 Sharp, Lola Harris Sharp, Phillip Wayne Sharp, Ralph Wade Sharp, Rhonda Lynn 398 Sharp, Stephen Byrne 373 Shartzer, Sharyon Mercer Shartzer, Terry Lee Shaver, Debbie Lynne Shaver, Laura Beth 274 Shaver, Pamela Gail 387 Shaw, Brian Douglas 414 Shaw, Donald Leland II 285-6 Shaw, Gloria Devon Shaw, Janice Lynne Shaw, Jenice Faye 297 Shaw, Kathy Sue Shaw, Kent Roland Shaw, Kim Ellen 373 Shaw, Marilyn Gail Miller Shaw, Peggy Ann 414 Shaw, Timothy Charles Shay, Kelly Joann Shearer, Elizabeth Arlynn 387 Shearian, Mohammad S. 373 Sheats, Gregory Wayne 246 Sheehan, Lisa Margaret 398 Sheeran, William Peter Sheffer, Ron 132 Sheffield, Jawana Sue Shehan, Theodore H. II 332-3 Sheilds, Scott 335 Shelby, William R. Sheldon, Steven Earl Shelley, Teresa Ann 398 Shelton, Cynthia Lea 287, 414 Shelton, Gregg Stuart Shelton, Judy Faye 298-9, 373 Shelton, Melissa Jo 326 Shelton, Naomi Ruth 414 Shelton, Pamela Jean Shelton, Paula Ann Shelton, Shelia D. Kerley 387 Shelton, Steven Randal 304, 398 Shepard, Rosemary Sheperson, Cheryl Ann Shephard, Lynnette Gail 415 Shepherd, John Scott Shepherd, John William Shepherd, Sheri Ann 373, 398 Shepherd, Sherry Francis Shepherd, Steven Dane Sheppard, Rickey Steven 285 Sheridan, Donna Ann Sheridan, Mary Chris 269, 277, 373 Sherrell, Stuart Curtis Sherrerd, Kathleen Beth Sherron, Eddie Wayne 167, 415 Sherwin, Sharon Marie Shewcraft, Edwin Ray 373 Shhhh! 124-5 Shiau, Shiow Chyen Shields, Barbara Ann 238 Shields, Randolph Shields, Samuel Sanders Shields, Sandra Marlene Shields, Wilbur Scott Shifflett, Fount W. Jr. 415 Shiley, Sheri Lynn 270, 415 Shilts, Gerald Carden Shinnick, Janice Elaine 398 Shiplet, Patricia Bryant 415 Shipley, Clifton Eugene Shipley, Mark Lee Shipley, Marlene Woodcock Shipman, Sharon Dawn 415 Shipp, Allen 26 Shipp, Rebecca Lynn Shipp, Steve Douglas Shirazi, Ahmad Alizadeh Shireman, Brett Shane Shirey, John Philip 283 Shirley, Lorrie Ann 415 Shirley, Margaret Warner 276, 415 Shirley, Robert Dale II Shive, Victoria Bakker Shively, John Allen 295 Shobe, Bennie Richard Jr. Shockley, Brent Edward 296 Shockley, Vana Jane 297-8, 373 Shoemake, Thomas Howard 373 Shoemaker, Deborah Raye 291, 387 Shojai, Ali Reza Sholar, Tamela Jo Sholar, Walter Alan 290 Shollenberger, Barry 254 Short, Anita Marie 398 Short, Freda Davis Short, James Elugene Short, Laura Lou 398 Short, Teresa Loretta Shortridge, David Richard Shortt, Patrick John Shoulders, Dennis Keith 294 Shrader, Cheryl Aline Shrader, Horace 19, 146-7, 399 Shrewsbury, Patricia W. Shriver, Stephany Ann 415 Shrode, Jay Wesley III 387 Shrull, Randa Len Shuffett, James David 415 Shuffitt, Margaret E. Shuler, Daniel Glenn Shuler, Sherrie Joy 387 Shull, Elizabeth Ann Shultz, Victor Scott Shuman, James Philip Shumate, Daniel Lee 287 Shumate, Joseph Kevin 387 Shunk, Harland Webster III 264, 387 Shuster, Patricia C. Sibalich, Leslie Ann 415 Siddens, Jeffrey Dee Siddens, Lee Robin Siddens, Leigh Annette Siddens, Mary B. 398 Siddens, Mary Elizabeth Sidebottom, Marilyn B. Sidewalk artists 410-1 Sidwell, Laura L. 306, 322, 398 Sidwell, Lisa 304 Siegert, Sonja Lynn Siegfried, Mark Alan 387 Siem, Mary Christie 373 Siemens, Joseph Paul Jr. 328-9 Siemens, Terri Lynn 373 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 336-7 Sigma Chi 336, 338 Sigma Chi Derby 314-5, 317 Sigma Delta Chi 121, 276-7 Sigma Delta Pi 292 Sigma Gamma Rho 263, 312-3 Sigma Kappa 327 Sigma Nu 338 Sigma Nu Powder Puff Football Classic 314, 317 Sigma Nu tubing 48-9 Sigma Phi Epsilon 338-9 Sigma Tau Delta 292-3 Sikes, Sandra Ann Silver Stars Steel Orchestra 82-3 Silver, Terrence Lavelle Simcox, Jane Marshall 266 Simek, Thomas Charles Simerman, Karen Lisa Simmons, Bruce Elliott Simmons, Donald Mark Simmons, Douglas P. Simmons, Edgar Paul Simmons, Ernestine Simmons, Fay Lynn Simmons, Karen K. 268 Simmons, Mary Jean Simmons, Rhonda Gale Simmons, Robert Garfield 415 Simmons, Robert M. Simmons, Sabrina Kaye 415 Simmons, Sara 322 Simmon, Theresa Marie Simms, Andy Richard Simms, Charles Richard Jr. 275 Simms, Darrell Wayne Simms, Lalla Belinda Simms, Lisanne 329 Simon, Beverly 266 Simon, Catherine L. 415 Simon, Deborah Lynn 298 Simon, Elizabeth Gwynn 373 Simon, Joseph Wayne Simon, Vincent 266 Simons, Marcy Beth Simons, Sarah Ann 373 Simpson, Alice Young Simpson, Bradford Carlton 330-1 Simpson, Clark R. 398 Simpson, Deborah Lee Simpson, Eugenia Simpson, Garry Moore Simpson, James Truman II 415 Simpson, John Timothy Simpson, Joseph Marion 58, 338 Simpson, Larry Lee Simpson, Lisa Beryl Simpson, Richard Gregory Simpson, Robert Mark 398 Simpson, Sheila Clareece Simpson, Sylvia Lynn H Simpson, Tamara Dawn Simpson, Terri Anne 415 Simpson, Terry Franklin 373 Sims, Claudia Michelle 274 Sims, Diane Marie Sims, Donald Gene Sims, Gary Wynn Sims, Herman Keith Sims, Leigh Ann 326 Sims, Warren Patrick Sinclair, Harold A. 409 Sinclair, Henry Lee 373 Sinclair, June Garrott Singleton, Cynthia Gale 387 Sister to sister 323-8 Sistrunk, Debra Ann Sites, Michael Owen Sitting it out 418-9 Six, Dorothy Elizabeth Six, Frank 184 Skaggs, Barry Dean 213, 216, 219 Skaggs, Karen Sue 398 Skaggs, Kathy Lynn 373 Skaggs, Kevin Leigh 415 Skaggs, Linda Kay 31, 128-9, 373 Skaggs, Roy Phillip Skaggs, Sharon Bernice 387 Skean, James Dan 301 Skean, Mark Edgar Skees, Cynthia Ann Skees, Willie Belle Skeeters, Richard Patrick Skellie, William Edward Skidmore, Victor Henry Skiles, Mary Alice Skillern, Ronald A. Skinner, Essie Lee Skinner, Frank James Skipper, Robert Allan 276, 415 Skipworth, Donald Baker 398 Skolka, Suzette Mary 387 Skydiving Club 264-5 Slaiman, Yvonne 373 Slaton, Terri Lynn 301, 304, 373 Slaughter, Lon 166-7 Slaughter, Patsy Joyce Slaughter, Stephen Russell Slaven, Donna Jean 298, 415 Slayton, Ronald David Sledge, Mila Marie 267, 387 Sledge, Rando! Lee Sleeth, Cynthia Gae Sload, Donna Carole 398 Sloan, Gary Douglas 338 Sloan, Kimberly Lou 326 | Sloan, Ned Tarter Jr. Sloan, Richard Gale Sloan, Timothy Clay Sloan, Vittoria Lee 305 Sloan, Vivian Gay Sloane, Harvey 11, 123 Slocum, Vicki Lynn Slone, Vernis Sloss, David Lee Sloss, Ronnie Lane Small, Nyla W. 304, 373 Smalley, Clay Marshall 330-1 Smalling, Harold Victor Smallwood, Gary Joe Smart, Linda Elizabeth 298, 373 Smeathers, Rita Beard Smeathers, Stephen Jay Smedley, Vicki Lee 398 Smialek, Kris J. Smiley, Karen Marie 313, 341 Smiley, Steven Eugene Smith, Barbara Jeanne 306, 326-7 Smith, Bradley Caldwell Smith, Brandon Eugene 208 Smith, Brenda Renee 270 Smith, Burie Kenneth Smith, Carl Edward 373 Smith, Carlos Lynn 415 Smith, Carol Sue 415 Smith, Cawood Gregory Smith, Charles Manning 274, 276, 292, 373 Smith, Cherry Kay 387 Smith, Christopher William Smith, Cooper R. dr. Smith, Cooper Ray III Smith, Craig F. 216 Smith, Cynthia Kaye 415 Smith, Daryl Wayne “ Smith, David Jr. 398 Smith, David Kent Smith, Dennis Leon Smith, Donald Richard Smith, Donna Jean 387 Smith, Edgar Ray Smith, Elizabeth M. 269, 400 Smith, Elton Bennie Jr. Smith, Ericha Lee 399 Smith, Eugene Leon Sr. Smith, Felicia Rae Smith, Frankie Duane Smith, Gail Eileen Smith, Gladys Louise Smith, Gordon Thomas 373 Smith, Gregory Eugene Smith, Gregory James 373 Smith, Gregory Rush Smith, Harold 168-9 Smith, Harry Glen Smith, Irma L. Spear Smith, James Loyd, Jr. Smith, James Michael Smith, James Ricky Smith, Janet 373 Smith, Jeffrey Joe Smith, Jennifer Suzanne Smith, Jerald Frank Smith, John David 373 Smith, Johnny Keith 267, 415 Smith, Joletta Faye 387 Smith, Joy Cinda Smith, Julia Ann Smith, Julia Marie Smith, Karen Leigh Smith, Kathleen Smith, Kelly Jay Smith, Ken III Smith, Lana Lee 373 Smith, Leslie McElroy Smith, Lisa 323 Smith, Loretta Shanklin Smith, Lucy A. 284 Smith, Marion Douglas Smith, Marion Seabrook Smith, Mark Anthony 2 Smith, Mark Fulton 415 Smith, Mark H.- Smith, Mary Ann Smith, Mary Dianne Smith, Mary Lisa 390, 399 Smith, Michael Anthony Smith, Michael Steven 335, 387 Smith, Michele Denise Smith, Molly Jo 399 Smith, Mona Gayle 373 Smith, Pamela Jean 415 Smith, Patricia Ann L. Smith, Patricia Jane 326 Smith, Paula Annette Smith, Philip Daniel Smith, R. Jane Oliphant Smith, Rebecca Gale Smith, Rebecca Joy 284, 374 Smith, Renee Vaughn Smith, Reta Jean Smith, Richard 39 Smith, Rickey K. 415 Smith, Rita Lorraine 374 Smith, Robert Allen Smith, Robert C. 284 Smith, Robert Reed 374 Smith, Rondall Lawrence 328-9 Smith, Rosalyn Delorna Smith, Russell Vance Smith, Sabrena Dawn 415 Smith, Samuel Thompson Smith, Sandra Joyce Smith, Sandra Kay 399 Smith, Sarah 296 Smith, Saundra Belwood Smith, Sharon Gail 374 Smith, Sharon Guinn Smith, Sharon Rhenea 415 Smith, Shaune Marie 291, 399 Smith, Sheila Faith Smith, Sheila Jane 415 Smith, Sheila Kaye 399 Smith, Shelley Wynelle 399 Smith, Steven French Smith, Susan Smith, Tammy Lou Smith, Theresa Elaine Smith, Thomas Allen Smith, Thomas Clayton 415 Smith, Thomas Lee Smith, Timothy Lynn 387 Smith, Timothy Wayne Smith, Tony 406 Smith, Vicki Faye Smith, Watha A. Bratcher Smith, William Paul 216 Smither, James Michael Smithhisler, Dan Francis 246, 387 Smits, Anthony Erwin 285, 415 Smock, Jed 397 Snapp, Laura Gail 387 Snardon, Troy Davis 216 Snardon, Vivian Denise Snead, John Lee 399 Sneed, Milton Rhea 332-3 Sneed, Patsy Lee Snell, Pamela Jean 415 Snell, Patricia Lynn Snellbacher, Timothy Mark Snellen, Steve 336 Snelson, Linda Marie 399 Snider, Craig T. Snider, Mary Susan Snodgrass, James Tutt III 291 Snodgrass, Kent Jay 374 Snodgrass, Stanford C. Snodgrass, Steven Lloyd 291, 304, 336 Snow, Gregory Allan 374 Snow, Lindy Ann Snyder, David Dyer Snyder, Elizabeth Anne 400 Snyder, LaDonna Jean Snyder, Mary Christine 291, 400 Soccer Club 264 Social work 131, 178-9 Socializing 178-9 Society of Physics Students 300-1 Sociology, anthropology and social work department 202 Sociology, anthropology and social work department head 202 Sociology Club 274 Sollman, Daniel Kent Solomon, Cheryl Lynn 374 Solverson, J. Paul 334, 415 Somers, Patrick Joseph Somervill, Laura Sue Somerville, Exum Lydell 311, 400 Sometimes it’s a pain 170-3 Sommer, Carol Ann Sommer, Roger D. Sonnenberg, Mark Wesley Sophomores 390-400 Sororities 322-7 Sorrell, Jennifer 263 Sorrell, Lee Richard 267, 328-9 Sotherland, Mike 329 Sour, Jennie 322 South, Jackie Donald 374 South, Patricia Ann Southerland, Michael Wayne 328-9, 415 Sowder, Chris Bradley 181 Sowder, Debbie Jean 415 Sowder, Preston Dean Sowell, Charles Michael 335 Sowers, Ricky Eugene 331 Spain, LaDonna Lea 323 Spanarkel, Jim 223 Spalding, Carla Sue Spangler, William R. Spanier, Donna Maria 415 Spare time 388-9 Sparks, Bryan Lee Sparks, Carla Sue Sparks, Carol Ann Sparks, Darlene Marie 374 Sparks, Darrell Gene 302, 374 Sparks, Gloria Daniels Sparks, Judy Carol 322 Sparks, Marilyn N. Dudley 324 Sparks, Michael David Sparks, Sandra Kay 387 Sparks, Sharon Lynne Sparrow, David Brian Spaulding, Janice Elaine 400 Spaulding, Patrick Donald 283 Speakman, Bobby Morris 266 Spears, Dennis Ross 400 Special Forces 286-7 Special programs director 148-9 Special programs offer something for everyone 148-9 Speck, Nancy Ann Speicher, Amy Macarthur 285 Speight, Carol Fields 374 Spending time spending money 168-9 Spence, Robin Rena 415 Sperry, Gary Michael Speth, Stephen Christopher Spicer, Jack Andrew 216, 400 Spiegelman, Suellyn Tyler 400 Spiker, Amy Jo Spillman, Kimi Sue Spinelli, Charles Briggs Spinner, Robert Lloyd 415 Spires, Leonard Ray Spires, Nancy Yvonne 415 Spirits in the night 191 Spivey, Steven Randall 193 Splashdown 48-9 Sponberg, Ky-Anne Sports money 208-9 Sports 206-61 Spring Sing 318 Sprinkle, Laura Jayne Sprouse, Jonathan Wayne 104 Sprouse, Larry R. Sprowles, James Stevan Spugnardi, Donald Joseph Spurgeon, Gloria Ruth 387 Spurling, Teresa Phillips Spurlock, Jefferson Tarter 334, 374 Squires, Robert Paul Sredin, Vasili D. 121 Stabenfeldt, Stephen A. Stacker, Stacey Jo Staff assistant to the president 145 Stafford, David Heyes 338 Stafford, Saundra Lea 387 Stafford, Mark Wayne Stagner, Phillip Wayne Stahl, Briggs Price Ill 298, 387 Stahl, Christine 400 Stahl, Mark Kelley 216, 338, 400 Stalbaum, Richard Lee Staley, James Edward Staley, Tamara Kaye Stallings, Joe William Stamper, Brenda Adeline Stamps, Cathey Lynne 415 Stanley, Antoinette L. 296 Stanley, David Andrew 332-3 Stanley, Luanne Knight 374 Stanley, Wallace Conrad 244 Stanton, Barbara Elaine Staples, James Ear! II Staples, Jennifer Martha 374 Staples, Michael Wayne 415 Staples, Richard Scott Stapleton, Gregory Arthur 415 Stark, Cynthia Vanaey 323, 415 Stark, Marilyn Joy Starks, Brenda Sue 400 Starks, Mary Frances 387 Starks, Sidney Moore 338, 415 Starks, Venessa Gumm Starling, Donna Anne Starnes, Bobbie J. Land Starnes, Lawrence Wyartt 216, 223, 387 Starnes, Linda A. McElroy 267, 400 Starr, Larry Andy 374 Stater, Michael Wayne 334, 415 Statton, Cynthia Jeanne 400 Stauss, Christianne 301, 375 Stauss, Kevin Leon 400 Staynings, Anthony Robert 210-1 St. Clair, Michael Brent 375 Steagall, Pamela 265 Steam room 406-7 Stearns, Kathy Lee Steedly, William Mark 415 Steele, Julie Anne 274 Steele, Pennye Danette Steele, Tony Berle 375 Steen, Bernard Leo Jr. 85-6 Steenbergen, Cynthia Jo 415 Steenbergen, Miles Calvert 71 275, 277, 279; 375 Steenbergen, Sonya Lynn Steff, Diane Stegner, Jeffrey Douglas Steinweg, Jane Gail Steinweg, Rebecca Lynn 375 Steitz, Ed 221 Stephen, Colin Stephens, Barry Scott Stephens, Connie Jean 388 Stephens, Donna 233 Stephens, Krisann 299, 388 Stephens, Mary Jane 98 Stephens, Pamela A. McClure Stephens, Philip Carroll Stephenson, John Glynn Stephenson, Rex Lewis Sterkel, Gail Ann Sterling, Michael Thomas Stevens, Barbara Schulte 275 Stevens, Debra Kay 104 Stevens, Gail Louise Stevens, Kathleen Marie 400 Stevens, Marcia Marquerite 313 Stevens, Vickie Sue 323, 375 Stevenson, Craig Lee Stevenson, David Arthur Stevenson, George Wallace 216 Stevenson, Joey Ray Stevenson, Juanita Sue 291 Stevenson, Lisa Marie 375 Stewart, Cindy Lee Stewart, Joseph Patrick Stewart, Kevin Malcolm Stewart, Kimberly Dawn 415 Stewart, Marilyn Rose 305, 400 Stewart, Michael Greer Stewart, Michael. William 267, 328-9, 340 Stewart, Nancy Ann 400 Stewart, Millard Lee III Stewart, Nancy Jean Stewart, Ronald William Stewart, Ronnie Gene 254, 400 Stewart, Stephanie Ann 400 Stewart, Thomas Ray 415 Stewart, Vertie G. Stewart, Vicki Lynn 415 Stice, Douglas G. Stice, Jeffery Wayne Stice, Jeffrey Wade Stice, Mary Elizabeth 415 Stice, Mildred 166-7 Stichtenoth, Keith Bailey 126 Stickler, Gregory Thomas 243, 388 Stigall, Lou Ann Roberts Stigall, William Paul Stiles, Christopher Cee Stiles, Deborah Ruth Stiles, James Wayne 302, 375 Stiles, Mary Dianne Stiles, William Allen Still in the rough 252-3 Stiltner, Sherrie Lynn 327 Stinemetz, Nancy Alice 375 Stines, Steven Ray 71, 280 Stinnett, Charles Roger 61, 375 Stinson, Janet Lynn 388 Stinson, Lanna J. 323 Stinson, Priscilla 388 Stinson, John Milton Jr, Stinson, Teresa Marlene Stinson, William Terry Stirsman, Edith Ann T. Stirsman, Tamerla Rene Stites, Anne Embry 375 Stith, Bart Henry Stith, Deloris G. Mullins Stivers, Dale Scott Stivers, Keith Allen Stockley, Jimmy 73, 76 Stockman, Ann Marie Stockman, Thomas R. Stockton, Cornelia A. 208, 282, 295, 400 Stockton, Eddy R. 388 Stockton, Joanifer A. Stockton, Leshia Renee Stockwell, Rita Ruth 98, 105, 283 Stofer, Lee Allen 271 Stokes, Cynthia Ann Stokes, Deborah Lynn 388 Stokes, Joseph David Jr. Stokes, Karen Sue 290-1 Stokes, Sylvia Kay 415 Stokes, William Dee Jr. Stokley, Lee Dawson Stoll, Lee Philbrook 400 Stoll, Shirley Gabi Stoll, Teresa Lynn Stone, Allyson Monea 415 Stone, Cynthia Denise 415 Stone, Cynthia Jean Stone, Dena Francine 282, 415 Stone, James Michael Stone, Jeffrey Dixon 261, 338 Stone, Kennon Davis Jr. 332-3 Stone, Lisa Ann 317, 322 Stone, Lorenda Gail Stone, Oskar Robert 334 Stone, Richard Farris 264, 277, 400 Stone, Sandra Kay 375 Stone, Sharon Gay 265, 400 Stone, Sharon Lavon Stone, Sue Lynn 291, 400 Stone, Theresa Ann Stone, Tina Rae Stone, William Victor Stone, Wilson Lee Stoner, Barbara Ann 388 Stoner, Robert Allen 388 Stonewall, McKinley Jr. 415 Storey, Gregory Lynn 334 Storie, David John 304, 330-1 Storie, Kimberly Ann 409 Story, Gregory Issac 334 Story, John Edward 270 Stotts, Janet Fay 291, 400 Stout, Ralph 221 Stout, Richard Helm II 220-1 Stovall, Teresa Ann Sholar Stovall, Thelma 123 Stowers, Elizabeth Sue 264, 287, 400 Strader, Charles Wesley Jr. 336, 388 Strader, Jimmie Lou Strader, John Kevin 400 Strader, Malcolm Earl Il Strader, Shea Anne 388 Strain, Cyndia Leevan 291, 375 Strait, Kenneth Shane 241 Straney, Mark Jeffrey 315, 337, 388 Straney, Stephen Allen 328-9 Strange, Shelley Straub, Mary Laura Straub, Russell Owen Jr. Strass, Kevin 338 Straut, Laurie 98 Strawn, Terry Lee Stretz, Rosalind Jeanine 400 Strickland, Terry Darlene 249 Stringer, Carolyn 279 Stringer, Donna Stringer, Janice Watwood Strobel, Laura Ann Strode, David Strode, John Edward 300 Strode, Judy Watts Strong, Karen Denise Strong, Nancy Jane Stroud, Brenda Jean 324 Stroud, Keith Wayne Strout, Brenda 324 Stuart, Karen Lynn 400, 415 Stuart, Leigh Ann Stuart, Michael Wayne Stuart, Steven Ray Studdard, Kathy 268 Student affairs assistant deans 165 Student affairs associate dean 165 Student affairs dean 165 Student-centered entertainment 80-3 Students come first in public safety’s work 154-5 Student Council for Exceptional Children 274-5 Student Life 12-129 Student Music Educators National Conference 270-1 Student National Education Association 50-3 Stull, Harry E. Jr. Stumbo, Brian James 298, 375 Stumbo, Christine Duraney 299, 375 Stumler, Dan Ray 64 Sturdivant, Fredericka Sturgeon, David Wayne 338 Sturegon, Denise Gale 270, 388 Sturrock, Rhonda Faye Sublett, Bradley Keenan 330-1 Sublett, Carl Leslie Sublett, Danny Lee Sublett, Vivian Rachel Suddarth, Sandy Suddoth, Lynn Marie Suggs, David Emanuel 216, 311 Suitcasing 22-3 Suiter, Gary Michael 400 Suiter, Rebecca Lynn 400 Sullivan, Dennis Wade Sullivan, Erin Marie Sullivan, James Russell Sullivan, Karen Marie Sullivan, Kelly Ann Sullivan, Russell Woodrow Sullivan, Terry Douglas Sumilhig, Alejandro Sorza Summers, Bret Michael 400 Summers, Mark Stephen Summers, Merry Anne 415 Summers, Michael Alan Summers, Rita Catherine 257 Summers, Sherry Lynne 415 Summers, Steven Young 388 Summers, Vera Jane Summers, Wanda E. Boggess Suter, Mary Ruth Suter, Susan Eleonore 415 Sutherland, Donna Lynne Sutter, Frank James Suttle, Deborah Sue Suttles, John Wesley 329, 330, 375 Sutton, Donna Laverne Sutton, Edwinia Lea 223, 415 Sutton, George Walter III Sutton, Grace Lenore Sutton, Rebecca Jean Sutton, Ronnie 168-9 Sutton, Skip 337 Sutton, Vickie Annette Swack, Johnny Perry 400 Swafford, Peggy Agee Swain, Kathy Sue 375 Swain, Maurice Lamont 339 Swallow, Kelley Ann 269, 388 Swallows, Shelia Ann 400 Swanberg, Christopher G, 338, 388 Swann, Kenneth Ray Swann, Robert Vincent Swanson, Gregory Duane 388 Sweat, John Edward Sweatt, Frances Flener Sweeney, Alana Faye 415 Sweeney, Jeffery Wayne Sweeney, Thomas Francis Swetmon, Vonda Defae Swift, Kimberly Joe 260 Swift, Michael Duane Swift, Richard Wayne 267 Swift, Robert Jeffrey Swihart, Barry Allen Swiler, Todd Allen 252 Swimming 240-1 Swinford, Paul David Swinney, Gene Allen Swyhart, Timothy Lee 332-3 Sybesma, Steve 73, 77 Sydnor, Harold Alan 301 Symonds, Henry Nelson Szczapinski, Larry T. Szorcsik, Brenda Faye 415 Szymula, John Thomas 126-7 Tabb, Gary Neal Table Tennis Club 268 Tabor, Cynthia Annette 299 Tabor, Margann 388 Tabor, Marion 296-7, 400 Tabor, Ronald Brodus Tabor Sharon 400 Tabor, Sharon Suzanne 306 Tabor, Vickie Lee 375 Tackett, Deanna Lynn Tackett, Deborah Lynn 400 Tadlock, Sheila Wynn Tague, Duane Evan Taking care of students is their affair 164-5 Talabi, Bashiru Adebisi Talbott, Gregory Hay Talbott, Jenny Bow 400 Taliaferro, Shelia C. Talisman 61, 280-1 Tallent, Michael Carl Tallent, Norma Jean Tallent, Ricky Lynn Tallent, Wanda J. Carver Talley, Patsy Ann Tambornini, Jeffrey Lee 296 Tamme, Theodore Francis Tanaro, Tami 415 Tanaro, Tania 415 Tandy, Anna Paulette Tanner, Beverly Brooks Tanner, James Mark 400 Tanner, Lucinda Luttrell Tapp, Lisa Faye 400 Tapp, Terri Lynn 299, 388 Tapscott, Joan Winston Tapscott, John W. 185, 380 Tapscott, Virginia Ann 400 Tarakemeh, Abbas Tarison, Cladice 4 Tarison, Claud 4 Tarleton, Stuart Price 246, 415 Tarrants, Terri Claudette 388 Tarrence, Robe rt Dale 445 Sloan, Ned Tarrence, Robert Tarter, Michael Steve Theirl, Mark David Thomas, David Evan 223 Thomas, Mark Leo Thomas, Terry Lane Tarter, Thomas Mark 301 Theobald, Polly Grace 296 Thomas, Deborah Anne 388 Thomas, Mark Stephen Thomas, Timothy Andrew Tate, Betty Jean Theriot, Rosemary Williams Thomas, Deborah Lynn 415 Thomas, Michael Allen Thomas, Viola Evelyn C. Tate, Boyce 184 Theurkauf, Jon Eric Thomas, Deidra Ann Thomas, Michael Calvin 260-1 Thomason, James Allen Tate, Charles Frederick 216 Theurkauf, Krista Jane 269 Thomas, Donald Lee Thomas, Patricia Lee Thomason, Jo Ann Tate, Emily Anne 95, 271, 375 Thielen, Thomas Edward Thomas, Donald Paul 388 Thomas, Peter Anthony 388 Thomasson, Danny Joe Tate, William Lindsey 216 Thielen, Virginia Louise Thomas, Doris Susan Thomas, Rebecca Jean 401 Thomasson, Patrick A. Tatum, Carlos Dale 335, 388 Thies, Genevieve Anne 388 Thomas, Jacqueline Kay 415 Thomas, Ricky L. Thomerson, Bonita Jean Tatum, Howard James Thomas, Alvin Michael Thomas, James Edward Thomas, Ricky Wade Thomerson, Carol S. Lowe Tatum, James Timothy 271 Thomas, Audrey Thomas, James Geyer 415 Thomas, Sandra 40, 248, 296, 388 Thompson, Alfreda Gail Taul, Sherry Lynn Thomas, Barbara Elaine 270 Thomas, James Watson Thomas, Sara J. Lawrence Thompson, Amanda Kay Tavakoli, Mansoor 415 Thomas, Billy Ray Thomas, Janice Elaine Thomas, Schekilla Faye 401 Thompson, Angela 279 Taylor, Anne Marie 301 Thomas, Brenda H. 102 Thomas, Jeffrey Tabb Thomas, Scott Glen 264, 286-7, 388 Thompson, Amy Elizabeth Taylor, Anthony Warren 415 Thomas, Carolyn Jean Thomas, Joann M. 364 Thomas, Sharon 415 Thompson, Betty J. 95, 325, 336, 388 Taylor, Barbara Clark Thomas, Cheryl Ruth Thomas, Juanita Maria Thomas, Sonjia Renee 56, 401 Thompson, Brian Allan Taylor, Brenda Joyce Thomas, Curd Ford Jr. Thomas, Karen Elaine Thomas, Stephanie Gail Thompson, Carrie Frances Taylor, Brenda Katherine 295 Thomas, Cynthia Lee 370, 375 Thomas, Kevin Michael Thomas, Stephen Joseph 388 Thompson, Cathy Faye Taylor, Bryan Steven 216 Thomas, Danny C. Thomas, Mark Alan Thomas, Teresa J. Williams Thompson, Charles Robert Taylor, Carmen Gail 415 Taylor, Carol Elizabeth 252 Taylor, Cathy R. 284 Taylor, Cherie Lynn 400 Taylor, Clara Jean 287, 388 Taylor, Dana Lynn 323, 415 Taylor, Debra Lynn Taylor, Denise C. Taylor, Donald Keith 291, 300, 375 Taylor, Elisabeth Carol 278 Taylor, Elizabeth Anne Taylor, Eva Elaine Taylor, Freddie Lee 415 Taylor, Garry D. 284 Taylor, Gary Laine Taylor, Gina Lanette Taylor, Gregory D. Taylor, Ivy Edgar Taylor, Jeannie Marie 415 Taylor, Jeffery Ray Taylor, Jeffrey Keith Taylor, John Scott Taylor, John Wallace Taylor, Joni Sue 375 Taylor, Joyce Lynne Taylor, Karen Denise Taylor, Larry Wayne Taylor, Lawana Lynn 400 Taylor, Leslie Eugene Taylor, Lois Elaine 375 Taylor, Lonnie Rhea 330-1 Taylor, Marc Louis Taylor, Mary Sue Taylor, Melvin Benjamin 400 Taylor, Melvin Woodall Taylor, Michael Anthony Taylor, Nancy Elizabeth 401 Taylor, Neil Il 264, 287, 388 Taylor, Patricia 104 Taylor, Paula A. 415 Taylor, Perry Randall Taylor, Randy Kay Bushaw Taylor, Rhonda Jean Taylor, Richard Gerard Taylor, Robert Thompson Taylor, Sandra Kaye 323, 341 Taylor, Sheila Faye Taylor, Stephaine Parrish Taylor, Susan Katie 276, 322, 388 Taylor, Tamara Lou 415 Taylor, Teresa Kay 2, 324, 401 Taylor, Tuss Monroe Taylor, Vickie Lee 401 Taylor, William Edward Taylor, William Henry III Taylor, William Lester Taylor, William Paul 401, 415 Tayntor, Joanne Mary Tays, Allen Reed 388 Teater, Mary David Teacher education department 187 Teacher education department head 187 Teaching oversupply reduced, shortages found in some areas 186-9 Teamwork 250-1 Tedesco, Frank Albert Tefft, Kelcie Jean Temperamental 175 Temple, Mark Thomas Templeton, Todd Alan 216, 415 Temporaily at the top 142-3 Tench, David Wilson 307, 401 Tengelsen, Joanette B. Terrell, Elizabeth Ann 388 Terrell, Jane Ellis 249, 266, 401 Terrell, Scott 264, 287 Terry, Anthony Lee 328-9 Terry, Dennis Brian Terry, Joan M. Feldkamp Terry, Norman Lee 375 Terry Sue Jane Terry, Tony 329 Teske, Heather Rutledge Teson, Charlene Ruth Tesseneer, Susan Wyman Teuerkauf, Jon 306-7 Thacker, Kathy Denise Thacker, Kay Christman Thacker, Kelly Elizabeth Thacker, Margaret R. Bryan Thanas, Anthony John 251 Tharp, Barry Ray Tharp, Julie Beth 415 Tharp, Kerry Wayne 336, 375 Tharp, Linda Jane 411 The best of two worlds 174-5 The longest mile 44-7 The night life 13, 54-61 The three Ds 228-9 The three Rs 118-123 The top five 128-9 The winningest ‘losing’ season ever 212-9 The working class 84-91 Theater 98-107 Flower girl RELAXING after having had several tests, Marcia Newlon holds a forsythia in front of Van Meter Auditorium. The Louisville nursing student said she was “‘tired of thinking” that day. 446 Tarter, Michael Thompson, Charles Thompson, Daniel Bernard Thompson, Mark Allen 300, 375 Thompson, William Ernest Thurtell, Gordon Keith Tines, Ronald Wayne Thompson, Deloris Hunter Thompson, Mark Aloysius Thomsen, Andres Alfredo 251 Thweatt, Susan Love Tingle, Ricky Lee 329 Thompson, Dimple Savage Thompson, Mary Jane 415 Thornberry, Stephen Ray Tichenor, David Gerard Tingle, Vicky Lynn Thompson, Donna Rae Thompson, Nicole Davis Thorne, Mary Paula 90 Tichenor, James Edward 216, 285, 401 Tingle, William Thomas 340 Thompson, Elaine Rene 282, 284 Thompson, Pamela Denise 375 Thornton, Bob Morris Tichenor, Jon Kevin 377 Tingler, Harry Curtis Thompson, Elizabeth Louise Thompson, Paul Lee 216 Thornton, Deborah Susanne 284 Tichenor, Sheila Jean Tingley, Mary Margaret 266, 269, 296, Thompson, Gary Steven Thompson, Peggy 236 Thornton, Margaret Mary Tidwell, Lisa Ann 415 377 Thompson, George Alan Thompson, Priscilla Lynn 261 Thornton, Steven Owen 123, 132, 288-9, Tierney, Dave 220-1 Tingthanathikul, Sompob Thompson, Jimmie Lee Thompson, Rando!ph Logan 293, 296, 336 Tigue, Michael Stephen Tinius, James Anthony 216, 285, 377 Thompson, Jo Anna 325 Thompson, Sheri Lynn 415 Thrasher, Barry Lloyd Tilford, Brad Calvin Tinius, Kathryn Strozdas 251 Thompson, JoAnn 279 Thompson, Stephen Wayne 415 Thurman, A.J. 164-5 Tilley, Debra Jo Tinsley, Cynthia Curine 401 Thompson, Karen Anne Thompson, Stewartson Clark Thurman, Elizabeth Annette 238, 415 Tillman, James 221 Tipton, Kathy Jayne 377 Thompson, Karen Joy Thompson, Teresa Lynn 291, 305 Thurman, Pamela Livingston Tilton, Scott Kevin 260, 332-3, 415 Tipton, Ronald Arthur 377 Thompson, Kathey Mae 299 Thompson, Teresa Marie B, Thurman, Sharon Kay Adkins Timberlake, Catherine J Tipton, Sherree Lynn Thompson, Kelly 120, 138, 161 Thompson, Teri Lynn 415 Thurmond, Cathy Jean 388 Timberlake, Cynthia Janell Titus, Steven Frank Thompson, Kenneth Foster Thompson, Vosteen Maddle Thurmond, Dianne B. Timko, Valerie Susan To go back to school or not — Thompson, Lynette Marie 415 Thompson, Wendy Carol 377 Thurston, Elizabeth Louise Timmons, Valerie 301 Financial aid helps find the answer Thompson, Marilyn Thompson, William Arvil 338 Thurston, Luvenia Ann Tindle, Neal Ray 205 — Robert W. Pillow 447 Thompson, Daniel To go back Toberman, Wayne Carl Toczko, David Charles Todd, Benjamin Harris Ill Todd, Doyle Bradley 216 Todd, Kevin Gerard Tofighi, Mohammad Toftness, Lea Anne 252, 401 Toh, Kee Bing Tolbert, Shannon M. Beasley Toler, Paul J. dr. Toll, Robin Gail 415 Tolopka, Daniel Joseph 147 Tomes, Barry Christopher Tomes, Deborah Jean 323, 415 Tomes, James 144, 158-9 Tompkins, Alan David Tompkins, Jeffery Lee Toms, Frankie Neal Toms, Hal Butler 401 Toms, Philip Allen 388 Toms, Tressie Onan Toohey, Jennifer Ellen Toomey, Hal Wade 291, 401 Toomey, Kathy Karen 415 Torrens, Kevin Durfee Torres-Trivino, Luz Daisy Tougher, Mary Catherine 129, 268-9 Towery, Frederick Clark Towle, Susan Carole Towler, Grover Cleveland 401 Town talk 30-1 Towns, Tony Lamont 216, 219, 256 Townsend, Debra Lynn Townsend, Kurtis Michael 7 Townsend, Vanita Jane 415 Trabue, Dwight M. Tracy, Homer 98, 104 Transplanted 176-7 Trask, Blair William Travelsted, Joe Kelley Travis, Bradley Kevin 401 Travis, David Lynn 388 Travis, Debbie Jane 323, 401 Travis, Jean Laurent 388 Travis, Shanan Lee Travis, Todd Oliver 388 Travis, William Joseph 336 Traylor, Louise Marie Treading on ice 362 Treece, Susan Joy 326, 334, 401 Trembath,Kern Robert Trent, William Joseph Tribble, Jane Trice, Ann Jeanette 415 Trickey, Lee David Trigbaum, Steve 241 Triggs, George Spencer Trillion 77 Trimble, David Lyle Trimble, John M. Jr. Trinidad, Ramona A. Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band 82 Triplett, Kevin Duane Triplett, Linda Sue Triplett, Scott Kilian 338 Tripp, David L. Troutman, Dan David 290-1, 300 Truell, Tori 325 Trugman, Rodney M. 401 Truitt, Charles Robert Trujillo, Rosalie Ann 401 Trull, Tori Lucille Truman, Margaret Hughes Trumbo, Don Trey 220-1, 223, 224, 227 Truplett, Linda 325 Trusty, Frederick W. 338 Tsao, Chienchung Tuba Ensemble 270-1 Tubb, Ernest Dale Jr. 343, 357, 377 Tucker, Bettina Estoria Tucker, Beverly Ann 377 Tucker, Cynthia Jean 66, 70-1, 103 Tucker, Fred Jr. Tucker, John Gregory 377 Tucker, Karen 291, 401 Tucker, Mark Allen Tucker, Melvin Dale 304, 377 Tucker, Nancy Lou Tucker, Ronald Dean Tucker, Steven Tucker, Tori 324 Tudor, Cynthia Ann 377 Tudor, Jennifer Denise Tuell, John Witherspoon Tuggle, Morris Jean 377 Tuggle, Ricky Allan 330-1 Tuggle, Samuel Patton Ill Tully, William Patrick Jr. Tunks, Tina Marie 415 Tupman, Teresa Ann 401 Tupts, Rita Yvonne 415 Turnbull, Fred William Turner, Alford Joe Turner, Charles Robert 246 Turner, Cheryl Rae 291 Turner, David Brian 377 Turner, Debbie Cox 377 Turner, Deborah Leigh Turner, Desiree Pavon Turner, Doris Ann Turner, Gregory Anthony 216, 415 Turner, Harold Wilson Turner, James Harold Turner, Joan Humphries Turner, John Calvin Turner, Joseph William Turner, Karen Lumaida Turner, Lester Thomas Turner, Patricia Carol 401 Turner, Polly Jean Turner, Richard Allen Jr. Turner, Richard Romano Turner, Stewart Britt 415 Turner, Teresa Gail 415 Turner, Terry Eldon 448 Toberman, Wayne Wheeler, Jack Turner, Thomas Guthrie Turner, Tommy Joe Turnmire, Richard M. Turok, Laura Jane 377 Turrentine, Dale Anne 291, 377 Tussey, Lee Ann 304-5, 377 Tussey, Thomas Allen Tutino, Thomas James 283 Tuttle, Terri Gail 401 Tuttle, Vickey Lynn 327 Tuttle, Vicki Jean 388 Tweedy, Brenda D. Twejiri, Gamaleddin Ali Tyler, Rico Thomas 285 Tynes, Vernon Walter Tyree, Tamala Sue C Ueltschi, Robert Dowling 328-9, 340 Ugochukwu, Nwabufo Ernest Underwood, David Glenn Underwood, Pamela Gay 298, 388 United Black Greeks 294-5, 341 United Black Students 82, 289, 295 University archivist 152 University attorney 150-1 University publications director 156-7 University-school publications director 166 University stores director 151 Upchurch Erwin Amos Updike, Tom 160 Ups and downs 248-9 Upton, John Cowherd 301, 377 Upton, Robin Iona 401 Urban, Rolanda Ruth 415 Urbanek, Kayla Rae 323 Urbanek, Kimberly Kay 377 Urtz, Thomas S. 252 Utley, Joann 305, 401 Utley, Kenneth 296 Utley, Lisa Gail 415 Utley, Mike Lee Utley, Powell Pius 415 Utley, Sherrie Kay 327, 415 V Vaden, Katherine Reed 401, 403 Vail, Carmen Rose Vail, Howard Peary Vaithayavatana, Narumol Vale, Lou Ann 415 Valencia, Carlos Arturo 415 Valentino, William Donald 377 Vamvas, Augustus John Vamvas, Jeffrey Allan Van Bussum, Gail Paige Van Leer, Darryl Edward 310-1, 415 Vanatta, Bob 221 Vanarsdall, Ann Baxter Vanarsdall, Thomas Edward 335 Vanatta, Bob 221 Vanatti, Douglas James Vance, Arnold Duffy 401 Vance, David Holland 284, 401 Vance, Eric Wallingford Vance, Gatha Jean 377 Vance, James Edward D. Jr. Vance, Karen Ann Vancleave, Phyllis Ann Vancleve, Annette Elaine Vander, Kraats, Keith R. 388 Vandercook, Jack Douglas J. 401 Vandermeer, Rebecca Leigh Vanderspool, Ann Leslie 327 Vanderwoude, Berend T. VanEaton, Laurie Lee Vaneaton, Valerie Lynn 388 Vanenk, Richard Arthur Vanfleet, Cynthia Dawn 232, 234-5, 285 Vangroningen, Willis Dean Vanhalsema, Helen Sterk Vanhalsema, Mark Emmett Vanhook, Patricia Lynn 415 Vanhoose, Howard Leslie Vanmeter, Kathy Ann 249, 378 Vanmeter, Kenneth Mark 260, 338 Vanmeter, Lisa Jacqueline Vanmeter, Mark 338 Vanmeter, Monica Lynn Vanmeter, Nelson P. IV Vanmeter, Shane Nelson 49, 338 Vanmilligen, Judy Carol Vannote, Katrina Lee Vargas, Angel Manuel V. 200 Variot, James Matthew Varnadoe, Marty Vaughan, Dwight Alan Vaughan, Gary Earl 183 Vaughan, Patricia A. White Vaughn, Alan Ray Vaughn, Diana Kay 266-7 Vaughn, Donnie Wayne Vaughn, Gregory Leonard Vaughn, Jeffrey Alan 66, 68-9, 71, 99, 103-5 Vaughn, John Paul 415 Vaughn, Randy 332-3 Vaught, Jerome Vince Vaught, Kevin Bruce 178, 274 Vaught, Larry Brent 270 Vaught, Mark O’Neal Vear, Donald G. Veech, David Scott 287 Veech, Paul Joseph Veech, Ronnie Lee Jr. 99, 283 Veenker, Ronald 9 Vejr, Rebecca Garrett Veluzat, Jane C. Vencill, Vicky 415 Venrick, Vicki Caryl 401 Verner, Joann 296 Vertrees, James Kenneth Vessels, Carolyn Louise 401 Vessels, Lea Ann 236, 401 Vick, David M. Vick, Dwayne Herndon 274, 415 Vick, Frances Annette 274, 291, 378 Vick, Franklin David Jr. Vick, Mark Alan 330-1 Vick, Minerva Ann Vick, Patricia Denise 401 Vick, Walter Glenn Vickers, Janet Lynn 378 Victor, Joseph Edward Viers, Tommy Joe Viffari, Rocky 241 Vikre, Karen Lise Vincent, Belinda Gaye Vincent, Chrystal Gill 378 Vincent, Joel Miles 236, 271, 401 Vincent, Pamela Jean Vincent, Randy Vernon 266, 415 Vincent, Reneva Estelle Vincent, Robert Alan Vincent, Robin Sue 291, 378 Vincent, Sarah Hawks 22 Vincent, Teresa Ann 401 Vincent, Terri Jeanette 388 Vinison, Karen Jeannette 415 Vinson, Kenneth Wayne 271 Vinson, Robbie Dannette 324, 341, 378 Vinson, Walter George Jr. Vinton, Edward Jay 332-3 Vise, Linda Kay 325, 401 Vizzari, Rocco James II Voelker, Brian Allan Vogel, Thomas Albert Voges, David Ernest Jr. Vogt, Christy Kay Vogt, Mary Suzanne 291, 401 Voils, Danny Gene Vollmer, Joyce Ann 388 W WBGN 86 Waddington, Cynthia Jane 401 Waddington, Shanna Sue 378 Waddle, Cheri J. Waddle, Marcia Gayle Waddle, Ralph Richard Jr. 328-9 Wade, Benjamin Wheeler Wade, Catherine Elizabeth 282, 378 Wade, Deborah Lynn Wade, Debra V. Rene 389 Wade, Joseph Wesley Wade, Marsha Jill 401 Wade, Michael Lynn Wade, Norman Lee Jr. 306 Wade, Rebekah Ruth D. Wade, Ursula Quinn Waggoner, Stephen Leonard Waggoner, Vicky Jean 275 Wagner, Denise Michelle 322, 389 Wagner, Jean Mary 267, 389 Wagner, Phillip Marlin Wagoner, Mark Shawn Waiters, Beverly Michele Wakefield, Frank H. II Wakeland, Susan Lynn Waksmunski, Paul Michael Wald, Melanie Lynn 389 Walden, Gary Kipling 260 Walden, John D. Walden, Vella Frances Waldrop, Alexander Moore Walker, Alfred B. 291 Walker, Becky Faye 282 Walker, Betty Diann 56 Walker, Cathy Lynn Walker, Denise Ruth 293 Walker, Ellen Dru Walker, Eugene Levon 193, 401 Walker, James Daniel Walker, James William Walker, Jerry Lee Walker, John Howard 378 Walker, Karen Walker, Kurt Dean Walker, Mark Earl Walker, Meloney Renee Walker, Nancy Jane Walker, Robin Jean 325, 389, 400 Wall, Curtis Ray 378 Wall, Dona Jean Wall, Donna Gail Wall, James Robert Wall, Melanie Geeslin Wall, Randy V. 330-1 Wall, Stephen Jay 378 Wallace, Anne Jennifer 401 Wallace, Don Vertrees II Wallace, Gregory Rhodes Wallace, Jeffrey Robert 415 Wallace, Kevin Mark 415 Wallace, Lydia M. 299 Wallace, Marc 154 Wallace, Mark Curtis Wallace, Matthew Wallace, Michael Eugene 378 Wallace, Michael Louis 389 Wallace, Ray B. Wallace, Regina Elaine Wallace, Timothy George Wallin, Jack Garry Walls, William 128, 292 Walsh, John Christopher Walsh, Thomas Edward Walter, Donald Thomas 336 Walter, Michael Dale Walter, Paul Edward Walters, Charles Freeman Walters, Danny Blaine 415 Walters, Dianna Lynn 270, 295 Walters, Janet Lynn Walters, Joseph Lee 389 Walters, Kenneth Dean Walters, Leah Mischele Walters, Mike 331 Walters, Peter Hudson 216, 219, 285 Walters, Ricky Walthall, Roger Dale Walton, George E. Waltrip, Richard Craig 401 Wampler, Marcia Lynne Wampler, Thomas Nelson Wang, Yuan Yee Wannemuehler, Matthew E. Wanta, Steven Richard 332-3 Ward, Barry Anthony 378 Ward, Barry Randall Ward, Diana Sue Taylor Ward, Dorothy Sheila Ward, Karen Miller Ward, Kimberly Lynn Ward, Larry 401 Ward, Lesa Michelle Ward, Tammara Warden, Larry Winburn Wardlow, Mark C. Wardrip, Bonnie A. Thompson Ware, Carlotta Marie Ware, Effie Mae Ware, Sidney Clark 401 Warfield, Robert Dean Warford, Kevin Thomas Warinner, William David Warmath, Randall Dean 338 Warner, Carrie Lynn 389 Warner, Elizabeth Williams Warner, Teresa Suzanne Warren, Charles T. Jr. 336 Warren, Don Allen 415 Warren, Ernest Carl Warren, Jeffrey Bryan 266 Warren, Jennifer Warren, John Mark 336 Warren, Keith Warren, Virginia L. Warren, David 244 Washburn, Ricardo Veloris 339 Washer, Threesae Glover Washington, Jack 223-4, 283 Washington, James Bernard Washington, Lula Bea 416 Washington, Zoe M. Washko, John Michael Wassom, Earl 152 Wassom, John 203 Wassom, Reginald E. Watanabe, Shelley Tomiko Waters, Jack Randall Waters, Sandra Michelle 325 Wathen, Donald Edward Wathen, Douglas Alan 298 Wathen, John Michael Wathen, Kathy Susan Geroy 401 Watkins, David Hunter Watkins, Denis Warren Watkins, Jenifer Gay Watkins, Jennifer Scott 261 Watkins, Gayle 13, 40-3, 249, 378 Watkins, Linda 66-7, 72 Watkins, Paul Lee 389 Watkins, Priscilla Harris Watkins, Ricky 40, 42-3 Watkins, Riley Ray Watkins, Rita Lynn 378 Watkins, Sonya Elayne 416 Watkins, Tanyita 40, 43 Watkins, Terri Lynn 299, 401 Watkins, Treasa Dianna Watkins, William B. Ill Watkins, William Gregory 416 Watrous, Kim Elizabeth 389 Watson, Beverly Jo 389 Watson, Carrie Ann 48, 322 Watson, Debra Elaine 416 Watson, Jackie Ray Watson, Judy Marie 378 Watson, Karen Y. Thomas Watson, Katherine Anne 341 Watson, Pamela Tracey Watson, Patricia Kay 416 Watt, Roger Allan Watts, Alicia Louise Watts, Christina Marie 416 Watts Holly Kristin 283, 322, 401 Watts, Karen A. 313, 389 Watts, Maria Louise 416 Watts, Rossan 325 Watts, Tina 327 Wayman, Sherry Lynn 416 Weafer, Stephen Edward 389 Weakley, Thomas Wayne 401 Wease, Terry Wayne Weather 62-3 Weatherford, David Thomas 389 Weaver, Alison Sue Weaver, David Lee 310-1 Weaver, Keith Allen Weaver, Mark Douglas 266 Weaver, Max C. Weaver, Patrick Lee Weaver, Valerie Jill 389 Weaver, William Thomas II Webb, David Paige Webb, Deborah Joyce Webb, Dennis Layne 378 Webb, Diane Lynn Webb, Jerri 401 Webb, Jill Angeline Webb, Joseph B. 337 Webb, Julia Ann 416 Webb, Kevin Ladon Webb, Patricia Y-. Webb, Rickey Byron Webb, Ronald Jeffrey Webb, Sherie Lynn Webb, Sherri 401 Webb, Stephen Morris Webb, William Neal Weber, Angela Marie 401 Weber, Richard A. Jr. Weber, Tina Marie 305, 378 Webster, Cynthia D. Webster, Paul Richard Webster, Robert Clayton Webster, William Douglas Wedding, Patrick Vincent Weddle, James Bryan Weddle, Lucinda Jane Weeks, Linda Lou Sulliva n Weems, Lonnie Ray dr. Wehby, Jennifer Leigh Wehlage, John Victor Weidmar, Mark 329 Weigel, Bruce Edward 378 Weihe, Gary Joseph Weis, James Burt Weisenberger, Geralyn Sue 401 Weissinger, James Wood 335 Weitlauf, Mary Virginia Welch, Charlotte Jean 416 Welch, Robert Mitchell Welch, Theresa Ann Welker, Beth Thomas 378 Wellinghurst, Gary Neil Wells, Alesa Jane 416 Wells, Anthony Eugene 216 Wells, C.G. 291 Wells, Charles Edward 266, 416 Wells, Elizabeth Anne 401 Wells, Geneva Gayle Wells, Gregory E. 304, 378 Wells, Helen S. Robertson Wells, Janis Kay 389 Wells, Judith Kaye 299, 401 Wells, Mark Edward 378 Wells, Paula Lugene 270-1 Wells, Roy W. Jr. 416 | Wells, Sharon R. 401 | Wells, Teena Fay Wells, Vanessa Jill 378 Wendt, Cynthia Sue 298, 389 Wendt, Stephen D. 378 Werner, Gary Lee Wesley Foundation 24 Wesley, Frank Donald Jr. j Wesley, Lucy Lynne Wesley, Ronnie Mitchell West, Brenda Jane 416 West, Debby Lynn West, Gail Maureen 401 West, Gary Lawrence 378 West, Gregory Lawrence West, Julie 416 West, Karen Denise West, Mark Allen West, Mary Kathleen West, Michael Allen 291 West, Moi Jolie 416 West, Robynne West, Stanford Lynn West, William Keith West, William Robert 378 West, William Terry 330-1 Westbrook, John Warren Westbrook, Sherri Lynn H. Western Horsemen's Association 267 Western Players 282 Wester, Don Alan | Westerfield, Cheri Ann 416 | Westerfield, Michael Glenn Westerman, Beverly Jean 261, 265 Westfall, Jeffery Allen 241, 416 Westfall, Martha Ellen Westfall, Sara Lea 179, 323, 378 Westray, James Kevin Wetherill, Rex Albert 337 Wethington, Barbara Sue Wethington, Mary Elizabeth Wettig, Keith Scott 286, 328-9, 378 | Whalen, Laura Marie 277, 389 Wharton, Kelcey Charles What’s news with the university 156-7 Wheat, Gary Eugene Wheat, Katherine 389 Wheat, Rita R. 416 Wheat, Ruth Ann 297, 304, 401 Wheat, Stephen H. Wheatley, Dennis Craig 302 Wheatley, Stephen Gerard 378 Wheatley, Thomas Joseph Wheeler, Carol Johnson 327, 341, 389 Wheeler, Cynthia Martin 267 | Wheeler, Dana Scott | Wheeler, Debra Lynne Wheeler, Douglas James Wheeler, Jack Timothy Wheeler, Mary Margaret 299 Wheeler, Michael Neal 267, 327, 378 Wheeler, Richard Kirk 332-3 Wheeler, Ricky Lee 86, 389 Wheeler, Robert Alfred Wheeler, Vikki Elizabeth 416 Wheet, Joe Whelan, Brenda Kay Whelan, Linda Carol 416 Whelan, William Edward 124, 306 Whipple, John Fredrick Whisenhunt, Timothy A. Whisman, Steven Andrew 268 Whistle, Patricia Annette 416 Whitaker, David B. 156-7, 199 Whitaker, David Taylor 278 Whitaker, Jeffrey Lane Whitaker, Jeffrey Wendell 264, 401 Whitaker, Monty Ray 266 Whitaker, Rhonda Lynne 277, 401 Whitaker, Robert Allen 389 White, Alicia Ann 401 White, Anna Marie 401 White, Barbara Sue 270, 295 White, Carolyn Jasper 378 White, Cheryl Lynn 282 White, Connie Beulah 287, 401 White, Cynthia Sue 378 White, Daniel Thomas White, David Olen Jr. 261, 378 White, Dewayne Leonard White, Diane Elizabeth 416 White, Donald Lawson 378 White, Donna Banks White, Floyd Eagle 416 White, Glenda Karen White, Gregory Neal White, Irvin Stanley 295, 328-9, 330, _ 341, 389 White, James Dale Jr. 293, 389 White, Jean Marie White, Jeffery Lynn White, Jeffrey Alan 285, 416 White, John Mark White, Karen 416 White, Kimberley Gail 378 White, Marjorie Christine White, Mary Kathryn 416 White, Melba Jo Eaton White, Melissa Lynn White, Meta Cheryl White, Peggy Lynn 401 White, Prentice Brady White, Ray B. 118-9, 294 White, Ray Buchanan II 216 White, Raymond Oscar 216, 285 White, Rita Gail White, Rita Gale 415 White, Robert Porter White, Robin Lane White, Rodney Maurice White, Ronald Lee White, Shari 417 White, Statia Marie White, Stephen Douglas 401 White, Tony Mark White, William Lambert White, William Letcher White, Winona Ruth 379 Whitehead, Kimberly Anne 417 Whitehead, Linda 417 Whitehead, Mary Leslie Whitehouse, Karen Ann Whitesell, Bell 64 Whitesell, Genie 64 Whitfield, Donald Boyd Whitfield, Jennifer Anne 417 Whitfield, Warren Lee 379 Whitis, Darrell Adrian Whitis, David Alan Whitis, Myra Whitley, Carole Scott S. Whitley, Darrell Keith Whitley, David R. Whitlock, Dennis Keith Whitlow, Diane Elaine 417 Whitlow, Faye Ann Whitlow, Forrest Clinton Whitlow, Linda Marie Jolly Whitmer, Robert C. Whitney, Jane Clark Whitney, Jeffery L. Whitney, Russell Evans 401 Whitney, Tammy Ray Whitney, William Frank Whitsell, William Franklin Whitsett, Cynthia Derayne 417 Whitson, Phyllis Ann 389 Whitson, Teresa Leah 265 Whittaker, Jess D. Whittaker, Teresa Ann Whittinghill, Sharon Ann Whittinghill, Tamara Jean 417 Whittinghill, William D. Whitworth, Daniel Lawrence Wible, Gerald Alan 401 Wicks, Alice Elizabeth Wicks, Joel David Wickson, Dick 241 Wiebmer, Carolyn Jeane 379 Wiedeman, Tim P. Wiedmar, Mark Willard Wiggington, Bill 330 Wiggins, Donna Freedle 379 Wiggins, Leonard Howard Wiggins, Michael Griffith Wiggins, Sandra Rochelle Wiggins, William Renick Wigginton, Cynthia Buford Wigginton, Edward W. Jr. 329 Wigginton, Scott Evan 285, 291, 401 Wiggs, Jane Lynn Wightman, Georgia Ellen 389 Wilburn, Stephen Craig Wilcher, Brenda Loyce Wilcoxson, Carla Jean 299, 417 Wild, Georgia Ann Wilder, Jerry 162 Wilder, Mary Earl Wilder, Tambra Louise Wildman, Warren Lee Jr. 401 Wiley, Anthony Twain Wiley, James Wilson Wilhelm, Aric Daniel 246 Wilhite, Gerald Wilhite, Jo Ellen Wilk, Joseph Peter Wilk, Susan Elaine Wilke, Douglas C. Wilkerson, Brenda Kay Wilkerson, Kimberly Stull Wilkerson, Thomas Kyle Wilkins, James Keith 329, 379 Wilkins, Martin Curtis Wilkins, Meredith Lee Wilkins, Robert Micheal Wilkins, Ronald Lynn 55, 178-9 Wilkins, Stephen Greer Wilkinson, Kathy Briley Wilkinson, Mark Allen Wilkinson, Stanley Randall Wilks, Thomas Garrett 331 Will, David Malcolm 417 Willburn, Steve 338 Willen, Sharon Willis 417 Willey, Renee Marie 322 Willhoite, Kimberly Ann 417 Willi, John Robert Williams, Agnes Nadine Williams, Andrel 277 Williams, Angela Denise Williams, Angela Rose 296, 379 Williams, Anthony Glenn 303 Williams, Artye 389 Williams, Becky Ann Williams, Billy Joe Williams, Bonnie Jean 417 Williams, Charles Vernon Williams, Darryl Taylor 401 Williams, Deborah Kay Williams, Debra Ann 379 Williams, Donald Lee Williams, Donna Jo 324, 417 Williams, Edward L. Williams, Elsie C. Williams, Gale Marie 327, 401 Williams, George Edwin Williams, Geraldine 417 Williams, Giles Buford Williams, Harry Woodrow Williams, Jacqueline Jean 282 Williams, Janet Ann 417 Williams, Jay Thaden Williams, Jeffery Williams, Jeffrey David 260, 268, 379 Williams, Jimmy Lee 66-7, 71, 223 Williams, Johnny 244 Williams, John Galen Williams, Judith Ann 389 Williams, Karen Denise Williams, Katherine Ann Williams, Kelly Hayden 306 Williams, Kimberly Ann 389 Williams, Marcella Ann 295, 379 Williams, Marie Antionette Williams, Marie P. 14 Williams, Mark Alan Williams, Mark Paul Williams, Mark Steven Williams, Marva Rae 379 Williams, Mary Carolyn Williams, Mary Elizabeth Williams, Melvin James Williams, Micheal Wayne 417 Williams, Mike L. 254-5 Williams, Nancy Ann Williams, Paula Ruth Williams, Penny Renee Williams, Peri Ann 327 Williams, Randy Neil Williams, Renee Earl Williams, Richard Williams, Rita Marlene Williams, Robert Andre Williams, Robert Daily Williams, Robert Louis Jr. 417 Williams, Roger Wayne 221 Williams, Sandra D. Napier 252 Williams, Savona 252 Williams, Scott Franklin 337 Williams, Sharri Latrice 389 Williams, Sherman Anthony Williams, Teresa Claire 379 Williams, Terry Dewayne Williams, Thomas Scott Williams, Timothy Lyal Williams, Vicki Gail 274 Williams, Vickie Lynn Williams, Vincent Peter 332-3 Williams, Wanda Jeanene 379 Williams, Willie Douglas Williamson, Celia Lynette 401 Williamson, Patricia P. Williamson, Regina Moore Williamson, Vivian Carol Williford, Bradley William Williford, Lloyd Harold Jr. Willingham, Melinda Ann 249, 401 Willis, Bonnie G. Zentner Willis, Dee Ann 401 Willis, Gregory Glen Willis, Jeannie Lavonne Willis, Mark Allen 296, 379 Willis, Matilda Ree Willis, Scott Lowry Willis, Tammy Lynn 305, 327, 401 Willis, Thomas Dale Willis, William Murrell Willoughby, Betty Gayle Willoughby, Deborah Kaye 379 Willoughby, James Glenn 246 Willoughby, Jennie Lee Willoughby, John Garvin Willoughby, Judith Anne N. Willoughby, Lavonna Law Willoughby, Lisa Anne Willoughby, Sharon Faye 417 Wills, Mark A. Wills, Meredith Louise Wills, Robert Vincent 301 Wilmore, Deborah Elaine 282, 327, 389 Wilson, Ann 73, 75, 77 Wilson, August Kent Wilson, Barry Ernest Wilson, Brent Edward Wilson, Catherine Deneace Wilson, Chad Martin Wilson, Charles Daniel Wilson, Charles Omar III Wilson, Cheryl Ann Wilson, Connie Allen Wilson, David Arnold Wilson, Dawana Lee 270 Wilson, Deborah Suzanne 291, 401 Wilson, Debra Lynne 389 Wilson, Donna Lynn 417 Wilson, Dwight Clarence Wilson, Elizabeth Darlene Wilson, Elizabeth Wright Wilson, Frances Louise Wilson, Gary Lee Wilson, Gary Wayne Wilson, Gerald L. Wilson, Gregory Allen 287, 389 Wilson, Gregory Antonius Wilson, Jennifer Joan 417 Wilson, Joan Marsh Palmer Wilson, Judy Frances Wilson, Julian Anthony Wilson, Kevin Gordon 301, 379, 440-1 Wilson, Larry Allan Wilson, Leslie D. Wilson, Lettie Winona Wilson, Linda Faye Wilson, Lisa Ann Wilson, Lora J. Fairchild Wilson, Lucia Sanchez Wilson, Marcia Kay 401 Wilson, Mark Douglas Wilson, Mary Alice 401 Wilson, Melinda Wilson, Nancy 77 Wilson, Patricia McClaren 379 Wilson, Paula J. Tichenor Wilson, Phyllis J. Turpen Wilson, Richard Neal Wilson, Robert Terrell Wilson, Scott Samuel Wilson, Stephen Alan Wilson, Steve Alan 296, 318, 320, 336 Wilson, Stevie Joe 379 Wilson, Stuart Kevin Wilson, Susan Dell 417 Wilson, Thomas Charles 401 Wilson, Tony 300-1 Wilson, Timothy Clay Wilson, Tracy Lee 102, 282-3, 401 Wilson, Vicki Sharon 417 Wilson, William David Wilson, William Marion Wiltshire, David Allen Wilwayco, Stephanie Dawn 291, 401 Wimberley, James Michael 258, 379 Wimberly, Maurice Darnell Wimbs, Vicki Elizabeth 313, 341 Wimsatt, Joseph Leo Wimsatt, Richard Alan Winchester, Clara May 401 Winchester, David Scott 332-3 Wingfield, Daryl Eugene Wingfield, Ruth Butler Wingo, Marion Kenneth 244, 246, 330 Wininger, Audre June G. Wininger, Gloria Ann 179 Winlock, Diana Lee 327 Winn, Christine Mary T. Winsett, Kathy Lynn 267, 417 Winstead, Dana Lynn Winstead, Joe E. 301 Winstead, Melvin Lee Winstead, Sara Carlisle Winter, Carmen M. Ortiz Winter, Janice Marie Winter Warfare 367 Wisdom, Charlie Paxton II Wise, Carolyn R. Wise, Christopher F. Wise, Kathy Sue Wise, Kimberly Jane Wise, Richard Eugene 330-1 Wise, Wilma Jean Webster Wiseman, Linda Marie Witcher, Russell Yates 401 Withers, Teresa Ann 282 Withrow, Richard Anthony 236 Witt, Chuck 16, 31 Witt, Jennifer Lynn 401 Witt, Kathie 95 Witt, Kenneth Roy Witt, Rebecca Martin Witten, Darrell Wayne Witten, David Wayne Witten, Timothy Allan 379 Witter, Linda Kay 417 Witty, Deborah Lou Witty, Marita Ann Witty, Tammie Jill 389 WKU-Community Dance Company 108 WKU Fencers 268 Wohlleb, Pamela Marie 401 Wolf, Patricia Marie Wolfe, Bill 276 Wolfe, Burchel Eugene Wolfe, Debbie Diane 417 Wolfe, Johnny Michael Wolfe, Karen S. Wolfenden, Carrie Ann Wolff, Douglas Paul Wolff, Jeff Alan Wolford, Madonna Kay 417 Wollbright, W.L. Women’s basketball 230-5 Women’s golf 252 Women’s swim club 268 Women’s tennis 250-1 Women’s track and cross country 248-9 Women’s volleyball club 264-5 Wood, Allyson Michele Wood, Carol Sue Wood, Christine Schon Wood, Frankie Dale 417 Wood, George Stephen Wood, Irene Hansel Wood, John Layne Wood, Lucy Annette Wood, Mary Eleanor Taylor Wood, Michele Smith Wood, Patricia Marie 257, 285 Wood, Randal Kelly Wood, Retta A. 172 Wood, Rhonda J. Fleming Wood, Richard Eugene Jr. Wood, Rita Gayle 417 Wood, Robin Jean Wood, Samela Ann Wood, Stephanie Hall 316, 416 Wood, Stephen Bradshaw Wood, Tedd 98 Wood, Teresa Glynn 358 Woodall, Candy Joette 418 Woodall, Connie Machelle 418 Woodall, Jeanne Kay 389, 430-1 Woodard, Debra Ann Woodard, Jo Ann Woodard, Lillie Marie 286-7, 401 Woodard, Mary Margaret Woodard, Shelia Elaine 379 Woodard, Veronica Ardella 291, 401 Woodburn, Karen Gail 324 Woodcock, Jeffrey Glenn Woodcock, Melydia Ruth Wooden, Jeffrey Blake Woodie, Ruth Lane Woodruff, Charles Ray 216 Woodrum, Sarah Margaret Woods, James Woodrow 216, 219, 379 Woods, Joyce Elaine Woods, Nancy Marie 389 Woods, Ricky S. Woods, Timothy Dean 297, 418 Woodson, Linda Faye Woodward, Alice Lee 418 Woodward, Hardy Bailey Woodward, Jimmy J. Woodward, Judy A. Cunigan Woodworth, Tonya Dee 294, 401 Wooldridge, Kathy Frances 299, 418 Wooldridge, Lee Ann 389 Wooldridge, William Roy Woosley, Charles Ray II Woosley, James Kirby 285, 291, 300 Woosley, Kara Lynette Woosley, Steve 338 Wooten, Sandra Gail Wootten, Paul Edgar Jr. 299, 401 Working 84-91 Worsham, Jackie Lynn Wortmington, James 181 Worthington, Kristal Lynn 389 Wray, Ricky Lee 7, 220-1, 223-4, 226, 228 Wray, Robert Eugene Jr. Wrestling Club 261 Wright, Carolyn Payne Wright, Dana Carol Wright, Deretha Allen Wright, Diane Elizabeth 401 Wright, Donna Leza 389 Wright, Frank Timothy Wright, Gary Wayne Wright, Jackie Lynn Wright, James Ray 335, 340 Wright, Julie Kay Wright, Mark Frederick 379 Wright, Marnica Dawn Wright, Martha Nell Wright, Michael Lawrence 418 Wright, Patricia Knipe Wright, Reginald Lane Wright, Richard Lee Wright, Tim 336 Wright, Tona L. 389 Wright, William Eugene Wright, William Vincent Wrigley, Blair Ralph 401 Wunderlich, Fredric Dale 336 Wurm, Robert William Wurtz, M. Sandra 299, 379 Wyatt, Jacqueline Beth 302 Wyatt, Nelda Kay Wyatt, Patricia Louise Wygal, Claudette Buchanan Wynn, Peggy Lee 379 Wynn, Sara Sabrina 4 Yale, Jay Arl Yancey, John Charles Yancey, Linda Christine Yankey, Harold Dee 270 Yann, Richard Keith 335, 379 Yarberry, Diane Yarberry, Phyllis J. Wisdom Yarbrough, Earnest Gregory Yarbrough, Scott Douglas 104 Yarbrough, Vernon Wayne Yates, Barry Eugene 401 Yates, Cathy 401 Yates, Charles Edward Yates, David Lee Yates, Eddie 379 Yates, Ernest Walton 328-9 Yates, Gregory Steven Yates, James Edward Yates, James Ray 379 Yates, Joyce 379 Yates, Rita Jo 56, 81 Yates, Thomas Arthur 196, 283 Yates, Thomas Daniel Yazdani, Ahmacabadi Hamid Yderstad, Tana Lee Yeast, Bronna Lee Yeater, Julia 230, 235 Yevincy, Vickie Lynne Yoeckel, Douglas Gene 389 Yokley, Sally McCready Yokom, Melissa Anne 323, 418 York, Ella Mae York, Judy Lynn York, Linda Kay 419 Youmans, Robert Alan Young, Amanda Jane 419 Young, Benita A. Young, Beverly Ann 327, 379 Young, Catherine Atkins Young, Cathy Allen 327 Young, Cynthia Jean 419 Young, David Paul 289 Young, Deborah Lynn Young, Debra Sherryl Young, Debra Thanial 419 Young, Deirdre Renee Young Democrats 119, 296 Young, Dennis Wayne Young, Greta Sue Young, Ian Troy 332-3, 379 Young, James Anthony Young, Jimmy Edward Young, Joe Vernon Young, Judith Karen Smith 379 Young, Judy Ann Young, Kathleen Louise Young, Kent 292 Young, Kim Elaine 291, 305 Young, Laura Ellen Young, Marie Ruth Helen 327, 419 Young, Mary Margaret 389 Young, Michael David 332-3 Young, Michael Dennis 401 Young, Monte Ray 339 Young, Patricia Ann 419 Young, Paul E. Young, Ralph David Young Republicans 119, 295 Young, Richard Wilson Young, Rita Cheryl 282, 379 Young, Rita Kaye 401 Young, Robbi Sue 379 Young, Rodney Earl 14, 111, 419 Young, Sandra Kaye 274, 379 Young, Shirley Cartwright Young, Susanne Young, Teresa Ann Young, Thomas Lane Young, Timothy Shane Young, Veronica Eugenia Young, William Alan Youngblood, Diana Faye Younkin, Linda Elizabeth 389 “You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown” 103 Yowell, Lisa Carol Yungbluth, Alan 292 Z Zaboronak, Maria Stella 294, 389 Zacharias, Donald 132-3 Zachari, Anne Cecile Zamani, Mohammad E. Zarate, Rene Jose Zarkhah, Ayub 379 Zarruk, Luis Armando Zeballos, Patricio O. Zegart, Jill A. Zeidler, Susan Elizabeth 401 Zeigel, Howard 154-5 Zentner, Bonnie Gail Zeta Phi Beta 326-7 Zettlemoyer, Martha F. Zettlemoyer, Susan Gay 31 Ziegler, Kathi Lynn 292, 401 Zielke, Sheryl Ann Zike, Ronald Benjamin 16 Ziller, David F. Zimmerman, Jessica H. Zimmerman, Karen Leah 419 Zimmerman, Patrick Leo Zimmerman, Sandra 292, 419 Zimmerman, Teresa Lynn 267, 401 Zinsius, Mary Elizabeth 401 Zirkelbach, Christopher J. 49, 338 Zoeller, Ann R. 401 Zoeller, Gregory 332-3 Zoeller, Julia Ann Zoeller, Patrick Dean Zoeller, Tom Andrew 314 “The Zoo Story” 100, 104 449 Wheeler, Mary “‘The Zoo Ev Vel 5 ah 7 the were calm — an unusual worth o Ss suitcas sulitca regul ul The v case peel Sunday Heparrire fe ae past th | 4 handful of snowfalls gave only a few days’ . f snowmen epbeee red on campus, and few — cle asses were Cal weather ng epidemi « arly o eee hts. ome across the state did — ree or four years. — sledding down the Hill, Few ios) Ile« Hed off. p rarely interrupted th Parking lots Biaptied n Friday afternoons and filled he and cooked for their weeke kend sons. as it was, t on o ; - 4 : a ? a | ‘ : +f, P} , : } a - | ‘ 3 . ‘ ° : t was a typical unusual year. f , - PF es 2g Bas 7 ‘And it had style. eet : Ra 4 : a ON THE last day of school, May 11, David Reynolds and Deborah Littlejohn cf Fate ; say their goodbyes outside East Hall. They had met three weeks earlier. ce} — Mark Lyons “. a a ean tne Nee Ae nani cena enna ieee ee ten anergy BO 1979 TALISMAN STAFF ||_— Editor : Sara-Lois Kerrick editor . Lisa Roberts Academics and administration editor _.... Laura Phillips Classes and index editor Theresa Montgomery Editorial assistants David Crumpler, David Frank, Margaret Shi : Writers Bryan strong, Stevie Benson, Tom Beshear, Amy Galloway, Tommy George, Catherine Hancock, ie Holman, Jeff McCaleb, Tom McCord, Mary Julia Pace, Neil d, Nancy Jz Salato, Vickie Stevens, Kevin Stewart, B32} Roger Stinnett, Beth Taylor, Susan Taylor, 1 i ee 5 Debbie Tilley, Karen Tucker, Linda cae Watkins, David Whitaker, Don White, Rick | ‘ : Wood, Linda Younkin ce ee photographers Lewis Gardner, Lyons ¥ . Photographers Stevie Benson, David Frank, Larry Hayden, i } Ron Hoskins, Mike Lawrence, Robert W. ‘= Pillow, Scott Robinson, Ricky { a: Harold Sinclair, Bob Skipper, Judy Watson : ea a Contributing photographers Bob Coffey, Jack Corn, Tom Eblen, Greg é ; Shirley, George Wedding, Scott Wigginton, i on Lele 56 ofthe Western} eh ee ee Yearbook Company | | Cine, Tm A pg ne aster Matte Eadeheat lock W'66 polnd Mohawk Culry Thonderoge | ay “Cov mtr Congo Fabio with «Back rb and Cordova san embossed debossed with a gold foil ni a Artwork by Gibbons includes two india ink with colored pencil (14-15, 209), with artwork by Bush in tempera (110. | a ee eae nn | } = eee ate Sere Piietas te ais peut BK bo tae hee SEE a er S i.14, 1e0 1d, US 207 260 26H 040 889, A54re PNG TES (66, a3, ; 71); PMS 163 (98-109): PMS 165 (6454, 212.213), PMS 255 (22.23), PMS 277 (94-95); PMS 351 (92.93); PMS 465 EE Ae ED blue (30.31). eh Although a variety of typefaces are used in the book, the basic face is Souvenir. Body type is 912 10 Souvenir with oe cutlines set in 7142 8 Souvenir. Cutline lead-ins are 7!2 8 Souvenir Bold. Page numbers are 14 point Souvenir Bold. f The index has been set in 542 6 Souvenir and Souvenir Bold, and cross-referenced by title and page content. Headline typefaces not of the Souvenir family come from Letraset, Formatt and Zipatone graphic art products. All were set by the TALISMAN staff. ee ee eee ee Ee | consecutive volume to be copyrighted began during the month of September, 1) f] iT) RAY AEN 4 dite Y. H as ermine


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

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, 1978 Edition, Page 1

1978

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

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1986 Edition, Page 1

1986


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