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

 - Class of 1981

Page 25 of 424

 

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 25 of 424
Page 25 of 424



Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 24
Previous Page

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 26
Next Page

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



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

Page 25 text:

‘ Sse . — Chris Clark CROWDED GARBAGE CANS stand in front of an unrented apartment on Kentucky Street. Sights such as this have kept many students from moving off campus. However, nearly 64 percent of Western's enrollment chose to live off campus during the fall semester. Rats Campus life attracts some new campus life ats — outside windows, in the trash R rooms, on the stairways — apartment dwellers had to deal with it, and dorm liv- ing wasn’t always an escape. “Yes we do have a rat problem on campus,” housing director Horace Shrader said. ‘It’s a problem all over campus and we deal with it continuously to control it.”’ he said. Rats live on scraps thrown from dorm win- ‘| hope something can be done about it. It’s getting bad, and someone else will get bitten if they aren’t controlled.’ — Fred Dent dows, Shrader said. They've been reported at every residence hall, but the problem was worst around Keen and Poland halls, he said. At about Thanksgiving, one Pearce-Ford resi- dent was bitten by a rat and had to get medical treatment. “Il was reaching into the bushes outside Pearce-Ford because | had dropped my keys, and a rat bit me on the finger. | felt dizzy and nauseous the next day and had to go to the hospital,’’ Fred Dent, a freshman from Chicago, Ill., said. “I was in the hospital five days before they finally called in a specialist from Atlanta. It was determined | had some disease rats transmit.” he said. ‘I was really sick.” Maintenance director Kemble Johnson was in charge of coordinating physical plant efforts to control the rats. ‘“‘We have an ongoing con- tract with a local pest control company that handles all our pest problems — rats, mice, roaches, ’ he said. “We have a few complaints a week about rats,’’ Johnson said. ‘‘Most come from the Keen or Poland halls. We had a report of rats in the ceiling at Keen Hall last week,’ Johnson said. “The dorms all have kitchens now, and the pro- blem has gotten worse over the last few years since the kitchens have been installed.” One Keen Hall resident has been trapping rats outside his dorm window, and Barnes- Campbell director Bill Burns said he put out rat traps in addition to ones supplied by the university. “It’s a problem, but | wouldn't call it severe,’ Burns said. ‘‘At least it’s not severe at Barnes- Campbell.’ Rats had apparently climbed up a heating vent into the dorm and could not get out. Food services director Lon Slaughter said he had seen rats only once or twice the past year. “They get underneath the building and in crevices underground,” he said. “But | have never seen one inside the Downing Center. | have seen them a time or two outside around the dumpster, though.”’ One rat control problem was the En- vironmental Protection Agency regulations that limited the strength and type of poison to give the rats, Johnson said. The poison in use killed slowly, taking up to 10 days of regular feeding. ‘| sure hope something can be done about it. It’s getting bad, and someone else will get bitten if they aren’t controlled,” Dent said. Rat control is difficult and total elimination would be impossible, according to Shrader. He said the answer appeared to lie in the poison control and the elimination of food scraps thrown from windows. Tim Farmer — Gary Hairlson IN FRONT OF Keen Hall, Steve Tong displays one of his catches. The Owensboro freshman caught 11 rats near the dorm during the year. : 21 Dorms vs apartments Rats

Page 24 text:

20 Dorms vs. apartments cont. several years is Marie Bunce, a Louisville senior. Bunce moved into South Hall when she transferred from Jefferson Community College in the fall of 1979, and moved back out again “as soon as possible,”’ she said. After spending a month in the dorm, Bunce sai d, “‘l was really going crazy; trying to study for tests when your roommate wants to party defeats the purpose of being here. And | could have gone to a lot better parties if I’d stayed in Louisville.”’ But getting out of the dorm wasn’t the end of Bunce’s housing problems. ‘‘Finding a place that was inhabitable was awfully hard — harder than it seemed like it should be,”’ she said. The apartment on 13th Street that Bunce first occupied after leaving campus included a lot of freeloading roommates. “‘There were roaches in that place as big as my thumb,” she said. ‘‘Everything in the cupboards | had to keep tied up in plastic bags. “The landlord kept insisting that he'd sprayed,’ Bunce said, ‘‘but he must have used something that roaches like to eat.” WHILE HIS ROOMMATE Curtis Richie, a Louisville sophomore, sleeps, Turner Cloar, a Munfordville junior, studies his accounting. In a dorm, trying to sleep while a roommate studies has always been a problem. — Steve Lowry And, according to Bunce, not all apartments are noise-free. ‘‘The walls were so thin, | could hear the guy next door roll over in bed at night. Anything louder sounded like it was going on in my apartment,” she said. After months of searching, Bunce found a clean, quiet apartment on Center Street. Relatively quiet, that is. “The only noise | get here is the people walk- ing around upstairs. Compared to the other places I've lived in Bowling Green, it’s like heaven,” she said. Bunce said apartments close to campus are more expensive for obvious’ reasons. “Landlords in a town this size know that they've got students right where they want them, but being close enough to walk to class is worth it,’ she said. “Trying to find a parking space in the morning if you're driving from off campus is harder than finding a good apart- ment in the middle of the semester.” Finding a comfortable place off campus helped Bunce’s grades, she said. ‘‘It took so much pressure off, it was like dropping two classes.” “Not everybody looks at it that way, but finding a decent place to live really helped me make it through. | don’t know if | would have, otherwise,’’ Bunce said. At Barbara Barry’s Parkside Court duplex apartments, a line of cars overflowing the driveway meant everybody was home. A Louisville senior, Barry shared the two- bedroom duplex with three other women. ‘'It gets a little hectic at times,’’ she said. ‘But we're all friends, so we get along pretty well.” Two bedrooms between four women was no problem, Barry said, but the apartment’s one bathroom presented some interesting schedul- ing conflicts. “We try to talk each other into taking showers at night so there isn’t a traffic jam in the morning,’ Cathy Francis, one of Barry’s roommates, said. “Usually it doesn’t work,” junior said. “But some of us are night people and some of us are morning people,” Barry said. ‘‘So we can work around each other without too much trouble.” “I’m a night person,’’ said Pam Shelton, a Russellville graduate student who was moving in to replace one of Barry’s other roommates. “During the day, I’m so busy that I have to do those things whenever | can.” But in spite of the crowded conditions, Barry's other roommate, Louisville junior Annie Boone, said apartment living was more comfor- table than living in a dorm. “‘You don’t feel like someone’s looking over your shoulder all the time,’’ she said. ‘We all compromise, so most of the time it’s pretty much fun,” Boone said. Fred Wheeler the Louisville er gitlilas oe CEECEEEEL



Page 26 text:

22 Election Campus political activity was light and students involved said there just wasn't enough money — or interest. A landslide with Ithough Ronald Reagan won the 1980 Asie election by a landslide, most pollsters were predicting a close race throughout the fall. In spite of widely publicized debate squab- bles, attacks and rebuttals, political activity on campus was light, according to local organizers. Tim Woods, chairman of the Students for Anderson Committee, said his organization lik- ed it that way. ‘“‘We thought a light turnout would help (John) Anderson,” he said. Although the committee had received its charter from the university in July, Woods said the 50 or so members didn’t pursue the cam- paign aggressively until a few weeks before election day. ‘We were on a limited budget,’ Woods said. Most of the organization's activity was ic a 4 mt aan ie ho ale Pax restricted to passing out leaflets at the universi- ty center. ‘It seemed like the other organiza- tions were taking care of voter registration,’ he said. The Louisville sophomore said as election day drew nearer, Anderson’s support seemed to drop off rapidly. ‘‘People just didn’t think he could win, so they didn’t vote for him,’’ Woods said. ‘‘It was more of an interesting campaign than we've had for a while,”’ he said. Smith said he supported Anderson and was disappointed when President Jimmy Carter refused to debate Anderson. “| think Carter’s refusal showed him to be a weak leader,’’ Smith said. “It made him look scared.” Smith was impressed by the Republicans’ na- tional campaign effort. He said, ‘| thought they did a super job. The Democrats really took a 2 € ? i BA eee owe ws eer ope see a@h ¢ Fe a ee OO. air them for granted. “It was like the Democrats just took a last- minute shot at it,’ Smith said. “Il don’t know why they didn’t put more money into the state programs. Finding space for a Bowling Green head- quarters for Anderson was difficult, Smith said. Finally a realtor with few political ties let the group use a building on State Street. “Most of the realtors said they had plenty of places they'd let us have if we represented one of the major party candidates,’ Smith said. ‘| guess they didn’t take Anderson seriously, just like everybody else.” Chairman of the Carter Steering Committee in Bowling Green Jeff Durham said he didn’t see much student involvement in the 1980 campaign. ‘| hate to use the word,’ Durham said, “but

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

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, 1979 Edition, Page 1

1979

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

1980

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

1986

Western Kentucky University - Talisman Yearbook (Bowling Green, KY) online collection, 1987 Edition, Page 1

1987


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



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