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 33 text:
“
“There are some run- ning close seconds, but their love can’t com- pare to ours.” | Elaine Lewis | AFTER taking a stroll around campus, Shanks and Lewis share a laugh together. The twosome were in Shank’s dormitory room. PLAYING around, Lewis pins Shanks to the elevator wal! The two had been playing pinbal l at Downing University Center, the sight of their first meeting in 1985. ON THE fourth floor of DUC, Shanks watches Lewis play pinball. Shanks was a member of Alpha Phi Alpha and Lewis was a Lady of Black and Gold. OS) Love on Campus
”
Page 32 text:
“
Story and photos by SAM UPSHAW, JR. GIVING blood to the Red Cross in the spring of 85 turned out to be better than Elaine Lewis, a Glasgow sophomore, ever expected. That was the day she met Freddy Shanks, a Radcliff junior. Lewis had just been to the cellar of West Hall to give blood, before going to the Downing University Center. “I was feeling a little sick at the time and he came over and asked me how I was,” Lewis said. Shanks said he saw her sitting alone in the lower lobby of the student center. “She had on a tag that said, ‘Be nice to me. (I gave blood),’ so I went over to talk to her,” Shanks said. Since that day, Elaine and Freddy were names to be spoken in the same breath. A member of Alphi Phi Alpha fraternity, Shanks convinced Lewis to join the Ladies of Black and Gold, the little sisters to the fraternity. “We spend more time together than anybody on this campus,” Lewis said. “There are some running close seconds, but their love can’t compare to ours.” Shanks was a resident assistant at North Hall. “This is practically her room. She’s here so much.” The couple spent as much time together as possible. They shopped and took classes together when they could. Also, they were both members of ROTC. Shanks was a first lieutenant and Lewis was a staff sergeant. In the spring of 86, Shanks received his commission and the two planned to be married when Shanks grad- uated. Shanks faced his military career after graduation, but was unsure about where that career would take him. “T have no idea where we will be. Hopefully it will be overseas. I come from a military family and I’ve been over there a couple times and I just like it.” Lewis planned to complete her degree and pursue her career goal of being a registered nurse wherever she ll | I ul AT SMITH Stadium, Freddie Shanks, a Radcliffe junior, and Elaine Lewis, a Glasgow sophomore, spend time together. Both were ROTC members. had the opportunity. “I go where ever he goes,” Lewis said. Lewis also liked the idea of living overseas. “I think it’s great,” she said. Although their relationship seemed to be perfect, Lewis and Shanks did have their problerns to deal with. “We fight more than the average couple, but we always trust and care for each other,” Shanks said. “We don’t really fight about big, major things,” Shanks said. “She gets a little jealous sometimes. I might be walking to class with a girl in my class and she might not understand,” he said. Lewis said Shanks got jealous sometimes, too. “He gets mad if he doesn’t know where I am every minute,” Lewis said. Both Shanks and Lewis said that they didn’t feel that spending so much time together caused them to fight more than other couples. Shanks said, “I see our relationship like my parents’. They may argue and be mad at each other, then five minutes later they may be talking and laughing about something different.” Lewis said, “I love him because he’s not as forceful as the rest of the guys on campus. Some guys come up and say, ‘Hey baby, what’s up?’” However, Lewis said Shanks was different. “He gave me some respect..He’s areal gentleman.” Shanks said that Lewis’s personality was what set her apart from other girls. “She’s the first person I've been around who wants to be around me all the time. We spend every second of every day together.” Shanks said that he didn’t think any relationship was perfect, but “If you can make it through the argument, you can make it. We've gone through a lot together. Even though we have a few problems, we stay together.”
”
Page 34 text:
“
CHRIS WATKINS Photos By M@ SIR WT IP @iIrwi= DRESSED as a commando, Chuck Whitehead, a Benton sophomore, puts cam- ouflage putty on his pumpkin. Whitehead was attending the Hilloween festivities. 30 Halloween Me ae i 4 : ¥ Z ONCE UPON a time, some pagans threw a party for some out-of-town spooks. The idea caught on and they decided to do it again next year. They called it Halloween, and the tradition continues... On the hill, the Halloween tradition meant a break from the mounting midterm pressures. Mark Hobbs, a Louisville sophomore, said, “Hal- loween is a good opportunity to dress up and act really bizarre for a night and not worry about what people think about it. ” Other parties took on a more subdued nature. The brothers of Sigma Alpha Epsilon chose to forgo a large party and opted instead for a “Horror Movie Night.” Tommy Tinsley, a Central City senior, said, “It’s great; we have a Halloween activity without alcohol. It’s just some guys, not dressed up, watching movies.” Holding with tradition, the University Center Board sponsored Hilloween at the Downing Univer- sity Center. Among the events held were: costume contests, pumpkin-carving contests and root beer chugging duels. The unversity center also ran a special late-night showing of “The Fog.” “Hilloween provides a way for the underclassmen to escape to be absurd,” Stan Reagan, a Tompkinsville senior, said. “I didn't have time to go elsewhere. I had a lot of work to do,” Billy Froggett, a Metcalfe county soph- omore, said. “But this is great. There’s music, cos- tumes and girls. What more could you want?” The costumes of the evening ranged from the usual vampires and werewolves to the latest media cel- ebrities like Rambo and Madonna. Some of the more unusual costumes were presented by students dressing up as administration officals or inanimate objects. . a - ae : 6 OF i saat “It’s college, so we decided to be half a sixpack,” Michille Hurm, a Philpot freshman, said. While many people were having parties for the holiday, some organizations were having haunted houses for charity. The Sigma Kappa sorority teamed up with Phi Delta Theta fraternity to put on one such house. Phi Delt Bernie Giudice, a Louisville soph- omore, said, “We thought it would be a good way to let the community know that we care.” Sigma Kappa Vicky Goulden, a Bowling Green junior, said, “We really enjoyed putting on the haunted house, and several hundred dollars were raised for our phil- anthropy, The United Way.” At the same time some people were experiencing planned hauntings, other groups were experiencing ghostly encounters of a different kind. Some of Dr. Lynwood Montell’s natural phenomenon folklore class spent the night in a haunted house in Breckinridge County. According to legend, a man had died mys- teriously in the house that was later plagued by inanimate objects that moved and unexplicable noises. Eventually the man’s wife moved out leaving behind all her possesions. The house has remained vacant for the past 50 years. . It was these disturbances that led the class to investigate. “When we got to the house, two mem- bers of the class seemed puzzled. They told us that they had gotten to the house the day before and stuck a big hunting knife in the door to frighten the class but it (the knife) was gone. When the dawn came we were glad to go home,” Ron Lafferty, a Munfordsville sophomore, said. Halloween has changed some. The pagans may be gone and people don’t party much with specters but the tradition of Halloween on the hill continued. - — hy
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.