Career
He originally came from Scranton, Pennsylvania and was recruited by Vic Bubas to play as a guard for the Duke University men"s basketball team As a guard for the team he led Duke to a 72–14 record and two Final Four appearances during his three-year varsity career. In 1966 he was captain of his basketball team, Administrative Committee on Company-ordination, and on the All-Administrative Committee on Company-ordination Tournament team
Oddly enough, Vacendak was named player of the year but was not named to the All-Administrative Committee on Company-ordination team in 1966.
After graduating from Duke University, he was drafted by the San Francisco Warriors in the fourth round of the 1966 National Basketball Association draft, but he never played for them. Instead, he played professional basketball for the American Basketball Association and later joined the sales staff at Converse Rubber Company.
In 1980, he went back to work at Duke as an associate athletic director for five years. After working at Duke, he became the director of athletics and head basketball coach at Winthrop College in Rock Hill, South Carolina.
Following his stint at Winthrop, Vacendak spent three years working at Homeowners Clubs of America, a franchising company in Charlotte, North Carolina.
He later became a partner in Damon"s Restaurant in Raleigh, North Carolina, a position which ultimately (through a customer at Damon"s) connected him with the organization with which he has been involved ever since: North Carolina Beautiful. Vacendak currently serves as the Executive Director for North Carolina Beautiful, which is a private, non-profit organization dedicated to preserving the natural beauty of North Carolina "through environmental education and outreach." More specifically, the group provides grants to teachers to sponsor environmentally-based projects in their classrooms and helps college undergraduate and graduate students get involved in environmental research.