Grace Theological Seminary - Xapis / Grace Yearbook (Winona Lake, IN)

 - Class of 1967

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Grace Theological Seminary - Xapis / Grace Yearbook (Winona Lake, IN) online collection, 1967 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 48 of the 1967 volume:

GRACE 1967 GRACE THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY Winona Lake, Indiana Contents Dedication 3 History 4 Administration 11 Faculty VS Classes 21 Organizations and Activities 33 Dedication In the thirtieth year of its existence, Grace Seminary gratefully remembers the inestimable contribution of its first great teacher and admin- istrator, Dr. Alva J. McClain. As president and professor of theology from its founding until his retirement in 1962, and since then as president emeritus, Dr. McClain has labored by precept and example, by encouragement and prayer, to build this institution upon the sure foundation of full commitment to the Lord Jesus Christ and uncompromising loyalty to God’s written Word. Only eternity can reveal the true measure of his contribution, through a rich and varied minis- try, to the growth of the Body of Christ. Even the vision of it allowed to us now, however, obliges us to turn in praise to God for the working of His grace in and through the life of this “good and faithful servant.” McClain Hall, 1952 History The foundation ... let every man take heed how he buildeth thereupon. For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ.—I Corinthians 3:10-11 Thirty Years Two circumstances unite to make the publica- tion of the GRACE 1967 an appropriate occasion for rehearsing briefly the blessing and providence of God in the sustenance and growth of Grace Theological Seminary. First, the year 1967 marks the thirtieth anniversary of the organizing of the school. Second, this year’s annual is the first deal- ing with Grace Seminary separately from Grace College to be published since the collegiate divi- sion was begun in 1948. The Seminary has been supported throughout its existence especially by the prayers and sac- rifice of Brethren people, and therefore it seems fitting that it originated in a prayer meeting in the home of Rev. J. C. Beal, a Brethren pastor, in the summer of 1937, and began its operation the following October 4 in facilities provided by the Ellet Brethren Church of Akron, Ohio. Two full- time faculty members and thirty-nine students participated in that beginning. The faculty mem- bers were Dr. Alva J. McClain, as president and professor of Christian theology and apologetics, and Professor Herman A. Hoyt, as professor of New Testament and Greek. They received con- siderable part-time assistance in other teaching fields such as Old Testament, practical theology, and church history, especially from Professor Homer A. Kent, Sr., who was to join the full-time faculty in the autumn of 1940. Soon the school received from Dr. W. E. Bied- erwolf a heartfelt invitation to relocate at Winona Lake, Indiana. As president of the Winona Lake Christian Assembly, Dr. Biederwolf believed that such a move would by mutually advantageous, since the Brethren Church had been meeting in annual conference at Winona Lake for more than fifty years, and since the northern Indiana area could be expected to benefit much from the pres- ence of this conservative institution of theological education. The Free Methodist Publishing House arranged to lease the upper story of its building to the Seminary. Thus after two school years in Akron, Grace Seminary began the fall term of 1939 in these new surroundings. The quarters in the Free Methodist Building brought with them the fortunate opportunity to use the library of the The Faculty, 1947-48. Front Row: Homer A. Kent, Alva J. McClain, Herman A. Hoyt. Back Row: Paul R. Bauman, Harry Sturz, Robert D. Culver. Winona Lake School of Theology, which used the same facilities during the summers. The student enrollment in the years following the transfer to Winona Lake rose continuously, as the following figures indicate: 1940, thirty-seven; 1942, fifty-four; 1944, sixty-nine; 1948, eighty-five; 1949, ninety-nine; 1950, 144. In addition to this increase, in 1948 a two-year collegiate division was added, to prepare students with no college training for entrance into a Bachelor of Theology program in the Seminary. By 1950 there were fifty students enrolled in the collegiate division, bringing the total number of students at Grace that year to 194. During its first ten years, the seminary’s faculty was considerably augmented. Professor Homer A. Kent, Sr. became full time in church history and Old Testament in 1940. In the following years others, including John M. Aeby, Harry Sturz, and Robert D. Culver, served for various periods as full-time instructors in their respec- tive fields of competence. Mr. Aeby taught Christian theology during several terms when Dr. McClain was prevented by illness from fulfilling his academic responsibilities. Mr. Sturz served as seminary librarian and instructor in New Test- ament Greek for two years before answering the call time to a full-time pastoral ministry. Pro- fessor Culver was in charge of Old Testament and Hebrew from 1945 to 1951. During the years of Dr. McClain’s illness in the early 1940’s Professor Hoyt assumed the presi- dent’s administrative duties, and one year after joining the faculty as professor of homiletics and apologetics in 1947, Dr. Paul R. Bauman became executive vice-president. In the same year Dr. Hoyt was made dean, and in 1951 Dr. Bauman gave up all teaching responsibilities to become full-time Director of Public Relations for the Seminary, a post he retained until 1962. Already in 1945 the Board of Trustees had begun to plan a building to provide a permanent home for the school. The projected size of the building was expanded several times as the atten- dance of the Seminary (and later of the collegiate division) rose rapidly. The structure as finally completed in 1951 is designed to serve four hun- dred students, and is located on a campus which now comprises sixty acres at the east edge of Winona Lake. This new building was dedicated on August 30, 195t, and the service was highlighted especially by the presence of Dr. Lewis Sperry Chafer. This was virtually Dr. Chafer’s last public appearance prior to his home-going almost exactly one year later, and he brought warm greetings and con- gratulations from his own institution, Dallas Theological Seminary. During the early 1950’s Grace Seminary ex- perienced two other major additions. One was the expansion of the collegiate division into Grace College, a four-year liberal arts Christian college, and the other was the emergence of several new, young seminary faculty members whose contribu- tions were to prove valuable and permanent. In 1953 a third year was added to the collegiate division program, and in 1954 a fourth year brought Grace College into reality. This is not the place to recount the history of the College, but a few remarks on its relationship to the Seminary will be of value. In the first instance, the chief mo- tive in the establishment of the College was to pro- vide a place where preseminary students might receive an adequate liberal arts preparation for theological studies, a preparation received in a Christian framework and with an emphasis conducive to channeling men and women into full-time ministry in the Brethren Church. This purpose has indeed come to fruition through Grace College. Already dozens of men and women have studied in both Grace College and Grace Seminary and gone forth into the pastoral or mis- sionary ministries of the National Fellowship of Brethren Churches. In addition, of course, the College’s simultaneous development in close proximity with the Seminary in subsequent years has contributed immeasurably, in untold ways, to the richness and depth of the Seminary’s own experience. Among the younger teachers who joined the faculty in the early 1950’s, ultimately to remain for a lengthy ministry, were Homer A. Kent, Jr., specializing in New Testament and Greek, James L. Boyer, also concentrating in New Test- ament and Greek, S. Herbert Bess, teaching He- brew and later other Semitic languages and Bib- lical archaeology, and John C. Whitcomb, Jr., specializing in Old Testament and later in apol- ogetics. These men, with widely varying back- grounds of academic training and experience, each had much to contribute to the deepening and broadening of the Seminary’s curriculum. Simi- larly, Donald Ogden, who was subsequently to contribute so much to the musical life and min- istry of both Seminary and College, appeared at this time as a teacher with great promise. The Free Methodist Building, Winona Lake, the home of Grace Theological Seminary for twelve years, 1939-1951. The curriculum was not only becoming more comprehensive. It was bound to become tougher. As the school entered its third decade the Th.B. (Bachelor of Theology) program, which had required only two years of college prepara- tion, was “phased out.” This tightening of en- trance requirements led to a temporary decline in enrollment, but as the school advanced into the 1960’s, it could look forward to a rapid rise in qualified applicants. On March 5, 1962, Dr. McClain requested re- tirement to take effect on August 31, 1962. This request was complied with, and thus Dr. Mc- Clain brought to a close twenty-five years of ded- icated teaching and leadership. In his honor the seminary building erected in 1951 was named “McClain Hall.” In the wake of Dr. McClain’s resignation, Dr. Herman Hoyt, who had been serving as dean of both College and Seminary, was chosen presi- dent, and separate deans were appointed for the two schools, Homer Kent, Jr. for the Seminary and E. William Male for the College. The past five years have witnessed many ad- vances in the seminary program. In 1963, Profes- sor Paul Fink joined the faculty to develop the fields of homiletics, practical theology, and Christian education. Professor Fink has been able to make significant strides in these departments. The alumni association was encouraged to con- tribute to the equipping of the homiletics depart- ment, and now top-quality tape-recorders are available to students for sermon-recording and sermon-listening. In 1967 the seminary student body has chosen for its fund-raising project a fifteen-hundred dollar video-tape system for re- cording and studying film-tapes of practice ser- mons. Other innovations in recent years have been full and definite Christian service requirements for all students, an annual Christian education confer- ence presented by students for area pastors and Sunday school workers, a pastor’s conference in which successful pastors present insights and methods to the seminarians, and a Palestinian archaeological field program for selected post- graduate students. This last development perhaps owes most to Professor John Davis, who joined the faculty of Old Testament and Hebrew in 1965. For some years the World Missions Fellow- ship in both the College and Seminary has spon- sored a week-long Fall Missionary Conference, presenting to both student bodies leading mis- sionary spokesmen from around the world. In more recent years the Seminary has seen its curriculum strengthened by Professor Paul Dowdy, who has added several helpful courses in missionary theory and practice. On the side of the physical plant, most of the building on the Grace campus in recent years has been in connection with the expansion of the Col- lege. The new library, to be completed in 1967, will be of tremendous benefit to the Seminary. The upper floor will be reserved almost exclusively for seminary use. The impact of the Seminary on the evangelical Christian world. As of June, 1966, almost eight hundred alumni have passed from its halls into far-flung positions of service. Well over one hundred of these men and women are currently serving in the cause of foreign missions. Many are teaching in theological seminaries, colleges, and Bible institutes in America and abroad. The total number of pulpits which have felt the in- fluence of men molded by training at Grace is impossible to estimate. Briefly reciting the history of Grace Theologi- cal Seminary can convey only the vaguest im- pression of what kind of a school it really is, of what atmosphere and attitude actually prevails within its halls and classrooms. As an institution whose chief purpose is the training of men and women for ministries within the National Fellow- ship of Brethren Churches, but whose doors are open to qualified men of evangelical Christian convictions, regardless of denomination, Grace provides openness of discussion along with a posi- tive presentation of Brethren distinctive beliefs and practices. Most importantly, Grace Theolog- ical Seminary continues to be known throughout the world as a school where Biblical orthodoxy, careful scholarship, and victorious Christian liv- ing are not divorced from one another. May it be so until Jesus comes again! COLL EAE RAGE CHOOSE D LABRARY FOR MASTER PLAN FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF LEFIRACE —GOLLEGE race eminary WINONA LAKE , (NR EXISTING BUILDINGS h. AB CLAIM HALL -SEMINARY§ ADM. 2 LEMASEEROQOAA BLOG, SYRNASIURA 4 WOMEN'S RES. HALL 4 DINING COMMONS 3 MAINTENANCE BLDG. G. MAEWG RESIDENCE HALL 2% BYERS HALL “MUSIC 4 FINE ARTS BE MISSIONARY RESIDENCE FACULTY HOMES PROPOSED PROJECTS % BLDG JA LIGRARY 2. CENTRAL HEATING PLANT EXP S : Pe ge A Iz, CHAPEL 43% TOP FLOOR CLASSROOM BLOG. Uk FINE ARTS BLOG. IS SCIENCE BLOG. RAMEN 'S RES, HALLS HEALTH CENTER STUOCENT UNION BLOG WOMENS RES, HALL ARRIED STUDENTS BLOGS ESIDEMTS HOME fx ZEATHLETIC 7g This is a part of the Master Plan for the development of the Grace schools. se McClain Hall (1) and the new library (10) are at the front of the campus. Dr. Herman A. Hoyt, President Dr. Homer A. Kent, Sr., Vice-President Dr. Homer A. Kent, Jr., Dean Administration © The LORD builds the house, they labour ... ——Psalmi2sl Board of Trustees Seated: R. Paul Miller, Jr., Richard Holmes, Kenneth Dwight Stair, Glenn Messner, Robert Collitt, Glen O'Neal, Ashman, Dr. Herman Hoyt, Paul Dick, Clyde Landrum. Thomas Inman, O. E. Hacker, Richard DeArmey, Orville Standing: John Armstrong, E. M. White, James Dixon, Jobson, Bernard Schneider. Department of Development Director of Development Richard Messner, assisted by Thomas Hammers and_ Terry White, leads in the program of expansion cur- rently in progress at Grace Seminary and Col- lege. Publicity, church and community rela- tions, recruitment of students, fund-raising—all these and more come under the purview of this active and resourceful team. Thomas Hammers and Richard Messner. The Library Ground-breaking for the new Grace library and learning center took place in the autumn of 1966, and construction began in earnest with the spring thaw. Projected as a $650,000 facility, its topmost of three levels will be almost exclusively reserved for seminary use. Students and faculty alike look forward keenly to the increased research and study potential which the library will offer. Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin Hamilton, librarians, share this anticipation, of course, but first must shoulder the responsibility of preparing for and in due time executing the transfer from the present location in McClain Hall. Mabel and Benjamin Hamilton, librarians. ARCHITECTS: PERKINS oWILL: sees Seminary reading room provides a (usually) quiet atmosphere for study or meditation. Ww Financial Officers Seated: Miss Joyce Ashman, Mrs. Willie Willson. Stand- ing: John Demas, John Lapp. Secretaries Seated: Mrs. Lucy Hall, Mrs. Dalene Frank, Mrs. Joan Hinks. Standing: Mrs. Norma Buhler, Mrs. Betty Vulgamore, Mrs. Agnes Derr, Mrs. Judy Ostrander, Mrs. Dorothy Lockwood. Maintenance and Construction wi a wr oa Glenn Stauffer, Tom Stephens, Bert Jordan, Max Fluke, Harold Witzky, Joe Vandermolen. Faculty Faithful men, ... able to teach others also. —II Timothy 2:2 Systematic Theology Dr. Hoyt has a full schedule—fuller than most men could stand, and he combines the presidency’s administrative duties with classroom teaching and frequent Bible conference engagements. ’ Church H. istory The inspiring and edifying saga of the historical progress of the Chris- tian Church is Dr. Kent Sr.’s prime subject-matter, but he also instructs in denominational history and in pastoring the local church. ew Testament and Greek Dr. Home Kent Jr.’s New Testament courses, both in English Bible and Greek exegesis, are known for their careful organization and comprehen- siveness. Unfortunately for some students, so are his examinations! New Testament and Greek Practicality is the motif running through Dr. Boyer’s rich courses, an emphasis deriving in part from many years of pastoral experience. Trans- fers from other schools pronounce this often lacking elsewhere. 17 and Theology Nation-wide speaking opportunities combine with Old Testament, apologetics, and theology courses to make Dr. John Witcomb one of the busiest men anywhere. Strangely (or not so strangely) he is also one of the most productive. Dr. S. Herbert Bess continues to be known for his quiet, gracious man- ner and careful scholarship. The Old Testament is never so real as when it stimulates this reflective man to laughter or to anger. Old Testament and Hebrew The teaching of Professor John Davis is quick and competent, and this applies to both his beginning Hebrew course and his Old Testament con- tent courses. He conveys a lot in a short time, and tests on all of it! In addition to homiletics and pastoral methods, Professor Paul Fink’s responsibilities include direction of the Christian Education department and courses in Greek grammar and hermeneutics. Versatility is his forte. 19 Drawing from years of experience on the Argentine field and from formal training in mission-related subjects, Professor J. Paul Dowdy instructs students in the principles and problems of missionary work. Church Music Professor Donald Ogden’s approach to church music is an edifying compound of uncompromising concern for taste and quality with warm devotional insight into the value of individual hymns. 20 Classes Study to show thyself approved. —II Timothy 2:15 Seniors CLASS OFFICERS John Renick Bob Moeller George Hall Eloy Pacheco Rodney Goertzen Rich Jensen President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Chaplain Social Chairman Seated: Renick, Moeller. Standing: Hall, Goertzen, Pacheco, Jensen. This year the senior class was unusually small, and the number of graduating seniors unusually smaller. Among the explanations offered for this was the coincidence of higher costs of living and a tougher curriculum, forcing many to carry reduced study-loads. But then the class was small to begin with. In any case, though small, the class had sev- eral “‘firsts’’. They were the first class privileged to preach their ‘“‘middler sermon” in their senior year. Their senior year was the year of the first ““post-exam blast’ (a rose which might conceiv- ably smell sweeter under a slightly different name), but not the last, we trust. It was the year the seminary’s soccer team defeated Grace College’s for the first time. It was also a year of marked growth for the seminary, of an influx of foreign students to bless us with their fellowship, of an unusually powerful missionary conference. All in all, it was a very good year to remember. Donald C. Apperson, M.R.E. Washington Bible College Baptist Dennis Beach, B.D. Grace College Brethren 22 Don G. Farner, B.D. Grace College Brethren Timothy Farner, B.D. Grace College Rodney Goertzen, B.D. Grace Bible Institute Independent George W. Hall, B.D. Bob Jones University Conservative Baptist Richard S. Jensen, B.D. Grace College Brethren Ronald H. Jones, B.D. Virginia Bible College Baptist John R. Mayer, B.D. - Wheaton College Independent David D. McGown, B.D. Washington Bible College Independent Baptist John Methuselah, M.R.E. University of Nebraska Baptist 23 Robert C. Moeller, B.D. Grace College Brethren Joseph E. Mogle, M.R.E. Grace College Regular Baptist Paul D. Morris, B.D. Bob Jones University Brethren Eloy S. Pacheco, B.D. Grace College Brethren Kwang Ja Park, M.R.E. Southeastern Bible College Presbyterian John A. Renick, B.D. College of William and Mary Brethren Lila M. Sheely, M.R.E. Grace College Brethren John Shypulefski, M.R.E. Philadelphia College of Bible Independent Fundamental Churches of America 24 Middlers z CLASS OFFICERS Lynn Hile President Dean Beaver Vice-President Ruth Dunning Secretary Ray Hoffeditz Treasurer Bill Fay Chaplain Dave Barnhart Social Chairman Seated: Hile, Beaver. Standing: Hoffeditz, Fay, Dunning, Barnhart. What does it mean to be a middler? It means they find), Van Til versus Carnell, Dr. Barnard’s Hebrew exegesis, Dr. Hoyt for theology and de- machine-gun presentation of Brethren missions, nominational beliefs, the Genesis Flood versus the and of course a plentitude of other new thoughts Gap, ‘“‘John problems,” rea grammatical analysis and experiences. But mostly, it is a sense of (the Junior experience was purely anticipatory, “pressing forward.” Dwight P. Baker David L. Barnhart Dean D. Beaver Jerry M. Browning Laverne R. Busenitz Mahlon Carver 25 Larry A. DeArmey Donald J. Demas Roger Downer Glenn A. Dundore Marquerite Ruth Dunning William N. Fay Melvin R. Friesen Thomas E. Goosseens John E. Gregory Daniel L. Hammers Richard F. Harstine Lynn C. Hile Herbert J. Hobson 26 Raymond E. Hoffeditz Llewellyn D. Ingwaldson Donald Jentes Alvin K. Johnson Arthur G. Johnson Lee L. Kantenwein Fred R. Ludwig Robert E. Marsh Ronald E. McDugle Bonnie Jackson McKay John M. McKay Frank C. Merckx Thomas R. Miller 27 28 James L. Montgomery James R. Overman Robert Bruce Paden Ardis D. Parlin Alton E. Perron Roger D. Peugh William M. Pierson, II] Charles Michael Reed Roger F. Reisacher Marlin E. Rose Rollin Sandy Marlin E. Savidge James D. Stevens Otis Stone Juniors CLASS OFFICERS Jerry Peifer George Harton Carol Mensinger Devapriyam Kurut Dave Smith President Vice-President Secretary Chaplain Social Chairman Seated: Peifer, Harton. Standing: Kurut, Mensinger, Smith. Numerous, diverse in background, but high in quality were the Juniors this year. From around the world, from a startling variety of denominations, through sundry leadings of the Lord, they gathered to study the Word of God at Grace. Hebrew, Hom- iletics I, Daniel—we salute the Juniors for enduring these and others, their baptism of fire. Donald E. Baer Mark E. Beech Max E. Benson Thomas Bump Ross A. Carey Willis N. Clawser Lawrence Eugene Cox Robert M. Croumlich, II Walter Allen 29 Raymond H. Davis James R. Dowhen George D. Ebersole Francis C. Edmonds, III Clinton S. Foraker Glen O. Foster Leland Friesen James E. Goering Edward David Gordon James A. Griffin George M. Harton, IV Donald R. Hinks David N. Ibach Raymond E. Johnson David Keith Kenemer Insun Kim E. Joe Kinuthia Lindow L. Koop Devapriyam B. Kurut Evelyn Kurut Arthur E. McCrum Robert D. McLaughlin Carol Jean Mensinger Donald H. Moffett 30 Charles N. Moore, Jr. Alan E. Muller Leonard Myers Michael E. Ostrander Richard R. Pauley Jerry L. Peifer James L. Poyner Gilbert Pugh William F. Rice Dennis R. Rockwell Harley Rollins, Jr. Terrence E. Rudd John E. Schleh Jerry Schneider David E. Shaffer Donald P. Shoemaker David W. Smith Richard Smith, Jr. Thomas W. Smith Ronald J. Sordelet Robert M. Spicer Roy Taylor Duane C. Thompson Richard C. Woodring 3] Post-graduates Standing: Merlin Berkey, Paul Tan, John Lawlor, Bob Ibach, Al Buhler, Rolland McCune, Director of Post-graduate Studies, John C. Whitcomb, Howard Dial, Chako Joseph. Seated: Bob Domokos, Jim Miller, Larry Pote. Under the capable generalship of Dr. Whitcomb, the Post-Graduate Division brings together stu- dents pursuing work toward the Master’s or Doc- tor’s degree. In the fall semester the seminar Vern Chovan Dick Woodworth 32 topic was the Inter-testamental period, and terms like ‘‘Qumran’’ and ‘“‘hellenistic’? were tossed freely about. In the spring, attention turned to Hermeneutics, a focus of controversy. Howard’s denominational preference. Organizations and Activities Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might.—Ecclesiastes 9:10 Saulan Council Tim Farner Roger Peugh Bonnie McKay Jerry Browning Marlin Savidge Paul Morris John Renick Lynn Hile Seated: Browning, McKay, Renick. Standing: Hile, Peifer, Morris, Farner, Jerry Peifer Peugh, Savidge. In 1967 fellow Princeton grads Bill Fay and Jim Montgomery represented the seminary as president and treasurer resectively of World Missions Fellowship, which unites seminary and college students in supporting world evangelization. The WMF-sponsored fall missions confer- ence saw a real moving of the Holy Spirit in the student body, perhaps especially through Art Larson’s powerful testimony of testing and God’s provision during the Stanleyville massacre in the Congo. OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Chaplain Social Chairman Senior Middler Junior World Missions Fellowship Jim Montgomery and Bill Fay. 34 One of the five continental prayer bands, upholding missionaries in Latin America. Student Pastors Having a_ pastorate while a student in sem- inary offers invaluable opportunities to practice concurrently what is being learned in the classroom, while at the same time helping to serve the surrounding communities. Seventeen of those who functioned in this capacity this year are seen at left. Front Row: Fasano, Baer, Rockwell, Moeller, Hall. Middle Row: Gregory, Browning, Pugh, Bump, Shoemaker. Back Row: Cox, Morris, Peugh, Fay, Benson, Sandy, Goertzen. Seminary Women’s Fellowship The Seminary Women’s Fellowship provides a meeting-ground for wives of students and faculty, as well as for the ladies who are them- selves students. This year the organization helped sponsor, in addition to their regular monthly meetings, an entertaining ‘“‘post-exam blast” after mid-semester tests in the fall and a caroling party just prior to Christmas vaca- tion. This year’s officers are pictured at left. Linda Shypulefski, Treasurer, Carolyn Goertzen, Recording Sec- retary, Lois Baker, President-elect, Arlene Friesen, Correspond- ing Secretary, Sandra Farner, President. One group of carolers at a nursing home. 35 Front Row. Jerry Peifer, John Renick, Willis Clawser. Back Row: Professor John Davis, Bob Croumlich. The Grace In 1967 the Grace College annual be- came a publication separate from the Seminary’s. Professor John Davis be- came faculty advisor to the GRACE, and John Renick assumed the responsibilities of editor. The task of shooting and de- livering suitable photographs fell chiefly on John Mayer, photography editor, and Ardis Parlin acted as treasurer of the enterprise. Valuable advice and assis- tance was provided by Pat Riggan, editor of the College HERITAGE for 1967. Willis Clawser provided the thematic sketch of the prayer tower. Freude! 36 Christmas comes but once a year. Insights In pursuing wisdom, neglect not merriment. —Hezekiah 4:13 At the Retreat Fee Are you crazy? Volley-ball is for kids! real close, and then put the salt on his Strikeout brings loss of face. A sprinkling of bat’s wool and a little more lizard’s leg should do it. Would you believe gang-land czar incog- nito? 38 Identify the chef. Oriental pep bloc. Evangelist points out wicket gate to nonchalant Christian. A weighty decision. 39 Professor Fink’s courses aren’t a required! Almost too pretty to be real. 40 Next time we'll ... Those swings and seesaws can become downright fascinating. 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Grace Theological Seminary - Xapis / Grace Yearbook (Winona Lake, IN) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

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Grace Theological Seminary - Xapis / Grace Yearbook (Winona Lake, IN) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

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Grace Theological Seminary - Xapis / Grace Yearbook (Winona Lake, IN) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

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Grace Theological Seminary - Xapis / Grace Yearbook (Winona Lake, IN) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

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Grace Theological Seminary - Xapis / Grace Yearbook (Winona Lake, IN) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

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