Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) - Class of 1938 Page 1 of 184
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lEEIAf«LLIlE ULIEI SUfL EX LIBRIS Copyright 193 8 by THE 1938 CHIMES STAFF Berea College Berea, Kentucky 19 3 8 BEREA COLLEGE PRESS BEREA, KENTUCKY THE SENIOR CLASS OF 1938 PRESENTS BEREA COLLEGE BEREA, KENTUCKY n Colieae 378.7691 B487c 1938 Berea College Collegiate dept. Senior class Chimes. 1  r m r4S - ft • - rl v dtife:. mw Y y •, J K ; I . I . j fcM HHMP iSSk ' . j38k w E D E D C A T E TO ROBERT HENRY COWLEY MASTER-SURGEON AND MASTER-FRIEND WHO THROUGH LONG YEARS HAS GIVEN HIS SKILL. HIS WISDOM. AND HIS LOVE TO BEREA COLLEGE. BECAUSE WE HONOR HIM AS A DOCTOR AND LOVE HIM AS A FRIEND WE, THE CLASS OF 1938 IN GRATITUDE DEDICATE TO HIM THIS VOLUME OF THE CHIMES. MRS. NAN COX HARE— Superintendent DR. RUBY H. PAINE— Associate College Physician DAPHINE DOSTER— Surgical Supervisor MARGARET R. FOX— Dietitian RUTH K. McCOLLUM— Instructor of Nurses A. JANE PIERSON— Assistant Superintendent RUTH G. TEWELL— Office Nurse ALICE M. VAN KREVELEN— Technician DR. J. W. ARMSTRONG— Associate College Physician DR. W. F. DODD— Associate College Physician DR. J. H. SPRINGSTEAD— College Dentist HOSPITAL STAFF DORIS ARLEDGE ___ Hendersonville, N. C. RUTH BARLOWE _ .. Johnson City, Tenn. SENIORS NANCY CHAMBERLAIN _ College Hill, Kv. LILLIAN COMBS Rutledge, Tenn. ANNA DEYOUNG - - Newark, N. Y 1L e MAUDE DANIELS Baton Rouge, La ANNA LEE DULANEY . _ Duffield, Va. ELAINE GOBEN Helton, Ky. ff BERTHA BELLE ISAACS Somerset, Ky M L MILDRED JUDY . Middletown, Va MARION SAYLOR Johnson City, Tenn ESTA M. SEVY _ Huntington, W. Va BEATRICE WILLIAMS Jenkins, Ky MILDRED CATRON _ Dryden, Va THEDA RRJSCOE1 ___|._|._ - „pHaz t-Grcen, Ky BEATRICI JcATRpsJ I ( ) k _ TVyden, Va ELIZABETH CAIN . _ Waco, Ky ROSE DESIMONE . _ McRoberts, Ky KATHLEEN KINCAID ... - Joy, N. C ANN E. KIRKPATRICK . . Bull ' s Gap, Tenn RUBY LIOUTZA . . Norland, Va EVA NEAL . . Pinevillc, Ky JULIA ANN PETERS _ _ Ashland, Ky LOUISE POOLE - Fairmount, Ga DESIE LEE RIDDLE . _ McRoberts, Ky MARY SLUSHER ___ . Pinevillc, Ky THEODORA E. SKEAN Kenova, West Va HOSPITAL NURSES PRESIDENT WILLIAM I. HUTCHINS ADMINISTRATION THOiMAS A. HENDRICKS— DEAN OF UPPER DIVISION KATHARINE S. BOWERSOX— ALLIANCE DEAN OF WOMEN JULIA F. ALLEN— DEAN OF UPPER DIVISION WOMEN UPPER DIVISION AGNES M. ASPNES _ - HOME ECONOMICS LAWRENCE BAKER . _ PSYCHOLOGY JOHN S. BANGSON - - BIOLOGY ELEANOR BROOKS ENGLISH WILBUR G. BURROUGHS _ - GEOLOGY JULIAN H. CAPPS _ _ CHEMISTRY GERTRUDE CHENEY _ _ ORGAN AND PIANO ALBERT J. CHIDESTER _ _ EDUCATION CHARLES N. COLE LATIN LEE F. CRIPPEN HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE MARY ELA . ART VIRGINIA LNGLE .. LIBRARY SCIENCE HARRY B. GOUGH ENGLISH ADELAIDE GUNDLACH . REGISTRAR DOROTHY HALL VIOLIN AND PIANO RECTOR R. HARDIN POLITICAL SCIENCE AND ECONOMICS J. . HATCHER _ - SOCIOLOGY WILLIAM R. HUTCHERSON _ MATHEMATICS GLADY V. JAMESON PIANO AND HIST. OF MUSIC MALCOLM H. KERR _ _ AGRICULTURE MARIAN KINGMAN _ - HOME ECONOMICS PATRICIA MAHON _ . VOICE AND PIANO K. HELEN McKINSTRY . _ PHYSICAL EDUCATION HOWARD MONIER _ - AGRICULTURE WALTER MUELDER . _ PHILOSOPHY AND BIBLE WALDEMAR NOLL - PHYSICS E. TAYLOR PARKS HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE CHARLES E. PAUCK _ - GERMAN ANNA L. PAYNE . - HOME ECONOMICS CHARLES S. PRICE _ AGRICULTURE FACULTY FACULTY REXFORD C. QUIMBY . PHYSICAL EDUCATION JAMES W. RAINE . ENGLISH MRS. LILLIE B. REYNOLDS SEC. TO THE DEAN ELIZABETH RICHARDSON . FRENCH RALPH RIGBY _ MUSIC IRA D. SHAW _ EDUCATION EMILY ANN SMITH _ _ ENGLISH MAY B. SMITH . ENGLISH RACHEL SMITH ___ VIOLIN F. A. STEWART . _ AGRICULTURE EUNICE M. TRUE . . HOME ECONOMICS ERNEST J. WEEKES _ _ ENGLISH ALBERT G. WEIDLER _ _ ECONOMICS FEASTER WOLFORD _ AGRICULTURE IRENE ZIEGLER PIANO AND PUBLIC SCHOOL MUSIC SENIORS 1938 CARLTON MILLER A PRESIDENT SARA LOU KIGER VICE PRESIDENT RHETT EVERHART SECRETARY HORACE McSWAIN TREASURER JOE CLYDE HAMILTON SERGEANT AT ARMS SENIORS CARL E. AUVIL HEATERS, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE LOUISE PERKINS ALLEN BEREA, KENTUCKY A.B., MATHEMATICS ALLIE EUGENIA AVERY MORGANTON, NORTH CAROLINA A.B., ENGLISH ROBERT ORANGE BELCHER CORBIN, KENTUCKY A.B., BIOLOGY WILLIAM D. BALL LIVINGSTON, MONTANA A.B., GEOLOGY SELMA MAY BASSETT WILLIAMSON, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., MUSIC HELEN LOUISE BELLARD WAYLAND, OHIO B.S., HOME ECONOMICS RUTH JALIE BENNETT CANDLER, NORTH CAROLINA A.B., ENGLISH SENIORS BIRDENA B. BISHOP BEREA, KENTUCKY A.B., SOCIOLOGY EMMA ROSE BLACKBURN BEREA, KENTUCKY A.B., ENGLISH LAWRENCE EDWARD BOWLING GLOBE, KENTUCKY A.B., ENGLISH CHARLES PEYTON BRIGHT WELCH, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., PHYSICS j£ 4 RUBY MAE BURCHAM GILMORE, KENTUCKY A.B., BIOLOGY EDWIN YOAKUM LA FOLLETTE, TENNESSEE B.S., AGRICULTURE THOMAS MARTIN CABLE FINCASTLE, KENTUCKY A.B., CHEMISTRY JOE CATHERINE CAMPBELL WOODVILLE, ALABAMA A.B., SOCiOLGY STUART CALWELL HINTON, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., CHEMISTRY JAMES HERBERT CANIDA BEREA, KENTUCKY A.B., MATHEMATICS ROBERT ELWOOD CASSELL AMONATE, VIRGINIA A.B., CHEMISTRY HAZEL VIRGINIA CA-WOOD CAWOOD, KENTUCKY B.S., HOME ECONOMICS MARY ANN CASON ERLANGER, KENTUCKY A.B., HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE THELMA THEORA CARTEE CARTER, KENTUCKY A.B., HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE WILLARD HUBERT CLATWORTHY LACKEY, KENTUCKY A.B., MATHEMATICS CHARLES DEWARD COLVARD B.S., AGRICULTURE GRASSY CREEK, NORTH CAROLINA SENIORS LINA COMPTON MIDDLEBURY, KENTUCKY A.B., EDUCATION MARIE CLARE COMBS HARVEYTON, KENTUCKY A.B., ENGLISH DEAN CORNETTE FLAT RIDGE, VIRGINIA B.S., AGRICULTURE GEORGIA ELLA MAE CORN GREENVILLE, S. C. B.S., HOME ECONOMICS GRACE K. COUCH HAZARD, KENTUCKY A.B., HOME ECONOMICS RALPH CUNDIFF FAUBUSH, KENTUCKY B.S., AGRICULTURE AGNES CROUCH OWINGSVILLE, KENTUCKY A.B.. HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE FOISTER BAIRD DAVIS BARBOURV1LLE, KENTUCKY A.B., BIOLOGY SENIORS WILLIAM CHARON DENSON LOGAN, ALABAMA A.B., PHILOSOPHY PAUL W. DERTHICK, JR. RAVENNA, OHIO A.B., MATHEMATICS VICTOR ARNOLD DICK BEREA, KENTUCKY A.B., BIOLOGY CONNIE CEE DIXON TROUT, WEST VIRGINIA B.S., HOME ECONOMICS WILLIAM ALLEN DONALDSON CELINA, TENNESSEE A. II, CHEMISTRY M. RHLTT EVERHART BERRYVILLE, VIRGINIA A.B., MATHEMATICS BERENICE CRAIG ESTRIDGE BEREA, KENTUCKY A.B., ENGLISH H. LEE DURHAM McKINNEY, KY. B.S., AGRICULTURE ■:,. i. SENIORS JEAN FAULKNER ATLANTA, GEORGIA A.B., ENGLISH ELMER EDWARD FELTNER HYDEN, KY. A B., HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE ERNEST GEORGE FREEMAN WHITLEY CITY, KENTUCKY A.B., AGRICULTURE SETH WARD GILKERSON EAST LYNN, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., BIOLOGY MILDRED BEATRICE GORMAN CORBIN, KENTUCKY A.B., SOCIOLOGY ANNE WILLIAMS GOULD LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA A.B., SOCIOLOGY DORIS LOUISE GROTEWOHL BURLINGTON, IOWA A.B., SOCIOLOGY CHARLES THOMAS GUEST GREER, SOUTH CAROLINA A.B., PHILOSOPHY SENIORS HETTIE BELLE GWINN LOCKBRIDGE, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., ENGLISH JOE CLYDE HAMILTON HENDERSONV1LLE, TENNESSEE B.S., AGRICULTURE WILLIAM B. HALL i DEANE, KENTUCKY A.B., HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE DORIS MARTHA HARRISON BYRDSTOWN, TENNESSEE A.B., HOME ECONOMICS HELEN MAXINE HARWOOD MILLERSPORT, OHIO A.B., ENGLISH EDWARD MERCER HARWOOD BEREA, KENTUCKY A.B., BIOLOGY JOHN C. HENRY ASHLAND, KENTUCKY A.B. ECONOMICS MARY FLORENCE HEPLER MILLBORO, VIRGINIA A.B., SOCIOLOGY SENIORS CORDELIA HILL BEREA, KENTUCKY A.B., HOME ECONOMICS ERNEST HILLAR1) EBERLE, KENTUCKY B.S., AGRICULTURE RUTH ARMON HINDS LIVINGSTON, TENNESSEE B.S., HOME ECONOMICS JENNIE MAE HIMES ASHEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA A.B., EDUCATION r FAY HOLLANDSWORTH WELCH, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., BIOLOGY ELMER HOUSE PAOLI, INDIANA HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE ETTA MAE HOLBROOK BAYS, KENTUCKY A.B., HOME ECONOMICS JACK S. HUGGIN GAFFNEY, SOUTH CAROLINA A.B., SOCIOLOGY SENIORS KUN HYUN SEOUL, KOREA B.S., AGRICULTURE CARLTON E. JOHNSON PAINTSVILLE, KENTUCKY B.S., AGRICULTURE I, MARJORIE ALMA INGLE ASHEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA A.B., ENGLISH JACK JONES MONTICELLO, KENTUCKY B.S.. AGRICULTURE EDNA LEE JONES SILVER POINT, TENNESSEE A.B., HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE BURDETTA FRANCES JORDAN BROOKSVILLE, KENTUCKY A.B., HOME ECONOMICS GEORGE KELLY KEITH MANCHESTER, KENTUCKY A.B., CHEMISTRY CARLISLE KELLER SOMERSET, KENTUCKY A.B., FRENCH SENIORS JAMES ROBERTS KILLIAN BLACKSBURG, SOUTH CAROLINA B.S., AGRICULTURE MAVIS REYNOLDS BURROUGHS BEREA, KENTUCKY A.B., GEOLOGY ELSIE KATHLEEN KINDRED BEREA, KENTUCKY A.B., HOME ECONOMICS RUBY JEAN KIVETT CUMBERLAND GAP, TENNESSEE A.B., HOME ECONOMICS r f ) It ELINOR ELIZABETH KUNDERT BOWDLE, SOUTH DAKOTA A.B., GERMAN SARA LOU KIGER MOUNT AIRY, NORTH CAROLINA A.B., SOCIOLOGY HARVEY V. LANCE SPARTA, TENNESSEE A.B., PHYSICS JEAN LUCILLE LESTER MORRISTOWN, TENNESSEE A.B., HOME ECONOMICS SENIORS WAYNE ODELL LOWMAN CONNELLY SPRINGS, NORTH CAROLINA A.B., MATHEMATICS ALICE MARGUERITE LUH CINCINNATI, OHIO A.B., ENGLISH CHARLES McDARRIS BARNARDSVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA B.S., AGRICULTURE LOIS JEANETTE McBRIDE LAS ANIMAS, COLORADO A.B., ENGLISH ELIZABETH LOUISE LAMB BEREA, KENTUCKY A.B., ENGLISH HORACE CLAYTON McSWAIN CHARLOTTE COURT HOUSE, VIRGINIA B.S., AGRICULTURE LILLIAN MARY McGUIRE MARQUETTE, IOWA A.B., ENGLISH FREDERIC THOMPSON MANN RENICK, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., CHEMISTRY TAYLOR MAPLES WOODVILLE, ALABAMA B.S., AGRICULTURE EDWARD MELTON LYNCH, KENTUCKY A.B., ECONOMICS CARLTON W. MILLER VINTON, IOWA A.B., PHYSICS THELMA M. MILLER ROCKHOLDS, KENTUCKY A.B., HOME ECONOMICS SENIORS 1 m it ISAAC MITCHELL SPRINGDALE, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., BIOLOGY MARVIN WALKER MILLS MANCHESTER, KENTUCKY A.B., ECONOMICS ELOISE VIRGINIA MOORE DUNMORE, WEST VIRGINIA B.S., HOME ECONOMICS CLAYTIE LEWIS MONTGOMERY BLUE SULPHUR SPRINGS, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., HOME ECONOMICS SENIORS , . - ■■■■■$ — m SELDON OLEY MORGAN DAVY, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., PHYSICS BYON MITCHELL MORRIS HARLAN, KENTUCKY A.B., ECONOMICS L. DELL MORRISON GREENEVILLE, TENNESSEE B.S., HOME ECONOMICS JAMES THOMAS MOTTERN BAILEYTON, TENNESSEE A.B., CHEMISTRY JAMES KERMIT MULLINS CAEBURN, VIRGINIA A.B., MATHEMATICS ANNA SUE OSBORN LOUISA, KENTUCKY B.S., HOME ECONOMICS JOSEPHINE OSBO RNE WEAVERVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA A.B., MUSIC REED CODY OWENS PRAISE, KENTUCKY A.B., BIOLOGY SENIORS RAYMOND BENJAMIN PADGETT EDGE FIELD, S. C. A.B , MUSIC ELWYN EUGENE PALMER PINSON, ALABAMA A.B., ECONOMICS JEAN MARIE PICKLESIMER PAINTSVILLE, KENTUCKY A.B., ENGLISH MOIR PILSON STUART, VIRGINIA A.B., ENGLISH BLANCHE ESTELLA PITT TRINITY, ALABAMA A.B., HOME ECONOMICS J. VIRGIL POWELL PRAISE, KENTUCKY A.B., ENGLISH GENE REED POWERS DAN, KENTUCKY A.B., ECONOMICS HARRY B. RAMEY BEREA, KY. A.B., PHYSICS SENIORS CHARLES McKAY RAMSAY GALLATIN, TENNESSEE A.B., ANCIENT LANGUAGES ROY CLARENCE RICHARDSON RICE STATION, KENTUCKY A.B., PHILOSOPHY WILLIAM SCOTT RISNER GUERRANT, KENTUCKY A.B., AGRICULTURE LOIS LILLIAN ROBERTS ASHEVILLE, N. C. A.B., HOME ECONOMICS WILLIAM WALTER ROBERTS, Jr. BURNSIDE, KENTUCKY A.B., CHEMISTRY PAUL INE ROBERTS WORLEY, NORTH CAROLINA A.B., HOME ECONOMICS ROY R. ROSE HULEN, KY. A.B., CHEMISTRY RONALD RAY ROSS CLAIRFIELD, TENNESSEE B.S., AGRICULTURE O SENIORS KATHRYN LOUISE SCRIVNKR EEREA, KENTUCKY A.B., ENGLISH CLAUD L. SCROGGS ACHEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA B.S., AGRICULTURE MABEL SELF BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA B.S., HOME ECONOMICS LILLIAN MARY SELLS ALPINE, TENNESSEE A.B., HOME ECONOMICS XURY RIVOLI SETTLE FLEMING, KENTUCKY A.B., CHEMISTRY VOLA PAULINE SIMPSON RED BOILING SPRINGS, TENN. B.S., HOME ECONOMICS WILLIAM A. SINGLETON, JR. WESTMINSTER, SOUTH CAROLINA A.B., GEOLOGY MARGARET VIRGINIA SLAGLE FRANKLIN, NORTH CAROLINA A.B., MUSIC SENIORS t i iW JW fc ' -- ' w L CAROL HOPE SMITH HINDMAN, KENTUCKY A.B., EDUCATION EUGENE BAXTER SMITH COSBY, TENNESSEE A.B., CHEMISTRY SAM B. SMITH BOW, KENTUCKY A.B., CHEMISTRY JOSEPH HOWARD SPARKS NORTH WILKESBORO. N.C. B.S., AGRICULTURE GRACE HUFF STIDHAM CONFLUENCE, KENTUCKY A.B.. SOCIOLOGY RUBY ETHEL STURGELL CHEROKEE, KENTUCKY A.B., HOME ECONOMICS BENJAMIN FULTON SUTHERLAND CLINTWOOD, VIRGINIA A.B., HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE EARL SHOUN LA FOLLETTE, TENNESSEE B.S., AGRICULTURE SENIORS PAULINE VIRGINIA TEWELI. DAVIS, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., HOME ECONOMICS GERTRUDE PEARL TOWERY BERF.A, KENTUCKY A.B., HOME ECONOMICS HOWARD EDGAR TRENT, JR. MAYSVILLE, KENTUCKY A.B., PHILOSOPHY JEROME TARTAR MINTONVILLE, KENTUCKY A.B., CHEMISTRY ARVIL LYMAN WARD BATH, KENTUCKY A.B., PHYSICS MAE LOUISE WARD HICKORY, NORTH CAROLINA A.B., SOCIOLOGY WALTER E. WEBB CELINA, TENNESSEE A.B., PHYSICS EARL RAYMOND WESLEY LYNCH, KENTUCKY A.B., GERMAN SENIORS iMjtjl MAURICE STANLEY WALL SCIENCE HILL, KENTUCKY B.S., AGRICULTURE EDITH ESTELLE WEST SOMERSET, KENTUCKY A.B., MATHEMATICS DORIS A. WIDENER CONCORD, TENNESSEE A.B., ENGLISH CHARLES LLOYD WILLIAMS ASHEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA A.B., PHYSICS H. MAURICE WILLIAMS FLAT GAP, KENTUCKY B.S., AGRICULTURE EDWARD DICKSON WILLIS VALE, NORTH CAROLINA A.B., HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE GLENN WINCHELL LANARK, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., CHEMISTRY MARTHA CATHERINE WINSTON ASHEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA A.B., HOME ECONOMICS JUNIORS 1 T 5t DALLAS CANDY PRESIDENT HUBERT STEPP VICE PRESIDENT JOSEPHINE JACKSON SECRETARY ELSIE CAIRNS TREASURER LEONARD ROBERTS SERGEANT AT ARMS HENDRICKS CANIDA _ - BEREA, KY. JEANETTE HUNTINGTON - - BEREA, KY. NEAL GIBBS . - SOMERSET, KY. HELOISE PENNINGTON KRYPTON, KY. JOE CANIDA . BEREA, KY. MYRTIS MANN - - NEW HOPE, ALA. ROBERT WALLIS ORR . BREVARD, N C. GLENNA SHAW _ CROCKER, MISS. WILLIAM R. LAY . BARBOURVILLL, KY. ELIZABETH THOMSON LOUISVILLE, KY. FREDERICK G. DAVIS _ BROOKITELD, MASS. ALLENE MOSS - - SMITHVILLE, TENN. ALFRED K. McGUIRE _ JACKSON, KY. WILMA BRANDENBURG . BEREA, KY. DEWEY E. HUFF - - CAIN ' S STORE, KY. ELIZABETH PROPPS - FAYETTEVILLE, W. VA. ROY ADKINS _ MIDRIFF, W. VA. THELMA MONICAL . - OWENSBORO, KY. HASTON FARLEY . - HEIDELBERG, KY. FRANCES HARRISON _ - GREENVILLE, TENN. ROBERT E. ADAMS . .. WEAVERVILLE, N. C. GLADYS TROUTMAN HELTON . WILTON, KY. GEORGE NEWTON PLUMI.EE - - CELINA, TENN. EILEEN HOWSMON - - DAYTON, OHIO A. JUNIORS JANET HARPER _ . FRANKLIN, W. VA. MILTON D. HUMPHREYS MA RLINTON, W. VA. FRANCES MORGAN _ _ GREENSBORO, N. C. MAYHEW CLARK _ HAMMOND, KY. ANNICE PIGMAN BEREA, KY. BERCHIN H. HELTON CRANE NEST, KY. TOSHIKO KATSUMATA . . KYOTO, JAPAN HUBERT STEPP MARION, N. C. MASAKA SUDA NUMAZU, JAPAN HAYDEN SILER _ _ JELLICO, TENN. HATTIE GILES CLIFFSIDE, N. C. ELBERT STEPHENS . __ GRIMSLEY, TENN. IRENE PIERATT BONNY, KY. ALBERT H. DORSEY ___ CLEVELAND, GA. DAISY MURPHY EZEL, KY. URCEY DII.LARD . RABUN GAP, GA. MARY ANN BOGGS - - FRANKLIN, W. VA. CLINTON NIX .. LYONS, GA. THELMA CARROLL _ _ PINEVILLE, KY. CLAUD A. NIX — LYONS, GA. EURYDICE WILSON — - BENTON, TENN. EVERETTE LOUIS GIBSON . . RACELAND, KY. FRANCES LILLARD _ DUET, VA. FOSSIE B. MAYNOR PEMBROKE, N. C. JUNIORS MARTIN MARLAR ._ HONEY BEE, KY. LOTTIE GRAY FRAZIER ... SPRAY, N. C. EARMON W. HUNT ___ COMBS, KY. ADA McGRAW LANSING, W. VA. NORMAN BALL PINE KNOT, KY. VERSA COLLINS - LACKEY, KY. CALEB YORK WINDSOR, KY. ADA CROSS HARLAN, KY. WALTER SCOTT CORBIN, KY. MABEL HELEN HENDERSON _ FRAKES, KY. EUGENE W. BRASSFIELD _ CARPENTER, KY. SUE ELIZABETH PULLINS _ BEREA, KY. HARRY C. QUEEN ASHLAND, KY. EDITH CLOUD __ r OCOEE, TENN. JOHN WATSON _ PINEVILLE, KY. MAXINE WOOTEN LOUISA, KY. HURSHAL SKAGGS TERRYVILLE, KY. SUE DUNCAN HENDERSON, KY. HERBERT SEBREN ASHEVILLE, N. C. MARGARET MOYERS BEREA, KY. ROBERT McCUTCHEON BISHOP, VA. HELEN MORRELL _ SPRUCE PINE, N. C. KENNETH BURNHAM - . WOLLASTON, MASS. HENRIETTA DAVIDSON ANCO, KY. JUNIORS KENNETH GIBBS _ . SOMERSET, KY. FRANCES L. BATSON . TRAVELERS REST, S. C. ASA GULLETT ___ . WEST LIBERTY, KY. DOROTHY STUART . . FAIRMOUNT, GA. OTTIS D. SPURLOCK . PRINTER, KY. ANN STRACHAN . CORBIN, KY. KIN McNEIL BOOMER, N. C. THELMA M. TODD _ . BEREA, KY. KERMIT MILLS _ _ MANCHESTER, KY. MARY ELIZABETH HUFF - BEREA, KY. R. O. GRIMWOOD _ . MERIDIANVILLE, ALA. ALICE ELSWICK . . RICHLANDS, VA. J. NEVIN BEHRENS TIMBERVILLE, VA. RUTH MAY KILBOURNE . . BEREA, KY. JOSEPH MORRIS . _ CLOTHIER, W. VA. LOUISE CARTER . . DEMOCRAT, N. C. QUENTIN KEEN - __. BUCKHORN, KY. RUBY SMYTHE BAIRD . . BEREA, KY. HARLAN HIRSCHY _ . EVANS CITY, PA. LOUISE S. HENDERSON . _ SALTVILLE, VA. LEONARD W. ROBERTS ._ OSBORN, KY. BETTY FORBES - _ KINGSPORT, TENN. THURLOW SIMMS GASH - . HORSE SHOE, N. C. GRACE KILBOURNE ___ BEREA, KY. JUNIORS HAZEL SMITH - . PRICHARD, W. VA. OSCAR W. DEYTON . GREEN MOUNTAIN, N. C. NELDA ANDERSON EZEL, KY. HUGH HURST _ ALDF.N, ALA. ELISE HINDS _ LIVINGSTON, TENN. MACK B. RAY _ PAINT FORK, N. C. IRENE CAMPBELL . BULLS GAP, TENN. JAMES A. GOEORTH _ ASHEVILLE, N. C. LENORE MILLER _ GREENVIEW, W. VA. ROBERT M. CLAY WILLOW-WOOD, OHIO RUBYE WILSON - . BLACKSBURG, S. C. WILLIAM A. BOYCE - _ PLEASANT HILL, TENN. RUTH PENNINGTON . WAYNESVILLE, OHIO RUSSELL GREEN - . WINCHESTER, KY. MILDRED WHEELER _ . ASHLAND, KY. WALTER PAYNE . CORBIN, KY. ELSIE CAIRNS _ _ MIDDLESBORO, KY. ROBERT K. WILSON - _ STURGEON, KY. VIOLA NETHER Y . HALIFAX, N. C. CHARLES M. PROCTOR . . MADISON, W. VA. MARY L. MILNE . . F.DDYVILLE, KY. JOHN SMITH NEWBY . BURKESVILLE, KY. SUSIE JOHNSON . _ MAYNARDSVILLE, TENN. CLISBY C. MOXLEY LIBERTY, KY. JUNIORS VIVIAN PAGE LEE . _ PINEVILLE, KY. WILMFR R. CREECH - . PINE MOUNTAIN, KY. MARY BELLE X ' AlTS _ HARRODS CREEK, KY. EMMER DAVIDSON . FORT BLACKMORE, VA. EVELYN A. HOPKINS - . MARYTOWN, W. VA. ADRIINNE TERRY _ ONEIDA, TENN. IDA MAE PIERATT .. _ MAYTOWN, KY. JESSIE PENNINGTON .._ DRUMORE, PA. BEREA BELOVED By Raymond Cable and Wilfred Johnston Berea, Berca Beloved Where friendships are formed fast and true, And all men stand shoulder to shoulder As brothers beneath White and Blue Thy mem ' ry be enshrined in every heart Thy spirit be of us a part; And though we wander far away Thy chimes will ring for us each day. A flower nurtured by a plain And watered by a mountain rain, May you ever flourish there O Berea! the beautiful, the fair. When storms raged and danger was threat ' ning, And stout-hearted trembled with fear, The spirit of heroes implanted The roots in the wilderness drear. Berea, Berea, we love thee; We cherish the old and the new. None ever can sever us from thee We ' ll stand by the White and the Blue. ■■r r ' . ' AMfe 1 K, ■:+ ■ ■a «■• v, 1 1 SOPHOMORES D. B. ROBERTSON FRESIDENT KATHRYN HUFFMAN SECRETARY-TREASURER , RALPH JOHN PRESIDENT j ELEANOR HOLLINGSW ' ORTH ! VICE PRESIDENT ADA MONCHO I SECRETARY | HAL SMITH TREASURER ELIZABETH WOOD _ - Asheville, N. C. RANDOLPH TULLY _ _ East Rainelle, W. Va. PIETERTJE SMITS . Paris, Ky. FRED BROWN . _ Black Mountain, N. C. JAMES NEWMAN _ _ Island City, Ky. CARMEN OWENS _ - Praise, Ky. DAN WESLEY . . Science Hill, Ky. DORTHA MORGAN . Asheville, N. C. EDITH SUTTON _ .__ Crab Orchard, Ky. OGDEN OLDFIELD Mize, Ky. RUTH ROBERTS _ Monroe, Va. IRELAND ALLEY _ _ Borderland, W. Va. JOHN A. PATTEN Hueysvillc, Ky. EMMA SNODDY _ Ashland. Ky. JAMES J. DAVIS _. Connelly Springs, N. C. ELIZABETH VIZZI _ Monaville, W. Va. FLORA MAE COX Yancey, Ky. CHARLES CH1DESTER _ _ Berea, Ky. FLORINE WILSON _ _ Forest City, N. C. CLYDE BENSEY _ Red Jacket, W. Va. LYMAN HURLEY Sand Gap, Ky. BILLIE BOOTH - - Carlisle, Ky. FRANK KUBIN - — New York, N. Y. MILDRED TINSLEY _ Berea, Ky. GRACE ROBERTS Asheville, N. C. BARCLAY McGHEE ___ - Bristol, Tenn. GRACE BEVERLY _ Norland, Va. WILLARD CAMPBELL . ___ Lerose, Ky. JOHN D. BAKER .. Confluence, Ky. EMILY RUTH SILER _ Warrenton, Ga. DOROTHY ELLEN BROWN - - Lynch, Ky. CARL LIVESAY Blackwater, Va. r ( 3 lit m m SOPHOMORES JACK STEVENS Candler, N. C. NOLA MAE BROWNING Chauncey, W. Va. ERNIE ENGLAND .. Toria, Ky. CHRISTINE MULLINS Mt. Vernon, Ky. JUNE MARIE RAMEY Catlettsburg, Ky. RAYMOND TRAIL Jenkins, Ky. ROSALIE MULLINS Blackwater, Va. OWEN RICKARD .. Weeksburg, Ky. [OE GILBERT Berea, Ky. RACHEL GREEN _ Rainelle, W. Va. JOHN MCALLISTER . Berea, Ky. HELEN WALTER . _ Nickell, Ky. DOROTHY ERNEST _. ._ Walhalla, S. C. CHARLES JARVIS - Mars Hill, N. C. JOANNA ARTHUR . - Flat Lick, Ky. EUGENE WYATT . Otas, Ky. GLENN WILSON . Booneville, Ky. LYDIA ALEXANDER - Bybee, Ky. DAVID HEADLEY . - Winchester, Va. MAYME HENSLEY Berea, Ky. RUBY JONES _. - East Lynn, W. Va. OZZ1E SIMPKINS .. - Wayne, W. Va. OMA SALYERS - - Coeburn, Va. D. B. ROBERTSON . - Gaffney. S. C. PERCY SHUE — - Staunton, Va. MARY RUTH JONES - - East Lynn, W. Va. EARL POWELL _ Elkhorn City, Ky. MARY ELLEN JOHNSON .. Wildie, Ky. BETTY A. CHAMBERS Huntsville, Ala. JACK MULLINS - - Betsy Layne, Ky. DOROTHY WILSON . _ Blacksburg, S. C. DONALD HICKS - Windy, Ky. . J w SOPHOMORES MELVIN SHEIN . _ Williamson, W. Va. GRACE KENNEDY . _ South Pittsburg, Tenn. A. G. BRYANT _ _ Geraldine, Ala. MARAGARET PEZZAROSSI Lackey, Ky. CAROLYN WEIR _ . Marshall, N. C. JOHN S. HAMILTON _ . Birmingham, Ala. AZALEE MEREDITH Elk Valley, Tenn. ARTIS HILLMAN _ . St. Paul, Va. WILLIAM VENABLE _ . Vincent, Ky. MARY C. HILL _ Bean Station, Tenn. ROBERT FELTON . . Parsons, W. Va. HELEN STRAIT . . Catlettsburg, Ky. RUTH McDARRIS . Barnardsville, N. C. JOSEPH A. MORRIS _ Black Mountain, N. C. MARION PEASE _ _ Norwalk, Conn. ARBOR JONES . . Richmond, Ky. GEORGE EISENHOUR . Keyser, W. Va. VIRGINIA McDONOUGH Jenkins, Ky. MARTIN G. SHEARER ._ Susie, Ky. NEOMA JONES . .__ Williamsfield Ohio LORA ANN RISER . . Fremont, Va. ROBERT BLAKE _ . Jamestown, Tenn. ELEANOR BENNING - . Chattanooga, Tenn. EARL HAYS . . McKee, Ky. VERNARD HUGHES WEBB _. . Dunham. Ky. IVA LEE KELLER . _ Somerset, Ky. JAMES WOODY . . P.ttsburg, Ky. SUSAN ATCHLEY _ _ Lenoir City, Tenn. ROBERT MOONEY . Fremont, Va. VIVIAN GOFF . . Danville, Ky. BURTON CLARK . Berea, Ky. EVA JO HILTON ___ Crab Orchard, Ky. SOPHOMORES FREDERICK McAFEE Caryville, Tenn. KATY HUFFMAN Somerset, Ky. WILLIAM NICKELL Hazel Green, Ky. RUTH SULLIVAN Decatur, Ala. LOIS KELLEY Hazard, Ky. BEN BAKER Langley, Ky. WINNIE MILLER Martel, Tenn. ROY STRONG Corbin, Ky. PHIL PHILLIS Paintsville, Ky. HELEN CARLOCK Alpine, Tenn. FRANK JOHNS Westminster S. C. IMOGENE WALL Eubank, Ky. HAZEL PARKER _ Asheville, N. C. O. C. MORRISON Baileyton, Tenn. JEAN MARIE REED Welch, W. Va. ORIN PETERS Island City, Ky. JOHN M. SHELLEY Susie, Ky. RUTH McNEIL Jonesville. Va. CALEB A. SHERA Oxford, Ohio HELEN COOPER Elbert, W. Va. BETTY RIVENBURG Argusville, N. Dak. WALTER E. DANIELS — River, Ky. JOHNNIE MILLARD _ Riceville, Tenn. WILLIAM CECIL DAUSE Catherine, Ky. ROY REYNOLDS Calhoun, Ga. INA F. DODSON - Monticello, Ky. CECIL McKINNEY Amigo, W. Va. MAGGIE STOREY Glen Mary, Tenn. LUCILLE BAIRD Middletown, Ohio WILLIAM W. DAVIS _ Fairview, N. C. ALICE STAFFORD __- _ Maryville, Tenn. LEONARD BREWER Boat, Ky. SOPHOMORES ANN SAYLOR . _ Loyall, Ky. ALBERT WOLFRAM _ _ Berea, Ky. CHRISTINE EASTHAM . . Lake City, Fla. KERN EUTSLER Edinburg, Va FRED SHORT . . Asco, W. Va. LOUISE WEST ___ . Berea, Ky. LUTHER CHANEY . . Bloss, Ky. HAZEL TROUTMAN . _ Wilton, Ky. JETTIE MAYO . . Hobbs Island. Ala. WILDA BOYD _. .. Trinity, Ky. HARRY CALLISON _ . Beard, W. Va. BERNICE HISER Kings Mills, Ohio BILL JOE GRAY ___ . Stone, Ky MYRTLE LEE GREENE _ . Boyd ' s Creek, Tenn. WILLIAM HURLEY . . Sand Gap, Ky. OPAL GREENE Brasstown, N. C. NELLIE LESLIE ___ . Estill, Ky. LUCILLE LAWSON . . Elk Valley, Tenn. VIRGINIA PETERS . Mount Morris, Pa. JAMES McCAMY _ . Scottsboro, Ala. ARTHUR WRIGHT . Jenkins, Ky. ACTIVITIES CLAUD L. SCROGGS Editor-in-Chief JACK HUGGIN Business Manager JEAN FAULKNER Art Editor STUART CALWELL Photographic Editor THE C H M E S JENNIE MAE HIMES Secretary HORACE McSWAIN Scenic Editor BETTY LAMB Literary Editor MARY ANN CASON Advertising Copy ELWOOD CASSELL Sports Editor HAZEL CAWOOD Sports Editor ISAAC MITCHELL Sales Manager CARLISLE KELLER Asst. Sales Manager RHETT EVERHART Advertising PAULINE TEWELL Office Assistant MARY BELLE McCORMICK STAFF Art Assistant JEAN LESTER Advertising Copy AGRICULTURAL UNION First Row: Shelley, Skaggs, Helton, Sparks, Wall, Mullins, Back, Dillard, Gibson, Gash, Bailey, Plumlee, McDarris, Grimwood, Little- john, Ray, Peters, Hamilton, Ratliff. Second Row: Campbell, Gibbs, Felton, Hayes, McLaughlin, Carson, Boyce, Hurst, Combest, Hamilton, Colvard, Ross, Baxter, Brown, Kil- lian, Hyun, Jarvis, McDowell, Woody, Cromer. Third Row: Morris, Becknell, Yoakum, Mor- rison, Mitchell, Stewart, Shoun, Cundiff, Dey- ton, May, Taylor, Wall, Brewer, Shearer, Williams, Dr. Wolford, Nix, Shoun, Jones. Fourth Row: Wilson, Brassfield, Headley, Mr. Spillman, Shuler, Mr. Kerr, Farley, Maples, Mr. Stewart, Dorsey, Durham, McSwain, Risner, Prewitt, McDowell, Hillard, Cornette, Mr. Price. AGRICULTURAL- HOME EC CLUB First Row: Ross, Gibson, Brassfield, Gibbs, Plumlee, Boyce, Hillard, Hurst, Farley, Yoak- um, Colvard, Cornette, Shoun. Second Row: McCormick, Murphy, Creech, Anderson, Lester, Pigman, Corn, Pitt man, Sells, Harrison, Holbrook, Hyun, Nix, Mr. Price, Cawood, Morrison. Third Row: Dorsey, Terry, Kivett, Hender- son, Campbell, Jordan, Hinds, Dixon, Miller, Williams, Harrison, Dr. Wolford, Durham, Pitt, Mills, McSwain, Dillard, Pennington, Moxley, Kilgore, McDarns. Fourth Row: Deyton, Cundiff, Rexroat, Hinds, Jones, Mr. Stewart, Ray, Maples, Grim- wood, Wall, Killian, Becknell, Gash, Scroggs, Mr. Spillman, Mr. Monier, Mr. Kerr. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB First Row: Frances Harrison, Robina Bland, Lillian Wilson, Jean Kivett, Jean Lester, Ger- trude Towery, Louise Henderson, Wilmer Creech, Irene Campbell, Nelda Anderson, Ruby Sturgell, Hazel Cawood. Second Row: Dell Morrison, Etta Mae Hol- brook, Grace Couch, Daisy Murphy, Mary Belle McCormick, Ella Mae Corn, Versa Col- lins, Lydus Rexroat, Mabel Self, Blanche Pitt, Cordelia Hill, Anna Sue Osborn, Mary Milne, Adrienne Terry, Janet Harper, Thelma Miller, Helen Bellard. Third Row: Bonnie Dixon, Vola Simpson, Bess Pittman, Lillian Sell , Allene Moss, Lula Brock, Burdetta Jordan, Pauline Tewell. First R w louise OiKru SarA LouV Ki r, MlrsA W. G. BurrowghsAEleen IHowsmon, Doris Grotewohl, Mildred Gorman, Edith West, B KJ€nl Bishot Elmor lAnlWA A L l f I Second Row: Dr. W. XjT Ross, Dean A. G. Weidler, Carl Auvfl, John - Henry, Howard Trent, Byon Morris. Third Row: Dr. Lawrence Baker, John Williams, Mr. Ira D. Shaw, Herbert Canida, Mr. A. J. Chidester. Fourt Row: Dean W. J. Baird, Dr. R. R. Hardin, Dr. E. T. Parks, Dr. W. G. Muelder, Mr. J. W. Hatcher, Mr. L. F. Crippen. dsorT Nlkl MfcchdU, Harlan Hirschy, William Lay, Seth Gilkerson, Edward Harwood, Seldo First R fwx pilliam aonaldsorTNkj MkchaU, Harlan Hirsc hy, Wil Morgan,|3Mne luw k VudhjlrUtwli. Second Row: Earl Snoun rrcTrJert CaniJa ' Rhert Everhart, Mr. John S. Bangson, Edith West, Dr. John Loefer, Katy Huff- man, Robert Belcher, Hazel Smith, Mrs. Burroughs, Emmer Davidson, Walter Roberts, Walter Webb, Jerome Tartar, Harold Flannery. Third Row: Victor Dick, Kermit Mullins, Dr. W. R. Hutcherson, Dr. W. G. Burroughs, Milton Humphreys, Harvey Lance, Robert Mooney, Elbert Stephens, John New by. l rK Br ' _J Davis, Rachel Smith, Jeanette Huntington, George Kilbourne, Mrs. Elisabeth Peck, Helen Crossen, Laura Eakin, Raymond Durham. Second Row: Selma Bassett, Jean Hoffman, Paul Love, Ellen Ambrose, Guy Wesley, Richard Weekes, Edmund Durham, Josephine Osborne. Third Row: Herbert Sebren, Raymond Padgett, John Henry, Ralph Rigby. o R C H E S T R A aWwY, Lang, Crase, Minton, McBride, Love, Osborne, Piatt, Hollands worth. Smith, Kilbourne, Davis, Hart, Second Row: Sebren, Padgett, Keener, Blackburn, Fielder, Mayhew, Trent, McKiddy, Lovelace, Nestor, Welch, Roberts, Tully Third Row: Durham, Rivenburg, Roberts, Keener, Hays, Gibos, Crippen, Durbin, Parsons, Troll. Fourth Row: Butler, Morris, West, Spence, W. Estep, Davis, McGee, Blair, Green, C. Estep, Blackburn, Fielder, G. Wesley, Buck, Ramsay, Jarmer, E. Wesley. ■' g i J a 1 B A N D ■■■■■El Y.M.C.A. CABINET First Row: Melvin Shein, Rober: Blake, Jack Walters, Charles Ramsay, Gene Powers, Virgil Powell, Kun Hyun. Second Row: Herbert Stepp, Stuart Cal- well, Carson Auxier, John Williams, El- wood Cassell, Charon Denson. Third Row: Claud Scroggs, Carl Auvil, Deward Colvard, George Scherrer, Robert Belcher. MEN ' S HALL UNION First Row: Earl Shoun, Kun Hyun, Cecil Dause, Deward Colvard, Joe Clyde Ham- ilton. Second Row: Rolland Grimwood, Carlton Johnson, Oscar Deyton, Kern Eutsler, Virgil Powell, Dan Wesley. COOPERATIVE COUNCIL First Row: Miss Julia Allen, Ella Mae Corn, Miss Emily Ann Smith, Lillian McGuire, Elise Hinds, Gene Powers. Second Row: Elizabeth Wood, Jean Pickle- simer, Dean T. A. Hendricks, Dr. W. G. Muelder, Leonard Roberts. Third Row: El wood Cassell, Carlton Mil- ler, Deward Colvard, Mr. Charles Morgan, Horace McSwain, Mr. J. W. Hatcher. COLLEGIATE UNION Gene Powers Secretary John Henry Chorister Howard Trent Pianist Stuart Calwell Treasurer El wood Cassell President WOMEN ' S HOUSE GOVERNMENT First Row: Ella Mae Corn, Iva Lee Keller, Heloise Pennington, Nelda Anderson, Miss Julia Allen. Second Row: Mary Ola Tanner, Miss Ruth Woods. Irene Campbell, Billie Booth, Janet Harper, Sara Lou Kiger. Y.W.C.A. CABINET First Row: Ella Mae Corn, Mary Belle McCormick, Lillian McGuire, Doris Grote- wohl, Rachel Green, Janet Harper. Second Row: Mrs. E. T. Parks, Catherine Winston, Allene Moss, Mary Ann Boggs, Virginia Shgle, Mary Belle Waits. Third Row: Mabel Self, Elsie Cairns, Jo Jackson, Marion Pease. ORNITHOLOGICA SOCIETY First Row: Hoy Wesley, Robert Gray, Wil- liam Nickell, Wallis Orr, John McAllister, Arthur Razor, Dan Wesley. Second Row: John Patton, Miss Nellie Crabbe, Basil Mullins, Viola Nethery, Lawrence Bowling, Eleanor Hardeman, Stella Bailey, Elfred Zimmerman, Gladys Helton, Hazel Troutman. COLLEGIATE UNION ORCHESTRA First Row: Ray Becknell, Harry Butler, Leonard Roberts, Herbert Sebren. Second Row: Guy Wesley, Earl Wesley, James Davis, Randolph Tully, John Henry, Byon Morris. Back: Howard Trent, Glendon Gabbard, Mildred Gorman. FOLK CLUB First Row: Oscar Gunkler, Selma Bassett, Emmer Davidson, Grace Stidham, Jose- phine Osborne, Frances Batson, Jean Reed, Lucille Baird, Ann Saylor, Albert Wol- fram. Second Row: Hurshal Skaggs, Claud Nix, Leonard Roberts, Clisby Moxley, Kin Mc- Neil, Iva Lee Keller, Elsie Cairns, Flora Cox, Vivian Goff, Helen Green, Dallas Candy. Third Row: Byon Morris, Harlan Hirschy, Earmon Hunt, Helen Bellard, Edward Melton, Helen Cooper, Leonard Brewer. EDUCATION CLUB First Row: Bertha Allen, Ruth Bennett, Mariorie Ingle, Sue Duncan, Jennie Mae Himes, Edna Jones. Second Row: Lillian Sells, Carol Smith, Evelyn Hopkins, Susie Johnson, Thelma Cartee. Third Row: Elbert Stephens, Mr. Chides- ter, [. Virgil Powell, Wayne Lowman. : RENCH CLUB First Row: Betty Forbes, Elizabeth Rich- ardson, Alice Stafford, Susan Atchley, Joanna Arthur, Mary Baker. Second Row: Selma Bassett, Lucille Baird, Ruth Bennett, Eurydice Wilson, Laura Eakin, Namoa Jones, Helen Carlock. Third Row: Charles Ramsay, Harold Rosenbaum, Hal Smith, Hayden Siler, Wellington Domas, O. M. Harwell, Jr., Carson Auxier. DELTA PHI ALPHA First Row: A. G. Bryant, Virginia Mc- Donough, Byon Morris, Winnie Miller, Dr. Charles Pauck, Mildred Alice Phillips, Jean Picklesimer. Second Row: Harry Butler, James Davis, Earl Wesley, Mary Ann Cason, Elinor Kundert, Ruth Jones, Hayden Siler. Third Row: Xury William Nickell. Settle, Ben Baker G L E E FIRST TENORS Victor Dick Charon Denson Robert Wilson Alfred McGuire Hugh Hurst Lee Durham Clinton Nix Fred Brown Director — SECOND TENORS Enrmon Hunt Russell Green Robert McCutcheon Virgil Powell Frank Kubin Kun Hyun Irene Ziegler BARITONES Gene Powers O. C. Morrison John Henry Stuart Calwell Elwood Cassell Foister Davis Seldon Morgan BASSES Albert Wolfram Charles Chidester Walter Scott Randolph Tully Quentin Keen Haston Farley Accompanist — Howard Trent a c L U B S fc i SOPRANOS ALIOS Jeanette Huntington Lois J. McBride Ruth McNiel Lenora Miller Lois Roberts Louise Scrivner Jean Faulkner Mildred Gorman Elinor Kundert Helen Morrell Eugenia Avery Henrietta Davidsor Hcloisc Pennington Louise Ward Eurydice Wilson Ella Mae Corn Hallie Mae Duff Ruth Roberts Virginia Slagle Florine Wilson Pres dent — Josephine Osborne Director — Patricia Mahon Accompanist — Toshiko Katsumata Ben Sutherland Hittie Giles Lottie Frazier Elmer Feltner Eileen Howsmon Mr. Lee F. Crippen Elizabeth Lamb Miry Ann Cason Dickson Willis Ada McGraw Quentin Keen Doris Grotewohl Ada Cross Franklin Burke Ida Mae Pieratt Kun Hyun Dr. E. T. Parks MEMBERS Dr. A. G. Weidler Dean C. N. Shutt Dr. J- W. Armstrong Dr. R. R. Hardin Mr. J. W. Sattler Carlton Miller Jack Huggin Betty Lamb Hubert Stepp John Williams Cecil McKinney Mary Ann Cason ASSOCIATE MEMBERS Howard Trent Lois Kelley Herbert Sebren Ruth Kilbourne Jack McCutcheon Katy Huffman Joseph Morris Grace Kilbourne Kern Eutsler Jessie Pennington Carl E. Auvil Moir Pilson INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS TAU KAPPA ALPHA M m $.. 9 r i K ft SIGMA Pi SIGMA PINNACLE STAFF Mr. Donald Pugsley Mr. Waldemar Noll Mr. Gilbert Roberts Mr. Luther Ambrose Walter Webb Carlton Miller Seldon Morgan Walter Roberts Milton Humphreys Harvey Lance Willard Clatworthy Harold Flannery Kermit Mullins Charles Williams William Donaldson Eileen Howsmon Cecil MeKinney Claud Scroggs Elizabeth Lamb Man- Ann Cason Jean Lester Kin M cNeil Grace Kilbourne Charon Demon James Goforth Joseph Morris Owen Rick:rd Frank Johns Carson Auxier Wilson Trail D R A M A T I C C L U B First Row: Shumate, Forbes, Henderson, Sutherland, Huffman, Lester, G. Kilbourne, Powell, Denson, Widener, Waits. Second Row: Longworth, Rector, Beldon, Smith, Lillard, Nethery, Himes, H. Pennington, Cornelius, Greene, Dr. Raine. Third Row: F. Queen, L. Hillman, Stephens, Robertson, Barton, Creasman, Hilton, D. Hill, Giles, R. Green, Goff. Fourth Row: Kubin, Rosenbaum, Cameron, Hunt, S. Johnson, R. Pennington, Frazier, Frye, M. Hill, Scott. Fifth Row: Stevens, Jones, Webb, Wooten, Scrivner, Pitt, Gabbard, Keller, McClure. Sixth Row: Damron, Morris, McGraw, Scroggs. THE DRAMATIC CLUB The Dramatic Club was one of the few organizations on the campus this year which was not affected by the curricular reorganization. The freshmen as well as many upper classmen applied for apprentice membership. Through their co- operation and the effort of master members who acted as student directors, the Tuesday night plays have been very successful both in locating talent and in teaching the fundamentals of play production. The Club presented as its fall production Shakespeare ' s Much Ado About Nothing. Through the excellent work of the cast it was possible to present it as a finished production to the alumni at Homecoming. The play was under the student direction of Doris Widener and Virgil Powell. Elizabeth McFadden ' s Double Door, under the student direction of Elizabeth Propps, was presented May, 14, 16, and 17. It proved to be unusually effective. The Dramatic Club is sincerely grateful to Miss Eleanor Brooks, Dr. Harry B. Gough, and Dr. James W. Raine, who through their expert advice, their pa- tience, and their cheerful service, have made invaluable contributions to the dra- matic work of the year. MUCH ADO ALPHA PSI OMEGA E First Row: Claud Scroggs, Louise Scrivner, Virgil Powell, Eugenia Avery, Jack Huggin, Heloise Pennington, Dr. James Watt Raine. Second Row: Seldon Morgan, Emma Rose Blackburn, Artis Hillman, Carlisle Keller, Elizabeth Propps, Charles Chidester, Doris Widener. Third Row: Ray Ross, Mildred Gorman, Walter Payne, Blanche Pitt, Eoister Davis, Berenice Estridge, Carlton Miller. RHO DELTA First Row: Helton Hale, Haston Farley, Deward Colvard, Charon Denson, Luther Gregory, Charles Ramsay. Maurice Williams. Second Row: Clyde Bensey, Eugene Wyatt, Alfred McGuire, O. C. Morrison, Carl Livesay, Kun Hyun. Third Row: Edwin Yoakum, Martin Shearer, Walter Scott, Willard Campbell, Dickson Willis, Earl Hayes. ALPHA ZETA First Row: Arthur Wright, Kern Eutsler, Eugene Smith, John Williams, Ben Baker, Jack Mullins, Joe Clyde Hamilton, Charles Welch, Herbert Canida, Loma Kennedy, Earl Wesley, Byon Morris, Hubert Stepp, Joe Lyttle. Second Row: Harry Callison, A. G. Bryant, Haskett Deyton, Charles Proctor, Joe Morris, Leon Lackey, J. T. Pruitt, Carson Auxier, Herman Bess, L. T. McClure, Frank Queen, Omar Milton, Rayford Whitaker, Joe Thompson. Third Row: Jack Stevens, Joe Canida, Joe Prater, Ted Rice, Edward Buck, Ogden Oldfield, Bill Joe Gray, Harold Bailey, John Howsmon, James Paynter, Grover Booth;, Hendricks Canida, Kenneth Gibbs, Edward Melton. A I FirlFNllw: klarAaret Pezzjir sJ, Alfchk Hamifu kJ Loiisl Kingsley, Sally Mannakee, Virginia Hunt, D I PrL«i, ITall J Aelius, Therm pMtll el . L I I I Second Row: Opal Green, Helen J. Paredes, Beryl Wilson, Winnie Miller, Lottie Frazier, Eileen McKiddy, orothy Caro- lyn Weir. Third Row: Nola Mae Browning, Hattie Giles, Dora Morris, Helen Morgan, Ada McGraw, Lucille Baird, Elea- nor Benning, Ruth McDarris. 1 I Flrsl RowITaVnfn AuntTwilAm Venable, John Bak Tllsln, William) JJoTialdsonJ Laaitance Bowling, Carlton er, Claud Scroggs, Claud Nix, Quentin Keen, Moir Johnson. Second Row: Wayne Lowman, Dean Cornette, Ike Mitchell, Rhett Everhart, Clinton Nix, Paul Derthick, Harry Queen, Felix Hensley, Harold Rosenbaum. Third Row: Howard Pilson, Kin McNiel, Roy Richardson, Horace McSwain, Arvil Ward, Harvey Lance, James Goforth, Jerome Tartar, Robert Mason, Clisby Moxley. KSV MM - • ? A vT j 1 - t ; ; i« ' V ;! - l Jh mr knc „!.,._ j ■itfi BP t RA .■' x; : :5 i a.. JL— 1 .: i ym V % Hi i j ■SHl •BPi | 1 M . V ■: M r • i •V M MEN ' S ATHLETICS Mcdowell N T A CANDY PALMER CLARK POWELL DURHAM RATLIFF N E E R ATHLETICS INTERCOLLEGIATE SPORTS BASKETBALL In view of the record made by the Mountaineers in the past few years, the 1937-38 season was disappointing in the number of games won. But beating their rival, Eastern, on Eastern ' s own floor, was almost enough to vindicate the Varsity hoopsters for anything that happened during the season. A small, smooth, fast-breaking, accurate-passing team, the quintet found it purely a case of having to play over their heads in every game with their tall sharp-shooting opponents. Though on the losing side the majority of the time, the Gunkler-men gave their opposition plenty of trouble. The defense was practically air-tight, and only by passing over the Varsity ' s head or shooting from the center of the floor was the competition able to score. Our forwards were con- stantly breaking into the opposing team ' s defense and literally running circles around them; but there always seemed to be a hand to block the ball before it reached the basket. Well coached and conscious of the value of team work, the team had no one who tried to be the star of the hardwood. Plays were run and points were made in the spirit of team work. All in all, this team was the most congenial to be found on the Berea floor in many seasons. The Mountaineers are lucky in that they lose only one man through graduation instead of three as was true last year. Coming up to vie for the position left by Captain Kelly Keith are several promising frosh. A squad that will be well matched as to ability should make interesting com- petition for berths on the team next year. With a year ' s experience of playing together and with the clever coaching of Coach Gunkler, the 1938-39 season should again find Berea in the top bracket. CROSS COUNTRY The team proved its prowess as Mountaineers by beating the University of Kentucky twice by the score of 26-29. The team was well-balanced, with Pilson, Clark, Ward and Scherrer all running the three miles within one-half minute of each other. TRACK Left standing in their holes at the start of the season by bowing to a powerful University of Kentucky team, the Gunkler men look forward to jumping the gun with all K.I.A.C. com- petition. Out-distancing Simpson of Kentucky in the javelin throw and jumping to a height of six feet to take first in both events and placing in others, Captain Roberts led the scoring for the Berea thinlies and gave other competitors a taste of what to expect when facing the Moun- taineers. With the field events and the dashes brought up to the standard of the Berea distance runners, we have the best balanced team in many a cinder season, and another state championship is expected. SWIMMING With only two letter-men from the previous y;ar the Varsity swimmers were unable to win a meet, although keen competition was given their opponents. Berea placed third in the state meet. This year ' s B swimmers are Begley, Brooks, Felton, Hillman and Phillis. TENNIS This year ' s team was somewhat weakened by the graduation of four outstanding net-men, but the experienced players of last year ' s squad plus several new men appear to be going strong. Start- ing off this season by losing to the University of Kentucky and winning from Eastern looks very much like a repetition of last, year ' s season for the racquet slingers in winning the K.I.A.C. com- petition and losing to the teams that play a higher class of tennis. INTRAMURAL SPORTS SPEEDBALL The Upper Division blanketed the Lower Division in the annual Thanksgiving conflict by a score of 12-8. The game was fast and interesting but the Lower Division found their shin-kick- ing brothers too much for them. DORMITORY BASKETBALL Sixteen teams entered the field this year, sach with the hope of ending up on top. First floor Howard realized this ambition by coming through the season undefeated, and by beating the third Howard south team in the tournament. Those picked from the various dormitory teams to make up the Pinnacle Ail-Star team were Bailey, Morrison, Wright, V. Powell, Huff, Cundiff, K. Mills, Farley, Moxley and J. Canida. HANDBALL Starting in a field of forty-eight. Brooks in the four wall tournament came through to defeat Lay in the finals and to claim the gold medal. Staging a come-back, Lay defeated Colvard in the consolation tournament to earn the silver medal and the title of runner-up in the tournament. BASEBALL With Collins and Brassfield as batteries, the Varsity went through the ' 37 season undefeated to gain the pennant from the Frosh. This year Brassfield will remain behind the plat. ' , and Ratliff will take the mound. Backed by an equally good team as in previous years, Varsity i; again out for the banner. DANCE A Dunce Drama Of Kentucky was first produced by the Department of Physical Education for Men in March, 1934. An attempt was made to show the close union between mind and body; that bodies may be swift and enduring servants of the good will ; that the body may be used as a means of expression. It was also felt that there is a definite place for men in the dance, that there is a masculine grace of line and movement, and to men belong the great gestures of strength and endurance. In receiving an invitation to present the dance at the National Convention of the American Health and Physical Education Association at Atlanta, Berea was recognized as making a unique contribution to Physical Education. A critical audience voiced enthusiastic approval of the per- formance. TENNIS MS, , Williams, Brashear, Rose, Durham, Behrens, Keith, Coach Quimby. w_ -4 -i I 4 |1H fcl 4HiHyl CROSS COUNTRY First Row: Clark, Ward, Caudill, Moxley Coach Quimby. Second Row: Scherrer, Pilson, Felton, Wat- son, Goforth. SWIMMING First Row: Behrens, Headley, Brooks, Fel- ton, Begley, Phillis. Second Row: McGhee, Daniels, Belcher Stevens, Hillman, Wyatt. LUB First Row: Trent, Pilson, Goforth, Dey- ton, Ward, Roberts, Settle, Cassell. Second Row: Moxley, McDowell, Begley, Gunkler, Powell, Brooks, Brashear. Third Row: Felton, Clark. Hirschy, Scherrer, BASEBALL First Row: Palmer, Thomas, Huff, Brass- field, Dause, Coach Huntington, Rickard. Second Row: Smith, Massey, Deyton, Dur- ham, Shue, Singleton. Third Row: Webb, Boyce, Johnson, Ever- hart, Mooney. DORMITORY CHAMPIONS First Row: Morrison, Wright, Bailey, Everhart. Second Row: Stepp, Johnson, Gaston, Brooks. .« v FIRST ROW: TRENT, PILSON SECOND ROW: HEADLEY, NICKEL THIRD ROW: WESLEY, WILSON fANIDA, V. POWELL. GC¥OiyrHASEp Hr ' fRTirUO ERTrTWq EYAHLWT7H.yfA KEL aVi sWlNSCLkRk, IMSCHY, Isc| ZRR£ , fiREW ., III!, n, sT o iGAvJ tso , |cA LispN, GU fa f: yowL iGj.qAVtDILL, MORRISON, E. POWELL. WOMEN ' S ATHLETICS L ■SENIOR BASKETBALL First Row: Bassett, McCorrnick, Hinds, Campbell, Montgomery. Second Row: Cawood, Jones, Lester, Pitt, Tewell. SOPHOMORE BASKETBALL First Row: Miller, Stafford, Pezzarossi. Second Row: Ingle, Baird, Kelly, Jones Roberts. Third Row: McDarris, Boyd, Peters, Snod- dy, Jones, Cox. i i )i : JUNIOR BASKETBALL First Row: Turner, Batson, Campbell, Hinds, Davidson. Second Row: Monical, Creech, Wilson, Propps. FRESHMEN BASKETBALL First Row: Morris, Wilson, McDarris Hughett, Meredith, Brenda, Loveless Tewell, Ellis. Second Row: Shumate, King, Reeves Hammick, Brannon, Thomas, Hillman Smith. Third Row: Parades, Beldon, Blythe Puckett, Ingram, Moore, Johnson, Mai strom. UPPER DIVISION W.A.A. BOARD First Row: Pennington, Monical, Jones. Roberts. Second Row: Miss McKinstry, Stafford, Cox, H. Davidson, Leslie. Third Row: Hinds, Tanner, Pease, David- son, Montgomery. ikk ■■I © a f SECONDARY BASKETBALL First Row: Rigdon, Evans, Hawkins Strong. Second Row: Pridemore, Blake, Johnson Dixon. Third Row: Ison, Smith, Litton, York, Brown. HOCKEY First Row: Litton, Smith, Bettis, Gwinn, Monical, Crowe, Montgomery, Pennington, Strong, Patrick, Blake. Second Row: Miss Borchers, Brenda, Jones, Sandlin, Roberts, Patton, Frye, Gross, Slusher, Bowe, Basset, Miss Boetcher. LOWER DIVISION W.A.A. BOARD First Row: Weekes, Strong, York. Second Row: Taylor, Rigdon, Crowe, Dc- simone. Third Row: Roberts, Clark, Deschamps, Patrick. LIFE SAVING First Row: Hiatt, Moncho, Davidson. Green, Tewell. Bassett, Stidham, Hillman Huntington, Frve. Second Row: Pease, Nowlin. Brannon, Booth, Kennedy, Pennington, Cameron, Tanner, Francis, Beldon. Third Row: Wood. K Wilson, E. Wilson, Keller, York, Miss Borchers, Picklesimer, McGraw, Fox, Holbrook. McCormick. B CLUB First Row: Tanner, Wi ' son, Monical, Gor- man, Hepler. Second Row: Bassett, S ' idham, Cawood Davidson, Montgomery. THE MAY FESTIVAL CREATIVE WRITING Believing that the written expression of Berea students is a definite and important part of the life and work of Berea College, the class of 1938 is continung the creative writing section instituted in The Chimes by last year ' s class. Although this section is small and cannot include all of the best writing done in Berea this year, it does represent a portion of Berea ' s written thought. We wish to express our gratitude to John F. Smith for generously allowing us to use as an in- troduction to our creative writing section a poem which he had composed to Dr. Cowley, to whom we are dedicating this volume of The Chimes, and to Frank Long, our Berea artist, who has again contributed to our annual one of his significant woodcuts. A MASTER OF HIS ART To Doctor Robert H. Cowley The master surgeon with a steady hand, And heart that beats as true as Father Time, Takes up the knife, and with a faith sublime And skill which novice ne ' er can understand Begins his work. What ever may demand Quick eye, prompt action, and a sense unerring He meets with sober reasons that withstand The strain that sets the timid hearts a-fearing. He knows why hearts are hearts and breath is breath, How hand and brain their wonders are achieving; He sees how man may often vanquish death And save a thousand loving hearts from grieving. Spirits like this are sent to calm our fears And take away the pain that drowns our joy in tears. — John F. Smith a z o -J z Pi H DOCTOR COWLEY ' S CONTRIBUTION TO BEREA The life of Berea College can be studied through knowledge of the personalities that have en- tered into her building. Berea has been blessed with great leaders. She has been especially fortunate in the man who has unselfishly given his skill, his strength, and his wisdom to the building up of the Health Department, — Doctor Robert Henry Cowley. Dr. Cowley received his A.B. degree from Oberlin College in 1896. He had been an athlete there, and an outstanding student. In 1901 when he graduated from Western Reserve as a Doctor of Medicine, he was characterized as the most promising student they had ever had. Alter an in- ternship in the City Hospital, Cleveland, and after his marriage to Miss Anna Parry of the Oberlin class of 1897, he began medical practice in his home town of Lorain, Ohio. Two years later, in 1904, he was invited to become the college physician at Berea. He came to the work at a time when it meant a great sacrifice. But he preferred the great opportunity of ser- vice offered him in Berea to the wealth he could unquestionably have won in the private practice of medicine. When Dr. Cowley arrived in Berea, he at once undertook an immense and until then badly neglected work. There had been no college doctor, and such attention as the town doctor had been able to give the campus was inadequate. There was an old dwelling-house in use as a hospital, with a staff of a few student nurses and a head nurse. Beds often had to be put in the corridor as well as in the few rooms. There was no operating room; the office had to be emptied, scrubbed, and used for operations as they came. Water was not piped into the building. Epidemics raged, especially measles and typhoid. Dormitory living and class-room gatherings made contagion easy, and in those days students knew little of avoidance of it. Constant, but often seemingly fruitless education was a part of Dr. Cowley ' s task — to teach them to observe quarantine. He gave himself unstintingly to the work of single-handedly caring for students and faculty. As new problems arose in his work, Dr. Cowley trained himself to meet them. A very short stay in Berea made it clear that the examination and fitting of eyes was one of the great student needs. For this his training had not prepared him. First he spent a summer in study at Cleveland, and then a summer in an eye hospital in London. Later he made two trips to Vienna for study which gave him a skill in treatment of the nose, ear, and throat. Dr. Cowley has watched the college develop through the years, and has taken great joy in the growth of his own department. From the early days with privations in equipment he has seen the changes through various stages of expansion up to a modern hospital with an adequate staff and a splendid Nurses Training School. It has been a long road with careful supervision, from the time when he came to the present. Then it was difficult simply to care for the sick. Now he is di- rector of a modern well-equipped hospital approved by the American College of Surgeons and a member of the American Hospital Association. In 1930 Oberlin College honored herself and him by conferring on him the degree of Doctor of Science in these words: A Master, amid his mountains, of the art and science of medicine and of surgery, loved by his colleagues and his patients, always remembering the lofty traditions of his pro- fession and religiously avoiding the many opportunities to commercialize his abilities, without the anticipation of reward he has given his full strength to the service of his fellow man. Berea has certainly been most fortunate in having at the head of her student health a man of Dr. Cowley ' s rare ability and training. His life here, his care of the faculty and students, his teach- ing, his direction of the hospital, and above all his inspiration have meant much to the college and to the community. Both as a surgeon and as a man he represents that which is highest and finest. We respect him, we honor him, we love him,— our own Doctor Cowley. — Elizabeth Lamb LYNCHING TREE This is the tree in alabama. This is the town in alabama. This is the terrible hate in alabama. That strung him to his fate. That strung And flung Him, dark and wretched, To eternity in alabama. He died of hanging And a burning soul in alabama. — Grace Kirtland SATURATED INTIMACY It is stimulating to be peeved at your roommate. You will exert yourself to do any number of things that would not occur to you ordinarily. You will remove any obligations you owe her in the way of stamps, soap, or money loans to make certain that the cause for irritation is wholly on one side, that you may be free to nurse your grievance righteously. Your side of the dresser and half of the top drawer will be meticulously arranged dating from the time of offense, and your desk will be a pointed contrast between your systematic habits and the sloth of your roommate. Neither of you has mopped the floor in a week, but you attack the dunes of dust underneath your roommate ' s bed with vehement punches of silent indig- nation at her lack of co-operation. In the evening when both of you are bolstered at the foot of your beds study- ing away in frigid, but conscious silence, you call, Come, in warm, friendly tones reminiscent of your past intimacy with the fellow occupant of your room. You are much more attentive to the conversation of your visitor than is your usual self-centered custom. You feel secretly victorious when the intruder directs most of her chatter toward you. It is most essential, you feel, to be the first to throw back the covers and jump up to switch on the light in the morning. Your roommate must not feel that you look to her to initiate the movement. You must be the first dressed and ready to go, because your roommate must realize that you are really inde- pendent of her, and if she should wish to be conciliating, that you are waiting for her. — Jean Faulkner AND DARKNESS COMES Life beats through endless chains Of tangled lives And no one can tell No one knows why Red stains the sky and fades, Love fades and dies. No one understands Why one man tastes of poison, Dying with a sardonic twist to his lips; While another injects into his body Serum — poison too — that he may test A remedy for but one disease In the ceaseless pain of humanity. Both die. Further there is no knowledge. No one can comprehend Why there should be un fathomed hope In a mother ' s eyes — a mother whose Back is bent by too much labor, and too hard; Why a young girl fights a losing fight For ideals outworn in the flux of time And grows more bitter. Both live. There is laughter in the world and tears; Hears love, and still can hate, And no one knows. Hunger exists and brings in never ceasing train, Endless want and despair over struggles, And a weariness in asking why To questions never settled. Many go on being hungry. Revolutions flare and are blanketed Smotheringly. Bitter want, with no chance to get, and do, and be. Youth calls to youth: there is a way, We are strong .... But today is gone flickering With a last spattering of gold, And darkness comes. -Ruth Pennington NO NEWS IS GOOD NEWS The boy slides the morning paper under my door about the time of the ringing of the second chimes and the rumble of men leaving for breakfast. By the time breakfast is over, there is a con- certed invasion of my room by about half the men on my floor. If I happen to be reading the paper, they resolutely appropriate it, section by section. They wrangle over the sports page and the best chair in the room. They growl about the inconvenience of having to come all the way to my room to read the news; they grumble about the lousy sports editor, the scarcity of football pic- tures, baseball news, and inside dope; they comment disrespectfully on the dilute editorials and the weak puns of the columnists. They compute the comparative strength of different football, base- ball, and basketball teams, hazard the opinion that Mussolini should be shot, and dispute every- thing, whether it be a statement that black is black, that T. A. Hendricks is Dean of Men, or that the Americans are in possession of Washington. They remind the late comers that it is extremely impolite to read over someone ' s shoulder, and that patience is one of the most admirable of virtues. — Ben Sutherland POSSESSION When I see a distant rise of land, blue in the sun, I feel a sweep of pure exaltation that no mood or present annoyance can touch. This quickening of blood and heart-beat, this tingling of nerve fibers is like nothing else in my experience; like nothing else in all the world. I am as one transported and impervious to the common sights of men; as one who has come upon heaven through a secret way. I can think of no simile for the sight o f purple distances rising fold on fold. There is nothing so full of the movement and the repose of life. As I draw closer and enter the hill country, th; individual trees qualitate the slopes, giving them the force of single identities. The balsam, pine, and hemlock smell unbelievably good. The air holds the piercing intoxicant that aged wines strive for. I grow more eager. The throb of possession is deep within me. There is the ancient spell of forests that is native to my Angle-Saxon blood. One lordly tree is grandeur and nobility. In array upon a hillside trees are a godlike race. The spirit of time, grown still and rich with potent yesterdays, abides among them. The meter of Virgil, the stately hexameter, bears out their rhythm. All of this country belongs to the years that have slipped from me, to associations and com- panionships, some of which will have no earthly renewal. Every summer for seventeen years, and tall and spring for over twelve of them, I have come to the mountains. If memories of good times and of poignantly happy moments throng a place, love of it is natural though it be bare and ugly. If it has manifold beauty, swift shadows and everchanging brilliance of color, magnificant distance and palpable nearness, nothing can tear that place from the heart. I am assured that never on a mountain peak could I know utter despair. There I enjoy the greatest happiness which I am cap- able of receiving from nature. Hills lay wisdom and comfort and an expansion of spirit upon me in an inexplicable way. They have given me hours of rich solitudes and splendid flashes of perfect, untrammeled fellowship. Physical exultation and spiritual ecstacy sweep me; quiescent musing and passive observance rest me. Conflict of moods and out of them an inner peace — this is the cycle of my mountain-top experience. If I speak in pompous, sentimental words they are the true expression of my feeling. The simple response of my spirit is complicated by translation into words. So much of my living and thinking is woven into the mountain scenes, so much of my nature is satisfied within them, that my ownership is certain. I stake no wooden posts, I hold no title deed, but irretrievably, irrefutably, the hills are mine. — Raymond Padgett SOME CHANGES IN MY ATTITUDES It you want to study some langauge, go to that country where it is spoken. How many times I have heard this! Yet I never expected that idea might be realized by me. Suddenly it happened that I came to America from Japan. Eighteen days ' journey brought about a great difference in my position. Quite suddenly I had to change many customs which I was used to. Although I tried to adapt myself to the new circumstances, it was pretty hard. The greatest trouble was that I had to speak in English. Even though 1 knew some words very well and could spell them, these words were not understood when I pronounced them. Some words, although I knew them by spelling, sounded quite new when someone talked to me. The inconvenience in the unfamiliar language made me very retiring in speaking. When someone said something, I would answer simply, Yes, or No, with much hesi.ation. Many times my English was not under- stood. Yet I was too bashful to repeat. One day a friend of mine said, Did you see my pictures? putting her pictures on her desk. I was very eager to look at them, and I answered, Yes. I waited and waited, expecting that she might bring them to me soon. But she put them back into the drawer of her desk, and she looked grave. In a moment we were in a strange air. It was natural. I should have answered, No ; yet 1 said just, Yes, omitting, I should like to set them. Besides, I did not say anything to make the misunderstood word clear. Now I would ex- plain the source of the mistake in such a case. In that moment my friend would understand clearly why I said yes instead of no. Then, there would be merry laughter. When I ate at table, other boys and girls talked and laughed merrily; yet, I never said any- thing except, Thank you, or No thank you, because we in my country do not talk much at table. We never use our fingers. Always casting sheep ' s eyes at others, I imitated them. But when a plate of pickles was passed around, with a little hesitation and slowly I moved some of them to my plate. Sometimes I held the glass of water with both hands quite unconsciously. While others were enjoying the dishes, without a word I managed the unfamiliar fork and knife, casting down my eyes. Often we had apples at a meal. Without eating at table, boys and girls would leave the dining room holding the apples in their hands, and they would bite them, out on the way to their dormitories. When I was going back to my dormitory from the dining room with some friends, one of them said, Why don ' t you eat? Instead of answering, I simply smiled. And still I was holding the apple in my hand, suppressing the appetite stimulated by her words. Really, 1 could not do it; I felt as if someone was looking at me, and soon I might be forced to go to the teacher ' s room to have a long lecture and to be told not to do such a thing again. In such a way I led a quite solitary existence which never could fuse into that of other students. But later the stu- dents ' manners and customs became quite natural to me. There was another custom which I could not change easily. In Japan we would bow our heads to show our respect for others. We had to make a deep bow to our teachers or superiors wheresoever we met them on a street or at the gallery of our school. This habit for a long time often let me bow my head unconsciously. But instead of making a low bow, boys and girls just said, Hello! to each other; this greeting was accepted even between teachers and students. At first, when a teacher said to me, Hello, I hesitated to answer, wondering whether I could say the same thine or not. It seemed too friendly to say to teachers. But soon I could understand that it was really the symbol of democratic spirit and individual respect. Now it is the best word I love among the common words. Hello! How warm and familiar it is! Thus, my attitude of hesitation disappeared soon; really adaptation is one of the privileges which we are given by nature. And now I feel as if I am one of the American students, as if my face is white and my hair is curled. Although I may look still a stranger, I am enjoying the school life as well as other girls. Keenly I feel my joy that I am studying with cheerful students in the very country where Liberty is respected above all. — Masako Suda ARGUMENT IN AUTUMN When summer ends, we say the rose will fade, When autumn comes, we think the heart will die; The rose must yield to winter ' s ambuscade, The heart will answer Adam ' s painful lie. Yet will the rose-haw punctuate the scene, A master hand will paint the winter tree — Is ripened corn less lovely than the green? Are oaks with leaves of ice not fair to see? — James Prince MYRIAD LEAVES With surging power earth shouts life to tree: From trunk to limb, and limb to leaf the strength Runs pulsing high, each leaf athrob and free, Yet nourished by the roots at friendly length. And teeming, myriad leaves make up the tree, For through them life, a strength unebbing, flows, Each leaf one microscopic part to be Of the inclusive whole which all compose. As leaf from tree, so issues man from God — Minute outgrowth of giant-giving source; Begetter, nourisher, embracer — God, And man partakes of His abundant force. A midge is man in timeless spans of His, Yet part of the vast source of all that is! — Raymond Padgett WIND In the pale moonlight the wind worries the tired, dead leaves across the valley. Then it hunts on the dark, wooded hillside and hustles more listless leaves back to be pressed against the old creek bank. Then it rushes at them and scatters them and bullies them. The tired leaves are sick of hurry But the wind is tireless. — Carlton Miller BLACK GOLD Black gold — Merciless murderer of men! Wop, Hunk, Dago — all bow To your relentless grasp. Sweating, cursing, groaning with fatigue They toil ceaselessly to wrench you from your Aged bed — bed of a million years. Why do they labor? You are a God! You feed the hungry flames of the giant liner; A white coated grocer markets you From his neatly-stocked shelves. A straining locomotive plows through the murky night; Behind the fiery monster Empty gondolas clatter and sway over ribbons of steel. From forges white hot with coal come cannon Feeding passions of hate and greed in some russet brown Autumn. A little old lady sits by her fire and knits contentedly. In roadhouse and ballroom couples glide; Girls in gowns of beautiful violets, blues and yellows — Colors wrested from the grimy, glistening blackness Of a lump of coal. A deserted coal camp squats in the barren valley. Weeds — and worms — claim shanties Where once was Life — And Death. — Robert McCutcheon FOG The dank fog clung to the buildings, the trees and the ground. Pushing through the fog, the nearer buildings stood out against it. They seemed to stand alone; shadows and vague shapes blended into the mist behind them. The wet limbs of trees that had not yet felt spring in their veins were black against the grayness. From my window, the houses I could see all seemed to have gone inside, to have turned their backs. They looked withdrawn and inhospitable. The dreariness was emphasized by a half-hearted chirp from a too-early bird. On a tree in front of the window, a few brown leaves fluttered dispiritedly. Everything was muffled, waiting for the fog to lift. Everything was melancholy, sad, and weeping — everything except the cars that went on, their horns honking blatantly, unconscious of the fog. Their tires made a wet sound on the pavement — rubber against the streets. The chilling, rain-soaked air was the kind that penetrated the thin skin of mortals and sank down to their bones, making them shiver in their coats. But the machines ignored it. They looked like gray wraiths, but you knew they were real. The fog could not reach them. — Catherine Winston SONNETS OF HOME Give me back the mountain life I know — The life which I have lived and learned to love, The narrow streams with ragged hills above — Those hills of stone and trees whence raw winds blow Across the earth with stinging sleet and snow. Where strong men — poor men — made of common clay Are born to toil and die their simple way — They spring from clay and back to clay they go. One sometimes sees small weather-beaten shacks With clapboard roofs and clay chinked in the cracks, Where people live their lives of pleasant toil, And every man is equal to the rest. All are one class — There is no worst or best — Where common people hold the rugged soil. II I long to go back home — back to the clay. I want to roam the hills at night alone, And hold the handles of a plow all day; To hear its steel point scraping past a stone, And feel the loose soil give beneath my feet. I want to seine the silent fish at night, To wade the river warmed by summer heat. And watch the waves reflecting white moonlight. I want to walk beneath the apple trees, And smell their balmy blossoms in the spring; To hear the humming rhythm of the bees, And listen to the songs the catbirds sing. I long to be back home — away from strife, Relax again with things that make up life. Ill Then let me face a rainstorm on a hill And strip my sun-tanned body to the waist, To feel the rain-sheets fall upon my face And blow across my body at their will. Give me saw-toothed lightning and black clouds, A thunder-rocking earth beneath my feet, Pure winds to bow me down as trees are bowed, And torrents of white rain that blow and beat — That make me free as any winds that blow, As reckless as a plunging mountain creek, As strong as knotty grape vines ever grow, While I stand there upon some lonely peak Among tall trees and limestone rough and crude With Nature speaking in her wildest mood. IV Yes, give me back the wind and moon and atars, And let me shell corn for the calves once more In the big corn crib with the chestnut door, And milk the cows again out at the bars. I long to sit on the old white oak sled And hear the twilight winds blow soft and cool, The cattle tramping cornstalks in the shed, The restless stamping of a grazing mule, The shuffling of young pigs in their leaf bed, The drone of insects, and the bleat of sheep. These are the memories that are in my head; These are the thoughts I think before I sleep. Some day back to this life for which I yearn Like migratory birds I shall return. -Lawrence Bowling PRESBYTERIAN BREAD At night as I walk home from work, a tantalizing blast of bread smells comes out of the little round ventilating window of the bakery at 6th and Columbia. Sometimes these smells cause my mind to go back to the Kentucky Mountains of my childhood, where there were no bakeries nor delicatessans, but where we nevertheless had breads of such peculiar kinds and of such toothsome flavors that we really had no need for these folderols of the furrin country. In those days cornbread was what we unders:ood to be meant when one said, Bread is the staff of life. That we had with us always. If by some devious process we became possessors of some wheat flour, it was looked upon as a luxury not to be partaken of lightly but to be saved and made into biscuits for our peculiar help-one-another workings or for the rare visit of some itin- erant Hardshell preacher. Loaf-bread as such was unknown to us, much less the art of making it. We had been cut off from our fellows too long to remember that. Never to our knowledge had we eaten any. But once, in that long past day, a group of us were invited to have a community picnic dinner with our friends, the missonary women, who were so valiantly interested in the advancement of our well- being. We packed our split-oak baskets with corn-bread and biscuits. But for their share of the dinner that day these furrin women had some of the strangest looking bread; it tasted both sweet- ish and soured-ish, but it was good, and the slices of pork between were familiar. Our good man- ners overcame our curiosity, so we did not ask what it was. Since the kind ladies were workers for the Presbyterian Church, some of our number thought the bread might be peculiar to that faith; therefore we gave it the name Presbyterian Bread. Every once in a while I go into the bakery at 6th and Columbia for bread, and I smile as I wonder what the sawed-off, pinkly bald baker would say if I should ask him for a loaf of ' Presby- terian Bread. — Mrs. Bernice Hiser _ABOR LABOR AND LEARNING Everyone works in Berea, campus guides tell interested guests of the college, students tell their friends, and newspapers tell the nation. How democratic that sounds. How democratic it is! When Berea College was founded in 1855, the constitution stated, Its object shall be to furnish the opportunity for a thorough education to all persons of good moral character at the least possible expense. To secure this end all possible facilities and inducements for manual labor shall be offer- ed to its students. This was an endeavor to find a method of taking higher education to the common people. Berea has continued to furnish this type of education throughout her eighty-three years. The results have justified her in doing so. She has been able to meet the test of survival where compe- tition has been terrific, and where most religious, non-sectarian, privately controlled colleges have succumbed. It is the judgement of many that had Berea deserted her labor ideal she could not have secured the moral and financial support which has made her continued existence possible. The unique intellectual, cultural, and moral training associated with the student labor system has aroused widespread interest in Berea College and in her graduates who have gone out to secure jobs. Our college has been able to continue and enlarge this policy because she has definitely and con- sistently made student labor one of her fundamental principles. It has been her glory and her crown. Each president has taken his stand on this fundamental principle and has, in the words of President Hutchins, pledged himself to keep open the path from the cabin to the college, by carrying out the promise in Berea ' s present constitution to provide opportunities for manual labor as assistance in self-support. The student labor program has bridged the gap between work and school. Interesting work, plain living, and high thinking has proved of value to all students. The boys and girls coming to Berea do not come to get away from life and its work, but to continue living and working on a higher level. There is less break with normal living here than at the average college. Everyone works. And by this ideal, Berea has been able to give a standard college education to the under- privileged, and has made it possible for her young men and young women to enter the highest graduate and professional schools on a par with the students from other colleges. Labor in the school program encourages the early planning of a life program. Berea believes that if we grant that work of some sort is necessary in every age of one ' s life, the labor done in school should not only help in self-support while in school, but should be an integral part of a con- tinuous work program. Most often when a student comes to Berea he has already learned of the variety of tasks to be done and rarely comes without having some preference. Probably for the first time in his life he has had to consider what work he should choose to do. This is the natural way to approach the problem of vocational guidance. He does not have to wait until he is forced out into the cold world to make a living, but faces the practical problems in an institution organized to guide him in a friendly and helpful way. He has a chance to see and explore a great variety of the world ' s tasks in actual operation as essential parts of a community. He must hunt his job and get experience in interviewing employers. He then is engaged in making a product or rendering a service which will be put to the test of use by his fellow students. He must make good on the job or else lose it and be compelled to get another. His whole vocational experience is real and at the same time under the most favorable circumstancess of friendly, not commercial guidance. Berea ' s labor system has been increasingly successful throughout the years. Not only has it made possible an inexpensive education, but it has also combined with the high calibre of learning a signi- ficant course in the value and dignity of labor. May we add the words of Henry Van Dyke: This is the gospel of Labor, Ring in, ye bells of the Kirk. The Lord of Love Came down from above, To live with the men who work. John Barrow Library George Bent Sales Promotion Luther Brown Broom Industry Mark Clark Painting Department H. J. Christopher Custodian ALBERT G. WEIDLER Dean of Labor George Dick Heat and Power Benton Fielder Garden and Grounds Mrs. Nan C. Hare College Hospital Lewis Hart Laundry Herbert Hays College Store Gilbert Hibbard Dormitory Supplies Mrs. Belle Hopkins Postmistress H. Clyde Jones . Bakery Candy Kitchen D. R. Durbin Building Department Bess Ledford Berea Weaver Boys lessie Moore Boone Tavern Charles Price Poultry Farm Albert C. Schumacher__Printing Depart. A. Pruitte Smith Fire Department Howard B. Monier __ Dairy and Creamery F. A. Stewart Farm Mrs. Ben Welsh __ Boarding Department LABOR SUPERINTENDENTS FOREWORD This year makes a notable change in the system of organization on our campus. There has been a shifting of classes with the result of an Upper Division made up of the College sophomores, juniors, and seniors, and a Lower Division made up of the former Academy juniors and seniors and the College freshmen. This plan, however, is not as new as its institution. It has been in the minds of President Hutchins and some of the members of the faculty for several years. Eight years ago the idea of a Junior Col- lege set-up was discussed, but no definite plans were made. Two years later, President Hutchins called a conference of the deans. Several plans of organization were considered, and the present set-up of the two Divisions was termed best for our Berea system. This year the plan has been partially instituted. Next year, the College sophomore class will be included in the Lower Division; this will complete the plan for an Upper Division made up of two classes and a Lower Division of four classes. Our school system is no longer made up of College, Academy, and Foundation-Junior High; we are now known as the Upper and Lower Divisions of Berea College, and the Foundation-Junior Fligh School. •5 V. ' • ' htZSk rwSi +■■j.vJ; «k V£ ■k r )WER : VISION -- 1 Jr L J fp fl li fftf ? ? • V ' £ $, J jjj SH Bp iJ ill 1% Ni ;JL ' ' ■' ;■■' • ' • • THE OLD ORDER CHANGETH There was a flash of evolut ionary though t across the remote senses of a genius. It was caught in the inescapable clutch of man ' s ever-present desire to progress. Then came a whole torrent of flashes. This time they were reflected from the single mind of one thinker to the photographic minds of a group of thinkers. The result: the beginning of a new era of or- ganization on the Berea College campus. A change is taking place, or has taken place. Its coming has been like opening a door and letting a bright stream of sunlight fall into an already well-lighted room. The actual newness of the system in Kentucky makes it a pioneering enterprise. It is good to know that our beloved Berea is a forerunner in educational methods. While ' Old Man Time continues on his listless way, Berea continues to expand. The pioneer must go before the permanent homesteader. Certainly, then, it is he who is greater! We bid good-bye to our dear old Academy. There is at first thought a tinge of regret; but it is quickly replaced by the pleasant anticipation of a better Lower Division for the Berea students of tomorrow. We, the Class of ' 38 Who now face the lanes of fame and fate, Send out to those of future years A hearty good wish and a million cheers. Often have we been asked the question, What department are you in? Promptly we have replied, Academy, Junior-High, or College. But now we will answer with the new names, Upper Division and Lower Division. We loved our Academy, but we stand in welcome to the Lower Division. As we think of the change which is taking place, we turn our eyes at once to the one who has so faithfully served the Academy for many years. The services rendered by Dean C. N. Shutt cannot be too highly praised. And so, the Senior Class of this school year welcomes this opportunity to express its humble thanks to him. We sincerely wish for our Academy Dean his continued success as Dean of the Lower Division. The old order changeth, giving place to the new. How much romance in these few words! How much force! They tend to make people think forwardly and progressively. We cannot always be certain that the new order will prove superior to its precedent. But history has proved that if we are to progress the old order cannot stand. Therefore, in behalf of the entire graduating class of 1938, may these words salute the future of the new organization. May a better Berea continue to contribute to the good of the world. N R E T R O S P E C T TO THE OLD AND TO THE NEW TO THE OLD ACADEMY WITH HER BELOVED SIMPLICITY. HER OLD BUILDINGS, AND HER MEMORIES; TO THE NEW LOWER DIVISION WITH HER NEW ORDER, HER SPLENDID NEW BUILDING, AND HER MEMORIES TO COME; WE, THE CLASS OF 193 8 WITH BOTH REGRET AND HOPE DEDICATE OUR SECTION OF THE CHIMES. LOWER DIVISION EVELYN ALSPACH BUSINESS LUTHER AMBROSE SCIENCE MARY BAKER FRENCH MARGARET BALZER ART JOSEPH CANTEINI ART C. C. DAWSON BUSINESS WILLIS FISHER BIBLE AND ENGLISH BEN FUSON ENGLISH DOROTHY HARVEY FRENCH KEITH HOLLINGSWORTH ENGLISH ORRIN L. KEENER SOCIAL STUDIES JOHN LOEFER SCIENCE WILLIAM E. NEWBOLT BUSINESS MRS. ELISABETH PECK SOCIAL STUDIES JOHN N. PECK MATHEMATICS DONALD PUGSLEY MATHEMATICS EMMA REEVERTS ENGLISH ALICE REED HOME ECONOMICS ' O r fH V ■m W. GORDON ROSS BIBLE JOHN W. SATTLER ENGLISH WALTER W. SIKES BIBLE LOUIS SMITH SOCIAL STUDIES ANNIE M. SOUTHWORTH HOME ECONOMICS CLAUDE O. SPILLMAN AGRICULTURE HATTIE E. STOWE BIBLE AND ENGLISH KATHARINE TRUE DEAN OF WOMEN ANNA L. WALKER HOME ECONOMICS RUTH WOODS HOME ECONOMICS H. D. SCHULTZ INDUSTRIAL ARTS DAISY LEE McCLURE SECRETARY IN OFFICE OF DEAN BENTON FIELDER AGRICULTURE CELIA KYSELA MUSIC OCCAR H. GUNKLER . . PHYSICAL EDUCATION MIRIAM SHELDEN _ - PHYSICAL EDUCATION JULIA BORCHERS __. - PHYSICAL EDUCATION HARRIETT BOETCHER .... PHYSICAL EDUCATION r FACULTY KATHARINE TRUE DEAN OF LOWER DIVISION WOMEN CHARLES N. SHUTT DEAN OF LOWER DIVISION FRESHMEN RALPH JOHN PRESIDENT ADA MONCHO SECRETARY HAL SMITH TREASURER LEON LACKEY CHAIRMAN SOCIAL COMMITTEE BETTY SCHUMACHER CHAIRMAN PROIECT COMMITTEE B. P. ALLEN Berea, Ky. LYNN ANDERSON Praise, Ky. CHARLOTTE ANGELL Dundee, 111. LUTHER ATKINSON Clarkrange, Term. ROBERT AYRES _ Elk Valley, Tenn. RUTH BURCHELL Manchester, Ky. EDWARD BUCK Grayson, Ky. W. T. BROWN _ Barnardsville, N. C. RALPH BROWN Dandridge, Tenn. SUE BROOKS . Greeneville, Tenn. EMMA BRENDA ..._ _ Crab Orchard, Ky. LEONA BRASSWELL . Montezuma, N. C. EDISON BRANSON Pound, Va. EMMA BRANNON Carcoal, W. Va. CLEO BOWIE _ Nimmons, S. C. SHONG LIN BOW _ . East Cleveland, O. GROVER BOOTHE Pulaski, Va. MARY BOGGS .. Chevy Chase, Md. CATHERINE BLYTHE Cherokee, N. C. DOROTHY BLACKBURN Berea, Ky. MADGE BETTIS - Dandridge, Tenn. EDITH BELDON _ Paintsville, Ky. KYLE BECKLER . - Treadway, Tenn. MARY BAXTER Huntsville, Ala. GRACE BARTON _ _ Westminster, S. C. BEULAH BALDOCK Yosemite, Ky. CHARLES BAILEY . Carver, Ky. WILLIAM BACK Eubank, Ky. A 1114 It FRESHMEN i- -4 ' a 1 f ■JESSE BURDEN _ _ Crab Orchard, Tenn. ALVIN CABLE . ___ Willeba, Ky. EDITH CALICO _ _ Berea, Ky. CLAUDE CALLAHAN _ . Island City, Ky. ELIZABETH CAMERON Burnside, Ky. JAMES CARSON . . Crossville, Tenn. MARION CARTER _ . Jonesville, Va. CARLINE COLEMAN _ _ Oneida, Tenn. VERVA COLEMAN McRoberts. Ky. JOSEPHINE COLLINS _ . Lackey, Ky. JAMES COMBEST . _ Catherine, Ky. WINIFRED CROCKETT . . North Tazewell, Va. BETTY CREASMAN _ _ Swannanoa, N. C. REED CROMER . . London, Ky. LEONARD DAMRON _ _ Ashland, Ky. FRED DAVIS . _ Arden, N. C. OLIVER DAVIS Black Mountain, N. C. DOVER DICK _ Cincinnati, O. PATTY DINGUS . Dungannon, Va. WELLINGTON DOMAS . . Chicago, 111. LAURA EAKIN _ - Bangkok, Siam LORENE EASON _ _ Lancaster, Ky. BETTY ELMORE . . Crossville, Tenn. MARY ELLIS . .__ Ashland, Ky. EMEGENE ELSWICK . _ Praise, Ky. HENRY EVERMAN _ - Grcgoryville, Ky. TOM FARRIS _ Yancey, Ky. GLADYS FOWLER Harlan. Ky. FRESHMEN JEAN FRYE . Wardensville, W. Va. GLENDON GABBARD Berea, Ky. TESSIE GILLESPIE . _ Crag, W. Va. EVELYN GIPSON . Clairfield, Term. DOROTHY GREEN . _ Ricetown, Ky. ALPHA HAMMICK _ Jamestown, Term. IOSEPH GREENE . _ Big Stone Gap, Va. VIOLET GREGORY . _ Monticello, Ky. RALPH HAMILTON _ . Delvinta, Ky. MARGARET GRIMES . . Fletcher, N. C. CHARLEY HALE _ _ Goodloe, Ky. ELI HALL Lothair, Ky. WILLIAM HARDIMAN _. ._ Pearishing, Va. EVELYN HARGROVE _ . Wichita, Kan. PHILIP HARRISON - - Berea, Ky. BENNIE HART . . Dandridge, Tenn. C. M. HARTSELL _. Limestone, Tenn. MARY HAWS „ . Louisa, Ky. CORNELIA HAYNES _ _ Rossville. Ga. LUCILLE PARKS . _ Berea, Ky. DOROTHY HILL . Russellville, Ky. MARGARET HILL _ . Bean Station, Tenn. LMERY HENSLEY _ Island City, Ky. FELIX HENSLEY . Causey, Ky. MILDRED HOLDER _ _ Enka, N. C. RUTH HOLDER . . Enka, N. C. ELEANOR HOLLINGSWORTH Topeka, Kan. JOHN HOWSMON Dayton, O. II Ik. FRESHMEN ,iM IMOGENE HUGHETT Huntsville, Tenn. VIRGINIA HUNT Cynthiana, Ky. ELIZABETH HUMPHREYS __ Max Meadows, Va. JEWEL INGRAM Lenarue, Ky. ANNE JONES Oneida, Tenn ESTILL JONES Berea, Kv. ANNA JOHNSON ___ Auxier, Ky. RUBY JOHNSON Berea, Ky. RALPH JOHN Marlington, W. Va. LOUISE KINGSLEY Lakewood, O. JANICE KENNEDY Coeburn, Va. WANDA KING Charleston, W. Va. CLAUDE KILGORE St. Paul, Va. LOMA KENNEDY Forest City, N. C. GRACE KIRTLAND Eastman, Ga. MARGARET KRAYBILL __ Montgomery, W. Va. LEON LACKEY Kimball, W. Va. EDNA LAMBERT Durbin, W. Va. DELLA LANG Russell, Ky. MAURINE LAWSON Woodbine, Ky. ROY LEDFORD Barnardsville, N. C. OTHAN LITTLEJOHN Geraldine, Ala. IRMA LOCKER Lexington. Ky. HAZEL LONGWORTH Middlesboro, Ky. DOROTHY LOVELESS Eubank, Ky. MERTON LUNSFORD _ _ Leicester, N. C. ROY LYELL Lyle, Tenn. ALICE MALSTROM Chattanooga, Tenn. FRESHMEN SALLIE MANNAKEE Bluefield, W. Va. EFFIE MARTIN Condia, Ky. ROBERT MASON _ Bernstad t, Ky. DENNIS MAY Stone, Ky. WOODFORD MAY Salyersville, Ky. RAYMOND McCAMY Gunterville, Ah. L. T. McCLURE Fort Gay, W. Va. JOHN McCOMAS Prichard, W. Va. VIRGINIA McCOMMACK Blue Jay, W. Va. PAULINE McDARRIS Barnardsville, N. C. THEOPHILAS McDONALD __ Whitley City, Ky. JOHN McDOWELL Frenchburg, Ky. EILEEN McKIDDY Loyall. Ky. THELMA MEREDITH Elk Valley, Tenn. WILLIS MICHAEL Pikeville, Ky. PHELMA FAY MILLS Manchester, Ky. EARL MITCHELL Elk Creek, Va. ADA MONCHO . Williamson, W. Va. ADALENE MOORE St. Helens, Ky. FRANCES MOORE Harriman. Tenn. HUBERT MOORE Altro, Ky. HELEN MORGAN Forest City, N. C. DORA MORRIS Hixson, Tenn. EDITH MORRIS Gays Creek, Kv. VIOLET MORTON Taylor, Ky. CHAD MULLINS Whitesburg, Kv. ERNEST NESTOR Lookout, Kv. AMOS NICKLES Hindman, Ky. 1 4 FRESHMEN .ft ' £5 4 FRESHMEN LEONA PATTERSON Dandridge, Tenn. PEARL PHILLPOTT Somerset, Ky. HOWARD PILSON . . Stuart, Va. |OE PRATER Lackey, Ky. DOROTHY PRINCE . . Landrum, S. C. ANITA PUCKETT . Smithville, Tenn. FRANCIS QUEEN . Ashland, Ky. JOHN RAWLINGS ± . London, Ky. SAMUEL RECTOR Dunnville, Ky. CEREDO REED Lackey, Ky. AGNES REEVES Spring Creek, N. C. THEODORE RICE . Paintsville, Ky. KATHLEEN ROBINSON Berea, Ky. EVELYN ROSE Barbcurville, Ky. HAROLD ROSENBAUM Fairplay, Ky. BETTY SCHUMACHER Berea, Ky. THELMA SCOTT Salyersville, Ky. WILLIAM SEAY Asheyille, N. C. GLENN SHOUN LaFollette, Tenn. KYLE SHOUN Knoxville, Tenn. EDWARD SHULER Appalachia, Va. CORLEENE SHUMATE Ramage, W. Va. HUGO SHUPE Friendsville, Tenn. ESTILL SINGLETON Richie, Ky. BERYL WILSON Bald Creek, N. C. MAY BELLE SINGLETON ___ _ Eubank, Ky. KATHRYN WILSON Benton, Tenn. ELFRED ZIMMERMAN Crag, W. Va. ANNA SMITH _ Ashland, Ky. CLARA SMITH Hayesville, N. C. EUGENE SMITH . - Forest City, N. C. HAL SMITH Bristol, Tenn. JANE SMITH ___ Williamsfield, Ohio HELEN PAREDES . Milford, Mich. EDITH SNOW _ Appalachia, Va. GLENN SPRADLIN - Whitley City, Ky. OGDEN STEWART Langley, Ky. KATHARINE STITH . Ashland, Ky. DOROTHY STRAIT Catlettsburg. Ky. CATHERINE SUTHERLAND ___ Clintwood, Va. LEWIS SUTTON _ _ Crab Orchard, Ky. MARY TARTAR .__ __ Liberty, Ky. CLEO TAYLOR Clarkrange, Tenn. HELEN TEWELL . Davis, W. Va. ALMA THOMAS Ashland, Ky. JOSEPH THOMPSON - Wayne, W. Va. HAROLD WALTERS . _ Davis, W. Va. JOHN WALTERS . ___ Davis, W. Va. MARGARET WASHBURN Belgian Congo, Africa CHARLES WELCH Glen Rogers, W. Va. GUY WESLEY : _ Lynch, Ky. RAYFORD WHITAKER . Stab, Ky. JUNE WHITE : . Monticello, Ky. WILLIAM L. WHITE . _ Burning Springs, Ky. SALLY WILKERSON _ _ Lewisburg, W. Va. MARION PARKER East Rainelle, W Va. SENIORS GENE COMBS PRESIDENT WILBUR RAYBURN VICE-PRESIDENT DONALD GARRISON SECRETARY CLAUD BAYS TREASURER CAROLYN BLAIR SOCIAL COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN BETTY HACKETT PROJECT COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN DONA ADAMS _ Leatha, Ky. WILLIAM ALLEN - Northern, Ky. RUBY ALLEN Langley, Ky. WILLIAM ANDERSON _ ._ Walnut Grove, Ky. ESTELLE ARMS Celina, Tenn. FRED ARMS . ._ Celina, Tenn. CAROLYN ASHER . ___ Hyden, Ky. STELLA BAILEY _ _ Pine Mountain, Ky. EARL BAKER _ . McKee, Ky. JAMES BARNHARDT _ . Rutherford, N. C. WILLIAM BAXTER _ . Vanceburg, Ky. CLAUD BAYS Guage, Ky. RONALD BEGLEY ... .___ Lothair, Ky. CAROLYN BLAIR . . West Liberty, Ky. MARY ANN BLAIR Boone, Ky. CHARLOTTE BLYTHE __ Hendersonville, N. C. MYRTLE BOWMAN _ Morrill, Ky. JAMES BOYER Jasper, Ala. MARGUERITE BRANAMAN _ _ Livingston, Ky. JOHN BROWN Oneida, Ky. STANLEY BURNS ___ Brutus, Ky. MARIE CAMPBELL _ ___ Krypton, Ky. ISABELL CARNES _ . Jamestown, Ky. MARSHALL CARNES . Jamestown, Ky. SENIORS MAE CHUMBLEY Dorena, Kv. AUDRY COLLINS Dry Creek, Ky. CLOYD COLLINS Hizard, Ky. ULYSSES COLLINS Dry Creek, Kv. GENE COMBS Langley, Ky. LEONARD COTTONGIM Cottongim, Ky. JUANITA CROWE Stanton, Ky. JESSIE DAVIS Frakes, Ky. LESLIE DAWES Catherine, Ky. ELEANOR DAY Sandy Hook, Ky. RALPH DEAN Berea, Ky. CAROL DESCHAMPS Brasstown, N. C. ESTELLE DESIMONE McRoberts, Ky. WILLIAM ESTEP Williamsburg, Ky. REBECCA EVERSOLE Krypton, Ky. BEULAH FORD Richmond, Ky. MILTON FRANKLIN Grayfox, Ky. ROBERT GALLOWAY Luxor, Egypt JAMES GARDNER Berea, Ky. ALBRO GARRETT Mallie, Ky. DONALD GARRISON Rogers, Ky. CORRINNE GRIFFITH Hazard, Ky. ODELL GROSS Harlan, Ky. MANUEL GUARCH Ant.lla, Cuba BETTY HACKETT Kobe, Japan WILLIAM HACKNEY McAndrews, Ky. DOLPHUS HARBOUR Stuart, Va. CHARLOTTE HAWKINS Berea, Ky. MARIE HAYES Liberty, Ky. MARY FLOYD HIEATT __ Montgomery, W. Va. KATHLEEN HILL Falls Mills, Va. JEAN HOFFMAN Berea, Ky. HUBERT HALL Lothair, Ky. ALLAN HUFF Berea, Ky. EVERETT HURST Knoxfork, Ky. BYRD ISON Defeated Creek, Ky. SUE ISON Defeated Creek, Ky. SAM JARMER . Somerset, Ky. JOSEPH JOHNSON Saxonburg, Pa. LOIS KEGLEY Ault, Ky. HELNA LAMBDIN Jellico, Tenn. NORA LAMBDIN Clairfield, Tenn. CARL LAWLESS Jamestown, Ky. CHARLES LAYNE Louisa, Ky. HELEN LEHMANN Mena, Ark. FLORA LEWIS Manchester, Ky. NORA LITTON Bell Farm, Ky. RUTH LITTON Bell Farm, Ky. 7 SENIORS SENIORS WILLIAM LONG Dixie, W. Va. PAUL LOVE Cameroun, W. Africa OPAL LOY Jamestown, Ky. HERSCHEL MAGGARD Cinda, Ky. TALMADGE MAGGARD Maggard, Ky. NILA McKEEHAN Rockhold, Ky. ANNE MORTIMER Charleston, W. Va. DILLARD MARTIN Langley, Ky. FRED MASHBURN Resaca, Ga. BILLIE MAYHEW _ _ Barboursville, Ky. GEORGE McCLURE . Pikeville, Ky. GEORGINA McCLURE Louisa, Ky. GEORGE McGUIRE Marquette, Iowa EDWARD MOORE Berea, Ky. ISABELL MULLER Berea, Ky. JESSIE MURLEY Celina, Tenn. HERMAN NEBRIG Decatur, Ala. DAVID PARSONS Berea, Ky. JOE PATRICK _ Sumner, Ky. MAUREEN PATRICK Mt. Sterling, Ky. THEDA PATRICK Camden, Del. FAYE PENNINGTON Big Stone, Ky. DORA RADER Burning Springs, Ky. RICHARD PIATT Berea, Ky. WOODROW QUINN Wallins Creek, Ky. WILBUR RAYBURN _ Emerson, Ky. PAUL REID _. . Mi. Sterling, Ky. JEAN ROBERTS Berea, Ky. NOEL SHUTT Berea, Ky. LOIS SHRADER North Tazewell, Va. FRANKLIN SHEPHERD Hardburly, Ky. LILLIAN SHORTE ... - Berea, Ky. MARY HELEN ROBERTS Burnside, Ky. DAVID SCHULTZ . Berea, Ky. LONA SIMMONS _ . Miami Beach, Fla. LUCY SIMPSON Red Boiling Springs, Tenn. EDWARD SMITH _ Forbus, Tenn. FAYE SMITH Marion, N. C. ALTA STRONG _ - Hardburly, Ky. VERNON SWINDALL _. _ Los Angeles, Cal. MARTHA TAYLOR . Sawyer, Ky. ORA LEE TAYLOR _ Crab Orchard, Ky. HOBERT THOMPSON Millsprings, Ky. 1LENE TOWERY ___ Paint Lick, Ky. ROY TURNER Canoe, Ky. ROSE UNTHANK Wallin Creek, Ky. LAURETTA WALDEN _ .. Silver Point, Tenn. MILDRED WALKER Jellico Creek, Ky. WILLIAM WASHBURN .. Belgian Congo, Africa ALICE WEEKES Berea, Ky. GENEVA WESLEY Eubank, Ky. OVAL WHITAKER Lynch, Ky. ELMER WINBURN Kimbrell, Ky. CHESTER YOUNGE Deland, Fla. tl am ef SENIORS @ ' Us n Q £ WILLIE ADAMS _. Leatha, Ky. ELMER ANDERSON Irvine, Ky. LEONARD BAIRD Lancaster, Ky. BERT BARKER _ Pathfork, Ky. CLGA BECK Murl, Ky. EVA BELL Susie, Ky. WILLIAM BLACKBURN . . Berea, Ky. ROBERT BLANTON Crane Nest, Ky. RUBY EOTNER - Booneville, Ky. LUCILLE BOWE . Wayland, Ky. OUENTIN BRICKEY Stephens, Ky. MILDRED BRISTOW . _ Murl, Ky. EDNA BROWN _ .. Coin ' s Store, Ky. HAZEL BROWN _ Matthew, Ky. CLENN BROYLES _ . Plato, Ky. HATTIE BURK Lebanon, Va. ANN CALDWELL Harlan, Ky. NANCY CAPPS _ Campbellsville, Ky. MACIE CAUDILL Richmond, Ky. VIVIAN CENTER Berea, Ky. LAURA BELLE CHILDERS . Gallup. Ky. MARY JANE CLARK . Berea, Ky. JCHN CODY Smithsboro, Ky. RUTH COFFEY . _ Creelsboro, Ky. STELLA COLEMAN McRoberts, Ky. THOMAS COMBS Langley, Ky. LESTER COOPER . Lickburg, Ky. DONAL COYLE _ Montevallo, Ala. ROBERT CRABTREE . . Winfield, Tenn. LEE CRIPI ' EN _ . Berea, Ky. LCiS CRIPPEN _ Berea, Ky. FARIS DAVIDSON Oneida, Ky. JUNIORS A. I. DENNTNG Cartersville, Ga. TAYLOR DAVIDSON Oneida, Ky. ELIZABETH DEWEY . Gaziantip, Turkey MITCHELL DOBYNS - Martha, Ky. LAWRENCE DYE Mintonville, Ky. MARION EVERMAN . - Grayson, Ky. ELEANOR EAKIN . Bankok, Siam ROY ENGLE _ Rock Holds, Ky. MARTIN ESTEP ._. Williamsburg, Ky. RUTH FARMER Max Meadows, Ky. GRAHAM FARRIER _ - Abdingdon, Va. RALPH GALLOWAY _ - Luxor, Egypt JEWELL GILBERT . Berea, Ky. WILLIAM GILBERT _ — Berea, Ky. CARL GILLIAM Livingston, Ky. JORGE GUARCH Antilla, Cuba THEODORE HAMILTON Richmond. Kv. WILLIAM HARDWAY Glen Ferris, W. Va. DOROTHY HARGROVE Wichita, Kan. JOHN HARRISON _ — Berea, Ky. LOUIS HARRIS Welch, W. Va. OSCAR HAYES Berea, Ky. STANLEY HELTON Rockhold. Ky. RAYMOND HINES Cincinnati, O. DOROTHY HOWARD ___ Berea, Ky. ROBERT HOWARD Izyton, Ky. IRENE JOHNSON Berea, Ky. HELEN JOHNSON Berea, Ky. RUSSEL JONES Berea, Ky. MAYE KERBY Berea, Ky. HARRY KINCAID .. Joy, N. C. CHARLES KING Taft, Ky. ttfc JUNIORS WYNONA KIRK Celina, Tenn. RUTH LEHMANN Mena, Ark. JUANITA LEWIS Wildie, Ky. COMER LYKINS Edna, Ky. MARTHA MANNING Tazewell, Tenn. [AMES MARTIN Anderson, S. C. NELLIE MARTIN Garrison, Ky. NOLA MAY Cherokee, Ky. ALMEDA McCOWAN Garrison, Ky. JAMES McCOLLUM Ellijay, Ga. fOE MEADOR Cumberland Gap, Tenn. GOLDA MOORE Cherokee, Ky. EDITH MOSS Section, Ala. EDWARD MULLINS Disputanta, Ky. HAZEL MULLINS .- Black Water, Va. WILLIAM NEAL Crab Orchard, Ky. JEANNE NELSON Crossnore, N. C. CHARLINE O ' DANIEL Louisa, Ky. AUDRA OSBORN Louisa, Ky. HOWARD PARKER Ravenna, Ky. GOLDEN PATTON Combs, Ky. BURL PENNINGTON Bigstone, Ky. CRIS PENNINGTON Krypton, Ky. LOIS PETERS Island City, Ky. MARGARET PITMAN . Ashland, Ky. HOMER POTTER Louisa, Ky. MARY LOU RANDLES - Berea, Ky. WALTER REYNOLDS Le Junior, Ky. EDNA ROI.LYSON _ - Frametown. W. Va. POLLY SANDLIN . - Harveyton, Ky. JEAN SCHEUER Waynesburg, Ky. JOHN ROEBUCK Berea, Ky. JUNIORS CLARENCE STEINBERGER ___ . Berea, Ky. HUGHES SPURLOCK . Bar Creek, Ky. DORCAS SPARKS _ Moravian Falls, N. C. LILLIAN SNOW Liberty, Ky. NELL SLUSHER Louisa, Ky. GLADYS SKAGGS _ Terryville, Ky. ESTON SIMMS ___ Sparta, Tenn. ANNELLA SIKES Berea, Ky. DAVID SHEARARD Berea, Ky. MARY SELLERS Rogersville, Tenn. VIRGINIA STIVERS Manchester, Ky. PRISE STRONG Hardburly, Ky. PAUL TACKETT Weeksburg, Ky. ELLEN TAYLOR Sawyer, Ky. EDITH TROUTMAN Wilton, Ky. JOHN TURNER Yeaddiss, Ky. CARMIE TUTT Ezel, Ky. MADELON UTTER ' Langston, Ala. SAM WHITE Burke, Ky. STANLEY WILSON _ Lesbas, Ky. ALICE WOLFRAM Berea, Ky. IMOGENE YEARY . Tazewell, Tenn. VIRGINIA BEGLEY Lothair, Ky. JUNIORS BELLE ABRAMS _ _ Sand Gap, Ky. WALTER ALLISON . . Woodville, Ala. JOHNNY ANDREW _ _ Rockford, 111. GRACE BAKER _ Cmda, Ky. MINNIE BLAKE _ _ Island City, Ky. PAUL BROWN _ _ Berea, Ky. ERWIN CAMPBELL . Dalton, Ga. LAWRENCE COLLINS . . Pulaski, Va. HASKET DEYTON .. .. Green Mountain, N. C. SALLIE DIXON .. . Trout, W. Va. PAUL FISH . . Fairfield, N. C. LEON FISKE . _ Hilhsm, Tenn. ZADI GANNAWAY . _ Daytona Beach, Fla. ISABELLE GILLIAM _ Bluefield, Va. ELEANORA HARDEMAN . . Fitch, Ky. RUBY KATE HOLLAND Andrews, N. C. FAY HOWARD _ . Pink Hill, N. C. VIRGINIA JOHNSON _ _ Paintsville, Ky. ODDA LANG . . Russell, Ky. MARY LESTER Morristown, Tenn. MARIE McNTEL _ . Jonesville, Va. DAVID MINTON . . Barbourville. Ky. ALFRED MOORE __ Charlotte Court House, Va. JAMES MUNDAY _ _ Stanley, Ky. BFRDINE RIGDON _ _ Canton, N. C. IF.AN ROEBUCK . Berea, Ky. KATHERINF ROWLETTE . . Berea, Ky. IMOGENE SPANGLER . . Crab Orchard, Ky. POST GRADUATES HERMAN BESS _ . Russell, Ky. ELVA COOPER _ . Houckville, Ky. RUTH FRYE _ _ Island City, Ky. WILLIAM HOLLANDSWORTH __ Welch, W. Va. VENA LOGSDON _ . Berea, Ky. JAMES PAINTER _ . Draper, Va. LESLIE SCROGGS . _ Asheville, N. C. HERSCHELENE SPANGLER __ Crab Orchard, Kv. J I J ' ' MORGAN SCAGGS _ . Vanceburg, Ky. VIVIAN TROLL . . Norfolk. Va. ARTHUR TROLL . . Norfolk, Va. DORREL W ' ARFORD ___ . Berea, Ky. ACTIVITIES CHIMES STAFF Betty Hackett Betty Schumacher Vivian Troll First Row: Ama Marshall, Louise Kingsley, Mary Y A C A He!en Roberts, Charlotte Angell, Jean Roberts. Second Row: Carolyn Blair, Rebecca Eversole, CABINET Nora Litton. First Row: George McGuire, William Washburn, Wilbur Rayburn, Edward Mullins, William Anderson. I .IVI.V .AA. Second Row: Marion Parker, William Hackney, El- A D I f I | ired Zimmermann, William Hardway. First Row: Miss Stooker, Roy Lyell, Ralph John, Foister Davis, Betty Hackett. Second Row: Francis Queen, Eliz- abeth Cameron, William Seay, Bet- ty Schumacher, Hazel Longworth. Third Row: Bert Barker, Mabel Henderson, Hugh McLaughlin, Bet- ty Forbes, Lucille Parks. C. E. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE LOWER DIVISION SENATE First Row: Leonard Baird, Claud Bays, Erwin Campbell, Oscar Hayes, Miss Harvey. Second Row: Betty Hackett, Elea- nor Hollings worth, Vivian Troll, Loma Kennedy, Dean Shutt. Third Row: Margaret Kraybill, Ruth Lehmann, Talmadge Mag- gard, Jean Roberts, Mr. Sattler. SUNDAY SCHOO COUNCIL First Row: Katherine Stith, Ada Mon- cho, Dr. Ross, Theda Patrick, Beulah Ford, Second Row: Francis Queen, Everett Hurst, Kyle Shoun, Estell Arms, Wilbur Rayburn, A. I. Denning, William Ander- son. MEN ' S GLEE CLUB First Row: William Neal, Elmer Ander- son, Joseph Johnson, Martin Estep, Chester Younge. Second Row: Lee Crippen, Robert Jasper, George McClure, Robert Galloway, Roy Turner, William Estep, Philip Harrison. WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB First Row: Pitman, Lewis, Beck, Taylor, Capps, Kegley, DeSimone, McCown, Blake, Bowe, Troutman. Second Row: Coyle, Dewey, Strong, Crip- pen, Campbell, Sparks, Coleman, Roberts, Litton, Ball. Third Row: Asher, Seale, Gilliam, Litton, Brown, Martin, Rollyson, Moore, Leh- mann, Frye, Shrader. ZETA PHI PI SIGMA First Row: Neal, Blanton, Johnson, Sparks, Anderson, Cody, Collins. Second Row: Coyle, Swindall, Hurst, Thompson, Layne, Burns, Jasper, Ander- son. ADELPHIC First Row: Meador, Fish, Reynolds, Ison, Maggard, Adams, Baker, Farrier, Howard, Younge. Second Row: Hackney, Campbell, Lykins, Turner, Galloway, Helton, Broyles, Harris, Cntrell. First Row: Isabell Gilliam, Cloyd Collins, Evelyn Hargrove, Dorothy Hargrove, Vir- ginia Begley. Second Row: Elizabeth Dewey, Mildred Walker, Marie Campbell, Betty Hackett, Ruby Botner. ill !liBi - e t psac ill w 7 - fipffi 33 spy? !  ' i |sSjJ 3 ' - ! ' ! ' jiiPli 1 !! j iH ' ' • ATHLETICS PHYSICAL EDUCATION ND ATHLETICS The glory of Berea ' s physical education program is its adaptation to the needs of the great majority of students. The individual receives th - attention which is most likely to produce the greatest bodily and mental efficiency, while groaps are adequately stimulated and inspired toward the development of team play. Even in the comparatively restricted field of competitive sports the emphasis is upon widespread participation imre than upon individual specialization. WOMEN ' S SPORTS The Lower Division women have had an important share in the institutional athletics. Their sports have included field hockey, archery, baseball, basketball, swimming, hiking, tennis, and track and field events. Detailed mention is omitted but a general estimation of interest on the part of the girls can be obtained by noticing the number of athletic letters on the campus. MEN ' S SPORTS— Fall and Winter In the first part of the school year formal spirts received little attention. Activities in basket- ball began early, both the Freshman and Second ay squads keeping company with the Varsity. As far as the number of games won and lost is coneerned, each aggregation had only a passable season. The Academy, after winning from many opponents of the district during the regular season, lost in the first game of the tournament. Both team;, however, showed a spirit of determination that made their supporters proud. In the ten-team intramural series the School honors were won by the squad representing Marshall House and the iun-dormitory group, closely pressed, however, by the third-floor Hunting tribe. In swimming, although they were forced to beiw to the Varsity, both classifications had com- petent teams, the Academy finishing second in the inter-school meet. Spring Sports As the season opens, interest in tennis, baseball, and track is considerable. About forty men have reported as candidates for the teams in each of these sports. In the inter-school baseball series no forecast can be ventured, for anything may happen. The Frosh appear to have a par- ticularly good chance. In tennis and track both groups are working hard. So far their com- petition has been limited to the campus, but meets with teams from other institutions have been scheduled for both the Freshmen and the Academy. Some interest has also been shown in the pos- sibility of a Softball schedule. Through these activities over two hundred Lower Division men, from a total of approximately three hundred, have participated in organized competitive sports during the year. FRESHMEN BASKETBALI First Row: Allen, Mullins, Green, Hale, Prarer, Sutton. Second Row: Coach Quimby, Cromer, Stewart, McClure, Welch, Jones, Bailey. FRESHMEN TRACK First Row: Rice, Stewart, Cromer, Mc- Clure, Queen, Hardiman, McGuire, Corn- best. Second Row: H. Pilson, CalLhan, Carson, Whitaker, Wesley, Buck, Mullins, Fielder, Walters, Shuler. Third Row: Rollings, Hensley, Hale, Kil- gore, Coach Gunkler, Brown, Davis, Mason, Spradlin. FRESHMEN BASEBALL First Row: Kennedy, Baker, B. Fielder, Smith, Manager Dwight Blackburn, Ros- enbaum, Hamilton, Davis. Second Row: B. P. Allen, Carnes, Single- ton, McLaughlin, Nestor, May, Coach Pauck. SECONDARY BASKETBALL First Row: Cardenas, Davidson, Bays, Al- len, Combs. Second Row: Moore, Wilson, Dye, Parker, Blackburn, Fox. SECONDARY TRACK First Row: R. Roberts, E. Hurst, Mullins, Howard. Second Row: Coach Hirschy, Fee, C. Hurst, Akers, Cody, Gilbert, Engle, Coach Roberts. SECONDARY BASEBALL First Row: Burns, Andrew, McClure, Fiske, Dye, Lawless, Dawes, Strong, Blackburn, Ornes. Second Row: Painter, Spurlock, Harris, Holt, May hew. Reed, Simms, Fish, E. Smith. SECONDARY SWIMMING First Row: Love, Galloway, S. Wesley, Smith, Roebuck. Second Row : Coach Phillis, Campbell, Term, Piatt. FRESHMEN SWIMMING First Row: Hamilton, Callahan, Carson, Whitaker. Second Row: Kennedy, Coach Love, Mc- Guire. SECONDARY TENNIS First Row: Deyton, Estep, E. Smith, Rosenbaum, W. Hackney, Shutt, F. Hack- ney. Second Row: Hensley, Gardner, Mcintosh, Minton, R. Galloway, Green, Allison, Tur- ner, Cody. SENIOR BIOGRAPHIES— UPPER DIVISION GROTEWOHL, DORIS LOUISE: Burlington Junior College 1,2; YWCA, Cabinet 4; Vanguards 4; In- ternational Relations Club, Sec.-Treas. 4; Pi Gamma Mu, Pres. 4; Clark Speech Prize 3; May Court. GUEST, CHARLES THOMAS: Dramatic Club 1,2,3; YMCA; Phi Delta; International Relations Club; Vanguards; T.K.A. Associate. GWINN, HETTIE BELLE: YWCA; International Relations Club 3,4; Harmonia 4; Hockey 2,4; Baseball 4; Utile Dulce, Sec. 3. HALL, WILLIAM B.: Rho Delta, YMCA; Inter- national Relations Club. HAMILTON, JOE CLYDE: Class Sergeant-at-arms 3.4; Ag. Union; Ag-Home Ec. Club, V. Pres. 4; Men ' s Hall Union, Sec. 4; Alpha Zeta 2,3,4; YMCA; Speedball 1,2. HARRISON, DORIS MARTHA: Alpha Alpha Pi 1.2,3; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Home Economics Club; Women ' s House Government, 4; YWCA. HARWOOD, EDWARD MERCER: Pi Alpha; Glee Club 2; Vanguards 3,4; Sigma Pi Sigma. HARWOOD, HELEN MAXINE: Harmonia, 1,2,3; YWCA; International Relations Club 3; Dramatic Club 4; Pi Mu Lambda 1,2,3. HENRY, JOHN: Swimming Team 1; Glee Club; Collegiate Union, Chorister 4, Orchestra 4; YMCA; Cabinet 3; Band; Orchestra; Choir 1,4; Pi Gamma Mu 4. HEPLER, MARY FLORENCE: YWCA; W.A.A.; B Club; Harmonia 3,4; Choir 4; Pi Epsilon Pi, Pres. 1; Dramatic Club 2,3,4; Sociology Club 3,4; Pinnacle Staff 2,3. HILL, CORDELIA: Harmonia; YWCA; Home Eco- nomics Club; Ag-Home Ec. Club. HIMES, JENNIE MAE: Biltmore College 1,2; Chimes Staff; Education Club, Pres. 4; Dramatic Club; YWCA; Home Economics Club; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Pi Epsilon Pi 3. HINDS, RUTH ARMON: Pi Mu Lambda 1; YWCA; Basketball 1,2,3,4; Glee Club 1; Women ' s House Government 2; Life Saving 2; Home Eco- nomics Club; Ag-Home Ec. Club, Sec. 3; W.A.A., Treas. 3, Pres. 4; Swimming 1,2; Outing Club 1,2; May Court. HOLBROOK, ETTA MAE: Outing Club; Glee Club 1; Folk Club 2,3; Life Saving; YWCA; Ag- Home Ec. Club; Home Economics Club; W.A.A. HOLLANDSWORTH, MELVA FAY: Glee Club 1; Pi Epsilon Pi 1,2; Harmonia 2; Folk Club 1,2; YWCA, Cabinet 2; Hockey 4; Track 2; Outing Club. HUGGIN, JACK S.: Alpha Psi Omega; Tau Kappa Alpha; Chimes Staff. HYUN, KUN: YMCA, Cabinet 2, Treas. 3, General Treas. 4; Glee Club; Choir 1,2; Rho Delta; Inter- national Relations Club, V. Pres. 4; Men ' s Hall Union, V. Pres. 4; Ag. Union; Ag-Homc Ec. Club. INGLE, MARJORIE ALMA: Mars Hill College 1.2; Pi Epsilon Pi 3; YWCA; French Club; Education Club, Sec. 4; Ornithological Society. JONES, EDNA LEE: Tennessee Polytechnic Institute 1,2; YWCA; Education Club 4; Basketball 3,4. JOHNSON, CARLTON E.: YMCA; Baseball; Ag. Union; Phi Delta, Treas. 3; Craftsman ' s Guild 1,2; Men ' s Hall Union 4. [ONES, JACK: Ag. Union, V. Pres. 4; Cooperative Council 3; Ag-Home Ec. Club. JORDAN, BURDETTA FRANCES: Home Eco- nomics Club, V. Pres. 3, Pres. 4; Ag-Home Ec. Club; YWCA; Harmonia 2,3. KEITH, GEORGE KELLY: Tennis, Basketball. KELLER, CARLISLE: Pi Epsilon Pi 1,2,3; YWCA; Basketball 1; French Club 1,2,3; Life Saving; Dra- matic Club 2,3,4; AlpTia Tsi Omega 4; Chimes Staff. KIGER, SARA LOU: Brevard Junior College 1,2; YWCA; Dramatic Club 3; Women ' s House Govern- ment, Chairman 4; Class V. Pres. 4; Pi Gamma Mu; May Court. KILLIAN, JAMES ROBERTS: Textile Institute 1; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Ag. Union; Phi Delta. KINDRED, ELSIE KATHLEEN: Pi Epsilon Pi 1,2; Folk Club 2,3; W.A.A. 1,2; Choir 2, Ag-Home Ec. Club; Home Economics Club. KIVETT, RUBY JEAN: Maryville College 1: Kappa Gamma, Sec. 2; YWCA; Harmonia; Home Economics Club; Ag-Home Ec. Club. KUNDERT, ELINOR ELIZABETH: Datota Wes- leyan University 1,2; Pi Gamma Mu; Delta Phi Alpha; Glee Club; Choir; YWCA. LAMB, ELIZABETH LOUISE: YWCA; Interna- tional Relations Club; Tau Kappa Alpha; Dramatic Club; Chimes Staff; Pinnacle Staff; Winner State Peace Oratorical Contest 4; Second Place Women ' s State Oratorical Contest 4. LANCE, HARVEY W.: French Club 3; Phi Delta 3.4; Pi Alpha 3,4; Physics Club 2,3; Sigma Pi Sigma 3, 4; YMCA 2,3,4. LESTER, JEAN LUCILLE: YWCA; Pi Epsilon Pi 1.2; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Home Economics Club; Movie Club, Sec.-Treas. 4; Basketball 3,4; Dramatic Club 4; Pinnacle Staff 4; Chimes Staff. LOWMAN, WAYNE ODELL: Rutherford Junior College 1; YMCA; Glee Club 2; Choir 3; Harmonia Society 3; Phi Delta, Rec. Sec. 3,4; Pi Alpha 3,4; Folk Club 3; Education Club, V. Pres 4; Highland Singers. MANN, FREDERIC THOMPSON: YMCA; Phi Delta; Pi Alpha 3,4; Student Volunteers 2,3. MAPLES, TAYLOR: Ag. Union; Ag-Home Ec. Club. Treas. 4; YMCA. McBRIDE, LOIS JEANETTE: Band; Harmonia 2,3; Orchestra 2,3,4; Glee Club 4; YWCA. McDARRIS CHARLES: Ag-Home Ec. Club; Rho Delta; YMCA; Cross Country 3; Baseball 3. McGUIRE, LILLIAN MARY: Harmonia; Choir 1.2; YWCA, Cabinet 2, Sec. 3, Pres. 4; Cooperative Council, Sec. 4; Central Evaluating Committee 4; Chairman of Kentucky YWCA 4. McSWAIN, HORACE CLAYTON: Ag. Union; Ag- Home Ec. Club, Pres. 4; Class Pres. 1, Treas. 4; Phi Delta, Pres. 4; Cooperative Council 4; Chimes Staff. MELTON, EDWARD GIBSON: YMCA; Alpha Zeta 2,3,4; Folk Club, V. Pres. 4; Class Treasurer 3. MILLER, CARLTON WESLEY: Class Pres. 3,4; Cooperative Council, Chairman 3,4; T.K.A., Pres. 3; Sigma Pi Sigma, Pres. 4; Vanguards, Pres. 3; Stu- dent Council 3,4; Dramatic Club; YMCA, Cabinet 2,3; Winner State Peace Oratorical Contest 2, Second Place 3; Southern Speech Association, Rep. 2,3,4. SENIOR BIOGRAPHIES— UPPER DIVISION AUVIL, CARL E.: Pinnacle Staff, Associate Editor Advertising Manager 3 ; Vanguards, Pres. 3 YMCA, Cabinet 3; Pi Gamma Mu; T.K.A. Associate Clark Speech Prize 2; Rho Delta; Dramatic Club International Relations Club. AVERY, ALLIE EUGENIA: Glee Club; Dramatic Club 3,4; Alpha Psi Omega 4; Pinnacle Staff 3. BASSETT, SELMA: Folk Club; Harmonia; Outing Club; WAA; French Club 1,4; Orchestra 3,4; Band 2,3,4; Pi Epsilon Pi 1,2,3; Choir 2,3; German Club 2; YWCA; B Club 3,4; Basketball; Hockey 4; Baseball 3; Track 3. BELCHER, ROBERT ORANGE: Pi Alpha, Pres. 4; YMCA, Sec. 4; Swimming 1,3,4; Ornithological Society 3,4; F.O.R. 4. BELLARD, HELEN LOUISE: Pi Epsilon Pi 1,2,3; YWCA, Cabinet 3; Home Economics Club; Ag- Home Ec. Club; Folk Club. BENNETT, RUTH JALIE: Mars Hill College 1,2; French Club; Education Club; Pi Epsilon Pi; Ornithological Society 3,4; YWCA. BLACKBURN, EMMA ROSE: Dramatic Club; YWCA; Alpha Psi Omega. BOWLING, LAWRENCE EDWARD: Morehead State Teachers College 1,2; YMCA; Phi Delta; Track 4; Ornithological Society. BRIGHT, CHARLES PEYTON: Sigma Pi Sigma; Alpha Zeta; YMCA. BURCHAM, RUBY MAE: YWCA; Ornithological Society 3,4; F.O.R. 4. CABLE, THOMAS MARTIN: YMCA; Movie Club 2,3; Tennis 4; Men ' s Hall Union Representative 3. CALWELL, WILLIAM STUART: Alpha Zeta; Swimming Team; Glee Club; Class Treas. 3; YMCA Cabinet, Treas. 4; Collegiate Union Treas. 4; Life Saving Examiner; Chimes Staff. CAMPBELL, JOE CATHERINE: Glee Club 1; Pi Mu Lambda 1,2,3; Folk Club 3; Harmonia; YWCA; WAA; Basketball; Baseball 2,4; Hockey 3; Sociology Club 3; German Club 1. CANIDA, JAMES HERBERT: Pi Alpha 3,4; Pi Gamma Mu 4; YMCA; Track 2,3,4; Alpha Zeta, V. Pres. 3, Pres. 4. CARTEE, THELMA THEORA: Kappa Gamma 1,2; Harmonia 1,2; Glee Club 1; Choir 1,2; Basketball 2; Baseball 1,2; YWCA; Education Club 4. CASON, MARY ANN: Pi Gamma Mu; Tau Kappa Alpha; Delta Phi Alpha; International Relations Club 2,3,4; Harmonia 3; Pinnacle Staff 3,4; Chimes Staff; YWCA; Winner State Oratorical Contest 3; First Place Women ' s Debate, T.K.A. Regional Con- vention 3. CASSELL, ROBERT ELWOOD: Track 1,2,3; Chimes Staff; Folk Club 2,3; Glee Club; Cooper- ative Council 4; YMCA, Cabinet 4; Collegiate Union President 4. CAWOOD, HAZEL VIRGINIA: W.A.A.; B Club 3,4; Basketball 1,2,4; Home Economics Club; Ag- Home Ec. Club; Chimes Staff. CLATWORTHY, WILLARD HUBERT: YMCA; Alpha Zeta 1,2,3; Pi Alpha 2,3,4; Sigma Pi Sigma; Physics Club 1,2. COLVARD, CHARLES DEWARD: Agricultural Union, V. Pres. 3; Rho Delta, V. Pres. 2, Pres. 3; Ag-Home Ec. Club; YMCA, Cabinet 4; Cooperative Council 4; Men ' s Hill Union President 4; Central Evaluating Committee 4. COMBS, MARIE CLARE: Basketball 2; French Club 2,3; YWCA 2,3. COMPTON, LINA: Education Club. CORN, GEORGIA ELLA MAE: Baseball 1,2; Dra- matic Club 1,2,3; Basketball; Glee Club, Sec. 4; YWCA, Busines Manager 4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, V. Pres. 4; Home Economics Club, Cor. Sec. 3; Women ' s House Government, Pres. 4; Cooperative Council 4; Central Evaluating Committee 4. CORNETTE, DEAN; Phi Delta, Sec. 3; Ag. Union; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Baseball 1; Track 2.3; YMCA. COUCH, GRACE K.: YWCA; Kappa G-mma 2; WAA 2; Folk Cub 2; Home Economics Club; Ag- Home Ec. Club. CUNDIFF, RALPH: Ag-Home Ec. Club, Pres. 3; YMCA. DAVIS, FOISTER BAIRD: Alpha Psi Omega; Dra- matic Club; Glee Club; Rho Delta. DENSON, WILLIAM CHARON: Wood Junior Col- lege 1,2; Dramatic Club; YMCA, C ' binet 4; Inter- national Relations Club 3; Glee Club 4; Rho Delt.a- Sec. 3, Pres. 4; Pinnacle Staff 4. DERTHICK, PAUL: YMCA; Pi Alpha 2,3,4; German Club 1,2; French Club 4; Phi Delta. DICK, VICTOR: Glee Club; Church Choir 3,4; Pinnacle Staff 1,2,3; Ag. Union; Pi Alpha 4; YMCA. DIXON, BONNIE CEE: YWCA; Pi Mu Lambda; Home Economics Cub; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Har- monia 4. DONALDSON. WILLIAM: Sigma Pi Sigma; Pi Alpha; Phi Delta; Photography Club; Swimming 2. DURHAM, H. LEE: Alph- Zeta 3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Ag. Union; Glee Club; YMCA. EVERHART, M. RHETT: Phi Delta, V. Pre-. 2,3, Treas. 4; Pi Alpha, Treas. 4; Class Secretary 4; Dramatic Club 1,2; Chimes Staff; Men ' s Hall Union 2; YMCA; Baseball. ESTRIDGE, BERENICE CRAIG: Dramatic Club 3,4; Alpha Psi Omega 4. FAULKNER, JEAN: Glee Club 1; Varsity Glee Club 2,3,4; Y.W.C.A., Cabinet 3; W.A.A. Cabinet 3; Chimes Staff; May Court. FELTNER, ELMER EDWARD: T.K.A. Associate; International Relations Club; YMCA; Phi Delta, Re- cording Sec. 3. GILKERSON, SETH WARD: Glee Club 1; Pi Alpha, V. Pres. 4; Vanguards 3,4; Phi Delta. GORMAN, MILDRED BEATRICE: Glee Club; W.A.A. Board; Track; Basketball; Swimming; Pi Epsilon Pi 2,3; YWCA; B Club; Pinnacle Staff 1,2; Collegiate Union Orchestra 3,4; Dramatic Club; Harmonia; Alpha Psi Omega; Choir 4; So- ciology Club; Pi Gamma Mu 3,4; Class Sec. 3; May Court. SENIOR BIOGRAPHIES— UPPER DIVISION MILLER, THELMA M. : Home Economics Club; Alpha Pi Phi, Pres. 4; House Government 4; Ag- Home Ec. Club; Dramatic Club 4; Alpha Alpha Pi, V. Pres. 3; Harmonia 3; Glee Club 1; Y ' WCA; Outing Club 1. MONTGOMERY, CLAYTIE LEWIS: Home Eco- nomics Club; Ag-Home Ec. Club; W.A.A., Sec. 2, Treas. 3, V. Pres. 4; YWCA. MOORE, ELOISE VIRGINIA: Ag-Home Ec. Club; Home Economics Club; YWCA. MORGAN, SELDON OLEY: Glee Club; Swimming 1; Baseball 1; Dramatic Club 3.4; YMCA, Cabinet 3; Alpha Zeta 1; Pi Alpha 3,4; Sigma Pi Sigma 3,4; Alpha Psi Omega 4. MORRIS, BYON MITCHELL: Glee Club 1; YMCA, Cabinet 2,3; Band; A.Z. Orchestra 3; Collegiate Union Orchestra 4; Delta Phi Alpha 3,4; Pi Gamma Mu 3,4; Alpha Zeta 3,4; German Club 1,2,3; Folk Club, V. Pres. 3; Men ' s Hall Union Representative 4. MORRISON, L. DELL: Glee Club 1; YWCA; Home Economics Club; Ag-Home Ec. Club, V. Pres. 4. MOTTERN, JAMES TLIOMAS: Rho Delta; German Club; Pi Alpha. MULLINS, JAMES KERMIT: Alpha Zeta; French Club 1,2,3; Pi Alpha 3,4; Sigma Pi Sigma 4. OSBORN, ANNA SUE: Union College 1,2; Home Economics Club; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Harmonia; YWCA; Kappa Gamma; French Club 3; Hockey 3. OSBORNE, JOSEPHINE: Glee Club, Pres. 4; Choir; Band Sponsor 4; Orchestra 4; Harmonia 4; Folk Club, Pres. 4; Cooperative Council 1,2; Women ' s House Government 3; YWCA; Class V. Pres. 3; May Court. OWENS, REED CODY: Pikevillc College, 1,2; YMCA; Pi Alpha. PALMER, ELWYN EUGENE: Basketball Manager 3,4; Baseball. PICKLESIMER, JEAN MARIE: Pi Epsilon P i 1.2,3; YWCA, Social Chairman 3; Cooperative Council 4; Delta Phi Alpha 3,4; Dramatic Club 4; May Court. PILSON, MOIR: Phi Delta, Pres. 4; Track 2,3,4; Cross Country 2,3, Capt. 4; B Club 2,3, Pres. 4; Craftsman ' s Guild 1,2,3; T.K.A. Associate. PITT, BLANCHE ESTELLA: Glee Club 1; YWCA; German Club 1,2; Outing Club 1,2,3; W.A.A.; Basketball 2,3,4; Hockey 2,3; Pi Epsilon Pi 1,2,3, V. Pres. 2; Dramatic Club; Alpha Psi Omega; Ag- Home Ec. Club, Sec. 4; Flome Ec. Club. POWELL, J. VIRGIL: Glee Club, Pres, 4; Track; B Club; Dramatic Club; Alpha Psi Omega. Alpha Zeta; Pinnacle Staff 1,2; Men ' s Hall Union Council 4; Education Club 4; YMCA; Publicity Director 4. POWERS, GENE REED: YMCA, Treas. 2, General Treasurer 3, Pres. 4; Glee Club; Baseball 1,2,3; Class V. Pres. 1; Class President 2; Cooperative Council 4; Rho Delta 1,2,3; Collegiate Union Sec. 4. RAMSAY, CHARLES McKAY: Band; Harmonia 3.4; French Club 2,3,4; Rho Delta, Pres. 4; YMCA, General Sec. 4; Winner Rush-Strong Essay Medal, 2. RICHARDSON, ROY CLARENCE: Phi Delta; Harmonia 1,3,4; Glee Club 1; Craftsman ' s Guild 1,2,3; Student Pastor; YMCA; Choir 3. RISNER, SCOTT: Swimming Team 1,2; Ag.-Union; Ag.-Home Ec. Club. ROBERTS, LOIS LILLIAN: YWCA; Pi Epsilon Pi 1,2,3; Home Economics Club; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Harmonia; Glee Club 2,3,4. ROBERTS, WILLIAM WALTER, JR.: Sigma Pi Sigma; Pi Alpha; Rho Delta; Swimming; German Club, 2; Movie Club. ROSS, RONALD RAY: YMCA; Dramatic Club; Ag. Union. Sec. 2, V. Pres. 4, Pres. 4; Rho Delta, Sec. 2, V. Pres. 4; Ag-Home Ec. Club. SCRIVNER, KATHRYN LOUISE: Glee Club 2,3,4; Dramatic Club; Alpha Psi Omega; May Court. SCROGGS, CLAUD L.: Pinnacle Staff, Editor 3; Dramatic Club, Pres. 3; Ag-FIome Ec. Club, Pres. 4; Alpha Psi Omega; Ag. Union; YMCA, Cabinet 2,3,4; Fhi Delta; Chimes Staff. SELF, MABEL: Glee Club 1; Basketball 1.2; Home E conomics Club; Ag-Home Ec. Club, Social Chair- man 4; YWCA, Cabinet 4. SELLS, LILLIAN MARY: YWCA; Pi Mu Lambda; Home Economics Club; Basketball 3; Tennis 4; Ag- Home Ec. Club; Education Club 4; W.A.A. SETTLE XURY RIVOLI: Track 2,3,4; B Club 2,3,4; Delta Phi Alpha, Pres. 3; German Club, YMCA 4. SHOUN, EARL: Ag. Union; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Men ' s Hall Union Council 4; Phi Alpha. SIMPSON, VOLA PAULINE: Home Economics Club; Ag-Home Economics Club; YWCA. SLAGLE, MARGARET VIRGINIA: Glee Club 1,2,3, Sec. 4; YWCA, Cabinet 3,4; Harmonia; K ppa Gamma, Pianist 1,2; French Club 1; May Court. SMITH, CAROL HOPE: Dramatic Club; Pi Epsilon Pi 1,2,3; Outing Club 1; YWCA; Cooperative Council 2; Folk Club 3,4; Band Sponsor 4; Edu- cation Club; May Court. SMITH, EUGENE BAXTER: Phi Delta; Basketball 1; Baseball; Y ' MCA. SMITH, SAM B.: Lindsey Wilson Junior College 1; Glee Club; Basketball; YMCA; French Club 3,4; Pi Alpha 4; Highland Singers 4. SPARKS, JOSEPH HOWARD: Ag-Home Ec. Club; Ag. Union; Livestock Judging Team; Y ' MCA. STIDHAM, GRACE HUFF: Folk Club 2,3,4; Har- monia 1,2; W.A.A. ; Baseball 1,2; Track 1.2; Basket- ball, Manager 3; Tennis, Manager 4; Life Saving; Kappa Gamma, V. Pres. 2; Inter-Society Council 1,3; German Club 1; Sociology Club 3,4; YWCA; Movie Club 4; Hockey 1,2. STURGELL, RUBY ETHEL: YWCA; Folk Club 1,2; Pi Mu Lambda 3; International Relations Club 1,2; Choir 2,3; Harmonia 1,2,3; Baseball 1,2; Hockey 1,2,3; Home Economics Club; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Ornithological Society. SUTHERLAND, BENJAMIN FULTON: Dramatic Club; Alpha Zeta; International Relations Club. Pr«s. 4; Pinnacle Staff 3,4; Alpha Psi Omega. TEWELL, PAULINE VIRGINIA: Basketball 3.4; Folk Club 3,4; Dramatic Club 4; YWCA; Chimes Staff; Home Economics Club 4; Ag-Home Fc. Club 4; May Court. TOWERY. GERTRUDI : YWCA: Ag-Home Ec. Club; Home Economics Club. SENIOR BIOGRAPHIES— UPPER DIVISION TRENT, HOWARD EDGAR, JR.: Track; B ' Club, Pres. 3; Pi Gamma Mu, V. Pres. 4; Glee Club Pinnacle Staff 2,3; Collegiate Union Pianist 2,3,4 YMCA, Cabinet 3,4; Band, Drum Major 2,3,4 Harmonia 4; Vanguards 1; Choir 2; Folk Club 3 A.Z. Orchestra 1,2; Collegiate Union Orchestra 4: Class Secretary 2; T.K.A. Associate 4; Orchestra 1. WALL, MAURICE STANLEY: Alpha Zeta; Ag. Union, Sec.-Treas. 4; Ag-Home Ec. Club; YMCA. WARD, ARVIL LYMAN: Pi Alpha, B Club 2,3,4; Phi Delta; Cross Country 2,4; Track, Cap- tain 3. WARD, MAE LOUISE: Brevard College 1,2; Glee Club 3,4; Pi Gamma Mu 3,4; Choir 3,4; YWCA 3,4; Sociology Club; Harmonia 4. WEBB, WALTER E.: Sigma Pi Sigma 3,4; Pi Alpha 4; Physics Club 1,2; YMCA. WEST,. EDITH ESTELLE: YWCA; Pi Mu Lambda 1,2,3; Tennis 2; Basketball 2,3; Harmonia 3; Inter- Society Council 3,4; Pi Alpha 3,4, Cor. Sec. 4; Pi Gamma Mu 4. WILLIAMS, CHARLES LLOYD: Track 1; Glee Club 1; YMCA; Sigma Pi Sigma, Recording Sec. 4; Craftsman ' s Guild 2,3; Physics Club 1,2. WILLIAMS, HENRY MAURICE: Glee Club 1; YMCA; Rho Delta 4; Ag. Union; Ag-Home Ec. Club. WILLIS, EDWARD DICKSON: Brevard College 1,2; Rho Delta; International Relations Club. WINSTON, MARTHA CATHERINE: Dramatic Club 4; Folk Club 3; Ag-Home Ec. Club 4; Women ' s House Government, Sec. 3; YWCA, Sec. 4; Basket- ball 4; Track 3. WIDENER, DORIS A.: Kappa Gamma 1,2; Dra- matic Club; YWCA; Harmonia 3; French Club 1,2; Alpha Psi Omega. YOAKUM, EDWIN: Ag. Union, Pres. 4; Ag-Home Ec Club; Rho Delta, Sec. 2, Treas. 3,4; YMCA; Livestock Judging Team 4. AUTOGRAPHS SENIOR BIOGRAPHIES— LOWER DIVISION ADAMS, DANA: YWCA; W.A.A. 3; Basketball 3. ALLEN, RUBY: Senior Class Play. ALLEN, WILLIAM O.: Basketball 2,3,4. ANDERSON, WILLIAM GLENN: Pi Sigma, Pres. 3; Inter-Society Council 1,2; YMCA, Cabinet 4; S.S. Council 4; Dormitory Council 4; Glee Club 3. ARMS, ESTELLE: YWCA, Cabinet 2, V. Pres. 3; S.S. Council 4; Advisory Committee 2,3. ARMS, FRED: YMCA; Sigma Tau, Sec. 3; Senior Play. ASHER, CAROLYN: Victoria 2; C.E. 2,3; Glee Club 4; James House Comm. BAILEY, STELLA: Aeliolian 2,3; YWCA; Choir 2,3; H-irmonia 2,3,4. BAKER, EARL B.: YMCA; Adelphic; C.E. 4; Senior Play. BARNHARDT, JAMES W.: Swimming Team, 3; YMCA. BAXTER, WILLIAM: YMCA; Glee Club 2,3; Har- monia 4; Beta Alpha, Treas. 2, Pres. 3; Inter-So- ciety Council 2. BAYS, CLAUD: Basketball 4; Class Treas. 4; YMCA; Student-Teacher Council 4; Senior Play. BEGLEY, RONALD A.: Y.M.C.A.; C.E. 2,3. BEGLEY, VIRGINIA: Choir 3; Strollers; Victoria 2,3; Zeta Phi, Sec. -Treas. 4; Life Saving 3; C.E. BENTLEY, ALKA MAE: YWCA; S.S. Council 2,3,4; Advisory Comm. 2; Choir 3; Aelioian; Inter- Society Council; Glee Club 3. BLAIR, MARTHA CAROLYN: YWCA; Cabinet 4; Lenorian, Pres. 3; Life Saving; Glee Club 3,4; Zeta Phi 4. BLAIR, MARY ANN: Sororian, Sec. 2. BLYTHE, CHARLOTTE: Glee Club 4; YWCA. BOYER, JAMES H., Jr.: YMCA; Basketball 3; Senate 4; Soft Ball 3. BRANAMAN, MARGUERITE: C.E. 3,4; Archery 4; Tennis 4. BRIGHT, J. CALVIN: Sigma Tau, First Place Story Telling 3; YMCA; Union Church Council 4. BROWN, JOHN, JR.: YMCA. BURNS, STANLEY: S.9. Council 2; Advisory Comm. 3; C.E. 2,3,4; Basketball; Baseball 2,3,4; Pinnacle Staff, Sports Editor 4. CAMPBELL, MARIE: YWCA; Glee Club 3,4; Zeta Phi 4; Choir; Inter-Society Council 3; Aelioian, Sec.-Treas. 2, Pres. 3; W.A.A.; Baseball 2. CARNES, ISABELL: YWCA; C.E. 4; Glet Club 2; Sororian 3. CARNES, MARSHALL: Pi Sigma 3; Advisory Comm. Chairman 4; YMCA, Cab. 4; Basketball 3; Soft Ball 3; Pinnacle Staff, Sports Editor 4. CHUMBLEY, SYLVIA MAE: YWCA; Glee Club 2; Harmonia 4; C.E. 2; Basketball 2. COLLINS, AUDRY: Glee Club 3; Adelphic 2,3,4; YMCA. COLLINS, S. CLOYD: Victoria 2,3; YWCA; Zeta Phi 4; Senior Play. COLLINS, ULYSSES S.: Adelphic; YMCA. COMBS, GENE NORMAN: YMCA; Adelphic 3; Basketball 3,4; Class Treas. 3; Class Pres. 4; Senior Play. COTTONGIN, LEONARD: YMCA; Harmonia 4. CRASE, RETHA MAE: YWCA; Basketball 3. CROWE, JUANITA MAE: YWCA; W.A.A. Board 4; Hockey 3,4; Baseball 4; Lenorian, Treas. 3. DAWES, LESLIE: YMCA, Ob. 3, Sec. 4; Baseball 2,3,4; Class V. Pres. 2. DAY, ELEANOR: YWCA. DEAN, RALPH A.: YMCA; Tennis Club 4. DESCHAMPS, CAROL: Victoria 3; YWCA 3; Har- monia 3; French Club 3,4; Basketball 3,4; W.A.A. Board 4; C.E. 4. DESIMONE, ESTELLE: YWCA; W.A.A., Track 3,4; Tennis 3; Glee Club 3,4. ESTEP, WILLIAM: Band 4; Harmonia; Glee Club. EVANS, OPAL: YWCA; Captain Bas ' etball 4. EVERSOLE, REBECCA: Aelioian, Pres. 3; YWCA, Cab. 3,4; Glee Club 3,4; Choir 4; Zeta Phi 4. FORD, BEULAH KATHERINE: Victoria 2,3; YWCA; W.A.A. 2,4; Pres. Track 3; S.S. Council 4. FRANKLIN, MILTON H.: Beta Alpha 2; YMCA; Track 3. GALLOWAY, ROBERT: Glee Club 4; YMCA; Beta Alpha 2; All-State Chorus. GARDNER, JAMES: YMCA; Tennis 2,3,4; Glee Club. GARRETT, ALBRO JONES: YMCA; Pi Sigma 4; Glee Club 3. GARRISON, DONALD: YMCA; Class Sec. 4; Swimming 3. GILBERT, WILLIAM: YMCA. GRIFFITH, BERTHA CORRINNE: Aelioian 2,3. GROSS, ODELL: Hockey 3,4; Baseball 3,4; Track 3,4; Archery 3,4; C.E. 4. GUARCH, MANUEL A.: Speedball 2; Track 2,4. HACKETT, BETTY: C.E. 3,4; Senior Play; Chimes Staffs Zeta Phi; Lenorian, Pres. 3; Inter-Society Contests; S.S. Supt. 3; Outlying S.S. Work 4; Advisory Comm. 3,4. HACKNEY, WILLIAM: Adelphic 2,3,4; YMCA; Cabinet 3,4. HALL, HUBERT: YMCA; C.E. 4. HAWKINS, CHARLOTTE LOUISE: Lenorian 2, Sec.-Treas. 3; Strollers 2; Harmonia 2; YWCA; W.A.A. 2,3,4; Swimming; Tennis; Basketball; Archery; Soccer; Baseball; Track; Hockey, C.E. 2,3,4. HAYES, MARIE: YWCA; Victoria 2,3. HIEATT. MARY FLOYD: Strollers 3; Senior Play 3; Life Saving 4; C.E. 4. HILL, KATHLEEN: Aelioian 2,3; YWCA; S.S. Council 4. HOFFMAN, JEAN LINDSAY: Strollers 2,3; Glee Club 2; Senior Play; Band 2,3,4; Orchestra 4; Har- monia 2,3,4; Life Saving 2,3; YWCA; W.A.A., Tennis Manager 2,3. HOLT, CHAUNCEY: Adelphic 4; YMCA. HURST, EVERETT: Pi Sigma 2,3,4, Sec. 3; Ad- visory Comm. 3; YMCA; S.S. Council 4; Strollers; Basketball 3; Track 2,3; Speedball 3. ISON, BYRD RANDALL: YMCA; Adelphic 4. JARMER, SAM: YMCA; Band 4; Adelphic 4. JASPER, ROBERT: YMCA, Cabinet 4; Glee Club 4; Pi Sigma 4; Soft Ball 3. JOHNSON, EDITH: YWCA; Basketball, Glee Club. SENIOR BIOGRAPHIES— LOWER DIVISION (OHNSON, JOSEPH E.: YMCA; Pi Sigma 4; Glee Club 3,4. KEGLEY, MARY LOIS: Lenorian 2; YWCA; Glee Club 2,3,4; Basketball 3. KINCAID, HARRY: YMCA. LAMBDIN, HELNA BOYD: Swimming 3; Basket- ball 3; Baseball 3; Hiking 2,3. LAMBDIN, NORA: Basketball YWCA. LAWLESS, CARL MONROE: C.L. 4; YMCA; Baseball 3,4. LAYNE, CHARLES: Pi Sigma 3,4; YMCA 3,4. LEHMANN, HELEN: S.S. Council 2; Life Saving 3; Baseball 3; Swimming 3; Hiking 2,3. LEWIS, FLORA ETHEL: Choir 2; Harmonia 2; C.E. 2,3,4; Glee Club 3; Victoria 2. LITTON, NORA: All-State Chorus 4; Basketball; Hockey; Archery; Track; Harmonia 3,4; Glee Club 2,3,4; Choir 2,3,4; YWCA, Pres. 4; Victoria 2,3. LITTON, RUTH: YWCA; Harmonia 2; Lion Staff 2,3; Victoria 2,3; Inter-Society Contests 2,3; Choir 3,4; Glee Club 4; Swimming 4. LONG, WILLIAM: YMCA; Track 3,4. LOVE, PAUL: Swimming 4; Band 4; Orchestra 4; Harmonia 4; Music Chairman Senior Play. LOY, OPAL: Lenorian 2,3; YWCA, Cabinet 2. MAGGARD, HERSCHEL PARNELL: Beta Alpha 2,3; S.S. Council 2,3; Inter-Society Council 2,3. MAGGARD, TALMADGE: YMCA; Adelphic, Treas. 4; Senate 4. MARTIN, DILLARD: Scout Troop 51. MARTIN, LINCOLN: Beta Alpha 4; YMCA. MASHBURN, FRED: YMCA; Glee Club 2,3,4; Beta Alpha. MAYHEW, BILLIE: Band 4; Alpha Zeta 4; Base- ball 4. McCLURE, GEORGE: YMCA; C.E.; Sigma Tau, V. Pres.; Glee Club; All-State Chorus 4; Har- monia 4. McCLURE, GEORGINA: Lion Staff 2,3; Lenorian, Pres. 3; Inter-Society Contests 2,3; Glee Club 3,4; Senior Play; Zeta Phi 4; Strollers 2,3. McGUIRE, GEORGE: YMCA, Cabinet 3, Pres. 4; Sigma Tau, Pres. 3. MERCHANT, ROGER: Strollers 3; Beta Alpha, Pres. 4; Inter-Society Contest. MOORE, EDWARD: Basketball 4; Tennis 4; YMCA 4. MORTIMER, ANNE: YWCA; Glee Club 4; Life Saving 3. MILLER, ISABELL; C.E. 3; Strollers 3; Senior Play; YWCA. NEBRIG, HERMAN: Tennis 2,3; Basketball 3,4. PARSONS, DAVID: YMCA 3,4; Adelphic 2,3,4. PATRICK, JOE: YMCA. PATRICK, MAUREEN: YWCA; Lenorian, Sec. 3; C.E. 4. PATRICK, THEDA CALLA: W.A.A. Pres. 4 Swimming Manager 3; Basketball 3,4; Hockey Archery; Track; Baseball; Tennis; S.S. Council 4 Senior Play; C.E. 3,4; Outing Club. PENNINGTON, FAYE: YWCA. PIATT, RICHARD BURNS, III: Tennis Club 2,3; Strollers 3; Swimming 4; Lion Staff 3. QUINN, WOODROW: YMCA. RADER, DORA: C.E. 4. RAYBURN, WILBUR: Sigma Tau; V. Pres. 3; Inter-Society Council 3; S.S. Council 4; Class V. Pres. 4; YMCA, Treas.; Senior Play; Track 3,4. REID, PAUL: YMCA; Soft Ball 3. RICE, NEIL: Lion Staff 3; YMCA; Band 2,3,4. ROBERTS, JEAN: YWCA, Sec. 3, Pres. 4; W.A.A., Sec. 4; Choir 3,4; Harmonia 2,3,4; Glee Club 3,4; All-State Chorus 4; Class Pres. 3. ROBERTS, MARY HELEN: YWCA, Sec. 4; Le- norian 3; W.A.A. 3. SHEPHERD, FRANKLIN J.: Sigma Tau 2,3; Track 3; YMCA; Senior Play. SHRADER, ETHEL: YWCA; Glee Club 4. SHRADER, LOIS: C.E. 3,4. SHUTT, NOEL: Class Pres. 2; Swimming 3; Tennis 3,4; Senior Play; YMCA; C.E. 4. SMITH, EDWARD: YMCA; Adelphic 4; C.E. 4; Baseball; Track; Softball; Spcedball. SMITH, FAYE: C.E. 4; Basketball 3,4. SMITH, JOSEPH: Swimming 3,4; Tennis 2,3,4. SPARKS, CLARENCE: Class Pres. 2; Pi Sigma 2,4; Inter-Society Contests 2. STRONG, ALTA: W.A.A., Treas. 4; Archery Man- ager 3; Soccer Manager 2; Basketball 3,4; Hockey 3,4; Glee Club 2,3,4; Strollers 2; C.E. 2,3; YWCA; Aelioian 2,3; Harmonia 3. SWINDALL, VERNON C: YMCA, Cabinet 2,3; Lion Staff 2,3; Pi Sigma 2,3; S.S. Council, Pres. 2; Life Saving 3. TAYLOR, MARTHA: YWCA; Victoria 2; Church Finance Committee 4. TAYLOR, ORA LEE: Lenorian 2,3; Inter-Society Contests 3; YWCA; Tennis 3; W.A.A. 4. THOMPSON, HOBERT: YMCA; Beta Alpha 2,3; Pi Sigma 4; S.S. Council 3; Advisory Comm. 3; Highland Singers 4. TURNER, ROY: Glee Club 2,4; Strollers 3; Beta Alpha 2,3; Inter-Society Council 4; Track 2,3; YMCA; Inter-Society Contests. WALDEN, LAURETTA; W.A.A. 3,4; Swimming 3,4; YWCA. WALKER, MILDRED: YWCA, Sec. 2, Pres. 3; Lenorian 2,3; W?A.A. 2; Zeta Phi 4. WASHBURN, WILLIAM CHRISMAN: Lion Staff 1; Pinnacle Staff 4; Track 2; Choir 3,4; Harmonia 3,4; YMCA, V. Pres. 4. WATSON, EUGENE: Swimming 2,3; Sigma Tau 3; YMCA. WEEKES, ALICE: Victoria 2; Basketball 2, Man- ager 3; Archery 2,3,4; Tennis 2,3,4; W.A.A., V. Pres. 4; Life Saving 2; Cheer Leader 4; Harmonia 2,3,4. WESLEY, GENEVA: YWCA. WHITAKER, OVAL: Victoria 3; YWCA; Basket- ball 3; C.E. 4; Senior Play. WINBURN, ELMER: Sigma Tau 2,3. YOUNGE, CHESTER L.: Adelphic 2,3,4; Inter- Society Contests 3; Strollers 3,4; Glee Club 2,3,4; Harmonia 4; Senior Play. JAHN OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. 817 West Washington Blvd., Chicago, III. - Telephone MON roe 7080 Commercial Artists, Photographers and Makers of Fins Printing Plates for Black and Colors ADVERTISING CALUMET TEA COFFEE COMPANY Chicago Compliments NU-WAY CLEANERS Short and Chestnut Streets Berea, Ky. Faculty and Students We Appreciate Your Patronage PORTER-MOORE DRUG CO. (INCORPORATED) Berea, Kentucky All the red-ripe solids of the WHOLE tomato are utilized in making- this juice by patented process. Insures smooth consisten- cy, finer flavor and more food values. The Sun-Rayed Co., Frank- fort, Ind. American Paper Products of Distinction AMERICAN LACE PAPER COMPANY Milwaukee, Wisconsin Compliments of THE RED STAR MILLING COMPANY Wichita, Kansas THE ELMORE THREAD COMPANY SPINDALE, N. C. Cotton sewing thread of every descripton for industrial users HO t£$ 2-e-£3Y iy r r £ ' AW 3£I3HT k TTAWZm T aor THE JENNER COMPANY (INCORPORATED) Stationers Engravers Louisville, Kentucky Phone, Wabash 4103 Established 1867 WATERS-GARLAND CO. (INCORPORATED) Laundry, Dry Cleaners and Institution Supplies 427 W. Main Louisville, Kentucky HAMPTON ' S Crackers and Cookie-Cakes Made by THE HAMPTON CRACKER COMPANY Louisville, Kentucky This book is bound in a KINttSKRAFT (OVER Manufactured by THE KIM.SPOICT PRESS. INC. KINGSPORT, TENNESSEE Compliments of the UNION TRANSFER AND STORAGE COMPANY LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY Eh The Baltimore Stitcher does pmi perfect Sewing on all grades of b i brooms, is the fastest and easiest to run BALTIMORE BROOM THE NORTHWESTERN ELEVATOR AND MILL COMPANY MT. VERNON, OHIO MACHINE CO. LACQUER SPECIALTIES, Holiday and Pleasant Sts. Incorporated Baltimore, Maryland Allegheny Ave. Newark, New Jersey FOIK PA KAGING CAKES AND CONFECTIONERY • BAKING CUPS in thirty sizes — Round, Square and oblong are supplied in white Bik-Test stock, parchment or colored glassine. • FLUTED and DIE-CUT LINERS — whether you bake 10, 20 or 25c Loaf Cakes or 6 inch to 9 inch Layer Cakes, there is a Sherman Liner to fit your requirements. Special Liners for Angel and Fruit Cakes, as well as large Sheet Pan Liners for buns, cookies, etc. • PRINTED BANDS AND LABELS — any and every size band or Label for packaging — in fact we have a stock or special design for any product you make — Gummed, Grease-Proof or Foil Stock. • CORRODEK LINERS — Cakes actu.lly bake better, keep fresh longer and have the color and sales appeal your cakes need. In white or colors — lined with white. Just bake and wrap — no box, cake pad or other Liner necessary. A great saving ... a larger cake per pound, plus the modern appeal of color. • CORRODEK TRAYS in COLOR — Here is the last work for packaging small cakes, cookies, nuts and candies. Made in any size ... all colors . . . shipped flat ready to set up, fill and wrap. The same Corrugated also supplied in sheets, circles or pads. Write for Samples. SHERMAN PAPER PRODUCTS CORP. Newton Upper Falls, Mass. ATLANTA NEW YORK CHICAGO LOS ANGELES MARINO BROS. WHOLESALE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Irvine Street Richmond, Kentucky Phone 261 CL c -faiLE ' Comfianii x uoy oa 3XIMaauXD3 ?MAN The Miami Butterine Company Congratulations to the CLASS OF ' 38 We hope that you continue to eat lots of good bread, wrapped in our Bread Wrappers. Zimiiier Paper Products Indianapolis Compliments of THE BEREA DRY CLEANERS Compliments of a friend Herndon Bldg. Short Street Compliments of THE BEREA BANK AND TRUST CO. Compliments of J. W. PITRKEY SONS Lowe Bros. Paints Where Bereans Save Berea, Ky. Inonr ©aurrtt A PRIVATE HOTEL WITH ALL MODERN CONVENIENCES A REAL HOME ATMOSPHERE Managed and Controlled by Berea College B, oons Icluexyl Qift Sfiofj Products of Student : Industries Located on the Corner of Main Street Opposite Union Church Under Berea College Management — Berea, Kentucky For bright, colorful, durable and waterproof furni- ture, woodwork, wicker and metal surfaces, indoors or out. A self smoothing enamel. Easy to apply. Dries in 1 hours. Leaves no brush marks. All newest colors. BOSTON VARNISH CO. Everett Sta. Boston, Mass. (LoLz-cJTaiiLncjton J oto% Co. Ford and Lincoln Zephyr Dealers One-Stop Shop Service on all makes of cars Best of Equipment and First Class Merchandise Phone 335 Berea, Ky. Congratulations to the Graduating Class Lee Clay Products Co. Manufacturers of Septic Tanks Salt Glazed Sewer Pipe Fire Clay Flue Lining Architectural Chimney Tops Fire Brick and Grate Backs Agricultural Drain Tile Your Farm Department Uses Our Drain Tiles and Sewer Pipe CLEARFIELD ROWAN COUNTY KENTUCKY Compliments of PARKWAY CRUSHED FRUIT COMPANY QUALITY AS WELL AS QUANTITY A great variety of Ice Creams and Sherbet — Flavors to suit your taste. Demand Cleanliness — Insist that your Ice Cream is Not Dipped. Ice Cream Delicatessen LEON LEON Quality is remembered long after prices are forgotten Compliments of a Friend COMPLIMENTS OF The Goldsmith Metal Lath Co. CINCINNATI, OHIO COMPLIMENTS OF BROCK-McVEY COMPANY Incorporated DISTRIBUTORS OF PLUMBING HEATING AND TINNERS ' SUPPLIES SHREVE AND VINE STREETS LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY BEREA COLLEGE STUDENT JNDUSTKE BEREA KY WHEREVER YOU GO AFTER LEAVING BEREA YOU WILL BE PROUD TO TELL ABOUT Jdzxzci ( oLLzaz htdsni: DndmtxLzi and the products you helped to make Hand- Weaving from FIRESIDE INDUSTRIES ♦«  I %t:i0_-, Homespun from MOUNTAIN WEAVER BOYS P T M J ' A -gO mr ' ' £= f - x -t N |-V £? |- £) .J ' - Jfff - L l life ? J - % |- „ — • £ Vv ! MOUNTAIN SWEETS FROM THE CANDY KITCHEN Bl CUDDLE TOYS FROM THE NEEDLECRAFT HEARTH BROOMS FROM THE BROOM INDUSTRY When you tell your friends about these pro- ducts, you are helping to provide labor for the stu- dents who follow vou. REPRODUCTIONS I ROM THE WOODCRAFT Compliments of BALLARD BALLARD CO. (INCORPORATED) 912 East Broadway Louisville, Ky. Berea ' s Best Bread is made from Ballard and Ballard Flour L M CR 133 a Compliments of LEREA NATIONAL BANK Compliments of BRYAN-HUNT CO. (INCORPORATED! Lexington, Ky. BEREA MOTOR CO. Dodge — Plymouth Sales and Service Berea, Ky. hi fflHIl ■■■■inn ■■! i ■Compliments of STEPHENS AND MUNCY V7holesale and Retail Dealers in Dressed Lumber and Building Material Berea, Kentucky With Compliments of Alfred M. Saunders representing: KEYSTONE BRUSH CO., Inc. 33 Spruce Street New York, N. Y. Window Guards Wire Partitions Iron Railings T ire Escapes LOGAN COMPANY Louisville, Kentucky As the supplier of Boxes for the famous BEREA BEATEN BISCUITS we take pride in being associated with such an outstanding product and an outstanding college. THE GARDNER-RICHARDSON COMPANY MIDDLETOWN, OHIO Mfgrs. of Folding Cartons Displays Compliments Of A Friend COMPLIMENTS OF THE New Fisheries Company In appreciation of service, patience, and excellence of workmanship the Chimes Staff, Class of ' 38, recommends THE M.«. STUDIO which has furnished quality photographs for every Berea College Annual. Copies of the Photographs in this annual may be obtained by writing the Ogg Studio. One of the Wil- iams Ice-O- Matic installa- tions at Berea College. Famous Ice-O- Matic marathon unit which has run continuously, Jay and night, since 1927. Best in the long run! As authorized distributor for Williams Ice- O-Matic I am naturally proud of the fine record that has been established by Ico-O- Matic Installations in Berea College. I am equally proud of the manufacturing meth- ods that make it possibe for Ico-O-Matic to furnish equally satisfactory and depend- able performance for every cooling need. There is a reason for Ice-O-Matic ' s long life and carefree performance. Both are the re- sult of high quality materials, fashioned by precision methods into the smooth-running, sturdy Ice- ' O-Matic compressor. Ice-O- Matic is available in sizes and capacities for all cooling needs. Either electric motor or gasoline engine driven. W. L. BAIN. JR. DISTRIBUTOR 13 5 V. SHORT STREET, Phone 184 LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF 1938 We, of The Trane Company, extend our b;st wishes to Berea College. Con- gratulations to those who are about to step from the halls of learning into the arena of the business and professional world. After a successful completion of your college course may the future prove equally prosperous. Comfort, is one of the prime essentials of present-day living. Trane is pleased that its heating equipment, installed in many of your college buildings, has given comfort and will continue to give comfort to the faculty and students of Berea. Wherever your footsteps guide you, at home or abroad, Trane will be there to successfully solve problems that stand in the path of comfort. A pioneer manufacturer in its chosen field, The Trane Company has had more than fifty years of Heating, Ventilating, and Air Conditioning experience. Trane hopes to serve you in the future with the same comfort it has given you throughout your college days. AIR is a symbol used exclusively by TRANE to signify the n ' degree of excellence in Heating, Cooling, and Air Conditioning Equipment. the TRBJJE compnnY lacrosse (AIR.) w i scons in, U. S. R. Struck Construction Co, Incorporated Building Construction LOUISVILLE, KY. Builders of Draper Memorial and Danforth Chapel Moesclil-Eflwartls Corrugating Co. Manufacturers of all types of Metal Doors. COVINGTON, KENTUCKY II. IL Tyler Company LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY WE WISH FOR OUR FRIENDS AT BEREA EVERY SUCCESS IN COLLEGE AND IN LIFE THIS ANNUAL WAS PRINTED BY THE BEKEA COLLEGE PRESS BEREA, KENTUCKY The Berea College Press has just recently been se- lected as the winner of third place in a national con- test conducted by the Dill and Collins, Inc. The ;ntry was President Hutchins ' Annual Report. It won this prize because of the very practical char- acter of this report, plus its attractive handling from the printing standpoint. IF IT ' S WORTH PRINTING AT ALL IT ' S WORTH PRINTING WELL. ■IIIJLIIiliilllllllll We Welcome You To Our Place QUALITY EFFICIENCY AND BAKER ' S NEWS AND SERVICE THE BEST MUSIC SHOPPE IN SHOE REBUILDING T. P. Baker, Prop. E. L. T H O M A SHORT ST. BEREA, KY. Thomas F. Weldon Co. WHOLESALE GROCERS 1 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS QUALITY WINDOW TREATMENTS J lis: (loLumuLa f iLL±, Una. Window Shades Venetian Blinds Shade Cloth Shade Rollers Awning Rollers Sign Cloth Lace Curtains CINCINNATI, OHIO NEW YORK, N. Y. Other Branches in Principal Cities SURGICAL AND HOSPITAL SUPPLIES We carry a complete line of surgical supplies and equip- ment, including sick room ne- cessities. We rent fracture beds and wheel chains. Surgical. Maternity, and Corrective Gar- ments. The CROCKER-FELS Co. 18 West 7th Street CINCINNATI, OHIO COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND Compliments of RIVERS RE-NU SHOP Shoe Repairing Short Street UlBiaMMi We Appreciate Your Patronage COLLEGE INN Shinny Engle — Jack Engle Compliments of GULF REFINING CO. Best Wishes For The Class of 1938 Davidson Brothers Co. BEREA, KENTUCKY tel i . ' ,.i. HERE WE SLEPT Compliments of a Friend INSIST ON Magnolia Meat Products Deliciously Different EMMART PACKING COMPANY Rcla xxd Slop ReDLtlLcls • Properly relaxed sleep on a Spring-Air Mattress REBUILDS the tired body and revivifies the mind. Enjoy it yourself, through the ex- traordinary comfort features which no other mattress can give you — features which have made Spring- Air the choice of the finest home3. greatest hotels, and health institu- tions of America. $24.50 to $45.00 Dox Springs to Match A VITAL part of the ring-Air mattress is its KARR Spring Construction — famous lor Graduated Resiliency and body - con- forming elasticity. Louisville Bedding Company THE MATT R E S S THAT SO GOOD! M oun BEREA COLLEGE BAKERY AND CANDY KITCHEN Berea fruit cakes filled with Velvet diced fruits, consisting of glace cherries, orange and lemon peel, pineapple, and citron. These fruits are prepared for us by The C. M. Pitt Sons Co. BALTIMORE, MARYLAND Minchar Equipped Water Filters and Softeners for Domestic and Industrial Purposes. MINCHAR MANUFACTURING CO. Elmira, New York --The Famous Coal Quintuplets-- Bonny Btu MAYFLOWER BED ASH CUSTOMERS DEMAND THESE QUALITY COALS Because They Insure Comfort Contentment Economy Pleasure Satisfaction BLUE DIAMOND COAL CO. Atlanta, Georgia CINCINNATI, OHIO Knexville, Tenn. Minneapolis, Minn. To the Class of ' 38 ... . Congratulations! When you return to the campus pay us a visit. LITTLE MAMA ' S TEA ROOM Mrs. G. C. Fish, Proprietress MT3c? QUA 07HU 3 A2 Q3H3A3 C  3MT OTWU fr YTlU(?lMI Quality Courtesy Consideration are yours for the asking at DORIS PIATT Special Attention Given To Mail Orders A. F. Scruggs Representing the PENN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. Short Street Berea, Ky. Our Merchandise Is Sold At The College Store SIMON ADES SONS CO. Louisville, Kentucky EDELWEISS JOHN SEXTON ■CO. MANUFACTURING WHOLESALE GROCERS CHICAGO BROOKLYN. United Chapel Omitted Today : j.v.. ■.■■:.. ' ■- ' SSbbm ■' - ■1 ■£■as : : - Qa tw ' ♦ r Jsp FV 4 ' rttt MAIM n i SEtf ▲ f •LLECE ▲tit. ▲ LLIEI I| L m WATE SKI m FAUJ-KNej
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