Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) - Class of 1940 Page 1 of 168
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BbHEMehm H si SHARP • '  .- rSfii ffin sp! vW£ MffiS i Ik 1 9 ■Miaffi ITU l J JJ3 r.TiiT- jGEMHIBIITl ' . HL H  -■.■• ' ■■■. ' -■■•• ' ■. ' ■' . ' ' ■■■' ■■: U J rr y THE CHIMES 19 4 VOLUME 12 PUBLISHED BY THE SENSOR CLASS BEREA COLLEGE, BEREA, KENTUCKY PERCY SHUE, Editor-m-Chicf JOHN McALLISTER, Layout and Design OHMER MILTON, Business Manager dVyau uou zus.x rLouxlili thzzs . . . our tkznzz . . . our Izohz . . . our a o n f id znt Bel t e r. TABLE OF CONTENTS This volume is a record of THE INAUGURATION OF PRESIDENT FRANCIS S. HUTCHINS; THE FACULTY OF THE LOWER DIVISION, the faithful counselors of THE ELEVENTH GRADE THE TWELFTH GRADE THE COLLEGE FRESHMEN and THE COLLEGE SOPHOMORES during the past year; THE SCHOOL OF NURSING; and THE EXTRA-CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES OF THE CAMPUS, including CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS CREATIVE WRITING ATHLETICS each constituting an invaluable and essential part of our Berea life. Interspersed among these pages you will find CAMPUS SCENES and SNAPSHOTS of places and events which must not be forgotten. Our student metamorphosis is complete with THE UPPER DIVISION; its JUNIOR CLASS, to whom we reluctantly but confidently bequeath our places as Seniors; its guiding, inspiring, understanding FACULTY MEMBERS, . and, finally, its SENIOR CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY 378.7691 B487c 1940 Berea College Collegiate dept. Senior class Chimes. Dr. Francis Stevenson Hutchins, who came from China to follow in the educational footsteps of his father, William J. Hutchins, was inaugurated November 25, 1939, as the fifth President of Berea College. The inaugural ceremony was held in the presence of official representatives from more than two hundred colleges and universities. Phelps-Stokes Chapel, well filled with college students, faculty members, workers, and friends of Berea College, was the scene of the event. Dr. W. D. Weatherford, assistant to the President of Fisk University and vice-chairman of the Berea College Board of Trustees, presided at the ceremony. In his welcome to the delegates, Dr. Weatherford pointed out that ninety per cent of the students of Berea are from the Southern Appalachian Mountain region. Berea, he declared, is dedicated to the dignity of labor, explaining that every student must work with his hands two hours a day. This labor takes the place of high powered athletics. He referred to Berea College as an institution founded by plain and simple people. Dr. Stewart W. McClelland, President of Lincoln Memorial University, delivered the response for the delegates of the educational institutions and de- clared that Berea is a great institution with a great future. The future of Berea will remain intact under Dr. Francis Hutchins. In the main address of the day, Dr. Frank Porter Graham, President of the University of North Carolina, discussed the economic and educational inequal- ities of the South. Referring to Berea College as one of the temples of American freedom, Dr. Graham said that freedom can be protected by the advance of equality of opportunity. Liberty can be raised to higher levels by the widening of social security. Dr. Hutchins, who served in China for fifteen years as teacher, and later representative of the American Board of Yale-in-China, was presented by William Dean Embree, New York attorney and trustee of Berea College. Dr. Albert Buckner Coe, Pastor of the First Congregational Church of Oak Park, Illinois, pronounced the benediction. Immediately following the morning ceremonies, a luncheon for the delegates was held in Boone Tavern. Dean Thomas P. Cooper, of the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture, presided at this luncheon. Speakers were Dr. Donald J. Cowling, President of Carleton College, who discussed The Support and Control of Education, an d Dr. Clyde E. Wildman, President of DePauw University, who spoke on Higher Education Faces the Future. The inauguration was brought to a close on November 26 with the inaugural sermon delivered by Dr. Edwin McNeill Poteat, Pastor of the Euclid Avenue Baptist Church, Cleveland, Ohio. His subject was Prophet or King? Trustees present for the inauguration included: Richard Bentley, Chicago; Barry Bingham, Louisville; Dr. Albert Buckner Coe, Oak Park, 111.; Thomas J. Davis, Cincinnati; William Dean Embree, New York; Allen Foster, New York; Joel E. Goldthwait, Boston; Louis J. Karnosh, Cleveland; C. N. Manning, Lexington; Carl T. Michel, Kansas City; Seth Low Pierrepont, Ridgefield, Conn.; Charles Ward Seabury, Chicago; James L. Stuart, Pittsburgh; A. E. Thompson, Medina, Ohio; and W. D. Weatherford, Nashville. DR. FRANK PORTER GRAHAM President, University of N. C. All who have gathered in this room this morning are interested in education for one reason or another. Some of us are involved in administration, engaged in research or actual teaching, some are students seeking an education, and others are admiring or critical friends of our institutions of learning. To return from a foreign land and investigate the colleges and universities of the United States, is to recognize with pride the achievements of our country. A visitor from abroad might spend many happy months visiting our libraries, laboratories, classrooms, gymnasiums, and dormitories. While we always show visitors our campus, as educators we are even prouder of our faculties, their ability in discovering new truths, their ability to lead the thinking of students. We rightly believe that the faculty is the crux of the entire educational pro- cess. It is our hope that we may provide these men and women with the requirements for their best work, libraries, laboratories, and freedom. We wish these men and women to instruct and stimulate their students, to lead them to a basic, sound under- standing of our world and its culture, to aid them in forming attitudes of minds which will enable them to meet courageously the situations of life. We are very proud too of our students. We select them with discrimination, we nurture them as carefully as we can, we graduate them when they hive fulfilled certain requirements. Viewing the beautiful campuses of American colleges and universities, noting the faculties with their highly degreed quality, thinking of the million students in institutions of higher learning (some nineteen thousand in the State of Kentucky alone), may we not then face with complacency the world, with the conviction that nothing is going to happen, that everything is all right? May we not hold the belief, that all that we need is more college graduates? Will not the problems of our world be solved, little by little? Shall not we enter then upon a new high plane, not only of economic prosperity, but also moral well-being and spiritual growth? We know that complacency is not for us. Anyone who has roamed from his home country will have noticed the constant intermingling of ideas, culture, and goods from one nation to another.  In spite of this world-wide exchange of ideas in which our colleges and universities take a leading part, in spite of the economic net work thrown over the whole world, we find that nations are today fighting, or preparing to fight. There are aspects of our own national situation which cause us the greatest distress. No one would think of blaming the public educational system for these situations, nor the colleges and universities. No American would advocate less education as a means of solving these problems In accepting the Presidency of Berea College, I should like to formulate, in general terms at least, what appear to be guiding principles for the present. In coming to Berea one finds certain assumptions basic to Berea ' s way of life: 1 ) Berea ' s doors are open to young men and young women from the Southern mountains. This is in keeping with the history of Berea. Conditions have changed rapidly in recent years, but there is no indication that this particular restriction has been outlived. 2) Labor is not only a part of the economic life of our students, but it is also a distinctively edu- cative process. 3 ) A third assumption is that the finest education in this country should be available to the young men and women of the mountains, regardless of geographic or economic handicaps. 4) A final fundamental assumption is that a vital relationship with God as exemplified in the life of Jesus Christ, has a place in the foundation of our individual and corporate life. The Preamble of the Constitution of Berea College begins with these words: In order to promote the cause of Christ . . . On these foundation stones Berea College stands. With these assumptions in mind as basic to the life of Berea, I would propose no radical scheme which might by its novelty be applauded. Berea must keep close to the real needs of the region she serves. —(From the INAUGURAL ADDRESS OF PRESIDENT HUTCHINS) DR. EDWIN McNEILL poteat Pastor, Euclid Ave. Baptist Church, Cleveland I believe that Berea must make available to her students the very finest academic education. We surely do not wish, any more than any other college wishes, to graduate robot scholars who raise their right or left arm or hand in unison to salute the great what-not. Each student is an individual, capable of understanding in some degree the background of our nation, the ideas which form our culture and ways of living, capable in some degree of thinking for the future. Each is capable, too, of understanding and carrying with him something of art and music, of perceiving the meaning of true religion and its place in cur daily life. If we could build a wall about Kentucky, or the Appalachians, we might minimize the importance of the work which we do. This we cannot do. We are citizens of a nation, not a region. It is reported that in 1930, more than 800,000 Kentucky born per- sons were living elsewhere in the U.S. With the South furnish- ing the basis for the population increase of the nation according to a recent Federal report, we must demand that the quality of the academic work we do, be the very finest. We must do this not only for the sake of the individual students, but for his place in the nation. If we know anything about the Berea student, and the young man and woman that are likely to be Berea students in the coming decades, we know that after the years spent in formal study, they are going to be forced to earn a living. We know that our society is demanding the services of men and women qualified to make contributions in some particular field. Now Berea, in addition to and through the general cultural courses of the college, is preparing pro- fessionally teachers, those who will promote agriculture, those who have at heart the improving of our home life — those who serve the sick and aid in programs to prevent disease. I would suggest that there may be additional fields of work in which Berea may give preparation to her students. These await study and consideration. I would not lose sight of the fact t hat the essential need in the community is for rounded per- sonalities, men and women who think clearly and a:t unselfishly. The core of our curriculum must always be those cultural subjects which will enable us to think, and understand the world in which we live. A college course has been described as a four year loaf. Another described it as sitting on a mountain peak to get a proper view of the world. If the four year loaf, or the sitting on top of the mountain, resulted in clarity of thought, a knowledge of life and modes of living, with the items ar- ranged in proper perspective, that would be fine. If a student leaves the doors of Alma Mater with n greater clarity of thought, he steps down from his mountain top into clouds of discouragement and despair. His education has not yet begun. It is my sincere hope while helping to equi p our students with basic conceptions for life in the coming decades, we may also make it possible for many to find the curricula suitable for assisting them in making a distinct contribution to society. It is unnecessary to argue the point that Berea is more than an ordinary college. One of its most im- portant characteristics is that it reaches off the campus into the community. In China colleges have walls about them. In some cases, colleges in the United States have invisible walls about them. Perhaps we have already undertaken too much, but I am bold enough to suggest that Berea should continue to intertwine and interweave the life of the campus with the life of the people who live in the regions about us. When our teachers and students carry new thoughts, new conceptions, new solutions for old prob- lems to communities off the campus, and bring back to the campus a mo re realistic view of the world and our educational problems, they are fulfilling th; purpose of the institution. Such contacts prevent us from developing a white collar superiority, and fr;m suffocating in the fumes of our own laboratories. In accepting the Presidency of Berea, 1 do so with the knowledge that Berea has been most fortunate during the years to have the loving aid and cooperation of many institutions, public and private. I re- joice in these cordial relations, which have bound us together in a common cause, enlarging our useful- ness. I would hope in the years to come that these ties of affection and cooperation, increasing our effectiveness in the cause of education, might be strengthened. —(From the INAUGURAL ADDRESS OF PRESIDENT HUTCH1NS) TO THIS HERITAGE . . . I do not know another institution that is doing a more necessary work among native Americans of fine natural capacities, who have been denied the chance that should be theirs for higher education. I earnestly wish you success. THEODORE ROOSEVELT I do not see how anybody can think of Berea and the work it has to do without catching fire. WOODROW WILSON You always have my best wishes and my belief that you are nobly performing a noble work. JUSTICE OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES THE PAST YEAR HAS ADDED THESE . . . I have come to know and to love an institution which has for more than eighty years been the inspira- tion of thousands of young people. STEWART W. McCLELLAND, President, Lincoln Memorial University. Berea College in the persons of its distinguished, nobly useful, and beloved President Emeritus and Pres- ident Elect, in the strength of its great traditions and the robustness of its clear purpose, moves us to a new realization of the spiritual value of its high simplicity above all the complexity and confusion of our modern world. Berea lifts above triteness and makes vivid the significance of the individual and the sacredness of personality. Study of books, work with the hands, play and sports, student government, learning and living, all join in the making of self-reliant individuals, integrated personalities, with the whole view toward intelligent social adjustments, as the students respond to the inner glimpses of their nobler selves and a nobler society. FRANK PORTER GRAHAM, President, University of North Carolina. On our campus here at Berea are fine buildings and splendid modern equipment which testify to great progress and achievement, but what we prize most is that which we possess here which was not wrought with human hands, that priceless something which we may call the Berea tradition; the composite spirit of all the courageous self-sacrificing, and loyal devotion of those who have gone before and those who now carry on that same pattern. It is a far easier task to find a president for Yale, Harvard or Princeton than to find a suitable presi- dent for Berea College. In this field God asks for a very special service, a service that only an unusual and consecrated leader can give. And now again in the choice of a new president we feel sure that we have been divinely guided. He has in large measure the qualities which his distinguished father brought to the work. He has in large measure the qualities which have built up the fine Berea tradition. WILLIAM DEAN EMBREE An institution founded by humble people and working for and with humble people. An institution primarily interested in the kind of life our boys and girls may live after they leave us. An institution which believes in the dignity of labor and tries to make each student feel he is a partner with God in any creative task whether with mind or hand. An institution which believes the foundation of character is a firm conviction and a living experience with a living God, and hence desires that all its graduates shall know something of the way in which all people have experienced that God. W. D. WEATHERFORD I feel that Berea College is doing a unique and distinguished work in education It has a warm place in my heart. LEW SARETT m ' + LOWER DIVISION FACULTY 4 AAA Evelyn Alspach Business Luther Ambrose Science Mary Baker French Margaret Balzer Art Anna Born German Eleanor Brooks English Joseph Cantieni Art Clarence Dawson Business Albert Dekker Chemistry Mary Dupuy Sociology Benton Fielder Agriculture Willis Fisher Bible Ben Fuson English Harry Gough English Arthur Hackett English Dorothy Harvey French Alfred Henderson History Keith Hollingsworth English Orrin Keener Social Studies Marian Kingman Home Economics John Loefcr Biology William Newbolt Business John Peck Mathematics Elisabeth Peck Social Studies Donald Pugsley Mathematics Annie Southworth Home Economics Gertrude Cheney Organ and Piano Alice Reid Home Economics Claude Spillman Agriculture Emma Reeverts Gordon Ross Philosophy Hattie Stowe English Oscar Gunkler English H. D. Schultz Industrial Arts Anna Walker Home Economics K. Helen McKinstry Director, Men ' s Phy. Ed. Director, Women ' s Phy. Ed. Walter Sikes Bible Ernest Weekes English Adelaide Gundlach College Registrar Marguerite Sloan Secretary Ruth Woods Home Economics Wm. Jesse Baird Dean, Foundation School - nr HUL ut Urt MNTKIH6MM fair life, Dtewte ! REPRODUCTION iWt look tor Minis m mkr or miraculous. Life is not or this nature. $T0P, READ, and THINK. von me pluty of time, wishow YOU NOTHM. YOU S££ FOR tOUKS£Lf WHAT MTl M HAS DONE. RAYS L O D I V ! ECONDARY ELEVENTH GRADE Martha Smith, Treas. Carl Watkins, Vice-Pres. Russell Dean, Chm. Soc. Comm. Rcll Roberts, President Oda Shackelford, Chmn. Program Comm. Henry Shackelford, Secretary TWELFTH GRADE Robert Ashcr, Vicc-Pres. Robert Brickey, President Kathleen Strong, Treas. Ralph Blakey, Chmn. Project Comm. Emmett Keyser, Chmn, Social Comm. £? £5 Hr ,. ; . ■mm. •= -tor fRj if - «, S| ?1m j ji|k A ' I. OKRA ABBOTT . Ritner, Ky. JAMES ADAMS _ . McRoberts, Ky. MILDRED ALLEN -. Orlando, Ky. ELLEN AMBROSE _ . Berea, Ky. COVA BAKER Cinda, Ky. CORDIA BAYS _ Guage, Ky. TONY BENT Berea, Ky. JOE BLEDSOE _ Crcelsboro, Ky. THEODORE BOTNER Berea, Ky. J. C. BOWMAN Berea, Ky. SHIRLEY BRICKEY __ Stephens, Ky. BESSIE BROWN - _ Mozellc, Ky. WALLACE BUCHANAN Fayetteville, W.Va. AEDRIN BUSCH _ Jeriel, Ky. VIVIAN CAUDILL _ . Prestonsburg, Ky. MABEL CENTER Berea, Ky. EDWIN CHITWOOD . Winfield, Tenn. GERALDINE CODY Garrard, Ky. FRANKIE CORNETTE _. ___ Morris Fork, Ky. LOIS CULBERTSON Surgoinsville, Tenn. TOMMY CUTSHAW Fleming, Ky. EMILY DAVIDSON Oneida, Ky. HAZEL DAVIDSON . _ Waynesburg, Ky. PAUL DEATON ___ Wooten, Ky. HELEN DODD Berea, Ky. D. R. DURBIN, JR. _ ._ Berea, Ky. JAMES ELY Barbourville, Ky. HILDA FOWLER . Irvine, Ky. RAYMOND GIBSON - Prospect, Ky. WALLACE GIBSON, JR. Prospect, Ky. MARY ELLEN GILLIAM Greenup, Ky. HAZEL GRIFFITH Berea, Ky. ELEVENTH GRADE CATHERINE HALL _ Louisa, Ky. ELIZA HAMILTON Frew, Ky. MADELINE HATCHER ___ Berea, Ky, CARL HENDRICKSON _ _ Boreing, Ky. WALTER HOPPER, JR. Barbourville, Ky. HELEN HUGHES Murl, Ky. CALEB HURST Knoxfork, Ky. MARGUERITE IMRIE __ Cameroun, West Africa MARJORIE KELLY ___ Evarts, Ky. CAROLYN KEENER ._ Berea, Ky. CURTIS KEENER Berea, Ky. CLAUDE KISER _ Grahn, Ky. JOE LEWIS _ - Manchester, Ky. LENA LEWIS Crab Orchard, Ky. LUCILLE LITTLETON Morehead, Ky. OLIN LONGWORTH ___ ___ Harrogate, Term. CAMERON LOVE Cameroun, West Africa PETER LUFBURROW ___ _ Roanoke, Va. LORENE McKINLEY _ . Jamestown, Ky. MARGIE McKINLEY Jamestown, Ky. CLYDE MEADOWS Ayers, Ky. DOROTHY MEDICH South Bend, Ind. ANDREW MILLER - Colie, Ky. RUBY MOORE ___ Laura, Ky. BARBARA MULLER Harriman, Tenn. ARTELLA MULLINS _. - Lee Valley, Tenn. NEWTON MYNHIER _ _ Yale, Ky. GENEVA NEW . _ Denney, Ky. JAMES NOLAND _ Richmond, Ky. DOUGLAS PARSLEY _ Berea, Ky. MILDRED PHILLIPS _ Stewart, Ky. ROBERTA POTTER _ Louisa, Ky. ELEVENTH GRADE LOIS PRICE _ Cliffside, N.C. LUELLA PRICE Sand Springs, Ky. MARJORIE RAMBEAU Berea, Ky. MARY RECTOR . _ Monticello, Ky. FAUSTINA ROBERTS Osborn, Ky. LYDIA MAE ROBERTS ___ Osborn, Ky. RELL ROBERTS . ___ Osborn, Ky. LILI.IE RUSSELL ___ Loy, Ark. EUGENIA SEWELL . _ Albany, Ky. ROBERT SCHRAEDER . Louellen, Ky. HENRY SHACKELFORD _. Harrogate, Tenn. VAE SHUTT Berea, Ky. MAE SKAGGS . Greenup, Ky. RANDOLPH SKAGGS Skaggs, Ky. MARTHA SMITH ._. Hazard, Ky. LOUISE STANTON . . Surgoinsville, Tenn. WINIFRED STURGILL _ _ Prestonsburg, Ky. JAMFS TAYLOR __. Sawyers, Ky. MILDRED TAYLOR _ . Crab Orchard, Ky. TIMOTHY TAYLOR . . Sawyers, Ky. MARCUS TINSLEY . . Berea, Ky. EVERETT TROUTMAN Wilton, Ky. JOETTA TURNER .. ._ Lancaster, Ky. NELL A VAUGHN _ . Cleveland, Tenn. CARL WATKINS . . Hamilton, Ohio WILLIAM WELSH Berea, Ky. ROBERTA BEATY . Berea, Ky. TRUMAN DAVIS . _ Everman, Ky. JAMES YOWELL Fincastle, Ky. ELEVENTH GRA LEONARD BAIRD Lancaster, Ky. BELVA BARNES Berea, Ky. NANCY BARNETT Berea, Ky. FRIEDA BEGLEY Berea, Ky. GNIDA BLACKBURN _ Cherokee, Ky. RALPH BLAKEY Jamestown, Ky. ROBERT BLANTON Crane Nest, Ky. F. J. BOYER _ Jasper, Ala. ROBERT BRICKEY . _ Stephens, Ky. EVELYN BROWN _. . Cain ' s Store, Ky. CLYDE BURCHETTE _ Gibson Station, Va. GLADYS CAMPBELL Krypton, Ky. OAKLEY CAUDILL . .. Richmond, Ky. MARY FRANCES CHRISTIAN Lexington, Ky. CHERRY CHURCHILL Berea, Ky. EDMONIA CLARK Hammond, Ky. BOB COYLE Berea, Ky. CURTIS CROCKETT North Tazewell, Va. WILLIAM CYRUS Buchanan, Ky. BENJAMIN DAVIS ___ Bar Creek, Ky. HARRY DAVIS LaFayette, Ga. ARTHUR DAWES Catherine, Ky. CLYDE DeBORDE . Level Green, Ky. WILLIAM DUNN Bristol, Va. TWELFTH GRADE TWELFTH GRADE WAYNE EASTERLING _ filairs Mills, Ky. HUGH ERWIN . Elk Park, N.C. ELIZABETH EVERSOLE Hyden, Ky. ALDENA FARiMER Rugby, Va. ROBERT FIELDER ___ Berea, K y. MILDRED GABBARD _ Berea! Ky. DAN GIBSON _ Smith, Ky. CARL GILLIAM Livingston, Kv. MARJORIE GILLIAM _ Livingston, Ky. SHERIDAN HALL Beckley, W.Va. NED HAMMONS Dewitt, Ky. LEWIS HART, JR. Berea ' Ky . EARL HAYS . Berea, Ky. RAMON MINES __. . Cincinnati, Ohio KAY HOFFSOMMER . . Philadelphia, Pa. JAMES JACOBS _ Jacobs? Ky . CECIL KEGLEY Au l ti Ky . EMMETT KEYSER . Ashland! Ky. CHARLES KING Tatt, Ky. DAVIS LANE . Greeneville, Tenn. ELIZABETH LONGMIRE . _ Elizabethton, Tenn. ROBERT LUFBURROW Roanoke, Va. JAMES McCOLLUM . _ EJlijay Ga. ROBERT ASHER ___ Hyden, Ky. 1 m m GLENN MARTIN Corbin, Ky. NOLA MAY . Cherokee, Ky. MARY LOU MUNCY _ Wooton, Ky. WILLIAM NEAL Crab Orchard Ky. MILDRED O ' DANIEL Adeline, Ky. MAXWELL PELFREY ._ Olive Hill, Ky. CLEMENT PENNEY . St. Anthony, Newfoundland ELDRED PENNINGTON _ Fielder, Ky. CHARLES RAYBURN . — Emerson, Ky. WALTER REYNOLDS _ Lejunior, Ky. EARL SHUPE Berea, Ky. ELMER SKINNER College Hill, Ky. HELEN SLUSHER Louisa, Ky. MILDRED SMITH -— Prichard, W. Va. RUBY SMITH . - Disputanta, Ky. DAVID SPURLOCK Bar Creek, Ky. WILLIAM STEINBERGER . Berea, Ky. KATHLEEN STRONG _ Saldee, Ky. ELLEN TAYLOR Sawyer, Ky. LYELL THOMAS . - Wilson, Ark. CHARLES TILLER Eagan, Tenn. EULA MAE TURNER Talbert, Ky. LAWRENCE VIA Clinton, Ky. ANN WALTERS Richmond, Ky. TWELFTH GRADE POST-GRADUATES 1 1th— HOY WESLEY Mangum, Ky. 12th— JOHN WHITT Louisville, Ky. 12th— NOAH WILLIAMS . Hoskinston, Ky. 12th— STANLEY WILSON Lesbos, Ky. 12th— MILDRED YORK ._ Windsor, Ky. PG — MARGARET SILVERS Somerset, Ky. PG— MARGARET ATCHLEY _ Lenoir City, Tenn. PG — GLENN BLEVINS . Bakersville, N.C. PG— DENNY CALICO . _ Berea, Ky. PG — MARIETTA CHIPMAN . Williamstown, Ky. PG— MARY COOK _ Pageton, W.Va. PG — KERMIN FLEMING Isom, Va. PG — MICHAEL FUHRMANN . Hamburg, Germany PG— MARIE HICKS _ Vonore, Tenn. PG — MARGARET HILLMAN Dungannon, Va. PG — THOMAS HOLDER, JR. ___ Enka, N.C. PG— CAROLYN IWIN Gadsen, Ala. PG— CARL JENKINS (Pres.) Flat Ridge, Va. PG— HUGH MORRISON - Greeneville, Tenn. PG — FRIEDA POPENHAGEN New Bremen, Ohio PG— HARVEY RILEY Harlan, Ky. PG— EVELYN SMITH . Creekville, Ky. PG— HERMAN SMITH .__ Creekville, Ky. PG— ROY STEPP ___ Martin, Ky. PG — ADELINE TINDER White Sulphur Springs, W.Va. PG— FRANCIS WEYANDT Dover, Del. PG — BLANCHE WILLIAMS Ary, Ky.f Ss a LOWER DIVISION COLLEGIATE FRESHMAN Charley Beck, LD Senate 3regory Gay, Treasurer Dixie Current, LD Senate Harry Edwards, President Lanham Dingess, Chmn. Soc. Comri Josephine Creamer, Secretary Harry Tennant, Sgt.-at-Arms Mary Jane Clark, Chm. Proj. Comn SOPHOMORE Claud Bays, President Dean Cadle, Treasurer Margaret Moore, Secretary Harold Tully, Chmn. Soc. Co mm. Everett Hurst, Chmn. Project Comm. Hal Masengill, Vice-President HAROLD ABNEY - ._ Richmond, Ky. IRA ADAMS _ _ Red Fox, Ky. WILLIE ADAMS . . Leatha, Ky. GEORGE ALLEY _ _ Asheville, N.C. DOROTHY ANDERKIN _. - Boone, Ky. AGNES ANDERS . . Barnardsvillc, N.C. ELMER ANDERSON _ Irvine, Ky. EDITH ASKEW . Baxter, Tcnn. BILL ATWATER .. ._ Granite Falls, N.C. ZORA BALL _ _ Pine Knot, Ky. BOB BENJAMIN _ - Shanghai, China CHARLES BECK _ Stanford, Ky. EDYTHE BIGGERSTAFF ___ Ellenboro, N.C. DELMAS BOEN - Guntersville, Ala. WILLA BOWER Winchester, Ky. JOHN BOWLING E. Bernstadt, Ky. QUENTIN BRICKEY . . Stephens, Ky. KENT BROCKMANN _ _ Charles Town, W.Va. MARTHA BRUMLEY _ Owensboro, Ky. SARA BUSSING _ _ Rossville, Ga. ZORA BUTTE - _ Westminster, S.C. EDITH CAMPBELL . _ Pineville, Ky. VIVIAN CENTER _ ___ Berea, Ky. JAMES CHEATHAM _. .. Detroit, Mich. LAURA CHILDERS _ _ Gallup, Ky. LUCILLE CHRISTIAN _ _ Cumberland, Ky. RUTH CHRISTIAN . _ Cumberland, Ky. WILLIAM CHRISTY _ Vanceburg, Ky. CHARLES CLARK ___ Cleveland, Ohio JOEL CLOUD . Connelly Springs, N.C. LACY COCHRAN - Trout, W.Va. HENRY COLDIRON Lisle, Ky. STELLA COLEMAN _ McRoberts, Ky. LOUIS COMBEST Liberty, Ky. VIRGINIA COOPER _ _ Thorpe, W. Va. RALPH CRAW _ . Gansevoort, N.Y. JOSEPHINE CREAMER _ Afton, Tenn. HARRIS CRESWELL _. ._ Talbot t, Tenn. LOIS CRIPPEN - _ Berea, Ky. JEAN CROUSER _ . Mannington, W.Va. MORRIS DANIEL _ .__ Horsepen, Va. KATE DAVIS ___ Midkiff, W.Va. FRANCES DAWSON . _ Peach Creek, W.Va. EUGENE DAY _ . Hazard, Ky. HARRY DAY _ . Filbert, W.Va. ANN DeJARNETTE _. ._ Soddy, Tenn. LANHAM DINGESS Chapmanville, W.Va. LOLA DIXON . _ Trout, W.Va. CLARENCE DUNFORD _. Kimball, W.Va. FRANCES EBBS . Bristol, Va. FI.ORINE EDMONSON . Burkesville, Ky. HARRY EDWARDS _ Chittanooga, Tenn. ROBERT EDWARDS . Barnardsville, N. C. MAVIS ENGLE _ . Hindman, Ky. WILLIAM FANNIN . _ St. Paul, Ky. DONN FARRIS _ . Welch, W. Va. VIRGINIA FERRILL . . Berea, Ky. GARNETT FIELDER . Rural Retreat, Va. ROBERT FOREMAN - . Hazard, Ky. BLANCHE FRANCISCO . „ Hellier, Ky. KENNETH FRYE _ Wardemville, W.Va. KENNETH GIBSON . Raceland, Ky. EILEEN GRIFFIN - . Corbin, Ky. JOHN GROSS Scottsboro, Ala. MARY GRUBBS . _ Kidds Store, Ky. IDA HAMBY _ _ Gatliff, Ky. WINSTON HAMBY . _ Chattanooga, Term. RICHARD HARPER _ _ Circlcvillc, W.Va. CARL HATCHER _ . Blue Jay, W.Va. BOYD HEADLEY . . Winchester, Va. HOMER HELTON .. Crane Nest, Ky. JOHN HENDERSON .. _ Mt. Vernon, Ky. VIRGIE HERRIN . __, Shopville, Ky. GEORGIA HEWITT .. ___ Concord, Tenn, CHARLIE HIBBITTS Grundy, Va. GEORGIA HILL . Ewing, Va. BILL HINCHMAN . .. McConnell, W.Va. EDITH HOWARD .. ___ Mill Pond, Ky. JANICE HOWERY . ._ Tazewell, Va. WINN HUGHES _ . Trinity, Ky. GRAY HUNTER Ashland, Ky. FORRESTER ISON Oscaloosa, Ky. JUSTINE JONES Ashland, Ky. OPHELIA JUDD _ Ashevillc, N.C. MARTHA KELLAR . .__ Dunnvillc, Ky. CARL KILBOURNE Appalachia, Va. WYNONA KIRK Celina, Tenn. FLORENCE KIRSTEIN Black Mountain, N.C. JOSEPHINE KNOX _ - Stevenson, Ala. LILA LAMB Churchville, Va. BURGIN LANCE Skyland, N.C. MINROSE LANKFORD _ - Shenandoah, Va. NORMA LESLIE Estill, Ky. LOUISE LESTER Greenville, Tenn. MARY LEWIS ___ Asheville, N.C. ROBIENA LITTLETON Morehead, Ky. NORA LITTON Clearance, Ky. JOHN LOVEDAY Middlcsboro, Ky. BARBARA LYNCH Loyall, Ky. GEORGINA McCLURE _ . ._ Louisa, Ky. EDNA McDOWELL West Chester, Iowa JAMES McDOWELL East Bernstadt, Ky. DOSHIA McKNIGHT Crawford, Ky. BETTIE MAGNET Hitchins, Ky. FRANKIE MANTOOTH Rossvillc, Ga. MO MARRS Russell, Ky. JIMMY MARTIN . Anderson, S.C. JOE METCALF Waco, Ky. EDNA MILLER .. Martel, Tenn. MOSS MILLS Manchester, Ky. GARLAND MORRELL Spruce Pine, N.C. JAMES MURPHY Mt. Sterling, Ky. CARL NEWMAN Exeter, Va. LELIA NICKELL Hazel Green, Ky. MARGARET NICKELS Benham, Ky. RALPH NORMAN . Winter Haven, Fla. AUDRA OSBORN Louisa, Ky. JAMES PASEUR — New Hope, Ala. OPAL PAYNE Midway, Tenn. WILLIAM PELFREY . Lawson, Ky. HARLIN PERRINE Stuart, Va. JEANNETTE PETERS . - Mt. Morris, Pa. BERTHA PILSON . - Stuart, Va. LELDON PITT - Trinity, Ala. HOMER POTTER - Louisa, Ky. RUTH PRATT . Martin, Ky. KATHLEEN PROPPS Fayettevillc, W.Va. I. C. RABURN Marion, N.C. MARY LOU RANDLES Berea, Ky. BERNICE RASNAKE Cleveland, Va. LaRUE RAWLINGS _. . Ringos Mills, Ky. NANCY RICE Candler, N.C. ORA RICE Flag Pond, Tenn. FLORINE RIFFE Hager Hill, Ky. MILDRED RITCHIE Blue Diamond, Ky. LUCILE ROBERTS Martin, Ky. GLADYS ROBINETT Wayne, W.Va. RUBYE ROBINSON Smithville, Tenn. JOE ROMERO Banes, Oriente, Cuba SAMUEL ROZIER Hendersonville, N.C. FRANCES SANDERS Romney, W.Va. ELLEN SCHEIBERG . Elmhurst, N.Y. VICTOR SCHERRER . Dayton, Ohio PEARLE SCOTT Covington, Va. FLORENCE SEAY Ashcville, N.C. WILLIAM SETZER Morganton, N.C. ZULA SEXTON . Annville, Ky. JAMES SHIRES Hillsboro, W.Va. FLOYD SLETTVET New Castle, Ind. DOROTHY SPICKARD White Pine, Tenn. HUGHES SPURLOCK Bar Creek, Ky. TEDDY STAMPER __ Olive Hill, Ky. CLARENCE STEINBERGER _ Berea, Ky. LINDA STEPHENS Prestonsburg, Ky. MARY STEVERS Pembroke, Va. GEORGE STEWART Hitchins, Ky. REBA STONE Wheelwright, Ky. ETHEL STRONG Saldee, Ky. HARRY TENNANT Williamsville, Va. ORLANDO THOMAS Oneida, Tenn. MADELON UTTER Larkinsvillc, Ala. MARTHA WAGERS Berea, Ky. JACK WALKER Hartwell, W.Va. HATTIE WARD Inez, Ky. ROYCE WARDREP Jefferson City, Tcnn. CECILIA WATERS Inman, S.C. JAMES WATSON Pineville, Ky. EARL WELLS West Van Lear, Ky. FRED WESLEY Lynch, Ky. SAMUEL WESLEY Chattanooga, Tenn. BUFORD WHITAKER Etowah, Tenn. ROBERT WHITE Thorn Hill, Tenn. BRUCE WHITFIELD Georges Fork, Va. ALICE WOLFRAM Berea, Ky. SAM WYGAL Corbin, Ky. JACQUELINE YAVECCHIA __ Waterbury, Conn. MARGARET YOWELL Peola Mills, Va. EDNA MARTIN Berea, Ky. SOPHOMORES BELLE ABRAMS . .__ Sand Gap, Ky. JOHN ADAMS Whitesburg, Ky. BARBARA ALLEN Hawesville, Ky. GARNIE ANDERSON Nancy, Va. FLETCHER ANDREWS Lake Toxaway, N.C. EULA ARCHER Jonesboro, Tenn. JAMES ARTHUR Flat Lick, Ky. HAROLD BAILEY ___ - Baileyton, Tenn. CLARENCE BALES _ Rose Hill, Va. VIVIAN BAILEY _ Ashland, Ky. FRANCES BARR . Charlotte, N.C. VIRGINIA BEGLEY . _ Berea, Ky. JESSIE BISHOP _ Tyner, Ky. CAROLYN BLAIR - West Liberty, Ky. ROBERT BLAKER Meadow Ridge, W.Va. HARVEY BRADLEY _ Cain ' s Store, Ky. THELMA BRANHAM Louisa, Ky. EDWARD BRANN Hamburg, Germany FRANCES BRUCE Cumberland Gap, Tenn. ELIZABETH BURDETTE Berea, Ky. ALBERTA BURGESS Big Lick, Tenn. JAMES BURKS - Kings Mountain, Ky. VIAXINE BURLEY Omar, W.Va. KATHLEEN BURNS _. _ London, Ky. MARITA BURTON Monticello, Ky. DEAN CADLE _ Middlesboro, Ky. CHANDOS CALHOUN Hitchins, Ky. JAMES CALHOUN Jackson, Ky. LUCY CANADA Somerset, Ky. J. W. CARPENTER _. ._ Owens Cross Roads, Ala. CHARLES CARRINGTON Charters, Ky. ELIZABETH CARTER Asheville, N.C. MARY CASEY Wilton, Ky. KATIE CHAMBERS Huntsville, Ala. SYLVIA MAE CHUMBLEY Dorena, Ky. HORACE CLARK Johnson City, Ky. EDNA CLOUSE Corbin, Ky. ROGER CLOYD Corbin, Ky. EDWARD COLEMAN Rich-wood, W.Va. CARL COLLINS Woodville, Ala. CLOYD COLLINS Hazard, Ky. GENE COMBS Langley, Ky. MABEL CONLEY Martin, Ky. ROBERT CONLEY Paintsville, Ky. RUTH CORNETT McRoberts, Ky. LOUISE COSSETT Ashland, Ky. JANE COX Mt. Vernon, Ky. RETHA CRASE Belknap, Ky. HUBER DAVES Ellenboro, N.C. LESLIE DAWES Catherine, Ky. WILLIAM DIAMOND Waynesburg, Ky. HANSEL DILLINGHAM Barnardsville, N.C. AUDREY DODD Boaz, Ala. RUTH DOWD Newport, Ky. OPAL DUNAWAY Blue Diamond, Ky. LAURA EAKIN Bangkok, Thailand AMBROSE EASTERLY Crossville, Tenn. J. B. EDWARDS, JR. Barnardsville, N.C. ERNESTINE ESTEPP Viper, Ky. BEATRICE EVANS St. Paul, Va. MARY K. EVANS Paintsville, Ky. VIARY FRANCES EWEN Berea, Ky. HARLEY FILLMORE Harriman, Tenn. PAUL FISH Fairview, N.C. SOPHOMORES OPHOMORES CALANTHE FRANCIS East Lynn, W.Va. HERSCHEL GABBARD Bond, Ky. OLIVE GAYHART Hardburly, Ky. IVOL GODBEY _ Bethelridge, Ky. AFTEEL GRAHAM West Somerset, Ky. DAVID GRIMWOOD Meridianville, Ala. JESSIE GWINN _ . Carmen, N.C. ELI COLBERT HALL Lothair, Ky. JUANITA HALL Hazard, Ky. LEHMAN HENDERSON, Jr. Athens, Ala. ALYNE HIATT Waynesburg, Ky. MARTIN HOFFMAN _ New Holland, Pa. MILDRED HOLDER Enka, N.C. RUTH HOLDER Enka, N.C. BILL HOLLANDSWORTH Welch, W.Va. MARGARET HOPPER _ Somerset, Ky. DAYTON HULBURT Oak Park, 111. RUTH INGRAHAM Kingsport, Tenn. DORA JOHNSON Blue Diamond, Ky. MARVIN JONES _ - Paintsville, Ky. RUTH KAZEF. Ashland, Ky. EARL KILBOURNE Berea, Ky. ELIZABETH KIVETT __ Cumberland Gap, Tenn. EVELYN LAMB ___ ___ McClure, Va. ANNIE LANCE Black Mountain, N.C. ROBERTA LAREW _ Greenville, W.Va. TROY LASWELL Brodhead, Ky. CAROLYN LAVENDER Ashland. Ky. CHARLES LAYNE Louisa, Ky. ROY LEDFORD Barnesville, N.C. LUCILLE LEWALLEN . Robbins, Tenn. JOSEPH LINDSAY Hillsville, Va. EMMA LOU LOFTIS _ . Brevard, N.C. CHARLES LORD . . Grinnell, Iowa GETHA LOSHBOUGH . _ Crossville, Term. Ol AL LOi _ Jamestown, Ky. BLANCHE McDANIEL .. _ Lothair, Ky. GEORGE McKINNEY _. ._ Amigo, W.Va. TALMADGE MAGGARD Maggard, Ky. KIMBER MAHAFFEY . . Green Hall, Ky. ANNA LEE MALCOLM _ Masontown, W.Va. HAROLD MALTBY . . Hastings, Fla. MINNIE MARTIN _ . Eastern, Ky. TELLIS MARTIN _ . H.ckory, N.C. HAL MASENGILL . . Blountvilie, Tenn. DONALD MERCHANT . _ Swannanoa, N.C. QUENTIN METCALF . Paint Lick, Ky. MARGARET MOORE _ _ Harrodsburg. Ky. ROSELLA MORGAN . . Akron, Ohio NANNIE MOXLEY . . Cresto n, Ky. HARDING NOBLITT . Marion, N.C. EMMA PEARSON _ . College Hill, Ky. FRED PEARSON . . Treadway. Tenn. FERNE POTEET . _ Bramwell, W.Va. MAYNARD PRESNELL . _ Asheville, N.C. WOODROW QUINN . Harlan, Ky. MARY HELEN ROBERTS _. _ Burnside, Ky. WILLIAM ROBERTS - _ Hambleton, W.Va. EDWIN ROBERTSON _ . Pine Hall, N.C. DAN ROBINSON . . Albany, Ky. J. B. ROBINSON _ . Bandana, N.C. CHARLES RUNION . _ Erwin, Tenn. WILLIAM SCHORMAN . . Ashland, Ky. LESLIE SCROGGS . Asheville, N.C. SOPHOMORES RALPH SHEPHERD . ._ Crumpler, N.C. ARMONELL SHERRILL __ Crab Orchard, Tenn. ETHEL SHRADER North Tazewell, Va. NOEL SHUTT Berea, Ky. CAROLYN SMITH Spartanburg, S.C. JOAN SMITH Williamsfield, Ohio JOSEPH SMITH _ St. Petersburg, Fla. FRANCES SNODGRASS Mouth Card, Ky. RAYMOND SPEARS . Van Lear, Ky. EUGENE STANLEY _ _ Tram, Ky. MARGARET STEINORTH Pt. Pleasant, N.Y. LOIS STEVENS _ Cummington, Mass. FRED TAYLOR . .. Greenville, S.C. EMOGENE THOMPSON _ _ Webbville, Ky. DANIEL THORINGTON - - Middlesboro, Ky. WILLIAM TOBY . - Grundy, Ky. HARRY TOMLINSON - Damascus, Va. HAROLD TOMPKINS _ Elgin, Tenn. HOBERT THOMPSON _ - Millsprings, Ky. HAROLD TULLY East Rainelle, W.Va. EDWARD TURNER - Houston, Ky. ELLEN WALI.EN - - Ebon, Ky. CARL WARD .. — Neva, Tenn. CARTER WARD . _ Neva, Tenn. KARL WARMING Jellico, Tenn. ESTFIER WARNER . Murphy, N.C. ELIZABETH WATKINS - Liberty, Ky. REX WESLEY . ._ Science Hill, Ky. JUANITA WHEELER ___ Stevenson, Ala. JANET WHITE - Meridianville, Ala. EDNA WIGGINS Barnardsville, N.C. ANNA LEE WILLIAMS Flat Gap, Ky. SOPHOMORES CLAYTON WRIGHT . _ Derby. Ohio CHESTER YOUNGE _ _ De Land, Fla. ESKELINE ADAMS _ . Paintsville, Ky. EDNA BELDON __. . Paintsville, Ky. FRED CORNETT _ . Whitesburg, Ky. WILLIAM ESTEP, JR. Williamsburg, Ky. EUNICE GARCIA _. . Norwalk, Ohio EVERETT HURST . . Knoxfork, Ky. ROY TURNER . _ Canoe, Ky. GARNET BRYAN _ Ashland, Ky. SOPHOMORES THE SCHOOL OF NURSING HOSPITAL STAFF Doster, Walker, Van Krevelen, Dodd, Marshall, Pierson, Spring - sted, Armstrong, Paine, Cowley, McCollum. VISITING PHYSICIANS Top: Nagel, Ross, Robbin , Mar- shall, Dodd, Gruener, Kavan ugh, Hans, Cragg, H;fer, Moore, Back, Morris, Springstcd, Armstrong, Renz, McCord, Swing, Hu:chin3, South worth, Trawlck, Shawk:y, Wooding, Kellar, Waugh, Cowley, Thomas, Topmillcr. $ THEDA BRISCOE _. _ Hazel Green, Ky. BEATRICE CATRON _ _ Dryden, Va. RIPARATA DcSIMONE _ _ McRoberts, Ky. ANNA MAY EVERMAN Gregoryville, Ky. KATHLEEN KINCAID _ . Joy, N.C. RUBY LIOUTZA _ Norland, Va. EVA NF.AL _ Pineville, Ky. LOUISE POOLE _ Fairmount, Ga. DESSIE LEE RIDDLE _. McRoberts, Ky. THEODORA SKEAN _ _ Kenova, W.Va. MARY SLUSHER Pineville, Ky. BETTY CREASMAN Swannanoa, N.C. MARY HOLT . _ Louisa, Ky. EDNA ROBINETTE _ _ Fairview, Va. MILDRED ANDERSON _ .__ Williamsburg, Ky. SUELLA BARNES Hardburly, Ky. VIRGINIA BERTHY _ . Webster Springs, W.Va. MILDRED BOYD _. Bristol, Term. DOROTHY GILKERSON _ . Prichard, W.Va. EVELYN HARRIS ... . Welch, W.Va. EUGENIA HOPKINS - .. Mountain City, Tcnn. MANDA HOWARD . . Northern, Ky. HAZEL HUGHEY ___ Asheville, N.C. CAROLINE MILLER _ _ Davis, W.Va. GRACE NOLAN .__ Cumberland, Ky. ELIZABETH ROBERTSON Pine Hall, N.C. ROSE SLUSHER _ . Pineville, Ky. STELLA TAYLOR Pine Mountain, Ky. CARMIE TUTT _ Ezel, Ky. GENEVA WESLEY __. Eubank, Ky. MELISSA WOOSLEY Bluefield, W.Va. NURSES .. jto . «i r ■' ■' m% m Ti y W THE CHIMES STAFF Percy Shue, Editor-in-Chief O Inner Milton, Business Manager Jack Walters, Associate Editor Vernard Webb, Staff Photographer and Snapshot Editor Eleanor Davis, Sales James Davis, Sales Owen Rickard, Sports Editor Hazel Parker, Literary Editor Jack Mullins, Advertising Joseph Gilbert, Advertising Jean Reed, Assoc. Art Editor John McAllister, Art Edito r Marion Wygal, Publicity Editor Hazel Longworth, Secretary UPPER DIVISION SE (STUDENT LEGISLATIVE GROUP) Dr. Hardin, Hensley, Wilson, Auxier, Hargrove, McKinney, Dr. Baker, Mills, Hows- mon, Eastham, Tully. STUDENT BOARD OF GOVERNORS (STUDENT ADVISORY GROUP) Front: Mr. Bangson, Kubin, Shown, Patten Back: Mr. Hatcher, Mr. Morgan, Mr. Hendricks, Stevens, Wood, Hill, Pilson, Auxier, Kraybill, Miller, Green, Miss Allen, Miss Ela. L D SENATE Front: Current, Dawes, Miss Harvey, Coffey, Rector, Blair, Beck, Churchill, Snodgrass, Bailey. Second: Turner, Adams, Nestor, Dean Shutt. Back: Miss True, Kirk, Weyandt, Hicks, Hensley, Duff, Mr. Hackett WOMEN ' S HOUSE GOVERNMENT Front: Coleman, Jones, Greene, Scott. Back: Angell, Miss Allen, Wood, Kiser, Miss Ela. MEN ' S HALL UNION Kubin (Pres.), Oldfield, Hows mon, Lackey, Callison, Hays. C E EX COMMITTEE Front: Daniels, Mynhier, DeBorde, Fleming, Love. Second: Reverend Seth Hunting- ton, Miss Stooker, Clouse, Coleman, Larew, Johnson, Campbell, Mrs. Huntington. Back: Rayzor, Orick, Lyell, Seay. YWCA CABINET Front: Mrs. Ross, Burley, Hill (Pres.), Beverly, Stevens. Middle: Loftis, Roberts, Scott, Steinorth, Perry. Back: Martin, Mills, Mrs. Parks, Roberts. YMCA CABINET Front: Davidson, Hardway, Runion, Andrews, Hurst. Seated: Lord, Fillmore, Morris, Auxier, Shackelford, Menefee, Roberts, Hollands worth, Turner. Standing: Jones, G. McKinney, C. McKinney, Martin, Bays. TAU KAPPA ALPHA (National Honorary Forensics Society) Front: McKinney, Kelley, Shumate Futsler (Pres.) , G. Kilbourne, Mrs. Hardin, Queen. Second : Morris, Cason, R. Kilbourne, Nestor, Dr. Hardin, Kennedy, Chaney. Back: Shue, Noblitt, Pilson, Allen. SIGMA PI SIGMA (National honorary physics society) W. Hurley, Kilgore, Nickell, Dr. Noll, Bensey, Wyatt. PI GAMMA MU (National Honorary Social Science Society) Front: Kilbourne, Paredes, Eutsler, McDonough, H. Parker, Queen, Shue Second: Wesley, Hurley, Domas, R. Parker, Mr. Crippen, Mr. Ross Back: Livesay, Dr. Hardin, Scott, Dean Weidler, Blake PI ALPHA (NATIONAL HONORARY SCIENCE SOCIETY) Front: Farris, Strait, Wheeler, Brannon, Hoffman, Patten, Ayres, Dr. Noll. Middle: McGhee, Howsmon, Hale, Walters, Somers, Wyatt, Nickell, Christian, Bensey, Davis, Callison. Back: W. Hurley, Dr. Capps, Adams, Rice, Eisenhour, McAllister, Moore, Rosen- baum, McGuire, Hardiman. DELTA PHI ALPHA (NATIONAL HONORARY GERMAN SOCIETY) Front: Brann, Eutsler, Thompson, Coleman, Dr. Pauck, Brenda, B. Allen, Bailey, R. Allen. Middle: Queen, McDonough, Miller, Muelder, Miss Born, Roberts, Morton, Conley. Back: Weiss, Welch, Bays, Lindsay. HOME EC CLUB McDaniels, White, Stafford, Jones, Pezzarossi, Leslie, Sullivan, Tinsley, Kessel, Bow, Greene, Scott. Peters, Jones (Pres.), Wilson, Chambers, Higgins, Cooper, Gipson, Thomas, Brenda, Smith, Mills. Smits, Hargrove, Miller, Ward, Rose, Moore, Brooks, Lawson, Anderson, Meredith. Click, Sparks, Elmore, Greene, Vandiver, Orick, Alexander. EDUCATION CLUB Front: Johnson, Green, Dodson, Wilson, Prince. .Back: Cox, Mr. Chidester, Camp- bell. FRENCH CLUB Front: Hall, McKnight. Seated: Grubbs, Miss Chapin, Miss Richardson, Greenwell. Standing: Bussing, Combest, Cor- nett. Easterly, Creamer. AGRICULTURAL UNION FRONT: Cochran, Davis, Hays, Price, Stanley, Thompson, Felton, Woody, Carpenter, Beck, J. Metcalf, Robinson, Dillingham, Q. Metcalf, C. Campbell. SECOND: Cheatham, Prewitt, E. Rob- ertson, Run ion, Dillard, Gabbard, Dorsey, Cromer, Stewart, Kennedy, Jar vis, Brown, Mitchell, Wilson, Cornett, Car ring ton, Turner, Led ford. THIRD: Lit tie John, Grim wood, Cundiff, Malt by, W. Campbell, Harper, Williams, Wesley, Shuler, Bailey, Houston, Back, B. Helton, H. Helton, E. Anderson, McDonald, Skaggs, Shelley. FOURTH: Mr. Kerr, Taylor, Shepherd, Corder, Harrison, Spradlin, McLaughlin, Peters, Sherman, Shoun, Adams, Duncan, Taylor, McDowell, G. Anderson, Arthur, Fish, Young. BACK: Slettet, Lance, Lord, Yoakum, Paseur, Wells, Mills, Deaton, Turner, Diamond, J. B. Edwards, R. Edwards, Alexander, Dr. Spillman, Meeks, Bradley, McDowell. AGRICULTURAL-HOME EC. CLUB Peters, Felton, Sherman, Wilson, Skaggs, Davis, Shelley, Harper, Campbell, Mr. Price, Dorsey. Cromer, Jones, Pezzarossi, Hunt, Leslie, Sullivan, Tinsley, Wall, Kessel, Bow, Greene, Scott, Staf- ford, Green. Harrison, Chambers, Stewart, Kraybill, Mitchell, Higgins, Cooper, Gipson, Humphreys, Thomas, Brenda, Mayo, Anderson, Smith, White, Dingus, Mills, Orick. Bailey, Shuler, Spradlin, Jarvis, Back, Prewitt, Deaton, Campbell, Hays, Gash, ' Miller, Sparks, Ward, Vandiver, Rose, Elmore, Brooks, Moore, Jones McDaniels, Coleman, Lawson, Meredith. Houston, Dillard, Click, Littlejohn, Hargrove, Wilson, Smits. FOLK CLUB Bettis, Greene, Walters, Howsmon, John Allen, Bright, Christian, Eisen- hour, Clarke, Miss Bennett, Johnson, Cox, B. P. Allen, Mr. Gunkler, Mr. Clark, Kazee, Garcia, Yarbrough, 5mith, Morris, Ernest, Hensley, Head- ley, Kubin, Lackey, Miss Elliott, Mor- ton, Evans, Morgan, Moore, Foreman, Goff, Saylor, Wolfram, Green, Click, Johnson, Ellis, R. Christian, Miss Mc- Kinstry, Back, Beldon, Cornett, Mrs. Gunkler, Hall. BIRD CLUB Front: A Farmer, Larew, Wesley, Pat- ten, H. Wesley, Cooper, L. Farmer Second: Miss Crabb, Gay, Abbott, Fillmore, Miss Klippel, Jenkins, Mc- Ghee, Thorington, Mynhier Back: Seay, Spillman, McAllister, Bales RURAL COMM. LIFE Front: Cooper, Tutt, Fish, Smith, Blakey, Potter, Moore, Mullins, Mc- Kinley, Davidson, Keener. Back: Neal, Lewis, Russell, Littleton, Blackburn, Roberts, Clark, D. Spur- lock, New, Rayzor, H. Spurlock, Mar- tin. Front: Coleman, Johnson, Bishop, Mc- Connell, Baxter, V. DeBorde, Terry, ■j fcl ' ' ■' ' Ernest . JAN ' White i olhn_s l _Sc£t,t,_LifiJftnn J ; rost, Lamb, R. 1 nomas, Moore, Grubbs, C. DeBorde, Herrin, Conly, Gilliam, Graham, Larew, Campbell Fourth: Sommers, Click, Kessel, Strait, Mynhier, Patterson, Taylor, Christian, A. Farmer, Evelyn Mitchell, Love, Loftis. Fifth: Lord, Raburn, Daniels, Green, Singleton, Orick, Eisenhour, Ballenger, Ernestine Mitchell, Martin, Cyrus Sixth: Stooker, Hinchman, O. Wesley, H. Wesley, Clouse, Hatcher, Mrs. Huntington, Mr. Huntington, Lyell, Seay VANGUARDS First: Mrs. Fenn, F. Muelder, Johnson, Cameron, Yavecchia. Second: C. Stevens, Dr. Paine, A. Stevens., McKinney. Third: Dr. Muelder, McLain, Eutsler. Back: Brown, Clarke, Dr. Hardin, Kubin. PUBLIC AFFAIRS FORUM Within a single year the Public Affairs Forurn has become one of the most vital organizations on the campus. The Forum provides a place where students and professors meet on an equal basis to discuss vexing national and international prob- lems from all points of view. The purpose of the Forum is to provide a means whereby its members can become conscious of the numerous political, economic, and sociological complexities of the world. Its major achievement has been the establishment of the Public Affairs Laboratory to which over four hundred organizations in the U.S. and several foreign countries have contributed material. BAND Front: Hoffman, E. Durham, (ngraham, Morrell, C. Keener, G. Wesley, Hart, Trosper, Cloyd. Second: Clark, C. Keener, Spence, Elliott, A. Hays, Fielder, E. Hays, Wygal, Parsons, Alley, H. Tully, Crippen, Lord, E. Hays, Day, Dur- bin. Third: Crase, Blackburn, Robin- son, Kilbourne, Estep, Craig, F. Wesley, McKinney, Nestor, R. Tully. Ralph Rigby, (Director), Bill Hol- landsworth, (Drum Major). ORCHESTRA Front: Miss Hall, Davis, Keener, Mrs. Peck, Morford, Durham, Miss Meek. Second: Churchill, Clark, Ochoco, Hoffsommer, Morrell, Hoffman, E. Durham, Alley, Cloyd, Miss Crossen, Spence. Back: Director Ralph Rigby, Tros- per, R. Tully, Miss Wolfe. ROYAL COLLEGIANS Front: Crase, Rickard, Lambert, Butler (leader) Back: Jones, Gabbard, Saylor, Menefee, Davis, McGhee, G. Wes- ley, Diamond, F. Wesley, Tully. ZEPHYRS Front: E. Durham, Hoffman, Morrell, Keener, Doe, Clark, Imrie, R. Durham. Back: Fielder, Bent, Hart, Jones, Nestor, Weekes, Cloyd. VARSITY WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB Front: Smith, Cox, Rigsby, Yowell, Dudina, Barr, Christian. Middle: Chasteen, Rivenburg, Dowd, McNeil, Miss Mahon, Roberts, Ingraham, Roberts, Strait. Back: Lykins, Eakin, Austin, Washburn, Wilson, Elliot, Crippen, Herd, Snoddy, Douglass, Booth, Christian. VARSITY MEN ' S GLEE CLUB First: Hulburt, F. Wesley, Turner, Benjamin, Runion, Chaney, Craig. Second: Wolfram, Steinberger, Davis, Hollandsworth, Sutton, Durham, Hovey (Di- rector) . Third: Smith, G. Wesley, Welch, Zimmerman, Walters, Atwater, Bradley. Fourth: Prewitt, Hartsell, McKinney, R. Tully, Damron, H. Tully, Cheatham, Wright. PHI DELTA Front: Wilson, Stewart, Pilson, Baker, England, Beckler, Scott, Campbell. Second: Pearson, Collins, Paseur, Ochoco, Maltby, Tompkins, Raburn, Rosenbaum. Back: Perrine, White, Cromer, Scroggs, Lord, Lance, Tennant, Smith, Moore. RHO DELTA Front: Price, Somers, Livesay, Radcr, Shelley, Bensey. Back: Hale, Wyatt, McDowell, Jent, Ledford, Toby, Campbell. ALPHA ZETA Front: Cannaday, Wesley, Parker, Gray, Gilbert, Hulburt, Pitt, Cheat- ham, Martin. Second: Cornette, Jenkins, Hunter, Foreman, Queen, Oldfield, Bowling, Noblitt, Wright, Lackey. Third: Headley, Wygal, Rice, Hardi- man, Anderson, Eisenhour, Hatcher, Warming, Howsmon, Stevens, New- man, Thompson, Brann, Hamby, Met- calf. Back: Combest, Daves, Adams, Skeen, Bailey, Coleman, Frye, Conley, Mills, Bach, Mullins, Roberts, Henderson. WALLPAPER Front: Bays, Weyandt, Bowling, Webb, Cadle, Hoffman, Fillmore. Back: McKinney, Smith, Shown, Mar- tin, Morris. TWENTY WRITERS Mrs. Hiser, Mrs. Fuson, Steinorth, Miss Auvil, Wygal, Hulburt, Trail, Dr. Weekes, Steinberger, Blair, Parker, Carlock, Yavecchia, Cadle, Mr. Fuson, Miss Van Krevelen, Mr. Hollingsworth PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB Miss Flannery, Miss Ludlum, Mrs. Hanson, Mrs. Manning, Mrs. Streyfeller, Mr. McCracken, Mr. Murphy, Mr. Walters, Collum, Burley, Felton, Loftis, Ramey, Robertson, Runion, Sangren, Seay, Taylor, Thompson, Younge, Walker, Warming, Weir, Welsh, Mrs. Koostra. DRAMATICS ALPHA PSI OMEGA Top: Gabbard, Hulburt, Hensley, R. Kilbourne, Miller. Bottom: Queen, Robertson, Seay, Short, Wilson. THE THESPIANS Front: Chappell, Chaney, Churchill, Longmire. Back: Thomas, Welsh, Bent, Keyser, Hoffsommer. THE DRAMATIC CLUB Front: Bowling, Queen, Eastham, Farris, Gabbard, Mullins, Kelley, Damron, Jones, Hulburt. Second: Haun, Shue, Patton, Andrews, Scott, Hensley, Shun, Phillpott, Skeen, Cannaday. Third: Carlock, Jones, Guest, Trail, Angell, Miller, Moore, Frye, Shumate, Wilson, Jones, Warner. Fourth: Mr. Gough, Dr. Blank, Chaney, Christian, McKinney, Wagers, Crippen, Allen, Cameron, Carrington. Fifth: Mr. Hackett, Harper, Henderson, Hill, Hill, Gray, Masengill, F. Seay, W. Seay. Sixth: Salyers, Kennedy, Day, Headley, Click, Johnson, Loftis, Houston, Parker, Jarrell. The Dramatic Club has been unusually active this year under the energetic direction of Dr. Earl W. Blank, who succeeded Dr. Raine. Through the cooperation of new members, and the work of the old members who act as student directors, the Tuesday night plays have been very successful in educating the club members in the funda- mentals of dramatics. The Spanish play, ' Laragueta, by Miguel Ramos Carrion and Vital Aza, was presented in the fall under the student direction of Ruth Kilbourne. For the major spring production, the Club presented George Kelley ' s Pulitzer-Prize- winning play, Craig ' s Wife, under the student direction of Glendon Gabbard. Another important spring production was the dramatization of facts from the life of Galileo, taken from Alfred Noyes ' Watchers of the Sky, adapted by Hazel Parker and directed by Luther Chaney. The Club has recently drawn up a constitution and has taken under its supervision the academy talent, a group which has had no dramatics organization since the Strollers were dissolved. On March 1, 1940, this group was accepted by The National Thespian Honorary Dramatics Society as Troupe 401. The Dramatic Club is extremely grateful to Dr. Blank, Mr. Gough, and Mr Hackett, who have contributed invaluably to the year ' s work in dramatics through their advice, their patience, and their willing service. On March 1, 1940, Berea College, Secondary Division, received word that the National Thespian Honorary Dra- matic Society for High Schools had accepted Berea as troupe four hundred one. On Tuesday, March 12, the troupe had its first meeting and adopted the name DAVID GARRICK TROUPE after the great English actor. The officers elected for this year are: Emmett Keyser, President; Elizabeth Longmire, Vice President; Cherry Churchill, Secretary; Tony Bent, Treasurer. Charlene Chappell, Edna Chaney, William Welsh, Lyell Thomas, and Kay Hoffsommer complete the Charter membership roll. Lyell Thomas has been appointed publicity chairman. The organization adopted a local constitution written by Emmett Keyser and Cherry Churchill. A late spring initiation is being planned. The National Thespian Society is the only honorary dramatic society for high schools in the United States. It has four hundred three troupes in forty-five states and the Panama Canal Zone. It publishes The High School Thespian Magazine seven times a year. Its national office is in Cincinnati. The aim of the society is To create a spirit of active and intelligent interest in dramatics among the boys and girls of our secondary schools. Earl W. Blank is the faculty sponsor of the troupe. At present, Dr. Blank is also National Director of the Thespian Society. . - CARL SANDBURG Commencement Speaker Photo by Eric Schaal Not until he was thirty-six years old was Sandburg recognized in the literary world. Now, at the age of sixty-two, he is hailed as the poet laureate of industrial America. He has seen life, many-faceted and changing, and in his strong, sweeping verse, has recorded what he saw. He sings news songs, unforgettable songs, about things and people unsung before. Sandburg is no stranger to the dignity — or indign ity — of labor. He knows America because he has worked alongside sweating Americans in unromantic tasks, has listened to their speech and has felt their fury, their joy and despair. He has been porter in a barber shop, scene-shifter in a third-rate theatre, truck- handler in a brickyard, turner-apprentice in a pottery, dish-washer in Denver and Omaha hotels, harvest hand in Kansas wheatfields. He has worked as advertising manager of a department store, as politician, and as salesman, pamphleteer and newspaperman. Sandburg lives all over America, but the place to which he always returns is Michigan, where he lives on a hilltop overlooking Lake Michigan. COOL TOMBS When Abraham Lincoln was shoveled into the tombs, he forgot the copperheads and the assassin ... in the dust, in the cool tombs. And Ulysses Grant lost all thought of con men and Wall Street, cash and collateral turned ashes ... in the dust, in the cool tombs. Pocahontas ' body, lovely as a poplar, sweet as a red haw in November or a paw- paw in May, did she wonder? does she remember? ... in the dust, in the cool tombs? Take any streetful of people buying clothes and groceries, cheering a hero or throwing confetti and blowing tin horns . . . tell me if the lovers are losers . . . tell me if any get more than the lovers ... in the dust ... in the cool tombs. — Carl Sanburg (Reprinted by permission of the publishers.) Outside new leaves have formed on the twisted oak, and above the sound of all the voices I hear the hard scratch of a squirrel ' s claws on broken bark. Under the window, there, they call for me. Come! Hurry! Kelley ' s voice is urgent. But I cannot come. I shall not hurry. It will require some deliberation, this ending. I have watched too often the sun on the mountains yonder to shut off the sight abruptly. I shall need to rehearse, in my mind, the casual turn, the six steps that will take me to the door. This is something I have not learned: how to quit a room before you have taken yourself from it. It is cool here and dark. The torn green shades are lowered, and high in the corner a spider web swings in a little wind. There, across the desk chair, my black graduation gown hangs limp, looking somehow foolish without its pasteboard cap. My hand lies warm in a little pool of sunlight on the window sill; and across the hedge, beyond the drive, sun bursts over the red bricks of Music Building. In my heart, though, there is no sun. Standing here, cupping in my hand the pool of sunlight, I am grown quite cold and still. This is the end of it, I tell myself, twisting the onyx ring on my finger. Now, no more than the ending of a life, no less than the last note of a song, it is over. And that, in itself, is good. I would not stay, reluctant as I am to go. But I need to get things straight with mvself. This morning, early, a girl came into this room, wearing alligator shoes. She looked about with slow, dark glanc- es. I lived here once, she said. I was concerned with the folds of my graduation gown, and the surge of the chapel organ swept through my mind, muting the memory undertones in her voice. I looked down at her shining shoes and I wanted to say: You have found other rooms, have you not? But I said nothing, because I looked at the lines about her mouth and knew what she would answer. She would say: Yes, yes, of course. But there are things that do not come again. There are things you did and will not do again. There are faces that you knew and will not see again; voices you heard that are quiet now. There are things you feel and cannot say. Now she is gone and all the others, too are gone — all but my friends who stand below the window, there, amid worn baggage, calling to me. Memory, I said once, is only a looking back, an indulgence, like rocking chairs, for palsied wit. But in this bare room I choose to forget that I said it, as I turn about and face my memories. At that scarred desk I have sat late, late, running unsteady fingers through my hair, writing on yellow paper, while the wind swept cold from the western mountains and stung my bare arms .... There have been nights when fearsome storms broke and rumbled over the mountains .... There have been evenings, long, quiet when friends have knocked and entered here and we have laughed together .... Once, facing that wall, I cried long, bitterly, then spat at it in hate of my weakness .... And once, on that same wall, I penciled: Beloved Pan and all ye other gods who haunt this place, give me beauty in the inward soul, and may the outward and the inward man be at one .... I gather up the robe from the desk-chair and I am glad that it is black .... Lost to me, now, are all the faces and the voices that I knew. Kelley, and the laughter-fires in her eyes .... the slow unfolding of Chris ' smile .... Helen, the silence of her understanding .... Lost to me the unnamed little gestures of those students I have known. On dark stairs, in a city unknown to me, I shall pass only strangers. Never Sully again, never Kitty, Lucille, or Patton .... Quick the movements of my memory: Severina, small and dark, teeth white in a smile. GGMtiom-LowMue-ceMme • easre a w mmimiifrmsLem-UNm -u esrfAN Come on, Plato, he says to Cecil. Let ' s go on up to philosophy class. And Cecil, smiling lazily. Go on up, Aristotle. I ' m coming soon ' s my girl gets back .... the lean sensitivity of Clarke ' s face; words that once he wrote and brought to me ... . Frank, his ready, off-side grin .... and Hal, quiet, striding tall beside me under flaming trees in autumn. Lodged in crevices of my mind, some words brought away from classes. Human rights are relative. Labor has to fight for rights; property rights are absolute — Dr. Muelder, pacing over the old brown floor, driving home his point with spike-edged logic and his index finger, his Phi Beta Kappa key bouncing and gleaming as he walks back and forth. A thin man, thinking, I described him once in my loose-leaf notebook .... Mav B. Smith, stalking about in the wind, white hair flying, coat flapping out behind her. But then one remembers that it is the fire that matters most. The fire of industry, of purpose, of an open mind, the fire of a friendly spirit, she said once, nodding vigorously .... And Miss Emily Ann, brown eyes bright on her Art of Writing class. I ' m going to lay a curse on you, the curse of consciousness. She said this, slim fingers moving rest- lessly. Who can say what I have lost with the passing of these things? Who can know what I shut the door on when I leave this room? .... I would be content to stay here a little longer. But the voices under the window are edged with im- patience. Hurry! Hurry! Kelley is shouting. The spider web in the corner shivers in the breeze. The turn is made; the six steps taken. The door closes behind me with a little sound. — Hazel Parker A Fool There Was I alius said a woman don ' t never get too old to get herself a man. Look at my gran-gal, Gensie. You ' d a thought she were beyont all hopes, lessen she took one with a cast in his eye, string-halted, or a widder-man with six younguns. Gensie were thought past the age of getting a man of the kind gals want. She were twenty-five last corn-cutting. Not that she weren ' t fair-favored — la, all us Finchie women has alius been good-favored (though I, her granny, shouldn ' t say it, seeing ' s I ' m so warty-looking myself, but then you can ' t judge the rose by looking at the hip.) She didn ' t look a day over eighteen or nineteen; so blue-eyed and rosy-red coloring. We never thought of her getting a first-choice man at her age. For one thing, the gal ' d spent the last fifteen years caring for her pa who ' d been left a poor fool from spotted-tongue fever back yander — helpless as a baby. She ' d been right at home and didn ' t know no marrying fellers. Maybe she ' d swore off, seeing what shape a man could get in and what trouble they could be to women. Anyway, what did come courting she put off and laughed at till they finally quit. She paid this no mind though, but helped Cyth-Ann, her ma, weave, garden, take care of her pa, and was alius busy. Till last fall her pa up and died. Now, he ' d kept her so busy she were lost when he were gone. She tried everything but just couldn ' t be content. She fretted, lost her taste, and got real poor. Cyth-Ann and me got worried. We axed Brother Arrowood to stop in atter the October Memorial meeting. He talked to her, and they decided to write up a piece and send it off yander to the papers to get her another fool like her poor pa ' d been, to take care of, cause, atter all, that ' s what she knowed best to do. He said she ' d be happier, and make herself some money, too, a thing gals are a-bound to do these days. She just about rode Matt-mule to death going trying to hear from this. One day she rid in home with a big letter. It said a feller from Virginia, David Welles, wanted to be her fool border, offered twenty dollars a week (school teachers around here pay that a month!) They writ a spell, and at Thanksgiving he come. We hired Big John Coombs and Matt Paxton to haul him home sending straw in the wagon and ropes to tie him not knowing but he might be hog-wild. Hit were a sight how they got him tied, he were so soft-tongued and stout-armed. You know Big John can break a plowline when he ' s drunk; but he couldn ' t handle him by hisself. Finally they got him tied in the wagon but all three were bad barked up. When they got in Gensie met them. They ' d let him walk apiece, both holding his arms, the roads being so bad and him so civil. But where ' s the fool? she asked, sharp-tongued. Here, Gensie; and wild as a buck-rabbit, Matt Paxton drawled. Now hit were easy seen he weren ' t in one of his wild spells, didn ' t even look touched a-tall. Gensie asked right to his teeth, Are ye a fool like ye writ, or are ye only aping? He let out a stream of talk in this slow heart-gripping voice you only hear out of two or three men in a life time. ' Peared like off yander fool don ' t mean what it does to us mountainers, a helpless, sensibleless idiot; but a per- son at does some silly unthoughted thing. He ' d seen her piece in the paper, and, world-weary, had writ to get away from his bosom-buddies because of some piece of stuff he ' d done. Well, sir, them two laughed in each others faces and fell in love, like that. You looked at the two together and saw they fit like your two hands or the halves of an apple. They went towards each other and stayed thar. Come Christmas eve, Gensie, though she were twenty-five, married one of the masterousest, lovingest men ever a maiden dreamed of ... . They ' s many a woman at thinks she is getting a man at gets a fool, but Gensie thought she were getting a fool and got herself a man! — Bernice Hiser There are those who sleep in class and there are those who sleep in class. Cecil is the recognized leader of the latter small yet select group. True, the difference between Cecil and any ordinary nodder is only one of degree, but the degree is great. Probably the secret of his success lies in an extraordinary speed of transition from alert wakefulness to a dead sleep, or the reverse. Having stationed himself where some broad back cuts off the professor ' s view, Cecil is at rest immediately after the roll call. His eyes close, facial muscles relax and, almost before the lecture begins, his head settles down on his chest. This he accomplishes with a bare minimum of the nodding which is a give- away to the ordinary morphetic student. Obviously superior as a class sleeper, Cecil reaches his most exalted heights in awakening. The ordinary dozer, aroused by some unusual noise, jerks himself upright. Invariably the sudden movement attracts the attention of the professor. Not so, an artist. If you watch Cecil carefully you will see his eyes open and take the lay of the land before he moves. If he becomes conscious of pedagogical glances, he begins to read very industriously with- out raising his head. This gives the professor, who has been unable to see his eyes, the impression that he has been reading all the time. There are many other tricks to the trade for a master. Simple precautions give added security. Cecil never drops a pencil when he goes to sleep for he has tucked it away in a pocket. All four legs of the chair on the floor is a rule which prevents his having a major catastrophe. Little things, these, yet care for details distinguishes any great artist. — Robert Menifee In the Mood TP ' s is a melting pot where high school and college students mingle with the single purpose of loafing. It has an easy atmosphere of friendliness and gives an impression of confusion as the music from the nickelodian merges with the laughter of happy people and becomes snatches of meaningless, unrelated sounds. At the table where the gang has gathered, Parker leans far back in her chair and laughs a strange mixture of keen and husky laughter. She laughs because she is happy in a group of happy people. Across the table from her, Hal fidgets with his hat, pushing it back on his head, pulling it low over his eyes as he tries to get her at- tention. TP has noticed Cecil ' s waving arm and starts toward the table, smiling and saying, Well, what ' ll it be folks — four coffees? Yeh, someone answers, make it four, no five. Here comes that lazy Carson Auxier. At the next table, Dot is saying, Yeh, I ' ve made up my mind. I ' m going to make an A under Henderson. Got to make at least one A and I certainly can ' t make one under Muelder, not in political philosophy anyhow. This reminds Kelley that she didn ' t do so well on Henderson ' s last quiz. You see, she explains, since this is my first course under him, I decided not to study and see what happened — it did! Carson tells the gang how queer it is to be calling Anna Born Miss Born this year. He and Cecil are taking German under Anna and must forget that they were classmates last year, at least while they are in class. By the way, Cecil, do you know the German for . . . . The rest of the question is drowned in a burst of laughter from a table of academy students. These students act their age, a little embarrassed by the presence of college seniors. The boys loll in their chairs and talk in loud, bragging voices or hold the hands of little blond girls — just to show the other fellows that they have a way with the women. The girls giggle and lean across the table to tell one another secrets. They have fun doing silly things such as making whistles from straws. Somewhere an irate college student says viciously, I wish those damn high schoolish brats would quit making that racket. Another minute of it and I ' m going mad, completely mad. A friend of his joins in bitterly. Yeah, buddy, I wasted a whole nickel to hear ' Indian Summer. ' Helluva chance I have. Looking at his watch, Carson exclaims, Say, TP, how about rushing that coffee over our way? After all, I do have a committee meeting in ten minutes. Carson is always rushing off to some sort of meeting. With a tray hoisted above his head, TP carefully picks his way through people and tables. On the tray there is coffee, hot, steaming, delicious, and black; and there ' s a can of Pet milk with the holes in the top all clogged up, and a high-necked container of sugar. Blake measures his sugar in a spoon, carefully. If I don ' t measure it, I might cheat myself, he explains. After all, I ' ve got to get my money ' s worth, and besides TP makes too much profit as it is. Everyone laughs, but they don ' t care how much profit he makes. They like his place and they like his coffee. Everyone ' s attention is turned to Bill Joe Gray who is pounding his fists on the counter, shouting, Bartender! Bartender! How about a glass of water to chase that last cuppa coffee! When the music stops — it ' s Tuxedo Junction — Parker feels deep in her old trench coat. She brings out her hand with a nickel between two fingers. I ' m going to play ' In the Mood ' before we leave. As the sweet and persuasive music swells into the room, everyone begins bouncing up and down on the modern- istic, steel-tubing chairs. Dot shouts hilariously, ' Berea College may keep us from dancing, but it can ' t keep us from wiggling. The music dies away and someone says, Well, let ' s go to the Library. Reluctant to leave TP ' s and its relaxed confusion, people begin pulling their coats and books from the tangled mass that is piled high on one of the counters. It is time to study. — Joseph A. Morris At Noon wheat and the sun on it is most beautiful of all, to me. gold-brown beauty springing from the earth ' s black body gold -brown sea of beauty moving in wind waves under a hot blue sky. — Jean Hoffman University Babble The parlor in Elizabeth Rogers was quiet as I settled into the big chair nearest the radio and began shuffling through the pages of Dante ' s Divine Comedy. I had just found my place in the Third Circle, reserved for the gluttonous, when Scott and Charlie, wearing casual tweeds and feathered hats, breezed into the room. Why, it ' s the BMOC! I greeted them cordially. Back already to our conservative campus. Didn ' t I always say you couldn ' t stand the pace at State? You err, Princess, replied Scott, seating himself on the arm of my chair. The University was boring this week-end, so we took off. There ' s a dance at the gym tonight, but Jimmy ' s orchestra plays and it smells. You ain ' t lyin ' ! agreed Charlie, relaxing on one of our prim love seats. Say, Scott! he exclaimed, Guess who I got a date with for the Sigma Chi banquet Friday night. Nobody but Martha Carroll — and she ' s a card! Scott looked bored. Ah, she ' s not so hot. Jane ' s a better date — she ' s a Tri Delt too. Say, have you seen that number visiting her? Bill dated her some. He says sh; ' s pu-lenty sexy! Yeah. That ' s what I like about her, agreed Charlie. By the way, who do you think will be our sweet- heart at the ball? Boy, the other houses will be green! We Sigma Chi ' s always get ahead of them. Grant Simmons — he ' s a Sigma Nu — said the SAE ' s were mad as hell because we got the orchestra first. They don ' t like us Sigs. They ' re a sorry bunch. Charlie paused, burying his body deeper in the soft plush and thrusting long legs over the back of the seat. Say, boys, do you remember Thelma Clayton? I asked. She ' s going to State now and I wondered if you ever see her. Oh, yeah .... sure. I think I saw her at the game Saturday, Scott said vaguely. She isn ' t a pledge, is she, Charlie? No, indifferently. This evidently eliminated Thelma. With elaborate care, Charlie eased himself off the love s;at and yawned. Let ' s go have a beer, Scott. Scott jumped up. Ah, hell, Charlie, you said you ' d quit. If I ' d wrecked my car a hundred eighty dollars worth I ' d never touch another drop. Ah, don ' t be a heel, Scott. Besides a beer won ' t make us drunk. He turned to me. So long, Princess. Why don ' t you come over for the dance next week-end? Anything exciting happening here? ' I thought a minute. Uh-huh, the Kedroff Quartet ' s singing at the chapel, I hazarded. Oh, blankly. They hurried out. ■— Lois Kelley When If Rains For the sixth and last time, your roommate says a bit wearily, at ten minutes after seven, you ' d better get up if you ' re going to class this morning. Repressing an impulse to ask her if she ' s ever in her life been sleepy (she rises faithfully at six and goes to breakfast every morning) you drag yourself out of bed and pull on the first clothes you can find. The room is cold and gray. It ' s raining outside. You fish around in your closet for your umbrella, which has been relegated to the top shelf ever since the water supply got so low they had to turn off the showers, gulp a cup of strong coffee proffered by some well-meaning neighbor, grab a nstebook, and run. Seven thirty. Barely time to get to class, but of course you ' ll have to wait at the crossing while two or three cars whiz by through the gray slush and splatter your bare legs with the dirty water. During this interval you survey the ever-fresh panorama of the campus walks streaming with students desperately bent on reaching some destination before the next bell rings. A common grayness silvers everything, blending into one softened, hazy pattern the bright, animated umbrellas bobbing along through the rain-darkened trunks of the old trees. You realize with a start that the car you were waiting for passed all of three minutes ago, and that the annoyingly prompt professor will begin his inevitable, inexorable roll call within no more than sixty seconds. Adjusting the angle of your umbrella you prepare to dash for it when you are stopped short by a cheery hail- fellow-well-met-and-whither-away-so-fast-today voice which you recognize as that of your present insomnia pro- ducer and you give up all hope — yea, and all desire — to get to class on time. You tell yourself that after all the major part of one ' s education comes not from classroom lectures, nor from privately pursued studies, but from the little personal contacts which one makes every day on the campus, then begin concerning yourself with the problem of entertaining this new quarry. You know there ' s no hope of inveigling him into carrying the umbrella over the two of you — he ' s either the tall, sleek-haired sheik who braves the weather bare-headed, or the short, cute lad who jams a battered felt hat over his almost irrepressibly curly pate and doesn ' t need an umbrella anyway. You ' ll have to carry your own books, too. They ' d get wet if he took them. You can ' t let a little thing like an umbrella come between you, though. How are you going to say all the clever things you ' ve been storing up against this hour if he can ' t see your face as you say them? But on the other hand, if you tilt that oiled silk orb of protection over to the other side, your hair ' s going to get wet and draggled, and you ' ll wish he couldn ' t see you at all. You could wear a scarf over your head like most of the girls do, but somehow scarves tied under the chin are always faintly suggestive of senility to you — you ' d never seen anybody but old women wear them until you came to college. Oh, well, suppose you do get a little wet just now. Maybe he won ' t notice it too much — the thoughtless wretch! At your destination you bid him a reluctant and somewhat suggestive an revoir and hurry inside. There are glass panes in the doors, and you catch a disillusioning glimpse of yourself as you pass, realizing in that split second that the shine in your eyes is equalled if not surpassed and even dimmed by the shine on your nose, and that in spite of your careful manipulation of the umbrella the moisture has made hay of your hair while the sun wasn ' t shining; what once was a mass of docile curls has been reduced to limp strands of hair looking quite undecided as to just what is expected of them anyway. Climbing the stairs you reflect rather grimly that the optimistic author of the little poem about It isn ' t raining rain to me couldn ' t have been a girl in need of a new permanent wave. Certainly by no flight of your own fancy will you ever mistake a deluge of violently reactionary H20 for a shower of daffodils. And you hope that today ' s chapel speaker won ' t mention the water supply, nor consider our near-empty reservoir a well of wit for his self-appointed exploitation. You hate rain! — Ruby Greenwell Night Message The sea told me: You ' ll be starved — You ' ll want — you ' ll nearly die with the aching, the reaching out and desiring You ' ll know the pain of too much disappointment, be lonely And go on reaching out and starving. The sea told me: You ' ll be content For moments dropped from the ceaseless rush of your never-ending quest You ' ll, for a moment, be quiet When there ' s caressing spring air and just a few stars You ' ll cease for a moment to wish and follow and desire You ' ll be almost happy. The sea told me. I listened and was sad I wanted, not sorrow and pain and too-great loneliness, But happiness, men ' s love, and contentment Yet knew without trying to know That the sea said the truth; That disappointment was the end of my wishing. But the sea receded And moon for a moment shone through a half-rift in clouds upon sea The wind softened And I was content — for a moment. — Ivol Godbey Pilgrim I have walked a thousand miles tonight, And my hungry soul is fed On the silver sheen the moon lays down; While around my tired feet A slumbrous stream stirs slowly. But come, the shadows beckon on, Though I ' ve walked a thousand miles tonight A thousand more I ' ll go. For my soul is a pilgrim soul. My feet are pilgrim feet. ■— Clarence Steinberger Verses I wonder why it is that we Who sagely watch the year ' s romances Are able instantly to see Intentions deep within the glances Received by them so heartlessly Who do not recognize advances. The moon Tonight is like A scimitar, cutting Through heavy clouds, a flashing blade Of light. — Margaret Steinorth Compliments of A I Capp EwKLTir ' ™ VARSITY BASKETBALL First Page: (top) Greene, Welch, (center) Stewart, Kirby, (bottom) Conch Clark, Hale, Powell. Second Page: (top) Bays, Harper, (center) Allen, Kilbournc, (bottom) Moore, Wilson, Mgr. Kennedy. X DOWN IN THE SPORTS CORRAL To those who have had their bit in the preserving of the sportsmanship brand of competition found in Mountaineer athletes on the hardwood, on the track and on the diamond ... to those athletes who gave for the joy of giving and kept the oP Berea spirit alive when hopes for a Blue and White victory were dim — this sports section of THE CHIMES is dedicated. With this in mind the oP Flash invites you and you and you to take a trip down to the sports corral this morning to see the Mountaineer in action. INTER-DORM TOUCH FOOTBALL PARADE For the first time since the days of Normal (eight years in fact) football returned to the Big Blue Campus, — this time, however, in the form of touch, with some six elevens representing Howard, Pear- sons, Guest House, Hunting, and Outside Dormitories. The championship went to the Basement Rats from Howard. Boasting gridiron feats of two wins and a tie, the Crimson Tide eleven from Pearsons and the Base- ment aggregation from Howard clashed in Berea ' s bowl classic with Howard winning out 6-2 on an aerial and land attack in the fourth period of play after being outplayed on the defensive and offensive by the Pearsons eleven in the earlier part of the game. CROSS COUNTRY After a long period of intensive training, the Berea College Harriers were entered in the Shamrock Athletic Club ' s Cross Country meet at Louisville. The meet was one of those Berea thinli =s will not for- get for a long, long while as Bob Felton, Senior, finished third; Rex Wesley, Sophomore, fourth; Everett Hurst, Sophomore, fifth; and George Scherrer, Senior and team captain, came through with a sixth. The harriers from Berea copped the team trophy of the Shawnee Park Turkey Day run to win their first and last meet of the season. SWIMMING Due to a diminishing water supoly, Seabury Pool early in November became an empty concrete bath- tub. Home-coming arrived and the water carnival planned for the Alumni and the inauguration guests was called off despite the hint from the press that such an event might be staged on the banks of Silver Creek. In February came the rain and the Murray tankmen. The Thoroughbreds found very little resistance from the Berea tankmen and triumphed 50-15. The setback at the hands of Murray was the first and last for the Big Blue mermen of ' 40 as they proceeded to capture their next three in a row, dropping Morehead by the wayside twice and the Eastern tankmen once. Representing Berea for the last time in intercollegiate competition were Robert Felton and David Headley, Seniors. TENNIS The outlook for a successful season for the lads who represent the Big Blue on the clay courts is rather cloudy at the present moment as loss of more than half of the ' 39 squad through graduation has put gaps on the racket roster that will be hard to fill. Gone from the courts are Brooks, Lay, Boyce, and Bra- shear. Returning for another session with the Mountaineers are four college juniors in the person of Harold Walters, Estill Jones, Charlie Hale, and Karl Warming, and upon the shoulders of these men rest all future hopes of the Mountaineers for the season just ahead. TRACK Since 1932, when a certain young man fresh from the graduating ranks of Springfield organized track at Berea, the Mountaineer cindermen have carried away five state championship cups. Victorious in ' 38, edged out by the Western thinlies in ' 39, Berea ' s trackmen get under way in ' 40 with a determ- ination that will have them climbing back on the band wagon with more front page copy when their first KIAC meet becomes a thing of yore. For the first time in some years, the Mountaineers take the field without the silver lining, and the places left vacant by Clark, Goforth, Roberts, and Watson are going to be hard to replace. The honor of co-captaining the Trackmen of ' 40 goes to Earle Powell and John Caudill, hurdle and dash man, and distance runner, respectively. FROSH BASKETBALL Front: McDowell, Gibson, B. Adams, Stewart, Hightower, Davidson Back: Coach Gunkler, Metcalf, Fort- ner, I. Adams, Dye, Mills SECONDARY BASKETBALL Front: Watkins, Harrison, Duff, Boyer, Reynolds, Sturgill Back: Moore, Tackett, Lockin, Roberts, Wilson, Keyser, Kilbourne, Coach Noll DORMITORY CHAMPS Front: Bensey, Jones. Clark, Parsons, Christian Back: Caudill, Harrison, Butler, Gil- bert, Wolfram L D CHAMPS Front: Stanley, Jones, Gabbard, Bailey, Hurst, Pearson, Cundiff Back: Beckler (Mgr.), Coleman, Turner, Spears, Meeks, Fiske ■A 4 JPk 1 Vt- ■■: ? K j u lira ;■■::■VARSITY TENNIS Front: Walters, Shutt, Mullins, Las- well, Jones Back: Coach Gunkler, Rosenbaum, Gray, Singleton, Greene SECONDARY TENNIS Blanton, Deaton, Sturgill, Longworth, Tinsley FROSH TRACK Cr U, Front: Kilbourne, Mill Reynolds Back: Coach Gunkler, Whitfield White, Cochran, Walters, Daniels Asst. Coach Wilson SECONDARY TRACK Front: Creech, A. Reynolds, Roberts, C. Hurst, Coffey, Trent, Collins, Clark, Martin, R. Hurst, Kiser Second: Baker, Coach Caudill, Luf- burrow, B. Davis, Cooper, Woods, Borde, H. Vaughn, E. Vaughn, W. Gibson, R. Gibson, Stewart Back: Moore, Watkins, Wilson, Bilotta, Jacobs, Tartar, Enix, Shupe, Mink, H. Davis, Helton, Kilbourne, Spur lock VARSITY TRACK Front: Powell, Caudill, Headley, Nickell, Howsmon, Adams, Crorner, Hurst, Wesley, Easterly Back: Coach Gunkler, Tully, Kirby, Bales, Cornette, Moore, Wilson, Davis, Pilson, Gilbert, Spears, Felton, Coach Clark i CLUB Front: Gilbert, Wilson, Scherrer, Tully, Shuler, Cromer, Coach Gunkler, Rickard. Second: Wesley, Mullins, Greene, Clark, Pilson, Caudill, Nickel Back: McGuire, Hurst, Headley, Wesley, Howsmon, Felton, Hensley, Walters VARSITY BASEBALL Front: Shue, Prewitt, Rickard, Webb, Kilgo, Davis Back: York, Patterson, Nestor, Coach Barnes, Harper, Brown, May L D BASEBALL Front: Clark, Kilbournc, Witten, Adams, Spurlock, Layne, Stewart Back: Abney, Pelfrey, Newman, Dav- idson, Norman, Dye, Collins, Coach Pauck SECONDARY BASEBALL Front: Riley, O. Shackleford, Trout- man, Crase, H. Shackleford, Black- burn, Holder, Caudill, Angell Back: Scott, Keyser, Smith, King, Coach Barnes, Skinner, Schraeder, Chitwood, Morrison. CROSS COUNTRY Hurst, Caudill, Felton, Wesley, Adams MEN ' S PHYS. ED. INSTRUCTORS Davis, Clark, Kubin, Wilson, Hulburt, Allen, Shutt, Jones, Moore, Tully, Reynolds, Welch, Bays, John, Kirby, Coach Clark, Coach Gunkler WOMEN ' S PHYS. ED. INSTRUCTORS Front: Lavender, Stafford, Cox, Clark, Eliz. Cameron, Evelyn Cameron, Steinorth Back: Miss Elliott, Puckett, Rice, Miss Bennett, Christian, Coleman, Miss Mc- Kinstry £ ?. ft © 1 M ■■■ ' V fan t • V 4 ■' VARSITY SWIMMING Front : Wesley, McClure, Maltby, Fillmore, Headley Second: Mgr. Gray, Schultz, Bradley, Cloyd, Andrews Back: Felton, Cliadwell, McGuire, Dickerson, Robertson FROSH SWIMMING Front: Thomas, Bowman, Hightower, F. Wesley, Clark, Metcalf Back: D. Headley (Coach), Benjamin, Gross, B. Headley, S. Wesley B. Headley, S. Wesley SECONDARY SWIMMING Front: Coach McGuire, P. Luf burrow, R. Lufburrow, Love, Lovely, Johnson Back: Ely, Keyser, Buchanan, Hopper, Noland. FOUNDATION SWIMMING Front: Guarch, Bochm, Els wick, Lit- ton, Longmire, Sikes, Peel, Coach Clarke Back: Combs, Lewis, York, Mc- Whorter, Conaway, Barker, Hedrick, Weekcs L D BASKETBALL Front: Stanton, Gilbert, Ballenger, Pridemore, Chappell, Ernest Second: Shepherd, Parker, Beck, Rob- erts, Fowler, Wheeler Back: Gilliam, Cook, Barnes, Taylor, Miss Elliott LIFE SAVING Front: Salyers, Stafford, McGuire, Wilson Second: Booth, Tanner, Cameron, Brannon Back: Miss Bennett, Wood, Clark, Bailey, Steinorth B CLUB Front: Weir, Cox, Puckett, Brenda, Roberts, McGuire Back: Salyers, Meredith, Tanner, Staf- ford WAA BOARD Front: Cameron, Miss McKinstry, Bettis, Leslie, Clark, Steinorth, Mere- dith Back : Puckett, Cope, Francis, Perry, Lavender, Tanner, Brenda, McGuire Foreground : Robbin f f I ff f f If 1 i; p |V J, If | |j | SENIOR BASKETBALL Salyers, Stafford, Jones, Eastham, Coach Bennett, Roberts, Kelley, Dudina JUNIOR BASKETBALL Front: Eliz. Cameron, Wilson, Paredes, Evelyn Cameron, Bettis Back: Moore, Douglass, Coach Elliott, Meredith, Puckett SOPHOMORE BASKETBALL Front: Francis, Hawkins, Cope, John- son, R. Holder Second: M. Holder, Thompson, Laven- der, Perry, McDaniel, Steinorth Back: Coach Bennett, Crase, Howard, Wheeler, Cox FRESHMAN BASKETBALL Front: Sanders, Bailey, Coffey, Chris- tian, Miller, Little, Hice Second: Mantooth, Robinson, Lamb, Yavecchia, Hewitt, Lester Back: Pratt, Peters, Pilson, Scott, Propps, Coach Elliott MAY COURT BETTY RIVENBURG PIETERTJE SMITS HAZEL PATTON CHRISTINE EASTHAM ELIZABETH WOOD BILLIE BOOTH RACHEL GREEN SUSAN ATCHLEY ANN SAYLOR UPPER DIVISION J U N I o Dorothy Prince, Secretary Thelma Scott, Chmn. Project Comm. Guy Wesley, Treasurer Howard Pilson, President Preston Mitchell, Vice-Pres. N I Rachel Green, Vice-President Cicil McKinney, President Myrtle Lee Greene, Sec ' y.-Trc.s. HI B. P. ALLEN Bcrea, Ky. WALTER ALLISON Woodville, Ala. LYNN ANDERSON Praise, Ky. BERNICE ANGEL . Paint Fork, N.C. __ __ CHARLOTTE ANGELL _. ._ Dundee, 111. _ _ LUTHER ATKINSON Clarkrange, Tcnn. ANNABEL AVERY Morganton, N.C. CLEO BOWIE .. _ Nimmons, S.C. SHONG LIN BOW _ East Cleveland, Ohio MADGE BETTIS _ . Dandridge, Term. ELIZABETH BAXTER Huntsville, Ala. CHARLEY BAILEY Caruer, Ky. BURL BACK - _ Eubank, Ky. LEWIS AYRES . . La Follette, Tenn. fll 0 O EMMA LEE BRANNON . Parcoal, W.Va. EMMA BRENDA Crab Orchard, Ky. SUE BROOKS . . Grecnevillc, Tenn. RALPH BROWN _ . Dandridge, Tenn. BUD BROWN - - Barnardsvillc, N.C. . BILLIE BURCHFIELD . _ Bluefield, W.Va. JESS BURDEN - .- Crab Orchard, Tenn. ELIZABETH CAMERON Burnside, Ky. CLAYBORNE CAMPBELL Confluence, Ky. MARION CART ER Jonesville, Va. ARCH CLARK Berca, Ky. WALTER CLARKE New York, N.Y. NELL CLICK Huntington, W.Va. — RICHARD COLE Russell, Ky. VERVA COLEMAN _ _ Berea, Ky. WINIFRED CROCKETT North Tazewell, V.i. REED CROMER London, Ky. GLENDON CROW Lynn, Ala. CLINTON CUNDIFF Faubush, Ky. LEONARD DAMRON Catlettsburg, Ky. — — — FRED DAVIS Arden, N.C. BETTY ELMORE Crossville, Tenn. PAULINE ELLIOT Middlesburg, Ky. WAYNE EISENHOUR Keyser, W.Va. ELMER DUNCAN - - Newcomb, Tenn. PHYLLIS DOUGLASS Athens, Tenn. WELLINGTON DOMAS _ - Chicago, 111. PATTY GRAY DINGUS . Dungannon, Va. TOM FARRIS _ Yancey, Ky. MARGARET GRIMES - - Asheville, N.C. GLENDON GABBARD Berea, Ky. EVELYN GIPSON Clairfield, Tenn. DOROTHY GREEN . _ Ricetown, Ky. JOSEPH GREENE _ - B lg Stone Gap, Va. WILLIAM HARDIMAN Pearisburg, Va. PHILIP HARRISON _ . Berea, Ky. BENNIE HART _ _ Dandridge, Tenn. O. M. HARTSELL Limestone, Tenn. CORNELIA HAYNES Chattanooga, Tenn. __ _ EMERY HENSLEY Island City, Ky. ™ FELIX HENSLEY Causey, Ky. — MARGARET HILL Bean Station, Tenn. HMBMaHHI HI JOHN HOWSMON Dayton, Ohio BETTY HUMPHREYS Wytheville, Va. VIRGINIA HUNT ___ . Paris, Ky. DON HICKS . Windy, Ky. _ _ WILEY JARRELL Dayton, Va. _ i __ _ i __ SYLVIA JENNINGS Fairview, Va. RALPH JOHN _ Parkersburg, W.Va. LOUISE KINGSLEY _ . Lakewood, Ohio ELIZABETH KESSEL . . Moorefield, W.Va. JANIS KENNEDY . Norton, Va. ESTILL JONES - _ Berea, Ky. ANNE JONES Oneida, Tenn. LOIS JOHNSON _ Auxier, Ky. ERMON FAYE JOHNSON _ ._ Paris, Ark. MARGARET KRAYBILL _.__ Montgomery, W.Va. LEON LACKEY . . Kimball, W.Va. — — DELLA ROSE LANG . - Russell, Ky. _ __ _ OTHAN LITTLEJOHN Geraldin, Ala. ROY LYELL ._ Lyle, Tenn. — — RAYMOND McCAMY Guntersville, Ala. L. T. McCLURE Fort Gay, W.Va. ANNETTE McCOMMACK . . Blue Jay, W.Va. WILLIAM McCREARY Corbin, Ky. EILEEN McDANIEL Lewisburg, W.Va. JOHN McDOWELL West Chester, Iowa — — — WAYNE McLAIN Statesville, N.C. — — — . ___ HUGH MCLAUGHLIN Lewisburg, W.Va. _ ALICE MALSTROM Chattanooga, Tenn. ROBERT MASON Bcrnstadt, Ky. THELMA MEREDITH Elk Valley, Tenn. FAY MILLS Manchester, Ky. PRESTON MITCHELL Elk Creek, Va. - — FRANCES MOORE Harriman, Tenn. — - — HUBERT MOORE Altro, Ky. BONNIE MORFORD Burlington, Iowa J. T. PREWITT Lancaster, Ky. HOWARD PILSON Stuart, Va. LEONA PATTERSON Dandridge, Tenn. HELEN PAREDES Milford, Mich. ERNEST NESTOR Lookout, Ky. JACK MULLINS _. ___ Cincinnati, Ohi, VIRGINIA MORTON Taylor, Ky. JAMES PRICE Hayesville, N.C. _ DOROTHY PRINCE Landrum, S.C. ANITA PUCKETT Smithvillc, Tenn. _ _ m. FRANCIS QUEEN Ashland, Ky. CEREDO REED _ - Lackey, Ky. AGNES REEVES .. ._ Spring Creek, N.C. THEODORE RICE _. ._ Paintsville, Ky. MARIE RIGSBY Wildic, Ky. THELMA SCOTT Sturgis, Ky. WILLIAM SEAY Asheville, N.C. GLENN SHOUN La Follette, Tenn. KYLE SHOWN Knoxville, Tenn. — — — — EDWARD SHULER Appalachia, Va. JAMES SKEEN Talbott, Tenn. ANN SMITH Russell, Ky. HAL SMITH Bristol, Tenn. ALICE STEVENS Cummington, Mass. OGDEN STEWART Langley, Ky. - — KATHARINE STITH Ashland, Ky. ____ __ _ DOROTHY STRAIT Catlettsburg, Ky. LEWIS SUTTON Crab Orchard, Ky. JACK WALTERS Davis, W.Va. CHARLOTTE VANDIVER Burlington, W.Va. JOSEPH THOMPSON Wayne, W.Va. RUTH THOMAS Ashland, Ky. HAROLD WALTERS Davis, W.Va. MARGARET WASHBURN— Bulape, Belgian Congo CHARLES WELCH _ _ Glen Rogers, W.Va. GUY WESLEY Lynch, Ky JUNE WHITE Monticello, Ky. WILLIAM WHITE Burning Springs, Ky. BERYL WILSON Baldcreek, N.C. KATHRYN WILSON Benton, Tenn. — ■— HOWARD WRIGHT Derby, Ohio . ——o— — __ WOODROW YOUNG — Micaville, North Carolina _ _ _ ELFRED ZIMMERMAN Crag, W.Va. 9tiX : ? ' jrp m ■T¥?«r, J, - - jte ■2 w -• ' .- ? ®g - . ' • AT GRADUATION TIME THE WORLD EXCUSES SENIORS EOR BEING A BIT SENTIMENTAL. THE SENIORS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED FORTY, TOO, DELIGHT IN MUSINGS AND RETROSPECTIONS. OUR TRANSITION FROM AN UNDERGRADUATE INTO AN ALUMNUS PROCEEDS UNRESISTED, VIRGINIA ENGLE, Library Science MARY ELA, Art KEARNEY ROARK ADAMS, Leatha, Ky. A.B., Biology LYDIA VIRGINIA ALEXANDER, Bybee, Ky. B.S., Home Economics JOANNA CATHARINE ARTHUR, Flat Lick, Ky. A.B., Home Economics SUSAN BEULAH ATCHLEY, Lenoir City, Tenn. A.B., English CHARLES CARSON AUXIER, Superior, W.Va. A.B., Economics HAGER WILGIS BACH, Mt. Sterling, Ky. A.B., History and Political Science LUOILLE BAIRD, Middletown, Ohio A.B., English JOHN D FELTNER BAKER, Confluence, Ky. A.B., English CLYDE BENSEY, Red Jacket, W.Va. A.B., Physics ROBERT ROGERS BLAKE, Jamestown, Tenn. A.B., Psychology EXCEPT FOR SOME STRANGE RE EMILY ANN SMITH, English EARL W. BLANK, English MAY B. SMITH, English LOTTA BELL McCONNELL, Gate City, Va. A.B., History and Political Science BILLIE BOOTH, Carlisle, Ky. B.S., Home Economics WILDA RUTHE BOYD, Trinity, Ky. A.B., History and Political Science DOROTHY ELLEN BROWN, Lynch, Ky. A.B., History and Political Science FRED W. BROWN, Black Mountain, N.C. A. B., Chemistry HARRY LEE BUTLER, Tazewell, Va. A.B., Chemistry HARRY RICHARD CALLISON, Beard, W.Va. B.S., Agriculture WILLARD GIBSON CAMPBELL, Lerose, Ky. B.S., Agriculture OSCAR F. CANNADAY, JR., Ferrum, Va. A.B., Mathematics HELEN CARLOCK, Alpine, Tenn. A.B., English KERMIT RALPH CASSADY, Petersburg, W.V: A.B., Philosophy SISTANCE WITHIN THE MAN OR WOMAN. MORE THAN A DIVERSION A WEAK ALL, WE SENIORS K (M1 MARY BROOKS, Home Economics EUNICE TRUE, Home Economics AGNES ASPNES, Home Economics BETTY ANNIECE CHAMBERS, Huntsville, Ala., B.S., Home Economics LUTHER MELVIN CHANEY, Bloss, Ky., A.B., Economics KENNETH GRANTLAND CHRISTIAN, Cullman, Ala., A.B., Chemistry HELEN HICKOK COOPER, Thorpe, W.Va., B.S., Home Economics GEORGE DELBERT CORDER, Slavans, Ky., B.S., Agriculture FLORA MAE COX, Yancey, Ky., A.B., Education LANDON BURNES COX, Pineville, W.Va., A.B., History and Pol. Sc. ELEANOR BENNING DAVIS, Barbourville, Ky., A.B., English JAMES JEFFERSON DAVIS, Connelly Springs, N.C., A.B., Chemistry H - - - OS = OB - s e m MAGNETIC GRIP — WHICH CLINGS ANB TENBS IIIAT JUNE THE THIRD MUST MARK A POINT OE DISINTEGRATION OF MOST LEE F. CRIPPEN, History and Political Science E. TAYLOR PARKS, History and Political Science JULIA F ALLEN, History WILLIAM WELDON DAVIS, Fairview, N. C. B.S., Agriculture JAMES ROY DEATON, Wolf Coal, Ky. B.S., Agriculture EMMETT URCEY DILLARD, Rabun Gap, Ga. B.S., Agriculture INA FAIRE DODSON, Monticello, Ky. A.B., Education ALBERT H. H. DORSEY, Cleveland, Ga. B.S., Agriculture VERA L. DUDINA, Vancouver, British Columbia A.B., English JULIA CHRISTINE EASTHAM, Lake City, Lla. A.B., History and Political Science ERNIE JANES ENGLAND, Toria, Ky. A.B., Economics KERN EUTSLER, Edinburg, Va. A.B., Philosophy ROBERT ALANSON FELTON, Parsons, W. Va. B.S., Agriculture jrkJSk OF OUR REREA EXPERIENCES SAVE AS THEY ARE NOURISHED l OUR ALBERT J. CHIDESTER, Education THOMAS A. HENDRICKS, Education GEORGE WILLIAM FIELDER, Berea, Ky. A.B., Economics THURLOW SIMMS GASH, Horse Shoe, N.C. B.S., Agriculture JOSEPH C. GILBERT, Berea, Ky. B.S., Agriculture VIVIAN FRANCES GOFF, Bryantsville, Ky. A.B., History and Political Science BILL JOE GRAY, Stone, Ky. A.B., Chemistry RACHEL LOUISE GREEN, Rainelle, W.Va. B.S., Home Economics MYRTLE LEE GREENE, Boyd ' s Creek, Tenn. B.S., Home Economics LUTHER LEWIS GREGORY t Hima, Ky. A.B., History and Political Science LENA ETHEL GUEST, Greer, S.C. A.B., English HELTON HALE, Cripple Creek, Va. A.B., Chemistry EMORY; ROMANTICISTS B B S THOMAS A. HENDRICKS, Dean of U.D. Men JULIA F. ALLEN, Dean of U.D. Women KATHARINE TRUE, Dean of L.D. Women CHARLES N. SHUTT, Dean of L.D. Men B H e ss si = B EARL FRANKLIN HAYS, McKee, Ky., B.S., Agriculture BERCHIN HAYES HELTON, Crane Nest, Ky., B.S.. Agriculture MAYME EDNA HENSLEY, Berea, Ky., A.B., French RUTH ELIZABETH HERD, Middlesboro, Ky., A.B., Music LULA ARNETTE HIGGINS. Farmers, Ky., A.B., Home Economic MARY C. HILL, Bean Station, Tenn., A.B., Mathematics BERNIECE TERRY HISER, Bulan, Ky., A.B., English WILLIAM GAITHER HOUSTON, Spear, N.C., B.S., Agriculture LYMAN CLINTON HURLEY, Berea, Ky., A.B., Economics Till: REREA CAMPUS. WE LIKE TO DWELL ON FIRST RALPH RIGBY, Director, Music Department JANE MEEK, Piano GLADYS JAMESON, Piano DOROTHY HALL, Violin WILLIAM N. HURLEY, Berea, Ky., A.B., Physics CHARLES EVANS JARVIS, Mars Hill, N.C., B.S., Agriculture MARY ELLEN JOHNSON, Paint Lick, Ky., A.B., Education WILLIAM ARBOR JONES, Richmond, Ky., A.B., History and Political Science MARY RUTH JONES, East Lynn, W.Va., A.B., Chemistry NELLIE M. JONES, Asheville, N.C., A.B., History NEOMA BELLE JONES, Williamsfield, Ohio, B.S., Home Economics RUBY MERYL JONES, East Lynn, W.Va., A.B., Home Economics LOIS MILDRED KELLEY, Hazard, Ky., A.B., English IMPRESSIONS THE CLIMB UP ADAMS STREET ON A BURNING HOT PATRICIA MAHON, Voice and Piano CATHARINE WOLFE, Piano ROLF HOVEY, Public School Music and Piano CELIA KYSELA, Piano and Harmony GRACE ELEANOR KILBOURNE, Berca, Ky., A.B., Political Science RUTH MAY KILBOURNE, Berea, Ky., A.B., Home Economics LEE ELLIS KILGO, Logan, Ala., B.S., Agriculture LORA ANNE RISER, Fremont, Va., B.S., Home Economics FRANK KUBIN, New York, N.Y., A.B., Sociology MARY LUCILLE LAWSON, Elk Valley, Tenn., A.B., Home Economics NELLIE MARIE LESLIE, Estill, Ky„ A.B., Home Economics CARL C. LIVESAY, Blackwater, Va., A.B., History JOHN BARD MCALLISTER, Berea, Ky., A.B., Biology DAY IN SEPTEMBER OF THIRTY SIX . . . PRESIDENT RETCHIIVS ' IMMORTAL CHARLES S. PRICE, Agriculture MALCOLM H. KERR, Agriculture HOWARD B. MONIER, Agriculture HERMAN P. McDONALD, Whitley City, Ky., B.S., Agriculture MARY IRENE PIERATT, Bonny, Ky., A.B., Education CARMEN VIRGINIA McDONOUGH, Jenkins, Ky., A.B., Political Science ROBERT BARCLAY McGHEE, Bristol, Tenn., A.B., Biology MARY HELEN McGUIRE, Beittyville, Ky., A.B., Home Economics CECIL CLAUDE McKINNEY, Amigo, W.Va., A.B., Economics VIRGINIA RUTH McNEIL, Jonesville, Va., B.S., Home Economics C. B. MARCUM, Berea, Ky., (Special) EDDIE JEWELL MARTIN, Salvisa, Ky., A.B.. History and Political Science [ETTIE CLEON MAYO, Hobbs Island, Alabama, B.S., Home Economics a g o - SB H S sa H 9 - — i = w = BY THEM ' DESCRIPTION OF THE ' PALACE BEAUTIFUL ' sc - OS H H % OS M Efi = ETH HUNTINGTON ' S ADDRESS ON HOMESICKNESS THE FIRST F. A. STEWART, Agriculture FEASTER WOLFORD, Agriculture ROBERT HATTON MASSEY, Bernice, Ky. A.B., Economics ROBERT GORDON MENEFEE, Ashland, Ky. A.B., Economics WINNIE COOKE MILLER, Martel, Tenn. A.B., Home Economics E. OHMER MILTON, JR., Roanoke, Va. A.B., Psychology JOSEPH A. MORRIS, Black Mountain, N.C. A.B., History and Political Science CHRISTINE McKENZIE MULLINS, Mt. Vernon, Ky. A.B., Sociology LORENA HOWARD MUNCY, Bcrea, Ky. A.B., English JAMES GRANT NEWMAN, Island City, Ky. A.B., Economics WILLIAM E. NICKELL, Hazel Green, Ky. A. B., Physics OGDEN OLDFIELD, Mize Ky. A.B., Geology CARRIE CARMEN OWENS, Praise, Ky. A.B., Education HOMECOMING . . .THE KEOROFF QUARTET THE TRIP HOME ON A GREY- WALTER MUELDER, Philosophy and Bible J. W. HATCHER, Sociology LAWRENCE BAKER, Psychology ERNEST REID PARKER, Cherryvilie, N.C. A.B., History HAZEL L. PARKER, Asheville, N.C. A.B., History and Political Science WILLIAM EDWIN PARSONS, Berca, Ky. B.S , Agriculture JOHN A PATTEN, Hueysvillc, Ky. A.B., Biology WALTER ROGER PATTERSON, Spring City, Tcnn. A.B., History and Political Science HAZEL PATTON, Combs, Ky. A.B., Education ORIN CRAIG PETERS, Island City, Ky. B.S., Agriculture VIRGINIA ANNABELLE PETERS, Mt. Morris, Pa. B.S., Home Economics MARGARET PEZZAROSSI, Lackey, Ky. B.S., Home Economics MILDRED ALICE PHILLIPS, Berea, Ky. A.B., Philosophy JI D THE FIRST XMAS - 9 r M 5 RECTOR HARDIN, Economics ALBERT G. WEIDLER, Economics 50 EARL VAN POWELL, Elkhorn City, Ky.. A.B., History and Political Science , ™ ROBERT BRUCE RADER, Egypt, Ky., A.B., Historv and Political Science B  JEAN MARIE REED, Welch, W.Va., A.B., English S ROY LEE REYNOLDS, Calhoun, Ga., A.B., Economics 5 ■J ELMER OWEN RICKARD, Weeksbury, Ky., A.B., History and Political Science H S3 ELIZABETH E. RIVENBURG, Argusville, N.D., A.B., Sociology GRACE ALICE ROBERTS, Asheville, N.C., A.B., Music H ™ RUTH MAC ROBERTS, Monroe, Va., A.B., Education 2 D. B. ROBERTSON, Gaffney, S.C., A.B., Philosophy B jIlo,  A NEW PRESIDENT SUCCEEDS HIS FATHER WILLIAM R. HUTCHERSON, Mathematics WALDEMAR NOLL, Physics KATHLEEN A. RUDDLE, Somerset, Ky. A.B., English OMA ROSELLA SALYERS, Coeburn, Va. A.B., English ANNA BRADLEY SAYLOR, Loyall, Ky. A.B., History and Political Science GEORGE HILSON SCHERRER, Dayton, Ohio A.B., Physics HUGH ANDERSON SCOTT, Covington, Va. A.B., English JOHN MARSHALL SHELLEY, Susie, Ky. B.S., Agriculture DALBERT CLARENCE SHERMAN, Lesbos, Ky. B.S., Agriculture FRED SHORT, Asco, W.Va. A.B., Economics PERCY HOWARD SHUE, Staunton, Va. A.B., English EMILY RUTH SILER, Warrenton, Ga. A.B., English DR. i: VI L DEAN BOWERSOX RETIRE; a magnificent building spbin JULIAN H. CAPPS, Chemistry WILBUR G. BURROUGHS, Geology JOHN S. BANGSON, Biology HURSHAI. J. SKAGGS, Terryville, Ky. B.S., Agriculture PIETERTJE SMITS, Paris, Ky. A.B., Home Economics EMMA LINDA SNODDY, Ashland, Ky. A.B., Music GRAHAM V. SOMERS, Elkin, N.C. A.B., Mathematics MARY ELIZABETH SPARKS, Cedar Bluff, Va. A.B., Home Economics GENEVA ALICE STAFFORD, Maryville, Tc.in. A.B., Home Economics JACK STEVENS, Candler, N.C. A.B., Chemistry RUTH SULLIVAN, Decatur, Ala. B.S., Home Economics EDITH KAY SUTTON, Crab Orchard, Ky. A.B., Economics MARY OLA TANNER, Somerset, Ky. A.B., English UT OF OLD TENNIS COURTS . . . TIIE OLD ORDKIt CHANGES. YES, WE ELIZABETH RICHARDSON, French CHARLES E. PAUCK, German CHARLOTTE LUDLUM, Ancient Languages MARGARET CHAPIN, French MILDRED SUSAN TINSLEY, Berea, Ky., B.S., Home Economic? RAYMOND WILSON TRAIL, Jenkins, Ky., A.B., Economics RANDOLPH R. TULLY, East Rainelle, W.Va., A.B., Music [MOGENE M. WALL, Eubank, Ky., A.B., Home Economics GENEVA HELEN WALTER, Nickell, Ky., B.S., Home Economics NANNIE BESS WARD, Decatur, Tenn., A.B., Home Economics VERNARD HUGHES WEBB, Jenkins, Ky., A.B., Geology CAROLYN BLANCHE WEIR, Barlow, Ohio, A.B., Biology DAN WESLEY, Science Hill, Ky., A.B., Sociology ■GETHER THE CLASS OF ' O H 2. EC - GS o ' - - - MRS. REYNOLDS, THE SWEETHEART OF EVERY SEIVIOR ROY AND THE MOST HONORARLE MEMRER OF OCR GRADUATING CLASS. WE WISH TO EXPRESS OUR SINCEREST REGRETS THAT SHE IS LEAVING REREA. AND OUR KEENEST APPRECIATION FOR ALL HER PATIENT UNDERSTANDING. MRS. LILLIE B. REYNOLDS, Secretary, U.D. MARY LOUISE WEST, Berea, Ky. A.B., Education LAURELLA WILLIAMS, Frenchburg, Ky. A.B., Education DOROTHY MINERVA WILSON, Blacksburg, S.C. A.B., Education FLORINE LOGAN WILSON, Forest City, N.C. A.B., Music GLENN ASTOR WILSON, Eversole, Ky. B.S., Agriculture ALBERT FRANK WOLFRAM, Berea, Ky. A.B., Mathematics ELIZABETH EARLE WOOD, Asheville, N.C. A.B., Biology JAMES EMMITT WOODY, Pittsburg, Ky. B.S., Agriculture ARTHUR WRIGHT, Jenkins, Ky. A.B., English EUGENE RALPH W ' YATT, Otas, Kentucky A.B., Mathematics O. C. MORRISON IN MEMORIAM SENIOR BIOGRAPHIES (Abbreviations: AZ, Alpha Zeta Literary Society; PD, Phi Delta Lit. Soc; CE, Christian Endeavor; PAF, Public Affairs Forum; WAA, Women ' s Athletic Association; UD, Upper Division; LD, Lower Division) ADAMS, KEARNEY ROARK: Pi Alpha, 2,3,4, Vice-Pres., 4; First Aid; Bible Prize. Labor: Grounds, Furniture Dept., Janitor, Foundation School, Library, College Biology Dept. ALEXANDER, LYDIA VIRGINIA: YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4. Labor: Candy Kitchen (Dec- orating), Boarding Hall (Head Dish Girl). ARTHUR, JOANNA CATHARINE: YWCA, 1,2,3,4; French Club, 2,3; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4. Labor: Boarding Hall, Pre- school, Hospital, President ' s Home. ATCHLEY, SUSAN BEULAH: YWCA, 1,2; French Club, 1,2,3; Pi Epsilon Pi, 1; Folk Club, 2; Basketball, 3. Labor: Treasurer ' s Office, Boarding Hall, Secretary ' s Office. AUXIER, CHARLES CARSON: Dramatics, 1,2,; International Relations Club, 1; French Club, 1,2, Pres., 2; Bus. Mgr. Pinnacle Staff, 2; AZ, 1,2,3,4; Editor, Wallpaper, 4; YMCA, 1,2,3,4, Cabinet, 2, President, 3,4; Chairman, Southeastern Field Council, 4; Member, Southern Economics Commission, 3,4; State Student Y President, 3; Tau Kappa Alpha, 3,4; UD Senate, 3,4, Chairman, 4; Student Board of Governors, 4. Labor: Registrar ' s Office, YMCA President. BACH, HAGER WILGIS: International Relations Club; Van- guards; PAF; AZ; YMCA. Labor: Labor Office. (336 W. Main St.) BAIRD, LUCILLE: Speech Prize, Bible Prize; Hockey, 1; Tennis, 1; Basketball, 1,2; Track, 1; Photography Club, 2; Dramatic Club, 2,3; French Club, 1,2; Outing Club, 1,2; YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Archery, 1,2; Pi Epsilon Pi, 2; Folk Club, 1,2; Chapel Choir, 2. Labor: Foundation School Office. (2 809 Central Ave.) BAKER, JOHN D FELTNER: YMCA, 1,2,3; PD, 1,2,3,4, Cor- responding Sec ' y., 3, President, 4; International Relations Club, 2,3; Ornithological Society, 3; Dramatics Club, 3. Labor: Build- ing Maintenance Dept., Janitor. BENSEY, CLYDE: Sigma Pi Sigma, 3,4, Sec ' y., 4; Pi Alpha, 3,4, Sec ' y., 4; Rho Delta, 1,2,3,4; YMCA, 1,2,3,4; Baseball, 1; Dorm. Basketball, 2,3,4, Champs, 4; Dorm. Football, 4. Labor: Bakery, Janitor, Waiter, Sales Promotion, Physics Dept. (Lab. Asst.) BLAKE, ROBERT ROGERS: YMCA, 1,2,3,4, College Treas., 2, General Treas., 3,4; Dramatic Club, 1,2; Track, 1,2,3; Pres. Fresh- man Class, 1; Tennis, 4; Cross Country, 1,2; B Club, 2,3,4; International Relations Club, 1,2, Gen. Treas., Ohio Valley Conf. of IR Clubs. Labor: Janitor, Monitor, Dorm. Supply, Bus. Mgrs. Office. BOOTH, BILLIE: Freshman Choir, 1; Varsity Women ' s Glee Club, 3,4; Dramatic Club, 1; YWCA; Woman ' s House Govt. Assoc, 2; Life Saving. Labor: Hospital, Home Ec. Dept. BOYD, WILDA RUTHE: International Relations Club, 1,2,3; YWCA, 1,2,3,4; PAF, 4; Basketball, 1,2,3; Kappa Gamma, 1; Tennis, 2,3. Labor: Fireside Industries, Boarding Hall. BROWN, DOROTHY ELLEN: YWCA, 1,2,3,4; PAF, 3,4; UD Sunday School, 4. Labor: Registrar ' s Office. BROWN, FRED W., JR.: Varsity Men ' s Glee Club, 2,3; Quartet, 3; Union Church Choir, 1,2; YMCA, 1,2,3,4; Dramatic Club, 1; International Relations Club, 2; Dorm. Football, 4. Labor: Com- mons, Library, U.D. Office. (Route No 1) BUTLER, HARRY LEE: Leader, Royal Collegians, 4; Collegiate Orchestra, 1,2,3. Labor: Chemistry Dept. CAMPBELL, WILLARD GIBSON: Agricultural Union, 1,2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Rho Delta, 2,3,4. Labor: Dairy, Janitor. CANNADAY, OSCAR F., JR.: Ferrum Junior College, 1,2; Dra- matic Club, 3,4; AZ, 3,4; CE, 4. Labor: Boarding Hall, Boone Tavern, Janitor. CASSADY, KERMIT RALPH: Shenandoah College, 1,2; YMCA, 3,4; Phi Delta, 3,4. Labor: Maintenance Dept., Janitor. CARLOCK, HELEN: YWCA, 1,2,3; International Relations Club, 1; French Club, 2; Twenty Writers Club, 2,3,4, Sec ' y., 4; UD Sunday School, 4. Labor: Boarding Hall, Pre-School, Janitor, Library. CAUDILL, JOHN HENRY: Track, 1,2,3,4, Captain, 1,4; Cross Country, 1,2,3,4, Captain, 2. Labor: Boarding Hall, Physical Ed. Dept., Boone Tavern, Grounds. CHAMBERS, BETTY ANNIECE: Athens College for Women, 1; George Peabody College, Summer, 3; Outing Club, 2; YWCA, 2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4;. Home Ec. Club, 4, Reporter, 4. Labor: Faculty Waitress, Candy Kitchen Office. (Route No. 2) CHANEY, LUTHER MELVIN: Varsity Men ' s Glee Club, 3,4; Dramatics Club, 1,2,3,4; Alpha Psi Omega; Oratorical Contest, 1, Third Place, Berea Contest. Labor: Treasurer ' s Office, Secretary ' s Office, Monitor. CHRISTIAN, KENNETH GRANTLAND: University of Ala- bama; Freshman Basketball; Dorm. Basketball, 2,4; AZ; Pi Alpha, President, 4. Labor: Boone Tavern, Boarding Hall, Janitor, Moni- tor. COOPER, HELEN HICKOK: Pi Epsilon Pi, 1; YWCA, 1.2,3,4; Outlying SS Work, 3; Folk Club, 2; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Ag- Home Ec. Club 3,4, Treas., 4. Labor: Sewing Dept., Waitress, Emery Office. CORDER, GEORGE DELBERT: YMCA; Rho Delta; Ag. Union; CE. Labor: Garden, Boone Tavern, Dairy. COX, FLORA MAE: Monitor Labor Award, 2; WAA, 1,2,3,4; Basketball, 1,2,3, Mgr., 2; B Club, 3,4; Education Club, 4; Folk Club, 2,3,4, Sec ' y. -Treas., 4. Labor: Fireside Industries, Monitor, Gift Shop, Gym Instructor. COX, LANDON BURNES: YMCA, 1,2,3,4; Track, 1,2,3,4; Phi Delta, 2,3,4; Dramatics Club, 4; International Relations, 2,3. DAVIS, ELEANOR BENNING: YWCA; Folk Club; Alpha Pi Phi, 1; Sales Dept., Chimes Staff, 4. Labor: Extension Dept., Library. DAVIS, JAMES JEFFERSON: College Orchestra, 1,2,3,4; Band, 1,2,3; Collegiate Union Orchestra, 1,2,3; Royal Collegians, 4; Track, 1,2,3,4; Varsity Men ' s Glee Club, 4; Pi Alpha; Delta Phi Alpha, President, 3; Gym Team, 4; Class Vice-President, 3. Labor: Heat and Power, Chemistry Lab. Instructor, Instructor, Men ' s Physical Ed. Dept. DAVIS, WILLIAM WELDON: Ag. Union, 1,2,3,4; Dramatic Club, 1,2,3; Ag-Home Ec, 3. Labor: Dairy, Heat and Power, LD Office, Poultry Farm, Industrial Arts Lab. DEATON, JAMES ROY: Lees Junior College, 1; Georgetown College; Eastern State Teachers College; Ag. Union, 3,4; Ag-Home Ec, 3,4; PD, 3,4, Vice-Pres., 4. Labor: Garden, Grounds, Com- mons, Boarding Hall Waiter, Janitor, Creamery, Head Janitor. DODSON, INA FAIRE: Education Club, 3,4, President, 4; PAF, 4; YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Life Saving, 3; WAA, 2,3; Student Cooper- ative, 2,3,4; Outing Club, 2. (Route No. 1) DUDINA, VERA LARIVONAVNA: Basketball, 1,2,4; Dramatics Club, 1,2; Women ' s Student Council, 2, Sec ' WAA, Sec ' y., 2; International Relations Club, 1,2; Varsity Women ' s Glee Club, ' 4; Harmonia, 3,4; Track, 1,2; Life Saving, 1,2. Labor: Labor Office ' Women ' s Swimming. (2127 E. 57th Ave.) EASTHAM, JULIA CHRISTINE: Pi Epsilon Pi, 1,2; Dramatics Club, 1,2,3,4; Basketball, 2,4; YWCA, 2,3,4, Sec ' y.-Treas., 3; Board of Governors, 3,4, Sec ' y., 3,4; PAF, 4. Labor: Boarding Hall Office, UD Dean ' s Office. (27 Fourth St ) ENGLAND, ERNIE JANES: YMCA, 1,2,3,4; International Re- lations, 1,2,3; PAF, 4; Phi Delta, 1,2,3,4, Vice-Pres Pres 4 Literary Board, 3; UD Social Comm., 3; UD Finance Comm. ' , 4; Class President, 3. Labor: College Store, Monitor EUTSLER, RALPH KERN: Tea-Drinker; Winner State Peace Oratorical Contest, 3; YMCA, 1,2,3,4; AZ, 1,2, Pres., 2- Tau Kappa Alpha, 2,3,4, Pres., 4; 2nd Place in Midwestern ' TKA Convention After-Dinner Speaking Contest, 2; Delta Phi Alpha, 3,4; Fellowship of Reconciliation, 3,4; Debate, 3; PAF, 4- Van- guards, 4. Labor: Sec ' y. ' s Office, Dept. of Philosophy and ' Bible. FELTON, ROBERT ALANSON: Track, 1,2,3,4; Cross Country 1,2,4; Swimming, 1,2,3, Captain, 4; Dramatics Club, 1,2 3- Ag ' Union, 1,2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec, 3,4; Photography Club, 4- Phi Delta, 4; B Club, 2,3,4; Freshman Chapel Choir, 1. Labor- Dairy, Jr. High Library, Creamery, Gym Instructor, Farm, Biology Dept. Business Staff (Advertising), The Chimes, 4. Labor: Library, Maintenance, UD Office. FIELDER, GEORGE WILLIAM: Eastern State Teachers College, 3. Labor: Treasurer ' s Office. GASH. THURLOW SIMMS; Brevard College, 1,2; Ag. Union, 2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 2,3,4; YMCA, 2,3,4; Folk Club, 2. Labor: Chemistry Lab., Grounds, Foundation School Science, Boarding Hall. GILBERT, JOSEPH C, JR.: Ag. Union, 2,3,4, Pres., 4; AZ, 3,4, Pres., 4, Sgt.-at-Arms, 4; Dramatics, 2,3; YMCA, 1,2; Cheer- leader, 3,4; Dorm. Basketball Champs, 4; Track, 1, Speedball, 2; GOFF, VIVIAN FRANCES: Dramatics Club, 1,2; Folk Club, 2,3,4, President, 4; Home Ec. Club, 3; YWCA, 1,2,3,4. Labor: Foundation School Reading Room, Candy Kitchen Office. (715 West Main Street. GRAY, BILL JOE: Alpha Zeta, 1,2,3,4, Pres., 4; Swimming Team Manager, 4; Tennis, 4. Labor: Bakery, Boarding Hall Waiter, Janitor, College Store. GREEN, RACHEL LOUISE: University of Tennessee, summer; YWCA, 1,2,3,4, Outlying Work Chairman, 2, Social Chmn., 3; Basketball, 1; Folk Club, 2; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Board of Governors, 3; UD Senate, 3,4, Sec ' y., 3; Women ' s House Government, Sec ' y., 3; UD Chapel Comm., 3; Class Vice-Pres., 4. Labor: Library. GREENE, MYRTLE LEE: Kappa Gamma, 1; Freshman Choir; Tennis, 1,2; Life Saving, 2; YWCA, 2,3; Women ' s House Govern- ment, 3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4, Vice-Pres., 4; Class Sec ' y. - Treas., 4; First Aid, 4; Home Ec. Club, 4. Labor: College Dental Office, Boarding Hall. GUEST, LENA ETHEL: English Literature Prize, 2; Dramatic Club, 2,3,4; French Club, 1,2. Labor: Fireside Industries, Dean of Women ' s Office, Commons (Floorwalker; Head Dish Girl), UD Office, LD Office, Boarding Hall (Head Dish Girl). HALE, HELTON: Tea Drinking Club; YMCA, 1,2,3,4; Rho Delta, 1.2,3,4, President, 3, Treas., 4; Board of Governors, Treas.; Harmonia, 1,2; Men ' s Glee Club, 1; International Relations, 1. Labor: Treasurer ' s Office, Gym Instructor, Dean ' s Office. HAYS, EARL FRANKLIN: Ag. Union, 1,2,3,4, Sec ' y., 4; Ag- Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Men ' s Hall Union, Vice-Pres., 1, Sec ' y-- Treas., 4; YMCA, 1,2,3,4; CE, 2,3,4; Rho Delta, 2,3,4. Labor: Bakery, Dairy, Janitor, Poultry Farm, College Farm. HENSLEY, MAYME EDNA: Alpha Psi Omega, 4, Vice-Chair- man, 4; French Club, 2,3; Dramatic Club, 2,3,4, Treas., 4; WAA, 1. Labor: Mountain Life and Work Office, Agricultural Office, Dramatics Office Asst. (19 Pearl St.) HERD, RUTH ELIZABETH: UD Chapel Pianist, 4; YWCA, 1; Accompanist, Varsity Women ' s Glee Club, 3,4. Labor: Boarding Hall. (1631 Cumberland Ave.) HIGGINS, LULA ARNETTE: Morehead State Teachers College, 3; Ag Home Ec. Club; Home Ec. Club; Basketball; Tennis. Labor: Fireside Industries, College Store, Miss Dingman. HILL, MARY COOPER: Freshman Chapel Choir; YWCA, 1,2,3,4, Sec ' y., 3, Pres., 4; Dramatic Club, 1,2,3,4, Cabinet, 3,4; UD Senate, 4. Labor: Janitor, Lab. Asst. in Dramatics Dept. HISER, BERNIECE TERRY: Twenty Writers Club; Bible Prize; Florence Essay Prize, 1; MacGregor Prize, 2; Danforth Creative Effort Prize. Labor: Tutoring Weaving, Laundry, Boarding Hall, Fireside Industries, English Dept., Town Labor. HOUSTON, WILLIAM G.: Brevard College; Rho Delta, 4; Dramatic Club, 4; Education Club, 4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 4; PAF, 4; Ag. Union, 4, Vice-Pres., 4; Livestock Judging Team, 4. Labor: Dairy, Creamery. HURLEY, LYMAN CLINTON: Clark Essay Prize, 1; Clark Es- say Prize, 2; YMCA, 1,2,3,4; Rho Delta, 3,4; Oratorical Contest, 2. Labor: Secretary ' s Office, Monitor. HURLEY, WILLIAM NEWTON: Pi Alpha; Sigma Pi Sigma. Labor: Boone Tavern, Woodcraft, Business Mgr. ' s Office. JARVIS, CHARLES EVANS: Mars Hill College, 1; Ag. Union, 2,3,4; Ag. Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Folk Club, 2; Rho Delta, 4; Baseball, 4; Dorm. Basketball, 2,3,4. Labor: Boarding Hall, Jani- tor, Boone Tavern, Gym, College Farm. JOHNSON, MARY ELLEN: Louise Veltin Scholarship, 4; Fresh- man Chapel Choir, 1; YWCA, 2,3,4; Harmonia, 2,3,4; Education Club, 3,4; Union Church Choir, 4; UD Sunday School Treas., 3; Dramatic Club, 3,4; CE, 2,3,4, Group Captain, 3, President, 4. Labor: Fireside Industries, Emery Building, Monitor. JONES, WILLIAM ARBOR: YMCA, 1,2,3,4; Chaplain, Senior Class (not a tea-drinker). Labor: Monitor. (124 Broadway) JONES, MARY RUTH: Delta Phi Alpha, 2,3,4; Women ' s House Govt., 4; WAA, Vice-Pres., 3; Ornithological Society, 4; YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Outing Club, 2. Labor: College Hospital (Office and Lab) JONES, NELLIE MAE: Basketball, 1,2,3; Dramatic Club, 3,4; Alpha Psi Omega, 3,4; International Relations Club, 3; French Club, 3; Union Church Choir, 3,4; Outing Club, 1; YWCA, 1,2,3,4. Labor: Boone Tavern, College Press, Secretary ' s Office, English Department. (21 Victoria Road) JONES, NEOMA BELLE: Basketball, 1,2,3,4; Tennis, 1,2,3; YWCA, 1,2,3,4; WAA Board, 3; Ag-Home Ec Club, 3,4, President 4; Harmonia, 1,3; French Club, 2, Pi Mu Lambda, 1; Alpha Phi Phi, 2; Women ' s House Government, 2. Labor: Boarding Hall, Ladies Gym. JONES, RUBY MERYL: Red Cross First Aid Certificate; Home Ec Club; Ag-Home Ec Union; Basketball, 1,2; YWCA. Labor: Fireside Industries. KELLEY, LOIS MILDRED: YWCA, 2,3,4; Dramatics Club, 1,2,3,4, President, 4; Basketball, 2,3,4; Tau Kappa Alpha, 2,3,4. Labor: Dental Office. (716 Cedar Street) KILBOURNE, GRACE ELEANOR: Tau Kappa Alpha; Pi Gamma Mu; Dramatic Club; Public Affairs Forum; YWCA. Labor: Secretary ' s Office, Speech Department, Political Science Depart- ment. KILBOURNE, RUTH MAY: Dramatic Club; Alpha Psi Omega; Debating and Forensics; Tau Kappa Alpha. Labor: Bible Dept., Boone Tavern, Registrar ' s Office, Boarding Hall. KILGO, LEE ELLIS: Wood Junior College, Miss.; Ag Union; Ag-Home Ec Club; Rho Delta; Baseball. Labor: Library, Cream- ery. RISER, LORA ANNE: YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Home Ec Club; Ag- Home Ec. Club; Women ' s House Government. Labor: Dormitory Checker, Hospital. KUBIN, FRANK: Choir; Dramatics; YMCA; Harmonia; Glee Club; French Club; Folk Club; Vanguards; FOR; Public Affairs Forum; Upper Division Senate; Men ' s Hall Union, President, 4; Dance Drama, Gym exhibition. Labor: Grounds, Gym Instructor, Boarding Hall. (181 Claremont Ave.) LAWSON, MARY LUCILLE: YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Home Ec Club; Ag-Home Ec Club. Labor: Needlecraft Dept. LESLIE, NELLIE MARIE: YWCA, 1,2; Hiking Manager, 2; Out- ing Club Manager, 3,4; Home Ec Club, 3,4, Secretary, 4; Ag- Home Ec Club, 3,4. Labor: Pre-School. LIVESAY, CARL C: YMCA, 1,2,4; Rho Delta Lit. Society, 2,3,4, Secretary, 3, President, 4; International Relations Club, 2,3; Public Affairs Forum, Vice-Pres., 4; Pi Gamma Mu, 3,4. Labor: Boarding Hall. McALLISTER, JOHN BARD: Chimes Staff; YMCA; Student Board of Governors. Labor: Bakery, Industrial Arts, Hospital, Chemistry Lab. LOTTA BELL McCONNELL: CE; PAF, 3,4. Labor: Boone Tavern. McDONALD, HERMAN PATRICK: Ag Union; Ag-Home Ec Club. Labor: Grounds, Poultry Farm, Dairy, Gardens; Heat and Power Plant; Janitor; Boarding Hall. McDONOUGH, CARMEN VIRGINIA: YWCA, 1,2,3,4, Cabinet, 3; Harmonia, 2,4; Delta Phi Alpha, 3,4; Basketball, 3; Tennis, 1,2,4; Archery, 2,3,4. Labor: Fireside Industries, Library. McGHEE, ROBERT BARCLAY: King College, Tenn.; Band; Orchestra, 2,3,4; Ornithological Club, 3; Pi Alpha, 4; Dramatic Club, 1,2,3. Labor: Biology Lab. Assistant. McGUIRE, MARY HELEN: Home Ec Club; Tennis; Women ' s House Government; Swimming (life saving); YWCA; Folk Danc- ing; Outing Club, B Club. Labor: Registrar ' s Office, Pre- School. McKINNEY, CECIL CLAUDE: Class President, 4; Board of Governors, 3,4, President, 4; Senate, 2,3, Chairman, 3; Dramatic- Club, 1,2,3,4, President, 3; Alpha Psi Omega, 2,3,4; Tau Kappa Alpha, 2,3,4; Winner, Men ' s Oratorical Contest, 3; Vanguards, 3,4; YMCA, 1,2,3,4, Cabinet, 3,4; Public Affairs Forum, 3,4; Pinnacle Staff, 1,2, Managing Editor, 2; Wallpaper Staff, 4; Alpha Zeta, 1,2,3,4; Labor Conference Chairman, 4; Youth Com- mittee Against War, 4; Chairman, Peace Strike, 3; Folk Festival team, 1 ; CE, 1 ; Track, 1 ; Tea Drinker. Labor: College Press, Citizen reporter, Economics Department. McNIEL, VIRGINIA RUTH: Varsity Girls ' Glee Club, 2,3,4; YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Tennis, 1. Labor: Gift Shop. MARTIN, EDDIE JEWELL: Dramatic Club, 1,2,3; Pi Mu Lamba; International Relations Club; YWCA Cabinet; Girl Re- serve Chairman; Public Affairs; Upper Division Social Committ ee. Labor: College Bakery Office. MAYO, JETTIE CLEON: YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec, 3,4; Harmonia; CE. Labor. Boone Tavern. MASSEY, ROBERT HATTON: Basketball, 1,2,3; Baseball, 1,2,3,4. Labor: Business Managtr ' s Office. MENEFEE, ROBERT GORDON: Vice-Pres. of Senior Class; Band, 1,2; Orchestra, 1,2; YMCA, 1,2,3,4; Cabinet, 3,4; Alpha Zeta, 1,2,3,4, Sec, 3; Senate, 3; Royal Collegians, 4; Public Affairs Forum, 4; Vanguards, 4; YACW, 4. Labor: Business Manager ' s Office, Boarding Hall. MILLER, WINNIE COOKE: Upper Division Senate; Delta Phi Alpha; Dramatic Club, 2,3,4, Secretary, 4; Basketball, 1,2,3; Alpha Psi Alpha, 4; Ag-Home Ec Club, 3,4; Women ' s House Government, 4; WAA, 1,2,3,4. Labor: Fireside Industries, Janitor in ER Hall. MILTON, E. OHMER, JR. Business Manager of Chimes; Union Church Choir; Varsity Men ' s Glee Club. Labor: Boone Tavern, Post Office, Psychology Department. (1114 Sherwood Avenue) MORRIS, JOSEPH A.: YMCA; Cabinet; Alpha Zeta; Dramatic Club, 1,2,3; Debating, second place in Home Oratorical Contest; Public Affairs Forum, President, 4; French Club; Pinnacle Staff, 2; Wall Paper Staff, 4; Tau Kappa Alpha; Twenty Writers ' Club, 3; Member of Youth Committee Against War; Tea Drinker. Labor: Mountain Weavers, Library, Boarding Hall, Assistant in History and Political Science Department. MULLINS, CHRISTINE McKENZIE: YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Pi Epsilon Pi, 1; County Chairman. Labor: Sales Promotion Office, Secre- tary ' s Office. MUNCY, LORENA HOWARD: Eastern Teachers ' College; Dra- matic Club, 4. NICKELL, WILLIAM E.: Sigma Pi Sigma, 3,4, President, 4; Delta Phi Alpha, 2,3,4; Baseball, 1; Track, 1,2,3,4; B Club, 2,3,4; Pi Alpha; YMCA. Labor: Woodwork, Janitor in Seabury Gym, Physics Department. OWENS, CARRIE CARMEN: YWCA; Education Club; Student Coop; Nursery Teacher at Union Church. Labor: Sewing Room, Pre-School. PARKER, ERNEST REID: Alpha Zeta; Dramatic Club; Pi Gam- ma Mu; Public Affairs Forum. Labor: Boone Tavern, Prof. Crippen ' s Office. PARKER, HAZEL LEONA: Twenty Writers ' Club, 2,3,4, Pres- ident, 3,4; Literary Editor of Chimes; Pi Gamma Mu; Wall Paper Staff; YWCA; Public Affairs Forum, Publicity Manager, 3; Dram- atized episodes in Galileo ' s life for Chapel presentation; McGregor Essay Prize, 2. Labor: Registrar ' s Office, Printing Office, Cam- pus Chronicle for Berea Alumnus Magazine. PARSONS, WILLIAM EDWIN: Ag. Union; Ag-Home Ec Club. Labor: Gym. PATTEN, JOHN A.: YMCA, 1,2,3,4; Prizes in literature and speech; Twenty Writers ' Club, 3; Pi Alpha; Upper Division Sen- ate; Dormitory Basketball Team; Ornithological Society, President. Labor: Woodwork, Biology Lab. PATTERSON, WALTER ROGER: Hiwasee College, Tennessee; Rho Delta; Baseball; Dormitory Basketball; Dormitory Football. Labor: Boone Tavern, Hospital. PATTON, HAZEL BEATRICE: Pi Mu Lambda, 1,2,3, Vice-Pres., 3; YWCA; WAA, 1; Dramatic Club, 2,3,4; Alpha Psi Omega. Labor: Labor Office, Boarding Hall, Women ' s Gym. PETERS, ORIN CRAIG: Ag. Union; Ag-Home Ec Club; YMCA. Labor: Boarding Hall, Janitor; Paint Department; Woodcraft De- partment. PETERS, VIRGINIA ANNABELLE: Beckley Junior College, West Virginia; YWCA; Harmonia; Home Ec Club; YAA Board, hiking manager, 3,4; Basketball; Outing Club; B Club; Baseball; Archery. Labor: Sewing Room, Boarding Hall, Gymnasium. PEZZAROSSI, MARGARET: YWCA; Home Ec Club; Ag-Home Ec Club; Pi Mu Lambda; Basketball; Tennis. Labor: Sewing Room, Sales Promotion Office, Hospital. PHILLIPS, MILDRED ALICE. Labor: Library. PIERATT, MARY IRENE: YWCA; Alpha Alpha Pi. Labor: Boone Tavern, Hospital, Boarding Hall. POWELL, EARLE VAN: Basketball, 1,2,3,4, Captain, 1; Track, 1,2,3,4, Captain, 1,4; Glee Club, 1; YMCA. Labor: Janitor, Seabury Gym. RADER, ROBERT BRUCE: Basketball, 1,2; Baseball, 1; YMCA; Track, 3,4; Public Affairs Forum, 3,4; Rho Delta. Labor: Bakery, Library. REED, JEAN MARIE: Dramatic Club, Folk Club, Life Saving, Archery, YWCA. Labor: Candy Kitchen. REYNOLDS, ROY LEE: YMCA; Rho Delta; Basketball, 1. Labor: Gym Instructor. RICKARD, ELMER OWEN: International Relations Club, 1,2,3; Baseball; Basketball; Cheerleader; Royal Collegians; Sports Editor of Chimes; Wallpaper staff. Labor: Commons, Labor Office; Berea Citizen, sports editor. RIVENBURG, ELIZABETH: YWCA; Harmonia; Girls ' Glee Club, 3,4; College Band, 1,2; Union Church Choir, 1; Student Cooperative, 3,4; Folk Club, 2,3; International Relations Club, 2,3; CE, 1; Basketball and Tennis, 1; Labor: Library, College Press. ROBERTS, GRACE ALICE: Freshman Glee Club; Pi Epsilon Pi; YWCA; Harmonia; Dramatic Club; Union Church Choir. Labor: Labor Office, Boarding Hall. ROBERTS, RUTH MAC: Girls ' Glee Club; WAA; YWCA Cab- inet; B Club. Labor: Candy Kitchen, Boarding Hall, Pre- School. ROBERTSON, D.B.: Alpha Psi Omega; Delta Phi Alpha; Pi Gamma Mu; Twenty Writers Club, 3; Alpha Zeta, 1; Dramatic Club, 1,2,3,4; Track, 1; Vanguards, 1,2,3; YMCA, 1,2,3,4, Cab- inet, 2,3; Class President, 2; Ornithological Society, 3; Student Cooperative, 1,2,3,4, Pres., 3; Photography Club, 3,4; Fellowship of Reconciliation, 1,2,3,4, Sec ' y., 4; Bible Prize. Labor: Grounds, LD Office, Labor Office, Janitor, Philosophy Dept. RUDDLE, KATHLEEN AZILE: Dramatics Club, 1,2; Folk Club, 2; Vanguards, 2,3; Pi Mu Lambda, 1,2; YWCA, 1,2,3,4. Labor: Citizen Office, Library. (704 Mt. Vernon Street) SALYERS, OMA ROSELLA: YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Dramatic Club, 3,4; Basketball, 3,4; B Club, 4. Labor: Fireside Industries, Knapp Hall, Janitor, Life Guard. SAYLOR, ANNA BRADLEY: Freshman Chapel Choir, I; YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Folk Club, 3,4; Dramatic Club, 1,2,3; Vocalist, Royal Collegians, 3,4. Labor: Sewing Room, Gift Shop, Women ' s Phy. Ed. Dept., Faculty Dining Room. SCHERRER, GEORGE HILSON: University of Detroit; Track, 1,2,3,4; Cross Country, 2,3,4, President, 4; YMCA, 1,2,3,4; Y Cabinet, 2,3, Treas., 3; Sigma Pi Sigma, 4. Labor: Gymnasium, Janitor, Physics Lab Instructor. (RR No. 11, Box 291) SCOTT, HUGH ANDERSON: Lees McRae College, 1,2; Phi Delta, 3; Pi Gamma Mu, 4. Labor: Broom Industry. (505 Rock- bridge St.) SHERMAN, DALBERT CLARENCE: University of Kentucky; Sue Bennett College; Ag. Union, 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club, 3,4. Labor: Grounds, Janitor. SHUE, PERCY HOWARD: Chimes Editor, 4; Pi Gamma Mu, 4; Tau Kappa Alpha, 3,4; Alpha Zeta, 1,2,3; Ornithological Society, 3; Dramatics Club, 3,4; YMCA. 1,2,3,4; Macgregor Prize, 2; Clark Speech Prize, 2; Baseball, 1,2,3,4, Captain, 1,4. Labor: Bakery, Janitor, Library, Reader to Blind. SILER, EMILY RUTH: YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Outing Club, 1; Dra- matic Club, 2,3; Folk Club, 2; Photography Club, 3,4. Labor: College Restaurant. SKAGGS, HURSHAL J.: Ag. Union; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Folk Club; Freshman Glee Club. Labor: Broom Industry, Janitor, Creamery, Dairy. SMITS, PIETERTJE: Home Ec. Club; Ag-Home Ec. Club; YWCA. Labor: Needlecraft, Faculty waitress, U.D. Checker. (63 8 Second St.) SNODDY, EMMA LINDA: UD Organist, 3; Basketball, 1,2; YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Varsity Women ' s Glee Club, 4; Harmonia, 1,2. Labor: Pre-School. (1908 Main St.) SOMERS, GRAFIAM W.: French Club, 3; Pi Alpha, 3,4; Edu- cation Club, 4, Sec ' y., 4; Rho Delta, 3,4, Sec ' y., 4; YMCA, 4; CE, 4. Labor: Boone Tavern, Foundation School Math. Dept. SPARKS, MARY ELIZABETH: YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4. Labor: Hospital. STAFFORD, GENEVA ALICE: WAA, 1,2,3,4, Pres., 3; Dramatic Club, I; French Club, 1,2; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Pi Epsilon Pi, 1; Outing Club, 3,4, Treas., 4; Life Sav- ing; YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Basketball, 1,2,3,4; B Club, 4. Labor: Treasurer ' s Office, Women ' s Gym. STEVENS, JACK: Dramatic Club, 1,2,3,4; Swimming, 1,2; AZ 1,2,3,4; Photography Club, 3; YMCA, 1,2,3,4. Labor: Boarding Hall, Janitor, Phy. Ed. Dept., Boone Tavern. SULLIVAN, RUTH: Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4, Sec ' y., 4; Outing Club, 2. Labor: Boarding Hall, Preschool. (Box 1175) SUTTON, EDITH KAY: French Club, 1; WAA„ 2,3; Education Club, 3; Harmonia, 2,3; PAF, 4, Publicity Chmn., 4; Y¥CA, 1,2,3,4; Dramatic Club, 1. Labor: Bakery Office. TANNER, MARY OLA: YWCA, 1,2,3,4; B Club, 2,3,4; WAA Board, 2,3,4; Life Saving, 2; Women ' s House Govt., 3, Pulaski County Chmn., 4; Tennis, 2,3,4; Outing Club, 1,2,3. Labor: Labor Office, Boarding Hall, Gym. (114 Maple Street) TINSLEY, MILDRED SUSAN: Freshman Chapel Choir, 1; YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Y Cabinet, 2,3; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4. Labor: Pre-school, Sales Promotion Office. TRAIL, RAYMOND WILSON: Tau Kappa Alpha, 3,4; Winner, After-Dinner Speaking Contest, Midwestern TKA Convention, Cincinnati, 3; Delegate to National Folk Festival, Chicago, 1; Dramatics Club, 1,2,3,4, Pub. Mgr., 4; Alpha Psi Omega, 4; Author of one-act play, The Codicil, 4; Editor, Tabernacle News, 4; Circulation Mgr., The Pinnacle, 2; AZ, 1,2, Pianist, 3,4; CE, 1, Pianist, 2,3,4; YMCA, 1,2,3,4; UD Senate, 3,4; Twenty Writers Club, 2,3,4; United SS Coram., 1,2,. Labor: Boarding Hall, Gym, Printing Office, Paint Shop, Reader to Blind Student, News Reporter, English Dept. TULLY, RANDOLPH RICHARD: Band, 1,2,3,4; Orchestra, 1,4; Freshman Chapel Choir, 1; Varsity Men ' s Glee Club, 2,3,4, Direc- tor, 3, President, 4, Quartet, 4; YMCA; B Club, 2,3,4; Track, 1,2,4; Board of Governors, 4; Chapel Chorister, 4; Gym Team, 1,2,3,4; Royal Collegians, 1,2,3,4. Labor: Phys. Ed. Dept, Music Dept. WALL, IMOGENE M.: Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4; YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Folk Dancing; Tennis; Kappa Gamma, 1. Labor: President ' s Office, Fireside Industries, Janitor. WALTER, GENEVA HELEN: CE, 2,3,4; Baseball, 1,2,3; Archery, 1,2,3; Hockey, 1,2,3; Basketball, 1,2,3; Track, 1,2,3; Home Ec Club, 3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Folk Club, 2. Labor: Boone Tavern, Candy Kitchen, Monitor. WARD, NANNIE BESS: YWCA; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Home Ec. Club. Labor: Boone Tavern Waitress. WEBB, VERNARD HUGHES: Dramatic Club, 1,2,3; Pi Alpha, 3,4; AZ, 3,4; Delta Phi Alpha, 4; Baseball, 1,2,3,4; Dorm. Basketball, 3; Dorm. Football, 4; Swimming, 2; Pinnacle Staff, 2; Editor, The Wallpaper, 4; Photography Editor, The Chimes, 4; Mgr., Royal Collegians, 3,4. Labor: Boarding Hall, Janitor. WEIR, CAROLYN BLANCHE: YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Y Cabinet, 3; Harmonia, 2,3,4; Freshman Chapel Choir, 1; Alpha Alpha Pi, 1; Alpha Phi Phi, 2; WAA, 1,2,3,4; B Club, 4; Photography Club, 4; Basketball, 3. Labor: Labor Office, Biology Dept. WESLEY, DAN: Phi Delta, 1,2,3; YMCA, 1,2,3,4; Ornithological Society, 1,2,3,4; Men ' s Hall Union Representative, 2; Chairman, UD Sunday School, 3. Labor: Boone Tavern. WEST, MARY LOUISE: Freshman Chapel Choir, 1, Sec ' y., 1; Band, 1,2; Pi Epsilon Pi, 1; Education Club, 3,4; YWCA, 3. Labor: Heat and Power Office. WILLIAMS, LAURELLA: Freshman Chapel Choir, 1; Education Club, 3,4; Pi Epsilon Pi, 1; Tau Kappa Alpha, 3,4; YWCA, 1. WILSON, DOROTHY MINERVA: YWCA, 1,2,4; Harmonia, 2,3; WAA, 2,3; Tennis, 3; Archery, 2,3; Education Club, Vice- Pres., 4, Member 3; Phi Alpha Phi, 1; Student Coop, 2,3,4. Labor: Labor Office. WILSON, FLORINE LOGAN: Glee Club, 1,2,3,4, Pres., 4; Dra- matic Club, 2,3,4; YWCA, 1,2,3,4; Board of Governors, 4. Labor: Gift Shop, Presser Hall WILSON, GLENN ASTOR: Varsity Basketball, 2,3,4; Freshman Basketball, 1; B Club, Sec ' y.; Track, 1,2,3,4, Manager; YMCA, 1,2,3,4; Phi Delta, 1,2,3,4; Ag. Union; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Gym Team. Labor: Gym Instructor, Dairy, Grounds. WOLFRAM, ALBERT FRANK: Pi Alpha, 3,4; Folk Club, 2,3,4; Men ' s Varsity Glee Club, 2,3,4, Bus. Mgr., 4; YMCA; AZ, 3,4. Labor: Bakery, Storage Garage and Hotel, Men ' s Gym Instructor. WOOD, ELIZABETH EARLE: Freshman Chapel Choir, 1; Pi Epsilon Pi, 1; Life-Saving, 2; UD Senate, 2,3,4; First Prize, Labor Contest, 2; Third Prize, Labor Contest, 3; Woman ' s House Govt. Council, 4; Pres., 4. Labor: Faculty Waitress, Life Saving, Gym. (85 Vermont Avenue) WOODY, JAMES EMMITT: YMCA; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Ag. Union. Labor: Treasurer ' s Office, Farm, Dairy, Garden. WRIGHT, ARTHUR: Pikeville Junior College; Varsity Men ' s Glee Club, 4; International Relations Club; French Club; Ornitho- logical Society; AZ. Labor: College Post Office. WYATT, EUGENE RALPH: YMCA, 1,2,3,4; Track, 1; Swim- ming, 2; Rho Delta, 2,3,4, Vice-Pres., 4; Pi Alpha, 3,4; Sigma Pi Sigma, Vice-Pres., 3,4. Labor: Woodcraft. TWELFTH GRADE BIOGRAPHIES ADAMS, ROBERT ROARK: Leatha, Ky., Labor: Bakery. ASHER, ROBERT BURNS: Honor Roll, 1,2; Class Vice-President, 4; Dorm. Representative, 4. Labor: General Shop, Industrial Arts, Metalcraft. BAIRD, WARREN LEONARD: YMCA. Labor: Commons, Jan- itor, Paint-Shop, Fire Dept. BARNES, BELVA GERRIN: Basketball, 1,2,3,4. Labor: Sewing- room, Boone Tavern. BARNETT, NANCY MAE: Honor Roll, 1,2; Scholarship, Spell- ing -Bee Winner, 2; Class Secretary, 3. Labor: Library. BECK, CORA OVALINE: Baughman, Ky. Honor Roll; Girl Re- serve; Scholarship; Spring Sports, 4; Amicae; YWCA. Labor: Fireside Industries, Commons, Office of L.D. Dean of Women. BECK, OLGA MAE: Baughman, Ky., Treas., YWCA; Amicae; Harmonia; Basketball. Labor: Fireside Industries, Science Dept. of Foundation School Office, Commons. BEGLEY, FRIEDA FAYE: Honor Roll; Finance Coram., 3. Labor: Foundation School Office. BLACKBURN, GNIDA MAE: Publicity Chmn., Rural Com- munity Life Club. Labor: Needlecraft. BLAKEY, RALPH WILLARD: Howard Prize; Honor Roll; Class Chmn. of Project Comm., 4; Scholarship; Pres. of Hi-Y; Folk Club; Christian Endeavor. Labor: Bakery, Founda- tion School Office, Commons. BLANTON, ROBERT CLARK: Christian Endeavor; YMCA; Tennis Club. Labor: Broom Industry. BOLDIN, MARY ELIZABETH: Middlesboro, Ky.; Christian En- deavor, 4; Swimming, 4; Amicae, 4. Labor: Pre-school Office, Laundry. BOYER, FRANK J.: Basketball, 2,3,4; YMCA. Labor: Painting Dept., Janitor, Woodwork, Broom Industry, Hospital, Printing, Boarding Hall. BRADLEY, MILDRED JANE: Paintsville, Ky. Basketball; Hockey; Tennis; Swimming; YWCA. Labor: Candy Kitchen.. Boarding Hall Office. BRATCHER, NANNIE BERNICE: Berea, Ky. Labor: Candy Kitchen, Janitor. BRICKEY, ROBERT HERSTON. Honor Roll, 1,2; Class Vice- Pres., 3; Christmas Day Program Comm., 3,4; Sunday School Council, 4; Class Pres., 4; Bible Prize, 1,3. Labor: Boone Tavern, Painting Dept., Janitor, Waiter, Hospital, Lower Division Office. BROWN, WANDA EVELYN. Honor Roll; YWCA, 3; Amicae, 4; Harmonia, 3,4; Basketball, 4; Outing Club, 3, Girl Re- serve, 2. Labor: Candy Kitchen. BURK, HATTIE VIRGINIA: Lebanon, Va. Special Group (Westervelt Shop). Labor: Bakery, Building Maintenance Dept., Woodcraft Dept., Commons, Boarding Hall. CASSADA, MINNIE WILDA: Pulaski, Ky. Hockey, 3,4; Swim- ming, 3,4; Dramatics, 4; Amicae, 4; YWCA; Student Co- operative, 3. Labor: Commons, Labor Office, Business Dept. CAUDILL, OAKLEY WILBURN. YMCA; Baseball, 3; Softball, 3; Dorm. Basketball, 4. Labor: Janitor, Maintenance Dept. CHESNUT, RUTH PAULINE: Berea, Ky. Labor: Candy Kitchen, Commons. CHRISTIAN, MARY FRANCES. YWCA; Amicae. Labor: Boone Tavern, Janitor, Sewing Room. CHURCHILL, ELEANOR CARROLL. Honor Roll; Lower Di- vision Senate, 3,4; Dramatics, 4; National Thespian, 4; College Orchestra, 1,2,3,4; Bible Prize. CLARK, EDMONIA ELLA. Harmonia, 1,2,3; Rural Community Life, 3,4; Christian Endeavor, 1,2,3,4; Sororian Literary Society, 2; Girl Reserve, 2. Labor: Hospital, Commons, Laundry, Fireside Industries. COUNTS, JUNE ELEANOR: Nora, Va. Hockey; Basketball. Labor: H. J. Christopher ' s Home. COYLE, BOB CAROLYN. Amicae. Labor: Sales Promotion Office. CROCKETT, CURTIS WALTMAN. Dorm, basketball. Labor: Grounds, Broom Industry, Boarding Hall. CYRUS, WILLIAM FREDRICK. Dramatics. Labor: Woodwork, Bakery, Commons, Painting Dept., Janitor, Printing. DAVIS, BENJAMIN HARRISON. Honor Roll; Hi-Y; Bible Prize. Labor: Hospital, Monitor, Waiter. DAVIS, HARRY LEON. Labor: Bakery. DAWES, ARTHUR LEE. Lower Division Senate; Hi-Y, 1,2; YMCA, 3; Social Comm., 3. Labor: Painting Dept., Hos- pital, Janitor. DeBORDE, CLYDE ALBERT. Dramatics; CE; Hi-Y; Har- monia. Labor: Mountain Weavers, Monitor, Janitor, Com- mons. DUFF, FRANK: Chavies, Ky. Basketball; LD Senate, 4; YMCA. Labor: Janitor. DUNN, MARY MARIE: Berea, Ky. Honor Roll, 2; Dramatic Certificate; Dramatic Club Cabinet. Labor: Foundation School Office. DUNN, WILLIAM CLEMENT. Camera Club, 3; Recreation Comm., 4; Union Church usher, 4; YMCA; State Play Contest, 3. Labor: Boone Tavern. EASTERLING, WAYNE C. YMCA. Labor: College Store, Commons, Janitor. ERNEST, MARGARET ANICE: Walhalla, S.C. Honor Society; Debating Club; Life Saving; Amicae; Basketball; CE; Tennis; YWCA. Labor: Bakery. ERWIN, HUGH A. Labor: Boarding Hall. EVERSOLE, ELIZABETH. Harmonia, 3,4; YWCA, 3. Labor: Laundry, College Store. FIELDER, ROBERT LEE. Winner of Chimes-ringing Contest on Labor Day; Band, 1,2,3,4; Orchestra, 1,2,4; Zephyrs, 4; Dramatics, 1,2; YMCA, 3,4; Hi-Y, 1,2. Labor: Bakery, Grounds, Electric Lab., LD Office. FRANCIS, WILLIAM WILSON: Carr Creek, Ky. Labor: Heat and Power, Waiter, Boone Tavern. GABBARD, DELORA MILDRED. CE; Amicae; Girl Reserve. Labor: Bakery, Laundry, Janitor. GIBSON, DAN SMITH. Hi-Y; Student Cooperative; YMCA. Labor: Commons, Dorm. Supplies, Industrial Arts (Auto Mechanics) . GILLIAM, CARL. YMCA; Track. Labor: Metalcraft, Monitor. GILLIAM, MARJORIE. Basketball; Amicae. Labor: Hospital. GROSS, JUNE OPAL; Harlan, Ky. WAA; Dramatics, 4; YWCA. Labor: Hospital, Knapp Hall, Library, Commons, Janitor. HALL, SHERIDAN LEE. Honor Roll; Ornithological Society. Labor: Bakery, Dorm. Supplies. HAMMONS, MARY FRANCES: Corbin, Ky. Christian En- deavor. Labor: President ' s Office. HAMMONS, NED LEE. Ornithological Society; YMCA. Labor: College Store. HAMPTON, ROBERT BACK: Manchester, Ky. YMCA. Labor: Bakery, Grounds, Boone Tavern, Electric Lab. HARRISON, WOODROW BOWMAN: Berea, Ky. Basketball, 3,4. HART, LEWIS ROBERTS. Band, 1,2,3,4; Zephyrs, 4; Drama- tics, 2. Labor: Seabury Gymnasium, College Press. HAYS, EARL THOMAS. Basketball; Honor Roll. Labor: Foun- dation School Office. HINES, RAMON CLAY. YMCA. Labor: Woodcraft. HOFFSOMMER, KAY P. YMCA; Harmonia; Band; Zephyrs; Orchestra; Dramatic Club; CE; Thespians. Labor: Boone Tavern, Boarding Hall, Print Shop. JACOBS, FLORENCE: Jacobs, Ky. YWCA; Girl Reserve; Pro- gress Prize, 2. Labor: Laundry, Monitor, Janitor. JACOBS, JAMES TALMADGE. YMCA; Hi-Y; Rural Life Club. Labor: Hospital, Grounds, Waiter. KEYSER, EMMETT M. Drum Major, 3; Basketball, 4; Dramatic Club, 4; Thespians; Class Chmn., Social Comm., 4. Labor: Hospital, Waiter. KING, CHARLES. Basketball; Baseball; Hi-Y; YMCA; Red Cross. Labor: Bakery. LEWIS, COWLEY: Cutshin, Ky. Baseball; Basketball; Swim- ming; Track. Labor: Bakery. LEWIS, ESTHER LEE: Berea, Ky. LONGMIRE, ELIZABETH DAIL. Thespians; Amicae; Swim- ming; Dramatics; CE. Labor: Hospital. LOVELACE, WILLIAM PAUL: Berea, Ky. Band, 1; Dramatics, 2. Labor: Foundation School Office. LOVITT, BESSIE JANE: Williamsburg, Ky. Amicae. Labor: Laundry, Bakery. LUFBURROW, ROBERT ALLEN, JR. Literary Society. Labor: Library McCOLLUM, JAMES LUTHER, JR. YMCA. Labor: Boarding Hall, Industrial Arts Electric Lab. McCOLLUM, MARY ELIZABETH: Berea, Ky. Labor: Library. MARTIN, GLENN E. CE; Rural Community Life Club; Wall- paper, 4. Labor: Dairy, Boarding Hall, Waiter, Woodwork. MAY, NOLA PAULINE: Houckville, Ky. CE; YWCA. Labor: Laundry, Monitor, Janitor, Commons. MAYS, ELLIS: Crystal, Ky. Girl Reserve; YWCA; Amicae; Rural Community Life Club. Labor: Fireside Industries. MINK, MONROE JESSE: Conway, Ky. Track. Labor: Printing Shop. MOORE, GORDON: Prestonburg, Ky. Basketball (Mgr.); YMCA. Labor: Commons, Janitor, Woodwork. MORGAN, MATT WILSON: Felty, Ky. Hi-Y; Folk Club. Labor: Commons, Woodcraft, Hospital, Dorm. Supplies, Maintenance Dept. MULLINS, EDWARD DOUGLAS: Disputanta, Ky. Track (Letterman); Fire Dept.; Harmonia; YMCA Cabinet; Class Secretary, 4. Labor: Auto Mechanics Lab. MUNCY, MARGARET LUCILLE. Labor: Boone Tavern. MUNCY, MARY LOUISE: Wooton, Ky. Union Church Choir; Harmonia. Labor: Janitor, Labor Office. NEAL, WILLIAM OSCAR. Rural Community Life Club; Dorm. Basketball; LD Choir; Folk Dancing; YMCA; Harmonia. Labor: Printing Dept., Commons, Janitor. NEW, JUANITA CHRISTINE: Denney, Ky. Harmonia; Amicae. Labor: Laundry, Commons, Monitor, Janitor. O ' DANIEL, MILDRED. Honor Roll; Girl Reserve Cabinet; YWCA; Amicae. Labor: Hospital, Boone Tavern. PENNEY, ROBERT CLEMENT. Labor: Grounds, Woodwork, Drafting Dept. of Ind. Arts, Boone Tavern, Paint Shop. PENNINGTON, ELDRED TESSIBEL. Amicae. Labor: LD Office. RAYZOR, ARTHUR JESSE: Salt Lick, Ky. Honor Roll; Hi-Y, 1,2; YMCA; Ornithological Society, 2; CE, 3, Treasurer, 4; Union Church Choir; Harmonia, 4; Dramatics Club, 4; Chmn. of County Group; Supt. of Sunday School Pro- grams, 4; SS Council. Labor: Boarding Hall, Waiter, Mountain Weavers, Printing Dept., Monitor. REYNOLDS, WALTER ELBERT. Men ' s Adelphic Society, 2,3; YMCA, 4. Labor: Boarding Hall. ROSE, CLAIR JACKSON: Booneville, Ky. Dramatics. Labor: Commons, College Press, Maintenance Dept., Janitor. SCHUMACHER, MARK WEIDA: Berea, Ky. Dramatics Club. Labor: Printing Dept. SHUPE, EARL JACK. Dramatics Club; YMCA. Labor: Hos- pital, Boone Tavern, Painting Dept. SHUPE, MARY ANNA: Berea, Ky. WAA; CE. Labor: Candy Kitchen, Bakery. SKINNER, ELMER NOLAND. YMCA; Baseball; Basketball; Softball. Labor: Bakery. SLUSHER, AMANDA HELEN. Hockey, 3; Swimming, 3,4; Student Cooperative, 3; Amicae, 4; LD Senate, 3; Dramatics Club, 4; YWCA. Labor: Boone Tavern, Sales Promotion Office, Commons, LD Office. SMITH, MILDRED MARIE. Rural Community Life Club; CE. Labor: Candy Kitchen. SMITH, RUBY LEE. Honor Roll; Amicae; Girl Reserve. Labor: Fireside Industries, President ' s Home, Business Department. SPURLOCK, DAVID WAYNE. Hi-Y; YMCA; Rural Commun- Dept., Broom Factory, Janitor, Monitor. STEINBERGER, WILLIAM WALDREN: Honor Roll, 1,2; Dra- matic Club, 1,2; Tennis Club, 3,4; YMCA; Scouting, 1,2,3,4. Labor: Labor Office. STRANGEMORE, MAITLAND LANCELOT: St. Anthony, Newfoundland. Labor: Woodwork, Janitor, Painting Dept. STRONG, KATHLEEN ELIZABETH. Class Treas., 4; Hockey, 3; CE. Labor: LD Office, President ' s Office. STURGILL, JACKIE DANA JAN: Sand Gap, Ky. SWINFORD, WILLARD EDWIN: Disputanta, Ky. Hi-Y; Dorm. Basketball. Labor: Painting Dept., Janitor, . Wood- craft. TAYLOR, ELLEN DARR. Scholarship; Prize Bible; YWCA; Photography Club; CE. Labor: Fireside Industries, Janitor, Monitor, Boone Tavern. THACKER, ANNIE LAURA: Edom, Va. Amicae. Labor: Candy Kitchen, Commons. TILLER, CHARLES EDMOND. YMCA; CE; Dramatics Club. Labor: Bakery. TURNER, EULA MAE. CE; Amicae; LD Senate. Labor: Presi- dent ' s Home, Hospital, Commons, Checker in L.D. Women ' s Dorm. VIA, LAWRENCE ROLAND. YMCA; Folk Club; Dramatics Club. Labor: Library, Janitor. WALTERS, ANNA ELIZABETH. Hockey, 3,4; Swimming, 3,4; CE; Dramatics Club, 4; Amicae, 4; YWCA. Labor: Laundry Office, Commons. WATKINS, CARL FORRESTER: Hamilton, Ohio. Basketball; Track; Vice-Pres., Graphic Arts Club (Printing); Honor Roll; Vice-Pres., Hi-Y; Class Vice-Pres., 3; Student Coun- cil. Labor: Commons, Boarding Hall, Waiter, College Press, Fire Dept. WHITE, JOE KING: Burke, Ky. YMCA; Student Cooperative. Labor: Boone Ta ern, Janitor, Hospital. WHITE, RESSIE: Freeburn, Ky. Basketball; YWCA; Girl Re- serve. Labor: Bakery, Commons. WHITT, JOHN ELKANA. YMCA; CE; Student Cooperative. Labor: Boone Tavern, Hospital. WILLIAMS, NOAH. Labor: Woodcraft. WILSON, STANLEY H. Labor: Grounds, Painting Dept., Jani- tor. WOMACK, HOMER BAXTER: Grayson, Ky. YMCA; Student Cooperative. Labor: Broom Industry, Bakery, Candy Kitchen, Commons, Art Building, Hospital. YORK, MILDRED WALKER. YWCA. Labor: H osp. tal. WORRY SRAH ' ?APPY Ntf 1 GOT To GiT OUT Tto BEREA COV.L6GE TO G T IKfTo TWE 04IAMBS -Compliments of Paul Webb, cartoonist for ESQUIRE Yep, and we all oughta ' hurry to these ADVERTISERS RODDIS PANEL DOOR CO. 457 East 6th St., Cincinnati, Ohio CRACKER JACK P. D. Q. FEEDS Give Cracker Jack Results P.D.Q. FERNCLIFF FEED GRAIN CO. Incorporated Louisville, Ky. Ask Your Dealer E. E. GABBARD Eat Here or We Both Starve Chestnut Open 24 Hours WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE STORE Home Owned by F. R. Clarke Son Everything for the Automobile for Less Richmond, Kentucky Compliments of THE BEREA BANK AND TRUST CO. Compliments of Robert D. Wiley Sales Representative Krim-Ko Chocolate Flavored Drink KRIM-KO COMPANY Chicago, 111. I X m O GE OR NOT TO BE: ' THAT IS THE QUESTION: WHETHER ' T IS NOBLER IN THE MIND TO SUFFER THE SLINGS AND ARROWS OF OUTRAGEOUS FORTUNE, OR TO TAKE ARMS AGAINST A SEA OF TROUBLES, AND BY OPPOSING -END THEM?- . ffamlet - Act tf-ScJ. janb the Security thr u h £lfe assurance Sum Lii H EAD OFFICE M O NTRE XU THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR INSURANCE Represented by JACK MULLINS Temporarily — Berea, Kentucky PAUL PERKINS Chamber of Commerce Buildim Cincinnati, Ohio IT IS LATER THAN YOU THINK Our Merchandise Is Sold At The College Store SIMON ADES SONS CO. Louisville, Kentucky SHINNY ' S COLLEGE INN Best Coffee In Town Sandwiches Short Order s Short Street THE JENNER COMPANY (incorporated) Stationers Engravers Louisville, Kentucky For Packaging Cakes, Cookies, and Confectionery • BAKING CUPS in thirty sizes — Round, Square and oblong are supplied in white Bake-Tcst stock, 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. • DOUBLE FACED corrugated cake pads and discs in sizes to fit every need. • CORRODEK LINERS — Cakes actually 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 word 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, Massachusetts ATLANTA NEW YORK CHICAGO LOS ANGELES Compliments of OHIO BAG SUITCASE COMPANY Manufacturers of Luggage 30 W. Pearl St. Cincinnati, Ohio THE NORTHWESTERN ELEVATOR AND MILL CO. MT. VERNON, OHIO s aL_ EDELWEISS JOHN SEXTON ■CO. MANUFACTURING WHOLESALE GROCERS CHICAGO BROOKLYN ELLIOTT COMPANY Manufacturers of power plant equipment, including steam turbines, turbine-genera- tors, engines, engine-generators, motors, de- aerators and feed-water heaters, condensers, steam jet ejectors, desuperheaters, strainers, tube cleaners, etc. Plants in JEANNETTE, PA., RIDGWAY, PA., and SPRINGFIELD, OHIO WASHBURN CROSBY COMPANY KNITTING YARNS For Over 30 Years Send for 600 Free Samples CLIVEDEN YARN CO. 711 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Compliments of BAKER ' S NEWS LINEN YARNS for HAND WEAVING Hughes Fawcett Inc. 1 1 5 Franklin St., New York, N. Y. FINE LUMBER For Furniture — Carvings — Models — Boats Mahogany — White Pine — Hardwoods — Cypress CHARLES F. SHIELS CO. Cincinnati, Ohio Compliments of Claussner Hosiery Company Paducah, Kentucky, Manufacturing LiauMJ ' KLEER-SHEER Exquisite HOSIERY Fo TfW iWio lil ' u tiit FuuaI Pleasingly Delicious RICHMOND BAKING COMPANY Richmond, Ind. Compliments of DORIS PIATT Food Products of Quality LUTZ SCHRAMM INC. Pittsburgh, Pa. A. F. SCRUGGS Representing the PENN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. Short Street Berea, Ky. SURGICAL — HOSPITAL SUPPLIES Wheel Chairs Fracture Beds Surgical Garments Trusses CROCKER-FELS 18 West 7th St. Cincinnati, Ohio INSIST ON Magnolia Meat Products DELICIOUSLY DIFFERENT Eimiiart Packing Company Model 40 Spring-Air $39.50 The Mattress that Has Everything Truly America ' s finest Inner Spring — Karr Spring Construction guaranteed 15 years. Automatic adjustment to weight — finest quality cotton — exc lu- sive Jacquard Damask covering 50% heavier than standard — American-made throughout. LOUISVILLE BEDDING CO., INC. Louisville, Kentucky C o M P L I M E N T S O F F R I E N D Compliments of A. M. SAUNDERS Representing KEYSTONE BRUSH. CO., INC. Sanitary and Institutional Supplies 3 3-35 Spruce Street New York, New York E. T. LIAYS SONS Grade A Milk Phone 32 ENGINEERS recommend pzsmc time proved REFRIGERATION because... Ice-O-Matic compressors are precision-built for enduring, trouble - free performance. This is in- sured by a motor car type pressure oiling sys- tem which provides pos- itive lubrication to every moving part of the com- pressor under any and all conditions. . . . and because This feature is incorpor- ated in every one of the 63 styles and sizes of compressors which enable Ice-O-Matic to meet every refrigeration need — large or small — with a made-to-measure instal- lation. NOTE: There are 12 Ice-O-Matic installations at Berea College. AUTHORIZED DISTRIBUTOR W. L. BAIN, JR. 219 North Limestone St. LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY Fine Furniture W. F. HIGGINS CO. Richmond, Kentucky Phone 474 Compliments of BEREA ' S 5c TO $1.00 STORE Compliments from BRAND STUDIOS Patronize Your Standard Dealers RAYMOND SCRIVNER, Agent AO ISICOS. WHOLESALE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES IRVINE STREET RICHMOND, KENTUCKY ALABAMA Ken Christian (Cullman) , Cullman Lee Kilgo (Cullman), Logan E. O. Littlejohn (DeKalb), Crossville Elizabeth Baxter (Madison., Huntsville Betty Chambers (Madison), Huntsville jettie Mayo (Madison) ,Hobbs Island Raymond McCamy (Marshall), Scottsboro Ruth Sullivan (Morgan) , Decatur Glendon Crow (Winston), Lynn GEORGIA Cornelia Haynes (Walker) , Rossville Roy Reynolds (Gordon), Calhoun Ruth Siler (Warren), Warrenton KENTUCKY Ernie England (Adair), Toria Harold Rosenbaum (Adair), Fairplay Imogene Wall (Casey), Eubank Caleb York (Casey), Windsor Laurella Williams (Menifee), Frenchburg Lula Higgins (Rowan), Farmers Hazel Longworth (Bell), Middlesboro Edith Orick (Bell), Linda Mary Ellis (Boyd), Ashland Robert Menefee (JBoyd), Ashland Frank Queen (Boyd), Ashland Emma Snoddy (Boyd), Ashland Katherine Stith (Boyd), Ashland Dorothy Strait (Boyd), Catlettsburg Ruth Thomas (Boyd), Ashland Anna Marie Smith (Boyd), Ashland Hubert Moore (Breathitt), Altro Harlan Risner (Breathitt), Guerrant Richard Cole (Greenup)_, Taylor Virginia Morton (Greenup), Taylor Wilda Boyd (Lewis), Trinity Jesse Allen (Clay), Trixie Lizzie Allen (Clay), Teges William White (Clay), Burning Springs Lewis Gregory (Clay), Hima Fay Mills (Clay), Manchester Robert Massey (Clay), Be rnice Joe Carnes (Russell), Jamestown Louise Coyer (Floyd), Prestonsburg Charley Hale (Floyd), Goodloe Nellie Leslie (Floyd), Estill [ack Mullins (Floyd), Betsy Layne Johnie Patten (Floyd), Hueysville Margaret Pezzarossi (Floyd), Lackey Ceredo Reed (Floyd), Lackey Owen Rickard (Floyd), Weeksbury Robert Shepherd (Floyd), Risner Ogden Stewart (Floyd), Langley Vivian Goff (Garrard), Bryantsville Mary Ellen Johnson (Garrard), Paint Lick J. T. Prewitt (Garrard), Lancaster Dorothy Brown (Harlan), Lynch Flora Cox (Harlan), Yancey Tom Farris (Harlan) Yancey Guy Wesley (Harlan), Lynch Earl Hays (Jackson), McKee Bruce Rader (Jackson), Egypt Theodore Rice (Johnson), Paintsville Ruth Herd (Knox), Barbourville Eleanor Davis (Knox), Barbourville Reid Cromer (Laurel), London Dalbert Sherman (Laurel), London James Woody (Laurel), Pittsburg Hurshal Skaggs (Lawrence), Terryville Helen McGuire (Lee), Beattyville William McGuire (Lee), Beattyville John D Baker (Leslie), Confluence Claybourne Campbell (Leslie), Confluence Verva Coleman (Letcher), McRoberts Virginia McDonough (Letcher) , Neon Thurlow Gash (Henderson), Horse Shoe Wa yne McLain (Iredell), Statesville Chad Mullins (Letcher), Whitesburg Raymond Trail (Letcher), Jenkins Vernard Webb (Letcher), Dunham Arthur Wright (Letcher), Jenkins Emma Brenda (Lincoln), Crab Orchard Jewell Martin (Lincoln), Crab Orchard Edith Sutton (Lincoln), Crab Orchard Lewis Sutton (Lincoln), Crab Orchard Herman McDonald (McCreary), Whitley City Theop McDonald (McCreary), Whitley City Lydia Alexander (Madison) , Bybee Kearney Adams (Magoffin), Leatha Charley Bailey (Magoffin) , Carver Irene Pieratt (Morgan), Bonny Helen Walter (Morgan), Nickell Willard Campbell (Owsley), Lerose Dorothy Green (Owsley), Ricetown James Newman (Owsley), Island City Orin Peters (Owsley), Island City Glenn Wilson (Owsley), Booneville Berniece Hiser (Perry), Bulan Lois Kelley (Perry), Hazard Hazel Patton (Perry), Combs Lynn Anderson (Pike) , Praise Bill Joe Gray (Pike), Stone Denis May (Pike), McAndrews Ernest Nestor (Pike), Lookout Carmen Owens (Pike), Praise Earle Powell (Pike), Praise Lurla Ramey (Pike) Belfry Burl Back (Pulaski), Eubank Elizabeth Cameron (Pulaski), Burnside Evelyn Cameron (Pulaski), Burnside Iva Lou Keller (Pulaski), Somerset Pearl Phillpott (Pulaski), Somerset Mary Helen Roberts (Pulaski), Burnside Kitty Ruddle (Pulaski), Somerset Fred Short (Pulaski), Somerset Mae Belle Singleton (Pulaski), Eubank Mary Ola Tanner (Pulaski), Somerset Bernice Wall (Pulaski), ' Eubank Dan Wesley (Pulaski), Science Hill Luther Chancy (Rockcastle), Bloss Christine Mullins (Rockcastle), Mt. Vernon George Corder (Wayne) , Slavans Gussie Cox (Wayne), Cooper Inn Dodson (Wayne), Monticello Donald Hicks (Wayne), Windy James Walters (Wayne), Cabell June White (Wayne), Monticello Joanna Arthur (WhitleyJ, Wofford William McCreary (Whitley), Corbin Anne Saylor (Whitley), Loyall Eugene Wyatt (WhitleyJ, Otas William Nickell (Wolfe), Hazel Green NORTH CAROLINA William Houston (Avery), Spear Fred Brown (Buncombe), Black Mt. Bud Brown (Buncombe), Barnardsville Fred Davis (Buncombe), Arden William Davis (Buncombe), Fairview Margaret Grimes (Buncombe), Fletcher joe Morris (Buncombe), Black Mt. Hazel Parker (Buncombe), Asheville Grace Roberts (Buncombe), Asheville William Seay (Buncombe), Asheville Jack Stevens (Buncombe), Candler Elizabeth Wood (Buncombe), W. Asheville Annabel Avery (Burke), Morganton James Davis (Burke), Connelly Springs Gwindle Hamby (Cherokee) , Violet Opal Greene (Clay), Brasstown James Price (Clay), Hayesville William Turner (Haywood), Waynesville Reid Parker (Lincoln), Cherry ville Bernice Angel (Madison), Paint Fork Charles Jarvis (Madison), Mars Hill Agnes Reeves (Madison), Spring Creek Graham Somers (Madison), Ivy Nellie Jones (Polk), Mill Spring Loma Kennedy (Rutherford), Carloeen Florine Wilson (Rutherford), Forest City Beryl Wilson (Yancey), ' Bald Creek Woodrow Yount (Yancey), Micaville TENNESSEE Danie Garland (Blount), Maryville Alice Stafford (Blount), Maryville Lewis Ayres (Campbell), Elk Valley Elmer Duncan (Campbell), Newcomb Lucille Lawson (Campbell), Elk Valley Thelma Meredith (Cam D belI), Elk Valley Glenn Shoun (Campbell), LaFollette Jesse Burden (Cumberland), Crab Orchard Betty Elmore (Cumberland), Crossville Anita Puckett (DeKalb) , Smithville Robert Blake (Fentress), Jamestown Luther Atkinson (Fentress), Clarkrange Kenneth Smith (Fentress), Clarkrange Margaret Hill (Grainger), Bean Station Mary Hill (Grainger), Bean Station Sue Brooks (Greene), Greeneville O. M. Hartsell (Greene), Limestone Alice Malstrom (Hamilton), Chattanooga Ruby Greenwell (Hawkins), Bulls Gap Roy Lyell (Hickman), Lyle Ralph Brown (Jefferson), Dandridge Leona Patterson (Jefferson), Dandridge James Skeen (Jefferson), Talbott Myrtle Lee Greene (Knox), Boyd ' s Creek Kyle Shown (Knox), Knoxville Susan Atchley (Loudon), Lenoir City Phyllis Douglass (McMinn), Athens Nannie Bess Ward (Megis), Decatur Helen Carlock (Overton), Alpine Kathryn Wilson (Polk), Benton Wm. Ketchersid (Rhea), Spring City Walter Patterson (Rhea), Spring City Frances Moore (Roane), Harriman Barclay McGhee (Sullivan), Bristol Hal Smith (Sullivan), Bristol VIRGINIA Hugh Scott (Alleghany), Covington Ruth Roberts (Amherst), Monroe Percy Shue (Augusta), Staunton Grace Beverly (Dickenson), Norland Janice Kennedy (Dickenson) Coeburn Lora Kiser (Dickenson), Fremont Catherine Sutherland (Dickenson) Clintwood Oscar Cannaday (Franklin), Ferrum David Headley (Fredrick), Winchester Preston Mitchell (Grayson), Elk Creek William Hardiman (Giles), Pearisburg Georgiana Ball (Lee), Jonesville Marion Carter (Lee), Jonesville Carl Livesay (Lee), Blackwater Ruth McNeil (Lee), Rose Hill Howard Pilson (Patrick), Stuart Ohmer Milton (Roanoke), Roanoke Wiley Jarrell (Rockingham), Dayton Patty Dingus (Scott), Dungannon Sylvia Jennings (Scott), Fairview Lotta McConnell (Scott), Gate City Kern Eutsler (Shenandoah), Edinburg Winifred Crockett (Tazewell), N. Tazewell Joe Greene (Wise), Big Stone Gap Allen Kilgore (Wise), St. Paul B C D i . — _ ' v- —  V zy ' ™, - ' - - - t .r-- ..— i -•) j . , -j .■•   •■«  •• — .-.j- ' • J ' s 7 8 s . ' ...-r—j ■r .._ ■- . ' - z V ' . w- ; • «« i- y i . v — ... - ' ■_ A •s .... -■■f.i.r y • ! • I — . . ' ! ' - . ' --A  A j ? — V J Oma Salyers (Wise), Coeburn Edward Shuler (Wise), Appalachia Harry Butler (Wise), Tazewell Helton Hale (Wythe), Cripple Creek Elizabeth Humphreys (Wise), Max Meadows WEST VIRGINIA Corleene Shumate (Boone), Ramage Nell Click (Cabell), Huntington Rachel Green (Greenbrier) , Rainelle Eileen McDaniel (Greenbrier) , Lewisburg Hugh McLaughlin (Greenbrier) , Max welt on Marion Parker (Greenbrier), E. Rainelle Randolph Tully (Greenbrier) , E. Rainelle Sally Wilkerson (Greenbrier) , Lewisburg Elf red Zimmerman (Greenbrier) , Crag Elizabeth Kessel (Hardy), Moorefield Hilton Kessel (Hardy), Moorefield Carson Auxier (McDowell), Superior Helen Cooper (McDowell), Thorpe Jtan Reed (McDowell), Welch B i 1 lie Burchfield (Mercer), Bluefield Wayne Eisenhour (Mineral) , Keyser Charlotte Vandiver (Mineral), Burlington Clyde Bensey (Mingo), Red Jacket Wilbur Harper (Pendleton), Franklin Harry Callison (Pocahontas), Beard Annette McCommack (St. Raleigh), Blue Jay Cecil McKinney (St. Raleigh), Amigo Robert Felton (Tucker), Parsons Harold Walters (Tucker), Davis Jack Walters (Tucker), Davis Mary Ruth Jones (Wayne), East Lynn Ruby Jones (Wayne), East Lynn L. T. McClure (Wayne), Fort Gav Joseph Thompson (Wayne), Wayne Emma Brannon (Webster), Parcoal Landon Cox (Wyoming), Keyrock Charles Welch (Wyoming), Glen Rogers ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: To John Patten, for Berea Territory Map, and sketch for faculty section. To Daniel Thorington, for title pages of creative writing, organizations, and athletics. To Harley Fillmore, for cartoons in creative writing section. To Marion Wygal, for inaugural day write-up. To Lois Kelley and Lyell Thomas, for write-up of dramatic club activities. To Harcourt, Brace, Co., for picture of Carl Sandburg. To Mr. Kavanaugh, for permission to use color plates of Danforth Chapel. Always Finer Quality Always Reasonably Priced Sold Only Through Independent Merchants Compliments of BEREA NATIONAL BANK Compliments of PAN CONFECTION FACTORY COMPLIMENTS AND BEST WISHES FROM CoriHI Construction Company GENERAL CONTRACTORS WINCHESTER, KY. This Issue Of The 1 940 Chimes Is Bound In A KlUSkll AIT COVER Produced Exclusively By Kingskraft Division K I -S r H I PRESS. INC. Kingsport, Tennessee American Paper Products of Distinction AMERICAN LACE PAPER COMPANY Milwaukee, Wisconsin Compliments of the MIAMI BUTTERINE COMPANY Compliments of ROMINGER FUNERAL HOME Night Phone 48 BEREA, KY. Day Phone 125 RICHMOND GREEN HOUSES J. P. Reichspfarr The Beauty of our Business is Flowers Phone 188 Richmond, Kentucky OLDHAM, ROBERTS, and POWELL Incorporated Funeral Directors and Embalmers Phone 413 Richmond, Kentucky Best Wishes From FULTON FISH MARKET Louisville Kentucky Best Wishes For The Class of 1940 Ihiviilson Itrolli4 rs Co, BEREA, KENTUCKY Service With A Smile DRY CLEANING and TAILORING WELL DONE . ! Short Street NU-WAY CLEANERS Dependable Tailorin g Chestnut Street OFFICE EQUIPMENT COMPANY. INC. COMPLETE OFFICE OUTFITTERS Also Complete Line of SCHOOL FURNITURE AND SUPPLIES 117-125 South Fourth Wabash 5161 Louisville, Ky. Branch Store 128 West Short Street Phone 3 372 Lexington, Ky. LOGAN BEDS Best for Rest Faculty and Students We Appreciate Your Patronage PORTER-MOORE DRUG CO. (Incorporated) Berea, Kentucky Congratulations, Class of ' 40. You know what real comfort is. Berea College has provided you with classrooms properly heated by Trane Convectors — The modern successors to the old-fashioned cast iron radiator. Trane Convectors, from the cam- plete Trane line of heating, cooling, and air conditioning equipment, are the Class of 1940 when it comes to heating. TRPHE LA CROSSE, WISCONSIN In Louisville: 727 South First Street LACQUER SPECIALTIES, Incorporated Allegheny, Ave. Newark, New Jersey LITTLE MAMA ' S TEA ROOM For That Extra Snack Short Street Compliments of MADTSON SOUTHERN NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST CO. Member of the Federal Deposit Corp. Richmond, Kentucky Compliments of STATE BANK AND TRUST CO. Member of the Federal Deposit Corp. Richmond, Kentucky BEREA CAKES and VARIETY BREADS Berea College Bakery Courtesy of a friend Congratulations to the CLASS OF ' 40 We know you are going to make the world a little better place to live in. ZIMMER PAPER PRODUCTS Indianapolis Guaranteed Bread Wrappers PHOTOGRAPHY PORTRAIT COMMERCIAL PHOTO FINISHING PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES CAMERAS FILMS SUNDRIES o p p shimo 27 Main Street Phototelephone 79 BEREA, KENTUCKY SNOW BALL YARNS STEINBERGER BROS., Inc. 10 West 33rd Street New York City Converters of Worsted, Angora and Rayon Yarns for Hand Knitting. FINE HANDMADE TABLE GLASSWARE MADE BY THE CAMBRIDGE GLASS CO. SOLD BY OWEN McKEE PHONE 60 RICHMOND, KY. Compliments of BEREA MOTOR CO Berea, Kentucky Compliments of PARKWAY CRUSHED FRUIT COMPANY BROCK-McVEY COMPANY, INC. Lexington, Ky. Wholesale Distributors of Plumbing, Heating, Tinner ' s Supplies and Sunbeam Furnaces This space is paid for by a friend The Candy Kitchen The Mountain Weaver Boys 1 OTDEKr I 4lTOST8IE The Needlecraft The Fireside Industries Compliments of BEREA COLLEGE STORE Operated by and for students and workers of Berea College. THE STAFF OF THE BEREA COLLEGE PRESS WHO PRODUCED THE CHIMES FOR 1940 Iooup ©auprtt A PRIVATE HOTEL WITH ALL MODERN CONVENIENCES A REAL HOME ATMOSPHERE Managed and Controlled by Berea College Products of Student Industries Located on the Corner of Main Street Opposite Union Church Under Berea College Management — Berea, Kentucky Compliments of J. W. PURKEY SONS LOWE BROS. PAINTS AND VARNISHES Where Bereans Save Berea, Kentucky Compliments of J. C. PENNEY COMPANY Richmond, Kentucky Compliments of BRYAN-HUNT CO. Incorporated Lexington, Kentucky Compliments of GULF REFINING CO. Incorporated TO BEREA .... Our sincere appreciation for the many years of pleasant associations we have en- joyed as suppliers of Boxes for Berea Beaten Biscuits and other Bakery Products. The GARDNER-RICHARDSON Co. Middletown, Ohio Manufacturers of Folding Cartons — and Displays New Management Phone 399 — We Deliver Chicken Dinners — Old-Fashioned Southern Cooking DIXIE KITCHEN MARGARET CORNETT, Mgr. Ky. County Ham — Sizzling Steaks Sandwiches — Drinks Chestnut Street — Route 2 5 — Berea, Ky. Foot Long Hot Dogs MUTTON FUNERAL HOME Phone 230 Day or Night Berea, Kentucky Rendering A Community Service jg yjr Experts say .... Play the Great Pennsylvania Ball PENNSYLVANIA RUBBER COMPANY Jeanette, Pa. CALUMET TEA COFFEE COMPANY Chicago Compliments of NATIONAL KREAM CO., Inc. Food Products of Merit 360 Furman Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Compliments of PARKE BUS LINES Compliments of THE C. M. PITT SONS Call us for Special Trips COMPANY Baltimore, Maryland Manufacturers of quality Phone 1050 Resident 552 bakery food supplies Richmond, Kentucky Cangratlulations to the Graduation Class Lee Clav Products Co. Manufacturers of Septic Tanks Architectural Chimney Tops Salt Glazed Sewer Pipe Fire Brick and Grate Backs Fire Clay Flue Linings Agricultural Drain Tile Your Farm Department Uses Our Drain Tiles and Sewer Pipe CLEARFIELD ROWAN COUNTY KENTUCKY JAHN OLDER ENGRAVING CO. 817 West Washington Blvd., Chicago, III. - Telephone MONroe 7080 Commercial Artists, Photographers and Makers of Fins Printing Platss for Black and Colors MARSHALL LUMBER MILL CO. Incorporated Manufactures Yellow Pine Lumber Concentration Yard-Mill Work Montgomery, Alabama Compliments of HOTEL BLUE GRASS and RESTAURANT Berea, Kentucky Compliments of BOHON STORES CO. Richmond, Kentucky Compliments of LEHMAN BROS. KNOWN FOR BETTER VALUES Richmond, Kentucky LUTHER KINDRED ' S SHOE SHOP All Kinds of Shoe Repairing Short St. Berea, Ky. (-omh.LLms.nki of czrf jiLsnd Compliments of UNION TRANSFER AND STORAGE COMPANY Lexington, Kentucky JOHN SCHWARZ Fine Footwear 754 756 McMillian St. Cincinnati, Ohio COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND Compliments Of CENTRAL FRANKLIN PROCESS COMPANY, Package Yarn Dyers, Chattanooga, Tennessee a - %m w - ■f??r ■' te£ «i te i czrfutoa lafiki ■• l • I . KXK HfiJtF i 6885 1 ' i-.irtr ■I H KBi lUi DATE DUE GAYLORD PRINTED IN USA H MK M WBS10J KQHWi ' tv! BIHLiXuiMif ' v -0 ■' • ' ' H Kn. ' Jun : V; 1 - ' ; ;-. ' ' ' HflHH ■■i ' v.-:-. ' r„ ' ?! EcssJ?? ■♦ ' • ■..;•£• ■■■■SK ' w c ' r H,,Vi K$mm jHEBQBI db A f k% ti fiCik ' ■• 1 ' ' vWj ' tXi ' Ww ' : - ' ' : W$h « « ' £mi • ■. 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