Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY)

 - Class of 1941

Page 1 of 168

 

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1941 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 168 of the 1941 volume:

Oju o1j u-v =Lsul H arLrmajcrrL ENGRAVING BY J A H N OILIER ENGRAVING CO The Senior Class Of 1941 Presents ... The Chimes Berea College Berea, Kentucky Colleae 378.7691 B487c 1941 Berea College Collegiate dept. Senior class Chimes. V Clrco rlreTr at UJe, live- S ' cwXov G1cls-s ot riA-rLetreerL VtuLrTjcbrcd, cltlcL £-orlr .i otxe, tre olve to lex A e Cl TrecotrcL oir o-u-T tcL tr -yeo ir cls -ytvLcletufcs ot Be-re x- Colleae To tine Alu mxxi , wlxo rtx av e -voi.il oort join., we cLecUcalre ttxi-5 l ootc. ,AitlcL tro all Hie Se-ttAoir clac e wlio - x .VL IrKx-s oVwtxt-C £a-c CLpp-ro-ucxl. Ijhe Chitru s -StrodEjfr — g ■ We Dedicate to the Alumni . . . Wilson Evans Alumni Secretary Lelia G. Flannery Secretary in the Office The Chimes 194 1 -tor minds th.u are in retrospection of the good of the past. — tor hearts that love the Berea of here and n: -for the faithful ambassadorship in representing Berea in all parts of the world. -and, for their unchanging interest, support and encouragement in keeping the Berea they love in continual progress. AM) is an experience peculiar to the Class of ' 41: that our dean close this chapter of his life and take leave of Berea along with us. His years of service: We do not choose to extoll all this in his very presence. We dare, rather, (with a term of time-proved respect) to speak out a bit of sentiment: Dean Tom, we ' re proud to have been graduated by you. THE ADMINISTRATION FRANCIS S. HUTCHINS President T. A. Hendricks, Dean of the Upper Division J. F. Allen, Dean of Upper Division Women UPPER DIVISION Agnes Aspnes, Home Economics William J. Baird, Education Lawrence Baker, Psychology John S. Bangson, Biology Mary Brooks, Home Economics Wilbur G. Burroughs, Geology Julian H. Capps, Chemistry Margaret Chapin, French Albert J. Chidester, Education Lee F. Crippen, History and Political Science Mary Ela, Art Virginia Englc, Library Science Rector Hardin, Political Science and Economics J. W. Hatcher, Sociology Alfred J. Henderson, History and Political Science William R. Hutcherson, Mathematics Malcolm H. Kerr, Agriculture Charlotte P. Ludlum, Ancient Languages 2 jM FACULTY . Howard B. Monier, Agriculture Waldemar Noll, Physics E. Taylor Parks, History and Political Science Charles E. Pauck, German Charles S. Price, Agriculture Elizabeth Richardson, French W. Gordon Ross, Philosophy and Bible Emily Ann Smith, English May B. Smith, English F. A. Stewart, Agriculture William L. Tayler, History and Political Science Eunice M. True, Home Economics Ernest J. Weekes, English Albert G. Weidler, Economics Feaster Wolford, Agriculture HAR ROVE LAWSON MILLS MAY D R T H Y T H E L M A N A M A R COURT P R 1 N C E S c T T 5 T E V E N S I L S N ALICE BERYL s KATHRYN 1 T H L m l s £ J chimes: Senior Class Officers Hal Smith, President Phylli s Douglass, Vice Pres. Lynn Anderson. Secretary Severino Ochoco, Treasurer CHIMES : ALLEN, B. P., Jr. Berea, Kentucky; A.B., Biology; Folk Club, 2,3,4, Vice Pres., 4; Basketball, 1,2,3, Capt. 1; B Club 3,4; Track, 1. ALLEN, JESSE BISHOP Trixie, Ky.; A.B., Economics; Tau Kappa Alpha; Oratory, 1,2,3,4; 2nd in State Peace Oratorical con- test in 1940-41; Debate 1,2,3,4; Red Cross Life Saver, 1,2,3,4; P.A.F. ALLEN, LIZZIE MAE Manchester, Ky.; A.B., Psychology; Y.W.C.A. 1,2,3, 4,5; Basketball 2; Folk Club, 5; Utile Dulcc, 1,2,3, Pres. 3. ANDERSON, LYNN Praise, Ky.; B.S., Home Economics; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Outing Club, 2,3,4; Home Ec. Club, 3,4. ANGEL, NORA BERNICE Paint Fork, N.C.; A.B., English; Berea Players, 4; Transfer from Mars Hill College, Mars Hill. N.C. ANGEL, CHARLOTTE MAE Dundee, 111.; A.B., Chemistry; Choir, 1; Glee Club, 1; Harmonia, 1; Movie Club, 1; Women ' s House Govern- ment, 3; Y.W.C.A., 1,2; Vanguards, 2,4; Alpha Alpha Pi, 2; W.A.A., 3; P.A.F., 4. ATKINSON, LUTHER BENJAMIN Clarkrange, Tenn.; A.B., Mathematics; Rural Life Club; P.A.F.; Y.M.C.A.; Cooperative Assn.; Pi Alpha. AVERY, ANNABEL Morganton, N.C; A.B., Chemistry; Vanguards, 3,4; F.O.R., 2,3,4, Sec. 4; Mathematics; Sigr Student Coop. Choir, 2,3,4; Harmonia, 4 Y.C.A.W.; Dramatics, 2. AYRES, ROBERT LEWIS Elk Valley, Tenn.; A.B., Sigma; Pi Alpha; Y.M.C.A. BACK, WILLIAM BURL Eubank, Ky.; B.S., Agriculture; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Folk Club, 2,3; Rho Delta, 3.4; Ag. Union. 1,2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Judging Team, 3. BAILEY, CHARLEY CLAYBORNE Carver, Ky.; B.S., Agriculture; Basketball; Track; Y.M.C.A.; Rho Delta; Ag-Home Ec. Club; Ag. Union; Student Coop. BALL, GEORGIANA ELLISON Jonesvillc, Va.; A.B., Psychology; L.D. Glee Club; Harmonia; Choir; French Club; Pi Gamma Mu. BAXTER, MARY ELIZABETH Hun tsville, Ala.; A.B., English; French Club, 1,2,3; Choir, 2; Y.W.C.A., 2; C.E., 1; Folk Club, 2; Outing Club, 4; Berea Players, 4. BECKLER, HUGH KYLE Treadway, Tenn.; A.B., History and Political Science; Phi Delta, Treas., 2, Pres. 4; Y.M.C.A. BETTIS, MADGE Dandridge, Tenn.; A.B., Home Economics; P.A.F., 3,4; W.A.A., 3; Y.W.C.A., 3,4; Folk Club, 4; Home Ec. Club, 4; Ag-Home Ec Club, 4; Bird Club, 4; Basketball, 3. chimes; Y.W.C.A., 1,2; Outin K Club, Harmonia, 3; Life Saving, 3 ; BOW, SHONG LIN East Cleveland, Ohio; A.B., Home Economics; Y.W.C.A., 4; P.A.F., 4; Harmonia, :,4; Choir, 2; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3.4; ID Glee Club,, 1; French Club, 2. BRANNON, EMMA LEE Parcoal, W. Va.j A.B.. Chemistry; Basketball. 1,2,3,4; W.A.A., 1,3,4; 1,2,3; Berea Players, 2; Coop., 2; Folk Club, 3; Delta Phi Alpha, 3, P. Alpha, Sec. 4. BRATCHER, ANDREW Berea, Ky.; A.B., Physics; Y.M.C.A., 1,2.3,4; Pi Alpha, 3,4; Sigma Pi Sigma, 4; Bird Club, 4. BRENDA, EMMA EMILIE Crab Orchard, Ky.; A.B., Home Economics; Ag-Home Ec Club, 4; Home Ec. Club, 2; German Club, 4; Delta Phi Alpha, 2, Treas.; Y.W.C.A., 1,2; B Club, 3,4; W.A.A. Board, 1,2,3,4. BROOKS, SUE NELLE Greenville, Tenn.; B.S., Home Economics; Y.W.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Harmonia, 3; Ag-Home Ec, 3,4; Home Ec. Club, 3; P.A.F., 4; Board of Governors, 4. BROWN, RALPH GERON Dandridge, Tenn.; A.B., Sociology; Y.M.C.A.. 1,2,3,4, Cab., 2,3,4; Vanguards, 1,2,3,4, Pres., 3; P.A.F., 3,4; Education Club, Vice Pres., 4. BROWN, WILLIAM TALMADGE, JR. Barnardsville, N.C.; B.S., Agriculture; Ag. Union, 1,2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Rho Delta, 3,4; Freshman Track, 1; Intramural Basketball, 2,3,4; Intra-mural Football, 3,4. BURCHFIELD, WILLIAM NATHANIEL Bluefield, V. Va.; A.M.. Sociology; C.E.; P.A.I .; Vanguards; Y.M.C.A.; Y.C.A.W.; Transfer from Bluefield College. Bluefield, W. Va. BURDEN, JESS Crab Orchard, Tenn.; A. B., Phvsics; Y.M.C.A., I; C.E., 1,2,3,4; Sigma Pi Sigma, 4. ' BURDEN, LEONA Dandridge, Tenn.; A.B., Hume Economics; C.E.. 1,2,3,4; Home Ec. Club, 4. CALLISON, HARRY RICHARD Beard, W. Va.; B.S., Agriculture; A.S.; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 4,5; Varsity Basketball Mgr., 5; B Club, 5; Freshman Track, 1; Men ' s Hall Union, 4,5. CAMPBELL, CLAYBORNE D. Confluence, Ky.; B.S., Agriculture; Photo-Movie Club, 4; Phi Delta, 2,3,4,5; International Relations Club, 4; Education Club, 4,5; Ag. Union, 5,6, Vice Pres. 6; Ag-Home Ec Club, 5,6; C.E., 2,3,4,5,6, Vice Pres. 5, Pres. 4,6. CARNES, JOE SHELVY Jamestown, Ky.; A.B., Economics; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; C.E., 1,2; Baseball, 1. CARTER, MARION EDWARDS Jonesville, Va.; B.S., Agriculture; Ag. Union, 1,2,3.4; Ag-Home Ec Club, 3,4. CASSADY, KERM1T RALPH Petersburg, W. Va.; A.B., Philosophy; Transfer from Shenandoah College, Dayton, Va.; Philosophy Club, 1; Y.M.C.A., 1,2; Phi Delta, 1,2,3; C.E., 1; Harmonia. 1; Vanguards, 1; Men ' s Hall Union, 2. AiA chimes; CLARK, ARCH B. Berea, Ky.; A.B., Biology; Delta Phi Alpha, 3,4; Pi Alpha, 3,4; Y.M.C.A., 1. CLARK, FRANCES BURTON Bcrca, Ky.; A.B., Chemistry; Basketball, 1,2; Track, 1; Folk Club, 2,3, Pres. 3; B Club, 2,3,4; A.Z., 3,4; Y.M.C.A., 2,3,4; Inter-mural Basketball, 3. CLARKE, WALTER MALCOLM, JR. New York City, N.Y.; A.B., Philosophy; Folk Club, 2,3; Twenty Writers Club, 2; Swimming Team, 1,2,3,4; Y.M.C.A., Cab., 2; Y. C. A. W., Chairman, 2; Glee Club, 1,2,3,4; B Club, 4. CLICK, NELL JONES Huntington, W. Va., B.S., Home Economics; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Y.W.C.A.; E.E., 3; House Pres. of Elizabeth Roger Hall, 4; Transfer from Marshall College, Huntington, W. Va. COX, GUSSIE WELLS Cincinnati, Ohio; A.B., Education; P.A.F., 4; Har- monia, 2,4; Education Club, 3,4, Sec.-Treas. 4. COYER, LOUISE Prestonsburg, Ky.; A.B., English; Transfer from Caney Junior College, Pippapass, Ky.; Movie Club, 1; Y.W.C.A., 1,2; Folk Club, 2; Berea Players, 2; Prize Bible, 1. CROCKETT, WINIFRED EILEEN North Tazewell, Va.; A.B., English; Y.W.C.A., 1; Outing Club, 3; Berea Players, 4. CROMER, REED EDWIN London, Ky.; B.S., Agricultur Ag. Union, 1,2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Basketball, 1; Track, 1,2,3,4; B Club, 2,3,4; Phi Delta, 3,4, Y.M.C.A., 1,2; Winner of Livestock Judging Contest, 4; Judging Team, 4; Inter-mural Athletics Council, 4. CUNDIFF, CLINTON KENNEDY Faubush, Ky.; B.S., Agriculture; Ag. Union, 1,2,3,4; Judging Team, 1,2,3,4; First Place, 1,2,3,4. DAMRON, EVERETTE LEONARD Catlettsburg, Ky.; A.B., Biology; Freshman Cross Country, 1; Harmonia, 1; Berea Players, 1,2,3,4; Men ' s Glee Club, 3; Alcohol Speech Prize, 2. DAVIS, FRED WILLIAM Arden, N.C.; B.S., Agriculture; Ballad Singers, 2,3; Folk Club, 2,3; Baseball, 1,2,3,4; Ag. Union, 1,2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4. DAVIS, MARIE RIGSBY Wildie, Ky.; A.B., Home Economics; Berea Players, 1,2; C.E., 1,2,3,4; Women ' s Glee Club, 2,3,4; Har- monia, 1,2; Choir, 1,2,3; French Club, 1,2; Ag-Home Ec Club, 4. DENNIS, JOHN DUMONT Bakersville, N.C.; A.B., Economics; Basketball, 1,2; Track, 1,2; Baseball, 1,2,3,4; Y.M.C.A., 1,2; P.A.F., 4; Class Officer Soph. Class; B Club. DINGUS, PATTY GRAY Dungannon, Va.; A.B., Home Economics; Student Coop, 1; Y.W.C.A., 1,2; Ag-Home Ec. Club. 3; Home Ec. Club, 4. DOMAS, WELLINGTON SHAY Chicago, III.; A.B., History and Political Science. CHIMES DOUGLASS, PHYLIS MARIE Athe Gle; hens, lenn.; A.B., English; Basketball Club, 3,4; W.A.A. Board, 4; Vice Pres. Class, 4; Chimes Staff, 4; Transfer from Tennessee Wesleyan. Athens, Tenn. DUNCAN, WILLIAM ELMER Newcomb, Tenn.; B.S., Agriculture; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 4; Ag. Union, 1,4; Transfer from Lincoln Memorial University, Harrogate, Tenn. DURHAM, WILLIAM EDMUND Berea, Ky.; A.B., Music; Basketball, 1,2,; Baseball, 1,2, Coach, 3,4; Tennis, 1,2; B Club; Pi Alpha; Ass ' is! Director College Band, 1,2,3; Director College Band 4; Orchestra, 1,2,3,4; Ambassadors, 1, Zephyrs, 3. EISENHOUR, GEORGE WAYNE Keyser, V. Va.; A.B., Mathematics; L.D. Glee Club, 2; A.B., 1,2,3,4; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Education Club, 3,4; Folk Club, 3,4; C.E., 3,4; Berea Players, 2,4; Pi Alpha, 3,4; Photography Club, 3,4; Winner of Freshman Bible. ELLIOT, PAULINE L. Middleburg, Ky.; B.S., Home Economics; Glee Club; Band; Choir; C.E.; French Club; Harmonia. ELLIS, MARY LOUISE Ashland, Ky.; A.B., Sociology; Y.W.C.A., 1,2,3,4; C.E., 4; French Club, 3; Folk Club, 3,4; P.A.F. ' , ' ; Education Club, 4; Basketball, 1; Tennis, 1,2. ERNEST, DOROTHY LOUISE Walhalla, S.C.J B.S., Home Economics; Outing Club, 1; Berea Players, 1,2,3,4; W.A.A., 1,2,3; Folk Club, 2,3,4; Ag. Home Ec. Club, 3; Home Ec. Club, 4. GABBARD, ERNEST GLENDON Berea, Ky.; A.B., English; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3, Cab., 2; Glee Club, 2, Quartet, 2; Royal Collegians, 1,2,3,4; Berea Players, 1,2,3,4, Pres. 4; Alpha Psi Omega, 1,2,3,4; Pres. 4; Tau Delta Tau 4. GIPSON, EVELYN Clairfield, Tenn.; B.S., Home Economics; Ag. Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Harmonia, 4; Outing Club, 2; Berea Players, 2; Folk Club, 3,4. GREEN, DOROTHY FAYE Ricetown, Ky.; A.B., Home Economics; C.E.; P.A.F.; Outlying Sunday School Work, 4. GREEN, MAE JOHNSON Ricetown, Ky.; A.B., Education; Freshman Glee Club; Education Club, 3,4; Outlying Sunday School, 2; C.E., 4, Berea Players, 4. GREENE, JOSEPH ARTHUR Big Stone Gap, Va.; A.B., Economics; 1,2,3,4; Tennis 1,3,4; B Club 2,3,4, Pr Club 3; Y.M.C.A. 1,2,3,4. GREENE, OPAL ALMAYNE Basketball s. 4; Folk ELMORE, BETTY DEAN Brasstown, N.C.; A.B., Sociology; Y.W.C.A. 2,3,4; Education Club 1,2,3,4; Berea Players 1,2; Folk Club 3,4, Vice Pres., 4; P.A.F., 3; Alcohol Speech Prize; Bible Prize. Crossville, Tenn.; A.B., Home Economics; Y.W.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Women ' s House Gov ' t., 4. GREENWELL, RUBY JUANITA Bulls Gap, Tenn.; A.B., English; French Club, Pres. 1; Writer of Xampus Chronicle 4; Chimes Staff 4. chimes: HALE, CHARLEY FULTON West Prestonsburg, Ky.; A.B., Chemistry; Basketball, 2,3,4, Capt. 4; Track Team; Phi Delta; Pi Alpha; Sigma Pi Sigma; B Club. HARDIMAN, WILLIAM ANDREW, JR. Pearisburg, Va.; A.B., Chemistry; A.Z., 2,3; Pi Alpha, 3,4; Track, 1; Y.M.C.A., 1; Sigma Pi Sigma. HARGROVE, EVELYN LOUISE Wichita, Kansas; B.S., Home Economics; Harmonia, 1; Board of Governors, 3, Treas.; U.D. Senate, 4, Sec; Home Ec. Club, 3, Treas.; Ag-Home Ec Club, 3; Chimes Staff, 4, Art Editor; P.A.F. HARPER, WILBUR W. Franklin, W. Va.; B.S., Agriculture; Phi Delta; Ag. Union, 2,3,4, Vice Pres. 4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 2,3,4, Prcs. 4; Basketball, 3,4; B Club; Transfer from Shepherd State Teachers College, Shepherdstown, W. Va. HARRISON, PHILIP BURNS Berea, Ky.; B.S., Agriculture; Ag. Union, 1,2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Basketball, 3,4. HART, BENNIE M. Dand ridge, Tenn.; A.B., Economics; Berea Players, 2,3,4; Photography Club, Vice Pres., 4; Student Coop, 1. HARTSELL, O. M., JR. Limeston, Tenn.; A.B., English; Glee Club Accom- panist, 2,3,4; Choir, 1,2,3,4; Harmonia, 1,2,3,4; French Club, 1,2; Rho Delta, 1; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4. HAYNES, CORNELIA A. Chattanooga, Tenn.; A.B., Economics; Y.W.C.A., 1,2; Harmonia, 1,2,3,4; Student Coop., 1,2,3,4; W.A.A. Board, 2; P.A.F., 4. HEADLEY, JOSHUA DAVID Winchester, Va.; B.S., Agriculture; Swimming, 1,3,4,5, Coach of Freshman Swimming, 4, Coach of Varsity, 5; Track, 1,2,3,4; Ag Union, 1,2,3,4,5; A.Z., 3; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4,5. HENSLEY, EMERY MADISON Island City, Ky.; A.B., History and Political Science; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Track, 1,2,4; Swimming, 1; C.E. 1.2,3,4; A.Z., 2; Tennis, 2; Folk Club, 3,4; Rural Life Club, 3; Harmonia, 3,4; Berea Players, 4; Pi Gamma Mu, 4. HENSLEY, FELIX Causey, Ky.; A.B., Economics; Track, 1,2; Twenty Writers Club, 1,2, Vice Pres. 2; Y.M.C.A. Cab., 4; Board of Governors, 3,4, Pres., 4. HICKS, DONALD OSCO Windy, Ky.; A.B., Biology; Men ' s Hall Union, 2; Rho Delta, 3,4, Pres. 4; Pi Alpha, Treas. 4; Mgr. Swimming Team, 4. HOWSMON, JOHN ARTHUR Dayton, Ohio; A.B., Chemistry; Track, 1,2,3,4, Capt. 4; Sigma Pi Sigma, 4; Pi Alpha, 3,4, Pres. 4; Folk Club, 3,4; Student Board of Governors, 3; Men ' s Hall Union, 3; Chimes Staff, 4; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Har- monia, 1,2; A.Z., 1,2,3,4. HUNT, NELLIE VIRGINIA Paris, Ky.; B.S., Home Economics; Y.W.C.A., 1,2,3,4; C.E., 1; Berea Players, 1,2,3; Harmonia, 1; Coop., 1,2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4. JARRELL, KARL WILEY Thomasville, N.C.; A.B., History and Political Science; Berea Players, 3,4; P.A.F., 3,4; Folk Club; Choir; Pi Gamma Mu, 4; Transfer from Western Kentucky State Teachers College, Bowling Green, Ky. CHIMES JENT, CRAWFORD LEE Cody, Ky.; B.S., Agriculture! Ag. Union; Rho Delta; Ag.-Home Ec. Club; Y.M.C.A.; Prize Bible. JOHN, RALPH C. Parkersburg, W. Va.; A.B., Philosophy; Prcs. of Class, 1; Prcs. of C.E., 2; Y.M.C.A. Cab., 2,3,4, Pres. 4; U.D. Senate, 4; Pi Gamma Mu, 3,4; Berea Players, 1,2,; Kentucky Dance Drama at Atlanta, 2; L.D. Speaker .it Dedication of D.inforth Chapel. JONES, ESTILL BOEN, JR. Berea, Ky.; A.B., Music; Freshman Basketball; Tennis Team, 1,2,3,4, Capt. 4; Leader of Royal Collegians Orchestra, 2,3,4; B Club, 2,3,4; Y.M.C.A. KELLAR, IVA LEE Somerset, Ky.; A.B., Education; folk Club, 1,2,1,4; Outing Club, 1,2; Alpha Pi Alpha, 1; Education Club, 1; Y.W.C.A., 1,2,3,4. KENNEDY, ELSIE JAMS Norton, Va.; A.B., English; Y.W.C.A., 1,2,3; Berea Players, 3,4; Member of Executive Council. KILGORE, ALLEN St. Paul, Va.; A.B., Physics; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,1,4; C.E., 2; Physics Club, 2,3,4; Pi Alpha, 3; Sigma Pi Sigma, 4. KINGSLEY, LOUISE PEARSALL Lakewood, Ohio; A.B., Sociology; Y.W.C.A., 1,2,3; Student Coop., 1,2,3,4, Sec, 1, Treas., 2, Pres.| ' 3; ' Vanguards, 1,2,3,4; P.A.F., 2,3,4; Chimes Staff, 4. KRAYBILL, MARGARET ADELINE Y.W.C.A., 1,2,3; C.E., 1,2; Ag-Home I.e. Club, i,4; L.D. Senate, I; U.D. Senate, 3, Sec; Chimes Staff, 4. LACKEY, LEON AGEE Kimball, W. Va.; A B., Chemistry; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,5,4; Berea Players, 1,2; Folk Club, 3; Photography Club! 2; A.Z., 1,2,3,4; C.E., 2; Men ' s Hall Union, 3; U.D. Senate, 4; Chimes Staff, 3,4, Asst. Bus. Mgr., 3, Bus. Mgr. 4. LANG, DELA ROSE Russell, Ky.; A.B., Biology; Y.W.C.A.. 2,3,4; Berea Players, 3; P.A.F., 4. LAWSON, VIVIAN MAURINE Woodbine, Ky.; A.B., History and Politi Y.W.C.A., 1,2; Student Co-op, 1; P.A.F., LITTLEJOHN, EARON OTHAN Geraldin, Ala.; B.S., Agriculture; Ag. Union, 1,2,3,4, Reporter, 4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4; YMCa ' 1,2,3,4; L.D. Senate. LYELL, ROY LEE Lyle, Ky.; A.B., Philosophy; Delta Phi Gamma Mu; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4, Cab., Cab., 1,2,3. I ; I [armonia, al Scient Alpha; Pi 1,4; C.E., McCAMY, WILLIAM RAYMOND Scottsboro, Ala.; A.B., Mathematics; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Phi Delta, 4; Sigma Pi Sigma, 4. Mclaughlin, hugh price Maxwelton, W. Va.; B.S., Agriculture; Ag. Union 1.2,3,4; Ag.-Home Ec. Club, 3,4, Pres 4- ' C E 1 Sec, 2; Y.M.C.A., 3; Chimes Staff, 4 CHIMES P.A.F.; Chimes Staff, Cumberland College, McCLURE, L. T. Fort, Gay, W. Va.; A.B., Chemistry; A.Z., 1,2,3,4, Vice Pres., 3; Basketball, 1; Swimming, 2,3; Berea Players, 1,2,3,4; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4. McCREARY, WILLIAM J. Corbin, Ky.; A.B., Chemistry; 4; Transfer to U.D. from Williamsburg, Ky. McDANIEL, EILEEN DOUGLAS Lewisburg, W. Va.; A.B., Home Economics; Pinnacle Staff, 1; Y.W.C.A., 1,2; Harmonia, 2,3,4; Home Ec. Club, 3,4, Vice Pres., 3; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4. Mcdonald, theophilas Whitley City, Ky.; A.B., History and Political Science; Phi Delta; P.A.F.; Y.M.C.A. Mcdowell, john calvin West Chester, Iowa; B.S., Agriculture; Ag. Union, 1,2,3,4, Corres. Sec, 3; Student Co-Op., 1,2,3,4, Pres., 3,4; Rho Delta, 2,3,4, Sec. 3, Treas., 3; Van- guards, 2,3,4; P.A.F., 3,4; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4. McGUIRE, WILLIAM HOLT Beattyville, Ky.; A.B., Geology; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Cross Country, 1; Swimming, 1,2,3,4; Track, Alpha, 4; Men ' s Hall Union, 4; B Club. 1; McLAIN, ROBERT WAYNE Statesville, N.C, A.B., Philosophy; Transfer from Brevard College, Brevard, N.C; Phil. Club, 3,4; Van- guards, 3,4, Sec. 4; P.A.F., 3,4; Y.M.C.A., 3,4, Cab. 4; Tau Kappa Alpha, 4; Rho Delta, 3,4; Glee Club, 4. MALSTROM, ALICE VIOLA Chattanooga, Tenn.; A.B., Economics; Y.W.C.A., 1 ; Student Co-op., 1,2,3,4; W.A.A., 1,2; P.A.F., 4; Harmonia, 1 ,4. MAY, DENIS NORMAN Huddy, Ky.; A.B., Economics; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Baseball, 3,4; P.A.F., 3,4; Student Co-op, 3,4; Phi Delta, 4; Berea Players, 3; Vanguards, 4. MILLS, PHELMA FAY Manchester, Ky., A.B., Home Economics; Y.W.C.A., 1.2.3, Treas. 3 ; Women ' s House Gov ' t Assn. Pres., 4 ; Student Board of Governors, 3,4, Sec, 4; Home Ec, Club, 3; Ag-Home Ec, 3,4, Sec, 4; Home Ec Club, 3; Ag-Home Ec. 3,4. MITCHELL, EARL PRESTON Elk Creek, Va.; B.S., Agriculture; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Ag. Union, 1,2,3,4; Treas. 2; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4, Treas., 3; Phi Delta, 3,4; Class Pres., 3; Track Mgr., 3,4; Chimes Staff, 4; Editor Ag. News Letter, 2; Judging Team, 4. MOORE, FRANCES PAULINE Harriman, Tenn.; B.S., Home Economics; Outing Club, 3,4; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club, 3,4; W.A.A. Board, 4; Harmonia, 1,2,3,4. MOORE, HUBERT A. Altro, Ky.; A.B., Geology; C.E., 1,2,3,4; Phi Delta, 2.3.4, Treas., 3; Pi Alpha, 3,4; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4. MORTON, VIOLET VIRGINIA South Shore, Ky.; A.B., History and Political Science; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Student Co-op., 1,2,3,4; P.A.F., 2,3,4, Sec-Treas., 4; Berea Players, 4; Folk. Club, 2,3; Delta Phi Alpha, 3,4; Vanguards, 3,4; Ornithological Society, 4. MUELDER, FLORENCE Kenosha, Wis.; A.B., German; German Club, 2,3,4 Vanguards, 2,3,4; Y.W.C.A., 2; Delta Phi Alpha, 2,3,4 P.A.F., 3,4; Philosophy Club, 4; French Club 3,4 Co-op 3,4; Y.C.A.W., 4. :=CHIMES MULLINS, JAMES CHAD Whitesburg, Ky.; B.S., Agriculture; Basketball, 1,3,4; Track, 1,3,4; Ag. Union, 1,3,4, Pres. 4; Ag-Home Ec. Club; B Club. NESTOR, ERNEST VELMER Marmet, W. Va.; A.B., Economics Y.M.C.A 1 3 4- C.E., 1,2,3,4; Phi Delta, 4; Band, 1,2,3,4; Baseball! 1,2,3,4; Zephyrs 3; Vanguards, 1. OCHOCO, SEVERINO MIRANDA San Fernando, Philippine Islands; A.B., Philosophy; L.D. Glee Club; Orchestra, 2,3, (; Phi Delta 4- Y.M.C.A., 2,3,4; Photography Club, 3; Transfer from Shenendoah College, Dayton, Va. ORICK, EDITH ANN Frakes, Ky.; B.S., Home Economics; Berea Players; Home Ec. Club, Pre Club, 3,4. PAREDES, HELEN JEAN Milford, Michigan; A.B., Economics; Y.W.C.A., 1,2,- 3,4, Pres. 2; Women ' s House Gov ' t., 4; House Pres ot Pre-School, 4; P.A.F., 4; Vanguards. PENNINGTON, RUTH Waynesville, Ohio; A.B., English; Berea Players 1,2,3,4; P.nnacle Staff, 1,2,3; Twenty Writers Club 3.4; P, Mu Lamda, 1,2; Editor, Tabernacle News, 4. PILSON, HOWARD Stuart, Va.; A.B., History and Political Science; B Club, 2,3,4; Phi Delta, 1,2,3, Pres., 4; P.A F 14 Vice Pres., 4; Track, 1,2; Cross Country, 1,2; Pres ' of class, 3; Men ' s Hall Union, 4, Pres. 4, Chairman; Board of Governor Alpha, 2,3,4. PREW ' ITT, JAMES T. Lane Uni, Ky.; Ag-Home Ec. Club, Glee Club, 2,3,4, Sec. Treas.. Pres.; Ag. Glee Club C.E.; Y.W.C.A.; ;■; Ag-Home Ec. U.D. Senate, 3; Tau Kappa Quartet. PREYSZ, LUCILLE PARKS Berea, Ky.; A.B., Music; Choir; Harmoma, 1,2,3,4. PRICE, JAMES THOMAS Hayesville, N.C.; B.S., Agriculture; Ag. Union J- Rho Delta, 3,4; P.A.F., 4; Y.C.A.W., 4; Student Co- op. 3,4; Transfer from Wester Carolina Teacher ' s College, Collowhee, N.C. PRINCE, DOROTHY CORINNE Wellford, S.C.; A.B., Education; Sec. of class, 1; Education Club, 3, Pres., 4; Y.W.C.A., 1,3,4; Outing Club, 1; C.E., 2; French Club, 1; Berea Players. 1.2. PUCKETT, ANITA FRANCES Smithville, Tenn.; A.B., English; Outing Club; Life- Saving; Basketball; Tennis. PUCKETT, EDITH CALICO Berea, Ky.; A.B., Sociology; Y.W.C.A.. 1.3; C.E., 2; Student Co-op., 2. QUEEN, FRANCIS VERNON Ashland, Ky.; A.B., History and Political Science- Delta Phi Alpha; P.A.F., Pres., 4; Berea Players 1,2,3,4; Debating, 2,3,4; A. 2., 1,2,1,4- YMC 1,2,3,4. RAMEY, LURLA KENDRICK Belfry Club. Ky.; B.S., Home Economics; P.A.F.; Folk CHIMES! A t ! RAWLINGS, JOHN London, Ky.; A.B., Chemistry; Phi Delta, 2. REEVES, AGNES ALMA Spring Creek, N.C.; A.B., Home Economics; Home Ec. Club; Ag. Home Ec. Club. RICE, THEODORE ROOSEVELT Paintsville, Ky.; A.B., Chemistry. ROSENBAUM, HAROLD DENNIS Fairplay, Ky.; A.B., Chemistry; Baseball, 1,2,3,4; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Berea Players, 1,2,3; Phi Alpha, 3,4; Sigma Pi Sigma, 4, Sec; Phi Delta, 1,2,3,4. SCHULTZ, DAVID GOODSPEED Berea, Ky.; A.B., Mathematics; Varsity Swimming Team, 3,4; Intra-mural Football and Basketball. Transfer from Bluffton College. SCOTT, THELMA RHEA Salyersville, Ky.; B.S., Home Economics; Y.W.C.A., 1,2,3; Berea Players, 1,2,3,4; House Government Sec. 3; Chimes Staff, 4; Ag. Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Home Ec. Club, 3; P.A.F., 4; Folk Club, 4. SEAY, WILLIAM BROWNLOWE Fairview, N.C.; A.B., Biology; Berea Players, 1,2,3,4; Lower Division Supervisor, 4; Pinnacle, 1; Y.M.C.A., 1.4; C.E., 1,2,3; Alpha Psi Omega, 3,4, Sec. Treas., 4. SHOUN, GLENN HARTE Lafollette, Tenn.; B.S., Agriculture; Judging Team, 1,2,3,4; Y.C.A.W., 3,4; Wallpaper Staff, 3,4. Y.M.C.A., 2,3,4; Co-op, 1,2,3,4, Sec. 3. SHOWN, WILLIAM KYLE Knoxville, Tenn.; A.B., Sociology; Student Co-op; Vanguards. 1,2,3,4; P.A.F., 3,4; Y.M.C.A.; F.O.R., 1,2,3,4; Y.C.A.W., 3,4; Wallpaper Staff, 3,4 SHULER, EDWARD EARL Big Stone Gap, Va.; B.S., Agriculture; Ag. Union, 1,2,3,4; Ag. Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Track, 1,2,3; Y.M.C.A., 4; B Club, 3,4. SHUMATE, MARIAN CORLEENE Ramage, W. Va.; A.B., English; Berea Players, 1,2,3,4; Tau Kappa Alpha, 1,2,3; Alpha Psi Omega, 3,4; Twenty Writers Club. SHUTT, NOEL MacHENRY Berea, Ky.; A.B., Geology; Y.M.C.A, 1,2; B Club, 3,4; C E., 1,2; Tennis Team, 3,4; Berea Players, 1,2,3. SINGLETON, JULIUS KNOX Westminister, S.C.; A.B., Physics; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Baseball, 2,3; Sigma Pi Sigma, 3,4; Tennis, 3; Men ' s Hall Union, 1,2,3,4; Vice Pres., 4; Pi Alpha, 4. SINGLETON, MAE BELLE Eubank, Ky.; A.B., English; Y.W.C.A., 1,2; C.E. 3,4; French Club, 3; Berea Players, 4. SKEEN, JAMES P. Talbot t, Tenn.; A.B., Geology; Berea Players. 1,2,3,4; A.Z., 2,3; Track, 2; Movie Club, 4. CHIMESi SMITH, ANNA MARIE Russell, Ky., B.S., Home Economics; Y.W.C.A., 1,2 C.E., 2; Harmonia, 2,3; L.D. Senate, 2; Home Ec Club, 3; Ag. Home Ec. Club, 3, Treas., 4; P.A.F , 4 Folk Club, 3,4. SMITH, HAL HAYNES Philosophy; Men ' s Glee Club, 1,2; Y.M.C.A.. 1,2,3,4, Sec. 4. Bristol, Tenn., A.B., 2,3,4; French Club, SMITH, KENNETH J. Clarkrange, Tenn., A.B., Physics; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Co-op. 1,2,3,4; Phi Delta, 3,4; P.A.F., 4; Sigma Pi Sigma, 4. SPRADLIN, GLENN EDWARD Whitley City, Ky., B.S., Agriculture; Ag. Union 1,2,3,4; Ag. Home Ec. Club, 3,4; B Club, 3,4; Y.M.C.A., 1; Track, 1; Swimming, 3,4. STEWART, OGDEN ARMOUR Langlcy, Ky., B.S., Agriculture; Phi Delta, 1,2,3, Sec, 4; Ag. Union. 1,2,3,4; Basketball, 1,3,4; Ag. Home Ec. 2,3,4; Board of Governors, Vice Pres 4- B Club, 4; Y.M.C.A., 4. STITH, MARGARET KATHARINE Ashland, Ky., A.B., English; Y.W.C.A., 1,2,3; Berea Players, 1,2,3,4; Alpha Psi Omega, 4; Tau Delta Tau, 4, Treas.; Assist. Editor of Chimes, 4; Harmonia 1. STRAIT, DOROTHY LOUISE Catlettsburg, Ky., A.B., Mathematics; Glee 2,3,4; Harmonia, 1,2,3,4; Folk Club, 4; Outing 3; C.E., 1,2; Pi Alpha 3,4. SUTHERLAND, CATHERINE ALLEN Club, Club, Clintwood, Va., A.B., English; Y.W.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Berea Players, 3; Basketball, 1. SUTTON, LEWIS EARL Crab Orchard, Ky., A.B., Economics; Basketball, I; Harmonia, 1,2; Varsity Track, 2; Men ' s Glee Club, 3,4; Bus. Mgr. of Royal Collegians, 4; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4. THOMAS, ALMA RUTH Ashland, Ky., B.S., Home Economics; Ag. Home Ec. Club, 3; Home Ec. 3; C.E., 3; W.A.a ' ., 3; Outing Club. 3; Berea Players, 4; Life Saving, 4; Women ' s House Gov ' t., 4. THOMPSON, JOSEPH MELVIN Wayne, W. Va., A.B.. Mathematics; A.Z., 1.2,3,4 Track, 2; Delta Phi Alpha, 2,3,4; Sigma Pi Sigma, 4 Pi Alpha, 4; Harmonia, 1,2; Chimes Staff, 4 Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4. TINSLEY, MILDRED SUSAN Berea, Ky., B.S., Home Economics; Alpha Alpha Pi, 1; Y.W.C.A., Cab., 3,4; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Ag. Home Ec. Club, 3,4. WALTERS, HAROLD STEPHEN Davis, W. Va., A.B., Chemistry; Pi Alpha, 2,4; B Club 2,3,4; Varsity Tennis, 3; Y.M.C.A., 4. WALTERS, JOHN DAVID Davis, W. Va., A.B., Economics; Harmonia, 1,2; Berea Players, 1,2,3,4; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4, Cab. 1,2,4; Track, 1,2,3,4; Glee Club, 2,3,4, Sec. Treas., 3, Pres ' . 4; Folk Club, 3,4; P.A.F., 3,4; Chimes Staff, Assoc. Ed., 3, Editor-in-chief, 4; Men ' s Hall Union, 4; U.D. Senate, 4; B Club, 4. WASHBURN, ABBIE MARGARET Bulapc, Belgian Congo, Africa, A.B., Home Economics; Harmonia, 1.2; Choir. 1,2,3; Glee Club, 2,3,4; French Club, 1,2. WELCH, CHARLES BROWN Glen Rogers, W. Va., A.B., Economics; A.Z., 1,2,3,4, Pres., 4; Band, 1,2,3,4; Glee Club, 3; Delta Phi Alpha, 3,4; Basketball, 1,3; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Harmonia, 1,2; B Club, 3,4. WESLEY, GUY MAXWELL Lynch, Ky., A.B., Economics; Glee Club, 2,3,4, Bus. Mgr., 4; Swimming Team, 1,2,3,4; Track, 1; Band, 1,2,3,4; Orchestra, 1; Royal Collegians, 1,2,3,4; German Club, 3,4; Class Trcas., 3; Harmonia, 1,2; P.A.F., 2,3; Y.M.C.A.; B Club, 2,3,4. WHITE, JUNE ROSE Monticello, Ky., A.B., Home Economics; Outing Club, 1,2, Sec, 2; Y.W.C.A., 2 3 ; Home Ec. Club 3,4; Ag. Home Ec. Club, 3,4. WHITE, WILLIAM LETCHER Burning Springs, Ky., A.B., History and Political Science; C.E., 1,2, Cab., 1; Y .M.C.A., 1; Berea Players, 1; Co-op., 1,2,3,4; Men ' s Hall Union. WILSON, BEATRICE BERYL Bald Creek, N.C., A.B., Home Economics; Ag. Home Ec. Club, 3,4, Treas., 4; Home Ec. Club, 4; U.D. Senate, 4; French Club, 1. WILSON, SARA KATHRYN Benton, Tenn., B.S., Home Economics; Y.W.C.A., 1,2; Berea Players, 2,3,4; W.A.A., 1,2,3,4; Home Ec. Club, 3,4; Ag. Home Ec, 3,4; Life Saving. WRIGHT, HOWARD LOUIS Derby, Ohio, A.B., History and Political Science; P.A.F., 3,4; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4; Co-op., 1,2,3,4; Men ' s Hall Union, 3,4. ZIMMERMAN, ELFRED BURL Crag, V . Va., A.B., History and Political Science; Choir, 1; Glee Club, 2,3; Orinthological Society; Y.M.C.A., 1,2,3,4. MILTON, HAZEL LONGWORTH Roanoke, Va., A.B., Psychology; C.E., Pres. 1; Sec. Chimes, 3; Pi Gamma Mu, 4. STEVENS, SYBIL ALICE Cummington, Mass., A.B., Sociology; Harmonia, 1,2 French Club, 1; C.E., 1; P.A.F., 2, Sec. Treas., 3,4 Vanguards, 2,3,4; Y.W.C.A., 2,3, Cab., 4, Pres. 4 U.D. Senate, 3,4; Y.C.A.W., 3; Folk Club, 4; Co-op 4; F.O.R., 4. YORK, CALEB POWERS Windsor, Ky., A.B., Geology; Y.M.C.A., 2,3; Basket- ball, 2; Baseball, 2,3,4. chimes: Junior Class Officers Hal Masengill, President Glen Moore, Vice President Katie Louis Chambers, Secretary Harding Noblitt, Treasurer CHIMES JUNIORS Adams, John Whitesburg, Ky. Allen, Barbara Hawesville, Ky. Anderson, Garnie Nancy, Va. Andrews, Fletcher Newton, N.C. Archer, Eula Kate Joneshara, Tenn. Arthur, James Flatlick, Ky. Bailey, Pete Baileytown, Tenn. Bailey, Vivian Ashland, Ky. Baker, Andrew Walkertown Sta., Ky. Bales, Clarence Rose Hill, Va. Barr, Frances Charlotte, N.C. Begley, Virginia Berea, Ky. Blaker, Robert, Blue Sulphur Springs, W.Va. Bowie, Cleo Nimmon, S.C. Bradley, Harvey Cains Store, Ky. Branham, Thelma Virginia Louisa, Ky. Bruce, Frances __ Cumberland Gap, Tenn. Bryan, Garnet Ashland, Ky. Burdette, Betty Berea, Ky. Burley, Maxine Omar, W.Va. Calhoun, Chandos Hitchins, Ky. Casey, Mary Wilton, Ky. Chambers, Katie Louis ___ Huntsville, Ala. Clark, Horace Wichita, Kansas Cloyd, Roger Corbin, Ky. Clouse, Edna Corbin, Ky. Coleman, Edward A. __ Richwood, W.Va. Collins, Carl _. _ Woodville, Ala. Conley, Mabel Martin, Ky. Cornett, William Whitesburg, Ky. Cornett, Ruth Victoria __ McRoberts, Ky. Cossett, Louise Ashland, Ky. Cox, Jane Mt. Vernon, Ky. Daves, Huber Polkville, N.C. Diamond, William Waynesburg, Ky. Dickerson, Joe Livingston, Ky. Dodd, Audrey Boaz, Ala. Pelfrey, Ruth Newport, Ky. Dunnaway, Opal Dwarf, Ky. Eakin, Laura Bagkak, Thailand Easterly, Ambrose Crossville, Tenn. Edwards, J. B. Barnardsville, N.C. chimes: CHIMES JUNIORS Estep, William R. Williamsburg, Ky. Evans, Beatrice St. Paul, Va. Evans, Mary K. Paintsville, Ky. Evans, Miriam Louise Cleveland, Ohio Ewen, Mary Francis Berea, Ky. Fillmore, Harley C. Harriman, Tenn. Franklin, Gladys Drexel, N.C. Fry, Elmer Lee j. Rabun Gap, Ga. Gabbard, Luther Gray Hawk, Ky. Garcia, Eunice Norwalk, Ohio. Gayhart, Olive Hardburly, Ky. Gibson, Alberta Burgess .__ Biglick, Tenn. Godbey, Ivol : Bethelridge, Ky. Graham, Afteel West Somerset, Ky. Grimes, Margaret Asheville, N.C. Grimwood, David Meridianville, Ala. Gwinn, Jessie Marshall, N.C. Hall, Juanita Hazard, Ky. Hammond, Ralph C. __ Valley Head, Ala. Henderson, Lois Greenville, S.C. Hill, R. V. Hendersonville, N.C. Hoffman, Martin New Holland, Pa. Hulburt, Dayton _. _. Oak Park, 111. Hurst, Everett Knot Fork, Ky. Ingraham, Ruth Kingsport, Tenn. Jennings, M. R. Beckley, W. Va. Jones, Marvin Paintsville, Ky. Kazee, Ruth Ashland, Ky. Kivett, Elizabeth _ Cumberland Gap, Tenn. Lamb, Evelyn McClure, Va. Lance, Annie Black Mountain, N.C. Larew, Roberta Greenville, W. Va. Laswell, Troy Brodhead, Ky. Lavender, Carolyn Ashland, Ky. Lawhorn, Roy A. Maynardville, Tenn. Lindsey, Joseph Hillsville, Va. Loftis, Emma Lou Brevard, N.C. Loshbough, Getha Crossville, Tenn. Loy, Opal Jamestown, Ky. McCommack, Annette __ Blue Jay, W. Va. McDaniel, Blanche Lothair, Ky. McKinnev. George Amigo, W. Va. CHIMES chimes: JUNIORS Maggard, Talmadge Maggard, Ky. Maltby, Harold Hastings, Fla. Marlar, Martin Honey Bee, Ky. Martin, Minnie Eastern, Ky. Martin, Tellis Hickory, N.C. Masengill, Hal Blountville, Tenn. Meek, Clarence Boone ' s Camp, Ky. Merchant, Donald Swannanoa, N.C. Moore, C. Edward Berea, Ky. Moore, Glen Berwind, W.Va. Moore, Margaret Harrodsburg, Ky. Morris, Juanita Benha m, Ky. Nestor, Paul Maxmet, W.Va. Noblitt, Harding Marion, N.C. Parker, Marion East Rainelle, W.Va. Patrick, Helen Jo Ashland, Ky. Pearson, Emma College Hill, Ky. Pearson, Fred W. Treadway, Tenn. Penley, Jewell Gate City, Va. Presnell, Maynard Asheville, N.C. Quinn, Woodrow Harlan, Ky. Rathbone, Jack Lake Junaluska, N.C. Rice, Floyd Arthur Berea, Ky. Roach, Charles Pineville, Ky. Roberts, Jean Berea, Ky. Roberts, Mary Helen Burnside, Ky. Roberts, William Lee __ Hambleton, W.Va. Robertson, Edwin Pine Hall, N.C. Robinson, J. B. Bandana, N.C. Rominger, Ruth Berea, Ky. Runion, Charles Erwin, Tenn. Scroggs, Leslie Asheville, N.C. Sherrill, Armonell __ Crab Orchard, Tenn. Shrader, Ethel North Tazewell, Va. Shepherd, Ralph Crumpler, N.C. Schorman, William Ashland, Ky. Shupe, Hugo Berea, Ky. Smith, Carolyn Spartanburg, S.C. Smith, Eugene Forest City, N.C. Smith, Leta Kensington, Ga. Snodgrass, Frances Mouth Card, Ky. Sparks, Clarence Hartford, 111. chimes; A k j -t i (? f f ?S CHIMES! JUNIORS Steinorth, Margaret __ Pt. Pleasant, N.Y. Stone, Kenneth Pineville, Ky. Thompson, Emogene Webbville, Ky. Thorington, Daniel Middlesboro, Ky. Tompkins, Harold Elgin, Tenn. Tully, Harold East Rainelle, W.Va. Wall, Burnice L. Eubank, Ky. Wall, Inez Eubank, Ky. Wall, Louis Eubank, Ky. Ward, Carl Neva, Tenn. Warming, Karl Jellico, Tenn. Warner, Esther New Market, Tenn. Wells, Ada Ashland, Ky. Wesley, Rex Science Hill, Ky. Wheeler, Juanita Stevenson, Ala. Whitaker, Rayford Stab, Ky. White, Janet Meridianville, Ala. Wiggins, Edna Barnardsville, N.C. Williams, Anna Lee Flat Gap, Ky. Wilson, Edna Louise Boaz, Ala. Wright, Clayton Derby, Ohio Wygal, J. Marion Corbin, Ky. Younge, Chester L. Deland, Fla. Young, Chester Raymond __ Columbia, Ky. Ball, Ruby Jonesville, Va. Brann, Edward R. Hamburg, Germany Combs, Gene Langley, Ky. Fish, Paul Robert Fairview, N.C. Dillingham, Hansel Barnardsville, N.C. Hiatt, Alyne Waynesburg, Ky. Jenkins, George Blackey, Ky. Litton, Nora E. Clarence, Ky. Mahaffey, Kimber Green Hall, Ky. Turner, Edward B. Houston, Ky. chimes: School of Nursing HOSPITAL STAFF The Hospital Staff is made up of the student nurses and the physicians. Dr. J. W. Armstrong is Acting Staff Head in Dr. R. H. Cowley ' s place this year. Other doctors are: Wilson F. Dodd, Ruby H. Paine, James H. Spring- sted, Kenneth Wright, and Dr. Hutchins. chimes; INTERMEDIATE AND JUNIOR NURSES ? v ' 7 a SENIOR NURSES 1st row. Hall, Turner, May, Kirby, Huddleston, Coyer. 2nd row. Mathney, Stallard, Frazure, Jones, Mathney. 3rd row. Stewart, Paredes, Patrick, Fleck, Hill. 4th row. Hopkins, Miller. 5 th row, Gannaway. CREATIVE WRITING CHIMES INDIA CULVER India Culver ' s wizened face twitched cheek muscles as she sucked at the pipe in her mouth. Presently she knocked the ashes from the pipe and gently tucked it into her apron pocket. Then she lifted a brown jug, pulled cut the cork with her two teeth, and poured the white corn whiskey into a tip cup. Slowly she drank, as her gray, battered eyes gazed into the distance. Soon she would be ninety-five years old. Yet life, instead of going out of her, had concentrated itself in her meager, narrow frame. To her there was no time, except in the way of the seasons, in the growth cf her sons and grandsons and great-grandsons. All else was sunrise and sunset, shadow and light, and the consumption of a white liquid. — Woodrow Quinn TWENTY WRITERS Godbey, Crabbe, Bowen, Steinberger, Stamper, Bowline Farris, Hulburt, Hammond, Auvil. Weekes, Steinorth, Shumate, MUTED WORDS I can write . . . anyone can write . . . there are things unbounded to be said, that must be said before the world is dead, and tongues are stopped with its dying. I must speak naw while the flavor of days is sharp yet to the taste, the hurt cf days quick yet to the heart. For to halt but for one moment the evanescence of those days with apt word is to hold enmeshed forever the train of memory. The silent slant of silvered rain is never gone from me . . . nor burn of autumn flaming on low hills . . . The pent-up cry of violin strangled into ordered tone is held within me free ... A quickened step upon a frosty walk and lips that breed desire . . . Promises that are as wind that shakes the tree and sets the leaves to singing, then goes away . . . Friends held enchanted in dreams while logs burn low and snap in two and sparks mount toward a silent sky . . . The half-forgotten freedom of a time when drone of airplane was a symbol of achievement and not a harbinger of death . . . The sear of too hot coffee with fresh kolacky . . . And Spring come back too soon. I will take words . . . everyone has words . . . there are sure knowings, lovely mome nts transient, that will distill in worlds like scent and linger long when surety is gone. With worlds alone I build against the storm battlements of truth, turrets of freedom. And I am not alone. My cry is the cry of all who want to translate into a tangibility something of the feeling pregnant in this living. To take the tinted thread of days and weave it into substance to be felt and known and understood; something of strength against the terror of living with hate and fear; something of courage against the death of hope. But the cry is not heeded, the desire is not made manifest. Feeling comes too haltingly with words and is changed with the uttering. Doubts misplace old confidences. Mistrust of self makes of that self a coward. The shining words, subservient to fear, go darkling and there is no light. — Ruth Pennington CANDLE Not knowing what to say, we sit in silence Waiting while a stub of candle burns its length I watch the little tallow drops glisten like tears Above the curling edge around the flame And then, overflowing, Slide down the smoothness of the candle. Dimmed and colorless, they harden there. I am afraid to look at you. The wick floats in a rosy pool of drops Within the metal base; A shadow of the flame quivers on the ceiling; And it is time for you to go. I stand alone with eyes closed, hoping The flame will die. How dark, how very dark it is. . . — Margaret Steinorth EXPECTANCY Just a lonely brook, rustling over smothered stones. But when I bathed in its coolness, it became tender, personal, no longer icily remote. I raised my soul into a beam of sun that drifted through the pines into the water, and I was Nausicaa. My nymphs, the elfin trees, protected me from all reality. Transformation! The darting stream was a shallow undertow of some ancient Grecian water. Let come Ulysses! — Meriel Goble SATURDAY NIGHT With a loud crash of orchestral music the movie ended. The lights in the chapel came on suddenly and Esther, clutching my sweaty hand, led the way, pushing against the Saturday night crowd ]ZZ hn T f §i | r,S i eamy-eyed and clinging to the stout muscular arms of their escorts, lor ° i K Al l U P ? A U Snt M wond f L ful? ' high-pitched, jeering voices. Molly, pushing a damp, fancy- 3 thn sohh7 ' I ' 1 ' ° r - C 6 ° d ;Tv° f her gkSSeS ' PUC 3rm ab ° Ut h£r P ' Um P ' sh -ommatc- sumpathetically, and they sobbed, V asn t it wonderful? ' Finally the digging elbows relaxed and the crowd spread at the door. We followed along silently, listening to t: c r s f the peopl i nh r °, f L i ncoln Hal1 three §iris p- issed -• The y — « - w w tempo their faces averted, then- feet barely touching the ground. In each I saw the heroine, Bett, majestic, allur- ing, hvmg a reckless hfe. One of them stopped prancing when she saw me watching her and guiltily hurried Twice along the way I saw the final movie kiss repeated in all its sincerity, sweetness, and dramatic possibilities. Wc were near Curtis House when Esther first spoke. You know, my life is almost like hers. She said it dreamily, with her hands posed ,ust so and her face tilted to catch the street light. I know, Esther — mine too, I whispered. — Anne Jones YARD CLEANING You, there, in your solid brick house — How can you know what autumn is? Over your stiff clipped hedges the musty leaf smell will not seep — You are color-blind to this world gone mad with twisting shafts of light. In you stiff clipped hedged-in lives, Autumn is the time of yard cleaning. — Ermon Fay Johnson DEPARTURE A silence brief with human inability To bear its preponderant suffocation Of emotions tearing at tightened throats Like rasped filings of metal breath Grating scarlet inner linings of soft flesh; Broke finally with the too great pain of its own tension As they began quietly to set in motion Preparations necessary to his last going Home. —Walter Clarke I ' M COIN ' TO TAKE A HOLIDAY Gong . . . Gong . . . Gong . . . there she goes . . . Lord, let the show go off well. This is the last night and there ' s no telling what will happen . . . Alda and the Duke are on . . . The houselights are on. Tell Jack to kill ' em quick. ' ' The actors must be scared silly, but they hide it well . . . They ' re doing beautifully . . . Don ' t giggle, you morons, this is drama . . . Calm down, Gabbard, after all you ' re not out there. That ' s what ' s wrong. If I were on the stage, I wouldn ' t be so nervous . . . What if Kat Wilson ' s putty nose should pop off? . . . Don ' t think about such things, you dope, after all, it ' s glued on . . . Maybe the ceiling piece will collapse . . . Oh Lord, what would happen . . . Someone might get killed, but worst of all, it would spoil the show . . . What ' s a life more or less when a performance is at stake . . . Those people from out of town would like that, wouldn ' t they? How they would like to pick our show to pieces! Shut up, you ' re being childish . . . Will this act never end? Death and Duke are through their scene . . . That silvered glove shivers the audience . . . Ah, the introductions are over, the curtain closes . . . Tony, make ' era keep quiet everybody. Joe, get off the stage. We don ' t want to sound like a bunch of amateurs. Okay. Keep quiet everybody. To your dressing rooms. What ' s the matter over there? Corky has left her slip at home and is running around like a nut. Has fuanita gone after one? Yeah, let ' s hope she makes it. Corky doesn ' t come on at first, thank the good Lord. I know I can ' t live through the rest of this . . . Why did I go in for dramatics, anyhow? ... I could have picked Agriculture or Chemistry or anything . . . But no, I draw dramatics . . . Could the second act have begun? . . . Where ' s the Baron? You mean he ' s missed his cue? Yes. Frances and Hal are out there ad libbing. There goes Hal off stage to get him. He ' s on, he ' s on! Those kids covered up beautifully. Corleene ' s made it. Whew, what a relief! Oh, oh, it ' s Alda ' s and Death ' s love scene . . . Someone is bound to giggle or make a kissing sound . . . They ' re kissing . . . Not a sound from the audience . . . Those wonderful Junior High kids, I love ' em all, at least those out there . . . My dress has ripped open. Where ' s Ralph? Here. What happened, Alda? I don ' t know. But get me sewn up quick. This is a fine time for her dress to burst a seam. I hope the audience doesn ' t think we ' re doing a strip tease. Not in Berea, anyway . . . At last, the curtain . . . Places, everybody. Ah, juit fifteen minutes to go and we ' re through ... I dread this black out . . . The audience will applaud and get up and leave if we don ' t hurry it . . . What ' s keeping Bill so long? Why doesn ' t he give the signal. Ah, we made it . . . Now I get to shine. I ' ll probably knock the chimes off the wall with the first stroke . . . Then (bong) there is a love (bong) that casts out (bong) fear and I have (bong) found it (bong). Bong . . . Blackout . . . Bong . . . Curtain . . . Bong . . . Does anyone mind if I go to a quiet corner and collapse? — Glendon Gabbard SHALL WILL We, with hearts and minds assailed and bogged down by worldly sentiment, travel through days of deepening stress to the strains of bugles playing; bent We, with hearts and minds so clear that only our own wills shall dominate, live our lives with confidence and faith in what we think is but connate leading us, despite our views, to battle fields thick strewn with finished men. ' the world of love and truth. And with that faith inside us TRAVEL ON? —Jack Walters CONCERNING THE SUPERIORITY OF MAN .... I am not a stone. If I were, I could not contemplate my fellow stones and write these words upon a silent sheet of paper. If I were a stone, I might rest quietly upon a high pinnacle, warm with the warmth of the sun, and cool with the coolness of shadows. With no power to awaken, and no power to sleep, I would be unaware of day and night, of wind and rain, of the touch of bird and insect. If the pinnacle were my home, I could not move except at the insistence of the changing earth or a mountain-climbing foot or hand. I am not a stone. If I were, I might lie wetly in the bed of a stream, or rest firmly in a man-made wall, a path or a road. I might be red or gray or white, but I would not know. And I would not know. And I would be as empty oi concern for my companion stones as they for me. I am not a stone. I am a man. I claim the stone as mine to use, and I build a temple. I take the stone as mine, and with my skillful hands I fashion from it a weapon with which to slay my enemy. If I were a tree, I would claim the earth with my roots and the sky with my branches, and change with the chang- ing season. Lifting myself to the sun, bending away from the storms, my body would clothe itself with blossoms and spend itself with seed. I cannot clearly say just how much I would know of birds and bees, if I were a tree. But this I know: that man deems it his right to take the fibrous trunk, and fashion from the body of a tree his shelter from the sun and cold, his chair, his table and his bed. I am not a tree. I am a man, and I may use a single tree to make a cradle for my child, or a cross for my enemy. I am not a sheep. If I were I would wander, within confining fences, over the stones and beneath the trees. My small hard hoofs would beat narrow paths between one pasture and another, and I would spend my days searching out my favorite grass and weed. There would be a flock of sheep I would have no concern for any lamb but mine. Without mercy or thought of mercy, without courage or lack of courage, I would push intruding lambs I am not a sheep. I am a man. I direct the lives of sheep and use their wool as I will. With color which the earth has yielded to me, I dye the wool. I weave blankets for my bed, rugs for my floor, and garments for my- self and my fellow men. I am a man and I consider it my right to use the tools which I have made to kill the sheep which I have raised. I hang the lifeless body, head down, and skillfully separate the skin from the flesh. I build a hearth of stone and a fire of wood. I cook the flesh of animals and eat it from dishes made of clay. I go from the warmth of my hearth with energy to build, with energy to destroy. I am a man. My hands are triumphantly capable of doing my will. My mind is restlessly alert. My heart is strangely sensitive. I am not a sheep. I am not a tree. I am not a stone. — Marv Ela BLACK AND WHITE Negroes were rare in Cat Town. In fact, I had seen only one, and she was an aged ex-slave. So when the Whitakers moved into the house across the road I was so excitedly curious that I could hardly eat. Dad scolded me for staring, so I rushed to the pear tree, there to peer through masses of bloom and watch every move made by the six little black strangers. Desperately I longed to play with them, but I didn ' t dare suggest such a thing to Mother. When we saw a white child with the black, Mother was immediately convinced that she had been kidnapped and that the Whitakers had come to our isolated community to hide. Dad insisted that, although she showed no traces of Negro blood, the child was really a blond Negro. My fascination was intensified by fear, for Mother might be right, and if she were, they might want another little white girl.. For two weeks I spent most of my waking hours in the pear tree, staring until my eyes ached. The blooms fell, the leaves were too small to screen me, but I stared on. I knew every one of the children by name, and every note of their hilarious laughter. Eagerly I wai ted for the rich, low songs of the mother and the deep chuckle of the father. I noted that they often had only one meal a day and that the children were sent out to borrow food for that. Especially was I aware of the gentleness which they all showed to the tiny golden-haired girl, who was always silent, never crying as other two-year-olds do. . Reluctantly I went to Sunday School one morning. When I got back to the pear tree I could see no one. A thin feather of smoke drifted from the chimney. Surely the Whitakers were not eating dinner, not this early in the morning. But the rickety old wagon was not soaking in the pond, and no flea-bitten mules pulled at the sassafras bushes in the yard. Desolation clutched at my throat as I tore through the briars and over fences to where my father was salting cattle on the hill. Dad shouted, Don ' t run like that. You ' ll scare the horses. I stopped short, then, elaborately casual, rubbed the big chestnut and fed an apple to the colt. As my father and I strolled back to the barn, hand in hand, he remarked, Well, the niggers left this morning. I don ' t suppose they stole anything on the way out. I hope they don ' t come around here any more. Back in the pear tree, I stared for a long time at the faint path through new grass. That was the only trace of the Whitaker ' s residence — that, and the loneliness in the heart of a child who had watched from afar. — Georgiana Ball DISCOVERY Massed within my hands — this round round form grows out into fullness. Thumbs of mine dig into brown earth (the hollows of eyes are born.) Piling block on block a body comes to be. Obeying further the impulses of my urging we grow together, the clay and I. Until with a final emphasis it stands here firm and new. Perhaps you will call it what Winter says to Spring or why men fight and kill But looking now I see a way of building common to God and me. — Sally Wilkerson TAPESTRY AND HOMESPUN To you, whose eyes are proud and brave, Who ask no gift, and take no staff To march with you to any height. Whose shining armor is your laugh; I offer you one star-small gift Because you helped me stand, and know That I am but a tapestry, When life, pure life, should only glow In homespun, woven humility — I give an endless thread, my love. — Rosella Morgan Experience To see something For the first time Is to see always What no man has seen before To come upon a new land And stake a claim. — Ruth Pennington EPITOME Rain, come f.ill on mc now. Late or soon, drizzle or downpour, choose your own fiendish way. This cold steel hull that once was heart is scuttled now, for the centuries that are yours have seared all sense of pain. The night just passed was filled with fears that I might die before I had even lived. But at gray break of the morning you won. This heart that so few hours ago pumped young red blood is sterile now. Vengeance? Why, I ' d laugh with you, heinous murderer. First, though, let me remember yesterday ' s hopes — just this one time? (Were you human, the torture might satiate your hellish desire to rape young life.) I am glad now that I was a youth. You see, youth ' s puerile vision discounted the pessimistic aphorisms that senile elders spoke. Youth said, This world is mine for the taking. So last night I left my theoricd books for a spell. Wrapped in the rubber-smelled old slicker, I walked in the downpour. Nothing new, I ' d done it since I was a tad. The rain in my face, warmed by the time it reached my throat, leaked through to lose itself on the tingling skin of a healthy body. Before vibrant heart had sung one note, mind came bustling along, panting to keep up. Fertile mind labored to rein in, with its everlasting reason, a wild heart that loved life. Rational mind would have no compromise, and heart, never servile, cracked under the rain of eternal force. Rain, when the Himalayas are washed down level, spread your lurking grin, APE! But when you recall this proud heart, deadened to love, remember also the reluctance with which you released your soggy hands. — Hal Smith COMPETITION You, Egon Petri — you walk across the stage below me and bow with confidence before your audience. I am just the Chimes in the tower above you, but I challenge you. Do not be so sure, do not be so serene. You give your coat-tails a deft flip and sit quickly at your piano. You are a master and you would conquer this audience as you have conquered the piano with the technique of your tutored fingers. But I defy you. Listen to my voice. One, two. . . You do not heed me as I chime the hour. The strength of your fingers runs down across the keys and stills the rest- lessness of the crowded room. Bach, Mozart, Schumann, Liszt. . . held poised by the power that is yours, the power of those white hands. Eager is your audience and grateful but I only laugh at the waves of your tone that mount up to me and my laughter is in my chime which you ignore. Three, four. . . Your enchantment will not last for long. You are just a little man with agile fingers. You will be gone tomorrow and this audience will forget you. Tomorrow they will follow me as I direct them to their time appointed duties. They are servants to me even if now they listen to you and do not heed the time. Five, six. . . Play on, Egon Petri, play on. In the end I will win. Your music will be stilled and hours will again be mine. Finish your program, play encores for the applause rightly yours. Ignore the hour that I am chiming. It is not for long. Seven, eight. . . — Ruth Pennington NOTHING What is nothing? The dictionary says that it is not anything; that which does not exist. That much can be seen from the word itself: no-thing. But then, what is a thing? Again turning to the dictionary, we are told that it is whatever exists, or is conceived to exist, as a separate entity, or as a distinct and individual quality, fact, or idea; any separable or distinguishable object of thought; anything at all. Boiling down all this high-brow languauge, we find that a thing is anything that is. But what? Even Webster was driven in desperation to using a It ' s so indefinite; anything can be a thing, except nothing. So we are Fine. Now we have somethiag to work on. compound of the word itself to describe thing, right back where we started. First, can you describe an absence, which is the best synonym I can think of. You can say There is nothing here, but how can you declare the presence of that which does not exist, an abstract? You are telling a lie, be- cause you are using a word to express something that does not exist and — but there, I said something does not exist when if it is a thing it must exist. There seems to be no way to express it (it what, when nothing is definitely not any kind of an it) ; so let ' s leave that branch of the question for a while. Let ' s try to find an illustration of nothing. Hold out your hand. Now close it with a firm, sure grip. If you have done this properly, you should have an excellent sample of nothing in your tightly clenched fist. Open your hand slowly, and look at your sample. Sure there ' s air there, but you can ' t see air and so we ' ll just disregard it for this simple experiment. What do you see between the palm of your hand and your eyes? Look carefully — is it — yes! Nothing! But now let ' s think it over more carefully. Take a few more aspirins, and let ' s go: You saw nothing. That ' s just fine; except one thing: How can you see nothing when nothing is the lack of any- thing to feel, see, smell, or touch? Of course, you couldn ' t see anything, and so you suppose there was nothing there. But can you prove it? Yes, because if there isn ' t anything there there must be nothing there. We said a long time ago that nothing is nothing more or less than the lack of something. Let ' s not go into how it got there, or where it came from unless we want some nice kind men in. clean white uniforms to take us to a lovely place where we won ' t harm ourselves or anyone else — So we have nothing. It isn ' t so hard to get, after all. But (here we go again), if we have it (that ' s good: using it to refer to nothing) it must exist. There we are, all snarled up again. We can ' t possess nothing unless it exists, if it exists it isn ' t nothing, and if it isn ' t nothing (doubh negative; remember your English teacher?) it is some- thing. So something is not nothing. At last we have something to work on. (don ' t look now, but we had that in the first two paragraphs of this crazy essay.) Maybe now we can get something done. Wait a minute: We are trying to get something done about nothing. We are working hard for nothing, and — Isn ' t this where I came in? — Ned Stoddard WHAT CAN I WRITE? What can I write on a sheet of paper? Airplanes write fear On blue skies; Bombs leave a signature of ugliness On ancient buildings; On dewy fields. What can I write? Who will look at my paper? Must all writing be ugly? Must it dig into things and people With sharp points? Once men saw a message On midnight blue, Five-pointed and shining. But blood-shot eyes Are too inflamed To look toward it, And teary eyes are to myopic To trace its outline. Once such eyes were opened To stark characters Against a black cloud: Three rough stakes With wooden cross-pieces, Rising from the hill-top And over one a light Beyond all understanding. There was a writing At man ' s eye level. Can I learn to write on blackness With a steady hand? —Nellie I. Crabb DRAFTED Small white card — innocent — poison. Leveler of plans — rearranger of life. A home — .in army camp. Soft quick steps on a rug, rustle of thin silk — Thump of nails on board, rasp of stiff khaki. Intimacy of soft nights, quick warm breaths on a pillow — Hard army cots, snore of exhaustion. Savorous meats and salads — heavy beans, greasy stews, Comfort of house shoes — cold boards under blistered feet. Ripple of woman ' s laughter — bursting of shells. Crying of new life — whining of bullets. Baby fingers pressed into a warm breast — Numb stiff fingers on a gun stock. Desires of youth filled — age, with desires twisted. Two souls living — one soul dead. Innocent white card, rearranger of life. LETTER FROM HOME A letter came from home today, leaving me feeling a sickly pea-green. Three words did it Those jaj-ed scratching from Mother ' s pen dug in, penetrating me as that hoary frost did the hills and valleys early this morn- ing. It ,s silly that they should mean so much, but they do. These are the words: We moved today Imagine that! My family moved from our home! My home! After living sixteen years in a house that lived and breathed home, that mo ded itself to our needs, that always called us to come back, now it ' s all over. The calamity of it! The death of home! Where ami going for Christmas vacation? Must I visit the family in their strange, new possession? I want to go home.— home to that old, ten room brick house down in the heart of town. I don ' t want to go to their duplex up there m— Heights, where all the rich people are supposed to live. We aren ' t one of them. It ' ll be a strain rather than a relaxation to go there. I can almost see myself traipsing down a foreign street in the snow, lugging a battered old suitcase in one freezing hand fingering a p.ece of paper in the other. The paper has on it my new address. I wonder what the new home will look like? This foster child thrust upon me. Is it big enough to keep our furniture on friendly terms with each other? What about our stuff, our junk, that was stored on the third floor back home ' I bet any money that the sentimental souvenirs that I ' ve saved for years were torn open. I hope they saw the senti- mentality rather than the silliness in them— and kept them for me. The letter says. Be prepared to part with many of your belongings when you come home for Christmas. I ' d like to sneak back to my old home, naked as it will be,— or rudely intruded upon by strangers— just to linger a tiny bit, and then go to the new house. I ' ll adapt myself to it as I would a step-mother or step-father or as 1 would to any new possession, but it will be hard, and I am stubborn. — Miriam Louise Evans I rolled out of bed hating for a second the bright sunshine which streaked the dusty floor. Why couldn ' t it be dark just a little longer? After quietly making up my bed, I gathered my utensils to make my morning ,ourney to the bathroom Re- turn.ng I found my roommate had finally managed to brave the morning. We dressed in silence, one movine over grudgingly at the dresser while both applied the essentials of facial beauty. I dont have a first period class so I retired to my desk to study some much needed history. My roommate hunted frantically for her jacket and books. Rushing out the door as the bell rings she flings me ' a smile and my morning greeting, See you at chapel. —Katharine Stith HOW TO STUDY There ' s really an art to studying, and when you disco personal technique and it is up to every individual to disco nique that has been highly developed by college student mended particularly for Junior and Senior girls. The night before an important quiz, come home imm and ask them to stay for coffee. When they insist on lea another half-hour at least. After they leave you can wri (you ' ve already written him one that day in Philosophy c rugs on the fire escape. This takes lots of time. After th clothes that have been sprinkled and re-sprinkled, if it i linen, read a magazine — one that has a book-length novel- If this isn ' t enough you can still paste pictures in youi of your wardrobe and knit on a sweater. By this time it should be 1 1 o ' clock. You may now t But you ' re so tired and sleepy — just set the alarm for fiv Do this before every quiz and you will make your grad ver it, your grades are made. Now, everyone has his own ver his own method of study. The following is one tech- s and I offer it to you for what it is worth. It is recom- ediately after supper. Bring the gang into your room ving at 7:30 make another pot of coffee and they ' ll stay te a letter home and another one to your best boy friend lass). Clean your room next and be sure to shake the at, shampoo your hair and manicure your nails, iron s linen night insist that it is your time to get the clean -and make your roommates ' bed. photograph album, read old letters, take an inventory ake your book off the shelf — dust it — and get in bed. e o ' clock. Turn off the light and then Peace. es — what kind of grades? That ' s your worry — not mine! — Katharine Sutherland Life is mine — to do with as I will! And I may take it from the depths of sober mediocrity And sling it to the heights of storm swept peaks Amid the clouds and lightning and the sunshine Of Love and Laughter — And. there — when sunset comes — abandon it! For Life is mine! — Ann de Jarnette This thing that has been done to me For which once I would have severed That gossamer strand between Being and nothing I now provoke. Life is too exciting to relinquish I long to spread myself as a film over the Universe To grasp every sensuous contact: to starve to freeze to catch divine laughter in the wind stride And swagger with callous smile under street lamps Wresting substance from mire. Living is beyond suffering, I must hurl myself in Universe Before I become of earth — Before I melt into sun. — Ermon Fay Johnson UNFED My heart lifts Gull wings, Clamoring for food; Refusing to believe Your empty hand. —Nellie I. Crabb PENSARE 1 slid down the haystack, absently chewing a blade of grass. Then I climbed back up .ind just sat there. Below the crest of the next hill, my father and old Henry, who lived in the tenant house, were swinging scythes in a sort of dramatic rhythm. 1 knew, without looking at them, that they were breathing heavily, their shirts plastered to their backs with sweat. Behind me a hen cackled, the sound scattering into smaller fragments of sound, and falling back into the noisy quietness of country life. There was pattern here, a harmonious pattern of hens and bees and steamy horses and brown-footed children. Not that I was aware of these things. At eight, I didn ' t deal in realities of later importance. I realized only that my father knew everything in the world, that Judy, who wasn ' t quite six, was a mere baby, and that one went over gates, not through them. Bv the time I was fifteen I was far too sophisticated to slide down haystacks or even sit on them. But there was one less public than the others, on a sheltered southern slope from which I could look at and through Elk Knob. By this time I knew all the answers. My father had grown hopelessly old-fashioned, and Judy, at twelve and a half, was st ' ll afflicted with extreme youth. A certain boy named Billy Thomas had beautiful brown eyes. Last summer it wasn ' t sentiment that made me go back to the old haystack. It was a deliberate experiment. When I was sure to the point of desperate finality that nobody knows anything, that the old order never was and that there is no order about the new ... I climbed to the top of the havstack and sat there waiting for things to happen. At first nothing did. Then when I had forgotten why I had come, absorbed in the dark and light design made by one tall milkweed shadow, that feeling came back with all the concreteness of which a mere feeling is capable. I knew then that all was right with the world and that security can be entered into and left like a state of mind.  There is something about haystacks. — Ruby Ball SPENDTHRIFT I was not quite certain what I wanted, I said to the shopkeeper (Her name was Fate, I learned later) And if I might just look - - - Certainly, she assured me, and maybe she could help me. Now here ' s a nice life — she spread it full-length before me And, I examining its brown-warm pattern of complacent existence (Suspicious of hearth and home-fire) Agreed with her that it was nice. Secure in the knowledge that I should never possess it. Then we have others . . . her voice was pale honey — This, maybe. . . I caught my breath at its beauty, And my fingers were feverish for it. The shortest bit of life it was — a mere scrap — But clear to the edge its colors were Passion and poverty Loveliness and loneliness W ' ildness and wise-men ' s scorn. Thai — ' fake that one, my voice crashed hoarse through her sales-talk; Impatient I waited while paper and strings went around it Then stood with my package, stricken had not asked of her what price 1 should pay. — Ruby Greenwell From the WALLPAPER These excerpts are chosen indiscriminately from the columns Little Grains of Sandie, and A Nickel ' s Worth, written for the Wallpaper by Frances Sanders and Margaret Nichol. My roommate sez: I wish we would have more school chapels so I could knit without feeling I was wasting my time. Isn ' t it funny how tastes change. Little girls like painted dolls; little boys like soldiers. When they grow up, the girls like soldiers and the boys go for the painted dolls. Old Chinese proverb say — Where there ' s smoke there ' s fire. Cabinet say — Where there ' s smoking there ' s firing. Parting words — The sooner 1 never see your face again the better it will be for both of us when we meet. As they parted for the night she said to him — Wipe my silly grin off your face. Boarding Hall Notice: You Can ' t Take It With You. Our favorite A.M. P. (absent-minded professor) spent half an hour in front of a mirror trying to remember where he had seen that face before. Prof: This exam will be conducted on the honor system. Please take seats three seats apart and in alternate rows. Three-week graves are due any day now. A rumor says they ' re grading posture on the curve system these days. Who always borrows, never lends? Your roommate. Who brings around her lowbrow friends? Your roommate. Who hogs the only study lamp? Who uses your last postage stamp? Who wears your necklace out to vamp? Your roommate. But who ' s a constant pal to you? Who overlooks the things you do? Who knows and loves you through and through? Your mother. I don ' t care who wins the election — one man is just as good as the other — if not better. My roommate sez: Censored! ORGANIZATIONS STAFT STITH chimes; CE EX COMMITTEE Ochoco, Bledsoe, Elannery, Shupe, Bowie, Cfouse, Burns, Gill, Mrs. Huntington, Current, Miss Stooker, Sletvett, Eakin, Eisenhour, Reverend Huntington, Raburn, Orick, Campbell CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR The Christian Endeavor is a religious organization sponsored by the Union Church. It has a large membership made up mostly of college students. chimes; WOMEN ' S HOUSE GOVERNMENT Dodd, Black, Mills, Gipson, Chapin Allen, Paredes, Elmore, Click, Snoderass MEN ' S HALL UNION Pilson, Singleton, Walters McGuire, Greene, Callison chimes; UD SENATE Stevens, Wilson, Click, Mills, Allen, Hall, McDaniel, Hendricks, Har- grove, Walters, Shoun, Ela, Lackey, Hatcher, Pilson, John, Ward, Nes- tor. Hutchins, Ross. STUDENT BOARD OF GOVERNORS Brooks, Noblitt, Hardin, Hensley. Pilson, Moore, Perry, Mills, Baker, Cox. LD SENATE Whitman, Brickey, Shutt, Litton, Desimone, Riffe, Clark, Current, Beck, Hensley, Sattler, Shupc, Hughes, Litton, Deaton, Duff, shutt. chimes: V- I I x H .h $ r m YWCA CABINET Steinorth, Johnson, Click, Peasley, Roberts, Perry, Dejarnette, God- bey, Rice, Roberts, Hill, Stevens, Kazee, Stevens, Kessel, Burley, Los h bough SUNDAY SCHOOL COUNCIL Kirk, Hinchman, Jones, Flannery, Bandy, Hartt, Yeary, Sharp, Mc- Dowell. YMCA CABINET Roberts, White, John, Andrews, Maggard, McLain, Bowles, Hensley, Stevens, Reynolds, Filmore. Brown, York chimes; The purpose of the Vanguards is to investigate, discuss, and stimulate interest in social and economic problems. Investigation yields knowledge and knowledge is a prerequisite of understand- ing. Furthermore, wise judgments and actions are possible only when the problems and issues are understood. And in as much as discussion clarifies issues and reveals the nature of problems being investigated, the importance of its role in the effort to understand problems is hard to exaggerate. VANGUARDS In the spring of 1939, the Public Affairs Forum was organized for the purpose of promot- ing better understanding of public affairs through study, discussion, lectures, and pictures. Dur- ing the two years of its existence it has become a vital organization on the campus. Member- ship this year exceeds 100. The most important project of the Forum is the Laboratory, a library of contemporary pro- paganda, which contains material from over 400 organizations in the United States and foreign countries. PUBLIC AFFAIRS FORUM chimes: SIGMA PI SIGMA Kilgore, Hardiman, Hale, Howsmon, Fenn, Rosenbaum, Noll, Bratcher PI ALPHA Walters, Hardiman, Roach, Laswell, Hicks, Bailey, Rice, Ward, Burroughs, Wright, Bratcher, Howsmon, Hurst, Moore, Perry, Eisenhour, Hoffman, Fry, Atkins, Henderson, Martin, Warner, Blaker, Bays, Ayres, Hutcherson. CHIMES! TAU KAPPA ALPHA Day, Beck, Sattler, Hinchman, Dunford, Schumate, Phillpott, Steinberger, Runnells, Schorman, Noblitt, Nestor, Riffe, Armstrong, Robinson, Deaton, Herndon, Queen, Masengill, Combest, Scott, Allen, Hardin. PI GAMMA MU Hoffman, Ball, Grimes, Parades, Bow, Steinberger, Stevens. Stein- orth, Quinn, Atkinson, Wright, Ross, Milton, Fisher, Morris, Queen, John, Masengill, Henderson, Hens- ley, McLain, Muelder,. Hatcher, Chidester, Allen, Noblitt, Carnes, Hardin, Lyell. DELTA PHI ALPHA Bailey, Brenda, Coleman, Pauck, Quinn, Damron, Brann, Welch, Barr, Cossett, Born, Queen, Thomp- son, Hughes, Lyell, Witten, Fisher, Hoffman, Muelder, Morton. chimes; BAND Durham, (Conductor), McNeer, Hays, Wagers, Lambert, Elliot, Keener, Spence, Morrell, Hoffman, Ingraham, Love, Blackburn, Lord, Tomlin, Burley, Hays, Popenhagen, Wygal, Alley, Shillings, Wesley, Cloyd, Keener, Denham, Estep, Craig, Haverly, Wesley, Welch, Nestor, King, Robinson, Davis, Kilbourne, Durham, Bent, Hays, Hibbets, Russell, Reynolds, Buch- ORCHESTRA Hall, Clark, Keener, M. Keener, Morgan, Durham, Spence, Crippen, Ochoco, Crossen, Balzer, Morell, Ingraham, Durham, Stillings, Alley, Popenhagen, M. Keener, Weekes, Bent, Rigby, Hibbits, Cloyd, Wes- ley, Cole. ROYAL COLLEGIANS Jones, (Director), Crase, Lambert, Blackburn, Diamond, Buchanan, G. Wesley, Jones, F. Wesley, Davis, Cole. CHIMES VARSITY WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB 1st. Cox, Canada, Yowell, Davis. 2nd. Strait, Ingraham, Washburn, Young, Eakin, Imrie, Miss Mahon, Coyle. 3rd. Lykins, Scheiberg, Austin, Chasteen, Douglass, Archer, Elliot, Current, Crippen, Whitaker, Barr, Ritchie, Allen, Dunn, Roberts, Bryan. VARSITY MEN ' S GLEE CLUB Hartsell, Steinberger, Wesley, Gabbard, Bowen, Benjamin, Slettvet, Warming, Cole, Smith, Edwards, Craig, Shoemaker, Sutton, Hovey, Hulburt, Runion, Turner, Mills, Atwater, McLain, Wesley, Roach, Wheeler, Lord, Whitaker, Durham, Prewitt, Bradley, Tully. ■ ■ ■ ■ niiii chimes; BEREA PLAYERS GLENDON GABBARD, Pres. PEARL PHILLPOTT, Secy. FLORENCE SEAY, Treas. DAYTON HULBURT, V. Pres. The Dramatic Club, reorganized under the name The Berea Players, has begun a far-reaching program which has brought many changes in internal organization and broader contacts with outlying organizations. Membership has reached a new peak of 233 members drawn from the Lower and Upper divisions. The Club now has three honoray organizations whose membership is determined by points given upon the basis of work done: These are: Alpha Psi Omega — 75 points in acting and stagecraft must be earned for membership. Tau Delta Tau — requires 750 points in stagecraft alone. Thespians — open to Academy, requires 200 points in acting and stagecraft, or in acting alone, or stagecraft alone. Death Takes a Holiday by Alberto Casella was the fall presentation under the direction of Katherine Stith. The set was designed by Glendon Gabbard. His account of the stagecraft problems in producing the play was published in The High School Thespian for March, 1941. Three-cornered Moon by Gertrude Tonkonogy, the major spring production, was directed by Frances Snodgrass. Marriage Proposal by Anton Chekhov, under the direction of Esther Warner, was entered in the Kentucky Drama Festival for high schools and received a superior rating. Adeline Tinder received a rating of excellent for her characterization of Natalia Stepanovana in the play. A total of 3 1 one-act plays have been presented before the Club. These productions have been carefully criticized by competent reviewers to help maintain a high standard for all work. The Club wishes to express its appreciation for the leadership and enthusiastic direction of Dr. Earl W. Blank and Dr. Harry B. Gough. CHIMES ALPHA PSI OMEGA Gabbard, Masengill, Shumate, Seay, Damron, Snodgrass, Hulburt, Stith, Queen, Phillpott. THESPIANS Tender, Razor, Bent York, Chaney, Welsh Chappell, Crooks, Thomas TAU DELTA TAU Henderson, Snodgrass, Morris, War- ner, Stith, Gabbard, Phillpott, Andrews. CHIMES FOLK CLUB The Folk Club has been unusually active this year under the very capable leadership of the president, B. P. Allen. An opportunity to learn new folk dances and enjoy old ones has been offered and much interest has been shown by the regular attendance of old members and a con- tinual increase of new ones. On February first the entire club participated in a demonstration given between halves of the basketball game at Seabury Gymnasium. COUNTRY DANCES The Country Dancers is an informal group, its members being students picked from large folk dance groups throughout the three divisions of the school. The group, under the capable direction of Mr. Frank Smith, learns the more difficult of the country dances. These they dance for various occasions on and off the campus in order to show the beauty and fun that may gained from country dancing. chimes: PHI DELTA Cole, Legare, Cromer, Bcckler, Collins, Pilson, Maltby, Shepherd, Fannin, Tompkins, Thompson, Brickey, Fleming, Stewart, Taylor, Ward, Smith, Raines, Doughtery, Gunter, Pcrrine, Hunt, Fisher, Pearson, Norman, May, Nestor, Fielder, Lord, Morrison, Bowen, Edwards, Blevins, Hardway, Rosen- baum. RHO DELTA Bailey, Back, Price, Robertson, Nelon, Dillingham, Buckner, Ed- wards, Ledford, Jent, Garland, Young, McDowell, Robinson, Brown, Few, Maggard, Bradley, Edwards, Tobv. ALPHA ZETA Queen, Thompson, McClure, Wes- ley, Smith, Haun, Noblitt, Pitt, Combest, Warming, Eisenhour, Cornett, Welch, Steinberger, An- derson, Roberts, Brann, Bailey, Coleman. chimes: L HOME EC CLUB Bowie, Hopper, Shrader, Tinsley, McDaniel, Bow, Gibson, Bowie, Loshbough, Pearson, Cox, Evans, Hall, Meredith, Kessel, Burden, Mitchell, Reeves, Martin, Burns, Click, Orick, Moore. AG-HOME EC CLUB Brooks, Anderson, Thompson, Lit- tlejohn, Robertson, Mitchell, Back, Maltby, Bowie, Hopper, Tinsley, Loshbough, Pearson, Cox, Evans, McDaniels, Gipson, Loshbough, Bow, Scott, Garland, Prewitt, Cal- houn, Callison, S tewart, Pearson, Cox, Shrader, Hall, Meredith, Brown, Kessel, McLaughlin, Cole- man, Smith, Dillingham, Hill, Er- nest, Reeves, Evans, Lord, Diamond, Gabbard, Martin, Spradlin, Ward. Williams, Cornett, Click, Orick, Bailey, Taylor, Moore, Grimwood, Jent, Shuler. AG UNION The Ag. Union is an organization made up of boys who are majoring in agriculture. It is one of the best organizations on the campus, creating a great deal of interest in problems of agriculture. It plans and manages a field day for the F.F.A. of surrounding communi- ties where former members of the Union, are now instructors. chimes: 111 II AG JUDGING TEAM Cromer, Kerr, Mitchell, Stewart, McDonald, McLaughlin RURAL COMMUNITY LIFE The purpose of this organization is the appreciation and improvement of rural life. An effort is made to have its bi-weekly, educational-recreational programs such that they could be duplicated in any rural community with the resources and helps available. chimes; BIRD CLUB H.uin, Wesley, Cooper, Abbott, Spillman Culbertson, Orth, Evans, Wilkerson, Farmer, Hil Loefer, Thorington, Gay, Dietz, Jenkins :aty, Mynhiei PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB Hart, Burley, Fillmore, Laswell, Moore, Hensley, Streyifeler New, Mullins, Taylor, Younge, Eisenhour, Hone, Rice, Thorington Brown, Clark, Hatcher, Crouch, Shires, Walters, Warming Cooper, Wilson, Tomlinson, Smith, Steinberger, Mynhier chimes; EDUCATION CLUB Prince, Ewcn, Green, Green, Dun- naway, Clouse, Campbell, Brown, Chides ter, Eisenhour WALLPAPER Carrington, Sanders, Shoun, Man- tooth, Nickels, Griffin, Clark, Cole FRENCH CLUB Mahood, Littell, Combest, Hoff- man, Cornett, Grubbs, Sinclair, Butler, Lilly, Whisnant, Richard- son, Gwinn, Brickey, Clark, Crip- pen, Knotts, Graham. PRINTERS ' CLUB Collum, Calmes, Wright, Haverly, Manning, Crippen, Luttrell, Campbell, Shell, Watson LOWER DIVISION Charles N. Shutt, Dean of Lower Division Katharine True, Dean of Lower Division Women LOWER DIVISION Luther Ambrose, Education Mary Baker, French Margaret Balzer, Art Anna Born, German Eleanor Brooks, English Joseph Cantieni, Art Gertrude Cheney, Music Clarence Dawson, Business Albert Dekker, Chemistry Benton Fielder, Agriculture Willis Fisher, Philosophy and Bible Harry Gough, English Oscar Gunkler, Physical Education Dorothy Hall, Music Julian Hartt, Philosophy and Bible Dorothy Harvey, French and Psychology Rolf Hovey, Music Jerome Hughes, English Gladys Jameson, Music Orrin Keener, Social Studies Marian Kingman, Home Economics Celia Kysela, Music John Loefer, Biology and Chemistry K. Helen McKinstry, Physical Education FACULTY Patricia Mahon, Music Jane Meek, Music William Newbolt, Business Elisabeth Peck, Social Studies Donald Pugsley, Mathematics Alice Reid, Home Economics Ralph Rigby, Music Mary Risinger, Music Gilbert Roberts, Mathematics Pattie Jo Russell, Business John W. Sattler, English H D. Schultz, Industrial Arts Walter Sikes, Philosophy and Bible Francis Smith, Sociology Louis Smith, History and Political Science Annie Southworth, Home Economics Claude Spillman, Agriculture Hattie Stowe, Bible and English Amy Woodruff, Home Economics Ruth Woods, Home Economics C.HIMFS = = Class Officers SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN Marvin Legare, Pres. Louis Combest, Prcs. Robert Brickcv, Vice Pres. Charles Beck, Vice Pres. Annabel Brake, Sec. Nancy Lane Rice, Sec. Robert Neal Burley, Treas. Louise Lester. Treas. CHIMES SOPHOMORES Abney, Harold Richmond, Ky. Adams, Ira Carr Creek, Ky. Adams, Willie R. Wheelersburg, Ky. Allender, Jr., fm. Corbin, Ky. Alley, George Asheville, N.C. Anderkin, Dorothy Mt. Vernon, Ky. Anderson, Elmer E. Irvine, Ky. Askew, Edith Nashville, Tenn. Bailey, Marion Rochester, N.Y. Beck, Charles McKinney, Ky. Benjamin, Bob Friend, Neb. Bess, Herman Russell, Ky. Biggerstaff, Edythe Ellenboro, N.C. Bowling, John East Bernstadt, Ky. Brickey, Quentin Stephens, Ky. Bright, Calvin Shansi, China Brockmann, Kent __ Charles Town, W.Va. Bussing, Sara E. Rossville, Ga. Butte, Zora Westminister, S.C. Campbell, Edith Pineville, Ky. Cheatham, James Detroit, Mich. Christy, William Garrison, Ky. Clark, Charles Edward ._ Cleveland, Ohio Cloud, Joel Connellys Springs, N.C. Cochran, Lacy Trout, W.Va. Coffey, Ruth Creelsboro, Ky. Combest, Louis W. Liberty, Ky. Combs, Thomas Langley, Ky. Cooper, Virginia Thorpe, W.Va. Craig, Robert L. Benham, Ky. Craw, Ralph Russell Gansevoort, N.Y. Creamer, Josephine Afton, Tenn. Creswell, Harris Talbott, Tenn. Crippen, Lois Elizabeth Berea, Ky. Crouser, Jean Mannington, W.Va. Current, Dixie Lercester, N.C. Dawson, Frances Peach Creek, W.Va. Day, Eugene Hazard, Ky. Day, Harry W. Filbert, W.Va. DeJarnette, Ann Soddy, Tenn. Dingess, Lanham __ Chopmonville, W.Va. Dixon, Lola Ray _ ._ Unus, W.Va. chimes; CHIMES: SOPHOMORES Dunford, Clarence N. ___ Kimball, W.Va. Eakin, Eleanor Berea, Ky. Ebbs, Frances Bristol, Va. Edwards, Robert Barnardsville, N.C. Fannin, Earl St. Paul, Ky. Farris, Donn Michael Welch, W.Va. Ferrill, Virginia Berea, Ky. Fielder, Garnett Rural Retreat, Va. Frye, Kenneth Wardensville, W.Va. Gray, Jean Chattanooga, Tenn. Griffin, Eileen Corbin, Ky. Gross, Jr., John R. Scottsboro, Ala. Grubbs, Lucille Kidds Store, Ky. Hatcher, Carl Blue Jay, W.Va. Henderson, Jr., John D. _ Mt. Vernon, Ky. Herrin, Virgie Shopville, Ky. Hinchman, Bill McConnell, W.Va. Hunter, Gray Ashland, Ky. Ingle, Cleo Merrow Weaverville, N.C. Ison, Forrester Whitesburg, Ky. Jones, James Asheville, N.C. Jones, Justine __. Ashland, Ky. Judd, Ophelia Asheville, N.C. Kellar, Martha Ann Dunneville, Ky. Kilbourne, Carl Appalachia, Va. Kirk, Wynona Celina, Tenn. Kirstein, Florence _ . Black Mountain, N.C. Lance, Alley Skyland, N.C. Lankford, Minrose Shenandoah, Va. Leedy, Allan _. ._ Welch, W.Va. Leslie, Norma Estill, Ky. Lester, Louise Greenville, Tenn. Little, Glynnell Crossville, Tenn. Lykins, Esther Tollesboro, Ky. McClure, Georgina Louisa, Ky. McDowell, Edna West Chester, Iowa McKnight, Doshia Langmau, Ky. Magnet, Bettie Joyne Hitchins, Ky. Mantooth, Frankie Rossville, Ga. Marrs, Mo Russell, Ky. Martin, Edna Berea, Ky. Martin, Jimmie Columbia, S.C. CHIMES CHIMES SOPHOMORES Metcalf, Joe Waco, Ky. Miller, Edna Martel, Tenn. Mills, Moss Manchester, Ky. Morrell, Garland Spruce Pine, N.C. Newman, Carl Exeter, Va. Nickell, Susan Hazel Green, Ky. Nickels, Margaret Benham, Ky. Osborn, Audra Louisa, Ky. Paseur, Earl New Hope, Ala. Patton, Golden Combs, Ky. Payne, Opal Midway, Tenn. Perrine, Harlin Stuart, Va. Peters, Jeannette Mt. Morris, Pa. Pilson, Bertha Stuart, Va. Pitt, Leldon P. Trinity, Ala. Potter, Homer I. : Louisa, Ky. Pratt, Ruth Martin, Ky. Propps, Kathleen Fayetteville, W.Va. Rainey, Archie Ashland, Ky. Randies, Mary Lou Berea, Ky. Rasnake, Bernice Cleveland, Va. Rawlings, La Rue Ringos Mills, Ky. Rayburn, J. C. Marion, N.C. Rice, Nancy Lane Candler, N.C. Rice, Ora Edison Flay Pond, Tenn. Riffe, Florine Hager Hill, Ky. Ritchie, Mildred Blue Diamond, Ky. Roberts, Lucille Martin, Ky. Robinette, Gladys Wayne, W.Va. Robinson, Rubye Lee __ Smithville, Tenn. Romero, Jose J. Banes Oriente, Cuba Sanders, Frances Romney, W.Va. Scheiberg, Ellen Kew Gardens, N.Y. Scherrer, Victor Dayton, Ohio Scott, Pearle Covington, Va. Seay, Florence ._ Asheville, N.C. Setzer, Carol Morgantown, N.C. Sexton, Zula Annville, Ky. Shelton, Nellie Mae Foster Falls, Va. Shires, James . Hillsboro, W.Va. Slettvet, Floyd Newcastle, Indiana Smith, Warren Mayfield, Ky. chimes: v w V 4 ZM - , T CHIMES: SOPHOMORES Spickard, Dorothy White Pine, Term. Stamper, Teddy Olive Hill, Ky. Stanley, Eugene Betsy Layne, Ky. Steinberger, Clarence Berea, Ky. Stevers, Mary Kathleen Pembroke, Va. Strong, Ethel Saldee, Ky. Tennant, Harry Williamsville, Va. Thomas, Orlando Oneida, Tenn. Utter, Madelon Larkensville, Ala. Vaughn, Grace Mooresburg, Tenn. Wagers, Martha Berea, Ky. Waters, Cecelia Inman, S.C. Watson, James Arthur Pineville, Ky. Wells, Earl Williamsport, Ky. Wesley, Fred Lynch, Ky. Whitaker, Buford Etowah, Tenn. Whitfield, Bruce Georges Fork, Va. Witten, Raleigh E. Auxier, Ky. Wolfram, Alice ._ Berea, Ky. Wygal, Sam Corbin, Ky. Yowell, Margaret Peola Mills, Va. Davidson, Farris Oneida, Ky. chimes: chimes; FRESHMEN Adams, Robert R. Wheelersburg, Ky. Adams, Mach Pittsburgh, Ky. Allen, George E. Berea. Ky. Alley, Mary Grethel, Ky. Arledge, Fred Hendersonvil le, N.C. Armfield, Eve Anne Tampa, Florida Arnett, Willard Rose Hill, Va. Atchley, Margaret Lenoir City, Tenn. Baker, Byron Brodhead, Ky. Ball, Zora Pineknot, Ky. Barath, John __ ._ Red Jacket, W.Va. Barnett, Nancy Mae Berea, Ky. Barr, Evelyn Blountville, Tenn. Bradley, Billy Loud, Ky. Beck, Ovaline Baughman, Ky. Beck, Olga __ _ Baughman, Ky. Begley, Frieda Berea, Ky. Bell, Bertha Liberty, Ky. Blevins, Glen Nathaniel __ Bakersville, N.C. Booher, Lurine Monroe, Tenn. Bowen, Ermel Stone Coal, W.Va. Brady, Verna Copenhagen, N.Y. Brake, Annabel Petersburg, W.Va. Brickey, Robert Stephens, Ky. Brown, Ralph Buchanan, Va. Breckler, Vivian Lee Coalgood, Ky. Bryson, Laura Delila Spartanburg, S.C. Buchanan, Jr., Hiram Benham, Ky. Buckner, Boyce Scheville, N.C. Ernest, C. Burchett Stambaugh, Ky. Burley, Robert Neal Omar, W.Va. Butler, Mary Wellford, S.C. Caddell, Theodore Holly Hill, Ky. Campbell, June Middlesboro, Ky. Campbell, German __ Robbinsville, N.C. Cawood, Walter Lee Cawood, Ky. Chambers, Mildred Louisa, Ky. Chandler, Dorothy Greenville, Tenn. Chapman, Buster Ashford, N.C. Clark, Edmonia Hammond, Ky. Coates, Mary E. Banco, Va. Colbert, Doris Okolona, Miss. chimes: chimes; FRESHMEN Cole, Robert E. Lynch, Ky. Counts, Harold Nealy Ridge, Va. Coyle, Bob Carolyn Berea, Ky. Craig, Mary Margaret Mt. Vernon, Ky. Creekmore, Nadene Creekmore, Ky. Crouch, William E. Carlisle, Ky. Cyrus, William F. Buchanan, Ky. Daugherty, William Lloyd __ Grundy, Va. Davis, Alta Mae Middlesburg, Ky. Davis, Wilma Juanita Loyall, Ky. Dawes, Arthur Catherine, Ky. Deitz, Estil Graydon, W.Va. Dodson, Jean Mill Springs, Ky. Dunn, William Bristol, Va. Dunn, Mary Berea, Ky. Durham, Helen Beatrice __ Moreland, Ky. Eads, Jennetta Eubank, Ky. Edwards, Ella Florence Sparta, N.C. Edwards, Harry Chattanooga, Tenn. Elam, Paul E. Corbin, Ky. Eldredge, Frances Hixon, Tenn. Ernest, Margaret Walhalla, S.C. Fair, Ruth Hollis Liberty, Ky. Falkenburg, Ruth Warren Louisville, Ky. Few, Ernest Benson Taylors, S.C. Fielder, Robert Lee Berea, Ky. Fisher, Z. Maxine Somerset, Ky. Fitzpatrick, Emogene Hazard, Ky. Fitzwater, Evelyn Louise __ Mallen, W.Va. Flannery, Clyde C. Dunham, Ky. Fletcher, Paul Deskins, Va. Foley, Hazel Russell Springs, Ky. Fox, Alice Crossville, Tenn. Free, Grace Sevierville, Tenn. French, Helen Marie Stanton, Ky. Gabbard, Mildred Berea, Ky. Garber, Louis Lee Staunton, Va. Gifford, Constance Tabriz, Iran Gilliam, Marjorie Livingston, Ky. Gilreath, James E. Corbin, Ky. Givens, Evelyn Smithville, Tenn. Griswold, Mabel Asheville, N.C. CHIMES chimes; FRESHMEN Guffey, Mary Jamestown, Ky. Gunter, Jr., George Beverly ._ Stuart, Va. Hamilton, Thomas Birmingham, Ala. Hann, Edith Eulene Littleton, Ala. Hansel, Margaret Pine Hill, Ky. Harber, Glen Rose Hill, Va. Heatherly, Gertha Lee Jellico, Tenn. Heatherly, Paul Jellico, Tenn. Herndon, Douglas Berwind, W.Va. Hiatt, Virginia Wildie, Ky. Hill, Georgia Ewing, Va. Hill, Gideon D. Pilot Mountain. N.C. Hoffman, Jesse Edward __ Burkesville, Ky. Hollyfield, Grace Gertrude __ Pound, Va. Home, Marie Coeburn, Va. Howard, Pauline Loyall, Ky. Hubbard, John W. Nora, Ky. Humphreys, Charles __ Marlington, W.Va. Hunt, Raymond Forest City, N.C. Hysinger, David Brodhead, Ky. Jenkins, Carl Flat Ridge, Va. Jones, Arlie Bethelridge, Ky. Jones, Eunice Sylvia _„ East Lynn, W.Va. Keathley, Mary Black Mountain, N.C. Keen, Katherine Flora __ Helenwood, Tenn. Keen, Polly Marie Dryhill, Ky. Kennamer, James Woodville, Ala. Keyser, Emmett M. ._ Ashland, Ky. King, Stanton Bristol, Tenn. Knotts, Betty Jo Atlantic City, N.J. Kuykendall, Nancy E. Asheville, N.C. Hart, Lewis Berea, Ky. Lockhart, Lunelle Clarkrange, Tenn. Loftis, Monna Eloise Campbello, S.C. Lowman, Reavis __ Connelly Springs, N.C. Legare, Marvin Lucien __. Lynchburg, Va. Lufburrow, Robert A. _ Ocean Grove, N.J. Luster, George Lowell McKinney, Ky. Lykins, Samuel W. Edna, Ky. Mahood, Chester R. Oak Hill, W.Va. McGinnis, Gladys Dry Creek, W.Va. Miller, Jason Dandridge, Tenn. chimes: CHIMES FRESHMEN McKenzic, Beulah K. Louisville, Ky. McNeer, R. Mason Williamson, W.Va. McNeill, Robert F. Fallsburg, Ky. Moore, Dewey Fallsburg, Ky. Moore, Jewell Tyner, Ky. Morrison, Hugh Greeneville, Tenn. Morton, June Rosebud __ South Shore, Ky. Nelon, Claude Rufus Lake Lure, N.C. Nelson, Mildred Corbin, Ky. Nestor, Billie Marie Marmet, W.Va. Noss, Margaret Aomari, Japan O ' Daniel, Sarah Lee, North Belmont, N.C. Orth, Esther New York, N.Y. Owens, Frances Mae __ Deablock, Ky. Parks, Robert D. Elkin, N.C. Parris, Ray Boom, Tenn. Peaslee, Ruth __ __ Oak Park, 111. Pennington, Eldred Fielden, Ky. McCoy, Pitt Trinity, Ala. Porter, Leland Booneville, Ky. Potter, Hazel Yeager, Ky. Potter, Irene Louisa, Ky. Raines, Earnest Breaks, Va. Reber, Elwood Westtown, Penn. Reynolds, Hazel __ Connelly Springs, N.C. Reynolds, Paul J. Hindman, Ky. Rickard, Robert R. Thomas, W.Va. Riddle, John James Mt. Vernon, Ky. Russell, Henry Clay, New Tazewell, Tenn. Saylor, Ruth Marie Berea, Ky. Saeger, Clinton Lenoir City, Tenn. Sears, Nadeane Somerset, Ky. Sharp, Mary Nell Knoxville, Tenn. Shaw, Marie Elizabeth Charters, Ky. Shoemaker, Harold Lloyd Panola, Ky. Shupe, Mary Anna Berea, Ky. Sinclaire, Love Elizabeth . _ Spindale, N.C. Smith, Mildred Prichard, W.Va. Smith, Ruby Lee Disputanta, Ky. Steinberger, William Berea, Ky. Stewart, Wayne Wildie, Ky. Stillings, Frank Stuart London, Ky. chimes: PHTMFS FRESHMEN Swearengin, Granuel Grant, Ala. Sykes, Anna Lee CHntwood, Va. Tatone, Lige Mullens, W.Va. Taylor, Ellen Sawyer, Ky. Taylor, Loretta Bluefield, W.Va. Tewell, Frederick Davis, W.Va. Thomas, William John Ashland, Ky. Thomason, James Douglas _. Cullman, Ala. Thomas, Luella Ruth Newport, Ky. Thomson, Nora Lou Louisville, Ky. Thorpe, Dovie Gaynell Haddix, Ky. Tomlin, Alma Ruth _ Richwood, W.Va. Trumbo, Dorothy L. Tollesboro, Ky. Trusty, Geraldine F. Berea, Ky. Waddle, Lewis Edward Somerset, Ky. Walters, Letta Pumpkin Chapel, Ky. Wheeler, Robert E. Grayson, Ky. Whisnant, Pollyanna Ollis, N.C. Whitaker, Eva Nell Ludlow, Ky. Whitman, Lenore Lee Stollings, W.Va. Wilcoxen, June Elisabeth _. Hixson, Tenn. Wilson, Wilma Berea, Ky. Wilson, Stanley Tesbas, Ky. Wood, Alpha Jacksboro, Tenn. Woods, Goldie Viper, Ky. Woody, Mildred Burnsville, N.C. Wooten, Norman Forest City, N.C. Worley, Clyde Whitley City, Ky. Wyatt, Robert C. Piney Creek, N.C. Yambor, Helen Marie Havaco, W.Va. Yeager, Marian Corbin, Ky. Young, Annabelle Omar, W.Va. Blakey, Ralph Jamestown, Ky. Lilly, Perl _. ._ Pineville, W.Va. Deyton, Wendell Jonesboro, Tenn. Strong, Kathleen Saldee, Ky. Calico, Denny Berea, Ky. Dellinger, Eugene Altamont, N.C. Ewen, Juanita Berea, Ky. Popenhagen, Frieda New Brenson, Ohio Sutherland, Parkis CHntwood, Va. Cook, Mary Pageton, W.Va. chimes: CHIMES! Class Officers SENIORS JUNIORS Davis, Truman President Lufburrow, Peter Vice President Graham, Ernest President McCord, Louis Vice President Sewell, Eugenia Secretary Kilbourne, George Treasurer King, Jane Secretary Suarez, Carlos Treasurer CHIMES SENIORS Allen, Mildred Orlando, Ky. Allen, Nancy Berea, Ky. Ambrose, Ellen Berea, Ky. Bandy, James Hager, Ky. Bays, Juanita Cage, Ky. Bent, Wilson Berea, Ky. Bledsoe, Joe Creelsboro, Ky. Botner, Theodore Berea, Ky. Brandenburg, Miriam Berea, Ky. Brown, Bessie Mozelle, Ky. Burchett, Nell _„ __ Rock, W.Va. Campbell, Gladys Krypton, Ky. Center, Mabel Berea, Ky. Chaney, Edna Owingsville, Ky. Chappell, Charlene Ashland, Ky. Coffey, Harding Wonnie, Ky. Coffey, Willis Disputants, Ky. Collingsworth, Edward - Hazard, Ky. Collins, Theodore Cumberland, Ky. Cooper, Margaret Oakdale, Tenn. Crabtree, Carl Oneida, Tenn. Crooks, Sarah Ashland, Ky. Culbertson, Lois Surgoinsville, Tenn. Davis, Truman Grayson, Ky. Dodd, Helen Berea, Ky. Durbin, D. R. Berea, Ky. Fowler, Hilda Berea, Ky. Gibson, Raymond Prospect, Ky. Gibson, Wallace Prospect, Ky. Gilbert, Edgar Berea, Ky. Hall, Catherine Lexington, Ky. Hamblin, Norman Sumner, Ky. Hammins, Margaret Corbin, Ky. Hatcher, Madeline Berea, Ky. Hays, Don Berea, Ky. Hurst, Caleb Knox Fork, Ky. Imrie, Marguerite Cameroun, French West Africa Keener, Carolyn Berea, Ky. Kelly, Marjorie Evarts, Ky. Kilbourne, George Paintlick, Ky. Kiser, Claud Washington, D. C. chimes; CHIMES: SENIORS Lane, Davis Greenville, Tenn. Lewis, Snowden Causey, Ky. Luf burrow, Peter Ocean Grove, N. J. Luttrell, Otha Windsor, Ky. Mcintosh, Woodrow Houston, Ky. MeKinley, Lorene Jamestown, Ky. Medich, Dorothy . South Bend, Ind. Moore, Ruby Beauty, Ky. Mynhier, Newton Yale, Ky. Noland, James Waco, Ky. Ogle, Mary Sevierville, Tenn. Price, Luella Sand Springs, Ky. Rambeau, Marjorie Berea, Ky. Randolph, Jeanne Black Mountain, N. C. Rector, Arvel Monticello, Ky. Rector, Mary ' . Monticello, Ky. Roberts, Rell Osborn, Ky. Ross, Gertrude Knoxville, Tenn. Russell, Lilhe Mae Loy, Arkansas Sandifer, Esther Harrogate, Tenn. Sandlin, Mary D. Hazard, Ky. Schraeder, Robert Louellen, Ky. Sewell, Eugenia Albany, Ky. Shutt, Vae Berea, Ky. Smith, Arlie Hazard, Ky. Smith, Martha Hazard, Ky. Spence, Helen Berea, Ky. Stafford, Eileen Berea, Ky. Sturgill, Winifred Prestonsburg, Ky. Taylor, James Sawyers, Ky. Taylor, Mildred Crab Orchard, Ky. Taylor, Timothy Sawyer, Ky. Troutman, Everett Wilton, Ky._ Wesley, Hoy Mangum, Ky. Pridemore, Georgia Gibson Station, Va. C H I M E S chimes; JUNIORS Abbott, Okra Ritner, Ky. Abney, Geneva Disputanta, Ky. Baker, Roy Avawam, Ky. Ball, Eugene D. Pine Knot, Ky. Beaty, Marvin Ovadene Columbia, Ky. Beculhimer, Orion Keaton, Ky. Bilotta, Angelo Coalgood, Ky. Bilotta, Thomas Coalgood, Ky. Bowles, Howard Hazard, Ky. Bowling, Winston Peabody, Ky. Branscum, Hobert Delta, Ky. Broyles, Hazel Plato, Ky. Calmes, Alva Evelyn, Ky. Calmes, Kenneth Evelyn, Ky. Calmes, Vina Evelyn, Ky. Campbell, Joe Frank Creelsboro, Ky. Capps, David Berea, Ky. Caudill, Lorna Salyersville, Ky. Chaney, Mary D. Furnace, Ky. Chancy, Wesley Bloss, Ky. Childers, Jack Lexington, Ky. Clark, Donald Berea, Ky. Clark, Mary Bernice Berea, Ky. Collins, Henry West Liberty, Ky. Combs, Billy Lothair, Ky. Cooper, Fred Hockville, Ky. Cottongim, Lowell Cottongim, Ky. Crase, Ressie Burg, Ky. Cox, Rovie Bethesda, Ky. Creech, Evelyn Pine Mountain, Ky. Davidson, Emily Oneida, Ky. Deborde, Verna Level Green, Ky. Fielder, Mary Katherine Berea, Ky. Foley, Marshall __ Webbs Cross Roads, Ky. France, Juanita Blue Diamond, Ky. Frazier, Vivian Berea, Ky. Gay, Shelby Bowlingtown, Ky. Gilbert, Jackie London, Ky. Gilliam, Anna Lee Livingston, Ky. Graham, Ernest Pell City, Ala. Graham, Margaret Berea, Ky. Green, Virgle Walling, Tenn. chimes; ■■am ■pai . « fft O O S ■till % ■yfllflHH ' A 4 ir - ■■■ ' MM ' ■ ■kill n fel « CHIMES! JUNIORS Gregory, Jessie Lee Haddix, Ky. Griffith, Rowena Berea, Ky. Guarch, Agustin M., Antilla, Oriente, Cuba Hall, Charles _.._. __ Jeff, Ky. Hamby, Thomas Copperhill, Tenn. Hardwick, Renda Mintonville, Ky. Haverly, Curtis W. Corbin, Ky. Hayes, Edna Brodhead, Ky. Hedrick, Louellen Montcalm, W.Va. Henderson, William Edward __ Frakes, Ky. Hicks, Ruben Strunk, Ky. Hoskins, Constance Hyden, Ky. Hubbard, Keith Williamsfield, Ohio Huntington, Margaret Berea, Ky. Jones, Nancy Kenova, W.Va. Jones, Ruth Detroit, Mich. King, Jane Taft, Ky. Leadingham, Anna L. Triplett, Ky. Leach, Dorothy Jamestown, Ky. Liles, Betty Jo Chattanooga, Tenn. Litton, Columbus Clarence, Ky. Litton, Edwin Clinchmore, Tenn. Lockin, William Berea, Ky. McCord, Louis : Sheffield, Ala. Marlar, Lucy Honey Bee, Ky. Monical, Louise Owensboro, Ky. Mullins, Eva Climax, Ky. Park, Ray Irvine, Ky. Parker, Oma Corbin, Ky. Parks, Irene Berea, Ky. Pearl, Louellen London, Ky. Picklesimer, Mary Louise Kernio, Ky. Potts, Finis Pumpkins Chapel, Ky. Powell, Robert Falls View, W.Va. Profitt, Modelle Louisville, Ky. Reynolds, Arthur Goose Rock, Ky. Russell, James Loy, Arkansas Saylor, Faye Bledsoe, Ky. Sandlin, Tolbert Chavis, Ky. Suarez, Carlos Banes, Orte, Cuba Scott, Ted A. Quitman, Ga. Shrader, John Ralph Tazewell, Va. CHIMES chimes; JUNIORS Skeen, Earl Emerson Walden, Ky. Spillman, Donald B ' erea, Ky. Stafford, Linley Berea, Ky. Stoddard, Edward Chicago, 111. Strong, Nancy Otisco, Ind. Sturgill, Dennis Smilox, Ky. Sturgill, Don E. Smilox, Ky. Swoboda, Mavis Cincinnati, Ohio Tarter, Herlan Russell Springs, Ky. Terry, Goldie Lee Oneida, Tenn. Terry, Miles Juan, Ky. Turner, Mattie London, Ky. Underwood, Billy Richlands, Va. Vaughn, Holston Athens, Tenn. Venable, Rufus Vincent, Ky. Ward, Roy Zeb Youngs Creek, Ky. Watson, Louis West Liberty, Ky. Webb, Joe Vanceburg, Ky. Wesley, Mae S. Mangum, Ky. Wethington, Gladys Opal Lizton, Ind. White, James Richlands, Va. Winkle, Robert Alumbaugh, Ky. Wylie, Jonnie Knoxville, Tenn. York, James Phil, Ky. Arms, Windle Celina, Tenn. Baker, Cova Cinda, Ky. Dunn, Burnice Bristol, Va. Van Winkle, Dena Anchorage, Ky. Herill, Mabel Mooresboro, N. C. chimes; pinnHnn chimes; Pattern, Charles __ __ Jackson, Ky. Popenhagen, Frieda New Bremen, Ohio Bryson, Kenneth __ _ Asheville, N. C. Crockett, Curtis North Tazewell, Va. Dent, William Hixson, Tenn. De Simone, Grace Ann McRoberts, Ky. Dixon, Luwanda __ Unus, W.Va. Francisco, Blanche Hellier, Ky. Gordon, Henrietta Middlesboro, Ky. Holt, Geneva Berea, Ky. Hillman, Margaret Dungannon, Va. Ingle, Eugenia Weaverville, N. C. Lutton, Elizabeth Cincinnati, Ohio McMillian, Elizabeth __ __ Milton, W.Va. Queen, Annie Canton, N. C. Ruckel, Bernice _ Vanceburg, Ky. Shupe, Earl Berea. Ky. Singleton, Donald .. ._ Westminster, S. C. Tinder, Adeline White Sulphur Springs, W.Va. Wallen, Agnes _. __ St. Charles, Va. Wallen, Mavis _. __ St. Charles, Va. It ' ■ i EI t wJ -j . -!. Il t BPIPP ACTIVITIES Hale Stewart Bailey Mullins Clark — Coach Bays Bess M O U N TA ( Jreene Harper Adams Callison — Manager Kirby Moore I N E E R S CHIMES BASKETBALL From the standpoint of games won and lost, the second year of Coach Clark ' s efforts resulted in the most successful season in several years. In winning six games during the regular season, the Blue and White cagers displayed some of the best ball handling seen in local circles for some time. The Mountaineers presented a high scoring combination which was seldom too far behind to be a threat. Although the prevacation games, which resulted in losses to Georgetown and Transy, gave little indication of anything better than a mediocre season the team swung into action after Christmas with a spirit that was not to be denied. Highly evaluated teams from Wesleyan and Eastern came to town only to be beaten by the rampaging Mountaineers. Then after a disheartening two point loss to Union ' s Bulldogs, the Blue and White came back to avenge previous losses by disposing of Georgetown and Transylvania. At this point Lady Luck frowned on the Bereans who then lost hard fought battles to Morehead, Eastern, Louisville, and Wesleyan. However, the Clark men ended the regular season in the right column by defeating Centre in the last home game of the season. When Berea drew into the same bracket as Western for the K.I.A.C. tournament at Eastern, all chances for success were negligible. The boys survived the first round by again defeating Transy 40-35, but bowed out to a superior Western team by a score of 53-33 on the following night. Five men will be lost from this year ' s team by graduation: Big Joe Greene, leading point scorer and member of the 1941 all K.I.A.C. tournament team; Charley Hale, varsity guard for three seasons and captain of the team; Wilbur Harper, lanky forward; Chad Mullins of the never-say-die spirit; and the spunkiest of all — little Og Stewart. The remaining members of the squad, Bays, Moore, Bailey, Adams and Bess, coupled with the members of a promising frosh team should give Berea a well balanced quint for the coming season. TRACK Since 1932, Berea ' s cinder men have virtually monopolized the track championship of the K.I.A.C. In these eight years, the track-men have garnered six state championship trophies, having lost in ' 36 to Centre ' s Colonels and to the Hilltopper ' s of Western in ' 39. The ranks of the Champion Mountaineers of 1940 were badly riddled by graduation. The loss of co-captains Powell and Caudill, along with Tully, Davis, Nickell, and Felton will be keenly felt, for these men composed the nucleus of one of the strongest teams ever to appear on the cinders, and compiled the enviable of going through the 1940 season without losing a meet. Prospects for the coming season are not so bright as last year, and rumblings from out of the West indicate some stiff competition from the lads from Bowling Green. Although it is too early in the season to make any prediction of the outcome of the track wars, hopes are high for another Trophy for the Mountaineer runners. Seniors, who are participating in their last year of intercollegiate competition, are Cromer, Howsmon, Walters, Mullins. chimes: TENNIS For the first time in the history of the school the tennis team can boast its own coach who does not have to divide his time with another team. Wilson Evans, the Alumni Secretary, has agreed to take over the coaching duties, and his net experience should aid the team. From the fourteen men who answered his first call for practice at the gym, Coach Flvans will choose the men who will represent Berea against such competition as Tennessee, Kentucky, and Cincinnati. Last year ' s racqueteers were not victorious in any of their eight matches, but the Bereans of this year will be more experienced and well coached and should compile a good record. Lettermen returning from last year ' s team are Capt. Marvin Jones, Estill Jones H. Walters and Noel Shutt. SWIMMING Thanks to the new reservoir, the mermen did not have to fight a losing battle against a diminishing water supply this year, and lost little time getting under way. U.K. ' s dry land team came to town and defeated our boys 45-29. Then on an extended trip, the Bereans lost to Y.P.I. 65-10 and to Concord College 59-19. The Blue and White swimmers then pro- ceeded to shellac Morehead twice 48-28 and 46-29. Their season ' s record consisted of two wins and three losses. Representing Berea for the last time in intercollegiate competition were David Headley and Walter Clarke. CROSS COUNTRY Because of difficulty in scheduling meets for this gueling run, the Berea Harriers partici- pated in only one meet this year. After a long period of intensive training the team entered the Shamrock Athletic Club ' s Turkey Day race at Louisville. The Mountaineers kept up the tradition of the distance runners of Berea by taking second place behind the team from Butler University. The showing in this meet won letters for Rex Wesley, Coldiron, Adams, Scherrer and Fred Wesley. INTRAMURAL SPORTS Intramural sports took a new turn this year. With the help of the Intramural Council, Coach Gunkler initiated a new program. A record is to be kept of the showings of the various teams throughout the year and small B ' s will be given to that team which has the smallest number of points at the end of the year. This promises to be a very satisfactory program and is thought to cause a great deal more interest in the intramural sports program. CHIMES ! . t t. [ tf 1 • J if t BTT t v- 1 1 is t - 1 h vl l V 1 r  k. 1 J 7 FROSH BASKETBALL Hart, Baker, Duff, Nelon, Tatone, Tewell, Cawood. Coach Gunkler, Gilreath, Blevins, Metcalf, Morrison, Allen, Coach Allen. SECONDARY BASKETBALL Howard, Watkins, Skeen, Sturgill, Peel Cornett, Hall, Lockin, Wagers, Kilbourne, Porter Coach Bays, Cottongin, Smith, Green, Davis, Sandlin, Coach Noll chimes: ' B CLUB McGuire, Fillmore, Whitaker, Harper, Cromer, Andrews, Bailey, R. Wesley, Stewart Adams, Cloyd, Howsmon, Hurst, Hale, E. Jones, J. Walters, R. Clark M. Jones, Spradlin, Maltby, G. Wesley, Shuler, H. Walters, Bays, Moore Welch, Greene, Mullins, Easterly, Pilson, B. Clark VARSITY TENNIS Walters, E. Jones, Greene, Loveday, M. Jones, Coach Evans chimes: CROSS COUNTRY Fryo, Coldiron, R. Wesley, Kil- bourne, Adams, F. Wesley, Head- ley, Grimwood, Scherrer FRESHMAN TRACK Noble, Heatherly, Bowen, Flan- nery, Wooton, Elam, McNeal, Ed- wards, Lufburrow, Haun, Dough- erty, Davis, Fleming, Jacobs, Coach Clark, Blevins, Worley, Porter, Turner, Legare, Nelon, Bradley, Harbour, Gunter, Coach Eaton. SECONDARY TRACK Paris, Bandy, Bilotta, Lewis, Creech, R. Gibson, W. Gibson, C. Hurst, Kilbourne, Caleb Hurst, Howsmon (coach). Peel, Henson, Guarch, Burton, Bent, Clark, York, Hinkel, Hodges, E. Hurst (coach), Roberts. Helton, Coleman, Hows- mon, Hulburt, Adams, Cornett, Whitaker, Hurst, Walters Collins Paseur, Cold iron, Bales, Kil bourne, Mills, Coach Clark, Runnels, Scherrer, d : -■ II C H I M E s ; VARSITY SWIMMING Thomas, Headley, Cloyd, McGuire Spradlin, Wesley, Schultz, Metcalf Dickerson, Clarke, Hicks, Maltby, Robertson VARSITY BASEBALL Clark, Cundiff, Spurlock, Dye, Norman, Gabbard, Collins, Abney, Rosenbaum Dawes, Davis, May, Dennis, Raw- lings, Adams, Ward, Blackburn, Nestor, Tomlinson. LD BASEBALL Hill, Saeger, Few, Nelon, Swearen- gin, Bowen, Gilreath, Luster, Rick- ard, Blevins Morrison, Hamilton, Baker, Dawes, Cadell, Stewart, Beverly, Harbour. '  i CHIMES WAA BOARD Nickels, Perry, Robin, Brenda, Meredith, Lavender, Moore Rice, McKinstry, Scott, Vandiver, Douglass, Roberts, Shepard LIFE SAVING Brannon, Wilson, Lavender, Dodd, Kazee Cook. Steinorth, Bennett, Puckett, Larew CHIMES SOPHOMORE BASKETBALL Hill, Bussing, Coffey, Miller, San- ders, Dixon Mantooth, Little, Robinson, Propps, Pratt, Hewitt Combs, Scott, Pilson, Rice, Bailey, Elliott FRESHMAN BASKETBALL Keen, Yambor, Tomlin, Headley, Chandler Pennington, Ernest, Gilliam, Pot- ter, Hahn, Fisher Lankford, Fox, Noss, Bennett, Sikes, Lockhart SECONDARY BASKETBALL Gilliam, Pridemore, Bowling, Jones, Clifford Moore, Beatty, Elliott, Creech, Willet To the Senior Class and Student Body we wish to express our thanks for your Patronage, Good Will, and Patience through- out the past year. The Ogg Studio 50 years of photography in Berea Compliments of BAKER ' S NEWS SHINNY ' S COLLEGE INN Best Coffee In Town Sandwiches Short Orders Short Street Compliments of BEREA DRY CLEANERS E. L. Edwards, Prop. Cleaning — Pressing — Tailoring Special Attention to Student Work Short St. Phone 328 HOTEL LAFAYETTE Lexington ' s Finest On U. S. Highways No. 25, No. 27, No. 60, and No. 68 Len Shouse, jr., Mgr. Best Wishes For The Class of 1941 Davidson Brothers Co, BEREA, KENTUCKY Faculty and Students We Appreciate Your Patronage PORTER-MOORE DRUG CO. (Incorporated) Berea, Kentucky LITTLE MAMA ' S TEA ROOM For That Extra Snack Short Street Compliments of TAFEL ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. Westinghouse Distributors 56+ West Main Street, Lexington, Ky. 329 West Main Street, Louisville, Ky Rotary, Exchange, Lions and Chamber of Commerce use HOTEL GLYNDON Richmond ' s Largest and Best NEW EASTERN HOTEL AND COFFEE SHOP Single $1 up Double $1.50 up We serve as fine a meal as can be had in Richmond. We specialize in Country Ham, Chicken, and Steak. W. B. TATE (Mgr.) Cfflu£ t4 I KENTUCKY FINEST FURNITURE STORE LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY Compliments of BEREA MOTOR CO. Berea, Kentucky Compliments of SWINFORD CHEVROLET CO. Berea, Kentucky Compliments of MADISON 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. Member of the Federal Reserve System Richmond, Kentucky Sleepy-Head House The South ' s Most Complete Factory-Furniture Store A complete furniture store where discriminating customers can get exactly what they desire in qual- ity, home furnishings at low Factory-To-Consumer prices. Manufacturers Of SLEEPY-HEAD Mattresses — Pillows — Box-Springs — Living Room Suites — Studio Couches SOUTHERN BEDDING CO., Inc. Main at Broadway Lexington, Ky. We Work That You May Sleep Compliments of THE BEREA BANK AND TRUST CO. Compliments of BEREA NATIONAL BANK Compliments of DORIS PIATT E. E. GABBARD Eat Here or We Both Starve ' Chestnut Open 24 Hours Compliments of LEHMAN BROS. KNOWN FOR BETTER VALUES Richmond, Kentucky BRITTON FUNERAL HOME Phone 230 Day or Night Berea, Kentucky Rendering A Community Service Compliments of HYMER MOTOR CO. Pontiac Cars G.M.C. Trucks Berea, Kentucky TREADWAYS Ladies Ready to Wear Shoes Notions 2500-3000 Items of Useful Merchandise at BEREA 5c-$1.00 STORE Compliments of the Ashland Home Telephone Company Incorporated Berea, Kentucky ARE YOU PROUD OF YOUR CHILDREN ' S SCHOOL RECORD Say It With Flowers From RICHMOND GREEN HOUSES J. P. Reichspfarr Phone 188 Richmond, Kentucky USE OUR Monthly Payment Plan Accounts opened for total Pur- chases as low as $10.00. $2.00 down and $2.00 a month. MONTGOMERY WARD CO. Lexington, Ky. Life Insurance and Annuities E. T. HAYS SONS LLOYD E. ItOIMIKTS Grade A Milk Special Agent Equitable Life Assurance Phone 32 Society Berea — Richmond Service With A Smile Ql)r } DRY CLEANING WJm TAILORING l S , WEL L DONE NU-WAY CLEANERS Dependable Tailoring Main Street Phone 61 Compliments of Compliments of PARKE BUS LINES Call us for Special Trips BAYNHAM ' S Shoes of Distinction and Home Phone 1050 Resident 552 of Florsheim Shoes Richmond, Kentucky 135 E. Main St., Lexington, Ky. OLDHAM, ROBERTS, and POWELL Incorporated Funeral Directors and Embalmers Phone 413 Richmond, Kentucky LUTHER KINDRED ' S SHOE SHOP All Kinds of Shoe Repairing Short St. Berea, Ky. j A. F. SCRUGGS AGENCY All Lines of Standard Insurance Bonds The Penn Mutual Life Ins. Co. Short St. Berea, Ky. DIXIE KITCHEN for Home Cooking Plate Lunches and Dinners Sandwiches — Drinks Phone 399 Berea, Ky. Where the Nation Shops and Saves Over 1600 Stores J. C. PENNEY COMPANY Richmond, Kentucky Compliments of ROMINGER FUNERAL HOME Night Phone 48 BEREA, KY. Day Phone 125 You can do it better with Whether you operate a college, club, hotel, hospital, restaurant, mar- ket, dairy, locker plant, or any ot 50 other businesses, you can do it better — give better service and earn better profits — with the aid of Frick Refrigeration. 50,000 users attest the truth of this statement. Your inquiry will receive expert attention. WARREN L. BAIN, JR. 219 N. Limestone Lexington Phone 1681 CjeT IP • May your Success in Lire be as Far-Reaching ai tne Fame or tlie Mountain ttweets made in your own Berea College Candy Kitchen PAPER PACKAGE COMPANY INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA Distributors — Dealers CARRIER: Air conditionings first name KELVINATOR: Specialists in controlled temperatures since 1914 Water Coolers — Beverage Coolers — Room Coolers — Walk-in and Reach-in Refrigerators — Frozen Food Cases — Coal Stokers — Gas Furnaces — Commercial Refrigeration COMBS LUMBER COMPANY Incorporated Lexington Kentucky FRANK L. McVEY, JR. DAN D. BROCK President Treas. BROCK-McVEY COMPANY, INC. Lexington, Ky. Wholesale Distributors of Plumbing, Heating, Tinner ' s Supplies and Sunbeam Furnaces Crane Plumbing Fixtures Visit Our Large Display Compliments of J. W. Purkey Sons LOWE BROS. PAINTS AND VARNISHES Where Bereans Save Berea, Kentucky MARINO BROS. WHOLESALE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES IRVINE STREET RICHMOND, KENTUCKY HMdEr Bakery and Candy Kitchen Workers The Berea College Candy Kitchen and Bakery maintain a high standard of health and sanitation throughout the plant. When you buy our merchandise you may feel assured that only the highest quality in- gredients are used in the manufacture of our Mountain Sweets and Bakery products. BEREA COLLEGE BAKERY AND CANDY KITCHEN BREADS BUNS ROLLS CAKES CRULLERS BEATEN I DEPARTMENT fjp OF HEALTH — G RAD E — Food Handling ISM i.U K K 1 J I I A ♦♦ BISCUITS Establishment ' %.. s ±£ „ „ CANDIES COOKIES FRUIT CAKE DECORATED SUGARS PIES Section of Candy Production Room Compliments of a friend Compliments of a friend The Broomcraft The Ncedlccraft The Mountain Weaver Boys The Firesid, Jioonz -Jauzxn (fyijk liofi Products of Student Industries Located on the Corner of Main Street Opposite Union Church Under Berea College Management — Berea, Kentucky A PRIVATE HOTEL WITH ALL MODERN CONVENIENCES A REAL HOME ATMOSPHERE Managed and Controlled by Berea College Compliments of BEREA COLEEGE STORE Operated by and for students and workers of Berea College THE BEREA COLLEGE PRESS Printers of the Berea College Annual for the past fourteen years The House With A Reputation For Good Printing Compliments of UNION TRANSFER AND STORAGE COMPANY Lexington, Kentucky Compliments of GENERAL-ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMPANY Lexington, Kentucky { ' {oiuitaui )ixr££.t± cy-fana J zcoxatzd uaaxi, Candis.6 and (LtAsy U zoduaii. Compliments of a friend OFFICE EQUIPMENT COMPANY, INC. COMPLETE OFFICE OUTFITTERS i Also Complete Line of SCHOOL FURNITURE AND SUPPLIES 117-12 5 South Fourth Wabash 5161 Louisville, Ky. Branch Store 128 West Short Street Phone 3 372 Lexington, Ky. Compliments of PAN CONFECTION FACTORY Compliments of OHIO BAG SUITCASE COMPANY Manufacturers of Luggage 30 W. Pearl St. Cincinnati, Ohio Best Wishes From , FULTON FISH MARKET Louisville Kentucky To The Class of ' 41 CONGRATULATIONS! And may the years ahead all bring The best in life to each of you; With joy, good luck and happiness In everything you do. ZIMMER PAPER PRODUCTS Indianapolis Guaranteed Bread Wrappers Van Bibber Roller Co. PRINTERS ' ROLLERS That Has Stood The Test For Seventy-Two Yrs. TELEPHONE: Parkway 5640 224 East Eighth Street Cincinnati, Ohio Compliments of the MIAMT BUTTERINE COMPANY Compliments of NATIONAL KREAM CO. Inc. ' Food Products of Merit 360 Furman Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Get the INSIDE FACTS about COMFORT for KEEPS The Mattress that Has Everything Truly America ' s finest Inner Spring — Karr Spring Construction guaranteed 15 years. Automatic adjustment to weight — finest quality cotton — exclu- sive Jacquard Damask covering 50 f i heavier than standard — American- made throughout. LOUISVILLE BEDDING CO., Inc. Louisville, Kentucky TWIN LEADERS In The World Of Sport Choice of the Champions Allcort Tennis Balls Blue Goose Shuttlecocks J? Produced By PENNSYLVANIA RUBBER COMPANY Jeannette, Pennsylvania Compliments of Claussner Hosiery Company Paducah, Kentucky, Manufacturing Tot Tfwit tuiYo Mt tfit FuuAt Modern Packing Designed for Selling Cakes, Cookies, and Confectionery -Round, Square and oblong supplied in white Bake -Test stock, • BAKING CUPS in thirty 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 tit your requirements. Special Liners for Angel and Fruit Cakes, as well as large Sheet Pan Liners for buns, cookies, etc. • FRINTED 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. Man in any size ... all colors . . . shipped flat ready to set up, fill and wrap. The same Corrugated also supplied in sheets, circles or pads. Sherman Paper Products Corp. ECONOMY-PLUS PRODUCTS Newton Upper Falls, Massachusetts ATLANTA NEW YORK CHICAGO LOS ANGELES THE E. T. SLIDER COMPANY Inc. Louisville, Ky. Producers and Shippers Of Washed and Screened Ohio River Sand and Gravel VELVET BRAND Glace Cherries, Pineapple, Cit- ron, Lemon and Orange Peels for Fruit Cakes. Maraschino Cherries, Straw- berries, Pineapple, Buttered Pe- cans, Black Walnuts and other Fruits and Nuts for Ice Cream. Mince Meat, Vanillas and other pure flavors. THE C. M. PITT SONS CO. Baltimore, Md. SEXTON SERVICE OFFERS YOU The only nationally advertised brand of foods prepared exclusively for the institutional market. The security of endorsement by all the leading trade associations in the institutional field in the United States. The facilities of the only whole- sale grocery company operating plants in the two principal Amer- ican markets — Chicago and New York. As rendered by America ' s largest distributors of number ten canned foods, a distinctive service on a com- plete assortment of quality foods packed in this institutional size con- tainer. Home recipe pickles, relishes and conserves from Sexton Sunshine Kitchens — delicious and appetizing. Carefully selected coffees — blends resulting from years of careful study — roasted fresh daily at Chicago and Brooklyn. A selection of your needs from the largest inventory ever assembled for the particular needs of those who feed many people each d?.y. SEXTON jo £rCO Edelweiss Quality Foods CHICAGO BROOKLYN LOOK FOR THE AMERICAN TRADE-MARK, THE SIGN OF QUALITY PAPER PRODUCTS Porcell Cups Drinking Cups Chop Holders Skewers BETTY BRITE Doilies Napkins Ramekins Baking Cups Shelf Papers Lining Paper HI AMERICAN LACE PAPER CO. Milwaukee, Wis. SURGICAL — HOSPITAL SUPPLIES Wheel Chairs Fracture Beds Surgical Garments Trusses CROCKER-FELS IS West 7th St. Cincinnati, Ohio SNOW BALL YARNS STE1NBERGER BROS., Inc. 10 West 33rd Street New York City Converters of Worsted, Angora and Rayon Yarns for Lland Knitting. COMPLIMENTS AND BEST WISHES FROM Cotlell Construction Company GENERAL CONTRACTORS WINCHESTER, KY. LINEN YARNS for HAND WEAVING and CROCHETING Hughes Fawcett Inc. 115 Franklin St., New York, NY. THE NORTHWESTERN ELEVATOR AND MILL CO. MT. VERNON, OHIO 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 Pro- ducts. The GARDNER-RICHARDSON Co. Middletown, Ohio Manufacturers of Folding Cartons — and Displays Congratulations to the Graduation Class Lee Clay Products Co. Manufacturers of Septic Tanks Architectural Chimney Tops Sale Glazed Sewer Pipe Fire Brick and Grate Backs I ire Clay Flue Linings Agricultural Drain Tile Your Farm Department Uses Our Drain Tiles and Sewer Pipe CLEARFIELD ROWAN COUNTY KENTUCKY Compliments of PARKWAY CRUSHED FRUIT COMPANY THE |ENNER COMPANY (Incorporated) Stationers Engravers Louisville, Kentucky WISE I URNACES For satisfactory home WISE PEOPLE BUY WTStlA Seating see your near- FURNACES est dealer or write to THE WISE FURNACE CO. Akron, Ohio Pleasingly Delicious RICHMOND BAKING COMPANY Richmond, Ind. This Issue Of The 1941 Chimes Is Bound In A KIM.Sklt Al 1 COVER Produced Exclusively By Kingskraft Division Kings port Press Inc. Kingsport, Tennessee CALUMET TEA COFFEE COMPANY Chicago CRACKER 1ACK P. D. Q. FEEDS Give Cracker Jack Results P.D.Q. FERNCLIFF FEED GRAIN CO. Incorporated Louisville, Ky. Ask Your Dealer J Compliments of A. M. SAUNDERS i Representing KEYSTONE BRUSH CO., INC. Sanitary and Institutional Supplies 3 3-35 Spruce Street New York, New York Juneman Tennis and Badminton Gut Strings are Especially Prepared to Re- main Tight in the Racket Regardless of Atmospheric Conditions. Used and En- dorsed by Champions. THE E. P. JUNEMAN CORPORATION 1100 West 47th Place Chicago, Illinois We are Headquarters For GOOD LUMBER Mahogany — White Pine — Cherry Birch — Poplar — Red Gum — Maple White Oak — Red Oak — Magnolia Kiln Dried Stock For Immediate Service We Will Appreciate Your Inquiries Charles F. Shiels Co. Cincinnati, Ohio ELLIOTT COMPANY Manufacturers of power plant equip- ment, including steam turbines, turbine- generators, engines, engine-generators, RODDIS PANEL DOOR motors, de-aerators and feed-water heat- CO. ers, condensers, steam jet ejectors, de- superheaters, strainers, tube cleaners, etc. 457 East 6th St., Plants in Cincinnati, Ohio JEANNETTE, PA., RIDGWAY, PA., and SPRINGFIELD, OHIO CLASSROOM COMFORT . . . Correctly heated classrooms are com- fortable, healthful classrooms. That ' s why Trane Con vectors — the ideal com- Food Products of Quality bination of convected, radiant and panel heat — are widely used throughout Amer- Pickles, Preserves, Jams, Jellies ican colleges and universities, just as they are at Berea College. Trane Con- vectors are a product of the manufac- turer of the most complete line of heat- and Fruit Butters ing, cooling, and air conditioning equip- ment commercially available. MB VA MA IMA AH LUTZ SCHRAMM INC. TRME Z IR ) Pittsburgh, Pa. — ' THE TRANE COMPANY LaCrosse, Wisconsin In Louisville: 201 Breslin Building Telephone: Jackson 298 8 YARNS For KNITTING and WEAVING for over thirty years Ask for Sample Cards CLIVEDEN YARN CO. Dept. X 711 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Compliments of VILAS-MAGES COMPANY Chicago, 111. 500 Varieties Always liner Quality Always Reasonably Priced Sold only through Independent Merchants MONARCH FINER FOODS INSIST ON Magnolia Meat Products DELICIOUSLY DIFFERENT Emmart Packing Company Our Merchandise Is Sold At f ■:• e l r s m o o t H . ■• c n ■ PAINTS-VARNISHES-ENAMEL B£ | FOR NEW LIFE The College Store AND NEW STYLE SIMON ADES SONS CO. IN YOUR HOME Louisville, Kentucky ♦ BOSTON VARNISH CO. Everett Sta. Boston, Mass. Compliments of JOHN SCHWARZ Robert D. Wiley Fine Footwear Sales Representative 754 756 McMillian St. Krim-Ko Chocolate Cincinnati, Ohio 1 Flavored Drink KRIM-KO COMPANY Chicago, 111. SOUTH KENTUCKY PIPE LINE CO. ; High grade refined petroleum ! products Somerset, Ky. MARSHALL LUMBER an d MILL COMPANY Incorporated MANUFACTURERS YELLOW PINE LUMBER Concentration Yard Mill Work Montgomery, Alabama WESTCOTT, SLADE BALCOM CO. |i Wholesale Retail i Paint — Shellac — Putty Providence, R.I. K S C Mineral Wool Insulation Made in Kentucky With Kentucky Material by THE KENTUCKY STONE CO., i Inc. J, 1616 Heyburn Bldg. Louisville, Kentucky Courtesy of KRAATZ ORCHARDS Noted for Fine Apples Route 2 Jackson, O. Berea Cakes and Breads BEREA COLLEGE BAKERY Courtesy of a friend JENNINGS MOTOR CO. Oldsmobile and International Trucks Sales and Service Berea, Kentucky HAND MADE -2!4oe in u.Sj£ Table Glassware Rock Crystals and Etchings Exclusive Agents for THE CAMBRIDGE GLASS CO. ROCKWELL SILVER CO. OWEN McKEE Phone 60 Richmond, Ky It ' s the Fit of Your Clothes That Counts. See Our Samples In the College Store Established Since 1905 Home Office Cincinnati Ohio THE OPTIMIST ' S CREED As you ramble on thru life, brother. No matter what your goal, Keep your eye upon the donut — And not upon the hole! And if you ' re fond of donuts That fill you full of jollity. Fresh, delicious, wholesome — Ask for Tested Quality! TESTED QUALITY DONUTS Made famous for over 20 years by DOUGHNUT CORPORATION OF AMERICA 1170 Broadway, N.Y.C. and principal cities Crane Beauty IN THE OPEN Crane Quality IN ALL HIDDEN FITTINGS ■ ■ CRANE CO. 375 EAST MAIN ST. LEXINGTON, KY. ■ ■ ■ ■ Plumbing and Pleating EQUIPMENT ■ ■ ■ For every purpose a y.


Suggestions in the Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) collection:

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944


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