Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) - Class of 1944 Page 1 of 152
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Hutchins Library of Berea College Berea, Kentucky efeQ.oereo u e it ove mMrasMi-HiiMiSJi we cherish the old and the new Jacob ' s Ladder • • • AnchorsAweigh •• Berea Beloved • • ii i inr nft ' iii 1 -. ■- n.  i ' -; fn ; the ' 44 Chimes published at Berea College Bereo, Kentucky Professor Rigby taught Berea to love her music; he gave Berea music to love. While we were growing from the two-room music hall to spacious Presser, Professor Rigby led us in simple mountain songs and he taught us the glory of standing to sing the Hallelujah Chorus; First Music Hall Presser Hal Cortege 378.7691 B487c 1944 Berea College Collegiate dept Senior class Chimes To him we dedicate our book our president, Francis S. Hut-chins, with Didi and Ann i h • ■m t.-. i i . r , BOARD OF TRUSTEES Bruce Barton Allan Knight Chalmers Thomas P. Cooper Chase Kimball William D. Embree Louis J. Karnosh C. N. Manning James Lyall Stuart- Albert Buckner Coe William H. Danforth William A. Julian Thomas J. Davis Allen E. Foster Carl T. Michel Edward W. Edwards W. T. Holliday Seth Low Pierrepont Charles Ward Seabury W. D. Weatherford Richard Bentley Barry Bingham Elmer E. Cabbard Leslie Clenn Gale F. Johnson THE CABINET President Hutchins, Dean Weidler, Dean Shutt, Dean Baker, Dean Baird, Dean Allen, Dean True, Dean Wright, Miss Gundlach. From the College Hospital Dr. John W. Armstrong Dr. Ruby Helen Paine Dean of Foundation School William Jesse Baird Heads of physical education de- partments Minnie Maude Macaulay Oscar H. Gunkler Director of art department Mary Ela Professor of geology Wilbur G. Burroughs From the business department William Newbolt and Clarence Dawson pedagogues all, in Louis Smith ' s terminology, teaching with bur sen burners and slides in Science Hall Elisabeth Peck teacher of social studies Dorothy M. Harvey teacher of French and psy- chology Deans of Women Julia F. Allen, U. D. Katharine True, L. D. Dean of Lower Division Charles N. Shutt Dean of Upper Division and phychology professor Lawrence M. Baker Chemistry professors Henry Refo Julian H. Capps Orrin Keener teacher of social studies Frank Smith of the sociology department . . . officed near the sleek corridors of Draper Building and the quiet of Danforth Chapel or in the rickety Liberal English profs Ernest J. Weekes Earl W. Blank Science Hall men John Loefer, biology and chemistry Herschel Hull, biology and John Bangson, biology Harriet Howard who teaches weaving with Charlotte Ludlum who teaches ancient lang- uages Albert Chidester teacher of education with Ralph Rigby of the music department More English profs Hattie Stowe Emma Reeverts May B. Smith Gilbert Roberts math professor and H. D. Schultz industrial arts prof Arts Building where PAF discussions rage furiously . . . studying psychology on the third floor of Lincoln Hall with Education professor Luther Ambrose Pre-school teacher Jacqueline Sparling and Betty Ferris music teacher Ag. profs Howard B. Monier Benton Fielder From Presser Hall Gertrude Cheney and English prof Maureen Faulkner Library science Virginia Engle and Albert G. Weidler economics prof and more Ag profs Charles Price Wilmot Carter Claude Spillman Greek mottoes and the old Alpha Zeta curtains stuffed Dehind the radiators . . . Ag Building with its butchering Rector Herdin, economics prof and Louis Smith, political science pedagogue More home economics profs Marian Kingman Alice Reid Agnes Aspnes Henry Gardner math teacher with Dallas H. Candy psychology prof and Theodore Wright math teacher Eunice True home economics teacher with Margaret Chapin who teaches French and Ruth Woods home economics teacher Of the math department Donald Pugsley W. R. Hutcherson Mrs. Clara Rice Ag teachers Feaster Wolford and F. A. Stewart labs and judging in the pavilion . . . enjoying the real home atmosphere of Emery ... studying posture silhouettes History and political science profs Lee F. Crippen and E. Taylor Parks From the physics department Waldemar Noll and Herbert Fenn More music teachers Dorothy Hall Gladys Jameson Celia Kysela Minnie Led ford English teacher Elizabeth Richardson French and Spanish Philosophy profs J. Clayton Feaver and W. Gordon Ross with J. Robert King, Jr. music teacher Sociology profs J. W. Hatcher Helen Dingman with Walter Sikes, teacher of philosophy and Bible in Miss Macaulay ' s office . . . listening to the shouts and splashes from the pool at Seabury . . . the sound of scales on English profs Jerome Hughes Emily Ann Smith with Coach Clarence Wyatt of the men ' s phy ed dept Art department profs Harriett Gill Margaret Balzer Women ' s phy ed teacher Smythie Alford with Lenore Lytle math teacher and Esther Beck of the business department German professor Charles Pauck with English and speech teacher John W. Sattler pianos and horns from the windows of Presser . . . colors and tex- tures in the Art Building personalities of the faculty and their haunts where we are privileged to learn. So this is what we ' ve been waiting for ' is freshmen we thought a senior had one foot in the grave— as seniors we don ' t feel a day older Lenore Grouser Mannington, W. Va. B.S., Home Economics Vivian Lee Buckles Coalgood, Ky. A.B., History and Political Science Theodore Caddell Holly Hill, Ky. A.B., History and Political Science Esther Orth New York, N.Y. A.B., Biology Dorothy Alice Chandler Greeneville, Tenn. A.B., Home Economics Virginia L. Osborne Candler, N.C. A.B., Art and English chins up, seniors, these are the best days, when loafing cc come at midday; when time is punched just fifteen hou a week and the news is our news in the Wallpap iw heck, first period class! We ' d rather knit for someone ' e like or paint the sunlight in her hair . . models re good subjects to weave into compositions Mary Hazel Hatchette Spartanburg, S.C. A.B., English Imogene Mae Fitzpatrick Hazard, Ky. A.B., Economics Nancy Field Winchester, Ky. A.B., Art Nell Elizabeth Warholm Grundy, Va. A.B., History and Political Science Ella Florence Edwards Bel Air, Md. B.S., Home Economics Jean Crouser Mannington, W.Va. B.S., Home Economics «f ' : Nancy Barnett Berea, Ky. A.B., History and Political Science Marie Watkins Asheville, N.C. A.B., History and Political Science John Denham Hazard, Ky. A.B., Chemistry Margaret Geissinger Noss Stroudsburg, Pa. B.S., Home Economics Edmonia Ella Clark Hammond, Ky. A.B., Home Economics Annabel Brake Petersburg, W.Va. A.B., Mathematics fun in going for library mail, more fun in Sunday leisure; bu there ' s science in calculating what a well-dressed woman wi wea and how to keep the Chimes out of the red . . low that the test is over, why not head for home and look up the answers (wish we ' d done it before) . . . besides there may e a letter waiting for someone who is demure Maryanna Shupe Berea, Ky. A.B., Home Economics Olga Beck Baughman, Ky. A.B., Biology Clarence Hayes Steinberger Berea, Ky. A.B., Philosophy Sarah Lee O ' Daniel Belmont, N.C. A.B., Education Billie Marie Nestor Marmet, W.Va. A.B., History and Political Science Katherine Carson Weaverville, N.C. A.B., Mathematics Frieda Begley Wilson Berea, Ky. A.B., English Lenore Lee Whitman Logan, W. Va. A.B., Sociology June Rosebud Morton South Shore, Ky. A.B., History and Political Science Clyde C. Flannery Dunham, Ky. A.B., Philosophy and Psychology Benjamin H. Davis Bar Creek, Ky. A.B., Geology Eva Nell Whitaker Cincinnati, Ohio A.B., English pretty plain about them . . . Heart on her sleeve ... to calm for Else Maxwell . . . Good morning, College Hospital . . . One announcement please . . . Evil ' s picture for the Chimes . . whatever will the college do without us . . . wonder who ' ll milk the cows . . . burn the lights at Emery . . . instruct in the lab . . . run the switchboard . . . play the chimes other seniors? John Hubbard Nora, Ky. B.S., Agriculture Betty Jo Knotts Camden, N.J. A.B., Chemistry Dorothy Trumbo Tollesboro, Ky. B.S., Home Economics Edsel Burton Monticello, Ky. A.B., Biology Loree Sinclaire Spindale, N.C. A.B., English Frances Henderson Mt. Vernon, Ky. B.S., Home Economics Alice Fox Crossville, Tenn. A.B., Home Economics Edith Campbell Pineville, Ky. B.S., Home Economics Mary Lou Muncy Berea, Ky. A.B., Education Hazel Foley Russell Springs, Ky. B.S., Home Economics Nora Lou Thomson Louisville, Ky. A.B., English Ernestine Edwards Spartanburg, S.C. A.B., English just foxing - he belongs to Country Home . . . thoroughly stamped we emerge in long black robes that hang the same on transfers, town students, and James Hall protegee ' s . . . ten years from now when you ' re coming in for homecom- ing and the conductor calls Bur-ear-er , you ' ll swear to your traveling partner that you never cracked a book Ruth Peaslee Oak Park, III. A.B., English Katherine Keen Helenwood, Tenn. B.S., Home Economics Ida Elder Griffin, La. A.B., Home Economics Luella Thomas Newport, Ky. A.B., Psychology Lillian Altizer Riner, Va. A.B., History and Political Science Madge Freeman Lewisburg, W.Va. A.B., English Ruby Lee Smith Disputanta, Ky. A.B., Home Economics Lurine Booher Monroe, Tenn. B.S., Home Economics Margaret Nickels Benham, Ky. A.B., Psychology Elizabeth Douglass Athens, Tenn. A.B., Music Letta Walters Pumpkin Chapel, Ky. B.S., Home Economics Thomas Hubbard Fort Gay, W.Va. A.B., Physics reading, playing basketball, or listening to a nickel ' s worth of Pistol Packin ' Mama is relaxation after a man ' s job at the creamery or a long day in the physics lab . . I Dmazed by the galaxy of color . . . blue without you, brown bacilli, Dink elephants ... in the red— reserve book due 3ut at least we have the mechanical advantage Helen Bell Asheville, N.C. A.B., English Marie Home Coeburn, Va. B.S., Home Economics Evelyn Brown Cain ' s Store, Ky. A.B., Biology Grace Hollyfield Pound, Va. A.B., English Evelyn Barr Blounrville, Tenn. B.S., Home Economics Dewey Moore Fallsburg, Ky. A.B., Physics Verna Brady Copenhagen, N.Y. A.B., Sociology Eldred Pennington Fielden, Ky. A.B., Education Evelyn Powell Brevard, N.C. B.S., Home Economics Cam Wyatt Piney Creek, N.C. B.S., Agriculture Elizabeth Kuykendall Asheville, N.C. A.B., English Jean Dodson Stewart Monticello, Ky. A.B., Home Economics sure, the class has shrunk some, but why gripe we get around to hiking, visiting, studying, and working with every member now ... we know each other— and that ' s good . . . vvhat are we good for when this part of that life-long education spoken of in chapel is done. .. perhaps the same thing we were ood for in MO, only more so ... we have chosen our future Polly Keen Dryhill, Ky. B.S., Home Economics Ann Armfield Tampa, Fla. A.B., Phychology Paul Fletcher Deskins, Va. A.B., Physics Margaret Atchley Lenoir City, Tenn. B.S., Home Economics Ann Lankford Shenandoah, Va. A.B., English Eloise Loftis Campobello, S.C. A.B., Home Economics MHMI H Dorothy Goforth Asheville, N.C. B.S., Home Economics Bill Steinberger Berea, Ky. A.B., Physics Earl Hays Berea, Ky. A.B., Biology Wilma Wilson Berea, Ky. A.B., English Agnes Anders Barnardsville, N.C. B.S., Home Economics Bertha Bell Liberty, Ky. A.B., History and Political Science caught at leisure having put away their work to cater to the photographer . . . after a hard fight we ' re nearing the end of the fight toward graduation . . Dick it up, girls . . . this is your last year to drop jne, catch one, or dress one up for the production vhy, they ' ll tell their grandchildren ' s children Mary Elizabeth Coates Banco, Va. B.S., Home Economics Ellen Hillman Almyro, Ark. A.B., English Marjorie Gilliam Fountain City, Tenn. B.S., Home Economics Mary Butler Wellford, S.C. A.B., English Alta Mae Davis Reber Middlesboro, Ky. B.S., Home Economics Elwood Reber Westlawn, Pa. A.B., Chemistry NURSES Evadna Blackburn Berea, Ky. A.B., Psychology Benjamin Washburn Bostic, N.C. B.S., Agriculture Alice Witt Ludlow, Ky. Margaret Jones Friendsville, Tenn. Eunice Fosson Ashland, Ky. Laura Belle Childers Gallup, Ky. ;he painted your throat in the service room, pushed a ther- nometer at you at five in the morning., brought that gorgeous ray of— milk toast . . . and now she ' s graduating with us . Betty Parades Milford, Mich. Beulah Serser Loyall, Ky. June Anderson Wendover, Ky. Judith Miller Easley, S. C. Obera Huddlesron Benham, Ky. Genevieve Manteufel Cleveland, Ohio Martha Ferguson Grassy Creek, Ky. Wanda Lee Francis Yellow Rock, Ky. Ellelia Stallard Herald, Va. Lucille Turner Hazard, Ky. Jeraldine Skidmore Cincinnati, Ohio Virgie Wright Hulin, Ky. when you were in the annex with that splotchy, broken - 01 condition she kept you from dying of self-pity by trea- ing you just like any other patient with the measles . . . SECOND YEAR . . . Rachel Frady. Emma McCann, Ruth Collins, Bertha Inman, Eileen Stafford, Emma Woodard, Tenna Hill, Ruth Crawford FIRST YEAR . . . Alberta Fleck, Dorothy Russell, Frances Digby, Sarah Harr, Rachel Chaffin, Fanny Martin, Mary Sue Hillman, Lois Covington, Elsie Zofer Mary Ruth Mills, Etta Fritz, Elsie Coffey, Merle Matheson, Mary Phillips! Alice Kempf imember the red-cheeked probie who made you imp up and down on that silly little foot-stool dur- ig physicals ... her first contact with our heart. Margaret Callison, Treas., Norma Vanderheide, Marguerite Imrie, Co- Chair. Social Comm.; Yvonne Covilli, Sec; Helen Monson, Vice-Pres.; Winifred Rodgers, Pres.; Jean Stillings, Chair. Project Comm. JUNIORS in the upper division: what freedom, what privilege . . . Hazel Sewell, Kathleen Mieras, Louise Young, Jennie Westlake, Virgie Mahaffey, Lillian Salis- bury, Vae Shutt, Margaret Jessup Ruby Elliott, Carolyn Keener, Mrs Effie Brown, Buena Bailey, Eula Mae Turner, Mabel Center, Jeanie James, Margaret DeBruhl, Jac- queline Aiken Virginia Bates, Annie Queen, Alice Coodell, Ruby Boggs, Jean Fugate, Ruth Wesley, Margaret Allison, Helen Smith, Lois Haun, Jean Vandiver Naomi Chafin, Miriam Eller, Claribel Breazaele, Anne Coates, Margaret Armbrister, Jeanette Ford, Laurette Head, Eulene Sherman.. 10 more of that check in, check out fuss at the library Delmas Pennington, Blanche Ingra- ham, Bill Jones, Frederick Kirsch, Mary Elizabeth McClure, Shirley Salisbury, Imogene Thomas, Freida Popenhagen, Melvin Cassady Mary Elizabeth Beaty, Mabel June Brice, Marian Campbell, Susan Cochran, Bernice Clark, Donald Singleton, Sara Slusher Margaret Williamson, Betty Gajew- ski, Zuria Farmer, Margerilla Branham, Louise Cady, Rena Yount, Inez Wallace, Novella Fuller, Eloise Sparks and you send your church cards to the u.d. office Argie Miller, Esther Vodola, Juanita Hatten, Marie Highfield, Esther Wertheimer, Margie Mantooth, Karen Taylor, Sarah Zicafoose, Ruth Law, Kathleen Mitchell Sara Nell Dill, Lucille Holmes, Lucy Goins, Audrey Singleton, Fern Goode, Jennie Self, Lillian England, Miriam Brandenburg, Ella Morgan, Libby Alexander Betty Jean King, Alice Fulk, Vir- ginia Ott, Joy Shepherd, Frances Evans, Mary Mitchell, Gladys Kin- ley, Frances Nunley, Kathleen Rowe W A r% ' n . . ■fS « .-.. ' -- ■. ' . x ■ou ' re practically a senior — it won ' t be long now SOPHOMORES Louis McCord, President; Betty Jane Lowe, Secretary; Mary K. Fielder, Chairman Social Committee; Kathleen Roberts, Chairman Project Com- mittee; June McFarland, Treasurer; Frisby Smith, Vice-President it ' s a good year, your sophomore year: gone is the lost feeling of freshman days; gone is the unsureness Poage Eversole, Aileen Lewis, Dorothy Schwinn, Lillian Davis, Helen Forloine, Elizabeth Fearing, Clenna Smith, Frances Hilton, Mary Ogle you know Berea is the place for you, now that there ' s no more dish- washing . . . Elizabeth Hunt, Jennie Rose Poynter, Pauline Sloan, Patricia Williamson, Thelma Sutton, Ruby Parris, Thelma Bates Eva Elmore, Opalee Smith, Anna Wills, Rosemary Wetzel, Katharine Davis, Re- bekah Horton, Virginia Balden, Lois Bas- sett, Lucia Skalski Anna Copeland, Pat Bryant, Margaret Graham, Edith Kyser, Billa Jean Peters, Evelyn Hibbard Eugene Stollings, Leon Wesley, Lucille Davis, Joe Houston, Alma Smith, Lee Gentry, Frank Edwards, Elizabeth Lutton, Kirkpatrick Adams Cecelia Plymale, Nancy Hess, Dollie En- evoldsen, Sara Jo McGuire, Dorothy Hilberg, Rosebelle Elkins, Cecelia Schroder, Polly- anna Brumley Bert Bray, Frisby Smith, Gene Dougherty, Russell Beach, Bill Norton, Jack Smith, Charles Snyder, Clara Newton, Leonora Hoernlein, Pauline Newton, Katherine Leatherwood, Evelyn Collins Bobbie Hillman, Agnes Ratcliff, Dorothy Dingus, Margaret Duncan, Mary Allen Wager, Betty Jo Rankin, Florence Elam, Ruth Slusher, Hope Mayhew, Bernice Clark, Joyce Hardin Elizabeth Stafford, Wilma Pigman, Ann Skinner, Alda Ruth Morris, June Lane, Kathleen Browning, Charlcie Robinson it ' s the last year you ' ll take physed, if you persist with the Gold th- warting . . . you ' ve decided on your major, you ' re on your way to upper division Inez Helton, Juanita Turner, Dora Nan Peace, Marion Branum, Marjorie Ota, Corrine Sparks, Virginia Godby, Florence Begley, Marian Nassau, Doris Watson Orriel Solley, Tharon Musser, Christine LaFon, Ruth Schell, Carolyn Killough, Vir- ginia Ellis, Erma Lee Francis, Ozella Hurst Corsie Croucher, Evalee Williams, Minor Munsey, Marie Lay, Delcie Davenport, Polly Gregg, Betty Gregg, Mary Virginia Bell, Margaret Larew, Eloise Vance, Ruth Salisbury Mary Helen Adkins, Dove Altizer, Ruth Ferrill, Imogene Maney, Dorothy Wheeler, Ovadene Beaty, Beulah Harper, Norma York, Pansy Fern Morton FRESHMEN Frank Hall, Treasurer; Charles Haywood, President; Clarence Hicks, Vice- President; David Capps, Secretary help! orientation , registration, dish pans, big sisters! big brother! Dean Shutt, water boy, water boy, water boy . . . Peggy Hicks, Jack Adams, Ruby Holbrook, Eileen Bentley, Nelle Shuler, Betty Jane McCutcheon, Evelyn Helms, Roberta Merrer, Jo Richards, J. E. Soper reen as Berea grass, grass dotted with sack suppers, summer : rocks and Navy jumpers . . . Virginia Thoroughman, Delia Miller, Al- fredo McCoy, Elva Martin, Frances Berkley, Elizabeth Fogle, Mary Ellen Ayer, Evelyn Hopkins, Ruth Burnett Zella Wager, Thelma Darnell, Pauline Swanson, Jean Hudson, Betty Imrie, Jaunita Hughes, Mable Wright, Harriet Hoffman, Irene Baker Shirley Wills, Virginia Mitchener, Myra Collins, Elizabeth Cook, Joyce Jenkins, Isabel White, Betty Shufflebarger, Marie Mitcham, Nadine Compton, Lenore Cab- bard, Maxine Jennings, Jan Cotton, Daphne Miller Daisy Garden, Gretka Young, Julia Fields, Mildred Beverly, Cleo Keith, Wilma Mobley, Eleanor Easton, Jaunita Breeding, Anita Pearson, Doris Dungan, Dorothy Shrader Ivella Sharpe, Margaret Mulkey, LaWanda Curtis, Winifred Evins, Eleanor Denison, Cleora Conley Evelyn and Betty Swingle, Lillie Pressley, Anna Sue O ' Daniel, Elizabeth Abbott, Maggie Puckett, Nina Sprinkle Cora Saylor Nickles, Helen Pulver, Ora Lee Beck, Joan Stephens, Pauline Gill, Colette Rieben Dorothy Tredennick, Virginia Henderson, Marjorie Cabbard, Delores Sallengs, Elnora Goodman, Kathryn Carpenter, Alta Whitt, Eliazabeth Vodola. mom! dad! contemplated packing up and going back where w came from . . . just contemplated . . . Felt right at home dancing in Woods-Penn . . . never knew the good Did days they talked about . . . thank goodness ' Lorraine Salyer, Brigitte Auerbach, Olga Smith, Doris Davies, Edith York, Jean Wolfe, Pauline Swanson, Alice Russell, Maxine Davis, Zenobia Hope, Cassie Harville Elizabeth Hollandsworth, Angeline Bur- chert, Vera Mae Burchett, Louise Proffitt, Fannie Litton, Hattie Sorah, Phyllis Jones, Doris Neal, Sue Hill Beulah Davis, Lela Mae Taylor, Mary Stevens, Helen Carrithers, Lela Watson, Irene Pigman, Genevieve Cockrell, Jean Hudson, Dorothy Bishop, Lucille Crumpler Emily Huff, Jaunita Fugate, Jane Hager, Barbara McBee, Scott Warrick, James King, Mary Phillips, Jane Threlkeld, Harry Craft, Betty Lou Powers Nancye McGuire, Caby Jean Smith, Nau- dine Mills, Faye Stewart, Guinola Hill, Mary Stafford, Edna Stafford, Margaret Ketchersid, Edith Dunagan Pauline Oliver, Fay Penley, Joan Rowe, Marjorie Muncy, Esther Spence, Jean Clark, Frances Bradshaw, Mary Lou Keen- er, Frances Finnell Jean Taylor, Anita Grant, Wanda Batson, Alice Nicholas, Sadie Cordier, Mary Elizabeth Cordier, Dorothy Palmer, Bar- bara Parnell, Evelyn Dillow, Lillian Davis, Helen Davis Matt Bullins, Dixon Bailey, Feddie Fugate, Samuel Scruggs, William Nelson, William Perry, Fritz Watson, Nobuyuki Yokogawa, Preston Johnston, Charles Elliott freshman comp with Jiggs — why I like Berea, thought, but there ' s something about the place hadn ' - :an ' t stretch after my first trek up the mountains ... fell off a cliff aughing at some chesty sailor wedged in Fat Man ' s A isery . Faye Skean, Ruth Mary Liddle, Mary Stylos, Eloise Oliver, Hilda Rhea, Gladys Fetzer, Nancy King, Kathleen Jett, Sally Shimanaka, Mary Ann Smith Ida Peterson, Margaret Love, Dorothy Turpin, Mitchell Hutchms, Cleda Penning- ton, Juanita Noland, Carolyn Caudill, Gayle Asher, Pearl Thomas, Elizabeth Hiott, Robbie Sowards, Virginia McCoy Curtis Baldwin, Robert Wallace, Paul Red- mon, William Harrill, Dale Carter, James Bayes, Lily Cornett, John Ross, Eugene Melgaard, John Younge Charles Mowrey, Reuben Hunter, Gilbert McKee, Audrey Majors, Thedora Waddell, Jessie Piercy, Bobby Hicks, Verna Hall, Elizabeth Tincher 7 Betty Jo Mallonee, Nancy Testerman, Grace Popplewell, Laura Lee Hale, Roberta Lake, Rosalynn Love, Doris Galloway Annis Dodd, Helen Armbrister, Mary Elizabeth Jones, Laura Sturgill, Margery Murphy, Mary Gill, June Stanley, Thelma Coleman, Scharlene Oney, Garnetta Shan- non Mildred Payne, Catherine Taylor, Lee Roy McClure, Charles McNeer, Mary Lou Baker, Elizabeth Crumbley, Allene Garrett, Paul Settles, Walter Smith, Samuel Hubbard Ruth Stephens, Samuel Hurst, Jean Harris, Edward Carpenter, Anna Clair, William Snedegar, Eloise Wise, Charles Elliot Dean True said to have a destination after evening dishes . . . des- tination where hamburgers stay or go with onions and mustard, Maggie Thome, Lillian McCoun, Louise Walters, Patricia Stewart, Jeanne Hardy, Marian Ealson, Delia Abney, Ruby Lester, Frankie Ruth Mease, Lora Adkins, Bonnie Evans Nina Clark, Jane Fleenor, Rena DeHart, Ellen Cadle, Eileen Barnawell, Aileen Blevins scolded in the reserve room, demerited for sleeping through dishes, caught lingering on the porch . . . Sweet Memories ' 12TH GRADE s s Wilma Horton, Secretary; Calvin Baird, Vice-President; Ruth Smith, Chair- man Social Committee; Joe Austin, President; Eleanor Bent, Chairman Project Committee; Avis Jarrell, Treasurer our last year of Academy Division . . . college looks awfully close now and we begin to worry about sixteen credits and Eng- lish 99 . . . psychology and fascinators have been the cur- rent fads of our class ... we have kissed our share -£S  James Hesselgesser, James Caines, Lida Caudill, James Skeens, Geneva Mullins, DeKern Lang, Earl Ruth, Joanne Turner, Nila Mae Blair, Inez Lucas, Winifred Garvin, Anne Jennings, Glena Ryan Kendrick Smith, Eugene Cady, Beulah Rector, Doris Speck, Jessie Clark, Buddy Hibbard, Johanna Kranold David Holliday, Sam Hodges, Anna Mary Lapsley, Betty Bell, Jack Mitchell, Sue Kilbourne of the boys good-by and we ' ve won our share of the dia- monds . . we haven ' t minded the sailors in the least . . David Williams, Wilma Savior, Lucille Wilkerson, Grace Miller, Dean Lambert, Don Murphy, Al- berta Thomas Ellen Reynolds, Anna Jane Pound- stone, Sanford Jones, Peggy Watts, Charles Keyser, Mona Hamblin, Frances Edwards Susan Deyton, Winifred Garvin, Frances Dennen, Geraldine Hooker, Arietta Hogan, Bethel Moore, Kathlyn Troutman, Melba Mc- Williams, Fairie Jones we the gloated over the college people that had to eat with us in commons . . . we ' ve sat starry eyed in Mrs. Peck ' s Eva Calmes, Billy Belcher, llleene Stanley, Elbert Miller, Myrtle Bar- rett, Theresa Johnson, Bert Johnson, Lewis Biggerstaff Ann White, Carolyn Suiter, Darrol Nickels, Dorris Piatt, Eleanor Weekes, Eleanor Morgan, Joyce Lockhart, Bobby Wesley Betty Acker, Joan Ridlehoover, Wilma Ellison, Alice Refo, Helen Cawood, Estelle Daniels, Ruby Campbell, Betty Blakey, Sally Bur- ton, Lena Gooding, Frances Bu- chanan class and relived the history that she acted for us . . . we ' ve had a taste of war when our class president marched away.. Ray Tudor, H. A. Porter, Jean Emerson, Richard Wilson, Donald Cray Sarah Talbot, Dorothy Ison, Orrin Taubee, Mary Goans, Aretta Shrewsberry now we ' ve ended our rivalry with fruit jar ... we have lived up to our motto and loved it because our motto has been fun . 11TH GRADE William Robinson, Treasurer; Genevieve Graham, Secretary; Molly Scholl, Vice-President; Helen Hardesty, President . . this is our first year in lower division and yet we nd ourselves on the same level with college students... Margaret Bishop, Mary Sue Cole, Evelyn Ledford, Williams, Avenell Rose, Maxine Caldwell Billy Barlow, Helen Guindola Johnson, Elma Isaacs, Bessie Spurlock, Walter Gee, Hazel Combs, Clara Brewer, Azaleea Casey, Emma Lee Combs, Wayne Breazeale John Holroyd, George Stephens, Jean Hoskins, Cordon Homes, Margaret Taylor, Robert Dodd Clyde Ramey, Katherine Campbell, Alene Mullins, Earl Woods, Pauline Caudill, James Wey James Barker, Robert Fowler, Jerry Fish, Herbert Shadowen, Grover Miller, Bernice Overley, Georgia Richie, Malcolm Murray, Robert Amburgey, Mae Marcum we have more civilian boys than any other class . . . our free time thoughts have run to sailors and curls and porch lights .. we worry about blue slips from deans, cutting gym, and getting light cuts . . . well, perhaps we don ' t really worry, we just wonder Gloria Edwards, William Crouch, Edward Cook, Flora Cofield, Helen Burnett, Velma Mar: ha 1 1 Dallas Monk, Mary Golden Saferight, Betty Horton, Majorie Keener, Gloria Jean Chris- tian, Opal Hurt, Cecil Hedrick John Welsh, Helen Smith, Charles Blantcn. Alvin Wilson, Margaret Churchill, Robert Bent, Mildred Johnson Marie Howard, Patricia Prater, Ray Dur- ham, Clarine Sutton, Edward Cook, Mar- garet Semple, William Howard, Paulena York, Viola Meadows, Wanda Farmer, Fannye Hensley I - ■MS . . . BY HEROES IMPLANTED . . . A man mobbed twenty-two times, tarred and feathered by citizens of his own state, a rock- ribbed dogmatist, an active and irritating reformer— such a man was John G. Fee, abolition- ist son of a slaveholding Kentuckian, and founder of Berea College. He entered Lane Theological Seminary in Cincinnati, a school known as a hotbed of anti-slavery agitators, and after much perplexity and struggle he decided to join the ranks of the fanatics. Disowned by his father when he expressed his conviction that he should aid in abolishing slavery, in- temperance, and other current sins, he set about preaching his doctrines. But his own people would not accept him; he was kicked out of the Presbyterian Church. And then he and Cassius M. Clay got together. Cash, cousin of the famous Henry Clay, had come under William Lloyd Garrison ' s influence at Yale; and he, like Fee, the son of Kentucky slaveowning parents, took up the abolitionist cause. Fee and smooth-tongued Clay often spoke from the same platform. Clay didn ' t hesitate to back Fee up with pistols and bowie knives. Slamming them down beside the Bible on the pulpit, he would say, This man is going to have a fair hearing. Fee established churches in various counties, and at Clay ' s invitation came to Madison county in 1853 to build a church which boasted thirteen members at the outset. The ten acres of land given him by Clay was the original site of the Berea school where the brotherhood of man was put into action, as well as words. When he fell in love with Matilda Hamilton, a lively girl, from his home county of Bracken, he didn ' t pop the question till she was converted and joined the church. Her keen wit, her housewifely virtues, her ability to grow beautiful flowers, and her way of riding horseback to see the sick made her beloved to Fee and to persons in her community. Neighbors thought Fee went looking for trouble when he broke state laws to uphold what he called Higher Law. He and Clay never agreed on this. Clay believing that it was good policy to obey man-made laws till they were legally repealed. Fee constantly reproved Clay for drinking and swearing, and he was thoroughly disgusted when warrior Clay marched off to the Mexican war. Final collision came in 1856, and many influential Kentuckians followed Clay ' s lead in dropping their support of the newly-formed school. Angry mobs used to drag Fee out, threatening to hang him. Once when a mob was carrying him and a companion to beat them and send them across the Ohio river, a rain came up and the party went into a house for shelter. Fee made use of the time to read a portion of the Scripture and pray. Their spirits deflated, the vicious crowd departed. Nine remained to escort Fee to the county border where they told him to beat it, and courteously offered him a drink of whiskey. Seizing the opportunity, he began o sermon on the evils of drink, and Hie nine rode off at full speed. But the school progressed. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. R. Rogers, he an Oberlin graduate, came to help the Fees at Berea, which was then a desolate ridge referred to as the Bresh. George Candcc, another Oberlin man, came, asking, Shall I preach or teach? Fee, with a sweeping gesture, replied, We ought to have a school here and educate, not merely in the ordinary branches of learning, but in love, as first in religion, and in justice, as first in government. We must enlist the young people. And they did. Fifteen pupils registered for the first term of school in 1858, with a one-room, unpainted structure for their shelter. Rogers was a scholar, and he saw that students crammed sound learning into their heads. Outside school hours were spent grubbing the thicket away. Dr. Rogers later reported, Those who hadn ' t begun to dig at Greek roots dug at oak ones. Hundreds of people riding on horseback to see the experiment were impressed. A member of the Kentucky legislature, having made a speech at the commencement exercises, whispered to a friend, If this school goes on in this way, the niggers will be free, but I ' m going to hold onto mine as long as I can. Higher grades were introduced in the school, and Berea Col- lege was organized in 1858, to furnish the facilities for a thorough education to all persons of good mora! character. Fee was encouraged by success, and he went North to raise funds. Headlines in Kentucky newspapers glared, John G. Fee Is in Beecher ' s Church Calling for More John Browns. He wasn ' t. He had said, in Beecher ' s church, We want more John Browns, not in manner of action, but in consecration: not to go with carnal weapons, but with spiritual . . . But slaveholders took up the cry, demanding that the Berea teachers leave the ridge. So a sad-hearted crusader met the band of Berea exiles in Ohio. Attempts to go back to their work during the war were repulsed, and the school did not reopen until 1865. From this time on there was steady progress in scholarship. Henry Fairchild was the first president of the reorganized Berea College. Under his leadership much building was done. From the original ten acres, the campus had grown to 109 in 1866— with no endowment, no credit, no building. But Howard Hall was erected, and then Fairchild, and Lincoln Hall! Berea College now has more than one hundred buildings. It possesses 6,000 acres of land- campus, farm, and forest. Present endowment and plant assets are more than 513,000,000. The periods of administration of President William G. Frost I 1892- 1920 and President William J. Hutchins (1920-1939. saw great advances made. The staff grew; students grew. More was taught, and more was learned. Southern highlanders have had handicaps-social, economic, political. For them especially Berea College was founded. drink to the foam... Commanding Officer . . . Lt. H. R. Dunathan . . . learned . . . considerate . . . dignified and quiet mannered Our Executive Officer . . . Lieutenant John Kessier . . . scrupulous Saturday inspections . . . cheerful natured . . . Our Medical Officers . . . Lieutenant Com- mander James Fuller and Lieutenant George Calderwood . . . their treatment for head colds discourages gold-bricking L« ...-•,: ■Chief Jake H. Moser • his Chief Charles Cummings ... the track team sprinted to victory little chief . . . j ud o dynamo at the helm these pilot our world Ihief Leonard Pickett . . . the Chief Sam Fox yes of Texas are upon you brain trust basketball Chief Ed Petro . . . coached basketball the Rhode Island way DonaldClark . . . Pharmacist ' s Mate . . . dignified dape deale, Paul Brazer . . . g. i. haberdasher j Chief Horn and Store-keeper Neuman Pharmacist ' s Mate McLain . . . nipping again, Mac? Bob Clements . . . specialist in wine, woman and athlete s foo BLUE RIDGE HALL 1st row- Ervin, Crawford, Blunck, Morison, Williamson, Fairchild, Kiel, Fetzer Pulliam Boker Fnedlander, Monk, Nave, Anderson, Bennett, Collett, Thweatt 2nd row— Wilkinson, McCormick, Chandler, Gold, Fliegelman, Sturtevant, Troll Brer-z r .,. r Sherburne, Murray, Dermont, Smith, Witt, Halvorson, Helton, Vandorn 3rd row— Copeland, Boone, Kreidler, Becker, Carter, Cochran, Comer Skillern Bre,r Duff Turner, King, Jenkins, Collins, Hoag, Clark i m m t; TTM.t?TTU!,!-?M ' 1i r + m 1st r ow-Anthony, Hutton, Briggs, Ryan, Rassell, Barker, Smith, Rue, Wood, Fagot, Bealmear Kolp Anderson, Carraher, Bensey, Sizemore, Smith 2nd row-Tice, Guthrie, Heger Fuson, McGmty, Whitfield, Fades, Cebhardt, Hymson, Shaw, Tul Vanderberg, Small, Donohue, Williams, Montgomery, Neumayer 3rd row-Plantefaber, Tye, Suiter, Moeller, Ward, . Emberton, Brooks, Cone, Mansfield. Flynn W eb s ter, Eberhardt, Doctor, Cradit, Hopkins, Dougherty, Brady e, CUMBERLAND HALL 1st row — Smith, Osborne, Croley, Shemwell, Rice, Estes, Ruffie, Lyon, Lindquist, Moore, West, Bickett, Broach, McNutt, Schillerstrom 2nd row — Byrne, Lang, Sandman, Owen, Grischy, Broman, Strong, Paasch, Hamlin, Thomasson, Cleveland, Huggins, Howard, Kilbourne, Corey 3rd row — Dumesnil, Cowen, Zimmerman, Adams, Rescho, Baker, Ludwick, Shelton, Phillips, Lynch, Beam, Peavyhouse, Beckers, Owen, Dimmick, Lacewell ■-■fc ' :: ! 11??? If? 11 •s ' r 1 ? ?1 ; Iff! 1 f 1 f f ? 1 1 1 I T K i.  - -t HDv HBHI 1st row — Smith, Baas, Newcome, Nelson, Reed, Helm, Ulmer, Lueking, Hartley, Wayman, Meader, Flowers, Jeffries, Sims 2nd row Fields, Callis, Bloomfield, Caperton, Vandivier, Heer, Trabue, Whiting, Murphy, Duble, Whitsitt, Runyan, Berger, Craig 3rd row Sallee, Carter, Bergewisch, Hail, Webb, Ternes, Stahl, Haesley, Wellbaum, Shewmaker, Wehr, Friedberg, Pratt, Gibbs, Rose HOWARD HALL 1st row— John, Cottingham, Clarke, McKenzie, Lee, Burkholder, Osmun, Berkr-r Roebuck Waggoner, Foltz, Smith, Myers, Edwards, Hawkins 2nd row— Shure, Broome, Geyer, Willins, Meckling, de Venny, Wh,teman, O ' Neal Parker K,rkman Noward, Bailey, Aszman, Bantz, Johnson, Lehnig, Gossett, Cams 3rd row— Chief Pickett, Dunning, Meyer, Hartloff, Barrow, Meyers, Conarroe, Travers West Milev M,ller, Owen, Hansen, Wheeler, McNeely, Wilson, Agnew, Morris, Willett, Williams, Slocum ...in the by the dawn ' s early light strutting our stuff f 1| f military manner shoving off for chow J | |A1 J M - • r ■■' r «...  ■■e n t a 1 1 y . a military secret? looks real, doesn ' t it? working overtime take yer guts in yer mouth and FINISH grunt and groan session good ole swimming hole and physically ...L_i. ' what ' s Tarzan got that we ain ' t got? between the chimes . • • drooling fooling fueling ' stooling I can cook, too ' •TAKE YOURs CHOICE • • • CfT, K o 9 - m • . j ♦- - ? . io = If] } RECREATIONAL PROGRAM • 3AT. AU6.2.8 life kinda switched up on us this year, what with a powder room off the dance floor and posters in the hallways reading, Take your choice — mixed swimming, movie, games or dancing . . . break- fast at 8 o ' clock on Sundays, with coffee and toast . . . lower division eating at the commons ... ten minutes between classes ... in by eleven on Saturday nights . . . classes six days a week some of this year ' s changes we hope will stay ... but we can still wish that classes to come will have a chance to see snow falling through the beam of the flood on Draper tower and the miraculous four shadows of the tower on the clouds ... to wake in the early morning to the sound of Christ- mas Carols sung by the men ' s glee club ... to shoot the chute into a bundle of hay at the Ag Social ... to relax on Sunday afternoons at the art building, in the Capehart Room, or climbing Pilot ' s Knob ... to use Monday to write that term paper or wash those dirty socks ... to depend more upon a date with the boy friend than just a letter ... to wait eagerly for weeks for the renowned chapel speaker . . . we ' d like to hear the band again at basketball games, and the Royal Collegians playing for our dances ... we want others to like horsecollars, real cokes, and fire balls as much as we did . . . we ' d appreciate a serenade from A.Z., and it would be nice to see plays at the Tabernacle with several men on the stage at once . . . we ' d like to fill Pearson Ho!! with a hundred u. d. men instead of just five . . . and what about those Christmas vacations with two long weeks to spend at home we hear the count of hup, two, three, four and remember the call that once cut across the campus, lower division! TWENTY WRITERS . . . WALL-PAPER TOO MUCH LIKE SAROYAN £ Lucy told me to write this.. I guess I must have told her a thousand times that it wouldn ' t go; that it sounded too much like something Saroyan had beaten out when he hadn ' t much else to do. I told her, Lucv, honey, even if things like that do happen, there ' s no percentage in writing about them, because everybody just thinks you ' re shooting the bull anyway. But she wouldn ' t listen to me. She told me to write it all up, and then some big magazine would buy it sure. So. I was up at Lucy ' s over my leave. We had five days off, and I spent most of it walk- ing around her home town like a peacock, looking at our reflections, Lucy ' s and mine together, in all the plateglass windows, and patting myself on the back because Lucy is such a beautiful thing and I am the luckiest gob in the Fleet to have her. One night we were going over to see some friends of hers, namely one Hilda Something and her boy friend. But somehow or other we got all loused up getting there and finally had to stop in at some little all-night cafe to call for directions. It was a crummy sort of joint. You know the type: a few tables, bum lights, a noisy juke-box — atmosphere that you scrape off with a spoon. There was a phone-booth in the back, and Lucy went into it to put in her call. I waited up by the counter, and tossed a casual eye at the waitress. Then this big Swede comes up beside me and asks me if I want a beer. He ' s a six footer with gray hair and a breath that wou ld lay you out at twenty paces; he ' s got on a worn- out looking coat and a pair of pants that might have matched something once. And he doesn ' t look like he ' s got a dime to his name. As a matter of fact, when I first see him I think that maybe there ' s going to be a bite. But when he offered me the brew, I saw that he was a good boy. I told him, No thanks, Mac, and after trying to twist my arm, he got the idea and moseyed off. I watched him go over to a corner table, where a guy and his broad were lapping it up. Some shoe-shine kid had been arguing with the guy to let him shine his shoes, but the guy didn ' t go for the idea much, especially since the babe was just about stewed enough to be useful. Then the big Swede comes up and stands over the guy and growls something, and hands the kid a quarter. The kid grins and starts to shine the guy ' s shoes for all he is worth. And the Swede just stood over the guy ' til the job was finished. I could see the Swede sort-of liked this gag. He get a dumb-Swede smile on his face, and, with the kid in tow, he went over to three more guys in a row, and made each one of them take a shine too, with him footing the bill. He was having one hell of a time. By this time Lucy had finished making her call, and had come out of the booth. She was fixing her hair or something, and I was lighting a cigarette, getting ready to shove off for Hilda ' s. We were half-way to the door when up pops the old Swede again. He slaps down a ham on my shoulder gently, like you pole an ox, and booms out to Lucy, Is dis your sailor? Lucy, having been with me long enough so as to take anything in her stride, says, He sure is! Ahhhhhh! Dot ' s fine! He iss a fine sailor. I luff him! All you need to see is dot uniform. Dot tells you all you need to know! He is a fine boy. Fine! Lucy looked at me sort of surprised, like, Who the hell is this guy? The Swede caught the eye, and bellowed, Ya, I know. I ' m notting but a Goddam — pardon me, lady — I ' m notting but a lousy drunk. But I ' m right, ya. He is just the boy for a fine lady like you, ya. Sure thing, pop, I says. Talk her into it for me. Ya, ya, fine people to be together Then the shoe-shine kid, who has a sharp eye for business, wandered over with his little kit and pushes the bite to me. I was about to give him the goodbye when I glanced at Lucy, and she ' s got that pleading look in her eyes, like when Gary Cooper got crippled in Pride of the Yankees. So I figured I might as well play too. Sure, kid, I said, Shine ' em up. And then weren ' t we the picture, tho. Me with my right foot ten inches off the ground, and the kid at my feet making those noises they make with the shining-rag, and Lucy look- ing tearfully at the Swede, and the Swede telling us to get married. You love him, ya? he asks. Oh, yes, sighs Lucy. Den marry him. He ' s a sailor. Look at dot uniform. And he loves you, I know dot. I can see I got eyes in my head. And — he turned to me. You love her too, ya? Hell yes, pop. , Ahhhhhh! He closed his eyes, turned his face toward the ceiling, and burped happily. You marry. I want you should marry quick. It is a shame to wait so long. You are born to be married to one anodder. Ach. Gott, it ' s so beautiful! And then all of a sudden I got it. The guy had never seen either of us before in his life. For all he knew, I might be a hatchet-man or a miniature golfer or something. Lucy might be a Borgia. But he didn ' t care a hott. Do you love each odder? Ya? Den marry! That was all he had to say; but, God, that was enough. I saw that the kid had finished on my shoes, so I slipped a quarter and grabbed Lucy by the hand. Come on, Honey, I said. We gotta get over to Hilda ' s. As we were going out the door, I heard the Swede yelling something about being best man. Outside I saw that Lucy was crying. I didn ' t try to stop her. Hell, it ' s a woman ' s privilege to gush. I figured she deserved it, for being such a wonderful thing all week. But I still don ' t see much point in writing it up. Nobody would believe it anyway, and besides that, it sounds too much like Saroyan. James Sherburne, A.S., USNR SNOWDREAM IN PICADSLLY, 1940 A snowdream as wild flurries fade out Nasty, naked streets White palaces perched on white cliffs leading into deep gorges. Piles of white crystal rocks guarding warm caves, Whose dark interiors are shielding countless creatures from The Thunder — hark! Wild streaks of lightning outside stabbing and piercing through Fleeting clouds, emptying their burdens of — Snow. Frantic snow, rushing down between the white palaces, And into the deep gorges, bleaching every detail White. Through the swirling, mad night, across a white river with crystal spans, The mighty bong of the great timekeeper Echoes down, from its ivory tower as the blue moon fades But now, the dawn looms. . . . The flashes cease, and the booms. My snowdream fades and I must return to ruins, and Reality. James Adams, A.S., USNR SYMPHONY « An ethereal haze tentatively lifted its mvstery from the black solidity of the hills, then shyly let it fall again hiding every tree form and mountain ridge. Vast reaches of un- certainty cool, quiescent, and disturbing. Into the mother-of-pearl qu.et shot a blood red band-then another-bold shafts of light streaking through mist and consaousness l.ke wood- winds in an orchestra. Gently and almost inperceptibly the veil from the mountam tops into The valley pushed earthward by a triumphant glow, rose quartz in color, fortiss.rno ,n tone Waves of color emerged to mingle with the rose, first co ral, then pearl grey a tmge of cleo mon yellow-then steel blue. The mountains were transformed from indefinite black shape, or h purple silhouettes superimposed against the vivid background. In that brief moment before the swollen ball of the sun rose above the hills for the elimahc chord, the grace and perfection of a bird in flight wrote the Kiting melody for the composition. — Dorothy Tredennick THAT ' S WHY m Thev went walking along together, tall sailor and girl in saddle shoes. The rain rip in her shoe, making the squashy sound which marred the strange beauty of the wet n.ght. I guess I ' ll always remember Berea in the ram. It ' s rained almost every week I ' ve been here, he said crisply, holding his head high, with face averted. Yes it does rain pretty often . . . But I don ' t know what I ' ll especially remember about Berea when I ' m gone. When I graduate June will be here and Apnl rams will be over —so maybe I ' ll remember sun and green grass and flowers. Silence followed her reply. Looking expectantly up to him, she saw lips firmly shut eyes fixed on nothing in particular. With hands thrust deep in his f P ' ahead with longer steps. He felt, though he did not see, that she lengthened her ■steos to ahead with longer steps. He felt, though he did nor see, mar -y-- ' - : match his but still he said nothing The air g ew elder. Her gloveless hands could have none nto her pockets- resolutely she kept them out. It would not have been right to put her finger undents arm, close to his warm coat. And the sharpness of the cold-feelmg was part of the night. They walked. They waited. just as her tooth-chattering became almost audible, he said, Let ' s get a coke, and they stopped at Little Mama ' s. Having settled on ice cream cones and potato ch.ps they licked gingerly until a gang of sailors marched noisily up the street, singing, Happy ,s the day when the navy gets its pay, and we go sailing home . . . Quickly he put his hand holding the ice cream down. He answered her wondering If she wondered, she didn ' t say so. A man in a passing car yelled, Sailor, it ' s a wet night for the business ' Houses along the street were dark and quiet, except for one in which o pajamaed little girl leaned out an upstairs window until her mother pulled her awav and turned the light out. Thev came to Dr. Weekes ' house, and turned to retrace their path, neither of them having suggest that they do so. Suddenly he burst forth: I don ' t know what I ve always wanted never thought much about it. I mean, I never thought I ' d teach or be a lawyer o a doctor or anything like that. But now-. Well, I ' m in the navy, and-. Oh, it s good enough God knows we don ' t have it tough like the guys who are really ,n it. And ,f I didn ' t believe I should be here, I wouldn ' t I mean, — . He broke off, searching for a way to convey to her what he meant. I know, she said, You know we ' ve got to fight and we ' ve got to win this war and that you have to help. But you don ' t know what the total pattern is. Yeah — that says it ... I have a feeling that, even when I don ' t say a thing in words, you know what I mean. Sometimes I feel as though you think right along with me. Yes, she said positively. Thinking means a lot to a man, and when you ' re in the navy you — well, you take orders. That ' s necessary. But if will be good when the war is over and we can be ourselves. I get hungry for a time when I can wear trousers different from the ones of the guy next to me, and not conform to all the little conventions. Her hands were terribly cold. She breathed sharply, and quickly put her fingers under his arm. It seemed to her then that his arm pressed closer to his side, against her fingers — but maybe not. Um-huh, she agreed. That ' s why people are different. That ' s why men wear green hats and women wear red dresses. And red blouses, he concluded, laughing down at her. The thing she wore wasn ' t a blouse; it was a dickey — but it was red. The color wasn ' t visible in the dark, so he had remembered. Elizabeth Rogers was lighted from top to bottom. They stood outside in the cold misty drizzle. It was time to say the final good night and goodbye. He took the hand she had placed under his arm, and held it tightly. — But he turned away from her upturned face. I guess this is it, — abruptly. Luck! — softly. She looked after him as he left, until she could no longer see his white cap. Then she walked inside, and stood by the signing-in table. Her left hand was very warm, and she smiled as she rubbed it against the cold one. — Virginia Osborne SPRING AWAKENING I whispered, tolerance, But a mighty wind engulfed it. I cautioned, patience, But the angry waters roared on. I breathed, love, And saw the oak bud unfold its lacy bloom. — Clarence Steinberger BROTHAH GAWD Gawd ain ' no big stick man, Walkin ' ' round, puttin ' fear in man. He ain ' dat kind. He sho ' is fine! He don ' want hate ' n ' hell; He jus ' wants all things to go well. Gawd ain ' no big stick man. He runs things wid a soft hand. Gawd, da Spirit, is life ' s wine. Halleluya! He ' s mine! Cecelia Schroder THE PATRiARCH OF THE PARK Old father, leaning heavy on your cane, Withered sage so grey and stooped with care, You make my heart cry out in bitter pain, Feeding pigeons from your meagre fare! You fling white bread crumbs on the cobbled ground And greedy hordes swoop down in winged grace — The trappings of this world you have not found But oh, that flick ' ring sun-beam on your face! — Ida Petersen BELOVED DESPOT © Not only did Grandma have a lasting influence on my life; she ran the whole house- hold. She was on hand the day I made my debut in this world and she didn ' t take her eyes off me until St. Peter opened the Golden Gate for her. When I reached school age, Grandma decided that it was nonsense to send me to Poca- hontas to school. Her children had gone to a country school, she reminded Mother, and there was no reason why the family should get uppety now. So I went to the country school. It was Grandma who decided that the old Chevrolet could last another year, that we should buy an old house instead of building a new one. She was a practical and unrelenting ruler. Grandma was innately religious. She always said grace before meals — long eloquently phrased blessings that frequently put us children to sleep. Every morning before breakfast, the family knelt in the living room, legs numb and eyes half-open, while Grandma prayed her way around the world, asking God ' s blessings on Europe, Africa, and Asia. When she had worked back around to the United States, she became more specific and prayed for each county individually. Grandma had very definite standards of Christian conduct. She was horrified the first time she saw my father smoking. And when Mother got a permanent wave she threatened to leave home. Of course, having no place to go, she never made good her threat. She fought waste with the fervor of a New Englander. My earliest recollections of her are connected with such maxims as Waste not; want not. I always ate my cereal and vege- tables because she said that uneaten food would dance on my bed at night. When I was eight years old, Grandma kissed me and went smiling to her reward. We still miss her — but I know she ' s happy. I can see her now as she walks down those streets of gold, looking up at God with an accusing eye and telling him, Brick would have been more practical. — Virginia Mitchener FARMHOUSE AT NIGHT Sarah stuck her head through the door to announce, The bread ' s already on the table. The men who had congregated about the heatin ' stove temporarily dropped their discussion of what to plant on the lower twenty and moved to the kitchen, bringing with them the pleasant odors of damp shirts, hay, and warm milk. They washed their hands in the basin by the window and slid into their places at the table — the three teen-age boys on the wooden bench, the two hired hands across from them, and Ed at the head of the table. After Sarah had chunked more wood in the old-fashioned stove, she slipped into her place at the foot. Ed turned down the wick of the flickering kero- sene lamp and said grace. (Somehow prayer seemed more sacred with the lights turned low.) The table around which they gathered was covered with a worn oilcloth of apple and peach design. The plain silverware bore signs of long use. Some of the plates had flower designs on them, some no designs at all. Ed served the food — string beans, fried corn, and juicy red beets, all canned by bustling, penny-pinching Sarah the previous summer. The cornbread was brown and crisp, the butter firm and yellow. The men were talking of farm problems. Ed told the ruddy faced farm hand, You ' d better turn old Mandy dry next week. Sarah sat quietly, interrupting only to tell Ed that the chickens were without laying mash. On the other side of the table, completely uncon- scious of the conversation of their elders, the three boys were discussing their chances of winning the county basket-ball tournament. Sarah got up to put some more wood in the stove. Outside, the March wind whipped and knocked at the windows. Inside, the cat purred contentedly in the woodbox behind the stove and shadows danced on the dingy walls. — Virginia Mitchener REMEMBER THE SUMMER? Remember the summer we spent on a hill In a green shaded place where the grass was tender? We argued war and the right to kill; We argued God and freedom of the will — Jonathan Edwards, unto Caesar render. And then we sang to your violin; And then we stopped and argued again Until we grew tired and went down to the creek, Where we watched the minnows in a sun-dappled pool, And put in our feet and got them cool. We sat on the log and sang again, And we parted saying auf Wiedersehn. And you went off with your violin. Dorothy Hilberg To Former Members of the Class of ' 44: In September 1940 our class filled Woods-Penniman auditorium. For the first time we heard President Hutchins speak; energetic Prof. Rigby taught us to sing Jackie Boy- Master. We were a large freshman class. We aren ' t large now. For a class meeting we use only about one-fourth of the seats in Upper Chapel. One by one throughout these four years you have gradually dropped out. Now you ' re in the Army, the Navy, the Air Corps, or the Marines. You ' re a WAC, a WAVE, a nurse; you ' re married, or you hold down an essential war job. We ' re proud of you, the ones of us who are left in Berea. Occasionally you return for a few days. Clyde Flannery taps his little bell in the board- ing hall to introduce you. We clap enthusiastically, and you stand and grin self-con- sciously. Sometimes there is a touch of envy in us for the things you are doing now, for the very real part you play in our world today. Then we remind ourselves that staying in school is our part in the crisis. We are the same class that sang Berea Beloved from mimeographed sheets in Woods- Penniman auditorium; only now we ' re in England, Italy, on the Pacific, or perhaps in Boston, Chicago, San Francisco, Tampa, Atlanta, Knoxville — and Berea. The Senior Class here are some of you . . . the ones we could find pictures of.. Mason McNeer — Lenore misses him . . . Michael Fuhrmann — remember his . fascinating accent in Speech class . . . Staunton King — the dope . . . Bob Wheeler — vocalist for the Royal Collegians . . . Arh ' e and Bob Adams — we always did like red hair . . . Ginny Draughon — we borrowed her bicycle once . . . Mary Nell Sharpe — we ' d like to hear her at the piano again . . . Frank Stillings — he was leader of our band . . . Norman Wooten — even better in uniform . . . Marion Merchant — we knew her as Yeager . . . Estil Deitz — our Junior class president . . . Bill Crouch — the CHIMES misses his camera . . . Connie — Ma Cifford — with her husband, Harry Tomlinson. That ' s Bob Luff- burrow on the other page. Remember how crazy he can be? When we saw the picture we feit like saying That ' s the boy, Luff — that ' s the way to tackle this old war. Vesper Hour and time for our class in living ... we do some of our hardest work during this hour, but not for college credits . . . these activities are extra-curricula Berea ' s music is Berea whether it ' s prof ' s ' The Farmer Did a Shootin ' Go or the black robed choir ' s anthem, we follow our music department ' s leadership we keep our feet sti 1 1 with difficulty when the band starts . . . or strive for harmony in rhe women ' s glee club . . . Dr spend free evening hours listening quietly and intently to records of our favorite classics in the Capehart room . here we have a chance to learn democracy first hand through our judicial Board of Governors and the legislative Lower and Upper Division Senates . . I  • 111 — 1ITBI 1 through the Women ' s Council we maintain self-rule in the u.d. women ' s dormitories . . . we go to the Vanguards O search for solutions to }ur social problems . . . n our Forensics we try to earn to speak effective- y of these problems . . . our discussions in the Public Affairs Forum are on topics of worldwide interests . . . through all these we learn to value democracy Home Economics Agriculture Club . . . famous for its socials then there are those clubs which are concerned with en- joying the fields of work that we especially like Education . French Club -• Sigma Pi Sigma for physics Pi Alpha for test tube enthusiasts Pi Gamma Mu for social science eventually we make the Greek letter honor fraternities for our field we don ' t forget religious activities during vesper hours . . . there ' s the Y.W. and Y.M. on Thursday and Sunday nights where we work out all sorts of projects, such as the Thanksgiving chapel pro- gram which we contribute to the World Student Service Fund every afternoon right after lunch we go to the Prayer Group in Fireside Room, or if we prefer to worship alone there is the quiet beauty of Danforth Chapel n Sunday night we meet at Union Church for C.E. terea College is a nondenomi national school with Christian deals ... its opportunities for worship show that then there are vesper hours that we spend in the beloved Tabernacle of THE BEREA PLAYERS . . . we are proud to become members of the national dramatic honor societies . . . we join Alpha Psi Omega for acting and Tau Delta Tau for stagecraft (or perhaps both if we are ambitious) ... if we ' re in high school we hope to be- come a Thespian THE IMAGINARY INVALID, LADIES IN RETIREMENT, AND THE CRADLE SONG — this years major shows . . . one acts every week to keep us busy with make-up, poster paint, flat washings, learning lines, and directing we Bereans like athletics, too . . . remember those years of goldthwait . . . there ' s danc- ing now, and badminton has always been a good game . . . playing basketball is much more exciting than just watching, and it ' s loads of fun to break a record in track (this year ' s team rated second in Cross Country at Louis- ville ) . . . our coaches have their job to build health and pleasure through physical exercise i i -se In Photography Club we find a chance to cultivate a wonderful hobby which may someday become more than a hobby . . the graceful folk dances live in Country Dancers . . . we look forward to the Moun- tain folk festival in the spring . . . Alpha Zeta Literary society begins its year with a colorful initiation and a torchlit pajama parade and continues with fiery debates . . . in Rural Life Club we learn to carry back to our communities some of the oppor- tunities we find in Berea . . . jodhpurs, slacks, overalls, dungarees, all hiking one Sunday afternoon down the road toward the pinnacles . . . climbing around Indian Fort . . . listening to vespers . . . watching the sun set behind the hills as the women ' s glee club sang taps . . . shoving down the mountain for supper . . . hiking home in the moonlight to hot showers . . . and bed Lowly and humbled we slump before you, amazed and appalled by the task we undertook. It didn ' t take long to learn which room was the Chimes office, but some of the other knowledge came harder — galleys, halftones, metrolite, let come, burnish it, square the thing, how many ' picies ' to a page — well, you ' ll never know and neither will we. The pictures of the staff of the ' 44 Chimes are not all on this page; you ' ll have to look through the book. The pictures were taken, developed, and printed by Bill Steinberger, Miss Crabb, Seamen Murphy, Gibbs, Cowen, and Rosenthal, Mr. Walters, Clyde Flannery, and you snapshot-shooters. Atchley, Chafin, Sherman, and Clancy rounded out the picture business and credit goes to all of them for long hours of patience and work. Copy came from the pens, pencils, and typewriters of B. J. Knotts, Virginia Osborne, Mary Butler, Speck and Adler. It was proofread by Loree, Covilli, by Eldred and Frances and Lenore. The business angle was handled by Annabel Brake, and that gal did solid work on the rest of the book, too. Then there was June working on circulation, Dutch running off to John and Oilier, six-foot Baas shooing in ads, Nancy with her squirrels; the help of Argie, Lucille, rounders, identifiers, and numerous other interested faculty and students of our staff. We thank you . . . every one. The Editor Eva Nell Whitaker, Editor Annabel Brake, Business Manager SENIOR BIOGRAPHIES ALTIZER, ADA LILLIAN — PAF 2,3,4; Sec- Treas. 4; Pan American 2,3,4. ANDERS, AGNES — YWCA 1,2,3,4; CE 2,3; Home Ec Club 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club; Berea Players 3. ARMFIELD, EVA ANN— YWCA 1,2; Berea Play- ers 3,4. ATCHLEY, MARGARET LEIGH — Harmonia 1,2 Union Church Choir 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 3 Treas. 3; Home Ec Club 3,4; UD Senate 4 Board of Governors 4; Berea Players 1 ,2,3 Danforth Chapel Choir 1,2; LD Social Com- mittee 1 ; UD Association of Women, Pres. 4; Chimes Staff 4; Modern Dance 3; Project Committee Chairman 1; WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. ARLEDGE, FRED— Ag Union 1; Winner of Fresh- man-Sophomore Judging Contest. BARR, EVELYN— Harmonia 2,3,4; YWCA 1,2,3,4, Cabinet 4; Home Ec Club 3,4, Treas. 3; PAF 3,4, WAA 1,2,3; WAA Board 2; Pi Alpha 3,4; Board of Governors 3,4, Pres. 4; Berea Players 3; Outlying Rural Work 3; WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. BARNETT, NANCY— Berea Players 3; PAF 1; YWCA 1. BECK, OLGA— YWCA 1,2,3,4; Photo Club 3; Out- ing Club 3, Sec. 3, Basketball 2,3; Harmonia, 1; Council of Association of UD women 3, Sec. 3. BELL, BERTHA— YWCA 1; Berea Players 1,2,3,4; Vanguards 3; Wallpaper Staff 4; PAF 1,2,3,4, Pres. 4, German Club 3; Delta Phi Alpha 3,4. BELL, HELEN— YWCA 3,4; Education Club 4; French Club 4. BLACKBURN, EVADNA MITCHELL — Berea Players 3,4; WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. BOOHER, LURINE— YWCA 1; CE 1,2,3,4; Home Ec Club 3,4; Berea Players 2; Basketball 1,2,3,4. BRADY, VERNA MAE— YWCA 1,2,3,4; Outlying Sunday School Work 1 ,2; Berea Players 3,4; Student Cooperative 1,2,3; Westervelt Shop 1,2,3. BRAKE, ANNABEL— Berea Players 1,2,3,4; LD Senate 2; Freshman Class Sec; Institutional Social Committee 4; Senior Class Pres. 4; YWCA 1,2,3,4; Chimes Staff, Business Man- ager 4, Y Guide Business Manager 4; WAA 1,2,3; Modern Dance 3; WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COL- LEGES. BROWN, WANDA EVELYN— Berea Players 1 ; Harmonia 2; Life Saving 2,3,4; Pan American 3; French Club 1; YWCA 2. BUCKLES, VIVIAN LEE — Berea Players 1,2 YWCA 1,2,3; PAF 1,2,3,4, Vice-pres. 4 Pan American League 3,4; Vanguards 4 Modern Dance 2,3; Pi Gamma Mu 4. BURTON, EDSEL H — Pi Alpha 3; YMCA 4. BUTLER, MARY— Berea Players 1,2,3,4; YWCA 1,2,3,4; Social Committee 1,2; Tau Kappa Alpha 2,3; Twenty Writers 4; Board of Governors 3, Sec. 3; Wallpaper Staff 4 French Club 1 ; PAF 3; Union Church Choir 4 Council of UD Association of Women 4 Chimes Staff 4. CAMPBELL, REVA EDITH— YWCA 1,5; WAA 3; Berea Players 4; Home Ec Club 4,5, Sec. 5; Ag-Home Ec. Club 4. CARSON, KATHERINE YWCA 3. — Berea Players 3,4; CHANDLER, DOROTHY ALICE— Berea Players 4; Home Ec Club 3,4; CE 1,2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 3; YWCA 3,4; Basketball 1,2,3,4; WAA 1,2,3,4. CLARK, EDMONIA ELLA— Berea Players 1; Har- monia 1,2,4; LD Senate 1; Ag-Home Ec Club 3,4; Home Ec Club 3,4; Modern Dance 2; CE. 1,2. COATES, MARY ELIZABETH— YWCA 1,2,3,4; Cabinet 3,4; UD Senate 3; Home Ec Club 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 3; Harmonia 2; Mod- ern Dance 2. CROUSER, JEAN— CE 3,4,5, Treas. 5; Berea Players 3,5; YWCA 1,2; Home Ec Club 3,5; Ag-Home Ec Club 3,4. CROUSER, LENORE— CE 3,4, Berea Players 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 3; Home Ec Club 4; Har- monia 4. DAVIS, BENJAMIN H. — Pan American League 3; Berea Players 3,4; YMCA 4; Country Dancers 3,4; Track 1. DENHAM, JOHN— Band 1,2; Orchestra 2,3,4. DOUGLAS, ELIZABETH — Union Church Choir 3,4; Varsity Women ' s Glee Club 3,4; YWCA 3; Royal Collegians 3; Berea Players 4; Basketball 3,4; Outlying Sunday School Work 3 EDWARDS, VELMA ERNESTINE— Berea Players 3,4; Harmonic 4, YWCA 3,4; Pi Alpha 4; French Club 4. EDWARDS, ELLA FLORENCE— YWCA 1,2,3,4; Berea Players 1,2; Harmonia 2,3,4; Home Ec. Club 4; Ag-Home Ec Club 3. ELDER, IDA— YWCA 3,4; Harmonia 4; Berea Players 4; Home Ec Club 4; PAF 4. FIELD, NANCY— Varsity Women ' s Glee Club 3,4, Pres. 4; Harmonia 3,4; Chimes Staff 4; Wallpaper Staff 4. FITZPATRICK, IMOGENE MAE — Harmonia 1,2,3,4; Berea Players 1; YWCA 1,2,3; Modern Dance 2, Pi Gamma Mu 3,4. FLANNERY, CLYDE CECIL— YMCA 1,2,3,4, Pres. 3,4; Debate 3; UD Senate 4; UD Board of Governors 4; WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. FLETCHER, PAUL— YMCA 1,2,3,4. FOLEY, HAZEL— Home Ec Club 3,4, Pres. 4; Ag- Home Ec Club 3, Vice-pres. 3; YWCA 2,3. FOX, ALICE CLAYBORNE — Basketball 1,2,3, Captain 1,2,3; Modern Dance 2,3; WAA Pres 3; Ag-Home Ec Club 1,2,3,4, Sec. 3; Berea Players 1 ; Harmonia 4; Home Ec Club 3,4. FREEMAN, MADGE ELAINE— Education Club 4; Berea Players 3,4; PAF 4; Harmonia 4; YWCA 4. GILLIAM, MARJORIE— Berea Players 1,4, CE 1,2, Basketball 1,2,3,4; Home Ec Club 3,4; Ag- Home Ec Club 3. GOFORTH, DOROTHY ROSALYN— Home Ec Club 4; Ag-Home Ec Club 3; YWCA 3,4, UD Women ' s Association 4; Social Committee Chairman 4; UD Social Committee 4. HATCHETTE, MARY HAZEL— YWCA 3,4; Berea Players 3,4; PAF 4, French Club 4. HAYS, EARL THOMAS, JR. — Band 1,2. HENDERSON, FRANCES RUTH— Berea Players 3,4; Home Ec Club 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 3, UD Women ' s Association 3; Modern Dance 3; Danforth Creative Prize Winner 3; PAF 4. HILLMAN, ELLEN ELIZABETH — Berea Players 3,4; YWCA 3,4, Vanguards 4, Class Sec. 4. HORNE, MARIE ELIZABETH — UD Senate 3,4, Sec. 3,4; Berea Players 1,2.3, Home Ec. Club 3,4, Vice-pres. 4, Ag-Home Ec Club 3; Out- ing Club 2,3; Photography Club 1 ,2. HOLLYFIELD, GRACE GERTRUDE- PAF 4, Berea Players 4. -YWCA 3,4; HUBBARD, JOHN W— Ag. Union 1,2,3,4; Ag- Home Ec Club 3,4; YMCA 1,3,4; Intramural Basketball 1,2,3, Intramural Football 1,2,3; Varsity Track 3. HUBBARD, THOMAS PLEASANT, JR.— Swimming 1,2; UD Senate 3,4; Sigma Pi Sigma 3,4, Sec. 4; YMCA 1,2,3,4; Pi Alpha 2,3,4; Berea Players 3,4; Photography Club 1; UD Social Committee 4. KEEN, KATHARINE F. — YWCA 1,2,3,4, Home Ec Club 3,4; UD Women ' s Association 3; WAA 1,2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 3; Modern Dance 2; Class Treas. 4. KEEN, POLLY MARIE— Harmonia 1; Home Ec Club 4; CE 1,2,3, Cabinet 3; Berea Players 2,3,4; Outing Club 2,3; Ag-Home Ec. Club 3; Basketball 1,3; Modern Dance 3. KNOTTS, BETTY JO— Delta Phi Alpha 3,4; French Club 1 ; Berea Players 1 ,2; Harmonia 3; Twenty Writers 3, Sec. 3; LD Social Com- mittee 1; Institutional Social Committee 4; UD Board of Governors 4, Sec. 4; Life Saving 2; Modern Dance 2,3; Chairman Project Com- mittee 2. KUYKENDALL, NANCY ELIZABETH 1,4; Berea Players 1,3,4. YWCA LANKFORD, ANN— Harmonia 1,2; YWCA 3,4; WAA 1,2,3,4, Treas. 2, Vice-pres. 3; Life Saving 1 ; Country Dancers 4; Folk Club 4. LOFTIS, MONNA ELOISE — Harmonia 2,3,4; Berea Players 1 ,2,4; Home Ec Club 4; Outing Club 3; Basketball 2; YWCA 1,2,3,4. MOORE, DEWEY — CE 2; YMCA 2,3,4; Pi Alpha 3,4; Sigma Pi Sigma 3,4, Treas. 4. MORTON, JUNE ROSEBUD— YWCA 1,2,3,4; Berea Players 2,3,4; PAF 2,4; UD Women ' s Council 3; LD Social Committee 2; Delta Phi Alpha 3,4; German Club 1,2; Modern Dance 2; Co-op 3; Chimes Staff 4. MUNCY, MARY LOUISE— LD Glee Club 1,2 Union Church Choir 1,2; Berea Players 3,4 Harmonia 1,2; Westervelt 2,3,4; CE 2 Varsity Women ' s Glee Club 3,4. NESTOR, BILLIE MARIE— Berea Players 1,2,3,4, Vice-pres. 4; YWCA 1,2,3, Vice-pres. 3; Bird Club 2. NICKELS, MARGARET RUTH — Wallpaper Staff 2,3; Co-op 1,2; Berea Players 3,4; Wester- velt 1,2,3,4; WAA 2; YWCA 4; Folk Club 2. NOSS, MARGARET GEISSINGER— YWCA 1,2,3,4, Cabinet 3; Home Ec Club 3,4; Basketball 1,2,4; Life Saving 2; Ag-Home Ec Club 3; LD Senate 2. O ' DANIEL, SARAH LEE— Ballad Singers 2,3; LD Glee Club 1 ; Education Club 3,4; Harmonia 1; Berea Players 1; YWCA 1,2; Bird Club 3. ORTH, ESTHER— Berea Players 1,3,4; Bird Club 1,2,3,4, Sec. 2,3, Pres. 4; Delta Phi Alpha 3,4; Pi Alpha 3,4, Pres. 4, YWCA 3,4. OSBORNE, VIRGINIA L— Berea Players 2,3,4; Twenty Writers 2,3,4, Pres. 4; Wallpaper Staff 2,3,4, Editor 3,4; PAF 4; Chimes Staff 4; French Club 2; YWCA 2,3,4. PEASLEE, RUTH— YWCA 1,2,3,4, Sec. 2, Pres. 3; Berea Players 2,3,4; Harmonia 1,2; Van- guards 3; UD Senate 3; Delta Phi Alpha 3,4; WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. PENNINGTON, ELDRED— YWCA 1,2; Basketball 1,2.3,4; Berea Players 2,3,4; Education Club 3,4; WAA 2,3,4. POWELL, AGNES EVELYN— YWCA 3,4, Cabinet 3,4; Home Ec Club 3,4; Vanguards 3; Berea Plovers 3,4; PAF 4; Harmonia 4. REBER, ALTA MAE DAVIS— Berea Players 1,2; Home Ec Club 3,4; German Club 1; YWCA 1,2 REBER, ELWOOD F. — UD Senate 4; Berea Players 1; FOR 2,3,4; Intramural Football 3. SHUPE, MARYANNA— CE 1,2,3, Treas. 3; YWCA 3.4; Berea Players 3,4; Harmonia 1,2; Ag- Home Ec Club 3, Home Ec Club 4; PAF 4; Outlying Work 2,3. SINCLAIRE, LOREE ELIZABETH— YWCA 1,2,3,4, Cabinet 2,3,4; French Club 1,2,3,4, Sec. 3, Program Chairman 4; Berea Players 1,2,3,4, Sec. 4; WAA 1,2,3; Harmonia 1; Bird Club 3,4; LD Social Committee 1,2; Project Com- mittee 4; Vanguards 3; PAF 4; Tau Delta Tau 4, Sec. 4; Women ' s House Government 3; Wallpaper Staff 4; Chimes Staff 4; Ora- torical Contest 2. SMITH, RUBY LEE— CE 1,2; Bird Club 3, Vice- pres. 3; Berea Players 3, Harmonia 2,3,4; Home Ec Club 4; Danforth Chapel Choir 1,2; Union Church Choir 1,2; Basketball 2,3. STEINBERGER, CLARENCE H. — Twenty Writers 1,2; YMCA 1,2,4, Cabinet 4; Student Co-op 2,3; Vanguards 1,2,3,4; Men ' s Glee Club 1,2,3; Phi Delta 2,3; Berea Players 4; Chimes Staff 4; Country Dancers 4; UD Board of Governors 4, Vice-pres. 4; UD Men ' s Hall Union 4, Chairman 4; UD Senate 4. STEINBERGER, WILLIAM W. — Photography Club 1,2; LD Glee Club 1; Bird Club 2,3,4; YMCA 1,3,4; Sigma Pi Sigma 3,4, Sec. 3, Pres. 4; Men ' s Glee Club 2.3, Sec. -Treas. 3; Pi Alpha 3,4, Vice-Pres. 4; Chimes Staff 4; Country Dancers 4; UD Senate 4, UD Board of Governors 4. STEWART, JEAN DODSON— YWCA 1,2,3,4; Class Vice-Pres. 4; Berea Players 1 ; Home Ec Club 4; Basketball 2; Harmonia 4. THOMAS, LUELLA RUTH— YWCA 1,2,3,4; PAF 2,3,4; Vanguards 3,4, Chairman 4, Berea Players 2,3,4; Harmonia 1 ; Union Church Choir 2,4. THOMSON, NORA LOU— Berea Players 1,2,3,4; WAA 3, YWCA 1,2,3,4; Outing Club 2,3; Vanguards 3,4. 12TH GRADE BIOCRAPHIES ABNEY, DELIA -Girl Reserves 2; YWA 3; YWCA 3,4 ACKER, BETTY— Berea Players 2; Glee Club 1. ADKINS, LORA ANNETTE— Girl Reserve 1,2, De- votional Chairman 1, Vice-pres. 2; Prayer Group 2,3,4; YWCA 3,4, CE 3. TRUMBO, DOROTHY L — German Club 1 ; YWCA 2,3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 3; Home Ec Club 3,4; PAF 4. WALTERS, LETTA— Berea Players 4; Home Ec Club 3,4, Sec. 4; Ag-Home Ec Club 3; YWCA 1,2,4; Harmonia 2,3,4; Modern Dance 2,3. WARHOLM, NELL ELIZABETH— YWCA 1,2,3,4; Berea Players 1,2,3; Bird Club 2; PAF 2,3,4; Pan American League 3; Modern Dance 2,3. WASHBURN, BENJAMIN— YMCA 3. WATKINS, MARIE— YWCA 3,4; PAF 4; Pan American League 3; Vanguards 3. WHITAKER, EVA NELL— Harmonia 1; Berea Players 1,2,3,4, Pres. 4; Women ' s Glee Club 1,3, Trio 3; Chimes Staff 4, Editor 4; Union Church Choir 2,3; UD Senate 4; LD Social Committee 1 ; Alpha Psi Omega 4; Tau Delta Tau 4; Twenty Writers 4; WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COL- LEGES. WHITMAN, LENORE LEE— Berea Players 1,2,3,4; Harmonia 1,2,3; Vanguards 3,4; LD Senate 1,2; LD Social Committee 1,2; Chimes Staff 3,4; YWCA 1,2,3,4; PAF 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 2,3; Modern Dance 2,3; Tau Delta Tau 4; UD Social Committee 3,4; Westervelt 4; Pi Gamma Mu 3,4; WHO ' S WHO IN AMER- ICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. WILSON, FRIEDA BEGLEY— Berea Players 3. WILSON, WILMA FRANCES— Harmonia 1,2; Women ' s Glee Club 2,3,4; LD Glee Club 1. WYATT, ROBERT CAM— YMCA 2,3,4; CE 2; Ag. Union 1,2,3,4, Sec. 3. BENT, ELEANOR McVAY— Berea Players 2,3,4; CE 4, Glee Club 1; Union Church Choir 1,2.3,4; LD Senate 3. BIGGERSTAFF, LEWIS— Swimming 1,2,3; Inter- mural Basketball and Speedball Winning Team 2,3; Basketball 4. BLAIR, NILA MAE— YWCA 3; LD Senate 2,3, Basketball 2. BUCHANAN, FRANCES— Band 1. BURTON, SALLY— Girl Reserve 1; Rural Life Club 4. CADY, EUGENE LYMAN— Berea Players 1,2, Technical Director 2; Union Church Choir 2; YMCA 2, Royal Collegians 1. CAINS, JAMES— YMCA 4; AZ 4. CAMPBELL, RUBY— Rural Life Club 4. CAUDILL, LIDA— Berea Players 3; Basketball 3; YWCA 3. CLARK, JESSIE— Berea Players 1. CRIPPEN, ROBERT D— Berea Players 3; YMCA 1,2,3,4; Basketball 3. DANIELS, ESTELLE— EDWARDS, FRANCES— YWCA ship Group 1 . World Fellow- ELLISON, WILMA — YWCA 1,2,3; Rural Life Club 2,3; Folk Club 2; CE 1,2. EMERSON, DOROTHY JEAN— YWCA, Cabinet 1. HAMBLIN, MONA— Girl Reserve 12 Cabinet 2: Rural Life Club 4: CE 3. HARDY, JEANNE E— Glee Club 1,2,3; Girl Re- serves 1,2; YWCA 3 4. HESSELGESSER, JAMES M. — Berea Players 2; YMCA 3; Glee Club 1; Hi-Y 1. HOGAN, ARLETT A— Prayer Group 3,4; YWCA 3,4. HOOKER, GERRY — Berea Players 3,4; House Council 4; Girl Reserve, Cabinet 2. HYMER, GENEVA KATHLENE— Berea Players 3,4 JENNINGS, ARTIE ANN— Girl Reserve 1; Basket- Ball 2,3,4; Berea Players 3; YWCA 3. JONES, FAIRIE— Glee Club 1. KEYSER, A. CHARLES— Union Church Choir 1; YMCA 2; Band 1 . KILBOURNE, SUE MARIE— Chairman of Social Committee 3; Union Church Choir 1 . KRANOLD, JOHANNA— Harmonia 4; YWCA 4. LAMBERT, DEAN WARREN— Orchestra 3,4; Band 3,4; Glee Club 3. LANG, DeKERN— YMCA 4. LAPSLEY, ANNA MARY— CE 3,4; Rural Life Club 3,4. LITTLE, CHARLES STRATTON— YMCA 3,4; In- termural Basketball 3; Forensics 3; Rural Life 3,4; Country Dancers 4; LD Senate 3. LOCKHART, JOYCE— Harmonia 1 YWCA 1 : CE 1 . Choir 1 LUCAS, INEZ- MITCHELL, JACK R— YMCA 1; Harmonia 1. MORGAN, ELEANOR— Berea Players 2,3,4; Glee Club 1; Union Church Choir 1,2,3; Thespians 3,4; Danforth Chapel Choir 3,4. MULLINS, GENEVA— Berea Players 3; Basketball 3; YWCA 3. McWILLIAMS, MELBA— Band 2,3,4; Berea Play- ers 3,4; CE 3,4. REFO, ALICE- REYNOLDS, ELLEN — Berea Players 4; Basketball 1,2,3,4; CE 4. RIDLEHOOVER, JOAN — Berea Players 1,2; Union Church Choir 1 . ROPER, JOSEPHINE— Berea Players 1,2; Sec- ondary Forensics 2; Glee Club 1 ,2. RUTH, EARL— Hi-Y 2,3; Baseball 1,2,3; Basket- ball 2; Intramural Champions 3. RYAN, GLEMA — Berea Players 2. SMITH, KENDRIC— Band 1,2; Orchestra 2; YMCA 2; Union Church Choir 2; Berea Play- ers 1 ,2; LD Senate 1 ,2; Chimes 2. SMITH, RUTH MARY — Union Church Choir 1,2,3,4; Country Dancers 1,2,3,4; Glee Club 1; Berea Players 3,4; Thespians 3,4; Forensics 3; Winner in Forensics Finals of Prose Literature Division in High School Speech Festival of Kentucky. STEWART, PAT— Berea Players 1,2. SUITER.. BETTY CAROLYN— CE 3, Treas. 3; Union Church Choir 3; Berea Players 4. THOMAS MARY BETH — Berea Players 1 . THORNE, MAGGIE — Girl Reserve 1,2; YWCA 3. TROUTMAN, KATHY— Berea Players 3; Basket- ball 2,3. VODOLA, ELIZABETH— Union Church Choir 4; Harmonia 4. WEEKES, ELEANOR— Berea Players 4; Union Church Choir 1,2,3; Orchestra 1,2,3; Glee Club 1 ; Forensics 2,3,4; CE 4; Country Dancers 1,2; LD Senate 4; Harmonia 3. McCOUN, LILLIAN LOUISE- WILLIAMS, DAVID, JR.— Band 4. our advertisers when you buy, remember these friends of Berea. friends of the Chimes . . . COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND for that quick breakfast before your 7:30 class, make it — ' coffee ' n doughnuts THE DOUGHNUT CORPORATION 393 Seventh Avenue New York City WHEELERS Kentucky ' s finest furniture store Lexington, Kentucky DRAPER MEMORIAL Be Better Fitted in BAYNHAM ' S Shoes of Distinction 135 E. Main Street Lexington, Kentucky Compliments of BRYAN-HUNT CO. Incorporated Lexington, Kentucky ■■■LITTLE MAMA ' S Compliments of BEREA DRY CLEANERS E. L. EDWARDS, Prop. Cleaning — Pressing — Tailoring Special Attention to Student Work Short St. Phone 328 Compliments of THE BEREA BANK AND TRUST CO. Short Street A. F. SCRUGGS Insurance Agency Berea, Ky. The ch : ef engineer must use quality products; for thai reason Mr. George Dick, chief engineer of Berea College, uses products made by THE JOHNSON ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. J oons. -JcujExn pijk kofi Products of Student Industries Located on the Corner of Main Street Opposite Union Church Under Berec College Management — Berea, Kentucky For all occasions, the year round . Say It With Flowers From RICHMOND GREEN HOUSES J. P. Reichspfarr Phone 838 Richmond Kentucky Compliments of a friend Compliments of the MIAMI MARGARINE COMPANY Motion Picture Entertainment BEREA THEATER Compliments of VILAS-MAGES COMPANY Chicago Illinois 500 Varieties MONARCH FINER FOODS ' Compliments of a friend ' « s x, ,« TO A SWELL CLASS AND A GREAT SCHOOL PAPER PACKAGE COMPANY INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA X ' V ' x ' ' THE CHIMES of 1944 has been produced by skilled craftsmen of the Berea College Press with the help of many student employees. Ever since 1930 the CHIMES has been produced annually by this same Printing House INSIST ON MAGNOLIA MEAT PRODUCTS FROM THE— EMMART— PACKING— COMPANY Louisville Kentucky TO BEREA .... Our sincere appreciation for the many years of pleasant associations we have enjoyed as sup- pliers of Boxes for Berea Beaten Biscuits and other Bakery Products. The GARDNER-RICHARDSON Co. Middletown, Ohio Manufacturers of Folding Cartons — and Displays Compliments of MADISON SOUTHERN NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST CO. Member of the Federal Deposit Corp. Richmond, Kentucky The thorns from which we make B. C. N. phonograph needles come from Burma, and are now unobtainable; but we expect a shipment SOON. READ HARDING NEW YORK, N.Y. John F. Dean Edward L. Roberts JOHN F. DEAN AGENCY Insurance Berea Bank Trust Co. Bldg. Phone 35 Berea Kentucky One of the oldest log schoolhouses still in use, it is the scene of the Renfro Valley Gatherin ' , heard every Sunday morning at 8:15 over WHAS, Louisville, Kentucky, and the CBS Southern Network. This program, sponsored by Ballard and Ballard, aims at the expansion and perpetuation of a community meeting of many years standing in the Renfro Valley Settlement — The Renfro Valley Gatherin ' . Our Merchandise Is Sold At The College Store SIMON ADES SONS CO. Louisville, Kentucky FINE PAPER SPECIALTIES BETTY BRITE White Doilies, Tinted Doilies, Place Mats, Shelf Papers, Baking Cups AMERICAN Drinking Cups, Porcell Cups, Napkins, Ramekins, Tray Covers, Candy Box Findings AMERICAN LACE PAPER CO. Milwaukee 12, Wis. MJWR J i -i i Meet you at T. P ' s Beautiful Shoes for Women BROWN ' S BOOTERIE 138 W. Main St. Lexington, Kentucky Also Louisville, Ky., Knoxville, Tenn., and Chattanooga, Tenn. AMERICAN COTTON PRODUCTS CO. ANYTHING MADE OF COTTON 2516 SOUTH DAMEN AVE. CHICAGO - ILLINOIS Compliments of BEREA NATIONAL BANK Compliments of BOONE TAVERN BARBER SHOP Surgical Supplies The Crocker-Fels Company Cincinnati, Ohio Compliments of BEREA MOTOR CO. Berea, Kentucky Compliments of OWEN McKEE THE LADIES ' STORE Richmond, Kentucky Eat here anytime BLUE GRASS HOTEL CAFE Home of good food Rooms Apartments 3erea, Ky. Phone 104 Compliments of Berea 5c to $1.00 Store E. T. HAYS SONS Grade A Milk West End Phone 32 TUXEDO WITH EGO by Carolyn Soft Blue, 100 per cent Wove Fabric Furred with a handsome skunk tuxedo! $1 19.00 plus tax B. B. SMITH CO., INC. Lexington, Kentucky Chestnut E. E. GABBARD Eat Here or We Both Starve Open 24 Hours CARTER ' S COLLEGE INN Best Coffee In Town Sandwiches Short Orders Short Street CONCRETE BUILDING BLOCK and CONCRETE BUILDING TILE Lexington Concrete Products Co. Lexington Kentucky PLUMBER ' S SUPPLY COMPANY LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY Plumbing — Heating — Mill Supplies Kohler Plumbing Fixtures — - Weil McLain Heating UNUSUAL GIFTS • • • • BY BEREA COLLEGE STUDENT INDUSTRIES AT BEREA, KENTUCKY BBREA COLLEGE STUDENT .INDUSTRIES BEREA K.Y. Compliments of ADES-LEXINGTON DRY GOODS CO. 249-255 E. Main Street Lexington, Kentucky T p r A Means of Buying through a J Inc. Single Source Theatre Production Service All Supplies and Equipment for the Theatre 1430 Broadway Write for Catalogue New York City CRACKER JACK P. D. Q. FEEDS Give Cracker Jack Results P.D.Q. FERNCLIFF FEED GRAIN CO. Incorporated Louisville, Ky. Ask Your Dealer Food Products of Quality Pickles, Preserves, Jams, Jellies and Fruit Butters LUTZ SCHRAMM INC. Pittsburgh, Pa. Compliments of LACQUER SPECIALTIES, Inc. Newark, New Jersey SOUTH KENTUCKY PIPE LINE CO. High grade refined petroleum products Somerset, Ky. Compliments of ZARINC ' S MILL Use Zaring ' s Patent Flour Richmond Kentucky Compliments of STATE BANK AND TRUST CO. Members of the Federal Deposit Corp. Member of the Federal Reserve System Richmond, Kentucky KRIM-KO COMPANY Itoottp aJaurru Compliments of Krim-Ko Chocolate Flavored Drink A PRIVATE HOTEL WITH ALL MODERN CONVENIENCES A REAL HOME ATMOSPHERE Chicago, III. Managed and Controlled by Berea College Compliments of ASHLAND HOME TELEPHONE COMPANY Inc. Serving Forty Kentucky Communities Compliments of RIVERS ' SHOE SHOP Short St. Phone 3 1 2 ELLIOTT COMPANY Manufacturers of power plant equipment, including steam turbines, turbine-generators, motors and generators, deaerators and feedwater heaters, condensers, steam jet ejectors, desuperheaters, strainers, tube celaners, su- per chargers for Diesel engines, etc. Plants in JEANNETTE, PA.,. RIDGWAY, PA., and SPRINGFIELD, OHIO We Are Headquarters For GOOD LUMBER Mahogany — White Pine — Cherry Birch — Poplar — Red Gum — Maple White Oak — Red Oak — Magnolia Boat Material — Cypress Kiln Dried Stock For Immediate Service We Will Appreciate Your Inquiries Charles F. Shiels Co. Cincinnati, Ohio compliments of a friend IT R-J . 5RTER-HOORE PC — ORTER-MOORE PQRTER-MOQI I - E PORT ' ' - PORTER-MOORE PORTER-I ' OORE Stationers THE JENNER COMPANY ( Incorporated) Louisville, Kentucky Engravers PADAWER CO. Filling Materials 24 Stone Street New York 4, N. Y. Compliments of BLACK BROS. BUS LINES Whether - It ' s Badminton or Tennis JlJi If At . , Is the Gut of Champions ' Call us for Special Trips Phone 210 or Nearest Bus Station Richmond, Kentucky CALUMET TEA COFFEEE COMPANY Chicago BUY WAR BONDS FIRST! IF YOU MUST HAVE FURNITURE— THEN SEE SLEEPY-HEAD HOUSE ' The South ' s Most Complete Factory-To-You Furniture Store Retail Division of Southern Bedding Co., Incorporated LEXINGTON, KY. We Work That You May Sleep MID-WEST THEATRE SUPPLY CO., INC. Cincinnati, Ohio Everything for the Theatre A tribute to fashion-wise students who know that it ' s smart to shop fashion-right OFFICE EQUIPMENT COMPANY, INC. COMPLETE OFFICE OUTFITTERS Also Complete Line of SCHOOL FURNITURE AND SUPPLIES 1 17-125 South Fourth Wabash 5161 Louisville, Ky. Branch Store 128 West Short Street Phone 3372 Lexington, Ky. PAREN- INDEX SYSTEM of complete name index- ing SI. 00. Description of system sent on request without charge. Published by the author, Miss A. L. D. Moore, 149 Broadway, New York 6, N. Y. Compliments of a friend CARRY ON! We, who work on the home front as part of America ' s great manufacturing system, have a dual goal ... to supply our Army and Navy with the materials of war ... to supply our country ' s workers with essential civilian needs. We pledge ourselves to carry on faithfully in this job of winning the final victory! SHERMAN PAPER PRODUCTS CORPORATION Newton Upper Falls, Massachusetts Los Angeles, California Branches in New York and Chicago Manufacturers of Economy-Plus paper products for baking and packag- ing . . . Corroflex and V-Lines for packing war materials. Congratulations to the Graduation Class Lee Clay Products Co. Manufacturers of Septic Tanks Architectural Chimney Tops Salt Glazed Sewer Pipe Fire Brick and Grate Backs Fire Clay Flue Linings Agricultural Drain Tile Your Farm Department Uses Our Drain Tiles and Sewer Pipe CLEARFIELD ROWAN COUNTY KENTUCKY STOVES AND RANGES RESTAURANT RANGES GAS GRIDDLES FOR COAL, WOOD GAS AND OIL ALSO BOTTLED GAS For Schools — Colleges Restaurants — etc. DOMESTIC STOVES CANNON HEATERS HOT BLAST HEATERS SCHOOL ROOM HEATERS Buy Wood and Coal Heaters to Save Oil and Supplement Present Equipment ALL SALES SUBJECT TO LIMITATION AND RATIONING ORDERS HART MANUFACTURING COMPANY INCORPORATED LOUISVILLE KENTUCKY Compliments of . . CRANE COMPANY Compliments of friends MARINO BROS. WHOLESALE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES IRVINE STREET RICHMOND, KENTUCKY Compliments of CENTRAL FRANKLIN PROCESS CO. Chattanooga, Tenn. Yarn Dvers and Colored Yarns. JOHN SCHWARZ Fine Footwear 754 756 McMillian St. Cincinnati, Ohio Modern Beauty Salon Short Street Lowe Brothers paints varnishes Quality Unsurpassed Since 1870 Compliments of J. W. PURKEY SONS Where Bereans Save BEREA, KENTUCKY Nu-Way Cleaners Where the Nation Shops and Saves Over 1600 Stores J. C. PENNY COMPANY Richmond, Kentucky Compliments of FROM DORIS PIATT A BOOSTER OF SHOP CLEAN SPORTS Compliments of LERMAN BROS. KNOWN FOR BETTER VALUES Richmond, Kentucky TO OUR MILLIONS OF VALUED CUSTOMERS TYPEWRITERS are available for rental to anyone. MAINTENANCE SERVICE, from coast to coast in 366 cities is in complete and efficient operation for all makes of typewriters. RIBBONS, CARBON ROLLS AND CARBON PAPER— Complete lines are available for all makes of machines. UNDERWOOD ELLIOTT FISHER COMPANY One Park Avenue, New York City 1 6, N. Y. In war production on U. S. Carbines, Caliber .30 M-l — Airplane Instruments — Gun Parts — Ammunition Components — Fuses — Primers — and Miscel- laneous Items. The Paniplus Company Compliment ' s of Central Service Station Compliments of Pat ' s Place %WADSWORTlf|b - 1 ECTRlcMFCfelNC Manufacturers of SAFETY SWITCHES DISTRIBUTION PANELS ELECTRIC TIME SWITCHES BROCK-MCVEY CO. Incorporated Distributors of Plumbing, Heating and Tinners ' Supplies Vine and Southeastern Streets Lexington, Ky. Best Wishes for the Class of 1944 DAVIDSON BROTHERS AND CO. Berea, Kentucky MEEKS MOTOR FREIGHT Incorporated Compliments of Here Comes Meeks THE E. T. SLIDER COMPANY 722-724 National Avenue Lexington, Kentucky Louisville Kentucky LOOMS LOOM PARTS LINEN COTTON YARNS COTTON CARPET WARP KRINWOOL RUG FILLER TINSEL New used Reeds — Heddles Harness Frames etc. Books on Hand Weaving HUGHES FAWCETT, INC. Hand Loom Weaving Dept. 1 1 5 Franklin St. New York, 13, N. Y. YARNS For KNITTING and WEAVING for thirty-five years Ask for Sample Cards CLIVEDEN YARN CO. Dept. X 711 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa. THE NEW FISHERIES COMPANY FISH SEA FOODS OYSTERS 324 325 W. Sixth Street Cincinnati, Ohio GREETINGS TO YOU WHO MAKE THOSE DELICIOUS CAKES AT BEREA COLLEGE WE HOPE KOTTEN CAKE MACHINERY HAS BEEN HELPFUL KOTTEN MACHINE CO., INC. BUILDERS OF FINE CAKE BAKERY MACHINERY 170-34th St. BROOKLYN, N. Y. Compliments Of CODELL CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, inc. Winchester, Kentucky Heavy Construction Specialists J. C. Codell W - J Moore J. C. Codell, Jr. M - T - Code J. Scott Talbott H. K. McCormick mmtrttwt  ■■«  r « ■I t . J .. . ■, i I « B ■ . f . - J r ... - . - I . ■t ■. . . r . - r.  ...«•« ,• L MVjill] ■:::■: ■! « '  ■' , , V , , , , l i t  « t i B  t  ,  '  I • ■J ' • 1 r .... ■- -. . . . . • . j i i . • ' • i • . ■, • , I .- ' ; Si ■' ;{ ■■ra ■►.;.( . ' « ■, ' J   ■« • ;;;:::;: Oi O: u NJ = Of oo- li o 1 o m,, i . . i
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