Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY)

 - Class of 1946

Page 1 of 152

 

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1946 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 152 of the 1946 volume:

- VY % m fm.°at ■■■-:■ .■■. its HP $fE35g mm ,-. . ' SMBMgSnKt BSsiS ' fla ' n ffifii -It- -..- ' v ■ H . :• ' .;!- I H ■ ■ -;. I B m ; vA ' ' I ram 91 IS KlM SHKSRiaWI E5 3? ¥B THE CHIMES 1946 PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS BEREA COLLEGE, BEREA, KENTUCKY Joyce Hardin Nancy King Co-Editors Tharon Musser Business Manager WE ARE BEREA, 1946. WE ARE THE STUDENTS WHO HUNG A SERVICE FLAG IN PHELPS STOKES AS A REMINDER THAT THE 1946 CENSUS WAS STILL IN- COMPLETE. NOW WE SEE OUR CLASSMATES RE- TURNING — TO ESTABLISH IN REALITY THE PEACE FOR WHICH THEY FOUGHT. IN VIEW OF THIS, WE DEDICATE OUR CHIMES TO THE FUTURE OF BEREA, AND IN THOSE WHO WILL BUILD THAT FUTURE WE HUMBLY PLACE OUR TRUST. President Francis S. Hut-chins THE CABINET Sitting: Julia Allen, Dean of Upper Division Women; Katharine True, Dean of Lower Division Women; Grace Wright, Dean of Foundation School Women; Adelaide Gundlach, Registrar Standing: Charles Shutt, Dean of Lower Division Men; Francis S. Hutchins, President of Berea College; Albert Weidler, Dean of Labor; Louis Smith, Dean of Upper Division Men. Roy Walters, Dean of Foundation School Men. OUR DEANS Upper Division . . . Julia Allen Dean of Women Louis Smith Dean of Men Lower Division . . . Katharine True Dean of Women Charles N. Shutt Dean of Men Foundation School . . Grace Wright Dean of Women Roy N. Walters Dean of Men ENGLISH . . . Emily Ann Smith Jerome W. Hughes ENGLISH . . . Earl W. Blank John W. Sattler Willis Wager Ernest J. Weekes ENGLISH . . . Maureen Faulkner Emma Reererts Hattie E. Stowe MATHEMATICS . . . Donald W. Pugsley William R. Hutcherson William Roberts PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION W, Gordon Ross George Noss J. Clayton Feaver Ira J. Martin HISTORY POLITICAL SCIENCE Elisabeth Peck Willard Hogan Lee F. Crippen HOME ECONOMICS Marian Kingman Ruth Woods Agnes Aspnes Eunice True PHYSICAL EDUCATION John A. Henderson AGRICULTURE . . . Ray Orr MATHEMATICS . . . Theodore Wright ECONOMICS . . . William E. Newbolt BIOLOGY . . . John S. Bangson Hsi Wang PHYSICAL EDUCATION Kate Forbes Minnie Maude Macaulay CHEMISTRY . . Henry B. Refo Julian H. Capps LANGUAGES . . . Charles E. Pauck Minnie Ledford ECONOMICS . . . Rector Hardin Albert G. Weidler HOSPITAL STAFF . . Dr. John Armstrong Dr. Ruby Helen Paine Dr. Harry Taylor EDUCATION . . . Albert J. Chidester Luther M. Ambrose AGRICULTURE . Claude Spillman Feaster Wolford Howard Monier HOME ECONOMICS Sarah Jane Hunter Jeanne Lindeman GEOLOGY . . . Wilbur G. Burroughs PSYCHOLOGY . Robert Ormsby PHYSICS . . . Waldemar Noll V. D. Roberts MUSIC . . . Margaret Allen HISTORY . . . Orrin L. Keener IF MUSIC . . . Gladys Jameson Celia Kysela Richard Warner Frances Griffin MUSIC . . . Mary Anders Doris Vercoe Jean Vercoe Mulligan Mrs. J. W. Sorrier SOCIOLOGY . . . J. Wesley Hatcher Helen H. Dingman Francis H. Smith LANGUAGES . . . Charlotte P. Ludlum Margaret Chapin Elizabeth Richardson ART . . . Harriet Gill Mary Ela Max Miller FRENCH . . . Hubert Rieben ECONOMICS . . . Clarence Dawson INDUSTRIAL ARTS H. D. Schultz MATHEMATICS . . Ruth G. Simond Mary Emily Sinclair ECONOMICS . . . Esther Beck MATHEMATICS . Edward Taylor In remembrance of Mr. Benton Fielder who served Berea College from 1916 until his death in April, 1945. C ' EST FINI. SOMETIMES RELUCTANTLY, SOMETIMES GLADLY WE HAVE TURNED THE PAGES OF THIS CHAPTER, SEEKING TO HOLD THE IN- EFFABLE SWEETNESS, YET FLEEING THE LONELINESS AND UNCERTAINTY OF THE LONG WAR YEARS. THIS IS THE YEAR WE HAVE REACHED FOR WITH MINDS AND FINGERS THAT LABORED UNTIL THE LONELY SOUND OF MIDNIGHT PASSED AND THE NIGHT WAS QUIET AGAIN WE HAVE RAMBLED ON BEREA ' S HILLS. WE HAVE HELD RAIN IN CUPPED HANDS. WE HAVE TALKED WITH THE WIND. DANCED, DREAMED, LOVED, AND LEARNED WE HAVE ARGUED ABOUT POLITICS AND RELIGION, CLASS PRESIDENTS, ABOUT ALL THE OLD AND NEW PROBLEMS. THE ATOMIC BOMB SCARED US, MADE US CURIOUS, AND SOMETIMES WE WISHED IT HADN ' T HAPPENED. WE HAVE KNOWN THE FULL BEAUTY OF CREATING WITH CLAY, WITH WORDS, WITH MUSIC. WE HAVE FELT THE DESPAIR AND LONELINESS OF WAITING FOR LETTERS WITH MYSTERIOUS A. P. O. ' s. WE HAVE FELT THE GREAT JOY OF SHAPING OURSELVES INTO INDIVIDUALS A LITTLE LESS VAGUE, INTO A PATTERN, A PURPOSE, A DIRECTION THAT IS NOT NARROW, YET CERTAIN AND MEANINGFUL C ' EST FINI. SO MUCH HAS HAPPENED THIS YEAR, THE END OF THE WAR, THE ATOMIC BOMB. AND NOW WE ARE GRADUATING, INDEED, IT IS FINISHED. Senior class officers Bobbie Hillman, Treasurer; Jack Buchanan, President; Florence Elam, Secretary; Tharon Musser, Vice-President. Mary Helen Adkins Huntington, W. Va. A.B., French Brigetti Auerbach New York N. Y. A.B., Chemistry m Dove Altizer Riner, Virginia j HF w i H A.B., Sociology m 3 -  ■. ! Virginia Balden m Harrodsburg, Kentucky B.S., Home Economics SENIORS valine Beck ineville, Ky. .B., Chemistry Aabc Center Boehr lerea, Kentucky V.B., Sociology [athleen Browning isty, Kentucky k.B., Education immie Ruth Burton lamp Hill, Ala. ..B., Sociology ernice Clark Williamson, West Va. S., Home Economics Florence Bcgley Bowlingtown, Kentucky B.S., Home Economics Marion Branum Andersonville, Tenn. A.B., Home Economics Jack Buchanan Barbersville, West Va. B.S., Agriculture Hilda Carter Jesup, Georgia A.B., Hist, and Pol. Sci. Jan Rose Cotton Jeffersontown, Kentucky A.B., Chemistry SENIORS Bob Coyle Crosswhite Berea, Kentucky A.B., English Lillian Davis Jacksboro, Tenn. A.B., History and Pol. Sci. Martin Doctor Chicago, III. A.B., Biology Frank Edwards Barnardsville, N. A.B., Philosophy Rosebelle Elkins North Plainfield, N. A.B., Psychology Helen Davis Beattyville, Ky. A.B., Chemistry Lucille Davis Jacksboro, Tenn. B.S., Home Economics Margaret Duncan Spruce Pine, N.C. A.B., Music Florence Elam Kimball, West Va. B.S., Home Economics Elyna Eller Wilkesboro, N. C. A.B., English SENIORS Amanda Jean Estepp Blackey, Kentucky A.B., Chemistry Elizabeth Fearing Ashland, Kentucky A.B., English Ruby Elliot Fleming Middleburg, Ky. B.S., Home Economics James Wing, Lincoln, Ala. A.B., Agriculture Lucy Goins Morganton, N. C. B.S., Home Economics Ruth Fair Liberty, Ky. A.B., Art Ruth Ferrill Louisville, Ky. A.B., Sociology Helen Forloine Ansted, West Va. B.S., Home Economics Virginia Godbey Salem, Virginia B.S., Home Economics Margaret Ann Graham Berea, Kentucky A.B., Sociology SENIORS Helen Elizabeth Gregg Kingsporr, Tennessee A.B., Physics Roberta Halcomb Viper, Kentucky B.S., Home Economics Jean Harris Pound, Virginia A. B., Chemistry Virginia Henderson Greenville, S. C. A.B., Mathematics Bobbie Irene Hillman Dungannon, Va. A.B., Biology Polly Gregg Kingsport, Tenn. A.B., Hist, and Pol. Sci. Joyce Hardin Spindale, N. C. A.B., English Lois Bassett Hartley Asheville, N. C. A.B., Mathematics Evelyn Hibbard Loyall, Kentucky A.B., Music Leonora A. Hoernlein Baltimore, Maryland A.B., Philosophy WJi :§ SEN IORS ebckah Horton onton, N. C. B ., English zella Hurst Iden, Alabama .S., Home Economics iory Elizabeth Jones enova. West Va. B., Chemistry ancy Carolyn King noxville, Tenn. .B., English sther Werthimer Koff ong Beach, N. J. B., Hist, and Pol. Sci. n c Elizabeth Hunt Gastonia, N. C. A.B., Psychology Kathleen Jett Richmond, Kentucky A.B., Music Nancy Carolyn Killough Mt. Pinson, Alabama A.B., Sociology Frederick W. Kirsch Berea, Ky. B.S., Agriculture Christine La Fon Oneonta, Alabama A.B., Home Economics SENIORS June Lane Clinchport, Va. A.B., Biology Aileen Lewis Roanoke, Virginia A.B., Economics Emogene Money Cane River, N. C. A.B., Hist, and Pol. Sci Alda Ruth Morris Huntsville, Alabama B.S., Home Economics Tharon Musser Burlington, Ky. A.B., English Marie Lay Hazard, Kentucky A.B., Biology Geraldine Lucas Huntington, West Va. B.S., Home Economics Geneva Metzler Matlock Paducah, Ky. B.S., Home Economics Pansy Fern Morton South Shore, Kentucky A.B., Biology Marian Nassau Ashland, Kentucky A.B., Sociology SENIORS Bill Norton Pleasant Hill, Tenn. B.S., Agriculture Ruby Parris Bryson City, N. C. A.B., Religion Mary Pierce Monticello, Ky. A.B., English Betty Jo Rankin Berwind, West Va. A.B., Biology Kathleen Roberts Stocksville, N. C. B.S., Home Economics James O ' Dell Berea, Kentucky A.B., Philosophy Billa Jean Peters Lida, Ke-tucky B.S., Home Economics Helen Pulver Bogota, N. J. A.B., Geology Connie Roberts Concord, N. C. A.B., Home Economics Willadene Rominger Berea, Kentucky A.B., English SENIORS Bonnie Ruth Salisbury Salisbury, Kentucky B.S., Home Economics Ruth Schell Burlington, Ky. A.B., English Ruth Slusher Knoxville, Tenn. A.B., Biology Opalee Smith Leicester, N. C. 8.S., Home Economics Nina Sprinkle Pennington Gap, Va. A.B., Mathematics Ruby Sasser Liberty, Ky. B.S., Home Economics Pauline Sloane Pikeville, Ky. B.S., Home Economics Olga Smith Owingsville, Kentucky A.B., Education Madge Sparks Jonesville, N. C. A.B., Home Economics Mary Stanley Beech Hill, West Va. A.B., Sociology SEN IORS Jane Threlkeld Harrodsburg, Kentucky A.B., Hist, and Pol. Sci. Rosemary Wetzel Caldwell, West Va. A.B., Hist, and Pol. Sci. Fanny Wilder Paint Lick, Kentucky A.B., Chemistry Forrest Vaughn Williams Paintsville, Kentucky A.B., Chemistry Patricia Williams Pikeville, Kentucky A.B., Home Economics Dorothy Tredcnnick Plainville, Conn. A.B., Hist, and Pol. Sci. Dorothy Jean Wheeler Ashland, Kentucky A.B., Hist, and Pol. Sci. Evalee Williams Cincinnati, Ohio A.B., Mathematics Ormar.d Williams Weaverville, N. C. B.S., Agriculture Anna Wills Beaver, West Va. A.B., Mathematics SENIORS Reno Yount Petersburg, West Vo. B.S., Home Economics Nancy Lois Covington Cookeville, Tenn. Elsie Zofer Hicks Stanford, West Va. Alice Kempf Parnell, Iowa Mary Ruth Mills Coeburn, Virginia Rachel Chaffin Hamilton, Ohio Sarah Harr Davis, West Va. Mary Sue Hillman Almyra, Arkansas Fannie Irene Martin Ruffsdale, Penn. Dorothy Russell New Port News, Va. WHEN WE FIRST SLIPPED INTO OUR JEANS, FOUND OUR LOUDEST SHIRT, SAUNT- ERED OFF WITH THE GANG FOR A COKE, WE HAD THE FEELING THAT THIS WAS ONE OF OUR BIG YEARS AT COLLEGE . . . WE PLOWED INTO A U.D HANDBOOK AND FOUND THOSE PRIVILEGES WE ' D HEARD SO MUCH ABOUT . . COULD WE HAVE BEEN A LITTLE SMUG WHEN WE SAID TO THAT SOPHOMORE, WHY, MY DEAR-R, DIDN ' T YOU KNOW— I ' M U.D. ? ADMISSION TO THE LIBRARY STACKS . . . BOARDING HALL, .CROSSROADS .OF THE WORLD, GARDEN SPOT OF THE UNIVERSE . . . GOLDTHWAITE PAST HISTORY HIKES TO ANY OUTPOST . LIGHTS BLAZING IN THEIR GLORY ALL NIGHT . THE TYM- PANI OF DISH PANS NO LONGER MEANING CHIPPED NAIL POLISH AND A FIFTY YARD SPRINT TO DRAPER IN THE PIN-STRIPED APRON. GOOD-BYE TO THE WAR-TIME ERA . . . GOOD-BYE TO THE NAVY— WHITE CAPS AMD BOOKS DEPOSITED ALONG THE WALL IN FRONT OF CHOW LINE— DEBRIS FROM THE SOJOURN— A CARD FROM THE CAPTAIN ' S B L, THE DIVING TOWER AT SEABURY. ENTER THE ONE-MAN COLOR GUARD . . . BOARD OF GOVERNORS AND U.D. SENATE MERGED TO U.D. COUNCIL, POUNDING RE3ULATIONS INTO SHAPE AND REALLY AC- COMPLISHING CHANGES . . TABLE CHATTER AT LAST DIVERTED FROM GRIPES ABOUT FOOD TO INTELLECTUAL DISCUSSIONS: I- THE TUBE CONTAINED A 1 r ' , OF WATER INSTEAD OF A 3 ' ; SOLUTION, WHY? AESCHYLUS VS. EURIPEDES; AND SHOES AND SLIPS AND SEALING WAX . . . THE END OF DILIBERATION OVER MAJORS, THE BE- GINNING OF IT . . . Junior Class Officers Maxine Jennings, Secretary; Oscar Davidson, President 1 ; Willard Arnett, Vice- President; Not in Picture — Hughes Spurlock, Treasurer. Joan Rowe, Frank Seto, Orrin Taulbee, Willard Arnette, Lillie Margaret Press ' ey, Nina Clark, Annie Sue O ' Daniel. Irene Pigman, Margery Murphy, Mable Wright, Doris Neal, Lucile Crumpler, Lois Haun, Lela Taylor. Jean Bright, Zenobia Hope, Carol Coapman, Eleanor Zipf, Ruth Liddle, Mary Stylos, Virginia Sanders, Dor- othy Medich. Edna Lee Lambert, Sam Hurst Dorothy Ison, Harry Bailey, Aline Goodwin, Bill Ledford. Garneta Shannon, June Stanley, Lou- ise Proffit, Mary Elizabeth Cordier, Frances Barkley, Sadie Kathrine Cordier, Wilene Kinsey. Sally Talbot, Margaret Susong, Jua- nita Noland, Helen Nicholas, Lorraine Salyer, Betty Holbert, Gayle Asher, Margie Davis. Dorothy Baldwin, Gladys Buchanan, Christine Jones, Betty Shufflebarger, Juanita Cooper, Gladys Ogle. Chester Newsome, Norma York, Col- lete Rieben, Kirk Adams. K ' •- ' ft 4 i % f, H is: ■ ti m Jean Clark, Hughes Spurlock, Frances Finnell, Nancy Jo McGuire, Ruth Burnett, Esther Spence, Mary Lou Keener. Eloise Oliver, Peggy Hicks, Frances Bradshaw, Betty Lou Powers, Jo Richards, Roberta Messer, Oscar Davidson Eileen Hartley, Alice Russell, Maxine Jennings, Kendric Smith, Gretka Young, Ruth Steinberg, Mary Ellen Ayer, Dorothy Palmer, Harriet Hoffman, Eleanor Knotts, Alta Whitt, Scharlene Oney. Sophomore nurses — Gertrude Sayior, Mary Virginia Lecky, Elwanda Dalton, Marjorie Page, June Hux, Vivian Cottle. Freshman nurses — Marian Davis, Alma Stephenson, Alice Simpson, Hazel Ann Dawson, Betty Ammons, Faye Skean, Cleda Pen- nington, Miss Wyfie, Vangie Noe, Sadie Luttrell. OUR LAST YEAR IN LOWER DIVISION THE LAST YEAR WE ' LL SAY THE LORD ' S PRAYER WITH DEAN SHUTT AT THE OPENING OF MEN ' S CONFERENCE LAST YEAR WE ' LL LOOK AT THE SCHEDULE ON THE BULLETIN BOARD IN DRAPER . . . ALL THIS, OF COURSE, IF WE PASS. U.D. HOLDS OUT MRS. PECK ' S WAY OF MAKING HISTORY LIVE . . . OR J. CLAYTON FEAVER ' S WAY OF KILLING IT: 200 BC, ABRAHAM LEFT UR, 1800 BC, GRADUAL IN- FILTRATION INTO CANAAN, 1600 BC, ENTRANCE INTO EGYPT . . . I WONDER IF I ' VE BALLED IT UP ALREADY. BUT WHY WORRY ABOUT BOOKS. IT ' S MORE FUN TO JAM INTO PAT ' S AFTER THE SATURDAY NIGHT MOVIE, SINK OUR TEETH INTO THE WARMTH OF A HAMBURGER SHOVED THROUGH THE WINDOW AT FRAU FISH ' S . . . OR OBSERVE VAN JOHNSON IN THE POPCORN AND WAILING— BABIES ATMOSPHERE OF THE WEST END CINEMA. THERE ' S A LOT TO LOOK FORWARD TO. TWO WHOLE YEARS BEFORE WE GRADUATE, BEFORE LIFE IS OVER. TWO WHOLE YEARS TO GO ON, AND WITH ADDITIONAL PLEASURES. WELL, WE ' VE QUIT THE LOWER DIVISION IN A BIG YEAR THE WORLD IS QUIET AT LAST . . . ALMOST THE FIRST TIME IN OUR SCHOOL CAREER WHEN WE CAN RE- MEMBER A NEWSCAST NOT BEGINNING AN ADVANCE OF FIFTEEN KILOMETERS WAS CLAIMED NORTH OF—. IN GERMANY THEY WORRY ABOUT FRATERNIZATION: IN THE PACIFIC THE PRICE OF SOUVENIRS SKYROCKETS. SO SOON WE GO BACK TO READING THE FUNNIES AND IGNORING THE FRONT PAGE. THEN THERE ARE THE PEOPLE WE ' LL REMEVBER; THE CLASS PRESIDENT WHO PROM- ISED TO GET THIS MEETING OVER IN A HURRY . . . THE REDHEAD WHO PLUGGED OUR SOCIALS . . . THE BOYS WITH THE BEARDS . . . FOOLISH LOOKING SIGMA PI SIGMA INITIALS, THE LAST OF THE CADET NURSES . . . LOWER DIVISION SENATORS . . . YES, IT WAS A BIG YEAR, BUT WE ' RE LOOKING TO THE FUTURE AND HUNTING FOR OUR PLACE IN UPPER DIVISION. SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS . . . Margo Southard, Treasurer; Ethel Cantrell, Secretary; Woody Reed, President, Billie Sue Davis, Vice-President, ( not in picture) Doris Adler, Kay Abels, Hilda Lane, Margaret Sue Fer- rington, Alma Tankersley, Hilda Ba Idock, Joyce Reedy, June Settle, Joan Shomo, Mar- garet Love, Barbara Goddard, Pat Nicely, Dorothy Davis, Mar- go Southard, Mariet- ta Purkey, Margaret Davis, Lois Speer, Emily Huff. Mary Frances French, Libby Watts, Jeannette Austin, Ra mona Layne, Alice Franklin, Jack Hale, Charlotte Johnson, Doris Swingle, Jennie Fitz patrick, Florence Baker. Lilburn Goode, Dora Campbell, Eleanor Hall, Mary Abodeely, Harry Dodd, Glenn Lively, Kenneth Poteat, Billy Hiatt. Woody Reed, Marion Van Winkle, Jane Bishop, Dahlia Sexton, Doris Messer, Jimmie Hines, Bob Robinson, Helen Barnes, Marvette Davis. Ella Foster, Lourdes Ossorio, Mary Hazel Phillips, Cordelia Slusher, Clinton Ramey, Jose Rubio, Wanda Eskew, Nancy Furry, Aileen Sloan. Dean Lambert, James Hall, Robert Fisher, Norrean Smith, Arietta Hogan, Clinton Clay, Elsie Coffey, Barbara Hill, Betty Ann Hixon, Phyllis Jones, Mo- dine Smith, Martha Williams. Mary Catherine Frye, Betty Broadbooks, Margaret Frye, Ethel Cantrell, Marjorie Moss, Anne Hayes, Sammye Stur- divant. Alberta Thomas, Frances Ed- wards, Polly Brooks, Eunice Van Winkle, Helen Cawood, Rissie Faye Layne, Mary Frances Sha- fer, Paul Taylor, Julia Thomas, Gene Ballenger. Reuben Hunter, Pat Finn, Elayne Waters, George Anah Stewart, Reva McMillion, Nancy Brooks, Joyce Lockhart, Joan Bridges, Theda Taylor, Anna Johnson, Georgia Ruth Roberts, Billie Sue Davis, Jeanne Hardy, Helen Dellinger, Margaret Ann Mul- key, Haze! Reynolds Etta Cundiff, Janice Stamper, Marion Haynes, Juanita Ketch- ersid, Faye Ritchie, Jean Crouch- er, Alonzo Moore, Merle Stanley, Irene Robbins, Dorothy Amey, Jean Smith, Betty Jean Morgan. Nelle Davis, Betty Pierce, Vir- ginia Morris, Helen Smith, Mary Lou Smith, Sylvia Sewell, Dor- othy York, Miriam Mann, Kath- leen Beverly, May Watts, Ellen Watts. We honor Mr. J. Wesley Hatcher who was a member of the Berea College faculty from 1925 until his retirement in June, 1946. MELLOW SEPTEMBER TO CHEERFUL JUNE— PAGES OF DAYS BEING TURNED SWIFTLY MONDAY ' S COIFFEUR DONE IN THE SWIMMING POOL— TUESDAY ' S SCHOOL CHAPELS —PAINSTAKING INTRODUCTION TO THE HANDBOOK, TO BE TAKEN LITERALLY — MIMEOGRAPHED READING LISTS — LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCE HALL— TWO HOURS WITH A MICROSCOPE HUNTING FOR THE AMOEBA, ELUSIVE MICROBE — CAREFREE MOUNTAIN DAY DOTTED WITH WHITE NAVY HATS— EFFORTS TO RESIST THE COFFEE HABIT— BEETS AND PEAS AND OODLES OF TABLETS AT THE HOSPITAL; ANNEX ROOM 4 —RAIN AND SNOW AND SUNSHINE— CHAPEL TARDINESSES AND CHURCH ABSENCES- GARY COOPER FROM THE BALCONY OF PHELPS-STOKES-TRAIN AND BUS SCHEDULES NORTH, SOUTH, EAST AND WEST— SUNDAY AFTERNOON HAMBURGERS AT THE HANG- OUT WITH CHICKERY CHICK FROM THE JUKE BOX — FLASHES OF DEEP GRATITUDE FOR PEACE — FLITTING THOUGHTS ABOUT WORLD-ORGANIZATION— POST-WAR IN- CREASE IN POPULATION ATTESTED BY THE RISE OF THE DRAPER ROAD COTTAGES — RUMORS OF NYLONS THAT PRECEDING CLASSES DIDN ' T HEAR — COLLEGE FRESHA. ' EN FEELING A WEE-BIT PICAYUNE AT THE OUTSET OT THE ATOMIC AGE— LETTERS HOME SAYING JUST TWO MORE WEEKS AND I ' LL BE A SOPHOMORE — FRESHMAN OFFICERS . . . Marjorie Keener, Treasurer; Helen Swanson, Vice-President; Fred Chapman, President; Genevieve Graham, Secretary. Betty Warming, Arthel Gray, Jean Butler, Charlene Mullins, Marie Hayes, Jewell Phillips, Janice Pigman, Armenda Rob- bins, Lucy Stewart, Ann Bray. Betty Williams, Chessie Wright, Mary Sue Baker, Beatrice Lov- ette, Dale Dedmon, Juliet Lewis, Jane Propps, Martha Fry, Bad- gette Dillard, Esther Richardson, Cleda Brock, Sarah Williams, Marbeth Peters, Rose Adachi Janrose Sherman, Max Hessel- gesser, Lavaun Halsey, Pauline Deal, Rossie Drummond, Mary Shuttle, Charles Keyser, Elmer Young, Harry Shaw, Doyle Sharpton, Daisy Lisenbee, Bob Lewis, David Cotrona. He ' en Burnett, Aloma Barnes, Flora Cofield, Miquel E. Ta- mayo, Peggy Ann Johnson, Roberto Casablanca, Bennie Tipton, Ted Smith, Herman Patterson, Wayne Proffitt, Ruth Begley. Flaine Charles, Jacqueline Hay- den, Jean Watson, Ruby Camp- bell, Martha Zoellers, Wanda Hammon, Eleanor Sibold, Joe Bush, Pat Mason. Effie Taylor, Nila May Blair, Herbert Moore, Jean Morgan, Frances Barnett, Pat Moore, Edwina Chiles, Leonard Oxier, Cloyd Eastham, Linzee Packard. Earl Woods, Jean Dawson, Jessie Hibbitts, Guindola Johnson, El- bert Miller, David Holroyd, Ingvi Gretar, Donald Murphy, Jerry Crouch, Glenn Harris, Arthur Wiggins. Norvelle Sharpe, Anna Wick- line, Virginia Hewlett, Mary Alice Peters, Margaret Trumbo, Dorothy Brannon, Helen Webb, Dorothy Morrow, Clara Eppard, Enola Foley, Faye Feltner, Ma- bel Pollard, Gladys Reece Jane Midkiff, Howard Tollison, Maxine Chadwell, Ruth Barnes, Evelyn McQueen, Betty Lou Partin, Louise Wardrep, Edith Lester, Vandeta Vanover, Rachel Teague, Coleman Jeffers, Nancye Rose, Jo Ella Wolfe, Bill Leake, Lucille Martin Jo Ann Gouge, Catherine French, Elizabeth Palmer, Lemma Cox, Helen Sweet, Mildred Green. Edith Clayton, Lewis Rogers, Gladys Sosebee, Virginia Hylton, Ray Feltner. Sara Hendrix, Alton Noblett, Joan Ferry, Alfred Swanson, Allan Demaree, Louise Corn, Norma Morris, Rosa Lee Case, James Dowdy, Ross Andrews, Forrest Jarrett, Jim Warrick, Sam McNeil, Russell Hennessee. Carolyn Henderson, Betty Con- ner, Roberta Parkins, Elizabeth Shepherd, Audrey Preston, Mar- jorie Harrison, Frances Scales, Lillian Moore, Argie De Simone, Eleanor Panter, Janet Marsh, Peggy Talbot, Mary Frances Yount. Helen 0. Smith, Ruth Slover, Elizabeth Boughton, Christine Chadwell, Virginia Jo Crutch- field, Amanda Clark, Edna Sims, Alice Neal, Ronda Allen, Martha Hutcherson, Patricia Brooks, Ruth Schulze. Nora Lee Maddux, Cornelia Loven, Pauline Whitaker, Char- line Whitaker, Bob Webb, Marvin Compton, Norma Hold- er, Ned Holder. Jane Van S coyk, Gladys Walker, Nancy Lisenbee, Juanita Pen- land, Audrey Shaw, Elizabeth Tally, Mary Esther Tally, John Welsh, Jessie Downs, Naomi Eppard, Berniece Kirstein Jean Burnett, Eleanor Cipolla, Toby Woolums, Jo Anne Wat- son, Jimmie Mallonee, Bill Parks, Avenell Rose, Martha Rogers, Mary Golden Saferight, Gray Parks, Bill Collawn, Her- schel McDaniels, Arnold Buck- ley, Bob Johnston. Janice Osborne, Ouida Hughes, Marjorie Holcombe, William Baucom, Garland Thayer. John Woody, Glenna Ray, Mar- garet Templin, Dorothea Noss, Bob Norsworthy, Herbert Strong, Mary Lunghofer. WE ARE GROWN UP NOW ... AT LEAST ALMOST ... WE ARE READY FOR COLLEGE NEXT YEAR ... OF FOR A JOB ... OR FOR THE ARMY. OR SOME OF US MIGHT EVEN BEGIN A HOME OF OUR OWN . . . THIS IS THE END . . . BUT IT IS REALLY MORE OF A BEGINNING THAN AN ENDING . . . THE BEGINNING OF SOMETHING WE HAVE BEEN REACHING FOR ... THE TOP OF A HILL WITH SO MUCH ON THE OTHER SIDE THAT WE ' LL NEVER GET TO TASTE THE SWEETNNESS OF IT ALL . . . AND YES, IT ' S AND END- ING, TOO, AND MEMORIES OF FALLS WHEN THE CAMPUS WAS STREWN WITH DAMP YELLOW DRIFTS OF WITHERED LEAVES AND THE MAPLES WERE LONELY, NAKED SKELETONS IN THE COOL DRIZZLE OF A NOVEMBER MORNING . . . IT ' S THE BEGIN- NING OF A BIGGER WORLD . . . MORE FREEDOM . . . LESS DIRECTION . . . MORE RE- SPONSIBILITY . . . WITH THE MEMORY OF CLIMBING WEST PINNACLE AND FEELING A LITTLE CLOSER TO GOD UP THERE ON TOP OF THE MOUNTAIN. IT ' S THE HOPE THAT WE ' LL FIND A PLACE IN THE WORLD ... A LITTLE NICHE THAT WE FILL PER- FECTLY . . OR ONE THAT WE CAN PREPARE OURSELVES TO FILL ... ITS SO MUCH, OH, SO VERY MUCH MORE THAN WORDS CAN MEASURE. 12TH GRADE OFFICERS . . . Raymond Bradbury, Vice- President; Mary Bowling, Secretary; Bill Morgan, Treasurer; Thomas Spill- man, President. Lola Sholar, Sam Horton, George Fillmore, Scott Collins, Gene Burton, Grace Chambers, Kath- ryn Morgan, Minnie Lee Sand- ers, Miriam Crowe. Josephine Beck, Jean Hayes, Aileen Saylor, William Eicker, Florence Ison, Myrl Skaggs, Lillian Young. Bill Blessing, Tom Spillman, Joyce Pennington, E. G. Fish, Pat Justice, Joanne Warriner, Max Gatewood. Paul Clarkston, Betty Wegener, David Douglass, Violet Baker, Mary Bowling, Martha Daniels, Jane Huddleston, Richard Park- er, Kathleen Scott. Pat Dawson, Leonore Noll, Mario Ossorio, Sara Beth Crain, Gloria Hudlow, Imogene Fear- now, Clarice Miniard, Lucille Ross, Hazel Dause, Howard Stevens. Logan Shell, Clara White, Mary Hurst, Georgia Baird, Pat Muncy, Betty Pearl, Phyliss Daniels, Edna Hicks, Mary Elizabeth Campbell, Leila Cain, Beverly Taylor. JUST A CLASS OF IN-BETWEENS . . . WE ' RE BEGINNING TO FEEL THE WEIGHT OF LAST YEARS IN HIGH SCHOOL AND WONDER ABOUT THE FUTURE . . . WHAT ' S IT TO BE? . . . FOUNDATION IS A THING OF THE PAST . . . AND TO THIf Y WE ' RE GOING TO STEP INTO THE ROLE OF SENIORS ... IT SEEMS LIKE ONLY YESTERDAY THAT THEY WERE PUSHING US INTO THAT COURSE OR THE OTHER . . . BUT NOW WE BEGIN TO FEEL THE DIGNITY THAT HAS BEEN BEQUEATHED TO US . . . JUST A CLASS OF IN-BETWEENS . . . BUT IT HAS BEEN MORE THAN THAT TO US . OUR CLASS HAS A FEELING THAT IS MORE UNIFIED ... WE HAVEN ' T HAD TO STAND BY AND WATCH OUR CLASSMATES OF THE MASCULINE SEX LEAVE US . . . WE ' VE HAD MORE OF A BALANCE IN OUR CLASS DISCUSSIONS, SOCIALS, AND WHAT NOT NOW THAT PEACE HAS COME MAYBE WE CAN REMAIN TOGETHER ... WE CAN SEE THAT ALL THE PROBLEMS AREN ' T SETTLED . . . THAT GIVES US MORE PEASON TO GO ON UNTIL WE CAN FIND THE WAYS TO HFLP SOLVE THEM . . . MAYBE WE ' RE JUST A CLASS OF IN-BETWEENS . . . BUT WE ' VE FOUND OUT THE ROPES AS WELL AS ANY ... WE KNOW THE BEAUTIFUL FEELING OF SEEING SEVERAL LETTERS TUCKED UNDER OUR DOORS OR IN OUR MAIL BOXES . . . WE ' VE LEARNED OUR SHARE OF TRICKS . . . WE ' VE EATEN MULTIPLIED DOZENS OF DOUGHNUTS AND LOAVES OF Bl ENRICHED . . . AND WHAT ABOUT THAT LABOR ASSIGNMENT WE GOT ROOKED IN . . . THAT ' S LEARNING ... IT ISN ' T PLATO, OF COURSE, BUT IT ' S SOME- THING THAT MAKES US THINK WE CAN ACCEPT THE SENIORS ' KEY TO SUCCESS , AND WHO KNOWS, WE MIGHT POLISH A FEW OF THOSE TARNISHED SPOTS ' EH, KIDS? 11TH GRADE OFFICERS . . . William Hanger, President; Hugo Miller, Vice-President; Patricia Langford, Secretary; John Bradbury, Treasurer. Wyldine Williams, Dortha Hyde, B e r n i c e Smith, Helen May Patrick, Ann Prestwood, Norma Calico, Bennie Herd, Bob Har- mon, Dil ' ard Feltner, Clayton Anderson, Shirley Baker. 1- B ' ll Hanger, Patricio Longford, I lez Black, John Bradbury, Jane Pobison, Betty Gevedon, Edith Morgan, Faye Kegley, Jeanne Fosterling, Nellie Campbell, Hvigo Miller, Numia Bradley, Georgia Mae Cox, Evelyn Goins. A n d r e w Nicholaus, Maxine D o v i s , Bill Evans, Laferne l.outhan, Inez Jenkins, Mabel Correll, Gladys Hubbard, Grace Johnson. Anna Sparkman, Donald Clay- pool, Chad Perry, Faye Burton, Lola Litton, Mildred Pennington, Loraine Campbell, Hazel Graff, Jane Nantz, Ethel Pearson, Christine Purcell, Ruth Ann Van CI eve, Betty Lovelace, Bettv Jean Finnell. Randall Williams, Robert Jones, Patsy Pullins, Forrest Rice, Clyne Nolan, Donald Holmes. Emma Robertson, Olvia Smith, Roberta Williams, Bill Williams, Edna Wilder, Jane Robinson, Betty Dillon, Margaret Johns, Mabel Baker, Larry Arnett, Betty Wallen, Jenny Fain. A DAY — KALEIDOSCOPIC — WALKING AND SLEEPING TO THE TUNE OF THE BOOGIE WORN PIANO— FLASHES OF COCKROACHES IN TALCOTT, SUCEEDING CROPS OF PRACTICE TEACHERS, ENGLISH, HISTORY, OR WHAT HAVE YOU — DEEP CHAIRS AND SOFT SYMPHONY IN THE READING ROOM — LONG TRIPS ACROSS THE CAMPUS — TO TYPING ON THIRD FLOOR DRAPER — PHY. ED. AT SEABURY AND WOODS-PEN. — LONG SHAFTS OF LIGHT AND SHADOW AROUND INDUSTRIAL ON SNOWY NIGHTS — QUICK TRIPS TO THE STREET DOWN BACK STAIRWAYS — A FIRST DATE WALKING HOME FROM SUNDAY NIGHT CHAPEL— THOSE HOURS CF STUDY— AND SO TO BED. MINUTES WELL AND GROW AND SPILL LIKE TEARS, WASHING THE MARKS OF PAIN FROM THE CHEEKS OF MEMORY Doris Speck Adler MATRIMONY Love you? You who call me turtle head ? Poke fun at my hair in pins? Yes. I love you ! I laugh with you. You are right. I guess I do look odd at night. — Eileen Hartley BEREA SPRING Spring is a hard-to-wind mechanical toy, an animated puppet. Swift in early pace, playful and abrupt. Queenly magnolia bows, Nipped leaves protest, Iris shiver When the toy runs down . . . When the strings hang limp, Wisteria is a brown ghost, dismayed, With no hope of purple resurrection. What have you to say . . . You who wind the toy . . . you who hold the strings? Silver birch apologies, Sweet gum . . . locust . . . oak regrets, And recompense in the white arch of wild blackberry in bloom Are not these proof that the toy has been rewound? — Dorothy Tredennick McGILLICUDY WAS A SAILOR The first day I walked into that math class, I was determined to be prepared for any and all kinds of greetings that I was sure to get in a room filled with Navy men. But once I got steeled to their comments, I began to look the field over in my own meek way. I noticed ' The Mick ' first. He looked like the fleet. There was one word to describe him, and that was All crude . I usually entered the class at a strategic three minutes before the bell. ' The Mick ' , in one on the aisle, would stretch his legs way out, slump in his seat, and with yellow hair over one risque blue eye, and square jaw propped up on a fist, he would prepare to leer at me. Some doll, his eyes said, as he did an about face in his seat and smiled significantly. I never knew ' The Mick ' through his mind, through what he thought or hoped or dreamed of. He stood out as a superb work of mother nature, a bit of a wise guy, and an authority on tactics, naval and otherwise. Our first Saturday night date, man about town with the dissipated look turned out to be a little boy not used to the ladies. He was scrubbed and shy, and tripped over words, al- though he was the smoothest dancer I had ever come across. ' The Mick ' had a reserved seat in the underworld, I knew that. He was the kind of a guy, I told my friends, who wasn ' t worth a canful of garbage, and I certainly wouldn ' t want to spend the rest of my life with him. But when ' The Mick ' stopped thinking that I was some doll , and became just another navy blue figure on campus, something inside me said, You don ' t want him, but you ' ll love him the rest of your life. j — Ruth Steinberg AWARENESS Today I saw a flaming, red-hued bush In the middle of a broad, green field. I smiled, Remembering that I find you so In a room filled with people. — Dorothy Tredennick SONNET ON INDIFFERENCE I do not care! It matters not to me That he has chos ' n to throw his life away; To toss about among the chaff, as free As dust, content to land where ' er he may. Resolved, have I, to disregard his state Of wanton wandering — to reinforce My will, unthrall my mind, obliterate All thoughts of him, and rise! Without remorse. But piercing thoughts intrude and oft have gained Admittance to some remote and unexplored Compartment of the soul, caressed the cove, And there beneath the struggle lie sustained: A force destroying petty wants, the chord Which ultimately gains — Unaltered Love! — Eleanor Knotts CARRIED AWAY Long slim fingers on ivories moved quickly, creating fantastic rhythmic patterns — syncopation — against a background of rumbling bass notes. Boogie Woogie. You listen; rhythm takes hold of you. Feet move — faster — faster; body vibrates — skirt whirls — hair flies — you shout — you ' re wild! Music stops. Rhythm turns you loose and you ' re back to reality — an exhausted Jitterbug. Long slim fingers on ivories move slowly and melt into deep rich chords. Unbroken lines of melody flow smoothly with tone swelling and dying away. You listen; melody gets you and takes you on an imaginative tour — lifts your soul above the clouds — higher — higher. Music stops. Melody still holds you — won ' t let you go. You ' re filled with it and you go on your way humming — humming melody. — Bobbv Crosswhite IF I HAD DARED Darkness, Heavy, Suffocating me with the weight of memories; Thickest blackness forcing me to my knees with your weight; The night brings you in on her shoulders And spreads your thickness over me . . . I feel you blotting out the details of my daily life . . . Forcing me to feel the burden of the acts I might have done, The person that I might have been ... if I had dared to be. — Harriet Hoffman SUMMERTIME When the idle dreamer is forced by the hard coldness of winter to retire within his four walls and while away his time, nothing can bring back pleasant day-dreams so well as the haunting melody of Gershwin ' s Summertime. This tune captures some of the dreamy languor of summer. As I listen, I see long rows of cotton under the sun. The darkies are singing mournful tunes in rhythm to the regular rise and fall of their hoes. Occasionally one raises his head and a long chanting melody flows from his lips. The sun shines hot, and the field stretches wide on all sides. A small cloud of dust hazes over the scene, and lengthening shadows crawl across the landscape. The scene drifts into golden obscurity . . . summertime. The golden haze becomes a cloud of dust aroused by a passing car. I walk down a nar- row dusty lane with trees on either side, their leaves heavy with dust and heat. In the clear sky a few buzzards drift, circling lazily. A grasshopper chirps drearily from the edge of the road. My shirt, soaked with sweat, clings to my back; however, the heat of the sun has a pleas- antly penetrating feel on the arms and shoulders. Ahead of me the river gleams through the dark twisted pillars of the tree trunks. The sand crunches softly beneath my feet. A snak e slips silently into the water, its head creatinga ripply V on the surface; the head of a floating turtle ducks hurriedly; upstream a fish plops. At an easy pace I strip, laying my clothes on a log of driftwood, bleached white by the sun. The water is relaxingly cool as it climbs higher on my heated body. The frogs begin to sing, and the shadows are long . . . summertime. A white thunderhead towers into the evening sky. Its undersides become dark as it covers the sun. A yellow bolt zig-zags earthward; the thunder clashes likes a monstrous kettle-drum. The hard rain pelts down. Gusts of wind send the branches into orgies of thrash- ing. Leaves whirl heavenward, spinning madly. The air is cool and sweet with the smell of summer rain. Rumbling, the thunderhead retreats, allowing the golden sun to gild the dripping leaves. There is silence except for the drip of water from the trees. Slowly the day he ats again. The clouds turn gold, red, and finally purple . . . summertime. The sky is black and soft, like velvet. The stars scattered across it ore big and compan- ionable A full moon rides high shedding its mellow light over the earth Through the air surges a warm wind; shadows are danging in the long grass. The urge ernes to dance with them until I can dance no longer. The drone of the night insects joins the chorus of frogs from the river. The dew falls, wetting the grass; the shadows deepen; an own hoots mourn- fully . . . summertime. The leaves of the trees hang listlessly in the hot air. The sky is dotted with unmoving cottony clouds. Beneath the trees the grass is soft to the body. A small bug crawls up a grass-stem, spreads its wings, and buzzes away. A line of ants meanders through the stems. The leaves rustle in a little breeze which cools the sweat of the forehead. Flies buzz mo- notonously. The sun beats down. Summertime, and the living was easy. Fish were jumping, and the cotton was high — Slowly the song fades into nothingness. — Jerry Crouch NON-CONFORMISTS The mountain was steep. Fallen leaves — brown, orange, and yellow — Were deep where we would climb. Brambles and briers, shrubs and trees, both growing and felled Said You cannot tread here ' No path is necessary. Obstacles are overlooked. The lure of heights, beauty, and exploration Pulls the adventurous soul to its destiny. The nature of the spirit of man Is greater than that of the universe — The cycle — bud, flower, death, decay. What can keep the destined spirit ' from its goal ? Who shall accuse them, the non-conformists Who tramp onward past natural barriers which Shout You cannot tread here! ? -Marjorie Jean Keener SPENDTHRIFT The late evening air is saturated with rich sunlight, distilled from the long summer ' s drowsy abundance. It strikes long shadows across grass already wet with dew. Soft light touches the rtillness of unmoving trees with the rich eolers of old oil painting. The grass softens the fall of my feet, a dry leaf now and then crackling where I step. A mist is settling ; n the val ' ey below my hill, and a coolness seasons the air. This is the time for pulling out soft wooly sweaters and woolen skirts from attic trunks redo ' ent with mothballs. Time for going home, time for filling coal buckets from the pile beside a dry has-been garden. This is an excuse for building fires in summer-cold grates, for. closing windows to snugness as dry Ifcaves skitter across the window outside. It is a time for outside work, letting dishes stack in the sink and dust settle on furniture. There is a yard drifted full of leaves which must be raked into p ; les, exposing scattered pecans from the matron trees in the withering grass underneath. There are leaves to be lifted in dusty armfuls, stamped down in bushel baskets which must be carried to the blue-graveled drive, dumpted in a wind- tumble heap and fired with a blazing newspaper. Teeth gritty with dust, blistered hands, eyes smarting from eddying smoke, I draw from an unlimited source of strength, unsparing of my body. For there is such an abundance of life in me I can never tire. Sunlight on my back burns through my sweater. My sympathies are with the grasshopper who sang while the sun was ripe, pitying the ant whose living was all in the future. I exult in my strength and youth who have so much to spare I can fling it away like handfuls of gold. How can I ever grow old? I that am so free, so conscious of vitality, so drunk with being? Nature echoes my mood; spendthrift too, she lavishly burns her candle at both ends, exulting in the wine richness of life that sings in her veins, throwing armfuls of her abundance in luxuriant color on the lazy earth. With so much life, how can she grow old? Those who are old were born old; I will never be old. But winter comes, and I am only made of bones and flesh. — Eileen Hartley THE FIELDS OF FALL The fields of fall, Brown, shock-studded, Stretching away Dim in the haze Of the dust-ridden air. Linked with scents — Dry, dusty hay; Pngent smoke, Drifting into the hollows Straight and still. The dusty road, Winding across the fields. The sun, redly setting Among the ruddy woods. The hills, Blue and dim and distant. — Jerry Crouch LETTER TO MINA New York, June, 1930 Beloved Mina It is unspeakably foolish of me to write this letter, I suppose; this letter, which can do little good; which you, who have been dead twelve months, can never read; this letter, whose contents I shall so soon be able to give you in person. Yet it is an explanation, this letter, which has been owed you from the start. You must remember, Mina, that I am at heart a gentile soul. Surely you, in your understanding of me as no other person ever understand me, can know how hard it has been for me to realize what happened. It is strange, in these months since I poisoned you, how you have come to stand before me again and again; in the little alcove; in the car; in the dark quiet of the living room as the twilight hour which you so loved sets in. How I have remembered you — in all the places we were together in those first mad days when we realized we loved each other . . . that street where I bought you the gardenia before the party; the funny little man with the organ grinder, who played Over the Waves . . . the soft light on your hands at the club, while the busy waiters went by and the champagne foamed in the glasses At first, in the hurt, bewildered days after I murdered you, I hoped that I would forget you; utterly, completely, irretrieuably forget you, all of you, your voice, your walk, your eyes. I was so terribly hurt, Mina, when I found out, so terribly hurt because I had loved you and trusted you so much. That this could have happened never occurred to me, during those days when we had just been married, and I adored you with all my soul and all my being. You never knew, of course, what it was. You never even had a chance to wonder. Now, my Mina, you shall know. You shall know everything. You were ill that night; you had been strangely weak the month before, and I had been strangely weak the month before, and I had been childishly worried over you; bringing you things from the drug store, begging you to see the doctor, phoning home in the mornings to find out how you were. It was summer time; a warm, thick twilight, the kind you loved so much; and a summer storm was being born in a great dark range of clouds off to the south- west. I felt your forehead, and brought you two aspirins and a glass of water, and you laid them on the chair by the couch, and told me you were going to take them after I had gone I promised you I would be back by ten, and thenn I went out, leaving you alone in the still house, closing the door carefully behind me, and started out to town. I suppose I should have told you I was going with Beatrice Still, it would probably have done little good, for you trusted her as fully as I did. You would have been glad for me to leave for a while, and follow your constant advice to enjoy myself a little. The storm came before we reached the club. Beatrice was a picture that night; in some- thing long and silvery, with tiny jewels set in the cloth. Her hair was swept back in that strange half-wild manner that you always said would have made any other woman look asinine but was becoming to her. We must have chatted amiably for an hour over our liquor before she said that first, strange, terrible sentence; that sentence that started my life to its ruin. The lightening was flashing through the windows, great blazes that lit up the rain-swept countryside for miles. Beatrice had lighted a cigarette, and, in that graceful way of hers, she leaned back in her chair and said, How ' s Mina tonight, Paul? It was the first time we ' d mentioney your name, and I fancy my face lit up as I answered her. She ' s sick again, I said, pouring more champagne. In bed? she asked quietly. No, I told her, She was up all morning. It ' s been just this afternoon she felt worse. I left her on the couch asleep. Frankly, Paul, how long will it be? How long, until what? She smiled. The baby. The baby? I asked her. Of course, Paul. You must know by now. But Beatrice, I said, you know what the doctor said . . . about my never being able to become a father . . . There was a sudden pained expression in her eyes, as if she now wished she hadn ' t brought up the subject Why Paul, I ... I imagined you knew. Yes, yes, go on . I . . . Paul ... I wouldn ' t have said anything. I thought surely that you knew . . . But there can ' t be a baby. I just said . . . Her face gathered determination. Paul, if you don ' t know, then it ' s my duty to tell you. In God ' s name, Beatrice 1 Tell we what? What are you driving at ? Paul, Mina ' s not been exactly faithful. I don ' t follow you. Yes you do, Paul. ' Not faithful ... to me of some other man ' s child. you mean Mina is about to become the mother There was o long, stunned, terrible silence. I heard Beatrice saying, Surely she must know. It wouldn ' t be long before you found out She told me ... I must have stopped breathing. Finally she said, I ' m terribly sorry about it, Paul. Terribly sorry. I think . . . you ' d better come home now I have no idea whether I answered her or not. I only remember after a while I was in the car, and she was driving me home over the drenched road. It was then that I began to hate you, Mina. Like some strange, awful thing. It began in the toes and came up into the feet and the legs and the stomach and the heart, choking and blinding and smothering. All my love, all my devotion, all my adoring tenderness swept away in the fierce flame of that hate. At first it was like a storm of fury. Then it became deeper than that ... a monstrous thing of silent and bitter determination. As we drove along, one course of action became clearer and clearer in my mind; a course of action which would avenge me; a course of action that would prevent all scandal — a course of action that not even my wildest nightmares would have conceived, and yet that on that terrible night took possession of my very body and soul. It was a long, silent ride. Neither Beatrice nor myself spoke. I was planning, coldly, carefully planning, rehearsing in my mind every movement of the coming hour. When the fury of the hate was only beginning within me, I had thought to confront you with my know- ledge before killing you, but then some subtler, more sinister council prevailed, and I decided that you should never know . . . that you should not have a chance to leave any clue that I was your murderer. You noticed that I was different when I entered the house. You commented on it, and I said I was tired and cross. In your gentile way, you babied me, told me not to forget my pajamas, and to open the windows in my room The storm was over, and I remember vour saying how much fresher the air was Do you feel better, Mina, I asked you, bending over the couch. I ' m afraid not, you said wearily, looking up with that sweet, disarming smile I once loved so much. You mustn ' t be alarmed if I ' m not up and around the next few days. I saw the doctor a few days ago Oh And what did he tell you, I asked cooly It ' s nothing much, you said, looking off through the darkness. It ' s really very little I stood there by the couch, detesting you with every fibre of my being, cursing you thot on whom I had so loved and trusted, could tell this hateful, slinking lie I found myself breoth- ing hard and fast, and clutching the little bottle I had brought up with me from the gardeners supply case in the garage You were surprised when I came back; you must have thought I had gone to bed brought you some tea, I said, setting the cup down by the couch You looked as if you needed something hot. Thanks, you said, but I really don ' t care for it You probably need it more than I No, I told you, I made it just for you I insist you drink it Oh, you said, with a laugh of distaste tempered with humor, you made it too sweet, dear Far too sweet. It ' s almost syrupy . . . I took the cup and went back out into the kitchen. When I came back, you were yawning, and said you were too tired to go up to bed, but had decided to sleep there on the couch. I covered you with a blanket, and kissed you goodnight, and left you alone in the darkness I shall never know, Mina, why I did it. Something in my mind must have snapped under the strain of what Beatrice said at the club. I should, of course, have sought another source of information, some sort of confirmation of what she said, but I trusted Beatrice as blindly, as completely, as I trusted you. Why, as I look back on it now, I should have ever let mvself prefer her word to my faith in you, I cannot understand I did not understand it that night, nor in the weeks that followed. They were horrible, those weeks. I was never afraid of being apprehended for your mur- der, for the only police investigator of your death was old Marshall Roberts, who also served as coroner. When I explained the cause for your suicide, he was childishly glad to help me keep it secret, and returned a verdict of death for self-administered poison, closing forever the of- ficial case of your passing. My office staff was very kind; Bill Corbett sent a beautiful spray of your favorite red dahlias to the funeral, and followed them with a smaller bouquet every Saturday for a month afterward. The neighbors practically fed me on pies and cakes and chicken that just happened to be left over. They made it harder, Mina, with their swirling through the house, making me comfortable and ' ympathizing with me, when all I wanted was to be alone with the things which were yours and the memories of the days when I could still love you and resDect you. I missed you bitterly, terribly, with an empty ache that never went away, but lurked continually around the corners of my mind, always spring out again when s ' eep or business had brought a brief pre-occupation to my mind As your funeral faded and farther back into the weeks, it became almost unreal to me, until I began to half expect to meet you on the stairs coming down to breakfast, to hear your voice calling my name as I locked the garage in the basement at night. The house was empty, utterly, hopelessly empty; there was never a moment when I was not feeling your absence, even when swarms of visitors came in and filled it with their chatter Beatrice was wonderfully kind during those days . . she came every evening, seeing I had enough to eat, taking care of my business those first weeks when I was too broken to work, urging me out to a movie one night three months after your death I cannot say, looking back on it now, when I first came to know that I loved Beatrice Perhaps I always loved her. I rather imagine you could say that better than either she or I Anyway, Mina, we were married a month ago, in that little church around the corner, the one with the ivy grown over the front and the roly-poly minister you always said looked like Smilev or what-ever-his-name-was in the Seven Dwarfs. It was a quiet wedding, Beatrice, without saying it, agreed with my inner desire to keep my name from any more attention in the papers. She work a simple green dress, a hat with brass buttons on one side, and she stood serene and lovely through the short service. I brought her here afterward, us and a few friends, and I carried her in over the threshhold as I had once carried you in. We had a lit tle wedding party, with quiet laughter, while you seemed every minute to be lurking at my elbow, ready to speak or to laugh with me. It was only this afternoon, Mina, that I found your letter. I had never found the courage to go into your room and put it in order, and finally, I told myself, if Beatrice was to live here, and stand as my wife in your place, then I must shut you into the past forever, and make you live only in one tiny section of my mind. Up in your room, sitting on the chinz covered bench you made, I went through your dresser drawers one by one, and there, in the bottom of your writing box, I found it. Oh, Mina, it was so funny; so cruelly, ironically funny, as I look back on it now. I sat there, reading through it with the speed and yet the tenderness which I have always had when handling your things since you died, and then I found my eyes suddenly going back to the heading of the short paragraph . . . Dearest Paul . . . Beatrice has told me, dear, what the doctor has told you. Knowing that I, too, am of numbered days, it is my hope that you may go first, so that you will never even know that I am ill. It is only in the event that my disease becomes rapidly worse, and that I pass away before you, that I shall leave this letter explaining why I never told you. I cannot bear to hurt you, and since, as Beatrice tells me, you have only six months, while I may have a year, I see no reason why I should. Only remember, dearest, that if I am gone when you read this, we shall soon be together again . . . I will never know how I got to the doctor ' s. He was busy when I entered his office, and it was several minutes before I could see him. Brown, I said quickly, I want to know all about Mina. He seemed a little surprised. Well, Paul . . . What did she have? It ' s terribly important that I know, from you . . . I wasn ' t surprised when she took her life. I think she did it as much to save you the pain of seeing her suffer as to save herself. Your wife had incurable cancer, Paul . . . There in his office, Mina, I saw suddenly, as in a flash of light, the who ' e sordid story. How you, facing death, had lied to me in your old gentle desire to protect me, to keep me from worrying about you; how you had planned to go alone to keep me haooy during what you thought were to be the last days of my life. How you must, in those terrible days, have wanted to confide everything in me, so that we might tace nemisis together, in each other ' s arms, pro- tecting each other as the shadows came up around us. I saw all in one instant how you had, in all the love for me which was yours, sacrificed yourself, how we had been apart. And I saw just as suddenly who had kept us apart. Beatrice and I, Mina, have had tea together. It is summer and twilight . . . that beautiful time of day the French call the blue hour, that faded afterglow of the sun that you loved so well. Yes, sitting out on the little portice, we have had tea together. You were right, Mina , . . I do make it too sweet . . . much too sweet. Your loving husband, Paul. ENTHRALLED BY THE GLAMOUR OF THOSE EXTRA-CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES WHICH ARE, BY TRADITION, THE BETTER THREE-FOURTHS OF COLLEGE LIFE, WE SELL AWAY OUR SOULS— WELL, ALMOST— TO THE MANY ORGANIZATIONS OPEN TO US If a picture is 5 5-16 x 7 6-8, how much does it have to be trimmed to be shrunk to 3 1-2x4? How many rolls of film will we have to buy to make 3,758 pictures? How many 10 pt. metrolite words will go in one square inch of space?. We didn ' t know then, nor do we yet, but enlisting a staff of efficient workers, we closed our eyes, crossed our fingers, and armed with a pica ruler and a razor blade, we began. We put Betty Jo to making senior and faculty appointments — a difficult assignment-, and carried out with not a flaw.. .Helen Pulver, Teany, Betty Jean, and Leonore battled with other ap- pointments. Mr. Welsh, Miss Crabb, or Dean Walters always managed to have their cameras ready for action at a moment ' s notice, and to them we owe our sincerest thanks.. .Uncle Ru saved the day by dashing over from Richmond to sling those club pics thru the line.. All the while such people as Gretka, Schell, Graham, Hibbard, Libby Fearing, and Eleanor Knotts were struggling in their end of the deal. Gret spent hours de- ciding between one, two, or more lines for the cover — we never knew that one straight mark could cause so much disturbance. Sc.Hell gave out copy assignments to writers Arnette, Whitt, Adler, Jennings, and Lambert. Then the contests began! Ruth clamored for literary selections; Eleanor, for snaps, and poor Libby pleaded that the seniors come forth with their bi- ographies. Evelyn and Margaret Ann went right to work selling a book still in the scrap card stage as confidently as if it were already at the printers. Then when Sloan, Christine, Ozella, and Mary Helen started collecting money in the pay up lines, we knew we had to produce. So rounding up Slush and Bobbie to mount pictures, Virginia Godbey, Flossie and Gertie, and Margaret Duncan for typing, we struggled over to the Chimes Office and worked with a clock on one side and a time table on the other — telling us when that last chance train to the engravers would leave. Somehow our clock was always slow. From the first Muss and Jo kept the letters going out and the money miraculously coming in. And there were Deans Smith, Weidler, Walters, and Mr. Kavanaugh to keep us in line. Through it all we ' ve had fun. We ' ve had time for Alta ' s hot dogs at midnight, for engagements, and soap operas over Dean Shutt ' s radio. And to every person who gave as much as one hour towards the building of the ' 46 CHIMES we owe our thanks.  Mt SIGMA PI SIGMA Dr. Noll, Mr. V. D. Roberts, B r i g i t t e Auerbach, Sam Hurst, Mr. Pugsley. RESERVED FOR PEOPLE WHO CAN SEE THROUGH PHYSICS PI GAMMA MU FOR SOCIAL SCIENTISTS PI ALPHA FOR GAZERS INTO TEST TUBES . . . PI GAMMA MU Bock — Mr. Chidester, Mr. Hardin, Mr. Hatcher. Middle — Dean Weidler, Mrs. Steinberger, Helen Furhman, Mrs. Weidler, Dr. Crippen. Front — Irene Pigman, Alta Whitt, Aileen Lewis, Dor- othy Tredennick. PI ALPHA Virginia Henderson, Evalee Williams, Dr. Bangson, Mary Elizabeth Jones, Marie Lay, Nina Clark, Jean Harris, Amanda Estepp, Pat Mor- ton, Anna Wills, Brigitte Auerbach, Ken Smith, Ova- line Beck, Frances Barkley, Helen Pulver, Bobbie Hill- man, Lois Haun, Christine La Fon. TAU KAPPA ALPHA 1st Row — Irene Pigmon, Marian Nausau, Nancy King, Helen Fuhrman, Kay Abels. 2nd Row — Dean Weidler, Evelyn Hibbard, Aileen Lewis, Willard Arnett. 3rd Row — Dr. Sorrier, Dr. Hardin, Dean Shutt. TAU KAPPA ALPHA, WHERE TALKING BECOMES AN HONOR . . . THERE ARE SELDOM TWENTY WRITERS, BUT THEY MAKE UP FOR QUANTITY WITH QUALITY . . BIRD CLUB, A HOBBY WITH A FANCY NAME, BUT THEY STAY DOWN TO EARTH TWENTY WRITERS Seated — Emmy Voden, Scharlene Oney, Eileen Hartley, Doris Adler, Fran- ces Bradshaw, Dorothy Tredennick, Ruth Steinberg, Dean Lambert. Standing — Dr. Weekes, W i II a r d Arnett, Jerry Crouch, Dr. Wa ger. BIRD CLUB 1st Row — Lois Haun, Miss Crab. 2nd Row — Evalee Williams, Miss Durst, Amanda Estepp, Ovaline Beck, Mary Ellen Ayers, Mabel Boehm, Sher- idan Hall. 3rd Row — Pat Morton, Marie Lay, Dr. Bangson, Jack Buchanan, Truman Denham, LOWER DIVISION SENATE 1st Row — Emmy Vode ., Leonore Noll, Betty Jean Morgan, Barbara Goddard, Pat Justice, Dorothea Noss. 2nd Row — Dr. Sattler, Marvette Davis, Jim Bishop, Linzee Packard, Earle Fish, Dean Shutt. 3rd Row — Logan Collins, Mr. Hughes, John Coapman. MAKING STUDENT GOVERNMENT WORK . . WHATE ' ER THE PROBLEMS ARE, THEY MAKE A STAB AT THEM U.D. or L.D. IT ' S AN HONOR, AND A RESPONSIBILITY, TO SERVE . . UPPER DIVISION WOMEN ' S COUNCIL Dean Allen, Billie Rominger, Jo Richards, Zenobia Hope, Dorothy Tredennick, Helen Pulver, Madge Sparks, Eliz- abeth Fearing, Irene Pig- man, Miss Macaulay. UPPER DIVISION STUDENT COUNCIL Jack Buchanan, Hughes Spurlock, Kendric Smith, James O ' Dell, Dr. Bangson, Bill Norton, Ormand Wil- Mams, Frances Finnell, Gretka Young, Elizabeth Fearing, Miss Ludlum, Mar- garet Ann Graham, Mary - Ellen Ayer; Ruth Slusher, Miss Allen, Joan Rowe, Dorothy Tredennick. WAA BOARD Seated — Barbara Goddard, Ruth Ferrill, Irene Pigman, Alice Russell, Mary Helen Adkins, June Settle. Standing — Doris Neal, Theda Taylor, Helen Hard esty, Helen Nicholas, Jua- nita Noland, Mary Ellen Ayer. THE WAA, OUR ENERGETIC FRIENDS WHO TREK FROM VOLLEY BALL TO TENNIS TO SWIMMING THE EDUCATION CLUB— SPREADING THE LIGHT TO THE MOUNTAINS, AND ELSEWHERE TOO . . . LIFE SERVICE— A PAUSE FOR RELIGIOUS EMPHASIS EDUCATION CLUB Sue O ' Daniel, Mr. Chidester, Evalee Williams, Marie Lay, Dorothy Wheeler, Olga Smith, Virginia Sanders, June Lane, Kathleen Brown- ing, Pat Morton, Joyce Hardin. LIFE SERVICE Standing — Frank Edwards, James O ' Dell, Reuben Hunt- er, Leonard Oxier, Doris Swingle, Alice Franklin, Anna Johnson. Sitting — Mary Frances Sha- fer, Alberta Thomas, Pat Fenn, Anna Claire, Florence Baker, Helen Webb. Floor — Katherine French, Naomi Eppard, Elsie Coffey, Mildred Green. SOCIOLOGY CLUB Marian Nassau, Carol Ann Coapman, Dove Altizer, Marjorie Murphy, William K i m s e y , Dorothy Ison, J ' mrtiEC Ruth Burton, Mary Stanley, Ruth Ferrill, Faye P e n I e y , Nancy McGuire, Doris Neal, Mabel Boehm. MORE WORK IN GETTING PEOPLE TO LIVE TOGETHER . . . THE Y ' S ARE ALWAYS GOING STRONG, MEN ' S AND WOMEN ' S . . . OPENING ROADS OF FELLOWSHIP AND SERVICE TOGETHER . . . LEADERS AND MEMBERS, IT ' S A GREAT OPPORTUNIT Y . . . YMCA CABINET 1st Row — Reuben Hunter, Ormand Williams, Jimmy Hines. 2nd Row — Frank Edwards, Gene Burton, Garland Thayer. 3rd Row — Tom Finney, Paul Thayer, Bill Norton. COUNTRY DANCERS Genevieve Graham, Nancy King, Billie Sue Davis, Ro- berta Halcomb, Betty Love- lace, Mary Ellen Ayer, Christine LaFon, Mary Helen Adkins, Ruth Shuler, Mabel Boehm, James Bishop, Ed- ward Cox, Foster Burgess, Gene Burton, Frank Smith, Badgette Dillard, James Dowdy, Harold Reynolds, Donval Simpson. AT COUNTRY DANCERS ARE KEPT ALIVE THE TRANSITIONAL DANCES OF OUR FATHERS FOR GENERATIONS BEFORE US. YWCA CABINET Standing — Harriet Hoff- man, Evelyn Hibbard, Helen Pulver, Theda Taylor, Aline Woodwin, Marian Nassau, Julia P. Thomas, Pat Wil- liams, Mary Stanley, Anna Wills, Dorothy Medich, Anna Johnson. Sitting — Eleanor Zipf, John R o w e , L i I I i e Margaret Prcssley, Billie Sue Davis, Virginia Henderson, Miss Hunter. We ' re the background people — we build the set the actors prattle on — whatever ' s wanted — light or dark, gay or grim, we can build it, or at least we ' ll try . . . Hammer and nails, paint and brushes — flats to set up and wires to nail down — We provide moons and birds, songs, and burn orphanages . . . Ruth Schell, Joyce Hardin, Tharon Musser Alpha Psi Omega — It was worth it — even the performance in front of Boone Tavern — another laurel, but no time to rest — Plenty is expected of a member of a National Dramatics Fratern- ity. High standards must be maintained . . , We ' ve got to stay worthy of the honor, you know . . . Tharon Musser, Ruth Schell, Joyce Hardin, Doris Adler, Hilda Lane. Thespians — on stage or off, we keep the ideal of the actor before us. We may never make Broad- way, but it ' s fun to try. Lines to learn and mistakes to remember, and correct — From try-outs to curtain time, it ' s work and lots of it — but we wouldn ' t miss it for the world. Leonore Noll, Beverley Taylor, Joyce Pennington, George Filmore |T S f f 7 r ' - r ' )i :t m ' EMBERSHIP ONLY BUT YOU REALLY MUSTN ' T BRING VISITORS TO A ' MEMBERSHIP ONLY ' MEETING— ITT THE COPYRIGHT RESTRICTIONS— MEMBERSHIP AT 300— IT ' S BEEN A BANG- UP YEAR— THE TABERNACLE NEWS | I. ' .. .:.. Jjmui 12. Mo . ■ GHOST L(Kt- THE sum HWtkRWft BEHINb fk.i. TME FOOftttSJ Hise lb TEU- THE. R STORv OF HV WvfcN SHOES AND COSTUMES AND STUFF— MAJOR SHOW TRYOUT ' S NEXT WEEK — KEEP WORKING. THERE ARE NO SMALL PARTS— THERE ARE ONLY SMALL ACTORS . . . STANISLAVSKY VANGUARDS Back Row — J. Clayton F e a v e r , Oscar Davidson, Marvette Davis, Donald Claypool. Middle Row — Joyce Hardin, Mary Golden Saferight, Martha Daniels, Emma Voden, Lola Sholer, Roberta Messer, Bill Parks, Bill Collawn. Front Row — Nancy King, B r i g i 1 1 e Auerbach, Jean Burnette, Barbara Goddard, Jo Richards, Kay Abels, Dr. Ross. LOOKING INTO THE FUTURE . . . COUNTING BRIDGES BEFORE WE COME TO THEM . . . KEEPING THE CAMPUS INFORMED . . . COSMOPOLITANS . . . THERE ARE MANY FLAGS IN MANY LANDS . . . WALLPAPER STAFF Standing — Jean Harris, Bill Collawn, Clinton Ramey, Irene Pigman, Jimmy Hines, Helen Davis, Jean Burnette, M a r j o r i e Murphy, Polly Brooks, Roberto Casablanca, Helen O . Smith, Ruth Burnette, Ruth Slover, Ra- mona Layne, Martha Hutch- erson. Dean Lambert, Alta Whitt, Elizabeth Boughton, Sitting — Eleanor Cipolla, Toby Woolums, Ruth Boggs, Emma Voden, Betty Ann Hixon. COSMOPOLITANS Standing — Mary Abodeely, Harriet Hoffman, Marian Nassau, Dorothy Palmer, Geneva Matlock, Carol Coapman, Ruth Steinberg, John Coapman, Amalio Rubio, Jose Rubio, Mario Ossorio. Sitting (Couch) — Lourdes Ossorio, Emma Voden, Dor- othy Medich, Linzee Pack- ard, Helen Pulver, Brigitte Auerbach, Roberto Casa- blanca. Sitting (Floor) — Rose Adacho, Mary Stylos. PAN AMERICAN LEAGUE Standing — Dorothy Wheel- er, Amalio Rubic, Alta Whitt, Mario Ossorio. Sitting — Lorraine Sayler, Marvette Davis, Rosemary Wetsel, Roberto Casablanca, Emogene Money, Jose Rubio. REACHING HANDS SOUTH OF THE BORDER . . . DISCUSSING WORLD PROBLEMS, AND ONES NEARER AT HOME, TOO . . . PARLEZ VOUS FRANCIAS? PUBLIC AFFAIRS FORUM 1st Row — Dr. Peck, Jean Burnette, Rosemary Wetzel, Emogene Money, Ruth Steinberg, Elinor Zipf, Em- ma Voden, Mary Ellen Ayer, Rosebelle Elkins, Lor- raine Salyer, Mabel Boehm, Alta Whitt. 2nd Row — Dorothy Treden- nick, Brigitte Auerbach, Mory Elizabeth Jones, Marvette Davis, Amalio Rubio. 3rd Row — Faye Ritchie, Fay Penley, Helen Pulver. 4th Row — Phyllis Daniels, Mary Saferight, Oscar Davidson, Ken Smith, Glenn Harris, Jose Rubio, Roberto Casablanca, Mario Ossorio. FRENCH CLUB 1st Row — Dorothy Palmer, Helen Barnes. 2nd Row — Miss Richardson, Harriet Hoffman, Miss Led- ford, Gretka Young, Alice Russel, Miss Chapin. 3rd Row — Bill Ledford, Mary A b o d e e I y , James O ' Dell, Harry Dodd, Mary Helen Adkins, John Benson. MUSIC BEST . BAND 1st Row — Margaret Duncan, Peggy Refo, Fred Chapman, Alma Stevenson, Margaret Blizzard, A. T. Wiggins, Ken Smith. 2nd Row — Reggie Walton, Pauline Whitaker, Hal Tollison, Dean Lambert, Betty Lou Roache, Margaret Davis, Charline Whitaker, Bill Sicker, Wyldine Wil- liams, Frances Bradshaw, Jack Perciful. 3rd Row — Helen Hardesty, Peggy Hicks, Irene Pigman, Joanne Warriner, Bobby Johnston, Bill Blessing, Joan Bridges, Ramona Layne, Rissie Faye Layne, Louis Rogers, John Bradbury, Paul Leach. WHETHER IT ' S A VICTORY PARADE OR A COMMENCEMENT, WE GET THE THE SOFTER HARMONY OF BLENDED VOICES . . . STUDIO ENSEMBLE Mrs. Mulligan, Anne Hayes, Marian Davis, Pat Dawson, Hazel Ann Dawson, Jean Hayes, Jimmy Malonee, Jane Bishop, Sarah Wil- liams. MEN ' S GLEE CLUB 1st Row — Reuben Hunter, Miguel Tamayo, Lilburn Goode, Mr. Warner, Earl Woods, Bill Eicker, Jim Bishop, Max Hesselgesser, Sam Scruggs. 2nd Row — Al Demaree, Ingivi, Bill Collawn, Charlie Keyser, Linzee Packard, Jim Dowdy, Louis Rogers, Fred Chapman. 3rd Row — Harold Reynolds, Jack Buchanan, Herschel McDaniel, Frank Edwards. THE GLORY OF A GREAT CHORUS . . . TWO PERFORMANCES A YEAR, NOW, TOO VIENNA WOODS AND HUNGARIAN DANCE NO 5 ORCHESTRA Eleanor Knotts, Betty Lou Powers, Mrs. Peck, Mary Lou Keener, Mrs. Wright, Phyllis Daniels, Reginald Walton, Margaret Duncan, Peggy Refo, Marjorie Keen- er, Reuben Hunter, A. T. Wiggins, Jack Perciful, Jo Ann Gouge, Delores Noll, John Biggerstaff, Kathleen Jett. VASITY WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB Bob Crosswhite, Miss Kysela, Marjorie Keener, Jimmie Burton, Dorothea Noss, Jan Van Scoyck, Maggie Puck- ett, Kathleen Jett, Betty I m r i e , Frances Finnell, Eleanor Knotts, Phyllis Daniels, Martha Williams, Jeanne Hardy, Lucille Crumpler, Margaret Ann Graham, Ida Mae Hogshead, Dorothy Amey, Virginia Morris. PADEREWSKI ' S MINUET— THE LIGHT FANTASTIC FOR THE QUEEN OF MAY . . . THE FIRE DEPARTMENT TAKES A LOT OF RIBBING, BUT IT DOES A LOT OF GOOD . . NEW TRUCK THIS YEAR, TOO AND CHIEF ' S RETIRED FIRE DEPARTMENT 1st Row — Reedus Back, Herschel McDaniels, Oscar Davidson. 2nd Row — Jack Hale, Tom Finney, James Bayes, Chief , Jim Taylor, Frank Sero. AG UNION 1st Row — James Bays, Harry Bailey, Larry Wolfe, Alton Noblett, James Wing, Alden Noblett, Russell Hennessee. 2nd Row — Frederick Kirsch, Bill Norton, Ormand Wil- liams, Edwin Bishop, Hughes Spurlock, Ray Feltner, Sam McNeil. 3rd Row — Gene Bollinger, Mr. Spillman, Wilbur Kin caid, Mr. Monier, Reedus Back, Jack Buchanan, Mr. Wolford. AG UNION SOCIALS HAVE MADE IT FAMOUS . . . HOME EC AIMS TO TEACH THE WAY TO A MAN ' S HEART ... IN THE CITY OR THE COUNTRY . . . Or mL : l mi ?j Q B n fWIjfaiw ' Lj iyui n HOME EC CLUB 1st Row — Lucille Davis, Pauline Sloane, Madge Sharks, Roberta Halcombe, Kathleen Roberts, Anna Claire, Christine La Fon, Connie Roberts. 2nd Row — Florence Begley, Ruby Sasser, Norma York, Virginia Godbey, Aline Goodwin, Geraldine Lucas, Virginia Balden, Geneva Matlock, Opalee, Smith, Rena Yount, Ruby Fleming, Ozella Hurst, Florence Elam. AG-HOME EC CLUB Florence Begley, Ormand Williams, Hughes Spurlock, Lucy Goins, Bill Norton, Helen Forloine, Edwin Bishop, Jack Buchanan, Pat Williams, Kathleen Roberts, Pauline Sloane, Virginia Balden, Claribel Buchanan, Alda Ruth Morris, Norman York, Florence Elam, Lucille Davis, Marion Branum, Ruby Fleming, Rena Yount, Geraldine Lucas, Opalee Smith, Aline Goodwin, Billa Jean Peters, Fannie Wilder, Madge Sparks. ALUMNI— Clark, H., B., Parsons, Green, Wright, G., Kirby. Kilbourne, Wilson, Moore, Hale, Wright, T. VARSITY — Kilbourne, Lovell, Hale, Welsh, Robbins, Allen, Reynolds. Woods, Ramey, Lang, Poteat, Compton, Lewis, Edwards, Henderson. ACADEMY — Coach Henderson, Miller, Hangar, Huff, Morgan, Fish, Bradbury, R. Bradbury, J., Holmes, Spillman, Hilton, Rue, Gentry. Johnson, Coyle, Clarkston, Rose. FOUNDATION — Fish, Walters, Card, Blackburn, Smith, Vanderpool, Grahar Schumacher, Johnson, Bales, Coyle, Barker, Center, Hymer. ' ' ™ J V • — HP BIOGRAPHIES, UD SENIORS ADKINS, MARY HELEN— Bereo Players 1,3; YWCA 1, French Club 2,3,4; WAA 2,3,4, Board 3,4, Treas. 4; Country Dancers 3,4; Harmonia 2, Chimes Staff 4, ALTIZER, EVA DOVE— Berea Players 1; Soci- ology Club 3,4; YWCA 1,2,3,4, Outlying Work 2,3,4; WAA 1,2. AUERBACH, BRIGITTE — Vanguards 3,4, Coun cil 4; PAF 1,2,3,4; Berea Players 1,4; Life Saving 2; Pi Alpha 3,4; Sigma Pi Sigma 3,4, Sec. 4; Cosmopolitan Club 4, YWCA 4. BALDEN, VIRGINIA— Berea Players 4; Home Ec Club 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 4; YWCA 1,2. BECK, CORA OVALINE— YWCA 1,2,3,4, Har monia 1,4; Bird Club 2,3,4; Pi Alpha 3,4. BEGLEY, FLORENCE— Berea Players 1 ; YWCA 1; Home Ec. Club 4; Ag-Home Ec. Club 4. BOEHM, MABEL— LD Senate 1, Sec. 1, Bird Club 3,4, Publicity Chairman 3, Union Church Choir 4; Project Committee 1 ; Country Dancers 1 ,2,3,4; Sec. 2, Pres. 4, Sociology Club 3,4; Pi Gamma Mu 3,4; PAF 4; Harmonia 1 ; YWCA 4. BRANUM, MARION— Berea Players 1,2,3; YWCA 1,2,3; Home Ec. Club 3,4; Har- monia 4; Ag-Home Ec. Club 4. BUCHANAN, JACK W— Ag Club 3,4; Vice- Pres. 4; Ag-Home Ec Club 4; YMCA 2,4, Alpha Zeta 1; Band 1,2; Orchestra 1,2,3; Harmonia 2,3; LD Glee Club 1 , Varsity Men ' s Glee Club 2,4; AF 3,4, Pres. 4; Class Vice-Pres. 2; Class Pres. 4; UD Board of Governors, Vice-Pres. 3; UD Student Council 4, Pres. 4; Bird Club 3,4, Treas. 3, Berea Players 2; WHO ' S WHO IN AMER- ICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. BURTON, JIMMIE RUTH— Transfer Southern Union Church Choir 3; Varsity Women ' s Glee Club 4; YWCA 3,4, Cabinet 4; Soci- ology Club 3,4, Vice-Pres. 4; Harmonia 3,4. CARTER, HILDA — Transfer Brevard College, North Carolina; YWCA 4. CLARK, BERN ICE— Berea Players 1,2,3,4; Class Sec. 1; YWCA 1,2 COTTON, JAN— PAF 1; Berea Players 2,3, Harmonia 3,4; Band 1 . CROSSWHITE, BOBBY COYLE— Accompanist, Varsity Women ' s Glee Club 1 ,2,3,4; YWCA I. DAVIS, HELEN MURIEL— YWCA 1,2, Berea Players 3,4; Wallpaper Staff 4. DAVIS, LILLIAN— Berea Players 3,4; YWCA 1, PAF 4. DAVIS, LUCILLE— YWCA 1, PAF 2; Ag-Home Ec. Club 4; Home Ec. Club 3,4, Pres. 4; Berea Players 3,4; Recreation Committee 4. DOCTOR, MARTIN — Transfer University of Illinois; Berea Players 4. DUNCAN, MARGARET ELIZABETH — Berea Players 2,3,4; Harmonia 1,3,4. YWCA 1,2; Orchestra 1,2,4; Band 1,2,4 Chimes Staff 4. EDWARDS, FRANK— YMCA 1,2,3,4, Pres. 3; Life Service 2,3,4, Pres. 4 ' LD Senate 2; UD Senate 3; UD Student C.uncil 4; Berea Players 3; Men ' s Glee Club 4; Harmonia 4. ELAM, FLORENCE ELAINE— YWCA 1,2; Berea Plovers 1,2,3,4, Group Chairman 3; Home Ec Club 3,4; Reporter 3: Ag-Home Ec Club 4, Sec. 4, Reporter 4; Class Sec. 4; Wall- paper Staff 4; Harmon-a 4; Kv. Home Ec. Assn., Vice-Pres. 3; Ch ; mes Staff 4. ELK INS, ROSEBELLE— Berea Plovers 1; French Club 1,2, Vice-Pres. 2 YWCA 1; LD Sun- day School Council 2; Psychology Club 3; UD Chopel Committee 4; PAF 3,4, Council 4. ELLER, ELYNA — Transfer Brevard College, North Carolina; YWCA 3,4: Berea Plovers 3; Harmonia 4. ESTEPP, AMANDA JEAN— Transfer Cumber- land College, Kentucky; YWCA 3,4; Har- monic 4, Pi Alpha 4; Bird Club 4, UD Women ' s Council 3. FAIR, RUTH— YWCA 1,2,3,4; Harmonia 3,3; Berea Players 2,3. FEARING ELIZABETH— Inter Dorm Council 2; Berea Players 1,3,4; Chimes Staff 4; YWCA 1,2,3,4; Education Club 4; UD Student Council 4; UD Women ' s Council 3,4, Sec. 3. FERRIL, RUTH— YWCA 1,2,3,4, Outing Club 1 , Band 1 ; Berea Players 1 ,2,4, Group Chairman 2; PAF 2,3,4; Vanguards 3, WAA 1,2,3,4, Council 1,2,3,4, Pres. 3; Sociology Club 3,4. FORLOINE, HELEN— YWCA 1,2; WAA 1,2; Harmonia 2,3,4; Home Ec Club 3,4; Ag- Home Ec Club 4. GODBEY, VIRGINIA— Berea Players 1; Har- monia 1,3,4; YWCA 1,2; Home Ec. Club 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 4; Chimes Staff 4. GOINS, LUCY — Transfer Mars Hill College, North Carolina, Harmonia 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club, Vice-Pres. 4; Basketball 3,4; YWCA 3,4. BSU 3,4; Prayer Group 4; Home Ec Club, 4. GRAHAM, MARGARET— Berea Players 1,3,4, Second Vice-Pres., 3; Varsity Women ' s Glee Club 1,2,3,4, Sec. -Treasurer 4; UD Board of Governors 3; UD Student Council 4, Sec. 4, Danforth Chapel Choir 1,2; Psychology Club 3; Chimes Staff, Circula- tion Editor 4. GREGG, BETTY— Berea Players 1 ,4; YWCA 1 ,2. GREGG, POLLY— Vanguards 1,2,3,4, Sec. 3, Council 4; PAF 1,2,3, Pan American League 1 ,2,3, Treas. 3; Berea Players 1,2,4; YWCA 1,3. HARDIN, JOYCE— Education Club 4; WAA 1,2, Vanguards 1,4; YWCA 1,2,3,4, Cab- inet 2; Inter-school Social Comm. 1 ,2, Chm. 2; Berea Players 1,2,3,4, Council 2,3,4, Group Chairman 2; Alpha Psi Omega 3,4, Vice-Pres. 4, Tau Delta Tau 3,4, Sec- Treas. 4, Chimes Staff 3,4, Asst Photo- grapher 3, Co-Editor 4 HARRIS, JEAN — Berea Players 3,4; YWCA 1,2,3,4; Pi Alpha 3,4; Wallpaper Staff 3,4; PAF 1,2; Prayer Group 3,4. HARTLEY, LOIS B.— Berea Players, 1,2; 1,2,3; Pi Alpha 3,4; YWCA 1,2. PAF HENDERSON, VIRGINIA— Harmonia 1,2,3,4; Berea Players 1,4; French Club 2; YWCA 1,2,3,4, Cabinet 2,3,4; BSU 1,2,3,4, Pres. 4; Pi Alpha 3,4; PAF 3,4. HIBBARD, EVELYN— YWCA 1,2,3,4, Cabinet 4; UD Women ' s Council; Berea Players 1 ,4; Harmonia 2,3; Danforth Chapel Choir 1; Band 2,3,4; Orchestra 4; Chimes, Co-Cir- culation Manager 4; Tau Kappa Alpha 3,4; UD Social Comm. 4; Institutional Recreational Comm. 3,4; Class Social Comm. Chairman 4. HILLMAN, BOBBIE— Berea Players 1,3; Har- monia 4; LD Senate 1; UD Board of Gov- ernors 3, Treas. 3; Class Treas. 4; Chimes Staff 4; Pi Alpha 3,4; Sec. 4. HILTON, FRANCES— PAF 1,2,3,4; Berea Play- ers 1,2,3,4; Life Saving 2; WAA 2; YWCA 1,3; Home Ec Club 3,4; Ag -Home Ec Club 4. HOERNLEIN, LENORA— Berea Players 1, Van- guards 1 ; Prayer Group 1 . HORTON, REBEKAH— Harmonia 1,2,4; Berea Players 3; YWCA 1,4; BSU 1,2,3,4, Coun- cil 3,4; Life Service 2,3. HUNT, ELIZABETH — Harmonia 4; Berea Players 1,2,3; YWCA 1,2,3,4. HURST, OZELLA YWCA 1,2; Berea Players 2,3,4; Home Ec Club 3,4, Ag-Home Ec Club 4. Chimes Staff 4. JETT, KATHLEEN— LD Choir 1,2, YWCA 2, Life Saving 3; Varsity Women ' s Glee Club 1,2,3,4, Pres. 4; Band 3,4; Orchestra 1,4, Harmonia 1,2,3; Berea Players 4. JONES, MARY ELIZABETH— YWCA 1,2,3,4, PAF 3,4; Pi Alpha 3,4, Treas. 3, Executive Council 3, Program Comm. 4; Berea Play- ers 1,2,3; Harmonia 3,4; WAA 2,3,4 KING, NANCY CAROLYN— Country Dancers 2,3,4; YWCA 2; Berea Players, 2,3,4, Parliamentarian 3; Tau Kappa Alpha 2,3,4; Inter-Dorm Council, Pres. 2; Van- guard Council 4, Chimes, Co-Editor 4, WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVER- SITIES AND COLLEGES. KIRSCH, FREDERICK WILLIAM - Ag Club 1,2,3,4, Treas. 2, Pres. 4; Board of Gov- ernors 3,4; UD Chapel Comm 4. KOFF, ESTHER WERTHEIMER— Transfer Brook- lyn College and New York University, N Y .; PAF 3,4, Vice-Pres. 4; Vanguards 3,4, Publicity Chairman 4; Chapel Program Comm. 4. LA FON, CHRISTINE— Berea Players 1,2,3,4, YWCA 1,2,4; Outing Club 2; Home Ec Club 3,4, Treas. 4; Country Dancers 3,4, Pi Alpha 3,4, Chimes Staff 4. LANE, JUNE— YWCA 2,3,4; Education Club 4, Bird Club 3,4. LAY, MARIE ELIZABETH— Berea Players 1,2, YWCA 1,2,3,4, Harmoma 3,4, Union Church Choir 4; Pi Alpha 3,4; Bird Club 4; Education Club 4. LEWIS, AILEEN H.— Wallpaper Staff 1,2,3,4 YWCA 1,2,3,4, Cabinet 1,2,3, Sec. 3, Ed itorial Staff, YW-YM Student Handbook 3 Berea Players 1,2,3, Business Mgr. 3; Inter School Recreation Comm. 2; Class Sec 3 Tau Kappa Alpha 4, PAF 4 Pi Gamma Mu 4; Class Project Comm. 4; Inter-Dormitory Council 2; WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. LUCAS, GERALDINE— Berea Players 1,2,3,4; WAA 1; YWCA 1,2,3,4; Home Ec Club 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 4 MANEY, EMOGENE— Vanguards 1, YWCA 1, Rural Life 2; PAF 2,4; Pan-American League 3,4, Vice-Pres. 4. MATLOCK, GENEVA METZLER— YWCA 1,2, Berea Players 1,2; UD Women ' s Council 3, Class Treas. 3; Home Ec Club 3,4; Cosmo- politan Club 4. MORRIS, ALDA RUTH — YWCA 1,2; Berea Players 1 ,2,4; WAA 2,3,4; Home Ec Club 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 4 MORTON, PANSY FERN— Union Church Choir 4, Berea Players 1 ; Harmonia 1 ,2,3,4, YWCA 1,2,3,4, Vice Pres 4; Education Club 4; Bird Club 3,4 MUSSER, THARON— YWCA 1,2,3,4, Cabinet 3; Berea Players 1,2,3,4, Council 2,3,4, Hall of Fame 3, Second Vice-Pres. 2; Sec. 3, Pres. 4, Alpha Psi Omega 3,4; Tau Delta Tau 2,3,4, Pres. 3,4, Tau Kappa Alpha 2,3,4; Chimes Staff 3,4, Bus Mgr. 4; WAA 1,2,4, Treas. 2, Class Vice-Pres. 4, Inter- Dorm Council, Pres. 2; LD Social Comm WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVER SITIES AND COLLEGES. NASSAU, MARIAN EVELYN — YWCA 1,2,3,4, Cabinet 4; Berea Players 1 ,2,3,4; Sociology Club 3,4, Cosmopolitan Club 3,4, Tau Kappa Alpha 4, Life Saving 1 , Sunday School Council 1 . NORTON, WILLIAM I — YMCA 1,2,3,4, Treas. 3,4, Cabinet 2,3,4, Ag Union 1,2,3,4, Pres. 4; Prayer Group 1,2,3,4; UD Senate and Board of Governors 3, UD Student Council 4, MYF 2,3,4, Vice-Pres. 4. O ' DELL, JAMES S— YMCA 1,2,3,4; UD Senate 3; UD Student Council 4, YMCA Cabinet 4, French Club 3,4; Life Service 3,4. PARRIS, RUBY— Outlying Work 2; YWCA 1,2. 3,4; Harmonia 3,4 PETERS, BILLA JEAN — Berea Players 1,3; YWCA 1,2,3,4; Home Ec. Club 3,4; Ag- Home Ec. Club 4; WAA 1. PULVER, HELEN— Berea Players 1,2; Sec. of Class 2; YWCA 1,2,3,4, Cosmopolitans 3,4; Wallpaper 3, Public Affairs Forum 4; Pi Alpha 3,4; UD Women ' s Council 4 WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVER- SITIES AND COLLEGES. RANKIN, BETTY JO — Berea Players 1,2,3; Har- monia 4; Chimes Staff 4; YWCA 1,2,3,4; Home Ec Club 3; Chairman Class Project Committee 4; Wallpaper staff 3; Chairman Class Social Committee3. ROBERTS. CONNIE — Transfer Brevard College. North Carolina; Home Ec. Club 3,4: Berea Players 3; YWCA 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 4 Harmonia 4. ROBERTS, KATHLEEN— Berea Players 1,2; YWCA 1; Class Project Comm. Chair. 2; Home Ec Club 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 4, Treasurer 4. ROMINGER, BILLIE — YWCA 1,2,3, Cabinet 2,3; Council of UD Women ' s Assn. 4; Berea Players 1,2,3,4. SALISBURY, BONNIE RUTH— YWCA 1,2,3,4; Berea Players 1,2,3; Life Service 4; PAF 4; Vanguards 4. SASSER, RUBY — Transfer from Campbellsville College, Ky.; Home Ec. Club 3,4; YWCA 3,4; Harmonia 4; BSU 3,4; Ag-Home Ec. Club 4. SCHELL, RUTH— Class Treasurer 1, YWCA 1,2,3,4; Berea Players 1,2,3,4, Council 1 ,2,3,4, Group Chm. 1 , Treasurer 2,3,4; Alpha Psi Omega 2,3,4, Treasurer 3, Pres. 4; Tau Delta Tau 2,3,4, Sec.-Treas. 3, Vice-Pres. 4, Wallpaper Staff 2; Chimes Staff 3,4, Literary Ed. 4; PAF 1; WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. SLOANE, PAULINE— YWCA 1,2,3; Berea Play- ers 1,2,3; Outing Club 2; CYS 2; Home Ec Club 3,4, Pres. 4; Ag-Home Ec Club 4; Chimes Staff 4. SLUSHER, RUTH— UD Student Council 4; Har- monia 4; UD Senate, Sec. 3; YWCA 1,2, 3,4; Berea Players 1,2,3; Chimes Staff 4. SPRINKLE, NINA— Berea Players 1,2,3,4. SMITH, OLGA - - Education Club 3,4; Berea Players 3; YWCA 1. SMITH, OPALEE— WAA 1,2,3; Home Ec Club 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 4; YWCA 1,2,3,4; Berea Players 4. SPARKS, MADGE— YWCA 1 ,2; WAA 4, Sec. 4; Berea Players 1 ,4; Home Ec Club 4, Sec. 4; Ag-Home Ec Club 4. STANLEY, MARY— Transfer W. Va. Wesleyan College; YWCA 3,4, Cabinet 3,4; Sociology Club 4. THRELKELD, JANE — Berea Players 1,2,3, YWCA 1,2,3,4; Harmonia 3,4; PAF 3,4. TREDENNICK, DOROTHY— Inter-Dorm Coun- cil 1; PAF 1,2,3,4, Pres. 3,4; Union Church Choir 1,2,3; Harmonia 1,2; LD Senate 2; Twenty Writers 1,2,3,4, Pres. 3,4; Berea Players 1; UD Student Council 3,4; UD Women ' s Association, Pres. 4; Ky. Repre- sentative, Conference of Southern Colleges and Universities 3,4; WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COL- LEGES. WETZEL, ROSEMARY— Berea Players 1,2; YWCA 1; PAF 1,2,3,4; Pan American League 3,4, Publicity Chairman 4. WHEELER, DOROTHY JEAN— Union Church Choir 4; Harmonia 1,2,3,4; Pan American Union 3,4, Sec. 3, Pres. 4; YWCA 1,2,3,4; PAF 3,4; Berea Players 2,3; Education Club 4. WILDER, FANNY— Transfer Cumberland Col- lege, Ky.; Ag-Home Ec Club 4; Home Ec Club 3,4. WILLIAMS, EVALEE— Union Church Choir 4; Berea Players 1,2; YWCA 1,2,3,4; Pi Alpha 3,4; Education Club 4; Bird Club 4. WILLIAMS, FORREST— YMCA 1,2,3,4; Class Pres. 3; Basketball 3,4. WILLIAMS, ORMAND C— Transfer Mars Hill College, N. C; Ag Club 3,4, Sec. 3, Public- ity Mgr. 4; UD Senate 3, UD Student Coun- cil 4; YMCA 3,4, Cabinet 3, Pres. 4; BSU 3,4, Vice-Pres. 4; Prayer Group 3,4; Life Service 3,4; WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. WILLIAMS, PATRICIA— BSU 1,2,3,4, Council 4; Life Service 2,3,4, Pres. 3; PAF 1; Prayer Group 1,2,3,4; YWCA 1,2,3,4, Cab- inet 3,4; Berea Players 3, Harmonia 1,2,4; Home Ec Club 3,4; Country Dancers 1 , Outlying church work 1,2,3,4; Danforth Chapel Choir 3. WILLS, Anna— Harmonia 1,2,3,4; YWCA 2,4, Cabinet 4; Pi Alpha 3.4; BSU 1,2,3,4, Council 3; French Club 3. WING, JAMES M. — Transfer Brevard College, North Carolina; Berea Players 3; Ag-Home Ec Club 3,4, Sec 4; Ag Union 3,4, Sec. 4. YOUNT, RENA— Transfer Flora McDonald Col- lege, North Carolina; Home Ec Club 3,4; YWCA 3,4; Ag-Home Ec Club 4, Pres. 4. BIOGRAPHIES, 12th GRADE BAIRD, GEORGIA — Girl Reserves, Vice-Pres. 2. BAKER, VIOLET— Glee Club 1; Berea Players 2,3. BECK, JOSEPHINE— House Pres. 2, Girl Re- serves 2. BLESSING, WILLIAM— Wallpaper 4, Band 4, YMCA 4. BOWLING, MARY— Girl Reserves 2, Pres. 1 ; YWCA 3,4; Berea Players 4. BRADBURY, RAYMOND A. — Berea Players 3, 4; Vice Pres. 4; House Council Represent- ative 3; Basketball 4; YMCA 4 BURTON, GENE— Hi-Y 1,2, Sec. 2; Berea Play ers 2,3,4, YMCA 3,4; Hi-Y Advisor 4, Berea Folk Dancers 2,3,4. CAIN, LEILA— Berea Players 4, WAA 4. CAMPBELL, MARY ELIZABETH- CHAMBERS, GRACE — Girl Reserve 2; Basket- ball 2; Glee Club 2. CLARKSON, PAUL — YMCA 1; Berea Players 2; Folk Dancing I COAPMAN, JOHN — Union Church Choir 4, Men ' s Glee Club 4; LD Senate 4, Cosmo- politan Club 3,4, YMCA 4 COLLINS, SCOTT— Berea Players 3,4; YMCA 4. CRAIN, SARA BETH— Girl Reserves 1,2; Berea Players 4; Vanguards 4. CROW, MIRIAM— Berea Players 4; Basketball 4. DANIELS, MARTHA— Harmonia 4, Vanguard Council 4; Union Church Choir 4. DANIELS, PHYLLIS— Orchestra 4, Harmonia 4; YWCA 4, Union Church Choir 4; PAF 4. DAUSE, HAZEL— Berea Players 4; Basketball 1,2,3,4. DAWSON, PATRICIA - - Union Church Choir 2,3,4; Studio Ensemble 3,4, Harmoni ' . Studio Ensemble 3,4, Harmonia 3,4, : Players 4. DIXON, VIRGINIA— DORTON, DOROTHY — Harmonio 3,4 DOUGLASS, DAVID— Hi Y 2, YMCA 3,4, Har- monia 3,4; Glee Club 2 EICKER, WILLIAM — Vanguards 4; Band 4, Council Member 4, Union Church Choir 4; Orchestra 4, Men ' s Glee Club 4; Harmonia 4, Librarian 4. FEARNOW, LEONA IMOGENE— Berea Players 3, Bird Club 2. FELTNER, BERNICE— FILMORE, GEORGE— Hi Y 1 ,2 Treas. 1,2; Berea Players 1,2,3,4; Thespians 3,4, Sec. 3,4; Bird Club 3,4; YMCA 2,3,4, Secretary 4. FISH, EARLE— Berea Players 4, LD Senate 4; Basketball 1,2,3,4, YMCA 3,4. GATEWOOD, MAX— YMCA 2,3,4; Berea Play- ers 3; Basketball 2,3; Harmonia 3; Glee Club 2; Band 2. HAYES, JEAN — Studio Ensemble 3,4; Harmonia 4. HICKS, EDNA— Girl Reserve 2; Sec. and Treas. HORTON, SAMUEL— Berea Players 3; Basket- ball 3; YMCA 3,4. HUDDLESTON, JANE ELLEN— Glee Club 2. HUDLOW, GLORIA— Girl Reserves 1,2; Har- monia 4. HUFF, JEANETTE— Glee Club 1,2; Girl Re- serves 1,2; WAA 3,4; Berea Plovers 4. HURST, MARY— YWCA 3 4 ISON, FLORENE— YWCA 4. JACKSON THELMA JEAN— Girl Reserves 1.2. JUSTICE, PATRICIA RUTH— Basketball 1,2,3, 4; Girl Reserves 1 ; Harmonia 3,4; LD Sen- ate 3,4. MARTIN, GALEN— YMCA 4. MINIARD, CLARICE— Berea Players 4; Van- guards 4; Girl Reserves 1,2. MORGAN, KATHRYN— MORGAN, WILLIAM— Basketball 2,3,4; Treas. 4; YMCA 4. MUNCY, PATRICIA — Union Church Choir 2,3, 4. NOLL, LEONORE — Berea Players 2,3,4, Group Chairman 4; Thespians 3,4; Vice-Pres. 3,4; Union Church Choir 2,3,4; LD Senate 4; Chimes Staff 4. PARKER, RICHARD— Berea Players 3,4, Group Chairman 4; Union Church C.E. 3,4, Treas. 4; YMCA 3,4. PEARL, BETTY JO — Chairman of Social Com- mittee 3,4; Union Church Choir 3,4. PENNINGTON, JOYCE Thespians 4. Berea Players 4, RICHIE, GEORGIA— YWCA 3,4; Berea Players 3,4; Vanguards 4; Harmonia 2. ROSS, LUCILLE — Berea Players 4; Girl Reserves 1,2. SANDERS, MINNIE LEA— SAYLOR, AILEEN— House Council 1,3; Pres. 4; YWCA 4. SCOTT, MARY KATHLEEN— Glee Club 1,2; Berea Players 4. SCHELL, LOGAN— YMCA 3,4; Berea Players 2; Folk Dancing 2. SHOLAR, LOLA — Berea Players 4; Vanguards Council 4; YWCA 4. SKAGGS, MYRL— YWCA 3. SPILLMAN, THOMAS— Berea Players 1 ; Basket- ball 2,3,4; YMCA 4; Pres. 3.4. SPURLOCK, BESSIE— Folk Dancers 2; Girl Re- serves 1; Basketball 1,2,3. STEVENS, HOWARD— YMCA 3,4. TAYLOR, BEVERLY— Union Church Choir 2,3,4, Berea Players 2,3,4; Thespians 4, Pres. 3,4. WARINNER, JOANNE— Union Church Choir 3; Berea Players 3,4; Harmonia 4; Band 4; Chairman Social Comm.3. WEGENER, BETTY— Berea Players 3; Wallpaper Staff 4. WHITE, CLARA— Basketball 3. YOUNG, LILLIAN— Harmonia 3. YOWELL, LENA— Berea Players 4; Glee Club 1, Girl Reserves 1 . the backbone of the chimes OUR ADVERTISERS THE CHIMES of 1946 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 HERE ' S TO YOUR HEALTH ' Sanitary Septic Tanks Glazed Well Casing The Twin Foes of Disease Ask your local dealer for clay goods made by: LEE CLAY PRODUCTS, INC. CLEARFIELD ROWAN COUNTY KENTUCKY JJHgBK Inonp (Eattprn OF BEREA COLLEGE Berea College offers much of interest both in its scenic beauties and in its education program. This charming inn is located at the gateway to Ken- tucky ' s romantic mountains. Now is your vacation time — relax and enjoy the privileges of a college community. Compliments of ENGLE DEPARTMENT STORE LADIES ' AND GENTS ' FURNISHINGS BEREA, KENTUCKY Compliments of Friend CALUMET TEA COFFEE COMPANY Chicago PLUMBER ' S SUPPLY COMPANY LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY Plumbing — Heating — Mill Supplies Kohler Plumbing Fixtures — Weil McLain Heating SOUTH KENTUCKY PIPE LINE CO High grade refined petroleum products Somerset, Ky FROM A BOOSTER OF CLEAN SPORTS Compliments of Krim-Ko Chocolate Flavored Drink KRIM-KO COMPANY Chicago, Illinois Compliments of ADES LEXINGTON DRY GOODS CO 249 255 E. Main Street Lexington, Kentucky TO BEREA ... Our sincere appreciation for the many years )f pleasant associations we have enjoyed as sup- pliers of Boxes for Berea Beaten Biscuits and other 3akery Products The GARDNER-RICHARDSON Co Middletown, Ohio Manufacturers of Folding Cartons — and Displays Compliments of Gulf Refining Company Loire PAINTS VARNISHES Quality Unsurpassed Since 1870 Compliments of J. W. PURKEY SONS ' Where Bereans Save ' BEREA, KENTUCKY CONCRETE BLOCK LEXINGTON CONCRETE PRODUCTS CO. Old Frankfort Pike Lexington, Kentucky COMPLIMENTS OF MEEKS MOTOR FREIGHT Reliable freight service to and from Berea HAND WEAVING 1 15 Franklin St. Jfrtsli 2jtitcn IT ' S LOVELY — IT LASTS LOOMS AND ACCESSORIES in stock now Samples and Prices on Request HUGHES FAWCETT, Inc. New York 1 3 N.Y. :-■:: :s W:WVrti? ; 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 ' . Food Products of Quality Pickles, Preserves, Jams, Jellies and Fruit Butters LUTZ SCHRAMM INC. Pittsburg, Pa Compliments OWEN McKEE THE LADIES ' STORE Richmond, Kentucky When in Berea . eat at the BLUE GRASS COMPLIMENTS of CRANE CO. Compliments of DORIS PIATT SHOP FINE PAPER SPECIALTIES BETTY BRITE White Doilies, Tinted Doilies Place Mats Shelf Papers, Baking Cups AMERICAN Drinking Cups, Porcell Cups, Napkins Ramekins Tray Covers, Candv Box Findings AMERICAN LACE PAPER CO. Milwaukee 12, Wis CONGRATULATIONS! CLASS ' 46 THE COLLEGE STORE REMEMBER THE HANGOUT When You Return THE STUDENT HANGOUT SISTRUNK THE BIG HOUSE W. T. SISTRUNK CO. WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS (Largest in Central Kentucky) Fruits — Vegetables — Groceries - - Notions - - Confections Hotel -- Restaurant — Fountain Supplies LEXINGTON, 31, KENTUCKY Compliments of PAN CONFECTIONS Compliments of A Friend KINGSKRAFT COVERS Used On The 1946 CHIMES Manufactured by the KINGSPORT PRESS, INC. Kingsport, Tennessee for that quiet snack between classes . . . meet me at . . . COTTON ' S PLACE Short Street Sandwiches Ice Cream Cold Drinks HOME COOKING- LITTLE MAMA ' S COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND Compliments of THE BEREA BANK AND TRUST CO. DEPARTMENT (H OF HEALTH Food Handling fl K Establishment ISSUED FOR i g w . Cm J Card I H K ■MB ■ ;ou r «iiti nnai AT PFftEA, JHMTUCtt ftufcauj f Tb IMMV m 7 b (• eJ d b. ihr Hfllh flficr- w nulm: of lb «l«bh K™rnl «id mu- br m nwd tii Hsakh Oldirr lli.i MMH i nil U .mJerablr  nd ■■■■Lit t pMtetJ •►♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦ e  • •• ♦  .  ♦♦♦ ' COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND , , ,v v, K TO A SWELL CLASS AND A GREAT SCHOOL PAPER PACKAGE COMPANY INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA n v, v, i x SLEEPY-HEAD HOUSE FOR THE FINEST HOME FURNISHINGS 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 Be Better Fitted in BAYNHAMS Shoes of Distinction Lexington, Ky. Louisville, Ky. Nashville, Tenn. John F. Dean Edward L. Roberts JOHN F. DEAN AGENCY Insurance Berea Bank Trust Co. Bldg. Phone 35 Berea, Kentucky BLACK BROS. BUS LINES Call us for Special Trips Phone 210 or Nearest Bus Station Richmond, Kentucky Compliments of A Friend Compliments of BEREA DRY CLEANERS E. L EDWARDS, Prop. Cleaning — Pressing — Tailoring Special Attention to Student Work Short St. Phone 328 Compliments of the MIAMI MARGARINE COMPANY CODELL CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, Inc. GENERAL CONTRACTORS Winchester, Kentucky HIGHWAYS OUT OF MOUNTAINS Modern Beauty Salon TYPEWRITERS Short Streel Compliments of BEREA NATIONAL BANK Compliments of ASHLAND HOME TELEPHONE COMPANY Inc. Serving Forty Kentucky Communities UN DERWOOD ADDING MACHINES ACCOUNTING MACHINES AND SUPPLIES SPEED THE WORLD ' S BUSINESS UNDERWOOD CORPORATION ONE PARK AVENUE NEW YORK, 16, N. Y. LACQUER SPECIALTIES, INC., Newark 5, New Jersey Broom Handle Lacquers of Proven Quality Compliments of G. M. RESTAURANT A Good Place to Eat Chestnut Assure You VARIETY VITALITY VITAMINS Fred Richardson, Mgr COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND VALUE Mwa s ' LOOK FOR THE LION HEAD FOR FINER QUALITY FOODS A. F. SCRUGGS INSURANCE AGENCY Short Street Berea, Ky. THE NEW FISHERIES COMPANY FISH SEA FOODS OYSTERS 324 328 W. Sixth Street Cincinnati, Ohio Compliments of BOONE TAVERN BARBER SHOP JV oiUlta.Ul VJ£.£.ti. -■ •• ■ ■ - I llll ■an For the Smartest Junior Dresses Wear a Minx Modes Junior Okayed by the Jr. Board of Review composed of alert, alive, College and Career Girls Minx Modes Exclusively in Lexington at Martins MARTIN ' S Blue Grass Fashions Lexington ' s Fastest Growing Specialty Store Hoonz JauExn (fyiji noli Products of Student Industries Located on the Corner of Main Street Opposite Union Church Under Berea College Management — Berea, Kentucky BEREA THEATRE Where you can always see a good show BRYAN-HUNT CO. Incorporated Lexington, Kentucky STATE BANK AND TRUST CO. Richmond, Kentucky K-CAB 24 hour Service Tel. 353 THE E. T. SLIDER COMPANY River Road at Campbell JAckson 2381 LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY Producers and Shippers of Washed and Screened SAND and GRAVEL from the OHIO RIVER Our Motto: Quality and Prompt Service Compliments of UNITED STATES PIPE AND FOUNDRY COMPANY BIRMINGHAM, ALA ' Meet you at T. P ' s Compliments of IDEAL CAFE Ideal Place to Eat ' Tel 141 ELLIOTT COMPANY Manufacturers of power plant equipment, including steam and gas turbine- generators, motors and generators, deaerators and feedwater heaters, con- densers, steam jet ejectors, desuperheaters, strainers, steam and oil separators, cleaners, superchargers for Diesel engines. Plants in JEANNETTE, PA., RIDGEWAY, PA. AND SPRINGFIELD, OHIO GREETINGS, CLASS OF ' 46 We are glad for our young people everywhere that our nation has been blessed with victory and peace We congratulate you on your achievements thus far in life which have made it possible for you to graduate from a splendid institution. You are better fitted to assume the obligations and responsibilities which must be discharged to preserve and perpetuate your heritage for which this entire people waged such a gallant fight. Again - - - Greetings, and our sincere best wishes. DIXIE WAX PAPER COMPANY MEMPHIS DALLAS Compliments of YOUNG AND EPLEE LOUISVILLE BEDDING COMPANY Louisville 2, Kentucky Manufacturers of finer bedding for over 50 years OLD KENTUCKY QUILTS SPRING-AIR MATTRESSES COMFORTS— QUI LTED PADDING — PILLOWS Compliments of Central Service Station Compliments of Elkins Drug Store MMt .|OH M IIW AIC Fine Footwear 754 756 McMillian St. Cincinnati, Ohio Doughnut Corporation of America 393 Seventh Avenue. New Yorkl.N. V JjEiza CoLUcjz tuaEnt {Jndusbil i The finest things are made by hand i i .t tm «■ • — ■   «—— IMMMM Handicraft gifts are never forgotten COMPLIMENTS OF STANDARD TEXTILE COMPANY Cincinnati, Ohio Compliments of RIVERS ' SHOE SHOP Short St. Phone 312 Compliments of ROMINGER FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service Tel. 125 48 Berea, KentuckJ BROCK-MCVEY CO. Incorporated Distributors of Plumbing, Heating and Tinners ' Supplies Vine and Southeastern Streets Lexington, Ky. Compliments of Berea 5c to $1.00 Store Compliments of a Friend - COMPLIMENTS OF COLONIAL HOTEL Telephone 84 Berea, Kentucky PICTURE POST CARDS SOUVENIR FOLDERS ARTVUE POST CARD CO. 225 Fifth Avenue New York 10, N.Y. Authorized Distributor A.B. DICK MIMEOGRAPH DUPLICATORS AND SUPPLIES THE LANG COMPANY 21 1 West Market Street Louisville 2, Kentucky Best Wishes for the Class of 1946 DAVIDSON BROTHERS AND CO. Berea, Kentucky NU-WAY CLEANERS Quality cleaning and prompt service is our specialty PHONE 61 BEREA, KENTUCKY Compliments of PORTER MOORE DRUG COMPANY WHERE THE NATION SHOPS AND SAVES Over 1600 Stores J. C. PENNEY COMPANY Richmond, Kentucky iw3 BIIOK. WHOLESALE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES IRVINE STREET RICHMOND, KENTUCKY FOR PORTRAITS OF HIGHEST QUALITY THE McGAUGHEY STUDIO RICHMOND, KENTUCKY RU BEE, Owner Whether It ' s Badminton or Tennis JUNEMAN ' S Is the Gut of Champions Compliments of ZARING ' S MILL Use Zaring ' s Patent Flour Richmond Kentucky EMMART ' S MAGNOLIA BRAND BOLOGNA Made of beef and pork with just enough spices to assure a distincttive flavor. Emmart Packing Company Incorporated CAROLYN BERKLEY Fashions for Juniors, Misses, Women B. B. SMITH CO., Inc LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY GUILDCRAFT Compliments of BEREA MOTOR CO. Berea, Kentucky T A Means of Buying through a Single Source Inc. Theatre Production Service All Supplies and Equipment for the Theatre 1430 Broadway Write for Catalogue New York City Beautiful Shoes for Women BROWN ' S BOOTERIE 138 W Mom St Lexington, Kentucky Also Louisville, Ky., Knoxville, Tenn and Chattanooga, Tenn FERNCLIFF FEED GRAIN CO. Incorporated Louisville, Ky Manufacturers of Cracker Jack and P.D.Q. Molasses Feeds Our Merchandise Is Sold At The College Store SIMON ADES SONS CO. Louisville, Kentucky Compliments of FOLEY MOTOR COMPANY Ford Sales and Service Berea, Kentucky Tel. 308 E. E. GABBARD Eat Here or We Both Starve Chestnut Open 24 Hours Compliments of LEHMAN BROS. KNOWN FOR BETTER VALUES Richmond, Kentucky Compliments of UNITED DEPARTMENT STORE Richmond, Kentucky Compliments of H. AND H. FURNITURE STORE TEL. 292 Compliments of a Friend PADAWER CO Filling Materials 24 Stone Street New York 4, N. Y. Bed Pans Wheel Chairs Infra-Red Heatlamps Trusses SICK ROOM SUPPLIES Urinals Hospital Beds Ultra Violet Sun Lamps Surgical Garments Crutches Canes DAY OR NIGHT SERVICE L. T. FLAKE SON HOSPITAL AND SURGICAL SUPPLIES Phone Day 4446 Night — Shelby 21 IS 53 West Short Street Lexington, Kentuck «• m SSSSWS FLOWERS and PLANTS BOUQUETS and CORSAGES are always fresh and beautiful when ordered from Phone 838 RICHMOND GREENHOUSES Johnny P. Reichsparr Richmond, Kentucky Compliments of a Friend STANIFER ' S STUDIO ' Portraits of Distinction ' Phone 39 Richmond, Kentucky Compliments of HYMER MOTOR COMPANY Berea, Kentucky Tel. 331 WHEELERS Kentucky ' s Finest Furniture Store 221-23 E. Main Lexington fcfW?  fill PAT McCRAY ' S PLACE NEW AND MODERN WELCOMES YOU The Same Old Hospitality rirfrin rw M JAHN % OLLIER AGAIN ' The slogan that ' s backed by genuine goodness in quality ana service, the result of 43 years successful experience in the yearbook field. We find real satisfaction in pleasing you, the year- book publisher, as well as your photographer and your printer. JAHN g OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. Makers of Fine Printing Plates for Black or Color Commercial Artists - Photographers 817 W.WASHINGTON BLVD., CHICAGO 7. ILL. I y :• vs ■  r,.1;. ' mmgm ■■■ ' •-■ .■. ' ' ■ ' ■ ' ■. ■■ ' ■ § ■ ' ■-.-■■■ a ■■.-■ ' ■ ' ■ J IH -■■.■■ :.-■-.■,■- ■ ' ■• ' • ' . ' ■ ■ ■■ ' ' ■ :...-- ' ' • ' ■•■■ v- 1 tforawWEI rV : 1 iTLMDlMMWiBUfflTiHH ■• ' ■ ' ■■■ ' ' ■ ' ■• ' ■ , I ■■■■ - ?Wifi:liMWfe 1 ■ ■Nl«S 1 bUhSHH ■H BHHH| KhEjxIr£K§m 01 - vV v- . -i.vSGK ' Evw S K BflH BBl HHHI •jKSj ft 98fflfflBB t ' i TRWy iitiMlllCBMBiB 1 - I R vj;avk S( i99SSnBHB] IH ■•., ■ v A y T f TCSwBflDBi E HIS • .■ v- BB S - ' •- ' ■•- Si ' ■ ■- ' t3 t .u33fi8E(S SSaH ■nh KEQvi : i v M i-, j paut3B wrff iOiH Vi -U V .t- .ailrj J . bBB - tMWHM .■ ' | i ■• -  ' ' - yP K B BBB - Hi -f , HH - 1 ■ IEI ' 9 T MiSiwiraBmBn V, !. ' .■ . ' ., ■ ' ' ' - ' if . 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Suggestions in the Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) collection:

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

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949


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