Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY)

 - Class of 1955

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Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1955 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 168 of the 1955 volume:

• ' O t - - ' 1 ' J- ' - ' a H H jqtmrmt the Chimes One Hundredth Anniversary Edition 1855-1955 BEREA COLLEGE — l— Contents PRESIDENT ' S MESSAGE ... 4 HISTORY 6 FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION ... 14 SENIORS . 23 JUNIORS 5 1 SOPHOMORES 57 FRESHMEN 63 NURSES 70 FOUNDATION SCHOOL 75 ORGANIZATIONS AND ACTIVITIES 89 SPORTS 1 1 1 ADVERTISING 1 17 INDEX 1 5 1 —2— 378.7691 B487c 1955 fereaCoBeoeColteflatectept. Senior Chimes Dedication Berea is the friendliest place. Here everyone belongs. It makes no difference whether that person is a stranger or a time worn faculty member, whether the clothes he wears be those of a bank president or a day laborer, before he has been on the campus five minutes, people speak to him. Those people are you, the students and faculty of Berea, and it is you who make this place known to all who come here as a place where people like each other. A part of the atmos- phere is different than it was thirty years ago but that is only because the school is growing. New buildings, more people, and closer schedules have stepped up the tempo here, but there is always time for a chat and a cheery hello. It is you who have made it that way, and it is you who can keep it that way, so it is to you the people who are connected with Berea College, the students, faculty, the alumni and the students of the future that this 1955 CHIME S is dedicated. THE PRESIDENT ' S MESSAGE It is a great pleasure to write a greeting to all readers of the Chimes for 1955, the Centennial Year of Berea College. Since the beginning of the College there have been enrolled 46,543 separate individuals. Students on the campus today and those who will follow are the inheritors of a very great college tradition. We are proud of our hundred years ' accomplishments, and yet the years that are important to us are the years ahead. The test of a college is found in the quality of the lives of its students and grad- uates. I am glad I feel happiness in the years that are past and confi- dence in the years ahead, as present students and those who follow become members of the alumni of Berea College. -Francis S. Hutchins. Jhe Centennial Chime A 1855- 1955 YEARBOOK OF BEREA COLLEGE S31 COLLEGE STATION BEREA. KENTUCKY Last spring five naive individuals sat together in the Hangout. We ' ll make it the best book ever. It will be something to keep to help remember How will we get enough money.. That will be no trouble... It will not be too hard. Tie will not make the seme mistakes of years past.... Now five tired but wiser people work furiously to complete the last few pages. It has been hard work but not without its re- wards of a job done. TBe learned much that is involved in col- lecting, arranging, and producing material suitable for a year- book. This year ' s book is the result of a pioneering experience into the field of offset printing. Vie think it is rather appropriate for the commemoration of a school that is a pioneer in its field. e, five haven ' t been in this thing lot of thanks to all the staff membe the CHIMES in print and in the hands tion of our thanks go to the people us.... Mattson ' s Studio for the clas for the cover page; the Yearbook Hou and binding of our book and for thei gled through our copy. V ' e give our Pus sell Samr.ons and Dr. Elizabeth Pe the History. We will not forget the faculty members of The CHIMES Commi by ourselves. we owe a rs who have helped in getting of its readers. A large por- who have done business with s portraits and the picture se for the actual printing r patience with us as we strug appreciation to Mike Meth, ck for their help in compiling help that was given by the ttee . This book may not be like the one we imagined last spring, but it is our effort to present a token of BEREA ' S 100TH BIRTHDAY. DAVE ALLEN FERME DEMEY LOUISE PEACE ANN WILLIAMS ELIZABETH POTTER A Hundred Years of Progress . . . Berea College aims to carry the opportunity for higher education to one of the finest stocks of original Americans that are found in this country. We all know that they are of the finest and most patriotic elements of the nation, and the splendid work that Berea College is doing among them is thoroughly deserving of all appreciation. — Warren G. Harding. This is a brief and, we hope not too inadequate history of a college and its presidents. THE FIRST BEREA SCHOOL HOUSE In 1853 Cassius M. Clay, with a view toward estab- lishing in this area a center of free speech, non-slave-hold- ing interests, began to dispose of his large tract of land in the region, which included present-day Berea. There was nothing here at the time except a dense thicket of brush which later went by the name of The Bresh. Even in succeeding years Principal Rogers ' son remarked that a man who stepped six feet off the bridle paths could not be seen. Meanwhile, a preacher by the name of John G. Fee had been teaching the doctrine of impartial love anywhere he could find a pulpit in the region along the Ohio River. It was this man who attracted the attention of Clay. So that Fee and his wife might be induced to make their home here, and perhaps to be the core of Clay ' s settlement, he offered Fee ten acres as a gift. Incidentally, these ten acres were not the first college property. Fee settled here sometime in 1854 and for a short while preached in the Old Glade Church. The following year, 1855, the first rude school house was built, but it must be remembered that Mr. Fee ' s early work was chiefly of an evangelical nature, The planting of new churches and the conversion of new souls ... Let us for a moment gather an impression of Fee the man. He was not a Hell-fire-and-damnation preacher. Rogers ' recollection of Fee ' s preaching was, His manner is calm but earnest, and grows in intensity as he proceeds, with shoulders thrown up and head bent forward. He makes his points clearly and quotes scripture for everyone of his propositions. And then there is the account of the famous Big Bend incident of 1858 where Fee went to conduct a service despite the warning of friends. In the middle of the meeting three men entered, and seizing Fee by the collar of his coat, dragged him to the door. Outside, dangling a rope before him, they swore he would be hanged unless he promised to leave the county and never return. Refusing to give such a promise, he and one of his companions were marched to the Kentucky River. At the bank of the river they took Fee ' s friend, ordered him to strip and flogged him with sycamore switches so that red welts showed on his back. Fee was threatened with five hundred times as much. When he remained adamant and refused, the mob mounted their horses and marched the two captives a short distance. Un- able to overcome Fee ' s firm stand, the mob left them. Still another aspect of Fee ' s personality can be seen in his break with Cassius M. Clay at a public meeting near Slate Lick on July 4, 1856. There is a little doubt that Fee had been countenanced, so to speak, by many men in the area due to Clay ' s power and prestige. Even so, realizing the protection which Clay gave him, Fee dared to maintain there was a higher law condemning slavery and that a man should break with the constitution and the courts when they declared slavery legal. Fee ' s public statement of his position caused the two men to go their separate ways. Notwithstanding these things, Fee became the patriarch of Berea and remained so until his death in 1901. The next consequential figure upon the Ridge was J. A. R. Rogers. He came in 1858 to a defenseless com- munity. It must be remembered that besides Fee ' s home and a few other houses, there was still nothing here. Thus Rogers and his wife toiled on with fifteen pupils. This was a strange and new experience for the young girl-wife, reared in the comforts of a Philadelphia home ... Let us not leave the impression that it was an unhappy year. Far from it! This was an adaptable couple who accepted the challenges of a man and wife, thoroughly steeped in a classical education, starting to teach fifteen pupils, many of whom could not yet read or write. Rogers ' liberal at- titude is shown, for example, in speaking of the hymns taught these children. Perhaps some of the hymns would not bear criticism, but the simple truths they taught reach- ed the simple hearts ... By 1858 the idea of founding a college on the Ridge had grown until the moment was ripe for formal organi- zation. Consequently in the same year, a constitution was drawn up and signed by John G. Fee, J. A. R. Rogers, J. S. Davis, George Candee, William Strapp, John G. Hanson, John Smith, T. J. Renfro, and John Brunam, al- though it was not until 1866 that the new organization was incorporated. Between the writing of the constitution and the incorporation, the exile of the Bereans and the Civil War intervened. John Brown ' s raid at Harper ' s Ferry stirred the South and fear of slave insurrection was everywhere. Berea stood for liberty in a slave state, and soon the handful of citizens on the Ridge, who went entirely unarmed, became the center of rumors and suspicion in the minds of Kentucky people. Fee, in the East at the time, was thought to be raising John Browns for Kentucky. Another story afoot was that a shipment of smuggled guns had been intercepted on the way to Berea. The whole state of affairs culminated in an ensemble of sixty men serving notice on eleven Berea families to leave their homes in ten days or suffer the consequences. An appeal to the Governor failed, and The farewells were uttered and the exiles mounted their various vehicles to begin the march. They formed a motley but not dangerous pro- cession, these ' people who were a menace to Kentucky. ' Patriach, and babes in arms, a bride and groom, men and women in the prime of life, young people and children of all ages, moved slowly from the hill. Before the exile, the leaders of the school bargained for 109 acres of land on the Ridge and during the War, Fee raised the money with which to pay for the Wooline Purchase. The exiles did return, Rogers as early as 1862, and the real start, the real period of development for Berea College, was yet to begin. At this stage, in 1866, The college possessed 109 acres of uncleared woodlands, worth only a few dollars per acre, it had no endowment, no credit, no buildings of any kind. The years which followed were an attempt to remedy the situation, a remedy which be- -7— came even more pressing as students began to flood the school. In these following years, the college began to clear its land, erected two small plaster buildings, a box chapel, a temporary Boarding Hall, two cottages for young men, and a combined store and dwelling for more teachers. Rogers and Fee, besides doing their regular work in Berea, were raising $18,000 for the erection of Howard Hall. Even more important was the calling of E. H. Fairchild to become Berea ' s first president in 1869. Between 1869 and 1889 one can fairly say the college felt a period of sky-rocketing growth. In 1871 Ladies Hall was completed; in 1879 a frame Gothic Chapel; in 1882 the railroad came; in 1886 Lincoln Hall was finished; 430 students were enrolled; and the endowment was $100,000. Generally not much is said for the intervening years between 1889 (Fairchild ' s death) and 1892, the beginning of William G. Frost ' s administration. A man by the name of Stewart was president, and he was by temperament suited to the work of a teacher rather than an administea- tive official. So there came a time of increasing debts and a corresponding loss of friends and influence for Berea. In 1892 William Goodell Frost accepted the office of Berea ' s third president. He might be termed the great molder, the great adaptor. It would be foolish to speak of this man in terms of buildings, the evolution of a cur- riculum, the growth of the endowment, and as a factor in bringing Berea into some of the country ' s most influ- ential circles, from T. R. Roosevelt to Woodrow Wilson. He did all these things, but more so let it be remembered that Frost brought to the college a sense of adaptability which is seldom seen in most institutions. We can show this by several pertinent illustrations. Over and over again, Frost repeated that even if a student comes to Berea for only five months, then these must be the most meaningful months of his life. The college must adapt, to his needs and when the needs change then the college must readapt. At the time when the Day Law was passed in 1904 the Berea endowment stood at about $400,000, money vitally needed by the school and collected only through the strenuous fund-raising campaigns of Rogers, Fairchild, and Frost. However, this money had been gathered at the time when Berea served both white and Negro stu- dents. Now the law required that Berea become either an all-white or all-Negro school. From every side it was an awful situation to face. The principle prevailed that trust funds must be used in accordance with the repre- sentation made when they were secured. Clearly the color- ed should have half the $200,000 gathered by Rogers and Fairchild in reconstruction times when the colored consti- tuted half the school ... The trustees worked out a formula by which half the property owned by the college up to 1892 and two-elevenths of the additional property secured when the Negroes were about one-seventh of the student body, making a sum in all of about $200,000, should go to the founding of a separate Negro school. Lincoln Institute in Kentucky. To this an additional $200,000 was placed in order that the new school might be a good school. In the period following the Day Law, electricity and student industries ( as we know them in the modern sense) came to Berea. The last of the college lands were cleared. The Industrial Buildings, Pearsons Hall, Phelps Stokes, a stone part of the library, Talcott and Kentucky Halls, the main building of the Hospital, Fireside, and James Hall were built. The West End village grew. So, in 1920 Frost left to William J. Hutchins an institution with many students and many buildings plus an increasing endowment. William J. Hutchins The Inaugural Address of Francis S. Hutchins William J. Hutchins became the fourth president. He served this post efficiently for nineteen years. One of the obstacles he faced was the depression. Even so, Berea weathered this crisis without any serious defects. This was largely due to the fact that late in 1914 Charles M. Hall died, leaving one-sixrh of his residual estate of which Bereat gained possession in 1929. As the speculative stocks were sold, the returns from it became part of Berea ' s largest endowment. Because the mountain area was struck hard it was all the more reason for Berea to serve its students. In 1929 approximately 50% of the students were self- supporting, a good example of the college ' s ability to help its people. In the year 1955 as one looks out across the campus, he seems many familiar buildings that were erected during the William J. Hutchins administration. Among these buildings are Union Church (1922); Emery Building (1924); Elizabeth Rogers Hall (1925); Woods-Penn- man (1926); First Unit of Science Hall (1928); Seabury Gymnasium (1928); Vincent Goldthwait Memorial Agri- cultural Hall (1928); President ' s Home, Presser Music Hall (1931); New Wing of Hospital (1932); J. A. R. Rogers Art Building (1935); New Section of Library (1936); Draper Building begun in 1937, and other minor additions. Berea ' s history during this administration was not without its troubles. Students were confronted with many problems. One difficulty was that of health. In 1929 there were 438 cases of influenza and 400 cases of scarlet fever. These were only some of the diseases which befell the students. There was talk at one time of abolishing the Christmas vacation, the reason being that students were returning to school with communicable diseases and spread- ing them to their classmates. Vacations were not abolish- ed, even though the thought was given serious consid- eration. —9— Naval V-12 Unit The expanding Berea was forced in 1925, for the first time, to refuse admission to mountain students even though they had graduated from accredited high schools. Since then many applications have been refused due to the limited facilities. This can be understood by the fact that at the beginning of William J. Hutchins ' term there were only 253 students enrolled in the college courses of Berea. When he retired, this number had increased to school and a 4-year college. over 400. By 1930 Berea obtained full standing in the Southern Association and made the approved list of the Association of American Universities. The endowment of the college, rose from slightly over a million to more than $10,000,000. So ends the administration of William J. Hutchins, a man interested in Berea becoming the center of culture for the mountain people. Francis S. Hutchins, son of William J. Hutchins, was chosen to become the fifth president when he was only 37. It is difficult to evaluate the work of a contemporary pres- ident. Usually such a history is not written until he has completed his duties. Even so, let us note a few develop- ments. First was the organization of the college into an upper (Junior and Senior) division and a lower division (second year in high school to second year of college) plus the establishment of Foundation School as a Junior High. This later gave way to the present system of high school and four year college. During the Second World War, Berea admitted a Naval V-12 unit to train officers. From 1943 until 1945 the records indicate that 783 men were given an education here, with several returning for their degrees. After the war, housing units were built to accommodate married vet- erans who wished to continue their schooling. It was under this administration that the following changes took place. Humanities, Biological Science, West- ern Civilization, and Social Science were added to the curriculum. The use of testing as a method of classifying students was used more extensively. The Director of ' Ad- mission office was established to replace some of the work done previously by the Registrar. Berea continued to grow both in size and endowment. Anna Smith dormi- tory and the completion of the Science Building are further proof of this growth. —10— Many things have necessarily been omitted in such a brief history. However, no one can overlook the splendid work of our labor program and the benefits the mountain people have derived from it. This labor program, it must be remembered, is a part of the students ' education and an integral part of the history of the college. So ends a history of the first one hundred years, fluctuating between men and cir- cumstance. So ends the history of the first one hundred years without using the words heroic or courageous, but we hope that in some small measure the reader will imagine the real heroism and courage which the times, not always favorable, drew out of the makers of Berea ' s history. Present-day Alumni Office at the time when it was a Church Memories . . . . U COLLEGE BAND —11— Memories . . . . BEREA BELOVED Jt. M. C. W. P. J. Moderate) Copyright 1932 by Berea College, Berea, Ky —13— FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION —14— wmmmt   . . i ..I.. - .. ADMISSIONS OFFICE Eloise Risley, Allen Morreim ALUMNI OFFICE Charles Carrington, Lelia Flannery ASSOCIATE DEAN ' S OFFICE Mrs. D. B. Robertson, Dr. Kenneth Thompson, Mrs. W. S. Swinford BUSINESS MANAGERS OFFICE George Lavanugh, Mrs. John R. Davis, Maude Led- ford, Herbert Akers, Mrs. Robert Polland, Ervin Connelly. COLLEGE DEAN Mrs. Maude Kilborne, Dr. Louis Smith DEAN OF MEN Julia High, Tom Parkinson — U DEAN OF WOMEN ' S OFFICE Julia Allen, Gladys Smith, Faye Feltner GUIDANCE OFFICE Charles N. Shutt, Marquerite Sloan LABOR OFFICE Ben Welsh Wilson Evans, Hilda Weringa PRESIDENT ' S OFFICE Betty Edinger, Charlotte Stewart REGISTRAR ' S OFFICE Mrs. Frank Wray, Adelaide Gundlach, Virginia Auvil, -16— Phyllis Shumaker TREASURER ' S OFFICE Nova Baker, Martha Rowlette, Anna Shumaker, Mrs. Nannie Kirby, Mabel Sangren, Edna Saylor, Ivalee Hodge, Bessie Dyk, Mary F. Payne, L. D. Bibbee, Carlie Grant, Mary Lamon. AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT William Lazuruk, C. O. Spillman, H. B. Monier, W. B. Wheeler, Thomas Hart, Ed Hogg, S. D. Whipple. ART DEPARTMENT Lester Pross, Sally Wilkerson, Dorothy Tredennick, Timothy Whitehead, Jim Bobbitt, Nelson Delavan. BIOLOGY DEPARTMENT Dr. J. S. Bangson, Dr. Hershel Hull, Mr. Seth Gilker- son, Dr. Frank Gailey. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Dr. Rockwood Chin, Sara Landau, Hazel Lincoln, Wilson Evans, Orville Boes, Wm. E. Newbolt. CHEMISTRY DEPARTMENT Mr. Julian Capps and Dr. Gus Levy EDUCATION DEPARTMENT Dr. Charles C. Graham, Howard Dene Southwood Dr. Luther Ambrose, Pat Wear. 17- ENGLISH DEPARTMENT Emilye Ann Smith, Eleanor Brooks, Virginia Mat- thias, Louise Scrivner, Margaret McCoy, Mrs. Nell Noll, Dr. Jerome Hughes, Carol Gesner, Dr. Fred Parrot, Maureen Faulkner, Dr. Thomas Kreider. GEOLOGY Dr. Wilbur G. Burroughs and Mrs. Mavis Burroughs. HISTORY DEPARTMENT Dr. Waring Hopkins, Miss Julia F. Allen, Dr. Char- lotte Ludlum, Dr. Preston Stegenga, Dr. J. O. Van Hook, Dr. Frank Wray, Dr. George Noss, Tom Parkinson, Dr. Louis Smith. HOME ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT Ervilla Masters, Agnes Aspnes, Angli Wai, Marian Kingman, Ruth Woods, Nancy McClary. LANGUAGE DEPARTMENT Dr. Charles Pauck, George Danials, Ruth De Gam- jo boa, Dr Charlotte Ludlum, Evelyn Montgomery, Gristjan Kogerma. LIBRARY SCIENCE DEPARTMENT Sarah Firor, Imogene Foster, Faunice Hubble, Blanche Lane, Elizabeth Gilbert. MATHEMATICS DEPARTMENT Gilbert Roberts, Theodore Wright, Louise Stolle, J. B. Westfoll. MUSIC DEPARTMENT Joseph Firszt, John Chrisman, Celia Kysela, Rolf Hovey, Harriet Crowder, Margaret Franke, Lar- raine Edwards, Beth Shoupp. WOMEN ' S PHYSICAL EDUCATION DEPARTMENT Pat Ehely, Marilyn Zeigler, Minnie M. Macaulay PHYSICS DEPARTMENT T. M. Strickler, Waldemar Noll PSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT Charles Shedd, Kenneth H. Thompson, Mrs. Clara Cooper, Angli Wai. I RELIGION DEPARTMENT D. B. Robertson,. Robert Cornett, Gordon Ross, Her- bert Thomson, George Noss. Jo Ella Nuckols Pete Thorns CHIMES STAFF: Emilye Hawkins, Kathy Harris, Dan Moore, Louise Peace, Dave Jones, Ann Willims, Artricia Campbell, Liz Potter, Ann Gaby. FAMOUS LAST WORDS: w WE ' LL MEET THE DEADLINE! n It couldn ' t be that bad. —20— 1 Feme Denney Louise Peace Liz Potter Chimes Editors Dave Allen Ann Williams -21— Class of 1955 WHO ' S WHO Row One: Louise Peace, Gene Lovely, Eleanor Burchelle, Eleanor Case, Bill Steeley, and Feme Denney. Row Two: Harry Cho, Johnny Harris, David Welch, Don Good, Russell Sammons, Charlie York. Row Three: Eugene McLemore, Lee Bobbitt, Bruce DeBrual, Julian Capps, Ledford Austin, and Dave Allen. Who ' s who among students in American Colleges and Universities is made up of students who are active and outstanding during their college careers. Selection is based on Character, Scholarship, and Leadership in extra Cur- ricular Activities. —22— Evelyn Adams Jenkins, Ky. A.B. English Ted Adams Paintsville, Ky. B.S. Bus. Administration Dave Allen Bismarck, N. Dakota A.B. Geology Betty Alley Crab Orchard, Tennessee A.B. Elementary Ed. John Anderson Knoxville, Tenn. B.S. Agriculture Steward Anderson Knoxville, Tenn. B.S. Agriculture James Arnold Charleston, W. Virginia A.B. Elementary Education Ledford Austin Lenoir, N. Carolina A.B. History Pol. Sci. THESE ARE THE SENIORS —24 — Orval Ayers Grant, Ala. A.B. Biology Jeanelle Lecky Baker Wayne, W. Virginia B.S. Home Economics Jewel Baldock Hustonville, Ky. A.B. Elem. Education George Ball Haysi, Virginia A.B. Physics Melvin Bess Covington, Virginia B.A. Social Science Joyce Bishoff Blackey, Kentucky A.B. Elem. Education Nancy Bishop Frederick, Md. A.B. Philosophy Lee Bobbitt Xemia, Ohio A.B. Chemistry THE BIG DAY HAS FINALLY BECOME A REALIZATION —25— Janet Rae Bowling Wild Cat, Ky. B.S. Home Economics Retha Brown Paris, Ky. A.B. English Eleanor Burchell Pleasantville, N. J. A.B. Biology Vernie Burleson Ashville, N. Carolina A.B. Math. Phy. Ed. THE CLASS OF ' 55 IS NOW READY TO TAKE THE BIG STEP AND GO OUT INTO THE WORLD Betty Burchett Stambaugh, Ky. A.B. Chemistry —26— Constantine Cappas Athens, Greece A.B. Chemistry Julian Capps Berea, Kentucky A.B. Chemistry Pauline Cart Beattyville, Ky. A.B. Elem. Education Joe Cable James Cass Dorothy Couk Cheng-Yin Cheng Pikesville, Ky. Brodhead, Ky. Crossville, Tenn. Hsinchu, Formosa A.B. Chemistry A.B. Geology A.B. Chemistry B.S. Agriculture Alice Chen H. H. Cheng Yoon Ai Choi Ying Nan Chiu Taipei, China Forest Hills, N. Y. Seoul, Korea Taichung, Formosa A.B. Piano B.S. Agriculture A.B. Hist. Pol. Sci. A.B. Chemistry —27 Hwal-Chin (Harry) Cho Seoul, Korea A.B. Biology Robert Claytor Bluefield, W. Virginia A.B. Philosophy Roy Cline Gilbert, W. Virginia A.B. Chemistry Violet Coe Mount Airy, N. Carolina A.B. Elem. Education Wyatt Collins Mary Conant Allen Cooper Mrs. Emma Cooper Woodville, Ala. South Paris, Maine Ashland, Ky. Toler, Kentucky A.B. Chemistry A.B. Geology A.B. Biology B.S. General Business AND IN NO TIME AT ALL THESE NEW GRADUATES OF BEREA COLLEGE —28— I Joan Coy Braxton Crocker Dot Crickenberger Junior Croucher Danville, Ky. Blackey, Ky. Swoope, Virginia Blackey, Ky. A.B. Art A.B. Geology A.B. Sociology A. B. Geology Tinsley Crowder Kenbridge, Va. A.B. English Bill Daniel Lynchburg, Virginia B.S. Agriculture Bruce DeBruhl Swannanoa, N. C. BA. Hist. Pol. Sci. Feme Denney Palmyra, Indiana A.B. Elem. Education WILL HAVE MADE THIS WORLD A BETTER PLACE IN WHICH TO LIVE Joe Derting Hilton, Virginia B.S. Agriculture Bob Dorton Pikeville, Kentucky A.B. Biology Hope Douty Beuma Vista, Va. A.B. Sociology Maxine Earley Canton, North Carolina B.S. Home Economics iVissSSSdSSKy YESTERDAY ' S CHILDREN THAT ONCE PLAYED HOOKEY FROM SCHOOL AND WENT SWIMMING IN THE Moyer Edwards Oak Ridge, Tennessee A.B. Biology Bob Eplee Marion, North Carolina B.S. Agrictulure illiam Everman Jack Farmer Eugene Fraley Garland Fuller Ashland, Ky. Aberdeen, Md. Morehead, Ky. Win, Va. A.B. English A.B. Math. B.S. Bus. Admin. A.B. Hist. Pol. Sci FAVORITE POND ARE NOW TODAY ' S SCHOOL TEACHERS, DOCTORS, CHEMISTS, GEOLOGISTS, ETC. Lillie Gabbard Berea, Ky. A.B. Elementary Ed. Anne Gaby Greenville,. Tenn. A.B. Elementary Ed. Russell Gadd Prospect, Ky. A.B. Bus. Admin. Shirley Garland Glenbrook, Ky. B.S. Home Economics —31— Louise Gibson Williamson, W. Va. B.A. Psychology Wendy Gwinn Graysville, Tenn. A.B. Elementary Ed. Donald Good Winchester, Va. A.B. Sociology Robert Goodson Black Mountain, N. C. B.S. Agriculture allace Gosser Fred Greenburg Betty Green James Greer Nancy, Ky. Chicago, 111. Bristol, Tenn. Boone, N. C. A.B. English A.B. Chemistry A.B. Elementary Ed. B.S. Agriculture NEXT FALL WHEN BEREA HAS ITS ANNUAL HOMECOMING MANY OF THE GRADUATES OF ' 55 WILL BE —32— David Grubbs Roanoke, Virginia B.S. Business Adm. Harold Haga Flat Ridge, Virginia B.S. Business Adm. Bonnie Hager East Point, Kentucky A.B. Elem. Educ. Clyde Hall Green Creek, N. C. B.S. Agriculture Del Hare Baileyton, Alabama A.B. Chemistry Gayle Harper Gilbert, W. Va. A.B. Elementary Ed. John Harris Morganton, N. C. A.B. Hist. Pol. Sci. Herbert Harrison Monrovia, Md. B.S. Agriculture RETURNING TO THE OLE ALMA MATER TO SEE HOW IT IS MAKING OUT WITHOUT THEIR PRESENCE Dorsalene Henderson Alkol, West Virginia A.B. Eleni. Educ. Everett Hartzog Idlewild, N. C. B.S. Agriculture Misako Higa Nakagusuku-Sen, Okinawa A.B. Home Economics Dorothy Higgins Berea, Kentucky B.S. Home Economics THIS TRIP BACK WILL UNDOUBTEDLY BRING BACK MEMORIES Margaret Holbrook Brodhead, Kentucky B.S. Home Economics Wallace Halcomb Gordon, Ky. B.S. Agriculture Juanita Horton Hyden, Kentucky B.S. Home Economics Bob Hulver Wardensville, W. Va. B.S. Agriculture Robert Humphries Covington, Va. B.S. Bus. Admin. Don Hutcheson Jeffersonville, Ind. A.B. Geology Marvin Hutchins Forest City, N. C. B.S. Agriculture James Hyder Brandon, Mississippi A.B. Physics S  st MEMORIES OF HOW YOU USED TO HELP OUT WITH THE HOMECOMING FESTIVITIES Eula Ison Oscaloosa, Ky. A.B. Elementary Ed. Rosie Israel Candler, N. Carolina A.B. Elementary Ed. Nan Jones Milwaukee, Wisconsin A.B. Elementary Ed. Wanda Kincaid Franklin, Ohio B.S. Home Ec. Ruth King Blountville, Tenn. B.S. Home Ec. Leon Kirkland Grant, Alabama A.B. Biology W. W. Lambert Boone, Ky. B.S. Agriculture Ernest Lane Bill Leach Isabella Li Dorothy Lee Mohawk, Tennessee Pine Mountain, Ky. Tai Chung, China Hong Kong, China A.B. Mathematics A.B. Biology A.B. Biology B.S. Home Economics REMEMBER THAT FRESHMAN YEAR. YOU HAD HEARD ABOUT THE THINGS BEREA STOOD FOR -36— Jana Lee Lewis Corbin, Ky. A.B. Sociology Eugene Lovely Lafollette, Tenn. A.B. Social Science John Lu Jainan, Formosa B.S. Agriculture Cecelia McKinney West Field, Ind. A.B. Elementary Ed. Eugene McLemore Canton, N. Carolina A.B. English LaRue McMahan Morristown, Tenn. A.B. English Nathan McMillian Louisville, Ky. A.B. Pub. Sch. Music Ann McMurray H ikons, Va. B.S. Bus. Admin. ■ NOW YOU SAW THESE THINGS PUT INTO PRACTICE AND YOU WERE A PART OF IT ALL Bertha Marine Gevierville, Tenn. A.B. English Bill Masters Irving, Ky. A.B. Chemistry Jack Mathews Ashville, N. Carolina B.S. Bus. Administration Anna Mattingly Trinity, Kentucky A.B. Elementary Ed. ■• ' .■■•■..■.■■«-;■■ REMEMBER MOUNTAIN DAY OF 1951 AND THAT CURFEW HOUR OF 7:30 P. M. Lucille Metcalf Mars Hill, N. Carolina B.S. Home Economics Mike Meth Baltimore, Md. A.B. Philosophy Beth Meyer Pikeville, Tenn. A.B. Religion Evelyn Miller Rockholds, Ky. A.B. Home Economics ason Morrison Kenneth Moss Sherwood Mull Kathleen Mullins Morgantori, N. Carolina Glasgow, Ky. Black Mountain. N. C. Clintwood, Virginia A.B. Biology A.B. Geology B.S. Home Ec. YES, THAT WAS QUITE A YEAR. BUT THEN SO WAS THE SOPHOMORE YEAR Harvey Musser Franford, W. Va. A.B. Biology Molly Myles Crawley, W. Va. Ancient Languages Cecil Nanney Black Mountain, N. C. A.B. Physics Ralph Neal Marble, N. Carolina A.B Geology —39— John Paul Newcomer Gainesville, Florida A.D. Physics Dorothy Newman Lavalette, W. Va. A.B. Sociology Jimmie Nickell Hazel Green, Ky. A.B. Elementary Ed. Alma Norfleet Monticello, Ky. A.B. Elementary Ed. Wanda Norris fo Ella Nuckols Louise Ogle Milton Ogle Middlebrook, Va. Ansted, West Va. Gatlinburg, Tenn. Basham, Va. A.B. Home Economics A.B. Elementary Ed. A.B. Hist. Pol. Sci. A.B. Business Admin. THE CLASS WAS RATHER BOLD AND DARING. REMEMBER AN EVENT OF MARCH, 1953? Barbara Oldaker Rahway, N. Jersey A.B. English Helen Parrish Bryson City, N. C. A.B. Elementary Ed. Clayton O ' Neil Banner Elk, N. C. B.S. Agriculture Billy Outlaw Hixson, Tenn. A.B. Geology Marilyn Patton Ashland, Ky. A.B. Elementary Ed. uise Peace Bob Pearson Don Pease Williamsburg, Kentucky Charlestown, Ind. Knoxville, Tenn. B.S. Bus. Administration A.B. Art A. B. Piano DURING YOUR JUNIOR AND SENIOR YEARS YOU REALLY SETTLED DOWN TO WORK Larry Peercy Robert Peercy Frances Pennington Jack Ping Monticello, Ky. Monticello, Ky Webbville, Ky. Eubank, Ky. B.S. Agriculture A.B. Physics A.B. Sociology A.B. Biology THE LANGUAGE PROFICIENCY WAS PASSED AND THE HUMANITIES COURSE WAS OVER Junior Franklin Poling Elizabeth Potter Sue Proffitt Ralph Ramey Nestorville, W. Va. Spencer, Tenn. Crandler, N. Carolina Elkhorn City, Ky B.S. Agriculture B.S. Home Economics- A.B. Elementary Ed. A.B. Biology — 42— Clifford Dale Reedy Middleburg, Ky. A.B. Hist. Pol. Sci. Bill Richardson Jamestown, Ky. A.B. Geology Barbara Reynolds Pineville, Ky. B.S. Home Economics Rex Reynolds Kodak, Ky. A.B. Geology YOU CHOSE YOUR MAJOR FIELD OF WORK AND BECAME PREPARED FOR IT Ann Roberts Richwood, W. Va. A.B. English Winnie Fay Roberts Hartselle, Alabama A.B. Elementary Ed. Clarene Michael Rogers Scherr, West Va. B.S. Home Economics Dorothy Skaggs Rogers Ansted, West Va. A.B. Pub. Sch. Music -43- Russell Sammons Meally, Ky. A.B. Hist. Pol. Sci. Gladys Sanko Philadelphia, Penn. A.B. Elementary Ed. Patsy Saulmon Morganton, N. C. A.B. Sociology Betty Saylor Corinth, Ky. B.S. Home Economics Lola Fay Sexton Ruth Shipman Bronelle Skaggs Ann Skidmore Berea, Ky. Brevard, N. C. Flat Gap, Ky. Richwood, West Va B.S. Bus. Admin. A.B. Elementary Ed. B.S. Agriculture B.S. Bus. Admin. EVERY MINUTE, OF EVERY HOUR OF EVERY DAY THAT YOU HAVE PLAYED, STUDIED -44- Peggy Smith Osaka, Va. B.S. Bus. Admin. Bill Steely Corbin, Ky. A.B. Economics Jeriell Surface Wellston, Ohio A.B. Music (Organ) Hugh Sutherland St. Paul, Va. A.B. Physical Ed. Jesse Thomas Lancaster, Ky. A.B. Social Sci. Area Peter Thorns Muscat, Oman S. E. Arabia A.B. Biology Arnold Thurman Eminence, Ky. A.B. Sociology, Willie Jo Traylor Arab, Ala. B.S. Home Economics AND WORSHIPED HERE AT BEREA COLLEGE HAVE BEEN WELL WORTH WHILE Glenna Valentine Sassafras, Ky. A.B. Elementary Ed. Loring Vance Moorefield, W. Va. A.B. Hist. Pol. Sci. Tom Van Sant Mt. Victory, Ky. A.B. Math Astronomy Jimmie Van Winkle Clarkesville, Ga. B.S. Bus. Admin. MEMORIES OF THESE DAYS ARE YOURS. CHERISH THEM Bob Van Winkle Berea, Ky. A.B. Biology Peggy Vecchi Clifton Forge, Va. A.B. Psychology Richard West Waverly, Ohio A.B. Physics Martha Vickers Salyersville, Ky. A.B. English Betty Jo Waldrop Hot Springs, N. C. A.B. Hist. Pol. Sci. Elizabeth Waldroup Andrews, N. Carolina B.S. Home Economics David Welch Ashland, Ky. A.B. Hist. Pol. Sci. Beverly Ring Wesley Narrows, Va. A.B. Spanish Phy. Ed. YESTERDAY ' S BEREA STUDENTS ARE NOW TODAY ' S LEADERS Helen Wesley Somerset, Ky. B.S. Home Economics }y Lewis Wesley Billy Ed. Wheeler Peter Whitis Liberty, Ky. Highcoal, W. Va. Tampa, Fla. B.S. Agriculture A.B. English A.B. Biology Virginia Whitson Relief, N. Carolina B.S. Home Economics Ann West Williams Blairsville, Georgia A.B. Elementary Ed. Ben Williams Roxboro, N. Carolina B.S. Agriculture Azalee Wilson Cullowhee, N. Carolina A.B. French Charles Wilson Louisa, Ky. A.B. Biology O. C. Wise Newland, Ky. B.S. Agriculture Sara Wright Hartselle, Ala. A.B. Sociology Charles Yates Louisville, Ky. A.B. Biology GOOD LUCK AND MAY SUCCESS BE YOURS Charles York Indian Springs, Tenn. A.B. Biology Class Officers President — Charles York Vice Pres. — Loring Vance Secretary — Janet Bowling Treasurer — Charles Yates Co-Social Chairman — Dorothy Couk Julian Capps — 49- Mary Atwood Helen Bennett Pierre Custot Alicia Del Castillo Special Students ■■ ■ Choong Kim Gwen Lanier Nakamura Choko Grace Piang -50— Junior Class There is a destiny that makes us brothers; None goes his way alone: All that we send into the lives of others Comes back into our own. — Markman CLASS OFFICERS: President — Wayne Spiggle Vice Pres. — Doris Kirk Secretary — Jo Ann Austin Treasurer — Bob Bryan Social Co-Chairmen — Gordon Jones Barbara Tinsley —51— Jesse Amburgey Raymond Ashcraft Don Austin Hugh Bailey Rachel Baird Julia Barker Marvin Barton Dot Baskette Mary Lou Battle Margaret Bevins Alene Bickford Hammond Ed Biddix Milton Boyce Frankie Brannon Charles Brown Jack Brown Jean Brown Carl Brittain Billy Dean Bruce Jane Brumback Frank Buck Barbara Byrd Articia Campbell Tommy Camper Tom Clark Stanley Comstock Jean Compton Mirneal Compton Myles Compton Patricia Cook Jewell Cook Allen Corbin Ray Corns Charles Counts Norman Cox Cora Davenport Bernard Davis Jackie Davis Dorothy Dimsdale Shirley Douty Renee Dow Gwen Downes Bob Dryman -52— Ben Dunn Bob Elkins Violet Farmer Vernon Flynn Ralph Fort Nevil Garret Sammy Gibson Earl Gilbreath Shirley Godby Fred Golder Joyce Grogan Carol Grizzle Sam Grider Elmer Gray Betty Hannah Gene Harkleroad Kathleen Harth Miles Hayes Mabel Herren Thelma Higgins Sylvia Hitchcock Tom Holladay Bess Holland Faye Home Eugene Huff Thomas Huffman Clarence Hurt Charles Hutchins Doris Hyatt Doris Hyder Marquette Jarvis David Jones Gordon Jones V Jr m[ Betty Kincaid Doris Ann Kirk Raoul Le Blanc 4 i Margaret Land is JohnLandrum Charles Larew JohnLeeson Kay Leslie Jack C. Lewis Jack Lewis Gay Looney Omer McGlone Ruby McKinney Rita Manuel James Marion Helen Maynor Mary Ellen Messer —53- George Miller Thad Mills Ken Mitchell Alice Moore Mary Rhea Morelock Dan Moore Harry Mustard Ruth Nichols Mary Ogle Pat Oppenheimer Joann Overton Pat Parker David Parry Betty Perkins Mary Plummer Wendell Powers Betty Pressley George Prewitt Hallie Price Betty Reed Erma Jo Reedy Edwin Roach Janey Robinette Oscar Rucker mm SB W Frances Reedy DonRuggles Carl Seldomridge Wilbur Sellers Gay Wise Barbara Shomo Sloan Southerlin Pat Spangler Wayne Spiggle Thelma Splawn Alice Sprinkle BenSturgill Betty Sutherland Eloine Sutton Sally Tappan PatTempleton Vivian Todd —54 — Wally Truesdale Norma Tuller Yvonda Tunnell Elizabeth Van Qeve Frances Van Sant Shirley Wesley Harry White J-Jk Wendell White Carol yn Wilson Connie Willard Dot Winston Ruby Nell Waldrop Margaret Wooten Patricia Wright David Zook —55— Life in the Dorm CLASS OFFICERS: President — Jim McLemore Vice Pres. — Sammy Bryant Secretary — June Davis Treasurer — Joann Howard Social Co-Chairmen — Colleen Snapp Jerry Perry Sophomore Class As we dream, aspire, plan, and work, let us always remember- What we are to be we are now becoming. Johnny Owen Joy Alexander Ruth Alexander Marie Allen Mickie Allen Martin Ambrose Edward Armstrong Mary Atkins —57— f? 4P Peggy Azbill Earnest Baker Robert G. Baker Nancy Ball Irene Barnes Donald Baucom Faye Bennett Mary Jane Bevins Lett) ' Biggerstaf f Norris A. Biggerstaff Harold Blackburn J. C. Blanton Sally Sue Boggs Carolyn Brasel £IlD O £ kdt Elinora Brittain Joanne Brockman Eric J. Brown Glenna Brown Betty Bruce Sammy Bryant Don Buchannan James Buckley Cloyd Bumgardner Christine Buster Howard Campbell Marshall Campbell David Carter Paul Claiborne -v Helen Claycomb Janet Cook Bobby Colgan Raymond Collier Alan Cooper DonCornett Ruth Cornett Glenna Cox Rachel Critz Herbert Drinnon Reggie Dickson June Davis Jack Cummins Ruth Ann Dodson J 1 Marion Drew Imogene Duckette -58— Wilma Dych Emmitt Earles Mary Easley Lyda Jean Evans Jack Feagen Jean Feltner Lynn Finchum Bill Fish Peggy Foshee Bessie Frizzell Greta Gabbard Tom Gabriel Doris Ann Galliher Joann Galloway Betty Jean Gasaway Jack Gatliff Betty Sue Geyer Kathy Gibson Bailey Silas Gilliam Louis Godby Sarah Gouge Ronnie Graves Jane Greene Elizabeth Guffy Alice Goforth Louise Hensley Astor Herrell Kit Hicks Edith Higgins GlenHiggins Richard Hipps C. B. Hoff John Hogan Anna Holcomb Carrie Holcomb Ernie Holt Vivian Hope Joan Howard Joyce Hughes r m it? Coy Hunsucker Gerald Hubble Lou Hysinger Denver Jones Dean Jones Powell Johnson Barbara Johnson .( • . T. f Mk Bill Tackson SaraKincer James King Joe Lake Mabel Lake Burn ice Lewis James Lester m ( k Lois McCollum Russ McConnell Tom McCutchen Clay McCravy Gail McDavid Vera McKinney Jim McLemore T TI Betsy Marcum Ida May Martin Peggy Mask Dorothy May Carol Meade Roger Meece Devon Walter Meek Royce Miller Russell Moneyham Gwen Moore PaulMoores Bob Morris Voilette Morris Mary Lee Morrison Yvonne Nanney Joe Neal Charles O ' Dell ' A i ' I Shirley Osborne Edna Outlaw Gerald Parrish Johnny Payne Joan Peppers J er T Perry Nellie Peters Annette Phillips Nancy Pilgrim Gaines Ronald Puckett Shirley Reed Harold Rice JuanitaRice Wilma Riddle Winston Riddle Winston Ring Bill Robinson Carson Robinson Tunis Robbins H. G. Sawyer Juanita Settle Charles Sheppard Elizabeth Singleton Carolyn Skeen Ernest Smith it Harold Solomon Jayne South Jean Spencer John Stapleton Ruth Stilling Mary Stokes Nina Stroud ■% Nina Taylor Charles Timberlake Beverly Tonne Bill Toy Blaine Tucker Dorothy Van Horn Joyce Van Sant HB Ann Walker Pat Walker Harold W 1 Mary Washington Betty Jo Weems Lester Winchester Howard Whitaker Catherine Whitaker Robert Wilkerson Shirley W Avis Williams Bruce Williams Delores Williams Hannah Williams Mike Wilson Shirley Wisecup Jill Wolfe Robert Wolfe Eugene Wratchford Mary Ellen Yates David Gillespie L.- - 1 if1 k C:- ?% Freshmen THE KEY TO SUCCESS IN 12 WORDS! CLASS OFFICERS: President — Allen Sutphin Vice Pres. — Keith Parker Treas. — -John Dan Austin Secretary — Pauline Sheppard Social Co-Chairmen — Ralph Coleman Jean Jennings I ' ll study and get ready and then maybe the chance will come. — Abraham Lincoln —63— James Adams Janice Adkins James Anderson Faye Angel Wayne Arms Ethelene Arrington Ann Asher John Dan Austin Robert Willis Ayers Larry Baber Jimmy Bailey Wallace Baird Geraldine Barnett Fred Beddingfield Feresheteh Beijan Kelly Belcher Audry Benning Charles Bertram Billy Best Shirley Bise Nancy Boley Lois Booher Dick Bowling James Bowling Den Cook Boyd Margaret Boyd J. C. Brandenburg Barbara Brittain Billie Brown Phyllis Brown Betty Lou Buchanan Beatrice Burrel James Burton • Richard Campbell Shirley Carroll Owen Cass Doris Caudell Wilma Caudell SueClontz Emma Coleman Ralph Coleman Carol Colvard Pat Cooksey -64— Jeanette Conn Kenneth Conn Jimmie Cook Fay Davenport Clara Jean Davis Deanna Davis Roger Dean Deborah Dixon Jack Duckworth Geraldine Dunigan Marguerite Dyer John Elder Faye Ellis Sona Eppenstein Barbara Fadely JillFeagan Annette Fiechter ■ I Julia Fine Patricia Franklin Edward Ford Delores Forbes Irma Gresse Judy Graves Ralph Gochenour Annette Gabbard Mary Nell Hall Jerry Halstead Dolly Hamilton Lois Hammond Nora Hammons Douglas Hanna Annette Hare James Harrell Steve Harrill Shirley Harrison Cecil Hatfield Norman Hatter Erma Hayes Carolyn Haynes Neil Hays Anna Lou Heatherly Betty Gene Hensley Tommy R. Hicks Wesley Holsapple Mary Jane Houser Lettye Howell Steve Hunter Jo Ann Hurt Anita Hurst Betty Hurst Joyc iyder Barbara Hyder — 65- isz Jean Jennings Cloyd Johnson Jeannine Johnson Shirley Johnson Shirley Kincaid Eugene Kirkland Irene Lamb Ronald Lamm Frances Lance Sue Lawless Anna Fay Lecky Q f Anna Lee Legg Doris Lehman Lynn Lewallen Lou Ann Lickliter Juanita Littleton Jeanette Lytton Mary McAfee Lois McCarthy Ernest McConnell Barbara Mcintosh Barbara McLain Mike McMillian Wilma Mahaffey Joe Maltby Frank Marsh Jean Martin Audrey Massey James Masters Dora May Sylvia Meadows Howard Miller Janet Miller Robert Miller Bonnie Mims Sylvia Minnix Joetta Miracle Charles Moore Howard Moore Bobby Joe Morgan Edward Lee Morgan Robert Morgan Wilma Morris Kelly Moss Imogene Mullins Bernard Murphy orii Fred Kirk Betty Musser Mary Liz Nelson Mitchell Osteen Harold Owens Keith Parker Lowell Parker Nancy Parks Shirley Pennington Joyce Perry Shirley Petersen Autumn Joy Phillips Marvin Philpot Paul N. Power Geraldine Puckett Bob Raines Carl Ramey Mildred Ramey Franklin Rasnick Janice Reesor Harold Ringley Viola Ritchie Carol Jean Roach Mary Roberts Barbara Robertson Ion a Robinette Sue Rogers Billy Ross Ruby Roten Ruth Rucker Barbara Sanders James Saulmon Nancy Scott Frank Scudder Norma Sheffield Pauline Shepherd Robert J. Shepherd Edna Sherill Robert Shields George Simmons Sylvia Simpson Clyde Smith June Smith ArdleSnapp David Spiggle Noland Stanley Betty Stephens Frances Stephens Janet Stone ,_ Allen Sutphin Joseph P. Sutton Felix Taylor Garnett Taylor Merry Taylor Donald Thomas Delores Thurston -; June Torrence Shirley Turner Vernon Underwood Astra Urjanis Marjorie Van Hoose Simotha Vickers David Vinyard Nina Wade Edwin Ward , Pansy Waycaster Ophelia Weaver Paul Welch Leon Welting Clarence White Maxine Whiteside Maureen Wilborn Dale Wilds Frances Ann Wilson Howard Wilson William Wine Leota Wise Edith Wood Glenn Wooters Fred Worfe Jean Workinan Fred Worley Janice Winchell Mary Presley A Frances Gabbard Virgie Mae Gibson Carroll Gilbert Penman Gilliam David Gillenwater Fred Adkins H m SCHOOL W Dr. Henderson Dr. Armstrong Dr. Smith Dr. Hutchins Betty Sue Anderson Morganton, N. C. Sally Jo Ballard Stanford, Ky. Margaret Marie Brittian Hildebran, N. C. Ella Elizabeth Capps Marshall, N. C. Vista Lemae Casada Bryson City, N. C. Ada Ruth Clotfelter Caryville, Tenn. SENIOR Mary Elizabeth DuVall Betsy Layne, Ky. Byrd Elizabeth Ellis Greer, S. C. Nancy Jo Hanna Porterwood, W. Va. Rhoda Ann King Williamsburg, Ky. —70— Ruby Doritha Landrum Pomeroyton, Ky. Martha Elizabeth Marshall Greenville. Tenn. Doris Hinkle Musser Lewisburg, W. Va. Delma Jean Parker Union, W. Va. NURSES Marjorie Marie Phillips Nashville, Tenn. Frances Elizabeth Renalds Vinton, Va. Nancy Joyce Spitzer Quinwood, W. Va. Billie Jean Stevens Biltmore, N. C. Juanita Pearl Turpin Somerset, Ky. Lois Ellen Williams Kenova, W. Va. w —71— JUNIOR fy o r -72— Joanne Alvis Betty Austin Cora Ball Viola Couch Delia Dean Anna Jean Gooch Wilma Haley Anna Hampton Hazel Holt June Laswell Barbara Ledford Kathy Long Rose Lutz Margaret Marr Pearlie Miller Sammie Mills Shirley Mull Sylene Osteen Lois Potter Nell Runyon Cinda Sparkman Anita Stephenson Sadie Stines Pat Taylor Freshmen Nurses Irene Bell Betty Bouton Doralyn Brashear Reva Chaney Jo Ann Collier Anna Cook Eunice Flanery Thelma Foley Roebertha Harvey Mary Jane Hennessee Frances Henson Joan Irwin Eula Lewis Eudell McCreary Annette Moore Mary Mullins Helen Preece Marcella Raines Not Pictured Betty Simpkins Cedith Slaven Frances Wilson Janice Walters Martha Whitis Wanda Wilkerson —74 — FOUNDATION SCHOOL Roy N. Walters Dean of Foundation School Mrs. Ethel B. Hall Dean of Women We ' re glad to get away From this crazy joint, Says we in nineteen fifty-five. It ' s good to be back In this grand old place, Says we in nineteen seventy-five. This second Centennial is not like the first; Now those were the gopd old days, Says THEY in twenty fifty-five. —75— THE FACULTY Standing: Mr. Lambert — Soc. Studies, Miss Parrish — Soc. Studies, Miss Brooks — Eng- lish, Miss Cooper — Home Ec. and Health, Mr. Boes — Business. Seated: Mrs. Barnett — Math, Miss McGuire — Secretary, Mrs. Wear — Librarian. V x . m I B.-T A fl k JiP Mra 1 Jl v m r • • BM B B r «r 2 V x «H Standing: Mr. Whitehead — Art, Mr. Kindel — Ind. Arts, Mr. Ayer — Agriculture, Miss Carpenter — Home Ec, Miss Williams — Latin and French, Mr. Drake — Bible, Mr. Osolnik — Ind. ' Arts, Miss Edwards — Music, Mrs. Pugsley — Math, Mr. Gross- man — Science. Seated: Mrs. Landrum — Ungraded, Mr. Kilbourne — Auto Mech., Miss Wilson — English, Not shown are: Mrs. Wilson — English, Miss Zeigler — Girls ' P.E., Mr. Jones — Boys ' P.E. —76— CHIMES STAFF Lois Todd, William Ross, Editor; Mr. Walters, Photographer. In Absentia: Charles Noss, Tommy Broyles. SENIOR OFFICERS Seated: W. C. Rose, Vice-President; Ken Thompson, President. Standing: Mrs. Pugsley, Sponsor; Kenneth Morris, Treasurer; Betty Banks, Secretary; Mr. Grossman, Sponsor. STUDENT COUNCIL Seated: Mrs. Pugsley, Faculty Advisor; James Brady, President; Mary Rose Collins. Standing: William Ross, Frank Hutchins, W. C. Rose, Vice-President; Ottis Kearns, Mr. Kilbourne, Faculty Advisor. (Not shown are Mr. Walters and Mrs. Hall, Faculty Advisors). -77— Bette Banks Carl Belden Irene Blanton James Brady Tommy Broyles Carolyn Byrd SENIORS Charles Byrd Mary Byrd Mary Campbell Wendell Cooley Ray Dash Kent Felty Raymond Hill Sue Hile Carolyn Humfleet Pat Johnson Nancy Lewis Claudella Lloyd Lee Mitchell Mary Lou Moore Kenneth Morris Dale Muncy Jo Neely Charles Noss Lois Todd Ted Parris W. C. Rose W. M. Ross Jean Shepherd Kenneth Thompson Jerry Piersoll Juanita Simons John Chalmers Eloise Smith Evva Watkins Beth Powell Reva Marie Wine JUNIORS JUNIOR OFFICERS Seated: Laura Bowles, Vice-Pres.; Nancy Webb, Treas.; Sam Huskisson, President. Standing: Miss Florene Brooks, Sponsor; Eugene Kilgore, Rec. Comm.; Shirley Allen, Secretary; Mr. Warren Lambert, Sponsor. Shirley Allen Vm% ' ? - f Wilma Ruth Baker Biggerstaff Laura Bowles Gail Burse Margaret Caldwell Kathy Sanborne Kathy Genie Rhonda Nancy Betty Lou Patty Sands Shanklin Watson Webb Wriston Williams —81— First Row: C. Clark, E. Scrivner, M. Collins, G. Kilgore, B. Bailey, J. Howard, M. Couch, M. McClellan, C. Causey, S. Miniard, I. demons, R. Hoskins. Second Row: D. Downs, E. Pullins, B. Blair, J. Lewis, M. Abney, R. Mitchell, J. Shep- herd, P. Adams, F. Richardson. Third Row: N. Campbell. C. Sergent, J. Napier, D. Malott, D. Bevins, P. Farley, J. Williams, P. Patrick, B. Patrick, A. Dow. Fourth Row: F. Mays, B. Willis, B. McCoy, S. Baker, D. Elswick, K. Griffith, F. Moses, R. McCuistori, J. Fee, H. Bennette, D. Wolfenberger, V. Cornett, B. Howard, R. Baugh. Fifth Row: W. McCreary, O. Pennington, L. Thacker, B. Mercer, B. Jenkins, P. Fields, R. Parsons, W. Chase, F. Messer, R. Chandler, V. Baker, D. Taylor, T. Hile, H. Smith, S. Galloway, D. Cassel. First Row: D. Parsons, F. Luttrell, C Campbell, K. Abney, D. Kilgore, J. Shackelford, W. Caldwell, C. Causey, G. Viars, J. Simpson. Second Row: D. Tester, N. Childress, S. Rhodes, R. Todd, W. Strunk, R. Brock, D. Bose, M. Cox, B. Standifer, C. Cress, H. Keith. Third Row: R. Singleton, A. Lamb, C. Hastings, G. Ray, F. Ponder, P. Champ, S. Stegall, C Runyon, A. Hamblin, M. Moses, I. Ruh, L. Conley, G. Anderkin. Fourth Row: B. Presnell, C. Wallen, A. Mason, G. Lewis, A. Conley, M. Lawless, M. Asher, L. Crawford, R. Evans, L. Hicks, M. Polly, C.Back, M. Hammons. Fifth Row: J. Saylor, A. Miller, R. Fritts, J. Ponder. — 82— MOUNTAIN LOI Season Record WE 66 Paint Lick NS They 40 .60 49... 46 57... Irvine .... Livingston ... Annville 40 .....39 43 59... Berea High Central 79 .57 71 ... Annville ...32 54 44... 28 50 76.. .... Kirksville ... Waco 52 ...64 Berea High .... Kingston .... .. McKee 74 38 .58 60 Irvine 43 38 44 ... Kingston .... ...43 .. Waco .57 51 Kirksville .... ...63 First Row: Garret, Ass ' t. Coach, Kilgore, Roark, Pullins, Blair, Kilgore, Church, Mgr., Coach Jones. Second Row: Routh, Mgr., Dean, Stephenson, Dash, Payne, Hawthorne, Parsons, Par- ris (not shown). SEA LIONS— STATE SWIMMING CHAMPIONS IN ' 53 and ' 54— B Class Standing: Coach Graham, Miller, Hoskins, Strunk, Moses, Parsons, Coach Gunkler. Kneeling: Rose, Stephenson, Noss, Routh. (Kneeling: Members of last year ' s team also.) — 83— CHEERLEADERS Left to Right: Jo Neely, Margueritte Hall, Gwynne Norman HI-Y Seated: T. Broyles, C. Penningon, D. Malott, R. Fritts, R. Brock. Standing: F. Messer, B. Shepherd, H. Smith, L. Thacker, V. Baker, C. Byrd, Mr. Drake, W. McCreary, C. Colvin. Y-TEENS Seated: S. Arnold, M. Collins, Miss Cooper, C. Spurlock, Jo Neely. Standing: F. Mays, A. Lamb, R. Williamson, R. Turner, K. Sanborne, P. Lovins, J. Shepherd, J. Ison, S. Miniard. DEBATING TEAM Wm. Ross, Jim Brady, Ken Thomp- son, Frank Hutchins, Chas. Noss, Mr. Drake, Coach ( not shown ) . BUSINESS CLUB Seated: A. Lamb, G. Kilgore, N. Lewis, C. Spurlock, N. Wade, M. Collins. Second Row: C. Runyon, H. Sparks, L. Hicks, G. Farley, M. VanHoose, R. Mitchell, Mr. Boes. Third Row: L. Mitchell, T. Broyles, C. Byrd, M. Byrd. -84- LION STAFF Seated: J. Ison, W. C. Rose, Editor; Faye Richardson, E. Mc Clanahan. D. Holley. Standing: C. Radford, D. McClellan, S. Allen, E. Coffey, L. Bowles, J. Simons, W. Baker, D. Malott, R. Biggerstaff, F. Hutchins, Mrs. Wear, Faculty Advisor. THESPIANS K. Thompson, C. Noss, F. Hutchins, K. Morris, Jo Neely, J. Piersall, Lois Todd (not shown). FOUNDATION CHORUS D. Holley, K. Morris, D. Malott, O. Pennington, G. Lewis, E. Mc- Clanahan, B. Jenkins, J. Shepherd, R. Turner, J. Ison, C. Wallen, I. Ruth, Miss Edwards. OUR MAJOR PRODUCTION— THE BARRETTS OF WIMPOLE STREET FOUNDATION SENIOR BIOGRAPHIES BANKS. BETTE A.: Chorus 2; Bus. Club 4; Class Sec. 4; Berea Players 2; Folk Dancing. BELDEN, J. CARL: Class Pres. 1, 3; Thespians 4; Berea Players 3, 4; Lion Staff 1, 2, 3, Ed. 3; Basketball Mgr. 2, 3. BLANTAN, IRENE S.: Cheerleader 2, 3; Berea Players 2; Judic. Com. 2; Regional Music Contest. BRADY, JAMES A.: Berea Players 3, 4; Chorus 3, 4; Track 3, 4; Varsity Club 3, 4; Pres. Student Council 4; Den Com. 3; Debating 4; Wrestling 4. BROYLES, TOMMY M.: Bus. Club 3, 4; Berea Players 2, 3, 4; Hi-Y 2, 3, 4, Pres. 4; Judic. Com. 4; Student Council 3; Chimes Staff 4. BYRD, CAROLINE: Chorus 1; Y-Teens 3; Berea Players 4; Bus. Club 4, Folk Dancing. BYRD, CHARLES R.: Hi-Y 3, 4; FFA 2; Fish and Game Club 1, 2. BYRD, MARY: Berea Players 2, 4; Scouts 2; Y-Teens 2, 3; Bus. Club 4; Handbook Com. 4; Honor Roll 2, 3; Chorus 1, Folk Dancing. CAMPBELL, MARY: Chorus 3. CHALMERS, JOHN C: Scouts 2. CLEVELAND, ALBERT E.: Basketball 3. CONLEY, MARY A.: Chorus 3; GAA 3, 4. CONLEY, NELDA: Berea Players 4; Bus. Club 3; Honor Roll 3; Folk Dancing. DASH, RAYMOND H: Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4, Capt. 4; Track 1, 2, 3, 4; Tennis Capt. 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Pres. 2; Vice-Pres. 3; Berea Players 4. DEAN. WILLIAM H: Basketball 3, 4, Capt. 4; Varsity Club 3, 4. DOTSON, NADINE F.: Scouts 1, 2; Y-Teens 1; Honor Roll 1, 2, 3; Chapel Com. 2; Bus. Club 3; Careers Day Com. 2, 3; Harmonica 4; Berea Players 3, 4. FELTY, KENT: Student Council 2; Track 1, 2, 3; Basket- ball 2, 3. HILE SUZANNE: Country Dancers 4. HUMFLEET, CAROLYN: Berea Players 1, 2, 3; Chorus 1,2. JOHNSON, LEAH JOYCE: Chorus 2, 3; Bus. Club 2; Berea Players 2,3; Lion Staff 2. LEWIS, NANCY LOUISE: Chorus 1; Y-Teens 1, 2, 3, Soc. Chm. 2, 3; Bus. Club 3, 4; Class Soc. Chm. 3; Judic. Com. 2; Lion Staff Asst. Ed. 3; Berea Players 3, 4; Church Choir 4; Speech Festival 3. LLOYD, CLAUDELLA: Y-Teens 4. LOVINS, ALEDA: Y-Teens 3, 4. MOORE, MARY LOU: Chorus 1; Y-Teens 1, 2; Bus. Club 1, 2; Class Treas. 3; Cheerleader 3; House Council 1, 2, 3, Pres. 3; Rec. Com. 1; Report Conf. Com. 1, 2, 3. MORRIS, KENNETH DEAN: Chorus 2, 3, 4; Thespians 3, 4; Treas. 4; Berea Players 3, 4; Honor Roll 2, 3; Class Treas. 4. NEELY, JOSEPHINE M.: Chorus 3, 4; Y-Teens 3, 4, Vice-Pres. 4; Cheerleader 3, 4; Bus. Club 3; Thespians 3, 4, Sec. 4; Berea Players 3, 4; Honor Roll 3; Aqua- cade 3; Church Choir 3. NOSS, CHARLES G.: Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4; Thespians 2, 3, 4; Berea Players 1, 2, 3, 4; Honor Roll 3; De- bating 4; Speech Festival 3, 4; Wrestling 4; Hi-Y 1; Harmonica 4; Varsity Club 3, 4; Scouts 1, 2; Folk Dancing. PARRIS, TED: Basketball 2, 3, 4, Capt. 4; Hi-Y 2; Tennis 3; Bus. Club 3. PIERS ALL, JERRY R.: Berea Players 4; Thespians 2, 3, 4; Hi-Y 2; Band 2, 3. POWELL, MARY ELIZABETH: Chorus 1, 2; Class Sec. 1; Student Council 2, 3; Honor Roll 1, 2, 3; Berea Players 1, 3, 4; Chapel Com. 2. ROSE, WILTON C: Lion Staff 1, 2, 3, 4, Ed. 4; Berea Players 4; Varsity Club 1, 2, Sec.-Trea. 3, Vice-Pres. 4 Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4, Co-Capt. 3; Basketball Mgr. 3 Student Council Vice-Pres. 4; Honor Roll 1, 2, 3 Judic. Com. 4; Tennis 3; Folk Dancing. ROSS, WILLIAM P.: Radio Club 1, 2, 3, Vice-Pres. 1; Berea Players 1, 2, 3, 4; Honor Roll 1, 2, 3; Swim- ming 2, 3, Mgr. 3; Student Council 4; Chimes Staff 4; Varsity Club 3. 4; Debating 4; Speech Festival 4; Class Soc. Chm. 4; Handbook Com 3; Church Choir 1. SHEPHERD, LAUREL JEAN: Chorus 4; Y-Teens 4; Church Choir 4; Judic. Com. 4. SIMONS, JU ANITA: Bus. Club 4; Lion Staff 3, 4; Berea Players 2, 3, 4. THOMPSON, KENNETH H: Berea Players 1, 2, 3, 4; Thespians 2, Treas., 3, Vice-Pres. 4; Honor Roll 7, 2, 3; Track 1; Swimming 1, 2, 3, Co-Capt 3; Varsity Club 2, 3, Sec.-Treas. 4; Hi-Y 1, 2, 3; Lion Staff 2, 3; Harmonica 4; Church Choir 4; Judic. Com. 2, 3; Speech Choir 4; Aquacade 3; Debating 4; Speech Festival 3, 4; Class Pres. 1, 4; Folk Dancing. TODD, LOIS: Chorus 1, 2; Class Sec. 2, 3; Religious Act. Com. 1; Recreation Chm. 4; Thespians 2, 3, 4, Sec. 3; Berea Players 2. 3, 4, Exec. Com. 4; Honor Roll 1, 2, 3. WATKINS, EWA LEE: Berea Players 4; Bus. Club 4; Aquacade 3; House Council 3. WILLIAMSON, RHONDA: Y-Teens 3, 4; Bus. Club Vice-Pres. 3; Judic. Com. 3. __ 2 Wilderness Road centennial drama Mr. Ted Cronk, Business Manager of Drama Preliminary tryouts for the drama at Phelp Stokes Final tryouts at the Indian Fort theater — 88 — Gwen Lanier, lead in drama, Mike Wilson also in drama Scene of Homecoming Festivities Organizations Activities Harmonia h ■■■■■ irji nn ■■■■■ c n r r . r, A r? n ? JPl .A, A O l i It ' A f 0 1 Ifl n Aa Wm.4 . a T if. 3M  B | _ ' 4II I 1 1 J ' ,■ 1 - i J 1 ' b fe ' lft« OFFICERS: President, Dave Welch; Vice-Peesident, Bill Steely; Secretary, Louise Peace, Treasurer, Ted Adams; Parliamentar- ian, Ledford Austin. STUDENT ASSOCIATION Standing, left to right: Dean Allen, Charlie Evans, Jo Galloway, Jim Arnold, Ben Boyd, Charles Hutchins, Eugene Fraley, Frank Marsh, Tipton Baker, Russell Sammons, Mrs. Matthias, Winnie Fay Rob- erts, Artricia Campbell, Glenna Valentine. Seated — Ann McMur- ray, Hallie Price, Ledford Austin, Bill Steely, Dave Welch, Louise Peace, Ted Adams, Mr. Gilkerson, Dean Parkinson. Student Council —90— rwV nl Pt rrprr Women ' s Council First Row, left to right: Artricia Campbell, Ruth Neely, Ann McMurray, Sally Tappan, Rubynelle Waldrop. Second Row: Deanna Davis, Pat Cook, Jeanette Conn, Dean Allen, Wanda Norris, Joanne Austin, Mrs. Scrivner, Barbara Weaver. Third Row : Miss Macauley, Betty Zook, Jean Martin, Frankie Brannon, Mannon Blevins, Betty Reed, Dean Feltner, Edna Outlaw, Dale Wilds. Left to Right: Dean Parkinson, John Newcomer, Sherwood Mull, Allen Cooper, Keith Parker, Eugene Fraley, Dave Allen, Carl Seidomridge, Kyle Butler, Andrew Brad- ley, Reggie ' Dickson, Wally Truesdale, Constantine Cappas. Men ' s Council —91- First Row, left to right: Emilye Hawkins, David Parry, Artricia Campbell, Betty jean Gasoway. Second Row: Rubynelle Waldrop, Ledford Austin, Connie Willard. Third Row. Gene Wratchford, Wilda O ' Dell, Winnie Fay Roberts, Yau Manu, Rachel Critz, Mary A. Atkins, Blaine Tucker, Pat Parker, Jim Arnold, Myrna Taylor. Y. M. C. A Cabinet Y. W C A —92— Christian Youth Council First Row, left to right: Dr. Cornett, Connie Willard, Edwin Roach, Dorothy Newman, Jean B. Sargent. Second Row: D. S. Grubbs, Gene Wratchford, Mrs. Wear, Miss Masters, Lois Dych, Beth Meyer. Third Row: Jim Henry, Jerry Hubble, Blaine Tucker, Sloan Sotherlin, Rev. Fitzgerald, H. H. Cheng. Life Service Clay McCravy, Pete Thorns, Cedith Slaven, Simontha Vickers, Sally Boggs, H. H. Cheng, Dr. Keener, Jim Henry, Rita Manuel, Barbara Ward, Wanda Wilkerson, Ruth Shipman, Coy Honsuker, Jerry Surface, Delores Williams. -93 — f v,l J Don White, Bob Shields, H. H. Cheng, Mary Jane Hennessee, Eva Smith, David Parry. Don Hutcheson, Pete Thorns, Lil Everman, Wilma Mahaffey, John Austin, Roger Dean, Bob Dryman. World Univ ersity Service Wilma Dych, Ruth Neely, Janet Cook, Dean Jones, Irene Lamb, Jane Greene, John Newcomer, Kelly Moss. —94 — First Row: Grace Piang, Choko Nakumura, Misako Higa, Frank Marsh, Raymond Collier, Charles Timberlake. Second Row: Delores Pennington, Vera McKinney, Ray Corns, Herbert Thomson, Carolyn Skeen. Third Row: Agnes Kuhlunigan, Astra Urjanis, Carolita Hamner, Mary Ann Atkins, Veree Thompson, Judy Graves, Jean Workman, Isabel Li, Yoon-Ai Choi. Fourth Row: Shirley Poole, Joy Alex- ander, Grace Curtis, Dorothy Lee, Wilma Riddle, Margaret Holbrook, Hallie Price, Harry Cho, Adelaide Gundlach, Eric Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Mikkal, Pierre Custot. Fifth Row: David Parry, Dene Southwood, Mike Parvaresh, Bob Pearson, John Lu, Constantine Cappas, Russell Moneyham, Dean Thompson. c o s M O P O L I T I O N First Row, left to right: N orma Tuller, James Henry, Mary Ann Atkins, Wilda O ' Dell, Betty Perkins, Jesse Amburgy. Second Row: Glenna Valentine, Bob Dryman, June Torrence, Mary Presley, James Arnold, GIdays Sanko, Clara Halterman, Azalee Wilson, Rachel Baird, Winnie Faye Roberts. rhird Row: Pauline Cart, Ann Mattingley, Bonnie Hager, Alma Norfleet, Mr. Southwood, Bruce DeBruhl, Vernon Flynn, Ernest Baker. F.T.A. —95 — Chapel Choir First Row: Mr. Rolf Hovey, Conductor; Mary Jane Bevins, Mickie Allen, Janice Reesor, Dorothy May, Betty Zook, Alleen Sump- ter, Barbara Tinsley, Pat Wright, Anita Hurst, Barbara Sanders, Alice Goforth, Dorothy Rogers, Helen Maynor. Keyboard Seated: Margaret Franke, Don Pease. Stand- ing: John Landrum, Violette Morris, Peg- gy Mask, Charles Yates, Mike Wilson, Alice Chen, Shirley Reed, Florence Davis, Anita Hurst, Betty Hensley, Ruth Bigger- staff, Janice Reesor. Women ' s Glee Cluk Lou Hysinger, Eleanor Brittian, Glenna Brown, Nancy Gaines, Helen Claycomb, Joanne Austin, Dorothy Couk, Miss Kysela, Wan- da Norris, Barbara Ward, Lola Sexton, Carol Mead, Jane South, Nancy Moore, Yvonne Nanney, Clara Davis, Margie Stevens. Jimmie Van Winkle, Wilma Mehaffey. — 96 — Band Collegians Barbara Tinsley, Joy Lewis, James Rose, Harold Owens, Dick Bowling, Jack Lewis, Bill Forbes. John Elder, Howard Campbell. Marvin Barton, Harold Owens, James Rose, Barbara Tinsley, Dick Bowling, Charles Bertram, Bill Forbes, Jack Lewis, Allen Cooper. —97— Billy Ed Wheeler, Margie Collins, Johnny Owens, Mary Roberts, Gene Lovely, Sue Hile, Garland Fuller, Judy Harris, Hugh Sutherland, Joyce Van Sant, John Dan Austin, Norma Smith, Martin Ambrose, Bertha Frazier, Eric Brown, Jewell Baldock, Mr. Frank Smith (Director), Lurline Newbolt, Tommy Huffman, Kathy San- borne, Harry Mustard, Edith Higgins, Jim Abies, Irene Lamb, Liz Potter. The purpose of the Country Dancers is to practice the Art of Folk Dancing, encourage the use of it, and to represent the College on various trips and tours. Mem- bership is open to all students on competitive basis. In 1940 the Country Dancers as we now know them was organized. The first president was Emery Hensley, who suggested the name of the organization. The present president is Billy Ed Wheeler. During the years of exis- tence the Country Dancers have represented the college at many folk festivals and on many tours all over the country, including the following places: University of California, Kansas City, Denver, San Jose State College, Cleveland, Ohio, University of Kentucky, Center College, Cumberland College, Ohio University, Miami University at Oxford, Ohio, Marietta College, Muskingum College and many local places. Country Dancers -98 — Berea Players The Play ' s the thing — — Hamlet. TAU DELTA TAU Hugh Bailey, Del Hare, Pedie Counts, Martha Vickers, Jewel Baldock. Pi Alpha First Row, left to right: Jim Cass, Jack Farmer, Roy Cline, Gordon Jones, Orval Ayers, Jerry Cox, Ralph Ramey, Dave Allen, Pete Thorns, Mr. Roberts, Don Hutche- son, Tom Van Sant. Second Row: Rex Reynolds, Snowden Eisenhour, Jim Gaines, Tom Dawson, Jim Hyder, Mary Plummer, Charles Brown, Tom Holladay, George Ball, Sally Tappan, Don Nash, Ernest Lane, Julian Capps, Ken Moss, John Newcomer, David Zook, Cecil Nanney. ' ■ Tri Beta First Row, left to right: Moyer Edwards, Faye Alley, Ralph Ramey, Dr. Bangson, Second Row: Pete Thorns, Orval Ayers, Mr. Hart, Mr. Hull, Wayne Grogan, Mr. Gilkerson. Third Row: Bob Van Winkle, Mary Plum- mer, Bob Dorton, Julian Capps, Charles Yates, Charles Wilson, Leon Kirkland. { I H s i ( — i S. v ' •:. Sigma Pi Sigma First row, left to right: Tommy Holladay, Cecil Nanney, Mr. Strickler, Snowden Eisenhour, Barlow Newbolt. Second Row : John Newcomer, George Ball, Dr. Ross, Jim Hyder, Ernest Lane, Tom Van Sant, David Zook. —100— Chemical Society First Row, left to right: Bill Bruce, Bob Frye, Roy Cline, Don Nash. Second Row: Betty Burchett, Beryl Pressley, Joan Overton, Del Hare. Third Row: Ying-Nan Chiu, Wyatt Collins, Larry Saylor, Tom Dawson. Fourth Row: Dr. Levy, Gordon Jones, Dr. Capps. Fifth Row: Fred Greenberg, Lee Bobbin, Julian Gapps. Medical Science First Row, left to right: Norris Biggerstaff, Mrs. Norris Biggerstaff, Bob Moore, Bob Dorton, Ben Williams, Allen Cooper, Paul Estes. Second Row: Wayne Spiggle, Howard Wilson, Charles Bertrum, Astra Urjanis, Shirley Peterson, Thelma Foley, Janece Walters. Third Row: Ying-Nan Chiu, Ralph Coleman, George Prewitt, Harvey Musser, Frank Catron. Fourth Row: Dr. Jones, Julian Capps, Charles Wilson, Ken Moss, Don Kilbourne. Mathematics Left to right: Tommy Holladay, Mr. Wright, Tom Van Sant, David Jones, Jack Brown, Ernest Lane, George Ball, Astor Herrell, Mr. Westfall, Miss Stolle, Mr. Roberts. -101— Home Economics First Row: Jeanelle L. Baker, Irene Chu, Jua- nita Horton, Janet Boiling, Maxine Ran- dolph, Wanda Kincaid. Second Row: Virginia Whitson, Jane Brumback, Mar- garet, Bevins, Lena Williams, Evelyn Miller, Betty Kincaid, Barbara Byrd, Miss Nancy McClarey. Third Row: Shirley Garland, Barbara Reynolds, Clarene Rog- ers, Dot Kennen, Betty Saylor, Ruth King, Kathy Harris. Fourth Row: Helen Wes- ley, Miss Ruth Woods, Miss Ervilla Masters, Miss Agnes Aspenes, Wilma Jean Hall, Betty Hannah, Ruth Nichols, Dorothy Van Horn, Mary Frances Wade. Agriculture First Row, left to right: H. W. Grubbs, Paul Claiborn, Clayton O ' Neil, Bob Eplee, Paul Sutton, Jim Carroll Gilbert, David Gil- lespie, O. C. Wise, Don Thomas. Second Row: Charles Larew, Elmer Gray, Robert Wilkerson, Winston Riddle, Bronelle Skaggs, Bob Hulver, Marvin Hutchins, Clyde Hall, Myles Compton, James Marion, Gwyn Campbell. Third Row: Houston Price, Jack Cummings, James Greer, Milton Boyce, Robert Wolfe, Thad Mills, E. C. Hogg, Dick Hipps, Bill Dan- iels, Ben Williams, Jack Feagen, Stan Comstock. Fourth Row: Harold Rice, Harry White, Charles O ' Dell, Howard Greer, Blaine Tucker, Joe Derting, Dan Moore, Wesley Lambert. Ag-Home Ec. Front Row: Janet Rae Bowling, Juanita Hor- ton, Robert Goodson, Don Austin, Elmer Gray, Bob Hulver. Diagonal, bottom to top: Dan Moore, James Marion, Bronelle Skaggs, Charles Larew, O. C. Wise, Joe Derting, Don Ruggles, Miss Ruth Woods, Bill Daniels, Robert Eplee, Lucille Met- calf, Myles Compton, Margaret Holbrook, Mary Frances Wade, Lena Williams Clyde Hall, Jeanelle Baker, Helen Wesley, Shir- ley Garland, Ruby McKinney, Barbara Reynolds, Libby Waldroup, Clarene Rog- ers, Harold Rice. —102— Spanish Lillian Everman, Renee Dow, Alicia Del Cas- tillo, Vivian Hope, Rita Manuel, Carolyn Skeen, Myrna Taylor, Ronald Puckett, Bill Robinson, Artricia Campbell, Mary At- wood, Bill Toy, Carolyn Wilson, Doris Galliher, Mrs. Ruth de Gamboa, Miss Evelyn Montgomery, Don Hutcheson, Lois Dych, Joan Coy, Shirley Poole, Eva Smith, Beverly Wesley, Carolyn Brewer, Dale Wilds, Mr. and Mrs Thomas Hart. French First Row, left to right: Sylvia Hitchcock, Car- olyn Brasel. Second Row: Sarah Gouge, La Rue McMaham, Cora Davenport, Dr. Herbert Thomson, Carol Meade, Betty Pressley, Faye Davenport, Anita Hurst. Third Row: Cloyd Bumgardner, Miss E. Mont- gomery, Molly Myles, Mrs. Ruth De Am- boa, Miss Charlotte Ludlum, Azalee Wil- son, Carleen Hemric. Fourth Row: Don Cornett, David Parry, Harold Warren, Pierre Custot, Kak C. Kim. Business First Row, left to right: Bernard Davis, Jackie Mathews, Melda J. Compton, Peggy Smith, Jemmie Van Winkle, Mr. Weidler, David Grubbs. Second Row: Carl Seldomridge, Louise Peace, Ann Skidmore, Mirneal Compton, Merrell Jenkins, Mrs. Weidler. Third Row: Mr. Newbolt, Russell Gadd, Miss Lincoln, Lola Sexton, Mr. Chin, Miss Landau, Bill Page. Fourth Row: Ann McMurray, Harold Haga, Ted Adams, Eu- gene Fraley, Howard Fraley, Marvin Barton. —103— P.A.F. First Row, left to right: Ledford Austin, John- ny Harris, Jack Smith, Eddie Ro ach. Sec- ond Row: Mary Ann Atkins, Carolita Hamner, Alice Moore, Haliie Price. Third Row: Russell Sammons, Ray Corns, How- ard Miller. Fourth Row: Bruce DeBruhl, David Welch, Preston Stegana, Harry Cho, Isabel Li. Fifth Row: Kay Leslie, Edrow Adams, Yaw Manu, Betty Waldrop, Eleanor Burchell. Sixth Row: H. H. Cheng, Yoon-Ai Choi, Alice Sprinkle, Pedie Counts, David Parry, George S. Noss. English Eugene McLemore, Bertha Marine, Dr. Jerome Hughes, Thelma Splawn, Betty Watkins, Billy Ed Wheeler, Evelyn Adams, Fred Golder, Retha Brown, Rubynelle Wald- roup, Gwen Downs, Carolyn Wilson, Wal- lace Gosser. Twenty Writers Julia High, Mrs. Dene Southwood, Mrs. Ken- neth Thompson, Bess Holland, Pauline Cart, Rauol Le Blanc, Thomas Kreider, Dene Southwood, Harold Warren, Harry Smith. -104 — Geology First Row: Oscar Rucker, Sherwood Mull, Gen- eral Croucher, Bill Outlaw, Pete Shelton. Second Row: Monroe Smith, Dean Cor- nett, Jerry Cox, Jim Cass, Raoul LeBlanc, Mabel Herren. Third Row: Mary Conant, Don Hutcheson, Don Clark, Earl Gil- breath, Pat Spangler, Bill Toy. Fourth Row: Dave Allen, Ray Ashcraft, Myles Hayes, Mrs. Burroughs, Dr. Burroughs, Bill Richardson, Rex Reynolds, Tom Camper. Outing Dr. Gailey, Harry Mustard, Dr. Noss, Mr. Grossman, Sherwood Mull, Hugh Bailey, Pat Spangler, Tommy Brackett, Noland Stanley, Del Hare, Carl Brittian, Lee Bob- bin, H. H. Cheng. History, Pol. Sci. Johnny Harris, Dale Reedy, Sara Gouge, Louise Ogle, Betty Waldroup, Yoon Choi, Alice Sprinkle, Harry Cho, David Welch, Russ Sammons, David Parry, Loring Vance, Bruce DeBrul. —105- First Row, left to right: Dr. Clara Cooper, Judy Graves, Paul Powers, Wallace Trues- dale, Carol Colvard, Carl Sword, Shirley Poole, Mitchell Osteen, Miss Angli Wai. Second Row: David Gillenwater, Clarence White, Cloyd Johnson, Dr. Charles Shedd, Philip Conley, Paul Alien, Toby Shook, Fred Beddingfield, Dr. Kenneth Thompson. P s Y C H O L O First Row: Margaret Parker, Dot Winston, Joy Alexander, James Burkley. Second Row: Eugene Fox, Devon Meek, Gerald Hubble, James Bailey, Lynn Lewallen, Royce Miller, Allan Sutphin. Third Row: Vera Clark, Frances Wilson, Jewell Cooke, Shirley Johnson, Barbara Hyder. Fourth Row: Bob Morgan, Kelly Moss, Bob Raines, Charles Larew, Bob Pearson. —106- MOUNTAIN DAY UHLE MAN Ori CAMPUS Robert Jetty S chnical ;rea wi 5 comp people ipals l Jeely c ind Gli a der. also h ird Ka - Ruck of th will hi p Nat ssippi uper. ' Editor Managing Editor ZZZZZZZZZ! Business and Advertising Mai News Editor ™ Sports Editor Copy Editor Exchange Editor I Co-circulation Managers Office Manager Faculty Advisor . Business Advisor Reporters Polly Gaflihe --Hurt, Carolita Hamn Nina Taylor, Wallace Ti Ann Skidmore, Harolc Bertha Marine, Clay Circulation Staff J, . Loftis, Shirley Pete Business Staff j oar Office Staff ;_ jac Sports Staff Photography Staff Artists 9 S n, was the brilliant Darrell se who had 28 points. Shanks owed with 17 markers and Rug i had 13. Bill Masters co uted 12. ave Cottrell sparke n with 25 points. ;ed 13 and xander tab not enougn substantial iood. could also have fresh candy ba .if we ' re, going to have them an Lytton. tfr Vrankly I think the sack supp Vtion is a serious problem. College is go ing to prea $srt for students it must pra xphilosophy. I ' ve «•- u r Duty Don ? xms is Brotherhood v. I In the past one-hundred year xcause it ' s leaders have stood for n Ithat God hath made of one blood Kermit Eby ' s address last Sunt jjshift restlessly in our seats with the nnt have done our duty. KZ. Th PINN CUSTODIAN OF THE SI BEREA, KENTUCKY 2H rhe missioi lot compete ;he valley, ob Eby, who hit , i. £ 5ep ii , r- K 4e vnijR FRIENDS j| Heavy Rai ns R a i se Reservoir Level water star way at 12: Z P Yvc e V w %3 full and r ■« -atv ftfc gcff vetf « t time in n « 2 £ V W, «S u ve, he total amc $ - |i February 22 -o v m. |i reoruary 22 -w ' me two reservoirs which i m J inches. T - „ c s , $Ol v ■6 too V --tv« low, showed an inc sinT ' v ,, couraging gain dur ,v Jo V o°° v s  ' ,. « end. Rainfall A v e « £ i £ •   9 ° S , W ...tetf W s ee . e ve A 0 amounted t , oV .  tfrf st .! ; rar e T v V O ' e £o.e c o „ £ Marjone . A atV s AVe .,,... and Spring i. • c v ,n.es eat c • C ! ,„ es J£ Gregory Peck. The .o ,,000,000 jd By His Guns ... Too «Mg] - 1• , « ! ' LtS f a °  « «oV c v e. . ttf ° te - onda y after- 1 Also, Cartoons i -iil gaining. RT.TT. oi-at mna Pn Hammond Nnw Oi A few notes scrawled on the note pad, the incessant clickety-click-click of the typewriter as the news goes into the copy stage, and a rush to meet the Wednes- day noon deadline. Behind every edition of the weekly campus chronicle goes the unheralded work of those behind the scenes, the news editor who collects the tips and digs up the new leads; the reporters who ask the Who, What, Why, When, and Where; the typists who transfors the re- porter ' s efforts into decent copy; the copyreader, who ' s hawk-eye scrutiny catches the tiny error — then to the press to be set in lead — then back again the story comes to the proofreader who scans it, headlines are written, and the layout artist designs the page locating its position. — That ' s the life of a newspaperman — a scene re-enacted every week in pre- paring an edition of the PINNACLE to roll from the press on Saturday morn- ing. VOLUME 1 cdnesdoy Noon L , Johnny Harris John Leeson Willis Todd Charles Counts J. C. Blanton Mary Ellen Yates Louise Ogle Dora Mae and Hugh Sutherland Ann Skidmore I _ Dene Southwood ■■ L Mr. George Kavanaugh % 1 rig Vance, Lynn Finchum, JoAnn rl Seldomiidge, Wilbur Sellers, I, Lyle Underwood, Betty Bruce, in, Deb Dixon, Sona Eppenstein, y, Marcella Webb, Toby Wilson Johnson, Garland Fuller, Tommy Ihirley Willard, Vernida Shiflett •ton, Dot Baskette, Joan Howard vis, Roy Watson, Alice Sprinkle, Barbara Toy, Imogene Mullins Eddy Ford, Jim Buckley Emilye Hawkins, Jerry Halstead -_ Jerry Perry, Harold Warren York 21, N Y. nforr ler : can 1 he 1 lent ■ lal I reet, BOW, JR., a become exaltei i ocal repr eser, v „_ °r$l ■ - rincipleolitan Life Insi lOi s ep J P is 1 attend acoi Houston, Te ' ening caused -  ,._,•«%% V V der that we as cm .. srea t. ■ . SOU fyjji c PINNAw 2S | Tuesday, March 15 at 2:30 an , iiveiy car paign is anticipated i D Ci II  II W W ■ March 1 create an interesting political Step By DlCp Here S flOW 1 lJO l ss for fou ation office or from Bill Steely. , lively campaign is anticipated CLE IT ' S RIGHT TO KNOW URDAY, FEB. 19, 1955 ihere and to help each stu- etermine the most qualified ate for each position, nitory discussion with the ites are planned and a for campaign speeches is led for March 24. tents To Attend (Editor ' s Note: First in a series r t s ' on how to fail in college) ji j C L% 1. Enter the course as late  V l W possible. By changing yo ' - VSvV J about your curriculum ?J starts, you shop ' ' elasses up week culture department. Ufcll nrcinnati Semi CvO 1 y n, and b omen and te y be double replaced b -te ' ryouts ar .d s ts in goo rV £s s are o librar li sfi ■ v- Ttoron r Uege will send legation to the Bk lign Service Semi bity of Cincinnati, 1 As ! A.. W .vetf SO ' v ' ■£ « ■ - «, A struggle to stay above the red line of financial indebtedness — a searing edi- torial — a triangular battle between PIN- NACLE, the Student Council, and the American Tobacco Company — all were elements in the turbulent life of the campus newspaper, 1954-55 style. As Custodian of the Student ' s Right to Know, THE PINNACLE was never accused of dodging a controversal issue in breaking the news to the students. And back the PINNACLE was a fine staff, many on whom the spotlight of recognition never focused, who fought and worked to make the paper. Unpaid and unthanked they will re- main for the most part, but as Volume 1 of THE BEREA PINNACLE, Centennial Edition, is closed — a tip of the hat to the representatives of the student press who served as a Custodian of the Stu- dent ' s Right to Know. Van Hook, head of ry department, has a at the following Bere. 11 attend: Ledford Aus- 1 DeBruhl, Harry Cho, V ' iris, Louise Ogle, Dale V f. 1 A ° P «0 cO v H ' hs t £ ' vA T issell Sammons, Alice wring Vance- wh V!T fl CP 4 ..a other all around , e V ior 6u i faith in hu tribute to the in -dDility of mankind. Tab W j vyNnterrupt your reading ing on what you have Recitation is unpleasant up deficiencies. ft « AA Teachers We - es Out Teacher The qualification members of the club to ot ,d- ._ «- J2ti2y!? , ?5 life ar  free_ - and the s P rin s rains p roi .meeting a ° lg caa y n SHOWF D S of Blessines. for« when l after Cot otv v 1 s c e IT ' S T0ASTED ,, t to taste better! 1 9. Every  ? gr ™; m US en - • an ong ° present an a.te V nial and wa ' ys and means for com- lielssohn ' s Hymn pS?_ __•_ ■ :« ia Hii rtto 8 •pv ' tive committee of the a bly be attributed t «- C S t0 , l e Alumni Association Society, now prai ■6 - eVea, Sunday, Oct. 3, to sprm g concert wh: a.dN scuss plans for Berea ' s Centen- Schubert ' s Mass i SC ACTION LONG OVERDUE The Student ' Council, in its Wednesday meeting, discuss one item that has been long overdue. This was the matter Doris Kirk )  — lj Yea Blue! Yea White! Yea Team! Fight! Fight! Ann Wyatt —111— Darrell Crase Captain All K.I.A.C. Don Ruggles All K.IA.C. Irvin Shanks All K.I.A.C. Bill Masters All K.IA.C. MOUNTAINEERS RALLY TO SINK TRANSY 62-56 BEREA TRIPS CENTRE 62-54 FOR 10TH WIN MOUNTAINEERS DROP BELLARMINE 73-62 —112— Crase Stars As Mountaineers Down Union 77-65 In Third KIAC Contest Joe Lake James Crase Ralph Fort Glen Higgins —113 — John Stapleton ■1 T L 3H H L k ' 1 Joe Disco Arnold Thurman Jerry Hayes Johnny Hayes —114 — Kenneth Conn Aubrey Etherington Manager Dale Reedy Manager Bob Miller Manager Joe Neal Joel Campbell — old reliable Berea Routs Transy Berea 75 L. M. U ...61 Berea 95 C. Newman .... ...53 Berea 83 Union ...75 Berea 80 Wittenberg ...79 Berea 78 Villaimodonna ...72 Berea 73 Willmington .... ...67 Berea 91 Milligan .59 Berea 84 L. M. U .70 Berea 73 Bellarmine ...62 Berea 62 Centre ...54 Berea 62 Transylvania .... ...56 Berea 56 Ky. Wesleyan .. .66 Berea ...49 Georgetown .... .69 Berea 85 Willmington .... ...66 Berea 76 Union ...78 Berea 73 Centre ...65 Berea 69 Bellarmine ...73 Berea 77 Georgetown .... ...80 Berea 79 Transylvania 76 K.I.A.C. TOURNEY Berea 77 Union ...65 Berea 76 Transylvania .... ...59 Berea 74 Georgetown 66 Coach C. H. Wyatt in early November when he predicted his winning season. Mountaineers Win MAC Title In Tilt With Georgetown Tigers -116— Left to right: Coach Bob Jones, Bob Edwards, Captain Larry Peercy, Bob Peercy, David Hart, Gwyn Campbell. Not pictured: Cecil Nanney, Jack Duckworth, Charles Wilson. Cross Country Bob Edwards takes an early lead as Berea racks on another victory Heading the pack over the fence and up Dead Horse Knob goes Captain Larry O. H. Gunkler Director of Physical Education Athletics Coach Robert Jones B CLUB First Row, left to right: Ray Rose, Les Winchester, Bob Peercy, Bod Ed- wards, Larry Peercy, Dave Hardwick, Gerald Jones, Paul Moores, Pete Thoms, Sonny Gibson. Second Row, left to right: Charles Wilson, Arnold Thurman, Bob Humphries, Bill Masters, Darrel Crase, Tom Holladay, Bob Gunkler, Luke Eldridge, Dave Allen. Third Row: O. H. Gunkler, Ralph Fort, Milton Boyce, Miles Hayes, Harold Rice, Julian Capps, Bill Daniels, Nevil Garrett. —118— I N T R A M U R A ' . .::.-■ ■. FOOTBALL— Blue League — Guest House White League — Blue Ridge 1 Playoff Game — Guest House CROSS COUNTRY— Individual — Team — Williams Intramural Managers Charles Evans, Dave Allen and Bob Dryman show evidence of the completion of another big and successful year in Berea ' s intramural program. BASKETBALL— HIGHLIGHTS OF 1954-1955 Season — Pearson 2, Town Pearson 1 Howard 1 Tournament — Pearson 2 PING PONG— Singles — Ronald Puckett HANDBALL— Singles — Ray Rose INTRAMURAL COUNCIL Seated, left to right: Carl Seldomridge Jack Mathews Lloyd Taylor Tip Baker Charles York Standing, left to right: Dave Allen Bob Humphries Arnold Thurman Miles Hayes Charles Bright Duell Sharp —119- Intramural —120— Rundown Guest Takes Football Title The six-man Guest House team which rolled to an 8 won-lost record are shown huddled from left to right: John Anderson, Tommy Holladay, Stewart An- derson, Bob Dryman, Frank Catron, and David Jones. TOWN, PEARSON I AND HOWARD I Season Co-champs and owners of a record of 14 wins and 1 loss in regular play. Left to Right, seated: Tip Baker, Leon Welting, Carl Graham, Ray Rose, Pete Whitis. Standing: Coach Glenn Higgins, James Hammond, Bill Richardson, Eldon Powell, James Powell. Pearson II Takes Basketball Tourney The end of regular season intramural play found Pearson 2 sharing the title. The tourna- ment proved to be another story as the boys in the spotted trunks swept 4 straight games to take all the marbles. Kneeling, left to right: Bones Lanham, Tom Dawson, Doug Keeter, Gerald Parrish, Coach Ralph Neal, Jessie Amburgy, Blaine Tucker, and Hugh Perry. —121— w A A Ann West Williams President Frankie Brannan Vice-President Dot Crickenberger Secretary f i Frances Wilson Treasurer Pat Tempelton Program chairman Mary Washington Publicity chairman Miss Mernie Ziegler Sponsor Back: Teddy Watkins, Irene Lamb, Ruby Roten. Peggy Mask, Alice Sprinkle, Virginia Whitson, Mary Jane Houser, Irma Jo Reedy, Miss Zeigler, Sona Eppenstein, Janet Cook, Helen Leatherwood, Bessie Frizzel. Front: Dot Crickenberger, Beverly Tonne, Frances Reedy, Doris Hyatt, Pat Tempelton, Mary Washington, Ann West Williams. —123— The Pilgrims Below — On the Hockey Field, Berea vs. Eastern The Indians Below — Hiking home from the retreat 1 l ' HBKHHS eyball Basketball The Anna Smith Ants volley a little before the game Ann McMurry Lucille Metcalf Jo Ella Nuckols Braxton Crocker Marilyn Pattan Yvonda Tunnell More of the Pilgrims Audry Massey, Irene Lamb Alice Sprinkle, Mary Washington Modern Dancers Ann West Williams Ellen McClung All-Star Basketball Game Fairchild vs. All-Stars —125- —127— Compliments of BAKER ' S NEWS AND SUNDRY STORE T.P. ' S ' Berea Kentucky Whether it ' s - - - DINE ' n DANCE ' SIT ' n GOSSIP Do t at THE HANGOUT The Onl y Place in Berea Especia My for L . Berea Students .™ — j BEST WISHES FROM PARSONS ' ELECTRIC CHESTNUT STREET YOUR BEREA, KENTUCKY GENERAL® ELECTRIC DEALER CARLTON RESTAURANT 1 i OUR FOOD IS OF THE BEST QUALITY ROMINGER Funeral Home BEREA Our Ambulance Is Ready Day and Night To Serve Berea And The Surrounding Community Phone 125 -128— S ieepu — htecid rri TV oude Retail Division of Southern Bedding Company, Inc. The South ' s Most Complete Factory-To-You Furniture Store MAIN AT BROADWAY LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY -129- COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND BROCR-McVEY COMPANY, Inc. PLUMBING, HEATING, REFRIGERATION SUPPLIES Fronkfort, Ky. Lexington, Ky. Maysville, Ky. DOT FRUITS AND VEGETABLES SERVING HOTELS AND INSTITUTIONS THE JANSZEN COMPANY CINCINNATI, OHIO— PHONE MA 0832 Hugh Campbell, Local Representative 1419 Richmond Road — Lexington, Ky. PHONE: LEX. 3-4085 —130— M f INNEY-NEWMAN COMPANY Wholesale Distributors for ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES — APPARATUS — APPLIANCES 270 Midland Avenue Lexington 21, Kentucky Best Wishes to the Graduating Class of 1953 COMPLIMENTS OF HARGETT CONSTRUCTION CO. Incorporated GENERAL CONTRACTORS 1 13 Walton Ave. Lexington 37, Ky. Phone 2-2992 Builders of ANNA SMITH SCIENCE HALL —131- ] C-MAID Table Grade Margarine Produced from the finest ingredients from American Farms in one of the most modern plants in the country THE MIAMI MARGARINE COMPANY CINCINNATI, 2, OHIO Wabash 0921 — L.D. 193 FULTON FISH MARKET FISH — OYSTERS — SEA FOODS 104 West Jefferson Street LOUISVILLE 2, KY. Compliments of BLACK BROTHERS LINES Incorporated Richmond, Kentucky Charter Service Anywhere VARIETY MERCHANDISE BEREA 5c to $1.00 STORE CHESTNUT STREET BEREA, KENTUCKY —132— CONGRATULATIONS FROM . . . NU-WAY CLEANERS Main Street Berea, Kentucky OUR 33RD YEAR OF SERVICE TO BEREA COLLEGE STUDENTS RIVERS ' SHOE SHOP Short Street BELLEVILLE ' S LEADING TELEVISION APPLIANCE AND RECORD CENTRE COMPLIMENTS OF AETNA SERVICE CENTER WE WISH TO CONGRATULATE THE SENIORS OF 1954 Berea Motor Company Berea, Kentucky Chestnut Street —YOUR DODGE-PLYMOUTH DEALER- —133— HIGH GRADE BAND SAWED INDIANA HARDWOODS T. A. FOLEY LUMBER CO., Inc. MANUFACTURERS PARIS, ILLINOIS COMPLIMENTS OF BAKER BAKER SUPPLY STORE t R I G I D A I R IE CHESTNUT STREET, BEREA, KY. Phone 384 SHOP AT BARKER ' S CLOTHING CENTER CLOTHES FOR THE SON AND HIS DAD WEST SHESTNUT STREET BEREA, KENTUCKY Old Kentucky Quilts Spring Air Mattresses Mattress Protection Pads Nursery Pads Quilted Pads Louisville Bedding Company LOUISVILLE, KY. Manufacturers of Fine Bedding for Over Sixty Years SENIORS: We Have Appreciated Your Patronage While You Have Been In Berea. ALLEN ' S FLOWERS BEREA —134 — PONTIAC CARS — GMC TRUCKS Compliments of JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTORS — Sales and Service — BEREA NATIONAL BANK HYMER MOTOR COMPANY CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $295 000 Berea CHESTNUT STREET BEREA SERVING BEREA WITH WHOLESALE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES PETE MARINO Distributor Irvine Street Richmond, Ky. VISIT YOUR STANDARD OIL DEALER R. L. Powell, Dist. — W. Jefferson St. — Berea —135— miimiiwun CONGRATULATIONS AND .... CONGRATULATIONS TO THE . . . BEST WISHES TO THE SENIORS OF SENIOR CLASS BEREA COLLEGE DIXIE WAX PAPER CO. PAPER PACKAGE CO. P.O. Box 2607 INDIANAPOLIS, IND. MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE FROM A FRIEND SENIORS Little Mamma extends 80 MILES FRESHER Best Wishes for the Future EITTEE MAMA ' S NIC NAC Short Street — Berea POTATO CHIPS The favored spot for Bereans to meet, to eat, and to chat. —136— COMPLIMENTS OF BEREA NOVELTY CO. WEST END BEST WISHES TO BEREA ' S CLASS OF ' 55 LACQUER SPECIALTIES, Inc. 249 Avenue P NEWARK 5, NEW JERSEY COMPLIMENTS OF BEREA DRY CLEANERS YOUR CHOTHES ' BEST FRIEND SHORT STREET FRUITS — VEGETABLES GROCERIES — MEATS B. B. FOOD MARKET Self Service — Delivery Service Phones 21 and 191 Main Street A CLEAN DEAL Ash — Birch — Cherry Honduras Mahogany — Hard Maple Red Oak — White Oak Poplar — White Pine CHARLES F. SHIELS CO. CINCINNATI 3, OHIO Where Berea Co-eds Shop For Style And Quality ZJne J au- J eliu kop MAIN STREET IN BEREA -137— ■UMaKziffii I m ■H MHM A round Ihe clock with Sexton Every time. tk clod ticks Sexton Foods am being sewed to pleased gnerfs icith greater profit CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES From L S AMERICA ' S FINEST PRESERVES — JELLIES PICKLES RELISH Since 1884 Lutz Schramm Pittsburgh, Pa. EMMART ' S MAGNOLIA BRAND HAMS — BACON — SAUSAGE — BEEF PRODUCTS EMMART PACKING COMPANY LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY PROTECT YOUR HEALTH Use: Lee Clay Well Lining Septic Tanks Grease Traps Sewer Pipe and Drain Tile See Your Local Building Material Dealer LEE CLAY PRODUCTS CO., INC. CLEARFIELD, Rowan County, KENTUCKY —138— 5 STAR buTlBTdL ,ui ¥i « !•••••!  WA«i GENERAL BOX COMPANY P.O. Box 1974 Louisville, Ky. THE E. T. SLIDER COMPANY Louisville, Kentucky Producers and Shippers of Washed and Screened SAND AND GRAVEL from the OHIO RIVER Plants: Louisville, Kentucky and New Albany, Indiana COMPLIMENTS OF The Lowe Brothers Company —139— Congratulations Seniors THE JOHNSON ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMPANY Distributors of EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL ? 17-321 Sycamore St. incinnati 2, Ohio Mk [? % WA K 50 NEVER BOUGHT A Mm B ; CUTER leather purse H H B 9 easy to as- Bl L H can be E H hanky H V and coins. In three colors: H Chocolate brown, red or chamois chrome suede. KIT IS COMPLETE: Liveoal cowhide gusset is ready punched. Ample plastic lace. Suede draw strings. Easy instructions and carving pattern, ALL FOR kfl C THE AMAZING LOW PRICE OF JUppd Two larger sizes also available $2.00 and S3 00 WRITE FOR FREE DO-IT-YOURSELF CATALOG TANDY LEATHER CO. (EST. W9) P.O. BOX 791 FORT WORTH. TEXAS GABBARDS RESTAURANT A Good Place To Eat CHESTNUT STREET BEREA, KENTUCKY L. T. FLAKE SON 169 North Limestone Street Lexington, Kentucky NOW... Rental Service for the Berea Community BEDS— WHEEL CHAIRS CRUTCHES— WALKERS CONGRATULATIONS TO BEREA COLLEGE ON THEIR CENTENNIAL YEAR BLANKE BAER EXTRACT AND PRESERVING CO. Manufacturer of WIN YOU BRAND Pure Food Products 3224 South Kingshighway St. Louis 9, Missouri —140— VISIT THE NATIONALLY FAMOUS Renfro Valley Barndanee Renfro Vailey, Ky. Each and Every Saturday Night Haynliaiii ' s SHOES OF DISTINCTION ' For Men — Women — Children Florsheim — Freeman — Sandler — Johansen — Capezio LOUISVILLE— LEXINGTON— CINCINNATI— NASHVILLE CONGRATULATIONS TO ' 54 SENIORS SIMON ADES SONS COMPANY Gilbert S. Ades Saul B. Ades 631 West Main Louisville 2, Ky. COMPLIMENTS OF Wm. GLENNY GLASS COMPANY Comprehensive Service in Glass Requirements 10-16 West Commerce Street CINCINNATI, OHIO THE J. B. SCHRODER COMPANY BUILDERS ' HARDWARE MANUFACTURERS AND SPECIALISTS 1117-1119 VINE STREET CINCINNATI 10, OHIO MPJwvTOiwswB. ' ' mm Bm mm0immi immmmmMmmm mB ' ' ' —mi -141— WE CONGRATULATE BEREA COLLEGE ON 100 YEARS OF FINE WORK THE MENGEL COMPANY CORRUGATED BOX DIVISION FACTORIES at Louisville, Ky., Winston-Salem, N.C., New Brunswick, N. J., Nashville, Tenn., Fulton, N. Y. FOR ENDURING CHARM AND BEAUTY BUILD WITH FACE BRICK TEXTURES AND COLORS TO PLEASE THE BUILDER Sphar Brick Company Maysville, Ky. Specialists in Face Brick Since 1904 —142— COMPLIMENTS OF CRANE CO. CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF ' 53 YOUNG ' S STORE Main Street Berea, Kentucky HOME OF QUALITY MERCHANDISE MEMBER CONGRATULATIONS TO CLASS OF ' 53 M BEREA COLLEGE LAUNDRY WASHABLE Phone V LAUNORr SERVlC ZOZ —143— BEREA ' S MOST MODERN FIREPROOF AIR-CONDITIONING EPLEE ' S COURT YINK WESLEY 42 Jackson St. Representing EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY OF THE U.S. ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. ST. LOUIS, MO. Compliments Of Finnell Furniture Store Kelvinator Appliances Phone 292 Masonic Bldg. BEREA ee psake DIAMOND RINGS =s Choose with confidence at Horton ' s Jewelry Chestnut St. Bereo —144 — BOONE TAVERN HOTEL THE BEREA COLLEGE CENTENNIAL HOSPITALITY CENTER COMPLIMENTS OF FARMERS SUPPLY COMPANY DEALERS IN ... . Pyrofex Bottled Gas — Caloric Gas Ranges Chestnut Street Phone 468 Phone 2190 BEREA, KENTUCKY RICHMOND, KENTUCKY phone ,so HEREA INSURANCE AGENCY ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE KENNETH COFFEY, Agent SHORT STREET BEREA, KENTUCKY CONGRATULATIONS SENIORS McAFEE PHARMACY — Courteous Friendly Service — Main Street -145— Mou  tai n w eauers CoWr c It 01 uy S l?V c 0oo @andi y Kkch 0i - 1 —  i ?)%.U ij te Berea College Student Industries BEHEA, KENTUCKY TRANE Louisville Sales Office 327 Fincastle Bldg. Louisville, Kentucky Phone: Amherst 251 1 HEATING • AIR CONDITIONING VENTILATING • HEAT TRANSFER EQUIPMENT THE TRANE COMPANY— Main Offices Plants— LA CROSSE, WISCONSIN THE GRILL RESTAURANT BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER MRS. LUCY GILBERT SHORT STREET WHERE FRIENDS AND FACULTY MEET BEREA BANK AND TRUST COMPANY Growing In Strength Through Service ALL TYPES OF BANK SERVICES FOR YOUR NEEDS —147— iPWWHIHiMPIVMMMMI IIIIIMIWIIIIWHI HH PIII I 1 I I Tl IIWIIUI i pmi I III H !■!!— mmm— i — | — Hp|— M ii HUJm i h ■ __ Congratulations to Berea in its Centennial SCRUGGS AGENCY, INC. BEREA, KENTUCKY L onarcLLulah f lond . . . to the graduating class of 1955 and to the Faculty on the occa- sion of the Centennial Anniver- sary of Berea College. churchill weavers INCORPORATED BEREA KENTUCKY good n ' fresh —148—  r ,r nta£i ! SI a b a Mattson Studio Ebba Jean Mattson and Warren Brunner OFFICIAL CHIMES PHOTOGRAPHER PORTRAIT— CANDID COMMERCIAL— PHOTO FINISHING CAMERAS AND SUPPLIES CONTACT MATTSON ' S STUDIO To reorder portraits appearing in this issue of the Chimes PHONE 878 SHORT STREET BEREA, KENTUCKY —149— ■■■RMBM|HnMiPIMPPMMMnHMHPnffM iaBI ai,,HN _ BEREA THEATRE AND GRANGER ANTIQUES Congratulations to Berea on Their 100th Birthday . . . From Two of the Class of ' 31 BEREA COLLEGE STORE Newly Remodeled for Better Service and More Efficiency! DESIGNED FOR YOU! MAINTAINED FOR YOU! Mr. Hays and Mrs. Griffith COMPLIMENTS OF STATE BANK and TRUST CO. RICHMOND, KENTUCKY Member Federal Reserve System Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation NEWLY REMODELED . . . DIXIE KITCHEN Chestnut Street BEREA, KENTUCKY -150— INDEX Abbott, Paula % Abies, James 98 Adams, Edro 104 Adams, Evelyn 24, 104 Adams, Ted 24, 90, 103 Adkins, Fred 68 Adkins, Evelyn 64 Alexander, Joy 57, 95, 105 Alexander, Ruth 57 Allen, Dave 21, 22, 24, 90, 91 104, 118, 119 Allen, Marie 57 Allen, Mickie 57, 96 Allen, Paul 106 Alley, Betty 24 Alley, Fay 100 Alvis, Jo Ann 72 Ambrose, Martin 57, 98 Amburgey, Jesse 52, 95, 121 Anderson, Betty Sue 70 Anderson, Stewart 24, 121 Anderson, James 64 Anderson, John 24, 121 Angel, Fay 64 Arms, Wayne 64 Armstrong, Ed 57 Arnold, James 24, 90, 92, 95 Arrington, Mary 64 Ashcraft, Raymond 52, 105 Asher, Carty Ann 64 Atkins, Ma ry Ann 57, 92, 95, 104 Atwood, Mary 50 Austin, Betty 72 Austin, Donald 52, 102 Austin, Joanne 51, 91, 96 Austin, John 63, 64, 94, 98 Austin, Ledford .... 22, 24, 90, 92, 104 Ayers, Orval 25, 100 Ayers, Robert 64 Azbill, Peggy 58 Baber, Larry 64 Bailey, Hugh 52, 99, 105 Bailey, Jimmy 64, 106 Baird, Wallace 64 Baird, Rachel 52, 95 Baker, Ernest 58 Baker, Tipton 90, 119, 121 Baker, Jeanelle 25, 102 Baker, Robert 58 Baldock, Jewel 25, 98, 99 Ball, Cora 72 Ball, George 25, 100, 101 Ballard, Sally 70 Barker, Julia 52 Barnes, Irene 58 Barnett, Geraldine 64 Barton, Marvin 52, 97, 103 Baskette, Dorothy 52 Battle, Mary Lou 52 Baucom, Donald 58 Beddingfield, Fred 64, 105 Beijan, Fereshteh 64 Belcher, Kelly Zane 64 Bell, Irene 74 Bennett, Helen 50 Bennett, Faye 58, 96 Benning, Audrey Faye 64 Bertram, Charles 64, 97, 101 Bess, Melvin 25 Best, Billy Fay 64 Bevins, Margaret 52, 102 Bevins, Mary Jane 58, 96 Bickford, Alene 52 Biddix, Edwin 52 Biggerstaff, Letty 58 Biggerstaff, Norris 58, 101 Bise, Shirley 64 Bishop, Nancy 25 Blackburn, Harold 58 Blanton,J. C 58, 108 Blevins, Mannon 91 Bobbitt, Leroy 22, 25, 101, 105 Boggs, Sally Sue 58, 93 Boley, Nancy Lee 64 Booher, Lois Margaret 64 Bouton, Betty Lou 74 Bowling, James 64 Bowling, Janet 26, 49, 102 Bowling, Richard 64, 97 Boyce, Milton 52, 102, 118 Boyd, Den Cook 64, 90 Boyd, Margaret Nena 64 Brackett, Tommy 105 Bradley, Andrew Jackson 90 Brandenburg, J. C 64 Brannon, Frances 52, 91, 123 Brasel, Carolyn 58, 103 Brashear, Doralyn 74 Brewer, Carolyn 103 Bright, Charles 119 Brittain, Barbara 64 Brittain, Carl 52, 105 Brittain, Margaret Marie 70 Brittain, Elinora 58, 96 Brockman, Joanne 58 Brown, Billie Mae 64 Brown, Charles 52, 59 Brown, Eric 58, 95, 98 Brown, Glenna 58, 96 Brown, Norma Jean 52 Brown, Retha 26, 104 Brown, Phyllis Ann 64 Brown, Jack 52, 101 Bruce, Berty 58 Bruce, Billy 52, 101 Brumback, Jafie 52, 102 Bryan, Robert Edwin 51 Bryant, Sammy 57, 58 Buchanan, Betty Lou 64 Buchanan, Donald 58 Buck, Franklin 52 Buckley, James 52, 106 Bumgardner, Cloyd 58 Burchell, Eleanor 22, 26, 104 Burchett, Betty 26, 10] Burrell, Frances 64 Burton, James 64, 96 Buster, Christine 58 Butler, Kyle 91 Byrd, Barbara 52, 102 Cable, Joe 26 Campbell, Frank 58, 97 Campbell, Gwyn 102, 117 Campbell, Marshall 58 Campbell, Richard 64 Campbell, Artricia 20, 52, 90, 92 100, 103 Camper, Tommy 52, 105 Cappas, Constantine 26, 91, 95 Capps, Ella 70 Capps, Julian 22, 26, 49, 100 101, 118 Carroll, Shirley 64 Cart, Pauline 26, 104 Carter, David 58 Casada, Vista 70 Case, Eleanor 22 Cass, James 27, 100, 105 Cass, Owen Ryland 64 Castillo, Alicia del 50, 103 Catron, Frank 121 Caudill, Doris 64 Caudill, Wilma 64 Chaney, Reva 74 Chen, Alice 27, 96 Cheng, Cheng-Yin 27 Cheng, H. H 27, 93, 94, 104, 105 Chiu, Ying-Nan 27, 101 Cho, Harry 22, 28, 95, 104, 105 Choi, Yoon Ai 27, 95, 104, 105 Chu, Irene 102 Claiborne, Paul Roy 58, 102 Clark, Tommy 52 Clark, Vera Pauline 106 Clarke, Charles 105 Claycomb, Helen 58, 96 Claytor, Robert 28, 96 Cline, Roy 28, 100, 101 Clontz, Sue 64 Clotfelter, Ada Ruth 70 Coe, Violet 28 Coleman, Emma 64 Coleman, Ralph 63, 64, 101 Colgan, Robert 58 Collier, Jo Anne 74 Choko, Nakamura 50 Collier, Raymond 58, 95 Collins, Marjorie 98 Collins, Wyatt 28, 101 Colyard, Carol 64, 106 Colvard, Dorothy June 52 Compton, Melda Jean 103 Compton, Mirneal 52, 103 Compton, Myles 52, 102 Comstock, Stanley 52, 102 Conant, Mary 28, 105 —151— ii i wuu« wi ■ 1 1 — wiww ai— p ■■■■■Hi Conley, Phillip 106 Conn, Jeanette 64, 91 Conn, Kenneth 64, 115 Cook, James Elwood 64 Cook, Janet 58, 123 Cook, Patricia 52, 91, 94, 111 Cooke, Anna 74 Cooke, Jewell 52, 106 Cooksey, Patricia 64 Cooper, Alan 58, 91, 101 Cooper, Emma 28 Cooper, Allen 28, 97 Corbin, Allen 52 Cornett, Donald 58 Cornett, Madge 64 Cornett, Dean 105 Cornette, Emma Ruth 58 Corns, Ray 52, 95, 104 Couch, Viola 72 Couk, Dorothy 27, 49, 96 Counts, Charles 52, 99, 104, 108 Cox, Glenna Ruth 58 Cox, Norman 52, 100, 105 Coy, Joan 29, 103 Crase, Darrell 112, 118 Crase, James 113 Crickenberger, Dot 29, 123 Critz, Rachel 58, 92 Crocker, Faye Brazton 29, 125 Croucher, General 29, 105 Crowder, Tinsley 29 Cullop, Harold 64 Cummins, Jack 58, 102 Custot, Pierre 50, 95, 103 Daniel, William 29, 102, 118 Daniels, Patsy Ann 64 Davenport, Cora 52, 103 Davenport, Thelma 65 Davis, Bernard 52, 103 Davis, June 57, 58 Davis, Clara Jean 65, 96 Davis, Doris 65, 91 Davis, Florence 96 Davis, Mary 52 Dawson, Thomas 100, 101, 121 Dean, Roger 65, 94, 95 Deane, Delia 72 DeBruhl, Bruce 22, 29, 104, 105 Denny, Feme 21, 22, 29 Derting, Joe 30, 102 Dickson, Reginald 58, 91 Dimsdale, Dorothy 52 Disco, Joe 114 Dixon, Deborah 65 Dodson, Anna Ruth 58 Dorton, Robert 30, 100, 101 Douty, Hope 30, 96 Doury, Shirley 52, 96 Dow, Renee 52, 103 Downes, Gwen 52, 104 Drew, Marion 58, 96 Drinnon, Herbert 58 Dryman, Robert .. 52, 94, 95, 119, 121 Duckett, Imogene 58 Duckworth, Jack 65 Dunigan, Geraldine 65 Dunn, Benjamin 52 Duvall, Mary E 70 Dych, Lois 58, 93, 103 Dych, Wilma 58, 94 Dyer, Marguerite 62, 111 Earles, Emmitt Hampton 58 Early, Maxine 30, 102 Edwards, Moyer 30, 100 Edwards, Robert 30, 117, 118 Eisenhour, Snowden 100 Elder, John 65, 97 Eldridge, Luke 118 Elkins, Bobby 52, 96 Ellis, Byrd 70 Ellis, Jeannine Faye 65 Eplee, Robert 30, 102 Eppenstein, Sona 65, 123 Estes, Paul 30, 101 Etherington, Aubray 115 Evans, Charles 90, 119 Evans, Lyda 58 Everman, Lillian 31, 94, 105 Fadely, Barbara 65 Farmer, Violet 52 Farmer, Jack 31, 100 Feagan, Jack 59, 102 Feagan, Jill 65 Feltner, Wanda Jean 59 Fiechter, Tevis Annette 65 Finchum, Lynn 59 Fine, Julia Pearl 65 Fish, William 59 Flanery, Eunice 74 Flynn, Vernon 52 Foley, Thelma Edith 74, 101 Forbes, Delores 65 Forbes, John William 52, 97 Ford, Carl Edward 65, 109 Fort, Ralph 52, 113, 118 Foshee, Peggy Lee 59 Fox, Harvey Eugene 106 Fraley, Eugene 31, 90, 91, 103 Fraley, Howard Lee 52, 103 Franklin, Janice 65 Frazier, Bertha 53, 98 Frizzell, Bessie 59, 123 Frye, Robert 101 Fuller, Garland 31, 98 Gabbard, Eva Frances 68 Gabbard, Greta 59 Gabbard, Lillie 31 Gabbard, Peggy 65 Gabrieal, Thomas 59, 96 Gaby, Ann 20, 31 Gadd, Russell 31, 103 Gaines, James 53, 100 Galliher, Doris 59, 109 Galloway, Joann 59, 90 Garland, Shirley 31, 102 Garrett, Nevil 53, 118 Gasaway, Betty Jean 59, 92 Gatliff, Jack 59 Geyer, Betty Sue 59 Gibson, Kathleen 59 Gibson, Louise 32 Gibson, Sammy 53, 118 Gibson, Virgie 68 Gilbert, Carroll 102 Gilbreath, Earl 53, 105 Gillenwater, David 68, 106 Gillespie, David 61, 102 Gilliam, Penman Runyon 68 Gilliam, Silas Whitsel 59 Gochenour, Ralph 65 Godby, Louis 59 Godby, Shirley 53 Goforth, Alice 59, 96 Golder, Fred 53, 104 Gooch, Anna Jean 72 Good, Don 32, 22, 96 Goodson, Bob 32, 102 Gosser, Wallace 32, 104 Gouge, Sarah 59, 103, 105 Graham, Carl 121 Graves, Judy 65, 95, 106 Graves, Ronnie 59 Gray, Elmer 53, 102 Green, Betty 32 Greenberg, Fred 32, 101 Greene, Jane 59, 94 Greer, James 32, 102 Gresse, Ruth 65 Grider, Sam 53 Grizzle, Carol , 53 Grogan, Wayne 100 Grogan, Joyce 53 Grove, Bob 102 Grubbs, Dave 33, 93, 103 Guffey, Ann 59 Gunkler, Bob 118 Gwinn, Ruby 32 Haga, Harold 33, 103 Hager, Bonnie 33 Holcomb, Wallace 34 Haley, Wilma 72 Hall, Clyde 33, 102 Hall, Mary 65 Hall, Wilma 102 Halstead, Jerry 65 Halterman, Clara 95 Hamilton, Dolly 65 Hammond, James 121 Hammond, Lois 65 Hammons, Nora 65 Hamner, Carolita 95, 103 Hampton, Ann 72 Hanna, Doug 65 Hanna, Nancy 70 Hannah, Betty 53, 102 Hardwick, David 118 Hare, Del 33, 99, 101, 105 Hare, Annette 65 Harkleroad, Gene 53 Harper, Gayle 33 Harrill, James 65 Harrill, Steve 65 —152— Harris, John 22, 33, 104, 105, 108 Harris, Judith 98 Harris, Katheryn 20, 59, 102 Harrison, Herbert 33 Harrison, Shirley Ann 65 Hart, David 59, 117 Harth, Kathleen Y 53 Hartzog, Everette F 34 Harvey, Ellen P 59 Harvey, Roebertha L 74 Hatfield, Cecil Edward 65 Hatter, Norman Dewey 65 Hawkins, Emilye 20, 59, 92, 109 Hayes, Irma Broxton 65 Hayes, Jerry Richarrd 114 Hayes, John Smith 114 Hayes, Miles Oren .... 53, 105, 118, 119 Hayes, Sidney Neil 65 Haynes, Carolyn Ruth 65 Heatherly, Anna Lou 65 Hemphill, Charles Y 59, 103 Henderson, Troy Vaughn 59 Hennessee, Mary J 74, 94 Henry, James G 59, 93, 95 Hensley, Elisabeth E 65, 96 Hensley, Helen Louise 59 Henson, Helen Frances 74 Herrell, Astor 59, 101 Herren, Mabel C 53, 105 Hicks, Howard Kit 59 Hicks, Tommy Roger 65 Higa, Misako 34, 95 Higgins, Dorothy Lynn 34 Higgins, Edith Louise 59, 98 Higgins, Edith Thelma 53 Higgins, Glen W 59, 113, 121 Hipps, Richard 59, 96, 102 Hitchcock, Sylvia A 53, 103 Hoff, Clyde Beckham 59 Hogan, John Wesley 59 Holbrook. Margaret 34, 95, 102 Holcomb, Anna Lucille 59 Holcomb, Carrie E 59 Holladay, Thomas M 53, 100, 101 118, 121 Holland, Bessie Belle 53, 104 Holsapple, Wesley F 65 Holt, Ernie J 59 Holt, Hazel Louise 72 Hope, Vivian Ruth 59, 103 Home, Faye Iona 53 Horton, Juanita F 34, 102 Houser, Mary Jane 65, 123 Howard, Joan 57, 59 Howell, Lettye Ann 65 Hubble, Gerald B 59, 93, 106 Huff, Eugene 53 Huffman, Thomas C 53, 98 Hughes, Joyce Y 59 Hulver, Robert F 34, 102 Humphries, Robert 35, 118, 119 Hunsucker, Coy Kate 59, 93 Hunter, Stephen Morgan 65 Hurst, Anita L 65, 96, 103 Hurst, Betty Carol 65 Hurt, Clarence Ray 53 Hurt, Jo Ann 65, 109 Hutcherson, Donald 35, 94, 100 103, 105 Hutchins, Anne G 96 Hutchins, Charles A 53, 90 Hutchins, Marvin D 35, 102 Hyatt, Doris Ann 53, 123 Hyder, Barbara Anne 65, 106 Hyder, Christine Joyce 65 Hyder, Doris Langford 53 Hyder, James Edward 35, 100 Hysinger, Lou Darilyn 59, 96 Irwin, Earlene Joan 74 Ison, Eula Elline 35 Israel, Rosa Lee 35 Jackson, William Devon 60 Jarvis, Marquetta 53 Jenkins, Merrell 35, 103 Jennings, Julianna J 63, 66 Johnson, Barbara Mescal 59 Johnson, Cloyd J 66, 106 Johnson, Janice J 66 Johnson, Patricia E 59 Johnson, Shirley B 66, 106 Johnson, Samuel S 66 Johnson, Arthur D 20, 53, 101, 121 Jones, Betty Jo 66 Jones, Carlen G 51, 53, 100, 101 Jones, Dean Tandy 59, 73 Jones Gerald D 118 Jones, William Denver 59 Jones, Nan Swan 35 Kee, Alice Merle 66 Keeter, Douglas Reid 121 Kennon, Dorothy Kaye 53, 102 Kilbourne, Donald E 101 Kim, Kak Choong 50, 103 Kincaid, Betty Carol 53, 102 Kincaid, Shirley Yvonne 66 Kincaid, Wanda Lee 36, 102 Kincer, Sara Lyndia 60 King, James Joseph 60 King, Mary Ruth 36, 102 King, Rhonda Ann 70 Kirk, Doris Ann 51, 53, 111 Kirk, Paul Frederick 67, 96 Kirkland, Armon Leon 36, 100 Kirkland, Poarch Eugene 66 Kulungian, Agnes 96 Lake, Joe Allen 60, 113 Lake, Mabel Janette 60 Lamb, Irene M 66, 94, 97, 123, 125 Lambert, William W 36, 102 Lamm, Ronald Wayne 66 Lance, Mary Frances 66 Landis, Margaret Ruth 53 Landrum, John H 53, 95, 121 Landrum, Ruby Doritah 74 Lane, Ernest 36, 100, Lanier, Gwen ; Larew, Charles 53, 102, 106 Laswell, June 72 Lawless, Sue 66 Leach, Barbara 36 Leach, Bill 36 Leatherwood, Jane 123, 126 LeBlanc, Raoul 53, 104, 105 Lecky, Anna Fay 66 Ledford, Barbara 72 Lee, Dorthy 36, 95 Leeson, John 53, 108 Legg, Anna Lee 66 Lehman, Doris 66 Leslie, Kay 53, 104 Lester, James 60 Lewallen, Lynn 66, 106 Lewis, Burnice 60 Lewis, Cedric 53 Lewis, Eula 74 Lewis, Jack 53, 97 Lewis, Jana Lee 37 Li, Isabel 36, 95, 104 Lickliter, Lou Ann 66 Littleton, Juanita 66 Long, Ruby 72 Looney, Gay 53 Lovely, Gene 22, 37, 98 Lu, John 37, 95 Lutz, Rose 73 Lytton, Mary 66 McAfee, Mary 66 McCarthy, Lois 66 McClung, Ellen 125 McCollum, Lois 60 McConnell, Floyd 66 McConnell, Russ 60, 111 McCravy, Clay 60, 93 McCreary, Mae 74 McCutchen, Tom 60 McDavid, Gail 60 McGlone, Omer 53 Mcintosh, Barbara 66 McKinney, Cecelia 37 McKinney, Ruby 53, 102 McKinney, Vera 60, 95 McLain, Barbara 66 McLemore, Eugene 22, 37, 104 McLemore, Jimmy 57, 60 McMahan, La Rue 37, 102 McMillian, Michael 66 McMillian, Nathaniel 37 McMurray, Ann 37, 90, 91, 103 125 Mahaffey, Wilma 66, 94, 96 Maltby, Joe 66 Manu, Yaw 92, 104 Manuel, Rita 53, 93, 103 Marcum, Elizabeth 60 Marine, Bertha 38, 104 Marion, James 53, 102 Marr, Mary Margaret 73 Marsh, Frank 66, 90, 95 Marshall, Martha 71 -153— Martin, Ida May 60 Martin, Mary Jean 66, 91 Mask, Peggy 60, 96, 123 Massey, Audrey Kay 66, 125 Masters, Billy 38, 112, 118 Masters, James Robert 66 Matthews, Jackie 38, 113, 119 Mattingly, Anna 38 May, Dora Lou 66 May, Dorothy Evelyn 60, 96 Maynor, Helen 53, 96 Meade, Carol 60, 103, 96 Meadows, Sylvia Jean 66 Meece, Avery Roger 60 Meek, Devon Walter 60, 105 Messer, Mary Ellen 53 Metcalf, Lucille 38, 102, 125 Meth, Michael 38 Meyer, Beth 38, 93, 96 Miller, Janet 66 Miller, Evelyn 38, 102 Miller, George 54 Miller, Harold David 66 Miller, Howard Pierce 104 Miller, Pearlie 73 Miller, Robert 66, 115 Miller, Royce 60, 106 Mills, Sammie 73 Mills, Thad 54, 102, 96 Mims, Bonnie Sue 66 Minnix, Sylvia 66 Miracle, Joetta 66 Mitchell, Kenneth 54 Moneyham, Russell 60, 95 Moore, Alice 54, 104 Moore, Charles 66 Moore, Daniel 20, 54, 102 Moore, Glen 60 Moore, Howard 66 Moore, Myrtus 74 Moore, Nancy 95 Moores, Paul 60, 118 Morelock, Mary Rhea 54 Morgan, Bobby Joe 66, 106 Morgan, Edward Lee 66 Morgan, Robert 66 Morris, Bobby 60 Morris, Margaret 66 Morris, Violette 60, 95 Morrison, Mary Lee 60 Morrison, Roy 39 Moss, Kelly G 66, 94, 100, 106 Moss, Kenneth 39, 101 Mull, Sherwood 34, 91, 96, 105 Mull, Shirley 73 Mullins, Imogene 66, 109 Mullins, Mary Mabel 74 Mullins, Virginia K 39 Murphy, Bernard D 66 Musser, Bettyann R 67 Musser, Doris Hinkle 71 Musser, Harvey A 39, 96, 101 Mustard, Harry 54, 98, 105 Myles, Molly 39 Nakamura, Choko 95 Nanney, Cecil 39, 100 Nanney, Yvone 60, 96 Nash, Don 101 Neal, Joe 60, 115 Neal, Ralph 39, 121 Neely, Ruth 91, 94 Nelson, Mary 67, % Newbolt, Barlow 96, 100 Newcomer, John 40, 91, 94, 100 Newman, Dot 40, 93 Nichols, Ruth 54, 102 Nickell, Jimmie 40 Norfleet, Alma 40 Norris, Wanda 40, 91, 96 Nuckols, Jo Ella 20, 40, 125 O ' Dell, Charles 60, 102 O ' Dell, Wilda 92, 95 Ogle, Louise 40, 105 Ogle, Mary 54 Ogle, Milton 40 Oldaker, Barbara 41 O ' Neil, Clayton 41 Oppenheimer, Pat 54 Osborne, Shirley 60 Osteen, Sylvene 73 Osteen, Mitchell 67, 106 Outlaw, Billy 41, 105 Outlaw, Edna 60, 91 Overton, Jo Ann 54 Owen, John 57, 98 Owens, Harold 67, 97 Page, William 103 Parker, Celia 96 Parker, Delma 71 Parker, Keith 63, 67, 91 Parker, Lowell 67 Parker, Margaret 106 Parker, Patricia 54, 92 Parks, Nancy 67 Parhsh, Gerald 60, 121 Parrich, Helen 41 Parry, David 54, 92, 94, 95, 103 104, 105 Parvaresh, Mike 94 Patton, Marilyn 41, 125 Payne, John 60 Peace, Louise... 20, 21, 22, 41, 90, 103 Pearson, Robert 41, 95, 106 Pease, Donald 41, 96 Peercy, Larry 42, 117, 118 Peercy, Robert 42, 117, 118 Pennington, Frances 42 Pennington, Dolores 95 Pennington, Shirley 67 Peppers, Joan 60 Perkins, Betty 54, 95 Perry, Huey 121 Perry, Jerry 57, 60 Perry, Joyce 67 Peters, Nellie 60 Petersen, Shirley 67, 100 Phillips, Annette 60 Phillips, Autumn Joy 67 Phillips, Marie 71 Philpot, Marvin 67 Piang, Grace 50, 95 Pilgrim, Nancy 60, 96 Ping, Jack 42 Plummer, Mary 54, 100 Poling, Jr. Franklin 42 Poole, Shirley 95, 103, 106 Potter, Elizabeth 20, 21, 42, 98 Potter, Lois 73 Powell, Eldon Franklin 121 Powell, James 121 Power, Paul 67, 106 Powers, Wendell 54, 96 Preece, Helen 74 Presley, Mary 68, 95 Pressley, Bernice 101 Pressley, Betty 54, 103 Prewitt, George 54, 101 Price, Huston 60, 102 Price, Hallie 54, 90, 95, 104 Price, Mattie Jane 60 Profitt, Wanda Sue 42 Puckett, Gerry 67 Puckett, Ronald 60, 103 Raines, Bobby 67, 106 Raines, Bonnie 74 Ramey, John Carl 67 Ramey, Mildred Louise 67 Ramey, Ralph, Jr 42, 100 Rasnick, Franklin Delano 67 Reed, Betty 54, 91 Reed, Shirley Sue 60, 96 Reedy, Dale 43, 105, 115 Reedy, Erma Jo 54, 123 Reedy, Martha Frances 54, 123 Reesor, Janice 67, 96 Renalds, Frances 71 Reynolds, Barbara 43, 102 Reynolds, Rex 43, 100, 105 Rice, Harold C 60, 102, 118 Rice, Juanita 60 Richardson, Billy 43, 105, 121 Riddle, Wilma Jane 60, 95 Riddle, Winston 60, 101 Rider, Richard H 96 Ring, Leo Winston 60 Ringley, Harold Loyd 67 Ritchie, Viola D 67 Roach, Carol Jean 67 Roach, Eddie 54, 93, 104 Robbins, Tunis, Jr 61 Roberts, Mary 67, 98 Roberts, Roselyn Ann 43 Roberts, Winnie 43, 90, 92, 95 Robertson, Barbara 67 Robinette, Iona Mae 67 Robinette, Janey Sue 54 Robinson, Carson N 61 Robinson, William B 61, 103 —154 — Rogers, Clarene 43, 102 Rogers, Norma Sue 67 Rose, Ray Wilson 118, 121 Ross, Billy Monroe 67 Roten, Ruby Myrtle 67, 123 Rucker, Oscar 54, 105 Rucker, Ruth Ann 67 Ruggles, Donald 54, 102, 112 Runyon, Nell 73 Rogers, Dorothy 43, 96 Sammons, Russell 22, 44, 90, 104 105 Sanders, Barbara 67, 96 Sanko, Gladys 44, 95 Sargent, Jean Budd 93 Saulmon, James 67 Saulmon, Patsy Bonits 44 Sawyer, Hershel Garvin 61 Saylor, Betty Jean 44, 102 Saylor, Larry 101 Scott, Nancy 67, 95 Scudder, Franklin Clark 67 Seldomridge, Carl 54, 91, 103, 119 Sellers, Frederick 54 Settle, Dorothy 61 Sexton, Lola F 44, 96, 103 Shanks, Irvine Lee 112 Sharp, Duell B 119 Sheffield, Norma Jean 67 Shelton, Pete, Jr 105 Shepherd, Pauline L 63, 67 Shepherd, Robert J 67 Sheppard, Charles Ray 61 Sherrill, Edna Jane 67 Shields, Robert Carl 67, 93 Shifflett, Veneda 109 Shipman, Ruth 44, 93 Shomo, Barbara Jo 54 Shook, Toby Ray 106 Simmons, George Allen 67 Simpkins, Betty Alice 75 Simpson, Sylvia Gay 67 Singleton, Larcenia E 61 Skaggs, Bronelle 44, 102 Skeen, Carolyn 61, 95, 103 Skidmore, Charlotte 44, 103, 108 Slaven, Cedith 74, 93 Smith, Clyde S 67 Smith, Ernest L 61 Smith, Eva Ann 61, 94, 103 Smith, Harry 104 Smith, Jackson D 61, 104 Smith, June 67 Smith, Monroe 105 Smith, Norma Jean 61, 98 Smith, Peggy 45, 103 Snapp, Ardle Woody 67 Snapp, Colleen 57, 61 Snook, Helen 61 Solomon, Harold 61 South, Jayne 61, 96 Southerlin, Sloan 54, 93 Spangler, Pat 54, 105 Sparkmon, Cinda 73 Spencer, Jean 61, 96 Spiggle, David 67 Spiggle, Wayne 51, 54, 101 Spitzer, Nancy 71 Splawn, Thelma 54, 104 Sprinkle, Alice 54, 104, 105, 123 125 Stanley, Noland 67, 105 Stapleton, John 61, 114 Steely, William 22, 45, 90 Stephens, Betty 67 Stephens, Frances 67 Stephens, Marjorie 96 Stephenson, Anita 73 Stevens, Billie 71 Sailings, Ruth 6i Stines, Sadie 73 Stokes, Maty 61 Stone, Janet Lois 67 Stroud, Nina 61 Sturgill, Ben 54, 96 Sumpter, Alleen 96 Surface, Jerrell 45, 93 Sutherland, Hugh 45, 98 Suthetland, Betty 54 Sutphin, Allen 63, 68, 106 Sutton, Elaine 54 Suttone, Joseph Paul 68, 102 Sword, Carl Ed 106 Tappan, Sally 54, 91, 100 Taylor, Garnett 68 Taylor, Lloyd 119 Taylor, Marion 68 Taylor, Merry 68 Taylor, Myrna Lou 92, 103 Taylor, Nina 61 Taylor, Pat 73 Templeton, Pat 54, 123 Thomas, Don 68, 102 Thomas, Jesse 45 Thorns, Pete 20, 45, 93, 94, 100 118 Thurman, Arnold .... 45, 114, 118, 119 Thurston, Dolores 68 Timberlake, Charles 61, 95 Tinsley, Barbara 51, 96, 97 Todd, Vivian 54 Todd, Willis 108 Tonne, Beverly 61, 123 Torrence, June 68, 95 Toy, Barbara 54 Toy, Bill 61, 103, 105 Traylor, Jo 45 Truesdale, Wally 54, 91, 106 Tucker, Blaine .... 61, 92, 93, 102, 121 Tuller, Norma 54, 96 Tunnell, Louise 54, 125 Turner, Shirley 68 Turpin, Juanita 71 Underwood, Lyle 68, 96 Urjanis, Ann 68, 95, 101 Valentine, Glenna 46, 90, 9 Vance, Loring 46, 105 Van Cleave, Elizabeth 54 Van Hoose, Marjorie 68 Van Horn, Dorthy 61, 102 Van Sant, Tom 46, 101 Van Sant, Frances 54 Van Sant, Joyce 61, 98 Van Winkle, Bob 46, 100 Van Winkle, Jimmie 46, 96, 103 Vecchi, Peggy 46 Vest, Dick 46 Vickers, Martha 46, 99 Vickets, Marlyn 68, 98 Vinyard, Dan 68 Wade, Mary Frances 102 Wade, Nina 68 Waldrop, Betty Jo 47, 104, 105 Waldrop, Rubynelle .... 55, 91, 92, 104 Waldroup, Libby 47, 102 Walker, Anna 61 Walker, Ann 61 Walters, Janece 74, 101 Ward, Barbara 93, 96 Ward, Edwina 68 Warren, Harold : 61, 103, 104 Washington, Mary 61, 123, 125 Watkins, Lois 104 Watkins, Ann 123 Waycaster, Pansy Ruth 68 Weaver, Barbara 90 Webb, Marcella 109 Weems, Betty Jo 61 Welch, David 22, 47, 90, 104. 105 Welch, Paul 68 Welting, Leon 68, 121 Wesley, Beveily 47, 103 Wesley, Helen 47 Wesley, Lewis 47 Wesley, Shirley 54 Wheeler, BUI Ed 47, 98, 104 Whitaker, Katherine 61 White, Clarence D 68 White, Clarence P 106 White, Don 94 White, Harry 54, 102 White, Wendell 55 Whiteaker, Howard 61 Whiteside, Maxine 68 Whitis, Martha 74 Whitis, Peter 47, 121 Whitson, Virginia 48, 102, 123 Wilborn, Maureen 68 Wilds, Cora 68, 91, 103 Wilkerson, Mary 93 Wilkerson, Bob 61, 102 Willard, Connie 55, 92, 93 Willard, Shirley 61 Williams, Joanna 61 Williams, Ben 48 Williams, Delores 61, 92 Williams, Hannah 61 —155 — Williams, Elizabeth 102 Williams, Lois 71 Williams, Bruce 61 Williams, Ann .... 20, 21, 48, 123, 125 Wilson, Carolyn 55, 103, 104, 109 Wilson, Charles 48, 100, 101, 118 Wilson, Frances 68, 106 Wilson, Frances 1 74, 123 Wilson, Howard 68, 101 Wilson, Mike 61, % Wilson, Mary 48, 95, 103 Winchell, Janice 68 Winchester, Lester 61, 118 Wine, Bill 68 Winston, Dorthy 55, 106 Wise, Gay 54 Wise, Leota 68 Wise, O. C 48, 101 Wisecup, Shirley 61 Wolfe, Clara 61 Wolfe, Bob 61, 101 Wood, Edith 68 Wooten, Margaret 55 Wooters, David 68 Worfe, Fred 68 Workman, Jean 68, 95 Worley, Fred 68 Wratchford, Gene 61, 92, 93 Wright, Pat 55, 96 Wright, Sara 48, 96 Woong, Kang Hi 50 Yates, Charles 48, 96, 100 Yates, Mary Ellen 61 York, Charles 22, 49, 119 Zook, Betty 55, 91, 96 Zook, David 96, 100 Foundation Index Abney, Keith 82 Abney, Marion 82 Adams, Patty 82 Allen, Shirley 81, 85 Anderkin, Gladys 82 Arnold, Shirley 81, 84 Asher, Mary 82 Back, Coleen 82 Bailey, Betty Lou 82 Baker, Shirley 82 Baker, Vernon 82, 84 Baker, Wilma 81, 85 Banks, Betty 77, 78 Baugh, Roger 82 Belden, Carl 78 Bennette, Hazel 82 Bevins, Drema Sue 82 Biggerstaff, Ruth 81, 85 Blair, K. Bruce 82, 83 Blanton, Irene 78 Bose, David 82 Bowles, Laura 81, 85 Brady, James 77, 78, 84 Brock, Ralph Roy 82, 84 Broyles, Tommy 77, 78, 84 Burse, Joyce 81 Byrd, Caroline 78, 84 Byrd, Charles 78, 84 Byrd, Mary E 78, 84 Caldwell, Margaret 81 Caldwell, Willie 82 Campbell, Carl 82 Campbell, Mary 78 Campbell, Noah 82 Cassell, Dennis 82 Causey, Jean 82 Causey, Clarence 82 Chalmers, John 81 Champ, Phyllis 82 Chandler, Robert 82 Chase, William 82 Childress, Norman 82 Church, Samuel 83 Clark, Carl 82 Clemons, Ima 82 Coffey, Eleanor 81, 85 Collins, Mary Rose 71, 82, 84 Colvin, Casey 84 Conley, Anna Sue 82 Conley, Lorene 82 Cook, Barbara 81 Cornett, Virginia 82 Couch, Montana 82 Cox, Mary Frances 82 Crawfo rd, Laura 82 Cress, Celia 82 Cooley, Wendell 78 Dash, Raymond 78, 83 Dean, William 83 Dow, Amal Faris 82 Downs, Richard 82 Elswick, Donna Sue 82 Estridge, Gilbert 81 Evans, Rose Mary 82 Farley, Gladys 81, 84 Farley, Pearlie 82 Fee, Beulah 82 Felty, Kent 78 Fields, Palmer 82 Fritts, Robert 82, 84 Galloway, Samuel 82 Griffith, Kenneth 82 Halcomb, Harold 79 Hall, Margueritte 84 Hamblen, Anna 82 Hammons, Mary 82 Hastings, Connie 82 Hawthorne, James 83 Hicks, Louise 82, 84 Hile, Suzanne 79 Hile, Terry 82 Hill, Preston 81 Holley, Danny 85 Hoskins, Bill 82, 83 Howard, Bonnie 82 Howard, June 82 Humfleet, Carolyn 79 Huskisson, Sam 81 Hutchins, Frank 77, 84, 85 Hill, Raymond 79 Ison, Janet 81, 84, 85 Jenkins, Bobby 82, 85 Johnson, Leah 79 Kearns, Lee 77 Keith, Jean 82 Kilgore, Eugene 81, 83 Kilgore, Dan 82, 83 Kilgore, Gerema 82, 84 Klein, Elizabeth 81 Lamb, Jean 82, 84 Lawless, Marie 82 Lewis, Gordon 85 Lewis, Greta 82 Lewis, Joy Ann 82 Lewis, Nancy 79, 84 Lloyd, Claudella 79 Lovins, Aleda 84 Luttrell, Floyd 82 Malott, Dick 82, 84, 85 Mason, Grace 82 Mays, Fay 82, 84 McClanahan, Charles 85 McClellan, Delores 85 McClollan, Mary 82 McCoy, Betty 82 McCreary, Bill 82, 84 McCuiston, Dick 82 McQueen, Charles 81 Mercer, Bobby 82 Messer, Flem 82, 84 Miller, Alan 82 Miller, Ernest 83 Miniard, Susan 82, 84 Mitchell, Ruth 82, 84 Moore, Gallie 81 Moore, Mary Lou 79 Morris, Ken 77, 79, 85 Moses, Felix 82, 83 Moses, Matilida 82 Mitchell, Lee 79, 84 Muncy, Dale 79 Napier, John 82 Neely, Josephine 79, 84, 85 Newbolt, Lurline 81 Norman, Gwynne 84 Noss, Charles 77, 80, 83, 84, 85 Parris, Ted 80 Parsons, Charles 83 Parsons, Ronald 82 Parsons, Robert Donald 82 Patrick, Barbara Jean 82 Patrick, Peggy Sue 82 Payne, Rex Ford, Jr 83 Pennington, Owen 82, 84, 85 Piersall, Jerry 80, 85 Polly, Mildred 82 Ponder, Franklin 82 —156— Taylor, Don Curtiss 82 Tester, Dale - 82 Thacker, Lee Epp 82, 84 Thompson, Kenneth 80, 84, 85 Todd, Lois 77, 80 Todd, Robert 82 Turner, Ruby 84, 85 Viars, George William 82 Wallen, Chestelene 82, 85 Watkins, Evva Lee SO Watson, Rhonda 81 Webb, Nancy 81 Williams, Jewel 82 Williams, Patricia 81 Williamson, Rhonda 84 Willis, Barbara Ann 82 Wolfenberger, Doria 82 Wriston, Betty Lue 81 Wine, Marie 80 Ponder, James J 82 Powell, Beth 80 Presnell, Baxter Lynn 82 Pullins, Edward T 82, 83 Radford, Connie 81, 85 Ray, Vera Gayle 82 Rhodes, Stephen 82 Richardson, Fay 82, 85 Roark, James E 83 Rose, James Lawrence 81 Ross, Wilton C 77, 80, 83, 85 Routh, William 83, 85 Runyon, Carolyn Drue 82, 84 Ruth, Ina Faye 82 Sanborne, Kathryn 81, 84 Sands, Kathryn 81 Saylor, Jack 82 Scrivner, Edgar B 82 Sergent, James 82 Shackelford, Joe M 82 Shanklin, Eugenia 81 Shepard, Betty Joyce 82 Shepherd, Byrd 83 Shepherd, Jean 80, 84, 85 Simons, Juanita M 80, 85 Simpson, Jerry K 82 Singleton, Ruby 82 Smith, Eloise M 80 Smith, Harold W 82, 84 Sparks, Hosea Lee 84 Spurlock, Catherine 84 Standifer, Betty Imojean 82 Stegall, Shirley Hope 82 Stephenson, John 83 Strunk, William Theodore 83 . . . What did he do, stir it with his feet . Homework? ' It must be spring . . . . What a way to spend a Saturday afternoon —157— ' , ' ■ ' Southern wonders . . . Ready 1 2 3 4. ■•■ Rays of sunshine ' We come from many lands . . . That famous black umbrella . . . Young Mountaineers . —158 — HOME of the BEREA MOUNTAINEERS WHERE THE STUDENTS MEET FOR THAT AFTERNOON COFFEE! 1 o II E R r O O R E D R r See yourself in these pictures? If you do, drop in for a FREE MILKSHAKE! ry or . BmmiuM SPHAR COMPANY PURITAN FIELD SEEDS WINCHESTER, KENTUCKY —160— TORBMR flOUSE KANSAS CITY 6, MISSOURI - ffC ■1 J w CO jz m M -m :re, 217 - — — o = - O - pj _ =: | — g _ m tn O === m - m


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Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

1954

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Berea College - Chimes Yearbook (Berea, KY) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959


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