Bethel College - Graymaroon Yearbook (North Newton, KS)
- Class of 1961
Page 1 of 140
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 140 of the 1961 volume:
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CYDQJGEQQQQ PWOPDSED FIELD HOUSE K ij 'Nw CU X5 3 xx L QS W-.X .jx F 2 D N f ?i.,y 17 'K- L fs' QV BARN TENNIS COURTS L, 1 OS R SIDE CE HALL F .f,:',t:'54:'i?-5 SX megs ees PARKING 200 CARS f-5 QQQLED 5 JG? Proposed 5 Year Pla F- n ,--J -ffl - -dTa.E-Ifi -':v?u-u?- 'W' M75 K F- L ' c.-in ci C-J ml--M - PARKING I30 CARS ' SHOPS MAINT neon. 1 PARKING 20 S l SCIENCE HALL PROPOSED ADDN 'x WOIIEN S RESIDENCE ' HALL I, v' ADMIN cours: BLDG WX G LIBRARY ' , Q ee Q 6 NT MEMORIAL HALL J U00 00 PARKING I20 CARS WHITE HOUSE TL Q33 , cams Y I'-1 MINNESOTA AVENUE PARK AND RECREATION AREA IK or Campus Development II D -1 :I ' ' W' !I-e.-e I 4 . ., H.- 'V-'f 'fl5 me If A P I HT. ' ff Qi 3'5 ' , Fi I a I I -A IL L KX A gg 6 eee' Awj L , Q , 3 ti I, X .,' N ' I I L, ...ma IQ A f B I -,, ,X . ff ff ii ,X J ' .S -' -.::-.Q.,,:- Jxi g1AgV X .4 1. az , 33K I - .9 D I C I EI I -. I J! S fn .I fy ful I I 2 ' U L- .Q f ,-, f'f '7I ' Q 5 I ' I I ,f . f ', 7 ., N, ti, ' , 't:' PROPOSED FINE ARTS ' UILDI'-N0 1961 thresher bethel college north newton, kansas table of contents the campus ............ . .2 people ................. I2 spz'1'itual and cultural lw. .64 atlzletics ............... 80 leuclershzp ............ . .95 campus ly? and mem0rz'es.1O8 F 12? In : - - -- H fg-,fp,:' wg, ,wff H ' 'N QF wa '-,wr . N- .mfdr-ww J-A1 w.. mm - , xi REQ . Wing l I- X fmieiw, :2?f:5Qa:,:1 'www 13H7rZa'::'-12 v 332,315 f flu W ' ,f,':- 'I 11151216-5... -- ,.,, .,,. ., .f5s.:f1s As1s lf ,gr , FEM, --fr-Q ..4'.w-Q, M , 5.1 M py1g1:fiL,QF',g1i M fjff'i ' :Wf-afmil-l:'1'f1-fF.:gi' Will. 'S N 9 5: ig fffig-ff 1 .fri . . , V 'M ' KN,-,-1' 5 wie mfs, M X '--Q.. , fit Aj., i' ,. -ff fi?-mm .- Li! V-.. 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' Y Q i W5 - , w- nr U Hx Qj ss message from the president It is the avowed purpose of a college yearbook to capture and to preserve for the students the events, acquaintances, and scenes of a given year . By the visible media of pictures and words, an annual attempts to express in a few pages the accelerated activities of nine months. This isa bigorder. It is, ofcourse, an impossible task. Not only is it im- possible to compress the activities of such a span into a slim volume, but the experiences of each student are so dif- ferent that no single compilation can ex- press the rich variety of student life. Even if the Thresher cannot tell the whole story, it admirably has caught the moving drama of the year. In years to come, this volumewill continue to stim - ulate and revive the latent memory of the student. Acquaintances, somehow forgotten, are reintroduced, ev e n t s , once considered insignificant, become meaningful 5 experiences, at the moment distressing, are reviewed with new in- sight and understanding. The 1960-61 school year, with new developments, faces, experiences, and commitments, with refreshing encoun- ters and evidence of growth, even with its disappointments and d e f e c t s , has been eventful and m e an in gful . This yearbook, by its capturing and express- ing the moving s c en e , will in time to come enhance this significance. Dr . Vernon Neufeld President Dr. E. G. Kaufman, president emeritus, presents the emblem of Bethel College to the new president. Dr. Neufeld and Dr. McCord chat informally prior to the processional. ' oemon nenjeld becomes seventh president typ bethel college Dr. Vernon Neufeld was inaugurated as the seventh president of Bethel Col- lege on October' 13. Guest speaker- for the occasion was Dr. james I. McCord, president of the Princeton Theological Seminary. The charge to the new presi- dent was delivered by Menno Schrag, chairman of the Bethel College Board of Directors. The investiture was made by Dr. E , G. Kaufman, president emeritus, upon which occasion a large emblem of Bethel College was awarded to the new president. Faculty members and the many guests for the occa- sion march into Memorial Hall for the inauguration ceremonies. 'I5 P. E. SCI-IELLENBERG, Ph. D., ELDON W. GRABER, Ph. D College Dean Registrar adminisiraiion administrators render ardent service EDMUND MILLER, B. D. , ESKO LOEWEN, B. D. , Director of Development VERNON PAULS, B. S. , Dean of ,Students Program. Admissions Counselor 'I6 Students proceed through the line in front of the Business Office as they pay their bills for spring quarter. HARTZEL SCHMIDT, A.B., Controller and Custodian of Fundsg VERNELLE WALTNER, B. S., Assistant Registrarg EARL KOEI-IN, B.S., Business Managerg LORRAINE GALLE, M.S., Dean of Womeng MAXINE VVILL, M.E., Dieticiang LEONA KREHBIEL, M.A., Librariang MARTHA SMITH, Assistant Librarian. ---K------ ::-:TTr 1 .lik 'L if I7 faculty twelve new aces appear on bethelfaeulgf DWIGHT CARPENTER, M.A., Inst. in History and Governmentg I. WINFIELD FRETZ, Ph.D., Prof. of Socio1ogygELDON W. GRABER, P1-1.D., Prof. ofEd- ucationg M. S. HARDER, Ph.D., Prof. ofPsycho1ogy and Sociologyg P. E. SCHELLENBERG, Ph.D.-, Prof. of Psychologyg I. LLOYD SPAULDING, Ph.D., Assoc. Prof. of Economics. Students at Work in the Chemistry lab 'I8 HENRY A. FAST, Ph.D., Prof. of Bible and Christian Edu c a t i o ng WALTER KLAASSEN, Ph. D., Asst. Prof. of Bibleg CORNELIUS KRAI-IN, Th.D., Prof. of Church History and Germany VERNON NEUFELD, Th.D., Prof. of Bibleg JOI-IN LENZ, M. S. , Inst. in Biology and Chemistry5ALBERTj. MEYER, Ph.D., Prof of Physicsg RONAID RICH, Ph.D., Assoc Prof. of Chemistryg ARNOLD WEDEL, Ph.D. Prof. of Mathematicsg WAYNE WIENS, A. M. Inst. in Biology. ii 'I9 ix faculty calbablefaculzgf labor to educate betlzel students 1 Prof. Jost directs the Messiah chorus dunng a rehearsal in the Chapel. HONORA BECKER, A.M., Prof. of Englishg CHRISTINE MILLER, A.B., Inst. inEng1ishgMARGUERITERUSS, A.M., Asst. Prof. of Englishg NORMAN LOFLAND, A.M., Inst. of Speech and Dramaticsg JOHN F. SCI-IMIDT, B.D., Asst. Prof. of Ioumalismg HAROID GROSS, Ph.D., Prof. of Philosophyg JACOB NICKEL, Th.D. , Asst. Prof. of Philosophy and languages. Q 20 13 1 1 RUPERT HOI-INIANN, Ph.D., Asst. Prof. of Musicg WALTER JOST, M.M., Asst. Prof. of Musicg J. HAROLD MOYER, Ph.D., Assoc, Prof. of Musicg ALICE LOEWEN, M.M., Inst. in Organg DAVID SUDERMAN, Ph.D., Prof. of Musicg PAUL FRIESEN, M.s., Asst. Prof. ofArt3 ROBERT REGIER, A.B., Inst. In An, LENA WALTNER, A.M., Asst. Prof. of Art. in-qi 21 MENNO S. HARDER, Ph.D., Prof. of Educa- Artsg MENNO STUCKY, M. S., Asst. Prof. of tion and Sociologyg IUSTIS HOLSINGER, Ed. Industrial Artsg ERNA SCI-IMIDT, M.H.E., S., Assoc. Prof. of Education: PETER R. Inst. in Home Economicsg RUTH UNRAU, KAUFMAN, A.M., Assoc. Prof. of Industrial M.C.S., Asst. Prof. of Business. faculty MILDRED BEECI-IER, M.S., Assoc, Prof. B.S., Inst. in Physical Educationg WESLEY of Physical Educationg GERHARD BUI-IR, BULLER, M.S., Inst. inPhysica1Education. M fi' 1? Iv K, 'fee PI-IYLLIS SAWATZKY, Receptionist, StudentPe1son- Secretary, Public Relations Officeg HELEN WIEBE, nel Officeg AGNES GOERTZEN, Secretary, Alumni Asst. Bookkeeper and Secretaryg JOAN BOESE, Book- Office and Teacher Placement Bureaug HERTA WIL- keeper. LMS, Bookkeeper and Cashierg LUANA REIMER, secretarial staff ROSALIE BARTEL, JANICE REUSSER, ESTHER BARGEN, Secretary to the President. Public Relations Secretary. Mailing List Clerk. 21 QF' ' staff labor to keep school ZW running smoothbf COOKS, STANDING: Mis: Harrison Unruh, Mrs. Edna Wedel, Mrs. Trude Friesen. SEATED: Mrsf H. Y. Schmidt, Mrs. Ted Schmidt. MAINTENANCE MEN: Paul Bartel, Wilbert Reimer, Edward Claassen, C. B. Goering, Gerald Stucky. ' COLLEGE NURSES: Ann Preheim, Lola Eisen beis, Lucille Hege. --1 24 WOMENS ASSOCIATION OFFICERS, BACK ROW: Mrs. C. C. Regier, Mrs. Wayne Wiens, Mrs. Eldon Rich, Mrs. Edgar Neufeld, Herta Willms, Mrs. Frieda Andreas, Mis. Helen Lingeri- felder, Mrs. August Epp. FRONT ROW: Mrs. A. K. Ratzlaff, presidentg Mrs. I-IartzelSchmidt, first vice-president, Mrs. I. Winfield Fretz, secondvice-president, Mrs. Eldon Graber, secretary, Lucile Enz, treasurer, Mrs. Vernon Neufeld. women's association completes year Qf active service to bethel college The Women's Association has con- tributed greatly to the development of Bethel College through the many pro- jects which it has undertaken. The As- sociation's current project is the es- tablishment of a fellowship for Bethel College facultywomen to complete their doctoral d e gr e e s . The organization presently consists ofnearly two- hundred women. - .Vw-1, i.,L s I BOARD OF DIRECTORS: Nick Klaas- I' sen, Dean Stucky, Arnold Nickel, vice-chairmang Howard G. Nyce, al- ternate memberg Louis Janzen, Helene Goertz, G erhard Zerger, alternate member, John Schrag, secretaryg Carl Claassen, Menno Schrag, chairman. NOT PICTURED: J. H. Ensz, Erwin Goering, Henry Hege, Clinton Kauf- man, John Suderman, Arthur Waltner, alternate member. ,,, -........ ...- board of directors make lblansfnr future development The Board of Directors have been deeply engrossed in making plans for the physical development of the campus for future years. Such plans include a new Fine Arts building, and additions to the two large dormitories . Other re- sponsibilities of the Board include the hiringof new teachers, and the utiliza- tion of various ways and means to fi- nance the development program. seniors cmmqfflmlmgwt graduating class in bathe! histopl Seniors enjoy the breakfast May 28 at the Guest House, at which they were the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Neufeld. LELAND ALBRECHT, Industrial Arts, North LENORE BLAIR, Home Economics, Hillsboro, Newton, Kansas, HUIDA BANMAN, Nursing KansasgWILMER BOSCHMAN, Natural Science, Education, Newton, Kansasg GLADWIN BAR- Carrot River, Saskatchewan, MYRON BULLER, TEL, Mathematics, North Newton, Kansas, Physical Education, Peabody, Kansas 26 CHARLES CLAASSEN, Socia1Science, Newton, Kan- tics, Winton, California, LOUISE DICK, Social Sci- sasg PIETER DE GRAAF, So ciology , Dreibergen, ence, Ruthven, Ontario. Netherlands, GEORGE DICK, Physics and Mathema- IOY ANN DIRKS, Sociology, Turpin, Okla- homa, THEODORE DOI-IERTY, Economics and Business Administration, Lagos, Nigeria, TI-IEO- DORE DREIER, Natural Science, Hesston, Kan- sas, EVELYN DICK, English, Newton, Kansas, ROYCE ENNS, Physical Education, Newton, Kansas, RITA FLIGINGER, Music, Hurley, South Dakota. 27 -2'-flair?-ffifv CHARLES FLOWERS, English andMusic, Gulf- port, Mississippi, DOROTHY FLOWERS, Eng- lish, Gulfport, Mississippi, CHARLES FRANK, Economics and Business Administration, New- ton, Kansas, CAROLYN FRIESEN, Elementary Education, Mountain Lake, Minnesota, DON- ALD FRIESEN, Philosophy, Dinuba, California, LO U I S E FRIESEN, Elementary Education, North Newton, Kansas . RONALD LEE FRIESEN, Social Science, Inman, Kansas, LYNETTE GOERING, Elementary Education, Moundridge, Kansas. 28 seniors SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS: Lynette Goer- ing, secretary-treasurer, Delayne Graber, president, Ann Preheim, vice-president. MELVIN GOERING, Philosophy, Moundridge, Kansas, DONALD GOERTZEN, Industrial Ar1s, Kansas, PHYLLIS GOERING, Music, Buhler, North Newton, Kansas DeLAYNE GRABER, Social Science, Freeman, South Dakota, EVERETT GRABER, Socia1Sci- ence, Pretty Prairie, Kansas, MAX GRABER, Social Science, Kingman, Kansas, RANDALL HARMISON, Industrial Am, Newton, Kansas, DOROTHY HARMS, Music, Whitewater, Kan- sas, HARVEY HARMS, Music, Vallejo, Cali- fornia. i 29 , i u ,rf A i . 'f ' i ' . ' '!. seniors have onefnot in the future LAWRENCE HART, History, North Newton, Kansas, CARL HEGE, Social Science, Aberdeen, Idaho, DONALD HOFER, Chemistry, Bridgewater, South Dakota, RICHARD HOFER, Chemistry, Marion, South Dakota, JEROME JACOBSON, Psy- chology, Newton, KansasgJOI-IN IANZEN, Socia1Science, New- ton, Kansas. elyy .. so D S F 33 f ? 46' 'rj ' LEON JANZEN, an d Business Administra tio n , Hillsboro, GORDON JONES, Econom ics and Business tration, IOHNIUHNKE, E d u c a tion, Moundridge, Kansas. -'ff A R LO KASPER, Music, Hutchinson, Kansas, RALPH KAUFFMAN, Biology, Cry- stal Springs, Ka ns as, LEONA KAUFMAN, Music, Galva, Kansas. OSAMU KAWASAKI, Economics, Setagaya-ku, Tokyo, japan, LAWRENCE KEHLER, Social Science, Abbotsford, BritishCo1um- biag GERHARD KLAASSEN, English, North Newton, Kansas, RUDOLF KLAASSEN, Psychology, Laird, Saskatchewan, LOIS KOPPER, Elementary Education, Arlington, Kansas, IOLEEN KREI-IBIEL, Elementary Education, Pretty Prairie, Kansas. fel? r-T 31 GEORGE KROEKER, Elementary Education, Inman, KansasgHAROID KROEKER, Industrial Arts, Inman, Kansas, LINDA KRUEGER, Nurs- ing, Gretna, Manitoba, PETER LETKEMANN, Social Science, North Newton, KansasgFRAN- ZIE LOEPP, Industrial Arts, Turpin, Oklahoma, GERALD LOEWEN, Music, Altona, Manitoba, HELEN LOEWEN, Chemistry and German, Gretna, Manitoba, ROBERT LOEWEN, English, Altona, Manitoba, JOHN LONG, Economics and Business- Administration and Psychology, Newton, Kansas. 4 rr, '25 ,, -- 'A' -? ' N.:-5.'y.,fj' , ' ' , vii.-. L' n Q.. 13 l. xi-7' '-1Ln 'if 2.1 32 fx -A seniors JOHN MARTENS, History, North Newton, Kansas, ARNOLD MCCLOUD, Industrial Arts, Economics and Business Administration, Newton, Kansas, TER- RANCE MCCLOUD, Industrial Arts, Economics and Business Administration, Newton, Kansas, CECIL MILLER, Social Science, Newton, Kansas. ',y f I F '7 P '57 'Q' of i V? 1-3 J 1, fo -ci? ,Q-,L ,srl DALE MILLINGTON, Physical Education, Tu- ron, Kansas, KENNETH NEUFELD, Biology, Hutchinson, KansasgROBERT NEUFELD, Math- ematics, Inman, Kansas, LENORA VOTI-I NICKEL, Elementary Education, North Newton, Ka ns a s 5 CAROL NIEI-IAGE, Social Science, North Newton, Kansas, SI-IERWIN NIEI-IAGE, Education, North Newton, Kansas, TED NIK- KEL, Elementary Education, Canton, Kansas. 'EF MARLO ORTMAN, Industrial Arts, Marion, South Da- kota, SONDRA PATTON, Elementary Education, Walton, Kansas, ALVIN PENNER, Economics and Business Admin- istration, North Newton, Kansas, KATHERINE PENNER, Sociology, Leamington, Ontario, SARA PENNER, Eng- lish, North Newton, Kansas, JERRY PERISHO, Biology, North Newton, Kansas, REINHARD PETERS, Elementary Education, Moundridge, Kansas, ANNA MARIE PETER- SON, Elementary Education, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa. 34 Burying the vault is a long-time Bethel tradition. In Senior Chapel, the seniors placed their letters in the vault, which was then buried in the sidewalk in front of the Ad. Building. fi ANNA MARIE PREI-IEIM, Nurs ing, Marion, PREI-IEIM, Indus1Iia1Arts, NorthNewton, Kan- South DakotagjUAN ITA PREI-IEIM, Elementary sas. Education, Hurley, South Dakota, KENNETH seniors ARLIN RATZLAFF, Industrial Arts, North Newton, Kansas, CLAYTON RATZ- LAFF, Industrial Arts, Hillsboro, Kansas, MAXINE RATZLAFF, Elementary Education, Hillsboro, Kansas, STANLEY REGEI-IR, Industrial Arts, NorthNew- ton, Kansas, DONAID REGIER, Industrial Arts, Newton, Kansas, DAVID REI- MER, Social Science, Vancouver, British Columbia. i I LENA REIMER, Elementary Education, Fowler, REMPEL, Elementary Education, Newton Kan Kansas, CORNIE REMPEL, Bible and Christian sas. Education, Glenrush, Saskatchewan, DILORES seniors MARTHA RICH, Elementary Education, New- ton, Kansas, LEON SCI-IMIDT, Industrial Arts, North Newton, Kansas, LeROY SCI-IMIDT, In- dustrial Arts, North Newton, Kansas, LEWIS SCHMIDT, Social Science, Newton, Kansas, JOSEPH SCI-IRAG, History, Norwich, Kansas, LOREN SCHRAG, Chemistry and Psychology, Odessa, Washington. x l 0 r 49' Ltd f .,:xi QP-9 X . -1.4 In 55: s - . 1 A . V f X . W .FN-0 Y. , l 4. ... ' 1 1 V ,. S I f -. Q V' i'-5 . ' ,iii 'A Siilggz?-g-5-PR 1 -wa -, r :,.'.. .,.:1., Q- 1 L' ,.t1 . - f4,,S, ,wjjg 1 - K . t 'J . ,. ' ,...,.-M. -., :s, 'I,,'Q., .Hts ag, -,.,.: '5 1- ,1- lf:i1. -ji a-ffl.:-'.',. 'im vp- g .' A v.. . . , , ., . v... ... , ,-,. W, ' I .I-.2 1' , , . v ,- gg -. ,j., .., MARJORIE SCHRAG, Home Economics, North Newton, Kansas, SAM SCI-IRAC, Social Science, Pretty Prairie, Kansas. One of the many senior voice recitals this year was given by Gerald Loewen. aux.- n-. .-,,. M I, , wg. . . I , -nf f,. 'fiftii H I -' ' i4'.,'v.' - a 21 . . . .,. . P l , 37 95,1 ' N3 1 -f f 5 y S-.I THOMAS SCHRAG, Music, McPherson, Kan- sas, GEORGIANNA SHEFFLER, Bible and Re- ligious Education, Newton, Kansas, LAW- RENCE SHEFFLER, Psychology, Newton, Kan- sasg ENOS SIBANDA, History and Government, Southern Rhodesia, Africa, NLERVIN STAUF- EER, Economics and Business Administration, Milford, Nebraskag FRANCES STUCKY, Home Economics, North Newton, Kansas. , seniors recheck graa'uatz'on requirements as commencement draws near JAMES STUCKY, Physical Education, North Newton, Kansas, MARVIN TI-HESZEN, Music, Henderson, Nebraskag ROBERT TIESZEN, Na- tural Science, Marion, SouthDakota5 EDWARD UMMEL, Economics and Business Administra- tion, Ransom, Kansasg JAMES UNRUH, Bi- ology, NorthNewton, KansasgJUDITH UNRUH, Elementary Education, Harper, Kansas, KEN- NETH UNRUH, Physics, Harper, Kansas, DIANNE WALTNER, Chemistry, Hurley, South Dakotag JANICE WALTNER, English, McPher- son, Kansas. if CV Iv' T GERTRUDE WARKENTIN, Nuxsing and Sociology, North Newton, Kansasg VESTA WICKE, Home Eco- Superb, Saskatchewan5DONALDWEDEI., Psychology, nomics, Deer Creek, Oklahoma. Goessel, Kansas, ROBERT WEDEL, Natural Science, DAVID WIEBE, Social Science, Newton, Kan- sasg ROBERT WIEBE, Industrial Arts, North Newton, Kansas, MARGARET WIENS, English, Herschel, Saskatchewan, JOSEPH WIPF, Social Science , North Newton, Kansas, CAROL YOUNG, Home Economics, North Newton, Kansasg CAROL ZERGER, Social Science, Mc- Pherson, Kansas. FS. 'ff ni fn is-'CE' Xxx- Q' iuniors ace the future I with antz'czfa1fz'0n IUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS: Caryl Smith, secretary-treasurerg jim Juhnke, presidentg Harold Loewen, vice-president. MIGUEL ALMANZA, Newton, Kansasg ELAINE BANMAN, Newton, Kansasg DUANE BARKER, Newton, Kansasg JOI-IN BEVAN, Newton, Kansasg CECIL TERRY BROWN, Newton, Kansasg ELDON as BUSS, Newton, Kansasg EVELYN CLAASSEN, Beatrice, Nebraskag JOAN CLAASSEN, White- water, Kansas. l L 1 I I I I . I 40 LOIS CLAASSEN, Beatrice, Nebraska, TWILA CRAWFORD, Salina, Kansas, DELORA DECKER, Newton, Kansas. KATHRYN DICK, Winton, California, LORENE DICK, Turpin, Oklahoma, WILBURN DILLON, JR., Newton, Kansas, VINCENT DRIVER, Hess- ton, Kansas, LaVON EDIGER, North Newton, qvx 'Q' 4'l Kansasg LOLA EISENBEIS, Marion, SouthDakotag AMANDA EPP, Henderson, Nebraska3BAR.BARA EPP, Henderson, Nebraska. . ,V N 1 '1,-,Q-'I ' - 3 . ' L. ' ' 5 V Z. V , . ' ' --1 1 ,f-'E i JIT? '-. 4 V 'qqw -.E E f 'giifg-2. 2!-t ' f ag 1 'A if 53 :YQ ..-4,253 f iig sgz' ,v,gfi.:?1'-Qffvq , A .A 3. if v..-.113 , v . gi , 1 w 235: s 2 1 ' 'V - - EQfu'6-51.33 ,Mia .ES iuniors DUANE FRIESEN, American Falls, Idahog MEN- NO FROESE, Ruthven, Ontariog ALVIN FUNK Herbert, Saskatchewang MYRTLE FUNK, Aber-1 deen, Idahog JAMES GAEDDERT, NorthNeWton, - um! V17 VIRGIL EPP, Elbing, Kansasg MARLYN FAST Mt lake, Minnesotag KENNETH FRANZ, Newton Kan sasg JERRY FREEBURNE, Newton, Kansas Kansasg LUCIA GALLOWAY, Normal, 111111015 LIESELOTTE GEIGER, Kaiserslautem, Germany HELEN GOERING, Pretty Prairie, Kansas. l '54 63 I JI J --nl' If A 1? 0 nd 'QW LARRY GOERTZEN, Hen- derson, Nebraska, CLARK GRABER, Freeman, South Dakota. ALFRED HABEGGER, Reedly, California, AL- FRED HAMM, North Newton, Kansasg VERLIN HARDER, North Newton, Kansas, CURTIS HAR- TENBERGER, Newton, Kansas, LUCILLE HEGE, V L Students chat While enjoying their meal at the Iumor Senior Banquet, held May 6 in the Student Umon Aberdeen, Idaho, IUDITH HILTY Bluffton Ohio, EV'ELYN HODEL, North Newton Kanss, LAVERNE HODEL, North Newton, Kansas Lfx 4 35. A as Q Q E Fil l L- W V v wi: ,- . f :EV , W v b ' I- V lf' s l -.. 'L 'J - 'I' -j .Y Y L ...JP ' ' x ' 5 DALE HORST, Newton, Kansasg DAVID IANZEN, Newton, KansasgjAMES IUHNKE, Lehigh, Kansas, IRIS KAUFMAN, Freeman, South Dakota, EDNA RUTH KEMP, North Newton, Kansas, PAUL KEMP, North Newton, Kansas, DONALD KLASSEN, Newton, Kansasg RAY GENE KRAUSE, Grant, Nebraska. 44 DOREEN LEWIS, Bronx, New York, PAUL LIN- SCHEID, Arlington, Kansasg HAROLD LOEWEN, Meade, Kansas, KENNETH LOHRENTZ, Mound- ridge, Kansas. iuniors Mike Almanza touches up the murals which he painted for the junior-Senior Banquet. MAJ Q L , NN lt 4-r 1-ff' ff' 6-'- fr ATHANASIOS MATSOUKIS Salomka Greece HERMAN MERRITT, Whitewater, Kansas, V MARILYN MIERAU, He n d e r s on, Nebraska, ' ELIAS MINA, Cairo, Egypt. FRANKLIN NACHTIGAL, Buhler, Kan- sas, IJOREN NEWBERRY, Newton, Kan- sasg IOI-IN OPIYO, Uganda, British East Africa, THEODORE PANKRATZ, Cass- ody, Kansas. V- qa- qiatrvmlwl H4-1 , . usa,- assw-Hm I as Q. H222 - 'I-14 5 'lun 1 hi. ng v-I -4 LEO PAULS, Inman, Kansas, IVAN REGIER, Madrid, Nebraska, CLIF- FORD SCI-IMIDT, Dolton, South Dakota, STANLEY SCI-IMIDT, Fern- dale, Washingtong TERRANCE SCI-IRAG, Kingman, Kansasg BONNIE SCHROEDER, American Falls, Idahog DUANE SCHROHDER, Mound- ridge, Kansas, URSULA SHUMACKER, Bladbeck, Germany. 45 A delightful and hilarious one-act me11erdramer, Hearts and Flowers, was produced by the Junior class for the banquet. iuniors produce entertaining banquet jar seniers SHIRLEY UNRAU, Lehigh, Kansasg DONOVAN UNRUH, Pawnee Rock, Kansasg EVELYN UN- RUH, Bloomfield, Montanag PAUL UNRUH, Galva, Kansasg ELIZABETH VOTH, Inman, Kan- 4 I A - I . w w ll .1 il a aa -- :ea ,, - , wr ' -if f ' W lg Il 4 , 7 1 , L ' HN -na, ,T F3 I gh A W In , XL ' 1' Y- I r' ' f , . vu A. 'n' . .4-lH'. w CARYL SMITH, Inman, Kansasg WALTER SPRUNG- ER, Dalton, ohio, CHARLOTTE TEICHROEW, Mr Lake, MinnesotagESTI-IER TOEWS, Grema, Manitoba sasg GARY WALTNER, Freeman, South Dakotag GEORGE WIEDEMANN, Burdette, Kansasg Jo- ANN ZIMMERMAN, Protection, Kansas. G El, I t , , I ji, In 1 .1 ,N S I A -iw 111 , A X . , fir, . 1 'if:.: DANNY AMEN W1 ch 1ta Kansas, Paraguay, TINA BLOCK, Steinbach, LARRY BARTEL Wolfpomt Montana Mamtoba ERWIN BOSCHMANN, Asun- VERLIN BARTEL, N e W t o n Kansas c1on Para guayg BARBARA BURDETTE, ALETA BERGTHOLD Reedley Ca 11 Valley Center, Kansas. sophomores DUNN, Partridge, Kansas, ANNELIESE DYCK, Erpolzheim, Germany, CAROL DYCK, Newton, KansasgKATI-IRYN ECK, Newton, Kansas, CARRIE EDIGER, Buhler, Kansas. L. t W w t 1 sophomores ROSALIND ENNS, Newton, Kansas5IULIA ENTZ, Valley Center, Kansasg ANTHONY EPP, North Newton, Kansasg CONSTANCE EPP, Fresno, Californiag LOIS EPP, Burnaby, British Columbiag RUTH EWY, Halstead, Kansasg DENNIS FLAMING, Hillsboro, Kansas, LARRY FRANZ, Buhler, Kansasg I-IILDEGARD FRIESEN, North Newton, Kansas, CAROL FROESE, Shafter, California, DONNA FROESE, Inman, Kansasg FRANK GAEDDERT, Buhler, Kansas. rw '43 -Z :Y , L., Af l iif' ' I 'N i ,. F n ., N '-' E'Y'44et' ' P ugh . ' f F, l L... V I . 1 - we I f 1 f N fc! 1 48 'v.1 Hx.: CAROL GOERING, McPherson, Ka nsasg KEITH GOERING, Moundrid ge , Kansas, JANEES GOER ING, Galva, Kansas, GLADYS GOERTZEN, Hillsboro, Kansas. -df E' S 1 -was ,M M , 'm 1 4- ff 'QD EVA HIEBERT, Newport Washlngton RICHARD HIRSCI-ILER Harbme Nebraska KENNETH HOCH STEDLER Wellman Iowa NOLA IANZEN Llberal Kansas, REINHILD KAUENHOVEN Gottmgen Ger many, WENDELL KAUFMAN Moundrxdge Kansas JERRY KELLER Halstead Kansas, JANET KLAAS SEN I-hllsboro Kansas LAUREL KLASSEN Le I-hgh Kansas WAYNE KLASSEN Newton Kansas, KENNETH KLUFA Newton Kansas LAWANDA KOPPER Newton Kansas 3 NORMA G R A B ER. Burrton, Kansas5VIRGIL GRAVES, Wal- ton, Kansasg SAMUEL HART, Newton, KansasgRONA1D HATCHETT, Augusta, Kansasg CAROL HEGE, Aberdeen, Alda- hog LOIS I-IEIDEBRECHT, In- man, Kansasg GLENNYS HEN- RY, North N e w to n , Kansasg ELEANOR I-IIEBERT, Mt. Lake, Minnesota. 'G' 49 sophomores learn to assume campus Zeadershzlb S452 I lg '.L-: W 'J I qw. I ,. X. 'Lf' T, SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS: LOUISE PANKRATZ . secretary-treasurer, STANLEY REIMER, president, LOIS Shlgaizals, y 1 PETERS, vice-president. , MARGARET KROEKER, Santa Cruz, Bolivia, VEL- MA KROEKER, Henderson, Nebraskag. PAUL KUEH- NY, Deer Creek, Oklahomag BARBARA LOUTHAN, Vilas, Co1orado,DUANEMARTENS, Newton, Kan- sas, LORETTA MARTENS, Buhler, Kansas, AARON JAMES KREHBIEL, Ritzville, Washington, JANE KREHBIEL, Pretty Prairie, Kansas MARTIN, North Newton, Kansas, SANDRA MARTIN Newton, Ka ns a sg SHIRLEY MOYER, Pipersville Pennsylvania, CHESTER NACHTIGAI., Buhler, Kan- SSS . 50 327' JIMMY NEUFELD, Corona del Mar, Cal- ifornia, RICHARD NICKEL, Moundridge, Kansas, NADINE NIKKEL, Canton, Kan sas, DARLENE NUSZ, Conway Springs, Kansas. LOIS PETERS, Fredonia, Ka ns a s, JOHN PREI-IEIM, Marion, South Dakota, FLOYD QUENZER, North New- ton, Kansas, FRANCES RATZLAFF, Hillsboro, Kan- sas, MARGARET REGEHR, Tofield, A1berta,NAO- l H W l '-lr E BETTY PANKRATZ, Hillsboro, Kansas, LOUISE PANKRATZ, Mt. lake, Minnesot, MAX PATTER- SON, Newton, Kansas, JIM PENNER, Clinton, Okla- homa, MARVIN PENNER, Beatrice, Nebraska, KAY PETERS, Wichita, Kansas. MI REINLER, Beatrice, Nebraska,STANLEY REIMER, Reedley, C a li fo rn i a , HELEN REMPEL, Hillsboro, Kansas, RICHARD REMPEL, Newton, Kansas, CHOUN YONG RI-IEE, Chongyo-Ku, Seoul, Korea. 51 i ,gz T4 w V- - c I ' 1 T li ,, I , ,L ,J I ,3 - M 1 KENNETH RUPP, Mt. Lake, Minnesota, THOMAS SANDWELL, Newton, Kansasg HOWARD SCHMIDT, North Newton, Kansas, JOYCE SCHMIDT, Inman, Kansas, JUDY SCI-IMIDT, Moundridge, Kansas, BRIAN SCHRAG, Kingman, Kansasg GOR- DON SCHRAG, McPherson, Kansas, HOWARD SCHRAG, Pretty Prairie, Kansas. sophomores JERRILL SCHRAG, Ki n g m a n , SCHRAG, McPherson, Kansas 5 I Wa Iton, Kansas, HAROLD SC Montana, LINDA SEBES, Hanston, 219: ul Kansas, KAY ANN UDY SCHROEDER, HULTZ, Glenclive, 52 Kansas, PRISCIL- LA SELZER, Protection, Ka nsa sg LYNN SINLPSON, Augusta, KansasgBANSON SING, Hong Kong, China, MICHAEL SIZEMORE, Newton, Kansas, LARRY SMITH, Newton, Kansas. Aiwa A W di I Iv Ll DON STAERKEL, Newton, Kansas, GARY STUCKY, Murdock, Kansas, NICHOLAS STUCKY, Buhler, Kansas, MARY THIESSEN, Leamington, Ontario, ERNA THIES- ZEN, Henderson, Nebraska, BETHEL ANN UNRUH, Independence, Kansas, ELIZA- BETH UNRUH, Bloomfield, Montana, LUANA VAN der SLOOT, Cocolala, Idaho. MAX VORAN, Kingman, Kansas, GERALD VOTH, Newton, Kansas, LOREN WEINBRENNER, Lehigh, Kansas, HANNS WHITE, Newton, Kansas, EDITH WI-IITEMAN, Hammon, Oklahoma, EVELYN WIE- BE, Beatrice, Nebraska, DEMETRIOUS XOURIS, Thessalonika, Greece, JOHN ZERGER, Kingman, Ka nsas, MONTE ZERGER, McPherson, Kansas, DARRELL ZIELKE, Newton, Kansas. , 53 MARNETTE ABRAHAMS, Newton, Ka nsasg ELSIE BAERG, Butterfield, Minnesota, BERTHA BARTEL, North Newton, Kansas, STANLEY BARTEL, Newton, Kansas, WANDA BECHTEL, Deer Creek, Oklahoma 5 STANLEY BOEHR, Henderson, Nebraska, LERACE BOSHART, Cucamonga, Califor- nia, PAULINE BOX, Newton, Kansas. freshmen are initiated during welcome week FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS: DON ENNS, DOROTHY BRANDT, Newton, Kan- sasg HARVEY BULLER, Mt. lake, Minnesota, THOMAS BULLER, Lar- ned, Kansasg JERRY BURKEY, Mil- ford, Nebraska, JUDITH CLAASSEN, Beatrice, Nebraska, ION COLEMAN, vice-presidentg KENNETH PETERS, president IOANNE ZERGER, secretary-t1'easurer. m MX -,..- ,Q . . , 1 - .1 n . U t- , . .V K, L of - . Newton, Kansas. ffl n ' , 2 -f b , ' , wel Y 1 . Lv au ' 1 . ,L ,. .1 Y , l bi . :T X w 4 I , X? v A I r' UVA. ROBERT DELAPLANE, Pawnee Rock, Kansas, HARRY DETTWILER, Hess- ton, Kansas, CARON DICK, Mt. Lake, Minnesota, PRISCILLA DICK, Win- ton, California 5 LaVERLE DIRKS, Turpin, Oklahoma, JANICE DOERKSEN, Imnan, Kansas, RONAID DOLE, Valley Center, Kansas, IANETT DUERK- SEN, Hillsboro, Kansas. ROGER DUERKSEN, Canton, Kan- sas, KENNETH DUNN, Partridge, Kansas, MAURICE EDIGER, Buhler, Kansas, RONALD HDIGER, Liberal, Kansas, GARY ELLS, Newton, Kansas, DON ENNS, Inman, Kansas. DELVYN EPP, Henderson, Nebraska, PAUL EPP, Henderson, Nebraska, VERDA EPP, Hillsboro,,Kansas, RAL- PH LEROY EWY, Halstead, Kansas, RICHARD FAST, North Newton, Kansas, JOANNE FLICKNER, Pretty Prairie, Kansas. 3:5171 fl GARY JANTZ, easily identified as a green freshman with his beanie on the table, receives instructions from his advisor, Prof. Stucky, concerning proper enrollment if procedures. CALVIN FOSS, Mt. Lake, Minnesota, JEANETTE FRANKLIN, Larned, Kansas, ROBERT FRASER, Newton, Kansas, f h RALPH FREY, Wichita, Kansas. blunder through complicated enrollment procedures C. KAY FRIESEN, Henderson, Nebraska, DOROTHY FRIESEN, Henderson, Nebraska, EVELYN FRIESEN, Bradshaw, Nebraska, KARREN FRIESEN, Hen- derson, Nebraska, MELVIN FRIESEN, Aberdeen, Idaho, OTTO FRIESEN, North Newton, Kansas, ROGER FRIESEN, Henderson, Nebraska, SARAH FROESE, Inman, Kansas, CURTIS GERING, Ritzville, Washington, NELSON GINGERICI-I, Kalona, Iowa, RANDALL GOERING, McPherson, Kansas, KATHLEEN GOER- ING, Moundridge, Kansas. f' I.EANNA GOERING, Inman, Kansas, VERNON GOERING, Pretty Prairie, Kansas, FRANCES GOMEZ, Newton, Kansas, RONALD GOOSSEN, Beatrice, Nebraska,JUDITH GRABER, Newton, Kansas, KAREN GRABER, Marion, South Dakota, KENNETH GRABER, Pretty Prairie, Kansas, SHERRIL GRABER. E1 Dorado, Kansas. MARY GRAVES, Walton, Kansas, KAREN HARDER, Mt Lake, M1nnesota, ESTHER HARMS, Newton, Kansas, MADELYN HARTENBERGER, Newton, Kansas, JUANITA HARTZLER, Elkhart, Indiana, MARY ANN I-IEIDEBRECI-IT, Sedgwick, Kansas, SUZANNE I-IELLER, Vesper, Kansas, RUTH HIEBERT, Newport, Washington, JOAN HOSTETTER, Ossian, Indiana, DONALD JANTZ, Newton, Kansas, GARY IANTZ, Ritzville, Washington, JAMES JANTZ, New ton, Kansas. 1l EILEEN JANTZEN, Beatrice, Nebraska, JOI-IN IANZEN, Henderson, Nebraska, JUDY JANZEN, Enid, Oklahoma, JANET IUI-INKE, Lehigh, Kansas, SI-IINGO KAIINAMI, Osaka, Japan, MARI- LYN KAUFMAN, Moundridge, Kansas, STEVEN KAUFMAN, Moundridge, Kansas, VILAS KAUF- MAN, New1:on, Kansas, JOHN KEI.LER, Halstead, Kansas, DIANE KLASSEN, Inman, Kansas. freshmen BEVERLY KOEI-IN, Greensburg, Kan- sas, KATHLEEN KOOP, Henderson, Nebraska, GLENDENEKRAUSE, Hills- boro, Kansasg DARRELL KREI-IBIEL, McPherson, Kansas, JOANN KREH- BIEL, Pretty Prairie, Kansas, LEANN KREI-IBIEL, Pretty ,Prairie, Kansas. The freshmen held a square dance on the tennis courts for their class party May 20. mn 0:4 .v. ,may .Q , . . -.3 , -, -Y-I ,-- n -. ' .lt xl I. ' lg--4.L.--5 :a,.,-- -.-, -fn I ,V .10 gg in J1l!1' P 1 :JI 6? V! Easiflmggsxal ie KERRY KREHBIEL, Moundridge, Kansas, RICHARD KREHBIEL, Hutchinson, Kansas, KAREN KROEKER, Henderson, Nebraska, SHARON KROEKER, Hen- derson, Nebraska, THOMAS KRUSE, Galva, Kansas, CAROLYN LAMIBERT, Kismit, Kansas, JERALD LEISY, Wichita, Kansas, CARL MARTIN, Newton, Kansas. GENEVIEVE MIERAU, Henderson, Nebraska, ROINE MIERAU, Henderson, Ne- braska,MARYM1LLER, Newton, Kansas,ERNA NEUFELD, Reedleyg California, IRMA NEUFELD, Inman, Kansas, RAMON NEUFELD, North Newton, Kansas, HAROLD NEUFELDT, Inman, Kansas, JOLEEN NEUFELDT, Inman, Kansas, ROGERNEUFELDT, Inman, Kansas, KERMIT NIKKEL, Canton, Kansas,LAUR.A PANKRATZ, Mt. Lake, Minnesota, ROBERT PANKRATZ, Cassody, Kansas. 'Q 5- , ii! I E lm FRED PENNER, Inman, Kansas, LA VERNA PENNER, Hillsboro, Kansas,LAW- RENCE PENNER, Hillsboro, Kansas,MARY PENNER, Hillsboro, Kansas,ALlCE PETERS, Henderson, Nebraska, GALEN PETERS, Newton, Kansas, KENNETH PETERS, Henderson, Nebraska, WILLARD PLENERT, Hillsboro, Kansas. REBA PORTER, Sedgwick, Kansas, LARRY RANEY, Erie, Kansas, KATHERINE REDEKOP, Cuauhternoc, Mexico, DAVID REGEHR, Inman, Kansas, ANNA MARIE REGIER, Newton, Kansas, CALVIN REGIER, Henderson, Nebraska, JOHN REGIER, Halstead, Kansas, AGNES REIMER, Fowler, Kansas, LEONA REIMER, Inman, Kansas, KENNETH RIESEN, Hillsboro, Kansas, PAUL ROTH, Carlock, Illinois, GARY ROWLAND, Newton, Kansas. 1 I 1 v 1 -. , - ' 1 , . , Y ,Fw - lfzliiir, Z- Y- Yu Pi al if H' Z' ' I 1. ' ,G,,, , I V .gl I E , lv w X Freshmen respond affirmatively to a proposal at one of their class meetings. GARY ROYER, Newton, Kansasg RACHEL RUTH, Wichita, Kansas, ANNALEE SCHMIDT, Reedley, Cali- freshmen forniag BRYCE SCHMIDT, Newton, Kansas. EVELYN SCHMIDT, Canton, Kansasg GENE SCHMIDT, Newton, Ka.nsas5JOI-IN SCHMIDT, Dallas, Oregon, IOYCELYN SCHMIDT, Buhler, Kansas, RONALD SCHMIDT, Lehigh, Kansas, CHARLOTTE SCHRAG, Moundridge, Kansas, HAROLD SCHRAG, McPherson, Kansas, KATHLEEN SCHRAG, McPherson, Kansas, LOIS SCHRAG, Moundridge , Kansas, SHERRIL SCHRAG, Galva, Kansas, ROY SCHROEDER, Inman, Kansas: MARTHA SELLERS, Reedley, California. V 'IM' Q V-227 . ,-,ff Y, 4 . . 1.5 J' ..V I Hx , - -1' ,M QT 'J ln. V ,I .. I - I In ,r WALTER SHACKLETT, Newton, Kansas, GARN'ET SMITH, Wichita, Kansas, WILLIAM SMITH, Halstead, Kansas, JAY S TA UFFE R , Milford, Nebraska, MA RILYN STRAUSZ, Buhler, Kansas, BENJAMIN STUCKY, McPherson, Kansas, GORDON S TUCKY, Newton, Kansas, JIM PAUL STUCKY, Pretty Prairie, Kansas. freshmen ANN SUDERMAN, North Newton, Kansas, JOAN TI-IIESSEN, Inman, Kansas, VERLA THIESZEN, Henderson, Nebraska, ANNA MARIE TOEWS, Hillsboro, Kansas, ELNOR TROYER, Harper, Kansas, ROSEMA RY UMMEL, Arnold, Kansas, NAOMI UNRUH, Colfax, Washington, CELIA VOGT, Newton, Kansas, JAMES VON RIESEN, Beatrice, Nebraska, CURTIS VOTH, Moundridge, Kansas, JUDY VOTH, Goessel, Kansas, KAREN VOTH, Whitewater, Kansas. I ,I . Q - - - x . ' . J. KARL VOTH, Moundridge, Kansas, LARRY VOTH, M oun dr i d g e , Kansas, LESTER VOTH, Moundridge, Kansas, VERDA WAGNER, Newton, Kansas, DONNA WALKER, Newton, Kansas, ROBERT WALTNER, North Newton, Kansas, RICHARD WASI-IBURN, Newton, Kansas, ANNA IO WEAVER, War- den, Washington. KENNETHWEI-IMULLER, Okarche, Oklahoma, IVAN WELTY, Hesston, Kansas, ALENE WIEBE, Perryton, Texas, CLARK WIEBE, Hillsboro, Kansas, DONALD WIEBE, Beatrice, Nebraska, LAURA WIEBE, Waka, Texas, MIRIAM WIEBE, Aberdeen, Idaho, EDITH WIELER, Gretna, Manitoba, CLARENE WIENS, Beatrice, Nebraska, JANET WOELK, Newton, Kansas, EZRA YODER, Kalona, Iowa, JOANNE ZERGER, McPherson, Kansas. w 1 4.5 qi spiritual cmcl cultural life We are youth digging amidst the maze of orthodoxy and unorthodoxy, seeking the Creator and Coordinator of all our life. We desire to outgrow the conven- tional and the old-fashioned, and to re- place it with the unconventional and the progressive. We learn through contact in theological and philosophical discus- sions, through guest s p e a k e r s, and through group activities. We develop new and more meaningful cultural and aes- thetio-valuesithroughgeig ressfign-iiniextne-1 roundfon the stage, -in the clioif, Behind the lectern, or lbeforelthe canvass, T . -In the atmosphere ofa Christian lib- eral arts college, Wejstiidji tlieolbgyin a new key, and find that lit lenridhesfand ienhancves--tour for rn err - convictiiilsg and speculations, We cornefto know our Crea-'W ator more fully through. ,participation in and appreciation for the fine arts . In our fspiritua1.la11d'cu1ru1-ai life, we arereacn- up toe - ' l I - ' w all fffiiliiiisgns ' . . ' b ' nf L -V ist viz: neg ssszXs?E1?X1i5iii59ii5z .TTT AF' cntc to ccnnrc ,Q l ,.- J bv 1 ,LL 5 2 E 5 E . ff'1:sp:1' 2 'Q 2:5 J' , W , 517 E W. - ' 2 Qx A ' SL QE A ff ' J'-L' -13. . , ' H- V: ti V , Q, , ' I 1 'Z K3f'- ' 3 Z Q-'L'-T1 u 9 X f- -1 W .ff V ll 1 X, f I Y X V if Q f -N H r , ' 3 '- .' y ', V' X iqfi. I 1 fr I , 5 4- 5 ' - ', ...' V 1- ' .g fl ' L' Lo' ul'-1 ' 1' '+,'. 5 I' ,, .,,-1 +L ge:-H V ?'i3 W 5 -' tl Q ,N E lvl- C f v in ,fi ' . 5, .Q Q. ' .yi V' Q 'F'-' I if .AIEY-,E f 2, 1-' , 1: .1 ' ' W , 'V1 W 'ii' ' -'ff ,mb - 'E ki ww ., Q. 1 Y' 1 A 'V' 1 y 'L Y 6 - vi an-:1 !! ' 4 ' - f W 12 f ' Xt.4Eif1i ,Q 1 , r I A si nj 'E-7,5 f Q ci X 1 -f - , , . -- :A .. f- 1' X x -ERC ,. l 3 e x 'L ,. , 'V ' - ' ' P r Xb 1 I X .V 7 gl h -un - -:ij K D 1 sl, Seq. ft, I ,Q llnp gb, . Q i t W J ,L ' J J 6- '. ' .ggi 2, 1' 1 A. 3 . ff ' ' . - fi 'in H, 'S --X 33 X 'TT , ns , A Q 1 ' Q 5g'ff.:g', 1 1 . Lx 'K 'rl ' Z., IK D 1 X -X W A ky 1 E' l if I f' ' 0, X ? 1'-4 'B 4:ff '?l1-J ff V I ' , -' I fr g ' 'I' A 59, ' - I I .- I l A , T mi FL n 4 V .1-- - 'G DR. CECIL E. HINSHAW, direc- tor of p e a c e education for the American Friends Service Com- mittee, was the g ue s t speaker for the annual Chris t i an Life Week le ctur e s October 3-6. These lectures are sponsored by the Student Christianfellowship. guest speakers and chapel services enrich DR. D. ELTON TRUEBLOOD, noted author and lecturer, was speaker for the Menno Simons Lectures October 30 to No- vember 2. A member of the American Philosophical Soci- ety he has writtensome eight- een books of wide acclaim. spiritual weyare QF students DR. J. E. HARTZLER, ofGoshen, Indiana, and former president of Bethel College, was the featured speaker for the Bible Week Lec- tures March 13-16. The theme of his lectures was A Philosophy of Life. Students listen to one of the challenging addresses presented by Dr. Trueblood in the Bethel College Church. 1 ' V j fr ,f . 1 ' 'P 2 1 i '57-V - 'ja w K, 'nigsdi November 30--'le-Tragic His: January 7--Richard D y e r -Ben- April 15--Dr. M ar c us Bach, Qygf Doctor Faustus, by Christ- nett, troubadour and guitarist, world traveler, author, and pop- opher Marlowe, was presented by app e a re d in Memorial Hall as ular interpreter of intercultural the traveling Cleveland Play- the second event of the Memorial relations, presented a lecture on house. Hall Series. What I Have Le arne d From Religions Around the World. memorial hall series lbrovides cultural entertainment The Westminster Choir, under the direction of Dr. Elaine Brown, appeared in Memorial Hall on February 18. The concert was comprised of works by Palestrina, Lasso, Bach, Brahms, early Italian and English c ompos e rs , and folk songs from various countries. M W , hang .J - i'Z7 , i H, H ,, , ........, .., , Y ..... ..,,,.,,,., ,W CHOIR MEMBERS, .BACK ROW: Charles Flowers, Richard Hirschler, Tom Schrag, Don Friesen, Joe Wipf, Arlo Kasper, John Zerger, DeLayne Graber, George Dick, Stanley Reimer, Peter Letkemann, Gerhard Klaassen. Tl-HRD ROW: Leonjanzen, Gary Rowland, Gerald Loewen, Gary Waltner, Kenneth Riesen, James Neufeld, Duane Fries en , Larry Franz, Harvey Harms, Cornie Rempel, Eddie Dick, bethel college choir fvlng, and the whole world will sing withyouv The Bethel College Choir is com- prised of approximately fifty carefully auditioned rnen's and Women' s voices . The choir p e r fo r rn e d at various on- campus functions, in local communities, and on an extended tour t h r o u gh Ne- braska, South Dakota, Minnesota, and Manitoba during quarter break in March. Membership is selected primarily from the so pho more, junior, and senior classes . The choir was directed by Pro - fessor Walter Jost. Marvin Thieszen. SECOND ROW: Rita Fliginger, Carolyn Friesen, Rosalind Enns, Louise Pankratz, JoAnnZimmerman, Barbara Claassen, Sue Kopper, Elizabeth Voth, Myrtle Funk, Ele anor Hiebert, Joan Claassen. FRONT ROW: Lois Peters, Katie Penner, KathyDick, Dorothy Harms, Lucille Hege, Elaine Bauman, Evelyn Wiebe, M ary Thiessen, Ruth Ewy, Lola Eisenbeis. CHAPEL CHOIR MEMBERS , BACK ROW: Paul Unruh, Kerry Krehbiel, Bruce Kaufman, LaVon Ediger, David Regehr, Lynn Simpson, Ted Dreier, Galen Peters, Bryce Schmidt. THIRD ROW: john Schmidt, Paul Kuehny, Stanley B arte 1 , Donald Wiebe, James Dunn, Rachel Ruth, Janet Juhnke, MaryMi1ler, Erna Neufeld, Dwight Goering. SEC- The Messiah was presented by the music department on Sunday, December 11. OND ROW: Wanda Bechtel, Judy Voth, LaVerle Dirks, Nola Ianzen, Beverly Koehn, Lois Schrag, Alene Wiebe, Lois Riesen, Esther Harms, Jeanette Claassen. FRONT ROW: Joann Krehbiel, Eileen Jantzen, ,Ioan Hostetter, Miriam Wiebe, Ann Suderman, Evelyn Schmidt, Dorothy Friesen, Kathleen Koop, Hulda Bauman, Leann Krehbiel. chapel choir enriches chapel services The Chapel Choir, under the direc- tion of Dr. David Suderman, functioned largely on campus and performed reg- ularly in chapel Worship services. The Chapel Choir joined the College Choir for the performance of the Messiah and the opera. Membership is selected by audition and consists primarily of freshmen. orchestra The Bethel College Orchestra, com- bined With the Newton Civic Orchestra, is comprised of approximately sixty au- ditioned members, and performs stand- ard orchestral W o rk s . The orchestra presented an autumn concert October 16, which featured a piano concerto by Barbara Claassen. The orchestra also accompanied the choir in the rendition of the Messiah and the spring opera, Martha. Directed by Dr. Rupert Hohmann, the orchestrawas augmented by several members of the Wichita Sym - phony for each appearance. concert band The concert band, under the direc- tion of Dr. Rupert Hohmann, performed in concert on May 28, and played the pro- cessional and recessional for the Bac- calaureate and Commencement activi- ties. ' vJ 1., . C Vg , LQ ' 'gi 21 pep band The College Pep Band, di- rected by Rupert Hohm ann , bo o s t e d school spirit by per- forming at all home football and basketball games . instrumental ensembles TRUMPET Q UA R T E T: Kenneth Unruh, Bryce S c hm i d t , Loren Weinbrenner, John Long. STRING QUARTET: Ann Suderman, Rein- hild K auenhove n , Bethel Ann Unruh, Janet Juhnke. spring opera martlza presented Q1 music department Martha, a comic opera in four acts, by Friedrichvon Flotow, was presented May 12-13 by the Bethel College Music Department. Written in an eighteenth- century English setting, the opera por- Upward jumping, downward thumping, Mind you inward point your toes. Bright and Winsome lasses, Come, the fair shall now begin! trays the gaity of peasant life as well as the pomp of Queen Anne's court. The plot centers around two ladies of the Queen's court, Martha and Nancy, who become bored with life. For excitement, they decide to go to the fair disguised as peasant girls to be auctioned off as ser- vants. The ladies soon realize that they have carried their little joke too far, as they become e m b r o i l e d in numerous troublesome situations, and a compli- cated lov e affair between masters and servant girls soon develops. The opera was directed by Dr. Rupert I-Iohmann. Professor Walter Jost served as vocal coach and choir direc- tor, and Professor Norman Lofland was dramatics coach and aided in lighting and staging. The Bethel College orches- tra accompanied the singers. ABOVE: She can sow sir, she can mow, sir. BELOW: Now have done with sorrow, Come, let joy illurn thy days. cast qv characters Martha ....... Rita Fliginger Elaine Banman Nancy . . . . Kathryn Dick Lionel . . . . Gerald Loewen Tom Schrag Plunkett ........ Arlo Kasper Sir Tristram . . . Gerhard Klaassen Sheriff ....... Harvey Harms CHORUS: Betty Unruh, Evelyn Wiebe, Lerace Boshart, Mary Thiessen, Katie Penner, Carolyn Friesen, Evelyn Unruh, Lois Peters, Judy Claassen, Priscilla Dick, Barbara Claassen, Rosalind Enns, Eleanor Hiebert, Ruth Ewy, Don Wiebe, Ken Riesen, Jim Dunn, john Zerger, John Schmidt, Robert Loewen, Randall Harmison, Stan Reimer, Marvin Thieszen, Leon Janzen, Gary Waltner, Eddie Dick, Ken Lohrentz, Gary Row- land, james Goering, Richard Hirsch- ler. l ABOVE: We will chase him, we will trace him, Who with out spears, now with- out fears. BELOW: Now then girls, be up and doing, to your spinning. Curtain Call! pygmalion presented as fall drama production George Bernard Shaw's famous light comedy, Pygmalion, was pre- sented by the Bethel College Drama Department November 10 and 11. Written in 1912, this play has been equally successful on stage, screen, and television. The plot centers a- round the life of I-Iiggens, a phone- tician who makes a business as well various dialects. The biting satire of the play reveals Shaw's contempt for the u se of colloquial English. Norman Lofland, dramatics instruc- tor, directed the production. as a hobby of recording and studying Drug you? Look, I eat one half, and you eat the other. l,'. l'1a My aunt died of influenza: so they say. But it's my opinion that they done the old woman in. Romans, countrymen, and lovers! hear me for my cause, and be silent, that you may hear. drama department presents aa'aptatz'0rt Qfj-1,tltZtS caesar A modern adaptation of Shake - speare's Iulius C a e s a r was presented by the Drama Department January 27 -28 and February 3. Contemporary dress was worn by all characters. The point of departure for this production was the use of multiple-level staging to depict Et tu, Brute ? laugh. 75 several s c e n e s simultaneously. Th e areas on which the action took place ex- tended from gym floor level to eight feet above stage level. The storage area for flats located upstage was utilized as the oration platform. The production was directed by Professor Norman Lofland. I say I am a cobbler, a mender of bad souls. bathe! presents jrst non-prcy?ssi0nalpe1y'brmance fyfjlb. J. B. , the Pulitzer Prize-winning a- dapitfn of the book of-1213 by Archibald MacLeisch, was presented by the Drama Department A p r il 20-22. According to Norman Lofland, director of the show, this was the first non-professional per- formance of the play since its production on Broadway. The staging was impres- Sha11 we take the good and not the evil? We have to take the evil--evil with good. 76 Where are you headed? Wherever I'm going. sively patterned to create the illusion of a circus tent, as in the New York pro- duction. The Broadway music and sound effects were also used. Three main lev el s of the stage-the c ir c u s ring, heaven, and the crow's nest fthrone of Godj -were featured. Evil is never very pretty- -spitefulness, either. which way the wind staged Zyl peace commission Which Way the Wind'?, by Philip C. Lewis, was sponsored by the Peace and World Order Commission of the S. C. F. as this yeafstravelingpeace play. Pub- lished by the American Friends Service Committee, it is an experimental docu- drama based on Speak Truth to Power, a Quaker search for alternatives to vio- lence. The play challenges the compla- cency of the American people facing a- Ha1f a league, half a league, Half a league onward , recites the school boy, while his mother anxiously looks on. , - A x . The cast of characters included YQ Marvin Thies- zeng X, Lucia Gallowayg Z, Walter Sprungerg W, Anna Marie Petersong and Narrator, Jim Jul-mke. tomic warfare and attempts to find an answer to the mass suicide of war. The play was directed by Judith Hilty and Lucia Galloway, and was presented in various schools, colleges , and churches in this area. It was also pre- sented at Nashville, Tennessee, at the Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship Con- ference. First Atomic Bomb Dropped on Japang Missile is Equal to 20,000 Tons of TNT. . . reads Mr. David E. Preston to his wife across the breakfast table. y 77 I . ... EJ l v - n .4 -? the kauffman museum cz center Qf attraction The Kauffman Museum is a point of s p e c ial interest 'on the Bethel College campus . The museum offers many inter - esting and awesome glimpses into the past, depicting the hardships of early pioneer life on the Dakota and Kansas prairies. It has also preserved many old traditions ofthe Mennonite people. Cre- ated and perpetuated by eighty-year-old Charles Kauffman, it is acclaimed as one of the finest museums of its kind in this area. It attracts many visitors each year . 78 ,, an sh , .r j,. H A , Kit! VF-l1.,Hl'l ang!-W5 fi ' , V ll Pl M in Guests enjoy the Low German meal which was served at the dining hall by Mennonites from several Low German communities . 47 One of the most popular attractions of the fes- tival was the hog-butchering, held near Kidron Kottage. r-H ev --vw-Q rm- F. H .-. A., AA ni, : f mennonile folk festival attracts large crowds The fourth annual Mennonite Folk Festival took place on the Bethel campus Marc h 23-24. The main feature of the Festival was the presentation of Strength in Weakness, by Postma. lt is a story of the early life and conver- sion of Menno Simons. Kaffee Klatches, hog butchering, quilting andweaving, and demonstration o f old machinery were also featured. A s u p p e r of traditional Low German dishes W a s served at the dining hall. The Low German play, Utw dre, was pre- aun sented in the college Chapel. ,. in gm F. ,M 4 . Fai? '4 pm f -f i W ell' ,AFM -4 Y V x 1 ' L lg 0 H' r' 'aa ff -'Q ,.r .- - i 'f fi Y ff m 54 f' I ' ' Q . A5 E I 4 V . 1 -fm, 1' 295. ff -lil ,-I, .- I 3 '-1 Mn fu ,L W L. ,, ,Nl I V W .I I 1 bi, cr . 'AP 1 . .gi me .. 4 .f V I F' L A W A 1 - l O 4. J :I A 4 : dl H 3 tymgf 5 M. il A 1 f ' ' .I uv ' ' ' ,Q .4 .fn- nl. , 'if fy BY afasml ,t 5 4 . 'gt F , fi s M . 'wx . V ftp, ' , , ati sn. UE W' 1 i R tr ET fi! if si ' 'av I ji football threshers post winning season On the gridiron the Bethel Threshers emerged with a winning season, posting a record of four wins against four losses and one tie. The squad of thirty-nine, void of any flashy stars, managed to be in every ball game becau s e of superb attitude and team work, which they dis- played throughout the season. Games of the 1960 season that will always be remembered a re the Kansas Wesleyan game in which Bethel sparked both offensively and defensively to win handily 33-6 ina game that was billed as Statistics Bethel Opp. First Downs 116 83 Yards Rushing Yards Passing Passes Attempted Passes Completed 53 37 1679 1378 502 670 120 109 82 5 a toss -up, the rain-marred Homecoming Southwestern game that ended in a muddy 0-0 standstill, and the fast and furious fourth quarter of the McPherson game in which Bethel overcame a 0-7 deficit to win 14-7. Four members of the team received recognition in the Kansas Conference. Franz ie Loepp fco -captainj, Tom Schrag Qco-captainl, Randall Goering, and Jim Penner received honorable mention in all -conference selections. Coaches Buhr and Buller review strategy during practice session. 1960 FOOTBALL SQUAD, BACK ROW: George Buhr, Assist- ant Coach, Howard Schrnidt, Stanley Reimer, jim Penner, Nick Stucky, Terry Schrag, Larry Raney, Jerold Schwartz, Kenneth Klufa, Wes Buller, Coach. THIRD ROW: Frank Nachtigal, Managerg Randall Goering, John Zerger, Clifford Schmidt, Darrell Krehbiel, Ivan Welty, Jerald Leisy, Monte Zerger, John Preheim, Fred Penner, Jim Dunn. SECOND ROW: LeonSchmidt, Manager, Myron Buller, Arlin Ratzlaff, Royce Enns, Max Graber, Leroy Schmidt, Franzie Loepp, Tom Schrag, Jim Stucky, Leland Albrecht, Mel Goering, LaVon Ediger, Manager. FRONT ROW: Ken Dunn, Delvyn Epp, john Bevan, Kenneth Graber, Maurice Ediger, John Regier, Jim P. Stucky, Ben Stucky, Jay Stauffer, Ted Pankratz, Ezra Yoder. final conjwence standzngs Team Won Lost Tied Ottawa 9 Baker 8 Southwestern 5 College of Emporia 5 BETHEL 4 Kansas Wesleyan 4 Bethany 4 83 McPherson 1 Friends 1 Sterling l Game Scores Bethel 6 Baker Bethel 0 Ottawa Bethel 34 Friends Bethel 25 Sterling Bethel 7 C. of E. Bethel 33 Kansas Wesleyan Bethel 0 Southwestern Bethel 14 McPherson Bethel 14 Bethany E' Tom Schrag, No. 27, runs around the end to escape the pur- suit of two McPherson opponents. the zfhreshers in action A McPherson Bulldog shows an expression of sxuprise as an unidentified Bethel player rushes in to tackle him from be- hind. 1 1al1ln.m!17 l12m1l With the protection of Arlin Ratzlaff, No. 53, and FredPermer, No. 33, Tom Schrag once again carries the pigskin as he finds the field open before him. Tom Schrag escapes the reach of a K-Wesleyan player as he carries for a gain. Jim Penner, No. 34, sprawls onthe turf after attempting a block. Terry Schrag, No. 28, struggles to withstand the efforts of a Baker tackler to bring him down. Larry Raney sidesteps two opponents as he breaks into the K-Wesleyan secondary for another long yardage gain. 85 34, V V , ' ' ,4 ,I L- Qa',-aff'fa'f- :,,1f,- 4 -Q fq,f5'2g , - big, , X f .l , , , .. . , . ., . . V pw: .- - ,, .',..' 'J 1 ..-A v . . ,. H. -11 - : 11 v W . .,-,J--.-I A,- ,W y 'Fi'-fem -- -A. r- Q if 1 ..' ,V-gr .t,. 'iv Q- H , . , ni 1 , ,. ,, K . , ,,,: ,- I r ,H-n,,,,LA , Q up 'au-V -ali,-'lvl M -V., i J . 1 , If. . U.. up -5 ,X X -5' '.1 ,. , - V 1 V , :spy--W,-HAMA-J,,,Y,-,l.m1J4g.. A 4 J.,-ir, -3 W.: Q , w . 'K N F X . 1 .A t 7-il aa: l 1 I 0 q'q V n i siii l homecoming dorothy harms fezlgns over homecoming j?stz'vz'tz'es Miss Dorothy I-I a r m s was crowned 1960 Football Queen, and reigned over all the traditional Homecoming festivi- ties. She was crowned in Co ronation Chapel by co -captain Franzie Loepp. Her attendants were joy Ann Dirks, escorted 86 305' by Tom Schrag, and L o is Kopper, es - corted by Myron Buller. The Homecom- ing festivities included t h e Coronation Chapel, the Alumni Tea, the parade prior to the game, and the Homecoming Banquet. The Homecoming queen was crowned in Coronation Chapel held in Memorial Hall Friday morning. Joe Schrag, Stuco President, presented a bouquet of roses to the queen. ABOVE: Queen, attendants, and junior royalty relax just before the opening kick-off. BELOW: Members of the homecoming roy- alty pause after ascending to the throne. Queen Dorothy enjoys her ride through the parade along with Suone Unr uh , crown bearer, and G r e g Regier, football bearer. .1 1 n--4 4, if lx 4 ,'-. , ' - -a ' EERNEY S-J n if KU 'i . ,iii floats add beauty to homecoming parade The gaily-decorated fl o a t s prepared by the various college dormitories added b e a u t y and h u rn o r to the Homecoming pa- rade. The winning fl o at , ICA Victor, was enter ed by Car- negie. Women's Residence Hall W 0 n second pl a c e with Skunk 'Em. The very original No Sweat, Roll-On to Victory was submitted by White House, and GoeringHall main floor received honorable mention for the color- ful Pullin' in a Victory. The judges' wdecision Wa s based on craftsmanship, originality, and appearance. ' mfg, .mir Q T1 1 5 -2 BASKETBALL SQUAD MEMBERS , TOP ROW: Clifford Schmidt, Manager, Larry Raney, Kenneth Peters, Kenneth Graber, Ray Gene Krause, Bruce Kaufman, Kerry Krehbiel, Stanley Bartel. SECOND ROW: Wes Bullet, Assistant Coach, Robert Pankratz, Ken Franz, bqskefball '60-'61 season is stag: cy' ups and downs The 1960-61 basketball season packed with many exciting moments, is a story of ups and downs. The two three- game winning streaks did not supply the necessary momentum for a winning sea- son. The Threshers placed eighth inthe conference, winning five contests and losing th i rt een . Overall, the season record ended with nine v ic t 0 r i e s and seventeen defeats. The highlight of the season was the performance of senior Don Wedel, This marked the third consecutive season that Don won all -conference recognition. In his final year of action, Don scored 541 points. He hit for 4573, of his field goal attempts and 852 of his free throws. I-Ie scoreda total of 1, 290 points during his college c areer for an average of 16.3 points per game. John Zerger, George Wiedemann, Frank Gaeddert, Frank Nachtigal, Gerald Schwartz, George Buhr, Coach. FRONT ROW: Robert Wedel, Tom Schrag, Don Wedel, Franzie Loepp, Mel Goering. 1960-61 BASKETBALL SCORES BC OPP 44 Northwestern fOk1a. j 86 67 Bethany . 70 63 Tabor 59 50 Sterling ' 58 65 Ottawa 71 56 College of Emporia 68 59 Bethany ' 66 96 Goshen 70- 72 Phillips 88 79 McPherson 95 89 Kansas Wesleyan 74 81 Friends 79 78 Baker 74 55 Kansas Wesleyan 77 51 Southwestern 64 71 Tabor 58 72 McPherson 67 61 Sterling 57 52 Ottawa 74 54 College of Emporia 61 46 Bethany 83 64 Friends 65 73 Baker 78 64 Kansas Wesleyan 53 60 Southwestern 77 77 McPherson 93 89 V ,W eee-ee ee, . - . MW-, e 1 1 I 1 , I, BASKETBALL LETTERMEN: Kenneth Franz, Frank Nachtigal, Robert Pankratz, Tom Schrag, Jerold Gaeddert, Melvin Goering, Franzie Loepp, Franklin Schwartz. Don Wedel, all-conference selectiong Robert Wedel, George Wiedemann, John Zerger. Q3 Don Wedel, high-scoring ace of the Thresher squad, shoots a jump shot. Franzie Loepp fires from the side as Frank Gaeddert waits to capture the rebound. 1961 TRACK SQUAD MEMBERS, BACK ROW: Wes Buller, Coach, Larry Bartel, Trainer, Larry Goertzen, Ken G r ab e r , Ken Dunn, Randall Goering, Bill Brown. Brian Schrag, Ioe Schrag, track track squad turns in enviable season In Track and Field, the Bethel thin- clads placed fifth in the highly competi- tive Kansas Conference, finishingbehind Southwestern, Ottawa, Baker, and Col- lege of Emporia . The team had some out- standing performers in its three senior co-captains: Mel Goering, conference champion high jumper for four consec- utive years, joe Schrag, c o nf e r enc e champion miler for t h r e e consecutive years , and Max Graber, conference champion quarter miler in 1960, runner- up in 1959, and third in 1961 while set- ting a new school record. Other outstanding performers on the Ezra Yoder, Mel Goering, Ben Voran, Trainer. FRONT ROW: Stanley R e im e r , Max Graber, Don Enns, Larry Raney, Clifford Schmidt, Terry Schrag, Bob Waltner, Bob Pankratz. squad were freshman Bob Waltner, who won first place in the conference meet in the pole vault, and David jan-z en , a junior who consistently threw the javelin at 200 feet. Lettermen for the 1961 s eas on in- clude Bill Brown, Don Enns, Mel Goering, Randall Goering, Larry Goertzen, Max Graber, David janzen, Bob Pankratz, Larry Raney, Clifford Schmidt, Brian Schrag, joe Schrag, Terry Schrag, and Bob Waltner. Prospects are bright for future years, as seven of these letter- men are freshmen. 1961 BETHEL TRACK MEET RESULTS 92 Friends 39 Southwestern 95 Dual Bethel Dual Bethel 36 Quadrangular Bethel 82 Quadrangular Bethel Dual Bethel Triangular Bethel Triangular Bethel Ottawa Relays Bethel Southwestern Relays Conference Bethel Bethel McPherson 50, Friends 48, Tabor 40 Friends 53 112, Bethany 48 112, K. Wes. 23 Baker 84 Ottawa 82 112, College of Emporia 34 112 87 112 Friends 43 112, Sterling 31 4th MAX GRABER, dash runner BOB WALTNER, pole vaulter bethel thinclads establish foe new school records The following squad members established new school track and field records during the 1961 season: Mel Goering High Jump 6' 3 1!2 1959 Joe Schrag Mile Run 4.27.2 ' 1961 Max Graber 440 yard dash 49. 8 1961 880 yard run 1.59.2 ' 1961 David janzen Javelin 204' 11 1961 Bob Waltner Pole Vault 12' 4 1961 'National NAIA Track Meet, Souix Falls, South Dakota MEL GOERING, high jump DAVID JANZEN, Javelin JOE SCHRAG, mile run l 4 I 93 1-5 7 'P+ X , 4 ' 1 I , . . fp. A ., ,UI W . -45 xii-H A Yi, TTL - A l : .i- 1m- .- Huh - . x , , , Qu' nv 2, -A -1, .1 fi V: ' ..'.', ' 'W' -:F-si -Vi 1 . Y, -13 G, .,,,:,w ,- - w3l,er,,' ' gf 'I-' 'U-. , r-. 1 5,11 'nik a ,. ., J . H 1 1 I kr 1. . 1 4 , , 'Lf 4- Y' ' '5 'E . 3 Y ' ii lilallll M 4 ,E if I ' A l sf ' F, el ' gg ' - , 5' ..,, 1, 'fb' 7: t ' x ' Io- -X N-9 Q 1 'lv T, I f , z ., Q -. 1 1 ' .. 19 1 lay' ., fx 3, 6 - ' ,, l ta' . ar- 3 iw! Q' lf: 1'-,-. ' . ' +4 , U, , r fn . .1 J. Q: in X , 1961 TENNIS SQUAD MEMBERS:George Buhr, Coachg Lewis Schmidt, Anthony Epp, Charles Claassen, Captaing Franklin Nachtigal, Chester Nachtigal, Ken Preheim, Osamu Kawasaki. tennis The 1961 varsity tennis season in- cluded three wins and three losses in dual matches, a loss in a triangular match with F r i e n d s and Sterling, and fourth pl a c e in the Ta b o r Invitational Eight Team Tournament. C h a rl e s Claassen and F r a n kl in Nachtigal were crowned doubles champions in the Tabor Invita- tional. In the KCAC tournament, Chester Nachtigal reached the semi-finals . 1961 Tennis Results Q0 If The varsity golf team won its opening match with Bethany, and then lost the four following dual matches . Inthe KCAC tournament the team placed eighth. 1961 SEASON RECORD Bethel 3 Bethany 1 Bethel 3 1 12 Friends 8 112 Bethel 1 S outhwestern 1 7 Bethel 4 1 X2 Bethany 7 1! 2 Bethel 1 S outhwestern 1 1 A, Bethel 3 Friends 6 Bethel 5 McPherson 4 Bethel 6 Sterling 3 Bethel 2 McPherson 7 Bethel 9 Kansas Wesleyan 0 Bethel 0 Tabor 9 Bethel 3 Friends 11, Sterling ll Individual Records Won Lost Charles Claassen 5 4 Franklin Nachtigal 4 5 Chester Nachtigal 6 8 Tony Epp l O Osamu Kawasaki 4 7 Lewis Schmidt 3 6 Kenneth Preheim 2 3 1961 GOLF TEAM MEMBERS: Donovan Unruh, Max Voran, Lynn Simpson, Loren Newberry, Clark Graber. GIRLS' BAS KETBALL TEAM: Vesta Wicke, Buller, Kathleen Goering, Joy Ann Dirks, Lorene Naomi Unruh, Eva Hiebert, Joan Thiessen, Mary Dick, Georgianna Sheffler, Evelyn Wiebe, Judy Ann Heidebrecht, LaVer1e Dirks, Coach Wes Schmidt. NOT PICTURED: Ehior Troyer. girls' basketball team completes thim' consecutive undejeated season The Bethel College Girls' Basketball team, coached by Wesley Buller, com- pleted its third consecutive undefeated season. Stars on the team were forwards Lorene Dick and LaVerle Dirks, both of Whom compiled scoring averages of more than twenty points per game. La.Verle Dirks, high-scoring ace withmore than twenty points per game , gets off one of her jump shots. Lorene Dick shoots for a basket with hex sure-fire right-handed jump shot. VI' 4 N , V , J'-I 4, w ' 1 . 1 QL V, W In I V ' 'T ' , , , ,l W AY N ., H ff,- , . , , :F .1 QR JR , iq :I , M. . .,. .5 L 2 af, If-Lv . -.. ' ' ., A., . H35 -ina, lu 1. ' X., HI! r 71, M , . Lf 'I 'I B I , I gl . Ig.. W 11, r l' ',1 L xr -: ' F iw. M gm ' -' f':- Nm? '- -I . 1 ,, ' v -'- ': W- ,W 1 4 n I tj . I V y . I vw -ful ' M 1 ni U NF 1' ' :HM ' N X , L. I r .Or V- : ' Q Q, :MI- I V , A U 1 .I ' l ', fm .- gw g 1 , ,MN J T1 -f n ,I v LL. X -,MW v Tj if -1, .3 f .v,-,953 .. gif :rg -4 , , 1. sw -Q HF I 'l1':': 1 ft ' l .- 41- ' vs f - 1 '.r 1 W -ig., .' ,- ll -W-I5 ' H. . , --!.!.1u- . I , 11 .4 4 Il 1 u 25: V I lu-.wirmrl-gin A 11 -as-v1 '- g.f' - . , mf. , - is-I , .. h n v ,ik-iw . ' .Y + . W -ev ,ff ,ny .rw-1 1, f -, 3?-ff Q ' n - ' .I .' ' -A gf'-as-: ' 4, ,nil-'I in 5' Y :.d'lu?'4 I I 1 '. 'fx r , u --:WZ NV- 1-C -L K 1.. as 4' Q '-fCf'Q': '- '53 f , '- - df-1-fig' - : -f 1 1 ' 'W-ff A . . EW V ' .-,A'fQ3,3'q12'i'QiTf11:2'gn ' ,Mx Y ,,--.gif ' .Ji 'I ?,xt-lille?-:Lc:ig'.:-l .HS '1 x?-:vw A .+:'-,-c- ' . - ,fl 4- Q :ffl-,. 1-v..g'p,LQ ' 'rat .1 .' jf- ' ' .J Y'-'pf-gin, ., -vm P-.2--' 5 l --'- fl'-ff','L:, ,whf'Iv,4.f1w1g-52, af- A- I' - 1f 1:fh5f1 fA'.2'P:f f'f :,i -' w mi-1,12 -5 'f.'M -ESL: ' ,u,: . 17-...g , L 'X-,gig , ,EV 13: :-x,iS,3,,j-Lqrpfk 41- A .Z -' F 125 I 5 -J' 1 13971-SSS'-ii .- j ' 'R T ,I Yjlifis- f A r ', 1 --A 'A 1 '--AE y'.. ' Ligpgf, :L , , rr-X-f'1,,: :glC' ' ' 4:22 . ,, , ff. , :,.4::g ,JL 5-4 f.f1La.-'??2':iQ- ? fy.-H 1?'is!. y 41 :ff . g WYE'-'i .L-el - ' 'li1:5 4-qs' .. A r t.'i. sc,-,, , J,-T?-gl? fl' . 'Cv-14. - 52: ' ' 5 ' L F me 2 ,.,.,. ML' STUDENT COUNCIL MEMBERS, STANDING: Lynn Simpson, Priscilla Dick, Lois Heidebrecht, Ezra Yoder, Lorene Dick, David Ianzen, George Dick. SEATED: Evelyn Claassen, Secretaryg Joleen Krehbiel, Joe Schrag, Presidentg Franzie Loepp, Vice-President. student court The Student Court is an organi- z a tio n comprised of eight students Who are elected by the student body. The Court has a two -fold responsi- bility: one to the group, and one to the individual. In its responsibility to the group, it is the duty of the Court to interpret and enforce the Student Body Constitution and rules and regulations of Bethel College. It may also recom- mendlegislation to the Student Coun- cil. In its responsibility to the indi- vidual, the Court must insure justice, and must attempt to initiate such re- demptive procedures as seem neces- sary for full reinstatement of the in- dividual as a member of college society. student council completes active year The Student Council, the gov- erning agency of the student body, consists of tw elv e students and three faculty sponsors . It attempts to promote democratic living, to co -operate with the faculty in the solution of common problems , and strives to foster dynamic school spirit. The Council sponsors ,student f o r u m s and convocations, con- ducts all student elections, is in charge of student-publications , and sponsors various all-school func - tions such as the annual Fall Mixer, Freshman Initiation, Homecoming, and WorkDay. The major project ofthe Council is the promotion of the Wuppertal ex- change program. An innovation this year was the Kaffee Klatsches held on Tuesdays during Chapel period. STUDENT COURT MEMBERS, S TANDING: Duane Schroeder, Nick Stucky, Brian Schrag, Lynette Goering, Franzie Loepp. SEATED: Betty P a n k r a t z , Secretaryg Menno Froese, Chairman. AK 'X women's governing council The Wpmen's Governing Council is a governing body subsidiary to the Student Court. Members are elected by and represent ,all women students. The Council helps to establish a real family atmosphere and strives to in- stigate high s t an d a r d s of conduct amongall Bethel girls. The organiza- tion sponsors several all-girls' par- ties throughout the course of the year. The Council was in charge of deco- rating the Christmas tree in the Stu- dent Union Room. RECREATION COUNCIL MEMBERS: Vesta Wicke, Harold Loewen, Chairmang LaVerle Dirks. NOT PICTURED: Larry Franz. WOMEN'S GOVERNING COUNCIL MEMBERS, STANDING: Beth Unruh, Judy Graber, Carol Hege, Kathy Dick, Vice-Presidentg Priscilla Selzer, Esther Toews, Margaret Regehr. SEATED: Betty Pankratz, Lorene Dick, President, Lois Claassen, Katie Penner, Secretary. NOT PICTURED: Lois Peters. recreation council plans social activities jbr bethelfamzbz The Recreation Council, spon- sored by the Student Council, is re- sponsible for providing recreational facilities and s p 0 n s 0 r in g social functions for the benefit and enjoy- ment of the Bethel family. The Coun- cil showed several movies this year, sponsored several highly successful evenings of folk games and square dancing, and pu rc ha s ed golfing equipment for the use of interested students. The Council also super- vised the intramural sports program in conjunction with the Athletic De- partment. gil' fl? 3 N I, i 'I ls! V LETTER CLUB MEMBERS , BACK ROW: Tom Schrag, Nick Stucky, Ken Preheim, Jim Stucky, Jim Penner, George Wiedemann. THIRD ROW: Arlin Ratzlaff, Howard S chrn i dt , Max Graber, Vice-Presidentg David Wiebe, Joe Schrag, Clifford Schmidt, Franzie Loepp, President. SECOND ROW: letter club The Letter Club is an honorary or- gan iz a tion composed of Winners of school letters in intercollegiate compe- tition. The primary purpose ofthe club is to promote high standards in athletics. Th-is year the club again sponsored the Buffalo Barbecue, for the purpose of ac- quainting the community, as well as high boost school spirit The Cheerleaders, spon- sored jointly by the S t u d en t Council and the Athletic De- partment, are elected by the student body at the beginning of the school ye ar . Leading the songs of victory and offer- ing moral support in times of defeat, they led the chants of the student body at all football and basketball games . They Worked in cooperation with the newly-formed Pep Club to boost school spirit and to im- p r o V e the cheering section. They also sponsored several p e p assemblies d u r in g the year. . in Clam-kGraber, Terry Schrag, Secretarygjohn Bevan, Charles Claassen, Larry Goertzen, Chester Nach- tigal, FrankNachtigal. FRONT ROW: George Buhr, Faculty Sponsorg Mel Goering, Lewis Schmidt, Ted Pankratz, Myron Buller, Paul Linscheid, Ken Klufa, Wes Buller, Faculty Sponsor. school athletes and coaches of the Cen- tral Kansas area, with the athletic pro- gram at Bethel. The featured speaker for this occasion was Bill Forester of the Greenbay Packers. New members are initiated into the Letter Club during spring quarter. C I d CHEERLEADERS: Joann Krehbiel, John Janzen, Barbara Epp, Head Cheerleaderg Ron Goossen, Leann Krehbiel. 100 CIRCLE K MEMBERS: Paul Linscheid, Secretary, Richard Hofer, Paul Kuehny, Vice-President, Ronald I-Iatchett, Clark Wiebe, Randall Harmison, Marlyn Fast, Presidentg Tom Kruse, Lynn Simpson, Ivan Regier, Stanley Schmidt, Treasurer, Ken Unruh. pep club The pep club, a newly formed organization this year, was introduced to boost school spirit and to enhance the cheer- ing section at athletic- events. The club, comprised of fifty members., chose grey bulky knit sweaters and black trousers and skirts for their uniforms. Mem - bers sat in a specially desig- nated s ection at all games to form a more compact and unified cheering section. circle k serves the communizfy The Circle Kis a boy's organization which offers the services of its members for V a r io u s on and off-campus functions. Sponsored by the Kiwanis, membership is open to any interested men stu- dents. Members of the club. served at the gates at all home football and basketball games , conducted a car check at the beginning of the year, and policed the campus on Hallo- weennight. A special project this year was the selling of Bethel College Thresher pins to faculty and students. PEP CLUB OFFICERS:Ann Preheim, Vice-President, Ivan Regier, President, Evelyn Claassen, Secretary-Treasurer. philosophy The Philosophy Club, newly organ- ized this year, is a departmental club the function of which is to enhance and supplement the knowledge which the stu- dent gains from the classroom. Mem- bership is open to any interested students RADIO CLUB MEMBERS: Stanley Schmidt, Secretaryg Paul DuBois, PHILOSOPHY CLUB MEMBERS, STANDING: Donovan Unruh, Menno Froese, Alfred Habegger, David Ianzen, Duane Friesen, John Janzen. SEATED: Mel Goering, Presidentg George Dick, Vice-Presidentg Lucia Galloway, Secretary-Treasurerg Dr. Harold Gross, Advisor. club who have completed at least ten quarter hours of philosophy courses. The club meets together bi-weekly to read and discuss various philosophical writings. Al fr e d No r th Whitehead's Modes of Thoughtwas studied by the club this yea? radio club Presidentg Howard Schrag, Vice-Presidentg Darrell Zielke, Publicity Chairman. makes plans jar campus radio station The purpose of the Radio Club is to promote an inter- est in radio and television. l Mostofthe members are licensed ham radio opera- tors. The main project of the club this year has been the setting up of equipment and planning for the new campus radio station which will go in operation next year. 102 ,, 1 BETA KAPPA MEMBERS, STANDING: Barbara Epp, Carol Dyck, Rosalind Enns, Lois Epp, Eve1ynWiebe, Carol Hege, Dilores Re mp el, Joleen Krehbiel, Vesta Wicke, Nadine Nikkei, Katie Penner, Betty beta kappas render dedicated service Beta Kappa functions as a service or- ganization for on and off-campus school activities. Members served as usher- ettes for the Memorial Hall Series, for all fine arts productions, and for bas- ketball games. The organization also at- tempts to promote loyalty and enthusiasm alpha psi omega Alpha Psi Omega is the national hon- orary dramatics fraternity. To qualify for membership, students must acquire a certain number of points from partici- pation in Bethel College dramatic pro- ductions. The organization also endeav- ors to cultivate appreciation for the best in drama. New members are initiated into the o r gan iz ation during spring quarter. Pankratz, Myrtle Funk, Joan Claassen, Mis. Vernon Neufeld, Advisor, Lois Peters. SEATED: KathyDick, Tre asurerg Edna Ruth Kemp , President, Amanda Epp, Vice-President, Lorene Dick, Secretary. among all Bethel students. Each year the money earned from selling refreshments at football games is used to finance a pro - ject which can be enjoyed by the Bethel family. This year, an attractive and use- ful faculty directory was conveniently placed in the Administration Building. ALPHA PSI OMEGA MEMBERS, BACK ROW: Arlo Kasper, Vice-President, Ron Friesen, Ed Ummel. FRONT ROW: Helen Voth, Dianne Waltner, Presi- dent. NOT PICTURED: Janice Waltner, Secretary- Treasurerg Harvey Harms, Reporter. fYfY 'Donovan Unruh, Harvey Harms, President, Dorothy Harms, Program Com- mittee, Constance Epp, Martha Sellers, Anna Marie Peter- son, Judy Graber. SEATED: Alice Loewen, Adviser, Eleanor Hiebert, Program Committee. NOT. PICTURED: Marilyn Mierau, Secretary-Treasurer. ORGAN MEMBERS , S T industrial arts club The Industrial Arts Club is adepart- mental organization open to any boys who are interested in the applied arts. It is organized to create interest in its specific field and in related fields. Dem- onstrations by members of the club and field trips to various points of' interest were includedin the club's activities for the year. INDUSTRLAL ARTS CLUB MEMBERS: Stanley Schmidt, De- Layne Graber, ArlinRa1zlaff, LaVonEdiger, Leland Albrecht, Robert Wiebe, Harold Kroeker, Secretary-Treasurer, Ken- neth Dunn, Marlo Ortman, President. NOT PICTURED: Jim Stucky, Vice-President. organ guild The Organ Guild is a depart- mental organization open to all music students studying organ. The purpose of the club is to en- hance interest in o rgan music by playing and by sponsoring guest performances. The club also strives to promote more in- tense individual s t u dy through group participation and inspira- tion. I. R. C. MEMBERS, STANDING:Elias Mina, Helmut Bertrand, Ken Hoch- stedler, John Opiyo, Demetrios Xouris, Otto Friesen, Enos Sibandag Choun-Yong Rhee , Ezra Yoder, Athanasios Matsoukis, Osamu Kaw- asaki, Daniel Shin. SEATED: Mar- garet Regehr, Esther Toews , Ted Doherty, P r e s id e nt 5 Ursula Schu- macher, Secretary-Treasurer, Dilores Rempel, Erwin Boschmann, Vice- President. biology club The Biology Club aims to pro- vide interesting and stimulating programs in the various fields of biological science. -It also conveys information on new developments and vocational opportunities which are available. Me rn be r s of the club frequently present seminars and findings from individual re- search projects. Membership is open to any students interested in the field of biology. BIOLOGY CLUB MEMBERS: Ralph Kauffman, Vice -President, Dale Horst, President, James Unruh, Rosie Horst, John Lenz, Adviser, Bertha Bartel, Darlene Nusz, Gladys Goertzen. NOT PICTURED: Ken Neufeld, Secretary-Treasurer. international relations The International Relations Club is comprised of students from all over the World. With a large number of foreign students on our c am pu s , the club was very active this year. In attempting to promote better understanding among dif- ferent peoples of the world, the club spon- sors panel discussions, films, guest speakers, and various other programs. The group meets bi-weekly for fun, fel- lowship, and a learning experience. home economics club Open to all girls interested in homemaking, the Home Eco- nomics Club plans m onthly meetings to introduce members to the many phases of home economics. The club is affiliated with the Kansas Home Econom- ics Association and the Amer- ican Home Economics Associa- tion. One of the highlights of this year's activities was the Spring Style Revue. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB MEMBERS, STANDING. Carrie Ediger, Karen Kroeker, Dorothy Friesen, Beverly Koehn, Kathleen Koop, Eve1ynWiebe, Sharon Kroeker, MaryPenner, Carol Dyck, Darlene Nusz, LaVerna Penner, Alene Wiebe, Lenore Blair, Karen Voth, Eileen Jantzen, Verda Epp, SFATED: Edna Ruth K e m p , Vice- President, Nadine Nikkei, Treasurer, Delora Decker, Secretary, Vesta Wicke, President, Carol Young, Publicity Chairman, Erna Schmidt, Adviser. student christian fellowship exerts christian influence The Student Christian Fel- lowship is the one over -all stu - d ent organization concerned with the promotion of Christian faith and life on the c o lle ge campus as well as in the com- munity. It seeks to deepen the spiritual life of students, to promote wholesome Christian fellowship, to propagate the principles of Christian love and peace, and to develop a pro- gram of Christian witnessing and service. CHURCH WORKER'S FELLOWSHIP MEMBERS , STANDING: Donovan Unruh, Naomi Reimer, Marvin Theiszen, Lawrence Hart. SEATED: Hulda Bauman, Secretary-Treasurerg S ara Pen- ner, Cornie Rernpel, President. STUDENT CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CABINET, STANDING: Ann Preheim, Duane Friesen, Ivan Regier, Katie Penner, Ken Lohrentz. SEATED: Louise Friesen, Carolyn Friesen, Nola Ianzen, Kay Arm Schrag, Secretaryg Joan Claassen, Vice-Presidentg Evelyn Claassen, John janzen, President. NOT PICTURED: Marlo Ortman, Treasurer. church worker's fellowship The Church Worker's Fellowship is a religious organization, membership to which is open to anyone planning to enter some phase of full-time Christian s ervic e . Its function is to offer information concerning service opportunities and to be a source-of inspiration to its members. It operates in conjunction with the Western District Youth F el l o w s h i p and the General Conference Board of Christian Service. phi beta lambda i The Phi Beta Lambda organization is the Bethel College chapter of the Future Business Leaders of America. It offers professional services and information, as well as s o cial opportunities, to its members. Membership is o pen to any students majoring in E c o n o m ic s and Business Administration. The organiza- tion sent representatives to the FBLA convention held at Emporia in April. 'I06 TI-IRESHER STAFF, STANDING: Priscilla Dick, Don Goertzen, Photographer, Rosemary Ummel, Betty Pankratz, Copy Editor. SEATED: Lois Peters, Assistant Editor, Ken Lohrentz, Editor-in- Chief. student national education association The Student National Education Asso- ciation is an organization open to all stu- dents Who plan to enter the profession of teaching in public schools . Sponsored by the National Education Association, the S.N.E.A. offers information about the teaching profession to prospective teach- ers, and strives to promote high ideals among its members. student publications The Thresher, the Bethel Col- lege yearbook, is produced every year by interested and qualified students under the direction of the Journalism Department and the Student Council. Many hours must be sacrificed by the students con- nected With the publication. The Collegian, the Bethel C o l le g e student newspaper, is printed bi-monthly by the Colle- gian staff. The staff included co- editors Dianne Waltner, Anthony Epp, and Joyce Schmidt, and Nick Stucky, business manager. S.N.E.A. OFFICERS: Jim Stucky, Vice-President, Gladwin Bartel, Presidentg Amanda Epp, Secretary- Tre asurer. PHI BETA LAMBDA MEMBERS, STANDING: JoAnn Doerksen, Leann Kre hbi e 1 , Lois Schrag, Joann Krehbiel, Loretta Martens, Carrie Ediger, Judy Schmidt, Naomi Unruh, Curtis Hartenberger, Vice -President: Ralph Frey, Verlin Harder, Aaron Mal-tin, SEATEDg Ed Ummel, Treasurer, Mrs. Unrau, Adviserg Ted Doherty, Presidentg Jane Krehbiel, S ecretary. FIT - 1 ikii' 'A V, ,-, Q n 'J .. , Y' 9 ' - -'f 5- K' -.V L , ,H Y Q ' ..- lr' 'J' n ,f 'Y U 4,-N: . 1 - W , dw, . Q f .J ,u. ,Fyf '- ' . -..4'. -3- 1 'S' lf ' f - X 7 f' '23-. A A K' ' I - q , . w I J. ' fri-1 I . 'Th . 1 4 ' f 4 ' 5' lx I . v ' A 4 ' 1 - 5 ' . - 4 . -Ks a 'g ff! 17 inf! . fl! 5-QM- ,n f-,P Y,-A f , V F, xv ,1 dl .m , X L D x ' V, I .J ' ' ' ' , 1 , v - ,, .-.-.....i ,' U I 1 ' n . 4 'un r a.f'l' 1-H' X-' nu i - ,, ,-'1'Wf++ p-b.m.,,'t.,s-- . 'FLW 9- ii-uf 1 All -1 - -x -I - . ,e- ' ' ' '. Lq - Z,-if .Y A- f 4, , , , ,iw - fr . 7 . ' 'sy in gf-?..j'b,:,.. QM. 'Cv ,, V1 1. uf, 'af' C' . 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'- ,aff tb ff' 1 ag r 1,0 , to 5- o - I A, f .M fr va' ' ,-vw. 7, IIHW' nel Katie Penner confers with Hartzel Schmidt about paying her bills as she completes her enrollment for fall quarter. U. Q qw-B . , Dr. Gross lectures to a group of seniors in Basic Christian Convictions class. Students take notes on T. S. Eliot in Literary Masterpieces , taught by Miss Becker. student life students enroll, attend classes, and stuajf Vernon Goering diligently studies in preparation for final exams. student life students enjgf particzfaation in Stuco actzbities -,.., ,,k,4:, I -- s During spring quarter, the Student Council sponsored several Kaffee Klatsches during chapel p e rio d on Tuesdays in the Student Union Room. The topics for discussion were usually in the realm of international affairs. Myron Buller places his ballot into the ballot box during the Student Council election. Students file out of Memorial Hall to return to classes after attending Coronation Chapel. The Home- coming festivities were another of the many respon- sibilities of the Stuco this year. The Wuppertal fund was boosted by the Stuco- sponsored Auction Sale held February 1. Items on auction included back rubs, car washes, hair cuts, and faculty suppers. ' ' 1: 'Q' 'e v we ,. 'V V 1 -. .41 tiff vm'-wg V I Mani' nl .. WM. x4 ,,-:W inlnl'-. ', It . H... ,.,-ff' , A H 'Um .u 'gl XPf.43I.f- --fx' I . r Hg! ,gl 'tfllxllbm .. ,H 'IU I . , Um ' - J 4 ' ,rn .4 Lx.: 1an.sa.. . 117 -1 1. student life dzhing hall mrs gay andjkstive varieties lil? Ninn' gl A Centennial supper was sponsored by the dining hall committee on May 22. A covered wagon was erected in the Student Union to depict the pioneer atmosphere. NSE' y iff' ,... Q, Centennial garb is displayed by Ivan Regier, ,B is K7 Anne Preheim, and Menno Froese. J, X - ' QR. Students were guests of the faculty in the annual . . Christmas banquet whichwas held December 14. 3:3:iegN3E?oggrZ?ihgVgio:3 ragga Egg Faculty members served as hosts at each table, Leap Week February 16 g g and were responsible for c e n t e rp i e c e deco- ' ' rations. Several Bethel couples sit around the campfire during an outing at Wilson Lake. student life students find time jer leisure and recreation A popular spot for relaxation and enjoyment is the TV room in the Student Lounge. Students and faculty m e m b e rs participate in folk games during an evening of entertainment and recreation March 10. Lorene Dick sets the pace in the 60-yard low hurdles. student life students compete in inter-class track meet, enjcyf all-school picnic may 23 t Jim Penner, Kenny Franz, and Tom Schrag clear their hurdles in close succession in the boys' 60- yard low hurdles. Students file past the food table during the all-school picnic held in Kidron Park. 1- ,. ik! -1 - 4 Marilyn Strausz cops another first for the frosh as she springs a mighty leap to win the girls' broadjump event. w- Jmimggnqh.. 4 gn 1- --ff siudent life campus improvement day - a day QP labor, un, andpllowshzp Students and staff m e mbe rs beautify the campus by raking leaves along the track. 'I ,H - I J, T, Q., ,Z , -V 1 fi To top the day off, a square dance was held in the street in front of the Ad. Building. One of the many projects for work daywas the sawing down of trees in Kidron Park. Paul Unruh operates the chain saw as Richard Hirschler and Paul Linscheid look on. NA. . . Maurice Ediger, Randall Goering, and Lewis Schmidt dub the tennis courts with a new coat of paint. ,1-r J - . JL' , A- ,wfhbtgl -,Qu ,,fi'1149ue.,'.:f ' - Elmi- ,,....--sq.,-X student life ena'-Myear activities include presentation 0 awards ana' citations Mike Almanza and Emerson Wiens hang a painting in preparation for the student art exhibit. fun Old faces met once again to renew old acquamtances at the alumni banquet One of the class reuni ons was held by the class of '11, Seniors display a nonch alant air as they proceed through the doors of Memorial Hall. 7 Seniors and faculty members pause after the pro- cessional before being seated. commencement seniors arrive at the end fy' the road Seniors march through the formation of faculty members in front of Memorial Hall. Abrahams, Marnette . Albrecht, Leland . Almanza, Miguel . Amen, Danny . . . Baerg, Elsie . . . Banman, Elaine. . Banman, Hulda . . Bargen, Esther . . Barker, Duane . . Bartel, Bertha . Bartel, Gladwin . . Bartel, Larry . . Bartel, Paul. . . Bartel, Rosalie. . Bartel, Stanley. . Bartel, Verlin . . Bechtel, Wanda. . Becker, Honora . . Beecher, Mildred . . Bergthold, Aleta . . Bertrand, Helmut . . Bevan, John . . . Blair, Lenore . . Block, Tina . . . Boehr, Stanley. . Boese, loan . . . . Boschmann, Erwin . Boschman, Wilmar . . Boshart, Lerace . . Box, Pauline .... Brandt, Dorothy . . . Brown, Cecil Terrance. . . Brown, William . . . Buhr, Gerhard . . Buller, Harvey. . Buller, Myron . . Buller, Thomas . Buller, Wesley . . Burdette, Barbara . Burkey, Jerry . . . Buss, Eldon ..... Carpenter, Dwight . . Claassen, Barbara . . Claassen, Charles . Claassen, Edward . . Claassen, Evelyn . . Claassen, Jeanette . Claassen, Joan. . . Claassen, Judith. . . Claassen, Lois .... Coleman, Jon Walker Crawford, Twila . . Decker, Delora . de Graaf, Pieter . . Delaplane, Robert . Dettwiler, Harry . . Dick, Caron . . . Dick, Eddie . . Dick, George. . index . 54,74,76 . . 26,83,104 . 40,44,116 ....47 ....54 . . 4O,68,73 . 26,69,106 ....23 . 54,105 . 26,107 . . 47,92 . . . 24 . . 23,115 . 54,69,89 . . . 47 . . 54,69 . .20,11O ...22 ....47 . . . 47,104 . . 4O,82,10O . . . 26,105 . . . 47 . . 54 . .17,23 . .47,104 . . 26 . . 54,73 . . . S4 . .54,76 . . . . . . . .40 . . . . . . . 92 22,82,83,89,94,1OO . . . . . . . . . 54 . 26,82,87,100,111 . . . . . . . . . 54 22,83,89,92,94,100 . ...... 47 . .54 . .40 . . . 18 . . . 47,68 . . . 27,94,100 . . . . . . . . 24 . . 40,98,101,106 . . . . . . 47 . . 40,68,103,106 . . . . . . .54 . . 41,99 . . 54,75 . . . 41 . 41,105 . . 27 . . 55 . . . 55 . . . . . . .55 . . . . 47,68,114 . 27,68,98,102,113 118 Dick, Dick, Dick, Dick, Kathryn . . Lorene. . . Louise. . . Priscilla . . Dillon, Wilbum, Jr Dirks , Dirks, Doerk Doerk Joy Ann . . LaVerle . . sen, Janice . sen, Jo Ann Doherty, Theodore Dole, Ronald. . . Dreier, Theodore Driver, Vincent . DuBoi Duerk Duerk s, Paul . . . sen, Janett . sen, Roger . Dunn,,James . . . Dunn , DYC14, DYCIM DYCR, Kenneth . . Annliese . Carol . . . Evelyn . . . Eck, Kathryn . Ediger, Carrie . . Ediger, Maurice . Ediger, LaVon . . Ediger, Ronald . Eisenbeis, Lola . . Ells, Gary . . Enns, Don . . . Erms, Rosalind . . Enns, Royce. . Entz, Julia . . . Epp, Amanda. . . Epp, Anthony. . . Epp, Barbara. . . Epp, Constance . . Epp, Delvyn . . . Epp, Lois . . . Epp, Paul . Epp, Verda . . . Epp, Virgil .... 41,46,68,72,73,87,99, . :41,46,87,95,98,99, 103, . . . .55,98, 103 1 14 115 107 . . 27,86,87,95, . . . . 55,95 117 ,99 .......55 . . . . 47, . . 27,104, 107 107 .....55 . . 27,69, 113 . .... 41 ...47 nu... -....- . . . . 47,69 . .55,82,92, . . . ..47,.1Cl3,.105, . . . . . . . .27, -E- . . . . 47,105, . . . 55,82, . . 41,69,83, . . . . .55 . . 24,41,68, . . . . . .55 . . . . . 54,55 . . 48,68,73,74, . . . . . . 27 55 55 ,ss 104 . 47 114 110 .47 107 115 104 ,75 112 ,75 ,92 103 ,82 . . . . . . . . 48 . . 41,103,107,114 . . . . . 48 . . 41,100, . . . .48, ,94 103 104 . 55,58,75,82 . .48,74, . . .53, 103 55 105 .. ..42 ....- . . . 55 . . . . 48,68 Ewy, Ralph LeRoy Ewy, Ruth . . . . Fast, H.A. . . Fast, Marlyn . . Fast, Richard . . Fast, Wayne . . Fey, Monte .... Flaming, Dennis . Flickner, Joanne . Fliginger, Rita. . Flowers, Charles . Flowers, Dorothy. Foss, Calvin . . Frank, Charles. . Franklin, Jeanette Franz, Kenneth. . Franz, Larry . . . Fraser, Robert . Freeburne, Jerry . Fretz, W .... . . . ...... . 19 . . . . 42,lO1,111,114 ......55 . 110 . . . . . 48 . . . . . . 55 . . 27,68,72,73 . . . .28,68 . . . 28,76 . .56,75 . . . . . 28 . . . . . . 56 . 42,89,90,114 . . . . 48,68 . . . . . .56 . .17,42 . . 18,113 . . . . . . . A8 . 42,98,102,112 Frey, Ralph . . . Friesen, C. Kay. . Friesen, Carolyn . . Friesen, Donald. . Friesen, Dorothy . . Friesen, Duane . . . Friesen, Evelyn .... . I-Iildegard . . . Friesen, Friesen, Karren . . . Friesen, LeRoy . Friesen, Louise. . Friesen, Melvin . Friesen,.Ot:to . . Friesen, Paul. . . Friesen, Roger. . . Friesen, Ronald Lee . Friesen, Trude . . . Froese, Carol. . . Froese, Donna . . Froese, Menno . . . . . 43 . . . 18,20 Froese, Sarah. . Funk, Alvin . Funk, Myrtle . . Gaeddert, Frank . Gaeddert, James . . Galle, Lorraine . . index . . . s6,75,107 . . . . . . .56 . . 28,68,106,112 . . . . 28,68,113 . . . .56,69,105 A2,68,102,106,113 . . . . . . . .56 . . . . . 48,113 . . . .56 . . 28,106 . . . 56 . .56,104 . . . . 21 . . . . 56 . 26,28,103 . . . . . . 24 . . . . . . . 48 . . . . . . .56 . . . . 42,75 . . 42,46,68,103 . . 48,89,90,91 . . . . . 42 . . . . . 17,76 Galloway, Lucia . . . . 42, 77, 102, 113 Geiger, Liselotte . ...... 42 Gering, Curtis . . . . . . . . 56 Gingerich, Nelson . . . 56 Goering, C. B. . . . 24 Goering, Carol . . . . 48 Goering, Dwight. . . . . . . . 69 Goering, Helen . . . .... 42,46 Goering, H. Keith .... ...... 4 8 Goering, John Randall . 56, 82,92, 115 Goering, Kathleen . . .... 56,95 Goering, Leanna .............. 57 Goering, Lynette ........... 26, 28, 98 Goering, Melvin . . . 29, 83, 89, 90, 92, 93, 100, 102 Goering, Phyllis . ............ 29 Goering, Steven . ........... . Goering, Vernon . . . 57, 110 Goerizen, Agnes . . . . . 23, 115 Goertzen, Donald . . .... 29,107 Goertzen, Gladys . . . . 48, 105, 115 Goertzen, Larry . . . 43, 92, 100 Gomez, Frances. . .... 57 Goossen, Ronald . . . . . 57, 100 Graber, Clark . . . . . 43,93,1O0 Graber, DeLay'ne . . . . 28, 29, 68, 104 Graber, Eldon . . .... 16, 18 Graber, Everett . . ..... A29 Graber, Judith. . . . . . 57, 99, 104 Graber, Karen . . . ..... . . 57 Graber, Kenneth . . .... 57, 82, 89, 92 Graber, Max . . . . 29,82,92,93, 110 Graber, Norma . . ....... 49 Graber, Sherril . . ....... 57 Graves, Mary Sue . . . . . 57, 61 Graves, Virgil . . Gross, Harold . . . . . . . 49 . 20,102,110 Habegger, Alfred . . Hamm, Alfred. . . Harder, Karen . . Harder, M. S. . . Harder, Verlin . . . . Harmison, Randall . . Harms, Dorothy. . . Harms, Esther . . . Harms, Harvey . . Hart, Lawrence . . . Hart, Samuel .... . Hartenberger, Curtis. . Hartenberger, Madelyn Hartzler, Juanita . . . Hatchett, Ronald . . . Hege, Carl . . . Hege, Carol. . . Hege, Lucille . . . . Heidebrecht, Lois . . . Heidebrecfht, Mary Ann Heller, Suzanne . . . Henry, Glennys . . . Hiebert, Eleanor . . Hiebert, Eva . . . Hiebert, Ruth . . . Hilty, Judith .... Hirschler, Richard . . Hochstedler, Kenneth . Hodel, Evelyn .... Hodel, LaVerne. . . Hofer, Donald . Hofer, Richard . . Hohrnann, Rupert . Holsinger, lustis - - Horst, Dale - Hostetter, Joan . . Jacobson, Jerome . . Jantz, Donald. . . Jantz, Gary . . . Jantz, James. . . Jantzen, Eileen . . Janzen, David . . . Janzen, John A. . . Janzen, John M. . . Janzen, Judy. . . Janzen, Leon . . Janzen, Nola . . Jones, Gordon . Lugz, Walter , Juhnke, James . . Juhnke, Janet . Juhnke, John . . Kajinami, Shingo. . . Kasper, Arlo . . . . . Kauenhoven, Reinhild . . . Kauffman, Charles . . Kauffman, Ralph . . . Kaufman, Bruce . Kaufman, Iris . . . Kaufman, Leona , . 119 .fauna . 43,102,115 . . . . . 43 . . . . 57 . . . 18,22 . . . . .43,107 . . . 29,74,75,101 . 29,68,86,87,104 . . . . . .57,61 . 29,68,72,104 . . . .30,1o6 . . . .49 . .43,107 . . . . . . 57 . . . . . . . 57 . 49,74,75,76,101 . . . . . . 30 . . 49,99,103 . . 24,43,68 49 . .' 57,95,98 . ......... 57 . . . . . . . . . 49 . . 49,68,73,74,104,113 . . . . . . . . 49,95 . . . . . . . . 57 . . . . 43 . . 49,68,115 . . 49,104 . . . 43 . . . 20,101 . . 21,69,70,71 . . . . . 22 . . .44,105 . 57,69 . . . . 20 . . . .57 . . . .56,57 . . . . 57 58,69,105 . 44,-46, 74,.93., 98, 102, 111 . . . . . . .58,100 . 20,74,102,106 . . . . . . 58 . . . . 20,68 . . .49,106 . . . . . . .20 . . 15,20,21,70 . .40,43,44,77 . . . 58,69,71 .....20 . . . . . . . . .58 ,68,72,73,74,103,113 . . . . . . . 49,71 . . . . . . . . .78 . .31,105 . 69,89 . . 43,44 . . 31 Kaufman, K aufm an , Kaufm an , K aufm an , Marilyn P. R. . Steven . . Vilas . Kaufman, Wendell Kawasaki, Osamu . . Kehler, Lawrence . . Keller, jerry . . . Keller, john. . . Kemp, Edna Ruth . . Kemp, Paul . . . ...19 Klaassen, Gerhard Klaassen, janet. . . . Klaassen, Rudolph Klaassen, Walter . . Klassen, Diane A. Klassen, Donald . Klassen, Laurel . . Klassen, Wayne . Klufa, Kenneth . . Koehn, Beverly . Koehn, Q51 . . . Koop, Kathleen . Kopper, Lawanda . Kopper, Lois. . . . . . . . . . 32 Niehage, Kopper, Loretta. . Krabn, Comelius . Krause, Glendene Krause, R Krehbiel, Krehbiel, Krehbiel, Krehbiel, Krehbiel, Krehbiel, Krehbiel, Krehbiel, Krehbiel, Krehbiel, Kroeker, Kroeker, Kroeker, Kroeker, Kroeker, Kroeker, Krueger, ay Gene . Darrell . Dorothy james . Jane. . Joann . joleen . Kerry. . Leann . Leona . Richard George . Harold . Karen . . Margaret Sharon. . Velma . Linda . . . 51, 98, 99, 103, 107 . ' 3.2,.8i, 97,'9s, 90, 91, 98, 100 Kruse, Thomas . Kuehny, Paul. . Lambert, Carolyn . Leisy, Jerald . . . Lenz, Iohn .... Letkemann, Peter . Lewis, Doreen . . Linscheid, Paul . . Loepp, Franzie. . Loewen, Alice . Loewen, Esko. . . Loewen, Gerald. . Loewen, Harold . Loewen, Helen . Loewen, Robert . Lofland, Norman. index ..5s . 22 ..5s 58 . . . . 49 . 31,94,104 . . . .31 ....49 .....58 . .44,103,105 . . . .44 . . 31,68,72 . . . .49 ... 31 . . 58,74 . . . 44 . . . . .49 . . . . . 49 . . 49,831,100 . . . 58,105 . . . . . 17 . .5s,69,105 . . . 31,49 . 31,86,87 .. 50,63 . . .19 . . .53 . 44,89 . -58,82 . . . . 50 . . . . . 50 . . 50,107,114 . .58,69,100, 107 . 31,98,103,111 . . . .59,69,89 . .58,69,100, 107 . . . . . . 17 .....59 ....32 . .32,104 . .59,105 .. . 50 ..59,105 ......5o . .58,59, 101,115 . . . 50,159,101 59,71 ' ' ' . 15'9,'74,75,76,32 .......19 .....32,68 . . . . . . 44 44, 100, 101, 115 ..........21,104 ...........15 32, 37, es, 72, 73, 75 . . . . .40,44,46,99 . ........32 . .32,75,11O . . 20,112 'I20 Lohrentz, Kenneth. . Long, John .... Louthan, Barbara . . Lujano, Marino . . Martens, Duane . . Martens, John . . . Martens, Loretta . . Martin, Aaron . Martin, Carl . . . Martin, Sandra . . . Matsoukis, Athanasios, . McCloud, Arnold . . McCloud, Terrace . Merritt, Herman . . Meyer, Albert. . . Mierau, Genevieve Mierau, Marilyn . . Mierau, Roine . . Miller, Cecil . . Miller, Christine. . Miller, E. I. . . . Miller, Mary .... Millington, Dale. . M.ina, Elias . . . Moyer, Harold . Moyer, Shirley . . Nachtigal, Chester . Nachtlgal, Franklin. Neufeld, Erna . . . Neufeld, Irma . . Neufeld, Jimmy. . Neufeld, Kennedi . Neufeld, Ramon . . Neufeld, Robert . . Neufeld, Vernon . . Neufeldt, Harold. . Neufeldt, joleen . Neufeldt, Roger . . Newberry, Loren . . Nickel, Frieda . Nickel, W. . . Nickel, Lenora . . Nickel, Richard. . Carol. . . Niehage, Sherwin . . Nikkel, Kermit . . Nikkel, Nadine . . Nikkel, Ted . . Nusz, Darlene . . Opiyo, john . . . Ortrnan,YMar1o . . Pankratz, Betty . . Pankratz, Laura . . Pankratz, Louise. . . Pankratz, Robert . . Pankratz, Theodore. Patterson, Max . . Patton, Sondra . . Pauls, Leo . . . 44,106, 107, 112, 113 .......32,71 ........5O ....5O . . . .33,34 . 60,107,115 . . .50,107 . . . . 59 . . . . .50 .45,104,113 .. . . .33 . . .. 33 . 45 .. 19 .. . . 59 ..45,113 ...59 .33,69 . .2o,112 . .16,112 ...59 ....33 ..45,104 ...21 ...,so . . . . . .50,44,100 . . . . .45,89,9O,94, 100 .....59,69 ......59 .51,6s ......33 .......59 .. . . . . . . 33 . . 14,15,19,26,116 59 59 ... 59 ..45,94 . 20 ..33 ..51 ... .33 . . ...33 ....59,74 . .51,103,105 .. .33,117 ..51,105 . . 45, 104 . . . . .34,104 .... . .59,115 . . . 50,51,6s,74 . . 59, 89, 90, 91, 92 . . . .45,s3,100 . . . . . . 51 . .34 . 45 . . . . . 23 . . 15,16,18 Pauls, Vernon . Penner, Alvin . Penner, Fred . . . Fenner, Jim .... Penner, Katherine. . Penner, LaVex-na . . Penner, Lawrence . . ....f'34, . . . . . 60,83 index 16 117 ,85 51,82,85,100,114 34,68,73,99,103,1o6 60, 105 .60 . .51,115 Rupp, Kenneth . . Russ, Marguerite . Ruth, Rachel . . Salander, Neil. . . Sandwell, Thomas . Sawatzky, Phyllis . Schellenberg, P. E. . . . . . 60,82,85,89 Penner, Marvin . . Penner, Mary . . Penner, Sara . Perisho, Jerry. . Peters, Alice . . Peters, Galen. . Peters, Kay . . . Peters, Kenneth . . Peters, Lois .... Peters, Reinhard . . . . . . . . .-. 51,116 . . 54,60 . 60,105 . 34,106 ...34 .60 . . 60,69 ,89 . . I50,'51',6'8,73,74,75, 103 . . . . . . . 34 Peterson, Anna Marie. . . . . . . . . 34,77, 104 Plenert, Willard . . Porter, Reba . . . . Preheim, Anna Marie . Preheim, John . . . Preheim, Juanita. . Preheim, Kenneth. . Quenzer, Floyd . . Raney, Larry . . ...23 Ratzlaff, Arlin . . Ratzlaff, Frances . . Ratzlaff, Clayton . . Ratzlaff, Maxine . . Redekop, Katherine Regehr, David . . . Regehr, Margaret . . Regehr, Stanley . . Regier, Anna Marie Regier, Calvin . . . Regier, Donald . . Regier, Ivan . Regier, john . . Regier, Robert . . Reimer, Agnes . Reimer, David . . Reimer, Len . . Reimer, Leona . . Reimer, Luana. . Reimer, Naomi . . Reimer, Stanley . . Reimer, Wilbert . . Rempel, Cornie. . . Rempel, Dilores . . Rempel, Helen . Rempel, Richard . Reusser, lanice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 24,26,28,35,43,101,106,112 . . . . . . . . . . ,51,82 . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 . 35,94,100 Q .... .... .51 . . 35,82,84,10o,104 . . . . . . . .51 . . . . . . .35 . . .35,115 . . . . 60,61 . 60,69,115 . 51,99,104 . . . . 35 . .60,61 . . . . . . . 60,75 . . . . . . . . . . 35 17,43,45,lO1,106,112 . . . . . . . 60,82 . . . . . . . . . 21 . . . 60 . . . .35 . 36,114 . . . . .60 . . . . . . 23 . . 51,106,115 . . 5O,51,68,82,92 . . . . . . . . . 24 . . . . . 36,68,106 36,103,104,111,114 . ...51 Schmidt, S chmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schmidt, Schrag, Schrag, Schrag, Schrag, Schrag, Schrag, Schrag, Schrag, Schrag, Schrag, Schrag, Schrag, Schrag, Schrag, Schrag, Annalee . Bryce . . Clifford . Erna . . Evelyn . . Gene. . Hartzel . Howard. . M-ri H. Y.. joh.nP., , . lohuf, , Joyce . . Ioycelyn . Judith . . Leon . . LeRoy . . Lewis . . Ronnie . Stanley . Mrs. Ted Brian . . . Charlotte . Gordon . . Harold . . Howard . . Ierrill . . joseph. . Kathleen . Kay Ann . Lois . . . Loren . . . Marjorie . Samuel. . Sherrill. . Terrance Thomas . 37,68,82,84,87,89,9O,91, 100, 114 Schroeder, Bonnie. Schroeder, Duane . Schroeder, Judith. . Schroeder, Roy . . Schroeder, Wayne . Schultz, Harold . . Schumacher, Ursula Schwartz, jarold . . Sebes, Linda . . . Schrag, Sellers, Martha . . Selzer, Priscilla. . p Rhee, Choun-Yong . Rich, Martha . . . Rich, Ronald . . Richert, David . . . Riesen, Kenneth . . Roth, Paul . . . Rowland, Gary . . Royer, Gary. . . . .51, 104 36 19 79 6.0,.68',71 . 60, . . 60 112 ,68 61 Shacklett, Walter . Sheffler, Georgianna Sheffler, Lawrence Shiu, Daniel . . Sibanda, Enos . . Simpson, Lynn . . Sing, Banson . . . Sizemore, Michael . 'l2'I .'.'.'.E5 . 34,61,69 ...52 .......61 . . . . . 61,69,71 . . . 45,82,89,92,10O . . . . . .22,105 . . . . . .61,69 . . . 61 . . .17,110 . .52,82,100 . . . . 24 . . . 61 . .20,116 . . . 52 . . .58,61 . .52,95,107 . . . . 36,82 . . . . . . 36,82 . 36,94,1o0,115 . . . . . . 61,75 . .45,101,104,112 . . . . . 24,112 . . .52,92,98 . . . 61 . 52,111 . . .61 . . . . . . . . . 52 . . . . . . . . . . 52 . . 36,87,92,93,98,1O0 . . 61 . . . . . .52,106 . .61,107 . . . 36 . .37 . . . . . . .37 . .61 . 45,82,85,92,100 . . . . . 45 . . . 45,98 . 52,74 . . .61,112 . . . . .,. . 52 . . 17,34,45,104 . . . 82,89,90 . . . . .52 . . . . 61,104 . .34,52,99,113 . . . . . . 62 . . 37,76,95 . . . 37,74 . . . . . . . 104 . . . . . . 37,104 . . 52,69,94,98,101 . . . . . . . .52 . . . . .52,76 Smith, Caryl . Smith, Garnet . Smith, Larry . . Smith, Martha . . Smith, William. . . Sgaulding, Lloyd Sprunger, Walter. . Staerkel, Don . . . Stauffer, Jay . . . Stauffer, Mervin . . Strausz, Marilyn . . Stucky, Benjamin . Stucky, Frances . . Stucky, Gary . . Stucl-cy, Jerald . . tucky, Gordon . . Stucky,'Jarnes . . . Stucky, James Paul. Stucky, Menno . . Stucky, Nicholas. . . . . . . 63 Weinbrenner, Loren . . 53,71,116 Suderman, Ann. . . Suderman, Davidg Teichroew, Charlotte .... Thiessen, Dorothy . Thiessen, Joan . . . Thiessen, Mary . . Thieszen, Erna . . . Thieszen, Marvin . . Thieszen, Verla. . Tieszen, Robert . . Tipton, James . , Toews, Anna Marie . Toews, Esther . . . Troyer, Elnor . Ummel, Edward . . Ummel, Rosemary . . f46,89,9b,iob . ...... 39 Unrau, Ruth .... Unrau, Shirley. . . Unruh, Bethel Ann . Unruh, Donovan . . Unruh, Elizabeth . . Unruh, Evelyn . . . Unruh, M5 Harrison Unruh, James .... Unruh, Judith .... Unruh, Kenneth. . Unruh, Naomi . . Unruh, Paul .... Vander Sloot, Luana Vogt, Celia .... Von Riesen, James . Voran, Benjamin . Voran, Max . . Voth, Curtis .... Voth, Elizabeth . . Voth, Gerald . . Voth, Helen . Voth, Judith. . Vodi, Karen. . Voth, Karl . . index . 40,46 . . 62 . .52 . 17 . 62 . . . 18 . .46,77 . . . 53 . . 62,83 . . . . 37 . .61,62,114 . . .62,82 . . . .37 . .53 . . . . . . . . 24 38,82,1oo,1o7,111 . . . . . . .62,82 . . . . . . .22,56 . 53,82,98,1OO . . 62,69,71,74 .....21 ....46 . . . . . 76 . . . . 61,62,95 . .53,68,73,115 . . . . . . . 53 . 38,68,71,77,106 . . . . . . .62 . . . . . . 38 . . . . 62 . - 46,99,104 . . . . .62 . '38,103,107 . , 62,107 . . .22,1o7 . ...... 46 . . . . . . . . 53,71,74,99 ,94,102,104,106,112 . . .. . . .. . . 53 . ........ 46,73 . . 24,112 . . .38,1o5 . . . .38,112 . . 38,71,101 . .62j95,107 . . . . .46,69,115 .. . . . . . . 53 . . . . . 62 . .58,62,112 . . . . 92 . . 53,94 . . . . . 62 . . 46,68,113 . . . . .53 . . . 103 . .62,69 . . 62,105 ...63 'I22 Voth, Larry . . Voth, Lester. . Voth, Orwin . Wagner, Verda . Walker , Donna . Walters, Jerry . . . Waltner, Dianne . . Waltner, Gary. . Waltner, Janice . . Waltner, Lena . Waltner, Robert . . Waltner, Vernelle . Warkentin, Gary . . Warkentin, Gertrude Washburn, Richard . Weaver, Anna Jo . Wedel, Antonio . . Wedel, Arnold. . Wedel, Donald . Wedel, Edna . . . Wedel, Robert. . . Wehmuller, Kenneth Welty, Ivan .... White, Hanns . . . Whiteman, Edith. . Wicke, Vesta . . Wiebe, Alene . . Wiebe, Clark. . Wiebe, David. . Wiebe, Donald . Wiebe, Evelyn. . Wiebe, Helen . . Wiebe, Laura . Wiebe, Miriam . . Wiebe, Richard. . Wiebe, Robert . . Wiebe, Roger , . Wiede mann, George Wieler, Edith . . . Wiens, Clarene . . Wiens, Margaret . Wiens, Wayne . . Will, Maxine . . Willms, Herta . . Wipf, Joseph . . Woelk, Janet . . Xouris, De metrics . Yoder, Ezra . . . Young, Carol. . Zerger, Carol . . Zerger, Joanne . . Zerger, John. . . Zerger, Monte . . . Zielke, Darrell . . Zimmerman, JoAnn. .63 .63 . .63 . . . . 63,76 . . . . .3g,1b3 '.'46,68,112,116 . . . . 38,74 . . . . . . 21 . 63,92,93 . . . .17 f 135,59 . . 63 . . 58,63 . 1 Q I I f i9 . 39,89,9O,91 . ..... 24 . 39,89,9O . . .63,82 . . . . . . . 53 . . . . . . . 53 . 39,95,99,103,105 . . . . . 63,105 . . . . .63,101 . . . . . . .39,1O0 . ...... 63,69 .53,68,95,103,105,114 . . . . . . . .17,23 . .... 58,63,113 . . . 63,69 . . f f39,1d4 . . . . . . 63 . . . . . 63 . 37,39 . . . 19 . . . 17 . 17,23,25 . . 39,68 . . . .63 . . . . . . .53,104 63,83,92,98,104,114 . . . . . . .S9,105 . . . . 18,54,63 . 53,68,82,89,9o . . . . . .53,82 .. . . . .53 . . 46,68 Sal,-nj CD C D :D Wg--1 ' f-uma' ,Pl-img, OX, , an 7 ' ' Q ' an W Q' 3 QQ o Q f fg Q as 9 Q 'Na figg r 0- - ii'-:rar Q QE 3 - can l -im'-'-' '--' -PA----d..-.A-A,, in A 2 I AJ -4 --FMHH, , R f-N f N T , fn f 3 ,Q e 'J r i Q li 2 5 3 ? i TJCQ egr G H 1 1 'gi 9 N E Qj u 91: gl A 1 g wg gf 4 S ' f' . 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