Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA)

 - Class of 1957

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Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1957 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 162 of the 1957 volume:

Eastern Mennonite Harrisonburg, College Virginia { ‘ i ✓ • ,, '' '• • Hi V. , u - ; A . VI, y V- y Omar Eby Editor 3 4 Mrs. Ruth M. Brackbill “Women sit or move to and fro some old, some young, the young are beautiful— but the old are more beautiful than the young.” These are the words of Walt Whitman, but the thoughts of your students. Your silver hair and liquid laughter and the poems you teach us in class are beautiful. But the life you live is more beautiful than they. Your life is a volume of poetry. You have given us of your life-poetry and we cannot fully repay. As an attempt to express our appreciation the Shenandoah staff dedicates this 1957 volume to you, Mrs. Ruth M. Brackbill. Dedication FOREWORD “There it is . . . E.M.C.!” Remember when you exclaimed that on the first glimpse of the school some long, long days ago. And you said it again and again. Driving dowTn through the valley on Route 11 you probably exclaimed it when you saw the green roofs, or at night when the hundred yellow windows made patterns on the dark hill. Those were your first glimpses of E.M.C. . . . from that high spot on Route 11 just north of the city limit sign. “There it is . . . E.M.C.!” As you catch your first glimpse of it in the Shenandoah and remember those days, long, long ago, you say it again. And you say it again and again. Leaf slowly through the valley of these pages and exclaim at the freshness of activities, and the deep gaze of thoughts, weaving patterns of life. And then, take many glimpses in the tomorrow years of life and say it again . . . “There it is . . . E.M.C.!” 6 CONTENTS Shenandoah Valley -------------------------------------- 8 Harrisonburg City ------------------ -------------------- 13 Park View Village------------------------------------------ 16 Eastern Mennonite College--------------------------------- 20 Bible and Philosophy -------- - 24 Language, Literature and Fine Arts ----------------- 38 Social Sciences -------------------------------------- 54 Natural Sciences and Mathematics ---------------------- 60 Education and Psychology _______________________________ 72 Applied Arts and Sciences ---------------------------- 90 Junior College _________________________________________ 96 Administration ------------------------------------------ 112 High School --------------------------------------------- 116 SHENANDOAH VALLEY “Old Road,” “Lee Highway” to veterans, “Route 11” to students—from the North, in the morning, when shadows were long we came on it. On it we go-—in the day, in the full light, we go. The Valley called us out one day to look at her from Massanutten. From Skyline we saw her as pasture beyond a wide expanse of mountain-chasms. And we were a part of her. On “School-Day- Out” we played in leaves at Hone Quarry. Later we collected “River” rock from Rawley, cracked open basalt from the top of Mole Hill, and poured acid on her backbone of dolomitic limestone to watch it fizz. During Exam Week she froze water at Brock’s Gap and announced a skating party. Of course, 8 we went. Some Sundays through glasses we looked at birds on Silver Lake—called them Mallards. We left our tracks in woods or read the poets there. The Valley led us through a peopled City, across a Village to a College, to learn more the language of the people. .o itu , • ; 1§ feSS ■ . s % . mm mm WRmb The city . . . what is it? This City—“Turkey Capital of the World,” Rockingham County seat, wealthy with twenty-seven million dol- lars in her banks. To us she was a thousand lights winking at night in the distance south- eastern. For fifty cents we taxied in to win- dow-shop at Ney’s, sip a soda at People’s, and bargain at Grant’s. Gitchell’s photo- graphed us and Miles’ sold us records. HARRISONBURG CITY Highest in retail trade volume, this city also reaps the benefits of higher education. We heard her concerts at Wilson Hall and sang a sacred concert in her Methodist Church. With the people we worshiped at Broad Street, First Presbyterian, and Chicago Avenue. We read her Daily Record. Some of her eleven and one-half thousand people mill around Court Square, 1329 feet above sea level, and listen to its millions of starlings clamoring outside a form of government. They are the dissenters. The city—sprawling and compact, sputtering and silent, human and inhuman, secure and insecure—a forest of buildings, burrowed by machinery, rooted in law, and peopled with seed, fruit, and weeds. 13 14 It’s not a tight Sandburg city of blue steel; even at 10:30 it’s a lonely one of desolate streets. I Bargains at the Bargain Place or pie a la mode at Pye’s? PARK VIEW VILLAGE Here our professors live, leave, and come home again. This “Mennonite Town” has more preachers than any village its size. They are the thinkers and the pray - ers and the doers. Park View, overrun by Mt. Clinton Pike—gateway to the city—crossed by Col- lege Avenue, the home of her profs—boasts of her eight hundred people plus. From Dogwood Drive, Smith Avenue, Park Way, Burkholder Apartments, Mareva and Starry Woods they come. There is the President’s “White House.” On the corner, college men may buy their banquet flowers at the greenhouse. To your right, our chorus ladies go to buy their ap- proved number 15-30’s for a dollar and a quarter. Everyone has bought a coke at Col- lege Shoppe or fruits at Berry’s. Education students in knee-pants will remember first 16 growing out of them at the village Park School. Past Trailer Camp, students walked to sing at the Home. Then there were those home-like evenings at the Wyse Concert Hall and the homemade doughnuts afterward. Per- haps, then, we felt most surely the heartbeat of this friendly village. And she heard the message of our college bells and was glad. The day is done, and the Mr. Student Teacher is now Fred sharing those little things.” Downfallen? No wonder! It’s heard all the gossip about a new College Shoppe next year. 20 EASTERN MENNONITE COLLEGE Our college opened house by rearing a “City of Brotherly Love”— a city of producers, consumers. But there had first to be a pruning and a growing, a giving and a taking, a learning and a teaching, assigning and applying. (What if our college were only the consumers?) We are the producers— for the Valley, the City, the Village, and for the College, we produced, passed exams, asked questions, abandoned idols, believed Truth, were embarrassed, gave answers. They were not the answers; we are the answers. This is the London time of year drizzles and fogs and washed color Bible and Philos 24 Bible and philosophy sound like deep studies. They. are. Seniors in seminar grapple with the profound things of religion: pro- fessors and students together ponder doc- trines, practices, and trends of the church. Juniors study “Mennonite History and Thought” in order to better understand the foundations of our denomination. Sophomores learn Scriptures and the essentials of “Per- sonal Evangelism,” and Freshmen gain greater insight into genuine “Christian Liv- ing.” These studies are challenging, yet in- spirational, for they go deep. Bible and philosophy sound like difficult studies. They are. Peek into one of the dorm rooms some night at twelve o’clock. The light’s on, and a tired figure slumps over his desk, studying the Novum Testamentum Graece. His roommate sits in the other corner, perhaps slaving over a two-hour Old Testa- ment History assignment. This is a hard night and these are industrious fellows, but we must conclude that Bible and philosophy are dif- ficult studies. Bible and philosophy sound like dry studies. They aren’t—if studied in correct perspective. Bible School Fellowship, for in- stance, is one of those tasty morsels of the theologian and philosopher. Every week sen- iors congregate to discuss pertinent problems and listen to inspiring lectures. Guided per- sonal work among the needy, dorm-group prayer meetings, and chats with professors about personal problems stimulate the Chris- tian student. Indeed, here is what makes these studies vital: the vision of future service to God to invigorate and apply the studies; and the continual exercise of wisdom received by witnessing for Christ. This is what keeps Bible and philosophy from being dry. —LOREN LIND 25 Bible and Philosophy PROFESSORS AND INSTRUCTORS CHESTER K. LEHMAN, Th.D. Professor of Theology JOHN L. STAUFFER Director of Bible Correspondence School 26 CLARENCE Y. FRETZ, M.R.E. MERLE W. ESHLEMAN, M.D. Instructor in Practical Studies College Physician, Assistant Professor of Missions and World Religions J. OTIS YODER, Tli.D. Associate Professor of New Testament Language and Literature G. IRVIN LEHMAN, S.T.M, Associate Professor of Old Testament Language and Literature PAUL H. MARTIN, M.A. Assistant Professor of New Testament Language and Literature IRVIN B. HORST, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Church History LINDEN WENCER, Th.M. Assistant Professor of Missions and World Religions, and Philosophy 27 Bible and Philosophy FRESHMEN Ray Gingerich, Jason Baer, Nathaniel Keeler, John Lea- man, Jack Kerns, Floyd High, Marvin Ketcham, Donald Hertzler. Daniel Wenger, Jerry Miller, Dale Weaver, Francis Over- holt, John Henry Miller, Jim Lapp, Leroy Petersheim, Mil- ton Schwartzentruber, Daniel Hochstetler. 28 Calvin Shenk, David Shenk, Herbert Schultz, Richard Sen- senig, Willard Swartley, Cora Yoder, Marcus Smucker, Eu- gene Witmer, Rebecca Hartzer. Henry Weaver, Jr., Sponsor, Glen Roth, Claire Schnupp, David Garber, Chester Lea- man, Elton Bomberger, Allen Martin, Kenneth Bender, Ray D. Miller, Amos Ramer, Ger- ald Brunk. 29 SOPHOMORES Bible and Philosophy Bible and Philosophy JUNIORS Milton Lehman, Wilmer Hart- man, Glenn Steffen, Elmer Maust, Ralph Lebold, Emer- son Martin, Mabel Herr. GRADUATE STUDENTS 30 Myron Augsburger, Herman Reitz, Claude Good. YOUNG PEOPLE’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Speak gently and continually, dear Father, to the bed-ridden man we met yesterday. As he teeters on the edge of time, convict him that he needs You. Renew his spiritual eyesight by cutting the cataracts of sin, and bring him to You before the curtain is drawn between time and eternity. Grant that the young man behind bars will come deeply under conviction. Abolish his taste for tobacco and alcohol and put in its place a longing for You, the only true Bread of Life. We are confident. Heavenly Father, that You have heard our prayer. Amen. WE BUILD THE CITY OF GOD. Y.P.C.A. President, James Gin- gerich 32 Y.P.C.A. Advisors: Jay B. Landis, Paul Martin, Esther Lehman, G. Irvin Lehman, Chairman; Grace Lefever. Hubert Swartzentruber, Institional Work Commissioner; Henry Ben- ner, Service Promotion Commis- sioner; Arlin Martin, 2nd Vice President; Lydia Glick, Assistant Secretary; Janies Wenger, Assist- ant Treasurer; Katherine Hies- tand, High School Representative; Mary Ellen Hershberger, Secre- tary; Wilmer Lehman, Extension Commissioner; Titus Bender, Vice President; John Miller, City Evan- gelism Commissioner; Donald Mellinger, Treasurer; James Gin- gerich, President. 33 Bible Memory Club “I’m going to try all of Ephesians.” A few moments before chapel, five minutes at bedtime—“here a little and there a little”—line upon line”—“pre- cept upon precept” all add up to a wealth of Scripture memory passages for the diligent club member. After a month’s prepartion the mem- bers come together on a Sunday after- noon to share their selections with others of their group. This group realizes the value of God’s Word in the mind and heart. Will our Bible sometime be taken from us? “Thy Word have I hid in my heart.” No man can take it from us. 34 —LOIS MARTIN Mennonite Historical Society History dry? No, in fact, history lives and be- comes dynamic in current times as past advancements and failures of men are noted. Each month the Mennonite Histori- cal Society met to enjoy a program which directed our attention upon some important aspect of Mennonite History. One evening, however, our thoughts were focused upon latest thinking as one of the Arnold brothers from New York lectured. —GEORGE BRENNEMAN Bible and SENIORS HUBERT SCHWARTZENTRUBER R.R.E. Zurich, Ontario DAVID HELMUTH A.B., Bible Louisville, Ohio , R.N. ESTHER IDA REESOR. B.R.E. Markham, Ontario HELEN EILEEN REESOR B.R.E. Markham, Ontario Language, Literature, Fine Arts “HUMANITIES—the branches of polite learning primarily regarded as conducive to culture.” The professor in the humanities may be regarded by his cold, scientific botanist colleague as something of a sophisticate: his leisure hours an epitome of the bo- hem ianism that reads Samson Agonistes or discusses Oedipus Rex while it measures out its life with coffee spoons; he scores symphonies before breakfast; he plays Scrabble in Latin! Although the humanities pro- fessor might he capable of such artistic gymnastics and he able to carry them off with some eclat, chances are he doesn’t. Rather, lie’s a professor, pure and simple, possessing a degree of proficiency in language, his own and a foreign tongue or two. He might know a good deal of literature, so that he easily recognizes Joseph Conrad’s style in idiom; he remembers a quotation (“What a piece of work is a man!”) or two and some facts, e.g., that Byron said Robert Southey will he read long after Virgil and Homer are forgotten, but not until then. He ought to he able to lecture fifty minutes, one would think, on the differences between Grandma Moses and Monet. Tonic triads are his tinker toys; he can whistle point counterpoint; he knows when a hymn is sung allegretto. Out of wheat and weeds he can fashion bouquets. He has had moments when the top of his head was about to fly apart, and he knew that was poetry. He has told his class it is good writing “when the black tracks on the paper fly up and hit you in the face.” No, he isn’t a sophisticate—the humanities professor. Actually, he’s a realist. He has taken the pulseheat of himself, of man. His aims are as simple as his colleague’s, similar, perhaps, or even identical. He sees his pupil gaining a sense of grammatical correctness, finding beauty and truth in poetry, writing a poem himself to sell for a dollar or two. He fills his pupil with music and sends him out leading songs. He teaches him vocabularies, assigns him translation, and watches him embark for Brazil or Cuba—a missionary. He is honest, dedicated. He believes his vocation is worth his life. You can grant him an occasional Friday night with Lear an aversion to “Brighten the Corner,” or a little Scrabble a la Cicero. —JAY B. LANDIS 39 Language, Literature, and Fine Arts PROFESSORS AND INSTRUCTORS DOROTHY C. KEMRER, A.M. Associate Professor of Latin HUBERT R. PELLMAN, M.A. Professor of English 40 ERNEST G. GEHMAN, Ph.D. Professor of German JAY 13. LANDIS, A.I3. Instructor in English VIVIAN BEACHY, B.S. Instructor in English A. GRACE WENGER, M.A. Assistant Professor of English (On leave of absence) SAMUEL E. MILLER, A.B. Instructor in Spanish J. MARK STAUFFER, M.A. Assistant Professor of Music EARL M. MAUST. M.Mu. Assistant Professor of Music AUDREY B. SHANK. A.B. Instructor in Music and English 41 Language, Literature, and Fine Arts FRESHMEN Nancy Swartzentruber, Kenneth Seitz, Jr., Lois Burkholder, C 1 a r e n e Shenk, Martha Harsh- berger, Norman Kreider, Carol Miller. SOPHOMORES Ruth Ann Boshart, Ruth Nisly, Lois Leatherman, Rachel Wenger. JUNIORS Vernon Zehr, Vernon Leis, Urie Sharp. FORENSICS Nestled in the balcony of the chapel is a small, temporary booth housing the first ten-watt educational FM station in Virginia. Each evening at 6:30 it is the scene of much activity. Music, news, entertainment, and inspiration —you’ll find all this and more on WEMC. One of the foremost contributors to WEMC is Forensics, whose members have prepared and presented several debates on timely subjects, and contrib- uted to the highly successful program, “Student Views.” The high school Oral Expression class produces “Poems You Remember,” college American History presents “The American Story.” The five literar- ies spend a half-hour each week with the WEMC audience. WEMC is making great strides forward and is beginning to stand out as the education voice of the Valley. —Carl Shenk A C T I V I T I E S WEMC i SMITHSONIANS Having solemnly affirmed to tell the truth . . . Sponsor— Esther Lehman Secretary-Treasurer— Hilda Stolztfus Evelyn Leamen Vice President— John Miller Robert Showalter President— Harlan Steffen Maynard Kurtz Buffrey, the Peafowl, splits a pod! Sponsor— Otis Yoder ZELATHEANS Secretary-Treasurer- Sue Dement Bertha Beachy President— David Miller Urbane Peachy Vice President— Lowell Herr Miriam Eshlemen COLLEGIATE CHORUS ALLELUIA SINGERS SHENANDOAH STAFF Editor-in-Chief ___________________ Omar Eby Associate Editor _______________ Fred Gingerich Assistant Editor _________________John Hershey Literary Editor _______________ Miriam Pellman Assistant (High School) ________ David Messner Artist ___________________________Marie Snavely Photographer ___________________Marcus Smucker Business Manager----------------- Henry Benner Assistant (High School) ________Ronald Collins Secretary and Typist____________ Elsie Yoder Assistant (High School) -------- Janet Yoder Sponsor__________________________________ Hubert Pellman Hubert R. Pellman Sponsor of Shenandoah They say, “It’s a whale of a yearbook.” SHENANDOAH It all began as a baby, and lagged through a summer of adolesence, but by December it was as voluminous as an elephant. While attempting to hurdle this monster to the publisher, we often wondered why someone didn’t throw us in the pond for ever saying “Yes” to such a job. Born late one May afternoon in A-48, the baby Shen looked innocent enough. 49 3CRIBLSRUS SOCIETY SPANISH La Sociedad Espanola is the natural out- growth of Spanish classes. Learning the language gives us a tantalizing sample of the unique culture of our Spanish- speaking neighbors. Through records, films, and first-hand reports, we delve more deeply into their lives. Gradually we learn to understand them; we dis- cover similarities between their lives and ours. To us Christians La Sociedad Espanola is both an opportunity and a challenge. Through applying our under- standing of the Spanish people we can truly extend a hand of love across the language barrier to our Spanish breth- ren. —CAROL MILLER GERMAN The German Society consists of students who are interested in speaking German and in learning more about Germany and its culture. Werner Will, a student here this year from Eastern Ger- many, gave us a behind-the-scenes look at his native land. Our sponsor, Ernest G. Gehman, and other members of the faculty who have traveled in Germany, broadened our knowledge by telling of their experiences. Singing some of the German songs was a delightful part of every meeting, and German poems and stories helped us appreciate and understand neighbors in German. —S. DAVID GARBER 'Thanksgiving Through The Ages’ _______Is Theme For Unique Social E. M. C. Contributes To Mennonite Hour WMEC Schedule September 1956 Teams To Witness During Vacation |$h«n $ oM Pint President Announces Curriculum Addition I It-.r I Owen «r. iKr h w t Mu .n r « r - Sr. thMchl and Jt-hn M i'.t. i ••wr Mini tHn ll-.l.tUf K.U d t liar-44 MUBftrr. wiN Rusty’ Faculty Team Baffles Pro's B Crowd Packs Kuhl Hail To See Unusal Gam - Stanley Shenk To Speak In Peace Emphasis Week Christian Education Convene On Campus Paul M. Schrock. Editor .L -Miin ftw mil WVartHer m. u I |rtr|Min) to |Mu W n •bw - d i Id ' V« vi) tt t U rtibwnl typifioi Paul kcfarxxi. 4 m • ■• ■ m, almuLiwr ut nr kK v Mabag utw «) ct nnM.4 thcen IWX Irt take 4 cloa« the mu who Krill b oprtilmK bufuml tbr «««n W )«ir •' Wttlhtr V , liante), i tnp-twtoK Im.U«U UontiT, Km nude- 4 M l ojaWbutoou U rampw We at kl ateni Viwwlt CotU-fl 111 fcuak) Otfp build Ii m lr him 4 uiwv oa tiie weert ttrVl Wlui icwlly uvakn tt n liiublr u tui intr «M in you a pmoo 11« prMtvad mptkmUm W ti« •! « « OtfMUn (elknadup 1144 marie UiU M-uion and tricndly talV mow nie nuig|ul. . M ac epMilkaUv. -n cl - tammy Si-Id bar- ne u lcie t -ik) partiopafkn. have I .am U ClUfUrd at luci d. Maiur fhi. part •« i - '«! a .. t.tit kl«,nl ol die Sm«WiuU« Ut r4fy v - iK Camera Simp C S.nr. HARRISONBURG. VA. FORECAST Who ’s Who at E. M. C... Miss .1 'Inmate, nj College Shop l ame Sr . Kmpha.. mk It M r. 4 .w KMOTKW r.l Language, Literature, Fine Arts SENIORS OMAR EBY A.B., English Hagerstown, Maryland Loaf with me in the leaves. 1 have heard that there are leaves of grass; tree leaves, some round, some pointed, veined leaves; and paper leaves of gold. The best leaves are the kind to walk in, to kick around, to look into the books that have left them drop, and to think long, long thoughts when you are leaving home. MIRIAM PELLMAN A.B., English Richfield, Pennsylvania Through a foreground Of moon-haze and maples Men lean on half-doors To stables of stupidity Hearing the blows of silent grief; Knowing and not caring; Wanting and not telling; Hating love, But returning suddenly To a coolness of reconciliation. - I know the secret sorrow Of a hundred million men. A hundred million men Have left it all unsaid. But I know their secret sorrow— The hundred million men. —O. EBY —MIRIAM PELLMAN °}' « nV1-, Social Sciences 54 Budapest — Port Said — Moscow — New York — Montgomery — Nagy — Nasser — Khrushchev — Hammarskjold — Martin Luther King These are places and persons of signifi- cance to all of us currently. Unless you are one of the more alert members of society they were meaningless to you until recently. But to understand their real significance you must understand their historical background, their unique cultures, and their deep economic problems. We try to interpret in history, sociology, and economics, the present and future through our knowledge of the past. We try to solve our problems by a better understanding of how society functions and how it might better function. We try to make better citizens by showing the significance of economic forces in our everyday life. We try to utilize the best Christian scholarship, to have the highest Christian goals and the keenest Christian atti- tudes toward the science of society in the past and present. Many analysts say the world’s current in- terest in man, society and history is because of our basic sense of insecurity in the world. Very likely that is the case, but in the tra- dition of Eastern Mennonite College’s phi- losophy of history, we believe that man’s difficulties can be shown and proven by his- tory but cannot be solved by nostalgic reflec- tions on the “good ol’ days.” Knowing that these problems exist, we attempt to solve them not as finite men, but with a sense of Providence guiding in the destinies of men. —JOHN LAPP Social Science PROFESSORS AND INSTRUCTORS HARRY A. BRUNK, A.M. Professor of History (On leave of absence) PAUL PEACHEY, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Church History, and Sociology JOHN A. LAPP, A.B. Instructor in History O'- SAMUEL L. HORST, A.B. Instructor in Social Science FRESHMEN Ivan Moyer, John Glick. SOPHOMORES Evelyn Leaman, Mary Miller, Kenneth Stevanus. JUNIORS John Hershey, Urbane Peachey, David K. Eshle- man, Harlan Steffen. Social Science SENIORS TITUS BENDER A.B., Bible Social Science Greenwood, Delaware DALE HENRY SCHUMM A.B., Bible, Sociology Tavistock, Ontario Social Science SENIORS JOHN EDREI LEHMAN A.B., Bible, Social Science Harrisonburg, Virginia GERALD WINROD BENDER A.B., Sociology Mt. Joy, Pennsylvania HENRY G. BENNER A.B., Bible, History Ronks, Pennsylvania FRED DENEINGER A.B., History Lancaster, Pennsylvania MARTIN BENDER A.B., Social Science Philadelphia, Pennsylvania JOSEPH H. GROVE A.B., Bible, Social Science Ringwood, Ontario Natural Sciences, Mathematics To us the sciences gave a host of new experiences. We found parameciums playing where our eyes saw only water. At the tables in the physics lab we checked and found that the laws dis- covered long ago are still working. A sudden flush in the bottom of a tiny test tube rewarded an hour’s search for an elusive element. The smell of chemistry’s vapors and the feel of coolly precise instruments became a part of our lives. To us the sciences gave a new world of knowledge. The most common things were transformed into creations of vast complexity and beauty. A mere leaf became an intricate factory of layers of diverse cells busily manufacturing food. A lump of iron became a billion atoms in orderly arrangement, each an incomprehensible mass of spinning electrons and magnetic forces. Long hours in the lab taught us to do things correctly or pay the consequences. The discoveries of science warned us never to assume that things are always what they seem to be. We learned a myriad of facts and they showed 11s there are myriads more we haven’t learned. To us the sciences gave new tools and new meaning for life. Tomorrow’s doctors gathered tools for the art of healing. Others of us came a year closer to a career in nursing. Some stocked stores of knowledge to expound in the classroom. And all of us will live a better life for having seen a vision of God. -JOHN HF.R.SHEY 61 Natural Science and Mathematics PROFESSORS AND INSTRUCTORS HENRY WEAVER. JR., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Physical Science MAURICE T. BRACKBILL, A.M. Professor of Mathematics, and Physical Science PAUL THOMAS, B.S. Instructor in Science D. RALPH HOSTETTER, Ph.D. Professor of Biology GRACE B. LEFEVER, M.T., M.Ed. Assistant Professor of Mathematics, and Science DANIEL B. SUTER, M.A. Assistant Professor of Biology ROBERT C. LEHMAN, A.B. Instructor in Mathematics and Physical Science 62 Donald Sensenig, John Horst, Miriam Yoder, Glen Kauff- man, Paul Wenger, Lois Riclil, Robert Showalter, Marie Suavely, Clyde Horst, Donald Taylor, Virginia Stolzfus, Dan- iel Wert, Marlyn Stephen, Harold Eshenshade. Duane Diller, David Bom- berger, Hershey Leaman, Cora Lehman, David Augsberger, Alice Herr, Franklin Brenne- man, Marian Glick, Wilbur Buckwalter, Martha Boshart, Irvin Coffman, Richard Keel- er, Daniel Miller. FRESHMEN Natural Science and Mathematics 63 FRESHMEN Richard Weaver, L i z z i e Beacliy, Millard Showalter, Meri Manetz, Lizzietta Long, Homer Swartzentruber, Marie Benner, David Kratz, Evan Riehl, Vera Nisly, Ralph Zehr, Lorraine Moyer. SOPHOMORES Duck Jun Lee, Miriam Eshle- man, Linford Gehman, Mark Miller, Richard Stoltzfus, John Eby, John Rutt, 1.ester Beachy, Walter Zehr, Joseph Long- acher, Abdullahi Ali Egal, Harvey Mast. Natural Science and Mathematics JUNIORS Milo Stahl, Dorothy Glick, Ernest Kraybill, John Wenger, John Wagler, Rachel Stauffer, Geneva Emswiler, Ronald David, Lowell Herr. Elias Saig, H a z a 1 Fereira, Larry Wenger, Robert Wenger, Grace Shenk, John Spicher, Elton Lehman, Erma Zimmer- man. 65 PRE-MEDICAL 66 A vivid, speedy slide lecture at the Suters’ home on Thursday evening con- ditioned our minds for the bloody atmos- phere at the Medical Museum on Satur- day. The trot through the museum devel- oped an impatient gnawing in our gastrovascular cavities. The famished frosh gulped the brown bread and cheese. The punctilious guards at Arlington were honored by our presence in the aft- ernoon. After a friendly debate about the way, we were chilled by the sandal-shod monks at the Franciscan Monastery. Three hours, then E. M. C. —DUANE DILLER “And stay around for a party. I’m accepted into ‘med’ school.” SUB-MEDICS Did you hear about the capping at E.M.C.? Sure enough. In the social room the experi- enced members of the society portrayed ex- citement and the feeling of achievement expe- rienced by a student nurse receiving her cap. Prenursing students look forward to the time when they can really feel that accomplishment. This was only one of the meetings. These so- ciety meetings have been very interesting and meaningful. They definitely are a means of preparing students for what lies ahead in the nursing profession. —LORRAINE MOYER “I solemnly pledge myself to pass my life in purity AVIAN Seeking a Red-wing Black-bird, or a star with a tail? In college you look at the birds dif- ferently. Not with the same eyes you did when a child, but with the aid of binoculars and the Peterson s Guide. You learn their habits; you see their brilliance. The surprises come your way every time you go for a hike. On- ly bird watching can get you up at four o’clock in the morning to roam the woodlots. Yes, these are the Avi- ans—the society which most people think is a society just “for the Birds.” —ROLAND YODER ASTRAL You say the world is too much with you? Then turn your mind from the mundane cares of time and space and lift your eyes to the heavens. Fill them with star dust. In the Brackbillian atmosphere of Astral Hall let the inconceivable mag- nitudes of stars, distance, speed and timelessness stretch your imagination to the breaking point. Wonder at the romantic lore of Greek mythology as it unfolds the drama of ethereal gods and demons. Rejoice as you read in the celestial bodies a message written in God’s star script. Worship in the vesper breeze as the soft light of crowned jewels sparkle in the deep blue canopy of night. —GERALD BENDER 67 Natural Science EUNICE KAUFFMAN, R.N. B.S., Nursing Bridgewater, Virginia SENIORS ROBERT D. YODER B.S., Premedical Belleville, Pennsylvania WM DAVID R. MILLER B.S., Premedical Hartville, Ohio and Mathematics SENIORS ALICE REBER, R.N. B.S., Nursing Shelbyville, Illinois CARL S. KEENER A.B., Biology Phoenixville, Pennsylvania GEORGE RUEL BRENNEMAN B.S., Premedical Harrisonburg, Virginia Natural Science and Mathematics SENIORS ROLAND YODER B.S., Biology Greenwood, Delaware CARRIE PEACHEY, R.N. B.S., Nursing Reedsville, Pennsylvania LAURA BAUMAN, R.N. B.S., Nursing St. Jacobs, Ontario MARTHA M. RISSER, R.N. R.S., Nursing Park View, Virginia CARL LEE KEENER B.S., Premedical Shippensburg, Pennsylvania Not pictured JOHN B. HERR B.S., Chemistry Harrisonburg, Virginia MARIA TERESA ORTIZ B.S., Premedical Aibonito, Puerto Rico Education and 72 We are the lovers of people— schoolroom captains of dinnerpails and spit- halls; rihhon-bedecked lassies who giggle or act bashful; faint-hearted fellow who dreads his first date; fearful, hurt persons who have lost their identity in the masses; dulled, broken spirits who have failed to keep contact with even themselves; spirited learner who never stops asking “Why?” and “How?” —these people, all people. We are the movers of men- to a love and appreciation for words; to a recognition of each person’s power to achieve; to an understanding of self; to active enjoy- ment of work and of play; to a search for truth which will lead to the Ultimate Truth; to beauty of harmony, color, and form —movers of minds, movers of men. We are the makers of character by— holding out to each person the freedom to develop high ideals; working and playing in fairness and with enthusiasm; exposing our learners to great thoughts and noble men; helping each child to knowledge and disci- pline of self; loving, purely and strongly, for none can resist the power of love —creators of character, nobler character. -HOPE KAUFFMAN Education and Psychology PROFESSORS AND INSTRUCTORS LAI3A.N PEACHEY, A.U. Instructor in Psychology DANIEL W. LEHMAN, A.M. Professor of Education, and Psychology ESTHER K. LEHMAN, M.A. Assistant Professor of Christian Education, and Education (MRS.) ESTHER WENGER, B.S. Instructor of Eighth Grade HAROLD D. LEHMAN, M.Ed. Assistant Professor of Physical Education, and History (On leave of absence) ELSIE LEHMAN, M.A. Assistant Professor of Education MARGARET I. MARTIN, A.M. Associate Professor of Physical Education, and Art IRA E. MILLER, Ed.D. Professor of Education Magdalena Sommers, LaVerne Zehr, Mary Dorothy Schrock, Barbara Chupp, Willis Miller, Suzanne Christophel, Loretta Schrock, Geraldine Lehman, Esther Bawel, Susie Bontrager, Joseph Shenk, Gloria Moran- ski, Helen Zehr, Anna Mae Long, Arlene Leatherman. Norma Hiestand, Henry Mast, Lillian 'Vj eber, Phyllis Swartz, Leanna Yoder, Ruth Myers, Mary Kauffman, Esther Ruth, Grace Hess, Ruby Kratz, El- mer Lehman, Rachael Mohler, Helen Ranck, Hollie Palmer, Martha Yoder, Joan Hersh- berger: 75 FRESHMEN Education and Psychology FRESHMEN Johanna Gehman, Evelyn Groff, Nicholas Klaue, Mary Louise Miller, Hazel Jane Gross, Doris Mellinger, Joyce Eberly, John Fisher, Anna- belle Miller, Elsie Stutzman, Delilah Miller, Eva Hackman, Paul Landis, Naomi Martin, Jean Stanley. SOPHOMORES Roy Hartzler, Lois Krady, Rae Della Alderfer, Daniel Hess, Lois Martin, Barbara Ann Brenneman, Barbara Lamp, Ruby Brenneman, Beatrice Benner, Millard Benner, Charles Hershey. 76 SOPHOMORES Education and Psychology Phoebe Garber, Robert Hos- tetler, Dorothy Eby, Romaine Shenk, Joyce Metzler, Verda Ropp, Janice Sensenig, Ruth Burkhart, Loren Lind, Herbert J. Martin, Daniel Miller. Ruth Hossler, Ivan Troyer, Naomi Hoover, Mary Ellen Hershberger, Ruth Showalter, Norma Wenger, Betty Strong, Hilda Stoltzfus, Wilbur Miller, Harold Zook, Shirley Kauff- man, Harold Stauffer, Paul Miller. Naomi Hackman, Grace Wide- man, Donald Mellinger, Anita Runion, Duane Kauffman, Martha Denlinger, Bertha Beachy, Mildred Bender, May- nard Kurtz. Paul Schrock, Rhoda Kennel, Florence Hartzler, Duane Tucker, Nancy Kyjuk, Ira Sollenberger, Eileen Lehman, Ada Nancy King. 78 JUNIORS Education and Psychology PROMETHIANS What did you say you are? Oh-h-h, that’s E.M.C.’ 's new literary society, isn’t it? I sup- pose that took barrels of planning, coopera- tion, and soliciting to start a new lit., too. Well, all great things have unique beginnings. You mean you got your attractive name from that Greek god who distributed fire in its many useful forms to the people on earth? His name was Prometheus. Yes, a mighty fine way of warming hearts from the fire of literary appreciation. “Beginnings” how fitting a theme for the first program! But didn’t you have “feathers” with Ike as you awaited election returns? I always did wish I knew more about sea life. Sounds great! I’m really eager for friendship like this. Say, could I become a Promethean? —LOIS KRADY Sponsor, John Lapp; Secretary-Treasurer, Doris Mellinger, RaeDella Alderfer; Vice President, Lois Krady, Loren Lind; President, Larry Wenger, Willard Swartley. Faculty heavyweights on the line. SPORTS . . . for the Men Ball over the mountain is out of bounds! Swish! Carefully aimed basketballs, cutting curves, ushered in a basketball season. The Zelatheans were off to an inspiring height with a major victory over the Smiths. The tide changed in the realm of foot- ball with the Smiths gaining the decisive victory. When the five o’clock chimes sounded and resounded, the fellows with strong bodies, and energy, knew it was time for that winning touchdown pass. Splat! The match point of the fall tennis tourna- ment vibrated the net. From the recreational room came the noise of a ping—then pong—interspersed with a slipping-slide sound from the shuffleboards. Smack! Springing into action with Spring were the softball tournaments that closed the doors of “Kuhl Hall” and another year of sports activities. —LOWELL HERR and a game for every girl They sat in their dorm rooms and lis- tened to the perpetual hum of machinery, building what long had been a dream. Their minds went back to a scene in “Kuhl” Hall — eighteen girls divided evenly, eyeing each other through the holes of a make-shift net stretched precariously from one block wall to the other. They’ll remember the volleyball and basketbal tournaments. On chill mornings. Physical Education classes spelled opportunities for release from bonds of books. Then there was the football tournament and blackboard notices, “Lansdale and Souderton will please meet promptly at 4:15 today.” They sat in their dorm rooms and lis- tened to the perpetual hum . . . They were the girls who pitched, played center forward and goalkeeper, and cheered hard at a basketball game. —LORETTA SCHROCK Athletic Association Vigorous exercise, keen com- petition, cooperation and team- work, the will to win, team spirit —whether in softball, football, basketball, volleyball, or tennis —these are the factors which make sports a vital part of school life. Wholesome recreation forms true friendships and builds strong character. —LINFORD GEHMAN HIGHLANDERS HIKERS Peeking pigtails looking down cocoa cups and seeing stars. A stick, a hat, and a loose-jointed walk. Col-lege Hik-er (kol’ij hik’er) N. 1. over-worked male student who enjoys mountain top experience. 2. one who goes to the top in an over-crowded farm truck. 3. red-blooded sleeper-out who freezes before morning and sleeps on a disturbing protrusion. 4. one who returns to campus with blis- tered feet and whiskered face. 5. man that enjoys living and proves it. (EMC —male man.) Ant. 1. house plant. 2. white-collar bookworm. 3. highlander. —PAUL SCHROCK Education and SENIORS SHIRLEY ANN JAMISON B.S., Elementary Education Creamery, Pennsylvania CHARLES B. LONGENECKER A.B., Secondary Education Biology Manheim, Pennsylvania RUTH H. THOMAS B.S., Elementary Education Lancaster, Pennsylvania ;K',r Psychology SENIORS BYARD W. SHANK A.B., Secondary Education, English Mt. Crawford, Virginia HOPE KAUFFMAN B.S., Elementary Education Wood River, Nebraska SARAH MEYERS A .B., Elementary Education Souderton, Pennsylvania Education and SENIORS FRED GINGERICH B.S., Elementary Education Kalona, Iowa LUKE M. DRESCHER A.B., Secondary Education H istory Mt. Joy, Pennsylvania MARY LOUISE LAPP A.B., Secondary Education, Business Lansdale, Pennsylvania Psychology SENIORS ANNA FREY, B.R.E. ASecondary Education, Social Science Lititz, Pennsylvania CLARA ELIZABETH LANDIS B.S., Elementary Education Lancaster, Pennsylvania SANFORD L. SHANK B.S., Elementary Education Harrisonburg, Virginia Education and Psychology SENIORS JOHN M. MILLER A.B., Secondary Education, Bible Hubbard, Oregon WILMER R. LEHMAN A.B., Secondary Education, Mathematics Chambersburg, Pennsylvania MARTHA HERTZLER A.B., Elementary Education Elverson, Pennsylvania LEROY PELLMAN B.E., Secondary Education Social Science Richfield, Pennsylvania EDNA M. HOOVER B.S., Elementary Education Denver, Pennsylvania (MRS.) LESSIE S. MILLER B.S., Elementary Education Bridgewater, Virginia ELIZABETH SHOEMAKER B.S., Elementary Education Scottdale, Pennsylvania 89 Applied Art and These are students of the best professor— experience. They learn by doing, by being practical. Within the web of campus activity they are found in their own unique labora- tories, pursuing knowledge with hand as well as mind. The girl whose dreams and aspirations center in the realm of the domestic may find her place in the knotty pine atmosphere of the home economics building. From this workshop comes the scent of a burnt cake baked by an amateur cook, or the lament of the potential seamstress who had misused her needle. Men having interests with roots in the soil gather in “Kuhl Hall’s” side-kick building to be instructed in the techniques of sheep- raising, or perhaps to witness a demonstra- tion of milk testing or farm equipment repair. Accounting, typing, and secretarial train- ing classes open the books for tomorrow’s new enterprise. The pecking of typewriters is familiar music of A-52, and is attractive to tyros of stenography. A-51, the office of the bookkeeping novice, offers training in the art of balancing debits with credits. Opportunity for the education of the home- maker is complemented with the orienting of the man of the house. The Industrial Arts program provides instruction in the skills of “do-it-yourself.” The wailing of saws and the pounding of hammers reveal constructive ac- tivity at this place. The term paper research of this course may be the building of a desk or a chair; the diploma—the finished, tangi- ble product. 91 —HERBERT MARTIN Applied Arts and Sciences PROFESSORS AND INSTRUCTORS HOMER A. MUMAW, M.S. Professor of Biology, and Industrial Arts (MRS.) MYRNA B. SHENK, A.B. Instructor in Business ARLENE BUMBAUGH, B.S. Instructor in Home Economics MARY EMMA SHOWALTER M.S. in Home Ec. Associate Professor of Home Economics (MRS.) RUTH STOLTFUS STAUFFER, B.S. Assistant Professor of Business Education WILMER M. LANDIS, M.S. in Ed. Assistant Professor of Agriculture CATHERINE R. MUMAW, B.S. Instructor in Home Economics JOHN J. HOSTETTER. JR., B.S. Instructor in Business FRESHMEN Esther Yoder, Elinor Turner, Ethel Witmer, Ruby Yoder, Joan You- sey, Dorothy Shenk, Mar- etta Shetler, Anna Seitz, Helen Shenk. Miriam Mumaw, Thelma Bitikofer, Edith News- wanger, Barbara Camp- bell, Anna Belle Hobbs, Miriam Martin, Carol Davis, Verna Hertzler, Selamawet Emmanuel, Wilma Gingerich. JUNIOR Florence Horst HOME ECONOMICS CLUB “Are you going to Home Ec Club tonight?” “I don’t have time, but 1 just can’t miss seeing those model houses the Home Ec girls are going to display.” Yes indeed! Time out for Home Ec Club is worth taking. And there are other programs you can’t afford to miss. We see displays of fall arrange- ments, family life in Europe, plans of our dream home. The last feature of every program is some delicious refreshments. —ELLEN SLABAUGH Cookies right out of the Community Cookbook. Not only spoons and knives, mixers and beaters, as many think, but education through courses that prepare girls to be mothers, perfect leaders. 94 i Hr-kVltB1. I Applied Arts and Science SENIORS GRACE GEHMAN B.S., Home Economics Rothsville, Pennsylvania ZOE G. ECONOMOU B.S., Home Economics Thessaloniki, Greece MARY ETHEL HEATWOLE B.S., Home Economics Penn Laird, Virginia Junior College College life for the carefree freshman has only a beginning of vision and a faint awaken- ing to today’s problems; then, suddenly the freshman is a senior. His classmates, now, are the mature thinkers, purposeful, and chal- lenged to meet and grapple with the current problems. He has a wide span to cross to catch up, hut he’s making good progress. The Junior College Senior speaks . . . Of classes and major interests Bible, business, home economics, English, music . . . and of course—exams! And of challenges to meet the problems of today with courage and self-denial; to show the love of Christ by his life and witness; to establish truly Christian homes. O “A little learning is a dangerous thing . . .” very true! However, if the choice is either two years or none, are we to blame for wanting to brave the danger? Our experiences, satis- factions from pursuing major interests, and challenges, prove that two years were worth it. Perhaps some day we will return for more! JOANNA MENGER LEHMAN 97 JUNIOR COLLEGE FRESHMEN Alta Martin, Donald Ris- ser, Mildred Halterman, Werner Will, Esta Yoder, June Lambke, Esther Jones, J o A n n Hess, Bertha Hartman, James Good, Eunice Beyeler, Ruth Zook. Raymond French, Ellen Nisly, Leroy Carr, Lois Wolgemuth, Sara Stahl, Mary Louise Rufenacht, Abe Gingerich, Ruth Overholt, Delmar Yoder, Lavina Smucker, George Z i m m e r m a n, Betty Schultz. JUNIOR COLLEGE FRESHMEN JUNIOR COLLEGE BIBLE FRESHMEN Martha Rohrer, Oscar Kindy, Eli Miller, Ray- mond Schlabach, Dean Wyse, Rawley Shank, Lydia Miller. i JUNIOR COLLEGE SENIORS WARREN W. MARTIN Junior College Bible Adamstown, Pennsylvania WILLARD HEATWOLE Junior College Bible Harrisonburg, Virginia PAUL L. DAGEN Junior College Bible Harrisonburg, Virginia JUNIOR COLLEGE SENIORS EMERSON MARTIN Junior College Anneville, Pennsylvania JUNIOR COLLEGE SENIORS JASON J. DENLINGER Junior College Bible Strasburg, Pennsylvania (MRS.) JOAN NISSLEY GINGRICH Junior College Lancaster, Pennsylvania D. KEITH MULLET Junior College Bloomfield, Montana IDA ERNE Junior College Delft, Holland SUMMER SCHOOL STUDENTS First row: M. Hamish, E. Groff, H. Reesor, J. Esch, M. Harrmuri, M. Yoder, E. Hockman, E. Reesor, Mrs. Miller, M. Schrock, H. Shenk, C. Yoder, C. Christophel. Second row: J. Smucker, L. Pellman, E. King, E. Landis, L. Landis, L. McDorman, J. Frey, M. King, E. Detwiler, H. Hammouri, R. Stoltzfus, R. King, C. Longenecker. Third row: N. Kajubi, A. Shenk, S. King, M. Yoder, M. Bender, M. Swartz, I. Snavely, E. Hoover, M. Gehman, L. Martin, J. Stutzman, M. Lapp, J. Hostetler. Fourth row: E. Bom- berger, W. Swartly, P. Dagen, H. Pellman, S. Hartzler, C. Wittlinger, ]. Lehman, F. Denlinger, U. Martin, W. Showalter, M. Wyse, E. Gehman, D. Lehman. Fifth row: L. Bauman, L. Hurst, C. Martin, 0. Yoder, E. Lehman, I. Miller, Mrs. M. T. Brackbill, E. Brenneman, W. Buckwalter, L. Drescher, D. Yoder, D. Yutzy. PART TIME STUDENTS Sally, Jackie, Will— Three foreign students at E.M.C. They came to join the five still here. Elias, Jama, Marie, Zoe, and Duck Jun Lee. “Let’s have some more”— Kiyono, Joe, and Ida, (three) So now we are eleven, see. Eleven are we, from wonderful. Famous lands like these. At Ira Miller’s we used to meet To pray, play and sing, To quarrel, fuss, and speak. We grieved not to have a meeting Full of laughing tears, For that’s how we are going To remember, my dears, A school like our E.M.C. —ZOE ECONOMOU Abner Miller, Rosalie Wyse, Betty Lou Peter- sheim, Ruth Hollinger, Daniel Yutzy, Georgia Martin, Alma Shenk. SECOND SEMESTER STUDENTS First row: Alma Beachy, Mrs. Rhoda Sauder, James Sauder, Katie Horning, El- don Hamilton, Emmitt Lehman. Second row: David Schrock, Lura Yoder, Lydia Overholt, Eunice Lehman, Pearl Horst, Edna Rice, Lucille Bontrager. Third row: Bob Meyers, H. S., Ernest Slabach, James Metzler, Russell Mumaw, Harry Brunk Jr. Jacqueline Richardson, Elias Saig, Ida Erne’, Abduhlahi Jama Egal, Zoe Econome, Na- hom Hertzel, Duck John Lee, Maria Ortiz, Salamawit Eman- uel, Werner Wil. First row: Freeman Hostetler Ezra Good Norman Zimmerman Fred Gingerich Lewis Good Melvin Myers Second row: Irvin Martin Marion Good Lester Moyer Harold Good Roy Kiser Junior Hershberger Marion Weaver MINISTERS’ INSTITUTE S. B. T. FACULTY S.B.T. Folks slowly drifted in one by one like the flakes of the snow that Wednesday afternoon, and some there were that waited a day or two to come. But they came—fifty- seven of them—twenty-eight girls and twenty- eight fellows and one married man. Yes, they were the Special Bible Term students and sometimes called Short Termers. Then it happened—in the middle of every- thing they burst in upon us—and great was that company of the preachers. We ate cafe- teria style and got acquainted while waiting in long lines. Most of the students came with a purpose to study God’s Word and to be better fitted in the service of the church. But they not only studied, they went to literaries—Berean and Mennovian. Harvey Shenk, Elmer Kolb, Naomi Smucker, Everett Mettzler, Norman Derstine. —WALTER DETWEILER First row: Ruth Driver, Lois Martin, Anna Mary Lapp, Fern Stoltzfus, Bertha Wenger, Lydia Yoder, Rebecca Stoltzius, Laura Stoltzfus, Rhoda Buckwalter, Andrew Cunningham, John Hosteler, Martin Herr. Second row: Ruth Burkholder, Marvin Metzlcr, Leonard Roth, Rhoda Zook, Elizabeth Shertzer, Emmas Hosteter, Esther Shirk, Marian Hershey, Sara Ann Hess, James Miller, Paul Hamish, Walter Detwiler. Third row: John Himmelreich, Arthur Newcomer, Mervin Boll, Melvin Yoder, Carl Leatherman, Mark Kolb, Jesse Peachey, Merle Brunk. First row: Lorraine Bracfield, Maurice Hertzler, Velma Landis, Esther Kurtz. Second row: Joseph Horst, John Kreider, Peter Peachey, Amos Swiegart. Faith Eshleman, Wilma Ding, Evelyn Winey, Doris Schrock, Marjorie Hostetter, Carolyn Heatwole, Martha Miller, Helen Longenecker, John Swartzentruber, Louis Peachey, Jesse Mack, Lloyd Eseh, John Driver, Allen Kurtz. SPECIAL BIBLE TERM o College Senior Class Sponsor. Mr. and Mrs. G. Irvin Leh- man, Peter, George, and Timothy. Business Certificate Students Carolyn Campbell Verna Hertzler Annabelle Hobbs Ruby F. Yoder American Studies Student Herzel Nahom PHOTO HIEROGLYPHICS We’re writing the lives of E.M.C.’s students with pictures. Days and days of little minutes tick people’s lives away. Their day is a life with life, a philosophy and prac- tice, here a little while and there a little while. The following four pages show the in and out of a college. And that’s life, and they wouldn’t want it any other way: Moments of goofing, gabbing and giggling; and minutes when even the stoic lets down his hair. 108 F',’r...i. It’s not much for the Gym —but they’re poor seniors. College dignity doing leap frog. low and lonely, sad and blue i tm ADMINISTRATION Ruth Hollinger, Thelma Landis, Wilma Lee Showalter, Mary Florence Shenk. The Administration is many things made up of many people. It is an organization whose watch word is faithfulness to duty. Theirs is the task of forming and carrying out the pol- icies that determine how well Eastern Men- nonite College can serve its students and the world into which these students go. Theirs is the high aim of keeping Eastern Mennonite College always true to its motto “Thy Word Is Truth.” But the Administration is more than an or- ganization. It is people all different, all inter- esting. We see them in the classrooms, we meet them in the halls or in the diningroom. The merry twinkle and keen wit of a class advisor, the warm smile and readiness to counsel of a student pastor, the sweet serenity and Christ- ian poise of a Sunday School teacher, the friendly fellowship of an English or history professor, the cheerful willingness of a main- tenance man to make dorm life more comfort- able—these are the traits of our Administra- tion that endear them to us. —ANNA FREY Dorthy Krieder, Esther Longacre, Rosalie Wyse, Margaret Metzler, Evertt Metzler, Dale Schumn, Esther Reeser, Wilmer Lehman, Luke Drescher, John Miller, Willard Swartly. On opposite page: Secretaries, Housekeepers, Information Clerk, College Shoppe Manager, Maintenance Men, Kitchen Help. 112 FACULTY ASSISTANTS DAN J. BI.OSSER Business Manager MARGARET M. SHENK, M.A. in L.S. Assistant Librarian MONROE B. WYSE Controller LESTER C. SHENK, A.B., Th.B. Director of Public Relations SAMUEL Z. STRONG, M.A. in Rel. Ed. Field Secretary 114 MYRON S. AUGSBURGER, A.B. Student Pastor SADIE A. HARTZLER, A.B. Librarian. Alumni Secretary ELSIE A. MARTIN, A.M. Supervising Teacher ESTHER K. LONGACRE Acting Dean ol High School Girls EVELYN E. KING, B.R.E. Dean of College Women DANIEL YUTZY Dean of High School Boys MIRIAM H. BARGE Dean of High School Girls (On leave of absence) HELEN M. KING B.S. in L.S. Assistant Librarian 115 w r There are about two hundred forty of them. Where are they from? Mostly from the Valley —Rockingham or Augusta Counties—or Den- bigh. But check the empty places at the dinner table on a Lancaster farm, in an Ohio town, in an ocean-skirting home in Delaware, up where the Michigan perch aren’t rare, farther away in North Dakota, Kansas, or sun-baked Florida. Why do these non-Virginians come here to school? Why does anybody come? Let’s ask them. What do they say? “My sister told me about the good times in the dorm.” “I heard about the active Y.P.C.A.” “I felt like I could join in the good times here.” “I wanted to find Christian friends my age.” “I wanted to sing in a chorus, or a quartet.” Do they get what they come for? Wasn’t that poem good? That lit program was tops! Remember “George” and “Amy” and “Aunt Hattie” at the Thanksgiving So- cial? School-Day-Out was perfect! And Jun- ior-Senior outing! Student Chapel on Friday ftiornings, I.S.B.M. on Sunday nights, singing at the Old Folks’ Home: These functions con- ducted by high school students, who are train- ing to serve their Master, have a different tune than the social functions of a public school. Where are we going? What are we doing to keep busy when classes are over? Did you think our day was over with the four o’clock bell? I can tell you differently. There are committee meetings: “Whom can we get to give that reading for I.S.B.M.? Who will be good for that poem for next literary? Whom can we ask to sing at the Old Folks’ Home Wednesday night?” Our extra time is so full we wonder how to get WEATHER VANE assignments finished on time or the hours of typing practice in. We’re busy. Life has a lot for us. Can you hear us yelling at those Phillie-Amerian basketball games? That’s the kind of enthusiasm we have for life! CLAYTON SHENK 117 Janet Yoder, Treasurer; Mervin Bontrager, Vice President; Rachel Wenger, Secretary; James Wenger, President; Ronald Collins, Business Manager. HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS We had just finished the seven grades and had five years at E.M.C. stretching out ahead of us. Likely we had all vowed at one time or another to quit school. Now, it seemed foolish when compared with attending E.M.C. We entered E.M.C. and were delighted with the personal interest the teachers showd us. As we became more acquainted with the lit- erary, social, and spiritual activities, we won- dered if we would enjoy such activities. Of course we were “busy” the way it was, but— After going through various stages of ado- lescence, awkwardness and social bashfulness, we suddenly realized we were seniors. And what a life! There were extracurricular activies and then some. We were already busy with our regu- lar studies. Who among us will not remember cramming for tests, belated book reports, proj- ects, topics in Student Chapel, quartets, and literary programs? Who of the High School Class of 1957 will forget the class socials, ball games, and Washington Trip? It is with a sense of indebtedness to parents and teachers we leave E.M.C. MARGRET SHENK, High School Class Advisor 118 —DAVID MESSNER ESTHER MAE WENGER Fentress, Virginia Well, check that! DAVID J. MILLER Corfu, New York Roommate, how about popping some pop corn. I can’t. NELSON H. GOOD Elida, Ohio Don’t I sound aivful when I go into my falsetto? KATHRYN LOUISE LEHMAN Harrisonburg, Virginia Oh, you tickle me so! GRACE WYSE Harrisonburg, Virginia Come on up to my house on Sunday and play the piano. RONALD C. COLLINS Harrisonburg, Virginia Yeah, but look, that doesn’t count, does it? 119 CECIL H. NICE Warwick, Virginia I like Ike!! LESTER ALVIN BEACHY Greenwood, Delaware I still think I’m going to be a farmer. JOYCE ANN DOWLING Knoxville, Tennessee Deed, that doesn’t make me too mad! JANET IRENE YODER Midland, Michigan I’m sure glad I don’t have to ivorry about things like that. MARTHA BEILER Grantsville, Maryland There are so many places need- ing nurses. RAMONA KATHRYN WERTZ Bay Port, Michigan What’s your main maladjust- ment? 120 GEORGE R. BRUNK, JR. Denbigh, Virginia I went to dump his bed, but the mattress went—pow! It hurt for a long time. CHARLOTTE RUTH HEATWOLE Harrisonburg, Virginia The test wasn’t about anything in the book. H. WAVID WENGER Linville, Virginia “K4HSR calling K4H N W. Come in, K4GNW. THELMA ELIZABETH HAVILAND Bergton, Virginia I wasn’t going to do it that way, no matter what he said. NIVA JEAN MILLER Hartville, Ohio I’d bring a book along to class, but I’m afraid he’d ask me a question. CHRISTIAN LYNDAKER Croghan, New York Yeah, but, ah .. . you know I like to argue. 121 RAMONA HORST Rittman, Ohio I almost got named Roberta! DAVID G. KAUFFMAN Exeland, Wisconsin It happens to the best of us. MIRIAM ELIZABETH MARTIN Mt. Crawford, Virginia You didn’t take chemistry? You cant be a nurse then. PAUL G. SHOWALTER Waynesboro, Virginia Taste this cider! JUDITH SHOWALTER Linville, Virginia I’m tired and fed up. MIRIAM ARLENE YODER Snow Hill, Maryland Please don’t. I don’t want all that publicity. 122 RUTH FERN SHENK Harrisonburg, Virginia was babysitting last night and didn’t get my Spanish done. MARY LOIS MACK Morgantown, Pennsylvania Roommate, two quantities equal to the same quantity are equal to each other. CAROLYN JUNE CAMPBELL Dayton, Virginia 1 don’t see why I ever did it. EDWIN GOOD Morton, Illinois What ya say, mon? JAMES E. WENGER Lancaster, Pennsylvania George, we just gotta take late per to finish this physics. SYLVIA LANDIS Harrisonburg, Virginia Miss Wenger told me to read that when 1 was a freshman. 123 CHARLOTTE Y. BONTRAGER Alden, New York Did your jaws ever ache from talking? ROY F. GOOD Harrisonburg, Virginia I’d like to sell this Ford for fifty cents. MIRIAM SHANK Harrisonburg, Virginia Wasn’t my Class Voice solo awful? DAVID MILLER Corfu, New York Lock the door. Here comes Yutzy for something to eat! DOROTHY M. WENGER Harrisonburg, Virginia You bet ya boots! ARLEN 0. SAGER Mathias, West Virginia When I’m Ag teacher at E.M.C.... 124 GEORGE F. BRUNK, JR. Warwick, Virginia Well ... don’t know what to do. DOROTHY BROWN Staunton, Virginia Oh, V m so sleepy. RACHEL ANN WENGER Columbiana, Ohio I don’t deserve to be so lucky! MARVIN H. SHOWALTER Waynesboro, Virginia Better get a drink of water before class so you won’t dry up and blow away. BYARD LAYMAN Harrisonburg, Virginia I know I have that forward look. EDITH ELLEN LAYMAN Harrisonburg, Virginia German again tonight. 125 VIRGINIA ANN SHENK Harrisonburg, Virginia You should have seen that horse of mine last night. He was doing his running walk for all he was worth. LYDIA ESTHER GLICK Minot, North Dakota They’re having blizzards at home. JEAN E. SNYDER Battle Creek, Michigan Marian, could you practice for the trio tonight after school? HAZEL KNICELY Mt. Crawford, Virginia I’d much rather give a talk than lead songs. ARLETHA ALBRECHT Akron, New York No joke! PEGGY ELLEN HEATWOLE Harrisonburg, Virginia I wish I could change my name to Peggi. 126 CAROLYN FAYE CARR Harrisonburg, Virginia Sure, I’ll take you to town. FREEMAN KINSINGER Middlefield, Ohio Just think, they haven’t lost a game yet! KATHERINE HIESTAND Marietta, Pennsylvania Oh, I’ve got an idea! MERVIN BONTRAGER Darien Center, New York What do ya mean, that dreamy look in my eyes? RUBY MARIE WEAVER Apple Creek, Ohio Oh, you’re always happy! NORMA JEAN GEARY Scottdale, Pennsylvania I just love the ivitches’ scene in MACBETH. 127 CHARITY CAMILLA SHANK Harrisonburg, Virginia If you put that in the Shen, I’ll “dah.” DAVID MESSNER Harrisonburg, Virginia Certainly, there’s enough vari- ety in classical music for any- one to enjoy. CAROLYN MARIE AMSTUTZ Apple Creek, Ohio When I go home some week- end I’m going to stay. RICHARD G. WEBER Warwick, Virginia Let us meditate. JOSEPH JOHNS Conneaut Lake, Pennsylvania Got to have it,—just got to! CLAYTON SHENK Elida, Ohio Hey, could you sing at the Old Folks Home Sunday? 128 MILDRED RHODES Bridgewater, Virginia Give me the pitch and tell me how to start it. MARVIN SLABAUGH Harrisonburg, Virginia Let’s see you guys get on the ball! DAVID WAYNE LONGACHER Warwick, Virginia Listen to this record I just got! KATHRYN ALDERFER Denbigh, Virginia Care for some coconut-cream pie? CECIL SWARTZENDRUBER Owendale, Michigan If I come to college I’ll major in Industrial Arts. ARLIN R. MARTIN Maugansville, Maryland Oh, there wasn’t anything the matter with that. 129 ANABELLE MARTIN Waynesboro, Pennsylvania Let’s go to the College Shoppe and stock up on food. NELSON LEHMAN Chamberburg, Pennsylvania Well, what’s the matter with that? RHODA GEIL Broadway, Virginia Was that a joke? PETER HOFER Chester, Montana Now what was that assignment again? MARIAN GRACE LONGENECKER Middletown, Pennsylvania Who short-sheeted my bed? ARLIN D. MARTIN Harrisonburg, Virginia When can we have a Social Committee meeting? 130 JOYCE HARLENE BONTRAGER Alden, New York I’m so mixed up! JUNE DARLENE BONTRAGER Alden, New York I’m June, better knoivn as Joyce. THEDA MARIE RUPPERT Tampa, Florida That guy s losing his cookies! MARLIN RAY BURKHOLDER Maugansville, Maryland Did you practice your Class Voice solo? GLADYS EBERSOLE Hagerstown, Maryland Yeah, but don’t tell it around! ARLENE DETWEILER Uniontown, Ohio Oh honestly, girl, I was SO ashamed! IRVIN HEISHMAN Harrisonburg, Virginia Hey, I got a new joke! 131 RAYMOND HERTZLER Denbigh, Virginia Ed, let's take a workout to- night. HAROLD HALL Hartville, Ohio What do we have for dinner? RAYMOND MARTIN Harrisonburg, Virginia Then last night I got two more town hunting for orange dye! NORMAN BENNER Harrisonburg, Virginia I was NOT out late last night! RAMON CULLEN Waynesboro, Virginia I can’t go. I’m campused. CECIL GROVE Waynesboro, Virginia Good day! MARTHA WEASE Harrisonburg, Virginia Deed honest, I did awful! 132 James Horst, Betty Deputy, Elsa Miller, Stanley Shenk, Lowell Kauffman, Oren Shank, Ralph Harman, Cynthia Good. JUNIORS Robert Steckley, Phyllis, Bontrager, Ellen Kiser, Alice Hartzler, Shelby Jean Campbell, Anna Keeler, Jane Burkholder, Rachel Horst, Nelson Driver. Ruth Eshleman, Marlene Collins, Janet Esch, Phyllis Showalter, Mary Beth Messner, Earlene Delp, Ruth Beachy, Mar- ian Yoder, Audrey Eshle- man. Norman Coffman, Mar- garet Layman, Stanley Hostetter, Ruth Benner, Mary Ellen Oberholtzer, Chester Bradfield, Lowell Turner, Lorena Detwiler, Joyce Miller, Miriam Strong. 134 JUNIORS Seated: Jeanette Landes, Margaret Showalter, Richard Lahtnan. Stand- ing: Mary Rollins, Gloria Harman, Eldon Shank, Mark Harman, David Mumaw, Edith Jantzi, Mae Funk, Marjorie Brenneman. Wilson Good, Alley Mil- ler, John Stahl, Earl Delp, Sheldon Layman, Ronald Deputy, Merrill Hunsburger, Eugene Stoltzfus, Donlad Frey. You’ve made us taller E. M. C., From 4’11” Ruthie Beachy To 6’2” Merrill Hunsburger. Our first inch: When we climbed Massanutten and learned respect for ivy poison. When we missed coffee cake on Tuesday Morning for not having heard the rising bell. When we rode the bus to Williamsburg—saw hoop skirts and Golonial breeches, heard the cannon and stood in the stocks, and sat in “style” at the Halloway House. A second inch: When we had pumpkin pie and cider—first class social. When the twins played musical duets. When we played rhythm and popped corn. When the “polka-dot triplets” marched. A third inch: When we studied Robert Frost and Carl Sand- burg. When we took American history pop tests. When we sang “This is Noel.” A fourth inch: When we prayed together at noon. When we sang Christmas Carols. When we sang at the Convalescent Home. You’ve made us taller E. M. C. —VIVIAN BEACHY 135 SOPHOMORES Sophia Pearl Brubaker, Janeth Heatwole, Bonnie Miller, Loretta Miller, Nora Shenk, Emily Turn- er, Janice King, Rose Weaver. Stuart S u t e r, Miriam Hostetler, Belly Good, David Eshleman, Leroy Kiser, Esther Hege, Ruby Y oder, Rhoda Knieely, Donald Nair, Margaret Deputy. Evelyn Wenger, Louise Showalter, Wilda Walker, Carolyn Sager, Lucille Weber, Allen Rhodes, John Heatwole, Mervyl Miller, John Yoder, Ida Sue Sarco. 136 FRESHMEN Patricia Hostetter, Caro; lyn Iiarman, Marjorie Miller, Loretta Bowman, Margaret Rollins, Lois Frclz, Nancy Shank, Joyce Kuhns, Lois Bru- baker, Julia Coffman. Lois Bradfield, Orden Harman, Eva Hartzler, Harold Hege, Evelyn Hurst, Sue Good, Lois Deputy, Eleanor Martin, David Whetzel, Gerald Martin, Kenneth Eshle- man, Virginia Campbell, William Klaue, Richard Stollzfus, Clarence Burk- holder. Emily Strong, R c b a Rhodes, Sharon Sager, Evelyn Stauffer, David Geil, Edwin Swope, Glen Showalter, Roy Heatwole, Robert Coffman, Dorothy Sue Wenger, James Landis, John Mark Wyse, Ellen Shenk, Howard Keener. 137 Front row: John Mess- ner, James Heatwole, Donald Pellman, Gordon Slabaugh, Allen Stoltz- fus. Second row: Wilda King, Jewel Harman, Miriam Keener, Janet Showalter, Janice Suter. Third row: Luke Lah- man, Ernest Miller, Jakie Batterman, Allen Ours, Norman Shank. Fourth row, standing: Wendell Beachy, Lowell Deputy, Ralph Wilfong, John Davis, Paul Schaeffer. Left side: Betty Low Smith, G 1 a d y Shenk, Phyllis Miller, Janet Hot- tinger, James Hurst, Stanley Yoder. Right side: Dawn Batterman, Betty Walker, Constance Yoder, Wilma Funk, Boyd Burkholder, Ray- mond Brunk. EIGHTH GRADE September—My, isn’t this a big school! Who are all these people? I’m scared! Will we have to sit beside the boys on these double seats? Will we have all our classes in I 12? “Ain’t it tuff?” October—That library is so big; how do you find a hook in it? Why did they ask us to have part in the devotional period during Christian Day School Institute? Must we come? November—Youth Guidance Conference was good, but a whole day is a long time to sit in chapel. Why don’t we have all of Thanksgiving Day off—my Grandfather is going to butcher then! December—Good! We can have a Christmas Social at Oakwood! Good-by, Mrs. Wenger, I’m not coming back to school any more this year! January—The Freshmen are signed up for a Ping Pong Tournament, you got to let us start one now, too! Our Phys. Ed. periods are not long enough! Yea, Rhubarb, that was a swell run! February—What time in the afternoon will we be dismissed during Revival Meetings? Why can’t we have a devotional period of our own every day? March—Will George have to stay in for talking too much? April—It’s too nice to stay indoors; may we have class outside today? May—May we take a hike today in Science class? I can’t wait until school is over! We’ll be back next year. 138 —MRS. LINDEN WENGER • v Hi ARMERIANS “They are crammed and jammed in buses . . “Dig, man, for a fast break!” . . . and they’re each of them alone.” “Tough break, it’s a block shot!” PHILOMETHEANS 141 VESPER BOYS’ CHORUS First row: R. Good, A. D. Mar- tin, L. Kauffman, G. Stoltzfus, P. Showalter, W. Good, N. Benner, C. Shenk, N. Lehman, M. Showalter, Jay B. Landis, Conductor. Second row: J. Johns, R. Heishman, R. Leh- man, M. Bontrager, N. Good, P. Thomas, S. Shenk, F. Kin- singer, C. Swartzentruber, A. R. Martin. Third row: G. Brunk, R. Steckly, 0. Shenk, M. Hunsburger, D. Kauffman, E. Good, D. Messner, D. Wen- ger, R. Deputy, R. Collins, J. Wenger. 142 CHORUS HIGH SCHOOL CHORUS Arley, David, Merril, John, Miriam, Betty, Nora, Loretta, Lucille, Janeth, Rose, Ida Sue. Twelve students, energet- ic or otherwise, singing To Us A Child of Hope Is Born in A-16 early Monday and Wednesday mornings. Twelve students, hoping to gain experience in cho- rus which will aid them in obtaining entrance into Vesper Chorus next year. Twelve students, singing because they like to sing. —DOROTHY KREIDER 143 Every branch hip; with it, Bent every twig with it; Every fork like a white web-foot; Every street and pavement mute; Some flakes have lost their way, and grope back upward, when Meeting those meandering down they turn and descend again. The pailings are glued together like a wall. And there is no waft of wind with the fleecy fall. A sparrow enters the tree Whereon immediately A snow-lump thrice his own slight size Descends on him and showers his head and eyes. And overturns him, And near inurns him, And lights on a nether twig, when its brush Starts off a volley of other lodging lumps with a rush. —THOMAS HARDY 146 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Making a yearbook is a big task. The Shenandoah Staff sincerely thanks many of you who cooperated with us. Some of you wrote articles, others of you gave us photos to use, for this we are grateful. We would like to acknowledge those who helped us in particular. The Beverley Studio, Staunton, Virginia, for pictures on pages 2, 3, 9, 10 and II. The Gitchell-Lee Studio, Harrisonburg, Va., for photography work. Taylor Publishing Company, Dallas, Texas, for quality printing. Professor Hubert R. Pellman, our faculty sponsor, for helpful criticism. The secretaries in the Records Office for keeping us posted on changes. The salesmen for getting out and selling these books. Roland Yoder, for the imaginatively designed cover. To the following businessmen for their financial assistance. GOODVILLE MUTUAL CASUALTY COMPANY GOODVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA Insurance for Liability, Property Damage, and extended Medical Pay- ments on automobiles and General Liability. OUR MOTTO:—INSURANCE AT COST Now Licensed in Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Maryland, Delaware and Pennsylvania. INCORPORATED JANUARY 4, 1926 TOWN COUNTRY MOTORS, INC. N. Liberty St. Telephones—4-6353 or 4-6467 HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA Dynamometer Tune Up Service Your Local Pontiac Dealer FRANK HARMAN HATCHERY Harrisonburg, Virginia White Vantress Crosses Famous Meat Makers H N Nick Chick Leghorns Today's Laying Champions ECHO RESTAURANT Fried Chicken Curb Service Old Virginia Ham Phone 4-7059 2 Ml. SOUTH HARRISONBURG—ON U. S. ROUTE NO. II JOHN W. TALIAFERRO SONS Jewelers FINE WATCH REPAIRING 54 South Main St. Harrisonburg, Va. THE NATIONAL BANK OF HARRISONBURG Harrisonburg, Virginia SAFETY AND SERVICE MEMBER F. D. I. C. Compliments of FARMERS SUPPLY, INC. Broadway, Va. We cooperate with your physician to keep you healthy BROADWAY DRUG STORE Carl S. Showalter, Owner Broadway Virginia PHONE 3-3251 VALLEY BOOKS 82 South Main St. Harrisonburg, Va. Harrisonburg's Religious Book Store You'll enjoy a visit here 10% Discount on Books and Bibles to E. M. C. Students Farm Equipment and Home Appliances J. O. STICKLEY AND SON, INC. Harrisonburg, Va. WALTER HARTMAN SERVICE STATION Barber Work, Tires, Gas, Oil, and Lubrication Service PARK VIEW HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA WEAVER HATCHERY Vantress Nichols Cross • Indian River Nichols Cross • White Leghorns Stuarts Draft, Va., Dial Staunto 52460 Harrisonburg, Va., Dial 46783 VALLEY GOLD Grade A Dairy Products MILK PRODUCTS AND ICE CREAM Valley Creamery, Inc. Phone 4-3814 Harrisonburg, Va. MARTINS ON THE CAMPUS Clothing, Dry Goods, Shoes, Gifts Plain Clothing a Specialty, Mail Orders Solicited Your Satisfaction Our Pleasure Compliments of DAVID A. (BILL) REED Excavating Contractor PHONE 4-3964 Harrisonburg, Virginia BATTERMAN'S MACHINE SHOP Machinists and Welders EDOM ROAD HARRISONBURG. VA. Compliments of MOYERS MOTOR CO., INC. Parts Dept. Phone 130 Office Phone 150 NEW MARKET, VIRGINIA Your Ford and Mercury Dealer SHENANDOAH EQUIPMENT CO. Phone 4-3838 Harrisonburg, Virginia MANUFACTURERS OF POULTRY RAISING EQUIPMENT, HOG FEEDERS, AND METAL FARM GATES STAUNTON STEAM LAUNDRY Quality Laundry and Dry Cleaning Service for the Students and Faculty of E. M. C. BRENNEMAN'S GARAGE Near E. M. C., Harrisonburg, Va. Complete Auto Servicing, Accessories, Repairs, Wrecker Service TEXACO GAS, OILS, AND LUBRICATION Phone: Day 4-7361, Night 4-3918 Aldine Brenneman, Owner JAMES THOMPSON BUICK, INC. Newest Buick Yet 2-2 N. Liberty St. Harrisonburg, Va. PHONE 4-6749 Dial 4-3133 Charter Trips Any Size Buses Anywhere SUPERIOR BUS SERVICE City Street Service Park View and College Harrisonburg, Virginia Franchise Routes to Franklin, W. Va. Mathis, W. Va. ROCCO FEEDS, INC. Definite Feeds for Definite Needs Dial 4-2549 Harrisonburg, Virginia COMPLETE LINE OF POULTRY AND LIVESTOCK FEEDS GARDNER Compliments of INC. Big Enough to Serve You. Small Enough to Want to. Compliments of JOSEPH NEY'S Harrisonburg, Virginia BLAH'S CLEANERS Quality Dry Cleaning Since 1910 47 E. MARKET ST. HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA GITCHELL STUDIO CAMERA SHOP Serving E. M. C. Since 1938 PHONE 4-7362 HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA Compliments THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Harrisonburg, Virginia ESTABLISHED 1865 DEPOSITS INSURED For All Machines For Modern Farming See HARMAN SALES SERVICE, INC. Dial 4-2584 Harrisonburg, Va. P.O. Box 207 Located I Mile South on U. S. II STRENGTH — SERVICE — COURTESY In meeting the banking requirements of our neighbors through the years we have sought to give an extra measure of service to every visitor or customer on every occasion. That is still—and will always be—our aim. We will welcome the oppor- tunity to serve your banking needs. THE ROCKINGHAM NATIONAL BANK Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation THE SHENK HATCHERY BREEDING FARM Phone 4-6733 Harrisonburg, Va. YOU WILL LIKE SHENK'S 77'S, 88'S AND 99'S SUPERIOR CONCRETE, INC. Sand Crushed S+one Cernent At Your Service With Superior Quality in Transit Mixed Concrete Phone Harrisonburg 4-7795 or Elkton 6161 950 South High St. Harrisonburg, Va. WEAVER BOOK STORE Bibles, Books Sunday School Supplies 44 S. DUKE STREET LANCASTER, PA. Compliments of YODER POPCORN CO. Processors of Quality Popcorn TOPEKA, INDIANA PHONE—Shipshewana, 58FII For a Meal or a Snack You Add Something Special With KALONA SWISS CHEESE Kalona, Iowa Compliments of BLAUCH BROTHERS PLUMBING AND HEATING Will-Burt Oilburners Duro Water Systems PARK VIEW HARRISONBURG, VA. We Ship Apples Anywhere THE MARTIN COMPANY 2315 Penna. Ave. Hagerstown, Md. No Order Too Small Apples the Year Around SUNNYWAY DINER The Place of Good Food Greencastle, Penna. On U. S. Route 11 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Eshleman—Your Hosts THE L. S. DINER 225 North Liberty St. Harrisonburg, Virginia On Truck Route U. S. II BURKHOLDER’S FLOOR COVERING Armstrong Line Mohawk Carpets 2039 Penna. Avenue Hagerstown, Maryland Compliments of WAMPLER FEED AND SEED COMPANY, INC. Harrisonburg Virginia World- Einesi! f TIRE SERVICE :: . . ■ $£$,?£! itsw.itc Wheel Balancing CARR S TIRE SERVICE Wheel Alignment RAYMOND E. CARR, Owner Willard Batteries GAS, OIL ACCESSORIES Tire Repairing Is Our Business, Not a Side Line NEW AND USED MODERN RECAPPING TIRES VQriREsy AND EXPERT REPAIRING SPECIAL BUDGET STUDENT TERMS DISCOUNTS Dial 4-2503 HARRISONBURG Cor. N. Liberty and Gay Sts. VIRGINIA INDEX Albright, Arletha 126, 143, 31 Alderfer, Kathryn 129, 141, 143 Alderfer, RaeDella 79, 76 Amstutz, Carolyn 128, 143 Augsburger, David 46, 63 Augsburger, Myron 30, 114 Baer, Jason 28 Barge, Miriam 115 Battermen, Dawn 138 Batterman, Jakie 138 Bauman, Laura 70, 143 Bawel, Esther 75 Beachy, Bertha 45, 78, 142 Beachy, Lester 64 Beachy, Lester A. 120 Beachy, Ruth 134 Beachy, Vivian 141, 41, 111, 144 Beachy, Wendell 138 Beiler, Martha 120, 140, 142 Bender, Gerald 46, 38, 111, 110 Bender, Kenneth 29 Bender, Martin 59 Bender, Mildred 47, 46, 78 Bender, Titus 46, 47, 33, 57 Benner, Beatrice 46, 76 Benner, Henry 48, 46, 33, 59, 111 Benner, Marie 46, 94, 98 Benner, Millard 76 Benner, Norman 132, 142 Benner, Ruth 134, 143 Beyeler, Eunice 46, 94, 98 Bitikofer, Thelma 93 Blosser, Dan J. 114 Bomberger, Elton 29 Bontrager, Charlotte 124, 47, 143 Bontrager, Joyce 131, 47 Bontrager, June 131, 47 Bontrager, Mervin 118, 127, 142 Bontrager, Phyllis 134, 15, 142 Borntrager, Susie 34, 79, 75, 143 Boshart, Martha 51, 47, 46, 94, 63 Boshart, Ruth’Ann 51, 46, 42 Bowman, Barbara 137 Brackbill, Maurice T. 62, 67 Brackbill, Mrs. Ruth M. 40, 110 Brad field, Chester 134 Bradfield, Lois 137 Brenneman, Barbara 76 Brenneman, Franklin 63 Brenneman, George 66, 68 Brenneman, Marjorie 135, 140, 142 Brenneman, Ruby 45, 76 Brown, Dorothy 125 Brubaker, Doris 142 Brubaker, Lois 137 Brubaker, Sophia 136 Brunk, George F. 125 Brunk, George R. 121, 142, 143 Brunk, Gerald 46, 47, 67, 29 Brunk, Harry, Sr. 56 Brunk, Raymond 138 Buck waiter, Wilbur 63 Bumbaugh, Arlene 92 Burkhart, Ruth 77 Burkholder, Boyd 138 Burkholder, Clarence 137 Burkholder, Jane 134 Burkholder, Lois 42 Burkholder, Marlin 131, 142, 145 Byer, Arthur 35 Campbell, Barbara 93 Campbell, Carolyn 123, 145 Campbell, Shelby 134 Campbell, Virginia 137 Carr, Carolyn 127, 133 Carr, Leroy 98 Christophel, Suzanne 79, 46, 75 Chupp, Barbara 75 Coffman, Irvin 63 Coffman, Julia 137 Coffman, Norman 134 Coffman, Robert 137 Collins, Marlene 134, 133, 141 Collins, Ronald 118, 119, 142, 43 Cullen, Ramon 132 Dagen, Paul 100 David, Ronald 43, 65 Davis, Carol 93, 143 Davis, John 138 Delp, Earl 135 Delp, Earlene 134 Dement, Sue 45, 43, 46, 103 Denlinger, Fred 59 Denlinger, Jason 102 Denlinger, Martha 46, 78 Deputy, Betty 133 Deputy, Lois 137 Deputy, Lowell 138 Deputy, Margaret 136 Deputy, Ronald 135 Detwiler, Arlene 131, 47, 142 Detwiler, Lorena 134, 142 Diller, Duane 51, 63 Dowling, Joyce 120, 47, 145 Drescher, Luke 139, 83, 86, 112 Driver, Nelson 134, 31 Eberly, Joyce 47, 46, 76 Ebersole, Gladys 131 Eby, Dorothy 34, 77 Eby, Eleanor 141, 143 Eby, John 64 Eby, Omar 48, 46, 53, 111 Economou, Zoe 105, 94 Egal, Ali Abullahi 105, 64 Emmanuel, Selamawit 105, 93 Emswiler, Geneva 65 Erne, Ida 105, 103 Esbenshade, Harold 63 Esch, Janet 134, 141, 143, 145, 31 Eshleman, Audrey 134, 142 Eshleman, David 57 Eshleman, J. David 136, 143 Eshleman, Kenneth 137, 139 Eshleman, Merle 27, 110 Eshleman, Miriam 45, 64 Eshleman, Ruth 134, 142 Ferreira, Hazel 65 Fisher, John 46, 47, 38, 76 French, Raymond 46, 47, 98 Fretz, Clarence 27 Fretz, Lois 137 Frey, Anna 43, 87 Frey, Donald 135 Funk, Mae 135 Funk, Wilma 138 Garber, David 51, 29, 142 Garber, Phoebe 46, 67, 77 Geary, Norma Jean 127 Gehman, Grace 95 Gehman, Johanna 79, 46, 76 Gehman, Linford 43, 67, 83, 64 Geil, David 137 Geil, Rhoda 130 Gingerich, Fred 48, 86 Gingerich, Joan 102 Gingerich, James 47, 32, 33, 37 Gingerich, Ray 28, 98 Gingerich, Wilma 93 Glick, Dorothy 47, 46, 65 Glick, John 46, 47, 57 Glick, Lydia 126, 33, 47, 142, 145 Glick, Marian 46, 47, 30 Good, Claude 46, 47, 30 Good, Cynthia 133, 140 Good, Betty 136, 143 Good, James 43, 98 Good, Nelson 119, 142, 141, 140 155 INDEX Good, Ollie 113 Good, Roy 124, 142, 133, 143 Good, Sue 137 Good, Wilson 135, 142, 141 Groff, Evelyn 46, 76 Gross, Hazel 47, 46, 76 Grove, Cecil 132 Grove, Earl 51 Grove, Joseph 59 Hackman, Eva 46, 76 Hackman, Naomi 78 Hall, Harold 141, 132 Halteman, Mildred 46, 98 Harman, Carolyn 137 Harman, Gloria 135 Harman, Jewel 138 Harman, Mark 135 Harman, Orden 137 Harman, Ralph 133 Harshberger, Martha 42 Hartman, Bertha 47, 46, 98 Hartman, Wilmcr 47, 36 Hartzler, Alice 135, 143 Hartzler, Eva 137 Hartzler, Florence 46, 78 Hartzler, Rebecca 46, 29 Hartzler, Roy 76, 111, 110 Hartzler, Sadie 115 Haviland, Thelma 121 Heatwole, Alta Mai 113 Heatwole, Charlotte 121, 143, 145 Heatwole, James 138 Heatwole, Janeth 136, 143 Heatwole, John 136 Heatwole, Mary Ethel 95 Heatwole, Peggy 126, 141 Heatwole, Roy 137 Heatwole, Willard 100 Hege, Esther 136 Hege, Harold 137 Helmuth, David 36 Heishman, Irvin 131, 133, 142 Herr, Alice 47, 46, 66, 63, 111 Herr, Lowell 45, 65, 110 Herr, Mabel 30 Hershberger, Joan 46, 75 Hershberger, Mary Ellen 33, 77 Hershey, Charles 46, 47, 76 Hershey, John 48, 46, 47, 57, 111 Hertzler, Donald 28 Hertzler, Raymond 141, 132, 145 Hertzler, Verna 46, 93 Hess, Grace 43, 75, 94, 143 Hess, Daniel 46, 47, 76, 111 Hess, JoAnn 46, 98 Hiestand, Katherine 127, 33, 142 High, Floyd O. 46, 28 Histand, Laura 113 Histand, Norma 75 Hobbs, Anna Belle 46, 93 Hochstetler, Daniel 34, 79, 51, 28 Hofer, Pete 145, 130 Hollinger, Ruth 94, 112 Hoover, Edna 46, 89 Hoover, Naomi 77 Horst, Clyde 63 Horst, Florence 93 Horst, Irvin 27, 110 Horst, James 133 Horst, John 46, 47, 63 Horst, Rachel 34, 134, 142 Horst, Ramona 122,140, 142 Horst, Samuel 46, 144 Hossler, Esther Ruth 34, 77, 142 Hostetler, Eugene 37 Hostetler, June 101 Hostetler, John J. 92, 113 Hostetler, Robert 46, 47, 77 Hostetter, D. Ralph 67, 110, 162 Hostetter, Miriam 136, 143 Hostetter, Patricia 137 Hostetter, Stanley 134 Hottinger, Janet 138 Hunsberger, Merrill 135, 141, 142 Hurst, Evelyn 137 Hurst, James 138 Jamison, Shirley 84 Jantzi, Edith 135, 142 Johns, Joseph 128, 141, 142 Jones, Esther 46, 47, 51, 98 Kauffman, David 122, 142 Kauffman, Duane 46, 78 Kauffman, Eunice 85, 111 Kauffman, Glenn 46, 63 Kauffman, Hope 85, 111 Kauffman, Lowell 133, 141, 142, 143 Kauffman, Mary 46, 75 Kauffman, Phoebe 113 Keeler, Anna 134, 145 Keeler, Nathaniel 28 Keeler, Richard 63 Keener, Carl L. 71 Keener, Carl S. 68 Keener, Howard 137 Keener, Miriam 138 Kemrer, Dorthy 40 Kennel, Rhoda 46, 78 Ketcham, Marvin 28 Kindy, Oscar 99, 142 King, Ada Nancy 34, 46, 79 King, Evelyn 115 King, Helen 115 King, Janice 136 King, Wilda 138 Kinsinger, Freeman 127, 142 Kiser, Ellen 134 Kiser, Leroy 136 Klaue, Nicholas 76 Klaue, William 137 Knicely, Hazel 126 Knicely, Rhoda 136 Krady, Lois 46, 76, 79 Kratz, David 64 Kratz, Ruby 51, 75 Kraybill, Ernest 47, 65, 111 Kreider, Dorothy 112 Kreider, Norman 42, 46 Kuhns, Joyce 137 Kurtz, Maynard 44, 46, 78, 110, 111 Kyjuk, Nancy 78 Lahman, Richard 135, 142 Lamke, June 98 Lamp, Barbara 46, 76 Landes, Jeanette 135 Landis, Clara 46, 87 Landis, James 137 Landis, Jay B. 32, 41, 111, 133, 142 Landis, Paul 47, 76 Landis, Thelma 112 Landis, Sylvia 20, 123, 142 Landis, Wilmer 92 Lapp, James 28, 46, 47, 51 Lapp, John 56, 79, 80 Lapp, Mary 86 Layman, Byard 125 Layman, Edith 125 Layman, Margaret 134, 145 Layman, Sheldon 135 Leaman, Chester 29 Leaman, Evelyn 44, 113, 57 Leaman, John 28, 143 Leaman, Hershey 63 Leatherman, Arlene 142 Leatherman, Lois 42 Lebold, Ralph 30 Lee, Duck 51, 64, 105 Lefever, Grace 32, 41, 62 Lehman, Chester 26 Lehman, Cora 63 Lehman, Daniel 74, 110 Lehman, Eileen 78 Lehman, Elmer 75, 143 Lehman, Elsie 74 Lehman, Elton 65, 111 Lehman, Esther 32, 44, 74 Lehman, Geraldine 74, 143 Lehman, Harold 74 Lehman, Irvin 27, 32 Lehman, Joanna 99 Lehman, Johnn 58 Lehman, Kathryn 119, 143 156 INDEX Lehman, Luke 138 Lehman, Milton 51, 30 Lehman, Nelson 130, 142 Lehman, Robert 62 Lehman, Wilmer 33, 88, 112 Leis, Vernon 42 Lind, Loren 79, 77 Long, Anna Mae 75 Long, Lizzietta 64, 142 Longacher, David 129, 141 Longacher, Esther 112, 115 Longacher, Joseph 43, 64, 143 Longenecker, Charles 47, 84 Longenecker, Marian 15, 47, 130 Lyndaker, Christian 121 Mack, Mary 34, 123 Manetz, Meri 64 Martin, Allen 29, 51, 142 Martin, Alta 46, 94, 98 Martin, Anabelle 130, 143 Martin, Arlin D. 33, 130, 140, 142, 143 Martin, Arlin R. 80, 85, 129, 140, 142, 143 Martin, Eleanor 137 Martin, Emerson 30 Martin, Gerald 137 Martin, Herbert 77 Martin, Jean 142 Martin, Lois 46, 76 Martin, Margaret 74, 83 Martin, Miriam 93 Martin, Miriam 34, 122 Martin, Ula 113 Martin, Naomi 76 Martin, Paul 27, 32 Martin, Raymond 132 Martin, Samuel 113 Martin, Warren 100 Mast, Harvey 64 Mast, Henry' 46, 75 Mast, Verna 34 Maust, Earl 41, 133, 144 Maust, Elmer 30 Mellinger, Donald 33, 46, 78, 111 Mellinger, Doris 47, 67, 76, 79 Messner, David 48, 128, 142, 143 Messner, John 138 Messner, Mary 134, 143 Metzler, Everett 112 Metzler, Joyce 46, 77 Meyers, Sarah 46, 85 Miller, Annabelle 76, 142 Miller, Arley 135, 143 Miller, Bonnie 136 Miller, Carol 42, 46, 51, 111 Miller, Daniel C. 46, 77, 142 Miller, Daniel M. 31, 51, 63 Miller, David 88, 124 Miller, David J. 119, 145 Miller, David R. 45, 46, 68, 80 Miller, Delilah 46, 76 Miller, Eli 99 Miller, Elsa 133 Miller, Ernest 138 Miller, Ira 74 Miller, Mrs. Ira 113 Miller, Jerry 28, 142 Miller, John Henry 46, 28 Miller, John 44, 46, 33, 88, 112 Miller, Joyce 134 Miller, Loretta 136, 143 Miller, Lessie 89 Miller, Lydia 99 Miller, Mark 46, 64 Miller, Marjorie 137 Miller, Mary 57 Miller, Mary Louise 67, 76 Miller, Mervyl 136 Miller, Niva Jean 121, 141, 47 Miller, Paul 27, 142 Miller, Phyllis 138 Miller, Ray1 D. 29, 51, 142 Miller, Samuel 41, 51 Miller, Wilbur 46, 47, 77 Miller, Willis 75 Mohler, Rachel 51, 75 Moranski, Gloria 75 Moyer, Ivan 46, 57 Moyer, Lorraine 46, 47, 64, 79, 64 Mullet, Keith 46, 103 Mumaw, Catherine 92 Mumaw, David 135 Mumaw, Homer 92 Humaw, John 26, 110 Mumaw, Lois 113 Mumaw, Miriam 46, 47, 93 Myers, Ruth 75, 143 Nahom, Herzel 105 Nair, Donald 136, 145, 141 Newswanger, Edith 46, 93 Nice, Cecil 120 Nisly, Ellen 143 Nisly, Ruth 42 Nisly, Vera 64, 98 Nolt, Elizabeth Oberholtzer, Mary 134 Ortiz, Maria 71, 105 Ours, Allen 138 Overholt, Francis 46, 28 Overholt, Ruth 98 Palmer, Hollie 75 Peachey, Carrie 46, 66, 70 Peachey,Laban 74 Peachey, Paul 56, 110 Peachey, Urbane 45, 47 Pellman, Donald 138 Pellman, Hubert 40, 48, 110 Pellman, LeRoy 89 Pellman, Miriam 48, 53, 111 Petersheim, LeRoy 28 Ramer, Amos 29, 34, 67 Ranck, Helen 51, 75 Reber, Alice 46, 47, 66, 68 Reesor, Esther 36, 66, 112 Reesor, Helen 37 Reitz, Herman 30 Rhodes, Allen 136 Rhodes, Mildred 129, 133, 144 Rhodes, Reba 137 Richardson, Jacqueline 105 Riehl, Evan 46, 47, 51, 64 Riehl, Lois 63, 67, 79 Risser, Donald 46, 98, 110 Risser, Martha 71 Rohrer, Martha 99 Rollins, Margaret 137 Rollins, Mary 135, 143 Ropp, Verda 77, 94, 142 Roth, Glen 29 Rufcnacht, Mary Louise 90 Runion, Anita 34, 51, 78 Ruppert, Theda 131 Ruth, Esther 47 Rutt, John 64 Sager, Arlen 124 Sager, Carolyn 136 Sager, Sharon 137 Saig, Elias 105, 65 Sarco, Ida Sue 136, 143 Schaefer, Paul 138 Schlabach, Raymond 79, 99 Schnupp, Clair 29 Schrock, Mary Dorothy 75 Schrock, Paul 52, 78 Schultz, Betty 51, 98 Schultz, Herbert 29 Schumm, Dale 58, 112 Schwartzentruber, Hubert 33, 36 Seitz, Ann 99 Seitz, Kenneth 42, 46, 47 Sensenig, Donald 46, 47, 51, 63 Sensenig, Janice 67, 77 Sensenig, Richard 46, 29 Shank, Audrey B. 41 Shank, Byard 85 Shank, Charity 128, 142 Shank, Eldon 135, 143, 144 157 INDEX Shank, Helen 93 Shank, Merna 92 Shank, Miriam 47, 124, 143 Shank, Lester C. 114 Shank, Nancy 137 Shank, Norman 138 Shank, Oren 133, 142 Shank, Rawley 99 Shank, Sanford 87 Shank, Stanley 133, 142 Sharp, Urie 42, 46, 147 Shenk, Calvin 29 Shenk, Carl 43 Shenk, Clarene 42 Shenk, Clayton 111, 128, 142, 145 Shenk, David 29 Shenk, Doroty 67, 29, 93 Shenk, Ellen 137 Shenk, Gladys 138 Shenk, Joseph 75, 79 Shenk, Margaret 114 Shenk, Nora 136, 143 Shenk, Romaine 77 Shenk, Ruth 20, 123, 143 Shenk, Virginia 126, 143 Shettler, Maretta 95, 103 Shoemaker, Elizabeth 89 Showalter, Glen 137 Showaiter, Janet 138 Showalter, Judith 122 Showalter, Louise 136 Showalter, Margaret 135 Showalter, Mary Emma 92 Showalter, Millard 28, 51 Showalter, Paul G. 122, 142 Showalter, Paul Robert 44, 43, 46 Showalter, Phyllie 134 Showalter, Ruth 57, 77 Showalter, Wilma Lee 112 Shrock, Loretta 46, 75, 111, 110 Slabaugh, Ellen 95 Slabaugh, Moses Gordon 138 Slabaugh, Marvin 129, 140, 142 Smith, Betty 138 Smucker, Levina 98 Smucker, Marcus 29, 48, 111 Snavely, Marie 48, 62, 110 Snyder, Jean 47, 126, 142 Sollenberger, Ira 78 Summers, Magdalena 46, 75 Suter, Janice 138 Spicker, John 51, 95, 111 Stahl, John 135 Stahl, Milo 65 Stahl, Sara 98 Stalter, Sharon 140 Stanley, Jean 51, 76 Stauffer, Evelyn 137 Stauffer, Harold 46, 77 Stauffer, John 26 Stauffer, J. Mark 41, 46 Stauffer, Rachel 65 Stauffer, Ruth 34, 92, 110 Steckley, Robert 133, 134, 142 Steffen, Glenn 30, 47, 86 Steffen, Harlan 44, 83, 57 Steffen, Marilyn 46, 63 Stevanus, Kenneth 57 Stoltzfus, Allen 38 Stoltzfus, Hilda 44, 77 Stoltzfus, Eugene 135, 142 Stoltzfus, Richard G. 46, 64, 111 Stoltzfus, Richard J. 137 Stoltzfus, Virginia 46, 63 Strong, Betty 46, 77, 143 Strong, Emily 137 Strong, Miriam 83, 134, 143 Strong, Samuel 114 Stutzman, Elsie 76, 143 Suter, Daniel 62, 83 Suter, Stuart 136 Swartley, Willard 29, 79, 112 Swartz, Phyllis 75, 142 Swartzendruber, Cecil 129, 142, 143 Swartzentruber, Homer 64 Swartzentruber, Nancy 46, 42 Swope, Edwin 137 Taylor, Donald 51, 63 Thomas, Paul 62, 80 Tressler, Lowell 46, 103 Troyer, Ivan 77 Tucker, Duane 33, 78 Turner, Elinor 93 Turner, Emily 136 Turner, Lowell 134 Wagler, John 46, 65 Walker, Betty 138 Walker, Wilda 136 Wease, Martha 132, 133 Weaver, Dale 28 Weaver, Henry 29, 62 Weaver, Richard 64 Weaver, Rose 143, 36 Weaver, Ruby 127, 143 Weber, Lillian 75 Weber, Lucille 136, 143 Weber, Richard 128, 141, 145 Wenger, David 121, 142 Wenger, Dorothy M. 124, 145 Wenger, Dorothy Sue 137 Wenger, Edith 112 Wenger, Esther 117, 142 Wenger, Evelyn 136 Wenger, Grace 41 Wenger, James 118, 123, 142, 143 Wenger, John 43, 65 Wenger, Larry 46, 47, 65, 79 Wenger, Linden 27 Wenger, Mrs. Linden 74 Wenger, Norma 46, 94, 77 Wenger, Paul 28, 43, 46, 47, 63 Wenger, Mary Rachel 42 Wenger, Rachel Ann 15, 47, 118, 125 Wenger, Robert 65, 80 Wert, Daniel 142, 46, 163 Wertz, Ramona 120, 46, 142 Whetzel, David 137 Wideman, Grace 46, 78 Wilfong, Ralph 138 Will, Werner 51, 98, 105 Witmer, Ethel 93 Witmer, Eugene 29 Wolgemuth, Lois 98, 142 Wyse, Grace 47, 119, 142 Wyse, Dean 43, 99 Wyse, John Mary 137 Wyse, Monro 114, 133 Wyse, Rosalie 47, 112 Yoder, Constance 138 Yoder, Cora 29, 31, 143 Yoder, Delmer 98 Yoder, Elsie 46, 48, 94, 101 Yoder, Esta 98, 143 Yoder, Esther Mae 93, 143 Yoder, Janet 48, 118, 130, 141, 142 Yoder, John 136, 143 Yoder, Leanna 75, 142 Yoder, Marian 134 Yoder, Martha 67, 75 Yoder, Miriam A. 122, 143 Yoder, Miriam 63 Yoder, Otis 45, 27 Yoder, Robert Dean 35, 68 Yoder, Robert L. 35 Yoder, Roland 46, 67, 70, 111 Yoder, Ruby 93 Yoder, Ruby 136 Yoder, Stanley 138 Yoder, Violet 111, 113 Yousey, Joan 93 Yutzy, Daniel 115, 144 Zehr, Helen 75, 95, 111 Zehr, LaVerne 75 Zehr, Ralph 64, 143 Zehr, Vernon 42 Zehr, Walter 64 Zimmerman, Erma 47, 65 Zimmerman, George 41, 98, 142 Zook, J. Harold 77, 110, 111 Zook, Ruth 98 158 AUTOGRAPHS LITHOGRAPHED BY — LOR PUBLISHING CO. DALLAS • TEXAS The Bes: Yearbooks are TAYLOR-MADE


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Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

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Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

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