Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA)
- Class of 1967
Page 1 of 186
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 186 of the 1967 volume:
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From the backstage— Belleville Walnut Creek Luray— We came To become Together and alone. We dramatized the moments between September's cautious expectations and June's year-end ecstasy— Provocative lectures on urban life The 3-1 soccer upset of U.Va. Chapel musings all our own Tedious bouts with facts and theories Quiet sessions of anonymity. The pulse of the activity— Thoughtful and vivacious— Throbbing and flowing from the Bard's Nest, Tennis courts Elmwood second south D-14 The hill Stretches across Time's continuum. For all the world's a stage for life— A universal drama. We are merely players Filling Time's vacuum. 4 Each man plays many parts. Being and belonging. Each player, one part of a whole— The cheering force at varsity games A Snack Shop foursome O. T. sections seated A to Z Skating swirls on Trissel's Pond Daily chapel's mass chorus. But each himself a whole Enlivening a single role as Reflector of the repertoire of action Wealher Vane newsman The voice with a question after de Boer's lecture. Socializer with a constant quip and a ready laugh Scintillating at spontaneous parties Coining the unique. Leader of a faction of motley sympathizers Guiding ideas in committee crossfire Chairing a dorm meeting. Previewer of administrative weights and professional angles Student Church deacon WEAAC program director Apprentice teacher. Behind-the-scenes forerunner Chapel usher Poster designer. We felt the ache to be a star To act the lines we were not patterned for. The many selves interchange, conflict and overlap Until each half-chiseled whole— Possessor of an indispensable role— Straightens his mortarboard in this act's denouement. 5 We glided through staged routine— Winding lines that triple on certain weekends Pushing a limp spread under its pillow at 7:55 Tapping nightly toward swinging library doors Damp tests reeking with duplicating fluid A pause at Today's Announcements. Iron deadlines locked our weeks; Bells timed every act And shoved our days in slots. We were known by our seats and sessions. Among the copied musts, surprises sparked the mundane— Discovering a book you always wished someone would write A hillside class where spring grass imprints your palms New smells in the lobby—sweet wood and fresh paint Finding your feelings mirrored in an Atlantic poem The birthday party sprung by your roommate Snow at dawn beyond your swinging drapes A bright B instead of the expected C A coveted evening with a special person. Life's total rhythm— A blend of the routine and the rare— Transcends each single scene. 6 7 Yet Time shifts scenes purposefully. They change as the seasons— With spring's mellowness and winter's harshness. As Time calls our exits and our entrances, Life rots and ripens alternately— Crushing pathos, lifting jubilance. For our year was A time to be born, and a time to die A time to get, and a time to lose A time to keep silence, and a time to speak A time to weep, and a time to laugh A time to keep, and a time to cast away A time to love, and a time to hate A time of war, and a time of peace. Time's rude intervention Of ourselves and our surroundings Slashed our smugness and girded our confidence, Erased our efforts and rewarded with achievements, Exposed our naked futility and wrapped our days in warmth. Time—a relentless pattern of scenes Guiding her actors Beyond the fleeting To the Eternal. 8 9 Prologue 2 Activities 12 Organizations 34 Academics 78 Students 1 10 Epilogue 156 Patrons 164 We remember you, G. Irvin Lehman . .. You're the professor who walked College Avenue each morning, a man in a navy suit and worn shoes. Your proverb of education, Read history and travel, taught us that facts without wisdom are foolishness. You invited us to the sources: Your gold mine—the library. You're the man who chose the median and knew, The hardest thing for anyone is to be balanced whether in living, giving or forgiving. Your realistic acceptance of life included student attitudes: I know you didn't come to college to take O.T. You're the traveller who trod the Holy Lands and showed us the way to the Plains of Jezreel. You trans- lated the Hebrew idiom into our own slang. A Dutch- man from Pa., you identified with the sons of Abraham and proudly recalled, In no-man's land, they nabbed me for a Jew. You're the friend who drank your coffee in the Snack Shop and entertained our minds with twice-told tales and puns. With your round smile and your date- book in hand, you welcomed a chat: All you have to do is stop me, and ask me for a date. You're the Mennonite who claimed to be a preacher, a layman,—and the only Mennonite G.l. We remember you and dedicate the 967 Shenandoah to you— the man with shoes worn by walking through life—G. Irvin Lehman. II Activities Highlights of the months— Those special times we swarmed to central places In bee-lined response to poster blurbs. They were the times for dates, Events that swung our spirits free of books, Lent reality to classroom theories And put responsibility in our laps. Many of us played spectator. We knew the suspense of blooming stage acts and Basked in outside speakers' insight. But we created and initiated too. We joined the working class in spurts, Planned bowls and banquets and Set the auditorium alight with our production. Creating the spirit of our college and our year. 13 REGISTRATION INQUISITION can be very preplexing even to a veteran—just ask Mel Harnish. WILL THEY LET ME STAY? the freshmen worry as they guess at the empty blanks on the SCAT test. Four days before the rest arrived, the fresh- men traipsed in to overrun campus. They under- went the initiating ordeal of tests, talks and tours, then capped the days with a hike over the hills for a supper out—potato soup and hot dogs, folk music by John-Dallas-Lorene and camp fire group favorites. Eventually 781 were properly inducted with registrations's unwieldy line, snaking over the gym floor in motley segments—a prof interview, Dean's signatures, a stop for IBM cards, a bout with the money-changers. The all-school mixer officially welcomed everyone en masse. Remember the senior trio's ''Bean Town, U.S.A. And the scramble to meet the most people first? The Thanksgiving Banquet proved an ironic attempt to capture the pathos in Vietnam. Guests dined with rice and curry, tea and angel salad while Vietnamese, Paxmen and nurses glided between the long tables. The movie, The Ugly American, climaxed the evening. ... and so began the drama of the year .. . MY BROTHER'S SO SKINNY that he has to wear water skis so he doesn't get sucked down the bathtub drain ' Milt Loyer told the freshmen at their fall outing. Identity via Mass Initiation THE PRESS FOR AUTOGRAPHS at the college mixer introduced us to names from Oklahoma, Nigeria and Cuba. AT THE COLLEGE MIXER Gene Stoltzfus strums Dona, Dona for a floored audience. A VIETNAMESE WAITRESS Barb Wenger coyly serves the impassive American, Jim Sensenig. 15 Necessities for Advancement SHY APPREHENSIONS erase Katrina's smile even though she snug- gles close to Rachel Fretz, her baby sitter for the evening. Two federal grants—$5,000 for library books and $10,899 for the science, English and audio- visual departments—accelerated EMC's economic value in 1967. A $50,000 grant by Carthage Foundation and an anonymous $20,000 liberated administra- tion for Science Building construction. Bids for the building were opened in March. By Christmas the back entrance to the Ad Building had fully metamorphized into a spac- ious lounge. Student pockets were mended with the $49,200 for educational grants and work-study program. Jobs ranged from on-campus reception- ist and teacher assistant to off-campus tutor or hospital orderly. In a desperate penny-pinching endeavor students ironed shirts, baby-sat or cut hair. Caught in the impetus of affluence, our small campus mimicked a great society. 16 SPECIALIST OF THE MISCELLANEOUS at Broadway High, Wes Ross chalks up hours for his work-study time sheet. DRAWING FROM HIS DOWRY, Cal Litwiller asks for some small change for his wife's weekly al- lowance for groceries. PIECEMEAL LEVELING of the new athletic field slowly grinds to a halt for recess time. 17 IN POLYGONIC CON- FAB, ICC delegates hash the Implications of Gosh- en's topic, The Chris- tian Basis for a Relevant Morality. YPCA-SCA EXECUTIVES Walt Hackman and Richard Miller exchange EMC and Goshen sentiment. College Interaction 18 EMC hosted Goshen, Hesston and Bluffton College delegations for the tenth annual Inter- collegiate Christian Council, November 17-19. Centered on the theme, Post-Christendom Ethics and the Church as a Discerning Community, the conference heard Dr. Paul Peachey on The Chal- lenge of Post-Christendom Ethics and Moral Dilemmas of Our Present World. Dr. Don Jacobs lectured on Our Desacralized World. Spearheaded by EMC and planned by a tri- college committee, the first quiz bowl among EMC, Bridgewater and Madison College contest- ants took place February 10. Madison claimed the first honor symbol, an engraved silver bowl; EMC rated a close second. March 2-4, seventeen EMC students joined thirteen other institutions at the annual Inter- collegiate Peace Fellowship Conference to pursue the theme, A View of Our World from a Non- Western Perspective. Centered at the United Nations, the weekend scheduled addresses by Mr. Noel Brown and Mr. Hashim Rifai, Political Affairs Officers of the UN, a panel of UN personnel and three films. Elections for a new IPF executive named EMCer Judi Livengood secretary. INTERCOLLEGIATE QUIZ BOWL experts Jim Bishop, Ron Guengerich and Milt Loyer pool intellectual strategy. ECONOMIC EDITOR for the UN Secretariat, panel member Mrs. Janet MacNeill explains UNESCO programs to IPF guests. IN THE AFTERMATH of ICC, Don Kraybill questions Harold Bauman, Goshen College Pastor of Students, about campus worship. DR. MAX LERNER Professor of American Civilization and World Politics Brandeis University The 1966-67 lecture series, Urbanization as a Way of Life, stirred awareness of changing urban patterns. After a WSVA press conference in the Stu- dent Center, Max Lerner, author and columnist of world renown, delivered the first lecture, From Village to Megalopolis: the Passing of Traditional Society. Robert Lee, Professor of Christian and Social Ethics at San Francisco Theological Seminary, dis- cussed The Urban Community: Human Values in the Metropolis, November 11. The third lecture, The Urban Muse: Profiles of Urban Art by Dr. Max Kaplan, aired sociologi- cal implications of creativity. Dr. Ernest Weissman drew from his experi- ences as Director of the UN Center for his lecture entitled Politics and Urban Renewal on March 3. Climaxing this year's provocative series, J. Lawrence Burkholder, professor at Harvard Di- vinity School, developed the topic, God and Man in the City: the Role of the Church in Urban Society. Public Occasions — Horizons to Urbanism DR. MAX KAPLAN Lecturer and Writer 20 DR. J. LAWRENCE BURKHOLDER DR. ERNEST WEISSMAN Professor of Pastoral Theology Inter-regional Advisor to the UN Center Harvard Divinity School for Housing DR. ROBERT LEE Professor of Christian and Social Ethics San Francisco Theological Seminary 21 A SEATED SAINT, Mr. Wilson rambled pithy wisdom with home- spun humor for a week of Chapels. SAGE OF NEW TESTAMENT WISDOM, Howard H. Charles, Goshen College Seminary professor, led Spirit- ual Life Week in March. RETURNED TWO WEEKS FROM VIETNAM, Eugene Stoltzfus, International Voluntary Service Worker, chats about his village life and friends. Speakers — Docents Ideas sprouting from guest speakers exposed heterogeneous viewpoints—conservative, liberal and eclectic. Dr. Walter Wilson's seated Chapel presen- tations in November specialized in Christian ex- perience as a love affair with Jesus. Evangelical emphases marked chapel talks by Dr. Richard C. Halverson, Vice President of World Vision, Arnold Jacobs from Young Life and Tom Skinner from New York City. William T. Snyder from MCC initiated the February Vietnam Focus with a weekend of talks on the Soviet Union church. Daniel Hertzler, At- lee Beachy, Everett Metzler and Eugene Stoltzfus presented perceptive and well-founded insights into the church's responsibility to the Asian crisis. Finalizing this Mission and Service Emphasis Week, Seminary student James Metzler appealed for an attitude of brotherhood. 22 SQUARE TABLE DISCUSSION pulls in comments from Professor John Lapp, Everett Metzler, Atlee Beachy, James Metzler and Pastor Truman Brunk, Jr., during Vietnam Focus Week. of Doctrine PLUGGING FOR REDEVELOPMENT, Robert Sullivan, Harrisonburg Planning Commission Chairman, points out the location of Harrisonburg's eyesores. 23 SYMBOLS of conversation warmth, the Bard's Nest tokens recall many memories. A T.S. ELIOT DISCIPLE, Professor I.B. Horst reads Choruses from the Rock to quiet worshippers at the Nest. SPRING ARTS STEERING COMMITTEE: Leon Miller, Linda Buckwalter, Mary Louise Zook, Catherine R. Mumaw, Wayne Weaver- Chairman and Ira T. Zook. 24 THE AUGSBURG CHOIR of Minneapolis under the direction of Leland B. Sateren performed at EMC, March 2. A Breath of the Arts A breath of the arts—fine and folk—guised in professional and amateur garments diverted EMC community from the study grind. Baritone soloist Henry Wiebe brought a February reper- toire of Haydn and Mendelssohn. The 65-voice Augsburg Choir appeared for a public concert March 2. Emphasizing 20th century sacred music, several by Director Sateren, the College Choir al- so sang a Baroque chorale and a Bach cantata. The Spring Arts Festival demonstrated the expression of human values in Appalachian folk culture, March 30 — April 1. Dr. Cratis B. Williams of Boones, North Carolina, interpreted the south- ern mountaineer's cultural heritage, and Miss M. McGrew's contemporary art assortment exhibited the feeling of the ballads told by Dr. Leonard Roberts, a West Virginian tail-tale-teller. With guitar strummings, rousing protest music and readings of Eliot's fine imagery, the Bard's Nest shingle welcomed thoughtful dialog and spirited singing. Special guests often treated the group. Over tarts and hot Dr. Pepper, faculty members invited students to talk freedom, paint- ings and curriculum revision. AFTER HENRY WIEBE S CONCERT, Earl M. Maust and the guest soloist com- pare EMC and Grace Bible Institute music departments. 25 WITH ANGLED SERVE, Vi Mullet feeds her opponents a wicked slice. The yell for victory, GO-go-go-go, chanted by the six cheerleaders, set EMC sports enthus- iasm. At home games the twelve-member Pep Band echoed the mood of the crowd. Highlighting the sports year, the King's Col- lege Tournament, March 1-4, tested EMC ath- letic skills. The teams competed with seven other Christian colleges in basketball, ping-pong, bowl- ing, volleyball, cheerleading and barbershop sing- ing. Toko Ryu won the trophy for women's singles in ping-pong. The volleyball girls placed first through perfected teamwork and Miriam Mumaw's optimistic coaching. Despite the descent to sixth place from last year's second, the entire group received commendation for their consistent good sportsmanship. WITH JAPANESE POISE, Toko Ryu serves her way to a Tournament trophy. IN AN ANXIOUS MOMENT, Captain Leanna Beiler drives the ball deep into her opponents' court. 26 Sports Spirit — Spontaneous and Organized WITH GENUINE ENTHUSIASM, EMC cheerleaders swing popular favor. EVENING AT GROVER'S CORNERS staggers uneventfully beyond family chatting. COMMENTATOR OF TOWN LIFE, Stage Manager Ralph King ex- pands Our Town. GULPING MORNING COFFEE, Dr. Gibbs (John Miller) reminisces his own wedding day. 28 SHELLING BEANS, Mother Gibbs (Karen Hoover) and Mrs. Webb (Marilyn Gehman) indulge in Grover's Corners gossip. Our Town DEMONSTRATING HIS INTERPRETATION, Director Bob Hostetter reads, Live people don't understand, do they? Thornton Wilder's three-act play. Our Town, marked Drama Guild's major production of the year on February 24 and 25. Focusing on two families in Grover's Corners, New Hampshire, the play is a commentary on man's tragic una- wareness of life's moments. Director Bob Hostet- ter moved the play from a non-perceptive life panorama in Act I to the deep wonder of minute actions in Act III. Rehearsal hours elicited Bob's bellow, si- lence in the wings, when John Fairfield's guitar or off-stage glee over a new hair style dis- tracted. Costume hodgepodge grew from swap shop rummages, snips, and stitches. As Emily Webb, Sue Swartz played her bridal role in a gown and train of her own design. Subterranean activity the climax nights—cast members sucking lemons for 'fraid voices' and boosting spirit with the play's Blest Be the Tie. Retreating to adviser Catherine Mumaw's after the final production, the cast filled her guest book with their lines and autographed programs .. . and for days afterwards called each other Our Town names on campus walkways. 29 THE BARD Stephen Shriner, Director of Twilight Auction4 weighs the impact of the auction upon his projected audience. Twilight Auction 30 AT AN EARLY REHEARSAL, Lynn Hostetler, Ben Wenger and Ray Cope rely on the written word. The final major drama on campus, John Ruth's Twilight Auction dramatized a Mennonite family's struggle over change. EMC's production marked the second performance of the play. Dealing primarily with the dilemma of a college student returning to his family, Mr. Ruth's three-act play depicts the universal conflict be- tween generations and emphasizes mutual re- spect. Director Stephen Shriner challenged his cast to a non-burlesquing objectivity. John Ruth visited campus prior to April 28 and 29 to advise the cast and also surveyed the play in Chapel. Stage manager Jerry Shenk pro- cured stage plans from the original production for an authentic Montgomery County farmhouse setting. Refining the Pennsylvania Dutch slur .. . recruiting antiques for the auction .. . projecting their own feelings into the roles, the cast enacted a personal and a universal conflict. WRITER JOHN RUTH, English professor at Eastern Baptist College, muses on the patterns of his favorite lines. A MENNONITE BREAKFAST crystallizes the conflict between generations. WITH ANGUISHED CONCERN, Bishpp Josiah Kratz (Walt Hochstetler) pleads with Sam (Don Stoltzfus). 31 GROUND-BREAKING FOR- MALITIES for the new Science Building satisfy shoveler Dr. Daniel Suter, Dewitt Heatwole and Pres- ident Myron S. Augsburger. I MENN CHITECTS HARRISON PUGNACIOUSLY INTENT, Dick Gunden, No. 1 Courtier, drives his opponents deep backcourt with a forehand smash. Spring For the first time Open House ran two even- ings. April 6 the men spied out the domain of the ladies; then they hosted the girls, April 8. In Gay Nineties style. Spring Banquet guests dined outdoors at flood-lit canopied tables. Entertained with gay music, the flowered proces- sion of belles in pastels and their dark-suited beaus tripped over dandelioned lawns. A string ensemble favored the feasters. Dragging trays to campus corners, oh-ing at construction and ah-ing at students' ways—a host of old Sheri faces swarmed in for annual Homecoming, April 21-23. Directed by Mr. Zook, a choir of past and present EMCers sang Gaul's Holy City for the 35th time. Festivities POSING AS EMC CUPID, logician Milt Loyer hits trouble pairing couples for the MATCH social. 4 33 PAUL HURST'S PRINCESS, Louetta Weaver, displays her corner during Open House. Organizations We heard, Glance in D-14 as you pass; Poke your head in A-222. Sign your name; become a member; Know the quips, 'Come to . . . Please plan . . ., There will be . .., I move . .., Aye.' Some of us found rungs in structure's ladder And wielded our influence through position— Manipulators, strategists, the wheels. Sometimes we got too biggety But usually we felt quite average, despised the special notice, name, priorities. Ve only craved unique identity in doing, wonder of fulfillment in the task. Knd so we beckoned to the passers-by, Sure, come on. Join your group, Sign your name; become a member. 35 OFF-CAMPUS COMMISSION: J. Allen Miller, Harrisonburg Joanne Hess, Secretary Bob Wyble, Extension Noah Kolb, Area Y Churches ON-CAMPUS COMMISSION: Pat Yoder, Secretary Rodney Groff, General Donald Kraybill, Student Church Delmar Glick, Public Relations STUDENT CHURCH COUNCIL: Truman Brunk Donald Kraybill Arlene Herr Paul Guengerich Donald Siegrist Nelson Good John J. Miller 36 EXECUTIVE OFFICERS: Betty Wenger, Secretary; Walton Hackman, President; Jerome Yoder, Treasurer; Herb Kraybill, Vice-President. Y PRESIDENT Walton Hackman ponders and projects plans for Y involvement within Harrisonburg. YPCA: Multiplex Student Involvement LAYING PLANS FOR THE YEAR, Y cabinet and advisors air their views at Shenandoah Lake. Though at times it defied definition and some questioned the vitality of its awesome framework, the Young People's Christian As- sociation moved dynamically. Budgeting $4,925 and piloting a potpourri of projects, the cabinet functioned at one end; at the other, students roller skated with their Y church youth groups and planned Wednesday chapels. Heading the complex, Walt Hackman em- phasized a notch for every student and pushed action with his, Let's grab the bull by the horns. Y roles on campus lay behind the scenes .. . groundwork for Floyd Gingerich's memorial service and Intercollegiate Christian Council, chapel reprints, Bard's Nest worship, publicity for The Restless Ones, Books Abroad pleas and the Vietnam Prayer Vigil. Student Church carried a two-pronged thrust with didache-kerygma em- phasis and koinonia groups . .. 37 CLEVER MANIPULATION of the noc-hockey flippers wraps John Clark and two Spice House fans in competitive concentration. A major innovation, the Y Spice House Com- munity Center opened in southeastern Harrison- burg. Virginia Mission Board supported the grow- ing Harrisonburg jailwork with $1000 for four men students to assist prison chaplains during the summer. Sunday lunch-packers scattered weekly to area churches from three-year-old Greenwood to Broad Street, veteran of the Y churches. Out-stepping the traditional lines of gospel teams, the YPCA sponsored an exploration group to New York City over Easter. Other extensions included a team to southern urban centers in December; week-end teams to Richmond and Newport News; several quartet trips and a study team to Winston-Salem, N.C., as forerunner of a Mission Board program. In light of a changing campus, a faculty- student-cabinet committee began a thorough re- evaluation of Y structure and program near the close of the year. THE LITTLE ONES at Greenwood come unto Herb Van Horn, Y group leader. 38 In a Potpourri of Projects CHIDING THE LATE EATERS, Noah Kolb supervises Highland Retreaters in the tank-up for their full day rat race. THURSDAY EVENING REHEARSAL of the Student Church Octet degenerates into a masquerade of sundry pains and pleasures. CLIMAXING A SLEDDING SPREE, a Bridge- water and EMC group warm up with Bill Forester at Oakwood. 39 CHAIRMAN Blair Seitz pulls campus opinion from the FSC representatives. FACULTY-STUDENT COUNCIL Row h Ruth M. Stoltzfus, Vice-President Richard Showalter, Secretary Margaret Wenger, President Blair Seitz. Row 2: Catherine Mumaw, Ruth Hoover, Karen Yutzy, Peggy Johnson, Faith Richardson, Mary Ethel Heatwole. Row 3: Herb Kraybill, Paul T. Guengerich, Milt Loyer, John Birkey, Joanne Hess. Student Government NORTH LAWN GENERAL COUNCIL. Row 1: Janet Shertzer, Faith Richardson, Charlotte Kolb— Chairman, Marilyn Gehman. Row 2: Irene Stoltzfus, Betty Wenger, Fanny Mullet, Shirley Peachey, Donna Carol Beachy, Esther K. Longacre, Carol Brubaker, Delores Swartz, Sharon Jantzi, Faye Garber. Row 3: Rose Hackman, Darlene Landis, Doris Ehst, Judy Eberly, Margaret Eby, Connie Heatwole, Ruth M. Stoltzfus, Margaret Wenger. 40 LATE NIGHT REHEARSAL of the Dorm Council. Row 7: Vernon Martin, Ralph King, Raymond Cope, Tom Spicher. Row 2: Milt Loyer, Gerald L. Shjnk, Paul Yoder—Chairman, Blair Seitz, Herb Kraybill, Samuel O. Weaver. RIGHT-HAND MAN to Samuel O. Weaver, Assistant Dean of Men Jerry Shenk tells Trumbo Electric Co., What do you mean I can't be sure the heat's off in the dorm? Activities of Faculty-Student Council and dorm councils marked steps toward more student voice in campus government this year. Seeking a better definition of FSC's role, President Blair Seitz emphasized informal debate in the bi-weekly meetings and encouraged at- tendance by non-members. An FSC request for student representation on the administrative council led to monthly joint meetings to discuss issues such as compulsory chapel. Highlights of FSC action included the Spring Arts Festival in April, the organization of a film committee to investigate EMC film selections, the intercollegiate quiz bowl and the MATCH! social. Organized for the first, the Men's Dorm Council ruled independently of the personnel committee in major rule infractions by college men. Selected by dorm men, the council of nine proved a success in the minds of both students and administration. The women's organization. North Lawn Gen- eral Council, added representation this year from new dorming quarters. 41 Shen Drama Behind a door marked Minds Working the Shen clan quibbled over theme connotations, their feet poised on a focal chair. From their sa- cred idea books, wrinkly-paged with travel in all campus climates, they coaxed their sinewy ideas, muddled words, sketchy layouts and photo lists. Photos from Herb's tomb, the darkroom, cluttered the desks until the paler ones hit the morgue under the table. The inescapable popu- lation explosion crowded the literary editors to the English Room. Late nights the staff played caption scrabble games—sentences laid from Roget's Thesaurus, Ron's punnery and tri-editoress verbosity. For diversion they posted notes and candy bars via the pulley mail service to the high school fans above ... or drank the Employees Only pop ... or listened for the flute solo in a Haydn Divertimento. In the dizzy deadline rush, all minds emp- tied words into the babble book and every hand tried to imitate Ron's layout skill. In the purple room, A-222, the staff tele- vised the drama the students produced and titled the play—the 1967 Shenandoah. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Ron Guengerich's spirit transcended the tedium of production. IN A DARKROOM CONFERENCE Photographer Floyd Schrock, Photography Editor Stephen Shriner, Head Photographer Herb Kraybill and Photographer Myron Slabaugh inspect their production. 42 CULLING PHRASES from the accumulation in their idea books. Literary Editors Rachel Fretz and Betty Wenger regis- ter the idiom of the year. ELIMINATING PHOTOS monopolizes the scrutiny of Junior Editor Jim Harbold, Editor-in-Chief Ron Guengerich and Associate Editor Ruth Hoover. v:'v AMIDST A-222 PARAPHERNALIA, typists Betty Jo Coakley and Karene Swartz discard a ''caption widow while Business Manager Dick Gunden writes a delinquent advertiser. 43 APPROVING HIS BALANCED LAYOUT, Editor-In-Chief Stuart Showal- ter relives one of his six-pagers. ADDING A CIRCULATION MANAGER'S COMMENT, Nev Lantz scans ad layout with Managing Editor Bob Buckwalter and Business Manager Harley Showalter. Across the hall in the business-tan office, the Weather Vane blew with campus news every two weeks. Tuesdays the organization slid into position- each chaired according to WV hierarchy. Editor Stu at his private desk molded the year's policy into objective reporting with a comprehensive coverage, a crisp conservative style and staff-con- sensus editorials. The slogan ran, We try hard- er. WV weekends broke with the shuffle of reporters' copy and the scurry of editors. During arguments over wobbly write-ups, staff checked their wall motto, It's grate, but is it art? and chided lazy spellers with, We have a dictionary in this office. Comma fights during galley reading dubbed Stu the comma hunter. After Friday distribution of the ink-scented papers, Stu red-pencilled a copy and lectured sub-editors on journalistic flaws. Between the professional spurts, Stu, Richard and Carol resorted to the quiet tan to study, but they only discussed the editor's current events or pinned an apt joke on the bulletin board. Despite mental efficiency, the staff tacked their door with Hearts working. Inside, the hanging row of WV's convinced the reporters that something was working. Weather Vane Slants 44 HEADS OF THE MASTER PRODUCTION, Photographer Paul Fretz, Editor-in- Chief Stuart Showalter and News Edi- tor Carol Kurtz, pattern shots and copy. Slants SPORTS COLUMNIST Milt Loyer justifies a slant to Assistant Feature and Assistant News Editors, Phoebe Erb and Jay Harvey Beijer. 45 CHALLENGING THE IDEA DOODLINGS of Literary Editor Sharon Jantzi, Assistant Editor Richard Showalter tests their student appeal. WATCHING FOR A REBOUND, Sports Director Dwight Wyse trans- lates Courtier action for WEMC listeners. EMC's unseen voice, 91.7 on your FM dial, disseminated varied sounds—Dr. Epp, Dr. Nar- ramore, Bach and Bizet. WEMC's thirteen-member crew ushered in several firsts this year—Saturday night's Vokal, a daily fifteen-minute shot of Associated Press News and live broadcasting of Courtier basketball action. History of Music students programmed Monday evening's Musical Memorandum of classical pieces and historical narrative. Listeners staked their musical knowledge against a free record when The Inquisitor aired an unan- nounced selection. Their chapel cubicle also merited innovations —a tape deck to synchronize ten-second spots and walls sound-proofed with green egg pack- ings. A telephone poll revealed an aware audi- ence at both ends of the Valley. In cooperation with FCC's stipulations, WEMC mapped plans for increased wattage and wider airing. It's the dial you flip when you want to swirl with Strauss, worship in bed Sunday morning or background your psychology readings. EMC on the Air CATALOGUING AN UNSHACKLED TAPE, Irvin Wenger, Feature Director, and Janet Shertzer, Continuity Director and Typist, handle the weekly tape traffic. PROUD OF WEMC'S 400-RECORD INCREASE, Music Director John J. Miller recommends a new long-play to Production Manager Ken Slagell and News Director John Yoder. 46 TUNING IN FOR THE TOTAL EFFECT, Station Manager Marvin Nisly feels the reward of creative supervision. CHIEF ANNOUNCER Vic Martin inspects engineering techniques of novice Terry Cowan. SHARING THEIR DELIGHT, Station Manager Marv Nisly, Program Director Don Kraybill and Publicity Director Marilyn Headings look over FCC approval for license renewal. 47 BACK ROW BRASSES blast their way through polyphonic harmony. Winged Art and the Sound CUING IN THE STRINGS, Mr. Zook pulls out the last full measures of Wagner's Valhalla. POISED FOR A MUSICAL OUTBURST, the EMC Community Orchestra awaits the downswoop of Mr. Zook's lifted arm. 48 With features of the bizarre and the com- monplace, the Phoenix rose artfully from the creative broodings of student contributors on April 23. Chief Editor John Glick balanced its annual smoky ascent with photography, poetry, prose sketches and art designs. Winged with sub- tleties, Creative Writing arts magazine emerged with pros and cons of universal themes. The February 4 debut of the College Com- munity Orchestra marked a laudable musical first. Under the direction of Mr. Zook, the 33-piece orchestra performed a symphonic Minuet by Haydn and Rodgers' The Sound of Music. College students, high schoolers and community residents- the musicians rehearsed each Thursday evening. Sensitive to musical interest, Mr. Zook accepted each volunteer and adapted the orchestration. of Music OUT OF A SMOKY REBIRTH the Phoenix ascends under the guidance of Editors Ken Fisher, John Glick and Blair Seitz. 49 A CAPPELLA CHORUS. Row 1: Judy Widmer, Josie Smucker, Karen Eby, Judy Branner, Eunice Seitz, Kathryn Bittenbender, Flora Yoder, Sharon Moser. Row 2: Salome Kurtz, Miriam Miller, Ruth Yoder, Connie Heatwole, Joanne Yoder, Carol Kindy, Ruth Baer, Sadie Miller, Toshiko Ryu. Row 3: Leanna Beiler, Lynn Hostetler, George Zimmerman, John A. Yoder, Eugene Stoltzfus, Wayne Keim, Russell Leinbach, Victor Martin. Row 4: Jay Roth, Herbert Steffy, Carl Landis, James Hamilton, Abram Derstine, Robert Snyder, Robert Wyble. Choruses on Wheels DIRECTOR Ira T. Zook A Cappella Singers, concert and touring chorus, presented Vivaldi's Gloria at their first program. The 30-minute concert of sacred music for soloists and accompaniment succeeded the orchestra performance, February 4. Anticipating the weekend tour in eastern Pennsylvania, the chorus perfected two Renais- sance pieces by Palestrina, one Baroque by Pur- cell, a motet by Sweelinck, the contemporary Requiem by Thompson and everal hymns. In response to an invuation from Inter- national Christian Leaders, the choir sang for the national prayer breakfast in Washington, D.C. The chorus heard the President's address after singing for the large audience gathered for a two-day seminar. The choir postlude on Homecoming after- noon treated EMCers with the perfected tour program. 50 ALLELUIA CHORUS. Row 1: Director Earl Maust, Karen Hoover, Fanny Mullet, Sherilyn Hershey, Faye Garber, Patricia Strong, Irene Stoltzfus, Janice Horst. Row 2: Ronald Guengerich, Nadine Smucker, Carolyn Glick, Mary Beth Shank, Sue Hess, Rachel Fretz, Marilyn Gehman, John J. Miller, Gale Maust. Row 3: Leon Miller, Paul Miller, Walter Hochstetler, J. Paul Swartzendruber, Gerald Shenk, Nevin Lantz, Samuel Miller, Jerome Yoder. Alleluia Singers, the main touring chorus, sang their way through Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio during Easter vacation. In preparation for the grand tour next summer, the chorus perfected the list of American songs, two Mennonite hymns and a few German compositions. Their repertoire included numbers by Yardumian, Schu- bert, Palestrina, Parker, Dieterich and Thompson. On July 19 the group will fly for Amster- dam to attend Mennonite World Conference. After the four-day stop in Holland, the choir will sing in Mennonite churches throughout western Europe. Visting in European homes—sleeping in hos- tels and hotels—sightseeing in the Netherlands, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Austria and Italy—the group anticipates a very educational five weeks before their return in August. DIRECTOR Earl M. Maust. 51 Mass Choral Participation DIRECTOR J. Mark Stauffer The on-campus choruses, Collegiate and Col- lege Chorale, inspired the EMC community. The larger Collegiate Chorus performed the Messiah in the fall, the traditional Holy City in April and a diverse program from Schuetz to Berger on Commencement Friday. College Chorale introduced freshmen to the singing ranks at EMC. Their repertoire ranged from a Baroque double chorus by Pachebel to Russian tunes, English songs and American spirit- uals. The small chorale, 32 members of the larger group, sang for the Charlottesville Mennonite Church and toured southeastern Virginia for a weekend. Six additional hymns and spirituals supplemented the College Chorale list. The campus choruses enlivened the song worship for music devotees and aspirants. COLLEGIATE CHORUS: Row 7: Judy Widmer, Sylvia Shirk, Joy King, Nancy Headings, Irene Stoltzfus, Salome Kurtz, Janice Christophel, Flora Yoder, Toshiko Ryu, Faye Garber, Esther Mack, Fanny Mullet, I della Borntrager. Row 2: Eileen Stichter, Sharon Jantzi, Barbara Gehman, Janet Shertzer, Fanny Mast, Viola Mullet, Janice Horst, Karen Hoover, Ruth Baer, Mary Louise Zook, Patricia Strong, Marilyn Gehman, Mary Ellen Huber, Barbara Gerber. Row 3: Gloria Kauffman, Eloise Buckwalter, Vivian Nice, Doris Ehst, Irene Gehman, Pearl King, Karen Martin, Joanne Yoder, Carol Kindy, Kathleen Weaver, Margaret Wenger, Eloise Gingerich, Arlene Herr, Sue Hess. Row 4: Virginia Swartzendruber, Evelyn Horst, Mary Beth Shank, Wayne Kurtz, Mervin Zook, Marvin Nisly, Gerald Shenk, James Wert, Robert Snyder, Jerome Yoder, Gerald Yoder, Victor Martin, Ruth Kennel, Evelyn Brunk. Row 5: Walter Hochstetler, George Zimmerman, Steve Mininger, Wayne Keim, Wilbur Yoder, Wayne Burkhart, John Yoder, Elton Nussbaum, Dick Stutzman, Floyd Schrock, Owen Yoder, Wesley Mast, Ralph King. Row 6: Paul Miller, Herbert Steffy, Harold Yoder, Roy Yoder, Carl Landis, James Hamilton, Bryan Stauffer, Dennis Kuhns, Robert Hostetter, Warren Bennett, James Roth, Abram Derstine. DIRECTOR Earl M. Maust COLLEGE CHORALE: Row 1: Phyllis Hoover, Barbara Wenger, Lena You- sey, Ethel Kandel, Martha Hershey, Charlotte Holsopple, Linda Eberly, Rhelda Esbenshade, Fern Miller, Carolyn Bergey, Sherry Miller, Mary Styer, Lorene Wagler, Karen Yutzy, Row 2: Lois Martin, Louise Martin, Bernell Switzer, Carol Brubaker, Eva Yost, Cheryl Shaffer, Carolyn Schlabach, Phyllis Shrock, Marilyn Headings, Rhoda Roggie, Suzanne Jones, Linda Hostetler, Esther Ryler. Row 3: Brenda Hummel, Donna Replogle, Janet Kropf, Kathy Brubaker, Eldon Kropf, John Yoder, Wes- ley Ross, Arland Schrock, Ken Horst, Emory Otto, Nancy Venet, Tina Hess, Judy Yost. Row 4: Margaret Eby, Judy Martin, John Birkey, Phil Guengerich, Allen Peachey, John Keim, Irvin Wenger, Ronald Denlin- ger, Ray Bender, Gerald Swartz, Lois King, Joanna Hershberger, Dawn Benner. Row 5: Dennis Hatter, Dallas Myers, John Clark, John Long- acre, Arlin Yoder, Dave Fretz, John Fairfield, Glenn Metzler, Ralph Eby, Larry Stutzman, Melvin Weaver, Ken Schildt, James Messner. 53 CHAINS OF HUAAAN BONDAGE do not hinder Smith Gloria Horst's apple-munching. RIGORS OF A BALLOON SHAVE tense Sam Miller into blind resignation until— THE SHAVING CREAM EXPLO- SION plasters his appearance and Connie Heatwole bursts in- to uncontrollable laughter. EXAMINING Z TAFFY, Dr. Bomberger drools over the buttery creation of Toko Ryu and Janet Kropf. INTER-LIT QUIZ BOWL PARTICIPANTS: Pros-Jim Bishop and Faith Richardson; Smiths—Milt Loyer, Ron Guengerich, Linda Buckwalter and Paul Fretz. 54 I DURING AN ADVISORY TRIP, Roy Umble encourages potential Laurence Oliviers. Launched by Diary of Anne Frank excerpts, the Promethian Literary Society commentated col- lege life for Senior Weekenders, Probed the Globe with a debate on Western vs. Eastern courtship and sponsored The Trysting Place. Knocking their inherited snob image, the Smithsonians upped membership. Rallying with John Ruth's Twilight Action, their major produc- tion in the spring, the Smiths planned a kids' birthday party for sponsor Roy Heatwole and a riotous evening at an Old Mill. Inter-lit quiz bowl honors went to the Smiths. The Zelathean Society lured members with a dramatic arrangement of Benet's Eve of the Western Star. A barn evening with Poe and Saki and an Old Fashioned Chivalry taffy pull en- tertained the Z's. Underlining mastery of basics. Drama Guild perfected acting exercises and read plays. Pro- fessor of Speech at Goshen College, Roy Umble discussed Drama and Its Evangelistic Relevance with members, presented the Toymaker and ad- vised Our Town, the guild's major production. A Literary Blend LAURA'S SELF-DISCOVERY comes alive as Gordon Yoder and Ruth Hoover give The Glass Menagerie at a Drama Guild reading. 55 IN LIVE DESIGN Dr. Don Jacobs illustrates implications of Western secularization in terms of Mennonite culture. Mennonite Historical Society drafted a world- wide Mennonite perspective. Dr. Don Jacobs con- trasted Anabaptist itinerant evangelism with con- temporary hobby missions. Professor Jacobs- zoon presented his historical research on the Dutch Anabaptist, Hendrick Roll. Virgil Vogt, a participant in koinonia of Reba Place Fellowship in Chicago, filtered revolutionary ideas on Christian stewardship. His six lectures emphasized con- fession as the third Anabaptist sacrament. Mem- bers previewed the Mennonite World Conference theme, The Witness of the Holy Spirit. Co-ordinated by Walt Hochstetler, the am- ateur historians coveted an integration of Ana- baptist thought with contemporary issues. Anabaptism — Historical PROBING DE BOER'S EXPERIENCED LINE, Peace Fellowship Pres- ident Jim Wert con- verses until midnight. 56 -1 INTENTLY REFLECTIVE, I.P.F. President Walt Hackman and Dr. Paul Peachey stir peace philosophies. and Contemporary WITH PROFOUND SIMPLICITY, Virgil Vogt expounds Reba Place's Bible-oriented eco- nomic theory to Walt Hochstetler. Peace Fellowship moved EMC with a line of voices unveiling ill will and fostering peace. Paul Peachey's discussion, Is There a Moral Equivalent to War? fomented controversial con- versations. Hans de Boer, author of The Bridge Is Love, profoundly blasted America's eating-easy church. He aroused the audience with a question, You have a message. Why are you contented to be 'die Stillen im Lande'? Focusing on racial issues, the Fellowship sponsored an EMC building crew over Easter for a church camp near Meridian, Mississippi, and the film, A Time For Burning, dealing with a mid-western religious community. An EMC delegation of 17 attended the an- nual Intercollegiate Peace Fellowship Conference at the United Nations Church Center, New York City, March 2-4, to explore the theme, A View of Our World From a Non-Western Perspective. MENNONITE HISTORICAL OFFICERS-Phoebe Erb, Sam Miller, Walt Hochstetler and Marilyn Gehman—coddle premature program ideas. 57 AT ASTRAL CLUB OPEN HOUSE, Ken Slagell and Pat Yoder give the telescopes their cursory inspection. MORE INFORMAL THAN PROFESSIONAL, Judy Eberly and Mary Kolb snack with other sorores caritates. The co-ed balance struck odd poses in Premed Society and Sorores Caritatis, both vying for the campus medical people. Trademarked with a human skull, the Society explored a mountain clinic and hashed the ethics of their profession. Sorores Caritatis joined the premeds for a mid-year film. Initiating pre-nursing students and keeping RN's informed, the sisters of charity heard Dr. Fred Brenneman on Psychiatry and Christianity and caroled at Rockingham Mem- orial Hospital. Home Economics Club pursued one theme for the year, Technology in the Home. A Den- ton's Furniture Store tour and lectures by Dr. Dorothy Roe, Madison Food Department head, and Ella Mae Miller, Heart to Heart speaker, on Technology and Foods and The Effect of Tech- nology on Family Life respectively keynoted the club's calendar. 58 The Conglomerate Science Clubs The oldest club at EMC, Astral Society flaunted its historicity while hugging a waning prestige. On deck with their hilltop telescopes, the Astralites watched while the earth passed through the plane of Saturn's rings (an occurrence only every 29 years), marked the ghost-like move- ments of a lunar eclipse with 4:30 a.m. ardor and watched NASA color films of the Gemini space flights. Boasting seven licensed operators, Radio Club W4RBC manned the ham shack in astral hall for the code-voice traffic of the winds. A new 700 watt D.C. amplifier, home brewed from navy surplus junk, and a single sideband trans- ceiver sharpened exchange. Tuesday evening three W4RBC operators tuned in on the Menno Net and occasionally ham- med administration briefs to other colleges .. . From Alaska to Australia they caught the mys- teries of the air. WITH HOME EC PRECISION, Edie Bontrager de- tails the measurements of a new recipe: Just take a pinch of baking power. PREMEDS DISSECT Dr. Fred Brenneman's analysis of med students' emotional problems. HAMMING BOLIVIA for his weekly contact, Paul Swart- zendruber spiels, Charlie Papa 5 Baker Kilowatt . .. This is Willy 4 Radio Baker Charlie. How copy Ivan? 59 1 PREVIOUSLY ELECTED to the Student Virginia Education Association, Dan Martin poses as Associate Vice-President with fellow SNEA executives. With a record membership of 139, Comenius Club broadened under club head, J. Daniel Mar- tin. At a kickoff program several of EMC faculty shared their insights to teaching. A Park School group performed for the club before Christmas. Panels of elementary and high school pupils told about their student teachers in one meeting. Later with Madison and Bridgewater colleges, fu- ture teachers practiced handling discipline situ- ations, enacted by Anthony Seeger and EMHS students. At Old Dominion College in April, EMC students discussed education trends with other SVEA chapters. Reason for its existence never made the posters, but consensus said Married Students Fel- lowship gave wives of student husbands a rare chance at confab. A potluck supper, chats of new menus and old jobs, babies and budgets— this organization held the strictest criteria for membership. Cosmopolitan Clubs ENGROSSED IN HIS DONUT, Eldon Mast enjoys the bounties of Ernie's post-dorm status. 60 COMENIUS CLUB QUIZZER Pat Hooley pumps Broad- way sixth-graders, What did you think when you heard you were getting a student teacher? ARAB SPOKESMAN Tasheen Basheer backgrounds Arab unification at a D-14 luncheon. To vitalize EMC involvement in current is- sues World Affairs Club sponsored the February visits of Gerard de la Villesbrunne, Counsul of the French Embassy and Tasheen Basheer, Senior Of- ficer of Arab States Delegations Office. A chapel presentation on the 21st anniversary of the United Nations was dedicated to world refugees. Ten students represented Tanzania and the United Arab Republic on the Model UN, April 5-8, at East Carolina College in North Carolina. A delegation also attended a state conference on the Arab-lsraeli dispute at Randolph-Macon Woman's College, Lynchburg, Virginia. U.A.R. DELEGATES—Mohammed Shadid, Miriam Erb, Jerry Shenk and Bill Mishler —probe their country's policy for the Model UN. 61 COSMOPOLITAN GUESTS enjoy a buffet luncheon of American flavor at Dean Miller's home. GERMAN SPONTANEITY has an international appeal for Jacob Dagbai and Charlie Togane. A foreign club—for some the memory of other tunes and celebrations—for some the hope of travelling .. . The Germans sang the old folksy Muss i derm and Die Lorelei. Rhineland flavor in- vaded the Christmas party with Weihnachts Still- eri cake and the carols Oh du frohliche. The Pennsylvania Dutch translated every mood into the farmer's language. Prof. Gehman, their prophet, read his original poems and stories. The Spanish revived the old customs of the pinata Christmas game and the pig roast delicacy. The roast, a Puerto Rican and Cuban festivity, swung the students into fiesta gaiety. Internationals, cohered by a sense of nostal- gia, assembled every month to sketch their home- land for their friends—or imagine an African, Jordanian and Cuban Christmas—or travel Ethiopia via slides—or hear Dr. Gabriela Rauch, Madison Language Department Head and naturalized for- eigner, speak about the problems of the inter- national .. . When Shenandoah tunes sounded strange, the foreign-bound resorted to their club. 62 TAPE RECORDER ACCENT reminds the Pennsylvania Dutch Society members of their ancestors' bilingualism. Foreign-bound Students Setting music tone, EMC's chapter of Music Educators' National Conference promoted campus music events, planned post-recital teas, posted Richmond and Washington concert schedules and renovated a music room. The spring session of Virginia Music Educators' Association elected EMCers John J. Miller President and Faye Gar- ber Secretary, to head the Student Chapter. DISCUSSING LOCAL CHAPTER INVOLVEMENT, President John J. Miller and Secretary Faye Garber officially serve the Student Chapter of the VMEA. SMACKING CHOPS and licking fingers, esludianles de espano dine with roasted hog. 63 SURROUNDED BY GENERALS, Je- rome Yoder heads the ball as Roger Eshleman engages in hand-to-hand combat. RUNNING EASILY after the first mile, Tom Spicher winds his way over the Bridgewater cross-country course. VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY (low score wins) EMC OPPONENTS 31 Davis Elkins 24 47 Bridgewater 15 31 Hampden-Sydney 25 27 Hampden-Sydney 28 Forest Festival Meet 7th among 8 teams Little Eight Meet 4th among 6 teams Expanded THE TENSE LULL freezes action before it breaks into a flurry of swirling arms and legs. 64 Increasing EMC's varsity sports program. Coach Hostetler initiated an all-intercollegiate soc- cer schedule and joined the Virginia Soccer Con- ference. The Courtiers salvaged the third mud-and- rain game with William and Mary as Ray Cope and Ernie Swartz tallied goals. The team upset University of Virginia with Ray Cope and Ron Guengerich booting goals. The booters lost their last four regular season games due to a weak offensive and inopportune defensive lapses. In spite of a 2-6 record, the Courtiers gained a berth in the Virginia Invitation- al Tournament, but lost to Washington and Lee. Marty Miller and Rich Garber gained hon- orable mention on the All-Virginia Soccer Team, while the fans thrilled at Jonas Borntrager's dar- ing, sure-fingered saves and Roger Eshleman's solid footwork. Cross-country took a varsity route via four dual and two invitational meets. Building endur- ance and enthusiasm, EMC avoided a winless season by eeking out a 27-28 victory over Hamp- den-Sydney. In the two invitationals, Tom Spicher placed fourteenth and eleventh with his running mate, Ron Denlinger, not far behind. In literary cross-country. Smith striders took first. Smith Ric Yoder upset Tom Spicher with a one-second victory in the annual Turkey Run. r DURING HALF-TIME DEFICITS Coach Hos- tetler grinds out minced instructions. Intercollegiate Schedule EMC VARSITY SOCCER OPPONENTS 0 Lynchburg 4 1 Davis Elkins 4 2 William Mary 1 3 U. of Virginia 1 1 Alderson Broaddus 4 1 Virginia Tech 2 0 Roanoke College 3 1 Washington Lee 4 1 Virginia Invitational Soccer Tournament Washington Lee 4 VARSITY SOCCER TEAM. Row 1: Jonas Born- trager, Walter Hinz, Bob Bishop, Co-captains Ron Guengerich and Roger Eshleman, John Birkey, Allen Peachey, Larry Fisher. Row 2: Marland Miller, Ernie Swartz, Mohammed Shadid, Jim Harbold, Jerome Yoder, Floyd Schrock, Phil Guengerich, Tom Hurst. Row 3: Jacob Dagbai, Dallas Myers, Rich Garber, Ralph King, Don Burkholder, Marty Miller, Myron Mast, Will Lapp. 65 ALL-LEAGUE SELECTION Vern Mar- tin slams through a bevy of Smiths for another five yards. SMITH SAFETY Mel Hess reaches out in an effort to stop Ron Yoder from reaching pay-dirt. Keynoting Participation With varsity soccer, cross-country and bas- ketball players ineligible for lit football, this year's competition took on a new look. Anchored by unanimous all-league selection Elam Blank, the favored Indies finished second to a surpris- ingly strong Z team led by all-league selections Leon Goshow, Vern Martin, Herb Steffy, Leon Godshall and Dick Miller. Leon Goshow was the leading ground-gainer and EMHS's Don Hess the leader in defensive points. The absence of Varsity Basketball players also changed the literary sports' picture. The Smiths, perennial champs, tied for last place with the Z's, while EMHS, pressing full court and prac- ticing every evening, finished an undefeated literary season winning squeakers from the Pros, Smiths and Indies. The key to EMHS's success was their great balance,- six men averaged in double figures. With the lits' scoring leaders—Ron Kop- penhaver (31.0 average) and Paul Beiler (27.5 average)—the Indies lost only to EMHS. 66 CLUTCHING FUTILELY for a rebound. Smiths' Bill Craun can only hope horror-stricken teammate Milt Loyer recovers his composure. MEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION: Don Burkholder, Ric Yoder and Delmar Glick. SLAPPING A JUMP BALL, Paul Beiler out-heights Roy Steiner to start another Indie fast break. 67 Girls' fall sports featured the staccato crack of hockey sticks and muted pung of tennis balls. Going into the final hockey game, EMHS and the Smith girls both had 2-0 records; the two teams played to a 2-2 tie, solving nothing. EMHS's Barb Rhodes led the scoring with four goals followed by the Smith's Peggy Johnson and EMHS's Gail Martin. In women's lit tennis EMHS also tied for first, this time with the Pros. In the No. 1 singles, the Pros' Shirley Emmert sported the best record (5-1). In winter sports, EMHS girls finally won outright championships, copping both lit basket- ball and ping-pong championships with well- balanced squads. Pat Strong of the second-place Z's led the lit basketball scoring race with a 15.8 average. In ping-pong, Toko Ryu (Z) and Joan King (EMHS) tied for top honors with 5-1 records. WOMEN'S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION: Sharri Beachy, Faculty Ad- visor Miriam Mumaw, Lorna Stoltzfus and Peggy Johnson. ADEPT STICKWORK by EMHS's Janet Wenger prevents a tally as she slaps the ball off to side of the cage. 68 THE ATHLETIC SAGE, Luis Gonzalez, delivers his ominous message to his plebeian team. Success Through Hardwood Coordination VARSITY EMC OPPONENTS 36 Madison 31 33 Bridgewater 39 53 Messiah 17 26 Bridgewater 40 46 Madison 42 58 Messiah 20 JUNIOR VARSITY EMC OPPONENTS 16 Madison 52 14 Bridgewater 42 32 Messiah 10 17 Bridgewater 53 32 Madison 67 39 Messiah 11 70 PIVOTING INTO TROUBLE with a re- bound, Shirley Emmert is blanketed by her Bridgewater opponent. RESTRAINT PREVAILS on Courtiettes' bench as Miss Mumaw calmly surveys the fray. ARCHING A SET SHOT, Liz Heatwole takes advantage of the screen set by Shirley Emmert. Hustle, desire, determination, and good coaching gave EMC's Courtiettes a solid 4-2 rec- ord losing only to experienced Bridgewater twice. Under Miss Mumaw, freshmen and upperclassmen were molded into a fine working unit that dis- played a coordinated fast break which consist- ently chalked up points. With a 19.8 scoring average, freshman Mary Hartzler led the team supplemented by forwards Leanna Beiler, Liz Heatwole and Shirley Emmert. Madison fell vic- tim twice, by five and by four. The girls dis- played precise execution as they trounced rival Messiah twice to avenge equally lopsided losses suffered by the men. Gaining experience for next year, the JV team finished with a 2-4 record in a season of lopsided games. Freshman Martha Kolb led this unit with an eight-point average. VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM. Row 1: Leanna Beiler, Elva Swartzentruber, Elizabeth Heatwole, Captain Mary Hartzler, Coach Miriam Mumaw, Viola Mullet. Row 2: Shirley Emmert, Nadine Smucker, Janie Bontrager, Sharyl Beachy, Brenda Hummel, Barb Heishman, Pam Morris, Martha Kolb, Rachel Koppenhaver, Lois Martin. Row 3: Nancy Headings, Lois Showalter, Phyllis Martin. 71 A SOFT JUMP SHOT by Jon Bucher floats over his flat- footed Beckley foe. POISED FOR THE REBOUND, Ric Yoder is sandwiched between two Generals along the free throw lane. VARSITY BASKETBALL EMC OPPONENTS 71 Bridgewater J.V. 88 68 Washington Lee 98 63 Hampden-Sydney 112 86 Lynchburg J.V. 84 65 Bridgewater J.V. 79 106 Lynchburg J.V. 90 52 Beckley 109 63 Hampden-Sydney 112 67 Philadelphia College of the Bible 73 76 Hampden-Sydney 121 121 Bluefield 129 67 Beckley 100 69 Messiah 64 STRAINING FOR THE TIP, Ralph Lehman battles his taller W L opponent. 72 VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM. Coach Eugene Hostetler, Larry Fisher, Ralph Lehman, Dennis Pursel, Don Burkholder, Co- Captain Ric Yoder, Jon Bucher, Ken Ehst, Co-Captain Marty Miller, Jim Hamilton, Assistant Coach Paul Beiler. A Season of Mediocrity THE INFORMATIVE DISCUSSION is all old basketball hat to Denny Pursel. In a rebuilding season, EAAC's basketball hopes for an improved record never got off the ground. Opponents breezed to 100 points or more on five different occasions. Hoping to get into tougher competition, the varsity received a bap- tism by fire. Most of the year was spent in trying to weld together a consistent starting unit from the largely freshman and sophomore squad. Spas- modic brilliant spurts were overshadowed by long- er periods of sloppy ball handling and lax defense. The bulk of the scoring was done by forward Ric Yoder with a 21.3 scoring average and center Marty Miller with a 17.8 average, while Mil- ler led the team in rebounds with a 10.1 average. 73 VARSITY WRESTLING. Row 1: Glenn Metzler, Mel Hess, Dave Hess, Coach Bryan Stoltzfus. Row 2: Jere Brubaker, Milt Loyer, Jim Hoover, Arland Schrock. Row 3: Bob Bishop, Preston Wenger, Vern Martin. The age-old Olympian sport made its varsity debut at EMC this year with a limited schedule and a combination of experienced men and novices. Freshmen Bob Bishop, Dave Hess, Glenn Metzler, sophomores Mel Hess, Jim Hoover and junior Vern Martin sported high school experience and formed the core of the team. Coach Stolzfus attempted to develop technique and enthusiasm. Heavyweight Glenn Metzler finished the season with an undefeated record. Winter Climax and Lull VARSITY WRESTLING EMC OPPONENTS 8 Fort Union 33 3 Virginia Tech Freshman 45 13 Washington Lee 23 18 Bridgewater 17 RIDING TIME, Glenn Metzler controls his Vir- ginia Tech opponent on his way to a decision. 74 INTELLECTUAL WARFARE expands as Janice Christophel second- guesses Phil Hartzler. In the break between winter and spring sports, the minor sports gained prominence. Gym- nastics Club presented half-time show at the Hampden-Sydney basketball game under Mr. Stoltzfus' supervision. Dick Gunden of the Z's emerged as ping-pong champ with a 6-0 record in lit competition. The Smith No. 1 doubles team, Wayne Swartzendru- ber and Dallas Myers, sparked the Smiths to a lit ping-pong championship with their perfect 6-0 record. Lit volleyball occupied the short March per- iod between basketball and softball. ARAB DETERMINATION surfaces as Walid Sharif overspins a smash. 75 MUSCLE AND COORDINATION combine as Elton Nussbaum balances over Raymond Cope. RISING TO THE OCCASION, Paul Zook stretches for a Pro volleyball spike. PRO THIRD BASEMAN Vi Mullet reaches for the ball with patience and one foot off the ground. Spring brought its annual barrage of sports; softball, track, tennis and golf flourished. Varsity track scheduled one dual and two tri- angular meets and accepted an invitation to Forest Relay at Davis Elkins College. Coach Hostetler had to replace Wayne Yoder in the sprints and Dave Voegtlin in the field events—key men in varsity and lit competition last season. The EMC version of baseball (softball) ap- peared with the first robin. Returning co-champs, the Z's and Indies led the dogfight with pitchers Dick Gunden and Dwight Wyse (Z's), and Bob Wyble and Paul Beiler (Indies). The other lits im- proved their pitching (Larry Kennel, Smiths; War- ren Beachy and Bob Wenger, EMHS; and Carl Litwiller, Pros) to pressure the 1966 titlists. Coach Bryan Staffer led his varsity tennis team through a seven-meet schedule. Girls' spring sports featured the usually bizarre softball and lit track—a proof that they equaled the men's points but not their speed. Rising Spring Tempo SMITH CLEAN-UP HITTER Paul Hurst grimaces and strides into the pitch. 76 LEGS PUMPING, Smith Leanna Beiler breaks into the early lead as the fillies leave the gate. COASTING to a 440 victory, Wayne Yoder eases into a first. BELABORING THE EVENT, Jane Bontrager (above) and Ralph King (below) strain to add extra inches to their shot-putting. 77 Academics The gestures of our minds Stretched slowly in our drifting hours And sometimes offered thoughts a trifle late: the times we exercised the glossary word in combat with Professor X or lost the platitude and searching found our own unpolished creed. But in the crowded midnight hours Our agile minds chronologized the sequence of the histories stapled struggling weeks in typed theories and flipped final pages of reserve copies. We felt hours and gestures leading to production Of what we are and what we are to be: our facts and feelings, lectures, leisures, and our questions and the formulating answers. 79 MYRON S. AUGSBURGER, Th.D. President Professor of Theology The Direction of Progress IRA E. MILLER, Ed.D. Dean of the College Professor of Education LINDEN M. WENGER, Th.M. Acting Dean of the Seminary Assistant Professor of Philosophy 80 LESTER C. SHANK, M.S. Director of Public Relations Assistant to the President HAROLD D. LEHMAN, Ed.D. Registrar Professor of Education E. GRANT HERR, M.A. Business Manager PAUL T. GUENGERICH, M.A. Acting Dean of Students RUTH B. STOLTZFUS Acting Dean of Women SAMUEL O. WEAVER, B.A. Dean of Men They are known as the heads. But they don't merely top a hierarchy. Long before stu- dents grimace over the course requirements on a five-page syllabus, these officials drafted another part-time instructor, decided that English 301 could squeeze into A-232 and extended the ladies' curfew one half hour Saturday night. Theirs is the last say. Behind all the decision-making is the formula- tion of theory and policy. President Augsburger surfaced the raison d'etre of the Christian’college via six college committees and two boards, two sermons each day during Revival Week and the ten-day World Congress on Evangelism in Berlin, Germany. Whether jetting to the annual meeting of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools or hearing out a student innovator, he projected a Christian academic climate. The deans—their voices affirm, approve, re- ject. They fill the answers to the students, May I .. . ? and the instructor's Shall we? Scanning 500-word biographies, directing construction of the Ad Building entrance, interviewing freshmen girls, preparing sermons for Student Church—the musts. Other unclassifieds clutter their minutes. Their approaches—as varied as their responsibili- ties. Each head —a person in his own way. TRUMAN H. BRUNK, JR., B.S. Pastor of Students 81 JOHN M. SNYDER Controller ELROY KAUFFMAN Assistant to Controller DANIEL H. BENDER Student Financial Aid Officer G. EDWIN BONTRAGER, B.D. Assistant Admissions Counselor EMANUEL MARTIN, B.S. Admissions Counselor ESTHER K. LONGACRE Assistant Dean of Women MERLE W. ESHLEMAN, M.D. College Physician MARY ETHEL HEATWOLE, M.S. Director of Food Service Assistant Professor of Home Economics ANNA V. SHOWALTER, B.S. Assistant to Director of Food Service ROBERT J. MESSNER Assistant in Development SAMUEL Z. STRONG, M.S. Field Secretary MAHLON N. RISSLER Business Office Manager 82 Machinery of Progress And the sub-heads. Their roles—supplement- ing, soliciting, calculating, coordinating. Their tasks—significant and sundry, menial and myriad. Starring our memorabilia: Unscrambled dollar dilemmas. Bills. Reminders. Receipts. The jigsaw puzzling that placed 222 in work-study jobs. A special order from that exotic publisher. Charge accounts. More sports clothes (including EMC night-shirts) and expanded book selection. Stock to match the seasons. Splinters—out; warts—off; gastro upsets—settled. Prophylactic shots and Diet Club. Lodging arrangements. The storage room key to unpack wools. Permission slips—granted or denied. Senior Weekend. Donations from foundations— checks, stereo console for the social room, cars. Cafeteria doors irrevocably locked at 6:15. Menus we read afterwards to see what that concoction was. Fine notices. Fresh newspapers on the racks each a.m.; 275 book accessions monthly. Weekend films—collegiate and otherwise. Shades for Chapel windows and new AV room furni- ture. WE LAUD THE INDISPENSABLES. GRACE I. SHOWALTER, M.A. Menno Simons Historical Library and Archives Librarian SADIE A. HARTZLER, B.A. Librarian Emeritus MARGARET M. SHENK, M.A. Librarian JAMES L. MULLENEX, M.A. Acting Director of Visual Education ELTON R. BOMBERGER, B.A. Bookstore Manager WEARIED WITH BOOKS, Larry Stutzman despairs of ever receiving The Season's Best in librarians' service. 83 JOHN R. MUMAW, D.Sc. in Ped. Professor of Christian Education J. OTIS YODER, Th.D. Professor of New Testament Language and Literature G. IRVIN LEHMAN, Ph.D. Professor of Old Testament Language and Literature CHESTER K. LEHMAN, Th.D. Professor of Theology Dean Emeritus HERMAN R. REITZ, M.A. Assistant Professor of New Testament GEORGE R. BRUNK SR., Th.M. (Th.D. candidate) Associate Professor of Practical Theology THE WORD SAYS in Job 40, 'Shall he that contendeth with the Almighty, instruct him?' ... We are always putting so many why's. But when God is asking us, we are silent ... You are probably thinking on this Dutchman that he is very unortho- dox ... But is only my feeling ... You must read and think these things for yourself 84 The Holy Writ, Their Daily Bread They're the two hours you had to take- flavored by G. I. Lehman's earthy interpretations, channelled into Brother Wenger's Biblical mind- set or awed by Mr. Swartley's ineffable God. The eight-man faculty met weekly to inaugu- rate a new package of lower-level courses. Return- ing ex-president John R. Mumaw accepted the title Professor of Christian Education in November. Professor J. P. Jacobszoon, visiting lecturer from the University of Amsterdam, Holland, spiced the church history wing. EMC reluctantly saw Dr. I. B. Horst, author of Anabaptism and the English Reformation to 1558, leave in January to accept the first chair in Mennonite History at the Uni- versity of Amsterdam. Sources moved from Bounds and Bonhoeffer to Barth and Bultmann. Terminology ranged from the layman's fellowship to the theologian's Koinonia. The objective part—writing papers that parroted commentators, ruling outline charts of Ephesians and dozing over Aristotle's Ethics. Those existential moments—painful ones like that first-person paper on Christian discipleship and doubting ones when stark rationalism seemed adequate. And sometimes believing ones when each lecture seemed to say: THY WORD IS TRUTH Thy Word Is Truth thy word is truth thy word is truth PERFORMING HERMENEUTICAL RITES, Exegete Herman venerates the explicatory textualists of Christendom. J. P. JACOBSZOON, (Ph.D. candidate) Visiting Instructor in Church History WILLARD M. SWARTLEY, B.D. Instructor in New Testament Language and Literature IRVIN B. HORST, Ph.D. Professor of Church History 85 The Wine of Life Musicians hibernated in the B-Rooms while the rest of us scurried past, cocking our heads to the cacophony of vocal sliding scales and arpeg- gios from three pianos. In the benign presence of a cracked Mozart, they clung to the recorders in the listening room, tuning their ears to triads and Italian sixth chords. The artists memorized 225 masterpieces, mused on Vermeer, splotched can- vases, explored the National Art Gallery. With a background from the Juliard School of Music and study under Rudolf Ganz, visiting in- structor Mrs. Anderson enriched the music staff this year. Earl Maust's research on music develop- ment in Mennonite colleges, for his Ed.D. from George Peabody College, led to a formulation of music objectives for EMC, The music department hosted the Augsburg College Choir in March, sponsored a Church Music Conference and joined other Virginia colleges in the fall and spring conferences of the Virginia Music Educators' Association at Richmond. College students formed one-third of Mennonite Hour Chorus. Nursing muscles stretched by choral conduct- ing, piping flutophone ditties, and puttering in clays—they endured the mundane and reached for glory. AT THE TUESDAY NIGHT VOICE RECITAL Paul Miller, accompanied by Mary Styer, reflects the Elizabethan romanticism of Come Again, Sweet Love Doth Now Invite. ART APPRECIATION TOUR at the Phillips Collection: Mel, are you sure you can't get your head out of there, or shall I call Mrs. Eby? EARL M. AAAUST, M.Mus. (Ed. D. candidate) Associate Professor of Music J. MARK STAUFFER, M.A. Assistant Professor of Music IRA T. ZOOK, M.A. Assistant Professor of Music KATHERINE G. ANDERSON, M.A. Part-time Instructor in Music A FANNING WEED loses its third dimension in Karen Eby's sketchbook. 87 HUBERT R. PELLMAN, Ph.D. Professor of English STUDENT ASSISTANT Stuart Showalter puzzles over a freshman's evaluation of the silent language factor in mass communication. JOAN E. ZOOK, AA.A. Part-time Instructor in English 88 CLARIFYING THE DENOUEMENT of Daughter of the Late Colonel ' Mr. Martin incites Creative Writing imaginations. A. ARLENE BUMBAUGH, M.S. Assistant Professor of English J. HERBERT MARTIN, M.A. Assistant Professor of English JAMES R. BOMBERGER, Ed.D. Associate Professor of English ALICE W. LAPP, B.A. Assistant Teacher in English REBECCA S. MARTIN, B.A. Assistant Teacher in English Critics of The Inkslinger Disciples of words and wisdom, English stu- dents scanned novels, stocked quotes and col- lected titles. Between the poetry critiques and the fifty-page readings, majors relaxed with The Atlan- tic, commented on Doctor Zhivago and penciled original fragments on the lecture margins. The curriculum revision intensified the major to 33 hours and shifted the emphasis to depth analysis. Survey of English Lit was split into period courses; World Lit expanded to include ancient masterpieces. Dr. Pellman absconded from lec- turing and devoted himself to authoring a history of EMC for the 1968 anniversary. As a summer hobby, subsidized by govern- ment funds, Martin and Bomberger Inc. painted, draped, and carpeted gray A-224 into a piquant retreat for the literature worshippers. The English Ones resorted to the quiet of soft lamps and Rouault paintings to browse in Frost coolness and Shakespeare puns. In the plush chairs they chatted with profs about Faulkner's themes . . . squatted on the floor at night to shape a sonnet . . . listened to the cadence of Under Milkwood ... or just skimmed tomorrow's assignment .. . AT MONDAY EVENING'S SKULL SESSION, Elsie Peifer and Brenda Hummel fall heirs to the Bom- berger method. 89 EMERY YODER, B.A. Instructor in French ERNEST G. GEHMAN, Ph.D. Professor of German DOROTHY KEMRER, M.A. Assistant Professor Emeritus of Latin LOIS B. BOWMAN, M.A. Instructor in Latin GREEK STUDENT Sallie Leatherman parrots the impersonal earphone voice in the new language laboratory. Instead of Good Grief! — Ach du lieber, Que lastima! and C'est terrible! punctuated the linguist's talk. Walking to class, they memorized French dialogues . . . proudly chanted la mesa, la silla, el libro without vocab card aid . . . drew the Rhine, Elbe and Danube through the German borders . . . read or translated Les Miserables, Don Quixote or Wilhelm Tell. As tour director of a two-hour course, Mr. Miller travelled with students to Mexico in July. Mr. Yoder constructed booths in the French lan- guage laboratory last summer. On furlough first semester, Mr. Frederick transfused an Espanol mood with the authentic accent and cultural panorama of Honduras. 1967 avocations—Mr. Gehman lectured on German dam construction and pressed his original Pennsylvania Dutch stories and poems into a spring record release. Rattling r's with a trill or a gutteral flip, the bilinguals assimilated the news through Diarios Las Americas . . . caroled peace in Stille Nacht ... transcended cultures in Arrivee a Paris. Vocabulary hungry or just desperately inarticulate, the foreign ones frantically gestured and ques- tioned, Que? Comment? Bitte? 90 MATCHING SCORES, Wayne Keim, Walter Hochstetler and Barb Wenger find their niches in Herr Gehman's infallible grading curve. The Bilinguist’s Laboratory S. ERNEST MILLER, B.A. Assistant Teacher in Spanish ISAAC L. FREDERICK, M.Ed. Part-time Instructor in Spanish SAMUEL E. MILLER, M.A. Associate Professor of Spanish 91 Pageant of the Past England's War of the Roses, Simon Bolivar, the Union Pacific's golden spike, the Burma Road —facts that link our world's past. Trends of thought blend historical events—nineteenth century tran- scendentalism, Eastern mysticism, African national- ism and English imperialism. The history department prizes its position as helper, contributing a universal background to other social sciences and liberal arts. Albert Keim attended a summer seminar at Tulane University, New Orleans. Aiming for their doctorates, Gerald Brunk researched the role of bishops in the Eliza- bethan House of Lords at the University of Vir- ginia, while John Lapp studied the Mennonite Church in India under the University of Penn- sylvania. Course offerings extend beyond traditional English and American perspective to include South- east Asia, Latin America and Africa. Students soak social and intellectual growth from P e r c i v a I Speare, Hugh Trevor-Roper and Alan Nevins. After Maplewood musings and cafeteria chats, they lay aside Lippmann and chuckle over Herb- lock's latest spoof. INSURRECTION 101? Protesting carpentry noise in the auditorium, John Lapp's City students jam the Ad Building for a transplanted lecture on the philosophy of Thucydides and Socrates. OFF-YEAR ELECTION RETURNS bombard Contemporary World Affairs students as they ponder the significance of the Republican resurgence. 92 BIBLIOGRAPHER HORST riffles through the C drawer adding Richard N. Current and Conscientious Objectors in the Civil War to his directory for Civil War and Reconstruction students. JOHN A. LAPP, M.A. (Ph.D. candidate) Associate Professor of History SAMUEL L. HORST, M.Ed. (M.A. candidate) Assistant Professor of Social Science HARRY A. BRUNK, M.A. Associate Professor Emeritus of History GERALD R. BRUNK, M.A.T. (Ph.D. candidate) Assistant Professor of History DONALD E. SHOWALTER, LI.B. Part-time Instructor in Political Science ALBERT N. KEIM, M.A. Instructor in History 93 SOCIAL INTERACTION parallels Mr. Stoltzfus' Marriage and the Family lecture. GRANT M. STOLTZFUS, M.A., B.D. Associate Professor of Sociology ANNA M. FREY, M.A. Instructor in Sociology and English HAROLD E. HUBER, M.A. Instructor in Sociology DANIEL R. SHENK, M. Soc. Wk. Visiting Instructor in Sociology 94 The Primate and His Partners Clustered over coffee cups, psych and soc students fitted a concept into personal experience . . . analyzed the dynamics of their dorm gang . .. reviewed Eye of the Beholder. The trend of '67 was toward cooperation be- tween the cousin departments. Returning from a year's research, Dr. Peachey continued his study of student behavior characteristics. Dr. Don Jacobs, visiting professor of anthropology, telescoped his cosmopolitan perception into a five-week autumn block. The soc faculty launched a survey of the cultural status of Rockingham County residents; advanced students participated in the polling of Harrisonburg area. Psych apprentices counselled high school dropouts. A '67 landmark; Dr. Peachey's beginning a five-year curriculum ex- pansion. Future scholars and reformers of society . . . now training rats to run mazes . . . touring West- ern State .... analyzing the difference between urban and rural life ... researching Spencer's Social Darwinism . . . always beholding the inner | IN HIS E-BUILDING STALL Laban Peachey shoots the psychological bull with Lowell Bender. PAUL J. GLANZER, M.Ed. S. Assistant Professor of Psychology LABAN PEACHEY, Ed. D. Professor of Psychology AN EFFICIENT MANAGER, Delbert Seitz removes a pen to check his roll of future managers. DELBERT L. SEITZ, M.S. Instructor in Business JOHN S. WENGER, M.Ed. Assistant Professor of Economics Balancing the Ledger Marginal and profit of sales, markets, capital, overhead-mental file of Adam's disciples. The line and staff management was more profitable than a functional setup. The Social Science Division launched upper level courses to finalize requirements for Business Administration and Business Education majors. From Western Reserve University Delbert Seitz brought fresh resources to the administrative angle. Offerings in the management area, busi- ness education and secretaryship conned 72 en- rollees into the department. While Mr. Seitz pleaded, A debit for every credit, his students tried to remember that Taylor was the father of scientific management and not a U.S. president. Economics students thumbed the Wall Street Journal, tracing their class invest- ment, a single share of Sperry Rand. They produced print—seventy-five words per minute—on the IBM. The Federal Reserve System took critical scouring for fallacies. They dreamed of their names in the Yellow-Pages .. . Still the educational loan unrelentingly stacked interest. 96 RUTH S. S. HOSTETTER, M.S. Assistant Professor of Business MILDRED GRAYBILL, B.S. Assistant Teacher of Business CAROLINE M. DETWILER, M.S. Assistant Professor of Business WITH HER HEAD HARNESSED, tongue in check and fingers fly- ing, Melva Swartzentruber trans- lates dictation. 97 ARER THE POVERTY PROGRAM in Home Management, Leanna Beiler concedes that 65c per day will not feed her husband Paul. CATHERINE R. MUMAW, M.S. Associate Professor of Home Economics DORIS G. BOMBERGER, M.S. Part-time Instructor in Home Economics MARY EMMA EBY, ED.D Professor of Home Economics PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH HOSTESS Linda Buckwalter serves hog maw and shoo-fly pie to Dean and Mrs. Miller by lantern light. 98 LILLIAN M. MAST, M.S. Instructor in Nursing MARY D. BRUBAKER, M.S, Assistant of Nursing RUTH A. HARTZLER, M.S. Instructor in Nursing Nursing and Home Ec—the acted ideas. Dis- secting cat muscles, reflexing frog legs, thinking RN terminology—the embryonic nurse. Bidding for the wall-to-wall carpet, planting 200 tulips and crocuses, re-upholstering a chair—the home economist. To freshmen the academic nurses' program opened a curriculum of liberal arts and a gradual induction into the clinical. The autumn visit to King's Daughter's Hospital promised future prac- tice of the college anatomy and nursing orientation classes. Home Ec females switched to more home management study. After a two-year stint at Penn State, Miss Mumaw moved into the home man- agement house, supervising its interior decor- ation and formulating her thesis on home man- agement organization. Mrs. Bomberger returned to the staff after eleven years of personal exper- ience in family life. 10,000 copies of Mrs. Eby's Mennonite Community Cook Book were reprinted. Pinching pennies for low-income week, teaching hem stitching and salad tossing or paint- ing the kitchen a soft bluish-green. Home Ec seniors practiced homemaking. And amateur RN's had nightmares of erroneous TPR's while memorizing the structure of the neural receptors. HUMAN ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY STUDENTS, Ethel Kandel and Joanna Hershberger, explore the inner sanctum of a feline cadaver. Procedures and People 99 The Matter of Life DANIEL B. SUTER, Ph.D. Professor of Biology D. RALPH HOSTETTER, Ph.D. Professor Emeritus of Biology ROBERT YODER, B.S. Assistant Teacher in Biology KENTON K. BRUBAKER, Ph.D. Professor in Biology HOMER A. MUMAW, M.S. Associate Professor of Biology DONALD L. MELLINGER, M.Ed. Instructor in Biology To the naive—a plant, a rock, a bird. To the biologist and geologist—nucleic acids, quartz- ite and one of the aves class, plus their multiple components—nucleotides, agate and the red-eyed vireo. Lab space was continually used to capacity this year. Plans were made for future merging of the natural and physical sciences in lower-level classes. Planned curriculum changes await the new Science Building begun this spring. Dr. Ken- ton Brubaker probed into a herbicide amitrole in postdoctorate work at Purdue University last summer. Focusing goes beyond the feline's mandib- ular arch or the bacterial scum scaled from a shower cubicle; it reaches universal scientific con- cerns—world food supply and the population ex- plosion. The answer's there—at the end of a six- hour lab session, under a cluster of chinquefoil in Park Woods, after the birth of the fourth gen- eration of fruit flies or somewhere beyond that B.S. degree. Until then they wrestle with ob- stacles, master procedures and identify micro- scopic exactions. 100 HABITUAL BIRD-WATCHER Dr. Hostetter attempts to Identify the martins at the pre-school faculty picnic. ADJUSTING THE MICROSCOPE for Kenneth Horning, Mr. Mellinger exclaims, Now, we can conceive that we have cornered a paramecium. AT VIRGINIA'S LARGEST TUFA BEDS, student geologists Walton Hackman and Jim Sensenig examine a leaf imprint chipped loose by Ken Fisher. 101 GLENN M. KAUFFMAN, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry HERBERT G. WEAVER, M.S. Part-time Instructor in Chemistry NOREEN POLZIN, B.S. Assistant Teacher in Chemistry ROBERT C. LEHMAN, Ed.D. Professor of Physical Science THE MATHEMATICAL TOOLS—slide rule, tables and graphs—only assist in shortening the daily assignments of Lehman, Kauffman and Showalter. IC2 GENTLY TURNING THE STOPCOCK, J. Allen Miller eases a separated solution into a test tube. Forms, Forces and Formulas In an underworld oozing H2S odors, they lived with the flasks, fumes, and funnels; chased cations through solutions; dealt in 'ates and 'ites. They plodded in the footsteps of Newton, Kepler, and Halley: slaves to the equal sign; disciples of ergs and ohms; star gazers. Inducted to inductions, they knocked roots at the roots, graphed sines and cosines, decked sheets with the acute and the obtuse. Numbers danced into order at their finger tips—when clarity reigned. Offering a stronger major in mathematics, the department expanded its faculty with the arrival of Mr. Showalter and added Introduction to Analysis and Math Statistics to curriculum. In pursuit of his M.S., Mr. Heatwole studied sta- tistics at the University of Georgia last summer. Participating in the NSF Summer Research program, Mr. Kauffman spent 11 weeks at the University of Florida last summer. Robert Lehman did biophysics research at Pennsylvania State University. Wielding reams of graph paper, the scales, the telescopes and the meter stick ... they were the analysts. 49,000 DYNES and you're in equilibrium. Kennel, mutters Mel Hess to his physics partner at the force table. ROY E. HEATWOLE, M.S. Instructor in Mathematics WILMER R. LEHMAN, M.A. Assistant Professor of Mathematics MILLARD E. SHOWALTER, M. Math. Instructor in Mathematics 103 Integrating Body and Spirit EUGENE R. HOSTETLER, M.S. Assistant Professor of Physical Education W. BRYAN STOLTZFUS, M.S. Instructor in Physical Education PAUL M. BEILER, B.S. Assistant Director of Recreation and Athletics MARGARET I. MARTIN, Ed.D. Professor of Physical Education MIRIAM L. MUMAW, B.S. Assistant Director of Recreation and Athletics ADJUSTING HER SIGHTS, Margaret Evans perfects her archery marksman- ship at the Massanutten Archery Range. Taking turns on the frozen and dewy field, the gym floor, the tennis courts and the new mats, Phys Ed students dabbled in a variety of sports or perfected a few. We saw them flock the hill on arrow hunts, squat-thrust in rhythm, trot laps in lines and singles, and struggle for the pinning combination in wrestling. Some patronized the bowling alley, match- ing their skills with the balls and pins; others journeyed to Staunton's YMCA pool for life sav- ing and stroke technique. With a jump from two to five in the physical education faculty and with more students surpass- ing departmental requirements, expansion ear- marked this area of pursuit. Enlarged officiating classes put only girl refs on the floor for girls' games. The athletic field evolved to reality. Blasting shattered Virginia limestone and lumbering cats leveled the eight-foot grade. A track was finally laid. 104 STUDENT INSTRUCTOR Vernon Martin buoys Ralph King, demon- strating the tired swimmer's carry to the Monday evening swimming class at the Staunton Y. STRETCHING FOR A SPEEDY ACE, Miss Martin demonstrates faultless technique to her Phys Ed class. SHOE INSPECTION by Miss Martin focuses on No. 14 (Orpha Kan- agy). The blushing defense: They're holey, but they're still sneakers. 105 Taught to Teach MR. GROFF, I know what the answer is, but what if you change the problem? Bouts with the abacus and Suppe's math ma- terials. Sessions in Dolch, Burdett, wooly mam- moths and phonetics. Curriculum library hours of textbook and film strip analyzing. A lesson for college peers ... El Ed majors amassed tools to meet youngsters. In 1-12 the secondary-oriented hashed adolescent psychology and discipline theories to the clatter of alarm clocks ( experience proves the best teacher ) and the ambrosia of mid-morning coffee. During nine weeks of practice teaching the Miss Benders and Mr. Ebys personalized class- rooms from Newton Square to EMHS. Ivory tower idealism, built as students, crumbled. This year marked the initial publication of TEACH, a semiannual bulletin for department alumni; the first Teacher Alumnus of the Year Award; and preliminary application to the Na- tional Council for Accreditation of Teacher Ed- ucation. Granted doctorates last June and pro- fessorships in the fall, J. Lester Brubaker and Esther Lehman taught University of Virginia ex- tension courses in addition to EMC classes. Elsie Lehman, on sabbatical, taught remedial reading at St. Anne, Illinois. J. LESTER BRUBAKER, Ed.D. Professor of Education Director of Teacher Education and Teacher Placement ELSIE E. LEHMAN, Ed.S. Associate Professor of Education 106 THE PROFILE OF 007 .. . the shadow of the visitation always in the corridor ... a student teacher's fear realized. A GAME FILE may be valuable someday, but Barb Neal wonders when third grade youngsters would ever play 2,000 games. ALPHIE A. ZOOK, M.Ed. Assistant Professor of Education DANIEL W. LEHMAN, M.A. Professor Emeritus of Education CHARLES W. PELLMAN, M.S. Part-time Instructor of Education ESTHER K. LEHMAN, Ed.D. Professor of Education 107 ELIZABETH MOSEMANN Bookkeeper ULA R. MARTIN Assistant Bookkeeper MARY FLORENCE SHENK Secretary to the Dean FROM HER NEW LATTICED CAGE Laura Histand drones In- formation Office for the 687th time. GERALDINE BECHTEL, B.S. College Nurse FLORENCE E. HORST, B.S. Assistant to Director of Food Service 108 College Shopkeepers JUMBLED SCHEDULES slip into proper slots through the organ- izational finesse of Tillie Yoder. The nameless college univac—secretaries, bookkeepers, maintenance men, housekeepers, cooks. Secretaries typed receipts and checks, mailed the urgent notices, ran off test masters, sched- uled counseling .. . Bookkeepers recorded the actions and transactions . . . Maintenance men repaired irons, planted shrubs to detour lawn paths, locked in the treas- ures at 11 p.m., prowled the campus at night .. . Housekeepers planned the Christmas waxings and Thursday sheet handouts, redeemed the lost scarves and toothbrushes, appeared at the buzz of the S.O.S. bell .. . Behind the fragrant doors, the cooks diced and sliced, mixed and fixed both the favorite delicacy and the Saturday Mennonite Review Stew. Fed by their skilled hands, the Brains grad- uated in the spring. SERVING PEACHES in preparation for our tri- weekly dessert—a com- mon domesticism for Mae Blosser. v Sj X KEY MAN ON CAMPUS, Wade Shenk makes his nocturnal rounds at 11 p.m. HOUSEKEEPER Mrs. Heatwole doles out two clean sheets for Doris Gifford and her roommate. 109 Students I f fc • We were the eclectic ones. We read Honest to God during chapel and humored the end of the cafeteria line with Peanuts. We listened to Don Jacobs and watched Huntley-Brinkley. We were the manikins of routine. We paid the barber, the clerk and the shoe repairman. We said Hi and I'm fine. Thank you and Shut up. We were the voices. We argued for peace or voluntary chapel in the S-rooms. We yelled from dorm windows and whispered in the rose arbors. We had our say. We were everything and nothing. We were the multicolored actors Strutting across campus for a year. The Seminary: Pastoral WITH KNOWLEDGE AT THEIR FINGERTIPS Merle Stoltzfus and Milton are sparked by an insight into the meaning of the Anabaptist vision. NINE O'CLOCK COFFEE shocks Glenn Kriebel out of the stupor following his first Greek nightmare. OBLIVIOUS TO THE WORLD James Metzler secludes himself in his monastic niche behind the wall of books. 112 Pastoral Apprentices Absorbed Mission Emphasis. Senior MERLE STOLTZFUS Harrisonburg, Virginia Bachelor of Divinity They wondered what we thought of them. The pious goofs? The preachers? The library priority group? At times we spied them in the Snack Shop or overheard a discussion on homile- tics from A-208. We read their announcements with our own: Seminary chapel will meet Tuesday and Thursday in A-18. We decided they were with it after seeing Gene Shelley's antics with the Indies and hearing James Metzler's inside views on Vietnam. They did things—trekked off campus to Chambersburg in the fall, joined President Augs- burger in a Pittsburgh crusade and spent a week- end in eastern Mennonite churches. Visiting pro- fessors Don Jacobs and Jacob Jacobszoon marked a move to broader use of guest instructors. George Brunk, Sr., joined seminary faculty sec- ond semester. EMS spearheaded the Evangelism Institute held on campus last June 27 to July 8 and pro- jected its second one for June, 1967. A highlight of the Church Vocations Fellowship was the re- port on Berlin Congress by David and Myron Augsburger and Dr. Richard C. Halverson. Hurrying home for meals (poor Milt and Glenn were the loners), pastoring in community churches and always aspiring to be the cutting edge of the church .. . the seminary men. Middler CARL E. HANSEN Harrisonburg, Virginia Juniors DENNIS BOEL Harrisonburg, Virginia GLENN KRIEBEL Souderton, Pennsylvania JAMES E. METZLER Harrisonburg, Virginia ALFRED J. POLZIN Harrisonburg, Virginia 113 DAWN BATTERMAN Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S., Medical Technology ANNA RUTH BEACHY Kalona, Iowa B.A., Elementary Education LEANNA K. BEILER Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S., Home Economics KAREN E. BENDER Kalona, Iowa B.A., Elementary Education Seniors: The Esoteric Ones, LOWELL BENDER Bittinger, Md. B.A., Sociology JAMES BISHOP Doylestown, Pennsylvania B.A., English ELAM S. BLANK Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., Bible EDITH S. BONTRAGER Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S., Home Economics ROY L. BRUBAKER Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., Elementary Education LINDA J. BUCKWALTER Wellsville, New York B.S., Home Economics 114 SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS: Anna Mast, Treasurer Dawn Jantzi, Secretary Rodney Groff, President Harley Showalter, Business Manager The “Arrived” Quarter — Enclaves of Critics. WILMA BURKE Masontown, Pennsylvania B.A. Elementary Education WAYNE BURKHART Brutus, Michigan B.A., English ROBERT CONLEY Fulks Run, Virginia B.A., Bible EVELYN J. DRIVER Waynesboro, Virginia B.S., Nursing MAURICE EBY Petoskey, Michigan B.S., History SHIRLEY EMMERT Sweet Home, Oregon B.S., Elementary Education 115 FRANK EMSWILER Fulks Run, Virginia B.S., Elementary Education ELAINE ERB Frazee, Minnesota B.S., Home Economics MIRIAM ERB Lancaster, Pennsylvania B.A., Natural Science GERALDINE ESBENSHADE New Holland, Pennsylvania B.S., Elementary Education We Researched for Seminars and CLAIR D. ESCH Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., English ROGER ESHLEMAN Greencastle, Pennsylvania B.S., Natural Science DONALD FREDERICK Royersford, Pennsylvania B.S., Chemistry RACHEL FRETZ Hagerstown, Maryland B.A., English DUANE E. GINGERICH Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., Bible, Sociology CAROLYN L. GLICK Smoketown, Pennsylvania B.A., Elementary Education 116 LYNETTE GRIESER Spencerville, Indiana B.A., Elementary Education MARY ELLEN GROFF Strasburg, Pennsylvania B.S., Nursing Shoptalked, WHISTLEMAN Roger Eshleman roughens his EMHS phys ed class with a rigorous wrestling drill. RODNEY M. GROFF Harleysville, Pennsylvania B.S., Elementary Education RONALD GUENGERICH Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., History, Music SALIM HABASH Amman, Jordan B.S., Mathematics WALTON HACKMAN Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., Natural Science 117 A GRAD ANNOUNCEMENT RECEIPT from Rodney Groff in ex- change for Sarah Peachey's guilders is only a pre-document of the imminent pomp. JAMES HAMILTON Salem, Oregon B.A., Business Administration RUTH MAE HENDRICKS Blue Bell, Pennsylvania B.A., English CONNIE HEATWOLE Elida, Ohio B.S., Home Economics CLYDE R. HERR Stanley, Virginia B.A., History Planned Parties Over Lunch Chatter SHERILYN M. HERSHEY Aibonito, Puerto Rico B.A., Sociology WALTER HOCHSTETLER Goshen, Indiana B.A., Bible PHYLLIS HOLLOWAY Singers Glen, Virginia B.A., English PATRICIA. HOOLEY Kalispell, Montana B.A., Elementary Education 118 RUTH HOOVER Pottsville, Pennsylvania B.A., English DAWN JANTZI Medina, New York B.S., Elementary Education MERNA JO HOYLMAN South English, Iowa B.S., Elementary Education EVELYN KEENER Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania B.A., Elementary Education MARY ELLEN HUBER Ephrata, Pennsylvania B.S., Elementary Education CAROL KINDY Plumsteadville, Pennsylvania B.S., Nursing PAUL R. HURST Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S., Natural Science HAZEL KNICELY Mt. Crawford, Virginia B.S., Elementary Education CHARLOTTE KOLB Royersford, Pennsylvania B.A., Elementary Education VOTARY OF THE UNIQUE, Clyde Herr poses the academician. 119 DONALD KRAYBILL Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., Sociology, Bible KATHLEEN LEHIGH Hanover, Pennsylvania B.A., Sociology, Psychology CORA LEHMAN Willow Hill, Pennsylvania B.S., Nursing MILTON W. LOYER Red Lion, Pennsylvania B.S., Bible, Mathematics ESTHER MACK Collegeville, Pennsylvania B.S., Nursing ALTA MARTIN Stevens, Pennsylvania B.A., Psychology CAROL MARTIN Hagerstown, Maryland B.A., Elementary Education J. DANIEL MARTIN Spring Grove, Pennsylvania B.S., Elementary Education, Biology and Accepted 120 JUNE WEDDINGS prompt trousseau comparison between room- mates Dawn Jantzi and Sadie Miller. J. WELDON MARTIN Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., Foreign Language ERNEST S. MAST Fleetwood, Pennsylvania B.A., Sociology ANNA MAST Cochranville, Pennsylvania B.S., Elementary Education ALTA MAE MELLINGER Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S., Nursing Student Priority. SADIE MILLER .Sugarcreek, Ohio B.A. Elementary Education SHARON KAY MOSER Lowville, New York B.S., Home Economics FANNY ELLEN MULLET Middlebury, Indiana B.A., Foreign Language 121 ELIZABETH JANE OSWALD Mantua, Ohio B.S., Nursing A. EUGENE REYNOLDS Goodville, Pennsylvania B. S., Psychology SARAH PEACHEY Belleville, Pennsylvania B.A., Elementary Education MARY ETHYL RHODES Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S., Home Economics WILBUR F. PEACHEY Belleville, Pennsylvania B.S., Sociology, Psychology DAVID RITTER Pottstown, Pennsylvania B.A., Natural Science BETTY LEE REVERCOMB Hinton, Virginia B.S., Elementary Education MARIAN ROHRER Wadsworth, Ohio B.A., Sociology SNACK SHOP CAMARADERIE builds on Gary Smucker's wind- blown Prince Charlie. 122 KENNETH ROSS Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., Psychology JAMES ROTH Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S., Sociology NELSON MUKARA SAKWA Maseno, Kenya B.A., History BLAIR SEITZ Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania B.A., Sociology CHIVALROUS KNIGHT Blair Seitz returns a fair damsel to the inner sanctum of North Lawn. The Men Panicked Over 2-S Terminations, JAMES SENSENIG Ephrata, Pennsylvania B.A., Natural Science JEAN SHANK Broadway, Virginia B.A., Foreign Language HARLEY R. SHOWALTER Timberville, Virginia B.A., Business Administration 123 STUART W. SHOWALTER Timberville, Virginia B.A., English J. DONALD SIEGRIST Bird-in-Hand, Pennsylvania B.A., Natural Science LOIS I. SLAUBAUGH Wolford, North Dakota B.A., English D. GARY SAAUCKER Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S. Social Science NADINE SMUCKER Harrisburg, Oregon B.A., Sociology CARLTON STAMBAUGH Spring Grove, Pennsylvania B.S., Biology LIVING ROOM FOLK DUO Dorcas Steffen and Linda Buckwalter relax with a Schlummerlied, Mude bin ich geh' zur Ruh.' 124 DORCAS STEFFEN Apple Creek, Ohio B.S., Home Economics BEN S. STOLTZFUS Lancaster, Pennsylvania B.A., Bible, Sociology GEORGE L. STOLTZFUS Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., Elementary Education IRENE STOLTZFUS Grayson, North Carolina B.S., Elementary Education RUTH R. STOLTZFUS Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., Elementary Education S. MARK STOLTZFUS Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S., Sociology 49 of Us Red-pencilled For Nine Weeks KARENE SWARTZ Malvern, Pennsylvania B.S., Home Economics J. PAUL SWARTZENDRUBER Kalona, Iowa B.A., Foreign Language VIRGINIA SWARTZENDRUBER Kalona, Iowa B.S., Nursing RONALD L. TRISSEL Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S., Social Science, History 125 MARIAN L. UMBLE Sadsburyville, Pennsylvania B.A., Elementary Education HERBERT L. VAN HORN Columbiana, Ohio B.A., Social Science MARTHA T. VANLEAR Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S., Business Education CAROLYN ANN WAMPLER Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S., Elementary Education WAYNE WEAVER Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S., Natural Science BETTY WENGER Lancaster, Pennsylvania B.A., English LOIS ANN WENGER Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., English ARTHUR W. WINGFIELD Churchville, Virginia B.S., Bible GERALD YODER Greenwood, Delaware B.S., Biology HAROLD YODER Belleville, Pennsylvania B.A., Elementary Education HELEN YODER Harrisonburg, Virginia B.S., Home Economics JEROME YODER Greenwood, Delaware B.A., Biology 126 And We All Bade Adieu With a Sheepskin. JOHN O. YODER II Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A. Bible PAUL T. YODER Stuarts Draft, Virginia B.S., Natural Science WILBUR YODER Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., Elementary Education VIOLET ELAINE ZEHR Castorland, New York B.A., English 127 WINFRED CASEY Crimora, Virginia T.Y., Business JOHN LAPRADE, JR. Richmond, Virginia T.Y., General SHEMAYA ONYANGO MAGATI Tarime, Tanzania T.Y., Business MRS. EVA A. MIGIRE Tarime, Tanzania T.Y., Business Two Year Graduates PAMELA MORRIS Centerville, Pennsylvania T.Y., Business DANIEL MTOKA Musoma, Tanzania T.Y., Bible KARA MYERS Harrisonburg, Virginia T.Y., Business DANIEL K. NESS Hanover, Pennsylvania T.Y., Business BARAK ORONDO Tarime, Tanzania T.Y General GAIL KAY PLATT Spartansburg, Pennsylvania T.Y., Business SANDRA KAY RITCHIE Harrisonburg, Virginia T.Y., Business MERLE RUTH Harrisonburg, Virginia T.Y., Bible I 128 FLORENCE SAKWA Maseno, Kenya T.Y., Business SALLY ANN STOLTZFUS Morgantown, Pennsylvania T.Y., Business MELVA SWARTZENTRUBER Sebewaing, Michigan T.Y., Business BENJAMIN WENGER Lititz, Pennsylvania T.Y., General PAULA WHEELBARGER Harrisonburg, Virginia T.Y., Business MARGARET WILLIAMS Elkton, Virginia T.Y., Business AN AFTERNOON TETE-A-TETE in the rose arbor offers international benefits to Dan AAtoka and Professor Horst. 129 GLENN M. ALDERFER Harleysville, Pa. BLANCA ARROY Mexico City, Mex. DAVID M. BENNER Souderton, Pa. KEITH BILGER Highland Lake, N.Y. ESTHER BIRKEY, Brimley, Mich. JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS: Glenn Lind, Vice-President John Shank, Business Manager Gloria Detweiler, Treasurer Nelson Good, President Shirley Bowman, Secretary KATHRYN BITTENBENDER Bechtelsville, Pa. JANE BONTRAGER Alden, N.Y. IDELLA BORNTRAGER Macon, Miss. SHIRLEY BOWMAN Harrisonburg, Va. JUDY BRANNER Harrisonburg, Va. AMZIE BRUBACHER Elmira, Ont. ELOISE BUCKWALTER Cochranville, Pa. ROBERT D. BUCKWALTER, JR. Harrisonburg, Va. ELIZABETH BURKHOLDER Harrisonburg, Va. PHILIP BUSKIRK Vestaburg, Mich. Juniors: HELEN F. CHRISTMAN Rexville, N. Y. JANICE CHRISTOPHEL Goshen, Ind. RAYMOND COPE Quakertown, Pa. DENNIS CRESSMAN Kitchener, Ont. ABRAM DERSTINE, JR. Souderton, Pa. GLORIA DETWEILER Harleysville, Pa. The Status Seekers JOHN EHST Bally, Pa. ROBERT F. ELSROAD Harrisonburg, Va. JIM FAIRFIELD Harrisonburg, Va. J. KENNETH FISHER, JR. Harrisonburg, Va. PAUL C. FRETZ Hagerstown, Md. FAYE GARBER Elizabethtown, Pa. WILLIAM GARBER Berlin, O. BARBARA A. GEHMAN Bally, Pa. MARILYN GEHMAN Harleysville, Pa. ROBERT GEISER Wadsworth, O. BARBARA GERBER Dalton, O. LESLIE GINGERICH Nashwauk, Minn. DELMAR GLICK Reedsville, Pa. JOHN GLICK Belleville, Pa. ANNA MAE GODSHALL Canadensis, Pa. S. LEON GODSHALL Green Lane, Pa. 131 LUIS GONZALEZ New York, N.Y. KARLA GOOD Harrisonburg, Va. MERVIN S. GOOD Lowville, N.Y. MILDRED GOOD Wooster, O. NELSON W. GOOD Lititz, Pa. WARREN GRASSE Blooming Glen, Pa. RICHARD GUNDEN Clare, Mich. ROSE HACKMAN Allentown, Pa. DONNIE HALTERMAN Harrisonburg, Va. JAMES HARBOLD East Berlin, Pa. R. MELVIN HARNISH Harrisonburg, Va. PHIL HARTZLER Newport News, Va. JOYCE HERSHEY Intercourse, Pa. CARLENE HOLSOPPLE Holsopple, Pa. KAREN HOOVER Imlay City, Mich. LAUREL HORST Orrville, O. Reneging the Hodgepodge for BRUCE HUMMEL Berlin, O. SHARON JANTZI Au Gres, Mich. CECELIA M. JOHNSON Quakertown, Pa. J. CLYDE KEENER Lancaster, Pa. DAVID KINDY Plumsteadville, Pa. DELVIN D. KING Albany, Ore. JOY KING Atglen, Pa. PEARL KING Malvern, Pa. SHERYL KING Bellefontaine, O. VERNANE KING Belleville, Pa. 132 SIPPING POP AND TEARING PIZZA, juniors socialized at the Broadway Fire Hall one October evening. the Specific, NOAH S. KOLB Spring City, Pa. RACHEL KOPPENHAVER Hesston, Kan. HERBERT KRAYBILL Elizabethtown, Pa. SALOME KURTZ Olev, Pa. WAYNE D. KURTZ Fleetwood, Pa. ANNA MAE LANDIS Lititz, Pa. DARLENE LANDIS Harrisonburg, Va. RUTH M. LAPP Lansdale, Pa. LOIS LEHMAN Johnstown, Pa. WILBUR LEIDIG, JR. Midland, Mich. RUSSELL LEINBACH Petoskey, Mich. 133 GLENN D. LIND Salem, Ore. KRISTEN LONG Mt. Crawford, Va. ALTON LONGENECKER Harrisonburg, Va. MILFORD LYNDAKER Lowville, N.Y. JOAN McCARY Petaskey, Mich. VERNON L. MARTIN Lititz, Pa. THEODORE L. MAST Greenwood, Del. WESLEY S. MAST Harrisonburg, Va. WILMA MAST Goshen, Ind. ANNA VIOLA MILLER Areola, III. J. ALLEN MILLER Hartville, O. JOHN J. MILLER Middlebury, Ind. LEON MILLER Sugarcreek, O. MIRIAM MILLER Nampa, Ind. M. WAMBUI MUGWE Nairobi, Kenya LEROY MULLET Berlin, O. Finding Major Niches on Staffs BEVERLY MYERS Hatfield, Pa. BARBARA L. NEAL Strasburg, Va. KATHY NEUENSCHWANDER Kidron, O. GLORIA NEWCOMER Spring Grove, Pa. MARVIN NISLY Alliance, O. DAN NOFZIGER Lebanon, Ore. RHODA E. NOLT Denver, Pa. ELTON NUSSBAUM Dalton, O. 134 WILLIAM DOUGLAS PIGUERON Wilmington, Del. DENNIS PURSEL Danville, Pa. PAUL E. REED Honey Brook, Pa. FAITH RICHARDSON Onancock, Va. LARRY RITCHIE Harrisonburg, Va. CLARE SCHUMM Tavistock, Ont. DEAN SENSENIG Harrisonburg, Va. MOHAMMED K. SHADID Hebron, Jordan and Committees DAVID SHAFFER Martinsburg, Pa. JAMES SHANK, JR. Lancaster, Pa. JOHN C. SHANK Harrisonburg, Va. MARY BETH SHANK Ellicott City, Md. TEMPTED TO STUDY by his pet serpent, Jim Shank surrenders to Math 203. 135 DAVID SHARP Belleville, Pa. GERALD L SHENK Harrisonburg, Va. JANET SHERTZER Lancaster, Pa. CHRISTINE SHOWALTER Waynesboro, Va. NANCY SHOWALTER Harrisburg, Pa. RICHARD A. SHOWALTER Irwin, O. STEPHEN L. SHRINER Atlanta, Ga. BEVERLY SIEGRIST Neffsville, Pa. KENNETH SLAGELL Thomas, Okla. JOSIE SMUCKER Orrville, O. ROBERT SNYDER Harrisonburg, Va. LOUISE SPORY Boswell, Pa. BRYAN J. STAUFFER Tofield, Alta. EILEEN M. STICHTER Wakarusa, Ind. FREIDA STAUFFER Phoenixville, Pa. GARY STITELER Harrisonburg, Va. HERBERT L. STEFFY Manheim, Pa. EUGENE STOLTZFUS Harrisonburg, Va. Liberated from Required 136 LOUETTA F. WEAVER Blue Ball, Pa. DICK STUTZMAN Seward, Neb. ELVA SWARTZENTRUBER Sebewaing, Mich. BERNADINE SWARTZENTRUBER Reedsville, Pa. GERTRUDE SWARTZENTRUBER Reedsville, Pa. MARY HELEN WEAVER Apple Creek, Ohio VIOLET WEAVER New Holland, Pa. JAMES WERT Lancaster, Pa. DWIGHT WYSE Midland, Mich. GORDON YODER Wellman, la. Pursuits JOANNE E. YODER Jefferson, O. JUDITH YODER Harrisonburg, Va. LOIS ELAINE YODER Lewistown, Pa. PATRICIA YODER McVeytown, Pa. RONALD E. YODER Belleville, Pa. VIVIAN YODER Johnstown, Pa. GLENN ZENDT Mifflintown, Pa. GEORGE L. ZIMMERMAN Mechanicsburg, Pa. MARY LOUISE ZOOK Columbiana, O. NEITHER RAMM'S TEXT not his interpretive lecturer can lure these students; they think they have proved the point. SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS: Jean Graybill, Secretary Carl Landis, Vice-President Sanford Wyse, Business Manager Bob Hostetter, President Dorothy Driver, Treasurer RUTH BAER Greencastle, Pa. DONNA CAROL BEACHY Greenwood, Del. LOIS E. BEACHY Salisbury, Pa. SHARYL BEACHY Pigeon, Mich. PATSY BEATTY Basye, Va. JAY HARVEY BEILER Elverson, Pa. I Sophomores: Group LEWIS BILGER Highland Lake, N.Y. BILL BRENNEMAN Doylestown, Pa. SUE BOWMAN Mt. Jackson, Va. KATHY BRUBAKER Lititz, Pa. ALICE BOYERS Harrisonburg, Va. EVELYN BRUNK South Boston, Va. FLORENCE BENNER Spring City, Pa. WARREN W. BENNETT Churchville, Va. 138 JONATHAN BUCHER Harman, W. Va. DON BURKHOLDER Harrisonburg, Va. JANE BURKHOLDER Harrisonburg, Va. SANFORD BURKHOLDER Newport News, Va. WANDA BURKHOLDER Newport News, Va. ANNA BUSKIRK Vestaburg, Mich. HARVEY CHUPP Mt. Ayr, Ind. ELLIS DETWILER Harrisonburg, Va. DOROTHY DRIVER Waynesboro, Va. KAREN EBY Sarasota, Fla. DORIS EHST Bally, Pa. THORD K. EINARSEN Harrisonburg, Va. CAROLYN EMMERT Sweet Home, Ore. PHOEBE ERB Milton, Pa. LAVONNE ESHLEMAN Greencastle, Pa. MARGARET EVANS Williamsburg, Pa. LARRY FISHER Coatesville, Pa. KAY FOLEY Mt. Sidney, Va. EVAN GARBER Edmonton, Alta. RACHEL GARBER Des Moines, la. Initiators RICH GARBER Nampa, Ida. BUDDY GOODEN Elkton, Va. IRENE GEHMAN Bally, Pa. LOIS GOCHNAUER Manheim, Pa. MARGARET GEHMAN Kinzer, Pa. JOHN GOSHOW Harrisonburg, Va. ELOISE GINGERICH Goshen, Ind. JEAN GRAYBILL Lititz, Pa. FLOYD GINGERICH Arthur, III. (Deceased) LOIS GUNTZ Harleysville, Pa- JAMES GLICK Atglen, Pa. STEWART M. HALL II Waynesboro, Va. 139 BERNARD HALTERMAN Harrisonburg, Va. ALICE HAMILTON Salem, Ore. HARRIET HARMAN Harrisonburg, Va. JAMES HEADINGS DeGraff, O. NANCY HEADINGS West Liberty, O. MIRIAM HEEBNER Holtsville, N.Y. ARLENE HERR Gettysburg, Pa. DON HERTZLER Bronx, N.Y. ALICE HESS Millersville, Pa. JOANNE HESS Marietta, Pa. MELVIN HESS Lancaster, Pa. SUSAN A. HESS Lancaster, Pa. SHARON HINKLE McGaheysville, Va. WALTER HINZ Duisburg, Western Germany WAYNE C. HOCHSTETLER East Earl, Pa. CHARLOTTE HOLSOPPLE Hollsopple, Pa. ELAINE HOMAN Staunton, Va. JAMES HOOVER Fairborn, O. EVELYN HORST Orrville, O. JANICE D. HORST Greencastle, Pa. KENNETH HORST Stanley, Va. JAMES KANAGY Harrisonburg, Va. THOMAS E. HORST Hagerstown, Md. ORPHA KANAGY Harrisonburg, Va. LYNN HOSTETLER Friend, Neb. GLORIA KAUFFMAN Bloomfield, Mont. ROBERT D. HOSTETTER Beltsville, Md. SIMON KEIM Harrisonburg, Va. JUANITA HUNSBERGER Danboro, Pa. WAYNE KEIM Bay Port, Mich. 140 LARRY KENNEL Atglen, Pa. RUTH KENNEL Lancaster, Pa. EDNA KING Ronks, Pa. MARY JANE KING Harrisonburg, Va. RALPH KING Malvern, Pa. DAVE KISAMORE Harman, W. Va. VIRGINIA KRIEBEL Souderton, Pa. CAROLYN KROPF Albany, Ore. DENNIS R. KUHNS Greencastle, Pa. CAROL KURTZ Chesapeake, Va. CARL LANDIS Lancaster, Pa. NEVIN D. LANTZ Elverson, Pa. SALLIE LEATHERMAN Upland, Calif. ALICE LEI DIG Midland, Mich. CALVIN LITWILLER Parnell, la. Arrested by Second Thoughts, RACHEL HESS LITWILLER Davenport, la. JUDI LIVENGOOD Keyser, W. Va. THE SOPHOMORE QUARTET-Gale Maust, Nevin Lantz, Jerry Shenk and Sam Miller polish phrasing and breathing for a music convention at Roberts Wesleyan College. 141 WANDERING IN STORYLAND, Sally Leatherman escapes study for a carefree half hour. EDWARD LONGENECKER Middletown, Pa. P. OWUOR MAKOYO Tarime, Tanzania CAROL M. MARTIN Blountstown, Fla. DANIEL MARTIN Harrisonburg, Va. ERMA MARTIN Wakarusa, Ind. KAREN MARTIN Spinnerstown, Pa. MELVIN MARTIN Lebanon, Pa. PHYLLIS J. MARTIN Goodville, Pa. VICTOR R. MARTIN Hagerstown, Md. E. LLOYD MAST Stuarts Draft, Va. Discovering FANNY MAST Goshen, Ind. MYRON E. MAST Kalispell, Mont. RODNEY MAST Navarre, O. GALE MAUST Bay Port, Mich. 142 MARTHA MAUST Bay Port, Mich. MARVIN METZLER Linville, Va. INEZ MILLER Nappanee, Ind. MARTIN MILLER Harrisonburg, Va. NATHAN R. MILLER Lexington, O. PAUL J. MILLER Goshen, Ind. SAMUEL MILLER Sarasota, Fla. STEVE MININGER Harman, W. Va. WILLIAM MISHLER Sugarcreek, O. VIOLA KAY MULLET Millersburg, O. VIVIAN NICE Morrison, III. ROBERT NOLT Denver, Pa. SUSIE PARKER Lancaster, Pa. T. ALLEN PONTON Newport News, Va. MARLYN M. RANCK Holtwood, Pa. MILLARD A. REXRODE Harrisonburg, Va. ALAN RITCHIE Harrisonburg, Va. DAVID RITCHIE Criders, Va. SANDRA RITCHIE Harrisonburg, Va. DWIGHT ROTH Masontown, Pa. More of the Hidden Self, JAY ROTH Belleville, Pa. JOHN L. RUSH Quakertown, Pa. TOSHIKO RYU Harrisonburg, Va. PHYLLIS SANER Thompsontown, Pa. GOLDIE SAWYERS Atlanta, Ga. FLOYD SCHROCK Salem, Ore. EUNICE SEITZ Mexico City, Mex. MARY JANE SEITZ Mechanicsburg, Pa MARY JANE SEITZ Mechanicsburg, Pa. JERRY SHEFFER Churchville, Va. GERALD E. SHENK Newport News, Va. SYLVIA SHIRK Harrisonburg, Va. KENNETH W. SHOMO Harrisonburg, Va. POLLY B. SHOPE Timberville, Va. MARSHA SHULTZ Pottstown, Pa. MYRON SLABAUGH Lansdale, Pa. LESTER SMITH, JR. Harrisonburg, Va. JEAN SMUCKER Harrisonburg, Va. DORIS M. SOLLENBERGER Quarryville, Pa. DWIGHT SOURS Luray, Va. TOM SPICHER Belleville, Pa. JULIA STAUFFER Elverson, Pa. DONALD J. STOLTZFUS Parkesburg, Pa. J. RONALD STOLTZFUS Harrisonburg, Va. LORNA C. STOLTZFUS Morgantown, Pa. SHIRLEY STOLTZFUS Elverson, Pa. A DELECTABLE CASE STUDY gratifies Sylvia Shirk, Eunice Seitz and Margaret Wenger in a library repast. Tobogganing, PATRICIA STRONG Harrisonburg, Va. SARAH SUE SWARTZ Turner, Mich. DELORES SWARTZ Au Gres, Mich. WAYNE SWARTZENDRUBER Pigeon, Mich. 144 SANDY TROTTER Leetonia, O. BECKY TROYER Goshen, Ind. LEVI TROYER Harrisonburg, Va. KATHLEEN WEAVER Harrisonburg, Va. ESTHER WENGER Wayland, la. IRVIN S. WENGER Leola, Pa. MARGARET WENGER Lancaster, Pa. WADE WENGER Broadway, Va. JUDY WIDMER Salem, Ore. GALEN WILKINS Broadway, Va. DAWN WISSLER Mt. Joy, Pa. BOB WYBLE New Holland, Pa. SANFORD J. WYSE Archbold, O. FLORA YODER West Liberty, O. JOHN A. YODER Meyersdale, Pa. Field Tripping to Western State. MARVIN YODER Harrisonburg, Va. LOIS ZEAGER Watsontown, Pa. OWEN E. YODER Orange, Va. LEROY ZIMMERMAN Harrisonburg, Va. RICK YODER Dayton, O. LORETTA ZIMMERMAN Harper, Kan. ROY E. YODER Orange, Va. LEE ZOOK Belleville, Pa. RUTH YODER Meyersdale, Pa. MERVIN ZOOK Harrisonburg, Va. EVA YOST Lanham, Md. ELAINE ZUCK Leola, Pa. 145 Freshmen: Campus Novitiates, RONALD L. BARGER Oneida, Kent. MARY BENDER Mt. Joy, Pa. RAY BENDER Kalona, la. DAWN E. BENNER Greenwood, Del. CAROLYN BERGEY Souderton, Pa. JOHN BIRKEY Goshen, Ind. ROBERT BISHOP Doylestown, Pa. JONAS LEE BORNTRAGER Humboldt, III. CAROL BRUBAKER Lititz, Pa. JERE BRUBAKER Lancaster, Pa. 31 FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS: Dallas Myers, Vice-President Liz Heatwole, Secretary Lois Martin, Treasurer Jonas Borntrager, President Steve Weaver, Business Manager BETH BOSHART Lowville, N.Y. RICHARD L. BOWMAN Kinzers, Pa. NANCY M. BRENEMAN Millersville, Pa. MILDRED R. BROWN Middlebrook, Va. 146 IRENE BRUNK Newport News, Va. VIOLA CHUPP Nappanee, Ind. KENNETH BUCKWALTER Harrisonburg, Va. JOHN CLARK Hannibal, Mo. MARLENE W. BUCKWALTER Harrisonburg, Va. BETTY JO COAKLEY Dayton, Va. CINDY BYLER Kalona, la. CHARLES COFFMAN Elkton, Va. JAY CAMPBELL Timberville, Va. TERRY COWAN Sweet Home, Ore. EVERETTE CARR Harrisonburg, Va LARRY CULLEN Waynesboro, Va. ROBERTA DAVIDHIZAR Wakarusa, Ind. JERRY DEMASTUS Lyndhurst, Va. RON DENLINGER Lancaster, Pa. MARK DERSTINE Souderton, Pa. RONALD DIEHL Bridgewater, Va. GETAHUN DILEBO Nazareth, Ethiopia TWILA DRIVER Waynesboro, Va. JAMES DUNCAN Harrisonburg, Va. JUDITH ANN EBERLY Mt. Eaton, O. LINDA EBERLY Bay Port, Mich. RICHARD EBERLY Harrisonburg, Va. GERALD EBERSOLE Lancaster, Pa. MARGARET EBY Alanson, Mich. RALPH EBY Harrisonburg, Va. KENNETH EHST Bally, Pa. RUTH EMERLING Wooster, O. RHELDA ESBENSHADE Willow Street, Pa. NINA L. ESTEP New Market, Va. TIM EVANS Grottoes, Va. JOHN R. FAIRFIELD Harrisonburg, Va. 147 DON FALB Orrville, O. DAVID FRETZ Perkasie, Pa. FRANCES GAINES Staunton, Va. NANCY GARBER Nampa, Ida. RONALD E. GAYER Cleveland, O. BARB GEISER Wadsworth, O. KAREN GEISER Dalton, O. NANCY E. GERBER Dalton, O. DORIS GIFFORD West Salem, O. RODGER GINGERICH Arthur, III. E. LORRAINE GOOD Kutztown, Pa. LEON GOSHOW Forksville, Pa. TERRY GRABER Broadway, Va. PHIL GUENGERICH Harrisonburg, Va. CINDIE HARRIS Staunton, Va. MARY HARTZLER Burlington, W. Va. DENNIS L. HATTER Lyndhurst, Va. MARILYN HEADINGS West Liberty, O. 148 WAYNE HEADINGS West Liberty, O. GLENDON HEATWOLE Harrisonburg, Va. ELIZABETH HEATWOLE Harrisonburg, Va. JANICE HEATWOLE Bronx, N.Y. Gregarious BARBARA ANN HEISHMAN Harrisonburg, Va. SHIRLEY ANNE HERSHEY Lititz, Pa. CAROL HENNING Harleysville, Pa. CHRISTINA HESS New Holland, Pa. J. ROBERT HERR New Providence, Pa. DAVID HESS Marietta, Pa. JOANNA HERSHBERGER Kalona, la. ROSALIE HESS Mechanicsburg, Pa. DALE HERSHEY Manheim, Pa. CINDA HINEGARDNER Keezletown, Va. MARTHA HERSHEY Parkesburg, Pa. DONNA HOLLOWAY Singers Glen, Va. RUTH E. HERSHEY Kinzers, Pa. PHYLLIS HOOVER Imlay City, Mich. Converscmts With All KENNETH HORNING Fleetwood, Pa. GLORIA HORST Ephrata, Pa. NAOMI R. HORST Mohnton, Pa. RICHARD K. HORST Orrville, O. LINDA HOSTETLER Johnstown, Pa. AMOS B. HOSTETTER Waynesboro, Va. ANN HOTTEL Staunton, Va. JANET HUGHES Buena Vista, Va. FRESHMAN OUTING occasions gaiety from Liz Heatwole and Carol Moyer. 149 BRENDA HUMMEL Berlin, O. ELSIE HURST New Holland, Pa. MIRIAM IKEJIANI Nri-Awka, E. Nigeria SUZANNE H. JONES Hampton, Va. JERRY S. JORDAN Harrisonburg, Va. ETHEL KANDEL Miilersburg, O. CHESTER KAUFFMAN Parkesburg, Pa. JAN KAUFFMAN Iowa City, la. RICHARD KAUFFMAN Roaring Branch, Pa. JOHN KEIM Aroda, Va. JOHN R. KENNEL New Holland, Pa. LOIS ANN KING Harrisonburg, Va. CARSON KIRACOFE Bridgewater, Va. PHYLLIS KISER Stuarts Draft, Va. MARTHA KOLB Spring City, Pa. Perfecting Creative Roguery and MARY JANE KOLB Royersford, Pa. ELDON KROPF Albany, Ore. JANET KROPF Albany, Ore. GLORIA KUHNS Greencastle, Pa. LUCY KULP Harleysville, Pa. SARA LANDIS Harrisonburg, Va. WILBUR T. LAPP Souderton, Pa. ELDON LAYMAN Harrisonburg, Va. MARY LEHMAN Johnstown, Pa. RALPH LEHMAN Kidron, O. CARL LITWILLER Au Gres, Mich. JOHN G. LONGACRE Bally, Pa. DIANE MARTIN Harrisonburg, Va. DORIS MARTIN Chambersburg, Pa. JUDY MARTIN Sauce, Uruguay 150 LOIS E. MARTIN Harrisonburg, Va, LOUISE MARTIN Fayetteville, Pa. PHYLLIS R. MARTIN Harrisonburg, Va. EMILY MAST Coatesville, Pa. STUART A. MAST Greenwood, Del. ROSALEE MAUST Bay Port, Mich. Window Dreaming, FROM HER SECOND FLOOR LOOKOUT Viola Chupp surveys Saturday campus thoroughfare. JAMES MESSNER Harrisonburg, Va. GLEN METZLER Manheim, Pa. ARLENE MILLER Wellman, la. FERN MILLER Chesapeake, Va. HENRY MILLER Constantine, Mich. JOAS MILLER, JR. Sarasota, Fla. KAREN MILLER Apple Creek, O. MARLAND MILLER Kalona, la. MARY MILLER Baltic, O. RACHEL MILLER Harrisonburg, Va. 151 RICHARD MILLER Landisville, Pa. M. VIRGINIA MUSSER Reading, Pa. SHERRY MILLER LaGrange, Ind. DALLAS MYERS New Paris, Ind. KATHY LYNN MORRIS Port Republic, Va. JEAN OSMANN Bedford, O. CAROL MOYER Harleysville, Pa. STANLEY WILLIAM OSWALD Aurora, O. CYNTHIA MULLET Glendive, Mont. EMORY OTTO Shipshewana, Ind. FAY E. MUMAW Harrisonburg, Va. ALLEN PEACHEY Belleville, Pa. DARLENE MUSSER Goodville, Pa. GERALD J. PEACHEY Belleville, Pa. ELSIE CAROL PEIFER Damascus, Md. BARBARA ANN PHILLIPS Jessup, Md. PAT POWELL Amelia, Va. AUDREY PRICE Harrisonburg, Va. VESTA RABER Baltic, O. ALVA RAMER Nappanee, Ind. DONNA REPLOGLE Curryville, Pa. WILMA RESSLER Powell, O. NORMA REYES Miami, Fla. ELIZABETH RICE Pleasant Valley, Va. RHODA ROGGIE Woodville, N.Y. WESLEY ROSS Wooster, O. EMAGENE RUPP Wauseon, O. FERNE RUTH Harleysville, Pa. DANNY SARCO Harrisonburg, Va. JIM SAUDER Lititz, Pa. KENNETH E. SCHILDT Spring Grove, Pa. CAROLYN SCHLABACH Luray, Va. ARLAND SCHROCK Glen Flora, Wis. ALMA C. SCHULTZ East Greenville, Pa. 152 REGINA SCHUNCK Webenheim-Saar, Germany FERN SHANK Broadway, Va. D. LAMAR SEIBEL Leola, Pa. WALID SHARIF Hebron, Jordan CHERYL SHAFFER Gettysburg, Pa. MAYNARD R. SHIRK East Earl, Pa. GLEN SHOWALTER Broadway, Va. LOIS SHOWALTER Broadway, Va. MARVIN H. SHOWALTER Waynesboro, Va. PHYLLIS SHROCK Walnut Creek, O. Begging Cars MARTHA SIEGRIST Lancaster, Pa. WARREN SLAGELL Hydro, Okla. for Shopping Sprees. WITH HIS HARMONICA Ron Gayer sprawls for a hillside break between finals. 153 THE PRESCRIBED FRESHMAN FORMULA-a pablum to be masticated and spewn into essays and reports. LOLA DANIEL B. DAVE SNIDER SLAUBAUGH SMOKER Au Gres, Mich. Wolford, N. D. Paradise, Pa. PRISCILLA MERLE SOUDER KATHRYN STOLTZFUS Spring City, Pa. STOLTZFUS Harrisonburg, Va. Gordonville, Pa. Their Haunts: the Ping-Pong Room and Snack Shop. ROSANNA STOLTZFUS Morgantown, Pa. BILL STRUNK Spring City, Pa. MARGARET STULTZ Broadway, Va. KAREN STUTZMAN Millersbury, O. LARRY STUTZMAN Seward, Neb. MARY STYER Hatfield, Pa. ERNEST M. SWARTZ Malvern, Pa. GERALD SWARTZ Au Gres, Mich. KAREN SWARTZENDRUBER Bay Port, Mich. MYRNA SWARTZENDRUBER Parnell, la. 154 SHIRLEY SWARTZENDRUBER Hydro, Okla. MARGARET TURNER Broadway, Va. DAWN SWARTZENTRUBER Lowville, N.Y. NANCY VENET Addison, III. BERNELL SWITZER Thomas, Okla. LORENE WAGLER Morgantown, Ind. ELAINE THOMAS Dayton, Va. DON WEAVER Annville, Pa. MOHAMOUD S. TOGANE Somalia, E. Africa M. STEVEN WEAVER Harrisonburg, Va. MELVIN WEAVER Wooster, O. PAULINE C. WEAVER Nappanee, Ind. BARBARA WENGER Ephrata, Pa. PRESTON L. WENGER Chesapeake, Va. TERRY LEE WHITMORE Harrisonburg, Va. PHYLLIS WILKINSON Dayton, Va. CARLTON WYSE Naubinway, Mich. ALICE YODER Spartansburg, Pa. ARLIN YODER Bally, Pa. DAVID YODER Sugarcreek, O. DUANE YODER Grantsville, Md. ELDON YODER Grantsville, Md. JOHN HENRY YODER Stuarts Draft, Va. ORPHA M. YODER Kinzers, Pa. JUDY YOST Lanham, Md. LENA MAE YOUSEY Lowville, N.Y. YVONNE YOUSEY Lowville, N.Y. KAREN YUTZY Plain City, O. PAULINE ZIMMERAAAN Manheim, Pa. DONNA ZOOK Weatherford, Okla. 155 Epilogue - .M 156 Our year—a splice of life's time Splotched by the welcomed and the feared— One act in an endless drama .. . Chasing phantoms in Truth's garments, Discerning Truth in shadowy wraps. Draping moods to suit the status quo, Unpeeling masks in exuberant oblivion. Mouthing lines to mesh the cues, Merging moves to form the roles . . . A pageant of pantomime and sound Designed for our creation Featuring . . . 157 The monologue . . . Shifting unawares to poses unrehearsed— No pauses for the cues, A facetious giggle Sliding tears A relaxed library nap A sunset stretch on the hill. My whims direct— Sagging and soaring Freezing and flowing Retreating and rising . . . My mind a windy moor, My thoughts the waving heather, Blissful unawareness Before the flip of consciousness. 159 160 And the dialog .. . With precisioned sensitivity to cues, The intricacies of communication— A hidden smile needing your smile for life Eyes on you caught in a glance A comment given wings by an unsure sender Fine knocks on your door A pregnant discussion line— We built togetherness by degrees, The off-hand hi on campus walkways Cafeteria chatter with coincidental comrades Lobby debate of an opinion board ultimatum Co-shelter under an umbrella's curve Living room church Walks and special hours with only one. Sometimes Beyond the crowd Our souls transcended the fragmentary meetings And knew the touch of Thou. 161 From the backstage— Belleville Walnut Creek Luray— We came To direct and Be directed. And in moving moments, As Times cues beckon. We go to Nairobi Kalona Haarlem Red Lake State College Quang Ngai Salunga Directed to direct In one ever reborn pattern of Plot and play Ritual and reflection Debut and denouement. 162 163 Patrons With many dabs of this and that You touched our campus, Community. The poorboys and the paisley shirts Fuel that drove our bugs and buses, Foods that colored dinner plates, Light and water, car repair, Curls and cuttings for our hair. Settings for a class affair, The conveniences of life— Your offers were as varied as your names. We studied your business in economics texts. Saw it come and go in trucks and cabs. Joined it in spending sprees and jobs; Bought it, sold it, ate it, drank it, wore it, held it— Transitory consumers of your wares. 165 MOYER AND SON, INC. HENNING'S SUPER MARKET Flour—Feed—Grain—Seed—Coal—Lime SELF SERVICE LAUNDRY Sand—Cement—Fuel Oils—Paint DRY CLEANING COMPLETE HEATING SERVICE Phone 723-9858 Souderton, Pennsylvania 25c CAR WASH Main Street Harleysville, Pennsylvania Welcome To Harrisonburg's Most Unusual Stores GLEN'S FAIR PRICE STORE GLEN'S GIFT CENTER W. J. NYCE SHOE STORE The Home of Nice Footwear West and State Streets Doylestown, Pennsylvania HIGHLAND LAKE BIBLE CONFERENCE Highland Lake, New York Ministry to youngsters, teens, and adults Christ in you, the Hope of Glory Colossians 1:27 LAPP AND ALDERFER, INC. I. WILBUR LAPP ROBERT C. ALDERFER Real Estate, Insurance 303 East Broad Street Souderton, Pennsylvania Phone 723-4378 166 Millions More Choose METROPOLITAN LIFE BILL STONER Phone 434-6845 Harrisonburg, Virginia THE LIGHT THAT NEVER FAILS, W. T. GRANT CO. Known for Values Your Friendly Family Store Harrisonburg, Virginia Communion Ware Audio Visuals Choir Gowns Church Paraments Memorial Gifts Chalk Bulletin Boards Lecterns Turn Over Charts HACKMAN'S BIBLE BOOK STORE Church and Sunday School Supplies 308 Saint John Street Allentown, Pennsylvania 18103 Phone 215-437-4801 Compliments of GRAND PIANO FURNITURE CO., INC. 198 South Main Street Harrisonburg, Virginia PIKE CABINET SHOP Home of Quaker-Made Custom Kitchens CUSTOM CABINETS GARAGE DOORS FLOOR AND WALL TILE—ALL TYPES CHESTER G. LEAMAN, Prop. 917 Mount Clinton Pike Park View Harrisonburg, Virginia Phone 434-4644 THE SOUDER STORE Clothing—Yard Goods—Notions Main and Summit Streets, Souderton, Pennsylvania Phone 723-2017 (Jha-BfiatnA GRA-BRAMS MEATS, INC. Country Fresh Hickory Smoked Meats 43 Meeting House Road Harleysville, Pennsylvania 167 BRUNK TILE INTERIORS BERGEY'S GARAGE Franconia and Lansdale, Pennsylvania Tires and Recapping 14760 Warwick Boulevard Newport News, Virginia um(dn, h iiicb, Phone 723-4346 855-1388 Franconia, Pennsylvania Lansdale, Pennsylvania Complete Real Estate Auction Insurance Service SANFORD A. ALDERFER AUCTIONEER 202 North Liberty Street Phone 434-6749 Harrisonburg, Virginia 22801 An Excellent Place to Do Business 96 South Main Street Harleysville, Pennsylvania Phone 256-8891 Area Code 215 THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Harrisonburg, Virginia Now In Our Second Century of Service Member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation DAN'S SHENANDOAH BODY SERVICE EQUIPMENT COMPANY Complete Accident Service Manufacturers Edom Road Incinerators 168 Harrisonburg, Virginia Phone 434-8889 Poultry and Stock Equipment Phone 434-3838 Harrisonburg, Virginia YOUR PUBLISHING HOUSE Creating contemporary literature and providing m PROVIDENT BOOKSTORES To select the best for you in literature, music, art, Christian education materials, church supplies, and furnishings and m HERALD PRESS Your literature arm to Christendom 169 Mennonite Publishing House Scottdale, Pennsylvania VALLEY LANES The Valley's Finest Bowling Center Duckpins Ten Pins Route 11 South Harrisonburg, Virginia Phone 434-8721 ROCKINGHAM CO-OPERATIVE FARM BUREAU, INC. The House Co-operation Built Harrisonburg, Virginia BRANCHES: Timberville, Virginia Bridgewater, Virginia Elkton, Virginia Cross Keys, Virginia FARMER OWNED AND CONTROLLED Co-operative Purchasing and Marketing Built for Better Farming and More Security for Agriculture EBY'S BARBER SHOP Open Tuesday Thru Saturday by Appointment IRA E. EBY 1234 Dogwood Drive Phone Park View, Virginia 434-7070 One of Lancaster County's Finest WILLOW VALLEY MOTOR INN Willow Street, Pennsylvania 17584 2 Miles South of Lancaster U.S. Routes 222-272 Air-conditioned T.V. FM Motel Overlooks Lake and Golf Course Phone 393-7612 170 Area Code 717 For Building Your Home to Last Use Glen Gery Brick For Warm Friends Use Esso Heat For Information Call GUY HEAVENER, INC. Harleysville, Pennsylvania Phone 717-256-8861 Compliments RED FRONT SUPER MARKET, INC. 677 Chicago Avenue Harrisonburg, Virginia WE GIVE S H GREEN STAMPS DOUBLE ON TUESDAY We Appreciate Your Business Exclusive Headquarters for Golden Skillet Fried Chicken Tender as a Quail—Tasty as a Pheasant. HARRISONBURG FRUIT PRODUCE Wholesale Distributor Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Frozen Foods GRAYBILL BOOK STATIONERY SERVICE Booksellers—Stationers—Printers 224 North Main Street Doylestown, Pennsylvania Phone Fillmore 8-5804 FRANK HARMAN HATCHERY Harrisonburg Virginia H N Nick Chick Leghorns White Egg Layers Harman Sex Link Brown Egg Layers } Harman Vantress Crosses Famous Meat Makers HARTMAN N. A. DERSTINE ATLANTIC SERVICE Packer and Distributor of We Specialize in Lubrication and Brake Service Farm Maid Creamery Butter Atlantic Gas, Oils There Is No Substitute for Good Butter and Accessories Franconia, Pennsylvania Phone 723-2956 Park View Phone 434-3362 Harrisonburg, Virginia 171 BLUE RIDGE FLORIST GIFT SHOP 107 North Main Street, Harrisonburg, Virginia Phone 434-8602 Greenhouses Located in New Market, Virginia G. L. BRUNK, Owner BERGEY GEHMAN Fuel Oil Oil Heating and Cooling Service 3rd and Walnut Streets Give Her Flowers Because She's Wonderful Perkasie, Pennsylvania John Deere I. G. ROSENBERGER, INC. Silverdale, Pennsylvania Sales and Service of Farm Machinery, Industrial Equipment, Tires, Hardware, Appliances Taste that beats the others cold! Pepsi pours it on! PEPSI-COLA BOTTLING CO. P HKIIA of Harrisonburg SUPERIOR CONCRETE, INC. Sand Crushed Stone Cement At Your Service With Superior Quality in Transit Mixed Concrete Harrisonburg, Virginia 172 Elkton, Virginia MOYER'S CHICKS, INC. Quakertown, Pennsylvania Already, one half of the world's supply of electricity is generated in the United States. And the demand continues to grow. How will it be met? Through the energy and resourcefulness of America's independent electric companies. Companies that plan ahead to stay ahead of the needs of tomorrow. Broilers, Layers, Started Pullets VIRGINIA ELECTRIC AND POWER COMPANY MOYER'S WASH HOUSE Coin Operated Laundry and Dry Cleaning 2 Minute Car Wash Car Cleaning and Waxing 50-60 North Main Street Harrisonburg, Virginia 565 North Main Street Doylestown, Pennsylvania For Friendly Service Come to VALLEY BOOKS ROCKINGHAM CONSTRUCTION CO., INC. HARRISONBURG'S RELIGIOUS BOOKSTORE General Contractors Stationery, Pens School Supplies, Books and Bibles Art Supplies Special Orders Welcome Phone 434-6643 82 South Main Street Power and Communication Overhead—Underground Harrisonburg, Virginia 173 GITCHELL STUDIO AND CAMERA SHOP Portrait and Commercial Photographers Serving EMC Since 1938 Phone 434-8139 Harrisonburg, Virginia 174 PENNEY'S Always First Quality Harrisonburg Virginia SHENK NURSING HOME As long as there's life, there's hope. Wellman, Iowa ONE HOUR VALET DRY CLEANERS I Hour Cleaning Service Free Parking 268 North Main Street Harrisonburg, Va. N S AUTO SERVICE Automatic Transmission Service Tune-Up, Electrical and Carburetor Service Complete Brake Service VW-Service and Parts Bear Wheel Alignment and Balancing OFFICIAL STATE INSPECTION STATION Tf. f F£ ) raurtANcr com i ’Em b t w mjl A. P. K. ALDERFER, Representative 74 East Harley Pike Harleysville, Pennsylvania 896 Waterman Drive Phone 434-3573 Security is our middle name! Harrisonburg, Virginia Rockingham National Bank • • • • • Harrisonburg • Weyers Cave • Grottoes • Mt. Sidney • Verona PURE VILLAGE COURT 5 Miles South on U.S. 11 Phone 434-7355 H. MININGER AND SON Custom Building ATTRACTIVE 37-ROOM COURT Souderton, Pennsylvania Radio, Air-Conditioned TV, Telephones, UMtAT Air-Conditioned Dining Rooms Swimming Pool 175 ERNIE'S SHELL SERVICE Greasing, Oil Change, Groceries Route 42, Edom Road Harrisonburg, Virginia Welcome To in Harrisonburg, Virginia LONGACRE POULTRY Poultry is Our Business, Not a Sideline. Franconia, Pennsylvania WILLOW BANK MICK-OR-MACK MOTEL STORES Air Conditioned—TV Harrisonburg, Virginia 2426 South Main Street We Give S H Green Stamps Harrisonburg, Virginia at Both Stores Phone 434-6810 176 SHOEMAKER'S One Hour Martinizing Certifies The Most in Dry Cleaning As Advertised in Life CLOVERLEAF SHOPPING CENTER ONE HOUR SERVICE UNTIL 3 P.M. A Martinized Garment Open 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Is Softer, Brighter 6 Days a Week Fresher, Cleaner Phone 434-6656 MAHLON A. SOUDER All Forms of Insurance State Road Blooming Glen, Pennsylvania Phone ALpine 257-2725 E. M. C. BOOKSTORE The place to get the book you want. FOLEY MOTORS, INC. 1654 South Main Street Engineering Construction Harrisonburg Peugeot Renault The Cadillac of France Triumph TR-4 WETSEL SEED COMPANY Seeds Field Garden Flower Lawn Insecticides Lawn Fertilizers Weed Killers Harrisonburg Waynesboro SWAM ELECTRIC CO., INC. Ill York Street, Hanover, Pennsylvania 17331 Phone 637-3821 Switchboards Motor Repairs Rewinding 177 SHENANDOAH'S PRIDE DAIRY Manufacturers of Shenandoah's Pride Milk and Milk Products Harrisonburg, Virginia 1. T. LANDES CHARLES L FAULS SON CLOTHING CO., INC. Plumbing and Heating 11-13 North Court Square and Water Softeners Harrisonburg, Virginia Bethlehem Dynatherm Oil Burner Mainland, Pennsylvania 256-8870 ROSENERGER'S DAIRIES, INC. Quality Dairy Products Phone 855-3425 Hatfield, Pennsylvania 178 BUDDY'S CARPETLAND The Finest in Rugs, Carpets, Furniture and Fabrics The Ultimate in Interiors 1780 South Main Street Harrisonburg, Virginia color’s -T'' LOOKING FOR A CHALLENGE? A chance to contribute toward feeding the world's hungry millions? We invite you to join our team of food processors here at Weaver's. VICTOR F. WEAVER, INC. 403 S. Custer Avenue New Holland, Pennsylvania 17557 Tel. 717 354-2161 SHENANDOAH TRANSPORTATION The Home of Rambler Automobiles and Travel Trailers NEW HOLLAND CONCRETE PRODUCTS Fairest in Sales, Finest in Service 1169 South High Street Harrisonburg, Virginia J. CLINTON SHANK, INC. Grain, Hay and Feed Brokers P. O. Box 107 Harrisonburg, Virginia 434-6713 New Holland, Pennsylvania 179 RALPH'S SUPER MARKET 801-809 West Main Street Lansdale, Pennsylvania Every Day is Savings Day Plenty of Free Parking You meet the nicest people on a HONDA SUBURBAN MOTORS Harrisonburg, Virginia BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY THE HARRISONBURG COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY JOSEPH NEY’S Harrisonburg, Virginia Harrisonburg, Virginia GOOD WILL BOOK STORE 304 N. Centre St. Pottsville, Pa. 17901 MOTOR PARTS OF HARRISONBURG, INC. PATRONS SCHEWEL FURNITURE COMPANY 135 S. Main Street Harrisonburg, Va. SPOTSWOOD BANK Harrisonburg, Va. NEFF TRAILER SALES INCORPORATED Route 33 East Harrisonburg, Va. East Market St. Harrisonburg, Va. WAMPLER FEEDS, INC. Harrisonburg, Va. WHEATLEY-YETZER FORD Rt. II South Harrisonburg, Va. WISHY-WASHY CAR WASH 1001 N. Main Street (Next to Tastee-Freeze) Harrisonburg, Va. YODER DAIRY Newport News, Va. 180 Index -A- Alderfer, Glenn ................................. 130 Anderson, Katherine .............................. 87 Augsburger, Myron S. ....................... 32, 80 -B- Balance, Arroy .................................. 130 Baer, Ruth ......................... 39, 50, 52, 138 Barger, Ronald .................................. 146 Batterman, Dawn ................................. 114 Beachy, Anna Ruth ............................... 114 Beachy, Donna Carol ......................... 40, 138 Beachy, Lois .................................... 138 Beachy, Sharyl ......................... 68, 71, 138 Beatty, Patsy ................................... 138 Bechtel, Geraldine .............................. 108 Beiler, Jay ................................. 45, 138 Beiler, Leanna ............ 50, 70, 71, 77, 98, 114 Beiler, Paul ............................... 104, 167 Bender, Daniel H................................. 82 Bender, Karen ................................ 114 Bender, Lowell ......................... 92, 95, 114 Bender, Mary .................................... 146 Bender, Ray ............................... 53, 146 Benner, David ................................ 130 Benner, Dawn ................................ 53, 146 Benner, Florence ............................... 138 Bennett, Warren ........................... 53, 138 Bergey, Carolyn ........................... 53, 146 Bilger, Keith ................................... 130 Bilger, Lewis ................................... 138 Birkey, Esther .................................. 130 Birkey, John ....................... 40, 52, 65, 146 Bishop, James ...................... 54, 55, 114, 161 Bishop, Robert ...................... 65, 74, 146 Bittenbender, Kathryn ..................... 50, 130 Blank, Elam ................................ 114, 157 Blosser, Mae .................................... 109 Boel, Dennis .................................... 113 Bomberger, Doris ................................. 98 Bomberger, Elton ................................. 82 Bomberger, James ................................. 89 Bontrager, Edith ............................ 58, 114 Bontrager, Edwin ................................. 82 Bontrager, Jane ..................... 4, 71, 77, 130 Borntrager, I della ......................... 53, 130 Borntrager, Jonas ................... 4, 63, 65, 146 Boshart, Beth ................................... 146 Bowman, Lois ..................................... 90 Bowman, Richard ................................. 146 Bowman, Shirley ............................ 130, 159 Bowman, Sue ..................................... 138 Boyers, Alice ................................... 138 Branner, Judith ............................. 50, 130 Breneman, Nancy ................................. 146 Brenneman, William .............................. 138 Brown, Mildred .................................. 146 Brubacher, Amzie ................................ 130 Brubaker, Carol ........................ 40, 53, 146 Brubaker, J. Lester ............................. 106 Brubaker, Jere ......................... 64, 74, 146 Brubaker, Kathleen .......................... 53, 138 Brubaker, Kenton K............................... 100 Brubaker, Mary D.................................. 99 Brubaker, Roy ................................... 114 Brunk, Evelyn ............................... 53, 138 Brunk, Gerald R................................... 93 Brunk, George R., Sr.............................. 84 Brunk, Harry, Sr.................................. 93 Brunk, Irene G................................... 147 Brunk Truman ........................ 6, 23, 36, 81 Bucher, Jonathan .................... 6, 72, 73, 139 Buckwalter, Eloise ......................... 52, 130 Buckwalter, Kenneth ............................. 147 Buckwalter, Linda ............ 24, 54, 98, 114, 124 Buckwalter, Marlene ............................. 147 Buckwalter, Robert ......................... 44, 130 Bumbaugh, A. Arlene ......................... 62, 89 Burke, Wilma .................................... 115 Burkhart, Wayne ............................ 52, 115 Burkholder, Donald ........... 65, 67, 73, 77, 139 Burkholder, Elizabeth ........................... 130 Burkholder, Jane ................................ 139 Burkholder, Sanford ............................. 139 Burkholder, Wanda ............................... 139 Buskirk, Anna ................................... 139 Buskirk, Philip ................................. 130 Byler, Cynthia .................................. 147 -C- Campbell, Jay ................................... 147 Carr, Everette .................................. 147 merely players . . . their exits and their entrances Casey, Winfred .................................. 128 Christman, Helen ................................ 131 Christophel, Janice ............... 52, 75, 110, 131 Chupp, Harvey ................................... 139 Chupp, Viola .............................. 147, 151 Clark, John ................................. 52, 147 Coakley, Betty Jo ........................... 43, 147 Coffman, Charles ....................... 48, 49, 147 Conley, Robert .................................. 115 Cope, Raymond ................... 41, 69, 75, 77, 131 Cowan, Terry .................................... 147 Craun, William ................................... 67 Cressman, Dennis ................................ 131 Cullen, Larry ................................... 147 -D- Dagbai, Jacob ............................... 63, 65 Davidhizar, Roberta ............................. 147 Demastus, Jerry ................................. 147 Denlinger, Ronald .................. 49, 53, 64, 147 Derstine, Abram ......................- 50, 53, 131 Derstine, Mark ............................ 147, 163 Detweiler, Gloria ........................- 130, 131 Detwiler, Caroline ............................... 97 Detwiler, Ellis ................................. 139 Diehl, Ronald ................................... 147 Dilebo, Getahun ................................. 147 Driver, Dorothy ....................... 17, 138, 139 Driver, Evelyn ............................. 69, 115 Driver, Twila ................................... 147 Duncan, James ................................... 147 -E- Eberly, Judith ......................... 40, 58, 147 Eberly, Linda .............................. 53, 147 Eberly, Richard ................................. 147 Ebersole, Gerald ................................ 147 Eby, Karen ..................... 39, 50, 76, 87, 139 Eby, Margaret .......................... 40, 52, 147 Eby, Mary Emma S.................................. 98 Eby, Maurice .................................... 115 Eby, Ralph ................................. 53, 147 Ehst, Doris .................... 17, 40, 52, 63, 139 Ehst, John ...................................... 131 Ehst, Kenneth ............................... 73, 147 Einarsen, Thord ................................. 139 Elsroad, Robert ................................. 131 Emerling, Ruth .............................. 15, 147 Emmert, Carolyn ................................. 139 Emmert, Shirley ......................... 70, 71, 115 Emswiler, Frank ................................. 116 Erb, Elaine ........................... 98, 116, 159 Erb, Miriam ......................... 49, 61, 92, 116 Erb, Phoebe ............................. 45, 57, 139 Esbenshade, Geraldine ........................... 116 Esbenshade, Rhelda ......................... 53, 147 Esch, Clair ...................................... H6 Eshleman, Lavonne ............................... 139 Eshleman, Merle .................................. 82 Eshleman, Roger........ 14, 15, 65, 67, 86, 116, 117 Estep, Nina ..................................... 147 Evans, Margaret ............................ 104, 139 Evans, Thomas ................................... 147 -F- Fairfield, James ................................ 131 Fairfield, John ............................ 53, 147 Falb, Donald .................................... 148 Fisher, Kenneth ....................... 49, 101, 131 Fisher, Larry ...................... 65, 72, 73, 139 Foley, Kay ...................................... 139 Frederick, Donald ............................... 116 Frederick, Isaac ................................ 91 Fretz, David ................................ 53, 148 Fretz, Paul ............................ 45, 55, 131 Fretz, Rachel ...................... 16, 43, 51, 116 Frey, Anna ....................................... 94 -G- Gaines, Frances ............................... 148 Garber, Evan .................................. 139 Garber, Faye .................... 40, 51, 52, 63, 131 Garber, Nancy ................................. 148 Garber, Rachel ................................ 139 Garber, Richard ............................. 65, 139 Garber, William ................................ 131 Gayer, Ronald .......................... 6, 148, 153 Gehman, Barbara ............................. 52, 131 Gehman, Ernest G......................... 63, 90, 91 Gehman, Irene .............................. 52, 139 Gehman, Margaret ............’................... 139 Gehman, Marilyn ....... 29, 40, 51, 53, 57, 131, 136 Geiser, Barbara ............................ 89, 148 Geiser, Karen .................................. 148 Geiser, Robert ............................ 131, 137 Gerber, Barbara .................... 14, 53, 69, 131 Gerber, Nancy .................................. 148 Gifford, Doris ............................ 109, 148 Gingerich, Duane .......................... Ill, 116 Gingerich, Eloise ......................... 53, 139 Gingerich, Floyd .......................... 8, 139 Gingerich, Leslie .............................. 131 Gingerich, Rodger ......................... 148, 149 Glanzer, Paul J.................................. 95 Glick, Carolyn ........................ 51, 116, 161 Click, Delmar ..................... 5, 36, 67, 69, 131 Glick, James ................................... 139 Glick, John ........................... 38, 49, 131 Gochnauer, Lois ................................ 139 Godshall, Anna Mae ............................. 131 Godshall, Leon ................................. 131 Gonzalez, Luis ............................ 69, 132 Good, Lorraine ................................. 148 Good, Karla .................................... 132 Good, Mervin ................................... 132 Good, Mildred .................................. 132 Good, Nelson .......................... 39, 130, 132 Gooden, Buddy ............................. 76, 139 Goshow, John .......................... 67, 139, 156 Goshow, Leon .............................. 4, 148 Graber, Terry ............................. 66, 148 Grasse, Warren ................................. 132 Gray bill, Jean ........................... 138, 139 Graybill, Mildred ............................... 97 Grieser, Lynette ............................... 117 Groff, Mary Ellen .............................. 117 Groff, Rodney .............. 39, 106, 115, 117, 118 Guengerich, Paul T......................... 36, 40, 81 Guengerich, Philip .................... 53, 65, 148 Guengerich, Ronald ... 39, 42, 43, 51, 54, 65, 117 Gunden, Richard ....................... 32, 43, 132 Guntz, Lois .................................... 139 -H- Habash, Salim ............................. 117, 160 Hackman, Rose .............................. 40, 132 Hackman, Walton .................. 37, 56, 101, 117 Hall, Stewart .................................. 139 Halterman, Bernard ............................. 140 Halterman, Donnie ......................... 67, 132 Hamilton, Alice ................................ 140 Hamilton, James .................... 50, 52, 73, 118 Hammond, Michael ................................. 8 Hansen, Carl ................................... 113 Harbold, James ........................ 43, 65, 132 Harman, Harriet ............................ 69, 140 Harnish, Melvin ....................... 14, 86, 132 Harris, Cynthia ................................ 148 Hartzler, Mary ..................... 68, 70, 71, 148 Hartzler, Philip ...................... 14, 75, 132 Hartzler, Ruth A. ............................... 99 Hartzler, Sadie A................................ 83 Hatter, Dennis ............................. 52, 148 Headings, James ................................ 140 Headings, Marilyn ..................... 47, 53, 148 Headings, Nancy ....................... 52, 71, 140 Headings, Wayne ............................ 66, 148 Heatwole, Connie ........... 15, 40, 50, 54, 55, 118 Heatwole, Elizabeth......... 70, 71, 146, 148, 149 Heatwole, Fannie ............................... 108 Heatwole, Glendon .............................. 148 Heatwole, Janice ............................... 148 Heatwole, Mary Ethel ....................... 40, 82 Heatwole, Roy E........................ 12, 14, 103 Heebner, Miriam ................................ 140 Heishman, Barbara.......................71, 149, 177 Hendricks, Ruth ................................ 118 Henning, Carol ................................. 149 Herr, Arlene .......................... 36, 53, 140 Herr, Clyde ............................... 118, 119 Herr, E. Grant .................................. 81 Herr, Robert ................................... 149 Hershberger, Joanna ................... 53, 99, 149 Hershey, Dale .................................. 149 Hershey, Joyce ........................ 59, 132, 136 Hershey, Martha ....................... 53, 149, 161 Hershey, Ruth .................................. 149 Hershey, Sherilyn .................. 39, 51, 69, 118 Hershey, Shirley ............................... 149 Hertzler, Donald .......................... 110, 140 Hess, Alice ............................... 140, 161 Hess, Christina ........................... 53, 149 Hess, David ................................ 74, 149 Hess, Joanne........................ 36, 37, 40, 140 Hess, Melvin ..................... 66, 74, 103, 140 181 Hess, Rosalie 149 Hess, Susan .... 49, 51, 53, 140 Hinegardener, Cinda 149, 161 Hinkle, Sharon 140 Hinz, Walter 65, 140 Histand, Laura 108 Hochstetler, Walter . 50, 52, - 57, . 91, 118 Hochstetler, Wayne 140 Holderread, Carolyn 39 Holloway, Donna 149 Holloway, Phyllis 118 Holsopple, Carlene 132 Holsopple, Charlotte .53, 94, 140 Homan, Elaine 140 Hooley, Patricia 61, 118, 127 Hoover, James 74, 140 Hoover, Karen 29, 49, 51, 52, 132 Hoover, Phyllis 52, 149 Hoover, Ruth 40, 119, , 43 Horning, Kenneth 101, 149 Horst, Evelyn 52, 140 Horst, Florence E 108 Horst, Gloria 54, 149 Horst, Irvin B • 24, , 85 Horst, Janice 51, 52, 140 Horst, Kenneth 53, 140 Horst, Laurel 58, 132 Horst, Naomi 149 Horst, Richard 149 Horst, Samuel L .... 14, - 61, - 93, 129 Horst, Thomas 65, 140 Hostetler, Eugene R 65, . 73, 104 Hostetler, Linda 15, 53, 149 Hostetler, Lynn 50, 140, 158 Hostetter, Amos 149 Hostetter, D. Ralph 100, 101 Hostetter, Robert ... 29, 52, 138, 140 Hostetter, Ruth S.S . 14 , 97 Hottel, Anna 149 Holyman, Merna 119 Huber, Harold 94 Huber, Mary Ellen 53, 119 Hughes, Janet 149 Hummel, Brenda 52, 71, , 89, 150 Hummel, Bruce ... 33, 59, 132, 137 Hunsberger, Juanita 92, 140 Hurst, Elsie 150 Hurst Paul | .... 33, 59, , 76, 119 Ikejiani, Miriam -J- Jacobs, Donald 15, 62, 150 • 56, , 95 Jacobszoon, Jacob P • 84 , 85 Jantzi, Dawn .. 49, 1 15, 119, 121 Jantzi, Sharon 45, , 52, , 90, 132 Johnson, Cecelia . ... 40, 68, 69, 132 Jones, Suzanne 53, 150 Jordan, Jerry 150 -K- Kanagy, James ................................... 140 Kanagy, Orpha .............................. 105, 140 Kandel, Ethel .......................... 53, 99, 150 Kauffman, Chester ...................... 63, 92, 150 Kauffman, Elroy .................................. 82 Kauffman, Glenn M........................... 102, 156 Kauffman, Gloria ............ 4, 17, 39, 52, 105, 140 Kauffman, Janice ................................ 150 Kauffman, Richard ............................... 150 Keener, J. Clyde ............................. 9, 132 Keener, Evelyn .................................. 119 Keim, Albert N............................... 78, 93 Keim, John .................................. 53, 150 Keim, Simon ..................................... 140 Keim, Wayne ............. 5, 28, 50, 52, 91, 94, 140 Kemrer, Dorothy .................................. 90 Kennel, John .................................... 140 Kennel, Larry ......................... 103, 141, 164 Kennel, Ruth ................................ 53, 141 Kindy, Carol ........................... 50, 52, 119 Kindy, David .................................... 132 King, Delvin .................................... 132 King, Edna ...................................... 141 King, Joy ................................... 52, 132 King, Lois Ann .............................. 53, 150 King, Mary Jane ................................. 141 King, Pearl ................................. 52, 132 King, Ralph .. 4, 15, 28, 41, 53, 65, 77, 105, 141 King, Sheryl .................................... 132 King, Vernane ........................... 7, 132, 136 Kiracofe, Carson ............................ 66, 150 Kisamore, David ................................. 141 Kiser, Phyllis .................................. 150 Knicely, Hazel .................................. 119 Kolb, Charlotte ............................. 40, 119 Kolb, Martha ................................ 71, 150 Kolb, Mary Jane ............................. 58, 150 182 Kolb, Noah ......................... 36, 37, 38, 133 Koppenhaver, Rachel ................... 71, 133, 136 Kraybill, Donald ....................... 36, 47, 120 Kraybill, Herbert .............. 37, 40, 41, 42, 133 Kriebel, Glenn ................................ 112, 113 Kriebel, Virginia .................................. 141 Kropf, Carolyn ................................ 105, 141 Kropf, Eldon ................................... 53, 150 Kropf, Janet ................................... 52, 150 Kuhns, Dennis .................................. 52, 141 Kuhns, Gloria .................................... 150 Kulp, Lucille .................................... 150 Kurtz, Carol ................................... 45, 141 Kurtz, Salome .......................... 50, 52, 133 Kurtz, Wayne ................... 52, 133, 137, 164 -L- Landis, Anna Mae .................................. 133 Landis, Carl .................... 4, 50, 52, 138, 141 Landis, Darlene ................................ 40, 133 Landis, Sara Anne .................................. 150 Lantz, Nevin.................... 39, 44, 51, 141, 180 Lapp, John A.................. 1, 12, 14, 23, 92, 93 Lapp, Ruth ......................................... 133 Lapp, Wilbur ........................... 64, 65, 150 Laprade, John ..................................... 128 Layman, Eldon .................................... 150 Leatherman, Sarah ...................... 90, 141, 142 Lehigh, Kathy ...................................... 120 Lehman, Chester K.................................. 84 Lehman, Cora ..................................... 120 Lehman, D. W. .................................... 107 Lehman, Elsie E................................... 106 Lehman, Esther K.................................. 107 Lehman, G. Irvin ........................ 8, 10, 11, 84 Lehman, Harold D................................ 77, 81 Lehman, Mary ..................................... 150 Lehman, Mary ..................................... 150 Lehman, Ralph .......................... 72, 73, 150 Lehman, Robert ................................... 102 Lehman, Wilmer ................................. 49, 103 Leidig, Alice ...................................... 141 Leidig, Wilbur ..................................... 133 Leinbach, Russell .............................. 50, 133 Lind, Glenn ......................... 7, 76, 130, 134 Litwiller, Calvin .............................. 17, 141 Litwiller, Carl .................................... 150 Litwiller, Rachel .................................. 141 Livengood, Judith .................................. 141 Long, Kristen .................................. 134 Longacre, Esther K.............................. 40, 82 Longacre, John ................................. 53, 150 Longenecker, Alton ............................. 134 Longenecker, Edward ........................... 142, 156 Loyer, Milton 13, 14, 33, 40, 41, 45, 49, 54, 66, 74, 120 Lyndaker, Milford .................................. 134 -M- McCary, Joan ....................................... 134 Mack, Esther ................................... 53, 120 Magati, Shemaya ................................ 14, 128 Magnus, Ingrid ..................................... 159 Makoyo, Phineas ................................ 142 Martin, Alta ....................................... 120 Martin, Carol ......................... 120, 142, 165 Martin, Daniel H.................................... 142 Martin, Diane................................... 48, 150 Martin, Doris .................................. 68, 150 Martin, Emanuel ..................................... 82 Martin, Erma ....................................... 142 Martin, J. Daniel............................... 60, 120 Martin, J. Herbert .................................. 89 Martin, Judith ................................. 52, 150 Martin, Karen .................................. 52, 142 Martin, Lois ....................... 52, 71, 146, 151 Martin, Louise ................................. 52, 151 Martin, Margaret 1...................... 12, 104, 105 Martin, Melvin ..................................... 142 Martin, Phyllis .................................71, 151 Martin, Phyllis J................................... 142 Martin, Rebecca S.................................... 89 Martin, Ula R....................................... 108 Martin, Vernon ............ 41, 46, 66, 74, 105, 134 Martin, Victor ................. 48, 49, 50, 53, 142 Martin, Weldon ..................................... 121 Mast, Anna ............................ 115, 121, 161 Mast, Emily ........................................ 151 Mast, Ernest .................................. 60, 121 Mast, Fanny ................................... 52, 142 Mast, Lillian ....................................... 99 Mast, Myron .................................... 65, 142 Mast, Rodney ....................................... 142 Mast, Stuart ................................... 8, 151 Mast, Theodore .......................... 4, 8, 64, 134 Mast, Wesley .................................. 53, 134 Mast, Wilma ........................................ 134 Maust, Earl ............................ 25, 51, 53, 87 Maust, Gale ................................ 50, 141, 142 Maust, Martha ....................................... 143 Maust, Rosalee ...................................... 151 Mellinger, Alta ..................................... 120 Mellinger, Donald L............................. 100, 101 Metzler, James ............................. 23, 112, 113 Messner, Robert J..................................... 82 Metzler, Glenn ............................. 53, 74, 151 Metzler, James ............................. 23, 112, 113 Migire, Eva ......................................... 128 Miller, Anna V....................................... 134 Miller, Arlene ...................................... 151 Miller, Ernest ................................. 91, 156 Miller, Fern ................................... 53, 151 Miller, Henry ................................ 151, 177 Miller, lenz ........................................ 143 Miller, Ira E.................................... 80, 98 Miller, J. Allen ........................... 36, 102, 134 Miller, Joas Jr...................................... 151 Miller, John J............. 28, 36, 39, 47, 51, 63, 134 Miller, Karen .................................. 151, 161 Miller, Loen .......................... 15, 24, 51, 134 Miller, Marland ................................ 65, 151 Miller, Martin ............................. 65, 73, 143 Miller, Mary ................................... 151, 161 Miller, Miriam .................................. 50, 134 Miller, Nathan ...................................... 143 Miller, Paul J..................... 39, 51, 52, 86, 143 Miller, Rachel ..................................... 151 Miller, Richard .................................... 152 Miller, Sadie .............................. 50, 121, 156 Miller, Samuel .................... 51, 54, 57, 141, 143 Miller, Samuel E...................................... 91 Milller, Sherry.................................. 53, 152 Mininger, Steve ................................. 52, 143 Mishler, William .......................... 61, 143 Morris, Kathy ...................................... 152 Morris, Pamela ............................. 71, 77, 128 Mosemann, Elizabeth ................................. 108 Moser, Sharon ............................. 50, 121 Moyer, Carol .............................. 149, 152 Mtoka, Daniel .................................. 128, 129 Mugwe, Mercy ........................................ 134 Mullenex, James L..................................... 83 Mullet, Cynthia .................................... 152 Mullet, Fanny ......................... 40, 51, 53, 121 Mullet, Leroy ...................................... 134 Mullet, Viola ......................... 52, 71, 76, 143 Mumaw, Catherine R.......................... 24, 40, 98 Mumaw, Fay .......................................... 152 Mumaw, Homer ........................................ 100 Mumaw, John R......................................... 84 Mumaw, Miriam .............................. 68, 71, 104 Musser, Darlene ........................... 152, 161 Musser, Virginia .................................... 152 Myers, Beverly ...................................... 134 Myers, Dallas.......... 28, 52, 64, 65, 146, 152, 161 Myers, Kara ....................................... 128 -N- Neal, Barbara .................................. 107, 134 Ness, Daniel ........................................ 128 Neuenschwander, Kathleen ............................ 134 Newcomer, Gloria .................................... 134 Nice, Vivian .................................... 52, 143 Nisly, Marvin ......................... 47, 52, 134, 136 Nofziger, Dana ...................................... 134 Nolt, Rhoda ......................................... 134 Nolt, Robert ........................................ 143 Nussbaum, Elton........................ 52, 75, 111, 134 -o- Orondo, Barak ....................................... 128 Osmann, Jean .................................... 28, 152 Oswald, Jane ........................................ 122 Oswald, Stanley ..................................... 152 Otto, Emory ..................................... 53, 152 -P- Parker, Cecelia ..................................... 143 Peachey, Allen ............................. 53, 65 122 Peachey, Gerald ..................................... 152 Peachey, Laban........................................ 95 Peachey, Sarah ............................. 40, 118, 122 Peachey, Wilbur...................................... 122 Pigueron, William ................................... 135 Peifer, Elsie .............................. 77, 89, 152 Pellman, Hubert R................................ 78, 89 Phillips, Barbara ................................... 152 Pigueron, William ................................... 135 Platt, Gail ......................................... 128 Polzin, Alfred ...................................... 113 Polzin, Noreen ...................................... 102 Ponton, Thelbert .....................................143 Powell, Patricia .................................... 152 Price, Audrey ....................................... 152 Pursel, Dennis ...................................73, 135 -R- Raber, Vesta ......... Ramer, Alva .......... Ranck, Marlyn ........ Reed, Paul ........... Reitz, Herman R. ... Replogle, Donna Ressler, Wilma ....... Revercomb, Betty. .. Rexrode, Millard . . . Reyes, Norma ......... Reynolds, Eugeue . . Rhodes, Mary Ethyl . Rice, Elizabeth ...... Richardson, Faith ... Rissler, Mahlon N. . . Ritchie, Alan ........ Ritchie, David ....... Ritchie, Larry ....... Ritchie, Sandra ...... Ritter, David ........ Roggie, Rhoda ........ Rohrer, Marian ....... Rosenberger, Henry . Ross, Kenneth ........ Ross, Wesley ......... Roth, Dwight ......... Roth, James ......... Roth, Jay ........... Rupp, Emagene Rush, John ........... Ruth, Feme ........... Ruth, Merle .......... Ryu, Toshiko ......... Sakwa, Florence .... Sakwa, Nelson ........ Saner, Phyllis ....... Sarco, Danny ......... Sauder, James ........ Sawyers, Goldie Schaerfl, Joseph . . . Schildt, Kenneth E. . Schlabach, Carolyn . Schlosser, Nancy . .. Schrock, Arland .... Schrock, Floyd ....... Schultz, Alma ........ Schumm, Clare ........ Schunck, Regina See, Barbara ......... Seibel, Lamar ........ Seitz, Blair.......... Seitz, Delbert L...... Seitz, Eunice ........ Seitz, Mary Jane . . . Sensenig, Dean Sensenig, James Shadid, Mohammed . Shaffer, Cheryl .... Shaffer, David ....... Shank, Fern ......... Shank, James ......... Shank, Jean ......... Shank, John .......... Shank, Lester C. Shank, Mary Beth . . Sharif, Walid ....... Sharp, David ........ Sheffer, Jerry ...... Shelly, Eugene ....... Shenk, Daniel ....... Shenk, Gerald E....... Shenk, Gerald L. Shenk, Margaret M. Shenk, Mary F........ Shenk, Wade ......... Shertzer, Janet ...... Shirk, Maynard .... Shirk, Sylvia ........ Shomo, Kenneth .. Shope, Polly ........ Showalter, Christine Showalter, Donald Showalter, Glen . .. Showalter, Grace I. Showalter, Harley . . Showalter, Lois Ann. Showalter, Marvin . Showalter, Millard E. Showalter, Nancy . . Showalter. Richard . Showalter, Stuart . . . Shriner, Stephen . . . Shrock, Phyllis ...... Shultz, Marsha .... ....... 152, 161 ............. 152 ............. 143 ............. 135 ........ 84, 85 ....... 52, 152 ............. 152 ........... 122 ............. 143 15, 62, 63, 152 ....... 10, 122 ........... 122 ............. 152 .......... 40, 49, 54, 59, 135 .... 82 ... 143 ... 143 ... 135 128, 143 ... 122 53, 152, 158, 161 .............. 122 .............. 161 ........... 49, 123 ..... 16, 53, 152 ................ 143 ........... 53, 123 ........... 50, 143 ................ 152 ................ 143 ................ 152 .............. 128 ..... 50, 52, 143 -s- .......................... 129 .................... 9, 123 ........................... 143 .......................... 152 ....................... 63, 152 ........................... 143 ........................... 113 ....................... 53, 152 ....................... 53, 152 .......................... 39 ......... 53, 63, 74, 92, 152 ............. 42, 52, 65, 143 .......................... 152 ......................... 135 ................. 62, 153, 161 ........................... 98 .......................... 153 ............. 40, 41, 49, 123 ....................... 14, 96 .................. 50, 143, 144 ........................... 143 .......................... 135 ................. 15, 101, 123 ..... 1, 14, 59, 61, 65, 135 ....................... 53, 153 .......................... 135 ........................ 69 153 ........................ 7, 135 .......................... 123 ..................... 130, 135 ........................ 81 .................. 51, 52, 135 ...............5, 75, 153, 160 ........................... 136 .......................... 143 ....................... 67, 113 ............................ 94 ... 51, 52, 61, 141, 143, 180 ....................... 41, 136 ............................ 83 ........................ 108 ........................... 109 ............ 40, 46, 52, 136 ........................... 153 ...................... 52, 144 .......................... 144 ........................... 144 ....................... 69, 136 ............................ 93 .......................... 153 ............................ 83 ............. 44, 115, 123, 156 ...................... 71, 153 .......................... 153 .......................... 103 .......................... 136 .................. 40, 44, 136 ............ 44, 45, 88, 124 .................. 28, 42, 136 ...................... 53, 153 .......................... 144 Siegrist, Beverly ........... Siegrist, Donald ............ Siegrist, Martha ............ Slabugh, Myron .............. Slagell, Kenneth ............ Slagell, Warren ............. Slaubaugh, Lois ............. Slaubaugh, Lola ............. Smith, Lester ................... Smoker, Daniel .............. Smuch, Gary ................. Smucker, Jean ............... Smucker, Mary Jo ............ Smucker, Nadine ............. Snider, David .. . .......... Snyder, John M............... Snyder, Robert .............. Sollenberger, Doris ......... Souder, Merle ............... Sours, Dwight ............... Spicher, Thomas ............. Spory, Louise ............... Stambaugh, Carlton .............. Stauffer, Byran ............. Stauffer, Freida ............ Stauffer, J. Mark ........... Stauffer, Julia ............. Stauffer, Margaret .......... Steffen, Dorcas ............. Steffy, Herbert ............. Steiner, Roy ................ Stichter, Eileen ............ Stiteler, Gary............... Stoltzfus, Ben .............. Stoltzfus, Bryan ............ Stoltzfus, Donald ........... Stoltzfus, Eugene ........... Stoltzfus, George ........... Stotltzfus, Grant M.......... Stoltzfus, Irene ............ Stoltzfus, Kathryn .......... Stoltzfus, Lorna ............ Stoltzfus, Mark ............. Stoltzfus, Merle ............ Stoltzfus, Priscilla ........ Stoltzfus, Ronald ........... Stoltzfus, Rosanna .......... Stoltzfus, Ruth B............... Stoltzfus, Ruth R............ Stoltzfus, Sally ............ Stoltzfus, Shirley .......... Strong, Patricia ............ Strong, Samuel Z............. Strunk, William ............. Stultz, Margaret ............ Stutzman, Dick .............. Stutzman, Karen ............. Stutzman, Larry ............. Styer, Mary ................. Suter, Daniel B.............. Swartley, Willard M.......... Swartz, Delores ............. Swartz, Ernest .............. Swartz, Gerald............... Swartz, Karene .............. Swartz, Sue ................. Swartzendruber, J. Paul . Swartzendruber, Karen Swartzendruber, Myrna . . Swartzendruber, Shirley . Swartzendruber, Vriginia Swartzendruber, Wayne Swartzentruber, Bernadine Swartzentruber, Dawn . . . Swartzentruber, Elva .... Swartzentruber, Gertrude Swartzentruber, Melva . . . Switzer, Bernell ............. ................... 136 .......... 36, 92, 124 ................... 153 .............. 42, 144 ........... 4, 46, 136 ............. 58, 153 ................... 124 ................... 154 ................... 144 ................... 154 ............. 122, 124 ................... 144 ..... 14, 50, 69, 136 51, 71, 111, 124, 161 ...............69, 154 ................... 82 .......... 50, 52, 136 ................... 144 ............... 7, 154 ................... 144 39, 41, 64, 144, 156 .................. 136 ................... 124 .............. 52, 136 ............. Ill, 136 ........... 14, 52, 87 ................... 144 ............. 159, 161 ............. 124, 125 ... 50, 52, 111, 136 .................... 67 .............. 52, 136 ................... 136 .................... 125 .............. 74, 104 ............. 77, 144 .... 15, 50, 79, 136 .................... 125 ............... 14, 94 _____ 40, 51, 52, 125 .................... 154 .......... 68, 69, 144 .................... 125 ............. 112, 113 .................... 154 ................... 144 ................ 154 ........... 40, 81 ................ 125 ................ 129 ................ 144 39, 51, 53, 69, 144 ............... 82 ................ 154 ..................... 154 ............. 52, 63 137 ................. 14, 154 ....... 14, 53, 83, 154 14, 15, 39, 53, 86, 154 ............ 11, 32, 100 .................. 37, 85 ................. 40, 144 ........... 14, 65, 154 .. 14, 53, 154, 159, 177 ................. 43, 125 ................. 29, 144 ................. 51, 125 ..................... 154 ...................... 154 ..................... 155 ................. 52, 125 ..................... 144 ..................... 137 ...................... 155 ................. 71, 137 .......................137 ................. 97, 129 ................. 53, 155 -T- Thomas, Elaine ................................... 155 Togane, Mohamoud ............................ 62, 155 Trissel, Ronald .................................. 125 Trotter, Sandra .........................6, 145, 160 Troyer, Levi .................................... 145 Troyer, Rebecca Ann ............................. 145 Turner, Margaret ................................ 155 -U- Umble, Marian 126 -v- Van Horn, Herbert .......................... 38,126 Van Lear, Martha ............................... 126 Venet, Nancy .............................. 53, 155 -w- Wagler, Lorene .... Wampler, Carolyn . Weaver, Donald . . . Weaver, Herbert . . . Weaver, Kathleen .. Weaver, Louetta ... Weaver, Mary Helen Weaver, Melvin Weaver, Pauline . .. Weaver, Samuel O. Weaver, Steven ... . Weaver, Violet .... Weaver, Wayne Wenger, Barbara . . . Wenger, Benjamin . Wenger, Betty .... , Wenger, Esther ... Wenger, Irvin ...... Wenger, John S. .. Wenger, Linden M. Wenger, Lois Ann . Wenger, Margaret . . Wenger, Preston . . . Wenger, Wade .... Wert, James ......... Wheelbarger, Paula . Whitmore, Terry ... Widmer, Judy........ Wilkins, Galen ...... Wilkinson, Phyllis . Williams, Margaret . Wingfield, Arthur . Wissler, Dawn........ Wyble, Robert ....... Wyse, Carlton .... Wyse, Dwight ....... Wyse, Sanford ....... ............. 53, 155 ................. 126 .............. 4, 155 ............. 59, 102 ............. 52, 145 ............. 33, 137 .................. 137 ............. 53, 155 .................. 155 ............. 41, 81 ........ 66, 146, 155 .............. 4, 137 ......... 24, 92, 126 . 6, 15, 52, 91, 155 .................. 129 36, 40, 43, 77, 126 .................. 145 ........ 46, 53, 145 ................... 95 ................. 80 ................. 126 40, 53, 90, 144, 145 ........ 64, 74, 155 .................. 145 ......... 52, 56, 137 ............ 129, 160 .................. 155 .. 4, 39, 50, 52, 145 .................. 145 ...................155 .............. 4, 129 ................. 126 .................. 145 ... 36, 37, 50, 145 .................. 155 ........ 46, 66, 137 ............ 138, 145 -Y- Yoder, Alice . . . Yoder, Arlin , .. Yoder, David Yoder, Duane .. Yoder, Eldon .. Yoder, Emery . . Yoder, Flora Kay Yoder, Gerald . Yoder, Gordon . Yoder, Harold . Yoder, Helen Yoder, Jerome . Yoder, Joanne Yoder, John A....... Yoder, John Henry Yoder, J. Otis, Sr. Yoder, John I. Jr. . Yoder, Judith ...... Yoder, Lois ....... Yoder, Marvin . .. Yoder, Orpha .... Yoder, Owen ........ Yoder, Patricia Yoder, Paul ....... Yoder, Richard .... Yoder, Robert Yoder, Ronald ... Yoder, Roy ......... Yoder, Ruth ........ Yoder, Tillie ..... Yoder, Vivian ...... Yoder, Wilbur .... Yost, Eva ......... Yost, Judith ....... Yousey, Lena ...... Yousey, Yvonne ... Yutzy, Karen ....... ........................ 155 .................... 53, 155 ........................ 155 ........................ 155 .................... 76, 155 ......................... 90 ............... 50, 52, 145 .................... 53, 126 ............... 28, 137, 180 .................... 52, 126 ...................... 126 . .. 37, 51, 52, 64, 56, 126 ............... 50, 52, 137 ....... 4, 46, 50, 52, 145 ........................ 155 ......................... 84 ........................ 127 .................... 62, 137 ........................ 137 ........................ 145 ........................ 155 ................... 53, 145 ....... 36, 37, 58, 88, 137 ........... 41, 62, 92, 127 ....... 12, 67, 72, 73, 145 ...................... 100 .................... 66, 137 ................... 52, 145 ................... 50, 145 ........................ 109 ................... 58, 137 ............... 52, 64, 127 .................... 53, 145 ................... 53, 155 .................... 52, 155 ................... 68, 155 ............... 40, 53, 155 z- Zeager, Lois ....... Zehr, Milton ....... Zehr, Violet ........ Zendt, Glenn ........ Zimmerman, George Zimmerman, Leroy , Zimmerman, Loretta Zimmerman, Pauline Zook Alphia A. Zook, Donna ........ Zook, Ira T......... Zook, Joan E. ... Zook, Lee .......... Zook, Mary Louise Zook Mervin ........ Zook, Paul ......... Zuck, Elaine ....... .............. 145 ... 112, 113, 156 .............. 127 .............. 137 ..... 50, 52, 137 .............. 145 ............... 145 ....... 105, 155 .............. 107 .............. 155 24, 48, 49, 50, 87 ............. 88 ......... 110, 145 ..... 24, 52, 137 .......... 52, 145 ............... 75 ............... 145 183 The Shenandoah 1967. We meandered over the campus greens looking and listening and feeling. We questioned our classmates and our dorm neighbors, our professors and our secretaries, and we remembered . . . In our every moment we felt your lives and patterned motion . . . And in our midnight hours we wrote your drama as we saw it. We wrote. But each must find his own identity, his cues and leads, and fill the empty spaces with his own interpretation. Our deepest gratitude to those who worked with us or just inspired: Professor Martin, sponsor; Mary Lou Brubaker, for cover design; Cal Gibson, Taylor Representative; Ruth Lapp, secretarial aide; Miss Longacre, for late permissions; Becky Som- mers and Kathy Brunk, for notes and jokes; the many good Samaritans, for food and drink; the Y and Weather Vane for their offices; the faculty for their lounge. Special photo credits go to: Delmar Studio, Gitchell Studio, Dan Sarco, Paul Fretz, Blair Seitz, Henry Rosenberger, Dave Shaffer, Nevin Lantz, David Yoder. TAYLOR PUBLISHING COMPANY
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