Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA)

 - Class of 1971

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Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 258 of the 1971 volume:

2 3 Jai Williams Erika Yoder, Bruce Yoder 4 Community Women Alta Brubaker 5 Yearbooks force people into boxes. Alphabet- ized, labeled, and smiling in convenient poses, people are likely to die, not live in the pages of a yearbook. Very little EMC life is lived in neat rows. Ap- pearances like dorm halls, classroom seating, and cafeteria lines are, in the end, just appear- ances. If a yearbook is to capture the essence of a year between its covers, it must be ready to ac- knowledge the issues that live behind appearances. EMC students are alive, changeable, and eclectic. They are not isolated from the vital controversies and differing opinions which are found in any healthy student body: religious questions, the place of sports in an academic in- stitution, conflicts about residence halls or male female relationships. Photography has learned to capture this human flux and motion. The slice-of-life frame of a basketball player rebounding has won out over tired rows of grinning athletic teams. (Un- avoidably, underclassmen will be under- k I CTj g«%, mu classmen in classic FBI mug shot fashion). But what about literary coverage? Some peo- ple have lost faith in writing. Especially when it is weighted with academic” verbiage and strung together like sentimental charms on a heavy bracelet—it's impressive, but the meaning is obscure. Writing, when attempted at all, has usually kept people in the grip of sys- tematic sterility. Literary editors act as though they can capsule a year with long lists of soccer scores or predictable accounts of equally pre- dictable activities and organizations. In some cases an enterprising editor could keep his cabi- net stocked with rubber stamp descriptions of campus life and, when called upon, simply pound out the yearbook. There has to be another way. Perhaps in the 71 Shen words can be persuaded to sacrifice the neat-row theory of writing and other preten- tions in order to produce with facts what pho- tography produces with film: a representative slice-of-life, a living action frame of the undefined energy that is EMC. 7 Hiroshi Mine At dawn I learn Jesus on the Hills. In the morning I learn Jesus in the Class. By the night I learn Jesus in Hospital service. Oh! I may know You! Send me Heavenly Gift of love for all men! Hiroshi Mine 9 Anne Bomberger ‘,yp - h . ■.■ S PSII - g| V -' i S; . - - ■■’ '■ ’. . ■ . v ; U ; 7 «Jr A.- - .- 7' ■•- ■■«£? +99$. , . • 'V-- '' ■: ■■■, ;:1V, ?V: $ •«; • ' « -JM; : ' : r? • . •'; • ':« - ,- ; v . , ■ ■■:«? « • Hafc iM.VfV .... §§■ ISpW ■ ' - liiiafli m Jk ' ■' ' : • i m RBH M3?«l •' -S ' iImWI d - , mu .- rf ise?,v..' ' -JSm 12 Ken Covelens, Fred Kolb 13 Women's group A lot of people here think EMC is someone else's school. They expect their college to offer certain social, spiritual, or intellectual advan- tages. Sometimes it doesn't. This year as much as any other, there was talk about not finding what is needed, about just leaving the place. But for some there was a change. A few peo- ple sensed that they were not at EMC, they were EMC. They tried to mold the school to them- selves, to leave their own impress, to help the place make room for them. This fall two sponta- neous groups formed and were able to sustain student interest throughout the school terms. The women's group began with sharing litera- ture from the women's movement and ended with discussions on how to become a person in one's own right, to help other men and women to develop and grow free of stereotyped sex roles. We women need to come together to raise our awareness of how we think of our- selves. To do that we have to talk about the artificial ways we relate to men, how we com- pete with each other in our appearances, and trap men into unemotional he-man roles and ourselves into dependent, passive roles. But more important than words exchanged was the feeling of solidarity and oneness the group experienced. Said one member, I think of the others as sisters now. It was amazing to find that each of us felt she had not been ex- pected to be her own person. We were all taught to find ourselves through the man we would marry instead of becoming individual adults first. The girls had no illusions about the obstacles they will face in larger society, especially job discrimination. I don't want to become bitter, one girl agonized, but I know if I enter certain professions I'm only going to become frustrated because women simply aren't hired, paid, or promoted on the same basis as men. All seemed to sense that their struggle will not be easy. As one girl put it, We have so few models of truly wholesome, equal relationships between men and women. It's almost like starting from scratch. 14 Recorder Ensemble Student Octet 15 “Spontaneous is the word for the evangelism group. Elton Horst, seminary student, talked about why he joined and how the group began. “This is my 'Jerusalem' here at school. I realize that I make up EMC as a student here, so it made sense to pioneer in something I was inter- ested in. We sort of originated that way. The evangelism seminar doesn't pit itself against the YPCA. “Wa're just people who come together because we have a common desire to share Christ. Many of the members are active in Y community outreach and bring concerns about their work to the group each week. At first Truman Brunk led the seminar but he soon worked himself out of a job. Like the women's group there are no elected leaders or set objectives for the meetings. Occassionally a speaker comes or the group decides to study a book of the Bible. “We haven't even gotten through the first chapter of Acts in three weeks now but we're sort of going at our own pace and trying to relate it to our lives. Elton describes the group as a place where he can submit his self and his actions for a con- sensus of opinion and support. “What we're re- ally trying to do is be a church, to have brothers and sisters we can open our lives to for rebuke or 'rooting and grounding in the faith.' Through study of the Bible we can even come to decisions about what is the will of God on this campus. 16 17 Campus Environment Committee; Omar Beiler Velma Brubaker When The Mennonite Boy enters the room, I look demure and begin fingering my purse strap. He speaks rap- idly to a nearby friend, taking care not to look in my direc- tion. Inevitably, though, our eyes meet. (I have forgotten to look demure and besides, his face rather interests me.) For several months we exchange accidental glances across rooms. When we eat lunch together (yes, finally) we vigorously discuss politics to prove that we are informed. Tiring of such games, I mention an- tiques and wait for a response. There is none. We never eat together again. Later I learn that he collects old jars, digs the Mennonite Hymnal, and wants to live in the country. But he is so well protected against threats like me that I never get to tell him about the old 1923 Mason on mother's shelf at home. 18 On Mennonite Boys Since I've spent most of my life hoeing potatoes and thinking about Mennonite girls, I guess I know what's wrong with them. In fact I've worn out three hoe handles thinking about it. Mennonite girls are too much like my mother. Don't get me wrong. I'm not condemning motherhood. It seems to be a pretty good invention, ranking up there with apple pie. (Both, I believe, were developed by Eve while living in Eden, a small town near Lancaster.) So if by chance I find a Mennonite girl who doesn't tell me to wear my rubbers when it rains, I shall marry her. It's the least I can do. And if we're fruitful and she begins to act like a mother then, I'll hoe my potatoes and not say a word. Alan Leinbach, Philip Byler 19 On Mennonite Girls 21 Life in EMC's five dormitories has never been in- timate or homey. Look-alike rooms line look- alike halls and floor after floor repeats the exact same pattern of halls and doors, the college ex- pects every student who doesn't live at home to room in the dorm. Most make the best of the experience. Some even prefer dormitory living with its close proximity to the campus and its scores of possibilities for friendships. But for others, the omnipresence of the campus and the impersonal relationships that result from sheer numbers make dorm life frus- trating. A former resident of Northlawn recalls, I used to go out of my room and there was nothing but a long row of doors. It made me want to get away. Now I can come down here and feel like I'm leaving the campus behind. To the 53 girls and about seven cats who live in Martin house, Suter house, and Birchwood, the difference in scale is an important one. One Birchwood sophomore described the genius of small house living this way, I get to know peo- ple I normally wouldn't. Last year with 400 girls in one dorm I could choose who I wanted to get close to. I usually stuck to friends who were like myself. Here I don't have any choice. At first she and her friends were critical of the weird types who moved in but now one friend ob- serves, I kind of realized that people are more than just the crowds they run with. They're indi- viduals. 23 Diane Kandel Small houses have a way of filling the social and psychic needs of their residents that larger dorms seldom achieve. Girls on Birchwood sec- ond say, When you have troubles you go to the steps and just sit there until someone comes by to talk about it. In Birchwood step-sitters aren't ignored for long. To meet other social needs the same girls have set up a combination cof- feehouse lounge in the basement where we can cook and have boys. Small houses are still like dorms in many ways, but problems like noise and hours are handled more personally. If you make noise at least people come over and tell you to shut up instead of going to tell the housemother that room 19 is making noise again. Girls who would freely violate hours at a larger dorm don't have that luxury in places like Birchwood. Their resident assistant, a student, knows everyone personally and persists in trusting each girl to come in on time. One girl who was having a fight with her boyfriend asked for a few minutes grace at 11:30. Sure, said her RA, Come in when you're ready and I'll be praying for you. Even the admittedly shabby facilities of the houses don't seem to bother most of the people who live there. One Birchwood girl aptly illus- trated the difference between small houses and the larger dormitories when she said, At least when we look out the window we see trees and homes instead of the gym and that heating plant. 24 25 Jon Cut roll a cat on the kitchen table DIRTY DIRTY DIRTY! A foul-mouthed cat rubbing its furry cheeks on a cool silver salt shaker shooting its whiskers thru tiny holes whiteness melting toward sodium purity DIRTY DIRTY DIRTY! Let's all raise our hands and shriek about germs and sanitation Let's all think about the muddy paws on the oilcloth and roll our eyes and sigh ... OR! Let's be SENSUAL and feel a racy feline joy suppose those were our furry cheeks wouldn't it be quite catty to carress a cool shaker and purr about it awhile? —Lois Leatherman tr 28 29 Two Small Boats We met two small boats going opposite directions we would have passed in the middle of the river barely rippling the silent water but there we were tied to the same pier moving together swaying to the rhythmic blue of the troubled water then you cast off upstream and I glided down will you remember at the head of the river when all the people cheer Ivan Shantz Wilmer Otto, Suzanne Bomberger Renee Minnich, Becky Lehman, Ellen Kennel, Tobi Brenneman. “I'm bored most of the time at EMC because I don't like scheduled living. Here I could live my life blind-folded. When I feel really bad I go to my room and put on a record, turn up the vol- ume, put my head between the speakers, and try to forget where I am and who I am. “Even though I live in the dorm where there are lots of people, I often feel terribly alone. It's really hard for us to relate to each other because we're thrown together in an abnormal living sit- uation. When the loneliness hurts too bad I go in to town or find someone to play cards with, not because I like cards, but because it gives me a relationship with people for a commoji pur- pose. There are unhappy people at EMC; students who find it hard to make the transition from friends, families, and home cooking to imper- sonal dorm living, regimented meal-times, and large lecture-hall classrooms. Surrounded by people, they still feel lonely because they can't find a place where they are needed, an activity that gives them a common bond with other students. So they try to escape. One time-honored campus haunt for spiritual solitude is the hill. Other people leave campus when they can to go to movies, restaurants, or shops. Clubs, athlet- ics, Y groups, the snack shop, and the Bard's Nest are all havens of friendship to interested students. Dates can kill the problem of lonely evenings. “I very seldom get bored, claims one girl, “My boyfriend and I get off campus about five times a week, often to a friend's house or to town for shopping or a movie. But students who do not or cannot date often find themselves alone. Most campus activities are considered dating times. If I don't have money for a date or I get turned down, I leave campus or stay in my room. I wish there was more group participation on campus. “The general routine of studies gets me up- tight sometimes, states a sophomore. Last year I didn't have a car and I really felt trapped. This year I have one. I don't use it that much but just knowing it's there is reassuring. “The trouble is there's nowhere to escape to, a Junior laments, “you have to go to D.C. or someplace like that. Harrisonburg only offers movies, usually lousy, or restaurants. Restau- rants aren't that good anyway because you usually go with the people you're trying to es- cape from. 32 Should there be more activities at EMC? Most students think so. “Personally I'd like more con- certs or lecture-discussions about contemporary issues. You can tell students are starved for something to do because whenever there's something on campus the whole dorm empties. EMC, like most resident colleges, must confront the problems of boredom and loneli- ness that plague dormitory students. With all their noise and impersonality, dorm rooms must somehow become home to the people who live in them. “Outside in the world I'm not sure where I stand, but in my room I know where ev- erything is. It's hard to feel that it's my place, though, when there are eighty people on the same floor. I need my own refuge, my own world. I need a home. |. D. Stahl 33 It can't go on . . . Life becomes a damned series of rat races and all the rat friends and rodent relatives subsist on dramamine to keep from getting air sickness as they fly from mound of dirt to chisel of cheese and breathe all with a strichnine intensity a bawdy bitchiness and deadly dedication to a life born in unbirth. Lois Leatherman Anna Louise Detweiler 36 Bob Mishler I remember other nights not even wanting half an apple gazing out a darkened window trees in my hair streetlight in my eye. Time alone on the road midnight radio windshield wipers I rest in the muddled neon of blackwet streets watching the twos of small town happiness. Sometimes in the bus that shoulders its way down the dusk drawn road from D.C. farm house lights drift by in the dark and I wonder if they take turns doing dishes and dream about hitchin' a ride on a Greyhound. Bruce Yoder Does EMC threaten or epitomize the traditional values of the Shenandoah Valley? “EMC students are not like the Mennonites who live next door to me, a woman at a record store confided, “I can't understand the ones who dress differently, who don't have cars or electricity. Do they get those rules from the Bible? But I like EMC students. You can't even tell them from any other college students. Mennonites have been an asset to the com- munity, commented a middle-aged man who was washing windows on the Schewel's Furni- ture building. But if you want an honest opinion, there are some who give me the im- pression they think they're a little better than the average person. A balding, obviously prosperous man in a business suit had this to say about Mennonites, Well, I'm Jewish so I understand what it's like to be in a minority. Mennonites are decent people—good people. This summer when I was in Lancaster, Pa. on business I spent some time with the Amish. Aren't Mennonites a form of the Amish religion? An elderly black man who lives across from Broad Street Mennonite Church thinks EMC has helped in his community. EMC students have been involved with the kids. Mennonites re- spect black people more than any other church group in the area. A county farmer who was worried about student dissent handily summed up community attitude toward EMC. Your students are quiet. They cause less trouble than most college students. They seem to be better disciplined. They are good solid citizens who stash their money in their socks. These opinions would surprise those students who take pride in their values which set them apart from the world. But to most community people the EMC student body is a relatively be- nign one. Undoubtedly the students hold beliefs that could potentially conflict, threaten, or inspire the Harrisonburg community. So far they haven't been vocal enough about them to really stir the waters. TWO- BAY mTTENRE , 005 38 I 39 ! 41 THE CIRCLE BEYOND FEAR Dave Schrock Ira T. Zook EMC Orchestra: Mel Janzen % 43 Chamber Singers: Chris Yoder Choral Union Alleluia Singers 44 Chamber Singers: Dale Brubaker, Bob Maust 45 WHY IS IT CONSIDERED UNPATRIOTIC TO TEAR DOWN THE AMERICAN FLAG, WHEN IT IS NOT CONSIDERED UNPATRIOTIC TO TEAR DOWN OR CONTAMINATE THE AIR, LAND AND WATER THAT IS THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, THE REALITY BEHIND THE FLAG? Ralph Nader Bill Russell The Oberlin Wind Ensemble Rebirth: Mel Lehman Rebirth: Dean Clemmer, Rob Eby 48 49 Hans DeBoer, Henry Harrison v -ii 50 Peace Club: Dan Lehman Comenius Club: Marcia Beachy, Phil Mininger, Beverly Miller Flying Club: Lee Stoltzfus The student senate has no formal decision- making power, states SGA president Nathan Showalter. At this point we are purely a con- cession from the administration. So once a week the senate convenes in the student center lounge to formulate recommendations while decisions of real importance are made in the ad- ministration building on the hill. Showalter finds it difficult to reconcile this state of affairs with his strong belief in student participation in policy-making. But the heavy hand of tradition hinders any real change. The primary bastion of power, the presidency, must be re-evaluated, claims Showalter. The present concept of presidency militates against partici- patory democracy, not because of who holds the position at a given time, but because the of- fice of president has traditionally been that of a manipulator rather than a participant in decision-making. Nevertheless, Showalter entertains hopes for changes in the administration, which he has found to be reasonably flexible. He hopes to gain equal representation for students on the faculty council, an important policy-making body of which he is the sole student member. This would be a major step toward his ultimate goal: a three-way governing body. For only when students can meet with faculty and administrators on a middle ground with equal voting power will the weekly split be- tween the powerful and the powerless be ended. Showalter feels that students would be an innovative force in this new campus-wide senate, while permanent personnel would provide continuity and long range guidance. It is an ambitious goal with obstacles to match. And not all of them center on the tradi- tional roles of presidents and administrators. This year's student president senses a shift in his own senate away from last year's more progressive and politically oriented SGA. The mood is not being challenged by the normally innovative students, most of whom have succumbed to the nationwide trend of student passivity and in- trospection, leaving only a small core of persons who are actively concerned about campus issues. Ironically, one of Showalter's prime targets, the lack of continuity in the SGA, may prove to be precisely what prevents him from imple- menting his program. Next year will bring a new student body president with his own ideas about student government. It is this sporadic and therefore powerless pattern of SGAs to date that Showalter would like to remedy by a governing coalition of faculty, administration, and students. 52 SGA WEATHER VANE Tina Mast, News Editor; Ethel Yoder, Feature Editor; John Otto, Editor-in-Chief Merle Harnish, Photographer Ray Ressler, Tina Mast, John Otto, Ben Gamber, Assistant Editor; Steve Shank, Jeanette Noll, Ken Covelens, Thomas Verghese The Weather Vane has a unique problem as a biweekly. News is often outdated by press time. John Otto has tried this year to shift the paper's emphasis from obvious news to the subtle fac- tors which make it happen. Otto points to Dennis Glanzer's article on the dorm-visitation debate, We could have waited until the senate brought the question to vote and then reported the outcome, but it would have been old news by then. Instead, Glanzer felt out campus opinion and uncovered the basic issues of conflict. The Weather Vane is not directly censored. Still, occasionally a reporter will uncover a sig- nificant story which never makes it past the edi- tor's desk. No one reads our copy before it goes to press but there are certain things we know we can't print or we'll get in trouble. 55 Velma Denlinger, Typist; Glen Litwiller, Sports; Marilyn Nafziger, Layout; Dan Lehman, Literary; Lois King, Layout; Ivan Shantz, Photography; Don Good, Business Manager 56 Ruth C. Stoltzfus, Editor SHEN 1. “Is it alright to cut off his arms so you can't see him reading the book? 2. “Who is it? 3. “J. Herbert. I don't think he'd mind. 3. “Hey, shut the door. I feel vulnerable. 1. “Shall I ask him if he minds standing in front of a floating book? 3. I agree it's a gross-out. I pushed for pa- trons harder than anyone else and I didn't get any. 1. Did the maintenance men mind standing together for the picture? 4. “No, they were so excited about their new boiler that they didn't even notice. 2. “We've got all the ads in! Do you realize we've hit the climax? I feel like I've been on Mt. Sinai!! 1. “That's alright. Just don't build a prayer chapel. 4. “Don't we have a neurotic staff? 3. What do you mean an erotic staff? 57 58 Glen Gehman YPCA ImlMM Glen Gehman, president; Phyllis Augsburger, secretary; Lester Lind, Y Church; Leanna Gerber, secretary; Truman Brunk, advisor; Jack Rutt, Campus Church; Ed Good, ICF; Dan Shenk, Religious Life; Loren Horst, treasurer; Jenny Hackman, secretary; Phil Mininger, vice president; Alan Leinbach, extension; Gerald L. Miller, Rec Center; Steve Lowry, extension; Linden Wenger, advisor; Nelson Martin, Jail Group. 59 ■■r. _________ Y CHURCHES 60 “When I was in school 35 years ago the YPCA had lots of prestige and influence. Everything, even the social life, was under the Y. The only other student activity of any importance was the literary society. The Young People's Christian Association is one of the last bulwarks of traditional student life. But although it still serves an important function in evangelical community witness, it no longer occupies a central position in EMC campus life. “I agree with the philosophy of the YPCA, comments a sophomore, “but my schedule is simply too full to work for the Y.“ Some students avoid the YPCA for other reasons. “I disagree with its basic philosophy, states one student. “I've been educated all my life in Mennonite circles and had Christian ser- vice pounded into my head. So last year I tried getting involved in a mountain church and I couldn't do it. It was like we thought we had all the answers and we were reaching down to pull them up to our level. 61 PROJECT CONCERN Joyce Burkholder Linda Troyer, Rhoda Lapp, Kathy Yoder Ken Herr 62 Although the Y has not changed its traditional emphasis, it is sensitive about the segment of students who no longer feel comfortable in Y activities. We don't involve a complete cross- section of students, admits a Y cabinet leader. There are lots of people who are more interest- ed in politics or peace. They feel the YPCA is missing the mark, that we're missing the real issues. Students generally concede that the YPCA could involve more people if it were to incorpo- rate a wider program of social action. But President Glen Gehman is not ready to change the Y's emphasis. We'll stick with the program CAMPUS CHURCH we have. It gives our people enough just to keep this much organized. The YPCA has a strong heritage and we serve a definite segment of the student body. I see no need to compete with the Peace Club. Ignored by apathetic and activist student alike, unsettled by an awareness of its own limited scope, the Y remains the only student organization with any kind of consistent com- munity outreach. So far, students who shun Y programs as irrelevant have failed to provide any alternatives for meaningful off-campus in- volvement. Judy Clemmer, Glenna Hershberger r Truman Brunk 63 Linda Witmer REC CENTER Gerald L. Miller 65 Dear Sir: Thank you very much for your letter. As program director of WEMC and producer of EXIT, I would like to respond to your comments. We expect very few people to enjoy all our programming, so we feature a variety of music. Unfortunately, many people who have learned to appreciate classical forms of music believe that the rhythm and beat of contemporary music is evil. Conversely, many who enjoy rock music regard the type of programming fea- tured on Moments with the Masters or Evening Meditation as boring and void of emotional depth. But beyond this, I would like to comment on your observation that the music we program on EXIT sounds like it comes from the bushes of Africa. It is true from a historical viewpoint that much of our contemporary music has its roots in Africa. The musical influences that the black man brought with him when he was uprooted from his native continent have formed a large part of what is now referred to as jazz, blues, or rock music. However, I believe there is nothing inherently evil about music which sounds like it comes from the bushes of Africa. That product of the bushes of Africa is just as valid and authentic an expression as the product of so-called civilized man. Sincerely, Eugene Kraybill Program Director 1970-71 Gene Kraybill, Program Director Dennis Kuhns, Chief Announcer 68 Tom Eigsti, Bob Weaver Sports at EMC has always occupied a precarious position. For years the school's interpretation of Christian values in education minimized inter- collegiate athletics. Most people agree that now sports at EMC is well developed for a small college. Every major men's sport except football has a varsity sched- ule. Women play intercollegiate basketball, field hockey, and volleyball. Luke Drescher, basketball coach, describes the difference since the gradual change in official attitude toward varsity sports. “We have a good philosophy of athletics now. A student can cultivate his talents in varsity sports some- what like a vocalist relies on school choirs to express his skills. What makes a person willing to submit to the tight schedules and grueling workouts that are demanded of an athlete? “Sports offers the same thing as an artist's painting or a musician's recital, says Byron Shenk, wrestling and soccer coach. “When I execute a well-timed gym- nastics motion I get a tremendous feeling of control over my body. That adds significantly to my psychological and spiritual discipline. Ken Herr, wrestler, offers another reason, “Sports fulfills my desire to be part of a team, to be needed. Even though wrestling is an individ- ual sport you have to depend on your team- mates. After a while the team starts developing as a unit. Merle Harnish Crowd support is important to varsity athletes. “A lot of the excitement of sports par- ticipation is displaying your ability to other peo- ple, claims coach Shenk. “We wrestled at one school where there were ten people in the gym. We began to feel apathetic about the match, as if no one cared who won or lost. Though school spirit is rising, athletes are sometimes disappointed by inconsistent fan support. “The crowd is wild if they think we have a fighting chance, coach Drescher notes, “but they don't help the team much when we need it most, when we're behind. Crowds are erratic, agrees Ken Herr. “During the wrestling match with Messiah we were down 17-0 and the crowd was quiet. They began to scream when we started coming back but by then we didn't need it as much because our momentum gave us incentive. But it's not all the crowd's fault. They're behind us; they just don't know what to yell. Leading cheers for a college crowd is difficult. Some students associate cheerleaders with high- school pep club mentality. Players who have been here for several years, though, say that school spirit at games has improved. Still, EMC cheerleaders sometimes feel frustrated. We don't really do much, admits freshman cheerleader June Smucker. Some of the fault is ours, but we're put down so much we begin to feel inferior. When we stand in front of the bleachers during a game kids yell at us to sit down. You can't lead cheers sitting down. 69 Frankly, I was disappointed in soccer. Our record was 4-6-1. At the very least it should have been .500, says coach Byron Shenk. I was a new coach and wasn't acquainted with the team. The schedule was also a major problem. We had 5 games in 8 days. During that time it was hard to practice and we quit working on fundamentals. We lost several games because of a lack of competence in basic skills. But coach Shenk is pleased with some things. One is the unusual team unity that developed. Another is the team's success in replacing key members who were lost last year. Shenk views the 1970 season as a good transitional year. One of the highlights of the basketball season was the Royal's defeat of host team Bridgewater College in the finals of the Rotary Holiday Tour- nament. But throughout the season the team was plagued by the familiar EMC tendency to crumble in the second half of the game. Coach Luke Drescher speaks about the problem, Sometimes the crowd and the players just give up. During the last couple of minutes of the sec- ond Messiah game we weren't hustling. We just fell apart. The players felt frustrated by what seemed to be a breakdown of communications with their coach. Drescher is excited, though, about the team's future. This year we have a new breed of younger, more competitive player who hates to lose. The phys. ed. department advertised its wres- tling matches as EMC's chief spectator sport. This year fans were not disappointed as they watched the team capture a winning season. Considering the size of our college and the non-wrestling background most of us come from, we have an impressive team, says captain Ken Herr. Herr doesn't overestimate the team's professionalism, though. We need more depth to really be first class. If someone is injured at 158 pounds or below we have no substitutes. To have a really balanced team you need 20 or 22 wrestlers. We have about half that. After they weathered inter-team problems the women's varsity basketball team improved its performance. Players began to gain confidence in themselves and each other. At the beginning we had a lot of conflict among ourselves, one member of the team explained. It took us a while but we finally learned to work together. Coach Miriam Mumaw felt the problem was in- tensified by a lack of experienced players. Some of the starters were freshmen with no JV background. Miss Mumaw pointed out, That didn't make the season 'unsuccessful.' The ma- turing that took place was, to me, the most im- portant thing. Coach Art Mullet is building a strong baseball squad. He comments, We have as good a hit- ting team as any small college but pitching is a problem. We've got four or five good pitchers but we need one outstanding hard-thrower. A good freshman pitcher who would stay four years would make a big difference. Intramurals this year attracted more students than ever before. Junior Dave Amstutz is enthu- siastic. I really believe intramurals should take top priority over varsity sports. It involves more people. The average student who pays for his schooling can only get involved athletically through intramurals. Athletics at EMC is in the midst of growing pains. The addition of a phys. ed. major will stimulate the department and at the same time increase the demand for facilities. The urgent need for a new field house must be weighed against the question of the importance of sports in a small Christian college. So far the depart- ment should be credited for not placing sports on a level that subverts the primary function of the college: education. 70 71 Don Wertz, Judy Mast Rick Shortell John Carl Shank Linford Martin, Herb Zook Coach Roland Landes, Luke Drescher 73 Marvin Horst, Marvin Holsopple Vernon Myers 74 m f Kim Boyd 75 Steve Bridge Men's Varsity Basketball Calvin Williams V Dennis Nissley SHI Ruben Padilla J.V. Coach, Art Mullet; Rodney Derstine, Ora Shetler, Randy Shore Rick Shortell Don Sharp 78 79 Basketball Managers; Kirk Martin, Dave Amstutk •I i Alan Miller Ken Herr 80 Dennis Herr Glen Metzler, Alan Miller, Coach Bryon Shenk, Luke Gascho, Don Stoltzfus 81 Mary lane Hackman Peggy Rowell, Coach Miriam Mumaw • Dennis Clemmer Carl Martin Ted Brilhart 84 Peggy Rowell, Phoebe Nafziger Gaye Berkshire, Tina Stewart Women's Junior Varsity 85 Rodney Derstine 86 Ron Sites, Merle Harnish 87 Gaye Berkshire Dee Shoup, Nina Hackman 88 Glenford Kauffman 90 Women's Recreation Association; Miriam Mumaw, Janice Mayer, Rhoda Ehst, Lorraine Sommers INTRAMURAL SPORTS 91 92 Ted Brilhart Byron Shenk Fannie Bomberger THE PEOPLE ADMINISTRATION Myron S. Augsburger, President Ira E. Miller, Dean 96 Richard A. Showalter, Assistant to the President Lester C. Shank, Registrar A. Don Augsburger, Director of Student Affairs Kenneth G. Masterman, Associate in Admissions Truman H. Brunk, Jr., Campus Pastor Margaret M. Shenk, Librarian 98 Milo D. Stahl, Director of Learning Resources _ J. David Yoder, Director of Admissions James O. Lehman, Assistant Librarian Grace I. Showalter, Librarian of Menno Simons His- torical Library and Archives 99 Frances G. Brubaker, Head Resident of Roselawn; Grace D. Jones, Dean of Women; Nancy M. Brenneman, Assistant Dean; Esther K. Longacre, Director of Women's Housing Mahlon N. Rissler, Computing Center Director John L Freed, Dean of Men; Dennis Clemmer, Assistant Dean Lynn Bontrager, Director of Food Services Henry G. Shook, Mechanical Maintenance; Reaford E. Hershberger, Buildings and Grounds. Clayton O. Shenk, Director of Financial Aid David R. Clemens, Manager of Bookstore. Merle W. Eshleman, Physician; Anna Martha Garber, Assistant Nurse; Miriam K. Kauffman, Nurse. 101 Stuart W. Showalter, Director of Public Relations, English Richard L Benner, Director of Development E. Grant Herr, Purchasing Agent; Dwight Wyse, Accountant; Elroy W. Kauffman, Accountant 102 Samuel Z. Strong, Associate in Development Robert J. Messner, Associate in Development Carl B. Harman, Alumni Relations and Development Norman H. Derstine, Director of Church Relations 103 FACULTY Harold H. Good, New Testament Language and Literature David Janzen, Philosophy Auburn Boyers, Bible Linden M. Wenger, Philosophy 104 BIBLE AND PHILOSOPHY Samuel E. Miller, Spanish Ernest G. Gehman, German LANGUAGE, LITERATURE AND THE FINE ARTS Lois B. Bowman, German Samuel J. Espinoza, Spanish Elvin V. Snyder, Spanish 105 Emery Yoder, French ). Mark Stauffer, Music Katherine C. Anderson, Music The music department is just about holding its own. It has always been strong in vocal, especially church music. In the past, students who wanted serious experience with in- strumental music simply transferred out, if they came at all. Things are slowly changing. Now the department offers instrumental instruction, a music education major, and the chance to play in a twenty-five member orchestra. The late Earl Maust laid the groundwork for the music education program. Professor Ira Zook talks about the changes, The choice between an instrumental and a vocal emphasis is a false one. No college can afford to ignore either area. We're not doing anything unique. We're just catching up. About EMC's historical aversion to in- struments: The uniqueness of the music department here should be that the teachers are committed Christians, not that we teach only 'our own kind' of music. Ira T. Zook, Music 106 Fay M. Garber, Music EMC's Art Department has never had the facilities and curriculum to attract real artists. Until now, it has been chief- ly concerned with providing courses for students who enjoy art, but whose primary interests lie in other dis- ciplines. First year professor Stanley Kaufman is an artist. He wants to construct the department to attract other artists. Next year we will expand to an eight- unit curriculum, Kaufman speculates. We hope to offer the aspiring art major a sound two-year program which would enable him to transfer and con- tinue work toward an art degree. The revised curriculum features two courses in sculpture and an advanced course in painting. In addition, new courses in basic design and basic draw- ing will be required as prerequisites for all advanced study, separating the serious student from the novice. Larry S. Landis, Music Amos F. Burkholder Stanley A. Kaufman, Art 107 Hubert R. Pellman, English Paul Schrock, English 108 James R. Bomberger, English Jay B. Landis, English Anna M. Frey, English J. Herbert Martin, English 109 SOCIAL SCIENCE L Arlene Sitler, Social Science The surprising thing is you don't have to go very far to find it. There are lots of shacks right along route 33. This year social work students are trying to do more than just study about problems like poverty, delinquency, and mental illness. Under a three-course social work program they are as- signed to one of ten agencies for supervised field work one day a week. Among the possibili- ties: a mental hospital, rehabilitation center, detention home, public welfare agency, and county visiting teacher plan. With the approval of the program EMC has become an associate member of the Council on Social Work Education. Harold E. Huber, Sociology 110 Betty lane Anderson, Political Science Gerald R. Brunk, History Shantz— You better watch! Do they have a police force? Otto— Those guys are sorta dirty over there. They might have one. Mast— Who are they going to arrest? Me? Otto— The first person they'd try to arrest is the head of the media and wipe out his assets. Mast— Good. As soon as they arrest the media I think I can wipe out their police force. But that's screwing our whole soci- ety! I hope they don't have a police force. Otto— I don't think they do. I don't think they have the intelligence. Mast— I think we ought to work on our hu- manitarian interests. See they're Christians, so we can make them give their subsistence tickets to our poor people. Shantz— If you're so humanitarian, how come you're killing so many people? Mast— We aren't—yet. That has to be worked out. Sociology 202 students playing Simulated Society game. ill W. Donald Shirk, Business Administration John H. Krall, Economics Grant M. Stoltzfus, Church History Miriam L. Weaver, Business Mildred Graybill, Business Education 112 NATURAL SCIENCE AND MATHEMATICS Wilmer R. Lehman, Mathematics John D. Stahl, Chemistry Millard E. Showalter, Mathematics Donald C. Miller, Mathematics 113 Though EMC has offered ecology courses for years, the present ecological crisis has forced the natural science department to expand its en- vironmental science curriculum. The depart- ment hopes to implement a strong pilot pro- gram geared to field work in local areas. Two curriculum additions are in store. The first is a course in applied ecology to be offered during the three-week inter-term immediately following spring graduation. Students will spend as much as six hours a day canvassing the area and noting local environmental conditions. We want to become directly involved in actual cases of air and water pollution, Dr. Kenton Brubaker speculates, but to remain effective, we'll have to stress political sensitivity to power groups from each side of the ecological question. A second change is the expansion of this year's course in ecology to two units. The first is a general orientation to ecological priorities; the second, a course for natural science majors in advanced techniques in environmental biology. The study of ecology as the synthesis of all the disciplines of natural science takes a permanent place in the curriculum. Even if the national mood of awareness slacks off, claims Dr. Brubaker, we biologists are not going to for- get. : r J. Mark Brubaker, Biology D. Ralph Hostetter, Biology, Curator of Museum Kenton K. Brubaker, Biology Glenn M. Kauffman, Chemistry L !1M.....M John L Horst, Physics Homer A. Mumaw, Biology 115 I Joseph W. Mast, Physics A. Clair Mellinger, Biology Charles W. Moyer, Natural Science Mary E. Schrag, Home Economics Catherine R. Mumaw, Home Economics Mary Emma S. Eby, Home Economics 117 Nursing is one of the most highly pressured cur- riculums at the college. Beyond their fairly rigid academic requirements, students must cope with the serious demands of on-the-job hospital training. Dr. Vida Jane Huber, department chair- man, explains, “They are forced to be aware of their relationships to patients and to make major career adjustments—something most students don't face until after graduation. This year, after submitting to careful review from without and rigorous self-study from within, the department gained accreditation from the National League for Nursing. The decision may have been helped by the impres- sive record of last year's nursing graduates (EMC's first) all of whom passed their state board examinations. Mary Ethel Heatwole, Home Economics Norma R. Dickerson, Nursing Vida Jane Huber, Nursing 118 V E. Grace Shenk, Nursing Mamie M. Mellinger, Nursing Beryl H. Brubaker, Nursing Verna M. Yeager, Kuhns; Nursing Alta B. Weaver, Olive C 119 EDUCATION AND PSYCHOLOGY John Henry Hess, Jr., Psychology Talk to Dr. John Henry Hess of the psychology department and you will find a man who is con- cerned about individualized instruction. He is disturbed about de-personalized classrooms which force students, regardless of ability, to ad- vance at the same rate. The whole educational system is geared to the average student's progress, claims Dr. Hess. Yet we know that the greatest variance in learning is speed of mastery. The department has now adopted the Independent Learning Sys- tem (ILS) for General Psychology, which stresses active participation, immediate feedback, and the use of small sequential steps. Each student progresses through the units (sub-divided into modules) by completing exercises and passing tests at his her own pace. ILS requires more in- dividual initiative, but at the same time gener- ates a greater feeling of achievement. A key ad- vantage is the use of proctors who are student Arlene R. May, Psychology peers. They help grade tests and give personal- ized tutoring to students who had to re-test. To date, most educational innovations have resulted in what amounts to improved display techniques, such as the use of overhead projec- tors, educational TV, etc., or in efforts to increase student participation, such as discus- sion groups, field work, or laboratory work. States Hess; ILS is the only real basic innova- tion in 200 years of education. We want to be part of it. 1J0 J. Lester Brubaker, Education A. Arlene Bumbaugh, Education Sanford G. Shetler, Psychology 121 Esther K. Lehman, Education Elsie E. Lehman, Education Learning math can be fun. Ask any fourth grader at McGaheysville Elementary School who has met the wooden man with removable fingers or learned to add by tallying the score of a miniature basketball game. Dr. Esther Lehman is responsible for this unique plan of practical professional orienta- tion. Not to be confused with student teaching, Dr. Lehman's plan sends students out to teach a particular subject (math, reading, etc.) and to relate on an individual, not a classroom basis. The students report notable improvement in their pupil's performances. But amid the general enthusiasm probably no one feels more enriched than the EMC students themselves, whose own future performance in elementary education will benefit from the experience. 122 Allen K. Yoder, Education Arthur L Mullet, Physical Education Roland G. Landis, Physical Education Byron S. Shenk, Physical Education 123 Margaret M. Gehman, Physical Education Miriam L. Mumaw, Physical Education Luke M. Drescher, Physical Education f 124 Sophomore IDS Gen Ed is dead. Both teachers and students were frustrated with General Education's unspecific course material. Team teachers frequently found themselves assigned to lecture on topics entirely outside their fields, and students found the narrow scope of some courses a disappointment. EMC's fledgling seven-course core curriculum has undergone extensive changes and emerged as Interdisciplinary Studies. IDS faces an uphill fight against large, impersonal classes and primarily negative associations with Gen Ed. The staff has begun the battle by balancing academic representation on teams and revising course content to include all basic liberal arts material. 125 Following is a compilation of five individual conversations with selected faculty members. The interviews did not take place simultaneously. Should a Christian teacher's course content differ from that of a non-Christian? Dr. Kenton K. Brubaker: In the realm of molecular theory it is hard to pinpoint any Christian perspective. However, in the realm of speculation in science we try to consider the Christian faith standpoint. Very basically my role at EMC is to live the Christian life both in and out of class. Dr. John H. Hess: In collecting information in my field it makes absolutely no difference whether I'm a Christian or an atheist. It does make a difference what I think should be done with the knowledge. In other words when I design an experiment it doesn't matter whether I allude to Christ or Buddha. But what I do with what I discover in that experiment is a question of values. The math department always has a problem when people bring up this question about how Christian mathematicians differ from other mathematicians. Two plus two equals four whether you're an atheist or a Christian. Dr. James R. Bomberger: I think EMC is a Christian institution because it has a committed faculty, not because we start classes with prayer, or mention Christ once a day or even once a week or term, but because the influence of our lives comes through. The students can see people who have achieved beyond the superficial level intellectually and yet have not lost their faith. As a church in- stitution we meet students in cultural upheaval who are questioning their traditional faith. We can show that one can shift cultural patterns without losing faith. In what areas do faculty and administrative interests conflict? Brubaker: There is a conflict in the basic nature of the two bodies. One balances the budget, main- tains public relations and the school image, a more conservative role. The other emphasizes exper- imental and free approaches. But each recognizes the other's role. It is a healthy conflict. Dr. Grant M. Stoltzfus: On the whole at EMC, you can generally get a hearing. There are times when the administration might have checked more completely with the faculty than they did. One example is the direction we take in the kind of speakers we have. Take chapel for instance. I think there are a number of topics or current issues that we need to look at. Take the matter of violence. We have some obligation here. Take the matter of world population. We have something to say as Christians about that. One could list several other things. The administration listens to what you have to say. Sometimes they implement it—sometimes they don't. Hess: Some faculty members think we should bring to the campus more of what I've heard called 'evangelical heavy weights'—whatever they are. And then there are others who, I think, are disap- pointed because we are not exposed to some of the very strong, pervasive viewpoints in our soci- ety today, no matter how much we disagree with them. If we aren't familiar with them, if we don't know what the people are advocating, how can we possibly make any rational statements about the validity of their claims or their viewpoints. The present policy contradicts a basic psychological principle. If you wish to have someone hold to a set of beliefs the best strategy is to present the opposite set of beliefs when you have support for yours. You have to raise the other position and give it a fair hearing, then marshall the evidence that your Christianity is superior. Dr. G. Irvin Lehman: There's always an open door to the President and Dean. I have no frustration at this school. I get it all resolved. Some teachers have problems with work loads and salaries. It's a question of whether we want to view ourselves in a spirit of competition or as brothers committed to a common task. When people don't get the answer they want, they tend to feel they aren't heard but they are. We operate as a brotherhood. 126 FACULTY VOICE Do you see a need for a separate faculty recommending body? Hess: Yes, last year there was some difficulty in communication between faculty and administra- tion. Technically there are members on various administrative committees who come from the fac- ulty, but their function as a representative group was never clarified because the faculty never got together as a separate group. So an ad hoc committee was formed last year that dealt with faculty grievances. Now there is provision made for the faculty to meet whenever they desire, indepen- dent of the administration. I don't know whether they will use it. I do think there is a kind of facul- ty identity. They feel like they have grievances and they have no strong man to represent them. The things they would meet together for have to do with processes for communication with ad- ministration on questions like funding which they couldn't feel free to discuss, at least preliminari- ly, with the administration present. Lehman: I can't imagine what a faculty-representative group would accomplish. The first result would be an awareness of our inadequacies to deal with problems. There'd be more confusion and more tendency toward splinter groups developing. You don't run a brotherhood with power blocs. I think every teacher should be interested in the larger picture but not everyone can run the school. A person who wants to get in the administration should apply for that job. Does teaching at EMC relieve you of pressure to research and publish? Hess: As far as publishing goes—no, I don't think there's much emphasis on publishing at all. We have a research committee, but their definition of research is rather restricted. All types of research should be fostered or at least given consideration. The criteria that existed for good research proj- ects, when I came at least, cut out in a priori fashion the kind of research that I was doing. My own research has to be done at my own initiative through funds that somehow I've drummed up or captured from somewhere. Lehman: Research? How can I compete with a person who has only one or two classes per semester and who gets twice as much money as me? Brubaker: Yes, there is relief from academic pressure, but it's not good. In a small school that is out of the research setting, one gets a bit lazy. We have lost as many good faculty members on this point as on low salaries. There are people who would come here and work on a low salary if pro- fessionally they could work up to their potential in research. Stoltzfus: No, I don't think it does. The college encourages us to publish and occasionally appro- priates money for this. It may be they don't push it as hard as some places, but the 'publish or perish' idea sometimes leads to some unfortunate things too, when a professor is more interested in publishing than in teaching. For him students become an annoyance. And the best publishers aren't always the best teachers. Are EMC faculty members underpaid? Lehman: Compared to Ivy League and state universities, we are paid less; compared to some de- nominational colleges of the same size, we are paid more. The whole purpose of salary is to provide for families' needs. I don't know of any faculty member who is really suffering. We should be ready to sacrifice, not compare ourselves to the Ivy League. Being a Christian teacher commit- ted to a cause you can't expect surplus money to play with. If you're serving as a missionary abroad you don't expect $2500 surplus to invest in stocks. We can't either. Brubaker: I think faculty members are underpaid in light of national professional standards. But the question to be raised is, 'In terms of the Kingdom of God, can a person be underpaid?' If a fac- ulty member does not have the resources to be a member of upper-middle class, does the school suffer? In the past five years we haven't lost too many people because of low pay, but I have my fingers crossed for the next five years. SENIORS i Melvin L. Lehman, English; President Althea M. Diller, Elementary Education; Secretary ! Rhoda M. Ehst, Elementary Education Treasurer 129 130 i. Marcia F. Beachy, Elementary Education Catherine W. Batchelor, Elementary Education Patsy R. Barnhart, English Elnore M. Birkey, Elementary Education Carolyn L. Blosser, Sociology 132 Fannie L. Bomberger, Nursing Patricia F. Bontrager, Sociology Kim E. Boyd, Biology R. Louise Brubaker, Elementary Education Louisa A. Brunk, Psychology James E. Bowen, Business Administration Marlene J. Buller, Psychology Caroline Bustos, Home Economics Education Jo Ann Burkholder, Nursing Judith IM. Clemmer, Sociology Someone is singing for us. Sister birds are singing for us. Someone is smiling upon us. Brother sun is smiling upon us. Someone is loving us. Father, the Almighty is loving us. —Hiroshi Mine William H. Cornell, Bible, Foreign Language Tesfatsion Dalellew, History, Bible John P. Claude, Foreign Language, Sociology William A. Craun, Biology Thanh Thi Dang, Natural Science Mary Ethel Coffey, Elementary Education Ronald R. Diehl, Business Administration P ► I 'I 139 Why does time go a-prouncing by I don't like things that prounce by Lord Jesus don't prounce by or what will I do. Beth L. Eby, Home Economics Lee E. Early, Business Administration Ruby M. Diener, Sociology Mary Kay Dietzel, Elementary Education Robert N. Eby, English L. Kenneth Fellenbaum, History Elias E. George, History Glen D. Gehman, Mathematics 142 Janet C. Fisher, Nursing Marlene L. Gentzler, History 143 Galen G. Groff, Biology 144 Linda L. Graham, Nursing Grace H. Guntz, Elementary Education i-- Anthony D. Handrich, English Margaret R. Gingrich, Sociology fm Edwin L. Good, Physics Louise K. Gehman, Elementary Education 145 October fourteen walking alone now and then the pieces do fit —Bruce Yoder Merle D. Harnish, Mathematics Owen W. Heatwole, English Glenna J. Hershberger, Elementary Education 146 Marvin S. Horst, Mathematics Norma S. Horst, Elementary Education Loren E. Horst, Sociology, Psychology Alvin M. Huyard, History U9 C. Stuart Horst, Sociology Titus F. Kauffman, Bible 150 J. Lloyd Kauffman, Music John T. Kanagy, History Peter M. Kalen, History 151 Edith P. Kaufman, Nursing Ardiss J. Kennel, Home Economics Education Julia A. Kaufman, Sociology 152 Carol L. King, Nursing Russel W. Kennel, Business Administration What is it about a dry mouth that speaks of Despair absence of salivary salvation sweet decay toward death What is it about a dry mouth that Damns? 153 iHLU Marie E. Kennel, Elementary Education Sharon J. Kurtz, Sociology 155 Dennis R. Kuhns, Psychology Kochu K. Koshy, Bible 156 John C. Lazer, Sociology Wayne D. Lawton, Bible Charles L. Leatherman, Sociology 157 Stephen R. Lowry, Mathematics, Sociology Paul W. Liechty, Mathematics Lester L. Lind, Biology 158 Wayne H. Longenecker, Biology Rachel E. Lehman, English And is today even Saturday?— Congratulations on a thrifty weeklet! Hasn't it just budded with mini-splendors? Hasn't it just shown what mortal existence is all about— Hasn't it just— And there is one less to go. 159 —Elma Ritchie Judith Nafziger Martin, Sociology Kenneth E. Martin, Sociology Janet A. Martin, Nursing Gerald W. Meek, Sociology 160 ¥ Janice F. Mayer, Elementary Education Christine C. Mast, Elementary Education Judith A. Mast, Sociology Linford J. Martin, Sociology 161 Carolyn J. Miller, Nursing Marlene K. Moore, Nursing Samuel L. Miller, Chemistry 162 Robert E. Musser, Bible, Sociology w Kristina L. Mast, English J. Vernon Myers, Bible, Sociology Rebecca Hofstetter Myers, Elementary Education 163 Joyce A. Nickey, Home Economics Education Ralph E. Myers Jr., Bible Dennis D. Nissley, Psychology 164 Gary N. Nussbaum, Bible Louise E. Nolt, Elementary Education Charles J. Nafziger, Nursing 165 Anna M. Oyer, Elementary Education John H. Otto, History 166 Raymond E. Ressler, Business Administration 167 William H. Randolph II, Social Science Linda K. Reinford, Nursing ) It's mysterious how a quarter Given in faith Can transform itself to ice cream For us to share. —Dan Lehman Dennis G. Rohrer, Biology Shirley E. Roth, Nursing 168 Rose Mary Ross, Nursing Barbara G. Roth, Bible, Sociology Jeries A. Rihani, Chemistry Roger D. Rheinheimer, Psychology Miriam J. Rheinheimer, Sociology 170 Donna M. Schultz, Mathematics Linda S. Rose, Nursing 171 William A. Salyers Jr., Business Education Barbara L. Schrock, Nursing Norma J. Shantz, Bible 172 Harry M. Seiders, Sociology Randall E. Shank, English John Carl Shenk, Music Education 173 Louise Y. Shirk, Foreign Language Sharon M. Showaiter, Home Economics Education 174 Doris M. Showaiter, Nursing 175 Rachel S. Snavely, Elementary Education Julia E. Stoltzfus, Nursing Jean Ranck Stoltzfus, Home Economics 176 Beverly S. Steffy, Sociology Joyce E. Stauffer, Sociology Patricia M. Stanley, Nursing, Psychology Donald L. Stoltzfus, Sociology 177 Ruth C. Stoltzfus, Social Science Paul H. Stoltzfus, Bible, Social Science 178 Roland E. Stutzman, Biology Beverly A. Stutzman, Home Economics John S. Weber, History, Social Science Tues., Oct. 7 This day fall-cool but not cold, windy enough to tempt you to run against it, to throw your head back to somehow laugh, But the feeling is too strong and the tears too close. Feelings bear no names, no places, no particulars, Just the wind, the sky, the laughter and tears tight inside. —Tina Mast 179 Lowell E. Ulrich, Bible, Business Administration Omar Z. Stoltzfus, Social Science Catherine R. Stoltzfus, Elementary Education Esther N. Weaver, Elementary Education Wendy K. Walker, Psychology Thomas Verghese, Business Administration 181 Arden Thiessen, Bible Ellen K. Yoder, Nursing 182 Catherine L. Witmer, Nursing Lois E. Weber, Elementary Education Esther V. Witmer, Sociology Bruce A. Yoder, English Glenn Yoder, Foreign Language Jonalix N. Wyse, Home Economics Education Allen J. Wyse, Mathematics 183 Karen S. Beachy Anna Belle Deal Carl S. Fulk P. David Glanzer Linda S. Hash Mildred T. Lam L. James Penner Glen Showalter Mary Jo Smith Joanna Vile Christon A. Zirkle 184 Phil Mininger JUNIORS ■ Michael Akers Victor Alger David Amstutz Hiroko Asai Beverly Baker Larry Beachey Janet Beckler Anne Bomberger Donald Bomberger; bus. mgr. James E. Bowman Janet Breneman Jerry Breneman Peggy Briggs Velma Brubaker Donald Bucher; pres. Mary Beth Bucher Eldon Burkholder Sylvia Butcher Machiko Chiba Philip Cipriano Dean Clemmer Dennis Clemmer Rose Marie Cline Wiley Craig Sylvia Crawford 186 Joe Goidfus Mark Derstine Sharon Derstine Donald Detweiler Clen Diehl Laura Dorsey Jon Dutcher Rosemary Eash Miriam Eberly Thomas Eigsti Clyde Espigh Beri Camber Wayne Cascho Clara Cehman Leanna Gerber Lee Cingerich 187 Lela Mae Coering Donald Good Thomas Griner Judith Hall Leo Heatwole Bonita Heishman Kenneth Helmuth Kenneth Herr Rebecca Hershberger Irvin Hershey Deborah Hess; Sec. M. Kate Hess Rachel Hess Susan Hess Esther Horst Gerald Miller, Deryl Kennel 188 Glenford Kauffman Judy Keaton Martha Keener Roy Keller Deryl Kennel Rachel Kennel C. John Kerstetter Carol Kesner Grace Kuhns Rhoda Lapp Paul Leaman Eugene Leffel Barb Smucker Daniel Lehman Kathleen Fe Lehman Nelson Lehman Ronald Lehman Marlin Lichti Allen Liechty Glen Litwiller Paul T. Livengood David Longacre Gerald Martin R. Larry Martin Ruth Martin Harry J. Mast Robert Maust K. Marlene Metzler 189 If you smile at me I will understand 'Cause that is something Everybody Everywhere Does in the same language —Dave Crosby Sharon Metzler Alan Miller Gerald E. Miller; V. Pres. Gerald L. Miller Janice Miller Joseph Miller Karen D. Miller Philip Mininger Ruth Ann Mininger Ruth Morris Randall Moyers James Mullet Robert Myers Kenneth Nafziger Phoebe Nafziger Chi Van Nguyen Victoria Ogbonna Jane Ott Emily Overholt Garald Overholt Ruben Padilla Betty Peachey Merle Reinford Ruth Ann Reinford Janice Riegsecker 190 Machiko Chiba Judith Risser Miriam Ropp Gloria Rutt John Rutt Ruth Ann Rutt Tuomah Sahawneh Omoro Sango Pauline Schlegel Louanne Schmitt Carole Schrock Carolyn See Diane Selzer Norma Shank Ivan Shantz Mary Lynn Shearer Eileen Shellenberger Carolyn Showalter Louise Showalter Miriam Siegrist Lloyd Slabach Paula Slaubaugh Barbara Smucker Milo Stauffer Larry Steele 191 Lee Stoltzfus Nora Stoltzfus Alice Strickler Orpha Tice Lois Voegtlin Elaine Warfel Dorothy Weaver Kathryn Weaver Robert Weaver Susan Weaver Harold Wells Joyce Wenger Alvin Wengerd E. Paul Williams Sanford Wyse Carolyn Voder; treas. Gretchen Yoder Judith K. Voder Judith L. Yoder Lois Yoder Rachel Yoder Ralph Yoder lla Mae Zimmerman Jean Zook Omar Zook Phyllis Augsburger Carolyn Baker K. Steven Baugher James Bontrager Bernard Bowman Ethel Bucher Kenneth Covelens Douglas Croxton Faith Dobbs Thomas Evans David Fisher Stephen Fitzgerald Joseph Goldfus Gary Heatwole John Hershberger Chester Kauffman Lois M. King Robert Landes Alan Leinbach Darryl Mizer James Rhodes Rebecca Shifflett Roger Shifflette Alan Shirkey Mark Sours Karl Stoltzfus Kenneth Stoltzfus Douglas Stover Leon Stutzman Harold Webster Mary Sue Yoder Joyce Zimmerman 192 Norene Huber ■ gp % ■' :' r. : . % ?' ■ vi , Mi.- mBMj Wanda Alger Frances Beachy Marilyn Beachy Thelma Beidler L. Vermeil Belton Harold Bergey; pres. David Birky Duane Bishop James Blosser John Bomberger’ Herman Bontrager Judith Brenneman Timothy Brenneman Dale Brubaker David Brunk Victor Buckwalter Glenda Burkholder Jon Cutrell Charmayne Denlinger Velma Denlinger Rachel Derstein Anne Derstine Anna Louise Detweiler Carol Dietzel Viola Dorsch Robert Eberly Roland England Kathleen Eshleman Mark Ewing Karen Fansler Kathy Fisher Sharon Frederick Jeanelle Garges Sheila Garnand Timothy Gascho David Gehman 194 Sallie Gehman Dennis Glanzer Luke Good Judith Grosh Stephen Hackman Joseph Hamlett Pamela Handrich Janet Harder Ramsumair Harry Dorothy Hartman Vernon Heacock Donna Heatwole Larry Herr June Hershberger Merlin Hershberger Clair Hershey Bonita Hertzler Beulah Hess Jean Hess Christine Hilty Larry Hockman David Hooley Lester Hoover Ruth Hoover Roland Horst Gretchen Hostetter Norene Huber John Jantzi Larry Jantzi Ruth Johnson Irene Kanagy Paul Kanagy Diane Kandel Keith Kandel Kenneth Kandel Dennis Kauffman 195 Sharon Frederick, Dennis Showalter Gerald Kauffman Mary Ellen Kaufman Judith Keener Lois Kennel Daniel King Carolyn Kipfer James Krabill Rosemary Kratzer David Kraybill Lloyd Kuhns Wesley Lambert Freida Lambright Christine Landis Linda Lefever Galen Lehman Susanna Leid Delores Long' Dianne Longenecker 196 Lois Lyndaker Gail Martin Gary Martin Jason Martin Jay Martin Margaret Martin Ronald Martin Daryl Mast Rhoda Mast Robert Mast Shirley Mast Charles Mathias Mary Jane McAllister Lois Mest Ruth Anne Meyers Diane Miller Eldon Miller Jay Miller Susan Miller Karen Moshier Darlis Moyer Eileen Moyer’ Marilyn Nafziger Rose Neer Jeanette Neff; treas. Jeanette Neuenschwander; sec. Jeanette Noll Philip Nyce James Olimo Marlene Peachey Joy Peifer Vera Plank Forest Porter Marilyn Raber Nevin Ranck Herbert Reed 197 Hey, Joe Where are you goin With your eyes closed Can't you tell You're goin any way the wind blows . . . —Johnny Rivers Irene Reimer Glenn Reinford Dale Ressler Elma Ritchie Ruth Rosenberger Glenda Rowell Janis Rutt; v. pres. Carol Sue Sauder Jay Sauder Lee Schmucker Elaine Schoch Leah Schrock David Shank Steven Shenk Ora Shetler Dennis Showalter Welby Showalter Janet Slagell Jacquelyn Smith Lorraine Sommers John Daniel Stahl John Stauffer Esther Steckle Joanna Steckley David Stoltzfus Dwight Stoltzfus Robert Stoltzfus Beth Swartley Sharon Swartz John Swope 198 Victor Buckwalter Marcella Tams Roger Taylor Karen Thomas Larry Trost Thelma Voegtlin Daniel Walter Vicki Weatherholtz Brenda Weaver Darrell Weaver Ellen Weaver Erma Weaver Harlan Weaver Joyce Weaver Lamar Weaver Dorothy Webster Chester Wenger Earl Wenger Lowell Wenger 199 Linda Wenger Louise Wenger Ruth Wenger Samuel Wenger Donald Wertz Daryl Witmer Linda Witmer Lois Jean Witmer Dexter Wyse Carol Yoder Chris Yoder Debra Yoder Duane Yoder John Yoder June Yoder Marcia Yoder Martha Yoder Mary Ellen Yoder Richard Yoder; bus. mgr. Victor Yoder Wanda Yoder William Yoder Marcia Yousey Bernice Zehr Donna Zehr Anna Zeiset Barbara Zook J. Irvin Zook Leander Zook Penni Zuercher Nancy Dean Raymond Denlinger Ralph Dewitt Jr. Dennis Herr Dale Jones Ellen Kennel Lloyd Miller Roger Miller Daniel Newberry Wilmer Otto Barbara Paul Dwight Peachey Faye Rheinheimer Galen Rhodes Eugene Risser Wesley Ross Glen Sell Ruth Shank Ahmad Sharif Ronald Sites Saraja Thomas Lawrence Thompson Bruce Tutt Calvin Williams Cheryl Yoder Kenneth Zehr David Zimmerman ‘Two Year Graduates 200 Dave Schrock FRESHMEN Connie Alderfer Raymond Alderfer Manuel Almarode Virginia Armentrout Evelyn Atkinson John Augsburger Joyce Augsburger Ruth Ann Augsburger Carol Bare Karen Bare Margaret Barte Elverne Bauman Virginia Beachy Barbara Beam Iris Beckler Omar Beiler; bus. mgr. Beverly Benner Gaye Berkshire Carolyn Birkey Susanne Bomberger Ronald Branch Barbara Brenneman James Brenneman Lois Brenneman Marilyn Brenneman Stephen Bridge Ted Brilhart Alta Brubaker Maher Bsiso David Buchanan David Bucher Rachel Bucher Robert Buckwalter Deborah Bumbaugh Joy Burkholder Joyce Burkholder June Burkholder Lynda Byler Michael Clem W. Brent Clemens Kenneth Clemmer Claudia Cole 202 Gloria Constantin joetta Culp Cindee Curtis Brenda Derstine Rodney Derstine James Dorsch Aden Frey David Dutcher Carol Eby Helen Eby James Eby Jane Eicher Hamilton Emery III Charles Emswiler Sharon Fitzpatrick Renee Fleming Ruth Flory Mark Fly Ray Frederick Marcus Freed Aden Frey Kathy Frey Carol Funkhouser Arthur Gachugi Marian Camber Esther Cascho June Cascho Luke Gascho Rachel Gehman Shirley Ceissinger Marlene Cnagey 203 Howard Good Kathleen Good Marlin Good Rodney Goshow Dianna Griffin Naomi Grove Gary Guardacosta Galen Guengerich Mary Jane Hackman Nina Hackman Rachel Harder Ted Hartman Arlene Hartzler Sharon Hatter Eldon Heatwole Patricia Heatwole Gerald Heavener David Heebner Ronald Helmuth Benuel Hershberger Leon Hershberger Linda Hershberger Myrna Heshberger Kathryn Hertzler Carl Hess Dorothy Hess 204 Jane Hochstetler Sue Holsopple Mary Fay Hoover Adelle Horst George Hostetler Karen Houser Marcia Hunsecker Sylvester Huston Ruth Kanagy Barbara Kauffman Carolyn Kaufman Charles Kaufman J. Edwin Keens Sheila Kelly Ophie Kier Evelyn King Feme King James King Jewell King John King Dallas Kipfer Randall Kiser Aaron Kolb Frederic Kolb Harold Kornhaus Mary Jean Kraybill 205 Deborah Krehbiel Jean Landis Thelma Lantz Edith Layman Marian Leaman Cheryl Leatherman Ceorge Lehman Gloria Lehman Kathleen Lehman Rebecca Lehman Robert Lind Nancy Litwiller Dale Long Verna Long Linda Longenecker Nancy Longenecker Philip Loux Phyllis Magal Joan Martens Betty Lou Martin; treas. J. David Martin Jane Martin Joyce Martin Kirk Martin Margie Maust A. Gail Meyers Phyllis Meyers Beverly Miller Brenda Miller Elinor Miller Jean E. Miller Jean M. Miller Kathy Miller Linda Miller Miriam Miller Phillip Miller David Mininger Robert Mishler Brenda Moser Kathleen Moshier Rose Ann Moyer T. Lee Moyer 206 Beverly Myers Freida Myers Rodney Nafziger David Neer Herbert Noll Marjorie Nussbaum Janet Nwankwo Kathleen Nyce Barbara Brenneman Margaret Oswald A. Eugene Otto Ida Reinford Mary Rensen George Richards Ardis Riegsecker Benjamin Risser Wenonah Ritchie Janell Roggie Sharon Rohrer Gene Ross; pres. Peggy Rowell Carol Ann Sauder Nancy Sauder W. Ronald Sauder 207 Jerrel Shank Miriam Shank Susie Bomberger Donald Sharp Nancy Sharp Gloria Shenk Nelson Shenk Hilda Shirk Randall Shore Anita Short; sec. Dolores Shoup Eileen Showalter Audrey Siegrist Connie Sue Slagell Lila Slaubaugh Ray Smith June Smucker Feryl Souder Richard Speers Richard Steiner Tina Stewart Robert Stuckey Lowell Stutzman Mervin Stutzman Sharon Summer Duane Swartley Lyle Swartz 208 We can't return We can only look Behind from where we came —Joni Mitchell Glen Swartzendruber O. Daniel Swartzendruber James Swartzendruber Linda Troyer Gary Tusing Loretta Umble Rosetta Unternahrer Susan Walters Cheryl Weaver Peter Weaver Philip Weber Carol Wenger Shirley Western Benjamin Wheelbarger Patrina Widrick Ellen Witmer Glenn Wyble Dale Voder Daniel Yoder David Voder Gerald L. Yoder Jerold A. Yoder Kathryn P. Yoder Kathy S. Yoder Keith Yoder Peggy Yoder Wanda R. Yoder Wendell Yoder Willard Yoder Eva Yousey Francis Zehr Ruth Ann Ziegler Herbert Zook Madonna Zook Melinda Zook Rose Marie Zook Patricia Baer Cindy Boyer Lewis Brown Albran Charles Karin Clemmer Eunice Doutrich Thomas Dove Jay Garber Orie Harrison Samuel Hess Darryl Jackson Carla Janzen James Johnson Esther Keim Olen Landes Elwin Martin Maryanna Mast Andrew Milazzo Renee Minnich Randall Moyer Gladys Nolt Richard Ross George Ryscuck Nicholas Shortell Brian Stoltzfus Ronald Stutzman Rhoda Trost Garnett Whetzel Gene Williams Gebre Wondimu Norman Zimmerman 210 Dr. George R. Brunk I NARY Jonas Bontrager, Cliff Miller We seek a balance between scholarship and warm-hearted evangelism. At a time when seminaries tend to have scholarship without heart warmth, we strive for a combination of head and heart. According to Dr. George R. Brunk, Dean of Eastern Mennonite Seminary, this balance sums up the uniqueness of his insti- tution. EMS stands squarely in the tradition of educating students for the ministry. We do not deny that other forms of ministry are legiti- mate, states Dean Brunk, but as long as churches are crying for men to fill their pulpits, this is our focus. Surging enthusiasm for the seminary is but- tressed by a solid program of expansion. This year for the first time EMS boasts its own full- time faculty and offers its complete curriculum to a record-breaking 28 full-time students. Classes, offices, and a small chapel are all housed in a newly renovated building that also contains the J.B. Smith library. EMS has reason to be ambitious. It wants to gain accreditation as an associate member of the American Association of Theological Seminaries. Dean Brunk hopes to meet the requirements for full membership, perhaps within the next five years. He also hopes to enroll more students—a goal that drives him increasingly toward non-Mennonite circles for support of fundamental evangelism. Since the nearest theological seminaries are in Richmond and Washington, EMS, if accredited, could capitalize on its strategic location to serve Methodists, Brethern, and other denominations. Like any person or institution entering a phase of rapid growth, EMS must make crucial deci- sions about its future. Should it become a center for Anabaptist studies and other legitimate forms of ministry, pastoral and non-pastoral? If not, will it be tempted to minimize its heritage in order to serve evangelicals at large? Could Mennonite doctrines of non-conformity, simplic- ity, and non-resistance be de-emphasized in the rush to recruit non-Mennonite students? EMS must answer these and other questions before it can pinpoint its direction. So far, it has been courageous in moving forward at a time when well-established theological seminaries are gasping for breath. 212 John R. Mumaw, Professor of Christian Education Chester K. Lehman; Professor of Theology G. Irvin Lehman Professor of Old Testament Language and Literature 213 SENIORS Ivan R. Lind, Associate Professor in Old Testament, (December 12, 1910- November 20, 1970), Harold Stoltzfus Harvey Chupp Victor A. Dorsch Daniel A. Hoopert K. E. Mathew Daniel I. Mtoka John C. Sawyer 214 MIDDLERS Robert E. Alley David K. Gerber David E Goodrum Dong Keun Lee George R. Brunk; Dean, Professor of Practical Theology 215 Thomas E. Auker Harold F. Davenport Dorothy M. Harnish C. Santana Krishnan Glenn D. Metzler Clifford C. Miller ( (ames K. Stauffer Elton R. Horst JUNIORS Not Pictured Jonas L. Borntrager Ronald L. David Samuel J. Espinoza Dennis L. Hatter Alvin C. Kanagy Elton L. Kauffman A. Ross Lillard Richard E. Lofgren Hiroshi Mine Stephen S. Renalds Harold S. Stoltzfus 216 GO ALL ELECTRIC THE FLAMELESS ELECTRIC WAY WHEATLEY-YETZER FORD SEE: JACOB E. MARTIN, JR. For your automotive needs. HARRISONBURG ELECTRIC COMMISSION US Route 11 South 89 West Bruce Street HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA Harrisonburg, Va. Phone 434-0707 Shop the ... All New . . . Spanish American 677 Chicago Ave. RED FRONT Harrisonburg, Va. 1001 S. High St. SERVICE OILS, INC. DISTRIBUTORS of SHELL PRODUCTS Fuel for modern living Rowley Pike Harrisonburg, Va. REUBEN G. STOLTZFUS U.S. 33 West Phone: 434-3434 0 MAYTAG PHILCO WOOLWORTHS West Court Square Harrisonburg, Virginia Where Dependability and Service come first HAMPTON HEIGHTS DAIRY INC 208 Fox Hill Road Hampton, Virginia WHITESEL MUSIC Harrisonburg, Virginia WISHY-WASHY CAR WASH CHARLES L. PAULS CLOTHING CO., INC. North Main Street Harrisonburg, Virginia Next to the Owner TASTEE-FREEZE ALPHIE A. ZOOK 11-13 North Court Square Harrisonburg, Virginia LAYMAN INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. Savings and Service BETTER FOODS BY THE PEOPLE WHO CARE @ rri,tmiurg 0ruil and Traduce (So. 1056MT. CLINTON PIKE Harrisonburg, Virginia 22801 AGENTS Dial 434-0761 2020 S. Main St. Harrisonburg, Virginia Emory Layman—Ina Heatwole it’s the real thing BERLIN ELEVATOR Berlin, Ohio SANFORD A. ALDERFER INC. Real Estate Auctioneer Auctions Put U Into Action 402 Main St 256-8891 Harleysville, Pa. Area Code 215 Vepco’s first commercial atomic power station is now under construction in Surry County, Virginia. In the new Information Center overlooking the site, you will see an excellent slide presentation, fascinating exhibits, and a working model of the reactor. (And from the balcony, you can watch them assemble the real thing.) Open 10 AM to 4 PM Monday through Saturday and 1 PM to 6 PM on Sunday. For tour information call 771-3194 in Richmond. Vepco more power to you... at less cost VIRGINIA NATIONAL BANK With offices in Harrisonburg and across the state HUMMEL INSURANCE SERVICE Berlin, Ohio Miles Music Co. Lafayette Radio Associates Harrisonburg, Va. Sony Marantz Fisher Carrard Yamaha Conn Dial 434-4040 Phone 682-2916 MARTIN'S STORE, INC 324 West High Street Orrville, Ohio 44667 Home Religious Decorating Supplies Center BRADBURN'S LAWN MOWER CENTER Lawn mower Sales Service Small Engine Repairs 1320 Edom Road P.O. Box 321 Harrisonburg, Va. Library for Eastern Mennonite College Nielsen Construction Company, Inc. Harrisonburg, Virginia I.T. LANDES AND SON, INC. i. CLINTON SHANK, INC. Plumbing and Heating Grain, Hay, and Feed Brokers Central Air Conditioning Water Softeners P. O. Box 107 Mainland, Pa. 19451 Ph. 256-8870 Harrisonburg, Virginia 434-6713 ART • DESIGN • LETTERHEADS • BROCHURES GRAPHIC DESIGN 1064 Mt. Clinton Pike. Harrisonburg, Va. 22801 Phone 703 434-0043 Sim U V J DERSTINE INC TRUCKING The Shenandoah Valley's Largest Newspaper 438 Derstine Road Hatfield, Pennsylvania 223 Mr. and Mrs. John N. Thomas Phone: 717 464-2711 Willow Valley Motor Inn and Restuarant 116 Willow Street Pike Willow Street, Pa. 17584 2 Miles South of Lancaster on Routes U.S. 222 272 GRAYBILL BOOK STATIONERY SERVICE BOOKSELLERS—STATIONERS—PRINTERS 244 North Main Street Doylestown, Pa. Ph. 348-5804 CREAMERY Butter—Eggs—Cheese Over 50 Years of Fine Quality and Dependable Service DOYLESTOWN, PENNA. PH. WA-7-4831-345-6160 Better Relationships Through Better Understanding • Illustrated family life messages for newspapers • Minute messages by Friend Ruth for radio • Consultation on family finances, insurance Concord Associates 1111 Mt. Clinton Pike Harrisonburg, Va. 22801 BRYCE MOUNTAIN Basye, Virginia Looking For A Challenge? SAUDER The Poultry Industry is constantly demanding new talents. Unlimited opportunities await businessoriented graduates. If you are interested in making this exciting industry your career, discover... HERRS POTATO CHIPS INC. TUeaver The finest in Poultry Products, Convenience Foods, and Eggs. Nottingham, Pa. Victor F. Weaver, Inc. Sauder Mfg. Co. Archbold, Ohio 43502 New Holland, Pa. 1757 Tel. 717—354-4211 A. W. Whitemore Sons 225 The Jesius, realist I am not willing to wait. Now, when the lonely, hungry, and poor are waiting, While the paper plans are being drawn up, I will act. I will act to bring hope to the helpless, to shield the vulnerable, to share the Gospel of goodwill and peace. “Jesus said, ' ... Go thou and preach the kingdom of God.' “And another also said, 'Lord, I will follow thee; but let me first go bid them farewell which are at home at my house..' “And Jesus said unto him, 'No man, having put his hand to the plow and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of God.' W Eastern Mennonite Board of Missions Salunga, PA 17538 TRUMBO ELECTRIC, INC. Area Code 703 896-7095 Broadway, Virginia 22815 ft 1’imtHff ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY W One Up In Style Fashion Division of the H.D. Lee Co. Inc. Broadway, Virginia DAN'S BODY SERVICE COMPLETE AUTO ACCIDENT SERVICE Edom Road Harrisonburg, Virginia Phone 434-8889 Broadway Drug Store Phone 896-3251 Carl G. Showalter Charles E. Kipps Pharmacists Nelson E. Showalter Broadway, Va. Rich Brothers Ford—Mercury Dealer Archbold, Ohio WAMPLER FOODS, INC Packers of—VALLEY STAR Brand Hinton, Virginia 22831 Phone 867-2141 TURKEYS Area Code 703 Whole and Parts 0 ui-Bh€ mA Henning's Supermarket Self Service Laundry GRA-BRAMS MEATS, INC. Country Fresh Hickory Smoked Meats 25c CAR WASH Main Street 640 Meeting House Road Harleysville, Pennsylvania Harleysville, Pennsylvania Poultry and Stock Equipment Incinerators SHENANDOAH MANUFACTURING CO., INC. Harrisonburg, Virginia 22801 Phone 703-434-3838 Emory J. Good Plumbing Heating Route 5 Harrisonburg, Va. J. Horst Manufacturing Co., Inc. P.O. Box 507 East Main St. Job Shop Fabrications and Machining Specializing in Steel Mill Equipment Dalton, Ohio 44618 Phone 828-2259 Aluminum Fiberglass TRUCK BODIES Produced in Kidron, Ohio Sold through distributors in major cities east of the Rockies PURE VILLAGE COURT HARTMAN ARCO SERVICE 5 Miles South on U.S. 11 Phone 434-7355 ATTRACTIVE 37-ROOM COURT Radio, Air-Conditioned TV, Telephones Air-Conditioned Dining Rooms Swimming Pool We Specialize in Lubrication and Brake Service Arco Gas, Oils and Accessories Park View Phone 434-3362 Harrisonburg, Va u Q_ Q_ 0) 0 I cl 2 o' S Uu u 00 DC O c 0 —I I— 5 0 0| x| 4-9793 riburg, Va. 3380 u Cl is 5| CL X c 03 o « (N3f s 1 O 4 Q- CkC LD U (J □ Z 1 s 2| m £ 2 c U “ 2 vX in O 1- 0 X Q_ LU u z O 1 00 o —I LU LU QC 21 LU —s D o - CD s— D u ‘o_ D D _Q fS E Best wishes to the Class of '71 from the Class of'72. Service Beyond the Contract WEAVER INSURANCE AGENCY, INC Life Auto Business Home P.O. Box 1083 Waynesboro, Va. Dial 942-1184 GARDEN SPOT MEAT PRODUCTS Win favor by quality and flavor Ezra W. Martin Co. Lancaster, Pa. 17604 HIGHWAY MOTORS, INC. Plymouth Chrysler Imperial MARTINS We specialize in Dress Materials Name brand Watchbands for Men and Ladies Also Gift Items and Novelties International Diamond Reo Trucks S H Green Stamps U.S. 11 North Harrisonburg, Virginia The Open Book Ltd. 151 S. Main Harrisonburg, Va. 22801 Walk in and See the New Book Store. FOLEY MOTORS, INC. 1654 South Main Street Harrisonburg, Va. Peugeot Renault Dodge Dodge Trucks On the Campus Free Gift Wrapping Mt. Clinton Pike BUILDING BETTER RELATIONSHIPS Oakwood 3rd North 434-7331 ext. 61 SERVING THE AREA FOR MORE THAN 30 YEARS ttotpginf SPEED QUEEN. TOPPED Amana WEAVERS PLUMBING HEATING, INC. Dayton, Virginia Dial 879-2721 --------------------------PtiNTt Water Heaters Plumbing Fixtures Heating Equipment Sherwin Williams Paints Gould, Myers, Jaccuzzi Pumps MAST MASONRY INC. Basements and Brick Work Fireplaces 12841 Uebelhou Road Alden, N.Y. Ph. 937-7539 • Aircraft Sales Rental Privileged to Serve EMC'S Flying Club • Flight Ground Instruction • Aircraft Parts Accessories K K AIRCRAFT, INC. P.O. Box 81 Harrisonburg, Va. 22801 703—434-1890 ONE HOUR VALET DRY CLEANERS Economical Comfortable Safe 1 Hour Cleaning Service Free Parking North Main Street—Harrisonburg, Va. HACEY'S BUS SERVICE Souderton—Harleysville Pike Franconia, Pa. Special and Charter Bus Tours 723-4381 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 Mennonite Publishing House Scottdale, Pennsylvania JAYCO ENTERPRISES P.O. Box 414 Harper, Kansas 67058 JAYCO, INC NEW HOLLAND CONCRETE PRODUCTS New Holland, Penna. P.O. Box 460 Goshen, Ind. 46526 BLAUCH BROS., INC. 911 MT. CLINTON PK. HARRISONBURG, VA. DUTCH MAID CLEANERS and LAUNDERERS John Chittick, Owner 191 South Clinton Street DOYLESTOWN. PENNSYLVANIA VALLEY LANES Duck Pins Route 11 South Harrisonbu 1 -?h BERGEY’S GARAGE Franconia and Lansdale, Pennsylvania Tires and Recapping Franconia, Pennsylvania Lansdale, Pennsylvania INCLUDE US IN YOUR VACATION PLANS! IN THE HEART OF THE POCONO MOUNTAINS ADMINISTERED BY FRANCONIA CONFERENCE HOLMES LIMESTONE COMPANY 235 Berlin, Ohio KENWORTH H. MININGER AND SON, INC. traditionally the finest Custom Building Souderton, Pennsylvania TRUCK ENTERPRISES, INC Harrisonburg, Virginia LONGACRE POULTRY PRODUCTS 236 “Poultry is our business, not a sideline' Franconia, Pennsylvania 153 South Main Street Harrisonburg, Virginia 22801 Tel.: (703) 434-1781 Lapp Alderfer, Inc. IfAi Real Estate Insurance 303 East Broad Street Souderton, Pa. 18964 KANDEL'S GENERAL STORE Groceries, Meats, Hardware, Shoes, Boots, Dry Goods One Stop Shopping Berlin, Ohio EBY'S BARBER SHOP Open Tuesday Through Saturday By Appointment Park View Phone 434-7070 THE WYSE OWL 'We give a hoot Be Sure It's ROSEN BERGER'S MILK— Either At Your Door Or At Your Store Area Code 215 Ph. 723-4326 MOSER STUDIO Professional Photography Portrait—Com mercia I—I ndustria I Russell I. Moser 632 East Broad St. Proprietor Souderton, Pa. 18964 Hatfield, Pa. — Since 1925 Serving EMC Since 1938 GITCHELL'S STUDIO INC. Harrisonburg, Va. We Salute the Royals Free Checking Accounts to local students. 'Where the Customer is King Harrisonburg, Virginia Spotswood UNITED VIRGINIA BANK The earth. Do you care? Sauder Woodworking Co. 239 PRES BROWN'S INC. “Tops in Team Equipment Located in Cloverleaf Shopping Center We feature all famous brand equipment. 1064 Mt. Clinton Pike 680 Waterman Drive Harrisonburg, Va. 22801 434-8702 WETSEL SEED COMPANY Seeds Field Garden Flower Lawn Insecticides Lawn Fertilizers Weed Killers Harrisonburg Waynesboro Honda BMW SAAB Bob Shenk SUBURBAN MOTORS CO., INC. Ill York Street, Hanover, Pennsylvania 17331 Phone 637-3821 Switchboards Motor Repair Rewinding Engineering Construction 240 GETS YOU UP IN THE WORLD TUBULAR STEEL SCAFFOLDING and EQUIPMENT BIL-JAX, INC. CLEMMER MARTIN Archbold, Ohio 43502 Phone (419) 445-2045 R.D. 1 Lansdale, Penna. N S AUTO SERVICE Automatic Transmission Service Tune-Up, Electrical and Carburetor Valley J)oolcs Service 8a South JHain Street, Starruonhurq, Virginia Complete Brake Service VW-Service and Parts Bear Wheel Alignment and Balancing OFFICIAL INSPECTION STATION 991 Mt. Clinton Pike, Harrisonburg, Va. 22801 • Phone 703 434-6355 Weather Vane EMC's News Before It's History MOYER SON, INC. Business Phone Address: 434-4835 Harrisonburg, Va. R. 6 (Route42 So.) Our Aim, To Please Our Customers Feed—Fuel Oil—Coal—Building Materials Lawn and Carden Products Custom Spraying MILLER'S CABINETS, INC. Phones: 723-9858 (Fuel Oil) 723-6001 Souderton, Pa. Kitchen Cabinets, Custom Built Furniture and Refinishing Free Estimates I have been driven many times to my knees by the overwhelming conviction that I had nowhere else to go. My own wisdom, and that of all about me, seemed insufficient for that day.” Abraham Lincoln ROCKINGHAM Construction Builders, Inc. Harrisonburg, Virginia 242 Mervyl L. Miller J. Harry Lantz Willis J. Miller Phone 434-0077 Phone 896-4472 Phone 434-4835 WSVA Harrisonburg, Virginia Clayton Showalter Broadway, Virginia Rev. Truman S. Brunk, Sr. Denbigh, Virginia Dr. Luke Horst Penn Laird, Virginia Alpha Development Co. Malvern, Pennsylvania Provident Bookstore Lancaster, Pennsylvania PATRONS Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Nafziger Bally, Pennsylvania Grant M. Stoltzfus Harrisonburg, Virginia Mr. John Swartz Au Gres, Michigan John L. Freed Harrisonburg, Virginia John L. Layman Denbigh, Virginia Neff Trailers Harrisonburg, Virginia Mr. Jay B. Landis Harrisonburg, Virginia Elmore Byler Harrisonburg, Virginia Student Government Association of EMC Harrisonburg, Virginia Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. Yoder Bally, Pennsylvania Schewels Harrisonburg, Virginia Gerald E. Shenk Salunga, Pennsylvania 243 RALPH'S SUPER MARKET 801-809 West Main Street Lansdale, Pennsylvania Every Day is Savings Day' Plenty of Free Parking BOX R, PAOLI, PA. 19301 Phones: (215) 644-3450 (215) 878-3198 13 dM 9 OMj ioiMfy 0j yjty . . tkoXj Mjtykb (SmLojw MENNONITE BOARD OF Beautiful... is a retreat at Laurelvile Write for information to: Laurelville Mennonite Church Center Route 5, Mount Pleasant, Pa. 15666 Building on the Free Church Heritage When? Which one? For whom? Who's there? CLEMMER LI ECHTY MOTORS MAYFLOWER MOVING AND Dodge—Plymouth STORAGE Chrysler—Imperial Office and Warehouse: Archbold, Ohio 38 W. Chestnut St. Telephone 419-445-2576 Soudertown, Pa. Phone 723-5515 Agent: Areo—Mayflower 245 We Honor Cash AMERICA NEEDS Christian Films from Century Gospel Film Library Dept. 00, Souderton, Pa. 18964 Write for Catalog of the Year Tel. 215-723-3669 But Checking is Free For EMC Rockingham National Bank Htrriwibittf • I«1 C « OfMWM • M Sidi • • • Eggs Risser-Martin, Inc. Harrisonburg, Va. 879-2351 YOU'LL LIKE IT MUCH-IT'S SHENN-DUTCH Meats Shenn-Dutch Foods Harrisonburg, Va. 434-4415 guy HEAVENER inc. td 480 School Lane, Harleysville, Pa MILLERSBURG TIRE SERVICE, INC. North Washington Street Millersburg, Ohio As Christian businessmen our motto is: “Not slothful in business, fervent in Spirit, Serving the Lord.” Schmucker, Miller 216—674-1085 “Shenandoah's Pride” Dairy of Harrisonburg INDEX Akers, Michael B. 186 Alderfer, Connie S. 202 Alderfer, Raymond J. 202 Alger, Victor E. 186 Alger, Wanda 194 Alley, Robert E. 215 Almarode, Manuel T. 202 Amstutz, David B. 79, 86, 186 Armentrout, Virginia S. 202 Armstrong, Patricia L. 130 Asai, Hiroko 186 Atkinson, Evelyn 202 Augsburger, John M. 202 Augsburger, Joyce E. 202 Augsburger, Phyllis A. 59 Augsburger, Ruth Ann 202 Auker, Thomas E. 216 Baer, Patricia L. Baer, Shirley A. 130 Baker, Beverly C. 186 Baker, Carolyn J. Bare, Carol M. 202 Bare, Karen L. 202 Barnhart, Patsy R. 132 Barte, Margaret A. 202 Batchelor, Catherine W. 131 Baugher, K. Steven Bauman, Elverne C. 202 Beachey, Larry J. 186 Beachy, Frances K. 194 Beachy, Karen S. Beachy, Marcia F. 50, 53, 131 Beachy, Marilyn A. 194 Beachy, Virginia F. 202 Beam, Barbara A. 202 Beckler, Iris K. 64, 202 Beckler, Janet L. 186 Beidler, Thelma M. 194 Beiler, Omar J. 17, 202 Belton, L. Vermeil 194 Benner, Beverly D. 202 Bergey, J. Harold 194 Berkshire, Caye D. 85, 88, 202 Birkey, Carolyn J. 202 Birkey, Elnore M. 132 Birky, David C. 194 Bishop, E. Duane 23, 194, 231 Blosser, Carolyn L. 132 Blosser II, James D. 194 Boese, Dean L. 131 Bomberger, Anne H. 9, 91, 186 Bomberger, Donald L. 186 Bomberger, Fannie L. 93, 133 Bomberger, John M. 194 Bomberger, M. Susanne 31, 202, 208 Bontrager, Herman D. 194 Bontrager, James Bontrager, Patricia F. 133 Borntrager, Jonas L. 212 Bowen, James E. 134 Bowman, Bernard D. Bowman, James E. 186 Boyd, Kim E. 75, 133 Boyer, Cindy M. Branch, Ronald A. 86, 202 Breneman, Janet M. 186 Breneman, Jerry S. 44, 52, 186 Brenneman, Barbara A. 202, 207 Brenneman, James L. Brenneman, Judith E. 194 Brenneman, Lois A. 23, 32, 202 Brenneman, Marilyn S. 202 Brenneman, Timothy B. 75, 90,194 Bridge, Stephen N. 76, 202 Briggs, Peggy L. 186 Brilhart, Ted C. 84, 93, 202 Brown, Lewis A. 72, 205 Brubaker, Alta L. 5, 202 Brubaker, Dale L. 45, 194 Brubaker, R. Louise 134 Brubaker, Velma E. 18, 186 Brunk, David L. 194 Brunk, Louisa A. 134 Bsiso, Maher E. 202 Buchanan, David H. 202 Bucher, David E. 60, 202 Bucher, Donald B. 186 Bucher, Ethel I. Bucher, Mary Beth 186 Bucher, Rachel E. 202 Buckwalter, Robert D. 202 Buckwalter, Victor 23, 194, 199, 23 Buller, Marlene J. 135 Bumbaugh, Deborah A. 202 Burkholder, Eldon D. 186 Burkholder, Glenda J. 194 Burkholder, Jo Ann 135 Burkholder, Joy M. 202 Burkholder, Joyce A. 62, 202 Burkholder, June D. 202 Bustos, Caroline 135 Butcher, Sylvia E. 186 Byler, Esther N. 136 Byler, Lynda J. 202 Byler, Philip R. 19, 60, 136 Charles, Abram H. Charles, Linda A. 136 Chiba, Machiko 186, 191 Chupp, Harvey 214 Cipriano, Philip A. 186 Claude, John P. 138 Clem, Michael M. 202 Clemens, W. Brent 76, 202 Clemmer, Dean A. 48, 186 Clemmer, Dennis M. 84,186 Clemmer, Judith N. 63,137 Clemmer, Karin F. Clemmer, Kenneth J. 202 Cline, Rose Marie 186 Coffey, Mary Ethel 139 Cole, Claudia J. 202 Constantin, Gloria 203 Cornell, William H. 137 Covelens, Kenneth R. 13, 54, 92 Cowan, Terry A. 67 Craig, Wiley J. 186 Craun, William A. 138 Crawford, Sylvia M. 186 Croxton, Douglas Culp, Joetta K. 203 Curtis, Cindee L. 203 Cutrell, Jon J. 194 Dalellew, Tesfatsion 52,138 Dang,Thanh Thi 139 Davenport, Harold F. 216 David, Ronald L. Deal, Anna Belle Dean, Nancy L. Denlinger, Charmayne L. 194 Denlinger, Raymond H. Denlinger, Velma J. 56, 194, 255 Derstein, Rachel G. 194 Derstine, Anne 194 Derstine, Brenda Y. 203 Derstine, Mark M. 187 Derstine, Rodney 78, 86, 203, 231 Derstine, Sharon L. 187 Detweiler, Anna Louise 35,194 Detweiler, Donald D. 187 DeWitt, Ralph Jr. Diehl, Glenn R. 187 Diehl, Ronald R. 139 Diener, Ruby M. 141 Dietzel, Carol L. 194 Dietzel, Mary Kay 141 Diller, Althea M. 129 Dobbs, Faith D. Dorsch, James V. 75, 203 Dorsch, Victor A. 214 Dorsch, Viola M. 194 Dorsey, Laura A. 187 Doutrich, Eunice M. Dove, Thomas L. Dutcher, Daryl Jon 187 248 Dutcher, David R. 203 Early, Lee E. 140 Eash, Rosemary J. 187 Eberly, Miriam 187 Eberly, Robert L. 72, 194 Eby, Beth L. 140 Eby, Carol Ann 203 Eby, Helen K. 203 Eby, James L. 203 Eby, Robert N. 141 Ehst, Rhoda M. 82, 83, 91,129 Eicher, Jane M. 203 Eigsti, Thomas L. 71, 187 Emery III, Hamilton H. 203, 231 Emswiler, Charles M. 203 England, Roland L. Jr. 194 Eshleman, Kathleen L. 194 Espigh, Clyde E. 187 Evans, Thomas O. Ewing, Mark A. 81, 194, 247 Fansler, R. Karen 194 Fellenbaum, L. Kenneth 142 Fisher, David J. Fisher, Janet C. 143 Fisher, Kathy D. 194 Fisher, Mary Lou Fitzgerald, Stephen B. Fitzpatrick, Sharon O. 203 Fleming, Renee M. 203 Flory, Ruth M. 203 Fly, Mark L. 203 Frederick, J. Ray 203 Frederick, Sharon L. 194, 196 Freed, Marcus L. 203 Frey, Aden 203 Frey, Kathy J. 203 Funkhouser, Carol Anne 203 Fulk, Carl S. Gachugi, Arthur K. 203 Gamber, H. Benjamin 23, 54, 187, 231 Gamber, Marian E. 203 Garber, Jay C. Garges, Jeanelle D. 194 Garnand, Sheila K. 22, 194 Gascho, Esther M. 203 Gascho, June L. 203 Gascho, Luke A. 11, 81,203, 231 Gascho, Timothy N. 194 Gascho, Wayne R. 187 Gehman, Clara A. 187 Gehman, David L. 194 Gehman, Glen D. 58, 59, 142 Gehman, Louise K. 145 Gehman, Rachel A. 203 Gehman, Sallie E. 195 Geissinger, Shirley A. 203 Gentzler, Marlene L. 14, 143 George, Elias E. 142 Gerber, David K. 215 Gerber, Leanna R. 59, 187 Gingerich, Lee A. 187 Gingrich, Margaret R. 145 Glanzer, Dennis J. 195 Glanzer, P. David Gnagey, Marlene K. 203 Goering, Lela Mae 188 Goldfus, Joseph S. 10, 23,187 Good, Donald L. 56,188, 255 Good, Edwin L. 59,145 250 Good, Howard D. 204 Good, Kathleen ). 204 Good, Luke W. 23, 69, 72, 195, 231 Good, Marlin W. 64, 204 Goodrum, David E. 215 Goshow, Rodney K. 204, 239 Graham, Linda L. 144 Griffin, Dianna L. 204 Griner, Thomas T. 188 Groff, Galen G. 144 Grosh, Judith L. 195 Grove, Naomi J. 204 Guardacosta, Gary A. 204 Guengerich, Galen G. 204 Guntz, Grace H. 144 Hackman, Jenny R. 59,144 Hackman, Mary Jane 82, 83, 204 Hackman, Nina G. 88, 204 Hackman, Stephen R. 44,195 Hall, Judith N. 188 Hamlett, Joseph C. 195 Handrich, Anthony D. 145 Handrich, Pamela S. 195 Harder, Janet C. 195 Harder, Rachel J. 204 Harnish, Dorothy M. 216 Harnish, Merle D. 54, 69, 72, 87, 90,146 Harrison, Orie J. Harry, Ramsumair 195 Hartman, Dorothy M. 15,195 Hartman, Ted E. 23, 204 Hartzler, Arlene E. 204 Hash, Linda S. Hatter, Dennis L. Hatter, Sharon F. 204 Heacock, Vernon L. 195 Heatwole, Donna M. 195 Heatwole, Eldon J. 204 Heatwole, Gary W. 86, 87 Heatwole, Leo E. 188 Heatwole, Owen W. 146 Heatwole, Patricia A. 204 Heavener, Gerald W. 75, 204, 231 Heebner, David C. 204 Heishman, Bonita M. 188 Helmuth, Kenneth L. 188 Helmuth, Ronald J. 204 Herr, Dennis B. 81 Herr, Kenneth L. 62, 80, 81, 188 Herr, Larry E. 69, 72, 90,195 Hershberger, Benuel 204 Hershberger, Glenna J. 15,146 Hershberger, John H. Hershberger, June L. 195 Hershberger, Leon W. 204 Hershberger, Linda K. 60, 204 Hershberger, Merlin R. 64,195 Hershberger, Myrna L. 204 Hershberger, Rebecca J. 188 Hershey, Clair H. 195, 231 Hershey, Irvin L. 23, 188 Hertzler, Bonita G. 195 Hertzler, Kathryn J. 204 Hess, Beulah B. 195 Hess, Carl A. 68, 204 Hess, Deborah L. 188 Hess, Dorothy J. 204 Hess, M. Kate 188 Hess, Rachel R. 188 Hess, Samuel L. Hess, Susan A. 188 Hess, V. Jean 195 Hilty, Christine M. 195 Hochstetler, Jane M. 205 Hockman, Larry D. 195 Holsopple, Carlene J. 148 Holsopple, Marvin D. 74, 75, 147 Holsopple, Sue E. 205 Hooley, David J. 195 Hoopert, Daniel A. 214 Hoover, Hugh N. Hoover, Lester M. 195 Hoover, Mary Fay 64, 205 Hoover, Ruth E. 195 Horst, Elton R. 44, 216 Horst, Esther R. 188 Horst, G. Stuart 150 Horst, J. Adelle 205 Horst, Loren E. 59, 92,149 Horst, Marvin S. 74, 90, 147 Horst, Nancy E. 147 Horst, Norma S. 49 Horst, Roland L. 250, 195 Horst, Sharon M. 148 Hostetler, George T. 75, 205 Hostetter, Gretchen 195 Houser, Karen J. 205 Huber, J. Norene 193,195 Hunsecker, Marcia M. 205 Hurst, Sharon L. 148 Huston Jr., Sylvester 205 Huyard, Alvin M. 149 Jackson, Darryl E. Jantzi, John N. 23, 92, 195 Jantzi, Larry L. 22, 23, 195 Janzen, Carla J. Janzen, Melvin 42 Johnson, James B. Johnson, Ruth E. 195 Jones, Dale H. Kalen, Peter M. 151 Kanagy, Alvin C. Kanagy, Irene J. 195 Kanagy, John T. 128, 151 Kanagy, Paul 195 Kanagy, Ruth A. 205 Kandel, Diane S. 24, 195 Kandel, Keith L. 195 Kandel, Kenneth R. 81, 195 Kauffman, Barbara E. 205 Kauffman, Chester W. Kauffman, Dennis L. 195 Kauffman, Elton L. 44 Kauffman, Gerald L. 196 Kauffman, Glenford D. 89, 189, 234 Kauffman, J. Lloyd 15,151 Kauffman, Nola F. 150 Kauffman, Titus F. 150 Kaufman, Carolyn S. 205 Kaufman, Charles E. 205 Kaufman, Edith P. 152 Kaufman, Julia A. 152, 237 Kaufman, Mary Ellen 196 Keaton, Judy E. 189 Keener, Judith N. 196 Keener, Martha J. 189 Keens, J. Edwin 205 Keim, Esther Keller, Roy 76, 77,189 Kelly, Sheila E. 205 Kennel, Ardiss J. 152, 237 Kennel, Ellen L. 32 Kennel, Deryl G. 23, 188,189 Kennel, Lois C. 196 Kennel, Marie E. 154 Kennel, Rachel A. 189 Kennel, Russel W. 153 Kerstetter, C. John 189 Kesner, L. Carol 189 Kess, Johanna H. 154 Kier, Ophie A. 205 King, Carol L. 153 King, Daniel L. 75, 196 King, Evelyn E. 205 King, Feme E. 205 King, James R. 75, 205 King, Jewell L. 205 King, John R. 75, 205 King, Lois M. 15, 56, 85 King, Phillip A. 154 Kipfer, Carolyn J. 88, 196 Kipfer, Dallas R. 90, 205 Kiser, Randall L. 205 Kolb, Aaron J. 205 Kolb, Frederic L. 13, 205 Kornhaus, Harold L. 205 Koshy, Kochu K. 155 Koshy, Rachel Krabill, James R. 196 Kratzer, Rosemary K. 196 Kraybill, David S. 196 Kraybill, Eugene S. 66,156 Kraybill, Mary Jean 205 Krehbiel, Deborah M. 40, 206 Krishnan, C. Santana 216 Kuhns, Dennis R. 66,155 251 Kuhns, Grace E. 189 Kuhns, Lloyd J. 196 Kurtz, Sharon J. 155 Lam, Mildred T. Lambert, Wesley J. 196, 235 Lambright, Freida 196 Landes, Olen L. Landes, Richard L. 94,156 Landes, Robert W. Landis, Christine G. 196 Landis, Jean Y. 206 Lantz, Thelma J. 206 Lapp, Rhoda M. 62, 189 Lawton, Wayne D. 157 Layman, Edith F. 206 Lazer, John C. 157 Le, Quang Khac 154 Leaman, Marian E. 206 Leaman, Paul G. 189 Leatherman, Charles L. 157 Leatherman, Cheryl A. 206 Leatherman, Lois M. 15 Lee, Clifton C. 156 Lee, Dong Keun 215 Lefever, Linda M. 196 Leffel, Eugene C. 189 Lehman, C. Ronald 189 Lehman, Daniel W. 50, 56, 189, 255 Lehman, Galen R. 196 Lehman, George N. 75, 206 Lehman, Gloria A. 206 Lehman, Kathleen Fa. 206 Lehman, Kathleen Fe. 189 Lehman, Melvin L. 129 Lehman, Nelson R. 189 Lehman, Rachel E. 159 Lehman, Rebecca M. 32, 94, 206 Leid, Susanna B. 196 Leinbach, Alan E. 19, 59 Lichti, Marlin W. 189 Liechty, Allen K. 189 Liechty, Paul W. 158 Lillard, A. Ross Lind, Lester L. 59,158 Lind, Robert W. 60, 206 Litwiller, Glen A. 56,189, 255 Litwiller, Nancy L. 206 Livengood, Paul T. 189 Lofgren, Richard E. Logan, Joan C. Long, Dale E. 23, 206 Long, Dolores A. 196 Long, Verna R. 206 Longacre, David R. 189 Longenecker, Dianne E. 196 Longenecker, Linda L. 206 Longenecker, Nancy E. 206 Longenecker, Wayne H. 159 Loux, Philip M. 206 Lowry, Stephen R. 59,158 Lyndaker, Lois K. 197 Magal, Phyllis A. 206 Martens, Joan E. 206 Martin, Betty Lou 206 Martin, Carl E. 74, 84, 130 Martin, Elwin D. Martin, Gail Y. 88, 197 Martin, Gary E. 197 Martin, Gerald Ed 189 Martin, J. David 206 Martin, Jane L. 206 Martin, Janet A. 160 Martin, Jason E. 86, 197 Martin, Jay W. 197 Martin, Joyce E. 206 Martin, Judith N. 160 Martin, Kenneth E. 86, 160 Martin, Kirk S. 79,90, 206 Martin, Linford J. 72, 73, 161,231 Martin, Margaret A. 197 Martin, Nelson D. 59, 130 Martin, R. Larry 189 Martin, Ronald D. 23, 197 Martin, Ruth Y. 189 Mast, Christine C. 161 Mast, Daryl L. 197 Mast, Harry J. 189 Mast, Judith A. 68, 161 Mast, Kristina L. 54,163 Mast, Maryanna C. Mast, Rhoda F. 197 Mast, Robert W. 197 Mast, Shirley A. 197 Mathew, K. E. 214 Mathias, Charles L. 197 Maust, Gale 44 Maust, Margie A. 206 Maust, Robert D. 45, 189 Mayer, Janice F. 85, 91,161 McAllister, Mary Jane 197 Meek, Gerald W. 160 Mest, Lois A. 197 Metzler, Glenn D. 81,216 Metzler, K. Marlene 189 Metzler, Sharon M. 190 Meyers, A. Gail 206 Meyers, Phyllis A. 206 Meyers, Ruth A. 197 Milazzo, Andrew D. Miller, Alan E. 80, 81, 92,190 Miller, Beverly J. 50, 206 Miller, Brenda L. 206 Miller, Carolyn J. 162 Miller, Clifford C. 212, 216 Miller, Diane 197 Miller, Eldon R. 68, 197 Miller, Elinor R. 206 Miller, Gerald E. 188, 190 Miller, Gerald L. 59, 65, 75,190, 231 Miller, Janice A. 190 Miller, Jay K. 197 Miller, Jean E. 206 Miller, Jean M. 206 Miller, Joseph E. 190 Miller, Karen D. 190 Miller, Kathy S. 206 Miller, Linda J. 67, 206 Miller, Lloyd F. Jr. 76 Miller, Martin 76, 77 Miller, Miriam J. 206 Miller, Phillip E. 206 Miller, Roger L. 86, 92 Miller, Samuel L. 15,162 Miller, Susan G. 197 Mine, Hiroshi 8 Mininger, David N. 206 Mininger, Philip A. 50, 59,185, 190 Mininger, Ruth Ann 190 Minnich, M. Renee 32 Mishler, Robert L. 23, 36, 206 Mizer, Darryl E. Moore, Marlene K. 162 Morris, Ruth M. 190 Moser, Brenda K. 206 Moshier, Karen R. 197 Moshier, Kathleen A. 206 Moyer, Darlis A. 197 Moyer, Eileen H. 197 Moyer, Randall A. 86 Moyer, Rose Ann 82, 83, 85, 88, 206 Moyer, T. Lee 206 Moyers, Randall L. 190 Mtoka, Daniel I. 214 Mullet, James I. 76, 77, 190 Musser, Robert F. 163 Myers, Beverly J. 207 Myers, Freida M. 15, 207 Myers, J. Vernon 74, 75, 163 Myers, Ralph E., Jr. 164 Myers, Rebecca H. 163 Myers, Robert S. 190 Nafziger, Charles J. 165 Nafziger, J. Kenneth 81, 190 Nafziger, Marilyn J. 56, 197, 255 Nafziger, Phoebe S. 83, 85, 190 Nafziger, Rodney D. 207 Neer, David E. 207 Neer, Rose Marie 197 Neff, Jeanette E. 197, 242 Neuenschwander, Jeanette F. 197 Newberry, Daniel A. 92 Nguyen, Chi Van 190 Nickey, Joyce A. 14,164 Nissley, Dennis D. 77, 164 Noll, Herbert H. 207 Noll, Jeanette H. 54,197 252 Nolt, Gladys J. Nolt, Louise E. 165 Nussbaum, Gary N. 86, 165 Nussbaum, Janice S. 166 Nussbaum, Marjorie A. 94, 207 Nwankwo, Janet N. 207 Nyce, Kathleen S. 207 Nyce, Philip R. 197 Ogbonna, Victoria C. Olimo, James K. 197 Oswald, Margaret R. 207 Oswald, Stanley W. 166 Ott, E. Jane 190 Otto, A. Eugene 207 Otto, John H. 54, 55, 166 Otto, Wilmer H. 31, 52 Overholt, Emily S. 190 Overholt, Garald D. 190 Oyer, Anna M. 166 Padilla, Ruben 76, 77,190 Paul, Barbara J. Peachey, Betty K. 190 Peachey, Dwight M. Peachey, Marlene J. 197 Peifer, Joy E. 197 Penner, L. James Plank, Vera L. 197 Porter, Forest W., Jr. 197 Raber, Marilyn K. 197 Ranck, Nevin M. 197 Randolph, II, William H. 167 Reed, Herbert E. 197 Reimer, Irene 198 Reinford, Glenn R. 198 Reinford, Ida K. 207 Reinford, Linda K. 167 Reinford, Merle R. 190 Reinford, Ruth Ann 190 Renalds, Stephen S. Rensen, Mary E. 207 Ressler, Dale E. 198 Ressler, Raymond E. 54,167, 231 Rheinheimer, Faye E. Rheinheimer, Miriam J. 169 Rheinheimer, Roger D. 169 Rhodes, Galen L. Rhodes, James D. Richards, George R. 207 Riegsecker, Ardis D. 207 Riegsecker, Janice E. 190 Rihani, Jeries A. 169, 231 Risser, Benjamin E. 207 Risser, C. Eugene Risser, Judith M. 191 Ritchie, Elma E. 198 Ritchie, Wenonah D. 207 Roggie, R. Janell 207 Rohrer, Dennis G. 168 Rohrer, Sharon A. 12, 207 Ropp, Miriam A. 23,191 Rose, Linda S. 171 Rosenberger, Ruth A. 198 Ross, Richard F. Ross, Rose Mary 169 Ross, Gene M. 73, 207 Ross, Wesley J. Roth, Barbara G. 169 Roth, Shirley E. 168 Rowell, Glenda J. 198 Rowell, Peggy J. 85, 207 Rutt, Gloria S. 191 Rutt, Janis M. 198 Rutt, John H. 59,191 Rutt, Ruth Ann 191 Ryman, Patsy B. 170 Ryscuck, George E. Sahawneh, Tuomah M. 191 Salyers, William A. Jr. 172 Sango, J. Omoro 191 Sauder, Carol Ann 207 Sauder, Carol Sue 198 Sauder, Jay W. 198 Sauder, Nancy K. 207 Sauder, W. Ronald 207 Saufley, Linda A. 170 Sawyer, John C. 214 Schlabach, Delmer T. 208, 231 Schlabach, Sharon L. 171 Schlegel, Pauline F. 191 Schmidt, Marcia D. 170 Schmitt, Louanne 191 Schmucker, M. Lee 198 Schoch, Elaine C. 198 Schrock, Anna Marie 208 Schrock, Barbara L. 172 Schrock, Carole J. 191 Schrock, David E. 41,201, 208 Schrock, Leah L. 198 Schultz, Donna M. 171 See, Carolyn M. 191 Seiders, Harry M. 172 Sell, Glen M. Selzer, Diane K. 191 Shadid, Ahmad K. 208 Shank, David L. 198 Shank, Jerrel D. 208 Shank, Miriam R. 60, 208 Shank, Norma R. 191 Shank, Randall E. 68, 173 Shank, Ruth F. Shantz, Ivan R. 191, 255 Shantz, Norma J. 172 Sharif, Ahmad I. Sharp, Donald D. 78, 208 Sharp, Nancy A. 82, 83, 208 Shearer, Mary Lynn 191 Shellenberger, Eileen F. 191 Shenk, Daniel E. 59, 173 Shenk, Gloria J. 208 Shenk, John Carl 15, 43, 69, 72, 73, 173 Shenk, Nelson J. 68, 208 Shenk, Steven C. 54,198 Shetler, Ora D. 75, 78, 79, 198 Shifflett, Rebecca M. Shifflette, Roger L. Shirk, Hilda A. 208 Shirk, Louise Y. 15,174 Shirkey, Alan R. Shore, Randall J. 78, 208 Short, Anita M. 72, 208 Shortell, Nicholas R. 72, 78 Shoup, Dolores J. 88, 208 Showalter, Carolyn L. 191 Showalter, Doris M. 174 Showalter, Eileen F. 208 Showalter, Glen A. Showalter, H. Dennis 90, 196,198 Showalter, Louise E. 191 Showalter, Nathan D. 15, 52, 53,175 Showalter, Sharon M. 174 Showalter, Welby C. 43, 198 Siegrist, Audrey J. 208 Siegrist, Miriam H. 23, 191 Sites, Ronald H. 87 Slabach, Lloyd E. 191 Slageil, Connie Sue 208 Slagell, Janet E. 64,198 Slaubaugh, F. Paula 191 Slaubaugh, Lila C. 208, 235 Smith, Jacquelyn 198 Smith, Linda G. 175 Smith, Mary Jo Smith, Ray L. 208 Smucker, Barbara A. 189, 191 Smucker, June E. 88,208 Snavely, Rachel S. 82, 83, 175 Sommers, S. Lorraine 91,198 Souder, Feryl K. 208 Sours, Mark A. Speers, Richard T. 208 Stahl, John Daniel 33, 198 Stanley, Patricia M. 177 Stauffer, Arlene K. Stauffer, James K. 216 Stauffer, John M. 198 Stauffer, Joyce E. 177 Stauffer, Milo J. 72, 191 Stauffer, Philip E. Steckle, Esther G. 198 Steckley, Joanna M. 198 253 Steele, Larry W. 191 Steffy, Beverly S. 176 Steiner, Richard L. 208 Stewart, Tina M. 85, 208 Stoltzfus, Brian W. 72 Stoltzfus, Catherine R. 180 Stoltzfus, David C. 198 Stoltzfus, Donald L. 81, 89, 177 Stoltzfus, Dwight L. 86, 198 Stoltzfus, Harold C. 214 Stoltzfus, Jean R. 176 Stoltzfus, Julia E. 176 Stoltzfus, Karl D. 232 Stoltzfus, Kenneth L. 232 Stoltzfus, Lee S. 51, 192 Stoltzfus, Nora Y. 192 Stoltzfus, Omar Z. 180 Stoltzfus, Paul H. 178 Stoltzfus, Robert T. 75, 198 Stoltzfus, Ruth C. 14, 57, 178, 255 Strickler, M. Alice 192 Stuckey, Robert E. 86, 208 Stutzman, Beverly A. 179 Stutzman, Lowell L. 208 Stutzman, Mervin J. 208 Stutzman, Roland E. 178 Summer, Sharon J. 208 Swartley, Beth A. 198 Swartley, J. Duane 208 Swartz, Lyle E. 208 Swartz, Sharon A. 23, 198 Swartzendruber, Glen R. 210 Swartzendruber, O. Daniel 210 Swartzentruber, James M. 210 Swope, John D. 198 Tams, Marcella R. 199 Taylor, Roger D. 68, 75, 199 Thiessen, Arden 181 Thomas, Karen M. 199 Thomas, Saraja Tice, Orpha 192 Trost, Larry C. 199 Trost, Rhoda P. Troyer, Linda J. 62, 210 Tusing, Gary C. 210 Tutt, A. Bruce 76, 204 Ulrich, Lowell E. 180 Umble, Loretta J. 210 Unternahrer, Rosetta M. 210 Verghese, Thomas 54,181 Voegtlin, Lois K. 192 Voegtlin, Thelma F. 199 Walker, Wendy K. 181 Walter, Daniel B. 199 Walters, Susan H. 210 Warfel, L. Elaine 192, 250 Weatherholtz, Vicki M. 199 Weaver, Brenda J. 199 Weaver, Cheryl L. 85, 210 Weaver, Darrell R. 199 Weaver, Dorothy J. 192 Weaver, Ellen M. 199 Weaver, Erma H. 199 Weaver, Esther N. 180 Weaver, Harlan L. 199 Weaver, Joyce K. 199 Weaver, Kathryn L. 192 Weaver, Lamar S. 199 Weaver, Peter A. 210 Weaver, Robert D. 71, 192 Weaver, Susan L. 192 Weber, John S. 179 Weber, Lois E. 182 Weber, Philip L. 210 Webster, Dorothy M. 199 Wells, Howard F. 192 Wenger, Carol E. 210 Wenger, Chester L. 199 Wenger, Earl D. 199 Wenger, J. Lowell 199 Wenger, Joyce E. 192 Wenger, Linda K. 200 Wenger, Louise A. 200 Wenger, Ruth E. 83, 200 Wenger, Samuel G. 200 Wengerd, Alvin R. 192 Wertz, Donald J. 44, 68, 200 Western, Shirley A. 210 Wheelbarger, Benjamin L. 210 Widrick, Patrina A. 210 Williams, Earl Paul 192 Williams, G. Calvin 76 Wilson, Judith A. 184 Witmer, Catherine L. 182 Witmer, Daryl E. 200 Witmer, Ellen L. 210 Witmer, Esther V. 182 Witmer, Linda E. 65, 200 Witmer, Lois J. 64, 200 Wondimu, Gebre E. Wyble, Glenn C. 210 Wyse, Allen J. 183 Wyse, Dexter L. 200 Wyse, Jonalix N. 183 Wyse, Sanford J. 192 Yoder, Bruce A. 4,183 Yoder, Carol C. 200 Yoder, Carolyn E. 192 Yoder, Cheryl A. Yoder, Christina J. 43, 200 Yoder, Dale W. 210 Yoder, Daniel W. 210 Yoder, David J. 210 Yoder, Debra A. 200 Yoder, Duane L. 52, 200 Yoder, Ellen K. 182 Yoder, Ethel D. 14, 184 Yoder, Gerald L. 210 Yoder, Glenn 183 Yoder, Gretchen J. 192 Yoder, Jerold A. 210 Yoder, John M. 200 Yoder, Joseph Yoder, Judith K. 192 Yoder, Judith L. 192 Yoder, June E. 68, 200 Yoder, K. Joan 184 Yoder, Joyce 15 Yoder, Kathryn P. 62, 210 Yoder, Kathy S. 210 Yoder, Keith E. 23, 81,210 Yoder, Lois 192 Yoder, Marcia K. 200 Yoder, Martha A. 200 Yoder, Mary Ellen 200 Yoder, Mary Sue Yoder, Peggy L. 210 Yoder, Rachel A. 192 Yoder, Ralph E. 192 Yoder, Richard L. 200 Yoder, Victor E. 200 Yoder, Wanda F. 200 Yoder, Wanda R. 210 Yoder, Wendell P. 72,210 Yoder, Willard R. 210 Yoder, William E. 200 Yousey,Eva K. 210 Yousey, Marcia J. 200 Zehr, Bernice L. 85, 200 Zehr, Donna L. 200 Zehr, Francis E. 210 Zeiset, Anna R. 200 Ziegler, Ruth Ann 210 Zimmerman, Darleen K. 184 Zimmerman, lla 192 Zook, Barbara L. 200 Zook, Herbert W. 69, 72, 73, 210 Zook, J. Irvin 200 Zook, Jean A. 192 Zook, Leander A. 200 Zook, Madonna C. 40, 210 Zook, Melinda R. 210 Zook, Omar B. Jr. 92, 192 Zook, Rose Marie 210 Zuercher, Penni 200 lf we love someone very much, is it necessary that we should see him in order to think of him? 254 Photo Credits: James L. Bowman: Faculty and student portraits, 8, 56, 89, 225, 234, 255 Dale Brubaker: 50, 60, 61, 66, 67, 73, 74, 75, 82, 88 Clair Hershey: 9, 15, 23, 26, 42, 64, 77, 84, 90, 91, 92, 93, 105, 188, 196, 199, 203,235 Dave Hooley: 40, 48 Phil Loux: 247 Phil Miller: 74, 77 Stan Oswald: 13, 16, 22, 49, 63, 69, 72, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 90, 91, 92, 93,187, 201,239, 249 Randy Shank: 18 J. D. Stahl: 242 John Yoder: 5, 240 Business assistants: Gerald Heavener, Steve Hackman, Randy Moyers, and Velma Denlinger. Typists: Velma Denlinger, Rachel Derstein, Linda Lefever, Lois Mest, and Mary Ellen Yoder. Our thanks also to Stuart Showalter, our faculty advisor; to Bruce Yoder for music provided by Maggie and to Joe Coldfus, Patsy Barnhart, and our friends and neighbors on second floor.


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1968

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1969

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1970

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1972

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