Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA)

 - Class of 1975

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Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1975 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 245 of the 1975 volume:

1975 SHENANDOAH BOOK I VOLUME XXIX EASTERN MENNONITE COLLEGE HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA Did you ever read about a frog that dreamed of being a king, and then became one? But then he discovered that he was no longer a frog. He was lost and didn't like the song of being alone. He shouted to the air and not even the chairs took notice. His jump was too big. He had no way to measure himself. Such inability to find the way, could happen to a kid who dreams of being a college student, and then becomes one. But it's not terribly likely here at this college, here in the eternal security of the Shenandoah hills. (If that frog had been a Mennonite, would he have lost himself so easily?) Most of us here have plenty of things by which to measure ourselves and remember who we are. Here's an illustration by parable. PARABLE: We have a room at home, used little enough that a few pencil markings on the door frame don't matter. Once or twice a year my father would take each of us children there, stand us flat against the frame and level a book on our heads. Then we'd gently creep out from under the book while he held it steady and made a mark along its edge. When I was small. I'd lift my chin slightly, trying to raise the crown of my head. But later as I grew taller than my friends. I'd shrink under the weight of the book. It was the book that determined my height. Daddy judged the book and marked my growing progress. MORAL: We Mennonites and evangelicals are pretty lucky. There's always that book to measure by. Even for those of us who don't believe in it, the book is always there to return the echo of our infant shouts, to give a sense of direction. The point is, we have a traditional past by which to measure ourselves. College contains a multitude of measurements. PARABLE: For one of my courses: (1) I read and digested for personal benefit, discussion, and quizzes, the entire list of books on page two of the syllabus. (2) I prepared a 2000 word term paper (6 to 8 pages, typewritten, double-spaced, with bibliography and footnotes) on an approved topic of my own choosing. I turned it in by November 15. (3) My course grade was compiled of term paper (1 3), objective tests (1 3), essay questions (1 6), atten- dance and final exam (1 6). MORAL: I kept myself busy. I took notes and did my paper according to what I thought my professor wanted. I got a redeeming grade, according to the academic plan of student salvation. And so we measure ourselves. We measure ourselves by our spiritual expression. See page 94. We measure ourselves by how busy we are. Turn to page 102 for that. What happens when you take some of the buildings and places around campus and use them as objects of fantasy. That might be a little hard to measure. See page 106. And so here it is folks, another yearbook. In pictures and words another record of the way we were. 2 • PRELUDE ' V . 4 PRELUDE PrELUDe 6 • PRELUDE PRELUDE • 7 8 • PRELUDE PRELUDE 9 PRELUDE • 11 12 • PRELUDE PRELUDE 13 14 • PRELUDE Claudia Allebach Sheryl L. Allen Steven O. Allen Susan M. Althouse Joy Dawn Bachman David L. Baer Ruth A. Beachey Barbara J. Beachy James K. Beachy Marilyn Beachy Sara M. Beckler Judith E. Benner Sharon E. Bentch C. Denise Berkshire E. Diane Biller J. Eric Bishop Diane F. Blosser Laura L. Blosser Donald C. Bomberger Randall J. Bowman Joanna L. Branner Kathleen M. Brenneman William Brown Karl E. Brubaker 16 • FRESHMEN Nancy J. Campbell Elaine S. Chaffee Janet L. Clarke Jayne A. Clarke Sylvia J. Clymer William C. Covelens Roberta J. Cox Debra C. Cramer Sharon J. Brubaker Polly G. Brunk Reeina G. Brunk Dale E. Bucher Gregory N. Buracker Douglas Burkholder FRESHMEN • 17 Janice L. Cullar June E. Davidhizar S. Lavonne Davis Diane E. Deaton Barbara S. Derstine Joanne Detweiler Linda G. Eberly Marian B. Eberly Melvin Esh Carol R. Eshleman Diane L. Eshleman Doreen E. Ewert Ken A. Fath Marcia Fike Judith D. Flisher Steven P. Frei 18 • FRESHMEN Sidney M. Frey Daniel L. Gehman Susan D. Gehman Wendy L. Gehman Joseph A. Gerber Faitn L. Gnagey S. Lorraine Gordon Audrey J. Guengerich Teresa A. Hartman Joyce E. Hartzler Daniel G. Heacock Evelyn J. Heatwole Leslie N. Helmuth Steve A. Helmuth R. Keith Hensley Rose A. Herr Dawn M. Hershey Cynthia J. Histand Karen R. Hochstetler Gary L. Hooley Brenda Sue Hostetler Alden L. Hostetter Charles H. Hunsberger Dawn Hunsberger FRESHMEN • 19 Jolene Hunsberger Lois G. Hunsberger Abdidahir Ibrahim Nevin Immel Sherry L. Jeter William L. Jones Jr. Harry S. Jordan Leisa J. Kanaey Jeanette Kandel Linford A. Kauffman J. Wayne Kibler Rosemary L. Kindy Pamela C. King Barbara J. Kolb Virginia M. Kratz 20 • FRESHMEN J. Charles Kray bill Mary Ann Kreider Clift R. Landis Loralea Landis Timothy Landis Katherine Lee J. David Lehman Judith A. Lehman Timothy J. Lehman Brent L. Leichty Donna K. Longacre Terry D. Longenecker Joann Lyndaker Rebecca L. Maltby Cassandra Mannhardt Julia Ann Martin Linford D. Martin Orpha B. Martin Phillip L. Martin Sharon E. Martin W. Gary Martin Yvonne F. Martin David C. Mathews Conley K. McMullen FRESHMEN • 21 Sharon L. Mease Robert P. Millen Ann Miller Barbara Ann Miller Carolyn Y. Miller James A. Miller Margie Miller Marcia L. Miller Marie A. Miller Randy J. Miller Rebecca D. Miller Barbara J. Millette Don J. Mishler Deborah J. Moore Norma K. Morris Rose M. Musser Sheryl Myers Colette L. Nafziger Kenneth L. Nafziger Marla D. Nafziger Thomas L. Nissley Steve A. Nussbaum Donald O. Ongalo Diane L. Payne 22 • FRESHMEN Betty A. Peachey Kenneth R. Pellman Kevin B. Phillips Weldon G. Raber Susan K. Reed Wanda Reimer Kenneth D. Reinford Ralph L. Reinford Susan L. Rhodes Deborah K. Rice Dennis G. Rice Paulette Ricks Phillip E. Risser Ivonne Rivas Patricia J. Rohrer Ruth A. Ropp FRESHMEN • 23 Linda R. Roth Naomi L. Ryman Mary Lou Schmitt Joanna Schrock Wilda K. Schwartzentruber Cheryl L. Schweitzer Sheldon B. Shank Deborah G. Sheets Susanne Shelly Karen Sue Shenk Craig D. Shoemaker Dawn L. Showalter Jeanie L. Showalter Sharon L. Smith Marlene F. Smoker M. Elizabeth Smylie Anna Ruth Snider Rachel K. Stahl Mary Grace Stauffer Donna C. Steinman 24 • FRESHMEN Evelyn K. Steppe Helen J. Stoltzrus Winfred E. Stoltzfus Carol A. Stouffer Rebecca J. Stultz Carolyn J. Stutsman Maurice Stutzman David E. Swarr Timothy P. Swartz Don Swartzentruber Richard L. Swartzentruber James E. Thomas Timothy K. Thomas Daphne C. Trent Dennis W. Trissel Edna N. Troyer Bonnie L. Valentine Mary B. Wagler Marla J. Wampler Edith I. Weaver Louella M. Weaver Emily L. Wenger Janice E. Wenger Miriam R. Wengerd FRESHMEN • 25 Teena M. Werner David M. White Sarah A. Widmer Dale L. Williams Roy A. Williams Grace E. Witmer Robert N. Witmer John Y. Wong Amy Yoder Diane B. Yoder Karen M. Yoder Phil R. Yoder Mark E. Young Mary E. Yutzy Waunita K. Yutzy Peter F. Zimmerli Nilson J. Assis Steven B. Brunk Gay N. Craun Nancy K. Frost Manoochehr Ghelighshlagh Stephen C. Hartzler Deora K. Hedrick Steve A. Helmuth Bradley L. Hostetler Not Pictured Vemon D. Isner Ray A. Johnson Ronald D. Lyndaker Robin Dale Martin Gary Lee Meeks Alan K. Messersmith Eugene D. Miller Anita R. Rheinheimer Carol J. Rutt Paul G. Zook Eric D. Shirk Donna R. Siegrist J. Marvin Siegrist Dennis J. Smucker Donald E. Stansfield Donna K. Swink Sandy M. Swortzel Sheldon L. Whitmore Vicki L. Yeatts Jr. 26 • FRESHMEN Gail A. Baliles Rebecca S. Baliles N. Kae Beiler John P. Bender Lois R. Bergstrom Bejos B. Beya Mary L. Biser David S. Breneman Beth A. Brunk J. Daniel Bucher Mary Ann Buckwalter Gail Ann Burkholder Karen J. Albrecht Diana L. Amick Eugene W. Amstutz Gail L. Bachman SOPHOMORES • 27 George A. Custer Carol C. Darden Ardith J. Delong David A. Detrow Marilou Enns Jean Epstein Lois May Burkholder Esther F. Cassel Benjamin L. Charles Mary L. Clemens Ronald L. Clemens Diana L. Cline Claudia J. Cole Christine Cooley Mary Ina Flisher James L. Flory Cynthia Jo Frey John M. Fritzman 28 • SOPHOMORES Esther A. Fulton Judith E. Garber Sharon Gerber Agnes L. Gibson Galen T. Gingerich Janet L. Gingerich Debra Ann Glick Helen R. Good Jo Lynette Good Marilyn F. Grasse David B. Greiser Daniel B. Grimes Jerrold L. Grosh Annette A. Guengerich Wesley J. Hamm Marilyn K. Handrich Barbara A. Hartman Karen L. Heitz John R. Herr Susie J. Hertzler Gloria K. Hess Maria E. Hidalgo Sue Ann Hiner C. Wendell Histand SOPHOMORES • 29 Sanford E. Hochstetler Anne M. Hodel Deborah A. Hodges Rowena A. Holloway Florence Hoogterp Donald E. Hooley J. Marcos Hostetler Ray A. Hostetler Bette J. Hudson Linda M. Hunsberger Carolyn J. Hunsecker Douglas B. Jantzi Christine Kauffman Karen L. Kaufmann Dana Ray Keener James A. Kennel Dave A. King Rodney L. King Cheeri L. Knabe Debra A. Kolb J. Walter Kolb Jose Koshy Daryl R. Landis Nancy Landis 30 • SOPHOMORES Steven E. Landis Jay Mark Leaman Barbara A. Lehman Lois E. Lehman Peter D. Lehman Paul M. Leidig Charles Libby Patricia A. Lobb Sheryl A. Longacre Kathy M. Martens David E. Martin Loma M. McBee Rachel E. Melhom Karen R. Mengle Kathryn J. Meyer E. Louise Miller SOPHOMORES • 31 Harold N. Miller Sue A. Miller Susan K. Miller Theresa A. Miller Richard-G. Mininger Juanita Moore Rosalyn J. Myers Sandra L. Nachtigal Carol C. Nafziger Julianne Nash Joyce R. Neuenschwander Mary Ellen Nissley Miriam K. Nussbaum Dulcy Jean O'Donnell Peace N. Okoli Jo Ellen Oliver 32 • SOPHOMORES Marilyn J. Olsen Diane L. Pavuk Kathryn L. Peachey Elaine S. Peters Ann E. Plank Jayne P. Purser Glenna Mae Ramer Lois A. Ranck Gerald J. Ressler Carmen Reyes Ramona Reyes Miriam L. Risser Margaret A. Roberts Pamela A. Rohrer Laurel A. Roth Mary Beth Rutt Andrew F. Saunders Amy Lynn Schaefer Bradley L. Schlabach Bruce A. Schlabach Carol M. Schrock Karen E. Sensenig Virginia A. Schwartzentruber Betty I. Shank SOPHOMORES • 33 Jonathan D. Shenk Phyllis J. Shenk Bonnie J. Showalter M. Inga Sivills James L. Stanley Ruth A. Stanley Darcy A. Stauffer Loma L. Stauffer Judy E. Steiner Christine Stuck Timothy W. Stutzman J. Duane Swartley Joy Swartley Julia M. Swartzentruber Susan E. Taylor Bonnie L. Thomas Brenda R. Thomas J. Samuel Thomas James D. Townsend Ninhson Thi Tran Doris J. Tutt Julie Anne Ulmer David A. Walker Charmaine Weaver 34 • SOPHOMORES Melody E. Weaver Lucy F. Weldy Mark R. Wenger Richard D. Wenger Paul E. Wesselhoeft Cheryl L. Wetmore Twila J. Whitacre Cheryl V. Wideman Rhonda M. Wingfield Donna L. Witmer Arlene L. Witmer Miriam R. Witmer SOPHOMORES • 35 Joyce A. Whitson Enos H. Yeager Andrea J. Yoder Jonathan P. Yoder Mary E. Yoder Paul J. Yoder Richard L. Yoder Sharon L. Yoder Edward F. Youket Kim Yousey Mary A. Yutzy Michael D. Zehr Deborah A. Revercomb John E. Zook Carolyn K. Zoss Patricia A. Collins James G. Alexander Randall J. Brunk Paula Sue Burk Edward T. Byler Clarence T. Cash Sandra M. Cleaver Clarence Davis Jr. J. Michael Easterday Firouzeh Etebar Catherine Fairfield Irene H. Frank Larry R. Friedt Not Pictured David D. Garber Sandra F. Good B. Sue Hershey P. Bruce Hess James W. Hofstetter Sandra K. Horrell K.C. Johnson Kenneth D. Kyger Dorothy R. Ligntner Ellen M- Miller Jerryl Miller James W. Price Marjorie L. Salsbury Walter W. Sawatzky Diana J. Sherwood Faye Y. Shifflett Valerie R. Stevens Maiy K. Summer Frederick Swartzendruber Karen D. Wade Jerry L. Wall III Theresa A. Yelton Stanley J. Yoder Bethany K. Zehr Two year graduates 36 • SOPHOMORES Carol F. Adams Maryanne Alderfer Linda E. Augsburger Carol D. Bacnman Peggy Jean Bair Suzanne L. Bareis Deborah K. Beachy Kenneth O. Beam Dolores M. Beiler Omar J. Beiler Marlin D. Bender Andrea R. Black Floyd G. Blosser Rachel A. Blosser John M. Bomberger Yvonne D. Bomberger JUNIORS • 37 Patrick J. Bopp Rita A. Brenneman Reba S. Brunk William R. Buracker Jr. David R. Byler Jonathan R. Byler L. Gail Campbell Alice M. Caskey Frank L. Caulder Janet M. Clemens Yvonne G. Cline Nancy J. Collins Anne L. Crist Judith A. Dickerson Mary Rose Dorsey Bruce Driver Ruth Dutcher Carol W. Eberly 38 • JUNIORS Charlotte Eby Pamela C. Edwards Timothy M. Ehst Dolores J. Fisher Karen S. Freed Edward E. Frey Linda M. Gehman Dennis D. Gingerich Earl L. Gingerich Frieda G. Goad Luke L. Godshall Ann K. Graber Barbra R. Graber Carolyn J. Grasse J. Michael Greene Luanne R. Gross Darlene M. Hain David L. Hamilton Steven M. Harder Charles E. Hamer James M. Harr Alvina J. Heatwole Keith W. Heavener Faith L. Hershberger JUNIORS • 39 Walter Mason Hilton Diana S. Holland Donna Kay Hooley Herbert L. Hoover Philip M. Horst Doretta L. Hostetler Marilyn K. Hostetler Deora S. Huffman E. Ellen Hunsberger L. Gerald Hunsberger Pamela S. Ide Paul E. Isaacs Martha O. Johns Ronald H. Jones Regina M. Keener David A. King Michael A. King Donna F. Kinsinger Lois E. Kniss Martha F. Krabill J. David Kreider Genet M. Kuhns Betty L. Kurtz Pearl N. Kurtz 40 • JUNIORS C. Stephen Lamb Michael A. Landis Nancy L. Landis June M. Lantz Don Earl Layman Wayne R. Lehman C. Dan Liechty Ann K. Livengood Joyce A. Longacre Colleen A. Martin Karen L. Martin Sandra J. Martin Darrell E. McVay William W. Mengershausen Carol J. Miller Karla J. Miller JUNIORS • 41 Juanita L. Norris Paul Okullu Dennis R. Ours L. Beth Pellman Brenda L. Perkinson Judy Price Rachel C. Miller Richard J. Miller Retha J. Mishler Joseph T. Moore Barbara C. Morris Mary Jane Moyer Susan M. Moyer Byron D. Mullet J. Marlin Myers Martha J. Naffziger Kent D. Nafziger Marian E. Newswanger 42 • JUNIORS Ruth Ann Ramer Joanne K. Ranck Rhoda R. Reinford Lawrence E. Ressler Christine Ridgeway Delvin L. Riegsecker Calvin G. Roggie Leland J. Ropp Richard J. Roth G. Roger Rutt Jack C. Schlosser Randy L. Schweitzer JUNIORS • 43 Nancy J. Shiflett Valerie K. Showalter Ray E. Smucker Linda W. Snader Rhonda L. Stauffer Diane E. Stitt Don M. Stoltzfus Yvonne A. Troyer Mary Lou Wagner Daniel P. Weaver M. Gregory Weaver Louise A. Wenger 44 • JUNIORS Daryl K. Witmer Gloria D. Woods Sara J. Wyse Rebecca W. Yeago Keith J. Yoder Kenneth L. Yoder Kevin C. Yoder Leon R. Yoder Mahlon C. Yoder Phil Yoder Ruth Ann Zehr Ethan D. Zook Levi O. Ameka Robrietta Batzdorf Wayne L. Berry Elizabeth Beyer Susan M. Brown J. Robert Brunk Sylvia J. Brunk Timothy C. Frazier Patricia A. Goosen Todd B. Graybill Not Pictured Joel L. Gross Bobby G. Kerns Sanford R. King William E. Leftwich Evelyn S. Mast Gwen Mast Louise Mast Lewis E. McDorman Deborah M. Mielke Martin L. Mikaya Craig M. Miller Edgar L. Miller Katnleen L. Miller Norman J. Moshier Keith D. Mumbert Lois Ann Mundy Miguel A. Rivera Susan C. Shortell Le Thanh Tran Dennis A. Wyse JUNIORS • 45 I'm a senior now. Having made it to the top of the college dung heap seems less attractive than I'd expected. They tell me visibility from higher up is better. I played by the institu- tion's competitive rules, sacrificing sleep and eat for the grade while forgetting many times in my haste the knowledge itself. From the top I don't want to say it was all futile, and likely it wasn't. But could it have happened otherwise? I'm not convinced that seeing from the top of the pile is preferable to never having begun the push upward. My sense of wonder and curiosity is in danger of slipping away now that I know the answers and the expected behavior. My fiery chariot hastening across the sky has been systematized — ball of gases. My rolled up pantaloons and merry whistled tunes have lapsed into professional garb. Dung isn't much use on a pile. Its stinking fertility must be spread far and wide. If and when I finish looking around from my illusory height perhaps I'll jam my diploma into my pocket, roll up my pant legs and begin slinging — only, what if I smell like the farm? BONNIE E. BARNHART Stuarts Draft, Virginia Education 46 • SENIORS 4 Nursing CHARLOTTE ANDERSON Winchester, Virginia RODNEY L. ALLEBACH Telford, Pennsylvania Business Administration Nursing BARBARA BEILER Narvon, Pennsylvania MARY BECKER Albany, Oregon Nursing T. EDGAR BENNER Lancaster, Pennsylvania Liberal Arts SENIORS • 47 SUSAN K. BYLER Belleville, Pennsylvania Nursing SANDI BONTRAGER Topeka, Indiana Sociology, Social Work 48 • SENIORS Bible ALVARO FERNANDEZ BANCHERO Sauce Dpto. Cartelones, Uruguay JANE STOLTZFUS BULLER Harrisonburg, Virginia NADENE SWARTZENTRUBER BRUNK Harrisonburg, Virginia Liberal Arts Nursing JIM BULLER Harrisonburg, Virginia Psychology SENIORS • 49 Education CYNTHIA CARWILE Thaxton, Virginia Nursing RUDY F. CHUPP Chouteau, Oklahoma RODNEY E. DENLINGER Gordonville, Pennsylvania Physics GLENNA J. COFFMAN Harrisonburg, Virginia Education 50 • SENIORS Psychology WILLIAM J. CHELGRAN New Castle, Delaware DIANE F. DAVIS Waynesboro, Virginia Home Economics Education SENIORS • 51 52 • SENIORS ALLEN R. ESHLEMAN Chambersburg, Pennsylvania Bible VALDA GARBER Harrisonburg, Virginia Nursing SENIORS • 53 Education JOSEPH W. HACKMAN Allentown, Pennsylvania D. BRENT GUNSALUS Staunton, Virginia Sociology 54 • SENIORS I Sociology KENNETH M. HANDRICH Harrisonburg, Virginia SENIORS • 55 Biology GARY E. HOCHSTETLER Berlin, Ohio MARY HESS Lancaster Pennsylvania Nursing Modern Language BETH HEGE Lancaster, Pennsylvania Nursing HELEN M. SHOWALTER HERTZLER Maugansville, Maryland JANICE M. GODSHALL Harrisonburg, Virginia Education KENNETH D. GODSHALL Harrisonburg, Virginia Education 56 • SENIORS MIRIAM H. HERR Lancaster, Pennsylvania Nursing STEVE HERSHBERGER Sugarcreek, Ohio Business Administration SENIORS • 57 GALEN HORST Ephrata, Pennsylvania History, Social Science JOY BURKHOLDER KANAGY Harrisonburg, Virginia Nursing 58 • SENIORS Bible LEROY HULVEY Staunton, Virginia Education BETTY HOLSINGER Hesston, Kansas MILTON BOWMAN JARRELS Port Republic, Virginia Sociology, Social Work SENIORS • 59 EVELYN ELAINE KRE1DER Osceola, Indiana Sociology, Social Work 60 • SENIORS English DAVID KRAYBILL Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania DANIEL L. KING Harrisonburg, Virginia Biology Education SENIORS • 61 Nursing PEGGY NAFZIGER MARTIN Broadway, Virginia Biology Education J. DAVID MARTIN Broadway, Virginia English LORETTA E. LEHMAN Leola, Pennsylvania RANDALL L. LONGENECKER Middletown, Pennsylvania Biology CHRISTINE MATHIAS Stuarts Draft, Virginia Sociology, Social Work 62 • SENIORS Education PAMELA LYNDAKER Harrisonburg, Virginia Bible Education BRUCE LYNDAKER Harrisonburg, Virginia Nursing JANET GARBER LOKER Dayton, Virginia M. JANE LOBB Collingswood, New ]ersey Nursing DENNIS E. MAUST Harrisonburg, Virginia Art SENIORS • 63 ARCHIE RAY MECGINSON Norfolk, Virginia Physical Education 64 • SENIORS Sociology, Social Work HARLAN A. LANNY MILLETTE Alexandria, Virginia JULIA MILLER Archbold, Ohio Biology SENIORS • 65 Sociology, Social Work JAMES W. MUSSER East Earl, Pennsylvania SHERYL PETERSHEIM Morgantown, Pennsylvania Nursing 1 66 • SENIORS Home Economics Education DOTTIE NOLT Manheim, Pennsylvania Biology STEVE MUMAW Smithville, Ohio MARY LYNNETTE NEWTON Norfolk, Virginia Nursing DONALD P. OSWALD Lincoln, Nebraska Psychology FREDERICK R. PLASTERER Roanoke, Virginia History, Sociology SENIORS • 67 Education MARIE G. PUTNAM Front Royal, Virginia LUCINDA JUNE REGAN Missoula, Montana English 68 • SENIORS Nursing NAOMI W. RESSLER Harrisonburg, Virginia Nursing BARBARA A. RICH West Chester, Pennsylvania LYNN L. ROTH Milford, Nebraska Business Administration LEANNA SHOWALTER RHODES Harrisonburg, Virginia Nursing SENIORS • 69 Home Economics DORIS A. KAUFFMAN RISSER Gordonville, Pennsylvania Physics Education J. DAVID RISSER Greencastle, Pennsylvania JON H. SCHROCK Harrisonburg, Virginia Chemistry 70 • SENIORS Business Administration Education VERLEN GENE RUFENACHT Wauseon, Ohio Liberal Arts ANITA L. YODER SARCO Denbigh, Virginia MARIAN R. SAUDER Ephrata, Pennsylvania Education DAVID WESLEY SCHLABACH Millersburg, Ohio Biology ELAINE SEE Mathias, West Virginia Nursing SENIORS • 71 Liberal Arts N. GERALD SHENK Mt. Joy, Pennsylvania Liberal Arts BARBARA S. SHENK Hokkaido, Japan I'.V.V KEATON SHENK Elida, Ohio Education GLORIA JOY SHENK Richmond, Virginia Education KAREN SHENK Newport News, Virginia Education 72 • SENIORS s Nursing PANSY M. SHEATS Wauseon, Ohio History, Social Science EARL T. SHEATS Florida City, Florida Education GAILE A. SHAW Kingston, Jamaica AHMAD KHALIL SHADID Dura-Hebron, Palestine Biology SENIORS • 73 Business Administration JAMES MICHAEL SHOW ALTER Broadway, Virginia Modern Language MIRIAM A. STRITE Williamsport, Maryland RONALD L. STOLTZFUS Intercourse, Pennsylvania Business Administration EMILY K. SHANK Broadway, Virginia Business Administration 74 • SENIORS v JULIA A. SHULTZ Willow Street, Pennsylvania Nursing SENIORS • 75 History ROBERT W. WHEELER Syracuse, New York Biology JANNA KAY WEAVER Stuarts Draft, Virginia SARA E. WENGER Lancaster, Pennsylvania English Education 76 • SENIORS Nursing SHARON A. STEVENS Altoona, Pennsylvania Nursing SHARON L. SWARTZ Dayton, Virginia BEVERLY TROYER Elida, Ohio Education SENIORS • 77 Bible REV. ROBERT H. WOODFIN Fulks Run, Virginia CHARLINDA WYSE Archbold, Ohio Nursing 78 • SENIORS Modern Language DARLIS A. YODER Belleville, Pennsylvania History DALE WILBERS Perkasie, Pennsylvania MARLIN E. YODER Belleville, Pennsylvania Mathematics Education IRENE F. WITMER Salem, Ohio Psychology SENIORS • 79 Business Administration DAVID W. YODER Orrville, Ohio Education R. SHARON YODER Grantsville, Maryland History PETER ZUCCONI Woodstock, Virginia Not Pictured Paula Y. Brown Gloria H. Cotchen Jose L. Cruz Kathy L. Dean Karen B. Emery Dorothy J. Hess Nnabugwu W. Iromuanya David V. Kauffman R. Timothy Kaufman Phillip A. King C. Eldon Kurtz Ajay T. Massey Ronald E. McMulIan Victoria G. Mendenhall Mary Jane Mundy Marjorie A. Nussbaum John M. Okay Gladys Ropp Philip E. Kopp N. Richard Shortell Shannon W. Swortzel Charles R. Vogan Jr. Ezekiel Waweru David M. Weaver J. Byard Yoder DELBERT YODER Meyersdale, Pennsylvania Biology 80 • SENIORS m m THE CRUCIBLE WRITTEN BY ARTHUR MILLER PRODUCED BY DRAMA GUILD DIRECTED BY KAE BEILER SPONSORED BY BETTY BRUNK A gang of savages, these Puritans. Student Vengeance walks in Salem, I'll not give my wife to vengeance. Proctor When Miller wrote the play he was attempting to combat the political witch hunting of the McCarthy era. The play is not about the occult. Faculty Why didn't the men sell their souls to the devil as the women did? Student Men invest the devil with the power they themselves want. Student Chris Cooley, Nancy Campbell, Barb Beachy 82 • PROGRAMS Don Stoltzfus, Barb Graber, Helen Stoltzfus ( Jon Shenk, Linford Martin PROGRAMS • 83 LECTURE-MUSIC SERIES Alex Haley Alex Haley, author of soon to be released book, Roofs, lectured on campus October 2. When I was a little boy, sitting behind Grandma's chair in Tennessee, on her front porch . . My great-grandmother, Kissy, began to tell George the stories she'd heard from her father name Kinte, the African, who called a guitar ko, and a river Kambi Bolongo; who said he'd been chopping wood when he'd been kidnapped . . Yes, we have been told by the forefathers that there are many of us from this place that are in exile in that place called America. The EMC campus hosted the Goshen Baroque Ensemble October 18 for a concert of exclusively Baroque music. Lon Sherer, a specialist in Baroque string music, performed the rarely heard Biblical Sonatas with ease. The Bach da gamba sonata — Mary Oyer, cello, Kathryn Sherer, piano — was a fine expression of melodic line. Director Doyle Preheim's stylistic versatility contained both the charm and the dignity of the respective works. 84 • PROGRAMS EVENING CONCERTS The European Mennonite Bible School Choir directed by Hans-Jakob Ruefenacht traveled from coast to coast in the Un- ited States and in Canada. The last stop in their two and one half month tour was on the EMC campus, October 1 and 2. George King and the Fellowship from Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania, performed Friday night October 25. The concert was sponsored by the Student Government Association. PROGRAMS • 85 TALENT NIGHT Darlene Hain Jack Schlosser, Dan Liechty, Lawrence Ressler, Ivan Shantz 86 • PROGRAMS Martha Johns, Pam Ide, Brenda Perkinson f October 12, 1974 Comic relief from a heavy week. My name's Al Keim. I work here on the plantation. EMC's talent night is a cross between Hee Haw and Sesame Street. Talent night, like football, is made up of spasms of violence between committee meetings. — Quotes from Al Keim, Master of Ceremonies PROGRAMS • 87 TENNIS 88 • SPORTS HOCKEY - ''TU ' r 'i i- Amelia Bomberger SPORTS • 89 SOCCER 90 • SPORTS SPORTS • 91 CROSS COUNTRY Jon Byler Meets won — 10 Meets lost — 4 Marlin Yoder National Christian College Cross Country Champions 92 • SPORTS SPORTS • 93 Judy Dickerson, Lorna Stauffer, June Davidhizar FOR THE LOVE OF GOD What is a Christian college and how can spiritual life be described? Certainly the buildings are a- moral and spiritual life is like life itself, an experience impossible to capture in all its essence. EMC is a college different from many others in that it is run according to a way of religious belief. The unique- ness of this situation justifies our attempt to portray something which is very personal and yet public, nebulous and yet concrete. Christian teaching occurs in the classroom, in chapel, in group studies, and in one-to-one discipling. But it is fellowship which helps us to sound out and integrate what we receive. Interaction with like, and not-so-like-minded people in the dorm and in class, with townspeople or faculty, in church or in an apartment, helps us to discern a way of life. Finally, it comes to the acting out of beliefs, the preparation which emerges in practice, collectively or individually. The expression of service in visiting or singing, Walk for Hunger, Saturday Adoption, helping the handicapped, and working with alcoholics or run- aways can be gratifying. There is even class credit for helping the sick, visiting prisons, preaching, or tutoring. But it's dealing with the heartache and frustration, releasing the joy, and living in peace, that bring spiritual life to the individual and revitalize one's relationship to God. Some of this material was gathered, some comes from a 6 10 of 1% response to a public request for student and faculty statements about EMC's spiritual life. — Lucinda Regan 94 • FEATURE 25 EMC students, YPCA members, go to the Wilson Rehabilitation Center in Waynesboro every weekend to help with recreation. Y activities include Campus Church, Good News Teams, Y churches, jail visitation, and Saturday Adoption. These activities sprout out of the Y's 50 year old mandate to promote growth in Christian charac- ter, fellowship, and devotion to Jesus Christ and the extension of His church. Top, and bottom left photos, Wilson Rehab. Right, teaching Sun- day School at a Y church. FEATURE • 95 What do you think of the spiritual life on EMC campus? Student Responses: — Supportive, especially in the event of tragedy. — Concerned, but often without commitment. Maybe we don't know how or what to commit. — I appreciate the stress on commitment, brotherhood and living the simple life. — What makes me upset on campus is that there is so little interaction with the world around us. — Most of the people I associate with seem very spiritual. They want to do what God wants them to; they're here because God wants them here. — It's harder to be a Christian at a Christian college because you don't have to share your faith as much here as on a secular campus — it's easy to just become com- placent. — Person to person and small informal group in- teraction with other Christians has been of tre- mendous value to me and will probably be one of the most important things I get out of being here at EMC. — One of the deepest struggles I've been having concerns my view on the Bible. The fact that we're exposed to a broad spectrum of views on it will be very strengthening to me once I have worked through it. — I sense a spirit of openness and caring by faculty as to the spiritual life of students. FEATURE • 97 A Christian college exists not only to fill that empty place in our heads, but that awful vacuum in our inner man. Loving obedience in view of Christ's sufferings for us will bring His gift of the Holy Spirit if we ask, and He fills that awful vacuum. This is so very simple and eternally satisfying that all should have it. — Mr. and Mrs. William Schubert, Missionaries-in-Residence 98 • FEATURE At one time I had a lot of trouble accepting shows of religion — public expressions of spirituality. Now I don't. I went to a non-Christian college where kids were just as fervent in their spirituality as were the old Mennonite standbys that had always turned me off. The big difference was that the Mennonites were being spiritual in a Biblical context; the non- Christians at the college I went to were being spiritual in ways dictated by the times and the cul- ture. The Mennonites were in prayer meetings. The kids at college were at dope parties. Both were tak- ing journeys whose ultimate goal was to find mean- ing, to find intensity, to find a place where they could stand. Now I'm here at EMC. Are these people really a bunch of religious cranks? I think not. This com- munity recognizes the existence of God. It recog- nizes that all human existence is grounded in God. This community suggests certain guidelines to help us continually be aware of God. The result is a fairly mellow atmosphere. I am grateful for such an at- mosphere in which to do some thinking, studying and planning for the future. An awareness of God and a high priority on community at EMC cut out a lot of the unproductive and circular restlessness that pervaded the non- Christian college I went to. Here I experience more humanness. More taking of time for others. At EMC the level of desperation is low enough that people can afford to care. — Student FEATURE • 99 I never get over the thrill of the gathered campus group for chapel 3 times a week, 1000 people. The excitement of having all the student body and some of the faculty together at one place at one time. — Student 100 • FEATURE Spiritual Emphasis Week was October 7-11. Lawrence Burkholder, president of Goshen Col- lege, and LaDon Sheats, from Koinonia Farms, Georgia, were the speakers. Larry Mann and Marilyn Houser, also from Koinonia, were re- source persons. Student Responses: — Spiritual emphasis week was the beginning of a real turning point in my spiritual life. It was an emphasis on the Holy Spirit which for the first time caused me to catch a glimpse of the fact that the Christian life is really worth living. There actually is a joy, a peace, and a satisfaction in serving Christ. — I see Sheats' condemnation of materialism, especially Mennonite materialism, as quite jus- tified; it shook me up a bit about my own life style. — The spiritual life week wasn't geared toward salvation at all. — LaDon Sheats is a prophet sent from God. We can't sit back and do nothing. Either we respond toward change and evaluate our lives, or we try to avoid thinking about it. FEATURE • 101 ABOUT OUR BUSYNESS By Gerry Shenk and Dave Kraybill Perhaps it's because we're paying more this year than ever before, or because we need the exercise of hurrying more, but students this year seem busier than any other group in recent memory. Some of the busyness is academic: papers, reports, tests, required reading, etc. Some is extracurricular: committees, student organizations, Y work, etc. The academics you can usually count on. Certain profs and certain courses are real bears for workloads. But one prof said of his “heavy course, The amount of work I'm requiring this year in that course is even greater than last year, yet nobody has complained, and no one has come around to give me a hassle about it. In the face of his draconian measures, this year's students appear more docile and actually less resistant to the amount of work. Last year's students would have rebelled at the quantity of work I'm piling on these students. The annual admonition to get involved met more wishers than takers, though extracurriculars continue to flourish. Apparently the general discontent of the sixties which translated to resentment at academic rigors has given way to a busy form of apathy which converts to a very serious view of studying. Is it the fleshing out of the Protestant work ethic? Are we a new generation of work-aholics? Though no one would own it, there is a sneaking suspicion that students are busy working harder than ever while learning less. One quotable prof noted his concern that students may not be alive enough to be critically involved with the educational process. Snoopy: Do you like being busy? Student: Yea, sort of. Why? Because I'm a restless person and like to go from one thing to another. That way I don't slow down and procrastinate. Snoopy: Do you like being busy? Student: Definitely not. I don't like the word busy. That's part of the rat race. I'm not part of the rat race. I have things to do but I'm not rushing. Snoopy: If you weren't busy what would you do? Student: Read Newsweek and all the back issues that I haven't been able to look at. All the Psychology Today I got last year and read only two of. I'd talk to people I haven't seen for a while. Snoopy: If I asked you to help rake leaves this week, would you? Student: I wouldn't have the time. I'd like to. I'd have a frustra- tion over it but I wouldn't have the time. Snoopy: Are you busy? Student: Well, yea. This weekend's covered. I'm not worried about next week yet. But I'm generally busy. Snoopy: What do you do when you aren't busy? Student: When I'm not busy, my mind tends to go on and on — I like to keep busy to keep my fantasy in control. 102 • FEATURE i ' Why do people run from the Post Office to the Ad Building? Is the running person usually busy? I became a trailer for thirty minutes one Friday afternoon. I chose a central spot on campus where I sat ready to go flying after running persons, stop them and find out where they were running from and where they were running to. During this time I witnessed thirteen runners, eleven of whom I was able to stop. The other two were too far away to reach. Here are the reasons that some of the running persons gave for their running: Trailer: Are you in a hurry? Runner: Taking a stop watch back that was supposed to be there (Phys. Ed. Dept.) this morning. Trailer: Are you in a hurry? Runner: No, I'm not in a hurry. Trailer: Why are you running then? Runner: I'm just taking an English paper to my prof. I always run. It's inborn, I guess. Trailer: Are you busy? Runner: No. Trailer: You seem to be walking with great forthrightness. Why? Runner: Well, because other people walk fast and I've learned to keep up with them. Trailer: Are you busy? Runner: Yea, but what do you want? Trailer: Why are you running? (Time — four minutes past 2:40) Runner: Because I don't want to be late to math class. Trailer: Where did you just come from? Runner: I was typing a term paper. Trailer: Are you busy? Runner: Yes. I'm catching a ride home and I'm two minutes late. Out of eleven persons I talked to in those thirty mi- nutes there was one exception. This person came down the Ad Building steps with a hefty pace and then ran toward the fish pond. She was running, she said be- cause she felt like it, because it was a nice day, and because she didn't have any more classes. Except for this person, however, the other ten “felt busy. They all seemed to have time for my questions; they were not so busy that they shoved me off. But to acquire a piece of their afternoon's time, to counsel with them or to play tennis with them, I would have been competing against a host of other activities, all of which were legitimate and needed to be done. Since the average student is entirely impressed with the significance of his own busyness, we opted for a more accurate assessment by asking questions about the busyness of the surveyed student's roommate. The sample was limited in size by the busyness of the interviewers, but the results may prompt a closer look at your own pace. YES NO 1. Is your roommate frequently late to class because of busyness? 27% 73% 2. Is he prompt in turning in assigned work on time? 28% 72% 3. Does he plan each day with an idea of what specific things he intends to complete that day? 70% 30% 4. Would he benefit from better planning each day? 59% 41% 5. Is he able to relax and put it all to sleep at the end of the day, in spite of the things not accomplished that day? 59% 41% 6. What activities would he do with his unscheduled time? Music, afgans, bride magazines, letter-writing and just plain gab and bull sessions. 104 FEATURE Question: What does your roommate do most with her un- scheduled time? Student: Talks to girls on the hall or goes shopping. Question: How often does she go shopping? Student: At least three times a week. Question: What does your roommate do most with her un- scheduled time? Student: Talks to people. Writes letters — but that's scheduled. Crochets; works on next year's Christmas pre- sents. Question: Is your roommate often late for class? Student: Never— always early. She likes to pick out which seat to sit in. Question: Does your roommate plan her day? Student: Yea, she has notes to herself all over her lamp and desk. Sometimes I write things on them and she doesn't even see it because she has so many notes. Guess she has them for security. Question: Is your roommate often late for class? Student: She's always late — don't tell her I said so. She's getting better though. She just takes a while to get ready. Doesn't start before she has to. Question: Does your roommate usually turn class papers in on time? Student: If I remind her. Not always. She's pretty absent- minded. Question: Does your roommate plan her day? Answer: Yea. She gets up late because she's planning her day in bed. Question: Does your roommate usually turn class papers in on time? Student: Yea — well, he usually gets an extension. This term has had two papers overdue. A college is an area of high-level energy. Students suffer from the strains of busyness for four years and then it's over. Faculty members, however, stick with it year in and year out, some for half a century. Despite heavy schedules just how busy are EMC faculty persons and how do they cope with the pressures? In the following interviews several professors talk about some side interests. Questioner: You spend a lot of time reading newspapers and magazines. Why? Prof. Gary Stuckey: Reading helps me to relate a variety of current events with my field. Also keeps me in touch with students. Reading creates a ground for communication about things that might be important to my students. Questioner: How many hours a day do you read? Stuckey: An average of 90 minutes a day. (Stuckey reads all the dailies and news weeklies in EMC's library, plus the Mennonite and other religious periodicals.) Questioner: What do you do to beat the racket, to relax? Prof. John Henry Hess: Play tennis or ping pong. Questioner: Why? Hess: Simply because it's necessary for my sanity. Get's rid of tension. Keeps me going mentally and physically. Questioner: Do you think people are too busy at EMC? Hess: I know of no other institution where faculty put out more for less. That's the only thing that makes our college survive. Our students know how to work too. That's what makes them desirable to employers. The capacity to do a lot of work is not necessarily a bad trait. (In an effort to improve efficiency, Hess has worked out a chart on which he keeps record of every part of his day.) Questioner: You know you'll never get as much done as you want to. Hess: Yes I will. I'm gonna live to be 160 just for spite. Questioner: Why do you take time out to play intramural football? Prof. Tom Finger: I play football because it's a way of brotherhood. We're supposed to be big on community here and often we professors overlook brotherhood in relating to students. Playing football helps equalize the levels between students and professors. I think I should be able to take a few blows from students, just like they take from me. FEATURE • 105 MONUMENTAL FANTASY I lie in wait. The sun in fluid rays defeats the shrouding mist and penetrates the valley morning. Currents of life begin to float the sea of grass, rippling toward science center from cafeteria. A few whisper by enroute to earliness among the waves of books. And with the morning mistlets evaporate the quiet. And the warm begins. I watch. Soon streaming torrents flood from chapel. And the warm grows and spreads itself among the people. They stop but rarely, and only to reflect some quickness of their beauty. Then continue. It's fate I'm fed the scum of passer by, visited little. 'Tis only small things I hear from those who round me stroll, or little things of nothing from those who nearby sit. In the passing goes the day. Shadows gently gliding long cover the surf of green. And with the waning light flows soon the deepening dark. And I be deep with dark and mystery, waiting err some motly swell with whirling victim come and cast their catch within my school. And so one day. And so one night. With days that promise most the same. And nights with wonder for the dripping. — Kenny Pellman FEATURE • 107 THE MARTYR HE WAS CONDEMNED TO DIE BY DROWNING. A simple engagement warranted some group action that Friday evening. THEY ASKED HIM FOR HIS LAST REQUEST; We dragged him to the fish pond and (with famous last words) HE PLEADED FOR MORE TIME TO SEE HIS FAMILY, he asked if we'd let him take off his new watch. THEY DRAGGED HIM FROM THAT PLACE, LIKE A THOUSAND BEFORE HIM. We grabbed his feet and arms, THE PEOPLE GATHERED AND FOLLOWED AS ONE, JEERING, CRYING AGAINST HIM; while everyone gathered near the pond, laughing. THEY BOUND HIM AND DID WHAT THEY HAD TO DO, We heaved him in with a 1, 2, 3. FOR IT WAS THE LAW. It had to be done, you know. HE TURNED WHITE AND TREMBLING, BUT AS THEY PLACED HIM UNDER A man does not commit himself HE CEASED TREMBLING AND WAS SILENT, to marriage AND HIS SPIRIT LEFT IN PEACE, without a healthy wet blessing. — Helen Stoltzfus FEATURE • 109 Three unmistakable foot-walks converge on our chapel with infinite short cuts across the grass and parking lot. The sparse shrubbery around the building make it well nigh impossible to creep into it unseen. No secret societies or underground churches hold forth in our chapel. This chapel houses a “visible church, a church boasting of 900 plus members and a full atten- dance three times a week. Dr. Isaiah Bredwell wants our attention, but in many instances the attention is diverted to open books and slumped sleepiness. Bredwell's voice flows over the audience in waves of exclamation and charisma, but too swiftly to soak in. Bredwell bows his head, rechanneling his spurting pop bottle of words to God. Abruptly he corks the bottle and sits down. The moderator in a “still, small voice calls everyone to silent prayer. Silence pervades. Silence seeps into dark cracks which the barrage of words failed to penetrate. Silence sooths, unifies. Silence draws the mass into its mystical “other sense of being aware of each other, being comfortable beside each other and unabashedly respecting each others' opportunity for reverence before God. “Go in peace. The spell is broken. — Sara Wenger 110 • FEATURE THE PREACHER In my mind, I take the Preacher from his holy stage and place him in my kitchen, RINGING HIS VOICE OUT ACROSS THE PEWS AT US. where pancakes, quiet voices, and morning sun replace the distance from him to me. HE GRIPS THE BOOK, AS HE WOULD HIS AUDIENCE, AND OPENS IT And now he opens the cookbook QUICKLY TO READ FROM TIME TO TIME. and seeks carefully the exact recipe. HE HOLDS THE AIR IN HIS HANDS, How would he crack an egg FULL OF SHAPES AND FIGURES, AND THROWS IT AT US, and stir the batter? HIS BODY LURCHED FORWARD NOW, HIS MOUTH CLOSE TO THE MIKE. Or how would he ask quietly for help with the recipe? WITH A MIGHTY SWEEP OF HIS ARMS, What are the movements, the steps that produce a breakfast? WITH A FIST AND A SHOUT HE TAKES US FROM HERE I watch the preacher then, moving from this end of the kitchen TO THERE to that AND BACK AGAIN, among kettles and cupboards. — Helen Stoltzfus 112 • FEATURE nwH MMjRB ■ - • V Valley Lanes Bowling Duck Pins Ten Pins Route 11 South Harrisonburg, Va. Motorola Sylvania GOOD'S T.V. SALES SERVICE Owner: Rodney Good 921 Mt. Clinton Pike Phone 434-0807 Harrisonburg, Va. SERVICE OILS, INC. Distributors of Shell Products Fuel for modern living Rawley Pike Harrisonburg, Va. U.S. 33 West Phone: 434-3434 EBY'S BARBER SHOP WETSEL SEED COMPANY Open Tuesday Through Saturday By Appointment Park View Phone 434-7070 Field Insecticides Garden Flower Lawn Fertilizers Lawn Weed Killers Harrisonburg. . .Waynesboro T We Give S H Green Stamps Plus Discount Prices It's a pleasure to do business with fine folks like you all. PRES BROWN'S INC. 115 West Nelson Street Lexington, Virginia 463-5587 463-3521 Our Team Is Dedicated To Serving Your Team Distributors Athletic Equipment And Sporting Goods 114 Rockingham Savings Loan Assn. “Your only locally owned Savings and Loan Phone: 434-5306 Corner of Mason and Gay Streets Harrisonburg, Virginia 22801 Compliments of DAVID A. REED SONS, INC. Crane Service Excavating P.O. Box 292 Harrisonburg, Va. Office Phone 560 Waterman Drive 434-9909 TRUMBO ELECTRIC, INC. Broadway, Harrisonburg 115 Pike Cabinet Floor Covering Shop, Inc. Kapri and Richmaid Kitchen's Representative Bathroom Cabinets Formica Tops Accessories Ceramic Wall Tile Floor Tile All Types Sheet Vinyl Linoleum Chester G. Leaman 917 Mt. Clinton Pike Phone 434-4644 Harrisonburg, Va. Shenandoah's Pride Dairy of Harrisonburg Batly ynite-ILWorh A.W. WHITMORE SONS INC. Richfood Supermarket Ben Franklin Ready-to-Wear “One stop shopping Broadway, Va. The Shenandoah Valley's Largest Newspaper JCPenney We know what you’re looking for. 116 Virginia National Bank With offices in Harrisonburg and across the state Agriculture is Our Business —Food is Our Future VALLEY HERITAGE DIVISIONS OF !Rockingham Cooperative 0 arm bureau, 3nc. WE SER VE E VER YBOD Y WHITESEL MUSIC N S Auto Service Eldon L. 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(703)434-4492 BLAUCH HOME IMPROVEMENTS Plumbing — Heating — Air cond. 911 Mt. Clinton Pike HYDRO-SPRAY 98 Waterman Drive Harrisonburg, Va. HARRISONBURG FRUIT AND PRODUCE CO. Dial 434-0761 2020 S. Main St. Harrisonburg, Virginia J. CLINTON SHANK, INC. Crain and Feed Brokers P.O. Box 107 Harrisonburg, Virginia 434-6713 Harrisonburg, Va. Ph. 434-9501 119 The New 24-Hour Teller Machine is now available at Your Home-Owned Bank Rockingham National Bank Man«MkiK|« NtymCo • Oron«ai • Mi S dn y • Vk«ik • 8'-0fi ««w H'ea v r ■ y Sumnre ' TvrmS 6 . flniuranre f ivs tpfu ' avitipA Hamilton Cook Colonnade - 520 W. Broad St. P.O. Box 1083 Waynesboro, Virginia 22980 Tel. 942-1184 Poultry Stock Equipment MYER'S FORD CO., INC. Shenandoah Manufacturing Co., Inc. Harrisonburg, Virginia 22801 Phone 703 — 434-3838 Old route 33 Elkton, Virginia Telephone 298-2071 Where low overhead makes the difference. 120 Shen-Dutch Foods Inc. Harrisonburg, Va. 879-2351 You'll Like It Much— It's Shenn-Dutch Hartman Arco Service Donald F. McMullen, Owner We Specialize in Lubrication and Brake Service Minor Repairs 1091 Mt. Clinton Pike Phone 434-3362 Harrisonburg, Va. 121 Adams, Carol 37 Albrecht, Karen 27 Albright, Kathryn Alderfer, Maryanne 3, 37 Alexander, James Allebach, Claudia 16 Allebach, Rodney 47 Allen, Sheryl 16 Allen, Steven 16 Almarode, Thomas 46 Althouse, Susan 16 Ameka, Levi Amick, Diana 27 Amstutz, Eugene 27 Anderson, Charlotte 47 Asp, Martha 75 Assis, Nilson Augsburger, Linda 37 Bachman, Gail 27 Bachman, Joy Dawn 16 Bachman, Carol 37 Baer, David 16 Bair, Peggy Jean 37, 89 Baliles, Gail 27 Baliles, Rebecca 27 Bareis, Suzanne 37 Barnhart, Bonnie 46 Barry, Constance Batzdorf, Robrietta Baughman, Carl Beachey, Ruth 16 Beachy, Barbara 16, 82 Beachy, Deborah 37 Beachy, James 16 Beachy, Marilyn 16 Beam, Kenneth 37 Becker, Mary 47 Beckler, Sara 16 Beiler, Barbara 47 Beiler, Dolores 37 Beiler, N. Kae 27 Beiler, Omar 37 Bender, John 27 Bender, Marlin 37 Benner, Judith 16 Benner, T. Edgar 47 Bentch, Sharon 16 Bergey, J. Harold Bergstrom, Lois 27 Bergstrom, William 46 Berkshire, C. Denise 16 Berry, Wayne Beya, Bejos 27 Beyer, Elizabeth Biller, Diane 16 Biser, Mary 27 Bishop, Eric 16 Black, Andrea 37 Blosser, Diane 16 Blosser, Floyd 37 Blosser, Laura 16 Blosser, Rachel 37 Blubaugh, J. Blaine 48 Bomberger, Amelia 48, 89 Bomberger, Donald 16, 91 Bomberger, John 37 Bomberger, Yvonne 37 Bontrager, Sandra 48 Bopp, Patrick 38 Bowman, Randall 6, 16 Branner, Joanna 16 Breneman, David 27 INDEX Brenneman, Kathleen 16 Brenneman, Rita 38 Brown, Paula Brown, Susan Brown, William 16 Brubaker, Charles 48 Brubaker, J. Dean 49, 104 Brubaker, Karl 16 Brubaker, Sharon 17 Brunk, Beth 27 Brunk, David Brunk, J. Robert Brunk, Nadene 13, 49 Brunk, Polly 17 Brunk, Randall Brunk, Reba 38 Brunk, Regina 17 Brunk, Steven Brunk, Sylvia Bucher, Dale 17, 37 Bucher, J. Daniel 27 Buckwalter, Dawn 49 Buckwalter, Mary Ann 27 Buller, James 14, 49 Buller, Jane 14 Buracker, Gregory 17 Buracker, Jr. William 38 Burk, Paula Sue Burkholder, Douglas 17 Burkholder, Gail Ann 27 Burkholder, Lois May 28 Burkholder, Owen Burkholder, Twila 17 Burmeister, Rebecca 17 Burrough, David Byler, Betty 17 Byler, David 38 Byler, Edward Byler, Jonathan 38, 92 Byler, Susan 48 Campbell, Katherine 17 Campbell, L. Gail 38 Campbell, Nancy 17, 82 Carwile, Cynthia 50 Cash, Clarence 35 Caskey, Alice 38 Cassel, Esther 28 Caulder, Frank 38 Chaffee, Elaine 17 Charles, Benjamin 28, 35 Chelgren, William 35, 51 Cherian, Sam Chupp, Ruby 50 Clarke, Janet 17 Clarke, Jayne 17 Classen, Miriam 51 Cleaver, Sandra Clemens, Janet 38 Clemens, Mary 28 Clemens, Ronald 28 Cline, Diana 28 Cline, Yvonne 38 Clymer, Sylvia 17 Coffey, Mary Beth Coffman, Glenna 50 Cole, Claudia 28 Collingwood, Allison Collingwood, Ross Collins, Nancy 38 Collins, Patricia 36 Cooley, Christina 27, 28, 31, 82 Cotchen, Gloria Covelens, William 17 Cox, Roberta 17 Craig, Rhonda Cramer, Debra 17 Craun, Gay Crawford, Priscilla 50 Crist, Anne 38 Crist, Johnny Cruz,Jose Cullar, Janice 18 Cullers, Kathryn 51 Custer, George 28 Darden, Carol 28 Davidhizar, June 18, 93 Davis, Clarence Jr. Davis, Diane 51 Davis, S. Lavonne 18 Dean, Kathy Deaton, Diane 18 Delong, Ardith 28 Denlinger, Rodney 50 Derstine, Barbara 18 Detrow, David 28 Detweiler, Ruth 51 Detweiler, Joanne 18 Dickerson, Judith 38, 93 Dorsey, Mary Rose 38 Dovel, Arlene 52 Driver, Bruce 38 Duckham, Ian Dulabaum, Pauline 52 Duncan, Donald Dutcher, Ruth 38 Earhart, Sally Early, Richard Easterday, J. Michael Eberly, Carol 38 Eberly, Linda 18 Eberly, Marian 18 Eberly, Wendell 52 Eby, Charlotte 39 Edwards, Pamela 39 Ehst, Timothy 39 Emery, Karen Enns, Marilou 28 Epp, Brian Epstein, Jean 28 Esh, Melvin 18 Eshleman, Allen 17, 53, 123 Eshleman, Carol 18 Eshleman, Diane 18 Eshleman, Robert 52 Etebar, Firouzeh Eubanks, David 38, 53 Ewert, Doreen 18 Faggella, Dawn Fairfield, Catherine Farrow, Frank Fath, Ken 18 Fellenbaum, L. Kenneth Fernandez, Alvaro 14, 49, 97 Fike, Marcia 18 Fisher, Dolores 39 Fisher, William Flisher, Judith 18 Flisher, Mary Ina 28 Flory, James 28 Foster, Richard Frank, Irene Frankow, Andrew Frazier, Timothy Freed, Karen 39 122 • INDEX Freed, Stephen 53, 95 Frei, Steven 18 Frey, Cynthia Jo 28 Frey, Edward 39 Frey, Sidney 19 Friedt, Larry Fritzman, John 28 Frost, Nancy Fulton, Esther 29 Garber, Dale 8, 53 Garber, David Garber, Judith 29 Garber, Valda 53 Gehman, Daniel 19 Gehman, Linda 39 Gehman, Susan 19 Gehman, Wendy 19 Gerber, Joseph 19 Gerber, Sharon 29 Gheljghshlagh, Manoochehr Gibson, Agnes 29 Gilchrist, Leonard Gingerich, Dennis 39 Gingerich, Galen 29 Gingerich, Earl 39 Gingerich, Janet 29 Gingerich, Keith 54 Glanzer, James 55 Glick, Debra 29 Gnagey, Faith 19 Gnagey, Keith 55 Goad, Frieda 39 Godshall, Edward Godshall, Janice 56 Godshall, Kenneth 56 Godshall, Luke 39 Good, Barbara 55 Good, Helen 29, 42 Good, Jo Lynette 29 Good, Sandra Goosen, Patricia Gordon, Sylvia 19 Graber, Ann 39 Graber, Barbra 39, 82, 83 Grasse, Carolyn 39 Grasse, Marilyn 29 Graybill, Todd Greene, J. Michael 39 Greiser, John Greiser, David 29 Grimes, Daniel 29 Grosh, Jerrold 29 Gross, Joel Gross, Karen 54 Gross, Luanne 39 Guengerich, Audrey 19 Guengerich, Annette 29 Gunsalus, D. Brent 54 Hackman, Joseph 54 Hackney, R. Douglas Harder, Alice Harder, Daniel Hain, Darlene 39, 86 Hamilton, David 39 Hamm, Wesley 29 Handrich, Kenneth 55 Handrich, Marilyn 29 Harder, Steven 39 Hamer, Charles 39 Harr, James 39 Harry, Gemma Harry, Ramsumair Hartman, Barbara 29 Hartman, Teresa 19 Hartzler, Joyce 19 Hartzler, Stephen Heacock, Daniel 19 Headings, Janet 54, 93 Heatwole, Alvina 39 Heatwole, Evelyn 19 Heavener, Keith 39, 95 Hedrick, Debra Hege, Beth 56 Heitz, Karen 29 Helmuth, Leslie 19 Helmuth, Loretta 57 Helmuth, Steve 19 Hensley, R. Keith 19 Herr, John 29 Herr, Miriam 57 Herr, Rose 19 Hershberger, Faith 39 Hershberger, Steven 57 Hershberger, Steven 57 Hershey, B. Sue Hershey, Dawn 19 Hertzler, Helen 56 Hertzler, Susie 29 Hess, Dorothy Hess, Gloria 29 Hess, Mary 56 Hess, P. Bruce 88 Hidalgo, Maria 29 Hilton, Walter Jr. 40 Hiner, Sue Ann 29 Histand, C. Wendell 29 Histand, Cynthia 19 Hochstetler, Gary 56 Hochstetler, Karen 19 Hochstetler, Marla 58 Hochstetler, Marcus 57 Hachstetler, Sanford 30 Hockman, Norman Hodel, Anne 30 Hodges, Deborah 30 Hofstetter, James 88 Holland, Diana 40 Holler, Nikki Holliday, Charles Holloway, Rowena 30 Holsinger, Elizabeth 59 Hoogterp, Florence 30 Hooley, Donald 30 Hooley, Donna 40 Hooley, Gary 19 Hoover, Herbert 3, 40 Hoover, Thelma Horrell, Sandra Horst, Barbara Horst, Galen 58 Horst, Philip 40 Hostetler, Brenda 19 Hostetler, Bradley Hostetler, D. Michael 59, 125 Hostetler, Doretta 40 Hostetler, J. Marcos 30, 99 Hostetler, Marilyn 40 Hostetler, Ray 30 Hostetter, Alden 19 Hudson, Bette 30 Huffman, Debra 40 Hulvey, G. Leroy 59 Hunsberger, Charles 19 Hunsberger, Dawn 19, 99 Hunsberger, E. Ellen 40 Hunsberger, Jolene 20 Hunsberger, L. Gerald 6, 40 INDEX • 123 Hunsberger, Linda 30 Hunsberger, Lois 20 Hunsecker, Carolyn 30 Ibrahim, Abdidahir 20 Ide, Pamela 40, 87 Immel, Nevin 20 Iromuanya, Nnabugwu Isaacs, Paul 40 Isner, Vernon Jantzi, Douglas 30 Jarrels, Milton 59 Jeter, Sherry 20 Johns, Martha 40, 87 Johnson, K.C. Johnson, Ray Jones, Ronald 40 Jones, Sharon 58 Jones, William Jr. 5, 20 Jordan, Harry 20 Kanagy, Carolyn 59 Kanagy, Jonathan Kanagy, Joy 58 Kanagy, Leisa 20 Kandel, Jeanette 20 Kauffman, Christine 30 Kauffman, David Kauffman, Joan 61 Kauffman, Linford 20 Kaufman, R. Timothy Kaufmann, Karen 30 Keeler, Mark 61 Keener, Dana 30, 98 Keener, Regina 40 Kennel, James 5, 30 Keppler, Debbra 60 Kerns, Bobby Kibler, J. Wayne 20 Kindy, Rosemary 20 King, Daniel 13, 61 King, Dave A. 30 King, David A. 40 King, Maretta 61 King, Michael 13, 40 King, Pamela 20 King, Phillip King, Rodney 30 King, Sanford Kinsinger, Donna 40, 44 Knabe, Cheeri 30 Kniss, Lois 40 Kolb, Barbara 20 Kolb, Debra 30 Kolb, J. Walter 30 Koop, ( Jen Koshy, Jose 30 Krabill, Martha 40 Kratz, Virginia 20 Kratzer, Rosemary 60 Kraybill, David 124 Kraybill, J. Charles 21 Kreider, Evelyn 60 Kreider, J. David 40 Kreider, Mary Ann 21 Kuhns, Genet 40 Kulp, Donald Kurtz, Betty 40 Kurtz, C. Eldon Kurtz, Pearl 40 Kyger, Kenneth Lamb, C. Stephen 41 Landis, Cliff 21 Landis, Daryl 30 Landis, Loralca 21 Landis, Michael 41 Landis, Nancy J. 30 Landis, Nancy L. 41, 27, 104 Lanids, Steven 31 Landis, Timothy 21 Lantz, June 41 Layman, Don Earl 41 Leaman, James 31 Leaman, Jay Mark Leaman, Paul Lee, Katherin 21 Leftwich, William 23 Lehman, Barbara 31 Lehman, H. Loren Lehman, J. David 21 Lehman, Judith A. 21 Lehman, Judith E. 60 Lehman, Kathleen 62 Lehman, Lois 31 Lehman, Loretta 62 Lehman, Nancy Lehman, Peter 31, 41, 44, 98 Lehman, Timothy 21, 31 Lehman, Wayne 41, 97, 14 Leichty, Brent 21 Leidig, Paul 31, 83, 99 Lepard, Eugene Libby, Charles 31 Liechty, C. Dan 31, 41, 86 Lightner, Dorothy Livengood, Ann 41 Lobb, M. Jane 63 Lobb, Patricia 31 Loker, Janet 63 Longacre, Donna 21 Longacre, Joyce 41 Longacre, Sheryl 31 Longenecker, Randall 62 Longenecker, Terry 21 Lyndaker, Bruce 63 Lyndaker, Joann 21 Lyndaker, Pamela 63 Lyndaker, Ronald Maltby, Rebecca 21 Mannhardt, Cassandra 21 Martens, Kathy 31 Martin, Colleen 41, 102 Martin, David 31 Martin, Eric Martin, Gerald Martin, J. David 62 Martin, Julia Ann 7, 21 Martin, Karen 41 Martin, Linford 21, 83 Martin, Orpha 21 Martin, Peggy 62 Martin, Phillip 21 Martin, Robin Dale Martin, Sandra 41 Martin, Sharon 21 Martin, W. Gary 21 Martin, Yvonne 21 Massey, Ajay Mast, E. Louise 64 Mast, Evelyn 74 Mast, Gwen Mast, Louise Mathews, David 21 Mathias, Christine 62 Maust, Dennis 63 McBee, Loma 31 McDonald, David McDorman, Lewis McMullen, Conley 21 McMullan, Ronald McVay, Darrell 41 Mease, Sharon 22 Meeks, Gary Lee Megginson, A. Ray 64 Meier, Ralf Gunter 64 Melhom, Rachel 31 Mendenhall, Victoria Mengershausen, William 41, 44 Mengle, Karen 31 Messersmith, Alan Meyer, Kathryn 31 Mielke, Deborah Mikaya, Martin Millen, Robert 22 Miller, Ann 22 Miller, Barbara Ann 22 Miller, Carol 41 124 • INDEX Miller, Carolyn 22 Miller, Craig Miller, E. Louise 31 Miller, Edgar 105 Miller, Ellen Miller, Elroy 64 Miller, Eugene Miller, Freeman Miller, Harold 32 Miller, James 22 Miller, Jerryl Miller, Julia 65 Miller, Karla 41 Miller, Kathleen Miller, Kenneth 65 Miller, Linda Miller, Margie 22 Miller, Marcia 22 Miller, Maria 22 Miller, Melodie 4, 65 Miller, Peggy Miller, Phillip Earl 64 Miller, Rachel 42 Miller, Randy 22 Miller, Rebecca 22 Miller, Richard 42 Miller, Robert Miller, Sue 32 Miller, Susan 32, 95 Miller, Theresa 32 Miller, Wilbur 65 Millette, Harlan 65, 102 Millette, Barbara 22 Mininger, Richard 32 Mishler, Don 22 Mishler, Retha 42 Moore, Deborah 22 Moore, Joseph 42 Moore, Juanita 32 Morris, Barbara 42 Morris, Norma 22 Moshier, Norman Moyer, Mary Jane 42 Moyer, Susan 42 Munganda, Priscilla 66 Mullet, Byron 42 Mumaw, Steven 67 Mumbert, Keith Mundy, Lois Ann Mundy, Mary Jane Mundey, Paul Musser, James 66 Musser, Rose 9, 22 Myer, James Myers, J. Marlin 42 Myers, Rosalyn 32 Myers, Sheryl 22 Nachtigal, Sandra 32 Naffziger, Martha 42 Nafziger, Carol 32 Nafziger, Colette 22 Nafziger, James 66 Nafziger, Kenneth 22 Nafziger, Kent 42, 83 Nafziger, Marla 22 Nash, Julianne 32 Neuenschwander, Joyce 32 Newswanger, Marian 42 Newton, Mary 67 Nicholson, Wilfred Nissley, Mary Ellen Nissley, Thomas 22 Nolt, Dorothy 67 Norris, Juanita 42 Nussbaum, Marjorie Nussbaum, Miriam 2, 44 Nussbaum, Steve 22 Obot, Victor O'Donnell, Dulcy Jean 27, 32 Okadigbo, John Okoli, Peace 32 Okullu, Paul 42 Oliver, Jo Ellen 32 Olsen, Marilyn 33 Ongalo, Donald 22 Oswald, Donald 67 Ours, Dennis 42 Park, Timothy Pavuk, Diane 33 Payne, Diane 22 Peachey, Betty 23 Peachey, Kathryn 33 Peachey, Mark Peachey, Titus 11 Pellman, Kenneth 23 Pellman, L. Beth 42 Perkinson, Brenda 42, 87 Peters, Elaine 33 Petersheim, Sheryl 66 Phillips, Kevin 23 Pieper, Frederick Jr. Plank, Ann 33 Plasterer, Frederick 67 Porter, W. Forest Jr. Price, James Price, John Price, Judy 42 Purser, Jayne 33 Putnam, Marie 68 Raber, Weldon 23 Ramage, Wendy 68 Ramer, Glenna Mae 33 Ramer, Lois 68 Ramer, Ruth Ann 43 Ramsey, Luther 68 Ranck, Joanne 43 Ranck, Lois 33 Reed, Susan 23 Regan, Lucinda 68 Reimer, Wanda 23 Reinford, Kenneth 23 Reinford, Ralph 23 Reinford, Rhoda 43 Renalds, Stephen Ressler, Gerald 33 Ressler, Lawrence 8, 43, 86 Ressler, Naomi 69 Revercomb, Deborah 36 Revercomb, James Reyes, Carmen 33 Reyes, Ramona 33 Rheinheimer, Anita Rhodes, Susan 23 Rhodes, Leanna 69 Rice, Deborah 23 Rice, Dennis 23, 96 Rich, Barbara 69 Ricks, Paulette 23 Ridgeway, Christine 43 Riegsecker, Delvin 13, 43 Risser, Doris 70 Risser, J. David 70 Risser, Miriam 33 Risser, Phillip 23 Rivas, Ivonne 23 Rivera, Miguel Roberts, Benjamin Roberts, Margaret 33 Roggie, Calvin 43 Rohrer, Pamela 33 Rohrer, Patricia 23 Ropp, Leland 43 Ropp, Philip Ropp, Ruth 23 Roth, Jack Roth, Laurel 33 Roth, Linda 24 Roth, Lynn 69 Roth, Richard 43 Rufenacht, Verlen 4, 71 Rushby, Ruth Rutt, Carol Rutt, G. Rodger 43 Rutt, Mary Beth 33 Ryman, Naomi 24 Sahawneh, William Salsbury, Marjorie Santiago, Jose 70 Sarco, Anita 71 Sauder, Leonard 73 Sauder, Marian 71 Saunders, Andrew 33 Sawatzky, Walter Schaefer, Amy Lynn 33 Schlabach, Bradley 33 Schlabach, Bruce 33 Schlabach, David 71 Schlabach, Sara 70 Schlosser, Jack 43, 86 Schmitt, Mary Lou 24 Schrock, Carol 33, 97 Schrock, Joanna 24 Schrock, Jon 70 Schwartzentruber, Virginia 33 Schwartzentruber, Wilda 24 Schweitzer, Cheryl 24 INDEX • 125 Schweitzer, Randy 43 Shiflett, Nancy 44 Thomas, Brenda 34 See, Elaine 71 Shirk, Eric Thomas, Cindy Jo 76 Sensenig, Karen 33 Shoemaker, Craig 24 Thomas, J. Samuel 34 Shadid, Ahmad 73 Shortell, N. Richard Thomas, James 25 Shank, Betty 33 Shortell, Susan Thomas, Timothy 25 Shank, Emily 74 Showalter, Bonnie 34 Townsend, James 34 Shank, Sheldon 24 Showalter, Dawn 9, 24 Tran, Le Thanh Shaw, Gaile 73 Showalter, James 74 Tran, Ninhson Thi 34 Shaver, Sarah Showalter, Jeanie 24 Trent, Daphne 4, 25 Sheats, Earl 73 Showalter, Joyce Tripple, John III Sheats, Pansy 73 Showalter, Richard 75 Trissel, Dennis 25 Sheets, Deborah 24 Showalter, Valerie 44 Troyer, Amy Shelly, Susanne 24 Shultz, Julia 75 Troyer, Beverly 77 Shenk, Barbara 72 Siegrist, Donna Troyer, Edna 25 Shenk, Jonathan 34, 83 Siegrist, J. Marvin Troyer, John 77 Shenk, Karen 72 Sivills, M. Inga 34 Troyer, Yvonne 44 Shenk, Keaton 72 Smith, Norma 75 Tutt, A. Bruce Shenk, H. Michael Smith, Sharon 24 Tutt, Doris 34 Shenk, N. Gerald 72 Smith, Shirley Ulmer, Julie 34 Shenk, Phyllis 34 Smoker, Marlene 24 Ulrich, Lowell Sherwood, Diana Smucker, Ray 44 Valentine, Bonnie 25 Shifflett, Faye Smylie, M. Elizabeth 24 Verghese, Thomas Vogan, Charles Jr. Wade, Karen Wagler, Mary 25 Walker, David 34 Wagner, Mary 44 Wall, Jerry III Wampler, Marla 25 Waweru, Ezekiel 7 Weaver, Carol Weaver, Charmaine 34 Weaver, Daniel 44, 18 Weaver, David Weaver, Diane Weaver, Edith 25 Weaver, Gary Weaver, Janna 76 Weaver, Louella 25 Weaver, Melody 35 Weaver, M. Gregory 44 Weaver, Robert Weldy, Lucy 35 Wenger, Emily 25 Wenger, Janice 25 Wenger, Louise 14 Snader, Linda 44 Snider, Anna Ruth 24 Sowers, Ronald Stahl, Rachel 24 I Stambaugh, Carlton Stanley, James 34 Stanley, Ruth 34 Stansfield, Donald Stauffer, Darcy 34 Stauffer, Eva Stauffer, Loma 34, 93 Stauffer, Mary Grace 24 Stauffer, Rhonda 44 Steiner, Judy 34 Steinman, Donna 24, 44 Steppe, Evelyn 25 Stevens, Sharon 77 Stevens, Valerie Stitt, Diane 44 Stoltzfus, Don 44, 82 Stoltzfus, Harold Stoltzfus, Helen 25, 82 Stoltzfus, Ronald 9, 74 Stoltzfus, Winfred 25, 99 Stouffer, Carol 25 Strite, Miriam 74 Strong, David 76 Stuck, Christine 34 Stultz, Rebecca 25 Stutsman, Carolyn 25 Stutzman, Arlene Stutzman, Maurice 25 Stutzman, Timothy 34, 88 Summer, Mary Swarr, David 25 Swartley, J. Duane 34 Swartley, Joy 34 Swartz, Sharon 77 Swartz, Timothy 25, 91 Swartzendruber, J. Frederick Swartzendruber, Loren Swartzentruber, Don 25 Swartzentruber, Julia 34 Swartzentruber, Richard 25, 90 Swink, Donna Swortzel, Sandy Swortzel, Shannon Taylor, Susan 34 Terry, Cheryl Thomas, Bonnie 34 Wenger, Mark 35 Wenger, Richard 35 Wenger, Samuel Wenger, Sara 76 Wengerd, Miriam 25 Werner, Teena 26 Wesselhoeft, Paul 35 Wetmore, Cheryl 35 Wheeler, Robert 76 Whitacre, Twila 35 White, David 26 Whitmore, Sheldon Jr. Whitson, Joyce 36 Wideman, Cheryl 35 Widmer, Sarah 26 Wilbers, Dale 79 Williams, Angie Williams, Barbara Williams, Dale 26 Williams, Gene Williams, Roy 26, 99 Wingfield, Rhonda 35 Witmer, Arlene 7, 35 Witmer, Daryl 44, 45 Witmer, Donna 35 Witmer, Grace 26 Witmer, Irene 79 Witmer, Janice 78 126 • INDEX Witmer, Miriam 35 Witmer, Robert 26 Wong, John 26 Woodfin, Robert 78 Woods, Gloria 45 Woolson, James 78 Wuntke, Henry Wyse, Charlinda 78 Wyse, Dennis 45, 14 Wyse, Sara Yamaguchi, Oki Yeager, Enos 36 Yeago, Rebecca 45 Yeatts, Vicki Yelton, Theresa 11 Yoder, Amy 26 Yoder, Andrea 36 Yoder, Darlis 79 Yoder, David 80 Yoder, Delbert 80 Yoder, Dorothy 78 Yoder, Diane 26 Yoder, Harvey Yoder, J. Byard Yoder, Jonathan E. Yoder, Jonathan P. 36, 90 Yoder, Karen 26 Yoder, Keith 45 Yoder, Kenneth 45 Yoder, Kevin 45 Yoder, Leon 45 Yoder, Mahlon 45 Yoder, Marlin 79, 92 Yoder, Mary 36 Yoder, Paul 36 Yoder, Philip 45 Yoder, Phil R. 26 Yoder, R. Sharon 80 Yoder, Richard 36 Yoder, Sharon 36 Yoder, Stanley Youket, Edward 36 Young, Mark 26 Yousey, Kim 36 Yutzy, Mary Alice 36 Yutzy, Mary E. 26 Yutzy, Waunita 26 Zehr, Bethany Zehr, Michael 36 Zehr, Ruth Ann 45 Zimmerli, Peter 26 Zook, Ethan 45 Zook, Herbert 45 Zook,John 36 Zook, Paul 4, 26 Zoss, Carolyn 36 Zucconi, Peter 80 Zuercher, Candace 45 Zwickel, Herbert Zwickel, Kenneth 41, 45 INDEX • 127 1975 SHENANDOAH STAFF Co-Editors: Loretta Lehman, David Kraybill Layout Editor: James Flory Literary Editor: Sara Wenger Photography Editor: Marcos Hostetler Typists: Janet Clemens, Head Typist, Polly Brunk, Nancy J. Landis Photographers: Marian Eberly, Mike Hostetler, Jose Koshy, Ken Pellman, Dan Weaver Business Managers: Mary Hershberger, Marcus Hochstetler — Cover Design: Phil Ropp — Faculty Advisor: James R. Bomberger — Yearbook Representative: Jim Ellis — Underclassmen and senior portraits: Roy Early — Layout Assistants: Marla Hostettler, Julie Miller, Barb Graber — Research Assistants: Judy Dickerson, Amy Shafer — Photography Assistant: Jim Mast — Office Assistance: Linda Eberly, Dawn Hershey, Lois Hunsberger, Jan Wenger, Sheryl Longacre — Rhonda Stauffer: organized underclassmen picture schedule — Steve Hershberger: helped with ad sales 128 • END SHENANDOAH mmm 1975 SHENANDOAH BOOK II VOLUME XXIX EASTERN MENNONITE COLLEGE HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA During every school year one takes stock of his progress. Has this year at EMC provided any new sort of standard for our pouring, balancing and leveling game? Perhaps it was like any other of the previous fifty eight years of this institution. There was fall term-renewing old acquaintances, forming new ones, filling up with life as the leaves fell. Winter went as winters go. And miraculously spring came. We revived in the warmth and breeze. It was a school year. We had our joy and our lonliness. The profs listened to the same questions students asked last year and the year before and hid yawns, letting us believe this new approach to the problem was only ours. But in many ways this year was unique. Town meetings were created to make each student feel like a significant cog in a caring community. And shall we or shall we not hand in our computer cards to prove we attended chapel? I-am-a-person-I-am-not-a-number-in-a-computer-I-resent- this-new-system-of-attendance-taking. Of no little importance was the bump built on the driveway by North Lawn. Various rumors circulated as to the purpose of that deaccelerating mound of macadam. To handle the articulate intelligentsia, the SGA saw fit to nearly quadruple the size of the opinion board. And Myron said, Let us renovate the chapel; let us fix up the facilities we already have. Which resulted in the great diaspora of the music department to the four corners of the campus. And of course, this was the year of the increasingly active underground of liberated women in Rose Lawn. Only God can know the joy of the oppressed female who breaks through the chauvinist partition and invites him to the roller skating party. We look back on all that mattered so much and smile. Such ultimate interests. Just another group of post-adolescent twenty-years-olds nourishing a smattering of innocence with EMC's exclusive last-warm-touch-before- leaving-the-nest feeling. But we measured our progress in the framework of these events. And the year was good. 2 • PRELUDE A. DON AUGSBURGER Pastoral Counselor MYRON S. AUGSBURGER President JAMES V. BISHOP Media Relations DORIS BOMBERGER Home Economics JAMES R. BOMBERGER English LOIS B. BOWMAN Library AUBURN A. BOYERS Education BERYL H. BRUBAKER Nursing FRANCES BRUBAKER Director of Residences J. MARK BRUBAKER Biology ERMA BRUNK Library GERALD R. BRUNK History 4 • ACADEMIC STAFF TRUMAN H. BRUNK College Relations ARLENE BUMBAUGH Library EZRA U. BYLER Business Administration JESSE T. BYLER Education LOWELL J. BYLER Music MIRIAM K. BYLER Music ALLISON COLLINGWOOD Women's Affairs NORMAN H. DERSTINE Church Relations OMAR E. EBY English MERLE W. ESHLEMAN College Physician THOMAS N. FINGER Bible and Philosophy ANNA M. FREY English ACADEMIC STAFF • 5 DIANNE K. GATES Physical Education MARGARET M. GEHMAN Physical Education and Art PAUL T. GUENGERICH Registrar LAWRENCE W. HAYNES Economics JOHN H. HESS Psychology FLORENCE E. HORST Food Services SAMUEL L. HORST History HAROLD E. HUBER Sociology VIDA S. HUBER Nursing BECKY HUNTER Music GRACE D. JONES Psychology 6 • ACADEMIC STAFF NAM-JIN JUN Sociology GLENN M. KAUFFMAN Chemistry MARY S. KAUFFMAN Home Economics MIRIAM K. KAUFFMAN College Nurse STANLEY A. KAUFMAN Art ALBERT N. KEIM History CAROL KING Nursing DONALD E. KUHNS Business Administration OLIVE KUHNS Nursing MARIJKE S. KYLER Modern Language ROLAND G. LANDES Physical Education CHESTER K. LEHMAN Dean Emeritus ACADEMIC STAFF • 7 ELSIE E. LEHMAN Library ESTHER K. LEHMAN Education GALEN LEHMAN Psychology JAMES O. LEHMAN Library LOLA M. LEHMAN Education ROBERT C. LEHMAN Physics RUTH K. LEHMAN Assistant to Registrar WILMER R. LEHMAN Mathematics ESTHER LONGACRE Information Office JOHN R. MARTIN Bible J. HERBERT MARTIN Liberal Arts ERVIN J. MAST Sociology 8 • ACADEMIC STAFF JOSEPH W. MAST Physics KENNETH G. MASTERMAN Admissions ARLENE R. MAY Psychology S. CLAIR MELLINGER Biology MAMIE M. MELLINGER Nursing IRA E. MILLER Counseling and Placement SAMUEL E. MILLER Modem Language PHILIP A. MIN1NGER Admissions HOMER A. MUMAW Biology MIRIAM L. MUMAW Physical Education MARLEEN G. NAGLE Financial Aid ACADEMIC STAFF • 9 LARRY E. NOLT Alumni Relations KEITH R. PHILLIPS Physical Education SUSAN PHILLIPS Student Employment ROY D. ROTH Music WILLIAM R. RUSHBY Sociology HARVEY S. SCHROCK Endowments HERMAN SCHROCK Superintendent MIRIAM E. SCHROCK Nursing LESTER C. SHANK Vice President BYRON S. SHENK Physical Education CLAYTON O. SHENK Financial Aid MARGARET M. SHENK Library 10 • ACADEMIC STAFF PEGGY B. SHENK Secretary to President STEVEN C. SHENK Media Relations ANNA B. SHOW ALTER Placement CLAYTON D. SHOWALTER Bookstore GRACE I. SHOWLATER Library MILLARD E. SHOWALTER Mathematics DELBERT W. SNYDER Mathematics LELA SNYDER Assistant to Dean JOHN D. STAHL Chemistry MILO D. STAHL Learning Resources J. MARK STAUFFER Music LORENE STICHTER Nursing ACADEMIC STAFF • 11 CAROL STOLL Secretary to Dean DORIS STOLTZFUS Nursing EMILY V. STRONG Physical Education DANIEL B. SUTER Biology MARY L. SWARTLEY Admissions WILLARD M. SWARTLEY Bible HERBERT L. SWARTZ Bible CAROL A. WEAVER Music MIRIAM L. WEAVER Secretarial Studies ANGIE B. WILLIAMS Student Affairs CARROLL D. YODER Modern Language DAVID D. YODER Student Affairs 12 • ACADEMIC STAFF i EMERY YODER Modern Language J. DAVID YODER Admissions NANCY A. YODER Nursing ROBERT D. YODER Biology DANIEL YUTZY Dean ALPHIE A. ZOOK Education Not Pictured Chester L. Bradfield Glenn Braswell Kenton K. Brubaker Mary Lou Brubaker Amos Burkholder Terry Cowan Mary Ethel Heatwole E. Grant Herr C. Thomas Holliday Florence Horst John L. Horst D. Ralph Hostetter Elroy W. Kauffman John H. Krall Lois S. Kreider Jay B. Landis Ula R. Martin Hubert R. Pellman Betty S. Redmond Mahlon Rissler Miguel A. Riviera James M. Shank C. Robert Showalter Samuel Z. Strong Gary L. Stucky Terri L. Whittaker Dwight O. Wvse Duane R. Yoder ACADEMIC STAFF • 13 SGA We have spent much time this year grappling with how to get students involved in SGA. Students need to be interested before we can be effective, but there has been much apathy this year. — Mary Ellen Nissley Aside from the traditional busywork involved in this organization, we have put much of our energy into restructuring the judicial system. Also we have pro- vided, along with YPCA, the student view point in the committee which created the Town Meeting. — Delbert Yoder Betty Kurtz Co-president Delbert Yoder Co-president 14 • ORGANIZATIONS Mary Ellen Nissley Secretary Steve Mumaw Vice-president Mark Wenger Treasurer ORGANIZATIONS • 15 YPCA Charles Brubaker President Lois Kniss Treasurer This year we have tried to sense campus needs rather than only reaching out to the community. In cooperation with SGA we have planned group activities and organized many prayer meetings. — Dave King I have especially appreciated our Cabinet meetings. Commissioners shared individual and group concerns, and we prayed together. — Carol Miller The emphasis of the Y this year was to strengthen already existing programs. This was possible because we had aggressive and reliable commissioners. A major handicap of the year was the lack of a student pastor, which left many of the pastor's responsibilities up to small groups of students. — Charles Brubaker 16 • ORGANIZATIONS Commissioners. Row 1: Ken Zwickel, Ruth Ramer, Diane Pavuk, Rod King, Brenda Perkinson, Sandy Nachtigal. Row 2: Phil Helmuth, Jim Musser, Sharon Jones, Rhoda Reinford, Nancy Collins, Steve Landis. Carol Miller Secretary ORGANIZATIONS • 17 WEATHER VANE Gerald Shenk Editor Jon Byler Photographer Daryl Landis Photographer In our opinion, any poor soul who has not been reading the Weather Vane all year probably has no interest in reading about it at this late date. The paper is for news, and even describing it now would be stale. Offset, newsprint, eight pages every issue, plus a twelve each term — all that couldn't matter to anyone who waits to read about it at the end of the year. Likely our major effort was to get the campus to talk to itself. About itself, about its beliefs, about its policies. Laugh about it, cry about it, write a letter reacting to it, but mostly just read it on the way to supper and throw it away with the greasy napkins and the soybean bones. Look at the pictures, glimpse through the headlines and let the rest go its merry way, content. The best new feature is that the Weather Vane is now recyclable, and you can throw it away to Earthkeepers. Steve Hershberger Business Manager 18 • ORGANIZATIONS Melodie Miller Feature Editor Sue Moyer News Editor Paul Leidig Photographer, Sports Don Stoltzfus Sports, Layout Marla Hochstetler Layout ORGANIZATIONS • 19 SHEN It's an old problem. The saints of old noticed it first. How to be in the world but not of the world. Fiances and fiancees notice it in the fish pond. How to get thrown in without getting wet. Auto mechanics notice it. How to take the thing apart without getting their hands so dirty they won't come clean. Yearbook people notice it. How to cover the ice cream social without getting so wrapped up in a cone that the ole Nikon camera gets slobbered with ice cream. Venerable observers down through the ages have noted that it's hard to observe a thing objectively when you're in the thick of it. The Shen staff joins that long line of venerable observers to chalk up another point in agreement. However, a spokesman for the staff, when asked privately what he really thought about the matter, said that although love for a thing or place may tend to obscure one's perception of that thing, he would rather be in love with his bed-post than be left out in the cold. Dave Kraybill Editor James Flory Layout Editor Sara Wenger Literary Editor 20 • ORGANIZATIONS Marcos Hostetler Photography Editor Artist's misconception of five tea-drinking, thumb-sucking, pencil-chewing editors. ORGANIZATIONS • 21 22 • SPORTS SPORTS • 23 WRESTLING 24 • SPORTS SPORTS • 25 26 • SPORTS SPORTS • 27 28 • SPORTS SPORTS • 29 EUROTERM Exerpts from letters from Euroterm students: “Had quite an interesting day yesterday — went to Phil and Edgar's place and then on to the mountains. We stopped at a farm, wallowed through some mud and finally hit on an old overgrown cemetary — apparently a Mennonite one. Found names on the stones — Widmer, Rutt, Bachman, etc. “Spain was very warm. A few roses still in bloom. Ripe oranges on the trees in the cities. We loved Cordoba with its red hill, burros and olive groves. “I'm sitting on my bed listening to Kae switch from Australian English to an impersonation of a Southern American speaking French. We've gotten into the habit of speaking in either British or Pennsylvania Dutch accents for fun. “Well, my general feelings today are: I have absolutely no interest in studying. I am very, very bored. I feel little purpose in being here. I have a terrible cold. “The English are beautiful. There's so much to do and see in London I've almost given up. People talking about “blokes and “have you got a camera, love? 30 • EVENTS EVENTS • 31 ANABAPTIST! Author — Kenneth Reed Director — Patricia Lehman Producer — EMC Drama Guild Sponsor — Betty Brunk Anabaptist! , a play based on a German novel, My Right, was premiered January 22-25 in the Discipleship Center. It was the first EMC production given as theatre-in-the-round. The plot revolves around a 16th cen- tury landowner driven by ven- gence who encounters peaceful Anabaptists. 32 • EVENTS EVENTS • 33 LECTURE — MUSIC The musical comedy The Fantasticks was performed by the New York Theatre Com- pany January 17. The basis for the show, now in its fourteenth year in New York, is an old French romance — a girl, a boy and the development of their love through a series of hurts. STALEY LECTURE The Thomas F. Staley Foundation sponsored the annual lecture series, January 13-15, and brought Dr. Harold J. Ockenga to EMC. Dr. Ockenga, president of Gorden College and Gorden Conwell Theological Seminary discus- sed Christian education and its value in con- temporary society. The three morning chapels were devoted to the intellectual difficulties, and their solutions, encountered in Christianity. 34 • EVENTS A CELEBRATION OF FAITH We do not worship a heritage, but the Lord of the Church. But believing that the Holy Spirit is acting in history, we take seriously what the Spirit has been doing through this heritage. — Myron Augsburger God has a lot more to do within our brotherhood, and studying our past should be an encouragement to keep moving on. — Linden Wenger As a climax to a year-long emphasis, pastors and lay leaders met on campus to commemorate the 450th anniversary of the Anabaptist-Mennonite movement. The series of meetings, January 20-23, touched theological as well as practical themes. In addition to hearing lectures from visiting and campus speakers, the participants were involved in group discussions and an all-campus social. EVENTS • 35 TOWN MEETINGS Eluding definition, refusing a category in SGA, defying the traditional institutional decision making approach. Of such are Town Meetings. At the beginning of the school year a committee was set up to study tuition and enrollment for the next year. The national economic situation was insidiously creeping up the steps of the Administration building. Rising costs had to be compensated. A spontaneous all-campus Town Meeting was called before Christmas vacation. Facts and proposals affecting tuition in- creases were presented; time was given for student feedback. Reaction was positive to this new approach, so throughout the year a few more Town Meetings were planned. In spite of hauling David D. Yoder out in the recent snowfall for a purging after the second meeting, a decided majority of the campus populus agreed that student-administration communica- tions were indeed enhanced through the Town Meetings. 36 • EVENTS Cloistered in the southwest perimeter of campus, the Eastern Mennonite Seminary squats, no more nor less imposing than the other brick edifices. Reserved, a sign tells me. The place reserved, or merely a parking space? I wonder. Inside, mingling with the somber coats and hats — a she-coat; I match it to the secretary. Around the lobby growing greens climb lampstands and cling to the rough terracotta wall. In the room the people come and go, pattering the plastic walk-mat . . . . . got a lot of mail for me this morning? . . . how was your day yesterday? . . . really, really good. A sonorous shadow blocks the morning sun from sitting on my lap. Say, I feel kind of embarrassed about this; I feel I flubbed the situation, the towering figure apologizes, chomping an apple. Oh, it worked out O.K., George, replies the confidant. Thy Word is Truth proclaims a Statue-of-Liberty-like torch, and a dusty volume II of Gustave Dore's illustrated Bible echoes the same. Lifting its lid, I suddenly feel unholy and afraid of mutilating the sacred pages. A fresh pile of Weather Vanes sit nearby, tempting passers-by to Take One. The would-be theologians, (some bejeaned, but most sporting matched shirts and slacks) clump for after chapel coffee, while Menno Simons, a suffering Christ and Chester K. Lehman peer over the young seminarians as they sip and crunch goodies from the honor system canteen. Please be a good earthkeeper and reuse your cup, a sign reminds. Burrowing into Greek, Hebrew, Pastoral Care Counsel, Systematic Theology and Early Christian Thought, scholars lose themselves in individual study carrels. Here a photo of a baby, there a stale styrofoam coffee cup. They man their carrels and barely stir as my female legs prowl their subterranean den. 1 spy little typed notices on the book shelves, informing me that personal copies of George R. Brunk are to be used and handled with care. Upstairs the inviting chapel rests in pleasant contrast to the two bald neighboring classrooms. A cushion waits expectantly and a hymnbook perches reverently on its rigid-backed pulpit chair in the hushness. I absorb the hallowed quality ... a little placard on the rostrum admonishes, Let us hear the word of the Lord in this chapel. I pause and hear the people come and go on the plastic walk-path, someone rinsing out the coffee urn, the drone of in-put from the classroom below, the phone ringing. Maybe that's a call for a new pastor, I reflect as I leave. — Melodie Miller SEMINARY • 37 Sam Cherian Ross D. Collingwood Johnny D. Christ Donald H. Duncan Brian K. Epp Frank E. Farrow Edward M. Godshall Alice N. Harder Daniel V. Harder Charles T. Holliday Jonathan L. Kanagy James R. Leaman 38 • SEMINARY David D. McDonald James R. Myer Timothy A. Park Mark Peachy W. Forest Porter, Jr. Harold G. Stoltzfus Not Pictured Richard K. Early John W. Greiser Ramsumair Harry Norman S. Hockman Jack A. Roth William M. Sahawnah Riley R. Smith, Jr. Ronald B. Sowers Samuel G. Wenger Gene M. Williams Harvey Yoder SEMINARY • 39 David L. Brunk Ian G. Duckham Paul G. Leaman Gerald E. Martin Wilfred J. Nicholson James D. Rhodes Not Pictured Carl L. Baughman Eugene I. Lepard Paul E. Mundey Frederick W. Pieper, Jr. 40 • SEMINARY Owen E. Burkholder L. Kenneth Fellenbaum Leonard W. Gilchrist Glen Koop Freeman J. Miller Stephen S. Renalds Carlton D. Stambaugh John B. Tripple, III Not Pictured R. Douglas Hackney Robert W. Miller H. Michael Shenk SEMINARY • 41 George R. Brunk II Dean George R. Brunk III David Ewert G. Irvin Lehman John R. Mumaw William E. Schubert Mary F. Shenk Assistant to Dean Linden M. Wenger Registrar 42 • SEMINARY Musick of the Year Now this is a ballad of a music department, And how they, with stamina and sweat. Lived all through a year without batting a tear; It's a year they will never forget. In the month of September, as we can remember. There arose some melodious cries. Let's build a mansion with rooms to practice in And perhaps we can liquedate the mice. The Bylers moved higher to halls on the hill They had quite a combo going on. It seems while Miriam was hypnotizing ivories OT Lowell was warbling right along. Mr. Amos became famous for his move to the White House And Roy got a nice pad in the Ad. The teacher Ms. Weaver brought harmony to the Center But the ordeal made the scientists mad. The future does bring some hope for many things; Wilbur's organ might finally get here. And if we reconstruct the chapel, perhaps, Perhaps we can move in next year. Next year. 03 111a mu a( =P= M .1 - t1 r )| ff-i- {r r tJ 7 x—m— j n ■t-t j: L-fH LJ -F U-t—1 1 E- rJ n i fv-r H—m— HJ— A r j i i w m J rJI M c r c : j. j' LJ ri -!i !j 4-—f—p— — Ip- k -p— L-f[ T Ll J .1 r=l f ■ L - J ID • _ • - • • 1 J d 1 1 I f J FTT E f r j T LL i n I 1 % 1 p 9 ■ j • 9 •Jr |r 1 II I 1 1 1 m 9 ' - ‘ I V I , 1 I I 1 l—i 1 - - t b r j 1 T j ri j f 1 r j i , ►— r 44 • FEATURE Malcom Wright Box 306 Eastern Mennonite College Harrisonburg, VA 22801 Academic Advisory Corporation 1070 Corporated Avenue Corporate, USA Dear Sir: Consumerist comments I talley in my ledger at the end of a day never seem to balance. Sly eyed speculators look me high and low and bet You can't be a business major. Blue jeans don't fit the bill, or So you're aspiring in the money rat race to become a fashionable capitalist bigwig, aye? Enough to make you fall into the red. Well, so I am a business major? Am I to look like your stocky Madison Avenue junior executive type with curtailed coat and fat tie? Or are the questions implying something else; maybe a bias or prejudice exchanged in the tone of the voice. Granted that many of Business' major products do exploit, it's also feasible that EMC's business major is a scheming scholar in training for the profitable money market. But then who arranges our financial aid packages, and undercharges our tuition and convinces the faculty that low salaries aid the general health of the school economy? One time business majors — I bet. Because this school professes antimaterialistic sentiment, they think all of us Business majors are mammon-minded. How can I justify myself, kind Sir? For what it's worth. Malcom Wright cc. Shenandoah FEATURE • 45 Genesis Chapter 1 1. In the beginning Euclid created space. 2. And space was without structure, and void; and darkness was upon the face of deep space. And the spirit of Euclid moved. 3. And Euclid said let there be lines: and there were lines. 4. And Euclid saw the lines, that they were good: and Euclid divided the lines with points. 5. And Euclid called these lines rays. And the extent of the line was the first axiom. 20,21. And Euclid said let the points bring forth abun- dantly parallels so that alternate interiors are forever equal. And Euclid created great cubes, and squares, and every parallelogram that cometh, which the points brought forth abundantly, after their kind one upon another: and Euclid saw that it was good. 26. And Euclid said let us make a Mathematician in our image, after our likeness; and let him have dominion over triangles and over circles, and over spheres and over cubes, and over all of space, and every constructa- ble subset that is constructed out of space. 27. So Euclid created a Mathematician in his own im- age, in the image of Euclid created he him; great and small created he them. 28. And Euclid blessed them, and Euclid said unto them, be fruitful and multiply and prove theorems and subdue them: and have dominion over triangles, and over spheres, and over every set of points that cometh out of space. 29. And Euclid said Behold, I have given you every set bearing proof, which is on the face of all space, and every set which is the fruit of a set yielding proof; to you it shall be for theorems. 31. And Euclid saw everything that he had made, and, behold, it was very good. This is part of a translation of an MS recently found in an ancient wine vessel in a cave in the mountains of Iraq. Reprinted by permission. The American Mathemat- ical Monthly, February, 1970, Vol. 77, No. 2. 46 • FEATURE Unit Outline DATE (S): Two month unit on Student Teachering (16th grade). BEHAVIORAL OBJECTIVES: At the end of the in-school training session our student teachers will be able to: (1) Respond immediately and gladly to principal demand. (2) Maintain a professional distance of five feet from students. (3) Reduce the content of entire lesson down to a basic idea re- membering that a child will not understand sophisticated jar- gon. (4) Carry a stop watch to facilitate shutting-up on time as teachers consistently talk too much. (5) Identify the creative student as the one desiring least to obey the teacher's assignments. CONCEPT STATEMENT: If you train up a teacher in the way the system works he will not depart from it. ACTIVITIES: Lessons on: Discovery teaching and how to fan curiosity The school not as reformer but conformer Retirement on the farm after many years as teacher Materials: Numerous guinea pig students. A large dose of courage and faith. A heavy mask to cover all first-time teaching jitters. A handbook on 10 innovative disciplinary measures. ASSIGNMENT: Walk into a screaming, teeming high school classroom, present a lesson forthrightly and entertainingly (amid paper wads and snickers), and stumble out alive. SUMMARY STATEMENT: Becoming a teacher is not a matter of learning how to teach. No matter what people say, it is a question of personal discovery, of learning how to use yourself as an effective instrument within the system. You may even call the teacher an artist as he facilitates effective growth in students. FEATURE • 47 48 • FEATURE Specimen: Life Sciences Department Data: Upon close examination of the above, several ob- servations were made. Observed: Dr. J. Mark Brubaker, in sneakers, trium- phantly leading the annual Bioscience I leaf-collecting ex- pedition. An unconfirmed report states that the ginkgo was seen to flinch visibly at the sight of the assemblage. Lights burning late in room S-51. On closer observa- tion the reason was discovered to be students who were seen poring over piles of old dry bones and muttering incantations of, scapula, glenoid fossa, acromion, sup- raspinous fossa, infraspinous fossa ... Homer Mumaw, having secret doubts on the present zoological classification of the North American Tree Frog, especially the extreme northern and southern var- ieties. Dr. Kenton Brubaker maintaining his serenity amid the tumult accompanying the recapture of half-etherized fruit flies. Dr. Daniel Suter dashing a Vert. Morp. student's hopes of having an anatomically abnormal cat by some- how finding and digging out that gluteus minimus mus- cle. Robert Yoder nobly accepting laurels for winning an Indian wrestling match with Abra Cadavra. Dr. A. Clair Mellinger, saving yesterday's newspaper, turning off unused lights, and not littering — all at the same time. Conclusion: The Life Sciences Department is alive and well and merits further study. FEATURE • 49 Recipe 1 VHEA student workshop 4 broken sewing machines 3 L-M Series receptions 5 bachelor living seminar sessions 1 child development case study 200 submarine sandwiches 3-5 science courses 1 new foods' lab 1 home management house 1 Valentine banquet 1 hospital dietetic internship Sift schedules; measure and add IDS, extracurriculars and weekends. Mix thoroughly. Combine rising prices. Foods and Nutrition I tests, club meetings and add alternately with education courses and microbiology labs. Blend well after each addition. Mix family living with etiquette and beat until fluffy. Fold in child care, food systems management and world food needs. Sprinkle with flower arrangements, Basic Design, textiles, nutrition and diet therapy. Bake until all areas are well rounded. 50 • FEATURE 1 Rules of the game 1. Super jocks are detrimental to team spirit. Prefer those willing to sacrifice their bodies regardless of the score board. 2. Develop a verbal Christian rationale for arena competition or risk oblitera- tion by academic competitors who dis- like a preoccupation with the physical. 3. Teach love to be practiced in the most gruelling, difficult circumstance, that of out-besting your opponent. 4. Be thankful for inciteful spectators, although blush to admit that they do make the game. 5. Learn to enjoy doing your best while shoving that ego in your back pocket. 6. Always remember that Physical Education is an integral part of man's total education. Remain open to the in- tellectual and spiritual areas of man's development, avoiding one-track- mindedness. 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CA X U CA 03 4- X X 5 3 CA CA 03 a. QJ K; X v M QJ - - Vh CA O QJ X f2 X x 03 CCS QJ QJ X X 3 -2, F . X •fH U JH a .2 S —« 03 2 « £ 2 X x os QJ X X CP g CA 2 c T • fH QJ H X X ■ - 60 _H C r - § ’S CL os a . 03 QJ QJ X X QJ 'qj X QJ C CA X CA 03 CJ G • fH QJ X fH 03 X r-H CA QJ CA X X 4-J G X 03 4-4 • fH X £ CA CA 2 cn QJ X CJ CA 03 QJ O QJ CA Vh CL QJ CJ .03 CA 03 X - - 2 cn £ QJ QC C QJ X £ TJ ca 2 c U QJ QJ X QJ O _ 03 c X 03 03 _ c 0 u g QJ CA ■° o — 4- •r| ca 1 § X ° cn u 'T' 03 Vh £ Vh o £ 03 '44 G ro X O 44 03 o o • FH 44 03 CA 60 CA • fH -4H 3 • H O O Vh 03 03 QJ 44 £ CA O 44 03 44 o • 3 X QJ CA o Mh o X CJ • CL CL 03 • CL 3 £ . O CJ o x CA 03 03 44 CA 2 44 CA 'qj 03 £ Vh 03 X 44 3 O Vh o TJ 44 H y o G QJ 2 c 03 G cn w cn D o 44 ii .tj -c 60 G c- X • H X X O -F QJ — CA 4 60 44 3 £ c 2 Vh X o 3) X' is C 03 CA CL O ■ 1 A « . . • r-, V4H £ £ o £ 03 § ’S • QJ 44 m 44 2 9- 03 cn £ 3 x g 5P 60 G • rH 2 cg .£ CA •a 03 Uc-S Vh xx QJ G dJ X QJ QJ Vh X c o 44 Vh V4h QJ ■ t— 'qj T3 4 k 4 J. Mark Stauffer, Ken Nafziger 54 • CANDID Cheryl Wetmore CANDID • 55 Clair Hochstetler Norman Derstine Paula Brown 56 • CANDID CANDID • 57 Gracious me. Whatever are you doing with that camera on a tripod in the microfilm room? Don't you have anything better to do during finals' week? What really are you — no, no — no, you didn't snap a picture of me, did you! You are crazy, positively crazy. CANDID 59 Mace Hilton 60 • CANDID II1PP CANDID • 61 Jan Cullar 62 • CANDID CANDID 63 Gary Harkins Amy Yoder Marcus Hochstetler 64 • CANDID Tom Rudderow, Ed Youket 66 • CANDID James Flory, Margaret Taylor, Mace Hilton I feel I owe a big Thank you! to our faculty and staff, who arranged to have Wednesday a free day to contemplate more deeply what discipleship is all about. This to me is proof that our administration is concerned for us as students in more than an academic way . . . — Marian Newswanger 10 10 74 The campus community will be happy to learn that recently the American National Biblical Fellowship in cooperation with the Department of Redundancy Department has concluded after careful and exhaustive research, that scripturally each of us is entitled to 490 sins per day, or 3,430 sins per week. This comes to 178,850 sins per year! Now what I was wondering is: would it be possible for two people to combine, as it were, their quotas?. . . — Gary Harkins 10 17 74 I have been somewhat concerned with all the talk that's been going around campus about hunger and fasting. It concerns me some of the methods used in getting food to the people who really need it. Why not, since so many students don't eat breakfast anyway, use that money and give it to the needy?. . . — Edgar Miller 10 31 74 In response to Edgar Miller's letter of Oct. 31 . . . The suggestion was raised — why not fast during breakfast? Well, I don't think this would symbolically say, I am concerned about the hunger problem and I want to do something about it. Instead I think it would say, I'm too lazy to get out of bed, and for a lot of people the fast wouldn't mean too much because they usually never get up anyway . . . — Tim Landis 10 31 74 Nine lives were taken this past week, yet there is little concern shown on this campus . . . Perhaps seeing the shrubbery three times a week caused an unspoken friendship to evolve . . . And as the shrubs and small trees lie uprooted and condemned upon the bank by the chapel, life continues with all its hurry and neglect around them . . . — James Flory 11 5 74 . . . We were told that we would be pleased to deposit a chapel card at the rear of the chapel Monday, Wednesday and Friday and we would automatically receive a present rating for the day's chapel service . . . Chapel services are designed to relate to the individual and his spiritual needs. In this process the characteristics of personalism and subjectivism would be highly valued . . . With this new system we turn in our cards to the sentinals at the rear and fear for our lives if we try to be present without having first insured ourselves through the use of those invaluable pieces of IBM crassness. How impersonal and non-subjective! — Ed Benner 12 2 74 . . . During the past five years that I have been on this campus I have seen an increasing number of performances on campus by so-called Jesus-rock bands. At one time I would have been glad to see this as I was eager to see the old ways die. Now I am less than certain about it . . . How does this fit into M in y :mM LzSfl Delbert Yoder, Mary Clemens 68 • CANDID John Bender the over-all goals and committments of EMC and the Mennonite Church?. . . How much is the media the message? Marty Balin, lead singer and writer for the Jefferson Airplane Starship rock band has been quoted as saying that rock music as an art form is the musical expression of all that the hippie culture stands for, including free sexuality, drugs and filthiness . . . It is not my intention or purpose here to comment on any individual musical taste but simply to have us face up to where we are heading . . . — C. Daniel Liechty 1 8 75 I believe the only way Mr. Liechty can justify his statement is if he also denounces all other forms of music such as country, jazz, and blue-grass, because they all surely have their worldly sides to them. If he is not ready to do this, I think he should not pick on one particular form of music as he has done . . . — Brad Hostetler 1 9 75 Last night we were confronted with something fresh and alive on the Madison College campus: the setting was different and so were most of the people. Though we have heard the speaker many times, there was something extra which intrigued us and with this perspective we share some concerns. What we saw in Myron was a person who was relaxed and free enough to communicate the Spirit of Jesus in a way which would probably have fallen on deadened ears here at EMC . . . Here at EMC we revel in and defend our little schools of theology so much that the spirit of teachableness is dampened and we lose sight of the spiritually hungry and alienated world that surrounds us . . . The Madison Christians we were with last night are burning with a desire to share Jesus with fellow students. On this Christian campus we should be experiencing and encouraging freedom of sharing Him even more openly than on a state campus. This is a challenge we dare not ignore! — Clair Hochstetler, Joe Hackman, Chuck Brubaker 1 28 75 We don't feel that the true opinion of the majority of this campus has been expressed, and we are asking that it be voiced. We agree that there should be more interaction between the sexes on campus, but co-ed dorms should be the last resort. That's just an easy way to say that we have interaction. We don't understand the reasoning of the housing committee. Last year we couldn't have open house on Sunday because it couldn't be controlled, but next year co-ed dorms will be allowed . . . — Signed by 35 students 2 10 75 Recently I was perusing the Dean's List. I began to wonder why such a list is posted in a college which claims the ideals we do. Doubtless, most of those on the List worked fairly hard and deserve some commendation for their efforts. But the List explicitly ranks individuals according to grade point average. And it thereby gives people with great natural intellectual ability a far greater chance of appearing higher up on it than others . . . Do we express an equal concern for all those in our college community, and especially those of lower status? Is the Dean's List one way we have unthinkingly adapted to the world's notion of status? — Thomas Finger 2 18 75 CANDID • 69 Schmitt, CANDID 70 • CANDID • 71 Mark Wenger, Peter Zucconi J. David Kreider Debbie Revercomb CANDID • 73 Wayne Lehman Kenton Brubaker 74 • CANDID Ken Beam, Faith Gnagey, Lanny Millette CANDID • 75 76 • CANDID Bob Brunk, Ken Kyger Conley McMullen, Jim Hofstetter Cliff Landis CANDID • 77 Dennis Maust 78 • CANDID Delbert Snyder, William Brown CANDID • 79 80 • CANDID + ' CANDID • 81 CANDID • 83 84 • CANDID Norman Moshier Carol Weaver CANDID • 85 Daryl Witmer 86 • CANDID Ha®? CANDID • 87 Truman Brunk 't 4 $ ■ $ ! Steve Hershberger CANDID 89 4ft H. IK' H I 90 • CANDID Arlene Witmer CANDID 91 Byron Mullet 92 • CANDID Delbert Snyder Kevin Phillips Mary Newton CANDID • 93 94 • CANDID Wilda Schwartzentruber, Julia Martin CANDID 95 96 • CANDID Gloria Tran Karen Albrecht, Robert Wheeler 98 • CANDID .5 IT A Churchwide Trust With you through a lifetime of learning Mennonite Church General Board Mennonite Board of Congregational Ministries Mennonite Board of Education • Mennonite Board of Missions Mennonite Mutual Aid • Mennonite Publishing House Clemmer Martin Motor Inn And Restaurant Color T.V. Direct Dial Phones Specializing in Home Cooking Banquet Facilities — Conference Rooms 7 Miles East of Lancaster on Route 340 Bird-In-Hand, Pa. 17505 768-8271 R.D. 1 Lansdale, Penna. SWARTLEY CONSTRUCTION, INC. Mason Contractors Brick - Block - Stone 1001 Old Bethlehem Pike, Quakertown, Pa. I.T. LANDES AND SON, INC. Plumbing and Heating Central Air Conditioning Water Softeners Mainland, Pa. 19451 Ph. 256-8870 In HIS Service' 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. ELECTRICAL-SERVICE X Domestic Commercial Refrigeration Air Conditioning Repair Schmucker, Miller 216-674-1085 Rt. 4 Box 28-A Harold M. Bucher Atmore, Al 36502 205-368-3418 ARCHBOLD. OHIO 43502 • PHONE 419-445-2045 Ask for detailed full-color brochure. W.L. ZIMMERMAN SONS Intercourse, Penna. 17534 PHONE: (717) 768-8291 Backhoe Service Dump Truck Service Front End Loader R.M. STOLTZFUS, INC. EXCAVATING Department Store Hardware Gulf Petroleum Products LP — Gas Service R. 1, Kinzer, Pennsylvania 17535 Harold Shultz Office (717)394-9237 (717)442-4762 Be Sure It's Rosenberger's Milk — Either at your door Or at your store Phone 855-9074 847 Forty Foot Road Hatfield, Pa. — Since 1925 SANFORD A. ALDERFER INC. Real Estate Brokers and Auctioneers “Selling Real Estate at Auction a Specialty 402 Main St. 256-8891 Harleysville, Pa. Area Code 215 STUTZMAN MOTOR SALES Plymouth Chrysler Berlin, Ohio SAU DE R DESIGNARE INTERNATIONAL INC Eood Stacking Chairs Modular Seating Tables 200 HORTON STREET □ STRYKER, OHIO 43557 41S 6B2-3061 STOLTZFUS MEAT MARKET Freezer Meats and Foods Shop 768-3941 Residence 768-8811 Newport Pike, Intercourse, PA LLOYD ALLEBACH LAWN MOWING SERVICE Residential — Commercial — Industrial Lawn Maintenance Quality Service For A Beautiful Lawn 253 Morwood Road Telford, Pa. FISHER'S FURNITURE STORE, INC. Main Green St. Souderton, Pa. 18964 723-4822 “furnishing and decorating H. MININGER AND SON, INC. Custom Building Soulderton, Pennsylvania Das Essen Haus Good Home Cookin' Open 7:00 a.m. — 8:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday Closed Sunday Corner St. Rt. 2 and Pettisville Road Box 18 Pettisville, Ohio 43553 Phone: (419) 445-8456 “Know where good chicks come from? Compliments of Lynn Hochstetler San's Trucking Rt. 4 Millersburg, Ohio 44654 Phone: 674-3141 MOYER'S CHICKS, INC. 266 E. Paletown Road Quakertown, PA 18951 215-536-3155 S ($M . Furniture — Machines — Service For Church, Office School 1409 S. Defiance St. Route 66 Archbold, Ohio 43502 Phone: (419) 445-0565 THE VILLAGE TOURIST HOME Your Hosts Jonathan and Martha Stoltzfus Newport Rd. Rt. 772 Intercourse, Pa. Box 58 17534 TELEPHONE: (717) 665-2S07 ELM, PA. 17521 Phone 717-768-8442 Reasonable Rates Groceries, Hardware Lawn Garden Supplies Carpet, Formica, Ceramic Tile High and LoHy Vision calls fol- low and Humble service Eastern Mennonite Board of Missions and Charities, Salunga, PA 17538 Congratulations to the Class of 75 V J Derstine Inc. Trucking 438 Derstine Road Hatfield, Pennsylvania BERLIN ELEVATOR Berlin, Ohio M. E. MILLER TIRE CO. Wauseon, Ohio 43567 PH: (419) 335-7010 335-9881 fanmb Motor Inn And Family Restaurant A Unique Country Setting Our Famous Smorgasbord — All You Can Eat • Bake Shop • Pool • Pond • Golf • Tours Lancaster, Penna. 3 miles south on Rt. 222 • Gift Shop • Beauty Shop • Barber Shop • Playgrounds • Row Boats 464-2711 MOYER SON, INC. Feed — Fuel Oil — Building Materials Lawn and Garden Products Custom Spraying Phones 723-9858 (Fuel Oil) 723-6001 Souderton, Pa. Creators of Fine Eating Prepared Food Poultry Frozen Fried Chicken Chicken Roll VICTOR F. WEAVER, INC. New Holland, Pennsylvania So great you'll have to tell someone! CLEMMER MUSIC, INC. FOR THE FINEST IN MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Since 1935 ORGANS-For Home and Church Relax and Re-Create ALVIN M. LANDIS Carpets Furniture Bedding Rt. 113 and 309 Saudertown, Pa. 18964 Phone 723-2161 Holmes Limestone Company Berlin, Ohio E.M.C. BOOKSTORE HARVEST DRIVE FARM RESTAURANT FAMILY-STYLE MEALS “ALL YOU CAN EAT” You will enjoy our scenic country setting and leisurely dining. Complete menu with steaks ond seafood. Open daily 7 A.M. to 8 P.M. Closed Sunday 2 miles North of Paradise by Belmont Rd. to Harvest Dr. or 1 mile South of No. 340 by Clearview Rd. Phone 717-768-8444 Bus. Ph. 656-6861 EARL KING INC. General Contractors 119 Forest Hill Rd. Leo I a, Pa. 17540 Earl King Harold G. King Ronald E. King 656-6861 656-9222 656-8411 LIECHTY MOTORS Ralph's Super Market 801-809 West Main Street Lansdale, Pennsylvania Dodge — Plymouth Chrysler — Imperial Archbold, Ohio Telephone: (419) 445-2576 Every Day is Savings Day Plenty of Free Parking SAUDER FINE CHURCH FURNITURE Sauder Manufacturing Co. Archbold, Ohio 43502 BERGEY'S GARAGE Franconia and Lansdale, Pennsylvania Tires and Recapping Franconia, Pennsylvania Lansdale, Pennsylvania GERMAN VILLAGE Groceries, Meats, Hardware, Shoes, Boots, Dry Goods One Stop Shopping Berlin, Ohio Homer Kandel (216) 893-2622 Ernest L. Reinford Home of Goodville Mutual Casualty Company When you think about auto insurance, think of GOODVILLE----a company small enough to treat you as a person and large enough to take care of all your auto insurance needs. 625 WoAt Main Street New Holland, PA 7557 Phona: 7 7 354-492 Trenching and Excavating Front End Loading Call: 723-9508 Box 65, East Summit Avenue M.R., Telford, Pennsylvania Congratulations HUMMEL INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. Berlin, Ohio 855-5012 723-2748 ALDERFER CLASS CO. Auto Class Plate Class Mirrors Give us your break 1613 N. Broad St. 144 Telford Pike Lansdale, Pa. Telford, Pa. WAUSEON WOODWORKING COMPANY LUMBER - MILLWORK - CABINET WORK BUILDERS’ HARDWARE - PITTSBURGH PAINTS - SUPPLIES CONTRACTORS and BUILDERS - RAY SAUDER - Pres. WAUSEON, OHIO Compliments of the Weather Vane SAUDER WOOD WORKING COMPANY GLENN RUTT INSURANCE Route 1 Gordonville, Pa. 17529 Archbold, Ohio Herculex — Beautiful, Finished Surface Plastic Laminates AMERICA NEEDS CHRISTIAN FILMS from Century Gospel Film Library Souderton, Pa. 18964 Write for the Catalog of the Year Tel. 215- 723-5522 Compliments of 7I7 299.521t HIGH STEEL STRUCTURES, INC LANCASTER. PENNSYLVANIA 17604 TRUCK ENTERPRISES INC Harrisonburg Richmond, Va. Kenworth — Traditionally the Finest One Hour Valet Harrisonburg, Va. Circle K Corral Marve and Pauline King Pettisville, Ohio Short Funeral Home 500 N. Defiance St. Archbold, Ohio PATRONS C.R. Showalter Harrisonburg, Va. Excel Steel Works Inc. Harrisonburg, Va. Valley Books H'bg's Religious Bookstore Harrisonburg, Va. Foley Motors, Inc. Harrisonburg, Va. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS — Cover Design: Phil Ropp — Faculty Advisor: James R. Bomberger — Yearbook Representative: Jim Ellis — Staff and Seminary portraits: Roy Early — Layout assistance: Dennis Maust, Marla Hostettler — Photographers: Dave Kraybill, J. Marcos Hostettler, Marian Eberly, Jim Mast, Jim Bishop, Jon Byler, Ken Pellman, Keith Gingerich, Deb Stoltzfus, Tim Landis — Literary assistance: Dave Garber, Keith Gingerich, Vicki Mendenhall, Lois Lehman, Jon Schrock, Marilyn Grasse, Colleen Martin, Sandra Martin 114 • END


Suggestions in the Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) collection:

Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972

Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974

Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 1

1976

Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 1

1978

Eastern Mennonite School - Shenandoah Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

1979


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