Lancaster Mennonite High School - Laurel Wreath Yearbook (Lancaster, PA)

 - Class of 1967

Page 26 of 152

 

Lancaster Mennonite High School - Laurel Wreath Yearbook (Lancaster, PA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 26 of 152
Page 26 of 152



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Page 26 text:

Growing Confidence J 950- 1 959; ' ' K«K A i . V ' Srf Paul Ciraybill, Edna Wenger, and Sadie Mae Yost, an- other faculty member, traveled to Europe. European relief workers were occasional speakers. Missionary children and students from distant states lent a more world-wide atmosphere to the school. Myron Dcitz became the first non-Mennonite faculty member. Along with the growing school came again the demand for more space, and in 1954 came the answer in the construction of the Agriculture Building. Brother Amos Weaver became principal in 1953. Noah Good and Clyde Stoner have kept their posi- During the fifties college and public high school administrators who had formerly written off the infant LMS began to take a second look at the growing institution along the Mill Stream. A reputation was being carved out for the school, partly due to the fact that the academic degrees of the teach- ers were first published along with the teachers ' names during this period. The school grew a great deal during this time. The enrollment for 1950 was 259 and by 1959 it had risen to 432. Along with this growth came the de- cline of the family atmosphere which had permeated the early school and a more institutionalized tenor took its pl-ice. During this period the school grew less isolated and more aware of the world around it. Clayton Keener, Lois Garber Keener, and Donald Jacobs went abroad as missionaries. Noah Good, J. Construction of the classroom building tions all 25 years. During these years the Mill Stream became a newspaper instead of a mere journal. The LAUREL WREATH grew larger and became a more modern production instead of the picture scrapbook it was earlier. Student Forum was initiated. The sjiiritual and missionar - cmph.isis continued strong. By 1957 the school was ready to enlarge again. This time a chapel was built opposite the Girls ' Dormitory. 22

Page 25 text:

1942- J 949 Senior boys quartet, class of 1948 sessions, the beakers would walk to the edge of the shelves and fall unless they were caught. Oc- casionally, of course, a beaker was not caught, and a basic law of physics was demonstrated. Dating on campus was not allowed in the first years, but before too long casual association was permitted. In the earliest years there was a great deal of interest in writing, and membership in Stylus Club was proportionately very high. Coupled with this interest was the formation of the Mill Stream during the first year. Edna Wenger, who served as advisor for the first 14 years, proposed the name. Some, however, thought it too frivolous and presumptuous a title, preferring something more prosaic such as The Journal. The senior yearbook had at first merely been an enlarged final edition of the Mill Stream. Then in 1946 the senior class published the first edition of the new LAUREL WREATH, a title chosen by the class. By 1949 the need for dormitory space for the grow- ing LMS had become acute. Girls were living in the administration building, the upper floor of Noah Good ' s home, which is now the Home Economics building, and in the house where Brother Stanley Kreider lives. In that year the present Girls ' Dormitory was built, and seemingly the matrons have never yet quite recovered from the shock of so many girls together in one place at the same time. Arlene Hess (Thurman), Mary Kathrj ' n Stauffer (Todd) and Eliza- beth Sauder (Eshleman) pose for their picture 21



Page 27 text:

Expanding Vision, 1960-1967 Edna K. Wenger, who has been with LMS from its beginning, cites the first years and the sixties as the most exciting years at LMS. After the secure fifties the school was ready for change by the sixties, and change it cautiously did. Audio aids for language classes became common in the early sixties, dormitory literary societies developed in 1963, the Supen ' ising Committee enlarged in 1964, films and Select Chorus come in 1966, LAUREL WREATH changed publishers from Scottdale to Taylor Publish- ing Company in Dallas, Texas, in 1967. Another part of changing has been Brother Keener ' s becoming principal in 1963. Hall managers have always changed faster than matrons. One teacher has suggested that when the job becomes unbearable the hall managers simply get married and leave. At present 560 students are enrolled. The LMS of today could perhaps best be summarized by describing a typical student. The student of today is like his predecessor of earlier years in many ways, but in many others he is different. The pressure for college and good grades has become much stronger. The LMS student of today is very much aware of the world around him and is very eager to relate to it. Chances are that he has given his opinions at least a dozen times in the dining room, dormitory, or car- load discussions on the subject. And most important, the average LMS student of today is wide-awake spiritually. Revivals, chapel messages, Bible conferences, and prayer cells have made him keenly aware of the challenge and re- sponsibility he has of spreading the Gospel. Foundation of the classroom building By the beginning of the sixties LMS was badly in need of more classroom space, and by 1964, when the school was ready to burst at the seams, the .classroom building was built. The building was rushed to completion by Christmas, 1964, and over vacation while room numbers were being painted in on one end of the hall, members of the faculty were moving in on the other end. Over the past 24 years Lancaster Mennonite School has graduated approximately 2083 students. Preparing for the first Mill Stream outing 23

Suggestions in the Lancaster Mennonite High School - Laurel Wreath Yearbook (Lancaster, PA) collection:

Lancaster Mennonite High School - Laurel Wreath Yearbook (Lancaster, PA) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

Lancaster Mennonite High School - Laurel Wreath Yearbook (Lancaster, PA) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Lancaster Mennonite High School - Laurel Wreath Yearbook (Lancaster, PA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Lancaster Mennonite High School - Laurel Wreath Yearbook (Lancaster, PA) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Lancaster Mennonite High School - Laurel Wreath Yearbook (Lancaster, PA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Lancaster Mennonite High School - Laurel Wreath Yearbook (Lancaster, PA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970


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